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f, Men:f• B. 1988

I

Cooper birthday celebrated
The niJith birthday of Gary Lee Georae and Barb Cooper, Harry
Coaper,IOII of Gary &amp;lldMariJYn Barmott, and Jerry Cooper. aU
Cooper, Portland, was oblened of Amwnortah, W. Va.
recently with a slratlng party at
the Skat.-a-Way rink.
Cupc:alres, Ice cream, potato
chlpa, and koolald were served to
tboae attendlfti, Mr. and Mrs.
wunam and Pbyllls Koatln
Keuy Rizer and SODJ, Todd, Wlleeler of WestfJeld, Mass.
Ke!UIY and Jamie, Chuck Evans
the birth of their first
and Matthew, SheUa,Long. Billy child, Andrew Kostln Wheeler.
Joe and Eugene, Wilma Black, Oct. 10. At birth the tntut
Jeremya_n dMissy,DebbleEngle weighed nine pouads and was 24
aad Pl!te, Sue Engle and,Shawn, tru:bes long. William Wheeler Is a
Sarah and· Laura Wallbrown, former resident of Apple Grove '
HIDery and C. J. Harris, John and a 1972 graduate of Southeia
Harmon, Aar011 HOback, Eliza· Hlglt SchoOl. Grandparents are
beth and Daniel, Coope.- of . Howard and Sulvla Kristin of
Annamortah, W.Va.; Chris Prot- Roc!hester, N. Y. and the late
fltt, TerrY, Stevie and T. J. Alex and Anna Stitt Wheeler.
Triplett, Jamie and Michael
Evans, Nick and Ryan Adams,
Gable Smith, .Jean f'(tch, Nick
•
and Jason, and Justin
Mlddleswart.
Sneld gttts were Gary's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Engle, Sr., his uncle, Junior
Engle, Middleport; b,!s ~t­
grandmother, Nellie Coope.-; and

Ohio Lottery

Southem
s~ks title

Wheeler birth

Daily Number
720

·-nee

Pick4
6971

·Page 3

GARY LEE COOPBB

•

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Yol.38, No.211
Copyrighted 1988

·THE FABRIC SHOP

CARBURETOR CIIECK - Uader the aapervl·
sion of BID WIDiamson, senior auto mechaaics

By ANNE SAKER
·United Preu lnternalional
Vice President George Bush
swept' Dixie's Republican prim·
aries to seize a massive lead In
the GOP presidential race today ,
but for the •Deqtocrats, Super
Tuesday contests 'did little to
resolve the party's Ideological
struggle.
Armed with a well-financed ·
organization quietly built as
• President Reagan's loyal No.2,
Bush stormed through the South,
winniDg all14 states voting there.
and took Massachusetts and
Rhode Island for good measure.
Left Jn his dust were Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole

WE HAVE-A LAIGE SELEcnGN
BEAunFUL FABIICS AND IRIDAL
ACCESSORIES TO CHOOSE FIOM. ·
•BEADS

•LAMAY .
•SEQUINS

•HEAD
•SATIN
•GLOVES PIECES
•LACES

LD THE STAFf . At 1HI FA.IC

SD IIIII YOU W1111 YOU DUUI. ;
. . . 01 Wl&amp;IING DUSS.

the Pacific island of American
Samoa. The Democrats are expected to remain uncommitted to
attract' suitors · at the national
convention.
Never before had so many
nominating convention delegates
been up for grabs in one day. and
Bush's landslide brought him a
huge gain.
A, United Press International
count as of 5 a.m. EST showed
Bush wln11ing 572 Super Tuesday
delegates for a total ot 695. Dole
had ·. 99 for a total of 164;
Robertson had 10 for a total of 38;
Kemp got four tor a total of 39 .
There were 75.1 GOP delegates
at stake Tuesday- 66 percent of

nomination by early May.
of Kansas, former television
Democratic delegates, mean·
evangelist Pat Robertson and ,
New York Rep. Jack Kemp. Dole · while, were shared mainly by
three candidates Tuesday and Robertson, who managed to
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Du·
win the Washington state cau·
kakls, Tennessee Sen. Albert
cuses, vowed to press on. Kemp
Gore
Jr. and civil rights leader
had no immediate comment on
Jesse
Jackson. Dukakis took
his future, but scheduled a news
eight
states,
Including the prizes
conference in Washlngton on
of
Tex11s
and
Florida, while Gore
ThurSday.
·
won six and Jackson won five.
With the momentum churned
Rep-. Richard Gephardt, whose
up by the 20 states 'Of Super
Tuesday. and as the campaign • tough trade message did not play
as well as he hoped In the South,
moves to populous Illinois next
won
only his home state of
week, should Bush prove domi· .
Missouri
and appeared to suffer
nant there and In six other major
the
most
among
the ,Democrats.
contests this spring, mostly In the
The
only
results
not yet tallied
Midwest, he could have enough
were
the
Democratic
caucuses In
delegates to claim the GOP

RACINE - Racine Baseball
Association will have an organizational meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. , at the Southern Kindergarten building. All interested
parents urged to attend.

~ ~

.

.f / I

i

' .'' ''

RACIJ:'iE - Rac)ne Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, will meet 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Plans will be made for
the annual inspection on March
22. Members are urged to attend.
CHESTER ..,. Chester Township Trustees will meet Tues!lily,
7:.30 p.m., at the town hall.

Middleport Cadette troop meets
Plans for several trips have
been made by the Middleport
Cadette Troop 1100.
The troop have planned a trip
to Charleston for an overnight
stay. one to Athens. to go
swimming, and another to Kentucky for the Horseback Riding
Camp In June. Currently they are
working on fund raising to get tbe
money together to finance the
trips.
Work has been completed by
many of the girls on the badVS of

child care, !ashton fitness and
sports. Work is continuing on the
badges for campiJig, leadership
and artistic crafts. In the ifOUP
are Sherry Johnson, Abby make,
Heather Burch, Unda Chapman,
Wendy Clark, Brooke Coates,-:
Reva M:uilen, M:ary stein,
Heather Franckowtck, and Kelly
Satterfield. Leaders are Sarah
Johnson, M:argle Chapmaa, and
Pam Burch, with Terri Hockman ·
and Margie Blake, project
ass!Stanl!l .

4ROLL
COLORTEX

TIDE

DOUBLE
175COUNT

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

PUFFS FACIAL
TISSUES

1.00 OFF LABEL

FLUFF
BATHROOM

TISSUE

. OR 90 COUNT

MAXIMUM STRENGTH

WITH

BAYER
ASPIRIN

CALCIUM

54REa.

3~~~-

5.99

10COUNT

DRIXORAL
SUSTAINED-ACTION
TABLETS

KOTEX

30 CT. IIAXI• 24 CT. PROFILE
27 CT. THIN lUPER

15 CT. OvERNITE

2t~m

2t9~

11 OUNCE

1/2 OUNCE

NOXZEMA
SHAVE

AFAIN
NASAL
SPRAY

CREAM'

OUR REG. 3.49

2.99

SALE PRICE
LESS REBATE
NETCOST
AFTER REBATE

1.99

1Zl
'

1M

Look For The "PRICE BREAKERS,.
BIG

Low
11 OUII:E CAN
BARBASOL

250 COUNT

SOFTIQUE

FACIAL TISSUES

-

WHITE RAIN
HAIR CARE PRODUCTS

1.29 ==~

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentl•el Newa Staff
V~er&amp;DB Memorial Hospital
has been awarded continued
· acc~tatlon by the Joint Co,m·
, mission on Accreditation of
Heaithcare Organizations.
The JoiJit Commission Is· a
private; non-profit organization
created by and composed ·of
health care professionals. It is
governed by a Board of Commissioners whose members are
appointed by the American College · of · Surgeons, American
College of Physicians, American
Dental Association, American
Hospital Association, and the
American Medical ·Association.
,A pubUc member Is appointed by
the Board of ·Commissioners to
represent consumer concerns .
·~Joint Commission accredtti'

tlon is evidence of Veterans
Meq~orial Hospital's efforts to·
provide quality health, and Veterans Memorial Hospital Is proud '
to announce. this prestigious
endorSement from the Joint
Commission.' • commented Scott
Lucas, hospital administrator.
"The staff and management of
Veterans Memorial Is dedicated
to providing the highest quality
services to the community. and
pledges on-going efforts to bring
this about. Accreditation by the
Joint Commission certifies that
our hospital does. Indeed, provide a high !l!)lel of care which
meets' their pre-established re· '
qulrements," Lucas continued.
,The administrator explained .
that In order for Veterans Memorial Hospital to receive Joint
Commission Accredltatlo!l. avo·

Middleport Mayor Fred Hof- place by Sept. 1, according to rD-Gallipolls) and State Sen. Jan
fman announced today that he grant conditions, Hoffman said Michael Long (D·Circlevlile) for
has received word from the that these would be purchased their efforts In securing funding
Division of Litter Prevention and and installed this summer. after . for this project.
Recycling of the Ohio Depart- the grant agreement has been
Hoffman said that the vlllage
ment of Natural Resources that ·finalized and approved by the wlli also be cooperating with the
tjle vlilage of Middleport has vlilage council.
Meigs County Oftfce of Litter
been awarded a special project
He said that the grant funds Control'for Clean lip Ohio Week.
litter containment grant for wlil provide much-needed addi· which will run from April 23 to
$2,200.
tiona! litter containers around April .~0. The annual clean-up
Hoffman said the grant funds the community• to asssist in week will be held by the village
will be · used to purchase and keeping the village as litter free during this week, when litter and
install eight new Utter containers as possible.
debris will be picked up by the ·
in various areas of the communThe mayor expressed appreci- vlliage street department free of
ity. These containers must lie in ation to State Rep, Jolynn Boster · charge,

luntary request was made by the
hospital for an on-site evaluation,
or survey. by Joint Commission
surveyors who applied stan&lt;!ards
designed to further the objectJ,ves of quality patient care and
..the safetY of the environment in
which that care Is provided.
These national standards represent a consensus among
health care professionals and are
periodically updated to reflect
change$ iii the deUvery of health
care. The survey process at
Veterans Memorial was com·
pleted in December, 1987,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
has served the community since
1962 and currently offers a full
range of heaithcat;e services
including emergency, acute and
long-term c;tre, as well as many
support services, .
-- '

Capital improvements bill vote today

WITH FREE
TRIAL SIZE

1.00

a

, Gephardt, the early leader in'
the primary season; had only 95
for a total of 159. nunols Sen.
,Paul Simon and former Colorado
Sen. Gary Hart, who did not
contest Super Tuesdl)y, were
rewarded with virtually .no
support.
The breadth of Bush's victory
was evident In the tally- he had
more. than 55 percent of the
ballots counted In primary states
as of 1 a.m. EST, when nearly 2.8
million votes had been recorded,
Dole had 29.5 percent; Rob€rtson, 13.4 percent.
On the Democratic side, out of
more than 3.8 million votes cast
Continued on page 6.

receives $2;200 grant
from state for litter containers

AHO awards · Veterans Memorial
Hospital co~tinued accreditation

100 CdUNT

FIBRE
TRIM

the 1,139 votes nee.ded ' tor nom I·
nation at August's national convention in New Orleans and 33
percent of the 2,277 delegate
totaL Democrats were choosing
1,307 delegates ..: 63 percent of
the 2, 0'12 votes needed to win the
nod at July's convention in
Atlanta and .l l percent of the
4,162 total.
Judging by delegates gathered
Tuesday, tlie Democratic race
shaped up as a three-man contest
among Dukakis, Jackson and
Gore. The 5 a.m.,UPI taunttound
Dukakis gaining 370 delegates
for a total of 459, Jackson with 353
for total of 376 and Gore with 316
for a total of 342.
'

Mid~lepori

'

1.1t

3.11

accreilltadon awiU'ded to tlie hospital by the·l olnt
Commllalon. Oli' ..,.~credltatlon of 'Healthcare
Orcantzattonil..
·

CER'l'IJI'ICATE OF AOOREDrrATION- Scott

IAiear, ~trat11r Of VeteriDB Memorial
H011pltal, and Dr. , James , Witherell, hospital
medical director, · display the cei11fl~ate of

Bat~:

2~RQG.

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

By NANCY YOACHAM
only entity that Joined the fund ' department of development ts
without borrowing funds to do so:. ~tow, more than ever before,
Sentinel News Staff
·Pomeroy Chamber of ComShields said he Is loo~lng getting Information when Indus·
merce members were updated forward in the very near future to tries are looking for possible
yesterday ·by Kim Shields, Meigs seeing the first deduction made location sites. "We are becoming
County director of development, from the fund in the form of a better known," he continued. ·
Shields also described very
on the county's $60,000 revolving $25,000 loan.
loan jund for small businesses.
Besides the revolving loan briefly , two Meigs CountY proShields was the guest speaker at fund, the county has another jects he was involved' with in
Tuesday's chamber of com- $24,000 to $25,000 in the Commun- recent months, one which fell
merce luncheon meeting at the lty Development Block Grant through because the cltent got a
Pomeroy Trinity Church. .
budget targeted for assistance to better deal in Wes t Virginia, .and
another which still has good
Shields explained that the small businesses .
possibilities. He also mentioned
Shields said It Is more difficult
revolving loan fund exists besuccessful
projects , Including
cause two years ago, the Meigs to. put together a financial
the
Middleport
Nursing Home
1' County Commissioners chose to package for a small , business
a!&gt;d
~
a~tment
com_plex lri
· lnvailt.U~t(f~~~h,••:thatned""t~h' .a.. latthae . buslnell&amp;i
. •. but .
1
1
Racine,
both
of
which
are curBuckeyel Hills-Hocking Valley no
at
e revo v ng oan
rently
under
construction.
R'Jional Development District, fund and the CDBG targeted
Shields asked chamber
which was then matched with funds provide "tools and tech·
sUite and federal monies. Shields .nlques" to ease the task of members to spread the word of
the revolving loan fund , and to
noted that Meigs County was one helping small busin~sses.
, of only five entities In Buckeye
"We won't be able to lielp call his office at 992·6861 for
Hills' southeastern Ohio area everyone," Shields said, "but assistance and informatlon.
which pledged participation tn every project wiil be Judged on Shields, who Is In Meigs County
only on a part-time basis, said a
the loan fund . In addition ac- Its own merit."
cording to Shields, Meigs wa's the
He also said that the county
Continued on page 6

CHESTER - Chester Towns hip Trustees will meet Tuesday.
8 p.m. , at the town hail.

720UNCE

2 Sections. 18 Page•

Chamber gets update on loans
for small businesses.in area

Cindy Oliveri.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees will meet in
POMEROY - Alcoholics Ano·
special sessio n Tuesday , 7:30 nymous and AI Anon will meet
p.m. , at the home of Dorothy . Thursday, 7 p.m., at the JTPA
Ca laway, clerk. Cable TV, !nsu- offices in Pomeroy, formerly the
ranee and other matters Will be Diamond Savings and Loan.
d iscussed .
FRIDAY
RUTLAND- Unified Citizens
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
lor Education in the Meigs Local Flame Fellowship Chapter will
School District will meet at 7:.30 meet 6:30 p.m. Friday at Dale's
p.m. Tuesday at the American Smorgasbord. SpeCial speaker
Legion Hall in Rutland; all will be Suzanne Bush, Racine.
members are urged to attend .
SATURDAY
PORTLAND - Portland PTO
RACINE - Morse Chapel
will meet Tuesday. 7 p.m., at the Church is having a hymn sing on
sc hool. Everyone welcome.
Saturday at 7 p.m. The church ts
located on Racine-Portland
POMEROY - Meigs Co unty
Road, County Road 35. The
Vo!ture 776, 40&amp;8, will have a public Is welcome.
dinner meeting Tuesday at8 p.m.
All members are invited to
WILKESVILLE - The Pya ttend.
thlan Sisters are sponsoring a
Sll)6rgasbord this Saturday with
WEDNESDAY
serving starting at 4 p.m. The
SYRACUSE- Syracuse Youth
smorgasbord will be held at
League will hold an organiza.
Pythian Hall in Wilkesville.
tiona! meeting Wednesday, 7
p.m., at Syracuse Elementary.
MIDDLEPORT - The second
registration for the 1988 Middle·
THE PLAINS - Zion Comport Yough League summer ball
munity Church on Route 62,
season will be held at Middleport
Lower Plains Road, will be In
Vtuage Hall on Saturday from 2
reviva l Wednesday through Sun- to 5 p.m. Any boy or girl who did
day, March 12, with services at
not play bali last summer must
7: 30 eac h evening. Evangelist
bring a copy of his ·or her birth
will be Ed Barney of Radcliff.
certificate which will be kept on
Special singers . nightly. Eve
!tie by the Middleport Youth
ryone we lcome.
League. The registration fee is $9
for eacl! child registered.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Amateur Gardeners win
SUNDAY
meet Wednesday evening at the
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting
home of Mrs. Jean Moore with
of Meigs-Mason girls • softball
Miss Kathryn Hysell and Mrs.
coaches and assistant coaches
Ferman Moore as co-hostess.
will be held Sunday, 2:30p.m., at
The prog~am will be given by
the Middleport Masonic Temple.

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, ·ohio, Wenesday, March 9, 1988

SPECIAL ON SEIGEl TIIEAD
THIS WRI OILY $ 199

Community calendar
TUESDAY
RACINE - Eastern Band
Boosters will meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., in the band room at the high
schooL

'

COME IN AND SEE OUR .
IRIDAL AND FORMAL
WEAR DEPARlWNT.

Cathy Hudson lost the most
weight and Texanna WeU and
Judy EbUn were runners-up for
the Sllndereita diet class held at
Five PoiJits Monday night. In the
teen class, Michele Folmer was
the top loser with Melissa Foster
as runner-up.
·, At the Tuesday morning class,
Jan Davis lost the most weight,
while' at .the Mason class, Lois
Ann Reltrnlre was the top .loser,
and Janice Reitmlre was runner·
up. Jo Ann Newsome is lecturer.

.

at y

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Bush sweeps. South; Dems race undecided··

wnco•s YOU TO.

Slinderella meets

'

•

Cloudy tonight, Chance of
showers. Low in mid 30s.
Mostly sunny Thurs'day.

SHAWKl C'R'E•u

I

and sent to the Senate a pair of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (IJPI) Gov. Richard Celeste's $618 bills granting certain rights to
million two-year capital con· divorced pareil~ who do not have
struction appropriation was custody of tlielr children, and
·scheduled for a House floor vote making It a felony for carriers of
today. barely 24 houra after Its AIDS to seliordonatethelr blOod.
A aeparate ST1 million cipltal
Introduction, despite protestt
from members jlDifered with the apprpprlatlon for the Depart·
menl of Youth Services also was
process.
The bill, written behind the tntrolluced and heard In tbe
scenes during the last three Finance Committee. It Is ex·
weeks, was to be reported out of peeled to clear the House by
,
the House Finance Committee · Thursday;
In the Senate a U8l monon
and placed on the calendar at the
capital reappropriation was In·
1: 30 p.m. floor aesllon.
'The bill. which had the ~lesllng traduced, heard In the F1nance
of House and Senate leadera from Committee and tiCketed for parboth partlelaawellu thiC.IeiM rage later thla week. That bill
admiJIIstratlon, wu Introduced contalna moDI)' for . leftowr
Tuelday aDd bad Ita~~ hearlJII' c8Dital projec:ta, Ull,t was not
yeara.
1n committee. Route Speaker spent dul'lng the JUt
vernal Riffe Jr .• D-New Bolton,
The main Cl~~ tmprovecontains
said no amendmeatl would · be m&amp;llta btn for 1
·
IIIOIIe.V
tor
proJectt
that
haw
alloWed
· Meanwhile, the House pa11ed lleell 011 a loq-rup Ult dew-

two

I

(

.l

.

. loped by the administration. But ·
It also contains some items,
Including $6.7 million for facilities ·for the Amerlflora flower .
show slated for Columbus In 1992.
Tile bulk of the appropriation,
$416 million, is designated for
projects on college and untver·
_,tty campuaes: Natural resour- ·
ces will receive $57 miiUon,
mental health and retardation
Sf7 million and corrections Sf5
million.
"I am comfortable with this
capital bill," said t.ee Walker,
director at the state Oftlce of
Budget and Manapment. "I
tJJink It ta1r11 u veryel!lle to the

umtt."

'

Walker referred to tile JU(dellne that DO ~ 1hu 5 pll'cent
of tile 1taW'1 llplratlq budget
should be IJIIDt 011 debt 111'\'lce.
Molt of tile projects Will be
Ccllltllnllil on pqe 6

l&amp;aff m-llera, I t r, Nt111C7 Bau, R.N., pabllc
.health -~ Us Ayna-Thoren, children's
1ervlcea; Joa lacoW, ldmlall&amp;rator, and Norma
TorNII, R.N., dlredor of n~~ne~.

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)

·Comment
The Daily Sentinel

Wen11day, March 9. 1988

.
.
Page 2-The Deily Sentinel
Pometoy-Midcleport. Ohio
Wenllllly. Men:h 9. 1988

.·

SDI may be viewed .as a disease ·

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta .
..

WASHINGTON -TbeReacan Alltt-Balllltlc~UeTreaty.
admlnlatratlon Is on Ita way out,
As we have reported In the
'
l11 Coun !~&amp;reel
and with It aoes tile protection tor past Reagan bas danced around spite of what the future may br- won't raise taxes. The alumni of
Pomero:r, Oblo
the president'' pet project, the the ABM Treaty when It comes to fng. Grumman Space Systems the Bork tight - Including conDEVOTED TO TIJE INTERESTS OF 'I'BE MEIG!HIIASON AREA
Strategic Defense Initiative, or star wars. Tbe treaty Implies and l.ockheed Missile and Space sumer groups, women's croups
'
Star Wars. Pentagon bureau; that It research on space-based Co. are 11 months Into a competiand .civil rights organlzatiOna crats are biting their nalls, and weapons goes ahead, the Soviets tive ground-demonstration pro· round out how much muscle they . '
Is not their only concern.
and Americans mustsit down for gram. Their research Is supSDI
have, and now they may try to
~v
.
, Our .cources say that any pro- reneaotiatlons.
·
force
Congress to take drutlc
posed to take 34 months and cost
ROBERT L WINGETT
gram that mllht look like a couI)\ 19115, Reagan signed a secret $31M million.
action.
Tbelr program would be
· .
·
Pabllaher
sin to SDI could also be In danger national security directive that
The Air Force has a second based on raising taxes and cut·
If Congress decides to wtpe out ssld the administration had found program that could also feel the tlng defense spending and entitPAT WBITEIIEAD
any vestiges of Star Wars. Mill· new ways to Interpret the ABM hot breath of Congress because lements .:... federal pensions, ,SoBOB BOEJ'LICB
.a.w•• hllliUer/Coatroller
tary strategists are calllng It treaty but that as long as Con- of the taint of SDI . That Is the cial Security and the like.
Geaeral Muaaer
"the leprosy etfect;" anythlnl gress ~t along w1th funding for Space Surveillance and TrackCommon cause and Its allles
that has touched SDI Is In danger SDI, there would bli no need tor Ing System.
want to enlist the help of tax-reA MEMBER of The United Press 1nternatlonal,lnland DaUy Press
ot being tainted.
_
any creative Interpretation.
While BSTS keeps track of So- form groups and of the retired perA.uoclalloa and the American Neivspaper PubUsbers Association.
The Air Force Is so worried
Wltb Reagan on the way out, viet missiles In the booster phase, . sons' lobbies, which have a ltake
t.E'Ml:RS OF QPINION are welcome. They ollovld be leu than 3011 words
that It has moved about $1 billion Congress may feel tree to use the SSTS Is designed to track the misIn low lntlatlon. Among the pro.
toaa. All letters are subject to edltlna and must be slped with name, address and
worth
of
strategic
programs
out
ABM
treaty
to
whittle
away
at
siles
after
they
are
lifted
Into
blems the reformers would tace:
tolepboae nunoiJI!r. No· wislgned letters wUI be publlabed. .Lette:rs ahould be In
tr?m under the SOl urnbreUa. bits and pieces of SDI, on the SPI\ce. That smacks loudly or Star · The powerful lobbies ot the older .,
10011 tute, addreii.IOiissues, not personalltl...
It s a paper shutne that may not · grounds 'that they violate the Wars, but even SS'r5 )las a nonAmericans may be.all tor cutting
work, even though most of the agreement.
SDI function ...,. general surveil- defense spending, but ·would aJ. , • ,
programs were begun before
The Investigation of BSTS ord- lance of space. 1
most certainly be against IIi- .,
- Reagan launched the SDI re- ered by Congress Is seen by some ·
BORK ALUMNI-' Some of the creased taxes ti'nd Medicare pay- · •
search In 1983.
In the Air Force as the first step diverse groups that banded to- ments, or decresed penslou and
Congress has already ordered toward canceling the program
·
gether to fight the Supreme social Security.
an Investigation of one program because of Its possible contllcts
A broad economic crUJadt
Court nomination of Robert Bork
that tor a time was bundled up with the ABM treaty. Many Jaw·
are Informally discussing a se- would be a departure tor Comwith SDI research. It is the Boost makers see BSTS as a wolf tn cond coalition. Members of the mon Cause and would force some
B:r REI .EN THOMAS
SurveUlance and Tracking Sys- sheep's clotbtn1 - an SDI pro- citizens' group Common Cause compromise by the other groups. • •
UPI White Houae Reporter
tem - an early-warning space gram disguised as an , early- are talking to their allies In the But some of the activists feel that
· WASHINGTON (liPI- Maureen Reagan says her father Is In "no
'
sensor originally designed to de· warning system.
hurry" to leave the White House and "feels he Is doing a good job."
Bork fight about how they can there Is simply no other way to
teet the launch of Soviet missiles.
The report lor congress on to~e the government to be more reform the economy. They beAnd she suggests he Is going to feel that way until Jan. 19, the eve of
the Inauguration of a new president.
·
.
It can 1\lso be used to guide our BSTS Is due within In a couple of fiscally responsible.
lieve that only a dedicated and
own missiles to bring down So~t weeks. J
· ·
Maureen, who Is a co-chairman of the Republl~an National
President Reagan Is wedded to broad group of outsiders can do
weapons, and that gives It an SDI
. In tbe meantime, the Air Force ·high deficits beca11se he won't sa- what Congress and the president
Committee, ]Ike her father Is staying neutral In the primaries by
.virtUe of her ro)e. But she Is In there· pitching, .drumming up voter
connection. Congress Is worried Is moving ahead with •BSTS In crifice the defense budget and he have ·been unable to do. '
that BSTS might violate the 1972
·
registration and getting out amongst the party faithfuL
Maureen and other Republican leaders are exuding confidence that
this Is a Republican year and the voters wtll once more turn to the
GOP tor leadership In the Whlle House.
Southern GOP leaders who met with Reagan recently are
It Is fashionable In some social one needs only to recall the
convinced they can woo conservative Democrats In the South to vote
to speak of Illegal drug murder of U.S. Dru1 Enforcecircles
Republican, assuring their party the Sun Belt states.
abuse as a "victimless" crime. ment. Agency agent Enrique CaMaureen says she Is the living example of her father's hands off
Such peopl11 argue · that drug marena at ·.the hands ot mapolicy In the primaries. When she sought the Republican senatorial
nomination In California primaries, Reagan declined to give her his
agents or Colombian govern- ot mandatory sentences tor thOle
support.
ment otflclals, and no drug dealing In drugs.
hear new accounts of accidents torney General by the Medellin
· We presently charge those who
and violet crimes being commit- cocaine cartel to appreciate the . related crime and violence on
Maureen and her husband, Dennis Revell, have bought a new home.
knowingly
polson others With
our
streetS.
ted
by
tbose
under
the
Influence
war-like
nature
of
the
principals
near Century City In Los Angeles, and she Is excited about lt. But it Is
deadly
substances
of murder or
of
drugs.
Beyond.,the
criminal
Involved.
Thus,
to
get
at
the
It
Is
time
to~
the
users
of
Illegal
taking time to .get the ho11.se In shape with the political year In full
attempted
murder.
Yet those
drugs
to
recognize
their
complicand
health
costs
associated
with
heart
of
the
problem
we
must
.
sway.
our
youth
Wltb the
who
polson
Ity
drug
abuse,
It
lmpos~
substan·
step
up
our
efforts
to
combat
the
lq
the
crimes
'committed
by
She says she Is having a debate with her husband over the color of
drugs
are
not
held
similarly
acas
well
as
reInternational
drug
trade.
Unlike
those
Involved
In
the
drug
trade.
tlal
economic
costs
the living room walls. She wants red.
countable. The conscious disAll of us must recognize that
duclng productivity and lncreas- a normal war, our enemies can
tribution ·of mind-altering and
log absenteeism In the work- only win with the cooperation of drug abuse Is not a victimless
Most observers think that Reagan Is neutral In favor of Vice
mind-damaging
drugs should
place. In short, despite what their victims, the users of Illegal crime. All of us must recognize
·
President George Bush.
.
draw
an
equally
severe
chlll'le.
some may assert, each year llle- drugs who provide the tratttckthat the damage It Is causing our
The president apparently tried to give Bush a boost at his news
Heretofol'!!, we have been much
gal drug abUse exacts a heavy ers wltb a markettor their goOds. society Is ever Increasing. To
conference last week when he saki the vice president had expressed
too lax and forglvlnlln ciur promoral, physical and economic Without such a market, there drive this point home to those Inreservations about selling arms to Iran In exchange for the American
secution of drug uaers and dealcost on American society.
. would he no International drug volved In the drug . trade, I
hostages.
ers. It Is time to get lo~iih!
A recently released study by .traffickers, no murdered DEA stronaly endorse the Imposition
At a news conference last spring, Reagan ·said that Bush did not
Accounting
Office
,.;..,..--------------'---......_
_
_
,.,...
_
_
_
_
_ _ _ __.:.._.:__ _ __
.
t
he
Gerieral
have reservations, and a memo that has been .made public written by
(GAO),, the Investigative arm of
·,
· torlll/!r national security adviser John Poindexter said that Bush was
the
Congress,
confirms
these
as.
solidly behind the secret deal.
sertions. The GAO's report conBut Bush Is apparently confident that the public does not consider
cludes
that In 1983, the last for
where he stood In the scandal an Issue. George Stake, chalrmanofthe
which
emperlcal
data Is availaTexas State Republican Committee, told reporters It doesn't amount
'•
ble,
Illegal
drug
use
cost the na"to a hill of beans." ·
·
tion $60 billion In lost wages,
treatment programs, law enforThe president will hit the trail with relish once the Republicans pick
cement
and other criminal jusa candidate to head the ticket . But It Is doubtful that Mrs. Reagan will
tice expenses: It Is estimated
be going on the hustings as much.
that Americans spent approximaShe believes that political campaigns go much too.long and by 1984,
tely $14() billion last year to
she had ·had it.
But she does plan to continue working for her ''Just Say No" . purchase 178 tons ot coctalne, 12
tons of heroin and 60,000 tons of
cru511de against drug abuse among youth. And will k~lt up after
marijuana. However, In addition
she leaves the White House.
to these dollar figures, Ulegal drug
abuse
Imposes many other costs
James Rosebush, former chief of staff to ihe first lady, has wrlteen
on
societY
as well. The GAO rea book titled: '' First Lady, Public Wife." Tl1e book deals with the
ports that between 1983 and 1986
expanding role of of first ladles and how they. have handled It
the number .of cocaine related
throughout history.
•PLUS•
emergencies reported by hospitals
He has divided the dimensions of the unpaid but powerful job Into
•
WE'VE QOT 1HE ttOT N£W
jumped 167% and the number of
six iunctions: manager, diplomat, hostess, champion of causes,
INIIUICK IleAL
annual
cocaine
related
deaths
political partner, wife and mother.
.
Jumper 24%. While no figures exist
The boOk Is replete with colorful tidbits about first ladles dating
1988
Ot.DIUOIIII
ClmAIS
~
to measure the human costs to soback to Abigail Adams, who was the first president's wife to live In the
ciety
that arise from the emotional
White House.
,
famDy
distress that drugs and
and
The book on politicians' spouses should be a good guide for the
drug
related
violence produce,
forthcoming new tenants at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and the
here
too
the
costs
are considerademanding role that grows bigger with each new administration.
ble.
His opus Is not an expose by one who has been close to the throne but
Moreover, the GAO report In·
a treatise on what Is expected of a first lady, and t"e contributions
dlcates
that the nature and scope
each has made.
·
of
the
.
problem
of Illegal drug
'
abuse Is changing as well. 'WhUe
Vacation plans, even marriage plans, of White House staffers are
MOOT HAVE&gt;
'
the use of marijuana bas dehanging In Umbo until the da!fs of the Moscow summit meeting are
- arm
• . 1
clined since the 1970s, the poannounced.
tency of the drugs that are availWhether he has a new arms treaty to sign or not, Reagan Intends to
able
on the street has Increased.
travel to the Soviet Union, probably In late May or early June for his
NEW1988
· -·..;;-~t~·
._.......,.,_
Furthermore,
while the percen"last hurrah" foreign journey.
,
.
4-DR.
CELEBIITY
.tage of people who bad.e ver used
L'ntll the dates are set, no one can make a move. Besides, all the
cocaine remained roughly the
aides are hankering to go on thj! trip that undoubtedly will be the most
REGAL LIIITED
same
!tom 1982 to 1985, the numdramatic of Reagan's presidency.
•111 .....
ber of regular users of the drug
._......,..,_
Increased by about 38%. Further
··~
.,_
compounding the problem for
•IUIDL
' ....
American society Is tbe fact that
NEW1988
I •
while
the
st~eet level purity oleo,
GRANDAM
·
B:r United Press lnlernallonal
1987~DR.
Today Is Wednesday, March 9, the 69th day of19Jl8wt th 297 to follow . caine more than doubled from
1981
to
1986,
street
prices
for
co~BILE
CALAIS
WE HAVE THE CURE
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
caine
decllrted.
Cocaine
has
beThe morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
MOITHAVI;
FOR TilE
•W
II ' . •
come more a vallable and as a reThe evening stars are Venus.and Jupiter.
...,..~ '
"POST HOLIDAY
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include sult c,o calne and Its deadly deriBn.L BLUES."
Leland Stanford, railroad builder and founder of California's vative "crack" are becoming the
._...._....._.
abusers
In
drugs
of
choice
among
Stanford University, In 1824; vaudevillian Eddie Fay In 1857; former
·•-•n
NO PAYMENTS
Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov In 1890; English novelist the 1980s.
TU.L JUNE, 1988!
'
and poet Victoria Sackvllle-West In 1892; composer Samuel Barber In · A common misconception Is
.C
that
It
IS
mainly
the
junkie
of
or
1910 (age 78); detective nov!!list Mickey Spillane In 1918 (age 70) ;
•
Soviet cosmonaut Yurt Gagartn, the firs! man In space, In 1934; actor the poor Inner city resident who
'
Raul Julia In 1940 ·(age 48), and former world chess champion Bobby uses Ue111 drugs; not so, accordIng to a report In the 1986 ~ew
Fischer In 1943 (age 45) .
Englal\d Journal of Medicine.
THe
typlcai coctalne user haa a
On this date In history:
,
·
higher
than average l!lcome and
In 1796, French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte married Josephine
many
are·
professionals In poal,•
de Beauharnals. .
·
tiOna
of
authority
and
respoulIn 1864. General Ulysses S. Grant was appointed commander In
r'
4Dllar
blllty.
Drug
abuse
Ia
atrecttnpll
LIUJIII
chief of Union forces In the Civil War.
,
In 1967, the daughter ot Russian dictator Josef Stalin, Svetlana, se1111ent of our populatloii.THe
severity of the 'crlala C&amp;IIIIOl be
•
detected to the United States.
· .
overstated;
now
more
than
ever
'
In 1983, Anne Burford resigned as head of the Environmental
Protection A1ency after charges ot widespread irreguhirlties within we need to press on with an all
out war on drup.
'
the agency.
However,
thewarondruplaa
In 1986. the module containing the bod!es of seven astronauts kUied
In the Jan. 28 explosion of the shuttle Challenger was located ott peculiar type ot war. As with
•
moat wan, thefe Is a clear, IdenFlorida.
enemy
the
Internatifiable
-....'••
'
A thou1hlfor the day: Vlctprla Sackvllle-West said, "The more one tional drug trarttckerl who exer.
gardens, the more one learns; and the more on learns, the more one else every means at their disposal to keep their buatneues alive.
realizes how Utile one knows.

