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                  <text>Page 1().-..;The Deily Se ,.. ,..

Tuutley,jebnJerY 9, 1988..

Pomerov Mldcleport. Ohio

-Local news briefs- Arctic cold front ·moves east early todayf
Amesville man cited by patrol

.

.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services rejlorts foutcalls
Monday; Tuppets Plains at 9:03a.m. to Rye Road for Carrie
Osborne to Veterallli Memorfll Hospital; PQmeroy at 2:35p.m.
to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Murl Douelas to V:eterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 5:43p.m. to White Hill Road for
Daisy Haggy to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:43
p.m. to Long St. for Gilbert Maynard to Holzer Medical Center.

By Ullited Preas lntenlatloll&amp;l
An arctic cold front tbat
brought snow to the Midwest and
drove temperatures as low as 37
below In the northern Plains
Inched east today, losing a bit of
Its snap and scattering snow
around the Great Lakes.
Tbe cold northern air breachIng the Canadian border as the
week opened will . move east,
blanketing m11ch of the Midwest
and Great Lakes and·headlng !or
the East Coast, said Bill Hlrt or
the National Weather Service.
"Zero (readings) and singledigit lows will move from Omaha
east to Chicago and Detroit. By
Thursday, there'll • be single

Eastern pupils to sell items

______;,..Weather-----

The Gallla-Melgs Post or the State Highway Patrol re5ponded
to an accident Monday, at 5:30p.m., In Bedford Township on
u.s. 33, just west of County Road 37.
.
Emma G. Shiller, 47, of Racine, was driving east before she
stopped In ·traffic. Upon making the stop, her car was hit !rom
behind by a car driven by Raymond ·H. Maxwell, 69, of
Amesville.
Maxwell was cited for assured clear distance. ·

EMS .ha.s four Monday calls
t

1.,'

Students of the Eastern High School Sophomore Class will be
taking orderd beginning tomorrow (Wednesday) for a variety
of Item~ ranging from nuts to Eastern candy. The students are
raising money for next year's prom, tbelr senior trip, and.other
upcoming events.
.
.
.
Some of the Items being sold Include mixed nuts, Currier
and !yes tin of assorted cookies, a solid milk chocolate bunny, a
bunny drinking cup with a plush bunny Inside, and much more.
The sale ends Feb. 17.
'
For more Information on Items being sold, or to place orders,
call Elizabeth Bryant at 985-3376, Amy Murphy at 667-6353, or
Robin White at 696-1077.
· ·

a

Free shade trees available

. ,;
The National Arbor Day Foundation Is giving ten free shade
trees to each person who joins the nonprofit Foundation during
.
February 1988.
A Red Oak, Weeping Willow, Sugar Maple, Green 'Ash,
Thornless Honeylocust, Pin Oak, . Sycamore, Tullptree,
European Mountatnash . and Red Maple tree will be given as
part of the Foundation's campaign to encourage tree planting.
These trees were selected to provide shade and beauty, and a
variety of forms, lea! shapes and fall colors, according to John
·Rosenow, the Foundation's executive director.
The Foundation will give tfle ten free trees tomembers
contributing $10 during February. The six-to-twelve Inch trees
will be shipped this spring between Feb. 1 and May 31 when
conditions are right for planting. They will be sent with enclosed
planting Instructions and are guaranteed to grow or they will be
replaced free by tbe Foundation.
.
To become a member of the Founda lion and to receive the
free trees, a $10 membership contribution should be sent to Ten
Shade Trees, National Arbor Day Foundation, l!Xl Arbor Ave.,
Nebraska City, Neb., 68410, postmarked by Feb. 29.

tinvn-owned.s~ntinued from page 1

·Discuss

television service would be about
$12,000. Mayor Hoffma11 Indicated that he has not received an
equlpme~t cost estimate which
was to have been prepared about
six months ago.
Council President Dewey Hor'
ton charged that Consolidated
Communications Group Is not
sensitive to the heeds ot this
community. He commented that
he believes the company should
offer local programing and affordable advertising to local
merchants ..
Mayor Hoffman Indicated that
he likes the idea of maintenance
sharing of a cable system with
Syracuse VIllage. The discussion
brought out that Mid~leport
Village officials are golnJLto be
making a trip to a West VIrginia
community which has established its own cable service.
Officials hope at tnat time to
gather tips and Information on
how to proceed. Middleport offi·
c lals invited the two Syracuse

•

councilmen to accompany them
on.the trip or they will pass on to
Syracuse officials all o! tbe
Inform a tlon they get on how to
proceed .
In other matters last night,
councll gave a third reading and
approved an ordinance which
provides pay raises !or village
employees as of March 1. The
mayor's report showing receipts
of $5,444 In fines and fees for
January wa~ approved.
Sealro bids received on the
purchase of used well drilling
and pulling equipment were
opened. The bids were from Jobn
Bass of Dexter and C. J. Lemley
of Vinton. Bids will be turned
over to the Board or Public
Affairs for study and
recommendation.
Councilman Bob Gilmore reported that a miniature golf
course, carrying out a localtlver
theme, Is being readied . for
Hartinger Park by Mini Golf,
Inc., and Is to ·be Installed by
Apri11 on a 100 by 70 foot plot.ln
the park.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck
Calvin Hawk, Tuppers Plains, and Councilman Horton, Gilhas flied suit In Meigs County more, Jack Satterfield, WIU!am
Common Pleas Court against the · Walters and James Clatworthy .
Meigs County Commissioners.
The suit stems from an animal
claim submitted by Hawk to the
commissioners In July 1986. The
claim for the loss of 63 streep was
Veterans Memorial
settled by the commissioners In
Admitted- Leo Curtis, P()meApril · 1987 when they Issued
Hawk a check for $945, or $15·per roy; Marie Young, Portland;
head of sheep. Hawk feels he was Carrie Osborne, Reedsville;
not compensated fairly and that Lloyd Harman, Langsville:
he should have been awarded $50 Belva Fisher. Racine; Muriel
per head, or $3,150. He Is asking Douglas, Pomeroy; Iris Baker,
the court to award him further Syracuse; Daisy Haggy, Rucompensa lion for the loss of the tland: Frank Wolford. VInton;
Cindy Stalens, Racine.
sheep.
Discharged - Robert Lemley,
Nationwide Insurance, Columbus. has flied an action against Marty Morarlty, Cecil
B&lt;lnnie Smith. Delcle Forth and Roseberry.
Dorothy Baker, all of Middleport, requesting judgment or Licences issued
I $3,972.97.
·
The case of Brady Gilbert,
Marriage licenses bave been .
doing business as Gilbert's Issued in Meigs County .Probate
Exxon: Cheshire, against Dan Court to Jesslee Kenneth Clayton
Smith . doing business as D-.J.'s Kimes, 22, Racine. and Julie Ann
Trading PoS'I. Middleport, has Bl ron, 26, Middleport; Frankllne
been transferred from county Ernest Sbiltz, 55, Albany, and
court to common pleas.
Arlene Gay Harvey, 45, Albany.

·'•

dlilts from Nebras}la'to Pennsyl·
vanla arid eastern New York,"
Hlrt said.
. · Temperatures were generally
below zero thlll momlDI across
parts of Minnesota, . North Dakota and Wisconsin. But the.
lowest recorded temperature as
o! 2 a.m. EST was 10 below uro
at Minot, N.D.
That reading was a mar~ed
~mprovement over Monday
night's lows, which Included
temperatures of more than 30
below In northern Minnesota.
E;mbarrll&amp;B, Minn., reported a
low of 37 below, and International
Falls, Gran{! Rapids and Bemidji
all reported.23 below.

Extended Forec..t
Thunday tbrou111 Saturday
A chance of snow flurries
Thursday, · wttb fair weather
Friday and Saturday. Highs will ·
be In the l!!ens Thursday, climbIng Into tbe 20s Friday and Into
the 30s Saturday. Overnight lows
will range from zero to 10 above
uro early Thursday, ranging
from five to 15 Friday morning
and In the teens early Saturday.
Soulb Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of snow and highs be-

Announcements

Stoc~

Plan to sing
Mr.andMrs.Sta11Waltersand

tween 35 and 40. Mostly cloudy
tonight, with a low between 15
and 20. Mostly clouiiy Wednes4ay, with a chance ot snow and
blghs near 30.
The probability of precjpltatlon Is 40 percent today, near uro
tonight and 40 percent
Wednesday. ·
Winds will be from the northwest at five to 10 mph this
afternoon and light and variable
tonight.

Dally. stoCk prices .
· (As of .10:30 a.in.)
Bryce and Mark SmUb
of Blunt EIUs II Loewl .

. children,
Heath, Oblo,
will and
be slnglne
In
Brandy
Jason, of
Sunday's morning service at.the
Pomeroy Church o! tbe Nazarene. Tb.e serVIce begins at 9:30
a.m;
Rev. Thomas G. McClung,
Am Electric Power ............. 28'n
pastor, Invites the ·public.
AT&amp;T ............................ ... ..
Ashland 011 ........................561-f Meedng cllanred
Bob Evans ..........................
A rj!gular meeting of the
Charming Shoppes ....... ........ 13
Southern Local School District
City Holding Co .. .. ............... 32
Chapter of OAPSE scheduled for
Federal Mog)ll ............., ....... 38
this
Wednesday has been
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ,... ~ .... .. ...55\i changed to Thursday, Feb. 18, at
Heck's Inc............................. 2
tbe Southern High School.
Key Centurion ..................... 39
Lands' End ......................... 17111 . ~k. di8solution
Limited Inc . ......... ,......... .. ..16% ,
Multimedia Inc................... 53~
Dianna .L. Lawson, Syracuse,
Rax Restaurants .................. 31-f
and
Edward A. ,Lawson, Racine,
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ :........ 81-f
have
flied . In Meigs County
Shoney's lite ... .... .... .. :.. ..... .. 22%
Common
Pleas Court . for a
'1\'endy's Inti ..........................7
Worthington Ind .......... .... .. .. 17% dissolution of their marriage.

.
J
Scattered snow showers were were linked to Monday's snowtali
reported today over mucb .of the over Minnesota. Both deaths ,;
•
upper Great L'akes. Snowfall were In the Twin Cl lies area.
A separate weather system •
totals as of early thlll morning
Included 21ncbeu.t both Mac! !son prompted snow advlsorlea this ;: .
and Milwaukee, Will., and 11nc'b morning for hlgber elevations In :
at Chicago, Green Bay, Wis., and Montana and Wyoming. wbere 6
to 8 lnchea of snow was el!pected, :.:.
Grand Rapids, Mich..
Snow showers were expected the NWS said.
. :
today from tbe Great Lakes · Tbe arctic air cblllllli the:.
tbrougb tbe upper Ohio .Valley, Plains and Midwest today fol••:
and Into the cenlral Appalach- lows an Icy weekend lp whlc~ -:
Ians and western Ne\1(. Eneland. , dozens of low temperature rer •• .
Snow showers over Minnesota cords were set and Gulf Coast : .
~
Monday prompted some sc,hools cities were socked with their first
to call off classes and sent plows snow.In more· than a decade. - ·:••
Freezing temperatures we~ :
to the streets. By Monday night,
snow had drifted Into the Chicago blamed tor a !least 13 deaths - . •
area, delayliie flights up to 50 three each In Texa$, New York :
minutes at O'Hare International City and Washington, O.C., a~ ;
two each In Michigan anaI ...,.,
Airport.
At least two traffic fatalities nnnols. · :·_
~

College
roundup

s~n ...,
·
cheering supporters. "We'll flg~t·::
"In many ways, this was a tbe trade establlsbrrtent. .. . We 11"'
genUt winnowing of the. fle_ld," ' fight corporate·, raiders," Ge-,~
·said ChairWoman Bonnie Camp- pbai'dt said. "We will save the.~
bell of the Iowa Democratic family farm." ·
,
· ·;
Party.
Tbe focus of tbe presidentiaL,
A record 110,000 Democrats race now shifts to tbe New ~
at!Ppded the neighborhood meet- HampShire pri!llary, the first lb :
lngs, party leaders estimated.
tbe nation, a week from today. , '"
"We won the first battle buttbe
Allee Travis, national political :
struggle does not end here," coordinator for Dukakls,
"l
Gephardt said at a victory tblnk we'll run a very
celebration.
campaign," adding
Gepbardt grinned wlclely and recol'!ls of Gepbardt and Sirtloil,
gave the thumbs-up signal to . wouldbeupforscrutiny.

Page3

T

Stop hi Today At ·
MIDDLEPORT
FLOWER SHOP
And see qur fine line
of .Valentine
Arrangements.

l4*

_ ......"""..

..,~..... -

FLOWEil SHOP

614-992-3533

PRICES GOOD
THRU SUNDAY,
FEBRUARY 14, 1888
WE F£8EAVElHE IDIT10LIIIIT .
OUMTITD. HOT RESPOI.a&amp;
FOflll"YPPGfWWHIC~ OR

IJ.UITMTIIN - ·
'

BATHROOM
TISSUE

99~~~rr

40UNCE

BENYLIN
DECONGESTANT

•
EXPECTORANT
•
COUGH SYRUP

2q~

Free Electronic hearint tists will be givin by
Beltonl Hearing Aid (enttr at . ·

LOVING CARl!
COLOR LOTION

DR. IANIIN PICKENS' OFFICE

::' 2.99

509 Sovth 1hlrd lwe., •11•eport, Olllo

THURSDAY, FEUUAIY 11
From 9:00a.m. to 12:00 (IHn)
UMWA PIOVIDII Alii lAW PIOVM

SN().80L

TliE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEAliNG AID SPECIALIST.
Anyone who hu troublt illlrllll or und.-slliitlllll-ruiiOtllaltwjtld to
11m I frM burin&amp; lilt to Mllf IIIII JlfG•I• CHill fltiJIItllrllllllls cilpOtl
with ~ou for your FREE HEARIIIII TEST Ill $50 nlut. Adtltl 0t1Jr, pl•t.

TOUT IOWL CIIANER

'I

25 Cents

A Multimedia lrfC, N8W11Jiper

Announce 1988 theme for Heritage Weekend
and accessories, past and curParker reported that the trusShe also said she would check ·· along,'' Reed said .
Gera.rd reported that Chamber
By NANCY YOACRAM
. rent, old wedding pictures and t~ of the, Meigs Pioneer and
toseelfanyotherfestlvalswithln
Paul Gerard, Chamber presi- has In the bank over $2,300 and
SenUnel StaB Writer
family Bibles. A formal parlor · . Historical Society have changed
a 50-mile radius are scheduled dent; reported that the Chamber- dues for the year are still
Tentative plans !or June's
with flowers and candles will 'be thedateforHerltageWeekendto for \he same weekend which the sponsored recreation grant ap- payable.
Herltaee Weekend were disset up downstairs In the museum, earlier In June, In order to keep
trustees have chosen. If anotlter plication which was rejected last
He commended all individuals
cussed by . members of the
and
upstairs,
a
wedding
recepthe
event
off
Fathers'
Day
festival
Is
sclieduled,
she
will
year
by
the
Ohio
Department
of
who
contributed to the success of
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Comlion,
Including
cake
and
punch,
·
Sunday.
check
again
wltb
the
trustees
to
Development,
will
be
resubmit,
Chamber's
recent dinner-dance
merce when they met Tuesday
will'
be
featured.
Some
members
,
of
Chamber
see
If
they
would
reconsider
the
ted
this
year
for
consideration
by
at
Royal
Oak
Park and said other
for a luncheon meeting at the
Donations
'
of
furniture
and
voiced
concerns
about
the
change.
the state. Chambe~ Is requesting dances are being considered for
Trinity Church In Pomeroy.
other· Items are being accepted change, mostly regarding tbe
It was pointed out by Chamber- approximately $19,000 from the April and New Year's Eve.
Sarah Fisher and Margaret
tor the va~lous scenes Fisher possibility of the event being member Tom Reed that If the state to be used to produce
Finally, Gerard Invited
Parker, of the Meigs Pioneer and
added.
doU!lle-llsted In vacation" )&gt;ro- blsiorlcal society' wants to materials, such as slide presen-. members to attend Chamber's
Historical Society; reported .on
Taped wedding . music, ·by chures around the state, since the .change. th~ date, that Chamber tatlons and brochures, to pro- · Board of Directors' meeting on
t~~e museum's plans · for the
organist
Gerald Powell, wil) be old date was a,l ready . being should goJalong with the change mote tourism In this area. Much the first Tuesday of every month.
annual event.
·
provided
throughout tbe two pub~lshed . Parker sal!! she had since the' maln sponsor bf Herlt- ot the research for this project , and to, feel free to submit
Theme for tbls year's Heritage
days
of
Heritage
Weekend. And already sent the date change to · age Weekend Is.. the historical was completed by former Pome- Information for the Chamber
Weekend will be "Our Special
for
couples
married
65 years Of the state for the Ohio Travel society. "We've just tagged roy resident Steve Powell, and newsletter.
Day," Fisher said, and Items
lollier
who
would
like
to renew Brochure, but that she would
the Information is on file.
related to weddings will · be
their
wedding
vows,
a
complete
cbeck
again
to
make
sure
the
featured throughout tbi! muwedding ceremony, with minis- event Is not double-listed In that
seum. Included In tbe various
brochure.
displays will be wedding gowns · · ter, will be available.
WASHINGTON (UPI) · - The
Blandon, appearing Tuesday Massachusetts Democrat leadCIA denies providing .classified
for a second , time before a lng ·the subcommittee hearings ,
personal Information on
subcommittee of the Senate called It "about as disturbing a
members of .Congress to PanaForeign · Relations Committee, revelation as I've heard:_. In his
rna's Gen. Manuel Antonio Nosaid the CIA and the National , continuing Investigations of U.S.
rlega, as alleged by O!le of the
Security Council staff supplied activities In Central America .
m lilt a ry leader's former
private Information to Noriega
In daylong testimony, Blandon
colleagues.
detailing the politics and "per- said Noriega, working with C()·
Senators Investigating Panl!sonal · problems" of senators lombia's cocaine kingpins, exmanlan corruption, however,are
Investigating corruption In pertly manipulated the Drug
disturbed by the alleg(ltlon from
Panama.
Enforcement Administration · so
Jose Blandon, who left his post
Blandon said he saw U.S. that Its principal contact with
documents marked ''classified'' him, Identified as Luis Qulel, was
last month as Panama's general
consul A lf'N8"1!.. York . and Is
with Information about Sens. In truth one of the .general•s
testifying against his country's
Edward Kennedy, 0-Mass., liaisons to the Colombia drug
de !acto .ruler.
·
Jesse Helms, R·N.C., and sev- producers .
Blandon lodged bls accuSation
era! Capitol Hill aides. The CIA
While working on behalf of the
against the CIA Tuesday , at
and NSC were blamed also by CIA In El Salvador, Noriega also
Senate hearings set to continue
Senate sources who . confirmed was entering Into agreeme.nts
'today . with testimony from a
such Information about aides had with the Soviet Union, working
former Jll6rlega pilot who admits
been published in Noriega- for · the Sandlnlstas in their
fiY!ni gullS and drugs as part of controlle'd newspapl!rs. ,.... ·
successful revofution In· Nlcaraan 'lnternatlonal network run by
· "The 'CIA categorically denies gua, supplying Salvadoran rebthe general.
Blandon's assertion that the els with guns and .setting up
Pilot Floyd Carlton, Identified
agency furnished any such lnfor- Panama's banking system for
as a leader In the civilian arm of
matlon regarding U.S. senators money laundering, Blandon said .
thelllegalnetwork,wasexpected
or their staffers to the govern·
"(He was) double-dealing,
to back up the drug·smuggllng
ment of Panama," CIA spokes- trlple ·deallng, quadruple :
charges flied against Noriega
woman Sharon Foster said dealing," Kerry declared, and it
last week in federal Indictments '!'uesday.
Is "Incomprehensible" U.S. intel in
Florida.
But
Sen.
John
Kerry,
the
ligence
agencies did not know
,
In
&amp;be
facll11y
owned
by
Veterans
Memorial
. CLINIC OPENS -The Racl!le Medical-Dental
.
.
about
it
.
_
Hospital.
WbUe
Dr.
Margie
Lawson.has
practiced
Clinic Ill opea. After moJUbl of work renO\'atlng
dentlsty In Racine for the past nine years, ·the
the old ~ery ll&amp;ore bulldln&amp;· at tbe comer of
villare has been without a doctor for nearly 30
Flflll and Pearl !ln'eets, patients are being treated
years.
-provide for the purchase of
Meeti.J1g In Special ' session · additional $376,690 for the curtwo badiy needed repla&lt;;ement
'Monday night, the Eastern Local rent operating expenses of the
school buses.
district.
School District Board of Educa·
.'
.
-provide for the purchase of
This $376,690 would allow the
'tlon voted to place a colltlnulng ·
library books as mandated by
tax levy, 12.4 mills, on the May 3 Eastern Local Schools to cover
minimum standards .
the projected deficit,....: (a recent
ballot.
-provide for the continuance
The board passed a resolution financial analysis revealed that a
ot
the existing extra curricular
be
Cathy
employes
continue
to
lng since July In the office of Dr. because o! the extremely serious very minimum budget, contain·
The Racine ~edlcal-Dental
and
athletics activities program.
financial situation In the district, . lng none of the following items,
Clinic located at Fifth and Pearl Coates, an ·a ccredited de,ntal James Witherell and Dr. Wilma
provide
for the continuation
to make additional cuts out of the will still result In a projected
Streets In Racine, opened earlier. assistant, Phyllls ,Cross, a dental Mansfield, Mulberry Heights. He
of
the
existing
kindergarten
deficit of approximately $161,000,
~ecently adopted "needs" budget
this month with Dr. Douglas assistant. and Lisa Krebs , hygen- has been active In the well-child
program.
·
Hunter, a spec.lallst In family lst. After graduating from the clinics held at the Meigs County 1 which was $491.552 In excess or It Is reported.
-provide for a contingency
It Is reported that the balance
medicine, and Dr. Margie Law.' Olilo State University School of Health Department and was a · projected revenue: These cuts
fund
to ensure that the board
Dentistry,
Dr.
Lawso11
opened
staff
doctor
at
Veterans.
Memor,total
$1i4,552
and
are
In
the
areas
of
the
$376,690
genera
ted
by
the
son, dentist, now practicing In
would
be able to deal with
In'
a
her
practice
of
dentistry
lal
Hospital.
of
personnel,
supplies
and
matelevy
would
allow
the
board
to:
that facility.
emergencies
should they arrive.
section
of
the
•
Racine
bank
Besides
the
examining
rooms,
rials.
Tbj!
board
then
voted
to
-provide
additional
money
for
• The old grocery store building
-provide
for a modest inbuilding.
She
has
practiced
there
Dr.
Hunter
has
the
purchase
an
.x-ray
room
place
.tM
levy
before
voters
fn
of
needed
classand- parking area were purcrease
in
salaries
for staff.
February,
1979.
dark
room
facUlties.
The
two
May.
The
levy
would
produce
an
room
textbooks
and
Instructional
since
and
chased last summer by Veterans
doctors
and
their
In . addition to her private
staffs· share a
·
supplies.
.
Memorial Hospital and bas unpractice, Dr. Lawson is the kitchen and lounge at the rear of
·'·
dergone extensive renovation.
~r
Meigs County Health the building.
Tbe building , Is handicapped
The entire facility Is In blue and
accessible wltb ramps at the Commissioner.
white
decor with coordinating
A
graduate
of
the
Ohio
State
front leading to the doors which
carpeting
throughout.
University
School
of
Medicine,
open Into a large waiting room . .
Plans
are
being made for an
with
three
years
experience
In
for both doctors. Patient rest
open
bouse
to
be held In early
family
practice
at
Grant
Hospirooms are available In the
March.
tal
Dr.
Hunter
bas
been
practlcwaiting rO()m as well as In Qtber
'
'
locations of the building.
Two parents of students who eluded therein was a no reprisal who were not properly certified
Each doctor has four treatto teach the subjects to which
did not attend classes during the clause.
ment rooms on opposite slqes of
Whitlatch and Sisson charge tl)ey were assigned and did no.t
recent teachers strike In the
the center business office, where
1,'&gt;1~1gs Local School District have
that during the strike, the board ·conduct schools that conformed
filed a ciliss action suit 111 the of education employed · as to the minimum standards presKathy Osborne. receives Dr.
Lawson's patients, and Judy
Meigs County Common Pleas teachers in the district persons
Continued on page 5
Harrison receives Dr. Hunter;s
Court aaalnst the Meigs Local
School District Board of EducapatlentJ.
In addition, Dr. Lawson has a:
tion and Dan E. Morris, district
superintendent.
lab area and sterilization room,
Filing the action were Wesley
as well as a personal office. Her
Max Whitlatch, parent of Nlkl
and Scott Whitlatch, and Iva
Sisson, parent of John and Me Usa
Approximately 300 Individuals attending the recent meeting
Sisson. Both the plaintiffs are of
•
Sauth Central Oblo
of
tbe Un)fled Citizens !or Education In Meigs Local were
Route 1, Rutland.
Most!)' cloudy today, with
updated
by Atty. Mark Foley on a taxpayers ' suit now In
The plaintiffs state they
highs In the upper 30s. Cloudy '
progress
against
32 subslltute teachers who worked In tbe Meigs
, elected to withhold tbelr chlldren
and a obanceofanowlatetonlght,
dlslrlct
during
the
recent te!lchers' strike, alt~ough they were
from attendance at the M~lgs
with a low In the upper·20s. Snow
•
not In compliance with state ·regulations.
.
·
Local Schools durlne the
" ,:
or rain llkety Thursday, with
Foley, who, at the vote of those present, wa~ retained as
~acbers strike lind that tbe
h!pa In the upper 30s.
attorney for the group, also answered questions reqardlng the
..
action Is filed on their behalf, on
The probabiUty of preclpllano-reprisal clause of the new teachers' contract. as the clause
the behalf or tbelr chlldrep, and
tion Ia
zero today ,50 percent
applies
to students In the district.
'\
on behalf of all other pa~ts and
tonllbt and 70 percent Tbilnday.
It
was
decldi!d by tbe membership that f.oley should seek an
children slmllaJ'ly sltuaiea In the
WID wiU be frOm the DarInjunction
against tbe Attendance-Make Up Polley whtcb has
Meigs Local School District.
at 10 tal.B mpll t.oday and
by the Meigs Local School Board. The request for
been
Issued
They state that their cl&amp;lms are
·'
Injunction
has
since been flied In the Meigs County ~mmon
typical of the clallns of tbe class
Pleas Court.
and that they will fairly and
Everyone was encouraged to attend tbe Feb. 16 school board
adequately protect the lnter~ts
meetlne. but elected to act as spokesperson&amp; for tbe eroupwas a
of the clua.
'
panel of alx people. ComprlalDi lbe panel will be Jim Conde,
Wliltlateb aDd Sisson chal'(e
Francine Shrlmplln, Keith Aah'-Y, Penn)' Mullen.• So!IDY Hallet
tbat the Melli Local ~ of
and
Paul Ladd.
·
· ·
·
Educatfoa
IDto a ®llec·
for
money-maklna
pro)ecta
were
dlscusaed
and
It wa•
Idea•
tlve 1larplniJia qrwrnent to end
.
·
Contlmlld OD
5
the tttaeblrt' ltrlb with the
~ teacbers usoc:latlon • and In·

- . LDcai·news

&gt;

BIQ 11 OUNCE
HEAD a SHOULDERS
8HAMIOO

Individuals briefed on issue

0

Weather

HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

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.1 Sticdons, 14 P1ge1

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 10,, 1988

Parents file ¢lass action suit.
against, ·board, superintendent

COUPON

.·

enttne

·New. ·medical-dental clinic ·
facility now open in Racine

Hospital news

IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

•

Eastem board asks for ·12.4 mills

Court news

.

