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71 Auto's For Sele

76

1177 Chw... c...loo. 4 door. 1173 Ford Torino; UOO. Coli
olr, - . . Claod ~nd. Coli 114-441-*194
I PM ..

•fl••

., .., .....17.

-"*· ...

117S
~.
_.OINCI&amp; ,.W., •-W.~ now

- - OoMoorwt. , 19 ·. C.ll

ll4-

.._,332.

IIARE· 1111 Chwy2 ilr. Sodon

127. 4 lpeld. n• Q~Mnt, utn~
pert&amp; 1....,..-.d_ pert._ onty.

72

Truck•· for Sale

1874 Ford hlllf-ton pickup 302.

J

Clwyli• Fifth.
114-742-2411 .

Alo!lnuo.
.

COli

1171 l'lvmoulh s ..mp, olont 8
lor oolo. 1310 &gt;1112Suzu.lol128
liM 1221. 814-181-3197.

1111 C h - AM-FM, P.S ..

P.l .. ».now tl&lt;-. roly whool•.

4 - · 4 oyl. outo, C S model:
13100. 1"·112-3219.
1111

Mereu,.,.

Aun~ng

condi-

tion. Body toir. 1325. 114-992·
1131.
71 Iuick SkyiM'k. cuatom. a·c,
cr· control. 1utom11ic. runs
. - good. 1300. ~04-87,5-6707 .

11130mll&amp; Pf.; pb,air.am-fm,
cond. oz.aoo. c.11
.tt• 5 p.m. 304-895-3820.

. . Dodge250 Ram, Custom
conwralon. Treil• rt.ty' . Ci!l

81

Goorg• CrNk

Carpenter WtJrk- Plumbing,
roofing, tiding. Aa homer81Nlin.
Cell 814-389-8842.

in twnttu.. upho!...ring.

Carp.,ter work• $8,60 a hr. or
. by' the job. Panelling, painting.
dryY~MII.

remodeling. Cell , 814·

446-6377.

81

82

Home
Improvements

Rotary or cable' tool drilling.
Most wells ,:ompllled aamed.IVPump salea and service. 304·
896· 3802

Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn care, landtceplng. 11ump
ramowel , · 304-5J.8-2842 or
676-2903.
'

' 446-3636cA~

Electrical

8o Refrigeration

General Hauling

I

CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST A. FEW
MILES FROM . CITY. 3 BEDROOMS, Ph
BATHS ATIACHED GARAGE', FENCED
BACK YARO.
.
.,.,

Talk to Audrey Canaday , Mary Floyd or Bob Gordon lt
CANADAY'"f(EALTY . They ~ nOV!( how to determine a
realisti c-price; who the qualified bu-yers are; where to
locate mortgage loans, and what to do for a quick. un ·
c omplicated closing .
Buyin~ or s~lling real estate] For fair treatment and
gQod advice ask o REI.LTOR ~ o1 CANADAY REALTY.

86 Comcealed
87 Reform.
89 Spelling conteSt
92 Jury list
95 Sharp corner
98 Clty1n Russlf'
99 Guard
101 Enthusiasm
103 Transaction
104 Proposition
105 Alcoholic
beverage
· 106 Agave plant
1Q7 Negative pre/ix
108 Above and
touching
110 lnl.et
111 Printer's measure
112 Gasp.for breath ·
113 Strikes .
115 Running
117 Equals 12 months
119 Credit note: abbr.
120 Chinese faction
121 Office staff
124 Antlered animal
126 Raised
127 Painful
128 Remained at ease
130 Barracuda
132 Narrow opening
133 Danish Island
134 S~mmer In Paris
135 Sow'
137 Three, In Madrid
139 Type of cross
140: Real estate map
141 Winter vehicles
143 Observes
·145 Blrd's craw
146 Cupboards.
148 Hay,ks
150 Psrole
152 Tell
153 Late actress
Geraldine·
154 Arabian chieftain
156 Mended with
· cotton
157 Dropsy
158 Aroma
159 Gaming cubes
160 Out of date
DOWN
1 Regions
2 Ms. Bailey, et al.
3 Weakens by
overexertion

4 Lamprey
5 Go by water
. 6 Connected with
7 l:llgh mountain
8 Irritate
9 Cocker- .
10 Hasty repast
11 Gary Carter's
glove
12 'The lo,nellest
number' 13 General Electric:
abbr.
14 Cleaning utensils
15 Cloth measure
16s-wa
17 Landed property
18 Stalks
20 Frond
23 Repast ·
25 Disturbance
27'Frank
28 Cylinder · ·
31 Top of house
33 Clement
36 Protective ditch
38 Entice
40. Abound
41 Flnancl.al
Institution
43 _Larry of the
CetUcs
· 45 - to the core
46 Decrepit horses:
··slang
47 Row
49 Letter opener
51 "Hogan's
Heroes" star
52 Looked Intently,
53 ·"Planet of the
54 Word heard In
doctor's office
56 Handling
59 Uhlrultlulnoss
60 King of beasts
· .61 Boast
63 Stabbed
·e5 Story
67 Native metal
69 That thing
70 Bae, e.g&gt;
72 Fish from moving
boat
..
74 Suffice
76 Sign on elevator
77 Squander

garments
~

94 Nickel symbol
96 Secular
97V100 Iron J)A ~-· ~

to2-PicliiM -~, •. ,
&gt;:. I i. '
109 Mt. ~;81 ~.

105 Staff

.

112 l[lard
113 "The Greeteet
American -"
114 Classifying
116 N.J.
basketballers
118 Transported with
delight
120 Civil disorder
121 - au Prince
122 Teased: colloq.
123 Majors and
Remick
125 Natives of Bonn
126 Censured
127 Oceans
129 Antlered animal
131 .Plagues
132 Look fixedly
133 Toward shelter
134 Church official
136 Act
138· Native of
Stockholm
140 Fiber plant
141 State flower of
Utah ·
142 Prefix with circle
144 "The - Maxwell
Story" '
147 Mate shaep
148 Cushion
149 Thus
151.Epoch
153 Govt. agcy.
handling mall
155 Again: prefix

·~

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·&gt;

SHOVELING TIME- U was lime to gel the old
shovels . oul Mooday momlnc and clear the
sidewalks of slushy saow as the temperatures

By NANCY YOACHAM
"We're not parents against
teachers. We're parents for
children. We can malce more
Impact as parents than we give
ourselves credit. And we want to
organize ourselves for our children, not against our childrens'
teach~rs."

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LEVEL LOT - PUBLIC WATER AVAILABLE1JUST FEW Ml·
NUTES FROM SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA. KYGER CREEK
SCHOOLS.

$12,900 BUYS A COZY COTTAGE IN CITY. 60Xl30 LOT,
STORM WINDOWS, GAS fURNACE.
.

TURKEY RUN RD. - . I 'h STORY HOME. WITH APPROX. 2
ACRES 2 BEDROOMS, FULL BASEMENT,' DINING ROOM,
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. $33,900.

· Those were some of the com·
ments • at a roeetlng Sunday
· afternoon at Pomeroy VIllage
Hall of approximately 100 Meigs
Local "Parents For Education."
The unoffjclal support group of
parents first emerged publicly at
Middleport Elementary on Dec.
21 when some of Meigs L()Cals
schools were .reopened to stu·

Tal~s

·,

MOBILE HOME- 1978 12X60, 2 BEDROOMS, I BATH, NICE
SPACIOUS ROOMS. EQUIPPED KITCHEN, FURNISHED,
ELECTRIC FURNACE. GOOD BUY AT $8,000.

JUST LISTED! 3 .BEDRO~S, 2 STORY FRAME ~OME. 2
'LOTS, GARD£N SPACE AND FRUIT TREES, BARN, NORTH
GALLIA SCHOOLS. $19,900.
' ·

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\

\
,--·

illitial snowfall
.

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,
'
By Ualted Press Iaternallonal
far, wlll arrive In Ohio late
anclSiaH Repo'if ·.
Monday.
.
· Between one and three Inches
Ohio had an easy winter until
of snow late Sunday night forced · the start of the new year when
postporiem~pj _olclaaaesJD. some
·temperatures bottomed out at
area sthools and delayed this
their coldest levels Satur.day
mornlnll's opening fn others.
across paFts of the Buckeye
Between one and three Inches .State.
fell from 8 p.m. untjl midnight
The next surge of cold. air will
Sunday. Classes were dismissed ...0 arrive Monday. Tuesday morntoday In the Meigs Local, East·
lng lows are expected to zero to 10
ern, Southern, Carleton and
above with a 10 to 15 mile an hour
.. M:asoll _County . district.~. along.. wiMAhat will make iUeelmor.e ..
with tbe Gailla Christian School.
like 25 below.
De1ayed starts· were reported
The leading edge of the cold
In the GaHla County ·Local
surge Is marked by a cold front,
. District and Guiding Hand
Its wind shift and a few flurries.
·
·
The front will move across, Ohlo
School.
· Temperatures fe(l to· the low
Monday morning·, preceded ..by
20s In the trl-~ounty area. The
the !lorries.
Melgs-Gallla Post, State High·
Then the cold will come and
WaY Patrol reported eight auto
keep com!ng this week,
- ·accidents Sunday. The Meigs and
A dump of lake effect snow will ~
Gallla sheriff departments re·
occur to the lee of the Great
ported
no
snow-related
mishaps
.
Lakes. This despite the rapid
hove.r ed around· freezing. He)re Mark Reltmlte
formation
of Ice on Lake Erie. As
gave a hand to a local merchBJi1t oa Court Street In
The
coldest
air
of
the
wlnter,so
usual,
the
wind direction, will
Pomeroy..
· • -.

.

•

dents for the first time since the
beginning of the Meigs teachers'
strike on Nov. 6.
Since then, the group has
continued . to display concl!rn
over the strike situation In an
effort, according to comments at
Sunday's meeting, to find solu·
tlons to problems which allowed
the stike to come about In the first
.place and continue for as long as
It has.
Parents admitted they don't
expect to take care of the
Immediate problems In this
strike. "We don't expect to find
solutions to take care of the
problems we have now," said one
parent, "but we hope to find

I

determine what area gets hit '
hard.
The ilortheas t tip of Ohio ·
stands a chance of significant •
accumulation Monday afternoon··
and evening with points from
near Lake Erie to Buffalo In a
more favorable area for snow.
. Sunday, by contest, was a
comfortable day with the mercury rising Into the 30s und,er a
f!llx of high clouds and sun.
· The late afternoo11 meatboer
"map snowed the Arctic 'front
crossing Wlsconlsn and eastern
lowa while low pressure was in
the Gulf of Mexico and high
pressure off the New England
coast..
By this time Monday, the Gulf
c_past low will have exploded Into
major storm off the New
England coast. This will pull the ·
Arcticfront across Ohio Monday
morning and to the east coast by
Monday night.

a

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•

solutions to . pr.e vent the same
problems fr ·om occurlng In the
'future."
Many pnrents singled out
Ohio's collerctlve bargaining law,
which gives teachers the right to
strike, as-ttre culprit In the strike

Is "a minority" of Meigs'
the "welfare" of the public Is
Involved, and not just when teachers lnvolv~d In the alleged
health and safety Is Involved, as acts of vandallsm, and many
stated their Intentions to contact
the law now reads.
The letter also states that Meigs County Court Judge Pa·
voters in southeastern Ohio ex· trick O'Brien to encourage him to
j pect a level of state funding that "prosecute to the fullest extent of
the law" any teacher found to be
will ensure quality educatlon 1
sltua~r~r'' Sent To Boster
'
Although parents Sunday said Involved In criminal acts of
Copies ol'' letters to State Rep. repeatedly that they "are not vandalism or harassment.
Jolynn Bo·ster, who serves on against the teachers" of the
Two Meigs' teachers have
Ohio's . Ho.use Committee for dlstr(ct, they also said repeat· charges against them In CQUnty
Education, were passed out fo edly that they "are against the court for alleged ·actlqns on Dec.
parents at the meeting with the alleged acts ·of vandalism" that . 18 at the high school during an
request th1~t the letter~ be signed · have occurred since the reopen· lnservlce session for substitutes.
and forw1nded to Boster.
lng of schools. "If students had
There was discussion as to the
The lett•i~r requests a revision committed these same acts, they quality of education In · the
by the st1 1te legislature of the would have been sent away by district under the substitute
teachers, with most parents
collective 1 bargaining law, to now," said one parent.
Parents acknowledged that I ~ stating that they, . and their
· allow enjl!linlng of strikes when

resume today

Negqtiatlons between the
During a temporary Injunction
Melp Local School District
hearing held before Judge Cha·
Board of Education and the · ~les Knight- In the Meigs, County
Melp LOcal Teachers Assocla· · Common Pleas Court last Thurs·
tton were scheduled to take place day. Judge Knight not qnll'
atlp.m. thlsafternoonlnAthens.
granted. the Injunction but or·
Meigs Local As~lstant Superln· dered the teachers and the board
tendeDt James~arpenter said
to go Into negotiations before
that he was \O!lfled Monday Wednesday -morning and to re·
morning of the Monday after· port back to him by that time.
noonii!BZ!onbetweennegotlators
Meantime, this morning Ml·
ot both groups.
chael Wilfong, president of the
The neeotiatlons session was Meigs Local Teachers Associ&amp;·
called by David Thorley and tlon, Issued the . following
Ward WIIIOn, federal mediators statement:
·worlffiii with the groupe In an
''The MLTA Is pleased with
attempt to reach a ll!tUement. Judge Knight's order to resume
Tile leat IH!IIIon between the two neeouauona.
_lfOIIJill on Dec. 22 tal~ to bring
''The ueociiUoo ~ made It
about a setllemeat of the clear froiD the bellnillng · of
teachers strike wblcb bepn on bartallllq tbat II II willlna to
Nov. 6. .
neeoUate at eaytlme, et eny
Schoola of Melp Locel were place, to I'8ICh ud fair and
ecbedaled to be opeucttodey tor equitable colltraet Mttlement.
. the II!Veatb dey receatJy using
"We will ao to the table
subltltute teacben. However, prepared to neeotlate In food
clauelln the dlltrlct u well as felth ll!d arolllld the clock 11
tiiiiiiiD the Southern and Eut· · · nece~Sity to brlnt en end to the
era Local Diltrtet were ololt!d atrllte. Wecubopebopetbet the ·
todaY clue to a Jllbt 1110wfall · bolrd .. Ia prepared to do .the
overalfbt.
eeme.

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politics In the system- while providing a cheaper
bOnd proceeds annually, making sure to give
r egistration method than using highly-paid state
equal treatment to large and small governmental
units and to give priority to projects with the
employees.
'Gov. Richard F. Celeste Is scheduled to deliver
·
highest need.
'
his ''State of the State'·' addre~s to a joint session
The House Ways ami Means Committee will be
o'- the General Assembly at noon on Jan. 13 In the
working simultaneously on Its own guidelines, .
House chamber..
meaning there could be a clash between the two
· The administration's $500 million two-year
chambers in the future.
capital Improvements bill Is not e1'pected to be
Anotheer priority matter which could cause
ready until March. The capital bill, a feature of
debate Is a solid waste regulatory bill now under
even,Lnumbered years, contains the plans for
study in the House Energy and Environment
cons\ruction and repair projeCts at state faclll·
Committee. State officials are trying to dlscour- ) ·
ties, primarily on state university ·c ampuses.
age the dumping of trash from eastern states Into
Expecl More Debate
eastern Ohio· landfills.
More debate Is expected over the plan .to
The Senate and House also are expected to work
implement State Issue 2- a$1.2 billion bond Issue
on legislation delaying the date of auto emission
for local roads. bridges and sewer systems
Inspections In the Cleveland and Cincinnati areas ,
adopted by the voters last November.
.
and tightening up the Ohio National Guard
A special Senate panel Is trying to set up ·'-· Scholarship program, which has run short of
guidelines for distributing $120 million worth of · money.

100 Meigs··parents··orgw~nize Sunday 'for our ~hildren'

BRICK EXTERIOR, GAS HEAT, \1 BATH, GREAT LOCATION. EX·
CELLENT BUY AT $25.000.

$25,000 - 1HREE BEDROOM RANCH IN CITY. FENCED
BACK YARD. LARGE EQUIPPED EAT-IN KITCHEN, GARAGE.

a

forces ·school closi.itgs

79 Airline Info.
83 Nabokov novel
85 Helping
86 Wife of Zeus
87 i.OOBB garment
. 88 Emerald Isle
89 'Exlst
90 Complete
91 Prepares for print
92 Greet&lt; letter
93 Protective

:~~gss~~~~~ T5Jt~~uiTH 1~o8~r~E~~~tA:LuE1 L~b~

$29,000 - SPACIOUS MODULAR, LOCATED IN COUNTRY
AIR SUBDIVISION, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, GAS FURNACE,
CEN. AIR, LARGE LOT. GREAT PlACE FOR AFAMILY. KYGER
CREEK SCHOOLS.

··~·

position. Skeen, 60, n.ow In his severtJih term, Is
trusted Riffe lll!\ltenant.
:
. , Major Activities
Both the House and Senate plan committee ·
meetings for this week. The majo~ ar,\tlvlty will be
ln. a House Highways and ' Pi.\bllc .· Safety
subcommittee, which wlli vote out a 1'mbstitute blli
- revising the method of registering m otorvehlcles.
The Senate last year adopted a bl U eliminating
deputy motor vehicle registrars a1nd replacing
half of them with state employe'es occupying
regional offices. A centralized mall-Ill-System·
would b1! key to orderly reglstratld/n.
The House subcommittee ha! J a different
version, retaining the deputies, Irequiring an
office In every county and providing for a
subsidized mali-In system, which 3111 percent of the
motorists are expected to use.
It would be Illegal to solicit poll•:tlcal contribu·
tlons from the deputy registrars. 1Riffe says this
will eliminate one of the major complaints -

Year~s

•

EIGHTY·SEVEN ACRES- $20,000. PUBLIC WATER AVAILA·
BLE. CITY SCHOOLS. HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

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SUNDAY PUZZLER
1 Part of church: pl.
6 Blreme necessity:
pl.
10 Smoke and log
. 14 Appor:tions
19 Amend
21 A Wilson
22 Baseball team
23 Interfere with ·
unwarrantably
24 Sooner
26 Appease
28 Filled
29 Macaw
30 Den
32 Legislate
33 Extinct flightless
. birds
~ Scottish cap
35 Mr. Plckins·
37 Simpleton
39 Writing fluid
40 Cash dra~er
• 41 Wagers ·
42 Supercilious
person
44 Journeyed
46 'Exchange
47 Biblical weed
48 oi.clared
50 Gamboled ·
52 On- and
needles
· 53 "- Officer and
a Gentleman"
55 Allowance lor .
waste
57 Latin conjunction
58 Apothecary's
l...........l'lelght
·59 Search lor
60 Equals 16 ozs.
62 Vigor: colloq.
64 Javelin
66 In the direction of
68 Near.
69 Roman road
70 Title of respect
71 Way out
73 Schoolbook
75 Of neither sex
'77 Portico
78 Cubic meter
SO By oneself
81 'The sixth sense'
82 HarVesting
84 Spin

...

! :::t~~~~i~ rn~~':.w~a~::••

.Pomeroy-MiddlepCJ·•rt, Ohio, Monday, January 4, ~ 9~8

By LEE LEONARD
, l)PI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The Ohio General· Assembly
reconvenes this month for a 1988 session to be
dominated by money and poUtlcal matters, and
punctuated by election campaigning.
The House Is to kick off the new year this week
with a Wednesday session, whlie the Senate does
not meet hi fuU ~sion until Jan. 12. ·
Hou.Se Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New
Boston, plans a brief one-day session to swear In a
new member and· elect an assistant majority !loor
leader to succeed the late Vernon F. Cook,
D.Cuyahoga Falls, who died last month.
Wayne Jones of Akron, a former deputy
· superintendent of the Ohio Insurance Depart·
ment, will be sworn In to ser-ve the remaining year
· of Cook's term·. ·
·
· Veteran Rep. Clifton Skeen, . D·Akron, Is
expected to be elected to Cook's leadership

Dillard Wate( Service: Pools,

you sell
your home!

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General ~~eritbly ~~eeonvenes for new year

448-4,77

AUDREY f . CANADAY. REAlTOR
RoBERT GORDON. REALTO~. 446·6ZI6
MAkl FLOYD. REAlTOR. 446-3383
25 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS. OHfO

Super Lotto
.. 41-26-2-21-3443

.,

~0::r';d1 ~:aa

Cisterns, Wells. DeiNery Any·
time. Call 114~441·7404.No
Sunday c•l•.
·

Let us ·help

.

446-7 .. uu

875 ~ 1788 .

. Canaday

. 101 ACREs- $26,500- MOSTLY WOOOm: PUBLICWA·
TER AVAILABLE, OLDER HOME NEEDS REPAIRS, TOBACCO ·
BASE.
.

'

Gallipoh. Ohio
·Phone 814-448·3888 or 814·

86

3-7

enttne

·Reeidanti• 'or conlrn~IW .wi~­
lng. New tervlce Ot' r..-,1.
Ucenlld electrician. Eatlmata
free. A ldenour Electrical. 304-

•

HOUSE OF THE WEEK

SUPER. SUPER BUY! BRICK AND FRAME RANCH, 3 B£0·
~OOMS. EAT-IN KITCHEN HAS RANGE AND REFRIG. TH·
ERMO PANE WINDOWS, NICE LEVEL LOT. $26,000.

'

Cloudy, cold tonight. Low
zero to 5 above. West winds 10
to 20 mpb/ 'l'uesday, sunny,
cold, high near 15.

1858

REAL ESTATE

Cor. Fourth and Pine

ACROSS

YOUR . ESTATE ~WAITS -:- CIRCLE DRIVE. PARK LIKE
GROUND AND A STAHLY COLONIAL 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
HOME WITH RECREATION ROOM COMPLETEWITH POOL TA·
. BLE PLUS FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AN DBAR.ENOR·
MOUS GARAGE WITH LOFT THAT COULD EASILY BECOME
GUEST QUARTERS. INGROUND POOL $125.000.
BEAUTFIUL COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS MAKE A PERFECT
SETTING FOR THIS 3 BEDROOM COLONIAL HOME. FORMAL
DINING ROOM. DEN. IN-GROUNO POOL. 5 ACRES. $60,00Q.
II ICE AND VERY AFFORDABLE - LE GRANDE BLVD., o
BEOROOMS, I ~ BATHS. LEVEL LAWN, FAMILY ROOM. JUST
LISTED! $44,000.

-

.LE~DINGH.AM
.
. .

Plumbing
. &amp; Haeting

84

Daily Number
474
Pick 4

..

CARTER'S I'WMBING'
AND.HEATING

Fetty Tree Trimming, stu.mp

Real Estate General

~

Call

304·878-,4184 lor tree
ettima1.

Ohio LoUery

Approx. 4 milrs lrom
on a blacktop r111d; 2 acr~. 6
nrce offices, 3 baths, a
.Loading dock W~h 10ft. h1&amp;11
electric rollu~ door•. l2 ft. hil!ll ~lectric roll up _
door at lhe.sroe
entrance to the shop area. Wired for a machme shop w~h a
large parts ·storage area. LOTS Of USES - WHAT'S YOUR
NEED? SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.
#668

~I countytrea.22ylars. Th•b!Ut

removal . Call 304-876-1331 .

"

SPRING VALLEY AREII'- SPACIOUS BRICK RANCH, COZY
FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE OFF FULLY EQUIPPED
KITCHEN, 3 BEDROOMS, I \1 BATHS, El&lt;TRA LARGE MASTER
BEDROOM HAS. TELEVISION VIEWING AREA. CALL NOW!

•

Mowrev·• Upholltarlng MI'VIng

tee .. locll ref•enc• .furnished.
Fr.. el11m.tea. Call Collect
·t - 814- ~37 · 0488 . diiV or night.

Motorcycles

ADDRESS: BITTERSWEET DRIVE
PRICE: $39,000
ANNUAL TAXES $344.64
LOT SIZE: 110x200 •

Upholstery : ·

. . WJ&gt;,TERPROOFING

1971 GMC 4whMI df~ . orwil

74

87

Un~di11onel lifetime guaran-

Cleaner, one half mile up
Rd. Cell 614448-0294.

77 .Ch..,.., 4 -wheel drive truck,
G~od Cond. 304-678: 241·8.

Walltraon'a Wat•r Hauling.
r•aonebla ratM. lmmediall
2,000 g1Uon d•Uvery. clt ....nt.
PGoiL well. etc: call 304-578~
2918.

BASEMENT ·

.SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, perts. and 1uppll11: P'idc
up lf'!d deM'IIery. Davis Vecuum

., 400. 304-876-2687.

P.~es

Paul Rupa. Jr. Water S•vl01.
Pools. ciaterna, wtfl1. Call 114441·317t .

Home
Improvement's

.RON'S Televiaion ServiCe .
Houae cells on RCA. Quazar.
GE . Speciellng in Zenith. Cell
304·576-2398 or 614 · 446·
1119 QMC, Y.. ton es&amp;O; 1972 198' Honda.. 2500 mil•. VT
Ch..,y. 1&gt; ton 1880; l976 500A..,ot. •eoQ. _COII8t4-379- . 2454.
' o·~·r 1125.· _31!4·&amp;·7.5 ' 1903;~ .· 2t12 . .. · .. .. , . . ·

4-dr.. ....

A • . A Walet hrviot. HOme
oltt••· wella, poola fill ... For·
m.tv Jam• Boys Wllart.CIII

s~rvrces

1993 Joop CJS. 8 o:vl.. ·4 spd ..
h•d tqp. Loca af extru. E~t~Cel .
cond. Coli 614-448-4976.

1978 Chevy Winslow van.

a J Weter 8er¥ioe. Swimming

304-171-8370.

R ogara8eaement
Waterproofing.
·

Coli 61 4·742-2421 .

Vikings,
OUers
advance·

_241·12U.

buy junk tr8nsmllllktnl.

81 4·448-4393 ...... 446· 0139
evens. ii. Wltk.nds.
, .

tntde on alngle axle dump truck.

