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                  <text>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

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�,Pomatoy-Midd'eport. Ohio

·: Comment

Page 2-The Daily Siatitiel

I

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Cout Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTE.RESTS OF THE MEIGI$-MASON AREA

A~

S!~ ~'--·~=.;­
qjv , . . ..
. ROBERT. L WINGETT
· Publlaber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Conlroller ·

BOB HOEFLICH
Geaeral Maaaser

A MEMBER ol Tbe United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LJ:Tf'ERS OF OPiNION are welcome. They should be leu tban 300 words
lone. AU letters are subject toedlttng and must be signed wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Leiters sbould be in

rood taste, addressing issues, not persmallttes.

'

What's missing?
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) - To Roll Call, a Capitol Hlll weekly
newspaper, something Is missing from the 1988 presidential
campaign and that "something Is Kennedys."
But, although a couple of former Ambassador Joseph Kennedy's
grandklds are constitutionally eligible, most are still too young to run .
For ln.stance, It will be, a Roll Call statistician has l!gured out, 1995
before John Kennedy Jr., son of the late presldent,ls old enough to get
elected to the White House In his daddy's footsteps.
By my calculation, however, there will be no presidential race the
year young Kennedy turns 35. •The next campaign year will be 1992
and then we will skip four years.
Thus, the earliest that John·John, as he used to be called, could run
• 1
would be 1996.
That certainly Is plenty of time for Edward Kennedy Jr .. whose
father currently serves the state of Massachusetts in the u.S. Senate,
to join the Republican Party.
Much has been made of the factthat Jack Kennedy was a Democrat
when he was elected to succeed Republlcan Dwight Eisenhower as
president.
It also might be pointed out th&amp;t Teddy Kennedy; to continue with
nicknames, was a Democrat when he became a senator. Therefore,
his son might reasonably be expected to run for president as a
Democrat.
But in family affairs, as well as lri this city, the "pecking order"
counts for something. And the senior Edward never made It to the
Executive Mansion. (Chappaquldlck presumably got In the way.)
So If cousin does run against cousin In 1996, any party switching
presumably m11st be done by young Teddy.
According to Roll Call's chart, Edward Jr. is only a year younger
than John Jr.
That chart lists 28 "Kennedy kids ," presumably old Joe~
grandchildren, plus 11 other "Kennedy kids' kids." Thus far.
As pollflc as he was, the one·tlme envoy to the Court of St. James
never had that many children on this own, so all39can't be blamed on
him, I suppose. I blame the girls .
They brought Into the family such outlanders as the Shrlvers,
Lawfords and Smiths.
Joseph Kennedy's youngest son. Teddy, by the way, has now turned
55. A colleague of' mine recently wrote that his birthday bash "must
·have been like Camelot ." ·
Spoken·like someone who knew the Kennedy White House as well.as.
the Broadway·Hollywood musical only by reputation. But wait until
1996.

Berry's World

·•

A poll In June 1986 gave tbe mit In October 1986. It was widely gle. Some 74 percent said the ,
NSCN and the president. a good perceived that the summit !alled. most convincing argument for
Idea of where SDI stood. Forty per· because Reagan refused to budge SDI was that "the Soviets believe '..
cent thOught SDI was "a good Idea on SDI. But the NSC poll taken In SOl will work or they wouldn't be :
1
and the best waytoavoldwar,"·ac·
November showed there were no trying so hard to stop it."
The
,
private
polsters
advised
\
cording to the report to the NSC hard feelings.
'
·
·
the
NSC
that
"Ironically,
Soviet
from the pollsters. ThoSe strong
Forty·two percent of Amerl·
backers were mainly members of cjlns thought Reagan should pro· opposition to SDI has given the ,
the lower middle class, Protest· ceed ''with the current pace of program a degree of credlblllty ;,
ants or men from the South. The 32 SOl development." Eighty per· that It might not otherwise have i
percent who were weak support· cent believed the Soviets wefe enjoyed. This argument Is so ~
well received that It can be used · ;
. ers of SDI ·were largely Catholic doing their own SDI research. ,
men, members of the upper mid·
When asked about the argu· · both to reinforce the beliefs of ,.
die class, or were from the Mid· ments against SDI, more than those who already support SDI '
west. About 10 percent wre "weak half said they found four argu· and to convert !bose who are
SOl opponents•'•; ihls group In· · ments convincing: that SDI was wavering between support and
eluded black women, 'and people too ·expensive, would not be opposition. ...Pointing out that · .:
whci were poorly educated or In . funded by Congress, would take the Soviets believe It will ivQrk • ·
low Income brackets. Tbe 18 per· too long to deploy and would accomplishes the same ta~sk, as. •:
cent W!lo thought SDI was a bad cause the Soviets to Increase arguing that It will work - It
gives SDI credib!llty. The basic
Idea Included blacks and women, .their missile force.
mainline PrOtestants and liberals. . But the NSC heard good news, argument for SOl 1$ 'It will work .
_
Then came tbe Reykjavik sum· too, and Reagan picked up an an· and the Soviets know It! "
There was one rub for Reagan,
the lame duck: SDJ's success Is
tied to his coattails.
"The Issue Is highly partisan,"
the pollsters said, "and as long
as Ronald Reagan Is popular and •'
SOl's champion, the program , .·
will carry the day. However, It Is ,.
In for rough sledding should ·,
either some cost scandal erupt or
Reagan Is succeeded by a less po- ,.
pular president."
·
,,
. DOLE VS. GEPHARDT? I
Some of our political sources have
pondered · a few numbers and ·'
gazed Into their crystal balls nad
come up with a prediction: Repu·
bllcan Robert Dole and Democrat
Richard Gephardt will be the major party candidates In this fall's
presidential race. Here's their rea· .'
sonlng:
Since 1976, every major party '·
presidential · nominee has woneither Iowa or New· Halflpshlre ·
and has finished no lower than '
second In the other. Both Dole · .
and Gephardt won the IGwa cau·
cuses and placed second In New '
Hampshire. Both of the first- (
, place winners In New Hampshire.. ,
- George Bush and Michael Du·
"You realize we've witnessed a miracle- a religious broadcaster cured
kakls - finished lower than se- ·.'••
of a severe case of television evangelism before our very
eyes."
cond In the lowa caucuses.
'

~

Today in history
· ·
By Unlled Press International
Today Is Wednesday, March 2, the 62nd day of 1988 with 304 to
follow .
The moon is waxing, approaching Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn .
.
,
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They include
statesman DeWitt Clinton, chief sponsor of the Erie Canal project. In
176?; Sam Houston, first president of the Republlc of Texas, In 1793;
journallst, politician and reformer Carl Schurz In 1829; Pope Plus XII
In 1876; publisher Max Schuster In 1897; German composer Kurt
Weill in 1900; children' s author :rheodor Gleselt''Dr. ~uss") In 1904
cage 84); entertainer Des! Arnaz In 1917; actress Jennifer Jones In
1919 (age 69) , and pop singer Karen Carpenter hl_1950.
On this date In history:
In 1836, Texas proclaimed Its Independence from 'Me~lco.
Jn 1945, toward the close of World War II, units of the U.S. 9th Army
reached the Rhine River opposite Dusseldorf, Germany.
In i949, a U.S. Air Force plane piloted by Capt. James Gallagher
completed the first non·stop around·the·world fllgllt In a little more
than 94 hours.
IJI 1981 the United States announced It was sending 20 mllltary
•
,
advisers ~nd $25 million In equipment to El Salvador.
· Iii 1986, Phlltpplne President Corazon Aquino restored Filipinos
protection • galnst arrest without charges.

A

.,

thought for the day: Carl Schurz said, ' ·our country, right ?.'
wronr. When right, tq be kept right; when wrong, to be put right.

"'

.

-~

!

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

"

'

~·~EW
:~::.

.
$13457

;
·,

•l'
'

..·

Ron Kittinger MOC player of year

•••

••
•

••
•

-·

"

'

,222

.

$14,955"

1

THE LIGHT SIDE

..

-··

$7,777

.

take part
in skills tourney

..

$9,969"

Capital, Wittenberg dominate All-OAC

R~ers

~

$8,888

. Redwomen eliminated

Kittinger ·
All-District
honoree

.

REOAL~no :~ $9,999

" I'm afraid we shan't be handling your class
action suit. We have determined that you
don't have any class."

- ..·.o.....

.

The Ohio Senate will soon be ready there? ·
concerns about this bill or any Michael Long, Sl&amp;tehouse, Col·
considering a proposal to set cer·
I would like lo'know what you other piece of legislation, please umbus, Ohio 43226, (614) 46&amp;
taln restrictions on rent·to-own think. If you have questions or write or call: State Senator Jan 11156.
1
purehases. Hou~· Biil~1. aeon· ~------~~----~------~·--------~------~~~----~--------~~--~------­
sumer protection measure, would
force renl·lo-own centers to diS·
close more plainly tbe cash price
and the number of rental payments required to own an Item.
Some consumer advocates warn
that this measure was written by
the industry lt~lf to avoid more
stringent regulation. They con·
tended that the bill does not go far
enough to curb abusive practices
and that It may actually protect
rent-a-centers from stricter cur·
rent law.
Rent·to·owp purchases are the
last resort for. many Ohioans who
may not have the cash to buy fur·
nlture or a needed refrigerator
outright. By offering plans to
give ownership to the renter af·
ter a certain number of pay- ·
ments. the rental centers con·
tend that they offer an opportun· .
lty that many people would not
otherwise have. The great rna·
jorlty of consumers partlclpat·
lng In renHo·own agreements do
not have the cash to buy the
Items outright or the credit his·
tory to buy In Installments from·
ordinary department stores.
Problems with these plans have
arisen in the .p ast because of prlc·
lng, repossession practices, and
faulty maintenance and repair
services. Even though these com·
panles provide ~n opportunity cer·
.~:--:::.
Q't*lll:
taln people might not have other·
wise, tbe need to curb certain abu·
slve practices has become clear,
' TRANSPONTIAC
'
......
All
T·
.
.___
.
TOP
HB ~1 requlres rental centers to
:'4....,_
.
disclose the cash price of the Item
to be rented, the payment to be
(t61n lltoc:k) '
made each period, and the number
of periods required for ownership,.
"
These disclosures would have to be
made both ln. advertising and at
'
the time of purchase. 1be bill also
addresses the problem of equity.
t988 2·DR.
•
Currently, consumers In these
CHEVROLET BERETTA
agreements can miss one· payment and have tbe merchandise
repossessed with nothing to show .
. lor it. Finally, the bill would prohibit contracts containing provisions
that aUow rental centers to file
criminal charges for missed pay·
ments,.
A problem with the bill seems
t987
to be a provision exempting rent~
to-own purchases from the Retail Installment·Sales Act, which
~
sets a limit of 25% for the annual
I
percentage rate for purchases on
regular lnatallment plana. Some
consumer advocates believe this
Is the rental Industry's attempt
to regulate Itself on Its own
tenns.
The concept of this biD Ia sound
- consumers need to . be protected from unfair practices.
What Is at questlQn Is the fairness
of the priclllg practices that will
emerge with the passage of tbla
bill. Does House bill 4.21 begin to
protect the consumer or does It ·
preempt pro~tlon that .Wu a1.

Two of the Redmen 's earlier
victories had been over MOC
opponent Urbana, which finished
the season with a 13·17 slate -its
best showing since 19B0-81 - and
a 6-8 record In the conference.
Rio Granile glided past Bob.
Ronal' s club 90· 78 on Jan. 12 at
Lyne Center and edged the Blue
Knights 78-75 on Feb. 6 at
urbana.
Since Its first loss at Rio
Grande, IJrbana has posted' vic·
torles over Bluffton, Jan. 14
(94·64), T!flln, Jan. 16· (7S. 70),
NBA results
'
Malone,
Jan. 19 (90·81) , Ohio
NA.'IION.\L l.uaETBAU.. ASSOC.
Dominican, Jan. 26 (95-85),
New ~to,.,. ~It, lA Olfferi '7S
Dyke. Jan. 28 (87·75),Cedarvtlle,
New·Y-M.II.._H ,
.
Delr'lllll,, . . . . . ..
J;~.n . 30 (72·71) and again over
.......... n....... ••
Ohio
Dominican (97·72) In its
I•M.-.IH, Pltee.U:IM
season finale Feb. 27. Other
Utalaiii. . . . . . IU
........ lA ....,. ...
los~s have been to twice to
........,.• o....
Ntwlenq ........ 1: .......
Mount Vernon Nazarene (86·75
1:ap.m.
on Jan. 23 anc;l 88· 73 on Fel}. 20),
IAal.,...
.,.., 1:11p.m.
•..._. .....,&amp;!a,.m.
Walsh, Feb. 2 (77-70). Tiffin, Feb.
ae,........................
10 (78·77), Waynesburg, Pa. ,
......., • O.lllft llal4, 11:• p.m.
Feb. 13 (118·92), Malone, Feb. 16
................ Oikap,•IIM
ISO· 77) and Findlay, Feb. 2.1
(100-91) .
.. Urbana Starters
NHL resul18
Thursday's game will repres·
ent Urbana's first playoff entry
In several years. For that effort
Ronal has assembled a formlda.'
ble amount of talent.led by guard
Anthony Harris, a 6·3 ~ sopho·
Armed wfth a quick offense, and netted 10 of 12 free throw ··.'
more from Springfield who Is Mount St. Joseph took control shots for 83 percent.
· ·
currently 32 points short of 1,000 early Tuesday at Lyne Center,
Siegel posted 20 points for MSJ,
career points at urbana. Harris, ,defeating the Rio Grande Redwo· while center Libby Stephenson
who will be Ronal's probable men 64·57 In the opening round of had 11 and Cathy Ellerbrock and, ..
choice
Is the District 22 playoffs.
Crowe each had 10. Connecting
By eliminating Rio Grande, the on 26 of Its 65 field goal attempts,.
Lions (17·7) will play Findlay on the Lions were 39 percent. They .
the Lady Oilers' COI!ri Thursday sank 9 of 15 at the charity stripe . .
at 7:30 p.m. The Redwomen for 60 percent.
'
finish the 1987·88 season with a
In retrospect. Flelltz, whose
19·9 record.
overall record at Rio Grande is . ·
"I'm disappointed. I definitely 39-15, hailed the efforts of her
feel we could have won the assistant coach, Robbin Luck, in ·:
game," Redwomen mentor leading the Redwomen to a ·
By t1nlled Pret111 IDienadonal
Cheryl· Flelltz commented. "We successful season, and team
De !lance College swept the top
got off to a late start and that's manager Jon Culbertson for his ' ·
two honors In the NAJA's All·
nobody's fault but our own.
continued support throughout the ··'·
District ' 22 team announced
"Overall,
l'm
pleased
with
the
campaign.
.
Monday.
season," she continued. "The
"I
look
forward
to
the
next
'
:
Dennis· Bostelmann, a 6·foot·6
kids stuck with it . and played season," Flelltz said. "Most of :
senior forward from Deshler,
hard. Our ·record doesn 't show my main Starters will be back." ·.·
Ohio, was named the player of
what kind of talent we have
MOUNT ST. JOSEPH (64) the year In the district, which
becau~ we · had some tough
Cathy
Ellerbrock, 5·0-4·10: Cerr! .
covers 14 schools In Ohio.
competition."
Crowe
,
4·2·1·10; Lisa Benson, : ·
Bostelmann averaged 22.4
The finale began with the Lions 0(1) -2·0·5: Patty Seta, 3·2·3·8;
points and 10.6 rebounds a game
posting three field goals within Tina Siegel, 7(2).(!·5·20; Libby ·
in leading , Defiance to a 21·6
RON KITTINGER
the first 4 minutes. Rio Grande's Stephenson, 4·3·3·11. TOTALS
record. It was his second straight
The rest of the team:
Holly Hastings scored the Red· 23(3)-1-18-414 .
appearance on the All·Distrlct
-Ron Rlttenger, senior, lo ~· women's first 2 points at 14: 53.
RIO GRANDE (57) - Marlo
team.
ward, Rio Grande;
Rio Grande narrowed MSJ's lead Kistler, 0·3·2·3; Holly Hastings,
-Tony Ewing, junior, for· to 2 points twice. A J·polnt field 7·2+16; Lea Ann Mullins, 50) ·3·
Defiance coach Marv ,Hoben·
berker was named coach of the ward, Cedarville;
·
goal by Tina Siegel gave the 4·16; Renee Halley, 5·0+10; Beth '
year. This Is tbe 21st playoff
-Brei Baker, junior, forward, Lions a 7·polnt advantage that Coil. 2·0·2-4; Angela Packard, ·
·appearance In his 23 years as urbana: .
widened to 11 (19·8) at 10:06. J.2·0·8. TOTALS 22( t H0-19·57 .
coach at Defiance, where he's
-Jeff Young, sophomore, Despite the efforts of Hastings,
compiled a 445·194 record.
•
guard, Walsh·;
Lea Ann Mullins and Marlo
Also appearing on the All·
- B. D. 'Bu·ta , j un1or, 1orward , Kistler, the visitors remained
The Daily Sentinel
District team for a second year In Walsh;
.1•
ahead and led 3J.19 at the half.
a row were Aaron Roth, a
-Tyrone Trbovich, sopho·
Rio Grande's offense Improved
(USPS 1411-M!I)
5-fooHO junior guard from Find· more, forward, Ttf!ln:
A IMYisioa of Mahlrnedta, lac.
strongly as the second part
lay and Rex Adams, a 6·foot·5
-Anthony Harris, sophomore, opened, but MSJ's press, led by
Published every afternoon, Monday
senior forward from Malone.
guard, IJrbana.
Siegel and All·Distrlct honoree
through Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
.
.
'
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Gerri Crowe, were ahead by 20
llshlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
(5.1·33) with around 6 minutes
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!i769, Ph. 992-2156. Seoond claSs postage paid at Pomeroy,
remaining.
In
those
last
few
rebounds;
MOUNT VERNON, . Ohio
Ohio.
B.D. Buda of Walsh, a 6-foot·3 minutes, the Redwomen held
(UPI) - Ron R!tt!nger, who
MSJ down to 11 points while they
Member; United PresS International,
averaged 22.6 points per game junior forward from Massillon,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
jumped
ahead by 24.
4.
7
rebounds;
16.3
points
and
!or Rio Grande this past season, .
Ohio Newspa~ Association. Nallonal
Turnovers plagued the Rio
Jeff Young of Walsh, 6-foot·2
Advertising
resentatlve, Branham
was named Tuesday as the
Grande offense -the Redwomen
Newspaper Sa es, 733 Third Avenue,
player of the year In the Mld·Ohlo sophomore guard from Akron,
New York, New York 10017.
committed 23 while MSJ held Its
14,7 points and 3.6 rebounds;
Conference.
POS'IldASI'ER: Send address changes
Rex Adams of Malone. a losses to 7 - and the Lions were
Bernie , Ballklan, who guided
to The Oatty Sentinel, 111 C.our1 St ..
able to sieal the ball 12 times,
6·fOOt·5
senior
forward
from
Mount Vernon to Its first winning
Pomoroy, OhiQ 4Sim.
Rio
Grande's
9.
compared
to
season ever, was named the wniard. 15 points and 8.3
Despite these drawbacks, .the
SUIISCIIIPTION RATES
rebounds .
. leai(Ue's coach of the year.
. BJ Carrier or :M.tor Route
Redwomen came to within 5
On
the
second
team
are
Brett
One Week .... .. .. ..... ......................11.25
Rlttlnger, a 6·foot·6 senior
(59·54) with 19 seconds left.
One Month ........... .. ..... .. .. ........... S5.45
forward fronl · Chillicothe, also Baker and Arlthony Harris of
"That was a big game for us,"
One Year ...... ..................... ...... $65.00
l)auled down an average of 7.5 urbana, Tyrone Trbovich or veteran MSJ Coach Jean Dowell
SINGLE COPY
T!f(ln,
Keith
Troyer
of
Malone
rebounds a game.
PRICE
noted. "We played very hard, but
and
Shawn
Gamble
of
Walsh
.
Datly ... ............ ....... ..... ........ 25 Cents
Also on that first team were:
Mount Vernon finished 15·14 we don't have the finesse of some
Tony Ewing of Cedarville, a
Subscribers not desiring to pay thecar·
of the teams we've played, or the
rler may remit In advance direct to
6-foot-4 junior forward from overall and 7· 7 and made Its pure shooters Rio Grande Ms.
flrst·ever
NAIA
District
22
The
Dally Sentinel on a 3, I or 12 month
Jeffersonville, ltld., who averbasis. credit wUI be given carrier each
Rio Grande Is more experienced
appearance.
aged . 17.7 points and 7.2
week.
and that showed becau~ we
No subscriptions by mall permitted tn
were shaky at the end, as If we
areas wbere home, carrier service Is
couldn't belleve we were winning
avaUable.
this game."
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -Cap!·
The 6·foot·6 Mueller, a senior
Leading the Redwomen were
Molls..=::,.
tal and Wittenberg each placed
f~om Toledho, led the league In Hastings ·~nd Mullins with 16
Weeks''.'.~ 1 ~~~~~............... . Sll.2'l
13
·two players on the first unit ofthe
scor ng w1t an 18.6 av~rage, was points eaclt, while senior Renee
26 Weeks .......... .... ...... ..... .. ...... . $3UJ6
ali·Ohlo Athletic Conference bas·
third In field goal percentage at Halley· added 10 for her final · 52 Weeks ..... .............. .. ... .......... lfi6.!!&lt;;
01-llelp~
ketball team selected liy the
.599 and f ourth In f ree~t hrows at game with Rio Grande. Statist!·
13 Weeks ......... ... ........ ......... ..... $18.20
The ' Carleton School River
First place ribbon winners In
league coaches and announced
.811.
,
·
cally, Rio Grande was 37 percent
26 Weeks ....... , .... ..... .... .... ..... .... $311.10
Racers basketball team traveled the Individual Skills Tournament Monday.
52
Lanier,
a
6·foot·3
junior
from
r~f~ro~m~t~he:_f~le~l~d~(:_23:o~f~62~a~tt~e~m~p~t~s~)
~=
::W:eek:::•::...::..::
...::...::..::...::...::...::..::·..::...:..:.. l6:7:.60:=_
totheConvocatlonCenteratOhlo !ron\ Meigs County were Joan
Wittenberg, which tied for
Wes,terv!Ue, was second to
University In Athens on Sunday Hart, Susan Everson; Mary Jane second with Musklngum In the Mueller In scoring at 18.5 and
to compete In the !lr!jt Area 8 Curry, Sarah Harmon, Ray Lau· regular season race, had Steve also was second !" assists at 4.5
Special' Olympics Basketball In· dermllt and David Karr.
Allison and Tom Welli!r named to per game, second In free trows at
d!\lldual Skills Tournament.
Second place ribbon winners
the squad, while Tom Ianier, and
.875 and sixth In field goal
Thlrty·flve athletes from were Lisa t-fontgomery, Hugh
Tim Mueller were Capital's two percentage at .542.
Meigs, Athens and Hdcklng Roush and Steve Boyd.
first team members.
There once was a man driving casually 'down the
Reineke, .a senior from New
The Hocking County Special
County were reglsiered lor the
The other first team selection Knoxville, averaged 14.5.polnts,
street. Suddenly a police car was behind him, lights
event ·and were assll'ned to Olympics Basketball Team will was senior Stan Reineke of 3.6 assists, ~t .4871rom the field
flashing.
divisions according to their a btl· be traveling io Bowling Green at · league champ Ohio Northern.
and .802 from lhe free throw line:
tty, age and sex. The tournament the end of March for the State
The l).foot·3 Allison, a junior
Named to the second team
"Yes officer?" the man ,said. "What did I do wrong?"
tested basketball skills In the.. Basketball Individual Skills trom Cincinnati, was seventh In were Marietta's Keith Barr', a
ar11as of shooting, passing, drib- Tournament. .
the OAC In scoring, averaging 6-foot·2 senior from Pleasant·
"Sir, did you know your wife fell out of the car about
. bUng and rebounding.
On Feb. 19, the River Racers
15.6 polnta per game and also was ville; Bob Burden of Ohio North·
Approximately . 30 volunteers traveled to Columbus for the
eight blocks back?"
seventh In free throw percentage ern, a 6-foot-4' senior from Bot·
conducted the tournament. Tour· slnglt elimination East Sectional at .787.
kins; Ken Rector of Mount
"Whew!" the ma.·l said, ''I thought I was going deaf!"
nament director was Patty Hays, Tournament •. whel'l! they played
Weller, a 6-foot-4 senior from Union, a 6-foot-2 senior from
RIVer Raeera' basketball coach. the Franklin County.Flyers.
Dayton, led the conference In Barberton; Brett Steele of Mus·
' '
.,
The 0. U. basketball team passed
Tbe Flyers won the game by
rebOunding with an average of klngum, a 5-foot-9 senloor from
out the awards and algned one point In the last five seconds U per game, was e!gltth Itt Warren, Mich. ; and Marc
I
.,•
auiogt'IIP~ for the athlttes.
of the game, 61-60.
IICOl'lng at 15.4 and second field In Streeter of Heidelberg, a S:root·3
After the Individual skills tour·
"lt W.s 11 beartbreakllll Joss,
goal percentage at .625.
'•
senior from Clyde.
namelit, a ~lattqn bulletball but aU the\ atiiJetn did their
'~·
game wa.. pli)-.d bY the Rlwr · belt," _.ld &lt;;oacb Haya.
R~l'l 8lld HaCit:tng County
SCorlDg lD Columbu tor the
team ·
.
·
Rlwr Racera were RI)'Wuder·
,Offkllaun ly lppe,lnt•ant
wr Racers won the milt wltb ... jlo!DII,
JobJJ.
...... (61() 592-2163
g
a ~~ 38-21. High IOD with MYft palntl and DaVId

....._ ... _..o:.' .

