<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12051" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12051?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:52:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43021">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/f809c9043fa38e54d122e3cf575cd560.pdf</src>
      <authentication>752d034dccbeab18c7abdf055c9ae03c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="37874">
                  <text>.:.;Pel::a::•.....:1:.2=.:The:.::.;D:;eilv='
:!.:S..::.::•ti;:.:nei=----......;..--...;.,-----Poine:..:,
':.::.:ro::.!v::-:.::M::id:dl:eport::.!··:.,:O:;:h,:io::..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:.":"""'"...:.:M:.;.:o:.:.:n.:;da~y~.;,.;Febr;,_uarv_.:.-2_9_.1_9_s_a:

...--Local news

briefs~

Rain drenches west coast
early
today
.
-

EMS ha8 12 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 12 calls
over the weekend, seven on Saturday and five on Sunday.
Saturday at 12: 52 a .m., Syracuse to Route 124 for Elvira Barr
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at -12:55 a.m . to
Stonewood Apts. for Inez Pooler to Veterans Memorial
fjospltal; Middleport at 10: 10 --a.m. to Stonewood Apts. (or
Esther Kissell who was treated·but not transported; Pomeroy
at 10:46 p.m. to Uncoln Hill for Evelyn Knight to St. Joseph's
Hospital; Middleport at 11: 11 p.m. to North Second Ave. for
Ricky Johnson who was treated bu.t not.transported; Pomeroy
at 11:19 p.m. to Willis HIU Road for Rachel Buckley to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Mlddl~port at 11:43 p.m. transported Ricky
Johnson and John King from the pollee departrilent to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12:06 a.m., Middleport to a structure fire at the
Walters residence on Turkey Run Road; Pomeroy at 8:40a.m.
to lhe Flood Road for Walter Bentz to Veter11ns Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 10:04 a .m . to Elm St. for Anna pb!tz to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 2:55p.m. to Albany for Scott
Ferris to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9: 20p.m.
to the pollee department for Ricky Johnson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Registration set Saturday
Registration for the 1988 Middleport Youth League summer
ball season will be held Saturday at Middleport Ylllage Hallll
a.m. untll3 p.m ., and on Saturday March 12, from 2 p.m. unt115
p.m. Any boy or girl who did not play bail last summer must
bring a copy of his or her birth certificate which will be kept on
file by the Middleport Youth League. The registration fee is $9
for each child registered.
·

Organizational meet Tuesday .
'
Rutland Baseball League will bold an organizational meeting
on Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the civic center. All coaches, officers
and parents are asked to attend. New olflcers will be elected.

By Ualted Press International
A storm off the Pacific coast
brought rain and thunderstorms
to much 'of Cal11ornla today as the
rest of the West enjoyed rather
warm temperatures and mild
weather covered most of the
country.
The storm system brought
showers and a few thunder:
storms to much of the state
· · tOday. Ralnshowers also covered
western Oregon. ·
Heavier rainfall totals at dawn
Included half an Inch at Paso
Robles and nearly half an Inch at
Sacramento. Portland. Ore., received two-ienths of an inch.
·Central Texas also had show·
ers and thunderstorms Sunday
night and early today as a cold
front pushed across Oklahoma
and Texas, the National Weather
Service said.
Advisories for dense fog were
issued this morning ror southern
and central Louisiana and parts
of southeast Texas.
Widely scattered snowshowers
were over the lower Great Lakes
region and isolated tainshowers
were reported over the Plateau
and Rocky Mountain region, but
otherwise most of the nation had
clear skies.
The work week began with

.

temperatures below freezing
over much of the Plateau and
Rocky Mountain region. The cold
s !retched from the northern and
central high Plains to the Carolinas and the middle Atlantic
coast.
Readings dropped Into the
teens In ·upper Michigan, West
Virginia and rnuch of the I!Orthern Atlantl_c Coast region.
Temperatures dipped into single
digits or below zero in Maine.
Record high temperatures for
Feb. 28 were set or tied in several
Western cities Sunday_ The high
of 66 In Boise, Idaho, broke the
1986 mark of 65; Kalispell, Mont.,

'

reached 57, two degrees higher
than the record set in 1967;
Mountain View, ·Cal11., !led ~
record high set in 1954 with a
reading of 72; Portland, Ore., set
a new record for February with
71 degrees, one notch higher !han
a 1968mark; ltwas601nSpokane,
Wash. , where the old record of 59
degrees had stood since 1901; and
Yakima , Wash., th)d the 1972 .
record of 65.
The Pacific storm In California
brought a weekend of rain that
saved the bene-dry San Francisco Bffy Area from what would

have been Its first rainless
February since 1864.
Rainfall amounts Sunday gen·
erally were under half an Inch,
ranging from 0.37 inches In San
Francisco to 0.46 inches at San
RafaeL The storm brought wind
gusts of up to 35 .mph In some
areas, causing scattered power
outages and bringing down a few
trees.. No major damage was
reported.
Sunday's rain In Southern
California was blamed for rock
slides In Malibu and several
traffic accidents.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM ES't 3-1-88

G

Weather
South Central
Today, partly cloudy with a
high in ttl~ mid 40s. Northwest
winds 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight, . partly cloudy. and·
colder. A low 20 to 25. Light north
winds.
Tuesday, partly cloudy . High
35 to 40.
·
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of rain or snow
Wednesday and Thursday. Fair
Friday. Highs In the the 30s each
day .. Lows 15 to 25. ,

crosses.
~SNOW
-RAIN . . ~SHOWERS
"Upgrading U.S. 35 in Ohio
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold , . . . Staiic
Oi:cluded
remains the most important
Map shows mininium temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
priority for the Committee,"
A Racine area man was cited !rt an accident Saturday, at 5:55
' to receive preCipitation indicated
UPI
p.m., In Sutton Township a·t the junction of CountY Roads 30 and
Boster said. "However, we ~ec122, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway
ognlze that any improvements to
WEATHER MAP - During early Tuesday morning, rain 'and
Patrol.
increase traffic flow in Ohio will
showers are possible In parts of the centtal Pacific Coast and the
be minimized If correspo11dlng
Charles Blake, 82, of Rt. 1, Racine, was cited for failure to
central and northern Intermountain region, with snow possible In
yield after his 1981 Ford Granada was hit by a 1984 Chevrolet
improvements are not made in
parts of the northern Plains and the upper Mississippi Valley, and
Camaro driven by Angela M. Grueser, 18, of Rt. 1, Racine.
West Virginia. As a border
snow showers In parts of the extreme north Atlantic Coast states.
county, Gallla County is espeGrueser was driving east on County Road 30 when Blake, who
(UPI)
was heading north on County Road 122, pulled from thestopslgn
clally affected by a bottleneck In
and was hit by Grueser's car.
West Virginia."
Continued from page 1
L::=============::=====;:=::;::!~a~n:d_:P~r~e~b~le~
)
~w:h:l:c~h~U~.:s:.
.
_:35..~
·
The subcommittee wUl meet
r
with Mason Co. (W.Va. ) officials
mission. It also provuies tor es- general election, must order the lo,l _
to discuss the posslblllty of . tablishing local emergency plan- cal election.
·
federal aid for construction pro:'
ning
districts
and
committees
and
There
is
a
petition
with about
jeets on U.S. 35 In Ohio and West
for
the
collecting
and
disseminating
6,000
signatures
against
a plan for
Charles Grimm
Lewis H. a·nd Pansy M. Walsh
Home. The Rev . Waiter Napper Virginia. By poollng resources
' Charles "Chuck" Grimm, 57 Spires. He was a coal miner for wlll officiate. -Burial will be In and Involving more congress- of infonnatii&gt;n concerning certain PyroChem, Inc. of Louisville, Ky.,
Gravel Hill Cemetery in men , the two states gain better hazardous chemicals 10 the public. 10 build a hazardous waste in·
of Naples, Fla., fonn~lyofMason many years and attended the
It provides for assurances thai state cineracor in a ·northern. part of the
Cheshire.
·
Cowlly, died "'-~--·da
"""..,. y, "reb. 24 , Freewlll Baptist Church at Old
represent a tlon 1n was hing ton,
and
local officials and the public county and residenJs in the
1988 31 Johnson City, Tenn., Medi- Kyger.
Calling hours will be Tuesday Boster Indicated.
are adequately prepared to respond southern pan of the county have
Survivors Include his wife,
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Willis
cal Center Hospital.
10 the release of these hazardous
collected more than 1,000 names
Funeral Home.
He was born June 21 1930 in Rita B. Spires, Pomeroy; two
chemicals.
against the Apms,proposal. The opNew Haven, the son of the late daughters, Martha Fry of Pome·
-Senate BiU 483 would allow position agamst Aptus leaves no
c d u · ~ M tcalf roy and Donna Bourne of Palm
Harry · an
rarua · e
Bay, Fla.; three sons,. Gene
least $18 mlllion, lottery of!lclals agencies 10 levy .administrative room for compromise. ,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - No
penalties in their control over enGr:m~as a real estate broker in Spires ot Alexandria, Va., Robert tickets bearing all six winning said.
In fact, the feelings of those at
forcing
violations
of
waste
stat~tes.
·
1954
H
Spires
with
the
U.S.
Army
In
Sunday's
meeting could be . sumI
Fl a., smce .
The six winning numbers SatNapes,
.
e J
numbers . were sold for Satur- Senate Bill 662 specifically med up with tliis.statement ,liv Dlirgradualed from Wahama High a pan and Jerry Spires of day's Super !:otto ·drawing; so . urday were eight, 13, 27, 30, '33
.includes polychlorinated biphenyls, lena Long of Ash!(ln.
School and was well known for his · Pasadena, 'f:exas; 14 grandchild· Wedneday's jackpot will be at
and 44.
or PCBs, in the definition of hazar- · "I have lived here all my life and
athletic abilities. He was a charter ren; several great grandchildTicket sales were $8,716,333.
dous waste for !he .Hazardous I would Iilre 10 see my children live
member of the North Naples ren; three brothers, Clair Spires
Waste Management Act
here all their liveS, and I don't want
United Methodist Church and of of Fostoria, Ted Spires ol DeSenate
Bill
680
revises
the
the National Rifle and Gun As- fiance and Chester Spires of
to be contaminated."
Snowflake, Az.: six · sisters, Location changed
sociation.
slate Hazardous Waste Mana$e·
Hersey. Roll call wlll be a current
ment Act in order to esiablish
Surviving are a son, Mad; Allen Marie .. Powers of Huntington,
The location of Tuesday's 7: 30 - missionary. ·
by which the slate can asauthority
of 1924 Brisco! Avenue, Briscol, Va: W.Va ., Virginia Addlesburger of p.m." meeting of Xi Gamma Mu
sume primacy over the administra- ..
one daughter, Claudia Jo of 1902 Bethesa, Ohio, Hilda French of Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Plan rummage sale
lion of the federal regulaiOry
Grayland, KnoxviUe, Tenn.; one McConnelsville, Ma'rjorie Sorority has been changed from
Forest Run Methodist Church
program under the Hazardous and
grandson, Matthew Kyle of Brisco!, Gardner of Bloomdale, Ohio , Evelyn Knight's home to Annie is having a rummage S;J.le on
.,
va.; two brothers, the Rev. H. Joe Mildred Hines of Fostoria and Chapman 's home. A recipe a_ucSolid
Waste'
AmendmenJs
of
1984.
Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m.
Grimm of New Haven and Claude Dorothy Underwood of Rising
tion wlll be held.
- Senate Bill 718 prohibits
to 3 p.m. each day. The sale wlll
L. Grimm, .690 Myrtle Road, Sun, Ohio; a half brother, John
hazardous
waste
incmeration
•
be in the church basement.
Naples, Fla.; one half-sister, Ellen Spires of Morgadore, Ohio, and Meeting site changed
within five air miles of a privaJC or
Friday March 18 is the flnar
Palm of Tampa. Fla.
several nieces and nephews.
This week's meeting of the
·public school. ·
day
Hymn
sing
slated
to pUrchase tree packets and
Besides his parents, he was
A memorial service will be held
Unified Citizens for Education In
-Senate Bill 719 provides for a ground cover ·plants from the
There will be a hymn sing at
in the United. Methodist ChUJth in preceded In death by an infant
Meigs Local has been changed Hazel Church, on Route 124
petition process to require a local Meigs Soil and Water Conserva·
Mason .on Sunday, March 6 at 2 daughter, Betty June Spires; one from Thursday to Tuesday. The
.
option election 10 approve any tlon District Ladles Auxlllary. •
between Portland and Long
p.m. with the Rev. Bennie Stevens sister, Frances Price; three
meeting w!U be held 7:30 p.m . Bottom, on Saturday starting at
proposed construction of a hazar- ·
This year they have a backofficiating.
brothers, Ralph, Stanley and Tuesday at the Rutland Ameridous waste facility. Under this yard packet which contains five
7: 30 p.m. Singers will -be the
lntemment will be in Greenlaw Lawrence Spires; a half sister, can Legion Hall.
Freedom Gospel Mission Sin- proposal, the county commission, (5) each of white snowberry,
Cemetery, Tiffin, Ohio.
Bethel Grover; and three halfupon the wrinen petition of lllac, burning bush, sweet gum,
gers. Speaker will be ROger
The family ~uests that in lieu brothers, Oscar , Howard and Band meeting slated
qualified
voters within the' county and redosler dogwood. This
Wilford. Pastor Edsel Hart wel·
be
de 10 Wesley Spires.
All parents of band students In comes the public.
d
equaliO
at
least 10 percent of those · packet sells for $7.00.
rna
Services wlll be Wednesday, 1 Meigs Local School District are
of ftowers, onauons
people .who voted in the preceding
East Tennessee Kidney Fund, in
Other packets available are
care of Renal Cjlre Center of east p.m., at Rawllng-Coats-Blower
invited to attend the Monday,
Group to sing
single
variety packets of White
Tennessee, 107 Woodland Drive, Funeral Home with Al Hartson
March 7 meeting of the organizaThe Grubb Family S!ngers_wlll
Pine, Scotch Pine, ,Norway
tion. The meeting will be held 7
Suite 2, Johnson City, Tenn. 37604. officiating. Burial wUI be In Old
Spruce and Colorado Blue
Kyger Cemetery. Friends may· p.m. In the high school band be at the Rutland Church of God
on
Saturday
night
at
7
p.m.
Spruce. This packets contain 25
Veterans
Mewmorlal
·
Errna Price
call at the funeral home from 2 to
room.
Everyone
is
welcome
to
attend.
Saturday
Admissions
Ida
seedlings of a single variety and
4 and 7 to 9 on Tuesday.
sell
for $6.00.
Middleport;
Patricia
Pooler,
Erma Pauline Price, 76, of
Fishermen to meet'
OES
to
meet
Barrett,
Langsvllle.
Ground
cover plants available
Marietta. formerly of Coolville.
The Mel"gs County Bass
Carnell Vance
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
Include
crown
vetch In packets of
Saturday
Discharges
Roger
died Saturday morning at the
Anglers Club will meet Thurs- of Eastern Star, Middleport, will
72
plants
for
$20.00
and English
Smith,
Ava
Lawson,
Edson
Hickory Creek Nursing Home In
Carnell W. Vance, 74, of Bob
day, 7 p.m., at the Pomeroy . meet 7:30p.m. Thursday. OfficIvy
In
packets
of
50
for
$14.00.
Roush,
Chad
Wolfe,
Thomas
The Plains .
McCormick Road, GalUpolis, · United Methodist Church.
ers
are
to
wear
chapter
dresses.
To
order
any
of
these
packets,
Lambert,
Helen
Tobin,
Raymond
She was born June 21, 1911 In died Sunday morning at Univer - Rutland council meets
or
receive
more
Information
Jeffers,
Helen
Rockey,
Gloria
Jane Lew , W.Va., a daughter of sity Hospital in Columbus.
Rutland VIllage Council will
Grange to meet
about them , call the Meigs Soil
McGhee, Gwinnle White.
the late Preston and Bertha
He was born on March 6, 1913,
meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., at the civic
Star
Grange
778
and
Star
Sunday Admissions - John and Water Conservation District
. Bargerhuff Ramsburg. She was in Thacker, W.Va., a son of the
center.
Junior Grange 878 wlll meet in
King,
Reedsville; Walter Bentz, Office at 992-6647 or stop by ihe
a member of the Warren Presby- late Epp and Anna Vance.
regular
sessions
on
Saturday
at
8
Pomeroy;
Dixie Slawter, Mason, . office located on the seeond floor
terian Church at Gravel Bank,
He was a coal miner for 32
Lodge to meet
p,m.
at
the
grange
hall
on
County
W.
Va.
;
Mandy Powell, of .the Farmers Bank building in
Ohio, and the church's Ladles'
years and was a bookkeeper for
The regular meeting of MiddleRoad 1 near Salem Center. A Middleport.
Pomeroy . All orders must be In
Missionary Society.
the Red Jacket Coal Company of
1
port Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wU! be held
soup
supper
with
ch!U
and
by March 18 and must tie
Sunday
Discharges
Teresa
Survivors include a daughter West Virginia. He was owner and
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. An Inspec- vegetable soup w111 follow the
.
prepa_
ld, Packets should arrive
Pierce,
Lois
Deem,
Owen
and son-in-law, Sondra and Cha·
manager of the Montgomery
tion meeting wU! be held Friday
meeting.
All
members
are
urged
for
pickup
around the end of
Garnes,
Henry
.
Beaver,
..
John
rles Brozak of Stewart; a son and
Ward catalog store In Galllpolls
with dinner at 6: 30, followed by
to
attend.
·
March.
King.
daughter-in-law, Donald and
for 10 years.
the meeting at 7: 30.
Rose Mary Price of Belpre; eight
He was a tetlred ·'policeman,
D of A to meet
grandchildren; four great grand- · having served on the Galli polls
The charter will be draped In
Uterary club meets
chlldren; two sisters, Naomi . Developmental Center force unmemory
of Letha Wood when ;
The Middleport Literary Club
W!Ulams ·of Coolville and Mar- 111'1978. He was a member of the
Chester
Councll
323, Daughters
wlll meet Wednesday, 2 p.m., at
garet Dickens of Athens; one
Galllpolls chapter of the Fraterthe home of MRs . George Hack- of America, meets at 7: 30 p.m.
brother, Robert Ramsburg of
nal Order of Pollee.
ett Jr. Mrs. Bernard Fultz wUI ·Tuesday at the ahll. Members
Port St. Lucie, Fla.; and several
He was a memberoftheUnlted
review "The Call" by John are to wear white.
nieces and nephews.
Baptist Church in Kenova, W,Va.
In addition to her parents, she
He was also a member of the
was preceded In death. by her
Masonic Lodge in Matewan,
husband, Edward Price, In 1987.
w.va.
Services wlll be Tuesday, 1
Survivors Include his wife ·
p.m. , at the White Funeral Home
Demple Vance, whom he marOUR JOB is to help you make and
with Rev. Cecil Morrison offlcla tried on June 17,1939, in Greenup,
save money.
!ng. Burial will be In Coolville
Ky .; three sons (Carnell Vance
· Cemetery. Friends may call at
Jr. of Cheshire; Harold Vance of
the funeral home on Monday
Baltimore, and Larry Vance of
from 2 to 9.
Galllpolls); three brothers (Lawrence Vance of Kopperston,
W.Va. , Orville Vance of GreenEmerson Spires
vllle, S.C., and Merrill Vance of
61 8 EAST MAII!I SOEn
Stuart Draft, Va. ); and two
Emerson Arthur Spires, 79, of
110 WIST IIAIII
991·2214
H&amp;IILOCK LOCAnON
Pomeroy, died Saturday evening
sisters (Helena Cline of JacksonvlJle, Fla., and Anna Marie
at the Pinecrest Care Center in
POMEIOY, OHIO 45769
Prelaz
of Blacksburg, Va.).
.
Ga!Upolls.
(614) 992-7270
Born April 18, 1~ ·In Gallla
Services will be Wednesday at t
''. County, be was_jl_s&lt;m_of the late ~,1~ PJ rn. at th~ Willis Funeral

Racine man- cited by patrol

· th. 8
rt.rea d ea

'

Daily Number
194
Pick 4
5876

Page4
e

at y
Vol.38, No.206

ft

fW

Jly LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- The flrmwhlch
_has done the advertising for the
.Ohio State Fair for the last five
·years has won narrow approval
to do the work for the 1988 show
for $450,000.
Marketing and Public Affairs
.Group, Inc., Columbus, received
the contract on a 4-3 vote of the
.state.ControU!ng Board Monday.
-despite the objections bf board
members who belleve It should
;go to &lt;llfferent companies.
·
Michael Froehlich, assistant
general manager of the fair, said ·

1' Section. 1 0 Pages 26 Cents
A Mullimedi• Inc : Newspaper

MA.CE. •.

March 18 is
deadline for
.packet ()rders ·

Hospital news

SPRING CLEANING?
Don't forget - wa do .

Draperies _... Quilts
Bedspreads.
Cushion Covers - Afghans

THE F

C SHOP

POMIIOY

Shamansky argued, to no avail ;
that the state would pay more In
attorney fees to challenge the
prior work than it would to make
the settlement.
The board approved :
-Release of $1.13 mih ion for
air conditioning the sprawling
Buckeye Youth Center facility In
Columbus .
-Expenditure of $650,000 for
engineering plans for construe·
tion of a four-mile rail spur at the
Honda Motor Co. factory site
near East Lll)erty, Ohio.

among the best in the nation. .
The board was not so generous
with the Bureau of Workers· ·
Compensation request for a
$176,321 addition to a contract
with Arthur Andersen &amp; Co. for a
new bill processing system. ·
It was turned down, 5-2, after
Rep. Wllllam Hlnlg, D-New Phi!adelphia. got a bureau spokesman to admit BWC was not
satisfied with the system, for
which it already paid $1.9
mUUon.
Columbus attorney "obert

