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PaiQI 14-The Daily ~nel

Wednaat'•y. February 3, 1988

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

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Ohio Louery

'College
roundup

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973
Pi('k 4
. 3960 -.
Super Lotto
4-8-22-35-40-44

·- Page 5

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Pearl St.•992-3471

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D"ily Number .

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Vol.38. No.187

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BUY ONE GET
ONE'
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BUY ONE GET ONE

BUY ONE GET ONE

V ''u.ihll' Coupon

V dtLitJI!· l'uupn11

V.iludtJII' Cllilpon

ValuaiJie Cou~on

BUY ONE GET ONE

Golden Grain Dinner

Llquid•22 oz. btl.

NT

Valuable Coupon

V.JiudiJI&lt;·

Cuu~o1J

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lo.an implementation

BUY ONE.'GET ONE
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Crisp•1 P,ound Bag

. CELLO

~ERVE LINCOLN DAY- AboutUOMelp
County Republlc.ans· alte!!ded tbe IJfl!lOin Day
· dinner held Wedneaday nl&amp;ht at the Melp Bl&amp;h
School Cafeteria. Pictures, I to r, are Richard

·Jones, Melp Republican Chalnnan; George
Volnovlch. speaker, candidate lot · the U. S.
Senate; Mrs. Volnvlch and Bemard 'Fultz, who
served as master of ceremonies.

Apple Grove selected
for
..
incinerator,
.. in Mason County
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By Charles A. Mason

150people, Dalko said.
"We feel o - 90 percent of the
Mason County haS been selected employment would be local,"
as the site for a second. hazardous Datko said. Half of the employees
waste incinmlo!', ~ second such
would be operations peqple, includ·
selection since September.
ing I1'IICic drivers, equipment
AJliUS, aJ*11lmhip between Na- operators and · material handlers.
tiona! Electric, Inc., and Westin- Another 25 percent would be Jecll~ Speciality Services, Inc.,
nicians, slich as ellgineers and
in Lakeville, Minn., an- · chemists. The remaining employees
nounced this wa it has sccurcd an would be admiilistnltive, officials
option on 190 acres in Apple said.
Grove, south of the Goodyear Point
"We actually deeiiled well over a
Pleasant Polyester Division plani year ago to establish an environbetween Reule 2 and tbe Ohio mental service centu 'in this
River. The papers securing the OJI" genenl- pan of the country," said
lion were signed tbis week, said W. Glen WincheD, vice president of
Andl'l:w Datko, Aptul m8J181Cf for Aptus. He bid the area ·p-ovidcs a
planning and developmenL Aptus -ready marketplace for hazardous
.pllns 10 build a ha7Mdous waste waste1 tnnsponation rouies that are
m1:inenllor costing between $25 accessible 10 that mtu:ketplace, and
million 10 $30 million which is ex- the site will meet pennilling stanpected 10 provide employment for dards required by the West VirJiinia

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Plus Deposlt•Ass't. Var.•8-16 oz. btls.

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2 LITER PEPSI

·R.Ca COLA

U.S.D.A. Choice~Beef Chuck

Assorted or Designer .

BRAWNY
PAPER TOWELS
jumbo
roll

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Department of Natural ResoUJtes,
the state Air Pollution Control
Commission and the federal Environmenial Protection Agency.
The site is on the state's list of {'C?S·
sible industrial sites, officials S&amp;ld.
· ApiiiS officials said they wiD first
C\I'III'IK:t with a COOtpany for an envunnmental evaluation of the land
owned by Appalachian Power Co.
Then, the company will submit application to the DNR the APCC and
the EPA.
"Our basic philosophy is we wiD
work to address all of the concerns
the community may have," Datko
said. "We arc wiDing to meet with ,
any group and we will invite
anyone wl)o wants to come to our
Coffeyville, Kan., facility," he said.
The principal services provided
by Aptus are waste analysis and
Continued on page 12

Bennett name.d chairman
"

COt.UMBUS, Ohio IUPI) '- Rho&lt;les, whom they felt led the
Robert Bennett, viet!' chairman party to defeat In 1986' and who
of the Cuyahoga County Republl· · had endorsed Holmes.
can organization. was elected . After some parliamentary rna·
·Wednesday as chairman of the neuverlng. Colley was chosen
Republican State Committee and Republican national committee- .
p!Mged to lead the party back to man. succeeding Rhodes, who
dominance In Ohio.
announced two weeks ago he
would not run .for another four·
Bennett. 48, will replace chair,
man Michael Colley of Franklin year term. Martha C. Moore,
County f'l!ob. 16 for a two-year vice chairman of the state party
term. Colley. the ch&amp;lnnan since and the national commltteewo1982. realped.arter the commit· man •tnce 1968, was re,elt!Cted to
tee decided to make the chair· a alxtb term.
man'a Job tulltlme.
Bennett, an attorney and acThe .ecret vote by the 41 countut.lla ..tlveo!Columbus.
commlttH membera. pl'8ellt who.Jl'aduated from Ohio State
wu aot dlklollld, but sourcea tlnlvel'llty and Cleveland Mar·
uld ·
defeated Allen sltalltawSeboolutlooee~erved
Chairman
In the Cuyaboca County fldltor's

palgn manager for then·Rep.
Roberi Taft Jr. In 1970. He has
been a state central committee·
man since 1974 and Is a longtime
irlce chairman of the county
Pa'rty.
Bennett was desc:rlbed as a
. "communicator and motivator"
by Franees Buchholzer, who
nominated him. ''He knows how
to build an effective team," said
Buchholzer. "He knows how to
lead."
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"He has tbe unifying quail·
ties." lllkl Ralph Kohnen Jr. of
ctnclrutatt. "We have llad a few
years of pretty: rough tlmea. and
we bave aot to Jet this act
tQiedler."
Bennett IBid bll plat1orm for
Wln!Jiat Jncludel ••ati'OIII orpnl·
vtewect •• a
Jlu Men active In uta. llltiiiiJ, lood c:alldldtea,
commlttu_ \ ~liiMa pcetjdeatt.J politics llal'll won, attntloll to detail,
Gov. J•~ . aDO .lti'Vtd u tbt Senate cam(Coatbnled 011 ~ ~)

t..tt

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qulrement may be waived with just £tarting. Then the personal
proper documentation proving lnv~stm ont should be 20 percent
the project will benefit the of th~ Jotal project costs.
Other borrower's costs will
community.
Include Iega I fees, the costs for
Small to mediUJtl sized bust·
nesses, new ventures and busi· appraisals. l.nsurance and 'nolo·
nesses operating In the county. .rtzed documents , a $100 applica·
may qualify for funding 10 assist lion fee due at the lime of filing,
wjth acquisition an\! Improve- and $250 loan origination fee to be
.
ment of lands, buildings, plant paid at the closing.
A critical advantage oft he loan
facilities and equipment; work·
lng capital; product develop· , fund is that all loans will be made
m,ent; start up · capita! and at a fixed five percent Interest
Interim loans In anticipation of · rate. Terms of -the loan will vary
accordhig to the type of loan
permanent financing.
although
a standard term would
At least 10 percent of total ·
pr.oject costs must be In personal be five to seven years.
A four percent penalty will be
Investment, unless a business Is

charged If payments are 10 days
late.
In addition to these and other
requirements and proceedures,
projects must be subjected to an
environmental assessment, pro,
jects must not discriminatory,
and projects must provide acces sibility for the handicapped and
elderly.
.
. Po ten llal loan appllcan ts ·
should pick up the necessary
pre·{lppllcation materials from
the Meigs County Development
Office. located a·t the Intersection
of Union Ave. and Route 7.
weekdays fr\)m 12:30 to 4:30
(Continued on page 12)

George V~inovich, - candidate
for U. -S. Senate, ·visits ·Meigs

Cuupu11

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BUY ONE GET ONE

BUY ONE GET ONE

V.ltlt,IIJit·

qualify for loans. Including. that
at least one job be created for
each $10,000 revolving loan fund
,
Investment.
Other req'u trments fnclude
matching $2 of public or private
money with every $1 from the
loan fund. For example, a total
loan of $15,000 would .require a
business to contribute $10,000 to
be matched with $5,000 from the
loan fund.
Also. assurance must be given
that wlthoufrevcllvlng loari fund
Involvement. the business pro·
ject would not proceed.
Allhough loans of $5,000 to
_.$20,000 are preferred, that re-

iiir:Aiiii1

IVORY DISH

2 Sections. 18 Pages 25 Centi
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

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. . . . ommiSSIOD . ISCUSSeS
Currently; Meigs . County has
·By NANCY VOACHAM
Invested
$12,000 In the regional
SenUqel.staff Writer
fund,
which
has been matched by
lmp!emeniatlon of a $60,000
the U.S. Department of Com·
revolving loan fund tor business
merce. Economic Development
and Industry In Meigs Count-y
Administration, to Increase the
was discussed Wednesday In the
total to $60,000. ·
regular meeting of the Meigs
A meeting of a local five- .
County Commissioners.
member Revolving Loan Fund
The commlsslciners have
Committee was held Wednesday
joined 1VItlt other 'local govern·
morning at the courthouse. Tom
ments In Southeast Ohio to
Closser
and Doug Unsold. repres·
att.empt to attract and retain
entlng
Buckeye
Hills, were pres·
businesses· for local communi·
ent
to
review
with
the committee.
ties·. through a Regional Revoh&lt;·
proceedures lind guidelines for
lng Loan Fund which Is being
administered by the Buckeye . loan fund participation.
Ceria in requirements must be
Hllls·Hocklng Valley Regional
met In order for local entitles to
Development District.

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enttne

. Pomeroy-Middleport. O"'io, Thursday, February 4, 1988

Cppyrteht:d 1888

·Clear tonight. Low between
5 and 15. Mostly sunny Friday.
Highs near 25.

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By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Approximately 250 . Meigs
County . Republicans rolled out
the r.ed carpet of hospitality for
George Volnovlch. Republican
candidate for U. S. Senate, at the
Meigs County Republican Ll n- ·
coin bay dinner at the Meigs
High School Wednesday night.
The . Republicans gave Volno·
vlch . . three times mayor of
Cleveland, a standing ovation
when he was Introduced and
apparently liked what he said
•· sine&lt;;--. they afforded nlJjU\n\lther
standing ovation, at :the close 'of
h!s well delivered speech.
Addressing his campaign for
senate, Volnovlch said that he
and his wife already have put in
22 months. of work and ai:e
attempting to get vital grass root
organlza lions on behalf· of his
candidacy estatablished In every
county. He stres~d the lmpor·
lance of people Involvement . .He
commented that he needs financial help, organlzat ional helP and
hitting upon the Importance of
name · familiarity, Volnovich
asked Republicans to mention
his name to their associates at
least once a day throughout the
campaign, commenting that the
voters many times cast their
ballots for a name with which
they are familiar. ·
Vo!novlch charged that his
opponent , Incumbent Ohio Sena·
tor Howard M. Metzenbaum has
taken .Ohio for granted and that
Ohio cannot afford him and the
• high rate of unemployment abOut
which he has done nothing .
"This area Is the most neg·
lected In all of Ohio. Metzenbaum
has not been hert&gt; for 12 years."
Voinovlch stated. ''I will be here ·
every year. If elected," Volno·
. vlch vowed.
Volnovlch charged Metzen·
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. baum of failing to serve Ohio
pointing out that Ohio Is 13th or
14th from the bOttom In getting
federal job dollars and that the
state ranks 45th In getting
education dollars .
·
Citing his own expertence In
county government, having
served 'In a number of county
offices, city government expe·
rlence with three terms as mayor
of Clev!'land , service in the Ohio
legislature and holding down the
position of lieutenant governor In
Ohio. Volnvlch said that Ohio
needs an agresslve senator who
can deal on the• ndttonal level.
Voinovlch as mayor of Cleveland
said he has bl&gt;en Involved In
getting help from Washington. D.
C .. for the past seven years
already after having taken over
the government of Cleveland
when it was $111 million dollars
in debt . Voinovich pointed out
that he is a past president of the
National League of Citizens
which also has given him experience in going after help.
Voinovlch charged thai Met zenbaum Is not an "Impartial
person" and "goes to the table
with his mind made up".
"He does not reflect the idealIsm of the main stream of Ohio, "
Volriovlch remarked.
The speaker cited an article In
the Akron Beacon Journal critic·
lzlng Sens . Ted Kennedy and
Metzenbaum for their anti-Bork
roles when Bark was up for
appointment to the Supreme
Court. even though the paper was
not basically In support of the
Bark appointment.
"The world has changed. We
must change to compete in the
world market place. We must go
after business and we must work
together,'·' Volnovlch com mented. Volnovlch warned "we
cannot just protect what we have

or we lose. We must open up the
market place. The economy of
the United States Is just as
Important to tho; nation's allies as
It is to our people. The nailon's
allies should know that the
United States can not longer be
everyone's social worker. ~oldier
and banker," Volnovlch said ~s
he hit upon the need for a long
range plan to reduce the national
deficit.
. For safety In America. the
nation must have strength realism and military commit ·
tfll~l\t -; 11 must be strong
econ6mically. and It must be
strong spiritually "reverting
back 10 thP fundamentals of our
forefathers." Volnovlch
roncluded.
Evelyn Clark, chairperson of
I he Meigs County Republican
Central Committee, opened the
Lincoln Day dinner served 'tn the
high school cafeiE'ria, with
prayer and. led the pledge to the
flag . She intro&lt;luced Masl!'r of
Ceremonies Bernard Fultz.
Fultz brought out that Meigs
Cilunty Is probably the orily
county In Ohio with ali county
offices being held by Republl·
cans. He Introduced the Incumbents Including David Koblentz
and Manning Roush, county
commissioners; Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight; Probate
Court Judge Robert Buck; Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick
O' Brien ; Meigs Treasurer
George Collins; County Auditor,
William Wickline; Richard
Jones. county commissioner,
wh·o was highly praised by
several speakers last night for
his role In county government;
Sheriff Howard Frank; Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer; Rick
Crow, prosecuting attorney; Phil
Roberts, county engineer, and
Cont111ued on page 12

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Thlnday, February 4, 1988

Comment

Trojans take over top spot in _Division II cage ratings

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
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Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio
Thursday, February 4, 1988

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wriler
COLUMBUS - Once-beaten
Portsmouth has taken over first
place by the narrowest of margins In this week's United Press
International Ohio High Scool
Board of Coaches Division ll
boys basketball ratings.
The Trojans (15-1), who
avenged their only loss ot the
season with an 82-73 win over
Russell,' Ky .. last Friday night
and Gallipolis 6040 Saturday
night~ now have won 11 In row,
climbed into first · place after
Willard's loss to Lexington and
Warren Champion's defeat at the
hands ot Youngstown Liberty.
Portsmouth, third a week ago,
received 12 first place votes and
266 points after posting three
wins last week. PHS downed
Boyd County Jan. 251n a makeup
game. Liberty, which beat
Champion 52-34 a week ago,
advanced from fourth to second
With, 11 firsts anti 265 points.
Liberty Is 15-0.
Willard, the No. 1 Division II
team the first three weeks of the
balloting. dropped to third with 7
firsts and 227 points, Steubenville
advanced one notch to fourth
with 166 and Champion settled In
fifth with 160.

)Anderson and
-·
Dragon's teeth .in hands of 1Srae VanAtta

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The Daily

Sen~in.el

111 Couri Slreel
Pomeroy, Oblo

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF' THE MEIGS-MASON /\REA

~rb ,..._.._..,...l,..,.....doo==&gt;

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Anlslaol Publlsher/Cootroller '

BOB HOEFLICH
· Geoeral Maoqer

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assocl~llon.
LETTERS OF OPINION .are wei rome. They should be tess than 300 words
lona. All letters are subject to editing and must be sl.gned wtth name. address and

WASHINGTON - The crisis
facing Israel In the West Bank '
and Gaza today Is the loss oflace,
not territory.
Israe.I has built Its· international persona as the feisty
underdog, surrounded by belligerent enemies. But since December, the world has watched
that underdog shoot live ammunition at young people armed
with rocks. So far, more than 35
have been killed in the occupied
territories, Including women and
children. ·
Hard-liners in Israel ..are calling for more repression of the
Palestinian upstarts, while Palestinian religlo).ls leaders are

more than happy to. fuel their
cause wt~h martyrs. The policies
of each side provide momentum
for more violence and more
killing.
Our White House sources tell
us that President Reagan has
been furious · about the way the
Israelis have handled the situation In the West Bank and Gaza.
Reagan has surprl~ the lsraells with his strong sympathies for
the Palestinians. The president
may not have Congress In his
court on this one. but our sources
tell us that Jewish leaders now
believe Reagan's leanings are
being encouraged by Chief of
Staff Howard Baker. As the

telephone number. No unsigned leiters wUI be publblhed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressqag ISsues, n&lt;lt persmalltles.

Bush's can't shake
Iran-Contra taint

senator from Tennessee, Baker peace plan In 1983.
That was a time when Reagan
never rolled over and played
made a strong pitch on behalf of
dead for the Israeli lobby.
To limit the damage to Israel's the Palestinians to thea-Israeli
reputation, Israeli officials have Prime Minister Yltzhak Shamlr.
hampered the Western press We have seen a confidential
from covering the demonstra- briefing paper that says Reagan
tions, jailed Palestinian journal- felt the main obstacle to a Middle
ists and closed Palestinian news- East peace was Israel's policy of
papers. Israel has detained more encourali!ng Jews to settle on the ,
than 1,000 Palestinians to keep West Bank. He asked for a freeze
them from influencing the on Jewish settlements. Shamtr
vaguely agreed to cooperate with .
demonstrators.
Our White House sources tell the State Department, but there ·
us that President Reagan 's feel - never was any real cooperation.
In behind-the-scenes talks with
ings for the Palestinians run
deep, and that he has not ' the Reagan administration these
forgotten how the Israelis days, Is~aelis are surprlaed at
scuttled his well-thought-out the president's continued strong
feelings about the West · Bank·
Palestinians. They had thought
the departure of Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger would .
temper Reagan's stand, but that
,
hasn't happel)ed.
Reagan knows that Congress is .
still very susceptible to the
Israeli lobby. Sources report a,
sense of "heiP.lessness" In the
White House whenever Reagan ·,
tries to get Congress to Influence :
Israeli action in the occupied •

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporier
. WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Vice President George Bush is resisting
' the suggestion that he hold a full -dress news conference to address the
territories.
:
: questions and. some of his ambiguous statements on his role in the
Congress killed a $23 million :
• Iran-Contra scandal.
.
proposal to improve living condl· I'
Bush says he has a nswered the key questions, acknowledging he
!Ions for Palestinians In the
: supported the policy, but did not know that the intent was to sell arms
territories. And new financing
· to Iran , which is e ngaged In an eight-year war with Iraq, to obtain the
procedures were written Into the
: release of the American hostages In Lebanon. He also has said that he
• budget bill at the last minute that
. had "reservations" that he expressed in private advice to the
will save Israel $2 billion in
president.
paying off its huge debt accumu'In one of his first inter views on the subject, he said he was out of the
lated over years of American ald.
· loop and not aware of some aspects of the operation. And he says that
Pro-Israeli pressure from Con:if he had heard Secretary of State George Shultz and former Defense
gress was so strong as the
Secretary Caspar Weinberger voice their vigorous opposition to the
violence began in December that
deal he would have been more wary, but he was attending the
Assistant Secretary of State for •
Army -Navy football game when one of the crucial meetings was held.
Near Eastern Affairs Richard :
Among the other ambiguities is the fact that President Reagan says
Murphy was ordered to reassure l
Bush was not at the meeting where the matter was strenuously
tlie Israeli ambassador to Wa- '
.debated and Shultz said he was.
shington that there would be no 1
Top strata government officials have secretaries and they keep
"Some of·the issues are still pretty cloudy. Like how do we know who has
change In U.S. commitment to i.
appointment books and logs of their telephone calls. So the whens and
Israel, ·despite the administra- !
the most humble-beginnings experience, Bush or Dole?"
wheres should not be so difficult to answer.
lion's stance.
•'
. But does it matter that Bush did or did not hear any arguments
against the clandestine operation. His main objections as he stated
them were that the deal might be discovered and there was too much
Israeli involvement.
I
Otherwise, he a pparently went a long with the charade that
It was nice to hear the next
resources while compliant oli- won't fly. The United States has dents Wilson, Franklin Roose" moderates" outside the Ayatollah's government in Iran were
Carlos
SaliMexican
president,
garchs
keep the people In line.
never directly intervened In most velt, Kennedy and Carter all I
gaining power and influence. A more likely story is that theKhomeini
nas
de
Gortari,
allow
-as
how
his
Fmm start to flnbh, this countries anyway. Moreover, disdained the dictators with l
government needed arms and spare parts and since, gs It appears
party
should
"go
further
in
theory is hobbled by contradiclikely, it controls the capture and retention of the American hostages
Intervention beg11n long after whom they sometimes felt they I
recognizing voters' preferences"
tory facts. For example, the Latin and Caribbean nations had to work. Even Richard Nixon
by its followers in Lebanon, it duped the U.S. leaders.
- which is to say permit a lilt
United States also began as a
settled Into familiar patterns of privately lamented the lack of a •
· It is extraordinary that during ·that period Bush headed· an
more real democracy in that
resource-exporting, capltal - authoritarian rule and stagna- domocratic alternative In, South I
:a nti-terrorlsnj task force. He also joined with Reagan and ~hultz in
supposedly del)'locratlc land.
lmportlng·country and continued • lion, which followed 300 years of America during the 1950s . ..
the flst pounding declarations over and over again that 'the United
Salinas
had
better
be
careful
,
one during ·the 19th century. similar conditions during colonas
In the end, dependency theory
Slates would never deal with terrorists and would never pay ransom.
though.
Too
much
frank
talk
will
•
it
industrialized
at
an
astonYet
ial
times.
patronizes Latin Americans, Im- I.
Whatever Bush's advice to Reagan was, it now appears Irrelevant.
undermine
the
widespread
belief
ishing
rate
and
never
lapsed
into
Nor Is It true the United States plying impotence on their part.
If he argued pri V'ate ly against the secret dealings, the president
that the United States Is the dictatorship.
has always 'favored right-wing Rather, for example, than t
Ignored him. If he s upported it, team player that he is, he probably
I
cause of most of what Is wrong
Nor is there any predicatable
dictators or strived to prop them simply blame the Brazilian costepped into the shoes of most vice presidential predecessors in going
with Latin America. Before you link between foreign invesiment
up. That .has been the case too lonels who seized power In 1964
a long to get along.
know It, people might have to and poverty - unless it is that
often, admittedly, but most inter- for the repression that followed, •
· Bells did not ring for Bush throughout the whole affair untll it was
face the unpleasant truth about standards of living tend to be
ventions - for example, those in we flay the United States with I
exposed. Even then he did not seek the full story until he was briefed
the
origins
of
underdevelopment
highest where Investment is
Nicaragua, Haiti and the Domini· equal vigor for blessing the •
by Sen. Dave Duren berger. R-Mlnn., several weeks after the scandal
and repression throughout the greatest. Latin nations most
can Republic early In this cen- colonels In advance of the coup. l
broke. Granted it is an unwntten code that vice presidents are
Western Hemisphere.
remote from U.S. influence are
duty-bound to suppor.t the presiden( no matter what . Anything less
tury - were prompted more by
Yet whatever the U.S. attitude •
Tl!ey might even end up mired in poverty as profound as
security concerns and arrogant toward the colonels, the Idea that I
:would appear to be a n act of political betrayal.
questioning the web of conve- any in the hemisphere.
· At the sa me time. If Bush had added his voice to the strong'Cabinet
cultural evangelism than by
Brazil - today a debt nient rationale known as "depenAh, but the dependency theor- grubby desire to protect beleagu~red . but proud nation of t,
opposition. Reagan might have had second thoughts.
dency theory," to which so many Ists retort, what about U.S.
markets. ·
Bush has wanted to put his record before the public and to s tress a ll
140 million inhabitants - was
•
intellectuals today subscribe. military Intervention?
the top jobs he ha s held. CIA director . U.N. ambassador, charge
The dependency theory also ever a merre appendage of U.S. '
The theory argues that underded'affaire s to China. congressman. It is also valid to look at what he
Ignores Instances in which the Imperial interests Is utterly •
•
velopment
has
been
nurtured
by
It
cerWell,
what
about
It?
contributed in those roles
United St!ltes helped prevent a laughable. That goes for many •
Bush now says the Iran-Contra affair was a mistake. Neither the . multinational companies and tainly provides other nations
Latin strongman from seizing other nations, too.
their U.S. government sponsor, with a just grievance, but as an
Tower Commission nor the Congressiona l inves tiga ting committee
power, such as in 1978 when
As Mexico's next president l
ihat foreign investments bleed overriding excuse for underdefa ulted him. In fact, neither could pinpoint anything he had to say
Jimmy Carter sent a warning to seems to realize, na lions usually
those nations of their wealth and velopment and repression It just
while the secret dealings were underway.
itchy Dominican gen('rals. Pres!- write their own history.
•I
The vice president says he has had countless news conferences and
fielded questions about the affair, but they were not held In
•'
Washington, except for a speech to the National Press Club where he
'
tackled spme ques tions on the subject.
•
Perhaps it is not legitimate to hold his feet to the fire on one issue.
'•I
But it's one he cannot escape for what he did or did not do.
operating In the 1960s are twice equipment ag)ng," Rep. Philip facilities.
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
•
as expensive to keep operating as Sharp; D-ind., said at a congres(NEA l -After years of repairs
' "We do need ... more formal- •
those plants that opened in 1970 sional hearing on older nuclear ... maintenance," admitted NRC
costing hundreds of ·millions of
I
or later," adds Public Citizen, power plants. ·
dollars , the oldest of the three
Chairman Lando Zech Jr. at the •
reactors at the San Onofre
which also warns that premature
Sharp, chairman of the House hearing. "There Is room for •
I
aging
is
"a
potentially
devastatNuclear Generating Station was
energy and power subcommit- improvement.' •
•'
ing problem."
supposed to operate trouble-free
tee, cited accidents In older
There is, however, no evidence II
In 1985.
In fact, 13 reactors have been plants caused by corrosion, fathat either the NRC or the •
Before the year was over,
closed before reaching their 20th tigue, embrlttiement and.. other industry is about to acknowledge •&lt;
however, the problem-plagued
anniversary, while only five forms of deterioration. He critic- that nuclear power pjants ·are I
By DICK WEST
Unit 1 had to be shut down
(including San Onofre Unit 1, Ized the NRC for allowing main: WASHINGTON ruP il - Perhapsyouhaveheard, or even used, the
productive for only about hal! of •
that
because
of
a
malfunction
tenance
procedures
to
be
"pretty
which went on line In January
expression: "Sam, you made the pants too long."
their claimed life and become '
produced valve damage. That 1968) have operated for more much left to the individual inefficient - If not dangerous : Well, while watching the Super Bowl game, I got to thinking about
prevented the reactor from genoperators" of 'the nuclear thereafter.
than 20 years.
Gene Upshaw . one of the National Football League player
'
erating
any
electricity
for
much
The aging plant~ that continue
negotiators. (The lopsided score allowed time for the mind t.o
•
ot 1986.
wander.)
'
to operate generally have expe'
The facility produced power rienced steep declines In their
: Mostly, I .thOught of Upshaw in this context: "Gene, you made the
•
with no major complications In capacity factor - the amount or
••
strike too short. " Or. depending on your perspective, perhaps too
1987, but its operator and princi- electricity reactors generate
long.
I
pal owner, Southern California compar
: Anyway, the Washington Scabsklns, if that is a proper way of
With their potential
•
j
designating a replacement team, won all three of the games they ' Edison, recognizes, that Unit 1 power ou ut.
!
will continue to require special
played . a percentage the "regulars" were unable to maintain.
lndustr an . government otttI
attention
because
it
is
more
than
Had the replacements been less proficient. you might have seen the
clals long have promised a
20 years old.
Chicago Bears or the San Francisco Forty-Nlners in the Super Bowl,
capacity factor of 70 to 80
•••
Indeed, the rea tor, which cost percent, but throughout the
as the so-called experts were predicting. With a different outcome.
'
only $90 million to construct in -1980s, It has fallen below 60
Another errant th.ought that entered my head was that for fans who
the 1960s, has consumed an . percent - which Public Citizen
have not adopted another spectator sport, now begins the season, or
addl\lonal $400 million during the notes makes nuclear power "sirather the off-~eason , of their discontent.
•
1980s for what SCE describes as multaneously more expensive
Never mind that most of the snows of winter already ,have fallen
"a continuing program of up- and less reliable."
over much qf the nation. It may be February and spring may be just
_
. •t•
grading" likely to go on •
around the corner, but your more rabid football fans aren't Interested
The capacity factor at San
In the weather.
indefinitely.
Onofre Unit 1 generally exceeded
•
Unfortunately for utility com- , 70 percent (and In some years it
For them, the year begins when the football season opens in the fall ,
' '
panles dependent upon nuclear almost reached 90 percent) dur- .
and ends with the playing of the Super Bowl game In January. This
power- and for their customers ing the late 1960s and throughout
leaves, my calendar attests, most of the spring and summer months.
.. ' ,,
when they aren't really alive.
who bear much of cost by paying the 1970s. But It plunged to about'
•••
higher rates for electricity- San 20 percent In 1980 and 1981 as the
Sure, with some overlapping, there may be seasons dedicated to
tJ I
Onofre Unit 1 is emblematic of a facility had to be sbut down for
b8sketball, which one football fan has scornfully dismissed as "round
'"
nationwide problem.
ball." and baseball, which is played with a spheroid somewhat
repairs to thousands of tubes In
smaller.
"As nuclear plants get older, its steam generator.
l 'H
they produce I~ power, cost
But for average true-blue football fans , those sports might as well
Productivity sunk even lower
' tll
more to operate aDd maintain In 1982, 1983 and 1984 as SOE
not exist. For them, there is nothing In between except maybe a few
and expose workers to Increasing expanded the rebablllta tton provacation trips to the beach.
.
doses of rattatton," says a recent gram to include a "seismic
,This prompts me to try to fill the void. For Instance, there Is nothing
report titled "Fading Faat," uprrade" ~ make the unit more ·
in; the rules that stipulates a football cgame can only be played In
prepared by Public Ctttzeo, a earthquake resistant.
autumn and winter.
D.C. public Interest
Washington,
" .. . P.S. We . . co.tint 0!/ JOU for IlliG ·.
Maybe high schools and colleges are obliged to field teams, or at
"Industry and the Nuclear
organlzatlorr
founded by Ralph Reeulatory Commission must
eonlllbutlon to 1111 Alumni PUnd IIIII ,..,. •:'
least have stadiums, tliljt are at the mercy'of the elements, so-called.
Nader.
And maybe all that padding, not to mention jerseys, do make -football
devise a betler means of detect'
"Those ·reactors that began . ing and arresting problema with
better suited for cold weather. But that stuttls strictly tor amateurs.

Scoreboard ...
" 'rdiM'fldiQI'M llfo11ulb

a..... Slat• .. fh·~·laad, 1: . p.m.

Philadelphia Ill Indiana, 7: •p.m.
BoMIG• a1 Mltwaukf't', It: M p.m.
NttW -'PIW!)' a1 Ho•ton, K: 31 p.m. •
O.nftrat KuAniento,A:JII p. m.
Cbk:aplll Pbotnlll,t: Hp.m.

lA Laker"' at LA C'llpperM, II· 3Gp m.
DallaK at liacramentu, Ht3G p.m

('Oi.UMBUS. Ohto lUPI) - 1 Thl!i
W('rk's Unllcd Prns lnh'rutlolllll Ohlo

So ~ilml'fl N~CIK'd•lrd

haltktolhall raHn.- (with lll'lll•pblct• voW!!
~:u\d wo•lull rf'l.'Oi'dl' In parenth~Al :

Hl~~~:h

dlret:ter ol

h14!fi'Utllll
LA. Cll"""' - "' qulred cr•ltr Gl'l'J
, Jutt' on WlliWrl'l; rtk..ed forward Norrt11
Cok'nuan.
U.Ho Ballketb ..l Leap - Mno•c.-.d
nN" fnlk hllK' Ia Ntw Hn~ .. Coaa.
Nfow Hawa (UMILJ - ... ptlaiH
Mu rra)l lila ax ~ Jtw"NI ,... .... .,,.
('oikoJI'

UHMIA -

NamHI ...... Madw\'tt•
'
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Tt•Mt"'*''' - SU"Pf'Mif'd lndl'tl•t"l'
blu;krdulll ,layf'r Ehln Brown afh•r tw

foothailt'OIHiL

• - l'I..,·•IMI wllh !lllopllhiiW.
t 't11h '!Malf' - Bll*u~dll&amp;ll Cllllll'll Rod
'I'Mf'lltr will n'!dJn u bllMkf'ltudl ,... , tJ
llflll'r IJtf' Nrii!IOft •nd ht" noplat:ecl hy K.ohn

Hot•kt•y

NY RJllllllt"r" - St&gt;nl df'fl"a~Wfhltn Jim
Pave!M' from ('olont4o ~ IHL) Ia Nt•W
HawD (A.ML) .