.

Bill seeks to check rent-to-own industry Jan M. Long

Rio Grande's Redmen take .
their first shot at retaining the
District 22 championship Thurs·
day when they host urbana 's
Blue Knights In the opening
round of playoff action.
Game time Is 7:30p.m . at Lyne
Center. Tickets for the game are
$4 for adults, $2 for students and
$2 for · Rio Grande students
showfng their 10.
Rio G(ande (25· 7) Is rated No.2
In the district as It enters the
game. Also scheduled to play
Thursday will be Findlay (15-~0)
at Cedarville (19·10) , while lOP'
seeded Deflauce (21·6) hosts
Mount Vernon Nazarene (1S.14)
and Malone (1!&gt;-13) play·s at
Walsh (20-10). The winner of the
. Cedarville·Findlay contest. plays .
Rio Grande at Lyne Center In the
second playort round Monday at
7:30p.m.
If Rio Grande wins that game,
It will host the championship
game Thursday, March 10 at 7: 30
p.m.
Wins Boost StaaciiDI
Rio Granc;le end!!(! Its regular
season Feb. 20 with a 102·86 loss
to Cedarv.llle on the Yellow
Jackets' court. The encounter
snapped an 11-game winning
streak the Redmen had enjoyed
since Jan. 19 that helped .):Joost
their standing within the district.
Rio Grande will share the 1987·88
Mld·Oh!o Co11ference title with ,
Walsh. Both schools complied
MOC records of 11·3 this season.

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

.

'

.
..
record has Increased to 202·68 avetag!ng, 19 pointS and 4 rewill rely upon his two seniors, _
bounds per game.
The other Urban.a guard ex . Ron Rlttlnger (6-6) and Ray
peeled to start Is Chuck Lewis Singleton 1&amp;.3) to carry the
(S.9, junior), who has averaged forward duties .
R!ttlnger, twice named MOC ,
12.4 points and 7.6 assists per
Player
of the Week this ~ason ,
game. At forward will probably
finished
the campaign with an
be Brett Baker, a 6-6 junior who
.
average
of 22.4 points and 7.5
attended Rio Grande briefly In
reboun&lt;js
per game, as well as an
1987. Baker Is credited with 20
overall
field
goal marl&lt; of 60.3
points per game and has
percent.
Singleton,
who played In
snatched an average of 7 .re·
bounds In each outing. Joining all but one of the Redmen 's 32.
Baker at forward will be Pat ~ason games, Is making 16.5
McCull!gan, a 6·4 freshman re· points and 5.9 rebounds.
The guard positions will be
cently promoted to 't he starting
filled by juniors Anthony Ray.
lineup.
At center will probably be more (.5·11) and Jim Kearns ·
Robert "Butch" Settle. (6·5~, CS.l). Raymore Is averaging 12.2 .
junior), who has averaged 10.5 points and 4.2 assists per game, .
points and 5 rebounds per game while Kearns )las 13.3 points and '
and who has shot 63 percent from 3.5 assists .
Sophomore John Lambcke c6·
. the floor .
5),
promoted to center In Janu· '
First off the benc!h for the Blue
ary,
Is averaging 3 poblts after
Knights will probably be Malplaying
In '1:1 games this season.
colm DeVould. (6-2, junior),
.
Probables
to enter the game off
Kra!g Gibson (6-0, ' sophomore)
and Dave Wareham (5·9~ . the bench will be Brian Watkins ·
(5-10, freshman) for the gu11rds,
freshman).
while
Marc Gothard (6-4, j uit!or) ..
Rely On Seniors
and
r
Rob
Jackson (6·6, sopho· •
For the Redmen, Coach John
more)
wlllfllllnforthe!orwards."
Lawhorn - whose collegiate

~

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta •··

..........

t

Pomemy-Midclaport; Ohio
Wedn11dav. March 2,1988

WASHINGTON -A dramatic,
series of opinion polls, secretly
taken for the National Security
Council In 1986, convinced Pres!·
dent Reagan that ttie best way to
sell his Strategic Defense lnltla·
tive, or·Star Wars, was toempha· .
size the !act that the Soviets want
to kllllt.
We have been reporting on
some of the subjects Qf · that
series of four . polls, heretofore
unpublished. They were done for
the NSC by a Washington think
tank that asked to remain anony·
mous. Presidents have long used
· public opinion polls·lor their own
decision making, especially de·
clslons that affect their political
futures. But this was probably
· the first lime that the NSC lntro·
duced polling Into Its own poll~Y·
making process.

3

Rio to ho~t Urbana in.District 22 opener

·

.. i

SDI's biggest boosters

The Daily Sentinel Paga

.'
•'

.'

.

.

i

Sa_,

tilt

IUctt'awu

t'llll ill tllit 31

Karf'lltll~polntl,

-~

'Nim .._.. Ia tile PoQiti.Tlle-tWo)IO!ntiWere llecdOiat Tinnameat Wj1l adprcMdlld 111 lftitlt RoUt\.
vance to tilt 1tate tou.....-t ht
Ray La6111'111

'S cotllll polnll for tht Hockllll
CQunt)' team were Gift Kllqea·
!lett 'lflth 14 pohltt, Rater
.1)dlappt wttb ellllt pclhltl, RN·

..

' • • ,._U d

Dallllfl' Gray

wltlt t910 JI!IDII each.

team play and au othera Will

aciY": 10 tilt State Balin til all
lndMdlllt Mia~. .

.

-IOtll'llaiMIItl wiUJie beld
11111011 Grt111 tile l(IJ .,... ·

Ill

""-' bsld Ia Marcil.
'

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'
.............. ...........
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--

_. ___......_ .

-:';'.~

.

-

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

�4 The

c.-

\

Pamato, Mldlapoi'i. Ohio

Santini!

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Wedrnclily, March 2, 1988.
'

I

Local news briefs- Storms fling hail, rain over southern Plains

•

Reds, Daniels far apart on '88 contract )
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI) Redl outfielder Kal Daniels
could be tbe moat disappointed
player In tbe ctnclnnaU camp, or
tbe happiest, depending oli how
the team renews hll 1987

contract
.
The club and Daniels, who
made $86,500 last year, are tar
apart. Pitchers Rob Murphy a11d
Jose Rljo and outfielder Leo

Strike ends toumey hopes

SPARI(V SIIAitES A LAUGH - Detroit Tlt~ers' skipper Sparky
AnllenH, left, topples backward oa the bellch aa he aac1 pltcber
w•te Renandes sbare a Iucll.aa lhey poeed for team pictures at
the Tigers' sprln1 tralniDg camp Monday. (UPI)

•

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Five
Cleveland high school boys basketball teams have been eUmlnated from this year's state·
tournament without getting a
chance to play because of a
teachers' strike Ill the state's
largest public school system: Cleveland East 16-14), Rhodes
(7-12) , South 17-13), Collinwood
(11-9) and John Marshall (6-14)
were forced for forfeit their
Sectional Tournament games
Tuesday night.
Glenville lll-8) and John Hay
(9-10) will be eliminated tonight
If there Is not a settlement In the
seven-day-old strike. ·
"Teams In brackets with
Cleveland schools will advance
automatically," said Richard
Armstro~~g, commissioner of the
Ohio High School Athletic Association. "It's unfortunate, but as
long as they don't · show up
because or the strike, , there Is

nothing that can he done."
· only two girls teams, East and
East Tech, are still In the
tournament. They will be.forced
to (orfelt their tournament hopes
If the strike Is not settled prior to
Thursday night's games.

.

IT! A

If Pratt Is retained. II Is likely a
lbl Yan
· reserve ou Ill e lder or poss
lnfield er wlllbed rop ped from the
24-p Iayer rna jor- Ieague ros ter.
"If you see him now, you say
'Wow. can he hit,"' Edwards
sa id · "B u t tf you have t 0 100k and
•
1 1 1 1 th bl
see II he s go
ng o P ay n e g
,
leagues I.n ,our years or 1wo. If
!t 's I our • you have t o thl n k we .c an
do a lot oft' other
things
t
(k 1In pthose
years. If I 5 wo, eep ng ra 11
1 h
)
be
th 't ..
or t e year may
wor 1 ·
The Indians wou 1d prefer to
make a trade with Boston that
would allow Pratt to be sent to
Colorado Sprtnos of the Pacific.
~

three-year professional career.
"I've got my foolln the crack of
the door. One more step and I'm
ln. It rn;ty sound cocky, but they
wouldn't have me here If they
thought 1 couldn't make it. I want
to make II here In Cleveland."
Edwards does not relish the
thought of losing Pratt, rated an
average catcher with an average
atrn but considered an aboveaverage hitter. ,
·
· "If we don't keep him. we lose
$25,000 for getting him Into shape
for somebody else," Edwards
said Tuesday after he and
Indians President Hank Peters
and eight coaches watched Prall
practice pltchouts.
The Indians were scheduled to
begin three days of tntra~quad
games today. Cleveland opens
the Grapefruit League schedule
Saturday by hos.tlng San
Francisco.
·

Williants
backs off
·
,
on Big 10 officials
COLt;MBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State coach Gary Williams,
who took some heavy verbal
SIVing• at Big Ten· basketball
oIf!elating following the Buckeyes' overtime 78-77 loss to
Ml c hlgan s tate saturday night,
has cooled down some after
lk
ta lng to the conference office.
" I really think there are some
good officials In the Big Ten,"
Williams said Tuesday during his
10mlnuresontheweeklyBigT¢n
coaches'. conference call, "I
really do. I think it's unfair to
1ump everybody Into the same
category because we db have
some good officials.
"I just hope we get our fair
share of the calls, that's all,·· he
added.
Th e object of Williams' wrath
s
d
atur ay night was Ga1-y Muncy,
who worked the BuckeyeSpartan game along with Mike
StocknerandTedValenUne.
Muncy, a veteran Big Ten
official. was Involved In key
plays both at the end of regulatlon and the overtime.

Coast League, but Pratt believes
t he Red So x w Ill not coopera I e.
"S
. er1ous1y, Cl eve land Is go1ng
Ia have to keep me Up •" p r at!
"tBo t ) 1 t 1 t 1 t
sa ld .
son sno gong o e
Cleveland drop me down (to the
lecrltlci ed
m!nors ) · Alotofpeop
z
(Bos ton Genera I Manager) Lo u
Gorman for letting me go . So I
think they'll take me back If thl'y
got the chance."
rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;i
Pratt admits to "helngoncloud 11
nine," but says he cannot get

Local bowling
MOND~Y

'

Baseball registratW,n Saturday

.'•

r·

Reglstratl~n (or the 1988 Middleport Youth League summer
ball season will be held at the Middleport VIllage Hall on
Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.. and again on Saturday March
12, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the same locailon. Any boy or girl
who did not PhiY ball last summer must bring a copy of his or her
birth certificate, which will be kept on f!le by the league.
Registration fee Is $9 tor each chUd registered.
.

..

I

EVROLET Malibu
Cutlass
LOS

$1995.
$2695.

36
36

$3329*
$5670*
$6Q05*
$6674*
$9734* .
$133°1*.
$1.4Q69* .
$14069*·
$14678*
$15349*:
I

s.w.

$2795.
SafariS.w. · $2995.
Delta as
$3995.
Lynx
$6195.
LET Nova
$6495.
'
Ciera S.W.
$6495.
Cavalier 40 $7295.
Cavalier
,$6995.
$5995.
Delta 88
EVROLET Cavalier S.W. $7995.
EVROLET C-1 0 Pickup $7495.
EVROLET Beretta .
$8995.
EVROLET Spectrum
$8995.
t

1982
1985
1985
1984
1986
1985
1983
1986
1984
1987
'
1987

Eldorado

$5995.

1986

LET S-1 0' Blazer
EVROLET Cavalier Z24
LET C•1 0 Pickup
Cutlass
Grand Am
Grand Prix

$10,400.
$10,400.
$10,400.

1986

EVROLET Caprice

$10,999.

1985
1987

LOS

1986
1983

$8295.
$9995.
$9400. ·,

36
36
36
48
48 .
48
54
48
36
54
48
60
60

Fleetwood

$12J950.
$9995.

54 .
36

Sedan Deville $17,m.
Brougham
$17,99.9.

60
'60

Eldorado .

54'

$19,999.

$1679 1 ~ '

$219rr
$21917* .
$21917*
$23314*

60

-

f

$21. 5°~·

48
54
54
54
54

$12,455.
.:

$16310*:.
$16629*;
$16791
$16710*
$18678•
91 *
$188
.

36
48
60

Ciera
.

$162 35~.

$240 5~*
. .'
*'

$27863
$29236*
$35235*·
$357°1*,
$44298*

•

·'.·ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - An
. !i:1th-hour ,. tentative contract
)Agreement has averted a strlkl'
:Dr non-teaching employees at
~lo University.
:· ' Tbe agreement was reached
~esday night just before 571
&gt;~nembers ott)le American Feder: ~tlon of State 1County and Munlc-

979 Dodge
Omn·l
AVAUIU IN
lED, NAVY &amp; lOGE

1976 Jeep

1976 Chevy

Wagoneer

Nova

!pal Employees Local1699 were
set to strike at midnight.
The employees, including
maintenance, food service,
housekeeping and some security
personnel, are scheduled to vote
on the pact tonight.. Details of the
contract are' being withheld
pending the ratification vote.

By United Press International
golf balls was reported.
Thunderstorms filnglng heavy
Nearly an Inch of rain tell In
rain, tornadoes and hall the size Fayetteville, Ark. , and more
of baseballs struck the southern than three-quarters of an trrch
Plal.ns, while snow fell over the was recorded at Fori Smith:
Rockies slid foreca s ter~ pre- Tulsa , Okla ., recorded more than
dlctrol up to 4 Inches in the · half an Inch. .
Denver area by noon.
Rain showers were scattered
Strong thunderstorms deve- late Tuesday evening from the
loped Tuesday north of a warm southern valleys of California to
front that reached across north- the southern coast. Forecasters
ern Texas to the central Gulf of said 2 to 4 Inches of snow
MexlcQ coast , spawning accompanled by winds of 25 to 3S
baseball-size hall at Lake Klcka- mph. could fall1n the mountains
J)oo In northern Texas , National
of SoGthern California by noon
Weather Service forecaster Dan Thursday .
McCarthy said.
Rain was turning to snow In
He said · that des pite a lull Denver lat.e Tuesday night as a
before dawn. the storms threa- cold front swept across parts of
. tened to kick up In central and the central Rockies and central
eastern Texas, Arkansas and · Plains.
·
Louisiana today. "They have
One .to 4 Inches of snow was
weakened considerably and are expected In the Denver area by
mostly rain right now," he said noon today, with up to 8 Inches
this morning .
possible In the foothills of the
Hall 1 % Inches in diameter Colorado Rockies .
was reported near Wichita Falls, · Up to 3 Inches of ·new snow '
just south of · the Oklahoma- could hit southeast Wyoming by
Texas border. More than 3 Y, this afternoon, forecasters said,
Inches of rain was measured ai with up to 61nches possible In the
Wichita Falls between 7 a.m. mountains .·
EST Tuesday and 1 a.m. today,
Snow showers dusted parts of
the NWS said.
•
upper Michigan and northern
lower "flchlgan, while freezing
Two tornadoes touched down rain and sleet turned roads slick
Tuesday afternoon near Wichita In parts of east central and
Falls, but McCarthy said no southeast lower Michigan.
lnjurle~ · or damag,e were
Single-digit temperatures
reported.
·
were reported across parts of
. Winds gusted to 62 mph at 'New England early today: At 2
. nearby Lake Kemp.
a.m . EST It was tr below in
Thunderstorms rumbled Massena ln__northern New York
across southern and ea's tern near Canada, and 69 In Browns-'

I . ; Area deaths · I;::~;;~,h_a_l _a_s_la_rc_g:_:_t:_n_u:_~_~ :_;_o:_e_: _:s.:~_e1_
:Edith
Stroll8
·
\,;
,l

ona; Ray Shearer, Delaware, · determine If abuse has oc·
and Henry Shearer, Montreal,
curred," she said. '"I think we ar.e
~ Edith Strong, 36789 Buzzard Canada, and a sister, Martha .
pen Road, Qexter, died Tuesday Chapman, Dexter, with whom
41t the Holzer Medical Center she had ~sided In the family
· )ollowlng an extended Illness.
horneplaceforthepastslxyears.
•· Mrs . StroM
..., was born 1n sa 1em
Besides her parents, she was Dally stock prices
!rownshlp, a daughter of the late preceded In death by her bus(As of lO:SO a.m.)
"'
h
dE
J
h
a·
Bryce
and
Mark Smith
,..osep an mma o nson om- ban,d, John H. Strong; a sister, of Blunt
EIUs &amp;·Loewl
~n!!. She had O'\VIled and operated
Doris Randolph; two brothers,
.the Beechwold Nursing Horne In · ,John T. and William Romine, and
)Columbus, She was a member of a step·grandson, Leslie Shearer. . Am Electric Power ............ •28 %
jhe North Broadway l;nlted
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
AT&amp;T ............ ............ ...... .. .29 ~
:Methodlst Church In Columbus Friday at the Blgony-Jordan Ashland OIL ............ .. .. .. .... .59 % '
j.nd of Chapter 207 of the Funeral Horne In Albany wlthl
Bob Evans .................... ..... .l 7%
~llkesville , Order . of Eastern the Rev. Kathryn Puckett off!- Charming Shoppes .... · .. .. .... .1 4%
.blar.
·
elating. B\lrtal will be In union' · City Holding Co ...... ... .. ....... 29 ¥..
~ Survl~lng are a da':'ghter, Cemetery, Columbus. Frlimds Federal ~ogul.. .. ...... .... ...... 38 %
. .OOrolhy Sllearer, Columbil.s; two may call at the f\lneral horne Goodyear T&amp;R ..... :...... .. .. .. .GO%
· ~randchlldren, David Shearer, from 3 to 8 p.m. Thursday. Heck's Inc................... .... .. .. 1%
~olurn~, and Heidi Schutts, Eastern Siar rites will be held a·t Key Centurion ...... . ........ " .. ·39 '!.
fort WoJith, Tex.; three step- · the funeral home at 7:30p.m.
Lands' End .. ..... .. .. .......... ... .. 20
andso
. n,' · FJ'a.nk Sllearer, Ariz- Thursday.
Limited Inc ............. ...... .. ... 22'uh
Mu Ill medt a I nc ............... ....58 "
c. ..J.; _:.._
Rax,Restaurants .. ... .... .... ...... 3'Vs
~ . ,U C«;U
, •-· ,
Cont.lnued from page 1
~ Roblllns &amp; Myers ..... .. .. :.. .. ... 8Y, .
Shoney 's I nc. .. .. ..· .. .. .. .•.. .. .. .. 23:v
7ll
·
w
d • 1 tl
ur esslstance and support. Our years when the budget Is writen Y s n · .... ...... ....... ...... 7'A.
islatiVe leaders must take the. ten," he said.
Worthington Ind .. .... ............ 20%

Stocks . .

tors._ .

,

!&gt;

F W~t''

ad.
pledge
our commiten!; we seek
yours."
·

"Education
gotten
the
highest
priorityhas
In the
last two
~. Heno~dsaldthalthefoun41ng
Republican-written House
!!Cathers put the burden of educa- · budgets," he said. •'We want to
~lon on.. the Legislature and the · make Improvements In Ohio's
~overnot.
·
schoola and make Ohio's schools
t "It's thlitr responsibility to see among the best in the country."
p: hat eaall.child has access to 11.
~borough : and efflc~nt educa11!-lon," he said.
~ WilBon said thtU In reeent years
Wundlng has lk:corne more dlffiHolzer Medical Center
, ~ult because of the erosion of the
Dltlcbargea March 1: Mrs.
~ax base, the reduction of perCharles Biddix and son. Sue
[fOnal taxes, the return of the . Donnally~ Mrs. Larry Elkins and
i:rederal ' tax windfalls and the daughter, Milan Fain II, Lisa
l,lransltlon of the.tax base from an Hoffman, Mrs. John Sheets and
!lndustrl;at society to a service daught.e r, Lorri Stalnaker, Ross
)oclety.
. .
. Well, Evelen.e Wes.t, Amber WIU,
:.0 "It's fl night.mare that House
Mary Wilson and Raymond
peaker Ver11al Riffe, Senate Wiseman .
esldent Glllmor and Gov _
Births Mareb 1: Mr. and Mrs.
i'Richard Celeste face every two Charles Michael, ' son, Racine.
~
'
'
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Warner.
son, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
.

~

~ Marriage licenses have been
lssued 1tn Meigs Counly Probote
:Courno Randall Mark Boston,
ills, Reedsville, and KrlsUna
~uzanlu! Sheppard, 21, Long
;t:lottom; I;arry 4e Casey, 20,
l&gt;omeroy, and.Teresa Lynn Tay-·
ilor. 27,• Pomeroy; Jerry Lynn
~rlbe, 20. Middleport, and Mary
't;llzabe 1h Jones, 19, Miildleport.

.

',i

'

-

,l

'

'

.

reli~ .di81D1ssed

"' The following cases have been
[~ismlssed 'In Meigs County ComPli!as Court; William T.
·against
Hill Rose
Jr.
Paule E.,June
Carol Louise Hlll; MerTodd against James Mayadmlnlltrator of the B\1of Worker's Compensation;
~~::;~,:cp;~r~ldernore against Rick

going a btl too far. I think we are
making a mistake by expandlfg
It so broadly."
·
Failure to report suspected
abuse would bring a 30-day jail
sentence which Rep. Richard
Rench, R-Milan, said he thought
was too tough on volunteers,
"especially when It Is so.hard to
get volunteers these days." . ·
The Housepassed, 92-0, a bill to
change the name of the Governor's Council on Disabled Persons to the Governor's Council on
People with Plsabllltles and
reimburse the members tor their
expenses.
The House approved Senate
amendments and sent to . the
governor a btU that would. allow
township pollee officers to
transfer to the Pollee and Firemen •s Dlsabll.tty and Pension
F d
un after the township lncorporates or merges with amunielpill
corporation.
·
Both chambers were to reconvene today at 1:30 p.m.

f:§JSNOW
FRONTS:

11 Warm

-RAIN
"

Cold

,.a

[LZ?J SHOWERS
Static . . Occluded

Map showS mi~imum tem~ran..res . At least 50% of any sMded area is fo&lt;ecast
to receov~ prec1p.taton .rld1cated
. .
, ··
UPI

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thundersto~ms will be
numerous across much of Texas, eastern Oklahoma and the lower
and middle Mississippi Valley. Thunderstorms could be severe
across central and eastern Texas, extreme southeast Oklahoma,
&amp;outhwest Arkansas and western Louisiana. Rain wiD extend from
Missouri across the Ohio Valley, reaching western Pennsyl~anta
late In the day. Rain. or snow showers will cover Michigan and
northern DIIDols. Rain will change to snow across northwest
Kansas. Snow showers will reach from eastern Colorado across
Wyoming to western South Dakota. Showers and a few
thunderstorms with snow In the higher elevations will occur over
western Colorado, Utah and northern Arizona. Rain will move onto
cQBStal areas of Oregon and Washington.

'

'

.

