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                  <text>Tuucley. M.ch 16. 198'

"-ga 12"-The Deily Saulinel

__B_y_en
____,;_.,.Ht\~ deaths
- l.ncal news briefs- _Del_bert

EMS has nine Monday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
Monday; Pomeroy at.9: 32 p.m. to Pomeroy·Amerlcare for John
Harrls011 to Veterans Memorial Hosplial; Tuppers Plains at
10:34 a.m. to Route 681 for Harold Brannon to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy .a t 4:11p.m. to W.elsl!town Hillfor
Lawrence Klein to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
4: 42 p.m. to the sheriff's office for Gary Rose to .Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 5:12p.m. to Meigs Mine No.1 for
[.uther Gillian Jr. to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at
5: 24.p.m. to Meigs Mlpe No.2 for Dwlght.Rees to Holzer Medical
Center; Middleport at 5:29p.m. to Brownell Ave. for Ron Carr ·
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 6:51p.m. to Route
325 for Andrew Myers to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at
9: 06 p.m . to. Mulberry Heights for Paula Adkins to Holzer
Medical Center.

Announcements .
To meellodays
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will · meet
today (Tuesday), 7: 30 p.m ., at
.the Bradbury Church o! Christ.

.final slgnup Tbursday
Final sign-up for the Salem
Center Baseball League will be
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Salem
Center firehouse.
Deadline Saturday
Final sign-up for Pomeroy
' Youth League will be Saturday,
:10 a.m. to 2 p .m., on the flrstfloor
· of Elberfeld' s. Registration fee
of $9 and a copy of birth
certificate to be retained by the
league must be presented for
. each c hlld wishing to partlclpa te.

Weather
South Central Oblo
Mostly cloudy today, with
scattered snow flurries and highs
near 30. Partly cloudy tonight,
with widely scattered snow flurries and a low near 20. Partly
cloudy Wednesday, with highs
near 40.
The probability of precipitation Is 40 ~rcen I today, 30
percent tonight and near zero
Wedne:;day.
Winds will be ·from the northw·
est at 10 to 20 mph today ,
diminishing to near 10 mph
tonight .
Exte.n ded Forecast
: Thursday through Saturday
Fair we;ither through the period , with highs ranging from the
upper 30s to the mid 40s each day.
Overnight lows mostly will be ln.
. the 20s.

Buzzards back
on schedule
HINCKLEY, ..Ohio (uPI)
The only time the buzzards have
failed to return on March 15 to
· their Medlria county roost was In
1984 - when an extra day ·In
February apparently threw
them off- buttheofficlalspotter
said he did not expect such
problems this leap year.
Cleveland Metroparks Capt.
Roger Lutz said he was prepared
to avoid a repeat of 1984, which
was the first time since 1957 that
the birds did not return on March
15.
"I'm not out there. I'm not
not spotting any,"
looking. So
Lutz, the official spotter for 10
years, said Monday; one day
before the buzzards' traditional
arrival day.
And If the buzzards are late well, Lutz Is prepared for that,
too.

I'm

made to the

Da~d

Caul Memor-

~~~:.)

Delbert Aida Byers (D.A.) . 84,
Born Nov. 14,19211n New York
Ia! Fund, International Society &amp;r,ee IIIICl Mark Smith
Rt. 3, Centenary Community,
City, Dr. Caul was the aon o!the
for the Study of the Treatment of of Blat Ella lo LDewl
Galla . County, died Monday
tate Harry and Eva Welnrlb
Multiple
G
Po tntPersonalities,
Road E a t 2506
m Am Electrl c Power .. .. .. .. .. .. .2711L"
v ns on, ·• AT&amp;T ........ , . ., ................. ....28*·
morning at ·Holzer Medical Cen- Caul. A licensed medlc!ll psych!ter after an extended Illness.
~trlst with offices In Athens and
~ Brink .
Aahland 011 ........................64~
Born Oct. 1. 1903 In Greene
olumbus, he was the former
er
Bob Evans ........................... 17
Cou~ty •.Ind., to the late John A.
superintendent and medical dlE1lller J. Jkinktz, 77, New Charming Shoppes .............. 12~
and Florence Westmorland
rector Cot the ~!hens Mental Hawn, died Moadal, Mll'c:h 14, City Holding Co ................... 34 .
Byers.
Health epter. At the time of hiS 1988 in Vereran a Manorial Federal Mogu1......... .... .. ..... 41"
111
He married Myrtle Grace ~ath he Ceas on the staff of Hospilll, Ptaneaoy, Ohio.
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ......... .62~
Furry May ,31. 1928, who preOlldland d nter,Galllpolls,and .
Bam OcL 6, 1910 In ~ty, Heck's Inc ........................... 1%
cededhlmlndeathJuly17,1971. was pres1 ent of the Interna· Ohio, he wes a son of
te KeyCenturlon ...... ....... , .. ..... 40
· He Is survived by Jils second ~na!Socle::r theSt;dyoftl!e Orion Edwin and Samh Jane Lands' End .. ......... .............. 20\4
wife, Lora Menshouse (Hack·
ea:nent d u tiple ersonali- Roberts Brinker.:......,.... . dea1h b
Limited Inc. ........... ...... ...... 20%
11
·worth), whom he married Oct.
c~· ::aM~~ htahschoolln
Hewasalso ...- m
Multlmedlalnc ....... .. .......... li3~
28, 1972 In Gillllpolls. ·
li~ ' : h • ss s ppl, received two brolhen, Lawrence Ferre
Rax Restaurants ............... :.. 4~
Also surMvng one son; John A. f
~I e1~~of Science degree Jesse E. Brinker.
.
Robbins &amp; Myers. ,................ ,9
Byers of Gallipolis; two step·
ro: s~ ~I College~ 1941
He w&amp;S'a retired carpenter and a Shoney's Inc. ......... '........... ,.24~
sons,JamesHackworthofGrove. ~edt ~~':t
· ~m
lane veteran of the U.S. Na~ : · Wendy's Inti. .................... ... 6~
City, Ohio, andWirtHackworth AI Fca
oo1ln1 f9W.He wdasan vedintheNavyduring
dfirs
.ar worthtngtonlnd ...... .. ... :...... 21*
of Nakomls, Fla.; two grandt orce veteran o · or1 War
n. He was a member of the t
sons; and two sisters, VIctoria
II, having served as a B-29 Church of God in New Haven and
RabbldeauofSanJose,Call.,and
bombardier. He was a .member · belonged to American Legion
Grace Carriker of Benton City, of the First United Methodist Smilh.CapebanPost 140.
Veteran• Memorial
Wash.
Church In Athens.
He is survived by his wife, Wilda
Monday Admissions .- · nene
Preceded In death by one ~on
Survivors Include his Wife, L. Brinter, New Haven; two Smith, Pomeroy; Violet Jarrell,
and three sisters.
Lots; a daughter and son·ln-law, daugbten, Katherine L. Stone and Langs~lle; Anna . McFarland,
He was a memberoftheGrace Carol and Bill Ware of Houston, Norma Ann Fzedrico, both of New Haven, W.Va.; Harold ,
united Methodist Church, Morn- Texas; a son and daughter-In- · Fresno, Calif.; one son, James Brannon, Reedsville; Betty
In~ Dawn Lddge No.7, and was a
law, Steve and . Betsy Caul of Brinker, Oaklalld, Calif.; three step- Stover, Dextel'; -!.ut}\er Gillian,
Athens; two other sons, Michael sons, VIJ'Kil M. Weaver, New Pomeroy; Ronald. Carr, Mlddle32nd Degree 'Mason. He served as
Gallla County Scottish Rite Dlof Phoenix, Ariz . and Buzz of Haven, Wlllilm M. Weaver, Mid· port; George Kuhn, Cheshire;
rectorfortheValleyofColumbus
Colu~bus; a stepmother, Mrs. dleport, Ohio, David L. Weaver, Lawrence Klein, Pomeroy; Do·
for a number of years.
Mildred Caul of Jayess, Mlssls· North Little Rock, Artansas; lhRe rothy Sayre, Racine; Cheryl
He Is a member of the Aladdin sippi; lour sisters, Harriett Rob- ·sisters, Vuxinil! B. Roush and Anna Stumbbo, Pomeroy.
· Temple Shrine In Columbus, had
bins of Brookhaven, Mississippi, Fa)'e RouSh, both of New Haven,
Monday Discharges - Wilma
served as membership chairman Joan Givens of Monticello, Mls· and Frances L. Gibbs, Hartford; Coon, Arlie Curtis, Margaret
In 'Gallla County for a number of slsslppl, Yetta England of Har- two brothers, Charles · Homer CurUs, Dana Longstreth.
years and was an Aladdin Am- ltngen,. Texas and M!lry Ann Brinker, Las Vegas, Nevada, Roy r-;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;!iiiiiiiiiiiii
bassador ;' He W!IS past president Wood of Jayess, Mississippi; and W.
· Brinker,
Mason;
six It
of the Gallipolis Shrine Club and
three brothers, Sidney Caul ot grandchildlen,
five
great·
Columbia, Mississippi, Harold grandchildren;
13
stqiChaplain of the club.
He belonged to the Order of Caul of Jayess, Mississippi and grandchildren; seven Step- great·
Eastern Star No. 283 and the Champ Caul of Olive Branch, grandchildren and several niece&amp;
White Shrine of Jeruselum.· He . Mississippi.
and nephews.
was a Kentucky Colonel, a
Services will be 1 p.m. ThursServices will be Thursday ar 1:30
member of !he Hillbilly Degree day at Jagers and Sons Funeral p.m·. at the Foglesong Funenl
andtheYorkRiteBodles.Hewas HomelnAthenswithRev.Dantel Home with the Rev. David Fields
active In all Masonic Kiger .and Rev. Hubert Hunting Jr. officiating. Burial will follow In
organizatlon.s .
both officiating. Friends may ICirkJand MIIIIIOiial Gardens.
Funeral Will be Wednesday 10 call at the funeral home from 2 to
Friends may call on Wednesday
a.m. from Waugh-Halley-Wood,
4and7to9onWednesday. Inlleu from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funenl
Wilen you nHd .11, we'll be
with the Rev. Joe Hefner of flowers, contributions
be home.
·
there ... with pr011pt. eonofficiating.
·
fl~;:;~~~~~~~~~;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~ etmed ins•ranee service. We
always try to ba friends you
to Calllnghour~willbeTuesday6
9 p.m. a1 the funeral home.
ean dtpend on. Call us today.
Masonic services will be 8 p.m.
by Morning Dawn Lodge No. 7.
Saturday, March 19th Onlyl 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
Graveside rites will be In
Beech Cemetery In Clay City,
,
-,..
-,tv•
-"' DISCOUNTS
RNER~
•uranc:.
Bervioea
Ind., Thursday 1 p.m.
WHICH REI YOUI SALIS SUP CAW FOI
In lieu of flowers , donations
may be given to the Shrine
Bargain Rack &amp; 1f2 Price Tabla Ful ·of
Crippled Children's Hospital or
- REFRESHMENTS SERVED
,
214 EAST MAIN
STORE HOUIS: Man. thru Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; S.t. 9 a.m.· I p·.m.
the Shrine Burns Institute In care
of the Gallipolis Shrine Club.

w;:·

1

•

Co•• Jolt The fun •.•
Brl•l the K14t •••

WIN

$100

...

.AN . ~

saL 1oaL JOGL

•rchandi•

POMEROY

992·6687

"OUR PRICE- MOST REASONABLE"

RACINE DEP.
ARTMENTRACINE,
STORE
3RD STREET ..
848·2800
OHIO

State Auto

MASTER CARD - VISA - GOLDI!N BUCKEYE

The American Cancer Society
And .Will Hold A Special One Day Sale!!
All Day Wednesday,·
March) ·16th
.
.

White Bread
20 Ounce loaves

3/Sl
Buttermilk ".IJIIJI.M.. 79C

IN
GROCERIES OR LOnElY TICKETS
With $1 111try dona.tion into raffle

ALL PROCEEDS 10
PLUS WIN Anlont~ Hundreds of Dollars In
Grocerln and luslnen Gifts With $1.00
Donations to A.C.S. lalloon IUI1flll

'

at y

en tine

Pomel'oy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Minch 16. 19S8

2 Sectlono. 14 PagH 2'11 C.nti
A Multimedia Inc, Newapaper ·

Bush easy ·Winner in Dlinois;
Simon·cOps Democrat race

BUSH CONGRATULATED - Vlee Prealdent Gecqe Bub Is
cCmpoatulaled by Dllnola Governor James 'J'hompeon lifter BIUh
defeated Sen. Robert l)ole Tuesday In the Dllnals ·Republican
prellldenllal pr'lmary. (UPI)

CHICAGO (UP!)- VICe Prest!
dent George Bush laid waste to
the White House hopes of R,epubllcan rival Robert Dole with a
landslide win In fllinols, but the
Democratic race grew even
more tangled with Sen. Paul
Slmpp's primary victory In his
home state. ..
Jesse Jackson, the Chicago
civil rights leader, finished behind Simon In Tuesday's voting,
followed by Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Qukakls, who put
$250,000 Into the Land of Lincoln
but was unable to solidify his
national front-runner status.
Bus~·s ~ctory In a state that
Dole said would launch his
post-Super Tuesday political ~c·
overy could sink the cam!Nllgn of
the Senate Republican leader
from Kansas , despite hiS pledge
to press on to Connecticut's
primary March 29 and Wisconsin's April 5.
·
A United Press International
· count of national convention
delegates In the wake of the
Dllnols vote sllo~d Bush picking
up67 of the 82 at staketoboosthls

total to 767, or a full two-thirds of
the 1,139 delegates needed to be
nominated. Dole was gaining
only 15 to raise his total to 179;
with that he would need 960 of the
1,222 delegates yet to be chosen to
deny Bush the nod.
"Who says rilce guys finish
last?" Bush crowed to delirious
supporters at the Rosemont
Expo Center · outside . Chicago
Tuesday night. Flanked by Republican Gov. 'James Thompson,
whose organization was Instrumental In Bush's Sllccess, the
vice president suggested Dole
should not hope for victories
anywhere else.
"It's on to Connecticut; we're
going on Into Wisconsin," he
said. "Wherever there's action,
wherever there's a primary, I
am going to be there."
Simon, whose lack of money
made him skip Super Tuesday's
20 state Democratic contests to
focus exclusively on his home
turf, made a similar victory
p)edge to supporters at a downtown Chicago hotel: "This Is a
new beginning for the Paul

•

~gislature

:P ending bllls move through

. .COLUMBU!!, Ohio (UPI) ·T1te supplemental approprla- ation for vartous programs.
• Tbree .. bii!S provldtna for. faCill· lion W\S·aereed upo11 In a!iVance Each .time, they were beaten
~.~ .tlttt.. ~tl.on i a!l4. a 'small .by maj91'ftY-'"feaderihlp In the 'blck by tbe.ReJIIIbllcans .
a~rlatloitfor addlttoJiaJ.geJi, House.and Senate and the admin- .
'''You'v~ taken · care · o! your
enl apendtnc continued to ad- lstratlon of Gov. Richard
projects, now let us take care o!
vance today In the Oblo General Celeste.
S0171! of ours," said Senate
.Utenl~. ·
Sen.· Stanley Aronoff, R'
Minority Leader Harry Meshel,
'l'he S.nate ·was -to vote on a · Cincinnati, ·chairman ot the FlD-Youngstown, In d~talllng his
$618 million Cl\pltal construction nance Commlttee, said tne addl·
own financial map which showed
plan for 1989·90 and a separate Ilona! spending was . lareely
the state has $31.5 million In
$82 million capital oull·a y for "corrective" In nature to deal
savings to spare, without damagyouth · services, as well as a with Issues not taken care of In
Ing lts ·credlt rating.
distribution formula for $1.2 the 1987 budget.
Among the Democratic
Aronoff said two exceptions
billion In local lm'p rovements
amendments which lost:
bonds authorlzed·by Ohio voters are:
. -$5.1 million to fund National
last November.
-$4.5 million for the Ohio
Guard schola~shlps at 100 per·
Both . the Senate and House Bureau of E11Jploymnent Servl·
cent for fiscal 1989. It failed,
were to rri~ at 1:30 p.m.
ces to prevent the closing of
17-16.
.
Meanwhile, the House Finance additional regional offices be·
-$10 million to fund additional
Committee was to take up a $481 · cause of a shortage of funds .
OBES offices, Including four
million capital reappropriation
-$2 million to permit the state
mobile offices.
and a $14 million supplemental to fully fund Oh1o National Guard
The Democrats also proposed
appropriation adopted by the college scholarships this school
extra s~ndtng for college tuition
Senate' Tuesday.
year, and to fund . them at a 60
grants, safe transportation of
· Lawmakers are' looking to- · ~rcent rate tn flscal1989.
hazardous materials, special ed, ward ,a pre-primary .election
Aronoff said trends show ~tate . ucatlon, pre-natal care and pro·
recess at the end of this week.
revenues declining and expendigrams to com oat abuse of ' the
Majorlty Senate Republicans lures Inching upward. He warned
elderly.
·
brushed aside Democratic sug- against upsetting Oh!o's.dellcate
Aronoff called the . amendgestlons to spend even more In fund balance, which could "send
ments "budget busting."
passing the supplemental appro- . a signal to Wall. Street" to
"We are not trying to bust a
prlatlon, targeted for a House downgrll.de the state's credit
fund balance." replied Meshel.
flOOr vote Thursday. The single rat1n11.
·
"There's more than an adequate
"We are being closely and
260-page bill also contains the '
amount of money. I dOn't think
capital reappropriation - a carefully watched," he said.
this Is pork. It's good old
!'!!Statement of plans to spend
But Qemocrata were In no
American political pie, made
money for projects approved In · mood to heed his advice. ·They · wlth·apples."
1985 but not completed.
spent almost two hours trying to
After the partisan debating,
·
.
add $31.5 million to the approprl·

the s~ndlng bill passed, 30·3.
Celeste said by telephone from
J!owllng Qr~n that he oppo5!!d
funding the National Guard scho·
larshlps by any more than 60
percent un!ler current budget
conditions.
·
•'This meets the realistic needs
for all these (National Guard)
students," said the governor. "It
would be Irresponsible to reward
the Guard for Its lack of fiscal
control."
The Guard went over budget
last year when It exceeded the
maxiiJluin of 3,000 scholarships
at one, time. Language In ·the
supplemental budget spells out
how the scholarship money IS to
be awarded.
The Senate also passed, ~1 ·1, a
major reorganization of the
mechanism- for caring for the
men \ally Ill. That bill also goes to
the House, where It Is expected to
undergo an extensive study.
A year In the making, the
proposal transfers the authority
and financial resources for car'
lng for the mentally Ill from the
state to communities.
Sen. David Hobson, RSprlngfleld, sponsor of the bill,
said more than half the money
for mental health goes to state
Institutions which care for only
one out of every nine people who
are mentally 111.

Gephardt, the E!arly leader by
Slmpn candidacy."
But Illinois Is Simon's only
~rtue of his Feb. 8 Iowa caucus
victory,
now trails with 159
~ctory In the 1988 primary
season and slmllar demonstra·
delegates.
The estimated 2.5 million vo- .
lions of strength are unlikely.
ters who · turned out Tuesday ,
The best the popular freshman
faced a two-part choice for each
senator could hope for Is control
of an Important delegation · party - a "beauty contest" to
express presidential preference
should Democrats convene their
and separate delegate elections
Atlanta national convention In
In congressional districts.
·
July without a prospective
nominee.
With 91 percent of the Illinois
Bush ran away with the GOP
precincts counted early today , popular vote, claiming 54 ~rcent
Simon had 43 percent of the of It with 85 percent of the
Democratic vote to 32 ~rcent for precincts reporting . Dole had
Jackson and 17 ~rcent for only 36 percent and ex-television
Dukakls. Tennessee Sen . Albert evangelist Pat Robertson. who
Gore Jr .. who tried to stretch his has faded alter a disastrous
Southern appeal Into the Indus- Super Tuesday, got only 7 pertrial North, managed only 5 cent. In Chesapeake, Va., Ropercent and Missouri Rep. Rl· bertson vowed to stay In the race.
chard Gephardt, who spent little
Bush's. wide margin over Dole
time In the state, drew 2 percent. was not even as large as
The UPI d.e legate count found pre-primary polls had sugDukakls gaining nothing from gested; some surveys had preIllinois to stay at473- not even a . dieted a 2·1 ratio .. But tlie ~ce
quarter Of the 2,082 needed for president said he was delighted
nomination . Jackson was shown and offered profuse thanks to
picking up 37 to pull closer with Thompson, whose extensive sup462; Gore held steady at 359;
port could gain the governor a
Simon reaped 136 of 'the 173 at Cabinet job In a Bush
stake Tuesday for a total of 169. administration .

SIMON WINS- Sen. PaulSlmoa of DUnols and his wife Jeanne
react to the cheering crowd after be won the DUaols primary
election Tuesday. ( UPI)

-LoCal news briefs'- - Ohio obse~es ag•~iculture .day
Pa.trol probes three ·wrecks

Foodland .King Size .

Clearing tonight. Low Ia
Lower 21)~. Sunny Thunclay ..
Wgha In mid 408.

.•

•

SPRING FLING DAY

YOUR FRIENDLY FOODLAND MARKETS SALUTE:

At All Stores!!!

Page 3

n.J

111

'

FREE
ENTERTAINMENT

Daily Number
. 722
Pick4
6271

'

Hospital news

"We've got a pair of binoculars
with a buzzard painted Inside,"
he said. "So even If you don't see
one, you can still see one."
The flock of 75 to 100 birds
reportedly has returned to the
Hinckley area each March since
1819.
One legend says .there was a
great hunt Dec . 24, 1818, when
farmers set out to kill animals
that had been destroying their ·
crops. The deer, wolves and
bears were herded to an area
near Hinckley Lake, .where they
were slaughtered.
.
The spring' thaw uncovered the
frozen carcasses that attracted
the buzzards, which are not birds
Dr. Paul Caul
of prey, but feed excl uslve ly on
the flesh of animals that already
Dr. David Cll,ul, 66, of Athens,
have been killed.
died unexpectedly early Monday
morning at 0' Bleness Memorial

In Addition To This Week's Mailer Already Loaded With Over One Hundred
Items Full Of Savings, We Are Holding This Special
ONE DAY SALE
Wednesday, March 16th
As We SALUTE The American Cancer
Society With Our Annual GROCER'S
CANCER DAY PROMOTION!!!

Ohio Lottery

1987 Meigs .
health report

Out Cancer ·In Your Lifetimelll

The Gallla·MEilgs Post of the State Highway Patrol
tn\restlgated three accidents Tuesday In Meigs County. There
were no Injuries, howe:ver, three drivers were cited.
Cars driven bY Jessica A.Brandt, 16, Athens, and James
Barton, 3l, Athena, collided at 7:!10 a.m., Tuesday, on.Sr 143, at
the Intersection of CR'1, In Columbia 'IWp. Troopers said the
• collision occurred when Brandt pulled onto
SR 143, cbllldlqwlth the Barton car. Thepatrolclted Brandtfor
Failure to yield the rlght Ol way.
.
.
·
A Galllpollll man was Involved In an accident at 8:40 a.m.
Tuesday on US 33,Just south o! mile post 3 In Bedford Twp. The
pstrolllld Max L.Adldns, 66, of Nelaonvllle, !oat couirol on the
Ice and collided head-on with aliOther vehicle driven by William
J. Devil, Jr.,36, Ga1Upol11. DamapwasmlnortotheAdldnlcar
and heavy to the Davia car. The patrol cited AdkiDB for drlviDi
left of center.
.
&lt;
.
Another accident occurred at 8:!10 a.m. 'l'llesday on us 33, at
mile poa~ 1, In Bedforcl Twp. '~)'!~opera llld.Eva J .Hanlni, 46, of
The Platna, atopped bec!luse of'uolhtr accident. Beblnd ber, a
VUI drive~~ by Gary R.Dagut, Ml, of Lancaater,wu unable. to
stop and 1truck the blck ot the HaniDi car. Dainaae wu mlnor
to Depe'a van and 'm oderate to the Haainl car. The Pttrol
cltl!d Deaue ,for failure to atop Within the auured clear
d!Jtance.

Fire d'amage• Buhan Road home
.

slmday

An electrical fire abnut 6 a.m.
IIIOI'IIInl cauled
~to tbt Ralpll RoaellOIIle 011 !"bin Road. Racine Fire

"*Iiiii

~~
Blth•n FIN l)epartmeat aa tbe call.
Rllcilll ~ Cbllf Huk JoltiloD aalcl tllerewae imolcedamap
to till . , boule, ••IIUJnalld t11e cl!lmqe '' ~.ooo to $3.000.
Continued aa Jlllll 5 · ·

·,
, : er

"Consumer tests have proven
COLUMBUS, OhiQ (UPI)- A
good," he said. "The retailer Is
new potato product drew the
waiting tor II."
largest crowd In the Statehouse
He's -worked to develop a
TuHday where Agriculture Day
market for the product from Ohio
was observed.
to Long Island. His company will
About a dozen COID!l)odlty
have 12 people on the production
groups served omelettes, milk,
cheese, hors d'oeurves, of meat . line at the start, and he ho~s to
add a second shift WI thtn 90 days.
products and cheese on crackers,
''We're starting · With Institu1f8pe Juice, meat balls, turkey
tions first to acquaint people witb
sandwiches, honey aM that new
the product and then they'll be
potato product called Potatoe
asking tor them at their groc·
Nug11eta.
, .
.U tertslators and Statehouse ers," Feeban said, adding that
the nugget Is not expected to be In
employee. sampled foods durltli
the frozen food section o! the
the noon·tlme reception, the
grocery store tor about two
tar1est crowda 1atbered at the
years.
Potato Growers Association
where the polatoe nqpts Wl!re
Ohio potatoes
"We'll bli
as
lOIIi
as
they
are
available,"
fried and served.
F'eelian said.
The potatoe nunet Is a subatl·
tute for trench frtes, home tries, . The potatoe nqll!t can be
hash browns of bald!d potatoes,
filled for brealdaat,Junch'1 dinner
IB)'S Charles Feehan wbo spent or brunch, Feeban aald. And It'•
fCIIII' yeancrutina lhe Item. It'a ll!nerally eaten With the flnpra .
a lbred4ld potato with ollions, ti
For variety, the potatoe nuaet .
!lbout tbe able ol a IIOUp apooa, cu be topped wtl:b ketchup,
alld can bit fried In heated oil or· yogurt, applesauce, jelly, sour
baUd Ill
cream or ayrup.
Tuelday•a lute testa lleemed
· ''We'ftt - - oa tilt ml«oto be favorable.
·
wiYBbllty," IBid 1'11'1111
dell ol tbt fb'lll fa Jcf I
~
''I tltlnk they're taking them
UcJWII COullty, tllat Jqlll to tit .out 011 tile street and aenta
JII'C!duCIIII tilt 1111111'* by tbe t11em." Fatlnan 111d. "'lbey've
nritol.Jua
..... back 10 IIIAQ' tlmel.''
,He ..... to ..,.
Tile C'Oftiii!Odl7 lf.OUPI let up
tllelr d!lpiQ fl. I8JIIplal .to
'

llllna

u_...

·

C

.....,lor .

'·.

observe Ohio Agriculture Day.
Although next week Is Agriculture Week and Agriculture Day Is
March 20, the o~rvanc~ was
pushed up because Ohio leglsla·
tors are taking their spring break
at the end of this week.
"It's like many products - we
take Ohio's agriculture products
for granted," said Connie Cahill,
a consumer marketing consulant
with the Ohio Poultry Assocla·
tlon. "Every once In a while you
have to putlt In front ot people to
make them aware."
Signs proclaiming agriculture
as Ohio's number one Industry
hun; above tbe tables on the edge
of the Rotunda.
One out of every five Ohioans Is
employed In the agricultural
work force. Agriculture accounted for more than $3.6 billion
In cash recelpta last year, ac·
cordtna to ftaures from the Ohio
nt of Aartcult~.
lhlpped nearly a blllton
dollars worth of agriculture farm
commodltlet to other countries
last year, with Japan be!Di the
leadln&amp; buyer of American food
and ftber.
Ohio Poultry Aaaoclatlon repreaentatlv~s
whipped up
omelettal and the Ohio Grape
Grower• .UaoclaUon poured
. cupa ot aparklllllll'lpe juice.

APPOINTED TO POST -

Cheryl A. Reub baa been
appoilded cllreetor ol f!aaaclal '
alii at ltlo Grllllde Coltp 811111
CanuallllitJ Collep. 1111e 11M
beell empla,H aa a aoa&amp;
81181Ja&amp;torth..._,Ma•nJ
Ql....... llle ....... , . . .
... lll'"IOiii!J ltad . . . plosiiiC 11r llle nlap m
IIIII I MCD:ala NOiheallle

clutla tileD ..........
r.

....._ a h$rlu It Ml

a._•

~esre;•c•nu'
na 1 Jollep. A mttve

If
...... Cll 1), . . . . . . . . .
- - - · Dell, nil tlletr

:&amp;:,:~ AmJ,
.... ... ... . . .

I

...

In

�'.

..
•

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Comment
The Daily Sentinel
lH Court Strefl

Po..-ero;r, Ohio ·

DEVOTED TO TilE INTEBE8'1'8 OF TilE MEIGS-MMQN AREA

~~
~v

.......... ~.,..,,.,._o::::l,..

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIIITEJIEAD
Avhteet Publlaber/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Maaapr

A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Auoclatlon and .the American Newspaper .Publishers Assoclallon.
· LE'M'ERS OF OPIN!ON are welcome. They should 1M! iOSI than 3110 words
klllc· All letters are subJect to editing and must be staneel wtth naine, address and
. teleploone number. No unslped Iotters wUI bo published. Letters should 1M! In

aood tute. addressing issues, not penonalltles.

·Letters to the editor
ThankS, folks!
support whether you worked or
Dear Sir:
We would like to take a · purchased a ticket. To be at such
an offbeat time of the year we
momen\ of your time to say thank
had lots of support. Again thankyou: to everyone who helped to
.
.make our annual Turkey Supper . lng everyon~.
Rutland Vol. Fire Dept.
a success. We .appreciate your

Meigs needs 80mething long tenn ·
The Panamanians were out

Page 2-The Dailv Sentinel ; .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednnjley, March 18, 1988

General tries to save B-52s
WASHINGTON - Later this
year ln Western :Europe, B-52
bom~rs that are part of the U.S.
Strategic Air Command will participate In the largest exercise In
decades - an· exercise to prove
to the Pentagon that the planes
are not ready for the scrap beap.
. Sources at the Pentagon tell us
that the exercise. to take place In
the summer or fall, demonstrates just how determined SAC
Commander Gen. John Chain Is
to find a "ronventlonal warfare"
niche for his strategic bombers
when the Intermediate-range nuclear force treaty ell,mlnates nuclear missiles In Eastern and
Western Europe;
Chain has been pressing to keep
older B-52G models In the Inventory welliDto the 1990s to give the
· North Atlantic Treaty Organization a conventlnal pwich. The
planes are the only ones now In
American service with pilots who
·can boast that their fathers also
flew them.
Chain and other Pentagon stra,
teglsts figure that strategic assets
like the B-52 bombers should be
tonverted to conventional warfare
Uses with the signing of the INF
treaty that eliminates · their nu·
clear function.
The B·52s - none of which Is

leaa than 26 years old - are destined for the.Julllt pile otbei'Wise,
with the coming on ofthe new B-1
strategic bomber fleet. About 160
B·52G models will be retired In
the early 1990s and the ·remainlng 95H models will be retired
several years later when the new
Stealth Bombers 11re expected to
come on line.
Faced with the possibility,
Chain has been persistently needUng the Pentagon's top brass to
use these older models as con·
ventlonal bombers armed with
sophisticated, long-range, slandoff weapons tbat could be moved
forward In an emergency.
Hanging on to these sentlmen·
tal favorites will no be . cheap.
Chain has estimated the cost of
$3 billion over five · years
malntalnte fleet for such a purpose.
·
·
Israel, of all counb1es,ls the key
to revltallzlng the B-52&amp;. The Is·
raells have a missile that Chain
thinks would be Ideal for the bom·.
again B-52s. It's called "HAVE
NAP" In Pentagon coding, but the
Israelis call the air·launched, ian,
d-atlack missile the "P11peye."
Developed ·by Israel's Rafael
Industries and America's "Mar·
_tin Marietta Corp., It locates Its
target through use of a TV ca·

:to

mera In the nose. The mlaalle has tiona! role fo~ the B·52!1. With !
a r!lnge In excess of 50 miles, their retirement, many pilots . ,
which makes It only an Interim . would lose thler Jobs. All' Force ·
· . solution In Chain's plan, since he pljot slots. would shrink to an
eventually wants new, highly ac- overall total bomber ·neet of 23l , ·
curate, precision-guided munl· planes.
•
lions wltll range of up to 200
Chain wold like to keep both :
miles.
the air power and tlie jobs ..,
The Air Force Is already plan·
· JUMPING JOBS- White House · •
nlng to buy up to 300 Popeye mls· staffers know their numbers wW be
sUes $8 million this yef!r.
up when Ronald Reiipn leaves of- . •
. Chain's concept has not been flee next January and they are ~!
approved at the highest levels or scramblln&amp; to find new Jobs. One . ~
the Pentagon. The top brass staff'who wants to Jump to
l
· ·needs to see some proof soon to government department has .con.. •
buy Into the Idea. Hence, the ex· sumer group scratching their l
. erclse In Europe.
·
heads. Susari PhllUps IJ.nowtheas-.,.l
Our sources say that, for the soelate director of the Whl~ House · l
time being, SAC's Elg!tth Air Otfl~ of Presidential Personnel. ;!
Force planes will go to bases In . But Reagan has nominated her to · •
Western Europe, probably 1n · nu a seat on the Federal Trade
· Great Britain and Italy. Some Commission - the agency In ,•.
will be deployed around the . charge or ·enforcing laws that pl'()o )
United States for night-flying II!Ct consllll'lm!. ··
and low-level operations.
Every FTC commissioner lri
The last major deployment of recent years has been a laWyer
heavy U.S. bombers to Europe or economist. Phillips' resume
was In 1948 during the Berlin says that before she came to
block&amp;df!!. That was no exercise. Was~lngton, she was a. School·
The U.S. nuclear-armed bomb· . tee her and a self-employed lab·
ers were sent to Britain to pro· ric representative. Then · she &gt;
vide defense force as smaller worked at her brother's 'conser· _.:
planes new an airlift of supplies · vatlve think tank In Washington. ·
Into Berlin.
.
The While House says she Is Chain has more than one rea· qualified for the FTC job because ;;
son to pUsh · tor. a new conven- ·of her background In textiles, a •
"regulated Industry." . ·

By S~rah Overstreet:

.

'fe

FASHION AND .

Whether you dress it up or
d(JNn, Naturalizer's ~tile shoe is
tailored Ia go with whatever you
wear. Fresh styling, comfort. and erose
attention to iletail make it a lashion
lavorita ln.

NATURALIZEit

• • IUCI,
ai&amp;IIIY

WEEKEND SPHIAL
ALl fiAMALIZDS

20-fo OFF TilL, Fll. &amp; SAl.

1987 Meigs County Health Department repol1
Vital statistics

POIIIIOY'S QIAUYY SIIOI ST.

r
I

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:
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177.

Conduct several inspections

EMPLOYEES - These .are the Melp County Board of Health
· Employees working Ia varlaus fields of endeavor with the Melp
County De.,..-tment of Health. They are. front, I tor, Rita Fteldll,
social work field Jntem student; Kennlt Waltoll, RS, sanitarian I;
Norma Torres, R.N., nursing director; Sue TIDIII, R.N., aulstant
nursing supervlllor; Pearl Scott, deputy clerk-registrar; baek, I to

Cancer ·
report

Inspections by the environ· grounds.
Numerous inspections were
mental health section of the
Meigs Copunty Health Depart· made at the various schools of all
ment continue to increase with three districts in the county.
Also approximately 112 re- . :
the largest Increase being In the
food service arEa, Section Direc- quests for testing of private ;
tor and Sanitarian II Keith R. water systems were te- celved. ;
This number does not Include any
Ll tile reports.
of
the numerous resamples
The 114 food service esta.bllshments had 165 Inspections: 42 which were performed. If the
permits fo.r new private water original water test came back as
systems were Issued and 114 unsafe.
Overall, the area of environprivate sewage system permits
mental health In Meigs Counrty . ' •
were issued In 1987.
There were · 54 animal bites seems to be Improving as each· ;_ _
Investigated with approximately calendar year passes, the depart-,:
ment reports. The CO!Itlnued ·
90 percent of those reported
being dogs. Little notes that the support and coooperation of the
county dog warden's office has citizens of Meigs County Is a very
important factor for the contln·
been very helpful In this area.
ual upgrading and improvement
Quarterly Inspections were
•
of
the environment in whiCh they
done at the Meigs County San!·
live, according to the,. .
tary Landfill and also at the two
.
landfills owned and operated by department.
Personnel In the envlronmen·. :
the Soutern Ohio Coal Co.
tal health section Includes Little; :·
Semi-annual Inspections were
Jon D. Jacobs, sanitarian- ,
conducted at various licensed
admlnlstratorKermltL. Walton.,,
trailer parks and seasonal health
sanitarian I, and Joseph Young, ;
and safety inspections were
s.a nltarlail · I and assistant' ·
conducted at all licensed recrea·
administrator.
,, .
lion vehicles. parks and camp·

a

. r, . Joe Young, RS, admlnlatratlve assistant; Jon· Jacobs, RS,
admlnlatrator and deputy health commissioner; Keith I.Jttle, RS,
director of environmental health; Nancy Bass, R.N., public health
- nurse; Carol Guinther, health check clerk; Edwina Scott, nursing
clerk; Faye Shultz and Jackie Hildebrand, Green Thumb workers.
Not present was Mary Dunt, Green Thumb worker.

4

I recently spent an evj!nlng
with about forty people - all
~~~ere liVIng \l{lth cancer or had a
loved one with II. They belonged
to a support organization called
"Make Today Count." I wen\ to
talk and teach - . Instead I
listened and learned. Every
'p erson there was Jiving with
cancer - no dying with It but
living. Most of , them had ac·
. cepted their cancers ·and were
maintaining control over their
own lives. They weren't feeling
helpless and alone. They were
happy and determined to live
each day to the fullest.
The most frequent complaint I
heard that night was "my doc!or
won't talk wtth me." These
people want to know where
they're headed -what to expect.
The unknown Is lar more fright·
eniDg than reality. They want
reassurance that their doctors
will be sepsltive to thfllr 1\eeds In
the m·o nths ahead. Unfortu·
nately, many were having trou·
· ble getting the Information they
~!~[_ant
from their physicians.
Today we'll look at ways to help
you get-the Information you want
wh~ you visit your doctor.
. First, be realistic In your
expectations. No doctor' ~an tell
you how well you will do.or how
long you , Will Jive. We can't tell
you when and where your cancer
may turn up next. However, we
can tell you what happens most
commonly - what happens with
the "average patient" who has
similar circumstances. Some of
· ypu will do better than averagesome worse. Knowing the aver·
age helps you approach your·llfe
r~allstlcally.
,
·
, One gentleman at the meeting I
altended told this story. Last
Spring he visited his doctor and
asked how much longer he had to
live .' He was told "three
months .l' He accepted this fact
and began to make preparations
f(lr his death. Among other
things, he gave away his Winter
coat. Nine months later, when
Winter returned, be returned to
his doctor. "You owe mea Winter
Cpat." He laughed as he told the
s~ry. ,tj:e Is doing better than
averaget;
,To get the Information you
need from your doctor you must
also be .assertive. You must let
ypur doctor know that you need
time to talk about your situation.
Y:ou need more than an exam and
a: prescription. You need to talk
and ·ask questions.
Write down your que,stlons Insist that you get answers. One
young man at the "Make Today
Count" meetlni told about his
el"perlence with one doctor. He .
notlceil that at each visit the
dbctor would stand at the door
with his hand oa the doorknob. At
the first pause In tlie dlacuaslonl
the doctor was "out the door." AI
his laat vlalt, after the docto~
entered \11¥ room, the YC!UDg man
"~lid a chair In front or the door
and sat down.'' He' aot to talk to
his doctor and then he found a
new one - "one who was wllllnll
to talk.'' Doctors may be busy
a lid Important, but no one Ia more
Important than you. 1
Once you have asked a question, listen to the answer. Too
often, wlten I belin to explain to
someone the treatment that }
recommend, they WID Interrupt
me In mM · aen~ ~ uy
10methlnllllke "my other doctor
said allrltl')' couldn't be done."
Listen to tht auwer, then begin a
dlalope u..t expreuet your ·