General Hauling

Pooll. cltlern,, wella. Ph, t14-

.Uud &amp; rebUilt t•'nsmiuions. All
intenwlty intp.cted &amp; gu1rn·
• -· Coli 114·441-0911. We

.

· 11•1 Oldo Omogo. 1983

86

Auto .Pam
&amp; •Accesiorlu
•'

outomotiC. 1110. 1t74 Ford
hllf ton pld!.up. I cyl.. sutomltlc. 43.000 1ctU.! mil•.
11100. Colll14·441-1912 .

f978 Dodat 4 whHI drtve,
C. 114·378·2112.
1977 FOfd 4 whMI driwo. 1978
Ch..,y "Mon Pick-up. n 600
1 - Cerioo~M, blocll on blodi. ooeh.•l\4-949-2801 .
...., inlllta. 1111 Honds 3
wllelle. 2 tt..t.,- Low Rid••· 188!4-Ford1501c, ps.~ pb: crulse
,... ...... lola of ctvomt. C.ll control, 4 -tp, low mil•. .xc.
e1~1211 lift• 7 ~M .
cond. S••t.o epprecllte. 1(1200.
---'-----'----1Firm. 304·882·22.3.
·
1111 Dodto Lon- Turbo. Air.
'
cruiM. tit. 11100. Ctll 814·
317·011t2. .

(

3: 1988

THTias Sentinel
71 Auto'• For Sele

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children, are pleased with the
substitutes. There were complaints about the training and
supervision of vocational stu·
dents at the high school.
Parents who have already
vl~lted their children 's schools
since the reopening encouraged
other parents to do the same.
A rumor was dispelled that the
days of sohool under the substitutes will not count with a parent
stating he was told ·by Me!gs
Superintendent Dan Morris that
the days will count or the school
district wouldn:t be spending the
money to keep the schools open.
Ii was also pointed out that If the
days were not to count, it would
Continued on page 5
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••=• If . ...,., II ere· • w1t1t

_ , . . , ... MIDIIIII'JiteteiiJIOwai . . . "Mprttlllec'IMf....
~ 1111'11111 ltlme wldoll eemplsts• llu,.,..'illd te lead -

*

•arlyl mlllloit dellan ........, 111te tile loceleco-.,.

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

.

ts:m~ ,.,....._,._.,..I~=·- .
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
. Pul!llsher
lc

. BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana1er

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally p'ress
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association. . .·

WASHINGTON .- Those somewhere ~·
Scrooges at American Express
As usual, •it was the little guy's
· Co. sure know how to wreck a belt that got cinched.
Clirlstmas . While you were out
But 'the b,1~d business climate
running up your credit cards In a that' led to lhose layoffs has not
holiday buying binge, American halted the gravy train for AMEX
Express eliminated 7,000 jobs.
·executives. ''&gt;fhe people at the top
The layoffs came a-fter an continue to ~:·~t goodies, modestly
AMEX subsidiary, Shearson· referred to &lt;l:s "Incentives." The
Lehman Brothers, merged with .. . people at t1he bottom get a
one of the biggest brokerage golng·a)l'ay 111arty. Why Is It that
houses · on Wall Street, E.F. American lnHu$try JI10tivates Its
Hutton. According 'tp one Indus: executives vlilth money and Its
try analyst, the layoffs were working stlffll' with the threat of a
necessary because of overexpan· pink slip?
slon and the stock market tum·
Earlier thils year, before the
ble. The belt had to be tightened stock market crash, the AMEX
1

:m

LE'M"ERS oF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be-less than
words
lonl. Alll~ters aresubj oo ·tol"dlllng and m,ust be signed wlth name. addr.E'Ssand
teH:phone number. No uns lgn«UeUers ~wUI be published, Letters should be tn
good taste, addre!!stng IsSues, .(101 personalities.
...
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Rhodes still.trying to
exert ·influence on GOP
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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - To veteran Statehouse reporters, It
was astonishing to.see former Gov ...James A. Rhodes take himself out
of the 1990 gubernatorial race last week.
·
It shows the length to which the tour-term totmer governor will go
to ensure his own credibility as the party's elder statesman.
In his salad years. ' Rhodes never would have made such a
.foreclosure on his political future. Even when he was out of office, he
de:lighted In keeping his adversaries and the news media guessing
abOut hts · n~xt moves.
.
.
:•we're not ruling anything In or out," he would say.
J'lut ·last week, Rhodes issued this printed statement: "I would like
t&lt;l'say for the record and. make It emphatically clear that I have no
inlentlon of running for governor or for any other state office in 1990."
L~ter, he- added the word "absolutely" before the words "no
Intention.·:.
Now to purists, " no intention" is the. weasel phrase. Anyone who
has dealt with Rhodes for very long knows that for him, words are
niere words. Watch what he does , not what he says. ·
~Two years .from now , Rhodes could decide that his "Intention" has
changed. and that he would like to run for governor. If so, he would.
:•u he saw a chance again that he could make It, he'd go," said
longtime nemesis Robert E. Netzley, a state representative and the
Republican chairman of Miami County.. ·
So why did R.hodes bother to Issue the disclaimer on 1990?
Well, it seems he's trying to prevail ()n state Republican ofliclals to
• endorse Vice President George Bush for president; to get on the
bandwagon early and wield some Influence In a Bush win; then reap
tire subsequent rewards.
.
·Rhodes a.lso Is s1vlnglng his welght_in the scramble for a Republican
state chairman.
But many#Republicans are afraid this activity Is a signal that
Rhodes Is trying to keep control of the party and Is positioning himself
for another try in 1990.
•"A lot of people are quaking and fearing that he is like some kind of
an ogre lurking behind the door , ready to pounce," said Cuyahoga
County Republican Chairman Robert Hughes, whp for years has
played Sancho Panza to Rhodes's Don Quixote.
And that's how Rhodes has thrived for years - creating a
perception that doesn't always measure up to reality. If people think
be's a threat , fine. Then he becomes a threat, and; t1lat ·gtves him
powe r.
Rhodes also thrives on leaping in to fill a-vacuum - something that
bas existed frequently in Ohio Republican leadership In the last 20
yea rs. That's why he-ran for governor In 1986- because nobody was
'quick enough or strong enough to push him out.
So oow, he sees an opportunity to be a "kingmaker" for George
Bush. and he' s taking that opportunity.
Trouhle Is , another major Republican player - .Ohio Senate
President Paul E: Gillmor - Is leading the Ohio campaign for Sen.
Robert Dole of Kansas. Gillmor just happened to try to beat Rhodes in
the 1986 Republican gubernatorial primary , but that has nothing to do
with this spat. Like flies have nothing to do with a cowbarn.
The Gillmor·Dole forces complain that an early endorsement for
Bush would split the party after the OhiO primary.
Hughes says Rhodes has every right to speak out anali'y to exert his
influence. " They want him mute before. he'~ in the ·grave," said
Hughes:·" He'll always be in the game."
It was Hughes who coined the motto for R!hodes: "If he 's breathln' ,
he's running .··
.
"I guess I '11 have to change that," Hughes said last week. "As long
,as he's breathing, he'll be speaking out."

·· ·

Letters to the editor

Reader speaks out on.issue

.

Today in history

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:fnderson and . V~n Atta '
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man assured our reporter Frank
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Thi8 week'8 games

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urb. ..
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across his
Business"
T·shlrt. The
tl!at the ·
Washington
suppressed
when he
Crorp the race
- concerning bis , long-standing
and well-docum.~nted liaison
with a Washington woman, rumored to be the w~fe of a fellow
senator - Is kn'o·wn all over
Washington a!\d wlll bi!come
public In due cours·,~.
Hart Is presum.a1\bly prepared ·
for this, of course·, .alnd one hopes
he ~Jas been thought(ful enough to
prepare the lady '1!11 question as
well. But one gets the Impression
that Hart Is, at bot.tom, a highly
Impulsive man who:se Instinct Is
to go after anythl1r1g he wants
badly enough, v•hetber It's
Donna Rice or the Democratic
presidential nomlmation, and
worry about the consequences
later. If so, one Is en titled to ask
whether that's the sot·t of temper·
amen! Americans want to see In
the Oval Office.
In the depjhs of th'ls winter of
the Democrats' d,iscontent,
'c redit Washington P.:·•st l'eported
and political commerrta.tor David
Broder with the moii.l construe·

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Arafat would also l1\ke to see a
1ational ef·
more .vigorous
lntern
.
.
I
fort to end the Iran-Ir.uq war. He
does not objeCt to ~J.S. ships
playing an escort r·~le In the
Persian Gulf, but he be~ leves that
it would be more ef~ecttve to
create a mult.UateraJ l, force In·
eluding such Muslim . states as
Turkey and Pakistan.
Arafat was highly a r·oused by
the · U.S. decision to ~~lose the
Palestinian Informatio.:b Office In
Washington. He wa'~ keenly
aware that ,the Amerlt;an Civil
Liberties Union and ol\'lers see
this as a violation of America's
constitutional commit nent to
free\lom of expression. .
·
When we complalnt. d about
PLO terrorist tactiCs, Arafat
st;~ted he had given
orders
· against the use of suc:tt tactics
outside the territory D&lt;i1w occu·
pled by Israll. In, these lllsputed
areas, he said, we lt~te!'ld to
continue ... armed strugt!:le." He

1

·elsewhere as an Israeli
of
terrorism.
While In Tunisia, Mr. ~nnedy
and I met with then PI1 !dent
Bourgulba, hours before 1 e was
.forced to give up oUice. Th signs
of senility were clearly p esent.
He was, however, clear ~n one
matter. He was outragecU)Y the
1985 llraeiHiomblng attack on
PLO 1\earlquarters In '"unls, ,
~hlch killed 16 members dlf the
PLO and 60 Tunisian cltlze.r.•·
· · If the Reagan, Admlnlstr.aUon

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Bath Tissue

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41 I

. Ohio Outdoors

What'.s . on
' .·the .'b.ottorn
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lilY JERRY 'PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers, Assn. 'of
Amerlc.a ·
Distributed by UPI
Fishermen like nothing better
than to know what the bottom of'
the lake .where they're fishing
looks like. Submerged gullies
and road beds, even old fence
rows and sites where graves
have been removed, all hold fish.
Stumps and sunken house
foundations are among the best
places' to fish for most species.
Trouble Is. they're hard to locate.
Some anglers ospend hours or
even days,g'olng over lakes with a ·
depth·flndet, charting contour,s
and marking their maps with the
locations of flsh·gatberlng
structures .
There Is' a much easier way
right now,
Because this past summer was
so dty, many lakes have ·been
drawn down to record-low levels.
That . means a . lot of the stuff
·you'd have to find l'l'ith a sonar
unit later Is plainly visible right
now. ~mart flshertl'len are taking
advantage of this opportunity to
go , out to the lake and m~ke a

· ALL GAMES
TEAM
WL .
Hannan Trace .....8 2
Southern ........ ..... .7 2
Oak Hill .............. 7 2
North Gallla :....... 6 4
Eastern ............... 3 · 4
Symmes Valley ... 3 6
Kyger Creek .... .. .. 3 "6
Southwestern ....... O 9
.
SVACONLY

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P
, 797
749
621
626
4!50
551
509
!501

The Dal!Y Sentinel

M8

(ti8P811Mtt)
' A, Dl¥1oloto ol - .tmedlo, Joe.

545

653
·517
716
539
668

(V....at:r.)

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chart of everything they can see.
Some are going a . step further ·
and making a series of pictures
they can refer to later In-the year.
I( you decide to do this, keep a .
couple of things In mind. First,
try to Include landmakrs ln your
photographs. Second, take a
picture' from more than one
location, Including more than one
landmark In each. Later, that'll
make It easier to find the spot .
you're looking for when · the
stump or whatever It was Is
covered with coffee-colored
\'Vater.
.
,
Don't trust your memory on
these things either. Jot down the
location ·of the picture and •Just
what part oft he lake It was ln.lt 's .
remarkable how similar things
like this can look Jater when the
lake Is• full of water again. A
simple note like "Looking north
from west side of bridge" will
bring lt back to you clearly.
· When you set out to map the
bottom of your favorite lake,
concentrate on things like old
culvert pipes, road beds, bridge
abutments and, ~peclally, the ·
old stream bed. These are more
or less permanent · features
that'lr gather fish ·for many
years.

OP
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TEAM
WL
POP
Bo!lthem .............. 6 o 351 2111
Haanaa Trace ..... 5 1 3tll 211

TOI'AI.I

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Soatbenl

·,

•• •

233 246

Syllllllll Velley ... 2 4 •
2IN
Euterft.&lt;,,, •.••.•••• ~ .2 • 2lt . •
JCyaer Creek ........ 0 6 2l5 310

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. Southweatern ....... 3 2 26a 281
Noriii'Gallla ........ 2 4 281 291-