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1&amp;6

Monroe, Mineral Ridge, Kalida
and Toledo Ottawa Hills, return -

ing to the top 10 after a two-week
a bsence.

PackerS name Infante head coach
GREEN BAY, Wis..(UPI) Lindy Infante, th_e new head
coach of the Green Bay Packers,
says he plans to keep his winning
touch in control of the offense and
do 'w hatever is necessary to give
the Packers a winning season .
He told a news conference
Wednesday Green Bay would be
the last stop in his coaching
career and he has his sights on a
winning record next fall.
"Infante, 47, was offensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns
the past two years in which they
reached the finals of the American Conference playoffs . He
succeeds ·Forrest Gregg, ·who
resigned in December to become
head coach at his alma mater,
Southern Methodist University.
"If I can' t get it done here then
quite frankly. it's time to get Into
something else," he said.
He said In football. winning is
the bottom line. But he felt Gregg
had laid the foundation for a good

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Hannan Trace .. 14 3 1291 1043
Southern .......... 13 2 1285 894
Oak Hill ........... 13 3 1094 939
North Gallia ..... 8 8 1046 1219
Kyger Creek ..... 6 11 1050 1052
Eastern ............ 5 9 943 1053
Symmes Valley 4 11 924 1168
Southwestern .... 2 13 842 1116
SVACONLV
(Varsity)
TEAM
WL
POP
Southern ........... 10 1 952 611
Oak Hill ........... 10 1 786 634
liannan Trace .. 9 2 822 706
North Gallia ..... 5 6 752 824
Eastern ...... .. .... 4 7 754 847
Symmes Valley 3 8 7iO 886 "
Kyger Creek ..... 2 · 9 673 733
Southwestern .... I 10 634 842
TOTALS
44 44 6083 6083
SVAC
(Reserves)
WL
POP
TEAM
Southern ..... ...... 11 0 651 463
Hannan Trace .. 10 1 576 418
Oak Hill ............ 7 4 431 456
Southwestern .... 5 6 485 512
North Gallia .. ... 4 7 512 506
Symmes Valley 4 7 473 490
Eastern ............ 2 9 427 561
Kyger Creek ..... 1 10 395 544
TOTALS
44 44 3850 39511
Friday's games
Southern at Oak Hill
Hannan Trace at Eastern
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
North Gallia at Symmes Valley

100

team.

honored to be sitting here and
standing here where so many .
grea t coaches have gone before .
me," said Infante, who beca me ·
the lOth coach in the team's :
history.
Packer President Robert Parins in troduced Infante at an
afternoon news conference. Toin
Braatz, vice president of football .
operations wHo co nducted the :
sea rch , said Infante met the ·
team's goal of hiring someone:
wlth a combination of NFL :
experience a nd previous head
coaching experience.
Infante was head coach of the
Jacksonville Bulls of the USFL .
from 1984-85, compiling a 15-21 :
record before the league 'broke up. He then joined Cleveland.
"We're happy for Lindy and his
family ," Browns owner Art Modell said. "He's worked hard for ·
this opportunity, and I'm confident the Packers have made the
right decision."

"I obviously have great faith
and confidence in myself. If I
didn't I wouldn't be here," he
said.
Michigan State coach George
Perles was offered the job first .
but turned It down last week.
Infante said although he was
disappointed he was not offered
the job before Perles, it did not
change anything.
·
"I have been a second choice
before in other jobs and it is not
going to have any affect in any
shape or form in my dedication to
the job at hand. It certainly Is not
going to. make me feel I am
second best to anybody, " he
said. "I am extremely excited
about the opportunit y," said
Infante, who also served as ·an
offensive coordinator under
Gregg when Gregg took the
Cincinnati Bengals to Super Bowl
XVI in the str ike-shortened 1982
season.
"! feel very humbled and

to ThuM\'111•• ShrrldiUI (II ( I.J.I)

""

I I.J.'!J

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The Daily Sentinel

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:HT junior hi~'
girls top Southem
The Hannan Trace junior high
girls basketball1eam upped their
season record 10-1 Wednesday
night by defeating Southern,
29-24. In the Racine-baaed 11YJ11.
Lucy Mullins Jed the winners
with 16 points. Buhl had eight for
the losers.
Next Wildcat contest Is Wednetday, at Eastern In the season .
finale.
The post-season tourney Is
slated Feb. 13-15 at North Gallla
tor both boys and gtri!J junior
hllb teams.
¥

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Football page ..Guess the
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Super Sunday
Time
'or errant thoughts

were Cleveland Heights Lutheran East. Pitsburg Franklin-

No. 1 in Division III for the fourth
week in a row, with Hamilton
Badin (15-0) in the runrierup spot
tor t~e third consecutive week.
Trace had 17 firsts and 251 points,
Badin 7 firsts and 225 points~
Unbeaten Columbus Academy
(13-0) advanced from fifth a
week ago to third, followed by
Springfield Catholic, Wheelersburg- and Bloom-Carroll, three
more perfect clubs.
Oberlin. which los!for the third
time, tumbled all the way from
third to seventh. Pymatuning
Valley was eighth. OttawaGlandorf ninth and unbeaten
Apple Creek Waynedaie made its
first appearance In the list in
tenth.
Wehrle, an 85-80 winner over
Columbus Eastmoor Tuesday
night behind Lawrence Funderburke's 33 points, 17 rebounds
and 6 blocked shots. ruled the
small school Division IV for the
fourth consecutive week.
Wehrle (14-2) received 27 first
place votes to outdistance second
place Indian -Valley Soyth (15-0)
345-295. Fort Loramie was third
with 241, followed by Beaver
Eastern in fourth with 167 and
Mansfield St. Peter's fifth with
165.
Rounding the Division !Vs

IO.Milrildlrld Malllhar (11·3)

lb._. -Ill, PIIIDPII Rlwniklf' :U

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C.enk'nillt -IS, Wl'lli Carrolltoa 34
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t. MMKIIIOII Prrry j 11-tl
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7. Brlk'ftllllllh-.· ( l!i-!)

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DI'Vt.lon I

Mlnne!iOll&amp; KIPl'd cah,.~r Tim
LaiiiiM'r •ad 11tlllt) playt'r AI Nrw•••·
Pltblhu,.h - Namrd Brur.·• ""rpll•n

•

K11_.. Ubta, It eat:h; 1:1. VfftlliUI'!I
IJ: 1-1. tUe) Applf' fr~k WIQ'ftedalr 11nd
Huron. 1 each: 11. Wl'lll.ll'ni'I'MOn 7: 11.
Uc:klftll Helaht" I; lit Newhuey $; II.
CUyabor;ll Hf'i~!:tltM !: !I. We~~t Salem
Northwf'llk"nlt.

Utah ad ronha-.1. 10· :ttl p.m.
i\thulta w.t ~ultlr, UI::IO p.m .
Friday., Game!'!

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OkMAO - Slprd reltet pUctwr ·lim
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Transactions

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21
~ 11'11: II. (tlt'l Art·llbold •1111

Tllllftld~'11 GatMM
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n.~('land 11'7, \\J11Nhl~un UMI

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6. Oak H•rtlor

N.\TIONi\L IASKI:TB.4.LL A.SSOf.

Dump 'dependency theory'___

0

2.r.ohamhu~o~Ru.dy(IJ

NBA. resultS

•
Vi_nc--'-en_ic_a_rro_U:
•
l

Nukes that grow

The rest of the Division II list
consisted of Thornville Sheridan
In sixth, followed by 'Be!lefontaine, Bexley, Leavittsburg LaBrae and Mansfield Malabar.
Bellefontaine dropped ' a 30-29'
overtime decision Saturday
night to St. Paris Graham. a
team the Chieftains had beaten
8049 earlier in the season.
Dayton Dunbar, Haviland
Wayne Trace and Columbus
Wehrle continued to pace the
pther three divisions.
Dunbar. 15-1, was the Division
I leader for the fourth week in a
row. although the Wolverines
faced a new No. 2 team In
unbeaten Lorain Admiral King,
16-0. Dunbar received 27 · first
place votes and 312 points and
King 2 firsts and 266 points.
. Canton McKinley. despite an
Impressive 73-60 win over No. 9
Massillon Perry last Fri!lay
night, slippi!d from second to
third with 248 points.
Wooster advanced from !itth to
fourth, Cincinnati Woodward
from seventh to fifth and was
followed In order by Euclid,
Toledo Macomber, Westerville
North. Perry and Middletown,
making Is first top 10
appearance.
Wayne Trace (14-0) claimed •

SVAC standings

•

a

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,
'

�'-1•

Th..sday, Februlry 4, 1988

•

Pomeroy-Mickleport, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

Flalnes open long road card with 9-0 defeat
By Unl&amp;ed Preas Inlernallonal
Wilson, Dale Hawerchuk, Tomas
The Calgary Flames. doomed Steen and Boschman, and the
to wander the NHL until next latter two scorell short-handed
month, began their sojourn In goals. as well. Winnipeg, with the
ominous fashion Wednesday second be!tt power play in the
night. ·
league, scored twice in seven
Because the Olympic Winter , man-advantage situations.
Games will occupy the SaddleAndrew McBain and Paul
. dome \lntll Feb. 28, the Flames MacLean, each with two goals,
were forced Into an 11-game road and Peter Tagllanetti also scored
trip. On their nrst stop., they for Winnipeg, which took only 26
suffered a 9-0 humiliation at the shots.
hand~ of the Jets at Winnipeg .
"This is the sweetest one yet;"
"There's no ·particular area or said gQaltender Daniel B!!rtliiour game you can point to and ame, who made 25 saves .for his
blame," Calgary's Jim Peplinski second shutout of the season and
said. "Our forwards were awful. third of his career. "This was
Our defense was awful. Our against the best offense in the
goaltendlng was awful. We're all NHL. We_wanted to show them
to blame."
we're going to beat them this ·
Three weeks ago at Calgary, year. It was great to see the
the Flames whipped the Jets 6-0 players going and the emotion."
to strengthen their ·hold on nrst
Trailing 4-0, the Flames tried
place in the Smythe Division. to intimidate the Jets, who
With the second-place Edmonton answered the challenge. Referee
Oilers playing wlthdut Injured Bill McCreary whistled 128 minWayne Gretzky. the Flames' utes in penalties. 75 to Calgary In
position seemed secure.
· a game marred by five fights,
· Now Gretzky Is back, and the and several pushing and shqving
Flarries will be without home-Ice matches.
advantage for what could seem
In other games, Montreal
lik\' an eternity If Wednesday's ripped Hartford 5-2, Detroit
. performance is any indication of topped Chicago 6·4, St. Louis
what Is to come in their next 10 · blanked Minnesota 2-0, Edmongames.
ton whipped New Jersey 8-5, and
Precedent might have sug- Los Angeles clubbed Vancouver
gested Wednesday's outcome. 7-2.
Since Dan Maloney took ov~r as
Canadlens 5, Whalers 2
Jets coach two years ago, the
At Hartford, Conn.. Sergio
Flames have · gone ().7-0 at Momesso, who entered the game
Winnipeg.
with two goals this season,
"We were looking for re- scored .his first career hat trick.
V\'nge," said Winnipeg's Laurie and Bobby Smith collected three
Boschman, who sparked the rout assists to pace Montreal. Claude
with a hat trick . ."We played Lemieux and Stephane Richer
poorly in their building and we
wanted to show them we're not as
bad as -our record shows t23-22·

each scored for Montreal , which
improved to 3-0-2 against Hartford this season.
· Blue~~ %, North Stars 0
I
At Bloomington, Minn ., ilbug
Gilmour scored a goal and set up
one by Brlan·senning, and Greg
Millen stopped 25 shots to help
the Blues to their club-record
seventh straight victory. The
North Stars have not scored since
the flrst period of a 9-lloss at St.
Louis last week.
·
Red.Wings 6, Blackhawkll 4
At Chicago, Adam Oates
· scored two goals, including the
go-ahead score in a three-goal
se~ond period. to help the Red
Wings !'nd a five-game winless
streak. Chicago has lost !our
straight following a three-game
winning streak. Oates broke a 3-3 •
tie late in the second with his fifth
goal of the season.
Oilers 8, Devils 5
At Edmqnton, · Albert;1, Esa
Tlkkanen scored a hat t rlek and
Dave Hannan added two goals tp
help the Oilers snap the Devils'
three-game winning streak. The
loss was the first for the Devils
under new coach Jim Schoenfeld.
The Oilers pulled within three
points of the Smythe Divisionleading Calgary Flames.
Kings 7, Canueks 2
At Inglewood. Calif., Jimmy
Carson recorded a hat trick to ilijllll...,
•
help move the Kings past the
Canucks into fourth .place in the
,.
Smythe. The Kings converted
four of eight power-play oppor-·
tunitles, while the Canucks went
CHJ::CKS MAR UK- St. Louis Blues deferislveman Rob Romane
1-8. Los Angeles scored six
·(right)
cliecks Minnesota center Dennis Maruk Into St. Louis goal :
straight goals.
during Wednesday's NHL action In Wooinlngton. (UPI).

The Daily

Michigan thumps
Iowa;· Purd..e tops
Wisconsin 82-69

Local
bowling
MOND.\Y NITE Ml:UCD
.... 11,1111
Team Series:

Pal

HUI

Ford-IS:W:

M.O.M-11110;' Carponler'o Vldeo-1762.
Team Game: Pat Hill Ford-659: Carpeon·
tE'rs Vtdeo-634; 622 .
High Serleo: Ron Smlth-192; Rod
Walker-490; Don Hyst"ll·454; Loretta
' Atkli'IS -494, Joan Banks-447 ; Terri
Whltma.n -jJS.
.
High Game: Rod · Walker-179; Ron
Smlth-174: 172; Lclren·~ A1klns-198; Joan

Ban'ks-175: Loretta Atkin!l-169.

•

.•

·

Baek By
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FRIDAyI FEB. 5
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SATURDAy FEB. 6
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NO COVER CHARGE

MIDDLEPORT OHIO ·

7) ."

•

••

The Flames potent power play
was offset · six times by the
forechecking of Doug Smail, Ron

SEO standings
SEO, OPPONENTS
. (All Games) ·
TEAM'
W' L P OP
Wheelersburg .... 14 0 1011 761
Portsmouth ....... 15 1 1245 944
Southern ............ 13 2 1285 899
Chesapea ke .. .... . 13 2 1031 833
Logan ................ 12 2 787 686
Gallipolis ........... 12 3 904 781
Waverly .: .. ........ 12 3 965 792
Athens ...... ......... 8 6 984 873
Marietta...... .. .. .. 7 8 933 981
South Point .. .. .... 6 8 974 1023
Pt. Pleasant ...... 4 9 869 931
West.. .......... .. .... 5 10 1002 1003
Warren .......... .... 4' lJ 871 995
Greenfield ......... 4 12 841 980
Jackson ............. 3 13 824 1061
Tuesday's non-~EO results:
Meigs 70 Warren Local 61
Athens 83 Trimble 75
Hurricane 82 Pt . Pleasant 69
Sout h Point 78 Buffalo 61
Chesapeake 61 Fairland 46
(SEOAL VARSITY)
Team
W L P
Logan ...... ... .... .. .. .7 0 430
Gallipoiis .... ........ .6 1 406
At hens ................. 3 4 449
Marietta .............. 3 4 439
Warren ...... ......... .2 5 :19;3
Jackson .... .. .... .... .O 7 355
TOTALS
21 21 2472

Steelers might
trade for .Blackledge
CLEVELAND tUPil - The
Pittsburgh Steelers are interested in trading for Cantonnative Todd Blackledge or the
Kansas City Chiefs. The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported
Monday.
Blackledge, who lost his starting job in Kansas City this
seasog, ·would replace quarterback Mark Malone, the NFL's
lowest rated quarterback.
· :'We have to get ourselves a
quarterback," a Steelers' official
told the newspaper. "We can't go
another season with Malone as
tile starter."
•Kansas City , owner Lamar
Hunt told The Plain Dealer that
tile Steelers were talking to the
Chiefs about Blackledge.
· Ron Blackledge, the quarter,tiackrs father. Is an offensive line
coach for the Steelers.

'

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Giant Sure Start Batteries

Kendall Motor Oils
;

I

¢ '(;-------_,'-,.- 10W30
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60-Month
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Limit 12

OP
365
335
432
423
442
475
2472

(SEOAL Reserves)
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan .... ...... .. ..... .6 1 342 302
Warren ................ 5 2 333 297
Marietta .............. 4 3 325 320
Athens .... ........... .'. 3 4 309 302
Jackson ........ ...... .2 5 283 327
Galllpolis ..... ... .... .l 6 282 319
TOTALS
21 21 1874 1874
Friday's games:
Logan at Gallipolis
JiJckson at Marietta
Athens at Warren
West at Wheelersburg
Portsmouth at Ironton
Huntington at Point Pleasant
Soqthern at Oak Hlll
Northwest at Waverly
South Point at Wayne
ROck Hlll at Chesapeake
Miami Trace at Greenfi eld
:saturday's games:
Sbuth Webster at Wheelersburg
Mi&gt;eller at Portsmouth
~uthern at Federal Hocking
Waverly at Circleville
North Adams at West
Wellston at Jackson
L_i)gan at Meigs (makeup)

1

QKendall.

•••

~ GRABS REBOUND - Purdue center Steve ScheiDer grabs a
;::: rebound during Wednesday night's Big 10 actloit In Lafayette. The

co-leape le$dlng Boll~rmakers won, 82-68, to Improve their mark
to 18-2. (UPI)

""''

Buckeyes
host
Illinois
tonight
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -To roller coaster ride. was one of the Illlnl defeats have' been to top 20
say Ohio State coach Gary negatives at Michigan State. He teams.
"We know what they can do,"
Wliliams wasn't happy following had 6of those 22 turnovers and hit
Illinois coach Lou Henson said of
the Buckeyes' 76-64 loss at • just 4 of 11 from the noor:
Ohio State. "They've already
t'llchlgan , Sta(e Monday night
" If you Jook at his pattern,"
beaten Iowa and Michigan at
was an understatement.
Williams said of Wilson, "he has
hom.e. 'we know we're going 10
: Williams broke a window in .always been that way. His
MSU's Jenison Fieldhouse when · consistent pattern has been· to be have to play well. We'll have to
he slammed a door shut, then . inconsistent. At Michigan State, shoot better from the perimeter ·
closed practice the following day he couldn't get Into the flow of the against Ohio State than we did
against Michigan and Arizona.
loronlythesecondtimet.nhlstwo game and it hurt us. ,
"We're pleased with our inside
years at Ohio State. .
"I'd like to see him more
; The reason? Probably the consistent;" added Williams, game, " added . Henson. "but
we're last in the Big Ten in
Buckeyes' wors.t performance of "but since he's a senior. I don't
the season and an embarrassing think he's going to change. We 3-polnt shooting and last in free
throw shooting."
ipss to a team that had dropped just hope he can turn It on down
Henson said he would start
seven of its previous eight the stretch."
6-foot-7
junior 'Lowell Hamilton
kames .
·
Williams said Wilson will start
·
at
center
rather than Hoot Jens
'• Ohio State returns to St. John at guard against Illinois along
Kujawa.
who
has started 17 of the
· Arena tonight 17 p.m.) to take on with Jay Burson, who hltonly5of
first
20
games
at that posillon.
~ th -ra nked IUioolsJ14-6 overall ..p shots at Michigan ~tate and
·
At
the
forwards
will be 6-foot-5
'-nd 4-3 in ,the Big Ten), with the · scored' just 14 points, 6 below his
Kenny
Battle,
the
team's
leadfng
11npredictable Buckeyes 00-7 average.
scorer
(15.3
per
·
game)
and
··and 3-4) needing a win to even
"We don't really have any
their Big Ten record.
other choice," said W.illiams. 6-foot-6 Nick Anderson.
"We'll be short," said Henson.
·; "We have to do a better job who again this year Is thin on
"We've been beaten on the
With the ball." said Williams, talent in the backcourt.
who saw his team charged with
Jerry Francis, who scored 19at boards pretty badly this year. but
2-2 turnovers against the Spar- ·Michigan State. freshman Perry that's the lineup we probably "'Ill
tans and shoot just 38.7 percent Carter and Tony White. who had start against Ohio State."
The Iliinl, however, will have a
lrom the floor. "We've also got 9 and 10 rebounds, respectively,
big
size edge in the backcourt .
· ihe get the ball Into the hands of will be the frontcourt starters.
with
a pair of 6-foot-4 guards · those wlio c~n shoot it. Whfn we . Illinois Is coming off back-toKendall
Gill and Glynn Black- ,
back lqsses to Michigan (76-64)
don't, we're nota good team."
; Senior point guard Curtis Wll- and Arizona (78-70), the ·No. 1 . well. -Wilson is 6-foot -1 and
s,on. whose season has been like a · team In the nation. In fact, all 6 Burson Is 5-foot -11.

Force scores 3-2 indoor soccer' victory

GOES FOR REBOUND Michigan'• Gary Grant
(right) attempts a shot as
Iowa's' ROy Marble (center)
goes up for a bloek during
Wednesday's Big 10 game at
Ann Arbor. (UPI)

Central
Michigan continues on roll. against BG
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Sate prices in ettect February 4 through February t 0. t988.

·- -f

-~'r'
-

Toledo was led by Mark
Robinson led BG with 15 points
"That's. two years In a row
By GENE CADD~
German
with 21 points and Jeff
each and Bi,lly Johnson added 14.
we've played games here we
!~ ·
UPI Sports Writer
Haar
.with
19.
Elsewhere in the MAC Wednes"" Central Michigan coach Char- could have lost. Luckily, we won
Xavier
got 27 points from
day night, Eastern Michigan
them.' '
~le Coles says his team alld
remained a game in front of Byron Larkin and 23 from Stan
Bowling Green's Jim Larran~wling Green may be the two
Central
with a 109-92 thrashing of Kimbrough in extending Its home
;.iutckest ln the Mid-American aga felt his team let a big one get
Ohio
University,
Western Michi- winning streak to 20 games over
·
o(:onference. Unfortunately for away.
gan
downed
Toledo
88-76 and . two seasons with a 101-84 win
"It's disappoin-ting to lose a
:the Fal.cons, that's as far as the
over Wright State .
.
Ken_
t
State
got
by
BallState~7-64.
game like that, " said Larranaga.
;ukeness goes.
The Musketeers unli:!ashed an
At
Ypsilanti,
Mich.,
Howard
;: Central, the cjJlfending MAC ''Your gUards are the critical
11
-0 run in the first half to grab a
Chambers' 23 points led five
'Champ apd pre-season favorite to positions to· winning_ down the
31
-17 lead with 12:04 left and
Eastern Michigan players in :
:repeat, fson a five-game winning stretch. We did It last year when
Increased
the advantage to 63-47
double figures in the Hurons' win
we had a senior (Frank Booker).
:streak following Its 63-60 win
at
halftime.
The Raiders could
over Ohio U. Ohio's Dave Jamer" Now we have underclassmen.
:Wednesday night over BG.
Right now, we're a team ·that son led all scorers with 27 points. not get closer than '13 points the
• The Falcons, slipping deeper
Kent State freshman Mitch· rest of the way.
:Ond deeper into the league's seeins Incapable of putting the
Corey Brown led Wright State
Sowards
scored 19 points and hit
nail in the coffin."
~econd division, have lost four of
with
22 points, while Joe Jackson
a
pair
of
free
throws
with
7
Dan Majerle scored 20·points
'heir last five MAC games and
had
20.
,
seconds
remaining
to
provide
the
:now stand 2-6, tied with Miami and Tommie Johnson 16 to lead Golden Flashes with their win
Elsewhere,
North
Carolina
Central. which scored the game's
for last place.
A&amp;T
exteilded
its
home
court
over
Ball
State.
first 10 points.
''They resemble us a lot,
winning
streak
to32
games
with
a
Kent led 30-28 at the break a rut
Central. up 27-26 at the naif, led
f!llpeclally in quickness. :· Coles
92-70
triumph
over
Akron.
most of the second half. although, nearly all the second . half,
said after his Chippewas saw an
In the Ohio Athletic Conference
Chippewas' biggest ll)argin although the Golden Flashes
the
e'arfy · 13-1 lead disappear but
Wednesday
night, Heidelberg
was only 51-43 with 8:15 to play. , didn't take the lead fQrgood until
managed to tough lt out down the
took
.over
sole
possession of first
Central took the lead for good, Eric Glenn's basket broke a 53-53 ·
stretch. "From one through ten
place with a 65-53 )lome win.over
59-57, on a 15-footer by ' Mark . . tie with ·6: 27 left to play.'
(players). I think we're tre
Ohio
Northern. The two teams
Reggie
Adams
added
15
points
Brisker .
.. quickest two teams in the league.
hall
gone
into the game sharing
and
Glenn
13
for
Kent.
Ball
State
'
· Joe Gregory and Anthony
that's WilY Its· so tough to play
was led in scoring by Derrick the lead.
l(galnst them.
In other OAC contests l it was
Wesley with 26 points.
Musklngum
over BaldwinAt
Toledo,
Billy
Stanback
years
scored 20 points and Greg Rapp Wallace 52-50, Capital over MaIri 1971,'.Page, now 42. became and Sieve Rilkonen added 19 rietta 66-51 and Mount Union over
ST. PAUL, Minn. I UP!) Alan Page, newly elected to the the first defensive player named each In leading Western Michl· Otterbein 68-66, handing the
Cardinals their 21st loss In a row.
J?ro Football Hall of Fame; is still the.NFL's most valuable player. gan over Toledo.
North Coast Athletic ConferThe Broncos scored 10 unansbitter about the 12 years he toiled lie played in eight straight Pro .
a defensive lineman for the Bowls and four Super Bowls as a wered points after Toledo had ence action saw Ohio Wesleyan
Wooster 75-69 and Oberlin
Minnesota VIkings where he VIking from 1967-76. Still, Page taken a 65•62 lead with 8: 38 to over
ove~ Case Reserve 102-63.
play.
said
It's
"debatable"
whether
gained his fame.
,,
'
, "Let's race It: I got flr«;d by the . those were his best yers.
"I was drafted to play In
¥1nnesota Vlklngs·and I 11 never
tJriet that," said Page, now a Minnesota." he said. "It was my ·
'
twyer ·on the Minnesota attor- choice to play In Chicago."
pqe,
a
native
of
Canton,
OhiO.
De JOU Mell • ,..lien fr. . '" how cart of a
IJ'Y 1ener1~1 a~ff.
where the Hall of Fame Is
; Page tln!Jhed his pro career tocaled. had frequent run·lns
lei AM1rl • ·=~oy !1-ae- aad 1111 ''llull011
with then.VIklnas coach Bud .
\iitt11 four yean wttb the Chicago Grant,
C1•len'
YII.IF........ prelillltllll stuff ....alAI·
p~~rttculariY over his
Jtears. He hedle!S when alked if
IY nlewt ,_ _,
ti 'f ...-...rf,
~ would rather be en$llrlned In playing weight (He dropped to
225
poulldl
from
27!1
as
a
rookie).
.
Acclfllt 1 rell!lilltt ir
ten1 rellflt• care.
·
tiNt Bean' team colors than the
Paae said playing for both teams
Cell
Sonya
Wolfla~ 114-811...01 For Conaultlng tnd
llllllJII•'
, -..Do I have to answer that . wu satlatylna and the tans Were
lnfornlatlon
uked. "We'll cross 1ooc1 In bOth place•. He allo said
A Llvlnt Center thet ll!r;:!i"!!!' ; ~J01Nth, DIVII(Iprnent
11'11* with hla former
. . . we 011111e tn lt.l -

Page bitter about

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•

209 Upper tliver Road

ST.' LOUIS (UP!) - Pascuale Craig Allen scored after inler-:
DeLuca scored midway through cepting a pass from llijevski.
the · fourth period . Wednesd~y
The Steamers regained the·
night to give the Cleveland Force lead when Garcia deflected in a
a 3-2Majorlndoor Soccer League pass of! the boards from Daryl
triumph over the ,lit. Louis Doran with 27 seco nds left in the ·
Steamers,
period.
The victory snapped CleveAll Kazemaini ti ed thescore 2-2:
land's three-game losing streak in the third quart er when he-·
and gave St. Louis its seventh drilled in a pass from Kai
straight defeat. Victor Nogueira f~H;:a:a:s:k:iv:i.::::::::::::::=;
made 19 saves in goal for the
Force .
DeLuca took a pass frQ.lJl
Michael King and fir!'d the bali
past a diving Slobo Ilijevskl. It
was King 's first assist &amp;lnce Dec.
9 and helped the Force. 18-12,
FLORIST
remain a game ahead of Minnesota in the Eastern Division. St .
Meigs County's Otdost Florist
Louis. 9-19, has lost Its last four
352 E. Mnin St. Pomeroy, Oh.
games by one goal and has the
PH. 992 •2644
league' s worst record.
Gerry Gray had given St. Louis ·
"Often lmilal ed - Neve r
a 1-0 lead in the first qua rter , but
Dup/.icat ed "
Cleveland tied it at 11:03 when

with Vikings

"CAN YOU USE OUI HELP?"

GaiiiDOIIa

defeated Georgia Tech 78-65, No .'
.&gt;ix minutes into the game, 6 Pu rduc pounded Wisconsin '
Michigan Coach Bill Frieder 86-62, No. 8 Oklahoma dumpe&lt;J:
knew he could save his best Kan sas 73-65, No. 9 Pittsburgh
Knute Rockne halftime talk for bea.t No . IS St. John's 88-.71. No. JO'
Kentucky crushed Mississippi·
another day.
·
94-65,
No. 15 Vand erbilt bounced
"I told them at halftime,"
Mississippi
State 82-66, and No :; ·
F~ieder said, '"l'm notgoing to
20
Fio~lda
topped
Alabama 74-64 .
feed you a line. We're going to
At
Durham,
N.C
.. Danny Fe rry
win to this game- even if I have
scored 22 poin ts to lead Atlantic·
to coach you through it. "'
Michigan blitzed Iowa for a Coast Conference-leading Duke
61-26 halftime lead Wednesday to its fifth straight victory. Kevin
night en route to a 120-103 victory Strickland added 16 points for the
·
over the Hawkeyes. Glen Rice Blue Devils , 15-2 and 5-l.
At West Lafayette , Ind., Todd'
and Gary Grant , the top two
scorers in the Big Ten, hit for 35 Mitchell scored 17 poi·nts and·
and 29 points, respectively. to Troy Lewis added 16 for Purdue,'
spark No. 11 Michigan over No . wlilch Improved to 18-2 and
maintained a· share ol the Big
14 Iowa at Ann Arbor, Mich.
Ten
lead with a 7-1 mark .
The Wolverines raised their
At
Lawrence, Kan., Stacey
record to 18-3 overall and 7-1 in ·
King
and Ricky Grace each'
the Ilig Ten. setting up Sunday's
showdown !or first place in the · scored 19 points to rally Okla "
con:erence when No. 6 Purdue homa to a Big Eight victory:
visits Michigan for a nationaliy Oklahoma improved to 19-2 over-all and 5-1 in the conference, a
televised game.
"! d.on 't think it was a fluke, " half-game behind league-leading
· low a Coach Tom Davis said after Kansas State. Kansas. which lost
Michigan ran up the most points consecutive hOme games and
ever scored on an Io\l'a team .. four straigh t overall for the first
"That's a very. very good Michi-- time since 1983, s lipped to 12-8
':
gan ballclub. I can 't think of and 1-4.
At
New
York.
Demetreus
Gore·
anything Michigan didn't do
well. or better than we did. They led seven teammates in double
set up their offense, defense, figures with 19 points to pace
broke our press ... Michigan Pittsburgh to a Big East victory
deserves an awful lotof credit." that snapped St. .John's six -game
Michigl;in repeatedly broke Io- winning s_treak. Pitt , 16-2 and 6-1;'
wa's P.fess for easy layups or· retained its hold on first place in
-~
pullup ~hots - then compounded th e Big East.
At
Lexington.
Ky
..
Winston
·
the Hawkeyes' embarrassment
Bennett
scored
16
points
to
lead
on several occasions by stealing
the lnbounds pass and turning it five Kentucky players in double
figures. Kentucky , 15-3a nd 7-3 in
into a basket.
Michigan ran up a 23-5 lead in the SEC, used superior size and
the first 6:24 then r&lt;~.ced to a 44-17 speed to overwhelm the Re bels,
lead with six minutes to play. The who sta rt ed three fre shmen.
At Nashville. Tenn., Will
Wolverines hit 25 of 41 shots in the
first half' while the Hawkeyes Perdue totaled 23 points and 11 .
rebou nds to power Vanderbilt ,
made only 27 percent (7 of 26. l
which
improved to 14-4 and 7-3 in
The Hawkeyes . 15-6 and 5-3,
the
~EC
with it s seventh st raight
started the second half with a 14-5
conference
vic tory.
·
run, shaving the lead to 26 with
At
Tuscaloosa,
Ala
..
Dwayne·
17:32 to play. The Wolverines,
however, added to their lead, Schintzius scored 18 points and
going ahead 86-55 with 11:12 left . Florida, 16-5. raised its SEC· In other games involving leading record to 7-2.
ranked teams, No. 5 Duke
.' \y United Press International

'* ••rt

IUW a elutea."

lie._., ...

