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Pllga 12-The Daily Sentinel
. •

~~~~~~:2~::~---=--~~:-------~--------!P~om~~~~ro~y:!M~M~~~~ap~~~~~O~h~io~------------------~~----_2M~o~~~~~~~~~u~a~~1~·21!9~8~
'

--Area news briefs-EM51J~ seven weekend ealls

East and Midwest.
Pre-dawn temperatures today
were below freezing, !rom the
central high Plains to the Great
Lakes In advance of the Canadian cold front. Early this
morning the front had driven
temperatures to 20 below zero In
northern Montana and North
Dakota.
Brisk northerly -winds - drove
wln.d chill factors to 57 below at
Minot, . N.D., said National
Weather Service lorecater Hugh
Crowther,
.
.
But farther · east five high
temperature records fell before ·
dawn today as a flow of warm air
out of the Gulf of Mexico pushed
the mercury to levels well above
normal.
High temperature records for
Feb. 1 were broken at Buffalo,
N.Y.. where It hit 53, and
Burlington, VI., where It was 50.
•!\round Nation
, . Rochester. KY.. recorded 56,
A blast of frigid Canadian air
Syracuse, · N:Y.. had 57, and
Youngstown; Ohio; was at 51.
drove wind chills as low as 57
below as it swept ·across the
Two dozen high temperature
northern Plains today toward the
records fell Sunday across ihe
eastern half of · the nation !rain
Great Lakes and New England,
threatening to snurt out unseaGreen Bay, Wis., where it was 41,
sonably warm weather In the
to Atlantic City, N.J .. which
notched a 63.

Foreclosure actions filed.

Three fon'closure actions, one 1 against Randy L. Riffle,
Shade. et al.; another against Robert J. Varian. Langsville, et
al; and the third, against Frank W. Houser. Rutland. et al, have
been !lied in Meigs &lt;;:ounty Common Pleas Court by Diamond
Savings and Loan·Co., Findlay.
In another !oreclosure action. June Ann Lowery has been
granted a judgment of $6.300 from James A. Schuler.
Judge Charles H. Knight has stepped down as presiding
authority in the case of Vernon Bartels against the VIllage of
Syracuse. 'Knight has requested the Ohio. Sl!preme Court
appoint a visiting judge to preside In the matter. ·
·
An action by Charles A. Ritchie and Lor! K. Ritchie has been
dismissed.

Stocks higher in
active trading today

I

Janice S. Kinneson
Janice Sue Kinneson. 33.
Langsville, di ed at St. Anthony's
Hospital in Columbus on Saturday followrng a brief m'ness.
Born in Wellston on Dec. 23.
1954, she was a daughter of
Perlene Spears of Willksvl1le and
t he lat e James Franci s
Kinneson.

UMW. •• Continued from page 1

Federal · Reserve Board will
launch a more accommodative
monetary policy leading to lower
·
Interest rates. ·
"If the economy weakens, you
will definitely see the Fed come
to the rescue," said Rao Chalasanl, bond and stock market
strategist with Prescott Ball &amp;
Turben Inc. In Cleveland, Ohio.
"We do look for some kind of
easing."
Harry Miller, portfolio analyst
at Johnson. Lane, Space, Smith &amp;
Co. in Atlanta. said the outlook
lor Interest rate relief was
"hopeful," but the market still
was plagued by ~nc\!rtalnty and
low Investor confidence.
"The last (ew weeks We have
seen very dull a-ctivity," Miller
said. "And while this can be
attributed to a lot of things. It
comes back to the same lack of
conviction that has been evidenced by virtually everyone In
the market since October."
Miller said many Institutions
and Individuals are on the
sidelines "waiting for a consensus to develop. This is still a very
difficult environment in which to
convince clients that there are
opportunities because of the shell
shock o!Oct.l9." ·

Also surviving are a brother
James Robert Kinneson of Rat eli!!; one sister, Mrs. Barbara
Pierce of Langsville. She was
preceded in death by an in!ant
daughter.
Graveside services will be
conducted Tuesday, 1 p.m .. in '
Wilkesville Cemetery, Rev. Marvin Markin officiating.
Arrangements are by McCoyMoore Funeral Home In Vinton.

CoJTeclion

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As o! 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
or Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power ........... .. 29'h
AT&amp;T ... .. ............................. 30
Ashland Oil ................... ..... 56%
Bob Evans .......................... 15V.
Charm.lng Shoppes ...... ........ 12 %
Cl ty Holding Co ................... 29
Federal Mogul .. .......... ..... ... . 36
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 58¥8
Heck's Inc ............... ... ...... ... 1%
Key Centurion ..................... 40
Lands' End .............. .'........... 19
Limited· Inc . ....................... 18%
Multimedia Inc ................... 52'h
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Hobbins &amp; Myers ................. 7%
Shoney's Inc . ............. ......... 22%
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
Worthington lnd.:........... , .. :.l7 %

ran said the rank-and·ftle meet·
lngs with local leaders Friday
were the "crucial factor" In
gaining ratification . of the
contract.
"Clearly, you have to under~
stand the contract Is not ratified," he said. "If we called a
general strike about 65,000
workers could walk out."
The nation's top three coal
companies, Including Peabody
Holding Co., belong to the group,
making It "wlthout·question" the
UMW's biggest contract, Corcoran said.
Tom Hoffman, spokesman for
the coal operators, said approval
of the agreement "will not be a
cumbersome process!' for the
companies, such as Peabody,
Consolidation Coal Co. and Am ax
1
Coal Co.
The national agreement covers
worker.s In more than a dozen
states east of the Mississippi
River Including Kentucky, West
VIrginia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Alabama, Ohio, Indiana and
Illinois.

I

Area deaths

,.

By Unllecl Preu International
High -temperature records,
two of which had stood since the
year the Germans attacked the
French a I Verdun, were broken
or equaled Sunday In parts of
Ohio.
Afternoon readings sta tewlde
climbed Into the 50s aand low 60s.
Highs ranged from 54 degrees In
Findlay and Toledo to 63 at
Cincinnati's Lunken Airport.
In Akron-Canton Sunday, the
mercury hit 58; eclipsing by one
degree the old record for Jan. 31,
set In 1916. Besides being famous
for the World War I. battle, .that
also was the year Gen. John J.
Pershln!( cl)ased Pancho VIlla In
Mexico.
The 1916 record high of 54 was
equaled In Toledo Sunday.
Other reeords for highs were
broken In Findlay, Mansfield.
. Youngstown and. Zanesville.

Meigs County Emergency Medlcaf Services reports seven
calls over the weekend; three Saturday and four Sunday.
Saturday at 2:18p.m., Tuppers Plains to Marcinko !;toad for
·' Robert Marcinko to St. Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Middleport at 11:15 p.m. to Hartinger Parkway for
James See to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy\at 11:18
- p.m:to Route 33 for JeH Hinkle to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 4: 04 a.m., Racine to Route 338 for VIcki Boso to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:29a.m. to Route 124
for Leroy Bartrum to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy .a t 12:59
p.m. to Condor St. fo.r Wayne Williamson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 1(): 08 p.m . to Butternut Ave. for Michael
Hubbard to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Stock
prices moved higher in active
early trading today. extending
gains won In the previous two
sessions amid a growing optimIsm over ihe likelihood of Interest
rate reductions.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose28.18Frlday, was
up 10.45 to 1968.67 at 10 a.m. EST.
Advances led declines 855-342
among the 1.618 Issues crossing
the New York Stock Exchange
tape. Volume was · active,
amounting to about 48.70 million
shares during the first 30 minutes
of trading.
· The prospects for lower interest rates provided the stock
market with a much needed
boost last week as prices staged a
broad advance despite evidence
of continued uncertainty and low
investor confidence.
The Dow Jones Industrial average rose 28.18 Friday to close the
week at 1958.22. For the week, the
index gained 54.71. or2.9 percent.
"The market held up reasonably well for the entire week, "
said Ricky Harrington, an ana lyst with Interstate Securities
Corp. In Charlotte. N.C.
Analysts said the market's
advance Thursday and Friday
reflected a strong belief the

Ohio reports record
high
temperatures.
.

Kenneth R. Shuster. Dexter,
was fined last week in Meigs
County Court, $250 and costs, .
three days In jail and his license
suspended for 60 days, for DWI.
The name was lncorrecily . reported as Kenneih R. Shultes In
Sunday's newspaper.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions -Edson
Roush, Racine.
Saturday discharges - Erica
Garnes, Kathryn Evans.
Sunday admissions - Vicki
Boso, Portland, Ore.; Wayne
Williams, Middleport; Michael
Hubbard, Syracuse.
Sunday discharges -Barbara
Johnson. Daisy Sisson, Janet
Jenkins.

Announcem~nts
Sorority to meet
The Heart and Hands Meeting
of XI Gamma MuChapterofBeta
Sigma Phi Sorority wlll be held ·
Tuesday, 7:30p.m .. at the home
of Johanna Shuler. Gifts are to be
wrapped In white paper with pink
bows.
Olive Trustees meet
Olive Township Trustees will
meet Friday, 6:30 p .m .. at the
Reedsville Fire Station.
Meet tonight
Letart Township Trustees will
meet tonight rMonday), 6 p.m ..
at the office building.
Rutland Village Council will
mee t Tuesday
Rutland
councilnight, 7 p.m., at
the civic €enter.

Hoffman declined to discuss
contract Issues but had said the
mine owners seek "a contract
that recognizes our need to
compete in the long-term in a
tough energy market;"
The contract must "allow
tunlonlzed mines) to compete
with non-union coal . .. t and) with
gas and oil. ... (and permit)
coal-fired electricity to compete
with hydroelectric power," Hoffman said.
The ·association, which once
represenied more than 100 companies In 1980, bargains for only
15 companies. Some 24 or more
companies pulled out of the
organlza lion and . signed "me
too" contracts which say that
they agree to pay whatever
settlement tlie association
agr'ees to.
South Central Ohio
Today, occasional rain. High 60
to 65. Winds southwest 5 to 15
mph . Chance of rain near 100
percent.
Tonight. more rain, possibly
heavy. Low 45 to 50. Winds
southwest changing to northeast
5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 90
percent.
Tuesday, still more rain.
Cooler with the high 45 to 50.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of snow in the north and
of rain or snow in the south on
Wednesday. Fair thursday.
. Chance of rain or snow Friday .
Highs hl the 30s Wednesday,
from the low 30s to low 40s
Thursday and from the upper 30s
to the .upper 40s Friday. Lows
from the mid-teens to the'mld-20s
r;torth and from the mld-20s to the
mld-30s .s outh through the period.

.....

Pick 4

Page3

3861

•

a1 y
Vol.38, No.1 86 .
Copyrighted 1 988

•·.

·~·

EE}SNOW
-RAIN
( /,;:;1 SHOWERS
,
FRONTS:
Warm "
Ccld
. . Sialic . . Occluded
Map shows minimum tempP.ratures . At least 50% or any shadeq area is rorec~st to receive precipitation indicated
1
UPI

11

WEATHER M~P - Snow will be l"idespread r~om the central
. Rockies through the central Plains and the Iipper Great Lakes
region. A b11J1d of freezing rain Will develop across south central
and northeastern Kailsas. Rain showers will occur from the
Mississippi Valley through the Tennessee and Oblci valleys, the
lower Great Lakes and Middle Atlantic st9tes Into New England.
Rain will be most likely across the Ohio Valley and lower Great
Lakes with a few thunderstorms across · Arkansas and the
TeMessee Valley.

.
.
said
that
.
lighting
and
Councllman
Bill
permission,
the
mayor
· BY NANCY YOACHAM
could
at
'least
Young
reported
that
he
m
et
village
workers
Sentinel News Staff ,
start
cleaning
away
the
brush.
recently
with
electric
company
What to do about debris In the
representatives, Young has been ·
West Main St. area where a rock Councilmembers agreed they
would
like
to
see
the
debris
pushing for some time for Instalslide pccurred In late November
Jation of decorative lights along
was discussed Monday night by cleaned away and a damaged
of
the
area.
but
the sidewalk In the downtown
trailer
moved
out
members ·of Pomeroy Village
also'
agreed
that
It
would
be
a
section
to beautl!y the village
Council. Mayor Rlc)lard Seyler
expensive
proposition
and
eliminate
poles on the
much
too
said several local resl~ents have
lor
the
village
to
atte~pt
to
have
parking
Jot.
If
the
new lighting Is
. asked him what council plans to
from
the
site.
Jnstalie'd,
Young
has been told
the
rock
removed
· do about the mess.
Council
has
not
given
up
the
that
the
double
light
poles will be
Because the slide Is on private
Idea
of
Installing
new
street
made
of
all!minuin
or
fiberglass,
property, there Is nothing . the
lighting
In
Pomeroy's
downtown
and
will
probably
be
higher
than
vllhlge can do to begin cleaning · _
area.
·
the
poles
currently
In
use.
shopping
up. the' area without permission ·
Columbus and Southern · Is
. Young said electric company
from the owners,' said Mayor
representatives are now checkSeyler. If ti1e' owners would give responsible for the downtown

•

\.\

ent1ne
1 Section, 1 0 Pages 26 Cent a
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

TWIN

EA. PC. ·

FULL

EA..'PC.

right, after emerging·from his den at 7:32a.m.
today. Phil did not see his shawdow, calling lor an
early spring. (UPI)

1,

Corf1)0site index o~

Leading Economic

Indicators

council to lease a computer from
the Leads Co. in Columbus to use
in ver!lying · registrations ·
through the State Bureau of
Motor Vehicles.
· Council's dec Is loll to lease the
computer was made at the last
regular council meeting.
Costs for the computer would
be approximately $400 per month
plus installation fees. Strict regurations must be followed In using
the computer to access ln!ormatlon and the system can be pulled
by the state at any time the
regulations are f10t followed

properly.
Councilman B(yan .Shank reported that Pomeroy Fire DeP!!rlment's new truck should be
arriving the e nd of March. First
truck payment of $27,000 will be
due upon delivery said Clerk
Jane Walton .
Walton also Issued a reminder ·
that cemetery fees of $5 per
grave 'for annual maintenance
and upkeep can now be paid to
the vlliage.
The mayor's report of $J.9281n
fines and fees collected for the
month of January was accep-ted.

•

tilde~

1967-tOO

several months that Celeste
wanted to move Transportation
Director Warren Smith Into the
chairmanship o! the Ohio Industrial Commission because of
controversy surrounding
Lancaster.
Lancaster. a black man, was to
be shifted · over to the Public
Ut!ilt!es Commission ,of Ohio to
replace commissioner William
Brooks, also a black man, who
was retiring.
Under a 1982 law , the 11member public Utilities Commission Nominating Council
makes its recommendations to
the governor. It recommended
Lancaster and three others.
"It was close," related one
member of the council in recal ling how Lancaste r got on the
short list. "He was the one that
squeezed by.:' This council'
. member said the decision was
dellb€fa tely delayed while a vote
was rounded up for Lancaster.
. The law requires public utili ties commissioners to have at
least three years' experience In
one or more of the following
fields: economjcs, law , finance .
accounting, engineering, physical or natural sciences, natural
resources or environmental
studies.
Lancaster is an attorney who
has worked for the Ohio Adult
Parole Authority, the Kroger
Co., the Bureau of Workers '
Compensation and , since 1976,
the Industrial Commission.
The law also requires that the
primary locus of the background
of'two of the five commissioners

Is on energy, and for two other
commissioners, on transportation or communications
technology.
"We want the Nominating ·
Council members to shOw up and
tell us how they considered
things." said Sen . Richa rd Finan, R·Cincinnatl. ·Chairman of
the committee.
"The questioning has been,
how does Lancaster fit into these
categories. and .1 don't think the
answers we' ve gotten have been
very adequate."
·
Finan also is in charge of
overriding Celeste's veto on the
bill . delaying the mandatory
aspect of _the auto emissions
testing In Hamilton. Butler,
Cuyahoga. Lake and Lorain
·counties.
Finan said· Republicans will
caucus to see how many voies
they can raise to override Celeste. Twenty-two are needed,
the same number that passed the
bill last wee k..
"I know the governor 's people
are beating on them rsenators
who voted to delay the testing) ,"
Finan said Monday .
The governor sa id he talked
with "a hall dozen" senators,
"primarily Republicans, " in an
effort to sustain hi s veto.
Testing began Monda y in the
affected areas, but motori sts
whose last names begin with C
· and D don't have to have a
certificate of Inspection until'
they want to register their
vehicles later this month . An
override would mean they don't
need a certificate until next year .

Index figures down 0.2 percent
DAVID VESEY
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UP I) - The composite index
of leading Indicators, which foreshadows economic growth, fell 0.2 percent In December for the
third straight monthly decline, the Commerce
Department said Tuesday.
·
The downturn In December followed revised
declines o.! 1.2 percent In November, which
reflected the plunge In stock prices, and 0.1
percent In October. Originally , the department's
Bureau of Economic Analysl,s reported a 1.7
percent decline In November and a 0.2 percent
Increase in October.
Since World War II there have been 12 instances
in whiCh the composite Index has declined three
consecutive months . Eight of those ' Instances
have been followed by recession .
In this most recent case, however, two of the
monthly declines. In October and December. have '
been small and are subject to revision as
economic data. reach government analysts.
Five of the nine seasonally adjusted_lndlcat\)rs
available In December contributed to the decline.
The;r- were, In order of Impact,· building permits,
change In prices of sensitive materials, es(1eCially

lumber and scrap meta l, average weekly claims
lor unemployment Insurance, stock prices and
average work week.
Four indicators were positive factors in the
December index. From the largest to smallest
contributor, 'they were contracts and orders for
building plants and factory equipment. vendor
performance, new orders for manufactured
consumer goods and money supply .
The major contributor to the November
revision was change in Inventories. while cha nge
in credit outstanding was the major reason for the
October revision, the department said.
In the !ourth quarter of 1987. the composite
lndex·fell 0.5 percent. That followed Increases of
1.1 percent In the th!Jd quarter and 1.6 percent in
the first and second quarters . ·
The Index, 'starting at 100 In 1967, was 190.7 in
Decembe.r.
·
·
The composite Index of coincident Indicators. a
monthly appr9ximatlon of aggregate economic .
activity, lncr,eased 0.8 perce nt In December .
The composite Index of lagging Indicators
Increased 0.7 percent In December, the department said.
·
·

PUNXSUTAWNEY. Pa.
the 10·pounci rodent.
(UPI)- P\!nxsutawney Phil, the
At the ceremony were exweather•!orecastlng groundhog, change students from countries
today emerged from his hole iri a as diverse as Ireland, Colombia,
steady rain and !ailed·to s~ his France and Mexico.
slladow for only the ninth time In
"It makes you think that some
the past 101 years - a harbinger of the things Americans do are a
of an early spring.
little strange, waking up to see an
The , rain-drenched crowd of animal, "said Helena Gomez, 18,
abOut 1,000 people cheei-e'd wildly 'of · Colombia. "'«$. don' t do. lt. . ·
when "the Great Prognostlca- Maybe to see a person, but not an
. tor" emerged -lr0f11 Ills electrl-' animal. It makes you realize thai
cally heated, man-made burrow America Is a completely differatop Gobblers' Knob and whls· ent country." ·
pered his prediction In "groungh·
''It's really con!uslurt~ and
ogese" to James Means. presi- unus11al ·and even a little bit
dent · of the Punxsutawney crazy" said Ivan Desentis, 17, of
South Central Ohio
Groundhog Club.
Mexico.
Rain or drizzle today. with
"Phil came out Qf his official
When the dflybreak extravatemperatures !alllng Into the mid
home at 7:32 a.m. to start his ganza In Punxsutawney ended,
40s. Occasional rain tonight, with
second century with an accurate the furry forecaster was whisked
a iow near 40. Rain likely
prediction. He has failed to see to thedowntcr.Vn municipal buildNEW YORK IUPI) - Poll~ _ Edwin ~erez, 30. was In critical
Wednesday. with highs in the low
lils shadow,'' said Means, the Ing and snuggled Into the l)eated
scoured
a residential neighbor:--...sondltlon after surgery for a
40s.
sole Punxautawnlan of. 8,000 In · den - complete with lights, a
The probab111ty of precipita- hOod today for a rooftop sniper gunshot Wound In the lower back,
this. blue-Collar, western Pen- pl'lvate waterfall and a view of
,
tion Is neat 100percent today.and whose. gunshots killed one man the spokesman said.
nsyivanl&amp; town wllo. Is well- the public park - that Phil
wounded
three
others
on
a
Candido
Sepulveda,
25,
whose
and
tonlg'ht _an.d · 70 percent
versed In PhD's tlftlVe tolllflle.
shares with his cousin and
Brooklyn street corner.
head was .grazed by a bullet, was
Wednesday.
Lepnd has It that'lf a ground- understudy Baniey.
The
assailant
fled
the
top
of
the
lrl
fair col!dltlon. Jorge Gonzalez,
1
Winds will be from the north at
hoi seet1 bta ahadow he will be
"This Is the best advertising
tenement
on
Bushwlck
Avenue
35,
was at Wyckoff Heights
10 to 15 mph today and from the
scared b*C:k Into his burrow for you can .. set. It's all over the
after
opening
fire
about
8:
:IOp.m.
Hospital
hi Brooklyn In stable
northeast at 10 to 15 mph tonight.
six more weelcl of winter.
world,". Hld Mayor Mike Catan·
Monday,
said
pollee
Capt.
Wilcondition
with a leg wound.
Bdellded Forecut
Meana llkl It II only the ninth zar~&amp;o, Who haa been a resident of
llam Wern. On the street corner,
Do2ens of pollee otflcers spent
Thtll'lllii,Y throu&amp;h Saturday
lime ID t1te paal'101 yean that the Punxsutawney since 1919. "I tell
A chance of srlow Thursday, his targets were talking and early today combing the dilaplanimal klqdom's most ac- people that Punxsutawney Is the
with lair weather Friday and a enjoylng the unseasonably warm dated build!• of the largely
claimed meteorologllt has pre- weather capital of the world and
chance of snow Saturday. Highs weather when they were struck . residential· neighborhood In an
dicted an early aprllll. ·
outer &amp;~Mace."
eHort to find the trlgaerman,
will ranp from the mid 20s to the by the small-caliber bullets. ·
Many In t!W crowd' lhr\lipd
Club otflotalalnsist that Ph ills low 30a each day. Overnllfht lows
Shot In the head, Jose Correa, said Detective Ted Emanuele.
ott the 47-di!IJte weather and
the very ume groundhllll who wiD be In the 20s early Thursday 35. died about 11:15 p.m. at Kings
Helicopters clattered over·
. ralllaad toalted f&gt;!lll wltll beer as
head aa officers went from
bas been reportlq on tbe dawn of and In the teens Friday and · County Hospital In Brooklyn, a
Mealll. In top hal and talla. held
ColiUnued on pa,e 10
· hospital spokesman said.
•
door-to-door In lin effort to fi~d
Saturday mc(lllqa;. •

Weather

Sniper kills ·one, wounds three

EA. PC.

EA. PC.

· EL

~

STOlE HOUIS ·

9!30 AM-SaGO PM •·

!!l

fti·MJ11

•

.

ing Into ~osts related to installalion oL the new poles. Yqung
believesmucho!thelaborcanbe
dpne by village wor kers, thereby
saving money on the project .
Mayor Seyler reported that
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources employees have
begun core drilling the hillside
behind the Pomerqy Masonic
Lodge building. If testing proves
that water from abandoned coal
mines Is causing slippage prob!ems to develop on the. hillside,
then ODNR will reclaim the
problem location.
.Application has been made by

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I )
The Ohio Senate Ways and
Means Committee, In a rare
workout on a gubernatorial ap'po!ntee, will" be raising sharp
questions again this Week about .
the , app(&gt;lntment of · Leo~ard
Lancaster, a former state Industrial commissioner, to the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
'rhe committee was to hear
testimony later today from the
noJl\inatlng council which put
Lancaster on a list of four
acceptable candidates last
December.
In what seemed an obvious
political ! m,ove, telegraphed
weeks in advance, Gov. Richard
Celeste chose Lancaster from the
/
,list. '
The Senate planned to convene
,
', &lt;U~ l.;,3Q. _p,m,.loct a&gt;' to, consider.
· among other biils. a revision in
the state Boxing Commission.
Senators also may try to
override the governor's veto last
. Friday of a bill delaying for six
months a mandatory auto emis sions inspection program in the
Cincinnati and Cleveland areas.
The House meets Wednesday
at 1:30 p.m .
Lancaster has been on the
griddle at two ,prior Ways and
Mean's Committee hearings because or the mysterious way In
which he was appointed. The
Senate Is empowered to confirm
or veto certain guberrtatorlai.
appointments, and most sail
·
through untouched .
It had been broadcas t for

HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.-8 P.M
SATURDAY9 A.M.-6 P.M.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

(SOlD AS 3 PC. SET)

MQN.·SAT.

tonight .

·Panel questions ·. appointment

Punxsutawney Phil ~
predicts early spring

KING

rain

Wednesday . Highs In low 40s.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 2, _1 988

• INDIVIDUALS~FEDERAL-STATE
• OUT OF STATE RETURNS
•· BUSINESS - SMALL OR LARGE
• PARTNERSHIPS
• CORPOUTIONS
• OIL AND GAS

QUE~N

Occasional

Low near 40. Rain likely

Rock slide debris Pomeroy . council .topic·
)

EARLY SPRING? ' - PUnxsutawney Phil Is
rattled Into the air by his handler, Bud Dankel,

Jennifer L . Shuler. Shade, has
filed for a divorce In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Martin A. Shuler, Little
Creek, Va. A restraining order
has been issued against the
defendant.
David Powell, Racine, and Eva
Lee Powell, Sandyville, W.Va.,
bave !lied for a dissolution of
their marriage;
A divorce has been granted to
Paul K. Arthurs from Catherine
R. A hurs.

RAIN

277

.'

Divorces sought

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE M. COWNS

Daily Number

NA:nol~4!. WEATHER SERVICE F.ORECAST Tp 7 AM E$T 2·2·88 • ·

Council to meet
Chester Councll 323, Daughters
of America, will meet at. 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. Members
who are going to the rally are
urged to attend .to practice
presenting the colors.

10°/o PENALTY WI~L BE CHARGED
AFTER THE FEB. 12 DATE ON REAL
•
•
ESTATE TAX.

Ohio Lottery

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~========~===========~;;;;;;;;;;;;~

LAST DAY TO PAY FIRST HALF REAL
ESTATE TAX WILL BE FEB. 12, 1988.

•'

Widespread snow was forecast
today from the central Rockies
through the central Plains and
Into the upper Great !1akes. A
band of freezing rain was expectedtodevelopacrosspartsof
Kansas. with rain . showers
spreading from the lower Mlssls·
sippi,' Tennessee and Ohio val- .
leys through the Middle Atlantic states Into New England.
-

Redmen· battle
Mount Vernon

·weather .

EXTENSION
GRANTED
.
.

'

The balmy weather was not
expected to last.
"It (the Canadian cold !ront)
will begin pushing Into New
England and the lower Great
Lakes by ,this evening,"
Crowther said. "It looks like
•most of the eastern U.S. ~hould
be warm today, but by. early
Tuesday, temperatures should
be cooling down pretty much."

'

I

'

I.

the killer, Emanuele said. Traf!lc was closed of! for live blocks .
"We're knocking on doors
asking If anybody saw anything,
heard anything, knew anthlng,
anything that can help us." he
said.
.
Pollee had no explanation for
the shooting, he sal«&lt;. The corner
was not considered a known drug
location. he said.
"We don't know why. We know
how, but not why," Emanuele
said. "It could have been a
dispute, drugs. a million things. "
Although pollee searched desperately for witnesses, they said
It . appeared the only wltnes~ ·
were tht! victims.

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Ohio

Villanova stops .Georgetown
against competition like we have
By Unlled Pre~~~~ lnternatlolllll
In an -era not long ago, In the Big East, you have to learn
Georgetown used a dominant somethlnll about defense."
The smaller Hoyas could not
defensive. center .to rule the Big
CORtaln Greis, who avoided falEast. Monday night, VIllanova
11sed the same formula to dump ling Into the foul trouble that has
plag~~ed him this season.
.
the 13th-ranked Hoyas.
•:The
bit
boy
was
bllrtlng
us
Tom Greis, VIllanova's 7-foot-2
Inside,"
Georgetown
Coach
John
sophomore, scored 21 points,
blocked 9 shots and grabbed 5 Thompson said. "We had to
make too many adj11stments."
rebo11nds to lead the Wildcats to a
Mark Plansky had 14 polrits·for
64·58 Big East' triumph over
· Georgetown, which won the . VIllanova, 15-6 overall an!! 7·3 In
the Big East, While Kenny Wilson
conference to11rnament three
times and made three trips to the · and Gary Massey had 10 each.
Mark Tillmon led Georgetown,
NCAA IItle game with Patrick
14·5
and 4-4, with 24 points and
.Ewing earlier this decade.
Charlie
Smith bad 15.
"I was very pleased with Tom
In
other
games InvolVIng
Greis' effort," VIllanova Coach
ranked
teams,
No. 5 Dllke
Rollle Massimino said . "He
bounced
Clemson
101-63 and
makes the big plays and goes
Wichita State downed No. 16
after It. He gets better each time
Bradley.
out on the court. "
Ma's slmlno has been critical of ( At Durhalll..N.C .. Phil Henderson scored 18 points to help Duke
his cenier's defense this year, but
Greis ~aid It was simply a m.a tter improve to 14·2 ove~all and 4-lln
the Atlantic Coast Conference.
of seasoning.
" I' ve been concentrating on It The Blue Devils. who hit lOof 11
In .practice and It's something 3·polnt attempts. have beaten
Clemson seven straight times·.
· that's Improved with expe·
The
Tigers . In their most lop·
·
rlence." he said. "When you play

sided conference loas of the year,
dropped to 11·7 and H. · Ttwy
have lost 38 of th~;lr 41 games aot
Duke.
'
At Wichita , Kan .. Way• Pnl)'low scored 24 points and Sa·h
Radunovlch and Lew HIU a' 2 '
21 apiece as Wlchlla State t •
over first plac!' In the Mls!IOUrt
Valley Conference. SteveGraye•
added 14 points for the Shockers,
who lmproved to 12-7 overall .U
5·2 In the lea~. Hersey Haw-,
klns, tile nation's leading scorer,
notched 37 points for Bradley,
which had a six-game wllllliq
streak slapped ancf fell to 13-3 allll
4·2.
In other garRes, It was: Ford!·
ham 83, Marquette i3; Ma...chusetts 60,· St. Bonaventure 56;
Mlaml79, Marlst 76 ID Overtime;
Furman 90, Davidson 80; Loula·
ville 107, VIrginia Tech !It;
Marshall 103, Western Carolina
74; VIrginia 77, JackllonviUe 52;
Austin Peay . 7~, 'VOIIllgStowa
State 68:' Cincinnati 81, Northl!fll
Illinois · 60; New · MeXIco 118,
Colorado State 5i; and Soutllem
Cal 67 Washington 65.

Spartans topple B.ucks, 76-64 .[

L
BLOCKS SHOT- Ohio Slate's Tony White (20)
blocks Mi chigan Stale's Carlton Valentine's shot
in the first half of l'llonday night's Big Ten match

In East Lansing, Mich. The Spartans downed the
· Buckeyes 76-64. ( UPI)
·

Blues make it record six in row
By United Press International
The St. Louis Blues bave
cll mbE'd a bove .500, th e ma rk of
stea din&lt;•ss in sports . No t in the
. Blues ' case. though.
Doug Gi lmour ,, eo re d a t 7: :;3 of
the second pe riod Mond ay night
to send thE' Blues to a club-record
sixth stra ig ht vict or y,

~-&lt;1

over

the Toronto Maple Leafs.
The Blues ' season ha s been
marked by inconsiste ncy. They
opened th·e season with four
losses . went on a 6·1·2 spree in
'Decembe r. then began the N&lt;&gt;w
Year by dropping seve n of e ight
games .
ln th e 21 -year his tory of the

Blues , whic h includes the 1980·81
season ~hen · they amassed 107
poin'" . they had been unaple io
put together more than, fl:o-e
.consecutive triumphs. St. Louis
had built fi ve-game win strings in
1968-69 a nd 1971·72. ·
"I gues s it's sort of funny.lsn't
Continued on page·7

EAST LANSING. Mich. (UP]) to Redfield, who promptly layed did." Heathcote said. "We tried
- Mlchiga_n State tmward Ken It ln. gave Michigan State a 4641 to get the ball liP and down .the ·
Redfield made sure Coach Jud l,e ad at the 13:23 mark.
. Cl)urt against the press enough to
Heathcote thinks twice before · Then Michigan State built that maybe make a difference In the
leaving him o11t of the slartlng · · margin to nine, 58-49, , when game.''
The Spartans opened the 11ame
lineup.
Re?fleld made a slx·footer In
playJng
like a team that's In the '
Redfield, benched to make heavy traffic and Rison recel,v ed ·
B,lg
Ten
basement. They 'made
room for freshman Jesse Hall. a court:long pass for 11n easy
just
one
of
their first eight shots
tossed in 20 points to lead the .lay.up at 7:24.
from
the
field,
while the Buck'
Spartans to a 76-64 win over Ohio
Ohio State. charged within fo11r
overcame
sloppy play and
eyes
State Monday night at Jenison at 62-58 behind Curtis Wilson's
hit
on
five-of-eight
to lead 10-4.
Field House.
3-polnter, but Rison and Smith
Ohio
State
went
deathly cold,
"It's hard tor any player to began working the 'transition
and
shot
29
percent the
however,
accept being benched, but 1 game to perfection once again.
played a pretty good game."
Rison fed Smith for a bucket rest of the half.
Smith set the tone with a steal
Redfield said. ·"We won. we and then flipped one to center
and
reverse dunk. This sparked a ·
finally got a victory . We worked Bobby Worthington. who made a
Spartan
run .o! seven straight
dunk to give the.Spartans a 66-58
hard all week and ·u paid off."
baskets
from the field and
The win awakens a slumbering lead •With 4:29 remaining.
Mtchlg11n
St11te
managed to bullil
Spartan team, 7-10 overall. and
Ohio State then tried to get
a
five-point
lead,
; 19-14, wllh 9:23
moves them Ol!t of the J'!lg Ten back In -the game by sending
left In the half.
cellar wlil) . a 2-5 conference Mlchlga!l State to the .free-throw
Smith, who scored 1~ In the
mark. Ohio State fell to 3-4 and line, but tlle Spartans, a 69
session. led .a potent Spartan
10-7.
percent team from the line. made
break
that riddled the Buckeyes'
the
crucial
shots
down
the
"It seems like forever since
full-court
press11re.
stretch
.
we've won a game." Heathcote
Burson,
on the Other hand, was ·
different
This
:was
a
totally
said.
held
In
check
and took just fo11r
Michigan
State
team
than
thi&gt;one
Freshman Steve Smith added
shots
In
the
first
20 minutes. He
that
slept
though
last
week's
18 points. while Ed Wright
had
six
points
In
the
half.
game
with
lowly
Minnesota
,
a
chipped In 15. Jerry Francis led
State
led.l!Y
as many
Michigan
62·59 loss.
the Buckeyes with l9.
as
six.
25-19
with
5:38
remaining,
"We figured we had to play
Redfield, a 6-foot -7 sophomore
but Burson sank a pair of
with
more emotion, enthusiasm
from Chicago. po11red In 14 points
Jumpers
to cut the halftime gap
and
Intensity
than
we
did
against
In the second· half as the Spartans
to
three,
32·29.
Minnesota.
and
.
I
thought
we
took advantage oi the Buckeyes'
Ineffective full·court press for 20
fastbreak ·potnts.
"We're going to live or die with
our full-court pressure." said
Buckeye coach Gary Williams.
"It's been very good to us all
year. jfonight, they handled It
prett1fwel I."
And a poor shooting night
simply added to Williams' trollB.S. NO. 1
bles. The Buckeyes shot just 39
percent for the game, while the
Spartans were good on 54 percent
of their shots. ·
Jay .Burson. 'the Big ten's
thlrd·leadjng scorer with a 19.8
point average. was held to l4
20 LB. BAG
points.
·
"It was a tough loss for us to
take," said Burson. who knows
the Buckeyes' NCAA Tournament hopes are fading. "We have
291 SEC- ST.
to start playing one game at a
Time. I think In the first half we
let them put us off our offense a
liTTle bit."
The key to the game. th&lt;&gt;ugh.
was Michigan State's ability to
handle the press. Whenever tile
Buckeyes pulled close, Smith or .
Andre Rison would lead a break
that usually resulted In easy
baskets.
·
·J
With Ohio State creeping back
at 44-41, the Spartan transition
game proved to be a savlar..
r.
"We were. more successful
/ than I though.t we'd be," Heath·
cote said. "We said that we were
going to attack the press, that's
always our theory. Unless you
attack the pre~s. It will get you."
Rison 's between·the-legs pass
. ~·

'

CORRECTION

SUNDAY'S AD SHOULD HAVE
READ

WHITE POTATOES

Sl 99

POWELL'S SUPEI .VlLUE

•

U)·

8.5°/o

\
•

CONSTRUCTION

•

.

Lyne Center pool
closed for rep&amp;irs
The pool at Rio Grande College's Lyne Center will be closed
until further notice.' according to
Lyne Center director Gene
Moore. The pool '1')11 be opened
·
when repair~ are made.

TAKES OUT DEFENDER- Hartford Whaler
. Ron Frand.• takes out Montreal Canadien
: d e l~n!lcr Chris Cheli'os as goalie Patrick Roy loses

'Cooper ...
· . Johnson. a 6-foot-2, 208-pound
running ba ck . who . rushed for
1.962 ya rds a nd scored 23 tou ch·
down s las t season. chose the
j3uckeyes over Mic higan State
a fler a weekend visit to Ohio
St ate .
Other s who a nnounced Mon·
day for Ohio State were Judah
Herman. of Chagrin Falls Ken·
ston. a 6-foot ·2 , 210·pound line·
backer anti UP! Division Ill first
ream all-s ta ter ; Chris Roy of

'

control of the puck just·before theWhalers' second
power-play goal' in Mo~day nlg(Jt's game In
Montreal. (Reuter)

'

.

.

YOU DON'T
. HAVE TO BE
.
A FIRST TIME HOME OWNER
TO QUALIFY!
.

, 9.44% ~P.R.

Columbus DeSales, a 6-foot -3,
230-pound tight end-defensive
end. named to the Division II fir st
team:. and Massillon tackle John
Schilling, a Division I honorable
mention pick .
'
With nine days remaining
before national signing day Feb.
10.. Cooper's list of commlrted
players has reached at least 16.
. Among those committing' last
week to Ohio State were Zanesville running back-defensive

~'

back Buster Howe, the Division 1
back of the year, and Tony
Closson of Delphos Jefferson the
Division V lineman of the y~ar.
Still uncommitted and so~~ght
by Cooper are Toledo Ma·
comber's outstanding Division I
running back Chuck Webb and
O.J . McDuffie · of Gates MIUs
Hawken , the Division IV back of
the year . B.o th have said they will
not announce until next week.

PEOPLES BANK

Page 6

-

By BOB HOEFLICH
friends {)n Guadaloupe Island; a
. For several years, thanks to
French lsland near South
Meigs County Superintendent of
America.
Schools John
Riebel, who
Meigs Local' parents of college
originated the
bQund seniors should mark Feb.
· Idea, a banquet
10 on their calendars.
has been held
Diana Kinder from Rio Grange
annually , to hoCollege will be on hand at the
nor students
Meigs High School Ll brary from
across Meigs
7 to 9 p.m .. to conduct a financial
County who are .outstanding 'In
aid workshop. If you liave any
questions before the workshop
.academics.
comes up, just call 992·2158, and
Tbls year, the Southern Local
Sch!lol District Is picking up on
talk to one of the guidance
counselers at the high school.
the Idea and will stage within the
district a spring banquet to honor
'
Congratulations
to Mrs. Glada
outstanding academic students.
Davis who will obsesrve her 90th
Student selection will be based
birthday anniversary on Feb.l2.
on academic achievement and
She loves g&lt;&gt;tllng cards and they
the student with the highest
academic average shall be se· · can be sent to 35293 Bowles Road .
Dexter. Ohio 45726.
lected. In order to keep a
manageable, yet proportionate
Did you know that the Internal
. gro\lp. a quota system has been
Revenue Service has a local
. established. Portland and Letart
taxpayer service .office to assist
Schools may each sell'ct of\e
from student from each grade,
th(l 'publ-Ic with tax ques11 0n,s,
~econd through sixth; . Racine
·
and Syracuse may each select
of
individual
Income
tax
returns
iwo shldents from each grade,
second through sixth. while the
at 1005 E . State St. In Athens ?
junior high and high school may
This walk· In service Is avalla each select live percent of the bleat the Athens facllllty from 8
students In each of the respective a .m. to 12 noon and 12:45 to 4:30
grades.
p.m. through April 15.
The.Southern Board of Educa·
With the Income tax deadline
lion. the Southern Local Educa- moving right ln. you can also call
tion Association. the Southern a toll free number , 1-800-424-1040,
Local Association of School Em·
through April!!\ If you can't get
ployees, and ' thl' staff of th&lt;&gt; over to the Athens office.
district have pledged support in
The telephone line Is function·
ing from 8.: 30 a .m. io 5: :lO p.m.
the &lt;&gt;!fort to honor Southern
studenis for academic every Monday and from · 8:30
a.m. 1o 5: 30 ..p.m.. Tuesday
achievement.
through Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Several committees have been
on Saturdays and on Feb . 7 and
appointed to develop plans and
Feb. 14 you can rail on Sunday
more Information will be forth ·
from
1 I? 5 p.m .
coming as the various commit·
tees finalize details.
Marcia Keller has a historical
coat
hanger - one of those fat
Members of the Meigs High
wooden
ones that they just don't
School graduating class of 1978
will meet at the home of Cathy · make anymore. The hanger
came from the Lo~ Horwitz
,Johnson, Wright St., P,omeroy, at
clothing store which operated In
7:30 p.m. tonighT. 10 discuss a
Pomeroy In the early 1900's: .
class reunion. If you need dlrec·
lions on how to get to Cathy's just · Marcia plans to pass it on to the
Meigs Museum.
·
'
call'992·6514.
.