Rangel .urges administration
to increase fight on drug war
WASHINGTON (t;PI) - The to halt economic aid to countries drug trial witness.
chairman of the House narcotics involved In drug traffic while
Reagan malhtained at the
committee today called on the developing a comprehensive conference that there ha s been a
Reagan administration towa~ea t_reatment and education pro"turnaround" In the narco tics
multi-faceted campaign against gram for America's youth .
struggle, citing stati stics on
"We haven 't lost any kids on government drug seizures, arrising narcotic use, trafficking
and violence. .
the street to communist~. We rests and more aggress ive en''It is tragic for . anyone io . haven~! had policemen shot by forcement. He pleaded, "W!tli all
I&gt;Eilleve that w.; are :winning the communists. But we've had them the headlines on how we're losing
war against drugs . Why, we kllled by drug-dealers," he told the drugwar, let's keep in mind
haven't fired the first shot," said United Press International point -· the progress we have made."
.Rep. Charles Rangel, 0 -N.Y ., edly on the eve of today's event.
It was Mrs, Reaga n, however,
drawing thunderous applause
The congressman asked a who silenced the White House
from ·a congressionally man- half-dozen other lawmakers to crowd by citing examples of the
dated White House conference on help him lead a "town forum" violent realities of lllegal drugs
drugs.
today at th·e conference, which is and telllng casual users firmly:
Rangel, cha!rman ·of the House being attended by about 2,000 "You're an accomplice to
Select Committee on Narcotics people from sports figures and murder. "
'''Although we're making proAbuse· and Control cal!ed on Jhe educators to politicians and
administration to develop an pollee.
gress, stlll many Ignorant Ideas ·
national education and treatThe conference opened Mon- persist," theflrstladysaid . "One .
mel\t program and to bol$ter Ia;, day with the president and the of the worst Is the casual user's
enfo~q~en\ e\i}~u ·
·. fiut ·tally ~laiD)iPE progress il,h_ justification that drug use is a
'"'RifngHepfit:"- file Wll'r-" 611 dr\lgs, a judgmi!n'! .,.VIt'fll!lfe'§§'q't)me~"' ·• - ~-:·_,.,..
- cal of Reag~n for rejecting a disputed in many quarters, in- · "Th'e casual user may think a·s
proposal by Congress for $230 eluding by pollee who say dealers he takes a line of cocai ne or
million to help state and local are taking over many smokes a joint in the privacy of
policeml'n combat drug traf· neigborhoods .
his ·nice condominium, listening
flckers on the street, but praised
Within the last year, statistics to his expensive stereo. that he 's
Reagan's wife Nancy for her show a surge In drug-related somehow not bother ing anyone.
efforts to draw attention to the murders in big cities and smaller · But there's a trail of death a nd
drug problem.with her "Just Say towns across the counh~y destruction that leads directly to
No" program.
notably in the nation's capital his doer."
"Thank God we have Nancy area. Many Involve rival gangs
Rangel praised Mrs. Reagan' s
Rea·g an . because without her battling for money, power and effort in recent years to focus
voice there lsnoone In charge" of turf.
attention on the drug problem
District of Columbia Mayor with her "Just Say No" cam'a national drug , policy," said
Rangel. making his remarks on Marlon Barry, who has admitted paign. ~owever." he said, " That 's
.!he second day of the conference. a past personal relationship with all we got going at the White
In Rangel's view, the "threat a convicted cocaine dealer . · House."
of drugs on the street is more a opened the conference Monday
Rangel said the secre tari es of
threat than communism In Cen- by questioning the government's defense. state and education
tral America "· yet President anti -drug commitment. He must get involved in developin g a
Reagan's ad~lnlstration seems warned, "We're beginning to lose national policy and Reagan must
less concerned with wiping out the war on drugs."
follow the lead of his wife ,. who
drug merchants than with propIn New York, Mayor Edward has led a drug conference of
ping up lj,S.-backed govern- Koch more bluntly denounced other first ladies, by calling a
ments and rebels south of the Reagan "as a wimp" In the drug drug summit of international
border.
war and demanded an all-out heads of state.
Rangel, who has crltlclzed the effort to crush dealers . His words
administration's past support of came ·as 10,000 law enforcement
Panama's Gen. Manuel Antonio officers attended the funeral of a
Noriega, now under federal in- roo)&lt;le New York policeman
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) -A
dlctment on drug charges, wants ·gunned down while guarding a
federal judge dismissed a re'quest today by a J efferson
County landfill owner ro force the
state to allow it to accept
out-of-state trash.
U.S. District Judge James
Graham refused to take jurisdiction In the complaint by CrossThe board accepted the resig- ridge Inc., which had asked for
The Glaser Co., St. Albans, W.
· Va. was employed to do a survey nation of Marty Dagostino as a an injunction against the Ohio
Enylronmental Protection
of asbestO$ In schools of the substitute teacher and added
Agency.
Meigs Local School District and Cindy Allen to the substitute
to prepare 'an asbestos manage- teachers llst. Maternity leaves
ment plan for the district when were granted two teachers, Jon!
the Meigs Local School District Jeffers and Gloria VanReeth.
Board of Education met in Kenneth EbUn, Dale Harrison
special . session Saturday and Richard Felly, teachers,
were given permission to take
afternoon.
Law requires that a school two students to the regional VICA
district follow a compllance plan Sklll Olympics to be held at t!le
on asbestos by October, 1988 and Plckaway-Ross Vocational Centhe action by the board will take ter in Chllllcothe on March 4 and
the district up to that desdllne. 5. Thomas Stobart was accepted
The firm w111 survey all factlll- as a high school trultlon student.
The board approved payment
tles Nd do a sampling of all
of
$100 to Rick Ash for filling In a
containing asbestos and will map
a training. program for malnte- second junior high girls basket,IJance personnel In coping with ball coa&lt;;hlng position for a
. 't he allbestos. Recommendations · month. The legal firm of Reid,
will be made on how the asbestos Johnson 'and Berry was em·fOund Ia to be eventually handled. ployed to represent the board in a
The work of the firm Is not to lawsuit expected In conjunction
exceed" ai9,900 in costs to the with the operation of schools with
district and required by the Ohio · the use of substitutes during the
Environmental Protection recent teachers strike.
Attending the. meeting were
NAMl!:D TO POST - Clair
Agency.
Woode, fonnerly of Melp
board members, Robert'
Snowden, Robert Barton and
Collllly and !If Dayton,
The board allo entered Into a
Larry Rupe; Supt. Dan E.
bu .beea aamed Director of
contract Wltll the J. W. DidiOn
Morris; Asst. Supt. James CarMarkltiiiJ 111111 Development
Co., Collilnbus, for holpl~·
Ill llle OOBA '1 Oldo dlvlalon
penter,
and
Treasurer
Jane
Fry.
lion IUid lllrllc!alluuraiiCt Qll all ·
effective
April 1. Be II curThe
next
regular
meet11111
was
empiO)'MI tot one )'ear btttn·
l'II..U,
llnlq
• 01111 ....
~llanled
trom
March
l5
to
nllw M.,Ol. TRholpltallllllon
maaapr
for
tile
coopecatlve.
for'merly WI Wltll Blue Cl'llll.
· Monda)',
March
.
.__, 14, at 1 P-111·

'fat"

-----Announcements

I

entine

the contract is ahcu't $100,000
"Once you get into the rut, leS invited to bid feel the process
higher than the 1987 advertising there's no competlllon," said Is ''fixed" and Is a "waste of
pact, but stlll well below the Atonoff:" 'The same firm gets It time."
"They aren't giving anybody
amount -spent to advertise fairs every ye8f.''
"The fair's been successful else a real chance, so why
in other maJor states.
Froehllch said the increase and we feel the firm that does our bother ," said Netzley.
w111 be used to advertise in advertising has a lot to do with
Also approved 4-3 was a $15,000
outlying areas .to get more people it," Froehllch responded. "If It's contract, without competltlve
to attend the annual late summer not broken, why fix It?"
bidding, for a Kansas psych Iaextravaganza.
Froehlich refuted Aronoff's trlst for mental health consultaChlefcrltlclsmcamefromSen. allegation that theblddlngforthe tlon . . Some board members
Stanley Aronoff, R-Clnclnnatl, contract was not competitlve. He . wanted an Ohio practitioner to be
who objected to the fact that said 66 invitations to bid were hired, but the Department of
Marketing and Public Affairs . mailed out and four compjtnles Mental Health said Dr. Charles
has had the contract since Gov. responded.
·
Rapp. of Lawrence, Kan.. Is
Richard Celeste took office In
· But Rep. Robert Netzley, R1983.
Laura, said most of the c.ompan-

-----No one has winner----

~

Cloudy tonight. Low near 30.
Cloudy Wednesday . Highs In
mid 50s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 1, 1988

. Copyrighted 1_988

w.

KARL A. KElLER Ill, CPA .
KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES '

L~ttery

{)hio. State fair advertising· contract approved

40

Boster appointed to panel
COLUMBUS _- State Rep.
Jolyrtn Boster (D-Ga111polis) has
been appointed to a panel that
wlll coordinate Ohio-West V!rginla efforts to improve U.S. 35.
The panel, the Ohio-West Virginla U.S. 35 Joint subcommittee.
was created by the U.S. Route 35
Corridor Committee, a 'tonsortium of state and local officials
representing the seven Ohio
counties (Gallla, Jackson, Ross,
Fayette, Greene, Montgomery

9hio

Reds have
holdouts

.NO FINE AND J;&gt;EANUTS, TOO!- Residents
with booJII _Jpm the Pomeroy and Middleport
Ubraiiet1 ,wJIICh are overdue can not only return
them "fine free" durla1 March, but will be
rewarded for doing so with a sack of peanuts:
Marcb Is National Peanut Month and the Peanut

Brush fire

se~on

Today, March 1, is the official
start of the brush fire season.
Just since Friday, there have
been . 15 brush fires In Meigs
County alone, according to Jim
M!Uiron of the Shade River State
Forestry Division.
During this potentially danger.
of year, which also
lnc!ud•es Apr,ll and May, trash

Growers Association have provided 500 packages
_of peanuts . as another lncenllve to tl108e with
overdue books to brinK them In this month.
Pictured here with a poster prom(ltlng fiDe-free
mqnth and the package~~ of peanuts reward are .
Madhu Malhotra, left, ancl Ruth Powers,
librarian.

starts today

burning is restricted as much as
possible, Mllllron says. In addl·
,tlon to asking Individuals to give
special consideration to wind
conditions before burning, fire
officials also ask people to walt
untll after 4 p.m. before burning.
Although March Is always a
had time for brush fires because
of the normally windy condition~,

· this March will probably be even
wo~se because the past year has
been so dry , according to
Milliron.
During brush fire season, in an
effort to detect brush before they
get out of control, ·Shade River
Forestry makes daily "by air"
Inspections of wooded and
brushy areas.

Refuses request

MeigS board hires
finn for survey

-

~

..;!/'

"

.

�....

Comment

Collins wlll protest 102-101 Bulls defeat

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middle~. Ohio

•

T~Htsday,

March 1, 1988

UPI ratings
NEW YORK C1JPI)- The Untied PrttHI

The Daily

WASHINGTON- One man Is
missing an arm. Another takes 15
minutes to button his shirt with
an Imperfect hand. The third has
epilepsy.
·Lost In the political hoopla this
year Is something that )leartens
millions of handicapped Amerl·
earls - the disabilities of three
men whose.JIIgnlflcant polltlt:lal
power has made their handicaps
the last thing you notice.
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawall,
was Senate leader of the Iran·
/contra · lnv~tlgatlng commit·
tee .

Ill Court Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~lb
qj_v

IS:~ ~._-.-.,......d.o=o

.

.

. .

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aullltaut Pabllsher/ControJier

BOB HOEFLICH
General Maaager

A MEMBER of The Unlted.Press International,

Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 wotds
long. All letters are subject toedit lne and must bes l&amp;ned with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters.will be pu~Hshed. Leiters should be In
good taste, addressing iss"es, not persooalllles.

'i'he absence of an arm, lost In
World War II. action, !lid not
Impede Inouye from reaching ·
such heights a·nd, once there,
effectively leading· the Senate
portlorl of the Investigation. If
anything, the handicap became
such quiet testimony of his own
patriotism that It dampened the
spit and ·polish of Ollie North and
provided for an eloquent summa·
tlon by the senator after the
colonel had flaunted his medals.
Now, ltlsllkelythatiilouyewlll
be elected the Senate majority
leader next year.

fO~ 'fi,tl,~

-n.IE.RE W,._S 'Tio\E COLt&gt; Wll.i.
'I WA~ - A. ~ES$1tof\IST, T~EI'l
..
GIA~NO~ CAM~ ALONIQ ,,, 'I 9ECAME
lt.l&gt;ol Oi'TI~I~T.

Let the good
ideas roll

)

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Ed It or
WASHINGTON - Back In the 1950s, when construction or the St.
Lawrence Seaway was a big political issue, Harold Stas&amp;!i!n came up
with a better Idea.
Instead of simply prov.ldlng a deep water shipping -route from the
Great LakeS to the Atlantic Ocean, the former Minnesota governor
wanted to connect the Gulf of Mexico with the Atlantic.
As It turned out, there were some technical problems: A key
element of the Stassen plan was to dig a canal from the Srule River to
the St. Croix River in Wisconsin to link Lake Superior to the'
Mississippi River. When someone pointed out that the Stule flowed
north and the St. Croix souih, Stassen's plan was.summ&lt;I'Nly Interred
in the graveyard of political brainstorms.
(This is not to say that politicians can't change the direction of a
river: they did It years ago In Chicago to keep the city's sewage out of
Its Lake Michigan drinking water supply. Works justflne, thank you.)

' restricted
(Nor are runaway daydreams about vast water projects
to landlocked Midwesterners . Franklin D. Roosevelt was entranced
until the day he died by the prospect of generating electricity from the
massive tides of Passamaquoddy Say on the U.S. - Canadian border.
People still are trying to figure out how lo do that.) ·
In any case, It does seem that presidential campaigns do bring
Innovative, sometimes wild, Ideas to public attention.
For exa111ple, Sen. Paul Simon's Idea for giving a telephone to evry
poor family. The Illinois Democrat advanced the proposal In a book
he wrote a while back and did not make It one of the planks In his
presidential campaign platform this year.
aut he was reminded of It at one of the candidate debates thiS year
and gave a stirring,!! short. defense of the Idea as a way to flghtcrlme
and deal with the isolation of the elderly poor. He did concede some
bugs needed to be worked out, such as how to keep the free phones
from being used for long distance calls.
Former Gov. Pete du Pont had a new Idea for how 'to keep high
school kids from using drugs: threaten to take away their driver's
licenses . He admitted at one ·or the GOP debates while he still was a
candidate that the plan might not be the answer for teenage drug
·•
abuse in inn~r city neighborhoods.
Alexander Haig, another departed candidate, jumped o.n duPont
with the comment that his worry was "the druggles who Want to steal
the wheels off my car."
Sen. Albert Gore, D·Tenn., entered the big Idea sweepstakes with
his plan to help solve the day care crisis. declaring that he and his
wife. Tipper, would set up a day care center in the White House.
(Gore may not know how hard It Is these days for people who are not
presidents or 5enators to get Into the White House. Some of those little
kids may be ready for Pete du Pont's teenage anti·drug program
before the Secret Service clears them through the gate.)
Finally, 1988 gave us Jesse Jackson's "Fifth Sunday" plan to raise
campaign Junds. Noting that January was one of those rare months
with five Sundays, the Democratic presidential candidate suggested
that churches wouldn't miss the money If they passed the plate on that
·
extra Sabbath for hiS campaign.
The returns aren't in on that project, but It Is mentioned here
because this is Feb. 29, -which comes even less often than a fifth
Sunday. We have yet to learn what Jackson has in mind for this extra
24 hours.

FO'it. ~1:\T 'I. WAS BEATEN
ANI" A1L~Eo;IE'P, NOW •
T;ON''T KNOW WI-\AT 't AM .. ,

7'

'
By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta ...
i

'•

The second man is Sen. Robert House hierarchy, the majority
Dole, R-Kan., who Is giving Vice whip. His " disability" - If the
President George Bush a real rull word fits any of the men -Is not
I
for the presidential nomination. worn on the outside. He Is an
I
As a .result of a World War II epileptic .
I
At age 22, Coelho was poised to
battle, Dole has little qse of his
•
right arm, no use of hiS right enter the seminary and study for
l·
hand and not enough feeling In the Roman Catholic priesthOod.
'
r
his left hand to tell the difference Then he learned he had epilepsy.
The church would not accept
'
between a dime and a_quarter.
'
The third man, Rep. Tony epileptic priests.
Friends Introduced the des·
Coelho, D-Callf., is emerging as a
pondent
Coelho to comedian· :Bob
prominent and potent political
Hope,
who
took Coelho under his
leader. He Is the No.3 man In the
wing. Hope urged him Into
1'lle&lt;".._..\.,. O"'"' ... ,...,,..... ~,.. ..,. JOI"'Et&gt;
politics, and Coelho spent 15
IN •"'" 7rll' ' ,.. '"'~'"'"'~ ' ' ' ..,
years on the staff of Rep. B.F.
A ~OTE'&gt;T A&lt;lill..ltllST OUR EIG"'T
Slsk: When Sisk retired, Coelho
"(E~S Of WA'- IN ,..rG~ANIS\ANY-:J.r .ran for his seat and won.
today he serves -as a quiet
)
counselor, a .S\lrrogate minister,
to members of Congress who
want to confide their problems.
He is also partlculafY attuned to
the cffilses of the downtrodden.
Far from whining about his
Invisible "handicap," Coelho
credits It with helping him to
achieve the success he enjoys.
"To a great extent," he told us,
" because of my epilepsy, I have a
tremendous Inner peace. And
that reflects in everything I do."
IS W..'l GI.ASNOST 1-\AI.F FUI.I..
Without any fanfare, he has
0~ IS IT 1-\M'F EM?T'I?
established his own foundation to
help epileptics develop job skills,
)
adjust to their disability and
"destroy these negative myths
that we have about disabilities In ·
general a'nd epilepsy speclfl·
cally," Coelho said.
For him, It Is vital to be a role
model. "All of a-sudden, people
with' epilepsy' or loved ones of
epileptics. see that l.f you can
make It, then why can't they?
This Is the key thing that you can
do." Coelho said.
'•
·.

New England's '"energy crunch __Ro_be_·rt_m_a---'lte_rs
REVERE, Mass. (NEA) - Its
growing economy and lack of.
easy access to energy sources
have combined to make New
England the nation's leading
candidate for a major energy
crisis, perhaps within the next
decade.
The region's ·distance from
energy supplies always has dis·
torted Its consumption patterns.
For example, coal Is the boller
fuel of choice-.. throughout the
country, supplying . power · to
generate 54 percent of all electricity nationally - but In New
England the comparable figure
Is only 13 percent.
Electric utilities elsewhere
phased out the use of all after the
"energy shocks" of the middle
and late 1970s. As a result, on now
accounts for only 5 percent of all
electricity generated nationally.
In New England, however: it Is
the most readily available fuel
and Is used to produce 3.6 percent
of the region's electricity despite
the continuing uncertainty o!
both price and supply.
Compounding the problem Is
the region's phenomenal eco·

About that speed trap

When Sen. AI Gore announced
that
he would run for president
It seems to me that there are
To Whom It May Concern:
and
as
his campaign developed,
This is a letter warning the probably a lot of capable people
skeptics
asked three quesllons
people In the surrounding coun· wlio do not have one job and
about
his
candidacy and his
ties of the speed trap in Pomeroy,' possibly their unemployment has
strategy:
Was
a 39-year·old too
run out and they have no source
Ohio.
young
to
be
a
serious
candidate? ·
There is something wrong of Income that would love to have
Was
It
possible
to
"jump
start" a
when radar Is set up at 5:30a.m. this job. I have talked to a lot of
campaign
after
the
.early
when there is only three or four people regarding this problem blitz contestsin Iowa andmedia·
New
cars on the road. ASI understand and found they do not shop In
it, the patrolman on evenings Pomeroy and just go through It Hampshire? Would Gore be able
to credibly run as the only
shift Is holding down two jobs, when absolutely ·necessary.
moderate
In a field of liberals?
The VIllage of Pomeroy may
one In Athens and one as
Gore
has
already
answered the
patrolman for the town of Pome- be raking In the money from first two questions In his favor.
roy, and holds his payroll checks fines, but the me~hants of . For the third - establishing
for as long as two months! I don 't Pomeroy are paying the conse- · himself as the different Demo·
know whether he gets a percen- quences through the loss of
crat - we wlil know more after
tage of the offenders fines but as I business of these people.
Eddie VanMatre the outcome of Super Tuesday
understand It, he picks up as
some up'com\ltg Senate
many as 13 to 16 in one shift.
Mason, WV and
business .
Personally, Gore has showri he
Is a big-league candidate. In the
debates, he· has given as good as
he's gotten. He hascjemonstrated
quickness of mini! and "presBy United Press lnternallonal
ence." Gore reminds us that he's
Today Is Tuesday, March 1, the 61st day of 1988 with 305 to follow.
just a bit younger than John
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
Kennedy was when elected.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
There are those who claim to
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
hear the bells of Camelot again.
Those bam on this day are under the sign or Pisces. They Include Gore's jump start strategy
Polish composer Frederic Chopin in 1810, author William Dean seems to be paying off. Despite
Howells In 1837, big band leader Glenn Miller In 1904, actor David his bypass of Iowa and New
Niven In 1910, poet Robert Lowell in 1917, slng!!rs Dinah Shore In 1917 Hampshire, he Is getting top(age 71 ) and Harry Selafonte In 1927 (age 61), and actor Ron Howard rank media treatment along with
In 1954 (age 34) .
Gov. Michael Dukalds ani! Rep.
Richard Gephardt. The latest
On this date In history:
.
polls !rom Southern states al·
In 1780, Pennsylvania became the first state to abolish slavery.
ready show Gore well Into the
In 1781, the Ainerlcan colonies adopted the Articles of double digits. Moreover, most of
Confederation. paving the way for a federal union:
.
those surveys were taken before
In 1932, aviator Charles Lindbergh's young son was kidnapped. The · Gore began bls major television
boy's body was found May 12, and Sruno Hauptmann was executed advertising campaign.
for the crime In 1936.
Can he po~~ltlon himself as the
In 1954, Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire from the gallery of only moderate? His· opponents
the House of Representatives, ·wounding five members of Congress. claim that Gore Is a fake
In 1961, President John Kennedy formed the Peace Corps.
moderate, playing tough to dis.
--. guise a liberal record. On a
A thought for the day: William Dean Howells wrote, "Some people · ·. "Meet the Press" .tniervlew, ,
can stay loriger In an hour than others can In a week."
· .
NSC's Chris Wallace referred to

Today in history

-

"

coUC!!p b.Uetball ratl.... wldl fln&amp;•c• wGtn .... reeenl I• puelldl-.,
lo&amp;al pelllla (b.-ed on 1$ Ptlllh fer llrM
.ace, II lor Me.... th'. ) a .. lut Wf.fk'•
:
Team
Pablta
Ml I
t.Tem,ac(U)Itl--11

..........

!.r.nhte(S)('U-!)

s..v.....,..,,

4. 0klaMmaltH%1-~)

S.PltWHII"IIItlt-4)
LN6rtll Caroll.. . (,!l-4 )

Ht :
SS7 J
HI .f
sn I
351 I

7.Ne•.da·l.as VeiiUI(tH)
R.Kentuek)'(H-S)

I ,O..ke( . .5)
lt .~c:ltltaa(!li:·S I
,
II.Brll:hamYouq(I)(U-3) "
lt.8]'raelllt(l1·7)
I!I.Nortb Carolina St(!M)
U -~wa(.1)

U.Geotfl:la Terh~U·I)
ll.llra&amp;y(lt-4)
li-l.ol')• Mar:rm..,.it t4-J)
IK.V ...erblll(l&amp;-11

:ut K

This

t15 · , ~ ·
S
te
7
11
Ill
Ill II
Mle
1114
M II

1!51
%15
tn
lt.'l
IN

n !t

ZI.Xa.-. state(I8-'H

IS

&amp;

....... II.Rd

Olhen recelvh11 vetes: Florida, 1 ...
... ~lla-- Litde ~k, - ~ . . . .
Stale, Solllltem Metltedllt, TeUI·EI
P -. Dll• ..,Cal-8 ......,.,.,., ~···
ville, Georretawa, Ml. .. t, RIHldl" I•·
laMI,llta•and Xawler (Ohio) .

NBA results
NATIONAL BMKETBALL ASSOC.
,.... ay'l lteiiiiii.A .
.Pillladel
_ ll!hla Ill, Olk:a.. Ill
Dal• 1!3, Deawr •
WMIIIftll.. II~, Goltlu State IN
Utah IU, SacramelttO Ill
Port1Ud"ll1, Oewa.lldtt
heldQ.. Gamee
LA Dlppenat Nb,.rte,,1: Slp.m.
lftdlaaa

at New York, 1: Jt p.m.

~ .... at

..ttlaMa, 7: M p.m.

........ Mltw. .kft, A p.m. •
Ph Delli• at San Ane..kl, R: at p.m.

Ho ....a at Uta•. 8: • p.m.
LA La•rs a1 SeaiUe, t:H p.m.
WedaeodQ'!l Game•
New Jeney at a..wa. nlrht
Indiana al W .... I. .H, Ill PI
LA CllppeNI at Delr:J~h, 11l1ht

Satr._meaeo a1 Datta, nlrht
Cl~veland at Denver, nlrht
HowMon 11 GOlden stale, nl~;hi

Transactions

.........

NHL results

flnc:lnnaU ..:. Slped oufltlelder' Tr11cy
olo~R~~, aftd pl&amp;chlft Pa&amp; Paemo aMI Bill

NATIONAL HOCKEY J.E'AOUE
Mon..r'• Renllt!l
NY HaRle'"" S, Kt . Loul• Z
Montrul t. Qaebec I
1\aetldllf'• Gaune11
BuHalo a&amp; Ot,roll, i: II p.m.
Ml.......oaa a1 Plt.......... 1:31p.m.
New olef'M')' a&amp; W. .IIII&amp;H, 1! D p.m.

- Slped pltchero Tom
Ca.. loW • • IUch Yeti •• l· )'ear

St.j.oub al NYI.,ndert~,8 :• p. m .
Hartford al Wlllllper,I:S51MII.
Lo!ii Anre'" at &amp;lmonton, I:S p.m.

stilwell&amp;. a I· year colllnd.
Plt..... rwll - Slped pllthers lilian
Flllller ud Vlcn&amp;e Palaclolt 11 l· yr.ar

Pltlladetphla a&amp; Va~~Cp.,...~r. It: :II p.m.

Sealde - Slped ea&amp;dwor O..vld Valle
aiiCI oltflekler Henry Cotto to 1-yeat
contradL
Tenuh- SJ.~d plkheh.JohnCeruttl
aid ..... Gu:an11n, and firM bMHmandeldc-Jed llll&amp;er l'.etll Flekler to I·Jear
conl.-ach; aPfOin&amp;ed Rocky Wheelt&gt;r
manafer ol Medldne Hal 111 the Pl...eer
Leape ~A).
ltaslle&amp;blll
t::BA - SupeiMied R1pld Clly'!l Asldre
PaUenoa lor tile remainder •t · ttle
Mtaaon, aftd Rot:klord'il J•hfl Fox and
ft:apW Cftr'• Kelvtn llPIIaaw I 1amt'
apita; ll•d llocldord'1 .Jim Lampley an
altlll.eiOIIH aiiiOIUit of c. . lor fl1htl111.
GoWen Slale - Pluf!ll forward Lar"f
SmD on the llljllf't'd lilt
New lerwy - Nuned WIUI&amp; Rted

Lud...-n.

