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                  <text>Page 12-The Deily Sentinel

Th&amp;ndly, F.,_., 26,1988

Pome!oy-Middleport. Ohio

•

--Local news briefs-- Tuppers Plains••• _~c~on~tl~nu::ed~fro~m~pa~ge:_:l~----_:----------'------$55,000 over last year's costs for
the same coverage. "We were
shocked," said Spencer.
Mike Swisher, of human servl·
ces, sa:td the hike would add
· $47,000 to. the annual costs of
Insurance for· his employees.
Although Patrick was able to ·
explain the reasons lor the high
percentage Increases In alllnsu· ·
ranees, as well as Blue Cross, he
told officials that he has already
requested ligures on ways to
lower the costs ·but still maintain .
• the same coverages for county
e,mployees. Patrick said he had
In mind a funding mecllanlsm In
which the county agencies would
assume the first $1,000 for each
.employee, and each year would
put money Into a pool to .c over
those costs only. Depending on
the amount .of claims during a
year; the money could accumu·
late over a three to five year
period and then the $1,000 re·

weight control cl&amp;ses .to b~gin
The Meigs County Health Department will begin a series of
. six week classes for weight control at 5: 30 p.m. on March 8.
There will be a choice ot nights for the classes, either
Tuesdays or Thursdays, and classes will be free of charge to
Meigs County residents.
Each class will be two hours long and attendance Is required
· at only one two hour session each week. Classes will Include
nutrition education, stress management, weekly weigh-Ins,
relaxation techniques, recipes, diet recall sheets, exercise
techniques and other phases of weight control.
.
There wUI be a limit ils to the number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes which are to be held In the
conference room of the Meigs Multi·Purpose Building,
,
Mulberry Heights, In Pomeroy.
Residents should register as soon as possible due to class size
llmltatlons. Those wishing to register may call the Meigs
County Health Department at 992-6626 and those calling should
be prepared to Indicate their preference for either Tuesday or ·
Thursday evening classes.
·

Man arrested on clw.rge
John W. Casto, 42, of Pomeroy, was arrested about midnight
Monday night In connection with an Incident on Southern Ohio
Coal Company property In Meigs County. Casto was arrested by
members of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department and
charged with assault and criminal trespassing. He will appear
In Meigs County Court at a later date, according to Meigs
·
Deputy Ruth Frank.

License. issued
Marriage licenses 'have been
issued In the Meigs County
Probate Co11rt to Edward Jess
Dreytuse, 21, · Middleport, and
Katl!y Jane Elias, 33, Middle·
port; and Harry Nelson Bass, 43,
West Columbia, and Betty Bass,
51, West Columbus.

E;MS has one call Wednesday
Meigs County Emergency Services reports only one call
Wednesday; Tuppers Plains Fire Department at 2:06a.m. to a
structure fire at the Charles Bailey residence on Owl Hollow
Road. EMS personnel report that firemen were on the scene
about one hour. There were some damages but no injuries.

I

Judge Lawrence Grey, Athens, presiding judge of the Fourth
District Court of Appeals, announces that three cases are
scheduled to be he.a rd when the court convenes in Meigs County
Wednesday .
In addition to Judge Grey, the court is comprised of Judge
Homer E. Abele of McAthur and Judge Earl Stephenson of
·
Portsmouth.
The court of appeals directly reviews all cases heard or tried
In lower courts in which ;r decision is being appealed. The
Fourth District Court of Appeals serves 14 Southern Ohio
Counties.
The three cases to be heard by the court here next week are
Kern versus Ridenour; the State of Ohio versus Jude, and
Clonch !Jphnson) versus Thomas.

In other matters, Roberts told
the commissioners that he spoke
by telephone with Rick Meadows
of the U.S. Corps of Engineers
regarding flooiilng by Leading
Creek along Shady Cove Road In
Salisbury Township.
After the conversation with
Meadows, Roberts wrote a letter
to the Corps asking for a meeting
with them to discuss.what effect,
If any; the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam has on the· flooding prob·
!em. Shady Cove residents and
township ot!lclals are of the
opinion that the dam is holding
water above flood stage for long
periods of time which adds to the
flooding problem.
. .
Roberts reported that two
Bedford Township bridges, one

on Township Road 82 and the along County Road 27 Is taking ·
other on Township Road 162, are · place In preparation lor a Joint· · ·
schedll~ for replacement by the
paving project with Southern
highway department.
Ohio Coal Company.
He also reported that the
In a final matter, the commlsdepartment Is assisting Salem sloners approved a $5,000 InterTownship In widening Township departmental transfer for Child
.Roa;,;;;;::d:..:;18;;,,,.;a;,;n;;;d;.t;;;h;;;a,;.t,;;b,;.rus;;;;.b;,;,·c;;;u;;;t,;;tl,;;n:g...,;S;;;u::p~P2:,:rt:,:E::;n;;;f:;:o;,;,rc;,;e;,;m;,;e;,;n,;,;t,..

I
r

~
· eimi
~~

Court news

a.,

Fined were Patty K. Jbbnson,
Rutland, $10 and costs, no
muffler; Marilee McDade, Mid·
dleport, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; John I. Kerr, Middle·
port, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Michael A. Norton,
Racine, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Kenneth Haner, Galli·
polls, $16 and costs, speeding;
Osb~ A. Martin, Albany, $15 and
costs, speeding; Craig Bolin,
Middleport, $25 and costs, dlsor·
derly manner, and Jeannette
Urble, Middleport, $10 and costs,
expired license tags.

Two actions for divorce, one L. Brewer from Terry · Brewer
for dissolution, and another for with CU$tody of the two children
an annulment have been filed In being awarded to the plaintiff;
the Meigs C9unty Common Pleas and Debra Gallagher Huffman
.from Brady M. Huffman, with
Court. ·
Filing for divorce were Sandra the plaintiff being restored to her
K. Duffley, Reedsville, from maiden name of Honaker.
Michael Ray Dutney, Canton; · Entries of dls59lutlon of . the
and Rochelle Eichinger, Middle- marriages of Kimberly M. Fred·
port, from Scott · Eichinger, erick, and MIHord S. Frederick,
and Darlene Shain and Paul
Nelsonville.
Gall Ohlinger Arnold, Pome- Leonard Shain, have been flied In'
roy, bas petitioned the Court for the court.
The Lavelle Law Offlce of
an annulment of her marriage
from William Edward , Arnold, A!hens has flied an action
Pomeroy, while Ethel Christy agalnsd Dennis Booth, Pomeroy,
Jacks, Syracuse, and Kenneth W. · asking for a Judgment in the
Jacks, Syracuse, have asked for amount of $5,180.98, due on a
promissory note.
a dissolution of their ml!rrlage.
9ranted divorces were Bonnie
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2·2M8

e

FRONTS:

I I Warm

signatures of resldeals of Stryker, and nearby
communities opposing the building of a regional

, mSHOWERS
. . Sialic . . Occluded

"Cold
Map etlowl minimum lempetature~ ..At least 50% or any snaded area Is IOIICMt ·

10 receive praclpitatlon indicated

•

.

60°/o OFF .

'

Charles F. Grimm

Charles Francis . Grimm, 73,
Letart, died Monday, Feb. 22, 1988
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born April 10, 1914 in Lelart, he
was a son of the lale James
Franklin and Cora Mae Snyder
Grimm.
He was jlso preceded in death by
his first wife, Johanna Helen Knud·
son, his second wife, Dorothy Maxine Huffman and six brothers.
He was a carpenler and belonged
to the · Laborers' In1emalional
Union of North America Local574.
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Marvin (Shirley Jean)
Woodard and Diana Marie Grimm,
both of Letart, Mrs. Olha (Judith

sJ,ooo,ooo lawsuit
dismissed
.
.

DRESSES

60°/o

A $1 ,000,000 lawsuit filed in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Barbara Ann and Delbert W. Fridley against Pomeroy
Attorney J. B. O'Brien and the !irrn of O'Brien and O'Brien
charging malpractice bas been dismissed in the court by tb~
plaintiff through her counsel.
The plaintiff reserves the right to reflle the matter within 'one
year of the date of the filing of the voluntary dismissal. The Suit
is being dismissed without prejudice.
In the original suit, the plahitlffs charged that the defendants
Called to prepare, pursue and enforce competently the. legal
rights and remedies avallable 1to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs
had asked $450.000 for the body' and mind Injuries, loss of
custody of Mrs. Fridley's child for at least six months, extreme
emotional distress, anXIety and embarrassment; $100,000 for
the loss of Mrs. Fridley's services by Mr. Fridley and !or
medical and hospital expenses, and $500,000 In punitive
damages as punishment for the defendants.

ESCORT

SPORTSWEAR

mt !i4. 2door, aedan, front wheel drive,
4 cyl. 81\gine, am/1m radio, stereo tape,
WAS$3995.

75°/o

NOW

FAll AND WINTER

.JEWELRY

I

75°/ooFF

Township' trustee sentenced

MEN'S

Ann) Warnick, Tiffin, Ohio; three
brothers, Ernest and Ernie Grimm,
both of Lelart, Okey Grimm,
Phoenix, Ariz.; four grandchildren
and two great· grandchildren.

SPORT SHIRTS
IEDUCED

60°/o
MEN'S

Stocks

·KNIT SHIRTS

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi

Am Electric Power ............. 28%
AT&amp;T ....... ............ .......... .. .. 29%
As hland 011 ......................... 59
Bob Evans ...... ... .................. 15
Charm lng Shoppes .............. 14 \1,
I
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul. ................... 36')!;
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ........... 58
Heck 's Inc ..... .... ..... ......... ...... 2
South Central Ohio
Key Centurion ..... ..... .......... 40~
Partly cloudy today. with highs . .Lands' End ......................... 19Y,
near 30 .. Partly cloudy tonight, Limited Inc ........ .............. .. 20~
with a low between 10 and 15. Multimedia Inc ................... 58\j,
Increasing cloudiness Friday, Rax Restaurants ................... 3%
with highs nea r 40.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. B%
The probability of preclplta· Shoney's Inc .................. ..... 23% :
tlon Is near zero through Friday. Wendy's Inti ... ........ ............. 6% ·
V\'lnds will be !rom the west at Worthington Ind ...... ............ 18Y, ,
10 to 15 mph today, becoming
southwesterly at less than 10mph
tonight .
Extended Forecut
Saturday through Monday
A chance of rain or snow
Veteraas Memorial
Saturday; with fair weather
Wednesday Admissions
Sunday and Monday. Highs will
. be In the 30s Saturday and Glenn Winland, Racine; Ray·
Sunday, and ranging from 35 to 45 monel Lambert, Rutland; Na·
Monday. Overnight lows will be . Ia IIe S!gler, Ru !land.
Wednesday Discharges - Ro·
between 15 and 25 through the
nald Butcher, Bonnie Inscoe.
period . --~

Weather

Hospital news

••

•

-Local nws .briefs--

LITTLE GIRlS'

SAVE

60°/o OFF
BOYS'

•

SHIRTS
SAVE

CONVERSION VAN

186041, v.aengina, ldlry ai' cond., ...,_
trans., P.S., P.B., P. windowi.P.dooriock8.

tib stHrilg wheal, au1ee IXXIInli, amr1m
radio, stereo IIIJI, radillllnls, wNte walls,
buc:Mt SN11, gauges, WAS $7995.
NOW

60°/o
JIMMY

LITTLE BOYS'

182336, 4 whHIIlriwl, 8 cyl. engirlt,
P.B., arnllrn radio, stno II!». rldlal

TOPS

fiiiiQt8

WAS$6995.

60°/o OFF

NOW

CHILDIEN'S

SNOW SUITS

SAVE

75°/o

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) Gov. Richard ·F. Celeste Thurs.
day vetOed leglshition making
major revlsiolls In the ·s ystem of
granting state liquor permits
according to population quotas.
"1\fy concerns with this bill are
: based on the potential saturation
·.of nelghborl!oods with new liquor
certallf new"' permit ap11llcants'
who would bf allowed 'to bypaaa
lhe current quota system," the
governor said In his veto
message.
• Celeste said Ohio Senate
amendments to the proposal

SLACKS

llnLE GIRlS'

establish whole new categories
for the issuance of permits for
loosely defined and unidentified
"unenclosed shopping center"
and "marina-type" facilities.
The bill authorizes the issu·
ance of one D·5b permit at an
enclosed shopping center of
between 225,000 and 400,000
sguare feet. Oneauch permit also
-~
·~ ~·
wnclosed
·shopping
· een~
ill ·mt~re
thilil
225,000 equant feet.
·. ' ·
Also authorized Is the Issuance
ot two new categories of permits
for certain food service opera- .·
!Ions located on a river and for
certain historical riverboats,

;
:
:
·
:
:

It~·~=.n:e.:.'~t:t:·~~~~'

WOMEN'S

SAVE

Jail In Stryker. The petition was delivered to the
governor'• office Thursday by Z5 supporters.
(UPI)
.

;Governor vetoes liquor bill

UPI

YOU'LL FIND MORE REDUCTIONS
ON QUALITY
WINTER CLOTHING.
'

184321,4 doors, sedan, toot wheel drive,
4cyl. eng., 1actory aircond., auto. trans.,
P.S., P.B.,amnm radio, radial ties, willie
wals, WAS ~995.

•

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•

•••

~-~~·
FLEETWOOD

177021,4 doorl, ladln, tontwlltel driva, V·
I q. llclory lk cond., 111!10· lrlnl., P.S.,
P.8., P. wlndon, P.·.... P. door IQcl!a, ~~
~ 1111111, aullt contrd. IWIIItn lldio,
""'rllilllirll, whllt'Wiill, rwwin.,. dologger, WAS $13.8115.
NOW

2 Sections, 1 &amp;.Pllaeo
A

26 1

i

DISPLAYS PETITION- Rich Murray, of tbe

.RAIN

enttne
26 Centa

Consumer prices rise
0.3 ·percent in January

rove mar's office, holds a petition with some 7,000
•

•

'• "

WINTER SALE
CONTINUES!

An action for $5,000,000 In damages allegedly resulting from
ex posure to. asbestos materials has been filed In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Robert M. Sheley and Ada Ru lh
Sheley, Middleport, against Eagle-Pitcher Industries, Inc.,
Cincinnati; Owens·Oilnols, Inc., Toledo, and Ga.rlock, Inc.,
Cleveland.
The plaintiff. Robert M. Sheley, alleges In the petition that
while he was employed as a boilermaker from 1948 to 1975, he
was · exposed to the defendants' asbestos and asbestos·
containing materials In installation and tear-o11t work.
He charges that he was. not advised of the dangerous
characteristics of the· products and that he was given no
information on protective apparel and equipment.
As a result of that exposure and the lack of warning of
pot~ ntial health hazard on the a~bestos materials he handled
the plaintiff alleges that he has suffered both mental anguls~
and physical disability.
.
He asks .for compensatory damages of $3,000,000, and punitive
damages of $1,500,000. The plaintiff, Ada Ruth Sheley, alleges a
loss of cmisortlum, society, companionship, and assistance of
her husband , and asks for compensatory damages In the
amount of $500,000.

Area deaths

at y

Vol.38. No.203

•

were 6. 8, 10, 36, 40 and 41.
Wednesday's jackpot -was worth
$9 million.
One-hundred·76 players picked
five of the numbers to win $1,000
each, while 8,836 players selected
four of the numbers to win $84
apiece.
Ticket sales for the mld·week
drawing totaled $6,449,352, while
the prize payout totaled $918,224.

•

0

~SNOW

. Cloudy tllnlght. Chance of
snow flurries. Low between Z5
and 30. Variable cloudiness
Saturday.

,.

-...-,

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Ohio's
Super Lotto jackpot went unclaimed Wednesday night, in·
creas ing the prize to at least $12
million for Saturday night 's
drawing.
There was no ticket sold that
listed a ll six of the numbers
drawn Wednesday night, a lottery commission spokesman said
today . The winning numbers

. Page 6

---"1

Damage suit filed in Meigs Court

Ohio Lotto Jackpot now $12 million

Daily Number
550
Pie!k 4
9818

Middleport .court ·news

Five defendants forfeited
bonds and eight others were fined
In the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting were Devon Wanat,
McArthur, $450, driving while
intoxicated, and $200, driving
under suspension; Robert W.
Quillen, Mason, W. V
$450,
driving while Intoxicated, and
· $50, left of' center; Theresa L.
, Ferguson, Columbus, $450, drlv·
ing while IntoXIcated; Catherine
A. Skwara, Athens, $41, speeding, and John Ingels, Middleport,
$200, fleeing police.

District court to hear 3 cases

qulrement per employee per
year could possibly be lowered.
Costs for each county agency to
participate in the pool would be
less than paying . the rate In·
creases to Blue Cross, and the
same coverage, or In some Cises,
perhaps even better coverage,
could be continued.
The commissioners, SWisher
and Phil Roberts, county eng!·
neer, who was also present !or
the discussion, asked Patrick to
report back as. sOQn as possible
with figures on the JX)Ol. '

Ohio Lottery

Church
•
notices

VIctor Perry, 55, of Dexter, .a Columbia Township Trustee,
charged In Meigs County with cultivation of marijuana,
appeared Thursday before Meigs County Common Pleas Judge
Charles H. Knight and was fined $5,000 and sentenced to 30 days
In Jail and two years probation. In addition Perry was ordered to
forfeit 45.5 acres of real estate to the county.
,
Paul Gerard, lnves_tigator for Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney Fred W. Crow lii, said the state argued for a prison
sentence for Perry, while Perry's attorney, John Lentes,
argued for probation.
'Knight reported that several factors were Jtiven strong
consideration bY the · court In determining the sentence,
Including tesumonies on behalf of the defendant by Columbia
Township Trustees Gay Johnson and Jim Gaston, Township
Clerk Gloria Hutton and Township employee Jim Haning. Also
major factors In the judge's decision were a recomme!Klatlon
!or probation by Phillip McKinley, adult probation officer and
Perry's state of health, as given by Dr. Mark Rothstein. '

Firm awarded judgment
'

.

Standard Publishing Co., Cincinnati, has been awarded a
judgment in Meigs County Common Pleas Court of $4,516.18
from Mark A. Beegle, Racine. doing business as Kings
Christian Bookstore.
An action by First Michigan Bank and Trust Co. against P&amp;S
B11lldlnga and Dale R. Proffitt has been dismissed with costa to
tbe plaintiff. The cOIIl't found iliat Dale R. Proffitt war never a
proper party In the action and ordered the plaintiff to pay $500 to
each defendant for attorneys fl!CS.
A voluntary dlamlssal bas been entered l.n thecae of Barbara
Ann Grovtr apjn~ Dalton Qrover.
·
~tiona by Hubert Clower, et al, aplnlt Denver Clower, eta!;
and Valerie Imbodeft, now lmowa as Valerie Jeflen, aplnlt
Timothy F. Jeffen, have alao bleb dismissed.

·Conducts training session
'

w_.

~

I

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Milre' Duhl, dlatrlct COIIIII'VAtlonilt for 0. 1\1111' loll and

CoUII'IIatJOn District Board, coadllc:ted aljaott trallllllf

COntinUed oa Jll&amp;llll

'
such as the showboat Becky
Thatcher In Marietta.
In addition, the proposal extends the D· 7 permit resort
season. from 120 days to May
1-0ct. 31.
In sending the bill back to the
Legislature, Celeste proposed a
joint Pause-Senate study com·
miltee on the liquor permit quota
·
system .
' 'The q·uota S)'a~m has not
. been comprehen~lvely reviewed
since Its Inception several de·
cades ago," the governor said,
''Business persons and neighbor.'
h!lod groups, both with equally
stn;mg points of view, could stand
to benefit from the public hearing

process."

'

,

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Infla·
lion rose a moderate 0.3 percent
In January with Increases In
prices for food, housing and
, medical care offset by sharp
declines in energy costs, the
Labor Department said today .
When figured on an annual
basis, the Consumer Price Index
last month rose, 4.2 percent,
slightly higher than the 3.6
' percent Increase In the second
hal! pf 1987 but less than the 4.4
percent rate for the entire year.
The .January increase in lnfla·
tion topped a 0.2 percent hike In
December, revised upward from
0.1 percent, and matched the 0.3
percent increase in November. ·
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
It was the second consecutive
monthly decline in energy'prlces.
· Gasoline prices were down 1.6
percent after a drop of 1. 7
percent In December while fuel
oil prices declined 0.6 percent,
charges for electricity dropped
0.3 percent and natural gas
prices fell 0.1 percent, the depart·
ment said.
Food and beverage prices rose
0.3 percent last month, a slower
rate .\ban In December. Grocery
store food prices rose 0.2 percent
in January compared with 0.6
percent In December. That re!lected a sharp turnaround In the
Index for fruits and vegetables,
which !ell 0.9 percent after a 6.9

hou~e
~aste

percent Increase In December. ·
Meat prices declined ror the
fifth consecutive month In Janu. ary. Beef prices felll:4 percent
and pork prices dipped 0.5
percent. Poultry prices, however, rose 1 percent in their first
Increase since August. Egg prl· .
ces also rose and a 1.'1 percent .
advance ln . cereal and bakery
product prices was the largest
jump In seven years, the depart·
ment said.
Dairy products rose0.7 percent
while restaurant meals and alco·
hollc beverages each Jumped 0.3
percent.
Excluding food and energy,
ln!latlon .rose 0.5 percent In
Janu&lt;~ry after a 0.2 percent
increase In December.
Hoqsing prices rose 0.4 percent
last month, up from 0.3 percent In
December. Shelter costs rose 0.6
Jiercent, re!lectlng a 3.2 percent
Increase In the price of lodging
while out of town. Renters' costs
rose 0.4 percent while residential
rents advanced the same
amount,
.
..
The decline in energy c0 sts
helped moderate the increase In
housing costs, the department
said ..
Telephone services cost 0.1
percent more In January as
Increase~ In charges Ior local
calls and Intrastate toll calls
more than offset a 2.4 percent dip
In charges for lntersta te toll

committee aPP~;;;~stsaid
disposal bill hursday

COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UPI) -'- and up to $3 a ton for Ohio waste
Legislation dealing with Ohio's coming from outside the coun
dwindling abtuty to accommo- or district.
date garbage took a step forward
The district would keep 75
in the state House of Represents· percent of that money and use it
lives Tilursday.
for solid waste disposal. The rest
Tile bill, supported by the would go to the state EPA for
administralionof Gov. Richard cleaning up unneeded or abah·
Celeste, came out of the Energy doned landfills and hazardous
and Environment Committee on waste.
The bill requires the EPA to
a 9·2 vote after extensive amend·
ments were adopted, and headed come up with ·recommendations
for a floor vote next week.
in one year for the dlsp()sal of
House Speaker Vernal Riffe used tires, a common eyesore in .
, Jr., D·New Boston, said he hopes Ohio, and ash from municipal
for a floor vote Wednesday after Incinerators.
The bill provides for back·
Don Jackson was hired as the bill makes a quick trip to the
volunteer assistant girls' softball Finance Committee for review of ground Investigations of landfill
coach for the current school year a $2.~ ,million appropriation for owners In response to the attor·
ney general's office, which dis· .
when the Eastern Local School administration of the program.
Meanwhile, the House adopted I closed that the owner of a landfill
. District Board of Education. mel
in regular session Thursday a pair of bills to protect victims of near Steubenville had connec·
child abuse, and then joined the !Ions with organized crime.
night.
Senate
in weekend recess.
There would be a moratorium
· Tbe board named Fred PenThe
solid
waste
bill,
drafted
on
new landfills, although excepborwOOd, Franklin Beach and
after
weeks
of
discussion,
re·
lions
could be made by the EPA
Verona Jones to the substitute
quires
the
establishment
of
local
with
permission · of the local
teachers list .. for the cufreni
school year and hired Ednq waste disposal districts to make waste disposal district, if a
Householder as a substitute long-range plans tor landfills and landfill Is needed and Is In the
secretary, library aide and kin· Other methods of getting rid of public interest.
Rep. Joseph Secrest, D·
dergarten aide for the current trash, · Including re-use and
re.
c
ycllng.
Senecaville,
committee chair·
year. Applications for reimbur·
It
jilso
requires
the
Ohio
.
man,
said
the
bill balances the
semen t for an lnservlce unl t for
Environmental
Protection
needs
of
citizens
and taxpayers,
Betsy Jones and Debbie Pratt,
to
write
specifications
local
governments,
C!tmpanies
Agency
teachers at the Chester Elemen·
tor
constructing
and
operating
that
generate
waste
and
landfill
tary School, were approved.
The board adopted the Special landfills, and to enforce those owners.
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
Education Compliance System, a ·specifications to prevent harm·
Cui
leaks.
Concord,
one of the bill's oppO·
state approved model of policies
The bill sets a fee schedule for nents, attempted to amend the
and procedures to meet the
trash
dumping, with the highest bill to eliminate most of the
requirements for educating han$4.50 a ton required lor provisions, saying the bill should
fee
of
dicapped children which Is proout-of-state
garbage.
be circulated in public before
. vided by the Southeast Ohio
Currently,
dump
and
landfill
passage.
Special Education ResouTce
operators set their own fees lor
Johnson said citizens are un·
Center.
accepting
•garbage,
and
eastern
aware
that the bill will cost them
Bills were approved Cor pay.
ment alona·with amemled appro- Ohio residents have complained
prjatlbns for the 1986 Chapter I that companies are hauling trash
·.carryover program, the 1987 from as far away as the East
Chapter I carryover program Coast and dumping It In Ohio.
Ronald R. Callfoun, a Galllpo·
The committee learned from
lis attorney who flied his petition
and the 1987 regular Chapter I .
program, Amended budgets and the state attorney general's
for thE! Judgeship ,of the Fourth
District Court of Appeals, has
appropriations for the clals of office that It would be unconstltu·
1992 and the clau of 1993 activity · tiona! to tolally ban garbage been dlsquallfed as a candidate,
fuada were apJil'OVed. New from other states.
according to the Scioto County
The bill requires the formation
budgets aiKI appropriations for
Board of Elections.
the clala Of ltll aotlvJty fulld and of·local solid waste management
the tillS Title JI praeram were· dlslriets, wblch may be by single
Calhoun !lied his petition with
approwd u was an approprla· county or a combination of
officers
of
those
counties.
The
.
the
wrong tl!rm of judgesblp. He
. Ucm modlftc!atloll for tile
district
boards
are
to
formulate
a
had
written In the expiring term
activity tuad. Tile bOard theJimet
111 executive .....Gil to dllcuu 10.year plaa fo~ adequale waste rather than the term he was
dllpolal. The plan~ would have to petitioning for which was . the
per~el, teaalancl ~ related
be ratUled by the Ohio EPA.
Feb. 9, 1989 tl!rm.
mauen.
· Board meam~ attending
Uadlr the ft« ICbedllle, WRite
No Gallla County candidates
tile
Jim Smith, d'IPONI ctulrlcta ~ be able
to cbarp up to SUO a toe 011 have been dlaquallfed, accordhlll
vtce wute from lheCOIIIltyordlatrlct, to the local boai'd of elections.
The Senate passed the blll21-10
and the House 72-20. It takes 20
votes to override a veto In the
upper chamber and 60 in the
lower.

Jackson
to serve
·as coach

caJhoun

.,.,A

nteetl=
==~
M=~·

calls.
The Transportation index declined 0.1 percent last month,
reflecting lower fuel prices. But
new·car.prlces also fell. down 0.2
percent, and the cost of financing
new cars declined 0,7 percent
after Increasing nearly 10 per·
cent in the fourth quarter of 1987.
Used car prices feliO.l percent.
public transporta!IQn costs
dipped 0.2 percent. as did prices
!or·airline tickets.
Charges for Ciir Insurance rose
1.5 percent, the biggest increase
since October 1986, the depart·
ment said.
Medical costs rose 0.8 percent
In January , the largest gain In
nearly two years. Drugs and
medical supply prices jumped0.6
percent while hospital rooms
were 1.2 percent more expensive
and doctors' services were 1
percent highe r than in
December.
Apparel and upkeep prices
rose 0.1 percent, entertainment
costs rose 0.6 percent and the
Index for other goods and services jumped 1.1 percent In January, the department said.
With the January ~PI report,
the Labor Department' s $100
market basket of goods is being
based on average prices from
1982 to 1984, instead of lhe
previous base year of 1967.
Thus, $100 In the 1982-1984
market basket cost $115.70 in
..

In t
torm of higher garbage
coilec 'on fees. But his amendment as defeated.
• Before recommending the bill,
the committee approved
ame.n dments :
-Earmarking at least 50 percent of the stat's litter control
grants to local government for
recycling. Currently, the local
governments may divide the
money In any percentage for
litter cleanup or recycling.
-Making It easier for small
counties· to operate c a self.
contained waste disposal ·
district.
-Eliminating- the criminal
background checl{ for officers of
companies that own their own
landfills.
The domestic violence bills,
recommended by a special gov·
ernor's task force , were sent to
the Senate on topheavy votes. ·.·
One bill, passed 89·1, allows a
child staying In a shelter to
attend school free of tuition in the
district where the shelter is, and
prohibits the offending parent
from finding the child's location
from his or her prior school.
The other bill, adopted 82-7,
permits a juvenile court to order
a child abuser to vacate the
residence or to refrain from
visiting the abuSed child's
residence.
Opponents Indicated they did
not want courts to have such,
powers without knowing all the
facts In a case but the sponsor,
Rep. Barbara Pringle, D·
Cleveland, said such an eviction
would take place only after a
hear-Ing.

�.•

•

.'

Friday, Febru.y 26, 1988

.•

Comment

Page 2-lhe Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mkklaport. Ohio
Friday, February 26, 1988

t/.

UPI ralif188

~~

Qilv
~

.........,._..,..,,.,.,...c:::l·..
-

.
ROIIERT L WINGE'M'
Publisher
.

--

PAT WHITEHEAD
•Aealstant Publlsber/Controller

.._

.

BOBHOEFUCH
General MIIDII(er

IIIII

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Cleft.... IIi lA at,. .... allbt
Goldea State at 8eMde, •lP*

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S..CrameiiO at loUie. lf:Jt p.m.

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44 •
Ul~

MiL ·results

II. Ntrtll CaNII• State (I. . )

....aaruJr.!.