Cloudy. Chance of snow late
tonight. Low In upper Ws.
Snow or rain likely Thursday.

CIA .denies Blandon charges

REGISTER FOR OUi DRAWING FOR A ·
.. FLOWER 'ARRANGEIUNT TO IE GIVEN AWAY
SAT., FEB. 13th - No purthllt ntCISSI!J.

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Vol.ll. No.191
Copyrlghtod 1Ill

0'

28*

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rr ~~~~:;;~;i~;~~~~~~;~;;~1
FLOWER. · S'U.Q!P.

1

Daily Number
969
Pick4
2844

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Gep'h4rdt... c~nttnued trom pagel

Ohio Lottery

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entered

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The Daily Sentinei-Pag1 3

Comment
111 eoun S&amp;ree&amp;

Pomeroy, Oblo

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DEVOTED TO TIIJI; INTEBBSTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~ ·

IS:~

~v

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.................-.-.~d ..-

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllber
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Aaslalant Publlllber/ ControUer

General Muager

A MEMBER o! The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AssoCiation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

WASHINGTON ~ S!.Jice Its
creation by President Reagan
last June, the AIDS comminlon
has been act(Jlg less like an advl·
sory -committee .with a lite-and·
. death mission and more like a
covert operations task force with
something to hide.
The commission has been be·
leaguered by two reslgnatlo.ns; a
lawsuit and a congresslonallnvetlgatlon. It has cloak~ Its own
di!liberatlons In secrecy, tiptoeIng_\ll"OUnd federal laws that require open records and open
· meetings. The point, apparently,
Is to avoid a full and public de·

f1GLIR~
lf-,5 M0 Rt: REPESJGNS,

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Congress full of
gOOd intentions

\IJE:L'L. HAvr A MAN
. IN SPAcF /!PAIN.

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~-'&gt; lVI&gt;.

Today in history
,

By United Press International
Today
Is
Wednesday,
~eb. 10 , the41stdayofl988wllh325tofollow.
1
The moon Is in Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
•
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter:
·
Those born on this date are under the sign or Aquarius. They Include
journalist William Allen While In 1868. Russian author Boris
Pasternak in 1890, entertalne~ Jimmy Durante In 1893, British Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan In 1894, German dramatist Bertoli
Brecht In i898, actor Lon Chaney Jr. ht1905, opera soprano Leontyne
Price In 1927 (age 61) , actor Robert Wagner In 1930 (age. 58), and
Olympic gold medal swimmer Ma.rk Spitz In 1950 (age 38).

---

On this date In history:
·
In 1763, the Treaty of Paris ended the Seven Years' War between
Britain and Spain.
In 1942 the AmerJcan auto Industry shut down Its civilian car
assembly' lln~s lor the duration of World War II and converted to ·
military production.
.
·
·
,
In 1962, U-2 spy plane pilot Francis Gary PDwers was returned to
the United States In exchange for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel.
In 1964, an Australian aircraft carrier and destroyer collided off
New South Wales, kUling 82 sailors.
.
In 1984. Americans and other foreigners were ev.acuated from
batHe-torn Beirut following the withdrawal or U.S. Marines from the
• ___Lebanese capital. 1/,
•
1,

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WIIIIIILI....a ... 'New lel'ltJ' 111 (OT)

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~at Utah. t::ll p.m.
Plioe•x at lA £11-.en.ll: 11 p.m;-

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Tnu'lllaclions

WASHINGTON- By 1991, the satisfy the political demands of
United States will have to with·
his followers while at the same
draw )he 401st Tactical Fighter time keeping Spain In the
Wlng, composed of 72 F-16 fighter alliance.
jets, lrom the Torre jon Air Force
The alrbase· though very ImBase near Madrid, Spain, The portant to the.defense of NATO Is
closing of · this base was re- not crucial. According to current
quested by the Spanish govern- strategy, the F -16s based In Spain
ment, and lh)s request marks the are .to· be used to reinforce the
first time that a NATO ally has Central and Eastern flanks of
asked the United States to close a
NATO. Given that the main
military facUlty since France mission of the existing base at
ended Its joint mUitary Involve- Madrid Is to reinforce other
ment with NATO In 1966. As a bases, Its loss will undeniably be
result of this withdrawal, It Is felt, but It Is replaceable with an
feared Spain wlll have set a had alternative location In another
precedent that other NATO allles similarly situated country. Inmay soon' see fit to follow.
dfled, Italy has already sugSpain had long sought to have gested that It might be wUIIrtg to
this Am~rlcan atr base removed accept the F-16s since Italy fully
In large part due to Its proximity reccignltes the ,Importance of
to Spain's capital. While the these jets for her own security.
American mUUary In Spain Is Therefore, provided that an
there for our common s~urlty alternative base can be found or
Interests, many Spaniards are that an alternative strategy can
quite hostne to our presence be developed, the Joss or th~ base
there. This hostility appe{lrS to be. will • not leave NATO forces
a carry-over from the days of the unduly exposed or mllltarUy
dictatorship of Francisco Franco weaker, However, the loss of ihe
under whose rule the Ameilcan base could prove very damaging
bases were established. Thus, lf It sends out the wrong message,
many Spaniards unfortunately a message that could lead to
equate our presence there with future fractures In the NATO
the. former dictator, and as a alllance.
result anti-American and antiSpain Is not the only country
NATO seentlments make for where anti-NATO rhetoric
good election campaign themes. makes for good election politics.
It was, In part, by capitalizing on Greece's Prime Minister, Anthese sentiments that Spain's. dreas Papandreou, Is hostile to
Socialist Prime Minister Felipe the American military presence
Gonzalez came to power. While in Europe , and baa repeatedly '
Prime Minister Gonzalez recog- remarked that he Is contemplatnizes the .value of the NATO Ing closing the American baaes
aiUance and has worked to keep Qtere. There bas also been some
Spain In NATO In the face of a political conlrovl!flly about the
referendum to take Spain com- · American bales In Turkey. Mopletely out of the alliance, he reover, outalde of the NATO
nevertheless felt the political alliance, President Corazon
need to take this s~and against Aquino or.the fhllipplnea facet 1
. the American military preaence. vocal oppositlbn CODC1!111lng the
By demanding the withdrawal of preaence of American miUtary
the Tactical Fighter Wing, bales In tbat stratertc laland
Prime Minister Gonzalez ap- nation. In all of theae countries
pears to have round a way to • the temptation exists to score

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In a game that saw the visitors
keep the home team's big men
out! of the· paint for most or the
game, 6-4 junior John Keenan
· sc&lt;ired 23 points and grabbed 10
rebounds to lead Ohio Valley
Christian School past Soutltwestern · 49-46 Tuesday night In
Gallipolis.
~
"We missed enough layups to
win, the game," said Highlander
coa~h Gregg Dee!, whose cagers
dropped their flfth straight aame
and end their affalra with nonleape opponenta '!lUI e 1·3
mark'
·
The Highlanders, though down
14-6 at theendortheflrstquarter,
took cha,ge or the boar.ds and
kept' the ·Defenders' heigltt advan tag~ concentrated In John
Keenan and older brother· Eric
(6-8,, senior), out of the paintlong
enough to·rackupsomeofthelr29
rebounds. Shawn McNeal, the
Highlanders' ~-3 sophomore·cen- ·
ter,.had help from ·f orwards John
Darnell and Brad Hively , In
controlling the glass and keeping
the Highlanders close.
In the second quarter, the
Highlanders began erasing the
Defenders' advantage. Junior
forward Mike Walker, who had
picked up two fouls In the first
quarto::r, got the ball 'and made
strong d~lves to !lie hoop for
layups that, combined with
McNeal's points In the paint, tied
the·bosts at 17 with 3:27 to gQ In
the half.
.
· Then the Defenders regained
the lead when junior guard
Brady Johnson connected on the
front end or a one"and,one with
3:22 left, giving the hosts an 18·)7
lead. Walker was fouled and hit
bOtll ends of a one-and-one to put
the visitors up 19-18 with 3: 08left.
Iri ·spite or the trouble . the
Defimders were haying (n.gettlng
the ball Inside, John Keenan
drove Inside on a layup to restore
the Defenders' lead, at 20-19.
However, Hively had the last
word when he got Inside for a

Teo• ' i t , - COnlloo u

layup to send the Hlghlan!lers to ·
the locker room with a 21-20 lead.
In the third frame the tead
changed hands three times befo~ the Defenders opened up a
five-point lead halfway through
the quarter. ~owever, McNeal
was back In business In the paint,
when with 1: 17 left he grabbed a
missed hot b;t Walker and putln•
a laY\11' to pull the vlaltors to
wltbln one, at 33-~.
The fourth quarter saw the
Defenders put their beigjlt advantap to gOCid .uae, u the.
Kee118n bro~hers got better pos!i'
tlon Inside and began to outrebound thl! Highlanders. · The
Defenders ended . up with 33
rebounds on the night. In addl·
tl!)n, the Defenders got ·most or
their 15 steals In that Cluarter and
used them to open up 1 10-point
lead With 4: 051eft. The ~lghland·
ers got to within four when ace
shooter Dave Mershon, who had
not scored In three and a half
quarters, Sank a short jumper
with 33 seconds left and to wtthln
three with a three-pointer with
four seconds left, setting the
Deienders' victory marglil.
The Highlanders are 2-16 over·
all and will travel to Eastern
Fr.lday night.

omo vALLil:Y

Relterve pine

OVCS 47, Southwestern 44
Top guns .:... Eric Burgess
IOVCS), 11 polnta. Chris Metzger
(Southwes~rn), 16 polnta.

iiQ ~E (,.1

- HollY
HUdql, ·2·Ui '" " o\1111 11111·
llnl, t-2-18-37; ReDK Ha~Jet',
2-2-6; Beth eon. 4-4-11: Cbrll
·wtmama. H--3; AnpJa Pac:lrarcl.
2-3-T. 1VIAU 11-Nl·'JI.

:.1"11&amp;C~-t.at111eiJ!law,
..
Qrlffltltl, 1.0.11; Deb.

Ill

Anderson, 4·1-9; Jolle Bokmlller,
10-0-20; Annette ShiSler, 4-0-8;
l;lennett, 3-0-6; Becky Blanc,
S.l-1-20. TOTALS 34-3-1·'13.

0

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ROCK SPRINGS - The thrlll
of victory and the agon~ of.defeat
Wa&amp; evident at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium last evening as the
Meigs roundballers of Coach
Mlck Childs soundly defeated
their SEOAL opponent, the
Athens Bulldogs, 85 to 70.
It was the Marauder's second

~:O~~~Ijl!~~tl:S.:;:r :;:~~~
defeated ~ the Warren Warriors
earlier and barely lost a three
. point decision to Logan In the last
minute or play Sa:turd~y night.
The Meigs nve jumped out to
. an 8.0 lead last night and II wasn't
untll .near the 5: 15 mark of tlte
first quarter that the Bulldogs
managed to get off a shot against
an a(1nost Impenetrable Marau!ler defense. Atllens' was not
r~a!ly to roll over and play dead,
. ltowever, as the Bulldog offense
started to mesh and pulled them
to within two after eight min11tes
had elapsed.
Meigs· continued to maintain
tlte upper hand despite the fact
that, during the first stanza
alone,,• they were whistled for
eight personal fouls to just one
for the visitors. At the halftime
Intermission, the locals held· a

they managed to counter-act. !dogs had 25 reboulllis with
nve poln t lead, . r
Brlentleadfng the way with 10.
Continuing their domlnanc.e In . Their guard play was very good
Box score:
t.h e second half, the Marauders and Bartrum and Bissell really
·MEIGS Snyder 1-1-3; Smith •
had one of their best nights, hurt us. Bissell penetrated our
offensively, of the year. At one defense well and .when he was 6-3-15; Bartrum 9-2-3-27; Durst '
point In time they,became a little covered . Bartrum' sank the out- 3-0-6; Bissell 11-7-29; N~Jer
0-0-0; Brothers 1-0-2; 13unlette
over-a!)ldous In trytrtg to get the side shot" , Gibson stated.
0-l-1;
Powelll-0-2; Baker 0.0-0;
The Bulldogs had a couple of
ball to fall and allowed th~ .
Sisson
0-0.0.
Athens squad to pull to within more than fair players of their
ATHENS
- Skinner 8.0.0-le;
five. Timely time-outs by Coach own In Doug Skinner and Thaden
Stricklin
1-2-2-10;
Corrigan 2·2·0·
ChUds served to get the Maruad· Brlent who scored 19 and 22
10,
Brlent
7-8-22;
Decamlnada
ers settled down and run their points respectively and did their
1
1·3-5;
Walsh
0·1·1;
Calvert0-1-0-3~
·
offense well, taking command of all to aid the visitors cause. ·
Score
by
quarters:
Mlck Childs, Meigs mentor,
the game.
was obviously more than pleased Meigs ... ........ .......... . 16 40 G4 85
From the floor, Meigs had a
with his team's performance. Athens .... .. .... .......... . 14 35 52 70
good game as they ltlt on 34 of 62
The junior Marau.d ers dropped
He, too, gave a lot of credit to the
field goals, Including 2 or 4' from
.a
59-35
decision to the BuUpups In
g\Jards
who
handled
the
ball
well
the three point range. During the
•
the
first
contest or the evening.
and to Chris Smith who hit (or 15
last 16 minutes of action, Brent
Eddie
Crooks
was the only '
Bissell was 100 percent on·field · ~arkers. In those games where
Marauder
finishing
In doubll!
the guards have turned In a ·good
goal tries and from the charity
figures
with
12
while
Pattersons,
stripe as he chalked up7fo7 and 5 performance, the Marauders
have had little trouble In picking of the Bullpups, burned the nets
of 5 res~tlvely. At the free
for 24 and teammate ·.DI!wees
up the win.
. ·
throw line, the M;~rauders con·
Bissell walked of( with game added 10.
tlnued their torrid pace with a 79
Meigs will host Federalhigh honors with 29 points with
percent overall average as they
Hocking
at home on Friday wtth
Bartrum
.close
behind
with
27.
missed by 4 of 19.
game
starting at &amp;: 30.
the
first
The.
Marauders
swept
the
boai"ds
Althoqgh It was a tough loss for
for
39
rebounds
as
Bartrum
, his team, Bulldog Coach Fred
grabbed 13 and Bissell 12. Joey
Gl bson had nothing but praise for
The Daily Sentiael •
· Meigs. "They (Meigs) played a Snyder picked off 5 caroms and
super ball/ game and we played Brian Ourst 4 for the winners.
(USPS 14:1-1101
well ourselves. But whatever we Chris Smith led In the assist
A Dlvlsloll of Multlmedl&amp;t he.
, did to get back Into the game, department with 12. The Bul-

..

Pub11shed every afternoon, Moaday
through F riday, 111 Cour t St ., . Po·
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
lishlng Company /Mulllmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·215G. ~

lloyas stop Seton Hall, 66-60
By JOE ILLUZZI
Seton Hall, 15·10 and 4-7, led .. He had th.e green light today.' ',
UPI Sports Writer
26-12-ln the first half after Martin
Smith, a junior guard, shot 12
Georgetown Coach John
S~fliey sparked an 11-0 run. Salley for 22 from the floor. Winston and
Thompson, who stresses team scored all of his 13 points before Bryant had 11 points each and
play rather than Individual per- Intermission.
McDonald added 10 for
formance, begrudglng1y. says he
Smith, Bobby Winston and Georgetown·.
will rely on .Charles Sml.t h to Perry McDonald led the surge
In other games Involving
carry his offense the rest of the
that opened the second half for ranked teams, No. 4 Oklahoma
season.
the Hoyas. Smith's basket at downed Nebraska 92-77, No. 6
•:Our worst enemy Is the team 15:39 tied the score 34·34 , and Brigham Young defeated Miami
concept," Thompson said Tues· Dwayne Bryant followed with a ' 99-86 and Missouri edged No. 14
day night after Smith SC!)red a
jumper and a free-throw to give Kansas State 79-75.
career-high 28 points. to lead the
tlie Hoy"-s a 37-34 lead~
At Llncoin, Neb., Dave Sieger
co-No. 20 Hoyas to a 66-60 Big
Seton Hall moved within 39-38, scored 19 points to lead five
East victory over Seton Hall.
but ·Smlth hit a bank shot to put Oklahoma players In double
"SometimeS, equal opportun· the Hoyas ahead 41·38. George· flgures. The Sooners, 21-2 and 7-1
lty Is not good. We have to get the · town's lead 'grew to 66-55 In the In the Big Eight, jumped to a 10·1
ball In Charles' haods. lt's a ·final mlnute.The Hoyas went to a lead In the first three minutes.
contradiction, but Charles has to four-corners offense with 9: 57 to Nebraska missed Its first 9 shots.
do ltror us. We just don't have all go.
At Provo, Utah, Mike Smith
the other pieces.''
"The thing that hei~ tonight scored 24 points and Brian Taylor
. Smith's total was the most by a
was going Into four corners and jidded 17 points and 10 assists In
Hoya this season, and his 12 field
by spl'!!adlng out the floor. we his first start this season to power
goals · represented almost half were able to Isolate Smitty," Brigham Young. The Cougars ,
George~own's output In the .. Thompson said. "He. was 90
knocked from the unbeaten
·game. Thllt rarely happens on Ti percent of our offense, and ·we ranks Saturday by Alabama·
Thompson-coached tetitn.
wanted ·to win or lose with him . Birmingham, Improved to 18·1.
This Georgetown squad, however, Is not as deep as ones In
recent seasons. Many,good players - Patrick Ewing, Eric
"Sleepy" F1oyd and Davh,I Wingate to name a few- have gone on
to the NBA. Thompson, though,
doesn't have players of their
caliber this year.
'
''We are not an overpowering
team, 'lut we are better than we
have been playing," said Thompson, whose team was ranked 13th
last week. · 1
Georgetown, wltlch broke a
two-game ' losing streak, Improved to 15-6 overall and 5·5 In
the Big East. The Hoyas survived
their poorest first half or the
season by' registering a 13-2 burst
to open the second half. They
trailed 32-24 at Intermission.

, I

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--._. ,'

(48) - . J.

Keenan 9-0-5-23; Gilllam ·4-0-1-9;
Johnson H-4-9; E. Keenan 2-0-0·'
·4; Patterson 2·0-0-4. 'rOTALS 18-1-1148
SOVTRWESTEBN ( 48)
McNeai8-0-1·17; WalkerS-1·3-16;
Mershon 1-1-0-5; Hammond 0-1-03; Hively 1-0-1-3; Bryant 1-0.0-2.
'J'O'l!ALS ~ 1&amp;-3-11-48
Team fouls · .
OVCS 15, Sout!IWestern 15
. Score by quarters
Southwestern . 6 15 11 14--46
aves ............ 14 6 15 14--49

Redwomen top.Malone
CANTON - Rio Grande forward Lea A-nn Mullins exploded
. for a cat:eer·hlgh 37 points
Tuesday night to help !he'Redwomen score a 19-73 victory over
Malone.
Mullins connected on six of 20
field goals, two of three three
.point. goals, and 19 of 20 charity
shots to reach her career high.
The Mid-Ohio Conference
1ame was played at Canton.
The Redwomen's abUity at the
foul line and a reduction In
turnovers combined to keep Rio
on top thro"'hout the contest. ,
Overall, the Redwomen 39
percent from the field and 84
percent at the line.
RIO Granlle Improved Ita mark
, to 16-8 and 6-3 lnalde the MOC.
'l1te ReclWollleD play at MoUIIt
v~ Nuartne Saturday.

Marauders· roll ·~Y 'Athens cagers, 85-70

a

~ighlanders drop
.tilt to ·Defenders

alliances that we as a country are '.,.
party to. The couqtrles or NATO ·
pledge themselves to the com· · ..' ·
mon defense of freedom. How- .' ,
ever, this pledge carrles•wlth It a · •:•
responslblllty to contribute to .: ,.
that common defense. By asking ,....
out F-16s to leave, Spain has.·· stepped back from Its commit- · ·"
ment. While the NATO alllance •1:
may be able to work around "···
Sp.aln's change or heart, It may ,: 1·
not be so fortunate the next time _,·, ~·
If other member nations likewise '••' '
choose to . turn their backs on .• •'
their obligations.
• •·ii

.

.

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· By Cong. '
.:·t
Clarence . Miller{~.
.,.,,.,.

Berry's.Wor.id

c.e.,...

. . . .

~.\'a.W~•II.Daw.am~.,.

way about parental seiUng. Some weed out· Imposters. .
1
of them said they refuse to
2. The taking of order blanks to . ' :
market merchandise for their work wtll be allowed, as long 88'' • '
kids, . even If It will save them they are hung secretly on com: • : •
from having to pay for band trips pany bulletin boards, wtth nn '
to the Rose BOwl Parade. They . parental (read BOSS) names · .,
think when teachers or club revealed. The pinning or pencUs : :
sponsors send kids out on the near said order blanks, via string_ · 1.:
streets with wares to sell, the and thumbisck, Ia permitted. . •'
kids ought to' sell them. Period.
3. Items sold under rule No. 7 • •.;
Wl1at do I want•I want to have '.'· must be delivered by bona fide ' ' '~
my cookies and eat tbem, too. I Girl Scouts, who will make''
want Girl Scouts to sell their own change and say "Thank you very '~
cookies, but I want to have a much."
-,.:
crack at getting some even If · 4. Any cookies sold directly •'! •
there aren't any Girl Scouts .In tl!rough parental agents will be' ..; •
my neighborhood. So I have . dumped Into the nearest large '·· '
prepared a list of suggestions for body of water and charged to said .. 3 •
parents and troop leaders, which agent's Mastercharge.
· '
I qave named:
5. In the event I ' am noth '
'11he ethics of Girl Scout
appraached by any Girl Scouts,:•J '
Cookie selling
.
. or do not hne access til any order ·,, f
1. All actual selling must be blank tacked surreptitiously to a· •.• '
done by Girl Scouts themselves. company b~tlletln board, I ·re: •. •
This Includes writing down servetherlghttocalluptltelocal ·&lt;
orders and exchanging money. Girl Scout headquarters and ·
Any pleading, cajoling· and/or order as many boxes as I want.' ' : '
·hard-sell must be done by Girl There's no sense gOing over• . .::
Scouts themselves. Badge board with this. •·
,.,, ·
numbers . will be recorded to
.. "

domestic political points by ask- •
lng American troops to leave.
However, while such a move
might make short term political.
$ense Internally, It Ignores the
common threat that we all facethe Soviet Unlon·and her commu·
nlst bloc a!Ues. The only way we
can all protect outa~lves from
this threat Is by maintaining a
·strong common front, and that Is
what NATO Is all about.
In conclusion, there Is the very .
real danger that the withdrawal
of this alrbase from Spain could
set a very bad precedent for the
future of NATO and for othe'

,.

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A bad precedent in ·the

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monsterS~.___
Sar._a_h_Ove_r_st_re.....
et.;~

Well, I am good for al)Other THEY were doing 20 years ago.
year.
.
Arid, I tell myself, there are
Fresh from my yearly glut of lots of us who don't ever see
Girl Scout Cookies, I can go back actual Girl Scouts anymore.
to salad bars and Lean Cuisines.! There are no cute little girls In
Wlll have no more excuses to buy brown or green uniforms YfhO
sugar, partially hydrOgenated come to our doors hawking·
cottonseed oil and monocalclum cookies. Ifthelrparent~don'tsell
phosphate for a while. I will not them at work, there's no other
be called upon to bankroll the way for us to get our mitts 'on
future ol the youth ol America for thoSe cookie$,
another 12 months.·
But once I come down off my
But the aftertaste Is bitters- sugar high, I'm still left wltb a
weet, kind or a combination or case or the heeble-jeebles from ·
left over peanut-butter cream realizing that most of those
lUling and creeping sense o( delicious morsels are sold not by
fuddy-duddylsm. It's the sa"!e authentjc Girl Scouts, but by
feeling I always"get when I start their parents. At work, I've seen
to question the value system of bosses go desk to desk with lists,
The Youth of 'l:oday and re- keeping mental records of who
member my own parents' dis- buys and who' ,d oesn't. The race
pleasure with too much blue eye becomes one of whose daddy has
shadow and "I ·can't Get No:ho the most clout. ldon'tthlnk that's
Satlsfac-shu-hun." 1 think I~ very healthy lesson for little
turned out all right, for all thelf.. girls whose daddies don't· have
anxiety. I'm always reminding clout ""' or for those whose
my friends who have kids, In the daddles·do, for that matter.
self·I1ghteous way that only
I canvassed someofmyfrlends ·
those without kids can, of what who have kids and found a
surprising number feel the same

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The real cookie

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NewY•..... htnll '7··p·m.

