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                  <text>T11 u Se 1tinel ·

Articles... ___....;c:.:o;::n.::t1n::;u:.:ed:::...::fr:.:o::.m:..:D::..":..1_ _ _ _. -

Ohio-Point
attempts to protect their lands.
This led to chaos In the United
States, and a need for a stront~tlr
central (lovernment became
more apparent.
However, the Artloles of Con·
federation, . even though they
were weak, proved to . be a
landmark In government ac·
lions. Thomas Jefferson said that

W.Va.

the new structure was the belt

~~~st::~xlsttng or tl!at ever did

All bUll dealing with specified help Coni!'eSS. ·
Because . the Articles were
All Of thiS po wer· fl g htln•a ell·
aubjects of Importance required
weak, they became a stepping
at least a two--thirds vote ..-. and maxed when Sbays's rebe!Uon
stone toward the present
Constitution.
AllY amendment of the Articles flared up 1n 1786. Farmers ~an
The Articles had outlined the
required a unantrnouse vote. losln(l tbelr farms through mort·
gage
forec;Josures
and
tax
deltn·
general
powers that were to be
Tbat would have taken the
"""
quencles
Hundreds
an
Of
unanimous agreement of all
·
.
..,. •
exercised by the central govern·
thirteen states which was men se!zed thelr mus ket s In
ment, and kept alive the Idea of a
Impossible.
-,...---!:---=C.:.on:::t:::ln::.:ued:;:::.:.fr:..::o:::m:.:...::D:.:;·l:_____ union by holding the states
Congress was handicapped 111
~
to(lether.
·
at least two ways. One way ,was Office (614-446-7007) .
ship as the keynote topic. Some40
Despite their weaknesses, the
that Congress had no power to
WJiat's the beef s~t~:~::~r\ break-out sessions ranging from
Articles served as a transition.
reaulate commerce,. leaving Several of the Ohio State
" House Cleaning for Others" to They represented a great sur·
each state the right to design Its slty Agricultural Econo
Low Investment Dairy" will be render to the states that had
own, different laws Including. -'!steel Gallla County this week to 'featured. The workshop will be' before controlled their own gotariffs and navigation.
discuss farm policy. The pro· held at the Hocking Technical vernments. The Articles pre·
Commerce between states gram leader was Dr. Dennis Colleg~ In Nelsonville on Satur· pared the states for a jump from
gave rise to disputes. Since J{endersQn. In a recent economic day, March 12, starting at 9 a.m.
the old boycott association ofl774
Congress. lacked the power to commentary Dr. Henderson says \E•~rollment forms are available to the Constitution of the United
regulate trade, each state was . the cattle herd decreased In size
the County Extension Office.
States In 1787 . .
· free to control the entry ol goods
duringthat
1987,
continuing
thetotal
de· r~~;;;;;d;e;ad;l;ln;e;l:s:M;a;r;ch;;l.;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;::;j~
began
In 1982. The
Into Its territory. Many states cline
lmp!lSfd tariff laws that applied Inventory of cattle and calves on
to other states as well as to Jan. 1, 1988, was just shy of 99
million head, down from 102
foreign nations.
New Jersy, for example, ex· million a·year earlier, 25 percent
ported Its goods directly, but below the pea)&lt; reached In 1975,
Imported . foreign products and the smallest since 1961.
through tbe ports o! Philadelphia Henderson says declines during
..
WITH REMOTE '
the
past,
year
were·
In
every
and New York. To protect Its
·. merchants, New Jersey put a tax category except heifers desigon foreign goods enter(ng by way nated as beef cow replacements,
&amp;
of other states. New York retal· which remained level with a year
lated by Imposing heavy duties ago, and 'feeder steers up 3
on New Jersey ships that entered percent and heifers up 2 percent.
CHESTER
915-3307
The number of both beef and
her harbor. In the south, VIrginia
passed a law providing for the dairy cows was down 2 percent,
seizure and prosecution of any with dairy reflecting heavy cui·
ship that failed to pay duties; It ling II\ light of lower milk prices
was aimed not at Europe, but at and the beef downturn suggest·
Maryland, Pennsylvania, ·and lng that -the strength In feeder
cattle prices over the past year
Massachusetts.
·
M a result, America as a unit and a half did not yet build ·
could not control Its own ship· cow-calf operator margins sliffl·
ping, ·!lavlgatlon, commerce, or clently to terminate cow llq~lda·
lion.
. Its Individual states.
·
The 1987 calf crop was off three
Congress was alsq. hampered
SECTIONAL
when It established a tax quota percent. With beef replacement
W
/RECLINER-PEACH
for each _of the states - asking heifers holding even, It appears
REG. '1799.95
that each state contribute that that the downturn .tn beef cow
amount voluntarily. Congress numbers is coming to an end and
was lucky to r'l&lt;'eive quotas from may stabilize during 1988. With
only one-fourth of the states. ~t 1987's small call crop and some
. could not force the states to pay. heifer hold-back, beef slaughter
Economic clouds began to looks to be somewhat smaller
form. The system of raising this year than expected earlier,
money for the government was despite the somewhat larger
not effective. When the states supply of feeder ca.ttle. Slaughter .
•
I
.
refused to pay the amount prices will probably top last
BED, D.. ESSU, JEWELRY BOX, MIIIOR,
Congress requested, · they. cried year's $65 · average for · choice
. CHEST, NIGHT TA,BLE
about the tyranny of "King steers at Omaha.
BASSETT CHERRY FINISH
A workshop abol!t alternative
Congress." This left Congress
lEG. $2699.95
with no funds to pay the Interest enterprises for people In rural
DRESUR W/WING MIRROR
on the public debt, seriously areas will feature entrepreneur·
RfG. S799.95
affecting the nation's credit with
other countries.
SALE
Individual states were fighting
Continued from D·l
with each other over boundaries, are about the same as If the tooth
and the levying of duties on goods has never been sealed.
from the dlffer!!nt staies.
The Rehwlnkel Dental Society
The weak national federal recommends pit and fissure
government In Philadelphia sealants for children as part of a
could only advise, recommend total dental care program that
and request. . .
Includes dally , use or fluorides,
It could not command,' cberce dally br~shing and flossing,
RIVERSIDE
or enforce anything. It could not regular dental checkups, and a
act directly upon citizens, and diet that limits snacks. Working
CURIO
could not protect Itself against together, these positive mea·
REG. '349.95
gross Indignities If the states did s ures can result in a lifetime of
not support Congress. And many s trong, healthy teeth for all of our
.times the · ~tales did nothing to children.

·: Ohio. Lottery

Olympic
results
Page 3

Daily Number
224
Pick 4
4475
Super Lotto
18 42-31-34-19-6

'

Farm Flashes

•

S99

waggart . admits wrongdoing

William 0. Smeltzet_

CEmFIED I'UiliC ACCOUNT AN'f

BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI)Jimmy Swaggart, the Louisiana
ffrebrand who helped topple PTL
founder Jim Bakker, has further
marred the soiled reputation of
television evangelists with his
admission that he also Is guilty of
moral wrongdoing, experts and
church officials say.
Swaggart, 52, told his Baton
Rouge congregation Sunday he
would step down from his $150
million-a-year ministry IIi light
of a "moral failure" for which he
gave no details.
Tl\·e !Ire-and-brimstone
preacher who · helped · oust
Bakker and New Orleans televl·
slon evangelist Marvin Gorman
from their ministries on grounds
of adultery asked fellow evangelists to "forgive me for sinning

126 First Ave.
Gallipolia, Ohio
. 446-4471

BLUE
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United Press lnlernatlonal
· .Sen: Robert Dole has shar· pened his criticism · of Republl·
. can rival George Bush, accusing
· the vice presl~ent of Ignoring the ·
"heartland" states where most
of the 10 major White House
candidates are seeking their next
round of votes.
.
· Still more than two weeks
away from the Super Tuesday
elections In 20 mostly Southern

IIEG. '2199.95

S109997
BLUE COnON

SOFA
REG, '999.95

$499 97

\ B&amp;E'solved by l~men

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

Two young men !rom the Ripley area of Jackson County-,
W•.Va., Ronnie Casto and Barry Glen Thompson, were arrested
_Friday morning by the Jackson County, W.Va. Sheriff's
Department In connection with a breaking and entering at .
:
Eber's Gulf Station In Racine. The B&amp;E: occurred just before
mldnlgh! Thursday. Karen E. King, 19, also of Ripley, who
accompanied the two men, was arrested In Racine shortly after
tile rpbbery occurred.
·
Casto and Thompspn are currently being held at the Jackson
County Jail. Both are expected to waive extradition to Ohio
when they appear Tuesday morning before a Jackson County
magistrate. They will then be transferred .to Meigs County to
appear before Judge Charles Knight on a bill of Information . .
' King, charged with complicity. appeared Friday before
J"dge Patrick O'Brien In Meigs County Court and was released
on bond.
Neatly all of the Items taken In the B&amp;E have been recovered
the.Meigs County Sheriff's Department reports.
·

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

EARLY AMERKAN

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tlal aspirants are turning to
South Dakota. Minnesota and a
few other places that .wlll vote as
early as Tuesday.
'
.
Most of the candidates admit·
tedly are more concerned with
the "super ballot" March 8, hut
some stand to gain from the
Immediate round of voting more
than others, such as Bush, who
are stronger and more confident
Continued on page 5

-Local news briefs---

•Sliding fee scale. No one refused services because of
inability to pay.

POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS
236 E. Main St.
414 Second Ave., ·2nd floor
Open 10:00 to 5:00
Monday-friday
446-0166 Mon.-Sal.
Excapt Wednesday
CLO!i£0 THURSDAY
Closed
Also: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe, Logan

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FULL SET, llg. 1399 ••••••••••••••••• JIOW 1199.95
QUEEN SO, leg. $499 ····-······NOW S249.95

'

Sheriff probes incident . ·
S~eriff

"
..

Buy 1 Table lamp
Get 1 Matching lamp

FREE

ptfi~:

industries up and down the river
about where It Ithe spill) was
located," said Peter Tennant, a
water quality exp~rt with the
Ohio River Valley Water Sa nita·
lion Commission.
"We thought they were worrled about their (water)
Intakes."
. The collapse of an i\shland Oil
Co. storage tank at Jefferson,
Pa., spilled 770,000 gallons of
diesel fuel into the Monongahela
River and later the Ohio River,
f
orclng scores of cities In four
states, including Ohio, to close
fresh Water Intake valves.
. ~~•
~ ~,..... • .
The Ohio River Valley Sanlta·
. lion Commission, or ORSANCO,
did tests along a 15-mlle stretch
of the river between Wheeling

and Moundsville, W.Va ., Tennant said.
Higher tev!!IS of chloroform
and methylene chloride - both
cancer-causing agents - were
found In the water, the news·
paper said.
"Offhand, I'd estimate these
concentrations at about ten times
more than what we normally
might see," Tennant said.
Tennant told the newspaper
that the chemicals, at those
levels "significantly exceed" the
federal cancer risk level criteria
for rivers and streams.
"What we have ·Mre Is a good
lndl&lt;:atlo .u.a. ·
• ..m.e..,. ot,.
Industries rriay have taken ad·
vantage o! the spill' to unload
some of their own problems and
unwanted material," said Edgar

Berkey of the University of
Pittsburgh, which has also re,
viewed water samples,
"They dumped during the spill
because dumping them In the
river without the spill would have
made them easter to detect,"
Berkey said. II was not known
which companies might have
engaged In the alleged dumping.
"There's no question that lf
someone wants to do this type of
thing, that was the time to do It,"
said Ray George, a regional field
. agent for the Environmental
Protection Agency.
"But with the new technology,
lt!•BOt-•lly l\lillciMl We do bave
some tools and resources avalla"ble to us and If we find s01ne
Industry doing It, we'll come
down hard on them."

applied to the ODNR, Division of
Reclamation for a long-wal min·
lngpermltwhlchwouldallowthe
company to use that mining
technique In the area.
Residents became worried
abOut how the mining would
affect their property. OU offl·
clals became concerned because
themlnlngcameclosetotheedge
of the 10-year buffer zone that
surrounds Dysart Woods.
Burns said North American
has also filed for a room-and·
pillar permit that woudl allow
mining not only to the end, but
within the buffer zone.
"We were a little surprised.
they didn't recognize It (buffer
zone)," Burns said. "The other
coal companies have."
The legal director said the
buffer zone was created 10 years
ago when It became apparent
strip mining may threaten the
woods.
"Surface miners have all rec·
ognlzedlt. Thepermltswereflled
and then they backed off from
those permits," Burns ·said.
"This Is the first time they have
not agreed with tt." .

weeks, but no agreement has
been reached. Burns talked with
North American's Loulse Wat·
son, an environmental consul·
tan t, throughout the
· negotiations.
Watson could not be reached
for comment, the Martins Ferry
Times-Leader reported Sunday.
A citizens group, POW (Pro·
teet Our World) has objected to.
North American's long-wall per·
mit for four months . Those
opposed to the permit offered
comment to the Division of
Reclamation for 51-2 hours last
month during an Informal
. hearing.
Long-wall Is a mining method
where coal Is cut from the coal
seam and sent to the surface on a
conveyour belt. As the machine
moves forward, the supports
move forward along the room to
cave ln. When the roof caves In,
subsidence occurrs, which ian·
downers say will greatly affect
their surface water and also
damage building.
With room·and·plolar" .mlnlng,
large pillars of coal, which hold
up the roof, are left uitmlned.
Where long-wall subsidence occurs Immediately. room-and·
pillar subsidence may occur
d.;.zens of years later, If at all.
Both coal mining methods
concern university officials but
the loss of groundwater poses the

greatest threat to theforeststhey
said.
"The trees have a great
demand for wter because they
are so big ," said Wlstendahl. "If
the t.rees, can't produce enough
food for the roots and the rest of
the tree, they're going to die."
During lmes of great stress to
the trees, such as during a
drought, "there will be a great
danger of losing them ," Wlstendahl said.
The university recel11ed the
woods from the National Conser·
vancyofWashlngtonln the1960s.
Dysart Woods has been placed on
the Department of Interior's
National Register of Historical
places.
·
''There's so little of our natural
heritage left It's good a few of us
are concerned about It," Wlstendahl said.
·
"The burden of proof to show ·
the woods would be affected by
mining Is on the school," Burns
said.
.
If the coal company Is granted
thepermltwlthoutrespectlngthe
buffer zone, Burns said, the
university will appeal to tbe
Reclamation Board of Review
and then lake the case to court If
necessary.
The legal director said the
room-and-pillar permit will be
decided on before the long-wat'l
permit.

The buffer zone extends from a
half mile to a mile and a half
around Dysart Woods, he said,
ou and North American have
negotiated a settlement to the
buffer zone question for several

wili&lt;·vote .··on,nurse·law ·;rewrite

:s·.•

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.._ - - - · - ... .._

-.1.

- lo.o- ~

-·

~- _.

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•

By LEE LEONARD
VPI Sl.atehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
State senat.ors will vote this week
. on a long-awaited overhaul of the
law goverplng the licensing and
regulation of nursing . .
The heavily-sponsored bill,
which has already been passed ·
by the House, will be first on the
calendar when the senate recon·
venes Tuesday at 1: 30 p.m.
Tenns of ihe controversial
rewrite have been pushed and
pulled for several years 'l,by
various factions of the nursing
prot-ton, a 1 well as the Ohio
State Medical Alaoc:lallon.
Spontorecl. by Rep. . Judy
Sbeertr, [).Shaker Heights, the
bW m111e1 requln!rnenta for

, .

u

&amp;VIA

MARTINS FERRY. Ohio
(UPI) - A dispute between the
North American Coal Co. and
.Ohio University concerning min·
lng' II) Belmont County Is
Intensifying.
At Issue Is mining close to a
buffer zone around a wooded
area that holds some that some
unt~sual trees.
"The coal company and the
university have disagreed on the
buffer zone," said Ohlo Unlverslty legal director John Burns,
' 'We are preparing documenta·
tion to the Ohio Department of
·Natural Resources to explain
why the buffer zone Is
lmporaitt."
.The wooded area Is the Dysart
Woods laboratory that covers 455
acres In Belmont County.
OU Botanty Professor Phillip
Canttno says two areas that
cover·50 acres Is the only area of
untouched virgin forest In sou·
theast Ohio.
Warren Wlstendahl, a retired ·
OU botany professor and former
director of the laboratory, said
that In addition to the state's
oldest tulip tree, there are while ·
oak there, some of which are 400
years old and four feet In
diameter. He says beech, sugar
maple, hickory and black gum
· trees can also be found In the
forest.
· · Last fall ·North American

·. Sen~tors

·Meigs., County
Howard E. Frank's
r:ecetvEid a
. call abOut 1 a.m. Sunday mornlngtrortJJackBon COuilty General'~)Hospital; Ripley, W.Va., to Investigate the p()sstble rape.of a
female minor from Meigs County. Evidence received at
Jackson Generalis being transported to the Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, London, Ohio, by Meigs Sheriff's deputies.
The sheriff's department also reports that Terry Watson, 37,
of Parkersburg, W.Va., was arrested In Coolville, In Athens
· County, with the assists nee of Meigs County officers. Meigs
County has outstanding ~arr11nts on Watson for aggravated
·•· burglary, escape and disorderly conduct: while. Intoxicated.
Watson was to appear MOnday morning In Meigs County Court

Approve change of venue

WE TAD IIAS1'II CAID

may have dumped illegally

education requirements six ye- harm to the public.
dumped In Ohio. It also requires
ars after the bill becomes law.
The bill also puts nurse- more careful long-range plan·
Under the bill, the board midwives pnder the jurisdiction nlng for the disposal of trash.
governing nursing would ·be of the Board of Nursing rather
Legislation diverting a small
Increased from eight to 13, ihan under the state Medical percentage of capital Improveadding three r!!gls tered nurses, Board.
ments money to the arts ·IS
one licensed practical nurse and
The senate also will vote expected to be approved Tu.esday
one r!!presentative of health care . Tuesday on controverslall!!glsla- morning In the Senate Finance
consumers.
tlon permanently banning ·j:Or· ~ommlttee so It can be taken to
Nurses would still be · prohl· poral punishment In sc hoots the senate floor Wednesday . .
blted ·rrom practicing medicine, ~1. 1,1989, unless a local school
The Senate Health, Human
A $5 million court case has been transferred from Cuyahoga
m~lng diagnoses or prescribing
bOard specifies otherwise before servtcea and Aging Committee
· County to Meigs County on a change. of' venue. The case Is
medicine under the bill.
that date.
will continue to study a bill on
Robert. M. Sheley ·and Ada Ruth Sheley, Middleport, against
The bill Is sponsored by Sen
pro~tlon and treatment proEagle· Picher Industries Ine., Cincinnati, OWens-DHnols Inc.,
In 1994, If the bill · passes, Richard Schafrath, R ! grams for AIDS "&lt;lctlms WednesToledo, and Garloek Inc.• Clev!!land. .
nurses will have to complete the Loudonville.
day afternoon.
The plalntlffa are clalmlna damages from the defendants for
equivalent of 24 hours of ap·
The House Energy and Envir·
The House Economic Develop·
the lllnels and dllabUlty of RObert Sheley. Shei!!Y worked for
proved education for license onml!nt Committee lse~ted to · ment aJKt Small Bualneu Com:
years
a.
and during the course ol hll
renewal every two years.
vote 'I\uisday evening on longrillttee will meet Thursday mornemp~nt, w
• .
l!.roJtlmlty. to. albestos materi8I.s,
The bill stipulates detailed awaited legislation regutatlna
Ing to continue hearings on a bill
callllna hlJp,. • ·
. d6\tt!lop dlle&amp;H, related to · ~
offense~ whleh are grounda for the disposal of trash In landfills.
liuthorlzing casino sambllng In
1 ~11 asblltol~
" , · .' :.. ~: .. ,t;. ·
· · · ': ,.,.
llc!eiiiiU11111'1H,rede•l'elll· dllc:lpUne,andprovldeaforauto· ·The legislation, supported by Lorain.
1be plalJitlffl 'charp· tbat the~~)*. put !he asbls~ , I"' tenif· ~ill« · llaitiiecl f1UUea1 , matlc: lleeniM! auspenslon If the the admlnlltraUon of Gov. · Rl: · The House will nounee\ In'full
· Co'"'"
:---- •
' ..
mu.t; Jltll''*liiiliCipUaaey . BoarCt of Nursing .de_!erml~ 1!. chard Celeste, Ia ~·atcuttlnl v eesalon until Wednesday. • ~. •
· · ' ' ...-ued llii.1101P "
"' · actlaaad .,._,.. CIOJitlnulng ·. danpr of linlrledtate and serious. · down on olit.of•etate traah belli¥
•
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1

AVAUKE .
FlEE DEUVDY

Gorman denied any se1eua!"
transgressions but lOst his televi· ·
slon program and his position as
the head of New Orleans' largest
Assembly of God Church and
started a storefront ministry in a
city suburb. His $90 million
defamation suit against Swag:
gart was dismissed last
September.
.
Gorman said he still consf..
dered Swaggart a friend but
declined coniment · on his
announcement.
Assemblies of God officials
have refused comment on re- .
ports Gorman was the source of
the evidence - an alleged
photograph of Swaggart entering
a motel witt\ a prostitute - that
led the church last week to
confront Swaggart.

By=~:~~at~~~~~~den- Coal firnt, Ohio University in dispute

GREY

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against you."
"I'm not sure how the whole
''To my fellow televlslo!l minis- religious broadcasting establish·
ters and evangelists, you that are ment can live with this wiihout
already bearing an almost un- really very devastating lmpllca·
bearable burden, I have made · lions for all of them."
your load heavier and I have hurt
you," Swaggart said at his
In Lancaster, Calif., Bakker
Family Worship Center.
responded to Swaggart's an·
Jeffrey Hadden, a sociologist nouncement by saying, "I think
with the University of VIrginia the .only comment Tammy and I
and author of "Prime-Time would have Is the words of Jesus:
Evangelism" and the forthcom· ..' Ye who are without sin cast the
ing "Televangelism, Power and first stone."'
Pqlltics," said the Swaggart
His wife, Tammy Faye, said
scandal could have a11 even more she cried when she heard the
1
devastating effect on television . news.
evangelism thari did the Bakker
Bakker. now writing and doing
case.
pay-telephone broadcasts, left
"The Implication and the rush his PTL post In Charlotte, N.C. ,
to judgment that people will after admitted his sexual encoun·
make Is that they're all a bunch ter with church secretary Jes·
of scoundrels," Hadden sal&lt;!. sica Hahn.

~dustries

PITISBURGH (UP!)-: Environmental officials say some
Industrial companies may have
tried to take · advantage of a
massive Jan. 2 oil spill · by
clan(jestlnely dumping extra
chemical wastes Into the Ohio
River, The Pittsburgh Press
reported.
River water samples taken the
week after the spill near Wheel·
ing, W.Va., showed higher than
·
normal concentrations of. harm,
SWAGGART CONFESSES - Tele11talon evan&amp;eUsl llmmy
. ful chemicals, suggesting that
Swaiprl, ·whoee lavolvemenl In lite expilaure of PTL preacher
h
"I
. Jim Bakker's ·aexual encounter wllh Jeulca Hahn helped lopple
some industries may . ave fl S·
.
,
· .,
charged wastes becaU!if! they
lha&amp;evqeJIIRirom po'Jl!er, conf-.edto,'!:.T'CII'l'ltallure Su!'d!LY ·
knew th'e oil spill would mak~ It
81111 ~·~ -~~;fro!'-~~ .,..pi~. ' :1 ~~e P.h~_to&gt;_ · . . dlfflc~lt .t.!l· ~-e~ect ~lllegal ~ump·
i'l ~
ing, . the newspaper reported
Sunday
1 ' . ·•·· ,,
, ,
.
"At the time of tlie spill, we
'
•
were getting calls from lots of

$1349 97

Your privacy is respected
Your questions answered

ent1ne

I .

Section, 12 Pagu 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopapot

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Sealants ...

snow, Low near 30.

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Comment

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Monday, February 22, 1988

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Yellow Jackets top Rio Grande, 102-86

Monday, February 22, 1988

_.

The Daily

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The White House bas canceled Unlverslly of California at Berout explanation. "Peter doesn't he had gotten to Duesberg' s
111 Cow1 !!tree&amp;
a conference that would have keley. A member of tbeNatlona\ . understand the biology of what theory. The White House label
Pomeroy, Oblo
would guarantee the attendance
forced the country's premier Academy of Sciences, Duesberg
he's talking about. Period. SimDEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
AIDS researcher to confront has 24 years of experience with
ple as that," Gallo told a reporter of Gallo and other experts.
" Warner Is quite skeptical himclaims that the virus be has the family of retroviruses to
for Spin magazine . .
~j;h .
.
self
about the veraclly of the
identified
as
the
cause
of
the
which
HIV
belongs.
He
studied
ts:~. · ~._-r.~d.;=o
Gallo did not return at least a
·
·
v!rus-HIV
hypot!lesls, " said
lethal
disease
might
not
be
the
the virus In Gallo's own labora- dozen calls for comment.
~v
Bialy.
Warner
would not respond
Among
those
seeking
an
-tory under a ·prestigious fellow·
cause at all.
ROBERT l.. WINGETT
to
our
questions.
Dr. Robert Gallo, the suir ship and concluded that It did not answer to Duesberg' s challenge
l'ubllsber
In spite of Initial enthusiasm. ·
..!lclentist at the National lnsti· meet the standard criteria lor a was Jim Wa111er, a senior anathe
White House conference,
lutes ·of Health, Is the man who disease-causing agent.
lyst for domestic policy at the
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
scheduled for Jan. 19, was finally
pinpointed the human ImmuDuesberg questioned the HIV White House. Warner called Dr.
AAI!IIaol Publlaber/Conlroller
. General Maa~pr
taken off · the calendar shortly
nodeficiency virus (HJ:V) as the theory In an article In the Harvey Bialy, the research edibe!ore·that. Warner tried to get It
cause of AIDS. Since Gallo's medical journal Cancer Re· tor at the medical journal Blo·
reseheduled, but he couldn't, and
discovery, the NIH, which con· search last March. As yet, there / Technology who had planned a
A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
It was permanen.t ly ca.nceled,
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
trois the largest share of the has been no o!!lclal response workshop called "How Does HIV
•
money for AIDS research, has from Gallo. "Dr. Duesberg Is an Cause AIDS?" to discuss Dues- accordl11g td Bialy. Doug McCor- ·
LETTERS OF OPINION are welmme. They s~ld be less than 300 words
m!ck1 chle.f editor of Bto/Techdenied funds to scientists w!tb excellent scientist. He has a very berg's claims, among other
long. Alllett~rs are subject to editing and must be s lined wttb name, .address and
nology said: "The Impression
topics.
·
other Ideas, even though they good reputation. - We had extelephone number. No unsigned letters wot be published. Letters should be ln
was that the pressure c(lme from
aood taste, addressing lssues, not persooauues,
have published their theories In pected that there would be more
According to Bialy, Warner
the , NIH." When we asked
respected journals.
official response to It," MacGee 'offered to co-host the workshop
Warner about the conference, ·he
Foremost among the re- told our reporter Sallie Dinkel.
under the auspices of the White
said, "I can't talk about that'.''
1 searchers with a fresh point of
Instead, Gallo apparently dis· House because he was frustrated
Several researchers we talked
view Is Dr. Peter Duesberg of the missed Duesberg's theory with· about the Inadequate responses
..
to said AIDS has become a maker
and breaker of scientific reputations. Dr. Stephen Calazza, a
New York clinical researcher
I
who Is also skeptical of Gallo's
hypothesis, put It this way: ·"The
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
.
bottom line to everything, ·a s I
KNo~
COLUMBUS -Well, they're at It again at the old Statehousehave through r.a tlier unpleasant
experience fqund out, Is money ·
debating whether the government should force people to wear
~E
seatbelts or whether they have the right to go unbuckled and san
and ego, reputation, Nobel
through the windshield In a crash.
prizes, all the things that we ·
· doctors took oaths to Ignore. The
A mandatory seatbelt law was approved by the General Assembly ·
In 1986, although only narrowly In the House on the second attempt.
·patients don 't count any more. I
Now, Rep. Richard Rench. R· Milan, thinks It ought to be repealed,
think that's the ultimate tragedy
and so do a bunch of his constituents who packed a House hearing
that's come out of AIDS."
room last week as the repealer got its first hearing.
Gallo plays a big role In
Rench himself Is a contradiction In terms. He's a former member of
directing the flow pf money to
the Ohio Highway P.atrol who would never be caught without his
AIDS research, according to
seatbelt buckled, . yet he say.s seatbelts are tar !rom perfect In
many scientists wlio work In the
preventing Injuries and deaths.
• ·
field. "Robert Gallo doesn't
Rench beUeves the government l)as no right to Impose on citizens
suppor.t any alternative views,"
by telling them they have to wear their seatbelts.
said Duesberg. "As long as this
"Everybody should wear their seatbelts, but they should do It on
(the HIV theory)' goes unchaltheir own, " he said.
lenged, It will have an Inhibiting
. · · The northern Ohio lawmaker points out that the Ohio Department
.
effect on research."
- of Highway Safety predicted two years ago that mandatory seat belts
Hundreds of . millions of re· would save 300 lives a year. This hasn 't happened, In fact , traffic
search dollars are spent each
fatalities have Increased.
year on the assumptlc;m that HIV
The department says this is a national trend which has nothing to do
causes AIDS. Medical experts we
· with Ohio's seatbelt law.
questioned be!!eve that federal
0
•
Rench says deaths of people wearing seatbelts doubled in 19.87.
health authorities would be em'
Safety officials point out that compllance has tripled. The more
barrassed If that assumption
people that are wearing seatbelts, the more likely that a fatally
. were wrong.
. Injured person will have a seatbelt on, they reason, adding. that
· overall deaths wl!l decline as more people buckle up.
Reaction on the House Highways and Publlc Safety Committee last
week was mixed. Rep. Barbara Pringle, D-C!eveland, said two of her
friends were Injured and one lost a baby because they wore seatbelts.
Every so often the strain of de!!vered himself (on the op-ed race communities, known here to remember that the attitude of.
Rep. Harry Malott, D-Mt. Orab, who described himself as a
maintaining
and propagating a ' page, to be sure) of a series of a.s 'coloreds' , have (been gl~en) American liberals toward South
"red-blooded American," said speed Is the kUier on highways.
totally false view of the situation statements·on the situation there their .own chambers In .Parlia- Africa has, In fact, almost
"I don't believe In (seatbelts)," he said.. "I dan't wear 'em. I'm not
going to buckle to some Utile group . that tells me I've got to do In South Africa becomes too so, accurate, and so wildly at ment, and the government has nothing to do wfth thatcountry.lt
much lor the New York Times. variance with the version of Invited black· leaders to join a Is a purely American phenosomething just because they. decide."
No doubt, If questioned, Its events usually served up by the 'national council' to discuss menon, serving strictly domestic
Malott said there wl!l be more government mandates " until the
purposes.
editors
would Insist that the Times, that I am taking the broader political rights."
Minutemen come out.''
If
ali
that
Is
true
(and
It
Is
of
quoting
selected
pas·
South Africa's problems proliberty
·
caricature
of
that
grotesque
Rep. Marie Tansey, R·Verm!llon, ridiculed Rench's seatbeltrepeal
along
will).
much
more).
why,
do
sages
for
your
delectation
.
You
country
that
Is
abumbrated
week
vide,
for orie thing, just about the
movement. "Should we not then repeal all our speed !!mils and stop
your
·
suppose,
bas
Congress
by
week
In
It
news
columns
and
may
have
seen
similar
statecheapest moral high available to
signs?" she asked.
Rench responded that speed !!mils and stop signs are for the safety on Its editorial page - the ments of my own In this space, · cracked so mercilessly through · an American liberal. For the