..'

~~ ....,_.._..,..,,.,_c::i,_

Backstairs at
the White House

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•

Let's make the penalty fit the cnrne
By Cong. Clarence Miller

~~~s~r:e::::; ~~[~;::;J:~";!:~ ~~~~~= rJ~=~~~ol!b:~:~t~

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$9,969*
...

·-·-.,....... ..... _

$9,999

Today in history ·

....
--..........
·-··-Ill

'99'?e

$9,969*

$7,m

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.

-

17..=...

$7.'i87

.
'

.

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-.

'

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'

-

The Daily Sentinel-Page .3

.

-

Southern, Eastem ·of Pike clash for crown
By SCOTT WOLFE
Senllnel Staff Writer
RACINE - The high flying
South~rn Tornadoes of Coach
Howle Caldwell hope to prove to
tile Eastern Pike Eagles that
March ·Is Indeed Tornado season
this Saturday afternoon In the
Division IV District championship at Ohio L'ntverslty's Convocation center at 3 p.m.
Last week Southern defeated
the Hannan Trace Wildcats In a
semifinal game, 83-68. Eastern
defeated the Leesburg Lions, 7964, after overcoming a slow start
that left the Eagles behind 0-11 .
Both teams are very similar.
.Ranked third In the state
Beaver-Eastern, as It Is known
statewide, Is a team of ·many
talents, utilizing a potent fastbreaking attack and a power
Inside game.It Is also an ex· ·
tremely young club.
Pike will utilize a man·to-man
offense and wlll apply lulicourt
pressure much of game and they
like to gamble. When not using Its
fullcourt game It will pressure
opponents with a half court
game, also showing a half court
trap allgnment.lt usually
presses only after scoring, then
lines up In a 1: 2: 1: 1 zone
press.whe
Although Southern Is potent
from the outside with ·the outside
shooting of Davld.Amlnirgey and
Jeff Caldwell, ·the aggressive ·
Pike defense may be to the
Tornadoes' liking, as SHS Is

equally tough on the drive. When some rough outings, but never
applying pressure out front and
has a long-lasting slump because
on ·the elbow, Pike Is suseeptlble of his tremendous confidence.
to the drive as the Inside opens
Nant~e Is not noted as a driver,
up.
but more widely flaunted as a
What makes the Eagles so set-shooter. The Sr . playmaker Is
tricky Is the fact that they are very confident from three point
sucessful In many ways. They
range,especlally when his club
have ~ host of sharp sbooting . traits. Nanc.e was notlOO percent
guards that are also good ·drlv- last Friday as he had been
ers. while also posing the threat weakened by an extended Illness.
of a strong Inside game with the Although no reports have been
likes of 6'6" Jr. center Darrell confirmed, It has been said that
Howard. Howard nets a 16.8 he Is expected to be closer to full
average ·and 10.9 rebounds per form this week.
game .He works the post well, bu I
Nance has canned 52 . three
Is not an attacker, although he pointers on the season and Is a 51
works best In the clutch. .
percent shooter.
Despite Its Inside size,
Sophomore Dustten Alley, a 6-3
Eastern-Pike Is somewhat delibforward averages 5.8 pts. per
erate In hitting the bol!rdS, Which game and Is also capable of the
gives Southern a slight edge on
three pointer.
quickness and aggressiveness on
The point guard Is Junior Brian
·
the boards.
Hale, ~ 6.() driver, averaging 12.8
Coach Howle · Caldwell said,
points per game.
.
'•One of i~ keys to us winning Is · Juniors Rex Leist an~ Bla$e
that we must hit the boards well,
Reader are the sixth and seventh
not just Kenny (Turley) or Dave
men, standing at 5'11" and 6'3"
(McMillin) ,but the whole team respectively. Leist averages 4
must rebound well."
per game coming off the bench.
Another top Pike rebounder Is
Eastern of Pike Is ranked third
Jr. Darren King. Standing at 6'2 In the state,averagtng 89 pts. per
this strong forward works the game and allowing 59 defenpaint well as evidence by his 16.6 sively. Southern Is similar with a
average and 8.4 rebounds per 85.1 average and 62.0 defensive
outing.
Eddie Nance, Pike's ace shoot·
lng guanl and leading point
gainer· with an 18.5 average, Is
ihe ~Jette'r of.the two E ·P guards.
Although the leading scorer
COLU'MBGS, Ohio (UPI) Nance,a streak shooter, has had Ohio State makes Its last gasp
effort for an NCAA Tournament
tonight at St. John Arena against
Big Ten . champion and No. 2
ranked Purdue.
The Buckeyes, 15-11 overall
and 8-8 In the Big Ten with two
games remaining, face a must ·
win situation against ihe Boilermakers, 26-2 and 15-1, If they are ·
to have any shot at the field of 64
which begins play next week.
"Nothing happens unless we
beat Purdue," said Ohio State
coach Gary Williams. "Our play.
ers read the papers and know
what's been said on TV.
"They've been under a lot of
pressure the last couple of
weeks," added Williams. "What
I'm trying to do Is just get them
ready .play thj! No. 2 team In the
country. That should he enough If
you're a competitor."
The game, televised on ESPN
· as the Big·Teri game of the week,
beglnll at 9: 08 p.m.
· Ohio State played well but still
dropped an ~.77 decision Ill
Indiana Saturday. That forced·
the. · Buckeyes to beat either '
Purdue at home or No. 10
Michigan on the road Saturday to
get the tournament bid, or maybe
even both.
Even a win over· the Boilermakers and a loss at Michigan
P~ARING FOR PIKE -Southern's Jeff CaldweU, shooting,
might n.ot be enough ·to get the
Buckeyes tn:
got past RanDall Trace's Scott Rlinkln ( 4) and prepared the
'l'o~oes· path to the dlslrlct final aialaal Eastern (Pike) wlth an
"I think It would be very close
83-88 &lt;llatrlct tournament win over the Wildcats. The Tornadoes
In that situation," said Williams.
"The negative of losing at
· will PlAY the 'Eaales Sa&amp;urda:r, a&amp; 3 p.m. ln the Convocation C.e nler
·
Michigan q~tght take away some ·
·in Aliens. (SeJIUnel pholo b:r Scott WoUe)
.
.
o! the things we gained. But a win
over P11rdue, with all the pu~llc ­
.tty
they've gotten for winning the
j
Big Ten championship, would
mean more than just a normal
win over a top 10 team."

mark; Its last ranking a 11th
place slot In the state.
Coach Howle Caldwell stated,
.' 'They are loaded with talent and·
are very deep. They have excel·
lent size and quickness, and are
strong all the way around.I've
seen . them play on . several
occasions and each time they
play the same way . Getting down
doesn't bother them. They're a
strong second half club."
Against Portsmouth East,
Pike trailed by seven with 1:57
left In the sectonal tournament
game, but came back to win by
five In a dramatic finish.
·
What happens when two powers meet? Well, the sparks are
going to fly!
Ptko;o has a .four man powerhouse In double digit scoring,
while Southern opts for a more
balanced attack With five men at .
or near the double t:llglt plateau.
Dave Amburgey, 'The Burg',
paves the way with an 18.4 tally,
while senior sidekick Jeff Cald·
well weighs In with 17.6. Both are
sharp-shooters ,from long range
and In cl~; both drive well, and
both shoot well on the run .
Kenny Turley will most likely
be Southern's answer to 6'6
Howard, as the senior pivot man

·Arihounce .plans for wrestling
cliUic,
tournament for pupils
•
•

Williams can't count on the
In other school activities and give
Boilermakers, led by seniors
them the option of attending Troy Lewis, TO&lt;Id Mitchell and
either session.
Everette Stephens, to suffer a
The clinic will cover all basic
letdown against Ohio State.
phases of high school wrestilrtg
;'One of the ·thlilgs about this
along with the rules of the sport.
team Is they've had the ablilty
It Is the hope o!the wrestling club not tQ overlook anyone," saki
to build an Interest In hlgli school
Purdue coach Gene Keady.
wrestling In the Meigs County
"They're usually ready to play
schools.
·Whoever's next. These kids,
The tournament Is sc;heduled
especially the three seniors, have
for March 26 at 6:30 p. : m. at not allowed the younger ones to
Meigs Hlg)l School. Those who overlook anyone."
have attended four of the five · But Keady Isn't taking Ohio
clinic sessions will be eligible to
State for granted, either.
participate In the tournament
and awards will be given to those
taking part.
Anyone interested In the clinic
should · contact Coaches Kevin
Sheppard or Jim Sheets at
B:r .U!1iti!d Presa lnlernallorial
992-2158 or 949-2128. There Is no
·
Promoters of the April 15
tee tor the clinic but the entry
World
Boxing Council junior
form below must be completed
' '
middleweight
bout between 'ltdThis Is to accomodate those and submitted to the coach pl'lor
tan
champion
Glan!ranco Rosl
students who might be Involved to participation.
and American Don Curry are set
to turn down $75,000 from American television. The cable network ESPN, which will telecast
the filbt from the Mediterranean
resort of San Remo,ltaly, wants
to stage the l2•round contest at 3
NAME - - - - - - - - - - M E (u of 1-1-11:)-.._ _
a.m. local time to catch the
'•
biggest possible Friday night
Add!JII
Birth Dltii.._...:..
audience 111 the United States.
Italian organizers prefer a 9 p.m.
Slltl
PltaiiL•_.._
start, and are expected to turn
down the ·otter ot extra cash so
.
.
.
they can set the start time.
1 hetey glva the pel'80n Ullted above the permlalon to wreetle
•nd'.!Nalve anclrDINM any •nd all rlght8 81141
fOI' •-1111
apciiiiOIIflg
the Mella tooallohool Dlltrlot. hi
tournament offlalale, IIIMol otflaleta. !IIIII tournafor any and alllnjuriN or dam 11111 euffered In thle ollnla
and :? oumament.
·

ROCk SPRINGS - Meigs
wrestling coach Kevin Sheppard
has a11nounced plans for a
wrestlllljt.clinlc and tournament,
which ,will span•.the next . two
weeks, that Is open to all seventh
and eighth grade studen~ ·In
Meigs Counly schools.
1.
The event. which wlll be
sponsored by the Meigs Athletic
BOosters, will be conducted by
the Meigs Independent Wrestling
Club. The clinic will be held at the
Meigs Junior High School on the
following dates : Thursday,
March 10; Tuesday. March 15;
Thursday, March 17; Tuesday,
March 22; and Thursday, March
24. There will be two classes each
evenii!J with the first starting at
4 p. m ~ ending at 5:30 p. m . and
the 5eC!1nd starting at 5: 35 p. m.
ccinclite)lng at 7 p m.

Promoters set to
tum down $75,000

'

"Their· style may make you
play a little faster than you want
to," said Keady, whose Boilers
beat Ohio State at home 84· 77 In
the opening game of the Big Ten
season. "The fact Iowa, Michigan and Illinois lost there (St.
John Arena) kind of gets your
attention.
"We respect their guards very
much," said Ke;~dy. "(Jay)
Burson and (Curtis) Wilson com·
plement each other very well.
Jerry Francis, , of course, Is a
tough competitor and Tony White

City~

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a1.rm.

eonJ..\,
,.. Slcltll~n ·_...::..__ _ _ ___;_
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'I

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h~··~w"

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they'll really bury you . Oneolthe
keys to getting our running game
going will be for all five players
to rebound well and the ball out
and go.
" Another thing I told the team
was that we must play 32 minute$
of hard basketballi not 20 or 28
minutes , but the full 32 minutes.
We must hit the open shots and
we m11st hit our lay-ups In order
to win.''
"And most of all we've got to
really beletve In ourselves. They
have an excellent club, but In the
back of my mind I really belelve
that we can beat them. If they
have their best game and we
have O\JI' best game, It'll be one
good ball game. and I belelve we
will win."
·
"If we don't pl;1y our best, then
they could really hurt us·.
''The kids are really up for this
onil. All year long the ~ids liave
looked forward to the time they
would play Eastern of Plke.Now
we've got the chance and I think
they are looking forward to it."
" I've said all along that I'm
still looking for us to play like we
are capable of playing. We've
been dose a couple times, but It
there Is a time lor that type of
game, then Saturday Is it."

GOOD . .

__:__ __;_-.,--

_ __;______________

RETURN FOAM TO:

WREITUNG .COACH
HlGHICNOOL

may be one bf the most Improved ·
players In the league this year."
Williams said he's amazed at
the success Purdue has enjoyed
this year In the Big Ten .
"I can't believe a Big Ten
team, after 16 games, Is 15-1,"
said Williams. "The league has
been very tough and to win on the
road as much as they have just
shows the quality of team they

bave."

·

"They've had some players
Improve· as the year's gone on,

B:r SANDRA L. LATIMER .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPX.) The state's' winnlilgest active
high school boys basketball
coach told a Senate committee
Tuesday evening he would like
each school sport kept In Its own
season.
BOb Arnzen, who has complied
a 608-~45 record In his 38 years at
Delphos St . Johns High School,
tes titled In opposition of a bill
that would take control of high
school athletics from the Ohio
High School Athletic Association
and pu.tl.t In the hands otthe sUite
Board of Education.
. The Senate Ways and Means·
Corriinlttee had planned to hear
opposition tes tlmony then vote
Tuesday, but Instead held an
abbreviated session and carried
It over Into next week. ·
The committee meeting was
scheduled for ·alter the floor
session, which ran untll4: 30 p.m.
Testimony was presented on
several other bills before this bill
'was taken up.
By the time this bill came up,
several members had already
left 'for · another committee
·
hearing.
The blll was offered by Sen.
Neal Zimmers Jr ., D·Dayton.•
after the OHSAA adopted a rule
that would prevent student ath·
letes who play on club-level
sports from participating on a
school team.
"I hope that I never have to go
chasing after kids trying to get
them on the basketball team and
trying to get them to forget
football," Arnzen said., "Everything should be kept In Its own
season~"

Arnzen coaches at a private
school that has 300 boys In high

· :;
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school. Delphos St. John has no Northwest District Athletic ' ·
soccer · team, a swrt which Board, one of the six district ' , ,
prompted the rule. and lrlll!a,ted bof,rdlj within the Olf~UoA IO· ., .:,
parents and club-level coaches vernlng system. He spoke of the ·
who testified In support of the bill board's regul&lt;'r meetings and of . "
last week.
the llne.s of communication.
,
"If It comes down to choosing
Canton McKinley football
between football and soccer, I'm
coach
Tom McDaniel said the
betting on soccer," Arnzen said.
key
to
his school's athletic
adding that soccer Is cheaper
success
If
the w'TITIIIgness to
than football.
share
athletes.
He said some
Other witnesses testified in
student
athletes
play on two . ··
support of the OHSAA and lis
teams.
communication with the schools.
"I oppose any move to ask · • '
Arnzen said that OSHAA com·
athletes
to specialize," McDaniel ·
missioners regularly attend his
said.
state basketball coaches' meet·
Tom Gardner. principal pt · •
tngs and ask the coaches If they
Wintersville
High School, outhave any qu11t1ons.
lined
the
makeup
of the govern. A witness last week alleged
system
of
the
OHSAA.
He Is a · ·,
Ing
that the OSHAA was unrespon·
member
of
the
district
board
In · slve to . the athletes and their
eastern
Ohio
and
Is
the
one
.::
parents.
member
from
that
district
on
the
·
Jerry Stackhouse, • superinstate board of control.
· ·
tendent of schools at Willard ,
Sen. Richard Pfeiffer Jr., .. ·
said he was a member of the D·Columbus, continued questionIng witnesses this week about the · :
makeup of the association, .with '
Gardner being able to answer ·
more of his questions this week ' ··'
than any witnesses could last · •
week. ·
By Untied Press International
Cycling
However, Gardner was unable
lttsh world c~amplon Stephen to provide figures on the OHSAA
Roche failed to start In the
budget, but promised he would
Parls·Nice cycle race Tuesday
provide t~en to committee chairbecause an Injury to his left
man Richard Finan, R knee has not Improved
Ctnctnnatt.
sufficiently. Roche returned to
Paris Monday night for an
examination of his knee....
The Daily Sentinel
Italian cyclist Giuseppe Saronnl
wlll be seeking his third victory
(USPS lfHtt)
Wednesday In the Tour of.
A ~vllloa ollll~ 18o.
Campagna one-day race. The ,
'
Published every afternoon, Monday
former World champion Is the
through
Friday,
111
Coi.U't
St
.,
Po·
only active competitor who can
meroy, Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley Pubstill complete a hat-trick at the
lishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio t5769, Ph. 992-2156. se.
classic.

Sports briefs...

.

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Member: United Prell lnteraattonal,

WHY WAIT
FOR YOUR
TAX REFUND

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61 8 East
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'

POMEROY, OHIO

·

j

·.are ."

..-------------------------j

'c

which has been the key to their . ~
success," added Williams. "Ob- ··
vlously, Stephens, Mitchell and ··
Lewis were well known and ·
established In the Big Ten. But I .. ··.
think the Improved play of · · •
(Melvtn) McCants has helped. ·
"(Steve) Scheffler has really .,....
given them some good minutes •'
lately and It looks like they aren't ·
afraid to use (Ryan) Berning at ·, ·•
any ttme, also. That comblna- " ··
tion, along with the veterans, has.·,, ·.
allowed them to get where. they

Ohio
high
schOOl
coaches
.
• •
support athletic association

ENTRY FORM

bodl•.

&lt;

Ohio ·State Buckeyes in 'must-win' situation .

'

-.
,
'*'·
$

Is Southerns' top rebounder and
third leading scorer at 6·2".
Turley paced Southern In the
first. half last week wl th an
exceptional showing.
Dave McMillin has talUed a
10.3 mark and Is also a strong
rebounder. Many expect to see a
much stronger showing from the
junior post man this week as his
rebounding and posltlonlg will be
a key to Southern's Inside game .
on both ·ends.
Lanky guard Shannon Riffle,
the defensive specialist, owns a
not so shabby 9:6 mark. Riffle Is a
sharp shooter and excellent
driver, who canned a key .goal to
break SHS out of a cool third
period slump last week.
Coming ott the bench are
Shawn Diddle with a 4.6 average,
Shawn Cunningham with a 4.7
mark, and Chris Stout with a 4 ·
point mark. .
Diddle also takes up a lot of
space In the paint and could be a
key factor In Southern's reboundIng corps.
· Coach Howle Caldwell said, "I
told the boys .. .I've seen this club
play several times and I truly
believe that we can win Saturday. They will give you the open
shot, but If you mlss, ... we 'll

Inland DaUy Press Auoclatlon and the
Ohio Newapaper AISoelotlon. National

AdYertiJing Rer,1resentattve, Branham
Newspaper Sa es, 73.l Third Awnue,
New York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER; S H d - ~
to The Dolly Sotttlnel, Ill Court St ..

. ·- -

. Pomoroy, 01o1o mea.

. IK1li8CRIPTJON ILU'D

.,~
One Week
............... ............. ........JJ.:III
One Month ...... ..................... ...... es.e
One Year .............. ..... .. ........ ,... l&amp;l.uo

....

IINGLII: cOPY

' PJUCII
DoUy .............................. .... . :Ill C.nta
Suboertben not-1'111 topor U.car·

-·

rter may romlt In · - direct to
Tlte Dally -IMI 0111 S, ltW12 ,_tb
lluta. Cndlt wW be .-canlorNdt
No il1lbo&lt;rlptlons by mou ponnutod Ill

...-- ......

areu wlltn 11omt carrier....,... II
ovaUable.

MUll'

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13 ..........................................

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

51 .............. :........ ;.... , ............ .....

OotiMa ..... Olotllr

I AM·I PM W1 I dawa, t·l IDturdly. Phone 112·ee74

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�1988

Ohio

Ohio

Rhode Island edges WVA
65-63; ·Temple wilis another
Pre~~~~ International
Rhode Island, having beaten
West VIrginia In the Mountal·
neers' back yard, now must
defeat the natlon'·s No. 1 team to
earn an automatic bid to next
week's NCAA 'J'ournament.
Rhode Island came away with
3 65-6.3 victory ag;llns I West
VIrgin!;~ In Morgantown while
Temple took,dvl\ntage of an1B-O
. burst to put away St. Joseph's
'79·67. At stake when the two
squads meet In tonight's cham·
plonshlp game of the Atlantic 10
Conference tournament will 'be
an automatic berth In the NCAA
Tournament.
Kenny Green scored on a dunk
with 1:43 to play to give the
Rams, 26-5, the victory. Green
scored after Tom Garrick lntercep!lid a pass by West VIrginia's
Steve Berger. Berger then
missed a 3-polnt shot with 5.3
seconds left In the game.
The game 'featured a shoving
Incident between West VIrginia's

HOOP SHOOT WINNERS- Christie Cooper,

SPRINS
CLEANUP

Portland school pictured with Christie were from
the left, front, Justin Mlddleswart, Jason Fltch,
Jesslka Codner, and back with Christie, Bobby
Moore.

dtstrlct contest. other first place winners at the

Ohio -University advances in
.MAC post-season cage play
· By United Press Internatloaal

The Ohio University Bobcats
appeared to he In trouble with
their leading scorer on tlie bench
and the rest of team playing
poorly.
Paul "Snoopy" Graham, ot?s
leading scorer, sat out most of
the first half In the Bobcats'
game against Bowling Green In
the opening round of the MidAmerican Conference Tourna·
ment Tuesday night.
But the 6-foot-6 junior was
unstoppable In the second half,
scoring all 20 of his points In
leading the Bobcats from a
·three-point halftime deficit to a
79-73 win over the Falcons.
In other first-round games
Tuesday night, Central Michigan
defeated Kent State, 66-56, and
Western Michigan edged Bail
State, 1!0-'1'3.
Graham, with a 20.2 .,verage,
was called for two fouls In the
first two minutes of the game at
Athens and taken out for the rest
of the half.
With Graham on the bench,
and the Falcons connecting on 52
percent of their first-half shots to
OU 's 39 percent, BG took a 31-28
lead at Intermission.
"When Snoopy Graham got his
second foul In two minutes of
play, It shocked our kids and we
panicked a little," sald Ot: coach
Billy Hahn. ''But Graham comes
back and he gets 20 points.in the
second half. He's had a super
SP.ason."

"We didn't play welL I was
happy we were only down by
three at halftime instead of
: double figures , as horribly as we
played, " added Hahn.
· Graham started the second
half and sparked the Bobcats to
their 15th victory of the season

against three defeats.
BG coach Jim· Larranaga
credited his counterpart for his
patience.
"Coach Hahn has a tremendous amount of patience. I would
have a tough time coaching a
Snoopy Graham. Taking him out
In the first half and getting .that
much production in the second
half was great.
OU 's Dave Jamerson led all
scorers with 23 points and John
Rhodes added 13 ..
Bowling Green, which ended
the season 12-16, was paced by
Steve Martenet's 19 points ,
Lamon Pippin's 15, James Tyler's 1.3 and Joe Gregory's 11.
At Mount Pleasant, Mich., Dan
Majerle scored 25 ,points and
grp.bbed 14 rebounds to lead
Central 1'!fichlgan past Kent
State.
~
Darryl Miller added 15 points
and grabbed six rebounds for the
Chippewas. David Barnwell had
13 points and 11 rebounds to lead
Kent State scoring. The Golden
Flashes ended their season with
a 10-18 record.
Central Michigan, 19-12, bat·
ties Ohio University and Western
Michigan takes on Eastern Michigan Friday night In Toledo in the
semifinals of the tourney . Eastern, the league champ, had a bye
in the first round.
Elsewhere in Ohio college
basketball action Tuesday night,
Steve Pittman scored 30 points,
Including five free throws In the
final two minutes, to give Dayton
a 90-89 victory over Miami
(Fla.),
·
The Flyers, 13-17, also got
double-figure scaling from . Anthony Corbitt with 18, Negele
Knight with 16 and Ray Springer

By United Press International

KET1'Li!: H9MEBS -:- Cleveland Indians' third base coach
Johnny Goryl,left, COiliJ'alulates Ban Kettle, right, after Kettle bit
a two-run homer In the seventh Inning of a Cact1111 Leacue game
,., Tuesday. (UPI)
·

-.
•

Scoreboard ...

We Carry- .
•Rakes -•Hoes
•Wheelbarrows
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Plus More
COME IN TODAY!

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WITH FIIES ......$1.79

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY ·
"At the End of the Pomeroy·....,; lrWp"
POMEROY, OH.
. PH. 992•U.56

I

. Cage 8Cl0l'e8

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

Culp joins Miami
team as trainer

.

- By United Press lnternatlooal

Ron Culp, wlio worked with the.
Portland Trail · Blazers for 1.3
: years, Is jolnlrig the expansion
· Miami Heat as trai11er..
· In other basketball news, Derrick Harris, starting center for
the University of Nevada-Reno,
bas been suspended as the Wolf
Pack gets ready for the postsea. son Big Sky Conference tourna·
: ment starting Wednesday. Coach
: Len Stevens said the suspension
. · was due to a combination of
: academic difficulties and failure
to comply with team policy.

in the top five who has won a
tournament.
The winner of this event will
take home $51,000.
Pete Weber of Florissant, Mo.,
the youngest player J.n PBA
history to win 10 events and the
tour's leading money winner last
year with more than $179 ,000,
claimed the No. 2 spot after
knocking down 3,618 pins.
George Branham III of San
Diego, Call!., whose two titles
make him the only black to win a
national tour championship, was
in third place with a pintail of
3,602.
Eight-time winner Guppy
Troup of Edmond, Okla .. threw
enough strikes to grab fourth
position 17 pins behind Branham
With a 3,585 total'.
Richard Bramwell of Escon· .
dido, Calif., completed the top
five with 3,579 pins. Bramwell Is
trying for his inaugural PBA
triumph.
The field 360 bowlers was to roll
eight more games today before
being cut to the top 90. Those 90
bowl eight more games before 24
survivors qualify for match play
Thursday and Friday .

.

B)' U•lled p,.. ........unal

New Yorll (AL) I, Okap (AL) J
Toru&amp;o c•) 1. a.c...ut
Tnu I. Plllla4lel ....a4
Los .\altlell, llalllm..-e I
C&amp;lllol'lllla I, 8 u Fruetac• I
lllicap (NL) t, (]enlud S
Sea&amp;Ut I, 8• Dlep 1
O.Uiaall I, MI ... Uee I

TIIMIIJ, Mardi I

MI ..Amerleaa CHfere•e To_..ment
nn~a._.

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CMtnl Mlch ..
Dlllo U•tv ·11,
WN~en Mld1 •·

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Oreo 'IS .
8i '71

Ml--aa t, llo..ton I, II Inn.
Eldllbllla lluflbfJIIk:lledWet.

Bop Olt .. ~Pikt.oo&amp;Buketball
B1 U.Me• frn• .. Wr..tkJul
,:'\lqd.,., MU"Ch I
Toumarae.t Re.ult•

HARDWARE

Molllftal (u)va. MlalltaatWettPalm
Beaclll, 1'1a.-. 1:• p.m.
n . lllnillon at Kl•lm·
Molllftal

&lt;•&gt;

DI\'J.to.J

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Akr,CeDl·lioWer II, •riJert.a 04
Caatoa McKiaiet IS, M...UI1111 Perry

Cle 8&amp;

MASON, W. VA.,

PltWMirwh vs. Phlladelphla at Clear·
waler, Fla., 1:15 p.m .
Cloelanatl "· Lo1 Mple~ f'f. \ler•
Beaclll, 1'1a., 1:31 p.m.
, .....,,
New York (NL) v.. Baltlmo~ ·at
Mlunl, 1: • p.m.
St.
~•· TII"'OItv at Ou•dl•, Fla.,
l:Jip.m .
. . . . VI . Chlcap (AL) at s .....~.
Fla.,
p.m.

oiOIIeJIII 11, Lflldllun\ Br..all 41

Eui ae suw II, ae Keftaedlt n
Puma v .. Ftree 18, ae fU IIMIIu.M
LtralaiU .. It IJtroapvllJt II 101)

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Or ...... IPb.,l: • p.m.

c. .. 71. ..."

FrJe a
0 1 - r r 11, OroiH IIUIIC. W
B,...... Bher a, ..cure Trail II

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Pia., I:• p.m.
ane .... , .. leaUie at Tem.-, Ark.,S
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COME IN AND LASSO THE BEST DEAL
AROUND!!

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w-.'I'Mee-.ct•wa&amp;w•

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ST. PETERSBuRG, Fia.
(liPI) · - ' Mike Dunne allowed
only one hit over three Innings to
lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to ,a
1·0 victory over the S~. Louis
Cardinals.
Dunne, a 13-game winner as a
rookie last. season, picked up the
victory. Bob Patterson, Dave
Johnson, Barry Jone!; and Jim
Gott finished the shutOut.
Former Cardinal Andy Van
Slyke, who had two hits, scored

at Port

New Yortl CAL) n. Teu.

OU...,..rll, lim_.... II (M)
Oltawa-GiuiiMI K. Arci!Mid II
., ............... EPIIelll.ell
1'

PORT ST. LUCIE , Fla. (UPI)
-Jack Daugherty, a non-roster
player, singled, doubled and
tripled Tuesday to lead the
·Montreal Expos to a 7-3 victory
over the New York Mets.
Daugherty, who was irivlted to
camp, scored·twice and collected
an RBI as the Expos dealt the
winless Mets their fifth conseautlve loss.
The EXJ)9S broke a 1-1 tie with a
pair of runs In the seventh Inning.
Daugherty singled to start the
Inning, stole second and reached
third when second baseman Tim
· Teufel booted Casey Candaele' s
grounder. Wallace Johnson
grounded to Teufel but his throw
to the plate was too late to get
Daugherty. Alonzo Powell then
hit a sacrifice fly to score :
Candaele.

r..w.

Ttl Wldlmer Ill, Tol 8~t&amp; II
Ttl Ubbe7 11, Ttl Maeomber f2
WN&amp;er\'lllt N 11, Newark 41
Worthl--'01111. lip per .o\tUIII&amp;On N
IMvlllo• 10

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Lake But-. Vl.aa, Fla. mtD'I 0. Polli Clasllk

1111.•

Jletll!rtiW Alter 41, Qa Fom~t Park !1
Mulldapm Coilep

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Waraw Rlwr View ft, &lt;AI DeSales 4t
8yern4Ue Meadtwbrook U, Bexley 41

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o\t Parma Normandy
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M••Ueld 8t Pe&amp;er U, Gatti Mills
Gllmo• 41
·
Upper 8cltto Val f'l, Ealt Cantoa 17
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Al f1ndla)&lt;

~

Transactions

........s................

IIANMS CITY -

Kalida It, PIDIIora·GI.IboA It
Ftrl ReCOWI')' It, Fa,.eUt 41
At Lancaltloer
Zanet"'llt Rolecraas il, NorUI Ad &amp;rile

plarera to their minor leape · camp:
pltehen O.a Welehtl, . . . . .., ...... ,
Stew f1reevhl, Allbrlfllielmer,
Randy NII!!INian, 11m Campbell, llrael
Sanebea aDII Bill lw&amp;IPrtr: catellten
Dtlna BUantello IDd ke\'la Bulft!lt: aDd
lllllelders Dave OWeJ ud Dave
Howard.
' .

.

'

Indian Val 8 H, Franklin hmace
GreenU
At V llld1Ua lla Uer
Fort Lonmle tl, O.nviDe tl
S C. .r~Nto•SE 17, DeGrafl Rlwnlde

Bull:e&amp;ball

MIAMI- Named Bo1 C.lp lnlnrr.
Colleae
n.oamA - All1t0.-ced Jualor rorwaniCIIriiCipe" IIMiefl1bebMketball

"
.'

learn.
TEMPLE - Namtill Efrle Molle)'
deleDIIIw II• coaciL
T1.IL8A - Football Coacll ~•l'le

.....

Pro results

........,

He ....aw rHiped. Named lonner ullst·

aM Dew

Atla.U IU, P.!!!talll! liS
llldl._ 111, ~rolf, ,II&amp; .

FHilllll
NEW ENGlAND - 81prM tlpt eMI
Chr• KeliQ, C!Oraertlack loe Peteno•

u.,.... M•rra:r Wlcllanl,
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ll•ma• Geerp c.•&amp;
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Mll-ukeellt, s .. Antonio Ill
Bo._ 113,
Seattle Ill, Goldeo fiht• Ill (OT~

NBW ·ORL&amp;ANS- Recalled lreeapat
wtde teeelver llerlaert Rarrt., releued
Jut Dec. u ........... llnrMcl&amp;itr8han

WeiiMed.,'s Oamn
Su "-""do at lollon, '7:31p.m.
., Phoeah at, W.W._to11, 1':11 p.m.
Milwaukee al

a......... 1: ,,

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IIOIII'ON

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Port...._. . . . . . . . •llli
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-

All eyes In District 22 - which
Includes all NAIA schools In Ohio
- will be on Lyne Center again
Thursday when Rio Grande
protects Its title against No.
2-seeded Defiance In the championship round of the district
playoffs and gain a shot at the
' NA!A Nationals next week.
The Redmen are 27·7 entering
the contest, while Marv Hohenberger's Yellow Jackets are 23·6.
Lyne Center was the site of the
1984-85 district championship, In
which the Redmen defeated
Walsh 85-68. 'Last year, Rio
Grande defeated 1985-86 title
holder Findlay 91-84 at Findlay
for the championship.
"I'd rather be In our house than
play at Defiance," said Redmen
, Coach John Lawhorn, whose
record at Rio Grande Is now
204·68. ''In the championshiP
game, the home court Is not an
advantage. Last season, we·bad
to beat them (Defiance) here In
overtime. They're that good."
Lawhorn referred to the Dec.
13, 1986 game the Redmen won
102-101ln the extra five minutes.
All-Americans Joe .Verhoff and
Mike Smith were the hlgh scorers
for Rio Grande, posting 26 and 25
points, respectively .
Regular Seuoa) Loss
Rio Grande played the Yellow
, Jackets last Dec: 12 In the
regular season at Defiance and