A recent study of New England's future ability to meet the
demand for power, commlssl·
oned by the region's governors,
concluded that the first supply

shortages could appear In the
early 1990's, followed by severe
short·falls In the mJd-1990s.
Various solutions are avalla·
ble, although each has drawbacks. Among them:
Nuclear - In the month since
the ' largest Investor In New
Hampshire's Seabrook nuclear
power plant, the Public Service
Cornpany of New Hampshire,
was fore~ to seek court p~p~ec· ,
lion' under the federal bank·
ruptcy code, some other partie!·
pants In ' the project have
grudgingly acknowledged that
the $5.2 billion facility will never
operate as a nuclear facility.
Others, however, refuse to
acknowledge that nuclear power
probably Is no longer feasible
anywhere In the region because
the public Is so sharply opposed
to lt. ·
Hydropower - In recent yeats, Hydro-Quebec has been
supplying all of New England (as
well as New York) with sustantlal amounts of power generated
at Canadian hydroeleclronic
stations.

aut• organized labor opposes
those cross-border sales because
they provide no domestic jobs.
(The executive vice president of
th e Massachusetts AFL·CIO
complains that his state "Is on its
way to becoming a Canadian
energy colony.'')
In addition, the Canadians
until now have been willing to
supply the power only on an
"lnterruptl~le'.' ·;;Jj_
f;lsls; w,hich
means that not enough Is ·avalla·
ble on peak load days when It Is
most needed. !3oth problems can
and should be overcome.
Natural gas - Although the
Algonquin natural gas transmission line goes Into Massachusetts
and a Tenneco line extends Into
Massachusetts and New Hampshire, New England tradlllonally
has not received enough natural
gas from the Southwest.
That problem soon may be
resolved because dozens of appll·
cations now are pending before
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission to build new natural
gas lines into the region- just In
time to alleviate the threat of a
major energy shortage..

ee•ractL

Delrolt - Elteaded lite c:ontratt al
tlllnl b...-.. Tom Brooke• I JUr.
. . . . . Cll)' -

.•

Wed~~ead~'11 Uame~~

NY l11laftden .a NV Raa«ert~, •ll:ht
Qi.Pb«! at Tornto, •IKht
WaNhl~on atNew.Jertey. niJht
Bartfoid at Chk:a110, nl111ht

Scores

.

the liberal Americans for Demo·
cratic Action ranklngs and asked
Gore If he wasn't running like
conservative Sam Nunn with a
record like liberal Ted Kennedy.
Actually, Gore's 1985·1987 ADA
rating falls between the Nunn·
Kennedy polarities: Nunn 38
percent, Gore 65 percent,
Kennedy 85 percent.
In a recent one-on-one Interview with me, Gore said the
clearest way to' see why' he Is
different is on the Issues of
foretgo policy and defense. Gore
says the othere candidates
swung left to satisfy the demand·
lng liberal acllvlsls of Iowa while
he did not. He supports the use of..
American power In the Persian
Gulf, refused to support a ban on
the flight testing of u.s. missiles,
and stresses that he supported
the American Invasion of Grenada, and that he understands that
President . Reagan's strong poi·
Icy of supporting deployment or
our missiles helped lead to the
"zero-zero" solution of the INF
Treaty.
Gore puts space between himself and the others on the most
delicate foreign policy Issue .
facing Democrats: Nicaragua.
His position Is complex. He
accuses Dukakls of countenanc·
lng the presence o( a Soviet client
state. He praised the Interim
humanitarian · funding of the
contras late last year. Yet he
voted against the contras on the
most recent vote because It
contained lethal aid (a wrong
position, .In my _ l)awklsh
judgement).
Now Congress Is faced with one
more contra vote - this time on
continuing humanitarian ald.
The vote Is likely to be crucial
and complicated. One fot!!!. of

.i

·

~;

i'
l

1

l·
l'
'•

.

.

....

•

.•
'· '

"~

·.'
).:.

..

..

!. • " ·

'

~l

•• •

.
:

... ,-:
\ ~ 1'

. -)';

..

'·

~ • •• J

..
"Our lab test~ Indicate you have a fairly
SBrlous ~ of ROOT ROT."

r

«.'GaCil.

Akr Nortll S3, N•rd••la Ill:
LakeWood AI, N Rltl~te¥11~ U
Nfow Phlla ~t. E Llwerpoel47 lOt)
N Olm!l&amp;ed tt, Lonln So.U.vlew tl
To I Seott
Tol WOIIllward U

. c;ol,•tap,lf, C'.oJ Whet~- tt
' O.y NOrtllrkl~ a1. ·b.; Carnlllcloc J
GinN II, Raw_. Sollilleaal 61
Ke-• Rill~ 11.111 Parll Graham 3lt
Lr.adWMira; Lallrae..,. Olam,_a et
Ml"dl• But'b)'e II. Medl• ID!lllland

"

_

Jamea rrom ... baalethll team.
H•U.., llewl - Nuned Leon Panna
Pf"kleal.
Norill Dakota - lluketball Coach
Da:H- tl.MIIoer ,....._.. eff~lw after

...

INll't.ioall

a.. tty •· cet-81 Ch.vtPI'ItR
Cle Belletlk:tlne •· .a e..aoa n
Col De~ tat Wl&amp;ld•lllem..,

•

Portlalltl - Plat:ed forward IUid
Vudewt"K'e oa the tlljured lit.
Cotlep
Drake - Dropped l•rward WWr

DI\'IIMin I
Akr Elltt -It, Akr Ke ...o"" -If

•

Na\'!lrn!..J'IIIrk-11" Jt TMimadlft' tJ

Notre Dame- Narnetl Oack Heuer
defeliil:vt ·-~a&amp;cll! allld John P•~·
ctere•w Une coach- , 1
.F . . .all

LA lal*ra- Named Ml"" Shanahan .
coacll a.S .4.1e• 01•r. ofle111lw line
CINICIL

Miami- NarMtll Larry SeiPle rwelv-

•n coach.

~

Fishennan needs
to be patient

Berry s ·World

•

MondiQ'. Feb. ft

Ohio Outdoors

.

I

fto)"l Ohio RIP lokkoel lukethll.ll

n.

Wn.«!p Kurt

• '

I

'

M, Nortlle Niowal\1 (&lt;M)
(Kypt'7, VunptctWnSI 116
W~•" 8t (Miehl st. CentraiSI 71

Totrnameni!l

humanitarian -aid makes the position.
contras well-clothed refugees,
It Is one of those arcane ' . '
another enables them to remain congressional linguistic dances . 1
a viable military force that can that determines the fate of •:
pressure the communists to live nations - and liberty - In !he :-.-"
up to the democratic conditions world. It'ls a golden opportunity \ ·'·'
of the Arias plan.
for Gore •to take a leadership ' ·
Gore charges that arch-rival stance thaI could prevent the ·'· ·•
Gephardt has previously offered •consolidation of a Soviet surro- · ' ,
an amendment to eliminate gate state - "Dukaklzatlon" by ·•. ·•
humanitarian ald. Sy contrast, the standards Gore has set up. If '· ,
Gore says !hal If the package Is Gore does that, he will show · :• ,,
right he hopes . to support a skeptics that he Is indeed the . 1
reasonable humanitarian aid different Democrat.
. ·

'

C' lf'~eland 91
Mo~htad81

·,

SI~Md

COI!tfaet...

By Uniled Pl't'A" lnll!rflalloul

.,

'

Cll!!~ud

M•-~ , Fe h. 21

nomic growth rate. During ·the
past five years, it has averaged
4.5 percent annually - substantially higher than the rest of the
country. ·
In four of those five years , the
region's demand for electricity
has Increased at an annual rate
of more than 5 percent - a pace
not matched by either the growth
of generating capacity or the
enhanced avallablilty ·of fuels
other than all.
·
·
An official of the Wa~hlngton­
based National Association of
Regulatory Utility Commissioners suggested last year what
might happen if those trends ·
centlnue:
""The accepted wisdom here In
Washington Is that New England
Is the region likely to have a
capacity crisis before anyone
else. New England, more than
any other region of the country,
needs new sources of power."

games

..... .,.,Feb. II
Clevelud !Male a! NortlleN Iowa
"'ofthead State a1 Yo•ptown 81ale
'hf:lday, MDnlh 1
DePMiatD•J ..•
Xavier at Nlapra
WeONdar, Mate Ia!
Ml_...·l&amp; Oltlo SU&amp;e
8owlht&amp; Gi'fta at Cutral Mltlllp•
Kelli lka&amp;e at laO •ate
Eutl"n MlciiiJu M 011 .. llal\'
ToWdo 'at W.aera M1eW1u
a.e1..u1 .a S.llllteN Mlllllll.,.
n..IQ, lllaft• I
lildi&amp;IIQOIII at All .....
.
NAIA ~~t I! PlaJoffs
Vrbaa at ... o Gr. .de
ft.tla, .. CNar\otlle
Ml. Verw• Nuarene al Den.-ce
Maloat at. Waa.h
'
Frhlay, Marc• t
Dlll'•lealn NCAA~ T•••ment
oreat LaiiH Reatenal
AI Olllo Welle,. a
Mu'*.hlpm va Hepe {Michl
Ohle Wnk,.a n Olllo Norllera
Saturday, March !I
Ohio State at Indlallll
Ball State at Bowllr1t: Gret&gt;n
Miami at K~nt State
Ohio Unlv at Tok'do
Akrotl at Wt&gt;S t~rn Mlchtp:an
Clnclnnall at South Caro lina
Wr~ht State at Dayton
Lewis (Ill) at Ashland .
Great Lakes Regional ToW'nam('nt
Con!lolation "and...ctlamptonshlp p:ames
Sunday, March 6
?Cavte r at Buller

lUI

li.W,omlllllft.l)

w~k's

TtlbiWeek'•
Ollill Colll'JC luketbaJI khe-~
B)' U1tted Preu ..lertii.IIOMI ,

on .. collep- Ba•ktillilll ltf!"ulh•

Gore's opportunity_ __;______B_en_~_at_te_nb_er_g...

Letters to the editor

....,.,..._

lnie....a••• a.&amp;rd ot CaatMa' Top a

Disabled politicians make their mark

Sentin~l

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

.'.
.'

By JERRY PICKRELL
Ouidoor Writers Auoclallon
of Amerlea
Distributed by UJ"I
There are some times of the
year when a fisherman almost
can do anything and catch fish.
When the bass· and bluegill are
preoccupied with the spawn,
they 'll strike at the most outlan·
dish concoctions •out of sheer
pugnacity . .
aut most of the time, fishing
isn't like that. Most of the time,
you have to make a real effort to
fool the fish Into thinking that
your lure is something It would
like to eat.
That's probably the reason
that. some anglers stop fishing
during the summer and wouldn't
give a thought to try their luck
right now. They ,just don't do It
right.
The key Is presentation: That
doesn't mean not making a
splash when lhe lure touches
down. even tough there are times

when It shouldn' t. What presenta·
tlon means is putUngthe lure In a
position and an attitude thai
looks natural to the fish:·
In other words, If you're using
a nlghtcrawler to fish for bass,

By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago SuUs Coach Doug
Collins· lost his temper because,
he claimed, a second was lost
Monday night at the Spectrum ..
Chicago's Horace Grant
missed two foul shots with four
seconds remaining, which led to
a controversial buzzer-beating
layup by Philadelphia's Gerald
Henderson that gave the 76ers a
102-101 triumph.
Collins vowed to protest the
game, saying timer Jack Grosse
failed to activate lhe clock after
Grant's second miss and Phlla·
delphia center Mike Gmlnski's
timeout call.
"You saw It for yourself,'' said
Collins, who said the ball was
tipped before Gminskl grabbed
lt. ''If there's a Up and a rebound,
a second has to go off the clock.
''I'm going to protest the game.
One second can mean the difference . between winning and
losing."
After the game, .Collins
charged the officials' table, but
Grosse defended his actions.
"If the clock shows four
seconds, It could be 4.9 seconds
and the clock doesn't start until
someone touches the ball;" he
said. "(Collins) said I never
started (the clock) and that's not
true."
.
"Funny things happen at
home," Ginlnski said. "But I
wasn't going to argue Doug's
case for him."
The 76ers were glad .to be
borne. . Phlladephla just com·
pleted an 0-5 road trip to extend
Its record road losing streak to 18
games. And the 76ers ended a
five-game losing streak on a play
that was supposed to go
elsewhere.

' .

:•.

PALMS BALL - Chicago Bull guard Mle,hael
Jordan (23) · palms the ball as he moves around
PhUadelphla's Cliff Robinson, lelt, during Man·
'·'The play worked as de·
signed," said Henderson , who
finished with 15 points. "I was the
second option. Michael (Jordan )

·day night's game althe Spectrum In PbUadelphla.
The Slxers edged the Bulls 102-101. (UPI)

had his back turned, looking at
Charles (Barkley). 1 had (Scot·
tie) Pippen on me and I thought!
Continued on page 4

Henson gets SOOth career win
By JOE ILLtJZZJ
UPI Sports Writer
At this stage of the season, a
veteran coach like Lou Henson
should know his team's capablll·
ties. aut the . Illlnol~ players
surprised him las l night, and
their efforts rewarded Henson
with· his 500th career victory.
"We played a fantastic ball
game. I didn 't know we could
rebound like that," Henson said
after Illinois outrebounded Indl·
ana 48-26 en route to a 75-65
victory over the Hoosiers. "We
played an Inspired game. "
. Henson, 500-243 In ·his 26-year
career, became the 21st Divisi-on
I coach to win 500 games and the
. second this season. Don Haskins
of Texas-El Paso also reached
the plateau this Season.
"It's nice to get it against one of
the top programs In the coun·
try," Henson said. "It feels
better when you beat a team you
respect. "This (Assembly Hall)
Is a tough place for anyone to get
a victory."
The victory allowed Illinois :
19-9 overall and 9·6 ln the Big Ten,
tq gain sole possession of fourth
place in the conference. Indiana
dropped to 16-9 and g. 7.
· Ken Sattle, who led the Illlnl
with 22 points, said Henson's
500th' victory was not on the
players' minds when the team
took the court.
" We didn 't dwell on 500 .be·
cause we · didn 't want to get
emotionally caught up lri It:
especially against Indiana," Sat·
tle said. "I wouldn't say.Jhls was
our best game, but It 's our ,best
rebounding game. We came out
and gave 110 percent and hit the
•

boards hard. We came in with
confidence and kept up the
momentum ."
In games involving ranked
teams, No. 5 Pi ttsburgh defeated
:Boston College 87-79, No. 13
North Carolina State downed
UNC·Ashevllle 87· 76 and .No. 16
Bradley topped Southern Illinois
113-102. At Pittsburgh , Charles
Smith scored 23 points and.
Demetrlous Gore coni rlbuted 20
to help Pitt offset a ~2 - point
performance ·by Dana Sarros.
The Panthers, who have won 14
straight games at Fitzgerald
Field House , Improved to 21 ·4
overall and a Big East·leading

scorer, registered 49 points . to
spark Sradley. Hawkins scored
29 first -half points for th e Braves,
23-4 overall and 12-2 in th e .
Missouri Valley Conference.
In other games, Louisville
CO!ltlnued on page 4

Long honored

TOLEDO, Ohio (U PT) -Eastern Michlga·n·s Grant Long. who
led the Hurons to a pair of
title-clinching wins last week,
has been selected the Mid·
American Conference pla yer of
the week. ·
Long, a 6·foot -8 senior forwa r d
11-3. .. '.
.
, from Romulus. Mich., scored 54
At 'R.alel~·: ~· t4'.c;~:"~ci\u~·v points and grab!Jed 30 rebounds
Srown scored 25 points and
in the two games.
Vinny Del Negro added 2:1 to lift
He had · 26 points and 15
North Carolina State. 21·6. The
rebounds in a 69-52 win at Miami
Wolfpack close Its regular season
on Wednesday night and followed
this ·week with Atlantic Coast
that with a 28·point , 15·reb&lt;iund
Conference games against Mary·
performance in a 96-82 victory
land and Wake Forest.
over Western Michigan on SaturAt Carbondale. Ill., Hersey
day that clinched · an outright
Hawkins, the nation's ieading
MAC title for the Hu rons.

catfish or whatever, don 't weight
It down with a heavy sinker.
·u a weight Is necessary to keep
the bait In position. attach It so
that a !lsi) can pick up the ball
and run with It wlthoutfeellng the
weight of the sinker.
It also means using as Utile
The Rio . Grande Redwomen
terminal tackle as possible on enter District 22 playoff action
your line.
tonight at 7:30 In Lyne Center
Tie lures of hooks directly to when they host the College of
the line rather than using snap Mount St. Joseph.
swivels between them. The
Tickets for the game are $4 for
.swivel may make changing lures adults, $2 for students and $2 for
·easier, bui It also adds unneces· . Rio Grande students with ID.
sary weight to a lure, making It
The-Redwbmen, ranked fourth
act differently than lis maker In the dlstrlcl , will advance In
district competition. If they de·
Intended.
feat fifth-place MSJ to play
If you fee!' the lure .will not
perform properly with the eyelet first-place Findlay on Thursday
tied tightly to the line; use a loop at Findlay. A victory at Findlay
will pit the Redwomen against
knot to tie It on.
Central State,. ranked second In
Finally, use as light a line as
you can.
the district , on Saturday.
·_Tonight's game will be the
SUper atrong line .will enable
Redwomen's second consecutive
you to horse a fish out of almost
, . anything, but It also ffi!IY mean shot at the playoffs under Coach
Cheryl Flelltz, who guided the
tbat )'OU wan't catch any to horse
tea{ll to a 19-8 regular season
tram ·aii)'Where. Lighter line Iss
finish and second place In the
!larder for the fish to see.
Mld·Ohlo Conference.
Th4t means a more natural
TUCSON, Ariz. , (UPI) - The presentation. And !bat's whatlt's
The top six teams are chosen to
last two unsigned Cleveland all about.
compete In the playoffs.
Indians. pitchers Rich Yett and
Tom Caildlottl, agreed to oneyear contracts Monday.
Candlottl. 30, waa7-18 with the
Indians last season with a 4.78
ERA. Most of his seven complete
games c11me late In the..._.
· The prevtous year, Cancllotu
was 16-12 with Cleveland lllld bll 17 complete games led tbe
American League.
· Yett, 25, a long reliever and
spot etarter, waa 3-9 lui year,
with a 5.25 ERA and one save In
37 appearances. He started 11
games.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IU.. .)
A Dlv ..lo• ol Multimedia, lac.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St ., Po·
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multlmedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second class postage paid &amp;I Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
Member: United Press Internatlonal,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising RepresentattVe, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Thlrd Avenue,
New Yor)J, New Ybrk 10017.

POSTMASTE·R: Send address changes
to The DaUy Sentinel, 111 Court St .,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4571ll.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

One Week .... .. ... ...... .................... $1.25

One Month ............. ..... ..... ........... $5.45
One Year .... ... .. ......... .. .... ... ..... . $6!t00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .................................. 25 ~nts

Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In a dvance direct to
The Dally senune! on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis, C.r~ wlll be gtyen e•r~ter ei\cb
week .

.. 1 .,

No Subscrl pUons by mall permitted in
a reas where home carrier service Is
available.
Mall Subsc:rlptlons
lntlde Melp County
13 Weeks ....................... ... ....... $17.29

26 Weeks ............. ... .. .............. .. $34.06
52 Weeks .. ....~ ...... .. ................ ... $66.!16
Ouislde Melp County
13 Weeks ....................... ........... $18.20
26 Weeks...
····-·····-·-·· $35.10
52 Weeks .. ........... ...... ........ ....... $67.60

Playoff tilt tonight

Indians sign last

two players Monday

•

INC.

NCE

-

_____
......_

'-"-----~----'--'

•

.

�Tuu1 'f, March 1, 1988

1,1988

Ohio

Middleport officers hospitalized

exhibition opener against
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI) Cincinnati General Manager Toronto.
..Ron Robinson went Into the
Murray Cook said Monday he
normal
batting practice rotation
will exercise the Reds • right to
renew unsigned contracts on Monday for the first time and had
Wednesday, eight days before .no lll effects from his session on
the major league renewal date, Saturday.
Robinson underwent arthrosbut hoped ·he would not have to.
The Reds have four unsigned copic sJ,Irgery Oct. 6 on hls rtght
players following the Monday elbow to reinove a bone
slgnlngs of outfielder Tracy fragment. .
Jones, who hlt .290 lnll7 games
Jones and pitchers Bill Landrum
with
the Reds last season with 10
and Pat Paclllo. Still unsigned
home
runs, 44 RBI and 31 stolen
are pitchers . Rob Murphy and
bases,
agreed Monday to a
Jose Rljo and Ol!tflelders Kal
contract
worth $157,500.
·
Daniels and Leo Garcia. '
No terms were announced for
In the renewing ·process the
club can sign a player for any Paclllo and Landrum, both of
figure other than the major whom split last season between
league maximum 20 percent cut. Cincinnati and the Reds' TripleMurphy returned to workMan· A team In Nashville of the
day and pitched batting practice American ·Assoclalon.
Landrum, a rtght·hander. was
after a 101 degree fever brokE'
4-0
with a 2.09 ERA In 19 games
Sunday night and ended a weewith
Nashville and 3-2 with a 4.71
kend bout with the nu.
ERA In 44 apll"arances with the
"I wanted to make sure that I Reds.
Paclllo, a lefty, was 8·4 In 16 .
threw batting . practice again
today on schedule,-" Murphy starts at Nashville. In 12 games
with Cincinnati, seven of them
said.
Murphy ts scheduled for an starts, he was 3·3 with a 6.13
Inning of work In Friday's home ERA.

WINS SPLIT DECISION - Azumah Nelson of Ghana hal his
llaDd raised by the referee alter winning a split decision over
Mexico's Azabache Martinez to capture the vacant . WBC,
su~r.featherwelght champlo.nshlp at the Forum In Inglewood,
Calli. (UPI)
·

ACC has four
•

teams ln top 20
By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK - With the
regular season nearing a close, .
the Atlantic Coast Conference is
re-estapllshlng itself as the country's top college basketball
league.
The Big East, Big Ten, Big
·Eight and Western Athletic Conference each had multiple Top 20
entries early in the season but
none of those leagues could
match the four clubs the ACC
placed In the most recent
ranklngs .•
North Carolina, Duke. North
Carolina State and Georgia Tech
reached the Top 20 Monday in
United Press International' s
weekly college basketball ra·
tlngs.The Big 10 had three clubs
ranked and no other league had
more than two.
, Meanwhile. Temple became
the second team this season to
hold the No. 1 spot four consecuitve weeks and North Carolina
State jumped five places. ·
: The Owls, 25-1, joined Arizona
:as the only schools to maintain
·the top position for more than
:three straight we.eks. The Wild.cats were No. 1 from Jan. 12
through Feb. 1 and also held the
top spot for a week earlier In the
season .
Temple received 33 of 41
first-place votes from uPI's
Board of Coaches to collect '602
points. Durin!( the week, the Owls
ripped Duquesne 94-55 and survived two tough games with West

VIrginia, winning 62-61 and 78-69.
Purdue. 24·2, held the No.2 spot
with five first-places votes and
542 points. Arizona, 26-.'l, was
third will! 537 points and Oklahoma, 26-2, received two No. 1
mentions to earn 504 points.
Pittsburgh was ranked fifth ,·
followed by North Carolina,
Nevada-Las Vegas, Kentucky ,
Duke and Michigan .
Heading the second 10. was
Brigham Young. which earned
the remaining first-place vote.
Syracuse was 12th followed by
No. 1.1 N.C. State, No. 14 Iowa.
No. 15 Georgia Tech, No. 16
Bradley, No. 17 Loyola · Marymount, No. 18 Vanderbilt. No. 19
Wyoming and No. 20 Kansas
State.
"
Kansas State was the lone new
member of the Top 20 while
Missouri dropped out after losses
to Colorado and Kansas.
N.C. State made the biggest
jump of the week , going from
18th to 13th after beating ACC
rivals Duke and Virginia. Kentucky Improved four positions,
from 12th to eighth, after routing
Louisiana State and rallying to
down visiti ng Syracuse.
Duke tumbled four spots after
losing to N.C. State and Georgia
Tech. BYu also dropped four
positions following a 2-polnt loss
to Uta h.
Rankings are based on 15
points lor first place, H for
second, etc. and are for games
· played through Sunday night.

:Ohio teams gear
up for tourneys
By United Press International
Cleveland 'State wound up its
: regular season schedule Monday
night with an 86-81 overtime
triumph over No rthern Iowa.
Ken McFadden scored 28
Points, including slx crucial
points in overti me, to pace the
, VIkings In the Association of
: Mid-Continent Universities con. test at Cedar Falls, Iowa.
· William Stanley added 18 for
; Cleveland State and Warren
Braden pulled down 18 rebounds,
including 12 off the offensive
boards. Northern Iowa was led
• by Steve Phyfe with 24 points.
; Greg McDermott added 18for the
: Panthers.
Cleveland State Is now 21 -7
overall and 10-3 In the AMCu.
Northern Iowa falls to 10-17 a nd
4-10.
Elsewhere Monday night ,
' Morehead (Ky.) State nipped

Youngstown State. 87-85, and
Wayne (Mich.) State defeated
Ce ntral State. 86-73.
At Youngstown, Darrin Hale
scored 27 points and Mike Cha·
ney tipped in a missed shot at the
buzzer in leading Morehead to Its
!lrst Ohio Valley Conference
victory of. the season with Its
decision over the Penguins .
Michael Mason scored 23
poin ts, Chaney 12 and Derrick
Davis 10 to . help the Eagles
improve to 5-21 overall and 1-131n
the league.
The Penguins, 7·20 and 2-12,
were paced by Tim Jackson 's 32
points and Tilman Bevely's 17.
At Detroit, Dwight King scored
20 points and Hank Woodmere
added 19 to lead Wayne State to
Its triumph over Central State.
The Tartars Improved to 19·8
while the Marauders fell to 7·20.
Dirrlck Givens paced Central
State with 17 points.