famlllar picture of a rabidly but you assuredly haven't seen economic ·sanctions enacted over price of a trip to Washington, he
of aU; seatbelts are for the safety of the Individual.
a Reagan veto, on the Bothsa can actually get arrested for
There followed the argument that society foots the medical b!Us lor racist white minority regime them In the Times.
holding down a far larger black
Thus, Burns declares flally government?
demonstrating In front of the
those who cripple themselves In highway accidents, and the welfare
majority
by
brute
force
and
that
"
By
common
consent,
It
Isn't
an
easy
question
to
South African Embassy, then be
'·
bills for their survivors.
answer.
Sometimes
I
have
specu·
Intending
to
do
so
In
perpetuity(Pre.
s
!dent
P
.W.)
Botha
has
gone
·released
by the cooperative
Good cases can be made lor and against seatbelts. It does not
Is
"subjectively
true":
I.e.,
that
·
further
toward
dismantling
the
lat.
e
d
that
the
liberals
are
actu·
municipal
authorities wltl)out
appear the seatbelt law Is doing that much good. Compliance Is far
any
trying
to
make
South
Afrl·
social
It
conforms
to
the
larger
.and
and
economic
aspects
of
any
penalty
whatever . .Without
!rom complete. Enforcement is minimal. People are going to wear
ca's
blacks
suffer
a
bit
(since
of
life
In
of
the
more
enduring
realities
apartheid
than
most
critics
even
leaving
campus, a handful
their seatbeil!; because they are convinced they work, not because·
South
Africa,
however
much
It
Party
thought
t!lem.
hardest),
.
In
sanctions
hit
ru!!ng
National
of students can erect a mini-slum
someone tens them to.
may depart from strict objectiv- possible.'' By whose consent? an effort to Induce a mood of ' In some lnconvenl.ent spot and
On the other hand, Ohio has the law. Repeal at this stage of the
Ity In regard to detalls.
The Times's editors? You could rebellion that could then be used call It a sample of living condigame would be a signal to the public- a false signal that seatbelts do
to " liberate" tbem. ·Sometimes I . tions In Soweto.
But the Times, ll!&lt;e Antaeus In have fooled me.
not save lives or serlous .inju• Jes.
But Burns goes on: "Major have suspected that South AfriGreek mythology, who drew Ills
That such antics may.result In
strength from the earth and had plllars of the racial system, such ca's critics ·are privately dis· the ·unemployment ·of real blacks
to make contact with It anew as the 'Influx coritrol' laws that mayed at the progress the Botha In the clUes and towns far away,
from
time to time for that denied blacks the right to move administration Is making on where there Is no unemployment
\
purpose, cannot disregard objec- freely around the country, have· "destab!l!ze" the situation be· compensation, doesn't eyeti ocw~
tive reality altogether. And re- been scrapped, or at ·least sub· fore It changes beyond ·recogni- cur .to them. IA.nd If It did, they
cently Its current correspondent stantlally eased... Representa· tion for the better.
probably wouldn't care. No pain,
1 would like to speak out on the
have a place for our high school in South Africa,. John F . Burns, lives ·or the Indian and m!xj1d- ·
But most of the time I manage no gain, right?
leadership of Meigs County. As
grads to go to work Instead of
we all know, our County Is
moving away? It's time for
· controlled by a mass of Republi- Meigs County to move, and the
cans, not Democrats. I don't like only thing that comes to mind to
get It to move Is a change of the
to sound like I am against all
Republicans, because I am not. I guard. And where are all the
vote for them too. But as a voter women running lor office?
Under Ohio law, meetings held. the reason for the meeting, but
resporislye to the citizens they rein Meigs County, I don't see us Maybe they can do ·a better job. by state or local government bo- need not Include the name of any
present. The S\lnshlne law en·
going anywhere. It's like we're Maybe they can land a: new dies must be open to the pul&gt;!!c. person being considered. The b!!l
suies that public business Is constuck in first gear and not moving industry. That's something that The Open Meetings, or Sunshine, contains ' a provision granting
ducted In public. SB 150 gives the
· ahead . Wedon'thave to lookvery hasn't happened In Meigs County law requires "public officials to that person the right to request a
Sunshine law more teeth so that
· far to see that other coun!les since - Oh I can't remember take official action and to con- public hearing. If an lndlvldua!!s
compliance Is more strongly en· around us have developed Indus- back that far. So come on duct all de!lberat!ons upon offl· subject to this type of action, he . couraged.
trial sites and are ready tor Republicans and Democrats, "cial business only In open meet- or sh!! should have every right to
.: .•business and lndustry,to move ln. which party Is going to get Meigs Ings, unless the subject matter Is a public discussion.
: As for our county, nothing has County Into second Gear and specifically excepted by law."
Under current law, If a v!latlon
· been done and we hea r Utile, If make new jobs for Its voters lor Those few exceptions Include of the Sunshine law Is proven, the
any action, of anyone pushing for years to come.
matters such as personnel conYours Truly cerns, labor contracts, or legal court must Issue an Injunction
· just such a site ln.Meigs County.!
Floyd H. Cleland actions. It a secret meeting Is compelling the members of the
for one would have to ask, why
public body to comply with the
Box 144-F held, one of the exceptions must law.
haven 't we pushed ahead tor an
SB 150 goes fyriher In punMiddleport, Ohio 45760 be the sole purpose of the meetindust•lal site before now so we
Ishing those who fall to observe
can find jobs here at home and
'lng. Decisions made In a meeting the law. It requires the court to
that was lmproper.ly closed can fine violators $100. Also, If an Inbe voided. The Ohio Senate junction Is Issued the courils reupdated the Sunshine law re- quired to award the preva!l!ng
cently by unanimously' passing party all court costs and reasonBy Unlled Prea lnlernatloaal
· .
Today Is Monday, Feb. 22, the riJrd day of 191!8 with 313 to follow . . SB 150, which I co-sponsored . able attorney fees. The threat of
The b!l! now goes to the Ohio having, to pay the other party's
This Is George Washington's birthday.
·House
of Representatives for court costs should encourage all
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
,·
consideration.
public officials to comply strictly
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The
btu
requires
public
bodies,
with
the Sunshine law.
·
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
.
such
as
your
city
councU,
to
hold
The
bill
also
protects
public
boThose born on this date are under the sign of Plces. They Include
publlc
roll-call
votes
to
decide.
to
dies
.
In
that
frivolous
lawsuits
Georgi! Washington, first president of the United States, In 1732;
Polish philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer In 1788; poet, diplomat and hold an executive session, or closed and discouraged. If the court
editor James Lowell in 1819; Englishman Robert Baden·Powell, meeting. The public body wtn also deems the nature or the suit to be
founder of the Boy Scout movement, and German physicist Heinrich have to specify which statutory ex- fr! volous' or barrasslng, and no
Hertz, diSCoverer of radio waves, both In 1857; poet Edna St. Vincent ception to the law · applies to the Injunction Is Issued, the IndiM!llay In 1892; S..n!sh !Urn director Luis Bunuel In 1900; actors meeting. Public roD-call votes will vidual can be ordered to pay the
RDbert Young In 1907 (age 81) and John MJUs In 1908 (age SO); Sen. help keep government officials public body's court costs and at·
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., in 1932 (age 56). and basketball player responsible when they choose to torney lees. While this discourhold private discussions. If the ages uMecessary lawaults, no
......
~Julius Erving ("Dr. J.'') In -1950 (age 38.)
·
·
appointment, employment, dis- one Is discouraged from taking
e,..eer ..... ~. ~tac
~
missal, discipline, promotion, or legitimate complaints to court.
On this date In history: ·
, .
Investigation
of
a
public
emThe
bUI
makes
It
clear
that
any
•
In 1819, a treaty with Spain ceded Florida to the United States.
"For hHven's uke, Frank, can't we just
: - • ~n 1862, Jefferson ~avis was Inaugurated as president of th.e ployee Is to be considered, the Individual can take a public body
public
body's
motion
and
vote
to
to
court
for
v!olatlnJ
the
SunPLAIN WALK lnstfllld of COMPETITIVE
:. Confederate States of America.
bold the executive session must shine law.
• In 1972I President Richard
Nixon
arrived
In
Peking
on
an
historic
'
•
WALK?/"
~
'
'
state which apptovtld purpose Is
Government bodies must be
: v!sll to China.
.

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Today in history

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·U. S. hockey team
eliminated Sunday, 4-l

··

aerry's World

SVAC standings

••.u

By Sen. Jan Mochael Long

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Kearns .stuns
Rio opponents

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·want jobs!

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Letters to the editor

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it_Lia_m_Rus_h_er

La~

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.Ohio Senate updates Sunshine

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Politicians,

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IN SoMETHING PPk'ficAL, I.IKc.ART!

The real South ·African .truth_·_,...B_y

Division IV play
begins on Tuesday

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MY DAD SAYS "HoW MANY
MMs Do 'lou
WHo ARE MAKING
AI.IVING? '' WANTS ·ME To MAJoR

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Seatbelts provoke lively
·debate at the Statehouse

CEDARVILLE - Despite a , .. Grande will enter District 22 ends this ' week. The district is lay , Mount Vernon Nazarene and
career high of 37 points supplied
playoffs on March 3 at home now led by Defiance, which Urbana.
~ThiA week'1 games
by Rio Grande's Ron Rltt!nger,
against one of seven teams to be defeated Walsh 61-52 on SaturSaturday 's game agaln~t C~C . - I l l . IUoll.......
ftlil Week'•
rt rm IPa) II, ....._,.
an
explosive
Cedarville
offense
determined
when
regular
play
day,
with
Rio
Grande
In
second
darvll!e
marked Ron Rlttlnger s
OllltColkplalllkdb..lkt.IUe
•v,.....u.un.. n
took
command
In
the
second
half
place.
The
other
teams
are
.
last
regular
season game with
a,v.... r..... ..terMta.MI
TIHI• lll. .,.. .. Dtlnlllkl.- •
.
THI... , Peb. II
Delliullte II, ...... U:
Saturday
to
defeat
the
Redmen
Walsh,
Malone,
Cedarville,
Findthe
Redmen,
and he marked the
Dlbalw-OIIIe... a Clne&amp;a.IIM;
WAI(Ptln.•rmn•
St. a.• at X awter
.
100·86 In Rio Grande's final
occasion by scoring 37 points.
olo. . Camilli, ftlel (Fa) IC ""\
Ya. .lleaa a at IIIMe Te~e
A.lhla.d 81, IU-PtJ P'l.llfH ..
season game.
Ollto Adlhtlli Colli. . . . ,.., ......,
s.
..
.,.
Feb. 11
Although the loss means Rio
otlltlbela at Balllwi•WIIate
s .,
W~:lJM 8t Ill. ee•rat It 11
GraJide
(25-7,11-3) will share the
......,.,,reb.U
re .... me ....
llemflallll .. a ....u
Dlwt.lonl
MldOOhlo Conference crown with
. . . . . . . . C.Mntle
Beawen:nek H. lllam... •l'l a .
Walsh (19·9, 11-3), Redmen
...... Ill 011• O.ml..eu
Col Mlftlta ... C.l w J1
opa at Ia Ve,_. N. .reae
·CoiWaMI.._N.C.IS ..
Coach John Lawhorn hailed his
· un. . IIi n ....,
De• ware 11, Col J: 'II
team's season accomplishments.
nltl (P.a~ a1
Babita ••· w..-n~~~e aM
o ...w cttJ (Pa) allo. . CwrroU
ROCK SPRINGS .- Tuesday 7 p.m. against the Southern-KC
E ~verpooiM. z.-.vtue 11
"If you were to leU me at the.
Mardi Ctiut Aatlef:le;Cenfereaee To_...e,
' o·a ..nu 1'1, Col WaiMtiUIIIIt II
Ohio State boys' basket· winner.
evening
year
that
we
beginning
of
this
(Pin&amp;&amp;o•d)
o.-.w,.,. 11, C.l u•• Me&amp;l*rll
ca. a1 AJita-.e.,
· aeUe:rtiC Failm..t 'D, U.r PMW..a
ball tournament action begins at
The winner advances to the
were
going
to
win
another
De-.. .Ill Ohertlll
Meigs.
High
School,
where
the
District
Tourney to be played at
championship and go to the
ILeqoa M Wooeler
iit..em011 M • - tl, Hamii&amp;OaiS
Wfftellla,y,Feb.U
Marla lanlillll II. C.l Be:ecltttof'llt
Crooksvllle
Ceramics
square
off
Ohio
University's
Convocation
districts, I wouldn't have beEuten ........ at lllunl
MIM~eMwaM, W ca,......._ M
Center,
surpassing
the ann~al
against
the
local
Eastern
Eagles
lieved It," he said. "Walsh Is a
'h .... At WI IWe
Newark H, Graw Cttr II
JlowH. Oree. Ill o•ao U111Wr11My
Ctn Oak Hills 41, aa Norlll""t tl
at
6:15
p.m.,
then
a
t
8:15
top
trip
to
ChliUcothe
this
year. The
great ball club and It's an honor
M;,. ..............
Plcllert ..... 11, Wortlr....... 17
District
winner
then
advances
.to
seeded
Southern
laces
SVAC
foe
. , . . . at . . .,. . . . . . .,
Cln Sycamore n, IV Choler LWU. SS
to share the title with them."
xmer a1 Flot11a lllw,.uo...a
Upper .VIhwton •· ~)'Delllllhurr d
Dayton for the Regional and on .to
Kyger Creek .
As for Cedarville (18-10, 8-6) ,
Xftlla 7S, Dar D...bar Ill
WrfiW 11 • ee.u.~ eo~•
For the first time In history the State Tourney at St.. John's
Yo
1 ullll&amp;'l
8t
DlvtiMall
Lawhorri noted the team's work
Cia McNiclloiU 41, Cia 1"8rtell Marta•
Ohio has strayed away from Its Arena in Columbus .
· foUow!ng ' the halftime wh~n
three basic class!flcatlons of
Until last week's games South·
Cl• Mt Ntre Dame II, Qa Rorer Bacon
~~~~
"they
·
just
dissected
us.
They
..
Class
'A','AA',and
'AAA'
and
ern
was ranked In the 26 team
scored
Inside,
they
scored
outMt.a Vw._ al Mw'*lllf'll"
Cln8t Vf1111a 11, D•'J:.,.... U
will hold the annual affair on a Southeast region as the number
, CaJIII!&amp;alatReliteaers
JIMMY KEARNS
W Bra•• 'fl. Campbell Mem It
side and were· just super
llaltw .. WIIII.ee-Q&amp;terbelw wi~~Mr al
WeMenBrownt7, GosiM•C
dlvlslona! system, divided by one offensive team and third
offensively."
Dlvt.toaiO
n..~., : re.. 21
student population Into four defensively. Last week, however,
BroDkYIIIe II. 'Aftu.n II
Playing before a capacity
" - • FIIN'IIIa at (Jael..al
a ...... MMOk 16, Eatoo II
Southern dropped to fifth defen·
equal classes.
crowd, the Yellow Jackets got off
• ........... ,_,.(IH)
Col JleUf ... .lo.O.u ANer f1
Olt.. .,.... . . at DJIIe
slvely, bu t mairlta!ned Its
Palrf&amp;eld ,Va... II. Olea&amp;a..,- 41
the
Class
system
Although
to a brisk start, leading by as
BIMm at lo.M car.ro11
Oraa'tllle•, '*Gilead til
remains Intact as far as other number one offensive mark.
much as much as 8 points (12-4)
NC,tCih........_.
Ma~ t8; IA&gt;irala Catb It
18emlftMil) ·
at.-U.Dilltn
·
Statewide the Tornadoes of
spo.rts go, and as far as Jiolls and
when the Redmen took off,
Wonler -Kea,on wlftwer al Ollila
Preble ••Me U, Cia Madeira f4
RIO GRANDE - A last second
tra!l!ng by about 5 points for most 3-polnt field goal by Jimmy ratings go, the divisional system Coach Howie Caldwell were
R,lv Val .. Cardlqtoa M
AJitpeiQ'-Catle wla.er play• DerdlnTwin v .. 8 tl, BeftJamlalA... Ifl
was designed to give more of ranked at number eleven, break·
' of the half until Brian Watkins'
OberlwwiMII!r
Wel~tnctM 11, Oberlla II
Kearns - which won the Rio Oh lo's elite teams and players to lng the top twenty honors, but
PrldQ, Feb. II
at
6:
18
tied
the
3-polnt
!leld
goal
DIY!olor IV
Grande Redmen first place In the be recognized.
An• ,.,, Trlatlll
OA.C To•ument
just missing a crack at the top
game for the first time at 26-26.
llei'Df Uaioa II, Cal We~ H
!Semlftnab)
Mid-Ohio Conference this season
have
as
many
as
Some
.states
ten.
The Redmen gained the lead
AIWIUeCe\4- u. lh•IM M'
- wasn't the first time the six divisions, while one neighbor·
!JilftQ, Feb. ~1
Di(a~Ue-. CeollertMtrt n
After 18 games SHS tallied 1556
(34·32) lor the first time at 2: 50 on
Mlelllau 8t al Otllo 1M
Falrb..U II, E Kno1. a
.,
former Upper Scioto Valley High lng state,Indlana , lumps its big total points for an 86.4 average
Keiii'M M Bewllac Greea
.JacbHCe*r4'7, llatkl••
a R!tt!nger basket and battled School standout had stunned
.......... Val II, Aa ....... U
011."
Uwh .t Ce.tral Mleh
schools and smaller schools Into and allowed 1085 fo r a 60.2 mark,
back and fo,rtb with the hosts to Redmen opponents. ·
Mlalnla&amp;'r.le..
Newark Calli 11. Mtllertpert U
one
division to crown a 'true Southern's next foe Kyger Creek,
Mecre..,...IX,) Ill Akron
atcllmo.. HM M, Ne-'lli'J P
. keep the advantage. The visitors
With 2 seconds left and Rio champion'.
au .... U , llraflferd II
O.cl_.l .. T t - . 8i
always known as a contender,
were ahead 42-40 with Jess than 50 Grande down by 2 points to
Sldae)'IA!amaa • W Ubertr-8.._. as
Clevtlut • &amp;I Wt.:-Greu Bay
rate
one
of'
five
teams
At
any
but slipping to an 8-12 mark ·
Sprtlllflekl Cath 0, WQ11"¥111e N
.,_,..atJlaB
seconds left to play, but an Eddie conference leader Walsh Feb. 11 '
ltulera . . . . .., at v......... St
VeUow S,rtltP tt, Or.)' .lefte~a It
Wakefield field goal at : 35 at Lyne Center, Kearns received (North Gall!a drew the bye) will despite several close games with
be crowned as the Southeast top teams .
·
Marrta.t-•1 c..a,. at Writbt St
deadlocked
the score at 42,42 for
NHL l'tl8Uil8
the ball from senior forward Ron Division IV Sectional Champion
~
KC
has
given
up
just
four
·
the half.
0111• Domlllku at Urbua
Nt\TJONt\L .OCKEY LEA.OVE
Rittlnger and tossed It In to win Saturday night at Meigs High. tenths more points on the avernm • .a DJke ,.
Cedarville's momentum re- · the game 70-69.
Sa&amp;ftay'a Resllha
Tuesday's llrst game winner will age than SHS, 60.6, b~t has fallen
la•ver (Pa) al Bhllea
ma!ned
on the upswing throughDetroM I. O.kap I
A week later, Redl;llen Coach play North Gallla at 7 p.m. off the dramatic offensive pace of
Ot\C To...nelll Pi•l•
Nl' lsllallllen S, Jlartlord I
out the remaining lialf, but the John Lawhorn was still marvelAI Wllle~~Hrc
Melllreal I, Qaebec I
NCAC 'h.-.unnl , _..
Redmen trailed by only 2 points Ing over how Kearns had pulled Thursday, then that winner wlll the Tornaodoes with a low 61.4.
WMh'-ltool, MI..-. I
At WoiJ!I&amp;er
Eastern hopes to be a spoiler in
on several occasions . Cedar- victory from near-defeat four advance to the llnals Saturday at Calpr)'l,8t.Lt.U3
the
tournament and has the
Let Allplea I , TDNIIIo t
vll!e's biggest lead oflhe half was other Urnes In his career at Rio
Sud., .. IWMI&amp;I
NBA re8Uit8
talent
to do some damage with a
Phlla ....la I, Detroit S
19 (92-73) with around 3 minutes Grande.
·
pt&gt;tent offense that averages 69.6
lleiiiDa •• Nr. .lel'le)' I
'
left to play.
Ell,...-.., WI-'Jell (0T)
Beaule Ill, New leN!J Ill
ALL GAMES
Kearns,
a
6-1
guard
who
has
points per game, but still ha s
~ lslll11hn 7, Hartford Z
A series of fouls - and the
Bo.... Ill. W... l...aa Ill
TEAM
W L
P
OP some defensive quetlon marks as
v~'oft'fll' 1. NV RUilll'l 4
made
outsld.e
shots
his
specialty,
trta•
Cllfpen _ltl
result!ng loss of Rlttlnger and
qu......._ .
Southern . .. ........17 3 1716 1245
PIMMblU. Deawr ••
81 . 1.o•1. Ptltllb•qll 4
guard Anthony Raymore first displayed his talent on Jan. Oak Hl!l .. ... .... .. 17 3 1378 1212 It allowed a whopping 1209·for a
C.lpry S. tlltea.. l tile)
Cleve .... Ill. O.Rap Ill
·
through officials'' calls ~ com- 6, 1986 w11en a 3' polnter at Malone Hannan Trace ..16 4 1534 1315 75.6 yield.
Mond.Q .. Game
lllltwaiiHe Ia PlaiHel..la IU (01')
Eastern ,not considered to be a
ToraateMMI....-,
p.m.
bined with an aggressive offense netted Rio Grande a 77-76w!n. He North Ga!lla .. ...10 10 1292 1477
Games
did
It
again
on
Dec.
8,
1986
when
pre-season
factor in the SVAC
LA. Laii!N 111, DetNII lit
led by Tony Ewing and Don
Bo.&amp;oa at Rartfo,.., atrhl
ladlaaa 111. a.-me.&amp;o 111
Kyger
Creek
....
.
8
12
1246
1227
his
outside
shot
caused
the
finished
a
strong
fourth , losing
Molltftal al q.ebee, •IIlii
Simerly to put the Yellow .
" ......... Seatllitlll
Eastern .... ........ 7 12 1304 1422 three ! ~ague games by less than
Pllla ......laallhtnli, alclrll
78-77
In
Redmen
to
edge
Dyke
h..u..tt11,8•AII...._lll
Jackets ahead at the b)lzzer .
......., .. " ..........bt
Mt...,'IOama
Symmes Valley 4 16 1201 1533 ten points, including a 94-93 loss
VIIKOIR'ft' .t NY lala!lfld,n. ala: tit
Ne• Yerk \II • ...._ II Bard'ord, 7:M
"We were juslfortuJlale to bust Cleveland.
&amp;lllnOIIM• .. St. Loala.......
A 3-pointer at Mount . Verl)on Southwestern ... . 2 . 18 1131 1459 to Hannan Trace at the buzzer.
out when we did," Cedarv!Ue
p ........ .,.. . . .: • • .m.
SVACONLY
Nazarene
on Jan. 10, 1987 put the
Look for more pre-game statisCoach Don .Callan, Ph.D., com··~· 1: ........
T1'81l8action8
~Varsity)
game
into
overtime,
with
Rio
tics
In tomorrow's edition of The
mented later. "We couldn't stop
We+...,•MDe.wr,t:••·m·
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
-boll
Grande
winning
96-88.
Exactly
Dally
Sentinel.
a.. .til ..... .a o.~~~n-.u,ll:ll•·"'·
Rlttlnger; so we had to outscore
.... n: - . . . . flnl .,..__
.........
.-.13
l 1.224 8;!0
Southern
....... a ....
two
weeks
later,
at
Cedarville,
a
'
o.uJelllar lim Traber, l.rlelder .rete.
the team. Rltilnger Is better than
hltlaiii .. New,....,......
Oak Hill ........ ... 12 2 998 826
·&amp;&amp;uloek .... t:akMr cart NkMia ..
47-foot
shot
by
Kearns
at
the
.......... ~Yorll,aiPt
any one player we' v.e played
l·,..cellll"'l'da.
Hannan Trace . .i} 3 1065 978
_
.. a. .._ _
OUeap IAL) - lll .... @IH'I. . bueagjllnSt
this season. Rio Grande's buzzer put the Redmen ahead Eastern .. ........ .. 6 8 1005 1070
mu
,
.
.
Ct•
to
•
mi..,...
.
.
.
......... a&amp;IALa..,.,all..
The Daily Sentinel
a good ball club, and this Isn't the 79-78.
e.lrad; slpiNI utder llevla a.rn11.
' DotreltMI•.............
North
Gallia
.....
6
8
929
1017
"You
want
to
talk
about
Mr.
a ....u · - 111pe4 pMca.n Rob
end of the year for them."
Kyger Creek ... .. 4 10 853 908
Dlllllle Ull Nerm Ouufl• ud caetW
(USPS 14ii-9f0)
In addition to · leading · .11 Clutch, that •s·Jimmy," Lawhorn Symmes Valley 3 11 887 1097
Tllrf'J' MeOrllf.
~
A Division ol Multimedia, lac.
"It's
like
being
strapped
said
.
Delrd - .trbllra&amp;or awaNM ftllewr
scorers, R!ttlnger had 11 eMarll ,......, a •lal'J af Stll,tlllor
Southwestern .... 1 13 812 1047
Olllo r.-•re llullellt.tl ae.t~~ta
BJ Valtetl rrne _., .......,_.
Published every afternoon, Monday
hounds . Guard Jim l&lt;ea: 1s Into an electric chair, waiting for TOTALS
'1 ~6 56 7773 7773
through Friday, 111 COurt St., Potherp
to
turn
on
the
juice
and
then
llultelball
s.a•q.Feb. •
added 18 points and 6 ass!! s,
meroy,
Ohio. by th e Ohio Valley Pub Ohio At n, No,..es~e... •
lA LaRn - PlaeN awl~tpW.• Ml:
SVAC
while Ray Singleton posted .4 getting a reprieve from the
To~ a, KeMit.
lishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc. ,
claol C..ptrM •• ~ IW.
(Reserves)
Mlaml1t. Cellini Mlell 'It (Jol)
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Se'
O.Dep
and Watkins recorded' 10. Fr&lt; n governor. In' those kinds of TEAM
Ohio Val\/ II, W1Mer11 Ml_cll li
Vll'llllla - ladeiiiiRIJ ••peadtd
W L
P OP
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy ,
situations,
he
really
wants
the
..
Xayler IB, Enas¥111e11
the !leld, the Redmen were 5: 8
. Ohio.
·
'
Southern .. ...... .. .14 0 828 584
Tua Tee• AI, Ya . . . . . .a fM 71
tho..,.
percel)t
(28 of 53 attempts) a. d ball and lie really wants It to get Hannan Trace ..11 3 714 574
Lo)'ela HIIJ H. O.rt.an
,
Molltreal - Rec:a:w celller GIIH
Member: United Pres s Inter national ,
Clevelud 8t Ill, Val,.ralto (lad) II
. ThibudeM lrom Sltlerbr..U of tile
sank 15 of 19 free throw tries f ·r In the basket. "
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Oak Hill ........... 8 · 6 552 598
AliNa nl. Okap 8t lA
A.merku~~M-,Leape: traWMIMI'Currently,
Kearns
Is
the
third
78.9 percent.
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Ie.,_ ........ ltlclr. ..,...,. .to
Marte«&amp; II ..............~ 'Jf (ol) •
North Gallla ..... 7 7 663 . 629
Advertising Representative, Bnmham
CalaUJ for mi~M,.Ieape ,.,..,. alarC.pltal 5I, Ml Ua1o11111 '
Ewing was Cedarville's I· p highest .s corer for the Redmen. · Southwestern .... 7 7 637 622
U• Nlekolc:UI; aulped Nlc:hsleUI to
Heklelhef'l II. 011 .. Wnle)'aa •
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
His biggest Individual game of
''scorer
with
22
points
In
add!tl•
1
Oldo Nortltt,. n, .....l .. a.n 4!
Skrtarn•l'·
,
New York, New York 10017.
Symmes
Valley
6
8
604
613
this
season
was
against
the
Wlltf'llbetl 81, Olk"«la 18
NY Ruren - Recalled llelnlemaa
to 6 rebounds and 6 asslsl .
Eastern ... ...... .. . 2 12 531 712
MM'II '11Minll from . Calorada of lhe
AUrlftenrl\8, ObHtla U
•
POSTMASI'ER Send address changes
Simerly scored 21 points and Wi • University of Guelph In the Kyger Creek ..... 1 13 494 691
Den..._ 81, Cue Wnw....14
to The Dally Se nHnel.. Ill Coun St.,
--~--~ . .CkeJ l.eape.
Ohio-Canada
Classic
on
Dec.
30,
credited wl\h 13 rebounds. Wak
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
T~ALS
56 56 5023 5023
field had :IG points and Chris 1987. Kearns scored 30 polrits ·
Saturday's
game
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Reese supplied 15 to complete the against the Gryphons.
B)' Carrier or Motor Route
Federal Hocking 68, Eastern 59
25-6
overall
The
Redmen
were
major scoring for the Yellow
One Week ............ .. ... ...... ... ....... .. Sl .25
Monday's tournament
One Month .. .. .. ...... ........ ............. $5.45
Jackets, who were 59 percent on before playing their last game of Ironton St. Joe vs. Symll;leS
One Year ....... ....... ..... ....... .... ... $65.00
!leld goals (36 of 61 ~ttempts). the season Saturday against Valley at CHesapeake H.S., 7
Cedarville.
SINGLE COPY
From the foul line, Cedarville
PRICE
p.m .
A
state-ranked
player
at
Upper
17
of
20
for
85.7
percent.
netted
Dally .. .. ...... .. ........... ... .. ..... 25 Cents
'
.Tue~day's tournaments
"For. us, It's time to get our. Scioto Valley under Coach Harry Crooksville vs. Reedsville East·
place In these Games. In nine
CALGARY, Alberta (Ufl) Subscribers not desiring to pay the earGarverick.
Kearns
was
recruited
minds on the playoffs," Lawhorn
Mer may remit In advance direct to
An arctic ch!ll swept Into t"lsclty days of competition, the United
ern at Meigs H.S., 6:30p.m.
The Dall y Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 monib
reflected. "It's been a great year by Lawhorn to play for Rio Kyger Creek vs. Racine Southern
Sunday night, but brought with It ·States, which sent more athletes
basis . Credit wtll be given carrier each
Grande.
At
the
time
Kearns
·no miracles on Ice for the U.S. to the Olympics than any other for us, but March 3 starts a new signed to play. Lawhorn des- at Meigs H.S., 8:15p.m.
week .
country, has won three medals,
Season."
hockey team.
,
South Webster vs. Oak Hlll at
No subscriptions by mall permitled In
RIO. GRANDE (86)- Anthony · cribed him as "an exc!t!ng Rock H!ll H.S., B: 15 p.m.
The u.s. hockey team, continu- Qnly one gold.
areas where home carrier service Is
ava ilable .
Raymore, 2-1-5-4; Brian Wat- offensive player- one who Is fun
Ing the losing trend that bas
Wednesday's tournaments
to
watch.
We believe that he can
.l:lonnte Blair, a . 24-year-old . k!ns, 2(2Hl-J-10; Jim Kearns, come in and play some as a Hannan Trace vs. Patriot
characterized · American forMall SullllcrlpUoas
lnalde Mdp Cellllly
2(3)-5-4-18; Ray Singleton, 5-4-4·
tunes In these Games, was . speedskater from Champaign,
Southwestern
at
Chesapeake
freshman, something that Is very
13 Weeks .... ............ ....... .. ..... .. .. 117.29
beaten4-l byWestGennany,and Ill., Is expected to add to that , 14; John Lambcke, 1-0-1-2; Ron. difficult to do In our program."
H.S., 7p.m.
:zc; Weeks ... ....... ...... ... .... .... .... ... IJUI6
Rlttinger, 16-5-5·37. TOTALS
eliminated from the medal. tot~l tonight whe~ she comperes
52 Weeks ............. ... ... ..... ... .... ... $66.56
Thursday's tournaments
In
1985-86,
Kearns
averaged
5.1
Oulolde Melp County
round. The l.in!ted States needed In the women's 500-meters. Blair 28(1)-15-2%-86.
North Gallia vs. winner. of
points
per
game
for
the
season
13 Weeks ................ ........... ....... 118.20
CEDARVILLE ( 102) - Gary
to win by at least two goals to · Is the world champion at the
:zc; Weeks ... ...... .......... ............... 135.10
and boosted that to 8.3 the Crooksv!lle·Reedsv!lle Eastern
52 Weeks ...... .... ...... ........ .......... 167.00
reach the medal round, but goals ' distance, but will get plenty of Harrison, 2+3-8; Mike Free· following year. This season, game, at Meigs H.S., 7 p.m.
l!Y West Germany's Dieter He- competition tonight !rom Karin ffii!-D, 2(1)·2-9; Eddie Wakefield, Kearns, who has started In all
6-4-1-16; DOug Loescher, 0-2-2-2;
ien and Ron Fischer In the first Enke-Kanla of East Germany.
Gold
medals
also
will
be
Jerry
Keller, 0·1·2-1; Chris games, Is averaging 12.9 points
period doomed IJ .S. chances.
per game. Based on his perfor·
Reese, 4(1)-4-1-15; Tony Ewing, mance
The United States had been contested today In men's 4 X
this season, Kearns can
optimistic of at least attaining 10-ktiometer relay, womeri's su- 10-2-3-22; John Angus, 2-0-2-4;
be expected to play a big part In
the medal round entering the per giant slalom, and 90-meter· Brad Baird, 0-2-l-2; Don Simerly, the Redmen's plans .for next
·
9~-5-21; Todd Penillngton, 1-0·0Qames, something It bad not ski jumping.
year. '·
2. TOTALS 38(2)-:14-22-102.
accompllsbed since the "Miracle
Kearns Is a business major at
on Ice" irold-medal vl~tory at
East Germany and tile.Soviet
Rio Grande and Is the son of John
Lake Placid, N.Y., eight years Union each won six gold medals;
REDMEN NOTES: Rio and Janet Kearns of McGuffey.
ago.
Americans managed l&gt;ut the Soviets lead In overall
I •
onty two victories In five ga'11'51 medals 16-10.
and wlU watch the medal round
Swedish speedskater Tomas
games from the stands. ·
GUitafllon , b!JhUghted Sunday's
Rio Grande's Redwomen Halley pumped In 14 points and 5
INDIYIDUALS~FEDERAL-STATE
activity by becomlni the first
,
"Basically, I think our Inexpe- dotlble-gold medaUat oj the
ended the 1987-88 season on a rebounds .
Center BUlle Jo Stephenson
rience showed up at Urnes," lJ .S. Games. He won the 10,000-meter
winning note Saturday by hand·
broke Into tbe doubte-flgure
hockey Coach Dave Peterson
lng
Dyke's
Lady
Demons
a
74n
race In world recorcl time of
column .with 13 points, and while
said. ''We played wltb great 13:41.20.
He captured the 5,0110 · loss at J.,yne Center.
enthullasm. If we were toplher last week and won the Olympic
With small forward Lea Ann power forwril'd Holly Hastings
another year, we'd be that muc~ 5,000 rou~ years aao. Only four
Mullins leading the o!!ense and was kept down to 9 points, she
w11er. we Rlayed well; we d!da t men have won more Ol~plc
scoring 19 point&amp;, the Rectwomen added 14 rebounds to maintain
flnllhecl the campaign with a her status as the Redwomen 'a top
always play wlsety.': ,
speedlkltlnl
aold
medal• tlian
rebounder. Hila lings finished the
His team prellaed ~. but bU the 18-yMI';oid SWI!de.
. . record or 19-8 (7-3 In the Mid-Ohio season With more than 300
could not crack thto dlll:ipUned
Mlci!HI HadJCI*ff Ill .Austria. Conference) and a sbot at the-- reboullda, averaging 11 per
,
.WestGermandef!flllltUntiUtwas took the sliver In the 10,000, the District 22 playoffs In Man:b. .
·'
too ·tate. Weet Gennany, as Jut of t~ men's races, and
At the end of her first season In game. Polnt_gual'd Beth Coli, one
team• had done tilrOU8bOut the Oateh skater Leo VIsser won tile 1988-1'1, RecSwomen Coaeb Cheryl of the RedwoiJtell's top frelhman
tournament, capitalized on tJ.S.
Fl~ went to the d!Jtrlcts playel'f, , supplied two 3-po!nt
HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.·B P.M ,
· ilronze.
field ioaJa aplnat the·visitors.
and
wltil a 20-6 mark.
defensive laP•• •
lee! 3-0
••
SATURDAY 9 A.M.·II P.M .
Patlt Hauat'l Dtlte club outMuUIDa, a. of the keys to Rio
early In the tblnl pertod•
· APPOINTMENTS .AVAILABLE
"I'm not aoiiiJ to laloCk Ill)'
In o\ber evellta, _Frenchman
Grande'• offenae thll .•uoo, scoNCS the lidlg on tleld goals,
~ " Petenon aaid when Franck Plccard won the men''
30
of
n
attempt&amp;
tor
42
nettlJII
allo recorded • rebo~ and 7
queaU~aed abo"ttt defensive su~-stut llalom. Aalta Wac~­ ullata aplnst tbe La&lt;ly Dem- percent, and COMected on 1lof 14
brta(!dowlll· "They pla)'ed lllrcl, . ~r . Ill A\!'~ took the women ~ ons, wiiO were 1-12 ·ent.r!DJ the free throWs for 79 percent. The
u.y lllaYed weU. 1114 tile ""''t aJP!De ~ llld a Soviet contatw-ratlbdllth~~ R8dwomell were IUCcesllful on 22 .
haVe 111 apolollle and 1
Uifob tftllllftdiO!Wd b)' Aofl•l'. In tile dlltrlet. Ia Mr last Nplar or 111 1t1et fr9m the tleld tor «1
have to apolollzie.''
ReztiOVII won the women'• • X se810D pme with the Redwo- percent and sank 18 of 32 charity
(aUure hal been common- !I- kilometer croa COUD¥'Y relay.
men, MDlor co-captain Renee,, sbota for 56 ~rcent.
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H
w...r-.ae.;..tl