kist 79-71. Dennis Bostelman, the
6·6 center who has keyed the
Defiance offense all season, was
held to two points In the first half
by a determined Redmen defense, but broke through foUow·
lng the halftime to record
another 17 and lead all scorers for the game. Rio Grande's Ray
Singleton was high man In that
pme With 17, While Anthony
Raymore bad 1t and Ron Rlttln·
added

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BLAZER

K¥tt'ltad NACIL

NATIONAL BAS&amp;E'I'BALL A880C ,

Portland 112, O.IIN 11t

DELTA88

George Bell made his first
Grapefruit League appearance,
starting In left field for Toronto.
The defending American League
MVP bad one single ·In three at
bats and scored the winning run.
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) - Luis
Quinones lofted a one-out sacrl·
flee fly In the ninth Inning
Tuesday, scoring Rolando
Roomes to give the Chicago Cubs
a 4-3 Cactus League victory over
the Cleveland Indians. . .
Quinones finished with two
RBI as Chicago Improved to 4-1
In Cactus League play. AI Nipper
got the victory, allowing two runs
on three hits over four Innings.
Ron Kittle hit Cleveland' s first
homer of the spring, a two-run,
415-foot shot. The Indians evened
their record at 2·2 as loser Bill

Caudill allcwed one run on thr~ seventh as Quinones's bunt sin·
hits with three strikeouts over gle plated Rowden, who had
triples , and Paul Noce followed
.
two Innings.
With the score tied 3-3, Roomes with an RBI double.
led off the Chicago ninth with a
Pat Tabler had two hits for
single and took third on Mark
Grace's single before Wade Row- Cleveland. Starter Reggie Ritter
"·'!1 struck out. Quinones fol· allowed one hit over two scoreless Innings while Bill Laskey
!~wed with a shallow fly ball to
left which Kittle caught, but permitted two hits and one
Roomes easily scored as third unearned run with one strikeout
'
baseman Ron Washington cut off over three Innings.
Tom
LumpIn
another
game,
the weak throw.
Kl ttle'.s homer tied the game In kin had a two-run triple to lead
the Cleveland seventh. After Cleveland's "satellite" team to a
_ leadoff batter Cory Snyder 4-1 decision over the Indians'
reached on thlrcj baseman Row- "B" squad. Dan Schatzeder had
den's error, Carmen Castillo . two perfect Innings with four
struck out. Kittle, signed as a strikeouts for the winners ..
Cleveland was scheduled to
free agent, hit a Nipper pitch
play Seattle In Tempe, Ariz. ,
over the left-center field fence.
The Cubs took a 1-0 lead In the today. The Indians will pitch
third on ,Dwight Smith's RBI Andy Ghelfl, Rick Roilrlguez and
single. The Indians tied the game Steve Crawford against the Ma·
In the fifth on Chris Banda's rlners ' Mark Langston, Edwin
Nunez, Clint Zazaras, Darren
rim-scoring single.
Burroughs
and Mike Jackson.
Chicago went ahead 3-1 In the

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the only tun of the game In the
first Inning when he doubled and
scored ~ on a single by ·Bobby
Bonilla.
·
The Pirates had five hits off
loser Jose DeLeon, formerly of
Pittsburgh, In three Innings .
PORT CHARLOTTE , Fla.
(uPI) -Pete O'Brien had three
hits, Including a run-scoring
doUble that provided the winning
run, to lead the Texas Rangers to
a 5-4 victory over the Phlladel·
phla Phlllles.
O'Brien played a part In Texas
rallies in the second, fourth and
fifth innings. He singled off
Phlllles starter Shane Rawley
and scored In the first Inning;
singled off Rawley to move Pete
lncavlglla Into scoring position In
the fourth; and doubled off Brad
Brink to sccre . Incavlglla, who
had tripled, in the fifth.

Tommy Lasorda experimented
by fitting all his power hitters
Into .the lineup.
Ore! Hershlser allowed · one
unearned run In four Innings of
work. Shawn HlUegas picked up
the win In relief as he hurled
three scoreless Innings.
Mark Thurmond, who surrendered both home runs, took the
loss as Baltimore dropped to 2·2.

SALE

•••. •·••·11·11

Smithson.
Balboni homered
after one out to put the Royals
ahead 3-2 and give him his second
game-winning RBI In two days.
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) Steve Ontiveros pitched four
hitless Innings and Mark ·
McGwlre belted his second home
run of the spring to lead the
Oakland Athletics to a 6-1 victory .
over the Milwaukee Brewers. Ontiveros, ·ripped for six runs
and 11 hits by the Brewers In his
first Cactus League appearance
last Friday, retired the first 11
Milwaukee hitters Tuesday. The
string was broken by Robin
Yount, who drew a walk on a 3-2
pitch.
McGwire, who hit his first
homer of the spring Monday,
belted a pitch by Teddy Higuera
off the Phoenix Stadium score·
board to hlghtllght a three-run
first Inning.

SARASOTA, Fla. (t:Pl) Jack Clark singled In the fifth
Inning to power the New York
Yankees to a 5·3 victory over the
winless Chicago White Sox.
Clark's fifth-Inning single past
diving shortstop Ozzle Guillen
scored Roberto Kelly to ·break a
2· 2 tie off loser Ken Patterson .
Clark, who drove In 106 runs for
the National League champion
St Louts Cardinals last season ,
has gone3for 11'for the Yankees.
Lee Gue~terman earned the
win
by pitching three shutout ·
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI) Guetterman, 2·0, has not · LAKELAND,
Innings.
(t;PI) Steve Sax and Mike Marshall
Carlos Dlaz grounded a single
each homered to lift the Los allowed a run In six Innings.
past third baseman Luis Salazar
Angeles Dodgers to a 3-1 victory
HAINES CITY, Fla. (uP I) - ' with two out In the lOth Inning to
over the Baltimore Orioles.
Marshall socked a two-run Kevin Seltzer and Steve Balboni score Manny Lee from third and
homer and Sax added a solo blast ripped home runs In the sixth . give the Toronto Blue Jays a 7-6
as the Dodgers improved their liming to lead the Kansas City victory over the Detroit Tigers .
_ Toronto scored a run In the
Grapefruit League record to 5·0. Royals to a 4·3 victory over the
eighth and three unearned runs
Pedro Guerrero played his Boston Red Sox.
Seltzer opened the sixth with a off losing pitcher Stan Clarke In
first game at third base In nearly
'home
.run off losing pitcher Mll&lt;e the ntnth to torce extra Innings.
three years as Dodger Manager
After coasting behinp Blpe Jays
starter Todd Stottlemyre, To:
ron to surrendered six runs in the
~ifth Inning.

Fla.

District 22 crown at stake in
Lyne Center.Thursday night

· Ma,I•IIIIHrlec:eerLeape
MI--. at DaiiU, I: a p.m.
Wlcbl&amp;lo at St. a.e•l.l:tl p.m.
T-.:oru II su Dlep, It:·• p.m.
'
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'l'ltornllle s•erldaa 11, Trenton·

Edan... u

Voss climbs to top in PBA tour
TOLEDO, Ohio (uPI) -Brian
Voss climbed to the top of the
leader board In the Professional
Bowlers · Association Tour's
second· richest tournament Tuesday night. ·
Voss, a four-time PBA cham·
pion from Tacoma, Wash. , scattered 3,625 pins for 16 qualifying
games to pace the $270,000
· Trustcorp PBA National Championship. Voss Is the only bowler

Allulal. New Yort (NL) (u)S
KaDMa CHJ I, lloMon S
Toro. . (a) 1, llftrotl e, lllan.

&lt;MilD Colll!!p IMWball RHalt•

PICKENS

JIM COBB Has Corralle~ ALL Remaining
New '87 ModeiCars ADd Trucks ... : ·

the fourth, fifth and sixth lnnlngs
to earn the victory. lie allowed
only two hits . Tom Henke worked
the final two Innings for the save.

Expos stop Mets; Pirates edge St. Louis

TIME••••

BAR. B Q

and Bill Uhl with 10 each.
Corbitt's jumper at the 's tart of
the second half snapped a 46-46
. tie and gave the Flyers the lead
for good. Dayton increased it s
advantage to as many as 7 points,
but Miami narrowed the deficit
to one on two occasions in the
final two minutes .
Dennis Burns paced Miami,
16-14, with 31 points, while Tito
Herford had 24 and Eric Brown
added 14.

DuNEDIN, Fla. (liPI) -Pat
Borders had an RBI single and
KeUy Gruber produced a run
with a double play In the fourth
Inning Tuesday to help the
Toronto Blue Jays to a 2-1
Grapefruit League victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Tom Browning limited the
Bfue Jays toone run over the first
thr~ Innings before Dennis
Rasmussen took over In the
fo11rth. The left·hander' loaded
lhe · bases to start the Inning
before Borders singled to drive
home a run and tie the score 1· L ·
Gruber then grounded. Into a
double play to bring hor'ne the
deciding run.
Toronto pitchers stranded 13
runners while allowing seven bits
and seven ·walks. Blue Jays
starter Jim Clancy walked four
batters ' In the first Inning to
account for Cincinnati's only run.
· Alex Sanchez, Toronto's first·
round ·pick from uCLA In last
: June'~ free' a·gent draft, hurled
'

In other games, No.12 Bradley
Darryl Prue and Green.· The
Rhode Island players abd West earned an NCAA berth by defeat·
VIrginia fans exchanged taunts lng Illinois State 83-59 In the
after the contest.
Missouri Valley Conference tourRhode Island Coach Tom Pend· nament championship and Le·
ers said he did not know If that high dumped Towson State 84·78
might affect his team against and will represent the.EastCoast
Temple, which beat the Rams Conference In the NCAA .
twice this season.
Tournament.
"I hope tlie kids come out and
At Peoria, nt., Hersey Hawplay emotionally," he said. "I kins, thetournamentMostVal\la·
felt the kids put a lot Into the ble Player, scored 29 polnis and
game. We were determined to Luke Jackson added· 16 to lead
get to the final. No matter how Bradley. Bradley, which won the
they positioned us or how many MVC In 1980, will take a 26-4
straight · nights they made us overall record Into the NCAA
play , we were determined to get Tournament. The Redbirds fin·
to the final."
!shed at 18·12.
,
Temple, 28-1, had a balanced
At Towson, Md .• Daren Queeattack against St. Joseph's. How· nan scored 37 points and Mike
ard Evans scored 20 points, Tim Polaha added 24 to lead Lehigh:
Perry had 18, 1'!fark Macon 21-9, before an ECC recoidcrowd
tallied; 17 and Mike Vreeswyk of 4,271. Towson, 14-16,1s theECC
added 16.
,
runner-up for the second straight
The game was tied 40-40 when year.
the Hawks went .scoreless for
6: 38 and Temple scored 18 r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
straight points.

By United

back left, was tile first place winner In tbe Hoop
Shoot competition at both PortlaDd and GaUipolis,
and tben went on to Ironton to take eighth In the

Reds, Indians both drop spring contests

Deflan.;e entered the playoffs
. with a 21·6 slate and progressed
by knocking off Mount Vernon
Nazarene 85· 71 on March 3 and
Walsh 72-64 on Monday. In the
Walsh game, Bostelman led the
team In scoring ivlth 24 although
the Cavaliers held down Defiance's lead to 10 points all the way.
The Yellow Jackets led at the
half (31-28) and employed a full
court press to keep Walsh, the
Mid-Ohio Conference cochampion, at bay by as much as
two points.
·Defiance Starters
Hohenberger, chosen the .dis·
trlct coach of the year for 1987-88,
Is expected to start Bostelman at
the post and put Kirk Seeman
(6-2, sophomore) and Jim Harris
(6·2, freshman) at the guard
slots. Doug Prigge, a 6·5 junior ·
who graduated from Bostelman's high school In Deshler,
Ohio, wiU probably start as
forward and will be joined by
Terry Morman (6·2, sophomore).
Bostelman, the district player
of tbe year, is currently averagIng 24.2 points and 10.5 rebounds
per game. Morman has an
average of 15.2 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2 assists and Harris
has 12.1 points, 3.6 rebounds and
2.1 assists to his credit. Prigge
bas an average of 10.3 points and
6.6 reboullds and Seeman has
recorded 9.6 points, 3 rebounds
and 3.2 assists per game.'
The Rednien were elevated to
the championship tilt Monday
when they ed&amp;ed longtime MOC
rival Cedarville 97-95. The game

contained another big scoring
performance (35 points) by Singleton, the 6·3 senior from
Painesville whose total of 89
points In two games played In the
last few days boosted his average
to 18 ..3 points per game.
Redmen Leaders
Lawhorn will probably start
Singleton as forward and place
Rlttlnger (6-6, senior), who
scored 22 against Cedarv!Ue, at
the other forward position. Sin·
gleton Is averaging 6.1 rebounds
and 1.8 assists, while Rittlnger's
statistics remain Impressive at
22.4 points, 7.5 rebounds and 1.5
assists.
Starting as guards will proba·
bly be Jim Kearns (6·1, junior)·
and Brian Watkins (5·10, fresh·
man) . Kearns ' average is currently 13 ..3 points, 1.7 rebounds
and 3.5 assists. Watkins Is
credited with 9.6 points , 1.8
rebounds and 2.8 assists.
Probable starter as Rio
Grande's center will be John
Lambcke (6·5, sophomore), who
Is averaging 3.3 points and 3.1
rebounds In the 29 games he has
played with the Redmen tnls
season.
Tickets for the game, now on
sale at Lyne Center, are $4 for
adults, $2 for students and $2 for
Rio Grande students with ID.

.IOIEAN

NEW CLASSES
.SJAmNG
MARCH 10

LOCATION:
MS FITNISS CENTER

Pike St. HertfOrd, WV •

. TIME:
, .. CldiiiNii
1'hufldiiY: M Adultl
'
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111·1794

J-22011

TEMPE, Ariz. (UPI ) - Ken
Griffey Jr. scored from third
base on a two-out ·stngle by
Nelson Simmons in the eighth
inning, lifting the Seattle Mariners to a 6-5 victory over the San
Diego Padres.
For Simmons, a non-roster
Invitee to training camp, the
gam,e-winnlng single was his
fifth .hit in eight at-bats for the
Mariners.

•

•

�-

.. .... . .

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

I

..
.
Oance F. Dunlap. 57, Clifton,
died Monday, Man:h 7, 1988 in
Pleasant Valley Hospi~.
.
She was born April 6, 1930 tn
CJ_ifton to lh~ late Artley E. and Be·
s~1e Mac Blair Blake.
She 'Yas a h~emaker.
She 1s S'!fVIved by a daughter,
~ Denrus
M.) Butcher,
Cliflon; one SISter, Mrs. Y~
(Loretta M.) Stewan, New Haven,
~brother, George A. Blake, Sterl·
•11g.
Alaska
and
three
gtandchildren. .
.
· The funeral wlll be Thursday at
Hl:30 a.m. at Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Ralph Butcher
officiating. Burial will be in lhe
Clifton Hill Cemetery.
Friends msy call Thursday from
9 a.m. untillhe time oflhe service.

rr,ma

Wilda Blessing
Wilda M. Blessing, 17, of ihe
upper fiats community, Letart; died
Monday, March 7, 1988 in the
Jackson General Hospital in Ripley.
She was born July 28, 1910 in
UnioniOwn, Pa .. to the late William
H. and Nannie Bell Burron Smilh.
She was also preceded in dealh
by her husband, Clarence C. Bless·
ing, who died in 1978.
She was a homemaker and a
member of the SL Mark Lutheran
Church. She belonged 10 lhe Ladies
Aid Society of lhe church and the
Sassafras Farm Women's Club.
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. George (Evelyn M.) Weirick,
Ravenswood, Mrs. Dorothy E. Bartholomew, ArlingiOn, Va., Mrs. Wil·
liarn (Peggy R.) Rogers, Vienna;
one son, Charles W. Blessing,
Letart; one sister, Blanch O'Neal,

Chamber...

Letafl,

Friends msy call Wednesday
from 4 10 9 p.m. at. Foglesong
FWleral Home. In lieu of ftowers,
the family has requested !hat con·
tributions be made to SL Mark
Lulheran Church.

Effie Hu..&amp;.es
e..
Effie Hughes, 85, Glenwood,
died Monday evening, March 7,
1988, in Pleasant Valley Hospital
after a shan illnes.- .
.
She was born March 27, 1902 in
West Virginia. ·
A life-long resident of Mason
County, she was a member of lhe
Fair Field Church of Glenwood.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Cecil Hughes, and her
mother, Eliza Crum.
Surviving are two foster sons,
Willard and Raymond Jeffers,
Glenwood; ooe brother, Jake Jef·
fers, Teays Valley; two _foster
grandchildren, Jimmy and Micharalel
Jeffers, Glenwood and seve
nieees and nephews.
Services will be Frid:ly at 2 p.m.
at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home with
the Rev. William King officiating.
Burial will follow in Beale
Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Friends may call at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home Thursday from 7 10
9p.m.

Continued from page 1

secretary is normally in the
office in the afternoons.
Tim Richardson , of the Tiger
.Yttness Club on West Second in
Pomeroy, described briefly what
patrons can expect at his esta blishment. Membership is $25 per
month and two free visits are
offered to allow potential' custo·
mers to make up their minds
about joining. Richardson said
he features Tiger Fitness equipment, and that he will also build
specialized fitness equipment for
individuals.
Mary Powell, of Top of the
Stairs, spoke briefly on upcom·
ing historical society projects,
including ·a proposed reenact ment of ihe Battle of Buffington
1sland sometime in July; and the
ann ual Heritpge Weekend cele·
bratlon June•11·12.
Powell also updated the group
on the $18,000 . Ohio Travel and
Tourism grant for which
chamber has applied. She said
some word on the status of the
grant should be forthcoming in
about a month.
Tickets for the annual Spring
Style Show, sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants' Associa tion , are on sale now and going

'
Bush
.. ,

HampiOnviUe. N.C.; two brothers,
William Smith, Maricua, Ohio;
Walcer Smith Cocoa Beach Fla ·
10 grandchildren, three 'grea(:
grandchildren.
Services will be Thursday 81 1
p.m. 81 lhe SL Mark Lulheoin
Church with pastOr George Weiriclc
officiating. Burial will follow in t:~e
Old Town Board Baptist Cemetery,

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

___

fast, according to Annie Chap·
man. The show will be held
Match 24 at Pomeroy Elemen·
tary and clothing for men,
women, teens and children Wtll
be featured.
The posstbtllty of chamber
renting office space on East Main
St. was discussed but no decision
wa.s made on whether to commit
to the $100 per month rent, plus
ututlies.
It was suggested by Councilman Tom Reed that businesses
might commit to paying "one
month of rent" for the chamber,
or that two or three businesses
combine to pay qne month of
rent. C)lamber would then be
responsible for the utilities .
The possibility of applying for
CDBG funding to actuatly purchase the bliildtng for c-hamber
was also discussed briefly .
Cathy Wood, work adjustment
specialist for Carleton SchoolMeigs Industries, announced
that Meigs Industries is now
accepting lawn and janitorial
contracts for the mowing season.
A reminder was also issued to
chamber members that yearly
dues are now payable to Sherri
Hart, chamber secretary.

Conitnued from page 1

In all states, Gore had 28 percent;
Jackson and Dukakis were both
at 25.6 perc~nt.
The victors, naturally. were
jubilant. In his adopted home·
town of Houston, Bush told about
800 supporters, "Whoever wins
Super Tuesday convincingly is
going to be the next president and
I'll repeat it- I'm going to be the
next president of the United
Stales ."
Dukakts. the three-term lib·
e ral governor who needed . to
prove his nationa l appeal, won
Texas, Florida and hi s home
state. the three with the largest
numbers of delegates at stake, as
well as Maryland , Rhode Island.

Hospital news
V clerans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Her·
man Kincaid, Middleport; Sheila
Jones, Langsville; Frank Clark,
St. Albans, W.Va.: Wilma Coon,
Racine; Elmer Brinker, New
Haven, W .Va .; Edna Lee,Shade;
Hattie Sellers. Pomeroy.
Tuesday Discharges - Kelly
· O' Brien, Dorothy Jenkins, Ivory
Bush.

Idaho, Washington and Hawaii.
At a hotel ballroom rally in
Chicago, he recalled a recent
visit to the White House where
·'we were looking the place over
a little more carefulty than
before. It's kind of nice."

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

By Unlied i'reu IDtemallooal
and Oregon, with around 61nches
A flash flood watch was In forecast, A wind advisory was In
effect early today · In south effect for most of eastern Wa·
Louisiana as heavy showers .shtngton state, where gusts up to
pelted the Gulf Coast from Texas 50 mph were possible, Alexander ·
to Florida.
said.
The National Weather Service
A winter storm watch was
said the flash flood watch was posted for tonight for the moun· ·
posted for the southeast . and talns of northern Utah and
south central coastal areas of northern and central Colorado as
Louisiana. Heavy showers were snow was forecastto return to the
falling along the Gulf Coast from · central Rockies, lle saki.
southeast Texas to northwest
A mixture of freezing rain,
Florida.
sleet and snow.was forecast over
In a six-hour period ending northern New England, Alex·
early today, more than an Inch of ander said.
rain was recorded at Apalachlc·
Temperatures early today
ola, Fla., more than three- were In the 50s as far north as
quarters of an lncn at Lake Detroit and Buffalo, N.Y., while
Charles, La., and .82 of an Inch In 20s were common over the
the Beaumont, Texas, area, northern and central Plains.
forecaster Lyle Alexander said. Temperatures across the north·
Rain extended from the lower ern and mld·Atlantlc states were
Mississippi Valley to Georgia a~ mostly In the 30s, but were near
southerly winds blew moisture 60 In Kentucky. Temperatures
from the Gulf of Mexico. Scat· were In the balmy 70s In south
tere&lt;l shOwers fell along the Rio . · Florida.
Grande Valley of Texas.
The western third of the nation
Scattered showers fell late · also had mild temperatures, with
Tuesday and early today over the a 50-degree reading In Boise,
lower Ohio Valley and parts of Idaho.
Illinois northern Indiana and
It was 7 at Houlton, Maine, and
southe~n Michigan.
75 In Key West; Fla.
Snow advisories were In effect
The NWS said highs would
for the Cascades of Washington reach Into the 50s and 60s for

Canita[•• •
?'

0

Illinois a~e::i ~~~~~ ~t~~oos3~
readings
an to western New
from Mlc~1g Air rt at Flint,
~~r:· Bls a~ed ~ record 61
d c ·• .re
•
egrees. tlon's hi h Tuesday was ~
Th~hnad P soufh Texas town of ;
93 n e ee
.•
McAllen.
~FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3-1 ~8 .(
·
·

Seventeen soldiers killed in

1'1

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"Tne re were no survivors in
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in Newfoundland.
Maj . Randy Schoel, another
base spokesman, said the UH-60
Black Hawk choppers were mov ing at about 90 mph and flying at
about 800 feet when they collided
and crashed in flames about 9: 45
p.m . Tuesday on the Fort Camp-

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crash .

bell military reservation near
the Tennessee-Kentucky border.
"Indications are that 17 people
died in the crash," Harralson
said.
Wreckage from one of the
helicopters landed near a clear·
tng and the other plummeted Into
a wooded area, Igniting a small
fire, Schoel said.
•
Harralson said he was not
certain how many soldiers were
aboard ·each chopper or what
caused the crash. A military
aviation safety team was
Investigating.
Schoel said helicopters on
night missions usually maintain
radio contact with the base, but
there was no Immediate lnforma- ·
lion from the radio operators
about any communication they
might have had with the pilots.

FORT CAMPBELL, Ky . (uP!)
- Two troop transport helicopters colltded and crashed in
flames during a night training
mission over the base of the
tragedy-scarred 101st,_ Airborne
Division, killing all 17 soldiers
aboard , the Army said today .

Another
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From
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ANNIVERSARY.

30

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AT&amp;T ..... ... .. .......... ........ .. ... 28% .
Ashland Oll.. ...................... 65\i,
Bob Evans ...................... .. .. 17%
Charming Shoppes .... ... ........ 14
City Holding Co -....... ........... a2
Federal Mogul.. .................. 40%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ .... .......61¥.!
Heck's Inc . ............. ... .. ....... ... 2
Key Centurion .. -................. 40¥.!
Lands' End..... :.. ... ... ........... 20%
Limited Inc.................... .... 21¥.!
Multimedia Inc .................... 59
Rax Restaurants ...... :............. 4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 8¥.!
Shoney 's Inc ....... ................ 24%
Wendy's Inti.... .................... 7%
Worthington Ind ....... ... , ....... 22¥.!

11 FReE CATALOG 11

Your Independently Owned
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ENJOY THE SAYINGS•••••

WEATHER MAP - Rain and thunderstorms will extend from
the
cent.-al GuU ·Coast states and the Teooessee Valley across
financed with long-term con·
Rep. William Hlnlg, D·New
structlon bonds. · ·
northern
Florida, Georgia and .the Carolinas. Numerou rain
~hiladelphla. chalrlilal! of the
showers
,will
extend from the Ohio Valley acro88 the middle
Some legislators were visibly
committee, said the bill would be
Atlantic
Coast
states and New York staie to much of New England.
upset that the process was
reported out Wednesday morn·
A mixture of freezing rain, sleet and 1now will occur over northern
Closed, and that they have no
tng and that no amendments
New England. RaiD and mountain &amp;Dow wiD be scattered from the
chance of inserting an ltem'in the
would be permitted.
northern Pacific Coast through the northern half of the Rockies.
capital bltl regardless of its
Rep. Larry Adams, R·Marlon,
Strong winds will prevail over the northeni baH of the Plateau.
merit.
sponsored the blll making a
A delegation from Dayton,
felony of the sale or donation of
Including the grand-nephew of
blood by anyone knowingly car·
Orvltle Wright, appeared before
rytng the AIDS virus.
the Finance Committee to ask for
"We must protect our blood
South Central Ohio
Friday through Sunday
$779,550 for restoration. of the
supplies, and we must prevent
Showers likely today , with
Fair
Friday, with a chance of
Hoover Block Building to house a
the spread of this disease," said temperatures falling lnt9 the 40s
rain Saturday and rain or snow
museum for the Wright brothers,
Adams.
·
this afternoon. Mostly cloudy
Sunday. Highs will range from
Dayton residents who pioneered
Rep. William Thompson, R· ionlght, with a chance ofshowers
the mid'40s to the mid 50s Ftlday, :.
!llght. '
pelphos, said he was aware of . and a low In the mid 30s. Mostly
be In the 50s Saturday, and range ~·
'·'Apart from Albert Einstein,
two Innocent lndlvlduals who . sunny Thursday, with highs near
from
the mid 30s to.the mid 40s on
who had a greater Impact on life died of AIDS after blood transfu.
Sunday. Overnight lows wlll .
50
In this century than the Wright
stons, Including a two·year old
1-be probability of preclplta·
range the mid 20s to the mid 30s
brothers?" asked Wilkinson
child · In his district who had tion is 70 percent today, 40 early · Friday and mostly In the
Wright, a member of the board of survived leukemia.
percent tonight and near zero 30s Saturday and Sunday
trustees of Aviation Trail, Inc ..
t:nder the blll, selling or
mornings.
,,
Dayton.
d ona ling con ta m tna I e d blood Thursday.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wright Silid he has been . to
would draw a jail term of one to ...----~--------------------,-Washington, D.C., North Carol· 10
years and a fine of up to $5,00Q,
Ina and Indiana, and seen monu· ·
The "btU of rights" for non·
ments to the Wrights. "What do · custodial parents was sponsored
we have honoring the Wright
by Rep. Joseph Vukovich, D·
brothers?" he asked. "Practi· . Youngstown ..
cally "othtng."

&amp;ooKRAK

f•

much of the nation today.
Winter-weary residents across
much of the eastern united
States dug into cloaets for spring
clothes Tuesday as temperatu~
climbed to balmY levels some
degrees above normal.
·
At dawn, temperatures were
near 50 degrees as far north as ·
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE

Mao shows minimum temperatures . At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
to rece•ve precipitation indicated
UPI

Continued from page 1

--------------~;;

r

·EASTMAN'S

I Wet weather tums Gulf Coast soggy .

Area d.eaths ·

Clarice Dunlap

wenallday. March 9. 1988

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

69&lt;

Coke .Products
2

•SPRITE •TAB •DIET or REGULAR

8
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..••
•
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Plu• DeDOait

~

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�..
Wen11dey, MM:tl9. 1988

'
Plar
8 The D., Sa ltinel

'

--Local news briefs.~
Three fire departments at JiTe
Firemen from three fire departments, Including the
Gallipolis Fire Department, were called to the scene of a fire
Tuesday, at 1:33 p.m., In Cheshire Township on Uttle Kyaer
Road, near Kyger ·Creek High School's football field, according
to the Gallipolis Fire Department.
The grass tire, occurring on land ownecl'by Mrs. Briggs Kirby
of Gravel Hill Road a11d on land owned by 011\o V•lley Power,
started In an open field and was caused by sparks from leaves
' being burned. Firemen from the Middleport and Pomeroy Fire
Departments, and the Shade .River Forestry ~rvice, were later
called to the scene;
.
(
The Gallipolis Fire Department iient two trucks and 22 men to
the tire, whk:h burned 30 acres, 15 each In Addison and Cheshire
TownshiJ&gt;4. The Forestry Service !lent two trucks to assist In fire
control.
A grass- and brush 'fire Tuesday, at 9:56 p.m .• In Addison
Township on Bul.avllle-Porter Road, a mile and a baU west of
Bulavtlle, brought two trucks and 24 Gallipolis firemen to tbe
scene.
The fire, which started In an open area on property owned by
- Terry Sayre of Rt. 1. Gallipolis, was caused by controlled
bumlng.

EMS has nine calls Tuesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
Tliesday; Middleport at 1: 25 a.m. to Brownell Ave. for Herman
Kincaid to . Veterans Memorial Hosplfal; Middleport Fire
Department at 12:46 p.m. to a structure fire at the Jeff Stamper
residence at 244 Sycamore; Middleport Fire Department at 2: 16
p.m. was called to Little Kyger' Road to assist Galllpolls with a
brush tire; Pomeroy Fire Department at 2:57 p.m. was also ·
called to assist GalUpolis; Racine at 4:08 p.m . was called to
transport Clara Sargent from Dr. Hunter's office to Holter
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4: 22 p.m. to Lasley St. for Homer
Smith Sr. to Ho~r Medical Center; Rutland Fire Department
at 4:41p.m. to a brush tire on Route 124; Rutland at 4:52p.m. to
Harrisonville for -Robert Johnson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains 1\t 7: 01 p.m. transported Lucy
Burroughs to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

I

Ohio Super Lotto ~. winner to invest in family, education

from the highest num_ber ..-.
Coucbot hall the only winning
ticket among the more than 14
mUIIon sold for the game. The
winning numbers In the 11ame
were: 1, 27, 29, 39, 42_and 44.

I

AYEAR

.
By BOB BOEFUCH
. It was lookle, lookle, lookle,
here comes cookie
In
County Monday,
Bet you didn't
know that bub?
Well, I didn't
e It her u n t II
someone advised me that
two big moving
vans loaded with Girl Scout
cookies atrived In the county.
Tile bottom line Is !bat you ca11
expect delivery soon.
__ ,..

Pomeroy flreme11 will be stagIng a Captain D's fish dinner at
the fire station from 4 to 8' p:m.
Saturday and ask your support.
The cost Is $4.50 tor adults and
$2.50 tor children under 12.

•
ener1c
•
ICe
•
•

co:o~~~.

~~=e~~~v~s\~:;ss:~b~i

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••

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· Full flawt.Lights, ·
Ultra Low &amp; MeilthOI

;•

: Eutern baaquet Friday

Senrliy to !Jleef

Pteceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Slsma Phi Sorority will .
met!l Thursday, 5:30p.m., for a
potluck diDJier at the Grace
• Epllcopal Church parish house.

'

P

•

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•

••
j'
•

•

. '•

*On specially marked cartons while quant~ies last.
Full Flavor: 16 ~~ "tar:'1.1mg niclllina-lighta: 12 mg "tar:·
0.9 mg nicaline-U~r1 Low: 6 mg "ter:· 0.6 rng nicotineav.
pt1r cipratte by FTC llllflod:

I .

-----,r - -- -- -- -- - -

•

(

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke . Conta_ins Carbon Monoxide.

I

Senator Jan Long
f
! H

The Quality Print Shop In
Middleport would appreciate
having ALL of Its !etters. back.
Recently four youngsters were
seen remoVIng letters frqm the
sign at the establlsh_ment. A
mother of one of tbenl returned
some letters to the establishment. lnto the bargain, the
printing shop received sorre of
different sizes which apparently
belong to some other establishment. There are more of the
printing shop's letters still
missing, however, and the staff
would appreciate ihelr return.
After all, how can they con. tlnue· those humorous messages
we all enjoy so much, It they don' I
get letters back?