------Weather------Friday, and ranging from 25 to 35 .
South CentrAl Ohio
Mostly cloudy today, with Saturday and Sunday mornings.
highs In the mid 50s. Rain
tonight, with a low In the upper
30s. Rain likely Thursday, with
highs near 40.
· The probability of precipitation Is 70 percent today, near 100
percent tonight and 70 percent
Thursday.
Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 20 mph today and from
tile northeast at 10 .to 15 mph
tonight.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Generally fair through the
period, with highs In the 30s
Friday and In the upper 30s or the
40s Saturday and Sunday. Overnight lows will be In the 20s early

·FOR ALL YOUR ·

PLUMBING AND'
HEATING NEEDS,
SEE US 'FIRST!
•TO REPAIR
•TO REPLACE
•TO FIX UP or
•TO SPRUCE UP '

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Dale
Barnhart, Middleport; Larry ·
H dna II Middleport· Linda·
W~lte, sy' racuse.
•
• Tuesday· Discharges Rick
Johnson, June Cremeans, Patricia Barrett.

SEE US TODAY!

PICKENS
HA'RDWA.RE
MASON, WV.

FaMJI'ire Store
JIIIY IAKII,

c:•• .--...
*s.-,RMt

AMERICA'S

MAS111
GMDINit,
tiCOMMINDS ...

AME
Kmort
Sale Price

L.ss Mlr.'s
llebote

SALE STARTS WED-.
tNDS·SAT.

11.17
- $3
8.17

c

.,_icences issued .

_ _ _ _ __

NATIONAl. WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO lAM EST 3-3-88

r-r=::===========::;;:=========~~==:!=::===============~

Hospital news

!

TOMt

SmlliiJI5.

p.m.

~~:!r=:

ROYAL .

Smltl•
INti, HIGH G.UII:: wry Sayn! 236;
Heten Ploolpl m Larry Sayre 210; Belly

partment at 11: 36 a.m. to a brush fire on the Stelgle property
~Haning Ridge Road; Syracuse at 12: 53 p.m. to Route 124 for
rey Vft1! Reeth who was treated but not transported· Salem
Fire Department at 2: 29 p.m. to a brusb fire on th; Shadd
property on Strong Run Road:. Pomeroy at4:33 p.m. to an auto
accident at the Intersection of Routes 33 and 681' party 'refused
treaternent; Racine Fire Department at 4: 42
to a brush
·fire on Route 3J8 at Antiquity; Pomeroy at 4:59p.m. to Peach
Fork Road for Ron Fry who refused treatment; Pomeroy at9: 18
p.m. to Highland Road tor Mildred Arnold to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 9: 58 p.m. transported Joy France from an
auto accident that occurred at the Intersection of Side Hill an
Nlchols~n Roads.
"
.

Nveement averts strike at OU

Whtrman 451 ; Ann Spires 4415; Loretta At·

"m'cl"H sERIES IND.: Larry ~yre 610;
Ray .R oldl 5~ .... l'llelplliU; Belly

,

••

I

klns 443.
IND. HIGH GAME (MEN) : TlmCundl!l
189; Ron Smllh 171i: Rick Hatfield 167
IND. HIGH GAME !WOMEN): J~dy
Musser, Ann Spires, Deobbte Neue, 171;
Terri Whitman 164; Debby Tillis
1!19. .
.

ay; Ra.ctne at 12: 05 a.m. to Township Road 275 for

e

~ldred Hauber to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Scipio Fire

&lt;·

NI'I'E MillED LEAGtiE
· F..._,. II, 11118
HIGH TEAM SER1ES: ~ M.G.M 1884·
16 Party Animals 1810; H Pat Hill Ford
1731.
HIGH TEAM GAME: 105 M.G.M. 68G· 116
Party Animals 63i; 15 M.G.M. 634. '
INDc HIGH SERIES !MEN I: Rick Hatfield 492; R&lt;ln Smith 491; Don Hysell &lt;50
· IND. HIGH SERIES !WOMEN ): Terri

1'111.
Mlddlepon Lunch Room .... .... .... .. ..... . 46
Roach's Gun Shop ............................. 32
Shammy's Carn&lt;·Ouf ........ .............. .. . 32
'F.O.E. 2171 .. .. ....... ... ....................... ;,. 28
Sayre's Small En11lnellepafr ............. :13
TEAM HIGH SERIES: R&lt;lach"s :1013;
TEAM HIGH GAME: F.O.E. 691.
IND. HIGH SERIES: John 'l"Yree 600.
Lar'f ·Sayre !lei; Dollie WUI Si.l; Debt
Henlley530.
IND. HIGH GAME: John 'i"Yref :122:
John 'i"YrH :115; Dottle Will 237; Ktm Ba ·
tey and Marlene Wll1011 201.
PII811\1UY St, •
.
Ml~ LuKh Room .. ...... .... ... .... .. 50
Roach's Gun Shoo .. ......................... .. il6
Tony's Carry.OUf.. ..... ..... ..... ...... ........ 311
Sllammy"s C..rry.OUt ....... .................. 32
F .O.E. 2171 .. ...................................... 30
Sayro's Small EMboe Resoatr .. ....... .... :If
TEAM HIGH IIEIUEI: Sayre's Smoll
EIIIIM ~lr 1111; llyn!"l illull Eqtne

~lgs Couniy Emergency Medical Servlc~ reports nine calls

Tu

.

j

Cl~CCIRED ADl

DEAl IN . THE

EMs has ninfk Tuesday calls

••
r-----~----------~------~--------------~-- ·

TAMPA, Fla. &lt;UPI) ....; In a
four hour and 20-rnlnute meeting
Tuesday that produced complaints but no viable candidate,
no person received enough votes
from the Veterans Committee for·
election Into baseball's Hall of
Fame.
Eighteen of the 20 members of
the Veterans Committee attended the meeting at an airport
·hotel, With former broadcaster
Red Barber and major-league
executive Bob Fishel absent due
10 Illness.
"There were some close calls,
some candidates approached the
minimum number of votes requlred," Hall of Fame President
Ed, Stack said. "In the future,
we re gonna take a look at the
voting process."
For election Into the Hall of
Fame at Cooperstown, N.Y., a
candidate needed 75 percent (14)
of the votes cast by committee
members In attendance. ·L ast
year, the Veterans Committee
elected former Negro League
star Ray Dandridge. marking
the first time since 1966 onlt one
person was . selected by the
committee.
As '"
-any·as two old timers can
be elected, but If there· are two
Inductees, one has to be a player.
The Veterans Committee had
gone 32 years since the last time
no candidate received ample
support for Induction. On ,Jan.12,
the Baseball Writers Association
of America elected former Pittsburgh slugger Willie Stargelllnto
the Hall of Fame, with Induction
ceremonies scheduled tor July
31 ·
"Next year. we may just get in
a room and hammer II out until
someone Is elected," said Hall of
Farner Monte· Irvin, who campatgned passionately for Da· ndrldge's election a year· ago.
"For people to get together all
day and not elect someone Is
rldlculous.Ithassomethlngtodo
with the voting process. Something has to change ... whether It
means changing the rules, meetlng for two days or whatever It
takes."

~

ody know. But I might be the :
happiest guy In this dressing ,
room."
:
Manager Pete Rose and.coach :
Tony Perez, who boUt played 1
first base tor the Reds, gave I
outfielder Eddie Milner personal '
Instruction at the position
Tuesday.
,
Milner said he has never •
played first base In a major I
league game, but he did play 1
there In high sehool.
:•Jt would give me a little more
playing time when they rest Nick
Esasky and use 'me against
right-handed pitching: I accept
the
"said Milner.

' 992.;2156 °

Rookie.catcher hopes to
make it with Indians in 1988 No one has
TuCSON, Ariz. (UPI) -Todd
complaceni.
Pratt knows the Cleveland Indl"While I'm here. I'm going to
enough votes
learn as much as I can," says
ans are prlmarly concerned with
their pitching staff, but the
Pratt, who has never · played
for selection ·
rookie catcher says the team will . higher than Class A in his
eventually have to decide on his
status.
I
"I'm going to try and stay up
all year," said the 21-year-old
Pratt. who batted .258 with 12
homers and a club-high 65 RBI
last year for Winter Haven of the
Class A Florida Slate League. "It
may be impossible for me to
start. but I'm sure going to try
and make it."
Pratt was selected off the
roster of Pawtucket of the
Internatlo1181 League - 'the 'top
affiliate .of the Boston Red Soxduring the Major League Rule 5
drall at the Dallas winter meetlngs last Dec. 7. Pratt must
remain with' Cleveland for the
entlre 1988 season. or Boston can ·
buy him back .tor $25,000, half of
what the Indians paid .for the
21-year-old from Bellevue, Neb.
Indians Manager Doc Edwards admits many decisions
concerning his "reserves will
depend on what the team will do
with ' Prat(.
' 'Prattwlllbethewholekey ,"
said Edwards, who ts tn his first
full season as manager. "I like
him. He's big and strong and can
blithe ball out of the park."

,.....

Garcia also are unsigned, and
General Manager Murray Cook
said he would renew contracts
today.
.
Daniels said negotiations are
playing on his mind.
"I don't put Itout of my mind,"
he said. "Today I was ,thinking
aboutlt while I was playing In the
outfield and I pounded the .ball a
little harder."
One of his line drives cleared
the right field fence of a practice
field and struck a passing car .
"rt I don't get a deeent
contract; lt'snotgolng.tobeover
me," said Daniels. ''If I ·a m
I'rngolngtoleteveryb- .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

8.97

Dlsc.._,gea February :19: Mrs.
Robert Coulter and son, Julie
Dressel, Vivian Ferguson, Jared
Figgins, Klmberle Greene, Mae
McCarty, Donald Nibert. David
Park, Shelby Pl~kens. Lillian
Roush, Sherr! Storms, Uarry
Wilson.
Births February liB: Mr. and
Mrs. James Schmoll, daughter,
Middleport.

Aller Rebate
Hyponex CraDgra•
ControiiPerltllur
Conlrola crabgrau aa
It lertlflzea lawn.
.

Cher to produe.e films

.

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Cher ~as en~red Into a
development and production
agreenlent with Paramount
· Pictures ~or feature tUrns .
Under ~ terms of the
contract, Cher will develop
motion picture projects In
. which she will.star and which
she will produce with Bohdan
Zachary, executive vice president of Cher's Isis
ProducllonR.

t2 Hp lrtggs ancllllallon Lawn Traelor

6 sp aed transaxle. 36" cut. Automotlll&amp;-type steering,
electric start and one gallon gas tank with fuel gtJuge.
'

$799.

Sprlag Shoaa Are Hera
N~TURt\LIZEit

Chapman ·Shoes
,

~OMaor•s ~~~

1101 STOJI

§]

2.97

Ml.llag

Leiiiiii ..J04 ..

614-992-6614

Pomeroy, Ohio
'

'AI pa,menta figured wltlla tl, ,000.00 down .-,merit. tlllll lt.u not ~ -llblllntar...
11.ft
.
.

"

...

Mfbt.•

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...............
..............
FOil lll'lltltlal ... II a ..

CHEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•CADILlAC
308 Main E. Street

1~11

1111111111 .. 7dfiWI.Ior

loltCOD~Iof bll

die road IDd IIIIa

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?\\tnHabr~~- }".: ''"&lt;~

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...

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The

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•.

Middleport
mayor~s court
Twelve defendants forfeited
bonds ·and seven others were
fined Tue,sday night In the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
!man
Forfeiting bonds were Tommy
Quillen. Middleport. $1,000,
posted on a charge of assault
upon pollee . officers; John Hoi·
combs, Langsville, $225, assault;
Robert A. Dobbins, Marietta,
$41; Betty J. Hill, Middleport,
$41; James R Dixon, Jr, Galli·
polls, $40; Theodore Saunders,
Columbus Station. $40; Ripkey R
King, Letart, W. Va.;$41; JackA.
Hannon, VInton, $42; Michael R.
Butche~ . Gallipolis, $42; James
C. Reltmlre, Hartford, W. Va.,
$40, all posted on speeding
charges; ·Gwenda Smith, Galli·
polls, SSO: stop sign violation;
Timothy Ball, Long Bottom $50,
expired tags.
.
Fined were Benjamin S.
Geyer, Lewisburg, N.C., $50 and
costs, speeding; Jenne! Oller,
VInton, $17, speeding; Nelson R.
Morrison, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, driving while under suspension; Lester M . Lewis, Ru·
tland, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Linda Johnson, Galli·
polls, $10, ·-.top sign violation;
Russell Lemley, Letart, W. Va.,
$10 and costs, running a red light,
and Charles Landers, Pomeroy, ·
$10 and costs, no operator's
license, and assured clear dis·
lance, $10 a11d costs.

....••.
..
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~

Auxiliary
meeting held

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.
.• ·

298 SECOND ST ..
POMEROY, OH. .

'.

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~:"•
••

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., FEB. 28 THRU SAT., MAR. 5, 1988

.

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•

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',1(

Meet set tonight
Eastern Athletic Boosters are
meeting tonight, 7:30p.m ., In the
high school cafeteria.

Seeks divorce

.

•'

Roy Franklin VanMeter, Ra·
cine. and Theresa Elaine VanMe·
ter, Racine, have filed ' In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
a disSolution of· their marriage.
Deborah Borah has been
granted a divorce from David P.
Borah.

F'tles action in court
Mountain Stale Bank, Parkers·
•: burg, W.Va. , has flied an action
: In Meigs County Common Pleas
,. Court against Robert S. Sams
l• and Judith A. Sams, Reedsville, ·
requesting · a judgment of
$2,727.82.

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BUCKET

19
Steak
•.••••
~
••
S2
Cube

9
$. _
1
1
Bacon •••••••••••••:•••••
'

BULK SLICED .

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FRESH FROZEN

Leg Quarters ••• ~•••• 39&lt;

MIXED

.

:~

:

.•.,
•

$

.

49
Whiting Fish ..~M'!. 4
HOMEMADE . . ·
.
·.
$ ,29
P~rk Sausage •••L:.. . 1
.

CHICKEN

•
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...

B:r ROBERT HOEFLICH
Crossover and the Shady River
A group of
· of Me!lgs Shufflers will be providing enter-.
. High Sct:ioot
talnment. Advance tickets are
a big vote of
$10 a couple and $6 a person.
thanks to Po meTickets at the door will,be $12 per
• roy Mayor Rl·
couple and $8 a person. Advance
chard Seyler
tickets at the cheaper price can
and other town
be purchased at the Rawlingsofficials for proCoats-Blower Funeral Home, ·
vldlng a gOpd
Clark Jewelry, Blue Tartan, and
location for the
Middleport Trophies
weekly teen dances they are
An auction will also be a
hold!Jig ln 1. the village hall
lea ture .of the evening with
audl.t orlum. '
·
. baseballs autographed by Clnlc·
This Saturday will be the third
nlnatl Reds team members going
to the highest bidders.
dance and will feature Scott
Mathews of WXlL as the d.j.
whUe Steve Rinehart of WKEE
Mrs. Violet Christy, 2353 Nedra
will be on; hand a week from
St., Grove City, formerly of
Saturday night. The dances are Meigs County, sends along a note
. from 8: to 11: 30 p.m. on both en tending big thanks to all of her
Athens and.Meigs County friends
Saturdays.,
·
. If, .as a parent, you have any, for their cards, let\ers a11d words
doubts abllut the dances, the of encouragement during her
parent group invites you to pay a
recent health problems. "They'
are a great inspiration and help
visit and to even help out. There
during iny convalescence," Mrs.
Is. a large group of chaperones on
Christy writes.
·
hand - both Inside and outside
· the building on dance nights. If
And other Leap Year birthday.
you want&lt;· to help out with the
Jessica Bartels, daughter of
chore do contact Iva Sisson, Max
Chuck and Joyce Bartels, ob·
WhltllltCh or Dennis McKinney.
served
her birthday Monday .
~ I'm also told thaI the young
Although actually four, Jessica
people are appreciative of the
was technically observing her
dances to the point of even
first birthday.
helping to clean up before and
Congratulations toE. R. Hollon
after the dances .
J
who will be observing his 93td
birthday on Friday . Cards may
·Speaking of dances. you might
be sent to him at Chester, Ohio
·also want to keep In mind that the
45720.
first annual MDA (Muscular
Dystropy Assp.) Shamrock Ball
Looks like spring will come
will be held on Friday, March ll,
after all, dQeSn't It! Not a bad
8 to midnight at the American
March l after the 168 days ·of
J,eglon Annex In Middieport.
February. Do keep smiling.

a.r

WORK ON PROJECT - A number of Meigs
County school children are working on the annual
"Send a Mouse to College" fund drive which Is
conducted through the ~chools to raise funds for

the Melp Unit of the American Cancer Society.
. Taryn Doidge, 9, of the Pomeroy Elementary
School, 18 pictured with the theme standup
placard.

Ugly, unsightly, ·unwanted
hair? Here's the answer

Ann
Landers

_

DEAR ' READERS: Today's to remove excess hair. Most
column Is not for everyone, but It females find this method psychoANN
;;
.._IAHD£118•
Is a subject that causes a lot of . logically acceptable for legs and
,.
anguish.
underarms, but are reluctant to
•••'
ere.w.a, r te
While you men go off to the shave their faces because of the
sports or business section, I am masculine connotations. Re••
•• •
going to devote most of this space member - contrary to popular Pitting the scarring are potential
complications, but both are rare
to unwanted 'hair on women and belief, shaving does !lot Increase
•~~·
If a skilled operator does the
the
best
ways
to
get
rid
of
it.
the
rate
of
hair
growth
C)r
make
••
•
procedure. The Society of Clinl·
. This Information is from the hair mote coarse.
cal and Medical Electrologists
Mayo Clinic Health Letter .
Pumice stone: This Is an
has established a certification
(Twelve copies a year for $24 and abrasive way to rub hair off your
'··
program of professional stand·
well worth it. The address: body. Your skin may become.red
',·
ards.
An. operator who pass~s .a
Raochester, Minn., 55905) ,
and Irritated.
.
•••
national
examination becomes a
,M
Cosmetic Treatment for Ex·
Plucking: Use of tweezers Is
certified
clinical electrologist. In
"
common for occasional long
Two 'more schools -Salisbury · ~enty-four participants took cess Hair
·~
many
(but
not all) states, elec·
Do you· have unwanted facial . hairs, such as on the chin or
Elementary and the Meigs Jun- part' In the junior high bee and
trologtsts must be licensed. Der·
and body hair? There.is no single around the nipples. For plucking
High SchQOJ..have selected these seventh and eighth graders
~J_j lor
matologlsts and other physicians
cosmetic treatment tor all. When a larger amount of hair, try wax.
thr~ ~boot bees, their repre· Included Allison Gannaway, Ste·
who often see hirsute patients
selectjng a technique, consider Many women find waxing more
sental ves to the Meigs County phanle Price, Brian Hoffman,
·~ Spell · Bee to be held on March Roger Roush, Lisa Schuler, the amount of hair you want to satisf&amp;ctory then .shaving, espe- can recommend a competent
~ 7 atE stern High sChool.
electrologist.
remove , the sensitivity of your cially for facial hair. Another
Shane Hatfield, Heather Franck·
••'
skin, and the time and expense advantage, · your skin remains
Wlnper at the Salisbury School owlak, Virginia Shuler, alter·
Involved. Some options are:
was Eric "Mitch" Jacks, a sixth nate; Ada~ Little, Nathan Ba·
smooth, with no stubble. With
••' grader,
son
of
Mr.
;#hd
Mrs.
toy,
Kelly
Doidge,
Penny
Lewis,
Makeup: For some women , a regular use, you may be able to
'1
, Danny Jacks, Gilkey Ridge Kelly Phelps, Matt Craddock,
heavy base of cosmetics will go six weeks between treat· . Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Wayland,
'
disguise a mild excess of facial ments. Phicklng has potential Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, are
Road,l Pomeroy. Runner-up was Jason Dowell, Beth Clark, Susan
hair . .
Angl~ Johnson, also a · sjxth Love, Rachael Roush, champion,
disadvantages. Occasionally, it announcing the birth of a son ,
I•,'
Bleaching:
This
grader,daughterofMr.andMrs.
Tammy
Miller,
Mary
Comston,
makes
the
may lead to Infection In the hair Jeremy Tyler, born on Jan. 1 at
••
hair less obvious; It works best follicle and cause pits or scars.
James Johnson, Route 1, Shade. Lisa Pierce, Melissa Neutzllng,
the Holzer Medical Center .
••• Both Jacks and Johnson are Miranda Nicholson, and Nlchelle . for a mild "peach fuzz" on the , Electrolysis: This Is the only
The Infant weighed eight
•• studepts of ~d Bartels at Salis· Scott .
upper lip, You can make bleach method for permanent hair rem· · pounds, eight ounces and was 21
.
at home from 6 percent hydrogen oval. The technique IS effective Inches long. Maternal grandparRachael Roush correctly
••' •• . bury Elementary.
peroxide and a few drops of but causes a mildly painful ents are Doug and Carol Wyatt ,
Ra~hael Ro~sh, an eighth spelled "malign" after VIrginia
'•
••
,., ~ grader,daughterofMr.andMrs. · Shuler misspelled that word and ammonia. Most women prefer shock. This work Is time- Mt. Olive, Miss . and Linda
commerical products available consuming and, therefore, ex- Wyatt , Pomeroy. Maternal
Roger Roush, Route 4, Bailey then Roush correctly spelled the
•• Run Road. Pomeroy, was named next word on the pronouncer's at drugstores or beauty shops.
pensive. Electrolysis is espe· great-grandparents are Don Bat·
·",.._I , .r champion speller at the Meigs Jist, "manual" to .win t,he junior
Shaving: This l's ·the easiest, cially suited ·!or removal of ley. Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ida
safest, fastest arid cheapest way problem hair in a limited area. Wyatt, Mt. Olive, Miss. Paternal
Junior High School in Middleport high bee.
•• and
will
represent
that
school
at
Pronouncer
for
the
junior
high
grandparents are Gary and
·',. the county event.
Sonja Wayland, Middleport , and
bee was Jeanne Bowen and
.~
the paternal great -grandmother
Runner-up wa s VIrginia
judges were Carla Saelens and
• Shuler,
Is
Edna Wayland , Middleport.
a seventh grader, daugh· Suzanne Weaver. All three are
'•:~ ter of Mr.
and Mrs. David Lucas, reading and spelltng teachers at
Route 1, E.wlngton, ·
the juniqr high school .
•

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....

'nrnfs., "- ... -

....·:.. S~lling
...

finalists named .
in /preparation for Bee

(

Fryer Parts •••••• ~•••• 39
BARS Bulk
$ .9
Chopped Ham ••~... 12,

Plans for the annual American
Legion birthday dInner party In
celebration of the 69th annlver·
sary of the organization's found·
lng, were made when the AuxU·
lary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, met at the hall
recently.
.
Mrs . Gerald Roush. president.
noted that the dinner has been set
for March 15 at 6:30p.m followed
by a program at 7:30p.m. Baked
steak will be served by the
auxiliary members who were
urged to volunteer their
assistance.
Special thanks were extended
to Mrs. Gerri Mfller and all those
who assisted her for helping on
the recent blodmoblle. The Auxll·
lary sponsored the canteen Feb.
10 and served over 100 people.
Mary Martlri was appointed
unit Americanism chairman fol·
lowing the resignation of Erma
Smith w)to has served the unit In
that capacity for 'several years.
Miss Smith was complimented
on her excellent ' job In that
capacitY. Mrs. Martin noted that
she will begin working on Buck· ·
eye Girls State. The unit will send
two girls to the workshop on
democracy. Since February Is
Americanism month, Mrs. Martin had a reading on that theme.
Mrs. Veda Davis announced
that the juniors of the Auxiliary
will sponsor the games at the
party at the Athens f&gt;1ental
Health Center Thursday . Mrs.
Rought presided at the meeting
with Veda Davis giving the
prayer. To close the meeting
members sang "America" and
gave a prayer for peace.

Workshop set
Erica Magnus of Athens , a
published author, will be at the
Racine Elementary School on
Wednesday for an al)-day work·
shop wth grades one through six.
Her visit is a part of the Ohio
Right to Read Week activities.

~

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10 OZ. LINKS OR LB. ROLL BALLARD'S

Sausage •••••••••••••• $129

Wayland birth

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&gt;
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Grpup to organize
Racine Baseball Association
will hold an organizational meet ·
ing" Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Southern Kindergarten Building.
All Interested parents are urged
to attend.
·
Plan supper
Ches ter Volunteer Fire De·
partment will be sponsoring a
so up supper on Satu'rday March
12 at the station house. Serving
will begin at 5 p.m. Dinners will
be served and soup will also be
soiq by the quart. Please bring
own container when ' bu ying bythe quart.
Clinic scheduled
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club wilt hold a blood pressure
clinic on Tuesday morning from
10 to 12 at the townhouse.
Everyone welcome. A club meeting will fo llow the clinic and all
club members are asked to
attend .
To meet Monday
Ali parents of Meigs Local
band students are urged to attend
Monday's band booster meeting
to be held Monday, 7 p.m. , in the
high school band room.