Vilflll ..........
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,)

'

USED FURNITURE
1-2 Pc. Living Room Suite-Like New!
1-7 Pc. Wood Dinette Set ·
1-0ccasional living lm. Chair-like -NewJ

�•
I

Pomeroy MiddlePort, Ohio

Page .6-The Daily Sentinel

Cavali~rs
By United Press 1nleraatlonal .
Coach Lenny Wilkens has
r~ ndered Cleveland Cavalier
jokes outdated.
Mark Price drew an offens ive
foul. then sank a free throw with
flye seconds to p)ay Wednes¥Y
night , giving the Cavaltei'S a
107·106 victory over the Washingtoil Bullets at Landover, Md.
· In Its second season under
Wilkens, Cleveland. 23-21, has
won five straight and moved two
games over .500 for the first time
since 1978, when It started 4-2.
·" It feels good. Wedeservetotie
over . . 500," said Cavaliers for·

Thwaday. February 4. 1988

\

edge Bullets. ill final .seconds of play, 107-1.06
NBA experience entering the
ward John Williams, who totaled
23 points, a club-record 9 blocked season - one more than Bullets
shots and 7 rebounds. ''We have . center Mo8es Malone. .
"We're getUng used to eveworked hard and everything Is
ryone." said second-year center
beginning to come together."
The Cavaliers rtnlshed 31-51 Br!ld Daugherty. who will play In
under Wilkens last year, a Sunday's All-Star Game. "What
tw9-game Improvement over the a difference a year under our belt
makes ." 1
•
previous season. The last t'mt
The Bullets had tlie ball with 14
Cleveland ended a season at .500
or better was 1978, when the seconds remaining and the score
Cavaliers recorded their second tied 106-106, but Price drew an
straight 43-39· mark. Since then, offensive foul on Frank Johnson.
they have not earned rnore than Nine seconds later. Johnson
fouled :Price, who hit 1 of 2 from
37 victories In a season.
Cleveland's starters Wednes- the line. Craig Ehlo blacked
day combined for only 12 years of

CSU eligible
for' tourney .
.

Larry Bird during Wednesday's NBA action in the
Boston Gardens. (UPI) ·

NFL scouts, agents begin
search for new grid -alent

••

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..

lNDlA NAPOLIS (UPI ) - The There is a lot of money riding on ! hey want me. 1 want shoulder
NFL scouting combine. an an - this," said Indiana linebacker pads. I want to play."
nual " meat ma rket" for football Van Waiters. "It's where teams
Bennie Blades, a free safety for
scout s and hopeful agents, began . get the stats they look at the rest national champion Miami (Fla. ),
today with 343 college seniors of the year. They figure out how prefers the chance to he exam·
trying · to impress potential good an athlete you are and that
lned outside of game situations.
·
will ' affect your draft position. He also believes de(enslve backs
employers.
Three days of tes.ting In the It 's not a fluke thing."
and wide receivers will be
Hoosier Dome were preceeded
Ohio State linebacker Chris selected 'lower than "safer"
by physica ls a nd X-rays Wednes- Spielman. · rated one of the positions such as quarterback
day . Athletes will be asked to run nation's top college prospects and linemen.
"This Is a gOod way of testing
sprints of 10. 20 a nd 40 yards. plus before an injury last season, is
race through co nes and take confident he can show his lop the guys to see who is the cream
other skill drills. including verti -· form to any doubters.
of the cream." Blades said. "It
cal and long jumps. A lea k in the
"It's basically a meat market , can make a diffe rence In where
sta dium 's roof has been repaired but if that's the way they want it , you get drafted. People say wide
and officia ls sa id the running . !hat 's fine with me. , It's · a
tecelver and defensive backs are
surface was in top condition .
challenge to see what kind .of high-risk markets. H th~y get hit
t:inemen and kickers were to athletic ability you have." Spiel- wrong, there goes the career. It is
undergo testing today. with line· man said. "They can't tes t your safer to pick a quarterback with
backers a nd defensive backs playing ability on the field. I all the rules to protect him or a
working out on Friday and don't know if I can help myself or linemen because they can play
running backs. wide receivers . hurt myself. I've proven I can down in the trenches."
and quarterbacks concluding play with the best of them. I'm a
Blades expects to be chosen In
drills on Satu rda y. Tim Brown. very confident player. I believe the first round. even if It's a
the . Heisman Trophy winner In my own abilities. I have a
hometown pressure selection,
from Notre Dame. was a mong dream to play in the NFL. That
"I think I'll be picked In the
more than 100 players expected dream will come true In the next first round; If nobody else picks
to arr ive today.
couple of months. I want to show me, the Dolphins will. If they
Hundreds of agents will be on these people that If they want a
passed me up, the 'city of Miami
hand and a se minar .by the NFL player who wiJI give 100 percent , might go out and kill somebody .
Pla yers Association is · being r-;::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;;:::;::::::===~11
conducted to help pla ye rs deal
wl)h t.he details of selecting· a
representative for critical con·
tract talks later in the year .
I
.
Drills will be open only to NFL
coaches and scouts. Results will
be kept confidential. but they will
be c rucial to teams in planning
their strategy for the league's
college draft.in April.
" This is ver y. ver y important .

LEGAL NOTICE

!

The Public Utilities Com. mission of Ohio has sel
for public hearing Case
No. 87·2189-EL-UNC to
review the recovery of Ohio
coal research. and development costs by Ohio
Power Company throogh
the electric fuel component
rate. The hearing is scheduled to begin on February
10, 1988, at 10:00 a.m., at
the offices of the Public
Utilities CommisSion, 180
East Broad Street. Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573. At
the hearing, all interested
parties. wiN be given an
opponunity to be heard.
Further information, may be
obtained .tiy contacting the
Commission.

DOUGLAS HUNTER,-M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE
ON
.

(

)

,

I

FR.~

·PULL-ON PANTS
SIZE 1·2!1
$ 33

$4 44

.

Slightly

'7.99 SAlE

SHIRTS
REDUCED

,.

1 PRICE
'1/2 PRICE
GROUP TOWELS &amp; WASHCLOTHS

WASH ClOTH~$ ·••••••••••••••• .'••••••••••••••u •• ~., .....~ ••••!~A~.~..... 84 c
H~ND TOWELS ................................................!~£~... S1.66
BATH TOWELS....................~ ............................!~.~~.:. S2.55
EXTRA LARGE lATH TOWElS..........................l~!~... S3.44

Ja~t

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·'

Arrl.v•• .For Spring!

LADIES PUlSES, JEWIUY, COORDINATED GROUPS
. liDS' STONESWEAI SHOITS, TOP$, Slim
Layaway NowU!

,,

0111 THE "T' till lUDDliPOIT

z

·ill-

,y.ou'Jl he happy to know that
·George Folmer who has been so
Ill ·for such a long time, Is really
Improved. He Is now .e ating
rnealsat,the table. walking. with
the help of a walker and getting
his mobility back. Now that's
godd·news: ·
W,e've gone so long locally
~jl '

TOPS meets
•

"

Amount In lilA At Age 65
Assuming An Average Yield Of 8.25%
&gt;

MONTHLY BEGINNING
INVESTMENT ATAGE35

$50
$75
$100

$78,411
$1_17,616
$156,822

BEGINNING.
ATAGE25

$187,697
$281,535
$375,394

.

.

&lt;'
.

·-•
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If y6u want to retire on more than social security,the chart above shows how much monthly
contributions to an IRA can mean to you at retirement.

..

Under the new tax law, the average family Is Slil eligible 10 deduct every dolar COIJbibuled from lis
currenl income tax. Up 10 $2,000 per wage eamar, per year, If )'Oil famRy Income~ $40,000 or less
($25,000 Hsingle). Regardless of your income, you pay no taxes on the Interest you eam until you ·
aclually use the funds.

.,

r

·. Ola Sinclair was the best loser
at . Tuesday night's meeting of
TOPS 570 held at the Coonhunters
Club on the .Rock · Springs
Fairgrounds .
Pearl Knapp was runner-up,
Penny Gillespie was the top teen
loser, and Jaunlta Humphrey
won the fruit ba~ket. After the
meeting a funny money auction
was held. Information on the club
may be obtained by calling
Le nnle Be lie Aleshire, 992-7464.

•

JOSHUA WILFONG

·Wilfong ·birthday

Valentine'.s Day Is coming up
and those dedicated residents
who work faithfully lor the
bloodmotiile visits point out that
a perfect valentine gltt Is a gift
from your heat. Therefore, they
ask for a whole bunch of donors
next Wednesday afternoon. Feb.
10, when a bloodmobile visits the
-Meigs Senior Citizens Center .In
Pomeroy.
•
Over 60 hospitals In the trl·
state reglon·whlch Includes ~ete·
rans Memorial Hospltlll. depend
on Red Cross blood and your'' gift
from the heart".

· SHOPPING SPREE WINNER:- Alonzo ''Buster" Dickens or Point Pleasant, recently won a 90·
second shopping spree at Twin Rivers Foodland. The winner was selected from area contestants during
''Foodland Night" at a Rio Grande College basketball game. Dickens came away with $36.78 wortb or
groceries. Pictured from left are Brent Eastman, director or sales and promotioo for Obio Valley S'!·
permarkets, Dickens, Larry Artbur, Twin Rivers Foodland manager and llob Eastman, owner or Oh•o
Valley Supermarkets.
·

•h

Fetty birthday observed. Wlt party

Here are some newspaper
excerpts from the Portland area
almost 50 years ago, pa~sed
along by Gayle Price:
"S. J. Lee lost a fine. pig last
week.
"Earnest Brewer traded his
Overland car for a Chevrolet two
door one day last week.
"The stork paid a visit to Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Mlddleswart
Sunday night and left them a fine
.
son.
"Lawrence Gluesencamp ,
Russell and Jake VanMeter, Sam
Long and Paise Wolfe went north
to cut corn.
"Eggs are 25 cents ):ier dozen .
and butter Is 25 and 30 cents."

David Fetty, son. of Mike and . Ewing, ~fetor Van Meter, Patsy
.Janice Fetty, observed his )lth
Aetker, Jeff Stetbem.
birthday recently with a party at
artan Frederick, Jarrod Van
the Cheste~ Skate-a-Way Rink.
Inwitgen. Travis Friend, Andrew
Cupcakes, chips and koolatd
Wolfe, Jared Ridenour, Andy
were served. Attending were
Myers, Anna· Wolfe, Lisa SteChristy Dill, AJtgle Dill, Nicole
them, Brandon Buckley. Sarah.
Nelson. Valerie Karr, Lauren Shannan. and Shane Machlr, Ty
Young, Jessica Karr, Jennifer Rose,JeremyandlsraelGrtmm, ·
Mora, Todd Michael, Ryan Buck- ' Reggie Pratt, Jerod Cook,
ley. Kirk Chevaller:Jesslca and
Amber Blackwell. Tina LamKristen. Amy Beth Redo, Mtbert. Oint and Bobbl Jo Stewrt,
chelle Pooler, Nancy Broderick,
David Van lnwagen, Stephanie
· Joshua and Holly, l(atrlck
Hoffman, Allison Rose, Arnie
Aeiker, Ryan Foster, James Friend, Penny Aelker. Amber

h
ld
Sltnderettta meettng .. e .
,

lJ ~

. •

Cora Folmer lost the most
weight and there was a tie for
runner-up betw~en Judy Eblin
and Kay Morris at the Monday
nightFivePolntsclassofSIInderella. In the teen class, Michelle
You know you're gettlllll· old . Folmer lost the most weight.
when you sit In a rocking chair.
At the Tuesday morning Five
arid can't get it started. Do keep . Points class. Cindy Lambert lost
. rocking and do keep smiling.
the
and Jan

· 1988~

·John and Amy Strauss, 4007
Elm Ave., Apt.307, Rapid City. S.
D. are announcing the birth of a
, daughter, Samantha Leigh. at
the Ellsworth Air Force Base In
South Dakota .
·
Gr11ndparents are BIII and
Sandy Strauss, Fleming, Ohio;
and' AI and Pat Dallas, Panama
CitY, Fla. Great-grandparents
are Nellie Diehl. Vardaman.
Mlss .. Whitney and June lngra·
bam, Lisbon: Floyd and Olive
W~ber. Long Bottom; and Paul
and lrE'nE' Curtis, Marietta. .
Frieda Bailey, Houston, Miss.
Is a . great-grandmother, and
Beaula Alexander. Calhoun City,
Miss. Is a great-great-great·
grandmother .

Point Pleasant
675-1121
•
'

New Haven
882·2135
Member F.D.I.C.

Lllncheon menva for. schools In
the EasterDLDeaJ-IIqllool Dlstrlet

t~ Wfek CIIJ'ell, • haw ~·
IUIIIIUIICed !IY
Stout.
f:'lll MoDIJiy tile menu will be
hotdotand.aaVHwllhpeas. fruit
· and mUir: 011 Tlll!lday. arllled

ar.c.

r._., ~alldWidl with tomato.
IICMIP• reJ11b tray, trvlt and rnllk:
on ,WIIInuday, IPIIIhlttl~
cblltlt. roll wlih bufter. ,,.... n
bftllt. appleclaVH. and milk; on

II

i

Well, Rick .and Brenda Bolin,
Derrick and Brook. Drenda
Cook. Jenny Machlr, , Janice
Grimm , Debbie Rose. grandparents. Bob and ·Isabelle Couch,
Jennl Couch, and David's parents and sister, Amanda.
Sending gifts were David'·
grandparents. Hank and Phyllis
Fetty. Point Pleasant; Frank,
Jan, andFrankleFetty,Jeffand
Sophia Couch and Heather, Ric
and Alexa Couch. Jim and Lesa
Simms . . Erin and Jared. Andy
and Kevin Fields, Andy, Kayte
and Janey Davis, and Monica.
,....v_lck_la_nd_T._J
. A_da_m_s.

==:::===::;

f~F:it:zg:e:r:al:d:.

DOWNING CHILDS
·
.
MULLEN MUSSEl

INSURANCE
111 Second St., r-oy
YOUIINDEPENDEIT
AGENTS SEIV.G .
MEIGS COUITY
SINCE
1161

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1987 FORD TEMPO'S
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4 doers, sedan, front wheal drive, 4 cyt.
eng., factory ai' cond., auto. trans., P.S.,
P.8.,tin steering wheel, Mlilmradio, radial
Ires, whie walls, bucket seals. rear wil·
dow defogger
SALE PRICE

1986 FORD T·BIRD
#82331' 2 doors, hardtop, coupe, 4

ang., fac1ory ai' cond., auto. trans.,
P.B., P.W, P. seat, P. door locks, tih
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reo tape, radial tires, whbe walls,
seats, rearwindowdeiogger,
SALE PRICE

$7999. $10 599.'
1986 MERCURY
COUGAR

111341.2doors ..coupe,6cyl.eng., fac1ory
aircond., auto. trans., P.S., P.B., tik steer·
lng wheel, cruise control, am/fm radio,
radial tires, wh~e walls, rear window delogger

1985 FORD
· ESCORT
#84801, 2doors, coupe, front wheel
4 cyi. ang., P.S., P.B., amlfm radio, stereol
tape, radial IiillS

'

SALEPRICE

$4599.
1985 CHEVROLET
5·10 PICKUP

A special Section
Comiog February 19, ·1988
'

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178751, 4 cyl. ang., P.S., P.B., amtfm
radio, radial tirn, whhe walls, rear step
bumper
SALE PRICE

.

.

Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1988
.

Contact Your·A,dvertising
Representative For Details

991·2156

Tlnlrtclw, .elllclrell patty, corn,

•t.

t:~:.lte~n~re~e:;~· ~~~he;-h:;\~ .

S~pplement

.

Eastern menu
announced

Joshua Wilfong celebrated hls .
third birthday re&lt;"ently with ·a .
party at Show Biz Pizza · In P ilrkersburg. The party was :
hosted by his parents, Pete and ·
Wendy Wilfong of Tuppers
Plains.
,
·
Attending and presenting gifts .
to Joshua were his parents, his
grandmother, Judy Elkins. Jim, . •
Robin, Sari and Jimmie Putman, ·
Debbie and Elaine Putman, :

was runn~r-up . At the Tuesday
night Mason class there was a tie.
for the most weight lost. between
Brend,a Roush, Carol Staats and
Joan Vaughan, and also a tie for
runner--up between Jennie Little
and Terri Fife. Information on
classes may be obtained . by
calling Jo Ann Newsome,

Birth announced

fnlft/ ~~~ ... ndlk. atld
I'll Jay, COOII'• chO!M.
-&lt;rJ -· - -

without losing lives In fires until
recently when two people In the
span of abou~ a week died as the
result of home fire. ·
They were Sally Landers,
Minersville, and Gerald Michael,
Syracuse. That's really tragic.
Incidentally, we do want to
clarify an earlier report which
stated that Mr. Michael was
somewhat handicapped In his
movements at the time of the
fire. Actually, he got around well
and was able to care'.for his own
needs.

Revival services will begin
Sunday night at 7 p.m. a1 the
Silver Memorial Free Will Baptist Church. The weekday services will he held at 7:30p.m. Rev.
Andrew Parsons. overseer, will '
be speaking 1 on the book of
Re'-:elatlons. The church Is located on Second Street In I&lt;~·
naugh and the public Is Invited to
attend.

.

_ ___.._-,------lL- - - ----:--'--- - -,,

-~

...

Have trouble saving? Ask us about direct deposil from your Peoples Bank checking accooot! The
sooner your IRA starts Mlrkrlg, the sooner you can stop!
.

Masori
n3-5514

Pll9• 7 .

Revival set

PEOPLES BANK
-.,

.•
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"
"

INDIVIDUAL RETI

'

By BOB HOEFLICH
f&gt;orlteroy Mayor Richard
Seyler has signed a proclamation
designating this ·
Sundayas Four
Chaplains Sunday In Pomeroy
and urges all
cll~ns to com·
memorate
day · With ap pJ'llprlate observances In public
Places and by prayers In their
hj&gt;mes and houses of worship . ·
wour Chaplains l;)unday' of
cuurse, •is held to mark the 45th
anniversary .- Feb. 3 - of the
stoking of the troop ship, Dorc~estl!r, which carried to their
deaths four chapli'ns of . three
tattbs who stood united In prayer
a' their ship went dol\'n during
\'{orld War II.
,The four chaplains, Roman
Catholic, Jewish and Protestant
g•ve their Ute jack!!IS to four
sqldlers on the ship and sacri·
.flced their .own llyes to save the
lives of others.
'The , proclamation In part
reads:
· •' 'Whereas,. the heroic deed oi
ttie four Chaplains and their
combined act of supreme devotion and sacrifice for American
liberty and human freedom will
be an Inspiring and ever shining
example of real brotherhood for
all time to the people of the world.
Members of Pomeroy's Drew
Webster post 39, American Legion, annually attend services at
one church In obser~ance of the
special Sunday al!d t~ls year the
services will be this Sunday a no
a.m. at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Churcli with the Rev.
Melvin Franklin delivering the
sermon.

JACKETS

MERCHANDISE

Thursday, February 4, 1988 -

Honoring chaplains...

•

GIRLS &amp; IOYS

MEN'S FLANNEL

Sentin~.l~·

The Daily

Beat of the bend

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· THE DEADUNE FOR 1987 TAX YEAR CONTRiBUnONS IS APRIL 15, 1988

5TH AND PEARL STREETS
RACINE, OHIO
PHONE: 949-268·3
.

CHAMBRAY SHIRTS

HO\V .TO '
RETIRE ON $50AMONTH.

FEBRUARY
4, 1.988
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HIS.: 9·5 M., TU., TH.,

. LADIES PETITE

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By The Bend

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VETE_RANS .MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
ANNOUNCES
THE OPENING OF THE
OFFICE OF

MEN'S _SHORT SlEEVE
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CLEVELAND 1UP]) - Cleve·
land State's appeat of NC,AA
sanctions has been delayed unlll
mtd,Aprll, making the VIkings
eligible for post-seasoh tournament play.
.
The NCAA In December placed
Cleveland State on three years'
probation for recruiting violations during 1983 and 1984. The
probation Included two years of
sanctions stopping the VIkings
from participating in post-season
play .
·
The school's appeal hearing,
however, wtll'not be unlll Aprll18
or April 19 and no sanctions will
be Imposed unlll after the hearlng, the NCAA told Cleveland
State Wednesday.
The VIkings are 14-4 and tied
for first place In the Association
of Mid-Continent Universities.
The winner of the AMCU tourna·
ment receives an automatic spot
In the NCAA tournament.
Cleve1a11d ·State palyed In Its
first NCAA tournament In 1986,
beating Indiana; 83-79, and St.
JOseph's, 75-69. before losing to
Navy. 71-70, and finishing the
season with a 29-4 record.
Last season . the VIkings were
invited to. the National Invitation
Tournament. Cleveland State
beat Tennessee-Chattanooga, 9273, and lost to Illinois State. 79-77.
In finishing 25-8.
SLAPS BALL AWAY - Indiana's Steve
Sipanovich (right) knocks ball away from Celtlcs'

Slxers. Golden State fell to1 -2lon
the road and has n9t won at the
Spectrum since a 108-106 victory
Jan. 31, 1979. Ralph . Sampson
scored 16 points for the Warriors,
Nu~&amp;e&amp;tl 115, Mavericks 105
At Denver, Michael Adams
sank 5 3-polnt shots and scored 21
points to send Dallas to Its third
straight loss. Alex English had 26
points and former Maverjck Jay
Vincent added 20for the Nuggets.
Mark Aguirre scored 27 points
for Dallas, and Roy Tarpley had
21 points and 14 rebounds ,
·Jazz 123, Klnp 81
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
scored 25 points and Thurl Bailey
added 22 to give Utah its first
three-game winning streak of the
season. Reggie Theus led Sacramento with 29 potn!s and Mike
McGee scored 15.

Bullets, who have lost three
straight.
Elsewhere, Boston dumped
indiana 118-103, . Philadelphia
tripped Golden State 96-84,
Denver topped Dallas 115·105 and
Utah crushed Sacramento 123·91.
CeltJea 118, Pacers 103
At Boston, Kevin McHale
scpred 27 points and Larry Bird
11nd Qanny Alnge adc!ed 21' apiece
to pace the Celtlcs past 1ndlan_a,
l!lBer of 23 COIIJ!E!CUtlve games lrl .
Boston Garden. Vern Flenilbg
paced Indiana wltb 18 points and
Ron Anderson added 16. Cnuck
Pe~son. the Pace.rs ' leading
scorer, was sidelined with ankle
Injuries.
76en 96, warrlon 84
, At Philadelphia, Charles Bark·
ley totaled 21 points and Mike Gmlnskl contributed 15 for the

TYrone Bogues' shot at tile
buzzer to preserve the triumph.
"I wanted the ball In Mark's
hands," Wilkens said. . "We
wanted to work tlte clock down to
four seconds before shoolll!i, but
Frank fouled him. 1 was sur·
prlsed he mts·sed one, but It
worked out all right."
Washington Coach Wes Unseld
lost for the first time In nine home
games stnce being named to the
)!elm. · ,
"You baJe to .s ee a catidecldea
game, especially wllen the ball·ls
not In a position to be shot," he
said. " I might have seen It
before, but I donTremember."
Daugherty finished with 20
points. 10 rebouuds and 11 assists
for the Cavaliers. Jeff Malone
had 27 points, Moses Malone 23
and Bernard,Klng 18 to lead the

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1984 CHRYSLER
E·CLASS

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Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio

Pligl 8-The Daily Sentinel

In the spotlight: ·
By CyDWA S. Oliveri
County Exte1111loil Aient
Fats are e!;Sentlal nutrients.
They provide energy ln our diet.
Many . people today are con' ·
cerned about the amount of fats
and .cholesterol In . their food.
Many people today are ' concerned about the amount of fats
and cholesierol . i1) their food .
This week "In the Spotlight"
takes a look at fats, their role lp
. nu(~ltlon and how to calculate
the amount of fat In your diet.
· Fat Is tile most con.c entrated
.source of food energy (calories) .
Each gram of fat contains about
9 calories. In addition to provld·
trig ener gy; fat aids In absorption
of certain vllarillns, and some
fats provide l~nolelc ac!d wh,ich Is ·
~ by everone In small
. amounts.
Obvious sources of fat Include
· butter, margarine, shO~tenlng

·In

mcxi~ration,

fats give energy, ·absorb vitamins

and oil. Well-marbled meats, ice .age number of calories you eat
cream , nt!ts, seeds, salad dres· each day.
sings a!ld some bake&lt;fproducts
. Todeterminethlsyouwlllneed
also provide · a lot of fat t(l the to keep track of the food you eat .
djet. · .
·
for several day&amp;. th~n using areMost nutrition autoorttles re· source that lists the calories In ·
commend that the United States foods, add up the calories In each
J;!Opulatlon as a whole reduce the ·food. Our office has several pu·
dally consumption. of fat. On the · bllcatlons which can provide this
.average, Amerlcans.eat about40 Information . The third piece of
ilercent of their iota! calories as ihe ppzzle Is to. know now many
fat. Many authorities have st!g- grams of fat are contained In the ,
g~sted that It Is·best to limit fat to food yo\1 eat:
no more than 30 to 35 per cent ·of
U,SDA Bulletin N1.1mber 72,
total calories:
.
available from the Cooperative
The question arises; how to fi· Extension Service will povtc)e
gure out the percentage of fat In this Information. Another alter. yo1.1r diet? Infonriattori provided native is to list all of the foods yo1.1
by Michigan State University eat for several days, making
can help you answer that ques· sure to list the Ingredients If II Is
tlon. In order to figure O\lt the fat .a casserole or mixed dish and the
, Intake ·in your diet you need to . amount eaten at each · meal.
know several things; first, that' Don't forget to Include snacks.
orie gram of fat eq1.1als 9·calorles. Bring this list to our office and a
You ·also ·need to know the aver· computer program can be run to

UNW~ presents' program

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.Begins ·work · ·

JAM meers
Jesus and Me, the youth group
at the Pomeroy Church of Christ .
enjoyed a skating party at the
rink recently. ·
Those ·attending were .Bonnie .
Rutter, Jessica Stobart, Kelly
~hliips; Russell and Rusty Ro·
blnson, John Tillis, Jr., Chris 11nd
Debbie Alkire, Shannon and
Shawn Nitz, Chris and Terry
Stobart, 1\nna, Robert , Jeapette
and DeAngelo Thompson, David
Roush, Paul, j..inda, and Jerry
Lewis, Jessica and Ashley Ha·
milton, Julie a.nd Tim Wells,
Missy Hensley, Autumn Griffith,
and Sandra Stanley .

Evans Financial Corp. to Clyde
E. Kuhn, Shirley M. Kuhn, 3.2Q
acres, Olive.
Pauline Wolfe to Columl;ms So.
Power Co., right of way, Letart.
Gary Wolfe to Columbus 9 So.
Ohio Electric Co., right o! way,
Letart.
.
David L. Sheets, Mary M.
Sheets to . ColUmbus' Southern
. Power Co., rlghto!way, Orange.
Ezra E . SHeets, Frances Sheets
to Columbus So. Power Co., right of
way, Orange. ·
E . Leon Sauters, L. Chr.lstine
Sauters to Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co., right of way,
·
Bedford.
Charles A, Ritchie, Lori D.
Ritchie to Columbus Southern
Power Co. , right of way, Sutton.
David W. Grindstaff, Sandra K.
·Grindstaff to Columbus Southern
·of way, Sutton.
Power Co.,
Paul Hill,
HDI to Col·

'

JET BASE SE~H - U,S, Defell!ll' Secretary
\ · Fruk Carlucci (R), accompanied by his Italian .
·. counlerpari Valerio Zanone (L), review&amp; honour
guards as he arrlvesaiRome'sCiampl'!llMllltary .
,airport Feb. 4, Carlucci arrived In Rome lodayJor

man ·as saying Iraqi warplanes along the norther n warfront . Th~ i!l th e vita l water wa£!, About 30 ntng a re ne wed land of!enslve
Wednesday night attacked "a chopper " e rashed inside Iraq ,'' . 1\me'ricari wa rships and ships against Iraq. It said othe r young
large naval target" ,.,.. Iraq's the Iranian war communique ·from five other Wes te rn nations ' 'baseejl" volunteers In western
pa trol the gull to pr otect their lrim's Lorestan province ;~nd .I n
standard reference for an oil · said .
Hor muzgitn provlpce , the coastal
tanker In Tehran's service Thousands of chanting young merchant shipping.
In Washington , the Defense strip near the. so'llthern Iranian ,
near 'the iranian coast at 9 p.ni: Iranian volul)teers marched off
The Iraqi spokesman said' .a ll to battle Iraq as Iran celebrated Department also said a U.S. port o! Bandar Abbas.. were
planes returned safelY to base. the ninth anniversary of·/l.yatol· --:a r shlp began the eighth convoy staging military maneuvers In -.
He gave no , (leta lis of the Jah Ruhollah Khomeinl' s retu r n lhjs year of a Kuwaiti oil tanke r ·preparation lor battle.
ownership or registry of the with Tenewed attacks on neutra l flying the American flag in th·e - In the past, Iran has thrown
ves&amp;el.or the damage caused. shipping tn .the Persian Gulf. ,
.gulf.
hundreds of thousands of Its
American
warships
conducted
volunteers.
against a solid wall of
·Shipping sources ~ould not lm·
·
Thousands
.
o
fvolunteerschant·
22
convoys
last
year
after
they
better-equipped
but tess numer·
mediately confirm the attack. ·
ing
"War,
War
till
victory,"
.beg11n
escorting
re-flagged
Kli·
ous
Iraqi
tr()()ps
.
·.
.
AsentorU.S. navycommander
for
the
front,
Tehran
walt!
tankers
tn
July
to
protect
The
.
baseejls,
,
s'upervised
by
hear:ted·
In the gulf earlier said that under
International law, Iraq had'every radio. said, as Iran observed the them trom attack . by Iranian Iran's estimated) million-strong
unconventional ''lslamlcarmy" '
right to attack ships serving a "ten days of dawn" that brought gunboats.
Tehran ' radio ,. in a broadcast of Revolutionary Guanls, ha.s ~
· the Islamic fundamentaliSts to
'' belligerent" - Iran,
Iran said In awar communique · power In 1979 when Khomelnt monitored In Athens , Greece, did borne the brunt of the"flghtlng '
not say whether Iran was plan- against Iraq,
·
tis gunners Wednesday shot retu!'"ed from exile In France..
In
.Iran's
second
attack
within
-~---'--~-:----"'--,.......-.........
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down an Iraqi helicopter at - .
1
temptjng to breach Iranian lines 24 hours, gunboats fired early
Wednesday .on the 20,505-ton
. ........!"
Noriveglan chemical tanker Pe·
trobulk as it · lay anc)Jored 10
milfS off the. United Arab Emi'
rates port of Sharjah.
·"Heavy Iranian ITI'!Chlne-gun·
. fire started a fire aboard the.
tanker but this has now been
placed under c,o ntrol,'' a shiP·
ping source said. "There are no
'Jnjutles aboard the vessel."
The Insurance compaf!Y
LlOyd's of London reported a
salvage tug assisied the immobll·
. !zed tank'er afier it was 'attacked .
The earUer attack occurred
' when Iran launched Its first air
strike on Persian Gulf shipping lr1
two ye'a rs Tu~sday . Two missiles
fired by an American-built Phan· ,
tom fighter jet · inlssed· their
target, the Liberian oil tanker·
Petrobulk Pilot, as It neared the
Strait of Hormuz at the gulf's
southern edge, Shipping sources
An.Origincol Play
By R~rl Smiddie
said.
,
The attacks are part of Iran's
effort to ctjpple Its. foe, Iraq, in 1
Friday, February 5, 19.88
· their 7-year-old war over dis·
&amp;
puled terrlto~. Shipping sou·rces
5atutdoy, February 6, 1988.
said there.were no casualties and
Both Petfonnances At 8 P.M. .
bofh vessels "continue~ their
voyages."
·
General Aclmission, $2.50 ·
a brief visit durln(f'Whicb he Is ei&lt;peeled to discuss
The Iranian aitacks came as
with Italian , (fOVernnient leaders whether Italy
U.S. Navy officials reported that
should take 72 .F·1&amp; Jets beiRI withdrawn from
Rio Gmnde ·college/Community College
four guided missile frigates were
Spain. REUTER.
.
headed towarp the'reglon to join·
fine And Perlorming AHs Center
. other warships ali-eady asslgn«;"d