eon~ takbit

CHAPMAN .S HOES

tion, congestive heart failure and
arteriosclerosis, 34; cancer, 26;
respiratory failure, 15: pneumo·
nla. 10; renal failure, seven;
stroke, seven; cerebrovascular
accidents, ·five ; accident, five;
shock, three: suicide, three;
sudden Infant death syndrome,
two; one each for diabetes,
.emphysema, homicide, mll!lul·
lary paralysis, multiple lllYe·
· lorna, multi sy$tem failure, ruptured abdominal aortic
aneurysm, sepsis from urinary
tract Infection, septicemia, and
ventricular fibrillation. Total,

Issued - a _ total of 1,201
certificates and permits lnclud·
lng 969 birth and de.a th certlfl·
cates; 198 burial-transit permits; 1 dislnternment,. and 33
veterans copies.
.
· Recorded - A total of 197
births, deaths and certiflca tes of
service Including three births,
177 deaths, 16 certificates of
service and one foundling report.
Death causes for people dying
In Meigs County:
CardJo pulmonary or l'esplra·
tory arrest or cardiovascular
collapse, 52; myocardial infarc·

i:

Decision
seems -sound ___
.

Against S-1009 BiD

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

another:

Today;in history '·

..·..

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.
By Jack Andersoq:
and Dale Van Atta ·