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.......e IU, d"e\'ei&amp;Mit&amp;

seerecy

By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Much like the remorseful soul who
over-Indulged the night before, Congress awoke to a.new year full of
good Intentions and resolved not to repeat the bad behavior of last
yea~.
.
.
Over the past few weeks, leaders of both parties In both the House
and Senate have pledged to conduct their business In a much more
responsible fashion ; particularly when It comes to · passing the
appropriations bllls that are necessary to· keep the federal .
government operating.
The goad for this reformation has been the generous dose or
criticism Congress received for the way It ended last year's sessiontwo months late and only after dumping aU Individual money bills Into
a massive $606 billion catch-aU measure that rightfully deserved
President Reagan'd derlstve comments during his State of the Union
address.
Despite an the ·promises and good Intentions, however, many
observers famlllar with the pressures and proclivities that entangle
Congress doubt any serious Improvement Is forthcoming.
c;ongress Is expected to pass 131ndlvldual appropriations bills each
year, but that has not happened In recent years. The House, which
originates the bllls, manages to get most over to the Senjlte, but
usually late and then they get bogged down In the Senate. And by the
time the two chambers seriously begin negotiating their dUfernces
the end of the year ts last approaching.
House Speaker. Jim Wright says this year will see all 13 bUls
reported by the House Approprlatlos Committee by rrtld-May and aU
wlll be passed by the House by the August recess.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd also said he hopes Congress
wlll manage to pass all the money bllls lndlvldlually and get them to
Reagan's desk .
The fact that this Is an election year and the lawmakers want time
to campaign should encourage early action on the appropriations
bllls as well as other legislation. But nothing will change the fact that
members of Congress wlll continue to disagree among themselves
and with the president on where and how much money. should be
spent. That Is the main obstacle to speedy work by Congress ..
It also should be noted that In the uproar over catch-all money bills
- called continuing resolutions - many of the complaints from
members of Congress reflect a turf fight as much as concern over
proper procedures.
.
Those bllls are · pieced together by the House and Senate
Appropriations committees, which often end up making policy
decisions that · rightfully should Involve other "authorizing"
committees such · as Foreign Affairs, Government Operations or
Education and Labor. Members of those committees have for several
years complained about the growing power of the appropriations
panels,
A recent press release told of a "Uberal-conservatlve coalition .of 49
Democrats" In the House who vowed to oppose future continuing
resolutions ''that make substantive-changes In federal l~w .'' None of
the 49 are members of the Appropriations Committee . .
Another non-member, Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo. , In a separate
move, proposed a rules change that would allow any House member
to block a continuing resolution "that contains funding that has not
been considered In the appropriate legislative process."
The coalition of 49 sent ll letter to House Speaker Jim Wright
complaining about "the effective disenfranchisement or many
members of Congress from the legislative process."
Those members have a case, but not one likely to sway members of
the appropriations panels. Major reform Is not In store lor Congress
this year, and the best the members can hope for Is only a sllghtl;r
more graceful exit this faiL
·

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

or FACA· may be violated," Gleon ,.
told our reporter SaDie Dlilkel.
~
Congressional lnveatlgaton had ~
. trouble getting paperwork from ~
the rommlsslon. "'nle primary ~
documents missing are those from ,:
the White House," said Rosslyn
Kleeman, senior associate dlrec· ~
tor of the General Acco1111tlng Of. '
I1
flee.
The secretary eXtends beyond ,
the committee 'tself to Wblte ~
House decisions about the composition of the committee. We ob- 4
talned a copy or a letter trorn the
former vice chairman of the com·· •
I
mission, ~ Meyers, ,
who resigned aloai Wlih the chair· l
man, Dr. ·Eqene Mayberry, last ,
October. In the letter, Meyers ~
complal!ls about "the great deal of !
within the White Hol!s on .,
who has to be appointed."
!
But the blame for the conaplra- . •·
torlal aura around the commls· i
slon may lie with the members !
themselves. They have meticu· f
lously avoided discussions that ,
Involve .more than a rew memb- ;
ers lit a time, which getll them •
. around the open meetings re· ~
qulred of a quorum. . .
The commission published an •
Interim· report last year without 1'
a discussion by the fuu sroup.
How did It manage this? The pa- 1
nel's executive secretary, PoUy !I
Gault, said the commissioners
camelnto the omce two ot three
at a time to off~r their opinions. j
Watklni has suggested that the ·•~
procedure "could weD be the rna- .
dus operandi from this point on,· ~ ;;
thus. avoldibg any public deba~ :
a,t all on .the disputed Issues surroundll)g AIDS.
&lt; This · penchant for secrecy Is ·:
not the only reason the commls- •
slon has been criticized.

_.,_
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.....
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NATION.U. IMilB'riAU. A880c

,.

ourselves to end run the system;
bate on the AIDS crisis.
and find alternative techniques
The AIDS ' commiulon was
that do not violate FACA," Wat·
formed to study medical, ethical,
klns
said In testimony In Decemsocial and economic Impacts o ·
ber
before the 'Semite Govern
the epidemic. It Is governed by
mental
Affairs Committee, · which
several "sunshine' laws ·gua·
Is
studying
the law,
ranteetng public deliberations,
·
When
Sen.
John Glenn, D-Ohio,
Including the Federal Advisory
asked· Watkins what those ·tech·
Committee Act.
nlques were, Watkins said, "You
Bu the chairman of the com·
mission, Adm. James Watkins, talk on the phone a· great deal."
dOI!Iln't think much or the act and That eliminates the need tor Writ·
told a congressional committee ten memos and publlc meetings.
how he circumvents it. "I think It "When Adm. Watkins says he's
Imposes a tremendous burden on trying to 'end run' around the sta·
us, and I think what we are see- tute, It sends a very clear signal to
Ing now Is an attempt even by me that the spirit, If not the letter .

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey shou)d be leas than 300 wordl
long. All letters are subj ect.to edit tna: and mus1 be slefted wttb name, address and
telephone number . No unsigned letters will be published. Letters sbolkl be In
goocnaste, addressing Issues, nDt personal1Ues. ·

NBA reeults.

...

By Jack Anderson ;
and Dale Van A tta :

What's the big secret?

The
Daily Sentinel
.....-·-··

'

[

Page 2--The Daily Sentinel
·:
Pon•ot M.Wdlepol1. 'Oh4o
·
Wtdn11day,,February 10. 1988 •:
.·

FOR ALL YOUR

PlUMBING AND
HEATING NEEDS,
SEE US FIRST!
.
•TO REPAIR
•TO REPLACE
TO FIX UP OR
SPRUCE UP, SEE
US TODAY

.

'

,·

'•

-

.'.•'
..

PICKENS
.
.

HARDWARE
WY

MUTUAl FUNDS?

.. ,,, 9.2Sfeo• 1-A's
•CI U/1116

Plan For RlfiflleNnt ,Today
11.1·10/o Aver• Since ~975

Sure, you could get one of those "fun tough" Ford Rangers with electronic
fuel injection; halogen head lamps and 4x4 capabilities. And ~u still wouldn't have
as much tolal head, hip and shoulder room as Dodge Dakota.' Because Dakota
gives ~u everything you'd want in a small pickup and morel And the Dakota long
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thlll in a Ranger, and you may lind it tough to hliVII any fun.
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Mftltl! AT ONLY

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300 'IIIB A¥1.
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GAWPOLIS,
You'U Like Our Oualitv Way o.f.Doing Business

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Pllp• 4

The

o.ey Sentinel

Vw'l* I Ny.

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Ftibn.y 10,1-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·; l.ocal news briefs~

Hardman indicted on 10 charges;
Logan board suspends coach

Parents ...

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy ·c ourt news

Continued from page 1

I

Continued from pap 1
decided that dances for students would be furlhur Investigated
aa a possibility.
.
LocThe next meettna of Unified Citizens for Education In Melp
Ameal will be held Monday, March 7, 7 p.m., at the Rutland
r 1can Lei!on Hall.
Max Whitlatch, president of the aroup, prealded,

crlbed by the State Board of school." The board of education'
Twenty-nine cases were pro- Laudermllt, Pomeroy, fa (lure to
Education.
had a policy In elfect prior to the
cessed Tuesday nlght In the court ·pay old 'fines, $25, and payment of
- Tbeyfurtflerchargethatabout teacl)ers strike requiring such
of Pomeroy- Mayor Richard old fines $536; David Tiemeyer,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, consumthe first day of February ,1988. an written notification which was . Seyler.
"Attenduce Malle Up Polley" not lcomplled with In regard to
Forfeiting bonds were Sandra lng alcohol In a motor vehicle,
,
was adopted lnd disseminated to absences by students during he
Tit\IS, Rutland. 545; Terry Rowe, and $63 and costs, driving under
·allprtnclpalaofthedtstrlctandis strike .
Racine, $48; William Peck, Mid- suspension;
Rick Lunsford,
be
used
In
deterThe
plaintiffs
state
1
hat
the
dleport,
$45;
Randall
Simpson,
Racine,
$63
and
costs drivi(lg
threatened
to
r
m)ntne . gradea, attendance, Revised Code requires written
Racine, $46; Lori Louks, Long under suspensio11; Heinz Coates.
credit and promotion or renten· notice by registered mall bf
Bottom, $46; Ralph Oller, Langs- Pomeroy, $375 and costs and .
.
,
•
•
w
slon with reglrd to the plaintiff's failure to attend school and that
ville, $46; Bobby Foster, Pome- three days in jail, driving under
A list _of staff members who have access to confidential
children.· 811 well as the children no suph written notice was gtven
roy . $48; Amanda Savage, AI- . the influence; Buford Smalstudent recorda was approved Tuesday night ·when the Meigs
of parents In plaintiffs' class. to plaintiffs or their school age
bany, $54; Terry Klaiber, Long !wood, Albany, $63 and costs,
~ty Board of Education met In regular sessiOii.
·
Prlnclpa:ls of the different children or members of the
Bottom, $53; Mathews ·Combs, driving while under suspenslop;
• ne board Issued a bus driver'• certificate to Terry
schools have lndlca\ed they will plaintiff's . class prior to the
Racine, $49; Mark Pfau, Vienna, BrJan Hayes, Mlddlep&lt;&gt;rt, $2B
Laudermllt,
Meigs
Local,
and·
·approved
the
use
ot
tile
be
applying
th~
policy
differently
·
threatened
action
for
failure
to
W.
Va., $53; Sheila Anderson,
and costs, petty theft. ·
.. Southeastern Ohio Reglo111l Resource S~lflcatlons In
with ea~b determining bls own attend school during the
Dexter, $58; Violet Brown, ~~==========~
processing special education students.
'
'
". variation a11!1-or enforcement, teachers' strike.
Pomeroy , $48; Harold ·clark, 1
Attendln&amp; tile meeting were,Harold Roush, ~rd president;
thereby resulting In dlscrlminaThe teachers ' strike of the
Albany. $48; Gary Warner, Long
GOOD USED
Oris Smith, Bob Burdette, and VIrgil Kina and County Supt.
tory an&lt;ldibconslstant applica- Meigs Local Teacher Association - Bottom, $48; John Sparry, Well- ·
John Riebel who serves as· clark of the county boatel.
liOns to d1lferent students In the was alawtul strike and the board
ston, $48; Roger Balser, Tuppers
WASHERS, DRYERS
district, the plaintiffs allege. of education at no lime sought to
Plains, _$49: Russell Voters, Mil·
REFIIGEUIOIS, IVs
•'
They say that section 3313.205 of have the strike (leclared unlaw!wood. W.Va., $50, all posted on
GAS &amp; EUC lA
'l
!~ Revised Code provides that ful, the plalntlfis state~ They say · speeding charges; Melvin Thor•
NGES·
. ,.
The
Board
of
Education
of
each
they
were
lawfully
exercising
a
ton,
Racine,
no
operator's
li·
. A jud&amp;ment of $48,215.68 plus Interest haa been awarded the
school district shall adopt a First Amendment Right In refuscense. $63; Justin Hood, New
Farmers Bank and Savin&amp;s Company from Kennell,! F. and ·
written
policy
witb
respect
to
the
lng
to
send
their
children
to
Marshfield, $46, stqp sign.
• . Marilyn Molz, Mon1stow.n, J".J., In a foreclosure action In
notification
of
a
student's
par·
school
thereby
crossing
a
lawful
Fined . were Betty Manll}n,
.
.;(, . \'dl!lgs County Common Pleas Court. Unleas peld within lOdays, ,.
ents,
custodial
parents,
guard.
picket
line.
Plaintiffs
state
also
Pomeroy,
no
Insurance
6n
.
a
627
3rd An,, Gallipolis
., · the property In question will be sold. In the same action, George
ian,
.legal
custodian,
or
·other
as
parents
they
have
a
funda·
vicious
dog
and
allowing
a
dog
to
·
Pll.
446·1699
·'
.Collins, couaty treasurer, was awarded $1614.34 In delinquent ·
person responsible for him when mental freedom under the Fourrun loose, $200 and costs; Greg
HOUIS: 1 A.M.·6 P.M.
taxes.
'
Tw,o cases, .James B. White against Barbara K. White, a~
the student Is absent from teen Amendment to direct the ff;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~upbringtng and education·of their
Anli D. Clonch, now known·as Ann D. Johnson, against the Ohio
children
and they truly hold a
State Mutu11 Insurance Co., et al, have been dismissed In
•
, belief in the importance of unions
cotnmon pleas court.
.
and the Importance of honoring
Plan meeting
.
Mary Shrine No. 37; White picket lines.
~MS
The
defendanis
have
threaShrine of Jerusalem, will meet
Friday, 7:30p.m., at the Rocksp- tened to, and unless restrained,
Meigs Coul)ty Emergency Medical Services reports three
rings Grange Hall, at the will implement actions giving
call&amp; Tuesday.
.
·
grades of Incomplete, requiring
fairgrounds. .
.
Rutland W!IS Failed a,q : 58 p.m. to Meigs Mine No.1 for L)avld
makeup work, assigning faDing.
I
Meetinr canceled
Cunningham ·who was Injured in a .work·related accident.
grades,
assessing unexcused abo
.The special meeting of Orange
Cunningham was flown by Llfefllght from the scene to Grant
sences and other discriminating
Townsl!lp 'Trustees which was
H!~fP!Ial where .h e was listed this morning In llOOr condition In
and retaliating against J;&gt;lailitlffs'
t,h•intell~lve care unit.
. :·
·
scheduled for Friday has been
children
for non-attendance durcanceled.
Racine was called at 6:11 p.m. to Stlversvllle for Robert W.
Ing
'
the
teachers
strike thereby
l'!tn !Jr .. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
threatening
and
jeopardizing
Racine was called at 6: «p.m . to Broadway St. for Ronald E.
their classs standing, rank, perHart to Veterans· Memorial Hospital.
manent grades and promotion or
Veterans Memorial
retention. The plaintiffs charge
1lbr~e
Tuesday admissions - Ronald
that this consltututes a r~prlsal
Hart, Racine; Roberty Bays,
and is in violation of the agree, ,.'f hree defendants forfeited bonds and lour others were fined
Portland.
COMPLIMENTS OF
ment between the board of
in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Tuesday Discharges - Jack · education and . the teachers
DAIRY QUEEN &amp; BROUGHTON
Forfeiting were Peggy A. Baternap, Chauncey, $50, wrong
Sheline, VIcki Boso. .
association .
way oil&gt;a one way street; Charles W. Buck; Cheshire, $50,
The plaintiffs request a tem expired ta~s, and Phyllis ~nn King, New Haven, W.Va., $41,
Divon!e
granted
porary llljunctlon, a preliminary
speeding.
·
fnjunction and upon final hearing
•F ined were Jercy J. Walls, G:harleston, $50 and costs, fleeing
A divorce has been granted In a ·permanent Injunction enjoinng
~lie~ offi~r; Delores Barber, Dexter, $10 and costs, expired .
Meigs County Cpmmon Pleas tlie defendants from enforcing
· tags! ·paul A. Miller, Rutland, driving while Intoxicated, $425
Court to Tina . L. Radeke from
the attendance make up policy
'pjl' costs and three days In jail, and Jerry Swartz, Middleport,
~bert E. Radeke. Tina Radeke
and any adverse action against
i' _
$100 and costs, assault.
·
has been restored by the court to
the plaintiffs or their children
her n:talden name y.'eddle.
and members of the ·plaintlff's
class for falling to attend school
during the teachers strike. They
700 N. 2ND
MIDDLEPOU
also seek costs Including reaso992 _3321

. LOGAN, Ohio (UPI) - lUrk Hanlinu, cqach of the Lopa
Hlp School vanity boy1 bulletbaU team, hu beea t.dlded OD
l&amp; leX·rela&amp;etl cbarJea lllvolvlal male shulea&amp;l.
A lloclllllll CoUD&amp;y paacl jury huded up &amp;he llldldmell&amp;a
'l'ueldq, cbarJID&amp; HaniiiWI wl&amp;llaevea colllltll of a&amp;temp&amp;lq to
pbcKopaph aude studeatll ud three coua&amp;a of. pou JeXual
lmpaeltloa.
.
llardmaa Is acheduled to be arralped Tuesday, aald Charles
A. Gerkea, Ullslant couaty prMecutor.
The coach llu lieea · auspeaded witboat pay by the
Logan·lloclkiD&amp; Board of Educatloa, which met Tueld~ llllht:
, and approved a resolution to colllllder tei'nlloMioa of
llanlmao'• colltraet, said Superintendent JORph Murtha.
·
Last week, Banlmaa lsaued a statement saying he bad puled
a IJe.d~tor test to·"clear my name."
.
He denied accusatloos lha$ he placed a video camera In a
locker room on the momln1 of Jan. &amp;In order to tape activity Ia
the boyuhower.
,
Har4man said he was planning It' tape a fresllmu buke&amp;hall
game &amp;hal nl&amp;hl and put the·camera In lhe locker room "to make
sure It would he avallsbl~ when I needed II.''
Kelly stUiweU, athletic director, wiD assume the coachea
dutlea until &amp;he season Is over.

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We;ct' Uday, ~ 10, 1888

Board approves item.S

A warded sum through eourt ·

COUNTY·.. •
APPLIANCES

.

UPI girls ratings .stay same
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The United Press .Internftlonal
Ohio High Scool Board of
Coaches girls basketball ratings ··
head into the final two weeks with
four unbeaten teams holding
firm to their first place spots.
Akron Buchtel, Garfield
Heights Trinity. Rocky River
L!ltheran West and Kalida. all of
which have spent at least four
weeks as the No. 1 team In their
division, held comfortable margins over their · nearest
challengers.
·
Buchtel, 18-0, led runnerup
Toledo Central Catholic by' a
~11-190 margin in Division I,
Picking up 16 first place votes to 4
for TCC, which also has an 18-0
record. Buchtel had a 195-177
lead a week ago.
Cincinnati Seton, . 18·1, and
Barberton, 15-l. again finished
third and fourth with 175 and 136
points, respectively, while Plcke·
rlngton. 16-1, advanced one spot
· .
to fifth with 78.
Four of the next five places
went to Cleveland.area teams.
Glenville was sixth, followed by
Cincinnati Princeton, East
Cleveland Shaw, Elyria and
Euclid.
Trinity, stilll7-0 after Its lone
scheduled game last week
(Cleveland Central Catholic)
was snowed out, held a 243-167
lead over Cincinnati Forest Park
(15-1) received ·1s flrst place
votes to 1 for the Lady Chargers.
Trinity, which was to play
lOth-ranked (Division lVI Gates
Mills Gilmour Academy Tuesday
night, will make up the Central
Catholic game Feb. 18.
· Following Forest Park in third
place was Canal Fulton Northwest with 143 points. Then came
Beloit West Branch andTippClty
TlppecanQI!, a newcomer to the
top ten, advancing all the way
from 12th last week to fifth. .
Rounding out the Division 11
list were Shelby in sixth, followed
by Millersburg West Holmes.
Solon and Ashville Teays Valley
· In a tie for eighth and Byesville

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Announcements

JHURSDAy FEB. 11 ONLY.
IECEIYE .A

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POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9 AM·9 PM 'WMkdeya. II· II 8aturd1y.

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ENJOY THE
BEST
.THE

Precious
elegance.
Ele8an~ .,. ·
prec1s1on.

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COWMBIAGAS

ThlA

211

IN

3. O.:lnMtl Selon ( t) !18-0

171
lSi

4, Barberton (1$-1)
5. Plckertn11o• I Il-l I
8. CJe\'elalld GI~Millll! t li- 2)

.. .

78

..

7. Ontlnnalt 1'\-bleeton ( 1&amp;.21

ll. l!:.. tCie\'elandShawCI1· 1J

•

$4
t. Elyria {1&amp;-S I
-IS
lii.Dtdld 115-Zl
43
Second ten; II. Up~r Arlln(lon !J; U:.
Ellll Llverpool ft; U. OIIUtcothe 18; J.t.
Be•"~"'reek 13: 15. Ule ) New Pa.lladelpbla and Canton McKialey, 12 u1•h; 17.
Clnci,..,IMalllil'rof~erc)'

If: IJI. Toledo
Whkmer I ; II. Lal&amp;.ewood 5; 9 . (tiel
Duhll11. Norlh Cuieln GlenOak and
Clnclnutl Withrow, 4 eactl.
.,,.hlon II
I. GarDeld U,h'ITinllJ (18} ( 17·1)

,.,"'
"'

'e. Clnclnrw.tl

Fom~t

Park (I) 11$-1)

J . Caul Fulton No nhwe!'lt ( 17-21

... kloltWI!IIt'BraDCh(I)CI.I )
5. Ttpp Cit J Tl ppr.ranoo Ct ) (li'-01
t. Shelby ( 1.._2 )
l . Wett Hobne. ( ls-31
11. (tiel Solon tiH l

liS
tH

ll ( tlf') Tea,Yt \-' alley (21 ( IK-0 1

85

.

til

8JI
85

IO.Byesvllle Me ..owhrook ( jQ.3)

sicond tea: II. " 'ar•w Riwr \' 1~ H :
lt. FJ)'rl• Wdl -11: 13. SCrut.hen (I) 3'1:
14-Ciacl...atiSt. Uullla!l; 15. Buley I !I;
II. (li~) Vpper Sa ... Uik)' ..... G.Wpolla,
17 ueh; 18. Warrn o ... ,e" II: II.
.letfef"'Ie Aru il l II; 'tl . C.ple)' II.
Dlvtu.niD
1. Rocky IUwr Lu" " 'at ( II) 111·11 ns
'l. VIe..- Madlf!WI (41 (18-0)

a. WeollllllftOII (4) (17-1)

4. cu•lla M&amp;r~artUa
Ill

n•n

11t
118

s. Sllerwoed Falrvl_. ct l 1 IHl

•

I.

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~wrly

Fort Fr;t"' (IH)

7. 0n•rkt { 12-2)
8. Lo.vll.,e ~Ill....., II) (UJ.J)
ft. Frr.montJK.Jo.. pk(l5-2)

711
S5
51
. .,

li.UUc• (IS. I)
13 ·
SecOnd tu; 11. WJomlrw 30; n. (lie )
C.ldwaler and Pliletol, 24 eaclli 14. Wett
La,.,rue Radpwoodr n : l$. Readlllll8;
11. Hnon 12: n. HailalbaJ Rlwr 10: 18.
(t)e) un .. &amp;o, Maec~n F.a•Mr• and Braok·
llekl, I r~ll.

5ULOVA
OIL~~I~

S7900

Dh1aiMIIV

1. Kalhl• c11) ( 11·1)
' · Upperfklo&amp;e Valle)' (3) tll-11

!: ::=.v.:'~ ~l-:-:t;~ cJ•2J

I. Mallllleld 8t. PKer'• {IJ.!}
a. 8 Q.,)l'Hoalolllheu&amp;enl (4)( 1J.
I)
1. Newnk CatJM• (IJ.! )
A.Sl. Be_,fl)(ll-2)
t. DeGraff alwnllh I IJ.2)

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71

lt,Oate• MI .. Gllmo• Aca*my(IJ.
I}

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14
Sf!co.t t~a ! 11. •rllefe Wt'R II; it.
Frankl Ia Faraa4!e Green (I} 41; 13. (tie)

Fort LorA mAe ... Fort Jktl41WfJ, II; 15.

O.ln'Uie 11; 11. Col...._ £ru~. .
11; 17. Cl_, .._,_..,If; 11. • .,....
If; 11. Roe...,. Plllllwar t; u. oa~e~
lillll Hawkea t.

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Give the eternal elegance
of diamonds brilliantly
displayed in Gold Tone.
Fashions in time
that will delight her.

ONLY

INGELS ·

.·FURNITURE
&amp;,.P,WELIY

I 06 ft. 2nd Awe;

Mldcll'._rt, o•1•
PH. 992•2635

'•

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cSeville

Be My
Valentine!

I

I

Diamond

And she'll be delighted
with the accuracy
and convenience of her .
precious Diamond Seville
. . .tells time precisely,
never needs winding.

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Polnl•

:. To !do Cellini Cath (.t) C18-1)

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Dhllkln I

~

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Anna Lusk

-""-#~

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44 January calls

•. . , ,1. ter. RQndaoempsey,o!Huntlng-

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Amemberot

'~ .

Dally Hock prices
( A• of 111: 10 a.m.)
Bryce ucl Mark Smith
of lllunt EIU. A Loewl

:Bob EviJII .... :.....................15%

OJJarmlnl Sboppe~~ ............ 12%
City Holding Co ... L ............. 32
Fedl!!'al Mop!.. ........... ;....... 38
GOodyear T&amp;R ...................

Heck'aluc.................. .

5:1"'

Key Cen~rton .................. ~~~v..
Landi' End .........................:ll41.
UIJI!ted Inc...................... --~"~"'
Multimedia Inc................... ~,.,.
Rax

9ss·Tax

Supplement

3

lCieflom"

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. Say It With

Am Electric Power ................ 29
' AT&amp;T ................................. 29%
Ashland 011 ........................56%

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;ij~~;;;;;;;;;;~

.........

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·StoCkS .

·'

riniaibileiaijt~to~r~ne~y~f~ee~s~

Don't FDIIBf
Vslsntlns '1 Dsg
$undsg, ·Fshtustg 14th

; . Former Me!(Is Coun,t y resident•
Anna L!~ Lusk, 65, pf Huntington, W.ya., died tlrls morning
(Wednesday) at her home.
, Born Nov. 16,19221n l')fabscott,
1
W.Va., she was a daughter of the
late Everett Archie and Myrtle
Annie Pack Miller. She was a
retired trust . assistant for the
American Bienefll Corporation of
Huntington, W.Va., and was a
member of the Methodist faith.
Survivors ll)clude one daugh-

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The Middleport Fire ,Department
answered a total of ~4 calls.
,
:· .
· ton, W.Va.; one son, Joseph
In J11n11ary, eight fire and rescue
: Leaste F. L\f«,-100. .R9Ut* l,';~&lt;.;H~I:&amp;Uon Llllli of Orlando, Fla.;
Middleport, qli!d 'fi!es'dlW\lhh!!-"twb gtandCbll4fen; lhree""llsters; ' calls' and 36" emergeney&gt; e'aus;
Holzer Medical Center.
Opal Armstrong of Clendenin, .Chief Jeff Darst reports. All
vehicles of t)le department were
Mrs.LuskwasbornF.eb.8,1888 , W.Va .• Margaret Leake of Polu Georgia, a daughter of lhe late wellton, Va. and Juanl(4 Lau- . driven 1062.4 mlles during the
BaylessandFronleBrewerReld. · dermllk of Cliatanooga, Tenn.; · month. ·
Sui,'Vlvlng are a son, Dorsey . ' four brothers, Everett MlUer of
Reid, Blaine, Wash.; two·daugh- · Tampa, Fla., Rolllkl Mill~ of
ters, Mrs. Helen Morgan, Au· Oak Hill, W.Va., and R.B. and · Middleport pollee
gusta, Ga., and Mrs. Jack TommyMlller,bothofChrlstian,
aJTe8l 58 in January
(Joyce) Bartrum, Route 1, Mid- W.V,a.
·
·
dleport, with whom Mrs. Lusk · She was P~"CCeded In death by ,
Torty-eight arrests were made
made her home, seven grand· her husband, Joseph · Harrison . by the Middleport Pollee Depart- ,
children and 18 great- Lusk on Aprll ,15, 19;&gt;5.
ment In January. Chief of Pollee
grandchildren. '
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday
Sid Little reports.
Besides her parents. Mrs. Lusk at Chapman's Mortqary · 2851
The department Investigated .
was preceded II) dea.th by her • Third .Ave.. Huntington, W.Va: . five accidents, collected parking
husband, John Wesley • Lusk, · with Rev. ·Bill Blankenship offi·
meter · money 11mountlng to.
three grand!ill!ldren, ami seven elating. Burial will be at 2 p.m.pn $787.90, merchant pollee collec·
brothers and sisters.
Friday at Montgomery Memortlons ot $34, and wrote 437
. ~ces will be held at 1 p.m. , lal Park, London, W.Va. Friends
parkin&amp; tickets. All vehicles
Frld!!Y at the Hunter Funeral may call ·at the mortuary from 6 ' were driven $,587 miles . during
Home In Rutland with the Rev. . to 9 p.m. on Thursday.
the month.
Paul Taylor officiating. Burial
'
will· . be In Meigs Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to4 and 7 to9
p.m. Thursday.
;1

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D'AIRY QUEEN

w.

t

IUICI won-losa records le p~~unUiraes ):

Area· deaths

Lessie Lusk

:BAS

A gas furnace stands by itself a source of welcome·
· winter-long warmth. Because no matter how ciold it gets Out:
side, a gas furnace keeps your whole hbuse feeling cozy
and comfortable ... without the addition of a heat pump.
. You ~~ also feel comfortable about your budget. Today:s
high-effiCiency gas furnaces and low gas costs mean yo'u
can save money over a heat pump, too.
For more details, check with a heating dealer. Warmth,
savings and ...
There are lots of reasons gas heat, alone, is your best
energy value.
·
.. ·

Uald Prn• lateraaU•nal Ohio
Hl«f' St; bMI Board of Coatltel' 11111
h•ketball ratilllp (wit" ftnt ·pllce"Y.W•

I. ,\It ron Buci!IP.I (It) 1111-1)

PhOne 1112-1174

·-

w~ell"s

Team

forfeit bonds in court·

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r

Ohio { UPI)

FREE
SMALL CONE·

Hospital news

'r-------Girls ralifigs
COLUMBUS.