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

•

II.V ....... (J7.. )

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesS than D) words
long. All letters are subject toedltlng and must be s lgned with Dame, addrt&gt;Ss and
telephone number. No. unsigned lt'tters wDI be published. Letters &amp;houkl be In

pNATIONA.L HOCU:Y LE.WVE

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;gooo lasle, addressing lssues, not per!lmalltles.

Buffalo 1, •· Lo•t
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P~ident Reagan hopes to.

q.ebec At Detrell, 7:JI P·••
NY Ralil:enatNewlene)', 1:flp.m.
Calpr)' lit V.-eomr, 11:11 p.m.

8ahniQ'R Game.
MIIIIHIUalBo . . .

· This week's games

ftee .hostages before 1989 .

'WMhtGKtoa at NY Jall.aden. ni1W

•rraleat•a...,.rd,nljbt
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St. LoiM .. Ta............
Wlaal,.&amp;al Mo ..real, III&amp;W
........... at IAt.U~. alsflit

Tldl Wet:ll.'a

·
.
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Reagan says he would like to
free all of the A~erlcan hostages In Lebanon before he leaves office.
He has got to hurry. And maybe even adopt a more resilient policy:
The president, Secretary of State George Shultz and VIce President
George Bush have pounded their fists tor the last several years
declaring they would never negotiate, never d.eal with terrorists. '
The Iran-Contra scandal investigations concluded that Indeed the
administration did deal. sending Iranweapons 'in hopes of freeing the
hostages. David Jacobsen, &gt;one of the hostages, was released on the
basis of the tradeoff, and more had been ex!iected to be frero
So the administration said one thing' publicly and did a~other
secretly and the expose of the clandestine operations was costly In
terms of the president's credlbiiJty and accountability.
·The administration, much as It has protested, of course had dealt
with captors of Americans when It was possible or feasible. The TWA
plane Incident Is a case In point. The exchange of American journalist
Nicholas Danlloff for a Soviet accused of espionage In the United
States Is another.
' II appears there Is some selectivity, although White House
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater now says the administration, with the
devastating experience of the scand,al, Is now back to square one- no
deals.
By William A..Rusher
.In his book "The Veil," about the CIA, author sOb Woodward was
told by William Casey, the late director of the cloak and dagger . No doubt the shrewd Democraiic leaders of the House of
agency, that the united States enlisted the support of Saudi Arabia to
Representatives felt there were
try to do In one of the leaders ot a radical Moslem group 'tn Beirut.
plenty of good reasons for voting
The operation ended In some 200 casualties when a building was
not
to send further military ~ld to
. blown up In the Lebanese capital and the one man who was the target
the
Nicaraguan freedom
got away. Later, the CIA found out that by forking over a couple of
fighters .
·
rqllllon dollars, they could subdue the leader who wanted the money
First and foremost, there was
for food and clothing for his followers.
the
satisfaction of delivering a
The terrorists have their own agenda; and their own demands. It Is
blow to a popular
stunning
not known whether contacts are made In channels behind the scenes
presldeqt and therRepublican
or whether any negotiations take place, and whether the demands
eby
diminishing,
to some extent
could be lessened :
·
his
·
reputation
as a wondet
The Israelis gave up some 1,000 Arab prisoners for thre~ of their
worker.
Thep
too,
the wholf;! aid
.
soldiers. ~alvadoran President Jose Napoleon Duarte· ·freed 93
Issue
has
been
around
tor several
political pnsoners to win the release of his daughter from her
years,
culminating
In
Its
key role
kidnappers.
.
Iii
the
Iran/contra
controversy,
Will! the latest capture of Lt. Col. William Higgins In Lebanon. who
and this musi have seemed a
was part of a U.N. team, the administration has restated Its policy .
Peggy Say, Sister of Terry Anderson, the Associated Press bureau . • propltjous time . to slay the
chief who has been held more than 1,000 days . apparently by an . dragon once and for all. Finally,
repeated polls of public opinion
Iranian-controlled Lebanese Shiite group, Is becoming discouraged
on
the subject have been reassurwith the State Department and the White House for what she said Is
Ingly
uniform In suggesting that
written in stone: "No concessions. No deals."
people, for whathe
American
"Why do we accept that," she asks. "Why do we say because It
tever
reason,
oppose
such milcomes out of the White House that's just the way it is? Hostage taking ·
Itary
aid
by
margins
of about
is nothing new; we have always made concessions "
·
2-to-1.
,
She made tlie remarks in an Interview on CBS-TV's "Face tho:!
At the same time, the extraor·
Nation.'.'
dlnary
narrowness of the leader;contending tha! the government has a double standard and may
ship's
victory
(219to 211), and the
make more of an effort to help Higgins, she said that while the State
fact that tlie Democrat Department's policy was an "absolute no-negotiation for Terry and
controlled Senate promptly went
the others, and I remlnde&lt;) them that they had told me that before
on
record as favoring continued
TWA , and I watched those negotiations, and then they got back to me
military
aid, must send a chilling
and said now we are back to our old policy: no negotiation."
to Speaker Jim Wright
message
.But Reagan is hoping for a breakthrough that will bring the
his
cronies.
Clearly, a tot of
and
kidnapped Americans, and others Including the Anglican cleric Terry
Democrats
In
both
houses have
Waite, back to their homes.
grave doubts about being
.If a policy isn't' working, there Is no law against trying something
saddled
with the responsibility
lf~w . Th~ people will understand, and the administration may win
destroying
the military capafor
pglnts With a little more above board resilience.'
•
bility of the Nicaraguan
opposition.
. What It amounts to Is that,
however smart the House Demo·
cratic leadership thinks It is, .11 .
had also better be lucky. Because
If Its vaunted "peace process"
••
falls, and the Sandlnlstas revert
.
By DICK WEST
: WASHINGTON ( uPI) - Chairman: The Committee to Abolish to behaving like disciplined com- ·
February will now come to order. The cha lr recognizes the gen !lema n munlsts after all, and even half of
the gloomy Republican predlc·
from Montana.
"
come to pass, the responsl·
lions
: Gentleman from Montana: Than·k you, Mr. Chairman . I hope· the
.for the ensuing disasters
blllty
v_oters are equally cognizant . I yield myself such time as 1 may need.
will
be
wrapped around the necks
• Probably not all people were aware when they were so blithely
of
the
House Democrats more
ll[lshlng "happy New Year" to everyone last month that 19881s a leap
tightly
than anything else In
l';"ar. Had they been more c~nversantwlth the calendar, they might
recent
history.
liave been more circumspect In the way they shouted out holiday
!t'eetings to all comers .
.
.
It has been positively eerie to
, I note the extra day a lways Is added to February, which In my home watch seasoned politicians like
s~ate Is hardly a spring month. Why couldn't June have 31 days every . Jim Wright and Tom Foley
·
four years Instead?
laboring to Impale themselves on ·
; Gentleman from North. Dakota : Will the gentleman yield?
the point of Dimlel Qrtega's .
• Gentleman from Montana : I'll be glad to yield to my distinguished lance. Surely they must know
friend from North Dakota.
that, If (or perhaps we can skip
: Gentleman from North Dakota: Does the gentleman know who the hesitancy and say ·"when")
Jlomulus was?
.
he betrays them, the American
· Gentleman from Montana : You mean the Inventor of the first peOple won't waste any time
!toman calendar?
blaming themselves for the
; Gentleman from North Dakota: Yes. That Romulus. My reading blunder of underestimating Orladlcates he made the year only 10 months long, leaving out tega. The public's Indifference to .
lt.ebruary.
the toppling of the Cambodian
:Gentleman from Montana: Good thinking on his part. '
· · domino, after a similar Demo•Gentleman fro!)'! North Dakota: I thought my friend from Montana cratic congressional majority
~auld approve.The Roman calendar didn't jl'lve the year Its full
sold out our South Vietnamese
1!-month complement, including February, until tlie reign of Numa ally, Is no · reliable precedent
~mpllh1s ,
·
here. Southeast Asia Is 8,000
: Gentleman from Montana : Didn't Pomplllus put February at the miles away. Central America, all
E!!'d of the year? And didn't he name It Februarlus, a Latin word ot which - from Panama to
..eanlng "to purify?''
.
Mexico - now lies exposed to
;Gentleman from North Dakota: The distinguished gentleman Is mortal danger, Is on our very
cprrect . And purifying sure beat being hung over on New Year's Day. doorstep.
, Gentleman from Montana: Amen to that.
: Gentleman from North Dakota: The gentleman also probably Is
Perhaps the Democratic leada.ware that February didn't become the second month until Julius ers were bemused by the magic
Qlesar came along and moved New Year's Day from March to power of those words "peace
Jenuary.
.
·
process." It's hard, no tWo ways
!Gentleman from Montana: Yes, I was aware of that. And a good about It, to oppose a "peace
tiling tor us latter-day tel~vlslon watchers, as well as sponsors of New process," hOwever phony II may
Year's Day bowl games, that he did. But we were talking about ,be or however deadly Ill likely
February. Did the gentleman read anything about Valentine?
consequences. Neville Chal!1ber-

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Transaclions

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Feb. n
IIJCIIIIJU St at 01110 II
Rt at BDwlllll' Oree~tt
0Mt Ual\' al Ce.lral Mlcll
MlamiM Tolello
lllofthe. . (K) ~ at M"*
Clncl-.tl at TeiUM!Uee 81
Clntelaad 81 al WIIC· Gret:n Bay
Darton al Xawter

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Dllrap (AL) -81pedtlllrd bMemU·
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a ......,_ sa-... ..r.., Larkla to.
l ·year collln.ct.
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Blrkbeek aDd catcher Cllarllfo O'Brlea.
· Ml.ne.ota-SipedcMchtrTomNieto ·
lea 1-year coalr:act.
· .
· New York. (A.L• - Slped oUIIIelder
,Jo• Cruz to a l ·yelll' no. . •nateetl
conlftct. ·
·
· New Yod!. iNL) -llpd pticher IUClll.
,\fallen to a l·rear col&amp;n.ct: atped
plldler Toerrr Leacla.
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Oalllud - 81pH lllerUtep Willi
Wet. a. a I·Jear colllnd.
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Slpetl eatdll!r Tom
Papeat lo • 1-yur cMtrad.
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t.•• -

,
NCAC Tournament Final•
At WoOIIt.er

lain.was cheered In the streets of
Britain for engaging In a "peace
process" with Adolf Hitler.
Henry Kissinger accepted the
Nobel Prize for the "peace
process" he Initiated with North
Vietnam's Le Due Tho. Jimmy
Carter undoubtedly believed that
the "peace process" In which he
had Involved Begin and Sadat
had set the Middle East on the
road to a more tranquil future.
But It was Winston Churchill,

McOrllf, pile her c.,tlo McLuslrllla ud

Toumey scores

The siren call of 'peace' · ~nigrants

·'

(I) (!1 •1)

' t. Htrll Caroll• (IN)

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,jUJallla a&amp; IIdia•. 8 p.m.

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.
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
ASS&lt;lCiatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclattoli.

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WASHINGTON- There were
plenty of congressional junket·
eers traveling on the taxpayers'
dollar during the January recess,
but the "Most Intrepid" award
·goes to the merry band with the
mlsslon•to watch a Coast Guard
cutter smash through Ice near
'

NATioN.U. a.u&amp;J'IIALL .\880C •

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1.1'ellltfle 1rn ca.o

DEVOTED TO ~INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
lSI~

NBA results

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Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oltlo

ouUielder Lou TllorMoa to l ·)'ear
conlradL

BUkdball

loj. Oht. lUll! lc....l Bukelhall

Olk:.qo Traded ruard 8e4all"
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Phoe•• - TradM lonrard-eeat.er
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t.au. W.n Rn tt, Norwalk· Paul5'r'

Mopdor. 8f,, Wl .. 1... M
Stlf!fwiHMI F•lnle.r a,' Tl•ra n

addressing the
Congress disarmament clauses of the :.
after Pearl Harbor, who Ia· .t reaties which Germany signed :
111ented most movingly the tall, after the Great War.... That ,
ure of free men to act decisively chance has passed. It has .gone. :
while there was YEll time:
Prodigious hammer strokes •
"Five or six years ago," he have been needed to bring us ;
declared,' referring to the years together." And tour years of '
when Nazi Germany was still bloody war lay abead.
:
relatively weak, "It would have '
We \flll be watching the out- :
been easy, without shedding a come of your "peace ptoceis" •
drop of blood, for the United with Interest, Mr. Speaker.&lt;;\Dd If !
States and Great Britain to have It falls, some of us, at least, wlll :
Insisted on fulfillment of the neither forgive nor forget.

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1.-t~econd-rouM pic II; tn.d!dprd .lar
Humptlrft to Mltwauket for~-~ Crall

Te..-.arneata

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North Gallia advances to sectional rmals

Scoreboard ...

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The new·Pontioe Gland Pri•
is ovoUoble In three dlsllnC.
live models and we've got
·em oNI ~orne see OUI
sei8C11on and find out how
affordable ln.Je rood . cor
excitement can bel

poing away
~ith February

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.

ALLSMD..ES- Debl Thomas ofthePnltedSiates laaUIIDllletlas
:she skates to the end of the women's sbori proaram Thul'llday at
4he Winter Olympics. (UPI/REUTER) ..

LW82-WDlRUCK ·
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1987 2·011.
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2-o:.e:J: All

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SVAC standings

·NP-a

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NEW CAIIAIIO Z2B
T·TOP

I

Ariz. (UPI) - Five
. roster players failed to report
Wednesday to t~e Cleveland

. &lt;SiD

1987

•

~~ TUCSON,

CHEVROLETBERETTA · - -

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.

five, Indians absent ~m. camp

:=.-;:

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,

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
SOuthern ........... 18 3 1804 1306
Hannan Trace ..17 4 1616 1369
,:-Oak HJU .......... 11 4 1426 1277
North Gallla .... .11 10 1368 1537
· x-Kyger Creek .. 8 13 1307 1315
x-Ea.tern ......... 7 13 1381 1491
K·S. Valle)' ........ 5 17 1318 1677
x-So~tern. 2 19 1185 1541
x-coltlpleled ~ason
·
Tllunda.v!a toumamenu
North Gallla·'T6, Crooll,svllle 60

.

Indians' spring' training complex, but Manager Doc Edwards
expected all would arrive In time
tor today's first full-squad
workout.
Infielders Don Lovell and Junlor Noboa and· outfielders John
Moses, Bernardo Brito and Carmen Castillo were tbe absentees.
Non-roster ln!lelder Domingo
Ramos a.Jso did not report.

.

GAHS, Meigs _clash· at 7 tonight .
Two former Southeastern Ohio Marauders, now a member of the
Athletic League rivals, the Meigs Trl· Valley Conference, · have
Marauders and Gallipolis Blue come on like gangbusters slllce
Devils, will clash tor the 1988 the · long school strike ended,
Division II Rio Grande Sectional winning seven In a row by
basketball championship In Lyne convincing scores. Last MHS!oss
Center . at Rio Grande College was Feb. 6, to Southeastern Ohio
tonight. Tipoff time Is 7 o'clock. League champion Logan, 60-57.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Gallipolis finished second In
Devlls will be going after their SEOAL play with an 8-2 record.
The Marauders are averaging
first sectional crown In 11 years.
Coach Mlck Childs Marauders 68polntsagameandglvlngup65.
will be going after their first GAHS Is averaging 61 and giving
sectlonal.tltle In two years.
up 51.
Tonight's clash will be the first
Probable MHS starters will be
hardwood meeting bewteen the John Burdette, 5'7 junior and
two schools since Feb. 25, 1984, Chris Smith, 5-10 senior at the
when GAHS edged the Maraud- guard positions; Brent Bissell,
ers 51-44 In the Class AA S.:3 senior, center; Mike Bar·
trum, 6-5 senior and Bryan
semifinals at The Plains.
Meigs enters the contest with a Durst, 6-0 senior at the forward
14-7 record, Gallipolis Is 16-5. The ·•

.-

Skater Witt impresses judges··
CALGARY, Alberta (uPI)The dazzling perfOf!Tiances of
beauty and the beast provided a
storybook charmTh,ursday to a
Winter Olympics again marred
by tragedy and tui;1Jloll. 1
. Figure. skater Katarlna Witt, a
beauty from East Germany, and
Italian skier Al~~to To~ba, the
self-proclaimed · beast of the
slalom ski slopes, demonstrated
the charisma and athletic ablllty
that have made them lnterna·
tlonally famous.
Witt, the defending Olympic
champion, Impressed the judges
so much with her short program
that she m(lved Into position to
take ho~e the gold medal In
Saturday s tree skating ffnale.
Deb! Thomas of San Jose, Calif.,
holds a slight edge over Witt
entering the final portion of the
competitlon; but Witt Is cons!·
dered slightly better than Thomas In tree skating.
''It's hard to be confident that
you're going to win a gold medal
because you never know how the
judges are going to vote,"
Thomas. said.
If Witt wins the gold, she would
become only the second woman
figure skater In history to win
gold medals In successive Olympics. Sonja Henle of Norway won
three straight golds f~om 1928-36;
Witt drew higher marks than
Thomas In the short program but
the sellout crowd at the Olympic
Saddledome did not approve of
the judges ' decision and booed
loudly when ~ set of low marks
were posted for the American.
Thomas, however, because of
her advantage over Witt In the
compulsory figures skated Wed·
nesday, 11eld a scant lead In the
overall standings enterlngSatur·
day night's long · program which counts tor half the total
score. Canadian Elizabeth Manley Is In third place. ·
Tomba, the sensation of the
World Cup circuit, made good on
his boast that he would capture
the giant slalom, winning by a
greater margin than anyone In 16
· years.
·
Tomba's victory was tempered
by the shocking death o! a doctor
tor the Austrian Ski Federation.
A pair of Swiss skiers, Including

giant slalom bronze medalist
P\Q.Oi!l ~urbrlggen, witnessed
the ·horrlfylng accident In which
the doctor .. a renowned knee
specialists, was crushed to death
by a snow grooming machine.
Joerg Oberhammer, 47, a
doctor for the Ausirlan Ski
.Federation, was killed instantly
when he fell under a large
machine that smooths and prepares the course. Zurbrlggen ·
saw the accident as he rode up a
chalrllft with fellow Swiss skller
Marlin Hang!, who was 21st after
the opening run. Hang!, shaken
by the Incident, collapsed In 1he
starting gate and could not make
the second run.
Earlier In the Games, Brad·
ford MacDonald, 17, a local
resident who had been working
as• a photograher's assistant,
slammed Into a tree while skiing
down the mountain after a race.
He remained In a coma Thursday. Pam Fletcher, an American

lishing Company/ Multlmedla, Inc., ··Ppmeroy, Ohio •~769, Ph . 992·21!6. Second clase postage paid at Pomeroy.

Ohio.

Member: United Press

Ohio Newspaper Association. National
downhlllracer brokeherleg'lna
Advertising Reuresentallve, Branham
collision with ~ volunteer course · Newspaper Safes, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
worker at Mount Allan the day
before she was to compete.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
The unlt!l(l states was again
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
shut out' of the medal race. But,
as usual, u.S. athletes were not
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By Curler or Motor Ro•te
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the second straight day with
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week.
"I didn't know Randy was
No subRCrlpUons by mall permUted In
quite as bad a loser as that "said
areas where home carrier service Is
Roy. "I think hll's ·psychotic He
avaUabJe.
·
doesn 't seem to have a grasp on
Mall Subocrtptl.'
reality"
laalde Melp County
·
Thur~day was also a day of
13 Weeks ....... ........ ........ ........... $17.29
~Weeks ... .............. ........ ........ . $34.116 · ·
triumph for Soviet Ralsa Smeta52
Weeks ............ ... ................. ;. $1;6.!6
nla, who won her ninth medal to
OU..lde Melp Coual]l
equal the Olympic record for
13 Weeks ..... ....................... ... ... $18.20·
26 Weeks ....... .. ... ............. ... ... ... $35.10
most medals In a-career She won
52
Weeks ........ ........ ............... ... $67.60 ' ·
Continued on page .j

INC. ,

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IJ;
)

--· ........

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

ln~ematlonal,

Inland Dally Press Association and the

'

RaebleSouthern v1. NorthOallla
4t I' 'F B.S., 7 p.rn..
I t!&gt; .,

II;

The first period proved to be boards. Goals by Steve George
the closest encounter of the and Mays put NG back on track,
evening for the Pirates as they but a real back breaker came
fought tooth -and-nan to build a when Burnette canned thetlrsto!
12-10 lead after the first period of a bonus , then missed the second.
play.
Denney put forth a great
Goals by Keith Burnette and second effort to boss the boards
Don Mays got · NG rolling, but and can the follow up jumper tor
Rusty Denney proved early .he a 60-5tllead, then after a missed
was .going to be a force to be ·shot on the other end was hit with
reckoned with by. canning 6 a super pass from Mays to cash In
points In the first round. As North on the fast break.
NG waited It out at the'llneas33
Gallla widened Its lead to 28-20 at'
the half, Denny added 8 more for foul shots were shot ln .the frame,
14 at Intermission. Despite col- allowing NG to post the 76-60 win .
lecting three fouls Ryan Wade · NG hit 27·54 for 50 percent and
had 9 points for Crooksville, who canned 22·31 from the line. '
stumbled somewhat offensively Crooksville hit 21·51 from the
without their sharpshooting field and 11-18 at the line.
guard.
.
NG won the battle of the boards
Early In ·the second half 41·22 as Burnette filled In with 10
Pirates Greg Glassburn,Denney, behind Denney's 15. Wood had 9
and Burnette each picked up for C-vllle.
their third personal foul, but that
NG had 10 steals,10 turnover:
did not stop their aggresslve!JesS. s,and 15 assists, 11 by Mays; and
Crooksville made several 15 fouls.CHS had 19 turnovers, 5
comeback bids and ·cut the lead steals, and 22 personals.
North Gallla faces Southern ,
by one point 42·35 after three
rounds, but every time they Saturday as for tile second time-·
would make a run the PIrates In three years the two clubs have~
would buckle down and make a met In the Sectional Champion-•
key offensive play.
ship game. Game time Is 7 p.m ,·
With only 3: 56 remaining In the but fans shollld arrive early to
game Crooksville went from 12 get a good seat.
•
points down to within 7, 46·53, on
Box Scores:
an Inside bucket by Wood. They
NORTH GALLIA (76) -Greg
had the chance at the line tocutlt G•assburn 1-2-4; Steve George·.
to flve,but missed the first of a 4-3-11; Rusty Denney 11-11-33;
bonus and Denney controlled the Don Mays 5·2'12; Keith Burdette .
4·2·10; Blaine George 1·0-2;
Benjy Blackburn 0-2-2; Todd'
~ Petrie 0-0-0; D.J . Hammel 0-0-0; · .
. Brian Stoqt 1·0-2; TOTAU 27-22- ·
76.
'
slots.
.
CROOKSVILLE
(60)
-Lonny
,
Bartram Is averaging 23 points
Jarrett
0-2-0-6
~
Chad
Smith
0-0-0;
.
·
a game; Bissell 15; Smith nine;
Burdette 3; Durst 3 and Matt Aaron Taylor 3-2-8; Shad Ross ·
4-2-10; Tom Musick 0-0-0; Shadd
Baker 7.
·
Channel 0-0-0; Greg Cook 0-0-0;. ·
Probable GAHS starters will
Jason Taylor 2-0-2-4; Ryan Wade ,
be Mark Berklch, 6·4 senior and
Tim Neville, 6-1 senior or Mark 2-3-2-15; Chad Wood 2·5-9; Greg
Wllllams 1·2-0-8; TOTAlS 14-7". ·
Kimble, 5-9 senior at the forward
IHIO.
slots; David Todd, 6-6 senior,
By Quarters:
center; Billy Evans, 5·10 senior
North
Gallla
1216 14 34-76 and Jason Thomas, 6-2 senior at
CrooksvUle
10 10 15 25-60
the gulilrd positions.
Thomas is averaging 19polnts;
aerklch 10; Evans 7; Neville. 9;
The Daily Senlinel .· '
Todd 4; and Kimble 9.
Tonight's winner will advance
(USPS lU·IIO)
to the Division II District at OU
A Dlvtllloa ol Mwllmedlo, lac.
an&lt;! play the winner of the
Published every afternoon, Monday·
Shawnee Sectional on Thursday,
tbrougb Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
March 3, at 8: 15 p.m.
meroy, Oblo, by t~e Ohio Valley Pub-

,.1 AT 9.25°/o
' QAVI$-O.UICKEL

Frldi¥'• toanlamllllla

......,..~

By SCOTT WOLFE
game, and had to sit out consider·
ROCK SPRINGS - Hitting 17 able time, led Crooksville with 15
tree throws In an Intense 34 point markers, Chad Wood added
· .fourth period, the North Ga\lla 9,Aaron Taylor 8, Greg Williams
. P,lrates of Coach Bruce WilSon 8, and Lonny Jarrett tour:
put together a great team effort · A very happy Coach Bruce
to defeat the Crooksville Ceram- Wilson sald of his club, " Our foul
Ics, 76-60, here.Thursdayevenlng shooting really came through
In the Division IV boys' basket; . tonight ... We've had problems at
ball semi-final game held at the line, but tonight thats what
Meigs High SchooL
pulled us through. This Is probaNorth Gallla, now 11-10, wlll bly the best overall game we've
·
play Southern, 18,3, In the cham- played this year."
Earlier In the year North
pionship game of the SecUOJia.l
Tournament to be played Satur- Gallla dropped several close
day at 7 p.m. in Larry .R. games as a result of dismal foul
shooting, but Thursday the PIMorrison gymnasium at Meigs.
Leading that Inspired learn rates were we'll armed, canning
effort was 6-5 junior center Rusty 22·31, most ot which was In the
Denney, who scored a game-high clutch.
33. points and collected 15 reWilson continued."I felt Keith
bounds. Denney had a tremend- Burnette had a great floor game
ous Inside game both on the · and showed much leadership.
boards and offensively, ·b ut was Rusty Denney had a great Inside
not limited to the paint as he sank game, doing a super job on the
several15·foot jumpers and sank boards and getting the job done
11·15 tree throws, 8 of ,which done on the post. Don Mays had a
came In the final quarter.
. good passing game tonlght(11
. Swing guard Don Mays was · assists) and our entire·· team
also lmpress~ve with 12 points played well together." ·
and a great floor game, coliect.''Tonight we !elt like we had to
lng 11 assists, while senior redeem ourselves trom·tast yearmainstay Keith Burnette turned .;.last year we just didn't play
In an equally strong floor game well and the kids wanted another
with 10 points, Steve George chance to reach the championadded 11, and . Greg Glassburn ship game. Saturday, we'll have
four.
our hands tun, but I expect a good
· Sophomore Ryan Wade, who ballgame. Southern has a good
collected 3 fouls early In the balldub."

r--,-__,..,._..,___-:;----'---'_:____:,:.:.,:;::::~:;.::.:=:;.j

HallJWI 'Q-ace vi. Frank!ID Fllr·
uce Green at Chesapeake H.s.,

7: 30 p.m·.

The Daily Saatinei-Page 3

Porueroy-Middleport, Ohio

�-----------------------------

..

"-&amp;•

•

4 The D.lly Sutinel

Friday, February 2&amp;, 1988

Pu~due romps over Illinois,

Atlantic City ·will
host Tyson-Spinks
bout on June 27
NEW YORK (UPI)- The head from Bill Cayton and Jim Jacobs,
of tbe Las Vegas Hilton says making bids from the Las Vegas
Don.a ld Trump Is premature In hotels meaningless.
calling Atlantic City, N.J., the
" We had the clauses that gave
boxing capital after landing us the .advantage," Trump said
tbe Mike Tyson-Michael Spinks at a Thursday news conference.
heavyweight championship bout . "But that wasn't our big advanTrump Plaza Hotel and Casino tage. Our big advantage was theY
will be the site of the June 27 all wanted to be with us.
Tyson-Splnks bout, expected to .
"The fighters, promoters and ·
be the richest fight of all time. media all would rath.e r come to
Tyson will earn between $15 and Atlantic City. We've brought'
S20 million and Spinks Is guaran- boxing back to the Northeast.
teed $13 million.
We've established Atlantic City
Trump paid a record Sll as No. 1 In boxing.'.'
million site fee to win the fight
Giovenco disputed Trump's
from the Hllton and Caesars claim that Atlantic City Is the
Palace In Las Vegas, Nev.
city of choice for boxing people. ·
But the Hilton and · Caesars
' 'All the fans, promoters, re'pledge to remain forces In porters and fighters wanted to
boxing. .
· ·
·
come to Vegas for the fight," he .
. "We'll be In boxing for a long s;ald. "Eut Trump bOught the
. · lime," said John Giovenco, pres!- fight.
• dent of the Hilton Nevada Corp.
"I'm kind of sick and tired of
~ "I'm not surprised, but I'm
comments coming out of Atlantic
· disappointed (over losing Tyson- City badmouthlng Las Vegas."
Splnks).''
II Trump had turned down the
Tyson won all three of his world $1t million prlcetag, the bout
'heavyweight championship belts would have went to the highest
at the Las Vegas Hilton, before bidder between Caesars and th,e
shifting to Trump Plaza for his Hilton. Giovenco said the Hilton
last two bouts. Spinks defended bid close to $11 mUllon. C;~esars
his International Boxing Federa- negotiator Bob Halloran was
tion heavyweight crown twice at unavailable for comment.
the Hilton before he was stripped
"If Donald Trump had not
for fighting Gerry Cooney come up with the number, the
rather than the No. 1 contender- fight -wouldn'i . have been hi
last June at Trump Plaza.
Atlantic City," Cayton said from
• The Hilton will hold a World a_New Rochelle, N.Y., hospital,
Boxing Association champlon- where he Is resting with a heart ·
. shlp double-header April 16, ailment. "I'm quite sure It will be
matching lightweight champion the biggest fight In boxing
Julio Cesar Chavez against Ro- history."
dolfo Aguilar · and welterweight
Shelly Finkel, who was an
champ Marlon Starling against Intermediary between TYson's
Mark Breland.
managers and Spinks' pror;noter
Caesars Palace hosted most of Butch Lewis, will coordinate the
·the blockbuster bOuts of the closed-circuit and pay TV opera·1980s, Including the record- tion and says there Is "no
.setting Ray Leonard-Marvin question it will be the biggest
Hagler middleweight fight last fight ever."
'April 6. Caesars has a pay TV
Finkel said l!e already has over
:show headlined by George Fore- $15 million In guarantees from
·man March 19, a world crulser- closed-clrcul.t exhibitors and pre:welght title bout between dicts the closed-circuit and pay
·Evander Holyfield and Carlos TV profits will be around $25
DeLeon Aprll9 and the Olympic million. Throw In the site fee, $3 .
box-Oils July 16-17. Caesars also million from HBO for the delay
'will host monthly shows televised TV rights and $2 million for
by ESPN. _
foreign TV and the promotion
_ Giovenco said he was most should net more than $40 million.
upset with Tr ump's contention
That would break by at least
-that he )lad stuck It to Las Vegas $10 million the record set' by the
.by acqulrtn'g the TYson-Splnks Leonard-Hag!er bout.
bout. Before negotatlons beTrump pr~:dicts a sellout of
tween the two fighters' camps 21,135 at Convention Center.
began . Trump already had a Ringside seats · will cost $1,500 .
written right of first refusal from with the cheapes't seats going for
each side.
$100. A sellout would bring a live
Trump accepted the first offer gate of more than $11 million.