splendid little operation. It was a
.
....:;;._-~::....__---~.::....:.:..:...::.:..:..
clean, non-polluting plant using
· Panama waving their social agricultural products. Smuckers
While the Sterns and Mary
confused with the practice or '~
In analys!s. tbe decision of thj! baby at blrtli.
security checks around. Thanks make jellies and things like that
The
New
Jersey
high
court
·
were
braBeth
Whitehead-Gould
New
Jersey
Supreme
Court,
sellln&amp;
a womb and an egg for
io Jimmy Carter we paid Pa· and Itis no piker. I don't think the
profit.
·
· '
that
the
Incidences
of
conclude4
wling
over
legal
p~enthood
of
the
Baby
M
case
which
reviewed
nama to take the Canal off our government put Smuckers there
Baby M In New Jersey, a and struck down s~ch contracts, surrogacy will be few, where
· Take away the profit m~;~tlve, ·
hands and set up a drug running and the government Is not going
money
Is
not
the
motivation.
drama
was
playing
touching
and
surrogate. motherhood will '!
seems
sound.
The
court
defined
dictator.
to make Meigs County prosperT!!$t·tube
fertilization
Is
a
.
Itself
out
in
South
Africa.
agreements
as
"the
sale
or'
.
these
assume
Its proper plaee In a . ; ·
If a Palestinian state Is ever ous either.
precious
gift
to'
thOSe
who
canna!
Pat
Anthony,
a
48-year·old
st)!;lety
child."
They
·
did
not
ban
where
Jltts or love ..-.. a.s ;
a
formed the United States will
What we are getting the
beat
cltllaren
normally.
There
Is
grandmother,
was
going
through
old
as
mankind
Itself - · and ':
voluntary contracts, but gliaran·
likely bribe the hostile people of existi!lg on largely In Meigs
nothing
evil
in
the
miracle
grueling
experience
o!
carrythe
modern
medical
miracles are · '
a
mother's
rights
and
teed
that region to let It be brought County are handouts from the
medical
sCience
can
give
child·
Ing
the
beating
triplets
a
tall
two of the great benefits of being • '
Included an "escape clause" for
about. We will likely pay for the socialistic do·gooders who make
.
;
order, even for a 20-year·old her. · Fair. King Solomon would . less couples, and lt should not be alive today.
land and pay mO¥Y to support It popular and profitable to loaf
not for herself, but for her barren have approved.
the Palestinians. That IS-the way or be a hack and live off a dole or
daughter.
The children · 'were
There Is every reason for
this country thinks.
some kind of bureaucratic job.
in
a
·
test
tube
and
conceived
who can bear a child to
someone
The Dally Sentinel had big
When Inflation and wholesale
' i
In
Anthony's
own
Implanted
h11ve
a
baby
for someone who
headlines about the capital lm· prices are going down, why are
By United Press International '
.
womb. It was a great risk to her can't - if that inotberhood Is a
provements that Meigs County Is the minimum wage, postal rates,
·
Today
Is
Wednesday,
March
16,
the
76th
day
of
1988
with. 290 to i
own
health,
a
sacrifice
only
·
~t
to
a
loved
one.
And
there
Is
going to get. "A commitment
Insurance premiums, etc. going
follow.
.
·· ,
someone
who
has
loved
another
evenr
reason
to
give
the
right
of
.
promoting jobs It reads". What is up?
The moon is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
.
deeply could understand. P.eopll! , ·reScission .- to a mother who
there to brag about? This
"We are nearing the end of an
The
morning
stars
are
Mercury,
Mars
and
S;llurn.
'•
all
over
the
world
watched
out
In
good
faith,
but
started
amounts to a little political · era In this country". When a
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter . .
veneer. Those kinds of jobs are polltican can vote himself a . spellbound and l,Qved Pat found her feelings for the child
A thought for the day: Astrollaut Nell Armstrong said as he became
Anthony.
·
.
'
she carried stronger tha'l her
· not productive over the long run.
subsidy any budget can be
the
first person to set foot on the moon, •'That's one·small step for a ' •
For those of us whci ha11e h~d a: original resolve to give up the
Meigs County needs something broken.
man,
one giant leap for mankind."
· · ·
hard time crys~llzmg our feel·
long term that will add to the
.
-,
I believe somebody Is running
ings about_ surrogacy, the two
quality of life, not just a political
for president of tlie republic. I
event~
couldn't have happened at
shot In the arm.
think I saw somethlng , to that
a better time.' There, played out
We were recently at Orville, In effect on television .
Wayne County, Ohio and visited
Gayle Price for the world to see, were two
very different eXB.mples of an
the Smuckers plant there. What a
ethical d)lemma making frontpage headlines: babies carried
and borne by ' mothers who had
••
agreed · not to keep the babies
•
alter their births. Surrogate .
If this was an Inconvenience, · motherhood. The differences
: on December 7, 1941, while
~lr envoys talked ·peace. the what of the soldiers of WWII? We
were;baslcally two: In the Baby
Japanese, by a sneak attack on were taken froin our homes and M case, the baby was the natural
sent half way around the world to child of the mother who bore her·
~earl Harbor threw us Into a war
did not want and were a long fight and die. Our homes were in ,the other. the baby was th~
ways from being prepared for.
broken and lost alo'rt'g with our natural child of another mother.
: ·F eelings ran high against the jobs, and If we were killed our And In one case, the carrying. of
survivors got $10,000. If we lived the child was per a contract tor
~panese. and In an effort to
we got $300.00 at $100.00 a month money; In the other, It . was ·
~~~:otect the West Coast and to
protect them, a group of Japa· and a pat on the back If we were purely a glff or Jove.
·
mise Americans on the West lucky.
In retrospect, ·Only one of those
I .can only wonder how much dl!ferences seems .crucial: the
Coast were moved to camps
away from the coast, this after flack, mortar, artillery and exchange ol money. In reviewing
many of them headed their cars small arms fire Sens. Glenn and the several cases of surrogacy
oilt to sea at night with their head Metzembaum ever faced.
where close relatives or friends
I wonder also If they have given offered to. carry a child for a
lllhts on when the west coast was
any thought to how much ·they · barren woman - whether or not'
to; be blacked out.
: Now. Senators Metzenbaum might owe our own American the surroga ie was also the
apd Glenn are co-sponsors to a Indians, the Negroes who were natural mot!ter - there have
bill (S 1009) to pay each of these brought here against their will. been no.Jater disputes over legal
people or their heirs $20.000, · and the Mexicans.
parenthood. Those surrogates
Action Is supposed to be taken
dollars each for this alleged
who bear babies as gilts, without
on this bill In April 1988, accord·
laconvenience. .
compensailon, seem sure of their
; irhese people ate three meals a ing to a spokesman in Sen.
original d~lslons . They are
&lt;illY and had a roof over their Glenn's office.
psycho~oglcally content to give
Jieads, at the taxpayers expense,
VOtf!!rs or America, we must
tbe baby to the loved ones after
and. most importantly, no one not let this bill S1009 pass. The birth. In paid surrogacy, many
time to stop it Is now.
was shooting at them.
mothers have had a change of
Richard L. Coleman heart after birth. They want their
'l'hese payments would run Into
37070 Bashan Road
billions of dollars, Mine and
babies, no matter what a legal ·
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743 contract says.
Y()urs.

60,000 strong In the streets of

Wednelday, MM:h 16, 19aS

~pe

re-

=wr·~nt.It's
·~tvery·

cllx!tor ..,_ dutllt a
...U 11our Ill c•••· I nutlllely

2,777

J;

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WJC - These are alaU meJIIben who handle
WJC program operatlou of the Meigs County
nepattmeat of Health and Include: front, I to r,
Norma Torres, health professional and fiscal
director; DorothY Btme, ADP coordinator; baek,
1 to r, Debra Babblt, R.N. WIC director. and

'1""7".\

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.Margie Blake, R.N., program health professional. Not present was Carol Tannehill, director
of children and family health services. Liz
Ayres-Thoren works In chlldrev's services with
the health deparlment.

re~iden~ immunized in
•

1987
•

•

visits while 2,304 people visited ,J
the Meigs County Health Depart- .·.
ment and Hearing Department.;.
With Mrs. Susie Heines serving
as coordinator of that activity . .. .
Health eduacatlon classes .. .
were held in numerous locations . ;
including nuritrltion and weight . ,
control subjects with 335 peop]e , .
attending. Jackie Starcher was-, .
the instructor for the weight. •.
control classes and Norma . ;
Torres, R. N., was Instructor for •. •
the health education classes.
.·,
In addition, health department •·;
personnel attended health· ;,
related seminars for continuing .
education.
,.
Nursing personnel are Norma .. •
(Continued on Pap I)

During the Meigs County
Health Department's clinics In
19B7, there were 2,77.71mmunlza·
lions given: 64 people were
treated for othopedlc problems
(bones and muscles) ; 20 for
neurological problems (seizures,
etc.) In addition 133 were treated
at the well child ctnlcs; 390 lor
ears and eyes, 380forSTP: 12for
plastic and SO for the Head Start
Program.
Prenatal and family planning
of the department hac! 675 visits,
Including physical· exams, by
attending physician. Dr . Wilma
Mansfield. and the necessary lab
work and counseling were
·
handled.
The WIC department had 1,042

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COMMISSIONER- Dr. Mar-

The Daily Sentinel '·

gie .La-, Raclae, DDS.
aerves as health conun1881oner
for the Melp County ~
ment or Healdl.

tape record first visits with
patients In my office and give
tbem the tape to take home.
Some pattents' don't hear anything after they hear the word
cancer. The .tape allowa them to
listen to the discussion at home
when they're less tense and
anxloua. And you'd be surprised
at how honest your doctor will be
If you are recording the visit.
I am convinced that the lll'llat
maJority of people with caiiCII'
live more peacetuUy when they
kllow tbe truth - when they are
deallnr With reality. You must
rely on your doctor to provide you
with the Information y~ ~.
Be reallatlc, aaentve, and atten·
tlveand cbancesareyou won'tbe
11f1.n1 "my doctor won't talk
wllh me''.
I WID! to deal with IIIUel that
concern you. Your comments
81111 •tlllttou are encouraged.
Pleuii llllll tblm to m. ID care of
IIIII IWW8piper.
I

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publlshlng Compsny/ Multlmedla, lac.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!16. Second class postage paid at Potneroy.
Ohio.

WANT ADS
Vacation Money

J'RE..NATAL - Worldag wltll lbe pre-natal· Yvonne Brown, project, nurle; standing, lon
- · famU, rl•111lng dlvlalon of the Melp County Jacobs, fiscal dlreclor and health departmen*
Departmeat of Health are, aea&amp;ed, llo r, Pbyllfll administrator.
Bearlul, woman's health care tecbnlelan, and

for
No.

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and related mat·
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1988 at aty Council

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Wadnn lay. Mpdl 11. 1988t

Mlddla!lGft, Ohio

Put·due favored
in NCAA opener
SOUTif BEND, Ind. (UPI) Among his trend-aettlq accompllsbmimta, ,legeadary. football
coach Knute Rocke Ia credited
with always bemoanln&amp; · hll
teams while elevating the ablll·
ties of the opposition.
Coaches coming to South Bend
for the first round of NCAA
tournament have taken · up the
art.
" l really don't see any weaknesses," Purdue Coach Gene
Keady said of 16th·seeded
Falrlelgh·Oicklnson. ''They are
one of the quickest teams In the
tournament and they'll be hard to

MIDWEST
Pontile.
licllipa
lllrdl 251 27

1-------,

KIIW City
lissouri
April2

II.RIII City
llnouri
Aprll4

Ka-City
IIIIOUri

cover."'

~112

Flrst·seeded Pllrdue, 27-3, was
the Big 10 regular-season champ,
Is ranked tblrd ~tlonalty , has
two All·Big Ten flrst·teamers,
one each on ·!he second and third
tea!IIS and the Big Ten Coach of
the Year. That doesn't matter
accoldlng to Keady, whose Bol·
lermakers, 24.5 polnt·favorltes
over the 23-6 Knights, are 2·5 In
their last five tournament

SOUTHEAST
lirllin&amp;N•.

East Rutllerlord,
lew Jtrsoy
lllrch 24 &amp; 26

AlaliiN
. .ch 24 ' ...:26;..___,--f

1--.....;;;;;;-"1

1888 NCAA PAIRINGS -

.

The palrlnp for the 1988 NCAA Dlvlslonlmen'sbasketballchampto..a..lpareshownbelow.(UPI)

Bottar and Madsen co-players of year
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS- Holly Bottar of
VIenna Mathews and Carol Mad·
sen of ClnciMa t1 Reading head
the ·1988 United Press Interna·
tlonal Division Ill girls all·Ohlo
basketball team.
Bottar and Madsen, both multi·
talented athletes, were selected
co-players of the year In balloting
by Division III coaches from
around the state.
·
Joining Madsen and Bottar on
the Division Ill all·Ohlo first
team were Andrea Clark of
Castalia Margaretta, Shelly Sa n·
tlnl of Belmont Union Local and
Stacy Nledbalsk;l of Genoa.
Madsen, a 6·foot point guard
and the only junior on the first
team, averaged 22.5 points, 9.2
rebounds and 8.5 assists the past
season for Re;~ding Coach Chuck
Mason. She shot 80.5 percent
from the free throw line and 42
percent from 3·polnt range, hit·
ting 55 on the season.
"She' s 'got a lot of natural

i,OOO career points.
talent, which Is obvious," said she's "too unselfish."
Ironically, although from oppo· "Everybody talks about her
Mason, "but she got where she _Is
site ends of the state, Madsen and
now because she works hard. She scoring," said Mason, "but I
really loves the game and she think her passing Is the strongest Bottar ar:e friends , having met
made a total commitment to It part of her game. She has the last summer at a basketball
· ability to see the noor and hit the camp.
this year.
Santini, a 5·fOOt·7 senior led the
"She' s a world class softball open girl. She Is very unselfish,
first
team In scoring, averaging
player, bot she didn't play any maybe too unselfish at times."
25.6
I!Oints
per game, while the
The 5-!oot·9 Bot tat averaged 19
big time .;o!tballlast summer,"
6-foot Nledbalskl, another.senior,
.added Mason. ''She concentrated points and 8.5 rebounds as a
on basketball and I think that shooting guard ·on Mathews' · averaged 24 points and Carter, a
made the difference between last unbeaten state tournament· 5-foot-10 senior, averaged 20.4.
Heading the second team was
bound team, which has three
year and this year."
Utica's 5-foot-10 Amy Cherubini.
Mason. who has been coac bing other players averaging In dou·
Joining her were 5·fOOt·3 Jlna
· bOys and girls basketball in the ble figures.
Skinner of Beverly Fort Frye,
" She's just a natural athlete, a
ClncJnnati area for20 years, calls
5-foot·7 Jul)e Felch! of Wellsville,
Madsen "the best I've seen," an complete player," Mathews
5-foot·9
Lori Williams of Stewart
Coach
Dennis
Holmes
said
of
opinion shared l!Y other Queen
Federal
Hocking, the only junior
Bottar, a four·year starter on a
City coaches.
on
the
squad,
and 5-!oot-lOTracy
team that has won 61 consecutive
Krueger of Cincinnati Wyoming.
"With her knowledge of the regular season games.
Named to the third team were
"She can shoot the jump shot,
game, it's like having a coach on
j unlors Annette Bergman of
the court," said Mason. "I know she can handle the ball and she's
a lot of coaches say that, but I a strong rebounder ," Holmes Sherwood Fairview and Andrea
Smythe of CAPE ·and seniors
·
mean it. When I call a time out, I added.
Botlar, who also stars In Amy · Majoy of Huron, Trlcla
usually talk to her before I talk to
Myers of Elmwood and Jeanna
anybody· else. It makes a diller· volleyball and softball at Ma·
ence in the decisions I make."
thews, plays on a team with.two Rex of Louisville Aquinas.
If Madsen has a fault, It maybe other players with more than

.Gi,ls state tournament begins Thursday
won 61 consecutive regular sea·
By GENE CADDES
son
games, going 20.0 each of the
UPI Spo~ Writer
last
three seasons with their run
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
and
gun attack. They outscored
When Dennis Holmes got the job
opponents this season by an
as girls head basketball coach at
average of 42 points per game,
VIenna Mathews four years ago ,
78·36.
.he ·SUspects he was the ·only
person who wanted the job.
Tha t , as it turns out. was his
" We 'll be pressing and run·
good fortune, because a trio of nlng;" Holmes 's aid of his' game
young players. Including UPI
plan against Coldwater, a team
Division III co·player of the year with a similar style. "We try to
Holly Bot tar, have led the Lady
run our offense off our defense. If
Mus tangs to an 85-10 'record In
those four years and into this
weeke nd 's 13th girls state high
school tournament at St. John
Arena .
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
" How's that for a team to luck . (UPI) - Gene Keady, who
into," said Holmes, whose Mus· ' guided Purdue totheBigTentltle
ta ngs (25·0) take on Coldwater
and a top seed In the NCAA
(22·3\ Friday a t 4 p.m . In the
tournament, was named UPI Big
second Division Ill semifinal
Ten basketball Coach of the
game . Bellville Clear Fork (19·5)
Year.
and Utica 124·2 ) meet In the other
Tuesday's announcement
Division III semi at 2 p.m.
marked the second time Keady
Actually, Holmes, a former
has earned the honor, deter·
as sistant boys coach at Kinsman
mined by a vote of conference
Badger, didn't take the Mathews coaches. The eighth·year BOiler·
job completely blind.
maker coach also earned the
" I saw them (Hollar, 6·foot·3 award In 1984, when Purdue
Judy Santiago a nd 5·foot·7 Dl· shared the Big Ten title.
anne Rallpach) when they were
The thlrd·ranked Boilermak·
seventh graders and they were ers, 27·3 overall, WO!I the Big Ten
unbea ten as eighth gr aders, "
championship outright for the
said the 3o.year-old Holmes. " I
first time since 1969. They open
got hired at Mathews as a math NCAA tournament play Thurs·
teacher and they wanted a coach, day at South Bend against
so I applied . !think I was the only Fairleigh Dickenson.
one who did."
"It 's a great, great honor to be
Holmes' Lady Musta ngs have selected by your fellow coaches
as coach of the year," Keady
said. " But as far as I'm con·
cerned, this Is an honor that
belongs to my entire staff as well
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) as my wife Pat. My staff worked
Karen Wittrock, who guided
tremendously hard and has done
ROCky River Lutheran West to an
a great job. My wife has been
unbeaten regular season and a
v e ry s upportive and
No. 1 rating, has been voted the
understanding.
United ·press International Dlv·
islon Ill girls coach of the year.
Wittrock earned the honor In
balloting by Division III coaches ·
from around the state over Don
Strahler of Beverly Fort Frye
and Dennis Holmes of VIenna
Mathews.
Wittrock received 7 of the 37
votes cast, while Strahler and
HolmeS. both of whom also had
20.0 regular seasons, got 5.
Others with more than one vote
were Chuck Mason of Cincinnati
ReadiJII, Dan EngUsh of Sher·
wood Fairview and David Camp
of WeUiq1on alld Rlcbard Kiser
on:utem (BI'OWII) ·

we get a steal, yo.u 'll see us turn
around and take It right back the
other way.
"We're very aggressive If we
play like we' re supposed to," he
added. "But, they may be a little
tentative down there (St. John).
I've seen a lot of teams go down
there and get shook.
"We played a game In the
(Richfield) Coliseum this year,
just to experience the big floor In
case we would get there, We're

Keady top Big 10 cage coach

Wittrock top coach

hoping that will help out some."
The 5-!oot·9 Hattar leads the
team In scoring, averaglng19per
game and has over 1,200 points In
her car!!fr. Rappach, the team's
point guard, averaging 16.7, and
Santiago, at 15.5, .also have
scored over 1,000 career points.
The tournament, ~U:st under
the new four division format,
gets under way Thursday at 2
p.m. with East Cleveland Shaw
( 22·3) going against North Canton GlenOak (23·2) In the llrst·
Division I semifinal game. The
second matches Upper Arlington
(24·2) and Cincinnati Seton (24·1) .
at 4 p.m . Seton Is led by
co·players of the year Mary
Keller and Janet H9rg.
Thursday at 7 p.m., former
champ Mansfield St. Peter's
(23·2) meets South Charleston
Southeastern (25-0) In one Dlvlslon IV semifinal, while No. 1
ranked Kalida (2li4l) takes on
another former champ, Zanes·
ville Rosecrans ( IG-IO) ' at 9 p.m.
The other semifinals, In Dlv·
Islon II, are at 7 and9 p.m . Friday
night. They match Thornville
Sheridan (19·7.) against Byesville
Mtllldowbrook (22·3) In the first
game and Akron Hoban &lt;20·6 &gt;
against Celina . &lt;18·8) In the
nightcap.
·
The four championship games
· will be played on Saturday Division I at10a.m.·, Division IV
at 1: 45 p.m.; Division Ill at 5: 30

FDU Coach Tom Green, who Is
taking the ECAC Metro champs
tp only their second tournament
appearance, ·said "panic" Is the
best word to describe his
feelings.
. After . watching five Purdue
games on tape, "I am thl.nklna of
going on vacation this week,"
Green said. "I feel like an
expectant mother stuck In the
Lincoln Tunnel at rush hour."
To counter the Intimidation
factor 1 " Wealreadywentoutand
bought new uniforms that say
'Oklahoma' on them," Green

.,...

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only altout ont·tlinl of
othtr marinas.

C••••••re Sw I

c.l
Jellll
for fwll11r ..hr••tl••

61 ·446·0175

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"They have an outstanding
three-point shooter In (Tim)
Legler, wlio seems to be their
WUI Scott. Thelt point guard,
(Rich) Tarr seems· to be vecy
slmUar to our Steven He111011 and
certainly (LaSalle's Lionel) Slm·
mons and (Kansas State's Mitch)
Richmond are the two guys these
teams rely on to carry the bolk of
the load," Kruger said. '·'I've
talked to a number of coaches
and other basketball authorltlea
who tell us that LaSalle will be a
handful." '

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A SoU .Fertility Letter Study Course Is being o!fered by' the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service. The course Is
designed to help residents learn more about son fertility and
Involves nine lessons for a cost of $3. The letter study course
enrollment period Is scheduled to run from March 15·25. To
enrolllp the course call the Extension Office at 992·6696.
The nine topics that will be covered In the course will be soli
testing. soils, Umlng, phosphorus, potassium, nitrogen,
"'trogen application, plant analysis and livestock waste.
Residents who would like to enroll by mall, are to send their
.name and address , along with a check for $3, made out to Meigs
Extension Service, to Box 32, Pomeroy, 45769.

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:\ Probe bus-car accident

Seven defendants forfeited
bonds andeightothers were lined
Tuesday night In the court of
, Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting were Gregory Eben. ·
Pomeroy, .$375, driving while
Intoxicated. and $63, no opera·
tor's license; Kenneth Neigler,
Middleport, '' $49; Betty Jo
Hamm, Syracuse, $46.,·· both on
· speeding charges; Ernest
Greene, New Haven, Ronnie
Buck, Guysville , $63 each, ex·

Seeks divorces ·
A divorce action has been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Courl by Frances Marie Mat·
thews, Pomeroy , against Ter·
ranee Wa yne Matthews ,
Middleport.
A dissolution of marriage has
. been granted Greta Triplett and
Larry Triplett.

'

An accident Involving an automobile driven by April Ritchie
and
an empty Eastern Local school bus driven by Bill Hannum
1
, occurred this morning shortly before 9 a.m. on Summerfield
,, Road, ,off State Route 248.
, Ritchie was Injured In the accident and taken to Veterans
. Memorial HospltaJ by Tuppers Plains EMS. The driver of the
bus was uninjured.
'
, . The a&lt;:eldent was under Investigation by t~e State Highway
Patrol and details were unavailable at press· time. The patrol
' was called to the scene at 8: 51 a .m.

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SrtOJP .r.elated accidents probed
Meigs Deputy Sheriff Kenny Klein investigated an a1110
acCident at 1: 52 a.m. this morning at Whipple and Pine Grove
··· Roads . Due to this morning's Icy road conditions, a car, driven
• by Cheryl' Malloy. went oft the road Into a ditch. !Oeln reports
· Ughfdamage to the vehicle which landed on Its side ln. the ditch.
The driver did not require treatment for Injuries !Oeln said.
.:·· Another .accident related to Icy road conditions occurred
· aboUt 7: 21 Tuesday evening on Route.7 near Fisher's Big Wheel.
' . AccOrding' to the report flied by Deputy Don Snyder. the driver.
... Robi!rt Hyseli, lost control of his pickup which overturned·and
'· c•me'to rest on Its top. There was heavy damage to.HyseH's
vehicle. HY..se~l repotteljty l'lad lacerations to his .~ands but did
.1 ·!\ot"rec!julre EMS transpordrom the scene.
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SPRIN8 TIME .
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.FISH &amp; CHIPS

4as three calls Tuesday

Meigs Cqunty Emerge ncy Medical 'Services reports three
calls TueSdll.y; Pomeroy at 9: 56 a.m . to the PomeroyAmerlcare Nursing Home for Ivory Bush to Veterans Mem9rlal
Hospital: Racine at 2: 42p.m . was called to an auto accident on
•. Main St. jlut no treatment was given; Racine at 3: 27 p.m. was
called to Yellowbush Road for Glen Winland to Veterans
, · M:emortai Hospital.
·

1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State will try to put Its
NCAA disappointment behind It
~
tonight when It hosts Old Domin·
ton at St. John Arena In the first
,
round of the National Invitation
:
Tournament. ·
:
The Buckeyes , who won the
•
NIT two years ago In Eldon
•
Miller's final year as bead coach,
·
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were Ignored Sunday by the tournatn$lt."
11
The Monarcha, who have live 1
NCAA Selection Committee, af·
ter losing their f~al replar players averaging In double :
season game, 9!1, 76,1at Michigan. figures, didn't come close to ..
That left them /16-12 on the doing that, losing 91·69 to Vlrgl·; 1
season, sixth In the' Big Ten at 9·9. nia Commonl¥ealth In confer- ~
but still hoping for a berth In the ence semWnais.
Anthony Carver, a 6-foot-7
64-team NCAA field.
sophomore forward, Is Old Do- •
It didn't happen, however, as
mlnlon:s leading scorer an«! ..~
coach Gary Wllllam&amp;-aild his
rebounder, averaging 15.1 points
players huddled together to fruit·
"'
Iessly watch the nationally- and 7 rebounds per game.
· Guard Darrln McDonald
,.
televised pairings show.
(13.8), 6-foot-7 center Garrick · , '
The disappointment left Willi·
Davis (12.5), reserve forward , ',.,
ams wondering how his team
Bernard Royster and forward
would react against Old Domin·
Steve Trax (10.6) are the op.er
ion, 18·11 overall and 9·5 In the
double figure scorers. Trax Is , ,.
Sun Belt Conference with a 9·5
the Monarch's top 3-polnt
.,,
. mark.
shooter, hitting 72 of 170 on the ,
"It's going to be tough," saki
. ·1
Williams. "Teams look at the year.
The other starter, auat;d Franll ,:
NIT two ways. They're really
Smltb ; averages 9.2 polnta per_..
disappoint.~ not getting Into the
game, but more tmportiJ!IIY for 1
NCAA or they're really happy
the Monarchs, 8.2 assists. Willi·
getting Into the NIT. If you play
ams
knows about Smith, who !le , '
one of thoae teams which Is really
tried
to recruit wbUe still af
happy, you can have some
··Boston
College.
probl:~ms. ''

SlED FIIOM
OHIO SEED CO.

Pomeroy Mayor's Court

.

:
•

!

That description fits the Mo·
narchs of coach Tom Yoll!lg, who
were 6-22 a year ago and feel a
berth In tbe NIT represents a
giant comeback.
"This year was very satisfying
when It was all said and done,"
saldYoung.''Wedldn'thlvealot
of hope lor ~ NCAA unless we
wo!l our confttrence

•OIIOisRs

eflmuza ··

Tax monies that fl!lanced nervous system disorders, 37
Meigs County Health ·-peparl· · visits for psychological dlsturment operations In 1987 made a bances, 34 visits for chUd abuse,
decided difference In health care 24 visits for sexually lransmltted
for Meigs' residents, health de- diseases, 22 for genitourinary, 20
partment .officlals noted In their · visits for mental retardation, 18
review. of the department's acti· for Injuries, 10 for Pili, eight for
vlltles for the year.
arthritis, six for alchollsm, six
There w'as a total of 12,310 : for premature Infant associated
lndlvldual , contacts by nursing complications, threeforsklnand
personnel. These contacts con· · subcutaneous disorders, and one
slsted of Individual evaluations, for rheumatic fever.
screenings, clinics and classes.
The visits listed were made In
According to a .health depart· the client's place of' residence,
m'ent spo!Cesperson, the clients schools, the health department
ranged !rdm newborn to 90 plus. quarters and
at numerousr
Health· promotion education . public areas within the county.
constituted the largest number of
Screenll)g services conducted
vfslts by the department There by the department are specndlal·
were 3,96.1 Individual · health lzed tesls, partial exams a ·or
·evaluations for abnormal dis·
educatlolllnstruct!Ona given.
Hypertenslonevaluatlonmade eases or conditions such as
up tbe se«~Dd largest number of anemia, hypertension, parasitic
vlslts,'fonsl1tiltlng 288. .
conditions, pregnancy, polson·
Infectious and parasitic dis· lngs (lead) sexually transmitted
ea5es. primarily lice and sea: diseaseS. trygllcerldes, cholesbi-:,s, made· up the third number ·terol and numerous others.
of visits. The department had 146
Of the total, 12.310 clients seen, :
visits on that count, foUowed by 3,&lt;119 were seen through screelng
101
visits .97for
ear
heart
problems:
visits
for and
congenital
anomalle~ . 76 visits for digestive
and endocrine dysfunctlo,u;, 60
viSits for respiratory problems, .
65 visits for cardiovascular and
hematology, 59 visits for museu·
Iarhkeletal, 5.1 visits for eye and
vision problems. 51 · visits for

2,777

• "teontiilu8d fi'um Pace 's)

Syracuse VUlage Council will
meet 6 p.m. Thursday at village
hall.

South ·Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs
In the mid 30s. Clearing tonight,
with a low In the lower 20s. Sunny
Thursday, with highs In the mid

. 4o'S.

The probability of preclpita·
lion Is 20 percent today and near
zero tonight and Thursday .
Winds will be from the northw·
est at 10 to 15 mph today,
becoming light and nortliwes·
terly tonight,
Exteadecl Forecast
Frldq &amp;brourb Siaaday
Cloudy and a chance of rat n
Friday, with mostly. cloudy skies
and a chance of snow fiurrles In
the northeastern part of the state
on Saturday. Mostly sunny state·
wldeSunday.Highswlllbelnlhe
40s Friday and between 35 and 40
Saturday and Sunday. Overnight
lows will range from the upper
20s to the mid 30s early Friday
and falling jnto the 20s Saturday
and Sunday mornings .

.--------------1

oOOUI Lae • •f
J

T0 Th I

·Souther..
Torti UlJOII I•
"Sweat 16"

11

Pl111f
l •·
MIDDLEPORT
·
TROPHIES
992·6121

ON SPECIAL
llli.CI 17th
YHIU IIAICH 31st

Tillis. R.
N.,
nursing
super·
Bass, R. N., staff
C'r'ol Tannehill. R.N .,
cUnlcdlrector; Debbie
N. , WIC dlrectQr;
R. N., WIC nutrl·
Dorothy
,ADP coordinator;
Brown. R. N., preaatal
family plaMing director;
Pln•llls atljrhS, women's health
tecllrllc;lan; Faye Schultz,
HIHriellraBd and Mary
green thumb workers;' .
Scott and Ca~l Gulilter,

POEFVY, 01.

JUST IN TIME FOI
USTIR

aa.

'40.01

S3J50

. " ' ... 2..
tr.

'

••

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Ca rl
Nelson, Middlepor t; Ivory Bush,
Pomeroy: Charles Neece, Mid·
dleport:· Glen Winland. Rac ine;
Dorothy Collins, Pomeroy.
Tuesd llY Discha rges ~ Da vid
Talbott, Jo seph Thoren Jr. , Her·
man Kincaid, John Sch neider ,
Jeremy Watson , Chery l Stumbo.

Licences issued
A marriage lice nse has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Harry E dga r Stewa rt,
33, Cheshire, and c arolyn Jean
Miller, 34, Cheshire.

GOOD USED .
WASHERS, .DRYERS
·REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

tt27 3rd Ave,. GaiHpolls
PH. 446·1699
· HOUIS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.

Am Electric Power .... .. .. ...... 28
AT&amp;T ..... ..................... .. ..... 28%
As hland 011 .. .. ............... ..... 64 \U
Bob Evans ..... .. ...... ........ ..... 16l4
Charming Shoppes .............. 12 %
City Holding Co .. :.... ..... .. .. .. . 33
Federal Mogul.. ..... ..... .. .. .. .. 41 %
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ..... ...... ..... .61%
Heck's Inc . .. ... .. ...... .. ...... ..... I%
Key Centurion .. ........... .. .....40\U
Lands ' End .. .... .. ................ .20%
Umlted Inc. ............ .. ....... ..20%
Multimedia Inc ..... ...... .. .... ..64 \U
Rax Restaurants ... ...... ... ... .. . 4 ~
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .. . ..... .. . 8'!4
Shoney's Inc . ......... ..... ........ 24 '!4
Wendy' s Inti ... .... ........... : .. .. . 6%
Worthington Ind .. ........ .. .. ... .21%

DOES I!OUIIEIIQHON
AllOW YOU TO ElM
1 'IHESSALOIIANS 1:8?
Audlo·viauil aida make stu·
dying the Bible both fun and
1~:~:~~~Fru leuona are conI•
by Christian couples
in the privacy of your own
home. Non-denominational.
By appointment only.

A rewardipg career. It can be found in
the field of long-term care. And that's
the opportunity Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Center is now offertng registered nurses.
, We're a 100-bed skilled nursing facil·
ity, accepting appllcatlom; for full-tine
and part· time R.N. positions. Our salaries begin at $9.30 per hOur for new
graduates benefits include flexible
scheduling, tuition reimbursement, ·
medical and dental insurance, paid
vacations and holidays, and more. ·
If you are seeking a career change, or
looking to begin a new one, call us at
(304) 675·5236.
•

~PLEASANT VALLEY

~Nursing Care

CALL 446·1494

Center

ATTENTION:
MEIGS· COUNTY VOTERS
' IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE
MAY 3, 1988 .GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
APRIL 4, 1987.
HAVE YOU MOVEDi CHANGED YOUR NAME, OR
FAILED TO VOTE IN THE LAST 4 YEARS?