Sale

lias three rolls

Flower[

Show You
Care ...

A special Section
.Coming February 19,.1988
.· Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1988

'contact Your Advertising
Repres~ntative ·for. Details

~~~hrue.d
A

The· Daily Sentinel

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L·~- ~-·· ·

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·STORE HOURS

ON YOUI MEAT
PUICHASE AT

Monday thru Sunday
. I AM~lO PM

SUPER .VAW

It Reww The li&amp;hl To
Li•it QU.ntities

•

r

lSl.OO
OFF f
, . 3LI.OIMOIE
I

~.S.~.~· CHOICE .BONELESS .

$·

. ,

199
Rump Roast ••••• ~•••
FRESH PORK BUn
. ks/ .Roas t ••• ~••- .139
Sfea
J

PORK

I USDA (HOKE BONELESS
I CHUCK
! ROAST
L~!.h'.!l-'··

SLICED
Cube Steaks ••••• ~••• $239 I PEPPERONI
HOMEMADE
I
I

Pork Sausage •••••• $.139

.. GRADE A WHOLE ·

.'

a..--:-----------'
Ir--------------1
POWELL'S COUPON

.'

'

I POWELL'S COUPON I
· I

·.••,.
GOD MADE YOU FOJl ft!1!:
t
E8PECIALLY
: ·eEspeCially
oa made you
tor ~ .e spectally; . ·
for me, and eave you all a man

.

-----~--------·

TPowiwscoijioN1
.
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IS1.00 OFFI

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'•

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ANY SIZE Pl(IAGE

I

$ 39
.P.otatoJs ••••••.~••• l~~. .1· .

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U. S~ NO. 1 IDAHO

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BROUGHTON'S

2°/o .Milk ••••••••••••••
' .

. . · GALLON

HANGING ROCK GRADE A DOZEN

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PORK I
LOIN . . 1

1/4

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l
I

---------------·
r------------1 POWELL'S COUPON

I Go0411'111'11 Sat.. F... 13. 1911 I

!S2.00
OFF
$ , 39 I ANY FAMILY SIZE PKG:
•I

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$

DAIRY LANE

!

PORK
CHOPS'

Ice Cream·••••••••. :.~A!.$ 1_09

II
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s.ocoz. OFF!

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11.5

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12

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PIG.

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20, 0Z.

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POWELL'S COUPON

AJAX DETERGENT
147

oz.

$299
c..,_

lilllit 1 ,.,
Goe4 Only AI Powell'I Sc pFl'lllarlttl
Offer Gooll11rru Sat., fell. 13, 1911

FLAVORITE SUGAR
5LI.

$129·

Lillrll 1 , . c. .....
OM Only At Ptwtll't 5 p1r-kol
Offw a-lllrru flrt.; Fell. 14, 1911

.,

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MAXWELL ,HOUSE

NOITIIEIN

INSTANT (OFFEE
IOL

$329

lllrllt 1 ,. Cltt-

Geetlllrrlr At Pnelrt Se PI

..,

•'II ·IU ~ .~ Geetlllwu Sat. Ftlt. 11, 1911

TOILET .USSUE .

29

50C

QIF ·.

PCUII Pll. hM;MI

.LUMCH.
MEAT

'"

ae

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1
1

t

, He took 1h~ blue from He~ven and pullt in
r
your eyes;
•
r.' The golden halo of your hair came from
1
sunset skies.
; . And like a lovely angel , He gavr you form
~~
and face;
,
,
I Then graciously He blessed you with His
own wondrous grace.

Yes, Cod made you' for me, es~ally;
f. EspeelaUy for me.
.
'i And gav yOU all thai I'd expect, my one and
;

1•

·

al1tobe,

·

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k For
And then he said. Son, ta~ this girl
yoUr, 11wful wedded wife.

How to lree them.elves Ct sin,
By tr)'lna another way.
·
By telling them ot Heaven's home.
' The one on distant shore. .
Ttur one that bears their Own namepll'te,
. If they wlllain no more.
Point out rhetr mlstak.. In life,

The ones, whJJe out In sin.

Tell them how, 'twat during these, ·
'Illat Satan entered ln.
Tell them if they auwer
To the kn~k on their heart's door,
Jesus Jg 'walt,ng ~o see them through
If they will siR no more.
Tell them that He loves them,
And has .for man:y: yean .
Tell them how, at Calvary's Cross
He died ln shame and tears.
And how,lt lhey wUI Uve for Him.
The thinp He hal 1n 1tore.
The blesslnp here, and Hraven above,
• It they will sin no more.

tow.1

••· NoW Lord, I sBid, that's the easiest thing
¥ you could
a man to do .
ha.ppens to be- you.
1••., Since that Uttte girl-Mrs.
Alpha Douglas
;~ · 376700 Pagevllle Rd. , Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

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THE GREAT SACRinCE
When I think of the world and Its riches,

The jealousy, envy and strife.

1 thld: of bOW God must ha.v@ loved mif.

BROWS NO PARTIALITY
I"' On ao·IIOtba'• lonely mountain , a man
,
went willingly
.

To take those. things out of my life.

t Heyou
t;::e,.andme,
us each and every

Sbed His bloocl. that I mlaht bo free.
Yes. God looked on me w1th plty. · ·
Or today, where would I be?

one. tndudlng

.

How HIS son bore. the Cross of Redemp· .
tiD~.

, Th .. Jesus, God' a only son . tfe show&amp; no
r , partlallly.
r: He showed compassion for the mad man

He must have seen my ~nd1tlon,
Kaew I waa doomed to be lost .
ThO\IIbt ttaat my soul waa wonh 111vlng, .
I
a'nd
Even at a terrible cost.
Tile woman fllled with aln. The poor out·
' ~~·
'
Fo~ He, pve His most treasured
, , cast~ .
alon,
r Jesus proved His tow for him.
, He fed. the poor and healed thr sick, aad • His Son, wbo paid a jp'Oat price.
Today, 1 am prom lied a mansion
• made the blind to see;
Jklcaue ef that one ucrUlct.
..,' He showed no partiality.
So
J~us ll more than I counted,
~: Tbai He hu DO rft,ptet ku" per10n1, In the
His love hal no equal, bar none.
~I
Blblt YOU «'!ID See;
1 would atlll bo wandl!rl11111n llarkneso,
And one Is ChaplerlO. verli! 17 q! Dourer·
If not for God and Hla Son.
•
anomy.
I
~D.­
•. 1 He didn't say black, broWn, or white, He
.,•........,, a...
• only cares that our hearts are rlaht,
~ And the little children IW oald ouHer them

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toeome WilD me

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For such lllbe Klqdom of Heaven .. He

ohOWo no partiality .

SO let Ua kwrone"nother, wtthaamtle not
•
a frowa;
,
To File lallfll lend a beiDit&gt;a hand. Don t
i• lclek tlllm-whtm they're clown.
.
I"'~Lo'rd wUIIIIeooyou lor fl. oil your llle
f muclr-er. be:
LlkeHewbolOVf'lusalllbetame, show,no '

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portfallty.

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- - t\lflllllloalal
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. !IECRET DMOBIES

How many are tbe aecrets.
we keep locked In our heart?

To most. whlc~ have1no meaning,
But •.o us, they are a part"'
A part, we try forge"lng, ·
Until some furure ~ay .
When

we can aptn remember.

What lime has put away.
How many are the srcrets.

We 1hartc1so lone qo'!'
T}ltnp we couldn't put aside,
Tbat you and I both know.
A part of life, we know so well,
Tbat fate has mel.nt to be.
Sln«'!e time of ,happening, to us both,

Became a memory . .
How many are tbe secrets,
·
Tile future stUI may hold?
While days and monthl, turn Into years,
As both Of US lfOW old, I '
TharW.. mliht recall II needed.
-OieoD: H a - , Those things In comtna yean,
Pomeroy, Olllo
And let the mtnd try to va.uallze
,.....,
1brough eyes, now blurTed wUb tears·.
-oteaD . . _
PolneroJ, Olllo

t ' To hold. to
'and «'!herlsh
f'i All the days of her Ufe.

h'

Saltines ...... ~ ••• ~.~····
l FiANKIE I
BETTY CROCKER
.APPLE, CHERRY, PEACH
.,. oz. '69.&lt; Ban~Juet Pies
I WIENERS I
Cake .Mixes •••••••••••
69&lt;
l~-'!"!.~~!.~ !]'-!!!!l
•••••••• •
.

I

could a1k hll one and all to be.
It must have been a special time when
thoUJiht o! you.
·•
Such a fovely little doll, with eyes of azure
blue.

~, To die upori the cross. that all' mankind be

L~.!!-'..!.!G.!::...F~:..I.!: .!~!,

1-

:~

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1 r;owiii.;-couPo"Ni
lI

f.

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Large Eggs •••••••••• 2/

NABISCO

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: .-· __,;,_,;_~~Poet's Cotner.- - - -

1Good Thru Sat•• Feb. 13. 1911 I

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h

I 2 Ll. or LAitGEI PIG. I
II GROUND
-1I
·
! BEEF !

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l SOC OFF ' !

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New officers
installed.

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Club meets

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Drumsticks .......~·•••. 33&lt;

Community Cal~ndar .

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- ~Good lhru Sat., feb. 13, 1911

TURKEY

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I BUCKET
II CUBE STEAK
.

Leg Quarters ••. ~••••

Square dance club visits Twirlers

•

•

J~us.

THE NAME OF .!ESUS
Js just a name to some,

But It's more than a name to me.
Jt'1 •he name of one. 'when I wa~ blind ,

That· rave me stght to see.

-

hearing the s!mg of the fir sr spring robin and the laugh·
ter of children provides me with a long and dreadful sad-

..

ness.

Office Hours By

He len Keller
AI'Poinl!ftl!nl

Phone: (6141

592-286~

The one who Jooked and saw my sins,

I ~ould no longer ~Mtar.

Who saw the need. aDd had the cure.
And healed me with His care.
Who took the sadness or'my heart ,
The evU In my mind,
And put tbem Jn a place somewhere,
That I will never find .
Wbo made me love my fellow man,

Give out wttl1 help each day.
. Regardless of the race or creed ,
·Ana turn no-oneaway.

•,

Tbat ls why His name to me,
Is more than just a word.
ll's llle ltoell. lor all the loti! ,
Whole crtea wm all be heard.
The ones who kneel and confess
The a1JII they have to bear.
Can ask fora1veness and receive
The.name ol Jesus there. ,

-OiooD.PO...,,OIIIo

603 West Union

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r

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CHICKEN

Bacon •.•.

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Grrotl Thru Sat. F... 13, 1911 I

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Ann
Landers .

Smiths celebrate

.... -

·ISl.OO OFF

Fryers •.••••.••••••. ~....

SAVORY

.

EagleS Class J;lleets
•

reason

;i

OFF II

7

The

Homemade valenlnes were ex- were discussed. A soup s upper
changed at the reeent meeting of
was tentative ly se t for March 4
the Eagles Class of the Asbury
wltb soup, sandwiches, pie, cof·
United Methodist Church held at
fee and kOPlald to be served.
the
home
of
Martha
Moore
and
Door prizes went to Bo_b Smith
• Dear "- "'eden: ·I read with forever), but her once-pronusrng have decided• that Scott shouidi be
Ruth
Crouch.
and
Helen Teaford. Bible qulzes
~- intcrat the lettrr from the woman career is now marred by this single my maid of honor. When I told
and valentine readings were
Helen Te aford pres ided with
~; who li!lt that she lrad been disr:rimi· experience.
.
.Dan that Scott was my choice he
Marcia Karr giving the prayer.
given by Mary Lisle. . Ruth
' naterl apinlt bealuse of her epilepThank you for helping us educate said it was a ridiculous idea and
Beulah Ward had scripture from
Crouch gave the blessing and
!ients
and
appreciates'tbem
all.
~- . sy. She Qned herselr, "Higlt Tech tire public. - HARMON PlJITER, that people would think I was nuts.
refreshments were served to
The question: Should he reply7 - I Cor. 13, "The Love Chapter. "
~- Problem in San joee."
.
PH.D., EXECUTIVE DIRECfOR, We talked a long time and I
Harriette
Sinclair,
treasurer,
those
named and Donna Smith,
DOCTOR'S WIFE IN WARREN,.
"·
I Would like to call your allen·
EPILEPSY CENTER, GARDEN explained that Scott really deserved
reported ·a balance of $1,l!j8.28
Betty Ash, Linda Ferrell, VIrgil
'!, lion to a national OF'gjll\ii.ation that CllY, N.Y.
the honor. •Finally, ·Dan said it PA.
with Irene Parker noting that the
Teaford, Karl Kloes, Lou Ferrell.
r DEAR WIFE: The question or nower fund Is now at $130.~.
· ~· dalls specifically with this type, of
DEAR H.P.: I tiave received
would be OK with him, but I
Vicky and Mark Morrow, and the
whether or not to say "thank you"
: problem. It is the Epilepsy Founda· . hundreds or letters from . people should expect a lot or criticism.
Plans for visiting more shutlns
hostesses. · .. ·
., lion of America, 4351 Garden City who decry the widesprfA!d ianoThe wedding is going to be · ror a thank )'Ou is highly personal.
':, Dr., Landover, Md. 20785. The ranee of this di$order. Tirey asked semifonual. Dan and I plan to have There is no ·obligation to do so.
;~ toll..free telephone number is
me to emphasize the fact t1lat the four attendanU each. We bolh want However, ir the thank you is
'• EFA·UXXI. There ·are lOcal affiliates
~rity of people with qJilepsy are it to be a memorable event. Please especially moving and the recipient
Twenty members of the Belle_s King, Harold and Betty Newell,
· {, thfoirlhout' the United states thllt ·employable and 11101t C8!leS can be tell me ir you thi'nk II!Y idea is too is · tow:~ by it,' it's perfe!:tly
and Beaus Square Dance Club Ray and Bernita MllXson, Joe
,I offer advocacy rourueling to,people
oontrolled with proper medication.
far out. ..J SEEKING HELP IN proper. I have, on oCtasion, written
traveled to Gallipolis to attend a and Marge Chapman, Dana and
• 11Vho have been fired, demoted, etc.,
Thank you ·ror sending on the NEBRASKA
to say "thank yo\1" ror a thank you,
dance
sponsored by the GaiUa Bernice Hoffman, Lynn and
"' becauae of this disorder. On Long · . add1'191 and phone number so my
DEAR SEEKING: 1 am a strong and will probably do so again.
Twirlers where Chad Johnson or Clara Burroughs, Homer and
• Island, the Epilepsy Foundation or
readers can obtain information and believer in people doina their own
Do you have questions about sex, · South Point was caller for the Shirley Belt, Jim Stewart and
; , Nassau County has provided assist·
guidance. I have seen the material · thin&amp; but there are certain tradi· but nobody you can talk to pbout
Sally Savage, George and Ruby
dance.
, anr;e in many such cases. .
and it is excellent.
lions that should be respected ir for them? Ann Landers' newly revised
Since the Belles and Be_aus had Nlclnsky.
"j ·
It is a l$lld commentary in this day
Dear. ADD Landers: I plan to be no other
than to acknowl· booklet, ''Sex and the Teeilager," will the largest group at the dance the
and qe of heiahtened awareness
married in Auaust of 1988. My edae ihe sanctity ohhe occasion. ·
club was awarded the·attendance
you the answers yotl 11«11. To refiance (Qan) and I are making
Ask Dan if he will invite Scott to give
•: that people with epilepsy are still
ceive a copy, send ~2.50 plrls a sd/-od· banner aQd the Back-Up Shirts.
: : plaped . by qe.old myths and
plans for the weddinl and we .have . be one of HIS attendants. You can
Mary Myers hosted a recnet
dressal, stamped No. 10 enveloj)e (39 Going from here were Jim and
:• misconceptions. In this woman's hit a snag. 1r ever I needed advice
Donna NelSon, Bill and Noami meeting of the Chatter Club held
~ ease, rour years of exemplary ser· from Ann ~nders it is now.
then ask a sister, cousin or l'enlale cents postagP) to Ann Landers, P.O.
at the home of Susan Cleland.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061 J.OS62.
'· vice · were ignored .because of a
· !'ofY closest rriend in the whole · friend to be YQUr maid of honor.
Dues and flower fund dona·
~: siJllllt: seizure. Stlltistics show. that world is a guy ~ Scott. . We
Dear An• Laaden: My huSband
0
lions
were collected and o'f tlcers'
ANN LAMJERS
!• She may not have another serzure grew up tosetber and-he has stood is a physician. He. rrequently r:e- C1988. Los Angeles Times Syrodic«o ond
reports from the last meeting
•: for four more years (or maybe by · me through thick and thin. I ceives · thank·you notes from pa· Crllla&lt;l Syndicolo
·
were read. A bake sale was held
Fred B. and Bertha F . Smith and plans made for a Valentine
celebrated their 55th wedding
Day observance with members
=· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
••
anniversary on feb . 4 at the
to wear: red and white. Hostess
home of their daughter and · gifts were presented to Mr s.
5Qn-ln·law, Kathryn and VIrgil
Myers. Flowers were sent to
New officers were Installed at
.;:,_,::......:..
.,.....,_...:..
...:..'-.:.·-----~~-~----'-Wlhdon, Texas Road, Pomeroy .
Isabelle Couch with a card being
"~.;·
the recent meeting of tire Bertha
sent
to Janice Fetty. Games were
•,•,
••
M. Sayre Missionary Group held
tamlly
dinner
,
an
played
with the door prize being
FoUowlng
a
Red Call. Admission $1.50. Bring ToYinshi!J Trustees will meet In
In the fellowship room of the
t•• RACINETHURSDAY
anniversary
cake
baked
by
Jo
awarded
to Delores Whitlock.
- Southern . High
special session Saturday, 10
snacks. Everyone welcome.
Racine Baptist Church.
neighbor
of
the
Linda
Hubbard
wiU host the
Ann
Baum,
School Band Boosters will meet
a.m., to' discuss Insurance and
Elected were Barbara Gheen,
February meeting.
•
couple, was served with Ice
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., In the high
GALLIPOLIS - . Gallipolis cable television. .
president; F1orence Adams, vice cream to the honored couple, the .-:....:..~_;:..__ _.:...._ _ _ __
'' school•
band room. AI) PBI'I!nts of F1ame Chapter will meet 6: 30
president of Interpretations, and
••
Wlndons , anolher daughter and
r band students In the district are
p.m . on' Frldl).y at Dale's Smor·
SUNDAY
, Martha Lou Beegle, l'ove gift
son-In-law, Barbara and Alvin
~ urged to attend.
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. chairman.
gasbord. Pastor David Adams of
T.rlpp,
and their sons, Rodney
Columbus will speak. President Stan Walters and children,
A report was glv~n on . the and Todd Tripp, Rodney 11nd
•p'
Brandy and Jason, of Heath,
• · CHESTER - Shade River Mary Folmer welcomes all.
scholarship fund. A letter. was
Debra Chevalier and their chlld·
' Lodge at Chester will hold a
Ohio,
wm
be
singing
at
tbe
.
read
from Trinity Churc.h, Pome'
ren, Adam and Abbie, Brian and
; ·. regUlar meeting ThqfSI!I!Y at
POMEROY - . Return Jona- Pomeroy Church o!the Nazarene roy, Inviting the pastor and
Blair
all local, and
r. -7:30 p.m. at , the lodge . hall . th~F\ Mellis Chapter, Daughters on Sunday morning at the 9: 30 women of the-church to a Lenten Becky Windon,
and James Cotterll1,
,.. Building renovation plans wlli be o! the American Revolution: will serVIce. Everyone welcome.
breakfast on Feb.l7 at 7: 45-a.m. Harrlsonv!Ue. ' ..
'
presented . to .the memblirshlp. meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the ·
The love gift progr!lm was by
f.· Retreshmen'ts will be served.
Meigs Museum. Arnerlcarl. His- Food collecttoa
Florence Adams with Gretta
Cards and !lowers were reEAST MEIGS - The Easte~n · Simpson and Naomi Stobart
. tory month will be observed with
--- ·
c eived from friends and
,
POMEROY - Rock Springs essay winners to be present. High chapter ol the Meigs . presenting love gifts · from the
relatives.
· Grange will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Hostesses wlli be Mrs. Robert Clvltan Club will be collecting Circles. Far the program a film
· ;:. Thursday ntght . at the ball.
Ashley, Mu. Keith Ashley, Mrs. canned g?xxls for the needy, entitled "The Pineapple Story"
Harold Hager, .PattY Par~er, through Frida)'. Anyone,wlshlng was,- shown.
tw
· --Prillon population
,,' POMEROY -ACiergyAppre-· Mrs. Lawrence Smith, and Mrs. to donate may drop Items off. at
Mh.
Gheen
opened
the
meet•..• elation Dinner, Sponsored by Big James Werry.
the school.
•
Ing with devotions followln~ the
From 1980 to 1986, The World AI·
,: Bend Clvltan Club, Is being held
diMer. Her topic · was "i'he manac reporlS, the population of pns·
' Thursday, 6:30 p.m., at the
GALLIPOLIS- Pastor David Yearbookl
Gj)lden Clasp" followed by ons In the United States Increased by
POMEROY - Monday Is the prayer by Florence Adams. 217,000, or 66 percent. At the end .of
: Seillor Citizens Center In AdamsofColumbuswiUbeguest
~ Pomeroy.
, speaker at ' Friday's Gallipolis last day to orde.r . Meigs Ma· Emma Adams gave the sunshine 1986 there were a record 546,659 prrs·
'' ·
_ .,- - ,
·
" F1trne -F.ellowshlp ~ng .. The :ra!lder yearb9oks , fQI' 1988.. All tund \'@POrt and · plari• .were onen undet' tbe jutlsdlct\on olloderal
•'
~~· ' " ' • ,JI'IUDA'!r' ' ' ' '
' · meeting· will be held at Dale's orders musf be placed by 3: 15 discussed for making bandages and state correctional authorities. ·
&gt;: POMEROY -A square dance Smorgasbord, starting at 6:30 p.m. Each book Is $18, .plus an
,. will be held Friday, trom 8 to 11 p.m.
additional S2 for engraved names In
used
sheets
usedforIngood
the
March
andtothebeneed
:: p.in., at the Senior Citizens
and $1 for,plastic covers. Names project.
,
; Center In Pomeroy: Music wiU be
and covers are optional.
SATtJBDAY
.
Ruth Circle members were
· "Never to see rhe face of a loved o ne nor witness a
.• , by True Country. Caller will be·
TUPPERS PLAINS- Orange
hostesses
at
the
meeting
.
I,
summer sunset is indeed a handicap. But I cari touch a ·
,.• .
face a·nd feel the warmth of rhe sun. But to be deprived ol .

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3.5 OZ. HOIMEL

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LB.

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F•.1!:!!!!.J

SOC

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Pon118f0V-Middleport. Ohio

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II ·POWELL'S
·
· COUPON II
I

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&lt;!D!l

·U11 ""'
A•l
''" Ero M,l
r'Powtr:Dsci'iuP()Nl

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Epileptics still plagued by myths,
~: misconcepti9ns, discrimination

Our Reguler Price• on
Meats are the loweat in
the are~~l Our melts are
ebsolutely the bestWe guarantee
utisfectlon I
'

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POWELL~S

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES,. EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., FEB. 13, .1918

. . ·' .

10, 1988

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SAVE UP
0
TO ~7°
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Athens, Ohio 45701

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• rzll 8 1be Del~ Sentiu•

Registration set
for classes
at Fitness

,

Wednuclity,

Pomecoj' Mltlr'rf*'o OHo

.

Caltholic
girls school
sold
TOLEOO, Ohio (UPI) CIDCillllatl.

Registration for classes to be
give~ by Ms. Flllless, Inc. at the
studio In Hartford, W. Va. Will be
held Feb. 22 from 6 to 8 p.m.
Classes wiU be offered In baton ·
tWirling, pompom and tumbling
for children ages 3 to 11 on
Monday evenings. Registration
fee Is $3. More Information may
be obtained by calling Kenda
Rizer, 949-2465, or Mary Smith,
1·304·882·3700.

McAuleY High School, a Toledo
Catholic girlS school that ts
'SCheduled to close after this
school year, bas been sold to
Toledo Christian Schoola Inc.