.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

Announcements

•.

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"••

Pomeroy
mayor's court ·
Seventeen defendants·foi'feited
bonds and six others were fined
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tl!esday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Paul E.
Anderson, Pomeroy, $45; Pearl
Scott, Pomeroy, $45; Donnie
Nickels, Middleport, $49; Terri
Deem, Tuppers Plains, $47;
Randall Jackson, Letart, W.Va .,
$47; Dana · Carlson, Guysville,
, $45; Julie Cramer, Athens, $45; '
Paul E. Will, .lr., Pomeroy, $46;
Melanie He{risley, Shade, $46;
William· Cremeans, Rutland,
$47; Roger French, Belpre, $47;
Wanda Swett. Dexter, $51;
James H. Sorrells, Athens, $45,
all posted on ·speeding charges;
Earl 0 . Pickens. Pomeroy, $45,
speedi ng, and $63, driving while
under suspension; Brian K
Green, Albany, $43, Illegal turn;
Robet t Combs, ' Long . Bottom,
$6.1, squealing tires; Robert
Knapp, West Columbia, W. Va.,
$375, driving while Intoxicated.
Fined were Sheridan Pierce,
Jr., Long Bottom, driving while
intoxicated, $375 and costs; Dar·
vln Fitzpatrick, Shade, fpeed lng,
$51 and costs; Sherr! Hart,
Vinton, $45 and costs, speeding;
Randall Werry, Racine, $48 and
costs, speeding; Martin Woodard , Bidwell, $6.1 and costs,
failure to register
motor
vehicle; Mitchell Meadows, Mid·
dle port. traffic signal violation,
$6.1 and co~ts .

By The Bend

.•.•

Friends and Flowers
Garden Club has meeting

.~

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(
Bananas •••••••••••• ~... 39
'

BROUGHTON

$]39
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
.

. GAL

•

BROUGHTON'S- 24 OZ. CTN.

SUGAR

~'~~

5/$1

Umit S Per CullAt Powell's S.,.marktt
v-v - " • foil, 21 ""'' ..,,.1

4 LB.
BAG

99C

··..... .
'·'
:...
·~.

..•

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:roo}l(fi

CAT ·FOOD

.t.,

BANQUET .

.

PURE SWEET GRANULATED

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PURINA

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BANQUET

5

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I 0.1· 10. 7 OZ.

ARMOUR VIENNA

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Cottage ·Cheese •.•••

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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle·
port Literary Club will meet on
Wednesday at 2·p.m. at the home
of Mrs. George Hackett Jr. "The
Call" by John Hersey will be
reviewed by Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
~--

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Unit 3

Lilli 1 Pw C.t I I
-~ Oaly At Pt..l:1 S piiWiltt

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POMEROY - Pomeroy Ma·
sonic Lodge will meet at 7:30
p.m. 1Wednesday at the Middleport temple with work to be In the
fellowcraft degree and. all mas-.
ter masons are, invited. ·

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangelln¢
Ch11pter 172, Order of .Eastern
Star, t,tiddleport, will meet 7: 30
p.m. thursday. Officers are to
wear chapter dresses.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town·
RliTLAND -:: RuUand Base· · · ship Trustees will meet at 7 p:m.
ball League will hold an organ!· Friday at the Pagevllle Townzatlonal meeting Thursday, 7 ship Building.
p.m.'. , !It the Rutland Civic
SYRACL"SE - A public soup
Center. All coaches, officers and
supper, featuring soup, sandparenll are asked to attend. New .wlches and pie, .will be served ,
offlcen Will be elected.
beginning at 4 p.m. Friday at tile '
Asbury Metbodllt Church In
·, FOREST RUN - Forest Run
:· Metllcldllt Church II having a Syracuse.

..
:-:
~.

rummaae sale on ThursdaY and

SATtJJU)AY

:;; .• FridaY In the baaernent of the
~ :• c:hurc!'- HOun will be 9 to 3 each ·. ~M~=~ T~::;~

1 :•'day·

':

MOM district will be IM!Id Satl!r:~ ~ ' .
--:• "day at Royal Qak Relort. Rect-POMEROY The Meigs tratlon, 12 noon with fee d. .1.
'• • Coulaty Ban AD&amp;Ien Club will Racel to be81J1at 1 p.m. Pack 2t8
. ~ '· meet 7 p.m. Thune!II)' at tile of SaUlbury II boltllla lbe derby.

a'
~

• Pomeroy United Methodist
.Cbureb.
·.

-JU,~ - Rutlalltl Fire
; 11Ua U'l aHUal lllrUy

__

·

MONDAY

..!

CHESTER-OieaterPTOww

meet MDIIIItO' 11111rt at 'I p,m at
the CIIIUir EIIIIIHtarY lellaol.

I

$8°0 OFF LEE JEANS
Ur. &amp; Misses, Storm Rider and Relaxed Rider)
107 PAIRS

WAS $27.99

1 GROUP GIRLS'

NOW

$1999

FASHION JEANS

NOW

S11 99

VALUES TO $27.99

BOYS' BASIC

LEE &amp;
LEVI
JEANS
DAIK DENIM ONLY

250//0 OFF

-.~

::;
"' 1•

GOlD MEDAL FLoUR

A demonstration on how to arrangements. ·
At the January meeting held at
make cornhusk flowers was
given by Camille Bolin at the
the home of Judy Snowden,
recent meeting of the Friends
members viewed a slide presendinner will be held Thu'rsday at ·and F1owets Garden Club held at
tation entitled "The Wonderful
World
of Cacti and Succulents."
the Rutland Elementary School. the home of Janet Bolin .
Serving will start at .5 p.m.
M1•s: Bolin noted that the husks ·It was noted that all cacti are
succulents but all succulents are·
Advance tickets for $4 are must . be first wet, then spilt
not cacti. Scale and proportion
available from any fireman . several times, and then rolled
are Important in container plant·
Everyone welcome.
around a pencil to dry. Lily
lngs, it wli,s noted with the most
--Kennedy then discussed arrangcommon error being that too big
'
FRIDAY
.
ing corilhusk flowers .
,
a flowet• pot Is usually used for
POMEROY - Planned ParFor rolf call Mrs. Bolin pres·
· enthood of Southeast Ohio Pa· ented a reading on birds for · the plants . The slides were
donated to the OGC BY the
tlent Services offices will be devotions. Members commented
Walnut Hills Club, Region 8.
closed Friday for staff meeting. on a . live floral arrangement
For roll call mem~rs crl·
Offlces will reopen on Monday at ma'de by Brenda Bolin which
tiqued an arrangement made by
8:30a.m.
l consisted of carnations, fern and
Janet Bolin using corn husk flow·
baby''s breath in response to roll
ers, straw flowers, and golden
CHESTER - Reading prime· call.
Plans lor the Ohio State Fair
rod.
time, a part of Right to Read
March ·meeting will be held at
Weeek activities at .the Chester planting were discussed .with
the home of Brenda Bolin.
Elementary School, will be held Judy Hl)l to make the final
Friday night 6 to 8: 40 p.m.

· Community,calendar·

a

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9
5
51
·R1tz Crackers .~:~;:~x.
. TV D1nners •••••••••••• 89&lt;
·sa~sage •••••••••••••
Pot Pies ••••••••••••• 4tS1
NA!ISCO FJG NEWTONS OR . .

-:--

.-

JEREMY WAYLAND

SIZE 0-14
REG. &amp; SUM

1,3 PAIRS OF MEN'S

LEVI &amp; LEVI JEANS
~

Will PIIIS-.....•1.94 .

-

V&amp;UIIS YO 129.99

ADOLPH'S

·at!~~!. •~ ~~~ .
POMSDY; ...

S13 99

"" .

�March

Ohio

Another Miss :rexas wins Miss USA
EL PASO, Texas (UPI) -The
Miss USA, Courtney Gibbs,
said she had doubts before being
crowned that a fourth contestant
representing Texas In as many
years could win the IItle.
Gibbs, of Fort Worth, became
the fourth con51!Cutlve Miss
Texas to win the contest Tuesday.
night, ending a trouble-plagued
pageant that drew a protest
against a decision to wrap the
beauty queens In furs.
· The 21-year-old brown-haired,
blue-eyed act res~ and model will
compete In the Miss Universe
Pageant In Taipei, Taiwan, startIng May 23.
The first runner-up was Miss
California, Dlan,a Magana. The
other three finalists, In order,
were Miss GeOrgia, Donna
Rampy; Miss Flo.rlda, Monica
Bruni Farrel; and the fourth
runner-up, .Miss Mississippi,
THERE SJQ!: IS- N-1)' ci'OWIIH Mll!lll USA, Courtney
of . Dana Michele Richmond.
Fort Word! Texas Is surrounded by ller fellow contestuts alter
Gibbs, 5-foot-9, •125 pounds, Is a
recelvlac.her crown. Miss Gl bbs Ia lhe fourth Ml1111 Texas In a row
junior at Texas Christian linlverto become Miss USA. ( UPI)
.
slty, planning a career In adverII('W

Using, broadcasting, marketing
or public relations. Eventually,
she would like to own and operate
a women's fashion boutique, she
said.
Gibbs ·said she was unsure
whether . a fourth consecutive
Texan would win the title.

.

PomeiOV-Midcleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page , 9--

rus
are

fur coats to winners~ His replace· to Chlel Municipal Judge Robert
ment. Alan Thlclq!. star of Duran.
ABC-TV's "Growing; Pains" and
El Paso pollee spokesman Lt.
"Animal Crack-lips," said Mon· ·J .R. Grijalva said Romero Is the
day he was against the use of subject of a crlmlnall ~ves~lgaanimal traps but believes anlm· tlon. Gr-Ijalva said po ~ ave
als raised on fur farms are been Informed thatthesuspectls
treated humanely.
a long-time friend of the judge.

1

State dlstrlci judge Brunson ,
The 1988 pageant has been
. "I didn't ~xpect to make It," ·
Gl bbs .sa ld. "Competition In the plagued with other problems, Moore ordered the suspect re·
Miss GSA Pageant Is always Including controversy surround·· arrested and set bond at $100,000.
tollgh. I feel fabulous."
lilg an attempted sexual assault PadUla turned himself In Sat~r- ·
of
the pageant co-host, two day, posted ·bond and was
Miss Calltomla and Miss
Texas both were proteges of contestants arrested for shoplift· released. ·
Guyrex, a company owned by lng and another charged with .
The contestant representing
Richard Guy and Rex Holt that drunken driving.
presents pageants In Texas and
Pollee said Pedro Concepcion _ Minnesota, Julie Nelson, Is that
California,
PadUla allegedly tried to sexu: state's third choice after dlscovDuring the pageant about 25
ally assault pageant co-host ery that the. winner,_Sue BoUch,
demonstrators marcheq peace- Tracy Scoggins, who played . and first runner-u_p, Jolene Stav· ·
fully outside the El Paso Civic
Monica Colby In the ABC·
rakls, had been arrested for
Center In a protest organized by
sehes , "The Colbys," Thursday shoplifting. Bolich, 20, Is a
an animal rights groups called
at the Marriott HoteL
University of Minnesota drama
Sangre de Cristo.
Associate Municipal Judge Ro- major !rom Bloomington.
Former Miss liSA emcee·Bob
dolfo Romero was suspended
Charges of driving wqlle lntoxl·
Barker resigned In January a.tter· from the bench after setting $100 cated are still pepdlng agall)st
hosting the pageant for. 21 years · bond for the suspect, according Miss Kentucky ,Suzan Pitman.
to protest the decision to award

••

:rv

'

Sta~e church won't be tough
ALEXANDRIA, La. tUPI) Despite the wishes of national
church leaders, 'the Louisiana
Assemblies of God refused to
toughen Its tl)ree-month suspension of disgraced television evangelist Jlminy Swaggart, a newspaper reported today.
The Times-Picayune of New
Orleans quoted an unidentified
source close to the deliberations ·
as saying the state organization
has sent Its original recommendation back the the Executive
Presbytery In Springfield, Mo.
The source told the newspaper
the Louisiana board has requested that the llnal decision

regarding Swaggart's religious
fate be made by the church's
200-member General Presby.tery, which Includes officers
represtlntlng Louisiana and 56
other nationwide districts of the
Assemblies of- God.
"The local district Is trying to
help him, not hang him," the
source said. "And the members
apparently believe there 's a
better chance to do that before
200 experienced men of the
church."
The state council met for more
than eight hours Monday In
Alexandria to reconsider Its first

N/acy's;·-Campeau
battle for empire
TORONTd fliP!)- Campeau.
Macy's, In an lith-hour bid
Corp. offered to restructure Its
disclosed late Monday, entered
$6.1 billion bid for Federated
what had been a month-longflght
Department Stores Inc. - the
tust as Federated's board was
parent company of Bloomingexpected to approve the Camdale's - but analysts predicted
peau deal. It was widely exrival bidder R!H. Macy &amp; Co.
pected Campeau would win after
would win the takeover battle.
he boosted his bid last week from
If Macy's successfully takes
$66 a share, or $5.9 billion, for
over and merges with the
some 90 million snares on fully
Cincinnati-based Federated De·
diluted basis.
partment Stores: It would create
Federated said Macy's offered
a retail empire controlling New
$73.80 a share cash,lp a proposed
York's three largest department
tender, lor about 80 percent of Its
stores: Macy's, Bloomingdale's
stock. The remaining 20 percent
and Abraham &amp; Straus.
would be exchanged In a merger
The Federated board met In
lor shar~s of newly Issued
New York Tuesday .to consider
Macy's stock equal to about 40
the offers by the Toronto-based
percent of the outstanding shares
Campeau and Macy's, the large
of a merged concern.
New York-based department
~tore chain made famous In the
The cash portion ol the offer
movie "Miracle on 34tb Street."
was
valued at about $5.3 billionThere was no world on what , If
$59.04
a share on the basis of 80
any, decision was made or If the
percent
-but analysts said the
meeting would continue ~oday .
total
could
not be estimated
Arbitrageurs have estimated
bee a use It depeni:ls on the value
the value of Macy's cash-andof the proposed new stock.
securities bid for Federated at
One arbitrageur estimated the
$6.3 billion. Federated, which
blended
value of the deal at $69 to
aiso Is the parent company of
$70
a
share,
or $6.2 billion to $6.3
Abraham &amp; Straus and I. Mag·
billion.
Another
estimated It a i
nln, Is America's fifth-largest
$66
to
$68
a
share,
or$5.9 billion to
retailer.
$6.1
billion.
Analysts predicted Federated
Campeau, in a statement, said
would approve the bid from
the Macy's bid was "an Illusory
Macy's. The company tried sev ·
offer designed to mislead lndlvidera! Urnes to rebuff Canadian
.
ual shareholders." He said his
raider Robert Campeatji, chair·
bid was superior but he would be
man of Campeau Corp .. before
prepared to structure a twoagreeing to negotiations this
•.
tiered
deal at Federated's
week.
·
request.
.,
"Obviously Federated wants
J\.lacy's, not Campeau," said
Macy's, which earned $59.6
New York analyst Monroe million on sales of $5.2 billion In
Greenstein of Bear, Stearns &amp;· Its last fiscal year and operates
Co. " They found their white 91 department stores and six
knight, or their white knight specialty stores In 14 states, went
found them . Campeau must be In private In a management buyout
shock today. He's In ,for big for $3.5 billion In early 1986.
Federated operates 676 stores
money already."
; Campeau's latest cash bid was In 36 states while developer
"allied at $68 a share, or $6.1
Campeau also owns about 275
billion. pushed up three times stores through Its Allied Stores
from an Initial $47-a -share, or Corp. of New York, acquired In
$4.2 billion. offer made Jan. 25.
1986 for $3.5 billion.

a

on Swaggart
'

ruling, which banned Swaggart be announced at the next regular
from the pulplt.for three months . meeting ott he Executive Presby ·
and ordered him to submit to two tery, March 29-31, or sooner. years of counseling after his
Church sources have Indicated
public confession of moral . that the national council wanted
,
failure.
a harsher punishment, extending
On Friday the national council the preaching ban to a year.
of the Assemblies of God, meetSwaggart's downfall began
Ing at Its headquarters In Spring- when church officials were given
field, ordered the state council to pictures of him entering and
reconsider Its original leaving a New Orleans-area
punishment,
motel room . with a known
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswo- prostitute.
man at the church's national
The snapshots reportedly were
headquarters, said national off!· taken by a private detective
clals had attended the Alexan· hired b:l( rival evangelist Marvin
drla meeting but left before It Gorman, who was defrocked by
adjourned. _
the church la.s t year on charges
"We won't have any statement of engaging In ailulterous atfalrs.
at all until this thing Is finalized Swaggart made the charges
and until a final decision Is against Gorman, who In turn
reached," she said.
!lied a $90 million defamation
Turnage said a decision could suit.

Airliner turns back
because ·of drug ·u se
NEW YORK (UP!) - An
Eastern Airlines jet bound for
Miami returned to New Yo'rk
mid-flight because a passenger
was believed to be freebaslng
cocaine In a -bathroom and others
were thought to be using the
drug, authorities· said today.
Five passengers were taken
Into custody from Eastern Flight
977, which left New York at 1:23
p.m. Tuesday but returned to
Kennedy International Airport at
2:19 p.m. ; said John Hughes, a
Port Authority spokesman.
A stewardess had reported
passengers were using cocaine In
the bathroom, leading the pilot to
.turn the plane around mld-lllght,
said Karen Ceremzak, an Eastern Airlines spokeswoman.
Lt. Jerry Matthews of the Port
Authority Pollee said the stewardess said at least one passenger
was "freebaslng," wblch Involves heating the drug to make
It more potent and then Inhaling
the fumes..

The pilot radioed smoke on
board the aircraft and returned
to Kennedy, wh~re the plane was ·
met by federal authorities and
five people were taken Into
custody, H11ghes. said.
Two men and two women Were
charged with possession of drugs
and drug paraphernalia and
Interfering with flight operation,
Hughes said.
The !Uth person, a woman, was
taken Into custody but not
charged, he said.
The names of those arrested
were not lmmedl&lt;!tely available.
· An agent of the Drug Enforcement Admlrilstratlon who hap. pened to be aboard the plane
asslste!l In the arrests, ·Port
· Authority officials said.
There were 109 passengers and .
a crew of 11 aboard the plane,
which originally was scheduled
to arrive In Miami at 4:24 p.m .,
Hughes said.
The plane departed a second
time from New York at 3:30p.m.,
he said.

r-----------:__ _;___________-l

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Use H&amp;R BloCk's ~icl Refund ft.ogram.
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Open 9 AM•I PM WHkdaya, 9·&amp; Soturuy. Phono 992-1174

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I

WITII ARMOUR.4CANNED MEATS

I SA.VE20~ *
I ARMOCJR.4 CHUJ
*
SJE\\1
on

IN OIL OR WATER

I
~ I

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wJiur ()I COYIIOn pi~ 8' llindlrn!j prCW!lltd '/OV 111d 1hf COAhilWI
hM tomphell Mil\ the 1erm5 ulthe otter Cuh ll'i!IIUI! I 1001hol 1C

Is

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~~

FROZEN

;:FROZEN PEAS, CORN OR .·

·Smoked Call_ie. Hams ••a-••• ~·?c
Shredllad .. $U9

Swtn-ECIIICH

Cooked Ham ........~a..~•. S1.79

CIISP AND SEIVE VACUIM PACI

Bacon ••••••••••••••••••~~•••• ~ $1. 1

IIAn 16 SUCI 12 OZ.

AllER. PROC.
CHEESE ................$1.89

LETTUCE •••••••• !~.!-!:.....69c
'

SUNIISI
·
LEMONS .....!~~.~;.. 3/59«
WINESAP

MIS. SMITH'S

.

Cherry Pie .............!t:h. S2.69

39

Hamburger Helper ••·.:~. S1.49
UICH CUFF
· .
s.roz. 2/$1 •59
• In·011..................
Sa r d1nes

ei(Ciuslve 1wo year worranty.

l

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Stop In Dllll wisitl Anll bt IUI't to • tilt
ltdtlltionl
to -liM collectitw - btalltlflllg~~Mtllli watches with
.,.. . . . . well oi ••.., ........ .,.,. ..... all ot • 20% Sawlngl fw the lolltlaR CIRid•••iiiii.W....

nu-IIST ' · .

CliP . ., . . . . . - . . oz.

tJ ~12 1. Mlln -

PDmny

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Tuna ••••••••••••••••••••••:-:..~ S1.29

OfJ!.
rreflelen ~
·

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•

.

Spaghttti/.atballs ••• S1.9t,
-

MONII YIILOW a•a

Peach Halves ..~••••••••::.~~••• 9I 7c
.l

.

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,

QUARTERS

~:Kr~ger Fruit .

,·

I'

c

.,
•
46-oz.
J
0rang~ DICe ...... Can '
'

c

?. Kroger Cherry •
..~ Pte
• F·11·
1 1ng ............. 21-o:t.

.,..••
!.

c

;:Kroger

~Brown Sugar ...... 2-ib.

•••

~ Kroge.r

· , · .·
·tlx Sugar ....:....... 2-lb.

" lpS .........................12-oz.

Cost Cutter
Egg Noodles........ 16-az.

C Country Oven $
Potato Chips ....... 16-oz.

19•

~·

. .

I

Cost ·cutter
$
Peanut Butter-.... 1s-oz.

19

COST CUTIER

~:.~~~~.~~············~
Brand
c
s
.....................•...
. CONDENSED

.

.

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C.

49.

fth•

•

Embassy
Mf;lyonnaise ........ 32-oz.
Vac Pack · · $
Kroger .coffee: ... ~~~

Chocolate

•

'

'

79

· COST CUTIER

I

Kroger

,.''·

Chocolate
$
Drink Mix .............32-oz.

c

•

'

KROGER

c

~:Avondale

&lt;

C Blue Bonnet
Margarine ............ 1-lb. •

Cost Cutter
Saltines . ~ ...............16-oz.

~;. Cocktail ................. 16-oz.

.

1111n CIDCID CHIISIIIIIGD IIICIIOfll

;Orange Juice ...... 12-oz.

c

Springdale
$
2% Milk ................ Gal,

Puddings ••••••••••~m~~!.~. ,S1 "29
1
100°/o Bran Flakes !~::. S1.9 7

C ,Cost Cutter

Kroger
Flour ........................ s-Ib .

c

HE'S SIIACI PICI

'

'FROZEN

c

._:;Cost Cutter
:: S~aghetti
.............. 2-lb.
~

'

:Avondale
r~ Pear Halves ........ 16-oz.

.

C Downyflake
Waffles ................. 12,oz.

Cost Cutter
Shortening ........... 42-oz.

69·

Facial Tissues •••••••••!~~r.-•••·.99C
RNDEI LEAF : '.
' '
100 a. $2 69'
'.a Bags •••••••••••••••••••••
•
POST

'

c

. . .

!: Peaches ........... :.... 16-oz.

F

•

FROZEN

Country Clu.b . $
Ice Cream .......... %-Gal. .

•

Chicken ••••••••n:h. S4~·19

IANQUO

Slices ...................... 12-oz.

c

c

p

HEAD

Sandwi~h

;Macaroni &amp; ·
;Cheese D1nner. 7.25-oz
. '

LONGHORN
CHEESE ......... !~... S1.89

C

(

COST CUTIER

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

.

Kroget
Corn Flakes ......... 1a-az.

c

rKroger
.:Cake Mix .......... 1s.26-oz.

COPYRIGHT 1988 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
·FEB. 28, THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1988, INGAUIIOUSMD,.• .., .......

liN THE DAIRY CASE)
.·
WRAPPED SLICES KROGER
INDIVIDUALLY
'

I

5-lb.

'

.Cool Whip .............!..Z••• S1.2 3

1

.....

09

1

~(

.SIImiFIIlD 6-1 L1. IVIUGI

Kroger
$
Ouick Oats ...........42~az.

$ 99

1!Kroger Mi_
xed .· .
~iV ..."getables ......... ·.20-oz.

0

The very newest ladles' watches from Europe.
Swiss crottsmonship, tested accuracy to within one
minute per year. gold tone and stainless steel cases
and bonds. Doves watches come with the

.