By United Press llllematlonal
The NCAA basketball 'cham. plonshlp pl_a que has a strong
cham;e of staying In Indiana.
While lbe ·Hooslers struggle In
defense of ~heir title, the secondranked , Purdue Boilermakers
continue to play like worthy
succes!IO!lS. :I'hursday night, In a
matchup between streaking
teams. Melvin McCants scored
22 point&amp; and triggered an early
12-0 spurt ~I West Lafayette,
lnd., In leading Purdue to a 93-79
Big Ten triumph against Illinois.
- Troy J&lt;.ewlsadded 19 points for

new

·Ohio Outdoors

Something familiar about
~those "new' fishing rods
baited up, there's a better than
By JERRY PICKRELL
even chance the fish could take
Outdoor Writers
the whole rig away from you If he
Association of America
was
of any size. I have actually
Distributed by VPI
seen
professional fishermen
Some of the baltcasting rods
throw
them
In the water while
;you'll find in the stores this
·season will look a little different trying to cast.
Someone In the business of
· :from the ones you may be used to
·designing fishing tackle regained
'using.
· It you're an old timer, they'll consciousness long enough to
look a bit familiar, but you may reshape that handle Into a
have a hard time placing where stick-like affair and extended Its
you saw them last. It's been a butt like It used to be before they
got laney with It :
·
while.
That means you can lay the
. , For _a long time, the rage has
thing
along your forearm while
•been the "pistol" grip baltcast:tng rod. This Is the one you use you pull for all you're worth
'with a revolving spool baltcast- without breaking your wrist or
lng reel, or a closed face losing the rod to the !Ish.
Another "Improvem e nt"
splncasting reel.
They look sleek and there's no that 's been made to this handle Is
question that the molded grip fits to make It of a substance't hat just
the fingers comfortably. The doesn't get slick wlien It gets wet.
Cork used to be the standard,
problem with them came only at
It wasn't very pretty and
but
the most crucial time: when
from the soli on your
discolored
..
you're fighting a fish.
hands
after
a · tiroe. Nowadays
. Unless you have wrists like
they 're using some space-age
Arnold Schwarzenegger, the
bloody things are hard to get any closed cell loam. I have to admit
It's lighter and It does look nicer.
leverage with.
It's sometimes strange the way
·, If they're slippery from being
old things are :'discovered" and
wet or from the. worm juice you
get a lot of hype being reintrogqt on your hand the last time you
duced. This Is one of them.

Skater Witt ...
bronze in a Soviet sweep of the
women's 20-kllometer cross
country race. her third medal of
the Calgary Olympics. Only
Swedish cross country skller
Slxten Jernberg, who last comgeted In 1964, has won as many.
: "As for the Olympics, this
must · be my last one," said
S,metanla, who will turn 36 next
Monday. "Before the next Olympics, there are four years. That's
too much time."
The Soviet Union's sweepofthe
\(/omen's 20-kllometer cross
country race brought that country's medal total to 25, or which
nlne have been golds. East
Germany failed to win a medal
lor the second straight day,
holding at seven gold,s and 17
overall.
• The United States ha~ won !our
medals so rar. Not since 1936 has.
. America come away from a
Winter Oly~plcs with less than
I(

\

,

Continued from page 3
seven medals.
Tomba's victory was the most
lopsided Olympic giant slalom
decision since 1972. His two runs
totaled 2:06.37. putting him 1.04
seconds ahead of silver medalist
Hubert Strolz of Austria.
"I'm the best In the world, and
thank God I did It," Tomba yelled
after bringing Italy Its first gold.

I

EASTERN SEVENTH GRADE - Pictured are members of
Eaa&amp;em's Seventh Grade Basketball Squad of Coach Ron lUll, wbo
posted a 1-5 overall mark and 4-3 league. Fropt: Jeremy Buckley,

the· Bollei1Dakers, 23-2 overall
and 12-1 In league play . Purdue
has won siX straight. The loss
snapped a four-game winning
streak for IIUnols,l8-9 and 8-6.
McCants scored 8 points In the
12-0 run that put the Bollermakers ahead 20-6 with 12:41 remainlng In the halt
"Our defense In the first five
minutes pushed them out of the
game," Pui'due Coach Gene
Keady said. "OUr defense forced
bad shots and got them out of it."
After Nick Anderson's free
throw with 3:29 left In the half

'

'

sliced Purdue's lead to 39-32, the Young defeated Air Force 76-62,
Boilermakers scored the final 6 No. 8 Nevada -Las Vegas ripped
points of the half to grab a 45-32 Pacific 77-61, 11th-ranked Syralead. Anderson scored 21 points cuse heat Providence 91-73, No.
to lead Illlnols, ,Lowell Hamilton 14 Bradley beat Tulsa 67-62, No.
had 18 and Kendall Glll16. Todd 15 Loyola-Marymount edged St,
Mitchell contributed 18 points tor Mary's 'ccaur.) 96-94, No. 16
Purdue.
.
Georgia Tech clipped· VIrginia
"They played very well," 76-71 and No. 20 Wyoming
Illinois Coach Lou Henson said. downed Utah 79-56.
"We played In spurts and we ·
At Pittsburgh, freshman Mark
weren't much of a match for Macon scored 24 points and Mike
them."
Vr~swyk 19 .In pacing Temple,
'Elsewhere In the Top 20, 23-1 overall and 16-0 In the
top-ranked Temple routed Du- Atlantic 10. Tlie Owls used a 19-4
quesne 94-55, No. 7 Brigham run en route to a 44-18 halftime ·
advantage.
.
"We don 't look at the scoreboard when we're up by a lot,"
Vreeswyk said. "Coach (John
Chaney) tells us to go out and
play as hard as we can. If we
make mistakes against a team
like Duquesne, we might make
those same mistakes against a

'

Gallla stated after Thursday's
semi-final win over CrooksviJle,
76-60, "Saturday we 'll undoubtedly have our hands full.
They've(Southern) !jOt a solid,
well coached, ballclub and they
enjoy the game. Tonight, we
probably had our best overall
game of the year and certainly
our best from the line. This
shquld give ~s 's ome confidence
going into Saturday's game."
Howie ' Caldwell added, "In
order to win Saturday, we must
co ntrol Denney on the post and
contain Burnette's shooting.
Both are exceptional players.
The other three players North
Gallia puts on"the court are very
complementary players. They do
their role ...and do what they're
supposed to. If they handle our
defensive pressure tl)ey ''\ be In
the ballgame."
In the two other meetings thl_s
year North Gallla did' not handle
Southern 's pressure well and
also had some difficulty at the
-foul line , a problem that cost NG
a much better seasonal record.
Ca ldwell concluded, "We had
several goals at the beginning of
the season. One was to win the
SVAC. Another was to break Into
th e top ten in the ratings, whi ch

1987

barely missed. (SHS was
hundred points.· and with a good
ranked 11th In the final State game Saturday 7 kids will have
Poll)Now we have the opportun- scored over 100 points says Coach
ity to accomplish our next goal by Caldwell.
winning the sectional
On the all-lime Southern rechampionship."
coi'd list the 1987-1:\8 Tornadoes
"Our team concept !l'ot us are currently the third highest
where we are. A lot of our scoring team, have the third
lndlvldual,effort comes from our highest scor-Ing average, and Is
team work. Everyone has done only tlie flt'th team In Racinetheir job well, but Saturday's
Southern history td1 place five '
another test and everyone will
men with over 200 pci\nl~. ·
aglan. have to do their job."
Caldwell stated, "This :earn Is
Southern has tallied 1804 points
really moving up quickly."
over 21 games for 85.9 per game.
Two Southerners, David Am Defensively Southern has given
burgey and Jeff Caldwell have
up 1306 for 62.1.
topped the 1000-pofnt ca.l'l!t'r total
Overall SHS is shooting 55.09
mark. while Kenny Turley Is
percent both two point goals and
close behind with 864.
three pointers.From the line SHS
North Gallla depen«;fs on the
Is shooting 65.5.
double-digit scoring pf . Rusty
Denney. who also a killer on the
Five Tornl\does are averaging
double figures after 21 games- boards and one of the areas top
.Dave ~mburgey is averaging
rebouriders.Kelth ' Burnette,a js.s. Jeff Caldwell 17.4, Kenny . nother top scorer In the SVAC Is a.
Turley 13.9, Dave McMIIIIng 10.6,
triple threat at guard, while
and Shannon-Riffle 9.9. If Kenny
Steve George,Don Mays, arid
Turley scores 8 points It will be
Greg Glassburn solidify the Nq_•
the third time that three kids , line-up.
have scored over three hundred
The well-coached Pirates are
points this year.
. led Into battle by veteran mentor
Bruce wlis on.
Unselflshnes Is one of this
Southern team's trademarks,
Should North Gallla play a~·
proven by the fact . that five
they are capable Saturday's
players have scored over two
contest could be ouite a thriller .
'
we

Knicks end 18-game losing streak on road . , : By MIKE BA~NES
Owners .of a seven-game losing rebounds. Kenny Walker contrlb- ·· scoreless In the fourth quarter .
. UPI Sports Writer · •
streak and the league's worst uted 16 points and rookie Mark
t;lefore the game, the Suns sent ·
The New York Knicks whose record of 11-40, Los Angeles was Jackson had 11 assists for the
Larry Nance, Mike Sanders and·
last victory on the road c'a me on without center Benoit Benjamin, Knick s.
a 1988 rtrs.t-round pick to the
Elsewhere, Phoenix downed
Cavaliers for Kevin Johnson,
the eve of Thanksgiving, finall y sidelin ed with the flu; and rookie
found a team they could beat forward Joe Wolf, out with a sore Cleveland 109-103, Dallas edged
Mark West, TYrone Corbin a
Houston 108-106 and Washington
first- and second-round pick In
away from Madison Sqti'are left hamstrmg.
Garden - the Los Angeles
Guard Quintin Dalley, the pounded sacramento 129-110.
1988 and a second-roimd selection
Clippers.
team 's top reserve, left In the
suns 109, Cavallei'S 103
In 1989,
.
'·
The Knicks picked on the lowly second quarter with a strained
At Phoenix, Walter Davis
In another deal, Phoenix dealt •
Clippers - a weakened Clipper gr om.
equaled his season high with 35
Jay Humphries to Milwaukee for'
"That was really frustrating," polnts .. 12 in the fourth quarter, Craig Hodges and a 1988 second-,
club at that - to end their
18-game road losing streak with a Clippers Coach Gene Sh~e said. and Jeff Hornacek registered 16
round draft· pick, Thursday
106-96 victory at the Sport s "The players really played their points and 15 assists to pace the
marked the league's trading .
Arena. New York is just one he~rts out and we were really Suns. Mark Price led Cleveland
deadljne.
·
garne behind Pniladelphla In the short. But we didn 't have the with 24 · points but was held
l:lattle for the flmil Eastern ' offensive weapon.s to keep up
· '
Conference playoff berth.
With them , And losing Quintin r•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~---~
" We finally.got the monkey off - hurt us even more . .,.
our backs," Knicks Coach Rick
In the final period, New York
Pltino sa id after his club lm- turned to Gerald Wilkins and
proved to 2-23 on the road. "Now
Patrick Ewing - and they
we don 't have . to answer any
d~llvered. Wilkins scored 12 of
questions about our road record.
his 25 points and Ewing had 8 of
Wecameoutplaylngemotionally
his l61n the fourth quarter. The
and at an all-time high.
pair combined fo( New York's
"I give the Clippers a great
finall7 points.
The Clippers wereled by Mike
deal of credit. lt was like the
wounded -tiger sy ndrome. They Woodson with 20 points , Michael
were battered and still played Cage with 16· and' Greg Kite great."
. sta rtin g for Benjamin...., with 10

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1982 C'hevy S~10 .......................... S3895

4 sp., topper, good condition.

·

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1976 Ford f.;.250 :........................... S695

204 Condor 51.

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1

II•• Ftll &amp; Wl1ter H11re
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~THE

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Cavalier

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.

better team."
At Colorado Springs, Colo. ,
Michael Smith scored 16 of his 21
points In the first half and
Brigham Young outscored Alr
Force 25-8 at the foul line. Jeff
Chatman added 14 points for the
Cougars, 23-2 overall and 9-3 In
the WAC.
At Stockton, Calif., guard Stacey Augmon collected 14 points
and 14 rebounds to help UNLV.
23-2 overall and 11-2 In the PCAA,
hand Pacific Its 18th straight
lossc UNLV forward J'a rvls Basnight suffered a mild concussion
In the first minute and was taken ,
to a hospital where he was
reported . In satisfactory condition and released.
At Providence, R.I., Rony
· Selkaly accumulated 16 points
and 17 rebounds. In en a bUng
Syracuse, _21-6 overall and 10-4 1!1
the Big E;~st, to extended Its

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1986

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'

Yanks, Pirates acquire aging _
veterans; Soto ·looking better
By United Press International
The New York Yankees and
Pittsburgh Ptrates acquired agIng veterans Thursday while the
· Cl nclnnatl Reds received encouraging ~lgns from one of their
'
own.
At the Reds' spring training
camp In Plant 'City. Fla .. Marlo ·
Soto, hampered by Injuries for
the past two seasons, threw 10
minutes of batting practice. The
club's minor-league pitching
coach, Wayne Granger, observed Soto, who Is coming off
shoulder surgery and has managed a combined record of only
8-12 the past two seasons:
"He threw well. but the only
thing I have to base that on Is the
times I saw him pitch at
i'frlple--AI Nashville last year,"
~ranger salq. ''He definitely had
roore velocity today. He Is more
~!axed and he Is not labOring lie had an easy flow."
·
-: During the off-season. both
Manager Pete Rose and General
~anager Murray Cook said they
~ere not counting on Soto to
Pitch.
•:~ "If !I told
you Marlo So to would
'
It!? our Opening Day pitcher and
he Is relaxed and throwing like he
~ce did, It would be the most
"tlsfylng ·thing that could
!Iappen to the Cincinnati ballclub," Rose said.
:: So to said . .' 'I'm just going to
keep on fooling everybOdy. I'll
just have to do what I can.
~peclally now that I don't

"It appears Bruce has had a
Fla .. St. Louis Manager Whitey
successful operation and Is on the !Jerzog said he would start
path to recovery," said Larry f&lt;)rmer Detroit and Atlanta.rlghtBOught!, .Pirates' assistant gen- hander Randy O'Neal In the
eral manager. "We worked him exhibition opener against the
out here at Pirate City on Friday Texas Rangers next week. "I
and we liked what we saw."
want to take a good look at hlm
In other news, Gary Pettis and and ·give him every opportunDan Petry, swapped for eaeh . lty," Herzog said.
other during the orr season, both
At Scottsdale, Ariz., Oakland
missed workouts with their new rookie Walt Weiss, expected to
squads .
step Into a starting role when
Petry left •the California An- shortstop Alfredo Griffin was
gels' camp In Mesa, Ariz .. and
traded to the Los Angeles
was briefly hospitalized after Dodgers, signed a one-year
experiencing back pain. Petry, contract.
acquired In a December deal
Weiss has played In just 16
from Detroit for Pettis, suffered major-league games, but hit .462
a muscle strain while performing wl)lle tilling In for Griffin last
routine conditioning drills.
season.
He was taken by ambulance to
"There's no doubt that Walter
Desert Samaritan Hospital and Weiss Is an II," said A's Manager
released following an Tony LaRussa. "But he's very
examination.
'
talented."
Petits will miss batting pracAt Miami. pitcher Jose Mesa.
tice at the Tigers' camp In denied permission to arrive In
Lakeland, Fla.. for at least a the United States because of visa
week because he Is still recover- problems, missed the Baltimore
Ing .f rom off-season surgery on Orioles' first full-squad workout.
his left hand.
First baseman ,Eddie Murray
"! just hope that people won't
and .third baseman Ray Knight
look at my .208 batting average of also were absent from · the
last year and conclude that's all I
practice but had called ahead.
can do," said Pettis, expected to
Mesa was scheduled to work
hit leadoff and play center field.
out Thursday, but was .still
"If they do, then they don't know
having visa problems In the
what I went through last year. I
Dominican Republic. Manager .
hurt my hand In spring training, ·cat Rlpken Sr. said Mesa was
but It wasn't diagnosed correctly expected to practice with the
until September.
club Friday'.
"In the meantime, the Angels
The Minnesota Twins signed
had me doing everything and catcher Tom Nieto to a 1-year
count."
anything to get out of my slump. I contract. Nieto, 27, split last
·~ The Yankees, searching for a
wasn't ··very happy In California sea!!On between the Twins and
l~t -handed pinch hitter, signed
-the area, :.es. butnottheteam. · their Triple A farm club In
4().yellr old Jose Cruz to a All I ever heard was how badly I Portland. He hit .200 In 105
~e-year non-guaranteed con- · was doing. "
at-bats for the Twins.
~act. The Yankees have also
Elsewhere, at St. Petersburg,
· lfvlted 37-year old Mike Easler,
'ho served as a platoon deslgrpted hitter last season, to camp
• a non-roster player.
~ Both Cruz and Euler were In
llllform Thursda:y and took part
ti the club's second tull-114juad
l(!lrkout.
CHICAGO (UPI) - Major
beld Thul'lday afternoon to con&gt;lThe Plratel alped right·
Leque Baseball pressured CitY
lllder lbe propoul to ltaht up the
lander Snice Berenyl, 33, to a
Councn aldermen Thuraday to
only' unlit maJor leap ballparll
lnor leap contract, m~lng approve tbe ChlciiO C\1111' reIn tbe nation de1plte ~ulllty
the oldest player. ill lbe q-t to have lllllllllllttalled 'at
proteell agalnat the plan. The
ate~' organization. &amp;.renyt,
Wrtaley Field by announclne the. proposal calli
etaht ntabt
~ hu a career record of H-55,
National Le!IJIIe team . would
11arnes thll IHIOD followed by 18
rii1Aed the entire 19111 seaaon IIOIIt the 1990 All-Star game If the ntallt aamee I aeuon beainnlq
aholllder surgery·
pla11 wu approved.
·
In 1989.
-.,:
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«l"· ·trying _to tel a rebound In the first half of
Tbul'llday night's Big Ten contest In West

60

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VROL~T

~''vo'tJ' t'AKE IT~ DUaolll forWard Ke11ay Battle,

unbeaten streak over Providence
to 18 games .
At Peoria, Ill.. Hersey Hawkins. the nation's leading scorer,
poured In 33 points, Including the
go-ahead 3-point play, t)lat
boosted Bradley. 21-4 overall and
10-2 In the MVC.
At Moraga, Calif. - Mike
Yoest sank a 3-polnter at the
buzzer to allow Loyola to !Joost
the _nation's longest winning ,
streak to 20 games and Improve
the Lions to 24-3 overall and 13-2
In the WCAC.
At Atlanta. Tom Hammonds
scored 23 points and freshman
Dennis Scott added all 16 of his ~
points In the second half to rally ,:
Georgia Tech, 20-6overalland 7-4 ..
In the ACC.
.',
At Laramie, Wyo. , Fennls .
DembO collected 19 points and 9 .
rebounds to carry, 21-5and 10-51n'
the WAC.

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1987

Southern, North Gallia cla8h for crown
By SCOTI' WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - Saturday
at 7 p.m. two SVAC teams.
Southern and North Gallia. will
fight It out for the first ever
Division IV Sectional Championship held at Meigs High School.
Both coaches are !poking for a
super ballgame; Southern hopes
to reach Its next g()al of Sectional
Champion. while North Gallla
would like to redeem Itself of a
less than par performance of a
year ago. In addition, the,._ PIrates, victims of two losse"\to
SHS this season, hope to break
Southern's hex on them a nd
escape with a victory.
A poll of both veteran coaches
reflects that both wo11Id like to
get an early lead and control of
momentum.
Southern Coach Howl e Cald,
well of 18-3 Southern says, "l 'm
looking for a good game. We're a
lot more relaxed with one game ·
under our belt and we've got
some confidence going into this
one. We' ll be ready ... and I'm
sure they'll be ready. Both teams
will have much pride on the
llne.lt will no doubt be a good
game. That's what high sc hool
athletics are all bout. "
Coach. Bruce Wilson of North

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S '

93-79; Temple rips Duquesne

Eric Powell, Chad savoy, and Jeremy . Cline. Bacli: Matt ~
Rldeliour, Scott Baker, Statisticians Sherry Wolf, Lori Burke, '
Lorre Osborne,
Scott Burke,
and Chfls Carleton.
..
.
.

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Friday, Februwy 28, 1988

liGION. •

&gt; fXrERifNCE THE JOY·Of:

/

•

Anny helicopter . crashes killing 10 soldiers, injuring 9
CHICO, Texas (UPI) - Wit- · soldiers !lnd Injuring nine oth~rs
nesses spotted smoke pouring on their way to training
fi'Qm an Army Chinook CH-47 exercises.
·The transport helicopter,
'helicopter moments before It
crashed and burned In a north- based at Fort Sill, Okla., crashed
central Texas pasture, killing 10 at about 3: 30 p.m. Thursday , .

'1'his Mess•ge and Church Directo,y Sponsored By The Interested.Bus~es Listed On ThiS Page.

Igniting a grass fire that coyered
about 60 acres. Witnesses said
fhey saw smoke coming from the
helicopter as It lost altitude about
1 'h miles from the pasture.
" The motors acted Ilk~ they

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' 'I1UNliY Cl!lJRai. Rev. JOlin llllf, pastor;
~ aQ, s..y SUpt. Church
9lilooi 11:1h.m.; w~ SemcelD: :o a.m.
ct..- - . o J ,; r...,lay, 7::0p.m. wderdl&lt;1 Loll Burt.
I'OMEROY CHURCH OF 'I1IE NAZA~ CIJmor IJJibl llld Mlllbeny, Rev.

~
M&lt;Qaar.
-·Nannan
.......
11\1. s. s.Glm
sup.,
&amp;mdoy
9::0 a.m.;

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----lltltla.m.;
p.m.; 111111 al: - · w.......... 7 p.m.
GIAa: UiSOOPAL CIIURCH. 3'l6 E.

=·-·-;;;".iiii"'~,;;'"',.~="""'~

lho '
lild ....with I!IOI'IUW .., lho
tlllnl &amp;mdo)'. lllonlln!IP"&gt;'!!'Iild liOmDI on

lll '! lbr,..,... dll&gt;o- Church Sdlool
..a Nlulocy~ Collet hour In lho
~lho-.

l'lrllllllaD

~
)\(ijD Sl, Leo

OF CIIJUsr, 2l2 W.
Lull. Ol'lliiiOIIIt- lltie School
9:30a.m.; Mlmng-.111p,l0:3la.m.; Youth
meotlnp, .,.., p.m.; ~-- 7; 00 p,
m. w-.y nJsht _..,.lllel!!lnr 4ild Bible
-·7:00p.m.
'PilE SALVAnON ARMY, llli Buttmrut
Aw., I'IAlorwJ..IOiinowf. - . llQra Wllilnlln charge.
&amp;iJIIay .......... lD a.m.; Sunday
SdoJI, lf1: :II a.m. &amp;ullaY Sdlaol. YFSM
Ell*o - - 7:il p.m. SaiYallon
. . - , . - - · sand
'11lindly. 11: 3l a.m. lo 2 p.m. La&lt;leo ilmlP
..__ JiiOii1llon In clw111o. all lm1tal; 6;«1 p.m. 1blll'ldoy, cu,. Cadet
C... (YOUIVI'UJPe--1, 7:30p.m. Bible

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. 7 p.m.

' OlD DEX'Im
CHRlS11AN
CHURa!, Alvin CUrtll. _ , lJnda Swan.

&amp;lpt. &amp;iJIIay Sdlool9::11a.m.; preochlilg/ier·

vices, tlrst and third &amp;iJIIay tliJowtng SUnday
School. Ywtb ..-.._ 7: il p.m. .......,. ,..,.
&lt;lay.

GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
PrE.'achlng 9: 30a .m . first and second, Sundays of each month; third, and fourth Sun day each month worship servlcesat7: 30p.
m :; Wednesday evenings al 7:30 p.m .
Prayer and Blbl• Study.
$EVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul ·
berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor
John Sweigart ; Sabbath School Superintendent, Darline Stewart. Sabbath School

begins at 2 p.m. on Saturday afttrnoon

wllh worship service following at J: 15 p.m.
,f:\leryone welcome.

•

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- •Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; Morning Worshlp, lO: 45

a.~OMEROY

Halley,

FIRST BAPTIST, Lyston
minister; Saturday evening

PVIn\eltstlc Services, OP'!'R to public, 7 p.
m..~ unda y Church School. 9:30 a.m.:
M~rning Worship 10:30 a .m .
.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po·
meroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Jack Needs, Sunday Schoo! Director. Sun- ·
dar. School, 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship,
lO :, ol~;

evening worship, 7:00p.m. (D . S . T . ~
· &amp;: 7:30 (E .S.T.); Wednesday Praye r Ser·
vloo , 7:110 p.m. !D.S.THt 7:30P.M. IE .S.

T .1: Mission Friends (ages 2·6) , Royal
Art!bassadors (boys ages 6-18 ). and Gi r ls

In #\ctlon (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays, 7 p.
m.·CD.S.T. I &amp; 7: 30p.m. (E·.S.T .) : Tuesda y
Vtsllatlon, 6:30p.m .
J:AITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Ba l·
ley Run Road, Rev . Emmett Rawson, pas·
to~ . Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday School,
10 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7: 30p.m.
: Bible teaching, 7: 30p.m. Thursda y.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Ch.rry Si ,. Sy·
racuse. Servlct&gt;s, lO a.m. Sunday . E venin g
se~lces S~omday .and Wednesda y at 7: 00 p.

m..

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
first elder; Wanda Mohler, Sunda y School
Supt. Sunday SchOOl 9:30 a .m.: Morning
wo·r shlp 10:30 a.m.; Evening Worship 7: ~
p.m.; Wednesda y prayer meeting 7:30p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
R~lne . Rev. Jam Ps Satterfield, pastor.
Frteman Williams, Sup1 . Sunday School
9: (5 a.m.; Sunday and Wednf'sday f'V£'n.
tnt services, 7 p.m.
.
~IDPLEPORT
FIRST BAPTIST.
Corner Sixth and Palmrr. James SeddOn,
Paitor . Edna Wilson. S.S. Supl.; Cathy

Rt.gs. Asst. Supt . Sunday School. 9:15 a.

m.; 1 Morning Worship, 10: 1~ a .m .; Sunday
Ewnlng servlcP, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Studl! Wednesday £'VPning, 7 p.
m! Children's choir praCtice, Wednes·
da~. 7 p.m.; Adult choir practice. Wed., 8
p.m.; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday.
8:30a.m. ·
JliDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
and Main, AI Hartsoo, mlnlster;
RIF.J:lard DuBote, Associate Paator; Mike
Getlltch, Sund.ay School Superlnrendent.

CHAPMAN SHOES

"Po.,Hg 1 QwRtg $, $toH"
104 E. MAIN ST. POMEROY

992-2815
•

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . 011
Rt. 124, 3 mtles from Portland-Long Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart. pastor. Sunday Schad,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday mOrning preaching
10: 30 a.m.; Sunday evening services, 7: ~
p.m.
.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash arid Plum. Noel
Herrmann. pastor. Sunday School10:00a .
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
nesday and Sarurday Evening Services at
7: 30p.m .

9: 30 a.m. : Morning Worahlp

10&lt;10 a.m. Evenlill Worship 7;110 p.m .
W....eodlly. 7; 110 p.m. Prayer meet lilt~.
liiDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZAAENE, PASTOR Fred Penhorwood.
Btl\ White, Suadily Schoci Supt. Sunday
Sct"ci 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10145
a .qt.; Evao,ellttlc meetlili 7:110 p.m.
WiiiD-Y. :110 p.m. Prayer meeting.

•.

I,

UNrrEP Pllllllll"'I::II.&amp;N IIINIITIIY
or
IOIOillOONIT
' t
..... ClllorlooJIARRIIIOHVILLE PRI:SBYTERIAN
CICVRCH - Suedily; Wonldp Servt ...
9:• a.m.; Cllurcll Schod ll: l5 a.m..
IIODDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

S..~ Scbod, 9 a.m.; Churcb oervtce,

lO: Sa.m.
CUSE FIRST UNI'I'ED P11E8BY.
'TI:IUAH - llimclay Schoal, lD a .m.;
Clltl..:h MI'VJ&lt;e, ll; l5 a.m. .
Rtri'LAND CHURCH OF 000. Put..-,
~- llimclay SchoGI :10:00 a.m.;
~II
I ~ Wonll?p U :Oh.m. catldra'a Qludl 1 Lm. laado!r
ill"lce T: ID p.m. Wod., f p.m.\'- loll·
t12~wr11117. w•r'o;y, T p.lll. r ....

Jo•

2b'

z-...,

..

.