~~~~~~~~~q~~~~e~v~~\~~~~~~:~~~

Pall(e Halley has returned to
her hom&lt;&gt; In tipper Arlington
-after spending the past 10 days
.with her grandparents, Mr. and
·Mrs. Earl Knight In Middleport.
:Paige was visiting here while her
parents. Mr. a,nd Mrs. · Ron
Halley . were vacationing with

You've been given an extra
week -to pay your real estate
Taxes. Originally-. the daadline
was Feb. 5. George Collins.
county treasurer. says you now 1
have until Feb. 12. Does this
mean ,you can keep smiling a
week longet·?

_:.uMFI cof!ducts meeting
A slide show on New · Guinea
taken when the Rev . David Bell
was there In missionary work
was shown at the recent mE&gt;eting
of the Laurel Cliff Free Metho·
dlst Women's Mlssonary Fellow·
ship held at lh&lt;' church.
VIcki Bell was hostess for the
.meeting with Karen Stanley
: having the opening prayer.
i Psalms 34 and ·readings on
'{ constant praise and thanksgiving
, for God's plentiful bl&lt;'sslngs were
: given .bY Donna Gilmore,
·; New assoclat&lt;&gt; membcr~hlps

were accepted at the meeting
and officers' reports tj:iven.
·
it was noted that Fl'bruary is
Compassion month. The first
Sunday in March the CYM wil
present a skit on compassion.
A work meeting was scheduled
at the church . Bonnie Friend won
the friPndshlp basket. and a
prayer circle closed the meeting.
Refreshments were prepared
by Mrs. Friend and Janice
Haggy who will host. thi s month's
meeting.