St. Patrick's Day Is coming up
March 17 and the first annual
Shamrock Ball will be held from
8 to midnight this Friday at the
American Legion Annex In Middleport.
Proceeds go to the Muscular
Dystrophy Aasoclatlon. Entertainment will by Crossover and
the Shady River. Shutflers and
there will '·be an auction · of
autograpbad . , Cincinnati_, Re$1s
baseballs. Advance. tlckell at a
priced lover than at the door
Friday night can be secured at ·
the Blue Tartan, Clark's Jewelry, the Rawllngs-CoatsBl.ower Funeral Home and Middleport Trophies.
"
And you know how It Is everyone'sirlsh when It comes to
St. Patrick's Day observances.

which Increases permit, license
So -keep that twinkle In your
a'ld tipping tees tor solid waste . eye - and do keep s~lllng.

Middleport
mayor's court

Eastern ·High School's Winter
Sports Banquet will be held
·· FridaY, 7 p.m., In the high school
gym. $1 donation at the door.
Tholle planning to attend are
asked to bring one vegetable dish
and a salad or dessert. Meats and
driDIII will be provided by the
athletic boosters.

Who'd do that?
.
A lady who resides on a country
road below Middleport advises
that It apparently Is the seasOn to
dump puppies out on country
roads.
.
ThEi lady Is all heart but can
only do so much tO help the
starving puppies Who are victims
of human cr11el ty.
·. It you !lave puppies thaI need a
borne, The Dally Sentinel offers
free give away ads. ·Before you
dump them, give us a call perhaps, we can locate good
homes. We would at least be
happy to try.

I've bleD recelvlni complaints
· aialnst the numerous out of state
.trucks passing through Pomeroy
to b&amp;ul garbage Into West
VIrginia.
It seems that little can be done
to stop the process because If
action were taken. It would
interfere, with Interstate

.

,

Eastern scores during
·solo, group competition

plants and Jn addition, establlsbes fees on the treatment and
dlspoaal of hazardous waste. In
O!tlo that was generated outside
the state. Furthermore, Sen.
Long reports, the bill requires
the Ohio Environmental Protec·
tton Agency to prepare a solid
waste management plan to reduce the reliance on landfills In
the state. It also requires county
commissioners to .eStablish garbage and refuse dlsplsal districts
which Is now an optional provlslon In Ohio )a:w.
Sen: Long comments that the
Issue of- solid waste disposal Is
well past tbe critical stage and
he's absolutely right. Leglsla·
tures 'bt states are apparently
· golni to have to move and move
strongly to prevent their respective states from becoming dumpIng grounds for others.
I don't really understand how
this all came about In the first
place. I thoqght It was a -case of
''To Each His Own."

. Former Middleport area resident, Fred Russell - you might
have noted a picture of him In the
!iaper recently In conjunction
with his receiving a long-time
Masonic membership pin underwent eye surgery Monday.
·Fred had been legally blind for
some time but did have some
sight. Jte was struck with excruciating pain and to relieve that
had to undergo surgery for
removal of an eye.
He'd love to hear from old friends. The address Is 314 N.
Albert Sp. 37, Exeter, California,
93221 . .

' .

' Announcements

Wenesday, March 9; 1988
Page-9

Lookie, lookie cookie

•

Eleven defendants forfeited
bonds - eight of tbem on
speeding charges - In the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Richard .
Seyler Tuesday nlgbt.
Forfeiting were Ernest Cross,
Langsville, $49; Judy Simmons,
Belpre, $46; RobertBalley, Long
Bottom, $49; Burke Willis, Parkersburg, $46; Brian Buffington,
Pomeroy, $45; John VanReeth,
Syracuse, $48; Myra Swearingen, Rutland, $44; Robert Marchi, Gallipolis, $48, all posted on
speeding charges; Robert Myers, Belpre, $63, traffic light
violation; Nancy Boyko,- Poml.'-roy, $38, violation of leash law;
Gregory LewiS, Qlfton, W. Va.,
. stop sign violation, $43.
Fined In the court were Wll·
llam Swan, Rutland, $375 and
costs and one day In jail, driving
while Intoxicated; June Landaker, Pomeroy, $63 and ~osts,
open container; Raymond Klein,
Jr.-, Middleport, $213 and costs,
unlawful trespassing, and $213
and costs, petty theft; David
Jenkins, Pomeroy, $46 and costs,
and Nell Frandsen, Parkersburg, W, Va., $44 and costs, both
on speeding charges.

The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the bend

Pomeroy
mayor's court

Thirteen cases were processed
Tuesday night In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
. Hoffman.
Forfeiting bonds were Cindy
Mitchell, Cheshire, $50, no operator's license; Paul E. Dalley,
Middleport, $50, expired registration; Margaret E . Caldwell,
Bidwell, $40, speeding.
Fined ·were Eugene Morrison,
Middleport, $25 and costs, accumulation of trash and garbage; Henry J . Bush, Mlddll'port, $425 and costs and , three
days In jail, driving while Intoxicated; $50 and costs, no operator's license; S100and costs, false
Information to pollee officer;
Leroy Perine, Akron, $50 and
costs, expired operator's license; Carl Stewart, Middleport; Charles Whittington, Mid·
die port; David Manley.
· Middleport, $25 and costs each,
disorderly manner; James Cook,
Middleport, $50 and costs, no
operator's license; $10 and costs,
wrong way on a one way street;
Ray Tucker, Kentucky, $50 and
costs, stop sign viola lion; Gene
Klein, Middleport, $200 and costs
and 10 days In jall, theft; John
McCauley, Mason, W. Va. , $18
and costs, speeding.

By .The Bend

CtEVELAND (UPI) - The time that be played the Ohio In the "C" box because that's the
Oblo Lottery's second lar118t · lottery iame. Kent\lcky does Jibt Initial letter In the spelllllg of his
Individual winner, Ricbard Cou- have a state lottery.
last name. He also said be
cbot of Ashland, Ky. , says the $21
He said he filled In the nurnl!ers selected the numbers In reverse
mWion be wnn In the March 2
Super Lotto game will be Inli&amp;AIES. ~ Dll PM ...,.. ,.,., to
vested In his famUy 's welfare
and education.
Couchot, 49, and his wife,
Katharine, along with their
youqest of ·four chlldre", Ann,
18, appeared at news conference
Tuesday a~ the lottery rommlsslon's headquarters. ,
.
He said he plans to keep his job
as vice president of Aahland
Financial Services Inc., a consumer finance company, and he
hopes his winnings will not
change bls family's lifestyle.
"I couldn't say 'take this job
and shove lt.' I tlilnk you bave
moral responsibility and I believe tills (money) will not affect
our famlly," said Couchot.
•'Those who share .In my good
fortunes, I hope It will not cause
them any p.yblem." .
Couchot said ·the money will
Initially go toward the education
of three of hiS children who will
be In co IIese next year.
~ 'She's (daughter Ann) going to
college next year and having .
three In collqe at one time ·Is
kind of tough. So she now has the
good fortune of not worrying
about me not going on a fishing
trip because I have to pay
(tuitions)."
Coucbot, formerly of Piqua,
said )le and his daugbter, Ann,
traveled across the Ohio River to
Anderson:s Party Center In 1ron- .
ton last .week to play the $21
million game.
He said It was only his third

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Eastern High School's choral Bissell, Greta Rim e and Kym
!lepartment, did well at the Ohio Mcintyre, mezzo-soprano solos;
Music Education Association C. Renee Kaylor, soprano solo,
solo and ensemble competition and Deborah Brooks, alto solo.
held at Ohio Vnlverslty.
''Superior'' ratings went to Susan
1n the class "C" competition, a Wolf for plano and alto solos and
girls ensemble singing "All Heather Flnlaw, alto solo. ·
Through the Night" received a
In the class "A" or state level,
rating of " good". In class "B" "good" ratings )Vent to Dav\d
district -level, "good" ratings Rice, baritone solo, and Amy
were received by the girls' trio Murphy, soprano solo; " excelSinging "Stopping By a Woods on lent" ratings to the women's .
a Sunny Day"; Crystal Kaylor, a ensemble singing,' 'What Can the
mezzo-soprano, . and Robin Matter Be" and Christopher
. White, a tenor solo. "Excellent" Spencer, tenor sol(), In class "A
ratings weni to a girls' trio · Advanc.OO", a "superior" rating
singing "How Lovely Are ,Thy , went to Laura Hawthorne, .soDwellings", Jenny Cowdery, prano solo.
Leigh Ann Redovlan, Sherr!

UMW meeting held
MR. and MRS; DAVID WARTH

Warth anniversary observed

Mr. ~nd Mrs. David Warth of
Hartford, W. Va. recently observed their 36th wedding annlversary with a surprise party at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Crump of New Haven, W.va.
Mr. and Mrs. Warth have 11
children, Unda Roush, Reda
Spencer, Cheshire; Reglnla
Crump, David Warth, New
Haven; Les Warth, Patty Rlet mlre, Jax, F1a.; . Mary Roush,
Pomeroy; Freda Eakins, Middleport; Tammy Greene, Hart-

ford, Dee-Dee Warth, at home,
and a son, Johnny, deceased.
They have 19 grandchildren.
Attending the party were, Mr.
and Mrs. James Roush and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Crump and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Jtoush, Tammy,]dr. and
Mrs. David Warth·and daughter,
Tammy Green and daughters,
Dee-Dee Warth.·The honored couple received
gifts from the family.

Martha .Bible Class 'meeting held
A donation to the Ohio Valley Again discussed was the sign for
Christian Assembly for expenses the outside of the church. The
toward the new pool and septic pulpit committee rei!Ort on Its .
system was made when the activities toward securing a new
Martha Bible Class met at the minister.
Dan Meadows presded at the
Bradbury Church of Christ Wedmeeting
with Bob King giving the
nesday evening.
prayer.
Officers' reports were
Welcomed Into the class were
new members, Linda and Gary given.
Attending were Cary and
Bates. Plans were made for
Easter services which the youth - Linda Bates, Dan, Karen and ·
EliSha Meadows, Larry , and
-Will bilve charge of. The .. class
voted to purchase some Easter • Paula Hanes, Bob . and .Bessie
King, Bill and Noami King, John
lilies for the church.
'
Also planned · ·was a .skating Wright, and Kathy, Jessica and
party at the Skate-a-way on Derek Johnson.
'
March 30, from 5 to 7:30 p.m .

Chicken· noodle dinner planned
Middleport t:nlted Pentecostal
ChurCh Is sponsoring a chickennoodle dinner on Friday from 11
a.m. to ·2 p.m. -The menu will
Include chicken noodles, gree~

beans, cole slaw arid a homemade rolL Prlce$3.50.Meals may
be eaten at the church or delivery
Is available. To place orders, call
992-3~- ·

Rutland Garden Club holds recent meeting
A donation was made to the
Amerlflora Fund when the Rutland Garden Club met recently
at the home of Margaret
Parsons.
. Ruby Diehl reported on valentine plates taken to the residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary.
Plans were made for the therapy
program at the GaUipolls Developmental Center with Nature's
Garden Club. Members brought
sea shells for t)\e program and
these were displayed.
Marcia Denison, co-hostess,
had devotions with the creed and
collect being given In unison. For

roll call members answered with meeting of Fernwood Garden
"My Best Houseplant.'' Letter Club was given by Mrs. Atkins
was read from the OAGC noting and Mrs. Nicholson.
that the club received second on
For the program Ruby Diehl
Its entry In the Victor Ries had a paper on "Geraniums, a
Oustandlng Garden Club contest. Plant for all Seasons" describing
A thank you note was read them as plants ~hlch grow the
from Margarel Parsons. It was year around with little care.
noted that Pearl Canaday furRuth Erlewlne had an article
nished flowers for the church. on "Here To· Grow Peanut
Mrs. Parsons wnn the traveling Cactu_s " noting that the plant
prize Which was furnished by comes (rom South America and
Stella Atkins. Neva Nicholson
orange or fire engine red,
displayed a flower arrangement ' about three Inches across. It
using shells. There was also a adaptes readlly to reasonable
display of seed catalogues.
growing conditions and Is a good
A report on the 10lh anniver ary plant for beginners.

is

Pauline Atkins's article was on
pruning and she said March Is the
perfect time to prune. She said
that cuts should be slanted and
that pruning maintains desired
shape and style.
BIQda · Diehl had hints on
forcing branches to bloom, a way
to bring spring Into the home
early. She said cuts should be
long and diagonal sq that the
bottom never stands flat on the
bottom of the vase. Once cut they
should be put Into a cool, dark
place for a few days before being
brought out Into the warmth and
light.

'

Tribute to Weese given -at church dinner
Carl Weese a retired school age and bas .always been dediteacher and l~ngtlme dedicated , cated to his church. He attended
churcjunan was honored with school at the oldo Syracuse
tributes Su~ay at the Asbury Elementary and Carleton ColUnited Methodist Church followlege, and graduated from PomeIng a carry-In dinner at the roy High School. He attended Rio
church.
Grande College and graduated
Approximately 65 persons at- from Ohio IJnlverslty.
lended the affalt enjoying dinner
Weese began his teaching
at tables decorated with pink, red career at the age of 18 at the
and white streamers an roses In Banner School In Forest Run. He
milk glass vases. A cake deco- · taught seventh and eighth grades
rated In blue and white roses was at Carleton College and became
presented to the honored guest by principal' at the new Syracuse
the church along· with nower Elementary. He later transarrangements from his sons, ferred to Racine High School
Jack and Don, bls brother and where he taught English and
slater, Donald and Ann Sauvage later went Into the history
and tamllles, and Vera V,an department there, retiring after
Meter and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin 50 years of teacblng. He was a
VIlli Meter. Letters were ·read reclplentoftheMarthaJennlngs_
from each of hls grandchildren, Award.
'
Melanie, Susan and Ancel, who
Weese was marrted to the late
are all attending college.
Grace Bartels Wee.e In 1931. She
Mary Lllte was emcee for the was alSo a teacher and the couple
Pl'GIT8lD which opened With one were Influential In iettlni the
of Weete's favorite songs, "Am- sanctuary of the Asbur)l church
azlq Grace." Judy Pape, Dick . finished after many yeara of
Alb, and Dennll Moore were the wonblplng' In !be ba18111ent.
soloists.
·
Mrs, sauvaae said they worked
A resume of his te11.,chlng side by side In all endeavors and
career and church atflllatlofl was served In varlou otflces of the
gtvn by Mn. SaiiVBie who noted church, He still teaobel !be Loyal
!Qt be wu born In Syracuse, the Helpera Claas In the Sllllday
'son ot tile ~te Mr, and Ms. Bert school daplte some health probW~e~~,.uthuiiJIIIIthlaentlre81 lema. 1n conclucllnl, Mra. SauvyearslftflleVIIIqit, Sheuld that -ae spi1ke of bll lllaplrabon to
. he ac:cattat CluUt at an early othen IIi the church family.

"Hope - a Shining Ray" was
The group discussed the
the title of the program pres- "women of hope" from the Bible
ented by Mrs. Ruth Karr and mentioning the women who
Mrs. Mae Young at the Thursday touches Jesus' robe, the mother
night meeting of the Chester of a dying daughter-, the women
IJnl)e_d. Methodist women. Pur- at the well, and. Martha.
posf of the program was to
Mrs. Clara Conroy read "A
dern()nstrate that there Is hope ' Personal P rayer of the Author"
for the Individual In times of need by Helen Steiner Rice, and the
and crisis and to affirm that program closed wl th prayer.
united Methodist Worpen are
Mrs. Martha Spencer presided
at the business meeting attended.
women of hope.
Christians, she said, are a by 13 members . A total of 32 sick
people of hope, seeing hope In and shutln calls were reported.
Urnes of sadness and sickness Officers' reports were given and
and seeing God working through the group voted to give some
.all things for those who love the financial assistance to a needy
family. Two lilies will be purLord.
Members were given cards by chased for the church Easter
Mrs. Ruth Karr to write out their services later to be sent to
hopes whlc)l were later shared shu tins .
with each other·.

Day of Prayer held
Annual World Day of .Prayer
services were held Friday at the
Middleport Presbyterian Church
with Mrs. Dwight Wallace as
leader.
p P. J. Harris was organist for
the program which carried out
the tMme, "Open Doors", written llY the women of BraziL Mrs.
oTildson White and Mrs. Richard
Owen gave out name tags In the
shape of keys, and Mrs. Guy
Harper and Mrs. Jack Coleman
distributed the programs.
Taking part In the program as
Brazilian women were Mrs. Karl
Grueser, Mrs. Ronnie Spencer,
Miss Glenna Rummell, Mrs.
Lula Hampton. Mrs. James
Titus, and Mrs. Erwin Baumgardner. The readers were Mrs.
Ted Downie, Mrs. William Qownle, Mrs. Arnold Richards . -Jilurlng the service, the women wrote
a concern they had on the back of
the key name tags and shared
concerns with the congregation,

Intercessory prayers were
given by the Brazilian women
with the organist playl11g a
choral response after each
prayer.
.
Ofleratory ushers were Miss
Rhoda Hall, Mrs. Milton Hood,
Mrs. Guy Harper, Mrs. Jack
Coleman. Participants In the
program formed .an arch .at the
rear of the church under wtiich
the congregation walked at th"e
conclusion of the program.

!.=========::::.

ELBERFELDS

MASTERS' '

Tuxedo
HEADQUARTERS

TOPS meeting
is conduaed
New officers were elected at
the recent meeting of the TOPS
OH 1456 Rutland Club held
recently at the American Legion
hall.
Elected were Terri Smith,
leader; Karen Grimm, coleader; Linda Bailey, secretary:
Sandy Sergent, treasurer; Sherr!
Darst, weight recorder; Sharon
Thacker, assistant- weight
recorder.
Best loser was Judy Snowden,
with Mrs. Darst and Mrs. Smith
as runners-up. At last week 's
meeting, Shltley Turner was the
best loser with Mrs. ~mlth as
runner-up.
A funny money auction will be
held at the Tuesday meeting.
Information on TOPs may be
' obtained by calling 742-2847.

Emma Jane McClintock sang Mlck and Cindy Winebrenner
"How Great Thou Art" another and Shellle, Dana and Bernice
of Weese's favorite hymns. Ruth Winebrenner, Ruth Shain and
Shain read ari original poem Emily, Irene P~rker, Beulah
. entitled ''A Tribute to Mr. .Ware!, Mary Lisle, Kermit WalWeese." Among those recog- ton, and Phillip Roberts .
n~ were 18 former grade
I
school students along with several of their children who had
g()ne to him In high schooL
Several remlnesced of those days
before the Rev. Carl Hicks had
Nellie Zerkle, who has served Miss Zirkle rrom the pastor's
closing remarks.
as treasurer of Heath united standpoint. Also speaking briefly
The group sang "Blest be the Methodist Church for the past 35 was Rhoda Hall, who worked
Tie That Binds" as they moved years, was honored at a surprise with Miss Zerkle at the Electric
Into a frlenshlp circle to repeat appreciation dinner held · at the Co.
church Sunday evening.
the 23rd Psalm ..
·
Donna Byer presented her with
Approximately 75 members a "pot of iOld" and Lee McCoWeese extended Ills appreclatlon tor the recognition. A,ttend· and guests attended the dinner mas presented her with a plaque.
lng were Don and Elma Weese,
which was followed by a program .Among those attending were the
Ann Sauvage, Jean Weaver and with Bernard Fultz as master of Rev. Marvin Dawson .of near
Chris, Don, Lillian, and Tract ceremooles . The Rev. Sonny Dayton wbo had tbe benediction.
Weese, Marcia Karr, Judy Page, Zuniga had the lnvcicatlon with
I:lllda Weaver and Amy, Dennis Dewey Horton extending the
and Kathy Moore, Andrea and welcome. Tributes to Miss Zerkle
Amy, VJrillan4 Helen Teaford, were ilven bY Nan Moore who
April Harm011, Wendt and Crys- talked about her u a loyal
tal; Sue Murphy and Robbie, church .m ember and Emma K.
Rev. andMtt.CarlHicks,Emma · Clatworthy, who talked on her as
Jean Conro, Dianna Mllll, and church treasurer, and then pres·
children, Emma Jane Mcaln· ented her · the evening's guest ·
toe~ and iflllddaurhter, Bob
book.
and DoDDB Smith, Eileen Oark,
Several favorite bybms of the
Dicit Alb, Carla Wallace and honored ll*t IUIIg by the choir
children, Bill and PeiiY Crane, Including "Old nrne Religion",
Ben, Billy and Jo Ellen, Har- and "~ In My Heart." The
riette S1nclalr, Jlln and Barbara Rev. ~unqa aaq "He'l So
(614, ·~~606
Lawtence, Jason and JeDDifer, Great' and tlien talted about

Zerkle honored for service

T

he day is fmally
here and you look
terrific. The Black
Full Dress by After Six
Formals. Don't settle
for less.

O"OMDIY

SEIYiaS ON
PIEMISES

Amtricart-POIIIIroy
Nursing and

RlhablltaliOn Cenw

Stop in on tha 2nd tkior
IH our nlac:tiOn of
Tuxaclos and Foral WHI'
for Proms, WacWings and
Special OccasiOM.

Elurhl4e
•

�-Pqs 1()-~ Deily S 1 tllnel
'

w.n·•• rJey. Mlrch 9. 19&amp;e_

PomeiOt' Middleport. Ohio

-

er
us
are ouse

~·

~·--

-

- ----- -·--·

-- --~----

-

Wen&amp;lday, March 9, 1988

..•fL

c

Krager
$
Quick Oats............ 42-oz.

u•

ADVlRnHDillM POUCY
Each of theu advertised items is required 'to be readily avaHable for
in ..ch
Kroger Store exclpt as speclficaly noted in thia ad. If we do run out of In
advertised ita:n. we wll offer you your choice of.a CO'!'P8f8~'e Item. when avaHable,
reflectir\g the same savings or a ralncheck which wdl en11tle vou to purchal the
adYertiled ttem at the advertised prK:a within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon wil
be eccepted per ftam purchased.

09

Interstate ·
$
French Fries ...... . 5-lb.
FROZEN PEAS, CORN OR

Kroger Mixed
Vegetables .......... 2o-oz.
.

\'

,.

I(roger

Cake Mix .......... 1s.2s-oz.
COST CUTTER

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinner. 1.2s-oz
Cost Cutter
Spaghetti .............. 2-lb.
'

•

Kroger Fruit
·Cocktail ................. 16-oz.
Avondale
Peaches ................ 16-oz.
.·

Avondale
Pear Halves ........ 16-oz.

99

c
c
c
c
c
c
c

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

ON THE DAIRY t:ASEI
INDI\/;II)UALLY WRAPPED SLICES KROGER

Kroger
Flour ........................ 5-lb.

c

Kroger
·
10%-oz.
TOm at 0 S0Up ...... Can

c

KROGER

Vegetable
Soup ......................1.~rc~~-

c

Sandwich
Slices ......................
12-oz.
,.
FROZEN

c

Downyflake
Waffles ................. 12-oz.

c

· Cost Cutter
0range Juice ...... 12-oz.

'

c

Country Club
$
Ice Cream .......... ~-Gal.
Sp'fingdale
$
2% Milk ................ Gal. . ,

69 '

39 .

C· Blue Sonnet

Chocolate
$
Drink Mix ......... ~ ... 32-oz.
COST CUTTER

Chocolate
·Chips ........... :....... ~ ... 12-oz.

-'

.Margarine ............ 1-lb.

KROGER

79

c

Embassy ·
Mayonnaise ........ 32-oz.
Vac Pack
.$
Kroger Coffee
. ..... 3"1b.
Can

c
•

•

49

'

Kroger
Orange Juice ......~:~l(roger Cherry
Pie Filling ............. 21-oz.
l(roger
BroV~n
'

Sugar ...... 2-lb.

c
c

.

Kroger
1O-X Sugar ........... 2-lb.
,.•

c

c

Cost Cutter
Egg Noodles ........ 16-oz.
Cost Cutter
$
Peanut Butter .... 1-s-oz.
COST CUTTER

Evaporated
Milk ...........:........·~ .... 12-oz.
CONDENSED

Eagle Brand
$
Milk ......................... 14-oz. '

c
19

c
39

l •

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

19

Big K
Soft Drin~s ....... 2-Ltr.-·

MIDDLEPORT
'
. - Middleport

l

Principal Roger Roush has
the fQurth six weeks
hOnor r'QU at the Letart Falls
Elementary Scbool.
Making a iJ'ade of "B" or
above in all tlietr aubjects to be
Hated on ttje roll were:
Second Grade: Dean . Hill,
Kristen Hill, Julie Hunnell,
Jacklt PrOffitt, Jennifer Roush.
Billy T~kett , Hillary Turley,
Stacy Wl!fden, R111111tta Wheeler.
Third: ' 1\dam Roulll, · Jeaatca
Sayre, Lore sayre, Tina Sayre,
VaMIIA Sbuler .
announ~

Big K
·$
Soft Drinks ....... 12-Pak

Pot ·Pies ...... ~ .... ~ ....

POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire
Department Captain D's fish
dinner at fire station Saturday
from 4 to 8 p.m.
HARTFORD, W.Va. - Hymn
sing Saturday 7 p.m. at tile
Hartford Churst of Christ In

Honor roll announced .by school

ALL FLAVORS 12-0Z. CANS

c

Ozark Valley

Sl 0 OFF

DENIM SKIRTS ••••••• 25°/o OFF
AU YOUTH ·DENIM JACKETS

25°/o OFF ·

I
I

SATURDAY
THE PLAINS - Zion ComRACINE
- Morse Chapel
munity Church will be in revival
Church
Is
having
a hymn sing on
Wednesday through Saturday,
Saturday
at
7
p.m.
The church Is
with services at 7: 30p.m. Evanlocated
on
Racine-Portland
gelist will . be Ed Barney of ·
Racllffe. Special singers will be Road, County Road 3$. The
featured each · evening. Public public Is welcome.
welcome.
. WILKESVILLE - The Pythlan Sisters are sponsoring a
THURSDAY'
RACiNE - Southern Band smorgasbord this Saturday with
Boosters: will meet Thursday, serving starting at 4 p.m. The
7:30p.m .• in the high school band smorgasbord will be held at
room. Parents of all band Pythlan Hall In Wilkesville.
members urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - ' The second
--- ~
MIDDLEPORT- Parents For registration for the 1988 MiddleEducation In Meigs Local School port Yough League summer ball
District Is sponsoring a seminar season will be held at Middleport
Thursday· evening, starting at 7 Viilage Hall on Saturday from 2
p.m .. with Carroll McCammon. if to 5 p.m. Any boy or girl who did
not play ball last summer must
Columbus, discussing school financing. The public Is Invited to bring a copy of his or her birth
certificate which will be kept on
attend.
file by the MiddlepOrt Yquth
POMEROY - Alcoholics Ano- League. The registration fee ls$9
nymous and AI Anon will meet for each child registered.
Thursday, 7 p.m .• at the JTPA
RACINE- A hymn sing will be
offices in Pomeroy, formerly the
held
Saturday, 7 p.m., at Morse
Diamond Savings and Loan .
Chapel . Church on RacinePOMEROY - The Preceptor Portland Road, County Road 35.
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma . Guest singers will be featured.
Phi SoJ'I)rity, will meet Thursday
at 5 p.ni'. at the Episcopal Parish
CHESTER - Chester Fire
House ·Iii Pomeroy for a potluck
Department will stage a public
dinner.'
vegetable soup supper beginning
POMEROY - Rock Springs at$ p.m. Saturday at the station
Grange will met at 7:30 p.m . house. Dinners will be served and
Thursday at.the hall. A class will soup will be sold by quart, but
be held In sign language follow· customer must provide
container.
lng the meeting.
FRIDAY
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Flame Fellowship Chapter will
meet 6:30 p.m. Friday at Dale's
Smorgasbord . Special speaker
will be Suzanne Bush, Racine.

ALL FLAVORS

FROZEN

STONE WASHED

---...

Save .35¢
ON ANY DIALANTI-PERSPIRANT SOLID, AEROSOL,
ROLL-ON OR STICK DEODORANT
Ottltr: THE DIAL CORPORATION will reimburse you
101' the lace value of coupon plus 8c handliog provided
you and tht consumer have complied with the terms
of the offer. Cash value 1f100th of 1e•. THE DIAL
CORPORATION, Dep1rtment 17000, 1 F•wcett

1

Drlw, Del Rio, TX 71140. '

THE DIAL CORPORATION

---

SPRINGDALE 2% MILK GAL . . . $1.89 UN BLUEFIELD, W. VA . I

QUARTERS

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

(FirsI of serletJ)

the adult vocational services
department, offers a program
called SUCCESS, that Is designed to be a "beacon" If you
will, for the displaced homemaker. A "light" to show options, alternatives, assistance,
and support for those caught up
In the whirlwind of change. A six
· week class, In a support group
atmosphere, will offer such top:
tcs as personal development,
career exploration. job readiness, and home and family '
management.
SliCCESS, which stands for
Surviving tinder Changing Conditions, Earning, Skilled and
Successful, will be offered In
Meigs County In ApriL For more
· information cantact me, noma
Smith, at the Gallla·JacksonVlnton JVS, 245-5336, or. Jane·
Snouffer at the Meigs Tolunty
Department of Human Services, ..
992-2117, ~rid please call before
Aprlll.

---

·FROZEN ·

.,

CoordluUOf

.... " -

ANN~

United Pentecostal Church Is
WEDNESDAY
sponsoring
a chicken -noodle
SYRACliSE- Syracuse Youth
League will hold an organtza- · dinner on Friday from 11 a:m. to
tlopai meeting wednesday, 7 2 p.m. The men~ will InclUde
chicken noodles, green beans,
p.m., at Syracuse Elementary.
cole slaw and a homemade roll.
Price $3.$0.Meals may be eaten
THE PLAINS - Zion Com·
at the church or delivery Is·
munity Church on Route 62,
available.
To place orders, call
Lower Plains Road. will be lri
.
992-3824.
'
revival Wednesday through Sun___
day, March 12, with services at
GALLIPOLIS
Gall1polls
7: 30 each evening. Evangelist
will be Ed Barney of Radcliff. ·F lame Fellowship will meet
Special singers nightly. Eve- Friday. 6: 30 p.m.,· at Da 1e •s
Smorgasbord. Speaker, will be
ryone welcome.
Suzanne Bush of Racine.
'
"--I
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
POMEROY -Senior CitiZens
.port Amateut Gardeners will ·
round
and square dance 8, to 11 .
meet Wednesday evenlni at ~he :
p.m. Friday at the center with
home or Mrs. Jean Moore with
Miss . Kathryn 9ysell an,d Mrs. Larry Hubba'rd orchestra to be ·
Ferman Moore as co-hostess .. featured. Admission, $1.50 and
those attending are to take
· The program will. be · glyen by
snacks for the refreshment table.
Cindy Oliveri.

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

Kroger
Corn Flakes ......... 1s-oz.

_

ces . being displaced from her
home making position and she
looks for employment outside the
home. ·
Whatever the cause of displacement, the homemaker who
must now beCQme a wage earner,
Is often at a loss as to how this can
be accomplished. "Where do I
start? How do I choose a c~reer?
Where can I go lor help? " are
just a lew of the questions that
crowd the mind.
The common threat that binds
displaced homemakers together
Is the fact that the majority did
not train, prepare or think about
an occupation other tlian thaf of a
homemaker . Age and responsi·
blilties make further education
and career planning, mind boggling. A whirlwind of tlloughts,
feats and indecisions .make the
goal of the wage earner appear
beyond her reach. But It Is rot.
. The Gallia-Jackson-VInton
Joint Vocational School, through

Community calendar

COPYRIGHT 19118 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY.
MARCH 8, THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1988, IN IAiliPDUIOID-11110.

FROZEN

ByDORNA SMITH
Displaced Homemaker

Landers

Whether you use an exclamation mark or not, the word
displaced, does not make its
statement quietly . The American
Heritage Dictionary says to
"displace" means to "discharge
from an office of position," The
action nor the result Is quiet ~
espec)aliy to the recipient.
Displaced Is becoming a common word In our society today .
Whe.ther we're speaking of the
displaced worker, or the displaced homemaker - both have
been "discharged" from their
job. Displaced, discharged, dis traught. discouraged, depressed
- there are just a few of the
domino-like rectlons that one has
when such a crisis occurs. Many
people react negatively to the
term "displaced homemaker."
Well, It Is a negative exerplence,
but the outcome doesn't have to
remain negative.
Homemakers can lose their
jobs due to several clrcumstan:
ces. Through separation and-or
divorce, one loses among other
things, a primary source of
Income. In addition to the regular
homemaking duties, such as
caring for the house, children,
laundry, meals, ete, additional
duties such as wage earner, sole
decision maker and disciplinarIan, bookkeeper, re~ord keeper
JR. &amp; MISSES
and purchase agent, are· often
900 SERIES
·
·
new concerns. There are new
NOW SJ9.99
responsibilities for which one Is·
rarely prepared.
All LEVI, LEE, CHIC
.
The death of a spouse brings
the same additional responsibilities as previously mentioned, but
there are emotions and adjustSTOHl WASHED, WIITE WASHED, ACID WASHED, FROSTED
ments In this situation that make
the transition sometimes more
Christian union; public Invited.
difficult. The single parent, too,
realizes the total responsibility of
RACINE - Harvest Trio will . being-wager earner and homebe performing a I a hymn sing to
maker. and suffers the same
be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at · ' fears
and frustrations. Lack of ·
Morse Chapel Church on Racine- emotional support and an overPortland Road. •
whelming leellng of "aloneSUNDAY
ness", is something all displaced •
homemakers experience from
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting time to lime.
of Meigs-Mason girls' softball
A married individual whose
coaches and assistant coaches spouse ts disabled or who has
will be held Sunda:,:, 2: 30 p.m., at been chonlcally unemployed or
the Middleport Masonic Temple. underemployed, also experlen.-~---------:_-~_ _:__:__ _ _ __:__ _.L:::.:::..::____________________-:-