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

'•
Three cr it ically burned men spokesman at Fort Sill .
wer e coming ofl and on," said
"Th~ pilots and crew are Fort
Wendell Berry, 53, who saw the were transfe rred early today to
craft go down from his cattle Brooke Army Medical Center In Sill soldiers and the passengers .
ranch about a mile away, " He San Antonio, wher e one died are Fort Hood soldiers ," he said .. ,
was smoking when he was shortly after 5 a.m. The other two
Fort Sill spokesman Jon 'Long
coming ln. He hit the ground and were In critical condition, said said five of the people on thecralt
were from the Oklahoma base, •,
probably went 300 feet before It Brooke spokesman Bob Clark.
The remainder ol the Injured where the helicopter was as - ~
exploded."
An Army Investigation team were at Parkland Hospital In signed, to the 2nd Platoon of the , r
was Investigating the crash, .Dallas, Harris Methodist Hospl- 158th Aviation Company.
•t
At the crash site, Berry said ' '
which occurred north of Farm- tal in Fort Worth and Bridgeport
to-Market Route 1810 . between Hospital In Bridgeport:
wreckage and bodies were ;
Chico and Decatur, about 50
Fort Hood spokeswoman Jea- s pread from the point of Impact :
'nle Kitchens said the Army to where the · helicopter llnally •
miles northwest of Dallas .
Capt. Michael M,onl)ett, a spo- expected to release the names ·of came to rest about 75 yards.
kesman at .F ort Hood near the the dead and Injured today.
away.
,
"All ol them was blown out of ~·
in addition to those Injured In
central Texas town ol Kllleel),
said live of the dead were from the crash, a nurse for Harris the helicopter except one, " the ,
Fort Hood and four were from Methodist Fort Worth hospital's rancher said.
"The pilot or co-pilot was still :
Fort Sill. The base to which the CareFllte air ambulance was
lOth victim was assigned was not admitted to the Fort Worth In his seat belt In the plane. and ,
hospital suffering from possible he was alive and talking," Berry : ·
available.
Many of the Injured suffered smoke Inhalation. He was listed said. "We cut him out. We cutthe ;
In good condition.
seat belt with a pocket knife and •..,
second- and third-degree burns.
The helicopter had picked up got him out."
David Wells, a Texas DepartBerry said rescuers talked to l
ment of Public Sli!lety spokesman some soldiers from Fort Hood
and was llylng them to Fort SUI several of the survivors, who .1
In Austin, s11ld six soldiers died In
the crash and three more soldiers for training exercises when It repeatedly · asked, "What hap. crashed, said 'Rick Brink, a pened? What happened?"
, .,;
died at hospitals Thursday.

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTIIEAST CLUSTER
lin. Doo Arcller
Be•• BeJDeeler
Be•.ScldoeJobuon
ALFRED - Church School 9; 30 a.m.;
Worslllp, lla .m .; UMYF6;30p.m .; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
first Sunday. (Archer)
.
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m .; Chureh ,
· SchoollOa.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m. ; Com·munlon, first Sunday IArchel').
· JOJ'PA- Worship 9130 a .m .; Church
School10:30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7:30p.m. (Johnson) .
·
LONG BO'ITOM - Church sChool 9; 30
a.m.; WorsiUp 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7: 30 p.m.; UMYF, Wednesday,
6:00 p.m.: Communion First Sunday.

(Archer).

REEDSVILLE - Church School9: 30 a.
m .; Worship Service 11:00 a .m . (Deeter) .
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL - .
Church School 9 a.m .; Worship 10 a.m.;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m .; Commu·
nlon First Sunday CArcher).
CENTRAL CLUSTER
lin. hadJ Burch
&amp;e\1. Melv• Fru.klta
lkv. Clemeate S. ZUnl1a, Jr.
.
Rev. Robert Muallll&amp;D
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a.m.
; Church School 9:45, a.m.; Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7: 30p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 7: 30 p. f'!'l.; Cholr Rehearsal,·

Wednesday 6:30p.m.; UMW, fourth Sun·

day, 6:30p.m. (Burch).
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church SchoollO a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7: 30
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rehearsal, 6; 30 p.m. Wednesday. (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School; !Oa .m .

; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.; UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m.

(Franklin).

FOREST RUN -

Worship 9 a .m.;

Church· School 10 A.M .: Choir practice,
Tuesday, 6:30p.m.; UMW, first Tuesday,
7: 30p.m. (Burch) .
HEATH !Middleport! - Church School,

9;30 a.m.;, Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Youth Group, 4i p.m. ; Wednesday, Church
Choir rehearsal , 1 p.m.;
Thursday,
Prayer Service, 6: 30 p._rn.; Bible Study, 7
p.m . (Zuniga) .
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service 10
a.m .; ChurchScbool,lla.m .; UMW, third
Wednesday, 1 p.m.; Choir practt~. Man·
day, 7: 30p.m . (Burch ).
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
9:30 a ,m .: . Church School 10:15 a.m.;

UMW Second Tuesday, 7:30p.m .;

(MUSil ·

man)

POMEROY -Church School, 9; 15 a .m .

; Worship 10: 30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m.; UMW, second
Tuesday , 7; 30 p.m .; UMYF Sunday, 6p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS- Church SChool, 9; 15

a. m.; Worship 10 a.m.: Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7; 30 p.m.; UMYF (Seniors), Sunday , 5 p.m.; (Juniors) every other Sunday. 6 p.m . (Franklin) .
RUTLAND - Church School, 10 a.m.;
Worship, 11 a.m .; UMW First Monday, ·
·
7:30p.m.
SALEM CENTER- Church School9; I~

a .m .: Worship 10:15 p.m. (Muuman). ·

SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9: 110 a.m.;
church school9: 45 a.m. 1Mu1sman1

SOOTIIERN CLUSTER
Rev. Rolft'Graee ·
Rev. PMI MeGalre

lln.&amp;elbllador

APPLE GROVE - Cbureh School 9; 30
a .m . Worship, ·1.0:00 a.m. (f1nt and third
Sundays) : Bible study every Sund1y 6 p.
m. ; UMW Second Tuesday, 7:00p.m.;
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 6 p.m.
~Grace) .
'
BETHANY- Worahlp, 9 a.m.; Church
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Studr.. Wednesday.

10 a.m.; Dorcas Women s Fellowlhtp,

Wedn-y, ll a.m. (McGuire) .
CARMEL - Church School 9:30 a .m.;
Worolllp, 10;4~ a .m. Se&lt;ond aad Fourth
Sundays; Fellowshtp dinner wlh SUttcm
lhlrd Thunday. 6:311 p.m. (McGuirt! .
EASTLEThRT- CIJurehSchodh.m.;
Worslllp 10 a.m. oecond ud fourth !kindwo; UMW lint 'l'lioodltY. 7; lO p.m.
(Gi-ooe).

Sunday.

·

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, George
Anedo, pastor. Sunday service, 9: 30a.m.;
evenJng se-rvice 7:30p.m. Prayer meettng,
Wednl'Hday, 7:30p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

Class, 9: 30a.m.; MornlngWorshlp10;30a .
m.; EveningWonhlp, 6:30p.m. Thursday
Bible Study, 6; 30 p.m.
NEW STIVERSVll.LE COMMUN!Ti1(1i
-CHURCH, Sunday School .servlce, 9: t!5 a.
m.; Worship ·service 10:30 a.m.:
Evangell•tlc Service 7: :JJ p.m. Wednesday; Prayer meeting 7:30p.m. Thursday.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, PomeroyHarrls:oovUie Rd. Robert Purtell, mlnbiter; ·Steve Stanley, S. S. Supt.; BUI McEI·
roy, Asst. Supt.: Sunday School 9:30a.m. :
Worship service 10:30 a.m.; Evening wor·
ship Sunday 7 p.m. and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pine
Grove. The Rev. William M}ddleawarth,
pastor. ChurCh service 9: 30a.m.; Sunday
. Schoo110:30 a.m.
. BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wright, pastor. Sunday School9: lOa .
m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
worship 10:30 a.m..
RACINE · CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE , Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., pastc:r.
Ora Bass, Chairman of the BOard of Chrls·
ttan Life. Sunday School9:30 ~.m.; Morning wor.shifl 10:30 a.m.; evanaellstlc ser. vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday service. 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
10~:a.m . and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swll:er, Sunday
School Supt.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.;
Morning worship 10: fO a.m.; Sunday
evening worship 7:30 p.in.; Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
BIJRLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Burlingham. Ray Laudoomlll, pastor; Robert Cozart. autstant pasllr. Suacloy School
10 a.m.; worship 7 p.m.; .w-.y, 6 p.m.
yoolh meet1n1r. Wed., 7 p.m. church servlcel.
I'INE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, 1!
mlleotfRt.325 .. Rev. BenJ. Watts, pastor.
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. SuJ~day School
9:30a.m.; Momtna Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Sunday ev.entne service 7:30 p.m. t Wed·
nesday servl~, 7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPI'IST, Bill Little,
pastor. Steve UtUe, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a .m.: Morning wonlp,ll a.m.;
SUnday eventne won hlp 7:30p.m. Prayer
meeting, and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.; Youth meeting Wednesday at Tp.m .
REJOICING LIFE BAPI1ST CHURCH ,
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Mldclleporl. SUnday
ScboollO a .m. Sunday evenlDJ 7: 00p.m.;
Mld·week service, Wed., 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRlSnAN CHURCH,
Robert E. Muuer, pastor. Sunday School
9: 30a.m.; Dallas Janey, aupt.; Morning
worsblp 10:30 a.m.;. Sunday even~ng aer·
vice. 7130 p.m .: Wedilesday evening service, 7: ao p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE . Rev. Glenn McMillan, pastor.
Mary Ja~tce L1vender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 913l a.m.; Morning
worship 10:"30 a .m.; Evanlellltlc aervtee,
'p.m.; Pr•yer and Prat.e9iednesday, 7 p.
m.; Youtll rneettna. 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHIUST, Elden R. Blake, pallor. SUnday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
Momlna: sermon, ll a.m.; SUnda)' ntaht
services: Clu11tlan Endeavor 7:30 p.m.,
Solli aervlce 8 p.m. Preachlna 8; lO p.m.
Mid-week prayer meetlni. Wednesday, 7
p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRlmAN, Rn\·
· er Wataon, putor. Creuon Pratt, Sunday
Sollool Supt. Momlne Worship 9: 30a .m .;
Sunday School 10; 30 a.m.; Ewtllilr aer• vice, 71 3l p.m.
MT. U"((ON BAPTIST. Donald Shue,
pastor; Joe Sayre, SUnday School Supt.
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.; Evet~lna wor•hlpl:3l p.m.; Prayer Mo!etlag, 6:30p.m.
Wodlieo4iy.
'
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Daw l'relltlee. mlnllter. Deryl ·
Weill. SUpt. Cblll'&lt;b School t a.m.; Woraltlp Servlce,t;e p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA..
REIII:. Rev. l?orl&gt;ert Grato, poator.
Frut IIUDe, IUpl. !Iunday School 9: 311 a.
m.; Wan?dp llnlce, n a .m. uct 7 p.m .
SUDday. Wrdanhy, T p.m. Pri)W meet·

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community oil Cl Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Sander11 putCf'. Jeff Holter, Jay leader;
Ed Rnush, SUnday School Supt. Suncl-y
School 9:30 a.m.; morning worship and
children's churt'h 10:30 a.m.; evening
pieachlng service first three Sundays,
7:30 p.llm.; Spedal service fourth Sunday
evening, 7:30 p.m.; WedlleldiY Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·

shlp, 7:30p.m.

. Tt=x
I

.

Rl.l24 and Co. Rd.~- Mark Seevers, minister. Sunday School Supt. Harry Hendricks: Sunday Scboo19: 30e.m.; Morning
Worship 10:30 a.m:;' Evenlng worship 7 p.
m. Wednesday w~rshlp 7 p.m.
ST. . PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Corner Sycam,ore and Second Sts., Po-.
meroy . The Rev. Wl1ltam Mlddleswart,
pastcr. Sunday School 9:4!i a.m. Church
servtce 11 a.m. ~

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRDrr.
Btll Carter, past&lt;r. Sunday School9 :30 a.

HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 99~5898. Saturday Evenla&amp; Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
, Mass, 8 a .m. and 10 a.m. ContesJtonl one
half bour before eacb Mass.
classes,
ll a.m. Sunday.
'
VICI'ORY BAPTIST, 525 N ~ 2nd St.,
Middleport. JamEII E: Keesee, paat&lt;r.
.

SACRED

ceo

School9: 30 a.m.: WorShip service 10:30 a.
m.:. Young people' s . service 6 p.m.
Eva11aellstic service 6:30p.m. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. MIII..St., Mas&lt;ll. W.Va. Sunday BlbleStucly10
a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. WednM·
.day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding Lane, Mat&lt;ll, W.Va. J. N. 'nacker,
pastor. Evening servtee 7:30p.m.; W~

mm's Mlnlsl!·y, Thuflday, 9:30 a.m.;
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
p.m.
HARTFORD CHURcH OF cHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartlonl, W. Va.
Rev. David MCManla, pastcr. Church
School 9: 30 a.m.; S11nday momlnl ser-

~Jtf'sAVIOUR L~ERAN

lla.m.

.

.CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH.Iocatecloo
Pomeroy Pike, County Road :15 near Flat"ooda. Rev. Blackwi:XJd, pater. Servtca
m SundayatlO:!Qa.m. aad7:30p.m. wttb
S..ndaySchooi9:31Ja.m. BlbleStlidy. Wednr'ay. 713&gt; p.m.. .
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, st. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Rw. .
Fraakllil Dlck!!llt, pUtor. Sunday mOI'IIIill 1Q a.m.; Sunday eveo!nl 7:3&gt; p.m.
Tbunday oveotna 7:30p.m:
STIVERSVILLt COIIMt!NITY
-T IST CHURCH. Put11r ilobort

.•

8ordea. pastor. CornellllJ

supl. :

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
MaiD St., Middleport. fte\o, GObert Craig,
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervtn Jlaurnaardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday Scbool9; 30 a.
m.; .WorshiP Service. 10; 15 a.m.
SUC&lt;;ESS ROAD CHURCH OF 'CHIUST
- Joseph B. Hoaklna, evanre1111. Sunday
lllble Study 8a.m.;_WoraliiP,lO..m.; Sunday even1ng .ierv1ce 8 p.n:-.; Wecllaftday

'

m.; Mid-week prayer oervlce Weda-y

;~-~

I

Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pattor. Carl Nol·
llqham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday '
School 10 a.m. with cla11es tor all aaee. .
Eventqservtcea at 6 p.m. Wednelday Bl· . •
bl~ study at 7:30p.m. Youth senrtces Frl· ',

day at 7: ~p.m..
·
•
ECCLESIA·FELLOWSIIIP, 128 Mill St. , , ,
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson, •

pastor. Sunday Sc:hod. 10 a.m.; Sunday •
evenlq services at 7 p.m. and Wed:nelday

services at 7 p.m;
,
· 1
ANTIQUITY BAPTIS'I'. Kenneth Smith,
pastc:K". Sunday School 9::K) a.m.; church • 1

servlce7:30p,m.; youthfellow~lp6 : ~p.
m.; Bible study, Thunday,7:30 p.m.
,,
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, ~
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom KellY, J)U·
tor. Danay Lambert, S. S.' Supt. Sunday J
momlng service at 10 a.m.; Sunday eveniDI service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thun- ~
day Servtcet at 7:30p.m.
·
4
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, patter. I...
10; 30 a.m.; Youth st!I'VIce Sunday 6:15 p.
m. Sunday evenlngservlce7:00p.m. Wed· fJ
nesday Prayer .Meeting and Bible Study

l

1

J ...

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa•

7 p.m.

lem St. RIM'. Paul TaylOr, putor. ~unday

MT.OLIVEFULLCOSPELCOMMUNITY CHURCH, La......,.,; Buah, poator .
Max Folmer, Sr., S. S. Supt. Sunday School
9; 3l a.m.; SUDilly eveniDJ oervlce, T: 30 .
m.; Wednesday evenm, Bible lludy ancl

Sohooi!Oa.m.; Sunclayeventne7: 00p.m.; • .
Wedaesday evening prayer meeunr7:00 ,
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH. Sliver Rldle. Duane Sydea-

pratae semce, 7:30p.m.

ttrtclr:er, putCI'. Sunday School 9 a.m.;

'

p.m.

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on PoWorobtpServlce, tO a .m.; Sundilyevenlng • '
meroyBy-Pau. fte\o. DavldWioeman, Sr.,
oeJVk:e, 7:00p.m. Wed!\eoday night Bible , ·
..,:pa..;..''.or•._Me_lvi_•_Dr..;.;
·';.ke.;.'.;.s•.•.
s ;.
·su.P;.'.·___a.;y_.;';;'ud;;;y~7:,;,00;,;P;;·;;m;.
. ...;
· ";...,_ _ _ _ _...... ,

'
~

.

''
NATURE NEVER GETS DISCOURAGED!
Think about tbla, natul'l! never tp!U dllcouraged. Each Jprlllg no
matter how bard tile Winter, we betiPn to- tbe coltsfoot, the crocus,
and the snowdrops peep tllrouch. We - tile butla 011 the maple treeo
thlckea and !tnaUy bunt lortll wltllleavee. The I)J'aaa turns llfl!'!n and
100ft we -the rhubarb and uparqua ?lfC!Wing. The year to at Spring
once more. Nature lllllow?Da God'a plan working again, new blrtb hao
come. You can -thalnatureneveraetadllcouragecl. It doel not 1\llea
to tile cold nortll wiDd nor tbe anow tfnlta alolli the sides ol the
The daya are
loa&amp;er and 1111ture ?tnowa 2111 time to come forth ·
tea !be da;ya with color.
and bloom ani! b
We, who are
In tbe tmaae ol God, need to remember alto that
G9d never pta cllleoura~. We may !JI'WIIble and lrowa and declare
"God II dead", but Rella t. andHtwllllorlfveuaouraelfllbwaya.HeiJ .
alwaya -dy to welcome 111 baell wltll ope~~arma J..t aa we are Iliad to
welcome baelllprlaa eub year.
·
Dllc!ourCJf:t rneanaat9!Diup. Nature does not gtveupandevi!IIU
a tre.e
1111 lllaott, tbe tlnie II abort until oace more we - buda
lhont!ltl
I IIICGIId tlml. God alao - l h ' l l Up OD Ul. Mallillnd
may lcitDt or Ill lind but God aever does. He II always wDlllltto taU
ua blclllllto KJa IIHrt and arma.
·
'
· · We eu lean oo muc11 from God'alllan lor tile eartb and natUft!. It 11 a
coaatut l't'l1liBder tbat God llwL Be ftDtli u to bllve au, and to be
baDPY. !lilriDa malta ua bappy wlllt Ill eolor. warm dl;ya, ...tie rallla
uirtltt aWeef-u at blaiiiOiiilla ?be llr. Gad Ia ·~·reedJ tolfttly
plell 01 11J1 wMD welall and hold da 18 tile palm atlliil bind. He II Jut'
waJt?nelclr .. toUy~AmJLardJeaua;llllpme-yourflce.ICIII
- lheSpriJIIand 1
you are aJM.»me, OltCreitorGod.to pt dllcourapcl. - • . . , - - !!Y!! .....

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received about the ad were
Inquiries about Illegal activity,
Including three to five calls a day
requesting he kill for money.
"In light of that evidence, an
Issue of material facts has been
raised as to whether defendant
knew or should have known as to ·
Soldier of Fortune lawyers said the nature of the advertlsemlmt
the publisher Is protected by the and thus should have foreseen
· First Amendment from liability the likelihood that criminal conbecause the ad did not expressly duct would have occurred," the .
propose Illegal conduct.
.
judge sa.ld.
In his testimony Thursday. ·
But Hittner cited three recent
cases In which courts ruled the former editor William Bruce
First Amendment does not pro- Gu thrle said he told Brown ol his
tect publishers from negligence opposition to running personal
In commercial speech.
ads 'during a 1984 staff meeting,
He said the ruling Is not but the publisher wanted to keep
Intended to place a burden on
them.
"It was Mr . Brown' s opinion
publishers to Investigate e..ery
that the personal service ads
ad submitted ar.d noted that
ildded a certain flavor to. the
publication of the Hearn ad In a
city newspaper would probably · magazine?" aske&lt;l plaintiff's at be reasonable.
., , .
torney Graham HIIL1
;,The reasonableness ·of Its
"Yes, slr, ''Guthrie repljed. ,
publication In defendant's maga1 "A
certain sensational flil·
zine without Investigation, howvor?'' Hill asked .
ever, Is not clear given the nature
· "Yes, sir," Guthrie said.
of the magazine and Its readership and given the fact that many
adver.tlsements submitted for
publication In the personal services column expressly offered
crlmln.al services," Hittner said.
"The Issue of the reasonableness
In the Instant .case presents a
gentilne question of mate~lal
facts for the jury."
HIttner referred to evidence In
the trial showing other personal
service ads published by Soldier
of Fortune magazine offered
criminal services. He also cited
deposition testimony from Hearn
that 90 percent of the calls he

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. 500 EAST MAIN

992·2174

POMEIOY, OHIO

,,

want the college to hire a
lull-time administrator to handle
charges of racial harrassment on ·
campus.
The protestors took over the
Dakin building Tuesday and
have vowed to remain until their
demands . are met. They have
allowed only minority students
But the 50 students In the Dakin Into the building.
In a show of support for the
Master's House said more negotl&gt;
protesters,
about a dozen white
atlons are needed to resolve the ·
students
camped
overnight Wedconflict at the small liberal arts
nesday
outside
the
Dakin buildclillege with 100 minority stu·
which
serves
as
a dormitory
Ing,
dents In an enrollment of 1,100.
and
minority
center.
"Supposedly Hampshire was
·created as an alternative col-.
"They felt that If they stayed
lege," said Michelle Johnson, a
. junior from · Columbus, Ohio. · outside In the fret'Zing cold, they
"What I'm getting out of this Is would be making a statement of
the feellng that I'm supposed to ' support," Johnson said. "We ·
accept the fact that out of 1,100 thanked them and told them we
studenls, qnly 100 are minorities. felt. th~y would be making a
that's not much of an statement II they didn't freeze to
death."
'
alternative."
: College officials made some
About , 10 white students
concessions during the first
round of negotiations Thursday, camped outside the building for a
said Sydney DeBerry, a junior ·t111rd straight night Thursday In
·support of the blaci! protesters.
from New York City.
College President Adele Slm- The students pitched tents and
"
mons,
Dean of Students Trey crawled Into sleeptnr bags as
WIU!ams and Dean ot Faculty temperatures dipped below 20
Penlna Glazer ~that funds &lt;1egreea, accordtna to ·one of the
for the group occupying the cam"'s, Elizabeth Onllkey, of
Huadagdon Valley, Pa. About20
bulld!na - Students of Underrepreiented CUlturea - sbould other wblte atudents milled
come from the collep ralber around outllde the hall In·sblfts,
than from the atuden t IJII!IIdlq - r a l hours In the
cokl before beln&amp; replaced by
cowmment.
others.
The admlalltraton alned to
atudent Clemlndl to vldeollpe
Hampsblre Colleae was
the neaotlatl0!18 and tJtat u.
cre•ted
Ia tbe 191101 by faculty
prolit!lterl would bllve aole repon·
allll
atlmlnlatraton
at Amherst,
albiUtY tor dllcuulng tbe neaotl·
Mt.
Jlol)'oke
and
Smlt!l
~lieael
attou·wttb the medl8, DeBerry
and tbe Ualverllty of M-cbu·
..!d.
Mtttt, wllo waatad tbellft'ldtool
to offer alternative curricula.
AMHERST, Mass. (UP!) .
Hampshire College agreed In
principle to some demands of
protesters occupying a campus
building today for the fourth day
to press for more recruitment of
minority studen Is and creation of
a cultural center.

•FIRST BAP,TIST CHURCH, Malon, W. ;-'
Va . Pallor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School10 .
·a.m.; Sunday evenlng 7::K) p.m. Prayer ~· 1
meetlngaad Bible study Wednelday, 7: 80 '•1

Sermonette ·

The suit - llled by Marjorie
Elmann, Black's mother, on
behalf of herself and her grandson, Gary Wayne mack, 18 accuses the magazine based In
Boulder, Colo.. of negligence In
Black's death.

'

eventna .lft'VIces at 7:30.

p.m. Everyooewelcome.

HOUSTON (UPl) - A federal
judge rejected First Amendment
·protection for a classified ad In
Soldier of Fortune that was used
to arrange the murder of a
woman, deciding to let a jury
determine whether the magazine
must pay damages to her family.
· U.S. District Judge David
Hittner refused to dismiss the
$22.'5 million civil suit Thursday
and ruled that It presel!ts legltlmaie ques~ons for the jury to
·
decide.
, Jurors hilve heard six days.of
tesdmony on the sui? brought by
the family of Sandra Black, 36,
who was shot twice In the head by
a seli-descrlbed mercenary Feb.
21, 1985, as she carried groceries
Into her home In Bryan, Texas.
In testimony Thursday •. a
former Soldier ol Fortune editor
said Pubii!Jher Robert K. Brown
tiil~",l.!lm 1 1;te •'l'!lnted . to run
per~l aCJs despite oppogltlon
beclause of their "!ien!IBllonal
flavor."
·
Sandra Black's husband, Ro·
bert, hired Atlanta mercenary
John Wayne Hearn toklllhlswlfe
through a classified ad In Soldier
of Fortune. Robert Black was
convicted In the murder-for-hire .
and Is on the Texas death row.
Hearn was ·sentenced to life lor
·the murder and also Is serving.
two life terms In Florida for
killings;
· Hearn's ad, which ran September through December 1984.
read: ·"Ex-Marine - Nam vets.
Weapons specialist, jungle warfare, pilot, M.E.. high risk
assignments In L' .S. or overseas.
World security group.''

Protesting students
push. for ~egotia:tions

SuDdaySchooi.9:30JI.m.; Worshtpservlce,

NEASESETTLEMENTCHURCH,SUnday anernoon services at 2:30. Thur&amp;d~

. LMNG WORD CHESTER CHURCH

'

··'•

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL , Third ,. , __

E..nlng Worohlp 7;30 p.m. WediJEIIday

OF Goo- Gilbert spencer, pastor. SUnday School 9:30 a.m.; Morntng aervlce
!O:OOa.m.; Sundayevenln&amp;aervlce7:00p.

1

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
Harry Holter, pastor. SUaday services ,, •
9: :iO a.m. and 'l p.m.; Midweek servtce,
7; 3&gt; p.m. Thursday.

7:00p.m .

and prala.e

•
,•

service 7:30p.m. Wednelday evenlne ser- • ,
vice 7: 3l p.m.

9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. ;
prJ~yer

l,

"l

lng seJVIce 7 p.m .; Wedn-y evening

evenln&amp; Bible atudy,
service, 7: 30p.m.

J

,1

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine, '·.
Rt. 124. William Hoba&lt;k, pastor. SU!ic!AY
SchoollO a.m.; Sunday ~nina .ervtce 7 ·, r
p.m. Wednesday ev'nlfti service T p.m. i ,
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Doa Cheadle, ·
Supt. SUnday SChool 9;30 a.m. MorniDJ \','
WorsbJp10:•a.m . Prayerservlc.,altem· P
ate Sundays. ·
l
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRDrr. '
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd., n!
n~xt lo Fort Melp Park, Rulla!ld. Rnbert
Richards, pastor. servtces at 7 p.m. on ...
Wed.netdaya and Sundays. '
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP· , •
TER of the Wesleyan Hollaeu CINrch, &gt;.J ~ '
Rev. David Ferrell, ~tor. HenrY tbltn1
SundiY School Supt.: SUnda)r"SchooltO a: ·
m.; Mol'lllila Worship U a.m.; E~nln1 , J

worshlp7p.m. VlsltatlonThunday6:30p.
m.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
Curtrnan, pastor. Sunday School.lO a.m. ;
wonhlp service 11 a .m.; Sunday night

·CHURCH ol Mlddleport,1nc.. ~Pearl St.,
Rev. Ivan Myen, p.utor; Rot« Manley,
Sr. , Sunday School Supt. Sunday School

~unch,

Sundey School 9:30 a.m.; Second and .
tourtb Sundays worship ·l ervlce at 2: 30 p. "'

..

. I

penouallraDifer from Ft. Hood, Texas, back to
Ita base Ia Ft. SID, Okla., when the crash occured.

Jrirst
Amendment.protection rejected
.
for Soldier of ·Fortune advertising

•

•

vice, 11 a.m.: Sunday eventna service,

7: 30p.m. Wedneodaypr~yermeetlng, 7;30'
p.m .
.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
w. Va .. Rt. I. James Lewll. patter. Wor·
ohlp oervlceo9:311 a.m. ; SundaySohoolll
a.m.; Evening woralilp 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9:30 a.m.: Worship tervlce, Wed.nl!ldly
7
'
CHURCH.
Walaut ancl Henry SIJ., RalldiWoocl, W.
Va. The llr\&lt;. Geo11e C. Wetrlck, past..-.
Sunday SChool I: 30 a.m.; Sunday wonhlp

WHERE BEnER
REALLY MAnERS \

10ldlen were lillled In the fiery crash and at least
· Dine were llljured. The bellcopter was on a roullae

!

SchOol 9:30a.m.; Mo. rntnaworslllp10: 30; •
Evening Worship 7: 30p.m.; WednHCiay ~ ­
Prayer Service, 1:30 p.m.
FAITH BAPI'IST CHURCH, RaUroad
St .. Muoa. Sunday School10 a.m.; Mornlila WGI'Ihlp 11 a.m.; Eventn&amp; aervlce 6 p.
m. Prayer meetlag and Bible Study Wed- 1' •
nesdliy,7p.m.
, •
FOREST RUN BAPI'IST. fte\o. Nyle ·

Sunday morning worship 10 a.m .: Even·

m.: Morning Worship and Communion . Wll'lhtp aer•lce 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
prayer senrlce Wedneaday 7.p.m. 1
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOUNESS

10;30 a.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tillis, pastor. Sonny Hudsoo., supt. Sunday
Schod 9:30a.m.; Morning worahlp, 10:30
a.m.: Sunday evening service 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday service 7 p .m . WMPO pro-a:ram 9 a.m. each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE. Samuel Basye, putor. Sunday

~UREL

Udrdj
c.rmot

.
• Bi!ADFORI5 Ci!URCH OF CHRIST St.