Meigs land transfers
Compiled by:
Emmogeae Holstein ,Congo
Recorder, Melp Co•nly, Ohio
C011rl Holl8tl
Pomeroy, Ohio 457118

Roger L. Walker, dec'd Cert.,
• to Gladys E. Walker, Pomeroy
·. VIllage.
; Everett E. King. dec'd CerL, to
: ):..eona Luelle King, Bedford,
; Homer E. Hysell, tracts, to
. Pauline Lucille Hysell, Reyoca: ble Trust, Chester / Bedford.
·Jacqueline Jones, Parcel, to ·
: Robert L. Jones and Ronald G.
~ McDade, Olive.
• Middleport Housing Corp., lot
: 8, to Maurice Durst and Marcella
: Durst, Middleport VIllage.
• Maurice Edward Durst, dec'd
~ a!fld, to Marcella G. Durst,
: Middleport VIllage.
• Magnum 011 &amp; Gas, Inc.,
. • parcels, to Frederick J. Stobarl,
: Lebanon • .
Mary E. Phelps, Helen Ball, ·
~ • Elvira Barr, Ronald Siders, Dale
: Sldera, MaxiH Gretbouse and
·~ Jeaa Ann HUI, sheriff's deed, Io
~ EI\Va Barr, Rlltland.
·
" Rl_. L.MunlbY 4114 CoJI9le
MurphY, alit'i•lfhitied, to James
lt. Lodwick · and Harry N. Lod·
wtck Oranae.
tlly L. YOUIII. ,Lot 11, to
1 •rtr lr., aM Pall lela ·
Mkldlepert VUla...
!! ICtvtra Bart, pareela, to

s.

.

t lt. Barr alld VJrljnla
• ft111Ja~. .

·

ow.ne
~rr,

.

~= r!tL~.a!io¥S:::

I

Tuesday•. Fetiruary 2, 1988

''

Southern_plans spring
··banquet for ·students ·

I

S~ntinel

\

--'" •&gt;
Continued from page 3

The · Daily

-

Beato/ the Bend

LOANS

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
......... E
FUND
. WV HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
.

By The .Bend-~.

.

I' I

Willis and Shirley Willis. Syra·
cuse VIllage.
Sandra A. Nelson and Jat')'les
W. Nelson, 5 Acres. to Gladys
·
Wolfe, Chester.
Gladys Wolfe, 5 Acres , to
Sandra A. Nelson. Chester.
Gladys Wolfe, 5 Acres, to
·Hubert t. Wolle, Chester.
Donald B. Allen and Lots Ann
Allen, Parcels, to Linda Turley
and Edward Turley, Letart.
Paulette M. Broadman· 'and
Marcus Broadman, lots 5 &amp; 6, to
Annette M. Willi~, James C.
Mather. Stephen B. Mather, tvf.
Collette Watson and Jeannette L.
Mather, Pomeroy VIllage.
William Alan . Blackwood and
Marta H. Blackwood, Right-of·
Way, to Buckeye Rural Electric
Corp., lite., Scipio.
Richard A. Liebmann, Natalie
Yo11ng and PaulK. Strauss, deed
of cor.r ectton, Martin A. Liebmann and Donna Liebmann,
Rutland.
.'
Tract Ann Sayre Condi! Gon·
aales, etal, Mln&amp;Uel A. Gonsales,
ital, Terry Lee Sayre, eta!,
Ta,mmll,.)'ll,ll Sa;yre Klmn, eta!, ,
Clare 'Bradley Klmes,.etal, Sec.
·, 18, to Cblarlea F. Sayre, Cheater.
Georse B. Hudson,
1, to
Ropr G. Winebrenner and Delorta J;Wintbreluler, Rutland.
DeWey E. Carner by TM~.
%lntere~t, to Dewey E. Garner; '

Tnl•*'•

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•

.

··t ~

A/2

Joyce L. Stewart . formerly of
Middleport . ha s joined the Card I·
nal Lodging Group division ·or
Columl:lu s-based Cardinal Indus·
tries , Inc .. a s an. accounts paya·
ble bookkeeper. ·
· ·
Stewart is a graduate of .
i;focking Technica l College. Be·
fore joining Cardinal Industries.
she served as a clerk at Fruth
Pharmacy i!l Middleport. Card!· ·
nal Industries. Inc .. Is the na·
Uon's leading manu(acturer of
mOdular housing.

CCL meets

MARATHON- Tammy Leachman poses with
the snowmobile she used In the Junior Clvllan
~ternatlonal Sno·Do 100 In Barrie, Ontario on

h

k

Jan. 24. She Is a student at Eastern High School
and governor of the Clvltan Club there.

•

h

Leac man ta · es ·p art 1n marat on
.
Tammy Leachman . of Pome·
roy. junior Clvitan governor.
recently returned from the 13th
Jurilor Civil an International Sno·
Do 100.
On Sunday. Jan. 24 . Tammy.
alon!: with :10 other Junior
Civltan leaders from throughout
Canada and the United States.
drove a sno\l'moblle through cold
blowing snow to complete the

.
long marathon.·
A Sno-Do is much like a
bike·a·Thon or walk·a· thon ex ·
cept participants ride over a
prescribed cour.e outlined by the
Soc-Voyageurs SnowmobiiPCiub
of Barrie.
Purpose or the marathon Is to
raise $65.000 to benefit . the
Children's Hospitals of North
America .

.

.
Leachman who attends Eas tern High School has colle'c ted
contributions which will be used
to benefit the Children's Hospi·
tats serving this area. She
conTinues in her fund raising
efforts and contributions in her
behalf may bE' made through the
Eastern High School's Junior
Civil an Chapter of wh lch she is
governor.

Soil and Water packets are available
Tree and backyard packets
and ground cover plants may be
ordered from the Meigs Soli and
Water Conservation District office at 221 W. Second St.
The Ladles Auxiliary of the
District are offering the trees
and plants with all ordNs to be
prepaid with the orde rs to be
received by March 1~.
The backyard packet. contains
five each of WhiTe snowberry.
common purple lilac. American
burning bush. sweet gum. and
RosOdler dogwood seedling~ for
$7. Bundles of 25 each of white

pine. Norway spruce. Scotch
pine . Colorado blue spruce. or
black walnut can be obtained for
S6. Seventv·two crown vetch
plants are being offered for $20.
Tqey are perennial legume with
dark green folllat(' and pinkish
lavender to white clustrrs of
flowers. The ground cover plant
Is reportedly good for choking out
weeds and resisting drought.
disease and Insects . ·
In addition to beautification of
the landseaping, the trees and
pl a nts will encourage wildlif~
and help in controllng erosion.

Wandling birthday is observed
Matthew Wandling c e lebrated
his second birthday recently with
a party at the home or his
parents. Dave Wandling and
Julie Roush.
The party was hosted by his
parents and a 1 Alf theme was
carried out. Cal&lt;e and icc cream
were sl'rved. Favors were givE'·n
to his· guests .
Atending besides his parents
were his maternal grandparents .
Mr. and Mrs. pon Roush. his
paternal grandparents. Mr. and .
Mrs Jt&gt;rry Siobart, his maternal
great·grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Fife. and Mr. and
Mrs . Dave Fife. Also at the party
were Weston Tyler, Amy Roush .
T&lt;&gt;rri Fife . Penny Wandling.
Sarah S.tobart, Jo~hua Wandling,
·and· Dave Leach.
Sending gl(ts were Julie Wan ·
dllng, Steve Fife, Chris Wan ·
dllng, and Randy Carl.

Menu given
Menu for next we&lt;&gt;k at the
Carleron Schooi-Mcll(s Indus·
tries has been announced.
On Monday .lhe students will be
served sauerkraut 11nd frank s .
oven fried potaf()('S. bread and
butter. fruit and milk; on Tues·
day. chicken noOdle soup. toaster
cheese sandwiches. erackers .
fruit and milk; on Wednesday ,
navy beans , corn bread . cheE'se
wedge. fruit and milk; on Thursday. sausage and gravy over
biscuits. mixed vegetables . fruit
and milk; and on Friday . holdog
on bun, potato chips. macaroni
salad. cookie and milk .
•

. The Rev. and Mrs . Arthur
Poziie and son. Tim. of Pasad· ·
ena. Texas visit ed here recenTly
with Mrs. Pozzlc's mother. Mrs.
Ada Keesee.

OSU dean's list

MICHAEL WANDLING

James E . Lucas. Pomeroy . has
have wne
verborn
left whll&lt;&gt;
the farms
ere
otherswh&lt;&gt;re
hav.e
been recognized by the American they
Polled Hereford Assn. as the . trave led hundreds of miles to
own()r of a Polled Hereford cow &lt;&gt;xcel in the show ring. The Lucas
that has received the Gold anima I was among ~14 Polled
Hereford cows to earn the
Benchmark Dam award.
This .c ow Is one of only 107 elite Benchmark Dam Award. and she
Polled Hereford !~males .nation - then achieved the "gold" rank·
wide' to achieve Gold Benchmark lng by raising a mlnlm4m of
status this year. Some opheGold seven cows .
Benchmark Dam award winners

Education group elects officers ·
Officers were elected at last
week's meeting of the Unified
Citizens for Education In Meigs
Local held at the legion hall In
R!ltland.
They are Max Whitlatch, president: J.va Sisson, vice president:
Kathy Wilfong, secretary; Den· ·
n.ls McKin~ey, treasurer; Schan·
non Slavin. historian; aJ\d Shlr·

Orders . may be mailed to th ~
Me igs SWCD Ladies Auxiliary.
P . 0. Box 432. Pomeroy, 4!\7n9.

I

'&lt;

A program on qullts was
presented by ' Bunny Kuhl at the
recent meeting of the Middleport
Child C()nservatlon League held
at the Ohio Power Co . office . ·
Mrs. Kuhl talked a()out the
nistory of qui-lt making. how the
various patterns were named,
the proper care of quilts, and how
to de termine their value tOday.
The pledge and mothers '
prayer opened tlle meeting with
Linda BrOderick giving devo·
lions. For roll call each member
named their favorite quilt pall·
ern. Peggy Harris gave the
sccrfary's report with Susie
Abbott giving the treasurer's
report.
Members were remlnqed to
remember their secret sisters.
Money making projects were
discussed to finance the spring
conference. Present at the meetIng to asslt in setting plans for the
convef~nce which will be held on
April 22 was Cathy Bostic.
Wclcol!led into the group as a
new member was Bonnie ScotT.
Hostesses were Helen Black·
ston and Mrs. liarrlson. Mrs.
Scot .t won the door prize with Ann
Colburn winning the traveling
prize . Other t')'lembers present
were Nancy Morris and Becky
BrOderick .

Star Grange to meet
Star Grange 778 will meet In
regular session Saturday at 8
p.m . at the Star Grange Hall. The
national sewing contest will be
judged. All members are urged
to attend. A potluc!&lt;· supper will
follow the m!'etlng.
The Star JuniorGrange878 will
also be meeting at 8 p.m. that
nighT at the grange hall.

Visiting

Lucas named to cattle group

ley Tyree. communications
officer. The treasurer's report
showed a balance of$181.50. Next
meeting was set lor Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Rutland legion hall.
.J\pproxlinately 240 parents and
120 teachers and their families
attended the meeting with a
potluck dinner being served.

·Alfred community notes

Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Brooks and
Hallie, Cohlmbus, visited his
· parents, Mr. apd Mrs. Lloyd
Brooks, Jim and Debbie
recently.
- RecentvlsltorsotMr. aniiMrs.
Arthlll' Spencer were Jo and
-E rica Lamb, Toledo. Mr. I!Rd
SC~.
·
Mrs. Sammie Brown, Aaron and
ria Roe Gamer by
Alex, Mt. and Mra. Keith Weber
· r{ ,(atere~t, to Dorll Roe Gamer, and Mike, aU lQeal. Mra. Wilbur
~r
"' Parker vlsted Irene Parker,

sec.

8tewan joins group

Syracuse, who recently returned
from a three-week visit with her
son and family. Mr. and Mrs.
Howard K. Parker and Howle,
'·
Agoura. Calif.
M~. and Mrs. Lester Keaton
received word that their grand·
son, Matthew, son of Mr. and
Mrs:. Bob Heaton, Lon11 Bottom,
has returned home from the
hosl!ltal and Is mallfna satisfactory recovery.

Two Meigs Countlans atTend ·
ing Ohio State University ha ve
· been named to the dPan 's list for
the autumn quarte r. Ma.k ing a
grade point averal(e Of'at least :l.!\ ·
out of four points to be named to
th(' list were Mark Edwa•·d RlcP.
Reedsville. and Todd Anthony
Adams. Syracus''·
Rice received his bachelor of
arts. degree from Ohio State at
· commencement exercises held
at St. John Arena . Mark Andrew
McGuire of Langsville received

When you nHd us, we'll be
there ... with prompt, con·
cerned insurance stl"4ict. We
always try to be fri1nds you
can depend on. C.ll us today.

AN~
RNER~'

•

lllr&amp;nce

Servloet;

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-6687
~

State Auto

IMurMca

rJh~ls~b~a~c~he:
e~d~c
during the·l~o~r~o~f~s~c~le:n:c~
commenceme
nt :.g:r:e:e_. ~~~;~·'~~C~a;•;•~-~-;~~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
ANNOUNCES
THE OPENING Of THE
OFFICE OF

DOUGLAS HUNTER, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE
ON

FEBRUARY 4, 1988
STH AND PEARL STREETS
RACINE, 01110
.PHONE: 949-2683
HIS.: 9·5 M.i IU., IH., FL

I

�•

'\.Juesdav. .February 2,1988

'

.A I

Tuesday. February 2, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

I The Dllt Sa 1titMI

~ve,

discipline, play
:help bring up a child

Ann
Landers

'