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RoN Souttaeutem

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ovcsat

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Your local power company is a
part of American Electric Power,
a frunily of power companies. ·
· So the electricity you use to brew
your morning coffee .COJ;11es from a
· network of people and power and
~~~~=·~~ resources that links seven states.
That network helps us deliver
electiicity quickly and efficiently,
while keeping down the cost.
And together we're pioneering
new technologies to provide
affordable power in the future.
From now on, when you see
our name, you'll also see AEP.
As a pan of American
Elc:ctric Power, we're stiU your
local power company, with a
lot of ~ behind us.

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::::::=::::!!!!:=::::::::;

""·
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Mf&gt;mtwr: Unltfd Preta IntPI"'IatlonAl.

TEAM
W L
P OP·
Inland Dally Pr... A•octatton and&lt; h•
Ohio Newopa)lft' A•octalton. Nat tonal
Southetn ..... :........ 5 1 ·533' 351
Advfrllatng Rfr.DrHPntatlve, Branham
Hanhan Trace ..... 5 1 488 J88
lil'wfPIIper 5a eo, 733 Tbtrd Awnue,
Nl'w York, Nl'w York 10&lt;D7 . .
Oak Hill .............. 5 I' 449 375
North Gallla ........ 3 3 397 439
POS'I'MASTER: Send
Cllan(IOI
Eastern ............... 3 3 386 437 · · 10
Th• Dolly · $entln&lt;l. lll O.urt Sl ..
Symmea Valley ... 2 5 400 511
Potnoroy, Oftto ·
Kyger Creek ......
5 344 395
8WK'IUPI'ION IIATIII
.,~... llo&amp; • ._
Southwestern....... · 6 Mil 456
0.. Week ................................ ~ .11.2:1
TOTALS
It It 1111 SIU
0.. MOIIh ........ .............. ......... ..IUS
SVAC
C.... Year ............................. 1• •• 115.00

Oak HIU ..............4

'

This morning 23,316 geople
brought you your coffee.

l'Ubllsbl'd ~•ry afternoon, Monday
&lt;brwgb Friday, 111 Court $t., J'o.
mfi'IJ)I, Ohio. by tb• Obto Valtoy Publishing Company /Multimedia, Inc .•
· Pomeroy, Ohio f~'lllf. Ph. H2·211lf. &amp;ocond class postagt" p.ld 11 Pomeroy,
Ohio.

, (RetiBI'VN)

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FOODLAND

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SVAC standbtgs
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Transadions

..te. ).......

·J. -11411 (It-t)
!. J1ertU!Mate (11·1)
S. OlllaiMma (II· I)
I. S,rac. . (11-t-1)

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WeiMI Olr . . C. I Welwl! •

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De._MWeeewr
~llarwlllt a&amp; Olllo Domlllleu

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"Educstlon 18 s wsy of Hfe, but then sgs/n, so
Is GOLF/"
•

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l
••
••

By DAVID E. NATHAN
deciding the game. He hit Scott
UPI Sports Writer
with an ·elbow, . firing up the
Without their top Inside scorer, Lakers guard. S&lt;i\t~rhlt 9 of 11
the Portland Trail Blazers were s~tots on the way to 2q first-half
poh\ts. He· hit three sfiots from
teft without lin outside aame.
INTERCEPTS PASS- Seahawk defensive back Martin Jenkins
Pn the strength of a.game-high 3-polnt range.
(24) picks off a Warren Moon pass, Intended for wide receiver
31 points from Byron Scott, the
''They (the Lakers) told me,
· Emest Givins (81),1n the first quarter of Sunday's AFC wlld·card
Los Angeles Lakers pounded the 'Don't worry, just shoot the
. game, played at the Astrodome Ia Houston. Seahawk defensive
Blazers 98-81 Sunday nlght. The ~pointer. That will take care of
back Eugene Rqblnson (41) also tried for the pass. The Oilers won.
: takers won their lOth straight the problem,"' Scott said of
In overtime, Z3·20. ( UPI)
game overall while the loss was LU&lt;?{IS. "It dld. "
the first In the last 13 home , Lil~ Angeles Increased Its lead
gamea for the Blazers.
·
over second-place Portland In
Portland played without center the Pacific Division to five
SteVe Johnson, sidelined with games.
,
bone spun In tbe ankle. Also out
Kareem Abdul·Jabbar scored
fo~ the Blazers was forward Klkl ,.. 13 points and A.C. Green grabbed
Vandeweghe, suffering from a 10 rebounds for the Lakers, wl!o
back ailment. Without the duo, have won nlne of 13 games away
the Lakers were able tel concen· from home, the best road win·
Irate on stopping the Blazers' nlng percentage In .the~:rt.BA.
outside shooters.
The Lakers led 57-41 at half·
time, 78-63 after three quarters
"We caught them without a andbyasmanyas23polntsmthe
ASST COLORS
post game," Lakers Coach Pat fourth quarter. The Blazers got
Riley saki. "With Steve Johnson no closer than 17 In , the final
out and Klkl not available, It left period.
them . with few offensive
In the only other NBA game,.
options."
·
. Atlanta
routed the LA Cjlp~rs
Sal~ Portland , Coach Mike 121-84.
Scb1iler: "We could not estabUsh
Hawks 121, LA Clippers M
an Inside game a11d we tried to
'At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
4 Roil
· live by the perimeter jump shot. sc!)red all 26 of his points In the
Pkg .
We couldn't get anything going." . first half to seild the Clippers to
limit I With $1 0.00
The Blazel'll hit Just 28 percent . their sixth straight defeat. Allan:
Additional Purchase
(27 of 95) from the floor, the
ta's Glenn Rivers l)ad 15 assists
lowest In the team's 18-year In the llrst half to set a franchise
history. Clyde Drexler had 24 and Omnl record. The Clippers,
points to lead Poffland.
who shot 34 percent · from the .
Portland's Maurice Lucas field; havf lost eight of nine
.
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I would suggest that Instead of
terminating the Palestinian In·
formation Office In our nation's
capital, we should terminate the
policy of refusing to talk With the
PLO. Any lasting peace must
Involve the participation of both '
Israel adn the PLO. ·That Is a
necessary pre-condition for
peace and security for the people '
of the Middle East. ·

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live· suggestion anybddy has
Yet he has a cast-Iron grip on !
come up with In a long time.
his pro-Reagan constituency In !
There Is, Broder points out, a
eastern Wasblngton, and one 1
nationally known and widely · can't help feeling that It's basi· :
popular Democratic political
cally a matter 9f style. Like . l
leader on whom the party could
Reagan himself, Foley comes. · J
unite, yet who has been over· · across as genuinely nice and,
looked thus far In the presidential
above all, non-threatening. Fl· · :
handicapping.
\
nally - and one of the most ~
Hls'name Is Thomas .S. Foley,
Important. points' of ~1, ll)ouaft ;
for 2J;.yeah ·bmgressman •froJDI ~· W·ldely~ overlooked ,U,ije ""'lall&amp;t
the Spokane area of the.state of from the Far West, a region
Washlngtqn and now majority .where the .Democratic Party
leader of the U.S. House of · simply must make Inroads If lt Is ,
Representatives. A Roman Ca· ever to capture tlie White House. · 1
tholic and a protege of the late
There Is, In fact, only 011e Oy In
Sen. "Scoop" Jackson, Foley
the ointment. As majority
(who is 58) hasthesllgbtlyjo~ly.. leader-, Foley Is the odds-on · .
sllg~tlyportlybearlngoltheklnd
favorite to succeed Jim Wright . . :
of actor Hollywood used to cast as speaker of the House some- ''
as president back In 'the days of day. And while there Is certainly 1
Edwin Arnold.
•
no sign that .Wright (who Is 65) Is ··;
In political terms, Foley's planning to retire, his entanglevoting record· is liberal enough to ment In corruption chargea Is
satisfy all but the most rabid deepening and his future Is 1
Democrats.' His cumulative rat· obscure. Foley must therefore '
lng as of 1984, as calculated by weigh his ~eal chances of becom· · ·~
Americans for Democratic Ac· lng speaker ~alnst ·Whatever •
Uon, was 80 percent out of a hol&gt;e 'a ,. moderate and likable' ;
possible 100; th'e American Con: Democrat may be thought to . ;:~
servative Union clocked him at 1 haveofwlnnlngthepresldencyln ' ·
only 26.
1988.
· '·

had not · backed away from Its
·Initial approval of this raid,
Bourgulba sw:ore he would have
broken relations with the United
States. It was clear from· !his
conversation that the Israell raid
~ and the belief that the U.S.
countenanced It - was the most
serlous·straln ever experienced
in U.S.-Tunisian relations. · ·

•.

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,November 1988 presldh.entlal elec·
tlon and that it could create"ii
solution with which l&gt;c•tli Israelis
and Palestinians could live:

)

De-.IIWilmllllt.o

•I
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William Rusher

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By MIKE RABUN ·
. 84-yarder In the flrstq~Jarter that Orleans ' 9.
.
. · ' .. . Saturday for an NFC divisional .
trPISportiWrltet .
gave the Vikings the lead for
Mlnnesota'svlctory , ltsflrs~in
round. game. Washington will be
good, and Minne~ta put the post-season' In five years, ·sends at Ch1cago Sunday for the other
NEW . ORLEANS (UPI)
Anthony ..Carter and the Mlnne·
game away with a desperation the Vikings to San Francisco next
. Continued on page 7
sota ·Vikings turned New Or·
pass at the end of a 21-polnt
leans' party Into a wakeSuQday.
second quarter.
The underdog VIkings doml·
A "Hall Mary" 44-yard pass
nated every phase of the NFC's
froin Wad~ Wilson to Hassan
wild-card jrarne and produced
Jones after time explredln the
two long-distance scoring plays _ first half- a play Mi!lrleS!Ita had
In the first hall to rout the Saints
a chance to run only because the
· In their· first ever ~t·SHSOII
Saints.had 12m~ iin tl!e (Ield oneappearance, 44-10.
·
play earlier- casta palloY,er the
New Orleans'. season came to
Loulslaha Superdome. ·
an .abrupt halt after tile Saints
·That.gave the Vikings a 31·10
hact pul together a club r~o~ · haUtlme lea4 a~d .J!18de the '
nlne•game winning streak and
result a foregone conclusion. ·. ·
the NFL's second best reeord at
Minnesota, which lost three of
12'3.
Its last four regular season
It was the most' one-sided · games, outgalned the Saints .wild-card game since the NFL
417 yards to 149. The S,ints
lnaUtuted tllem Ia 1978.
turned the ball over six times,
Carter caught a scoring pass . Mlnneaota held the ball for more
and produced the longest punt
than two- thirds of the glfme and
return In NFL playoff blstory, an· made 28 first downs to New

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Vikings, .- Oilers advance in NFL playoffs
..

Iowa (IN)

1L Mldilpa (A-4}

,.... "eek'.,

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board of dlreciors voted to give~
Byrt that the luxury accommoda,
board members of the board
lions
will be used primarily for
$78,500 each in stock options,
business
conferences. Presuma· •
reaso11ing that It would be an
bly,
It
wouldn't
lOOk right for
added "Incentive." .
AMEX
people
to
have those
The latest example oftheplush
meetings In their own offices.
fringe benefits available to cor·
The resort conlplex will be
·porate VIPs Is a resort homplex
available
ror private use by
now under c.on'structlon . by
vacationing
V!Ps who don't have
Shearson-Lehman at the ·prlcey
any
busin'
e
ss
on thir atenda, but
Beaver Creek ski resort near
only
If
,
they
. reimburse the
Vi!ll, Colo. Company officials
refused to discuss the details 9f · company. We thus predict the
this Incentive and have told need for a lot more AMEX
others Involved In the project not business meetings when )he
powder Is fresh. Maybe some of
to discuss It either.
A Shearson-Lehman spokes· the folks can even get AMEX to
pick up the tab for a $32·a·day ski
,Pass at Beaver Creek If they talk
shOp on the lift.
One company official, former
President Gerald Ford, won' I
· need to borrow the company
~ondo. He lives just d!lwn the
street from . the Beaver Creek
complex. Ford takes home about
$200;000 a year as li part·tlme
adviser and consultant to
Shearson·Lehman.
·
Other former government offl·
chils have also found AMEX and
Its subsidiaries a great place to
work. The board of directors
Includes former Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger and
former Transportation Secre·
tary Drew Lewis. Each takes
home more than $36,000 a year
serving on the board, not lnclud· .
lng stock optiOns.
·
But that lsn' t all. Some celebrity board members pork out at
the AMEX trough ln a varlf!Y of
ways. Kissinger gets an apdl·
tiona! $420,000 a year as a
consultant and lecturer for
AMEX and Shearson·Lehman.
Lewis was a top executive for
the former AMEX subsidiary
Warner Amex Cable for less than ·
three years, and he collected
$12.6 million via salary, stock
optiOns and bonuses.

II. (llo)

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Por:neJOY-Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

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If

JenUiry4. 1988

Let's talk to the.·PLO _____Ge_or--'-ge_M....__cG_ove_rn',
.

In March 1975 I visited Israel
and a number of Arab states for
discussions with heads of state
and foreign ministers. I also met
.
$2.25-per hr. and I didn't live on with Yaslr Arafat, chairman of
Mr. Editor
I would like to publicly express welfare either, so it looks to me ' the Palestinian . Liberation
by oplnon on the teachers strike I like their Interest Is more In the Organization.
The previous night I met with
have no children involved but I dollar than it fs In the children or
several
afflue~t Lebanese "re·
having,
a
job.
I
think
they
should
have grand children involved. I
jectlonlsts."
They cOuld not
be
back
to
work
and
forget
this
can und'e rsland the Board not
tolerate
the
notion
of an Israeli
stuff.
silly
wanting to commit themselve's
state
and
demanded
that the
E.R.
Scarberry
to pay ·money they do not have
Israelis
be
expelled
to
make
26680 Mile Hill Rd .
and don,;..t kriow if they will have. I
room
for
the
Palestinians.
Racine, Ohio ,
underlta nd the teachers make
In contrast I found Arafat to be
$100 plus per day if that Is so the
considerably
more. reasonable. ·
way . things are loo king within P.S. Like some have brought out
When
I
asked
If
he would accept a
four or . five years they will be we are paying more taxes now
lUCkY to have a job making $10 thari we can afford In another ten settlement that created a Palest!·
per day. I raised a family anp we years Meigs Co. will own all the nlan oomeland1:m the West Bank
didn 't sta rve to death and my homes and land in the County for alld the Gaza Strip, while recog·
nizlng the right of Israel to exist
largest wages I ever made was taxes .
Thank You as an independent Jewish state,
he answered, "Yes.''
When I announced this In
Jerusalem two days later, I was
told by an American Embassy
By United Press International
official that Argfat would deny
Today is Monday, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 1988, with 362 to foll~w.
the statement. He never dld.
The moon Is waning, 'moving toward Its last quarter.
That remains his position 12
years later.
1The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury , Venus and Jupiter.
In 1987 I met wlthArafat again.
Those ' born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
I was accompanied by several
Include folklore and.fairy tale collector Jakob Grimm 1785; teacher of
prominent Americans, Including
the blind Louis Bra llle in 1809; shorthand wriUng 'System Inventor
former Secretary of the Treas·
Isaac Pitman In 1813; Charles Stratton, the midget known as General
ury David Kennedy. The mission
Tom Thumb, In 1838; Illinois Sen. Everett McKinley Dirksen In 1896;
\'VaS sponsored by the Americanactress Jane Wyman In 1914 (age 74); boxer Floyd Patterson In 1935
Arab Affairs Council ·- a moder·
(age 53), and actress Dyan Cannon In 1937 (age 51).
. .
ate organization attempting to
Improve U.S. · Arab
On this date in history: . · .
.
understanding.
·
In 1885, Dr. William Grant of Davenport, Iowa, performed the first
A.galn, I found Arafat to be
appendectomy. His patient recovered.
reasonable. He now advocates an
. .rn 1951, ,Chinese and North Korean forces capll,!~ the South
International peace conference ·
·
Korean c~pltal of Seoul.
to resolve the troublesome COl!·
In 1974, Preslden t Richard Nl'xon refused to release any more of the
filets of his region. He would like
500 c!Qcuments subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee.
the PLO to be Included In such a
In 1985, Israel confirmed that 10,000 Ethiopian Jews had been Down
conference as part of an all-Arab
to Israel. Ethiopia termed' the operation "a gross Interference" In Its
delegation. He believes the con·
affairs .
~
fere,nce should be held before the

'• "

••v.

candidate

A· new
With the Iowa caucuses barely
a month away, the Democratic
presidential contest has deteriorated 'Into such a mess that
James Reston has begun wonder·
lng ;~loud lfJhe Republicans are
somehow behind it.
The Six Dwarfs have been
battling for the prize for several
months now., with the· dismal
result that Jesse Jackson Is the
nominal front-runner and the
rest of the field Is strung out
behind .'him, most of It In .
single-digit territory.
This state of affairs has finally
tempted Gary Hart to barge back
Into the race, and various polls
already Identify him as the new
front :runner. Unques tlonably
this is In part a reflection of the
Democratic voters' acute dis· .
contel\1 with the other alterna·
lives available to them.
Nevertheless, it Is simply out of
the question for the Democrats to
nominate Hart, even If they are
prepared to see America plas·
tered. come fall, with billboatd·
size versions of that shot of Hart
at Bimini with Donna Rice on his
lap and the words. "Monkey

I

MOIIMy• ....._., 4, 1988

Page 2-The Dilly Sa 11lnal : ·~
Pon~ Midcllport. Ohio . :

.

Not enough rpom ' at' trough

111 Court Street
'Pomeroy, Ohio

'
.
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aai.,tant Publisher/Controller

. ._.,..
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The Qaily ·Sentinel
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Comment

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liiiftiPOWIR
...

IINOU:OOPY

PiliCI:

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SUIII&lt;rtborl

not dNirhlllbpay thP&lt;ar·

rler ~remll Ill advu.. dlrOOI 10 ·
Bentllle1GIIa3,1•1Jmoelb
ball.
Hwllt.atvenoarrt•ftcb

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4 The Daly Sentinel

Monday,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.ianuarv 4, 1988

Monday, January ,4, 1988

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Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Area deaths

1oo Mei.us
par. nts .. Contl.nued r_rom _page 1
"'0'

•Hospital .news

come.
"
" We are the voters and the
taxpayers," a parent said . "To-.
Saturday Admissions be pointless lor parents to be refuse to be InII m !dated bY gether we can have a powj!rful se.hp Roush, New Haven, W.Va .,
R. F.. Schoonover
19061n Meigs County , a son o!the
during the strike and ·
d
sa· turday Discharges - Cryslate John and Leoma Blake. The sending their children durlni the teachers
Influence," sal another.
Ike I
tiled
th
th
at after e str
s se
'
Anothermeetlngofthegroupls tal' Prldemore, Allen Eichinger,
Russell Eugene Schoonover,
Rev. Mr.·Baker was founder and strike.
to be scheduled right away, at _ Anne Wagenhals, James Bailey,
Plrie-Air Village, Athens, !orformer pastor of the Hocking . !'\rents whose children have they wilL not allow . acts of
actherts wd hotsmay
which time, formal organization Daisy HagiY. . . . .
.merly .of Meigs County, died · Valley Tabernacle for 36 years. •· been attending school sgedlnce the reprisal, by te
1ns s 11 en
0
encoura
parangry,
•ga
w
sunday Admissions - James
•
reopening
also
He Is survived by his second
Sunday at Doctors' North Hospl- ·
of Paren~ · For Education
may
h ooI du rl ng th e
ents
who
have
not
been
sending
attended
sc
McClellan,
East Liverpool; Lawtal ln. Columbus following· an
wile, Mrs. Forrest Adams Baker,
lbelr children to begin doing so.
strike.
•
take place.
Reedsville; three ·sons, Mike
extended Illness .
·
Following Sunday's meeting,lt ton Templeton, Pomeroy; DoMr. Schoonover was a retired Baker, Logan; WIUard Baker, . · Although Parents For Educa- - They said they want to work was explained . that a panel of · rothy Brewer, Portland; Chesler
parents, P\!. rhaps one from each· Young, Long Bottom; Crysta:l
Raleigh, ·N. c., and VIrgil of lion began as a support group of with the teachers and the admln·
ell)ployee of stores recelvtng at
.
Nakomls,_Fia.; a daughter , Mrs. friends , It appears to be turning llltratlon for the better education school In the Meigs district, may ~uth, Pomeroy.
Ohio University In Athens. He
be formed to speak tor the entire · • Sunday Discharges -Joseph
David (Eileen) Van Fossen- Into much more. The group hopes of their cblldren after the strike
. WfiS ·a .1956 graduate_of Rutland
group.
Roush, Sara Cullums, Frank
High SchoOl.
.
. . .Goose Creek, s. C.13 grandchild· to become a !otmal organization Is settled', 'without picking sides
ren and 16 great.grandchlldren.
Preceding him In death were
goals and
purj)oses;
and stated
to continue
efforts
long · duThrtng·the
ey sa14sttrhlke.
ey wa· nt to take an
Besides his pai'enis, be was with
his parents; Clarence and Freda
the
settll!lg
of
the
current
active
role,
even
a political role If
beyond
Little Schoonover, and four. preceded In death by his first
necessary,
to
ensure
the educatrlk
wife, Mrs. Mary-Baker, to whom
brothers, William, Edward, Clars
Gr~~p
members
said
they
t!Qn
of
their
chI
ldren
lor
years to
he was married lor 61 years aild
ence, Jr., and Lindy.
who preci!di!d hrtn. In death on
'Surviving are hill )Vile, Betsy
Dec. 9, 1984.
•' . Pedigo Schoonover: a .s ister,
Services will be held atll a.m.
· Juanita Bolen, Columbus; five
brothers, Jack of Marietta; . Bob .Wednesday at the Hocking ValCOMIINATION DINNER ONlY.
FOI JUST
ley Church of the Nazarene with ·
of Callfofl!ta; Charles and Tho-.
the Rev. Charles Williams o!!l(Dinint · - Oftly)
mas, blilh of Rutland; Jerry of
Servetl
with
whiptleGpotl!foes,
chicken &amp;riYy, cole
clatlng.
Burial
will
be
In
the
·•
Cheshl~, and his mother-In-law,
siiW, hot roll, butter and coffH. Sorry, no substi·
.
church cemetery: Friends may
Eloise Pedigo ol The Plains.
lutes except bevera&amp;e wiih additiOIIII price.
•
call at the Heinlein-Brown Fun- .
• '
servtces will be held at 1 p.m.
NOW FEATURING HOMEM
DINNER ROLLS
eral Home In Logan from 7 to 9
WedneSda'y at the Warren Funp.m. this evening, any time on
eral Home In Ne Isonville with the
Rev. ',James G. Knight offlelat_. TUesday wtth the family to be
present from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
lng. Burial will be In Greenlawn
PN... 2.5432
POMROY, OH.
a_itd until one hour preceding the
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Frlttl
Chlckn
•
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the funeral hol!lf !rom 2 to 4 and 7 services.
to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

1

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Jo(

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~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~;;~~~W~o~lf;o~rd~-~-;;,~~;;;;;;;;;,

·.
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JOHN A. WADE, M.D.- Inc.

•

$ 3 2 s·

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

.EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE IIA~E IIEARIMO.AIDS"
· CALL (61.)

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
Fpurth-ranked Pittsburgh
keeps losing players and winning

games.

'

''

,.

,.

The Panthers downed No. 9
Florida 80-68 Saturday behind 30
points from Charles Smith and 2.1
rebounds from Jerome Lane.
Pittsburgh Improved to 9-0, Its
best start since 1929.
Pitt has been playing without
guard Mike Goodson, who was
declared academically Ineligible
before the season, and swingman
Demetreus Gore missed · time
with an Injury. The latest loss Is
swlngman Rod Brookln, who will
miss the rest of the season
because of grade problems. He
was averaging 12.6 points a
game.
The losses have been offset by
the strong play of freshmen ·Sean
Miller ~ Bobby Martin, Jason
Matthews and Dare lie Porter.
The quartet combined for 35
points against Florida, Miller
hitting for 14.
Smith, a 1!-foot-10 senior cep'ter, played a solid all-around
game for the Panthers. He hit 10
of 17 shots from the field and
made 10 of 12 free throws·. He also
blocked 7 shots and had 3 steals.
"Before the game, I made the
mistake of saying Charles Smith
was having a'n average year lor
him," Florida Coach Norm Sloan
said. "I said he would probably
break out against us and he did.
He gave an Impressive
performance."
Lane, a 6-6 junior, finished with
just 3 points but said he was not
concerned with scoring. • ,,. ·
"This year I'm strictly playing
within the system," Laqe said.
' 'It's my job to try to get as many
rebounds as I can."
Vernon Maxwell led the Gators, 8-3, with 20 points and
Livingston Chatman added 16.
· In other games with ranked
teams, No. 1 Arizona fell to New
Mexico 61-59, No. 2 Kentucky
stopped Georgia 84-77, No. 3

Findlay ~dges ·Rio
80· 72. in road tilt

Nor¢ Carolina downed UCLA. ·

80-73, No. 5 Wyoming ripped
Stephen F. Austin 94-55, No. 7
Syracuse thrashed Siena 123-72,
No. 14 Nevada-Las Vegas beat
New Mexico State 69-64, No. 16
Georgetown edged Miami (Fla.)
82-78, co-No. 17 Iowa ~tate
poUnded South Dakota 95-61 and
No. -~o Missouri routed Tulsa·
92-48.'
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At Albuquerque, N.M., Hunter
Greene knocked away Sean Ell!Qtt's shot with five seconds left to .
preserve a New Mexico lead and
give the Lobos a victory over
previously unbeaten Arizona.
Greene swatted the ball away
from EIUott as the Arizona
forward · launched a 3-polnter.
Craig McMillan recovered the
. loose ball and threw up an'
off-balance try th;~t missed at the
buzzer. ,
At A!lanta, Rex Chapman
scored a season-high 26 points to
lead Kentucky over Georgia. The
Wildcats led by as many as 11
'ppints, at 70-59. with 5:49 remainIng, but Georgia closed wltbln
80,77 In the final minute. . Ed~ .
Davender hlt two free throws to
seal the victory.
AI Los Angeles, J.R. Reid hit 9
of 11 shots from the floor en route
to 25 points and Ranzlno Smith
contributed 18 points to lead
North Carolina past UCLA. With
the score 69-69. and 3: 37 remaln. lng, Smith hlt a 25-!oot jun\per ·
and benefited from a goaltendlng
call seconds later to give the Tar
Heels a 5-polnt cushion.
At Laramie, Wyo., Fennls
Dembo scored 19 pplnts and
Reggie Fox added 12 to help
Wyoming remain unbeaten with
an easy win over Stephen F.
Austin. Wyoming, 11-0, led_by as
· many as 44 points before Coach
Benny Dees cleared his bench. ·
· At Syracuse, N.Y., Rony Selkaly . scored . a se~son-hlgh 30
points to pace Syracuse dver
Siena. Syracuse outscored Siena
24-4 during a 6: 50 span early In
.· the game to move In, front 35-15.

t -

· FINDLA
Host Findlay
capitalized on a rafleil first half
performance by Rio Grande to
hand the Redmen an 80-72 loss
Saturday, the Redmen's se~ond
road defeat of the season.
Rio Graqde, flushed by Its twin
victories In the Ohio-Canada
Classic earlier In the week, came
out roaring In the first few
minutes, leading 10-4 before Ron
Niekamp's Oilers, th~ 1985-86
District 22champlons, reclaimed
the floor. ·
Turnovers proved to be . RID
Grande's enemy, with the Red menpostlng14ofltsgametotalo!'
19 during the first. half. The
Oilers, whose 7-polnt Joss to the
RedmenboostedRioGrandelnto
the NAIA Nationals In March
1987, held the lead to notch up a
41-25 halftime advantage.
The Redmen fought back In the
second half, narrowing the Findlay lead to 6 and later to 3 In the
last few minutes before the hosts,
led by 1986-87 All-District pick
Aaron Roth, pulled ahead for the
STEALS
- N.C. Stal.e 's Chris. Corchla!'l.(14) aleails the
win.
, ·
, , ·- ...
ball ll·om ComeU's James Paul (13) during second-half action
Roth, who pumped In 21 (iolnts
Sunday afteruooli. The Wolfpack defeated the Big Red. 95·72. (UPI)
for Findlay, w,a s paced by Rio
Grande' s Ron Rlttlnger, who also
~elkaly scored seven points durnetted 21. Junior gliard Jim
the Hurricanes.
111g the run.
·
At Ames, Iowa, Lafest~r Kearns, who scored 30 for
At Las Cruces, N.M., Jarvis Rhodes scored a game-high 26 - Grande against the University
l'!aslllght scored . 22 points and points and Gary Thompkins Guelph on Dec. 30, posted 20.
grabbed nine rebounds to help added 20 to power Iowa State past Junior guard Anthony Raymore
South Dakota."'i'iie Cyclones took added 13 ·and ·si!nlor starter Ray
UNLV remain urtbealen with a
triumph over stubborn New
the lead for good with a 10-0 surge Singleton had 11 for the Redrnen.
Mexico State. Gerald Paddlo early In the game. Tim Hatchett Findlay's other high scorer· was
added 19 pplnts lor the Runnln'
led the Coyotes wl th 17 poln ts.
Brian Stadler wl th 19.
Rebels, 10-0,
At Columbl;~. Mo., Byron Irvin
The Redmen were 50 percent
At Miami, Mark Tillmon
and Greg Church keyed a 15-0 run
(31 of 62 attempts) on field goals,
scored a team-high 24' points and ·. In tbe·. second half to power . compared to the Oilers' ·44
Georgetown rallied from ·a
Missouri past TUlsa. The Tigers
percent on 31 of 69 tries. ·Findlay
seven-point deficit In the second
also had a 20-6 run late In the first fared better at the free throw
half to nip Mlanil. Tlto Hor!ord
half. Tulsa shot just 27 percent line, sinking 17 of 28 for 67
from the floor.
scored a game-high 26 points lor
percent, while the Redmen were
63 percent ·on 7' of 11.
Findlay also led In rebounds
with 42, while Rio Grailde had 33.
Stadler and Cast~o MCClellan
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Buckeyes open Big Ten play Thursday night

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GENECADDES
UPI Sporis Wrller
For a freshman , Ohio State's
Perry Carter Is carrying a: pretty
heavy load on his wide shoulder~.
The 6-!oot-8, 235-pound Carter,
who leads his team In rebounds,
tipped in Jay ·Burson's missed
shot at the buzzer Saturday
afternoo~ to give the Buckeyes
an 85-83 win over Central
Michigan.
"I knew the clock was licking
down," said Carter. "I thought !t
(Burson's shot) was going In, but
I got In position just In case and it
came right off to me."
Carter gently tipped the ball
• back over the rim as the buzzer
sounded to give Ohio State only
Its second lead of the game as the
Buckeyes scored the first basket
and the last.
The Buckeyes, 7-3, open Big
. Ten play Thursday night at
Purdue.
"I'm looking forward to the Big
Ten," said Carter, who finished
,. Saturday with 15 points and 10
rebounds. "I heard It was a
·~·· . physical style or play and that's
1 the reason I came to Ohto Stafe."
·
Buckeye Coach Gary Williams
said Carter, a heavily-recruited
high school prospect out of
Washl!l~on. D.C., Is making
progress.
"You want a guy like that, who
takes up that much room, to be
around the basket," said Williams. "Perry's only a freshman
and sill! doesn't, see all his
opportunities to score. We want
to.get him to where It's a hablt!or
him to go to the basket every time
somebody elee .shoots. He was In
the middle of the lane this time
and In great position to put that
~llln.
·

I don't have to."
Carter's tip-In spoiled a spec,
tacular 45-polnt effort by Central
Michigan's Tommie Johnson,
who hit 8 of 14 3-polnt field goal
attempts In scoring the secqnd
highest total ever against an Ohio .,
State team. Indiana's DOn
Schlund! had 47 pplnts twice
against the Buckeyes In th~
mld -1950s.
"There's not many guys who
can shoot with power from that
range," Williams said of Johnson. "He gets upwell on his jump
sl\ot and Is tough to cover."
Ohio State led 2-0, fell behind
16-4 and trailed all the way until
Burson tied the game 83-83 with a
3-polnt flekl goal. Burson led the
Buckeyes with 26 pplnts, Jerry
Francis had 25, Carter 15 and
Grady Mateen, making his first
start, had 10.
Dan Majerle added 23 points
lor Central, which slipped to 5-6
heading Into the start of the
Mid -American Conference season Wednesday · night at home
against Eastern Michigan.
"Tommie plays awfully hard,"

·H~lzer Night ducats
are available for tilt

' were top rebounders, each with 9.
Rlttlngal' and senior center Doug
Fogt each had 6 rebounds for the
8edrnen. Findlay recorded U
turnovers.
"
Now 12-4, Rio Grande enters
conference ' play on a fulltime
basis Tuesday at 7:30p.m. when
It hosts Malone, which lost 72-l!ll
to Defiance Saturday.
.•
FINDLAY (80) Brian
Stadler, 8-3-19; Anthony Slappy,
6-1-13; Todd Horman, 2-0-4; Pat
Nolan, i -3-5; Aaron Roth, 9-3-21;
Eric fogt~ 2-5-9; Castro McCieiian, 3-1-7; Desmond Buford,
' 0-2-2. TOTALS-31·11-110.
"
RIO GRANDE (72.) - Ron
Rlttlnger, 9-3-21; Ray Singleton,
5-1-11; Doug Fogt, 1-0-2; Jim
Kearns, 8(1)-3-20; Anthony Raymore, 6-1-13; Brian WatkinS,
1-1-3; Rob Jackson, ·1-0-2: To, TALS 31(1)-7-12.

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1---------.,....,........._
Diet Pills Swwapng US.
'

Doctors Invent. .
'Lazy _Wrt' to .·

' .~Beatrl~
Donohew
rf " ~ ' -

•." . ~

.ol "

Beatrice A. Do119hew, 12; 1009
· Memorial Drive, flomeroy, died
Saturday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A, homemaker, Mrs. Donohew
was born Dec. 22, 1915 In ·
Cottageville, W. Va., a daughter
of the late Carl and Bessie Roush
Bennett. Sbe was a member of
the United Methodist Church and
an honorary member of the
~;taclne Fire Department Ladles
Auxiliary.
Surviving are two brothers,
Ben Bennett, New castle, Pa.;
Emery Bennett, Ra; venswood,
vi. Va.; three sisters, Blr41e
Rhodes, Jacksonville, Fla.;
Bridget ,Snyder. Millwood, W,
. Va., and Beulah Gilbert, West
Lafayette, OhiO and several
nleees lind nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her busbani!, · Archie Donohew, five
brothers and three sisters.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wlili the Rev. Steve
Deaver officiating. Burial will be
In Letart Falls Cemtery. Friends
may call at the funeral hOme
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.

Lose Weight . /

. NeW .,., ....,... Ollf Pill
~,...

"

..Wglif Loa

BEVERLY HIUS, CA (Speciii)An ~new Wl!i&amp;llllou pill caQe,c1
"fat-magnet" · hu recently been

.developed and perfel;led by two proillinentdoclon Ill --'d limoul holpilll

"'I

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...

in Los An,eles that reponedly
"guarantees' lhat )'OU will euUy kiee
tat by simply tlkina their Jelled and
pnMII pill.
.
No Dleflng-&amp;t Notmlllr '
Best orall, ")'OU can 001111nue to eat
all of)'CI!I' tiMlrile foods IIJd )'OU dcJ!I't
haw to ctw.e )'OUr normal eatirig
habits. \bu w111. sUut lolina 111 froin
the very fint day, until )'011 achieYe tl'te
ideal v.i:isht and fJ811re )'011 desire:"
1'bm has ~been lll)1hin&amp; tiki:
it belbre. It is a totllly new ma,ic!r

,I

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said 'Central Coach Charlie Intermission lead. ·Kent got as
Coles. "II he's fresh, he's proba- close as 56-53 with 16: 30 left In the
bly one of the best playets In the second half, but Xavier went on a
country. I think with Tommie 19-11 spree In the next eight
and Majerle, we have two ·guys minutes to put the game a \Yay .
Holzer Cllnlc will host the next
medical breakthrouah lbr weight loSs
who . can play with anybody ,"
Reggie Adams led Keqt State
(worldwide J111e111 pendii!aJ.
·
·, At Athens, Marty Lehmann )"lth 25 pplnts and Mitch Soward Booster Night with the Rio
G
rande
Redmen
at
7:
30
p.m.
,
~
,.,
Out
of
llodr
•
scored 15 points and Reggie added 23.
In
Lyne
Center
when
.
TUesday
The
pill .
illel callCd
Ran.kln and Paul Graham 12 each
as Ohio University coasted to a · Fred King's 19 points and 17 by Rio Grande hosts Malone· In a
79-66 win over Bluffton, desplte_12 William\ Branch led Toledo to a Mid-Ohio Conference game.
into thousands ol particles, each ~­
Tickets for the game are
of 23 3-polnt!leld goal shooting by 73-56 Win over -Army. The
. likcalinyiJllll*, ·~"and
the Be.a vers.
. Rockets went ahead lor good 'on available, free of charge, at .the
111111)' times its li2ie in fl!l partimain·
branch,
the
Syca·
clinic's
Cles. Then, all that tnpped fat:ls
back-to-back 3-polnt · field goals
by King and led 37-31 at halftime. more branch In Gallipolis and at · naturally "flushed" riJht out or )'ll!lr
BluUton's Jeff Sass, who was 6
• Its Middleport location.
body because it cannot be di~.
of 10 from 3-polnt range, led all
Within 2 dlyl )'OU wUI notice _.
scorers with 22 points .
Chanp in the color of )'0111' 11001 as
Shawn Roberts scored 21
the fat perticlel are bei• ellmi!Dd. ·
points to lead Akron to a 63-57 win .
..,.. Oo All !lie
over North ·carolina A&amp;:T. The
Ammlil!l to the docton, the fatZips, trailed by a:s many as 8
mapel pills do all the .oot while )'OU
points before a Roberts free
quickly
l01e fat with no~J:'
throw gave them the lead for
rnemu
to
illlow, no calorie
,
good.
no
aen:iaina,
IJid
no
_hiiiiJM
p~~~p.
Xavier ran Its record to6-2 with
It il 100" K \bu limply tab the
a 92-78.; win over Kent State
.
pilla
• • ghiill orYo81er~ rneall.
behind Eric Strong's 27 poln,ts
The filt-IJIII8lld pilll 11M jUII ~n
and 26 by Byron Larkin.
ofi:ml to the Ameiican )l!lb!JC and are
Xavier scored 13 of the last 15
already sweeplna the COUIIIry w.l!fi
points In the first half for a 50-~9

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Announcements

*"*"

•
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•
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IN.DIVIDUALS-FEDERAL-STATE
'
OUT OF STATE RmRNS
BUSINESS - SMALL OR. LARGE
PARTNERSHIPS
CORPOUnONS
OIL AND GAS

.

·.

reoontlalea IJid repo111 or~
wel&amp;htlou. It's the ''lazy~" tol01e
.weiaht filr people who enJI1y eadii&amp;·
Now Mllllble ID PuMc
lf)'OUneedtoloee20,50, l»pn•ncls

can order )'0111' llipply ·
new hi&amp;hiY IIJC : mtur fai.

or more, )'011

or •

IJIIII* pilll (DOW NiJible fram
. docb .. llllduli¥11
maUar

'

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To meet &amp;onlcllt
Racine VIDage Council will
meet tonight (Monday), 7 p.m.,
af the Shrine Club Park. The new
mayor, councllmembers aqd
members of the Board of Public
Affairs wilt'be sworn ln .

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CllarmiDI Sboppel ..•....••••••. 12%

..
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'~

Fectleral Mopl ...........:..••.•.. 33,.
Goodyear TIR ................•..~

aeet•a Jac........................... 1~

c:enturlon ··~·· .............. .39~
I
21
~ umltlld Jac......................... !~
. ":• , Multllltldla. Jnc ••....~............. 52\i
•t.- r Ita Rlltauraat1 ... ~ .............. 3~

,. .
.. "'
~

Kl)'

••'lad.. .........................

~~ ~· ................. TIS

SIIIOitleY'tl lac.·.......

....... w ••~. Jatl.

MIP'J

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•

Exitling

EJ&lt;Change

Pzopoaed

Exchange

Access Lines

Structure

Access Lines

Schedule I
Schldule II

1 10 3 000
·

~.001 to 6.000

Schedule Ill

,- ' .

&gt;

Schedule I

6•001 to 12 ·000 &gt; SChedule 11
12.0011o24.000
.

Schldule IV

Schedule v

24 ,001 to 48,000 &gt;
48,001 IO ,9 6,000

Schedule VI ,

Schedule Ill
·

0 0 • • • • • Ol 00 0 . 00 If

1 to

6.000

6,001 to 24,000
24,001 lo 96.000

Schedula VII
Scl!edule VIII

96,001 to t92 ,000 &gt; .Schedule IV · !16,001to 364,000
t92 ,0011o 384,000

Scl!edule IX
Scehdule X

364.001 lo 768,000 &gt;
768,001 and over

Sched 10 v

22

oooooo ; u,ooouooooouo516

W.l:lallllltaallld..................1.,.

B-1

. S1353
18.05
453

$13.02
t7.2t
4.19

$11 .90
15.60
. 3.70

$29.30
39.22
9.92

511 .96
16.94
496

$11 .56

$10.44
14.63
4 .19

$2498
36.29
11 .3 1 •