~~~.~~ ~:r:n m~ s~t;:e ~~~~{.

Kroger
Tuna .........................6.

Ann
7

•

IN OIL OR WATER

What is a displaced homemaker? .

-

,...,
2 ...
Dear Ann LaDders: I am a
a.llnlt
million diabetics now have more
healthy young woman who is In
reasons to be optimistic than
love with a 2$-year-oid diabetic. ever belore.
_
"Jim" ha~ had diabetes since he
Except lor the discovery of ren. I've been dating a nice man
was very young. He looks terrific
insulin 66 years ago, more for lour years. He Is also
and gives himself lns11lin shots
progress toward a cure and ·. · divorced and has two children. ·
every day.
betler treatment has been made
At. first, "Charlie'' said he
We are In love and want to be
In t~ past 17 years than In the would never marry again, but a ·
·married b11t I'm having trouble . previous 35 centuries, tb~nks to a few weeks ago he changed his
with my mother. She Is very fond
significant degree to the work of mind. He said he would like to
of Jiin .b11t Is concerned that his
the National Institutes of Health marry me In 13 years when he
Illness makes him a poor candia_n d the Juvenile Diabetes takes early retirement.
date fQI' marriage. She has read
Foundation.
I really like Charlie a lot. Ann,
up on tl)e subject and Is afraid
,
but 13 years ·seems like an
that I might end up being a nurse
Newer methods of controlling awfully long time to walt for a
to a sick' man.
blOod sugar levels, and easy-to- commitment. But to be perfectly
My ~uestlop, Miss Landers, Is use blOod glucose monitoring honest, rve looked at what's out
this: Should I rule Jim out as a equipment, give us reason to, there, and he's a lot better than
future husband because of what believe that many of the compll- · most of them.
cations may be circumvented.
Should I stick with Char)te until
Research Is moving· ahead at a retirement or tell him goodbye
headed advice. I can't be objec- record p11,ce.
· and keep · looking while I still
tive about t)lls. Sign my letter You should keep in mind, have one chin and agOod figure?
IN LOVE WI'tll A DIABETIC. however, that diabetes Is a
UNDE CIDE D IN
NEW ORLEANS
disease that impacts on the MILWAUKEE
.
DEAR IN LOVE: I asked my entire family. Be prepared to
DEAR MILWAUKEE: If you
friend, Eileen Gelick, immediate help your friend/spouse monitor want to be married soon, Charlie
past president of Juvenile Dia- his diabetes and stick with a diet Is not your man. If you are willing
betes Foundation International, and exercise program that will towalt,doso-·wtthaneyeonthe
to respond to your letter. Here is help him stay well. Also, keep up lookout for other possibilities.
what she ))ad to say:
with the literature so you can
Do you have questions about
DEAR I.L.: Many medical help Jim follow the regimen, and · sex, but nobody you can talk to
experts around the world would start planning the wedding. Good about them? Ann Landers' newly
encourage you to follow your luck!
revised' booklet, "Sex and the
Dear 'Eileen: !Thanks for the' · Teenager," will give ·you ihe
heart.
Whil~ you · are ·correct. that
assist. I knew you would do a answers you need. To receive a
diabetes is a serious chronic super job and you did. Millions of . · copy, send $2.50 plus a · selfdisease, and •possible complica- diabetics and their fa.rrtllles will address~. stamped No. 10 envetions such as heart attack, kidney .· bless you.
lope (39 c.ents postage) to Ann
failure and' even blindness are
Dear Ann LaDders: I am a Landers; P.O. Box ll$62. Chicause for concern, America's 11 divorced womim with three child- cago, IlL 60611-0562.

•••

·----- ·· ..
The Daily Sentinel-Page 1 1

Ohio

This potential in-law
says diabetes a disabili

Margarine

-

·- - -----------

a-oz.

.
, II

'

-,l

Fourth : Jason Bar~eit, Jason
Shuler.
Flftll: Sabrina CORiO, Tracy
Pickett, Brandy Roush.
Sixth: Michael Jarreil, Stephanie Sayre, Sam Shain.

..,..er ewtlq _

..

To reduc:e c:ooklnJ COlli, The World
Almauc ll!uelll. match tbe pol or
~ _to tbll l&amp;e
thll'lurface UDIL
P11U111 a ..U pot liD llart~._tiaa
antt . . wtlbollt beatiaa
tbll poiiiiJ filler,

or
••ru

I

.

SAVE
SLOOONONE120Z.
OR TWO
oz.)
ANY OTHER SIZE (Except 2

Maxwell House· ~~w;;
GD-I'IE88

SAVE40¢

on

MAXWELL HOUSE®
VACUUM BAG
Ground Coffee

Try the Great Taste of
Maxwell House• Coffee in the
convenient new bag.
Vacuum packed to remove the air
so Jhat it stays deliciously .

fresh. Tliat's why the
bag is brick hard until
you open it to enjoy
the fresh Maxwell House•
flavor and aroma
you love.

G •- -,_
'

CQrpoolllol· ·

.

-

-

•.r---

-

.

--

---

.

.

--

---If.

�'
:Pia•

12-The

Pomlroy-Midcleport.

•

Wt lltselft The Ript To
U111it Qlllntities

race tn
fifth day

I

0~ ·

.

STORE ..HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM ·

NIKOLAI, Alaslca (UPI) -A :
71-year-old man and two Eskl· :
mos musbed ahead early today to 1
: lead 49 other teams In the fifth
: day of the 1,158-mile Anchorage: to-Nome ldltarod sled dog race.
At the front of the pack In the
· 16th annual Idltarod was Joe ,
Redington, the founder of tile
race who has been mushing dogs
for 40 years. Redington, the
second oldest musher
In the race
.
was running faster than top
musbers half his age.
Wen Redington left Nlkolal l
Tuesday night, he was barely i
one-third of the way to Nome, and .
the grueling marathon still posed .
many challenges for musbers :
and their huskies.
:
Nikolai Is a 12&amp;-person Athab- :
ascan Indian village 364 miles :
from Anchorage, where the ldl· :
tarod race started Saturday. :
After Nlkoll!l, the next check· :
point was McGrath, 48 miles :
,way.
; Redington operates a kennei of ·
about 500 racing huskies In Knlk,
north ~f Anchorage, and other
:mushers often rent dog teams
:from him to race the ldltarod.
-Redington, who said he mushes
:for lun and exercise, has run In
:nearly every Idltarod and three
times has finished as high as fifth
place.
In second and third place were
:two western Alaska Eskimos
;Herbie Nayokpuk, In hls '50s, and
Joe Garnle, 35. Nayokpuk fin·
!shed second In 19SO and fourth In
1983 just a few months after
having open-heart triple-bypass
. surgery. Garnle finished third In
1984 and second In 1986. ·
Joe Runyan had been leading,
but he stopped In Nikolai to rest.
Unlike the other leaders, Runyan
had not yet taken his mandatory
: 24-hour rest when he reached
· Nikolai. Mushers must stopfor24
: hours at any otthe 25checkpolnts
between Anchorage ·and Nome.
Susan Butcher, winner of the
past two Idltarods, an!l Rick
Swenson, a four-time Idltarod
winner, were among a group Of
top mushers racing to catch up
wl th the leaders: The race still
has a week and hundreds of miles
to go.
Butcher and Swenson were
among more than a dozen
mushers who pulled Into the
Rohn Roadhouse checkpoint
Monday afternoon and declared
their 24-hout stopover there.
That large group raced out of
:Rohn Tuesday afternoon heading
for Nikolai, trying to catch
Redington , Nayokpuk and .
Garnle.
Those three leaders all took .
their 24-hour .layovers early In
the race because mild, nearfreezing temperatures exhausted them and their huskies.
Those who plowed on helped
flatten the mushy trail for the
three who rested early and who
now have taken over the lead.
Having passed McGrath, the
leaders had made it through the
worst moose and buffalo country,
trudged through the mushiest
dee)&gt; snow. come through a
treacherous mountain pass des·
cendlng from the Alaska Range,
crossed the bumpiest landscape
and were ready to head toward
. several ghost towns deserted
. decades ago after gold miners
got what they came for.
Colder weather lies ahead.
Mushers still must cross the
Yukon River and head to the
wind-swept Bering Sea coast,
with some of t})e most rigorous
miles of trail yet to be
. conquered.
• Only musher No r man
Vaughan, 82, Is older than
Redington.