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
will be held Sunday attheMedlna
U itlted Prea8 International
County Fairgrounds In Medina.
Despite last week's warm
Ms Appetizer Cook-Off Feb. 8
temperatures · and a hint of at the Holiday Inn on the Lane,
· 1l!AR READ!!RS: Tile National wrong. Tiley need to be taiJiht basic
spring, winter Is still very mu~h Columbus, Is a competition to
. . . . . ~Menial Health asked the values and manners so that they
prevalent In Ohio, as evidenced find the best appetizers served at
~•II qwllion of SO pBmJts '"Will get along well in SQciety. Insist
by the numerous winter activi- more than 50 of Columbus' finest
wbo had raised their children to
that they treat others with kindness,
ties this weekend.
restaurants.
,t
r well-elljusted, productive respect and honesty. Set personal
ThIs is the second weekend of
Saturday's program at the
lMt.lll:
..
the
Eighth
Annual
Erie
Islands
Valley National ReCuyahoga
~xam~es of moral courar and
'
Winterfest In · Port · Clinton . . creation Area Includes: ''Family
: 8ued on your personal -experi- mtegnty.
.
6·. Develop mutual ~-' Act in
Dear Aan Landers: I've been Again, the focal point for activi- Matinee: · Indian Games and
- . what is llle best advire you
a
respectful
way
toward
your
chil·
·
living
with "jack" for 18 months. ties will be the Ottawa County Lore" at the Happy Days VIsitor
WI live new parents about raisins
...... ~-?.
We became officially enBIII!ed two Fairgrounds In Port Clinton and Cen'ter In the .a fternoon and "The
dren. Say "please" and "tha!'k
'
. Their responses were, in my you," and apologize when you are months ago. Our wedding date has activities will bi similar to those Early Americans: The Historic
of last weekend.
Era" at the center ln the evening.
wrong. Children who are trealed
been set for August.
opinion, the most thoiJihtful and
Toledo gets Into the atmosA family workshop on ow Is will
SIIIXinct pidelines I have seen in a with respect will then know how to
I have put on a few pounds in the phere wlth Its own Wlnterfest
be held Friday evening at the .
101111 time. Here they are:
treat you and others respectfully~
last couple of years, but I don't Friday afternoon through Sun· Wahkeena Nature. Preserve In
,l . l-ove abundantly. The mnlt
7. Listen. Really listen. This consider myself fat. Imagine how I day. The theme Is "Hats Off to. Fairfield County.
important t,ask is to love and really means giving your children undi· felt when last night jack told me Winter". More than 60 hot alr
A workshop Saturday at the
Care about your ~hild. This gives vided attention, puuing aside your that unless I lose 25 pounds he will balloons are expected to Ohio Historical Center In Columhim or her a !CII5e 'of security, beliefs an~ feelings, and trying to not marry me.
compete.
bus focuses on the " Life in the
belolllinl and support. It smoothes understand your children's point of , 1 am shocked and hurt and am . . The Buckeye Trail Winter Hlke 19th Century" for young girls.
view.
CMii the rolllh ed&amp;e$ of SQciety.
covers 6.2 miles through a
Special Exhibits
8. Offer guidan. ce. Be l&gt;rief.· Don't . rethinking the whole thing. Help }1eavlly wooded section of Find2. Dilcipline constrilctively. Give
-At
the
Ohio State University
me, Ann. - IDAHO
dear direction and · enforre the . give speeches. And don't force your
ley Slate Park south of Welling· Gallery of Fine Arlin Columbus:
DEAR IDAHO: The .i marriage ton, Lorain County. Hot bean A composite bookwork of 150
limits on your child's behavior. opinions on your children.
9. Foster independence. Gradual- soundS as if it's in ~roullle before soup and cornbread will be pages by women artists from tbe
Emphasize .. Do this." instead of
ly allow children more freedom
the ceremony. If you should lose served at the end of the hike.
··non 't do that."
United State and Brazil on eight
The "Chili" Open Golf Classic themes of llfe, through Friday;
3. Whenever possible, spend time and control over their lives. One the weight to please hiln and gain it
back after the wedding. would jack ls 'a golf tournament played on
Pollee State, works-of Sue Cox.
with your children. Play wilh them, parent said, "Once your children
the
frozen
Nesmith
Lake
at
the
artist , who ad·
British-born
.
are
old
enough,
phase
yourself
out.
divorce
you?
Think
about
this
talk to them, teach them to develop
Portage
Lake
State
Park
dresses
loday's
issu~s. through
a famUy spirit and give them a sense of the picture, but always be near · carefully. It's a real possibility.
weather
permitting,
of
course.
Feb.
17;
Visual
Images of the
when they need you.''
Planning a wedding? What's
of belonging.
.
Ski races will be held Saturday Appalachian Culture through
4. Give the needs of your mate
10. Be realistic, expect to make right? What's wrong? Ann Landers'
and Sunday at the Clear Fork Ski Feb. 12.
priority. One parent put it this way: mistakes. Be aware that outside "New Bride's Guide" will relieve y 0ur
Area near Bellville, Richland
-AI the Cincinnati Muse um of
"~ husband and wife are apt to be
influences such as peer pressure will anxiery. To receive a copy, send $2 County.' Pro .slalom racer 'Laure
Natural
History: ." Wildlife In
spccessful parents when they put increase as children mature. One plus a long, self-addressed, stamped Baker will be honorary course
Art" through Saturday.
~heir marriage fir5t. Don't worry parent said, "Oon'.t expect thingS to . envelope (39 cents postage) to Ann pace setter.
·
·
-At l·he Columbus Museum of
libout the children getting ·~nd · go well all the time. Child rearing . Landers, . P.O. Box IJ562, Chicago, . A cross-country ski walk will t Art: "A CharlesBurchfleld Exhi·
liest.' Child-centered households has never been easy. lt bas its Ill. 60611.()562. ·
be held Saturday morning at the bllion" through Sunday. Actor
jlioduce neither happy marriages sorrows and heartaches, but 'it also
Kyle Woods State Nature Pre- David Fendrick will present a
has its rewards and joys. This is
ANN LANDERS •
serve In Mahoning County. · · ·
nor happy children.''
one-man interpretation of Burch0 1988. Los Ar111oles T1mts Syndicate ond
what makes it all worthwhile."
~ :S. Teach your children right from
A
winter
Bog
Walk
will
be
held
field
Sunday afternoon.
CreatO&lt;s Syndi:ato
J
Sunday afternoon through the
-At the Toledo Museum of
Jackson Bog State Nature Pre- Art: "Thirty Years of New Glass.
serve, Stark County.
1957 to 1987, from the Corning
For those who prefer the Museum of Glass'' through Feb.
nounced. Making a grade of B or Indoors at this lime of the year: ·21: "Picasso 'I.:lnoleum Cuts:
The third six weeks grading Whit e.
Camp and Travel '88 Is a Kramer Collection." through
above in all their subjects to be
period honor roll at the Ra.cine
recreational
vehicle and vaca- March 6; ' 'Picasso as an Illuslra"
named to the roll were:
The third six weeks grading
Elementary School has been
tion
show
at
the
Lucas Ccounty tor: The Barelss Collection of
Third Grade: ·Laura Buckley,
announced. Making a grade of B period honor roll at the Chester
In Maumee Modern Illustrated Books" l
Recreation
Center
or above In all their subjects to be Elementary School has been Sherry Burke, Angela Chaney, Thul'$day througl) Sunday .
through May 29.
'
Laijra Eastman, Amber Fort ·
announced. Making a grade of B
named to the roll were:
Auto Show '88 shows off new
AI
the
Contemporary
Arts
·
.
.
Billy
Francis.
Randy
neM
First Grade: Robbie Card. or above in all their subjec.ts to be
cars, trucks, vans and molorcy· · Center in Cincinnati: "Jan
·
K~hler.
Katy
Manicke,
Sean
Jennller Carleton, Joshua Ervin, nam ed to the roll were:
cles at Veterans Memorial ln Grqver 'P hotographs" and "Pa~ l
Maxey, Erin Sexton.
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp,
Third Grade: Patsy Aeiker.
Fourth Grade: Jonathan Avis, Columbus Saturday through Imperfect: Eric Fischl. Laurie
;Josie Jarrell. Amy johnson . . Meredith Crow, Eric Dillard.
Simmons. Vernon Fisher"
Brian El&lt;lwen, Traci Lance. Gin - Feb. 14.
Kara King. Jerimiah Johnson. Maria Frecker. Traci Heines,
The
Columbus
Travel,
Sports
through Feb. 27. ·
Jesse Little, Jessica Smith, Shanna Machir, Travis Thomas. · ger Nutter.
and
Vacation
show
opens
at
the
-AI the Allen Memorial Art
Fifth -Grade: Randall Burke,
Anna Wolf.
,
Crissy Snider.
Ohio
State
Fairgrounds
Saturday
Museum.
Oberlin College: ·
Fourth Grade:' Melissa Demp· John Collins. Janet McDonald .
Second Grade: Chad Cark.
and
runs
through
Fe.
b
.
14
.
"From
Arcadia
to Barbizon: A
Sixth Grade: Jaime Wilson ,
Tyson Evans. Ryan Grace, .Matt sey. Jennifer Mora. Robbie·
The
Mld·America
-Home
Mo·
Journey
in
·
French
Landscape .
Hill. Nicole Hill, Melissa Layne. Murphy. Nicole Nelson. Noelle Anita Calaway, Nora Eastman, .
derniza
tlon
Expo
will
be
held
Painting" through March 14.
elissa Harris, Randy Kaylor,
John Matson. Matthew Riffle. Pickens, Brandi Reeves.
Fe b. 10 through 14 at the
-In the Chisholm Halle Cosarilyn
Kibble;
Stephanie
My·
Heafher Well. Lauren Young.
Danny Sayre. Amanda The iss.
lnte
rnatjonai
Ex~sition Center
tume
Wing gallery of the Western
ers,
Patrick
Newlantl.
Robert
Fifth Grade: Michael Bailey ,
: Third Grade: Timmy Gheen,
In
Cleveland.
Reserve
ijistorical Society . in
,
Reed,
Dawayne
Wilson.
Amy Northup. Jenni Scarberry. Charles Bisse ll. Ryan Buckley.
on
the
agenda:
Also
"The Garment Gar Cleveland:
Ryan No'rrls. Bobby Writesel.
Jessica Chevalier, Tara Congo,
The third six weeks grading
An Ant·l ques Sale and Show will nish',!." a dlsp)ay of about 100
, Fourth Grade; John Card, Richard Connolly. Davi Felt , period honor roll at the· River·
be held Friday through Sunday at
Jason Hudson. Paul lhie, Craig Sara Machir." Todd
e l.
view Elementary School has the Avalon Inn in Warren . objects dressmakers used to
decorate c lothing, through May
Knight. Ryan Martin. James · Jamie Ord, Jessica Radford, · been announced. Making a grade
Trumbull
County.
29.
White.
Victor VanMeter. Stacy of B or above in all their subjects
The Tri-State Gun Show will be
-At the . Akron Art Museum:
Fifth Grade: Grant Circle. Woolard.
to be na rried to the roll were:
' held Saturday and Sunday at the
"
Ties
That Bind: Folk Art in
Sixth Grade: Penny Aeiker.
K~vln lhle. Shannon Morarity.
Third Grade: David Baker. Allen County Fairgrounds in
Contemporary
American Cui·
Kendra Norris. Courtney Roush. J ory Coates. J .P. Davis. Adria
Angela Bissell. Math ew Lima.
·
ture ," Saturday ·through March
Frecker, Debra Frost, Stephanie Barnhart.
Jenl Stewart.
An AntiqUe Wholesale Mark€'! 27-.
Hoffman . Tyson Rose. Amber
Sixth Grade: Beth Clark,
Fourth Grade: Crystal Morris,
Well, Andy Wolf.
Jenny Cleek. Christy Hawkins.
Rebecca Evans. Connie Pooler,
Rachael Hensler. • Jennl Hill.
Ca ndy Mays, Jeanie Cline.
The third six weeks grading
Ryan Holter, Brandi Mallory.
Fifth Grade: Heidi Nelson,
period honor 'roll at the Tuppers Becky Driggs, Brandy Barber.
Freddie Matson, Marcy MaPlains School has . been an· ·Chip Suttle.
thj!WS. Jeremy Northup. Mario
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!) individual' expression,.. Zettler
This year's Mi ss Ohio Scholar- sa id. " In addition. these young
ship Pagean1. set for June 18 In women are a source of civic pride
Mansfield. wi II have a field of 37 fo r thei r communities and
contestant s from throughout the state ...
s tat e.
Some of the local pageants are
Preliminary rounds will be closed, which means young
Life Church at Burlingham will
TUESDAY
be at the Racine Department
LONG BOTibM - Mrs. Mary
begi n revival services Monday. 7 Store, Wednesday. 11 a.m. to 2 · he ld June 15, 16, and 17 with the women from a given area can
p.m. each evening. Johnnie Rid'Folmer of Long Bottom will be
p.m. to held residents fill out televised finals June 18 ai the enter. Others are open. which
Renaissance Theat re. The means contes tants who placed
the speaker at the Feb. 2 meet ing dle will be the evangelist .
applications for Golden Buckeye
winner
will receive a $10,000 well In an early preliminary
of the Long Bottom Chapte r of
cards. Residents can also sign up
sc
holarship,
wardrobe and other pageant can enter another page·
Flame Fellowship to be he ld a t
WEDNESDAY
a t the Senior Citizens Center of
prizes
as
well
as the right to a nt . Local pageants also provide
7: 30 p.m. at . the Mt. Olive
MIDDLEPORT - District 2c&gt;, the library In Pomeroy.
present
the
state
in the. Miss sc holarships to the winners.
re
Community Church. Long Bot·
Order Qf ihe Eastern Star, annual
America
Pageant
in.September.
Zettler said the local pageants
tom. Suzaime Bush is pres ident
meeting· and school of instrucEASTMEIGS-EasternLocal
The contestants come from will award a total· of $125,000 ln
a n~ invites the public.
tion. Middleport Masonic Tem- Athletic Boosters will meet a 1
local preliminary pagea nts sc holarships while the state
ple, Wednesday. with the Harri - 7:30 p.rn. Wednesday at high
throughout the state, says Bob pagean.t awards $26,000 · in'
MIDDLEPORT- The regular
sonville Chapter as the host unit. school cafeteria.
Zettler, executive direc tor of the sc holarships.
meeting of Middleport Lodge 36il
The afternoon meeting will begin
state pagea nt .
Contestants are judged In the
F&amp;AM will be held 7:30 p.m . at 4 p.m. with the evening session
FRIDAY
areas
of talent , interviews, evenTuesday. Me mbers are.asked to
to be held at 7 p.m. Ali Eas tern
" The Miss Ohio Program
POMEROY -Scipio Township
ing
gown
and swimsuit. Contest ·
Star members are urged · to Trustees will meet Friday at the offers those Interested contestattend. Refreshments will be
ants
must
be between the ages of
at tend .
sei.ved.
Pagevllle Township building a t 7 . ant s the challenge and opportun17
and
26.
and reside. work of
p.m.
ity for personal growth and
..
SURLINGHAM- The Word of
RACINE - Edith Reiser will
~~~~

Meigs County honor .rolls announced
'

'

-People in the news------------.:......;.;,_______
' By IRIS KRASNOW
United Press International
llOME OF THE CHAMPIONS! While some 100.000 revelers choked the streets . of
Georgtown C&lt;'iebi'aling the Wa·
shlngton Redsk ins' Superbowl
victory Sunday night . cash registers were clanging Inside nearby
Champions, the team's favorite
pub. "We had 900 people in here.
from one in the afternoon until
two In the morning. " Champions
manager Loulll Earle said Monday,. "That's 10 times as . many
people as we normallyhave for a
Sunda)• night ." Earle reported
tha( the crowd was subdued early
In the firs t quarter as the Denver
Broncos thundered ahead ..but by
the end of the second quarter Ihe
bar was resounding with "Hall
To The Redskins". and raw
tnr&lt;1ats were soothed by gallons
of cold brew. 1
·
"We went thtough 250 cases of
~aeet." said Earle wearily. "Half
fit It . . •dHker. 'I'M JIGtins come In here quite a bit, and
their. favorite drlnlls are Budwel~r and Corona." · The only
unruly Incident of the night was
when some exuberant fans tried
to rip Redsklns memorabilia off

,...

__
r

.. .,......... -

~·-

- -

. - ....... . . .... . ...... -- ..

the bar's walls.
Earle's personal champion of
the ,e vening was . rookie running
bac~ Timmy Smith, whO rushed
more tha n 200 ya rds - a
Superbowl record.
STARS ON THE RUN: Rosa
Parks. the seams tress who
helped Ignite the civil rights
!rjovement by refusing io give up
h~r seat to . a white man on a
Montgomery, Ala.. bus, was
ho11dred Sunday at the Museum
of African-American History.
Soul s in~er Arelha Franklin
was a mong at least 350 people
who turned out for the event,
which kicks off a 10-month
national celebration of Parks'
75th birthday . Franklin gave
Parks a bottle of perfume from
Tiffany's, artist Carl Owens
unveiled his portrait of her, and
students from Rosa Parks Mid dle School In DetroiJ sang anll
danced.
When Parks was arrested in
Montgomery 32 years ago, the
black community ·retaliated by
boycotting the buses. After a long
and blUer struggle, buSf'ft In
Montgomery and other Southern
cities were desegregatfd. "I'm
just about speechless," said

~

..

~-....

.

. . -·-· . .

~

Parks, whose actual birthday is
Thursd~y. "l can hardly think of
a thing to say . But this has been a
great day."
PU'ITIN' ON THE PUDDIN':
Comedians Lucille Ball and
Steve Martin were named
winners of Harvard's 1988 Hasty
Pudding Theatricals woman and
man of the year awards . Ball, a
four-lime Emmy award winner
and veteran of TV, films ·and
Broadway. will receive her tradl·
tiona! gold pudding pot during
Harvard Square ceremonies
Feb. 16.
Martin, who was honored by
the Harvard University all-male
student drama group as the
··premier comedian of this gener·
ation," will be hOnored with a
parade and ceremony· on Feb. 23.
Martin, who has won Grammy
awards for his first two comedy
albums, h~s starred ln such films
as "All of Me" and "Roxanne".
He won an Emmy for comedy
writing earlier fn his career.
''They are nothing short of a
legend," said Donna Friedman,
spokeswoman for the Hasty
Pudding Theatricals. Past recip·
Ients lncldue Elizabeth Taylor,
Sylvester Stallone, Bernadette

-At the Center of Science and
Industry, Columbus: Gold Exhibit through May 1.
-At Lawnfield , the Mentor
home of President Garfield:
" Inter Folia Fructus: The Fruit
Between the Leaves", tracing
the career of Garfield, through
Feb. 28.
.
-At the Taft Museum In
Ci ncinnati : " Nicholas ·Longworth - Cincinnati's First Patron of the Arts'' through ~arch
20.
.
-At Denison University ,Gran. ville: Kimberly Burleigh Paint- ·
logs and Cuna Indian Artifacts
are' on (!lsplay In Burke Hall Art
Gallery Saturday "through Feb.
22.
At the Cleveland Museum of
Art: " Tomb Sculpture from
Ancient China: The Quest for
Eternity: Feb. 10 through April
10.
.
.
On the theatrical schedule:
"The Best Little Whorehouse
In Texas'' plays at the Westgate
Dinner Theatre · In ·Toledo
through Feb. 28, except Mondays. 419-537-1881.
"Clear Liquor and Coal Black
Nights" plays al the Clnci9nali
Playhouse In the Park through
Sunday. From Ohio, 800-582-3208.
"Deathraft" plays at Bolton
Theatre at the Cleveland Play
House through Sunday.
"Painting ·churches," opens
Friday a I the Toledo Repertoire
Theatre and plays w~ekends
through Feb. 13. 419-243-9277.
"Much Ado About Nothing" at
the CleveIa nd Play House, Drury
Theatre, Cleveland, through
Feb. 28. 216-795-7010.
Violinists Ani and Ida Kavanan perform with the Cincinnati
·Symphony at Music Hall in
Cincinnati. Friday and Saturday
nights. 513-621-1919.
Soprano Sylvia McHalr performs with the Columbus Symphony .at the Ohio Theatre . •
Columbus, Friday a.nd Saturday
rilghts . 614-224-3291.
.
Flutist Eugenia Zukerman, :
bassi~t Gary Karr and pianist, ;
Harmon Lewis ~rform with the ,
Lima Symphony at Civic Center '
In Lima. Saturday night. 419-2225701. .
The na tiona I pla,no concerto
winner performs with the Youngstown Symphony. Saturday night
In Powers Auditorium. 216·774·
0264.
•
The Magic Circle Mime Company performs with the Toledo
Symphony at the Toledo Museum
of Art !Peristyle) Sunday after noon. 419-241-1272.
·· ,

.

:~~

17.00
. • 10.011
n1.011

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It I I I I 11.!111111

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.,._..,.,

CltWified pages cover the
following te(ephone exchange• ...

c8pJ - clanified di1play, Busin. . Card and ..... natlcetl
will also appear in the Pt. Pl•nnt R......, and iht Galli-

. 0-C.Unty

11-camp~n,

....,... nt

71---Ca..,._. a Motar Homu

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DAY IEFORE PUIUCATtON .
-1 1 :00 A .M . IATURDAY
-, 2:00 P,M. MONDAY
- 2:00P.M. TUESDAY
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M-Co.. WV

A•Codel14

polis Dally Tribuna, reaching GYtr 18.000 ham...

COPY DEADLINE• MONDAY PAPER
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WEDNESDAY PAPER
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Uuwt ak

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AONI!II

71-...............
72-Tn..... larlolo
n-v-14WD'o

• A cla~lfiad advertiHment placed in Th. Daily S.ntinel C•·

I Ill

I Ill I "

21--too 0-nlly
· 22-MDIIIIW to LOM
D-l'la'-. .1 1 1 -

'

.

'"

Public Notice
COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following wore roce.ivod / proparod by The
Ohio Environmontol Protoction Agency jOEPAI . Ia t
week . Effective datu ~~
final actions and loauanco
datos of propoaed actlono