: Ohio to have 27 $100,000 purse race8
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio will have27horse races with
purses of atleast$100,000 In 1988,
· equaling the number oflast year.
: according to the Ohio State
' Racing Commission.
In 1987, there were 14 standardbred races and 13 tho· .
roughbred events with purses of
$100,000 or more. The bre'!kdown
: IS the same for 1988. Heading the
· Ust was the Ll.ltle Brown Jug, one
of the jewel's of 3-year-old
pacing's triple crown, run each

year at the Delaware County
Fa·lrgrounds. This year's Jug,
Sept. 22 , is estimated at $450,000.
Next In llne Is the $310,000
Breeders Crown Aged Horse·
Gelding Pace on Sept. 2 at Scioto
Downs.
The thoroughbred race with
the top purse is the Ohio Derby,
scheduled for June 18 at Thistledown, followed by the $200,000
Miller High Life Cradle St~kes
Sept. 5 at River Dpwns.

Henson...

· TWo Middleport Pollee Department officers were hospltaltzed as a result of an altercation at the Riverboat Inn, Second
Ave., late Saturday night.
·
It was reported that the two officers, John King and Rick
Johnson, answered a call. to the establishment between 10: 30
and 11 p.m . when the department was notified that Tommy
Quillen, Middleport, and a female companion, Tammy Blake,
were having difficulty In the establishment.
.
. The two officers arrtved and advised Quillen that he was
under ~rrest. A fight started and both officers were Injured. The
·
sheriff s department l!nd the Pl!meroy pollee assisted.
King and Johnson were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where they were admitted for treatment of Injuries. King was
released Sunday night but Johnson· remained hospitalized
.Monday.
·
Meantime, the Middleport Pollee Department reported that
charges have been flied against Quillen and wlll be flied against
a second man Involved In the fight .

see

tipped In a shot at the buzzer to
help Morehead State beat Youngstown State 87-85, . helping the
Eagles post their first Ohio
Valley Conference victory
against 13 losses.

RedmeD post
2-3-l record
in Florida
A record of two wins, three
losses and one tie in a series of
pre-season games played In
Florida have left Rio Grande
baseball coach Dave Oglesby
pleased with hi~ te,am:.~
performance.
"Since It was the first week
we'd been ou,tdoors since fall, I
was pleased at how well we hit
• the ball," Oglesby commented.
"The pitching staff ·did well
under the circumstances."
The Redmen opeQed Feb. 22
with a 5-4 loss to Capital University. They bounced back the next
day to hand Florida Institute of
Technology a 4-3 defeat, then
went on to spilt a doubleheader
with Capital on Feb. 24. Rio
Grande won the first game 4-3
and to.s t the next 8·3.

bander and Grant grabbed the
rebound. But he missed the free
throws.
"I didn't concentrate," Grant
said. "I was thinking of missing
and there was no concentration.
If we don't win a close one like
this, It takes away everything.
It •s not a good feeling to lose a
close game."
The 76ers' home record Is 18· 7
compared to a 5·25 road mark.
PhUadelphla, which has only two
wins In Its last 10 games, moved
one-half game ahead of New
York In a battle for the Eastern
Conference's final playoff berth.
"It 'Was an exciting win foD the
whole club and one we needed
very badly," Henderson said.
"Now we can go on the road with
an uplifted spirit. We were
despe_rate for a win." .
Elsewhere, D11.llas ove.rwhelmed Denver 123-96, Washington topped Golden State
110-105, Utah stopped Sacramento 115-110 and Portland defeated Cleveland 107·94.

EMS has 11 runs Monday

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
Monday; Pomeroy at 4:39 a.rn. to Wolf Pen Road·for Amanda
Hawk to Veterans Memorial Hospital; J;tutla11d at 4:56 a.rp. to
Meigs Mine No. 1 for Donald Wooten to Holzer Medical Center; · ·
Tuppers Plains at 7:42a.m. to New Hope Road for Madge Barr
to ~erans Memorial Hospital; Middleport a.t 10:10 a.m. to
Fa
ne Dr. for Tim Taylor to Holzer Clinic; Mlddleportatl: 52
p.m. to Broadway St. for Time Taylor who was treated but not
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UPI) transported; Pomeroy at 2: 42p.m, to a brush fire on Landaker
General liability Insurance pre·
Road; Pomeroy at 3:35p.m. to Burlingham for Carl Still Jr. who
mlums written In Ohio between
was treated but not transported; Racine at 5:33p.m. to a brush
1982.:,86
Increased by 4-1 over
!Ire on Lutheran Road; Rutland at 8:11p.m. to the civic center
company
payouts, the Ohio Pubfor Carlos McKnight to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at
.
lie
Interest
Campaign reported
9: 41 p.m. to Route 338 for Clara Adams ' to Holzer Medical
Monday.
Center; Rutland at 11: 43 p.m. to Hill' St. for Carl Denison to .
An OPIC survey showed thatl3
Holzer Medical Center.
Insurance companies .Increased
their premiums by $409 million
while losses p;ild lnereased by
'
only $106 mUllan over that same ·
·. The lOth Congressional District Republican Comll'!lttee,
period.
which met In Athens, unanimously endorsed the re-election
candidacy of U.S. Representative Clarence Mlller of Lancaste(
"The so-called liability crisis
for Congress In 1988. Miller Is being.challenged for his party's
of the past several years Is really
nomination In the May primary.
. ·
an Insurer accountability criPraising Miller's job In the region·; the panel participants
sis," said Pete MacDowell, Insuexpressed strong displeasure with the action of hls Republican
rance project director fCJr OPIC.
primary opponent.
"Some small businesses In
Also endorsed was Bill Keslar of Musklngum County for
Ohio are literally getting the life
re-election as State Central Committeeman for the lOth
squeezed out of them by Insurers,
Congressional District and Norma Jean Bowman of Mustcln·
and yet, .neither the state nor
gum County, a candidate for election as lOth District Committee
federal governments have made
woman. Bowman Is county auditor for Musklngum County. ·
any serious effort to rein In the .
lnsuranc~ Industry, "
,. ·

CHECKS ON TEAMMATE - Cincinnati Reds outfielder Kal
Daniels checks on teammate Ertc Davis as the team's tnlller
limbers up his le&amp; durin&amp; warmu_p drills at th,e, l,teda' sprlnl
training camp Monday. (UPI)
.

Willis Reed named Knicks new coach

.Committee endorses Miller

EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. Clippers.
"Personally, I'm kind of su·
(UPI) .,.. Willis Reed , who
Inspired the New York Knlcks to prlsed yet very elated that I was
two NBA champlons)llps In the chosen," Reed said at a news
1970s, Monday was named head conference. "When Bob McKin·
coach of the Inert New Jersey non became the Interim coach, I
felt like they would probably walt
Nets.
Reed, .45, takes over a team until the end of the year .
"I'm very happy that they
that reached the playoffs two
came
to the decision that I was
seasons ago, but since has been
rocked by drug scandals and has the person that they would like to
the worst record In the NBA at have come back and take this
team and try to restructure It and
12-42.
Reed replaces Bob MacKin· try to put it back In the' Winning
non, who led New Jersey to a ways of the teams they've had
.10·29 il)ark as the Nets'. lP,te~\m . here In vear's past. 'i ,
coach: MacKinnon · was named ' Ree&lt;I rfeportMl$' ' wlis"lobktr&amp;
Interim coach after Dave Wahl for a three-year deai but neither
was fired Dec. 9. Reed will make the team nor ·Reed w.ould comhis Nets debut Tuesday night at ment on the length and financial
home against the Los Angeles terms of his contract.

r-pla_Y-:-.o-:n::-a-:-w-:et::-fl=el-:d.:-"'::""'::-:'"":="'":'""':t::-h-:-an_k_th_e_Lo_rd_fo_r_H_ls_d_lrec
......
tlo-:n:"''

-of~year

TONY'S CARRY OUT
221 ML n.
_...,

'

•

•
•
l

'
•'

;•
~·

:·:

~

gCarol Bam~

Hoepital news

"

11 6 EAST SECOND

o.

~~ -

"
'

II

Sialtr.

. ~~

...

'

-

He said Ohio •made a "major
mistake'· in 1987 when It passed
product liability lawsuit limitations "while doing nothing to
Insure greater accountability by
the.lnsqrance lndl!stry."
·

11

f1

UPI

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will continue
over the Intermountain west and extend Into the central Rockies.
Showers will occur In Ca!Uomla and southern Oregon. Showers.
and thunderstonns will be scattered across western and southem
Texas. Snow will be scattered near the Canadian border from
North l)akota to Michigan and In the rnomlng from northeast New
York to northem Maine.

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today, with highs
between 45 and 50. Increasing
cloudiness tonight , with a low
near 30. Becoming cloudy Wednesday, with highs In the mid 50s.
The probability of precipitation Is near zero today and
tonight and 20 percent

Stocks
Dally St!ICk prices
(Aa 0110:30 .a.m.)
· Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Wednesday.
.
Winds will be light and varia·
ble today and from the south near
10 mph tonight.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance of showers or snow
flurries Thursday. with fair
weather Friday and Saturday.
Highs will range from 35 to 45
Thursday and Saturday and be in
the 30s Friday. Overnight lows
·
generally will be In the 20s.

l)ivorce !Vanted
A.divorce action has been fll.&gt;ti

.

I

DO·LLAR
COUPON

Gospel sing
A gospel sing will , be held
·s aturday, 7 p.m., at the Rutland
Church of God. Featured singers
will Include the Grubb Family of
Gallipolis and the New Hope
Singers of Wellston, and others.
The_publlc Is welcome.

I.

Lutheran Chwth in New Haven
with pastor George Weirick official·
~ Carol Roush Barringer, Sl, Char· ing. Burial wiD follow in t1'le
~ ioue, N.C.. formerly or New · Graham Cemetery. A memorial
~ Haven, died Mon&lt;~;ay. Feb. 2~. 19~8 service will be conductcd Saturday,
~ in t.he Prcsbytcnan Hosp1tal m Match S at the Living Savior
: CharlO!te.
.
Lutheran Chwth in North Carolina.
There will be no visitation.
" She was born Oct. 10, 1936 m
~ ~n County to Lloyd D. and
The farnlly requosiB t.hat in lieu
~ Mary Wolf Roush , who rcslde in . or Rowen donations be made to the
' New Haven.
SL Paul Lutheran Church in New
~ She was a ·co-owner with her Hawn or a fawritocharity.
t husband or t.he Little . Professor
' Book Center in CharloiiD; She was
t a member of the Livina Savior . ' v.............
~ Lutherall Church in CharloUc.
Monday Admi~llons
~ · Survivors besides her parents are
Amanda Hawk, Pomeroy;
her husband. 1ohn E.. Barringer of Madp Barr, Long Bottom;
t Chlrlolle' ODD 100, Srephcn Lloyd, Frank Clark, St. Albana, W.Va.;
~ Willon, N.c.: her mother·in·law, Jeremy Lab::nce, Pomeroy.
• GenludO Barringer, Bnltlleboro,
l,fondll)'.
llargea - Karen
&amp;tea, Edith Spencer, Paul Mont·
t VetmonL ·
.
t· Tho funCII'Ii wiD be Thursday,
pn~. Sara McCarty. Natalie ·
~ March 3 at 2 p.m. II tho SL Paul

LAMBERT INSURANCE
AGENCY
.
982~1841

.

t::!2JSNOW
-RAIN
~SHOWERS .
FRO~S:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map shows mi~mum temperarures. At least 50% oflany shaded area is forecast

In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Rhonda J . DePue,
Pomeroy , against Daniel M.
DePue, Pomeroy .
'

OPTOMETRY .
SERVICES ON ·.
PREMISES. .

Americare-Pomeroy ·
Nursing and ·

Rehabilitation Center
(6141 992-6606

JOHNSON'S VARIETY STORE

The Rlo Grande Redmen will face Urbana's Blue Knights In
first round action of the 1ll88 District 22 post-season playoff
action Thursday_at 7: 30 p.m. In Lyne Center,
Tickets for the contest will be $4 for adults, $2 for students and
$2 for Rlo Grande students showing their ID cards.
The Redmen enter the playoffs with a 2~ 7 record. Bob Ronal's
Urbana club Is 13-17. Winner or Thursday's game will meet the
winner of Thursday's Cedarville-Findlay game on Monday, at
7:30p.m. In Lyne Center . .
Championship game IS set Thursday. March 10. at 7·: 30 p.m.
Also sclleduled to play ThursQ&amp;y are Mt. Vernon Nazarene at

I '. Area deaths

,(

.1.=:::::::::::::::;:::::=_

~ !::De::fl:a:nc:e:a:n:d~M~a;lo:n:e:a:t:W:a:ls:h:.~::::~;::::::::
· ::::~
~~

0

-----Announcements------

Rio Grande draws Urbana

l

.

•• &gt;

'

A Bidwell man was cited In a two-tr!Jck accident Monday, at
12: 50·.p.m., In Clay Township on S.R. 218, according to the
Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Ra}:mond· T. Richardson, 36, was cited for not maintaining
assured clear distance after hiS 1981 Cbev.rolet Luv pickup truck
hit a 1978Chevrolet C·lO pickup truck driven by Janet F. Boggs,
35, of Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Richardson and Boggs were heading south when Boggs
stopped to turn right. Richardson did not stop In time to avoid
hitting Boggs ' truck.
An Athens man was cited In a two-car accident Monday, at
10:45 a.m., on S.R. 7 In Kanauga.
William L. Shepler. 46, was cited for not maintaining assured
clear distance after his 1984 Ford Tempo rear-ended a 1979 Ford
LTD driven by Ernest L. Richmond, 37, of Rutland.
Shepler and Richmond were driving south when Richmond
stopped In traffic. Shepler did not'stop In time to avoid making
bumper contact With Richmond's C&lt;\r.
•

•

· NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3-2-88

CLEVELAND (t;PI) - Ohio .
Lottery spokeswoman Anne Am Electric Power .. ........... 28%
Lottery officials said Monday the Bloomberg said there was a AT&amp;T ....................... .... ...... 29\i
jackpot In Wednesday's Super "distinct possibility" the jackpot . Ashland Oil .. .... ........... .......59%
Lotto drawing will be at least $20 would be Increased again prior to Bob Evans .......................... 16Y,
the next drawing. The state Charming Shoppes .............. 15%
million.
The jackpot was set at $18 record of $32 million was set Jan . ctty Hotdtng cd ... ...... ......... 29%
Federal Mogul. .. ..... ....... .. .. .38%
million after nobody won the top 9.
Goodyear
T&amp;R .. ..... .. ...... ..... 59
The last time somebody
prize In Saturday's drawing, butt
Heck's
Inc
...................... ..... ! %
lottery officials Increased the matched the six numbers drawn
Key
Centurion
.................. ... 40
estimate . as ~ result• of heavy . In Ohio's richest lottery game
Lands'
End
..................
...... .l9 %
was Feb. 13.
s~les.
Limited Inc ................ ... ..... 21'1\ ·
Multimedia Inc ........... ... ..... 60Y.
Rax Restaurants ............. ... ,. 3%
TomeetFrtday
Thursday , 5 p.m., at Rutland Robblns&amp;Myers ................. 8~
Meigs County Pomona Grange Elementary. Servlngwlllstartat Shoney's Inc ................... .... 22%
will meet Friday, 7:30 p.m .. at 5 p.m . Tickets can be purchased wendy 's Inti .. ...................... 7%
the Rock Springs Grange Hall. In advance from any fireman, or Worthington Ind ..................20"'
Columbia Grange will serve r~a~t~th~e~d~o~o~r~fo~r~$4~._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
refreshments. According to \Vestlna Crabtree, womens ' actlvl·
ties chairman, the National SewIng Contest will be judged at lhls
meeting.

Gallia man cited by patrol

.

Highway Patrol said.
·storms were reported over
More than three dozen tenants sout hern Nevada, the Great Salt
of a downtown apartment build- Lake in northern utah and south
.
lng already undergoing renova- central utah.
tion from last October's earthA few showers and thunderquakes were evacuated Monday storms were isolated over parts
nlghttoaRedCrossshelterwhen of central and east central New
rain began leaking through their Mexico and over the central Rlo
ceilings, officials said.
Grande Valley of Texas .
•
Eureka, Calif., headed for the
A light snow dusted southeast
'dries\ February in the 102-year . lower Michigan, Including the
history of weather records. Only Detroit area. late Monday night
.11 of an Inch of rain had fallen ·and early this morning.
the entire month.
. Snow was scattered across
Rain showers were scattered western Pennsyjvan)a early to•
late Monday evening from coas- day. A half-Inch was reported
tal Oregon Into Northern Callfor- across Trumbull County In nornla. Showers and a few thunder- theastOblolateMondayevenlng.

to receive precipitation ind~ated

MacDowell said the study
findings come on the eve of a
last-ditch effort by business
groups to advance legislation In
Congress curtailing the rights of
people Injured by dangerous
products .
,
He said the study show.ed that
In 1986, Insurers Increased their
premium Income by $217 million,
more than five times the $39.5
million In paid losses for that
year.
Ten of the 13 Insurance companies reported a . two-fold Increase in combined net profits,
from $2.4 billion In 1982 to $5.1
billion In 1986. MacDowell said.

Super Lotto jackpot up to. $20 million

· Angela K. Conklns, 18, of Columbus, was hound over to the'
Gallla County grand jury Monday on a charge of complicity In
connection with the reported Feb. 23 burglary of the residence
of Charles E. McGuire, on Hannan Trace Road.
Other charges are pending In connection with the shooting
death of Rickey Lee Moore, of Columbus. No other charr:,es were
lndic.a ted to be against Conklns.
,

Mobllehomesarupecilll, wtth thtlrown special
'·
lntuiWICtlllldl. That'• JNhywe've created three special
lntullnCtl progrllil811lloroflllde fortht mobile home .
owner. Alii )'OUr Moterletugent lor Ill thtdetlils. ·

•••••••••••••••••••
AIIOUICEMDn

to grand jury

.~ , Oonkins bound nver

"I really love the game of
Cheryl A. Flelltz, coach of the and Inspiration," Flelltz said.
An
AU-State
high
school
basbasketball
and working with the
women's basketball team at Rlo
ketball
player,
Fielltz
continued
players,"
she
said or her coach·
Gratide-College/Communlty Colplaying
the
game
at
Malone
lng philosophy. "I feel that each
lege for the past two years, has
been named the 1987·88 Coach of College, . where she set school girl has some God-given talent
the Year by . the Mid-Ohio ·r ecords as a starting guard. She and It should be used to Its
Conference.
received the best offensive fullest."
Rio Grande ended the trip with
"I f 1
h
ed
h
a 7-3 loss to Brevard Junior
· ee very onor
to ave player award at Malone for two
been voted In by my peers," said years and the best defensive
College on Feb. 25 and a 5-5 tie F.lelllz, a native of West Unity, player award one year, In addiwith Florida Institute the next
Ohio.
tion to being named an All-State
day. All games, except for the
The coach attributed much of and All·Regl9nal player In 1980
the· reason for being selected to and 198~ . She graduated from
first one with Florida Institute,
were played at Cocoa, Fla ..:rhe the work done by the women's Malone In 19&amp;'l with a bachelor's
game with Brevard will not be team.
degree In physical education.
counted on the Redmen's season ·
The Redwomen ended the
In the summers of 1982 and
record since It Is a junior college.
1987-88 regular season with a 19-8 19&amp;'l, she played basketball In
BARGAIN MITINEES SAT l SUN
"We played against sorne very
record prior toenterlngthe NAJA Europe with a Christian ministry
ALL SEATS 12.50
good competition," Oglesby said.
Dl trl t 22 1 ff Th ·
1
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $2. 50
"Capital Is one of our district
s c
P ayo s. e prev ous team. News Release. She la.ter
season, Rio Grande was 20-6 and entered Seattle Pacific universchools and Brevard, even
also In the playoffs . The team, sity to obtain a master's degree
though It won't count on our which had been part of the In athletic administration and
record, Is one of the besttwo-year Greater Ohio Athletic Confer- was an assistant women's basteams around."
ence, joined the 6-team MOC tbls ketball coach ther~ for two years.
Oglesby noted tha.t he used his
season. The Redwomen finished
After obtaining her master's,
reserves In · the Brevard game,
at second place In th~ conference Flelltz returned to Ohio in 1986.
and fourth In the district. Lea Before coming to Rio Grande,
but In all ~others, he depended
upon his starting lineup.
Ann Mullins, a junior small she was director of student
" We have a fairly good starting forward on the team, Is ranked 'activities, assistant women's
lineup and good people on th~
third nationally In · free throw basketball coach and softball
bench," he said.
h t1
coach at Defiance College.
The coach blamed some of the s 00 ng.
losses on "early season mls"It has a lot to do with the kids y------,-----'--'--..L....;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:::....
takes," noting that In some cases and the records th~y have set,"
the Redmen were close to Flelltz said. "I owe them a Ia!
winning.
·
·
because they played well and
The trip has given the. team a believed strongly In what we
14IIIMIIII'IIflllllli1r'l IIIII ltlllAIP 1111•
taste of what to expect when the were doing."
season opens Saturday. Tlie
Flelltz 's aid a major key to the
ll.edmen are io host West Vlrgl- Redwomen's success this season
nla Stale In a 1 p.in. double· bas' been the help and expertise
header, but Oglesby noted that If displayed by her assistant coach,
the playing field had not dried Robbin Luck. Luck, a senior on
sufficiently, the game could be the Rio Grande team when
played at WVS.
Flelltz took .over tbe coaching
"I feel there's a possibility reins from Dixie Jeffers In 1986,
we'll play here, but at the stayed on to assist the program
momentll's remote,"hesald. "It this season.
"And most of all, I want to
wouldn't be fair to either team to

••••on

northern New England to northern Michigan along the Canadian
border.
But elsewhere, much of tbe
nation recorded temperatures In
the 30s and 40s early today, with
50s and 60s from south Texas to
Florida. Highs were forecast In
the 50s and 60s for much of the
. country. with 'TO-degree readings
along a southern · belt from
Flortda to Arizona.
Rain began diminishing across
the Southern California moun·
talns Monday evening after
dumping as much as 2 to 51nches
In ·some areas.
Only about a half·lnch had
doused downtown Los Angeles by ·
6 p.m . Monday. But coupled with
high winds · the rain wrought
havoc on several freeways, In·
eluding closing all northbound
lanes of the San Diego Freeway
In Long Beach when 15 cars
slammed together. No major
Injuries were reported.
A motorcyclist died · in a
. collision with another vehicle
about 7:05 p.m. along the rain·
slick Artesia Freeway In Cerri·
tos, County Fire Department
dispatcher John Tabak said.
A car slammed Into a power
pole late Monday night on Pacific
Coast Highway In Malibu, dropping live electrical lines across
all four lanes and Injuring at
least one person, the California

OPIC survey reveals
_increased premiums

Fielitz_named MOC

YOU CAllOW PLAY PIC14
• Till
• SUPEI LOno.

,

Sandy Morris, a sixth grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wllllam Morris was named champion speller of the Pomeroy
Elementary School at the ann11al final bee and will repre~nt the
· school at the Meigs County . event to be held on March 9 at
·Eastern High School.
·
Runner-up In the school final was Allison Lee, a fifth grader.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lee.
.
Contestants ·In the final. to select the county partlclpani
Included Israel Grimm, Robert Oliver, Heather Knight, Amy
Harrison, fourth graders; Kelly Grueser, Amber Blackwell,
Heather Blanks, Allison Lee, fifth graders, and Chrissy Taylor,
San~y Morris, Stephanie
and Johnanna Imboden, sixth
graders.

Collins ... Continued from page .3
could get by him. Hell, they gave
me a layup."
o
Barkley led the 76ers with 26
points. Robinson had 20 and
Maurice Cheeks added 15. Jordan struck for 35 points and
Grant had 20.
Jordan hit one of two free
throws to give the Bulls a 101·100
lead with 59 seconds to go after
the · 76ers' Cliff Robinson hit a
jumper to tie .the score.
Barkley missed a driving one-

1

By United Press International
Rain today pelted Southern
California, already soaked by
two days of wlnd·whlpped showers that have slowed freeway
traffic to a crawl, while cold air
stung the upper Midwest and
batmy· weather spread over
much of the rest or the nation.
The National Weather Service
forecast more showers today for
California, Where one of the
driest Februarys on record
ended with two days or rain. In
Southern California Monday, 4 '%
Inches fellln Ventura County and
4 'h Inches In Santa Barbara
County, the NWS said.
Commuters crawled along
Southern Callfornla' lreeways as
rain spawned a rash of accidents
that choked of! traffic on several
key arteries, officials said.
One raln·related traffic death
was reported Monday.
In the upper Great Lakes
.region this morning, temperatures dipped far belo.w freezing,
with subzero readings In· Michl·
gan's Upper Peninsula and the
northern Lower Penlnsllla. It
was 9 below zero at 2 a.m. EST In
the tiny northern Michigan town
of Pellston.
Temperatures were reported
In the single digits and teens from
northern Mlnneaota acrossnorthern Wlsconsl.n. Highs today
.were forecast In the 20s from

Name Pomeroy spelling bee champ

Continued from page 3

defeated MemphiS State 71-69 to
clinch the Metro Confernce title;
St. Bonaventure edged Duquesne
78·76 In the Dukes' final home
game -at the Civic Center In
Pittsburgh; and · Mike Chaney

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

.---.Local news briefs----. More rain soaks Southern California

Reds ·stlll have fom- unsigned players

~

Pometoy-Middeport, OhiQ.