YOU CAN CHECK YOUR REGISTRATION, CHANGE
YOUI NAME AND/OR ADDRESS OR REGISTER AT

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS
108 Mechanic Street
Pomero_y, Ohio,
(

I

01

HOURS FO' IEGISTUTION:

'(I

IIOIIAY "'"'·FMDAY1 I:JO aM. til •:30 p.~~~.
·
IIAICI17, t• and Jh 6a00 ,.. t1H 9&amp;00
Sl1UIDAYS, IIAICII19, 16 _.APRIL 2: lcOO a.m. tHI Noon
MOiaAY, APRIL •: 9 a.... til 9:00 p.m.
.

11-•·

Boutique &amp;:. Tanning Salon

'?P~

Hospital news

PHONE 992-2697

s,.,JQA

Pl. tft·ISS6

Glenn Waid Wolfe, 89, Chapel
Hill, Md ., formerly of Meigs
Coun ty, d ie d Sunda y In
Maryland.
He was born at P lants In Meigs
Cpunty on July 31, 1898, a son of
the late Jona s a nd Mary A.
Pickens Wolfe. He was employed
as a n accountant for 50 years.
Surviving are a daughter and
son·ln·law, Mr. a nd Mrs . Roy C.
Bell, Chapel Hill; a gra nddaugh·
ter , Clnthla J . Be ll, Chapel Hill; a

sister , E lizabeth Sharpnack, Co·
tumbu s, and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his pa rents, he was
preeeded In death by his wile,
Georgia Wheeler Wolfe In 1978,
and three brothers, Ca rl, Rl·
chard a nd Arthur Wo lfe.
Mr. Wolfe was a me mber o!the
United Methodist Chu rch a nd
Racine Masonic Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM.
Services will be held a t 10: 30
a. m . on Friday at the E wing
F uneral Home with the Rev .
Roger Grace officiating. Buria l
will be In Plants Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funera l
home from 7 to 9 p .m . Thursday .
Masonic rites will be held at the
fun era l honie~t7p . m . Thur sday .

11

Everything you ~er wanted
in a perm IS here!

~f!~~~l~,s~;u~e

Glenn Wolfe

Dally stock prices
(As'of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and· Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; IA~ewl

Weather '

,

Area deaths .

Stocks

rise~rvl;;ces;;·;;::;;·=~;;;;~~~;;~~~~~;;;;~~

N. , agellc;y nuralng

SEE US TODAY

plred plates; Norma Eakins ,
SyracuSe, $43, stop sign viola·
tlon; Grady White, Lorada, W.
Va., $375, driving while (ntoxl·
cated, and $43, left of center.
Fined were Carolyn Neece,
Pomeroy , $375 and costs , driving
while lntoxlcaled; $63 and costs,
failure to control ; Sa m McCloud,
Middleport, $375 and costs, drlv·
lng while Intoxicated: $63 and
costs , no operator's lice nse;· $63
and costs, expired tags; $63 and
costs, !allure to transfer; Brad
Jolley, Athens , $375 and costs,
driving while Intoxicated; $63
and cos ts, failure to control;
Linda Beaver , Racine, Thomas
Batey, Pomeroy, both $46 and
costs, speeding; David Custer,
Smithville, $47 and costs, speed·
lng; Bret Wyant, Wadsworth, $45
and costs, speeding; Mary J.
Crlsty, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
expired plates ; $43 and costs,
Illegal turn.

Council to meet

'

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
''AttlleWoftlle ..._ey, ••lrillae"

I

Foteclosure action filed

SA~INISI

Is now accajdlng
applications for Mw
11111nllm for c...-111 and

Middleport Court news

Four defendants forfeited chard D. Blair, Mason, $1.0,
bonds'and 10 others were fined In fail ure to yield the right of way;
the court of Middleport Mayor Terry Jarrell, Langsville , $100
a nd costs, driving under s uspen·
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Dlamo!ld Savings and Loan Co., Findlay, has !lied a
' Forfeiting were Blaine E . slon; VIrginia !..·Thomas , Pome·
! foreclosure action In Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Walburn. Washington, W. Va., roy, $15, speeding; Eugene S.
· .I against Warren L. Perrine, Brunswick, N.J. , and Kathy
· $40, and J ames Craycraft, Che· Morrison, Sr .• Middleport, $10
·l Perrine, now known as Kathy Mor ris, Pomeroy, eta!.
shire, $40, both posted on speed· · and costs, stop sign violation;
'
Diamond Sl\vlngs a"nd Loan Co. has been granted a judgment
lng charges; Robert E . Boring, Ray A. Eblin, Pomeroy, Carl S.
of $18,301.36 from Randy L. Riffle, el al, In a foreclosure action.
Middleport, $50, stop sign viola· Smith , Middleport, each $425 and
A confirmation of sale and orders for deed and distribution
tlon, and Martha Erb, Mason, w. costs. and three days · In jail,
' have b4!en filed In the case of Western Credit Union Inc. against
driving while intoxicated; Lance
Va., $50, weaving course.
·' John D . Wilson Sr., et .a !.
· 1
Fined were Timothy L. Sm!th. T. Herman, Middleport. $425 a nd
· Dj!fault judgments of $3,171.74 and $1,751.30 have been · Athens; Dean Whittington, ~ld· costs and 10 days In jail, driving
·, granted to Bene!lclal Ohio Inc. from Joseph Neal, and
dleport; David Manley, Pome· . while Intoxicated; $25 and costs,
SearS·Roebuck and Co. from Sharon K. IUffle, respectively.
roy, $25 and costs each on failure to yield, and $50 and costs,
· . An early teachers ' . strike-related action by Meigs Local
disorderly manner charges; Rl· driving while under suspension.
' School Dfstrlct Board of Education against the Meigs Local
·
.., Teachers' .AISOCiatlon, et al; has been dlsmlsSPd.

"Andmostofall, thlshonorlsa
tribute to our players. We were
expected to be good this year.
They have given It everything
they have got. They made It
happen on the court."
Meigs basketball stars Mike Alexander; Thaden Brtent an~ , ~
This season, Keady earned Ills
Bartrum and Brent Bissell were Doug Skinner of Athens; Scott,,,
500th career coaching victory,
twoselecteesamong18areahlgh McConkey, Troy Stucky and ..
his 400th college trlumpl) and his
school basketball player~ chosen Roger White of Belpre; Chad,";
to play on a squad that will be Savage of Nelsonville-York; Jeff,,,
·100th Big Ten coaching victory.
Keady's overa'll coaching record
Included on an International Koons and Bill SAyre of Ti1mble; ,
Is 401·135,1ncludlnga 176-68mark
Sports Exchange liH!ay trip to Joe Griffith and Scott Maynard/ '
at Purdue entering the NCAA
Salzburg and Innabruck, In Aus·' of VInton County; Brett RaiiChl . :~
tournament.
tria, during the first week of of Warren; and Andy Graham of , ·
This year's team has been on a
April.
Wellston.
,1
mission to prove they can sue·
Alexander basketball coacb
Players are raising , funds ..
ceed In the NCAA tournament.
Mike Meek, who took a similar through of variety. of benefit _;
De~plte regular·season . honors,
group to the Netherlands and evenll to help pay their expenses ::
Purdue has failed to advance
Belgium last year, will coach this In coMectlon with the trip.
past the second round of NCAA
year's edition.
'
L
sty
ar
the
Others on the team will be Mike
K
d
Ia
d
P Y un er ea y. a e
BoUermakers shared the confer·
Chapman, Doug Kelter, Scott
Stalder and BIU Whltlach of
ence crown bot played poorly at
the end of the season and lost In r..:.p_.m_;,.;_a_nd_D_Ivl_s_l_on_I_I_a_t_9:_15_P~·-m_._ _ _ _ _ _;,__ _ _ _...._;
the second round of the NCAA
.
tournament
"Even my own assistant
·
coaches didn't appreciate what
we accomplished last year be·
cayse of the way the season
ended," Keady said. "I want to
go through a spring where I feel
..
good about myself. I didn't do
that last year."

GAWPOUS IOAT CLUI

The Daily Sentinel- Page 5

PonM!roy- Middleport, Ohio

Continued from page 1

Bucks try to forget NCAA

Speolal of the w·aakl

r

.....-Local news briefs-----.

added •.
Eddie Fogler, taldn( 12th·
seeded Wichita State, 2().9,
agalnlt f.ltth·aeecled DeJ'aul, 21·
7, Jumped Into' tbe •lf·plty vat
with lftat al'andcnl,
. ,
"We're not De.IJ'i)' as big and
strong a relioundlng team as we
were lui year. Our center
(6-foot-10 SUha Radunovlch) Is
not a dominant player," Fogler
said. ''Wedo~'thavealotofllze,
and If DePaUl atartl grabbing
rebollllda and running, we ~ll be In
trouble.I '
.
DePaul's Joey Meyer refused
to play the game,
"He luiOws lie hu a good team
and that we are pntty good, too,''
Meyer nkl with a chuckle.
"They wouldn't even · bother
coming to South Bend If they
didn't think they could win."
Baylor Coach Gene lba nys
the elghtb·seeded Bean, 23·10,
going to their fli'st tournament In
38 years,liJ~yen't had milCh time
topreparefornlnth·seecledMem;
phli State, 19·11.
"You)lll.t try to do what you do
best and hope that ·Is good
enough," lba said. "It's bard to
worry about who you are
playing."
·
Kansas State's Lon Kruger
says 13th·seeded LaSalle, 24-9, Is
a mirror Image of his awn
·fourth-seeded, No. 20 Wl!dcats,

21·9.

'

Wedn1 .. ,. March 16, 1988

992-36~7

·

.·

�···"

.

'·,.

'

....

'•.

... .

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,, '

,•

Pomeroy Mlddlaport. Ohio

P.gz I The Dlllv S1ntMIII
~1;

Weclnnxtey,

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n.WI-rOamelt.
Game a : 1: • p.m. - WIIMI' Game II
~ .. WI-er Game II.
Gallli!IM: 1::11p.m. -wt-Gamell
~ .. Wl.-r Oa"" 7. •

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Game 3: Mea. - N•. I W.,..-•1"1
(PL ) l»l) YL FN.aldl• Pti!IU {N .•• )

NAJA
pairings

(1.14) .

...... a.,,,..,
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(&amp;7.)

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Game 1: I :Up.m. - Ne. lSI. T.._._
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VJI.

leiWale

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I

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(S.C.) (11-t) vs. Detluce (011 .. ) (tH) .
Game 11: ..... - Ne. I 0.v1•

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('h-.l th-tl .-.. Eut Tn..
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0... II: 1: 0 p.m. - No •. ll W~n

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Stmlftnals

"AS ADVETISED ON TV"

FROZEN 4·7-LB . AVG.

Valleydale
Sliced Bacon__.

Young
Turkey Breast

. 1-lb.

Pound

.Meigs.students will take their
science projects to distriCt

Thirteen eighth grade students
Awarded excellent on their Poulin, Danny McDonald,
••
• of the Meigs Junior High School projects were Sharla Cooper. Teresa Molden, Danny Lewis,
• receiving superior ratings on Phillip Hovatter, Tamml Jones. Jeri Hawley, Stacey Fry, Dodle
l helr science exhibits at the Fifth Terry McGuire, Jeremy Rupe, Cleland, Kim Burton, Becky
·Annual Science Day Tuesday will Ronald Vance, Amy Herald, Wise, Mary Walton, Jayme Til·
take their projects to Ohio Melissa Rollins, Jason Reynolds , Us, Darcy Stone. ·
University to compete for dis· Kevin Musser, John Harrison,
Also receiving ralngs of good
trict honors.on April 9.1
Tara Gerl'ach, Misty Butcher, were Tammy Miller , Churck
Receiving the superior ratings Valerie Wilson, Joh11 Moor:e, Mash, Mark Haley, Joe McEI·
from judges, Ron Ash of Ohio April . Hudson, Matt Haynes , roy, Beth Clark, Scott Barton.
Power, Dr. Larry Kennedy , Jason Dowell, Love 1'1atey, Josh Jamie Barrett, Mark Stanley,
dentist, Rick Edwards, science Bartels , Marjorlta Tromm, · Su · Paul Sharp; Lisa Pierce, Kim
educator,·John Costanzo and Bill ·san Love, Candy Hensley .
Dickson , John Bechtle, Tammy
Buckley, Meigs County Educa·
Also receiving excellent were Starcher, Ivan Powell, L. J .
lion office, were Michelle Scott, . Bobby Vance, Jamie Snodgrass, Mitch, Melissa Markin, Melinda
Jacinda· Mullen, Kim Hanning, Phil Smith , Becky Ockerman, Dalley, Timmy Peterson, Mandy
Frank Blake, Darin Logan. Melissa Leonard, James Hower· Eblin, Andy Vance, Amy Searls,
Robby Wyatt, Mary Stein, Nikki ton , Jeremy Heck, Stacey Dun· Evelyn Neece, Kerl Black, Dan
Meier, Mary Compston, Conn.le can, Heather Davenport , Ryan Daniels, Hank Hale, Tammy
Sauters, Melanie Qualls, .Julie Cowan, ChrJssy Weaver, Kelih Klein, and Jason Yeager.
Buck, and Barbara Anderson. 1 Smith, Tonyj Six, John Sargent,
Ratings of satisfactory ~ere
Special Governor's Awards for Miranda Nicholson, Melissa given to Misty Van Meter, John
Excellence were presented by ,· Neutzllng, Shawn Hawley, Ryan Haggy, Heath Shoemaker , Sally
Rusty Bookman and.Jesse Vale, Foster, Steve Caruthers, ' Brett Miller, Jodi Smith, Becky }less,
science teachers, to Kim Han· Baker, Mary Cremens, Trlcla Kelly Herdman , and Richard
nlng, water resource research; Baer. Chris Gilmore, and Tiffany Blankenship.
e
Frank Blake, energy research; Bennett.
An open house was held Tues·
Robbie Wyatt, environmental
Ratings of good went to Roger day night for parents and friends
sciences research , and Jacinda Smith, Jamie Schuler, Todd
to view the exhibits. The event
Mullen, agriculture and food Reitmlre, Jeremy Phalin, Alrnee was sponsored by Meigs Junior
science. ·
Mitch, Raymond Lander's , Kathy High !n cooperation with the Ohio
The projects were judged In the Williams. Rachel Roush, Wayne Academy of Science. Also active
areas of originality and creativ· Ranyon, Frank McGhee, Don In the Science Day activities was
lty. clarity of expression, use of Hunnel, Angle Goody, Heather the Meigs Junior High School
the scientific method and know!· Gllbeaut, Micah Bunch, Lisa • · Science Club.

ll&amp;ldmore
- ........
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.......
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Marti . . . . . . . . . . . . OttiMI $e.....,

VL

U.S. GRADE A

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......... a... • .

· va. Wl-r Game II.

va.WI...-0•••·

l

........

Ganll: ll :•a.m.-WI..erGamelt

Gillnw: Ill ..... - WlaMr Game I n.
Wl-rGame4.
Gamall: 1: &amp;1 p.m. - WIMer GameZ

Wl-ro... •
oa. . lt: 'Jp.M. -Wt-rQa•llwa.

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w. Wl-r Game II. ,
Gt.me •: 1: II p.m. - WI.., Game 11
w. Wl.-r O•me II.
Gamen: 1: .p,m. - WI.-HG&amp;nv:d

Game lA: lt:lla.ID.-WI-rGamelt

:· Wednau._y, March 18, 1988

o.--.a,_~_..Ga_nwUw•.

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

Galll!e l'h I :. a.m. - Wl-r GaRM 8

M.d. 11, 1988

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SUPERIORS ALL students
among lhe 13 elghl tp'aders receiving S!lperlor
ratings on their Science Day projects at Meigs
.Junior IUgh School. Plclun)d with some of the
exhibits which wiD be taken to district compel!·
lion are left to right, sealed, Mary Stein, Frank

staiidlng, Barbara
Loran. Melanie
Qualls, and Nikki Meier. Others receiving
superior ·ratings were Connie Saulers, MlcheUe
Scott, .Jacinda Pullen, Kim Hanning, and Mary
Compston.

Class to get
Garden club bends the rules
aquainted with ·Amaryllis"
.' 'Bending the Old rules on New Sibley Center which several
was the topic pres· of the club members toured In
• •
by
Anna
Turner at the summer .
new.mtntster
recent m eeting of · the Star

the

ent~

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

FIRST OF THE SEASON
REO, RIPE

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

California
Strawberries

Pound

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Quart

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. SPECIAL AWARD- Connie Sauters waslhe
reelplent of the special Innovative electrical
dlllplay award pven·by Olllo Power at Tuesday'•
Melp .Junior High School Science Day. The eighth
Jftder received a superior rating on her exhibit.

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Rinso
Laundry Detergent

Lay's Brand
Potato Chips

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65-Dz.

6.5-~oz.

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Not just a homemaker

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. Plans for a get-together on
Saturday to get better ac·
qualnted with the Bradford
Church of Christ's new minister,
Scott ' Stewart, and his wife,
Renee, were made when · the
Young Adult Oass met recently
at the church.
Regular meetings were set for
the third Saturday of each
month, at 7 p.m . A committee
consisting of Becky AJ1lberger,
Carolyn Nlchols()n, and Tina
McGuire was named to plan
activities for the year .
New officers elected were
Terry McGuire, president; BU!
Amberger, vice , president;
. Sherry Smith, secretary; and
Cherie Williamson, treasurer.
Attending were Bill and Ca·
rolyn Nicholson, Bill, Becky, and
Ryan Amberger,' Greg, Vicki, B.
J. and Cody Smith, Dave and
8he was presented with a T·shlrt by Ron Ash ol
Cherie Williamson, Brian and
Ohio Power, who al8o served as one of the judges,
Su.zle WI!!. Terry and Tina
Alb allo presented a T·sblrt.to PbWp.Hovatter tor
McGuire, Cathy and Jenelle
hill eleetrlcal exhibit whlclo received an exceUent
Spencer, Sherry Smith, and
award.
Diana Million.

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By Doma Smith, Displaced

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Homemaker Coordinator
Second In a series of three.
When a dlsplaced·homemaker
comes to the program S.U.C·
.C .E'.S.S. , (surviving under
changing conditions, earning,
skilled and successful ) which Is
offered through the adult division
of the . Gallla-Jackson-VInton
Joint Vocational School. the first
Item on the agenda Is to Identify
one's present skills.
A usual reaction is, " I don 't.
have any skills! I'm just a
housewife! ''
Few people realize the respon·
slbllltles and skills that are
developed as a result of being an
experienced homemaker. The
acompllshments and duties are
numerous, depending upon the
size of ·fainlly, the motivation of
the Individual and the amount of
time Invested In this occupation.
Occupation? Yes, occupation!
Many are surprised to discover
as many as 64 various "hats"
'they wear In fulfilling the du.tles
of a ' homemaker . Chauffeur,
laundress, housekeeper, counse·
lor, custodian, Interior decora·
tot, time-management expert.
mediator, diplomat and night
matchman are just a few occupa·
lions represented In a homemak·
er's day. These are skills that can
be built upon when making the
transition to wage earner .
When a person "loses" the
position of full time homemaker,
much thought and effort are
required In finding another post·
lion. By taking a look at one's
Interests, hobbles and strengths,
an Individual has started a
journey In career planning. Eve·
ryone has special areas
of
Interests and abilities, but few
take the time to Identify and build
on them. This calls for career
exploration.
The Importance of career
explora lion I~ stressed In the

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POWERFUL
CLEANING...
SUPER VALUE

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"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

NATURAL FLAVOR

White House
Apple Sauce

Kroger Deluxe
Ice Cream

16-oz.

%-Gallon

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For

For

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"AS ADVERTISED ON TV''
NESCAFE

Mountain Blend
Instant Coffee
~oz.

/

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KROGER

Hom9genized
Milk

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·Gallon

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IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
MTN . DEW, DIET MTN . DEW,

. Oven Fresh
.Variety Cookies

Diet Pepsi or ·
Pepsi Cola

,

12.Pak 12-oz. Cans

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AND

STERLING
SILVER

Neck Chains

"'

COOKED HAM •••a•••.sucED S2.19
SWin ECIIIICH
PICKLE LOAF ••••••••••·.~····· S2.19
MEAT SALAD ••••••••••·.~~ ......~89&lt;

HOMEMADE

AND

Pierced Earrings
AFFORDABLE PRICES

nan " suCE 12 oz.
AMER. PIOC.
CHEESE ................ S1,89
MAIGAIINE.f.ll.~,.

3 Ll. BAG

WINESAP APPLES .... 97&lt;
NEW

SHEDD'S WMIUI

2/97&lt;

DAnVBVEETA

CHEESE , ...... P.J!L••• S1.29

MIS. PAIL'S CIISPY CIUNCHY .

GREEN CABBAGElf,•• 21 c
PINI 40 CT.

GRAPEFRUIT.,..... 2/59&lt;

$

FISH FILLETS .........!!.0•1.;.. 1. 79
IAIIQin
$
TV DINNERS •••••••••• !!.O.Z.;.. 1.39

A card was signed for Darrell
D\lgan; a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, when the
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met
receNtly at the firehouse annex .

8.750/o

•

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14K

UD HAWAIIAN

PUNCH JUICE ........ :\~~••••••• 99&lt;

lOYAL PIICE

iai';"'s NAruuuzER, HusHPUPPY

20% OFF

lNG SHOES

$999
HUSRPUPPY, SIIAGO

JA-1

au•·s
1•111 WAlE

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OOZfll ·

SMIIHFIELD ......................................... SHREDDED ~2 .29 lb.

Auxiliary
sends card

•

Mrs . Turner said that lt is . - - - - - - - - - - - - - better to use clay pots and mix
some bone meal Into the soil.
Leave the plant outdoors In the
summer and then In the fa ll bring
It Inside and place In lui\ light,
feedlng regular ly.
Tells Your Past, Present &amp; Futurt.
IGI•teaAdvlce
On All Afflllra Of Ufa..
Mildred Jeffers cautioned
Love,
Marrlllg.
&amp; Bualntll. All
a~ removing mulch from
I
Re:sdln·gl
Confldandal.
roses until all danger ls past. For
roll call members answered by IRe.::ailta A $10.00 Reading For
naming a flower mentioned In the I $5;.oo W~h This Ad.
Open 9 am.· 11 p m Da11y
Bible. Binda Diehl desc ribed and
Call 675-7889
showed pictures of Callaway's
2211J110'&gt;&lt;! Av•
PomiP~l'k'"tW'.

BULK WIENERS ••• ~ •••w•••••••• 99&lt;

adult divi sion of the Gallla·
Jackson-Vinton J.V.S. When an
Individual is in transition from
one job to another, It pays to
search and explore what occupa·
lions match your Interests and
abilities. This "match" results
in job satisfaction which Is an
Important key to being a good,
productive employee.
Career exploration Is one area
that Is covererd In the S.U.C·
.C,E.S.S. program for displaced
homemakers, ' offered through
the adult division of the GalllaJackson-VInton , J.V.S . "Dis ·
placed'· does not have to be a
permanent condition, but It Is up
to the Individual to make her lite
the success It can be.
We can help! Classes will be
held In tlie Meigs County area In
April. For more lnformatlon.call
or write to:. Dorpa Smith at the
Gallla-Jackson·VInton, J .V;S .,
245·5336, or Jane Snouffer at the
Meigs County Department of·
Human Services, 992-2117. Plea·
see call before April I.

Prayer aqd pledge by Ann
Layne opened the meeting. Refreshments were served by
Sherr! and M;ay Holman to Sandy
Patterson, Wandy Lyo'ns, .Bar•
bara Layne, II'ene Roush, Jean
Johnson, Sherry Grady, Trudy
Spaulding, Missy Jones, Angle
Patlerson, Emma Lyons, Misty,
Grueser, Teresa Johnson,
Wanda Patterson, and junior
members, Valerie Patterson and
Sissy Lyons .

Denise Ford assisted Mrs.
Radekln In serving
refreshments.

SUPEIIOI IIIEGUUI

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Garden Club held at the home of
Wanetta Radekln.

LAtCR088 • TINSLEY

20°/o OFF
35°/o OFF

ill

.

YAMS ••••••••••••••••• ~ •• ~!~~.... S1.29

DEL MOIIR WHOU LEAF

SPINACH ••••••••••••••• ~~:~........ 99~
JELLO, 'lANDA 'CREAM PUDDING &amp;
PIE FILLING ••••••••• l~.o.z•••• 2/99C
PRINGLES ••••••~ ••••••• !~.~~••• S1.39 ·
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE .~\:1-Jt~. S5.79
Ullt CIOCDI
GINGERBREAD MIX l~v:::, S1.19
Willi CL01D
BATHIOOM TISSUE :1-.o:.. S1.19
A'UDII
.
CHILl w/BEANS •••••JZM~ •••• 99C
uao...r
COIN SYIUP'•••••••••J:.o~ee-••• 99c
CMPUTI
S1.39

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P II 8 1he Dilly Sa tllti81

People

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!~~·~~~~1~I~t~~~M~.,~~d~I~1~·~·~1!9!8!B____~----~--~----~------~P~ome~~ro~y!:~M~~~Mport~~·~O~h~~~· --------------------------_JTI.~!D~a~i~~S~~~·nM~:!~~g~a~9~;

Wednesday, March 16. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the news....:.___ _ ___:_______.:...__.....:.;..._~-----

Br W1LLtAM c. T1WTT

tis must be going around. Ml· Indianapolis. The·ftrst lady was In . January because of a
national hero In Kenya, was in
·v............. •,,.,,
ellael ~aekaoa canceled his sold· to speak in Naahvllle as. part of snowstorm .
Kenyatta National Hospital
out show In St. Louis Monday her drug-busting campaign but
WAR SOUVENIR BE· Tuesday In Nalroblfor surgery to
fAD WOBUON UOPBNS after losing his voice and Nancy didn't feel up to it. A spokeswo- MOVED: Warublu ltote, the remove a small sliver of a. bullet
FOR 8UIINIIIIS: Lake Wobegon Beapa had to call off a trip to man said Reagan Is not taking feared tribal 1eader General In his right shoulder - a
Is l1lrlllq out to be too lucrative · Nashville, Ten!!. , for the same medication 'but Is using home China of the Mau Mau rebellion memento he had carried since a
tot GMzk• &amp;eW.r to abandon It J;eason. Jackson, who performed remedies !Ike gargling salt water against the British. finally rid colonial soldier shot and cap·
allollether. Keillor held a news Sul!day but had canceled Satur· and Inhaling steam. Reagan also himself of a souvenir ot· the lured l)lm In January 1~. !tote
Conference In New York Tuesday day's show because of a cold, is had to cancel a trip to Nashville fighting 34 years ago. ltote, nowa said the fragment went unno·
to say tbat he's planning the scheduled to try again Friday In
~nd Annual Farewell Perfor·
!)\Iince of hill "A Prairie Home
Companion" at Radio City Music
Your l~tdependently Owned
a.llln Ju~. "It was so much fun
le«vlllg that we're coming back
Low-Priced Supermarket
to say goodbye again," he said.
'Keillor lnalsts the country Is ripe
ior a "national ·outpouring of
jtlef • and says his show will
ture ."heart-rending songs of
ewell not seen on TV since the
~emtse of the Kale Smith Show.''
'l'he humorist also won a legal
~lctory Tuesday when a judge In
Jflnneapolls Issued a temporary
ruling ordering National Public
:kadlo to stop selling a tape of a
jpeecb be gave ln. W!lshlngton
f.st year. Keillor S!IY.S his words
!('ere copyrighted but NPR says
~ey couldn't have been since
r
ihey were extemporaneous. The
fnatter goes to court Aprll14.
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. • PRICLi EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 13 THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 1&amp;, 1MB.
• HEPBURN TOURS ETHIO.
• USDA FOOD STAMPS AND W.I.C. COUPONS AcCEPTED. • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.
tiA: Audrey Hepbunl arrived In
~e Ethiopian capital of Addis
~baba Tuesday to start a three~ay famine tour on behalf of the
:\)nlted Nations. Hepburn, a speelal ambassador to the United
!lations who Is traveling with
lJNICEF President Larry Bruee,
~rrlved a day late because she
was held up bY an airline strike In
~tome. First Hepburn will be
.rlefed bY government officials
ibout the drought, famine and
tlghtlng plaguing Ethiopia and
AGRI·GEN MEDIUM GRADE 'A'
ihen sbewlll take a Hercules
TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
Jtansport plane to the stricken
BONE·IN
treas. When she returns to the
llnlted States, she will hold a
'ews conference to discuss wha I
ihe saw.

t

tlced until late last week when he
visited the doctor complaining of
a numb right arm and difficulty
In breathing. "My wife Insisted I
go to the hospital," he said . ." At
first !'refused. I bate them. Th~
doctor pointed. at an object In my
X·ray and told me It was a
bullet. "

J

'
0... Au I vtni: As a woman a reliable COntnu:tor. Of COUJ'lle, it
who wa1Jr.ed out on one man !llld will' cost you mote, but it will be
Wll d11"1P"" by IIIOtber, I feel
worth it Put stodl in that old
quallli!d to n+mnmt 011 your reply saying, "You llf!t what you pay for."
to "UncW'-*W in Montana."
Another problem is thole thirdJust '*a- her blllband (from rate outfits that hire low·bellers
whom lhe is aep~ntcd) mds up in beca~~~~e they can start work tomor·
her bedroom when W OOiiles to visit row, or they con the boss ·into
. the lddl does not llieall that be still belieVing they can keep costs down
cam for her !llld that tbm is hope by not caJTYinl insurance,
for the III8ITiqe. Take it from me,
Tell your readers who want
Ann, what it rally is that Grade A work .to ·contact their local
the down W!lllll to ,_ve his cake
trade emrations, such IS the
aJid eat It, too.
National Association ot Home
Wbm a family DiaJI tells his wife Builders. or the National Associatbal be is in love with. somellndy tion of the Remoddlfil IndUstry;
elle, wmtla divorce and mows out, AIIIOdated BuUdets and Contracshe bad better believe it's all over. tors. Also, it wouldn't hurt to call
"Undeddetl" sllould make him the Better Business Bureau and the
.x1t to his decision. In the Ioiii run Chamber of Conunerce and lind
, the deanat breaks are the easirst.
out if the person they plan to hire Is
In both the Clllell I was involved a member in goOd· standing and
In, the men went back ·to their . what kind of performance record
wlws ·aJICI I wu 11811 they did. It be (or she) has. Sign me - A
Wll the decent thlna to do. Sian me READER IN MICHIGAN
-CONTENT IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR MI.CH.: You told it like it
DEAR CONTI!NT: Your up-front is, and I thank you.
confessions are refnlhinJly honest. ·
Dftr Alia Laaden: Regarding the
I hope you have profited by what dilemma: To tskt the cotton out of
you
lamed and made a good the bottle of aspirin or leave it in:
life for yourself.
Take it out. There is no "actiye
Ollar Ann !•aden: A Massachu· ifltredient" in aspirin, as your
set11 reader asked, "WhAt on earth
reader stated. The aspirin itself Is
is wrong with most repair people coml!ined with a tiller.
who come to do a job?" (She said
The cotton, if left iii the bottle,
they were irfi!IIIOIISible, foqetful, ·
will absorb moisture and hasten ihe
lazy. incompetent and poorly
breaJdns down or the tablet into
' tlllined.)
.
.
I would jike to ask. her t11is the two sulrltances from which it is
qutStion: Did you try to save.a buck made. P.S. If tbe aspirin smells like
by hiring the local yokel doWn the vinegar, it has decompoeed. Don't
stRiet, or the friend of a friend, or U!ie it - S.M.. CHEMISI'RY PRO.
the IUY who works out of the back FESSOR. FAAMINGDALE. N.Y.
DEAR PROFESSOR: Thanks for
of his pick-up truck? If so, it serves
you rilhL ·They are the ones who the correct information. It arrived
not a minute too soon. Confticting
l!iYe our industry a bad name.
If you want hi&amp;h11rade work, call theories on this subject wer~ l!ivitll
me a bealiache. .

ODLAND;

•

: AVALANCHE . INVESTIGA·
fiON: A Swiss magistrate will

Chiquita
Bananas

Round
Steak

l 1/2 Dozen
Eggs ··

MT. DEW. PEPSI FREE
DIET or REGULAR

Pepsi-Cola ·

{§J

LIMIT 2
With •1 0.00

LBS.

WEDNESDAY
Saturday, 7 p.m., at the First
RACINE--The Racine Arneri· Church of God In New Haven,
can Legion will hold Its birthday W.Va .. Many gospel groups will
party at the home at 7:30 p.m. be featured. Everyone welcome:
Wednesday. There will be enter·
tainment and refreshments. All
RUTLAND··Signup for the Ru· ..
Legion and auxiliary members . tland Slimmer ball program, 9
and their families are Invited.
a.m. to noon Saturday at the
Rutland Civic Center.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT··The Middle- Flnt daace
.
port Child Conlervatloo League
Royal Oak Dance Club's first
will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m .. at dance of the year will be held
Rock Springs United Methodist Saturday; from 9 to 1 p.m. , with
Church. A potluck supper will be music by Dynasty. ·
held In observation of "Hus·
band's Night." Devotions and Homemakers club
.
Third Wednesday Homemak·
traveling prize will lle ~ .F'eggy
Harris. Baby Items may be ers' Club will meet this week at
turned ln. 1\11 members urged to the usual time and place.
Members are to bring articles to
attend.
· finish last month's project.
RACINE··There will be a meet·
lng Thursday, 7 p.m ., at Southern Grance
Meigs County Pomona Grange
Kindergarten, of coaches and all
Interested people who would like will meet Friday, .7:30 p.m :, at
to help with the Ra~;lne Youth the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Columbia Grange will serve
U!ague and girls' teams.
refreshments. The Natlona) Sew·
SALEM CENTER··Final sign· lng Contest will be jl!dged.
up for participation In the Salem
Center Baseball Organization Youth leape
will be Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Registration for the 1988 Ra·
Salem Center firehouse.
cine Youth Leagu~ summer ball
season will be held at the
SYRACUSE·•Sign-up for Syra· Southern Kindergarten building
cuse Youth U!ague's sunimer 'on Saturday, March 19 and
ball season will be Thursday, 6 to March 26, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
· 8 p;m., and again on Saturday ,10 both days. Fee Is $10 per child
a.m. to noon, at the grade school. and a copy of birth certificate Is
Birth certificate necessary for
needed.
first time participation.
Leape sip-ups
ROCK SPRINGS··Rock
Final sign-up for the ,Salem
Springs Better Health Club will Center Baseball League will be
meet Thursday, 1:15 p.m., at the Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Salem
home of Judy Humphreys.
Center firehouse.
Final sign·up for Pomeroy
Youth U!ague wilt be Saturday,
PORTLAND··The womens' department of the Reorganized
10a.m. to2 p.m.,on thefirstlloor
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter ·of Elberfeld's. Registration fee
Day Saints will meet 7:'30 p.m.
of $9 and a copy of birth
1Thursday. Bring pie for auction.
certificate to be retained by the
league must be presented for
POMEROY··The Meigs
each cbllcl wishing to participate.
County Democratic Executive
No bolldaya?
Committee will meet' Thursday,
Technically, Tile World ~~~;c I
7: 30 p.m., at Carpenter Hall In
polnll
out, tbere are no nations!
Pomeray. All Interested Demodays
In
tbe Uaited States. Eacb state
era~ are welcome to attend.
has jurl8dlmloll OYW Ill own bolldays.
1n practice, tboqb, most states CJb.
POMEROY··The Meigs
_,. t1te federal Iecal or public
County Chapter or Alcoholics holidays.
Anonymous wtll meet Thursday,
7 p.m., at the Sacred Heart
Church In Pomeroy.

Or

mo,. addltionef
_
purchale\ •.

.

•

.PTO elects
.
new officers
"

~ New officers were elected at
1he recent meeting of the ·Syracuse PTO held at the school.
: They are Rose Ann Jenkins,
_president: Texanne Knighting,
.vice president; Mark and VIcky
Morrow, secretary, and Hilda
':f~eaver, treasurer.
, It was noted that the students
,Will be selling candy bars In
March with the profit to be used
lo buy safety mats foreachend of
Jhe gym. A skating party was
•nnounced for the students partl·
·~tatlng In the candy sale.
• The PTO agreed to purchase
trophies for the fifth and sixth
irade football players. cheer·
t;&gt;aders, and basketball players.
hey . were presented at the
in:sports banquet which was
fteld at the school Tuesday night.
the newly formed fourth grade
fl!am will also be hOnored at the
banquet.
: Arrangements were made for
~asette players to be secured
through redemption of the Camp·
~~~ soup labels . .
; The room count was won by the
!bird grade.