:Interstate
:French Fries ..

I

----------.~-

.

be accepted per rtem purchased .

c

:Kroger
·
..
. .
:Tuna ........................6.5-oz

"JJ'('

TMI M tofl,_notl, Dl;:ukw• 1MI. 1 ,_.. lrhl.

ADVERTISEII ITEM POLICY
Each of theM advertised items il requir"ed to be readily a&gt;Jaiable for sale in uch .
Kroger Store, eKCIPt 11 specificlilly noted In this ad. If w~ do run out _of an ·
advertised item, we w~l offer you vo.ur chotee of. a co'!1para~ 1tem, when availl~.
reflecting the tame aavinga .or a r~1nch~k. whiCh will entitle you to purchase th.• advertised item at the advertised pnca wllhm 30 days. Ontv one vendor coupon w~l

Margarine

1.-----~~~~-----. .I .....;__._ _ _. zoe I

APPLES .........:.

WHY WAIT
FOR YOUR,
TAX-REFUND

MONEY SAVING COUPONS ·

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•
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•

ALL FLAVORS

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Big K··
Soft Drinks ....... 2-Ltr.

•

•
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ALL FLAVORS 12-0Z. CANS

Big K
.Soft Drinks .......

$ 97
••

12-Pak

FROzEN

·Ozark Valley
.Pot Pill ...·.:...........
••

11"0&amp;.

�•
1()-lhe

Wednesday. MarCh 2. 1988

Ohio

I

ermont a·s~rong showing for ·Jackson~_ ..
bolulce Into Super Tuesday,

prove. I think 40 percent Is a very
March 8, when 20 states bold · strong showing."
prlmarlell or caucu~es .
Jackson, who also finished a
. AD euy Duklld•-vlctory In the strong second , to Dukakls In
purely l4vllory COIItesi was
Maine, drew support from new·
comers to the Green Mountain
expected. Tile Bulb·Dole r1ce
was conaldered c:IC!R IJOIJII Into State, progressive voters who
moved to Vermont from Boston
the pl1mlry, which allowed for
party croasover voting.
and other urban areas. He was
f&gt;ukakts In a statement said,
endorsed by .Bernard ·Sanders,
"TOday's wtn In Vermont Jives · the socialist milyot of B!1rllngour 50 alate national campaign ton, the state's largest city.
another boost toward success
"I think It's a fantastic show·
next week In Super Tuesday."
. Tbestate cbalrman oftbe Bush lng," Sanders said. "I think what
campalp, Jack Lindley, said, this means tor Jesse Jackson, as
he goes Into the South, this should
"Senator Dole's great claim Is
that he atlracts -Independents be a real boost to his effort"
Democratic Gov . Madeleine
and Democrats. He had an
opportullity In this Vermont Kunin, a Dukakls supporter, !laid
beauty contest to do that and he J11ckson's strong finish "clearly
didn't do that, U be didn't do that shows his growing strength and
that his vote goes beyond the
In Vermonl, I'm not -s ure where
black vote, since Vermont Is a
In the country be can.
''The Republicans In Vermont state that has a very, very
modest black pclpulatlon."
• are telltnc George Bush, 'Good
·.
luck-oil Super Tuesday,"' Lind:
vermorit only offers 19 Detnt&gt;ley said.
Tile vice chairwoman of Dole's cratlc and 17 Republican deleVermont campaign, Mary Ellen gates, who will not be assigned
Grupp, said she was not dlsap· until state party conventions In
pointed with a second-place ApriL
The primary Is merely an
ttnllh. "Everybody likes to win,
advisory vote, although some
but I think we did win," sh~ sal~.
"We proved what we needed to analysts say It can have a

· MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI) -

~~-:nM=:eD~~e:~~

wttll atroaa Jiew EnaJand tiel,
«HIIfoa'lable vletortes Tllel·

. day In Vermont'a DOn·blndlq
.
presidential priJn4ry.
Civil rlahtsleader Jeae Jack·
son reglilerejl his aecond consec·
utlve stl-oftl second-place show·
lng'ln a state with a tiny minority
population.
·
With 99 pefc:ent of the precincts
h!jiOI llq, Dukakll . had 28,ai8
votes (57 percent) tO 12,966 votes
(26 percent) for Jackson. Mls·
sour! Rep. Richard Gephatdt had
3,968 votes (8 percent), Sen. Paul
Slplon of Dllnoll 2,5!!4 votes (5
percent) and former Sen. Gary
Hart of Colorado 2,027 votes (4
percent.) Sen. Albe~t Gore Jr. of
Tennessee was not on the ballot.
VIce President Bush had 23,381
votes (49 perceril)", to 18,471 votes
(39 perCent) for senate Republl·
can leader Robert Dole of Kansas, 2,435 votes (5 percent) for
former TV evangellat Pai Robertson and 1,849 votes ( 4 percent) forRep.JackKenipofNew
York.

·.

••
LINING UP - Meencliusellll Gov. Mike Dukak!s ~ 11
Baltimore ol line up party lallhlullor aexl week'sauper Tlleeday
presidential primary, whUe leading In Vermont's non-binding
·
·
·
prim ary • (UPI)·
. .

Dukakls, governor of neighbor·
lng Massachusetts, and Bush,
who has a summer home In
Maine, won' the Maine preslden·
tlal c•ucuses Sunday and hoped
Vermont would provide an added
•

·- -·
·The Daily Sentinel

bearing on candidates' mdlnen·
tum as they head from. the ,New
Hampshire primary Into the
super Tuesday contests.
For the most part, cand~ates
left their Vermont campaigns In
the hands of staffers and local
polltlclails, preferring Instead to
concentrate on winning the 1,307
Democratic and 713 GOP llele;
gates up for grabs next Tuesday. _

TO PUCE AN AD CAll tt2-2156
III'ONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 ;,M.
·.. I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY .
CLOSED SUNDAY.
.
PO.LICIES

'

·-·

Bush WlJS th~ only candidate
who appeared In the state II! the
week leading up to tl\e primary .'
"ln terms of the national
context, the Vermont experlenc~
Is just a small blip on the ~t.een 1
and then It's justforgottei:l, "·sald .
Deputy Secretary of State Paul
'
'i
Gilles.

'A• outside Me.... Ollila or MUCN'I countlet mutt be

~R.,..,O t.I!Q dlocoum for odo pRI 1n -

Washington Post reported today
thatLanersaldMcCioskeywould
probabiYj oppose dropping the
suit unless Robertson agrees to
pay the l'lgal fees amassed so far.
Robertson said last week he
would not pay " one nickel" of
McCloskey's legal fees.
Robertson sued McCloskey
and Rep. Andrew Jacobs, 0-Ind.,
In October 1986 after McCloskey
wrote an Aug: 4, 19!Mi, letter to
Jacobs saying that Robertson
told him and others "that his
father had gotten him out of
combat duty" In the Korean War.
The action against Jacobs was
dropped last year.
Robertson's father, A. Willis
Robertson, served VIrginia In
Congress for more than three
decades.
Robertson has repeatedly de·
nied . ever asking his father to
Intervene . His libel suit seeks $10
million II) compensatory dam·
ages and $25 million In punitive
damages.
McCloskey said on the CBS
·:This Morning" program today
that he has obtained letters
written by Robertson'.s father ,
one of which was written to the
- Marine Corps, " saying, 'Thank

2

Public Notice

-oton,

PUBLIC NOnCE

c-.

~Adt

car.t of 111MU
1·. 1 • '

I

''The- original plan was even
though It was non-binding, ti
would attract some candidates, 'I
he said. ·" But I don't thlnl!. that I ~
working this year. We got Bush
for a halt an hour and then a lot of
a pologles .
'
"It's simply an exerctse,'l
Gilles said. "I suppose It help~
the candidates gauge the temper•
ament of the electorate, but It's
not a life or death thing. We're
just an afterthought" '

l I

the tfderly end hondiceppod
within ow .....
Optroton wha .,. ln,.r·
In offMing - • "
to ,..,.,.... ....cc. ohould
conloct Choo .... E. Hamp·
ton. Mtlntonen... FIICIIHtn
hfaly Admlnlltm"", or
M-m Onbough, Auoci·
Di..Ctor, Woodlond

Inc.. 412 Vlriton

Oeltipotlo,
Ohio
wilt ........, one 1-411131.l0 obtoln tho full depa-oer. lllandlrd
the type ot

VIII, VA-14-0.
h Ill PI ojocled -

lrlln-·

HIYicolhott•,_...
prior to preportng ' propo-

OM

h-red fifty ......,. rdal11c1ntand hlnd,_.,.d atllntawll UMtlle
..,.. dlyt • for vorloua octhrlttea lnalud·
lng lrlln....,...tlon to tnd
from 11~• end tndl·
vidull programo.
·
WoHIMd Cenlere, Inc.,
invitM - - t a -/or
PI aiP a rh from •" '"'-nted
· publici, prlvlle •nd pa,.lfin·
Iii -1810N lncluciii)G t'"l

....

CLYDE WINES. ,SR.

will· --~~~ llio lit. - ·

. ' P,olto Dolly,_ _

-..

Keane arranged the contract
between }\lhltehead Gould and
the childless New Jersey couple.
In her suit against the Infertility
Center, Whitehead Gould
charged the agency had failed to
counsel her properly before she
agreed to become a surrogate

Meigs County
property
transfers

I"N.'WAn.
;

.,
.,..__

f

••''

•nd
Happy momenta of tho
one• we loved to
muc:h.

_ _ ....~ ..-...... _

.

..,.._ ..,.... ,. ,_
. . . . .. . , ... ...,.__,..~

Sltdly ml"ed by

daughto" and

I

_ , _

-

···.... .
....._,.......

,.........

..

.

. •AIII·CONDmONERS
....,., PUMP&amp;

..

1
\

1

I

•'•

H01111Lot

IDII A. Mlifc lt.
Coolvill, Ohia 41723
1-114-117-31••

-

.'

2t

ldnlll · '
Opportunity

IESIA"A" FOI SALE

to. b.,.y

•
clean, well equipped, estab· ·
lishecl buainea~ Only neecta

' The oppOrtunity

younger owners •.
•

·AF1116 .

OlfY5I.fR

AFTHAVENUE

Allthoorbttl .1oM hero,
New Hollaool, ...,. Hog

,

Farm Equi,......t
DMitr

--·-

. 915·1111

16141 ft'l-6550

IBIIUI COIIIIACNIS

11·3-;ttn

Fan. E••l,...t
Parlt U~l'l 11,

16141

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
IAONE, OHIO

10·9-lfn

·Read the

•VINYL SIDIN~
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

(CLRSSIFIED

·BISS.ELL
SIDING ~0.

... ._ ...

!\Ill : . Ill

I • I ill'

7

Ill .

Yard Sale

11 Help Wanted

"Free Estim1te1''
3 AnnouncementJ
PH. t•t-2160
....... PoiTiero·v·· .. ----··
or 949·2101
Middleport
NO SUNOAY
~· ..d ConnoodoM
_____
..J.;l!.;!i!LJI•I totno
Doting of Huou.....,
&amp;
Vicinity
......,., ollwlna proflln.

~

''m wrtt.: K-~·
No0t, P.O. lox Ill. l10oiion.

.

You C8ft tffOf'd 10 look greet ell
tho limo 11 fiEITA HAIR
I'AIHtONI( A lhiompn ..t Ia

--..h

)ull n.tt, Mondor
••• lld-r.lftdyouMVerneed
.. F"'ll 1\CCMtl ~22 SeCONI

- .. - - ...... 441·
-1112.
MAI11NEI: W.'ro looiUng far •

t.w good men. For more lnfor·

Bake and Aymmege Sa~ . Mothen of Twlnl Club. Seturday,
March lth 11 Pomwoy Trinhy

ChUICh . 9:00-4 :00.
March 4th and lith on County
Rood 12. 31811 Toxoo Rd., 2
mila off Rt. 7 , ebrow. Chwter.
Tuttle Relldance.

8

3358.

.

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL.
SERVICE JOBS .
NOW HIRING . Your · A~. .~
en,tsO to Ut,480, IMME-

OIATI! Oponingo, Col 1-3il·
733-1013 Eot. f 2718.

Tele·a·Mart;etlnu · Ladl•• to
make appointment• for Ohio
VaUtpy Memory Gerdens, 6-9
evenings, t3.10 a hr. plus
bonus. CaM 10AM·1 PM only for
appolmment-1 14 -441-3&amp;16.

PM"t time in ttore merchandi.. t.
Call coii~Ct.. Pent• ShephtN-d.

Public Sale
It Auction

metton. call It, '"' Mlke Abell
II 304·420·1011 colleat.

Get a free cologne - Sell Avon.
MRe biQ bucks. Calll14-«e-

404-998·1148

Day or Night··
·NO SUNDAY CALLS

Out

IVs,
.....il.

(DIIIflll'$,

··

U. S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVW, OHIO
614-662-3121 .

"•Y Your !'hone
end C1l:le BUia Hare
IUIINISS PltOitl

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860

cledlc:
ltllfl' who
- tlllyw
CDI Iii . . . . . . ....
lng qmlltfc...lf
you
~ and comtfoitbl.... to ..... J1"11tlc
Cllre end '-n-". '11111 Olll·llr w.tle: '
.
F'1tty Con1rd, R.N., D.Q.Jt. ,
for all Interview. WEW in•11 IIIII liiMI
excellent 118M.. - - . .; J ·
ARCADIA NURI119(1 etNT!ft ,,,

_.. .......

Ret•eno•

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

SAUS &amp; SUYICE

.

~-~~f==·=M~- '

IJUpl';

BOGGS

We CM'y filhint IYIIPII•

"At R••101tablo Prius"

IIOWN'S
1'UUlPARI

I

•
8 INIH. . . .
II MabMI..._If._. '

'I, ........ _ . .

..... .....,io.o:
161 llwlh s.ctlld
····••rt, Ollie 45760

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES .

3:00·1 1.:30 A.M.
11:00 P.M.-7:30A.M.
75 BED ICF/LONO-TERM,
· · CARE FACIUTY
.. ,
LDokint for • taw aooc1 nurwa t1 J1i!1 -

Id

U-1

..._.., _ .HEATING

BUILDERS

~

PAmiMI LPN'S

,

.......

11dhtl #$11w

Olllo .....

991.-2156
.

1:00 ~.~.-3:30 P.M, SHIFT

.,_

Par ...,De

-~WIIIet­
wfth.aNnM

FULL TWI &amp; PAI1 , _ . •IIVISOIS

· ,•

n--c•.,. .. • ..., "~

•-'"*"
_,... a v;,nid:lu
....

•HOME BUILDING
'
•ROOM ADDinONS '•
oKITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMOOEUNOI
REPAIRS
SEP'fiC IYITIMI I
lACK HOE WORK

•.F UIINACII

"'

'

,. -caJ. ot 1 . . ."'""

(;-.

17 M

CONTUCtiiG
CHEITI!R, OHIO

i

fl'll!l! IITIMATEI
. . . M'J!.~

-

••

•

z.z.,.-., • LNoo .

coou•

~

IMM.IUtt.....

..
__
._. ....
... . . . . ..

The child was born In March ·
1986. Whitehead Gould, wbo
called the Infant Sara, refused to
surrender the child and fought
for custody In a court battle but
lost. The Sterns named the child
Melissa.
,
On Feb. 3, the New Jersey
Supreme Court ruled the surrogacy contract was Illegal; restored Whitehead Gould's status
as the c_hlld's legal parent and
said she should be awarded
visitation rights.

.21-.,.._o, .....,

'a11 Frrla

77--11...

•• • tv•

1/22118/lfn

-IIATIIII

'
'

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

.

11-c:.. TV .• I I - ...... -

I

Cu•••MeiM
Bulhllllt. ~~~-

Guttara
D-pDut.l
G,.uer CIMnlng

or, ••••, . . .

their famlll•

'.

. ........

ttJ~S6lJ

" - ' z•Y
0110010.
. ' t-&amp;:'11-1

CARTER'S
PLUMIING
&amp; HEATING
- 992,.6212
Jl9 So. 2nd Av•·
Middlepert, C)hio

Altlntkm Electroux cutto'mers.
Prenk Futa ll now your autho·
..._.. f . . .ry 111M end 1ervice
NpOUCAoobidua. for ..viol call
304-837-2272 anytlmo.

RADIATOR
SERVICE .

VINYL I
AL-IUii SIDINq
er.eul~
,
\:

.._.,_.

We'can repair and re,-

cora 11dtators and.

heater cores. We can

•I- Window•
"ffi~IIIMJillot Window•

also acid boil and l'8ll
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

,.unum

PAT HILL FORD

.,... ....,flag

••••s
,.._.;.tt2!.t7:72

POI!MI....-tfw 1188 Moun-

, . _ , write

P.O. lox

IIINfeflftformotlon.

---IPM.

'1\ GenNIII lllephenl • 'h Lab.·
oH - · To ..,.... hom• In

992·21911

-

Middleport. Ohio
1-13·1fo:

,,.,_·I· Coli

114·

lhaa••r

eooct

,......... te

Two---·
-

to

Coli 1\4-441-37117.

____

*Loll _ _I
__
G...
- old.

qENNY CONGO

- - . . - - 1 1 4 - 1 1 2-

....,..
_..._..,..
7111.

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

-

i

-

.

.,...._

- · twin ......

i'

·tfC

w..

Jim Mink Chev.-&lt;Mclalnc.
1111 Gtnt Johnaon

lt4-441-3172

toP CMH .pold far '13 model
1nd new• uMd c... Smith

-P'ontioc. 1111 e, ...,.
Aw.. Oalllpollo: ·c.ol 114-441-

2282.

Lolt and Found

....

II..., - ·. Coli 814-441·
7101.

_I'OUNO:........
__
Colltl4"'

-l"'17.

'

2130.

.

••·•16 PM

Carpenters:
hour
depending on skiHs; willing to
retocete. Csll anY11me .tt• 5

PM- .114· 245·5177.

Need blbysitter in my home.
O.ys • houurt vari... Trantppr ution needld. C111 814· 44fl·

7841.

Want to buy: u ... ........,. and

Information itftHdtdfora book.
Anyone vlctlmlnd "' prafootionll perton . C1ll The

- --

• Auctioll, - . ! . Olivo,
114-446-3111.

..........
.....- w.....
holdfum-.

R-on- 1-800-241-3882.

- l d lllul to ""' junk - 1 .
wNCIIttd e. . Md motoooycl~a.
Coli 4t4-371-21acl or 378·

JKklon. • Lawrenca Counti•
Coli 814-441-4101

.

2413.

Part-time truck delfvrlfy W~Mnted .
Know~o• of

Meigs, Ath~r~s.

t:'••ed.
appt .

•

Fft,EE Pieoe of Jewelery to first

w- so.boY -~.. tir!lbo&lt; •

1 0 ~ t~ lltl Avon- C.ll
114·44··2111.

114-112-7123.

Oov•rnment Joba. •11,040$18.230 ye.-. Now hlrtftl. Vo'ur
- 1 ·805·H7·1000 ht. R1105 tor current Feder.llitt."'

pitto. ""'TOP DOLLAII. I or ....-.. IJOOelllfte oalaao..,...
c.ll IMrY llih •1 n- Logolng.

----

c....... ... - . . . . , . __
Ceiii14-III-43M- 1 :00·
8:00 ,m. for •: t I obo&amp;W4. •

- · Coli Lony l.lvoly-114-

ueembty ~ - Jew.lry, toys,
and ottw.. fT eMI PT hllil. C. II
todorl 1-118-..
!loll· .

........
LOIT:-·-- J_co,_.,_

....

Motor Route carrier naeded.
Bondable, a good trlftlportl·
Cion. Crown Cily / Gallipolls
.,... C. II Jlln Miller 304· 628·

Complete hou11hol• of fuml ..,. I onllqooo. Aloo wood I
OMI .._... Swain'• Furniture

--114-248-1112.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
~---0.•·
--·-•,...CoiiW'
TOP SOil
-II. Cellfl4--·1121. IO"
LOIT:,._I...,-.Qomo.,
fiLL DIRT , '"'''
ld· .. .. .... ftt. Ill
1

tnheritanc' Aucotion, M1rch I •
1918. 10:00 am, Putnam
County CourthouH. Winfield, Looking for part-dmeleading to
W. V1. Termtcaehorcheckwitto full time by summer. Good PI\'
prOf*' to, Conbict AI Whitting- and good conditiont. Must be
ton, 304·171·2873.
bondable. SH nm Rippeth st
the Spot Fr" C1r
h on
Jacbon Plk•
Fri., M1r. • 4
9 Wantad To Buy
beh•ean 11 AM -1 PM.

Wt pay cllh fOf 1......... clean
uudc.rt.

IIIIPh- Dllt- IR v1ei1111Y of
..... Collll4-4411174 • I'M, --4222,

....... Coiiii4-211· 111J.

-·303.

AucUonMr hiring

,.n-li••

Eam ••cellent money. In home

t-na .

,..,_ld,,lelbt. 1·1W, 24hrt.

Whleadwkllu'(mrs I&amp;Ui e rnD1111111e. Filii AMnii !ll.nl!illlliiSIIlil'll.,...
. '

·

'CaslllN!cll ror retail buyers on new ·a7and ·aa rno&lt;leis ln&lt;lea!er Stock.
·~a- sticker price minus cash l&gt;ilch·anow~nce.
Excludes title. taxes and destination chinges
~~Dad¥rta·lll'!tull SO..o~rllhl5llmi!ll-.ftll wt.en
...utailnsllll*.l

. - . . .. ltsta and civil MO'Yic•

, _ 111,141 IO llt,QI
- · :114 Mil.

·

Norris Northup

--AVL · .......,,
{

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

Yo&amp;~'ll Like Our ~Lit1

ray of Doi"' B!Uirae11

. . . . . . . ._ _ _ _, ;
· . . .,.. , . . . . , _ . ,_ _ _, . . . . ._ , _ , _" -•• . . . . _ . _ . -

•k

A.Jta es '*,.,..,.,.\lin

por

-1-111-411-att
· -lllrintl lnfltu
Coli J .... u'-&lt;
..

.
"""-!PI'...... '""*"
'
Wewart1D1 iialiewuanAmerican Winnet: \
SeevourCivvsler-PiymouthDeelariDday! \
Mnre Nonbap, Pete Somerville, Tommy 8praaae or Dale mU

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

~

D.'S AI'PUAICE
SIIYICI .
tiS-156.1

lrQUlAn~M

Mt·JUJ

ture has to be guided by that.
" My client's very satisfied,"
Frost said. "Tbere Is no admls·
slon of any wrongdoing."
Whitehead Gould and her then·
husband, Richard Whitehead,
entered Into an agreement with
the Sterns In which she would be
paid $10,000 to bear the child,
then give the baby to the Sterns.

APPUAICES

-r

......... I l l "

. J&amp;L

COIIS'IM'IIOII

IIR'EE ESTIMATES

J.

COUNTY

I

_,.....,.,•F•~•

...

........,.".
JIOI LU . . . P.&amp;

....."'.......

•Walhera •Dryera

.-

'

GAS &amp; UC. UIIU

••• ., 992·6606

WlNnD
HD 01 AUYE

·

•

.

~

n-v...-•-···

'M Mota e;J't

1.

toriiMI
ltl . _• ._
. . ., .
. .11om
,,_.
tilr

- U11u-

W. SeNiae All Milko•

CAI1II
"_.S IAIIIIIICJ

WASIIBS, IIYIIS

........... Ctnttr

ltylim

Of'S .
.AUTY SALON

:• ·aoonttG
.
nw.,..:•all

.,n_,_..,_
__,.......

·---·...··
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., ___ ,__
................ ..
11--Piu=-·
_
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__
...
....
·-----·
--a- ... ...... .
=...........

· 41

.

.

.

Business Services

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

baring tO many warm

'

M-1 1h-lullll~.

.._,

~==:Fla

.

Mall.. ..._ .., ....

41 -Hw- tor II..,
.ta II til ...._ flw.Rent
U~IIMI
44-A; I ""
u t lltR.-t

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·111 . ~m n •r

ll!wf, Naeinl, ......

,w -

GOOD USID

617WIN.orl T111

Ill W:al tt·

with

cannot touch;
We tpok back "mom·

~

:: re 1::

........t1.1,..

: •scrtl L Writ111l

CNrJ 7-'&lt;rl0000inlosm_.,.,llll7"""'&lt;r ()Q(](l()"*"

Americare-Pomeroy
Nunfng and .

.