Marbalhead Exchange

Current Flat Ril.ta
Pmposed Aat Rate
Difterence

16.29
4.73

MechanicstoWri Exchange
Current ~at Rate
l'!opo8ed Aal Rate

Difference

$ 9.99
' 13.57

$13.53
18.06
4.53

$13.02
17.21

$11 .90

$11 .56
16.94
- 5.38

$11 .11

. 4..t8

Seamon Exdtange
Current F1al Aate
Proposed Flat Rate

.Ottterence. ·"' .
"

$11 .11
t5 .08
3.97

511 .56
15.74 .

Paris Exehailge
Current Flat Rate
PropOMd Flat Rate
Difference

Waverty Exchange
· Current Flat Rale~ '

Difference
Winona EICChange

•

Current Flat Rata
Proposed Flat Rate
Oiff~rence

3.58

15.60
3.70

4.19

$11 .56

16.94
4.96

t6.29
4.73

st 2.52
16.94
4.42

$11 .96
16.29
4 .33 .

making premise -Mils and 0011¥18111• varioua functions
while on the customer's pt eHd~s , u,on a customer's
request. The Company1is also lif'Oposing to replace the
current Central Office L11111 Conii8Ciion Charge, Initial and
SubseQuent, with a Central Office Charge and an Outside
p~ Charge to more appropriately rellectthe werk functions performed. ·
·
Present

.

$23.80
32.92
9.12
$29.30
.39.22

9.92

$ 9.99
$2360
14.63
36.29
4.64 . • 12.49

16.29
. 5.18

$11 .96

l'!opo8ed Flat Rale

$10.44
14.63

$24.98
36.29

4.19

11 .31

$10.89
14.63

$26.33
36 .29

3.74

9.96

Rate 1

u

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. KEY AND PBX TRUNK DISCOUNT
The Company is proposing that customers with more
than ;lO Key trunks or30 PBX trunks receive a disco~nt of
10% per trunk fOr each trunk.over thl! initial 30 trunks, if
the total trunks serve the same customer premise and are
billed to the
account. The discount would apply only
for Rat Rate Local Service and not Usage Sensitive Service.

same

Service Ordering Charge Initial. per occasion ·

Business

'

f:tesidence

4.9e
$14.65
20.05
· 5.4t

114.14.
1ue
5.12

112.80
17.31
4.51

~111"
1

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CunontRai-

PrCIHII-Id Flll RMe
~E

l.'llt
Cunont
.p, rtl JFIIIFIIIe

1'111-

DlilfaiMIOI

a;.. c.- Elocllo!w

1'111-

Cunont
Po 1 '1'111-

'

$15.73
21 .31
5.58

''

'a2.39
45.05
12-ee

$15.32
20.73
5.41

$13.75
18.37
4.62

$35.85
48.27
13.32

s1 t.ta 11o.ee
15.74 · ' 15.01
4.56
4.42

I 9.86

S22.48
32.12 .
10.47

115.11
21.31
8.20

113.311, . ~-11
18.37
...27
5.01
15.01

114.62
20.73
5.81

13.57
3:12

5:)5.25
. 35 .25

$39.05
. 32.05

i.oo

8.00

18.05
15.90

10.05
t0.05

9.20
9.20

10.0:)

10.05

9.20
920

13.65

14.70

5.70
5.70

6.50

25.30
25.30

35.75
35.75•

7.35
7.35

9.15

Service Ordering Charge Subsequenl, per occasion
Business

Aesldence
Premises V1sit Chal'~. per occasion ·

Business
Aestdence

Aepa.ir V.si' Charge, per occasion .
· · Busin~ss
Residence

. ''

Prro~ises Wiring Charge, each termination

Business

Residence

Station t:tandling CMrge.
per Item of equipment

•

Business
Residence

.1

_,.,.

Busine~

Maintenance of Service Charge,
each addillo~ quartet' 1\0\lf
Business
· Residence

6.50

The Company i6 proposing an introduction of option~l
Usage Sensitive Service (USS) to its one-party customers·
in forty-one additional exchanges. Also, the Company proposes an· increase In the exist:ng_USS aecess and USS
usage ra~. The usag~ rates are proposed to be increased
between 35.0"/o and 40.0%. Proposed USS access rate ·
increases In representative exch.a nges are:
Bellevue Exch"''QG
Cwrenl Access Rate
' Propo&amp;td Access Rate
Differet IC6

BoiiYar Excllange
Current Acceu Rate
' . . P!qlooed Access Rate

Dilrerence

•

Huron Exc:hange
Current Accoos Rate
Pu_.t Access Rate
OiHetenee
MOnt- ExChange
Accoos Rate
P!qlooed Acoes8 Rale

c..-

Dlfle""""'
~e.chlngo
eun.nt- Rate
Pnopoood Accou Rate

B-1

R-i

S15.95
22.06'
6.11

$ 7.75
10.55
2 .60

$20.61
30.18
9.57

$ 9.44
13.44
4.00

$18.65
7.63

$ 8.76
t2.10
3.34

$2t .70
30.18
8.48

s 9.82
. t3.44
3.62

2628

..

$17.64
$ 8.39
24.3t ' 11 .35
6.67
2.96

RESIDENCE LIFELINE SERVICE
The Company is Proposing to establish a Residence
utallne Service for one-party customers eligible for the
Home EnervY Auistlnce Program (HEAP) or the Ohio
EIIIIIVY Credit8 Plan (OECPI. The proposed Rtsidence
. Ufallne raiH- 57.4% of the p:opoled flat local aervice

· ra1e tnc~ ueage eaillitlve eervice acc:ees rate' (42.6% dis·
-. cOunt). Upoo appiOY8I of the Reekllnce LJf1tllne propoeat, ,
the ~ wt1 llle tor the n:atdlklll Fedelll Ufeline ·
"nlllliiiCI progrWn wHch -...up 10 S2.110of the mouthly
llillecllllllfllne clltllge. Upon FCC approval, the llfllc:tlve
ciiCounl for rnlclence lifeline
will be ..,.,axi-

masety!Q%.

cu--.

SERVICING CHARGES

~c:.·::=:.:r:-.:::=

9.15

Central OHK::e Une Connection
Charge lnilial. each tin8

' Business

R-4
$11 .34 . $27.~'
39.22
15.60
4.26
- t1 .38

Proposed
Rate

Mainlenance of Service Charge ,
first quarter hour

3S4,001 and over

$12.48
17.21
4.15

18.06

•
an.- Ela:lwtge

.

R-4

USAGE SENSITIVE SERVICE

Structure

01r"' encw

.Qty HoldfDI Co ................... 33

... "' ,

Current Flat Rate
Propc!IOd Flat Rato ·
Oillerence

EXCHANGE RATE GROUPS

Poopooocj All Rote

Boll Evana ...............~.........16

''

R-2

~- I

Mal\'em Exchar\ge

15.80

15.60

Residence

Ashland 011 ................... ;•••.• 57

"t ,, .'

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.
HOURS; MONI;)AY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
SATURDAY 9 A.M.·&amp; P.M.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

The application proposes to consolidate the 10 existing
rate groups into 5 new rate groups.

Cunont Floi-

Am Electric Power ............. 26%
ATI:T ................ .......... ..... ..27~

, " .. :

LOCAL EXCHANGE SERVICE

.-·jlo

!If 8Jut EIU. lo Lo'ewl

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.This notice contains the substance and prayer of the
application. However, any interested party desiring complelli detailed information with respect to aH affected rates,
charges, regulatioos and practices sh9uld inspect a copy
of the application and all attached schedules. at the office
ol the Como I . . '00, t8Q East Broad s-, Columbus, Ohio.
A oopy of the application may be inspected by 8tr'f Inter. ested party at the office of GTE NORTH INCORPORATED
located at 100 Executive Orilla, Marion; Ohio. A copy of
the awliealion and the p10posed tariff sheets are also BN ·1 Iie
for Inspection durlng normal business hours at any Phone.
Mart o~ Cuslomers,Servlce Point of GTE NORTH INCORPORATED. In addition, the proposed rates were mailed to
the mayors and legislative authorities of all municipalities
served by the Company on August28, 1987, as part of the
Company's I)OIWication of its Intent to file.
The application affects rates and charges for teleccinimunications services -to an customers of GTE NORTH
INCORPORATED provided purs1Jantto its Exchange Rate
Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 6, General' Exchange· Tariff;'P.U.C.O.
No. 7, and Facilities for Intrastate Access Tariff, P.U.C.O.
No.2.
Any personl firm, corporation or ass9Ciation may file,
pursuant to Section 4909.!9 of thli Ohio Revised Code,
objectiQns·to the proposed i(ICreases ahd adjustments in
rates a(ld charge•. and to the proposed changes ln regulations and practices affecting the same. The objections
may allege that such application contains propOsals that
are unju,st and discrlrhlnatory or unreasonable. Recommendations wflich differ frpm the applicetiOf} may be made
by the staff of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio or
by intervening parties an_d may be adopted by the
Commission.
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DlfiiHencw

(M ollt:IO Lm.)
arree lllld Mark Smtih

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$13.08

Dai)J Rock prlcea

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~CORPORATED

'Pursuant to the requiremenm ol Section 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised Code, GTE NORTH
hereby gives notice that on September30, 1_987, it hied with ttie Public
Utilities CommiSsion of Ohio an application (PUCO Dockei No. 87-1307-TP-AIR) for authority to increase and adjust its rates·and charges for telecommunocatJOns serv1ce and to change
its regulations and practices alfacting the same. .
·

C*r,.•ence

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Notice of Application of _GTE NORTH INCORpORATED
. ~or ·Increases and Aqjustments_in Rates and Charges

R-2

.:.~.· Stocks ·

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· The Rev. E. V. · Baker, 81,
Reedsville, formerly of Logan,
died Sunday at Camden-Clark
Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va.
Rev. Baker was born Nov. 30,

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Specific local service rates depend on the rate group
classHication applicable to a specific loi:ation. The 11verage
increases in monthly rates lor different classes of service
are as folloWs: residence one-party $4.80 or 37o/oi twoparty $4.22 or 35%; four-party $3.94 or 37%; business
one-party $10.89 or 40%; l&lt;ey trunks $13.65 or 40% and
PBX trunks $12.81 or 23%. The changes in monthly local
service rates for residence one-party, two-party a!ld fourparty exchange service and lor .one-party business
exchange service 'in representative communities, 9hould. ·
the requested Increase be granted in full, are sliown below.
Proposed rates for services in the Company's 232 other
exchal)ges are cbntalned In the proposed tariff sheets which
can bit inspected as stated previOUsly.

Rev. E. V. Baker.

~

"He's beeli uked to do a lot this
year for a freshman," Williams
added. "1 don't like to put
treslunen In a startlnj altuaUo~, If
(

Florence Snowden ·
Florence L. Snowden, 59, North
Madlaon Road·, . London, Ohio,
former, Melgs County resident,
died Saturday at' the Madison
County Hospital. ·
·
Mrs. Snowden was born Sept. .
28, 1928 at ProVIdence, R . I., a
daughter of the late Gabriel and
Angelina Infantollno Maglloll.
SurviVIng are her husband,
Arnold Eugene Snowden; three
daughters, Mrs. Bradley (Robin)
Johnson, London; Mrs. Robert
(Gena) Wood, Bidwell, and Mrs .
Krls Chappelear, Long Beach, ·
Call!.; two grandchildren, Mason and Jacob Wood, Bidwell;
two sisters, Mrs . Richard'
(Grace) Lancellottl, rtovldence,
R. I., and Mrs. Llda DILugllo,
Cranston, R. 1., and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral m8Ss 'Will be at ·9: 30
a.m. Wednesday at St. Patrick's
· C:atholic Church In London with
the Rev. Father Donald Maroon
officiating. Burial will be in St.
Patrick's Cemetery. Friends
. may call at the Eberly Funeral
Home In London from 5 tQ 8 p,m.
Tuesday . Rosary services will be
hekl at the tunex:al home at 7 p.m.
TUesday.

CIOW'S FAMILY lEST AUlA NT ·

·2104

Central Office Line Connection
Charge Subsequent, each line
10.40
10.40

BusineSs

Residence
Central Office Ctlarge. each line
Business
Residence

13.10

13 .10

Outside Pl~nt Charge , each line
Business

39.05
39.05

AeskieOce

MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES
Increases in rates and cl'!arges are proposed for some
miscellaneous services; namely•
• Foreign Central Office Service
• Directory Listings
• Qirectory Assistance Service
• Private Lme Services
• Off Premises Extension Line Services
Bel:ause the Commission has authorized the deregulation ol certain billing and coii8Ction services, the Company also pr!4)' Ito iiCt 1 as 1 its proposed basic BlCChange
rates by approximately 1.5"/o.

The prayer o1 the appliCation requests the Public Utili-..
ties Commission o1 Ohio to do the following :
(a) Find that the Company's present rates and charges
and th8 regulations and practices affecting the same are
unjust, unreasonable and Insufficient to yield reasonable
compensation tor .t he services rendered:
·
(b) Find that the rates and charges and regulations and
practices propo aed are just and reas6nable and will provide no more thin a fllr and ltiiOn8ble rate ol rewm on
the value of the eernp.ny·a preperty actually ueed and ·
ueeful for the COftUiillii11Ce 4lf the !ll*lic;
(c) Appreue the . , . 01 the p1 ; 1sec! schedule sheets
i:onlllr\ed In Schallllil !-t II Ill 'a,pfication, modified to
rellect IUCh retllllll• thereof • TMY. become vffectlll8,
pu!IUihlto Oldlrs of the Conwrlnlc!l, during ihelnterlm
blteuaen the filing of thl 11P1J11ca11on and .the date upon
which the IChldull ...... ileCCime llf«:tlvt;
(d) Older that the propo eed tchedule shfeiS become
~ tonhwtth;
•
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. (a) 1\JpiCMJIII wltiUII tl of the pr 111rt ac:f**-lhelts
oontllned In Sc:hedull E-2 of the IPtlllcat!On;
(f) GrtniiUiih llllarllllil
1'11111 a thl C4lmpMy
IIIPII
MIWQ.Isdtellt . . pl I !1. ·

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The form~ t11i1 NoUca hal bHn IIJPIIIWd by the Public UtiNtlt$ Comr&gt;~IIIIO!I of Ohl\).
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By 'fheBend
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' Th~ Daily Sentinel
,.

..Lung di&amp;ease seminar
.slated
for seniors
.

.Vikings ...
Continued trorn page l
NFC contest.
· "We didn't back Into the
playoffs, " Vikings Coach Jerry
Burns said. " We're here because
we belonged and I think we
showed we belonged."
.
· "San francisco Is fa&lt;Vored to go
to the Super Bowl," said Tommy
Kramer, who. shar~d time at
quarterback .with Wilson Sun·
day. "We're going to be' the
underdog. We can afford to take
. chances. Werenot .intlmldated .ln
any sense of .t he. W()rd."
The Vikings were not Intimidated. · Sunday by · the sellout
~ crowd and the fact they lost a
fumble on the second play of the
game that allowed a quick New
Orleans score on a 10-yard pass
from Bobby Hebert to Eric ·
Martin.
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Page

Special cl¢a:ning for special fabrics·
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H11ng the garment with eno11gh prevent soil. Treat .a spoi as soon Too often, we leave the owne11's
room In the cl95et to kepp It from as- poulble, absorbing the excess manual In a box or throw It out
..
being crushed.
spill and moisture then allow to with the wrappings. Only months
The hustle and bustle of Christ·
: "Ch!'onlc Lung Disease" and Citizens Center located on Mul- .
Coal or hall trees are great, but . dry, _theli brush. A gum eraser,'a later do we wish that the book ws
mas Is over. Here's hoping you
tlle Importance of Pulmonary berry Heights In Pomeroy.
not for leather coats. The shape dry sponge or a thick towel may In an easy to find spot or that we
· lfebabUitatlon will be the subject . Cunningham graduated from and your family enjoyed a
of the hook won't look too terrific be used to remove tbe' surface had taken tlie time to reail .·lt!
of the January. 1988 series· of Ohio State University In 1976 with special holiday. If your Christ· -It It's on the back of y_our jacket!
spot.
bne Item that surely wasn't
Health Maintenaace programs a bachelor of science degree In 'mas packages contained a new
Use a hanger.
Give your leather ga_rments under the tree but comes In
s~ jointly by Holzer Med·
microbiology and from Ohio leather coat or appliances, this
Use a scarf when wearing a seasonal care and cleaning be- handy Is white vinegar. II may
leal Center and Holzer Clinic University In 1985 with a master week's "In the Spotlight" has leather garp~ent to avoid neck- fore they become heavily 'soiled. prove handy though for some of
Oe,lped for community resl· of science degree In exercise some lips for you.
' line soli. .
Enjoy many years of servlceabii- tbe gifts you received. The
One of my favorite sme) Is Is
dents who are age 55 .and over.
physiology.
Keep leather away from heat, lty with your leather garment following home tips all use white
leatlier! If you were lucky
~ Featured speaker at Wednesespecially If It becomes wet. through dally allil perl&lt;&gt;!llc care. vinegar as a base for soaking Qr·
enough to get a leather coat or
Making the arrangements on
day's program· for Meigs County
Allow the garment to.dry.- away
If an applianee was tucked cleaning.
··
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jacket for Christmas, special
Senior Citizens will be John behalf of the hospital and clln~
from beat In a place where air under the tree (or next to It),
New shirts with bright eolors
care Is necessary to keep it
Cunn!Dgham, director of the . for this community lilformatlon
can circulate.
extra attention now will help you can CaUse problems OD Wl,lSh
looking Its best. Leather coats
pulmoaary and cardiac rehablll· program on "Chronic Lung DisOccasionally other · special be a more satisfied consumer ·ln· day! To keep colors from run- ·
and jackets are good Investtatlon program at Holzer Clinic ease" Is Mary Harrison, R.N.,
care may be needed between the future. Be sure to .take out the - nlng, soa·k new shirts In cold
ments
for long term wear.
$taff dE:Velopment coordinator at
.In GliWpoUs.
.
cleanings:
warranty card ail'd mall It In to water and white vinegar before
The type of leather, flnjsh and
This month's program Is sche- . the ho§pltai, along with Alice
Brush suede garments with a . . the manufacturer .. This assures washing.
color determine how often the
duled tor Wednesday afternoon, Wamsley, director of the Meigs
specially treated ' sponge de- you t~at If there Is. a detect or
To clean burned pans (from
garment must be cleaned. First
slgnl!d fo~ the purpose or a terry problem with the model 'yOU Christmas dinner or anytime) let
. Jan. 6, at .1 p.m. at the Senior County Senior Citizens :
check the hang tags on.'' the clolh 'towel (heavyweight). received, your will receive a the pan cool. thoroughly. Pour In
garment. They may contain
Brushing removes dust and loose notice. Also, If yQu experience vinegar and' let It sit overnight.
specific lnforinatlon·for cleaning par.licles of sou on the surface. problems, the warranty may The 1&gt;urned on food should wipe "
your coat. Generally, cleaning . Do not use a brushthatcouldmar cover repair or .replacement If away the next daY.
using special care methods Is
the surface.
·
you mall the card back.
To remove candle wax fro111
'
required. Since leather coats
Spot cleaning may-be done with
Next take a look at the owner's wooden flnlsl1es, soften lite wax
. represent a sizable expenditure,
c•re. For smooth leather, water manua). Thlsls~speclallylmpor- 1 with a hair dryer. Remove. wax .
thorough dally and periodic care
and a mild liand soap will remove 't ant . ·with app)lcances such as with a paPer towel and wa'sli with
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can prolong the life of the soli. Use a damp cloth and soap, microwave ovens, clock radios, aSO(UtlOD Of V(negar and I ater.
: The Child Assault Prevention on child sexual assault, a feml- garment and . keep them new . rub gently, and dry wltli a soft etc. that have more .than one
Happy Holidays.
tCAP) Project of Gallla, Jack· nisi .anal_ysls of community prev- looking.
clean cloth.
feature. Sit down when you have
Did You Know That: VInegar
Follow these dally care tips:
son, and Meigs Counties Is ention strategies. reporting laws
some time, read the book and can be used for a wide variety of
Hang leather coats and jackets · Suedes are difficult to spot . practice operating all thi! fe~i• home cleaning projects. For
gearing up for a· new year! The identification of a possible child
on a padded hanger to malntian clean. · You .may need io . take · lures of the appliance. Once you additional Information contact
Tri-County will be hosting a victim, and community organlz·
the shape of the shoulder atea: . them to a specialty ·cleaner but have mastered this, store the the Meigs County Cooperative
state-wide training.
log and administration of the
: The training will be conducted. project.
some quiet action will help book In a safe accessible spot. Extension Service at 992-6696.
by Judith Cunningham. S.tate·
In conjunction with the threewide Trainer for the National day training, a community-presAssault Prevention Center, Co- entation will be given by .Judith
lumbus, Ohio. The training will Cunningham, Monday the 18th at
begin January 19, 1988 at 8:30 · 6:00p.m., at the Comfort Inn. At
.
.
•fm. The training site wlll·be the. • this time, any Human Service
CompDed by:
.
Deem and Betb A. Deem, Olive.
Ethel Carson, Lots 10 &amp; 11 to
Russell E. Quillen, parcels to '
Comfort Inn, Jackson. ,
worker, law enforcement agency
EMMOGENE HOLSTEIN
Jonathan L 'Wells and Phyllis Ethel Carson and Dorothy Frl!drlc H. Rhodes, Letart.
Community members. con- or other concerned agency will
CONGO
M. Wells, Lot 375 to U.S.A. . Pence, Orange.
Kathryn E. j:lrown; dec'd,
cerned parents, and PTO be welcomed to attend.
Melp Couaty Recerder
Farmers Home Admin., Middle- ,
Shirley Jean . Harris, dec'd, corrected aftld to VIctor L.
members will be participating In
If yo\1 are Interested In working
port VIllage.
affld to Charles L.' Harris, Olive. ' Brown, Sutton.
Pomeroy, Ohio· 41178&amp;
,
the extensive three-day tnilnlng. with the CAP Project, contact :
Mary H. Plckens,,dec'd., aftld
Linda M. Sbaver, · tracts to
VIctor L. Brown and Allee M.
. Participants will be trained to Carol J . Edwards. P.O. Box 207,
Olin Bailey aka Olin A. Bailey, to Rankin Ray Pickens, Sulto_n .
Linda M. · Sl!aver, Christopher Brown, par~el to Danny Brad-.
implement th.e CAP Project Jackson, Ohio, or 614-286-5076.
c~rt of trans to Mabel M. Balli!y,
Freda S. Levacy, Lots 9 &amp; lOto Robert · Lemley and George ' ford Brown, Sutton,
. . ·
elementaiJ' currlculm within the
Training participants must atChester.
'. John L. Bass, Salem.
David Lemley, Jr., Salisbury.
' Marvin L , Keehaugh, Marjorie ·
Tri-Coun'ty. The three-day tend ·an three days and you
Sidney J. Manuel and Denise
Edwin G. Ash and Florence E.
.Jerome Goldberg, dec' d. Cert. · J. Keebaugh, Theodore Abo lin
agenda covers recent research should register early to reserve
M. Manuel, Right of Way to Ohio Baer, parcel to Timothy A. of Trans. to Jerome Goldberg Keebaugh lind Inez Claire Keeyour slot.
Power Co., Sutton.' ·
·
Curfman and Brenda K. Curt- Family Trust and Jerome Gold· baugh, parcel to Marvin L.
.
Deibert Bollinger and Mar· man, Sutton:
berg Marltlal Trust, Meigs.
Keebaugh and Marjorie Keegaret Bollinger, Right of Way to · · Bobby L. Porter, parcels to
Freda M. Hendersqn, dec'd, baugh. Orange, ·
Ohio Power Co., Salisbury.
Terry L. George and Vonda A. affld · to Clyde' V. Henderson, • Vldla Glrolaml, dec'd; atfid to
1
Homer
L.
Bonecutter,
Sr.,
·George,
Ru.tllind VIllage:
· Pomeroy Village.
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·
Guido Glrolaml, Pomeroy VII·
:: The Ohio · Valley Area.. local public library.
Sheriff's
deed
to
North
Central
John
Do
Frazer,
·
Audrey
Martha
J.
Ash,
dec'd,
affld
to
!age.
•
·
Libraries-OVAL-has produced a
"The Quality of Life" catalog
Mtg
Corp
nka
Shawmut
Mtg
Frazer,
dec'
d.
affid,
Martinsville
Edwin
G.
Ash,
Sutton.
John
R..
Nelson
and
Tamora
new Books-by-Mall catalog feat· Is limited to 200 titles with a focus
Corp. Middleport Village.
VIllage.
.
Tammy Putman, aka Tammy Nelson, Lot 55 to Mlc))eal L.
firing titles on "The Quality of on mental and ·physical health.
·
Shawmut
Mtg
Corp.
fka
.iilort~
Dora
E.
Foully,
2/
31nt.
minerRarber,
parcel to David Tyree, Miller and Gall A. Anderson,
Life''. This catalog through ser- · This ca,talog also has sections on
Central Mtg. Corp., Lot 96 to . als to Helen William and Linda Middleport Village. ·
Middleport Vlllal{e. · ·
)lice agencies In the ten county fitness, family planning, depresAdm.
of
Vetran
Affairs,
MiddlePimnybacker,
Lebanon.
·
Joseph
w:
Pullins,
97.75
acres
reglon.
slon and parenting. 1t was
port Village.
·
Gary J . Wolfe; Right of Way to tp ·Ernest Holbert Calaway and
Call A. Miller· ·(Anderson) .and
·.: You may see the bright green d~slgned to provide a variety of
Paul
R.
Roush,
1.9680
acres
to
T.
P.
ChesterWaterDist.,Letart.
Patricia
Lynn
Calaway,
Orange.
Michael
L. Miller, .402 Acre to
cover In Information racks all options on everyday problems.
Plains
Chester
Water
Dave
Weeks
and
Jeanie
Dale
C.
Warner,
·
Marybelle
John
R.
Nelson and Tamara J .
Tuppers
over town. Each county has
As with all other OVAl. Books·
District,
Orange.
Weeks,
Right
of
Way
.
to
Warner,
George
H.
Warne;,
.Nelson,
Rutland.
· ' '
targeted differing agencies to by,Mall catalogs, the only cost to
Warr.en
Rose,
dec'd,
affld
to
T.P.C.W.D.,
Orange.
Grace
M.
Warner,
parcels
to
ieffery
Michael
Workman,
(ilstrlbut~ the catalog, and in
the user is the initial s~mpon the
Pauline
Rose,
Sutton,
Ra}'
C.
Smith
and
Golda
M.
Edward
E.
Chaney,
Bedford.
Theron
K.
Workman
and
Mildred
addition. it Is available at the order card.
EariBiack, Jr. andRosemary Smith , Right of Way to
RobertK.Smith,dec'd,affldto
L. Workman, parcel to Theron
M. Black, Right of Way to T.P.C.W.D., Olive.
Florenee L. Smith, Letart.
David Workman, Pomeroy
Buckeye Rural Elect., Columbia.
Jack Carroll and.Mary Carroll,
. John Hale, Right of Way to
Village.
.
Ben Buckley, parcels to ChesSheila K. Anderson. Right of Right of Way 'to T .P.C.W.D .. · State of Ohio, Rutland.
Way to Buckeye Rural Electric, Olive:
William t. Klein, Lots23&amp; 24 to
ter Buckle~ and Nancy Buckley,
Columbia.
•.
Doak.Masters and Pearl Mas- Paul E . Wilson and Michelle L.
Olive.
. 1
David Dunkle and Betty L: ters, RightofWaytoT.P.C.W.D., Wilson, Salisbury. •·
PeariWebbandMarshaWebb,
Dunkle, parcel to James w. Olive.
Corbett E. Ratliff and Juanita
1.0001 '. Acre to Robert . Allen,
, INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - An children suffering from terminal
Ohlinger,
Salem.
·
Candy
Kay
Cox
and
David
Cox,
J.
Ratliff,
P,llrcel
to
Herbert
E
.
.Scipio.
,
I
Ethiopian gran4mother couldn't illness.
1
Otto.
Hartenbach,
dec'd
by
Right
of
Way
to
T.P.C.W.D.,
Whaley
.an
d
Sheila
Whaley,
·
Ray
W.
Miller,
dec'd,
affld
to ~
l'he foundation paid the grandhold back the tears ·when she
~.
exec., 6.21 acre to Franklin M. , . Lebanon.
Bedford.
Blondell J. Miller, Lebanon. ''
!
·arrived In the United States to mother's . travel costs of $1,804,
Rlz,er
and
Wanda
M.
Rizer;·
Mary
Ann
Kerns,
Right
of
Way
Dorothy
B.
Ehlinger
and
Nor.
Rlch~rd
A.
·
Slggelkow
and
;
fulfill the· Christmas wish of her . and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.,
Sutton. .
. \ to T.P.C.W.D., Lebanon.
man J. Ehlinger, lots to Rankin
Rose M. Slggelkow, parcel . to •
7-yellr-old granddaughter, who Is helped clear some red tape In
Maude
E.
Gray,
tracts
to
Jotm
J.
Stark
and
Eleanor
J
.
Ray
Pickens,
Porreroy
Village.
James
R. Eiselsteln and Alberta ;
obtaining travel documents for
suffering from cancer.
Robert
R.
Gray,
Jr.
,
Orange.
Stark,
Right.
of
Way
to
Doris
E.
Sayre!
dec'd,
affld
to·
R.
Elselsteln,
Olive.
.
Negeset Teclemarlan arrived the woman.
Ethel
Cozart,
parcels
to
Betty
T.P.C.W.D.;
Lebanon.
Herbert
L.
_
Sayre,
·
Racine
.
Thomas
Rue
and Velma n.
Tlmnet lived with her grand- .
Saturday night at Indianapolis
Combs,
Lebanon.
·
'
Ronard
G.
Allen,
Right
of
Way
.
Vlt'lage.
·
·
·
Rue,
parcel
to
Carol
Ann Harper,
International Airport and went mother In Ethiopia before the
Maude
E
.
Gray,
tracts
to
to
T.P.C.W.D
..
Lebanon.
Otis
Chutes
and
Vyona
R.
Bush
Pomeroy
VIllage.
.
Immediately to the Riley ,Hospl· child came to the United States
Robert
R.
Gray,
Jr.,
Orange.
Nor~
Eason,
Right
of
Way
to
aka
Vyona
R.
Chutes,
parcels
to
.
Fred
B.
Smith
and
Bertha
F.
tal for Children to visit her las I January wllfi her mother,
Clarice
J.
Kennedy,
tract
to
T.P.C.W.D.,
Chester.
Henry
Richard
Milam
and
Mary'
Smith,
27%
acres
to
Helen
granddaughter , T (mnet who was seeking treatment for a
Clifford J . Kennegy and Darla F .
Argyle L. Deeter, Right of Way · J.ou Milam, Olive.
Kathryn Windon and Virgil Wlil·
near-fatal liver disorder.
Ghebremlchael.
·
Kennedy,
Chester.
to
T.P
.C.W.D.,
Lebanon.
Gall
E
.
Bradford
and
Mary
A.
don.
Chester.
The child was adopted by her
The two hugged and the grand·
Nella E. Seyler and Richard D.
Roy Proffitt, Right of Way to Bradford, tracts to Anthony G.
Clifford .S. Kennedy, dec'd,
mother,1cupping Tlmnet 's face In aunt and unci~ eight months ago
Seyler,
Easement
to
GTE
North,
·
T.P.C.W.D.,
Lebanon.
·
•
Bradford
and
Becky
Bradford,
affld_
to Clarl~e . J . Kennedy,
~er hands-t began to ,cry.
. because they believed her
Pomeroy
VIllage.
Eula
Proffitt,
Right
of
Way
to
Lebanon.
Chester.
·
Inc.,
mother would die. The mother,
· 'f:lmnet kept talking.
John
C.
Ha,nnlng
and
Kathie
S.
T.P.C.W.D.,
Lebanon.
·
Anthony
G.
Bradford
and
Clifford
~Kennedy, dec'd,
Abrehet Ktdane, has since reco'.'She's telling her not' to cry,"
Hanning,
Right
of
Way
to
BuckDavldR.HolterandDeloresE
.
·
BeckyBradford,tractstoPaulL.
cert.
of
trans.
to Clarice J.
' explained Timnel's uncle, Rus- vered and Is expected to return to
eye
Rural
Elect.
Corp.
Inc.,
Holter,
Right
of
Way
to
Rowe,
Lebanon.
Kennedy,
Chester
&amp; Pomeroy 1
Ethiopia soon .
stom Ghebremlchael. "She saw
Bedford.
·
T.P.C.W.D., Sutton.
VIllage.
Tlmnet has been In the hospital
her shed tears and she was
Kathryn
E
.
Brown,
dec'd,
Dorothy
Braley
Tillis
and
Mira
Maliaktala,
dec'd,
affld
to
.
•
Donald Robson. dec'd, affld
for the past month suffer'titg from
upset. "
VIctor
L.
Brown,
Sutton.
Davtd
F.
Tillis,
.1214
acre
to
Satlsh
C.
Manaktala,
Lebanon.
.
Allee
Robson, Bernard ·F ultz,
affld.
to
cancer of the lymph glands. She
The reunion was made possible
Kathryn
E.
Brown,
dec'd,
Amos
Tillis
and
Ruth
L.
Tillis,
·.
Salish
C.
Manaktala
and
Kat·
SalisbUry,
·
..
had told her uncle she would not
by the Chlldl'en'S Wish Foundaalfld. to VIctor L. Brown, Sutton. Rutland VIllage.
. .
hleen Manaktala, % Int. 100 A. to
George Gum and Fay Gum, 1
open her Christmas presents
tion. a charity organization that
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings
Co.
Chester
Carson,
'dec'd,
affid
to
Peter
Elicker
and
Doris
Eilc!&lt;er,
acre
to Charles M. Salser and
until her. grandmother arrived.
~arks to fulfill special wishes of
A. Corp., 6 acres to William B. Ethel Carson, Orange.
Let&gt;anon.
Susan L. Salser, Salisbury.'
By CIDdy S. OUverl
Coun&amp;y•Exten•loa Areat

•

planned for
area .CAP volunteers

Meigs County property transfers _ ____,_
'

MiSSED OPPORTUNITY - New Orleans Saint cornerback
Dave Waymer (M) misses an opportUnity to latereept a Tommy
Kramer pass, lntende!l tor wide receiver Anthony Carter, during
first-quarter action Sundlly In life NFC wild-card game at !he
Superdome In New Orleans. The SaiDts lost their first-ever playoff
appearance to the.VIkings 44-10. (UPI)

I

lnte~fu!~p/e in tht~r '!1~'1£!u.s.

Whale swimming up·bay
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - 1\
· whale with a mangled tail was
slghtt!d swimming toward the
dead end of San Francisco Bay
and whale watchers hoped he
wasn't headed for a slough or
channel where he could get
stuck.
.
·
. " Personally, lthlnk it has gone
l)ack out of the bay.'' said Gary
€ombes, a state fish and game
warden who spent much of
Sunday , looking for the gray
whale that swam In from the
Pacific Ocean,
.
• The sighting was reminiscent
of Humphrey, the 4~- ton humpback whale that wandered Into
the San FrantfiCll: Bay two years
ago and swam 60 miles up the
Sacramento River before returning to the ocean.
Combes said no sighting&amp; were
reported after the whale was first
8een by fishermen at about 8 a.m ..
Sunday.
·
. · : About17,000 gray whales swim
past San Francisco each year
while migrating to Baja Calltor-

•

I

.

I

,

.

By United Pre8!1
·
MEETING THE GREAT MAN: During l'lls' vtsit to
Washington, Sovtet leader Mikhail Gorbachev lnvtted 50
American Intellectuals and artlsta to the Sovtet Embassy Dec.
8, among them Joyce Carol Oates. In an article published
Sunday In The New York Times Magazine, the novella! wrote
. that Gorbachev was Impressive In his speech on.Sovt,et glasnost
(openness) and perestroika (re•tructurlng); .
.
· She said that among the guests, actor Plllll Newmulater
described Gorbachev as a gifted performer whose "machlnery" of technique cannot be seen . ...., Kissinger, asked If
Corbachev was different from other Sovtet leaders he bad
known, replied: "Tl!lltone Is more skillful." ,
And Oates herself? "One comes away With the visceral
, certlt\ide that this Is a person of surpasslpg Integrity; a man of
the utmost sincerity .. . Yet one recalls too, more soberly, that
the political enthusiasms of past eras (for Uncle Joe Stalin, for
the bearded revolutlonlll)' Cutro, for the ascetic Ayatollah
Khomeln1, amoq others) can look rather bleakly Ironic In
· retroapecl. Hlstory ·ls the onJY true phlltisopliy." .
ANOTHER GARY BART JOKE: BaiJ Jhpe, while being
honored Saturday night ID Palm De~rt. Calif., at the gala
opening of a $20 million theater complex named for the
comedian, let I001e with yet another Gill')' Hart Joke.
·
"Naming a cultural center tor me Is llke namlq a monutecy
·ror Gary H~··, Hope quipped about the Dernocfatlc
presidential cand te who quit over ueucandal and Jateraot
back ln. !he race. T e fM.:yeat-old Hope, frelll from a workiWide

..

nla and 10to30wander under the
· Golden Gate Bridge Into San
Francisco Bay, and out again,
usually without Incident, offl·
ctals said.
The fishermen said the whale
appeared, to have a mangled or.
'&gt;adly bitten tall and was sighted
about 35 miles Inside the bay near
· Palo Alto, heading soutlt tqward
San Jose near the end of the bay.
Combes said the whale's tall
may be perfectly all right but
simply look strange because of .
enc~usted barnacles ·or unusual
pigmentation.
A spokeswoman for the state
Department Of Fish· and -;;arne,
which dispatched a boat to track
the whale, said the "report we
have Is that the whale hasa badly
bitten or mangled tall: We've had
a boat out watching for him."
There are nllmerous sloughs
and channels at the south end of
the bay and wtldllte officials
feared the · whale could become
disoriented and get trapped In
one of them, as did HumJlhrey.
I

.

.

I

t

~teuben

troop!.' was -presented with a
glass- "America's Hope Award" - by l'rellldentRearan, who
attended with wife, Naacy.
1
Taking part In the program were comedian Lucille Ball, actor
John l'ofll)'the and composer Alldrew Uoyd Webber·.
..
CONNAlLY PREPARES FOR AUCTION: Jehn Conully,
who sei'Ved as secretar;y of the Treasury under Richard Nlxoa,
Is preparing for an auction of his personal items to pay off his·
debts. The Dallas Morning News reported Sunday that moving.
vanswlllpulluptotheCopnallyhomeinFioresvtlle,Teias,thls ·
week to Clf'ry away personal belongings that wlii be auctioned
off Jan. 22-26 to pay off some of his $93 miUion In debts.
Connally, 70, '!'bo was Texaa governor trom 1963to 1969, flied
tor bankruptcy Ia July. Connally told the newspaper, "It •s going ·'
tobedltflculttoseethemmovethlqsoutotthathousethatha"'
been,there siDce 1968, but We're.reconcllecl to it. We want to dolt.
We think we lhould·do It~ "
·
'
THE BEAT GOD ON: 8o887lloll0 11111iled like a proud papa
New Year'• Eve at the openlq of the PalmSprlngs Convendo11
Center as he sang wtth his daqhlllr, Cbltlt)', "Th~ Beat Goes
On" alld two other aonp made famoua with Cher two decades
·yeara aao.
'' ·
. Cbutlty, anJ.8.year-oldfllmstutlentatNew.YorkUnlvef1lty
Jll8de her profe11lonal IIJIIinl debut with her father, ~
candidate tot mayor of tbe dnert I'IIOrt, aa part of a "Rocking
the Nlaht Away•_
• concert 10 be broldcut ID March.
Amoq tbe 250 f&amp;JII wbo pUS U a tleket at the poab lflalr
were.Jlm . . . 'l'e ~ ; Btlrunlld their IIIII Jim. OOiiif vet8raJ1
rec:ordlnl 1111111 Clll the bill llleblded ...., the Mn 6 111e

P.,_, Dollo¥aa &amp;lid .ru 6 Dtu. ·· ·

•·

'

•

~RO BEACH, Fla. (UP!) Things are pretty .cut and dried
with Cleveland Browns punter
Lee.Johnson.
The 6-foot-2, 198-pounder from ·
Brigham Young, who averaged
26.3· yards on four punts against
the· Pittsburgh Steelers Dec. 26,
knows he has · to"Improve or he
will be unemployed very soon.
"Sure, J'v~ got to (Improve),"
he said Sunday after the team's ·
first practice at Dodgert&lt;iwn. "I
came here with a ·purpose. and It
sure wasn't to shank punts, I C&amp;D·
tell ydu that."
·
Johnson, cut by the · Houston
Oiler's ' and Buffalo Bills this ·
season before being signed by the
Browns Dec. 11, said the adverse ·
elements In Three Rivers Stadlumill the regular-season finale
should have had nothing to do
with !Its horrible performance.

"Regardless of what the sltua- a .shoe, playing In Cleveland now.·
lion Is, It's still something that I'll probably ~tick with what got
can be done," he said. "It wasn't me .here. It's not the weather or.
a bad situation, though, really. the shoe. it's me.
·
There wasn't severe. wind, the ·
"When the ~eather Is cold; my
turf was In good condition and It
foot
feels numb after the game. It
wasn't raining." ·
feel's
like I'm kicking a rock
Well then, whl\1 happened?
sometimes."
· "I just didn't hit It," he Said.
Browns head cqach ~arty
"It was ohe of those things where
Schottenhelmer
said he has conI didn't drop It rlghtorhltltrlght.
My confidence Is good right now, fidence In Johnson. He has to, the
but If I had to kick the day after NFL rosters are now frozen for
the Pittsburgh game, I would the playoffs. Cleveland (10-5)
will host · the Indianapolis Colts
have been shaken a bit."
Observers have marveled at (9-6) In an AFC divisional playo'f
Johnson, one of a few barefooted game this Saturday at 12:30p.m.
kickers In the National Football
League. However, last week In
"I think he'll do fine." the bead
practice, he had a shoe on his left coach said. "He has a history,
foot.
and it's a pretty good .o ne. He 's
"I kick with a shoe In case It been an effective punter (this is
happens to be bad weather," he his third year In the league) , but
said. "I have thought about using · · he's In a slump right now.

VoWe .

GUN SHOOJ

DON'T LET YOUR REC·
TIICAL PIOILEMS IE·

EVERY .
SUNDAY·"
1:00 P..M.

COMf A SHOCK TO YOUI

PARTS

NEW AND USED

WIDE

.

SELECTION
ALL MAKES ~NO
. · MODELS.
CALL 742-2315

....... . .
""""' ...,...

RATE8

Howard

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

·-..-..-DI
.

.....

PDD,

-ltlll

'

-.u. .............

SUNDAY

.

'

__

Q- ... ~~~-~-- .....

- ~-·
)

:=::r-~r...:·

lOA"'

.. ona

I OIOifllo

. ... .

Ill .. .

oti.ID

"1 -ID

UUIII

011 .11111

• ·•

tlt .DD

.......

.....

"

,..,_,._
_ ".,' '_
o ...
·- · - -..,.,.
'""
",
'' 'ct~""'"Joa
_ _ _ ICho&lt;•

,

CIU.ifled pap• cour the

followi~« 1elephone nchortp•···

:==·

::rc:;~.

.t:"C::·: :

COl'¥ OIAIIliJit

·---

OOOfiiDUP&amp;HII
tuiiOA~ P&amp;""IO

WfiiJOIUII&amp;W
·-"~
l ... llllliOY 0-1'1111
IJIIII&amp;Yr&amp;KII

n,........~

IJU•ou ••0111

Public Notice

WHIR HILl JD.
IIITlAHD, OHIO
12·31-87 1 mo. pd.

NOTICE OF
244, Pogo1B; and Volume
APPOINTMENT OF
245, Pogo 1013, Deed
FIDUCIARY
R~cordo Molgo County,
On Doc:8mbor 14, 19B7. Ohio. .
in tM Meitll County Probate
Subject ~o o Plpo Llno
Court CoooNo. 2117111.Ro- Eooemont grontod to
notd Aciopor, Route 1, Box Tupporo Ptoln&lt;!-Ch•tar Wo- .
29 Albany. OhiO 411710, tor Dlotrlct, otong with .U
~ 'opPolrrtod EKecutor at other looou, · eooom.,to,
iho , •tote of Wendoll ond righto of way ~~cord.
Hooper,' doceued. toto of
Termo at Sole: . h on
3761 1 Frederick R.. d. AI· dote of delivery of d . The
biny. Ohio
411710.
~~~!~~~ to
E.-.~or
the right
Chor!eo
H.
Nl- ,..erveo
ony end ol bide.
·
Abtlng Preboll
1 Minim..,. bid: ••1.100.00.
Lone K,,N.,oolr..d. Clerk
tnqulrleo con be mode ot
(12) 2\. 2B; 11) 4, 3tc
1 814-992-HBI.
Doug!.. w. Uttlo•
~ubllc Notice
Ex"':;'~":.!'Q.E:..,,
OF SALE
· On tho lth doy·DI JMuery.
11BI. 81 10:00 A.M.11ltho
olfl- of ,_,, . Uttlo,
lh-1 • ; FI'Idcor, 211-213
Elll a-nd llrwl. Po,.
,;,y; ONo • .,. rOll • - 81
10024 TR10U, Tu_..
"""" .Ollto. tiling the .....
den• of the tote . . . . G.
W........ wll be IOid. Tho
NOTICE