Carlucci;.Italian officials exploring ·
new' home base f~r us . fighter jets

MIDDLEPORT

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1.PINT· SIIE-.."'•• ~•••-.······'!···········............~2 ·
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VALENTINE . ·~
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Your Early Shoppingl'
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proVIde a ·solution to the problem . around" .f or a ·new base fo~ . the
By AI.;EJL\i'!IDIIR SLOOP
ensuring the alliance'sdefe11se advanced waF)&gt;lanes, but addei!
of
' LISBON, POrtugal {UPI) ...:.
of
Its southern flank.
· '
·"tangential talks ... were under
..Defense Secretary Frank Car·
Carlucci said Italy has shown way .with a · second, unidentified
Iucci and Italian officials are
"a c.e rtaln openness" to accept- country.
~xplorh)g ways to find a new
home for U.S. fighter jets thai Ing the F-16 jets that must be
In 'Ltsbori, after meeting Wed·
. .
are losing their base In Sl?aln, In removed from Spain.
nesday with Portuguese Prll'De
The· United States accepted
an effort to prevent a ·gap !rom
Minister, Anlbal Cavaco Silva
developing ln .NA'FO's defeqse of . Spanish demands Jan. 15 to and President Marlo Soares,
withdraw the · jets from t)le CarlucCI said the two countries '
Western Europe.
Torrejon
Air Base. American . will se.t up a joint las~ force to
The defense secretary said he
and
Spanish
officials met Wed· · review the. transfer 1of surplus
would discuss today with Italian
nesday
·tn
Madrid
to work out , . U.S. arms to m.ake up for hefty
.authorities the relocation o! 72
Air Foi;ce F ,16s.to be pulled out of details of the withdrawal
' congressional cuts 'In mllltary
Italy, following tile u.s. an· ·and economic aid to PortugaL
Spa in by I991.
Carlucci pacified al)gry Portu· nouni:ement . about the· pullout,
Carlucci, who Is a persoria,l
guese officials WedneSday . by said It would ·like the A:merlcan friend of Soares and served as
~
offering pos_J;lble surplus .mil- fighters to remain· (II ,Western : U.S. ambassador to Lisbon a't the
, ltary equipment to balance large Europe, but the Italians did not
height of the Portuguese revolu·
cuts In American aid to 'Lisbon, publicly offer to accept the jets.
tlon betwe.e n 1975 and 1978,
Established In 1953 under tlie . appeared to have defused threats
. postponing a possible formal
review of an accord that allows rule of iormer Spanish dictator by the Portuguese to demand
U.S. bases to operate in Portugal. Gen~rallsslmo ,Friiitcis·c o review of ·the 36 ~year.-old accord
While Carlucci maintains he Is Franco, Torre jon became a sore granting U.S. uoe of .the pivotal
not hunting for a ·new home for . point In U.S.·Spanlsh relations mld·AIIantlc Lajes Air Base· In
the Ainerlcan . 'w arpl.anes thai after Spain's return to demo· . the Azores Islands.
·
lose their base near Madrid, cracy In 1976. ·
U.S. military and economic alr;l
Carlucci
maintained
the
Unl·
Italian support for the lighters to
to Portugal, provided as a pitrttat
Jemaln tn Western Europe could . ted . States · "Is not shopping · trade-off for u&amp;e of the air base.
has dropped shatply from a 1985
peak of $208 nillllon to the $117
million proposed for the fiscal
year beginning Oct. 1. The cuts
..
·,1
,
.
are part of overall s)ashes In
foreign aid to many countries,
and are Intended to reduce the
federal budget deficit: .
Silva recently called the proposed sum for Portugl\1 "pea·
nuts" and Indicated he might
• By ROLF SODERLIND ,
tiona! Atomic Energy Agency
seek a midterm revision of the
·STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) •responded to tne rumors by
air base accord, which was
The world's news wires Issuing a statement:
renegotiated In 1983 and Is valid
hummed with reports of a
"~n response to questions dl·
until 1991. The base; home to ·
Chernobyl-type.nuclear accident ' reeled to it today, the Interna·
about 1,500 u.s. &amp;ervlci!men, Is
In the Soviet U.ntop, sending a 'tlonai Atomic Energy Agency , used for submarine search oper·
scare S)l'eeplng across Europe · states that It has received oo allons and U.S. plane refueung:
until a ter&amp;e statement from report · of any nuclear' accident
Porluguese Defense Mlnl~ter
Moscow and llenlals by Euro· !rom !lnyone I or) from any
Eurleo de Melo .. appearing at a
pean capjtals finally killed the mem!?f!r state, nor has any
news conference with Carlucci,
.erroneous story. ' .
·
. slgnUicant change In the level of
el!P~sed satisfaction w1111 the
The rumors', fueled by an ~' radioactivity In the European
possible receipt of u.s. military
i . Incorrect Sw~jsh national news environment been .measured by
equipment,
. ..
agericy story, rat~ fears Wed· anyone of th.e specialized li:ur&lt;i- ·
"We understand the problems
nesday of another accident Uke pean lajloratorles with which the ·· the (Reagan) administration has
the April 1986 disaster at Cher- ageMy Is In contact."
with Congress," de Melo said.' .
"Betwee11 goo4 friends there Is
nobyl nuclear power statiOn 600 .
'miles southwest ot Moscow,
In Oslo, the chief spokesman good will and eommo'l .lnterests
TheCnernobyllcc!dent.·whleh ·roribe.NorwegtanForeipMinls· that are more Important !hail
kllled at least 31 'people. spewed · , try theorized the nuctearc.ccl· trea:es."
.
·
.
r his trip to Ita!y, Carlucci
.radioactivity l.llto the atomo.s- dent reports may h11ve "be;en
phl!re. apreadblgltovermuchot sparked by teat telex messages tse i&gt;ecledto~kWithotflclaia
Europe.
.
trltnamttled last week by the lnBoMabouttheWestGermalll'
Mollt'Ow denied there was any ~ to the world MeteorolDil· Interest In ' epminat1na shOrt·
truth to the I'IJlnol'a. .
·
cal Office In London.
,&lt; •
rqe nllC!IMl' mtsaUea that are
· . '"niere has bteD 11Uccldenl at
'Fitlwater and Swedish oftl· . not covered by tile IntermedtsteatOIJIIc power stations In the clall offered a similar theol')'.
l'ilnae Nuclear Forces treaty
· USSR," the oftloJallovlet news ,
.
' t1pec1 Ill December 1D Washing· .
aaeiiCY Taas .. ld. "All atomic , . '"'''lli messages lncl.udild words toll by President Rearan and
poWer t~tatlou hi tile USSR are ' like 'n)ICiear accident,'" sa.td the Sovlet leader . MlkbaH
Junetlonllll normally and au No~laa apolieamall, ' Per GorbaChev.
,
.
atorles to tile ccintrary are Pa\Uif. ''lt waa a tell rua on · 'Tbedef-aecretaryallowaa
aroundlell."
· :
WMO'a earl¥ warning system f~ scheduled
attend the Web·
In WulllaltOa. ,Wb!W Boult radfllletlvlt)' hi the atmQIP!ten' rkunde conferettCe In MIIJI,Icll,
apo~tet\'llin Marllll ' l'lt&amp;WJttr Oil~ UcJ 2'ltll of January.
Weat Germaay, an anaual ptll·
·aald 111ere waa "110 llldieltitlla 9f . '"'''W 1ln' run tnelucled teleX - ei'Jill of po.lltlcal, mWtary 114
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10 DAYS ONLY!

Swedish news · ~eport
starts rumo~, scare
~f fiuclear accident

con..nience

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in&lt;Jicltor

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INGELS·Furniture
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Arab ~mlrates today after It was
"mistakenly attacked by Iranian
gunboats and set ,ablaze and
drifting In the gulf Saturday ." ·
.. The SO\lrce said the Panamantan ves&amp;el, which was abandoned
by its crew following the attack,
"sailk'ln shallow waters oft the
. UAE coast;' · and "Is causing a
IJazard to shipping tn the busY sea
lane."
·. .
· · ' .
The Iranian gunboats tnat
attacked.the MV Mare picked up
Its 22 crew members after they
abandoned ship In two ]Jfeboats, .
The · gunboats took the crew ·
members to the Iranian port of
B\.tshthre.
.
· .
. Slate-run Baghdad radio, In a
broadcast monitored In Cyprus,
quoted an Iraqi military spokes·

SIZES I TO 13112 IN
LEOPARD AND GIRAFFE PRINTS
GLOWS IN THE DARk

• 1·piet:e record/playback '

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By LEE STOKES .
-· MANAMA, Bahrain iUPI)- A '
Panamanian freighter crippled
·by I(anlail gunboats sank today
In a busy shipping lane off the
United Arab Emirates, creating
. ·a hazard for otner vessels plying,
··. ~he shallow, waters, a shipping '
source said.
'
·
Also today, .Iraq .claimed l.ts
warplanes atfa'cked an on tanker
· . 'about 9 p .m. Wednesday In 'the
Persian Gulf off the . Iran)an
coast•. apparentlytoretallatefor ·
·recen~ Iranian strikes against
neutral shipping In th~ strategic
wat!lrway.
The shipping source said the
9,112-toil freighter MV Mare which was operating lri Iraplan
service - sank riear the United

ALSO NEW: KID GLOWS

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Partamanim, freighter 'mistakenly attacked' sallk off UAE

•BliGHT ILUI-CIILD'S 10 TO liEN'S I
•niQUOISI-CHQ'S 1 TO'-'S I

.•. J

The Daily Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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. ·CANVAS HI~TORS ·.
.::~CHILD'S
10 TO liEN'S I
("CDfiVI
..• •r
•PINI-CIILD'S 10 TO •N'S I ~t.J
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Meigs County property transfers _ _ _~

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Thurlday, February 4. 1988

SPRING SHIPMENT OF CHILDREN'S

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JUST ARRIVED

Lord knows how many millions
Dear · Ann Landers: .I have· jliSt on the same page as this column.
returned from another frustrating They are vitally interested in what' offurure adults will be incap.able of
a trusting relationship or a solid
shopping experience. Note . tnat I their customers thin!&lt;..
·
Thanks
for
airing
your
beefs.
commitment because they could not
said shopping, not b1.1ying.
Can't
hurt.
Might
help.
·
count on their mothers to care for
· I realize that as human problems
Dear Ann Landers: There's a big them. Society is sure to reap litiS
go, this one is less than earth·sbat·
debate
going on in the office. The bitter hlirvest.
tering. However, I thought it w'luld
question:
Can a man tell if a
. · A ·way must be found to make it
be more sensible to write to you
..
possible for working mothers to
than to dozens of clothing man\1· woman is a virgin? ·
Chaperones
were Pat ThOma,
'I say the man ~nf\ot tell. other· take a leave of absence and make
facturers and department . store
director;
Charldene
Alkire,
wise so many of. them would not be ends meet. - ·M01liER OF II IN ·
heads. '
Anna
Shuler,
Ed
Venoy,
Mildred
asking the question, "Have you ever ST. WUIS .
How can we let the designers and
been with anyone else?"
· .
DEAR M01liER: Most' women and . Orval Phillips, Mike and
manufacturers know that not all
Nancy Griffith, ,Joan arid Dano
The woman who insists that a with young children work because
· women want to look like lineback·
King and Bus.ter Phillips.
·
ers for the Miami Dolphins? I am · man'can tell cites the fact that. when of economic Iiecesslty. According IJl
The J.A.M·. Youth meet at the
the maidenhead is ·broken there is Congresswoman Plltricia Schroeder Pomeroy Churc)l of clirlst·every
Hoot·2, 33 years old and don't
pain and sOmetimes bteedjng. I to.ld (D-Colo,), the Family and Medical Wednesday evening at 7:15p.m.
wish to dress like a trenager.
her
it is not always the. case. It Leave Act, J)!mding before Congress; A varied program ts enjoyed by
And speakfng of sizes, why is it ,
didn't
happen to me.
·
· would help these mothers stay at youth and · adults and Includes
that .men's clothing is available'in
Will
you
settle
this
one?
SAN
. home temporarily and keep thei'r Bible study workbook and crafts
inches while women are subjected
ANTONIO ARGUMENT
jobs. For birth, adoption or serious and outings.
to a ridiculow sizing system? What
DEAR
S.
AN::
Sometimes
there
is
·illness,
a parent would be able to
in ·heaven's name is a size 7
A calendar has. been adopted
discomfort
and
btee&lt;ling,
but
more
stay
home
on an unpaid but
anyway? I swim in some size 7s and
by
the teachers and directors Qf
·
often there is not . .You win this one. · job-protected leave. Paid leaves are
can't get others over my hips.
Dear Ann Landers: The NYC at the employer's discretion., job the groupfot this year. Activities
And wht:n was the last time you
woman
who objected to dumping a seeurity, ho.wever, Is guaranteed.' to be Included will be a pizza
beard, " May I ltelp you?" The few
party, spring outings. a wiener
salespeople that are left are either 6-week·old infant in a day·care .Sounds great to me.
Planning a wedding? What 's roast imd skit to be held at the
·too busy or they don't want to be center, when there was no financial
need to do so, is right on target.
right? Whar 's wrong? "The Ann . Christmas camp · at Darwin, a
Bothered.
The fa\=15 are in on deprivation Lander.; G&lt;!cide for Brides" will relitNe bowling party along with another
I hope lots of papers will run
skating party.
' '· ,_
.
your column right next t,o a neurosis, a condition of lifelong your anxiery. To receive a copy, send
·
dutation
that
~ns
with
infants
$2.50
plus
a
No.
/0,
self-addressed,
·
departm~t star~ ad so the top men
Anyone Interested In joining
who are deprived of bonding with a stamped envelope (39 cenrs postage) the group where Bible teaching
in the business will see it. - ~.O. M .
single.signilicant mother figure. No to Ann Landert, P.O. Box 11562, Chi· and fellowslllp Will be emphas- ·
IN PITISBURGH ..
way can day-care centers make it cago, Ill. 6061 ).()562.
· ized are invited to attend. Infor·
DEAR PinS: Here's your letter,
possible
for
babies
to
experience
the
mation may be bb\B.l~ed by
and you can be sure that a great
AN.NLA~ERS o
calling
Pat Thoil)a, 992·2;!77 after
!:Ssential
trust
so
necessary
to
their
•1988, Los Ang~as Times Syndicate llld
many department ·store heads will
Creators
Syndicate
~
p.m.
or
Mary Lash, 992-2926.
see it whether or not their ads are emotional he&lt;~lth .

Compiled by
Emmogene Holstein t;ongo
Recorder, Meigs County
Edith Spencer, aka Edith M.
Spencer to Orland J . t.audermilt,
Shaula Laudermllt , parce ls, Mid·
dleport vtllage .
Charles A. Ritchie, Lori K.
Ritchie to Willard Wamsley, Debra K. Wamsley, parcel, Chester.
Charles W. Duncan, Lott.te
Duncan, to Ailen Wright, onestxlh Interest, ~ acre, Lebanon .
. Walte r Garano, Pat Garano to
Leeotls Burrows, Edward Damron, Paul R. Rings , Allen Wright ,
Mlcliael D. Coleman, int. t;, acre,
Lebanon.
Federal National Mtg. Assoc .
to Dale E . Taylor. parcels, Meigs.
Cecil Bush to Henry Richard
Milam, M~ry Lou Milam, parcels, Olive.
George Gro~nds, Jan Grounds
to Roger Escue, right of way, Columbia. . .
Herbert GroUnds to Roger ES·
cue, right~~ way, Columbia.

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grams oUatlil tbe food you ealln · changes In cookl'ng, &amp;easonlng,
a typical day. Multiply the . · p\lrchaslng, and.selectlon . . •
grams by 9 to determine the total .
For .!' Superbowl Snack without ...
calories from tat Dtvlde the to. the fat from a creamy dip why not '
•
t.a l calories In fat by ·the number Jt'Y this chDI bean dip, · .
ot calorieS eaten dally to deter- 15·ounce can kldriey beans
mine the percent of calories from
3 tablesi&gt;oons drained liquid :.
fat In the dlei. For example If you from beans
·
.,
eat 80 grams of fat In a day and
1 tablespoon vinegar
· had 18()0 total cal!irles you would
1 teaspoon chill powder
figure It out as follows : 80 grams
'h teaspoon ground cumin
times 9 eqt!als 720. 720 divided by
2 teaspoons grated onion ·
l!!OO.equats .40so40%otyourca); · 2 teaspoons chOpped .par~ley ~
aries come from fat;
.· , Drain kidney beans, reserv· ,
, Once you are aware of tlie fat lng 3 ·tablespoons liquid.
• ..
you are consuming you can i~ke . Place beans, liquid, vinegar :,,
steps to make .linY necessary • and seaso,ntngs In blender. B)e~ ·,
changes. These many Involve unttl smooth.
..
Add onion and parsley. Chill. •
Serve with cflsp vegetable ;,
sticks.
..
For· additional Information on ·
Angela. Evans. will begin her . the fats In foods contact the.~
Meigs County Cooperative Eii; ~­
1\'0rk as d cosltletologlst at Kay 's
· Beauty S)lop In Mlddlepqrt next
tension .Service at 992-6696 ot '
week. ·
.
· ·
write to Box 32, Pomeroy, OH,'
Da\lghtej' ofMr ..and Mrs. Allie
45769'.
.. :. ' . . . .
. ,: ~-­
Did You Know That: A recent · •
Evans, New Haven; ~he Is a 1986
graduate of Wal\ama · filgh
survey done by the .U .S.D.k. ~
School and &lt;illended Parkerburg
found that women's mean Intake '
Ejeauty C111lege. She received her . of several nutrients are consider· .'
Plvo,t Points Certificate &lt;it
11bly below the · recommendeil
Achievement In Hair Dcs!g!l ~!!d
levels; and their fat Intakes· are ';
Ha!r Sculpture, aod Is licensed In
above the 30·35 per cent recom'·
both West VIrginia and Ohio.
mended.

for kids

Ann
Landers
.

come up with the total calor ie
and fat Intake.
.To determine how much fat
you sho\lld eat a day, use the fol ·
lowlrig formula: • ·
,
Total Dally Catorles times :ll%
(recommelided calories from tat).
Qlvkle this total by 9 ( calo~ per
, gramoftat).Thlswlllgtveyouthe
maxtrnum grams of tat which you
.shoUld eat dally, For e,xampJe you
are on an .1,101 calo~ diet: 1,101
times 30% equals 600. Divide that
total by 9 · 81\d the maximum
grams o fat per day Is 66.
To determine what -you do eat
dally and how 11 compe.res with
the recommendation:
.
'
.add up the

of,ho~

" Hope! A Shining Ray'" was · Harriette Sinclair talked about the UMW purpose and glvlrtg an
the theme of the program ptes- her trip to Isr;~el and gave eac.h explanation of . the church emb·
ented by Helen Teaford at the one a boOkmark which she had !em, "The Cross. and Flame"
recent meeting of Asb1.1ry united
brought back. At the suggestion which symbolizes the Holy Spirit.
Metl!odlst Women held at the of Mrs. Fryar, the.group decided
Beula)! Ward had devotions on
to have begin a "prayer clock" the 23rd . Psalm, entitled "The
ch\lrch.
Reader&amp; for the program were which Will take place every Lord Is My Shep!lerd." Reports
Monday. Each member will talie were read wltll 26 shutin c;~lls
~&lt;;andy :B1.1rch aild Kathlee.n
Fryar wllh songs Including "My a half hour for prayer at a being noted. A freewill offering .
designated Ume.
· .
Faith Looks llp 'to. Thee" and
was taken , the birthday of the
Ann Sauvage . was hostess for Rev. Ms . Burch was noted and an
" My Hope Is Built ·on . Nothing
the ·meetfng with Ma ry Lisle offering for the girl scout troops .
•Less." Each member partie!·
paled by writing down something · presiding. She opened by reading sponsored by . the church . w11s
hOpoid for in the f1.1t1.1re.
taken for Aprll Harmon, leader.

..Frustrated shopper
mad at dressmakers;
salesclerks in stores

Thtnday. February 4, 1988 !'
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to

'In a41tlo, We ~'t C. .l
aay or the reports. • · · ·
,~· Vfeua.W411 . la~·

eli'eiiiiii'H ~·en Loadaw and

Vlelllla and otller capltall, In·

f'l*llpt.lct. ~ ~,~

jllplolllatiO ltallera trol1l N4TO
cotmtrlel. Be retum SUitllf tO ~
tllaUIIbiiO ..,...

Here is a sale .where nothing is held back. Every item throughout our
store has been marked down and is on sale. You can save 10% to 60%
OFF Mason Furniture's everyday low prices We haven't held anything
back. In addition, just look at this....
·
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1-

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PAYCASH. ... SAVEANEXTRA 10%!!
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llulday, February 4, 1988

.10-The Daily Sentinel

Thursdily, ·Febhaery ' 4, 1988.

Pomeroy-Mickleport, Ohio

•

Close ·lOOpholes In INF treaty: Perle
Perle quarreled with the idea
By JOHN HANRAHAN
ambiguities. and Perle said
"that
any a111endment or reser- · senators should abandon a
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Former administration arms vat!on that requires further
"smell the roses" approach and
CQntrol hardliner Richard Perle negotiation or consultation with
get into treMy specifics.
endorsed the INF treaty today the Soviets is bound to kill the
Perle's .criticism contrasts
but said Itis laced with danger- treaty . ... Indeed, some possible sharply with statements offered
ous loopholes that can be fixed or clarifications might be as wel- to the Armed Services panel
Wednesday by t~e Joint Chiefs of
even renegotiated without killing come to the Soviets as to J!S.,." •
In par.tlcular. a treaty pr'qv!- StaUand other top U.S. Qffi(;ials.
th~ historic treaty.
·Perle, testifying before ·the s!o n that bars non- nucl~ar The chiefs .:... leaders of the .
Senate Armed Services Commit· · ground-launched cruise missiles uniformed · services - were
ought to be eliminated, he said, called to restate their case today
~ee on the pact to eliminate
land-based nuclear missiles with calling it the ''s ingle most serious before the Foreign Relations
ranges from 300 to 3,400 miles, defect" in the accord. Tl!e tr!'aty Committee, another of the three
Senate ~anels examip!ng the
was the Pentagon's top arms bars both conventional and
control expert unt!! his resigna - nuclear-tipped cruise missiles agreement with the Soviet Union.
within the prohibited ranges. but
tion last year.
Senators must approve the
"Unlike some who argue that does· not bar either side from
Intermediate Nuclear Forces
the INF treaty is politicaily and having• recopnaissance cruise accord by a two-thirds vote for it
conceptually flawed," Perle told missiles without any kind of to 1&gt;€' ratified by President
warhead, or ones with ranges
~he committee, " I believe that it
Reagan. The treaty signed Dec. 8
under
300 ml!es .
Is sound in these respects and
would eliminate all U.S. and
Perle said that could te( the
should be ratified." He added
Soviet . nuclear m!sslles with
,!hat he opposed so-ca!!ed "k!ller Soviets In time of ·crisis put a
ranges of300 to 3.400 miles, most
lightweight.
nuclear
warhead
on
~mendments" that could scuttle
of
which are deployed ill Europe.
.
. '
a missile carrying a far heavier ·
the accord.
.'
The Foreign Relations ComBut Perle,.now a sc holar at the conventional munition and capa- . mitte&lt;&gt; heard strong INF support
ble of flying under 300 miles . The Wednesday from three U.S.
American Enterprise .Institute,
added that " there are provisions lighter payload v:ould extend its.. officials based in Europe: Aiton
range into the prohibited area, he
in It that could benefit from
Keel, NATO representative; Risaid . .
greater precision and clarity;
chard Burt , ambassador to West
Perle and others at the AEI
there are ambiguities that should
Germany, and Gen. John Galvin.
released
a study Wednesday
be cleared up and loopholes that
NATO commander.
·
detailing treaty loopholes and
ought to be closed."
Ali of the men said the treaty

·ciA tries to buy drug smuggler
By RICHARD SALE

WASHINGTON IUP IJ- Pana manian strongman Gen. Manuel
Antonio ·Noriega. under investii(ation for possible involvement
in dr.ug smuggling, was paid
$200.000 a year for a1 least a
decade by the CIA in an attempt
to lure him from Soviet influence.
U.S. intelligence squrces say.
Noriega, said to face crimina!
indictment in Florida today or
Fridav on drug charges. received the payments even though
the CIA knew he l]e!ped Colombia 's Mede!!in carte! manufacture cocaine and smuggle it into
the United States. according to
NBC News.
Furthermore. The Washington
Post and The' New York Times
ro;&gt;ported today. the Panamanian
l&lt;&gt;ader struck deal s with Lt. Col.
Oliver North . the White House
aide fired in thE' Iran-Co nt ra
scandaL to train Nicaraguan
rebels in Panama and to arrange
an East bl.oc weapons shipment
that could be captured in El
Salvadpr . and falsely linked to
Nicaragua 's Soviet-backed .San·
tlinista regime.
"The CIA fund s any leftist
dictator that will take the mo ney," one source told United

Press International Wednesday arrangement that would ·frame
night . . The lnteiUgeQce expert the N!caragll\ln ,goYernmeitt for
said the CIA did not realize the an East bloc weapons shipment
Soviets "would pay more." how· to be captured in )Cl Salvador.
ever, and could of.fer Noriega The scheme was aimed at
"something we could not - the bolstering President Reagan 's
means to~grab and keep power." cla!in that Nicaragua was exCIA payments, totaling about porting Soviet subve.rs!on
$2 million in the last 10 years, throughout the region.
·
were designed to woo Noriega • The effort co!!apsed in June
away from Soviet influences , 1986 with news reports of illegal
sources said, but the spy agency ac:ivities by Noriega, the Times
also paid him to a !low the United satd. Both newspapers . based
States to conduct pro-Contra alld--....~he!r reports on quotes from Jose
anti-Cuban covert activities fn- l31;mdop; a former Noriega &lt;~ide
side Panama. according 10 a now a witness in federal
House staffer.
Investigations.
Noriega continued to accept
Blandon suggested a deeper
Soviet weapOns supplied through administration link to Noriega,
a Cuban front called th&lt;&gt; Hunting the Times said, by telling investiand Fishing Club of Panama. gators that the genera! who
sources said. and congressional seize? po":'er in 1981 had a close
intell!gence committees were relat10nsh1p wtth the late CIA
briefed fo.r years on the CIA Director Will!am Casey, a close
involvement.
-Reagan friend.
Lawmakers may not have
known what the Post and the
Times report&lt;&gt;d today - that
Noriega and North struck deals
to train Nicaraguan rC'bels on
Panamanian soil in exchange for
U.S. support of outside loans to
debt-ridden Panama.
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
The Times also reported Norih
UPI Religion Writer
was responsible for th e 1.986
WASHINGTON IUPI) - Voting for a mandatory code of
financial ethics. the National
Religious Broadcasters associalion has responded to tM PTL
scandal that damaged its cred!·
·
'
bility and sent contributions
plummeting.
been found. Anderson said.
ThecodeapprovedWednesday
H&lt;&gt; also is charged with car by the largely Protestant and ·
theft in tne disappearance of ·theologically conservative NRB .·
Wendy Aughe, 29, in Washington. demands fuller financial dlscloShe was last seen April 25. 1987. sure and prohibits large broadleaving a. Bellingham. Wash.. casting ministries from dominarestauranr with O'Neall. who lion by family members or
reportedly was using the alias of ministry staff.
Mike Johnson.
The action had been in the
Aughe's car was found a short
works for more than a year in
time later in Eugene, Ore., but
light of the l!scal abuse revealed
her body has not been located. amld the PTL ministry sex
Anderson said.
scandal, and it was spurred by
O'Neal! also is sought for
theposs lbilityoffurthercongre~questioning In the strangulation sional investigations into the tax
of Lia Szubert. 22. of Twin Falls, exempt status of .television and
Idaho. Anderson said. Szuber.t 's
radio evangelists. acknowledged
partia!!y decompOsed body was
NRB Director Ben Armstrong.
discovered June 13. 1987. at the
Armstrong said 33Q voting
. bottom of a freeway embank- members attended the private
ment near LaGrande, Ore. She session . Wednesday at which it
last was seen alive when her car was decided to make the "ethics
broke down at a t ruck stop near
and financial integrity" guideMountain Home, Idaho.
!!nes mandatory for membership
O'Neal!, an avid outdoorsman in the NRB. Only six votes were
and repu ted survivalist. is also ·cast against making permanent
wanted in Colorado on charges the guidelines that have been in
stemming from the 1986 sexual effeCt since September.
assault of a Colorado Springs
woman. Anderson said.
The NRB. wlthmore than 1,350
member organizations and minDetective Jim Be ll of the Salt istries, represents abo!lt 75 perLake City Homicide Task Force cent o.f Christian religious radio
programming.
sa ld h'1s. department would like to and
u ntelevision
d
·
.
er
the
guidelines,
quest1on 0 Neal! in the slay!ngs
be
of two nor~hern Utah women.
mem rs must .submit an !ndeo· Neall left the Puget Sound pendently
audited financial
t 1
h
eac
area last spring the same day sa ement
b
NRB year to· a nineSmith disappeared .
mem er
commission,

NRB .approves code
in re$ponse to· PI'L

'
ed
ne
0
S
want
f FBI
0
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d
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HARVEY. La. IUPI)- ThC'
sea rch lor one of th e FBI's 10
. most -wanted fugitives &lt;&gt;nded
when authorities discovered I he
accused killer was al ready in
jail. where he was ser ving time
under an alias lour months after
his arrest for car theft.
Darren O'NealL 27. a native of
Albuquerque. N.M.. lares a
murder charge in the tortureslaying of a Washington woman
and is wanted for questioning in
Ove other killings in the Pacific .
Northwest. FBI spokesman Cliff
Anderson said.
His true identity came to light
Wednesday in a police crime lab
in Baton Rouge. La., when an
investigator matched his finger prints with FBI files.
O'Neall used the na me Zhohn
Mayeaux when he was arrested
Sept. 22. 1987. in Lakeland . Fla..
after a short chase in a car
r&lt;&gt;ported stolen from Ha rvey .
La., Lakeland Police Lt . A.G.
Brown said.
. " We had no re&amp;l'on to beli&lt;&gt;ve
he wasn't who he sa id he was,"
Brown said.
He was extradited Dec. 30 to
the New Orleans subur~ of
·Harvey where he was r1·ngerPrinted.· apparently for the l!rst
time, Anderson said .
Gremillion of the
Kath! =n
~State Police Bureau of Criminal
Investigation on Wednesday was
comparing inmates· fingerprints
when she discovered Mayeaux
a·ctua!!y was O'NealL who was
de.scrtbed as a career criminal
with more than 15 aliases.
' Her office immediately noti fied the FBI of her discovery,
Anderson·said.
Pierce Cqunty, Wash.. She·
riff's Capt. Mark French s~!d a
detective would question O'Neal!
today in New Orlea,ns while
preparing paperwork for his
extradition to Washington.
"There al'e charges against
him in three states - Washing·
ton, Colorado and Louisiana· but I imagine they will let us have
him first," Trench said.
O'Neall is charged with first degree murder in the March 28,
1987. death of Robin Smith, 21, of
Des Moines, Wash. He also is
wanted fpr questioning hi the 1
disappearance of a 29-year-old
woman from Whatcom County,
Wash.. who~ ~Y has never

r--------------'h_o_u::,g_h_s:..m....:.a_n.:.er....:.m:::l:::n:.:!s:.:.tr:.:!.:.es:._:w:.:!.::th~

Before Wednesday's:.._vote re ..
By' JOHN VAUGHAN
jecilng
Contra aid, li'ltzwater
WASHINGTON tUPI)- President Reagan received an· early .ruled out sol!citationol aid from ·
birthday treat today and tol&lt;l a third countrles·but refused to sayNational Prayer Breakfast he whether private donations might.
·'could never unCierstand . athe- be £ncouraged' once again for the •
.&lt;;:ontras. The last s!Jppl!es ap-•
ism in this w!)rld of beauty."
The talk of •. religion and the proved by Congress carne In a •
singing of " Happy Birthday" by $100 mi!l!on package that ateared
the House by just 12 votes in 1986.the gathering to Reagan whd
Reagan played his final card
turns 77 on Saturday contrasted
this time around with a last-ditch
with hi&gt; disappointment with
Wedne!lday night's House vote compromise to Congress in a
killing the president's request for speech from thl' White House
more aid for the Nicaraguan Tuesday night. He offered to•
modify an t&gt;arl!er agreern.ent by .
Contra rebels.
giving
lawmakers a role In
Presidential spokesman Mardeciding
when to release the $3.6•
lin Fitzwater issued a brief
million
for
m!l!tary aid included ·
statement following the Wednesin
his
overall
package.
day night vote .saying, " We are
Opposition
leaders
were unim·disappointed the House of Reprepressed.
Rep.
Tony
Coehlo of
Sentatives did not vote to keep
pressure on the Sandln!stas dur- CallfOI'Ilia, the No. 3 House'
Democrat, said there was scant
ing the peace process ." Reagan
lnteresr-· in Reagan's "last-~
did Mt mention the Contra aid
minute appeal for Congress's '
vote at thl' prayer breakfast, but
as he was leaving, was asked, help to continue the Contra war"
under terms by which the Demo·•
"What are you going to do about
crats
c~uld be . blamed for a
,
the Contras?"
failure.
··
"Help them," he responded.
-House Speaker Jim Wright;
Reagan read to the prayer
moments after the Wednesday•
gathering a now familiar letter
vote capped a grueling day of
from th~ mother of a Soviet
soldier who died in World War II debate, asked. the president to
help turn his defeat into victory
professing his faith in God. He
· also spoke or receiving letters for the Central (\mer!can peace'
from fivE&gt; Soviet soldiers who ' , plan sl~i~~ed Aug. 7 in Guatemala.' ·
"The Con11ress Is · prepared 101 ,
renounced their· country's Invawork'
with t~e president of .thl'
sion of Afghanistan.
United States · and invites his:
He said that one of the soldier
defectors he. met in the Oval ·. cooperation.'' said Wright. D·'
'
Office told him that religion "is Texas.
The speaker recalled Reagan•
spreading . fast" among young
said last week he did not. come to.
people in the Soviet Union.
Washington to preside ·over the
"I have been unable to undercommunization of Central
stand the atheist in all this world
America.
·
of beauty,," Reagan said. "I've
"Of
course
he
dl4n't.
Bu_t
Mr,
had the desire 'to invite all the
Reagan did not come to Washjng-'
atheists and .serve them a
ton to preside over Central•
gourmet dinner and ask them
America." Wright said, "He
afterwards if they believed there
came ld Washington to preside'
was a cook."
over the United States. The'
The prayer breakfast was the
people of Central America elect' I
eig!\t)) that the President and
their own leaders; their own' ·
Mrs. Reagan have attended
people speak for their own
while they have been in the White
House.
·
countries." ·

"God 's love shines through
every .word," Reagan said. "His
truth is the ultimate power
source."
''His comforting hand- well, I
could never carry the respons!b!!it!es of this office without It,"
. Reagan .added. "God has truly
· blessed this country. God's gift is
for a II mankind."