INSTANT

TENDER BEST QUALITY WHOLE

Boston Style
Pork Roast ·

.

Maxwell House
Coffee

CHUNK LIGHT
•WATER •OIL PACKED

•REGULAR •LIGHT ·

Chicken-of·
the-Sea

Kraft
Mayonnaise

59
12

$

oz.

CAN

ADC

SPRITE. TAB. PIET or REGULAR

Foodland Coffee

Coca-Cola

$579

320Z.
JAR

60Z.

JAR

3 LB.
CAN

•

2LITER
BTL.

99&lt;
.

.

Esther Circle
~t quilt blocks
•

~ Members

of the Esther arcle

· o1 Racine First Baptist Church
met recently at the home of Reva
J1orrls, Letart Falls.
" Scripture and prayer opened
the meeting. It was reported that
rflembers met at the home of
Dorothy Badgley to cut quilt
~loCks for the white cross quota.
ljeveral boxes were also sent to
Aacone College In Muskogee,
Okla.
• Members of tbe Esther Circle
inc! the Ruth Circle met at the·
c;turch recently to cut and roll
llandages, also a partofthewhlte
bs work. f'lans were made to
terW lunch to Dr. Ron Long and
atea ministers on March 29at the
Srell. Dr. Long will be holding ·
LC::.:rence on -worship at the
Church on March 28 and
II; wftll the service open to the

SLICED

•PLAIN •SELF RISE

Armour Bacon//

Martha White Flour

$139 ,

120Z.
PKG. ·

1.

6 LB.
BAG

89&lt;

25 ll.

S399

POWELLS ASST.

Jelly Beans
12 oz.
BAG

69C

HEINER'S OLD FASHION

FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS--Meigs
County Pomona Graqe will
meet Friday, 7:30 p.m.• at the
Rock Sprlbp Granp Hall. Columbia Granp will serve re. treabmentl. National . Sewing
eontes~ wn1 be judpcl.

White Bread ·

~gfl .

69&lt; :

.

·sALE

NO-NONSENSE
PANTYHOSE
Styles include Valut Plus, Quttn Plus,
Comfort Stridt, Control Top. light
Support, Sheer to Waist and Knee ·
Highs.
Colors: Tan, Beige, Nude, Black, Navy
and Gray.

BOYS f8.95

Sweat Sfiirts
SimS 16-81, M11 0·121, l l14-16i and
11 8·201. cr,w neck, fluce lintel (on
sl~wes, solid colqrs by Wrangler a::3
Spr~ngfoot.

$719

~!f~i $1 35 TO '$3 45

RCA
25" COLOR

'CONSOLE
TELEVISION

CHILDREN'S

JACKET SALE ..

Spring colars and prints in lined and unlined styles. Sizes: 12 mos. to 24 mos.
and 2 to 14.

11 XL-1 00

Chassis
*Oak, Pecan or Pine Cabinet

REG. S539.00 TO 1559.00

RCA
XL-100

$1. PAT'S

$3 9 900

SUPER SPECIAl ·

KNIT
SH TS
Sefid colon allll stripes

POCKET
T·SHIRTS
Crew neck, lOOOfo cotton. SimS 134-361,

in all

slzn lndutllng tails anti boys
-slzn. Eaulleitt selection of
the ....on's bnt styles~

M (38-401, L (42-441, XL 14&amp;-481. Good
selection ~I solid c~lors

REG. 14.25

$9.95 Knit Shirts ........ S8.46
SJ2.95 Knit Shirts.... SJJ.OI
S16.9S .knit Shirts.... S14.41
SJ9.95 Knit Shirts.... S.J6.96

...--...$339.........._

3 BIG
DA~S

SALE PRICES I
MEN'S LEATHER

DRESS BELTS
By "Buxton" and "Letgin" - all fint quality
leather in your choice af colors in al the popular
widths.
. .

•Western 8elts Also Sale Priced
f12,50 to S14.00
· alLIS •.•••••••••••••••••••• ·s9.99
f14.50 to S15,50
IELTS ••••••••-............ s11.99
f16.00 to S17.00
BELlS •••••••••••••••••••• *13.19
S17.50 to S19.00
BELTS .................... s14.39

DONT

::::_
:;:,...
(~ i-,:1, (

---

J BIB DAV8 :

NEW HAVEN, W.VA,-~
AI'.- Ge•pel . . . will be held
.

. -.

~

.

·.

MISS IT. :;.

"'" -"011011 -·111:311 WEST

...

S10.00 Jackets ..... S7.99
S14.00 Jackets ..,S11.19
S18.00 Jackefs ..,$14.39
S24.00 Jackets ... S19.19

SALE! "HANES"

ball seuon wtll t,. SaturdaY. 9
a.m. to aaoa, •• the Soutllenl
Kllldel'llll'len llulldiJII ..... $10
per clllltl. Birth c:et llflcate
nnLie1. Rqlatratlon will allo be
lleltl .xi Saturd~Y, March 18.

,

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

SATVUAY

ftlr the meeting.