(12) 20, 31: (1) 4,

•tlmoted conltrui:tlon coot far thlo Contract 11
111.000.00.
Copl• of Drowlngo, Spoclflcotlono end Contract doc·

umente mey be obtained or

offl-.

TO
CONTIIACTOIII
lnlifd prop •h witt lljo
the

~

tlken from the ebove

3tc

NOTICE
Illy

Section 153.54 of the Ohio
llevl_. Code. The bid guaranty lh•l be either in the
form at o Bid Guaronly land
lor the lui omourrt of the bid
or o Certified Check. Coohl·
or' 1 Check. or lAtter of
Credit; pur-.nt ta Choptor
13011 of tM Ohio Reviled
C.ode, In en amount' -~ to
ten peocelit at the bid. In the
~Vent one oftM hill• throe
formo of bid -ranly lo
Mlbmltled, lh. . o Controct
Porlonn- Bond oquol to
tM amount of tho Contraat
mull bo provided 811ho time
of •-'n11 the Controct.
. Suaoeolul bidder muot be
•• Equal Employment Opportunity Emptoyw, whiah.
prohlblte diocrlmlnotton be·
ceu• of race. ciMCI. color,

oxomlned-otlhe office of tho
Mlyor, Vlll"'ll Holt, Mlddl•
port, Ohio, 411780 ond 11
Floyd Browne AIIOdotoo,
Inc., Conouttlng Engl-ra.
'PIM-1. 1B1 South Moln
Street. Morlan, Ohio
.
43302.
A ten dot.. (110.001
dtROiit inon-relundoblel
witt bo required for eoch oot
of Drowlngo, Speclflcatlono
decooled ·oqd Corrtroat doaumonto

· Public Notlc.

rece'-1

·

eewer. with ell epurtenei'lt
wofk.

Villtae

~

Cheallo lholi bo mec1e
f11Y8ble to tho Yllloge of
Middleport. Ohio.
Atl8nlion Dl the Bidder II
*•1811 to the _ . . . con- ·
olruclio'l r..uletiont lnoluded ........ . ........ 10

lllt,ianll origin, - · age,
bandtcap, potltlcol offlllltlon
or IMIIele. The VII'- of
Middloport lo 1n l!t!uail Em-

ployment Opportunity
I!IIIJIIoyor.

toll-·

._nd

v.._

en:=:
.. .., ....
..ft
__.....

Tu-·

~ ::-:..:-"'0:..::

- ......... --••••Mille

•

Locust,

l.AL~
IN THE

~
-Real Estate General

E. Main•.w
POMEROY, 0.
992-2259 .
MINERSVILLE - Nice 2
story home wrth a view of
the beautiful Ohio River. 3
bedrooms and much more!
PRICED Hi SELL AT
$19,900.00 ..
I

RUTLAND -"- Very neat
· ranch · style home with C/ A,
garage, 3 bedrooms. lg . .
living room. dining area
w/ bar, nice big level lot.
MAKE OFFER. $38,500.00.

4120: M~ Sizes 12.10

26. Two placed~ has
two sleeve versions;
trumpet skirt Is alasticiz·
ed. Scarf givas a dlll8i a 4
look to !18880nlessdress.
Each pattern $3.25 pius
75¢ postage/handling.

IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 acre farm with older
home, garage and other .
buildings. Close to Pomeroy.
ASKING $42,500.00.

(NY6 MI lllfdentl add Slit$\i&gt; .1
Send to:
ReldlfMell

'

RACINE - - 4' bedroom
home w/large modern kitchen and dining room.
family room ··with woodburner. FA gas heat. Carport.
large lot. MUST SE~!
$31,000.00.
. ..

FREE OFFER
3Craft Books (vllua $8.85)
•when you order one ol the
$2.95 books listed below. •
11141Blrpln. Crochet .
115-Easy Ripple Crochet
117-M of Needlepoint

SYRACUSE- Remodeled 2
story home. Includes 3-4
bedrooms, I 'h bath, basement, garage on ajJprox. I
acre. Great for a big family'
$39,900.00.

''·1!5 far poilroge-.dlng.