Knob, located on County Road 31 . Rev.

LETART FALLS - Worolllp 9 a.m.;
Chur&lt;:h ScboollD a .m. !Grace).
CLIFF FREE IB'niODurr
MORNlNG STAR- Worolllp, 9:45a.m.;
Chur&lt;:b Schod, l0:30 a.m.; Bible STudy,
CIIUiq:JI. David Batt, · IlDDeli I:.
Tbursdlly, T:3l p .m . (Rader) .
lllnoa....J,llnet« &lt;1 Clu'lattu Edueattaa;
RACINE WESLEYAN - Cliun:h Sclloot. ' Stew ........ - !Iunday School II: 30
. lll il.m.; Wol'llllp U Lm.; 011'111' loullli Mon- • a.m.: .....,..,. """"'P lO: 10 ~om.;,._ ,
dw It 7;3) p.m.; Moll' I Prayer ~-- I ~n-.. .~~~., -..,wol'lblp, T:oop.
w~ 7 a.m. tGrlct).
· : ., m. Wid r 'IY ~ lll'l)'lf ud Bible ,.
- CIIIRb lebool, t:JO Lm.; l lba!y, T: OOp.m. Choir praetleo, 'l'burlday,
...,..,.,..Won!dpi0:41a.ni.llrjllaod
!kiadaya; ...,...,. ....... wltb
! ~IER CliURCH or aDUIIT, .
'1ll?nl TINI'Idly,__t_:,lll-p.m. (II&lt;Gulrt).
, ctwlll a-t? lr.,
Rtel&lt; .,. •.
ccmber, lllpl, llandly Scbool t :• a.m.; ·

1

'

HOPE BAPTtST CHAPEL, ~70 Grant
St ., Mlddloport A!nltated with Southern
BaptiSt Conveatlon. David Bryan, Sr., Mlnllter. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
worship n ·a .m.; Evenlna worship 1 p.m.;
Wednelday evening Bible ~tudY , .._,d
~raver mtetlnl' 7 o.m.
· ·
·J' ' · ·

m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a.m.; Sunday evening service at 7: 30p.m. Thursday
services at 7:30p.m.

denour, pastor. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.:
worship service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
and worship serviCE', Wednesday, 7 p.m.

REMAINS- A twt.tecllump ol metal II aU Cbat
left al a U.8. Army Clltaook CR-41 traoaport
lie11ca11ter wliteh cruhed lllld bunted In a lleld

evening servtce, 7 p.m.

CHURcH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Loc,ted on 0 . J. White Road of Highway
160. Pat Hens&lt;11. put..-. Sunday Schooi!O
a.m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Cholr pradlce6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's. Cblldren's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wedneadav at 7:3&gt; p.m.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
0 . H. Can, pastor. Sunday SChool. at9: 30a.

leaders. Commuidon service tlrat Sunday

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

Oil.

~~Q Q,~idlel allll luth AM Fo• ! '

worsblp service 7:00 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7:00p.m .

Service, 10:30 a.m .

each month.
·WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvllleRD. Rev. Phillip Rl·

·-oy.

PO..ROY, OHI0.:_992-6677

: Prayer Meet lila, Wednesday. 7 :30p.m. ·
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non·Penterostal. Wonhlp service Sunday
10 a.m.; Sunday Schoolll a.m . Evening

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. ' Rev , Earl
Shuler, ~stor. Worahlp service, 9:30a.m.
Sundlly SChool 10: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOM!NATION&lt;'L CHURCH, Klppbury 'Road. fte\o .
Clyde W. Hendf!non, putor. SUnday
Sehool9;30 a.m.; Ralph Carl. Supt. Even·
log worship 7; 110 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7; 110 p.m.
LONG BOTI'OM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Eldridge, p.aator; Wallace Damewood, s.
S. Supt. Sunday SohOot9; 30 a.m.; Worship

Wednesday,. 71 311 p.m. , Gary Grt!!lth,
leader. Youth gr.oups Sunday evening at
6:30p.m. with Rnger and VIolet Willford,

106 htt•nut ....

'

Chico, Texu, la&amp;e Friday aftenooa. Tea

.. day School9: 30a.m.; .morning wcrshtp,ll ·
' a.m.; Sunday evening servl~ 7:30p.m.

'

Lawre.nce Gluesencamp, pastor. Rev.
Roger Willford, asst. pastor. Preaching
services Sunday 7:30p.m. Prayer meetlng

I

.

Church school 9:30a.m.; Morning worship
10: ~ a.m.; Wednetday evenlnl prayer
services, 7:30p.m.

CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskl~. pastor. Bible

l

ROWEls FOI IYDT OCCASION .

1614)992-1039 Qt'
(614)992-5721

~.=.~·

Worship servtce lO:ll a .m . 9Jble study,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATI'ER DAY SA1NTS. Port·
land·Ractne Road. Mike Duhl, putor;
Janice Danner, church school director.

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Vernon
Eldridge, mtnlster; Oliver Swain, Sunday
School Supt. P.reachlng 9:30 a.m. each

!

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

~

~

Btbl~ Scbod

Our calendar's composed of days:
Three hundred sixty-five;
A schedule that the earth obeys
In order to arriVe
'
Where it was always meant to go;
But somehow on the way,
We found that it was running slow,
A quarter of a day. ·
Thus each four yeaq this day we add,
That soon will be in sight,
Becomes the only way we had
10 make it come out right.
So thank the lDrd each time :yOu pray,
For all His love divine;
,And also for this extra day,
That's number. twenty-nine!
· -· Gloria Nowak

SONS SIORE

264 S. 21111, Mitltlltport

786 NOITH SECOND AVE.

THE IDRD BIE5SED US ALL WITI-1
THE EXTRA DAY IN LEAP YEAR

WAID CROSS

;Rawlings·Coats·Biower
r•

.•

!

. FRANCIS FLORIST

~;

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middaport, Ohio

t

-··- - - .:.:. ...•.-- ·-- --

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Call lANK ONE

.. .

for more Information
593·6611 or

BANK.=.ONEM.

· PihHn tlloiiSllnd{JitlfJk wlto Clltfl.
- .'/.

lANK oNE. ATHENII, NA

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A1MN. Oltlo Mliitobit_FDIC

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%a1 8 The Deily Saminel

JERUSALEM (UPI) -Thouullda of Israell soldiers and
pollee officers took up positions
In the West Bank and c;aza Strip
In an attempt !Q crush a new
fOIIIICI of rioting by Palestinians
opposed to U.S. Secretary of
State George Shultz's Middle
c EUt peace mission.
But the show of force did not
prevent widespread unrest In the
occupied territories Thursday.
Israell soldiers sl)ot and killed
two protesters - one of them a
14-year-old boy - and wounded
at least seven others .
·
More than 3,000 pollee officers
fanned aut through Arab sections
of Jerusalem, and the 12,000
soldiers In the West Bank and
Gaza were on alert In antlclpa. tlon of violent praiests during the
Shultz visit, which began
Thursday ,
But bands of rock-throwing
Arabyauths waving the outlawed
, Palestine Liberation Org'anlza·

lion flag clashed with pollee In
several Jerusalem neighborhoods and In the U.N.-run Shuafat refugee camp In the northern
part a( ~he city. Two policemen
were slightly wounded In the
confrontations, authorities said.
During a tour of Arab East
Jerusalem Thursday morning,
Prime Minister Yltzhak Shamlr
said he expected the PLO to
Incite unrest dur\ng Shultz's
five-day visit, and he war!led that
security forces will do whatever
Is necessary to prevent lt.
Shul tz . who arrived Thursday
a fternoon , also Is expected to
visit several Arab nations seeking support for a U.S. proposal
that calls for talks on self-rule far
the 1.5 million Palestinians In the
West Bank and Gaza and later on
the future status of the occupied
areas.
"Our objec tive is to help Israel
and Its neighbors achieve peace
. and security and to help Palest!· nlans achi eve their legitimate ·
rights ," the secretary said dur-

lng arrival ceremonies at lienGurion Airport In Lod, outside.
Tel Aviv.
Leaders of the ll·week-old
Palestinian uprising In the tetrl·
tortes have denounced the AmerIcan Initiative as.lnadequate and
have called for a new round of
protests during Shultz' stay,
Hours before Shultz arrived,
violent dernanstratlollli erupted
In several (owns and U.N. refugee camps In the West Bank and
Gaza and a general strike shut
down most businesses In the
territories .
·
Soldiers shot and killed an •
18-year-old Palestinian you.th
and wounded two other Arabs
during a clash with protesters In
the Jenln refugee camp, 50 miles
north of Jerusalem, military and
Palestinian sources said.
Troops Initially used tear gas
and rubber bullets In an attempt
to disperse a crpwd of demonstratQrs who threw stones and
chunks of concrete at them, an
army spokesman said.

When the rioting · continued, other Information.
soldiers, opened fire wltli live
The two deaths brought to a t
ammunition. Isum Said Abu least 65 the number of PalestiniKbalifeh was fatally wounded lri ans killed In anti-Israel protests
the head and chest, the Arab-run that erupted Dec. 9.
Palestine Press Service
Another Palestinian was
reported.
wounded by live fire during a
In Nablus , 40 miles north of clash between soldiers and rock·
Jerusalem, soldiers shot and throwing protesters In the West
kiUed Saml Aldayeh, 14, during a Bank village of Tulkarm, the
clash In front of a mosque .In the mltttary said.
Old City, t!le Pates tine Press
In the Salata refugee camp; .10
Service reporled. A second Pa- miles north of Jerusalem, soldilestinian was seriously wounded ers opened fire on a crowd of
by anny gunfire In the area. ·
youths, wounding one boy, after
Doctors at Rafldlyeh Hospital · tear gas and rubber bullets failed
In Nablus said Aldayeh was shot to break up the demonstration,
once In the chest. The army the military said.
conflnned the boy was brought to
Two Palestinians also were
the hospital, but could provide no wounded In Yata; 25 miles south

-

c

of Jerusalem. The army said the
two were wounded whe n the
drivers of a military tank transporter opened fire on a mob of
youths that attacked their vehl·•. ·
cle with stones and bottles.
'•
Clashes were also reported In ~
the Gaza Strip. Soldie rs used
r\lbber bullets to end a demonstration In the Jaballa camp
outside Gaza City. ·
Concerns about violence In
Jerusalem prompted pollee chief
Yosef Yehuda' l to deny reques!s
by at least three Arab groups for ,
permits to stage demonstrations
In the Arab section of the city.
Several permits were granted '
to Israeli groups far rallies In
West Jerusalem, Yehuda'l said:

t

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Middle East peace as the tone
mediator.
MOSCOW (UP!} - The Soviet
He said Secretary of . State
Union says It will restore full · George Shultz Indicated during
diplomatic ties with Israel, sehis talks this week In Moscow
vered after ihe 1967Six-Day War,
with Foreign Minister Eduard
as soon as a Middle East peace
Shevardna(Jie that he was not
conference convenes.
optimistic about success In his
The comment by a Soviet · Middle East peace mission that
official Thursday marked the
began In Israet'Thursday . Soviet
most specific public commit·
officials think Shultz wanted to
ment ever made by Moscow to
try the U.S. approach one last·
re-establish diplomatic ties with
time.'
Israel, a move that would would
The official said a Middle East
eliminate a major hurdle to
peace conference should be conSoviet participation in any Mid·
ve ned as soon as possible under
die East peace conference.
U.N. auspices with the ~artlcipa ­
:· The official, speaking on condl·
tion of the five permanent
tlon he not be Identified or
members of the Security Council
directly quoted, Sjild Moscow
..:.. the United States; the Soviet
also would establish normal
t;nton , China , Britain and
diplomatic ties at the same time
France.
with Saudi Arabia, another
The role of the five Security
staunch U.S. ·ally In the region.
Council members would be to
Israel for years has been
pressure the Middle East nations .
seeking resumption or full diploin to staying with the talks until a
matic relations with Moscow tied
solution is found, he said. ·
to permission for Soviet Jews to
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
emigrate. Progress was made on
Shamir, head or the rlghtwlng
that issue when the Soviets sent a
Likud bloc, opposes an Internatonsular delegation to Israel in
tional conference. His political
the 'summer.
·rival, Foreign Minls\er Shimon
· , AlthO!igh · Moscow . broke off
Peres, Who heads the· Labor .
illplomatlc relations with Israel
alignment, favors one.
,during the 1967 Six-Day War, the
In another Indication the &amp;,
l&gt;fflclal said an exchange of visits
viets were preparing for a peace
now under way is evidence of
conference, the official said he
growing contacts between the
hoped far a · visit soon by the
lwo countries.
chairman of the Palestine LiberThe oiftclal told a small lun - ation Organization, Yasser Ara cheon gathering he believed rat. He visited Moscow in No·
Washington was beginning to vember for the hrst lime In three
·understand it could not achieve a year s.

. By BOB HOEFLICH
. vln, T!!ddl, Eric and Ken will be
Weese , retired teacher, .competing In the state event for
wll) be honored with a carry-In
the first time.
potluck
onSunclay 1
And, of course, ~ many at you
Asbury unrtea
ar~ familiar with the annual
Methodist
turkey dinner of the Rutland Fire
Church In
Departiment.
,
Syracuse.
Normally, It Is held In No·
The dinner
vember but was postponed last
will be held at
fall. It has now been rescheduled
12: 30 p.m. following
church for Thursday, March 3. Advance
services and friends , former
tickets at $4 each may be
students alid former co-workers · purchased from any memher of
are cordially Invited to attend.
the department-.
~art

Bertha Conde will be observing
her 92nd birthday Wednesday ~ t
ber home a I 6 Oak St., In
Pomeroy, and I'm sure will be
glad to hear from friends. ·
Incidentally, Bertha, ·' and
Louise Conde of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
are both cousins of Fred Healy,
Grove City, former Meigs County
resident.who died In Dayton this
week.

r.

,. Ritual practices tor the spring
rally to be held on March 12 at
Lagan were held at a recent
meeting of Dlstrlctl3, Daughters
of America, held at the Chester
lolf~e hall.
' The rally will be held at the
Senior Citizens Center In Lagan
starting at 9:30a.m. Final plans
will be.made at a district meeting ,
to be held there an March 5 at 1
p.m.
·
Lora Damewood, district caun·
cilor, presided at the meeting
which was opened In ritualistic

.,

Do you have .

form. Those received officially
were Esther Smith, Inside state
sentinel; Faye.Hoselton, Belpre,
past stte councilor; Dorothy
Ritchie, past state councllor;
Mary C. Moose, Ne~ Lexington,
national representative;· Helen
Wolf, state finance committee;
Betty WCJlfe, New Lexington,
state publicity committee; and
Esther · Harden, District 13,
deputy.
Refreshments were served by
Guiding Star Council, Syracuse.

-~~~n~~a~. t~~-: Y~: ~:;

rent or royalty
inco111e?
H&amp;RBlock

I

)
;

'.

Gran~e

College releases honor list

-·118·

..

w••

Ann
Landers
._ ....

. Oood

_

Look Who'1 37.

PARTIAl USTIWG: Ook dressers

my affection.
Now that I am married, I express
my love for my wife and children
every day, and they do the same for
me. It is amazins how the exchange
of tender wards can make a family
1
close.
Three years ago I went to see my
mother in the ha5pital . ., knew she
was very ill, but I didn't realize the
end was so near. When i left, I said,
"Mom, I love you." She passed
away that night.
I will never be able to thank you
enolllh for teaching me to sa~ those
words. So, for myself, my 'father,
my wif'e and my children, I would
like to say, "I love you, Ann." L.B.M .. GREEN BAY, WIS.
DEAR FRIEND: Thanks for a
beautiful letter. Love is the · only
thinlt you can give away and have
mare of than when you started.
Do you lulvt! questions about se.;
but nobody you tlln talk to about
them? Ann Landm' newly ffl'ised
booklet, "Sex and the Tl!f!nager," will
give you tM a~~SWe~S you nml. To ff!rtlve a ropy,

'fl'lfh miriors. oak wardrobe with
Murphy b!d. oak rockers, 01~ cupboard with pg doors, 5-pt. Victo nan parlour suite, 01k tab6es and
stands, oak hall seat With mirr01.
high-bltk sidebNrd, oak low boy

dresser, 01k wash stands, oak &amp;erpentine hilh boy, ice cream t1ble
and rour chairs, schOOl desks, oak

Hoosier cabinet. pop hall tree, Wll·

•

stands, otd tool bo~tes, Morris chair,
Victorian dresser, sewinl cabinet,

child's desk, depression bedroom
su!te. dinine room suite, din ina room
SUite .

SIOIIE JARS: From Hamill Jones 12
pl.)wlfree Hand, 1-6 pl. &amp; 2 ~ pl.
Donaahtlo's and others, Dan Mercer
bean pot, crock$ tnd Jugs.
GLASS11UE: Pink &amp; 11een dopression. occupied Japan. Fenton ruby, black amth. vasollne, co!Nit
biiH!, Foctofia, set chin1tor 12, crystal &amp; others.
JOOLS: Bklck planes. sc;ribbers,

st~les, buck Yw, shoe lathe, auaers,
woodworkine toots, old car wrenches. draw knives, monkey wren·
ct~es. iron ketttt.
PAfNifMG: Two oi palnhnll on
canvas in w1tnut frmes, (i\STONDI),

i

II&amp;R 8LOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

tcome.

.

'

;RUTLAND - Roller skatlna
ll be offered at -the Rutland
vic Center on Friday, and
ry Friday, from 6: 30 to 8: 30
. Studenta$1. Adults G. Brlq
ur own skates.
'

6 fa East Main Street
Pomeroy, ()hlo

l

...

~--

.

, !;ftARijJSONVILLE - A youth
rilly will be held Friday, atarUq

at 7:30p.m., at the Harrisonville
Holiness Chapel on Route 884.
Speaker will be Rev, Don Adams
of Columbus. Everyone
welcome.
·

---

POMEROY - Asquarellance
wJU be held Frld•y, 8 to n p.m.,
at the Melp Cowlty Senior
Clttzena Center. Music by Larry
Hubbard's True Country Band.
Red Carr caUinJ. Admls81on
refreshments.
.

suo. Brlna

,SUNDAY
TUPP!CR8 PLAINS - There
.will .be a youth II'OIIPmeetlns, for
grades 3-6, at Oraqe Church on

WE WILL BE CLOSED
SATURDAY, FEB. 27, 1988
FOR REMODELING.
WILL REOPEN MONDAY
WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY
INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY
. CAUSE.

· IGUDE lR!.
CQlllClfiLE$ &amp; IISC.: C.st irllll

~ems, kitcllen utensils, old license
p"tes, clocks,_illss churn, pictures
and trmn, sleigh beUs1 pocket
watch, kraut cutter, comrc books,
postcards, records, shtil rriusic:,
b~ets, ldv. bm:es, peper items,
porcellin ware, books, 2.50 Ind.
lold pc. old COins. 14 K IOkf chain ,

14 K IIOid cross, mtlll docl buay,
Miss lfnldn doll, chlin c.-, stucla ·
mixer, marks ~~ truck. Nrlll
sporlelf', china dol 1n11 otflen,

send S2.SO plus a mf-od-

1/ressed, stamp«/ No. 10 tnllftope (39
Cfllls poslilgr) to Ann Landn-s, P.O.
Box 11562, Cllictigo. /U. (t{J61/-0562.

quitts.

-

PUIS LOTS FU.IYUIE &amp;
COLUCDillS tiCilllmD.
!EllS If IAU: CMtt Dl

_ AIIC!ttltllll
, 3!K-4H-1245
IMide Salt

..,111_11 Awi!Mfo

lot ... , . . . tor ..... It'

· FRIDAY
DANVILLE - Danville Holt·
s Church will be In ~vlval
tlng Friday and continuing
dirougb March 6 at 7:30 p.m.
ch evening, with Ev{lngellst
bert Barrow. Everyone

POMEROY

nut- wash stand, col crank phonograph, china ttbtnet, ptelet table,
library table, wal. lap desk, 1 ~wr .

Community calendar

'

.

Connolly
birthday

PATIICI H. ll.tlltR.

can make the
new tax laws
work for you.

I

.

Dear Ann Landers: I thought you
some well-deserved lumps. I would
were too easy on the Cincinnati
have told the wife to keep her eyes
husband who had his own first·
open for a SU~!Jellt visit from the
floor bedroom and Insisted on
tramp, then call the police and tell
keeping the door locked "as protec- · them to come right away, with ah
tion apinst burglars." (He also kept
ax, to chop the door down and free
his window open.) One night his
him from "burglars" who had
wif'e (who he tho!llht had taken a
entered through the window and
sleeping pill) looked outside just in
locked the bedroom door.
time to see a nelabbor lady crawl
From Van Nuys. Calif.: The letter
through her husband's window.
from the man who bas noctUrnal
I Instead of saying· nothing and
visits froni the nelabbor lady pve
~riling tQ Ann Larjders,for advice,
me an inferiority complex. I have a
~ should have waited about five
couple of fairly low bedroom
minutes; banged on the door,
windows. I'm single, not bad~ook"
Yelled, "()pen up, Tam, the house is
ing and am willing to leave the
on fire!" then scurried outside just
windows open, if you will tell me,
in time to catch tbe neighbor
Ann Landers. bow can I get a
dimbing out the window .
·
woman to dimb in?
·_ You were caught ftat·footed on
DEAR V.N.: You sound like one
rhat one, Annie, old prl. - EAU - of those Yalies who bas been
~l.AIRE LEADER READER
inventing letters for Ann Landers
·~ DEAR LEADER READER: You
for a good many years. But your
~ren 't the only one who thought
letter was pretty dam cute, so I'm
.!;)). Here are some other scenarios:
·
printing it anyway.
Dear Ann Leaden: It has !41len
me too long to say thank you. Even
;i1vfully generous to, the man whno;e · now tlie words do not come easily.
perami&gt;ur entered his bedroom at
When I was in my lmls I read a
nlaht while his wife slept in an9ther column · in which you advised
16om. We both thought the wif'e saying "I Jove you" to people you
dqht to dimb in the window care about. It was hard for me at
ljerself, witli a suitcase, and tell him first, but I made myself say it to my
td pack it.
parents. This shook my father up at
' From Gaithersburg, Md.: You first because he is the type who .
"'re missed a good opportunity to never showed much emotion, but
lfve a low·lif'e. cheatina husband after awhile he was 1ble to accept

'-

••

American History Month was lng the Wrangle Island just off . Chllllcothe Veterans Hospital' ;
. observed at the recent meeting of the coast of Alaska and Russia's a n d D A R s c h o o I r o r
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Interest lq gaining control of contributions . '
Daughters of the American Re- · them. She urged members to
-A-vote of thank~ was e xtended .
volutlon, held at the Meigs send letters of strong opposition taPattyParkerfortheAmertcan ::
Museum.
to their representatives.
·. History display of the chapter at ,
Mrs. John Rase , ·acting secre- the museum .
Students taking firsts and
seconds In the essay contest on tary, read correspondence from · Refreshments were served by
"Roads to Ratification" were Mrs. Robert King, state regent , Mrs. Robert Ashley, Florence
among the guests and read their congratulating the chapter on Its Smith,' Mrs. James Werry, Sue '
essays. They were VIctor Van 80th annlverary. Thanl&lt; you Hager, Mrs. Kelh Ashley, Patty ,
Meter, Chester Elemetnary, and letters were read from the Parker .
Joy O'Brien, Syracuse Elemen,
tary, first; and Tyson Rose ,
)
Cheter, and Anita Thomas, RI verview, second place winners .
Other participants; many parReturn Jonathan Meigs Chap- . Mrs. Betty Rose providing lee ·,·
. ents and grandparents, and one ter, Daughters of the American cream.
teacher, Janice Curry of Syra- Revolution , hostedapartyforthe
In the group were Carey Hill, '
CHRISTOPHER L. CONNOLLY cuse, were among the gUests fifth grade class of Shirley Sayre, Mike Craig, Randy Roush, Larry.;
attending.
Letart Falls Elementary School Patterson, Mike Montgomeray,
The students were congratu- recently In recognition or the Sabrina Congo, Justin Hill, ;
lated by the judge, Mrs. Helen class being the only on with full Becky Stobart, Tracy Pickett, ,
'Carper, retired teacher. Flowers participation In the U.S. Constl- Billy Craig, Shannon Staats, '
were presented to Mrs. Carper tutlon essay contest.
Brenda Fetty, Jeff Gilland,
by the chapter.
Refreshmets wer'e served by Bobbi King, Angle Atkins, Jason .•
Mr . Ronald Reynolds gave the Mrs. Dwight Mllhaon and Mrs. Barnett Jason Shuler and Kirk '
Christopher Lee Connally o_bnational defense report regard- Gary Moore of the Chapter with Turley.'
'
:
served his first birthday recently
with a party at the home of her
•parents. Michael and Sheila
Connolly.
Twenty -three Meigs Countians
cine; Paula J. Chancey, Pome- Ryan B. Mahr, Middleport; ,
, Following a dinner party a
have·
been
named
to
the
winter
roy; Patricia J. Duffy; Pomeroy; . Nancy L. Morrissey, Pomeroy;
chocolate chip . cake and Ice .
quarter honor roll at Rio Grande Jeffrey L. Fields, Pomeroy;
Mary E : O'Brien, Pomeroy;··Larl ·:
cream were .s erved. Attending College.
·
K.
Ritchie, Coalville; Kelly D.'
Cheryl
D.
Halley,
Middleport;
·
besides her parents were Chris: ·
To
achieve
honor
roll
status,
Rizer,
Racine; ,Carol A. Smith, ·
Kristina
G.
Haynes,
Rutland;
' topher's brother, Jeremy, his
students must earn a 3. 75 grade · Lisa M. Henderson, Guysville;
Middleport;
Terrie A. Starcher,
paternal grandparents, 'Ted aild
point average on a 4 point scale. Rebecca J . Johnston, Langs- Racine; Laren M. Wolfe, RaMarge Connally, Arlene and
The gPoup Includes Cindy J . ville; Angela L. Lohse, Pome- cine; Amy Yvette Young, Reeds- ;
Jason Parker, Debby, Misty, and
Allen,
Racine; Allen G. Arnott, roy; Charlotte M. Lyons, Ra- ville, and Angela Yvonne Yaung, ,
Travis Lyons.
Middleport; Mary I. Ash, Ra - cine; Karen S. Lyons, Racine;
Reedsville.
Sending gifts and cards were
his great-great-grandmother,
Public Notice
Lola Griffin; his , great · ,
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice'
grandmot~~er, Beulah Scliultz;
mater1)al grandparents, · May·
RESOLUTION 1988-2
motion lo odopt tho follow· · Mr. Wehrung offered a •s....,ltlcetionl ...,
bo picked ilp •' .tho otorll'o
cond to the motion and upon
At tho 11111Uitr -lng of ing:
ford and Wilma Harris, and
tho Pomeroy Vllloge Council
Be It RESOLVED lhittho roll ..n. tho vooo roouha oo . home et 23238 Hill Road,.
La ora and Bruce Hawley.
Rooine, Ohlo. Tho truet- ·
.
thi1
.1
15th
doy
of
Fobruory.
Po,.roy
Vllloge Counctt IOUowa:
.Gifts were also given by Mr. 11188, tho Pomeroy vttfoge h.,.by -bllohoo
lorry Wohrung, yo~: John reoerve tho right to ICCIPI Of
the .VII,
and Mrs. Connolly to the children Counotf d!ocu- et length logo pooltlon of Stroot Su- Andllr110n, yea; Bruce Reed. rejoot oft bido.
BOARD
OF
TRUSTEES
tho
need
for
olloblllhlng
tho
yeo:
Betty
Boranlck,
y•:
perintendent:
to
tie
held
by
o
attending.
LETART TOWNSHIP',
Vlfloge poohlon of Street duly quollflod person oxperl- Wllilom Young, yeo; Bryon
Horry Hill, Wol~tr Rouoh,'
Superintendent.
.nced In the varioua arua of Shank. yea.
Don HiU, Joyce Whill. clerk'
Attar due conaideratlon. ........ building ..poi, ATTEST: Jone Wotton. Clerk (2)
, 2, , 9, 26. 3tc
Pomeroy VHI•• Council ond malnte-: Ught ond Po,.roy Vllloge Council
doolroo to ollllblllh tho pool· hoovy equipment repilr ond Molgo Counly, Ohio
Happy Ads
tlon of Pomorooj Vlllogo M!Pirvlolng of Vllloge lobor (21 19, 211, 2tc
5
Stroot Suportntendont: thet po.-.net: thotoeid poohlon
Others attending were Jo Ann llid poohlon would requl,. wttt bo hotel and oorioponPublic Notice
Baum, Darlene Baum, Erma tho oohoduling and ouporvl- ooted booed on a 1 0'11 month
Cleland, Margaret Tuttle, Opal llol) of otf vlflotle amployooo period from tho 20th doy of
NOTICE OF
norm~~lly working u leborFobruory, USB, and from
Hollon, Charlotte Grant, Marcia ors
APPOINTMENT OF
on tho otrMia. buildlngo yeor to yeor the,.ahar. pro·
. FIDUCIARY
Keller, Sadie Trussell, Mary K. ond othor property·undorlho vklecl that Council may terOn Februorv 8, 1988. in
Halter, Mary Hayes, Thelma gonorot oontrof of tho Vlflogo mlnatll II&gt;• pooltion of Stroot
Superintondont 11 tho ond of tho Meta• County Probate
'I
White, Bonnie Landers; Ethel ofPo~, 1
tho flrot or ony auccoedlng Court, c- No. 26749,
~.
tho
Pomoray
VIIOrr, Faye Kirkhart, Darts "
Bwnard v. Fulu. P. o. Box
loge Council dtllreo to _.,_ yeor. by giving notice In
Grueser, Chester Council; Iva lith tho pooltlon of l!omotoy writing to tho pooltlon 723. Pomeroy. Ohio 411789
appoint.d Executor of
Shutts, Belle' Prairie Council;
V1lage s - luporim.n- hoidor elthor peroonolly or
Eileen Clark; Janice Lawson, dont ond In portoinlng thor8- by moll, 11 teoot thirty (30) tho oatato of Opal Randolph,
fato of ' Box 84,
Betty Biggs, Betty Spencer, to, Mrs. Baronlclc medo o doyo prior to tho oxplroolon doceooed.
Roodovllle. Ohio 4&amp;n2. ·
of .uchyNr.
Margaret Cotterill, Gulldlng Star
Robert E. Buck,
Be It further AESOLVED
8
Public S•le
_
Proboto Judge
Council.
lhot tho wogeo · of l/lfloge
8o Auction
StrMI Superfnl8ndont ohott ~na K. Noooelrood, Ctork
be eight dolors (.8.00~ per 121 12. 19, 21. 3to
hour. peyoble In bl--ly
Public Notice·
lnttallmenh baMd ·on twen·
LARGE ANTI8UE
oy-olx 12111 oquof ·pay peCOLLECTIBLE A CTION
rloda: In addition to wogoo
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUNDAY. FEIIUAIY II. 1111 •
tha
VUiogo of Pomeroy will
'
Tho Clerk of Loton Tiiwn1:00 P.l.
pay the fringe bonoiita nor- llllp will occopt ooolod bido
~DWELl'S GROVI PAtl, I!LPR!,
. OHIO
molly peid to full limo VIllage on o 1988 Dump Tnick until
OM IASMIMGIOtiiLVO.
omployaoo.
11:00 p.m. on March 7.
o\NllllANDIR81
I 11ilt fi011 Pllh.... ia. IIY. 15
1988, ot which time off bldo
mi~o '"""' ot lalolll, Oto .. ll
wtfl
bo opened 11 rogulor
'nn-8) 7 5 ...
ftlifto toot ol o\ltMtlt, 011.
c......n ts a te

Rio

Mighty neighborly woman
needs to be taught lesson

.National Assembly ousts Delvalle,
Palma swont in as acting president

Open 9 AM'8 PM WMkd•ya. 9·11 Set. Phone 992-887.~

essays read ·.