·

REG. $1.119 TO 14.32

RACINE··ftellatratlon for the
Rae• Youtll Leaaue •ummer

~- J)eavor bad the progra~
'

of which began In a remodeled God; " and a video for training,
horse shed. He has been a
" A Personal Evangelism Call."
full·tlme evangelist and bas ·
The Sissons of GallipoliS are
preached lri camp meetings and members of the Church of Christ
all the l[berai arts colleges of the In Christian Union, will be
Church of the Nazarene in the singing each night of the meei· ·1
U.S.A. and Canada.
lng, which begins at 7 p.m.
_.
Shaver has written seven
),
Paltlnl oa tbe dog
bOOks, and produc.e d two audio
"The Second Kids' World Almanac"""
tape sets and a video. His "Basic
Bible Studies" sold over 250,000 explains the origin of the expressio~.
copies In English, and has been ~putting on the dog": At the turn of:
published In 22 other languages. the century, Americans who wan~
Most recently, Beacon Hlll Press to impress people bought expens)ye
has released hiS tape album, dogs to put on their laps- imitatl~ ;a:'
practice that was prevalent amoni
"Lord Teach-Us To Pray; Living the
high society of England at the'
In the Spirit,' ' a d_lsclpleshlp lime.

r--.....,.....,-------------------------------------------:-'·

.Community calendar

"ndsay
•

Ann
Landers

haw

69

l!eelded If anyone should face
rJharges for causing the March 10
Cvalanche that killed a friend of
~e Charles and almost hit the
prince himself. The prince said In
4 public statemept that he
accepted responslbUity for tak·
Gig his friends on a steep run off
~e marked slope but that eve·
!')'One In his party knew about the
flsks Involved In such skiing.
~ollce In the Swiss resort of
Kli&gt;sters have confirmed Charles
~as questioned and made a full
statement but It's very unlikely
lhat It will lie released unless
~aries are filed against some~ne. The avalanche kllled Char·
les's close friend Maj. Hugh
and Injured another.
Patti Palmer·Tomklnaon.
~ SPEECHLESS DUO: Laryngl·:··

Evangelist for the Meigs Area
Holiness Association, ·26th An·
nual Indoor Camp Meeting, at
the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, located ·on Main Street In
Rullarid, March 14 - 20.
Since 1970, he has been teach·
ing at Nazarene Theological
Seminary In Kansas City, Mo..
where he serves as the Frank and
Gladys Cooper Professor of
Evangelism. He also serves as
minister of outreacll at First
Church of the Nazarene, Kansas
City.
His ministry has Included the
pastorlng and o~ganlzlng of two

J

·

EASTMAN'S

t

s~~::~s~:~~~:~n~::m~~?~!es~:e~~ ~;:~!~~'People,Sexan~.

High-gradeh work costs
but
·
£
'
vou. get W at ViQU pay. or

r

·•

�--Ohio
11 Help Wanted
TheAAA-DrivorT!olnlot
lnltn.lotoB. M..t Nv8 .,...
"'"""e rooanl _, ....,. hio(o
YJUd Ohio drtv.r'l . . . . . . .
r.t~r.. . WIM
trlln. Submit OultWfc .. laflltiD:

v•n. ldell for

Ill""''" .. CAll '"·21"

._.,,.MAY I &amp;.a. t• S P:A

__
_
__
'. . _.-.
. .._
__ ..,_. . ._.____

We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Quantities

I AJl """' MOON Y~Y
CLD51D S&amp;MIIY
•
-

c_,--..:.,
_ .. __......_
·..,.,.·-~-·
_,. . . __
........ -·---..........
.. __,. __
.

I'CIUOU

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

,.._,......_
1'f0o0--·

11 .........

.....

ALL
WEEK

_Coli-·~-

~~

••

• .•

,1114"
._

••
Ill••

•••••
te l ..

.....

Government JoN. • 1I ,04f·
t58,230 , .... Now hlrina. Yew
. . .. 1·1106·117·41000 !ot. II·

,..... ..'-'---. -............
--··--·-·
..
·-

-.a•

....·
. •
-

••.•

....

1101 for CUffMt Federll 1.... .,.

Y:n!::

~CI~•

DUI'&gt;Uirll -

•0111011• •AI"(R
fUIIa.t.VUI'IE R
MOOOUC.t.• OAOfR
lllliRIDIII ·-~
fR IIIIIf ......
IU"')nP•'f•

••

"

OA~

UTURDU
MOIIIO.t.Y
"-'CID.t.Y
MDNUD.t.Y
-ID4Y
FRIO.V

Limit
20

.

.

9 lunch Meats ..... ~B..
11
Chuck Roast •·•••• l·•·
BUCKET~
.
.$
229
Cube Steak ••••••~•••
BlUE GRASS KY •.BORDER
•
.W1eners•••.•••••••••••••
FLAVORITE-WHOLE or HALF
$ . 99
Boneless .Ham •••••• 1
'

z

-

ElWIN
CONSTIUCTION

....
"'0c

...

.

RACINE .
FIRE DEn.

2·2~.?'110.

-y

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE lo
a1ven
lhet on Bllur...y; Men:~ 19, ·
1988, ot 10:00 o.m., o pub·
lie oolo will be held ol 11ili
Union Avenue, Pomeroy.
Ohio, to ooH for calh lho ful·

'.
.

~.

.

;p.

Ul

. 12 OZ. Pi&lt;G.

0.ft.

LB.

r"'

~

~l!llVt7· Missi8S Sizes

;p.

=
r"'
1:!:1

tq 18. Doublebrauted, Hned ~
': or coet has ragtarl •

I,

sleeves. Stale N (1D' 12·14) orR (14-16-18)
· when ordering.

~

0

~

"CC

0

1978 Chllvrolot Comtro
S# 1887UNII721127
1980 CJ·7 JHp
t# JOM93AC709013
Dozer Madil D850 Con
oil 70711111
The Formort Be,. ond
Sovlftlll Company, POm•
Ohio, ,._ .., tho
io bid at thlo oolo, ond

tbo.. collo·
ter1l
.old In the condillon It It In with no ••·

or

tle• given.

2

lmpUMI. w•r•n -

·

. WANT ADS bring .
·Vai:ation Mooey

$1.00 PIH.
. OFFERGOODTHAU

-

Send to: Reader MaiL
Dept 0000 BoK 4000.
Niles Ml, 49120·4000.
Print Name. Address.
Zip. Size. Pattern Num·
ber. (N Y&amp; Ml residents
add sales lax)

-

-•
(.
Bananas ••••·•••••••• !~~. 29
Q

~

r"'

•
•'

~

;p.

=

~· '2.--;1-::n-;M=e-m-o""ri=-e-m-'--

r"'

1:!:1

In Memory Of
DONW.

0

~

0 ·

BROUGHTON

2°/o Milk ... ~...•. ~~.... $139
KRAFT SINGLES SLICES · . . $
9
11
Amer. Cheese....... .

-=
0

ROACH

2

who passed
away
Mar. 16, 1986
Sadly missed
by Family
and' Friends

,.

Bread ••••••••••••••••• 2I

$ ·

·1
Grape Jelly ••.•~m••• 89&lt; Noodles •••••• ~2.~~:~'. 69 &lt;
20 OZ. LOAF

•

KRAFT

.;

.•The total value of the dou·
lbla coupon may not exceed

$1.00

10.3-lo.a oz. ·
Pl.zza •••••••••••••••••••••

CRISCO SHORTENING
3LI.
CAN

$199

1i1111t 1 P• CuttGHII i.t Powell'• Supermorktt Only
GHII S.., Mar. 13 thru s.t. Mor. 19

......

TOILET nSSUE

PAPER TOWELS

CHARMIN

3/Sl

Umlt3 P • C GHtl Owly At Powell's s_,m;uktt
• Goool
.... u
.
... 19
o
•

99(

Ulilit 1 r. Cutlomtr
floo4011y at Powtl'l S pi IWbt
• Goo4.S... k. 13 thru Sat. k. 19

DETERGENT ..

72 oz.

lOX

$279 '

•The total value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon
c:ennot exceed the purchaee
price of the item. M,oney
will not be refunded. ·

lillllt 1 , . , _
GHII Oily AI Powtl's S.,11i111rht ·:
IIMII S... Mor. 13 tin Sat. Mil. 19 .

•

·n•••

Register far FREE
lir.41 llath - No
Pwr~Naceseory

......

~---·
915·4141

EAGU I.GE
SMALL ENGtNE
PH. 949-2969
Deelar f•

YAUMAII &amp; ICIO

Clllls lllsrto11td $5.00

PAIT-nlu LPII'S
75 lED Kf/lONG·fE·
CAll fACiliTY
'
Loololnt
for • ......
nurHI to join ow dtdluttd

Alto Tr••••l111..
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

I 3:00·1 1:30 A.M.
11 :00 P.M.· 7:30 A.M.

"C

lttff ........ - - ..

pravldlna quolllv-.
feel you lhlr• thle.WI I
and COinmlamiiiC to . . .

__
_
......

6·i7·tfc

gorlolrlo . . .
..... work.
....... HI or
write:

_.,..

PAm COIWII, LN. D.OJI.
for tu• •'lew. WEW_• •

CARTER'S

AI&lt;AIIIA IIUISitiG CENJII
luA, . . St. "

,PLUMBING
..
&amp; HEATING

3· 11-tln

BROWN'S
TIAILER PARK
Campers, RYs,
or Mobile
Home Lot

Rentals

-

Loc•t•4 HalfWay be·
Rt. 7 8t Jallan.
NEW I USfD MOWEIS
8 .7 FinJinclng on
Ytrdmon
'

992-5623

YARD

PICNIC TAILII

.Offer Ia only good for produat on hand. "'o Rein- 1

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

BUY 1101 FOR EASTER.AIDIOTJIIR'S QAY

.

l
..
'

.
'

'

'

'"SEE: BIU, TOll, JoAI or Slllren Stlart

•w

Or SfO!I ly 11le Store
0.
U.. loaJI out
ef

·Tho orlglool luy, Soli,

Trede MqazfM for c•n.

IIUcko, booiO, cycl•. RVo

FOR QUICK RESULTS ...
AdveriiM lodoy In

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

Ph. 1-992.3J27. 1.164·4133

.,

1·15·'17·1 -

CARP.ENTER ·
SERVICE

Ctll 11M R....,c:hert. 1-800248·3882.
'

Comp• .houMholdt of tum&amp;ture •
Atlo wood 6
ooaltt.t.n. SwHt' 1 Fumitura

Federal. Stltil lind Civil 8eNtt}t
Jabs. NDW ~. .. Your .,...
•13,&amp;50 to '11.410. ,.......,
dlete openings, C.l11 -31 a -731~
8013 Ext. F2711.

WMt to buy: UHd furniture end
amlqu... wm buy ~tire hou..
hold fumloftlng. Morlln wmoyor, 814·241·51&amp;2.

Excellent cath money. Aatemila.
producu et home. J......,,
-.ooyund "*";!fs

Mt••·

• Auction. Third &amp; Olin.
814-441-3111.

"""own bu-.

tlking
c•• of at
"•;""~~~:;}~=
A.R . Knight
Rold. Phone
before you come.

coini.

~nt.

w••·okl

4·1~ ·'86-tc

88~·3478 .

QUiLTS
High pricel paid for pr•1150
qulttt. Applique. pMeed. •nv

condlllon . Clllll14·192·2101
or 114·992·1157.

Money for College! Parl-IN
jobs. Join the Army National
OuW. 304·87&amp;·3950 or ,..

800·142·3118.

Thr• held Taylor iiOft ..,floe
machine. Call 81ol-797·
4295 or 114· 114·4711 .

crMm

3 Announcements

W.'llglve you theloak you ....
at 1 priM you'll kw•-Haircub
JrO Juol et.tt al FIEITA HAIR

FA.HIONSI No ~.:::;on••·

JUOI wolk lnl 322
A....
acro11 'from pn. 441-1112.
Hoi F~ Sundoo. Wllol'o lho
"acoap? lllld why now? IUMn

4

Giveaway

EXCELLENT CASH MONEY ft,

I1111JI11'11111'111

Hmble pnxlucts at home, Ji}
welrv. eiKtronk:t, ~0'(1• ma~
Start your own ~ . Cell
IRofund-1 1·518·4159·35"'
0111 82214 24 hours.
_,_
------110MMura bebytitl• naedad foroQ:
children. Park Drivt erN. Cll

S1~r VILI~S

11 Help Wanted

after e P·"'·· 304-17&amp;. 7349. ':j

o.t 11 fr• cologne - Sell Awn.

Hant.mM, J.tf.aan CountY.
W.V1 tG mHk 200 c:ows one&amp;-a
dey and fnd. Mutt have ••pf
lienee and good refrtnelt, Ur
eel tent housing and Pl'f .. Cal
304·725·1308 bolwoon 8 '110'
9:00PM .
.Z;

GOVERNMENT JOBS .
t11.040 • t51.230 / yr. Now
hiring'. Your area . 1015·117·
8000 Ext. R-10189 for current

GET PAID for loodlng

Applfcltlons being tlkan for
exparlanced. I elf- m otlvated
conltructlon sup1rlntMd1nt
wUUna to trntl. fwnHiir whh
FHA iltUD procedu,.. for up-

Plea11nt Valley Hollpit.. Ia .0,.
cepting IIPPiications lor a 'hdl
limo Soclol Worker. toch~i

cominG project• In eoutt.ern
Ohio. lend rwume with HiltY

requll•••.u to P.O. Bo• 180•
Llncnt•. Ohio 43130.

degree In Sodll Wo~ is l'lr ·
qufred. EIIIPII'ience It preterr•.
If you would lllle more Wtforrrfl..

lnfarrutlon needed concemlng
.ny fllp-cw• of 3 or 4-wheat
AI-Terraki Ve..._ (ATV or

tlon call lho
offlco
.. 304·171·4:WO.
Volto, Hoopllllllo on oquol
opportunituy and .tfrlmn._.
eetktn employer.
~· :

pt.,.

-'!l\1

ATCI. Coli Tho Roo........
1·800.248·3812.

12

Appllcallono oro bolna occoolod
unlll Al&gt;rll 1 fD&lt; lllo ~ of
London Pool men•r for thla
.,..,...,, R.um. .,. ta be
ruHM to: .a.nk=elaw.an, clerlt-

IQ.t-lfn

WANTED

Dill OR AUVI
•Weahera •Dryen
•Ranges •Freuera
•Refrigerators
I
I

t'

II

1111'S APPUANCE
SIRVICI

41nl.

Four tat frilkv DUDDiel . Davtlmtl
114-448.oeotl; lilor 1 :00 PM
114-448·2821.

' bo
u - ond ofMidd'-"· Con
3molopu~l-.old.~

Colllo, 'Ao Blue Hoo_.. A1oo
---.Goodwill!

-o.

Ghlld,... Collll4--2007.

old,

2 - · I rnonllo
1 .....
Ill Aoh II.,
MIIPIIJID t.Ohlo.lrown ..........

ond ·1

old - ·

c-,.,.

Cuto. - · odottblo. I lionel. OhioJ114·143·1421 .
4 month old 1111 ,.,..
cd
IIQ4.171· 7887 ·l:oci ....

·-old---

8824. - ........... -

·171-

6 Lost end Found
LOIT : Two W1U1tr Coan

..... onet.mllt.
,Houn•••
_ _ .,....,oolot.
teo
Rfw Coli tt43H-1741or2U·tt:IO.

FOUND: Y - • -olrlpod

-;v.::· ...... -

IMM . . . . D I . I • -

10

441-t

.

- - ·Coli 114-

Sltuetione
Wanted
~

Will do blby aittina "' my home
H1ve ,.._enees. C.n 114·381•
7171.
~
1

•

,

R•sidentu•l or commercJ..

WANTED : Pert - lme (31

cloonlng.

hrt/ w....l Community Servloe

R o - of llloljt

County ov• 20 ....,., E..-;

Worker postdon neileble at an
I n - - .... fiiCIIIIy lor

_..._....d__

noncod. eoa 114·192·7305 .~

In Oolllpolo. Ohio. llouto: 3·
1:30 PM. IIICI 7 llullllo houn,

13

wild Ohio . . ........... lftd
good "'"""e rooanl ._Ired;

Cell Ul for your mobl..
lnsurenu: · ~Uitr lnsuranW,
304·812·21.,1. Al1o: •uto'

10n1 with mentllll reurdatlon end

homo. lifo, hoollll.

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

a month o l d - Colle, mill.
IDntholr.whllo-biOCIII ..or
OM .,.., HI DJ.mond lt.,

boollil

1100.00 per title. Write: PASI'·
1173, 161 S. Uncolnwoy, N.
Aurora. II 10642.
~

lrellurer, ViMega of ByNDUN,
Third St.. lyrecuta. Ohio

2 . . . . brood ...... puppl•. Coli
S14-441·1233.

- .•

AVON ..lareu; Shlrtey Sp..,l,.
31K-171 ·1429.
•

M•k• big bucka. Call 114-4413318.

A11111111 Ill: I' 1111!111'

..

fulldma
oldorly
and boW.
814· 949· 2931
5132.

1.-ge currency. Top prl·
.,_, Ed Burkett llrblr Shop,
2nd. Ave. Mkldleport. Oh. 014-

Poineray, Ohia

Ohlo41838. ,

IACINE, OHIO

.

•

NHdMI pert-time· hllnllllm• 4) ,
work on r.m.ls. Mutthwl.mjll
amount of klootAtdtJU conc:..;na
-·
_,. ·
orolplumbing.
ropolr. Wrllo
10 P.O
1!f&gt;1
401, Pomerov. OhM» or Qlll
114-912-2403.

318·1303.

~992-7314

Kupid'a N11t •Ad Conneetfons
O.Ung Servic. of Huntinglon
iolne too-th• IIJII'II"'I profUu.
For infonnltlon wrtte: Kupkf's
Nest. P.O . Boa 519, Ironton.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

•

11122. 24 hr1.

-111111.

EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M•

Coli (

- 1· 1·111·481·3131

JuM C.rs wfth or whhout
maton. C.U L.rry Uvefy-114-

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Dtaltr

\. . . . I

· Over 100 Properties
For
,, Sale- Call
. Today

Ave., CWHpoUt, Call 114·440·
2282.

IF!oo EJtl,moteJI

f•lll Et,lipllltftt

GUN SHOOT

Electricity pragram ~.­

Information nMded conawniNu
any fUp·over of 3 or 4 whMI M
Tarrtlin Vthld• CATV o; ATCJ,

work

614-742-2617

Reel Estate General

Aduh:

TOP CASH p-'d for '13 model
and ,_., uNCI c:8rS. Smtth
Buick• Pontiac, 1111 Eatt11m

-Concrete work
- Plumbing 1nd electrical

Authoriull ~ Doore,
Ntw Helonol, W Hog

-FmEmUm-

.

at your con.,.._.w

Tri-County Vocotlonol kh411tl
meyer Auctlonttr· 114-24&amp;-. begin April 4th. l'o register orfW
1182.
more informadon, AI 71P3111 ut. 14. Yau ...., : .
ollglblo to. nionloo to .tor
9 Wanted To Buy
your tra•Nng. uk •ut ~r
flnanciel akl eourcn.
~
We pav tnh for IIta model cion
uHd QWt.
lnform11ton 11 Mlded for book.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc.
Anyone, wk:limlred b¥ profttBil GIMM Johnton
tional - IM'toft nil 'rhe ftt814-'41-3172
aurohert. 1-800-2.t8-3U,2. :,

-Addons and remod..iftg
- Roofing and gutt•r work

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILE, OHIO
614-662-3121

f• any tl thtro ,..,., col

New&amp;IHII

evaillb~

and localiont. Marlin Wede-

YOUNG!S

].4.'... 1110.

ws

MEIGS OFFICE
IIACHINES

w.demeyar's Auc:tlon S.rvlce-

Doter, or you
jut! moy mlu 1 oolol ..

HOlliS: 9:30 o.m.-6 p.m.
. .. , ·fridoy
Sat. by Appo!otiMllt

&amp;III'VIco
oJunk Yonl BuoiWANr 10 IUY WBCIID 01
JUIII(
01 'IIIUCIS

or Llatt ••••••

. . -gh--

outlook. We trlln pec~p,ifDf ~

frlgorllllon- .. - ·
ti!Ot.oro l.niiOIIod onc1 wllod liy
oloetrl&lt;lano. c - lor il)o

Wheeler

IUS. 667-6102
HOME 374·5599

Dump Truck

~

atMcbtai.... HNI..... ~.
powa, .ir-oondltionll• _.. M-

6old.

· 17 Yre. E•~rience
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

·w-..

~----~··~·""~

tUg~.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Buving, dlity
sliver
rlnga, jewelry, lt_.lng

41U6 ST. IT. 7

•Doltr • llackhM Wollt
'oWIU Do Houllng 'liVIth

. _......... ........

111t. 14. A v.t.ly r.t'
funding aourCft 10 IHY .-....
tr*lnt are available for th6M

3111

Want
to tiuy tobaicaa pctlllldqe.·
Call114-44e-1437.

RandS
AUTO REPAIR

.F•ltl
l•••,.••t.
P1r11 I

A!O!O

27&amp;8.
6-30 acr11 frontage on 218·
IOUthofO.IIIpolis. No more than
I mlloooUI. Colll14·441·1111 . ~~;;;;;-h.;;;:~;;-;.;;;~.;+
If you hne ta.d

992-2196

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

00

- -. C o - E....
ciMto. Food_W_.
Elocttonlco T - I e l - · ~rial Malntenenc• Worke!f,
Nursina -.nto _, 0•41'·
lies, Machlanim , .net Weld• .
.R..-. now for d11. . ........_
nmg April ..... Coli Tfi.Caurlly
VocM:ton.l Adutt Cant• ... 713·

Standing Timber. C.ll814-378-

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

TIIPLI P
EXCAVAnNG

1·21-'U·tfn

lOi OFF THIOUtiiOUIIIAICM · .

742·2421

PAT HILL FORD

1nrw1 ...

Middleport, Ohio

·

Cal T. 0. Stewart
or Ill Stewart

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Wo Honor IIC/Dilc/'11111 .

319 So. 2nd Ave.

DEER-FOUfftAIHI....QfMtNT

•

Fllhlng Su!IPIIM. Guns.
Archery. ilnd MUch
More.

915-3561

CiMINT ORNA¥DIT8

OPEN DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Lot of New ltemt:

POMEIOlh~:.01110 •

Service on All MuM

992-628!

.

GUNS &amp; SUPPUES

'SALIS &amp; SERVICE

6 fet' S45

lt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Middl1110rt, Ohio 45760 ·
S~LES &amp; SERVICE

BOGGS

~:,:s

Roger ·Hysell
Gara.ge

Now location:
161 Nortll Stcon•

NO SUNDAY CAliS

I
*' C0111UCYOIS .
R.-coo
l l·~lfn

KOUNTRY ~~':

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

7:00 A.M.·I:H I'.M. SHIFT

. "l.... fiOI" .

I

•

STUCIISI. 01110
NEW STOII-NEW STOCK
LOW PIKES .

.

PH. 949-1101
., .... 949-1160

Wa lervlae

''

'

CHESTER, OHIO
I
oHOMI BUILDING
•ROOIIII ADOniONI I
oKITCHINI • .ATHS
oROOPINO
,
REMODELING 8
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SVITEMI 8
lACK HOE WORK

P. 0. lox 111
Oh. 45769

.

eTii.re ie • limit of .a&amp;-.:0&amp;....,...,.miy,...m
. .

..... .

JIM COBB CHEY.·CAD.-Oi.DS

•This off~r excludes cigarettes. or any other Items
· prohibited by lew.

.

FULl TUllE &amp; PAIT

Send rnuma to:

•This ontr does not apply to
Powell'• Super Velu Coli·
pone, free coupons. or any
competitor's coupons.

oheoka.

MARCU.. 1
CONTRACTING 1

....JO'$ ~In SHOP.,

11

Cooi.W..OIIIo457U

.

'1

10·8·tfc

. '

~

8

FILL DIRT

J.l.'. . 1...

local Car Dealer Needs
Experienced •cHANICS and
t1 BODY MEN with ASE
certification.

•

•• .,.

GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL ,

10·7·Hn

JOHN TEAFORD
Clltst•; Olio
.

1· 14·66P· 15

•Only one manufacturer'•
· coupo11 per item.

REAMES FROZEN

PRICE SAVER

•

·•Any menufecturer'e cou·
,pon greeterthan61¢willbe
redeemed at face value
9111y. .

JENO'S FROZEN

.

s.-.

SUPIIVISOIS ·

~·

'

.

New GripJ $3.50
Greowft $10.00
laJkttllall ,,.,..... and
pt..... $3.50
f. . . . . .

JULY31, 11188

¥ ·

Factory (hake
1~ Gauge Shotguns Only

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

3- ..... , ••.

131 18. t7. 1,8 . 3tc

Each pattern $3.25 plus

-.

I

Come In - Lot• of
New Gi{t•! ·.

"'::',!]:::.: the

Prlued

.

HEINER'S KING SIZE WHITE _ .

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
4:30P.M.

3·2·. . 1

DENNY CONGO

lowing coll1terel:

-

.