'

VIIS JAPI

Complied by
Emmogene Holstein Conco
Recorder, Melp County
William B. Downie, dec. to
Rachael E. Downie, affidavit,
Sutton.
·
Rex F. Cumings, Kathy . J.
Whitehead Gould testified durCumings to Rex F . Cumings, Ing the Baby M custody trial-she
Kathy J . Cumings, .28 acre, Sy- Initially signed up to become a
racuse v111age.
surrogate mother for William
Gllsple Howard, Edith C. Ho- and Elizabeth Stern "to give the
ward to Columbus Gas Trans- gift of life" to a couple who could
mission Corp., right of way, Col· not experience the joy she had In
umbla.
giving birth.
Nicholas R. Ihle, Diana L. lhie
to Dr. James P . Conde, Inc., par- .--~------------4
eel, Middleport village.
Harold E. Rose, Betty K. Rose
to Harold E . Rose, parcels, Le·
tart.
::::::: '
:-....
Charles Henry Wllllama, April
( ' ' l .'"t;(
L . Williams to Not!l\8 Jean Coleman, parcel, Olive.

OPTOMDI_Y
SIIVICES ON
PIIMISES

onc1

ll,fi!IO - ·

... -

I

21-....

. .

mother.
Keane's attorney, Gregory
·Frost, predictt!d the suit would
have little effect on surrogate
parenting.
"This settlement doesn't mean
a nything for It, " he said. "I think,
though, that decisions out of the
state . of New Jersey have lm·
pacted on everybody's thinking
a nd the New York state Leglsla·

-

-2:00P.M.
- 2:00P.M.
- 2:00P.M.
-2:00P.M.

gonoforevor,
And 'their hoond• we

.

Writtan'comrMntl or pro- " muot l!e oubmhtod
-ln30.cllyuothugency
It tho ebove "'*•u with 1
copy to lh• Ohio ·Deportment of Tra~~~. 26
South Front StNM. Room
718,
Columbllo.
Ohio
4321 S·OIII; AttenticJ!t Do·
puty Director,
'
(21 24; (31 2, 21c

-.....· •

.

follbUJi"f teLepltoM uchange•...

car.t ........ loiiiOool

t!IIY llfDIIE PUIUCATIOIII
- 1I :OOA-.M.IATUIIDAY
~ 2:00P.M . - A Y

who diltd Mer. 2. 1986.
Though th81r omilo io

· s urrogate parenting agency,
Whitehead Gould settle suit ·
NEW YORK (UPI) - Surrogate mother Mary Beth White·
head Gould and the agency that
arranged for her to bear the chlld
known as Baby M have settled a
lawsuit she llled that claimed she
was not properly counseled be·
tore signing the parenting
contract.
U.S. District Judge Pierre
Leva! Tuesday approved the
settlement between Whitehead
Gould and Noel Keane, the
founder of the Infertility Cente r
of New York.
Whitehead Gould rose to national prominence after refusi ng
to give up the child she carried
and bore for William and E llza·
beth Stern of 'l'enafly, N.J. She
lost custody of the Infant, who
became known as Baby M, to the
Sterns In a 1987 trial, but a higher
· cou~t last month ruled she was
the legal parent _and. that she
should be awarded visitation
rights.
•
Her attorney confirmed Tuesday that she had received money
In the settlement, but he declined
to specify the amount, citing a
"conflde n tla II ty provl slo n."
Sources said Whitehead Gould
received $32.~ .

R- 111e-· =-=·
·. m.

-- . lleol-.. . . ._

'A aJ~. ar"•n' 1 ee•tl

Of A
P11l E.l1
Flftf·Onel

al!d Ol!r dNr Dad

ti1
••1 .Ga
..

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

:11--lorlllo

·-·-·--·-w---·-I-A•••

CL~i/ied p•ge• cover the _

.,
Dleoecl'ln Tha.p.uy .........·,

$••·

IN LOVING MEMORY
Of our .dNr.M01her
GLADYS WINES
who died Mar. 26, 1984

.,..aa

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

.

.

2-tRMicnolf

tllllaa

tt:a.aa ·

__ _

. 1-Conlei'I'IIMu

u ,atJ,aa
-~

'F'esru-.~No~JM••,.-••..­

-Ado
Y.niS..

In Memoriam

•rvtce to

•»-•

n-a . woll~
.... .
.. . . ,

._....,_
Ior-dly••-•N•.

tiiiM MUtt bll 1N1k1 Ml ,._._ . .:

far the ....,VI1Ion

of lrll~

W..alland
Inc..
whiGh t. a....-. non-profit
oolpOialloot, lnllndt to lubmh •n ........,._far • ......
181 g,.nt undtr the prowt.
tloN of hctlon 11 1111121 Dl
tho Urllon Mato Tr..._q!kin Aat of 1184, 11
.........._ to ,..,.,.... lrll•
..,.wtcM far tho
tldorly 1nd thll hoondloloppod
wllhtn Gall•. Jockeon Ond
unliel. The .-m

, _p4.W
....
W.OD
"'-OD

I...,H

._.,. .... ,=..................

Otpt

you,forassurlngmethatmyson
wUI not go Into combat" ... and
other letters saying he hoped the
warwouldbeoverbeforePatgot
Into combat, that kind of thing. "
Robertson challenged McCioskey to submit the case to
arbitration by the Iowa Libel
Dispute Program, run jointly by
the University oflowa College of
Law and the American Arbltra·
tlon Association.
"If he doesn't go to arbitration,
we will prove to the American
people that he truly doesn't want
the truth to come out,'~ Robert·
son said.
McCloskey was on the same
ship that carried Robertson to ·
Japan en route to duty In Korea
and recounted lh his letter to
Jacobs how Robertson called
his father to seek to have his
orders changed. ·A short time
later, McCloskey said, Robert•
son and several other soldiers
left the ship In Japan.
He noted In his letter to Jacobs
that Robertson, then a second
lleutenant,dldgotoKoreabuthls
"major duty was apparently 19
fly to Japan once a week and
bring back booze for the officers'
mess." ·

~11-01

.... ...,. tr.:

.Robertson intends to drop s·uit ~~~~~~~~~··=-rlc. . si=
. . ,_..~,.Otli~~·~m~
WASHINGTON tUPI )
Former Rep. Pete McCloskey, .
R-Callf.·, said today he has letters
written by Pat Robertson's fa·
ther that prove the former
evangelist "chlckened out" of
combat In the Korean War.
McCloskey's statement Is slm·
.liar to ones that prompted
Robertson to file a libel suit,
which the Republican presldentlal ·candldate now says he wants
to drop because the trial date of
March 8 Is the day of the giant
Super Tuesday political contests
In 20 states.
" He chlckened out the n, and
he's chlckenlng out, now, "
McCloskey responded tjxlay on
the CBS " Th is Morning"
program.
Spokeswoman ·Te resa George
quoted Robertson as· saying
Tuesday, ·'In order to compete In
that trial I would have to break
.off 111Y campaign today and run
the risk of losing Florida. Texas.
South Carollna.and other parts of
the South. That was an lmpossible decision for me to make and
an unfair one. "
McCloskey's attorney George
Laner said Tuesday, ··we're
prepared. to go to trial." The

~·-

·. 10AYI ·
IDAYI
I .:IAYI
IDDAYI

•F,..Mt-01 K uau1IPIIFot.tNIIdlunMr11WOidtwtlbe
'!lfii ..... IIM.......
'Price of ..................... - " " " " . , ........
'7·llno typo only-·
...., .... II Mt 'WP I at for....,. ...... firM dev. (Cheot
NM 1ft,....,, Cal.....,,. 2:00 p.ftt.
..

PHONE
992-2156
Or l1itt Dailly S..tiotl o:msHitll

••

...

n-..

RATES

'

AVON
All · cioto Mlfilt!)l
3 0• 4-IU-1141.

�------·-------~----~-

--------:--,-------,,....-~::---:----------·
f

12-The Dilly Sandnel

Ohio

LAFF-A-OAY

18 WentMtoDo
Wlldo....

lto.

~-

•.

ce ....,.. c.~ 114· 441·

lnt-.. - . . . . .
0411.

48

..

JIM:-t\II'IGaiMpo-

Coll14-~-

21

Bualneea
Opportunity

bu~.,...

With

....... ....... _ __

., btl-

datn,.wteorlcc•rpriel.tore.
Add color 1n1IYJII. Brend
• ..,..., Liz Clolliomo. Holilth101&lt;.
Chouo. Leo. St, Mlcholo. Fooonu, 8ugi1 Soy. levi, Camp
l•verl'f Hill• . OriJinlul!y

Orown, L~H;i&amp;over2000othwa.

Or _!.13_. 99 OM price detigner,
munl t1er pricing dltcount or
tomlly ........... R01011 pricoo
unbetiav1bl1 for top qualtty
shoel
from t19
to •eo. Over 2150 brandt 2100
•.- 017,900 to 029,900'
14'YMtory, tr1 inlng. ti.Jitui'H, eir~Iara. gr11 nd open Ing. etc. "-'-n
11 'd.,. • . Mr. Loughlin
112-888-4228 .
.

nonn~~lypricM

"'*'
23

Professional
Services

0 _...,.,.._......., • ... ..,.......,.

f----------...,r------------1 Councy~·

7991 .

for Rent'
2 IR

1 :00.

hooll-up, ww
niJWiy
........_ dedi. Aa ....... nc.
Apta, c..
304 _17 -7111 or
1 ,._1104.
1n
New completely
epartn'lent • mobile ' horne In

33

Farms for Sale
f

.. --.... -

30 ocro ''"" - · •
e.
Ne• Rio Grtnde. Pond. '-nt.
hame. Cell It 4 -24117e .

zoocl

39 .4 Acreo- Rouoli Hollow .Rd.
•· houM
....,prox.
20 ec . ....._
folf condition.-....,.. pond.
t32,000. awn. wttt
fiI PM , 147

;:",;:t cl:::"

":1

-

22 acree ""'''" 3 bld•oom honM.
5 ytlert otd. IINIII ta.m lftd other
outbulfdlngo . AppooD-oly 3

C::•ll Deys-114-446-111&amp;. efttr

2 BA . home, lA ecrelot. All new
llinly .aiding, new drlvwey. new
tloort , cablneta. AcroH from

G.llipolia lock1 on Rt. 7 . C1ll
814-258-&amp;813.

2 ttory house loctted In
Gallipolis-near ~ehool : 3 BR .• 1
beth. Will Mil on lend contract;

t&amp;.OOO down. t32.&amp;00 total.

Buainesa
Buildings

Mlni· F•rm tor ...... 14 .cr.a.
'""II blm, pond, OM mill plus
from downtown. 2 or 3 bad·
roams, cM ..I alr cond, city
watw, minimum 1 va• ......
$450.00 per month, av•ifeble
M•rch 1. call 304-171-1118. ·

35

lots •

614-446-2205.
2 bedroom, 2 b .. hs, 2 car
garag•. IIIYel lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, llltelit•, CIOH
to M•ig• High. C.ll 614-992-

3254.
Spacious 7 room ho'u H. 1 VJ
tt.ih . 770' .A1h St. Middleport.
Ohio. Quick ~Muion . C.ll
614-992 ·6714.
1 rooms. 3 Mdroom, g•age,

axcallent location. many ntras.
located in Middl..,ort. Ohio.
614-992-2353 . '

Acreage

4 bedrooms, 2 bathl. Ned Sam.
cental air eond, ba1ement, garage, fireplaces. lease t41!50.00
or sell. 304-675-6999.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1Ox50 moblte home. 1919
Martena. 2 BR . $1500. Call
614-256-8248 .
12x60 EICOJ\fl, 1971 2 8A ., gu
hut. wa1htr &amp; dry~~r, air cond.
Compl•ttly furr')lthed . Extn
Nice. t 5450. Call 814-441·
0175.

1975. 1 2d0 Qlllll- A· 1 1hepe,
furnished e•c•~t livingroam. Air
in kitchen, w.sher and dry~~r .
Call 814-949-2853 1fttr five .
- - -- - - - - - l c 1974 Holtv P1rk, 3 bedroom.
70.1114. Excttlent high gr~de
e-peting, nlc• appll.ncaa. new
hot wllter' •nk. 011 heat.
08000. C•ll 814-742-3033.
1914 10.11150 'Eieono Hou•
Tr1ller with upandD. Naw fur·
naca, n.w hat w.ter tank. fulty
urp81ed. Jurni1hed. porch 1nd
window1wningt. bcellantcan·
dition. After 5 :00 11'· 9927102 . 814-d92-6072 onyllme.

1H2 M...olon . 14•70. 3 bod,....., 2MI _
_ . ...IId!nil. ........ .,.., pon:h awnlngt, vinyl underpinning.
Set up on rentltd lot in Middt.
port. Price rtdueacl. Call l149t2-1839 .,., e ,oo.
A.toc.tina. need to Mit 1114
1._70 lhuta. 3 bsd:oom. Z
Nth- 1 ....... aoftdlllou . ...
rioue I I 'h:e ..... 114-.....

-·

3 roo.m • and bl!h t100.00
month uliliti• 1x1ra, close to
M11on Jaoklon line. At. 87.

304-458-1042.

42

Ott• floor model ,25'" televllion
Excel. Oond. t200. Cal 81 4:
441-7108. a AM-2 PM .
Anticlue ·3 pc. Bedroom Mlite.
Coli &amp;14-448-3849.
.
Norge refriger•tor lAvocado,,
11 cu. ft. Johnaan Mobile Home
Plrit-bltem Ave. Lot 4, tiO.·
5 ,bunkbed Nit, all t~..vY duty.'
N•c• m•ttre"et included. 886:per Nt. Cell 114-742-303.3 .
Antiqye wing blc:k ~::hair with

Quetpn Anne legs. P1ir m•hogeny end tlbl... All A· 1 condition. 114-912-6861 .

h...,,

218 Stat• St.· Fuml1hed 1 BA.
•pt. Utiliti" p1id. t110 • mo.
t50 dep. No chiklran. No pat1.
cen 614·441--31&amp;7.

304-676-4265.

2 pc. living room sultea·at•rtlng
M t300. 15 pc. dlninQ room
~- atarting 11 t226 . 7 pe.
d1ning room •ulta . t350 .
Reclinlra-ltllrtliil •t t118. New
Philco 215" colorTV·t4150 . 8 pe.
living room suitu·t400 .
Carpet-starting at ·~ • yd.
Kitchen &amp; bathroom vin'll
llnolaum- ... rting •t •4.99 • yd.
lnatellatlon &amp; flnlncin.v
8VItlable,
Mollohan FUrniture
403 .th. AVII.-KMR
GoUipollo. Ohfo-114-441-7444.

Fumllhed apl.·nicll locetton in
city. All utillti• furnithed. Muat
ret. a. dep. Call 114-'4841&amp;9.

New lteetrk: Hatpoint drver tor
.. lo. 3~878 - 2130 .

PICKENS USED FURNITURE.
·Bedt, dr..aen, eh ..t. dinn.tte,
oouoht. ch1ir1, Ddd ch1in relrig..-.tora. atovet, 6 rftiac.
304-671-1450 .

54

Fumllhed 1 BA . Apt. o~ Fir_,
A... Colll14-441-1078.

Mobile Homes
for Rant

2 BA .. wlter. eewegefurnilhed.

BeltUtifUI riwer view. No city
tax11 . Foster·a Mobile Hama
Park. Ctll814-"6· 1802.
Netr Waterioo. 2 Bft t1ZI a
mo.·AdYitl . OardeniPOt. Ref, •
&lt;Mp . c.n 114·441· nl54 or

843-2644.
Nice '2 BR . tr•iler, larga.,.rd- ln
Kan~uga. CaM 114· 446-7473.
2 BR . trtil•r with S.llpendo living
room. C•lll14·37a-2401 , if no
•nswar CIU· 8 14-_1114.1 -1726.

••pendo.

14x70 with 7x24
3
BA .. 1'h blths, eppliencet fur·
nilhed. Pay onty OM utility. AH
electric:. 2 mllea from town. D•p.
• ref. e:300 • mo. Cai1614-441·
4S24.

Nlca 2 bedroom apt. in Middleport. t181S per month. Depoah:
·end ret ...nce required. O.y
1:14-112-2381 . Weakendsl14·
192·2101.
-,.;___bod_ooo.:..;__m_o______u_._ _
nillhld and unfurnl1hld. t200.t226. p• month, Utilirin furniahed. Call 114-H2-1724.
New .tfici•cy a.,.mn.nt with
well ~o wen carpet •nd epplltn·
c.. Na• 11Chool1 in Gellipolis.
t200 per month. C•lllt•·«l·
1478.

2 bedroom ,.n. in SyrlcuN tor
rent. Eklerty pretarrl8d. Reuon1blo ,..,, 114-882-2749.

1 2o&lt;60. 2 BA .. unfu-od. IIIH
mile peat Hob:er Madlelt Center.
c.n 114· 441· 4H9 or 304171-1710. 121110- In ChooliiN.

APARTMENTS. mobile hornet.
hOueM. Pt. Pl.... nt •nd O.lllpo·
Ho. 114- ~-1221 .

3 bedroom· children • 1*11
w.lcome. Kyger c..- School1
MetropoUtton Hou1ing epproved.
t171 por month. COl 14-4418410.
.

•
- " · Now Hovon.
w. vo ..
304-812-3217
•• 304-773-

2 a. 3 lA . mobile homea for rent.
Colll14-448-0127 oflor 2 PM.

tloopoid.
nil_ _ _ .,_..._
2. utill-

2 bod....,. tumilodopt. monct

Misc. Merchandise

Oallah1n'slllld Tlrt Shop. Over
1.000tir•, abel12, 13 14 15
16, 11.5. 8 mil• out A:t. he:
Caii814-2151·1ZI1 .

Oreciout living. 1 1nd 2 bed·
room •partment• at Villege
Manor end Rlverelde Aptrtments In Mlddlepo,.. From
t215. includ_ing utiliti••· C.ll
114-192-7787. EOH.

86g 3 BA . farm homM built on
your ktt. t15,995 and up. C.ll
1-814-881 -731, '

I

Brand naw · Wed~ing Dr•11 - 1 tz.•
12. Never UNCI. Trehr Lot
1B.John~an•• Mobil• Homa.
Colll14-441-8290
SWIMM.ING POOLS - t888
ORDER NOW · PAY LATER

Huge 31 ' DYII pool wilh diiCII.
f..,ce • fllmr. lnsMIItiDn •
llntneing .,..leble. 1·800-34&amp;09411.
You nawr need en 1ppolntment
for p1ofln'onal htlrca,. tervl·
ns at FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS. 322 Second ~ve..
acrou from pari!;, 441·$11 62.
Bidwell C•ah Feed Ito,.. Now
hendling pro mi.11. 1or Hrty
...,an.,. 1~1\G wtth blood
mNI. nltroto
oodo. 34"
nl.,..., • roblilt. dot ropollont.
Coli 114-3SS-1811' fo&lt; loteot

of

c:,llenllato

'·

~~
-

1

1 7 42 2

.'•

A

-·-.

114
•

1171$ 1":jikln•l II INI•
:":'n:nld
aood condhlon. 1 -t endenltrane.
lllo ..... ch
~- ,, 1100· u~nt""
· ..-.--·
~
...--

:u;:::·;:;
11

IU,.PLUI DINIM, carhMt.
11-1 Clollilnl- How. iww
-clotlili+lliiOIIII.....,ot
NIIORitll ............. A1Jwnlslnel=+l lUJ . . 'Mtn
IIIII Sc:mllu .... 0111 llt.l1 ·
lunadan In d I Jl •• RoM.
leitR•ueesubld,Prl.ht.lull;

-•,oo

pm.

-:rn--.

1171Dod111Cunan:W,2ton.
1117 lony :rv 08 • 6

•ooonloo •
1174.

VCR, 104-171-

..... baM or Ydltly II'Mier,
071.00. 104-812,2714.

,-,•Y.rct

Groom ond I"''!1V lhop-1'111
Oroomln1 . All breeflt ... AII

Pete .

1-Colonlolbeoclod lliMOiil1lo

lap lidlnt- •23 aq .• ZO -..- lull
Uft1-e1e aq,
7-711 lx4x8 Pfilflnlthed
tltte gre.v or allnond lklingt13.91 ..ch.
1-Ma~anlte rock or brick
unflniehed panlllnr V.x4xl·
t6.96 • ..m.
9·Aiitlbe florala and lHe
paneling V.x4'x8·t7 .95 end
08.91oooh.

10-~•4•8AMwtlodponoflntt

oak 1nd pine 1nd bitch· t11.11
to t11.91 HCh.
1_1-Barh roam pinlll~a.
glt1ed tile end •mouth p~ttarn01.95 .. t12.91
12-Whlte 48" x.2Z " bath
room vanhl .. with marble top
IB} grodn-t188.81 .
1 3-C"Ina and m.rbla round
end 0¥111 venfty bowla- wt.lteMII
color-t1 9 .915. •
14 - Calor commode•·
*'1 .95 , Whitt , commode•·
038.11.
16-Color pedlml Ia~
059.91. 2 fo&lt; ., oo.
16-Wiilto· 1Uboo88.91ooch, 21or t1.o o - t71,91-h.
.
17-Whiripool tublfiberga.... eomDietll plumbing.
t888. reg . • , , .,
18-1 pc_ flbortlo• 1111r •
lhow~ .-159.&amp;&amp;
, each, white or

w.... ""·....114-441-0211
•· .
-

1

~~

!!!. ...._.

r-·· *

2142.

c:o.._.,... - Olitn
ltftpp~Db... V-8 tuellnflcted.
1111

-·loa
-•~ · · • -'"'•
,.., louvw •
C.l

•
. tiiOO.

Regl k .. .....,... .W. Cook•
Sponlol, 1 - . old. 071. c.a
114-387·0241-4 PM.

-pupo. ..................
lo• t.--. -

le·1141.

......

Auto Repair

.

1118~ fGnl . _ ,

2

dr.

HetitllaDII. 4 IDCI: V*Y Good
Coo1111-. ·co• •14-"'·1171.

H-

=-

'

Jim's Import Auto lervle~~ ' ~ J
llllllow. Wilt Ylrlfnlo. 1~, ; • !
lofl In
porto end tl71. 13041 372- •
1117. Nino to fhlo_
-

=
.,· .
-::;:;=:::::;~=
79 MotOrs Homes
•

Campara

1181 31ft. CMDIII'Nift C.ntper 1

N .. 1'1; AC.

2 ...
-loft.
o400.

·-Ia -· 4

":ii~~
!!....~ .:;:&amp;:'
2217.

·

- · 114-7U-2001.
Good

•

-'ion. - . .

Col 114-882-2 2 H - 1:00. •

'

s .... ....,.,.

z W'Nf old ...... . . . , . •• ••

on.-·,._
Your A-. 11!1\Mro Ouldo.

Rod ltol ...........l 0"'11 - ·
"""'d. lur-

-1711-

pluo.

111-;817-- .... · - -.

67

-~

a- -

1801.

1 Z String Atv•re• Gull•r,
t110.00Firm, 304-112-2138.

. . .,OOpm.

Fruit

•--·---

Vegtriable1

F....., - · 104-1715-4112.

.

For Sale or Tr1de
'

F"' Solo .. . Trodo lor plcll-up
1ouclt-1117Ctlovy.. 4'dr.. lololr,
palm. No - · T - cor.
Nlleda ~~ wariL C.M
. 114-441'
.
1114 1!- Y-30 C.l
oftor 4 p.m. --171-3$42

,..,,

11U lliMolonn,..l•. 1;2 ........

mu•

-~,00-1,00:10'4-1711-

1111.

81

Farm Equipment

CIIOII. IONI
U.S. 31 Woot, J o - . Oli1o.
114-218-1411 .

40--..--

1171 IH 17oo; 382 ..... I op.s.
1r- 2 ..... - · 11.100, ...
- ......
Nloo
truok. - 1171101120
Dodtlo- '16·
plolt-up• .318 .............. -

Ferau-. - - ·
.Mooli.

:,0:2~"114,-

I 01p11opl•te HM of MW • Ulld

Truclt P - '"" loll' 311

..... -•-.o-

aquiiHMftt, ~ a1I1Ddon 1ft

I .E. Ohio.

,

pr=

·col 304-e71-ll:to.

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

rior,.-o.-..rlng.th...

cuClll14-~-7872.
.-

..........

........
=~~---.co•

, _ Clioowl-10--

~·
----·~·OM4
o;l
•• ·4 10,000
..... dlflCWJI,

· ~·-· 114-182-2313.
1171 ...... holf Illicit Willi
V-1 - · - 1110.00.