:pistrict 13 ritual practice held

Pneumonia drug may prevent AIDS

y---.r--------"----------------1

win~ing

DAR give party for fifth grade

Glen Lawson, resident of Limburger Ridge, Reedsville, Is a
cardiac patient at Jackson General Hospital In Ripley, W. Va. ·
He's an employee of Kaiser
AI umlnum. Glen would appreciate hearing from you and cards
amy be sent to room 213.

The Rutland Baseball League
will hold an organizational meetIng at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
/',. btg·event will be coming up \ Rutland -Civic. Center. All
on March 19 and 20 far som~ coaches, officers and parents are
members of the ChesterBowhun- asked to at\end and new officers
ter and Archery Club. They'll be , . will be elected. Now that's gotta
competing .In the Ohio Archers be a sure sign of spring.
Indoor 300 Competl lion at
·Portsmouth .
Barbara Hudson and Dottle
Competing will be Melvin Scarberry of Middleport were In
Forester, his daughter, Teddl, Huntington, W. Va., Wednesday
and Kelly Parsons, Racine; Paul night to attend the Kenny Rogers
Searls of Rutland; Ken Roush coneert. The twa Middleport
and Eric Slrn of Pomeroy; John women were also fortunate to get
.and Lynn Young of Shade a11d backstage tickets and to meet the
Jeff Dennison of Bidwell.
popular entertained--and they
really
enjoyed!
'
John, who Is president of the
I --local club, a:nd Jeff will be In ·
Why do Ifeelthatthe authors at
com(letitllon wllh some or the top the · First Amendment dldn'.t
shooters. Last year Kelly and mean that It should protect porn
Lynn each p)aced third In their pushers? But then. what do I
respective divisions while Mel- know? Do keep smiling.

· The official did not say the PLO
leader had to partlclpa te personally In the proposed Middle East
peace conference but said the
organlza tion should . be represented In some way. Israel long
has opposed a PLO presence In
any peace talks and Washlngtcm
has followed suit.
. The Soviet official said a
formula could be found to gPt
around Israeli and U.S. objections to PLO participation, such .
as attaching Palestinians to
another delegation.
Despite the Soviet desire to be
Involved Iii Middle East negotla·
tlolis, the official acknowledged
•
Moscow has no proposal for
salving the conflict .
" The resumption of diplomatic
relations will mark the culmination of a methodical but cautious
ARRIVAL- A Star of David on an Israeli Oag Is
process under Soviet leader
Shimon Peres chat at Ben Gorton, Airport , on
In the foreground as U.S. Secretary of State
Shultz's arrival. REUTER
Mikhail Gorbachev that began
George Shullz (L) and Israeli foreign Minister
with secret meetings and has
risen to the current exchange of
delegations.
·
A con.s ular delegation from
Moscow has been In Israel since
-r
By LARRY DOYLE
Retrovlr does not cure AIDS. A the side effects, which were',,
the summer, officially to' check
UPJ Science Editor
majority of patients on Retrovlr typically limited to a mild skin ·
Soviet property and to Issue
develop PCP and they need rash.
·
';
passports. An Israeli delegation
· ,In co~t•ast , · 16 91 . ,30, AJDS
.CHICAGO (UPil -;- An Inex- something !Ike this.."
Is due .ln Moscow soon with ·1t~
pensive comblnatlon . drug ther·
While AIDS destroys the patients not given the , drugs,.'
offlcfal mission to check the
apy that can prevent an uncom- body's Immune system, It Is not developed PCP. The treated .
functioning of the Israelimon pneumonia Is likely to the acquired Immune deficiency groupsurvlvedanaverageof22.9 ·,
Interests section at the Dutch
prolong the lives of AIDS patients syndrome Itself that kills victims months compared to 12.6 months,
embassy.
'and
may be the best defense they but another disease or Infection In the untreated group.
,
Moves toward full diplomatic
they
develop
as
a
result.
PCP
i~
Hundreds
of
additional
paagainst
the
deadly
disease,
have
relations with Saudi Arabia, a
researchers say.
"by far the most common" of tients have been given the drugs ,
conservative Moslem state, also
_
Scientists
these deadly Infections, Fisc hi Fischl said, "and we have yet to :
from
·the
University
have been pursued steadily
said.
It strikes 70 percent of AIDS see a breakthrough" of pep'
of Miami School of Medicine In
under Gorbachev.
Florida reported today that the patients. •.
·
infection. She also said th e drugs,.·
antibiotics sulfamethoxazole and
Sulfamethoxazole and trlmeth- which are sold together, ar€' ;
trlmethoprlm effectively pre- oprlm have been shown In the inexpensive.
•
vent pneumoncystls carinll. or past to be effective In treating
A year's suppl y of the drugs
PCP, a-type of pneumonia that Is and preventing PCP ln ather would. cost about $200, based o.n ~
otherwise rare but Is the most patients With suppressed tm-· prices in the Chicago area.
common secondary Infection af- mune systems, but has not been
As of Feb. 15. 53,814 cases of
flicting AIDS patients.
extensively tested In AIDS pa- acquired Immune deficiency syn'
"This course of treatment not !Ients because many doctors felt drome had been reported to the .,
only prevents this llifectlon, but It · the side effects of the drug, which federal Centers for Disease Con : ·
alters outcome as a result," said can Include a serious rash. would trot in Atlanta, and 30,158 people.'
Dr. Margaret Fischl, an asso- make Its long -t e rm us e afflicted with the di sease had •
died .
ciate ' professor of general Intolerable.
medicine.
But Fischl and her colleagues
In a study of 60 patients , used low doses of the drug on 30 r;==:;;;;;;:;;;~===i
published In the Journal of the AIDS patients who had already
REMEMBER -·
American Medical Association, developed Kaposi's sarcoma, a
40 percent of the patients receiv - soft -tissue . cancer ' associated
WtTH FLOWERS
Ing the twa drugs were still alive with the early stages of AIDS.
To •••d a boauollully
after three years compared to 7.
None of the 30 contracted PCP
~
d.. ignt&gt;d lunoral
percent of untreated patients.
while on the drugs. Five pat.lents
"""«'"'""''
er \'liltJ••• nil j •
· "Anyone who has AIDS or who discontinued therapy because of
.
POMEROY
Is symptomatic far HIV (the the side effects , and four of them
AIDS virus) Infection should be developed the pneumonia within
· FLOWER SHOP
~ Thr WoyAmf'rica ."ifindl.l..tnJf' ..
put on this regimen -absolutely four or five months. Fischl said
Ph. 992-2039 .,. 992-5721 '
positively," Fischl said. "That's the rest of the patients tolerated
our recommendation and that's
how strongly we feel about this.
It's the most Important weapon
we have against AIDS right
now.''
·
Fischl said It has yet to be
determined whether the drug
therapy would work well with
zlduvodlne, or AZT. a drug now
widely prescribed under the
name Retrovlr to slow growth of
, the AIDS virus In victims. Both
drug therapies deplete red blood
cell counts as a side effect, but
Fischl said she believes they will
OUSTED- Panamanian President Eric Arturo DelvaUe (R) Is
work well hi concert anyway.
shown · with General Manuel Antonio Noriega In an August 1187
flier. Delvalle fired Noriega from his post Friday as chief of the
· ' ·' That's a concern, and we need
armed forces. Noriega was recently Indicted In the United state.
to look at that," she said. "But we
on federal drug and racketeering ~;barges. UPI·REUTER
believe that problem Is not
Insurmountable, and remember
tries and oppressing people all
ove r the world ," he said.

PANAMA CITY. Panama
(UPI) - Manuel Solis Palma
was sworn in as acting president
today after the National Assembly voted to oust Eric Arturo
Delvalle on charges he overJitepped his powers in attempting
~o fire military strongman Gen . .
Manuel Antonio Noriega.
; . Delvalle, who earlier rece ived
liD expression of support from the
~. eagan administration, vowed
j il "fight It out" and call~d on
other foreign governments to
tontinue to recognize his
presidency.
• Former Education Minister
$oils Palma was sworn in at 3:15
a.m . after a day of confusing and
often contradictory developptents that began with Delvalle's
surprise announcement he was
tiring Noriega, who Is under
Indictment In the United States
on cocaine smuggling charges,
as Defense Forces chief and
replacing him with the leader 's
secand-.ln-command. who refused the post.
, Despite the confusion In go·
vernment, Panama City quietly
~oke today. with few pollee
posted along city streets and
there were no apparent signs of
ll!lrest. Traffic was lighter than
uaual In the early hours and It
appeared that most stores and
~ernmeht offices were opera!·
11!11 on a normal schedule.
· -After the National Assembly
voted against him, Delvalle, who
"I'm getting a lot of support
!14rved as a figurehead president
from all the Latin nations and the
bfhlnd Noriega, retreated to his
United States of America on my
home, which was surround\!() by
decision to oust Noriega from his
gbvernment troops for four
position and I expect the OAS
hours. He said today he was
(Organization of American
supported by the t;nlted States
States} will also consider my
apct Latin American countries .
request for an urgent session
"There Is no reason In the
today," he said.
~~~;orld that I can be taken aut of
He also sa ld he doubted Wa.
ntY post," he told CBS's. "ThJs
shlngton
would recognize Palma !
Mpmlng" after being yanked
as
the
new
president and sugfrom office by the National
gested U.S. support could be
Alaembly.
Instrumental ln brlnglrig demo 'U!IIess !Ill the democratic
CQWitrles of the world stand · cracy to his nation, wracked by
strang opllOsiUon to ·Noriega
Mblnd me, we wlli have this kind
since last June.
o(.mllltary ' leader leading coun.

DAR .hears

Will honor retired teacher

.

Friday, February 26, 1988

Paga 9

Beat of the Bend

•

The Daily Sentinel ·

By The B~nd

.

Moscow pushes nonnal relations,
peace conference in .Middle East
By .JACK REDDEN

•

Friday, February 26, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Israelis mount massive. show of force for ShultZ visit .
By LOW TOSCANO

----··--·-----

Ace~

Sl!nday starting at 3: 30 p.m.
Le11der Is Teresa Davis.
POMEROY -' MI. Hermon
United Brethren Church In the
Texas Community will feature'
the Ifni!. . of W•yne and Linda
Rbodel durin&amp; the 7: 30 p.m.
Sunday service. Everyone

OPIOMIIIY

SliVKa: Oft

welcome.

Delicious Dishes!
EnJoy the very fl nest In home ttyle
cooking at the very best prices around!

$
Hot Roast Btef Sandwich .................. . 349
TUESDAY
.
·
$
'
Ham &amp; Scalloped Potatoes................. 349
WIQNEIDAY
$
~IMIIIIIICI· .............................................. !!J411P
MONDA)'

.

JHU.c.QAY

Po

FRIDAY

.

Sausage .......................;...........
,

.

The Mount Hermon United
Brethren Church bu !lad to .
postpone a villi by Wayne a"d
Linda Rbodl!l thll Sunday due to
Utneu .. Howewr, the , regular
aervlee will be beldl.

$

IIIII Loaf ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 349
IA!URDAY
$ SO

-leans &amp; Cornbread ..........~..................

PostpOned

$349

1

HOUIS: MON. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.-1:00 P.M.

.WILLIAMS
••

•

991·7133
. . . .111

,

i

�••

7

. . "· ,

••

.

.
Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

54 Mlac:. MwchendiM '

honcl...

"*'·
roltno

-·

1 DAYS
I DAYS
I ·::IAYS
10 DAYS
I MONTH

POUCIES
•1.41e outside Matgl. GeliMt or Muon count._ mutt be pre-

:.C::W.
e.io disca'HM-. tctt peid In ldwncoe.
F,_ eda - G.._wat .nd found . . under 15 wordt will M
rvn 3 diY' 1t no

__ .

,

0-11-08 1a.•.WCIIIoa 21-• - o a
••. 00
11.00
M .OO
...oo
'tiO.OO
...00
na.llil
.,,_oo
11.00
UI .OO
- .00
tii:OO
tii .OO
810.00
131.00

l-In'? 4'
I A ' I 11
t Qhu .,

114_..,__
•.....
..._
........
........
.......... ...--llor.·-·-·w:..
·--·- . ·-·....-

'~----·­
"""'"'-..,.........

M

7 - Y - - .... 111-•1

•

1

.

I

•

, ,. . . . . . .

Roger Hysell
.Garag•
Rt. 124, Ponllllf Ohio

..

.., ,.,_

Po••ro~

• • 0'

•

---~~-·

7G--d
M7~11t . .

"AI

KAY'S .
BEAUT'f SALON

(ARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

2-5-'88 I mo.

PLUMIING &amp; HEAlrJNG I
Now Locatlaoo:

168 North Socllllll
Mid.lpOI't, Ohia 45760

SALES.&amp; SERVICE

· Cal T. 0. SteWirt
or Ill Stewart

We Csrry Flllhing Suppliel

Poy Your Phone

7U-2Ul

and Cable. IIIIo Here
luSt,.!! rHONI

Or Step ly lloo Sten

Night
SUNDAY CAllS
or

0.. • • Lloilo leatl out
of lutlaNI

16141 991-6550

IIIIDIN((

2·21·'17·1 mo.

4-16-16-tfn

16141 "'-"'"

•Storm Door~
•Storm Wlndowo
•R~MnoniWindo~

•N- Roofing

FlEE ESnMAm

JAMES DESEE
PH. 992·2772

2·5-'881 ...

,

YOUNG'S

EXCAVATING

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addon• 1nd remodeling

oDour • Boclthoe Wort.
•WIH Do Hoorllng With
Dump Truck
•W-korlervlce
•Junk Y1rd Bu1inou

- Roafl"fl! and gutter work
- .Concrete wart ·· ,
- Plumbing end electriczell

WANT TO IUY WIECIID 01
JUIII WS 01 TIIKII
-FIIHIITIUn!for any of tilltt otnlcos call

work
(Free Eatimateal

V. C. YOUNG Ill

614-742-2617

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pameray, Oh,i~ .•.. •~ 1
L-----:!:.4-~

htw- 9 a.no.-6 p.m.
ar loa"

. ERWIN

CONSTIUCTION

SKATE·A·WAY

CHESTD, OHIO

CHESTER, OH.

Cullom Home
Building, Room
Addition•.
Remodeling &amp;
R•palr., Roofs, ·
Baths, Kitchens

Tht ......... Buy, Soil.

Trade Mquine for can,
trucltt, tao.ta. cycla. RVs

FOR QUICK RESULTS ...
Adwrll" todoy in
Wheeler Outer. or you
jult may miH • ulel
I'lL l·ft2·3327 •1·16C·4233

OPEN
WED .-FRI. -SAT.

7 :30-10:00
Call for Birthday,
Church. Private
Parties Mon., Tues ..
Thurs ., Sat . &amp; Sun.

985-3365

Day or haninl

erletwt .........
2-2!-'17-1 ....

985-3929
or 985-9996

2·25-'17-1 mo.

lmm MOVIIS lc VHI Uri
lot us con•ort those olct

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Fob,uory 8, 1988, in
the Moigo Counly Probo1e
Courl. co.. No. 26n1.
,_,._n• Limbert, South
Hiah Street, lox 1118,
Wllkomlle. Ohio ·46&amp;96.
w.a eppointed Admini•tretthc of the eet•te of Jenice 5.
Klnniaon, deceaMd, lata of
29337 SA 124, Longoville,

1:00 P.M.

'
Ull AMY CUTIR
or IOI'S HECTIONICS
446 -6939 .. 446-7390

CONTRACTING

. RACINE
GUN CLUB

Doolor

,.,.
E••'P••••
Ptrts &amp;

Royal &amp; SCM T[.pOwrilon
Royal &amp; MAX akulaton
loyal I ' Mix Caslo loviston

•ROOFING

REMODELIN!I •
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS •
BACK HDE WORK

Ohio 457•1.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
lene K. Neuelrood, Clortl
121 12. 19. 26. 3tc

........,..........
915-4141

.VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SILES.SIIVICE·SUPPUIS

•KITCHE~S • BATHS

Public Notice

HOMEI liLT

........,._, 011. 45743

;

Ph.

ll! 14) 14:1-5.. 6

QUAUTY

PliNY

SHOP

(614) 992-3:145

IUIIOUGH'S CUSlO
UPHOLSlEIY
lt. 2, Coolvlla

7:00 A.M .-3:30 P.M. SHIFT

PAiniME LPN'S

Serving Meigs &amp;
Alhens Counties

3:00-11:30 A.M .
11:00 P.M.-7:30A.M.
75 BED ICF/LONG-TERM
CARE FACILITY

Re•tyllng &amp; Reupholstering
A..identlel 6
Commercial fYmiture
Automattva &amp; Marine
Drtperi.. &amp; Comlcet

Looking for • few good nuOWI to join our
dedicated atafl who are committed to provid·
ing quality care. If you feel you lhare this dedi·
C11ion •nd cornmitlment to quality geriatric
care and team work, pleeee call or writs:

A LARGE SELECTION OF
FABRICS

Now,._, Built
"Free E11imates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

WANTED

DEAD OR lUVE

INSULAnON
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

•Waahera •Dryera
•Rangea •Freezera
•Refrlgeratora

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•H EAT-PUMPS

"Must lo lopolrWio"

FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772

lEN'S lPPUlNCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We

2-5-'U 1110.

2-22-'17'11•

Kupld'o -

ond Co....,loM

DotinG.
· -oftorint
"' """,._
lolna
togolllor
poollloo.
'or lnf&lt;!nnotlon wriiO: Kupld'o
N..t. P.O~ lox 118, Ironton
Olllo411H.
'
'

He.-t of gold llfMimeotcommlt·
mont D.W.M. 31 Y't In moldng

hit h - on hit-.:
htol
"",...,
tho .,._,
_ ,..
ICtM,
no children,
courteoua, llln--. li.-dwOtk·
lng.......otlo, flllllilv arltnJotocl.
He, HOUrt emplorm... •net

Service

FIREWOOD
On,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Cherry

$3500

992-3410

Per Pickup Load
Delivered

Reel Estate General

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

BILL SLACI

614-992-2269

'

[lelan
Realty

Depelldlblt Hnrina Aid Salts &amp; Servlic.l

Over 1 00 Properties

For Sale- Call Today
992-2269
9-6 Mon.•Fri.
9-3 Saturdays

We can repair and recort radiators lnd
hut..- cores. We can

Iiil Licensed
LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
Audioi!Jiist

out radiators. We also

z:
z

also acid boil and rod
l'lpair Bas Tants.

PAT HILL FORD

JEAN TRUSSELL-949-2660
TRACY RIFFLE- 949-3080
DOTTIE TURNER-992-15892
HANK CLELAND- 992-8111

892-2181
Middleport, Ohio

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

1-13-tfl:

CJ

-

Hearilll

EV1Iu1tions

For

All

Ages

-

'

.
11 VIl11

~. 1 r .,J

11

18 Wanted to Do

Help .Wanted

'

6

Loot IIMolo. Ml..lng tinct loto
afternoon Sunday. lolt In &amp;hide
Cove Ad. arM, Middleport
Fomlly .... - · " ' a f t - .
114-992·1121 .

c.u

...

171-IIOt. ·

hiring.

27

lmottJiOotod tho aHorlng.

clolm.

locll flnancitl. perl·tlmt clerk·
teller. Send rMUme to: loX Cia

aero .. from old lt1te ,_.. and

'

,7111 .

Il l

.,'·

&lt;

•

r.now oat. .,..._,.caN

Tele· I·Mirketl"g' Ltdie• to
mall.• appalntmentl for Ohio

MetaUc blue fencMr sldrt for
1871 Pandee. un 304-07&amp;·

bonut. Coli IOAM-1 PManlylof
oPflolntmont-114-&gt;141-3111.

..... pal•

lrM.

large

Vollov ,.,,..,.., 0on1-. 1"8

:104-882- 181.

awnings,

t3 .10 1 hr. piUs

Government Job•. t11.D401111,230 yeor. NoW hl~ng. Yaur
...... 1-801·187·1000 Ext. A,

8-lur ..,,.,. - l l l t t.

Auctioneer hiring pert· tlm•
cllf'tct, c•ten and ringmtn.

·--·--·oampolri-----:---&amp;

Col 114-886-4381 trem 1 :009 :00pm. for eppolntment.

VIcinity

WMtecl: llotn81d tulor to tueh

..............., .......·····......

71h QrodOf. CoU1f1112-Ha.
E•m excellent money. In hom•
- l y work. Jtwolry, toyo,

MOVING· Gttrate Sal• 130 Jay
Dr.· Tu... thru IM. , 8-1. Office

and Othtn. FT lftCI PT eVIIII. C.H

loblt only-130.

8

taclovl 1-118-•le.3131. 111111rwfundolllol EKt. 8-1122, z•h!a-

Public Sale
Auction

a.·

9

Jim Mink Chev.·Oicltlnc.

IIMOtiOOJoh114---:1172

ond-- . . .

s1111-

- .... --Otlllpolio.
... eon
A
2212.

.,......

Dlys~ I14-.UI- 1811.1ft~ ~
0

1:00- &gt;141-12&gt;14.
·
_,---------'!
"c:
FOR BALE OR RENT: 3 IR.
1

--otttchtol-·
central efr-NO PETS- O.poth: .~ ~ ·
m...aa .-.qulred. 31 Chllq· -~

colht f!d . Coli 114-&gt;141-21•3 ·
· ~.~

8:5 dlity.'

11

lealuded ~
homo, JIOOd ""nllng. 8 mll4i~'
IJom Loako • Dom. t28.~. '
GlenwOOd, w~V• . Celll14·441~ ;
Rent-l.a.:

2114.

'•

,&lt;..:!

i j"

eo--""""· ooun!i
...,,.,,
tltctric. P,_
up.ThoRd. 131,000 "

1-•·

~ ..

24 houn.

Campi... houMttolcll of Mnl·
ture • -.dqaaa. Aleo wood •

12

- - . _..., Foinllou..
• Au_, Third • OIMI
114-....1111.
•

11oM-

Call

...,_.,,coli_..,,

fvr '13 modtl

Prlold to nil fut , ownerl'i'KMIW

Sltu•tlon•

out of ltlle. 3 Hdroom .....,..
7 In Lo- . Cllfl.
Olth--. IWfrlgtrotor, """"
_ _l o _ t o _ . - -· dryor lndudtol. Coli"'
.,...... rn .... llou•ln olty. 114-112-1310 - 1:00 pm; '
Colll14-....cr.M.
,
7 room M
- ,-_
770Aohlt.
'

. W•nted

tnd

·------

=-~~-

WOIIIJI lib to lluy junk ....
ed OM'I end n OIGIOWolll,

WIIC

2&gt;UJ.

Clinical
(614) 446-1619 or (614) 992-2104

"=if '

I D..........

"" oroolodv. ..,..... ...... ...,

Ohio. Clulok
II 4-112-171 .

112-1171.

H-louolo.
Clolipollt
bldroome. ~
. , .\ii~

holM. flea:anllala . Cell 114-

Coli 114-171·2110 .. 371-

.

UI,IOO.OO. 104-171-

'J:

2 bedroom epabiatntonUncoln

80 · Days ~-.;;~·-;;· ~ wtth
epprowd crHit. 3 Mle.. out

10-\'lx4x8 AU wOOd paneUng
OOio 01!11 pint ond blrclo- • 16 .I 6
to t18.91ttch.

1210 -

·•

2 bedroom opt. for - · Stow
_, ..trlgtrotor .,. fumlthod .

Bul8vllle Rd. ·Open 11m to 15pm
Mon. thru Sit. Ph. 114-441,

11-Bath room p1nellng.
gl•rad tile and tmOOih .,.nem.

0322.

tl.llto

Volloy fumlouN
New and uaed furniture •nd

room venhlae with mMble lop
Ill gr-tlll.ll.

~ 114· 441·..

a.n: r

-

114-882-3711 E.D.H.

i,_.
rem.l!ld.-lvr•.,••N.

c..... ·w..

No -

turtw. • dop.

2 bod- JOPI. In

up. .

. .

n.nda

-

anat meet the new

""""' .............. pool ..........
- -'FIIIIIIV
tho-~

lis . ., 4---1221.
2

-f-.lovtiOl'. 20-2 .... - .. . aft white
taxtufed well Pllnt· t4.11• .reg
tl.91.
.

21 -1 pl. aluminum tibeQcf ·
rOiOf C0111ng· t20.11. ·
,
22-K·Lu• whlllbrldc I oq.lt.

C1n.-•I.IO.

bocl'ioom f u - ..... ..t tnd

Now Hovon, w. Vt..
IM-IU-3217 or 304-7731024.

-·-tw'-·

-pokl·--·nd304-882-HII.
'

2,R
..
~--·No
oily
- · · Molllo • Homo
l'olll.·Colll4-441·1102.

A-tnt tor - t.... bod-'
-m. furrolthod. """Vol-. no
- · ......... - -171-1311.

z t i R - wNi . . . . . .
~- 1221-.­
:.;,i'"•"i:ii-· OH Col .14-

-

Nlot
2 IR.Collllt-+fl-7.73.
- · -yerd-ln
~

2 • R . - - •11011110 living

•'t'::i.Coii14-:171-:MOI,
011-11 ......1721.H no

·:miD

min- """' O t : , ....
• ..... dop • • raf.
DH:t.
-

llanto tor -

Col

2 •'

n.:uinln ••lllfTP n. Na.

lnaluda:l. Cal
li4-•1·11141 or 114·112·
h 111i114 ......_

.' !1·

·1110. Rtntoolowo. . uo

uood. Col - 6 fM-114-211·
1141.
~ bunlobtci ....... hooVv duty
NIM menr..... Included. . .
I"' oot. Coli 114·7•2-3033.

e:

'

-w.

25-~

Tempered tliermal

P'"'·

!lluo pontlo. 132•71t21.91) , (3.•71 ·
131.001.147•71-····001. FuU
c... tota,e5.oo pr.pc. a-.
28-21' '

Oc:£.':•tiii.M
thermal
'

27· 72" W•lnut •Urt•r

Anilq-. buy or Mil. Rlvorlnt

~.

k"chtn· lnoludlng 12-ll"wolll
i1 -72" b...l, (1-72" po. top~
tllt.ll.
21·2 gol. pooH K-Lu• whlto
- 14.81.
28-Pino Louvorod ~­

112• Eoot Mtln So ..
Ponuecov. Houn: Mon., Tun
one~-. 10:00o.m.-1:0Dp.m::
Sun. 1:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m. By
·
otOnlllly
Below WlioMta'•
polil. Caoldng f - . D - chance Dr WGI .au*". Ruu
town toatlon. &amp;enlora _.... · M-. 114-182·2121.
I 011"!.0''·.
pc. IMile lemon ' calor
como. '"" Control Hottl Coli
:;'2'~· - -•219.11. 64 Miac:. Merch•ndiae
31 -l n - proloung - .
for rent:. fllfriaeleror,
tlnialled and untlnlahell. Choloe
· atliloo T.V..
toch.
.
-ao.aft-poorl&lt;- Collthon'o,Uood Tiro lhop. Ovtl oi-·UI.H
32-l•rtor ..... .... _
-•blo.., 4-112· 7711. 1•000-•..-12. 11,1 • • 11
poontl prohung d--t71.M
....
-·
11, 11.1. I mlloo 0111 Rl. 211'
11 I
Collll4-261-12i1.
· •nct,;~Ai1
ond
48 Sp1ce for Rent

utll-

COUNTRY MOilLE Ha111t Pork.
Po..ov
1 aa.
- Norm
.. CoNat 11•-112:
7.71.

1--

._MIN!I POOLI - 1199
loft
1117ft. Modo!
Paolo.
Hugto....,
IIK24
owlm

__ _
,.-................_
--

llgllll.t.m--on
your tot. '11.181 "und up. Cal

__ ........,

lioiMiolo lor

Goo- • ;,, __

::::.~

.....,, w. v..

1171.

1·114--·7311.

For

Leliae

=t n'Jootood
J "*
bo lldl

1

1

1•

.:::·of -

fl=.'"i:.'o!:'.:"=
~~~:
n 00
-

to U .OO pr.pc.
• -· • ft . dPENN'S WAREHOUSE .
- • . .....,ty, ln. .l..:
Wtlloton, Olllo
t1on • ftawaala4 ~ &amp;ll• c.• , ___1_1_•_
. _ _
-H..:.."-..:':=..:.•:_
2• ,..._, 1--'141-111111.