lop SCientiStS blo.Ck' StUdies Anderson and Van Att~

Se·n~inel

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

,,

ne

Redwomen defeat Dyke

•
• OUT OF STATE RETURNS
• ·BUSINESS - SMAll 01 LARGE
• ·PARTNERSHIPS .
• COIPOUnONS
• OIL AND GAS

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Page 4 'f'he OINy ~~ lbiMM

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Monday. FebruarY 22, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

e

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.Monday, 1-ebruary 22, 1988

•

ROCK SPRINGS- Had the
Nelsonville York Buckeyes hit on
just one third of their three point
attempts, the outcome might
.have been'dltferent at Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium Saturday
night as they faced the Meigs
Marauders !or the second time
this season. They were unable to
do so, however, as they lofted 19
!rom outside the semi-circle !lnd
.hit ohly three, dropping their
rematch with the local lads,
85-79.
Opening a 9-2 lead with less
than two minutes gone on three
field goals by Chris Smith and a
three pointer by Mike Bartrum,
the Marauders maintained that
margin throughout most of quarter one. By the time 16 minutes
had elapsed, Meigs had extended
the margin to 12.
For the second consecutive

contest,theMaraudersheldthelr
turnover output to six or less In
the first halt of play. They also
controlled the glass at both ends
of the court, haullng down 23
rebounds to the visitors 15 In the
first two periods.
In the second halt of play, the
victors surged to a 19 point bulge
at one point but seemed to faller
late In the contest as the
Buckeyes, putting more pressure
on the Meigs five, slowly cutin!(\
the lead. In a four minute span
down the stretch, the Marauderes tallied only seven points
(all from! the foul line) as the
visiting Buckeyes hit eight field
goals and eight charity tosses to
close the gap. Although the
Marauder shooters attempted
nine from the floor during t.hls
period of time, they could get
none of them to drop.

With the win; Meigs stands at
12-7 on the s~ason and will close
against the scrappy VInton
County Vikings tonight at Larry
R. Morrison Gym with the
reserve game scheduled to start
at 5:30PM due to tbe observance
of parents night for members or
the cheerlead~g. wrestling and
basketb~ll squads.
Agalnstthe Bucks, Meigs bl135
of 77 field goaltrles (45 percent))
to 32 of 72 ror the visitors (44
percent). Although the Buckeyes
shot a 54 percent average from
the two pOint range (29 of 53)
their cold outside shooting de:
creased the overall percentage.
Each team hlf12 of 19 free throw
attempts for a 63 percent ratio.
Meigs' Mike Bartrum and the
Buckeyes' Dave . Kirkendall
shared scoring honors with· 27
each. 'Both teams placed
-,- two

12

HEII~OCK

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MILLER

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Hemlock Miller

Feb. 18. 7:00p.m.

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RACINE SOUTHERN

It would appear on paper that

TO WAVERLY DISTRICT

Feb. 26, 6:30 p.m.

vs.

'

HILLSBORO LOWER WINNER
March.2, 1:15 p.m.

VINTON NORTH GALLIA

'

•1 CHESHIRE KYGER CREEK
Feb. 26, 8:15 p.m.

TO WAVERLY DISTRICT

vs.

REEDSVILLE EASTERN .

-

LUCASVILLE VALLEY UPPER WINNER
March 2, 6:30 p.m.
'

MEIGS BOYS DIVISION IV BASKETBALL
CROOKSVILLE
r

Feb. 23, 6:30 p.m.
REEDSVILLE· EASTERN

Feb. 25, 7:00 p.m.

N2 VINTON NORTH GALLIA
. TO OHIO UNiVERSITY
ilarch 4, 6:30 P,.m.

Feb. 27. 7:00 p.m.

CHESHIRE KYGER CREEK

' vs.

CHESAPEAKE WINNU
Feb. 23, 8:15 p.m.
#1 RACINE SOUTHERN
THE DOORS WILL OPEN I HOUR BEFORE THE FIRST GAllE!
111\ UAII 011111£ lOP Of 111£ BRACKET WILL BE TilE IIOIIE TEAll. :.

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Eagles drop 68-59
. STEWART - In an hardfought modern day jousting
match. the Federal Hocking
Lancers rode side-saddle most of
the game to avoid fatal attack by
the graceful Eas tern Eagles,
then galloped headlong Into a
victorious fourth quarter to defeat the · visiting Eagles 68-59
Saturday evening In a non-league
bOys' basketball contest.
Chad Tate sank five field goals
and seven charity tosses to lead
the Lancers with 17,whlle Shane
Burchwell and Bryan McPherson each tallied 15 apiece. Ron
Eddy planted 11 markers, whel
Brent Dishon netted 6.
For the local Eagles Jr . postman Mike Martin went on a
torrid · shooting spree to net a
game-high 24 points and 8 rebounds, but despite his fine
individual performance the Ea·
gles were unable to withstand a
late Lancer rally .
· Also hitting double figures
were senior guard Tony Hendrix
and Steve Horner with 11 each,whlle Scott Fltch and Jay
Reynolds ca nned 4 apiece.
Both teams shot full bore out or
the gate into a sizzling lead
exchange that yielded a 17-17
deadlock after the first period.
Eastern's mainstay was Mike
Martin, who did a nice job In the

co~rt

paint, scoring off several fine
passes from Hendrix and Fitch,
plus also capitalizing on several
follow through&amp; on the rebound.
The trio or Tate, McPherson,and Burchwell allowed Fed·
era! to stay in the game as they
each hit five or more field goals
In the game.
Without the services of Mark
Griffin, due to a reported foot
Injury, some or Eastern's speed
was taken away, but that didn't
cool the Eagles pace In the
second canto. Eastern outmuscled the Lancers to a 19-15
frame and 36-32 advantage at the
hal!.
Like a notorious Alberta
Clipper, Eastern's offense was
teed to·a mere glaze as It netted.a
meager 23 points in the half.
Meanwhile, Federal's express
snowballed to the tune or 18 .
points in each or the final rounds.
Despite Its offensive output Eastern contended strongly until the
final four minutes when FH took
the lead !or good.
The margin of victory rested
exactly at the foul line, where
Federal's 9 additional free tosses
proved to be the margin of
victory.
EHS hit 10-16 and FH canned
19·26. From the field both clubs

'
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battle

hit 24 field goals with Eastern
shooting 54 tries and FH 45.
Tony Hendrix hit 3 patented
3-potnters for EHS,whlle Burchwell had one lor FH.
Eastern had 14 assists, four of
which came !rom keen passes by
senior Steve Horner. FH had 4.
The battle of the boards was
won narrowly by FH 22·20, Tate
grabbing seven for the winners
and Martin 8 for EHS.
EHS had only 11 turnovers and
8 steals, while the hosts basd 15
and 6 respectively.
In the reserve match Tim
Powell netted 21 points to lead the
little Lancers to a 69-45.wln. Dan
Tripp led the nestlings with 12
points and a good game
unde~neath .

Box score:
· EASTERN (59) - 'Horner
· 5,1·11, Hendrix 0-3-2-11, ·Allen
Tripp 0-2-2, Mike Martin 10·4-24,
Chris Lance 1-0·2, Jeff Johnson
0-1-1, Scott Fitch 2-0-4, Reynolds
2·0-4. TOTALS :ltH-11»9.
FEDERAL ROCKING -Tate
5-7-17, Sequoia Lemon 0-0-0, Ron
Eddy 2·7-4, Shane Burchwell
5-1·2·15, Dishon 3-0-6, McPherson
6-3-15, Mawrtocla Perez 2-0-4.
TOTALS Zll-1·19-49.
Score by Quarters:
Eastern .......... ... 17 19 13 10-59
Federal. ............ 17 15 18 18-68

SVAC CJLUIJ'8- Tile Bulerll Elpa. , _ el
Coaeh Do Elelllapr c~ die SVAC Wldlu .
8-1 mark •••1-11-4 ovenll record. ),"'amed are,
IIHIDr, 11111J WeU., '11m BIINII, DaVId G11111ph, ...,

•

Bissell 1().0.4.24; ' Durst 2-~;
Snyder 1·0-1-3; Brothers 1·0-0-2;
B&amp;1cer (H)-0-0; Sisson ().(H)-0;
Powell (H)-0-0; Nelaler (H)-0-0.
NYJlS - Spencer 6-0-1·13;
Savajte 7-3-3-26; Addis (H).0-0;
KlrkendalllO-O-7-27; StlmeJl·(H)2; ·Eckels 3-0-1-7; T. Russell
1·0-0-2; Clemons 1-0-0-2.
Score by qlianen:
Melp ............... ·'····· 24 42 64 85
NYHS ........ .. .... :·....... 18 30 56 79
The young Marauder JV squad
held a ten point lead at the end of
quarter three In the opener but
hit a drought during the last six
minutes 'of pJay as they were out
scored 23 to 11 by the Little
Buckeyes, consequently drop·
ping a close 52-50 game which
they appeared to have In their
pocket.
•

Jackson's Ironmen should be
easy prey for the Meigs Marauders as they open sectional play at
Rio Grande on Wednesday at 6: 30
p.m.
The SEOAL representative bas
suffered six consecutive defeats
and owns an overall slate of 3-17
on the season compared to Meigs
12-7 (not including Vll}ton County
game). The Ironmen have lost 38
of 43 In league play, Including 20
In a row over the past-two years.
~ntor Mike Abrams leads the
Jackson In scoring, averaging
16.8 points and has averaged 5.5.
rebounds per game. Greg Harris,
usually the sixth man· In the
Ironmen unit, has a 12 point
game average and just over 4
rebounds. The remaining four
starters are at 6 polntsorlessper
game on the average.
The Marauders will start Chris
Smith and John Burdette at the
guard spots. Smith, a senior, bas
average almost 10 points per
·contest and has played good
defense for the Meigs squad.
C0 ach Mlck Childs commended Smith for his ablllty to
run the offense well and his. solid
floor play. Burdette, a junior
transfer from Federal Hocking,
has 62 points thus far tbis yellr
and Is considered a great asset on
defense and In the pas,slng game
by the· Meigs staff. · When left
unguarded, Burdette has the
ability to sink the outside field
goal.
Brent Bissell will get the nod at
the center position. The 6-4 senior
has a game average of 14.3 points
and has been, along with Smith,
one ol the most consistent free
throw shooters for the Maraud·
ers canning 71 of 92 from the
charity stripe Iodate. He bas also
snagged 180 defensive and offensive rebounds on the year.
Injuries In the (!arly part of the
season hampered Bissell but be
has come on strong since mid
January.
At one of the forward spots
you'll see Senior MikEl Bartrum,
who along with Bissell. Is cons!·
dered one or the most physical
players In the TVC. Bartrum

· materials into the stream ot commerce, knowing the possible.
dangers of asbestos contact, and that they, the plaintiffs, !ailed
~a warn Sheley ·of the possible risks to his health. A trial by jury
as been requested in addition to the $5 million lor punitive and .
compensatory damages .
·
The Ohio Supreme Court'has denied a request to rehear the
~a~~: Mary Jane Talbott, administratrix of the estate o~Tercy 1
. , a
• versus Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric co., et al.
· ~he c~se was appealed to the Ohio supreme Court after the .
·
. ourt of Appeals reversed a decision by a Meigs county'
C~mmol! Pleas jury to award Talbott a multi-million dollar
' j u gment for the '\CCldental death of .her husband ·by
electrocution.
,

Ourtq the last quarter, Ma·
rauders committed five turnovers to none for the visitors and
sent the Buckeye shooters to the
foul, line where they canned 12
points.
Meigs had played an excellent
game for three periods but were
unable to cope with the visitors
pressure during the final frame.
For the Marauders, Eddie
Crooks tallied 19 points, lnclud· .
1ng three three pointers and Cary
Betzlng also had three from
outside the semi-circle In his
total of 15. Other Meigs players In
the scoring column Included
Scott Barton with 2, Chris Stewart wJth 8, Doug Stewart 4 and
Randy Hawley two.
Leading the pack for Nelson·
ville York were Robin Russell
and Eric Wilson with 13 each.

smo

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Wed., Feb. 24,
8:15 p.l(l.
VINTON COUNTY 3·13

Eastern cops junior
high cage championship
0

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Junior High Boys'. bas·
ketball teams recently completed fine seasons on the basketball court as the Eighth 'g rade
squad or Coach Don Eichinger
posted an 11-4 overall record and
claimed the SV AC with an 8-1
league record.
Coach Ron Hill's seventh graders, an Improving eight man
squad, finished strong with a 6-5
overall mark.
Coach Eichinger's SVAC
championship team also placed
fourth In the 12 team Federal
Hocl\lng InvitatiOnal tournament
after dropping a triple overtime
battle to Nelsonville-York 61-58
In the consolation game.Teams
placing ahead or Eastern were
larger
schools Meigs, Belpre,
andTVC
Nelsonville.
Members of the SVAC cham·
plonshlp team are Michael Newland, Billy Wells, Brad Powell,
Phillip Woods, Tim Michael,
Ac;lam Calaway, Rod Newsome,
Jeff Durst, Michael Smith, Tim
Bissell and. David Gumpb.
:I"alenled guard Tim Blsaell
and top rebounder Jeff Durst
were each named to the all·
tournament team at Federal.
BlneD received a trophy for the
most points scored In one game
(25 points), and Jeff Durst,
equally effective from lnalde and
out, scored the most ~ts
throughout the tournament ' (58
polnls).
.• 'l'be youq Eagles averqed 44
points per game,whlle aUowlq
Just 3'7 defensively.
. 1&lt;fembers o! the aeventh grade

team are Chad Savey, Scott
Baker, Scott Burke, Jermey
Buckley. Jeremy· Cline, Eric
Powell, Matt Ridenour Chris
Carlton.
Following are tl)e 8th grade's
scores:
Eastern 35 ..... ....Kyger Creek 23
Eastern 50 .............. Southern 43·
Eastern 25 ................... Melgi 45
Eastern 51 ........ Southw~stern 56
Eastern 38 .North Galllll 39 (3ot)
Eastern 50 ... Federallfocking 23
Eastern 44.. ......... :...... Kyger 17
Eastern 49 .............. Southern 40
Eastern 34 ................. Federal29
Eastern 40 ... •....• North Gallla 33
E as tern 47 ... .. . Hannan Tr ace 31
Eastern 53 ..... Hannan Trace 37

To meet Tuesday
The Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch of the American Assocla·
tton of University Women will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Racine United Methodist
Church. Theme of the meeting
will be "Community." .Anyone
Interested Is invited to attend.
Planning session Fr.l day
Church Women United will
have a planning session Friday
at 1:30 at the Middleport Presbyterian Church In preparation for
World Day of Prayer. All .key
women.of member churches are
asked to attend. The observance
will take place on March 4 at the
Middleport Church.

Prep
scores
ao,.