949-2263
or 949-2168

Bash- lulldl•g

Public l\1 otic a

·.

GUtters
·DownapoU11
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTiMATES

GUN SHOOT

985·3365

·z

NEW- BPAIR

.

Day or IY-'--

0

ROOFIIIG

949-2748

Custom Home
Building, Room
Additions.
Remodeling S.
Repairs, Roofs,
Baths, Kltchene

• .UI1 )Vo

SkiN Ill powor. Brighton your'"""

•DIEPOIT, o•o

ROOFING 8t SIDING

C!IIMI, OHIO

•..
Jl

$ 119

CONCRETE 8t
BLOCK WORK

Thr• f•mlly yard ule. M1rch
18-18 . 1 :00-I :OOp.m . 101
Wolfe Drive . Baby itama,
ciQthee, mile. Rain or lhlne.

· .. Free Eatimatea"'

PAGE STIEET

OHII

NEW HOMES

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
-.---------- ,.... ---·-·..... -· -··-·

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

... ...

Howartl L Wrltnel
UCIM~

Job hunting? -

·······P"omero·.;;··········

BISSELL
SIDING
..._. CO.,

GEARY
IODY SHOP

or IOI'S BIC110NKS

REMODELING 8t
ADDITIONS

Jli

.

.........,..=r.,. .

:.Ia
CALlMYC

417 Second A)'lllue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 4563i
or at
Veterans M8morial Hospital
·Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

i:a

CHICKEN

. :u·•.

•

~ Licensed Clinical AudioiOiist
:z:: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992:2!04

Fryer Parts ••••••• !~•• 49&lt;
FLAVORITE

::n:;:..

Ltt · - " ' -.....ill
&amp; ....... It
VIIS.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

MIXED

Leg Quarters •••• ~•• 39 &lt;

.

IAPI

Dependable Htarina Aid $lies &amp; !larvii..l
c:J Hearina Evaluations For All Aaes

(Qupons

$ 09
Steak/Roast ••••• ~~. 1

l

Yard Sale

.... ....... "" jobo

Business \Services

MARCH 1.9

FRESH PORK BUn .

•
.

7

·~·

N'I'&gt;M PUIUCAIIQH

!Hit .toM
· lOCI PM
- l 011' M
~ I 00 P.
- I 00. M
" I OOP.

THIU
r

Cl•iJ;.d fHIP• eo~~er 1M
jolloM'-1 a.Jeplaou e.rchnp~ ...

I

MARCH -13

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., MAR. 13 THRU SAT., MAR. 19, 1988

$

,...... M. ... .,.

1114"

.._.,,. _ _ .. _ _ . . , _ IC-

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

AAA3410tocond Avo.,Qollrp.
111, Ohio ..1631 .
~

RATI8

..,._a•a.•-•,..•-

Insurance

.

::1

...'

ho.

M·F,pluoMO-how-lyOiafl
- Hioh-clogreo.

""

de'*opment diHIMiitl" pre-

ferred; mutt heva tfOOd corn-.
mUniCitlon end oroanlletlon
lldltl, blattt. to worllM pert of a
111m and punctual. Good money

16

,......,....................··lary ; t4.21/hour. lick ·
menrgrfNIIt lklll 10 .........

U :ati Hi-life..._.,._ ...........
lhnd r.ume and cowr lin• to

R-Illy,

_.,.c"""""""' ·

loo•loto. P.O. eo. 104, Joall·
Ololo 41140 . ......,._
muot bo - · - by: 3·24-

11. Equ1l Opportunity
l!mpilsr•·

-0:

lilT PAID far , - . llaritool
f100 ,.. - ·
PAll·
!JK. 111 1 . Unaalmuw. N.

.
.......
------..-=-··-··Jifw
...,,,
................ .,....,.

-~~-.
'-""

a aan£11 •
nl daua: NMtftt
Iiiii lila I .. IHII ..........
1:JO.I:IO. bo ....
pu

-

2

"

.

,......

tJ.eo -.,. -

•

. . . . . .

,..

'""

. ......: ... Cia140

o/o- ,,,.,..._ . .

,...... Aw.. ' - · · · · ONo

Schools
lnetruction

A!i

Top jobs rtquq top •klls:
Nowl - - . ,. . . .
C-441·4317 AIC "-•,.
dltodllog. II· I 1· 10881
.

18 Wanted to Do
1--- - - - -..;

�...

.
'

Pomelov-MidrJapo~t,

Pometov Mlddlapcrt. Ohio

StJilltlill

-·
..... ..., __
.-·--. . . .fer-- ·-·Ill--·
:.:..· .. ... :a
·-·---fol

LAFF-A-OAY

4i Speoe for Rent

i4MIMi. Mti'OIYIIidiM

.T elevision
Viewing

~,r'Mfol~... l've
,
~
IN ~~55'5!

Offtol h It 4 " 21 l.ooun It,
.. ,..............
Coiii14-.UZ1.
1

l
111 ............., . . . . . .

~-­

.- :; ~

~

All
Mall-.... CMiri.AIIoeF I 4

W.Vo. Colll04-.,.,...1.

0:

•

'::~~:~' S©~~lA-L££~S$
ltfHo4
CLAY l . ,DLLAN

--·u;;·-·..

~Wk.

1177 ct

'

··.~~

Jot

•

0

WED •• MARCH 18 . • ;.

I

.

71

ID~Look(T)
(!) Dr. Wllo: The Two

.' ~~

• Aooqto.iee

-..·-...:.·--

..

j;OON

W~'LL

HAVE MOII:E
. LOP&amp;ER-t HE~E THAN THEY PO
AT T!!E ZUMSAI.IA HILTON.

I

Ill ,._ of Ufl
ero HIPPY

- - - ' - - ''-

o.r•

WILL,OOMIE.
AT !.EAST 'IOU ·
WON'T HAVI! A

~

--rA:.:....;T,....::..U..;.Q!...;O......ll

1:81 (I) Allca
1:30. C]) liS NBC Nightly Newo

FENCE II&gt;ETWIOEII
VA WHEN 'IQU

5

PAII!NT~

..

t
!

I II I !

Maange left on

.....

entw~rlng

"

machine: "Tonight's meellng hll
belen cancef!KI. There ere nor
. - - - - - - - - . . . . , enough people available 10 have
·

.

lu•=

/i)NIAT:!

HUC/ '/QUit,

.

•

•

•

.

.

I

!ll~~~·ei'cu
H; .....&amp;..,..

I

......

0 R E N U ll
a - ."
1---.,.~6;:...:.;1:..::...1.;,:7:...;1:..:;·,~---1 Q Comp ieoe

tke chuckle ,q uoled
.-J..
--'·--'--..l-'-..1·-"'
·
bv
filling
in
the missing wOrds
1
you develop from step No . 3 below.

l!]lodrE~

IIJ)Inelde PoCIIIcl 'II
Ill WKRP In Clncltw11d
ero Too ~tar Comtott

•,.,
••••

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN

1:35 (J) Corol Burnett

THESE SQUARES

...

7:00 (Jl Remington Steele Blue
BIOOdadSi-

.c."'
'
.,

e (Jl PM MIQIIzlna
ID~(L)

SCRAM-I.m ANSWERS
Mllffllr - Rtbal- GniA - lnfKt - BUilt _STEERS
lt'a nollhe belli and bulla ln'IO!VId with the ltOc;k market
that meke people loll money, ~·a the BUM STEERS!

(I) E-lnment Tonight
8 (I) Paople'a Court
(!) II] M-1/ L.ahm

NawaHour (1 :00)

...

~:::,li

n

-.o. Col

J_ •

Oraon
~ w..-114·441·9717 or

Rlplev, .... Ylf'llnla. ••

-4411.

. w,.._.,._
111

liog· ln 1171.
Hondo- ...,..

-7. Nlnetofhr&amp;

yn, Df eapuiance·alf wotl

eueranteec~.

F,.. •llmtt... C.l

1014-441·8121 .

I

eli&gt; M'A'S'H

•

7

I

lqUII'II

-c-.172··•·
'

ID Schaloodc Sports
Amarlcl
eCIJ Judge

:;:

'

•c'"''*'

IIJ Cnlaaflra

-.-·.·

~1

=

~.Dill, ........., .

Homee for Sele

._m

Col

3 IR .
hamel built On
lo~ I 1t.lll5 ond ••.

14·115·7311 .

lrtunechte por r 1 r'=n · t roome
.... Nth. ba..n...t • pr..-ln

0.1-. Ohio. Call 114·441·

2-.

Fermt for Sell

.... -

30 .ere finn: Monty tiHablt.
Nre• fUo GranO: .Poncl, Mrnl;
good homo. CIHI14-241-H71

35 Lot•

3 ru. ---M•in Bt.. Crown

Cltf. 121.000. Call 114· 441·

1111.

2 atoty, I IR., 1 bfth. In tDW'n.
,..., SchDOt. Will Mil on 1.-i
_,..., , Calll14-441· 1122.

'*

r.:....

2 tiedroorn; 2 • batha, 2
lw.t lot on At. 33.
lwa1th11 pool, Httlhe, CloH
10 _.._... High. Call 11 4·992·
32~ ,

I rootn·houH'and Mth. 80 plu•

...... V - lulh Rd. RoehM,
Ohio. MI.OOO. 1114-992·6988.
'h

.era.

5

100

a. Acreage

acr•. ,__, CDIIIIty Rt.

87. .-..o hillo of· -ond
end mtldoWt. ......, fOr
hunting, many good buMdlng

sites.

hnc::ed for cntle,

t35,000.00. C.ll Ron Thanlton

304-181·3113.
Lots. one acre, level woodtd,
city WIIUI, Jentcho Rolld, owner
finMcing, good t.m~, 304.
372·11405 or 372·2171.

36

ReeiEeteta

7 room 3 bMroom houN on
"-Urel Cliff whll 7 ICNI. Weah.,
1nd ·dryer. retrt.,...stor, nave.
Asking •46.000.
114-892·131 0 oft" I PM.

ell_,.._,

Rent. wtth option to · buy. 4
beGioom frii'M home on 315
ACNI . . WDDds and IMidoWI.
A.INny • •· Meiut County. Cell

1·1tl4·12114.

approahnlllfy &amp;000 equere f..,
In.,.. bltnMn Pt. Pl....n.ud
QoiNpollo
CaH' 304·343·

Fo...,.

bath. llooutllulllght ""' wood·
work, good neighborhood .
Quk:k poseiiMiun. Call 11 4·
992·671.,

n

41

Homes for

Rent

Nicely turnithed tmatl houta.
Adultt only. Aat. required. No
0010. Calll14·441·0331.

24x60 double wide home on
50x11 0 tot.
porch.
utility bldQ. t.nced y.nl. Cltfton.

2 BA . unlumlahlld. 1 mlta-211
off Rt. 7. UOO rent. •110 dep.
Ref. MMrled couplel. One child.
CoiiiU·- ·8811.

w .v • . 3~- 773·5521.

:.:.:..:..::..:..::..:..::..~-- 1 10800

Four bedrooms, 2 baths, Ned

S•m~ Addition.

central 11r cond.,
ba""'-· progo, fl.opl.,.o.

eo·o. 304-171-1119.

Four bedroom., 2 blth1, Ned
Sem Addition, centr• air cond.

1

or 2 b1dr:oom houM in

l'omofoy. R-.dy romodolod.

1985 NlthUI 1 4xl0. 2 led·
roorm:, ~ned. centflllir,
porch~

Fumishlcl or unturniahMI. 114-

992-1723 m .. I:OO.
Small ~for rent. 1 bedreom.
living room, k - . utfllly

room. OM toroid aW turnece.
114-1141-2734.

uriNmtthed. Park L..ne.
Colll14· 441·931 I Momingo.

3 -room 1335.00
month; 304·175· 1137.

1981 Crlltricf9o. 14•7~ . Totol
eiKtrlc. 2 bld~m. 2 beth I· 1
garden tub, teundry room, llrQI
porch &amp; underpinning. C.l
11--441-9113.

14 .:,.., Hm, pond, mile eut. 2
bedroomt, cemr.l •r• . _ or
Mil. t4150.00. 3044·111·1891.

1971 Fairmont 14x70. total
...: .. 3 BR .• gllfden tub wmdeck. Very nice. Call Wlftinp

1171 ..... L1l1t:N. Veff good
.

010. 114-01·1101 or 114H Z · -·

....

lulkling Mlteriltl

·
· -brialo. · -otc. c
......
-..
- Wlft.
toro. Rio Orondo, 0, Col 114241·8121 .

utll- pold. Nochlldron.

c
- • blod&lt;l· " " - yont
ar.Wtv.y. M1.anaend. Gel...._

FumiiMd -'· 1 8R, 107 2nd.
Oolllpollo. 1231 Ulllhloo pd. CoN
441-4411 """1om.

Ill llodo Co.. 123\0 Plno So.,
GoiNr.ollo, Ohio. Call 81 4-4411·
2783.

FurNihed apt. 701 4th. 1 BR,
1220. IIIII- pd. Coli 4414411 after 7pm.

156

Pets for Sele

Suool'f lhop·Pot
Oroomlng . All breed1 ... AII
IIVIoo. lomo. Pol F.... a..tor.

0.-o -

Fu111iUted apt. 243 Jackson

Plko. 1 IR . 1231. Utlllioo pd.
Clll441-4411 after 7pm.

Julio- ""· 114-441.0231 .

oloctrlc. CaM 11-·441·9813 of·
tor1'3,0PM.

1110 14x70 lhulb. AH.aactric,
........ condhion. ,,.. r•

· Cal
"""' . ,oo, 114192·1142
.. 114-892-3341.
14• 11 •n.ooo
iilllclldu111.
11x21"
ft.-·
living
room•

1

IU._..

Pork. Col 11 4-441· 1102.

lnller3ll' ....... .....
I ..,.. tend, out
:;;;::r;o~··- c" ,.,.,, JCM.
5

. . ., .

---.--m
_.,..,.... .
, . . . . . . . .. . .

I

01:0 ........

•71

.
•

Un001dllol... ..,....... .....,.. l,

fwnllhed. ,,
,_
Col1·114-217.-. - . ..........

"•••••••••"'•nt
!
W.,.,NOflng.
~;

-·--.-

lliJ . .
ltody
IRDIAiil ......
.. .-. acM·I'ta;
.....

2·.--.
.
low
=---·*'··
7748-I:OOPM.

II Oltl1 Cutla11

,.,..., .......... « f

Plak~J .

up end dal &amp;f, a.. "-tm...J·
Ctuner. one · "'" Mil• up~
lid. Coli 114- « ·

440~. ··

:

lu~tre•e,

UvettCIClk

.c..,..,
.. wockltyllourorlolt. ... •
. ~===:~~~~~~y·
,........ ••lntll1&amp; . . . . . .

eel,,,._..._...,,_...,

Cool.

•ro MOVIE: Laat Plene

c.•

11n

Chlld'o pony fvf - · vor,
· ..... t121. Coli 114171-2110.
.

0111o

lew m"1111

"""-'·

~

· '

304-1.,.,:.-;;•::;
.
.

'74 DcN11o Slonl

304-171-2417.

a, t300.00.

out CPG) (1 :36)

Hey

a. Grein

21R . - h o m e l n E - on private kn. Chlclr., H-· Cal
..
241-8223
. 114-441-3117
.
~Mae

yonl. In ICon 'I•. Call

., .......7473.

304·1~1-ZII\

2414.

'

=..r~'=,:f.". ,.·

_______ _

Rotlly
or - ..•
~ . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . .. yi

.:..:.._
. . _ .... ond - · 304- '
111·1102

Clilltle ~
•
Snoopy turns Into a devilishly
dashing dog who rocks
Punutland whtn he falls
head over tall In puppy loVe
with a capricious French
poodle.
e:oo ro 100 Club

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
IF I WAS HAV1NGA F.IO&lt;RTY, 'rt:)LJ'D
E5E INVITED.

DO''IOL.l KNOW 7HAT

TONORROW's MY
131RTHDAY-:f

PROMISE:.S, PRO'r\ISES.

~.

•

11 .200.00. 304-171-2700.

54 Mite. Merchendise

,.

..

case.

e

•1

IIJI.I.en'J Klnfll.lvtll
8:30 (I) • (I) llltop ........
Story Slap rapalrt hit

rlletlonahlp with young_Jucrr.
to her dad's dlstreu. Q

10:00 (]) llnllalrt Tlfk
.I]) Gil .. y - In , . Ufl
Jack tries to recaptlire

romii1C4 with his first loVe ·at
hia reuniQn.

tiJ

IVIIIabll.

.

.

........,_,

ua....w--

''""'"'.,.!'

·~.

--..---·-'1·

"•
.1;

JIR. - -. 1 1 - -. Air-12211-.
Coiii14--1Ue.
'
2 l1 ' awn, fuu ....... In lyq-.ParGWII......_.Iklluar

----~--

I:OOe1 .......- .

........_.........
1·1111. .

=

-tw ........ loro_Col '
......,..N70,

::!
'

Pool"-

ero~~ennr

'',

--·--·=-:
_,.. __ _

.==-. .:-::v..r:=: ;:
=
................. Heullnt. ~

..

e(!)IIIJIISI .. II

10:31!11 IIOVII: The Qulei-

~-

t4.00-you plo- . 114-441·
1442.

,.....

10:30 (]) Anllltnn IMpaholl

M
..
-~---------------- ..
..- .....00·-al. '·
•

. Call441-4f11-7PM.

·Q ·UIH

reault.
When all four trumps are held by
Welt, 12 trlcb seem impossible, but
that II an Illusion. H West has equal
dlatrlbutlon In the side-suits and U declarer Is lucky enough to find East
with both tbe queen and the 10 of
bearls, the contract can be brought

Tbua, declarer won the king of dla·
111011111 and led a spade to dummy's
klllg. Dismayed by the horrible trump
break, be 11111 played on. Dammy'a ·
jack of beartl waa covered by tbe
quMD and kiDg. South nut led a club
to clammy's queeo, followed by a low
heart from dummy. Wberi declarer's
heart Dine won the trick; declarer

PEANUTS

..

11:00CJJ Rrll ••n....,. You're
. Stllfl ... One
.
el]) CJJ e111 • ~~~~

I:&amp;,J
..
~

ME

.,

L=

""' perf
10
two of Amlrlel'l camlc
ilgllllll, .liCk llnny and
Gnluaflo Mini. lleaclllrglly

t'Z
.=;;;{a. , _-...
. ..
101171-1110.

COUNliiV_E_ ......
of ""'*"1·

Harry Wll finally old enough to ule hll

Cal 114·89Z·

'

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
=

•Au

•u

+KIOI
Vu!Derable: Both
Dealer: South

-·

N .... Eut

s•

Pass

s+

Pus

.Pass

••
Paa

Paa

~

I Queeg'a

10~...
..........,

Opening lead:

+Q

'-:-~-:----:----:-.....,..,.,-~.·
eaabed the heart ace, plaved tiDe Ill¢~
ace of clube, then ace of dfammd., ud··
r:affed dummy's last diamond. ~­
er, dlllllllly and bapleu Well bad ootlat ·:
In&amp; left but spades. South got off lelld
wltb tbe nine of spades. West tbe 10 and bad to lead back Into declarer'll '
A·J for the game-going trlelt.
-

:r

sillter·

u: __

7 in-law
.Prlnce88
w(the
11 Lover
operetta)
or Aentrs 8 Obstade
18 Elmonlte for a
14 u~ · ~lrdle
1e 'MUtt
9 ... - I
re1ltlve .. saw Elblaw 21 The stull aa &amp;no
18 Kind
11 '"Ole Worldw
In ~ifamlet," 84 Chwclilll'B ..
•
of tent
of Suzie e.g. ·
alan
11 Kind of 11 Dutch
28 Y0U118J11811 81 N:Y.C.'a
cut or
to~
apeclaJcy
5th, e.g.
time
le Ole.
2'1 HYPOtheals 3'1100th of
It Rich
17 Metal
18 "Ciieers"
a pltaca
cake
bolt
charlcter 38 0.001 of
~-&amp;Greet
18 Dem.ollfltrlte 31 Coaatal
. -lncll
review 19 PronclwiCe
bird
at
....
II Obeerve 10 Nobleman II Made tnclrs
Ill Not hidden
!8C!Jt
!I Kettle
lnaulter.
80·Medlclne

.· man

Sl~

Enrico31Arthw's

:a

. . Celebrtt;y

40 Strtngent
41 '"lbe - that

......

men....,_

.OBhlbby
41 Sanchrlch

o&amp;'
:N
tp;qpole

littin&amp;e.g.
·!CI!ckOO
1111

AXYDLBAAXR
..
,j,.,.
IILONGFELLOW
,.,
One letter standi for another. In tlliB sample A illlled
for the three L's, X for the two O's, 'etc. Slnc&amp;e letten,
I(IGitnlpha, the Jen&amp;lband forulltion ol the nrds m aU
hints. Eaehday the code ~~-~erent.

\
C X R

CRIPTOQUOTB
T H F T B V 8

BO

Q~VM

AL

H Z

QIIZR

11:10

'c x a

OCFTO

C X T H 'P 8 X

FTR
--

~

.....,. •• fl4 ,., "••

birthday cake to atay -'oft.
&lt;

\

•'

. ..

·c

X R

F V. l(

. ••. .

CXR

.

AL

.

Ill ii
...-·;;1•11-.:-.-....
,..........11 .... Cll

••

.

10 . • ,

IJ) LOw Colautlan

.,

.

-::.e.

I .... .

,..

,,

Paa
Paa
Paa
Paa

1 Emultt.e ' DoubleGandhi
cr&gt;a sser

on ••••••
111/1111

I'

..... u ......

SOVTII
+AJU5

'-l THOMAS JOSEPH
AdaoSS a But (Lat.)

n

-.Col114-441-1144.

••"

+.rut

bome.

(NRJ (2:08)

rtlll...........

De we laue a Ofllae
11ro- ·
fualat a ....._. 1
111- ft ••
. . 4lfldi. CioMteCourttiDIII

7418.

IIINiwe

"r«"!! .......... ~ '
- . •u. Caii14..... t,
70'11.

F.- -111-

~.(NR)

0

Jr. .--Colll14. . . -. ', ,'
- 4414171 •
. "II
UMUTONI· tJ.OO 811 -

e (I) f)Jnally Sun

haunta Ale•fa· dreamt; Adam
won't itveDtna's
outburst.
·
•McCall
·eahtlpl a~~
...
Vtiellara hotel
lamliy that rafuHs to be
lntlmldllld.
II] llg lend ~laade
Popullr tune• of.fhe 30'o
an!! 40'&amp; 1wilg again In this
11ve concan 1a1tur1na Bing
Croaby, Frlllkle Carie,
WI1111ng. and

'•
Dlln .Wet• a.w. .._.._ :
~ Wolo, llolhlorr AltO·. •
- · CaM 114-441·7404-Mo,

41S , Fumlthed Room•

§'s

Tile 8Win (NRI .
(1 :48)
111
iiJ Jllke a"" 1fle
F11m1n McCabe must supply
an alibi for an accused jlwet
thief end murderess.

orJoffWo......,-..441.
1077. Llml11d •11•nlnga

ahoHiftl. Depnit required.
114-Hf·Z084..

GJI HlfiiiWIJ 10

(!) M0 IE:

lndlvldutl Gulter Lnuatiu Ina·
nlcordlo M - 114·441· 0117

·-"''---'"

(Jl

- n Mark 111!1 Jonathan
help a terminally Ul teen
begin fundralslng dfive. 1;1
·
1D 'Tap 118nk IIOidrla
(I) eCIJ HDDPIIIIIMI McNeil
refusea tQ see ere - ;
Harry
illvolvad In abuse

1 - - · - ,......... 21 .·
yur1 nperlenoa. lo.f'-171· 1 •
1807.
.
.

Plumbing
&amp;Heating

• e!IJ ClnOOpJ'a a.tang

.

KttchencabiiMitllendappiiMCIIa.