Toledo Christian paid $1.5
mutton for the 11-acre site In
south Toledo, officials said
Monday.
The JO.year-old schoolls owned
by the Sisters of Mercy of

•

February

10, 19f!

Phys Ed complex being proposed :

:· VJulrtndav.

'"' "" m~u,.

"'"'tr-

•

Monday for a week of rehearsing In Pensacola's Civic Center
before starting his U.S. tour on Feb. 231n Kansas City, Mo. He
planned no public appearances but WJLQ·FM will rally at the
Civic Center Friday In hopes ot getting Jackson to .perform·.
There's also a petition driving that WJLQ program director
J.D.· Nortb hopes wlll have 20,000 signatures by Friday. J.
Jackson "welcome center'' has alSo been set up at a parking lot
near downtown as a place where fans could congregate and hear
Jackson music.
·
·
RODGERS REMEMBERED: Broadway preferred musl·
cal val en tine to the memory of composer. Richard Rodgen
Monday night on what would have been his 85th birthday.. It was
an evening titled "My Happy Valentine" at Town Hall with 20
· established and rising stars of the stage partlclpatlng In singing
Rndgers love songs with lyrics by Lorenz Han and O~!U'
Hammenteln II. Eartha Kltt got to sing the valentine song and
others slngtng ·hlghllghts from ROdgers shows were DoroUly
Loudon, Jeu Staple&amp;on, Larry Wopal, and Mlu'nl Nixon.
· Everyone, Including Rodgers' wido~. Dorolby, agreed It was an
' enchanting evening ani! a prolltable one for Equity Library
Theater, which raised $80,000 to pay off Its debts. Rodgers and
. Hammerstein Were original boosters of the tlleater showcase
for.young talent when It was founded In 1943.
POLmCAL NOO'ES: Johnny Cash Is getting political. He
plans to boost the presidential campaign of his Sl!nator,
· Democrat Albert Gore, by appearing on 1hls behalf In New
Hampshire. "He's going to be campaigning with me on
·Friday," .Gore said. "We're going to walk the line together" .. .
.; J - Jackson lsn'tthe only one In the family making news. His
son, ·vusel, was a hot-shot linebacker at a Washington, D.C.,
prlv.te school and announced Monday that he will play football
at the University of VIrginia next year, .. A London bookmaking
house has readjusted Its odds on the presidential race: After the
IoJa caucus results, Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas Is now the 7-4
favorite with VIce President Geor&amp;e Bullh 'dropping to 2-1.
·Ex-evangelist Pat Robertson's strong showing Improved his
oddsJrom16-l to6-1. ·

By WILLIA1l C. TBOTr
UDIIed Pr- Interna&amp;ioaal
· ltOO STAGED: lloo Stark's name ls·ln the headUnes again...,
this time tn uncompllrneatary revlewa for her stsge debut.
Stark, ~e one-time $!1ft-porn actren who had a celebrated
18-month romaDCe with Pllllee Ailtbew, Is appearing In "alll;ba
Cllrlltle's "And Tben There Were None" at, Ironically enough, .·
the Duke of York Theater, Before Koo was staged ibe told an
Interviewer, ''Being an actreasll really aU I ever wanted to be,"
and · her producer. BID lteawrtgb&amp;, described her as having
"real star quality." But Koo's reviews were boos. "Koo, a dab
· hand at thrills In her film strtpptng days, did a te~rlble job
providing them with her clothes on," one critic wrote. Another
· said: "The stark truth Is that li's doubtful Meryt·!Mreep will be .
• worried."
.
· .
~GE llO. BOXER: Heavyweight champM!ke'l'Jand actreaa Robia G l - ' apparently felt their weekend
wedding In Chicago didn't take and had a rematch Tuesday at
City HaD In New York. Round 1 o1 the wedding came after the
couple at~ the NBA aU-star game In Chicago and was.
performed by the Rev. Gea1ge m-aw, the priest who adopts
kids and whoae lite 1!(as tbe subject of .a recent' TV movie '
star:rlng IAu ao.ett lr. Tyson has ~D a major contrtbutor to .
Clements's efforts io rebuild his church, which was destroyed
. by fire In June 1986. But there was no Immediate explanation of
just why Tyson, 21, and Givens, 23, decided to go through the
ceremony ag111n In New York. TYson and Givens, one of the
. young s~rs of "Head of the Class," make an unlikely couple. He
spent lime In a home for juvenile delinquents and she graduated
. from Sarah Lawrence CoUege.at age 19 and .attended Harvard
medical school. Tyson wlllleav.e for Tokyo next week to begin
tratntng to fight Toll)' ,...,...,
IACKIION IN- UBE.\ItSAL: MlcUel lackMR fans In
Penucola, Fla., are hoping to persuade him to perform and not
just practice while he's In their toWn this week. Jackson new In '

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The Deily Sentinel-Page 9

Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio

. People-----~. _,.;.,___ ___;.,_ _........;,;_____, Baby has 'will to fight,' ·aunt says

1

complex.
.
•
Deering said Tuesday tle
request was Included in a caplltll
Improvement bill under consf·
eratlon by the Olflce o1 Bud t
and Management.
If approved , construct! n
could begin this yea r , Deerlfg .
said.
·
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·
The complex could also be us6d
by Island residents as a recr$·

PUT·IN•BAY, Ohio (UPI) ''Tbey W8llte(l to .ell llJid WI!' Rep . Fred · Deering, D ·
wanted to buy. It wu a no-lOR Monroeville has proposed ,giving
situation Jor.• us," uld Donald =o,ooo to the Put-In-Bay school
Andrews, 'ldmlnlstrator for district for a physical education
Toledo Cltrladab.
Toledo Chrlatlan wiU receive school. In i986, the school bought
au·o1 tbe silppliM and boob In the former Holy Spirit Seminary .
addition to tbe property.
In Toledo.
Tbe purchase 1s tbe second·
Andrews said the purchase will
time Toledo Chrlatlan has pur- allow Toledo Christian to consoll·
chased a troubled C&amp;thollc date Its operations.

F.IJn-v 10. 1988

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a

CLEVELAND (UPJ) -A baby
born. eight weeks premature
after her mother was shot to
death three months ago has been
released Tuesday from Rainbow .
Babies' and Children's Hospital.
Eight-pound Megan Coyne has
been adopted by her aunt, Carol
Coyne.
"
Jennifer Coyne, 18, was shot

three times by her fonner
boyfriend, Milan Vukelich, 23,
Nov. 9. Vukelich then killed
himself.
•'I took care of Je11nle when she
was little and Megan reminds me
of her," the aunt said. "Jennie
gave her the wiil to fight and
she's done a hell of a job.

Buses· running in Cleveland
EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio (.UPI) - Buses ran again
Wednesday In the East Cleveland public school system after an
nine-day strike by 260 non·teachtng personnel.
· The main Issue was whether 20 non-union members would be
forced to pay union dues ; Details of the "-greement reached
Monday will not be released until union members vote on the
proposed contract Saturday. ! -,

TRAVEL FAIR

O.te:
'Time:
Place:

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~ :Quirks in. the news
·
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Thursday, FtbrWJry 18
7:00P.M.· 9:00 'P.M.

Meigs CoUll!)' Stnior Ctnttr
Mu/b.!rry Htighrs
Pomeroy, Ohio

"' ~

k

w ~

· _ ·_surf &amp; Turf ·
INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN
56·70-CT.

.

••

'N' Save ·
Wieners

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

Shrimp In
The Shell

Boneless
Strip Steak .

Pound

Pound

12-oz.

••
•'
••

Don't Forget Your Stveeth~eart
!~E!!LOYalentine's Day! San. Feb. 14th.
LQng Stem
Pa~er
99 Sw.eetheart ·
$}9 99

-

~

FRESH CUT

.

.••.

R

~

.•

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

Wrapped

Dozen

$2 9

'

..

FRESH CUT

·

•

·

·

Roses
......... :.....
.
'

OPEN

Paper
Wrapped .

Dozen

·

·sUND,c\.YS

.

I

"'0
~

•

105 SHEETS PER ROLL 2-PLY .

~

I

~

"'

.,;
~

~

Bananas

•

.·

..

••••

Coronet
Paper Towels·
Single
Roll
.,

,, f

•
•
•
•

•

-lbs.

•

&lt;
•

.•
..
•
.
••

BUTTERMILK, SKIM,
LIGHT 'N' LIVELY OR

·Sealtest
Homogenized Milk

..• ,
'

%-Gallon

•

•
•
•••

·.••

Polar Pak
Ice
Cream
•
Vi-Gall,on

•

obltelrlclcm 'vllh w1torn lhe II tholoughly
t&lt;»nllklr. Mo;t ·of my pollenfl choo.
ntlhlrt:lf «epidural $1/Verl•s"

CHILLED GRAPEFRUIT OR KROGER APPLE JUICE 64·0Z. $1.00

••.:•

FROZEN

Kroger Bread Dou.gh
~l..Jb. LOIVII

'·

'rid

· "IIHI a woman -lhould have the kind of
delivery lhe wants by. a fully trained
.

••

....

gollf'Rlet
of supermarkets Insections
past. ·years,
their
manufacturers "neve~ did ihelr
homework researching trui na·
tureofcoUee,andwoundupwith
something people would .be bet·
ter without,"
But llhe 1ald she has created a
coffee bag that will function
perfectly and be available on
supermarket shelves as "the
natural missing Unk between
I!'OUJ!d coffee and Instant coffee.
"Coffee . bags are fast and
simple · to use, come perfectly
ground and pre-measured, are
gourmet quality
as fresh as
any pre-ground product, come
iadlvtduauy wrapped, are avauable 11111 variety of blends and an
assortment pack, • requll'!! ,no
brew:lng parapbemalta, thus
maldng them the least messy of
any brewing process, and are
cost effective," abe said.
Seara, 28, said her company,
Revii\Ou, expects coffee bigs to
be widely available 011 superlhelvet by late spring.

JOH~ ·o. CREDICO, M.D..
OB/GYN physician .

00

'

Simmons,
director
of .
Dr. LeeHenry
Omaha's
Doorly
Zoo, took
, the ft'lllPS on an International
., .. ·'delegation's . triP to Southeast
Aslaonbehalfo(,thekouprey . .
The delegation, made . up of
. con~rvatlolllats, zoolOflsts and·
; government otftclals, · met In
· Hanoi, VIetnam, to plan strategy
~for a 10-year ·breeding program
. to save the kouprey. .
Reports of kouprey slghtlnga
. from refulees aparked renewed
:tnterest In finding the animal,
·Simmons said, and delegation
: membera met o(flclals from
; VIetnam, Thall'-nd, Laos and
··camjJodla.
.
:
~·; The Air rorce maps, provided
, by the StrategiC Air Command at
~ Offutt Air Force Base. will be a
•' major help, be uld.
•' "We had maps of their country
~that were far supetlor to any·
•thing they had," he said.
K Simmons was named to the
. deleptlon because of the zoo's ·
; auccels ID breeding gaur.
... another type of wild ox. 1be

••

'

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..••

NON RETURNABLE BOTl'LE , '
DIET !-1TN. DEW, MTN . DEW, '

Dtet Pepsi or
Pepsi~Cola
2-l.iter

I

Pleasant Valley Hospital'
Medical OffiCe Building Suite 14

... ..

.,

'

'.

.'

Oft'lce Houll: Mon..frl:' 1t:(X)a.m.-6:00 p.m. ·

..

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

~VEVPTOJI .. ONAAA
MOTORCO~CH TOURSIII

.,. flJilAll.YIIlDDISCOUHT
{l)lplllf...,2't. l-).
ft SEND. anzENS DISCOUMT
(Oood ... J'MI').

..

•LEAitH AIOlJT 1981 AM toURS AND VACA110N PA.aAO!SI
•DBPOSrr ON ANY GROUP TOUR AT ntE OPEN HOUSE AND SAVE AN ADDmONAL $10.00.

Fight The Bug With ...

or

-.

•

Henry Doorly Zoo bas ~5 gaur,
tbe 'largest zoo popUlation of that
animal ln. the world.
Baak nbber ~arne note
for two beW.: NEW ·YORK
(UPI) - A determined bank
robber llll!d the same note to
demand money from two mid·
town Manhattan banks, but got
money from only one of his
mar lea.
The robber made off with
$4,596 from a Bankers Trust on
Park .Avenue Tuesday after
handing the teller a note stating:
••I have a bOmb In·the·bag. Give
me the money."
.
He fled the Bankera Trust
branch, then stopped at a Dollar ·
Di'y. Dock branch a block away,
where' he handed another teller
tbe same .note, pollee Sgt. Raymond O'Donnell said.
.
"He used the same note, but
thla time the teller refuaed" to .
hand .over the money, O'Donnell ,
said, Tbe robber fJe4, he Hid .
Lllle tea. e.rtee - I l l die bq:
SAN FRANCISCO (UPJ) -What
m~t peopl11 would calt a cup of
, •'IJt&amp;f"''' ..,.,
"' . hot~~r. the,lnveniDrGfJlCoffee
~. ''rileY looked so teal. Jthought ' ' bag' calli .... mlnlriiallat coffee
.~we eOuld use thll effect In our brewl,ng device." .
traffic patrolling," he Hid.
Jo Sears of San Francisco said
Alrll'orcemapaeometoi'Melle Tuesday that she 'Invented a
of wild ex: OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) coffee bag to dip Into hot water
,;_ Zoologlats trying to save a v;lld like a te,a bag because "I
ox called the kouprey from ·stum)lled onto a product I ·
extinction are using Air Force couldn't buy."
maps of Southeast Asta·provtded
She said that while an occa·
by the Strategic Air Command.
sl011al coffee bag has turned up In

• :!; Canbo.,. eop •Iowa •peed• ' .,.: -COPENHAGEN (UPI) " Like a scarecrow In a cornfield, a
f life-size cardboard policeman
· positioned at street corners Is
;1 mak\Jigs Its targets ·more
•. cautious.
~: ReaJ.IIfe colleagues of the
'•.s~alled "scarecop" say speed·
~ lng drops 30 percent when the
~· cardboard figure Is on duty In
Taarnby.
'
"On a normal day, 300 motor., llts drlye too fast on these roads~
·· !Jut when. the cardboard pollee~l man Is placed In the cu~b, only
I; 2!JO excei!(l the limits," Taarilby
·• Pollee lna~tor Lelf Bredager .
, told the d4Uy Pollllken Tuesday.
t. Tlie ~arecop can be used only
• for a while at a given corner,
! . "After some time, moat motor·
l$ts ,-ecognlze tlie cardboard
"' cop," 1Bredager said. ·~hen he
1: has to be replaced with real
1• P,JIIce officers If we are to
• maintain the effect."
:, Bredager said be got the Idea
i· "heft be saw llfe-slze photoatata ·
C: O.Dllh IIOCCer stars qutsldll

.'

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l-" ~.1

1"''· ~ ...•

Bulk Wieners ...................!!••• 99&lt;
SUPIIIOI
.,
. R
. •••..•.•••..••••••
. . Ll ,99&lt;
~ ed boIogna
Bna
H. . .DE
'
Meat Salad •••....•••••••••••..••1!_••• 89&lt;
SWin·ICIIICH
.
·
Turkey ·Br•a~t •••.••••••••••••LP•• S2 .8 9·

,J:~~=:;~=:;:~========~=~~~~~
lli'!l~ill ~ · ...,~\!~' .111a
. . . . ..J,.... \..- r

'S .NI'GHT

THURSDAY1 FEB. 11
5 to 8 p.M.

o•'

NO LADIES ALLOWEDI

Dr••• Your Swae.tla S11art
SUNNlSOUTH .- JO HARDIN
SPIING DESIGN
. 11 fASHIONS
AND' I liS 'SPORTSWEAR
All ARRMNG.

o-··

UDIES
WRITE DOWN
YOUR SIRS
FOR
HIM
GENTS, REGISTER YOUR SWEETHART
FOR DRAWING OF A SJO Gin
CERnFICATI WHEN MAKING YOUR
.
PURCHASE
.

·PLUS

RECEIVE A
SAYING~
DON'T MISS THIS SPECIAL EYINING
THUISDAY, FEI. 11-5·1 PM

10°/o

lllAfl I&amp;

I

SIIIGLES PltOCtSS

AMERICAN
CHEESE '""""""~ ....1.1. s1.11

WINESAP
APPLES ...:........ UJI••Ui .. 99•

MARGARINE .....LL.2 /S 1.00

HEAD LffiUCE.....~A~... 99 1

SHEDD' SPREAD QUARTEIS

IOIUIHTOII'S QUART

CHOCOLATE MILK ......... 79 1

01110 lULl COLlY

CAUFORNIA
ORANGES .........U.~3/a9•

..,Garlic. Bread ...........

1.'.~1••1~!-!.

S1.4 9
I fMIYI IZ OZ.
·ft. Hook Lima Beans ............ 95&lt;
WILCI'S
Grape Juice ..............M!.... 2 /99&lt;
Lasagne Dinner ........11.~1•••• S2. 79
IIUIOtnl
.· ·
··
Fruit Cockt~n · .............3MJ•• S1.29
VAl CAMP'S
Pork-N-Beans .............3•1.~1••••••99&lt;
111m 4 PACI
Snack Puddings •••••••
;
.
..
4eM!. S1.29
. .
Tea - ~ps ....................1.'-S!f. S3.39
llllfalq
&amp; CIUII
·
·
·
Quaker Oatmeal........~\1~9. S2.19
CAPFI 'I CIIICII 1t OL
l
Chicken Nugget Soup •••.••• S1.2 9
biD'S
.
. ISYJOZ $1 •19
.nw,ICh •·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
(

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

(

.....

71

$

fMI I

Facial Tissue •••••••••••,. ••v.uz... 1.19
..... '
. s
F*ic· Softener'..........\\~&amp;.. 1.69

·--

.

�-·

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----------- --·----

·--,~-~----·

10-The Dilly Senti,l ll

l.AWRENCE ISLAND,
(UP!) · Nat10114J Guard
~ Ill the two Eskimo vlllaa~es
~ t~ Bertna Sea llland have
~ Soviet military ~utpment
~ bave seen mysterious people
!""aaderblg. I~ tundra, Eskimo
• guards!~Jen told a visltlngdelega.
1tlon from the Pentagon . this

Wuka

Sgt. Mike Apatlltl, showed off a
green epaulette from a KGB
patrol guard unlfonn.
Apatikl told Temple the I;:s~­
moa have seen strange lights, a
mysterious plane, and even peoPle who do not live on this

Eskimo-owned Island.
"We know they're notfrom the
Island. I;'eople on the Island don't
run away from e11ch other," he
said.
V!Uagers ha:ve reported an
Increasing numbe~ olthese sight-

EASTMAN'S

Your
,,,
.

lngs - Including reports 'of
Individual• In wetsullll, scuba
geu and civilian clothea. The
most ~~ lnslance occurred In
October near the vllla&amp;e of
Savoonga, said Staff Sgt. Barrett
Penaya.

'

. Haynes said Soviet SJifiiCial
forces could be using St, Lawrence lor training. "It's a large
Island and has an awfuL lot. of
coasll!ne," he said. "All yoll can
do Is scratch your head and
wonder. ''

"A large amount of material
Items are found and aent to
Intelligence- -collection agen clea," MaJ. Fred Haynes, bat tal·
Ion commander, told Gen .
Temple.

Take Campbell's Product·
. Labels To Your Nearest
School For Redemption on
Equipment for the School. • •
·Join Foodland, Campbell's
and School Kids in Support of
This LOCALLY Worthwhile
· Community C~ustl!l

Independently
Ow•1ed
.
Low-Priced Supermarket
'

'O DLAND

I

SEE YOUR MANAGER FOR FURTHER

SOUPODlE

TO PLICE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
.
I A;M, Until NO.ON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY .
POUCIES

ANOTHER COMMUNITY MINDED PROMOTION
FROM EASTMAN'S FOODLANDS , .

poid.

.,.,..... -

SCHOOt·

KIDS SAVE
·IABELS .

~-"'-:

I

..

-~

"'' \)\\\&gt;11_ \

•

FRESH

$

II.$]

. _ , Neloomllllo, Ohio,
4157M. ~lng 10 the
ckewlrlgl Mel IPICificltlonl
on file In ttolo offloe of Ponlch
ond Noll. ArchMiof1, 1107
Richland Awriue. Athlnl,
Ohio, 41701.
Contract. ......... Ell. of Call
1. Site worll-••..•... ,187,000
COillle ·ot Hid drawlngl
ond ••aalflolltlonl moy bo
~bt*IM by prime bldd
end Noel Aralll- 1 0 7 RlchllndAA"'-. Ohio, 41701 upon
the depollt with "'""' of
_ . . , ....... 1120.00) In
aoh or cMclt for - h Ml of
drowintll llld -'flcltionl.

Diet or Regular

Pepsi-Cole(

from.._

DOZ.
CTN.

59

VIVA ICE Mllll..............~!!!... S1.39

Plus Deposit ·

Rni

I

•t·

~

- · ._,.
lilt:~ Dill.
. 1141-AI- - llllt.

.

Eatata General

-

POMEROY. OH.
. 992-2269

I'
l

NEW LISTING - Appro~. 4

1I

acres of wooded vacant land
near Pageville. Electlic available. $3,!JOO.

I·

••i .

NEW LISTIIIG l TUPPERS
PLAINS - I~ siOty lrime
wHh 3 bedrooms, ·
•
I car garage, double
lot.
$17,900.

\ '

t

Split Chicken
Brea$ts

$

I

.

T-Iona Steaks

Prego

)Spagh•tti Sauce

'9

ROASTERS

LB.

11.

79c

I
3-Diamonds .

NEW usnu - Approx. 10
acres of ground wHh a nice 3

CHUNK LIGHT
•WATER •OIL PACKED

•

bedroom horne. 2car r~arage,

IUtchen, 2 lireplaces, full basement car·
paled, lamily room, bam
l6'x32', large pond, prdM
MUCH MOREl CAU
equi~

•

Tuna

DETAILS! ~

•

IUNOU HIT

. LB.

STEAKS
II.

$369

ONE
· With $10.00 or lore Additional Purchlso
LIMIT

Ml-11-•
741-11-·

171-w-

•7-c:ool . .

Public: Notic;e

on

Public Notice

outoideoftheenwlope
ltemo of wotlt bid upon.
EliCh bid mull contoln the
ful ._,. ol riwy penon or
compeny lnteoooled In the

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWN.SHIPS
, For Flecll! YHr Ending

.......
'"""
the prioe
lor
labor
•d- nillerlall,
.....
muet bo -ponied by •
liD GUARANTY -"111
tho Nit~ of Sloflon
113.114 of the Ohio RIVIood
Code.
'

County of Molal
''1111111 ., uNtUCflted
Fl111nolll R.-t"
SUMMaRY OF CASH
IALANCII, RICI!IPTS

·-~
- ......
"'..pubthe
PI'Wiillng
R....

""the
lndullrlol .............

~of

llehed

co~

to'"'
with throughout

tllil project.
lldillll ..... ..... _.,.Rutnondllogulltiolll t11
,Em•h; ment
Cii!Partllf
ehiill be made 1

r.

Lg:r~r:.:rT~~~~~p

AND !XIII!NDITUREI

OOYEIINMENTA~

FUNDIRECI!IPI'I:'

. ......,_n......

.
·

~z.

BVa
t, · cAN·

~

I

MINERSVILLE - ilulldin1
lot w/dozer work 1lrndy
completed. Eleo. and ~
ler taps available. · 1.69
acres can be yours lor only

.1

I

w•·

$2,800.00.

o-

tal
•
· Raul~te .............. t11,347
Intel lit .......................171
AI
_................... 8.121

o....

-

bedroom !lome in ·

~ilion.

opinion

hl1 11e11get111
....,_,thetaMe of the -.at bid .. not
In tile belt
II
conc81ttld • .the Owner rn.,
"-~• with the cone•·
of .the Dir8qlor or Ml
d~o~d rll"llentotlve,

,,_.Of

• - - ' 10 opened

or

re)eot

ol pro-t• end

Further, the ebove colla-

• terel will be mid in the con;.tlllon II lo In with no ••·
!J"II d or Implied -ren·
:11ao given.
12110, 11, 12, 3tc
·

18

MENT8 ............ ...71,470
Tote! R.....ph 0-/IUn·
Jlorl Dllb ............ : .......7H
.
Fu nd C• ... BI Ionce
Jon. 1, '17 ........... 14;1138
·fund Callh Balance ··
Oec. 31, '87 ....... .. 1&amp;.3015
Depoaftory

·

·

•.. ,.,_
................ 11 ,071
~ Outatllndlng
C - , ...... ............ .3.nO
TOTAL
BALANCE ............ 11.301
SUMMARY OF·
INDEBTEDNESS
OUIIUI~
·
J In, 1 • '8 .............. 2,847
Now loiue1 ...., ....... 21,000
Rltlred ... , ...... ......... 12,805
0 utltllndl ~
Dec• 31 • 1' 1 .. . ...... 1'3 i 130
I cortlfv,tfie pr-dlng ,..
port to bit cornot ond trlio,
to the Hit of my knowt·
edge:
Jon. 3, ;sea
Shlrl!o\' A, Johnoon, Clerk
. ll:i:iB • - llout&lt;o 124
· Portland, Ohio 411nO
Ph. 1814) 843·1205
12 1 10• 1"'

.......:....J.814
....... , .......18,1117
and FIICII
CNrgn ...... ....... ..... ,1,1811
TOT,t.L DIBURSE·

NDTIC~ OF SAL(
By virtue of on Qnlar of
Sola iuuod out of thto Com-

mon Pleaa Court of Meig1

County, Ohio, In tilt cilee of

·

........ tftllnicrtioft .
TV C1 Rl!lllr

.,. •••uua••

,

17--RIIIIir
rfoo
71-clftlflll
·~~=71...-.c........•
.......

.,

1141ou-Goo•

...

1 4 - - - -'- ·

,..."

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

12-ctl. TV 6 Rillito! ......

'

'.

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

Ucen~ Clinical

Audiollllist

!614)446-7619 or (614) .2104
417 SecuntiAwllte, lox 1213
GaiApolls; Ohio ~1
.
.
. or ' ·
Yeter1ns Memorial Hos1~ilal
Mulbtrry Hps, PomerOy,

Public Notice

Public Notice

13 of the Ohio Company's
Purchue in Salisbury Town·
1hip, MeigoCounty.Siallof
Oh'
d ••· d ribed
to on ~ong esc
••
follows:
·

T!lomao Fo.rk Creek, soid
point being the Northeast
comer of 1 tract containing
0.67 ecru conileyed to Cort
Edward· OeLong and Gene·
vieve SUI!I Delong. hutband
and wife, by Oavld w. Baum·

Beginning1t1polntonthe

Cherry Coke
lle•&amp;CIIfhiM-·

Fr" Colrt

IUTWIO
Nice ·ranch
hGme Gill level lot 3

~~~:c=

2

c'""

·

0

RACINE
fiRE DEPT•

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6 30
: P.M.

OPEN

7:30-10:00
Call for Birthday,
Church, Prlv11e
P•rtle• Mon .. Tuee., •
Thurs.. Sat. • Sun.

-Roofiflg .. nd g,.tter work

-Conci'ettlwork
- ptumblng and electricel
, worli

·

•

V. C. YOUNG Ill·
992·6215 or 992-7314
. Pomeroy, Ohio,
4-1~

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Will Bur or Houl Awoy:•

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME IUILDINO
•ROOM AODmONS
•KITCHENS- lATHS
ofiOOFING
REMOOELINO 1!.
' REPAiRS
SEPTIC SVST,EM&amp; •
lACK HOE WORK

1

I

-............
915-•1•1

till u CCIII1UnoH
R.t-.nc•
11·3-ttn

Ob·lc

JIL ILOWN .
•suunoN

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

~YifYL&amp;
All.pll,_ SIDING

Oln........,
.
,
•ltormDeorl
•ltorm Window•
•Rep'ait"*lt Wlndowa

•N- llooflng

1:00 P.M.
RACI,,.E .
GUN CLUB

FlltiiSliiAm '

915-9996 .