........._

Ololo Blp 8eOMI -..bol

s•na,,Peb.•

. . -·
.......
.
,.,.,....... ... ,........
IW!k 81¥ ........... .,

County board to meet
The Meigs County Board of
Elections wlll meet. In special
session · Tuesday, , 4 p.m., to
certify ihe validity or petltlo!IS
for tl)e May 3rd gr,lmj~ry .

a.-Fa·~
a.
Coten~• n. aa N•r6WHt t7

Oa PI_J.._. 11. Oa Ot!• Put II

a,.e a S,cunere •uwk II
~

De .............. 111. ,......... .,.

BaM 11. N..._., 'I'NU •

Fort IA•IIIIe . . JlutHIM t1

Ub)lrtrC'A!*r•,ll•_.eeV.. M
M.:.nehl 81 PMr 'lt, PH*rlekton

Eastern h¥•d meets
Eastern Local Board of Education will hold a regular meeting 7
p.m. Thursday In the high school
cafeteria!.

II

._.
.... hn7•. W.-re•YIIIeHtiU
................ 8pri....... lt

N_.., ..._w.,..n
New ...... tlPI,........tt

Nt"W lllepl11, ,IIIII Calwrt II

Norte• H. c.,.Mp Fall• u

o.. ..,..r•Ue-11

Ia 11...,. II, Pl.- tl

OAPSE meets Tuesday
· Meigs Local OAPSE Chapter
17 will meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m. ;
in the Meigs Junior High
cafeteria.

.....

• Pull Orallam 14, 'l"rlatl tl
. . . . , l'a1rtMra II, Miami E t7

Ot~··
Twl MIIIIBr 11, TDI Cui H
Tel 8t , • ._ n, ~Jeo~~uee n
T....,..ll .. ...,.$1

,._.., II, lmMIIIYUie ft
WllaNU.8.......JT.I
Wlletlec lkPK U. Waverly II
Wooller 11, Milia.. A
Yoa IIIHMJ II, c.. Cc!lll C&amp;U:I11

........

To Host garden club
Riverview Garden Club will
meet at the home of Mrs. Paul
Thomas on Thursday at7: 30p.m.
Mrs. Denver Weber will· be
co-hostess. An auction w{ll be
held.

,..

DI..W.am
n., Jellei'IH 1111. O.y ar 11

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

Glr.. 011• .... klltol Bukftball
s~tna,, Feb. II

Del .... li .,..... 11. lle•o..u11 ... 11

a. ... hrt tl

hll aee......, a. New.-..._. a:
........... II. ~--J 81 MU'J' It
Ne.I"WWt..t.•P... 11.8Cellt•
oa ...... 11. O)llllell

Olive trustees
The Olive Township Trustees
will hold a regular meeting on
F.rlday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire Station.

01-e. . l!ll. . . . . {)rep• Oar ••

'lKARl A. IlEBlER .. CPA

1

_.8_

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••

611 EAST MAIN mEET
H&amp;lllOCI OFFKE
LOCAl10N

, I

POMEROY, OHIO 45769
1614) 992-7270

If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
about what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
·be happy to visit with
no obligaion to you.
-

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sistm.

If HEARING Ia your problem -and you feel that
hearing aida are
TOO HIGH tor your
. BUDGET - then ~Hate contact ua at DILES .
HEARING CENTI!ft. We MV1 many 1afwrrel
aoureq for a1111Utn~ and you may qualify
whether you .,. ngulaity employed or not. It Ia
our hope that NO ONE whooen behelpedtlhould
be deprlv8cl of better hearing. 1.81 ua be your advocate.
CAll TOll-FREE 1-800-237-7711.

•rlced

He worlced on the New York
Cemral ~way on the section
crew and wiiS a farmer.
Swvivinl tw two daughters,

•I ,

Emma L BoswcU, Point Pleasant,
Clara Jo Gordon, New Haven; d!ree
sons, Harrison H. RobinsOn Jr.,
Clifton; Charles K. Robinson,
Honolulu. Hawaii, ~I W. Robin·

.. '
I,

...
'I '

316 W. 111111 St., A..... OIIio 45701
,
(614) St4-SS71
1--·217-7716
' Wt ...... aldl from:
:...·....;.--HEA--IIIN_.;.,;;,;:;:.:;:CH:.o,:N;:,:O:;,:LOG;:.:,Y~IN;::C:.:..-~

. son, Gallipolis, Ohiqi one sister, ,
beu. Parsons, Marietta. Ohio; 29

H08piaal news
''

v eteran• Memorial

Saturday admissions - Charles Chaffee, ~ville; Ray
Wilson, Portland; Lelah WIUI·
ams, Pomeroy; Gwinnle White,
Middleport; Larry CUmmins,
Racine. ·
Satur'clay discharges - Hazel
Westen.
StuldiY . admlllklnl - Inez
Snyder, Middleport; Edna Lee,
Shade.
'
$lllldiY Dllcllar~ . - · Earl
Reed, Alice Btown, 'Floyd Ha.r-

DILES HEAliNG CENTER

.

tnon, Walter BeniZ.

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In the South.
Thus, as Bush sperit Sunday
relaxing In· Houston, 'which he
once represented as a congress·
man and which wll'l vote with the
rest of Texas come Super Tuesday, Dole was campaigning In
Wyoming, which wlll hold Its
caucuses March 5.
·
The · senator from Kansas
lashed hard into Bush, accusing
him of Ignoring the voters of the
West and Midwest- and saying
it indicates the GOP front-runner
cannot win the party's nomination this summer.
"George Bush's decision 'to
tu rn his back on America's
heartland Is the mark of a
regional candidacy tbat cannot
win," said Dole, who won the
Iowa caucuses Feb. 8 but ran
second to Bush tn last week's
New Hampshire primary. .. •
'.'I was In South Dakota yesterday and there was no sign · of
George Bush. I'm t.n Wyoming
tod~y and there's no sign · or
George Bush. I'll be In Minnesota
tomorrow and I don't expect to
see him there," Dole continued.
"Where is George Bush?"
13ush, apparently .judging his
work eompleted for- :ruesday's
Minnesota caucuses and South
Dakota primary, was bound
today 'for South Catalina and
Tenne~see In search of Super.
Tuesday support against Dole,
former television evangelist Pat
Robertson anil New York Rep.
Jack Kemp.

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Stationed In Georgia

'

Army Sgl. Myra A. Norrts,
daqbter of Shlrl.ey A. and
Kenneth H. Norris, 7070 Muttoln
Rldjte Road, Langsville, ~as
arriVed for duty wltll the 92Dd.
Enllneerlq BattaUan, Fort Ste·
wart, Ga. Norrta, an equipment
records and parts spectalllt, II a
191) lfld. .te Of Trl·Valley HIJh
School, Dreiden.
·
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daughter of Rick and K!ithy
Arnold Van Matre, 315 N. Wj!· .
shlngton St., Greenfield, died on
Feb. 15 at the Highland District
Hospital, Hillsboro.
Born the same day abe' died,
the Infant Is surVived by her
parents, her paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Van
Matre of Middleport, and .her
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Undberg Arnold, M~~&amp;on.
W.Va., along with an aunt, VIcky ,
Russell, Rutland.
Private services were held at
Murray's Funeral Home with the
Rev. John Mlnlc _officiating.
Burial was In St. Joseph Cemetery Greenfield. ·

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His strategy prompted Dole
campaign chairman Bill Brock,
with the apparent blessing or his
boss, to release a statement even .
more blistering than Dole's own
remarks, accusing Bush of being
afraid to compete In the Midwest.

Zl

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At least st,x people we~e killed . ·. Mt .Gilead·: . ·Patrick A:. );i'lyc ··.. _,- ... · ·. . ·.::.·. ·~ :.. ' .
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In Ohio traffic accidents this past · nal&lt;l, 41; Clev~laJ\d, kllteil when · .; · • :· ' ·' ··
· · : . · · . . · lllliim!t ·;.. _: .. ·.
· '· · ·· . .
•
weekend, th~ State Highway . · Ills car · c~lll&lt;leq '+'!!~. ~ •lraetbr· ·· ·• . · · · ~-~OY{ : ·,'.'. . ~RAIN .. · . ~ SH9WERS
.
Patrolsald-to!day.
·
· .
.tratler ·rlgthlll: ·was'Pat.ke!l·aJong' ·. liJIIQNTS:. . ..Warm ··"Cold ' ....A. static ·Occluded
'
The coqnt showed no. death!!
on· ley Interstate
In 'Morrow . ~ • · ·· :·. ..
. · .. : : ·
· ' ·· · ·.. ·
Friday night, five Sa(urday and County:.'-. · .' : ,· .: · : . . .: " Ma~?sh~lllit!lmumll!(ll~nltur~. A~~ast·:;o"(.ol~f!Yshadedarealslore&lt;;;~St .
one Sunday..
.
. .. .
Col·u~·b·'-s·
. .u
li . .LY.ilU
. . . . \ ,to;ec.
e~ye"'E!C'PIIat4f'
,l ~d~ated
.• . .•.... .. : •-: ..
. • .
UPI ..
•!!• ... • •. ""are
l
• ,,
•
• , .. •
• •
•
. This wee~end's count .w11s ·· Bro\vn; 29, Columbus,"•:l!'lll¢c1.·: · ";WEA,Tllli:t,l MAP.,..:. .Snow ' stomw~ w!U exteid.lrom 'Monta11a·
$1lghtly higher than the last two wb~n 'hll by·a.CJidls sli'e ·w.a)Ji.~. · : &amp;c:llli!oii th~ ~~eat Li;kea: Wblflli ,~ be l!.lriiDI. aad gusty fi-clm the
weekends when only four people . aro~g ~ C~h.ornbu.~clty:,Mr.~t~ .:· ..; . ' •~;oor~em ..and,' o\!entral !'lllilna through .the · o.~at .Lalieio. RIKh .
were killed In each of the two
.- s'lnda:r.
. . ·... ;.• ·..:··. : ·;. •• . .Jem~atures . wlll.belli. tbe, 20s-and30sXromeasternWas.blarton .
•
periods.
·
Chll!tcot)'le: David R; -CII):rq\1; ·, .. • sq.te,f()rPIIII M\ln&amp;alta aad llol'\h'ern }Vyomjng, alao-over the Great
..
'
One pedestrian was killed ~his · 35, BaJnbrld!!e,'lllll~l,ila}&gt;'ll~-car ·-.Cakll!J aii4tp Ne&gt;if· EDgla!ld:Teiilp~ratuies'·wJD reach tlie.fl08 and
weekent!.
dll.U .S. 50.1n RuS5 Cou!)ty, . ' : •·•. :, .71!i from'.GliUornljl tl!rougb the.southerll half of Arlzcjna; as weU.as.
Victims ln,clude: .
. · . .
freill the.iloJ~tiiern.lrillf :oul)j! .Pialfts ioci'IISS Geoi'gla' l,.nd Flortda.
Friday night : None.
· ··
0 Wlf1Jl~r.H.t&amp;'l!"' .Wer ~'e~mabi!l~t'llftbe nation Will reaeh the tos•and, 50s.
.Saturday:
CLE~L.AND ".&gt;l'lf' ,. . NQ .. .
. . ....• ' ' · · . ' · ' "· '
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Lebanon: ATthar G. Musser, winne,$ . in. Saturd~y· ~tii~t"s:. ·. ·. .
:w~tlu~r··-----:--....;.--:-;...
18, South Lebanon, killed In a Su{ier· LOho drawing ~s rab.ed .
... ::: . • :~ .'.
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one-car accident on a Warren . the prtie f6'r w~riesda}' night's .. · .: ,· •·,. .. Sdn~h Ce"tral · · , . ·.40 per~ent, · ·
.
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· County roa\J. · .
gatne•!G..aJI~a~.t $9 Mllllori~ ~ll)Q ··: · · .f'o~~, ~ln\ly S,nd' J/psea~it\f·.: . :uesdal', ··partly cloudy with .
Circleville: Troy .Dejln Busch;
Lottery o'f.lclals salil Sf!nday, · • · · bl~ ~rm, P,ar,t~y~oudy with the .,. statt~red flurries. ·Htgh near 35.
19, Arn~nda , killed In a One-car.
!11u111ber~ d~aw!I .JII .~atuz:c!~Y •.• .: htgli 5.~.to 6~, Gus_t.JI'St?Ulll wlnd2!i.. E;~ance ot'.sno~· 40percent,
accident &lt;!n Ohio 6741n Pick~way . night's gam~ were,t; 18,-19, 31.• 34 · . 1?.,35_. m~.h. ~OIIanc.e .Of. fall) 20. ·. . . g.,tended Forecast·
County.,- '
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' ' · . a.nd42. · :·.
· : · ·. · .. ... : ~· :·" perc~nt . . ··
·:, ·.Wednesday.lhrou(IiFrlday.
. .
Youngstown: Davld'·A. Cairns, · Tick~t ,q1iti'ilv~ oftl\1;! rluni~i-s; · ~ .·1AJll&amp;\lt, doydy_wttb !l:.C\Iaac.e · , ,.,:"Calll fAt~l&gt; · u.. .-\o4, .. ~ :: , : t 17,- Canfield, killed in a one-car . arewortl1 $1,(!00;whlletho~ew~th .. . •t01 :~a~ O.r .sn~~:· Lb~" ne,11r 30. · cli.ai)CE!· ~f sn&lt;YN ,Wednesday and
accident on a Mabonlng CountS&lt;
four of tlie.slx numbers ar!! woitlh
W)nds: 1\lmlng.northwest 11t ·1~ho. · Friday .. Fair Thursday . Highs 25
&lt;
road.
$87:.. .
·
· . '·. . : • • . ·. , : ~5 'P.Ph-·Cluu:oce !&gt;':!&gt;rec!pita!lon · to as:~ws to :to to,. -.,

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. grandchildren and one great-great·
Hamson H. Robinson Sr., 95,
granddaughter.
GaUipolis, Ohio, died Friday, Feb.
Sen-ices will be conducted
19, 1988 in the Pine Crest Care Tuesday at u a.m. at Foglesoog
Cenler, Gallipolis.
.
FUne!al Home with the Rev.
Boni Aug. 11, 18921n Ripley, he George Weirick officiating. Burial
was a son of the late William H.
win · follow In the Lone Oaks
and Malone Duffy Robinson.
Cemetery.
He ~as also preceded in dealh by
Friends may call Monday from 6.
three sons, Bobbie Bryant, Carl to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Edward and William Harold Robin·
son; two daullhtm, Ellen Anna Lee Whitney Van Matre .
Frye and Alma Robinson; ·tluee ·
great-grandchildren, Sarah ' Beth
Whitney Rae VanMatre, Infant
Boswell, Kitty Ann· Jones, Duane
HoweU; three brothers and three

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Accidents cl~.::six:·:·~ .,:.: &gt;. :,·.·. · .-·.:.
d . .
t .- '. .:=1..: ·. :· d: . :' ;. .·.".:: ' '", .;.
unng pas · W~K~- .. : &lt;&lt;··- :·:~,. . ~·-: &gt;·:·· ; ·..,.

Bwh
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Continued !rom page 1 ·

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KElLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

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k d

Announcements

ranked Gallla Academy Blue
Devils. He says that, as In
football, the basketball can take
some crazy bounces and hopes to
have his squad prepared for the
Ironmen come Wednesday
evening.

To1II'IUIIIIellt

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'The .ol\iJy $entll'l8i...,Pa~5 ,. ·

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EHS45 ...... :............... Albany39
EHS 37 ... ......... . :......... Belpre 44
r:E~HS~58~··:;.:·..:::··;.:":.:... ·:::··.::.. ~N~e~lso~nvl~l~le~6~1j~:~~~~~~~~~
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Winner to O.U. Convo
District Play vs.
ShlwnH StatdYJnntr
Fri.. lar. 4
-6:30p.m. ·

Prllnllltlt.,..

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leads the Marauder five in the
scoring department as he nears
the season high record with a 22.3
game average. Although other
coaches have urged their players
to keep •him of! the boards, his
strength and helghth make him
bard J o control. Thus far this
season the has swept the glass at
both ends of the court for 310
caroms.
Filling the other starting forward spot will be Brian Durst
who has come Into his own In the
la!ter pilrt of the season as a
starter. Durst has accounted for
49 of the Marauder points on the
year but Is credtled with spark· '
lng the Meigs !J'Iachlne with his
aggressive style of play.
Coming oft the bench as the
sixth and seventh man In the
Marauder unit will be Senior
guard Joey Snyder and Senior
Bill Brothers, a forward. Snyder
is a hustler on the hardwood and
when the defense packs It In on
the Inside, he can hit the good
outside shot and Is always a
threat to score.
Brothers Is not a fl~~&amp;hy player
but his good defense and aggressive rebounding gives the opposl- .
llon problems and has contributed to the Marauders winning
season.
So' the stage Is set for the
tournament play but Coach Mlck
ChUcis cautions against looking
past the Jackson !lve to the
possibility of facing the state

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EMS' has seven tveekend calls

Wed .. Feb.' 24,

Ill GALLIPOLIS 12_.

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time·

112 MEISS 7·7

Fri., Feb. 26, 7:00 p.m.

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DIVISION ·II SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
AT RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

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... By United. Press International . ·that 's what. I! • winild spund \(k~· . Bi'Cladul!, Mont., ciJl~ln~- !ite six clock¢ gusting between.' ~ ·and .
· Gale-force·· winds ho~l!¥1 • wh~n orje· of tllese•blg '!!lndows . ·hotjrs ~dbJg ,at'l a.fl\ . . · ·· ' · . ·. 75 mph ~Y the Natlonal.Wearber ·:
through the. Rockies a~d . COII'l· . :goes: : '. ·. ·. · · .. :, :, : ·: ; A:.re.co,rp ~d+:,-as setSund.i\Y ~~ · ser,vlce. T.here also were g~~sts of .'
. blned with · bitter cold ln. New
Sears spok~sm'ln E~t~ ~r.ms · 'P.helps : 'CG!iiri·s • Airport, !)elir · .·66.mph In Ljvlngston and 561J1ph · :
England and tM Grea~ · Lakes . said at· least '19 ·windows· we.fl! AJ:pena', .Mlclt; when the meccury Ill Great Falls..
·
.. region early today, while 50-m~h : 'blown .!)Itt . ~Jn~ :slilr.·oth~r~ dam· .. ~ '. re~c,Jo.~ J2 'd~arees belew Z!lro at'
. Most :of .'the nation , S11nday .. ·.
gusts lasl)!!d downtown C!tlcl!g?,
aged by 'wintls:'a\IQv¢ 5() mph,.~
·.·abO!f17: JO, ·a ;m . At~p; n'i. Sunday, 'epjoyed .p,r.tly· clouj:ly skies and· . ·.
smashing windows at the wotld s
"!t's .the upper; ~orjes; ~b&lt;;)ve . "It was ·on!:~t. 6 belo)O ln. ¥."as,epll, :dry weather&gt; ·.
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tallest building.
· .
· .
.t.he·52pd floor .to the .88th ·.floor:::·: . l J:·X,· .: t · ·:: . , ·.- ·• ·, • '' ~ ·:· • · In the 1\lortheas~. temperaBy contrast the ~actfle.
·Arms. sall1 . '\he ·· high; w~6~: , : Th~ ., ~lg~ ,. .ylilds ..t!l. · H!ivrl!,. .. lures were ..belO\!f freezing Sun- '
Northwest enjoyethmseas&lt;;mably
carried ~bbl!!s,,off i\earby build: , -Mont .• : Sqnday . top11kid trSj!s.. . day t~om :the V(ashtngton .a rea
warm temperatures: · · .
. lng . rQbf~ A!ld ... ~pr~ · )h~m· . r.ip!)!!d·.o(f,l)ranehe~. kriix!k~d.ou.t , ito.rthward. Afternoon tempera- ..
Jj
L ... _
At the 110-story Sears Tower. through !W!l'l~ -o.f the· I\U~e·wln., · ·.·PQII(et•aRd'-topplro .tbe Ke.ntilcli:y , lures. were lit the teens from · ·
ome IUUJ
e arriage
office building, .high winds o;ltd ..... do":s. "Then wt).athai&gt;~n~ )11 the .\ Fried Clile):erl .~Ucltl!l. f~.om: Its .: ' eastern O!llo ·and' much ot Pen· .
,
. eKtenslve damage ~nd snarled .. shar.ds ·.fall out '11'1'!!' blown Into· 30-fR&lt;U·I\blh-pert:h,.o(flclels said.. nsylv.an~ . acrOss . upstate New "
Smoke damage was lllcurred to the residence of Lester Wise.
traffic In a portion of Chicago's · . other.wlndo.ws;l, ~r:ms satd;·.· . .•· ':Tbe bu~lte~· bit -the lil~: mi~.·: ··.: York tq·nor'thetn N_ew Englapd.
at Enterprise as the result of a furnace problem early Saturday . ,downtown business district early · · · High . wlna. .. warnings·'. were .. sal&lt;tDaye K.r\'Z6lak, adlspatclier . ···' Temperatures -across. the .
morning.
today. ·,· .
.
.. Issued .for. f!lucb ·Qf. tile· 4at:·ln : . lor•. the . !lr.e,' dellariment:· "It's · N'orthwesf ·were -unseasonably
Pomeroy firemen were called to the residence at 12: 26 a.m. to
'·~tndows are still being blown
southeas! ~Jio.l!1l!!g·. ani! · nor· al)dUt t~e· 'thi1X1.
tn the l.a st Wjlrm Sul)!lay·. y akttna·: 'Wash., . _
out, said a SearsTowersec.u rtty !)least . .Colorado. · .On . . SuridaY,', , .• f~w ·years, so -we had cole' slaw. enjoyed a rei::ord lilgh tempera: · .
find the bouse full of smoke but no fire. Apl);)e on the furnace had
become detached allowing the ·smoke to enter the house. ·
officer at dawn. ·
· · ·
afternoon ·~Ina ev.enln'g · winds" . arid cJ!:Icken ·ror~llepollbdy .". . : turt-.forFe.b . 21 at68degt~s. The . ·
Firemen were on the scene less than an hour, according to .
No tnjur!es were reportetl but gusted to 61ItJph arO:ispet, WS'o.: : · · ·rhe winds· : a't · Ha,vre· were pld recol')! was 6~ de«rees In 1958. .•·
Danny Zirkle, fire chief.
pollee closed the four streets 65'inpb at Cody, Wyp.;··77'mpll'at . ; , .' · • . · :: · :·:,. : . -' :·· · . . · · . · · ·
.·
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.around the hug,e s~eel ·and glass · Coloradc;&gt; SpHngs; COlo:, and' 90 • . :' NA-t(o~~L 't;'EATftJ;R li"RVlOE fORECAST TO 1 AM EST· 2·23-88
str~cture to traffic and those
li')Ph at.Bilid~er, .Cplp. · .: .: . • ,,._ . ; · -. . · · .· ':·. . '-. · · . . · : ·
:· .
' · ·.
·
- ·;
streets
remained
closed
during
·.
Warft!ngs
·
o
f
,
g
ale.·.foree
.Mnds
,,:
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·
·..
·
·:
,
·
.
·
·,·
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the
morning
rush
hOur
.
.
,
'l).lso
·
contlnuejj
.
!Ji•
tiarts
·of
't:'e~
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Meigs County , Emergency M'•{IJcal Services reports seveJI
Barry
Edwards,
a
Veteran
.
Englan!!
.:..
whf\re
the
temper.a•
.
Cl!lls over the weekend; four Saturday and three Sunday.
\YBBM radiO traf!l~ reporter ture at 1 -a :m. In ·S t . ublins'bul:]',. ·' .I .
·
Saturday at 5:50a.m .. Mlddlepart to Ash St. for Steve Bunce
who
broadcasts
from
the
top
of
Vt.,
dropP!!d
'!o
~
·
degr~es
"
)!glow
·
···
~
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to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at12: U p.m. to
Sears Towe~~· witnessed the · zero - and ol(er _La!fe E~t~:and · . •
Route 124 for Warren Pickens to Camden-Clark Memorial
.. ...
destruction. · .
..
Lake ijumn : · : . .. : .• .. ·, ·: 40
Hospital: I;tutland at 12: 5!\ p.m. to Harrisonville for Lelah ·
,.'
"''ve never seen so much glass · · S11ow · !ell · durlng'" the" 'e arly· '·..
Williams to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10:30
.
"
In the streets," said Edwards, .· morning &amp;.cross~OrM!we~\ lowe)"' ... ·, ·
·p.m. to Powell St. for Eileen Snyder to Veterans Memorial
..
who has seen wind dama~~ at !he ., Mlcl!lgan; upjier.. Mlcltlg4io.~apt( ' . .
Hospital.
.
• .
toweronotheroccas!ons. We ve nor.theast Mlnl)esota, Snow-was·~
Sunday at 9:22 a.m .. · Middleport to Stonewood Apts. ,fov
had .over 20 windows hit. If you·· ·alsp !alllng · acros~·westefn''l.\on~ . , 51.J'+..._\.
Esther Kissel who was treated but not transported: Tuppers
were
covering a war. I lm~glne · ·tana. Orie · l~cli . of.. s.no~ feU ;a,t · ···' '
Plains at 11:22 a.m. to Ratite 7 for Edna Lee to Veterans
"
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 6:58p.m. to an oil.well ftreot;
Noble Summit Road. ·

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6:30 P-!11·
JACKSON 3-15

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Marauders fac~ Ironmen in
Division II Tourna~ent
play
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•

MEIGS GIRLS DIVISION IV BASKETBALL

others In double digits. Brent
Bissell finished with 24 (lncluding 4 of 5 free tosses) and Chris
Smith added 16 with 6 coming at
the foul line. Chad Savage
canned 26 (includinng three 3
pointers) and teammate Brad
Spencer contributed 13 to the
Buckeye cause.
Meigs out-rebounded the
Bucks 45 to 29 as Bartrum and
Bissell led the way with 16 and 14
respectively. Spencer and Klrkendall shared the honors for
Nelsonville York with 7 each.
Marshall bound Mike Bartrum
Is closing on the single season
scoring record with at least two
more chances to top Rick Wise's
454 mark.
Box score:
MEIGS- Smith 5-0·6-16; Bar·
trum 10-2-1-27· Burdette 3-1-0-9·
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P~ro~y-·Mid~Jeport,. Oh~ · ···. ·,: . . · ·

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Local,.~!:~!..~riefs .,..._.._.,·Chicago ,hi~.·. · .b)i;~i~
.· ~·:.-~.~d._:·.-.. :·~~~~: tOday , .•

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Me•gs outlasts Nelsonville-York 85-79 m ma.k eup cc;tntest ·.
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Monday. february 22; 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8-The o.Hy Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