aro stoted. Final actions may
be appeoled, In wri'ltina,
within 30daysof
thia notice. to Tho .
mental Board of
Rm . 300. 236 E.
Columbus, OH. , 43216. No·
tico of any oppeal ohotl bll
lllod·with thodlroctorwlthln
3 days. Propooed octlono
wiH become !lnat unlooo •
written adjudication hoorlng
requelt it submitted whhln
30daysoftholoouancodote;
or tho director rll¥1101/wlth-

draws the proppnd action:

per~n

Any
mayrequest
submita
comments
and/or
~

meeting regarding 8ny nonfino! action within 30 dayo of
the date lndlcotod. "Action·', at uud above d0111
not include racelp1 of 1
verified complaint. If signifi-

cant public intereat exilts. 1

public mMting may b8 held.
AI to any action, Including
receipt of verified complaints. any per10n may
obtain notice of further
actiona, and additionall,nfor-

mation. Unleu otharwiM
provided In nottcu of fllrllc-

ular ac~loni. all communica·
tiona ehan be aent. to:

Haering Clerk, ·OEPA, P. Q.
Box 1049, Columbuo, OH .,
43266-0149, PH. 16141
48.1- 2116. Coneult ORC
Chop. 374&amp; and OAC
Chaps . 3741-47 and 37415 for requil'llmtnta.
Draft NPDS permit ronawet oubjeot to rll¥11ion: Ohio
Power Company. 301
Cleveland &amp;. W. POB 400,
Conton, Ohio. Publlo Nottca
Dato 01-29-88. Reoolvlng
W-o: Ohio River; Flllfffty
D-rlptlon: Po- plonta,
Permit No. 01800.11'00.
(21 2. 1tc

'",.

f

.

3 Anoouncanlenta

ACCOUNTANT

•o

SOU1HIU
OIL I GAS
DbiW.IIOI

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

AID

AcciD'Ia.f

SalarY t101111nenturate

· S11"

with ••,....hOI.
liND IIIIIUMI TO
COWLII, IOITIIII

........

a

RODIIIICK ·

mllff'C•NE

G

- .•

P.O,Ioalll
hiD 41

Public Notice

Public . Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
NOTICE OF
, FIDUCIARY
APPF~~NTMENT OF
On January 20. 1988, In
UCIARY
1ho Molgo county Probate
hOn J•nuary 22, 1988, in
8
c
c
N
257
t
Molga County Probate
8 10
0
48 • Court, Cue No. o26760,
wourt.
T
tt'l
p'
oodrow . w; ng, . 0.
Michael Daan 8ak . 4466
Box 99, Syracuoo, Ohio G 1
or,
45779, woo eppolmed Exo· ·
3. ~~~ :~:~PPL~n•tne,d DExh i~
cutor of tho etme of Sytvla
1
Zwilling, dacused, toto of P. ~ut;r 0 the ootata of Erllmit
o. Box 99, Syracuoo, Ohio · akor, dacouod, tate of
46779 .
~!!:!m=~~~lo~~~ Rd., ·
Robert E. Buck.
Probllta Judga
R~bert E. .Buck,
Lena K. Nesooti'OIId, Clork
robate Judge
t1126; t2) 2. 9, 3tc
lena K. Nouetroad, Clerk
12 12.9, 16, 3tc

z

4

1

2

r---------...

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
Pursuant to Rule 1601:9. APPOINTMENT OF
3-06jE) (1) of the Ohio Ad·
FIDUCIARY
minillraiive Code, 011 and
QnJIInuory26, 1988,1nthe
Gao Rutu. notlcelo hereby
Meigs Courrty Probate Court.
given by GMR Pr0 rtl 1
Cue No. 26768, Sindra J. Portn oroh'op, P. Q. &amp;oxpe32e8 '
R
il&lt;llh, 1168 Mayo Orive,
Dunbor. W. Vo. 26014. 304Now Hav!"'· WOO! VIrginia.
788-3191 that they Plan to
Wf'l a_.od Executrix of convert the Gotdberg!Wn·
llie estate of Jamoo E. Simp- tern •3. tocalod in Soctlon 1.
0011, cfeceeiiCI.IateofthoVtt· · Sutton
Townahip, Meigs
IIIII" of Middloport, Meigs
County, Ohio to a oattwater
County, Oh&gt;O.
·
InjeCtion well. The propoooCI
Robert E. Buck,
injection rona would ba tho
P.roboto Judge
Big Injun formotlono from
lena K. NooMtroild, Clerk
1100 hootto 1200 feat. The
(2)2, 9. 16. 3tc
mBkimum proposed injoctlon preoouro would ba 320
PSI with a propoaod average

daily injection volume of up
to 200 barrels saltwater per
day.
Further information •con
be · obtoinod by contacting
either GMR Propertieo Partnorohlp a1 11H1abovo address
or the Underground tnjec·tlon Control · Section, Divislon of Oil and Gao. Fountain
Square Building A , Col urnbuo, Ohio . 43224, 1614)
286-6926 . .
For futt consideration. att
commonta or objections niuot
b a - b y the dlvlolon, In
writing,

8

{"
'-"

...,

USlaD
.

THE.BEST
HOUv•v••n•
ISA
WANT AD..

wtthln~catondar

992-2'1.56
' -

s
•
ervices
ess.

___.....;_..l.._________i,________..:.., · .

'.

.. .

r------------r--------~~~--------r---------~----------~---------------~-------------~
RADIATOR
lmrn MOVIES to VHS. Tll'l
WANTED .' c
BISSELL
GUN
SHOOT
FIREWOOD
lot us can..,l !hast ·old
SERVICE
DEAD OR ALIVE
Home Mewl• om to oaty
YHS.
CAll AMY Cllmt
or 101'5 ELICTIIONICS
4U-69S9 or 446-7390

GUN S800T
llACINI
FIIE ·DEn•
la1hant lulldlfll

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Chaltt
.12 Gaug.ShotpM Onlt
ID-7-tli

Locust,

Oak~

Cherry

EVElY
SUNDAY

~3500 J
Per Pickup Load
Deliver•d

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

BILL'SLACK
614-992-2269

Evenings .

IACINE, OliO
.

112!/'17/1 mo. d,

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

DENNY CONGO
WiLL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-6282

GRAVEL - SAND.
TOP SOIL
', FILL

319 So. 2nd Awe. ·

Middleport, Ohio
1·21-'

9'92-3410
LIMESTONE

BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES .&amp; GARAGES
"At laa5011able PricH"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

We can repair and recore radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and .rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas' Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio _
1-13-tfc

10-9-tln .

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG
Now Lecttt""'
161 North S.Contl
,.....,.,,, Olllo 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Cerry,....... I· PI! II•

· Pay Yow Phon
and CalM IIIII H-

IIUSIIIESS PIIONI
16141 fli·65SO

PIIOIII

ttn

Aid Slles &amp; Strvlc4
Hurln1 EYihlltlons For All Aps

YOUNG'S

SIATE·A-WAY

CARPENTER
SERVICE

OPEN
WED.-FRI.-SAT.

-Addona anci remodeling
- Rooting and gutter work
- Conc,.te work
- Plumbing and alectric.l

_,.,.

tF- ElllmttOI)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
"2·6215 or 992-7314
Pomtroy, Ohio
4·J5.:86·fC
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
.
. INSULATION

.......

CHESTER, OH.
7:30-10:00

for

Birthday.
Church, Private
Parties Mon .. Tues.,
Thora .. Set. 8t Sun .
Call

9-8 5·3929

or

Roger Hysell
Garage

BISSELL
SIDING CO~

lt. 124, Ptmorey Olio

..Free lltlmataa"

Alae Trttelllllltt
PH. 992·5612·
or 992-7121

Pll. 949-1160

or 9.t9-1101
NOSUIIDAY

11

I

doyoolthopublicationdoteof
thie notice.
t2) 2. 1tc

----~~----1----------.L.;;;.;.;;;;;.;.:-;;;,;;;;;;:.::;;:.::.J..;;.:..:.;_;,:._

. KOCH, M.S.
. . Ctink:ll Aucllololist

"-

•SOUTHIIN UDY

.,

11.011
...00
t13.00

Raw era for oonMCUtW. rune. broktn'up dlya will l».chlrgecl

tor

day after Publication to m~~ke corTactlon.
·
'"ds that must be paid in edvanc:e are:
Card of Than..
Halppy Ads
In Mamoritm
Y•d 1111•

,,

-..J

1 MDNTtt

.4.011
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., • •011
133:00

fi,._

..

·s A. SWEATEIS•••••••
U••

Q-11 WORDI 11-21 .WORDS 21--WDRDS

10..VI
3DAI'I
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run 3 days at no ch~rge:
··
•Price of ad for all capiql letters il double price of ad coat.
•7 point line type only uMd.
·
·
•senlinella not respontlble for errors a·t ter
day. !Check
f~r errors lirst day ad runs in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.

attend School in Ohio.
Local pageants that will send
representatives to the Miss Ohio
Pageant this year are: Miss
Akron; Miss Americana; ·Miss
Ashland: Miss Bowling Green
State University; Miss Brown "
Jug Festival; Miss Canton; Miss
Central Ohio: Miss Cincinnati;
Miss Clayland; Miss Columbus;
Miss Conneaut; Miss Coshocton
County; Miss Cuyahoga County
Fair; Miss Cuyahoga Falls; Miss
Eastern Ohio; Miss Greater
Cleveland; Miss Heart of Ohio; "
Miss Hocking Valley; Miss Lake
Festival; Miss Medina-Lorain;
Miss Miami University; Miss
Miami Valley; Miss Miamis· ·•
burg; Miss North Central Ohio;
Mi ss Northern Ohio; Miss
Northwestern Ohio; Miss Pickerington America; Miss Portsmouth; Miss South Central Ohio;
Miss Southeastern Ohio; Mlss '
Southern Ohio; Miss Southwestern Ohio; Miss Summit County;
Miss University of Toledo; Miss
West Central Ohio; Miss Willard
..
and Miss Youngstown . ,

DIYoi,

31---··
M--..

.RATES

•Ads ou'taide Maigt, Galli a Or Mason counti" must be pre·
paid. ·
•Receive 8 .50 discount for adt paid iri advance.
·'
•Free ads - Giveaway tnd Found•ada u-"d" 16 words will be

·s alisbury Pa~k 246 will be
holding their first blue and gold
banquet Thursday n'ighl at the
Senior Cl tizens Center. All cub
scouts and their families are
Invited to artend .

JUST ARRWID

"

'

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATU.DAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

Peters and·Mikhall Baryshnlkov. brother Donovan reacted with a
The Hasty . Pudding Theatri- blow to the monitor. Six deputies
ca ls is the nation's oldest and received minor injuries and T ----'---.,-...::;_---.,-...,..;."' "'1
largest unqergraduate drama Delroy Ruddock, J;&gt;onovan's
organlza !Iori.
brother and manager . suffered· a
THOSE SIX-FISTED BUD- cut forehead. All three Ruddocks
DOCKS: Steer clear of heavy. were released from jail on bond
wejght boxer Donovan 'Razor" Sunday.
Ruddock and his siblings when
AND: IN ROCKY'S RING: Sly
they gel annoyed. A dispute Stallone Is not yet engaged to
~
AIMrkare-Pomeroy
Sunday over a plane ticket at
debutante-for-life Cornelia GuHollywood -Fort Lauderdale In- es t, but his mom wishes he'd gel
Nursing and
'(;
ternational Airport led to Dono- wlth the program . In the current
,., '
van punching out a flight monitor
Issue of People magazine, Jackie
Rehabilitation
Center
and being arrested along with his
Stallone gushes a bout how much
brother and sister at the ticket
they have .In common: " They
''
(614) 992-6606
·
counter. '
both love to ride horses , work out
"It look four deputies to subdue . at sports and wrestle."
T ..
and handcuff the fighter who Is
I
6-3 and weighs 230 pounds,"
Broward County Sheriff's depu·
lies said of Ruddock, ranked as
the ninth toughest heavyweight
SPRING SHIPMENT OF
IIIII
In the world. But according to
authorities, it was his sister,
Juneau Raddoek, who started the
"MNIIGS.APPOIN1111111S f01111WGI'" WMAR"
brawl after an Eastern Airlines
agent told her there would be an
aUitlflllOW
·
additional charge for her ticket
STOlE HOURS. Mon. thru Fri. 9
P.M.! Spt. 9 ••IL·l p.tll•
since she had mlllsed her fllght to
Toronto,
.
Deputies said she became
SID
.OliO
verbally abusive, grabbed the
ticket clerk 'by the arm, and her
t

• .
W·I D :•

sv ·ort·.s .summary. ••

I
:::~;~;:e:;e$~~a~~· g::.~:~~·

~~og.~ ~hl~rset

Cub Scour banquet

PHYSICAL THERAPY
SPEECH THERAPY

Continued from page 4

It?'' 12th-year Blue Brian Sutter Ryari Walter notched tht&gt; game- . .
· as.~ed. "I don't know. When I wlnn,lng goal for the ca·n adlen·s.
.
.
The VIkings jumped to an 8-0
At Youngstown, Tony Raye in helping the Governors boo~t
thmk back, I can see some Montreal also received goals · By United Press International
It may have been "ugly," but
lead and never trailed In boosting scored 16 points and three other th(&gt;lr record to 10-8 overall and 5•) .
four-game streaks and a couple from John Kordlc, Claude Letheir record to 14-4 overall and 5·1
teammates hit In double figures In the OVC. Youngstown Stale
of fives but yeah, It seems mleux and Stephane Richer. Ron · Cincinnati coach Tony Yales was
slrange.
happy. with the outcome.
In the league.
·
to lead Austin Peay over Young- dropped to 7-12. 2-4.
·
· Francis, Sylvain Turgeon, Ray
FerraroandDaveTippettscored
"II
was
kind
of
an
ugly
The
Phoenlx,14-5
and
5·1,
was
stown
State
In
the
Ohio
Valley
,
Tim
McNair
paced
the
Pen. ," It wasn't our best game, but
for Hartford.
·
basketball game, but the players
paced bY Richard .Sims with 19 Confere nce .
guins with 21 points. Including 12
11 s nice to have. It sure wasn't
Bruins 5, Blackhawks 3
produced when they had to, "
points, Michael. Connor with 17
Andre Harris had 13, Barry In the second half, while Tim
pretty."
Sumpter 12 and J avln Johnson 10 Jackson and ·Tilman BeveLy
At Chicago, Randy Burridge Yates said following the Bear· · and Frank Nardi with 16.
· A lack of depth contributed to
the Maple Leafs' loss , which totaled two goals and two assists cats' 81-60 thumping of Northern r-------r:;-,.;:~~---------------.:
ad,:d,:ed:_1;,:5;,;e:_:a:,:c:,::h::,..· - - - - -·;:_·~·
ended . their three.game und e- and Rejean Lemelin stopped 27 Illinois Monday night In Clnclnfeated string. Before that brief
lehle dBrulnls .fChisuccess •. the Maple Leafs had .
,
c ve goa s rom b . 1
•
,
u we , are not overall that .
record ed a club-record 15-game Steve 1 Larmer, Glen Cochrane
By .United Press International
Japanese fighters to world
1wa:s named to the same post ~w
:VInless streak. Toronto, .playing and Steve .T homas; dropped Its pleased with our performance.::
third
.straight
game;
steve
·
UC.
down
by
six
points
at
the
Baseball
lilies,
died
of
Intestinal
cancer
East Carolina .
1ts third game In four nights. fell
Sweeney
and
Gord
13:.52
mark
of
'
t
he
first
half,
took
1\;lontreal
Expos
first
baseman
at
a
hospita
l
in
Osaka.
Japan.
Pro Football
Kasper,
Bob
to H2-6 In Its last 19 games .
Kluzak
also
scored
for
Boston.
the
lead
wi
th
]0:
30
remaining
In
Andres
Galarragawlll
not
play
He
was
73.
Some
i2
hours after the lnvlta- ·
·'The schedule has certainly
1
Devils
5,
Flames
4
the
period
on
a
reverse
layup
by
with
·
the
Caracas
Lions,
the
College
Football
tion
was
to
have been extended~
taken its toll on some players."
At
Calgary,
Alberta,
Mark
Levertis
Robinson
and
never
Venezuelan
league
champions,
Don
Riley.
thei)
CLAoffenslveon
nationwide
television, the·
Toronto Coach John Brophy said.
because of an arm Injury. ... line coach since 1976, was named While Hou se · announced Pres!- ·
"Onr top guys might have been Johnson scored two goals, help- trailed after that.
lng
the
Devils
Improve
3-0
Cec(rlc
Glover
sparked
Cinc.lnShortstop
;Jose Uribe agreed to a head coach at East Tennessee dent Reagan wlll fete the Super
10
tired; they 've had to play a lot of
under
new
coach
Jim
Schoenfeld
·n~ll
with
22
points.
while
Roger
one-year
contract
with the San State, replacing Mike Ayers, who Bowt-,c hampion Redsklns Wed, .
hockey lately.
and
snap
the
Flames'
five-game
·
McClendon
scored
14
points
fo{
Francisco
Giants,
avoiding · a resigned last month to become nesday afternoon . ... New Eri~r" I didn't think we had the jump
unbeaten
streak.
The
victory
was
the
8-9
Cats
and
Robinson
13.
salary-arbitration
hearing
sche- coach at Woffot'd College .... AI land Patriots quarterback Tony '
we showed in our last three
Jersey's
first
In
Calgary
The
Huskies,
4-15,
were
led
by
duled
for
Tuesday.
Groh, an assista nt coac h tor the Eason. who.s e contrac t was to,
New
games and, once you get behind
.
25,
1982.
Flames
Rodney
Pavi~
with
14
points,
Basketball
Atlanta Falcons and former head expire Monday, has said he will.
since
Nov
..
that team, they're tough to
.
rookie
Joe
-Nleuwendyk
scored
.
·.oonnellThomaswith]3andJohn
The
Boston
Celtlcs
waived
coach
at Wake Forest. has been not accept his .nw role as ,a '
catch."
the
season
and
.
Culbertson
'
w
ith
10.
center
Greg
Kite.
The
fifth-year
named
offensive coordinator and backup to Steve Grogan and may·,
his
39th.
goal
of
Gilmour's 21st goal of the
25th
on
th~
power
play
.
Elsewhere
'Monday
.
night.
·
player
out
of
BYU
has
been
on
quarterbacks
coach for South sit out th e 1988 season.'... Dennis
season capped a three-goal outCleveland State whipped .. injured reserve since December Carolina ... . Ohio State Coach · 'fhurman.formerdefenslveback :
burst early ln the second that
Wisconsin-Green Bay, 74-68;
with an "acute lumbar strain." John Cooper received verbal for Dallas and St, Louis, was :
gave the Blues a 5-2 edge.
Jacobs leaves squad ,
Austin
Peay
downed
Young... MissoutlforwardGregChurch commitments from at least four named the Cardinals' defenslveElsewhere, Montrea l · edged
stown State, 78-68; and Michigan Will miss at least two games mo-re of ilie state's top high- secondary coach, replacing Mel
Hartford 5-4. Boston boun9ed
YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio. tUPI)
because of a stress fracture In his school prospects, Including Bex- Renfro - another former Cow: ·.
Chicago 5-3 and New J ersey - Erlc ,Jacobs, a sophomore cin Slate defeated Ohio State; 76-64 .
AI
Cleveland,
Eric
Mudd
left
fool.
ley's Brent Johnson, UPI's Dlv- boy . ... Two years after ifs'·
shaded Calgary 5-4.
the Youngstown State basketball scorei:l27 points a nd Ken Me Fad- Boxlnr
•
·
islon III back of the year . ... release. the " Super Bowl Shuf. ··
Canadlens 5, Whalers·4
squad. has left the team for what den added 24 to pace the VIkings
· Edward Townsend, an Amerl- Richard Bell , Duke's defensive fie" video by the Chicago Bears ·
· At Montreal, Chris Chelios officials said were "personal
past. Wisconsin-Green Bay In can trainer Who led six
· coordinator the last five years. has provided $283,455 to 68
collected a goal and an assist and
reasons."
AMCU-8 action.
charitable agencies.

37 to compete for Miss Ohio crotpn

Community calendar

Bearcat coach. upset despite 81-60
'

Blues ...

Wi~ter events _
are still popular

The Daily Sentinel Page-7,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

I·

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR

6·17-tlc

··washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
" Will Buy or Haul Away"

KEN'S APP~IANCE
SERVICE
985·3561 .

. •-

Wa Service All Makes
1122/ 88/ Hn

MARCUM I ' &gt;&lt; ]
CONTRACTING 1 .CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

. _..,.. :.-.
915·4141

Gltlltl&amp;l. COIITIACTOU
AaW.ncn
1 t · l ·tfn

BOGGS

'SALIS &amp; SIIVICI
U. 5. ItT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILE, 01110

614-662-3121

Authorilltl .1111tt ._..,

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

Nowllel.llll,lwllllat

',.,.
,....

• I

'.

.,.,'

�••
, . 8-The 08ily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY
3

••
Anentian Electrokta cultom. .

Frank Futtl ia now you~ 1uth0~
ri:r*«&lt; fiCtory nl• and 1«vk:l
repr...,tllfhHt. For unrice cello

Giveaway
neun~.

ell thou. claws

6038.

homt, phon• 304-175-

Puppies - 1A Doberman ~
8nglo. 304-175-7245. '

6

..

cond~loft . 114 ,000

IPd- t4181 or tlkt

we•u..

~M/'\1tt:;&lt;;;tl( ~ ~6j~

P•v·
menu. Calll14· 44e-&amp;234 atk
tor Dave.

'

Television
..
Viewing

o¥11'

•

18111· 10, 41Dd. Lalfl"wflheir.
Alpine ttareo. Price
C.ll
114-448·1891.
.

"000·

0
0

1192-2498.

0

1911 350 ChillY pickup, otep
Mel. restored. *3.000. 304·
875-8022.

0

--

Yard Sale

------- p·----................... .
omaroy

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

35

(!) Dr. Who
(!]) Owl TV E;l
II)) ShowBiz Today
IBl Facta of Life
fll (!) Happy boys
6':051Il Allee
6:3o Gl]) il5l NBC NlghUy NIWI

CAPTAIN EASY

73 . V•ns &amp; 4 W.O.

I I&gt;OIII'T

THIIoJK

I'M

CUT OUT FO!t THj;
~ON6 ~UMP.

Comm•c:ial property and house
lota-GaUipolill Ferry. Call 304671-8908.

Basement Moving Stle. Feb. 1,

370 acres, Apple Grove. w .v1 . .
Rt. 2 frontll&amp;e· aan!f, gravel.
coal. located 4 miles from Dam
site. ld11l for development

2. 3 . at yellow baock hou..

acrou from Hubbard• Greenhouse in SY'ICUit. 9:00-3:00.

304-629-2380.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction ·

Wtcl4imeyer's Auetion

~Me•

awailtb_
l e at your ·convenience

and locations. Mar!tn Wad•
meyer Auctioneer- 614· 24&amp;6162.

9

Wanted To Buy

12

Situations
Wanted

Renlols

$enior citi;ren. Roo~ ar1d 'bolrd
for one a.dy. Specie! cart in my
home. Reasonable. Call 114·
992-1873.

13

41

Nicety fumllhed . small houte.
Aduhs only. Ref. r-.ulrad . No
pots. Coli 614-441-0338.

Insurance

Large 2-3· 8R . houM. Plenty of
ator•ga. Hendaraon ~rea . Call
814-441-7021.

We pay cash for lale model clean

uted cara.
Jim Mink Che¥.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

614-448.3872
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and n....- used can. Smi1h
Buick-Pontiac. 191 1 Eutern
Ave.. Gallipolis. Call 614-UI2282.

~all u1 for your

mobiia

home
msuranca: Millar 1'\IUrlnca
304-882 · 2145 . Also: auto:
home, life. health.

Furnished house. 3 BR . 29 Nail,
Gallipolis. t226 . Call 446-441 &amp;
after 7 PM.

Wanted to Do

2 BR .• with .lir8place • 1h acre.
$260 a mo. Call614-446· 7881 .

quilt your tops . or, make
quilts . Call Patty at 814-4488393.

Hou• for uta or rent: 1400 sq.
ft ,· 3 B.R.• 2 full baths, utility
room, family room 24x28 g·arage. Level lot. Rt.· 36-RodneV
area. Call 814 -446-2868 attarS