IACIIIE, OliO

1·2 ·'18-1 mo;

10.9-ICn

DINIY CONGO

WILL HAUL

JUST CALLI
. 992·3410

FIIEWOOD

Rt-aatuaint yaurnlf
with the stylists -

$3500

G.._, De11110, Anglla

locust, Oak, (hlrry

Per Pickup Load

Delivered

llary, N1omi, Jant,
flllftlayat

.

•

lAY'S

~

SALON
-; 1 .... ~

WII.IIILCG.

1·5-'al•o.

JAR

CARTER'·S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

We Service

3

Announcements

11-.

~1711.

1•

.

992-2l56:
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

••
··i

----~--~-------"'•
.,
Wedemey•r·s Auction SerYict:.;

tvlllablli It your convenience
1nd locttiont. M1rlin Wide-

Control your Weight ~ Tille•
..New Shepe Diet Plan" and
E-Vep Water Plllt. Fruth
Ph•mecy.

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
Ntw location:

A~uc• •fe &amp; t•t with Go ....
Clptuln A E-V•p ''wttttr piHs'' ,

161 North Secend
Mitl••pGfl, Oltio 45160

Avoll-- Fruth Ploonnocy.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Attlndan Seniclrs. Get your
pictUNI tor your 1nnounc.
menta hrty. Call. now and get

WI C1rry Fithlng SuppiiH

Pay Your Phone
Cable Billo Here
IUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6550
mtDENc:f PHONE
16141 Y9J':7.1:14

your plctuno. 114-948·3010 or
114-148·2103.

e•A lewer1nd Plumbing. Aeaidentill 1nd Comrnerci... We
.,...... the cUitom•. Fre4! Eld·
m ..... 24 hr. ServiDI. 30 yar

Roger Hysell
Garage

. ••• 124,

p_., Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
_AI•o Trt•••llllo•
PH. 992-5612
or 992·7121 .
6·17-ICc

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES
New &amp; Used

SAW.SIIYICE
SUPPUIS

MARINES: We're looking for a
fODd men. For maN lnfar~
mellon, cal Servunt Mtke Abllll
et lCM-..20-IOfl coUect.

few

Notice: .,..-.on th1t

toR our 4
month old. black tncl llfown
Chaw~Chow from blue trill•
blhfnd Hertford . .r. ....._

......
- - · llttio girl
mi
. . . ..
herpm:.

4

d--·

Uslld

41SI.

Cllllt,4·441-

1·21-'M·tfn

· Coil 11 4·2M-12H.

2 •• -

old

tololl¥ -

· ond
ond """'
-1441.
- - · Coli
114-1143·
-

Loat and Found

.•. -·-

•VINYL

'

:

Jim Mink Chev.-Otdtlnc. ,
Bill Otnt John110fl ·

114-44113172

"-Foil.

3, UN.

10 poylolllo. Coolllt 4·-·

1

,. ..

TOP CASH paid for '83 modt.l' 1
and newer ulld c... Smith '"
lulck~Pontlec, 191 1 E11tern• 1
Avo.. Oolllpollo.
2282.

Clll 114-441-• ' I

.
,;
Camplltl hOUMhOJdl of fumi~
biN • tntiqua. Al10 WOOd ' ~ .

CCNII h•teu. Swtin'a FumituM
•

Auction.

Third •

Oltv.., ..

114·441-3119.
::-w:-..-,-to-:bu-y-:-:u:-,..--tu-rnllu--..-...
~"
entiq1111a. Will buy entn houleholcl fumllhtng. Mlirlln Wed•

....,... 114-24&amp;·11 &amp;2.

Celll14--379~

Stlndlng limber.

27&amp;8-CIIUdo Proffitt.

WOuld like to buy fuM WI•
Wf'lekld cen 1nd motOfV\'CIII;
Coli 114-379-21110 ·. ,
2423,

m:

.

Buying d.Hy golci, altwr coin 1•
ring~, jiWIIry. ltertfng ware, old

'"1" ..,,_.,,

aalno,
Top prlurbtt lartter Shop,
2nd. A... Mlddloport. Oh. 114·
912-3471.
:

,ce.. E;d

_ lheploord-mix.
__
_
-2..-otd.l
Dormon

I

UHdGII'I.

1

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
MIIWI.ort,. Ohio

--~j

'. -

9 Wanted To Buy ''
~--------------~
·~
W1 1J8Y caah for lite model cl..rn:::

.

FoMI•-ood for tho--..ofo
oroo In Oollpotlo. Collet4·4417J21.
.

-

meyer Auction..,. 01 4·245~- •

1112.

Giveaway

IMI!n

0

WITH BARGAIU"'

Annou 11 ce111 enl s

••Ptrilftce. Profelliontl wo"-.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPIIIi

J. 2-tfn

1

. ' 915·3929
01'

,,,

lmm MOVIES to VHS !APE
let us con'lert those ohl
Home Mowies ower to easy
YHS.
CAll AMY CAIITIR
or IOI'S UICTRONICS
446-6939 or 446-7390

10-7-tfn

DICUM
CONTUCnNG I

-Addone •nd remodeling

Ellirl]l~l)

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE

Basham lulldlng

.

CARPENTER
· SERVICE
IF-

GUN SHOOT

Fact11ry Choke
12 Gatq~~ Shotgllns Only

YOUNG'S

SIATE·A·WAY
WED.-FRI.·SAT.

'"
110 loot along il'aid right of
way; thence S. BO degroo•
33' E 372 B I
lh
.
.
. . oetto e con.
tor of lhto Creek; thonc. N.
32 dagreeJ46' W. 148.11 , ~
feel along sold Crook to ·a
·point in the center of 18id
n
crook t he aouthHit com..
of Ernest end Iva Powell;
thonceN.80degreoa33'W .
273 feet olong Powell's
aouth liOUI to the place ol be'
ginning.
containing .10
acre. more or le11.
·
Except all legal right .!&gt;(
way or ntement.
._
Reta..,ce Ooeda: Vol:'
243. Page 267; Vol. 238
page 387 ; and V01. 25fi';;
Pogo 829, Meigs County''
Oaed Records.
·
The above deacriptionwilo'
furnithed by Homar HyMII. ~
Registered Surveyor Stri•l
No. 2274. persurvevotfeb-'
ruory, 1975.
·
~·
Appraised Value

B· ustness _servtces
· •

r

114-192-2121 .

CHESYEI, OH.

Public Notice

Verll~ ~;:=======::;r;;::=======:r:::-:-r:::::J----~-----

· . . tu

oz.

ib
·
ICr ad '" Volume 246,
Pogod R87. dMeig1 County.
0 ee . ecor s. conveyed to
Ronald E. Riffle and Lindll L. '
Riffle.
..
Further ••copting .80 ocre,
more or leis, 11 described in
YoiLme
PageR 829,
M . C 259, o--"
•ga ounty """' ecorda
~~~::." on~o M:l:u1oh::

de

S.,k)r Citlnn ditcount. Call

con-

ground. Ellc.IVIilable, bllrn
IIIIPrDK. IO'K90' w/lollara.
Slllsbury schooi district
$52,000.

Public Notiee

east right of way line of Ohio
State Route 143 South 8
tplrdner and Shirley Joan
d eg. 32'WHI 100foet f rom Boumgardnor by deed doted
I concrete m.rker on the
October 21. 1981. and re~
North line of Frocllon 32, COided in Volume 210, Page
10id concreto ITUirkor being 269 of the Meigs County
on the eolt right of woy line 0ooc1 Rocordl; thence North 10~ARCEL NO . 2 , The folof0hioSto~Rou1o 143ond
70 dog. 00' Woat 230 feel
30.1H1Eoltofthtocenlorline otong the North.line of oaid ~O:.:nreol ~~~ ~~~~~
of Ohio Stole Routo 143; Delong tract to 0 point on R13
th ence S outh 80 deg. 33' the Ealt right of way line of Meigs
W. Solilbury
Township.
County, Ohio,
de~
EaatTh276 loetF to
center Ohio Sllto Route 143; ocribed as follows:
o1 om11 ork reek and tioence North 16 dog. 18'
8egIn n 1ng on a concrete
. tna
.~ s
belAg
qut h•••t corner E1st 237 feet along the Ealt
0011 right of
of a lrocl -ld
to Hottle Co pe· ri ght o f way I1no of 0 hlo marker
way •linoonof the
Stote Route
No.
hen, lee DOled Yoluma 214, Stote ROMOtt 143; thence 143 • JOfeelfromthocenter
Page 93. Molg1Counly Oiled N.orth 10 dog. 60'·. Eaat 192 line, where the nonh line of
Recorda; thence following feet •long tha Eaat right of Fraction No. 32 intersect•
tho meandering of centtrlne way""" of Ohio Stele Route the sold Right of Way line,
of Thomao Fork Creek along 143 to the point of begin..
·
the following btoring1 and · ning, containing 4.08-acro•. ~:.:":~:'~:~";!.::;:",~
diNncea: South 14 dog. 30' more or loa. OKcepllng all Ia- corded in Oeed Book No .
East 1015 feet; South 5 dog. gel rightl of w.., and eeoe- 238. Pogo No : 307. Deed
tJO;OOO.OO
00' Wool 1 111oot; South 1 B menta of rocord.
Records of Meigo County.
Terms of Sale: Cosh. _,1
dog. 211 ' West 1581oot; South •
Tho foregoing description Ohio; thence S. a·degrHo
The ' 011 asllte cannot Ill
6 dog. 60' Enl 117 """= p
d b R Ill H E
sold for looo then two-thirds
2
South 32 ~ 00' West 54
ropore
V o rt . •- 3 , W. 100 filet along said
of the appralud valua. .
~ ....... N-~ ton, Ohio P.E. No. E-32187 Right of We¥, to Ernelt and
1
1
,_.,
,._;
uru•
It reault of Iurvey dated Oc· Iva
Powell's southwe1t
Howard E. Frank,
49 dog. OO' West 44 """= tobe&lt; 14 end 15, 1968:
corOUir, the place of beginSheriff.
South 69 dog. OO' Well 30
EXCEPTING 87/100thf ning for 1hio description:
Meigl County. Ohi&lt;&gt;.
11:00:·•:,:t:o:•:poo:·n:l~in:t:hto:,:co:n:••:•:ot~·J!of~o::n:.;•::c~re:,;._:mo::::r•:.,:or~l=•:•s::,..,::•s:j~•h:•:nc~e:_S~-~9~:!!!::!12!7:.;'w~
. ;_.+l~i~l2:o~·!2:7·~·1!2)~3:,~10~.~1~1~.6~t~c·

Butchor,
ot.. Delen(flntf,
Plolntlff. It
ag1in11
M..
upon 1 judgment therein
rend..-.1, boing CoN No.
87-CV-.1 73 In llid Court. I
offer for .. ,e, •t the
front door of the Court
HouR In Pomeroy. Meigs
County, Ohio. on the 26th
day of ·Februory, 1988, ot
10:00 O'clocll A.M. the fol·
lowing Iandt and ·tentmente. to~wh:
PARCEL NO.1: Being in ·
~fiCtion 32, Town 2. Range

Devices
·
lfelrilli Aid Sales ·&amp;Seivie•
Hnrinc EYIIUitions For All Ales

.

town. 641l acres ol MCint

"PEPPERONI "SAUSAGE

Pizza

...

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

·'

liE. LISTIIIG - Just out of

Fried
Chicken

n-TNtlllforl. .

ti-W...... ToDo .

!~;;,-;;.~::;:.·~~~:T.;~

Business SerVice~

, Equipped kitchen,
washer and dryer included.
Fireplace, front sitti111 porch,
110 baths. $18,500. .

Benk end l&gt;INinga Compon¥
• ,._..," tho right to reject
ony or oH bids submitted.

...... 23,838
........11,0341
.... ...... 27.8158
...... .. :..... 223

or

IIDDLEP~ - =ue 3

SWANSON

•'

n-v-•-·· . . _ ..
,._a_
lt---·· .

.

Public Notice

..

r - ..................... 111,390

of

and only 12 yrs. old. WANTS
$29,5011.
'

Jif
Peanut
Butter

.

. ..

._. ,_._

c-:TMin...
tt-11-.
,_
..........,_.a
~=
11

.,

D --IJI M1 aall
M-Ho;6-

1 2 - 1 - Wllllod

Public Notice .

=ht,

RUTI,AND - Ranch type
home,in the country resti111
on IMII 2 mes of ground.
Full basement, 3 bedrooms

'CREAMY 'CRUNCHY

'·

•z-NM H ••-a111---

141--'- Foil

Hon. L. Alan Got-.ry,

'*'
llioolbidder
Wtthdnw
hll bid
CIOI deY"
- t h e - . ! .....
the
_....the,...,.
If In the
of the

E. MMt li L.AiiDI.LIU

_

5 . •, . . . . . .

•-Rooll-w.....

171-lf.....

l'oillwid

Atllefto County; Hon. Jomo1
E. ltllwltt, Hoc:ldng County;
Hon. Chull1 H.
Melt!• County; lfon.
m
H. lofronok, Morgen
County; Hon. G - W.
F - . Pony County; Hon.
Mlchlll A. Breme, Vinton
County: Hon. •uun ·e.
lloyor, Wuhlngton County.
12110, 14, 21, 3ta

within olxty

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

K

~----·-·

t I -1te111t -

m~=~ ..~ :~~·"
:.1-r-."-'
••
•
1711-..._. a......

lilly '

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A' .

M_. Ce., VN
ANe CDCIII04

••--

the

tllll--· .

"REG. •MUSHROOM. "MEAT

·--·
.... ....

11-f-forloll

7-Yn -llelllio .. _ ..,

.'

11-f-~. . .-

·-·-·

.

71

~~...~nlyi.
--v- 4

odvertiN lot othef ilidl. The
o - ......... right IO
ony lnfo11111Utln.
Approved by SEPTA Con·
ter Judlclll Contet Boord:

DaualopmMd Work. Fectoty

g

10'" HAlf

LB.

. '

''

POlK lOINS

·

G... C.Unty
· • A._ Code 114

Public Notice

lrf

.

MT. DEW, PEPSI-FREE

Medium
Eggs

Lettuce

39

the o - . colla18rol prior to

••

2 :00P.M. MONDAY
2 '00 P.M ..TUESDAV
2 ,00 P.M . WEPNESDAY
2 ,00 P.M. THURSOAY
2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
SHied lld1 will 1 bo re·
Cllved
the SEPTA Center,
(· S~uth.. etern Probetion
Treom.ni Altemltivo), P.
0. Booc 728, 1001 ' Eoll
Stllo Stroot, lllulte 4,
Alhlnso, Ohio, 45701, until
4'00 p.m. on Moroh 1, 1MI 1- ''!!'.lblc!o~llng
ond opened lmmedlltlly
-Miter lor tunollhing the
nKIIUfY . . . . and meterlala, toole, moahl...,. .....
•IIIII"- NCtuirecl lor the
SEPTA CMter Sill

'

FOODLAND GRADE 'A'

Head
·
-

Rib Half
·I Pork Loins

t/\1 \)\)til_

......._

I t - - f o r loll
11--H-Iorl••

a -'Nb • Vl,£1 ll•
. 11-fwloleor .....

',

, ule . Fun,er, The ff1rn11ra

Rober! E. Buck,
probl~ Judge
.. ..... fC.N-ro.d t C,_,.
12110, 17, 24, 3ta .

DAY BEFORE PUIUCATION

- 11 '00 A.M . SA'fURDAV
-

· • Gluw w
1-H_ ....

Clauified pages cover th~
•
following telephone ezchanges...

_ _ _ _ _ _..:.__ _--..;.! '

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSOAY PAPER
FRIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

~ A::aiMinciciO•ta

,

"A clliulrllld ldvonloomont pi-In n.1 Doll¥ ..ndn•l•·
c~pt- d ....~~ dllpl~, 8UiiMM C.rd 1nd lepl noiiCH)
will 1110 fiPP..r in the Pl. PIN.. nt Aeaittet' lnd the GeiiJ.
polls D,1lly Tribune. reec:hine Over 11.000
, he
homes.

3~~- s1
~

'It thi1 Ale. end to withdr.w

\

·

• day etter publkt;ltion to mA• COrNCtion.
Ad1 thll mult be Pllkl in 1dv1noe •N:
, C1id of Th•nll•
'HIPP'i' Ads .
In ,...mort.m
y IHI a....

DET~ILSIU

'

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereb~ givon
1h1t on Seturdey. February
13, 1988. 1110:00 o.m., •
public 1111 will be held It
101 Union AvMue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to Mil for c.lh
the following collo~ral:
1980 c.J7 JEEP
JOM93AC708013
. Thto Formero Ionic ond
S.ving Company, Pom•oy.
Ohio reMrYn thto right IO bid

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
• On February 3, 1988, In
the Meigs Co..,IY Probote
,Court, CoN No. 21711, Oe. _ JMn Lorig, 31411 loll
·Run Rood, ""-roy, Ohio
41711, we1 oppointed ldmlnl.l t-x of tile -~~
of Roger Po,.er Long, d•
·- -..... of 311411 Boll
llun
Pomeroy, Ohio

type only u-.1.

·sen.tlnel il not retpona~W. for «ror1 1tw firat diY . (t;h.ct~
lot enon lint Uy 1d runt In....,.,, C1ll before 2:00p.m. ·

1-.....-_
......-......

. 2-ln MIIIIIOI\'

--~·--..,runa . ...,klnup.,.wllllollhlftiOII '

• run 3 d..,. at no charee.
.;~~~~~-for .. Cllpltalltttere ie doubte pric:e o( •d cott.

Public Notice

Public Notice

.

:Receive e.&amp;O di1c:oun1 fOf ada paid In l(hlenc;e •
frH ad1 .- Oiveeway encf Found .m unct. 11 worda will b.

'
HELP·

0·11 WOIIDI 11-B.WOIIDI II·· WOIIDI
1
14:CD
••. 00
t7.00
••• 1111
....
110.00
f11.00
111.00
111.CD
IZI.CD
f21.00
lt1.CD
- -00
fla .CD jl

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

tOAva ·
3DAYI
IOAYI
10DAY8
I MONTH

• Ad~ outs ida Meigs, Qallil or Ma.an count... mult ba Prt·

Public Notic;e

TENDERBEST QUALITY

,.,...,._~.

material

~ ~HonalGuudEs~moScouts r---~~~--~--~--~~------~----~~--~_;----~~~~~--~~~~~------------~~~~----------~----------~~~~~

, on patrol and other villagers out
: hunting have fqund Items of
, Soviet origin such as rafts, a gas
; mask, fuel barrels, explosive
• buoys, batterles,unllorm pieces,
1small electronic devices, canned
1.1ood, bug spray cannlslers and a
·1chemical C!etectlon kit contain·
l lng an antidote for a nerve agent,
! according to National ·Guard
, oltlcers.
; Residents also have reported
~ seeing strangers on the island 1some of them In scuba gear who run away when appi'O;Iched.
• lgh-ranklng oftlclals In the
; Alaska National Guard acknowl·
; edged a growing body of circum·
•stantlal evidence that points· to
:Soviet military tr;~lnlng occur·
; ring near or even on the Alaskan
&lt;Island.
: Lt . Gen. Herbert R. Temple
cJr., chlef .of the National Guard
Bureau In Washington, listened
attentively to the reports after
flying to the Island In a howling
blizzard Tuesday, but said he
was not alarmed and declined to
speculate as to what it all meant.
· However, · he questioned Eskimo guard scouts closely a bout
whether they had everything
they needed to carry out their
sqrvelltance patrols.
"I have to look at It as
happenstance," Temple said of
the Soviet Items. "After all, this
Is the closest place In the United
States to the Soviet Union. I just
wonder bow much of our flotsam
and jetsam washes ashore
there."
'Maj .· Gen. John Schaeffer,
chief of the Alaska. National
Guard, said the Soviets could not
possibly have · clandestinely
1
colne ashore.
''Where else can they train on
U.S. soli and get away with it.?"
he said .
;:Sut Schaeffer said recent
reports of mysterious slghtlngs
and discoveries of Soviet
military gear have caugh! the
Pentagon's "ttention.
'.'The military Is taklrig more Of
an Interest In It," Schaeffer said.
"And that's as (ar as I'm going to
go."
..
."Maybe some of out territory
Is being used," said Col. Joseph
Beans, commander of the 207th
Infantry Group, which Includes
the Eskimo National Guard
Scouts .' "! don't deny it. "
St. Lawrence Island Is 37 miles
from Siberian landfall at Us
closest point and more than twice
that far from the Alaska main·
land. The rugged, Isolated, treeless Island Is 100 miles long, 38
miles wide and locked In Ice for
the long winter. T.he 650 residents
survive .by hunting walrus, seal,
'
whale and polar bear.
. !rhe guard Intelligence officer
based In Nome, Renard Nichols,
acknowledged some Soviet Iterns
wash ashore, but he said; ' 'What
we concern ourselves with Is a
Soviet -made battery 2 miles
Inland ... Ba tterles don't float. "
On his office wall in the Nome
armory, Nichols has a St. Lawrence Island map showing three
dozen places where, In the last
three years, items have been
found or villagers reported see·
ing strange land, air or sea
..
aotivities .
.In Gambell, a small, bitterly
cold, wlildswept village at the
northwest end of St. Lawrence,

__

Wednuclay, February 10, 1988

Pometoy-Midcleport, Ohio

aska EskimOs ·find Soviet ntili
~ST.

-----..-

S~ t i - ..' coii814-7Q.

2321.

�•
.,

f~~~~~~~~~~-:~::~~~~~--~-r~=;~~~~~~T·~~~·~~~-~~~~==;==================wed:":':·~~·~vr·;r~~i~~NM~~~v~,~o~.,~a~a~a=
For
LAFF·A·DAY Pome

Paga 12-The Daily Sentinel

11 lfelp. WantM

44

-· -'""'"-'"
___ .. _
TEXAI '

~EfiiiERY

,...,._

.._

w-.

1

ExCellent wag11 tor ap8re time
assembly work; ehtc:tronic:t.
crafts. Oth.,.. Info 1· 504-841008 1 Ext. 3028. Open 7 ~··

.
RN

needed for nurling rehebili·
tttion unit. Requires cllring
indklid~l who 's nursing pn~c­
tice it gnred towt~rd ,..taring
r11idence to the home environment •• much 11 possible.
Conttct Nancy VenMeter
o·.o .N. Amerlcare Pomeroy
NUrsing 1nd Aehablllution Center. 81.· 992· &amp;80S. E.O.E . .
Federal , SUite. end Civil Sefvice
job• •19.648 to te8.891 -Year,
now hiring. Cell Job Une1 · 518·
469-361 1 Ext. F1 122 for info.
24 hr.
AVON . All area1. Call Marilyn
We.ver 304-882 ·2145 .
Avon all artll, Shirley Spear•.
304-675· 1429.
Loctl phytican needt receptio"ist to handla billing, filing.
appointments. pltient achl·
dules. experience p~arred , but
not· nec1111ry. minimum wage
or over. "34 hrtw11kly. write Box
P-2 c1r1 of Point Plessant
Reg ltter, 200 Main St., Point
Ple•unt, W. Va. 28650. , ·
EARN .EXCELLENT MONEY in
home aUimb'v work. jewetry,
toys 1nd Othert. FT &amp; PT IVIIIil.
Cell todeyl •·• 1-618-469-3536
jToii -Refundilblel ext. 8 2284,
24 hn.
Baby sining in mv tlome ~ Gelli·
polit Ferry trea, ~.-encea
required. cell 304-875-6835
after 4 :00 pm.
PART·TIME JOSSI Join the
Army Netlofl'el Gllard. 304-87539&amp;0 or 1-800-842-3619.

Situations
Wanted

Senior citizen . Room and boerd
for one ledy. Special cera in my
lioma. Reatonable. Cell 614992 ~ 8873 .

13
ll

Insurance
1 for vour mobile home

u an ce : Millar Insurance.
·882-2145 . Alto :· auto,
hCJme. life, health .

i

3

18 Wanted to Do
ladiet; w ould iike to do house-

c laa ning. Ca ll 614 -245 -51 83.
Will do federalahd Stltelncome
Taxes; typing , booling, snd
Notery Hrvice. Ma rgaret Parker
614· 992 ·2264.

Financial
21

J a I FUIINITUII!
IFonnolly ·· Pumlturo}
1411-Awo.
I.Mftanl0m
_ _ .,78.

'

M-. 4 ..,., . .eo.ao. f .

304-171·2417.

,..,.,_.._4
......- ....... .
aaoo.oo.
t

JCM..171·4121.

... ............... 4-.Ha

1:

8

'71CirlrMI-.-~ • •;
H. Pl. elr. PGwlr ;.
w!uAoeut, . .10.00. ~71- •

up.rComltlate .mk:Jowueu• ltaftcll
*31 .91. up. .
Come In and mMt tha HW
Ownen. ~

...... .._......._ ...;...........,_

t · IIO ,.......

"Punctuation? You mean
that Chinese'
medical stuff?"
.
.

21

36 Lots lit.Acreage

Bualnna
Opportunity

Commerciel property and house
lot•Galllpolla Ferry. Cell .30417&amp;·8901.

I NOnCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG co ~ recommendt thet you
do bu.ine. w6th .,.apt. you · 2 totl tor 111• 1!J "'111• north of
Eureke on At. 7;. Rurel Wiler
know, •nd NOT to tend montY Wllflbte.
80 ft. Widl, 238 ft.
tt.rough the mall until you hftl
long.oach. Cotl 114·2&amp;6· 1610
invwtlgated the offering.
eft• I PM.

111&amp; ov"**ll•·

.·

.

11M Chrvller Town • C:O,..ntry

Houndl·

·. 1111
•a~
I]) .(J) Gil
Haft
Cll lporteLOOk

' ••

Trucks tor Sale

.72

22 Money to Loan

(!)Dr. Who

Rt: nt:lls
A CASH LOAN TO 410.0001
NO CREDIT OR EMPLOYMENT
NEEDED FOR NEW PRO·
GRAMI 1713} 182·S.OB, 24
HOURS.
.

23

Home• for Rent

Nicely ·fumltfted imell .house.
Aduhs onty. Ref. required . No
.,..• . Call &amp;14-«8-0338.

Profeasional
Services

Fumtture retlnlthing 1nd repair,
qu1lity work end rMaOneble
l"'t•. frM ettimllll, 304-17157911.

fh:,ll tsl&lt;ill:
31

41

Urge 2-3 BA. houu. ptenty of
atol'llge. Henderaon erea. C.ll
S14-44S-7021.

Fumilhed Two: Thrll room
CottagH. Glllipolit, Cl11n. No
pelt. Adult•. Ref. • dip. W1ter
fumitfled. Call 814-448-21§43.
Vtlrf nice. 2. po~tlb.. 3 BPl.
houM in Middleport. OW, 00,
AC, full b111ment. EllCellent
locotlon. CoH 814· 448-920&amp;

Homes for Sale

4 BA., fireplece. fullbllllft't..,t. 3
mi. 10. of Glllllpolis. e29,9&lt;)0.
.Coli Doyo· &amp;14· 44&amp;~ 1811. after
6 o00· ... 8· 1244.
·

3·&amp;R .• 1'11:btth. fonn•IDR.brk:k
firepiiCI. Bllev.. deek. Bridland
treme JNCh located at end of
qui.t drive. One plua 1cr1.
Gtrden IPICI. City school1.
Hell pump-centrel air. Outdoor
IIGriQI lfll. Ctll 8 1·· 4419867.

eft• 6:30 PM.
Houa for ·ule or rent: 1400 IICI·
ft.- 3 . BR .• 2 fuM bltht, utility
room, tem!ly room. 24x28 glr·
ege.· Level lot. At. 35-Rodney
.,.• . C.ll814-448-28158 eftlr 6
PM,
3 bedi'oom. 2 full beth•. large
living room. dining room and
kitchen. Alao .leundry room. 2
car garage: c~tral11r, E11tem
School District. ReteNnc• r•
quiiM. Call 81•·2•7·4946.

Option to buy. 870 Ath St.
Sub-TManlum home with 11"\-1 Middlepon. 3 bedroom, meny
ec:ret. Locftld epprox. I mil• ut,.a, finencing avelltble. Cell
from Rio Grende. County Wttlr. 814-992-7621 or 814-992Mutt ..n. 120,000. Good in- 2363.
vutment property. C.ll 614379· 2762.
' Two room oottage fufnlthed,
utilities ptid. •s.fi .OO week.
2 BR, home with tlrepl1ce-1A Single pertoft. Cell 304-176ecre lot near town. Will tell for
123,600. Own• wiR ftnlf1081

U1.600. Co11814· 448-7e81 .

Conage in FloridatorS•Ie. 2 SA.
1 beth. partly furnished . Lot
60x120 . Loc1tion-2 blocb from
beech &amp; 2 blockt from bey.
Asking t29,000. Cellfteningt,
(8131 987· 8944.
2 BR . Houle in Eurek1. Vinyl
aiding. Call 614-266-8813 .
2 bedroom, 2 betha, 2 ~sr
garlgl. IBVel lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, 11t1lite, close

Government HOI1:\81 . From
S1 .00 IU-Aepllr} delinquent tex
propertill end repo'a. For cur·
rent Iitts cell 1-800-358-4887
Ext. 1986. Alto open evening•.
Ruttic ceder home with olk
flOors, cwo-way firaplece. Pelle
Colonie! window•. c:uttom
woodwork, study, 3000 plutaq.
h . appro•. 8 wooded •eras In
Sutton Twp. Countryside. Appreiaed at $112,000. Sell for
117.000.
Home for ule. Gellipoli• Ferry. 4
bedrooms. full car gerage.
138,600.00. 304-876-6884 .
HouteforSIIe, clotetotown,12
acres land, 3 bedroom•, centrtl
heat and air, house treller end
other extru, '415,000.00 or
belt offer. 304-875-7231? .

32 Mobile Homes
Repoue11ad mobile homes.
Onlol •600 down. teke own
pavmentt. ELSEA HOME CENTERS. Ohio Will· 800-826·
0752 far location n11,..1 you.

1973· 12166. Fr..SOm. 3 SR ..
gas furnace with centre! air,
Wllhlr·drylr, all kitchen appliancet, dinette HI, underpinning, block a. porchn. Call
614-387·0883.

Own your own t 14.99 one price
ladies epperel , ohildrens jS20.S40.valua) or shoe t tOfe. Regu·
lar 1tares choose ffom jeant pol1swear, IJdiet, m111'1, l1rge
tizea. pet ite , dancawear eerobic. brldtl , lingerie or accetsorill store. Brands: Liz Clai· 1983 SChulu. 14x70 on 1.8
borne, Healthtex. Camp Beverly ecras wit~ 28ft. a 30ft . garage.
Hills, St Michele. Forenta. Bugle Shown ·by appointment only.
Boy , Levi. Orgtnicllly Grown, Cel1814-742-2&amp;n.
Lucia. over 2000 othert. Or
t 13.99 one price or multi-tier 1984 14a70 Shultz trailer. 3
pricing dlec!)Unt or flmity shoe ~roam . 2 blth. EllCellent
store. Rltlil prices unb4ttlevabte c:onditktn. e14-941-3001.
for top qu1ll~ shun normllly
priced from e19 . to 110. Over 1982 Mansion . 14l70, 3 bid·
2fi0 brands 2100 ltYI81 . roam. 2 full betha. m...l build·
S1 7 ,900 to •21.900: inventory. ing, ~;entral ei;, porch end
treinlng, fixturH, gr~nd open· awnings, vinyl underpinning.
ing. airiere, etc. C.n open 115 let up on rented lot In Middl•
dey•. Call Mr. LoughHn (8 121 pon. Cal S14·992·8839 of1or
8:00.
888 4228.

46 Space for Rent
Commerclel building for IH18.
Downtown Pt. Pleuant. Stor1111,
ofllces. A- 1 Real~state . Carol
YNijler, Broker. Ctll 304-67&amp;6104.
.

Nice 2 bedroom home, 304·
876· 1891.
Avail•bll March 1, N&amp;w Hawan,
nice ciHn 2 bedroom home,
batement, gerege, woodbumer,
no pats. •1oo.o ·o deposit.
•250 .00 month , 304-882 ·
3202 Of 882· 2682 .