11111111111111111111111111

Monday, February 22, 1988
Page-7

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CB Club meeting plans break

Husbands have m4jot. quirks

Ann
.Landers

What you are dealing with is sick a great day for everybody. The
rabbi did a wonderful job. Even
married to a man for more than
behavior.
thouah
my wife and I were diyear and have seen his feet only
Sinoe you are putting this column
vorced,
our mutual friends and
ANNIANDB... '
.twioe. when he was getting out of where Joe can see it, it will come as
relatives
were
jl)l
there
and
everythe shower.
!JO surprise when you 11!11 him to get
.
~'Georae" wears his socks every. ~-r·
professiona1 help and clean himself thillj was lovely.
This
time
it
was
different.
That
·
where, even to bed. Try 19 imagine
up or you are calling it a day.
makina love ·to a man with . his Sounds harsh? Not really. These "wonderful" rabbi married my wife
DEAR V.: Good question. I have
socks on. Oh, brother, what a cases set worse unless there is 'a nd they have moved to another no answer either, but I do have a
turn-off.
intervention and we have just congreption luilfway acrois the sugsestion. If an impressive number
country. Of coune they IO!&gt;k the of people write to the sponsor and
IMt summer I bouaht GeOrge a iniervened. Good luck.
Dear Ann Landen: Recently you boys with them. Do you really say, "I will not buy your product
pair of sandals, thinking I might set
to see his feet for a ~hange, but he
told a woman, whose boyfriend think I should pay the entire bill unless you clean up your show," the
fooled me. He wears socks with his
talked incessantly tbat he was for the reception that will be held sponsor will surely pay anention.
Dear Ann Ludefs: Your reoent
sandals. Ever hear of anything so_ insecure and the reason he talked in the rabbi's new temple? What it
will be, if you want to know the column tl!at listed the do's and
weird? What do you make of this,
all the time was . bealuse he was
truth, is a reception to Jalinch the don 'Is when tragedy strikes was
afraid people would think he
Ann? - ·STUMPED IN D01HAN,
new rabbi.
helpful and much needed. Thoughtcouldn't think of anything to say.
ALA.
Come
.on,
Ann,
set
real.
I
send
DEAR D01HAN: Let's just say
You are wrong, Ann. I am a my wife a healthy check every less remarks at such times ·intrigue
it's "dilferent;"Georae's haniup is 20-year-old guy who is very quiet month to $upport my thne sons. me. Well-meaning people wiih pi)or
,inconsequential compared to some and the reason I don't talk is They come to me every summer judgment should wear muizles.
I know a man who said to a
I've heard of. Read the next lener because I honestly can't think of while my wife and the rabbi so to
srievillj
friend whose wife had been
and you will never complain again. , anything to say.
Israel. When the boys arrive their
Dear ADo Laaders: I am 21. My
killed
in
a traffic accident, "God
Once in a while when I do think clothes are like rags and they need
husband is 33. We have been of somethillj it seems so dumb that haircuts.
must really Jove you to send you so
·
married for three years and I am I figure l am bener off to keep my
I am willillj to do my share. bull. much suffering."
going crazy trying to fisure out mouth shut By the time I get up the am not .&amp;OinB to pay the whole bill
My personal "Knucklehead of
what to do.
nerve to make a comment the for this combination bar mitzvah the Year Award" goes to the
"Joe" was never the neatest guy in conversation has switched to some- and ~jet-acquainted party 500 miles woman who told the parents of a
the world, but now things have thing,else.
my home. -' SOMEWHERE young child who had died suddencome to the point where. I need · \ I'm not bad-looking and I would from
ly, "I know just how you fed. Our
IN 1HE MIDWEST
.
so~~~~: answers from an outsider. The
love to have a steady sirl, but I feel
dog
died last month and we have
DEAR MIDWFST: I have done
man has not taken a shower in over as if I am terrible company. I hate some
rethinking and you certainly been in mourning ever since." a year. He ~jetS mad when I am to inflict myself on a ·date. I'd
have a point Circumstances alter ROCKFORD, ILL.
unresponsive and says I'm a "cold appreciate any sugestions you
DEAR ROCK: I, too, see "the
CIISfS, and in your case, if you pay
fish," but there is no way I can might have. - A READER IN luilf the bill I'd say. you were a real passing soene," and my mail has
make love to a man who comes to DETROIT
made me positively shock-proof.
mensch. Mazeltov.
bed smellillj like a goat
DEAR READER: I can give you
Dear Ann UDders: Sorry to be so Strange how normally intelliaent
He refuses to wear the clean socks the solution to the problem in two
late, but it has taken me until now people will say the dumbest thinp
and shorts I put out for him. The words: Ask questions.
to calm down and think rationally when they don't know what to say.
People love to talk about themonly way I can get him inio fresh
about this llll!Der.
They need to know that silence can
· thinp is to hide the ones he is selves. They will go on and on, and
One night our little family was be an appropriate and welcome
when the evening is over they will
wearillj.
watching a ·year-end speci!ll. The response in time of trouble . .Their
Joe works in an offioe and I keep tell you what a fjlScinating conver- main character was a little boy, presence makes the statement that
wondering what the people who sit sationalist you are when all you did
about 9 years old. The child was in they care.
·
near him tliink. I can smell him was listen.
a situation that made him alljry.
What are the. signs of tilroholism?
All of a sudden he blurted out a
before he walks into the room.
Dear Ami Landers: You sure
How
ctJn you tell if someoM )'OJ!· love
.I am so compleiely turned off by blew it wl!en you told "Somewhere very dirty .word. It wasn't even 9
is
an
a/crlholic? "AicoholiMn: How 10
this man that I am seriously in the East" to be a mensch and pay o'clock. Our son asked, "How·come
Recognize It, How to Deal With It,
considerillj divorce. My mother
the entire cost for the reception of you don't let me say that word and How 10 Conquer ll" will give you the
that kid can say it and nobody
says she wouldn't blame me. Please
his son's bar mitzvah. I am in the
'
answt'TS. To receive a copy, send $2.50
print this letter. I promise to put it same situation and have no· intenpunishes him?"
.
Neither my• husband nor I hlid and a No. /0, self-oddmsed, stamped
on the pillow next to him when I
tion of beintl such a schnook.
envelope (39 cents ptista~) to Ann
move to the couch, which will be
When our oldest son ~ his an answer. Please 11!11 us, Ann,
whete will this end? - DISGUSTED Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
. any minute. -- CLO'f.HESPIN , celebration I participated in the
'
.
. . Ill. 6061 J-()562.
PLEASE. BEAUMONT, TEXAS
plannina and the ceremony. It was IN VERMONT
DEAR C.P.: Joe baa a aeranium
in his cranium, and I am not
·ldddllls- 1'llen! is a big dlft'ermce
between beintl ca~ about hy~
Ilene and not bathing for a year.

_
---

Dear Ami Laaden: I've been

._ ...

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· ·FAWEEK

1988 NA'flONAL F2 Z1
FEBRUARY 0.:

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·calendar

This Page Sponsored By These
Many Fine Businesses

Riggs Used -Cars
CHESTEI, OHIO

985-4100

Gravely Tractor
Sales and Service
992-2975

Pomeroy, Ohio

Sugar Run· Flour Mills
Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.

. Middleport, Ohio

Francis Florist
992-2049

Po...roy, Ohio

Po•eroy, Ohio

992-2196

Fruth Pharmacy
MiddleportI Ohio

992-6491

.

Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-2039

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ewing Funeral Home
992-2121

Pomeroy, Ohio

Lumber
Chester, Ohio

992-2342

992·3785

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pleasers
992-2057

992-5432

Vet~ran•
992·2104

....

ow.

'

Brogan-Warner Insurance.
992·6617
.

P••roy, Ohio

'

State Farm Insurance
Mill SWIGEI
992-6685

'

Mlddlepert, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

.......rt, Olrio

HI·IOS4

CHESHIRE - · Cheshire
Chapeter OES meets Tuesday.
7:30p.m., Masonic Hall.

DONATION MAJ)E - The Meigs County
Special · Olympics Program wiD ar;aln benefit
from a donation from the Pomeroy Foodlaod
Store. On Friday, Don Perry, manaser of
Pomeroy Foodlaod, presented Kathy Luebbert,
local coordinator for the Melp Special Olympics,
with a check reflecting the profits from

Foodland's Special Olympics Day, which was
held In January. On that day, three percent of the
store's dally sales ' was committed lo Special
Olymples. This Is the aecond year lor Foodland's
donation. Special Olympics spousors the Carleton
School River Racers' basketball and track and
field teams. {Sentinel photo)

c
"l h,0 lds
ester
ounct
C
l /_

r.J

•

meet~~ng
It

RIO GRANDE; - Open Gate
Garden Club meets Tuesday,
7: 30 p.m.. home of Barbara
The death of a charter Roush, Ada Morris, Laura Mae Kirkhart, Brenda Cunningham,
Allen. Plant auction.
member, Letha Wood, was noted
Nice, Beulah Maxey, Mary K.. Bonnie Landers, Margaret AmMIDDLEPORT _ A special
and plans made for draping the
Holter, Ethel Orr, Esther Smith, berger, Ada Bissell, · Sandra
meeting o! Middleport Masonic
charter In her memory when
Ruth Smith, Erma Cleland, Mae White, Marcia Keller, Betty
Lodge wtll be held Tuesday, 7:30
Chester Council 323 Daughters
McPeek. Lora Damewood, Mar- · Young, VIrginia Lee, Iva Powell,
·p.m., for practice In the MM
o! America, met ~ently at the
garei Tuttle, Doris Grueser, Eva Darlene Baum, and Jo Ann
deeree. All me_mbers who helped ·hall.
·Robson, Genevieve Ward, Faye Baum.
with the Fellowcraft team are
Thelma White, coUncilor, preasked to attend. The regular
sided at the meeting attended by 1
lodge meeting will be held at 7:30 34 members. It waa -noted the ' • - p.m. on March 1. Inspection will . Edith Spencer ts In the hospital.
beonMarclt4,wtthdlnnerat6:30 Dorothy Ritchie thanked
.p.m., followed by a meeting at . members for cards; prayers and
7: 30.
·
visits during her hospitalization
February 23 thru Mar~h 1
0r1aalza&amp;looal meednl
and recuperation.
MIDDLEPORT- The MiddlePla11,11 were dlscuBSed for the
port Baseball Association will be March 12 rally at Logan . and
holding an orcanizatlonal meet- members were reminded to take
tng Thursday evening, 6:30p.m., ~~ for the varloua tables to the
CLEAIIID &amp; PUSSID
at the MiddlepOrt Village Hall. March 1 meeting:
All loteresied parents are urged
It wu noted that several
membera attended lodae aervt10 attend.
Parea&amp; meetlol
ces for Mn. Wood at EwiDI
.IPWR a1rt or ,_tall•dm)
RACINE -The parent meet- Funeral ijome. The charter will
ing of the Everybody Counts be draped for her at the March 1
Plop am will be held at Southern meeting and members we~
&amp;
OIILY
HIJh SChool at 7 p .m . on Wednes- reminded to wear white.
.
day evening.
.
A silent auction was held by the
good of the order committee.
110
t.tt-ttl4
MhdOTII'J meetlnl
Helea . Wolf WU ptaollt. Opal
RUTLAND - A apeclal mts- Hollon, PauUne RldeiiQlll', and
· ldcmuy meettna will be held Helen WoU l8rved refrelbmentl.
'l'llurldiU', 7:30 p.m., at HyMll
Otben .attell!lbll were Alta
Run Hol1De18 Church.
Bellard, Sedle Trullell, Betty

SPECIAL

Ingels Furnitu-re &amp; Jewelry
992-2635

•las

Memorial Hospital
PoMeroy, Ohio

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Rev. Sam Clay
will be at Old Bethel Church on
Story's ·Run Road, north of
· Cheshlre ··raltroad tracks, Tues·
day, 7:30p.m.

······"~ ow.
Auto sGies .

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

.: 992-3011
-

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Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
992·6611
•

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r

Betty . Fultz talked on the
United Methodist Women's Conference at the recent meeting of
the Rock Springs United Methodist Women held at the church.
Group sllljlng of "At Calvary"
and "What a Day That Will be"
with Betty Wills on the autoharp
opened the meeting.
VIolet Hysell gave devotions
using readings , "Right Words"
and "God Loves
Me" ' wtth
.
scripture from 1st John.

Linda Foster and Dorothy
Jeffe&gt;rs gave reports and Frances
Goeglein had the card report
· Sharon Folmer had prayer. The.
group will be selllng hearl
necklaces as a fund raising
project. Next meeting will be
March 8 at 1 p.m . Mrs. Wills had
the c)oslng prayer with refresh·
ments · being served by Mr_s .
Goegleln and VIrginia Wears.
Others attending were Trecle
Abbott, Betty Dill, and Thelma
Jeffers.

UMW conducts meeting
"Hope, A Shining Ray" , was
the program topic presented by
Mary Nease at the recent meetIng of the Forest Run United
Methodist Women h.eld at the
home or Ada Nease.
Mrs. Nease talked about the
Importance of proclaiming hope
as a basis of ·Chrlstian faith, to
demonstrate that there Is hope
for the Individual In times of need ·
and crisis and hope for world
situations. She said It affirms
that the United Methodist
Women are women of hope. Her
scriptures were taken !rom Luke
3, Psalms 39, and Romans 15.
"The People of Hope" was
read by Edith Sisson, Kathleen
Scott, and Evelyn Hollon.
"Women o! Hope" readers were.

Faye Wiggins: Hilda Yeauger,
Erma Roush, Carolyn Salser,
and Ada Nease. Naomi Wyatt'
read "What Is a Friend?"
To open the meeting Edith
Sisson read a poem, "What Is .
Love?'' and Evelyn Hollon read a
different version of the 23rd
Psalm. There was a duet reading
of the Lord,: ~ Prayer ·by Mrs r
Nease and Mrs. Scott. 1
Officers gave reports and a
Jove offering was collected, A
total of 23 shutln and sick calls
were reported. A rummage sale
was announced for March 3 and 4
at the church basment.
Refreshments were served to··
10 members and two guests;•
Carrie Grueser and Marybelle
Warner.

Fernwood Garden meets ·
awards and scrapbooks of club'
The lOth anniversary o! the
activities.
Fernwood Garden Club was
The refreshment table was
·observed with an open meeting
covered with a white lace cloth
held at the Zion Church of Christ.
and centered with a bOuquet of
Suzanne Warner extended the
pink, red and white carnations.
·.welcome to the members and
Kathryn Johnson baked the Inseveral state, regional and
scribed
annlvrsary cake with
county o!!lcers of the Ohio
.
Tammy
Johnson decorating It
Association of Garden Clubs
with
a
brown
trellls and green
lncll!ding Janet Bolin, OAGC
.
~ern syrpbollc of the club name, .
president; Pauline Atkins, Neva
''Fernwood.''
Nicholson, Pat Holter, Betty
Other members at the anniverDean and VIrginia Covert.
sary
observance were Ida
· Evelyn Thoma gave a history
Murphy,
Helen EbUn, Thelma
of the Fernwood Garden Club
Glles, and Marjorie Purtell, Mrs.
with Marjorie Purtell presenting
Atkins won the door prize.
a program on perennials. DevoAt a meeting of club members
, tions were given by Marjorie which followed, flower seeds
Purtell.
were exchanged. It was noted
On display were the past
that
the next meeting wtll be at
yearbooks of the club, along with
noon on March 15 at the home of
WUovene Bailey. The Lord's
Prayer In unison closed · the
meeting.

A visitation program was dis·
cussed at the recent meeting of
the Golden Rule Class of the
MiddlepOrt First Baptist Church
held In the social room.
Emphasis of the visitation this
month will be with Inactive
members. It was also decided
that members will send cards to
or call on someone on the church
prayer Jist. ·
.
A Bible reading program was
discussed with the suggestion
being that members read chapters of the Bible using Dally
Prayer boOklet as the guideline.
The grO'-!P wtll continue to save
pennies.
Jean Thomas had devotions
using I Timothy 6 and Matthew 6
on the theme "Lay Up Treasurers In Heaven, not on Earth."

Omitted
Evelyn Murray was a contributing hostess at the recent
meeting of the Phllathea
Women's meeting held at the
Middleport Church of Christ. Her
name was omitted from material
on the meeting submitted for
publication.

Mrs. Thomas and Teresa Crisp
were
Theout
valentine
theme hostesses.
was carried
In tile
decorations as' well as the refreshments. The Rev. James
Seddon had the closing prayer.
Members enjoyed Bible Trivia.
Others attending were Howard
Wagenhals, Manning Kloes,
Sharon Seddon, Glenna and John
Riebel.

· 1-------------------------r-----------~-==-=========-

POIIIIOY

Home National Bank

949·2210

Pomeroy,

111 COUll ST.

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
funeral Home -

992-5141

Pomeroy, Olllo

Crow's Family Restaurant

K&amp;C Jewelers

Pat Hill Ford
· . Middleport, Ohio

INSUUNCE

'

915·3301

Adolph's Dairy Valley
992-2556

Pomeroy, Ohio

Be~um

Far.mers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
992·2136

Po!Mroy, Ohio

992-2174

Downing-Chllds-Mullen-Musser

MIDLEPORT- OH KAN Coin
Club will meet Monday evenlng1
at the Burkett Barber Shop In
Mhldleport tocomplete planning
for Its 25th annual coin show to be
held on March 20 at the Holiday
Inn In Gallla County. Following
the meeting, there will be a coin
auction and refreshments.

A ·membership drive Is underway with dues to be paid by the
end of Marcl\. Meetings are held
the second Tuesday of each
month and the last Friday of each .
month.

Rock Springs UMW has meeting

Golden Rule
class meets

RACINE - Southern Junior
. High Athletic Boosters will meet
Monday, 7 p.m., at the school.
Everyone welcome.

Pomeroy, Ohio

. 992-2115

Village Pharmacy
992-6669

MONDAY
RACINE - ·Southern Local
Board of Education wtll meet 7
p.m. Monday In regular ~esslon,
at the high school.

A coffee break was set for May
1 at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds when the Big Bend C. B.
Club met recently at Pleasers.
At the "break" there will be
live music, booths, and other
activities throughout the day.

PLAIN .SKIRTS

9 9(

2 PIECE LADIES SUIB

CLU~

•
,j

$3 75

FA.C
SHOP
war ...

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f __

PIISSED

•

•

MUTUAL FUNDS?

9.25°/oo• IRA's
SI'ICI 11/3/86

Plan For Retirement Today
11.110fo Average -Since 1975

•I

�.

. , . 8-lbe Daily Seutiuel

T~Winter
..

Monday, FebrU11'V 22, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

weather, -salt ·can damage plants

OVMA hears forest
industry overvi~w

such as bark mulches, peat moss,
straw, oak leaves or pine boughs.
Phie bo\llrhs a~So can be propped
against and over evergreens to
protect against wind and sun
damage.
-Remove any wet, heavy
snow that causes evergreens and
other plants to bend. k plant
severely bent by snow may take
weeks or months to straighten.
-snow or Ice . can damage ·
multiple-leader ()lants, such as
upright juniper, arborvitae,
taxus or· some pines such as
Mugo pine. .Prevent damage by,
tying thick twine to the base of
the trunk and winding It spirally
upward to the top and back down
In ·a reverse spiral. Brush heavy
snow off the plants.
-In winter, rabbits and mice
will chew on plants and Injure
them, especially during periods
of extensive sriow cover. Favor, ltes · are flowering crabapple,
' mountain ash, hawthorn, vlbur. num and winged euonymus.
Sometimes the chewing can
girdle and kill the plant. .
Protect the trunk or main stem
from the soil line up to 2 to 3 feet
In height with a collar of
one-half-Inch mes}l-wlre cloth.
Or spray or paint the trunk with a
rodent repellent available at
garden centers.

Land-use conference sl0;ted

&amp;onomist predicts low wheat harvests

John Rohrer, Extension com·
munlty development sjleclallst,
who will speak about Ohio's
agriculture dlstrlcts1at the Land
·Use Planning Course.
State legislation allows the
creation of agriculture districts
to protect farmers from develop·
ment pressures.
"Agriculture districts pr~tect
farmers from assessments by
1tlllties Interested In running
utility lines through the farmland," , Rohrer says. "They also
protect farmers w1 th generally
accepted farming practices
against nuisance suits."
' Nuisance suits, for example,
can arise from complaints about
odors or animal waste.
In 1982, Ohio passed legislation
allowing the creation of agrlcul·
ture ·dlstrlcts. Today, some Ohio
counties have more than half
their land In such districts.
Many states have similar laws,
often called " right-to-farm
laws," Rohrer says.
.
· "In Ohio, a district Is established based on a farmer's
application," Robrer says. "It Is·
In place · for five years. The
farmer can renew the commit·
ment or remove the status after
that time. A farmer can remove
the status before the commit·
ment Is over but must pay a
penalty."
Although agriculture district
legislation restrlc!s develop·
ment, It has not been strongly
challenged In Ohio cour.ts,
Rohrer says. But In, test cases In
other states, the laws have
always been upheld, he says.
Topics presented during the
course Include zoning, solid
waste management, management of municipal growth and
historic preservation. The topics
are taught by government offl·
clals, university faculty, private
land- , use specialists and stale
agency officials.
To register, cpU your county
Extension office or call James
Dowdy at Ohio State University
at 614-292-2265.
'

Note change in
training program

·..:._ _ ___:__ _.....:..._ _1

OPTOMETRY
SERVICES ON
PREMISES
Amtricart·Pomeroy
Nursing and

Rlhabilitulich'l

c..ter

(614) 992-6606

'---------' &lt;i
r

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
,WE HAVE HEARINO AIDS"
CALL (6J4) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
. I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES .
•Aecetve t ,IO discount for tda Plid In ldvance.
FrM ..ta - On.uw.y,and Found HI lidcter 11 words will be
Nn 3 d.,a at no ch.... ·
,
'Price of ed fvr all capta.l 'l.nera Is dDuble price of ad coet.
'7 point Jint type only uHd.
~ •&amp;.,.tinel 11 not retpanaib61 for errors attar fi,.-t d.-y. IChedl
· tor errors tint da¥ eel runt In peptr). C.IIMfore 2 :00p.m.
d~ efter pubU~n to mlllt correettqn.
~Adl thlt inuet
In ld\'8nc:. are:
Hippy Ada
Canl of Thanks
In Memori~m ·
V.cllala

COPY . DE~OUNE­
MONDAY PAPER
TUEID~V PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSD~V PAPER
FRID.-v P~PER

PUIILIC·NOTICE
11 hold

1

111

111

n.. _ , ...

to
... "" . . . . . . lollowlng col·
~:

117 VCR Topeo twill
3VCR--

1-13'ColorTV ·

The,.......,. .........
Sftlnp C-ny. Po.,.._
to bid
"* .... to
2 4xl Nghgd lligne

roy, Ohio, &amp;UIIlt'H the right
It
lncl

-- . . ·-col·
....1 prior to - · Fllrllror,
Thor.. lank and lev·

111111 CompMIY _,.,.. 1111
r1g11t to NjNI: any or 11 blda

'