Special meeting
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM
wlll have an Inspection meeting
on Friday evening with dlqner at
6: 30 followed by the meeting at
7:30. Inspecting officer will be
R.W . Bro. Wayne White. All
members are asked to bring a
·
pie.

~~~!"-"~=

coupon
YOUI CHOKE

CANDY BARS
RE0 . 40C

SALEil

Choict

CD.IPOIIS GOOI filii SA1VIDAY,
MAICI 11, 1918

•
CONTACT
PAPER'
IIEO. HC VAllO

3 ,.... S109With

Coupon Good throug~ lat.,

1112/81

Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township Trustees
wlllmeetThursday,7p.m.,atthe
township hall on Rock Springs
Road.

Lirllit J With
Coupon good thrOugh Sat.,
3 / 12/ 88

coupon
KLEENEX
TISSUES
FAMILY SIZE 210'8

CRAFT RIBBON

FIEO. '1.28

~

Uooit' ,.,.

3/SlOO
c_,.,.

'

REG . 69C
3 ID$. 11oo

$1 00 witto t -

WI..

UOIIIShaos

c_.
- Umit 6 laroh
good through S.t ..

C~upon

Coupon good 11nough •••··

5

---5

---

-5
-=
·
=
~

:

':

3/ 12111

3/12/11

coup~n

FUZZY BEARS

DIIC IMIIOIDEIY
PLOSS

FOI ClAm
JIEG. I / '1 .00

. II EO . 31'1 .00

5/Sl 00

Anaual dinner

Rutland Fire Department's
annual turkey dinner will be lleld

10/Sl oo

Wltllt-

-~~

.....

wttii( ..... -Neu.it
~

Coupon good thorugh Set..
3 / 12/ 88

Correction
An actloJI by Hube~t Clower, et
at, against Denver Cu!11s, et al, ·
h,.a been .dlamla&amp;ed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
The name of Denver Curtis was
mistakenly reported earUer as
Denver Clower.

H~lilllll

EASTER CARDS
50°/o OFF

c-~-llolllllt
_ _ ..,...... ....
')/12/11

Ucemeileued
A marriage llceall baa bien
Issued In Meigs Couaty Probate
. Court to Richard Ra:yBtaeell,atl,
Maon, W.Va., and Anna LouiH
Grtllltead.23, Nt~WHIWD,

JOHNSON'S VAllOY STORE
992·3411

. . .---------;.....J

w.va.l' lolio--------~--..;..-------.I

"

•

MIIIDUOII, 0119

�-·------------'--'~
.,..---- --~~---~~ .

The- Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday, March 1, 1988

World Day of·Prayer planned
World Day of Prayer Service of
Church Women United of Meigs
County will ~held Friday a 11: 30
p.m. at the Presbyterian Church
in,Middleport.
Theme of the service ls"Open
Doors." Written by both Protest·
ant and Roman Catholic women
from Brazil, It refiects the
background . and concerns of
South American women who are
struggling· both to achieve
greater freedom and to elevate
the equality of life for themselves
and for all pe&lt;iple.
Church Women . United, ·
founded In 1941; bas· been the
official sponsor of World Day of
Prayer In the U. S. and has
assumed responsibility for. the
preparation and distribution o(
World Day of Prayer resources

and materials. CWU is the
ecumenical movement that
brings Protestant, Roman Ca·
thollc, and Orthodox women
together into one Christian com·
munlty of prayer, advocacy and
serVIce. It represents a broad
spectrum of religious tradition,
race, age, economic status and
ethnic background and works
through a national unit , 52 state
units, and 1,800 local units_.
Unified by a common faith In
Christ, the women of Church
Women United work for the
elmlnatlon of poverty of women
apd children and Issues of peace
and justice. The offerings make
possible, In part, the mission of
Church Women United Including
the Intercontinental Grants for
Mission program that funds
national and International self

\

development and teaching projects for· women, as well as .
community services and disaster
relief at home and abroad.
World Day of Prayer, begin·
nlng Its second ceptury of cele·
bra lion, Is a prayer movement of
global dimensions with world·
wide expression of mutual
prayer and Christian unit. It has
now expanded until today It Is
celebrated as a commn day of
prayer by ·thousands upon thou·
sands of Christians In 170 coun·
tries and regions of the world.
The same .theme and worship
' materials are used worldwide
translated Into hundreds of languages and dialects. In many
countries, , the event serves as a
catalyst for women to come .
together to bring about changes
In their lives.

. T() PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P:M:
8 A.M. Until NOON' SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
,
·
·
·A~

t

r
WORK AT COMPUTERS- Stephanie English, .
Jason Rupe and Audrey Lambert are pictured
using the Apple II computers employing auto·
mated accounting software to enter accounting

1

I

' ' of their training In the
H
transactions as a part
accounting and computer program taught by Sue
"1cGulre at Meigs High School.

Computer course offered by. MHS
With computers now playing
an Important role In the every
day business world across the
nation and the world, Meigs High
S~!bool students are being offered
an_ accounting and computer
·program.
In this prugram, s tudents are
trained In office practices and
p ~~edures relating to . business
bookkeeping and accounting
procedures. The main areas of·
study Include accounts paya ble,
accounts receivable, prepara-

lion of financial statements, clerks, tellers, bookkeepers, date
payroll and other financial re· entry clerks, accounts receivaports, payroll records and bank· ble and payroll clerks, computer
ing transactions .. In addition to operators and various other
an indepth knowledge of account· · statistical positions.
Work on computers Is Included
ing, students develop skills In
In the course so that st11dents
typing, records , management,
commu nications and public trained in the program are given
ample opportuntity . to acquire
relations.
A two· year certificate Is issued the basic manipulative skills,
to each student upon completion .technical knowledge and positive
of the program . The training personal qualities and attitudes
offered prepares students for needed for success in the busl·
e ntry leve l employoment as·bank ness world.

Community calenda-r
TUESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Council
32.1, Daughters of America, will
meet at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday . Th,e
charter will be draped lil me·
mory of Leatha Wood and
members are to wear white.
--'--

TUPPERS PLAINS- Orange
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hom e of Clerk
DOrothy Calaway.

p.m., In the high school cafeteria.
Matters related to the levy will be
discussed.
. ,-·
RuTLAND - Unlfle&amp;€\tizens ·
for Education In Meigs Local
School District will meet Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. , at the Rutland
American Legion HaiL
RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Co uncil will m eet 7 p.m. Tuesday
at the civic center.
·

LONG BOTIOM - Long Bot·
POMEROY - The Ladies
tom
Chapter of Flame Fellow·
Auxiliary of Aerie 2171, Frater·
ship will meet Tuesday, 7:30
nal Order of Eagles, will meet at
7 p~ m. Tuesday at the hall . A vice p.m ., at the Mt. Olive Commun·
ity Church in Long Bottom.
preside nt will be elected and
Speaker will be Pastor Charles
members are to take items for a
Bush of the Fellowship Church,
grab bag.
Racine. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
WEDNESDAY
Chapter ' of Beta Sigma Phi
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
Sorority will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday at the heme of sponsor, port Literary Club will meet on
Mrs. Evelyn Knight. Lincoln Hill Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the' home
of Mrs. George Hackett Jr . "The
Road. Pomeroy.
Call " by John Hersey will be
LEBANON TWP - Lebanon reviewed by Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
township trustees meet Tuesday
POMEROY - Pomeroy Ma·
at the township buldlng ,
sonic Lodge will meet at 7:30
EAST MEIGS - A' s pecial p.m. Wednesday at the Middlemeeting of Eastern Local School port temple with work to be In the
Board will be held Tuesday , 7 : ~0 !ellowcraft degree and all master masons are Invited.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Cpapter 172, drder of Eastern
Star, Middleport , will meet 7:.30
. p.rrt. Thursday·. OUicO!rs al'e to
wear'chapter dresses.
·
RUTLAND - Rutland Base·
ball League will·hold an organ!·
zalional meeting Thursday, 7
p.m., at the Rutland Civic
Center. All coaches, officers and
parents are asked to attend. New
officers will he elected.
FOREST RuN - Forest Run
Methodist Church Is having a
rummage sale on Thursday and
Friday in the basement of the
church. Hours will be 9 to 3 each
day,
.,

---

POMEROY. The Meigs
County Bass Anglers Club will
meet 7 p.m. Thursday at the
·Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.

A program on prunnlng trees .
and shrubs for better growth and
beauty was given by Mary Nease
at the recent meeting of the
Wildwood Garden Club held at
the home of Marcia Arnold.
Mrs. Nease said that trees need ·
prunning to keep !bern from
growing too high and 'also to cut
out dead and broken branches,
and that shrubs should be
prunned to Improve the health of 1
the 'shrubs cutting out dead,
diseased, broken and overgrown
br anches which · lnterfer wfth
new growth.
Flower shrubs should be
pranned after they have

Plld.

Dear Ann Landers: Can you
stand another response to "No
Dolly In Conn." who Is the Other
Woman?
She knows only one side of the
story, Here's the other side:
Almost 11lways the wife has the
responsibility of the children, the
home, the dog, her job, and she Is
the central emotional prop of the
entire family. As If this Isn't
enough, she has to put up with
ln·laws, her husband's obnoxious
buddies and his character and
personality flaws that he works
overtime to conceal from others.
The Other Woman has only
· herself and someone else's bus·
band to think about. She sees only
the charming and delightful aide
of him, What .he Is like when they
rendezvous Is a far cry from what
he Is like at home.
There Is no legitimate excuse
for a spouse to have an affair.
Marriage is a parnershlp.
Neither has the right to cheat on
the other. If one feels abused or
taken for granted, he or she
should talk It over with the errant
partner and work things out. -A

FAITHFUL BUT NEGLECTED
WIFE IN FORT DODGE.
.DEAR NEGLECTED: I'm
sure you know the options that
are open to you, but for reasons of
your own you choose to hang in
there. I'm not being crltical,just
making the point. Her:e's another
view on the subject.
Dear Ann Landers: 'I'hls·mes·
sage Is to "No Dolly In Conn."
DEAR NO DOLLY: SO you fell
for that line, too? Apparently,
Other .Woman never learns.
How do you know his wife is
demanding, selfp·centered and
Inconsiderate, and that she is a
miserable flop In both the kitchen
and the bedroom? You know
wha I he tells you, and. he tells you ·
what you want to hear. This
enables him to keep things
exactly the way he wants them.
I am one of those "lousy
wives." He strung the Other
Woman along for three years,
making her believe that he would
be leaving me as soon as be could,
get a divorce and that they would
live happily ever after. (This Is
the oldest line in the world.)

Funding raising projects were
discussed at the, recent meeting
of the Mt. Moriah Church or God
Ladles · Auxiliary held at the
home of Louise Eads.
A soup and chill supper was
planned for March 12 at the
parsonage, and a bake sale will

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER ,
WEDNESDAY PAtER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

LADIES DO YOU HAVE FORMALS IN YOUR
ClOSO YOU'D UKE TO SEW CALL US
ABOUT SEWNG THEM ON ·CONSIGNMENT.

I

STOlE IIOIIISs Mon.thru Fri. 9 t~.~~~.·S ,,;..., Sat. 9 t~.~~~.·l
are pictured rece1Y1n1 a $5,000 check from
KeyNal Winebrenner, employee at Shammy's, W.
Main st., Pomeroy. The S5,000 Wll8 payment for a

-

DAY B~FORE PUBUCATION
11 '00 A.M. SATURDAY
2'00 P.M. MONDAY :
2'00 P.M . TUESDAY
2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
2,00 P.M. THURSDAY'
2'00 P.M. FRIDAY

, wlantag llckel wl)lcb Kapp purcltued· In d.e

p.11L .

6

Happy Ade

Cu.a tom Home
Bulldl!lg, ·Room
Addition•.
Remodeling II
Rep1ira, Roofs.
Bathe, Kitchens

985-3365

.Jay or Ev•lll..

Ann
Landers

Fw S,..,. ..,. S.S- •
SYIACU$1, 01110
NEW STOII-NEW STO&lt;I

lcM PIKES

llgisttr for FREE

Bini loth

- No
Purchost NecniCII"y ·
Come In - Lou of
New
Public Notice

,
•I

~

1

PUILIC NOTIC

,
l

·A public IIIIDICtlon of the
IIGuthem Lolli! School Dtotrict'• 1888-18 budget;
hHri"11: notice; 1ubmlulon

1

Ohio A..,iMd t..w 11705.30
wtn be h•ld on Merch 21 ,

1

I1:

ta the County Auditor under

'

· Do you have questions about
· sex, but nobody you can talk 1o
about them? Ann Landers' newly
revised booklet, "Sex and the
Teenager," will 'give you ihe
answers you need. To receive a
copy, send $2.50 ·plus a self·
addressed, stamped No. 10 enve·
lope (39 cents postage) to Ann
Landers, P .O. Box 11562, Chi·
cago, IlL 60611·0562.

1881

at tho Southern 'High

School

du~ng

rneeting

of

BOerd.

I
\
,

the regular
the

School

Dlotrict

I

P. !). Box 178
Aoch10; Ohio 411771

t

13) 1. 1tc

l

Real Estate General

I II

992-6282
·

When ,au nHd us. we'll be

tlltrt .,. ~th prompt, conctmtd IRIUtlnce service. We
IIWI!I try to be friends you
can depend on. Call us toclly.

'

I
I

RNER~
un.nce8ervl-

jFreo

,;:_;qh!ll

Read the Best Seller~
·Read the
:.: ·

· V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Ponwoy,

•Wa1her~ •Dryer~

•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrlgeratpra
"Muff le lapalr,.la"

Balha• Building

EVElY
SAT. NIGH1
FactOI'y ChOkt
12 Gauge Shotguns

· Roger Hysell·
. . ' 'Gara·9e
II. 124, P-or Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alao Tr••••laalll
PH. 992·5'82
or 992-7121
6·17·tfc

HEADNG'
COOUNG
•FURNACES ·
•AlA CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PVMPS

FREE ESTIMATES

PH.

Mary, Naomi, Jone,
Grace, D-., Angelo
and Kay at ·

WElCOME

Campers~

RYi,
or Mobile

.F11111 E••IP•••t
P1rt1 &amp;
.

PLUMIING &amp; HEATING
New Location:
161 North SocMtd
Mid.oporl, Ohio 457 60

EXCAVATING

•Wrecker S-ee

PAT HILL FORD

Fw ""Y of those sonicos call

•Will Do HeuHng With
Dump Truck

•Junk 'VIrd Buatneaa
WA!IT TO IUY WIECIED 01
· 111111 CUS 01 QUCIS
-FlEE E!TIUTIS-

614·742-2617

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-ttc

·

ltlwHn 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Lla¥t

Attention EIICirOUil cul10mer•.
Frank Futb: It now your 1u1ho·
rited fKtory ul11 1nd service
repreHntlriw. For senrice cell
304-937-2272 enytime.
POEMS wented for 191B Moun·
telnHI' Po.try, write P.O. Box
515118 for informetion.

Giveaway

4

Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sates &amp; sarvtU
Cl Hearing Evaluations For ~11 Ages

Ronytlng • Roupholote~ng
Roolclonu.ill
Commeralel Furniture
Automoth'e a M.rinl
Df'8puill a Camlcn
A LARGE SELECTION OF
FABRICS
Pioliup I Doll_.,
FREE ESTIMATES·

IL:5
:r::
z
-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Awnue, Box 1213
Gaitipolis, Ohio 45631

M0111.

..... s_.,.

•HOME IUILDINO
•ROOM ADDITIONS
oKITCHENI • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING •
REPAIRS
IEI'TIC IYITIMI •
BACK HOI WORK

'

I

I

Large carpet coyered apool,
ctteet typ11 frMHr, twin m•t·
trell, 304-175-2401.

6

4-16·86·1fn

•

n=-.oo REWARD for full

....

11•• T - Millo
I I - or Lotor Rt, 2.
Lotirl, w.vo. J04.17&amp;·1101.

Tt.arfttlnolluy, ....

,.,..,..•• ••toroara,
1

"FrH btlmete1"

NOs.AY

4441·7111.

oeoowe-r rtf gt1111 teUn J1n. 30,

Sltlll
,
._ co.,
PIL 9•9·1160
or 9•9·1101

FOUND' t..rgo bloctl rabbit io
vicinity of Plue Hut. Cell 114·

••••

BISSELL

DOL
TO YOUR POCI£T

Loet Celleo ~n. eround GarA... Chlkl'o pot, Coli H'""
-11. Col 814· 448·M21.

LOST: llack a brown Germtn
Sh .... onl Dog· In vicinity of
lurlih1rt Lane. CIH 814·'"1·
2174 ollw I PM, 4411·4222

•VINYL SIDING
•AWMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
. INSULATION

...

Cell 114· 379-27158.

ayoloo. RVo
GUllA IIIIULTI
...

INoloo. POll

7

Athlf" todoy In
Whulu Deller. or ~u
juotmeymloi8Hiel

·-·

"- 1·9H·IIIr w1·164-4JJJ
'

Yard Sele -

....... GiUTpoiT8.. :.......
Ia VIcinity

.......................... ; ...... .
w_ _ ,.....,.z1e-

!.-,.

_____

Aw.. - 1 . Ll. ..

............ =l·plllftlll.

._.

,.., . . . . . · - illlld·$3~

fuil'llftMNt MWinl IUefllq,

....c.....,... ii

8

Public Sele

• Auction ·

State Auto

!

I

~

Junk Auto• • .tNckt. C1ll to'l'
prices· 814· 379· 2888 or 379.
2784,

200 1mp bruker boiC. Single ,....

ph11e. C.ll814-268-1393. . .:.
Buying daily gold. silver coin~ . ..:..
rln.gs, jewelry. t11rling were, old '""
coms. l•ge currency. Top pri· .
c•. Ed IJurkett Berber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 814992·3476.
'•

.,

QUILTS
.,
High price~ p1id for pre· 1960 1
quiht. Applique, pieced. 1nv •
condition . Cell 614 -992 · 2101
or 614-992-5167.

f ITipln ylllcnt

Scrv1ct: s
11

Help Wanted

Get • frN cologne - Sen Avon.
Make big bucks. Call 8U.. 44&amp;3318.
•
GOVERNMENT JOBS ,
1,8,040 · 169,230/ yr. Now
hiring. Your .,... 806-881· t.!
1000 Ext. A-10189 for cutTtnt
Federel ll1t.

...

,.,

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS .
NOW HIRING . Your Ar11 .
•13.160 to Ul.4110, IMME·

DIATE Openings, Cell 1·315- "'
733-6083 Ext. ~ 2758.
... "'
Tele-e -Merkellna· Ledl•• ~'
"'•e eppointmente for. Ohkf.:
YIUI'Y Memory Oerden1. Iii'" ~
IIYI'ninge, e3.10 e hr. plu~....
bonue. C.ll 10AM·1 PMontyfOI: ',
appolntment-114-448-3115. ~
The 0 :0 . MCintyre Perk Di•trf~•
II now eccepting application• t.' r0
Soccer Otfici8ll end Summ•
Recrutiofl LeMler •nd Aide "
poahklna. Contact the Park
Diatrtct office. firlt: floor of the
Gelll1 County Courthouse. ar by
ClUing 814-446-4812, eJit,
218 .
Will do beb,lllning in my homeAnytimo, Coli 814·441·40H.
Part time In ltON men:hendillf, ..,.
Clll cohct. Pente Shepherd, ~
404·····"4e
.
HANDWRITING ANALYST. No.. '
till)., will lflin. 112 p-hr. • up.
Writ"' PASE GRAPHOLOGY "
10010, 181 S . Lincolnway, ~ .....
Aurar1, IL IOU2.
·
. 10-"
GET PAID tor reodlng - • 1
0100.00 por tlllo. WriWO' PAlE·
S3J, 111 I . Unco4nwey, N, •
IL 10142, .
.

All-•·

Loolllnt

-· - .

tor----.. .. ·:

""'-"'
-~
Nn~allla

aoudlloua• .._.._

._ 11m 111-... at•!
tile .,.. Cor .......
JIDIWI Ptk. Llrl., Mw. 4 '
bet II 11 AM-111M .

J

-,

'

LOST: py,..a,... black German
Sh.,onl doe· In Rt. I l l
R-oy - · Coli 114, 441·
71100.

Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
·

Lost and Found

FOUND: Large dog. Long hatred.
Vicinity of Vinton . C•ll •
ldontlty. 114·388, 9792c

or 949-2860

11·"""

4 mol. old. Houae
broken., Free to 1 good home.
Coli 81 4·448·1229.

c•ll&amp;14-98&amp;-4227.

PH. 9'4 9-2801

'I-C101S

Refuu::-

Went to buy· stlindmg tlmbfr,: ')

Free to good home, lerge epaved

"At 1-blt Prices"

tiS-4141

~~~ .

black Lib. Gentle with children.

CUSTOM BURT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

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

P8rt Gokten AetriiMtr·PIIrt Mil·

Puppiu to giv81wey to good
home. C1ll &amp;14-448-3787.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

MAICUa, 1 .
CONTilCIING.r
CHESTER, OHIO
1

C.. Y. 0. Stewert ·

W1nt to buy Jttlnding timber &amp;
pine. P1y TOP DOLLAR . 6 1cre1
or more. Excellent reference•.
Cell LArry Stricklend logging. ,
8, 4·612· 7823,

1U 1hots. To good home in
counrty (prate,.....!. C•ll 614·
446·8608 1Her 5 PM .

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

OPEN DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY

Lot of N- Item•:
Flohlng BuppiiH, Ouna,
Archery. end Much

Would like to buy junk can.
wrecked cert end motorcycltl.
C1ll 114-379-2110 or 371· 2423.
• - •

'h German Shepherd &amp; 1h Lib.·

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospitlll
Mulberry Hps, Pomeroy,

GUNS·&amp; SUPPLIES

W1nt to buy:- Used fumiturtlnd ::
l!lntlqu11. Will buy •ntlrt houu- •
hold furni1hlng. M1rlln Wed• ·
meyer, 814-246-&amp;1152.
•·•

.

lt.l, Coolwl..
ServiDr Melp II
Atheas Couatles

Complete hOulllholdt of furnl· . ·
tore &amp; entlqu6s. Alto w~ 1._
coal h•eters. Sweln'1 Furniture 1·:
&amp; Auction, Third II Oliv., ' i
814-448·3159.
_
_ _:.:,.:.::.__
_...._..:_
• ,1 '.

Stending timber. C1ll 614-742.: 2328,
.
' . .

Free pupple1·6 wka. old. Raccoon Rd•. Cell614·441-8841 .

•l'

~

m1don, Clil Sergnnt Mike Abell
et 304-420-1018 Collect.

SERVICE

••
I

..

MARINES: We',. looking for 1
few good men. For mort lnfor·

Heart of gokiiHttimeot commit·
ment D.W.M. 36 yra In meldng,
cerrie• hit heart on hia sleeve.
&amp;
Nevw hed time tor the aocl1l
We Cerry F.. hlng Supplies
aCini, no children, neat.· quiet,
Pay Your Phone
cour11t0UI, llinc•e. hardwork·
end Cable Bill• Here · ing, energetic, fillmlly orientltld.
He• aecure employment end
IUSINfil PHONE
property owner-. Worked hard to
(614) 992·6550
secure future. would now like to
did: enjoying lite. Would lllce to
RISIIENCI PHONE
mMt 1ing.. or d!vorced worldnv
t614)
ledy, middle 20'• or older to help
build and thl,. quiet counlry llf•
""':~~-~ -I e~le. Smell chldren welcome.
:":
COli PDndencewtHbedtumed
If 10 detlred. Reply whh letter.
Pt:aone numHr. Photo If posaible
to P.O. Box 317, PointPieet~nt .
w. v•. 251560.
•Doze• &amp; Bockhoo Work

SALES

Wanted To Buy · "

We pey C81h for let• model clean
Uled Clrs.
~
Jim Mlnk Chev.-Oklt.lnc . .: ...
Bill Gene Johnton
814· 448· 3172 .
' ·I

Kupid'a Nett llftd ConneCtion•
Deting Service of Huntinvton
Join• together 1h1ring profilll.
For lnformtt.lon write: Kupid 't
1,Ne11, P.O.· Bo• 519. Ironton, .
Ohio 45838,

We can
core radlat~IFS and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks. ·

(6141 661'-66't5

BlOWN'S
TRAilEI PAll

Annou nc1:111 t: nl s
3 Announcements

Doalor

-·or

Ra-acquaint yourstlf
with the stylists -

N"" Holland, lu.sh Hog
f•m E'l"ipmtnl

. J&amp;L

INSULATION

9

Authorized Jllhn Doore,

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

We Service

~

.