~HEEL

Pay for 3 and Get.
the 4th FREE
Call 992-2094 For Appointment

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"excessive."
The new rules will be po!!ced
by random, on-site visits to
various ministries where ·'previously. we accepted their
word," Armstrong added. NRB
members w!!! have 90 days from
June 1 to apply for·accreditation,
with two years to comply.
The rules are designed to help
restore credibility to tlfe amorphous re!Jglous broadcasting in·
dustry, badly shaken after the
scandarthat last year drove Jim
and Tammy Faye Bakker from
their PTL ministry in Fort Mill,
S.C.
·"This will cause people to
realize we have nothing to hide,"
Armstrong said Wednesday.
"We have an open book and an
open policy." .

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'.., 1 l I \ )'

Ctl.... tuffle. fiLPh.
lltonald Htnlng, R . Ph.
Mon. !hru Sal. 8:00A .M. to 8 P.M.
Sunday 10 :00 A.M, to 4 :00P.M .
PRESCRIPTIONS
ptt . 992 · 29i5i

Kenn-'h 'MeCuHOUQit. ltPtl ,

Friendly

I

Serv~

Po.meroy-. 011 .

E. Main

0~

Nights JIM 9

EXTENSION GRANTED
10°/o PENALTY.WILL BE CHARGED
AFTER THE FEB. 12 DATE ON ·RIAL .
.

.POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

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less than $1 million in donations
only must do so every other year. I
In addition. ministries must
make available· to the public an
annual report, must ensure that
more than half the members of
their boards of directors are
neither family nor staff, and
must promise to use all solicited
funds "for the purpcs&lt;&gt; stated at
the time of sol!citafion."
The rules further say fund raising costs cannot .exceed 35
percenJ or relat&lt;&gt;d contributions
and "total fund-raising and administrative costs cannot exceed
50 percent of total income."
Armstrong said the ninemember commission will look at
the salary levels of principals
a.nd staff involved In the ministries. but. he would not say
whether the NRB would determine whel~er such. salaries are

ESTATE TAX.

Coupon Good Tbru 2/8/88

..'

.
'I

'

LAST DAY TO PAY FIRST HAlF·REAL .
ESTATE TAX WILL BE FEB. 12, 1988.

FREE
BALANCING

606 Easf Main

• !11 ..

.

MEIGS COUIOY,
.

·-.

010181&amp;

.

The Daily Sentinel Page 11

if3iblical hell is lukewarm topic in modern world

Reagan receives
a· birthday prayer
'

would enhance European securIty and keep the NA·TO alliance
strong. Galvin disputed asser tions by Sen. Jesse Heims,
R-N.C., that the Soviets may be
hiding for future use some of
their .SS-20 missiles set to be
dismantled under the pact.
· "I've taken a look at a lot of the
Intelligence !data) on this
Issue." Galvin said. "J. haven 't
seen anything I could take to the
Soviet Union and say, 'You' are
cheating. You are withholding
weapons under the treaty."'
Evan Galbraith. U.S. ambassador to France from 1981 to 1985, .
sided with Helms and likenet\ the
treaty to the 1938 Nazi "appeasement" policy of British · Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain .
"The administration has certl·
fled that this treaty is verifiable.
·In fact il is not,:• Galbraith ·
declared. "The Senate should not
b~ a party to what amounts to a
deception · of 1he American
people."
Perle. now a scholar at Wa·
shington 's conservative-leaning
American Enterprise Instituie,
also stressed the risk of Soviet
deception.
He anq four other AEI scholars
released their study Wednesday
warning the treaty would not do
many of the things the ,admlnis·
trai!on claims, including eliminating SS-20 launchers and production .of all stages · of · the
missiles.
Perle .said he believes the
Soviets could hide and maintain
enough SS-20s to wage an attack
capable of knocking out ali of
NATO's chief command centers.
That differs from several days
of testimony from other m!IJtary
and civilian experts who said the
treaty contains verification provisions so tough that any missiles
hidden by the Soviets would
become ml!itarily !ns!gnU!cant
because they could not be tested
without being spotted by ihe
United States.
·
CIA Director William Webster
testified privately Wednesday to
the Senate Intelligence Committee. which is ·examining the
ability of U.S. intelligence services to detec.t any Soviet cheating.
Webster would not comment
afterwards.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

''

. '
'

.,

.,,
·'

.r

'
By JOHl\1 M. LEIGHTY
is in the human mind," says;
:
UPI Feature Writer
Richard Cavendish, author of the
•
classic :'Visions of Heaven and
' SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) Hell," and
British eKpert on
The concept of a B!l)!!cal hell, magic, occultism and the super·
where Satan reigns over a natural. "The concept of hell, in
hideoU!I realm or fire and brim- Christianity and other religions,
stone, is a topic genera!!y sort- appeals to sado-masochistic 1mpedalled by a modern culture pulses, and artists have given
more concerned over pleasant these feelings free rein."
pursuits and g(){l!s than by fears
In . the ·modern world, such
of eternal punishment
medieval views of hell and
Despite the seriousness of damnation have 'been chal·
Hades in most religions, the lenged, modified or · rejected.
underworld of the Devil- called With the exception of ardent
amon'g other things Satan, Beet- evangelists, the subject is rarely
zebub, Lucifer, the Prlnce of preached from the pulpit.
.
Dar.kn'ess - is often treated
A Gallup poll taken on religious
lightly. even humorously in tum, convictions in 1980 said about 71
music and literature.
percent of Americans surveyed
.Shakespeare .offered his own believe in an "afterlite" where
definition, writing: "When all the those. who led good lives were
world dissolves; and every crea- rewarded. This compared h&gt; 53
Iure shall be purified; a!! places percent whO believe in a hell
sha!! ~e .he!! that is not heaven. " where tliose who live· bad lives ·
In the Apocalypse or St. Peter, · are pun!she&lt;l for eternity. ·
w,ritten In tlie second century .
Today's tendency to bei!e~e In
hell is shqwn · as a gallery oi · a ·pleasant afterlife doesn't surhorrors reserved for sinners, the prise theologians and religious.
~!eked r!ch and as a revenge - leaders.
·
• against those who persecuted
Paul Jewett, senior systematic
Christians.
·
theologian at the prestigious
· Movie titles have invoked the Fuller Theological Seminary in
word hell some 50 times, the word
Padadena, Ca!!f. , said the classic
dev!l62 times and the term Satan definitlons of hell are now "much
five: In contrast, "heaven," has less d!!&gt;Cussed and much less
appeared in only 12 movie 1&gt;€'1ieved...
names. Most oft he films, such as
"One reason would be the rise
· "De~!!'s Cargo," don 't regard of higher critical and historical
the subject in the religious sense, vi&lt;&gt;ws of the Bible, •·. said Je-,vett.
b1,1t as a look into some dark or "There are ancient documents
unusual aspect of·human nature. that are' not relevant today,
· In music, the Rolling Stones especially eternal damnation or
had a big hit with "Sympathy for hell-fire, which reflects the times
the Devil," and the witty story of in which the documents were
how to outsmart Satan, "The' written."
Qev!l and Daniel Webster." is
In the early history or' the
required reading for many church. he said. hell was an
S&lt;;hoo! children.
important part of Christian con' On a more frightening level, fession because it invoked
sadistic satanist rituals of b!- sinners to repent rather than face
zarre human sacrifices is the an angry God. "Now, you'd go a
theme in the 1987 film. "Angel long way before you'd find a
Heart ," which stars Robert De Sunday minister who would talk
Nfro in .the role of the Devil about the subject."
searching for a man who "sold
There's also been a shift in
his soul" and then tried to escape sociology and in the understandhis destlny through the use of ing of penal justice. said Jewett,
black .magic.
.
adding that hell traditionally
In the real world, an increasing represented the ultimate punishamount of suspected satanic ment for sin or evil deeds.
crimes are being investigated by
"Lots of people today believe
police departments , lnclud!ng all we shouldn't even have prisons.
varieties of demonolog!sts such but rather Institutions for rebaas wizards, witches, satanists, billtating and healing people so
sorcerers. conjurers, and they have a chance to rejoin
voodooists.
society.
·
Sandra Gallant, a veteran of
"Hell does not fit in with this
the San Francisco Police Depart - !&lt;lnd of thhiklrig. It is not
ment's Inteii!J!enc;e D!.v!slon and
remedial or purgatory. but in
expert on the subject, . said
traditional teaching is a place
. numerous crime cases involving where 'once yo4 enter. you would
satanic cults have recently been be lost forever."
'
reported around the country but
· Father Miles Riley, a spokesther.e's no way. of telling how
man for · lhe San Francisco
widespread or dangerous devil
Archdiocese. said the Catholic
worship Is because statistics
Church has shifted its stance by
a.ren't available for comparison . embracing the Ideal and positive
· "Maybe they (satanistsl bP.aspects of God and deemphasizing the belief in hell and
lleve in the dev!! as a reality, but
you don't hear much about tlte damnation .
·
be!!ef in an afterlife or of a place
The !!bera! second Vatican
such as hell." said Gallant . Council of Pope John XXIII. said
"They're mostly involved with Riley, for the first time in 2,000
what they want today." ·
years did not condemn here~y-'
Anton Szandor La Vey. who
those who didn't believe the
foun~ed the San Fr;mcisco-based
church's teachings.
Church of Satan in 1969, said
"When I was a young priest 1
sales of his book, "The Satanic heard a great deal about hell
Bible," have recently tripled, but because it was used as a motive
the increased readership doesn't
for not sinning," said Riley. "It
please him because of some wa~ burn baby burn and in the
!mp!!ed associations with c.u!t case of hell the punishment was
crimes . Richard Ramirez, await- forever.
!ng tria! in Los Angeles as the
"Now, ht&gt;ll is not so much
accused "Night Stalker,'' for perceived as brimstone and fire
example, was allegedly a devil but as basically a separation
worshipper who scrawled sa- from God, who is love. Nobody
tan!c pentagrams 1inverted.fivewants lo face a cold, lonely death
pointed stars) on the wails of forever and ever.
murder victims.
"Npbody says that doesn't
LaVey's church uses ·a nude happen, that there isn't a hell or a
woman as a "living altar" and separation from God. Weare free
has rites and rituals to glorify to sin and we are free to separate
desires while repudiating what from God. What the church did
he believes to be the hypocrisy of was reach out and accentuate the
established religions. La Vey positive."
says in his writings thai sexual
Herman Felfe!, called In psyfreedom is important. but d!vorcholog!cal circles the " father of
ces himself from "sick and Thanatology," or ,t he study of
distorted" cults that defile oth- death, said there's been a resurers' rights.
gei)Ce among fslams and ChrisThe self-proclaimed dev!l's
t!an fundamentalists, probably
disciple. 'n a c!ande~tine inter- because of the fact that science
view with UPI. said the concept and politics can't. explain the '
bf heil was subjective - Inter· mys.ier!es' of existence. ·
preted in various ways- rather
"The belief in survival after
than a black kin~dom of punish- . · death makes ·people feel some·
·ments for sinners as depicted by thing about the way they live,"
most religions.
said Felfel. chief psychologls_t at
!&lt;' ''People make their own hell,
the Veteran Administration's
~&lt;&gt;yean make a hello! heaven or 01Jipatlent clinic in Los Angeles
i heaven of heil," said LaVey. "I and a clinic a! professor of
l-ouldn't presume to improve on
psycl)!atry and behavioral sc!en·
iftt!Iton's quote, 'Better to reign In ces at the USC School of
Jell than serve in heaven.'
Medicine.
1o1 "Satantsm is. centered on the
However, fe\V people undergo
y life shquld be lived in the c;onvers!on phenol'l)enons or
re and now rather than wast- change the way they believe
·
an entire life preparinl! f.or because they realize 'they're .
at h."
·
. close to death, said Felfel.
.
The most vivid deplcllon of the
"Ills healthy that people think
hr!stlan he !I comes from the · · about dying and death and
4th century Dante's ''Inferno." whether there's an afterlife behere 'tbe ,real poet deacrJbed a cauae ltthesubject'asupprellled,
arkened pit of nine layers, each it can fester and when tbe time
gruesome In punlsbment comes they'll be unprepared,"
r the .wicked, who entered the said Felfel.
aim through a gate Inscribed,
Felfel said It's Important to
Abandon Hope, All Ye Who question the meaning of lite,
nter ·Here.'' Ge111ratlons of valu\!1 and ethics lnol:dertolead
tlats,lnclucllng Guatave Dore', a · rnore satisfied existence on
IMPtred by Dant~ to paint . earth.
utJJWI'Wisoull tormeateil
""nle reaaon life beoomea
fire; Jh, allme. mutllat..
precioUs and unique I• because Of
o..- anclllldeOIII qonles. · ' the realization tbat It's not
"Wbatl¥tr ~ heU may be, it
fo~er ," said Fette!. ""nle Idea

a

I

. . ;1)

of death forces man to set
priorities and not to waste timet Ieave hi s footsteps on the sand
ofo time."
Rev. Cecil Williams of San
Francisco's Glide Memorial

Methodist Church said he never
discusses heaven or hell from the
trodden a better quality of life .
"I don't even talk about the
pulpit but rather invokes his
afterlife, original sin or heaven
flock to help change the cond!- · and he11 •" sa1'd W'll!
t ams . "I n
lions of the world in order to give -fact ,' it's null and void as far as
!he POOr, homeless and down·

I'm concerned. The people who
come to Glide
nontraditionalists, peopleare
who have
quit the church because it was
t
k!
h 1
no spea ng tot e r needs."

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12-The

...

Sentinel

4,1988

Ohio

Announcements

.Reaction mixed on waste plant
By Matt Robertloa
ud·CU..Iell A. MaMa
it's not a maJtt:t of which one
comes in hen: lint." Jimmy Joe
Wedge, PyroChem, Inc., twion,
Said in reaclion to this wedt's Ill·
DOWJeeiiiCIIt that Aptus plans on
building a hazardous waste in·
cina'a~ in Mason County "Then:
is enough waste to go around." he
lidded on the Apple Grove project.
: Aptus, a par1llerSIIip between National Electtic, lnc., and Wcstinjbousc Specialty Services, Inc., has
proposed to build the incinerator
JUSt ~th of the Goodyear plan!.
The incinenltor could employ up to
ISO J!COP.le and will cost at least
$25 million. PyroCbem, Inc.,
awaits a decision by state
~e~~Uiators on a $140 million hazar·
dous waste incinenltor planned for
· ihe Don Kingery property funher
nor1h in the county.
The Mason Association for a
Clean Environment, ·or MACE, is
opposed to ~ commercial incineration, said its cbainnan, Paul
Washington.
"We say 'commen:iaJ incitJeration' because it is necessary for
some plants to have incineration."
Washington said.
Washington said his group is

against bringing in outside hazar.
dous waste incinelation.
The advent or the second
proposed hazardous waste incinerator does not bolher Wedge. "I
don't think it's going to change
~m. Inc.'s application one
bit," be said.
In fact, he added, it may be a,
good thing. ''This should make the
public more aware that the treat·
ment of hazardous waste will be
more common down the road.
Something has to be done with the
waste."
''They (Aprus) still need to go
through the appliclll:ion process,"
Wedge said
Valley Volunteer Fire Depanment Chief Jennings Page said that
the deportl)lent vlill remain neuttal
on the project position wise., but
added the waste being transported
on the roads concerns him. "With
that stuff going up ilnd down the
highways ·. we will have to have
more equipment,'' Page said.
"If there is' a spill, then we will
have to call in outsiders," he said,
adding, Point Pleasant Volunteer
Fire Dcpanment has some of the
necessary equipment.
The department will require ad·
digonaJ uaining, he said. Aptus is

·.
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NAMED LEADER - Tim
Tompson has been named 1987
sales leader for the Jim Cobb
('.he v r o I et ·01 d s mob lie·
Cadillac Agency In Pomeroy.
Tompson, a resident of Ma·
son, W. Va., Is pictured
receiving a recognition plaque
·lor his accomplishments from
Jim Cobb, agency owner.

Bennett .. ~

George .. , Continued from page 1

Continued from page 1
James Conde, county coroner. leadership.
.
open communicauo·n and more
Fultz announced that Emma· · . Fultz extended regards from
gene Holstein Congo, county Con~ressman Clarence Mlil~r har'd work.''
recoroer, confined to St. Joseph who could not attend due to h1s
He made an indirect reference
Hospital in P,~rkersburg with a involvement ip the Contra hear· to Rhodes's backing of Holmes:
back problem, had sent best lngs. Fultz pallllrlbute to Oakley
•••
_c_on_ti_nu_e_d_,r_om_.::..pa-=g::...e_l_ __
wishes to those attending. New Colllns, former state senato~.
"We.are on the threshold of a
Republican candidates who will and to~the leadership of PreSI· · new generation of leadership." .
·testing, t:ran~rtation, treatment activity taking place thus far has
be seeking nomination of the dent Ronald Reagan In his.efforts said Bennett. , "The choice we
and recycling, mcineration and spill served to heighten the sensitivity,"
party on the county level in the to have .freedom of democracy In make today wi II send a signal to
response and site clean-up. In addi- Johnson said. "ln!lusttial waste is a . May primaries were Introduced the Western Hemisphere. He. too
every , precinct comm.ltteeman
tion, the finn proVides household fact of life. We feel thai there is a
and Include Steve Story for commended Commissioner and lard leader, to every county
hazardous waste collection ser- need for firms like ourselves. We
prosecuting attorney and Robert Jones for his time and dedication and community leader. to every
vices. Aptus also operates an en- take a competent approach. We let
to county governmentr and as contributor. This- Is a chOice
Beegle for sheriff.
vironmental service center in Utah our track record stand on its own
Bill Kessler, 10th District Com- chairman of the Republica!) between whether our party can
which is ·nearly identical to the merits. We try to be a [J8!t of the
mitteeman, spoke briefly asking party in Meigs County.
take hold of this opportunity and
proposed West Virginia project, solution and not part of the
lor support of the judicial candi·
Jones, introduced by Fultz. look forward to the future, or
Daktosaid.
problem."
dates and commending Richard ex tended thanks to the school. - whether we wlll be chained to the·
The hazardous waste incinerator
Jones for his role in the county cooks, students, administration past."
Aptus officials said they wiD pay
is the second proposed for Mason the applicable taxes and penn it fees
government and in Republican and others lor the steak dinner
County. Last fall, PyrjlChem, Inc., required by West Virginia law but
prepared and served for last
of Louisville, Ky., annOunced its in· wiU not offer the county commis. night's occasion and introduced
tention to build a $140 minion sion any siting a,greement.
Maxine Goeglein, presi&lt;;lent of
.
hazardous waste incinerator oo the
the Meigs County .Republican
"It would be presumptuous to
Continued from page 1
Women's Club. In a short talk,'
South Central Ohio
Don Kingery property. That com- come in with a pre-determined
p.m .. or phone 992·6861.
Jones paid high tribute to Voino·
Partly cloudy this afternoon,
pany's application is · being package," Datko said. "we are not
All loans must be approved by vich citing his wide range of . with hlgl1s in the low 30s. Clear Louery numbers
reviewed by the state DNR, APCC, coming forward with any kind of a
tho&gt; local committee. Upon appro· ex perience In all levels of govern· tonight, with a low between five
and the federal EPA. PyroChem, package." Winchell added, ''This is
CLEVELAND rUPI) - Wed·
val
at the' local level, pro"ject menl as an lmportrantqualifylng and 15. Mostly sunny Friday,
Inc., additionally, signed a siting a business application, not a politinesday's
winning Ohio Lottery
packages will be reviewed by a factor in Voinovich's candidacy wllh highs near 25.
agreement with the Mason County cal process."
numbers:
regional loan · committee which lor I he u.s. Senate. Jones stated
The probabitlly of preciplta··
Commission giving the county a
Datko said the pennits for the
Dally Number
will
meet
in
Marietta
at
the
that
Voinovich
took
over
as
tio11
Is near zero this afternoon
percenta,ge of the gross profits and regulatory process of the applica973.
of
Buckeye
Hills.
mayor
of
Cleveland
at
a
time
through
Friday.
offices
PyroChem, Inc., officials have said tion may be submitted by this
Ticket sal($ totAled $1,493,124,
Winds will be from the northw·
Meigs County is represented on when the city was practically
they are negotiating with the Slate spring. He estimated that the per.
with
a payoff due of $359,021.
the regional committee by Kim bankrupt and in a short umehad est at 15 to 25 mph today,
of West Vlfginia to establish a per- milling process could take from 12
PICK-4
Shields , director of development changed It Into an All American becoming light and southwes·
centage of the gross profits to the to 18 months. That timetable would
3960.
for the county. Shields also
terly tonight.
state.
have the project brealcing ground in
serves
.on
the
local
committee
~::.:.:.i~---'---------....:__:___.,....-----------------Thomas Johnson, Aptus presi- the spring of 1989 and becoming
along with.Robert Wingett, Ernie
jlent, said the company IS aware of operational in 1990, officials said.
Sisson.
Millie Midkiff and Jim ·
the expre~ opposition to the
The project will be undel\llken in
Diehl.
PyroChem, Inc., application. ''The phases:
In other business in the comIntensive environmental
missioners' meeting. Clerk Mary
studies of the site.
Hobstetter . reported that she
- Development · of . a truck received no negative comments
transfer center to base trucks for the regarding a request for a C1 ·C2
collection
of industrial wastes for
perrtrit for beer and wine carry·
CLEVELAND !UP!) -Ohio's
shipment
to
the
Aptus
facility
in
out only. The request was from
Super Lotto jackpot went unCoffeyville
or
other
permitted
·
claimed Wednesday night. in- facilities. The center wiU also Gregory and Rebecca Meeks,
creasing the top prize to $6 provide spill response and site doing business as Meeks Groc·
erv . Route 33, in Bedford Townmillion for Saturday's drawing.
' .
'
II
remediation
services.
Development
ship.
The request wlll now be
There were no tickets sold that
&lt;
listed the six winning numbers of for this phase is expected to begin submitted to the State Depart·
.
men! of Liquor Control.
'
4, 8. 22. 3Ci. 40 an&lt;j 44, a lottery by the spring of this year.
- Once appropriate permits are ' Hobstetter also reported· that
commission spokesman said toobtained,
Aptus Will construct the the county has received its
. LADIES' .lONDON FOG
day . Wednesday 's jackpot was
LADIES' SWEATERS
$23,013.90
adv.
a
nce
from
the
s
tate
LADIES' DRESSES
incinerator.
worth $3 million.
&amp;
on
the
1988
litter
grant.
Any
funds
All
STYLES
Winchell
said
the
company
plans
Although no one claimed the
top prize. 112 phiyers picked five on proceeding with the project even advanced to litter control from
REDUCE1(3
0
of the numbers to win $1.000each, if the West Virginia Legislature count y general fund will now be
PRICE
PRICE
·
' .
reimbursed.
'
.
enacts
a
law
to
tax
hazardous
waste
white Ci,633 players chos&lt;' four of
Finally, a request from ihe
incinerator companies. "As long as
the numbers to win $81 apiece.
Meigs
Soil and Water ConservaLADIES
Ticket sales for the mld·week the numbers are still there, and we lion District
ONE IACI
to make an interde·
I.AJ)IES
COOIDINATED
dr\'wing totaled $3,977.275, with can make a profit, we intend to
LADIES' BLOUSES . I
SUITS &amp; JACKETS
partmental transfer of $11.000
the prize payout totaling $568.273. operate," he said.
SKIRTS,
PANTS,
BlOUSES
'
long &amp; Short Sltewa
was tabled until' a later date .
RfDUCED

Apple Grove..

~·.'f&gt;

Weather

Commission ...

No one claims
Ohio jackpot

By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
United Press International

ROCK 'N' ROLL ROAD: Buddy HoUy may soon
be honored wltb a street In his name in Clear Lake,
Iowa, the town where !Je played his last show. The
proposed)luddy Holly Place runs alon~ the east
side of the Surf Ba Uroom. the site of that final
copcert before Holly, Rltcble Valens and J.P.
''The Big Bopper" Richardson Were killed In a
crash 29 years ago Wednesday. City
. Jim Ransom says the ~ounc)i has had
businesses along the street and
. Is
only for apPI!oval papers to arrive from
lawyers representing Holly's wife, Marla Elena,
·who Ransom said is supportive 61 the Idea. The
name change will take place Feb. 16 at the
earliest.
' SINATRA GIVES: Tabatha Foster, the 3·year·
old Madisonville, l&lt;y., girl who underwent a
mu.ltiple organ transplant, Is getting more
celebrity help. Frank Sinatra sent a $1,000 check
' to help pay her bllls at Children's Hospital In
Pittsburgh, pushing her fund to $160,(){)() and
· joining President Reagan and· talk·show host
Geraldo Rivera on the list of donors. "We've had
contact from Stevie Wonder's people, too," said
· Joseph K. WIDiamil Ill, the trustee for Tabalba's
fund . Tabatha remains In serious condition three
. months after receiving ·a liver, pancreas, small
intestine and parts of a stomach and colon. Her
medical bills so far total about $350,000.
UNHOLY TRINITY: FolkieJonl MltcheU chose
an unlikely collaborator for her song "Dancing
· Clown" - leather·clad rocker Billy Idol. "I
laughed and I was shocked," Idol said. recalling
Mit&lt;'hell's Invitation to join her In the studio last
year when she was working on the album "Chalk
Marks jn a 'Rainstorm." "I wasn't sure It was the
right thing to do. Then she read me tlle Iyrlc_s. It
was close to wha) I would slqg about." Things
went so well that MltcheU .e:vim extended Jdol's

~

Following the Thursday night .
services, all to be held a(l 7:30 •
p.m .. there will be light refresh· ••
· ments. The public Is invited to:
attend the series of services.
The schedule is as follows:
Is Patient and!I
Feb. 18' - 'Love
.
King". at· the Southern Baptist
Church.
. .
Feb. 25, "Love Is Not Jealous
or Boastful", St.. Paul Lutheran·
thuith.
·• ·
March 3. "Love Is Not Arro-)
gant or Rude", Grace Episcopal ·
Church.
'
March 10. "Love Does Not
Insist on Its Own Way", Sacred! ·
Heart Catholic Church.
.
" Love Is Not Irritable or•
Reseniful", Trinity Congrega.:
:
' lonal Church.
March 24 "Love Does Not·
Rejotce at Wrong But Rejoices In~
the Right", Poq1eroy United:
Methodist Church,
•
Meets Tonight
·'
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order ·
of Eastern Star, wlll meet at 7:30
p.m. this evening at the temple: '
Officers are to wear chapter
dresses.
DAV Meets Monday
The· Disabled American Veterans and the D.A.V . Auxiliary of
Chapter 53 will meet at ; the
chapter home, 124 Butte,rnul
Ave.. Pomeroy, at 7 p.m.
Monday .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-13

People in the ·news..,;.._---~---N-oti_..:.ce,._

Plan Lenlen Services
Plans have been completed by •
- the Meigs Counly MiniSterial ·
Association lor a series of Lenten:
worship services on Thursday ; .
· •
evenings during Lent.
TheJlle this year wlll be "The :
Love Road to Calvary," series on.
Chapter 13 of First Corinthians. •
Emphasis will be on knowing .
more about Christ's everlasting •
love.

-- ---

4. 1988

To Meet Monday
Regular meeting of the Bed· ;
ford Township Trustees will be •
held Monday at 7 p.m. at the town :
•
hall.

willing to help the department.
Mason County Commission Presi"Wc talked to them and they said dent R. Kento11 Shelipe said
they would have their own fire
"Before they do anything, they
fighting equipment in the plant," will have to get the proper ap.
Page said. "Once they .get going, , plications lion\ the federal En·
they will help us with the plant," virorunental Protection Agency and ·
'Pllae added
the stale l&gt;cpanment of Natural
·-r.it shouldn't be any worse than Resources," Sheline added.
Goodyear or .Stauffer," Valley ResMACE has no current plans to
cue Chief Karen Nance said. "We fight the appli~tion. "We plan 1o
may have to go to me new uain- have a meeting with Aptus in the
ing," Nance said.
. . ncar furure to get Ilion: informaPoint Pleasant Emergency Medi- lion." Washington said ·
cal Services spokeswoman Angie
"No slllltegy has been planned
Spencer said they ~ equipped to yet for fighting the application., but
handle the situaliqn. "We carry we will discuss · it," .Washington
books in each rig that have all the said. "We're waiting to see what
chemical symbols in them and in- they wiU do," he added.
formatioo on how to treat the
"I think then: are some things
patients,"· she said. The squads, she different · between this plant and
said, have direct communication PyroChem, Jnc.'s proposed plant,"
with the hospitals and work with Washington said.
the fire department$.
The proJl!lSCCI Aptus plant is not
The incinerator, if it's approved, . as big, Washington said, and it will
can't be stopped. "If they're not affect different people. It .wiU also
breaking any rules or regulations, · be downwind. of GaUia County,
then there's nothing we can do," Ohio, he added.
·

.,.....

part In the song, which she describes as "a
lhree-ch~racter play" that also features another
rocker, Tom Petty.
ROYA18 VISIT THAU..AND: Prince Charles
and Lady 01, fresh from helping Australia
celebrate Its bicentennial, arrived Wednesday in
Bangkok. They were greeted by Crown Prince
Vajlralongkom and Princess Slrlndhom and the
women stood in the blazing sun as the princes
Inspected the honor guard. There .was a bit of a
row when British journalists became upset that
some ThaJ photographers were allowed to ro11m
fre!' ly whll~ the rest of the media was cOnfined to a
small area on the tarmac. The visit of Cha"i'Ies and
Diana Is to heip celebrate the 60th birthday of
Thailand's King Bhumlbol. The birthday was
actually Dec. 5 but the celebration continues
through June.
GLIMPSES: The reigning Miss Minnesota· UsA
was arrested for shoplifting l.n Minnesota but her
lawyer says she still intends to compete in the
Miss USA contest In El Paso, Texas, March 1.
Authorities said Susan Carol Bolich was arrested
Tuesday outside a Dayton's department .store
after allegedly stuffing her purse with $372 worth
of merchandise;· Including a bathing suit, two
scarves and some hair accessories .. , M:ary
Sleenburgen spoke for Some 40 members of the
Hollywood entertainment industry In appealing to
the Chilean government to protect artists from
harassment. Also at the Los Angeles news
conference Tuesday were Steenburgen's h.usband, Malcolm McDowell, Ed Asner, Rae Dawn
Chong, Hector Ellztindo. Jeff Goldblum and Daryl
Hannah. Actors and artists in Chile say they are
being threatened because of their liberal poll tics
.. . George Harrison will be the guest .on the
syndicated radio call· In ·Show Roc kline Feb. 10.
· The show usually all8ounces where !ts guest will
be speaking from but Harrison asked · that his
locale be kept secret for security's sake.

MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
PROBATE
!STATE
OF COURT
GLAOYSOFHI·
g~~~A~E~gERGoTT AKA.

lf2

40%-50%

W'tMtJ*NOW UNTIL .IIALENTINE'S DA'I
VAILIEMTII~IES ~~

.

· -A

KARAT FLOATING HEART
GOLD
$295

14

14
r

KARAT
GOLD

20°/o

$1688

S.AlE

40°/o

REDUUD

ROSE or PEARl PIN

$795

KARAT
GOLD

14

2 HEARTS &amp;DIAMONDS '

LADIES BRACELET
NO"

$1395

ONE lOT LADIES
lADIES COORDINATtD
ROBES, GOWNS
SWEATERS
BLOUSES, SKIRTS JOGGING SUITS
REDU(ED
IEDUCED

400fo

WEATHER

GOLD

75( to $25

NOW ONlY

· COIN REPUCAS

RING OR
PENDANT
NOW

9995
Your

Choice

14K GOLD

COATS ,~~;,~. JACKETS

lf2

PRICE

SWEATERS

lf2

PRICE

KARAT ADD-A-BEADS
MEN'S lONG SlEEVE

$9995
•

·

20°/o ·

COVERALLS, JACKETS
Ill OVERAllS
IEDUCED

'

1,,,,,,,, "' g,,,

l'ftng Ot6, ''"' Bug1
Court St.
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2054

&amp;~ JACKETS

REDUCED

&amp;
DENIM Ill
OVERAllS

SPORT COATS, BlAZERS

20°/o

REDUCED

30°/o

SWEAT
SHIRTS
'
All STYLES

REDUCED

30°/o

.

20°/o

Carroll Eciw.rd
field, 'Adminiotrotof
with Col·
Win
ond ccidicils onneud of tho Eo·
· tate of Glodyo Higley Holder·

goa 1k11 Glodyo H. Hoidorvott.
Decem~. lata of the Clty of

~~ c:-:.":...~

copy of the of "'" ....
poit•b•wort ....... him by The
Superior Coun of Catllomill,
County of
Be-no.
Caoitrol Diltrict. l'nlHt&lt;l DMIlion. AM uediiDta of ouch deooilent muat ~ their
ctoima. to thio Coun. within eix

s.,

{61 month•.- thebe for-r barred •••••.u•o••

·ouch fiting. "' th~r ·
b'le lien upon the

Public Notice

For Fiscal Year Ending

December 31, 1987
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
County of Meigs
"Thil is an unaudited
Financial Report''

DRESS &amp; USUAl

ITORI HOURS:

Mon. thru lit,.

.... .. . .·-·
.....
,_,"""
••.• ... tf"··
___
-__......,--..:....-....
)""'
eOAII
IIIA!fa

. ...
. ....
~~-·-(loa··,
·--·

....

11.-

MI..

e~t .w

.....

lf.M

--=ell. .

--

~-

General

..... - ,

~y

M,llllf I'VIUCAT!OOI

II MIA. MTIIIIO"l

...

lOCI Pill tiiiii!A~
1· 0111~· - - ·... ~
10111~•••""oou
10111,111 fiiiOU

••

Notice .

••ORDINANCE ·N0.1192·8B
~ An Ordln•nc• to eatablllh
&lt;1 Minlotuno Golf Fund end

• to Approprtota Funds for

r

its operation.