121 21, 22, 23, 24, 41c

Public Notice

not

~~~-·c·*"'l
1180C rCo-

oubmllted.

pro- or Implied wonontloe given.

RESOLUTION 1111·1
. At'lhe ......llr..,..lngof
the~iogeCowall

c

•

16141 •••• _..

""'"'

111

r~'::~'t':ilt=. !~ :::

Spoclol Requl-to for
wcoge retH, ..,. houra ohm·
ployment eo oocertolnecland
dn!nnlnod by lllo Dopeh·

man1 of lnclll8trial Relltionl
ond provided for In the Iowa
. of tho
of Ohio.
- Propout• mull be oubmlt1ed on · the Propoul
Form• contelnoclln tho Con·
1roe1 documonu. The Pro·
-~mull be - n i o d

a-

~ •~'::1.:..'"::''=

Crodh, pu....ont to c =
1308 ot the Ohio R Nd
Cocie.ln on -nt oquollo
ton pon:ont ot 'lhe bid. In.._
-1-ofWIIttarlhformoofbkl~tWrlillyiiMOb·
mltlad. then 1 Conti'- Perf.....,.... lionel oquol to ,the
amount or till . eonmc~

muotbeprovldodttthedme

eo.,._

• ot an:ltntl ....
·
•
a-wful bldcllr mull be
on l!qu•t Employment Dp' porWnhy Employer, which
prohlbill ............... IllCIUII of NCO. crwod, """"'

v.....

..,.

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6-17-tfc

01

PAD&lt;

446-7!90
. . .

ABil PUNCH!

In Memoriam

It's.· your birthdly
lpin for us here on
arth, to PlY rtSPict
to you on this your
d
·
IJ.

We ...._
•
...._
NNW In your,_.
Vlllly hotne you 1!1 IS
...,,..., IS worr WI 5
~-·•
~,.... 11110 11111 II1IYbl
.tier for we know JIIU
111 in lpllcewhnJOU
liMr IJOW old, no 111011

no

•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF .
FIDUCIARY

On Jonuory 28, 1988, In
the Meigo Co..,ty Proboto
Court, Cooe No. 211711,
Jemn R. Sloul of 41840 S.
R. 7,
Plolnl.

=,. . _, -

_,.

ID be wiiiJ you 11111 Hint
c~~v
In- Bl11nd ,.,,
&lt;'u

,...

you soon,

Bo• , 34, Tuppero

Ohio 41783 and
ChoriM Glln Stoul ol
48780 8. R. 248~ Long B~·
lorn, Ohio 4174;,, - • IP·

pointed Co-Executoro of the
_ , . of Vorclo N. Stout.

work

·

~

tFree Eotlmote1l

' Ill
Y. C. YOUNG
9U-6215 or 992-7314

Pomlroy,
11 Help Wanted

! lie-acquaint yourself

with the stylists Mary, Naomi, Jone, ·
Grace, Donna, Angela
and Kay at

KAY'S .
BEAUTY .SALON

.•. ,.....

MEIGS OfFICE
MACHINES
SA&amp;IS-SIIVICI-SUPPIIES
loyal &amp; SCII Typowrltor1
. 11op1 &amp; IIAI Cot..loro .
lepi&amp;Mo•CIIhllotltton

110......,
.... lett- OIL 41743
Ph. 161•) IU·S486

QUALm PIIIT SHOP
(614) 9t2-3Jts

Ohio 41743.
Roborl E. Buck,
P!Obote Judgo
Lono K. Noeoelrood. Clo"

121 8, 16, 22, 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
AI'POINTM!NT Of
FIDUCIARY
.
On...._,,...., I 1188 I
·--• •
• n
1M Moit11 County Ptoboto
Court. C.. No. 21,747,

w.

DclutiiU unto. 211 ·213
1111 a-nc1 a-.. lox
.HI, I'DmlrOf, Ohio 417tl
•PP ah•IN --.... of
..,. ot J., 1. ltllll.
doonlld,
ot 31711
-Lime R.... loa lilA.
Rutlttncl.

y.
CHESTII, OH.
OPEN
WED.·FRI.·SAT.

7:30·10:00
Call for Birthday,
Church. Private
Partie• Mon., Tues ..
Thurs .. Sat. 8i
., Sun.

985-3929

or

Ohio£.·l[.ra

F!eal Eltate General

lilY

1n

1M
::.e~
I'Ntltato
c-t,
No.........

'
'·

.... ..
4!11 111t
Au~ ll1d•::'; ...._
""'·
,..1
....'d
owllll.....,of

. n-~=:
.....
ulbot•.

.._It

(IJI, ti,U.tta
f)
_,

CtMt

Automotive &amp; Mlrine
Drtperf• a Comic.
A lAROE SELECTION DF
FABRICS
PICkup a Do--,
FREE E8TIMA1U
(614) 667'·66~,5

GUN SHOOT
RACINE'.
FIRE DEPT.

AVIilable- Fruth Phartnacr.

Kupid' t Nest and Connections
Otting Service of Huntington
jolna togMher at.aring profHea.
For lnformadon write: Kupld'a

Nao, P.O. Boa 519, Ironton,
Ohlo4&amp;138.

MARINES: We'N looking for a
few good men. For mort lnfor·
madon, cell Sergeant Mike Abell
at 304-420.6018 collect.
Major cNdlt cardsl Ragtrdl••
of credh hittory. Also, new
credit c:ard. No one refuted! For
lnformetion cell 1 -311-7331012 Ext. M27&amp;1.

4

Giveaway

EVERY SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Chob

fadiiiV

Male dog to glva.way. Hatf
Btllle. hilt Dachahund. 4 mot.
old. c.. 114·441-3318,

HEAhNG &amp;
COOUNG
•FURNAC!S
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT pUMPS
FREE ESTI.MATES

PH. 992•2772

6

Loat and Fo11nd

LOST: lrown m1r1 with biiCk

· m1ne a I rill. H1nn1n Trace1rea.
Rtwlrd. C1ll 114-288-1818 or
211·1&amp;12.

FOUND: In Foodland l*tl;lng
lot- Ford car key. Call 114-44121::.:7..:.1:._._ _
· --::.
·lcLo.t dov•: 1 mae. le.VI• and 1
mala miQ«&lt; brMd, on , Shon
fourth St. atH In Mldlhport.
Feb. 12. Both huntl"' . doga.
R-Id. Coli &amp;14·812·1311 "'
114-112-8277.

Lol1 -One ahow-llke dog, fewn
coloNel on 0111 Ridge Rold.

304·888·3083.

8

to

u -.

-·....,.--.Mt
buy _ . . , .

C.ll114·37t-2711.

n2-221e

8-1 . . . .frl.

e-a laturd-va

-4ori-.Colll1+-1171.
''

Would like to buy junk Clft,
wrecked Clrt and mo1orcyclet.
Call 814·379·2180 or 3792•23.

3 -4 BR . house with garage ·at
l•tt 1800 1q.ft. OeiHpolilaraa.
Coli 304·171·1805.

f llllliUVIlli'lll
SI'IVII:I~S

DIR~CTDII OP NUR'S ES
Seeking RN with ••cell.nt menagement, llldlf'1hip. llr. nursing
tklllt to overtee nur1ing depart·
ment of a 100 bed INF / ICF
facility . Bachelor degree with
one or I"'))rt .,..,, of experience
d•iied. ~xcellent Mlary &amp;. be·
neflt package. Send resume or
apply in person at Scenic Hill
Nurtlng C.nter-531 Buckridga
Rd .. Glllipolit, Ohio 4&amp;&amp;31. .

EXCAVATION
SUPERINTENDENT
Manegament experience Iuper·
vlting man In the eltcavation
trad11. knowledge of site ufillty
inttlllttion •• well ••
e•eavation cut and fill operationt. &amp; y11r Experienca required . . Pey Negotiable with
expertence. SendretumetoP .O.
Box Cia 136 Gallipolis Daily
Tribuna, 825 Third Ave .. GaMipolit, Ohio 46631 .

m...

Get a free coJogna - Sell Avon.

Make big buckt. Call 614·446·
3351.
.

TECHICIAN · BurlarFire, CCTV altrm tyttem . Local
company . Past elec1rlcal or
talaphona e•perience helpful.
Good pay . Good benefitt, eomplny fthide. Cell 614·448·
9515 .
ALARM

Government Job1. •1e.040·
t69,230 year. Now hirint . Your
araa. 1-80&amp;·887-1000 En. R9805 tar cu,..,t Federal lilt.

Help Wanted

Ladle.: pert time tnd full 4ime
potttlon• aveilebte in your araa.

SHIP REPAIR

Coli 11•·843·&amp;218, &amp;t4· 986·
.171 , 11·· 192· 3036, "' '114·
378·U92.

17·30 year old high
achool gradt fOr Immediate
openings. =~rovide training,
pev and
Itt in following

e2oo.-eaoo. or *400. wUkly.

Hiring

ar111: • Oat turbine • Power
plant. • Mechanical •,HydrauHct
• ElactriC81. Pothlont requlr. aut
of atate relocatkm and tome
- · Call _ . . , ot 1 -800·
282·1384. Mooidov· Thu,.dov 9
AM ·2 PM.
EXCELLENT WAGES fo• - ·
tlmti HHmbly work; elac:tranlc., cnfta. Oth... Info. 1-tl504)
f41·0081 E•c. 2887. 0 - 7
doyo. CAUNOWI
MEDICAl TECHNOLOGIST· ••
MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN- Po"·- · ..,.,.
lng ehlfta. Mutt btl regl.-.cl or
,,..lotry lllglllle. Now ........, ..
welcome. Contact lonnie
Schooltthtr.
MemorIal Hoeplt•l. ~thent. Ohio
41701. 814·183·1111. EOE
AMNTION PLEASE!
Do to • trwnandou1 Ina r11ln
IMMinMI and further aorponri:a
UiMinelon, wt1 heva to offer:
, 1 - flom 111'120.0CJO.flloe

..... f o o t - - t . _......
condltkM'I I· I wulcd.,.. MHI·
s.nt rettNtMnt Plen. For oonfl.

............. caN ...... 7071.
01k for MI. lryont, -MioB-1
PM,M011.a Tue~.

par-·-:

CIET PAID for . - . . , - ·
1100.00
PAS!·
117h. 181 I . Unoolnwoy, N.

AuNII.il-2.

Wanted: mature l1dy to IM In
end care for pn-achool chlkl;.nd
do light houMka.plng In , ••·
change, for room and ~lfd,
nomtnal wage. Prilf•r non·
smolier. M1y have one chllcl .
Reptyto The OeitySentine4, P.O .
Box 729 S , Pomeroy, Ohio
41719
Man and womw~ , tiNCt of brOken
promltH1 Tired of ju" meking 1
living 11 can offer you • job with 1
frM trtinlng, flw day Work
weetc. end In opportunitY .ta
mike whM you are reeHy worth.
Call mil now. Mr. An11M)ny el
11•·992·U88.
AVON · All areaa. Call Marityn
Weaver 304-882-2145 .
Avon Ill aNII, Shlr1.., SpNrt,
3o4.&amp;7S.a2e.

12

Situations
Wanted

Have room tar penon in prive1e

home tar thOM who "Ish "ot to
be kt nursing home. Raatonable,
Colllt4· 2U·IIot.

Need tingle P8f"IOn to aliare
e•peneH In llrge hOUM In city,

Colllt4·441· 0484,

•

Ienior eitlzen. Room end bOerd
for OM t.dy. lpeolel care in my
horne. Aeeeonable. Can 114812.el73.
Wll do houN work In Pom.ero-,
• - · HCollll4812·7131.

Dlllveted

--

illll SLACK ,

"""'1:00 .... to 11:00 .... Coli

·,~•3.5f0

M

Want to buy: Uted fumlture and
antlquas. Will buy entire hout•
hold fumithlng. Martin Wed•
meyer. 814-245-5182.

o·-

Public Sale
&amp; Auctiori

- · •t
•your
Auction
11oM.,.
IVIIlable
oonwntence
and looatlone. M•rtln · Wed•
....,... A - - - 814-241·
1112.

w...

la&amp;l&amp;t,- Chlrry

Complete houtaholds of furniture • an1iquas. Alao wood &amp;
coal haatert. Swain's Furniture
· &amp;: Auction, Third It Olive.
61····8· 3159,

11

ud•,

Over 100 P..O~·
For Selit .....
Today ·

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uted cara. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eattern
A~~e .• Gallipolit. Can 814·446·
2282.

3 kittena. 2 maiM, 1 female. 7
monttit old. Large male cat,
white with dft tpOtt. fMiale
dog loob like Old Yeller. 1141111·3884.

J&amp;L

INSULATION .

Wit'pey c•tK for late model Claan
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc.
Bill Gena Johnton
81 4·446·3672

Want to buy ttlndlng "timber &amp;
pine. Pay TOP DOLLAR. 6 acret·
or more. Exceltent referencat.
Call · larry Strickllnd Logging.
61•· 882·7823.

BashaM hlhllng

IICINE
GUN CLUB

PubliCI Notice

=

CommM'Ciel fumituN

GUN SHOOT
EVERY·
SUNDAY
l:OO .P.M.

Yllllp ol
Miclclleport. Ohio
Fred Hoffuwn. M8¥0I
121 •• 11.. , •• 3111

On~1.1 ....

Rntyllng • .Reupholnering
Ro.-tlol•

-

to wolve eny In·

Of
I'NTOF

Reduce ufe &amp; feat with GoBel&amp;
cap:IUI• &amp; E-'\1'• "water pill•'',

Servln1 Mella 6
Atheno Coualles

2·5-'11 I mo.

'

API!O

UPHOLSIDY

lt. 2, Ceelwlle

tom,

LoVI 11Wlyt,
·n
Wife Huel, c•lldran,
-dc.Udl1tl,
r•"
. lfc r'l
natloMI origin, oex. eo-.
lfllt"'fflldCIIIIdrtn
handlalp. polltlaol eftlllotrorl
'
IIIII friends. 121Lone
K. "A' I ....
or boliofl. 1be Ylloae of
1 I, 22.
• Ita . ,
Middleport li on Equol !m· 1':====::;;;::;:;;~~;~~~_:._.:...._
.....~IIIC)

3 Announi:emilnts

l·lf.'ll-1110.

- N d . loto ot Routo 1,
48181 B. R. 241. Long B~·

:'2.

...,.

-Roofing and gutter work ·
·
- Plumbing 1nd electrical

-Concrete work

WAUI.INS WRCqME
2-5.'11 t mo.

111011 IOIITOW

te.J or lllfflri!Wo 110
111011 illnus ,lnd W8
..__
·
......, YDI n M
Ill
the City of God for I of
a,
, _ ..,_,
thlt lltit In God IIJd
flllhful UfttR the
~Gad_,.._ a~"--'
_,

-:-Addona 1nd remodeling

992-2725

feb • 22 • 1988•

....,.,,

CARPENTER
SERVICE

169 N. 2ncl ''"·
"Midclloport, Ollio

In memory of
Georae McHaffie
Sr. on this his
84th birthday,

...Ia

YOUNG'S

, _ or llngcrlorltloo
In,.. propolllo !Mh/8cl.

._to

c-• ......,nDm b~ao. 1•:

II 11.111111',1

AIIO ,,....,••,..
PH. 992·5682
Of 992 •,7121

tho
right to ~ a~y clr II pro.

Vlllogo Mol.

·

SMALL
WANT ADS

Lot .. _ , thooo ,olcJ
H... Mo•iol onr to ooty
YHS. CAU UIY CAIT£1
or IOI'S IIICTIOIICS

~na.,

' "';f:· OWner ........

(21 22

Mt

10.8-tfc

-MOWS to VMS TAPI

d,!::.'lo':o"f :~: ~
conltluclion regulotlono Ineluded herein Nlltlve to ope·
cill Nqulran11ulo for procUiemlin1 of Lobar. tho • ·

Public Notice

MeiP County, Ohio

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

.. 141 Ht-6550
IESIDINCI PltOII

•bletotho
port, Ohio.Vilogoot
,

•

992-3410

We Cony ,,..,,.,. lupplllt
Poy V our Phone
and Coble Billa .Here.
, III!IIISS PltOII

·cllidii ohatl be m.:~c~:

ON.

DENNY CONGO ·
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

2

~-

far11 E.ll..tlt
Plrtl,I

New locallo111
161 Nar1h S.Con4
Ml•• tpnl, Ohio 45760

446-6939

s

D....,

PlU.ING &amp;

141 11 •ao.ooo.
CGPIII of OrewlnOa, lpocfflaedane .... Ccw:taaut cloau~
nwntlrMY be ablllnecl oro·
8llllnld at 1he oftlco of Floyd

'

F- EIJIIIprnont

•

· ContiOCI No. 14G · -·
Tho ootlmotN conlllruc'
t1on 0011 fvr Cat bwt No.

'

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

,.,., .....

Tho .almoiOd conatruodon 'cloot for Controct No.
14011 n 12,000,
Tho PfOIIOIId worl&lt; In
C4ntrocl No. 14E , conoloto
of lho - r y elect~col
· _,. at 1he w..-otor

.

GUYSVIllE, 0110
614·662-3121
&amp;utherl... ,W. ~~eo.-,
New ........... Hot

I l l • - ' ....... p.r1L
·or 111¥1" I»&gt;

fectlon •v-m Including •
chlorine building, with oil
eppunen.nt work.

Auocllte8,

Garage
11. 124. Pomtn~y Ohio

F6• 1'"'l~7~2:"
61col7
2 Icos

contlioto of eke pr-ratlon
_.._ improvomen11 to the
outlot etruct,..l, ond dloln·

r

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

u• s· • Rl'• 50 EAST

WANT TO lilY MICIID 01
JUIII UIS Oll'IUCII5
-lm D111A11S-

ELECTRICAL WORK CONTRACT NO. 14E
Tho propolld worl&lt; In
Cont10ct .No. 14G Include•
lmpro¥1monu lo the ulotlng jVtll-ter lrNt..,.nt
focillty. In gel\111111, work

$3 2

VI.... Of rOIMioy

71

171-W..,..

oJunk Vard lull-

coJ~~~~~o-:- 14G

FOR JUST

Amat: ...... WMon;
Cllllc/T- ·

••"i:'IS: Dllt.
MlDllt.

,

WASTEWATER
TREATMENT PLANT
lAGOON IMPROVEMENTS

honby app..,... ond ••·
Mr. Ll"'l Wehrung r of·
oept1 1M Pllltlon of lrucoJ. 'flied o IICOncl 1&lt;1 tho motion
1Road and RltaJ. Road to In· oncl upon rollaoH tho_,.
nox ·~ .348 oulta 11 fallowo:
,ot rMI
Into the · 'LI"'I· Wehrung. yeo; John
VI.... of PoiiMGf.
Andlrlon. • : htty lar·
Tho Clorlc of tho Vlloao ot onlcll. ,_, VI1AII111 Vou111

-"'"

I 10....

I Ill. j Ill I 'II

1411-lllo o......

:~o:-~ ~= ~:

a
Caohitr'l Chicle, or IMW of

,.., Irvin.._, yeia,

.

117d;lan...

EXCAYAnNG

rood oloud for

ThMo thNe 131
•COpiaoohoHbemellocllo:t11
Melge County Auditor 121
. Meige County ReCMiior
one! 131 II!Crotary of ~
""-n-y Villllgo Council s- of Ohio.

thla I lith . of ...........,, Pon11101 ~~· m... ihroo .
131 ........ ot tho pa~~~~an eo
11U, tho
tho pad lion of INDO J, Rood anna. proof of.pullllalllon.
ond Rita J, Road t o - a NIOiutlon of YJI.... of Pomoroy clltlll D1nmbiw 21,
_"'....,.of .... - · v - . o f .... _,., t 1187, NMIUIIon of tho
I I
............ - - of lloord ot C
prD,IIIIIttll ot 1M Mllllt c111ac1
Countv 10en1 of
ot 1h11 .VIIIIti "'
IIOMfl,
h!Mroyclltlll ~"11,
Pou•or Via , .......... Olldllad ~
.... CouoiClll ...... to .... Mined by tho Cllrll with tho

··--

~

71---C...,.Irl ~~~~
77--~-Cc:::.,.•• rHo,...

14-luoln-T!Wing
1 1 - - .............
1 1 - - TV a Clll•*
17---·
11"-W- To Do

,._CoHJII4'

f:!:;""~b~: .;:!:!t :::: .W:':!.~

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

prove oncl ~ """' t*l·
·don II pr
illtd, Mr. John .
And11oou modli • motion lo
odopt tho following:
lo It RESOLVED lliot tho

., . _ _ , _ .

12 ..............
'

.,_Co., WV

,

14 . . . . .,...

11__.....,_

t;:::;;;;;;;:::~::;;;:;:;:~~~rr=~==::~==~~~:::;~~~~:;rr~ii~~Fiii~nl====~==~~~~~~~~~~::J
TIIPLE p
...JOGGS
Roger Hyse II

FOR BIDS
ADVERTISEMENT
Sooted by
propoule
will
received
tho Vl ..
go be
of ·
Middleport, Molg1 county,
Ohio In tho office of tho
Moyor, VIRege Hell, Mlddl•
pon. Ohio. until2:30 P.M.,

NOW F.EATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLU

Funhor, 1he obove collo·

I ,I! II I I

Business Services

Public Notlc•

'l.LL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICK EN
YOU CAN EAT

Public Notice

lr I '

(

·TUESDAY NIOHT SPECIAL

Public Notice

] r r 'I

,,_...,.._

Cl,..,ified pages cover the
following telephone e%changes;~

DAY BEFORE PUILICATION
-11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2:00 P,M.'MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M. THURSDAY
- 2 :00P.M. FRIDAY

IUNDAV · P~PER

71---··to&lt;.,.:..·-·--···

f{ 1' I I d

n-T
.....
n-v-a4WO'o

tMI+O Wcatll

Ohio R . - Cocto. The bid
guonilty atml be eltfl!tr In
1he form of 1 lid Guoronty
. loncl for the tuP amount ol
,... bid or Cottiflod ~.

PH. 992·5432 ·
POMEIOY
Featuring Kentuck Frilti .Chicken •

·---....

,_.,.,. ••lpold In 111•..•1

· · &amp;-l'ulolo- a Aulllon

-~·-··

..,, Mah dly ..

"A claalflild :.:artiUm.m pieced In The Dlii¥Sandn• f•·
cop1 - dwlftod dliO&gt;Ioy. luain. . Coni ond logo! notlcu)
w11 e11o appear in the pt, Pl....nt Reoi.ter ,a nd the O.IM-

(

e.

&amp;-HIIIPY,_
11-Uot
.... , _

........ f.,CDn-.tinruna,bro••-.•Y•..,IIIaharged

be.,_

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - It year, but few corn acres are
appears American farmers wlll likely to be enrolled In it."
plant3.5mllllon to4 million more
The margin between 1988 and
acres of ·corn' this year than in 1987looks to be·around 3.5 million
1987, because fewer acres are to 4 million acres, Henderson
expected t6 be put In . the says.
government's feedgraln acreage
Government corn programs
reduction program.
·
are less favorable this , year
The corn program just doesn't because farmers can't enter as .
pay as well as It did last year, much of their corn base acreage
says Dennis Henderson, agricul- In the paid land · diversion, or
tural economist at Ohio State receive as big a payment for that
University. ·
corn as they did .In 1987.
That's particularly true of the
Henderson expects participapaid land diversion program. He tion In the basic 20 percent
predicts that farmers will hold acreage reduction to be about as
17.5 million to 18 million acres out high as last year's 87 percent. He
of corn production under the 1988 , says It Is more profitable for
feedgralns program.
most farmers to participate !han
io rely on·market prices.
That's down from the 21.5
· Under typical Ohio conditions,
million acres diverted to conser· ·
the market price for the 1988com
vallon uses In 1987.
crop needs to be at least ~.50 a
. "Basically, we're looking at a
bushel for a farmer 'to be better
similar program to what we had off financially by planting all of
In 1~87," Henderson says. "The
his acreage and not taking the 20
difference Is that the paid land percent basic reduction· and
diversion was marginally attrac-.
governmept payment
tlve In 1987 and this year It's
And Henderson doesn't expect
marginally unattractive.
a $2.50 corn market next fall. ,
''We also have a 0·9'.1 option this

(Dining Room Onlv.l
.
Served with whlppiMfpotatoes, chicken gravy, colo!
slaw, hot roll. butter and coffee. Sorry, no substitutes except beverage with additional price.
,

. 3-Annaun....,.t•

- :1~::

na.oo
ua.oo

1

polla D..lyTribune, retching owr 18,*_hom•.

2-··-'
1
'
--...

1 -Carolef n......

0.11 WORDe 11· 211 .WORDe 21·-WOIIDS
17.00
11.00
1 OA\'1
M.OO
11.00 .
IDAYI
11.00
• 113.00
IOA\'1
...00
' 121.00
121 , 00
10 DAYI
111.111 .
~0.00
1 MONTH

oold .

More com .expected
to be -planted this year

COMBINATION DINNER. ONLY

RATES

'Ada outaida Meigs; Galli• or MelOn C:ountl" muat be pr..

_,,_tplant--in

NO'IICI!Iot.obv._,_ toni wm be oold In tho con·
an10:00
~.
2llth.
.m., oFebNery
public-will dillon It lo In with no ex211

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

ture Use Vallie (CAUV) to reduce
tlielr taxes. Application forms
Restricted Cbemlcals....More can be picked up at the Auditor's
chemicals are belpg restnctea Office, filled out, and returne\l.by
each year. A restricted che.mlcal March 1. To file the application,
·
Is a chemical that cannot be used there Is a $25.00 fee.
Speaking of Taxes .... Diesel
unless a person has taken and
passed tes Is on the safe use of fuel purchased after Aprll1 will .
pesticides. These tests are given have the federal road tax added
by the · Ohio Department of ti&gt; the bilL To get credit for this
Agriculture: Almost all of the soli you will be required to take this
Insecticides for field corn are off on your 1988 federal Income
·
now 'restricted. Once a person tax return.
Soil Tests and Fenilballon·
becomes certified he Is Issued a
license which entitles him to ·..... Now Is the time to plan your
purchase certain restricted 1988 fer!Uizer purchases. Take
chemicals. Each person must !soli tests first '( every three
take an(! pass a general exam years) , and fertilize accordingly.·
and also must take and pass at To take an accurate soil test take.
least one category test. There are the test 3 Inches deep for
15 different categories. Some bluegrass pastures and at plow
examples of categories are depth (6·8") for everything else.
grain, forage crops, and To get a ,composite sample you
need to take cores from several
livestock.
After a person Is certified areas o~ ihe field. If not using a
(taken and passed the test), he soli probe, be sure to take a
must receive three hours of uniform slice from top to bottom.
training once every three years A field that was In corn last year,
to maintain his certification. be sure to stay out of the corn row
Recertification training wl.ll be when taking the sample. For
given on Thursday, February 25, , more efficient use of fertilizer, It
atlO: 00 a .m. and repeated at 7: 00 is recommended .to apply some
p.m.
starter fertilizer at the · time of
We also will give training on planting for corn. The fertilizer
the safe use of chemicals to placement should be at least 2
persons so that they can !liOre · Inches over and 2 Inches below
easily pass the · examinations. the seed.
This training will be given on
On hillsides, It may be wise to
Thursday, March 3rd at 10:00 place fertilizer 3 Inches or more
a.m. and repeated at 7: 00 p: m. to preven.t salt Injury. The lotlll
Examinations will be given on amount of salts (N and K'O)
Monday, March 14.
should not exceed 100 pounds per
If you currently have a license acre for corn . People who are
and II expires In 1988 and you hauling manure back on the
wish to maintain the license, you fields should allow.or give credit
must attend one of the meetings ior the nutrient vaiue In the
on February 2~th. Please call our manure. For dairy operations,
office at 992·6696 to register for thls ·can be quite extensive. :
this meeting. If you wish to
1988 Com and Soybean Updaobtain your li~ense for the first , te .... Monday, February 29th,
time, It would be wise for you to from 9: 45 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (free
attend one of the sessions .on lunch), at the Athens County
March 3rd. Reservations are Extension Office. The program
needed for this meel!ng also, due Includes efficient fertilizer reto limited space. Call us at commendations, herbicide up992·6696 to register to-attend this date, Johnsongrass control, tilmeeting. ·
lage practices, and the 1988 grain
program. Reservations are
Taxes.... Property owners with needed. Call us at 992·6696 orthe
30 or more acres may be eligible Athens County Extension Office
·
to apply for a Current Agrlctil- · at 593-8555.
John C. Rice

• pioymont Opponunlty Em· I·

--------:--:------------t..,.
....... eo.. w.t
l•acud, Pcw••ov. OhiD.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

Restricted ·chemicals
·. iilcrease each year

The swimming pool session,
originally schedUled for Feb. 24
Is now set for the afternoon of
Feb. 25.
State Jaw requires that pestl·
clde applicators be certified and
either attend approved training
every three years or retake the '
certification exam.
Training sessions update par·
tlclpants on safety, envltonfllental concerns, labels, equipment
calibration, pest Identification,
and suggested pest control
measures.
Ohio State University special·
lsts and experienced pesticide
applicators conduct the training.
Public Notice

MOncl8y. February 22, 1988

Mei@S County Agent's Corner

.

:::; • COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - • turn brown. You can reduce the
Warm temperatures on tbelr: : Winter weather, and the salt used effect of salt damage by keeping · tender bark facing the sun
: • to fight It, can damage your plants well watered.
followed suddenly by extremely
~· · ·lllants, but there's still time to ·
Consider using alternative de- , cold temperatures can cause the
•· jlrotect them.
leers on walks and driveways bark to spUt. Wrap the trunks
: • Elton· Smith, Extension lands- neat plants, such as sand, with a tree wrap available from
cape horticulturist at Ohio State sawdust and cinders. Or use a .garden stores.
University. has this advice: .
mixture containing one of these
-Sun, low temperatures and
-Common salts used as de- and salt.
'
wind cause evergreens to lose
Icers are sodium chloride, calEvergreens near roads are moisture In winter. Since the
cium chloride and garden fertll- easily dll1flaged by salt-laden ground ' Is frozen, ' tbe plants
tzers. De-Icers shouldn't be mist. Protect small evergreens caMot draw water from the soli.
repeatedly spread around plants. with burlap, canvas or dark· Leaves tum brown and may fall.
Snow treated with these male· colored plastic. The plants need
This Is a serious problem with
rials shouldn't be piled on or near some sunllght so avoid com· certain hollies, rhododendron
plan.ts. ,
pletely covering their tops with and azaleas. To reduce this
Lawns damaged by salt·laden material:
Injury, spray the plant with an
snow or run-off will have dead
-Some trees are susceptible to anti:c!esiccant available , from
spots circled by yellow grass . sun-scald, · Including those garden stores. The spray fortns a
Salt damage to plants may not be planted last fall or during a thaw thin film on the foliage to help
visible until summer. when the this winter and those planted keep the wind and sun from
soil dries and concentrates. the where daytime heat Is high, such drying the leaves out
salt. Then plants may wilt and as beside a sun-reflecting wall.
-There's still time to apply a
mulch. A mulch will keep newly
planted shrubs, and shallow·
rooted plants such as perennials
and strawberries, from heaving
out of the ground during alternate · periods of freezing and
thawing.
Apply the mulch when the soli
Is frozen. This will keep the soli
RIO GRANDE; - Keeping and timber Industry, accounting I ,
cold, reducing · the threat of
expanding secondary tim)ler In· 5.2 percent ol all manufacturlhg heaving.
·
dustries In Ohio Is the most jobs In the state, he said.
Don't use mulches that pack
A member of the extension down and mold. Use materials
logical means of encouraging
growth In the business, an Ohio service since , 1984, Bratkovlch
Cooperative Extension Service edits a newsletter on the forest
Industry.
staff member has learned.
Attending the meeting were
Stephen M. Bratkovich of Jack·
. son said furniture manufactur· . Dwight Leedy and Paula Doh- .
By United Press lntematlonal
- · ers are moving their Industries bins, Ohio Technology Transfer
A system of guidelines to
· ·from the north to the south and Organization; Beverly Crabtree,
ensure
compatible and efficient
find Ohio lacking In terms of Kevin Kelly, Sanford Lane, Don
land use must be linked to
Plymale, William Medley, Dr.
Incentives.
economic
development, says DoBratkovlch said these were Ray Boggs and Harold Walker of
nald Buckley, executive director
some of the results of a telephone Rio Grande College/Community
of
the Clermont County Planning
survey he did In 1984 to determine College; Fred Zirkle and Dave
Commission.
·
why Ohio, one of the nation's top Wright, Southern Ohio Coal Co.;
U
not.
a
community
will suffer,
timber·produclng states, Is not Bob Chapman, Jackson, and
he
says.
benefl ttlng from wood Walter Stowers, Gallipolis, of the
The center of Clermont County
Ohio Bureau of Employment
manufacturing.
Is
22 miles from downtown
Bratkovlch, noting the percep- .services; Jay Caldwell and John
Cincinnati.
The counly's popula. tlon that the region has few Thomas, Federal Mogul Corp.;
tion
Is
growing.
But 80 percent of
'· skilled laborers In the furniture Gallipolis Municipal Judge Jo·
the county's population lives In
· Industry, commended the Rio seph L. · Cain; Sam Crawford,
unincorporated areas, which
Grande Community College Southern District Extension Of·
.
brings up an array of develop·
School of Technology for Imple- flee; Lynn Smith, WJEH·WYPC
ment
and land·use questions.
menting the Fine Woodworking Radio;
Buckley
'will speak about local
Scott Hinsch Jr. and Bob
Technology Program, which will
planning
and zoning at the
llennesy, Commercial &amp; Savings
begin at Rio Grande this fall.
Jennifer
M.
' McSweeney Land
·.
He said Implementation of the Bank; Susan Jennings, Holzer
Use
Planning
Course, Mar. 10-11
program would go a long way Clinic; Tom Childs, Holzer Medl·
at
Mohican
State
Park Lodge In
toward answering a need per· cal Center; Bob La,m bert and
Perrysville.
celved nationally by the wood John: Lambert, Jackson. Alum!·
The course helps township
num Corp.; Mike Lleving, The
products Industry.
trustees, county commissioners,
Bratkovlch revealed his find- Peoples Bank; Ronald McDade,
mayors,
zoning commission
Ings at the Feb. 2 m~ting of the Columbus Southern Power Co.;
members
and
local admlnlstra·
Ohio Valley Management Associ· Robert Muller, French City Tool;
tors
with·
.
their
land-use
atlon at the Rhodes Student . Charlie Powell, Appalachian
decisions.
Center at Rio Grande College· Power Co.; John E. Smith, U.S.
It's produced by the Ohio
/ Community College.
· Marine Corp.; Dana Waldo,
Department
of Natural Resour·
In southern Ohio - where 33 Columbus Southern Power; and •
ces,
Ohio
State
University School
percent of the state's 7.1 million Taella Woolfolk, Procurement
of
Natural
Resources
and the
Outreach Center .
acres of forestland Is based Cooperative
Extension
Ohio
The Ohio Valley Management
there are few furniture plants.
Service.
Association
Is an Informal organdimension mills, dry kilns and
"A planned economic developother related Industries. Ttie Ization of business leaders In the
ment
that's profitable on paper
majority are located In northern Rio Grande Community College
must
also have an acceptable
Ohio or the Cincinnati area, district. The association meets
land-use
plan," Buckley says.
on ·the first Tuesday of each
Bratkovlch said.
certain limitations
Because
month, October througll May.
Overall, Ohio ranks high In the
and commitments exist If devel·
opment Is to occur In a commun·
tty, Buckley says·he will impress
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UPI) produced a crop In 1988, Hender· upon course participants the
Federal farm programs will lead son says.
need for care!ul land-use
.to a reduction In this year's what
That calculation Is tricky .
planning.
harvest, with an Ohio State
"The summer fallow land
"Communities that don't plan
economist predicting up to 24 certainly Is hard to get a handle can suffer from too much traffic
million acres nationally could be on," Henderson says. "But In my 'or an Inadequate sewage or
Idled.
view, the 0-92 program will water system," Buckley says.
The federal government paid attract a very large share of that "It's the responsibility of com·
farmers to Idle about 20.5 million
land. There's nothing butgalnfor munlty leaders to judge the
acres of wheat land In 1987. anyone with base acres for benefits and hazards of
Dennis Henderson projects the summer fallow wl)eat."
development." .
reduction this year could be as
The typical wheat producer In
· Land·lise legislation Is one way
high as 24 million acres.
·
the Eastern cornbell would need that government weighs !lie
to expect a market price exceed· Impacts of development, says
But don't bet on that number.
He says wheat acreage Is hard to lng $3.20 ·a bushel to · justify
predict because ofthls year's 0-92 staying out of the program.
option.
Henderson says.
Prices for the 1988 crop are
The 0.92, In essence, allows
farmers to receive 92 percent of expected to average In the $2.50
the government deficiency pay- to $3 range.
ment for which they are eligible .
''I tend to think participation In
under the wheat program, for
this year's program will slightly
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) _ .
planting as few as zero acres of exceed 1987 levels," Henqerson There's been a change In the Feb.
wheat. And In some parts of the says. "With the kind of prices 24-25 pesticide applicator train·
·• country that could be a good deal.
we're projecting for 1988, the lng program at Ohto State
On the High Plains and In .farmer's decision to participate University.
· western states much of the In the program Is going to be
Anyone wha applies pesticides
wheat Js produced In a summer closer than last year.
10 swimming pools should now
fallow program - the land Is
"However, I think when the attend the Feb. 25 afternoon
Idled every other year to collect final analysis Is In, we're going to session, according to David R.
moisture for the following year's see that most wheat growers are Miskell, associate Extension
crop.
not willing to take the risk of not · leader fo,r agricultural industry.
That ldhi land may be enrolled
being In the program."
The Feb. 24-25 pesticide train·
tn the 0·92 program. In states
Sign up for the wheat program lng school will be held at the ·
such as Ohio, where the land can
begins Feb. 16. The deadline Is Fawcett Center for Tomorrow on
be planted every year and
March 11 for farmers who want Olentangy River Road. ·T he ses.
summer fallow ·methods are not
to take advantage of the 0·92 slon Is primarily for new appllcaneeded, the 0·92 option will not option. Farmers who sign up for tors but anyone who needs
bring the producer as much
the regular · acreage reduction additional credit for recertifica•
Income as the regular acreage
program have until April15.
tlon may also attend.
reduction program will.
Other than the 092, there's nota
The trick to figuring out how
whole lot of difference between
Miskell says Wednesday, Feb.
much land will be kept out of
the 1988 and 1987 wheat pro· 24 Is for pesticides used , In
wheat ,production this year Is
grams. Here's a breakdown of . agronomic crop, home pest con·
calculating how much of the
the program, With per-bushel troland animal treatments. The
I d that Is
f II
figures
on the second, third and Feb. 25 session Is for hortlcultusummer a ow an
enrolled In the 0·92 would have
fourth lines:
· raJ and forestry pesticides.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~upload

614-ttl-1169

m-.

Paof ulanaltMdkMIIend~

........................
,...,..._fat.

1.,... ·r

........ - - ...... « •••

....._..,..Wifkauallig

114-7Q.ZI88 -

"''*•••

n "•

1:00 ,..

.

�- _,

-· ...

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

..

..

~

..

~....

•

•

LAFF·A·DAY

...

---·

111

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

uo "" your
.lCoM
naurai\J;I!
Miller- lftturlnca.
304 -112-2141. Al1a: auto.

HOUMhold Goocle

w-.,...___

GOOD UIID APPUANC!I

ran.... lkan• Appllenoee.
._..
C - M -. 114-441-7311.

Upplr Rlwor Rd. -

18 W1nted to Do

LAYNE'I 'URNITURE

. . .,2·.-·-·..... _ _ _

14 Mlec. iierchllftdiM
- . . . - - . . 8 0. ....... • 10, _ , - -

•Hito•III. T-MOonol

Hou....,.ing Service- Don't

- - CaMUo. 114-371·2180 e&lt;
371-2112. onydmo.
WiN cert~ for MIMfy .,..-.on on
tholr homo. Prof• nlflhu. Coli

114-371·2841.

....

,.~.-..,.....;,..,;;..._;_

.~,
.

..

Mother af 3 year old wil Mby ...
in my home. Rt. 2. Leon .,..,

.. .
r..
.

....-~

'

f lll. tll WI

'

.. '~"· R - fZZI to
'3.7 1. Lo. . . Ul to f121.
INnOitoo UOI and .. to .411.
WOod-up
·tofZIIi
to
'711.
Oook W·8
e100
f371.
Hutohoo •400 ond up. 8101k
Ndl Complete W•ft'18ttr1Mft
U81ond up to Uti. 9obybodo
e110. Mlttrwteearbo•IIP'Inll•
ful or twtn eea. firm ,.,., eiid
fll. 0&amp;-. f221. King
e310. 4 ctrawe; ct..t tl8 . Gun
coblnoto 8 'un. Gel or electric
._u7 . 9oby-f31 • e41. Bod tn,... ezo.
uo • King !Torno no. aooc1
........., o f - . . , . oulteo.

-

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

lNG CO. recqm,...,.., that you
do bueineu with pt10ple yau
know. ar.td NOT to 'send mon.y

thro:uth the mail until you hwe
inv.-tig.ted theoffering.

. 23

Professional
Services

Fur\titure retinithing end nplir,
qutllty work end reuoneble
~~:,- . ~,.. lt1im8tel, 304·875·

31 :

l

•

·

48R. , flrepiKe. fullb•.,ent . 3
mi. ,10. of Gelllpollt. 128,900.
Ceii.Deys-114-448-1118, after

5:00· 440·1244.
FOR SALE OR RENT: 3 IR,
houH with tttliched llniSI•
cent'rll tir-NO PETS· Depoeit •
ref..-.nce raquired. 39 Chilicotbo Rd. CoU 114 ·441· ~183
9·1 doily.
3 EiR., 11h: beth. fonnal OA, brick
firepiK:e. Bllevll dec*. Brick end
frame ranch ,IDCtted It end of
quiet driwl. One plut 1er1.
Gird..-. IPICII· City tchoola.
Heet pump-centrll elr. Outdoor
ltortge trtll. Cell 114-...,19817:

33

44

farm a for Sale

30 acrtl f1n11: Mottty tll.ble.
~~~Rio Grande. Pone&amp;.. bema.
good homo. Coli 814-241·
917e.
.......
t.
3•• ·4 ocroo: outbuUcHf'tOI. pond, Approa. 20
KrMtiUebte, countyweter, Ford
tractor. K~ CI'Mk JCIH)olt.
135,000, Neg. C.H 11•-3881704.
18 acrN:. 1 -m. . IDUihon 218-