614-662-3121 .

992-3410

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
915-3561

. 6:30P.M.

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILI.I, OHIO

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

DUDOI AUVE

.CLRSSIFIED RDS.::

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

RACINE,

WANTED

RACINE
FlU DEPT.

BOGGS

j

tli•

II. II ill ', I

. . . . .. . . . . _

'l

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

II

II

1:00 P.M.
R"INf
GUN CLUB

Eotiinat01l

. suarRAcr·· THOSE THINGS
.CATHERING DQSt

•

AN~

-Addont 1nd ,.modeling
- Roofing end guner work
-Concrete wofk
- Plumbing end .a.ctricel

1-28-'ll·tfn

Rentals

1

•
' l

'I ' I

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

CARPENTER
SERVICE
work

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
·

YOUNG'S

,

Home Lot

l
II

1

21--··0-nlty
2 2 - -... • L.,_;
D-.... •••

.CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

992·5623

I

1i'

••••-nt ·

··--

WAll-IN~

I

1,t!

77--~~·71-caUQL

. :M~IIIeG211 Gupu: Old.
141·-Did.
171--t

992-2725

992-2269
9-6 Mon.-Fri.
9·3 Saturdays

1

H7-c:r.olll..,.

169 N. 2nd h•.

Over 1 00 Properties
For Sale - Call loday

11

I 'I

71--Ce,.... • Meter Ho.-

·,11

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

I

MAlTER CARD -

•

J f

ClU~ifief# pages cov~r the
following telephone exchanges...

1

Dennie E. Hill
Bouthem Lo..t Sqhool

''

IACINE
DEPAITMII1
JDSIWI
.
'

Santa's Sleigh rubofl game of The Ohio Lottery.
The tlcke~ was bourht at the Pomero7
establishment.

•!

74 - ••:;all

Business Services

JO'S Gin SHOP

When r' found out about her i
tossed hisbelo 0gtngs ·on the front
lawn. He meekly brought lhlln!
back Inside. It h·a s been four
years and he has not mentioned
her name since. I feel sorry for
the woman. She gQt a rotten deaL
-NO GLOATER IN N.C.
DEAR NO GLOAT: Stay tuned
for the testimony of another
sorority sister.

Ill

71--·-··
·71-·-.
71--,-· A. .. ._

441-8 ......

CMMI, 01110

be scheduled In the near future.
Prayer opened the meeting
with Mrs. Eads giving scripture
from Psalms 31. Minutes were
read· and approved. Next meet·
lng was set for March 29 at the
home of Sherry Harris. Prayer
closed tlie meetlilg.

"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"
WINNERS NAMED- Mr. and Mrs. John Kapp

..

I

legal liabilities, chapter manage·
Lambda Gamma Chapter, Unl·
ment, chapter finances, asso·
versity of Cincinnati. with grand
elate members programs, scho· chapter secretary, Bob Borel,
larshlps, retreats and retention
leading the celebration.
of members.
Rho PI Chapter of Rio Grande
Chapters from Ohio, · West received the' 100th chari~r ·rrom
Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Illi- Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity.
nois, Michigan, and Wisconsin The chapter Is active in all
attended the conference which aspects of campus life and is a
wu highlighted by the awards · supporter of the local Big
banquet and the closing celebra- Brother·Big Sister Program.
tion of brotherhood by the

chjps and other food will be
served. Pack 246 Is hosting the
derby. Tigers and Bobcats Will
start at 1 p.ni. with the oilier
races to start at 1: 30 p.m.

f:

•

71--olofllllt
71-T.,... Ioflillo

GUN SHOOT

•

)

an4 chUdren, I to r, Diana, Stephanie and John, •

Alta INfO" IDII-.threNne,INoUn up.yawlllltcft...,cf

I

_Cub Scouts plan Pinewood Derby
The MGM District will hold Its
annual cub scout pinewood derby
Saturday at Royal Oak Resort.
will start at noon.
fee Is $1. Hot

,,.,ao
~. cio
. ..o.ao

tDr _.. . , 11 ..,..., • ..,,.

• A clutlfied actverttttment placed in The Dilly Sendnelfu·
cept .- d ....fled dllplay, Bu"neu Card 1nd leglll notices)
will 1110 ippeer tn the Pt. Pill
. lint Aegltttr end ttle Gellipoll• Dilly Tribune, r•echlng over 18,000 hom•.

Fund raiSing discussedby ·group

I'I

'

Ada tMI muM bll paid in H-.,anca are;
c•rd of Thtnka
..i.ppy Ad•
In ~ampriam
Y•d Seln

Rho.Pi chap~er TKE attends meeting·

Ralph H. Werry, president,
and James A. Freeman, III,
chaplain, attended meetings on

110.00

·m::

Mlddlt"'"' Ohli

Two members of Rho PI
Chapter, Tau Kappa Epsilon
Fraternity, Rio Grande College,
Community College, Rio Grande,
recently, attended the Settles
Region Regional Leadership
COnference at the Clarion Hotel
In Cincinnati.

· n.oo

to'

I

RuTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department's annual turkey
dinner will he held Thursday at
the Rutland Elementary SchooL
Serving will start at 5 p.m.
Advance tickets for $4 are
available froin any fireman :
Everyone welcome.

211·21WO~Da

•7 point Nne type Ottly uNd.
•semtnlt it not retpontlb .. for trrora after flnt day. (Cheek ·
,errora flnt d'V td r.:.na In Pll*l· C.ll before 2:00p.m.
• ltay after pu:blation to meke correction.

Members responded to roll call
bloomed, she said, and the best
by
displaying homemade valen·
time topr\lne evergreens, except
tines. An Invitation was read
pines, Is In late l'{inter or early
from
the Belpre Garden Club to
spring before the new growth
Its
50th
anniversary which wll be
starts. ·
on
March 12 from 1 to 4 p.m.
held
A report on evergreens was
at
the
Mullen
Memorial Baptist
given by · Dorothy Smith who
Church
in
Belpre.
Thank you
displayed specimens of pjne blue ·
notes
were
read
from
Dorothy
spruce, Norw;~.y spruce, and
Smith
and
Dan:
and
J11lla
WilL
cedar. Peggy Moore and Janet
Betty
Milhoan,
Doris
Grueser,
Theiss 11ad the arrangements of
Janet Theiss, and Kathryn Miller
the month. Mrs. Moore showed
told about their birthday baskets.
an unusual piece' of wood using
The Wildwood Club will partie!·
with It boxwood, holly, moss, and
pate In Amerlflora '92 to be held
a red bird, suitable for use as a
,
In
Columbus at the Ohio Center.
wall hanging. Mrs. Th~lss used
Refreshments
were served to ·
weathered wood with evergreen,
all
15
members
and a guest.
straw flowers, baby's breath,
Carrie
Grueser.
and ·a bird accessory.

Marriage is partnership,
not a whim of moment.

outtide Meiut. Gillie or Muon eountl• muat be pre·

•RaceNe 1.50 ditcount tor ads paid in advtnce.
•F,.. ad1 - GIV~PIWIY. Ind Found ada und., 15 -nil will bli
. fUn 3 d.yt at no chal'98. '
· ·
•Price of ad for all a.pital letttrt Is double price of ad colt.

Wildwood Garden Club meets
I

.....,

RATES

o-11 WOIIDI 11·21 .WOIIDt
. 10AYI
fl . liD
3DAYI
•• . liD
••.00
IOAYI
...oo
f13 .11D
10DAYI .
f21.11D
1 MONTH
111 .00

'

�-Smlinel
11

LAFF-A-OAY

HelpWanted

NHd .............. ,

46

homll.

o.
.. •houn- .Tro-·
tlon - o d . Call 11 4· 441 ·

Fuml.tt.d Rooms

74

PI'Mte entNnce. off..,_ perk-

I

lnt. - e . 114-NZ-7711.

Qov.ftrnent Jobt.

t11.MO·

llt.u o -. - - Y a u r
.,..,. 1-IDI-117-1000 Ia. .. .
if!ol.
8101"" ......... -

48 Space for Rant

I--

••I.

......,bty
· - n
· ....,
..
md othttt.- FT and
Cal
todoyt 1·11t·418·3131. "oil·

W.VL Coll304-773·1151 . \

Spacious mobile home loll tor
renl. F•mlty Pride Mobile Home
Pe"'- GlllpoUt Ferry. W. Va.

-TIIIephoni •I• people tpWnted.
Call 814-992·3117.

Huge 31 ' oval pool wltll ·
fence a tttt.r. ln•ullation a
flnencfnfjl tvelltblt. 1·800-341 -

304-178-1071.

Avon all aNII, Shirley Spnrt1

0941. .

, 04-171-1429.

Penon or ·coupta to hod. sit.
mutt ta.v. good reference~.

"You're lucky being an only ·

writt Box P 21, ctrt Point
PIMIIftt Rtgiater, 200 Mtln St.,
Point Pltattnt. W. Vt. 2815&amp;0.

child and not having to be a

good example for anyone."
L,.'; .._________.,l'-..,.__.;..______..j

5171. 111 s. Uncolnway. N. F"
Aurot'a. 11 10542. .

Situations
Wanted

'*'-"'·
70x14. Excell..-.t "high grade
_ ..... - IlPPI'-. 1974 Holly Pork, 3

singlt ptlrtOn ta U..,.
upen•• in ltrgt houA in city.
Ctll814-441*0484.
Senio r. citlatn. Room tnd botrd
lor one ltdy. SpeciM Cllt in my
home. Rtuonebie. Call 114-

992-1873.
13

waw •nk. 01• hut.
..ooo. can 114-742-3033.

hot

1914 1 0JIIIO Elcono HoUle
T,.iler with ppendo, New fur·
nact.,. new hot weter tank. tulty
·~· fuml...od, pore~! .....
winclowtwnl .... Exct~Mnicon-

cfl-. Altar 1:00 114-192·

Insurance

7102. 114-112-1072 anytime.

Ctll ut for your mobllt home
insurtnct: Miller lnsurtnct,
304-182-2145. Alto: tuto ,
home. lift. h..lth.

'

,1 8 Wanted to Do

1HZ Manlfon. 14x70. 3 bed·
room. 2
bttta., me111 build·
lng, centrll tlr, porch tnd
twningt, vinyl underpinning.
Set up on rented lot in Mlddl•
port. Price roducod. c.n 114·
992-&amp;139 ·aft• 1:00.

tun

• Will do houltcl ..ningln Gtllipo·
lit . Ctll 814-448-3851.
Houte Clttnlng. Ctll 114-•te·

0415.

interior or exttrior ptintlng, 28
yrt experience, frM Htimtte.
phone 304-676*15107.

!nth. Excellent condition. s ..
rlout lnquiritJ only. 014·949·

1917 Cleyton mobll1 hornt
14x60. complltNiy tumlahed
wtth weah• &amp; dryer. Take owr
peymtntt , 304-1571-2101.

2

ttedroom,

furnllhed , extl'l
ciHn. 1 chHd. no peta. Ntw

Haven. 304·882·2411.

2 bed.r oom, 1 2kl0 Mobile
Home. Rtelni tr••· 814·992·
II&amp;B.
.
2 Wdro:om mobile hom• In
Middleport. Ohio. At.,_.,ce
and Security depo.tt required.

l 571 .

Stert..- Gtntrttor repair t hop.
Owner retiring . For inlor. c.U
614· 2fi6·6434·wtekendt • alter 15 PM weekdays.

22 acrn with 3 bedroom home,
~ ~'" old•.am II) bam trid other
outbuildhlgl. ApproxitMttly 3
mi~ on Cnb Ct'Mk Roed,
O.tttpot,, Ferry. ~ny , . _ ,•••
offw owr f40,000 wiH be
coneidered. 304· 67&amp;· 2231 .

34

Furniture refinishing and repair,
quality work and rt ttontblt
rttet, free lltimttll, 304-676-

.....

Good
3rd.

Apartment
Jor Rant

'•

2 BR. eptt. II clo•et•. kiteh.,..
tppl. fumlthed, Wether-Dryer
hook-up. ww cerpet, newly
JM~Inted, deck.
A...,cy, Inc.
Aptli. Call 304-875-7738 or

114-441-0338.

.

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·

SON ESTATES, 1~1 Jtckton
~ke frOm f183 t mo. Walk to
1hop and movin. 114-448-

7991 .

Esi&lt;Jie

Nice 2 BR ." 4 1fJ: miiM from
GaiHpollt. Stova, rtfrig. &amp; weter
furnlthed. No'*'· 1215 t mo.

Call814-441-103e.

1 1 Court lt.· 2 Bedroom. 2
btth1, kitchen fumllhed. w / w
ClfPtt, •326 1 mo. plut utllltie•.
No petl, depotlt &amp; ret. C.ll

114-441-4926.

1

BR . apt. nHr HMC.
Stove. refrig. &amp; drapes. Call
Nice

114-441-4782.

Homes for Sale

4 BR .. firepltct , full btttment. 3
mi. to. of Gtlllpolit. f29,900.
Ctll Oayt - 6,4 - 446 - ~815, after
5:00- 446·124-t-.

Brookside Aptttments: Located
off Blll.villt Rd.· 1 BA. apacioUI
epanmenu with modern kltehtn
and Wllhtr·di'V8f hookups, Ct·
~· telwlaion tvllltblt. Ctll

114-441· 1932.

Nice 2 BR apt. Wat•. garbtfilt
paid. Stow • .-.trig. fumi1hed.

Oupltlt apartment. trtiltr &amp;
t mtll eerry-out, $46,000- In
Cheshire. Ctll eher 6:30 PM,
814-387-0181 .
2 BR . home. 3.4 • &lt;=re lot. All oew
vinlv tiding, new drivwty, new
doort , &lt;:ablnttt. Acrott from
Gtllipolit lockt on Rt. 7 . C1ll

1 SR . apartment with ttOVI &amp;
retrlg. No pett. Cell 614· 4-t-6·

Commerciel pro~ and houM
lota·Gtllipolit Ferry. Clll 304·

176·1908.

41

Homes for . Rant

Nicely furnith,cf tmlll houte.
Adult• onty. Ret. required. No
Pitt. Call 814·448-0338.

3 BR. hou .. tor rem arrent FILE

ERROR

.

3 BA . haut• for-rent or rent with

Option to buy, on 141 . 1310 •
mo. D•P· • rtf. required. Cell

614-266-681 3.

2 ttary house loctted In
Gtllipolit-nttr tehool: 3 BR .. 1
bath. Will tell on lend contract:
down. f32.600 totll.
Ctll 1·6 · 814-448-7572, •Iter
6-114-446·16 22.

Nicely furnished tm•U hou...
Aduitt. Ret. a dep . No pett.
Wtttr furnl•hed. t111 per
month. Ctlll14-441-2143.

9280•eV8n, • WMkendt.

2 bedroom, 2 batht, 2 car

gtrtge, level lot on At. 33.
Swimming pool, ttttlllt, cion
t o Melgt High . CIM 814-982 ·

3214.

6 room1 . full ba"llmtnt,
1226.00 month, C.mp Conley
l r-81, IVIillblt Mtretl . 5, 304·

676·1371 orl71· 3812.

42

••oo.

2 BA.; 2 blllhl. All utllltiet
InclUded.
C.ll 814-448-

4222 - - 1·1.
Furnlthed efflctncy apartment.
Carpet throughout. Private &amp;
quie1 . Single working pertOn
only. Cell 814-446-4607 or

Mobile Home•

dap. Colt 114·441-7714 ot
143·2144.

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE
t396 to •995. Teblft t50 and
up to 11215. Hld..a· btd• t390
to tl915. Rtcllnen 8225 to
t371 . Lampt t28 to $126.
Oinettn f108 and up to 1496.
Wood qble w-8 chairs f286 to
t796 . Dt1k t100 Up to t376.
Hutchn f400 and up. Bunk
bedt complttt w · mMtffttet
f295 and up to t395.1aby bedt
•110. Mtttreuelorboxtpringa
full onwln 188, firm 178, end
fBI . Queen lltl t225,. King
f3&amp;0 . 4 drtwtr chMI e89 . Gun
cabinete I gun. Gt• or electric:
range $375. ~by mattre•••
f3&amp; • 146. Bed frtmu f20,
f30 &amp; Kina ll'llme '60. Qood
telection ot bedroom •uttes,
meul cablnett, htadbotrdt 130
and uf to *85.

90 Otyt same •• cash whh
tpproliNMI .crecnt: · - 3 MIIM~ out
Bulaville Ad. Optn 9tm to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-448-

2 P&lt;=· living

Wedding drtlt, let-length
drett, Cak1 topper, corugee •
boutonnieree. wedding mulic, &amp;
rec:eptlon decoNttont. Cell 814-

441-8111.

large amount baby cloth• and
oth..- itema. one boy'l coM-Ita
20·22. ten tpeed bike. lamtonite ~ggtge Mt. 19 tnch coior TV
wl!h lUnd, auto CUI. , AM· FM
radio, 12 Inch oscelltlng tan,
b1t1tk beda, ttlreo "' (Bound
D11lgn~. oth• miiCI All exc.
cond. Calll"1 4-24&amp;-8138.
Mixed herd wood llabt. t12 pti
bundle. Containing approx , 1 'li
ton. FOB. Ohio P1ilet Co.
Firewood for tele. 1315 • lolld.

_______:_...,.:....:.,.Will dallvar. 114-843·1~10 .

For Sale: Mltaned hardwood.
No. 7047 reglttered.
Delivered or pick·up. Phone
111.·742·2·21.

HEAP

114-448·0811. 8AM ·4:30PM

Narge refrig8JIIor (Avocado),
, I cu. ft . Jof-lnton Mobllt Home
Ptrk· EIIttm Ave. Lot 4, 150.

Deluxe two IMcfrooflll - equipped
kitchen. Eai::•lltnt location .
Ref.....,ce- Sea. d.poeit. No

Antique wing blck chair with
Qu~ Anne lege. Ptlr maho·
gany end ti~H- All A· 1 condi·
tlon. 114-992-1851 .

UpiUira uhtumlthed tpt. Cerpeted, loltllttiM peld. No children.

No polo. Call 114·441·1137.

B
68

Pats for Sale

li;;i;;;;;·-;,;;-;;;i;;;;
R•a•u•• black. melt coa.
8panlal, 8 ...... old, 171. C.U
114-317·02'1- 4 PM.

U Haul truck• and treHert for
rent. 304-8715-7421 .
Flrtwoad dellv,.-ed, tilde~.
*31.00 . Mtton County, G•llipo·
Ill. Ohio • other erett within
retiOn, tklr diiCf"BIItion. 304·

895·34411.

•tnt ~ 1o&lt; &amp; pup.. •londl. luH a -....
W- • - · V1t
.-oc~. 1200 -

· Col 114-

31t·8880.

1•-- _...., ond

~

c.
- ....
· no..-.C.III14-112·
~ .... --·
2107

.•

2 .,..r old mete hldngecJ. a-.
hoUM broltln, 3C)4..171-·
·

~~.
4811
67

1978 Dodge Cuttom 4x4, 2 ton,
1917 Sony TV cetMtte a
reoordtr • VCR. 30•·171·

1174.

Small boat or udUty

f7&amp; ,oo. 304·1e2-2714.

tr~Her,

66 Building Supplies

opcnlngt

lvttleble.
12 Strln_g Al'4erat Guitar.

1110.00 ""'"· 304·112·213t.
68

&amp;

For Bale or Trade far pl.._.. .

truck·1187 Cllovy .. 4dr., lolalr,

new pelnt. No Nl1. Texu .oar.

•phol...,.

304·171· 1410.

Concrete blockt ell lint yerd ar
dl4tvery. M110n And. O.llipolll

Oreck)ut ltvlng. , 1nd 2 bed·
room 8PIIrtmtntt It VIllage
Menor Mel Alvenlde Apen.
mtntt in MiddlePort. From

Bloclo Co.. 123* Plno 11 ..
Ollllootll, Ohio Coli 114·441·
2713.

U11. lnoiYdlna utiUtiM. CoR
814·H2-7717. IOH .

68

room. C.ll 114w379-2409, tt no
lniW• caH- 114-441-1721.

Two bedroom. 1 beth. with
btHment upper Point Pllutnt,
f42,000.00, price negotiable.
614· 387· 0122 after e·:oo pm.

14JII70 with 7d4 upendo. 3
lA., 1 'li bethe, appll..._. fur-

· 3 bedroom, 2 bttht. full ttniehed
baMmiM, new furntat • Clft-

trolalr, gar.,•. foncod yar&lt;l. Low
&amp;O't. 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave. Pt.
Pl. 304-175·1774.

10.10

114-211-1241.

~

1171. 11xl0 .... A·1 ..._

__ __

furMIIItl UlliiPt ........... Air
In ~-. - - ond ..,...
.:.:::...:.;..:..;:_
__; - ·
Coiii14-MI·28N-""!

,_

118431.000 ·
E.-. cond. Prloo.
Mult ... to IPPNololo. Col 114-317-71111 .•

hrvlcl.
Ripley, Woot Vl ....lo. lpaclallz·
lng In Honda Plrtl end atrllce
lllnco 11171. ""- [3041 372·

uto

I

apa r

-rk. Col
.

7:05 !lJ Andy Qttflltlt
Jim'• Import Auto

ctr.

()

--· ·-·--

NoT TO LE:T IT

phill. Your - . a.,.,. Cloolda.
111101·187-1000 £&gt;&lt;1. 1·1101.

_....

--

UIEIRNT

,

WATI!RPIIOOPINO
Un _
_ _ ....''·

1971 Now Euroatyta. V·S, auta.

~..:::~

.... Loallll'lili-

Free •t : •u

rolly •

loti
of n- - · 11400. 080.
MYit IIIII. 1911 Ch-1 California Car. No rult, rotiulh
motar, •him 11ot1. new exll.m.

Homa

Impro11amante

-~~ Dol"'-"t
tox-101-a87- -·
••onLC111
·lhpo
IOOO bt. OH·IIOtf. for cu"""

fum6atied.

Cell collect

1•114-237-0411. _, .. night.'
llloger•l•ae:nenl

u.s. 31 w.~
114-281·1451.

J -. Ohio.

Mateey fer9u10n, New HoKend,

eUihHogllla.lorvloo.O..

40 UHd trectort to choote from

• coonpleN llno o f - • eq~pment . l.argttt lllection In
S.E. Ololo.
-:

800 F,.t farm triMitor, 1981
Dotaun plcloup far Pl'tO. allo
oth« f.-m ~PIIMit. 304-

m... ,....., ........

1917 Bulot Orand No-ll 3.8
liter. SFI Tiorllo. All _ ..
Loeded with every hlhble
..,-, 11000 odd on
perlonnenCe peck._ Ablolutly

ant ol few in' circulation .
111.1H.H Nagotl-. 114-

742· 2211 .... "" H-e. A1:00 oaiii14·H7·1118.

878·2321 or I 1·2801.

1983 Cu- au,.,.. New

tirol,
- -·
·~· and
111.
pawwaloockl,
wlndowe.
tw.ll•

ataorlng. USOO. 114·992·
1101 .
.

1111 F~ Tempo. ellO cond,
loodod with ....... 18,800.
3:00 pm.
304-171·1331 -

Now buytng lhtl corn or ••
com. C.llforl&amp;tlltquottJt. A""'

City Form
2881.

s.~.

.....

114·441·

Wont to bory, Yellow l.aouot
pollld, con 304-171·2130.

1881 GrondAM lE. PS,PI.AC.
tilt, AM·FM - · dol..
wl...,., •• lE lnllrlor,
, 11.aoo mMM, exc cond. Mklng
18,200.00. 304-171·1141 of·
llr 4:00pm.

ltoreet for ul• ltaM.-clbred
end
c.•

y.,.,.....

w.........

Retlllered Guerter HoneBrood Moroo !tom t210 ta
t1000. Raglalend 1 yr. old
Sto- ·IMwro • , . _ In

\t4111nn .,.._.... ollltel. Cell
114-211·1822. .

84

Hay •

Gl'llln.

-"'I··

2 -··
1114 M....... T -. dt1tlmt.,.

e~~eebnt .concM~.

304-171·2731,
171·41N.

304·

1171 -tlac otatlon - n.
aood concl. teoo.oo. 304·.1711.
,.17.

1112 Me..-

8 0 0 - o f - - h...

-1:00pm.

Co"!!-

72

Coli 114--4344.

Tl..-y or """od
h.. W Coli I PM,
114-4441-31H.

--.. . . . e.-.

Truck• for S.la

1177 Ford pi+-... P·210.

A-'&lt;. v-•-..._.c.u

,llrga round

h., boloo w Mlo.
111. Col 114·182·7277.

114--1121.

Coli 114·37t·2711.

117111H 1700, 111-.,lopd.
, _ 2 .... - · 11.100, ...
- ....... aood1o.JONiol - ·
1171 4opd..Dao1ee '14
..........
,. .....

.

Pats for Sala

:i'::~"''14f.""