~~~~~~~;:===
1

For Lel!se

For Rent or Lease: Warehouae ·
36x61 rt. Electflc t1e1t, water_&amp;
rettroom. 2412 Jefferson Ava.:
Office or Smell Butineu: 18x36
ft . 2416JackfonAve. 304-676·
2194 .. 875-9746 .

Merchandi se

42 Mobile
f RHomes

or

ent

51 Household Goods

2 BR., w1ter, ~agefurnlthed .
Beautiful river view. No city
taxet. Foster'• Mobile Home
Perk. Call814'· 446-1602.

SWAIN
AUCTION S.. FURNITURE 62
Olive St. , Gellipolia.
NEW- 6 pc . woo(t group· e399.
Nice 2 BR. treHar. Large yerd· '" Uvlng room suites~ t199 -S699.
K•niuge. Cell814-446-7473.
Bunk btdl with bedding- S199.
Full till mattrest &amp; foundation
2 BR ., utiliti,.ptid-except e lect· starting · $99 . RecHners
ric:. turnithad / anfumlshed. Sec. lterting· 199.
dep. required., Convtnient loca· USED· Badt, drllterl~ bedroom
tion. C.ll 614-446-4758 or tuhet, .199 -S299 . Deslc1,
wringer wither. 1 complete lin&amp;
&lt;148· 8&amp;68.
of uted furniture.
2 bedroom. turnithed. Wuher , NEW- Western boott- $30.
and drver, air, •210 per month Workboota t18 &amp; up . (Steel B.
plu1 depo sit . Call .&amp;14-992· 10ft toe) . Call614-446 ~ 3159 .
7479 .
·County Applis.nce, Inc. Good
2 bedroom mobile home in
uNCI tppliencea and TV sets.
Middleport, Ohio. Reference Open BAM to 6PM . Mon thr1.1
and Security deposit requirttd. Sot. 814·441· 1899. 827 Jrd.
~04· 882 · 3287 ., 304· 773·
Ave. Gtlllpolit, OH.
6024 .
GOOD US.ED APPLIANCES
W~thert, drvera, refrigerator&amp;,
· range1 . Sklggs Appliance.,
44 Apartment
Upper River Rd. betide Stan&amp;
for Rant
Crett Motel . 614-446-7398.

2 SR . tpts. 6 closett, kitchen·
eppl. tumiahed. Wnher· Dryer
hook-up. ww carpel. newly
paintt~. deck.
Aegenc:v. Inc.
Apta. Call 304-876· n3B or
87&amp;-6104.

roNIAToclly

.

.:.:.~ L~F~~ I.

~

·1-1-r:.t..:A;..I

.;.'!..:
'
Why is lhat the only gla88Bs ·
· · · · - ·
which brllk are cl'y&amp;tal. but lhe
,.-----------, gas stalion freebie• last--?

·

.•

I

h:7--r'lINCLEY
:.. .:.rl~~8:::'-'ilr-'-!lr--l Q

I

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by filling in the mi S$ing wotd s '
._....._...__._....._..__, you develOp from step No. 3 below.
.

·

_

_

_

_

_

e (J) ABC Newa !;J
(!) Nightly lualn..e Raport
·i111 e 1121 Cll Newa
I])

i .
Clnclnn.ti
e Cll Too CJoH for Comfort ·.
1:35 (I) Carol Burnett ·

ARLO AND ANISr---------,

7:00 (J) R~~t~lngtlin Bteele High
Flying Steele
8 (J) PM Magazine
(J) lportaCanter (L)

54 Misc. Merchandise

,.,.

Callahan'• UMCI Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tirH, llzet12, 13,
1fi,
18. 18.&amp;. I mlln out Rt. 218.
Coll814· 266·6261 .

1•.

75

SWIMMING POOLS • *9S9
New ·left over 1987 Model
Poolt. Hugh 15X24 ft. twlrn ·
aree. 4 h . deep. lncludel deck,
fence, filter 6 warranty. lnata...
tion l financing avef11ble. C.ll
24 hrt.: 1-800.-346·0948.

Big 3 BR. farm homn built

2 hor11 trailer. exc cond.
t1 .2&amp;0.00. coll-·&amp;71· 2173.

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buying shllll oom or ,.,
...,, Callft&gt;rlotn1quotoo. RICity Fonn Supply, 814·441·
29811.

Want to buy, Yellow Locutt
pootod. coli 304-S?&amp;-2130.

Choo.. your ateer: intpected,
grtln fed . No druga. Reference.
Heve beef IVef"' four months.
Ouener-e196. Firtt time otter•1 .20 11b. Cut It wrtpped. C.l
304·937·2900.

HOflll tor t~l• 8tenderdbred
end TennniM Wlllken. C.ll
814·441·47&amp;8.

Refrigerttor. E1rly Amerloan
couch &amp; chair, fold· up twin bed,
maple deak, reguler tprlngs &amp;
mettra11. Cell614-448-3224.
80ft. rod-iron fence, 38 i!" . high.
Air compre11or, 2 hp., 20 gelt.
Cell after 4 PM -614-448-7757.
FIGURE SHAPING TABLES
Open your own figure Mlon wltfl
the original Stauffer .C oncept
Figure Sh1ping T1bfel. Buy
factorv direct . Call 312-2349647.

Mixed herd wood •labs. •12p•
bundle. Containin"g appro~ . 1 V2
ton. FOB. Ohio· Pallet Co.
Pomeroy,
.
...:_Ohio. 814-992-8481
--,.

__

___

__,._

Trailer and lot for sale. 3a:3 Park
St .• Middleport. $8000. 814992· 6881 .
Two new matched waethered
copper post lemps, y..d NCR-8
d.epertment c11h register, ttore
fiJtturas. Call 114-992-3287.
Uving room so fl. 2 velvet chtlra.
Vary good condition. Call Joe
Struble 614· 992-3424.

1,

.·

Rog. hot boar, YOik·wt. 3&amp;0111o.
Brooding only·UIO. lhoto. Onli
otd. CIIII14-UI·I&amp;OI.
&amp; ho-: 3 R-..cl ARO•
looM. Colll1-.448·40&amp;8.

Bom:horing hogo. oell 304·87&amp;·.

4308.

.

64 Hay lit Grain
Mixed hay or 11talfe • aquere

balM. Mixed hoy • lorp round
boiH. Call 11 4 - 2el-3334,
Jo-.Ohlo.

SmaH round bat.. t10 e1ch.
Call I! 4·&lt;148· 881&amp;.
=.:..::...;..:..:.:....:.:...:.__
·loMiud hey or ettafa In squere
bal11. Mbced hay In lerge round
bol01 . Call 814- 288-3334.
Jodcoon.Ohlo.

] r .iiiSf'lllLIIIIIII

71 Auto's For Sale

Hospital bed aqd hospital lounge
chair with feeding tray, Uke
new . Ctll 814-992· 5431 or

ASTRONOMICAL
SOCI[TY
ANNUAL MEETING

&amp; Accesaoiiet

Utld &amp; rebulh trlnsmlllions. All ·
internally lnspaallel •
· Call 114·448·081 . Wo
buy junk tl"'lntmlaalona.

auem- '

BoY,

ANI' 6Mitif:R LIMITS ON
iH~ l-"'IV~$"5~

:-:- WEL.t., ONE- VOIP L~AP.s
·.• 'l"o Ar,..lctrHER.
•

'.I

18 f1 · - tTollor. oiOopl 4, ••
uoo.oo. call 304-871-&amp;I&amp;S
etteri:OO pm.
t

ALLEY OOP

,.,..

..

1:r SURE SOUNDS UKE

..,an-

···11-~.

"

2 BR. ept. Stovt &amp; refrlg.
furnished. Nllf Oo Mtrt. Cell
814-446-7026 .
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. &amp;38 Jeckton
Pike from •113 1 mo. Walk to
thap 1nd movies. 114-441·
2&amp;88. E.O.H.

&amp;

phle
Special Study 1he Gagudju In
a beauilful, remote corner of
northern
Au8tralla.
illl College
..... _((

~lEEK

m.x.oor

AT 1\-\IS
11M£...

.;

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY 0&lt;\00 DECIDED TO
GIVEUPJO~ING . HE

I··
'
I

,;
I

• :1
'I

.i

LAFFIN' IN HIS

,,.i,

•

'·.
'.•

~.

General Hauling ;

·

dilt.ll-ra ·

SLEEP ABOUT.
AUNT LOWEEZY ?

beawal&lt;ened.
(J) CGIIge .
, I])
(I)

e

a,u..,.

bristle
32 Fore's
opposite
33 Tirana's
loc.
35 Discredit

..,..

J8118

nka Karen lor a ncond

chance; lht Q!!e• birth to

Adam's aon. li!
i111 e 0 The Equalizer A
lorelan dlplomal IS acculed
of kklnapplng his son from
hit IX•Wife.
(J]) Haft

IIJII!venlng New~
10:30 (I) Antellcen lnapthol8
(J]) flllftln' In My Halrt A
llkMI Mollie A loOk at lhe
dlveiOpmlnt Of 111e blual

sound In lhil Soulll, through
111e l!tUIICII ttylll end ,
peraonal pertpiCIIvea of len
SOUiham l.oulllana
bl-.nan.

!liNen

• (!) Hogln'l . . .a.
10:31CJl MOVII: IIIIU Irani Fort
· limo INRI (1 :38)
11:00(1) Remington ...... Forgecl

·=
-~~..........
8tHII

•

(J) I]) • (J) Ill

~ .... Follow
WOIIgi.'ll Bayw a ha

doaumlnlary ,.__.

. , _ I NIIUIB apeci11 on

•

,,

...

~ "'~·
••

•

..
•1,1

CRIP'I'OQUOTE .

'""

Z·IO

• ,I .

XL

M L

YCQMV

XL

P L J H

w

PFG·

KLMVHC

PWG

EPHM

TQDLCUH

UWM

JLCXB

..,.

...
'·

day

pH

.,7.t0Dto ne.eoo: lnilontoow.
nlnlne.
ftdu- grond - · 30 tng, alrf... etc. Cln o,.. 11

,,

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ,, v
apostropbea the length and fonnation of the words are all ''·• ,,•
hints..Each
the code letters are different.
·
.·

f1IITitll,

Tw.... .._

..

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

YWMT

IDIIDIIISII•

.-".,

37 ~:!fmt
38 Colophony
89 Preminger .
40Tear
DAILYCRYPTOQl)OU.:S--Here'• bow to work It:

.,. Saguaro aaalul Of
AltlonL Howle Molhovllz
e(!) "-C.. RIDIDn

....

31 Wheat

clllldhood ;:§ng beauty 10

WHAT'S UNK SNUFFY

i •

f.ather.l;l .

Elderly man brings In hla '

I

;

.

King U¥11

e(J)

I

j

lnlplrlllan Embark on a
muatcel rollercoalter from
smOky night dubiiO church
choir rehnrnla to chart
HouaiOn'a imJ)Kt on gospel
and rhythm and blues music.

10:00(1) a..laht Talk

. ,,

1

(Sp.).
DOWN
. jn Yemen
1 Dross
IS J;Jacktalk
2 Fabulist
9Ponce de
3 Hardly
10 Priest at
expect
Alexandria' 4 Black
12 - spwnante cuckoo
13 Stonny bird? 5 Marmalade
Yesterday's Answer
liJ Mass .
tree
18 Speck
8 Mountal;n 18 Tryst
27 Guard
17 Golf
crest
19 Garnishee 29 Dress
Instructor
7 Pose
22 Zola
fabric ·
18 Mouth roof 8 Unexpected
heroine 30 Highest
20 Outfit
celebration 24 Encircled
class
21 Miss
11 Small
25 Go a few 34 Vulgarian
Moreno
finch
rounds
38 Dupe
22 Hydra's
14 Theater
26 Crouch 37 "A View
heads,
part
in fear
- Kill"
"
by nwnber
23Haw's
opposite
240xygen,
e.g.
21 Scrutinize
27Wine and. ,_
28Luau food
29Tamplco
shawl

e

8eaLarryMagnum, P.l. Magnum

41 Yesterday

ACROSS
· I City

;ac£.;. a.aketiNIU
8:00 (J) 700 Clull
e (J) 1111 A YHr In the Ule
Joe's axhaultecl and
disoriented, bu1 ha won't
revesl the cauoe.
· I])
Cll Ho ap1n1111n ·
Hoopet111an raklndlea an old
llama, then busts her for
prootHution. Q.
(!) Arrtlllan l"'yllouMi A
Chicago laeniger vla~s hla
astringed father, who haa

8eerche8 for a priceless
ancient scroll 11 Higgins'
requeal.
8:30 a1 e Cll SlaP Maun..u
IIOty Slap struggles wl1h the
roepecl of visiting his aHing

'I

!

ltt2.

,SOUTH

by THOMAS JOSEPH .

remQrrled. 1;1
llll Clny Hciulltilll: lwHI

5A'r6 F1&lt;CW. NOW ON ...

•
'~
R•dentiel or commerclel
wii··
lng. New llf'VIce or ,..,.,,., •1 ~
Ucenlld elec:trtdan. Eltimlte I •'
INt. R l - r Boetriaol, 304- "
17&amp;·1711.
'I

flflll: -..y ,........
-llloGrlnde. . . -. .......
"""" homo. Call 11 4-141·

.10872

:

8:30 (]) Anlmala of Africa
I])
Cll HHd ofll1t Cllll
Darlene pretends 10 like Alan
10 soothe his bruised. fragile

. I
CARt
(
. . 10 RtsFa.D 10
r - - " L 1l-IPJ (}\AFQ

Rotary or Cllbll tool drilling.
MOlt wella completed 11m• dey.
. Pump ..... end eervloe. 30489&amp;-3102

86

=t.

e

AON'S ... t.levialon Servlae. 1,
Hou• Clllt on RCA. Quaur. ' •
GE. Spoclollng In Zenith. Call
304·171-2388 or iSU-4Q~
2454.
11t,
----~~---------.•
~tty y,... Trlmmk\g, ltump
romo¥11. Coli 304·171· 1331 .
',

Electrical · .
i &amp; Refrigeration

Huven Alter Jona1han looes
his win
s. ha find~ mortal
love.
(J)'C
el..k-U
·
I])
Cll Perfect Stntngera
.When Larry playa, he winds
up floodlng.)he
1;1

2'(PG) (1 :49)

'•

84 ·

II (J) 1111 HlghWIIJ 10

llll Nllllonal

.'

.712
.KJ80

Ugh\lllng lPG} (1 :40)
8:0e CJl MOVII: W...lng Tall, Part

· '~-"

Concrete Septic Tanb- 1000
pl .• 11500 gill . and Jet Alretkm ,'
IYIIIm. Factory trlined repeir
•
ohop. RON !!VANS ENTER- .•
PRISE&amp;. Jodcoon, Ohio. 81._ .,
211-1130.
'
' ~:

CARTER'&amp; PWMBING
ANDHEAnNG
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pina
GoQipoHo, Ohio
Phon• 114-44e-3188 or 114·
441-4477

8:00 (]) Second ltorteynlpon

IIJ) Hogin'l H11011

SWEEPER lnd -Ina mochlno ·
._,,, - · lnd oupplleo. Plok "
up llld dlhooy, OOVIII, 1/acuum
Cleantr,. one half ' mil• up
Goorv• c - lid: c.11 ., -.
448-0294.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

e (l) WKR~ In Clnclnnllti
7:35 (I) Ianford and Son.

e Cll MOVIE: White

FoN - - · Cioll cottoot .1'

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

12.!/~=rdyll;l

e

+9

. • AQ
• Q 7 52

•s

..

EAST

WEST
+A 'JI0765

• 83
To tell the truth, North was dogging
•
J 8 53
it when he raised to only two hearts.
I A 10 9
Although he has only 13 high-card
.KQ93
points, the K-Q of spades can be upgraded after West's overcall, and the
Vulne[able: East· West
Dealer: North
good heart support plus slllgleton dla·
mond brings tbe hand up to about 16
El11
support points. At any rate, when West
Pass
South mustered a three-club game try,
Pass
I+
North was happy to jump to four
Pass
Pasa:
hea.rts.
Pass
Getting to game is unfortunate;
since any sort of reasonable defense
Opening lead:· • 5
by West will result in a set. Af~r lead·
.'
ing the singleton club, West now had to
'.hope that his partner held a singleton
·spade. When declarer played a low,
heart toward dummy's K-10· 9·6, West
rose with the ace and played ace and a .will realize that his partner may have
spade. East ruffed and returned a only one spade. But he should still play ~.
club, which West ruffed to set the con· his singleton club before playmg the ...
tract. So why did we say·that any rea· ~ond spade. That way, he will sttll
sonable defense will set the hand?,,
get his club ruf! for the settmg tnck ...
Suppose West starts with the ace of . What about a dtamond opemng lead? ,
spades. When he sees the dummy, he Sorry, but that just isn't reasonable.

iiJICroaaflre

•
' ••
,•

F • F C.rpentrv. Carpenlry tnd
plumbing work. Reaaonlble
prico. CoM 81-.388·8713.

+6

By James Jacoby

SquatW
Cll Scholaa!lc Sporta
America
.
IJ(J)Juclgl
illl Wheel of Fortune 1;1

tiJ PlleneNewe
e 1121 The Law end ltlrry
McOrllw When the evklence
pointe one way, Harry points
1he alher.

1· S1 .. 237-Gal. day ............ •,
A o g • r ' I 1 1 • m • n t ~.
w...,rootlng.
· ·
: .•

and removal.
odd jobo. frH oidlmotoo. 30407&amp;·3312.

·-..-•··

Z.ll·ll

.AJ6 4

Is it cold
for down one?

'•"

. '"· , _ - - fumlohtld.

Tret~ trlm~lng

New completely furnished
aP'nment &amp; mobil&amp; home In
c1ty. Adulta only. P1rking . Cell
8 U -448-0338.

IT, YER &amp;XCEI.LENCY!

Improvements

82

• K 10 9 6

· (!)

~------~~~-----81
Home
'··
BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOPING
Unconcttdonlll ltfltlme

~oSE

A$TR'oNOMEI$
t'!EP PIJTTIN6 I1GG~

I

,,,

lit Campers

II

t

,.

79 Motora Homes

Starkt TrM end Lewn Servictt.
lawn cere. lencltc:eping. ttump
removal, 304. 578·28•2 or
176·2903. .

61 4 - 9 92 ~ 7769 .

James Jacoby

7:30 .. (J) I]) Hollywood

Z.Jtr~

Auto Parts

Livestock

Rltllo- Quor1or H.,.... April
19h, Sorrell Mere. fleehymlrk·
lft91. 4810. C.II81 .. 211· 1&amp;ZZ.

iiJI ,.._,.,..
eiD 1111 Wheel Of Fortune

7:0&amp; (I) Andy GfiHith

·,•

63

NORTH
+KQ42

(l)

,,

76

BRIDGE

ich-•
e M'A'S' H

1978 Hydrupott- boo~ 10 . ' 1
HP Mere, •1 PFQp, M•rc TM. ,
trail•. lp.,., EC. CIIItt4-448· '•
141 9 oflltr lpm.

1979 City triaxle eluminum
dump lrtller. 32 foot box. Good
cond. CoU 814· 448·9379.

Flrewooi Pick-up toed. •26 •
load. '(ou htul ~ Call 814-4486886.
.

..

'

on

your lot, 816,996 end up. Call
1 · 814·888-7311 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale .

(!) llll MacNIH/ Llhrer

NewiHour (1 :00)
illl Newa

•

1183-.. Y ameha 410 YZ. Eacel.
cond. Coli 114·24&amp;·11282.

Keystone Cl11sic Meg•· Dodge
or Ford. Exerci,. mechine. Barr
generatar., toals, kniVes, crafts,
t.rps. Cell 814·317-0141 .

Bidwell Cash Feed Store now
reedy for spring. In stock tli
tob'l cco tupplill, ell fertilizer.
fenciniJ, gtrden IHd, weter &amp;
drein pipe. Clll tor lateat pricft614-388-9688.

I .

SC:RAM-I.ETS ANSWEU
SplaSh - WrlnQ- Tease - Unlock - WEAPON Tha newly lnltallad computer at lhe pollee station had lhis
sign placed llbove ~: "While Operating This Mal;hine, You Are
Not f&gt;ermitlad To Wear a WEAPONr'
.

I])E~Tonlght

• (J) ....... Court .

1-;;:;:=:;:==:;::::;;;::;::

- ·Call Mr. lid..., (lf21881-

t

IIJ) WKRP In

1

UBI.

I;

SOGTH

iiJIInlldl Polltlca '18

OWnyourownt14.19oneprice New 1988 Country Villa ,
~
h'ld 0 1'20
14x72. Ill .a.ctrlc. Mt
on
Ia dl"IPplf.,,
C 1 r ns
.• r•~m
"8
1•0. VIIUI} pr
ehoe IIOrl.
,....,.,.v lot. '•14-182·
v
Ragular ttoreechooM from Jen- after llp.m.
I;
Sporteweer. Ladln, ~en' I, Kl~-•. 12.e•. ktt-... en ~
Urge llzet. Perite. O.dwear'"-"""
w
..,.,
Aerobic, Brktll, Un...,te or Ac- fumtshld, new ...,. 21,
c....,.• Store. lrends: Ua btu aW cond. lliC COftCI, ~­
Clo-..o, Ho-tu, Camp-· j..::l_7:_&amp;~_7.:;277;..;_or.:.;_l_7_1_
· •_•_3_1_
. __
orty Hllo,St Ml-o,Foronu.
F - mollllo ........
auglo loy. Lo¥1. Orvonlcolly 1174
Grown. Lucie, over 200b othert. 12xtl, 3 Mdroomt, aM elecbtc.
Or t13.1t one price or muhl·tilr unct.rpennlng, t4,100..00. 304·
priQna,....._ or family- BI2·2H8. ·
.,.,., ~-11 , _ unbel-lllo
for top
normoHy l ·33 · F
f S I
pricltl ff&lt;rlfl . , .. to 410. aarmt or e e
280 . brlndo 2100 otyloo . I ~--------­

.,,,tty -

My L u c E

(J]) llody llectrlc

Tree 81 uump remove!,
finwood - t110 dump . truck
load'. Heap Voucher• accepted.
Oon'a Landacapes, 81•·.,.1·
9848.