Buaineaa
Building&amp;

~od 4

mlloo- of Golllpo-

lillodti tnd dam onw.v. . ......
Bldg. 110•100. 1.000 oq fl..,
.81 ...... oM..-bulldlng1111

high. For 1. . . ur ..... 304-178-

1332.

11nPon1v-1.-.. ..
Md. 41100. 1171c-.H-·
z- . noot:· CoM
114--2101 .

Rtnt-Siie: SlctudM country
home. good hunting. 8 mil•
from lockt &amp; Oem. •29,900.
Glenwood. W.Va. C.III14-44129U.

......,.c •

50 tcru. newer hou11, countv
wetIf •
phone hoc*'ld
up. ThomPton Rd. 1315.000 or
best oft•. C..ll814-« l-8980.
2 bedroom, 2 betht, 2 c•
g••ae. level lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool. Ntllhe. cto11
to Mligt High. Clll 814-992·
3254.

- -- -- - - - - -lcRu.th:;: cldtr ho me with Olk
floort, two-way flrlpiiCI, Pellt
Colonial window•. custom
woodwork. atudy, 3000 plus aq.
ft . approx. 8 wooded ecret in
Sunon Twp. Countryside. Ap.
praised 1t •112.000. Sell fOr
tn.ooo. Coli 514-949·2630.

4 bedroom, fireplace. full flnit hed b1esement, z ctr u••ge,
hot wettr hett tnd wood burner.
On 5 wooded eclea at Tuppert
Pltina. Ohio. Ctll 814-8876 2 05 after 8 :00 pm.

Gov 't Siezed Home• from
81 .00. !U repeir) Foreelotur"
•nd Tex deltnquent hom11. For
eurrent repo lilt Cell (refundable)
1· 618-469-3548 Ext. H 1822.
24 houri .

Priced tu sell te1t. owner moving
out of t tate. 3 bedroo m houM
w ith 7 •eras in Laurel Clift.
Oia~.w11htr . refrigerttor. ltove.
we·ihir, dryer included. C.ll
6 14-992-8310 efter 8:00pm.
Home for Hie. Gtllipolit Ferry, 4
bedrooms. four ear g•rtgt,
t38,500.00. 304-576·6684 .
HouM on ,..in St reet, 2 bed·
rooms. b1th, large llvingroom,
diningroom, kitchen. one outbuild ing, 3 04 -67 6- 1116 or
676· 8818.

32 Mobile Homes

1970 12x70 .3 BR ., 1 &amp; 1.-l
bttht. gat heat. EX1r1 nice
through out. •&amp;900. Cell 814446·0176.
1987 14K70 Ftirmont . All
electrie-hett pump . Fumithed.
Coli 514-245-6294.
New 1988 Country Ville.
14x72, all tlectrle, tat up on
riverfront lat. 114-992-3348
efttr fip.m.
1989 12xll mobile ·home in
Pomeroy. 1 bedroom . ttovt,

refrlo-ator and w•llhlr. 82100.

Call 113·213-8122.
19.. 10d0 Eleono HDUII
Trelllf with ••Pindo. New furnKe. nM hot weter Unk, fully
cerpeted. furnllhed. porch and
window awnlftlt. Excellt~nt con-

dition. Allor 1 '00 114·H2·
710~. 114-182-8072 ·~·

1 H3 lctt.ths 14xl0
.......c,·;·
home. 2 Wdroon'l. "'":~"·~ ~~~

can 114-112·1303

36 Lots

&amp;.

Acreage

1971, 12d0 - · A-1 oh-.
fumllhed except liwlngroom. AW
In kttchen. welh.- end dryer.
C•ll814-141-2113
ttve.

•fl•

1173 ToronMo 12xeo. 2
llod room mol&gt;llo homo. portloll¥
turnlthed. e3.100.00. 304411-11101 1111« 1:00.
1181 two blcfroom

· 1b70
. ... . . . 31121:00.

pro.,.,.,

-------

· 14•80,
111i · C~
" 'furniiMd
-OUhfJI 1819
SNI''"*'·· JCM.t,.._a,•.
1HI 12xll IUt•w I d ....
oond. KJtDMft ..............

a-c.
·-

a porahlt, •*7t.'··· •
· 304-111-72

41

Home• for Rent

Nicety tumilhed amlll house.
Aduha only. Aaf. '*IUirlld. No
- · Colll14-441-0~38.
3 BR. houNfor'rentorrentwtth
option to buy- on 141 . *310 e

mo. Oop. t. rot, roquirod. Call

.,4-448-

304-etl-e.aue-d~• ·
1280 ...... t. wefkdoy~

2 or 3 BR . home in city. No peta.
R1f. required. Clll 814-4481118.
3 BA ., living room, kltch.,-. &amp;
both, f225 ... t. f110 dop. Call
814-445-1314.

3 BR.. fvll boaomont. copan.
centre! air. No pete. e271a mo.
pluo dopoolt. Call 814·448·
010&amp;.
2 bedroom houM. Nice. Fully
carpeted,

lood

814-892·1 18.

IDCIIion.

c.•

Ver; nice, recently NIIMCMIICI.
....w cerpet. 2 adroom on
Uncoln Heigh... •225. with
ditcopm. Security depcllit - r•

qulrod. Coli 814·H2·1013.

Smell hOUM. Jeffereon Ave,
reference .1nd depollt, phone
304-876-1928.
Avelllble March 1ttNew Haven.
nice ct.n J bedroom houH.
biMmtnt. gtrege, woodbumer,
no
•100. 00 depotlt
en .oo month. 304-882 3202 or 882· 2882.

gett,

- -- - - - - 8
Nlee 3 btdroom home, bu•

m.n:. gtrlga. 304-171-3030 or
671·3431 .

.

\

hook-up. ww c..-pM,

newty
polno.d. · Rogoncy, Inc.
Apto. CaM 3()4.871-7738 or
17&amp;.&amp;104.

doll-. _ ....

, ... -

Cu-

~.

UI.OO, -Caun\y. Goltlpqlit, Ohio • oth• a,... within
NIIDn,. our dl~ . 304811·3441.

v...

2 7 . - - CaM
114-HI-7111.

Cunlt Math~• 211nd'ITV. tolld
wood. remate contro,l, ·cable

raody.
3118.

CAPTAIN EASY

UIO .OO. 304· 171·

I~

A

GE portabl' dl-o-. formica lot&gt;· he. Condition. Uko
N-. uoo. 304·1711-1111.

,,.

11me •• calh with
3 MAll

H~nge fumilhed.
Beeutlful river view. No city
llllll. Fotter't MobUt Ham•
Pork. Coli 514-441·1802.

2 SR ., water,

448·8561.

2 BR houH wtth ttove •
retrlgeretor. UZI mo. depotft
required. Vinton, OH Coli 814388-8121 .
2 BA . mobile home tutty fur·
niahld. Etttern Ave. Wttlt' end
MWII' peid. •221. Adutta only.
No pitt. Rafer_.CII 6 O.I)Ottt
raquiNCI. Ctl1814-448· 31?1 .
N..r Wltartoo. 2 BR . 1125 I
mo. Acfuht. O.rQn tpot. Ref. •
dop. Call 814·441· 7784 or

543-2544.

2 lr. Mobile Home far nnt an
privllte tot. Adultl onty. Ref, •
dop. No - · CaH .14-357·
7743,
2 bedroom mobile home; In

Mlddl-. Ohio. R ond llocu~IY -lrod.
3~- 182-3207. or 304· 773·
8024.

~

./

Braok.ide API!rtmentl: 1 BR.
ll*'tm-.n with '-a• kltchlft
and laundry room whh welherm-,.r hookup. AH electric. Cell
114-441-1832.

(Formally Parson' • Fumhure)
1411 Elltern Ave.
LMna room tultet from n796
up, llitdroom Utet t489.95 &amp; .

3 pc. living room 1ulte. Excel.

cond. •171. Cell 114-441•
2310.
LMng room tuiie. Couch. 2

chain. coHH IMie. 2 endttbtll.

Brown IR color with Qortl
dooiQn. 1 yoar ole!· tz&amp;O. 010.

114·892-7431 .

'

Cottlge efficiency, tot1l eiectrtc. refrig. .tor. ttova, nice.
HUO epproved. 2216 Mt. Ver. non Aw.• Pl . Pl....nt. &amp;14·

Pomeroy. Hours: Mon .. Tuee .•
and Wid. 10:oo • . m.·I:OOp.m..
Sun. 1:00 p.m.-1 :00· p.m. By
chtlnce or lppolnlment. Auu
Moore. 114·992·2521.

2 bedroom ept , tOr rent. Stow

end retrigerttor ere tumiahtd.
CerpatN. Nice Hning, C.ll
814-tl2·3711 E.O.H.
L..uretend Apertmenta, George
St., Ntw Haven. W.Va. 2
bedroom1. c:etpeted. •• electric,
for more Information. c.. 304882·3718.

63
Antique~,

Antiques
buy or

..at.

Riverine

54 Misc. Merchandise
C.ll•h•n '• Uied Tire Shop. Over
1.000tirn,tizet12. 13. 14,1&amp;.
11, 11.6. 8 miiM out Rt. 218.
Coli 8~ 4 - 251-82&amp;1 .

SWIMMING POOLS · f919
New left over 1987 , Model
Poole. Hugh 1&amp;•24 h . awlm
.,.,, 4 ft . deep. lncludet d~~ek •
fence, filter • Wlrrtlnty. lnltllll·
tlon • finenclng evellablt. Cell
24 hrs.: 1-800·341-0941.
81g 3 BR. farm homn bulh on
your lot. 115,996 and up. c.n
1-114-888-7311 .

- · phono.304-871· 13. ..
46

SH It 241 relr Jtckeon Pikt.

room, fumlthlld,

very CINI'I, no

Elvil coiiiiCtlon for ule. •1100.

Furniahed Rooms

WHitty, monthty retu, utilltl•
pekl. Cooking l.clfti•- Downtown loeation. S.nlora wei·
come. Pllrk Central Hotel. Celt
514-445·0711.
.

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork,
Rou.. 33, Nol'lh of Pom.-cy.
A-1 troll••· Call ' 114·112·
7479.
Speae tor amd trailan. All
hook· upt. C.bfe. Al.olfffidency
room•. .at lftd cable. Mleon.

W.Vo. Coll304-773-1111 .

51 Houaehold Good•
~ SWAIN

AUCTION t. FURNITURE 82
Olivo St., Goll'-,
NEW- 5 pc, wood FOUP- f381.
IMng room-- f181·tltl.
lunk---...f111.
F u l l - - ··ttarttng - til. Recllner't

56 Building Suppliea

78

BuikHng Mtttrillt
Blodt, brick, MWer plpee. window•. Hntelt, etc . Claud• Winten, Rio Orende. 0 . Ctll 11424&amp;·6121.

Uood t. .-lh lnnomlooiono.
Uood ... 1ntomo1y 11-"&lt;1

MEMBERSHIP for Sel•to Royal
Otk Retort Club on Rt. 7 n•r
Pomoruy: Security prlvUogos.
Indoor pool. camping. Hthlng.
toelll ICIJyitlll, oth1r lldvan'lllgeel BIG SAVINGS before
Merch 1ft, Cell Collttc:t-IU·288·1837.
&amp;a. . electric typewrit•r. Excel.

cond. f80. Call 814-441·1743.

2 htndmedt afgh1n1. Cell 4488141 Mondty thru Friel., beIWHn 8 :00 tm • 4:30pm.
Mlud h•d Vfood tlebt. 112 pit'

bundle. Containing approx. 1 Va
ton. FOB . Ohk) Pllltt Co.
Pom.,-oi&lt;. Ohio. 014-H2·1411.

Firewood for ule. e31. lerge

pickUp lood. All hllnlwood.
Dollvo&lt;od, Coli 514-742·2'\11.

Ooll. ioll top dook, omoll. R•
mtngton 870 Wingmaltlr. 20
p. thotgun. like new. 1271
ooch. Coli 814-141·2801 .
For Slit: Fa,uton Trector,l ft.
luoh Hog. 178 Hondo, 784
Motorcyclt. Cell 114-742 2411,

%x4'd'-*13.K each.
3- v.x4 ·.a' L..u• ptywoociU .I &amp; -.
4-Aough HW elder boardt
'14• 12" •72"·2 for fi.OO .
5-No.Z-8"..,.-uca bam eldlng v·groved·38C lin. ft.
1-Colonlel beaded muonite
lip ~ding- f23 oq .. 20 .q. lUll
1Hto· f18 oq. "
7 -7 / 1 &amp;•4•8 prefinlthed
slete gray or almond aldingt13.98 •Kh.
1-M•aontt. rock or brick
unflnlthlld penellng 'l.x4x8-

e&amp;.91-.
•
8-A.Ihlba florelt tnd Ieee
~J~:nellng 'Ax4x8-e7.95 and
t8.8 1 -.
.
'
10-~x4x8 AI' wood penellng
oak end pine 1nd birch- t11. H
toU8.1 1 - .
1 1 -Bath room paneling.
glelld tile end amDOih p.~~nem­
'1.11 IG t12.H
12 -Whlta 48"x22 " bath
111 ar--•111.81.
13-Chlnt MCt mlfble round
end OVIII vaftlty bowlt· whl.. end
coiOr-11 8 .91.
~
'·
14-Colar commodet•41 .111 . White commodett39.11 . •
15-Color pecll•tel llvetoriM••s.BI, 2 for e1oo.
1 &amp;·White -

I'"'-·Colll14-441-

30· 1 pc, palt lemon co'or
commodea, reg .•e298.85, now
f128.11 ..
31·1ntlrlor prehung daora.
flnlthld end unflnt.hld. Choloe
...... fzt .81oooh.
32·E.-r otoo1 lnoulao.d
ponol -.ng doors·•n.N
ondfN.IIoooh.
33·AII typoo of ond
Window trim. FlniMed and un.
flntehld. PIMIIC end WOOd·
f1.00 to t3.00 pr.pc.
PENN'S WAREHOUSE
Woi-.Ohlo
11 4-384·3141
RHdy mix oonara and el

concroto oupolloo. CoM uo Volloy
B - COrnont ond Supplloo.
304·773·1214.
·

I~ I' , 1111 I

61

Farm Equipmant

CROSS • SONS
U.S: 38 Woot, Jock-. Ohio.
114-211·.8411 .
Mooooy
N- Holland.
· Over
luoh Hog loiN t. 40 UHd trKtort to choole from
a compl... line of nftll • ulld
aqulp'mant. Ltrgut Mlectlon In
S.E. Ohio.

Fo.,.-.

410 Int. tractor w / plowt, cultl·
Vltora, grader blade. mowing

mochlno t. bol•. e4710. eon
814-211-1122.
Heuton 1400 round baler,
f1.211. 1981 11ft. h...., duty
otock troller. eun. CaM 814·
210·1122.
Gravely tractor. E'-tric ltlrt, a
opd. With rotory plow, culllwtor

UHd Nbultt r r I I eel trlinaml•·
.
1185 Dod&amp;o Doytono Turllo Z·l . ....... Calll14-441-3834.
opood. 14,000 mlloo. lluo ond
tUver. Trenlf. .blll OUitom wernnty. Lolcled. Muat . . to

._......E--c
CoM 814·742·21.7 1 .. ,, 4-'
742·2143. D. W-.

1181EoconLI1otlonW-. I
1'1. ....
Pl.
-luggogo34,000
.............
,..
- · 814-141·2410.
1982 Foid M-ng. Good

1177 Monte Carlo. Swt¥11
-.litton. CaM
114--4141.
.

- . . llood

1181 Ford baort ltetion
W-. No ruot. tnno. ond llnol

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT446-1777
JwlthPfOohllfi.U81whllothoy
Pt. hltoh. - · - . . . . -

841-2111.

loot. .

•

AC Dtok Honaw. Madel 2311 .
11 f t . -· CaHI14-812·1371 .

--.. -.Alltilt-

Me- Fo..-. 180 . , _,

.... - - · Pl.

d . . t - hyd- - ·
........ Holland273

Zz37P
plcllup. C., 114-141~-Nov--­
Forrnoll ~ Mfer iolo. Roanulne In 14. Good oonclhlon,
Call 114-111-1815.

-=

Mine liP II .,ollne u• 41 H.P.
1-llnoJ. P.T.O.; puloy;
rornoto hyd.; fOir
now
poln~
814· 841·2113

no-.

evenings.

I ollooo _... 1872 Ford four
wh..r d - plcll .,. :104·1712180.
lnternatlonell 1 010 trlnder
-bind. ·For!~·N- Holond
417rollo.
hOI
... bor hoy
-

Hollind707 " " - horwo-

.... 304-273-4211.

62 W1nted to Buy
'

71 Fonl Falnnant nation wqen

with oir, E.c. Cond. Coli 304-

773-1101 oft• I .
::-:-::~~.....:.:..____ 4
IOPanllacSIIMird, 73,000oct.
mllll. IIUtOmltlc. pb. p., •C.
-.I. 12.000. :J04.1B2·2183.
1 88lM-ng GT.Iow mlloogo.
•••- .00. 304·811-3834.
1818 Chry... Now

Pan.-

mMhlftiCal COnd.uc WOfk aa,

fZZO.OO. 3()4.871-4431 1:00,
1812 Pontiac Fltoblnl, ch.,_l,
~. AM-FM
till, cruiM

=-

· oir - · . 4 . -.00.
304-111-2741,

-.- """'·AC, PI,

....

1 171 Plymouth D..,.r, 71.000
mlloo, UOO .OO. 114-3877717.
.
72

Trucka

for

1. .7 Font R - I . I

.,.0-

~--ofhoyfor­

Colll14·441-t811'
0&lt;448-40:141.

30o boloo o f - h.,, 41.21
- · JOObolooof-.•1.10
· Col 114-381-1413 or

.'

Rooflng.rornoclolne.-o.
·· drywoll.
•
plumbing.
Call Go,Ypolritlng.
014-)Q.
8842.
.

·...,'

RON'S Tetevltlon len,lce.
Hou• oaa. an RCA, OUUIIr.
OE. · - In Zonllh. Col

AND WINTHROP

304-171-231t or 814-441·
2414.

c:;ct.j'T YOLJ EiET TII&lt;ED OF

Potty Troo T - - 1 . Call304-871-1331 .
Rowy or ooblo -

PEOPLE ASI&lt;INC:i 'IOLJ WHAT

'10J ~NT lOBE WHEN
'lOLl 6RON UP"?

difllne.

Moot-oom~-t1oy.

cu..--·

opd ..

-

-

2142.

OF.7HE~;

.

THEY .c:ION'T STJO&lt;. .·
· ARCLJND 1..0Na

.

AFTeR 71-IA.T.

Pump Nl• .... """""· 30481!1-3102

--~-- ........
82

.-.

Plumbing
• Heating
CARTER'S PWMIIN(J
AND HEATING

ea..,-.........

CAN 1 BORRY
A CUP CYF SUGAR,

Go-Ohio .
Phone 814-446-- or 114446-4477

WHY, SHORE,
SAMANTHY

MIZ SMITH?

WHAT ARE YE
FIXIN' TO MAKE,
HONeY J

NOTHIN'· ·I'M JEST

L'ARNIN' HOW TO

BORRY FER· WIE~
[ GIT HITCHED

84

&amp;.

Electrical
Refrloeratlon

::

j ,

... '•
,,

. Oillor.l.oor ....... -

. ...
.
811 · General Hauling

THE GRIZZWELLS®

111. .... 414 ..... - .

--~"'-·

,..... ,-T-..... . --.
...

·--000-.Good
- C d . 1 4 - - -.

LIIell-. ......
..........
- - ·..4

-7741. · noo.

2122

..

'' .

•
JIJ_BoMot. _ _

.

..

.'

=---~r wo!lo: "'· 114= .. '''

...

-. ......................
·-·~·Col If........,..

1187,....Ttu&amp;T•.-I,

-•lt.MOOO,

114-446.

, ... _ . 214. .........

. .," ,,
.. . .

..

....

•· I

"Excuae me ... l forgot to fiOII
• . · thla morning.''

'

·•

.

t •• !

1174Poni ....... Qood-.
fiOO. CaM .14-:l41-1214.
1111 Chow. .........'"" •

,." .

. r •.

1817 Oodgo IIMD-10. AM-,M·
•1280.
Call 114-446-2117. ---~

-

.

.:

TrN and Lown BoMot.
removal, 304-171·1'142 or
171-2103.

Col
' f14-"Z.IU7
PM-AII- · ·or-114-

1177 , . , llwaty II. ,._.

4·.

I Ll$LIALLY TELL'THEM·
I WANT 10 6C KING

.

14 ft ........ ....,,

- . ,. . . Gin .. .. ...
Clollpolo Dolr , _ • for
_
_ . . . . . . .14-446-

-.-.-oholn,,.

..

•

.,...
-·
Uwo -rtt'rw
.
c-.
""'-.
.......,., ...ooo ::t..'t.a';,... -. CaM

, I l l Choory.

..

·.·

Sala

AM-FII·Cooo. 1.000 -CaR
114-441-UZJ- 4 PM.

boloo of - - hoy.
CoMI14-446--.
'

~-...._.

Free •lmnea. Cell oo11eo1

.400. 304·5711· 7181.

tnd T•w 11111 W...,.