ST.. RT..143- A-frame and
211 acres of ground close to
town. 3. bedrooms, full
basement. woodburner hookup. In a great location.
$29,900.00.

The Daily Sentinel
.

loa 411011, Hllel M I , 411ZO.
4000. Print Nanw, Addlaaa, .
Zip, Slla, Panern Numlllar.

Add

FASHION

MIDDLEPORT - 2 unrt
brick apartment building in
town. Garage, AC units. Good
rental income. Close to
shopping. $28,900.00.

Card of Thanks

RUTLAND ..:. i 'hstoryhome
w/3 bedrooms. enclosed
front porch. equipped kit·
· chen. storage building and
part basement. $21 ,000.00.

emq~ncy

are unit staff, Dr.
Picbns &amp; staff, Dr. Hill·
ter. Bllony-Jordltn Funeral Home, Rev. Ray lM·

dtnnilt and pallbearers.
Dau&amp;lillrs, Faye &amp;
· Lym~n Stanley, Edith
Sll)ent; Grindchildren,
Beverly &amp; Richard
Kerns, Melinda &amp; Joe
Smith, Russell Slrpnt,
Gt11t·anlndchlldren;
Trampn. Mib, Slm,
Mary &amp; Shiney.
11

Oak, Cherry ·

. · SJSOO

Per Pickup load
Delivered
BILL SLACK
614-992-2269
Evenings . .
· : 12/14/ 87 I mo.

R~~R~l~ER ~

Roger Hysell
-Garage

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

Rt. 12 4, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

~leo Jran~~~llailon

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

PAT HILL FORD ·;

HOUSE FOR RENT

THE DABBLE SHOP

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio ·'

POI'IIROY-985-3561

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

If interested stop

· All Makes

•Ranges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

WE SEll USED APPUANUS

1 2 ~ 2· ' 87 · 1 mo pd

•

.. ,

'

DENNY CQNGO
WILL HAUL ··

MARCUM 4,
CONTRACTING 1:
. CHESlEII . QHIQ

JUST CALLi·
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL : SAND
TOP SOIL

•HOME BUILDING

915-· 141

GIIHIAI COIITUCIOIS
'

'

.

~

10-8-tfc

PlUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

•AMMO I
•GUNS .,'

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

•MUZZLELOAOING

SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M ..

Pay Your Phone
and -Cable Bills Here
IUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6550
RISID!Ncl PHONE
(614) 992-1·154
1128/ llfl

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls
3-11-tfn

HILlSIDE .
MUZZLELOADING
•SLUGS

, We Cerrv Flshi"' Supplies

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

'1·3-ttn •

..

GUN SHOP

New location:

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

INSUlAnON

Rt. 124 Across from ·
Happy Hollow Rd . " •

RUTLAND
614-742~2355 '
12/ 14/ 1 mo .

..

BISSELL
BUILDERS .

CUSTOM IUILT
HOME~ &amp; GARAGES

"At Reosonolllt Prien'~

PH. 949-280t
or 949-2860:: · ·
Day or Night

·
• NO SUNDAy CAllS .'

.,.

&lt;UUH~. . ..... 992-6191
JUN TIUS!lll.. .......... 949 -1660
oon• fUIHII ........... 992-1692

~

YOUNG'S .
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addon• •nd remodeling
- Roofing end gutter work

- Concr.,e work
- Plumbing •nd e!ectricel
work

.DKAL WOUTOIY .TECHNICIAN ·
FIL 111 POSI1IOR FOIIEGISIMDIIDIW
LAIOIATOIY TECKIAII Oft IOJA111 SliTS

. V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomtroy, Ohio
4·15-' 86·fC

BOGGS .,
SALES &amp; SERVICE·
U. S. RT. SO EAST , ~
GUYSVIllE, OHIO •'·
614·662-3121 '0:

Authori11d lohn Doore,
Now H....,nd, lush Hog "
Form Equipmont •

Doolor

·

Fertit E~•l.-e•t '
Ptrts &amp;' S11vl~t .

..

1-3: 86-tfc

. '

Rtqulrellndepeudent worker, with
. Clptbllitlel In 11111111 of clinical

Ustenin1

Heerin1 Aid Slles &amp; Sll"llical

. llbcntory.

Enltiations for All Aaes

EXCEu.ENT FRINGE BENERTS
·"'- •ttcl: .

.

I

4-16·16-1111

-T L

Help Wanted

I

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
.
REMODEliNG &amp;
REPA)RS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK
,...,.. Day or lwenlllfl

Referencn

FILL DIRT

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

lllAliOI

by.~

· PLASTERCRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS. ETC : '

4·5·tfC

POMEROY - ·PRICE REDUCED- Beautiful view of
the Ohio lliver! 2story home
features 3 ·bdrms., full
basement. 2 car garage, I\!
baths, attic area. Only
$19.900.00. .

~

'

GOING ON NOW

•Washers •Dishwashers

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM·SIDING
*BlOWN IN

. A_(H

-

IS FOR SALE

1f2 PRICE SALE

MIDDLEPORT - PRICE
REDUCED - 2 story home
tHat shows the work that has
been done! Nice kitchen, 3
bedrooms, dining room, one
and a third baths. ·much
more. $26,900.00. ·

'IIACT RiffLE .............. 949-301~ .
OffiCI ......................... 992-2251

.

Middlepor1. Ohio .. ·
1·13-tfc ·

I 07 lOCUST ST.'

(Free Ettimeteal.

==~:.==
flllenVU
wllhaWdftd

FIREWOOD.-

L Wrlt111l

· /_.!!ND~

The OWner ,....._ the

Mldclopart. Melli COuiil\1. 'lfllllleiNII•Iw-oforproOlilo in · the olll• Dl the aua&amp;uiNI of labDr. the ....,. rlgltt to Nl- ony or ott'
Mayor,
11e11. Mlddl•
.... ... Hlcrlbed .. port. Oliio, until 2:10P.M .. ollllnfomtatiorllllv.. In tho
lnlormetion 10 atilder, 10 the In the Pf"''IDIIIa NDihllCI.
J~r~-v 7, 1IU. 11K1 than
lp ..,.. ............ for
~~~..ted In tho County of
VILLAGE OF
..........d ..... ........... the ........ of
Mette. 1n ,.,. s - of ohto. pulill,.,
MlbDLI!POIIT.
OHIO
oloud
.
IUt:t.lnld
Fred
lfoffmelt.
MIVor
11K1 In ~ T-"""P of IANITAIIY IEWEIIAGI!
0.
OtiYB, . end llaundecl ond
(12)21. 21; J"'!· "· 3tc •
IMI'IIOYIMINTI
paib- olln*'Mrlllllel•
c!O!a ... datfoH-e:
DIVII'IIIOft
MANHOLE
Ilona IIRI ..... Iilld for In tho
111111 Lot II of Arlleullll'o
iwll of till I - of Ohio.
Subdlvlllon Dl -tho . ~N0.11
Tile llfl' .... welltln thle
aaela-belllllmll·
Yillle lof
Plalno. C01cb- . . . . . of oon- ...Ptmp
on
tho Ptip
I'Polme
. . . County, Oltto. .-ulL4 •,... .._. ., at I lned Ill 1M C.oti_.
mllllllla 111111
dawullllule. TM Pn p ,.,
CourllY, Olllo.
. pipe Mts•n 11M1 •I .... lllllll lila UIO II p lied lily I
bid QllllllliY • , ...... Illy.
lie• •1• Deed
. · Volume•..

12·7·'' 87 tfn

4-22-87-tfn

Squad, Veterans lllemO-

Public Notice

Middlepon
lnourtd/lic""\111

949·2263
or 949-2168

742-2035

rial Hospital

Public Notice

992-6226

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

room staff. the intensive

Pflblic Notice ·

Ron Dileo or
Gary Cummina

NEW. - IEPAII

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

CARD OF THANKS
The famil~ of Glen Stanley
would hke to thank
friends, neighbOIS and relatives wllo sent food,
flowa, or did anythina
for•us duri• the illness
and death of bur father. A
special thanks to Eliza.
beth Smith, S.E. E~~~tncy

...·--·---··---'. _"' ........,,...-_.
.. _..... ........
..........
-...
.............
·-.......--..... ,_
"
-···--·"'
·
... . .___
. _. _....., __
1 CLO~ED

10·9-tln

Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

. D&amp;C ELECTRIC

ROOFING

..

•11-DI
, ...
-01
t4DD
....

Basham

.,.

1
lDA'I't

RACINE
FIRE DEPT,

---a't-

RACINE, OHIO
·

GUN SHOOT

.·CAU

RACINE ·
GUN CLUB ·

PATfERNS

TO IUQ AN AD CIU "2-2156
.,.U tin fRIDAT I A.M. It 5 P.M.
I A.M. Until NOON SAJUHAY

'

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Althoug)l Carter's punt return
started Minnesota on Its way, the
killer play was the 44-yard
touchdown pass from Wilson to
Jones after time had run out In
the second quarter .-

B..,;)wns punter knows he'll have to improve

:Quality.of Life' series set

Ethiopian woman visits
ill granddaughter in us·.

·Business Services

Wl'i:h Wilson completing 189
yards of passes and . Kramer
running a flawless ground game
In the second haff after Wilson
took a blow to the head, Minnesota held the ball for 41: 18.
"They caught us on a good day
for them and a bad day tor us,"
said New Orleans Coach Jim
· _Mora, who had helped bring the
Saints their first winning season
and first post-season berth in the
club's 21-year history.
''It was difficult for us to get
anything going. We did not play
well In any area 'today . 1 don't
know hoW many areas our team
didn't get whipped ln.
. "But this team (New Orleans).
went a lot farther than anyone
wouid .have thought by a long
shot. We are disappointed. But
the players have nothing to be
ashamed of. They can leave here
with their heads held high.
"We haven't had any days like
this ali year. But Minnesota Is as
talented as any team In the
playoffs."

~raining

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The Daily Sentinei-Page.,.--7

Pomer(iy-Middleport, Ohio '

Monday, January 4, 1988

~

In the spotlight

Monday, January 4, 1988

I

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l· .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licens8d Clnical AutM!IIOiist

(... IWI
Yltnllllllill la,ihil
11SIIIt llllilll1 D1iwt

....... 4576t
... 61t.tft~tll4

(614~7&amp;19 Ill' (614) 992-2104

417

Awnue. Box 1213 ·
Oallpolls, Oltlo 45631

or
Ytterllls
....., l•orr!lll~l
llatl. ~ :::~

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Page 8 · The Dilily Sentinel

"-

Monday. January 4. 1988

. Pon:aeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CHECKlHE :

41 . Homes for Rent
Rent·Leaae -Land Contract :
Hom• In EUteka. ROdnev VII·
l ... ell, Evan• Hots. Dep. ll Ref.
req.u irtct •laclburn Realty,
. . 4-441·0008.
Nice 2 BR. unfurnlthed wltti or
wilhout "~ a '*lg. ueo •
mo.' plul d._.alh; .. utllitl•. c•tl
814-448· 2115 .
Nice 2, potaible 3 BR . hou•ln

Mlddaport. Dlahwa•h•. II*'·
b-ee dhp .. . AC. f\.11:1 b•ement.
heal. location. Call 814·4419205 alia&lt; 1:30 PM.

Alllllllllll:tlllt'•lh

44

2 BR . a pta. ·4 cto..ta. kttohenappl. ft!rNihed, Wather-Dryer
• hook-up, ww c.-p41(. newtw
pa6ntM. dedi.. Regancv. Inc.
Aptt. Call 30 .. 875· n38 or
875-1104.
.

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1181 Ch ..atto AM·FM. P.S..
P. B., AM. niW tlr-.. Nlfy w~ealt.
4 door, 4 cyL. alJto, C I model.
13800. 114·192-32.5 9.
.

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1171 M•cury. Running condl-', .,..,..
tion. 8ady tlllr. 1325. 814·992· "· 1::
8131.
'r"

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11n PontiK Venitu,. Hatch·
back. New rebuilt engine. .call
814-882-1305.
.

0

c

,.

~·

CAPT
AfN
.
. . EASY

"

71 luletk lky*k. custom. a-c. , , , ,
cr-colnrol, ilutometlc, runa . ·
good. UOO. 304-1175-5707.
--;-

Announcements

1983 Omag...,.__pb, olr, am·fm.
·4-dr, •c· - · t2,900. Call
altar 5 p.m. 304-8111-3820.

KUPID 'S N-=ST. Offwa two
klndl of. d11dng , MI'Yice, ~write

.

&lt;SAlMON SPAW~ I~
WARM WATER~ OF

,.,.
,.

.

Givqway

No. It' I not In excellent
condh.iOn, But it' 1 ...... Cell
114-441-2205.

12 wk. old m .. e kitten, black.
Utter train.r . . C. II 14·448-

4737 all or 5:30 PM.

e

sw..,•
and sweeper parts Eureka.
Hoover, 301\-67&amp;·
an~

2440.
Mixed breed female dog. AA

ahot .. 1 ~ed . :,04-t75-4208.

.'

8 puppitl. 5 ,...,_.., 1 mlle.
304-875-7437.

Chr~mas

blllt to PlY? ltert
Hlllntl AVON bafora Jan. 12.
receive frM cologn~ Call 114448-2181.
WANTED~

Pert-tlmel34 houn·
/ week) Rill., Houtamanag• 18 Wanted to Do
tor an intermtdi•• c•• fedlity
tor d~elopm.nt•lly diAbtld ' Houeedeaning or offi~ cl•n·
1dulta In Bldw*l, Ohio·. Hour~: Ing. h.,• references, Call 61 45:00 PM· Friel., through 4:30 742·2404.
PM- Sundlf (ltve-ln). 2-haur

walldv ataft m... tng. end halt-

High ~c:hool degre.. valid
Cat. spayed and dedi!Y'Ied. litter
drfv•'• &amp;icen• and~ good
train.:!. 304-6715:-5011.
dnvin_g record ntqulred; .must
h...-e good communl08tion and
Electric range. oven do•n ' t Drganiutton skills, able to work
work. 304-876-5018.
11 part of 1 tNm, work wilh
mini"'-' tuplrVillon, good mona¥ m.n-u'"*"t eldHs, l!nd be
punctual; expe:ri.,OI WCH'klng
6 LoS1 and Fo.u nd
with p•eons with mental r•r·
dltlon and dwelopmentel ~.
abilitiee preferred. Salary:
1 quilt found on Kineon Or. Can
ba seen at 115 a..tiani Or. CNL. •4.60/ hour. Sick/wcalion/1~.•
614-446-4302.
- '
. . insumace beo.rilt. Sandrnume
to Robin EbV, Buck~• Community S•vic:.a. P.O. Bo• 804,
Male German Sheph•d type Jocbon.
Oh 45140. Ooacllno
dog. Derk .•••· ~ white fece.
for applicants; 1 ·8·88. Equal .
Spota on back. Vicinity of
Opponunhy Employer.
Georg• Creek Rd . Call 814•48-4200 or 814-448-9302.
HELP WANTED

..:._.::._.::.__ _ ___;__:_ -lc-

LOST: L..di• gold w.tch, Nil·

trix. Between parking lot an~
Chepmans Sat. 61•·992-2816,

•

Lost: Bl.ek

and white mal·e
Walk•. Lott
Forked Run
State Park. $60 r.ward. 304773-5893.

•

7

n..,.

Yard Sale

·-·--··Galli#olis......... .
&amp; Vicinity
... ,............. ................ .
Moving Sal• Everything mud
go. Call61'1,44~-8809 .
.218 Jrd. Ave., Mondav. Tuea·
diiY. Jan. 4th, &amp; 6th. Cloth&amp;~,
dishes. pots/ pans, aewif'lg machine, etc.

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8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

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•

Wedem&amp;¥el''s Auction Servic:•
available at yOur conveni•ce
and loc.t:lons. Marlin Wed•
meyer . Auctioneer- 614-2455152.
.

9

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Wantad To Buy

We pay cash for late modctl cle110
used CM'S.

Jim Minlt Ch811.·0lds Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon
&amp;14-446-3672
TOP' CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used c•s. Smith
Bu ick-Pontiac, 1911 Eaatern
Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 614-4462282 .
WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
&amp; coal helllers. Swain'l' Furniture, 3rd. B. Olive St. Gallipolis.
Call 6 i 4-446-3159\
Pool table end living room suite
; n good cond. C.ll 614-266·
6666 .

•

Wanted to buy· u..d furniture
and antiques. Will buy entire
household furnishing. Marlin
.. Wedemeyer- 614-245-5162.
Used Mobile Home~. Call 814446 -0176 .
Real nice pool table. Regulltion
5 . Ca ll 614-446-9251 after 7
PM .

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Buyinq daity gold, silver coins.
rings. Jew"fllry. stMiing ware, old
coins, llfge currency. Top prt.
cas. Ed Burkett Barber: Shop.
2nd . A'lie. Middleport Oh. 614·
992-3476.
Raw fur, beef and deer hid•.
Gyn Sing and Yellow root. We
hsve wheat and ntte li't"es.
Trapping suppliei for Nle. !Buying used trap~,): George Buckley.
Hours12-9 . 814-664-4781 .
Q!JILTS
High prices paid for pre-1960
quih s. Applique, pieced. any
condition. Call 614-992-2101
or .814-992-5857 .
Used out dow color T.V. an·
tenna. Call 61;,4· 992-7304.
Wooden drop leaf dining room
table..Call 304-675-1204 eher
4 :00p.m.

[Ill pi II y 1111: Ill
:-; 1: r v 11:1::,

11

Help Wanted_

E:.•v work! EJCelllnt Pavl ~-H
A•
iembl• productt at h ome.lor lnlor. .tlon. 312-741-8400
Ext. A. -313...,
Oulo!Work1Nojoblno!ght1Wa
can t\elpl . .sic .Educetion an~
SkiH Trwlnlng l!l"eilllbf• Conte~:!
Adult Sarvi-. BHCC at 11424tJ·5331.
D A U M MER ·WAN TEO : For
COUII!IV·!Valt b..d . Call 814·
441-2144.
-AlA UNE JOBS AVAILABLE
NOWI ~am up to t50,000.
Macllanl•. fllgllt A-denio.
Cuotomor Sonrlco. 311;7335012. att. A-2t38 lor lniDIIatln • .
I

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Local compt~ny naw hiring for
full· time ,mptoyment. No aperl.,ce nece~•rv· Ewnlng work.
Light littlno involved. •1200 a
mo. Profit sh•lng • othef
bentlfila. For personal inteMew
call IS14· 4oM-1148, Mond., •
TueldiiY·
.. Frienda Ratlit Corp" of Gallipolis. Qhio MIU a competent
111• penon to work in Child,.,.., Cfothlng Store. Mu1t be
highty moti'•at_. and LOVE
worldng with children. Send
resume to: Fri .. dl Rltall Corp ..
P.O. Bo• 981, GallipoUs, Ohio
.4 5631 .
Job hunting? Need 1 skill? We
tnMn people for jobt 11 auto
mechanh::.. c•pentM'S. electrici.,s. food lervice wor...,a.
electroniCI tac:hnlciMI. indu•
trial maintenance workers. nur•
ing •aiatlnts · and ord•ll•.
machtniats. and weldwt. A-vi•·
tar now for c\11 ... beginning
January 4th: Call Tri-County
Vocational Adult Center at 7&amp;3~1511 ext. 14. A· veriety of
funding •ourell to pay for
training are evail8ble tor those
.. igible.
.
Po you h*"'t the spirit ofc.-ing1
ThweererNnyjobopportunttl•
for he.lth c. . workers. Become
a valu.ble membe!" of the health
c•e team In luat 18 weeks.
Enroll ~ now in the Nursing
Assistllnt· Ord•ly progr•m et
Tri-Countv Vocational School··
Aduh Education centW.- Need
money for training? We hiVe a
variet-y fundlngiOlirces avail8ble
for tho" eligible. Register now
lor cl•~e• beginning April 4th,
call753-351 1 ext. 1 4 . Catch the
Spirit I
Gov'e rnment Jobs. $11.040$159.230 ye~ . Now Hiring. Your
Area. 806·687-6000 ht. R·
9806 for current Federal lilt.
The Meigl Loc•l School Dlttrict
is accepting appllcattons for
substitute teach••· Substitute•
are needed in all certificati'o n
areal. ,. The · dail-y rete of pey
11215 . Schooll ere open and a
temporery ·mtralnlng ord• il iri
effect. Ohio Certified T. .
w~ling to cross • · pi .. at line
should lmmediatley contact
Meigs LOcal SchOol Sup•lh·
ten dents Office. 621 South Third
AWt. Middleport, Ohio. 46760.
614•992-2153 .

ch••

Couple wanted for maintenance
of rental prop_.i... Livlrig quarters and weekly wage negoti.ted. Send rif•ence. and
resume to The Dally Sentinel.
P.O ..Bo• 729W, Pomero-y, Ohio.
Federal. Steta and Civil Service
Jobs 112.846 to 157,891 p•
ye•. ·Now hiring! C.ll Job Line
1-518-459-36:11 Exl F16221or
info. 24 hr.
Ssl•per•on needed, PP«ienoa
in sal• •nd craft• helpful. La
Salle Gallery, 1pply In Jllereon
Mo"'day throL!gh Slturdey .
10:00"5 :00.
AVON · All areia. Call Merityn
Weaver 304· 882-28415.
· Aecoverv Room St8ff NurH
lmmedillte opening for Regit·
Staff Nur• in recovery
room. P.R.N. bMie. Salary commensurate with ••perience,
Contllct Geoff Poltn. Director of
P...sonnel. Pl. . .nt Vall., Hoipilei, Veil., OrNe, Point Pie•
aant. W.V. 21550. 304-8714340 .. t. 307. AA·EOE.

tat'_,

73

f I!Wictol

d~a.
O~lo

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Season Premiere (AI
(i) II (J) ABC - · I;J
Cll Nightly Bullnett Report
i1D1 • il2l CBS New1
•·
[]) Body ElectriC
0 lnafde PolitiC• '18
® WKRP In Cfnelnneu
.
• (!) Too Cion lof Comfort
-• 6:35 (I) Lellve II To Be.,.,
7:00 (I) Rtmfngtoh StHie
11 (]) PM M~~gezlne
I]) Bportaeanter (LI
(]) Entertainment Tonfghl :
11 (J) People't Court
Cll []) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewtHour (1 :001
IID1 Nawe
0 Moneyffne
• il2l Gil Wheel of Fortune® Cheers
• (!) M'A'S'H
7:05 (]) Andy GriHith
7:30 II (]) Hollywood Squoreo
1!J College Batketboll
(i) N8wlvwed Game
O(J) Judge
IID1 Wheel of Fortune 1:;1
· !!)) Crossfire
Ill (J2) I!JJ Jeopardy! 1:;1
(8) Bamey Mffler
(!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 (I) Sanlord and Son
8:00 (I) Fllher Murphy.
II (2) Gil ALF ALF belrlends
a befligeran1 boy who has
trouble communicating. 1:;1
(]) 0 (J) Ma!'&lt;lyver
·
Scientist's research could
eliminate world hunger • or
the human race.
Cll The Making ol a
Continent Look at the Grand
Canyon and other can~ns of
tho Colorado Plateau. Q
IID1 Ill (J2) Kete l Allie Kale
and·Allie take a cliant who
refuses to pa)0o small
claims court. Q
(!]) Wonderwoitco El
Salvadorans flee political
unrest to find a better file in
the U.S. (1 :QOI 1:;1

21

'
Oroom

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommendt: th.C you
do . bualn•• with people you
know, and NOT to aend money
through the mail untl you h ... •
lnve11to•e:ct the off•lng.

·········-··

6 room duplex, b•em.,t, Qlr·
ag a. private, nice location, 304·
676-3753.
.

FOR RENT
45 Furnished Rooms
WITHOUT UTILITIES
7 room hou •· midtown. 1216
Rooms for rent, day. W.ek.
month; 1 bedroom duplac, mid·
23 Professional
month. Galli• Holt!. call 814tOwn, *150 month; 1 bedroom
apanment midlown. *13~; 4 · 446-9680 . Rent•slowasl120
Services
month.
room duJ)teK. midtown. 8186
month; 4 room cottlg&amp; Jeffet"Furnished room, t96. Utiliti•
M,c D1nill Cu1tom B~ch•ing ....- aon Ave .. •210 n,onth.
paic;l .. Sh.-a bath. Single mala.
WITH UTILITIES
Open 6 d.-ys a week, 304·882· 1 bedroom
apanment. down- -'8 1 9 Second. Gsllipolia. Call
3224.
448-4418 after 7pm.
town, 1300 month; 2 bedroom
ap•tmtnt. furnished. down town, U10 month. Call 30446 Space for Rant
Rea l Es l ii i P.
. 675-4100, 9 a.m.· 6 p .m .

31

Homes for Sale

4 BR .• firepl.c8. full bMement. 3
m'i. so. of Gallipolis . t34.900.
Call Dayt-614-448-1615, after
5 :00- 446-1244.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Office Space for rent. Excel.

downtown Galllpolll locltlon.
lnquirifll Cl!lll 614-448~.t222 .

Ne• W1terto~ 2 BR., *126 P•
mo. Ref. &amp; dep. Adultt. Call
6,4-446· 7754 or 643·2644.

ByiOwn•· Off 14.1 &amp; Neighborhood Rd . Nice 3 bedroom.
Mdosed bree;reway. attached
gwege. Cell814-797-2441 .

Eurekt, 1 8R , 10x46. applltn·
c•.
c•pet, watet p.aid, no pllts.
deposit &amp; refer•cn. Rent

Brand ne'IN 3 BR . n. . Gallipolis
Locks on At. 7 . 2
g•age. nioe
lot. lmmadlllle poa•l.lian. Will
consid• tr~~de in of mobile
home, property, etc. Bargain
priced. Call 814-446-8038 ,

Trail• and lot in Racine far uie
of rent. 114-992-3934 o~:.:614·,..
992-7204.
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2 Bedroom houH on Ch•ter
Road in Pomerov . •&amp;oo. Call
814-367-7267 .
Government Flomn for S1 . IU
~ir). Delinquent ... property.
Repos ...sians. Call 805·6876000 Ext. GH -980&amp; for curren1
repo ll1t:
Glenwood. WV - 13.15 acr•. .6
rooms, 2 baths, rench . style
home, 304-762-2641 aher 6
p.m.
"

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
197312x66Freedom3 BA~ . g•
furnace with central air, washer-.
dryer, 111 kitchen appli.,cet,
dinette aet, underpinning. block
&amp; porches. Call 61.t-387·0683.'
14x70 2 BIL 2 bath mobile
home on one acre. for Sale or
Trade. C•ll 614-379-2629·.
1986 Overlend Park-14;~~64 , 2
BR .• total g•. EJCCellw condl·
tion. French City 8rokerag•
614-448-9340 .
1976 Kent- 10~~:38 . Good condi·
tion. Many po11lbilitles. Frer,ch
City Brokerage. 614-446·9340.
Uud Hornet-Big •election. PrieM reduced. Shop and save.
Fr.-ich City Mobile Homes814-448-9340 .
For 11\e or rent: 4 mobile hom•.
One 3 bedroom, three 2 btd·
ro'?ms. 614-742-3033. No pets.
New 1988 Country Villa ,
All etectric. Already stt
up on River front lot. 614-992·
3349.
14~~:72 .

14'x14' add·a-room tor trailer,
with wall-to-wall c.-pet. two
clolatt, two entriei, own elect rio
cal box.· 304·875-1979.

34

Business
Buildings
,.

Commercial buildings for le••·
DoWntowf' pt. Ple-..nt. Store~,
offlon. A-One Real Estate.
Carol Y•ao•. Broker. Can 304875-5104.

35 lots. Ill. Acreage

Get Pllid for ,._.ing bookal
-lc1100. per ti11e. Write: ACE · · 50•100 ft. lot. 4th St .. Syra517E, 111 S. Uncolnway. N.
cuoo. w.. ;r. u•. • - · ouhallla
Aurora, IL 10642.
·
trail• or hou•. 114-992•3885
or
write P:o . box 1 14, Syr11cuat.
Working ttrvlce mlinager
need... for immediate employ80 •cr• " wooded" located on
mlf'lt. Mu .. h.,. A•IC\Itturlll
-""nlol
• Pot1.,. Creolt rood. 4
and Med1anical badc•Oluad and
ecns 011 l•nd Hill Road. cit-y
furRisl) your own tools, BalMy
Wilt ...
Md oommtH6on. Send ...Sume
SOMERVILLE REALTY
to 531, u _ . RNar Ad .• GalllpoPhont 175-3030 offl ..
111, 0. 41831.
e75-3431 ... 1711-4232
A.N.• phyaidanl' office. Pl.
,.,drwumetolo•C11.1na••
o1 Pt. P t - l Raglatar. 200
Main lt. Pt. Pl.

Mobile Home lot. 10 ·f t . or telL
920 •th., Gallipolis. f76 . Wet•
paid. Coli 814-441-4418 afi0&lt;7
PM.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomaP•k.
Route 33, North of Pom•ov-

Rental tr•il••· Cell 414-992·
7479.
Space for tmall tr~~n... All
hoolrl-upl. Cable. Al•oetflci. .cy
rooms, ali' end cable. Masoo.
W.V.a . Coli 304-773·5851 .

Apartment
for Rent

large 2 BR . apartment, ' next
doortocotlege.11tfloor. $300amo. All utilitl81 peid. Cell
814-245-9170 ... 446-1323.
Upstairs 3 room &amp;: btlf:t"!. •ur·
nithed. CleM. Utiltti• paid. AOf.
&amp; deposit required. Adults only .
No _pets. Call 6,4-441-1519. ~
Nic8 2 BR apt .. stove. retrig.. e.
Yl!:tier furnished . 4Vz mil• from
Gallipolis. 8216 mo. No pets.
Call 614-448· 8038.
Furniehed ,tficiancv. 92.0
Fourth, Gellipolis. $190. Utili. ties paid. Cali 446-4416 after
7pm.
Gracious liv ing. 1 anci . 2 be,d·
room ap1rtment1 at Village
Manor and Riverside Apllrtmants in Middleport. From
t!215. induding utilities. Call
614-992-7787 . EOH .
.
2 bedroom furnilhed ·ap:t . *260
month. Utilities included. Pomeroy . 614-992-2545.
APARTMENTS. mobile hom•.
hou••· Pt: PI . .antand Gallipolis. 614-446-8221 .
2 bedroom furniaed apt, ref and
depo1it, New Haven, W. Vs.,
304·882·3287 or 304-773·
6024.
Beech Street. Middiepon, Otiio,
2 bedroom furnished apt. utili·
tiEIIi PliCt. ref•encesand deposit.
304-882·2566.
Middtaport - 2 room furnilhed
apt. Private beth. Utliiti• ptid.
304-892·2588 .
Furnished effi,cienC¥. apartment
for one working gentiWI"'an.
Private, utiUti• paid. $180.
month. Jeff•aon Ave. 304676-,2083 or 876-6689..
Apt. for r•t Unfu'fnlahed. one
bedroom, effid.,cy apartment.
8225. par mont11, Call814-448·
6181 between 8 -6 Mond., 1hru
,Friday.
5 unfurnished rooms, over 3 car
g.-age. Adult• ontw. no peu.
•160. momh. 1405 Jeff... on
A..,.nue.
Fui-niehtd or unturnilh.t, large
8 room ap1rtment, downtown
Poinl PleMant, deposit required.
304-895-3460.

49

For Leasa

14QO tq. h . .commerci• apace
suitable for offi(:81., retailing. or
service~ . Prime location-corn•
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis.
Am'p le parking in rear. $360 p•
month. Call 614-446-4249 or
446-2326.
\

1:;

12

:";;-;.::::::::;:::===:.
Situation•
Wanted

Room. bOenl,· or IIMplrta·raom
lor-~ .. alclerty. 114-992-

7214. .

41

51 Household Goo~s
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 112
Olive St., Galllpolll.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- 1399.
Living room auitet· $199-1191.
Bunk b8d1 with bedding- 8199.
Full 1ile mettretl S. foundatkm
start lng · •&amp;8 . A ecllneu
st•rting· 199.
USED - Beds, dr••rs. bedroom
au·ites, 8199 -*299 . Deskt,
wring• washer, • completallne
of used furniture.
NEW· Western boot• •30.
Workboots US • up. (Steel •
soft toe). Call 614-448-3159.

Pc, liYtftV room

1Utt... *398 .81; ahnt of
drawer•• drtwer, *48; twin
mattr•... *II Jilt microwave
oven stlndl. ..
.
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND
'i
30" elec. rtnp. whtte, •71.
30" eltc. range. coppwton ..
•s&amp;. 34" Jiltc. rang._ white.
•7&amp;. 30" gM f'llnga. IVOc.do,
t75. Kenmore waeh..- • dryer
•et. t180. Kenmorw washer.
t8&amp;" Whirlpool hony duly '
wash•. e11. G.E. wa•h•. like
n8W. *171. Refrlg•ator,
frolt-tree. coppertone. •110.
Rofr11!-...-·
2 door.
Skaggs AppHan
559. Uppor Rivor Rd.· 14-448·
7388.
.
'.
MollohM Furnilure
UPP• Rlvar Rd .. Oallipolla. Oh.
Dln.nn-12215 • · up, Living
room ault·u - t300 • up,
Aedln•s-•1 51 • up. CarpM
atarting at t4 • yd. Financing
aval•l• to qulifi«t buyer•. Call
814-441-7414.
Coud'l • ch•. Excel. cand.
t100. Call 6•4-448-3909.

*"

Oak
-_-,
tJOand
a Aoh
plaltup
Call8.1 4-2&amp;1-1874.
Tree • ttump removal,
fir-ood· f110 per ..,.mphiod.
Heap Vouchers. Don' 1 Landi·
cap•. 814·.4 4,·9145.

PICKENS USED FURNITURESofa's. chair" Iampi, reclin•e.
dish•. din.,ene. ba~lng. hid•
a -bed, gla~sware &amp; mlie .' 304676-1450.
I piece Mctional, excel.m
condit6on. *171 .. coft• !Sible.
304-875-8732 or 875-2311.

Black Male Peking••· .1 vr. old.
Call 61 4·441-1974.

1978 GMC 4 wh ... drive, or will
trade on Jinglea)tle dunlp truck.
Call &amp;14· 741-2421. ·

Aottwail•· 1% yr~. old. GOod
w.tch dog. No ~·...-s. Good
buy. t150. 8aaotllul dog. Call
614-388-93&amp;4.

1978 Chev-y Window van.
., 400. 304-675-2667.

2 AKC Reg. male Chihuahuas.
"-or morelnforrNtion clll 814388-1481 .
12 wk. old Male ~odt• Spanlllil
lor aala. 1100. 814· 742-2233.
Rtgiattrad Sibarian Husky .
•1oo. 8U·992· 7124.
AKC Bo•er pupt, 7 mal•. 2
fem ..w. wry 1pec:ial puppi•·
1250. . .c:h. 304-524-7950 ...
342-2417 cofloct.
AKC reg. Slb.-illl Husker- puppi . . 2 fem ..•. biM~t~; and while.
1200. AekforRogeror.lennit•.
304-712·2173.

57

Mu1ical
lnS1ruments

58

vtnawood. FrL
\M.• EutSun,.
Aoed·
Re·
Noon-8 :00 p. m . 304·273·
~~~~=~=====~::;:::::~~~~~i~llndependanCt