.,_,. -

48

AKC reglnerect Pomerlen pups
orange color. 304:891-3951. '

•1000. Rtalotarod &amp; yr. old

67

... _ _Coli

418-1918.
64

Hay

&amp; Grain

388-8810.

· 69 For Sale or Trade

Conditlonad nmothy or mixed
hoy tor •lo. Coli ofiOf I PM

614-441-3918.

.

For Sale. or Trade for pick-up

!loool mb!od hoy. Coiii14-Z45.
6417.
•

new pelnt. No rust. Tea;.. car.
NaH• upholmry wort. Call

1000 b•l•. conditioned mixed

Ford

. .

hovforoolt. Ctll11•·992·1113
or 51•-Ht-2714.

Statlan

LII'IJ• round and SQuare bal• of
hey for •le. Call 814·187·

El~ort

w_.. Will Mdt tor pick-up
truck or .cetdt of equel value

114-949-2178.

.

·_:1ra.::rr.,......
.,._..7:o,ar=.~'llr:::r·~~ ·

Vtt111ns. IIIIIOrill Hospitll
· Mulberry Hlh~ Pomlll'OJ,

2

1

. . . . . . . . . . .

tar-

Coli 114-441-2101 or ..._

•--w-.D-.-

"

11•~ mbo 001101010
-r
ond ol

c.•

• • • • .uppl•.
"'Yeller
• - Com- ond lupplloo.
77 2

-

-

-

•

-

:•

•'

. 8 ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondition•l llflltim• guaran-...._ LOCII ref.-.ncet furnished 1
F,.. Ntimst••· Cell coneci
1-11•·237-0488, dtv or night.•
R o Sl • r • I a • • m e n t •

304-171-2741.

l' -::
w:=":,:""=:roo:.::.:"ng:::.:..- - --

- ::

1884 Ford Tampo, 48 ,000
mltue. lim.d wlndowa, IS ipHCI,
new radlula. 12.100.00. 304671·7438.
·

SWEEPER and MWing machine;
Np~lr, perta, •nd auppllea. Pick•
up tnd delivery. Davi• V•cuum

1181 Ford Toilropo, uc cond.

..1-0294.

loaded with eat,... •1.900.
304:871,5339 lher 3;00 pm.
'78 Ford fllrmont station
wa
lth i1
1 ' ••c cond, c•ll
~n w
3 ·773-9108 ofiOf 6:00.

Cl.. ner. ont half mile uP
Georg• Creek Rd. Cell 0:14-

.

.

.
,
Concrete Septic Tlnks~ 1000
gel .• 1~00 gal. and Jet Aeration
av•tem. Factory trained ....,.lr
ohop. RDN EVANS ENTERPRISE&amp;, J1ck1on. Ohkl. 114-

281 _1930_

.

11811$ Plymouth Voyager, cell · Roofing, remodeling, additiont,
llectrlal, drywall, pelntlng. &amp;:
plumbing. Call G•ry 1514-388-

304-171-7438 · - 1:00.
1870 Novo S&amp;. 310 ro..r opood,
•1.500.00. 304·

cond,
l ood
78-2. . 7.

8142.

RON'S Televi1iOn Service
HouM calli On RCA. Quaur:
GE. Spaclallng in Zenith. C.ll

304-571-2398 or 614-446-' '
2454..
Fetty TI-H Trimming, tlump
nmav•l. Ca11304-871!i-1331 .

Starlul TrH end Lawn SNYict,•
l•wn c. are, landtclplng. ttump
r•moval. 304-1571 -2842 a (

f dl Ill Sli!Jplli";

,\ IIVI':,IIIr:k

72

61 Farm Equipment

f1 dii Spilll.lll illl

CROSS. SONS

U.S. 31 Wtet, Jackson Ohio

114-281·MI1 .

'

Bullh Hov lal" • l«vicu. Ow..40 UHd tnlctDn to choaae from
• compl... line of new • uMcf
equipment. Llrgnt Hlecllon In
I .E. Dlllo.

410 Int. tractor w/ plowa, cuhf.
waton. gredef blade. mowing
mochlnt • boiOf. •HIO · Coli
114-281-1122.
. .
HHiton

1400 round

...ler

•uas. 1988 1111. hoovv dutY

lroiltr, 12491. Coli 1142 81·1622.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT-·9777

.....PTD olooft. t1111 whllttfotv

3 Pl. hltoho - - · - ·
wllh

Ford O.xiUr DltrMI tractor· Nice.
with .plows. ouhfvllton. 2 row

planter, *2810. Ow,_. wiD
linonoo. CoM 114-201·1122.

1000 Ford D - with
-.duiY-.IIIIO. Iott

modal2.00 llllariaetkMtal round

boiOf,

tlteo-

o - wll jj.

81

f~';Ot;;~~;~~~,.~-~:::;;:::~n~~~~~-c.~n~l~1~4-~2~~-~~~~i~.J=
22

1881 f . i 5o XL. AC, AM·FM
ltorto, trollor tawlnglloa- Low

mHoogo. eon 11 4-.. -1121.

"

Mllstey ferauaon, New Holland.

Trucks for Sale

1174 Ford pickup. !laod cond.
•eoo. Colll14-241-t214. ··

671·21103.

Eaf*i"enctd pain1er, eactllent
ref.nnaes, quality work. lnte-•
rior. eKterior. teaturing; thoro
Mal, ~ ...menta, frH Qtim•t.

coll304-176-7413,
EiectroluK

YICUU~

71' Auto' • For S•l•

1977 Ford Pick-up. Coli 114-

•fl•. PM.

. 441-2111

1883 Chevy. Cltotlon. Am rodlo.
outo. orono.. PS, PB, 19,000
mil•. 11 HO. C.n be...., 11 the

Otlllpollt Dolly T~buno or lor
monolnformotlon ctllll4-..l 2M2.
1183 Chevme. t2000. Coli

I :-=:-:::-....:::..:......:::..:..,-I 971 Chevy pickup whh 327

englnt. Good cond. e8150. h1ra

. .1-8111.

1881 Tovatro plclo-up. Utility
bed. cern,. top, tt.ddler f'lck.

Coii•IIOf 1 :00114-1192-3143.

BtME,
mtl...

1917 Dodge Mini Ram Van.
CuilbHtalzad. EllUl. ooracf. L._ow

m - Coli oltor I PM · 114211-fMI.

18'711 Plnoa h-becll- !load
_,.ng ord ... Col 114-&gt;141-

.,31.

polnt.-

1112 Ponlloc Flrolllrd. Nbcol. cond. Col
114-...._110-41 - I PM.

B2

. tiOOO.

or 114-

1876 Ford pk:k.up. 150 auto.
- with r o d -· No
phone. oan bt . . . mc.t eny.
time et 115 Dlamo'nd 81., acrou
11om Dolry a.-. u - tnd of

Mkiii-.Ohlo.

llh1mpoolng

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1884 Nl-n KlnQ C.b 4x4,
wraolled but utvagelale. C.ll

1971 Dodge Sport...,.. Von.
Gaacl -lclt. llko
tlroo. Col oftorl PM- 114-2M1141.

•nd Mrvic•;

•s t9.78. 304·175-2286.

·

11'4-. .1-1334- 6:30 PM.

•I•

,..,..,.,

and ......., CIHnlng carp.., low

Wooclburnor. t71. Coli 114-

114-211-1121 .

CARTER'S PLUMBIN!I
AND HEATIN!I
Cor. Fourth end Pine

OtH....IIo, Dhlo

Phone 114--44.1-3888 or 614·

441-&gt;1477

~;;::;;::;:::::.::::=j
84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

- - - - -.•
AMidentill or comm.-ciel wlr-:
lng . New ~ or repair~ .'
Ucenaed elaotrtQI.,. Estlmet~
frH. Ridenour EIIH:trical, 304,.1'
171-1781.
.
&lt;
J

B6

1181 Covollor RS- 20;000
mloo. .,to., olr, Pl. Pl. AMFM·Cooo. tlh. •1100. Colli I 4SII-1240.

General
'

Hauling ~

'

Dill~rd Weier Service: P0o11~
Cinema, Wtllt. Deltvery Any-

limo. CoM 114-&gt;141-7404-No
lund.,. eel ..:

.J • J W..., SaMet. lwim"mlng

pools, cl1tarn1, well1. Ph. 114-

12. - - - ....
11.Jott·-·· - · Colll14-411-.

241-1211.

Htal.flolt--.itl.-.

......._ """"'
-morly..Jom•
-w-·,_--Far
Bovo W"-.CoHR •

11-.

."17 Font
,,000 mitt,
- - 11.000.00. - -7131121 - r 4:00 pm.

701f0111oof-·-.- .. llMI. Good.nllk::a. •
for •eo. Colt 114-411-

73

.

R

304-171-1370.

Ven••4w.o.

•

1171 . , . _... tUI. , . ,
Doton ......... N71
Coliii4-H7-111141. ·
'

1171 '"" CJ7, ... d...... .......... -.-poolntjolo,
11.000 . . . . AII·PM. I me.
lt.C. 11t11L . . ..._ :104-171- t l l 4:00pm.

Cool.
_ __
.......
.
Dumptruoll
heullng
ttnlioa.

104-171-3110.

74

:::-~~.:.
PI. lOt.,.. ,,..
. · ~.J

."'

· · - din.

..__. _-87

Upholatery

Mowuap•a "-"'*1L114 - - .

..... llYN :f.1tltl... c.l
104-171· • 14 tar trot

'

'f

Improvements

881-3802

.

.._~·

-

Rotary or cable lool c:triiNng.
,Malt wellt completed samed1y,
Pump aln and ttrvlce. 304-

-1· u,d-•I.._,M~·

or 11

1982.· Ford . Murtung. Good
condh:lon . Naw 4 cyl.. ai r.

6114.

..... =-m~.-

•r0n•ag~o

.......----:-:--------:·
B1
Home
;

Phone

volcto, 304-171-143 ,_

1981

2241 .

1912 PontlacFireblrd. ch•rcoel.
Auto. AM-FM ca..enu, cruiM
oontro4, •If cand, ·~.1500 . 00 .

.

t..v

114-441-7841.

1971 Pontiac Ventur11. Good
condition. *100 firm. e 1•·9•9-

•8.100.00. 3o.t-1715-31 34_

lndtvidulil Guitar luaon•ll 8runioerdlt Mutilc 114·"8·0187 ·
or-Jeft WIIMiey.lnatructor 448- tOO balM of condliton.:
. .
807l7. Llmlud openings Coii114· . .1·4S...
.JVIIIIble.
•
300 bal.. of mixed hay, *1 .26
Conn doUble lcevbo8rd organ · toch. 300 bol• " ' -· tuo
with rliythm unh: and keyboard - · Coli 114-111-.U 83 or

touclo-1817 Chevy., 4 dr.. lololr,

Serv1ces

~2600. Col 114· 912-2772.
1816 Muota~g OT. Iow fl!lltoao.

Reglttered Polled Hertford Bulls
tor •Ia. 8 14-885·337. week:
dey~ aft., 1:00. WHk'.ftd tny.
time.
dnfl ho..... in any eraa. 304-

Muaic•l
lnltrumenta

l

..;

Stallion ·Shown · - p&amp;uc. in

Will lliol horsts, pl. .sura and

71%.
2•·Wood. elumlnum and
vinyl clod wl-o. (lltiwol
lloyol. IC•-tnt), (Doablo:
.. ond
hungl. s... It -

~-~~~14-EU~1~·0[71~1~';-~!~·~

-...71hcl·--··
-..,-z
-.&lt;;.~- Col

KtnmOfe- I Y,. Qld cheat frMZar
22.7 cu. ft. hctl. DOIId. Htnlly

Rooma for Nnl. dl'(. wwek.

monon. Otllo Hotol . eon 114-

4888.

.

'
1878 36 ft . Troplcan• Travat:
Trail• with tip out. eir, big b•lh •. kitchen, bedroom. Good condi- "
t~n . ftr~ced to lell. 13800. c... ~

992· 6117.-

~

,. ,.... old male PeklngHe, all
•hot' hou• brohn, 304·171-

'

-~--- l•

Mult Mill 1983 Ford E.Con.

RegiUe i'ed Quarter Hor ...
Brood' M•l'e!l ' from t210 lo
17:28.~~

1

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

V.ry clean, gll'tge kept . LDided
with extra•. Prlc.t right. 81•-

••••I

I.-dod,__ w1
Z for tl21.00.

n.. ., _...

w-. 2 'aR. 1121 ,
- O t - IIPDt. Rot. •
Ctll . , ......
IIQ--.
No-"'
11111· -

6800.

'ifto=:::-::-::-..--- - 1

814-115-4340.

· 23-Eproxy cotted
cloMt and door thltvlng.. lave to

~.

8H6h StrMt. Mi~oat. Ohio
2 laadroom .fumith apt, utili~

tl3.1.

color.
t I: Bright and •nlique br•a ·
ond """""' vonlty ond tub •

hou-. Ill. PINIInt and 011111~

or 371-

lOg.

1• -1 pc. fu,...,.._ tub •
......... .,,9.91toch, whiiOO&lt;

tor

APARTMENTS, m - h..,_

AKC reglttered Siberian Hu1ky
8 weeks old Fib. 21. eac fsmlt-(
pat, UHCIIO children, 304-1715·

_&amp;,.::8~
57~-~N=Ino:..:t~o:
flv:•:·_______ :

2818,

814-&gt;141-47.11.

17 - Whlrlpool tuba,
fl,.,ltto, com- plumblng-

tllf,

.

COIII(IIttiloly funol-. 3 BR.

Coli
2'MO.

-•~·-111•
c~ In

RNIOn•
bit ....t. Col 114-1182-27.9.

. ......... Colll1 ......2 ..3.

--All
114-..,.4101

up. .-..- ....... .

U!:._Compllte mica OUUUVII

'31.11.
1I- Color ptollotol ltvotorloo·
tll.ll. 2 for t100.
.
II·Whlto ltotl both tubotll.ll - · 2 !of t 100' calor
-171.11-h.

Livestock

end Tenn .. _. Walka.... C.ll

1181.

·~~-·1

, 13·Ctllnu ..,.. marble round
end ovtl'fanlty bowla: 'whtta 1nd
aolor·t11.U.
14-Calor cammodea·.
*41.15,- Whitt commad...

63

Horus for ul• Standlfdbl'ld

Iotti• fed lambs,
pm, 136.00. Ctll

12, Whlte · 41'"a22" b11h

Cerpead. Nln Mnlng. Cell

xooltdovL

.

'

4130 Qr 171-2478.

I·AI"Ibe flor•l• and lace
puntllng '4x4x8· •7 .1&amp; and ·

tl.9 1 -.

Want to buv, Yellow Locutt
potttod. ctll 304-871-2130.

.I·

Two llldiOOIII. 1 ...... wfth'

417 .Second AVIIIUI, Box 1213
lllllipolis, Ohio 45631

Col

...........

aooci
moto1 ctblnoto. hHCIIIoord• nci
o1o.

and liP to .tl15 .

UCI-

- · .,., • _
..t. _
. ..,
. -.
304-111-_
......

Homes for Sele

4 BR .. fl..,_ lull booom..t. 3
oo. of Otnlpollt. 128.11!1\l.;;

•ao • Klntl tnm•

1211. lndudlntl utiHtl•. CoD
114-882-7717. EON.

tnd unfumlthtcl. ezoo .
U21. ,_ month.
~­
-od. Colll14-882-172•.

3 Ill. _for_or _ _
option to touy. ... 1.1. 1110.

f-:-:::--::----:-----

Ad-.,.....

W. pey cllh far lat8 model CINn
'uNClean.

TDP CAIH -

31

D..,._ •

W•nted To Buy

ltlectlon of t.droom suite•

1 bedroom u,.-ttnenll. Fur·

42 Mobile Horne•
for Rant

- ottw. Coli 114---11 . '
AVDN · All tltto: CoU Mo~lyn · -::-:::--:---~--:--'"T.
Wo..,...304-81Z-21•&amp;.
2 IR . hou• on i3 1/ 3 ~-·.
with full b.......... 2 - · .
-"oad floano. Outloul.....'
Avon el ....._ lhftt.r 8pe.-s
lonct. pomt • plno ....,. '
304-176·1421.
• Coli 114-&gt;141·2107--. 2•11- ~
• ;.
FEDERAL STATE. CIVIL SER- 1100-even.
VICE JOIS, tll,l.l ta
181,181 . .,..,, hiring ....
...,.mtnt, traner ·~·
lob un, 1 ·111·411·381 1. tltt ~ borry-..,t. 141,000- )n
C~lle. C:oll 1:30 poo
F2284tur Info -24 hro.
114;'7-0111 .
·:-.·: .
Moil eo.. 2 bedroom, 2 bllha, 2 OM'~
11M _ .... f .. ... 1 - lot on Rt. 33~
·
boOth.
llllo/lt
104-171wtmmlng pool. Mtelttt, c~
4173, .
to Mtlt" High. Col 114-88&gt;. •
3214 •
it· ,j
•1.1-l
Ttlephono .. onc1 light
10:00 orn
ond 1:00 pm, 104-171-1111. Oov't &amp;lezed Hom•• tram:
11.00. (U ropolr) F o -100 I
Conwenltnt dON mottty ..,._ ond Tu dtllnq_,. hom•. F~
ou..- ropo llot Collirohlndollljj
lntl• 'IOIId -'171-.Cow
.21 .tor 1·118·419· 3141 EKI. H 1122 ·;
•Pflolmmont
- -·

Wedtmeytr'l Auction hrvic•
IVIIIable at your convenlenn
1nd locetione. Merlin Wede"'"" Auctlo,... 114-241·

Manor •nd Rlvenldt Apenmenta In Middleport. From

1•11-A...
LM?..t.--fnlm.l71.

•
.,.,,-"""--....--::-,...:.
''

mi.

4008.

,.... t37_ . . . by ..............
Ul • t41. lod tnmoo t20

6 AKC reglttered Paldng8M
pupa, e160.00 each, 304·171:

·

7 -7 / 15x4x8 preflnlshed
sl1te grey or almond siding·
e13.11eech.
8·Masonitt rock or brick
unflnlthed pantllno %x4K8·

t310. 4 drawer chaM eei. Gun
CtbtnN I lun. Gas or .t.ctrlc

!lroclouo IMng. I ond Z bodroom apenmtnta It: VNiage'

3-'Ata4'xa• Lluan. p~od-

llfto-t18 oq.

e221 1u1111

J • I fURNITURE
. (formtlltt Po.-"oJ'urnlturol

, _ , _ _ In

"

til. Cluotn -

Colll14-982-2712.

4-Aough uw ceder boarda
14x12"x72"· 2 for t8.00.
I · N0.2·8 " 'PfUct Urn tidIng v·gtDVOd-39C !!1!- ft.
1-Calonl•l be~ masonh:e
ltp siding, ez3 aq .. 20 .q. full

twtn *18/ flrm t78, and

7172. Houro 1-1.

~
.• t '

Furniture rwflnWiing and ,;.,..·,) •
qualtty work end rtaon•blt
rttM, free ntlmatea, 304-875-•

Dln.nes t101 and up to t4ea:
Wood table w -1 chair• e211 to
1791. Dolk n 00 up to t371.
Hutchel *400 lnd up. Bunk
bedl complete w -mattret. .

.

2· T-111 yellow pine tiding

}b4'K8"-t13.8 1 -.
ll.llooch.

City Form Supply, 114·0148·
.
2811.

•1•.

Reg...,ed ...... pupa tor
Staats. wormad, wfth PIPtrl

••.••. '14•4'•1'-tl.ll.

0371. Lompo 128 to n2e

applioamoes •• 1Cull

, .•,

Profesalonal
Service•

oo tllll. Tollloo •eo ond

tu1

·

1-Water board 7 / 18K4'x8'·

Iota end oheln pricad from

Two bedroom fumlthocl tlpllrt·
m.nt. Two Huitt: onty. No pete.

Hll. Po-.,y. Col! 114-8921138 or II 4·912-MH.

•

I H. c/ o Otlllpollo· DollY Trfl&gt;unt, 121 Third A.... Otlllpollo
Ohio 41131 .
'

LOST In Hartford

Reel E111te
.· Wanted

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Of'

corn. Call for IeMit qu01e1. Rlv«

Auto Repair

Jim's Import Auto SeMce, f
Ripley, w... Virginia. Speul11i1· l
lng In Honda pana 1nd "Mce ~
linc;e 1818. Phane 1304) 372. 1

1171 Now Eurol'lyte. V-8. a"uto.
trent., new Porlhe red paint.
new Eegle ST'1 on rully whH11,
loti of n.w pirtl. '1400. 010 .
Mull Hll. 1811 Chenlle Cull·
foml1 C1r. No rust rebulh
motor, •lum tiGts. new uhausl.
t800. 1978 Blazer. Rancho
su..,.lon, • ln. lift, new
~lea. elum. slota. 38 ln.
Oumboe, new lrans. fronl end
and transflf' CIM good llhepe.
e1000. llrm. Call 814-992·

Now buying ahtll oom or ear

114-117-7770.

Rst Terrier Pupe, natural bOb&amp;lll

e291ond .. oat311.1obytll 0. Mittr- or bo• opilngo

Ctlll14-441-4171.

:J•l

- -- -- -"
,- ·,

.Ftdw• 111:.

and more I mllea out

. . . Hll Rood. 304-171-7111 .

.

23

Vour aree. 805·117·

acNI

Reg. UKC·Toy FoJC. Terriers. 3
maiM. *110 ..ch, Firm: C.ll

CoHI 14-4•1-34 13.

BUILDING SUPPUES
SAVE 10% to 71'11

4222 between 1-1.

IN!I •-CO,· roco,_do
-you. .
do
wl
uUI . _
th ....,.,.. VOU\
llnow end NOT lo 8.ncf mon...
- ftlan• unIll you hew.,
.llroug• h,ute

4182.

aooo Ext. A-1 0188 for currtnt

2 IR.. 2 ....... A11 ulliMioo
lncludod. t400. c.11 e1•--·

l i - - - n d tor- P l llljtao ..... 114-112•2221 .

C - MDIOI. 114-. .1-7388.

0391

· 62 Wanted to Buy

81ock Co.. I 23\ol Pine 81.,
Otlllslollo, Dhlo Coli 114-. .12713.
.

up to t121. Hld•e·bud• 1380
to e195. Aeclln~~r~ ezze to

2 IR . untum- tlplirtmtnt •
lt1 Third Aw.• e210 • mo. plus
dop. Coli II 4-2. .·8891.

loti:Odlle Iii Perry. C.H 304-

O.lry a.r •nd R..rurent looet8dr.'

Found: wetch .. sy,...,.. a.n
Diamond. Mullt deecrlbe. HOUM

Acreage

Com......, pr0party and hOUM

'

Ot_..lo Feny. Coli --1713918 .. tfiOf 1:00 304-171-o.

.,..a.o .

month.--

t221 ., .
o n d - ............ Coii114- ·UQ, - -..21 a• . .1.
2326.

~otici I • 'i ~l;
THE OHID VALLEY PUBLISH·

·

GOVERNMENT JOIB.
118.230/ yr. -

d,.,.,.. rwfrk:.-.tDrs.
ranges. Skltt• Appllenc..
U - R..... Rd: boolclo s... ~

One tnd twa-bldroom apei1·
mMill for ..... Stow •nd
aelulgeo:uror furnlahed. t200

.

Canc:rfta, blaclu allslzet Ytrd or
deU.,.ry. Mason Hnd. Olllllpoll•

w..h.,.,

I

El\llrgttlc, in~:J'"' peno~ for
offtoo I
lctll. Muot be
mottnted, u.y lurMr. worUhollc. Mtdiool billing. nuroloig
tldlla 1 plu•. C.ll 304,175·
1972, Evenings.

Lost and Found

&amp;

plpM, wln-

246·1121 .

!IOOD USED APPLIANCES

311 Lou

EXCELLENT WA!IEB for ""'"
tlma ltMmbly work; electron,
loo, crotto. Dthtn. Info. 1-(1041
841-0011 bt. 2887. Opon 7
~- CALL NDWI .

9611.

SQ.

Buwln. .,
· , Bullditiga ·

••• •• -building 18 to
IIIah. For • - or,.,._ 304-171llf:A.

----~----------~1

company. Patt ..llCtrfcll- or
teliphont experi.nce --..lui
Qaod
II
,_,.. ·
ooclC.ll
beneftw,
compeny PlY·
Y'lhlaiL
IU·-.UI-

Full b'a adad 0ermen Shepherd
pup, 10 montho old, 304-77381!

~lodo. brick, -

.......... 4 -northoiOtlllpo=d~· ond d-on W.Vo. oklo.
· .IOtiOD, 1,000 oq II on

lnaurance: Miller ln•uranu,
304-112-2141. Alao: autot...
home, life. Meith.
~.__

Pets for Sale

77

·-·

,, ~~~·

Fermall 'S uper M for Ale. Rabult
-enaln• in '84. Goad condition.
CoTI11•-see.3886.

66 Building Supplies

34

..

C.l Ul for your mobia. ,_...

u·

"'

aowa, llnt81a, etc. ClaUde Wintera. Rio Or•nde. 0 . C.ll 114-

·

',,,,.

Insurance

.

Building Mtt:tn.l,

Vecancy. Board room or totll

~fiN.
: -:LA-:-I: CCIVTE=-IAN:·-::M·=="'·- - ~~~ '

10 10

I -

~ 4 iafttl , _ _ , I ohort
h - . Coli 114-H7-IMI.

. ..

~

..

Situation•
Wanted

56

form: Maotly dllololo.

.

Rio.,_, Pond. btmo,
homo. Coli 11•-2•1-

1 1 -- lmNoo-on2113 IR. - . yro. old. T - · Col l14-21e.U84.

c.,. for ~ldorty. 11•·882-7204
arll4-182-3813.
-

big""""'·

litfl• Wlluy Mtlreltouae-

DevictS

12

13

1 1111'

-

e. .

-r.

Wont 1o lluy1

Television

NTHE

Non- CoftltiUior Conaull"!!i:
............. uo ......... rlgl\( '
eqUipmlftt for you, bualnelil. ·
WWI lnololl. Ml up, ttoch u• fl "
PI'CIIIRy ownw. Wort&amp;ecl hlf'd lo
opera• on progt8""' euch •• p:
MCUN future, would now NIIIIO
Ill , Lotuo 123, dltpltt.'
. - onjoylng llh. Would 1. . 10
WtHt 3 ond PosoMollor. Coli
EXCAVAT
.
ION
tnMt tingle clr diuoaoed wDrldng
742·3080.
SUPERINTENDENT
~rillddloZO'oor-tohtlp
Management
......
~ence
au.-r~•
end there qutlt oountry 1fe . .ng men In the uaewtlon Sn:-llenglne rtPalrt: 3o4·881·
otylo ........ c h - ...._
_
Con 1 p ncleuoa wiiiM retui'Md o r -. Xnowloclgo of oliO utility · _3_0_17_._ _ __ _:.__
lnle.lletion •• well •• mua
u.uvatlon cut and flll open~ '"' - nurnlter.
- Roply
' ..
phone
Photo- If POt IIIII
toP.O.Ioa317. PolmPI-nt tiona. I Yhr bpM'Ienoe ,... ·
1111.1111.1.:1
W. Vo. 21110.
- Pov I ' l - l - with
••Piflence. SendretumetoP.O.
Bo• Cit 137 !lolllpollo Dolly
T~ll&lt;lnt, 121 Third Avo., Otlll4
Giveaway
pollo, Olllo 41131.
21
Bu1ineas
Opportunity
lentllm ChlcUn•frM. lome
Get • frM cologne • Sell Avon.
Joying. Coliii4-HI-11943. . . Mol&amp;o
Coii114-441IO -

304-171-1104.

,..

~

2nd. ...... Mlddl_., Oh. 114·
IIIZ-M71.

11

NOt, auto acc1110ri11 lnclud•
Ford mel Chev truck toppers

Fermi for S•le

luylng dtHv gold, .. ...,. colno.
ringa, Jewelry, l*tfng ware, Old
oolno, ,.,.. .... _. Tap prl- · Ed lurUII lorl&gt;tr Shop,

w.·.-

1162.

~ocust,

Used furniture. lppiiM'IOIL ate-

Wanted T c:' Buy

MARINII:
loofdntl 1oJ 0
lowgood...,.. Formorelnfor· ..a~t~ov...o MllltAbtll
It - ·&gt;UO-eoll ooNoat.

NO SUNDAY CALIS
3-11-tln

J&amp;L

Pickup &amp; Delivery

(6141 667-6695

Petty Conard, R.N . , D.O . N . .
'for an interview. WEW wage scala and
811cellent benefit package.
ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Box A . Main St.
Coolville, Ohio 46723
1 -614-667-3166

•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1-21-'11-1 110.

FULL TIME AND PART TIME IN'S

•

U. 5. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
614-662-3121

Announcementl

Farm E'l"i.... IIII-

New&amp;Usad

CHESTER . DHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROD~ ADDITIONS

·I

.

SAUS &amp; SERVICE

Authorhod John Dotro,
Now Holand, .._h Hog

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

VHS.

Help Wanted

.__

·:· BOGGS

I -27-'88-1 mo.

GmDAL COM1UCTUIS
Refll"ancea
11 · ::1-dt~

11

GUN SHOOT
EYER·Y
SUNDAY.

IACINE,

Home Movies over to eaty

3

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulatton

9

Allilllllll 1'11'1'111.

J&amp;L ILOWN
INSUUTION

1·28-'88-tfn

GUNS &amp; SUPPUES

OPEN DAILY
E)(CEPT SUNDAY
Lot of New lto1111:
Fillhing Suppllot, Guno,
Arc~ory, ond Much
More.

~

M

Colloflor&amp;:OOpn(

304-171-32~.

I 15 :::· 1
I , ..........

.,

you want it ...
you'Ve got it ...

Middleport, Ohio

WAUC·INS WElCOME

dohumld~lor.

-~ ··~-~- '

319 So. 2nd Ave;

992-2725

Sean MWing · machine. Oaala

. 11-hr... ....

992-6282

169 N. 2nd Avo.
rlilldlepiirt, Ohio

.---.::
---·
..
•

. STEWART'S

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
NO

Mary, Naomi, Jane,
GriKII, Donna, Angela
t~nd Kay at

6·17·tfc

ho-lllt PricH"

Day

with the stylists -

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

'

11 "a '111111 . . .
Q-cl, TV • R - • .,.,.,.
•
•ale.
.