'• Be it ordoined by tho
~auncll of tho Vlttoge of
Middleport •• follows:
• " Soc. I. Thot a miniltr..
~~~ Fund to horell'l Htab·
~flhed within IM lrHIUry of
:the VHioge of Mlddtopon.
See. II. That oil .. pondl·
:.urea related to the con''illruction end opeNtlon ot

)hla Mlniot~re Ooll projeot
.,e to t. ch1rgod to this
.1und. ·
.
• Sec. Itt. Thot· ott rocolptl
·.!,toted to tho aperotlon of
'
.

: WANT ADS bring
: Vacation Money

:::-:=.

====
==="-

====·
··-

:-c:·::

i!iii:.-

A
ve.

·

Public. Notice

Public Notice
ttiis Miniature Golf project

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS .
fund.
.
For Fhrcol YHr Ending
.Sec. tV. That Uli,OOO lo
Deotomber31 , 1987
opproprilted from thio fund
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
for conlltructkm 1nd aperl·
County of Mligs
tion of this foclllty for 1-988.
''Thio
Ia on unoudited
Sec. V. Thot thl name of
Finonclot Rapon"
tho Wotor Tonk Fund io
SUMMARY OF CASH
chonged to tho Woter Syo·
BALANCES,
RECEIPTS
tom 1m~"""""'' Fund.
AND EXPENDITURES
Soc. VI. Thot thlo ordi·
nonce Ia hereby cleclorW to OOVI!RNMENTAL ...
be an IITMI'IIIIICY in thot FUNDSRECEIPTS:
.
funds ore nec-rv for
iri1medillta oonltruelion of TUIS ............... :64,019.29
lmerao-nmomol
the minloture goff cour11.
Soc. Vtf. This Ordinonce Rocelpta .......... 46,197.1·6
ollatt tiki llffoct end H in tntoroot ............... 1.931.22
force from end otter Jon. 21, Alt Other
R - .......... 14,018.18
1181.
P1111d tho 21th dly of TOTAL
RECEIPTS ..... 1111.104.22
Jonuary 1988.
OIIIURSEMENT8:
ATTEST: Jon P. Buck,
o-.!Ga....,.
Cleric
...............21,864.87
0-yM.H-. Plllid"" of CCMIIIClt Publlo Sofety ..... 21,128.23
Publlc Warlto ..... 81.071.10
{214. 11.210
HHhh :................ 4,531.3Z
are to be credited to

thi:a

15

Hippy Ada

Public llj6tlce
Debt ServiceNote Principal
Payment
6
............ ·251 ·86
lnterllt and Fi1cai
c•·r~a
1 147 89
•• •-DISBURSE·
... .... .... '
·
TOTAL
MENTS ......... 116105
· ·17
Toto! Rocaipu
Ovor/(Undor)
Dilb... :................. 499.06

Doc. 31., ·a7 .. .. 8~. 763.91
Depository
.
Botonce .......... 86,676.82
invootmonto ......... 2700.00
Total Treaaury
Bolonce ........... 89,376 .62
Leos Outllonding
Chocko .... ..........tl.622.71
TOTAL
BALANCE ...... 82,763.91
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS

Fund Cath Balance

Outstanding

lltiNE,

11

·Attention Seniors. Get your

BINGO

pictures for your announc•
inents earty. Call now and get
your pictures. 61.t•949· 3060 or

614·949-2803.
dential and Commercial. We
please the customer. Free Estlmatea. 24 hr. Sentle4t. 30 year
experience. Prote..ional work .
Senior Citizen di.count . CaM

614-992-2629.
A«ention Electrolux customen ,
Frank Fultz is now your authorind factory sales and aervict
repr ..entative. For service call
304-937-2272 anytime.

4

,

5 puppiaa, 3 mates end 2
femal11. 304 -675- 1777, cell
after 2:00

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD

992'-2196
Middleport, Oh'io .
1-13-tlc

Puppy part Cocl!;er Spaniel:
black. 304·882-2024.
Young male German Sheptlerd.

304·676·2347.

16 waek old mixed bre&amp;d female
puppy, had shots and wormed. 1
month supply food. must have e
good home. t::all anytime 304-

-458-1904.

10 months old, female half
Border Collie. CIJ[e ltfendly 9
weelt old puppy, wormed. Botll
will make nice pets . 304-675-

1892.

•

16 week old mixed breed female
puppy, httd shots and w;ormed, l
month supply food, must have a
good home, call anytime 304458-1904.

161 North Second
Middloport, Ohio 45760
SAlES &amp; SERVICE

LOST: Dog lost in vicihjty of
Addison on Da11is Lane-Blo-nde
with black face: Pekingese &amp;
Spitz mixed, answers to name o'f
"Dutchess" . ' REWARD . Call

Pay Your Phone
and Cabte Bills Here
IU!tN!SS PHON!
t6 141 992·6550
RESID!NCI PHON!

614-446· 4029 .
Found : black and wtlitfl female
Banji·type dog on N . Third.
Middleport , Tueaday. Feb. 2.
110 N. Third, Middlepor1, Ohio.

(614)

1·26.'83-J mo.

Lost and Found

6

We Carry Fishing Suppliea

Lorot lotto-. OH. 45743
Ph. 1614) 143.5416

· ··-.•Television
Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic•
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

lo1t ; 1m1ll red and white female
dog in Fore1t Run area. Sunday ,
Jan. 31 . Call 614-992-206"1;
aher 4 call 614-992-3012.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-

· Giveaway

Large standing maple tree for
firewood. 304· 675-3962 .

HOMER BELT

Yard Sale

7

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avtnue, Box 1213

··•· ·GallTpolis--........

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hos.pital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

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

lmm MOVtl! lo VIIS TAPE
ltl us convtrl thoro old

..

622. J•v 0(ive, off At . 35 . Felt. •

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Homt Mowits onr fo tasy
VHS.
CAll AMY CARIEI
or IOI'S ELECTIOMCS

CHESTER. OHIO

oHOME BUtLDtNCl

•ROOM ADOITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
AEMOOELING lo
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS lo .
BACK HOE WORK

446·693, ... 446·7390

PlooOIIoye&lt;l......

985•4141

IISIIIAL COIITIACTOIS
Ret•encta
11 -3-tfn

5th &amp; 6ttl, 1988, 9 AM tll6 PM .~ w
Walnut blanket boll, . player pf •
a no, kitchen cupboards. trunks. •
poreelain top tablet, glas•w•re',•
clothes, salesr'flan sampl&amp;a, olllil• ·

!,:~~·;.!~~~· 1i~~~it ~~:.bo!~~=

woodan milk cooler, stonewartt, ,
bird h~use1 . quilt• tops , quiltint i
frame , . metal detector, ,
.;.
granlt,ware.

~----------------·
Gallipolis Flea Market • Former ·

Thaler Garage- Rta. 35 &amp;. 160. :
Open Saturdav• &amp; Sundav s• .,

9 - 6.

..--~~~~----~~~:I
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•

- - - - - - - - - - ,)
•
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Halp Wanted

....":;~~lul::lt~'

---------.1
FIREWOOD
r

Locust,

Oak,

Cherry

$3500

Per

AICADtA N. . .G CENTER .. ·
lox A, Main St.
c...... Ohio 45723
,1.

3 Announcements

E&amp;R Sewer and Plumbing . Resi-

Royal &amp; SCM Typewriton
loyal &amp; MAX (~kulators
Royol &amp; Max Cash llsgist•s

our dedlc.tld staff who are
committed to providing quality eire.
If you feel you lhaN this dedication and
commlllii...U to quality geriatric care
and tellm wot'lc. pt.... call or write:
Patty Conard, R.N., 'D.O.N.
fw: an Interview. WEW wage ICIIIe end
excellent benefit PHicage.

Nu:a\t[~•

Announce ments

6:30 P.M.
10-Hin

SALES-SERVICE
SUPPLIES

Looking for 1 few good nunea to join

Ynl K.
CZit. 11, 11. Ill

4-15- '86-IC

New Loc:alian:

ICF /SNF LONG· TERM
CARE FACILITY

Mltlt of . . "" 111111 of
fluiiA....... dlr
J,
... of401WII!I Mlln, ,__
"""' Ollltl ...,..,

Pomeroy, Ohio

SAT. NIGHT
Factclry Choke
12 Ga~ge Shotguns Only

New &amp; Used

~

Ill

V.C. YOUNG

992·6215 or 992-7314

Control your Weight • Take
'' New Shape Diet Plan " and
E- Vap Watar Pills . Fruth
, Pharma.cy:

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

·z

Addona and remodeling
Roofing •nd gutter work
Concrete work .
Plumbing and ~l•ctri cal
work
(free Estimitet)

Building

75 BED

Mui-

-

OHIO.

EVERY

LPN's and RN's

Public Notice

CARPENTER
SERVICE

· · 10·9·tln

~sham

Outatondi119

Dec. 31, '87 ......7.933.33
t COfllfy the Precadi119 re!""1 tot. correct end true, to
the boot of&gt;my k.-ge:
·. Jon. 21, 1888
Olorlo Hutton, lwp. Cleric
Rt. 3, lo•l2
" Albany, Phlo 41!71 0
.
814·181·11204
{21·4.·hc

YOUNG'S

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto fr••,.•lttloll
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Fund Ca•h Balance.

Joq. 1. '87 ....... 52,323.61 J 1 '87
5 333 34
Fund Cosh Bolonco
on. ·
......... • ·
....... "3•460 ·00
D 31 '87 52 822 68
Dopoaltory
oc. •
.... · · 11.~~~~~~:,;~;~~·
· .. ·'.. .. 2' 886 ·87
Botanco ......... .. 68,917 .98
.. .... 6.116.67
Total Treasury
,
I certify .th~!l' preceding ra~
Botonco ......... ,.68,91 ~.9!1 port to b8 COITect ~lftd true,
losa Outstanding
to the boot of my knowi·
Chlcko ............ 14.095.42 adgo:
TOTAL
.
Jon.· 18. 198il
BALANCE ....... 12.822.811
·opal
Dyer,
Deputy Cterk
SUMMARY OF
P.
0 . Bo• 3211
INDEBTEDNESS
Rutlond,
Ohio
41n6
OU1118ndi119
Ph.
742·2806
Jon.1. '87 ...... 14.185.19 i2) 4. 1tc
Retired ............ :.1.211.86

1·3-'86 tic

GUN SHOOT

Roger ·Hysell
Garage

Disb. • Other'

u... ................ 6,691.66
Fund Cuh Botanco,
Jon. 1, '87 .... .. 66.162.26

hr11 E~alp11nt
Part1 &amp; Strflct

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

992•62'82

Gov~

Deoler ·

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

ornmont ... ...... 31.180.66
Public Sofoty ....... 3,013.87
Public Works ..... 67.223.82
Copitat Outlay ........ 907.01
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS .......... 92.324.96
Totot Rocoipts Over/(Un·
derl Diob........... 8,691.86

Cl.Ui/ied pap• cotrltr tlu
followin 1 ,.,.,.,..,,.. ......_...,

....
=A-aOH·
·- ....
I:JO tiD 1:00

Ca1h Balance

Receipu ......... 39.999.B8
Interest ...............3.024.69.
Gifts ...................... 240.89
Att Other .
.
Ravonuo .........21.323. 70
TOTAL
'
RECEIPTS ...... 98,916.60
DISBURSEMENTS:

IIAfll

On§¥1=:~.=

992·1151

Fund

Intergovernmental

=..:.·=~c, ••·

175 fl. 2nd

Ca1h Balance

Dec. 31. '87 ...... 4,909.87
TOTALS &amp; .
FU!'ID BALANCE
RECEIPTS:
Toxoo ................ 32,327.44

I'IDUGIAIIV

BAHR CLO

Fund

Authori•ad John D11n,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Form Equipmtnl

4·16·86-lfn

WANTED

•

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

Day or Night
fl!O SUNDAY (AllS

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

SALIS &amp; SEIYICE

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

~

319. s·o. 2·n.d

BOGGS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rlasonablo Prices"

estate of ouch decedent.
Middleport, Ohio
Robert E. Buck. Judge
1·28-'SB·tfn
Meigs
County,
i1121. 28;
{2)4.
3tc Ohio "===========~
r

NOTICIOF
APPOIN1'11t11NT Of

COVERALlS

10-8-lfc

..,1988~:,.,~ot.i':"nuo~

:......--------------------------'------------1 Jon. 1. '87 ........ 4.494.96

•
.•

PRICE

MEN'S .SUITS,

MEN'S UOWN DUcK

MEN'SlM DENIM

NOW$19CJ5· ·

. DIAMOND EARRINGS.

MEN'S WORI

SPORT SHIRTS CORDUROY PANTS
·~~~~ $1288
1/2 PRICE
JEANS

14K GOLD

MEN'S PWOYEI
Y-NECK &amp; CREW NEU

.

lf2
DIAMOND HEART RING

s:~al S6495

MEN'S ·WINTER

MEN'S LONDON FOG

All

30°/o

t to· IOigutL lkll Olodya - -

NOTICE
IO.R.c. 2129 '021
To Alt Creditor• of
ouch Decedont:

Coronary angioplasty tmproves

~

~LE

POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS

14

SLACKS
REDU(ED

ONE LOT lAOIES •
lEVI
DENIM JEANS
Volutt lo $32.00

lEVI BENDOVER

· _PIECIAL

REDU(ED

-HoiLioigotto
. . . Mery
Higioy
1k11 Glodyi
Merv Gloclys

c~~Ec~~f:~'l~~ :

•

0°/t

lf2

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI
'
•
992" .3410
LIMESTONE
GRAV'I:L • SAND
ro· p so· IL.
F'ILL'
DIRT
.

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
6-17-tfc
AND EXP.ENDtTURES
GOVERNMENTAL
FUNDSRECEIPTS :
BOSTON (UPI) - Improved
and other symptoms by restoring at I~ast 150,000 Americans each Taxes ................ 34,327.44
DEAD OR AUYE
technology and more expe·
blond flow and can avert heart year.
Intergovernmental
39 ·999 ·88
rienced doctors have apparently
attacks. ·
"This shift In patlenl profile
Rocoipts
.........
•Washers,
•Dryers
lntanoot ............... 2.850.86
•Ranges •Freezers
increased . the success rate of a
The study compared one group appears to reflect greater
All Other
t ommon procedure In which a
of patients that underwent the confidence. resulting both from
Rovonuo .........21,323.70
•R.efrigerators
·tiny balloon is used to reopen the
procedure between 1977 and 1981 increasing experience with
TOTAL
\
"Will luy ar Haul Away"
RECEIPTS ....... 98,501 .88
c Iogge d ar ter I es o f hear t with a.second .group, w hic h ha d anglop Iasty and from greater
DISBURSEMENTS:
lEN'S APPUANCE
patients.
tl)e operation 'performed be- therapeutic capability as a
Gooorot Gov·
A. government ·sponsored
tween 1985 and 1986 at 16 centers result of tfichnQlogical ad van·. ' _,
· ornmont ......... 31. 180 .65
SERVICE
study comparing the short.·term
in the United Stales'and Canada . ces," the researchers said.
Public Sofaty ....... J,OI3. 87
985-3561
· of t he procedure. .
Public Works ..... 57.223.82
effectiveness
Success was measured as
The study, funded by the Capitol
We Service Aft Makeo
known as coronary angioplasty,
having achieved at least a 20 National Heart Lung .and Blooll
Outtoy .................. 907.01
'1122fl8ftfn
found the overall success rate
percent reduction .In each block- Institute. did not assess the TOTAL DtBURSE·
.
92 · 324 ·96
increased from 61 percent to 78
age without the patient d.ying. long·term . effectiveness o.f the · Total
MENTS
..........
Racolpto
Ovor/{Un·
SKATE-A-WAY
percent about live years later.
having a heart attack or needing procedure, including whether the
dor) Disb ............ 6, 176.93
"By almost any criterion, the · bypass surgery while still in the cleared arteries clogged up Diob. • Other
CHESTER, OH.
technical outcome of coronary
hospital.
again later.
Usoo ................ 6,178.93
OPEN
The success rate Improved
Dr.- Katherine Detre, a proles· Fund Cash Botonco
angloplasty has Improved ... ,"
WED.-FRI.-SAT.
dl
DJan. 1. 87 ·..... 51,667.31
.
d
h
the researchers said In reporting
even though' the 1, 802 pat I ents In sor of epi emlology w o coor : Fund cash ilotonco
7:30-10:00
their results Wednesday in The
the latest group were mu~h nated the study, said additional
Doc. 31. '87 .... 57,844.24
Call for Birthday,
New England Journal of
sicker. and underwent more ex· researchisunderwaytoevaluate NON-EXPENDABLE
Church, Private
'
'
.TOPERATING
RUST FUNDStenslve treatment than t he'1,155 the long.term effectiveness and
RECEIPTS:
,Mediclne.
Parties Mon .• Tues ..
Angloplasty involves inserting
earlier patients.
\,
compare the procedure to bypass intorell .. ................ 173.83
Thurs .. Sat. &amp; Sun ..
.li9Y,,~n W11 •.11~1~rles JI,!Jd , "" ,:rJ!e .Unlversi\Y of. Plttsbur!fh,. ~urg~r:Y· - ·-.,.
. ___..,....
~b~':il'"................. 24D.8B 1
985-3929
,Inflating the balloon to reopen
researchers who conducted the
""assa"""'ays supplying blond to
study at.trlbute.d the Improve·
\1 b·n• Ads
RECEtPTS
..
..
........
414.72
or 985-9996
'I'
.,...
W11ra1 ''
Total Rocoipto Over/tUn·
:the heart that have been ·nar·
ment to beller technology and
Niwarlilllll '4tt Yon
dorl Disb ...............414.72
"' . 1·27·'88·1 mo.
~rowed by fatly tleposlls. The
more experience with the proce·
They'Wof1( AI 'tlillrl
Diob. • Other
treatment allevia.tes chest pain
dure, which is now performed on
Uooo ................... 414.72

e ru aryl I
•
FOR THE LADY OF THE HOUSE
JACKETS

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

7 2

rou

COATS

Business Services

Pickup

Load
Daliwred

Wedemayer' s Aut::t lon Service·.,;
available at your convenience!
•nd locations. Martin Wede·•
meyer Auctionetr- 614-245- ..

5152.

;::=;.::::;::;::;::;::=:·9 · Wanted To Buy

'

We pay cash for late model clean \·, ·
uted cars.
i
Jim Mink Ct"aev .·Oids Inc. ; :
~
Bill Gene Johnson

614·446· 3872

..

•

TOP CASH paid for '83 model '
and newer used cart. Smith ~
Buick-Pontiac, 191 1 E..tern;
Ave.. Gallipolis . Call 614·448-' ~

:~

2282.
Completa hou11hokts of

furni~

ture • antlqu••· Al10 wood •

coel hHters. SW.In'• Furnllunl.,.
•

Auction ,

Third

1114-441·3119.

•

Oltvel :

. •.
~

•net •

W.nt to buy~ UMCI furniture
WIN buy em1re hou~...

,.-t"""'•·

·-.....,...lumlohlnQ.
114·24·1112.

---~
•

8-lotlllmbor. c.n 114-371!;,
2711·Cioudo Prollitt.
••

"

BILL SLACK

614-992-2269

•

·,

,.

I

�.Page 14-The Daily Seatin&amp;l

____ .

It: W•ntecl To

........

LAFF-A-DAY

Buy

. . . - cu-.

.,....

11 Court St.- 2 hdroom. 2
blths, kftchtn fu~ . w / w
c.pk t325 e mo. 1)4.t1 utlllti ...
No poto; d~ • rof.
231 Flrlt AW.· 1 Bedroom.
kitChen fu,.,..._., riwr vlewo.
•1 715 1 mo. plus utillti•. SlAgle
or couple. De"'lt • ref. No
poto. Coli 514-445·4925.

S.U AYCH.. Gat your own A'vonat
1 ditcount. C.lll14-441-l318.

Nice 1 8R . opt. n - HMC.
StOVfl!, refriQ. l drepea. (:all
114-441-4782 . .

EXCELLENT WAGES lo• -

timt aaembly wort&amp;.; ..~ron ­
ict, crlftt. OtheN. Info. c:.U
1-504-1141 -0091 , Elrt. 29e7.

Open 7 doya. CALL NOWI

·-"I .........
...............
haven't located ,the trou-

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOIS.

-....

.. Now.Hiri nv. Yo~o~r 1rn. t'U.t!SO
to t69,480. lmmHiatt Openingt. c.n 1-31&amp;-733-&amp;063 Ekt.
F-275e.

514-448-0418.
TE~AS OIL COMPANY !Comm;IMilld;ng mo;ntonon..
product• nlet)nMCit mature
penon for •hart trips IU~ounding Oallipolia. Contact Cuttom.... We train. Write O.L.
Dic*..-.on. PrN.. Southweltem
Petroleum, Box 911005, Ft.
worttt. Tx. 78161

ble, but I think it's in the
$360 to $400 range , "

18

41

Wanted to Do

" (will~ tit in thtaftemoon•
with Kind.,..,..nchildieninthe
B1 ..e Schdol.... ai'M. U .OO hr.

30+1715-1817.,

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
tre looking for a rnpecttble
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHh1rd working lndlvklutl for naw
ING CO. recommend• thM you
1nd uled c• Nln. The right
penon should alto be 1 self· do businBU with. "pMJple you
lttrter whh the pot~tltl to . know. and NOT to sand money
through the mall i.mlil you have
ri1ndle m~n~eri.. r..,OnlibUi·
t)es. Buainna education tnd invettigltld thl offering.
experience • plut. Excellent PlY'
JM•n -with commlation and b• ha~ty Shop for •le in town.
C•ll 814-99.2-3&amp;14 for ·more
n.tits. Send resume ta: Smith·
infor~ton.
Buick-Pontiec. P.O . Box 807
Gallipolis, Ohio 45831 .
P,4ature woman needed to btb·
ysit infant in my home. Refeten·
oes required. Call 814-4410009.

23

Qovernment Jobs. t1 8,040·
f59,230 .,.. r. Now Hiring. Your
Are1. 805-687-6000 Ext. A9805 for current Federal list.

FurnituN l'lftnilhing tnd repair,
qualhy work and reaeonable
rate~ . free aatlmltH, 304-1715·
7981 .
.

Professional
Servicee

bc•llent wages for spare time
.. umbty work; electronics,
c!rafts. Others. Info 1-504-841 0091 .Ext. 3028. Open 7 days.

Renl Eslott:

RN needed for nursing reh1bili·
t1tion unit. Requires e•ing
individual who's nursing ptiC·
tice is geentd toward restoring
residence to the home environ·
ment 11 much as ponibl•.
Contact Nancy VanMeter
O . O.N. Americare Pomerot.t
Nursing and Rehabilit.. lon Center. 614-'!:}92-6606 . E.O. E.
Stop Dreaming ! You can wOrk in
motton picture·, , De.. ils (1 I
806-887-6000 Ext. MP-2000 .

'2 bedroom 1partment oli Lincoln

Hil. Pomoroy. Coli 114-8825539 or 514-992-34e9.
Cottogo officloncy, ·toto! .,....
ric, refTig•ttOf, 110\llt, nice.
HUD tpprovecl. 2216 Mt. Vernon Ave., Pt. Plaisant. 114-

3 BA. hoUaeforrentorrentwith
option to buy. 2 mile~ qut141 .
Ctll 304-676·6808-devs. 614448-9280-even .
Furnished Two: Three room
coltllgM. Gallipolis. Clean . .No
pelt. Adultl. Ref. &amp; dep. Water
furnished. C.lll14· 441· 2543.
2 or 3 BR. home in city. Ref. &amp;
dep. required. Call 814-446·

Homes for Sale

4 BR., fireplace. fuR basement. 3

3 bedroom houae. •111 month.
Mulberry AVe. Cell 814·992·
6587 or 814·992· 7460.

tnd refrig.,ator e,.. furnithed.
Ctrpeted. Nice Mtting. Cell
11•-992·3711 E.O.H.
1 bedroom apt. torrent. Utilitiea
paid. 3Y.t mil!tl south of Middt.
pon. At. 7 . 6.1 4-387-0511 .
2 bedroom apt. •nd 2 bedroom
mo.bila home. Syracute. &amp;14992·6732.
·
APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
houses. Pt. Pleasant and O.llipoIii:. 614· 448·8221 .
2 bedroom fumised 'lpt, ref 1nd
deposit, New Ha\1181'1 , W. Va.,
304-e82 -3267 o• 304 -7135024.
Beech Street. Middleport, OhiO.
2 bedroom furnithed 1pt, utili·
lies .,.&amp;d. ref..-encts lnd depotit.
304-9e2-256il .
.

Now accepting application•.
Mason Apt, Mason, W. VL
Contact Julie Johnson, 304713-5107.

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooma for rent, dav. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 814·
448· 9680. Rent as lowes f120
month.

3 bedroom, 2 full blths, large
living room, dining room tnd
kllchen. Atao laundry roo~ . 2
car garage. centr•l air. Ellstern
SchDOI District. References r•
quired. 0111114-247-4146 .

Weekly, mq.nthly rttes, utilltiM
paid. Cooking facilities. Downtown localion. Sanion wel come. Park Central HoteL Call
614-445-0758.

Nice 4 room, 1 I!J bath country
8piU'hnent. 1260. per month,
lncludu w11er. Cell 8.1 4· 992·
3312.

46

Space for Rent

Commercial building tor lease.
Downtown Pt. Pln11nt. Starn,
offices. A· 1 Aell Estate. C.rol
Yeaget, Broker. Call 304-6766104.

mi. 10. of O.Ripoll1. 129,900.
C1ll Dayt-114·44&amp;.- 1 8115, after
5:00- 446-1244.

HouH for rent . e..t Main St ..
Pomerov. Ohio . Ctll 814-992·
6144.

SR. 790 Le,::ta. Ohio· 3 BA .,
kitchen. DR .. LR .. V. bath:.
shower in biMment, fual oil
fum.:e. 3 YJ acres. 2 ctr g1rage,
1toraga building. Call 614· 441·
oue .

Op1ion to buy. 870 Ash St.
Middleport. 3 bedroom, I'Niny
extras; financing evallablt. Call
814-992-71121 or 61•·992·
2363.

M,:.b.ile Hqme lot for rent. Total
electric. Priest , MObile Home
Park. Call614· 317·(438.

3 IR .• 1 ~bath , formal DR. brick
firepiKe. Bilev.W dtck. Brie* tnd
frtme ranch located tt 1nd of
quiet drive. One plus acre.
Garden spa~. City schools.
Heat pU,m p-centrl l air. Outdoor
storage area. Call 614-4469667.

42

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33 , North ...., Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 814-9927479.

2 btdroom, 2 blitht. 2 car
garage, level lot on Rt . 33.
Swimming pool. ..tellte. cloM
to Meigs High. Call 614-992·
3254.

Mobile H ()mea
for Rent

·2 BR .. water, sewtgefurnished.
Beautiful river view. No city
.. xes. Foliar's Mobile Home
P•"'· Coll614-446-1602.
Nice 3 BR . Mobile Hom•.
Convenient locallon-RI. 7. Ptr·
tlally furni•hed . Water paid.
1210. Call 8U-246-5818.

Sp1ce for smell trailers. All
hook-ups. Ceble. Also efficiency
rooms, air .end cable. Mason;
W.Va. Call304-n3-5661 .
Specious mobile home lots for
rent, Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. G•lliPolia Ferry. 304-1763073.

Wanted: Mature lad't whb would
like to wor k in private care home.
Day and night job open. can
614-992-3656.
.

7 room house 1 'VI bath, 4
bedroom on Gravel Hilt. Garage.
770 Ath St. MiddJeport. Ohio.
Call 814· 992·6714.

3 bedroom-Metropolitn Housing approved. Children &amp; Pet•
welcome- Kyger Creek Schools.
Call 614-446-1410.

AVON . All areas. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304· 882· 2646 .

3 bedroom, l•rge living room.
eat-in kitcheli, full baM~:Mnt.
garage. elec. Central Air, in
Tupper• Plain1. 814-441-7.96.

2 BR . trtiler torrent-Patriot. Call
814-379-2409, If no answer446-5725.

bedroOms. 2 baths. . full
finishlld baHment. new furnace
and central air, garage, fene~
yard. low 60's, 2•14 Mt. V~Jnon
Ave .. 304-676-1774.

SWAII'I
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St., Gallipolis.
2 BR .. furnished . Ret . . 6 dep . NEW· 8 pc. wood group- e399.
required . Call 814-446-1200 Uving room suites· *199-t599 .
Bunk beda with bedding· e199 .
aftar 5 PM .
Full size mattrest 8. foundation
2 bedroom In Syrecuse . • 180. starting· t99 . Recliners
per . month plus deposit and 1t1rting- t99.
refetenee. Call 614-992-7680 USED- Bed1, dreuera, bedroom
•uitas , e199-1299 . Des ~•.
after 8 :00p.m.
wringer washttt', a complete line
2 bedroom, furnished. Washer of used furniture.
and dryer, air. 1210 per month · NEW· Wntlrn booi1· $30.
plu1 depotit. Cell 114-992- Workboota n 8 6 up. !Steel &amp;
soft \08) . Clll 61 4-446· 31 59,
7479.

B.e your own boll, work your
own hourt, .. ~es petition. cDm·
mission, unlimited opponunity,
interviews Feb. 8 , 6:00, 2413
Jackson Ave.. Point Pie aunt,
W . Ve., 304-S75-172fL
Money For College! ' Part time
jobs. Join the Army Natioilel
Guard, 304-675 ·3950 or 1e00-642-3619
Avon all areas, Shirley Spears,
30-4-675-,429.
Local physic•n needs reception·
1st to handle blllirig, filing ,
appointments , patient sche·
dules, experience preferred, but
not necetsary, minimllm wage
or over, 34 hrsweekly, write Box
P-2 care Df Point Pleasant
Register. 200 Main St.. Point
Pieesant . W. Va. 25650 .

•

31

3 SR . hou• in country. 1260 a
mo. Coli 614-246-8875.

115e.

~---:---:-~-lc­

Position Mtailable: Habilitation
Speci.. ist One. Mult work wi1h
M.S .P.R. Indfvlduals on hablll18·
tion plana-daily schedules. Must
have or obtain adult 1ervices
Cert . degree in •ducatlonhuman Mrvice field h.Wpful.
Binefils includl retirem1nt,
medical-lit• ins .. vtc•tion, per·
10n1l leave. S1l1ry) t16.540fl8, 7~8 . Apply by reaume to:
Meigs Co. Bd. MA -bD. P.O. Box
307. Syr.cul8. Oh 45779. An
E~ual Opportunity Employer.

Large 2 IR hi. wtth 1tove &amp;
retrig. .tor. t221 p..- month.
Depotlt r1quired. Vinton lfta.
Ctll 114·38&amp;·812 1 .

2 BR hou• in cfty. No pets.
t3215 month. DepotH: &amp; refer·
enee required. Cllll WiMman
Rttl Estate. 114-.,.1-3844.

SALES AEPRESENTAnVE: We

•

Homes for Rent

Conwntent 2 8R conaoe In
OaiUpolil. I room• plua b...
mentanda-aga. Cilllt14-4461890 or 11 -448· 2321.

t100.00 per title. Write: ACE·
:. ~ 3h. 181 S . Llncolnway, N.
---4urora. 1180142.

M Pinecr"t Cue Cent.,, MOn.·
Fri., 9 -3. 514-.W0-7112 .

Grec;ou, living. 1 and 2 bed·
room 1pertm.,ts at Village
Manor tnd Riverside Aptrt·
menta In Middleport. From
t215 . including utlllti•. Call
514-982-71a7. EOH .

I~:;:;;~=:;:=::===1-==========1992-le58.
-2-bed--""""-••-,-,-,0-,-,. -,. . -S-to_vo_

GE PAID tor readinG booktl

I&amp;PN · part-time • on ctll. Appty

3

1'h atory, new ~quipped kitchen.
large family room. AC. conv•
nienllocation, priced on inspeotion, 304-675-6027.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1983 Schullr. 14x70 on 1 .I
acre1 with 28 ft.x 30ft. garage.
Shown by appointment only.
Co11614-742-2677.

1984 14x70 Shulu trail.,, 3
Baby .slUing in mv home, Galli- bedroom, 2 bath. hcellent
polia Ferry area, references · condition. 614·949 ·3006.
requ ired, call 304-675-5635
14x70 Windsor with 14x30
after 4:00 pm .
addition. 3 bed raomt, black top
Need: laborers. secretary and road. appr,x 3 ~ern. Gallipolia
sales persons fo r new busineu in Ferry. 304-676-1930.
local area. For more information
14x70 Skyline, 2 bedroomS,
call 304-675-2295.
mtny ex trll , clll 304·676 ·
1294 after 5:30.
12 Situations
Wanted
33
Farms for Sale

Senior c•tizen. Room end board
lor one lady. Special ctre in my
home. Reuonable. Call 614992-6873.

30 acre farm; Mostly till1ble.
Ne1t Rio Grande. Pond. barna.
good home. C•ll 814-2415 9152 .

13

39.4 acres: Two older housn •
outbuildings, pond. Approx. 20
acr11 tillable, eountywtter, Ford
tr.etor. Kyger Creek 'tchools.
13&amp;,000. Neg. C.ll 81•· 388·
9704.

Insurance

Cell us for yo1,1r mobile home
insurance: Miller Insurance ,
. 304 · 882-2145 . Also : auto ,
home. life. heallh.

15

Schools
Instruction

Private guitar leuont . Oppor·
tunity for 4 ttude.n tt onty. Call
614-948-2087.

18

Land Contract. 6.98 •cr... 3
bedroom house, barn and · 3
other, building•. f3&amp; • . 90 month
plu1 •2600. down or cMh pri~
of t25,DOO.Coll514-892-2143
t&gt;More 5:00 or 114.- 992 ~ 8373
after 1:00.

35

Lots

R"pontlble. Christian teen•atr
woufd like to do baby1itting In
.venings or on weRends. Call
614-«G-9835 .
lnt.-lor Pllnting. drywtll finishing a texture cilfling. For fr"

tt1im ..e Clll 114·388·8240,
•of.-689-4755. 3ee-86a2.
Would •• to do bHy•itting- my
home. Mon.· Fri., ....,. Nof'th
Oelllt High School. Call 114-

388-909C.

&amp;

.

wln do Fect.ral.nd Sttta lnooma
TP•; typing, booking, and
Not.~ allr4m.. Marg.,.. Park•
614-112-2214.

Hom11 for Rent

Nice~

fumilhed 11:1"..1 hou11.
Adults onty; Aaf. '"'*-'· No
- -Coli .,4---0331.

1M11o 2-3Htndtrtoft
IR. norage.

., ......... 7025.

51

Household Goods

1 2x60 mobile hom•fumished.
2 mi. from town , Weter paid.
1200 1 mo. plu1 dep. Call
614-.W&amp;-2390.

2 bedroom mobile home In
Middlepor1, Ohio. Reference
end Security deposit . required.
304-882-_3 287 or 304· 773·
5024.

County Appliance, Inc . Good
used appliances and TV sett.
Open BAM to IPM. Mon thru
Sat. 814· 448-1699, 127 3rd.
Avt. Gallipolia, OH .

Mobile home lor rent ·Kanaugl.
References and depo1it. 4484697 or 304-675-8196.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wethers, dryers. refrigerators,
ranget . Skaggs Applitncea,
Upper Rivar Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-441-7398.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . aptt . • ciOIBII, kit(lhe':1·
appl. furnished. Washer-Dryer
hook·up, ww cerpet. newly
painted. deck. Retencv. Inc.
Apts. Call 304·876· n38 or
876-5104.
Furnished apt. next to library.
One profalional aduh onlv.
Parking. Call 11•· 448-0338.
2 BR. ept. Stove • retrig.
fumllhed. Near Go Mart. Call
514-446-7025.

Glass and br.., thllf. S75. Call
614-446-839a .
Antique Wing Beck upholstery
chtlr. Queen Ann Leg~ . Pair of
Maho~any end tabl... Good
conditton. 814· 992-68&amp;1 ,
Uving room sola. 2 V!ll\llet chairs.
Very good condition. Call 614·
992-3424.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Beds, desks. lamps, tabiH,
coucha, chaira. dinnetts, misc.
Hatf mile out Jericho Road.
8 :00· 8 :00 Sundays 1 2 :00·
6:00. 304-675-1460.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT . New tltetric Holpoinl dryer for
.. ,._ 304-675-2130.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 131 Jackaon
Pike from t183 • mo. Walk to
shop •nd movies. 814-448255e . E.O.H.

Amana side·bt.t·lide 22 cu. ft.
refrlg. fi'Mnr· ice makM", 1'10·
cado. G.E. electric rengt with
hood • avocado. Ctll 814-2415·
91521 after 1 PM .

53

Antiques

e...

Privately owned 1ntiqun for
ul•:
Lake walnut drHW
with marble top, Gogthlc Influenced walnut bed . wry old,
Ouenn Ann poster bed • cheat,
Heavy oak r:teedla point oounb'y
rocker. Sen..-.· table whh 4
matching cheirt, . lerga dining
room outfit lndLHIIng mirrortcl
buff~ ; tllver &amp; more. Most over
. 100 yeara old. Cell 814·"8:3921.
Antiques, buy or ..n. Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main St.,
Pomeroy. Houn: Mon., Tues..
and Wed. 10i00a.m.·6 ;00p.m ..
sun. 1 :00 p.m.-1 :00 p.m. ly
chance or appointment. Ruu
Moore. 814-992-2&amp;28,

54

Misc. Merchandise

C•llahan'• Used Tire Shop, Over
1,000 tires. aizea12, 13. 14, 15,
16. 18.&amp;. 8 miln oUt At. 218.
Call814· 2151·8251 .
Keyttone Clauic Mags· Dodge
or Ford. Exercite mschine. Btrr
generator, tools, knlve-. crtfta,
tlirps. Call 814-387-0U1 .
SWIMMING POOLS - 1999
Ntw left OYer 1987 Model
Pools. Hugh 16x24 ft. twlm
area. 4 ft . deep. Includes de-ck,
fence, filter&amp;. wemnty. lnttalll·
tlon 6. llnancing tveilable'. Cell
24 hrs.: 1-800-34&amp;·09.6 .
Model 12 • 12 ga .. Brow,.ing 11
ga .• Universal 12 ge., 31 Re·
mington 12 ga. C.l 114·4483346.
Bid~ll

Caah Fetd Store now
ready .for aprlng. In atock all
tob~cO · tupplhil. ell fartmn;,
fencing, garden ...... wat• •
drain pipe. Call for latest prian·
614-3ea-aeaa.
1975 GMC piekup YJ ton 16
350 engine. Sttndard
tran,. New clutch, motor runs.
but needs work. UOO. 4000
tobacco or tomato nick a. 1I
cents each . 3 tobacco bale···"
boxes, t100_. for t!l. 60 pes.
uled 'tin roofing. n '.oo each.
250 gallon water tank. HorH
drawn plows. Call 814·371·
2437.
te~iH.

Big 3 BA . f•m homes buih on
your lot. 'n &amp;.98&amp; and up. Call
.1·814·886· 731, '
Firewood' for aal1, delivered 6
stleked. 835 a load. Cell 814·
256-9303.
Membership to VIP World Wkle
Reaort' t located at Deer Land.
Now aelllng for f8000, •lldng
$4000. Call 614·992·2988 at
Jackson, Ohio .
·
Bontempl electric keyboerd,
bunk bed1, &amp; misc. ltemt. Ctll
814-448-0854 after.&amp; PM .
Tandv .1000 Comput8r, whh
color monitor &amp; duel di•k drive&amp;.
printer-bought new in Sept.1 1800· uMCI only a few timn.
lot of toftwaN goq with It
$1250. Ctll t14 -3BB-9031 .
!\1hted hard wood •labt. •1·2 per
bundle. Containing approx. 11,&lt;2
ton. FOI . Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 814·992·1481 .
Moving. muat Mil two cemattry
lots •t Meigs Memory G•rden•.
Will Hll both for UOO. Call
514-992-5240.

.

r[~;;.~~~~=-=~~~1::::=~~~:=~~
64
62
Mite. Merch•ndls•

Firewood Mlt4tNd, IUicked,
13&amp;.00. Meson Count-. Galli·
polla. oth• . . . within rNIOft
al our dlaorntlon. 304·811·
3445.
SURPLUS DENIM . C.o•hll1,
Rtntaf Clothina. New · hMVY
coverllll e22.60. heevv new
work clothlnt. bool:uHw,nter at
m nble prto.. lam Som•
nrilo'o. Old Rl. 21-lunctlon
lndtptndance Aoed. hat Rl·
WMWood, Fri. Sat. Sun; noon·
e :oo pm. 304· 273-5111.

PI-

-.,..,

of

can

F•ml- - - 3 IR. 2t Noll,
Oo-'11- f225. C.N-4411
oflor7PM.

.

Went to buy. Yellow Loculi
coll304-575-2130:

-od.
63

14 Locult 11.· · Fumlllted. upNirs. 3 room~ . No chtlclren.
U111111to .....,. U10 a mo .. f75
dill&gt;- c.u 114--· 13!10. ..
446-3170.

65 'Building

Supplies

Building Material•
Bloell. brick, IIIWer plpw. win·
dows. llntttt. ttc. Cteude Win·
tert, Rio G,.nde. O. C.lt 814·
245-6121 .
Conettte btoclls alllillll'yard 01'
dollwny. Moion und. Oollipallt
Block Co., 123'h Pin• St.,
Gellipolil, Ohio CaH I 1 4· 448·
2783 ..

1917 Hand• Four Trax, 4 whMI
drive. U100. Coli 114-379·
2617.
_1_81_2_K-:-:-M:-od-oi-:-H:-o,-:-loy-:D:-o-v:-ld:-oo-n:
12500. Call 514-982·351e.

Honu for ul• Stand.wdbrH
Mil Tennts.. Walker.. Call
514-448-4151.
R-e..twecl Querter Horae. April
1184, MoN, flaohy .......

lngo. 1880. c;aiii14-2BI-8522. ·

64

Hay

IIi

Boata and
· Motors for Sale

1971 Hydr•aport BaH boet. 10 ·,
HP ,._c, •• prop. Mire TM.•· •
trolltr. Spo,;,, EC. Coii814·&lt;W5· ,
94~1 tfter lpm.

76

Hay tor oolo. 11 .10 por balo. Coli
614-1148-2754 .. 514-9926383.

--'---::---"'----:-- h '
land L Tire Outlet tire trUckload ~

ooloFob. 1-5. 131nch-16.5incll, ·

I ran .p,lrLil11111

I

Auto'• For S•le

~

ond ...... 304-171-4431 ottw . ·

5c;~OO~-----~--~--~~

1
15 Inch Peavey black widow.
1110. Coll514-379-2181 .
Guitar Leatonsll Individual inttructlon. Brunlcardl'a Mulic.
114· 445-05e7 o• coli Jeff
Wtmlley Instructor. 114·44..

eon.

lnl"tamltlontt 5 pi~• drum MI.
.on 304-171-4152.

59

For Sale or Tr•de

Vamaht HUnd ..,...m. ,Tumtll•
.,.., tuner, cMMtta -... pre.
emp. Power amp. I!U alullc

. ,. .,.,.. o···-

oo1r1not

New coat lnclucttng tex· t3833:
Yamaha very belt com,othll:s.

lollfoil24000ft-lo•1Nok.

Call 614-441-3921 .

'

-

S I' r . ·If 1 1187

s-..

GL 19. 4 - ·

"

rniGII red, power suriroot, turbo
onglna. I opd.. AC. AM·FM
c....ne. lit. cruiM. PW. power

81

door loclllt. Jun 1 1.000 mH•.

e..- ,

condMion. c.11 114441-1217- lpm.

WATI!RPIIOOf'IIIIG

... Loal ...... , .. furnlltltd.
F,.. .......... C.H colleqt I
1-514-237--. dey or night.
Rogersl•••m•nt 1
Wot.,.,....tinv.
.

SWEEPER and ttwlng meohine -.
repalr. pert1. Mtd supplitl. Pick ,
up lnd d-.ry. O.Vit Vec:uum
Cltlner, one half milt up •
Gaorgoo c- Rd. Coli 114445-0214.
.

"RON'S T•lavltlon Strvlct .
Hou• cells on RCA, 01110r, "
GE. Soeclollng In Zonhh. Coli
304-578-231e o• IU-4452454.

B2

,._.,,,,

·

2010J.D. - w / J.D.-'Po
monL 2 raw p l - . plowo.
&lt;OtM'y . . . . .. 13110.
Coiii14-ZI
..I8ZZ
.
131 Mf_tro__ _

2 - MF , . _ , 11710.
190 Dovld- - · - .

-- ·-•"--hoa.
11310wll ... Coli .,...

.....

84

QolniN--JTO&lt;MIMD,

Wanted

to

&amp;
...
-------------~----Rnidanti .. or COntm.-cial wlring. New ....,.ce or rtptlra.

'f,

:

'~

General H1ullng ;'

"

Dillard w..., lervtce: Poolt. '
Ciattn:~t. Wel.la. Deltvery Any.
limo. Coli e14-446-7404-No I
lund.y

~alia. '·

,..

-:-:-:-:::--'
: ---:::----- ''
J • J )Votar 8arvtce. Bwl"""""' •
~it~··...,,._ Ph. 114- '

R

a

R Water

~erv~a

jiOOio

•

Horne :

flied . ..... '

w.....C.N ·:
·~
J•. w- """'"'"- .,

- 1 7.. U70hya

towRtl I 104-171-7471.

72

Trvolll for 8111

;t"i~,toma, - .. Colll14- ;

,......... retn.......... .
1.000 . - do~Nooy, . . . . . . .
.. Mil, ate. Cal 304-8711-

2111.

•7

Buy

-Calfat--11-

I

I

\;
•I

UpholatwV
,.,_~, Up' II I 1:4 ~

==:-:;:=.:-=
II

:f

104·171 · 1 14 lor "hot ' !1

CIIv Fonft ......,., 114-4412....

?lilt&amp;.

•

~' .

SOME

SUGAR

L.6weEZY

I

JEST GOIN'
TO SET UP WITH

A SICK

SICK FRIENDS

BEFORE SUGAR
COOKIES,
f-It( CHILD

ATTE:NTION . .

· ~

1 \•

V

:

UNSCRAMBlE AIOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER ,

SCIIAM-I.ns ANSWERS.

1.,_

oflcllltng done In her dllensa

ltom011tW!.

Ill ....., P.l. Mad Dogs
and Erilllilhman

IL~RIINfOb

lli!Z

12:10(1).111G1tlennt
e!ll •· ~.._with

. Dnlcl Lltkli•

Ji!~:-,:, .

1!.~ - - 'TIIfl . . . fat
II:'•
~ .... (1:40)

L

MOVII: lllllrfl (PO)

NORTH

James Jacoby

• •\74
tQ10»72
tAJ 10 3

.,

'1881 5

• J 10

By Jomes Jacoby

+9 72

tAKH4
+Q54

EAST

WEST

+J 105

+98532

SOUTH
tAKQ4
.KQS2

A useful gimmick in bridge that has
gained acceptance through the years ·
is to use the double of three no-trump
to ask for a specific opening lead from
your partner. In the absence of any defensive bidding, that lead is the first'
suit bid by dummy. This is certainly a
useful metbod, but I would guess that
as manr points have beeo lost
by the abuse o this uuderstandln1 as
have been gained by its proper use. Today's deal is a case in.point.
East felt that South was stretching
to bid . two spades and then three notrump. In reality. South was making a
stab at slam, but East foolishly doubled for a diamond lead. South was
happy to redouble, with the result that
the contract was made with an overtrick. In the revised scoring table, that
was 1000 to North-Sooth, as well as a

1

!-1-11

Bad double,
big trouble

~~::~~~~ serving

of egg oo the face of
East. The saddest part of this
unlucky tale is that the deal occurred
in team--of-four play. At the other Ia·
ble, North passed in first position.
East opened with one diamond, South
doubled for takeout, and everyone
passed. One diamond doubled was set

ta3

tK63

,.2.

Eul

Pass
Pass

Db!.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
·

Nor lit

Wfll

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3+

Pass
Pass
Pass

S..llt
1'1

2+
INT
Redbl.

Pass

Opening lead:

+6

".,
.four tricks for 800 points (revised
scortng) but the net result was still a
loss because of the 1000-point dlsastet
at the first table.
The moral is easy: Don't double fat:
a specific suit lead against three notrump unless you are sure that gettin&amp;
that lead will set the contract.

"'

ACROSS
39 Horace
1 Ostrich kin
product
4 Earthy
deposit

DOWN
1 Mistake

8 Spoiled
2 Joan of Arc
child
3 Miss Hagen
9 The Hunter · 4 Italian
11 Sutherland
~}~
showpiece 5 ll.ind
12 College
of c~e
offering
6 Outfit
14 Reel
7 Hallellijah!
partner
8 Poet
21Jeer ·
29. Fat
15 Tunneric 10Just about 22 Kansas
31 Ruined
18 Pop
13 Dutch
city , ,
Iranian
17 Pay a call
cheese
23 Stop that!
city
19 Bikini
·15 Baptism, 24 · - Ha'l"
34 Mr.
part
e.g.
25 Vanquished
Tom
20 Greek
18 Benefit
28 Actress
35 Actor
cheese
(sl.)
PapiS
Robert
21 Tiller
12A sight

.. !t •

...

. ..
••

...
,.

for-eyes

23 Sluggish

..

24Sowld
from a
boxer

•

.·

r-'IP"'.,.,..""'-

21 Vulgarian
26 ·--for

.
..

one... "
· 27Involve
30 TIIIT8IIiddle
31 Used
a rocker
. 32 First name
' In lyrics
338ored

.'

31 Czech river
flavor
·,

DAD..Y CRl'PI'OQUVIES-Here'a bow to work U:

114

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

·One tetter stm11 fOI' auotl•. In this sample A is used
for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Single lettera,
~ tbe leuphand formation of the words are all
hlntl. Each clay the code leUerl are different.
.

etn1'UI

12:011 (]) 11111'111 IIIII Allen

.,

BRIDGE

87 Watch over
38Bridge

!Ill ANrlcan Vllfon
tonlghl .
'
Ill 'Night Hell' 988 Late
Nllht Nicole hldll the delalls

·I• ' I• .I• I•

Junlot - Dolly - Vitufl - Mlllldat ;;_ NEUTRAL ·
, I learned 1 valullble IeNon. It I'm -~topped by the polloll
again, l'lllhut off the engJna and put my moulh In NEUtRAL

CDSigtiOII .

e(J) (J)
iiJI Tonight Show
a.....
e (J) Nlghtllne (I
.,....,...,P.I.

quoted

•

88Llquer

etnLDYI~

11:30

T U FEE R

QJI-

11)-ynne
IIJbp

Watttreon'l Weter H•uling. :~

1111_......, __

TH' Clf.JRCH SOCIAL
COULD SHORE USE

th~

Telavlolon .Look at
evolution of television
coma&lt;ly.C
i1J1 Prim•"-••
tBl MOVIE: The Bride (PG)
(1 :25)
fl) !Zl MOVIE: o..lh With 3
(R)(1 :301
.
8:05 Cil MOVIE: Balain (NR) (1 :54)
1:30 II (J) iiJI A Dillltanl World
Denise campaigns to get
street-smart, genius study
partner enrolled.
llll IIIIIJ lugs Bunny
Valentine Speciol Q
9:00 (]) 700 Club
(J) iiJI Clleert Evan
Drake's yachl becomes lhe
setting for a love quadrangle.
!!J College Baokllball
(J)TIA
CD liD Myateryl
till IIIIIJ Simon and Simon
Self-appointed death squads
have been murdering
Selvoaoran taiugels.
i1J1 Lany King Uvel
1:30 11 (J) iiJI Lata Night wllh
Dlivld Letterman: 1111t
- r y Joining Dave for
a ·took at lhl past six years
of Lete Night is Paul Schaller
and the world's mosl
dangerous band. along wKh
surprise talebrity guests.
(I) MOVIE: Charlie Hannlh
10:00 (]) !hnilghl Talk
CD The ar.1n Models, graphs
and animation help
demoostrate how the brain
works. (1 :00) D
till IIIIIJ Knol'a Landing
Abby conlronts Charles· wile;
Rourke's escapade leads lo
murder. Q
·
(!] l!JI Newo
i1J1 EYenl11Q Newo
• (l) Battny Hill
10:05 I]) MOVIE: Flying
LaelhlmeckliNRI (1 :42)
10:30 ()) Ora at Amorican Outdoort
(0:30)
t!!J Voices I Vlolona WHness
clips of Interviews wHh
Robart Frost. leading
pa91oral poet. C ·
• !1) HogMI'I fletoea
11:00 (J) R~tnington SIMla Sleele
Searching, Part 1
• (J) !ll • (J) iiDI • Ill

UcenMd electri•n. Eatlmlte
lrN. Ridenour ElectriNI 304116·1111.
•

----171-

U11•••••

IF'rOLJWERE AAYING-

table: "One good 11111111 lbOUt
eetlng cauliflower lllhll you c.n

-

9

(JJ Collellt Baakllball

,.. R-.

IIGtlt w!INI ..... 1111 -

Now buvlfta INII oorn or _.

.-

•

Electrical
Refrigeration

fiOO.OO. 104-171-7371.

215-1522.

82

.,~-

SELLS Tl-1&amp;\1\A.$ FOCD 10

,

. CARTER'S PLUMBING
'
AND HEATING
\
Cor. Fourth end Pine
\
0.111-. Ohio
•
Phon• 814-441·3818 or 814- .;..
441-4471

_ ... __ _=--..::·

_
·11 ...,_....rca.
4

JUST 't#INTED 10 SEE

ALleN~ CR56-TURE:5.

1

Plumbing
• He~tlng•

85
1811 Oolf. - · - · 4

HE 6-RCM'S PEOPLE AND

ltlrb T,.. tnd Lawn Service. J
lawn cere. lendtctp"ing. .Cump ~
rtmoval. 304·878-2842 or ,
575-2103.

_.. - -2- .T·- -

Runa
· tHy
tD mlllnt.lhl.
· good,
........
opllt- ·-

•

Rotlry or cable tool driiNng. :
Most well• completed umt dey.
Pump ..1. and service. 304- ~~
05-3102

1981 Torotoeollco. PI, Pl, olr,
euto.. tunroot. 4 crL E.cellenl
condition. AM-FM rodo. C.oH
l14-115· 31tl or 814-112·
7151 .

13000. DID. 114-H2·114D
afttr 1:00 p.m.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Fetty Tr• Trlfn""nv. · llump

relnOYIII, c.tl304·171·1-331 .

7:35 Cil Sanford and Son
1:00 (]) Hell Town My Girlfriend
Apne
II (J) i!)J The Cooby Show
Vanessa prepares an
impressive audHion lor the
band majo• position.
CJ (J) MOVIE: 'Fitalox ABC
Thut'lday Nlghl Movie Q
CD The Weal ollhe ,
lmaglnaUon Hislorical events
that shaped the We6t are
seen through portra"•·
l!ll IIIIIJ Be My Valentina,
Cllllrlle Brawn Charlie Brown
celebrates another
Valentine's Day with a
slightly bruiseq heart lull of
hope and an empty mail box.
but the Peanuts surprise him.

e

!

Uncoftditlon• lfetlrM gueran-

~'!:~·· 2000 m..:~· ~~;.=:

1811 Pondoc Grone! Prbl. Oood
c..-lon. V-I cyl. Pl. Pe,

WHAT A \.l.n.IlRFU\....
1~ .. -~ rr OOIIJG?

lASEME NT

1987 Oklt. Cutlaa Suprema.
C II ~•713 "I •
713
a .~
·u 1u or
•
59 1 1
_
::
::
::
-:
·
:::-:--=---:---:-:-'::---::-11111 otd•CudauLS. Excellent
oondMion; U200. 1171 Ch...,
plck,~ up heH,,on. •1100. C.M
!·5::1::4-:-::-114-:1::·-2_8_0_1._ _ _ _ __
19e7 Iuick somoroot, 4 cyl.,
p s p8
Pharte 11 .. 141-2110.
1880 CHIIIH ...., o. Vi no.
lullv oqulppad, good oondltlon.
12100. 1811 Calolnl" Eoiroapon, 38.000 mlloo. Automotlc.
4 cylinder, cruln, tlr ~
conditioning. a7,DOO. eon 114848-3027.

Home
lmprovemenu

L-..-'--L.-L-...1-..J

· by fillii'IQ in 1the· missing words
._.....,_ _,__ _,__.___._ _. you develop from step No. 3 below.

(l) WKRP In Clnclnnetl

•

Mqlher to children II dinner

I

Q

g

"79 Bronco. 1uto trllrwnluiDn.~
AM-FM c_.., AC, traUw taw'"

c-.

co~inet with 1 15 Inch JBL •

Motort Homes
• C1mpers

1179 23 ft. GMC motor home.
Oeluu. Nice for tnrwNng or
construction worlkere, etc .
:..~ to ...,_ Coli. 114-24&amp;- ~.

=~~1'41r.:m:

Lotut •leotric guitlr. *100.

from 115.00 Up. locttecl eCfOII
from lohio ltttlon, Tuppen
Plolnt, Ohio. 614-02-1144.

79

19a3 Chovy. CltotiOn. Am Ndlo,
auto. trent., PI, PI, 89,000
mllei. 11700.C.nbe...,.attha
Galllpoli1 Dalty Tribune or for
mareinfarmdan c.tl 814-441·
2342 ,

AKC Reg,_ llauan Hound ·
pupa. R•re gray pups, •zoo. or 114-371-2137. ·
RQultlr trl·color. 1110. Call
114-117-1758.
12 Oklo. 11. Good-~
11on: 1310. C.U14-245·82..,.
AIIC.C laiMtt pup, Trl· color. hll
wormed. AI ltod. AKC 1882 . .rtlnttte C.maro (Reel) .
81aMt1 lrid AKC Shattie. can
bePS, Pa,
514-681-5957.
aru~. air, ltlna, ...., d.troat,
- · low ml01f1o.
A-tittered Cooker .,...... pup· &lt;Ocllnlna
oo~vlnltil. Coli 114-&lt;WI-2111
pin. M•lei and famel•. No ..... lpm.
.
chock•- Colll14·991· 3551.
1984 Etcort. Of't own..-. Call
Two Beaal• ,.bbit doaa. 3 yean '514·448-5280.
old. 1 male tnd 1 femalt.
304,575-5331 . .
1910 vw Ro-. Goo, 4 opd. ,
llr. Good cond. Ae•onebae. C.H
614-44a-Me4.
67
Musical
1818 Hondo Arloonl LXI. I opd ..
I n1tru mants
AC. atn roof. 30,000 mH•.
11Q,IOO. Coli 614-.WI-2121.
Y.maht 8 I 'Iring ftet top wlth
C.H- 112&amp;. BtslgUlUrlpe.tler

.r

buy 'junk 1rt~lions.

2 minlaiUN fem81e Dachehund
pupplel. One long haired, ont

I AllC Reg. Pokingooo pupploo
tor ~tla . I wka. old. I 12&amp; ee.
Somt · adult Peking...: Will
negotiate on price. Cell 114251-1381 .

... ANI&gt; THf'N ~
CO/VIE IN WITH THE
ttl&lt;il'f NOT~ . ·.

Used • r.buih trlinlmi. .nt. All +
internllly inapecled • tUim· ~
tood. Call 114---09e6. w~

Hoy toroolo. Coii514-M9-2111

71

Auto Part•
&amp; AcCIIIOries

i!)J Jeop~rtlyl

® Bamoy Miller

----------- ,,

Part whitl Chow Chow a .
1 I 15th woH pO-. 1150 .1877 Com•o t•adi. 91.000
...... Coli 614·255-8333 . .
mllet, IU1o•• Y· l . t1100. Call
514-4411-1e\5· Dov• .w1-12.w
AKC Reg. · Mlnitture Oech· lflerl PM.
shund. 8 wkt. old. llhott,
wormed. ~all614 · 182-8731 .
'iaae Ford Escort, e2815. c.u·
614-28.. 1122.
AKC Reg , Docllahund P•i&gt;pl•.
Coll614-441-7820.

"""" hotrod . Coli 614-2511704.
'

1111121

14 Ft. Rlvor John. 25 HP•,
Johntan, tnlltf' • eac. Call
514-.WI-1290.
•
-

__,.;C;...;;A_T'--i:'H'-YT--il

lelwlyaget-otlt."
~--,~,.;-..,.I...;.-T.I5;-:;-I..;.;_I"':--I 0 Complete the chuckle

Ba-l't

icheero·
fl) (l) M'A•s•H
7:05 CIJ Andy OriHIIh
7:30 11 (1) HoiiV"ood Square•
D(J)Judge
ill) Wheel of Fortune Q
i1J1 Craullra
.

.locbon.Dirl~-

aft• 1 :00 p.m.

eo_, Konno!.
CFA Htmeleyan, PeniM Met
Slam- lldtt... AKC Cttow
p•ppi•. Coli 614-446-31&lt;W
aft• 7PM.

75

Mixed My- ar etfelta ~ aquarli
balM. Ml&amp;ld hey - larva round
bolea. Coli 114-281-3334.
Jecklon. Ohio.
-::----_:.-:-----·lcMiud hay or etfata kl ICIUM'a
1111•. Mixed hay ln lttg• round
bal•• · C•ll 11 .. ·281-3334.

68

0.-ogonwynd

f

1982 KX 250. 1800.00. call :
304-675-4552.

Grein

Good ,nixed hey for aale. Cell
514-192-3",09.

Groam •nd Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breede ... AII
styltl. l•m• Pllt Food o..a.r.
J•llo Wol&gt;l&gt; I'll. 81 4--·0231 .

'·

cond~lon. 1950. Call 514-319-

2511 .

Ready mix conCt"et. and Ill
cor.crtte auppliet. Call u• Valley
Brook Cement 1ncl SuppiiM,
304-713-1234.
'
Peta for Sale

i'

..

1

(0:30)
(J) D(J) ABC Newal;:l
CD Nlglllly Su""*• Report
I!)) IIIIIJ CBB Nawa
(!] Body Electric. .
I!JIInaldl Pollllca '18
"IIJ) WKRP 1t1 Cincinnati
• (!)Too Cloee lor .Comfort
8:35 Cil Caral lutn111l
7:00 (]) RtmlngtOn SIMla Sting
of Steele
' ·
11 (J) PM Magulna
!!J College BatlciiiHIII
(J) Colllge IIII""IIIHIII
CJ (J) Peoplo'o Court
CD t!!J MocNell/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
iii)Newl
iiJI Moneyllne
• iiJI i!JJ Wheel of Fortun•

Motorcycles

I

!
. I I 1· I "

Super !!owl of Sparta Tm.t.

1111 v..,eh• vz 12&amp;.. EllCeli.,.t ,

Uve1tock

Oak ftNWood. C.H 304-~75- , Rog. h011 . Yo"'-wt. IIOibo.
2717 1fler 4:30p.m. Alit lor llnedint only-UIO. Shoto. One
Woodman.
..., old. Colll14-211-6101.

1030 c.oo trwoto" c.-. Puff.
Mutt be IMft 1o ..,.,. . . I
bonom plow.. u•u• a'11 diM.
•4710. Cott 'I14-ZII-18ZZ.

Noah's bu1ineu floundered till he Clime up
·With a promotional Idee.

74

1---.-----..,..---

2

1.

"al

~

I I I 1I
t

1:0&amp; (J) Allcl
1:30
iiJI NBC Nlghdy Newo

1971 Ford Bronco.
cond, I
13,000.00
fl•m . good
304-ee22681 ..

Wanted to Buy·

'·

~r-u,_lT.:..,t"-c,_l-~I i

(l) Happy Dtyt

1'Ji loordwallc I

'

be·

. 1-1-,:1

iiJI Sllow8f1 Today
IIJ) Fecta ol 1.111
•

·..

BINGOS

(J) I!Df • G2l ,

CD Dr. Who

t-..

the

I

(!] Rudlng Rainbow

11891. Coli 114-241-8087 ··-

. . 8PM .

Rlorronge ·letters of
0 four
scrambled words

low to form four 1irnple wOf'dt .

•

(JJ SpotULook

------~--~~--~
"
1981 Ford Bronco. Exoel.cond. :··

~y

1:00 (Jj Cra&amp;y Ulle 1 FOJt Bum
(J) . (i) •

S©~JllJ.-J&amp;£!rS*
CLAY I . POLLAN-------

WOlD
IAMI

- - - - - - - - - - E41tod

I

ill)-·

•

1182 Oodgt 250 Rem. Custom
COIWII'IIon. Tr. . . Nidy. CaM
114-448·4383 doyw, 441-0131
ewnt. • weekendl.

1HZ Oldt C - I PI, PI, AT, V•l, "'13,471.00. 104-171-1700.

Ntw dttuu 2 Br .• equipped
- E'"'ollont
loatdon. No p.... Dap. II rtf.
_ ,... _ Colll14-44a-1210.

TIIAT DAILY
PUZILII

!VI!NiNO
•

:;;::::;:==.::;::;:;;::
.
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

A - "".. 11150. .eon 114-

khchort, low -

THURS., FEB. 4

Trip

I

1961 350 · Chovy plcloup, lotop '
bod. ,....,....,. u .ooo. 304- ,
515-5022.

U Haul ·trucks and trill. . lor
rent, 304-876-7421 .

,.,.. Z IR . 4 1&gt; mlloo !Yom
Gallfpolil. ltoVe, refrig. 11 wit•
tumithtd. No peU. t211a mo.
C.oll814-4411-803e.

•

ule · or· 101 owr PIYft'll'ita. 1
Contoct 814· 98~-4107« 614982-2481.

1 979 Ford pick-up truck. Good
shape. t800. Trail• and lot tor
11le. 383 Pert St., Middleport.
18000. 114-192·5881. .

Fun,lahed · 2 BA . lptlrlment.
Adults onty .. No pete. lnq'*e et
Firft &amp;. Olive St .. aak for 8oH
Stilner.

Television
Viewing

19el Ch..., 1 -10. oxtond cob.

For aalt, good uHd gasolln•
powered chein uwe and
trlmm. .. Ct11614·882· 2914.
Sa•• Arc Weldw, t226. 1912
school bus. runs good, •soo.
3157 Colt King Cobra Pistol.
30.06 Model 4 Remington
Semi-Auto . 22 Magnum 14
Model Wlnchest..- lever eCtlon.
Coll814-882-3547.

BORN. LO.:&gt;.:.n

Ohio

~· uctfllflt condition. For ~o

10 Days UrM Is e-.h with
approwd credit. 3 MUM OUI
BUII,vih Rd. Opwt hm to 8pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 11•· 441·
0322 .

pwnera.

Pometuy~Mfddleport._

February 4. 1988 •

~

814-«a.UII.

.,.n,

J • I FURNITURE
{Formally Par.on's Furniture)
1411 Eeettrn Ave.
Uvlng room lllittt from f179 •
up. Bedroom tul* t489.85 a
up. -Complete microw1ve atendl
t39.1&amp; • up.
·
'
Corne in and meal the new

~.

Sale

19e5 S-10, hpd. w'Hrwlthair.:
Alpine ttereo. Price t7000. Call ~

au--nrm
nze.

Furnished epartment-7' Nail.
OoiHJiollo. 1 eA. t221. UtHMioo
pold. C.oii--&lt;W18 attor7 PM.

Rl!llLiiS

41

Merchandi se

&amp;of• end ch-'" prlaed from
1385 1011111. Tobloo tiO ond
up to 1121. H5d•a·beda t310
to 1511. Aedinen t221 10
1315. Lompa Ul to 1125.
Dlnett.. 11ot and up to •411.
Wood table w-e chalre e285 10
t111. Doo&amp; 1100 up to *37L
HutcMa *400 end up. lunk
btd1 complllle w-,...lb ••
Us&amp; ond up to Uti. loby1110. Mettr..... orboxiPrinlt
luH o• 151.
178. lind ·
ue.
King·
1310. 4 driJiwer chMt e89. Gun
cabin• I
Ols or Mectric
flngll tl71 . ..by ,.,........
135 • 141. ._. from• 120,
130 6 King !rome 110. Gaod
aalection of bedroom aultea,
metal cabintts.. hMdboards t30
and up to tiS&amp;.

V ..l.., FumituN
New and UMcl furnttuN lnd
eppllcenc11 . Ctll 814·448·
7172. Houra 9-1.

T rvckl for

M Toyot. pickup. Excellen~'
candltion. 14.000 mill... 4 ayl.l
.... t4tl5 or tell• owr pay·
mtnu. Cell 814-. .e.IZ34 • •;
for Dow.

Acreage

Commerci•l property tnd ho~o~H
lots-Oallipolit ~rry . Call 304675 -6801.

Wanted to Do

72

A~rtment
for R1nt ·

EHicency eprertment. Private
_.ranee. One rooM , ground
IIPor, kltchenerte • b.-h. Utllld• patd. t100 d..,.. ref. r•
quired. t175 e mo. C•ll 814· .
.WI-11115.

H .. p W1nted

N•"" bobyoinM to como to my
homa. 2 ehitdren. Uva clo.. to
· 1 R 1
._, ~-II
hosprt.
·
e · raqulrwl.. ~

44

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

rlnot. Jewelry , ltertlftg w~. old
TO(I
Pri-_
. .. Ed I _ .. _
_
2nd. A.VIi. M'dd'tpart, ()h. 11•112-1471.

11

Th.....y. February 4. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

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KUPPKO

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AND 00'1', 80IIII'l1IING ALWA!B , _
USUAlLY '11111 H08II f1' '!OlJW1
-.

.. ~·.
'

.,

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...
..

•I

�'

.,Ill 1~The Daily Sentinel

'

Thursday.

Pomeroy- Midcleport. Ohio

. ·~\:..

Febr~.~.

1988

(:olumbia Township Stocks ·
gets first responders ~,:.;;,::.
•

Church
•
notices

'•

Dally stock prices

:

Through the effor~s of the Center by Donald L. Stivers. Am Electric Power .. ........... 2S14
Meigs County Emergency Medl- training coordinator for the AT&amp;T ................................ .29 'h
cal Services, theColumblaTown- 'Meigs EMS. .
·
Ashi~Jnd 011 ... , ........... ............57
ship Volunteer Fire Department
The group will respond with a· Bob Evans ........., ................ l SlA
and the Columbia Township fire department · engine at the Charming Shoppes ......... ... ,.I 2%
Trustees. better coverage of present tlme until a rescue truck City Holding Co ......... ......... . 29
medical emergencies Is expected ·can be obtained · to carry the Fe(leral Mogul. ....... ,.... .. .. ... 36 %."
In Columbia Township with the necess;~ry equipment.
Goodrear T&amp;R .... ~ ..............57 ¥..
addition of the first responder
"This group bas worked hard . Heck s Inc .... .. ...................... ,2
group for the Columbia Fire In gettlqg their training · and
Key ~n!urlon .............. .. ....39¥..
, Department:
-· equipment and are a welcom~
Lands End .................. · .. .. .. l9~
The pilot project backed bv group for our system,"· said
Limited Inc . .. ..................... 17'!4
the Meigs County 'Emergency Robert Byer, ad min!strator tor Multimedia Inc ................... 55¥..
Medical Services, went on line on the county EMS system.
Rax Resta.u rants .. ......... ....... 3%
Dec. lOwith eight first responder
The pilot project Is for one year Robbin~ &amp; Myers ................. 8~ "
trained personnel to handle-life but will become a permanent Shoney, s Inc ....................... 21~
threatening situations !n.Colum- arrangement lflhesystemworks
Wendy s Inti ........................ 5~
· bla ToWJishlpuntllanEMSsquad as planned. Byer reports .
Worthington Ind .... .. ............ l7~
,arrives ..
:rhe responder group members
recertiY completed · the state
certified 40 ho.u r first responder
Free From E~ka
course and are equipped to
How to Beat Housework! .
handle medical emergomcles
A 111• .,...,., •eo page
along with the Meigs EMS squad
ha;dcover bOOk. Yours 8t
from Rutland.
no additional coal when
you purchase a Eurel(a •
Ricky Bailey has been placed
cht•ner for 180.00 or
In charge pi the group by ilre
more. See dealer for
chief. James Gason. who along
with Allee Llevlng. Don Cheadle .
Randy Lelving , June Jones,
Beulah Perry, and Marco Jeffers
make up the eight who were
trained at the· EMS Training

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number

'

Pick 4

1247

Page6

...

at y

_,.

.

cm-

Vol.38. No.118

enttne

arrives. Members of the group are, front. I to r,
June Jones, Alice Lleving, Beulah'" Perry; back, 1
to r, Ricky Bailey, ofllcer in charge; Randy
Lieving, James Gason, fire chief; Don Cheadle
and Marco Jefiers. •

I

--Local news briefsRelease report on EMS calls

Area deaths ··

Tabatha VanMatre

I

Wednesday, Feb. 3. 1988, on the
Thbatha Dawn VanMatre, infant day of her birth, at Pleasant Valley
~ughter of Bany D. and Robyn
Hospillll.
·
Gtbbs VanMatre, New Haven, died
Other survivors are mlllemlil
, Sf!Uldparents, Mr. and Mrs. Gary L.
Gtblls,
Mason;
palmlal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul D.
VanMatre, lelart; palemal great.grandfather,
Harold
Giboo,

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services made
236 runs &gt;n January, Robert Byer, county administrator.
reports.
Runs by the va r ious units to make up the total include
Middleport, 36; Pome roy, 57; Racine. 29; Rutland 28·
Syracuse, 1.1. transfer units. 55. and Tuppers Plains 20. Unit~
took 86 patients to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 40 to Holzer
Medical Center: eight to Plea's a nt Valley Hospital and 103 to
other hopsltals.
All units were driven 7,794.4 mil es during the month, an
average of 31.4 mil es per call.

c.

Ohio hit by heavy
snow early today .

Hartford;

malemal

$5995

grea~-

Helen Gibbs qf
.. paJema1
grea\,

grandmother,

By United Press international
A wlnt!!~ storm late Wednes- Mason;
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. David
day and early today dumped at
least a ha lf·foot of snow In parts H. VanMatre, West Columbill;
gre&amp;-grandmothet
of northern Ohio, forcing schools maternal to close and making traveling Pauline E. Greathouse, Middlep:lrl:
Ohi~; several aunts, uncles an~
difficult.
·
Snowfall in northern counties COUSIDS.
Gravesi~Je
services
were
condll&lt;j
ranged from 5 \7 Inches In Toledo
to 6 Inches In Cleveland, with 3. 7 led today at 2 p.m. at the Sunrise
Inches in Youngstown and 2 Memorial Gardens, Letart with J!IISIa Rjck MOQney officiating.
·Inches in the Akron-Canton area.
Foglesong Funeral Home was in
Elsewhere. Dayton received 1.7
inches, and Columbus re,Ported charge of seiVices.
1.3 inches .
, A win ter storm warning re·
ma !ned In effect early today for
northeast Ohio and a snow
advisory was posted for east
V eterails Memorial
central areas.
·
Wednesday Admissions - Can·
The snow was expected to dace Tillis , Rutland; Edna Lee.
diminish to snow flurr.tes today
Shade; Hugh Leifheit. Pomeroy;
with skies clearing this evening Gertrude Bass, Pomeroy; Roand temperatures falling to near bert . Lemley. Syracuse; Betty
zero In parts of the's(ate tonight.
Willis, Racine; and Paul MI -.
Doze ns of schools in the north·
chael. Pomeroy.
ern part of the state were closed
Wednesday Discharge : Ruby
today due to the snow
Frick.

Foreclosure action filed
Action for forr losure on a mortgage has been flied by the
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. against Michael A. Mitchell and
Teresa Mitchell in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court ..
In other action in the court, Ginger Pratt and Crenson· R.
Pratt. both of Hemlock Grove, and Brya n Lawrence and Wendy
Lawrence. both of Rutland. have filed for di ssolutions of their
marriages .

Patrol reports one accident

Hospital news

The Ga llia·Meigs Post State Highway Patrol reported one
accide nt Wednesday at 3; 50 p.m . on Coun ty Road 26 in Cheshire
Township.
DavidS. Dailey. 18. LongBottom. traveling west, and Betty L.
Osterle, 45. Mason. W.Va .. traveling east, colli&lt;led on a hillcrest.
No ci tat ions were reported.
Osterle had visible injuries a nd take n to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by Emergency Medical Service of Pomeroy.

,BlUSH lOLL WITH
BEATER BAR
EUREKA ESP
UPRIGHT

....

•129.95

!054

Mull
1411
'

Powerful

4J·Amp Motor

. .

$9ft05
'7 '

• ePaallltln

0111-A·IIIP
• Pawii'•Drlv..
· ·
Vlbra-81101111r II 1111p C!Una

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

,.

•,

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

..

.

UNDERBIRD

By KATIE CROW
controlling such a situation.
SenUaeiCorrespondent
Those In violation will be
TheOh!oDepal'tmentofTransnotified by letter to remove the
'
portatlon will delermlne who has
cars. If the vehicles are not
··.
the right-of-way along SR 124 In
moved other action will be taken.
t)le upper !!lid of Syracuse
Kenneth Buckley councilman
\,
according
Mayor
Eber
Pickens
reported
that he bad received a
~- ...
dUring Thursday night's Syra- cost estimate on extending the
cuse Council meeting.
_ pool deck and necessary repair.
The area has been a bone of Council felt rather than extend
contention for several years due the deck that they should do the
to the number of traffic repair at thiS time.'
Williams pointed out tha t the
accidents.
Mayor Pickens Informed coun- village can not supplement the
.
cil that Joe Leach, diStrict pool operation. "The pool has to
deputy director of ODOT, has make money," Williams stated.
Williams also noted that at the
agreed that t)le state will make
next meeting council should
the delerminatlon.
' ..
Council was pleased to hear prepare to advertise for a pool
that
finally som~ action Is going manager and guards.
..
Following a suggestion by
to be taken. Once the determlna- ·
tion of right of way Is made It Is
Williams. council voted to grant
hoped that work cail proceed to Monty Hart the pop concession at
WHAT IT WILL LOOK LIKE -Above II u artllt'i rellderiJI&amp; soulbml ~ COIIIity. Aptos Is a partllmlllp ~~etwee• Nitlooal make the necessary changes that the pool. "We must buy locally,"
IK., 111111 WatiDPouse Specia!itJ
Set tlces,
llle- . ·
fA, tile~ ..... ~waste iadBB'atar ud -piiiJIDIRp- Electric,
.
.
'
will correct the hazardous Williams noted and council
port
•
tat A~ Ill Lllleftlle, MIDD., wuts to -blllld, Ill .
agreed. Williams also comsituation.
mented that council should apMayor Pickens &lt;1-lso announced
that two culverts will be Installed
prove all purchases.
along the highway near the Bass
Buckley reported that when
residence · by the slate with cinders are placed on village
'
.
council to bear the cost of the streets they should be spread out
more and not plied In one spot.
culvert.
cutbaQks .
.
said.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Un- million.
Jim Hill, councilman, reported
Mayor Pickens also announced
The number of unemployed
. ·J obs .In the services sector,
Maqufacturlng added 25,000
empl~t ·Was unchanged In
that the Meigs County Health
jobs to the economy compared .,_that the Syracuse Emergency
which has provided a large share
January aU.8 perceJ\t. the Labor periiOnJ In January was 7 mUUon,
Department
has given a resident .
Squad
will
be
receiving
a
n,
e
w
wl!h an average 60,000 per month
~~wrtmen~aal~ Thepropor, of · n~w jobs In recent months;
~~!lld today, ·~ ·lOW·
erru!rgency
squad
by
the
last
of
30
dayS'
to
)look
onto the 'sewer .
Uob df the tl.S. P,OP~-t~~n:~ .~~tew by qnly 30,000 la~t month: !'11\k\~ the second haU of 1987.
~~~·-i'iiiillliliil-i•1M. - ...+ . ,.,
and
60days
to clean up an
system
MIP'ch,
Tbe~ergencyvehlcle!s
Little gain occurred In the· -'Whne· lll!lil&amp;tries related to autos
Joli' cJ"Ntlon ilowed last month working bit a record 62.1 percent ·
provided
by
r;telgs
County
Emeropen
sewer.
'
' · ·
finance, Insurance arid real est- and construction showed· wea·
In lierillcet and a'llanufacturlng In Jllluary.
also
reported
that,
Hill
gency
Medical
Services
kness, the department said, job
All figures were adjusted for ate Industries, signs of retrenchlndllstrtes, the aource of. tre~
Pickens and councilman Jack weather permitting, work on
growth In machinery and electrl·
·· ment In the financial Industry
mendous job IIJ'OWth In the past seasonal variations.
Williams
also brought to coun- cleaning, painting and repair at
There was little or no change In following the stock market col.
cal equipment Industries con·
year. white employment In concil's
attention
that Inoperable
the ballparks wtll get underway
the jobl~s rates for adult men lapse 1n October.
,
tlnued tb Increase.
struction and rnlnlna declined.
cars
located
on
private
property
In
preparation for the upcoming
and women at 5.1 . percent,
Jobs In health services rose by
Within sectors that produce
Total civilian employment, as
Continued on page 12
. non-durable goods, there were are In violation. of an ordinance
measured · by ' the Bureau of teenagers at 16 percent, whites at 35,1100, the department said.
5
percent
aild
blacks
at
12.2
Of
175,1100
payroll
jobs
added
In
employment gains In the publishLabor Statistics' househOld sur·
vey, rose by 385,00Q last month to percent. The UJ!employment rate . January, 155,000 were In the . Ing, printing and food Industries,
but those Improvements were
114.1 miiUon as the clvllJan·labor for Hispanics fell· to 7.2 percent ·retail trade Industry as employpartly offset by los~s In textiles
force expanded by 450,000 to 12p from 8.1 percent, ~he department ers made fewer post-holiday
and apJl!lrel.
$'~
There'wasadropof15,(1(X)jobs
duplication."
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) He said the merger of 53 of the
Construction employment fell Congress did Its job In beefing up district's Federal Land Bank
the farm credit system with a $4
tor at the Meigs &lt;;ounty Board:qf
by 50,000 after showing strength billion loan and now administraWedemeyer Indicates that the
Associations and 30 ol35 Produc•A commonty llealth and early
from October through De·
MR-DD. She will conduct needs
1980
federal
census
figures
show
Credit Associations also
tion
tors of the money must get It to
education grant' of $3,000 has
ceml!er. the department said.
that there are approximately assessments of Identified chUdhelped
efforts to reduce operatbeen award.ed by the Ohio
ren, and referral to early .child·
The average workweek of farmers In need and ensure the Ing costs of the district.
1800 children under six J;"eS!dlng
government Is repaid, an official
Developmental Disabilities
production or non-supervisory
In the county and says that a·· . hood agencies, as well as present
"Once the system regains
says.
.
Planning Council to the Meigs .
workers on private non·
conservative estimate suggests '.throughout the year 12 early
financial
stability , the Interest
of
a
"slreamUnlng"
of
Details
County Board of Mental Retardaagricultural payrolls was unapproximately 11.8 percent of childhood education public
paid
by
the
government during
the
operations
of
the
farm.
banks
tion, Lee Wedemeyer, superln·
·changed In January at·34.7 hours
these chUdren will receive spe- awareness programs.
10
years
will be repaid."
the
first
about
.70,000
farmerservittg
tendent, announced today.
The grant has the potential,
while the manufacturing work- ,
services
from
oili!
cial'
education
Montgomery
said.
"The system
stockholders In Tennessee, Ken:
The Meigs County Board of
according to Wedemeyer. to
week rose ,0.1 hour to 41.1 hours. tucky, Ohio and Indiana, were Is also required to repay the
of the three local school districts
MR-DD operates early childhood
Increase cooperative interdlsclFactory overtime remained high
In Meigs County sometime In
.outlined Thursday by Steven principal. "
programs for chUdren with de·
pl!nary
diagnosis,
treatmen~.
.
at
3.9 hours per week, the
their school career.
.
·He said the farm credit bank
Montgomer:t, president and
velpmental delays, ages up to
department said.
· These approximately 216chlld- Individual service plans for at·
been much more market'
has
chief
executive
.
officer
of
the
·
six. Services Included case man·
lncludlqg the armed forces, Farm Credit Banks of Louisville. oriented over the last few years.
risk children, consumer Involvere'n, he says, could ·benefit from
agentent, early childhood educa·
total u!U!mployment In January
early Intervention services, par- ment, family support, evaluation
" We've developed Joan pro"In 1986 our district board of
lion. speech and language ther·
was 5. 7 percent.
ticularly In view of the county's and comprehensive services.
grams
which will better. serve
direCtOrs
placed
our
three
disapy, physical therapy,
high
poverty
level,
unemploy·farmers
and agriculture cooller·
trict
banks
under
common
man· occupational therapy, adaptive
ment rates, and teenage preg,atlves,"
he said. "We're now
agement,"
he
said.
"This
move
physical education.
nancy figures .
providing
to farmers and their
enhanced
our
operating
effiFamily resourr.es which In·
The major goal of the grant Is
cooperatives
both fixed and
ciency, allowed us better coordiA Syracuse youth was cited In an accident Thursday, at 8: 15
elude respite care both In home
to develop a local system which
variable·
Interest
rate loan
nation among the district's banks
p.m ., In Sutton Township on S.R. 124, just west of Racine,
and out of •hOme services. train- describes how Meigs County will
.
and associations and cutdown on programs.
according to the Ga!Ua·Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Ill&amp; and counseling for parents
cooperatively approach and lm·
Christopher R. Stout, 16, headed west, was cited for failure to
and members of the family,
plementll essential comporients
control after h~ lost control of his 1984 Chevrolet Camara. The
special diet assistance, purchase - of a comprehensive early Intervehicle went oft.the right side•of the road and overturned. Stout
or lease of special equipment and
vention plan. These Include child
wall not Injured.
· assistance In modifying the home find, diagnosis alld assessment,
A Racine man was cited following a,n accident Thursday, at
to fac!Utate .tile care of. the evaluation and an Individual
7:35p.m.,
In Salls!Jury Township on County Road 26,just south
Individual. are also considered.
service plan as well as staff
of S.R. 7.
,
Other local agencies who pro- training philosophy developRacine V!page receipts for ·
Council gave a first reading to
Chestet
A.
Ross,
19,
who
was
drivlqg
south
(Uphill)
was cited
vide early childhood services to ment, family support, •a nd case
January totaled $17,267.95 while
an ordinance authorizing the
for drlvlq wltbout a license after the engine of hiS 1979 Pontiac
chlclren work In a collaborative management services.
expenditures for the month totrustees of the Board of Public.
Grand Prix stopped running. The car rolled backwards Into-a
eHort with til~ grant fund
taled $41,780.59.
Affairs to expend an amount In
Grant coordlator Is Ms. Kat·
ditch.
through the. Meigs County Board hleen l.eubbert, program dlrec·
This was the report when
excess $1,00o to have the Interior
ofMR·DD.
Racine VIllage Council met In of the water system storage tank
regular leSSion. It was noted that cleaned and recoated to extend
the large expenditure was due, In
the to' year warranty on the tank.
part, to the yearly fire truek loan
Fire Chief Robert Johnso'n
'
payment
and
the
annual
Insureported .t hat seven_pages (radio
Next l'uesday, two oiher comPUCO. He did.
By LICE p!:ONABD
trial Commllaion; which he·tett a
rance
premiums.
receivers) have arrived and are
mlllloners
wtll
give
the
commitReached Thursday evening by
month ago to join the PUCO.
VPI ll&amp;ateltiM!If RePorter
Clerk
Jane
Beegle
reported
a
now In use by the firemen. He
tel!
their
version
of.
the·
contract
telephone, ~ aovernor aald It
COliUMBUS- Gov. Richard
· They focused primarily on
cuh
balance
of
all
funds
totaling
repOrted
the department · ha.d
wu premature to talk about approval.
Celeste hu left the door . open approval of a $1.1 mUlloa unbid
$112,013.31
and
making
up
that
answered
two fire calls In Janu.'
Sea. Richard Finan, Rwlthdraw!Dg Lancuter's nomlthi'OIIah whlcll Leonard LaDCiil- te~ae le- contrll!t with tbe
total
are:
.
general
.
fund
,'
ary.
The
mayor's report for
ter may back out u bls nominee same poUtlealb'-eonnected finn uuon. He said be wanted addl· CIDCIIIDatl, coinmlttee , cbalr$19,032.48;
street
fund,
January
showed
a collection of
maa, · said hll members were
tl~l Information aboUt the
to tbe Public Utilities eoltimts- whlcll has cloDe bulblell · with
$12,020.06;
fire,
$20,575.18;
state
$1,329.70
In
bonds
and tines.
"very upset" by the tetUmony.
betrlq,
several other 1tate qeacletl.
slon of. Ohio.
bJahway,
$3,82U9;
water
reSeveral
..
projects
were dis·
.Uked If It were posalbte be "If tbe vote were held today, I
l.a¥11ter wu foatlh, at belt,
LaDCuter, a Maa~'~ll"'' lttGr·
venue,
$64,036.
72;
cemetery,
culled and council moved Into
would Wltlldraw the nomblaUon, would vote not to confirm Mt.
ney and labor flpre, Thunclay OD a llllt furlllalled by an 11$2,161.41;
water
depo11t1,
executive
seaslon before recessI,ncaeeer,"
he
said.
"I
do
not
Celelte
Nllld:
''What
Ia
Ohio's
wu put tllroulll the I'IIVIt lllte- member PUCO Nominating
$3,165.97;
cemetery
eDdowuaent,
Ing
.until
·
7
p.m. on Feb. 15 at the
lllllltOT"
Ollo'l
motto
II,
''With
beUeYe
thllll
a
per1011
that
ouaf!t
conflrmatlon bHrlq In at 1eut CoUDCU frOID whlcb Celate
S6,!100.
Shrine
Club
Park build Ina.
·
to be on one of tile molt powerful
10 yean at the Statebaule. Tile CMM a .-.or 110 retlrlq God All Tldllil ~ Polllbte."
Council
agreed
to
readVertlle
a
Atlelldlna
the
met!llna
were
Senate Wa)fl and IIII•Commlt· commllltoaer WIDiam Broob. - DudDa • faar..IIOur llllellq, and MJIIIUve I!OI1IIIll.nloaaiD tills 1973 Chevrolet dump triiCk for
Mayor Frank Cleland, Clerk
It had beell Widely reported
tbe ~lell&amp;torlellcltldCCIIItra- stata."
tee btariDI wu rteeAed untu
sale
after
rejectlar
four
eealed
Beetle; Council members, Rq·
But Sen. Mlcbael White, DdlclorY tlltlmolly h'Gm LIDeU·
that Celllte plaiiiMICI to llhutne
next 'f'WidJY.
.
on
the
veblele.
The
blcll
received
Majority ftlpublleana, wllo are LIN'IIter aut al tile OIC to make m alld Tllllotlly O'Jk'lea. cUrec- . Clewlaad, atllltlllr eommtttee tl'IICk wiU DOW be offered tor sale bert~ Henry Berltz, 'Car·
roll
rd, IUcbardWamstey,
at tile IIIIDllMr, IWIU- tha Republtroom for Trauportallon Direc- · tor at
tbrea..D'"I to blook WKUter'l
by
-led
bldl
on
ll&gt;.onday,
Feb.
·Lar!'Y WOU. llld S COlt Wob,
ColdlmlatiOII, Ill I'll . I , tor WillTetl Sllllth, uc1 tbat conlllll.lllaa. •J~out boW the tl-1 C8111 CJI '111D IliUM CJ1 the leglala- 15.
trlre Clllef Robert 'John and
~
....
,
...
oalltract
wu
'UW
'NY!Iw
procue."
"lklllli.Y" elld ''loole'' apll'atloa ~ •would llllface at tile
Mll'lllll
KeUb Harter. . . ;
WIM!d laat hly.
·'
u ehalnnu Ill tilt Oblc) IJJdv1•
'