~··-*

L"tll~

.::5.::81::.1:.·.--.,-----,-•1.00 bolo.
tNall toad

Open All Winter- plenty fruit•
•nd produce. I tiii:OO. Jack't
Mtrk•. Rt. 31. Hand•ean.

I .1 111 :; upplll~ s

CROSS• SONS
U.S. 38 W•t. Jackaon, Ohio,
614-2i8-11451 .
M,.., Fergu10n. New Holl110d,
Buah Hog Sll•. Service. Over
40 u..., tntclou to choote hom
• campi• line of neW a u.d
equipment. Larg•t •ltction in '
S.E. Ohio.
.
. Ml 1 31g• t,.ctor. plowJ. dilc
and lllotla. Calll14·992·7401.
1-cattlo 1~11•. 14' dfok. 1faedtr, 2.t' grain conveyor, tHd •ower. 304-176·
1979.
•

cr....-

.•,'.

..
·.

NlcOtv lurnlaheti omll - ·
· ...,..,.. only. Rot. raqulrotl. No
poto. Call e14-441·03311.

298&amp; .

63

LiveS1ock

1----------Wanted to buy 1 to 8 bred beef
cow~ Call 814-982-8040
814·992· 7848.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

400 ~ol• ol Clowor Hay. 400
bal• of Mixed Hey. C11h only.
Coli 114-388-8483 or 3888180 ... 814-471-1472.
Hay

J

aalo. l.arga 1700 lb.
round ...........,. btl•. Cell
814-817-1184.

Miltod hay lor aala. Call 814·
742-2711.

II .111.\llldltllllll

71 Auto'a For Sale
1171ford LTO. GOOd !INa, now
balllry, ... 1700. Call 814241·1231.
1111 Doclgo Lon- Turbo: Air;
,.,. teiOO. can ·e 14317.otl12.

cru~a~~.

..n••••

why all this myetery about
Year's resolution?"

v

1111 ,.,..

r-. .zoo.

ca11

114-441--IIM lfttr I PM.

*·

AMI·11H ~ 2
hdM
327, 4 .....,r. ,_point. •IN
............tMIItl .....

6&amp; BuUdlng Supplies

Colll14-:t71·1112.
1 1 1 0 - ..,..., '"' 111....
.. 11• . . _ 3
I
Low IIIII•~

.-.
....... -pip-. - ............ Ciotolo_

wo. lllo

o,... 9-

241·1121.

Cal 114-

-If

wll-.
,........_...,.,...__ean
lt'-.....1211 .... 7 PM.

l

GH&amp;::~S'~

.

I

. ''

uano~loliono. ~.
..,
· -"

!!)) PrtmaNewa

® College

a

Uootl.&amp; .robuHI
All
tlntemtlly inspeet:ed S. guarn- .., ·i'
1ootl.- Calf 814-441·0986. w• . .-!'
buy junk transmi..ionl.
·· ~

. •'

..

1:05 (I) MOVIE: The Gazebo
(1:421
8:30 II(]) Gil Valerie's Family.
Sandy remembers why she
divorced Richard when he
pays a visit. 1:;1
IID1 IIi'il2l Frank'o Place
Frank becomes enraged
when a bum sets up hbus_e
in his alley. (A) . ·

~

··~

••

. Home
.
I mprovementa

·-} ·
·-!'

7

1:00 CIJ 700 Club
. II (]) Gil MOVIE: 'The Ann

,.. BASEMENT .
- ::
WATERPROOFING
r '&lt;4
Vncondltionai "Nt•lme vuaran· ... .,.#&lt;
tat. Loctl rlf..nc. fumtlhed . :"
Free ntimat... C•ll •. colect · ·• "..
1·114-237-0488. dO'/ or night. ,
Roger 18 a 1 e m"e ·n ·t · .,
Waterproofing,
•(:..
SWEEPER and Mwing machine 't
repair. peru. and Juppli•. Pick .j
up •.n d delivery, Davie Vl!cuurri ' ~
Cleaner, one hall mile up ·1 .::..
Georgea Creetc. Rd. Call 614- :·.~·
441-0294.
"
.~

.
.', .

.•

Carpenter work~ 16.50 a hr. or
by the job. Pan.ing. painting, .• {
dryMII. remodeling. Call 614- ' .
448-8377.

~ORTY

r

RON ..S Telavislon Sarvlce.
Hou• cal• on RCA, ~ur.
GE. 8pocl.ng In Zonfth. Call
304-574-2398 or 614·•48·
-~
2454.
~ ~

·'

Fetty Tr• Trimming, stump

removal. Call 304· 878,1331 .

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

HAVE AN INViTATION

to MY ~R:TY HERE
~ '10..1, C!NOT":

PL~E BRINE;' A GiFT
WORTH AT l6AST
FIVE DOLLARS.

7G·1411.

.

IM NEI..IER &lt;::iOINa TO
• G:ET RIDO:THE5E

DUMB INVITATIONS.

,.

..,..,·uJ..r.·

l!v ,, ..

8W~ , Tree 1nd L.twn Service,
lawn c•e. landtcaping, Jtump
ramov•l. 30•·678·2842 or
678-2903.

82

''

Plumbing
lit Heating

-.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANDHEIITING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 ,or 614·448-4477

84

&amp;

THEN BESSIE
SAYS 10 ME:
SHE SAYS···

••·'

:·,.

,.••

. ,.'

E lectrlcal
Refrigeration .

:oO

.,

I
~ I 1~ I I I ·

, . HULCCT

· .'
-- ~

I_ I_ I'_ ...:.I~
. I_

, 1-1-----r-S-=OrF"-+T

1,

. .y

'tt

J • J WM• S.Vtc~~. Swimming ~ ·
PDOI1. clltema. wwlla. Ph. 814· • :;- .
241·1218,_
'
..,_,..

.....

A a A Watw larvice. Home ·....,.. 1•
cistera. w.lll. poole fill ... For· ~~.
m.ty J•m.• IOYI Wettrl. Call ~ . ~·
304-171·8370.
•
. ~
P•l Aupe. Jr. WMer Service. ~
, _ ol•tornt, wollo. Call14·
441·3171 .

~

® Mlgnum,

,.
12:00

••,.

Wattenon' • Water 'Hauling, a &gt;. o
rMIOMble rltH, immedl•a
~· '
2,000 gllloft dlllvary, cistern1, '\ .,.,;
-~ - 1..... call 304-578- ·•,
2818.
- '•

UphoiS1ery

•· ,.
''
' &lt;'
Mowrey• 1 ·upholaterlnu HrVktg v_ ::

'

trlpountyiraa22ye ... TheMat

.

-----oatt-aa:

I

.

•m Text
!J!IIurnl and A!leii

.

~·

,.

what really -

-.

.

Complete the chuc&lt;le · qGot~d ·

.
.
•
.
.
.
•
by filling in the missing words
'-....JL-...L...;...J.......JL.......L....,J you develop · from step No. 3 .below .

•

8

-PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS IN

THESE SQUARES
UNSOAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET "-NSWER 7"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS_
Invite - Offal - Verge - Jumble ·- .BELIEVE
The owner of our local pub was noted for being stlngy..One
evening he oHered to buy me a drink, but only it I told no one.
I grinned and said, "Who'd BELIEVE It?" .
-~.·

BRIDGE

NORm

.,

1-4--18'

+AKJ3

•• 2
e ·A Q82 '
+QU

James Jacoby

Accurate bid,
careless play

EAST
+Q987642
•g Q7 s

WEST
5
• AJ 9
+J5
+KJ9!42
+I~

By Jaoies Jacoby

+K
+B

SOUTH
· Soutb was lucky in that he and hi!
;
partner had agree~ that the way I&lt;
.10 8 43
show a weak reSponding hand with ;
· +109!643
long minor suit after partner's ope~+A 10 '3
ing one no-trump was to first bid two
Vulnerable: East-West
clubs and then bid three of the minor.
Qealer: North
Tha.t was perfect lor today's South
cards. II two clubs had elicited a heart West
Sou1b
Norlb Easl
bid from North, South would have
I NT
Pass
2+
passed. When North bid spades, South Dbl.
3t
Pass
2+
signed off in three diamonds, ending Pass
Pass
Pass
the. auction .
·
'
Although there is no way to defeat
Opening lead: 10
tlie contract, look how declarer care•.&lt;
lessly threw a trick away. He took should play lt:iw -(m the opemiig spade
dummy's two high spades immediate- lead and ruff it. Then a diamond to
ly, shedding clubs. Next came a low dummy's queen is relatively safe.
club back to h1s ace. followed by the 10 Even if East wins the king alone, it is
of diamonds. When West played low, ot likely that he will now be able to
declarer p~t in dummy's queen.· East • n. e partner a spade ruff. (It was only
took .the kmg, played ·K·Q of hearts fh~ unfavorable vulneratlility !hat had
and then returned a low spade._Declar- kept East from bidding his seven~card
er .ruffed With the mne of, d~amonds spade suit, but with an eight-card suit,
and was overrufled by Wests J~ck. AI- even a milquetoast would have overth~ugb there were no m,ore tncks for called.) Declarer will thus be able to
the defense, declarer s play was play the diamond ace, . dropping the
pomtless.
.
..
'jack, and then play. A·K of spades to ...
W1th all the time m the world , South rid himself•~f two lositig clubs.

••••

+

lty THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Smooth
t•An Amer· 89 Assuage
lean-" 40 Withhold
41 Roman
5 Of the
ear
~l;'ay

9 Loiter
10 Fortifi·

1 Pooped
:!!·Hacienda

cation

12 Thespian's

concern
IS Laundry
employee

' 15 Subside

..

brick t
3 Confounded
phrase

4 Comic
Pinky

16Thieves'

5 Get one's

hangout?
17 Verily

6 Set of

18·Get
murkier ·
· 20 Producer
Mike

bearing •
three

. - .. .

24 Fireplace

11 Item
with
.an eye
14 Airport
device

shelf

.

271n fact

SO Immerse
31 Computer
command
33 Legal

16 Secretary
19 Food

clalin

36 "-Maria"
37 Six (It.)

the limit

ZlOnly

.,

25 Shape

7 Answer to
·paste
a J.P.
20 Iota ·
8 isn't it

22 Dance for
a wahine
23Smug
smile

25 39.37
inches
26 Senate

!!mployee
27

Printing

28

u.s. .

• prQCeSS

playwright

29Pass
32

Nice

seaSon
33"AShrop-

shire-"
34 Like a
· -.-of

'I

·•'

One letter stands for anOther. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apolb,._, the lqtb and formation« the words are all .
ldnta. Eacb day the code letters are dlfM'ent.
'
-

•

•

.•.

• •

C21PtoQUOTB8

::=

s y

7

MZBKQ -

o a·

U 'A K T N

BTY

•

/
~

~-

114

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

1--4

~1~-=~~

~

IQ

~-.,~;;s,....:TI..:.....;I~:;~,...:;..,.I6M
.·

.~:;9

tt:IOua•

!~::=~~~==== . !:
87

.

P.l. L.A. Pan 1

12-.20 ill Nltlanll aa.eoiiiQIIt=llhletlc
·
I*IIDfftlr ~~.!..!,In
ldllltHC. , .."'" .. , .... _,,

).

T
· Silence is what makes the real
.:. . conversations between friends.
Never having to say a word is

37Closed
DAILYCRYPTOQUOID-Here'sbawtoworklt:

OllgnOII

PEANUTS

0

bricks

[]) Thlt Old Houn The
progren of Weatl1erbee
Farm·s exterior paint work Is
dlacutsed. !;I~
· ·o 1por1a r
• !II 'HunlW
La18

,;,

.·.
••.
... ..

i

NOT RE D

I

,_.

'

..

e

:i;:'•

1

!C
...

0 N VY E

111 Mlgnllm, P.l.

''

\

low to form four simple words.

35Deftect

11 :30 II ill Gil leat of Caraon
ill College leallelbafl
(i) Chears
(J) Nliailgh.nfllllna,. 1:;1

..

Dllard Wet• &amp;•vice: Pools,
Cisterna, Wells. Delivery Anytime: Ca~t14-448-7404·No
Sund&amp;¥ 9"':
,

Ill (J2)

e (IJI.oWI Con~n

'••

General Hauling

I!J)

9 Jellaraont

A•identi• or commercial wiring. New service or 'r8RIIIrs. JLicenHd electrician. Ettimate 111 ~"""·
lrw. Pllldenour Elttctrical 304- ..
875-1788.
.

'

a

II (]) (i) Ill CIJ
till N•w•
Cll Sign Off
,. i1J Monayllne

••'

•

.

Jllllan Story' NBC Monday
Night atlhl Movlet 1:;1
,
(j) Ill (J) MOVIE: 'Cf1y Heel'
ABC Monday Nfghl Movie
•{PGI (1 :371 C
Cll- l!ll An Evening of
Chanqilonthfp Skotfng 1987
Top amateur figure skaters',
including Elizabeth Manley,
Scott Williams, Gillian
. Wachsman &amp; Todd
Waggoner, take to the ice
with dazzling perfO&lt;mances.
IID1 Ill il2l Newhart Larry ,
Darryl and Darryl announce
they are goln to adopt a
child. !:;I
0 Larry King Liver
1:30 1!1 Col~~ge BaeketbaH
IID1 Ill il2l Deelgnlng Women
Much·feared convicted
murderer oHers Anlhony B
business pannersHip.
10:00 Cil Slrlfght Talk
Cll Colla Rica: Child In lhe
Wind Examine 1ho history of
Costa Rica and the reasons
1he country has been able to
exisl as a demilitarized
nation lirmly commil1ed to
democracy.
i1D1 • 1!2) WIIIIIIUY VInnie is
levered into an international
contraband syndicate .
[]) @N,_
!!)) E-lng Newt
• (!) Benny Hlff ·
•
10:05 (I) MOVIE: The Other Side
oflhe Mountain fPGi (1:411
10:30 CIJ Varlouo ..
[]) The Making of a
Continent Look at the Grand
Canyon and ·other can~ns of
the Colorado Plateau. 1;1
(!) Hogan'• Haroeo
11 CIJ Remington Steele
'

.

Carpenter Work· Plumbing, .. .,.
roofing, akllng. All home repairs.
Call 514-388-8642 .