\

. . TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
· 8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY ··
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

~98 SECOND ST.

t .10 cfitcount lor adt ptld In advance
.
FrM ~_-: Otvuwayt tnd Found adt und.-1 &amp; ~rd&amp; wil be

SUN., ~R. 6 THRU SAT., MAR. 12, 1988

,.PGM'ble for Mort after firat day (Ch.ck•
for lfiOI'I tint d., ad runt In Pll*l· Call before 2:.00 p.m.
· dQ lifter pubncetkm to make ~orrectian
"' . •Adl lhlt muet be paid In advlnce are: · '
Card of Thanks
tt.ppy Ada
In Mamor'-"
.Y•d Sal.•

The charter was draped In
memory ·of .Letha . Wood, a
member since 1934. at the ·recent
meeting of Chester Council 323
Daughters of America, held ai
the hall.
·
· Thelma White, councilor, pre·
sided at the meeting which
opened In ritualistic form. Prac·
llce·fol'the district rally was held
$aturday. II was noted that Edith
Spencer Is home from the
iioapltal.
- The flagbearers escorted Faye
Klrkhart to the altar Whel'l' sbe
was presented with a pall
eouncllots card. A thank you nqte
was read from the Letha Wood
family. At the next meeting
quarterly birthdays will be observed. A cake walk will be held
at the first meeting In April.
..

1-

COPY DEADLINEMONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNEIDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPtR
SUNDAY PAPER

$ 89
Steak ••.••L:.• ..3

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

T~Bone

.

.

FRES,H BUTT sTEAKs

711-T-tor'X Ill •

.

.

s.·o9

.

Spare Ribs •••••••••••• 9:9.&lt;
.

. ·.

'

HOUISo 9:30 a.m.-6

"ADD" DOLLARS
~TO YOUR POCKET

p.m.

Sat.