141~ ....

Re-acquaint your11lf

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Tr••••l11i11

. HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Auto Parts

a. Acce11ories

11...C ,.................. .

Business-Services

CUSTOM IUILT

76

.

n..-114Mlt
11~1 .......... _...

'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

'

I

..,.~

.,

10-7-tfn

114-..1·1528.

' 111-M.,..teart

~~lot,

Fadwy Choke
12 Gwge Shotguns Only

fl.

16
Fibergl ..s boat. 40 HP
Johnaon. electric ... rt motor o~
trailer. t1200 or belt off•r. Ca l~

I 1'

,._c-.e1•

141-Rio.B•4Yr••
. ,_ _
Din.
:171-woinut .

6:30P.M.

Boats and
Moto,. for Sale ·

..... c......

....
··--

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

76

·--·-...··

Clauified page• cover the
following telephone exchangea.:.
.,~

lasha. luilding

U

,. MUla au 1

441 Q ITJ atil

FilE DEPT.

dog 1 5 II nt.
1 1 -IO·MIItorlotoot
3

. 71--......

COPV DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WliDNEIDAV PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

UCINE

se• ~ , _

11-""'...........
·"'- ,.
11--·-··

•*•

GUN SHOOT

with. bloocl

J1 ..... tit ....

na

..... a. .

ch.,.._

~ of ad for .. c.pktlltiWrl Ja doubte pric. 'o t "ad cost
' 7 point II.. .tvi&gt;O ooly UMd.
.
·. •a.ntintl Ia not~ fo r
after flrfl d8\l . lc'hectt
for •ron fnt ~ 1d runs tn ,....r). C.U Mfore 2~00 p.m.
claw an. pubUcebon to mek1 COIT'Kdon
•• • thllt mutt be ptid In m ..~ .,,: '
Cerd Gf tl..nks
H.ppy Ad•
In Memoriem
Y•d. Ill•

_

C• 11

tlo!&gt;t

Motorcycles

. _,.---..

- tt."of ...... ,..,.

von~oo-

..........
out. -Utoo.
.........
· ·Col
- 114nloo
f"-0171.

RATES

74

lldwoltoolofeocll.... pro nibo tor torly

•

1170 1Za70 .3 . ... 1 • ~

, TO PLA&lt;E AN AD UU 992 ~2156 ·
MONDAY thru FIIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
-

64 Miac: . MwchendiM

..

•

;

..

••

....

�--·

;

'

•

-··

Paa•

12-The Daitv Se tlinel

Friday, feruary 26, 1988

Most of nation to get mild. weather

,.._.....[A)cal news briefs-Continued from page 1
session tor supervisors when the · board met rec.enlly. The
training session was on sol! loss calculations and crop rotations
In relation to farm planning.
.
Lease agreements for the Allis Chalmers no-till com planter,
Moo~ unl-drlll !!0·1111 seeder and Brillion seeder were
reviewed. A decision was made not to change the agreements
but to leave them as they were.last year.
The office secretary title tor Opal Oyer was changed to
district program administrator to more clearly cover her .duties
with the organization.
Multiflora rose applications were approved for those meeting
qualifications. Applicants approved will be notified In the near
· future.
The essay contest sponsored by the Ohio Federation of Soli
and Water Conservation Districts for grades 9-12 were judged
by the ladles auxiliary. Winners will be notified and prizes will
be presented In the near future. The f.l rst place county winner
will be sent on to the area level for judging.
Those attending the meeting were Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Chevalier, Alan Holter, Thomas Theiss, Mr. and Mrs. David
Gloeckner, Michael Duhl; Mr. and MRs. Gordon Gilmore, Blair
Windon, Robert First, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shenefield and Opal
Dyer.

·REV. AL SWAIN

REV. AND Mra. AI Swala
have beell mlulonaaiea for lbe
Cbarcll of llle Naureae slncle
1186. · Currently aaslpled lo
BoUvla, llle .Swains are aow
lurloulhln&amp; and will be apeak·
ln1 al the Cheater Cllurcll of
the N aurene on Friday at 7
p.m. The special mlasloiaary
aervlce will le&amp;Nre a meM&amp;Ie
about mlasloaa today. Slides
will be shown and lland crafts
will be displayed. Everyoae
welcome.

HEAP deadline April 15
The Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency can provide
help for those experiencing a home heating-related emergency.
The Emergency HEAP . (Home Emergency Assistance
Program) was created to provide assistance to households that
have bad utilities dlsconected, face the threat of disconnection
or have a 10-day or less supply of bulk fuel. The program allows
a one-time paymenmt of up to $200 per heating season to restore
or retain home heating service.
Households applying for Emergency HEAP must report total
household Income for the past three months or the past year of
all persons 18 years old and older. Households whos gross
Income Is at or below 150 percent of the federal poverty
guidelines are eligible for the program.
Those households serviced by a PUCO-regulated utility
company must sign .up for the Percentage of Income Plan In
order to receive emergency bene!lts.
Applications are being taken at the Gallla-Melgs CAA
Outreach office at the cental of!lce In Cheshire; at 220 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis; and at 39350UnlonAve., Pomeroy.
For more lntormation, call 446-0611 or 367-7341 In Gallla
County, and 992-5605 or 992-6629!n.Melgs County.
jhe deadline for applying Is AprJ115.

Plan banquet
RACINE - The Southern High
School Athletic Department will
be sponsoring two alumni basketball games this coming Tuesday,
March 1 at Southern High School
beginning at 6:30p.m.
The first contest will be for
older alumni graduating from
1975 on back with a format of odd
years versus even years. This
format was chosen to give some
of Southern's veteran stars a
·g reater opportunity to get In
some competition.
Following that contest, Alumni
from 1976 on up will compete
against one another says athletic
director Howle Caldwell.
The same format of Odd years
vs. Even years will be In effect.
This wiJI ·be the second annual
Alumni event as last year the
team's of the seventies defeated
the younger eighties squad by 12
poln(s. Several graduates are out
for revenge against their elders,however, this year some may
end up being teammates.
A meeting for all Interested
Alum.nl who would like to participate will be hed Sunday evening
at 6 p.m. at the hjgh school. All
players should that db plan to
play should attend so · rosters
may be prepared and to give an
Indication as to bow many
· players will be Involved.
Concessions will be sold by the
Southern Athletic Boosters.
Admission will be $1.50 for
Adults and 75 cents for students.

EMS has eight calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Thursday; Middleport at 1:01 a .m. to Race St. for Hallie
Zirkle to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 3:59a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Johnnie Nash to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 4:51 a.m. to POwell St. for Dano
Longstreth to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:07
a.m. to Horner Hill for Craig Howard to Holzer Medical Cenier;
Tuppers Plains at 6:21p.m. to Reedsville for Curtis·Hawthorne ·
who was treated but not transported; Middleport at 7:08p.m. to
Stonewood Apts. for Bessie Turley to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 9:50 p.in. to Route 7 for Bertha Griffin
who was treated but not transported.
·

Area
death$
Hazel Weslen
Hazel Crow Westen, 78, 43261
S. T. 124, Racine, died Thursday
at her residence .following an
extended Illness.
A homemaker, Mrs. Westen
was born April 13, 1909 at Navo
Ridge, W. Va., a daughter of the
late Melvin Clyde and Ella Dobbs
Crow. She was a member of the
. Daughters of America, the Pythlan Sisters and the Pomeroy
First
Baptist Church. She was
TRICKY DICKEY
reared In the Moimdsvllle, W. Va.
area.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs·
. Harry R. (Delilah) Wright,
EAST MEIGS - The Harlem personalities.
Sr.,
August!\, Ga.; Mrs. Ray:
The game was earlier postAll-Stars. world-reknown funmond L. (Augustai Welch, Marmakers of basketball. ·wm play poned do to Inclement weather.
lon; Mrs. James (Charlotte)
Tickets are available at a
the EHS faculty this coming
Marriner of Mercerville, and
Tuesday, March 1 beginning at 8 discount for all pre.sales at the
Mrs.
Robert (Sarah) Roush,
p.m . with a preliminary elemen- high school at prlces . of $2 for
Alexander.
Va.; a son, William
tary contest preceding at 6 p.m . students K-6,$2.50 for students
A.
Westen,
Woodbridge,
Va.; five
Led by veteran "Tricky 7-12, and $3 for adults.Ticket
sisters,
Opal
make,
Elizabeth
. Dickey", the touring basketball prices will be 50 cents moreflt the
. Crow, both of Moundsville, W.
stars feature a lot of action gate.
Involving good quality basketFor further Information please Va.; Alma Goldburg, Charlesball, combined with pracltcal contact Dennis Eichinger at ton. W. Va.; Daisy Canter,
Colorado Springs, Colo.; Mabel
jokes and skits that provide Eastern High School.
entertainment for ali ages .
The eveQ.t Is sponsored by the Doclns, Pensacola, Fla.; a niece,
Specializing In basketball Eastern High Athletlc Boosters. · Laura Blake, Moundsville, who
was reared In the Westen home,
comedy, this touring group has a
and several other nieces and
little something for all
nephews. Also surviving are 14
grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
Meetl.n r changed
preceded 'tn death by · her husDally stock prices
The meeting of the Rutland band, Thomas H. Westen In 1984,
(As ol'lO: 30 a.m.)
Township
Trustees has been · .a sister, Wilma Stout, and two
Bryce and Mark Smith
changed
to
Friday,
March4,6:30 brothers, Lawrence and Carl
ol Blunt Ellis ol Loewl
p.m., at the Ruiland Fire Station. Crow.
All meetings are open to the
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Am Electric Power .. .... .. .. .. .28'4
public.
AT&amp;T ... .... .. ..... .. ............... .. . 29
Saturday at the Pomeroy First
Teen dance Saturday
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Ashland 011 .. .............. ........ 59'4
A teen dance will be·held at the Lyston Halley offlclat111g . .
Bob Evans .... ...... ...... ...... .... 15'4
Pomeroy Municipal Building this Friends may call at the Ewing
'Charming Shoppes .. ..... .. .... .14')8
Saturday
from 8 to 11 p.m.
Funeral Home from 6 to 9 p.m.
City Holding Co .. ..... .... ..... .. . 34
Friday and from 9: 30 to 11: 30
Federal Mogui.. .. ....... .. ....... 37V.
WIC pickup
a.m. Saturday. Following aervJ.
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... .............. 57%
The
Meigs
County
De~rtment
ces here, the body will be taken to
• Heck's Inc.. ,....... .... .. ............ .2
of Health has announced the Grlsell's Funeral Service, Inc.,
Key Centurion ............ ....... .40\2
March schedule for the pickup Qf 400 Jefferson St., Moundsville,
Lands' End ............. ............ l9%
WIC program coupons. They are W. Va. where services will be
Limited Inc . .... ... .:...... ........ 20%
Feb.
29, March 1 and March 3. held at 1: 30p.in. Monday with the
Multimedia Inc... ........ ........ 58\2
Make
up date~ are March 7, 14, ·Rev. Frank Crow o111clatlna.·
Rax Restaurants ......... .. ... .... 3~
and 21. Hours are 9 to 11 a.m. and Grandclllldren will serve as
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .. ..... ..... 8'!4
1
to 3 p.m. Dates for March pallbearers. Burial will be at
Sboney's Inc. .......... .. .. ...... .. 22%
are March 8 and HalcyOJ! Hills Memorial Park In
Immunizations
Wendy's Inti ............. ........... 6%
22,
9
to
11
a.m.
a~
. l to 3 p.m . - Wheeling, ·w. Va.
Worthington lnd. ;-;.... .. ..... ;: ..19%

Harlen All-Stars play Tuesday

Announcements

Stocks

'

Micld1port, Ohio

'

By Untied Preu lnterilalloaal
Scattered snowshowers lin·
gered In the Northeast and light
rain fell over northern CalHornla. but mUd·weather once again
dominated much 01 the nation
today with mostly sunny or
partly clolldY skies.
·
• High temperatures will be In
the 50s or 60s across much of the
country today, the National
Weather Service said. Hlgbs will
reach to around 80 degrees
across the desert Southwest.
· Snowshowers wltl be scattered
across eastern upper Michigan
as well as the eastern Great
Lakes and upper Ohio Valley,
weather service .forecaster Hugh
Crowther said. Ralnshowers
were expected In the southern
Pacific Coast region during the
afternoon. Otherwise, . fair
weather prevailed across the
nation.
A snow squall warning re·
malned In effect today tor
counties east of Lake Ontario In
New York. A weak weather

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions- Larry
Sigler, Rutland; Janet Jenkins,
Middleport; Heniy Beaver, Long
Bottom; Edson Roush, ~aclne;
Helen Rockey, Langsville;
Grace Gardner, Rutland; Dano
Longstreth, Middleport.
Thursday Discharges - Inez
Snyder, Charles Chaffee, Mary
Derenberger, Karen Hood, Lawton Templeton, Edna Lee.
·

Divorce granted
A divorce has been granted to
the defendant. In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
case of Esther Ward against
James T. Ward. The court
restored Ester Ward to her ,
former name Frecker.
Brenda Cloud has been granted
a divorce from Benny Ray Cloud
and restored to her former name
Fry.

dlsturbanl!e moving overnlthl
across Lake Ontario was ex· ,
peeled.to produce ~ to 6 Inches of
snow.
Clouds primarily . extended
from Texas to California, and
over Washington and Oregon.
Partly cloudy skies prevailed
from the Great Lakes region to
the rrtlddle and north~rn Atlantic
Coast.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 4·
degrees In Montpelier, Vt., to 68
degrees In Phoenix. The high for
the nation T!lursday was 88
degrees at Palm Springs, Calif.
Temperatures were below •
.freezing early today from the
middle · and upper Mls~lsslppl
Valley to the inlddle and upper
Atlantic Coast, with teens over
much of the area from Wisconsin .
through Michigan and Ohio to
northern New England.
Temperatures early today
were still In the 50s across
southern F1orlda, and over. much
of Texas and New Mexico.
Temperatures were still In the
50s and·60s In Southern California
and ,outhern Arizona.
While mostly sunny skies and,
dry conditions prevailed· over
much of the nation Thursday, up
to 2 feet of snow plied up around
the eastern Great Lakes.
During the early afternoon,
snowshowers lingered over
snowbelt areas of Oblb, Pennsylvania and New York nejlr the

.

.

Great Lakes.
· As much as 2 reet of new snow
was on the ground In Oswego :·
County east o1 Lake Ontario am! •:
north of Syracuse. · Sheriff's po- •
lice reported hard-packed snow :
and Ice on roads but no major ·
problems.

sOuth Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness this af· •
ternoon, with highs In the mid ;
40s. Considerable cloudiness to- ,
. night, with a chance of' snow ;
flurries and a low between 25 and
30. . Variable cloudiness Satur' •
day, with highs between 35 and
40.
.
I
The probability of preclplta- t
tion Is near zero today,JQpercent .
tonight and 20 percent Saturday.
WindS will be from the southwest at 15 to 25 mph today, ;
becoming northwesterly at 10 tO •
20 mph tonight.
.
I
Extended Forecast
Sunday tbrourh Tue8day
·:
A chance of snow flurries In the ,
northeastern part of the state ~
Sunday, with fair weather else- ;
where through the period. Hlgl)s ,
will range from 30 to 40 Sunday, ;
40 to 50 Monday, and 45 to 55 :
Tuesday. Overnight lows will •.
range from 15 to 25 early Sunday, :
!rom 25 to 35 Sunday morning tmd :
from 30 to 40 early Tuesday.

F.AY,·FE.UAIY 26TH
TUNA AND IIOODUS DINIIEI ....................... *3.99
Our Dalld1vs r- _.lch Ea1Na1' In• Sanry Sauce SorvH with Hot
Golden 11H1 lrewo Pattie llllilllet lutt1nd P101 ¥" ,_ Choice of a Hot
Ill II

NOODUS &amp; CIICIEN ALOJIE, lllltlll bowl "'"·····-····· s1.99

· Occasion

HI·3SS3
PERSONAL DISIGIIS 1Y OWIID,
DONNA AINOI.I, MAll\ .IAIIISON,
CAIOI. I'IOfJR.

EYDY SUteAY: lllioY Our Waltw, Waltnu T.... Service with Your
..... S..vlll on Cfalaia Plateo, aM Drl.. Y...- CoffM or Toa frem
China c...t
· HOURS:i 10:00 A.M.·6:30 P.M.-7 DAYS· A .WEEK

z .·i!\r~bnuf\~:au:!N~4ratrr -•om 7

WE GIVE

915·1132

CHIS111

10% DISCOUNT

.

Page B-1

Backstairs at the White House

A-2

VoL 23 No.3
CDIIf&amp;lel*d '1188

I

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Chance of rain near zero.

•

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12 Stctiona. 72 P1ge1 ·
A Muttlmeclil Inc. tiiWIIPiper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point
Pleeeant, February
28,1988
.
.

OhiO HOUse ready to vote on solid waste bill ·
Secrest, O.Senecavlile, who' as chairman of the
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP!) -A maier revision In
House Energy and Environment Committee
Ohio's solid was til disposal law Is expected to
presided over a lengthy series of hearings.
come~ to the floor of the state House of
' Representatives this week.
Rep. Joseph Haines, R-Xenla, said be voted
against the blllln committee l)ecause "It doesn't
HoUlle Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
solve the problem."
J3oston, said he hopes to have the solid waste blll
Haines complained.that the blll merely calls for
ready for a vote Wedllesday. Backed by the
planning of future landfills and Incinerators for ·
administration of Gov. Richard Celeste, It
trash:' 'We've got to get rid of It Instead of burning
received 9-2 committee approval last week.
It," he said.
..
.
The Senate ~ec0 nvenes at 1:·30 p.m. Tuesday,
. The Senate Is to vote Tuesday on House-passed
but the House does not meet until '1\'edri~day .
leg_lslatlon providing for courts to make the
The .solid waste bill, . sponso~ ·, by ' Rep. .
Fre(ler)ck Deering, D-Monroevllle, Is a1rrted· at'
"Interlock" Ignition ·system a condition for
providing 'long-range p)aimlng tor garbage
proballqn for motorists conviCted of drl~lng while
Intoxicated.
disposal, and encouraging alternate forms of
waste disposal to alleviate Ohio's landfills which
With the Interlock system, a motorist must
·are rapidly reaching full capacity.
con.flf'1h his or her sobriety by blowing Into a
bloOd-alcohol measuring device In order to start
The measure also provides a way to discourage
the car .
.
,
receipt of out-of-state garbage by charglllg a
Rep. Ronald Mottl, D-Parma, said the·system
h"ber "tipping" fee at the waste disposal site.
"This Is a well-balanced bill," said Rep. Joseph

.

H~

will help ·keep drunken drivers off the road while
permitting them to drive under close s upervlslon
after conviction.
·
Hearings will continue Tuesday afternoon In the
House Economic and Small Business Committee · ·
on a bill authorizing casino gambling on an
experimental basis lit Lorain.
And a House Highways and Public Safety
subcommittee will hold Its first meeting Thursday
morning on legislation repealing Ohio's mandatory auto seat hell law.
Rep. ,Robert E . Hagan. D-Madlson, . the
cbalrman,has promised to return the bill to the
full committee for a vote and not kill it, despite Jhe
fact he favors mandatory seatbelts.
The Senate Finance Committee will meet
Tuesday morning to iry to Iron out the snarls In a
blll, sponsored by Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
establishing a trust fund to guarantee future
college tuition for newborns.
Pfeifer bad the bill on the floor two weeks ago,
.

but .was unable to satisfy fellow senators that a
specific amount of money Invested today would
guarantee the cost of a college education In 18
years.
.
Another bill sen.l back to committee - banning
corporal punl.s hment In schools - wlll,recelve a
hearing Tuesday evening In the Senate Education
Committee.
That bill, sponsored by Sen. Richard Schafrath,
R-Loudonvllle, allows school districts to reimpose
corporal punishment by vote In September 1989 If
they wish. Otherwise, It Is banned.
Senators were uncertain as to whether
Schafrath' s bill applies to private as well as public
schools.
A Senate subcommittee will continue to wotk
Tuesday afternoon on a formula for distributing
the proceeds of a $1 .2 billion, 10-year bond sale for
local government road and bridge repair and
replacement.
.

stays·in race; his chances 'remote' ·
hometown In southern Illinois Is
showing was 5 percent of the votf)
"closer to the south than It Is to
In South Dakota.
·
Chicago."
.
During his news conference,
And Massachusetts Gov. MIHart admitted that "the chances
of me becoming the party nomi- chael Dukakls, trying to downnee are remote, to say the least.·· . play his New England backHart. who nearly captured the ground, said, "North and South,
Democratic nomination In 1984 East and West, we all share the
by caltlng lor "new Ideas," said same hopes and aspirations for
he would present his Ideas m1 key ourselves and our children,"
With only 11 days to go before
Issues by appearing at the majo~
20
states hold primaries or
candidate debates and In a series
of !lve speeches In Richmond, cauc],!ses on "Super Tuesday"
Va., Raleigh, · N.C., Chicago, March 8, the 1988 presidential
Nashville, Tenn.. and Orlando, candidates were spread out
Fla.
.,
"
arDund. tlj.~.SOuth where most of
be-lie1d; · - ,
Several thousand people at- tM~iecH~s
On the Republican side, Dole,
tended the Jefferson-Jackson
Day dinner, where each of the who was endorsed ,by South
Democratic candidates, with the Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond
exception of Hart and civil rights
leader Jesse Jackson who arrived late, spoke for about 15
minutes.
They s,ll pushed lor support
from the powerful Southern
Democrats and blasted the Reagan administration.
.
"It's time to put the White
House. back on the side of
~orklng men anfl women for a
COLUMBUS '(UPI) - The
change," said Tennessee Sen.
Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation
Albert Gore, who also presented
the Ohio Farmer's
has
joined
himself asthe Southerner's best
Union
In
urging
the Departchoice.
ment
of
Transportation
not to
Sen. Paul Simon said his
change the classification of
anhydrous ammonia !rom a
non-flammable gas to a polson
gas .
"Anhydrous ammonia
John Donahue, assistant professhnply doesn't meet the definisor at Harvard's John F.
tion of a polson gas," said C.
Kennedy School of Government.
William Swank, the federaHe Is co·author, with Robert
tion's executive vice president.
Reich, of "New Deals: The
"Arbitrarily changing the
Chrysler Revival and the Americlassification would Impact not
can System" and Is working on a
only the cost of distribution, but
book.on privatization from which
International trade and liabilthe Institute's study was taken.
Ity Insurance costs, or availability as wen, " he said.
The study was published just In
Swank said the apparent
advance of the expected release
basis for the department to
next week of the report of
consider such a change was
President Reagan's Commission · because a number of European
on Privatization which, If It
nations generally classify anhfollows the J)anel's preliminary
ydrous ammonia · as a polson
recommendation, will call for the
gas .
.use of private contractors to run
''Europe doesn't utilize anhyfederal , state and local prisons
drous ammonia to the degree
and jails.
American farmers do," said

By United Press International
One-time Democrailc frontrunner Gary Hart acknowledged tC~~ay his chances o!
winning the presidential nomina·
· tion are "remote to say the least"
but he pledged to stay In the race
as a voice for change In public
policy .
At a news conference In
Atlanta, a fe)V hours before a
debate by tbe Democratic contenders, Hart announced he ·
would stay In the running. The.
. li:~~~:~ColdJ'IIdo senator was the
i.
for tWe-nomtn.Uon.untll
repcirts last May •uteesied a lie
scandal. He withdrew from the
l'll,fe but re-enter,'1d .• last fall
p~glng · "to let the people
decide."
On Friday, Sen.' Robert Dole
picked up another endorsement
and Maine Republicans ganged .
up on Pat Robertson in caucuses
Friday.
Ha·rt stayed away from the
. packed Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner In Atlanta on Friday
night, which helped spark speculation be again might leave the
race. Hart has fared dismally In
the four states - Iowa, New
ON
TRAIL - Republlcaa pretldenllal tudldate Robert
Dole told a rail)' at St. Loula Friday, the Panama Canal should be
Hampshire, Minnesota and
protected wllll mWtary foree If necessary In lhe lace !)f politic&amp;!
South Dakota - ihat have held
unre~~IID the Cealral Amerltlan natloa. ( UPI)
primaries and caucuses . His best
.

..vn•

:Report ·critical·of .privately run prisons
'

WASHINGTON (liP!)- Turn. lng prisons 0\'er to private
management Is·generally a poor
Idea that will not likely save
. taxpayers' money and "will fully
· protect neither the Interests of
the pllbllc nor the 'prison Inmates," a liberal think-tank
reported Saturday·.
· "The evidence on potential
cost savings Is too weak and too
questionable to warrant so radl-

cal and risky an experiment,"
the Economic Polley Institute
said In a 32-page report.
The lni!tltute also warned:
···The cost of labor, moreover,
whl~h comprises about ' threefifths cif total prison budgets,
probably cannot be· reduced
much without lowering the qualIty o1 the workforce."
The repori cautioned prison
prlvatlntlon takes direct control

earlier In the week, scored again
when former Treasury Secretary
and Texas Gov . John Connally
announced his support Friday,
Bush and New York Rep. Jack
Kemp concentrated their campaigns on South Carolina , where
Republicans . hold a primary
March . 5, while Robertson and
Dole stumped In Texas.
A strange alliance began form ·
lng among Maine Republicans
who support Dole or Bush In an
effort to exclude Robertson as
towns and cities held caucuses
· thro~ghQ.l~t tht: wee~end to select .
representatives to the state convention which will pick
delegates.

Ohio· Farm Bureau
stand$ against change
of anhydrous ammonia

out of government's hands but
would not exempt the .government from " large and expensive
liabilities" .for lawsuits relating
to contractor-caused abuses.
"There Is a substantial likelihood that government contracts
wl th prison corpora !Ions will
fully protect neither the Interests
of the public nor the prison
Inmates," the report. said.
The study was conducted · by

Swank. "Their farms are
smaller and their crops generally are less nitrogen lnten'slve
than ours. These and other
factors have discouraged Europeans from using anhydrous
ammonia ·a s a fertilizer.
'
"Changing the classification
would cause higher transportation costs, Increase Insurance
costs or make Insurance unavailable, and cost the agricultural Industry at least $1
million per year. It Is questionable whether a polson gas can be
delivered to farms by truck and
delivering It by rail or by
pipeline would be Impossible,"
he said.
'

"The polson gas classification would also create labeling
problems between the li.S. and
Canada, our number-one anhydrous ammonia trading
partner,".. Swank said. "The&lt;
Farm Bureau recommends:
that anhydrous ammonia b(.
classified as a corrosive gas:·
just as It Is In C&lt;!napa. "

Meigs Seni~r Citizens Center
expansion, renovation to begin
.
.

.

POMERO);' - Contracts totalIng $200,000 for the expansion and
renovation of the Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center have been
awarded and the work Is expected to begin next week.
Jilml!ll Diehl, president of the
Meta&amp; County Council on A&amp;lng, .
and Eleanor Thomas executive
director, announced that the
aeneral construction contact
went to KI:J Ccinakucton, Pomeroy, with CI:C of Athens being
awarded the plumbing and heatIna «::ntraet; Great Bend EleetrJe ot Racine, the electrical
~ contract, And Robart
.._. ilf Parlllrlbui'J, !he con-

c

.,

Along lhe River . .. .. ... B-1-8
Buainess .. ....... ......... .... E~l
Ccimlcs-TV ..............Insert
Claslllleds ................ D-!-7
DeatluJ ...................:: •.•• A-4
Editorial .... .. .......... .. ... A-2

B-8 .

SUNDAY~ FEBRUARY 28TH
HOMUUIE IIOODUS &amp; CHICKEN DINIIIEI ••• S3.89

f11hlring a fanrltt, Our 'lllick .................. Si-H In a Gl'lvy
·. with Gooier- Port!- of ~ SorYH with" hd Pat.-. ..d Graq,
llom!&lt;oollld o.- ._with .... ...,.. Gllll , _ Choicl oto·Hot loll or
llolnlmada lilcult, ...... llautll CofMt or Sanka Dtcaffeinatad, loth ·
,,...., ..... lA Snlil Saft ~ .. Net ... May .. !Wditutldl.
.

Inside :

Beat of the Bend, By Bob Hoeflich

IIKuit.

UIGI BOWL ALONE ·--.. ~•••••••••............................... 12.19

MIDDLEPORT
FLOWER SHOP
Flowers For Any

area

.

C-1

Cagers· capture titles

Coal mining:
Its importance
to Meigs

Weather

Thlt Week'• Speelelt
St-r W er H•1 I

50 cents

Sunday

treat tor IQIIOIIa equipment.

.

.....,.

aomplet10114ate ..

for a Gl8 lltory
........ of .. atH1511Y.~feet

at the rear of the building which will be Installed and another
has been occupied by a patio commercial refrigerator, a stea- ·
area. The exterior will be brick mer, convection oven, commellke the rest of the building, rial mixer and slicer wlll be
according to Mrs . Thomas. In added' to the current equlpr:nent.
that section will be a large
It Is anticipated that the
meeting room, one office, and kitchen will be closed for two
some storage area.
.
weeks during the renovation.
Both' the dining area and the Mrs. Thomas reports that the
kitchen will be enlarged by Center bas made arrang~ments
knocklllll: out a wall and Including wlth Veterans Memorial Hospla former hall Into that space. tal to serve the meals at the
Storaae and laundry area will be Center during that lime and also
en18rged, the woodworklnl room to t.andle the · home detlvered
size decreased, and ·a craft meals.
display area Included at the rea~
There should be no lnterrupor the acUvtty room.,
!ion In the dally activities at the
U money Is avallable, a couple center during the renovation
of the current 1arpr oftl~ will time, aceordlng to Mn. Thomas.
be divided Into emaller olfleet. · Some apeelal activitlee Javolvlna
A total or abOut .,.,1100 wt11 be Jarae numben or JIIOII)e will be
"""' on new kltc:Ma equlpmellt. curtailed, however, she 11111..
A eollllll&amp;l'Clal type dllltwalber
'
~
.
_....
;.._.._

i

___
•

.

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