1B
Wi~l

Complete .h ouseholds ol fumi·
ture &amp; antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal heaters. Swain's Fumiture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olive
614-446-3169 .
'
Want to buy: U1ed furniture and
antiques.
buy entire house. hold lurnithing . Martin Wedemeyer. 614-245-5152.

vvm

Standing timber . Caii614-3792758-Ciaude Proffitt.

Wm do Federal and Statalneome

Tax•; typing, booking. and
Notary service. Margaret P~rker
114-992-2284.
I will baby tit in the afternoons
with Kindergarten children in the
llleale School aiea. U .OO hr
304-676-1857..
.

21

Raw fur, beef and deer hides
Gvn Sing and Yellow root. w~
h...,e wheat and nite Utes.
Trapping supplies for sale. (Buving uaed traps). L.ast day to buy
tur, Fef 6, 1988. George
Buckley. ours 12-9 . 614-6644761 .
'

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that you
do bu1int11 with people you
know, and NOT to tend money
throu~h tha mail U:ntil you have
in\lest•gated the offering.

lnt8ftlsted in 3 to 5 acrBI vacant
land within 8 miles Of Gallipolis.
Must be flat to rolling. Call446·
9708 after 7 :30p.m .

,,

Hplp Wanted

.31

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
lime au~mbly work; elactronics, crafts. Others. Info. call
1-504-641 ·0091, Ext. 2987.
Open 7 days. CALL NOW!

Homes for Sale

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOSS .

Now Hiring. Your area. S1 3. 560
to S59.480. lmmedi.-!e Openings. Call1 -315-733·1063 Ext .
F-2758.
Need babysitter to come to my
home. 2 children . Live close to
hospital. Ref. required. Cali
614-446-0498 .

.

2 bedroom, 2 baths. 2 car
garage. level lot on Rt 33
Swimming pool. satelite. ·cloa~
to Meigs High. Cell 614-9923254.
.

Government Jobs . . s, 6, 040 ·
S59,230year. Now Hiring. Your 1 \room house 1 Y1 bath, 4
Area. 805 -687-6000 Ext . A- bedroom on Gravel Hill . Gerage.
. 770 Ash St . Middleport, Ohio.
9805 for current Federal list .
Call 814-992-6714.
E1q::ellent wages for spare time
3 bedroom. large living room
auembiV work; electronics
crafts. Others. Info 1 - 604·841 ~ eat-in kitchen. full benment:
g.,aga, alae, Central Air in
0091 E,;t. 3026. Open 7 days.
Juppers Plains. 61!4-448-7i9&amp;.
Woman who want to earn extra
income. Must be 18 or older. If Must sell to settle estate
qualitied n1'ay start immediately. beautiful two bedroom home:
108 legion Terrace. Pomeroy.
Call 614-698-4370.
Interested per1iea. call614-992·
RN needed for nursing rehablli- 3841 lor appointment.
~ali~~ unit. ~equiraa caring
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full
1~drv_1dual who 1 nuning pracfinished b•aament, new furnace
tiC~ 1s geared towar~ restoring
res1dence to the home environ· 11nd central •ir. g~r-ae. fenced
ment as muc~ as possible. yard, low IO' s, 2414 Mt. Vernon
·
Contact Nancy VanMeter Ave .. 304-876-1774.
O.O.N . Americare Pomtlrov
Nursing and Rehabilita1ion Cen·
ter . 614 ·992·6606. E.O.E.
1

Stop Dreaming I You·can work in
motion pictures. Details (1)
806-687-6000 Ext. MP·2000.
Wanted : Mature lady Who would
like to work in prbrate care home.
Day and mght JOb open. Call
614·992-3166
AVON - All 1reaa. Cai( ·Marltyn
Weaver 304-882-2146.
L.P.N.-P .H.
Plea.. nt Valley Nursing Care
Center seeking energetic II·
censed Pr~ctical Nurtft. lmm•
di1ta part time empklyfMJ'It .
hj)efienced in long term care
pretarred . Ex~ent fringe benefit •nd •lary package. Call
per~onnel ofice. Pf. .ant V1lley
Hospital , 304· 176·A340 ,

1967 Holley Park· ,2x&amp;0. 28R ..
1 bath. 27x10 .buih on room
CA. fuel oil fumaca. 1 OxiO front
awning. c1rport awning. Good
cond . Mutt move. Call &amp;14·
44t· Z868 after 6 PM .
14x70 Windsor whh 14x30
addition. 3 bed rooms. blac:k top
rold. approx 3 acrat, Gallipolis
Farry, 304-17S-1930.
14x70 Skyline, 2 becfroorha.
many alltraa, nil 304-1761294 '"" &amp;:30.

33

Farms for Sale

E.O.E.·A.A.

Be your owft boll. work yOUf
· own hourt. 11111 poeltion, aommlstion, untlmlted opportunity
l o t - . f&lt;ob. I. 1:00, 2413
Jack10n AVII., Point Pl.... nt.
W. Vo.; 304-171·1721. , .

38.4 acret: :rwo okMr houaa a
outllulldlngo, pond. " - •· 20
.,., dllabla, county water Fonl
trHtor. Kn• c..- tc:hooia
Nog. Coli' 114-381:
9704.

•n.ooo.

ROOf'!lS lor rent, day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call &amp;14448-9680. Rent ulowas $120
month.

--------·
monthly Jates, utilitiea
W~akly,

peid. Cooking facilities . Down town location . Seniors welCome. Park Central Hotel. Call
814-446-0766.

Office Space tor rent. E11cei.
dow!'~own Gallipolis location.
lnqu1J1es call 614-446-4222 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR .. water. sewage furnished.
Beautiful river view. No city
tues. Foster.'• Mobile Home
Park. Call614-446·1602. ·

'

Furnished Rooms

3 BR , house for rent or rent with
option to buy. 2 mi laa out 141 .
Call 304-875· 6808-days , 614·
446-9280-evan.

42

·SR . 790 Leete, Ohio- 3 BR
kitchen, OR., LR ., lh bath'
shower in basement. fuel oil
furnace, 3 % acres. 2 car garage.
storage building. Call614· 4480568.

45

46

~ _
bedroom, 2 full baths. large
hv1ng room. d!ning room and
kitchen. Also laundry room, 2
car garage. central air. Eastern
School District. References r&amp;quired. Ca11614· 247-4946 .

Estate

Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
Locks on Rt. 7 . 2 car garage. nice
lot. lmmedi1te pouesaion. Will
consider trade ·in of mobile
home. property, etc. Bargain
priced. Call 614-446-8038

APARTMENTS • .mobile home•.
~ouns. Pt. Ple,.ant Jtnd Gallipolis. 614-446-8221 .

3 BR . houae in country. t260 a
mo. Call614-245-9676.

3 bedroom house. 5176 month.
Mulberry Ave. Call 614· 9925687 or 814-992· 7460.

4 BR .. fireplace. lull basement . 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis . 129.900.
Call Oays· 614-446-161 &amp;. a her
S:OO- 446·1244.

Sell Avon. Get your
a discount. Call 61

1 bedroom apt. tor rent. Utilitiw
paid. 31h miles south of Middleport. Rt, 7 . 614-387-0611 .

Beech Street. Middleport. Ohio.
2; bttd~oom furnished apt, uliiitlea pa1d. references and deposit
304- 882- 268~.
•

3 bedroom house for rent in
Syracuse. C•ll 614-992-7689
after 5 :00.
,

Baeuty Shop for sale in town
Call 614-992-3664 for mor~
information.

Real

6 room unfurnished apt. for rent.
CAll 814-992-6434 or 304882-2688 .
.

Furnished 1 BR . house. 936 First
Alii . *200 plus ref. &amp; $60
deposit . Call 614-446-403111 or
441-1115 .

2 BR house in city. No pets.
5326 month . Depotit • refer·
ence required. C1ll Willem•n
Real E1tate. 614-446·3844.

1000 Sunbeds· Toning Tables.
Sunai-Wollf Ttnning Beds .
SlenderQuest Passi"e Eltercisers . Call for free color catalogue.
Save to &amp;0 percent. 1-800-2286292.
.

Serv1ces

2 bedroom apt. for rent. Stove
1nd retriger•tor ere furnished .
Carpeted. Nice sening. Call
814·992-3711 E.O.H.

'

Business
Opportunity

Employment

Cottage efficiency. total electric, · refriger•tor, atove. nice.
HUQ approved. 2216 Mt. \ler· .
non Ave .• Pt . Pleasant. 614·
992-5868 .

PM .

Convenient 2 DR cottage in
Gallipoli1. 6 rooms plus buement and garage. Call614·4461890 or 61-446·2326.

daily gold, silver coins,
nnga. jewelry. sterling waui, old
coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed Burkett S.rber Shop
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614:
992-3476 .

Gracious living: 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apanments in Middleport. From
~216 .. including utilities. C•ll
814-992-nS7. EOH .

Z bedroom furni1ed ap_t. ret and
deposi1 , New H1Ven. W. V8 ..
304·882-3287 or 304-7735024.

large 2 DR · hs. with stove &amp;
refrigerator. $225 par month.
Deposit required. Vinton are•.
Call 614-388·8121 .

Financial

~pying

Standing timber. Call614-742·
2328.

Homes for Rent

Efficency apartment. Private
entruce. One room , ground
floor, kitchenette &amp; bath. Utili·
ties paid. •1 00 dep., ref. re·
quirH. *171 a mo. Call M4448- 7&amp;15.

Nice 2 bedroom trailer. Large
yard . Kanaug1. Call 814-4467473 .
Nice 3 BR . Mobile Home.
Convenient location- At , 7. Partially furnished . Water paid.
S210 . Call614-246-5818.

Mobile Home lot for rent. Total
electric. Priest Mobile Home
Park . Call 614-367-7438.

bedroom-Metropolitan Housmg 1pprovact. Children &amp; pets
welcome- Kyger Cfeek Schools.
Call614-446-&amp;410.

Am~na

slda· by·skle 22 cu. ft .
rafng. freezer- ice maker. avo·
cado. G.E. eltctric range with
hood . IVOCidO . Clll614·2459&amp;21 after 1 PM.
Glau and brest shelf. $76 .
614-448-8398.

Oak fiNwood. Call 304-676·
2767 1fter 4 :30p.m. Ask for
Woodman. ·

Golf clubs, pho rfe304· 17&amp;1672.

C•ll

Antique Wing l•c:k upholstery
cllair. Queen Ann Legs. P•lr of
Mahogany end tables. Good
condition . 814-992-6861.

55 . Building

47 Wanted

to Rent

Wanted to Rant- Needed imf'l"'e·
dietely 3 or 4 bedroom house to
rent in Gallipoli • . Call614-767·
2762 after 6pm.

Merchandise

51

Household Goods

SWAIN
11 Oakwood, 2 BR. gas heat, AUCTION .&amp; FU~NITURE 82
AC . wuh8r-dryer. In Aio Olive St .. Ga llipolis .
~Ew . 6 pc. wood group- t399.
Gr1nda. Call ;l14· 246-9143.
l1ving room sUites- a 1 99- t599.
Mobile home for rent. 6 milea Bunk _beds with bedding · $199.
from Gallipolis on 218. Call Full s11a mettrfts • foundation
starting· $99 . Recli'ners
614-258-8009 .
starting- 899 .
2 BR . trailer for rant-Patriot. Call U~ED - B~ds, dressers , be~room
814-G79 -2409, If no anawer- su~tes. $199 · 5299 . Deska,
448-6726.
• wnngar washer, a complete line
of used furniture .
12x60 mobile home-furnil;hed. NEW- Westem boots- t30
2 mi. from town . Water paid. Workboots t18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
t200 a mo. plus dep. Call soft toe). Oall814-446-316 • .
814-446-2390.

Supplies

Building ..,atariala
.
Block, brick. sawtr pipe~, winPICKENS USEO FURNITURE · dows. lintels. ate. Cltudt Win·
ters, Rio Gr•nde. 0. Call 814·
Beds, deskt, l•mps. tables
couchs, chairs. dinnatts, mise: 246-5121 .
Halt mile out Jericho Road
8 :00 -8 :00 Sundays 12:00: Concre1t blocks all sins yard or
delivery. M11on sand. Gallipolis
6,oo. 304-676-1460.
Btocl!: Co., •123Ya Pint St.,
New electric: Hotpoint dryer for Gallipolis. Ohio Ctll 814-446sale, 304-676-2130.
2783.

53

Antiques

Buy &amp; Sell Antiques. BUckeye
~eddiM, 614-446-7612. EvenIngs &amp; weekends.
Pri~ately owned antiques for
sa!e: East Lake walnut dreaser
with marbl' top, Gogthic lrifluencad walnut bed · very old,
Ouenn Ann poster bed &amp; chan,
Heavy oak needle point country
rockar. Selleri table with 4
ma~ching _
ch_•irs, large dining
room outfit Including mirrored
b~ffirt, silver &amp; more. Most over
100 years old. Cell 614-4483921 .

Antiques, buy or sell. RIVerine
Antiques, 1124 East Main St
Pomeroy. Hours . Mor- .. Tu,.::
and Wed. 10:00 a.m.-6:00p.m .•
. Sun. 1 ~ oo p.m.-6:00 p.m . By
chance or epp_olntmant. Run
Moore. 614·992· 2526.

Cellahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tirea, 1izes12. 13. 14. 16,
,6! 16.5. 8 mites out At. 218.
Cell614-256-6251 .
K~ystone Classic Mags- Dodge
or Ford. Exercise machine. Barr
generator, tools, kni\let. crafts.
tarps. Ca~i 614· 367-0141 .

Model 12 · 12 ga ., Browning 18
g.... Universal 12 ga .. 31 Remmgton 12 ga. Call 6.1 4-446 3346.
.
Bidwell Casll Feed Store now
ready for spring. In stock all
toba~co supplits, all fertili 1er.fencmg, garden teed. water &amp;
drain pipe. C•ll for latest prices614-388-9888 .
1975 GI\IIC pickuP 1h ton 'f6
series, 360 engine. Standard
trans. New clutch, motor runs,
but needs work. t400. 4000
tobacco or tomato sticks. 16
cents each. 3 tob~eco bela
boxes, t100. for all. '60 pes
used tin roofing. t2.oo each:
250 g1llon water taRk. Horse
drawn plows. Call 614-3792437.

Hay tor 111e. large round ballS ..
Welo1d. Clill 114-441-1878.
-lcMixad hay Dr
In square
bel•. Milled hay In larva round
bales. Caf,l 114-288-3334,
Jeck10n, Ohio,

,.,.,a

Hay for Ale. e1 :10p.-bala. C.II
114-849-2754 ., 114-892·
6383.

Ready mix concrete •nd all
concrete auppliea. Call us V1lley
Brook Cement and Supp/181
304-773-5234.
.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groom!ng. All braedt . . All
aty_~es . lams Pet Food Deeter.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446· 0231.

. 71

1983 Chevy. Citation. A'rn radio
auto.' trans.. PS. PB, 81.oo0
miles. $1700. CenbeH8na11he
Galllpollt Deity Tribuna or. for
mora information calll14-4'82342.

. 1~77 Camaro (red), 9&amp;.000
m1lea, auto.• V-8. *1600. cau
114,441-1816-Dov. 446-1_244
after.&amp; PM .

1986 Ford Escort. •2196. Call
814-288-6622.
1911 Cav•ller AS. Uk;a new.
20,000 miiM. Awto .• AC. PS
PB, AM·fM.Caaa .• tilt.
Call 814-388-82•0.

Carvin D,C 126 Lead Guitar · 1982· Bertinetta Camara (Redl.
8376.00. .C•rvi!" apetk•r ce· bcelltn~ condition. PS. Pl.
bloat with four 12 Inch Celes- crulaa, an, stereo, rear defrott,
tiona. t28&amp;.00. Both exc cond
reclining Mats, low mileage
304·882-3236.
. Origlnlal. eatt 114-448-2&amp;85
after 6pm.
Piano $100.00. Phone 304876·3868.
1984 Eacort. On• owner. Call
814-448-1290. .
•

59

For Sale or Trade

1981 Ford Bronco. Eltcel.cond.
f6996 . CoM 814-246-8167 ofter I PM .

Yamaha sound tY•t•m. Turntable, tuner, cauette deck, pre- 1980 VW R•bbit. Gas, 4 spd.,
amp. Power amp. ESS classic air. Good cond. R•aaonable. Call
speakers. O'aullivan cabinet. 814-448-9484.
New cost including talt· e3133.
1987 Olda. Cutl•as Supreme
Yam1h1s very but compontt•
Sell tor t2400 or trec;lafortruck' Call 30..._ n3·1611 or 773:
Cell614-441-3921 .
. . 5911 .

Fn~ 'II Siqiplll~S

&amp;

LivHSIIII

k

1187 luiclc Someraet. 4 cvl.,
1uto .• P.S .. P .... air, II. . new.
Only 2000 mflel. •1 2.200.
Phone 11•·949-21&amp;0.
,
1910 Cadillac Sedan De VII•
lully equipped. gOCid condltton'
*2100. 1981 Celebrity Euros:
pon, 38,000 mlln. Aw1omatic,
4 •r,llndar, cruise. air ·
cond tloMig. •7,000. C. II eu948-3027.
.
1981 Toyot8 Cellca. PS. PB, tir,
auto .• tunrDOf, 4 cyl. bc:alleflt
condition. AM-FM radio. Call
114-881-3818 Of 114-892,
7861 .

Mobile home for rent Kanauga.
Raferenc.a
deposit. 448·
41597 or 304-8715 -8198 .

•nd

'74 Ch111y v-o.
304-171-2457 .~

62 Wan_tad to Buy

fvmillhed. N11r Go Mart. Call
11 4-44~- 7028.

1111

· Now bUvtng .., ..1 com ~ atr
\OOfll, Cali farl-tquot... ftlver
OMy F""n Sopply. 814-4412986.
Want to buy, YIHow Locust
pootld. coll304-171·2130.

lind · Ten'*'" .;,_welllen

.

•

Morourya---.

(f~lri gANG" P~JECT!

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Used • iebuilt tranlmltllons.JUI
internally inspected &amp;
taed. Call 114-441-098 . We
buy junk tranamieeions.
.

luom-

79

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondition• lifetime gu.r•ntee. local ref.,encn furnlthed.
· Frn astimatat. Call oollecrt
1·114-237·0418. day or night.
Rog•rslasemant
Waterproofing.
SWEEPER and Hwing machine
repair. p•rts. ,and auppli11. Pldt
up and delinry. Davit. Vecuum
Cl•anar, one halt mile up
Geora- Creek Ad. Cell 11444f·0284.
'RON'S Talavl1ion Service.
Hou .. , calla on RCA, Quazer.
GE. Speclallng in Zenith. Call
304·171-2398 or 614-441 24&amp;4.
. !

NAY6E TI-l ERE'S 50ME11411-a
W~WITH HI6&amp;T.

'Fatty Jree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-675-1331 .

I

Ro"rv or Gable tool drlllni ..
Moat wells Completed lime day,
Pump· 111M and aarvice. 304891-3802
Starks Tree and Lewn s.mce.
lawn care, lendacaplng, stump
removal. 304-578· 2842 or
&amp;71-2903.
Tree trimming Md removal. odd
)obi, free •tlmatet, 304-17&amp;3312.

,.

..

Plu!f1bing

BARNEY

~~V~~~ :~J~· ME

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEAnNG

HER MILK COW

Cor. Fourth end Pin•
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phon-t SU-448-3888 or 114·

FER A SPELL,

YOU GOT
YORE OWN

•

.

c.u

74 Pord 1-1 ton - - Runo
....,.. ••oo. CiM 114-241·

12M. ' .

'· .

IT'LL BE

A TIGH:r
SQUEEZE

CHORES
TO DO _II

• m ro o Cil

®l 1111!21

New•
(!J Lighter Side ol Sports
C!l Sign Off
(!]) The Brain Examines how
vision and mobility aff"ect our
perception ol the world.
(1 :00) E;l
(!}) Moneyllne
IBl Soap
til (!) Love Connec11on
'1~:30 8 (lJ iUJ Tonight ShOW
Ill SporioCenter (L)
Cll Cheere
Cl (JI Nlgh111ne E;1
11m Magnum, P.l.
(!}) Sporto Tonight
1111!21 'Diamondo' CBS Late
Night Intelligence operative
abandons a beby at Mike
and Christine's door.
tBl Magnum, P.l. Find Me a
RelnbOw
til (l) Taxi
12:00 ffi Burna and Allen
@ lntlde the PGA Tour (R)
(]) Nlahtllne E;1
,
(JI l'all Guy

PAW

~41 - 4477

Electrical
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wir Ing. New urvice or r~aira.
Ucenead alac:trician. Est•mllte
free. Ridenour Electrical 304 . ..
171-1781.
'
~

General Hauling

· D~ll•d Watet Service: Pools,
C•tternl, Walla. Oelinfy An •
dma. Call 614·441-7404-J&lt;J
Sunday ollie.

J • J W..•r Service. Swimming
poolt. clttema, w.lll. Ph 114-245-928&amp;.
,.
.

e

ril •.

" • A W•ter Service. Home
clstera.
IM)Oie filled . Formerty J !"• loya Wat•a.Call
:104-17 -1370.

· liD Sign Off

I

L_,l__...L._.l__...L.-.l--..J

-

quored
· by hllin.g in !he. ~'h issing wor ds
you deve lop from slep No. 3 bel~w -

a·

Sign on' pamphl~t loldlng machine at a printing company:
"Restricted areal Violators wi.ll be FOLDED!"

BRIDGE

NORTH
-. A 4

James Jacoby

• Q J4 3
+A K!O&gt;

When the heart combination in today's deal stands alone. the right play
is easy: Lead up to the queen and hope
that the king is in the West hand. But
as always, the complete deal must be
considered. Here North invited slam
and South declined. Since West knows
there are few high cards available to
the defense, he would quickly grab the
king ol . hearts. Let's see how this
thinking helped South play the heart

.H

12:30 Cil JICk llnny
ill Late Night wtth

e ())

Devld IAlWnn

· @ lttl WOtlcl (RI

(]) Newtvwad O.me

.

ill MOVf!: Olt, Gocll (PGJ

B7

(t :441

e iiJ MOVIE: 'Man, Woman

Upholatary

... Chid' Cll Late Mowle

tPGHt:ae1
iiJ MOVIII: Acroea the

M-ov·o UpholoWtng tri-oru22-.Thtboo1
In lumltu,. u-trlnD Coli

Peolfla (1 :37)

10 .. ·171•4114 for ' free .
ettlm.....

.,

-.

EAST
+J 63
• K 10 6 4
t jU0 9&gt;1

WEST
• 9 a&gt; 2
• 86
+ J9 64 3

' . ..

+7

SOUTH
+ K Q 10 7
• A932

t A7
+ Q82

.;

-.

Vulnerable: Nei lher
Dealer : East
Declarer won the first trick with his
eight ol clubs. Next came a low heart.
South.
No.rth " East
Wes1
When West followed low,. the seven
I Nr
Pass.
was played from ~ummy , forcing
•.
Pass
4 NT
Pass
Pass
East's 10-spot. East returned the nine
Pass
of diamonds, ducked to the queen in
dummy. Now came the crucial play Opening l ead
4
the queen ol hearts from the, North
hand. If East covered , South would
take the ace as the jack I ell from West .
.. If East failed to cover . declarer would
play low and the jack would still fall . would be shor t in hear t~ . perhaps
The A-9 of hearts would then be over st arlin g out wifh either J -x or JO -x. lf
the K-6, and declarer would be able to West held eitijer ol these combi na
take anoth~r successful finesse to pick lions, then !e{!ding to dumm y ana
ducking and then later leading dum ·
up the suit.
How could declarer play this way? my's queen would li mit the defender's
The reasoning was sound . If West held to only one tri ck . The play is.based on
the heart king. he would likely take it. the assumpti on that West would lake
Because .West had led from length in the heart king . II he held il, on tile lii~l
·
clubs, there was a good chance he play of the suit.

+

.'

61tUM~by

THOMAS JOSEPH .
37 Gaze in
away
38Hackman

ACROSS
1 Surfeit
5Type0f

dance~

39 Equal

9 ship's
company
10 Ancestor
12 · -·, Baker,
Charlie"
13 Rich or
Richard
14 Part of
an elem.
Ill Buddy
16Procommittee

17 Seclusion
19 Chance
20 Pleasant
21Aipine

snow
22 Favorable

DOWN
1 Rapscallion
2 Bower
3 Predict
4 Palin-

dromic
animal ··
5 With joy
6 :fable scrap
7 Understand
8 Taking a
sabbatical
10 Between
win and
show
11 Arizona
city

15 Tempo
.25 Singer
18 "- Zapata!" Crystal
21 Zola book
22 Like some 27 Irish
lions
county
or ftres
28 Rubric
23 Nose or
29 _ ego
1ce cream 34 Period
24 Hackneyed 35 - a plea

review

23"1-,1
sa,w.... "
24 Fountain

or jerk
25 Departed
26·Hebrew
letter
27Card game

30-

• Parseghian
31 Sodium
hyroxide
32 YeUow

ocher
33 Alicestral

35 Women's
suffrage
leader
36 Extra

recital

,piece

...

212-

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work it:

,

AXYDLBAAXR
, is LONGFELLOW
One letter siands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for .the two O's, etc. Single le"ers, .