Niet 2 bedroqm •Pt. In Mlddt• ·
port. 1181 PI' month. Oopoon
end ,.....,ce requlftld. Dey

! I ' II I' II' ' I I

II

I'I

-

· Call

1117-Tno+. T.,, -E.
. . . . . . . . . . . . .000 .....
Ca8 114-112·1117 or 114441-2111. tiOOO.

1-....................
. . . . . . . .-'
-..

ConwtlW lepdo T..._ 1000 •
pl ..

CD 0 &lt;ll Who'1 1M lloll?
Tony Invites Mason to move
in after he~~~· kicked out of
his dorm .. ~;~
(!) l!ll Nova Nova reports on
latest research In the fight
against breast cancer. Q
!Ill D1121 Candid camti'l:
Thl Flrel 40 Yure Allan
~unt caloibrales the timeless
television program, whose
hidden cameras have ·
captured thousands of
humorous, poignant and
heartwarming moments ol
people in the act of being
lhtmselves.

Jason and Maggie reluctanlly
chaperone a high school
dance. Q
9:00 (JJ 700 Club
D (2) 1111 Hunllr Wounded
deaf man gives cryptic clues
In sign language before he
dies.

.,.lflop, liON IEYANI llfnlll· '
PIIIIEI, .11-. Ololo. 114- .
281·1130.
:
Aoaftng.

rem aElling, NcldOnl. ·

- . drywoll, •
........... Col Clary 114-388- '
11842.
)

(I)

RO.N'S Televl1lon Sarvlae .
tfDu• callt Dn RCA, O..r. ·•
OE . S-aling In Z..ltlo. CoN •

304·1)8·2398 or 114·441· ·
24114.
.
'
l'otty TrM Trtrnm101g. atum~.

roonoval. Coll-·171·1331. ~ · ,.

Rotary

or cMio tool ~ .
M... wdaaompiM:ed..ned.y.

:
'·

Pump Ul• and .-vtce. 304- ' .

811·3102

.

''"

"WHATS 'rtJLJR FAVORITE

.PROewvl(l CN THE PLJBLIC
BR()AI)OI6TI NEI SYSTEM+

! IX)N'r KNOW...THE:Y GOT
ANYTHIN6- WITH R060KIL.LER5
AND INQ&lt;!EOfEILE HULKS~

I

I

Starke Trw IfNI L..wn Servloe.

I OFTEN v.oNCla&lt; HOW
r EVER. \MQL.Jt-JD lP IN
A TO~ LIKE THIS.

tr

liWft CIN, landiCtplng. ltllll'lp
remov11 , 304-171-2142 ar

171-2803.

EK...,...ced '*"'~~"· excelent
......,_, qutltty wortL 't n•

82

....

BARNEY

with ......... 3Q4.

CON)ES
.PAW !I I GOT
JUST ENUFF
TIME TO ··

Plumbing
&amp; Halting

WASH DISHES,
MAKE TH' BED.

Of ii6iUINfalal

'

~;;;:;;::::;;:::
86

relives his escape with Ray
Luca lrom an alomic blast,

SUPPER

NIWI

10:30 (JJ Clllbrlt\' Chela
ro A l l - A - Puling
San•• (T)
l!ll Tonr lrown'a JOWMI
• Cll Hopn'l Het1:00 (JJ R....,lngton Steell Beg,
Borrow or Staele

Dl]) Cll D (I) 1111
l!ll-.

THE GRIZZWELLS~~t
·

II (I) tf11rtyaaoo011hlflii

• Clllllnnr HNI

e 1121

(JI Ugltllr llkll ol Bporll ·
(!)Sign Oil
l!llThe lr81n Work wtlll spiR

wtr·

· -· -

e (2) en- S1oty Pauli

10:20 (1) MOVIE: Dllllh With (Rf
(1 :33)

Ua•
I Ill cblulaa. Eadfnele ,~
froa. Rl-r Eloot~~ - · ,,.

178-1711.

10:00 (JJ Slnolghl Tllk

I[J) EVIIIInCfNIWI

SCRUBIH'
FLOOR AN' FIX

'

-- .. -..

I[J) Larry King Llvel

liD (!J)

Elactrlcal
• Aafrlgaration

:!..,eliclendll

Alan Thicke and Tracy
Scoggins co-host, from tha
Civic Center Theater In El
Paso. nt (LI

Michael and Brad make
funeral arra~ments for
thai( lather.
·
(!) ValcQ 6 lllane This
Modernist collage Includes
documentary footage and
interviews. (NRI r:;J

CARTEII 'I PWMBINO
AND HEAnNG
1 Cor. Fourth ooncl Pine
·
Clalloolla. Ohio
l'hooroa 814-W·MII or 114- ·
441·4477
84

1111 D1121 Mlu USA PllgHIII

ane~riC

lEE Ory - · N...n- 1oo
hanging. flnl ... lng. ond work. mMe ceilings look • •

m.:::;

D (I) MOOIIIIghllng

Herbert has a Casablanca
type lanlasy when A~nes
won't live with him.
(!) l!ll Frontline Exp ore
legal and moral iSSIHIII of
ramOY.al lrom life support
system.

(I)

brain patients reveBls
diYIIIon of functions In brain.

.
•,

(JI~(L)
(I)~

• (I) iiiiNigiDttillllalnell Q
1111 M~g~~~~~~ P.l.
iiJ 8pofts Tonlallt
• • 'DIIt.-.cl'l' Cl8 Late
Night A friend of Ch{lstina'l
comes to her lor help when
accueed of murder.

1111 ..... II I It nt

Ill...,.__ _,___

........... Cal., .......

1---·.,.................. ,..

APARTMENTS, . . - -ntandGalllpo111. 114-441·U21.

-

.l't.

UH.

2bod_,fumloodop~,mond

1024.

1 - Clu FIR -

no

Two and OM:bedioom fumhlbed

-

.'J -

coll304-171·3100.

OF SPIRIT WE HAVE., .

7J

V1111a

i

4

W.D.

i7

UphOiltary

~llta phobia about winning~:._

r

•m T•td

JUST WAIT 'TIL
NEXT ·'i'EAR !

1-l·A

•Jlo·

WFm'

EAST

•a

•lu

.QJ98

In today's deal the principle of taking advantage of favorable vulnerabilIty Is illustrated by South's very weak
jump overcall to two spades. His part·
ner bad him c:ovel'l!!l and quickly bid
1ame. It Wl1l a nice coatract, but
watch bow South chopped up the play.
The deuce of diamondS was an obvious
:anJ.',:OO· Declarer .won dummy's ace,
A·K of hearts while shedding a
diamond, and led a club. East woa the
king and played two diamoads, on
wblch West discarded two hearts. [)e.
clarer ruffed the sec:oad diamond with
the spade 10. Another club was played
and East toot the ace to play still another red card. Declarer ruffed with
bla jack, ruffed bla last club In dummy
with the spade deuce, and cashed the
A-Q of spades. That left the lead in
dummy with declarer holding the K· 8
of spades. West bad no more red cards
but still bad the i1lne of spades, which
to take a trick when declarer tried
to get off duminy by rulfing.
. So how can declarer avoid this un·
happy result? Don't even grab your
bat - it's not that ear~akinfl. After

l

.10763
tKQJt09
tAKI

• 2 .
.Q9763

SOUTH
.KJIOI75

•s

+176
+542
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

Pus
Pus

,.

Nor..

Eul

4•

Pus

Opening lead:

+2

taking the A-K of hearts, declarer
should simply ruff a heart with a low
spade. He C8!J then prQCeed about his
business in the club suit, but the crucial end position, after he has taken
the A·Q of trumps in dummy, will lind
declarer with only one remaining
spade - the king, which takes the lOth
trick. West still wins bla spade 9, but
too late.

6l~1M~td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
'38 Subsl!1 Recording
quently
medium
39 "Can you
5 "Bonanza"
change-?"
role
DOWN

9 oe.ll!ade"

1 Rooming-

tO "GISelle,

sign
2 Ancient
market·
I
house

e.g.

12 Bank
trans-

Yeaterday'a Auwer

Pace

action

13 Withstand
14 Ending for
north
or south
15 Ruddy

16 Disease
of sheep

17 Ragged
19 Move

almlessly
(about)

. 20 Soft

:

:::.~k

adverb

11

25 Nantes'

Lingerie

.rtver

· item
15 Take

27 Stem
composer,
a
opposite
W.C. break
28 Scandi6 - Glory
18 Austnlian
navian
7 Fighting
marsupial 29 Unseason·
(sl.)
21 4 gills
ed
8 Arranged
2Z Vesture 34 Distaff
in sequence 23 English
bUMy
10 Actor
river
35 Extinct
Noah
24
bird
5 Blues

21 Sympathy

22 "True-"
23 Baseball
team
24 History

s~;:~s-;t.)

28
26Weep

27 Working
on mall
30Hawalian

br+-+-f

baking
pit

31 Common

gift '
32 Rocky
peak

33 Return

addressee

35 "Less

Is- "
36 Bls!
37 English
river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:

811 .

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

One'Iftter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
3·1 ·

P.l. Bllllcet

-

P Y I D

GTQG

L P 8 D W

GVDDC
SQKFTG
.)

ADIHDMD

F

v·p

XC

. P KG

p 8

F DG

KCKQIIW

P B

.

'

Q

'

IHLA.-P . Q .

AQGGHCGQ

YeeterdaJ'a Ceyptoqaote: TRUE FRIENDSHIP IS

2 I ... ~

IJKE SOUND HEALTH; THE VALUE OF IT IS SELDOM
KNOWN UNTIL IT IS LOST. - CHARLES C. COLTON

.........

'
,•

•

1o1 ""'""-12Tho........
'T' ,......
·Ciil
104· 171·4 14 for tr 11

••• u•r•• U,.

"I dreamt I was a compulsive gambler

0

10.000

.-,
-·1111. fia':f' Coiii14... AM·
I'M·Cut.
IIIU40

---.-'MY'

51-lOW 'EM W~AT

..................... -.Call

........
- -or·304·
w. 773.
v...
104-112•1217

....room. Mtelllwsd. ate..
- · ........ 304-171·1381.

- ea..

Good

NOaTII
.AQ2
.AKtz
+A54S

Anticipating
the end position

~':'.l.2yllnl

G1111ar11 Hauling .:

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

BRIDGE

(!J) lalp
• (%) ~ ConiiiCIIon
11:30DI]) !Ill Tonlglll8how

c.n

2 · SR. horne fvr - ·
lot. Adulto . only. llof.
Dap. No pole. Cal 114-117·
7743.
-

rap . ~;~

,e:ol:jJ) iiiiA illolt-· .
'
'
1:30'(J) Lael FrontiW
Cll D (I) Qrowtng Paint

2 •~'~ · mobllehomt, *171amo.
Farm for rent. f1 SO 1 mo. No

...... c - . . woloomo.
114-211·1171.

a murder

Soklonon'l Mlnu (PG13}
(1 :401

. 1802 - '

Ma~oclc's

Clydl (POl (1:511

T.- 1172 Fonl M_,... ond rtor. • - r . l'"!Nrina. thoro
1171 Pontiac, Yentt.aN for ~tn~H
..... b
itanll;· free Mtimatee
eUICimltk: trilcti:. PhDne 304oall-·178·7411.
411·1042.
I

114-441-4711 . .

l!ll Matlock

brainy nephew mus1
oulol'l'an a co~ut8r to beat

D Cll MOVIE: King

·d
-to
n_
d
on
_....
_
11000. 11om. Call 114·882·
2NI.

CR088.80N8

I

e (2)

1R1 MOVIE: lomll and

t800. 1171 lluor. R lutiiJfltlan. I tn. Htt. new

111ti luldo C.ntury, 4 ·
1a.ooo
E _ , oonolltlon. Call 1149112·1213 .. 114-112·1311.

I

I[J PtlmiNIWI

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

-·. .--In'.

e

'

..... 114-742·2001.

81

• 1121 !Ill "-tdyl Q
(!J) lltont1y Miller
Cll WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 (1) Sanford and Son
1:00 (JJ ¢1011bow The Little
Soldier

A~ouf'JD HE~E '
•
AGAIN.

1H111 fl. Co•oh"*' C.m,.,
2 tih roonw, air

I ..IT,_ 1171 Toyo11 CO·
rolo, 1171 Do- 210, air,
extll aood oondhlon.
Colt 4-441·1110.

I[J) Croaafl,.

)AI P tiE:: WM GLAD
\o Set= :I.' , cout..D .
HOf.P AN ' opiNION, ·.
AND :r: SttoVLD T~Y .

J. FLODG~E
__.,
PRE5.

1971 31 ft. TrotllcMa T..Trrtlar with tip 0t11. air, big both.
-- - - ·tbodroom.
o l l l l. Clood
tHOOcondl.. CoH ,
114-118-4340.

••001!·

. D(I)Judgl
1111 Wheel of Fonu110 Q

~E

79 Motors Home•
&amp; Campers

Granny always sa
. id it is easy to seve lace. Afl you have to
do IS keep the lower part CLOSED.

By James Jacoby

7:30 D I]) Cll Hollywood
SqUirei
(JI NHL Hock1y

FRANK AND ERNEST

1117. Nine taflvl,

1N1AMC8plrtt,4oyt.,4opd..
...., ttree. •1100. 1hl Mu•
"'!''I.~.. loll o f -........
Call 114-441·&lt;14112.

........
- Elolito IT'o on

.

•&lt;DM"A'S"H

•~. 1300omo. Call814·441·

c-.

home, 11151
Mo-. 2 eA. ltiOC). Cal

R

ii$ Cheers

77

4124.

Coli 814·441·4311 or 304171·f710. 121110· 1ft ~lro.

motNie

·871· 7431.

nlohod. Poy ""ly One utility. AR
Metric. 2 mUtt from town. Otp.

1bl0, 2 8R ., unfuml...od. HoH
m11o .,... Hob• Moclical

32 Mobil• Homes
for Sal•

A

1111 NIWII
I[J) Maneylln•
!IIIDI 1111- Df Fortune

~
~ 1171 .

Joap truck. coD

· v.,oood-. 13300.
c.II14·..,-·Z217.

Ntw electric Hotpolnt dryar for

Buildint Meterial•
Block. rick. tewet" pipet, wlnPICKENS USED FURNITURE. dowl, llntelt. etc. Clat.lde Wlnled1, dNIMI'I, chat, dlnnttte. · ~ers . Rio Grande, 0 . Cell 114241-1121.
coucht, chalrt, odd chelrs, r•
frltl....-ton, ltOvet, • misc.

w..~ V·l

Oovom._.H_frorni1 . [U

69 For Sale or Trade.

SCRAM-lETS A,NSWERS
Belief- Issue - Vocal - Zodiac - CLOSED

(2) PM MagaziM

NlwaHour (1 :00)

Rod Hot borD!nal Drug .........
CIN, boetl. P1enM repo'd. lur-

· --171·4112.

Nelda
114-441·714&amp;.

Town Staele

Clll!-lnment Tonight

•• 1'1•·

Fruit
Vegetables

F'"- -

7:00 (JJ R"'**ggon • - Small

1114 -.:ury lynx 08. 2 dr.,
PS., P8, AC. MIIOic blooo. 4

Incl.,_ Gool1or Lo.otwll 8ru·
nloordla Muoio 114·441·0117
orJolfW-.. I n - Llmlt1d

8:35 ID Corol Buntin

(JIS~(LI

1111tn Ford E~ 2 dr.
111101 h+ 4 ""': v
oood
Condllloro. Coiii14-Ji'll171. ·

............ haiGI'bl* 4

107~ .

(!J) WKRP In Cine,_

•m To:oo Clolt tor eomtott

. D (I) People'a Court
(!) l!ll M8CNIII/ IAh,.r

-...... .... Interior
e nl'lnt. Cell $04-.a71-7741

..... 304·871·2130 .

.---:---+..,----::-.,.t:-,

l!llllody Ellcttlc
I[J) In- Politico ' "

1111 YW .Iotta Cll. _ ,, iolr,
AM·PM·C.u, 10 ....... ! .....
""""· tiiOO. c.n 114·112·
2222-clop. 441·7209 ......

c"''*·

(n.WI 120.00. Ntw quttn liN

175·7431.

/

0

As a kid I was taught that there
two kinds ol losers. The
, oA•oA losers, and the ones who

Ill e111 CIS.._

1110 ,....... . . . , . _ '

D

&amp;~arrolS. 2
1112 Olda.
dr.. 2.1-olloyl., auto .. JOt, JOt. air.
c:nolla - . . . . till. AM·PM·
c.u.
ee.ooo
t3411. c.1
114-4441-1117, ,

· Musical
lnetrumante

Firewood. f20.00 pick up k»td,
no delivtriet, 304-875-7711 .
83
Livestock
' 'Nuratmllt" nurse lhHe abe 7 , _ _...,._ _.;..__ _ __

wat..- beclthtett •11.00. 304-

I

1NI Wogon, 14100Fintl. Cal 814-441-1174.

R1gl lliitld CoeUr 1penW .....

82 Wanted to Buy

SURPLUS DENIM·. Carhart,
Rental Ck)thlng. HIIIYY new
work clothtng, bootttllwln• at
rettontble pricn. PoUtlCII Ad·
vertltlng Imprinted a.,.lalltiM. .
Sam Somerville'•· Old Rt. 21 junctlon lnd8Pinden• Road.
Eut Ravenawoad, Fri. Set. S"n;
noon·S:oo·.,m. 3()4..273-HSI.

l!ll Owl TV C
I[J) lhow81z "Todey
(!J) , _ of Llll

Cll D(I)ABC-~
(!) Nightly luolnnl Rotport

....,....

1171 PlyiMUth. t328. 1181
Do- '14 - ,.,.•..,.. f1478.
CoH 114-387-0141 .

Now

a

3187.

(JI SpottiLOOII (T)

. D &lt;D Hooppy Day•
8:05 (I) Allcl
8i30 .I]) l!ll NBC Nightly Nlwl

,.
.
· 4 - -. --bulh .
- -. . OM - · ·- o n· •
_,.~a
ea.... ...,.. ·
or-M. C.II14·371' 2220or.
304-171-4230.

71 Auto's For Sale

Oraganw ~ cett.y Kennel.
CPA Hlmatayon, and
8 1 - k - . AKC Chow
IMtnln Call 114-441·:1844
1ft.- 7PM

Home for Nil, Gallipolis Ferry, 4 , 2 BR . trailer with ••PM'IdO ttvlnt

bec:lroo..,, four car g1r1g1,
t38,1500.00. 304 -471-5184.

MR. CAPTAIN EASY,
PLEASE PON' T LET THEM
TAK! lr\E. l WANT TO HELP
FINP liN PARENTS!

~.=·:-:;:";-;;·::;=====:;:=========::~ olon1,
""-.,.,kilo
1oo CIM
~llel'drtwe
to 310 Turbo. 2 wfMII

114-982-2311 . WHkondo814H2-2109.

114·192·2353.

ch~

130. CaoloSK-1 Ktoylloord, IIC),
OutAr251nchT.V. e110. a...
t;ack pleyer. eartrtd• end
carrier t60. mlui. 1315. Negoti-

p••.

• (I) all • 1121

(!)Dr. Who: A~of the
I

Tr11•1' I ll
Ulld-ltiartingltlll.u·
'

f

chi Boombo". f75, Sot.andllian.
Boombox, f20, OtympiceMctrlo
t&gt;fpBuniter, t,IO. Seert Lobo,

1976 lnttrnttlonel 6&amp;
18nger school-Church bua. C.n
bt conv.n:ed to camper. V811Y
good condition. Sundtrd tl'llnt.
Alto Hlling chur9h tent. Atklnv
prlee 11100. Cell 614-182-

• (2) Cll
iiJINiwl

Cybltllllll

.'

Auto Parts
Accassoriee

.......

J· l

Btlm• Su•phont, t271. Hila·

One floor model 21" tellvitlon.
Excel. cond. tZOO. Call 1114-

Coli 81 4-4411-3e49.

j

(lj In- 1M POA T_.

Pomeroy, Ohio. 114·982·1411.

tt 1300. 6 pc. dinlna room
IUitet•ltlrtlng It t226. 7 pC.
dining room tulte-f360 .
RecUnert·tterting at t156. N1w
Phllco 28" coklrTV-f460 . I pc.
living room •ui,ttt-e400 .
Ctrpllt·.Urtlnt It •• 1 yd.
Kitchen •
athroom vinyl
linoleum- tltrting at t4.99 a yd.
lnetallatlon a fintnclnv
IVtMable,
.
Mollohan Furniture
403 4th. Aw .·KMA
G•lllpolla, Ohlo-8 14-4411· 7444.

Downtown -ground floor tptrt·
4 rmt .. b1th • b...m.nt.
Newty deconttd. Off 11r"'
J)llrkina. For more infor. can

Furnllh.cl ept.·nice loeetfon In
city. All utiNtitl fumlthed. Mutt
hwe .-.f. &amp; dep. Ctll 01 4 · 441·

I~

8:00 (JJ Cruy 1.1111 1 I'Oli Hearing
' Is l!llitYing

•
I
•

-~-----,.
,'

114-4411.73)3.

room tuitet-ltuting

m~r~t .

· .Coli 114·440·1250.

&amp;

Computer IBM PC JuniOr plua
printer. Auorttd toftwlre. CaH

J &amp; S FURNITURE
(Formally Parson'• Furniture)
14115 Eallern Ave.
Uvlng room tultet from 1179 •
up. Bedroom auittl f489 .8&amp; &amp;
up. Compl .. e mlcroweve ttiAdt
139.96 &amp; up.
·
Com• In and meet the new
OwnBn.

Antique 3 pc. Bedroom tuitt.

-

w.d: C.l i14·248·

2100.

Valley Furnllura
New and uNCI furniture and
•PPiictneet. Call 114-448·
75,2. Houn 9-5.

44$-2102.

wetkd.,..

78

able. Col1 &amp;14·849· 27tl.

441·7101. I AM ·2 PM .

4119.

Priced to 1111 fttt, owner moving ·
for Rant
out of tlttt. 3 bedroom houM
with 7 acrtt in l.euritl Cliff.
Olthw..her , refrlget'Mor. ttove.
wattler, dryer lncludltd. Call 21A .. water, aewagafurnlthtd.
leautttul river view. No city
614-992-8310 eft• 8:00pm.
ttxee. Fott•' • Mobile Home
Por)l. Call 014-441·1102.
S~clous 7 room hou... 1 'Ia
btth. 770 Ath St. Middleport.
Ohio. Quick pot..alon. C.ll Nttr Weterloo. 2, lA . t125 I
mo. Adultl. Garden apot. Ref. •
614· 892-6714.
7 roomt. 3 bedroom, garage,
excalhint location. meny eJIItr...
locattd in Middleport. Ohio,

On• and two·bedroom ap•rt-

2325.

304·878· 8801·d.... 114·441·

n .ooo

3117.

m•ta for IHtt. Stove and
refrig. .tor fumlahed. t200 U21 ,_, month. Referenc11
and depolit ftqulred. Call 4J14-..e-4249, 446-4421 or 448·

R1:111,!1 s

FOR SAlE OR RENT: 3 eR.
house with au.ched g•av•
central tlr -NO PETS- Depotit.
reference raquired . 39 Chilli·
cothe Rd. Call 614· 448· 2583
9· 6 dtilv.

&amp; Acreage

Sun. •
5182.

0322.

Call 114·441·7021.
36 Lote

WMhers, dryert, refrlgerators,
reng11. Sktggt Appliance•,
Upper River Rd . bnlde Stone
Crht Motel. 114-441-7398.

Sot.. and chairs priced frOm

8usin881
Buildings

Min\-Ftrm lor leaH, 14 tcr ...
small bam. pond, ana mile plua
from downtown , 2 or 3 bedrooms, centtl tir cond, city
weter. minimum 1 VHr 11111.
t4&amp;0.00 per month, evelltble
Mtroh 1. clll 304-676·6999.

M..nord• -lh Shoc&gt;·J,.e, Weet of Rodney. Fabric by
the yard. O.Utlng - b y tho
b-u. Qultdng frtmet • rd1.
Houro· 10 AM · I PM Cloaod·

t'l

thru

44

New completely furnithed
tp•rtment • mobile home In
city. Adults only. Ptrldng. Ctll

through tl1e mtll until you htvt
irivutigtted tht offering.

n ..

Uving_room IUitH· e191· fl98 .
Bunk Welt with bedding· f1 98.
Full 11.18 m1ttren 6 tound1tlon · HALF PRICEI Flethlng errow
ri• •2991Ughted, ftOft-errow
•tertlng - t99 . Recliners
191 Un htod 12491 Fmnlno- t88.
lette,..l S.. ocally. C. II todayl
USED- Btd~. dte~MI'I, bedroom
FOctOfy: 1 18001 423·01 13,
tuite• , t198 -t299 . Detkl,
anytime.
wringer w..h.-. a camptett line
of uledi furniture.
12 ft. Combinaiion counter·
NEW· WBI..rn boott· t30.
/ detk, ·walnut 'wood grain, for•
Workbooh •1a • tip. (Stttl 6
mica cOvered. C.ll 814·441·
lOft-·· Coli 114·441·3169.

304·882· 3287 or 304· 773·
1024.

pm .

30 acre fum: Mot~Y tillable.
Ne• Rio Gt~ndt . Pond, btmt,
oad home. Call 814-24&amp;-

PliC41.