EEK

... ·,
~Pi£ NO L003ER

•

Electrical
Refrigeration

(R) 1;1

L4:a&lt;,THERSS TI-\ATsTHE
."!t:L!R triOVI AT
THE WINCCM/.

WHATSSHE

HANEiiNGi Uf&gt;

DOING~

A "R&lt;:::O'o\ FOR
RENT' SIGN .

WINDOW IN
MY I&lt;IOCWI.

\

I C:.U~ SHES STILL
MA.DAT ME ABOU,T

-0.

dining - · , ........

48

,.-·--......---r.....I

j
,

,,

'

I

. (R}

'.

I!J) ~lloe

11l!to - • IJalaue,......__ ... ._

(J)

-

m e111
GOOD LADDERS

CHEArPt·~~~

,... OsiiiP a111 Ferry,
104-171-3072.

w.

va.

T - lofo. 111. 1 Lo«oot Rood.
of K • K Mobile H 304-171-1071.

11:15·(2}-

'\

"

~------·------~--------~~---------

U!i
+10 2

Vulnerable: aoth
Dealer: North

-

Nordo
1+
2NT
••

Eul
Pua
Pua
Pus

Opening lead: 4

+

ducked In dlimmy, East would shift to.
clubl. H declarer took dummy's ace
aDd played a second diamond, West
would win the ldng and switch to a
club. AD!IIf decla~ won dummy's di8111ond ace and played .a second trump,
FAst would win aDd play a Club right
away. All of this just goes to sbow that

good defense requires you to wear
your thinking cap.

•~:•Q
I!JI
P.L

II' CBII.nl

NJelll Click lelia Gralnap~n

111at Ml~ Affairs Ia

----- ~

1

\

DOWPtl

e

1 It's lost
standing

(J) NIA Todllf (R)

i::t:~

®llgnOff
DNewlflgl&amp;t

eCll Rlliltllda
12:111 (I) 110'111: Tntl Grit (NR)
(1:&lt;10)
12:30()) .... lenny
(J) MaiOS ••til Ill I allid

1111111111

••

oqtllze

11;45 (J) Tanlglll a12:00 ()) llumllncl Allin

Canlllll!ft
•Cll"MIMI:,...-.

....

47 Pitcher

Friend

eCllTaxl

.

·~

5 "Car 54,

46 Grandll·

be}"~, P.l.
outLlgley
Gil
from

4 Gennan ·
river

41Slav
44Uniform ·
41 Frost

Ollporla Tonlghl

ee 'Add

pag~

e.g.

(IE ,...............

-)i

book

37RUe
89Westem,

(I) Chiara

, ,.

· tree
3 Like some

swan

11:30(J)~IL)

UveatOCil '

of

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW
'

One letter stands for another. In this sample Ais used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
·ap 111t1 ophes, the lenltb IIIII formation of the words are all
· ~·Each-day thec.'Gde letters are different
ca~uoT£

'

CllllqVIII Tile llullt..., .
(NR)

VOUR 6LOVE

·,

•

~ ··I..,..

FKXGTZX
'

'

.F S P

.'

VXDKTSG

PAX

11:41.(J) ............. llllld
LI
n
1:01

MARCIE

D

p T

PTUZXEP

D U. X

PUTS

T .P A XU G
PT

PAXZ

;•

.._.
_

SOUTH
+li:QI08
.108752

31Iranian
cash
88Tennls
term
84Female ·

IIJ)Ioep
• Cll ~ Corl...-ton

·

.
...,.,.
..
=:,=.,..... .....

tQJH .2

+Q15S

Denmark"

91 llll • 01 1111

(!)Sign Off
0 Monaytlna

DONTCONE

,,._,.,

~

.AH

+Ks
+K974

In the
state of

lcf1ala111c ..,_
.,_.

ca:r~:IIJ......_
'!'

•

•••

so·... -

Alive and Kicking

... .......... CML:l.
:r

___
a-·-· ....
-· -· Fomltr--_

(1 :43)

eCllHopn'l .......l
1 I :00 ()) R1111lnglon 8laela Steele

81/TVOUWEAR

,,

.

10:30 (J) Amenc.. Snepthota

Space tor Rent

W.Y&amp; Coi--77S-1811 .

EAST

- ?"
1Z Patti or
8 Slower
Geraldine
(mus )
18 Small size
7 ~Wh~ kno~ Yeaterday'e Answer
14 Typo
what 20 Shopping 84 ~or,rey
18 Mrs. Gary
lurks..."
place
sport
Hart
8 French port 22 Czech ·
35 Arab title
17 Kind of
9 Golfer's
river
38 Lenin·
jacket
hazard
24 Elite
grad's
or soup
11 Make(slang)
river
11 Utah city
of (mock) 25 Sword
38 Tennis
fl Bring In 15 Strelsand's Z8 Lease
great
ll8 Maple
"Second·
payments 40 Tennis
Hand - "
28 Robert or
term
genus
17 ~eudal lord 17 Victoey
Elizabeth 42 Charlotte
Z8 Clothe
branch
30 Tacky
29 Iranian's
18 Part
32 River to 43 "It's
freezing!"
ancestor
of HOMES
the Rhone

• Cll hnny Hill'
10:05 (JJ MOYIE: Young WlfiiOn

U.. AI. 7. 0221•
· Coiii14-.Z41-1811.

:.•.-c.:: =~!.::t

. bers"
tim

181- .

-

I - l o r - - AI

11"-' me

iOIEvenlngNiwo
M'~'S'H .

THI5M0RNIN6.

- -· C.lll14-441-38?1.

-

1 Do dock
work ·
5 Take
by force
10 Footless

10:00 ()) Slnlglfl Telk
Ill elll Dynelty Alexia
hires Morg1n to lnveetigllte
Sean; Leslie reveals threats.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

2 Ill. fully tur- Two MMI..,. t d OOCRiu........
-Oii. EootomA... .... IP hnant, 0111t 304-171-1100.
-No p.ll.
- Re1.-...c.
· U21i. Adulto
only_
• Moot~~
""-" 2 IR. M - Ho- HI

WEST

+t75U

i.y THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
Z Brazilian

0 Urry King LIYII
1:30(1) .(I) Slip~
Stoty Slap sets out on the
highway that could lead him
back 10 1111 Ledger. Q

lum- ""'·
.

dlamOIId I~ 011 the clubl) 1IDiea the
defeaalw Umlag is 'ultrl-precise. Aec:ordlagly, when declarer played a
trump to the dummy at trick tW!l, FAst
played low. Declarer tried to cto11 to
his band in the spade suit. but East
ruffed. East DOW played the dl~mnnd
jack, a decepUw play Jut in cue declarer held the king ol dlamondl (no
point In tlivintl up a clleap trick to the
10 to give away an overtrick). T~t
cooked dec1arer's ~~ H declai'er

knuckle-beating loan shark.

- S t - . Mlddl_,, Ohio.
104-182-2181 .

baDdl so that you

atroeglntermedlate apot-eardllln tbe
mlnan that the club 11*1' ..will very
likely J10 away 011 the dlamDIIdl (or tbe

1:00 ()) 700 Club
Gill MOYII: ' " ' - In ...
llelfl' NBC Movie of the
WHk IPOI (1 :52) Q
(J) Col. 8'11111
&lt;II e(ll Haap1rmen Harry
infiltrates 1he hangout of a

TH' ROOF, MAW

B4

.,

.A IOU
+AJ&amp;

'

defense is to

':f:·South
~ut the probis that North
have iniCh

Q

claaa.

GO UP TO PATCH

CAIITEII'I PLUMBING
AND HEAnNG
cor. Fouoth- Plno •
Go-o. Ohio .
•'
Pliono 114-~-3888 o• 114- :
441· 4477
~ ../

of - ~

...._.,

•xQs

bold both minor

Cha~le's bl11erne&amp;a lbolrt hla
· div01ce causes friction In hl1

YOU BE CAREFUL
NEXT TIME YOU

Plumbing
· • Heating

'

(1 :33)

.._ :Z::.
82

.

NORTH

nor-suit eardll.
'
It's easy for East to determlae that
beating tbe contrlet requireS West to

1:30 ()) Ani11111l1 of Afrtca
(I) • (I) HMd oltlle Cll8ll

lEE Dry Wall, eaperltsnced in :
hlftllnl. flnilhing. and rep1lr ·
- . ....... -1190 lookll~· - ·
w~ teature, 3CM- · •
.,.,
7.
.'

· C.P

-· --.__
..
y-

loti--,.._

113

-

Dolltot Dolool Mlllno. PIOigh-· I ..... _ _
10:10. ·
porto.

110 -

.......1011 quality worlc. lnte-

•• 104-171-7411,

TNcka tor S1le

-.

Exps '-' asd • • · uctlent

•' '

+AJS

James Jacoby

lem

~

• Cll College BllkltiNII
8:05 (JJ MOYIE: De... WlalllliR)

I

·- 304'
• 71-7741
lntorlor
-· .....
COli
• .....
,00
.
1 1 1 7 - .....iloLI.-...,
bought MW,
M ,....., all
:104'1711-, 110 ... .... -

M'lnel (NR) (1 :42)

Roofing, ,.modiHng. eddltione. :
· drywo11 . ............. .
p l u -. C.l Gory 11 4-lla- ,
·~t. '
'

T - 1172 Ford I I - ont1 RON'I Television Service. ," •
ttou11 c.lll on RCA.. Queur, '
1 1 7 7 - V - l o r - OE.
lpra'.ing In ZMiith. Calli '
-1042.
' 304-171-23aa ,. t14-441 - •
2414.
' ; :
11M .Moicury T - . 2 lloorl. Fflty T,_ Trimming. stump~ ·'
••oahna aonclhlon. dlvdme.
JCM.e71-27:Jt............ JCM- - 1 . C.11104-17l-1331.
..
171-41te;
.._., .. tOOl driiNnci .
Maelwellaoocnpleiechemldtrr- _,
1 1 7 1 _ ... _......,..
Pump ut• and s.vlce. 304· ' ,
cond, t400.00. 304-1711: Ul-:1102
·

'

IIJI Colage BllkaiiNIII wvu
vs St. Bonaventure

$lORY...

.

1111 Qnnd AM LE. N. N, AC,
tit, • • ,.. 1
.... deley
12otrlnaAiwo,.gulter. 0110.00 ....,.... ·hoo opoolol LE I..,...,
"'"'· 304-02-2131.
.
n.soo m .... - cond. -"'
tl.200.00. 104-171-,141 ··-

(l)

1tt0 sas 10 £VERY

b - . Air. iltt.
pow,. wtndsu:ia. br.U. •nd
......... 03100. 114-112-

o.....,

Billy Crya181 hoa1a.

1m MOYIE: King Sol-'1

:

44a-OJM.

111i Cutlooo

~warda

F,.. MttmMn. c.ll oollacl "
1-114-237-0488. dey ........... .
RogeraBaaament '

up_.

-. -

HoHman. ·

I!JI Collegl Blakllblll
iiJI PrlmiNiwa.
• 01 lOIII ~-

tea. Looel ....... 01. fumfthMI....1

WilbWp;ooftng.

Is

based on 111IIHI aiD&lt;Iaa by
Ernst Theodor Amadeus

BASEMENT
WATIAPIIOOFINCI
· .,
uo-idlllonol llfoCimo _.,., :

SWUPEIIond_.,.moclilno :
...,..... ~ and euppll•. Plall •
Mnry, O.vta Yeauu:n '
Cleaner. one half mae ulil ...
0eota-. C.... Rd. Clll 11"" !"

119

0 Mibcpullten Opire
Pre-•
Jacques . ·
Offenbach'slentaay opera

(!)

'' '

.' .

ones who CAN'T ACT.

five bearta. The opealng ·lead - the
1QIIde four - llldlcatea that declarer
also bollia four opadea, no doubt good
0011. {SIDce Weat'1 lead would be
fCIIIftlt.best aDd lloee dummy baa tbe
Isolde S, Welt C8llllol bold more thaD
spades.) Simple subtrscUoa
leaves cleclarer with at most four mi-

e

-=-9::-1--H:-:-----~-.
orne
,

good losers, ,nd the

picture the -

crippled ~r confront her
bitterness. 1;1
· .
Ill
(I) Cllowlng hlne
When a hlp Maggie fills In as
OJ a11he dance. Jason gels
)tiiOUI. 1;1

..........

_

cu decide 11ow best to aet your tricts.
At trick ooe, East baa a lot of lnlormaUon. South's bldd!DC lbowl at least

.

•

L ..

•

[G X K L X G

••• cr'• Uptta11•11•--~;
·~-~~-TIIOiioot·'
.. flatiiiUN f' 'I II
Caii':J.

!·~~t~·=··==?~·~-4::·:·:_:··:·:·~··=·~·~·~·;~:.,
•

•

~

......

•'

SCUM-LITS ANSWERS
Gunner - Enac:l - Craft - Status - CAN'T ACT
As a kid I was taught that there were two kinds of losers.

The ereooe

e Cll WICRP In C!f!ctnn8ll
7:3S(JJ Ianford- Son
8:00 ()) lac- " - Y _ ,
Gill lflghw1y to HNv1111

--

noo

lmprovem1nti

ANSWER

BRIDGE

~~.:,~IQ

wliolo-•

•

.

.

Jonall1an anc:I·M•rk help a

'
i'h ft. tn:Dk a...., for ule.""'·

1177 - r y ~ C.l
114-441-4104oo441-1381. ·

.. ......... Cooker ............ 1a71 GNntl Prill. ...... ooilct ..
pup.
MdWOf!IIOd. t2100. 1 Ill Iuick Rotol Cooh, no ........ C.lll14-182- ·
2107.
·1711.
- - · · - · Col .,.:..._

•

I!JI~

Otf, Otf••
ozoNE /..AYete!
I

·

UNSCRAMBLE fORI

.

The

e ())

out-·.,..,

1114 - r y LY'IO OS. 2 dr ..

.•

.'

e Cll M'A'S*H
7:05(JJ ~ncly Ortmlh
7:30
Ill HOIIyw&amp;qae,.l
•
11(1) Judge
I!J) W!1HI ol Q

- •, •·

Complete the chuckle quoted

12 1~ I" r I' I' I' I' I
I.. I I .1- I I I II

PR!NT NUMBHEO .I1

9' LETTERS

§~;,.WhR ol F~ne

'· •

n

.A

iiJI Moneyllne

----~--------------&gt; ~:

,..,. 210 .••••
.,I,IIF, MM IOOd coudi&amp;lon.
Col ·14-448-1110.

381--.

68

Newlllour (1 :00) . .

I!J) .....

"·
',.

by filling in the missing words
L --L--.1----L-..1..--L.-.1. you d,'!felop
from step No. 3 below.

l!l ® MacNaiiJ ~

11~!. •

u..-. C.l

_

Q

People'• c-

• (I)

l l l n ' - 1171 T"""11i Co-

wormo~~•--v..
ch-.
uoo·- . cou 114-

4811.- - · ·
-

leg

HAIC

G (J) PM .._.....
(J) CoL l'belf
.
Ill !nllflalntMnt Tonlghl

1M3Chlwy. CIISII,,Am...UO, ::.'::0&amp;::~:·::-a,;.,.,.
:
. :.riiOftl
... _..,
11.,
•.~ 304-e,.:_4230 •
•
or
...., _ _ __::.:.;:.·---~- · ·
0 1
' Ito Dol1v T - ., lor 1 ~ IH
•
morw .. ara:n..oa: sulll14-441·
. . - U...,4 . . . . Dodae- •

I_ I_ I_

I
t..,.--.,:...:;,....;.,,;,;..:;.,,.;...,,-.j
I

Steele

- "4 " " " '
'u,.., _
•
•
wM1J diM, OUitDm bulh · '
lock-up GM tO:Q£11 .

1181 AMC ifllrlt. 4 ovl.. 4 otld .•
t1100. 1181 Mu•
tMg C..:uert .• toaof , _ paiU.
tl400. Coll14-441-4412.

IOO ' Fonl t - ....tar. 1111
3q-1 pc. pale e.mon color. Dotoua plcloupfor-commodes. regP-•288.11, now ath.-. t...... JQUip . . .. 304171-2321 .. 171-2.121.11.
31·1nterior
doors
flnllhN lftd unfln
. Cho~
82 Wanted to Buy
alna-t21.H uc:h.
32-Exierlar ltHI ln..ur.c:i
pen at ~YI'Ig d00f"'· t78.81
ond 081-11 oocli.
33-A.II types of door end ·Now lluvlne lhll oorn or ...
window trim. Flnlthtd and un· com. C.i
flnlah.d, Plaatlc and wood· ~ Fenn ' lupply, 114-4488 •'
n .00 tq U .oo pr.pa.
PfNN'I WAREHOUSE
WoiiiiOft, Olilo
WMt to ' buy,
'-ttl
prices.

For Slle

Colt 114-

color. ·'

19-Brlght and lli'ltlqut brtll
1nd chrome vanity and tub &amp;
lhower f.ucet. lev• 10%.
20-2 gol. 'bucket - of! wliiU
textlnd wall peli1t· t4oll. reg.
t9.85.
:
.
21 -5 gal. aluminum flHred
rool co.ting-$20.1&amp;.
22-K-Lu• -to b~CIII I sq. lt.
c:tn.•$1 .50.
23- Eproxy co•tad atael
clo• end door lhehring. Sweto
75%.
•
24-Wood. •luminum end
vinyl cl1d wlndow1. IIOWI~,
!Bays). ICuemant). IDoublehungj . SIW at whol... ._ end
bolow.
21 - ~ T•mpared tharmel
IMU)O. Olool - 0. 13:b71029 . 951. C34•71 U8.00}.147•78-o4&amp;.001. FuH
eau lou-t5.00 pr.pc. 1. ..
21-21 .. Ocotgon thermal
leeded gl... windaw1·tl8.88,
2 to• 0125.00.
27· 72 " W1lnut starter
kltch"'- Including C2-1a"-ll}.
11 -72"booo}, C1-72" po. top}t119.11.
21 -2 gol. poM K-Lua wlilto
moner· e4.81.
21 · Pine Louvered interior
1hutteu. Below Wholl$111

Auto'&amp;

· tilt. AM-FMC..O. ...- - . t3418.Col
114-441--7.

B~~~~~~:~~~~

1-Wafer bOI!td 7111x4'xl'•&amp;.96, J.4x4'~e8'·•8.85.
2-T-111 yellow pine lidlng
~x4'x9'· ttl . ll aiiCh,
3· V.x4'x8' Uu•n 1'plywood-•1.9&amp; e1ch.
·
4-Aough uw cedar boMda
.IA.II.12"x72"·2 for •s.oo.
5-No.2-8"tPNC8/ born oliling v--growd-38C lin. ft.

71

- . , .....,..__
110 •11o 2lor GM t\ ·

dr.. l-11-4 oyl ......... N. N, olr,

Julio
otyloo. -

•••

·

If you are able lo look back on
your lile and f"l no regrets. you
r---:::-::-:---::------. have a great gift of
FET EEF
memory.

ell WICIIP In Clnclmell
e Cll Too Cloaa for Comfort
41:35 ()) Carollumetl
7:00 ()) Rltnlngton 8Mela MOlten

-=---• :'.;.,Z~

. 1112-. ~-LI . Z

for 81le

118

·~:

.

lutl,oH....mli!IOtl4

,

'""" _,., ..,. - · wMi
- - . 101111:..,. ttvll on-itt
lhauldM', lile. 11-14, .......
304-171-1447.

- &lt;,1

~
- ...

1 HP tltllr ueec1 vwy little.

104-171-1472.

,....,..

~~-

MilO. M•ch8nciiM

r-

-I) .
lulln•M Report
ill OCIS® IIOdy lleclllc
0 lllllde , .......

(I)
(f)

lind nnll'llillla•. Cell 114,"

1;;:.-=;----,,....--,--,....._

--;:.C...;.A;..N:.:..,;S&amp; _;.KT----ll
·1 .,~.·.'

5

. ···;:.~: !!W*Y-

~b~IO~filnlonl.
·:
~Mwl
II! IJMd ~

•
IN

\

.1' -11.1"_ ~
f

I:CII ()) Allee

---..------~

12;;..;.,.:-..1..:.;-:.1,..,...jl

T-'r.,

r

:

® Dailr1MI .litnlor High Q
IIJ IIMwlla Tocley
CIII'IC!ts ol Ufa

••

,"'.

,-

---.TE..;..M;-:-P.;::.U-=LT.:-11 · ~

• Cll Heppy .,.,.

·

t·'-

eo

.l!l Dr- Who: Alllchl .,.

78
•
.

Cll •(I) 111

(J) lp a!tll.Ooll (T)

1Me Hon4e 4 whnltr. gOod 01•
....... 104-171-3471.

~~prl=-=·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;=:;;.,1.;;;;;;;;;;;';1;14-:;;3;84;;;3;1;41;;::;;;.,J -

1024' .

e&lt;2l

j

7t47.

-to-

::.~.-p

·-

•

111'7 210 Kcn=-kl r .... 4
whMIII. f1IOO . 114-IIZ-

...._ed h•4waa:L
No ..,704-7-u'"'p
. .._....

"*"'

two bedroQm • equipped
kitchen . Excellent locetlon.
Reference- l•c. dapoait. No
poto . Colll14-441-1210.

Upltlirt untumi1hed ept. C.r~
peted. utillti• paid. No children.
No pet1. CaU 614-US.1137.

8~

Good ::,o.R:::"':i..=:.· oc...

Delu~~e

2 · bedroom•. TV roam, h.llf
buement. fenced bec:lc yard,
11 00&lt;1 1oc1tion. •tttr e:oo pm.

Fr

.

I

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1:00 (J) Claqi Ulta • ,.. Hyde
llld Seek
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Will cllllfwr. 114-U3-1410,....

-or

J &amp; .S FURNITURE
(Formally P1rson'1 Fumlture,
1411 Eaatern A....
Uvlng room lwl ... lrom t179 1a
up. Bedroom tulth e489.95 aa
up. Comp'-te microWave , .. ndt
038.95 • -up_
Come In •nd meet thl new
Ownen.
.

On• end two-bedroom IPirt·
manta lor 1..... Stove and
furni•hld . tZOO .
41 Homes for Rant :wfr...,ator
e221· per month. Refereneu
end dl!potlt .-quired. Call 11 4·
Nicety furnished small houH. 44&amp;-4249. 448-4426 or · 441.
Adutt1 only. Ref. r.equ. .. Nq 232&amp;.
pets. Call 614-441-0338.
2 lA.. 2 bltht. All • utlltti•
3 SA. hou•• tor rent or rent with in~luded . t400. C.ll 114-440·
option to buy, On 1•1 . t360 1 4222 between 9-6.
mo. Oep. • ref. required. Call
304' 675-1801-doyo. 114-448- Furni1hed efflcanCV apertment.
1280-av.n . &amp; weelcands.
Cerpat throughout. Prtv•t• •
qu'-'. Single working person
Nicely furnished 1mall houta. oney', Call 814-448·4107 or
Adult1. R•t. &amp; dep. No peta. 446' 2602Water turni1hed . t1 85 par
DowntOwn ground floor •Pirt·
month. Call 814-446-2543.
mertt. 4 ""'·· beth • baemant.
VfiiV nice 3 BR .. 1 'hb1ths. ranch Newly decortted. Off '"'"'
ttyle home. tn Crown City aree. parking. For more infor. c111
t250 1 ,.o . C1ll after 4 114-441-0811. a AM - 4 ,30 PM
weekday1.
PM-&amp;1 4-211-1 IBI.

3 bedroom hou11 lor rant In
SyracuM. 614· 992-7889 att.r
5,00.

-

e

Vslley Fumhure '
New and . used furniture end
•ppllc•nces. C•ll 11 4· 441·

1 lA . apartment with stove. &amp;
relrlg. · No pats. C.ll 114·4483117.

Rt~nlals

Fl~ for- · • - 1 -

na. •""

2

Co11114-441-7026.

Two bedroom, 1 bath, wrth
b1Hm.,..t l.fPP8r Point Plell8nt,
&amp;42,000.00. price 1\lgOtiable,
614-367-0122 after 5 :00pm.

Nice 3 bedroom home in Clifton.
kit~;hen ; tultv c.rpeted,
l1undrv room, anached garage.
2 carpons, utility building, fruh:
trMI . call Harold Rickard. 304882-3492 .