~,

Apflo!""""'t

-

'II-

~~~

CI.ASSIRED
.. AD

I ....... 11.., VIIS.

HILLSHIRE FARMS

992-2156

446·7390

.

Smoked Sausage •••

LB.

;.411'11

w.

second aueot.

•!omeroy, Ohto 41711, until
• r ueodey, March 1I, '1818,
: for the ute of the ,.oldence
· !'f ·the- 0 pe t L· Rando tph.
• jitua18d ln tha Vllage of
. R-ovttte, County of Molgt
and State of Ohio. Said retl·
•.lienee It a two ttory ftame
. . dwatling wl111 lh,..' - ·
. rooma. one be1h, ki1chen,
· llvlna room, boumonl, ca•·
. port and central gat heat. tn-

ternteclpenleswhowlth1o

•

RED OR' WHITE SEEDLESS

139
.

$599

limit .1 "' CuttGootl lhlly lt Powoll't SuperrMrtrtl
Gootl S!ln. lllor. 6_lhru Sat. Mor. 12

oz.

3/$1

Umit 3 hr Custo-

Only At Powell't $uptrmarlc1t
Good Sua, . 6 lhru Sat., Mor. 2
Good

$649

GUN' SHOOT
'EVElY
SUNDAY

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

1:00 P.M.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

992-3410

· 10-9-tfn

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•ln•ulation

•Storm ~or1
•Storm Window•
•Repl•cement Windowa
•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMAns

JUlES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

2·5·'111 mo.

10.8-lfc

'

•Witt Do HauUng With
Dump Truck
.
•W-118r ltrYice
oJunll Ytnl IIIIi""'
WAN'I TO IUY ft(IID 01

JIM UIS Ol 'IIIKIS
-FIIIISTIIAIIS-

ft,.ny of t'-tnonlCOI&lt;..

61 ~42·2617
let

CHESTER, OHIO ·
•HDME BUILDING
oRODM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING •
RIPAIRI
SEPTIC SYSTEMS •
BACK HOE WORK
-loy • I....

91S·C1CI

9 ....._6 p.m.

• - COIITUOOH

l....::.!'-::~~
., ..... "

•·'

~

Rot•on•..

,.,....

""

~-----':""'"--j_.?_1~1.~H~e~lp~W~e~nt~e~d--

AHANDfUL
OF CASH

r-------..l
FULL::: :,.Pur

7

SIPIIYISOIS

Nii~i:i·r;;.~5
3:00-11:10 A.M.

~~itO:~t:i.
Is BETTER
.THAN A -. . . ...... join---.
...
GARAGE~FUL =Wi=""''.':.t~=
OF STU
FF ~":.lie,:· ~..:=
·.
1
,; . :

tor • -

.......

'

'

New location:
161 North Soccnl
Mld••part, Ohio 45760

Gutters
Do,.vn•pouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

~ ·LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

991-2156

z

-~- IU. .ISS P1101tt:
16141 9u.uso

-

llStDEIICI PHONE

(6141

•v•·'"'

· Premitring

OPEN DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Lot of New ltlms:
Flohing Supplies, Ount.
Archery, ond Much
-More.

c• T. 0. St-art

lllooriglnal Buy. SoU,
TrMe M.guine for a.,.,
lrucko, boo11, cycleo, RYt

FOA QUICK RESULTS ...
AdvoJrtiu todey ln
Wheetet DNIIr, or you
jutt INY mill 1 ulel
Pit. 1·"2-SUJw 1·164-4t33
orion••
2·15·'17-t. ....

Service on All Makn

Wt"-

EIWI-"
n
CONSTIUCnON
c•ml, OHIO

JO'S Gin SHOP

For s,r1111 .... S.••n
SYUCIISI. OliO
NEW STOII-NEW STOCK
lOW PIKES

Cu.tom Home

Building, Room
Addltlonl.
Remodeling &amp;
Repalrl, Roofl •
Bath1, Kltcharis -

R~gister

985-3365
Day
or Ewllllnt

or • 1 Sflwart

2·2e· '117· 1 mo .

IUIIOUGH'S CUSTO
· UPHOLSTEIT
lt. 2, Ceolwllle

. Rottyllnv • Rwphoil1orin~
Ro-111•

FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS. 322
Socond Aw.. oc1011 from pork.
441·91 12.

Cornmwdal Furniture

Come In - Lois of

FREE ESTIMATES

FABRICS

Pickup. DIIVII'f

(6141 667-6695

2-22·'11'thl

Reel Eltllte Generel

A lonety N'dred Columbul man
wllhel to corrupr&lt;i'MI whll a
OIIUpolil..woman with the intent
to go1 ...,loci tlloultllt lood up
to tMI. Writl to Saint MlrCUI
Co•• Charlie C.nnMI..,, 1348
Fair Aw. Columbu1. OH 4320&amp;.

aood ,....., For more hlfor·
metton. can SenMI?t Mike Abell
few

•VINYL SIDING
•AWMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

New&amp;lted

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

"Frae E1tlmlt11"

We can repair and recore rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil 'and rod
out radiators. We also .
repair Gas Tanks .

PH. 9C9-JIG1

PAT HILL FORD

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

WU.SIIVICioiii'PWS
hpl &amp; SCM T~tor1
hpi&amp;IIAI(*-••
leyal &amp; . . Calli liFt..

. 11011111 . .,

'-1 llttua, 01. CS7U

or 111. 9C9-JI60

NO SUNDAY CAW
S·ll·tfn

,.. .'. . 1110,

RADIATOR
SERVIGE

992-2198

Middleport: Ohio
, ·13·tfc

4

Giveaway

2-llaal. olldrumo-- h.. lltlla
ollln h. Colll14--·4134.
Pan flllkl_.pen Poodle. 41'&gt;
mot. okf. M11... Call 114·440·

3311.

4 young ~t1 . 7 moe. okl to good
homo. Colll14-2&amp;1-,1139.

- - C.lll14'448-3717.

GUN SHOOT

·aoGGS

RACINE
FilE DEn.

SAliS &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUTSYUE, 01110

lashallllaldl..

.

614·662-3821

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 , ...

Autllorlz• .111111 . .....
NtwH........... IIeg,

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

·-r.t ~­

FICtiii'Y Chab
11 . . . She. . . ~ . '

~·lfM•••

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addona ond IOitiOdollno
- Roofing ..., gun.r work

-

-Concrete wOrll ·
-Plu-g ond oloc1ricol
( F- Ett11N111)

V.

t. YOUNG Ill

992·6215 .. 992-7314

Pomir_.,, Ohio

Wedemeyer'• Auction Service-

available 1t your convenience
end loc.tlon1. Merlin Wede·

814-245-

6162.

,lnhertt1nc. Auction. March S,
1988, 10:00 em, Putnam
County CourthouH, Winfield
W. Ve. Terma ceah or check with
proper ID, Contttet AI Whitting ton. 304: 1578-2873 .

-;::::;.;:::;:;:;;~;:::::=

"iSQ

Wanted To Buy

: : : - - - - - - . . : _We p.y cnh for l.te model clean

uaed eara.

Jim Mink Chev.·Oid1 1nc.
Bill Oene Johnaon
·

114-.41-3172
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and MWttr uud cart, Smith
Bulck·Pontiac, 1111 E11tem
Ave.• Gallipolla. C.ll 114·441-

''2212.

\

W1nt to buy; UHd furniture eftd
endqu11. Will buy entlre hous•

hold fumllhing. M1rlin Wtde·
.

meyer, 114·245·51 52.

Woukl like to buy junk care.
wrecked car• lnd motOfcyciH

Coli 81•·371-2180 •• 371:
2423 .
W1nt to buy lltlnding timber •

ptne. Pey TOP DOLLAR . 15acr"
or more. Excellent ret.rences.
C•ll Larry 8trlcldend Loggin'g

&amp;1•·182-7823.

.

home.s_..s.
oltl-. Houoe - .Good.. 814-

Freo ID good
Lab.

118-4.227.

Junk Cera with

FrooiD IOod home. C.lloo - · 1

mo-. Coli Latry Uvoly-114·
311·9303.

-

olcl. FIIUIId at W.ndy'o In
Qolllpollo. 11···2·7312.

or whhout

f - dog. - . , llro OM
Cll. _
_ _
Yollw.
2 - ._
1 -llliiMo.

---.mole-

114-HS·HM.

- - ond whlla.
1:00
Prrr·· 104-ltt·30t3 · -

4·15-'86-lt

·-~-~-'"'"'

. .......Lot

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ot 304·120-IOfB coUoct.

Olu•uu-w·3 puOPIM to • OOOd

3 I

-u:.~.:·~Dml
( ........ 45723

eppointmenu-jut welk lnl

MARINES: Wa'rl tooldng for •

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

Mrlr. plaoM oat! or wrl1e:

Ntlt, P.O. Boa 118. Ironton,

Ohla 41138.
We'w got ~enentt from
t 1 8 . 8 I com pI 1 tt I N o

Automotiw a Merine
D111ptMi• • Comica

8

meyer AuctlonMr·
Kupkl'l Nett end COnnictiona
D1tlng lervlce of Huntington
jolna logothor ·ohorlng p1ohloo.
For infonn.cion write: Kupld's

Serving Me1p &amp;
Atbeu Counties

·1110.

QIAUIT Plltn SIIOP
1614) 991- 45

3 Announcements

itf lutlallll

A LARGE S£L£CTION OF

·

Annnu nce111 &lt;: nIs

742-2421
Or Step ly" 'lhe Stor•
On New UNa load out

for FREE
lird lath - No
Purcha" Necessary
New

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry H~s. Pomeroy.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

PHOTO ADS SEW

EAGLE
SMALL ENGINE

.

~ (614) 446-7619 0; (614)992-2104

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bille Here

3·2,81-1 mo.

r

c Licensed Clinical Audiologist

We Cany Fi1hlng Supplln

.949-2263
or 949-2161

L----=2~·2.i:;,5-'

listening ·
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic•
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

PlUM1IING &amp; HEAnNG

NEW -IEPAII

Ph. (6] 41 143·5416

J

.

I

ROOFING

Hyou
.... youlhlrethla dlllfllllon

Nm COIIAIII, LIL D.OJI.

$

1

C...1n, l¥1,
lAG

17 Upt alltJr'fl

YII-

ll~•l~orT,..e

UCIIIIE, OHIO

Chttttr, Ollio
3-2-'U. lmo.

4-16·16·11•

IIOWN'S
IUI&amp;aPAB
SLI.

-~N

:::·

RACINE
GUN CLUB

JOHN TEAFORD

Yardm..,

MAICUM
CON1UCnNG
·

-----1o

••••••••••••

HOUSE

3 Ll.

TIIPU p
EXCAYAnNG
•Dozer • hcllhae Work

LoMlng

BUDGET - BEEF STEW, CHICKEN/DUMPLINGS,
SALISBURY STEAK, TURKEY
·

15.5

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

Loc1t1d
H~:~fi::~.l
tween
Rt.;
NEW &amp; USID MOWERS
8.7 FlnU!clng on

CAIE FAWTY

1
.
19
Tomato Juice •• :~~~•. 69&lt;
.
(
Pie .Filling •.•~ •••• !~~~ •• 89 French Fr:ies ••••::.o:. Sl 09
1470Z.

v.

".'F'-&amp;---;;:He..,...ppy__,A,..;,-ds-

HANGING ROCK GRADE A

COFFEE

: ~78·1241 or Beman!
.fultz It 892·2116.

v.

.

KIDNEY lEANS

. look at ukl reoldonco moy
contact Charleo Houber at

:•
. Bornanl
Fultz.
. • Exoc:U1or of tho Eetato of
,. '
Opel L.' Randolph
·' )31 •. 8, 7, 8, 8, 10, 11, 7tc

Grapes.••••• ~ ••••• ~~•••••

TIDE DETERGENT

PH. 949-2801
or 111. 949-2160

Dealer fer

"

••*

JOAN OF AR(

''At IMMI!ilbla Pric11"

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

Public Notice

_.
PUIUC NOTICE
: Ofl&lt;i,. wilt be received
1he office of Bomard
· ~· Fultr, Anorney·lt·LIIw,

.

6 for 145

Clubt llhorftnod $5.00
.... Gript $3.50
Sc!-t Groowot $1 0.00
....etball rr.- en~
,......$3.50
Enpowlng

' PH. 949-2969

CAll AMY CAITO
or IOI'S R£C11011KS

Family-' Entrees ~.o;.

- LESSONS .

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

WITH ·A ,

•a.

lll!m IIDYIIS I SliDES t1
VHS TAPI

DOZ.

i'~
sa.oo

BISSELL
BUILDEIS

6·17-tfc

·GATHERING DUSt.

'::==·==
.. ............

ORE-IDA

PH. 992·5682
or 992-712.1

~'SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS

Mlnday-Frlday

1

'S . .

.

I !771

Howard L Wrltanl

AUTO REPAIR

·Drumsticks •••••••••L:.•• 39&lt;.
BARS BUlK
'
.
·
Chopped Ham •••~~. $·129

FlAVORITE APPLE OR CHERRY

Alto TrlttMittlot

WALI·IIS WElCOME
2-5-'88 I mo.

BUS. 667-6102·
• HOME 374-559-9

large Egg

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

RandS.

TURKEY

GAL~.. .

Rt. 124, Pomoray Ohio

992-2725

CERTIFIED MECHANIC

~

Roger Hysell
. Garage ·

11&gt;9 N. 2nd Ave.
MicldtlfiO'I, Ohio

17 Yro. Experience

..
2°'o Ml.lk •..........

=·

~~-.,
• ,"!I .......I ,.....
•

I

41926 ST. IT. 7
TUPPOS PlAINS, OHIO

s·

o-. artMnttv

22-__, .. .._
D-,foo-· 21 _....,..,

•

12 OZ. PKG.

VALLEY BELL

11 Hecuw
12-1'111-. • H......
t3-l
~ RolriiiM-11·---H-1
.
IIMuttefMflep* ·

........lqueo

Business Services

KAY'S
IEAUTT SALON

1-28·'88-tln
.!. --~:::.::::...1

··---.........
...

•••••••tt

11-Htu-u-c:a. TV • ROIIIa l.,lp_

·1-.._,

with the stylists Mary,'Naomi, Jane,
Grace, Donna, Angela
and lay at

Middleport, Ohio

B.aeon ••••••••••••••••••••
.

w

.2-N•H-

Re-acquaint yourself

319 So. 2nd Ave•

.

a MOtor HetMI

771-IIloiiOII

•

992-6282

.

T!--~OIIIIr

171--loG-

j

&amp; HEATING

.

11-c....... ~.-......

831-lulf...

PLUMBING

LB.

COLUMBIA

••-'- .

-

·cARTER'S

In

MIIOfiCo.. WV
AIOOCadoJ04

DAY
- 11 :

•

i

'"li.....C.Z••11---·A "-

Cl.U.ified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

-,

.;.

~ork
Roast··~·····~·
1
PORK 3-S LB. AVG.

STOKELY'S ·

71--·-··
71-V-·-··
.,.___ ......

•sent~n~~t II not

171-Pt. M

Whole Chicken •••~•• 49&lt;

111-IA*·111--1-W..III

11

•A d.ulfied advertlument placed In The Daltv Sentinel lex·
ClePI - d-'W dilpley. Butineu Card Md 1-e.. noticetl
wtH also •~pear In the ,P t, PlteHnt Reglller tnd the GllliP,O 1Ia Dilly Tribune, retching over 18.000 hom".

A

u,....MoWIIIHo..... fDr&amp;lle

33-f-lorl.

run _,..
no chqe.
:Pri
~~-for 1M capitlll lett•• ll double price of ad c~t.
7 .,.... .. -typo only uMd.

.

Chester
Council
_ha5 meeting

.

3

:n---··
34----·

RATES

:Rece~W

POMEROY, OH.

.

0.11 WOIIDI 11-III.WOIIIX 21·111 WOIIDe
14.00
... 00
17.00
'
1DAYI
11.00
••. oo
110.00
IDAYI
... 00
113.011
. 111.00 .
·IOAYI
111.110
121.011
121.00
10 DAYI
1 MON'IH
III.CIQ
. 111 .oo
110.00

•Acla cautaide Melgl. Gallla or Mason count!;. mutt be pre-

pold.

'

J&amp;L

8 1.o1t and Found

IISUUnON
IIA1111 &amp;

.cu••

..................
=. . . -·

.,UIINACIII
oAIII CONDITIONI!III

_

Colll14·&lt;141~

• y--

•HIATPUM"

80VIIINMINT JOII ,

FRII EITIMATI.

ltt.IMO . tii,IIO,rl". Now
-111l
tor-

... 991·,17
•

.....J:f·101.
•

;

�--,~-------------'--- --

Pea•

LAFF·A·DAY

FEDERAL. ITA1'1! AND CIVIL
UIIIIICE JOI!I .
NOW HIRING . Your Ar...

48

leROGt4S]

lnla_lo_tor.-.
AnVOftl' vludn ked by ,..,.._

Soli Momoriol Doy W-ho from
Sulphur Springa. In 47388-

Cell the Adult Educetion Center·
-Tri-County . JVS at 753· 31511
u;t. 14. Spring quarter
April 4th.

-.In•

Get own Avon at cost. Prlz•.
ln.urenc.. No 1ign-up f " If you
call 614-992-7180.
Information it needed for book.
Anyone victimized by prof••·
1lonal per1on call The Re•••ch~r~ . 1-800-248-3882.
AVON - All arau. Call Marilyn

Weever 304·882·2845.

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS. Now hiring.
YO\Ir ••a. t 13,660 to •&amp;9,490.
lmmed;.ta openings. Cell 1-

•••
"Going on a trip,
Fangly?"
42

Homes for Sale

51.·441·2201 .

2 IR . houH on 13 1 / 3 ICrel
whh full bwnmem. 2 betht.
hordwood -.a. Outbulldlngo.
new fence. pond • pine fNit.

Coli 114-441-2107-doyo, 241·
15800-even.

FOR SALE DR RENT: 3 BR .

houM with ttteched ow•o•.
central tlr, NO PETS. Oepoait.
refer.nce r-.quli'ed . 38 Chllll-

cotho Rd. Coli 6H-441-2613,
9·6 dolly.
.

2 bedrOom, 2 : .bl1h·a, 2 c•
g.r-ae, level lot. on At. 33 ,
·Swimming pool. utellte, clo..
t~ Melgt High. Cal 814·982-

3254.

I roomt. b.th. 1 Y2 acre. ahlnglld
roof . lnt. .ec:tion of RJ. 143 and
At. 7. tum left, fil'ltgreen houte.

Coli 814·882-7453.
5 room houH end bath. 80 plua
acrn. YeUow luah Rd. Rtcine.
Ohio. •4&amp;,000. 814-912-&amp;988.

2 bedroom house. f11111ily room.
ful basement. centr.. hut and
air, IWQI lot, 304-175•3119
aft• 4 :00 pm.

2 BR .. wtt., a.w ... tumllh.ct.
8uutlful riY• view. No city
t..... Foet•'• Mobile Home

Pllfk. C.U 114·441·1102.

2 &amp; 3 BR ~ mobilehomM torr•t.

Coli 114-445-0527 lftor 2 PM.
for Slle or Rant· 2 lA ., 12x80
Mobile Home. t200 a mo. Call

11.·441·1341 oltor 5 PM .
2 BR . mobile home If'! Ev.-green
on private , lot. Children tc·

rq.~ired.

·

Neighborhood Rd. Cell I 14·

367·0132.

2 BA . untumllhed tren... t150 .
plua dep. • utHit:lel. No pela.
Aef. rtQulred. C.ll &amp;14·441·

4491 or 448-3188.

Fumiahed, llfp living room •
ldtchen, 2 BR, Call 814-388·

8732.

2 bedroom. 1 htO Mobile
Hame. Racine area. tn4: H2·

13161733-6063 oxt.F2878.

Coli 304·676·4890.

3 bedroom, tumlshad, Washer·
dryer. 1ir. •226. plua depotlt
1nd utllitlea. 114·992·74:79.

Pan-Time Jobsll Join the Army .
National Guard. 304·871-3950
or 1-800·642-3819. ·

32 Mobile Homes

2 bedrooma. fumi1h.cl. wtiMr

Need mlture Hbysfttw in my
home for Z children, ret.enctl
r-.uired. write to Box 8 care
Point Ple..ant Register. 200
Main St. , pt, Pit .• W.Va.
.
Taking applications for el!lpe..
rieneed truck drlvtrl appty in
penon A 8t R Sanitation. 410
Fo unh Avenue, Kaneuge. Ohio,
No phone cells. ·

Situations
Wanted

•nd dryer, air conditioning.
•210 month plua ct.polk and

for Sale

utllhln.l14·892-7479.
1973 Holly Park, 80x12, 2
bedroom. Lllnd contrKI pouible. 1&amp;000. 114-742-3033.
bedroom. Very nice. tBOOO.

au. 742-3033.

44

For sale or rent. 14x70 2
bedroom mobile home. 61 4·

992-5512 or BU-992-3348 .
982-7204.

13

Cell us for your mobile home
insurance: Miller Insurance,
3 04 -882 · 2146. Also : .auto,
home, ltfe. hulth.

18

Wanted to Do

~V home
on Jefferson Avenue. Phone

Will do babyaining in

304-676-1109 .

21

1884 Schuh~:. 3 bedroom. porch
with tun deck, 304-875-6375
efter 4:30 pm.

81.·445·0338.

14x70 tot•l lltctric, 111 Zx6
c:onstruc1ion 1A 01k peneling and
ahHt rock. Full bethroom with
gll'dtn tub, 3 ~rooms, vinyl
underpenning. I 1 3 .600.00.
Phone 304-676-83157.

33

Farms for Sale

Ferm on At. 36 Southlide,
excellent 1700 sq. ft . f1rm
house, b1rn, pond , 60 1crn, mid
80' t , 304-876-6420.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommend• th~ you
do buslnell with people you
know. 1nd NOT to .. nd money

through the mlll;il until you have
invettlgeted the offering~
Starter Generator rep1ir thop.
Ow'ner retiring. For infor. caN
814 -266-8434-we.kenda • af·
ter 5 PM weekdays.

35

namn: Uz Claiborne, H..lthtex,
Chul, Lee. St Michele. Forenu.

Lots &amp; Acreage

· shop and moviel. 11'4 -441·

266S. E.O.H.

Nice 2 BR. 4 1h mile• from
Oallipolit. Stove. refrig. 6

w•••

1 1 Court St.· 2 Bedroom, 2
beth1, kitchen fum ..hed. w/ w
Clll'p... t321 a mo. plus utllitle1.
No peta, deposit • ref. C•ll

BU-446·4928.

Nice 1 BR. apt. nNr HMC.
Stove, refrig. &amp; drepe1 . Call

8U·4·6-47B2.
Brookside Apll"tments: loctted
off BuiiiVIIIe Ad.- 1 BR. speclou1

100 at:rttlo M81on County Rt.
87, rolllngt hills of woodland
and meadowt, lxcell.,.t · for
hunting. meny good building
aitu. tenced for cattle.
136.000.00. C.ll Ron Thompson 304-815-3813.

Dna end two-bedroom Split·
menta for IHH. Stove •nd
refrigerator fumlahed. f200 ·
•225 per month. ReferenCH
tnd dtpoaft requir.d . C.ll814·

448·U49. 441·•425 or •46·
2326.
Upsttira unfurnithtd 1pt. · Carpettd. utllltitt paid. No children.
No pMI. Celli 14-441-111!137.
Fumlthed ept. 1 BR, 807 2nd.
Gallipall1. t231!1 Utllkl• pd . Call

446·44 1I oftor 7pm.

41

Homas for Rent

Furniahed tpt . 701 4th. 1 BR,

Nicely furnished sm1U houae.

3 BR . hou.. for rent or rent with
option to buy, on 141. 1350 a
mo . Oep. • ref. required. C1l
304-876-15806-dlyl, 614-448·
9280· BVen . &amp; weekends.

Morphis (306)388-8101.

Call 814-441·9188.

Aduht only. Ret. required. No

2727.

387·7441.

Mlaodhordwoodolobo . • 12por
bundle. ConMI~ng 1pprox. 1'11

ton. FOB. Ohio Pollot Co.
P.,._, Ohio. 814·182·8461.

lOft too). C.lll14·441·3159.

71

Peta for Sale

.:110 NOh. Coli 11&lt;1-1 :88&amp;·
8121 oftor 1 PM. Atloollo, Ohio.
21 mlloo , _ Qolllpolloc

moo.--·

AKC Rotillorod R-ollor. 14
Chomplon81ood
Uno. C.l814·211·1021 .
~ Chow Chow puppitl. Cute.
roody to 10. 025 - C.H

1 HP lenbome Air CompriUOr.

tiOO. Coli 114·119-3813.

rene•• · Shggt Applianc...
Upper River Ad . .belicM Stone
Creet Motel. 114·441w7398.

G1'41';'houncl tk:ket to St. Pet.,..blq, F -. Good throuah
Mllroh 23 . •••· Coli 114-741-

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

23 98 ·
R&lt;tlrlgorllor. living ,....,. oult,
king llH ,...., bod, pool toblo,
1011 · owlvol rockor,
CW'1' poefc,

Sot• end chlil'l priced from
•3tlto 1896. Tebl• •so and
up 10 1121. Hkle·e·bedt '310
to t51&amp;. Aeellnera 1225 to
1376. ~mPI t28 to 1121 .
DlnlltiM 1109 Inc;! up to '491.
Wood table w-8 ch1ira t286 to
'795. Desk 't 100 up to 1376.
Hutchtt 1400 and up. Bunk
bed• complete w-mettrHtM
129&amp; 1nd up to t388. I• by bed•
*110. Mettr..... or box 1pring1
tul or twin t88, fl"" •78, and

AKCroglot-SI-Hullly,

Low mlloogo. Coli 114·441·

orlno1oN. C.UI14· 378·2220or ,

0139.

304-878·4230.

304·17&amp;-2113.

••

lndMdull Oulter lAatONII Brvnk:wda. Mulic 114-441-0117

or Jotf Wo-lnotructor441·
1077. Limited openinit
evelllll:tle.

68

llot.
111M o.lioee ROflllrough .....
E - t condition. All powor,
mony ....... · 114-982·8137
lftor 4:00.

Fruit

I. Vegetables
F,_.. - · 304·178·4112.

81

U Haul truck• and tralln for
rent 304 171 7421

CROll 1 SONS
U.S . 38 Wnt. Jocbon, Ohio.
11&lt;1-211·64&amp;1.
·
Mo~,.,...oon.HOIIond,
~
lo'•-•a u- 1 - ·040UMCI-....to_,_
• .........,._oln-IUMCI
equlpn..,t. ~~ .-.1an hi
I .E. Ohio.
For S• I•orT-•- I HPT roy I ulit
tlllor, H - mc&gt;&lt;lol. tiiO. A·1
..._. Col 114-H8·1f19.
!;orJ.U""" tnoctar with bulh hof,
UHO. d - wltlo ..,.
Undor. fltl. 2 MF oom
p~ontor, tZIIO. o - w11 fl.
- - · C.ll14-211·1122.

et.n·-·td, ltadltd,

junction -lndlptndanoe Rotd.
E1tt Revlntwood, Fri. let, Sun;
noon-1:00 pm. 304-273·1118.
mm c•mere, Vc R. end
c1uet1t r.corder, 304-17&amp;-

8

(Form•llv P•r~on's Furniture)
14115 Eastern Ave.
Living room aulte1 from 1179 •

1174.

•39.86 lo up.

FirNrood delivered, ·stadled.
13&amp;.00. MatonCoumy, Oelllpo.
li1. Ohio end other • - within
filiOn 1t our dltcr... lon, · 304-

Come In •nd meat the new
Owntra.
. 896-3446.

AAA Portllble Signe, P.O. lo•

704, Huntington, W. Va . 2&amp;71 1,

phone 800-142-2434 .
Computer with loti of extru. 4
prom dr.....; coffee lnd 1nd

tlbleo. 304,876-2217.

Three pl8ce h1Ht1 bedroom
eulte, almolt new. with tun •e
Beeuty ~~~ ·m1111r.. • boa
1pring1. CIMn. 3041·175•1710.

Smoll ciiOot - . . •80.00.
Console 8 track nereo •ao.oo.
Phono 304-175-7288.

7 pitc:l dlnett• att. good condi·
tion . t100. C•ll814·441-0081
after 5pm.

30,000 btu KtfOIInl 1P11W

hHtor t100.00. 4 old foiillon
hordwood khchon cholro •1 0.00

Nch. Small old kitchen cebinet
with flour bin tnd metal aUcle

decorator rod. Excellent Condi·
lion. Clll114-441-3148 aft•4

Farm Equipment

·-=

3136.

aonew.in.Call814-441-1486.
Magic Chef g11 atove. Likt

Loto model 160 Cocklhut trot·
tor, 3 pt. hhoh, livo PTO - ·
- · dloo, · - o r . bulhhof.
mowing mechlne • bll•r.
t2810. Owner will flnanot. C.H
114·211·1122.
IN Ford tractor, 8N Ford trector

far - ' "• phano 304-571-2328
or 171·2601.

83

Liveltock

Building Suppllas

PICKENS USED FURNITURE.
Bulldi, Motoriolo
Block. rl*. HWer pip•. windows, UntM1, etc. Claudt Win·

304·176·1460.

t.._ Rio Grandt,

0. CaM 1144

248-1121'.

1887 Soney TV, 21 " brand new,

304-876-167 • .

w.......

1,1 12 ..... -.. roplllnllllo ..,.
gino 110E, ond lntorior
· - - d.... 304-1717741 oftor 1:00PM.
1978 Chov-. 11.000 octuol
mil••· t471 .00 . 304 -171 2417.
1an C.prioo Lo-·· rilly
wiiHII, U75 .00. 814-441·
2171 .

o.uru•. Ohio. con e14·441·
278 .

4154.

66

1110 Pontiec Orand LeMiine,
auto, elr. 4 door. good cond. call

·

rlbultl. Contact APtn 8otter-

814·441·1712.

cow.

-:--.....,._______;,_ _
lomlnhtl bull-· 10 montho
old. Coif Qoylo Prlco 114-843·
5213.

Pets for Sale

64

54 Misc. Merchandise

good cond, low mtlttge, new
tlrM. one owntr, IOMIM ••

Chevy truok w / lowle body;

114·441-47&amp;1.

Hey

I.

U20. Utllhloo pd . Coli 4.S·
Raund biiM·miKid hly. 110.
Don COK lt Pllttlot-11··3792171.
Hoy lor ..C..

t1.00porbolo.C.I
114-381·8411.

Cond- mludhoy. t1 .001

n .25por-. hnllllkono.C.I
514-387-n27.

1:00.

.

1 · or 2 bedroom houH in

Homes for Sale

Big 3 IR . t.m homtlll buth on
..,... lot, t15,895 ond up. C.H
1-114-8H·7311 .
2 story hou•• located In
GellipoUt·n. . .chool: 3 BR .• 1
bath . Will ... on IMd Contract:
ea.ooo down. fl2,100 total.

Coli 9·1· I 14·441· 7172. Ottor
5-114-441-1122.
3 Bedroom hou1e w/ 32 ecr11.
In Eurltca .cro.. from O.m.

-.

''" building. C"""'V · 01
··
Nl
...
U1.000.
C:..l
114441·2205.

Pomeroy. Aea.ntly ,.,odtltd.
Furniahed or unfurnt.hed. 114982·8723 lftor 1,00.
3 bedroom FtnnhouM for rent
on Jackson Ad., Patriot. Ohio.
t100 . 0-.1160~month .

Colll14-741·8821.
MI~ · Farm

.,,u Mm. forpond.IHM.
one 14m•8CNI,
plul
from
- ·1ir2 cond.
or 3 bod·
room1,-centtl
city
wltef. minimum 1 y........
•oo.oo por month, .....Morch 1. coli 304·878·1989.
On• bedroom ~"-' ·n ufHr'(,
lllth. •1oo.oo month. c - to
Mo- --County lno. Rt.

17. 304-411-1042.

,

"'1i"A.::::-o:o==;--71 Auto' a For Sale
11U Chovy. c - . Amrodlo.

ront.Eklertvp-. -...,,.
bl• - · 8'14-112-27411.
2 bedroom Apt. tor r. .t . C.r·
· Nloo
10t11ng.Call
Loundry
t.cll.....
...,......
114·
112·3711. EOH.

- · fronO., PI, PI; lf.OOO

11-.o. C:..nbo_ll,.
G1'\:
o.Nr
,...._ or b
_ alii
_
...,oolll1..._
2142.

'.II

Si!rVIC.I'S

81

.I,~

Home
Improvement•

...

·~

-----------------~· ·

eASEMENT
WATEIIPIIOOFINO

·~

· .,

~;

Un~lionel

ltfetime gu•w:'
' t•.
- - furnlolo~~
Free L.etti,.,...., Celt aoll...- ,

..
1177 c:a-o. V·l, - · Pl. Pl. Coli 114-&lt;1441-111&amp;
- I PM· 441·1244.
'

1fl4 0...,.. . , . _ T -. I
.... .• -AM-PM·C... .Atk·
lng 111100. C:..II1"'2H·-·

- h Stroot. Mlddl_,., Ohio,
2 bodroom lurnlohod ...~ utili·
tin pold. m«onCHond-t.
304-112-2HI.

1117 " - l'lltv. A~. - ·
11.-. c:a• 114-441-0111.
"Tha

time? Sure, It'I ten Pill

BOHGI ... BONGI...BONGI;..BONGI''
~

. 1---I~XII

EEK&amp; MEEK

--. -p·-··

Fetty Tr• Trfmmln,. ttump &lt;,

or

I

11'-ll: OLD

NmO'Iol. Coll304·17 ·1331 . ~.

Rowv

'PAPER e.A.e
. Ole&lt; T!-1 Ei

cabltl 1001 drilling. 1

Mottweltecompleted'a .ne•r· '

898·3802

DIDN'T THINK

THSY'D
RE.MEMBER.

HEAD"

Pump Nln and 11rvlce. 304·

SHTICK ...

lterkl Tr• end Lawn . .1¥101,
lawn cere. lendiCIPing. ltump 1
remov1l, 304 ·171-2842 or

571·2103.

•

SEE Dry Wall; •ap..-tenD.d
hanging, flntehtng, repair work.
meke ceiling look new with
tU1Urt,

304-171·8417.

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heetlng

~

,,

'

I'M OFF TO
TH'CHURCH
SUPPE~,

PAW··

I'LL' STIR UP
SOME VITTLES

1971 Ford pl&lt;*up, 3 ...- 011
floor, UIIO.OO. 304-171·7810.
1171Ford8-Coot,Md-kl
aood 1h•p1,
or -I . """· .Phone
304·112·201

86

Eloct~ool.

304"' ·

,f'

4 W.O.

1978 F2504a4fonlluperc:ab,
Nc ....... -...-~.

II I

TH'BOYS

......

·AC,
-·
llltfr•1111.
.....-Coll1..._11ft.:

---·--

ONIONS?

lorvlcl. Homo '
poole fUiod . for. .

AmeriCa

(J) Sign

MOtorcyclea

?0"·

·,

Wetterun'a W•ter Heullne~

I

&lt;

,......... '""· tmmMI••
2.000 ..... -..,, - - ',
...... - · ....
1111.
' 104·17S- ",.

~;;~:;;;;;;===:· ~
87

Upholetery

•·

'-----,.-- ~
. u....,~ olorvloMi '•

.,_..,.,

tr1 ~ ..... aa!!l!l: n.llrMi

'

:,

"' ...........-41
104-171
h -...
far "Cel
" I',
uti s • •

..

u~~CH

l

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THE SE SQUARES

I

UI:-ISCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET AN SWER
'· '

I 1

ITHEI

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEI!S .
Unison - Stall - Month - Polite - ATTENTION
I've always remembered what my elderly aunt used to tell
me . "Dearie," she would say, " the most s ~nc ere complimen1
we can pay is ATTENTION."
..
-~~~---------~

BRIDGE

NORTH
• 6 53

3-t-88

. • A 10 7
.106 54
+JL06

Since the South hand appears less
WEST
EAST
than once in a blue moon, bridge books
• 842
K 10 9 7
won't tell you how it should be bid. The
.Q32
•
9
8
54
diagramed approach is reasonable.
• 832
.97
Open two clubs; then, after responder
+ ·4 3 2
+
98 75
makes the e~pected ·negative two-dia'.
SOUTH
mond response, jump to four no-trump '
+AQJ
to show more high-card points 't han ·
.KJ
6
you bave ever seen. When you bid this
.AKQJ ·
way, your fondest hope is that partner
+AKQ
will now bid a slam. II he passes with a
Vulnerable: Both
sigh, his hand may be so bad that four ·
Dealer: South
no-trump will not make, and lhen
you're sorry you bid so much . Today,
West
North Easl
Soutb
all's well since North raises you ·to six
no-trump, but you still have to make
Pass " H
Pass
4 NT
the contract.
Pass 6NT Pass
Pass
There are various ways to try lor 12
Pass
tricks. One approach is to win the
opening lead and immediately give up
Opening lead: 9
a trick to the klng of spades. Then you
can cash out all of your high-card
tricks, hoping to determine who is
most likely to hold the queen of hearts. your hand and let it ride . If it wins the
Another approach · is to play a low trick , you can give up a spade and
heart to the 10; if that wins, you can . make the slam. II the jack of hearts
try a spade finesse. Unfortunately loses to the queen, you can reach dum·
East will win the queen and now you · my twice in the heart suit to take the
will have only one entry to dummy to spade finesse twice. Thus the slam
finesse spades and that's not will make when the queen of hearts is
enough.
with West or when the king of spades
Best is to play jack of hearts from is with East.

..

..

2+

+

t!&amp;~IJ•"tt(
lty THOMAS ·JOSEPH

DOWN
1 Btijold
film

ACROSS

1 Vealer

5Re!!Ort
.
t

2 Vigilant
3 Plea
by Moses
4Enemy
5 Steiger

9~garine

10Soap

plant

12 Boundary
13 Mighty
15 Prepare

'8

film

role

Yesterda)"'e Answer·
&amp; "Love"
in Lucca 22 Chevalier 29 Glue
7 Witticism
song
30 Bucephalus

for combat
Favoririg

17--

standstill
18 Irish
county
20Gennsn
lll'tlcle

8Stand
up for
· 11 Enroll
14 Vetch

18 "Stage-

21 Skin

bull

25 ·-- to

director
19Bombast

. was
one

3&gt;&amp; Cornice

the tear!"
or seckel ·
26 Lily
38 Swiss

coach"

22'nte-

the

24 Corrida

variety

river

27 Take out 37 Music by
of pawn
GWeepie

merrier
23Purpoae
I&gt;&amp; Stannum
21 Dundee .

native

27Georgla
·city

28Knock

29Vanlsh
81 Building
wing
82Fuss

SSCagney or
Lacey, e.g.
35 Gratify

37Diwlge
88 Playing
marble

. 39 Thessaly

mountain

CBI Mqnum, P.l. Squeeze

DAJLYCRYPI'OQUOM-Here's bow to wort It:

.

Ill

Play

•mraxl
12:00 (J) Bumo anct Anon

AXYDLBAAXR
iJLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for .another. In, this sample A is used
· for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

• m Alwllkll
• (2)

01 Lite f!lghl wtth

. David Lltllnnln
{)) MoiOiallk lllultrated

"-Con-lon
1111 MOv•: l'ulurewortd (POi
(I)

(1 :47)

'PEANUTS

11U!Ik-. IH. Colll14-.._. :·

HO•. I USUAU.Y

.

liD TBA
d2l Sporto Tonlghl
e d2l 'Acldlrty' CBS Llll
Night

•

_

.WUtah
city
41 Nobleman

12:30 (J) .lick lllnny

I

............ kindO- ...... -

011

I!DtllgnOII
C1J NlwiNight

P.ul Rupt. Jr. W8ter hrvln:~~ ' ,
-11r
·-·
- - Poole, cll'lomo. wollo. CoN 114· ···
~~. ...
•ues.oo.
10•·171·
441·1171.

74

CD Ill d2l

.(J)l'll au;

,.

-----'-----·
· UMUTONE· t7 .00 por ton~·

A
V

.

Cil NIA Todll_r_

"'""' JtmM ilo¥l WIII&lt;I.Col
304-111·1170.
,

,

(I)

(I) Nluhlltw 1;1

.

-

8

,
Cil Scholeottc Sports

FER ME AN'

Wffil

R -

(I)

!IS NIWI

THE GRIZZWELLS®

J • J Wiler SeMot. lwtmmtng' :
· ........ wollo. ""· 114, .
241-1251.
-

a

eill) (J)
Nlglltllne 1;1
Mqnum, P.l.

Dtllord w - ..,_, PoOl., ·:
Clotomo. Wollo. Dollvory A~- 1
-lu.....,.eelll.
· c.u 114·441·7404-~i
,;_

Maggie tries to summon
enough courage to tell her
bo~s she 's pregnant 1;1
(J) l!ll Na11onal Qeogrepltlc
Special Examine the
circuses of Moscow , Minsk,
yoroshilovgrad and ·
1\shkhabad.
1!11 PrimeNoWI
Ill d2l Billy O,.ham' Denver
Crusade
@ MOVIE: Mall Appeal (PGI
(1 :40)
fll Ill MOVIE: ChlriOII ol
Fire IPGI (2:03)
I:OS (II NBA Baakt1b.-ll
8:30 ()) Anlmalo ol Alicea
(I) D (JJ Head ol lhe Cia"
11 is discovered 1ha1 Mrs.
. Russel sutlers from .
Alzheimer's disease . 1;1
9:00 ()) 700 Club·
Cil Col. B'baU
CII It (JJ Hooperman Q
(J) area1 Momen11 wltli
Nationll QIIO(IO'IIIhlc A
,tasclnatlng annlverwery .
celebration of 1he NatiOnal
Geographic Specials with
exciting excerpts from-the
popular series.
i!D1
d2l MOVIE': 'Shattered
Innocence' CBS Special
' MoviiQ
.
«D.Lemet a Loellroeclway'l L111 Romenltco
Audrey Hepburn and Richard
Kiley hosllhis trlbu1e 10
musical geniuses Lerner and
Loewe wi1h film clips and
rare footage of original
Broadway casta. ·
d2l Lorry King Llvel
. 9:30'CII It (JJ Slap Mlawell
Story Slap endures a series
· · of indignities upon returning
to The Ledger. 1;1
10:00 (}) Strelghl Talk
e&lt;2l IUl A Year In 1111 Ule
CII D (I) Dynaoty Adam
tries to convince Dana that
they will win in coun. Q
(!)I E.. nlng Newo
IBi NIWI
10:20 (II MOVIE : Gunfight 11 the
· O.K. Corral INRI (2:02)
10:30 ()) Amlricen Snlfllhoto
liD Hollywood Ll(ltlnds
Explore the woman behind
the Image lhro~h friends
and 111m clips.
Ill Hogan'o 11011
11:00 (II Remington S1Mie
Temperad S1eele

(I) Chilli

Oenaral Hauling

___ __:----------·

IU) MOVIE: 'Aaron'o
Woy' MOllie of 1ht WMk E;l
CII D (JJ Growing l'alno

d2l Moneyllne
CB1 Soap
a Ill Love Connec11on
11:30 e (2) IUl TonlghiShow
Cil SportsCenter (L)

310 engine.

Vena •

e (})

. e &lt;2l

Rnklentlll or cornmerclel wt~r\- :.
ing. New aarvloe or rapllr~ .·
U011nltld eleclrician . Elll:lnu~t• •'

, _ Rldonour
171-1711.
.

7:351]) Sanford and Son

1:00 ()) Second Honeymoon

a

BARNEY

•.

Ju.S"T

@ BII114!Y Miller
.
II) Ill WKRP In Clnclnniltl

e

tom·- · - · '

1
1

APARTM!NTI. mobllo ttou.... Pt. P11111ntllfldO.IUpo·
llo. 81&lt;1-441·1221 .

4 , _ opt ond - · utlltloo
- · nlcl ....,, col 304-171·
)100 or 171-1508.

•

' '

1973 Chwy tru&lt;* ond oompor.
Rune good, good .-.....
tBBO. I'll- 304·171·1121.

r - to ao. •1 .700.00. 304·
171·'714T or 171·2011.

II ,1 1.\!1111 Lilli II

far

1211. trollor. 7000 lb. copoclty 1
14 Inch aide rella gu•r•ntted.
Factory made. t?'99. 114-742- "

..

,.., brtlkM, at.ter, redi•or.

lyr~~eu ..

•It• 5,00, ,..

.,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
72 Truck• for Sele
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourtlo ond I'Cno
1185 Ford Rona•. • cyl. IIIPd.
0.-0hlo
..
t3500. Coll114-441·1229.
. Phono 114-4411-- 8 or 114- '
441·4477
.
1971 '14 c.....;. 4•4. 2
,,
tono. - ··7&amp;·1574.
,.
••
84
Electrical
1988 Chwy 1 -10, bluo, I
'
......,. ...1100.00. 304·882·
&amp; Refrigeration
3674.