49

th•

1-...=-l.;..I=-r.l].....:.rl.:---1

1:05 (I) Allee
1:30. (J) 1111 NBC Nightly N-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Plfk.
Route 33. Nonh of Porrilf(ly.
A811tel "trtilert. Cell 614-9927479 .

Spacious mobile home Iota tor
rant. F1miry fride Mobillt Home
Perk. Gallipolis Farry. 30•· 6763073.

I

.

e

FirewoOd·'Lirge plck·up lo1d.
836 delivered. All herctwood.
Coll814-44&amp;·1437.

Sp.Ce for tmall trailers. AU
hook-111)1. Cable. Alto efficiency
rooms. air end ceble. Maaon,
W.Va. Ctll30.... 773-5151 .

m

rallltlonshlpa. 1;1

Mobile Home 'lot for rent . Total
"•etric, Priett Mobile Home
Park. Cell 614-367· 7438;

~3~1~00:=••~8~7&amp;.:;·~6~6.:;09~.~--~4

for Sale

1- - -- - - - - - -

Weekly, monthly rltll. utilities
paid. Cooking faciUtln. Downtown location. Senion wet.
come. Ptrk Centrll Hotel. Call
814·«&amp;· 07&amp;8.

I

·=

0 8Mwtll1 Tcidlly
11J F- of Lite
(l) Happy DIJI

2 bedroom furniHd apt, ret end
depoth, New Heven. W. Vt.,
304·812· 3287 or 304· 773·
&amp;024.

ROoms for' fllll, dey. week.
month. Gallie Hotel. c.n 614.
446-9680. Rent es low as·$120
month.
·

I AMI

be·.,
low. to form tour simplt words.

Themes: Dlsllblllties, ·
ahynen. fealousy and peer

APARTMENTS, mobile homtl.
houMI. Pl. PIHMnt end Gllllpo·
lio. &amp;t-.44S-il221 .

46 Furnished Rooms

Rearrange lefl•n of
0 four
IC'rombled words

(J]) Dagralll Junior High

CAPTAJN EASY

Nice 2 bedroom a;pt. in Midda.
port. •185 per month. O.potit
1nd rtf...,ce required. Day
. , .. 882·2381, w...ondo 814·
992· 2&amp;09.

Two end one bedroom fumiahld
apertmenta, ~·II 304· 1711 Sii12.

WOlD

1:00 (J) Cruy Ulte a l'ox Foic and

11

Sllltlon w~. all extnl. IXC • I
oontl. - . .. .2-201 • •
·•

Ameiia alde· by·tld• 22 cu. ft.
refrlg. trte•r· Ice meker. evocildo. G.E. electric Hinge wtth
hood , avocedo." C.II 814· 2419&amp;21 ofter 1 PM. ·

S@\\~~-&lt;Zt.tfS"

- - - - - - - - - - ltflto4· bw~ CLAY I . '0LlAN

EYININQ

~·

tAllY

PUUIU

8

WED., FEB. -10

••

2 bedroom tumllh.d 1111rtment.
CaR 11 .. 992· 5•34 or 304·
182-2111.

looch 6tToot. Middl-rt. Oh io,
2 bedroom furnished ept, 1utllltlee paid, raf..-.nc~tand depotlt,
304-112-2&amp;18.

TIIAI

run1 ......

HUD approved. 2215 Mt. Var·
PIMHnt. eu-

1967 Holley Park • 12xeo. 2
BR ., 1 bath. 27x10 buih on
room. CA. iuel oil tuma'ca.
10x80 f'ront awning, ClfPOrt
awning. Good ccnd. Must move.
Cell814 -448-28118 after I PM.

Business
Opportunity

7872. """"' • .• .

·eo

The Daily Senti~-Page-13

Television
.'
Viewing

~'

1114.

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

;:;2_:8'1;;. Pl.

ta M•igt High . Call 814-992·
3264.

Older ladv to live-in. Light
houn -keeping . Room and
board. Cell 8124-446-8986.

NowonctUIOd-Oftd

epplloenc.. . Cell 814-448·

6ti!t?

~-. MidcflaP_Qrl,

10, 1988

.:

Cott8ge .tflciency, tqtal elect·
ric. , ,.....,.tor, ttove, nice.

paid hatklays, vacation1 fl~lble

Government Jobt . $11. 040·
•&amp;I , Z30~ . Now Hiring. Your
Ar11. 805 ~ 887 ·IPOO Ext. R9801 for current Federalliat.

•

Groclouo Hvlng. 1 and 2 bod·
room apertmentt 11 Village
Manar lind Alwralde Apart·
mentl In , Middlepol1. From
e215. lndUdlng utllltlet. Cell
814-992-71e7. EO~ .

lo- d-

Locel compeny noW hiring for
full·tlme employment. No ex~
rience Mceuary. Evening work.
Light llhi~ involved. t1200 1
mo. Profit thering a. other
N:nefltt. For peraon11 intel"ttiew
celll14-441-1141. Thura .• Fri ..
a. Moh., after 9:30AM .

-

9&amp;23.

13&amp; c/oQolllpolio D&lt;illy·Tribuno.
82&amp; l)llrd Avo .. QoiHpollo, Ohio .
. 0&amp;831 .
.
.

HELP WANTED

with

Fumlohod - -· All utllitloo
INIId. Aduho only. Call &amp;14~1-

..,.. pf&lt;liootl ..... duUw. a.nd ......... to: lOx ca.

tchedullng; ratirtment · pl.n.
h..tth ineurence with druiJ card.
dental, 1nd vition and the
oppol1unlty for 1dv1noement.
Send rtolf,lme or tpply in person
tt IS36 Buckridge Ad .• Gelllpolit.
Ohio •1831 .

IR. -

- · 4100 . . .. Cal 114·448·
M17.

Enthueiudc
• outgOing
penon
to
__
......,...,.onct

AnfNnON liN'S
Looking for challenging. rewlrd·
ing poaition1 SceniC Hll&amp;t Nurs·
lng Center offllrW oomp.ctttv.
wagM, tuition re-.l mbursement.

mo. W-

••t.~. No pett,. a111 •

ylit-lol..., ........ ~
,.• .dred. C8ll 114-4410001.

DIRECTOR OF NURSES
SMiling RN with~ INn·
a.,...,.m, ludal'lhip, • nurting
skills to OWftilill nurting d.,.n:ment of 1 100 bed INF/ ICF
facility.
with
ona or mon .,.an of~
dooiiM. E x - .......... .
neflt pacbg.. Send ,.., .... Qt
apply In penon at Sc.nlc Hll
NuO'IIng c.-....&amp;31 Buotcridgo
Rd., GoiNpotlo. Ohio •&amp;831 . •

1

~ · CINI14· ol41-ol411-1

· T - RotiMrv
eo....L.L.
- -111.
Fot&lt;
T-71101 .

_......... 131 4th.

Aw.. 3 Ill. 4200

Sale

11110 01et. uao.oo. liM .•
c..... von •eo.oo. 104·171· •

Volley Pumltu,.

....... IIA,.Jdll·tl ift. Galflp D" l
.... • • ... of .........

-

71 Auto' I

61 Houeehold Goods

CO~P .

-IUIITY OF MONEY pluo

12

.AfpeOfrtmeRent"t

X PH'

PQG

J L M H 8

E Q I H

"

,, I

... .

,. .

. .."'
• ..'l

JWQK.

Q X , -

UCWIX

Y....-c·r'w OQJ&amp;cll•lllll HE DREAMED HE WAS

la\TING

"·"!
........

WHEAT AND WOICI.UP TO JtND

TIJ£ tutlit£&amp;&amp;IWI GONE.- FRIDJtllEN

." '
·;

..

...'·'
... j

�tt,.

14-n.. D.ly Sa 1tinll

Wedn11 tlay.

Pomaroy-Midclaport, ·ohiO
'

·'

FebruiiY 10, _1 988

)

Ohio Lottery

Winter
Olympics
to begin
Page a·

Daily Number
. 112
Pick 4

9347

Occasional II!GW toai1ht.
Low between 20 and 25. Cloudy
Friday.

Superlouo
7·I 0.22-26-3342

Middleport, OH:•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; P~arl St.t'992·3471

•

ent1ne

I

..
Vol.38,

No.192

2 Sectlono. 18 Pogtoo

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Feb~uary 11, 1988

' Coeyriphted 1888

A. Multlm-

l~c.

26 Centa

Nowopapor

Shady Cove ·Road problem .said township's
SAlE DATES: February 7 thru February 13, 1981

Clilontlty righto r-.od. Nat I

panolblolo• . . . .phlaol

Of

.

platotlol ........ .

•

Holsum

Coupon Below
&amp; •10.00 Purchase
White or Pastels .

CRACKED WHEAT, RYE
OR WHITE BREAD

•An+h

Buy 1, Get 1· .FREE

Reiter

SPRING
WATER
In Gallons

CHARMIN·
~- - BATH TISSUE .

16 Oz. Loafs

3

,By NANCY YOAj::KAM .
Sentinel Newa SCalf
Reside~~ Is of Shady Cove Road
·!11 Salisbury Township attended
Wednesday's meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners to
ask for direction from the commlulol!ers and County Engineer
Philip Roberts In their search for
...·!lnai!Cial assistance to raise their
road out of flood level.
Ted and . Lorraine Saunders
·and Debbie Engle, ex11lalned to
the commissioners that flooding
·on their road, which borders
Leading Creek, Is a constant
problem throughout the fall,
winter and spring months. When
the road Is flooded, which Is
sometimes days and weeks at a

FOI

ttme, residents on the road must
make a dlfflcult hike around the
water In order to leave their
pi'operttes.
Aclul8wled1es Sltwlon
The commissioners acknowledged that the situation Is ··· bad"
and could possibly be dangerous
If anyone living on the road ever
needed emergency asslstal!ce.
However, the commisslol!ers
pointed out ttiat control of the
· road and any re11111rs or alteta·
tlol!s to tile road falls under the
jurisdiction of the Salisbury
Township Trustees, and not
under county jurisdiction.
The residents said they under·
stood this, but since they have
been told by the trustees that the

township. 'cannot afford to ·raise
the road. "That's why we've
come to you ," saJd Mrs. Saund·
ers. She said residents on the
road are-hoping the commission·
ers or Roberts might be able to
point them In the right direction
to find funding that might be
available for a project such as
theirs. "We're not asking for tar
or concrete," she said, "we just
want out of the water."" ·
She also thanked Roberts for
tak!ng It upon himself to visit the
road on Monday to review the
situation.
Coul!ty Umlted-Roberll .
Roberts pledged that the
county highWay department
would help the resl~ents "to the

$100

With

sugar

ICEBERG
HEAD LETTUCE

&amp; '10.00.Purchase ·
Granulated

THOROfARE
SUGAR·
5 Pound bag

Thursday memtng, after an evernlght snowfall ·~
. closed all MilWaukee public schools. Sl!owfall was
reported to have been 9.71nches overnight. (UPI)

CLEARS OVERNIGirr SNOWFALL - Milwaukee public sch!M'I , workerS cleared lhe
entl'IUice ways to WaaJdnllon Jllgh School early

-- , -

'

Meigs ·residents donate 99
pints of blood Wednesday

A total of 107 area ·residents
reported to an American Red
Cross Bloodmobile at the Metis
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy Wednesday to contribute 99
pints of blood to the county's
pickup truck , kUllngonemanand
blood program .
Injuring two others.
Thlrty-nllle donors gave blood
In appreciation for blood · re.In Wisconsin, a Greenfield
man was killed when his car ceived by a . relative or frlel!d.
rear-ended another· car, which
First time donors were Larry D.
had been .stopped on lnterstate97 Circle, Earl Ritchie, Shannon
In a trattlf jam created by Hlndy, Teresa Hoschar, Susie
Pierce, Barbara Lane, Dee
accidents blAmed on the storm.
A Continental Airlines MD·80 .Spencer and Eunice Nlehm.
jetliner carrying 75 passengers Gerald Anthony became a two
skidded off a runway and Into the gallon donor during the visit;
mud while landing Wednesday on Dorothy M. Sayre, a seven gallon
a snow-sUck runway at Chicago's donor; Lloyd Blackwood, an
O'Hare International Airport. eight gallon donor; Harlan A.
Authorities said the 6:47 p.m. Ballard, a 15 gallon donor, and
mishap closed the ru11way, but Carolyn Charles, a 17 gallon ·
that there were no Injuries. ·
donor.
Scattered delays· were reDr. James Witherell and Dr.
ported at O'Hare, where three or Wilma Mansfield were the at·
seven runways were closed for. tending physicians and nurses ·
snow removal.
, for tne visit were Lenora Lelf'
Illinois Department or Trans-' belt, Beulah Ward, Ferndora
portatlon officials said the even· Story, and Naomi Lo.ndon. Mak·
. lng commute for Chicago area lng up the clerical staff were
motorists took about twice as Mary Nease, · Wanda Fetty,
long as usual. ·
Peggy Harris, Ed Cozart -and
"The expressways are slick, Brian Reed. R.S.V.P. workers
. slippery and hazardous," State . were Marlon EQersbach, Jack
Police Sgt. Donald Thompson
.said Wednesday evening. "lt you
' don't need to be or. the expressways, stay off or,them."
I

Midwest hit by· winter stortn

GROUND

7-UP

BEEF ·

A&amp;W

5 Lb. or More
1

09

Plus Deposit

Per Lb.

Assorted Varieties

RC

COLA

.8-16 Ounce Boltles.

and that by Friday morning,
. By United Presall!tematlonal
snow will probably stretch "all
A powerful storm that caused
the way through New England
'an aii'Jilane to skid off a runway
and
Into Maille."
and contributed to at least two
As
of Wednesday evenll\ll' 8
traffic deaths barreled ·across
Inches
of snow had fallen In
the Midwest today, unfurling a
Milwaukee,
7 Inches In Moline,
heayy carpet of snow as It rolled
Ill.,
al!d
6
Inches
In Kansas City,
toward the mld·Atlal!tlc Coast.
Mo.
Mote than ·half a foot of snow
Early today weathermen mea·
had fallen In parts of the Midwest
sured s11ow falling In northern
by late Wednesday, and National
1lllnols at just Ul!der an lpch an
.Weather Service forecaster Pete
hour, slicing' vlslblllty to less
R~ynolds said more was on the
than a half· mite In some parts. A
way today.
total
of at least 4 Inches fell
"We're talking around 4 to 8
and the NWS had
Wednesday,
more Inches In northern llllnols
expected
up
to
6 more ll!ches Ill
and 6 to 9 Inches In northern
the
Chicago
area
by daybreak
Indiana," Reynolds said.
today.
1
· The storm spread snow from
ChiCago
public
schools
were
Arkansas and Missouri across .
open today but school bus service
Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiwas canceled, and students were
ana, Michigan and Into Ohio.
being asked to report to school an
"It will move toward the
later than their regularly
hour
Middle Atlantic states" tonight,
scheduled
starting.times.
Reynolds said. Wll!ter storm
Authorities
said the snowwatches were posted for parts of
storm,
making
roads danger·
VIrginia, Macyland, Delaware,
ously
slick,
was
a factor In at
and the mountains of North
least
two
deaths
Wednesday.
Carolll!l.
Durlq
the
morning
I'Uib·hour
on
· Forecaster Lyle AleX811der
Chicago's
Calumet
Expressway,
predicted the storm would swipe
a semi-trailer colllded with a
Penl!sylval!la and . New Jersey,

:Stone
enters
.

IIIID 011

·sLAB BACON

'

guil~y
'

1

'I

t

..

·erowm.

•

.f

..

..................~ ~~~~..............~..........................~............~..........~ ~~~~................
---' ~· _.:~~~~~~~~----~
. .... ... ~
_

plea; senteneed

One man was senlel!cecl on a
Geratd, lnveat11ator · for tlie
charae of aaravated a11ault jlrosecutor, Ia wlllcb Stone was
and IDOther man waived extradi- acculed of attemptlna to ram a
tion to nortda wben they ap- Middleport Pulice c:ndler with
'
peared Wedlleldll)' ID Metas . 1111 veblcle. Officers were punu.
·" County Cornmoll Pleat Court 1111 Stolle Ol'llblllly on a traffic
..rore Judae CllariM H. KDJaht.
. Doaald £_ (i')ol!!!te) . . . . 22,
KDIPt acceptlld St-·•
of Mlddiepart. elltenld • plea at IUIItY plea uti Nllleidd the
llllltY to agravaflld . . .ult Mlddlepo11 lllllll to a deftlllt1i
6etoi'e Judp KDIIJit, Oft a bW of term' olllx m011t1111D prllon, to
IJifonnatloll PI'IDil'wd IIIII ll1ed · oommettce 0111'eb. 17.
11Y tile af:ftcie ll ll(etp County
'Steve R. McGrath, 25,. alto of
PrOIICIIttq Atlomly Fred W.
Mlddl
appeared ..rore
Jlldae •
t 011 a warrant from
. Tile clllrie aplllft StCIII wu ' 1111 ata• Florida abarlllll blm
tile 1'11111t qt u IDQtlat 01 N- wltll faiiVt to appear CID a .
Y11r'1 ~Y, accor41111 to Paul chirp of reliiUDI ~· wltb
\'

orren.e.
·J.,._

Per Lb.

.

Deliveries will not be affected former hours of 8: 30 to 11: 30 a.m .
Meigs Countlans will be expe·
Langsville 1- new window
rlenclng changes - minor ones , at the Pomeroy and Middleport
Post
Offices
or
at
other
post
hours,
8: 30 to 10:30 a .m. Instead
actually - at their respective
offices
In
the
c.
o
unty
as
a
result
of
offormer
hours of 8:30 toll a .m.
post omces beglllnlng next week
the changes.
Portland - miw window hours
as a result of the national
·program to reduce U. S. Postal
Here are the changes for the of 8: 15 to 9:45a.m. Instead, of old
Service expenditures by 1.25 other post offl~es, all taking hours of 8:30 to 11 a .m.
Syracuse- 9 to 11 a .m . are the
place on Saturday, Feb. 20:
billion dollars.
Patrons of the Pomeroy and
Racine - new window hours, 9 new window hours, rather than
a.m. to 11 a .m., Instead or the . the old hours of 8: 30 to 11: 30 a.m.
Middleport Post Offices will be
experiencing changes on Thurs·
former Saturday morning hours
Tuppers Plains - 9: 30 to 11: 30
a.m .. tnstead of the former hours
days whlle-chal!ges at othe.r post of 8 to 11.
offlcfi!S In ,.the county
wUI
,•--.....--be on
. Chester- l!ew window hours,'8 of 8 !!-Ill to ~2 n09n.
.
.,
"j
Reedsville- 8: 45 to 10:45 a.m.
10
a.m.
Instead
of
8
a.m.
!o
12
to
Saturdays.
·•
'
.
'
replacing the old hours of 8: 45 to
At the Middleport Post Office · noon.
effective next Thursday, Feb.18,
Long Bottom - 7:15 to 10: 15 11:15 a.m .
All post offices will be closed on
the window service will be a.m. window hours, Instead of
discontinued at 12: 30 p.m. while two hours on Saturday mornings Monday · In observance of Presiat the Pomeroy Post Office, and two hours on Saturday dents' Day but the normal
holiday schedule will be
window service will be dlscon· afternoons.
.
Rutland - new window hours observed.
· tln~d at 1 P:m .
are 9 to 11 a .m. Instead of the

COupon Below

•

rolling," said Jo11es . He said If
ODNR can't help financially,
then maybe they will know
another agency which can.
Favor Sunestlon
.
The resldel!ts were In favor of
Jones' suggestion and Roberts
agreed to contact ODNR Immediately. He also agreed to contact
the U.S. Corps of Engineers to
determine If any responslbllty
for the flooding lies with them.
The Salisbury ,trustees will ' also
be contacted about the meeting
with ODNR since they are
ultimately responsible for whatever Is done to the road.
Later In the meeting, during a
discussion with members of the
Continued on page 16

'

Per..Head

Fresh ~

milling stopped, water runoff has
brought sedlrnenttrom the mllles
Into the creek, thus fllllllg up the
creek. "There Is just as much
water but the creek Is not as
deep," said County Highway
Superintendent Ted Warner.
Since the floodlllg problem
may be mille· related, Commlsstoner Richard Jones suggested
that residents allow the county
engllleer to coriiact the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mining Reclama·
tlon, to schedule a .meeting to
discuss the flooding problem and
to determine If the raising of the
road might qualify for ODNR
assistance.
"This will at least start the ball

List new post office hours
for ~enrices in Meigs County

4 Roll Package

Fresh Crisp
California

fullest extent" but pointed out
that the county Is legally limited
In working on the road, since It Is
under township jurlsdlctton.
Roberts and Commissioner
Richard Jones also pointed out
that there are locattons on a
couple of county roads where
flooding Is a common occurrance
and families are sometimes
trapped for days .
.
The group discussed the prob!ems ~aused by the constant
flooding and all agreed that past
strip mining of many areas along
Leading Creek might be the
cause of flooding problems, not
only on Shady Cove Road but on
other roads which border the
creek. Over the years since strip

.
5

••

violence, a third· deeree felony
under Florida law.
The cbareea resulted from an
l!ICident whlcb occurred lut fall
II! Lake City, Columbia Couuty,
Florida, 111d Gerard reported
tbat Florida authorities llldl·
catlld the wlllled to bave
McGntb l'etlll'lled to them to
face tile cbar... ·
1\ofcGratb qreed to VOIUD~IIy
return to Florida llld lliDid a.
written walwr (If atradltloll. He

IbiD ntunlld to thlt ......
CuntyJall toawaJUIIell'l'lvalof
otncen tiom ll'lorlc1a. wblch
lllould

oeeur

wltllla 10 days.

and Joan Sorden, VIrginia Buch·
anan, Dorothy Long, Lula Hampton , Emma Clatworthy, Esther
Harden. Gertrude Roblllson, William al!d Joyce Hoback, VIrginia
Oller, F1orence Richards , Philomena Follrod, Evelyn Gilmore
and Gerald WUdermuth. The
canteen was served by the
auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion.
Donors from the various·communities Included :
Pomerey ~ Debra D. Mora,
Doranne Boyd, Lenora
McKnight, Kelly R. Ginther,
Raymond F. Jewell, Thomas
Hart, Lloyd Blackwood, Tracy L.
O'dell, Pamela J. Miller, Jeffrey
D. Holter, Raybon R. Wallace,
Brenda L. ·Morris, Mary Ann
VanMeter, Sylvia G. Neece,
Jeane. E. Braun, Loretta A.
Brown, Mary E. O'Brien, Janet
K. Peavley, Dan E . Follrod,
Cyndl D. K111g, David M. King,
i\tidrey C, Kinzel, Deborah L.
Grueser, Bonnie Friend, Walter
R. Couch, Lawre11ce D. Leonard,
Don B. Cullums, VIrgil K, Win·
don, Oiana Conde, Harold W.
Brinker, Penny L. Brinker, Gerald Rought, Fonna K. CUilums.
Mary A. Sorden, Donald R.

Smith, Paul F. Marr, Gloria K.
Kloes , Janet M. Ambrose, Mar·
sha L. Barnhart, Patricia J.
Barton, Howard P. Logan, Bryan
S. Shank, Carolyn A. Charles,
Adell L. White, John S. Foster,
John F . Snyder, W!Uiam W.
Radford.
Middleport - George Harris,
Jr.. Jean Ann Durst, Carin
Taylor, Shannon Hlndy. Kathryn
D. Johnson. Charles F . Johnson,
Carrie M. Roush, Sarah J.
Fowler, Julia Qualls, Patricia M.
Hlndy, Lisa R. Ashley,. Patricia
F . Kitchen, Gloria J. ·Peavley,
Judith K. Hunter, Gerald L. ·
Anthony, Timothy E. Smith,
Dorothy McCloud, Maurlsha A.
Nelson.
• Racine- Charles F . Wagner,
Vlrglllla Bland, Larry Circle,
Diana L. Smith, A. Marie Bush·,
Charles W. Bush, William H.
Hoback, Dorothy M. Sayre, Nola
C. Young, Barbara Lane, Susie
Pierce, Dee Spencer, Johnanna
Shuler, Dawna R. Grueser, Kim·
·
berly J. Follrod.
BldweU -Robin A. Payne.
Reedsville - John C. Rice.
Tbe Plains - Barbara R .
Conley.
· (Contlllued on· page 16)

Senate

Wrongful death suit filed

app~ves

A ,7M,OII8 wreqful death aetiCID bu been fUed Ia Melp
Couaty Common Pleu Court by Delorn .Jeu LCID1, Pomeroy,

gun bill

Loap&amp;r:etb, ef Laapvllle• ..
Ropr P.,._ LoaJ, ap II, died Ia a.Jal718. 1981 one-vehiCle
IICClldlldln wllleb loba l.ooaptnltllwu tile driver aad Loq wu
a pee1 apr. Tile aocldell&amp; &amp;loll place • Roate Ita Ia Selplo
Tow lip, Tile velllcle wu owae• 117 Keaae&amp;b IAIIPhdl.
Tile plallllltlff c.....,_ 111M .Joba Loapbetb wu 1111der tbe
bdlaeaae of aleoltolat lie &amp;Ia. of die aocl'; a&amp;, aad ill&amp;&amp; lie wu
dJttlq aeJIIIeiiiJ _. a&amp; a ldP l'llle el llfeM. Tile phMft
elalml&amp;lul&amp;loec IliA I'*"*'WUdriWTcDeJIIIedr,heloa&amp;
iCOii&amp;nl of 1111 v8lole ftlell na off Ill nll4l lo collide wl&amp;lt a

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Arming ·
'huhters al!d competitive shoot•
ers with tbe ammunition they sa)(
tbey need !O eajoy tbelr sports,
the state senate has approved a
bW to effectively pre-empt hand·
lflllllllulland other local and·eun

or4lnucea.

'J'he lePJatlon, sponsored by
Sea. Robert Ney, R·BarllelviUe,
wu ...lid 21·9 W1!11nnday and
DOW. 10111 to the R0111e, where
Speaker VCli'Ul · G. Riffe Jr.,
D-Ntw BoltOn, Wal DOD·
1:9mmittalabollt 1tar.111re there•
Coatlll~ on pap 18

admlalllratrlxoftbew~ofBoprParkerLong,a,aiU&amp;Iolm

W. Loaph'eCII llld Keliaetll L;

eaiYert...............
ph'""'"

'

Tile
IITIL cllarpalllat Ka1 e&amp;b Lo11Je&amp;nltb wu '
nldlaaa&amp; In •b lla11111 wldcla a. 1111-..
A ilal llr 11117 II 1'8!1 tid Ia die • '1 Ir, u wall u tbe
DIII~IG08DMTtiai•rt ......... fer a- ol fila dlllll 1'1 ~~
ftiURAIIIJex)llltlhll l101pa . . , . _ .......
ud lor 1M mealal
111 11111....0, " " ITII

.....

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