114_-••• _0338
au n
~u FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKION
ESTATES. 131 J•cltoo
' n
....__ "-~ ~ t113 • - · Wolk to
lhop Mid """'- · 114-441·
2188 · E.o .H.
Nice 2 . BA . . • ~ ml• frOm
Golllpolio St- ~ •
· v.-...
· wa1.,
tumWa.d. No Jtlb. • 11 • mo.
Colll14-448-1038.
court st.- 2 Bedroom.
belht, kitchen furnlthed, w / w
c.,_, t321 a mo. ptu1 utllld•.
No paa, deposit a· ref. C.H
4.
.
11 441 4121

Nice 2 BA apt. w.. er. g•rttea•
paid. ~tOIII Ia refrig . fuml1hed.

Home for tala, Gallipolis Farry. 4
bedrooms. four car garage.
t38,500.00. 304-675-5684,

new

p....•-. C.1l
.. ,

Brookaide Ap1i1mentt: Located
off Bulaville Rd .· 1 BR. lpt~eioul
lpertmanta with modern kltchM
•nd w ..her-drver hookupS, ca~. telwlaion •v•ilable. Call
814-441·1832 .

Completay tumilhlld 3 BR.
home. Swimming pool. S1WIIita
dilh. Famity room. Allthte.ll.trll.
C•ll 114-441-,109 or 3782740.

3 bedroom. 2 bath1, full finished
b11ement, new furnace &amp; central air, g1r1ge. fenced yard. Low
60's . 2414 Mt. Vernon Aw. Pt.
Pl . 304,675-1774.

~-·.•

·~end

7672. Houn9·5.

Commerci•l property end house
lots-O.Uipolit Ferry. Call 304175-1901.

3 Bedroom house w/ 32 1crn.

3 blldroom hou .... Z029 Cha·
them. Nice 1iding. New root:
Exc•l. cond. •31,000 . C.ll

ally. Adul1o

fur~iahed

Modem One BR. epenment. 'c.11
814·448·0390 .

5-61 4-44&amp;-1522.

446-2205.

IF..._...', ~

1171....., 0. I'
.... I ••• ' - •• ... Cal
_ , ,oo. l14-7o12-U~.

Pomer0¥.0No. 014-IIZ·148,1 ,

lot• 1nd ahalra priced from
3117·
t3H to till. T•bl•
up to t121S. Hkte-e·bedt •310 U Heul truckt _ .. traM. .. ""
to 0191- Roclnoro 0221 to Nnt. 304_1711- 7-42
- 1.
t3711. La~ t28 to 11215".
D l -. t1
••
- ~ up to 049 5. Fl
od
·
WoocltiW. w-8 chelrl 1281 tor•lllllo
delivered, ltldtld
0791. Oooll t100 .up 1o t371 . UI.QO.MooonCOunty.GoiU.0:
H ~
Uo. Olilo • 01,_ • - within
u.......
t400 and up. Bunk raeaon, our dllcrMtiDn, J04.
bedl
Coml)lete w-rnsttrM'"
t281onduptoU91. 1obybodo 891-3441.
.
•110. Menr rssorbouprlngs
"'" .. 1Win til. ftnn
66 B~ilcling Suppllaa
188. au..n Mti •zza. Kl:ie
·~10. 4 dr'lwlr chett til . Gun
clbineta UUft . OM or a1ectr1c
range *371. lab¥ mettrea... Building Mllteriea.
f38 • US. lod fro- UO, Block. bridl.
plpoo. wfn.
no • Klnt lnimo no.
~:
Mlectton of bedroom IUh:••· 241·1121 .
..cabmeta. hMdbolrd1 130
•nd YP to 118.
--·--------·
Concrete blocka· all .....
10 D•y• lime 11 011h with ordalivery. MuonNnd.ChiHoo•pprovocl . . . -. 3 M._ out Its a- Co.. 1 23~ Ptoto St ..
lulovllo Ad. Open 11om to Spm O.IUpallo, Ohio. C.ll 114-441Mon thru Sit Ph 814 441
278i.
032:i.
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Nico 1 aR. opt, nooo HMC.
Stove, Nfria, &amp; drlpet.. C.ll
114-441-47112 .

C1ll 9·6- 814-441-7672. aHtr

In Eu,..a aerou from Dam.
P.rti•l b.. emen tl glr.ge. Storage building. Counfv Wlhlr. Oil
hNt. Nice. U1,000. C.ll 614·

cwpet.

Q.';'pa~':; Fe~ Anyc~ ,·,

Homes for Sale

5,00- 448-1244.

w-.

bedroom~, 304-IIIS·3612.._, appl.· ..::~cto;:"..iw~
1981 mobile home 1411170. 2

·

114-~-,eu.

0,....

Apartment

44

for Sale

34
4 BR .. fireplace. fullb•~n~ent. 3
mi. • · of O.llipoli1. t29. 900.

end TV ..u.
II to IPM. Mon thru
sot.
627 3 1'&lt;1.
Awe. GeiNpoU1. OH.
·
' .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
dry«o, NlttiiOfOtcKo,
rlntea. lhgg1 Appll1ncea,
Upper Rtwr ftd • .,_..Stone
CNttMot.l.l14-441·7388.
LAYNE'S FUR I
NTUAE

UMd

32 Mobile Homaa

offet' O¥er t40,000 wiN be
conaidered. 3CM-175-2231 .

31

IOfltoot. c.lll14-441·311.a .
Woo+baall 011. up. iSce. Inc. Clood

POLLAN-~-----

low· to form ' lour oimplo WO&lt;da.

___ .·
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==.~='!=

•30.

WOlD

;.,. tiiMiw De II A . . . . t
..... Clllt4-111-. . .7.
•

Weddlnl dreee. TH·Ieniti.
dNU, Mka topper, 001' 1111 6
~ .... d._ ........
rz aptiou dlconitlans. c.III14448-1111. '
Ml
- - - o l o b o. t12flli'
buiide. C..lnlng _..,. HI
ton. FOI. Oh~ ,... Co.

k..

o
f - -·
NEW- W....,. bootl•

'::~::' .s~ttillA-l&amp;t.trs·
••••
14ilo4 loy CIAT I .
0 four
Roorrongo lotfors of 1lio
.'
Krambl.d worda be-·

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Television
Viewing

Motorcyclaa ·

,m-~:::~·-·
ftOO.
Colli
•.
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SWAIN .
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Ollvolt .. Golllpollo.
N£W- Ipo. - - p . t 3 9 9.
........,,_......_ t118-tll8.
lunk ~with t:1"dlng f118 .
Fullllae
toundetion
Uertlnt - ••• · Recllneu
... rant- til.
USED· hdr, ._..,., bedroom
•ulte•. n••·•211. o ..
Wflftett ...,, 1 comp4ete lin•

"I don't like' I't when you
order for both of us."

·-~

f umiture' reflni.tli1111 ...cl repair,
~ualitv work end r..-nable
flit .... free tetm.t••· 304-676-

=

114 . . . . . . .

The Dilly Sentinel-Page 13

Pomerov-MIMapo."''. Ohio

rd A¥-

II U11"oQI04MI -..........
loti.
.~. !'.. I'Nd hoc .•••.
--171-1-.

know, lftd NOT to Mnd
throUfh m. mail until you ~teva
invMtlg•.ct ttia oHaring.

5
'"
Own PM
you~-doyo.
own ,..,_,_. or Moe
ltore, chooH from : Jean·
1portaw.. r. l1di11. men•;
d&gt;lldron-...,.miiV; lo'll' oiHo.

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

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,., .... ., . . . . . . . bu . . . .

l

"'""you
.non..-

Sttrt• Oenentor .repair ahOp.
Ownoo N11ring. Foo Info&lt;, coli
814:-25e-M34-wHttendt • at-

tor ..... or rem on Ph

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- - - - - - :·.

•

I NOTICEI
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO . recommec•d• th.t you
do

LI'Mt

-~... f'or-loiform.
. . --IQ.1111 .

I

21

74

For Leua

Ill

rs'cRal, tr. ...m..•.
)04.1,..1101.

yn

-

Man:h 2. 1988

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R H K K H D Z

0 X E E

. Yall Cq'a CQpeoc..,... PEOPlE WHO .BELIIVE
~T MONEY GROWS ON TRm VSUALLY 0BT
~OUT ON A LIMB.- OA BA'liilfA
'

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, OHIO

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Corner of Oener~l H8rtlnger Parkway end

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CoUege

Ohio Lottery

champs

Daily Number

crowned

PtMStteet

358
Pick 4

TELEPHONEi,lll-3471

• •

9284

OPEN 7 DAViS A WEEK
8 A.M.-10 P.M.

·

:Su1per Lotto
-29-42

We ~cept Food Slimp~&amp; W.I.C. Coupona

Rain tonight. Low In mid
30s. Rain likely Friday. Highs
In low 40~.

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Val.38,

at y

Na.~07

Pomeroy

Caprrtemed 1988

••

enttne
2 Section1. 14 PegH 25 Cenll
A Multimedia lf'!C. Newapaper

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March. 3, 1988

Ohio OKs solid waste dispoSal revision bill

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Kraft ·
Miracle Whip

·2°/o Lowfat
Milk

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Regular or Light

FRESH ·
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By NANCY YOACBAM
we should be Involved now,
unless we're asked by township
Sentinel staff Writer
Orange Township Trustees say residents."
they have not been asked by
Robinson said the only comresidents of their township to ments he's heard about developbecome Involved In the pursuit of lng a new sewage system propfunding for a se~Yage disposal osal for Tuppers Plains came
sys~ for Tuppers Plains, and
from Jacobs, and that no one
that they should not be Involved from Tuppers Plains has said
14nleas uked.by the residents.
.anything to him !!bout such a

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CQmmtuloners
by
Wilbur Robinson, Orange
trustee.
·At last week's commissioners
meeting, Olive Township Trustees Paul Life and Joe Lantz
reported to the commissioners on
a recent meeting at the Meigs
County Health Department. The
meeting was called by Jon
Jacobs, of the health depart·
ment, and Included Orange and
Olive trustees, County Develop·men! Director Kim Shields and
representatives of Engineering
Associates, Wooster. Discussed
was the Environmental Protectlon Agency ban on building In
Tuppers Plains and the need to
alleviate sewage problems In the
community, which are the cause
for the ban.
Olive trustees told thecommlssloners last week that they were
willing to become Involved 111 the
project, only If the commissioners would also become Involved.
The commissioners said they
were'willing to do whatever they
. could !O help, and to Instruct Kim
Shields to assist In seeking out
possible funding sources, as long .
as they were asked to do. so by ·
both Olive and Orange Trustees.
The commissioners said they
were reluctaht to become Involved In the project without the
request of the trustees and the
PeoPle of the area, since they
- already spent over $60,000_ In
·engineering fees to develop a
proposed sewage system that
would satisfy EPA, and then
yeats trying to secure the fundIng, finalize the plans and and get
the construction started, only to
have the project turned down by
Tuppers Plains residents.
Olive trustess presented their
letter to the commissioners .a t
last week's meeting.

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Assorted·Varieties

RC, Diet Rite
Dr.·Pepper

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Bounty
Paper Towels

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iOmES

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F.IESH

not
asking the
to do
anything at this time, "but we'll
be .back (to speak with the
commissioners) If asked by the
people. The bottom line for us
(the trustees)," he added, "Is
what ihe people want."
Kim Shields told the commls- .
stoners later In the meeting that
the tone of.meetlng at the healih
department was that the problem of enforcing sewage disposal
guidelines In Tuppers Plains falls
under the jurisdiction o! the
health department. Because of
this, Jacobs has taken Into
consideration an ·alternative e'nglneerlng design which calls for
grlnder,pumps and a centralized
sewage system, which might In
the long run, be a highly cost
effective system for Tuppers
Plains. Shields said It was his
understanding that Jacobs
started with the trustees because ·
they are the elected officials for
the townships, and If they (the
trustees) were favorably dis·
posed toward the project, the.
next step would be a public
meeting.
At ·this point, said Shields,
there Is nothing to lose by looking
Into funding possibilities. "But If
_folks In Tuppers Plains aren't

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.. N!I,~St
stoners,
.
the commissioners' degree
Involvement In the situatiQn.
The commissioners entered
Into a contract with Burgess &amp;
Nlple, Ltd., Parkersburg, W.Va., .
for architectural services and ·
other related services needed to
prepare an estimate of costs to
put a new roof, downs pouting and
gutters on the county courthouse.
Bill Dlttoe, of the Parkersburg
firm, gave the commissioners a
ball park figure of $75;000 or less,
Including his company's fee, to
repair the roof of the historic
building.
The roof has been plagued with
leaks for several years, and the
commissioners have been setting
aside money for the past two or so
years to replace the roof.
Documents necessary to bid
the project may be expected
around tl,le~nd of March, Dlttoe
said.
State. Issue II funding was also
discussed briefly by the commissioners and County · Engineer
Philip Roberts. Methods of fairly
disbursing Issue II funds to
Ohio's counties are still under
consideration by legislators.

Hunting bill sent to House

SIGNAL'! - Melp High Senior Electronics
students, Jerry Grueser, Scott Geyer and Charles
· Cleland, under the supervision of Senior Instructor Dale Harrison are shown checking signals
through an AM·FM receiver. Grueser Is a student

Road temporarily
closed to traffic
Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts reported this morning
that Chester Township Road 83,
Skinner Road, Is temporarily
closed to traffic. Roberts said the
county highway department Is
replacing a wooden deck bridge
on the road wllh a steel deck, and
that materials .for the deck ran
short !)n Wednesday afternoon.
Worl!en relumed to the highway
garll«e for the needed materials,
but rain late Wednesday after·
noon hampered completion of the
p~oject and the road h!'od jle be
clo~~ed. Roberts expects the road ·
will be reopened sometime to-

COLUMBUS,' Ohio (t;PI) -A nip off .three of the 10 acres and
bill that. would allow Sunday destroy the crop," he said.
hunting of fox and groundhog In "Farmers 111 my area would
Ohio won &lt;IPProvalln the Senate welcome hunters to come out and
Wednesday, 27-5, and was sent to · ellml01ite these critters."
the House.
· ·
Gaeth admitted the Sunday
·Sponsor Sen. Ben Gaeth,
hunting would draw opposition,
Defiance, said that since the red but orily Sens. Eugene Bra.nstooi,
fox was put on the Department of D-Ullea, and Richard Schafrath,
Natural Resources list of pro- R-Loud2nvllle, spoke for ·the
tected game, It could only be opposition. .
day. ·'
hunted on commercial game
"I don't oppose the game
presel'l(es. He said the bill would preserves, but I oppose open
give the working person another ht.mtlng on Sunday, the one day
But Orange trustees did not day to hunt and 11 would provide
request the lnvolvment of the additional Income for the game for peace and Sl)fety of the family
when we're trying to promote
commissioners and are not sure preserves.
·
family togetherness," saki SchaCOLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) their (the trustees) Involvement
Gaeth also said farmers would
frath. "It'll be bad If rou can't let · The Ohio Senate gave unanimous
Is necessary at this time. .
welcome hunters for croundhog.
your kids go out wlth.out worry- approval Wednesday to a bill that
"We weren't Involved before,"
"In two weeks, gtoundbogs can
1
Ing abOut their dodging bullets. would aliow parents to set aside.
said RobiiiiOn, 'and wedon'Ueel go throu11h a sovbean field, and
And you know not all hunters are money regularly In a tuition trust
good shooters."
fund so tbere would be money for
Branslool also objected to the their children's college
Suaday bunting saying that education.
A motion to dismiss a class lnjunctton be Issued enjoining the . farmers and landowers are lookThe biU, · sponsored by Sen .
action suit flied In the Melp defenclallll from enforcing the Jq for reUOIII to close their Paul E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyru.s, was
County Common Pleas Court . Atten4ance·Make Up policy lands to bunters.
approved 32-0 and was sent to the
Joining Branalool and Scba- House.
aaalnlt the Attendance-Malle Up Issued after the recent ·teachers'
·
fratb In votlnJ aplut the bUI · "Parents could set aside a
PoUcy Of tbe Melp Local Scbool atrlke In the dlltrlct.
District . hu beell flied In the. ' 'lbe dllmlllalaction IIIII nine were Sena. Linda Fumey, D- small amount of money from the
ltellll of defense atatiq reuons Toledo;
Paul Pfeifer, R· time a cbUd ll .bom and by the
court.
The OriJinal action flied by the suit should be dlan!l4eed and Bucyrua, and Michael White, Ume the cblld Is 16, there would
flied with the dllmllsal request II D.Cieveland.
Wesley Max Whitlatch, et al,
be e110111b to pay for a four-year
aaalnlt tbe Melp Local School · a JenlthY brief cltiq declllona In . l:be bUialao prohibita the uae of education," Pfeifer said .
Dlatrlct ao.rd of Education IJid . otllercourtcuee whlcballqedly "i«'!i·terraiD veblcleiiD tjle t a • . •'For a child liarD tocla)', If
Dtatitct SUperintendent pan £. •bllllt lela! reu1111a wby the of pme anlmaiJ and Jnere- coati rile the way lbey have
Morrll ulll ·that a temporary claaa actton suit should be f - for conimerclal fllblnJ bafa, ltl colllp education would
Injunction and a permanent dlmlued.
Uoeues. '
tll0.800," be said. ·

R·

Deli ·pizzas
(CHEESE &amp; PEPPEIONI
12 INCH

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waste disposal . district , if a
landfill Is needed and is In the
public Interest.
Rep. John Boehner, R-West
Chester, an opponent, said the
bill caters to environmental and
citizen groups, and to the "bureaucrats" at the EPA. "We live
In the real world and we need a
real solution, " he said.
Boehner said the legislation
does nothing to solve the landfill
problem but creates disincentives for private Industry to
collect and haul trash. ''The
result will be a . significant
Increase In the cost of garbage
collection without Improving the
situation," he said .
·'The cost to the consumer will
double or triple for garbage
pickup, " agreed/ Rep. James
Buchy, R-Greenvllle. "We need
to allow people to go back to
incinerators. We've got people Jn
the rural areas throwing garbage
In the streets because they cari't
use the landfills."

behind the project, then It won't
fly," he commented.
Shields alSo shared his concerns that If Tuppers Plains
hasn't tried to alleviate Its ·
sewage problems by 1991, when
EPA has geared up to go after
unsewered areas around the
state, grant money may no
longer be available.
•, SI!ICe o.-ange.

File motion to dismiss suit

'

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I

mlttee wrestled with the terms of · leaks.
hauling trash from as far away
the bill for weeks, balanclng .the
Fifty-one landfills "grahdfa· as the East Coast and dumping it
thered" Into the permit system in Ohio.
Interests of environmentalists,
The solid waste disposal dis·
concerned citizens, the Ohio for tl]e last 20years would have to
EPA, local governments ; trash apply for new perm! Is within 18 trlcts would keep 75 percent of
haulers and landfill owners.
months . The EPA would be able the fee revenues, with the rest
Secrest said 15 counties have
to close unqualified ones, subject going to the Ohio EPA for
no available landfills and 50 to local variances If there were a cleanup of unneeded or abancounties have landfill capacity lack of space for waste disposal. doned landfills and hazardous
which will last less than five
The bill sets a fee schedule lor waste.
years.
trash dumping, with local disThe bill requires the EPA to
The bill provides for local tricts charging up to $1.50 a ton make recommendations I" one
for local .&gt;yaste, up to $3 a ton lor year lor the · disposal of used
wast~ dlspos{ll districts, either
single-county or joint districts, to Ohio garbage brought in from tires, a common eyesore ln.Ohio,
make long-range plans for siting outside the county or district , and and ash frcim municipal
landfills and for alternative up to $4.50 a ton ·for out-of-state .Incinerators :
It also provides for background
methods of handling solid waste,
garbage.
"
Including re-use and recycling.
· Rep. Daniel Troy. D· investigations of landfill owners
Willowick, who chaired a com- In response to the attorney
.It also requires the Ohio EPA
to write specifications for thE' mittee to study Ohio lan&lt;:lfills, · general's ·office, which disclosed
construction and operation of
told his colleagues that landfills that the owner of a landfill near
landfills. and to enforce those
In nearby states charge $60 to $80 Steubenville had connections
with organized crime.
a ton to receive waste.
specifications to prevent toxic
There would be a moratorium
Currently, Ohio landfill opera·
tor.s set their own lees, and on new landfills, a Ithough excepeastern · Ohio residents have tions could be made by the EPA
complained that companies are .with the permission of the local

Senate approves
tuition fund blll ·

• •
• • •

• •
• • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • •
• • •

landfill near Amanda, Ohio.
Rep. Steven Williams, RLancaster, whose district In·
eludes· Amanda, told his col·
leagiles trucks are already
''rolling through downtown Lan·
caster" with some of the out-of·
state wastes.
"This Is a serious problem,"
said Wllllanis, asking for a
favorable vote on the bill, which
Is supported by the administration ot Gov. Richard Celeste.
Opponents complained the
measure would raise garbage
· collecjloil fees ani! give the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency too much power without
. Improving. the situation.
"Oh Ia Is ciri the verge of a
serious crisis," said Rep. Joseph
Secrest, D-Senecavllle, whose
Energy and Environment Com-

Orange Twp. residents have
not·asked ·for sewer funding ·

Cardinal
White Bread

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•• • •

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£n.rlched

110'
I
II

Boneless Charcoal
Steak .

By LEE LEONA-RD
UPI sta&amp;ehoose Reporter
,COLUMBUS, Ohio (uP!)
Amid reports thaI a huge ship·
ment of 'incinerator ash m·ay be
on Its way from Philadelphia to
central Ohio, the Ohio House has
~ a deterrent to out-ofstate trash .
.Passed Wednesday, 87-7, .and
forwarded to the Senate was a
major overhaul of the state's
solid waste disposal law which
dlicolrages Imported garbage
·and , provides for long-range .
planning of how local governments may deal with trash. ·
· A Liberian ship containing
15,000 tons of ash Is docked at
Lewes, Del., awaiting tests In
Philadelphia for the toxicity of Its
cargo. Plans call for the. ash, If It
Is non-toxic, to be shipped to a

*'

·from Southern High School; Geyer, from Meigs
High School, and Cleland, a student from Eastern
Hlgb School, representing all three high schools In
the Meigs Yocalional Educational Planning
District. (See additional picture and story on page

7).

Ohio legislators check
health-fitness displays
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) how many calories you need to
Legislators got the wheels mov- maintain an Ideal body weight,"
Ing Wednesday, with physiology
she said.
students standing right beside
The computer printout could
them to make sure they dldn 't do
also determine the amount of
too much huffing and puffing.
protein, fats, · carbohydrates,
Many legislators, lobbyists
cholesterol, sodium, potassium.
and legislative· staff members
vitamins and minerals were
took advantange of an· eight·
contained In that 24-hour diet. It
station health and fitness display
also graded thedletona scale o(l
set up by the Ohio Association of
to 10, with 10 being a perfect diet,
Health, Physical Education, Re- and lesser numbers signifying
creation and Dance on Leglsla·
the severity ol changes thai
live Fitness Day.
needed made.
·•
' 'The group wanted to do
something at the state level,"
said Dr. Tim Kirby, head of the
exercise physiology laboratory
at Ohio State University.
Soulb Ceniral Ohio
"Other state~ are doing similar
Occasional rain today, with
programs," said Kirby.
highs In the upper 40s. OccaInstead .of Inviting legislative sional rain tonight, with a low In
personnel to go through the
the mid 30s. Rain likely Friday,
sophisticated program at the
with highs In the low 40s.
. laboratory at OSU,l&lt;Jrby and the
The probability of precipita.. exercise physiology students
tion Is nearolOO percent today, SO
brought much of their program
percent tonight and 70 percent
to the Statehouse.
Friday .
·
Legislators hail been given a
Winds will be from the norchart wbere they could list what theast at 10 to 20 mph today and
they ate during a 24-hour' period.
from the .nortbeast near 10 mph
They were encouraged to fill this
tonight.
·
In specifically, paying attending
Extended Foreeaal
to exact amounts and brand
Sll&amp;urday throu111 Mt~nclay ·
names.
Generally fair through the
Annette Brown, a reJistered
period. Highs will range from 35
dietitian and craduate student In
to 45 Saturday, climbing Into tbe
exercise physloloay, ran tile 40s Sunday and ranging from 45
chart tbroUJh the computer tbe
to 115 Monday. OverniJht 10\\?
J!«SSn's nutrltlonallteedt.
, will be In the 20a early S&amp;turday
. "We flpre In your hei.Jbt,
and raliJ(ng from tbe mJQ :ZO. to
wei.Jbt and activity level and
the mid 30s Sunday alld r.tonoay
then the computer can . - a mOI'IIIqa.

Weather

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