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day~ code letters are different. .
.:
CRYPTOQUOTE
' .

2·2
GQHZ

,UZC
L

(NR) (1 :55)

WilEN ~E WAS
THIWI/6~, TltE!f WE HIM
A ~NDIN61N'IITATION!

2-2-88

• Q B7

RY

••
B T U R--

KZTYSW
LSW

KLEDYRQQW

T

K-"
.•

12:20 Cil MOVIE: San Franclaco

THE'( SAID HE COULD
STOP B't' ANif' 11ME !

..

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS .
Abound - Rodeo - Craft - Zealot --' FOL.DED

(!}) NtwaNigh1

.(I) Rawhide

Trucks for Sale

1112 Ford plolk ~ up truck
13210. Colll1tf.III·H22. .

.

8:05.til NBA Basketball
8:30 Cil Branded This Stage of
. Fools
(JI Growing Pains
Mike lands the lead in his
scnool play, hoping to score
points . (R) E;1
9:00 m 700 Club
.
Gl]) 1!5) Hunter Hunter and
McCall investigate the
mysterious death of a movie
actress.
(JI MoDnllghting
Maddie takes the train home,
but shes still not prepared
tor Osvid . E;l
(!) 1!JJ Frontline Investigate
rescue of U.S , students
during' 1983 invasion ol'
Granade.
11m CD 1!21 Jake and 1he
Favnen McCabe. an
eyewitness, refuses to rely
on what he saw.
@ Larry King Livei
9:30 ® Hogan's Heroes
10:00 Cil Straight Talk
· U C2l l!5l Crime Story
Torello gives mobster
government protection in
exchange lor testimony. I;J
''
(]) l!J I]) thirtysomething
Melissa and Ellyn compete
for the attentions of the
same man. E;1
. (!) Voices &amp; Visions Follow
controversial poet Ezra
Pound in his search for a
poetic voice. E;1
11m t111!2l Cagney &amp; Lacey
Cacey tries to help abused
children; David proposes to
Christine. E;l
(!]) @News
(!}) Evening News
&amp;I IIl Benny Hill
10:20 CIJ MOVIE: The Blue Knight
, {NA) (1 :43)
10:30 Cil Celebrity· Chela
(!])Tony Brown's Joumal
til(!) Hogan's Horoeo
11:00 Cil Remington Steele Steele
Trying

(]) m

Improvements

B6

CD 1!21 48 Hours

(]) m

~,---~-------~r·
81
HotTJe

&amp; Heating ·

-

linds a respected. long·time
client is the sofl of a mob
boss. Q
·
Ill NHL Hockey
(i) 8 (11 Who's the Boll?
Tony reunites with his
do-wop s1nging group for
one last concert. E;l
(!) l!ll Nova Scientists try lo
find why members of
Franklin expedition were lost.

(1 :56)

.,

8t

Handmaiden

Ul]) i!IJ Matlock Matlock

til crl MOVIE: 2010: The
Year We Make Contact tPGJ

1979 23ft. GMC motOf' home.
DaiUIIe. Nice for traveling or
conuructlon workers. etc .
Priced to Hll. Call 114-246·
9448.

84

'

I

CH E K A L
' Enter At Your _; - r
~--'1~·r·:.._..,.l...::.,lr.,7:...;;.1~-:..,1.--4 0 Complete the chuck le

suit.

@ PrlmeNews

Motors Homes
8t Campers

82

IBl College Baska1balf
&amp;I &lt;Il WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 Cil Sanlord and Son
1:00 Cil Croubow The

i

L an~ L Tire Outlet tire truckload
13 lnah-1&amp;.51nch,
from ti&amp;.OQ up. Located across
fr~m Sohio St•tion, Tuppltl'1
Plains. Ohio. 114-992·6344.
aaleFtb. 1 ~ &amp; _,

'
(·

~EY, IT lOol".&gt; life: I:
H~'..&gt; DECIDEP or\1 THI?

Con

""'"' for .....................

114-441-4711.

.,71 00

1117 Foftl R_ _ I 1 ltld
AM·fM·C:O.. I.CIGO ......
114-441-212~- 41'1111.

Llvaatock

'II he sees his shadow It means
6,000 more years of Ice Age."

a0 ,

- · 2 - · 304·fti·3H2. '
1112 0111o Cutlou ...,_,
1'8, Pl. AT. Y·l, · - .,.,.·
u.n5.oo. 304-171-27110. ·

72

2 Ill. Opt. Stovo 8 r.tflg,

hll

OJ Crossfire
e @ l!5l Jeopardy! C

1 979 H.,lrnport
boot.
HP Marc, u prop, Mere TM
trollor. Spore. EC . cOHI14-441:
9411 after lpm.

1981 Olds Cut1111 LS. Excellent
oondition. 12200. ,1 976 Chevy
plclc-up h1lf·ton. •1100. Call
114-94_9 ·2801 .

1 87&amp; Pontioc o.. m~ Pri• u
new llret, needa trlnemllalo~
warto. f600.ao. lofoni:OOcoll
1·304-171-4011 or 304-1853433.

FUmllhed apt. MXt to Hb,.:,Y.
O..o Pf-oioftol only.
Port&lt;lng. Col 114-441-0338.

Boats and
Motors for. Sale .

•eooo:

e.u

2 bedroom mobile home In
Middlapor1, Ohio. Aaf•'"ce
and Security deposit raquirtd.
304-882·3217 or 304-7735024.

2 BR . •pta. 8 cloaeu, llltchan•ppl. fumlahed, . WMh•-Dryer '
hook-up, ww carpet. newly
PlintH, deck. Regency, Inc.
Aptl. Call 304-878-7738 or
175-5104.
.

mil•.

76

Au~o·s For S11le

Dragonwynd Cattery Kannel
~971 Monte Carlo. Excel. con-d .
CFA Himalaytn, Persian and . •n a out. 350 engine. •&amp;50. Call
SiemeH klttena. AKC Chow 614-388-8847.
puppin. Call 814':448·3844
after 7PM.
1971 Pontlec Gr1ndprtx. 2 dr.,
auto. "eo. Call11•·441· 1115
Pari white Chow Chow &amp; · or 446·1244.
· 1 / 16th wolf puppln. *150
each; Call 614·268·9333.
1950 Ford Coupe. 311 awto
PS. Pl. TW. Not orglnlal. ReaciV
Female LhaU A.paa &amp; female to drlv•. neoo. Call 814·388ferret. Call titer lpm. 114-448· 8488.
.
4737.
19n Black Monte C•rlo. A•
AKC Rag. Miniature Oach· options. Nice c.,. a 750. Cal
ahund. 8 wk1. old, shots.
114-388-9788 .
wormed. Call614·682-6731 .
1987 Suberu GL 10. 4 door,
mic~ Nd, power sunroof. turbo
57
Musical
engme, 6 apd.. AC, AM·FM
canena. tltt. cruiM, PW, power
Instruments
door locks. Just 1 , .000 mu ...
E-xcellent condition. Call 814446·8217 after &amp;pm.
lottls 81ectric guitar, t100.
Yamaha I string flat top with 1973 OPII station wagon, g~od
ca••· *121. a... guitllr .,. . . . condition. C.H 814-379-2143
cabinet witfl 1 16 inch JBL a 1 .. 114-371-2137.
16 inch Petvey black widow.
8160. Call614-379-2611 .
1971 CamtJO, 3&amp;0. autometic
rough body. Aunt tood- Good
Guitar Leailons!l Individual In· work" c.r.
114--UI-7211
struction. lkuniclfdi'a Music, after 5pm.
614-448· 0187 or call Jatt
Wamtiey instructor. 814·441- 72 Olda. Delta 88. Good condl·
8077.
tlon. *310. Call614-246· 8264.

Bi!J 3 BA. farm homes built on
your lot. $16,995 and up. Cal)
1 -614-886· 7311.

Apartment
for Rent

Honcta A..ro 80 Scooters. 2 for
•1000. loth 1884._ 1 under
1000
1 und• 800 miles. ·
CAll 114-948·2989.

14 Ft. Rlvtr John. 25 HP
. John10n,
trail..- • ICC. Call&lt;
114-441-1290.

Trdn spo rl.rlillll

1111 Pondac Orand Pr'l• . Good
condition. V-1 cyl. PS, PB,
power Mate. 2 door. T-topa
03000. QBO. 114-882-1840
attar 8100 p!m.

44

111• ttartey D•vklson Sports·
tar. Raoantty rebuilt. Many new
parts. New paint job. *800.
814-985-4420.

75

After 1rylng to buy a house, I've
found a truth in real estate adver•
tising. A ' Fixer Upper' means,

Inside the PGA Tour·
(i) Cl (JI ABC News t;l ·
(!) Nlghdy Busineaa Report
®l el!21 CBS News
[]) Body Electric
(!}) lnoide Poli11cl '88
IBl WKRP in Cincinnati
• (!) Too Close lor Comlon
6:351Il Carol BurneH
7:00 Cil Remington' Steele Vintage
Steele
D I]) PM Magazine
Ill SponsCen1er (L)
(i) Entertainment Tonight
CJI]J People._ Court
(!) (!]) MacNeill -Lehrer
NewiHour (1 : 00)~ - - ·
OJ) News
(!}) Moneyllne
el!2l il5l Wheel of Fortune
IBl ChaMa
&amp;I(!) M'A'S'H .
7:05 Cil Andy Griffith
7:30 om (I) Hollywood
Squ~res
.
Ill Countdown to Calgary
0 I]) Judge
I
· ~~m Wheel of Fortuna E;1

I

S~IMMING POOLS . t999
New left over 1987 Model
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
Pools. Hugh 161124 tt. swim
area. 4 ft . deep. Includes deck ·
Route 33, North of Pomeroy'
Rental trailers. Cell 61 4-992 :
f~nce. fil~er &amp; :"arr1nty. Install_:
7479 .
., lion &amp; fmancmg availeble. Call
24 hrs .: 1-800-346-094S.
Space for 1mall trailers. All
Pink &amp; white full length prom
hook· ups.- Cable. Also efticiencv
gown. size 3 . $80. Call 304rooms, air and cable Mason
676-5491 .
W.Va. Call304-773· &amp;fi61 .
'
Spacious mobile llome lots tor
rant . Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolls' Ferry . 304-6753073.

Grain

bal•.

Space for Rent

CommMcial building tor lease.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Stores,
offices. A·1 Real Estate. Carol
Yaeger. Broker. Call 304-676 ·
5104 .

&amp;

Mi111td hay ·o r 8tfatf1 • squ~re
Ml~ttd hay • large round
bales. Call 114-288-3334,
Jackton, Qhlo.
.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Furnished 2 BR . Mobile Home.
Located at K &amp; K Mobile Home
Park- Eastern Ave. Dep. • ref.
required. Cell614 ·256-1187.
~

Hay

•

i

1981 Y.m•ha Yz 121. EllloeMent
condition. •9&amp;0. C•ll 814-3712681 .
•

Lots &amp; Acreage

below fO form fou r si mple words

I]) Cll I!) (J) ®l ., a2i
\Ill Newo
Ill SportsLook (T)

~onay

Avon all areas. Shirtey Spears
304-175-1429.
•

6VENINO

the

Homicide

·.;

30 , acre f•m : Mostly tillat,ta.
For College! Part time -Ne• Rio Gr1ndt. Pond, barnt,
JObs. Join the Army Nation• ~~~~ - home. Call 614-2.4&amp;·
Ouard. 304·171-3950 or ·1800· 142·3819.

0 foReaurrraKngeramblemm
of
led words

•

.

·

GUlf

•

TUES., FEB. 2

--

WOlD

I:OCHil Crazy Like a Fox Motor

1981 Ch...,y S -1 0 , aatend nb.
to.dad. uc,tl.nt condit6on. For
Nit or taka over paymentt.
Contact &amp;14-9815-•107 or 614-

Lost and Found

·-- 7

·r.

~ PIP~~

mll11. 4 cyl. 1

.

~

Furnished •partment- 7 Nail
Gallipolis. 1 BR . t225·. Utilitiei
paid. Call 446-4416 ahar 7 PM .

Large tttnding maplt tr.. for

304-675-3912.

'

1he Daily Sentinei-Page-9

'

TNCkS for S•la

14 T.o yota pickup. Exc.eiMtt .

I~

-·o ·.
'

Furnished Z BA . , apartment.
A_dults on~. Nq pets . Inquire at
Fn"St &amp; Ohve St .. ••k for Rose
Stllner.

9 month okl melt, O.lmation.
h~ all shots. Call after 5
304-171-2415.
•
fir~ood.

Household Gooda

Nlca1 BA . apt. Range and relrig.
furnished. Wat 11 &amp; garbage
~id. Deposit r~uir«t . Call
81,4 · 446-43415 after 6 PM.

rwmoved, d1rk gray and white to
good

51

Luaury Tara ~partm..-.ts. Elegont, 2 Sr. 2 floor, fully
carpetted, ~A and he... Privata
t11tranca, ancloHd patio. pool•
pl•voro~nd . Start - *299 per
mont~. Utllhlat not included.
Coll814-317-7110.

:104-137-2272 onv--

Kin..-.

Apartment
for Rant

7'J,

County AppManc•. Inc. Good
UNCI appl'-"ncft lftd lV 1811
Open lAM to 8PM. Mon 1h,._;
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS o\T . Sot. 114-441-IIH. 127 ~•d .
8UOGET PRICE&amp; AT JACK· A ... foifit!ollo. OH.
ION ESTATE&amp;, 838 J Pike fi'Onl 1113 • mo, w• to
. thop •nd· movln. 814-4462618. E.O.H.
.

Announcement•-

4

44

· Tuesday, February 2. 19B8

Tua1day. February 2. 1988

Pomeroy-Middlapon, Ohio

..

VYYGD

U Y E E

L

D Y N Z Y U ., .. ,

URY

UZHUR ···

TU

RTA

· -TULETLS

,.

'

-'

GZQMYZI .

Yeatetday'a
Cryptoqaote: ONE OF TH&amp; '
STRONGEST CHARACTERISTICS OF GENnJS IS THE ·

POWER OF lJGHTING ITS OWN FIRE. -

JOHN .......

..

••

WATSON FOSTER
/

...
j\

'

.,

•
•

�•

-Area news ·briefs_____, Winter still alive; .cold front moving in
'

Meigs jobless rate down

By United Press International
that If a groundhog sees his
DespJte Punxsutawney Phil's shadow he will be scared back
pfedlcllon of an early spring. Into his burrow for six more
winter was still alive and well weeks of winter.
today In the form of a Canadian
In Louisiana, heavy rain on
cold front that drove tempera· Monday flooded streets in Baton
tures to 43 below zero lfl the upper Rouge, Morgan City and GonMidwest and produced a band of zales. A tornado knocked down
rain and snow stretching from utility poles In New Iberia,
·the Deep South to the Northeas\. cutting power to 1,800 homes for
The arctic cold front sent several hours.
tempera tures plunging below
The ·a rctlc air Monday pushed
·zero this morning across Mon- as far south as Dall!lS, sending
tana. the Dakotas, Nebraska, tef11peratures plummeting from
Minnesota. "Iowa and·Wtsconstn .' 72 to 49 in three hours.
Duluth, Mlnn:, reported a record
Unseasonably .mild weather
cold temperature of 29 degrees continued ahead of the cold front.
below. w!ille Tower, Minn .. and overnight temperatures re·
checked in at 43 below.
mained in the 50s and 60s from
kain, freezing ·rain, sleet a!1d south-central texas to the south·
snow were widespread along t~e ern and middle Atlantic Coast.
cold front which pushed across Record highs · were set before
the Northeast, Ohio Valley. Mls· dawn in ,Harrisburg, Pa ., and
slsslppi Valley and southern N~Y~C~.~~It~~
Plains. Ralnshowers wen: nu- ·.degrees.
I
merous from southern New Eng·
The stream of warm air out of
land I to the .tower Mississippi theGulfofMexlcoshatteredhlgh
temperature records In the 50s ,
vaner
&gt;
60s
and 70s.ln 33 cities In 15 states
Flash flood watches were In
Monday.
The records Included
effect today for parts of Tennessee. Kentucky, the · Vlrglnlas. readings of 69 In Washington,
New York State and Pennsylva· D.C .. and Atlantic City, 611n New
nia, where the weather i York City and 73 In Richmond.
forecasting groundhog today
On the West Coast, a pair of
emerged from his hole In ' a Va.
new
Pacific storms spreaded
steady rain and failed to see his
rain
across
the· Southwest with
shadow for only the ninth time In
in
some
of the higher
snow
the past 101 years. Legend has It
elevations . ·

Uemployment in Meigs County was down over four percent In
December; 1987 compared to December. 1986, according to the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
According to the service. the labor force is composed or s:1oo
persons with 700 unemployed in December. 1987. The
unemployment rate for last month was 8.5 percent compared to
12.61n December, 1986. According to the report nine counties In
Ohio had unemployment rates of more than 10 percent during
December.

PatR;f cites woman after mishap
An Illinois woman was cited in an accident Monday, at 1 p.m.,
In Sutton Township on S.R. 338, just nortll, of Racine, according'
to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Constance G. Folsom, 23. of MI. Carmel, lll .. was cited for
driving left of center after her 1980'Chevrolet Citation hit a 1984
Dodge Ram pickup truck driven by Delbert G. Milliron, 57, of
Rt. 2, Rach!e.
Milliron wa,s driving east when Folsom, who was driving
west. went off the right side of the road and returned to the road.
Folsom then went left of center and hit the truck.

EMS has B rolls Monday
Eight calls were answered l)y local units Monday, tile Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services report~.
At 8:11 a.m., the Racine Squa·ct took Cecil Roseberry from
Third St., to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9: 53 took
Jim Spangler frorn Main St., to O'Bieness Hospital in Athens;
Middleport at 12: 18 p.m .. went to Route 7 for Carl Stewart,
treat~ but not transported; Tuppers Plains at 4:50p.m .. took
Jack 1.ance from Rice Road to St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg; Pomeroy at 7:48 p.m . took Joseph Cook from
Lincoln Terrace to Veterans Memorial;· Syracuse at 8:09p.m.
took James Cotterill to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 8: 21
p.m . took Goldie Roberts from Pine Grove Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 11; 05 Syracuse took Emmogene
Con$0 from College St .. to St. Joseph Hospital.

,

continued from page 1
Ph 'l predzc'ts···------

Buckeye Chuck Does
Not See Shadow
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)

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I

The 1988 Groundhog predictions
are in and It appears we.wiU have
an ear.Jy Spring. Ohio's official
groundhor, "Buckeye Chuck,"
emer1ed from hill· Marion bur·
row at 7: 40 a.m. but did not see
his shadow.
And to make things a shade
more ridiculous. "Deadly Dan,"
a stuffed albino groundhog at the
Mohican State Park near Lou·
donvllle also failed to see his
shadow.
It marked the second·
consecutive year that Buckeye
Chuck, who state lawmakers In
19'79 declared Ohio's official
groundhog, predicted In an early
spring and last year's prediction
proved to be true. ·

--------"'l"'--~------:----,

I

. ..ea deaths
Ar
.

Roy Priddy

,
.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her · hus·
band,· Frank Holter in "1980. a
grandson, a sister and a brother .·
Burial was in the Morse Chapel
Cemetery.

Announcements

place

Daily Number

911

Page4

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Vol.31, No.1 81

IIIII RAlN

m
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r~~:;~an~d~n~or~t:h~e~rn~I~nd~l~a~n~a~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. .i·~

RECEPTIONIST/
·MEDICAL ASSISTANT
We are seeking an energetic
individual.to become involved
in all aspects of a busy
medical practice.

. By United Preas lnternatlolll'l
· · BO!j'TON- Sen. Robert DolestiUdomt,n lites the
GOP field of presidential candidates and ReJ?.
RIChllrd Gephardt of Missouri holds a slim lead
over the Democrats. a Gallup Poll of Iowa voters
'showed Tuesday.
Gephardt's· 14-polnt lead over the closest .
Democrat, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis.
'narrows to 3 percentage points when only those
Iowans "most likely to attend" the Feb. 8 precinct
caucuses were considered. ·
· "The fact that we are In strong contention ... I
think is terrific and lfl can come out oflowa. o,yith a I.
good showing and then win in New Hampshire,
we're ~lng to be on our way," said Dukakls. who
had discounted earlier polls.
·
' Former Sen. Gary Hart of Col()raqo. who IE~ d the
Democrats a month ago In a similar poll with 34
.percent overall, dropped 10 fourth place with 8
:percent of the "most likely to attend'· sampling In
the latest Iowa survey. ·
. The Gallup Poll. conducted Jan. 29-31 for
several media outlets, surveyed 577 Democratic
voters and 529 Republican voters in Iowa : The

margin of error Is 5 percent. The· results ·were·
aired Tuesday by WCVB-TV an!! WEEI·AM 111
BOston. '
Dole, of .Kansas, still holds a signlflcan! edge
over Vice President George Bush, a lead that
grows when only the preferences of the most
likely caucus-goers are measured.
Overall, Dole led with 39 percent followed by
Bush with 27 percent; Rep.· Jack K~mp of New
York, 10 percent; former TV e'langellst Pat
Robertson, 8 percent: Former Delaware Gov.
Pete duPont, 6 percE-nt and former Secretary of
State Alexander Haig, ] ·percent.
Among 'likely caucus-goers, Dole improved to a
47, percel_lt to 20 pe~cent lead. over Bush. KemP
improved to n percent and Rol)ertson to 9
,
·
percent.
For the Democrats. Gephardt ied overall with
· 32 percent followed \Jy Dukakis at 19 percent; Sen.
Paul Simon of Illinois, 15 percent, Hart,13 percent
- down from 34 percent last month -and Jesse
Jackson and former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbit,
both at 6 percent .
But among likely caucus-goers Gephardt 0!11Y

Office of
'•

..Francis G. Fugaro, M.D.
241 0 Jefferson Blvd'.
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

'(

'

leads 27 percent to 24 percent over Dukakis with
Simon improving to 19 percent. H&lt;~rt dropped to 8
percent. tied with Babbitt, and Jackson gained to
7 percent.
·
.
.
A key in the GOP race is voter perception of
President Reagan, a Gallup spokesman said.
About one in five voters said they disapprove of

I

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Reagan, the highest percentage qf any Iowa poll
to date. ' ·
Dole leads Bush by ·5·1 among that. group in
Iowa. By contrasf, in the South, where Bush holds
a.big lead over Dole, only 7 percent of Republicans
say they disapprove of Reagan .

Stocks open . lower .e.arly today
NEW YORK tUPI) - Stock ·policy committee at First Albany
prices drifted at slightly lower Corp. "It Is hard to move this
levels In active early trading (llarket when you have so ma~y
today, unable to . mount · any: Investors, large and small. that"
follow through to the modest have been alienated by the
gains won in the previous session events of October and the vola til ·
following ·a cut in , the ptl!fie ity that followed."
As expected, several ·Of ·. the
lending rate.
nation's
largest banks Tuesday
The Dow Jones industrial average. which rose 8.29 Tuesday. cut their prime lending rates to
was down 9.29 to 1943.63at 10a.m. 8.5 percent from 8.75 percent.
But that news came just after
EST.
Declines led advances 649-390 the government said Its main
among the 1,494 Issues crossing gauge of future economic actlv·
the New York Stock Exchange ity - the index of leading
tape. •Volume was active, · indicators - fell 0.2 percent In ·
amounting to about 35.50 million December for the third straight
.
shares during the first 30 minutes · monthly decline.
The
downturn
followed
revised
of trading.
·
of
1,2
percent
in No·
declines
In Tokyo today, prices fell for
vember.
which
reflected
the
the second consecutive . day on
the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The plunge in stock prices. and 0.1
Nikkei Index of 225 selected percent in October.
Johnson said the "uncertainty
stocks. which lost 60.11 points
Tuesqay. dropped another 76 .84 ' about the outlook for the econ·
.P.qlnts to finish the day at omy is simply overwhelming the