61 Household Goode

· SWAIN
AUCnON &amp; FURNITURE &amp;2
No ptU. Rtf.-.ncte • depotlt ONvto St., Clelllpolla.
NEW· I pc. wood group- t391 .
........... C.l1114-44&amp;·3171 .

2518. E.O.H.

Professional
S~rvices

:M"

lnMI, nttr.te of toda.
nltn•. • rebbit • dog rtptla.nt.
Colt I14-388·H88 for 1atoot

2 IR . mobill home fully fur"'lhed. &amp;elltm Ave. Water and
...., _,.ld. •221. Aduttt only.

171·.6 104.

304· 876· 3030 or 871·3431 .

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommend• th't t you
do butinett with people you
know, tnd NOT t o send money

31

bulldl,g, good locitlon, terge
lots, 200 ft ro.d trontag ..

Call. 114·441-0127 altar 2 PM .

1984 Skyline, 14JII70, 3 btd·
room . bath , woodttove ,

I NOTICE I

Re a l

For ••••• or 1111. lai'QibutinHt

GOOD USED APPliANCE&amp;

New 3 bedrodm mobile home.
tldd-'on roomt. 1 acre lot. ltrve
porch, outbuilding, carport.
Located cion to dam ~te. Phone

8usina11
Opportunity

--orogo pioll·•p lood·t21, you
1
35
'- ' '
dollw...t loco!, c.n
814-441·1115.
lldwoH C. ... •--" Sto,. Nhencm- - r-.-m-1• ~ ··• ~·
·~
a-don.,.
along with blood

Mt'f i:ll.illii iSC

a 3 BR. mobllehomMfor,.nt.

3008.

113,100.00. Coli 304·1751367 - . 1:00 ond 7:00
F1nanwl

cond. eon 114-371·2280.
Firewood- -~--... L---·--.... Av-

cal1304·343·1811 .

ReloCdng. need to Mil 1184

14a70 lhllltl. 3 - . .... 2

23

.2

.

Iii nal. fllh ........
' ........ hood.
~lights. pump and rnor.. Good

Relltaurent for Inn or rent 011
E..tem Aw. FOr more Inform.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

for Sale

Nt~

For Laa1a

304·171-1431.

32 Mobile Homa1
12

49

l

SWIMMING POOlS· 1111
ORDER NOW • PAY LATER

Treller _lott, At. 1 Locutt Ro1d.
• • of K 6 K 'Mobile Home•."

, .

D--

Colt 114·448·8280

304-171·3072.

AVON • All areae., Call MarilY n

EVENING

1117 210 K
21 T - 4 :
. . whaoter. f1SOO. 114·112· ,
7147.

Brond . _ WIOddlng
12. Never uMd. T,.._ Lot
1 &amp;-Johnlof''l Mobile Harne.

WOlD

GAM I

8

TUES., MARCH 1

:

on
ca.

1 - 814·N1 ·~311 .

retundaiM) Ext. B· 112 2. 24 htt.

t100l00 p• tithl. Wrl_te : PASE

- . . a:oo. 114-742~1.

Big 3 8R . lwm loullt
your lot, t1 e. 911 tnd up,

Space lor unall tl'lillrl. All
hoolc· ups. Cebie. Allo efficiency
roornt. air Md cable. M"on,

&amp;m aull.m mctfteY• In hom.

8

m,
1111 ....... DeuiiJI L ...... .
..... I !IUiiM ... [''it·. Cal '

Cal-'a Ulld Tiro tllop. Ow&lt;
1.000-.-12.13, 14,11,
11, 11.1.
At. 211.
Catri14·211-UI1 .

Colt 114-NI·43H !tom 1:00.
9:00 pm. w oppolrlcmont.

Clot poid lor ..... lng booul

Motorcyclu

~ 1~~M~ moo.:

84 Mlac. ~archandiM

A\lctionHr h iring part•tlme
cMrU. oaehitre Md .........

waa~ -304·882-2141.

Television
Viewing

l'loomt far rent. R-zetor.
nMcucucwe, lhower, c
T.V.•

7141.

21

MM:h 1,1988

Ohio

'

"

·''

·I

.,

..

''

�March 1' 1988

Ohio

ELBERFELDS

NOW
fJOINS

A CH HO E

MOC player
of the year ·

ON/

GIVE YOUI HOME A NEW LOOI Will NEW
WALLPAPER, FLOOR COVERING OIIEPLACE
THAT OLD FURNITURE•

Ohio
Lottery
· "Jhiiy Nwnhet
984
Pick4
9351

Page 3

Rein tou,lgllt. Low In upper
308. Rain likely Thursday.
mch&amp; near te.

•

LLPAP
.
SALE

RCA SALE .

..

ALL SETS ARE ON SALE.
HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF
THE GREAT VAI,.UES.
'
.
13" COLOR TV .......!!!.~!.~~.. qnly S279

at y
enttne
Senate OKs drunk driving, no smoking bills

Now' a 8 great time to hang
paper. We have • huge eaaort·
men~ of printa • .tripaa end tee·
turea to fit every decor. Buy
end take

.

S339
3 CABINET STYLES
.
.
. $
25" COLOLCONSOLE TV .............. Only 499
R(A lffFRA·RED REMOTE VCR ........ Only $2 79

By LEE LEON!\RD
and forwarded to the Selll!te
UPI Stateboue' Be~rter
legislation expanding the list of
COLlil.lBtiS, Ohio !UP!)
persons required to report known
Tbe Ohio Senate Is trying to cut · or suspected chUd abuse or .
down on the number of drunken
neglect.
drivers on Ohio highways and to
The Ignition Interlock bill,
discourage smoking by high
sponsored by Rep. Ronald Mottl,
school students.
D·Parma, also was passed 31-2.
The Senate voted Tuesday to
It requires motorists convicted
allow motorists convicted of of DWI to prove their sobriety
·druQken driving to use an lgnl· each time they start their car by
· tion .Interlock systtem as · a
blowing Into a tube hooked to a
condition for driving their cars device measuring their blood
while on probation.
alcohol content. If they register
Senators also passed, 31·2, and
over the 0.10 percent legal limit,
sept to the House a bill forbidding
their car wlll not start.
school pupl!s to smoke or use
"This Is a major tool fOr
snuff or chewing tobacco on
municipal courts to use In keep·
school property.
lng drunken drivers off our
MeanwhUe, the House adopted streets," said Sen. GarySuhadol·

SPECIAL FINANCING•
•No Down Payment
•No Payments For 90 Daya
•No Finance Charge·for 90 Days ·
'TO QUALIFIED APPUCANTS

SOMMA

Long Bottom news .notes
By Melody Roberts
The Long Bottom Community
Association has changed Its
· regUlar meting night from the
las t Wednesday of each month to ·
the last Tuesday of each
month,7:30 p.m:
Mr. and Mrs . Glen Lawson
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Hauber a nd Melody
Roberts.
Roberta Larkins, Columbus,
visited here recently with her
parents, Mr. and Mr. Robert
Larkins.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Stanley Wells and

Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Ballard are
vacationing In Florida.
Howard Lawrence Is a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Judy Holter Is recuperating
after having been hospitalized.
Mrs. Georgia Mount of Hun-.
tington Is now at her Long
Bottom summer home.
The Long Bottom Senior Citizens meet on the second and
fourth Tuesday of every month at
. the community building. On the
fourth Tuesday a free blood
pressure clinic Is held from 10
a.m. until noon.

WATERBEDS

VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING
Quality Armstrong and Con·

REG. 5499.00 TWIN SET ...... 5439
REG. 5699.00 FULL SET ....... S$49
REG. 5799.00 QUEEN SET ... ss
REG, 5899.00 KIN.G SET ...... S699

golaum vinyl floor covering.
12 ft. width ..Large assortment
of patterns and colors.

SALE

nlll, R-Parma Heights, the floor Celeste.
manager of the bill.
Sen . David Hobson , R ·
Suhadolnlk said 25 judges In Springfield, said the no-smoking
Ohio already are permitting use bill Is to "discourage Ohio school
of the Interlock device as a children · from taking up
condition of probation, and that smoking.
Mothers Against Drunk Drivers
Hobson said three-fourths of
supports the bill.
. adults who smoke began the
But Sen. Bell Gaeth, R· habit before high school gradua·
Defiance, said most of those lion, and that the 20 percent of
convicted of DWI would not be school districts that permit
able to afford the $500 price tag of smoking . In de$1gnated areas
the bre•thalyzlng device. "It have more smokers than those
hasn't really been proven to that ban smoking.
work," he said. "I think It's sort
The senator S!ild Texas and
of crazy."
California have smlllar prohlbl·
The bill was returned to the lions, and have seen an accomHouse for concurrence In Senate panying decline In drug use.
Senate Minority Leader Harry
changes, but silon will be on Its
way to the desk qf Gov. Richard Meshel, D-Youngstown, a heavy

conference to be held in April was
discussed.
Ann Colburn had devotions and
also provided the traveling prize
which was won by Peggy Houda·
shell. Others attending were
Linda Broderick , Bonnie Scott,
Peggy Harris, Helen Blackston,
Clarice Kennedy, and Becky
Broderick. The group went to the
Pizza Hut for refreshments,

s

$ ~~YD.

Anemia set as topic
of senior health meet
presented by Holzer
"Anemia " (a ll types ) will be from 1977-1979.
the subjec t of the Marc h series of
He r eceived a fellowship in He·'
Heath Maintenance programs matology/Oncology at the Medl·
sppnsored jointly by Holze r Med· cal Collegle of Ohio In Toledo
lea l Center and Hol.zer Clinic de· from 1979-1981 and was a clinical
signed for commu nity residents Instructor In Hematologyi Oncol·
who a re age 55 and over.
ogy in the Department of Inter·
Featured speaker at Thurs· nal Medicine at the Medical Col·
day 's program for Meigs County lege of Ohio In Toledo from 1981·
Senior citizens will be Mark A. 1982, before joining Holzer Clinic
' Walker, M.D .. member of the In August 1982.
Holzer Cli nic and medical staff
He is a member of the Ameri·
of Holzer Medica l Center spec!· can Medical Association, the
allzi ng in Internal Medicine and Ohio State Medical Association
oncology.
a nd Is a Diplomate on the Amerl·
This month' s progra m Is sche· can Board of Internal Medicine
duled for Thu rsday afternoon, and t he American Board of Medi·
March 3, at 1 p.m. at the Senior. cal Oncology, as well as a mem·
Citizens Center located on Mulb· ber of the Gallla County Medical
er ry He ights in Pomeroy.
Society.
Dr. Walker, a native of C!ncln ·
Making the arrangements on
nati. Ohio, recei ved his BS from behalf of the hospital and clinic
Marietta College In 1972. He then for this community Information
entered the University of Cincln · program Is Mary Harrison, R.N .. ·
nat! College of medic ine, gra - · staff development coordinator at
duating in 1976. He did his inter· . the hospital, along with Alice
nal medicine residency a t the cWamsley, director of the Meigs
. Medical College oiOhlo In Toledo County Senior Citizens.

ASSORTED SIZES, COLORS AND STYLES $
.

j

All' TABLE LAMPS .~

MACHINE WASHABLE

20°/o OFF
BRASS PLATED

FLOOR LAMPS

$5777

HEADBOARDS

SPECIAL

Reg•.S4~.00 TWIN ......Sale S38
Reg. 562.00 FULL ....;...Sale S48
Reg. S69.00 QUEEN ....Sale S58

New Shipment

METAL CABINETS

Great for kitchens. basements, badrooma
and extra storage.
White and Almond ena"1al finish .
BASE CABINETS, CHINA CABINETS, UTILITY .
CABINETS and WARDROBES

Reg. S209.00

Sl

DRAPERY &amp;
CURTAIN SALE
Our entire stock
curtains

Twin, full, Queen,

ORTHO LUX

10 YR. WARRANTY
SET ..................................~.... SJ99

FULL SIZE
QUEEN SIZE SET

$399

~

WHIRLPO
SALE.

ALL WHIRLPOOL
APPLIANCES ARE
INCLUDED
•WASHERS
•DISHWA$HERS
•DRYERS
•ELECTRIC RANGES
*REFRIGERATORS •GAS RANGES
•MICROWAVE

EPER

sn ............................

:.l1 •.,., .

LOW, LOW ·PRICES
SOLID OAK - Rtg. S35UO

$

·

GOSSIP
IENCH
•••••••
sAu
.
299
With peddecl .-t. From the Keepaaka collection of

COMPLETED TRAINING- These studentS completed traiDlilg
1n the nunlng assistant procram offered by the Gallla-JaekloaVInton JVSD Adult Division at Buckeye mu. Career Center.
seated In the front row are (L toR) Shirley Northup of Gautpelll,
Michelle Steiner of Rio Grande, Jonelta Gilmore of GaWpoU.,
instructor Mary Dee!, Dlaae Wallace of Oal mo, U1111 Kaulf of
· Middleport and Karen Reed of Wellllton. StandiDg are Dawn mu
of Crown clty, Anna King of GaiUpoU., Nucy French of Oak HID,
Karen Blazer of VIDion, Sherlynn Tripp of BldweU, Sue LJUie of
Middleport, and Jackie F1elde of Hartford, W. V~. .

Pulaski Fumltura.

..•

.+

•'·
'~

~

-...

·•.•,

••
•.
•.'

....,
•
'.
.,

SAVE

fa'O~ PREMIER
COMFORT S99 EA.
All SIZES-

'

'
~·
'•..

your houR.

20°/o

''•
"',
.•.
..

.

and driperiea is included in thi•
· ..,• . Huge auortmentofstyles
and colors for every room in

SERTA SALE

~·~PERFECT

~

White enamel twin size
daybed. Link springs
included.

of

20°/o OFF

FULL SIZE

AYBED

QUALITY FURNITURE SALE

AU IOIIINE aCUNEIS -.25"/o OFF
All . . . 100M TMIB .....nor. Off
AU GUN CAIINITS ........... 2$"f. OFF
ML IIIDIOCIM sums.-.-2sor. Off

26 Cento

NOWIPIIPW

smoker, opposed the bill, saying
It would be unenforceable. He
particularly objected to a section
which prohibits the J)ossesslon of
cigarettes or other tobacco pro·
ducts by pupils on sChool grounds
or at any school activity, pointing
out this would apply at football
games.
Sen. Eugene Branstool, D·
Utica, lost26-7 on an amendment
which would have toughened the
bill further by forbidding smok·
lng by anyone; Including
teachers and custodians, Inside
school buildings.
Senators shouted down a prop·
osal by Sen. Lee Fisher, D·
Shaker Heights, giving school
districts the optionor designating

smoking and non-smoking areas
for teachers, employees and
visitors.
The child abuse reporting bill
cleared the House on a 71·21 vote.
Sponsored by Rep. Francine
Panehal , D-Cleveland, It adds
paramedics. emergency medical
technicians, medical examiners,
child-care staff members and .
volunteers In shelters for victims
of domestic violence or nursing
homes to the list of who must
report suspected abuse.
Rep. Joan Lawrence, R ·
Galena, opposed the bill because
she thought the expansion was
too broad.
" II 's hard ior professionals to
Continued on page 5

.are resolved, but he declined to was "politically motivated' ' by
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
The matter of a Jeff~rson · doso.
the adveriie publicity about lm·
.Crossrldge sought permission ported trash.
County. Ohio, landfill receiving
from the state to Import up to
out-of-state tras]). shipments has
The temporary restraining
1
2,000 tons of garbage a day from · order was denied, and argu.
been tossed back ·to the state of
Bergen County, N.J., shipping It . ments were heard last Friday on
Olllo.
by
ran to the 1,000-acre landfill in the request for a permanent
U.S. District Judge James
Jefferson
.County, near the state Injunction.
Graham refused Tuesday to take
.
border.
jurisdiction In a case Involving
The judge held that the state of
EPA Director Richard Shank Ohio has an "overriding Inter·
Crossrldge Inc., the landfill aeek·
lng an Injunction agalnsttheOIIIo denied the permit Feb. 12 on est" in . the disposal of solid
Environmental Protection grounds It would result In "a waste. "The disposal of solid
Agency.
· significant adverse social, eco· waste is a matter of substantial
nomic and environmental lm· public concern ," he wrote in his
. The Ohio EPA has denied
pact"
on .the Steubenville area.
order.
·
·
' Crossrldge permission to accept
Shan]f.
said
the
company
was
garbage from New Jwuy.
,
Graham cited federal court
Graham laid Crossrldge has Unable to ensure that the baled precedents In Michigan and
aCiequate legal remedies within trash would be exclusively com- Maryland In handing back the
the state environmental protec· posed of laWfully disposable entire matter to the state and
tl(!n machinery and the state's waste.
dismissing Crossrldge's request.
Requesting a temporary res· He said federal courts tradition·
appeals courts. He could have
retained jurisdiction to handle training order, Crossrldge said ally do not Interfere with state
Crossridge's constitutional com· Its . constitutional rights were courts In land ·use policy
plaint after the state questions violated, and that EPA's action matters . .

REG. 6.99 RUGS ..................................................................Sale $5.59
REG. sa.99 RUGS·...................~ ....................·.......................... Sale S7 ~ 19.
REG. s12.99 RUGS ...............................,,.....................~.-·.··· $al.e_S10.39
REG•. s19.99 RUG$ ........ ~............,........................................ Sale. s·15.99

cLAMP SALE

Mu(11medie Inc.

Federal judge dismisses
landfill owner's petition

CCL conduas recent meeting
Plans for husbands' night to be
held on March l7 were made
when the Middleport Child Con·
servation League met recently a l
the Mason Bowling Lanes .
The group enjoyed an evening
of bowling and then returned to
the Pizza Hut for the business
meeting. Nancy Mortis presided
at the meeting. The spring

Z S.ctiona, 14 Pagn

A

'

19" COLOR TV .......!!!.~!.~~.~.. Only

RUNNER-UP- JeanUer Grover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Grover of Chester, lefl, was first runner-up lor the 1988
homecoming queen of Kentucky Christian CoUege, where she
majors In Bible and music. With her at the presentation were, Usa
Waldridge, center, homecoming queen, a11d Tara VanCurne,
· second runner-up.

..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. March 2, 1988

Vol.38, No.ZOI
C"P!'Jhted 1888

All SWMLIOCIEIS "--.25'r.
All SUIPII/JOfAS......-.MU"f.
~· Q(WICJIW TAILES....2S"t.
AU SOfAS
2S"f.

:·...'
'

.-i'
~

.

·~

~

Educators want more money

•
BEARING AID - Pretlldent
~=::!hc!lde up hearln&amp; aid device alter having
p1
· speakiDJ with Prime Minister Mar·

COLUMBUS, Ohio Cl:PI)
State Senate President Paul
Legislators were seeing red . GIUmor. R-Port Clinton, In ac·
Tuesday as members of the Ohio ceptlng the petitions, said he, too,
Education Association tried to believed In symbols, but that he
drive home their pleas for more chose to wear a black tie, "a
money for education.
symbOl . that we can turn the
As many as 500 OEA members school district's red Ink Into
made the rounds of the State- black."
house for the OEA 's Lobby Day.
OEA members filled the
The OEA members wore red gallery for the House and Senate
riot jJollce for three hours. Police
red jackets, red blouses, red sessions and met with legislators
equipped with tear-gas sweaters, red dresses, red lies.
and their aides.
.
launchers, shields. and shotguns
"Red Is a reminder of t.h e red
The petitions said thai while
dodged rocks and other objects Ink. in the budget," OEA Pres!· slgnees were proud of the effort
thrown from buildings as they
denl Don Wilson told a news and achievements In education,
tried to break up the barricades conference when he presented they would not itand by and ·
and chase down protesters, wit- legislative leaders with petitions watch the education system
nesses said.
bearing 52,000 signatures of deteriorate because ot lnade· .
"I suspect that If the strike education employees. "It's a quate funding, would not allow
goes on .you will see more
symbOl of the schools' financial Inequities In per·PIIPII spending
strong arm tactics," Elliott · troubles."
to continue to grow, and would
Abrams, assistant secretary of
state for Inter-American affairs,
:1 ·'\~'.
said today on th@ CBS program
·~
"This Morning."
-. J:

gare$ Thacher of Greet Britain (left) and NATO
Secretary Geaer-'.Lord Carrington. The two-day
NATO aummlt opened In BMJNelsloday. (VPI)

Strike continues in Panama
I

PA~AMA

CITY, Panama
!UP!) - A 3·day-old general
strike against mlll,t ary strongman ·Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega gained support today from
doctors and dentists, a day after
the first outbreak of violence
since the country's political
·
crlsla began.
Leaders of the Civic Crusade,
the opposition coalition SJl!!ar- \
, heading the work stoppage to
protest the ouster of President
Eric Arturo Delvalle. told repor·
t11rs Tuesday .night the strike had

'

been 85 percent successful In
paralyzing the country.
·
They said It would be expanded
today, despite fears ·the actions
could provoke pollee repression.
Witnesses said a paramlllll!ry
group traveling in at least two
unmarked cars attacked the
opposition Radio Mundlalsbortly
a(ler noon Tuesday. The attack
prompted dozens of nearby residents to pour Into the streetf •
banging pots and pans and
shouting "down with Noriega."·
Residents built flamlrig barr!·
cades In the street and battled
' .

.

not allow salaries of teachers and
other education employees to
decline.
Slgnees asked legislative lead·
ers to take the Initiative In the
area of school finance to see that
sufficient revenue Is available to
ensure every student has equal
access to a quality education.
"Education is the cornerstore
of Ohio's social and economic
future," he said. "Education Is
the pathway out of poverty and
crime; it's an alternative to drug
addiction and teenaged preg·
· nancy; It's the road to jobs and
progress .
"We want action to solve the
school funding problems," Wilson told the legislators. " We offer
Continued on page 5

.

Some par~nts, coaches upset, want
OHSAA rules ehanged by officials
•

•

-By SANDRA L. LATIMER

also said amendments to 'the bill
proposed by Sen. Neal F.
Zimmers, D·DI!Yton, would be
taken and pos~lbly a vote.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI) Parents and coacl)es, upset with
. 1 ·•
Ohio Hllh School Athletic
The soccer season In the
Association eligibility rule, are
Is In the fall while
schools
aeeklq legislative approval to
put contra~ ·of high school- · club-level soccer Ia played bOth
aanctloned sporting events under In the spring and fall. tinder this
new rule, thoJe who play clubthe State Board of Education.
level
soccer would be lnellalble·
The rule In question concerns
from
partlclpetlnJin the school
students pJeylnJin bOth school·
program.
·
·
lenctloned and club-level aporta
"The
problem
with
the
OHSAA
end lhet If they participate In
one, they can't play In the other. Is that It Is not accountable to
anyone," Sen. Guy C. Suhadol·
'Molt ot tbe teatlmony Tueectay nlk, R·Pil'llll HeJahta, testified.
eame
parentl end coacllel "A stuctentcu play two aporia at
ot aoooer, wttll one p•Opc.lnnt at the aama
bidcu nat play In
tile lenlte Wsya and Means the ae)llt aport at two dlf1erel!t
Committee lMUIIil telllq ot bla tllllel of 1M year. "
daualiter'a problema with
Rep. Clifford Slreen, O.Aitron.
IBid a recent Inequity cropped up
IWIIIIIIIIIII•
.CGIIIIII111118 cllab'llllll SeD. Rl· with reapect to womtn •s
allllrd FblaD. R-ctaclaMU, pi8JII athlellc*.
to 110111 IIIOiber IMarlq Mllt
"UaUI It wu reqlllrld by the
81 wlllell 11m. llj,lpllllelill facleral JOVII'illll8llt. the OHSAA
.W'-eiiiWMto~.nnea did DOt provldt eqtlll Qlllllll'tUIII·

rram

um.,

'"*

.·

ties for women, " he said. "Now
It's soccer. It's lime to put an end
to Inequities. We should not
tolerate situations where kids.
cannot compete for their awn
school."
Cincinnati ~cNlcholas coach .
Michael J. Tucker, who said he
took a girl's soccer team to ·
London last year.
"It was a valuable history
leaaon, not only for the girls, but
for the parents who went along,"
he seid.
He mentioned that bOys socc~
could compete for a atate title In
19'18, but ltlr 11r11. before 1985,
suclle Qlllllt wu
ble.,
"Wily did It
t lOIII to
brlq the atrll ap
tyT" lie ·

••'WL

''OriUIIZed ac:tlvltl telie the
kldl ci!r tile •treet.
IIIICial
· akllll 11111 lit are laVe'luellle."
he aeld. "OIIBAA doeln't

Cll'lt.

-.m to

TileY 4oi1't IIBteb to Ill

a. M II W el .... ..
.a 1111111 '!WI thr..... a1r11t

.pacllalm . . II
'II M'K'I I I

peOple nlast llffaCied by the

' rwe.u

I I ........ .., ...... (WI)

~
'•

..

..

-

·-

--·--- ··~

.......

·•¥ . ....... ... -

..

., - ~· ~-~ .. - · -

:-!""

....

~··

_.......,_~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="132">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2710">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="37876">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37875">
              <text>March 1, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="225">
      <name>barringer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