411 Space for Rent

-lOIII. 114-

(I) Hucl of , . CIMa
Charlie getS hia classlmo
the sChool's j)tOductlon of
Gra11e. (AJQ

(I) •

~;;:;::::;:::~.
84
Electrk:el
:
a. Refrigeration •

Nice one bedroom unfumlaMd

-

. .. 1200

8:30 (Jl Anlmlllt of Aftk:l

or 114·441·

Oo"-Oiolo
. "
-114-441-*-ori14- ;
-4477 .

Aw., G1"1 Ill 1121 a mo.

.-·-=..::
,...... -.. ..=

1:05 (J) MOVIE: .a.tHn CNR) (1 :54)

RON'S Talevlelon lervlcl. r ·
HauoOI - I lie"" InRCA.
-Cal
· I~
GE.
z.ntdt,

AND HI!AnNG

1 bedroom ,,.,......., Furnilhod ond unfuml-. .ZOO.·
U21 . .., - - Uti- fur·
......... Calll14-892·1724.

locllltln r~ollolllo . Cal 814912·371 1. EOH.

features such stars· as Jack
Jones. Maur!Min McGovern &amp;
the L.A. Voices.
IIJI PrimeNewa
IDl MOVIE: For ,.._., Slke .
CPGI (1 :30)

,.. t'\

. W. lt • ......,77 ..

Coo. F--I'Ine

U11 . Including ut-o. CaH
114·H2-7717. EOH.

2 b1druom Apt. for ,...,, Car·
poood. Nloo ooltlng. l.oundry

legend Tommy Doreey

CAATIIII'I P'LUliiiNG

Minot 1nd Riv.... A...,.
mantt In Middleport. '•om

bedroom

This nostalgic musicei tribute
10 the music of big band

U - NADA iNI
· t
7 . -.
104-118·2111
I 1CJ.II,
NEW INI'OJIMAnoN: , _ ,

...••aeu.

Mu.k: o1 Tommy Doraer

II14-441-14Z2.'111oYIIoof- ••
yeiJ I'IINf.
.~1'

m 7 II
Now

Clots

America's lavorita
paata-toving rat cet competes
In 8 na11onal television talent
contest, The Pet Search, thet
could make him a movie star
overnigh!.
II] Slntlmental SWing: Tile
~

.... ::.": ::·~·...:. 'l::i ;

7

..... 1-.

ill • iiJ

IWEEPER- ........ ~;

2 BR . apt. Adultt only. Flm:An.
Coli 814·441·1221.

.

,,oo,...

W'

IAII!MENT
WATERI'tiOOIIING

82

114-448-1031.

2 8R .• Wltlf, NW. . . fvmiiMcl.
rtv• vtow. No chy
F..._'• Mobtls Home

- ·· Colll14-lll2·1117-

5

~

R a R - ....... -

42-.2~17.

----*'··Col
.,oo,

. , ..

H.,__l e r O I I • I - .Coro.4o4'oMIHillnllrue...,._t1DO.OO. Coltor- r • .., .... Wllbn.
lllilor·
C21Ji12!'--·
114·441-4718.

"4

mo. Stove,

refrig. &amp;
tumllhed. 4'1.1
mllet from toWn. No pau. Catl

2
~,!',!J'•uu far
rant. Ekltrtypr
. Reaeona·
blo rM11.114·112·2748.

e

-------------------:·•

llwn . . . . . dl lllkl&amp;o ...,.
reeR0¥11. ao-.171·1142 or ., ·
114·1103.

Rent

:..
:=to~~ ~'""=:
121.000. 114·
121&lt;156. 3 bod-. -. ..
114--·210-

•

"

· - - ,,.. ................. 1

Slnalo--only. Ca!
81 4'-441-410) or 441· 2102.

w.,.,

DOl . . lon.

1118 ....,_,.. ~~- - ·
·t eyt., - .. olr, - · · Hlah
1710. Callf4-IQ.2177 . .
- 1 : 0 0 - - 2 : 0 0 pm.
11U "

.

J_
• J. . . _ _ .... 114- •

~
out., In
R.2
- ·I!W"!ffll
31art0 -·
-

1171 12•10. A•1 · fu~
...... POIJIIt ............. Air In

113

Fumiehtd llfftdancy apt. C8rp«
throughout. Private • ' quiet.

Nice 2 IR . 1211

I

Hotjle

Improvement•

3 1 . 0 0 0 . - -.

241·11111.

114-441-1812.
1111 . ,..nt· 1187 14xl0 SkyUna
rnotHia home. 2 lldroom. an

._
-·71-7411.

DAIIIV FAIIMERI
Vul Produallr W811111'1'" "'F•""
F-" ..... 110-1111 lboo. Hot· S-7 dop old. Cal IU·

42 Mobile Home•
for

..., . ......
--=
··· ,. ....... . .
-Co

M

=o--"7':-....----·
··
81

..

EAST

complicated wben the trump suit
spills badly. Six spades Is a good contract. Even Utbe queen of spades does
r
not fall under tbe ace and klog, deelar· ·
er CID ellmlnate the minor IIIIIs and
piKe the defender wltb tbe·queen of
I ipades on lead. That would force a
play with a possible favorable

•••nil

'

'

.A74
+AQS

A relatiVely simple band can get

when ht puts lhe kids In an
u_lll)lty 8Cidemy. Q
(I)
3rd Annual
Resorts International 9-Balf
Championship from Atiantic
City, NJ: Nick Varner vs Mike
Sigala (A)
(I)
(I) Golhling Palna
Mike can't stan!! the
competition when len
r~ecl8 his advice. (A) Q
(!) Holl'jwoocl Llganda •
Aamarkable story of Grace
'Kelly is tolt:3throh clips ·
and Interviews.

,,.,

I--·- --c-

..-..low..-...

AC, AM- t
741--.

56 Building Suppllea

CaM

vw

..

eAaron
&lt;2l liS Mnln'a Wor
feel&amp; culture shock

'

. .. LDall ......

oon•d LHklh ....... ltiOO.

Volhof Furnltu...
New tnd -=1 fumtture and
appllcenctl. Cell 114-4417172. Houro 8·5.

--·co·

ond
btl --dryer
tlllvt.lon ev~Mabae .
114-441-1832.

room •• m... u ., v,...

32 Mobile Homes

carpel, IIH he8t;, extre nice
throughout. •&amp;450. 11,..441·
0175.

a.--

812·H17.

10 Dayt ..,... a1 ceth with
a;; oued credtt. · 3 MMM out
lutwllle Jlld. Open a... to lpm
Mon. lh'" Sot. Ph. I 14·441·
0322.

A - l e Locotod
olf lulovtllo Rd.· 1 IR. -louo
o.-wllflmodomkH-

Fum...._. 3 room con.ge. one

•a Chillleotho Rd. 1111 o mo.
pluo utH- • dop. Call 814441-1480.

1972 New Moon 2 BR. neW

11 c- sa .. 2 lod-m. 2
t.tha. kh:chH lumiiMd, w/ w
_.pet, t321a mo. plya utllitiK
No - · d - • rot. C.N
114·441-4921.

Orecioul Uvlng. 1 and 2 Met-

ba......... II"OV•· firopl.,.o.

for Sale

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDQET PRICES AT JACK·
ION ESTATES, 131 J o Pike trorn t113 • mo. Walk tO
llhOp 1nd moviel. 114·441·
2H8. E.O.H.

233 SecondAve.:w/ wa.pet. 2
BR .. 1\0bath, khcilonfumlohod.
'310 • mo. plua ct.p. • ref. No
- - Call 114-44~1-4128.

IR . Adulto. No - · Wfumilhld. f110 • mo. Oep. •
rot. Colll1 4·441·2143.

ao·o. 304-171-1919.

tiUI. 114·H2·21·74 or 14-

.

2 8R .. 2 bath op\. All utMMioo
lncluded. t310 1 mo. Oap.
roqulrocl. Coli 114·441·4222
MIW'Mnl-5.

HoUH 4 room• and blth, lot,
garege, hetf baMment 1137
Second Aw.. Oallipotl1. Ohio.
Coli 304·176· 4890.

ICI"__.

I 1 4·-·0331.

F u - - C ¥·120 4th.
Auo. Ull. UtAhloo Nld. Cal
114· 441·4411 oft•7 PM.

Spacioul 4 bedroom hom a. 1 'IJ
blth. be1uttful light oak wood·

892·5714.

~ • motH.. home in
chy. -~~~ only. Porldng. CaM

SpeciOUI 4 bedroom home. 1 'h:

.

work . 100d neighborhood .
Quici&lt; ..-10n. Call 114'

mer a•

No polo. Coll814--·1837.

PROPERTY SOUGHT' To or buy weret a tM-typl building

8801 .

1 - ....tliiO 4 MOf Pert:
....... N._ Low
VI
..... .,.,• •1.... Well ... ''lad.

New completely furnlahad

potod,

Wanted

...........·d. lur·

"""· v- - · ...,...
......
1-111·-·
Eat. 1-11101.

Upftlirt 'untumlthed apt. Car·

rooms and blth.

Ou",. 't' g 1nd 11••· FDt'
-ni~otlon calll14-949·
2111' .. 1114·849·2321 .

:u .

for-

llodlloi~D"'I­

2;atorv. 3 bedroom ho1,1u for 12 .ere f«m. e .-om• • bllth.
Mia with . 'oddltlonol ,3 """" . 0 .... bom. UI,OOO. Call14·
..._ on ..... lot. •14,100. 2 2156·1774.
blli*l from &amp;.Hll Acid "'
HJI:. M..._ out of county. Mull
..... Co~ 114-441-1107 ..

., .

aa.C.I1·

·-Uot.

or 241-1112.

14~·2873 .

I

lat. GH·-

33

l

7:31 (J) Slnlonl and Son
1:00 CJl Seco;'ICI ~moon

......... ·
-· Col 114-441-•. ·
211-1uz.

.

.

• iiJ liS Jaoollrdyl Q
Cll ......, Miller
eli&gt; WKRP In Clnclnne1l

1 t n - - " - a - !·:

•Ju

By James Jacoby

Cll WhMI of Founune Q

"

...

a.-.u

NOR'l'll
.K7U

Overcoming
a bad split

7:0ii (J) Andy Orlffllh
7:30. (Jl (I) Hollywood

I·
, ..-1 '

79 Motore HomH

...nn....,... •.

iifl Cheera

,.

Jim•• ...,..,., Autl .......

BRIDGE

l!tC IISWIIMiofF-IMI

',.

Auto Repair

.

KLABE
1-...T-1)..:r-1:.:.,;:1

DactDra
•
iiJ Silo. . . Today

Auto Pertl

.,

,:...:;,-II i

· iiSNiwa

·'71dorf. ~

-- 1:10 IIIII'·

.'

1

LURNUY

ero a&gt; eCIJ e ec

:.

UMI

Reorronoe lenarJ of the
. . ' fo.ur scrambled words be·
lOw to form four slrnplt words.

1:00 CJl Cnay Llko 1 l'o• Pilot

1hft,............. ·.
7

WOlD

~y

EVENING -

- - ..... - · 1 0 .
Plr• oad ........ ..,,,. ••• A•

- - -.eu,,..
-.I'HIIIy-w.e • n ,_,.,,
v•. - . ......... _ . Col
IU 4411111 .

104-I'Jt.I071.

The Daiy Sentinel· Page

Ohio

\

.

'I

...
I

�"-91

14-The Deily Sentinel

Wedneldey,

Pomero'; . MlddhDOrt. Ohio

Man:h 18, 1988, I
~

· Ohio Lottery

Ann Landers
column

- Daily Number
569
Pick4
1981
Super l.olo

Page 8

aoudy &amp;onlcht. Cbance of

mciw. low aear 38. Occulonal
I!IDOW

' ~9-15-25-25-32

'.

&amp;Pearl St.•992·3471
-

e

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
'

•

'

..

Vol.31, ~.217

at

.

en tine

•

2 &amp;ectlono. 14 Pe- 21i ,C.nti
A Muhlmodie Inc. New-er

Pomeroy-Midd,leport, Ohio, Thuraday, March 17. 19~8

, Coll'lriphtl:d 11111

Friday,

'•

United States sending soldiers to Honduras
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The
first 1,500 U.S. soldiers left for
•Honduru today In a symbolic
sllow of force In response to a
Nicaraguan Invasion said by the
White House to spell possible
'doom for the U.S.-backed Contra
rebels.
Whl~ House spokesman Marlin ntzwater told reporters at 8

a.m. EST, "The American troops
are on their way."
.•
President Reagan ordered tile
mobilization Wednesday night in
an escalsted response to wllat
Fitzwater called a "significant
cross-border Incursion" by Nicaraguan Sandlnlsta troops In ·
pursuit of the Contras.
Lt. CoL David Kiernan,,clllefof

public affairs officer at the 18th
Airborne Corps at ·F ort Bragg,
N.C. , said today: "Two battal·
Ions of tile 82nd Airborne 01 vision
have departed for off-post trainIng at Paltneroa Air Force Base
In Honduras. The 1,500 soldiers
departed at 7 a.m. tills morning
for Pope Air Force Base. I tis not
known bow long the tralnillg

VIVA

PAPER TOWElS
'

'

ASSORTED VARIOIES

CARDINAL
ICE CREAM

INSIDE Ia w1W Soldhera forward.
ball, II t17181 to do aplaat

Dave

'

$ 1.39~

ments," Kiernan said. "Initially nesday: "I think the decision Is
they 'II be there for three days, · motivated as mucll by tile White
then we'll look at the situation ... House lobbying attempt to get
to determine If their stay will be more funds tor the Contras as It Is
extended for another three for concern over the security of
davs."
Honduras.",
In prepared remark!&gt; for the
ce~~~Y 'toth~ wq~!~t~~~se f:.~~ Senate
Budget Committee today,
from Capitol Hill, even while Shultz appealed to Congress to
plotting strategy on how to turn restore aid to the ' Contra
the events in' Honduras Into guerrillas.
Increased support for new U.S.
·'Those who may hilve believed
aid to the embattled Nicaraguan that cutting off aid to the freedom
guerrtllJ~.s ..
fighters would help achieve
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the peace and freedom have made a
former Intelligence Committee grave mistake. They must undo
chairman expressed the skepti- the error before It Is too late. "
cism of many lawmakers WedContinued on page 14

County commission accepts
Margaret Peters property

Deslgner·or DecOrator

0

exercise will last."
The Fort Bragg contingent Is
extlected to be joined later In the
morning by soldiers from the 7th
Light Infantry · Division, Fort
Ord, Calif., for a total force of
about 3,500 soldiers, counting
headquarters and support
personneL
Kiernan also said the 82nd
Airborne contingent left aboard
· C·l30 Hercules prop-jet and C-141
Starllfter jet a:trcraft and Is
taking with them three OH-158
llellcopters.
He said the excerlse will be In
three-day Increments. "We're
looking at It In three-day lncre-

ceater .Joe BaD In WedDell·

'Mlddle&amp;owa

day'a Dlvllloa IV reclotlalluanuulilld coatest Ia
Tlte Falcoas atllled tile Tol'IIBIIoes 8&amp;-'Jt.
(Sentinel pbo&amp;o by Scott Wolfe)_

Da~.

'

'MiddleioWD-Fenwick ousts
SHS ;- &amp;Om Division IV action
'

GAL.

•

-

I

•

'

•

By NANcY YOACBAM
may be used for a related
purpose, such as another retireSentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Commis- ment home In the same area.
Racine VIllage .could not acsioners passed a resolution on
Wednesday to accept, subject to cept ownership of the house and
approval by the Probate Court, property because the · village
the Margaret Josephine Hunter does not have a retirement home
Peters property In Racine as within Its boundaries where
money from the sale of the bouse
county property.
The seven and one-half acres of and .property could be used.
grounds, and a house on the
For thiS. re;~son, It would be
grounds, would then be resold. proper for the county to accept
Proceeds from the sale'lllust go ownership and then resell the
house and P,ro'perty ,' with the
to the Meigs County Infirmary.
·At · the t.lrne of Mrs. Peters money derived !rom the sale
"!!jlth ln -1~56. she Wtlled the home being applied to· the cqunty
aiiCI property to the Racine lnflrmai-y.
The matter of the Peters
Baptist Church tor use as an old
folks borne. The church was property was discovered when
unable to accept the bequest · problems came up regarding the
from Peters and the transaction laying of sewer line from apart·
remained unfullfUled.
ments being constructed on Elm
There Is a law, according to St, In Racine. The sewer line will
Attorney Berpard Fultz. who cross the Peters property.
dmcussed the matter -with the
Fultz was In contact with the
commissioners, that when the State Attorney General's office
exact terms of -a will may not be to determine It would be appropcarried out ~ In this case a · riate for the county to accept the ·
church-operated old folks home property and then resell, before
- that money derived !rom the presenilng the proposal to the
sale , ot the house and property commissioners .

all goes back to being mentally quarters of competitive "H-0-R·
By scoTT WOLFE
prepared, ..Thls)oss follows the S·E" and came home a winner
Sentinel !Jtliti Write~
same pattern of our others."
.!rom every spot, combining the
DAYTON- Wednesday even"At Urnes when we needed to drive, set shots, and stop-and-pop
Ing tlie Southern Tornadoes were
The Ohio Department of Transmake a defensive surge we ' jumpers from all parts of the
handed an 86-76 defeat, while tile
portation, District 10, has begun
didn't, and that really hurt. I floor.
Middletown .Fennwlck FalCflns
realiy don't believe that tlie best . The junior bested his seasonal repairs on U.S Route 331n Meigs
were' likewise handed a Division
club
won tonight. You know,lt Is average by some 21 points ( 19 County, beginning at the four
IV, Reatonal semifinal basketball
something
to get to be IIJ the final point average) by hitting a game lane ' highway , down to the
victory In the· University of
Intersection of State Route 7.
sixteen,
but
when you get there high 38 points, while also grabDayton Arena.
"What we are trying to do Is
and
lose
the
Way
we
did,
knowing
.
bing a remarkable 17 rebounds .
Very somber, but glowing with
relocate
ditches and culverts on
you are the better. club, It still
Coacll Howle Caldwell said
ptlde from within, Southern
the
highway
before the actual
hurts.''
earlier, "We must stop Esposito,
Coach Howle Caldwell summed
Proving to all why he was Holweger, and DeFosse to win." , resurfacing job begins In June,"
It up best by saying, ''The best
chosen to second team all- Southern partially stopped two of Paul Hoffman, operations engiballclub did not win tonight. We
district In Southwestern Ohio, the three, ~ut Holweger nar- neer for District 10, said. "The
just didn't play well tonlgllt. We
Mike Holweger put on a one man rowed the gap with an Inspiradidn't (and couldn't) play our
shooting
clinic. Th.e fine, young tional performance,
normal defense and we did not
6-3
Jr.
guard
played two full
rebound well at all. I think that It
' Continued on page 3

~Repairs

3 lb.

begin on

Kim Shields, the county's ' dl·
rector of development, apprised
the commissioners on the status
of this year's Community Development Block Grant funding.
Shle_lds said he was told last week
by Betsy Giffin, of the Ohio
Department of Development,
that Meigs County's CDBG appllc~~otlon "was fine" and that grant
approval coUld be forthcoming
filth ln. the next few weeks'
The commissioners . are to
meet next Thursday· with Bill
Dlttoe, ot the Parkersburg otflce
ot the Burgess and.. Niple eriglneerlng firm, ' to discuss the
replacement of the courthouse
roof.
The commissioners approved
requests from Robert Byer,
Meigs Emergency Medical Services' director, for EMS personnel to allend upcoming meetings
and seminars scheduled throughout the state In tile next four
months, and from Judge Robert
Buck to attend the annual conference of tbe Ohio Association of
Common Pleas Judges, Probate,
Juvenile and Domestic Relations
Divisions, coming up In April.

·u.S. Route 33

ways are affected during the
repair and utility companies will
be relo atlng.
, "It's important that we work
with the property owners concerning this reconstruction.
Through their cooperation and
support, we will make this a safer
highway for them, their neighbon and the traveling public, "
Hoffman concluded.

drainage needs to be replaced
and extended."
The Shelly Co. of Thornville
has been awarded the resurfacIng contract which Includes pavIng two foot shoulders on each
side of the road . The firm also
will eomplete the resurfacing of
the four lane portion of the
highway.
Hoffman said that some drive-

·.,

1\feigs will
----Local news briefs,.

observe 'Ag

Emergency number ~;tnchanged
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman stated today tliat the fire
and emergency number for Middleport and Meigs County Is still

992-li&amp;ll3.

Some confusion has been created by the recent notice In GTE
bllllnp that this number Is 9ll. The 911 number.ls not In use
anywhere In Meigs County, and no one can lie reached by dialing
this number.

Bus-a~r

CRISPY SERVE

CAUFORNIA FRESH

BACON

59&lt;

SWEET·STRAWBERRIES
lLB.
PIG.

$189
'

IEIQUMT

crash still being probed

\
1be State Hlgllway Patrol is still Investigating a car-school
bus accident which occurred at 8:40a.m. Wednesday on Twp.
94, jWJt north of SR 248 In Meigs County's Chester Twp. The
acc~~tent Involved a car driven by April E.Ritchle,l7, of LoJ!II
Bottom, and an Eastern Local Scl!ool bus driven by William
M'.Hannum, 65, of Loq Bottom. Hannum suffered minor visible
lnjurlea. There wu no eltaUoa..No other.detaUa are available.
Another Metp County accident occurred at 3411 p.m.
WedneldaY on SR 681, juateut ol .mlle post 27, In Olive Twp.
The coUislon ln'volved veblcles driven by Lisa J. Muters, 29
ReedaviUe and Rlls A. Baker, 57,.Rt.l, Reedavllle. No OlleWIB
InJured and there wu no citation. No other detaUa are
available.

Home destroyed by fire
The Stanley Weill home on Route 248 at Lolli Bottom was
clealnl)'ed by fire WedDelday Dllbt.
_ Olive Towlllblp
Chief RlcJc Bal'l'lqer repOrted that the
lWHtory frame boule wu llllulfed In flamee wba t~Jwmen
arrived. Olive and aa.ter
Depai'ID*Ite were called at
8: 24 p.m. Olive Will on tilt ICQI wltb two trac:b and Clleater
1.
Continued on PIP 14

nre

nre

-·----

'•

I· '

Day' Sunday
Sunday, March 20, the first day
of Spring, has been proclaimed
by Meigs County Commissioners
David Koblentz, Richard Jones
and Manning Roush, as Agriculture Day.
In proclaiming Agriculture
Day, the commlulonen are
calling upon the people of Melp
County to salute the 'f arm faml·
lies who contribute 10 much to
Melp County's wayofllfe,and to
Increase their understanding of
the Importance of atp'lculture In
the county and In the alate.
Apieulture .. .r ecoplzed ..
the basic lnduatry of the United'
Statu, and ,combined with related rilanufacturlrla procet181,
p~ more Jobs than any
other 11DaJe lbduatry In tbe
country. Aarlclllture Ia coaal!lertd a VItal lqndient In tbe
countlll'• •lrtlllth u a ·aaUoa,
botll ~ and on the

world teeM.

Ap1culture Day Ia a aaiiODal

and atata celebration rec•lplwd
b)' Pn lrtntROII•k! RMpUIId

OJUo Oov•DO¥ Rleltlrd ee....
1 tlalt to '
1111 acbiiYe-

u

vw

m nteOifAIIIerlaa'e.....,men
and women Olf lll'loultltN.

.,.

''

,_. ,.. •

' ar, ... 111 pr1u 1. e

as

}llrlft 'plu- Blla
mr·uiita w, Oe~rp Bonk, '

reoehl 1 :;::

Glturt,

B aD Ms.., 011111 ,._lnU, l'rllill ·
Vlt ) ' 1111 Vs I' n, .., • f Jaw II, Dol; .'
B
I ... La t llual, wlio lllllde lie
IAoll
an .r Ill Yw prm 1
11ee ·.
a' IIIIa•' pt aIM • .... 'J,
.

'I••·

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