.

..'

.Jobless .figure

re~ains..same

~QUIPPED

•AM/FM CASSEnE
•TILT WHEELS
•FRONT &amp; REAR
· FLOOR MATS
•PREMIUM S()UND SYSTEM
•POWER WINDOWS ' .
et.EATHER WRAPPED
STEERING WHEEL
TOTAL VEHICLE PRICE WITH OPnONS$16,87900
OPTION P~CICAGE SAYINGS
40000
,•
PAT 'HILL'S .DISCOUNT
1,57900
.

•AIR CONDITIONING
•SPEED CONTROL
•PAINT STRIPE
·•ILLUMINATED
ENTRY SYSTEM
•POWER LOCKS
'CAST ALUMINUM WHEELS

WITH

•V-S
•POWER LOCKS
•TILT WHEEL

•DUAL POWER SEATS
•POWER WINDOWS
•PREMIUM SOUND SYSTEM
::~:ri~~::~:~: .TRANS •TURBO HOOD SCOOPS &amp; GRillE
• . •PLUS MORE
TOTAL VEHICLE PRICE WITH OPTIONS S18,29800
OPTION PACKAGE SAYINGS
81500
PAT HILL'S DISCOUNT
1,98300
7 60000
MANUFACTURER'S REBATE

I

MANUFACTURER'S REBATE

,- -----

TOTAL PRICE DELIVEiED
ONlY TAX &amp; nnE EXTRA

FORD

$14,_900

TOTAL PRICE DELIVERED $
o•Y TAX &amp; "TTTLE IITU

·

75000

141 1.s·0
'

PAT HILL FORD INtJ.

461 SO. THIRD

J

-DL.OIT

.

.

~~;~~~o~.m~.stlylnollandgas

credit system
:streamlines operations

Two drive,rs cited after a~idents

EQUIPPED WITH

BUT LOOKS LIKE ·A TURBO COUPE

in January

~arlil

992-3871

' .

SPORTS MODEL

ODOT will
rule on issue
in Syracuse

.' ''·.

·
.
d
d
000
G.· rqup awar e ..J, .. grant

1988 FO

2 Sectiono. 1I Pogeo 26 Conts
A Multimodllo Inc. Nowopop.,

. Pomeroy-Middleport•.Ohio, Friday, February 5.1988

1988

...

Clear tonight. Low between
zero ud five. Sunny Saturday.

•

•

..

FIRST RESPONDER GROUP - These are
members of the first Columbia Fl~ Department
responder group wllo have been trained to handle
Ute threatening .emergency situations in the
townhsip until a ~ounty e mergency servic~ 'unit

601

' 992~2196

Racine Village Council
•
covers routme matters
•

•

.·Celeste may withdraw I aneaster nomination

._tllllta•

l

••

•

--

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