Grain

,-

-

1177 T·blrd. Tnn11port1tion.

tlroo• ., .000.00. 304-481·
1818,

Hay •

IAIEMENT

... ....

~

SWEEPER and .wingmochlno
- -·and oupplloo. Pick
up and - r y . Oovlo y........,
1171 l:hovrolot Chovotto. I . CIMner,
one half mile up
.,..._ 4 - · cloon. e87I.OO. o...... c,.... Rd. Call 814J04.171-4480,
441-0284.
1111 Ponti.: Fiero. tunroof, I
........ like n-. • •. 400.00,
304-571-4480.

- · ... 304-171-2130.

64

'•.

Home
I mprovernent1

' 80 Clvyolor Co....... .....,,
. , . -.00. 304-871-2183.

1177 Ford -

·

B1

- · •3800. Call 814·H2·
3211.

Woolt to buy, Vollow "-"'

814-441-4711.

lng
....
.
. .In 1171.
-13041"""""
1721817. Nino to """·
.

1·514-237-0411. day or nigh~
Aotertleaement
W........... ng.

1114 Food Tompo. ,41.000
miN. t l - wloldowo. 8 opood,
now rodlolo. •2.100.00. 3Q4.
111·7438.

----

Auto • ......,
Virglnlo. II'Otilolz·

u.-:=::"::...0:."0
....
·--··

c-....
4 cyl .. outo. 4
-.Pl.
Pl.olr,n-tlroo,rolly

--

Llveltock

Rlploy, -

1811

-~-·-. 814-

Now buying lhlll oom or . . ·
- .. Colllori01101Q-. RCity Fonn 8-'lt. 114-44128el.
.

83

Jim'• 1on110&lt;1

·
4 cyl.. oir.
U -.
CoU -114-H2-2772.

t. IUiky. CaM 114·446-4141.

71 Auto'a For Sale

UIID PUIINffUII!,
.. oMit. .......

~ .... ....... 1211.;
Law- Ul.; Goodoyw Ul.;
- 2 :•11.; old
420.: 3()4.411-' 113.

.....
.,.__,

... to--.Caohlcorry
o r -· Coii14-J71.1220 or

1177 ln10f1101IOMI Ton-

Ceumy1iF.:ioo, Inc. -

.... •

IT 5'A'(5, ''HE WHO
LOot: ~. FoP.tvfo!e
IN &lt;::;"OOfCIE
Sli;/C ·JN . NoopLE ': ·

-toJIOTufbo.Z14-----

Col-1:00 114-812--.

................... mile.
llf4.171-1-.
.
•

Two end OM' I d OOift furnllhed

\ i

. - . ; _ , . . . _ IIIII for QM

Utllty

,uood
ondTV-.
0MtoiPM.-101. 114-446-1181. 127 Jnl.
Aw. 0 1Mr lilt. OH.

I'IC

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

..._.

f d ] 1 ~II1JI'i I

Z112. No...., .....

booto- UO.
f18 t.up. IIIMit.
"""tOOl. Col1114·446-3111 . .

- . ..z.Jn7
., 104·771·
- -·
· · v...

-----__ --lludgttTrBllftlng .. e81. . . .

~:::::::::::::::::l~::::::::~::::::~~~::""'-....
::---.-:-I.~Co~.~~1~4-~7-:-42::-·

w.......

,.._ . _ _ .. , ... al ,,..,., far
--111-2130.

FRANK AND ERNEST

u-.

prlcoo.

w-

2 bedroom ...., 1111 - . ref Md

~8024.

ond corry 3000 mlloo or 30 doyo

Ollrilllg- . . ..

NEW·

.

both tubO·

169.88 eeCh, 2 for •100- COkJr
.71.11-h.
17 - Whlrlpoal tub• fiberglllt, complete plumbing·
Ull, rog. 11381.
18·1 pc. flborvluo tub t.
shower. •1&amp;t.95 each, white or
color.
18-Brfght tnd antique br'e11
and chrome VM'IhY •net tub 6
thower fiUCIII , Save 150%. ·
2G-2 gel. bucket • off white
textured well J»elnt· t4.11. reg.
U.l5. ·
21·1 gal. •lumlnum flbared
root coetlng-120.91.
22;K-Lu• white brick 5 tq. ft.
ctn.·fl .10.
23-Epraxy coated tteal
dotetancl daorlhelvlng. Bweto
71'11.
24 -Wood, aluminum end
vinyt clad wlrwfowt. CBowet.
ll•yt), (Ceaement), !Doublt·
hung). Save •t wholeule and
below.
25 -~ Tempered lhermel
pant. Gl111 Pt~nelt . (32a78f 2 9 . 9 I I . 1-3 4 • 7 0 ·
f31 .00J.I47•78-e41.00J . Full
Cllliott-ei .OO pr,pc, 1. ..
28-21' " Ocotgon thermel
loodod glau wl-•·•88.81.
2 for •121.00.
·
27- 72 "' W•lnut •tarter
kitchen- Including (2-18" weHI.
11·72"-1. 11-72" pc. topJ •.
e118.B1 .
28·2 gal . poll K-Lu• whlto
mortar- 14.811.
29·Pinl louveNd lnl.-ior
thuttera. Below Wholeaale

Auto Parta
Acceaaoriea

wenanty, (whichever ooouu
· flroll. Wo con holtt with hord to
find I r O n -. Call 114441-0181.
..

BUILDING SUPPUES
SAVE lOll to 71'11
1-Wif... boerci7/ 11K4' x8 '·
fUI. '14•4'•1'-el.ll.
2·T·111 yollow- okllng

of ...- furniture.

Nlceepartrnentlnnfol=·

&amp;.

Concrete blot::kt ell slue yard or
d.. lv.ry. Mti.on 11nd. Gtlllpollt
Block Co., 1231/.t Pine St.•
Oollloollo. Ohio Cal 814-445278:1.

room venltt• wflh ma'rble top

Gun · cabinet• for 1111• 2 hand
made, newty flnlthed ctbinetl
for 11te- 1 Wllnut. 1 cherry. Both
hew 11 gun CIPfiCtty. Alking
ti&amp;O each. Call814-441-4045.

Apertment for rent. one bed·

30 ft. Owono Cabin Cru-.
ueoo or off•. eon 814211·1848.

o -.

Antiquea, 1124 E11t Mtln St••

1 bedroom epartmenta. Furnlthed end untumlahld. •zoo..
122115. per month. Utllld• fur·
nithM. Celll51 4-892-1724.

- ..

.

Motor• for Sale

Com~emicrowavea.. nda
t38.gl t. up.
Come In and meet the new

Groclouo 10110111. 1 ond 2 bod·
roam ....,.menta It VIllage
Mtnor 1nd Atvwralde A......mentt In Middleport. From
121&amp;. Including utllltl... CIR
814-IU· 778·7 . EOH.

Nice 2 bedroom tpt. In Mlddl•
·oon . e111por month. Oopooit
and reference required. D1y
614-192-2381 . WMkondo o 14112·2109.

Boata afld

76

lQ),

Wutlnahou• electrie fMVL en
upright pltno. chelt·type
treaer. Kenmore dllhwuher.
Nice '2 BA tpt. Water, garbage. Good condHion. UO. Call 114poid, Stovo t. Nltlg. fvmlohod. 812·2178.
Coli 814·448-7021.
• &amp; bunkbad Mtl, eN heavy duty.
New brlak, 2 lA .• equipped Nice mettreaet inctudld. •e&amp;.
kltch ... ...,..ry room. Print• OOf Mt. Coli 814-742' 3033.
J*klng. No Pilla. Ref. a dep.
Call 814·448-1210.
.

112·1858.

: ~.

UBEO···- - · auitea. •1tl-t211. ·Deall.e.
wring«-· o comploto-

Apartment
for Rent

hood on Third Aw. In 0.

514-445-0310.

441-8180. Rent:~tlow•••120
month.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

f220.
1471.

-.-. :-: .

Ph.

2 pc, lMng room aultea-ltaning
.. t300. 15 pc. dining room
New completaly furnlehed auhu-n.ting at t226. 7 pc.
apartt"Mnt , • mobHe home In dining roam aulte - *350 .
city. Adultt onty. Parking. eel RecUnert-ttartlne It t1511. N•w
814-448·0338.
Phllc;o 21" color w -euo.e pc.
l!vlng room tultu - 1400.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT&amp; AT Corpot·olorllng ot e4 o yd.
IUDOET PRICES AT JACK- . Kitchen • bathioom vinyl
SON EllATEa, 131 J1ck10n linoleum- Nrtlng It .4.89 1 yd.
Pile from •183 a mo. WIIA to lnet•ll•tlon It 'financing
~p and . movte.. 814-. .8e¥11ilable.
21•1
E0 H
Mollohtn Fumiture
9
'
'
403 4th. Auo. -KMR
•
•
Nice 2 IR. 4 1,-i mil• from Gallipolis, Ohlo-814-441-7444.
G1IHpoHt. IleNe, refrig, • WlltM'
furniahed. No pets. •211 • mo.
3 pc. living room tulte whh 4
Call 814· 448-8038.
chrome • giMI tablet. Excel.
11 Court St .- 2 lledroom. · 2 cond. Coli 514_-241-1801.
betM. ldtcll• fumlehld, w/ w
Relrigora·
c--. •3211a mo. ph• utiiiU•. -...,1 Froot-No poll, d - t. m . Call tor. Oood cand. C•lllfterl PM114·448·7449.
514-448-4828.

Rooms tor Nnt. d..,. week.
m.,th. Oalllo Hotel. Call 114-

mobile

--

2 IR. aptt. I ckiMtl, kttchen·

"ttlll. fvmlohod. Woohor-Oryw

Modern One BR. lptrtment. C. II

Comm.clal
llftd hou11
loto-Golllpollo Fonv. Coli 304871· 8808.

44

pm.

for Rent

1 lA . ept. nlll' HMC.
Stove, l'lfria. • dre.,... Cell
o 14-44&amp;-4782.

2 BR .. u«llitl.. peld-aKcept •1-=tric, fumlthad / unfumilhtd. S.c.
dep. requlrlld. Convenitnt aoc.
lion. Cell 114-441-4718 or

for Sal.e

for

J t. 8 FURNITURE

Apartment

Nl~

2 BA , houN With ffNpl--. 3
mite. from Galllpoli•. •1 000

down, payments· 1241 monthty
includel 1111 &amp; lna~ren~. Total
price t22.400. Cal . 814-4417881 .

- . ' •...
. - ··-

V~.y Furnh:ure

•

34

Homes for Sale

•,

~----PI. PI,
AIII-AI-CO-. Col 114-4418111.

"Your horoscope does soWld 80 Dey• credit.
out
Bulllvl.. Rd. Open lam to &amp;Dm
encouraging, dear, but 0322,'
Sat.
114-441shouldn't you get a second·
:;:o~p=m;;:::Io=n:fro:::·:m::::ith-::e;:d:o:;:c:to=r:?:."==::-1 7.172.
=::~.:~.~~.W7,u4~4:~
Hours 9-5.

3 BA. h&lt;iuoo. 4vn. old. Tobocoo
btH. C..ll 814-218· 13M.

R;:.rl blale

l'l-

'•

.......... -....uo

lpprowd

Business
Opportunity

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Page--1 0-The Deily Sentinel
13

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

THIS
MEIGS
GIRLS BASimALL ·
Completed S..son With A

SOUTHEIN

EASTERN

. GIRLS BASmtAU

GIRU BASmalLl

Completed Season With A

15-6 RICoi'd

6-15

BOYS BASKETBALL

. Daily Number

473

Page 5

Pick 4

· fiiiDAY, fD. 26 ,
Dlwlslon IV Stctionols
At Mlip H. S.

R~eord

BOYS BASIE11AlL

FEBRUARY 24

Ohio Lottery ·

Olympic
results

1275

ws.lyll'l' CrHk

•

fEIRUARY 23

Divisional II $ectional
At Rio Grandt
vs. Jackson

Diwisian IY *'*-Is
At Meigs H. S.
vs. •""" crHk

FEIRUARY 26

. FEIRUAIY 23
Division IV S.Ctianals
At Mligs ·H.S.
·vs. Cr...SYillt .
FEIRUAIY 25
S.Ctlanal Semi-Finals
At Meigs H. S.

S.ctianal Finals
At Mligs

SICtional Finals
· at Rio Grandt

e

BOYS BASKETBAlL

• · FEIRUARY 27

Vol.38. No.200

at y

.

(
'

#2 HEMLOCK MILLER

and work in Europe;;·
He said the tact!cal ·battlefleld
nuclear weapons w!ll "stay
where they are , until we can
achieve a better balance of
convenl!onal forces on the
continent."
.
Reagan said thE' United States
" remains steadfastly committed
to the NATO strategy of fle;&lt;:!ble
response, and we in the United
States will do our part to ensure
that NATO maintains all the
modern forces , both conventiona! and nuclear. needed to
uphold that strategy.''.

Hemlock Miller

RACINE SOUTHERN

TO WAVERLY DISTRICT

Feb. 26, 6:30 p.m.
VINTON NORTH GALLIA

vs.

...

HILLSBORO LOWER WINNER
March 2, 8:15 p.m.

#1 CHESHIRE KYGER CREEK
'

TO WAVERLY DISTRICT

Feb. 26. 8:15 p.m.'

vs.

LUCASVILLE VALLEY
UPPER WINNER
Mar,ch 2, 6:30 p.m.

REEDSVILLE EASTERN

.

.

CROOKSVILLE

p.m.

•

REEDSVILLE EASTERN

'

hb. 25, 7:00. p.m. ·
#2 VINTON NORTH GALLIA

·INSTAU.MENT LQANS

CHESHIRE KYGER CREEK

992-3007:;,

Feb. 27, 7;00 p.m.

..
'

....

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Feb. 23, 8:15 p.m.

TO OH 10 UN IVER$1TY
March 4, 6:30 p.m.

STORE CHANGES HANDS - After successfully oper~tlng Brown's Fire and Salety Equip·
ment store 111 Rutland for the past U yean,
'owaer, BID Browa, at left, has sold his business.
New owner, Gary Snouffer, allefl, says he. wiD
continue provldlag the same good service which
Brown has provided over tbe years. The store has

vs.

CHESAPEAKE WINN.ER

;

#1 RACINE SO.UTHERN

Bomb injures

Bors Di~islon II Sectional TournaMent. at Rio Gran•• College

*

'

Wed., Feb. 24, 6:30 p.m.

feilturing · .
Grpt. Hamburgers.

#1 GALLIPOLIS 12-4

*

• •&lt;

.

Fri., Feb. 26, 7:00 p.m.
•

Dinihg • C,arrv OUt •
Drive,Jhru
SIIO.-Tbl:ri. 8A.M .·10P.M. ·
Fri. 8a Sa•. 8 A.M.-12 P.M:
•

W 'ltness
"

'

Croissant* Stuffed Baked'
Potatoes * Taco Salads
. * Salad Bar ,
. Real'lce. Cream.

~

.

JACKSON 3-15

:. · *Roast Beet on a

.·*

'

been renamed Brown's and Snouffer's Fire and
Safety Equlpmeat;ud has been moved to a new
location at 172 North Second Ave., Middleport.
Open dally, the store deals mainly In the sale,
service and testing of fire edlagulshers, and
other fire and safety Items. For lnlonnatlon, call
the store at 99~7075.
•
·

PORTSMOUTH\ - A radio- · in critical condition in Grant .
controlled bomb destroyed a car Medical ·Center In Columbus,
Monday, at 9:40a.m., on S.R. 73 · where he was flown by helicopIn Scioto County, injuring a West ter. He was scheduled for
Portsmouth man on his way Jo surgery Monday, at 8 p.m., !or
federal court to · sign a plea mull! pie trauma. At midnight, an
agreement to cooperate with a aide decl!ned to comment on
drug investigation, according to whether his surgery had been
Scioto County Sheriff John Hull.
corilpleted .
James J . Brown, 43, was listed
Jennifer Reed, 19, of West

#2 MEIGS 7-7

A GliAl PLACE
FOR .REAICFAU .·.·.
LUNCH ·. &amp;.DINNER

Wed., Feb. 24, 8:15 p.m.
VINTON COUNTY !-13

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) _ A
decl!ne in orders for planes and
motor vehicles helped push down
new orders for 111anufactured
durable goods 2.8 percent in
January, the biggest decl!ne In
one year, the Commerce Depart·
ment said Tuesday.
Analysts wete no I alarmed by'. '.

the downturn, which followed a
healthy 4.1 percent increase In
orders fordurables in December.
Excluding defense orders, durable goods orders were down 2.1
percent, matching a decl!ne in
August and the steepest since a
6.9 percent downturn in January
of last yea~.
.

Academic banquet set
March 31 at Southern

..

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·

·

Portsmouth, the driver of the late
model Chevrolet , received emergency room treatment and was
l!sted In good condition Monday
evening at Scioto Memorial
Hospital.
,
Hull said the car's passenger
seat was blown from the car
when explosives planted beneath
the passenger seat were detonated when the car was traveling

Wyss added.
The Japuary downturn, however, was the sharpest since
orders fel! 8 percent in January
1987, according to the department's Census Bureau .
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
Orders . for transportation
equipment last month fell $3.8
blll!on or 12.4 percent to $27.~
b!ll!on, reflecting .a decline in
aircraft and motor vehicles as
wei! as parts in both categories.
Orders for primary metals also
lei!, down . $1.9 b!ll!on or 15.5
percent to $10.2 b!lllon, offsetting
a 10.5 percent increase in De- ·
cember, the department said.
New orders for electrical rnach!nery· rose $1.1 billion or 5.5
percent' to $20.8 b!lllon in the
fourth increase in five months.
Orders for non-electrical rnachlnery also increased, up $1.1
b!lllon or 5.8 percent to $20.3
b11l!on. nearly matching a 6.3
percent upturn In December.
New orders lor delense capital
a09ds leU !or the sixth time in
seven months, down $1.1 billion
or 12.1 percentto $7.9 billion.
Shipments of manufactured
ioodl last month declined 3.3
percent or $3.7 billion to $109.3
billion. Unf!lled orders far durable IOQdl Increased 0.8 percent
or 13 biUloil to $392.7 bllllan, the
•rtment said. · .
'
-~

Secretary of State George
Shultz w!ll report to Reagan
Wednesday morning on his talk~
in Moscow w!tli Gorbachev and .
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard:
Shevardnadze on a range of
subjects from breaking the stalemate in the Geneva negotiations on the Stra teg!c Arms
Reduction Treaty (START) to a
timetable for a pullout of Soviet
troops irt Afghanistan and the
status of Soviet Jews.
After somewhat less than 24
hours in Wash!ngton, Shultz will
head for the Middle East with a
proposal to end the strife in the
Israel!-occup!ed territories call!ng for a swap of land for peace.

afford," Hoffman continued.
"Both senior citizens apartment complexes in Meigs County
are full at this time )'{lth the one
In M!ddleporrliavlrig at lasfl4 on
a waiting l!st. I feel this Is a much
needed project not only for Mid·
dleport but for Meigs County.
"It would appear that federal
funds are available for such a
project here and a local individual is willing lo construct and ·
· operate such an apartment complex, which would be a 45 unit
complex and cost approximately·
$1.5 mll!on.
"In order to convince FHA off!c!als of the need for such a project, an Interest must be shown In
the project by the community.
"Anyone who may be Interested in renting one of these
apartments Is asked to !!II out a
. survey. F1111ng out the form does
not put you under any obl!gation
at this time but is only being used
to show that ther e Is community
Interest in the project, " the
mayor concluded.
The survey appears on page 10
today.

Durable Goods

'

New factory orders
Seasonally adjusted in
billions of dollars
$120
118
116

·.

114
112
110

108
106
104
102
100

98
~

94

J FMAMJJASONDJ .
1987
'88
UPI Graphic ·
NEW ORDERS DOWN- New arden for maaufacturH 4urallle
good&amp; feD 1.8 percent Ill

,.......,,tile 1111\t!::- Ia- )'eat,

aecordJna te tile Commeree Depattment

!

I

radical captors in Lebanon.
Reagan was expected to echo
remarks 'by Fitzwater that the
hostage question be off l!mlts In
the current presidential political
campaign. "I think it's very ·
dangerous to make terrorism a
political issue," Fllzwater told
reporters, " especially when
you're talking about. specific
episodes."

FHA considering new
complex for elderly

Reagan said, ''Our goal is not a
nuclear-free, or a tank-free, or an
army-free Europe, but a warfree Europe."
The president said he w!ll press
ahead w!lh his Strategic Defense
Middleport Mayor Fred HoffInitiative, known as "Star Wars" man announced during Monday
s~ce defense, adding, " It would night's councU meeting The Farmbe a (alai mistake not to pursue ers Hon:~e Administration has
this program. .. . . .
., .. - under consideration. the consttuc"Even before it becomes 'leak tlon of an elderly housing apart proof,' strategic · defense will ment complex to be located on
strengthen deterrence," he Page St. adjacent to the new oursadded. ''It can make anyone who !ng home now under construction.
might think about dlsabl!ng the
The apartments would have
West with a' first strike think subs!d!zed rental program for
again, because it will undermine eligible senior citizens and res!Sov!et confidence in the military dents of the apartments would
success of an attack."
also have access to the nursing
Reagan also warned Euro- home fac!l!ties for meals andrepeans to be wary of the new creatlonal activities if they so deSoviet policy of Glasnost in view sired.
of "the reality of pol! tical rep res "I met recently at the proslon in 'the Soviet Union." .
posed site with FHA officials and
The president also was to do local !ndlv!dua!s who would be
some homework to prepare for responsible for the construction
.
and operation of such a fac!l!ty if
approved," Hof!Jnan said.
"The project would be Ideal for
that area since the fac111t!.es of
the nursing home would be made
e.as f on the roadway miar the Car I available to apartment residents
D. Perkins Bridge, just west of and the subsidized rental proPortsmouth.
gram would make It ppsslble for
The c~r has been impounded many of our · senlqr citizens to
by the Bureau of Alcohol, To- live comfortably In 'this area,
bacco and Firearms. The FBI which they could not otherwise
and the State Highway Patrol
assisted the Bureau and the
Scioto County Sheriff's Department in the investigation.

enroute to court

Orders · for durabie goods,
which are big-ticket items designed to last for at least three
years, totaled $112.2 b!ll!on compared with $115,5 bUI!on in
DecemHer.
Within the capital goods cale·
gor!es, new orders · for nondef,ense capital goods !~creased
$0.5 billion or 1.6 percent to $34.4
bUllon. That exceeded the December high of $33.8 b1lllon. A
downturn in non-defense aircraft
and parts WiiS more than offset
by increases in several machln·
ery categories. including office
The first district academic Beash, Brenda Ryndall, .Fred and computing equipment.
banq)Jet ,to honor high ranking Penderwood, Henry Lewis and
"I would not take a negative
scholastic students of the entire Verona Jones. The resignation of . view of th~ report," said Nordistrict was approved lor March Roberta Maidens as director of ·. man Robertson, chief economist
31 ~hen the Southern Local
the annual variety show was
of Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh. "II
School District Board of Educa- accepted. • The observance of continues to show strength in the
tion met; · in regular session Right to Read Week in the · key capital spend in&amp; sectors."
·Monday night.
·
.
dlltrlct was iet for March 7-11.
Spending for new equipment,
Some 55 students of the district
headded,rema!nsonamoderate
The Racine Home National
wll! be honored at the event and Bank was na~r~ed to serve as the
growth track.
speaker wil! be Rep. Jolyn district's depository throu1h
"There Is aotblne to Indicate in
Boster.
:
1990. Plans were made for .board this report that the economy, or
The board hired Charles Ch~n­ member&amp; to attellcl the spring
the lndllltrlsl part ol the econ·
cey, former Me!ga lfleh School confereqce of the Oblo SchOQI
omy, 11 .flldlnl Into an early
football coach, to 1erve as ·B oatdl Alsoclatlon to be held in
recession)!' Rob_e!11on said.
coordinator ol the dlltrlct's foot· Athens on·March 15:
David WY•• oU&gt;ata Rnourcea
ball protrram tor the next season.
All board members, Charles
Inc., an economic forecsatlq
Dr. Douglu Hunt will 1erve as Pylea, Dennie Evans, Charles
firm In Lexlqton, Msal., acreec1
the athletic physician.
Norris, Gary Wilford and Scott
that IIOn-defenae capital apend·
It was afll'IN!d to bave a reserve Wolfe, were preaent for the
1111 wu "moat encow-irrtnl" Jn.
pll' llllttball team thla year and meettne 110111 with building January.
,.
the coachlni polltlon-....ll be principals, Supt. Bobby Ord and
"That m - lnveatment waa
PCJited. Added to the subltl tute Treasurer Denny HID.
up after a ltrolli Deeernber,"
· teacllera lilt were Franklin

992-2057

-·· --

.

his first news conference In four
months Wednesday evening. He
Is studying briefing books the
size of telephone boqks and may
have a rehearsal in the White
House lheater with aides playing
reporters · and tossing touchy
questions at him .
White House spokesman Marl!n Fitzwater said Monday that
Reagan w!ll open the 8 p.m . EST
nationally televised news conference ·in the East Room with a
formal statement, expected to
spotlight his budget proposals
and a bid to hold up spending on
what he bel!eves are wasteful
'projects.
But the !nte.rnatlonal front was
expected to dominate the ques '
tton!ng with reporters probing
his plans to bring peace to the
Middle East and prospects of a
negotiated settlement In
Nicaragua. ·
The question of the administration's handling of the hostage
problem was also expected with
the kidnapping of Marine Lt. CoL
W!ll!am Higgins, adding to the
l!st of Americans In the hands of

New, durable goods orders down 2.8 percent

Winner to O.U. Convo
District Play vs.
Shawnee State Winner
Fri., Mar.
p.m.
. 4 - 6:30
'

698 W. Main St,..t. Pomeroy

•

"We Americans w111 do our
part in keeping the A!Uance
strong," Reagan promised. " Our
troops wi!l stay in Europe as a
guarantee that our destiny . is
coupled with yours. We w!ll keep
our forces .' including the strategic nuclear umbre!la, strong
and up to date."
. "NATO's strategy for peace
has always been simple prevent aggression before 11
starts," Reagan said. "Be strong
enough; be determined · enough
so that no adversary would think
even for a moment that war
might pay;"
The quick journey to confer
with NATO leaders was a prelude
to a fourth summit meeting in
Moscow with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, probably in late
May. The pres!den~ was hoping
that he and Gorbachev would be
able to follow up their signing of
' an INF agreement in Washington
in December with a new Strategic Arms Reducl!on Treaty
(START) . ·
.
"The Atlantic All!ance is the
core of America's foreign pol!cy
and of Amertca'sown security/'
he said. "If our fellow democracies are not secure, we-cannot be

secure."

BOYS DIVISION IV BASKETBALL
Feb. 23. 6:30

1 Sect"ion. 1 0 Pagel
25 Cent•
A Multimedia Inc. Newap1per

.

'

By HELEN TH
an attack on u~. "
UPI White House
Declaring that the new arms
WASHINGTON (
agreement, eliminating super!dent Reagan top
'l'er land-based nuclear mls·
Amerka will keep 1
s! s with a range of 300 to 3,400
Europe and maintain
nuclear m!!es, "is a victory for NATO" ·
umbrella "strong and u to date" and recognizing it has caused
in the defense of the Atlanl!c some worry aqout Soviet mU- ·
All!ance.
itary advantages, .the president
In an address, broadcast on said:
Worldnet and the Voice of Amer"The appro1&lt;lmately 4,000 1\Ulea as a prelude to a summit clear weapons that w!ll remain In
meeting tn Brussels, Belgium, Europe are a strong Unk between
next week with NATO heads of ·the p1llars of NATO- as are the
state, Reagan told his European more than 300,000 .American
audience: "An attack on you is servicemen and women who !lye

GIRLS DIVISION IV 8ASKETBALL
Feb. 18, 7:00 p.m.

enttne

President Reagan ·pledges· defense of Europe

s.Ctional Finals
Af Mligs H. S.

Basketball Tournament
at Meigs ·High Sehoo·l

•

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Febru-ary 23, 1988

cogvrlehteci 1988 .

FEIRUARY 27

Dl~islon · 1~

Clear tonight. Low near 15.
Partly cloudy Wednesday.
Highs between 25 and 30.

,t_r

• (VPI)

' .,.

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