B~tketiNIU

(!) Hoover va the
Kennedys, Pari 1 (NR)

~~~o•=..,oo::::u..'~= ~o~~·.r ·~~r;e- ,::;: ~
1

'

.

"

. ,~.

~·

DWT 230 prlnW lor .T. .tlr or
lib
1

.

•'-.~ '

~7~6--~A~u7to~P~a~rt-s---­ j

85

- oo-.
n...
.........
uoo. 10-2-2141.
a - , M - · ...

'.

Rotar-y ot cabl a tool drilling.
Molt well• completed ••medev.
Pump nl• 110d 1ervice. 304888-3S02

FhowOOCI, . no. plaltup lood.

3 IR. hOuse a

SCEI\IIC:

"""

,\ ltl,t:,, llli:k

dallvorod. 104-4&amp;1-1138 1''
304-411-1728 . •
RCA _,.,.,. Klich., Trull
CornpeaiOI'. N- f11t.OO{h,_ nood IO Ml DJtal 304-175•
1731.

youF

,.

..

bum•. mott.n 4ft. wOOd
table, Womani mlrrONCI
304-1711-4014.

'.

'

II
SINCE! TliEY NEVE~
5~EM 1l' CL-f?A~ AN'(WAY?

;'

~

Pi111iilr·

•·
,,••

..

-··'

oN

...... 4

Fruit
&amp; Vegetable.s

Now buying •hall corn or e•
corn. Call for l•test quotes. River
Chy Farm Supply. 814-448;

n.-

II , _ BANI&lt;

,.

1984" HOnda, 2800 mil•, VT
500l•acot. 1800. Coll614-379·
2112.

81

Baby aac•Hri•, •dJu•ble
bed frame. twin miff,.., &amp; box
..,., _ _Call814-379-2443.

Surplua Denim-C.rh-' •' ntnte1
dothlnt. Dteron IMul•.t oaveralll •21.00 He•y
werk
dothint • boot1 el winter at
,.....btl. pri-.. lam 1om•
rvlla'a - Old AI 21 • JunCtion

'·.,
l·
,.
·'..

Motorcyclas ·

. lit Accessories

a

S1:rv1cr.s

62 Wanted to Buy

U Haul truali:a and ttlder'1 for
rent. 304-875-7421 .

74

•

FRANK AND ERNEST

77 Ch.,y 4-wheel drive truck.
Clood Cond. 304-876-2418.

Wurlrta• PiMo for •I e. EExcel·
!ant conclllon. f800. Call 814992-2188.

Bar ir. 2 stool•. eso. Sofa •
chalr-bluo &amp; ruot floral. UIO.
Call 814-446-4387.

..,.mp

~,,

1883 Joop CJ5. 8 cyl., 4 opd .•
h.-d top. Lots of ••tras .. E•cel.
cond. Call 814-448-4978.

61 Farm Equipment

Callllh.,·a UHCI Tiro Shop. o 1,000tir•,
12.13, 14, 15,
18, 18.5. 8 J'lff• OUI Rt. 218.
Calf 114·218·1251.

.;..lj

l)ragonwynd Cattery Kennlf.
CFA Hlmal-riln, , Per1ian •nd
Siam_, kitten•. AKC Chow
puppiM. . can a 14-448-3844
1ft.-7PM.

Maytag dtyer. Electronic con/

,.,.

.1982 Dodge 250 Rom. Cuotom ~
converllon. Tr•l• Nacty. Cell ~.;if
814-441-4383dtrio.448·0139 , ,..,
•ven1. a. we_tk.,dl.
·
.,t

1rol. t100. Call 814·448·7182.
9 AM -9 PM.

lit 4 W .O.

1nd Suppty Shop-Pet
Groemlno. All bread1 ... All
stye.. lama ' • Food Dallar.
JulloW- Ph. 814-441-0231.

Pondero• Pine dining room
suite (table. 6 chairJ. hutch).
•soo. s..utiful living room
couch. *400. Call &amp;1•· 379·
2741.
•

County Appliance, · Inc. Good
used appliances and TV •••· Mixed hnwood 1labl. •12p.Op• BAM to 8PM. Mon thru- bunda. Con101nlng approx. 1 YO
Sat. 814-448-1899, 827 3rd. ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
·Ave. Gallipolis:. OH .
Pomorov, Qhlo.ll14·812-8481 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Mixod ftr-ood. ·180.00
w.. htrs. dryers, r.triu•atora. tnrcl&lt; load, dollvarotl. 304-178ranget. S\!.aggl Appliances, 2903.
Upper Rive,r Rd. b81ide Stone
Cr•t Motal. 814~448 · 7388 .
SURPLUS ARMY. OENIM.
RENTAL, CARHART CLO ·
Maytag washlf' a dr-yer. *400. THING. Orialnlll army cemou.
Eltctrolult vaccum, 1300. Trl flage. H. 0. "Sam" lo....Star vaccum. •300. AC cool•. r v II le • 1 , 0 I d A t. 2 1
$850. Se•• freeur, ·•150. C.M EIII·R .... eniWOOd. Fri. SM. Sun.
614-367-7267 .
noon· 8:00pm. 304-273·1851.
lnsubrted ctmouftaga aoveralla
Gibeon wnh• and dry8r. con-' •21.00. Black-Wh!te 1now
lact Banlfidal 814-992-2111.
cernoufl111e.

Homes for Rent

IMga 2-3 SA . - ·· Plonty of
1tor.g4 Hendtreoft • .._ Cal
814·441· 7025.
-

New wood IS

54 Miac. Merchandiae

IE-AA_N_E_X_C_E_L_I.E_N_T~M-0-N-EY_:.-In
_

n•

PARSON'S FURNITURE

Men: tw11t1sH

..e

Homa A..,.,btv WGrk. Jewelry,
Toyt a Ott!...
·!'T A.tl.
CALL' TODAYI 1-111·411·
HJI {Toll-lllfllncllllllal ht. 12
22
::;S4;::,:

Valli¥ Furntturt
New and us... furniture and
applictnces. Call 814-4487672. Hourt 9 -1. ·

r,;•·

$145. Cal\614· 2•6-1529.

44

90 oau· ume •• c•h wllh
•p,rowd creclt. 3 Mil• out
BulaviHt Ad. OP•. 8am to lpm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-448·
0322.

Vans

..

O four
Rearrange lotlers of the
·scrambled words. be-

.

~

Pi•o

EVENING "

· ®lett o1 Bill Dance '

P.O. lox 119. Ironton. OH
45838, {108) 836-2748.

4

MON., JAN. 4

1:00 (I) Crazy Like 1 Fox .
• (I) (i) .• (J) OJ .. fiJ
Gil Newo ·
I]) BpOrlaL.oolc
Cll Dr. Who
. (!]) Coloraoundo
0 ShowBiz Today
® Facia ol Life
• Cil One Dey at o Time .
6:05 (]) Alice
6:30 • (2) Gil NBC NlghUy Newa

-~

Furnish_, .-Pt. ni.t to Ubrary.
Ont prof•lionll adult only.
Pirlolng. Call e14-441·0338.

0

3

Television
.
Viewing

I

1971 Plym®tll Scamo. olant 8
foraala. 1350. 18828uzuW 128
AM U28. 814-111· 3597.

The Daily-Sentinel. PagB':-9

Pomeroy- Middleport. ·

'·

71 Auto:s For Sale

A -partment ,
for Rent

Mondl!tv. Jamary 4, 1988

.

.

JTBOIYA'ftl

YNtenia7'•

•

B 8 T

B VA

~ ·
CQ~Uea

R Y A 8 H ·y

R Y A .B ' H Y.

A DRUNKEN NIGHT

.MAKES ·A &amp;LQupY MORNING.•

('ORNWAUlS

JTU

IYJQOI

- · SIR

Jin.uAM

·'
••

.,•.

.

!·"

•

�•

Pomeroy-Middlepor".. Ohio

''·

•

•

,.
·Purdue

THIS
EE 'S
CA ES

. BANI
•&amp; 'SAYINGS ·co.
,_IOY,QK.

PH. 992-2l36 .

defeats
Illinois
Page3

..•

Blower ~.c: ,
'

.

GIRLS BASKETBALL

•

••

.JAN.
JAN. 12-NOIITH GAWA- HOME
JAN. 15-SY-S VAWY - HOME

GIRLS IASIETIAU

..

BOYS SCHEDULE
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 8-Tramble
·
. ·
...............................
Away
Dec. 11-Belpre ............................... Hontt

Dec. 15-Aiexander ........................ Away
Dec. 19-Logan .............~..................Hon
Dec. 22 -Wellston ""'··········~........... A"ay

'

'

"YOUR.FINANC.IAL
CE.NTER".

Jan, 5-Federal Hocking ................. Away
Jan. 8 - Mill'er •..•,.................................ltotne
Jan. 12-Nelsanville-York .............. Away
jan. 15-Vintan County .................. Home
Jan • 19 ---: Tnmm
· ble .....................,.... Home
· ·

97 N. 2ND STilET
MIDDLEPOiT

. 992-6661

Jan. 22 --.ltlpre .............................. Away
Jan. 26-Aiexancler ....:.••~................ Home

:INSTALLMENT LOANS
~

Jan. 30-POint Pleasant ............, .... Away

Feb. 2-Warren .•.•.... :...................... Away

992-3007

Feb .. 5-Wellston .............................. Horne

Feb. 9~Athlns ............ -.........................Homt

.

EASTERN HIGH SCH'OOL
1987 ·88 BOYs-BASKETBALL

·-

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

!

Dec. &amp;-Southern ............................ Away /-·
Dec. 11-Hannan Tr~t .................: Away
Dec. 15-Partc. . . .g Cath. (6: lSI ... Away
Dec. 22-North Golia (6:00) ............ Hame '
Jan. 8-Symmes Yaley ................... Home
Jan. 12-Kyget Crwk ...............,......HQ,M

Die:. 8-East•n ••.'.............................Home
Dec. 11-0ali Hiii ........ ~ ..................HOnte·
Dec. 18-HDIVIan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 22 -Kyger Creek ........." ...........Away
Dec•.29-lnlb Valty So.... Convo. Centw
Jan. 1-Soutllwttt._.:n L.....:...................

Jan. 19-Federal Hocking ......;......... Hame

Jan. 22-Southerri ...........................Home

Jan. l2 -North Gallia _ .................. Home
Jan. 15-Symmts Yallty ................. Home

Jan. 29-North Gallia .................... Away

Jan. 22 -Eastern ........,.................... Away

Feb. 2-Milltr ...........................

i ......

Away

Feb.- S-Hannon Trce ........................Home
Ftb. 12-Southwtstern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath........~ ... Away
Ftb.19-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb •. 20~Federal Hodcing ............... Away

Jan. 29-Kyger Crllk ......................Homt

Jcin. 30-MiHtr ............ ~ ...................Honie
.FEb•. s.:....oak Hill .........................;:.. Away
Ftb. 6-Federal Hocking ................. Away

-Feb. 12-HaMan Trace ...................Hot~~~
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away
'

GIRLS SCHEDULE
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
. 198 7-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOl
1917·II GIRlS IIASKETIA~l

•

Featuring ·

* Great ~amburgers

*Roast. Beef on a
Croissant * Stuffed Baked
Potatoes * Taco Salads
* Salad Bar
* Real Ice Cream '*
· Dining • C.a rry Out •
Drive· Th ru ·
Sun.· Thurs. 6 A.M .- 10 P.M.
Fri . &amp; Sot. 6 A.M.- 12 P.M.
698 W. Main Street; Pomeroy

992-2057 .

Dec. 7-Vinton County ....................Home
Dtc. 10-Trtmble .............................Home
Die. 14-Belpr, .............................. Away
Dec. 17-Alexander ......................... Home
Dec. 23-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 4-Wellston .............................. Home
Jan. 7-Fediral Hocking .................. Homt
Jan. 9-Miller ..... ~..... ~ .........\,,,.........Home
Jan. 14-Nelsanvillt·York ............... Home

Dec.
DK.
DH.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

Jan. 18-Vintan Count ..:................ Away

Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................ Holllt
Jon. 21-Southern .......................... Away

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
feb.

21-Trimble ............................. Away
25-lelpre ............................... Home
28-Aiexeindlr ........................ Away
4-Wellston ............................. Away

Ftb 8-Federal Hocking .................. Away ·

feb. 13-Southern ........................... Home ·

7-Southern ............................. ttome
1Q-.:..Hannan Trace ...................Home
14-Miller ........"..•••...•......••.•..•H0...
17 -Southwestern ................... Home
19-Federal Hocking .............. Away.
21-North Gallia .................... Away

23-Meigs ................................ Home

Jan. 7 -Sy~mes Valley ................. ~ Away
Jan. 11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away

Jan.
Ftb.
Ftb.
Feb.
Ftli.

28-North Gallia _ .................. Harne
1-Symmes Ylalty ................... Hamt
4-Han- Tract .................... Away
11-Southwtstern .................. Away
14-Federal 119dcing ........:..,... Hame

'

.••·•

.
f

'•'

•••
••

'

·

vice

Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................... Away ·
_/ Jan. 21-EaltJI'n ............................ Hamt
Jan. 28-llyger Crttk .........;.....:..... Away

'

c.....-n AM.ITIC

Ftb, 11-Ha..IDn Trace .................. Away

· .Feb. 13-..- ......... ~ ..................... Away

Two new members, Charles S.
Norris and Gary K. Willford,
were given their oath of office
. Monday night When the Southern
Local School District Board of
Education held Its organizational
session at the blgh school In
Racine.
Charles F. Pyles was elected
president .'or the new calendar

year and Gory .Denny Evans wa:;
· named vice president. The fl!th
member of the board is Scott
Wolfe.
The board set the third Mond·ay
of each month at 7 p.m. for Its
regular meeting times for the
year with the location to be 'the
high school cafeteria. Board
Contlnqed on page 5

Middleport VIUaae lult been apptloved for a slate grant of

$11,'711 and a federal IJ'ADI of M1,881 for' lbe public
trueporiatlon ayaMm In Ul8, aceardlnJ to an an•ouncenli!!DI
b:r Oavearorllelulnl Celeate.
·
·
'"l''leee fudl wiD lltlp matntalllservlclee provided eo that aU

f09TWIAI SIOIII

,,,. ue• '•••• ~

reald1ntr tllll.....,-tlle elderl:r ud people wlllldtubllltae.caa .
.-JOJ the bell• 1 eate, reliable tnalportatloa a;rs&amp;em,"

•

Oov.Ctlll...

.r

111NUP

111e Ohto Public
ad \ ' '1 ed br tile 0~
'1'111 putl .... aw....... to

appraWdbJ* V~baa llua
~ p1lbJie

tnnlpartallon

w•• • ........

oe1
tra&amp;lve ....,. for the Blue
wllklllll tile pllb1ic neqortlttaa a,.tem lor
I

(

'

'

Massive oil· slick threatens
w3;ter supplies ·along the Ohio
Scaflde asked· residents to
store water in containers Monday .so the city's reserve tanks
c~uid be refilled before. th.e oil
slick reached the area .
East Liverpool supplies water
to its 16,000 residents and sells
water to Columbiana County for
about 16,000 more people, Sea fide
said.
" We should get a reserve of
about·36 hours, maybe longer" he
said.
Columbiana County Commls·
stoner David Halverstadt In
Lisbon said _two ~torage towers
should prevent a shortage In that
area unless the water supply in
. East Liverpool is cut off for an
ex~no:led period.

EPA olficlals had not estimated how long tl:le on slick
might affect drinking water In
the East Liverpool area. Scafide
said he would send a telegram to
Governor Richard Celeste ask·
ing for additional water supplies
lf necessary.
Scaflde ·said he also would
close .the city's schools to 90n·
serve water If a shortage ap·
peared imminent. ·
A tank at the Ashland Oil Corp.
refinery in Jefferson, Pa., col·
lapsed Saturday, dumping as .
much as 2 mlllion gallons of
diesel fuel Into the Monongahela
River. Debris from the collapse
ruptured another tank nearby .•
adding 20,000 gallons of gasoline
to the spill.

Jo!tn E. "Jack" Katllc, senior ple&lt;;e of baccarat crystal in the
the National Mine R~cue Ass~cl'To me, this just helps unders·
vice president _ fuel supply for • .shape of a large chunk of coal
atlon, and ~as served .as a
core · whaf I've been saYing
the AEP Serv.lce Corporation, . which is mounted on an ebonite
director of coal associations in
before, that we're doing the right
has been ltameq the recipient of base. The recipient's na!Jie is
three states.
things. in fact, the accomplish·
the 1987 Coal Age Award for engraved on a sterling silver
Finally, he has been a tireless
ments our people are making are
distinguished contribution to the · plaque.
·
advocate for the coal industry,
exciting.
coal' industry. •
, Coal Age editors, who deterandd for the· electric utility
"The miners'worklng for AEP
Katlic received the ·award mine the award winners annu- Industry which Is the coal Indus- Fuel Supply operations are absofrom .JosephF. Wilkinson, editor ally, could point to a variety of
try's No.1 custom~r. He's ta~en Jutely the best In the world · of Coal Age magazine, at a · reasons for Katllc's selection.
his message to such diverse · there's nobody better," Katlic
speeial p~esentatlon held at the
First, Under his guidance, "'EP
audiences as- coal buyers in praised. "When I thlrtk of our
Capital· Club in Columbus on mining operations have achieved
Europe, governmentlll officials,
training programs, our safety
·
tremendous gains in productivity
newspaper editors, .his fellow
achievements, the condition of
December 16.
The AEP Fuel Supply execu- and efficiency. As ex!ijX!ples, the coal producers, and to students · our mines, I'm sure of lt. I was
studying engineering in colleges never so sure of anything in my
tlve is only the fou(th winner of Martinka Division of· Southern
this prestigious a~rd, whfch Ohio Coal Company has regis·
and universities.
life.
was initiated by Coal Age maga,- tered !! ~3 percent lncrease, ln
"Obvious!~, it's an honor to
"We've mad e the Improve·
zlne In .1984. Previous winners tons per m,anshlft and the Meigs
receive an award such as this,"
ments, we've made the transihave been B.R. Brown of Consoli- Division of Southern Ohio Coal
Katllc said. "When you're In the lion, and we've earned . the
coal industry, it means a lot.
respect of the Industry."
dation Coal CQmpany (1984), has chalked up a 47 percent gain
Ceorge Evans of the Kentucky In that category.
Energy Cabinet (1985), and WllSecond, Katllc has been a
Jiam Carr of Jim Walter Resour- leader in the development of
By ALAN KRAUSS
ces (1986).
mining technology and, during
,
United Press International
The Coal Age Award was his near Iy 40 years In the coa 1
lnaugllrated, . Wilkinson said, Industry, bas been responsible
A small St. Louis b!'nk Monday reduced Its prime lending rate
"because there was no f.lttlng for more than 100 mines represby a quarter percentage poinllo 8 %percent, but major money
center banks did not·follow the move and analysts suggested
recognition for leaders in the coal entlng most major coalbusiness conditions do not merit the cut now.
lndustry.-We feel that the award, pr~uclng ,regions of the country.
,which we present each De·
Soutllwest Bank, the nation's 1,0171h-largest ~e basis of
deposits at the end of 1988, cut Its prime from an annual 8 %
cember, has filled a void."
Third, he serves as a director
. The award Itself Is a handsome of the National Coal Association, _ L....;p;..e.rc_e~.n..;t';..w,..h_e..,r.;.e.lt_h_ad_s_lood
__•;..1n_e_e_e_a_rl.:;y_J_as_t_m_o_n_t_h_
. ...;.._ _ _.J
·
·
.
·

Board, MT.I.JT.1_A.·~esume DeDiO.ti•ati.ODS toda·y

••

~

.L •

Swear in two neu; Southern ' Meigs
Negotiations b~tween the
Local Teachers Assocla.
b
·
M
·
da
·
•
ht
tlon and the Meigs Local School
bo
. ard mem erS · On Y ntg .DistrictBoardofEducatlonwent

Feb. 1-Southwett•n .".................. Hontt
feb. 4-0ak Hil _ ......................:......Hontt

Middleport approved for .
state and fed~ral · granu

· · THI AREA'S MOST

''

•- ·

the Coil Ace macUlae award for disllnplsbed aerv)ce lo the coal
iDdtl8tl7 ta 1811'1. Tbe handsome piece of baccarat cryst!ll, ahaped
d Kat Uc
Jlkeaehallkofcolll,markathefourihiJ'anllngollheawar.
Ill ~e~~lor
prsldent of the American Electric Power Service
Corporailoa and bead ollie Fuel Snppiy Departmeat. He received
lheawardtromJoaephF.wuldDson,edllorofcooJAge,atrecent
ceremonies In the Capital Clab In Colwnbus, Ohio.

Jan. 7 -Southwestern .........-........... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia ............ ~........ HOme
Jan. 14-Symmes Valley ................ Away

--,.

~--~
.
.'

·

"MAN
.. OFTBE YEO IN COAL"- JacaKaiUc, right, accepts

·rcCDIIVI..r

n•.,.

'

temporary · appropriation of
$50,000'to carry village finances
until receipt of this year's budget
certification from the county
.auditor. ·
Chosen to serve this year as
president of council was Lar·ry
Wehrung.
·
Finally, council welcomed ·
Bryan Shank who was elected to
the board in November.

St. Louis bank cuts prime rate

Dec. 7-EC.stern ............................... Away
Dec.1 0-0ak llill ..........................~ .. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 17-Hannan Trac:t ................... Ho•
Dec. 19-AIIIIndtr ...................;...... Away
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ...~..~ ................. Ho•

, • .
.

a

ame.·ltddte . ·w inner of -Coal ~e Award

Jan. 2 -Soutlltastern ...,..,....._ ....... A-.,

Jan. 15 -Oak HNI ............................ Away

Feb. 12-Federal Hacking ............... Home

A GREAT PLACE
FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

1 Section, 10.Pagea 26 Cants
A Multimatlia Inc. Newspaper.

sion to OSM. It Is the mayor's
In another fire department
understanding that OSM , wou.ld related matter, a provision of the
not be liable for damages, but Ohio Revised Code for active
that the contractor would be firemen to undergo periodic
phy~fl:als was discussed by couninsured for damages.
The masonic bullding was cil. A motion was passed by
closed late last fall and is no council recommending physicals
. for Pomel'9y's active firemen,
longer used',
Danny Zerkle was appointed according to Code.
by Seyler as Pomeroy's n(!w lire
CouncU approved a request
chief; ·replacing Charles Legar from Clerk Jane Walton {or a
who resigned the position Jan. 1

By JEANNE REALL
United Pres&amp; International
Officials have ordered resl·
dents to conserve water and said
they would close schOols if.
·· ·necessary rn some eastern Ohio
communities threatened with
water shortages by a massive oil
slick sliding down the Ohio River .
East Liverpool Mayor Jim ·
Scaflde said the Environmental
Protection Agenc~ predicted the
oil. slick would reach his community about noon today.
"We are anticipating some
problems," Scl\fld~ said Mon- '
day. "We're anticipating the
Monday alght oJonc with MaYor
Seyler, . legendary slick coming down the
rjver am;l hitting here around ·
center, and Counelbnan Bruce Reed, who were
1\00n. '' .
re!'leeted to their po~~ltloDB In November.
~~~~~~----~~~--~----,

JAN. 7-SOUTHWESJEitH- AWAY
JAN, 11-NOITH GAWA - HOME
JAN. 14-SY-5 V~EY - AWAY

COMPANY

.

'.

•

BOYS IASIETiALL
8-SOUTHwmEIN - 'N o•

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST

'

I

SOUTHERN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
614-992-5141

ei1ttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·Tuesday, January 5, 1988

celved a request from OSM for will be looking lor sulfates !rom
general
permission to temporar· mine water In order to justify
Sentinel Newa Staff
lly
stop
traffic
and parking In the reclamation, Seyler added. AcThe Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement area near the masonic bulldlng tuallength of time for the project
plans to have test drllllngs taken and courthouse for varied peri- Is undetermined and will depend
ods of time during the testing upon the ·outcome of the test
· of the hUislde behind the Pome·
·drilling, and if reclamation Is
roY Masonic Building accord lng proceedures.
Testing · of the area Is to be carried out.
to Information from Mayor RICouncil felt li would be wise to
chard Seyler at Monday night's completed by an individual contractor
.
the
mayor
said.
Since
.
c:onsult
an attorney 'r egarding
regular meeting · of VIllage
the village's llabillty in · the
Council. •
·
· there are abandoned mine shafts
. Seyler reported he has re- uilder the hillside, the contractor project before granting permls~
~'· --,-......,.-...,......

l'
{

JAN. 7-SY-S VALLEY- AWAY
JAN. 11-IYGER CREEK - AWAY
JAN. 14-0AJI Hll ....,.' HOME
.

.Funeral
Hotne

•

at y

By NANCY YOACHAM

JAN. 8-S\'MMES VAWY- HOME
. JAN. . 12-IYGEII CIIEEI - HOME
JAN. 15-0AII Hll ..::_ AWAY

·

.

(,.ow between five and · 10
below zero tonlg'ht. sunny
Wednesday .. Jnghs'llear 15. ·

.Plan test. driUings behind ·Masonic Building

-BOYS BASIETIALL

Rawlings
Coats

Pick 48198

Vo1.38. No.1 6&amp; ·
CDP'fl!!hlod 1988 .

EASTERN

••

84'5

•

ALL GAMES SUSPENDED
UNTI. FUIIHER NOnCE
DUEl TO THE LABOR
PROBLEMS IN THE
.DISDICT.
,,

•

Daily Number

•

.MEIGS
·•

Ohio. Lottery

for · some g hours Monday In
Athens.
Today at a p.m. negotiations
between'the two_groups resumed
· 1n an attempt to 'reach a settlemen! in the teachers'. strike
which began on Nov. 6. ·
While some .may look upon the
two days of negotiations as an
encouraging factor, Monday was
a "no progress" situation, accordi Ill! to a statement Issued this
morning . by Michael Wilfong, .
president of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association. The state.' ment reads:
''The Meigs Local Teachers
Association's negotiating team
Monday met for seven hours with
the group representing the bOard
of education. There was no
progre11 ~oward a contract settlement as the board failed to
respond to the · teachers' last ·
proposal' which was !1l&amp;de on
Dec. 22.
•
•
·

niutualagreementonacontract.
"Until the board Is ready and
willing to negotiate In good faith,
to simply sit down and talk out
the Issues with the MLTA, there
will not .be a negotiated settle·
ment to the contract dispute. ·
"Another negotiations session .
has been set for Tuesday after:
noon at .one. The MLTA would ·
have preferred to start the
!&gt;'!SSion earlier but remains
ready and willing to negotiate at
anytln:'e· anywhere, and around·
the-clock tp reach ~~ equitable
contract agreement:

Meantime, classes In the six
operating schools of the Meigs
Local Scl\ool District were being
held today after the schools, plus
those ot the Eastern and Southern Local School Districts, were
.closed on Monday due to weather
conditions. Classes In the six
Meigs Local schools are being
conducted. by substitute
teachers.
• Oltlclala , bave reported no
lllcldenta of vandalism within the
dlltrlct In tile pas~ few days . .
A temporary inJunction has
"Collective bal'l&amp;lntne pro- ·
tocol Clllll tor a neaotlatlng team
been granted against the MLTA
to counter the. oppoalq team'•
bY Jucl&amp;e Charles Knight In the
propoeal; lo makt a eo)lllter Meigs County Common l'Jeaa
offer. It Ia tllll &amp;lve-alllfstalre
Court tllld Judp Knlabt 'laJt
· prooea tbat leadl to the mltlclle week alia 01~ the board o1
IJ'OUDCIIJICI eventual~)' ntiulta In edllcatloll and teachers to nego.

tiate· before tomorrow and to
report back to him the results of
those negotiations.
rt was reported that teachers of
the dlstrlet held a meeting

Monday night at the Rock
Springs Fairgroun~s, but since
negotlattqns are. stoll underway
. there was no actoon for the group .
·to consider.

I UC8T TO I'll&amp; - Bma...- Ho..teta COtaco, Melp County
A rellOrdet, WM $he fin*JOI= te file I ,ell~ of CladldaCY at the
MeliiiCeuaiJIIDMdof
A
·~·· 'deca_.lulterma
reeoJ'IIer. lfbe fliH Iter petllloe .._.., momhl1 willa .Jane
Frr!DJtr, rlaht, boanljll~. 'fte
CM1 prlll'!ll'f .. -., 1.
Tile iJ1i 11tda"1' elecltlae II Nov. a........... lor the prlmtU')'
claellt,p.m. AprlU.
.
.. ·
.

ua

.,

,•"

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