1 l n l -. 4 - - • o w

2 b.droom ept. in

Good condition. Alldng 1700,:

:JCM.I82·2744.

73

nlohod. Con 114·892·1724.

"

91h ft. truck c1mper for tale."'

7187.

n .ooo.

1 bedroom aptrtmentl. Fur·
nlthtd and unfurnished. UOO.·
t2215. per month. Utllltl• fur.

A ~Uf'Lt: DAYS?

,

Grain

4418 ettlf' 7pm.

·

AMS:~ICA Fo~

1

eatru, t12.100.00. 304·171-

2 Slmmeitt:tl ..... 1 Chi Angue.
1 C._,ollfa. 1 Cherolal1
llo Block Co .. 123\'J Plno lt .. . colt. C.ll814·317·7411 .

2 BR . unfurnished. 1 mil•218
oH AI. 7. t200 rant, t160dep.
Ret. M1rried coupln. One child.

3 bedroom houtt tor rent In
Syracu ... 114-992-7689 att'er

R1~,d Esl,lll:

Portio! ......,..,; go;ooo.

c=-·

ti-.

Hon• for Ill• Stand•dbred
and Ten,.....
Clll

Concrete blocks· ell eizn· yerd
ur.Wivlry. Mlton . .d. G111ipo-

Small sof1, hit just been reo
upholstered ·whh 100 nyton
m1terial. brown and belg•
stripea. Cen ... at Mowrey
Upholttery or call 304-8715-

'

•

piUI.

-roof. -

233 S.Cond Av•.:w/ w cerpe&amp;. 2
Piano &amp; Organ tauona. Call BR .. 1'11 both, khchon fumiollod.
Mary Lucll-814-440-9787 or •350 1 mo. plut dtp. • rltf. No

~1

-·d.

Of

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

1111 Horioon. ciMn, 44.000
-•-·
"
-· lllr cond111on.•• ...-.
t11100.
Mom1 .,_114·111·4227.
'-

Your ••· IUJWI gukle.
1·808-167-11000. Etd. S-9105.

LOAN V$ THE BANf&lt;

..••

Motors Homea
_&amp;Campara

C-•·

1181 Codlllot: Coupe DoVIh,

66

Bed1. dreMif'l, chtlt. dlnnette,
couchs. ch1lr1. odd chair-. r•
friger.tora, ttOVII. • mi1c.

79

1111 Bulcll lkylttrll. lim"""
· Pl., PB.,
cruiH,olt.bloakwhhl...,...top, 1·114-237·0481, doy or '- t . ·
R ·o 1 • r 1 a " 1 " m e n t \
U-. l14·1t2·3213.
.. . . .proofing. '
"'
· ,,
11
4
4~
. niWtl,..,
•r"• ......
door, PI, PI,*·
rellr SWEEPER •net HWtftg mechlne 1•
• ,..,..,, ...... end IUppliM.. Pioll 'l
810 O.wld .,..,. troctor
UIIOO. Col 114-912· up '""-ory. v ......,
Cle•ner, one hllf .mile Ull'
-ng. t3,3110.
271 lntomlllonol round bolor. 1977 Monto Corio. PS, PB, Goo- CtMk Rd . Coli 114· ,
I
t3260. 200 gollon oproy tonk AM·FM, rough. 1100114·112· 441-0284,
wilh • booml, 0211 . 2"71
o - will fln-. Coli 114- . • .
Painting. roofing. tree trimming. ;
281·8&amp;22.
1177 Vollawegan O.aher, 4
-.a.
•
buildingsc.a 114·387·0121 .
4 cyl,
JIM'I fARM EQUIPMENT · ...-.
lltlll
·
t811.00.
304·875441-1777
For home ...,..,. remodeling. ;
2H3 ar 171-1711.
3 Pt. hhcll. · fortlllzor
opr- with PTO lhlft. •111 1980 Chry~lor c-.-~~~ 114·441·9422. ..., God blc.u .
whhthoyl. ..
you richly,
::
llam lbl,ll'tUIIt ... SOIPPrecl••·
t1 .111.00. phooo 30•·171·
1860 0Mvlt' Dllul tf'ICIOr, 2513 or .e7&amp;-f711.
RON'S Televlalon lervlca. ;.
t3710. J .D. ua part dac.
HouH etda Oft ACA, Queur, ·'
t&amp;&amp;O. 4 bo1tom - · 0410. 1182 Olde Om••· thiS little ur GE. Sp ' Hng In Zenh:h. Cll 1 ~ ~·
0 - will flnM ... Coli 81·· lo loodod. U,IIIO.OO. 304·115· 304·1'7e.nia or 11 4-441 ·"'·
281-1522 ..
241 •.
2583 Of 871·1718. '

ahelv81 t7,5 .00 . 304· 181 -

PM .

===='

1870 88 Oklo. Hlilh mil-•.
Good condition. Ronatd Clay,
Ohio. Aftor 1:00 coli
IU-185·3819.

ng • .....,...,.,..
Red Hot blfalnel Drug ......,.
"''R• booto, pion•
Sur-

G~EAT! .O&gt;vio you

,.i'tl

olnoo 197a. -no ,(304) 372- ·

20157.

!:~. ~u~~7o~l~' chino

rouon- PrieM. Pol"lcol Ad·
vortiolng
lmpri- ·
-·
S1m lomwvl!l•~.
Old At.
21 ·

IVIillbl•.

•

New Blue T1ndem A)CI• 8Y.t . ....

with Utro'o. Prlcod rlgh1: 814112·1117.
·
,

d2l Cro..tlre
Ill d2l 1111 Jeopardy! 1;1

Jim' a lmpcirt Auto S.n~lce. ~
Ripl.,.. Welt Virglnll. &amp;ptd•lb:· i
lng In Hond1
end IINICI -f;J

~5;8;17:·;N;I:no:t:o::flv:;•:·

8

_

+

Square•

·a CIJ Judge

Auto Repair

Mull Hili 1113 Ford Elicor1.

SURPLUS DENIM , Carh1rt,
Atthtlll Clothing. Heavy new
work dothl~. booU:allw ....•at

Mollohan Fumitu!'l
403 4th. Ave.-KMA
Gallipolit, Ohio-814-448-7444.

77

Vflf'Y c!Mn, a•ege kept. loeded

815-3445.

2 pc. living room tult"· ltlrling
at *300. 5 pc. dining room
suitn-starting 11 1226. 7 pc.
dining room aulte - t350.
Aeclintrl· ltarting It f 1 156. New
~PhHco 21" cDIDrTV-1450. e ~­
living room Jultll- 1400.
Carpet·ltlr'llng It 14 a yd.
Kitchen • blthroom Vinyl
linoleum- 1t1ning at 14.99 a yd.
lnatallatiori 6 financing

:~

387-0238.

1978 a1oror. omoll roll lot&gt; dftt,
PA tyl'tern with monltol'l,llghtl,

Firewood

up. a·e droom auit" 1489.96 &amp;
up. Complete microwave tt1nds

-•ion•.Ceii1-801-1111000 llrt. GH-1808 to.. c:urrent
Repo

~.

A sportsman's w~eleft this note
for h8r husband, who was late for
dinner again : " I went s hopping.
Your d inner is - the -!"

.

James Jacoby

•m
e

1184-18 Dodge pick up truck '

left front door, t200 .00. 814·

Coli 114·892·2211

13&amp; 00 M
c
..,._llpo
' ' •ton ounty, ~
•
Ita, Ohio • other .,... wtlhln
reuon, our d ..Cfllllion, ~-

J loS FURNITURE

Oov.mmll'lt: Hom• tram t 1 . (U
....,.,. Oollnquont tu PlOP.., ·

icheero
M·A·s·H
7:051]) Andy QriHith
7:30
(2) CII Hollywood

,,

3213.

1---·----·.,..-' ..;·__. - - -

Valley Furnhure
.New end utld furniture end
eppllcanc81 . Call 114-4487672. Hourt 9-6 . .

1883 Oldo. 98, 80,000 miloo.
Lookl• runs orut. 11100. C. II
114-441-1084.
,
1981 AMC Spirit, now tl-.
AM-FM· otoroo, 4 oyl., 4 opMCI.
8hor~181&amp;
bl
• 14 Mulling
••• •••Convortl·
•· llv ·- · · - 2 ·

e ClJ CBS Newo

.

·ro

find trMomloolono. Coli 114M
44 I-D9H.
~
......... Tronomlo~no
~]
--.
••
Uood· Storting ot t91, ...,.
......... oloo-robulh t -1""
olono. .........., kho for OM •
__,
........ ..t..-to 350 Turbo, 2 - ',
.....-un.•
I 4 whNI drivo. cullOm built

_

Complete the chuckle quoied
by I dli ng in the missing words
L_JL-...1.--.L........I-..L-l you develop from step No. 3 below .

II) ~ Too Clo. . for Comfort
6:351]) Carol Bumelt
7:00 ()) Remington S1MII My
Fair Steele
IJ (2) PM Magazine
Col. ll'ball
CII En1trtalnmem Tonight
8 CIJ People'• Court
• (J) l!ll MecNeM/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
aD! College Beokelblll
(!)I Moneyllne
Ill d2l IUl Wheel of Fortune

oaou~\·

.U lllue ..,.., lhote • wonned,
Alto'-' CloGw Chow puppln.

otc. CoN 114·882·1137.
r

90 Days 11m1 " ceah with
1pprovtd cNdit. 3 Mil" out
8ulaville Ad. Open 91m to 6pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 814-448-

werranty., (Whichever

~

.

-,r6-TUI.. ;R. :. ,;D__,I,.,..•
.: T--..,1~.,...-l 0

t!))lnoltle Politico '88

flm). W.- hotp with hord ~

1884 C.... Cltltlon. 4-door
hetcllbec*. fill , PI, A-T. A-C.
AM·FM, Crul... ~~. ~-11 11•·
·"" 112·7112- 1,00 pm.

bentwood rocker. t•lnaope,
dollhouse, engegement 1nd
wedding ring Nt. 114·882-

t225. King

*•·

1875 Ford Elite. N•w
Runt
good . . U&amp;O. Coli 114-448·
0 8 43
1871 C - Monu . Coil
114 387 0"41
•
. " '
1897C-Collbrity. • dr.,
PI, PB, tilt, cruiH. olr, AM·FM·
ttereo.
Cell 114-448·4110 ar
·
441·0652, onytlmo.

I

_

CB1 WKAP In Cincinnati

Uood • roltulh .... ~........
~lod oro lntorn.., 1-'od
end cmy 3000 ml• oi 30 deyI'•

I

I

~I

«J)BodyEieclrlc

lock-up OM t~•· Ou•an· ,.
t..cl up to on•ve•· Cuh • CIITY J

;~ r • n Jtyroc,:or. ~~1.88. 67 ln~rUulmiceanltl

· copo
ump -·now
uMd
· Eoglo Rklao
•nd
lm•ll Entint... W. honor M.C..
0 1 - . Vlu. e14-9U-2919.

Auto'a For Sale

GAVEAR

_.;.:.N...:.A~L:..,:.U...:.N;.._.jl! ·I I
.~·:

C1J NBA Today

~:;

Auto Partl

be-

..;:....t

(I) II (JJ ABC Newo t:;l
, (J) NlghHy Buolneu Report

all

th e

I I I I' I
~--1. .~;~.; I. . :. .J -Til~1 ~

Jf

I

78

I

6:06 Cil Allee
6:30 (2) 1111 NBC Nlghlty Nowo

1113 luidi. hn A¥tnue. Sharp I

114-441-2101.

B~nlov Utlity Troiloro for 1own

0000 USED APPLIANCES

t360. 4 drewer chllt Ill. Gun
cab_inats I lun. o .. or •ctrlc
range t37 . Baby matll'81111
t36 I 041. Bod lromn UO,
t30 a King trame 160. Good
•election of bedroom suite~,
metal ctbineu. hoodboordo •3o
1ncl up to 185.

St. hm.-cl AKC, bNu(lful pupe.

polo. C.lll14·441·7447.
0
r11 1 1 H p ridl 1
ynema Electric ·111rt,
·
"I awn
mower.
, . . dl•
........ Nlco lhopo. Coli e14·

USED· Beds. drt~..,. , bedroom

na. a.., ....

7790-Aoulh
Oh,lo.

Good uhphoiM ~~~~. 25'-31'
long. P.-.o-lng ot t20 por

ault11. 1119· t298. Delllt1,
wringer wuhtr, • compltttllne
of used fumlture.
NEW· . Western boote- UO.
WOtkbooto t1 8 I up. CStHI I

llllllr

66

aoby Clothoo, 0·3 yn., owing.
· ploypon. C.lll14-441-7413 .

Olive St., GeiiiJK)IIa.
NEW- a pc. wood group- t398.
Living room auit•- t181-t188 .
Bunk bed a with bedding- t1 IJI .
FuH all:• mmr. . • foundltion
atlrting - Ill. fhclln•n
st•nlno- 199.

,..,
.~

Aflh-lor-C~od.C.N

poto. Coli 814-448-0331,

pou. Colll14-448-4921.

WED., MARCH 9 •

Vengeonco on Voroo

it

GAM ~

low to form four simp le words.

d2l ShOwBiz Today
CBI Facto ol Ufa
e Ill Happy D1y1

________
..
c.-...

448-1340.

•«-4428.

.

WOlD

lditod br CLAY I . 'OLLAN

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled word$

• (J) MOVIE: Dr. Who:

1

Patriot. •260 per mot'db. ns
d•p. c.n 814-448-3870 or

Professional
Services

• ..

S©ttQijlA-~t-~s~

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

1111 Nowe
Cil Spot11Lool! (T)

11 II LoWo Uno - · 71; HP
Mercury motor. uatllng motor~
ond tnllot. f 1000. 114·9411·1,,

Modern 3 bedroom hou.e It

23

i

oottw••· CoN 1.==========;:::======
·=·;:·;":;-: ..;:_~ ------------~~
&amp; Acce11ories
~
...."'

Koth,ryn Yoougor·l14· 317·
Lane, Cheehlre,

One WIY drew patio drape with

81.·448·1832.

Bugle Boy. Lni. Camp ~lv
Hlll1, Organically Grown, Lucia,
over 2000 others, or 113.99 one
price designer, multi tier pricing
discount or family shoe 1tore.
Retail prices unbelieveblef~r~op
quelity' aho• normally priced
from t19 . to flO. Over 260
br1nda 2600 styles. 117,900. to
129,900.: Inventory, Training.
Fixtur•. Airf••· Grand Open·

ing. Etc. C.n qpen 16 d-va. Mr.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 531 Jockoon
Pike from 11 83 1 mo. Walk to

IP.,mentt with modwn kitchen
•nd WllfMir·dryer hookups, Cl•
bla· teltvlllon IVIilable. C1ll

Own your own apparel or shu.
store, chooae from : Jean -

Sportswear. ladies . Men 's.
Childr•-Maternh:y, Llrge Siz".
Petite, Dtnceweer-Aerobic::, Bri·
del, lingerie or Acce•sarlu
store. Add color an ..v•· Brand

New c:ompletely furnished
epertment &amp; mobile home in
city. Adulu onty. P~rldng . Call

furnithtd. No pitt. t216 • mo.
Cell 81•·448-8038. ·

9578.

Business
Opportunity

hook-up, ww carpet, newly
pelnt.t. deck. Reg.,.cy, Inc.
Aptf, Call 304·87&amp;-7738 or

~876~-~51~0~4~·----------- o

30 •ere f11rm: Mostly tillable.
Ne• Rio Orande. Pond, berna.
good home. C1ll 81 4 -246·

FinanCial

2 BR . apts. 8 cto1.ts, kitchen ·
appl. furpiah'ed , W•eher-Oryer

Windaor trailer 3 bedrooms, with
edditlon, 3 1crM lend. out
buildings. G•lllpolia Ferry. 304·

876·6930.

lnsur!lnce

printor. Aaortod
814-441-7313.

0322 .

Apartment
for Rant

.

1980.14x70 Shuh1:. Allel.m:rlc,
excellent condition. Price r•
duced. Cell after 6 :00. 814·

Board end room . Elderly. Priv1te
room• and semi private. 814 -

2 bedroom moblt. horN hllf
mile out Jericho Rotd. c1llaft•
6,00 pm, 304·876·1·83.

1874 Holy Pork. 70•14. 3

982-1722.

12

crulooo. Colll14·317·0141.

IMAI DAILY
'UULU

EVENING

1171 S1arcreft 21 . ft . Mer· ;

·,. ft
conoo. p~~on&lt;k,
304-871· 94118.
·"1.

Waahtrt, dryera, retnQeratora,

2 a.droom mobile home on

Second Ave., Oellipolis. Ohio.

Television .
Viewing ·
•

Sentinei--P&amp;Q87"15

The

1:00 ()) Crur Like a Fox Fox on
,the Range
e &lt;2l CII D (J) aD! e d2l

11n 4•4 co..,. pickup. 304-575-3073.
tractor with ~r. O....tl
Elowlc rongo. CoN 114-371·
Tr...... Jot .. At. 1 Loculi Road • ~
bldl of K • K Mobile Hom•.
304-175-1071.
Computor liM PC Junior pluo

·County Appliance. Inc:. GDDd
uaed IPPiienal tncl TV Mte.
2 BR mObil~ home 4llty , fur- · Open BAM to IPM. Mon thru
Sot. 114-441·1699. 627' 3rd.
,...hed. Eeat..-n Ave. Wl1er •
fl.v.. Oolllpollo. 0~ .
MW• paid. e221. Aduh• only.

68&amp;8.

biFT!

- ..

Antiquo Mohovony 3 P.,. bod·
room oulto. Good cGnd. 0450.
Coll81•·211·1410.

coptod. Coli 614' 441· 3897 or
245-&amp;223.
.
.

tiouae 4 rooma 1nd bath. lot,
v•r~ge, heH betement, 1 137

~

1887 ~. t81ce ov• peymente '•.
"""'ln8 - . ,, V·l. 11 II, 17&amp;·
hp, -.~r~~. Uled 14 houra,f ..
304-171·2364.
«.\
.::.:..:...:..:...:..:...

SWAIN .
AUCTION I FURNITURE 12

Coli e 14-441-3171.

~ ~IIISM~~IPlO
1

.:::•2::7:.:.1100=;...·Co='•..:33~04·7::"2~7:""·-:...
::-'

Fltowood·Lo,.. pl&lt;*-up lood·
Ul dolhiend· All hordwOod.
Coli 814·441·1437.

61 Ho.UM
. hold Goods

Mobile · Homes
for Rent

No pets. Ret. • dep.

'!) ~~---~~--.._r-...,.,.--.,.,....,..-----:-----n

--~~~--plley.
oenne.
.to. 310 V-1 . ... :

Pili! r C!1.1 IIIII sI!

3 t.edroom hou••2021 Cha·

tham. Nice siding. New roof.
EXC81. cond. t31 .000. C.ll

Boataand
Motora for Sale

. _ e. .,..., -

.JVC·
YII8·YCII· · - ·
0225.4
Cd114-441-2282.

t-;;:~;:;::;~;:::::;;::;:l-::;;::;::::::::~===:l --:7-;.,.--,--;,--,,...,.=--:31

~ fJ.TI&amp;IIT, t.£~.-•w ~

- - - - -·

' S,.doua moiHie hom• lots for
rent. F1mity Pride Mobile Hom•
Park. G111ipoll1 Feny, W. Ve.

0342.

•nd

76

Space for Rent

w .vo. Con 304·n3-&amp;551 .

your locMion. Pllya 2&amp;" com·
mluion. Wrtta - P.O. Bok 342.

lllek the skilla1 We train people
for job. •• machiniatl in our
rn.chine trltda1 program. Nawty
11\1'..-y product of induttry, trom
comflaku to turbin•.· ia made
Mther uting m.china tool• or
using machinn made with me·
china tools. In the m~~ehine
tfedn program you will learn
how to use variou• typq or
m.chlnery such 11: IM:ha, driH
pren. milling m.chlne. grinding
m.china
punch prat. We
heve 1 variety of funding sources
••ileble for .. lgible epplk:ilnts.

11, 11.1. I - out Rt. 211.
Coiii14·2H·I25t .

-Spect tor tmell tralttra. "II
hook-upe. C.blt. Alto effiCiency
· rooma. air •nd Clblt. Meaon.

Plko. OolllpoNo.· 9.4,30.

Machiliniata. 11nd Weldlrt.
R•glltlf' now for cl. .• begin·
nlng April 4th. Cii!ll Tri-County
Vocational Adult Cent• et 713·
3611 ext. 14. A nrt.ty of
funding ICKM'CII to pay for
training ar• av•ilebl• tor thoM
eligible.

_.

~__.;

-lc-

7471.

Medical Plau·203 Jackton

Nuroing Auioto.... ond Ordor··

Motorcyclel

1e7s Htorlov o.wldlon ••...,
o-. C•" 114·371-2447.

watt atereo-comp~Me with
COUNTRY MOilLE Homo Pork. . 41
rtcll\llr, tqe, turntable, ..,....
Rou .. 33. North of Pom..-oy.
Remll treil..-a. C1ll 1 14-892· i'i4-~-iz~~· t460. Col

Part-lime MLT for Ful Setvic.
Ub. Appty In penon at the

u...

__

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

21 ft . . . . - cruloor: 1tll

FREE Pi.- of Jaw•w to flrR
10 to Hll A -· c.u
614;44..21H. ·

~IIMl'tronict
lndulcienl,
FoodTeahn~IM,
Service Workera,
trill M1intenenu Work1re,

74

.,.;__

1 ,000-. -1 ~ 13.1 4, 11.

RIVER LOTI
, .. - .... C.. . .·FOI ....
or R.m:. A-.One Re.l Ettlte
8 ...... 304·8711-5104.

tlonel pereon . C•ll The
fh
ale a 1 -aoo..zq.3112.

Job huntlftg l' NMd • sldill' We
trein peopJ. for jobe 11 Auto
Mec:henk:l, C.rpent... Electri-

•

MwchendiM

. ~·,ulodTitoihop. o-

T'fi'O and one badrOCN\; fumllhed
aplf'QftNftt, 0111 304·175·3100.

t1S,UO to tU,qo, IMME·
DIA1'1! OweN-. Call 1·31&amp;·
733-~ h1. 'I' l7U.

Government Jo~ . U I,040119,230'fMF. Now hiring. Your
..... 1-806-187· 6000 Eld. A·
9801 for current Fect.rel Ult.

114 Mi~c:.

Apartment
f.or Rent

1988

Weni,t'ey. MII'Ch 9, 1988 ,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·

14-The Daily Sentinel

11 ,Help Wanted

-- ·----- - ----

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hints: Each day the code letters are different.

C&amp;YPTOQU()'i'E
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· Y•&amp;erdaJ'a CiJpCOgaotal 'nfERE ARIN'T ANY
EMBARRAS81NG QUESTIONS-- JUST £MB&amp;Jtft..4881NO
. AN~.-- CARL ROWAN

�•

~

Wenu clay, March 9, 1988

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT V
5ftil DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES I c:xlgcarettludlnG••

Midclaport. Ohio

I

Daily Number

)

MUST PROVIDE IOLDEI BUCKEYE CARl OR DRajER'S UtEI*

I

Ohio Lottery

Science
fair

574
Pick 4
1537
14-15-16-30-41-42 .

Page 12

I

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. It Pearl St.•992·3471

e

'
Vo1.38, No.212
Copyrighted 1988

'

CORNED
BEEf
BRISKET

Grade "A"

THOROFARE
LARGE EGGS
dozen ..carton

Granulated

PER LB.
.

$189

CAUFORNlA RED RIPE

at y

l
j

•

enttne
2 Sactiono. 16 Pagoo 26 Canto
A Muhlmedle Inc. New8paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 10, 19BB

.Rich Jones upset with Meigs' share of funds

FLAT·. cuT .

'

•

Clearing tonight. Low near
30. Sunny Friday. Highs between eo and 65.

STRAWBERRIES ••!!!.~•.

·THOROFARE
SUGAR

Sugar.

5 pound package

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
"We always get the· crumbs ,"
said Meigs .County Corilm!s. stoner Richard Jones , "and
never a chance to sit down at the
. table for a full piece of cake."
Jones was speaking in reference to Monday's joint announcement by State Sen. Jan
Michael Long, D·Circlev!lle, and
State Rep. Jolynn Boster, DGa1l!pol!s, of $21 ll)lllion lor
capital improvement projects. in
Meigs, Gall!a and Athens
c;ounties.
· ·
According to the announcement, the majority of the money
will go to Ohio L'nlvers!ty .in
Athens County. Gallia County
will get over $2 million for Rio
Grande College-Community Col: .
lege. Money will also go· to

1202
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I
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I
I
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I
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I
I
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TISSUE
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4 rolj package ,

204

Hocking Technical College:. in
Athens County and to Our Hduse
Museum lnGall!a County. Meigs
County will reap $13,800 for ithe
Buffington Island Memorlai. 1
"That 's .06 of one percent Ifor
Meigs County," commented
Jones in Wednesday's meeting of
the commissioners.
1
Jones said he was grateful for
the funding for Butf!ngton :1s.·
land, but called thevastd!fferences in funding amounts to the .
three counties another example
· of Meigs County being "shOrtchanged now , and In the pa ~t , " .
regardless of which party 1 is
running the state administration . ·
"What I'm trying to say,"
Jones continued, "is that all the
institutions benefitting from the
funding are either state-owned or
state-related in some way. How

SPAGHETTI

The newspaper is not reimburs·
ing the company for the trip and all
accounts written about the tripl if
any are published, will be ~ed
with an editor's note explaining to
readers that the informatibn 1 in
those articles was gathered durjng
the Aptus-funded jo~y. The ,
newspaper before making a comtnillllent 'to go, .told cha:!'Jber
ofl!~ials ~ wuuld auend only ifltbe
IP'!*Il.'was eQnipbeed of ~Is
•"" nnnnnentS· of the. h8z.ai:doos ,

haZardous wasre incinerptor on the
site which would biJill about 5~.000
tons a year oC what Datko said are
hazardous wasres regulated under
the federal Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act. Datko S81d example~ of those wastes are solveniS
and pw._nt sl~!!es. ~tus has not y~
determined if 1t will seek a penmt
in West Vqinia to , bum high.ly

The cham~ · of comm~i'ce, ·
boiD tbe
··Col!ii'Y Bbaid of which is laking que ot the ..logisEducation, iho Sunny~ Parent· tics, does not consider setting up
.1\!achers Orpnlzation, the Ga11ia the trip un endorsement of the
Count)' Charllber of Commen:e, the project but simply a fact-finding
Mason A•aoclation for a Clean En· {lJlPOI!Onity, explained Bernie Rid~t, the Valley Voluntw" dle, cham~ preSident Rkldle
F'~re Department and Rescue declined to release the names of'the
SqUid, the Muon County Farm individuals attending from MaSon
Bureau, the Point Pleasant Register, County.
;
Aptus, a pannership of Natiopal
possibly a representative from the
Mason County Commission, the Electric and Westingbouse, ~as
Masori County Developmell! taken an option on .a 200-acre ,ire
Authority, the Mason County Area soulh of the Goodyear Polyester
ChaJll~ of Commerce and the plant along Route 2m the south~
Beale Parent-Teachels Organiza- pan of the county. The land is
lion·, a l;hambc:r spokeswoman said owned by Appalachian Power Cc). ·
Aptus wants to constructj a
Wednesday afternoon.

PCB incineration is regulared

By Charleli A. Mason

SAUCE

Aptus is paying more than

$13,000 to Dy pout 20 Masol! and
Gallia ·Counly residents to Coffeyville, Kan., Friday for a tour of

32 ounce jar

~I

1 .,

its polychlorinaled biphenyls-buming hazardous waste incinerator, a
. company official said. Wednesday

afternoon.
"The lOIII cost for the lnllspona.
tlbn is $13,65).20" -.Jd Andrew
2 •. 1 U

1.•

•.-.wtpi

~t iliteercr.

· •t

d~-ed
' .· , ·• ' · t;;~eTs5Ue.

•Tbe ~- r•zaenlltlves

Board rehires

·•

. ,

·

Local news

funding !rom ARC had been
secured tomoveforwardw!ththe
project. However, the -project
was held up due to Ohio Departmen! of Transportation stipulalions and lor a tlme,!t was feared
that the ARC funding was lost .
Through the efforts of Carper,
the Buckeye Hills- Hocking Val.ley Regional Development Distr!ct, the offices of the county
commissioners and engineer,
and others , the project has
apparently been salvaged .
The commissioners said it is
their understanding' the project
is now in the hands of ODOT for
placement on their construction
schedule.
Although the commissioners
consider the Carper project
" good news," they aren't so sure
about Information they've re- ,

ce!ved regarding the progress of
state legislators in determining
howStatelssuellfund!ngw111 be
distributed throughout Ohio's 88
counties, even though State Sen .
Long is on the senate committee
to develop distribution methods .
" When it's all over ," said Jones ,
" I think it'll be like everything
else, the big boys (meaning the
more populated areas of the
state) wll1 have their way."
Sal!sbufY. Township Trustees
and residents ·of shady Cove
Road discussed with thecommls- .
sloners the posslb!lity of apply:
!ilg lor Community Development
Block Grant funding to help pay
for raising their road out offload
level. The commissioners expla!ned block grant procedures
and that the trustees would have
continued on page 8

briefs~
l

pemployees

J

dan~us .~· buh J?a1!Ln ~
thete is nO quesbOil at this tiJIIC that
the : ton\pany wil\ butn •RECRA.
wastes.

.

pnder a more stringent federal
standard, officials said.
Those atlending the trip will
leave !he Tri-State Ait:pon outside
Huntington at 7 a.m. Friday, and
wiU arrive in Coffeyville's ~
before 9:30 a.m., Central Stlindard
Time, Riddle, said. Aptus wiU
provide a tour of the plant lastins
two hours that morning and also
will have compeny officials avail·
able to answer questio_ns.
. ·
Datkp said the group will be "on
its own" in the afternoon.
.
After a meeting earlier this week
between the diverse group and
Continued on page 8

.

.

COLUMBGS, Ohio (t;PI) Gov . ·Richard Celeste's $618
m11Uon capltal construction appropriation for 1989·90 sped
through the Ohio House on a 90-8
. ·vote Wednesday despite a han&lt;l·
ful of complaints about the rush
job.
It was joined by a separate $82
m1111on long-range construction
proposal to replace dilapidated
fac!Uties of the Ohio Department
of Youth Services, which houses
·
wayward youth .
I
Coming in -the other direction
Barry G. Thompson and Ronald Alan Casto, of Ripley, W.Va.,,
from the Senate Thursday will be
entered voluntary pl~as of _gu!lty to charges of breaking and,
a $481 m!U!on capital reappropri·
entering when they appeared recently before Judge Charles-H. I · a lion, using unspent money irom
Knight In Meigs County Common Pleas Court. Thompson and
the last two years.
Casto were charged in connection with a recent break-in al i ,
Much .of the construction will
Eber's Gulf Statton IJ! Racine. The two men were ea~hl
be financed with long-term
sentenced to a six month determinate sentence in the Orient,
bonds, and the , state Office of
Correctional R~cept!on Center, Orient, and ordered to make,
Budget and Management re·
restitution.
,
ported that the debt service for
Charles W. Green entered a voluntary plea of guilty to
the , capital projects will . not
aggravated assault in connection with an incident Dec. 3, 19871n
exceed the recommended 5 perwhich Cheryl Hy:;ell was shot in the foot by Green. Green was,
cent of the state's operating
sentenced by Judge Knight to a six month determinate sentence'
budget.
·
In Orient.
i
Lawmakers pian to have all
1
three bills on the governor's desk
when they go home at the end of
next week lor primary election
The Pomeroy Youth League has designated Saturday March '
campaigning.
·
12, as sign up ,day for all boys and 1lrls interested in playing !
The
new
two-year
capital
ap·
baseball or softball. Registration wiU take place at Elberfeld's
store from 2 p . m. unt115 p.m. ThOse who did not participate last ,
year must brtns a· copy of their birth cert!l!cate . Registration
fee is $9 dollars.
l

I

Pair sentenced by Judge Knight

I

U. S. NO. l

Signup slated March 12

.

IDAHO POTATOES

I

j
l,

Parems plan seminar
'

'.

1

. Parents For Education in Melg&amp; Local Scbool District is
spo1110rlq a aemlnar Thursday, starting at 7 p.m., at Meigsj
Junior Hlah Scbool with Carroll McCall!lllon, 11 Columbus,
dllcusalni school flnanclila'. The public Is invited to attend.

Woman cited by patrol
;
;

A south Bloomlqv!Ue woman was cited in an acc!den~
WedneldaY, atlO: 15 Lm., In Olive Township on S.R. 681, less
Conttnued Qn page 8

.
,'

KEMP · WITHDRAWS - Rep. Jack Kemp
(R-N.Y. ), left, shown with his wile Joanne after
leaving a press conference earlier this week,

withdrew from the Republican presidential race

at 11:07 a.m. Thursday. ( UPI).

House adopts capital improvements bill

' Five employees were rep!red Tuesday night when the Meigs!
. County Board of Education met In regular session at its ofl!cesl
in Pomeroy.
·
Rehired were Elebra Buck, Robert Hudak. each given two;
year contracts as sc~ool p~ycholg!sts; W1111am Buckley, twoJ
year contract as secondary school supervisor; Sandra.
Chadwell, four year contract as a speech therapist, and Nancy''
Carnahan, two year contract as a secretary.
I
· The county board issued a school bus driving certificate tol
Tim Fry and adopted·an amended resolution to participate as a i
Class C site with the Counc!l of Government'ss Southeasteml
Ohio Voluntary Education Cooperative Computer Network. '

10 LB. BAG

According to a project announcement from Congressman ·
Clarence Miller's office, the
Appalachian Regional Comm!ssian has approved $56,000 to
cover 80 percent of the construetion costs to build an access road
to the nursery. Local money will
pay for the remaining $14 ,000
cost of bu!ldin2' the road.
The re-establish of direct access to Carper's Nursery is
expected to increase its retail
bUsiness by 100 percent, to
expand it business by investing
$125,000, and to create eight to 10
jobs .
Carper fought in court to get
the access road to his nursery
whenRoute33wasbu!!t,andlost.
It was thought a couple of years
ago that · the necessary perm!ssian from the state and the

.Aptos .trip to Kan~as will
cost -fii'In more · th~ ,13,000

.Ragu Homestyle

c

many state offices or institutions
do you know of in Meigs
County?" ' The only one. he said,
would be the extension service
which Is funded by the cou~ty .
Jones acknowledged that the
money for building improvements at O.U. and Rio Grande
shows a commitment by the state
to higher education. but that it Is
his opinion that someone at the
state level should show as much
concern lor secondary educa·
Uon, •·especially in Southeastern
·Ohio where it looks like it's going
down the tube."
Twenty years after the ·constructlon of the Route33~ourlane
in Meigs County, George Carper, .
owner of Carper's Nursery, five
miles north 'of Pomeroy, may be
· getting an access road from
Route :l.l_to his place of business.

proprlatlon contains $417 million
lor construction projects on
Ohio's college and university
campuses, $48.3 million for men·
tal health and retardation faclll ·
ties, $56.7 million for parks and
recreational fac!Ut!es and $45
mlllto·n for correctional
fac!Ut!es.
Rep. William H!n!g, D-New
Philadelphia, chairman of the
House Finance Committee, told
House members the plan has
"bipartisan consensus" and ·
would promote jobs and higher
education, protect past investments with rehabUUatlon , and
preserve the state's financial
credit rating.
"It is affordable within existIng revenu~s." H!n!g said shortly
after the bHI came out of his
committee on a 21-3 vote.
The plan was worked out
behind closed doors during the
last several weeks by state
legislative leaders from both
parties and the Celeste
administration.
"I don't think that's the way
the legislative process is supposed to work," said Rep. Joan
Lawrence, R·Galena, one of the

Anti-landfill group

COLt;MBUS, Ohio lvPI)
Former Ohio Attorney General
William Brown Is threatening a
libel suit against a citizens' group
oppoalq a Pen!Jsylvanta com·
pany'a propoeal to open a landfill
In eastern Ohio.
Brown, Who represents
Cham. .• Inc. of Plttlbur1h,
. aald Wedneaclay the ifOUp Is
nillreprnenttq lhe company's
propoeal, lncludlni llaylq It
wOUld aceept 20 miDIOn pounds of
··,·
\

.
opponents . "What you have is a
leadership pork barrel."
Lawrence complained that the
leadership was able to add about
$100 mUI!on worth of projects to
Celeste's original plan In private
negotiations, while she was un·
able to get included a $120,000
allocation for a scenic rivers
project along the O!entangy
River.
''The chairman treated us very
fairly," said Rep. Thomas John son, R-New Concord, ranking
m!onor!ty member of the Fi ·
nance Committee. Johnson said
if more hearings had been held,
various projects would have been
added but the state's ab!l!ty to
pay for them would not have
improved.
· Hin!g said he even turned down
a request by th!l governor for a
last-minute change. Senate leaders also are committed to pass·
!ng the b!U as is next week.
Despite the statements of
Hlnlg and Johnson, Rep. Ronald
Amstutz, R-Wooster, said he
voted against the b!ll because
Ohio's credit rating might be in
.danger in future years If the
capital spending pace keeps up.

threat~ned

garbage a day from the East
Coast.
·
Chambers has appl!ed to the
Ohio Environmental Protection
A,ency for permission to open a
lindtlll on an abandoned strip
mine about 1 %m!les outside of
Cadiz, about 100 m!les east of
Coiumbua.·
Nancy Beck, a spokeswoman
for tile Cltlzena Watch Commit·
tee of Harrtaoa County, said
Chambers II propoelq to bring

"We were not given good
information about precisely
where we're going with our debt
l!mi!ation," said Amstuiz.
Rep. Ross Boggs, D-Andover ,
said the youth se~v!ces construction would relieve overcrowding.
anhe Buckeye Youth Ce nter and
Scioto Village, and would provide
for a new center in southern Ohio.
Boggs said only $10 m!llion or
the construction will be started in
the first year , meaning future
state . budgets will have to take
care of most of the ·debt.
The Senate passed unanlm·
ous!y and returned to the House
for concurrence in amendment"
a bill protecting "wh!stleblow ers" In the private sector. A
wli!st!ebiower is one who reports
evidence of a felony or a hazard
to public health or safety at the
place of employment.
In order to have protection
from adverse employer reaction,
an employee must lile a written
report with the employer and
give the employer until the close
of business the following day.
The Senate adjourned until 11
a .m . Thursday and the Hou:;e
untll1 p.m . Thursday.

with libel suit

In 10,000 tons of garbage a day, by
truck and rail, from New Jersey
and New York.
· She said the group is not
opposed to a landfUl being
opened on the site.
"We'd be glad to take our own
garbage and neighboring coun·
ties' 1arbqe, but not 10.000 tons
a day from the East," abe said.
'·'If New Jersey can 'I bandle their
garbage, then Harrison CountY
can't either."

'

But Br.own , whose offices are
In Columbus, said it would be up
to the EPA to determine how
much out-of-state garbage would
be allowed In the landfill.
.
Last month, he aent a letter to
the leaders of the committee
after It beian distributing ~
paniphlet, titled "No Eastern
Statel Qarbap."
:
"I em demanding tha~ YOII
eeaee ~ uae of tile "mphlet
Coatlllued on pap I
:
~- '

.

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