positive kicil" the market might
2~.595.37.
.
1 ·'Despite. the steady decline in
get from lower rates.
"For the first time since
interest rates, analysts believe
o
dtober
1981. just prior to the
the stock market's mostformida·
1981·1982
recession, we have had
ble barriers to a sustained
advance are' nagilng doubts over· · three successive monthly de·
,the e&lt;;o.nbmy'~ ab_l!ity to avoid clines in the index," JoJm.§On
said. ·;The salvo sent by the stack
sllpplJI.il into a reces~ion. ·
"The single biggest question on market plunge In October essen·
tially said we should be on our
investors' minds is where is t.his
economy •going," said Hugh · guard concerning the economic
Johnson, head of the Investment outlook in.1988. We might avoid":
recession, but It will be a close'-

call."
The market struggled a nd
finally · managed to stage a
modest advance Tuesday.
Analysts said the market was
distracted throughout the day by
concerns over the outcome of the
Treasury Department 's $27 bli·
lion refunding, which began
Tuesday with the sale of $9.25
billion In three-year notes.
Hildegard Zagorski, an analyst
with Prudential-Bache Securl·
ties Inc .. said the market was
dragged down fn the early going
on fear s that the refunding might
not go well and the n recovered
when those !ea r s proved
unfounded.
The refunding Is scheduled to
continue today with the auction
of $9 billion of.lO-year not es and
conclude Thursday with . the .
selling of $8.75 billion of 29
'tl -year bonds.
·
Johnson said the market re·
malned · "extremely nervous"
and in the current environment
viewed Interest rate de.clines as
evidence of economic weakness .
. :·The combination of weak
· demand for money and a Federal
Reserve· jiloard policy that Is
more generous leads to lower
rates," Johnson said. "And what
makes all that possible: cleclin ·
lng economic activity and
weaker earnings performance."

President Jleagan plays final
card; vote today ·on contra aid
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WASHINGTON tUPI) -Once devoted countless speeches to the a rr;llltary solution of I ~e conflict.
The offer came with strings
" a pole about 10: 30 a.m. more. · President Reagan has Contras, polls consistently have
Pickens, Racine, clipped
POLE CLIPPED
Oble Power Company
revealed·
his
Inability
to
make
attached:
lawmakers would
gone to the well for aid to the
Tuesday on Route 124 in Syracuse. Power was · Nicaraguan Cpntras, this time on . theirs a popular cause to have to act within 10 days of
employees work to ~re power io customers
restored In aboul one bour.
wllo · were affected when a car driven by Keith
Americans.
Reagan
in vi tatlon to assess
a .. note of accommodation that
to
whiCh
Americans
complia
ce
with the peace plan
The
extent
·
,
. ·
·
may have been drowned out by
and
they
ould
have to accept hi s
have
been
reluctant
buyers
of
the
0
policy Reagan has tried so hard assurance that their advice ·
With the stage set for a pivotal to sell was evidenced by a would be heeded.
CBS-New York Times poll in
Still. It was a ga mbit played
According to a spokesman for
gated the accident, with DWI.. vote today on Capitol Hill.
An automobile driven by Keith·
the Meigs County Sheriff's De·
driving under suspension. failure Reagan' played his final card December that showed only 35 only under duress and the threat
Pickens, Racine, clipped an Ohio
percent of those questioned fa· of ·imminent defeat for the
.partment. Pickens was traveling
to control and no seat belt.
Tuesday night In a high-stakes
Power pole as it went over an
'
voring
Contra aid, with 53 per- president.
east
on
Route
124
toward
Racine
•
Pickens
was
taken
to
Veterans
showdown
over
the
short-term
embankment on Route 124 In
·
"I
tell
you
truthfully tonight
cent
opposed.
he
lost
control,
clipped
the
.
.
when
·
future
of
u.s.
policy
in
Central
Memorial
Hospital
by
Syracuse
Syracuse at about 10: 30 Tuesday
'
EMS.
fie
left
the
hospital
th~ough'.
America.
Perhaps
with
that
in
mind.
there
will
be
no
second chances
pole
and
went
over
the
embank·
morning. Owner of the vehicle'
Pr"!iidential
aides
described
to·
tomorrow."
he
warned in his
ment.
Pickens
was
charged
by
An
arrest
warrent
has
In
a
22-mlnute
speech
the
big
a
window.
was Ron Lindeman of the Ches·
day's
crucial
House
vote
as
a
"llo·
speech.
"If
Congress
votes down
Deputy
Kenny
Klein.
who
invest!·
three U.S. ·television networks
been Issued&gt;
ter area.
or
die"
and
"make
or
break"
ald.
the
freedom
fighters
may
declined to broadcast ~ Reagan
proJ)osltion
for
a
policy
that
soon
be
gone.
and
with
them
; all
sought to salvage his $36.3
as
secret
CIA
assistance
to
effective
pressure
•
on
·
the
began
million aid request for the Contra
Sandlnistas
."
·
the
rebels.
guerrillas by offering Congress a
. White House officials Insisted
Pointing to reforms announced
role in the release of any future
Mullen had Indicated that If he military assistance.
members
of
the
Middleport
Po·
that
Reagan
inofferlngtoaccept
,_
in
Nicaragua since the Aug. 7
• James B. Scott, Pomeroy, has
were unable to find a federal
lice
Department
Including
a
irom
Capitol
Hill
on
signing
of the Central American
a
judgment
The
offer
mod~fled
an
earlier
filed a $100,000 suit against
attorney and he (Mullen) would
the
status
of
political
conditions
peace
plan,
a skeptical Reagan
verbal
threat
.on
his
life.
agreement to withhold the pack·
attorney, Don Michael Mullen,
act as Scott's legal counsel.
·Scott
charges
that
Mullen
In
Nicaragua.
went
as
far
as
he
said
the
Sandinistas
"are clea rly
age··s $3.6 million In arms until
Pomeroy, In the Melia County
Scott contends In June, 1987. he March 31 to allow more time for could to address congressional feeling the press ure . and are
tJIIilcated
he
(Mullen)
would
Common Pleas Court.
· was adVised by Mullen that
Scott alleges thai he contacted. contact a federal civil rights Mullen would , represent the possible negotiations on a cease· concerns that lle is committed to beginning to tak e limited steps."
attorney and discuss· the matter
fire between the rebels and ·
Mullen on May 6, 1986, in regard
plaintiff in the matter and Scott NicaragUa's leftist Sandin isla
with
that
attorney
for
possible
to alleged haraulng pollee tech·.
legal representation and that charges that he paid a retainer regtnie.
• ·
niques used on him by certain
fee. court flUng fee and consulta·
'
It thus added a new twtst to the
lion fees.
Cpntra aid debate; but failed to
· !Scott alleges that Steven L.
dampen Democratic predictiOns
Story, 110licltor for Middleport that · Congress would cut · orr
· Vtllage, was authorized to pres·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Gov. Richard Celeste, through
further military assistance to the
ent two separate out of court
"effective
arm·twlstlnl" of skltlsli lawmakers, has quelled an
Contras In support of recent
settlements to . Scott. one being Central American peace efforts.
attempt to override hla veto of a controversial hill delaying auto
the dismissal of a pending drunk
emlslllonl lupections In lhe Cleveland and Cincinnati areas,
Assistant House Democratic
'
.
.
driving charge brought by Mid·
Sen. Richard Finan, Jl.Cinclnnatl, chief proponent of the
lead~r · Tony Coehlo, 0-Calif ..
dlepprt Village and second. a $500 said .there was scant interest In
Jennln11s Beegle, Route 1, Racine, was appointed to serve on
slx-monlh delay In tile tesltq,lhreiN In the towel today, saying
the Mellis County Fair Board at·the board's regular meeting
cash award. Scott states that he
he lacks the r.t votes to override In the Senate and has no
Reagan's "last-minute appeal
held at tlje ·Rock Springs Fairgrounds Monday Night.
refused to accept the dismissal of for Congress's belp to continue
prospecll of Jetting th~m.
.
.
,
Beegle was appointed to complete tbe unexpired term of the
the drunk driving charge but was the Contra war" under terms by
"It now appelll'l that we do not'have the votes ot overrl.d e,"
late William B. Downie which expires In November, this year.
not advised bY hla counsel of the .
· said Finan, who secured 22 votes last week to serid the measure
the DemOcrats could be
Beeglf bas been active through the year with the quarter horse·
$500 cash settlement until the which
to the IJOvernor. "The 11overnor, alon1 wltb the Ohio EPA. have
blamed fora failure.
racing program.
statute of limitatiOns had expired
cloae
aonre effective 1111ft·twlsllna."
Indeed, tite declilon by ABC,
The board agreed to sponsor an all-Meigs County Fair Chorus
after which time the \ lllage no CBS and . NBC to not air · the·
The teed~t~ ' Prograin bepn Mond&amp;y In Cuyaho1a, · Lake,.
1onaer wanted to pay the prime-time speech live sug·
to be orpnlretl from the siudents of Eastern. Southern and
Lorain, Hamilton and llutrer COIHlllee. It will continue, as
Melp' Qllh Schooll under the direction of Bruce Wolfe of
eettlement.
m1111dated by tile U.S. Ellvlrollllletltal Protection A1ency.
gested lime may be runnlnB ·out
~IDe. Atcompanlmllnt of the clloru• will be on tapes and the
SCott alle(rel that" be has been on
MotorllliJivlnaln th- five COIIIItlee, will~ last names be11n
the president's ability to use
group trill appear llt¥eral times dally at the fair.
cauiiClmental aJIIUisb aa weD as
C and D ud wbo own 1 • ud later-model can or light
trllil
warnlnas of, a deblcle-ln·theTbit bolrd qawd to tltat the 01t1o State Kiddie Tractor Puu ·
peat •motloaalltreu and asks
lnclla,
wiD have to llave u Ia
certificate befere they
Alan. wlllalap tM flnlllevent of lhe local kiddie tractor pull
· S!OOwllteh wuadtnid to hlmu maktna to win more U.S. arrils
cu
re11ew their ~ 1"811*11*
1lr
Ute end of tblll month.
whiCh II held d&amp;U;y at the llfelp Fair. Tbe winner ot the
settlement: "'.QIIO In PUJIItive for the Contna.
FIDIIII iald Celelte aad tile EPA lbreMned aena&amp;on from
NetwOrk offlctall baled their
~t~IY niJ)It nn,1 will he ellllble to '-lle ~fiN.. Ia state
dame.- and IIOMO for me.n tal
llelll'br
cqlllldel that U &amp;lle prvcram wu delayed, lllelr areas
comptlltlon. It wu announced tbat PluleOlollitinteHalnment
· llipllh and emollollal dlltrela actlona on a Jll,dlment that
would be next for Ute ta 11•1·
·
.
for ' ~ 1* lair hu INieD ICIIItraeted. Wllllam R•llford,
allllaedl¥ "au!tertd u a ...Wt of Reaaan ~ bad'ample opportun·
"AD
•peclalb'
effee&amp;Jve
lactic
~·
tile
tbreata
to
IIICIIIde
II}' Ia - t year• to aen. hla
praldeat of tile board,llfll.\dM over Moaday'a aesalon.
netiiDJII:e 011 1111 attotaey•a Conlra
other coalllles aot - Ia lite talltlq paopam," laid·nnaa.
to the American
Contllillfd Jll Plllf &amp;
part•r.llcOtt al~requeststrlalby pubUc. poliCy
Altlloup Reaaan bas ,
a.;..--~~---~~~
liii'Y·
,.,

·t

Car hits

po
· wer

pole, rolls over hil'

:~:i~e~~~~d !t~~g~~mitm,entto

I

$100,000 suit filed in Meigs Court .

Hospital news

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2 Sections. 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Gephardt gaining; Dole.dominates GOP field ·

COME IN FOR APPLICATION

19.88 Tax
·supplement

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enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohii&gt;, Wednesday, February 3, ·1988

. 'copyitghtecl 1188

•

SHOWERS
~
"
I" 0c 1 ded '
FRONTS: "Warm
Cold
ta IC Y1ll'
cu
~~'
Map shows minim~m temperat~res . At least 50%.of ilny shaded are~~ is r - t : ..
to receive preCipitation Indicated
.
··
.
UPI "''
WEATHER MAP - Snow will he widespread fr~m the l.ower . =~
Missouri Valley through· the central and eastern areas ofthe Greu &lt;1
Lakes and across northern New England. Freezing rl!-ln and sleet
wllloocurfromsouthwestandelllitcentraiMissouriacroescentral ,,
I:·.··ISNOW

at y

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Stocks

Rain changlnr to snow to·
night. Low near 30. Cloudy
Thursday. Scattered snow
flurries . Highs in low 30s.

Pick 4

Pomeroy . Volunteer Fire De· miles during the year; Tan\{er 2
partment answered a total of 94 was driven 848 miles; Pumper 3,
calls for assistance during 1987 349 miles;· Rescue 1, 1,020 miles;
according to an annual/feport Brush I. 189 miles, .T he ladder
prepared by former Fire Chief truck has no speedometer.
Charles Legar and presented· to
New tunrout gear , two self·
Pomeroy Village Council.
contained breathing apparatus.
Of those 94 calls. 29 were hand lanterns and nozzles were
In-town, 13 of which were struc· purchased In 1987 with $10,500 in
ture fires. The remainder of calls Community Development Block
were five false alarm or service Grant funding through the
calls, two brush fires, five auto county commissioner~.
fires , one river rescue , one gas
A new pumper truck has been
spUl and two accidents with orde~ed for the department. with
injuries.
delivery · expected the end of
'
Out-of-town calls amounted to March.
Needed in 1988 is ),000 ft. of
65 with two false alarm or service
one·and·one·half
inch hose.
calls, nine structure fires, 13 ,
Legar
resigned
his position as
brush fires. 12 auto fires. nine
fire
chief
on
Jan.
1. He .was
chimney fires. seven mutual aid
replaced
as
chief
by Danny
calls, two transformer or oil
Zirkle.
well-n !lated calls.. 11 accidents
with injuries.
An a'.(erage of 13 men .answered eac.h in-town call for a
total of 403 man hours. .
-,.
An · average of 14 men ans·
wenid each out-of-town call for a
fotal of 1,092 man hours.
Pumper No. 1 was drive·n 841

Roy Gay Priddy. GS. of Middle·
port, clied Monday at Veterans
Trustees meet
Memorial Hospital following an
Rutland ·Township Trustees
e~&lt;tendelr illness.-'
will meet at 6:30 p.m . Thursday
A fo rmer employee of the Ford lvor Logan
at the Rutland Fire Station.
Motor Co. and a me mber of the
Full Gospel Lighthouse Church .
Plan conferences
lvor iSam) Logan. 75, Flora.
Pomeroy. Mr. Priddy was born died . Monday at the Holzer
Parent-teacher conferences
Aug. 8. 1919 in Buffalo. W.Va .. a Medical Center following a
will be held in the Southern Local
son of the late John Edgar and lengthy illness .
Schools Thursday evening and on
Matilda Myers Priddy.
Fr14ay morning.
An oil worker. Mr. Logan ·was
Survivo~s include · his wile. born Nov. 23. 1912 at Flora. a son
Southern students will not be
Ethel Virginia Jacks Priddy, of the late William and Caroline
attending classes on Friday due
whom he marriE&gt;cl Dec. l. 1900; We lls Logan .
to the conference. To accomo·
,
five daughters . Mae Maxine
date fathers and working par·
He was a member of the
Jordan of Pomeroy. Flora Virgl· Bearwallow Church of Christ and
ents, evening conferences will he
nia Bing of Lancaster. Ciedith was a veteran of World War II
scheduled Thursday from 6 ·to 9
Arvella of Cambridge, Carolyn having serving in the U.S. Army.
p.m. and conferences on Friday
Sue VanMeter of Middleport ancl
morning will he from 8: 30 a.m. to
Surviving are several nieces
Marilyn Rile of Wellston; 18 and nephews.
12 noon.
grandchildren; 23 great grand·.
Besides his parents, he was
children; one great great grand- preceded in death by a sis ter and Meet tonight
The Long Bottom Chapter of
child; three brothers, Ru ssell a brother.
Flame
Fellowship will- meet
and Lloyd Priddy. Rutland. and
Graveside rites will be held at 1 tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Mt .
Guy Priddy, Pomeroy; several p.m. Wednesday at the Cherry
Olive Community Church, Long
nieces· and nephews.
Ridge Cemetery with the Rev. Bottom. Mrs. Mary Folmer of
Besides his parents. he was Jam.e.s Corbitt o·!ftciatlng.
preceded in death by two sisters. Friends may call at the Ewing · Long Bottom wiU be the speal\er.
Ollie Schuler and Helen Molden; Funeral Home from 7 to 9 this
Meet Friday
and three broth.ers, Holly, Stan- evening.
Meigs County Pomona Grange
ley and Truman Priddy.
will meet at 7:30p.m. Friday at
Services will be 1 p.m. ThursAlpha Cottrill
the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
day at Rawling-Coats-Biower
Refreshments will be served by
Funeral Home with Rev. Thomas
Alpha Cottrill. 97, died Mon&lt;jay Harrisonville Grange.
Kelly officiating. Burial will be in
at his hom;oo on Fifth St. in
Miles Cemetery. Rutland.
Syracuse.
Friends may call at the funeral
A farmer. Mr. Cottrill was born
home on Wednesday from 2 to 4 at Cheshire on Aug. 12 , 1890, a son .
I
Veterans Hospital
ancl 7 to 9.
.
of the lat e Andronacuss and
Admitted - Cecil Roseberry,
Fannie VanMeter Cottrill. He
Mary Holter
Racine; Joseph ·cook. Pomeroy.
was a member of the Church of
Discharged - Ferdinand ' Gil·
the Nazarene.
Funeral services for Mary
land.
Bertha Diehl. Earlene
Surviving are a son. Don
Ethel Holter. 88, Racine, whO Cottrill. Syr.acuse; a daughter- Eliersbach.
died Saturday following an ex- in-law. Margaret Cottrill, Syra·
tended jllness were held Monda y cuse; t hree grandchildren,
afternoon at the Ewing Funeral
Sharon. Craig and Bruce Cot ·
Home with the Rev . Charles
trill; two great -granddaughters.
Bush officiating.
Daily stook prices
Crystal and Rachael; three steP.·
(As of 10: :u~-wn.)
I( homemaker , Mrs. Holter
daughters. Dorothy Marrison,
Bryce andMark Smith
was tile daughter of the late Guy
Ashtabula; Noami London and
and Rhettle Pierce Singer. She
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Beatrice Lisle. both of Syracuse;
was a member of the Morse
a step daughter-in-law, Helen
Am Electric Power ............. 29~ ·
Chapel Church.
Diddle, Syrac~se; several step
AT&amp;T
............. ... ... ............ .. 29~
Surviving are five daughters.
grandchildre~. step
great ·
Ethel Cooper. Parkersburg, W.
Ashland
Oil ...... ... ... ....... . ,... 57%
grandchildren. and step great·
Bob
Evans
................... .... .... 15\-1
Va.; Susan Gates. Vienna, W.
great-granchildren.
Charming
Shoppes
............. .12%
Va .; Mattie Lawrence. Por· ·
Besides his parents, he was
Cty
Holding
Co
........
....... .... 34
tland; Dorothy Duncan and Ruby
preceded in death by his first
Turner, both of Grove City; four
Federal
Mogul
.....................
36
wife. Loretta; his second wife,
Goodyear T &amp;R ...... .... ..... ... .58~
sons. Delbert Holter, Malta ;
Jessie; three Infant children; a
Heck's Inc ........................... 2%
Dana Holter. Coolville; Carl
sister, Ruth, and a · stepson.
Holter, Marietta. and Charles
Key Centurlo.n .................... 39~
Lawrence Diddle
Lands' End ........ .-..... .......... 19%
Holter, Racine; a sister, Eva
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Hollon, Chester. four half sisters,
Limited Inc ..... ... ............. .. .18%
'n!ursday at the Ewing Funeral
Multimedia
Inc; .................. 53~
Goldie Krackomberger and Opal
Home with the Rev. Glenn
Hollon, both ,ol C::hester; Mar·
Rax
Restaurants
.. ; ....... : ... .... J~
M~MIIIan officiating. Burial will
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
................. 8%
·garet· Bissell; Long Bottom, and
be in Gravel Hlll Cemetery at
Mildred Arnold, , Pomeroy, 15
Shoney's Inc ................... .... 22%
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
grandchildren and 27 greatWendy's Inti................... .......6 .
funeral home from 2 to 4and 7to 9
grandchildren.
Worthington I~d ....... .......... .l7%
p.m. Wednesday.

Ohio Lottery

-Oaks tie for
r~t

I

A meeting of Unified Citizens for Education in Meigs Local
School District will be held Thursday, 7 p.m., _at the Rutland
American Legion Hall.

spring for more than a century,
rejuvenating himse.lf each Au·
gust by drinking a secret
"groundhog punch" that in·
creases his lifespan by seven
years with each sip.
The town of Punxsutawney
was groundhog wild Ol\ the eve of
the annual forecast by Phil.
Motels were booked to near·
capacity and shopkeepers re·
ported brisk sales of Groundhog
Day souvenirs. including ceramic replicas of Punxsutawrey's most famous resident. an
IS-pound woodchuck.

.
.
~
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST Z.:J.II ..

Pomeroy volunteer fire
department telease~ report

·Unified CitizensJto meet

•

Tuesday, February 2, 198&amp;:

P011'18roy-Midclaport, Ohio

10-The Dtily Sentinel

.
A special S~ction·
Coming Feb"r~ary 19, ·1988

. .

Ad Peadline·Feb. 15, 1988
I

.

Contact Your Advertising
Representative Fot Details

Celeste quells oVerride
attempt on controversial" bill

,....-Local ·news briefs----.·
Beegle fills unexpired term

•r::-

The.·Daily ·Sentinel

. . . . . . . __ . . . . .

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