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·-~

~(II

. Th&amp;ndly, FebruwY 11, 1888

16-The Deily Sentittel

-Local news briefs-- Heavy snowfall forecast for ·parts of Ohio
EMS has Jour calls Wednesday

By Uded Prea Jnteraatloul

A win.- storm warnin1 was In
effect totlay for western and
northern Ohio while a snow
advisory was. issued for the
southwestern, central and eastern parts of the state.
National Weather servtee forecasters said . heavy snow· was
expected to develop in west
central and northwest Ohio this
morning and spread eastward

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday; Middleport at 1:17 p.m . to Beech St. for Henry
Turner to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:29p.m. to
Golf Course Hill for F1oyd McClellan to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; ~acine at 4: 18 p.m . to Fifth st. for Lisa Johnson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:26 p.m, to Main St.
for Gertrude Bass to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Flooded... .contl.nuecl from page 1 .

Meigs J:ounty Soil . •nd Water map back to the printer to be
Conservation District, Jones
laminated. At the time the maps
asked Mike Duhl, district conser- were printed, Roberts ordered
vatlonlst for· the Soil Conserve- only enough' laminated copies to
Written by the National Rlfie
tlon Service, to check and see ltv give to local governmental agen- Association, the proposal authofunding though his agency might cles and offices . Cost of the rizes anyone to own, possess,
might be available to help raise laminat,ion will be $6 per map, transport ortransfer all firearms
Shady Cove Road . Duhl said he which will mean that the cost to and ammunition &gt;allowed by
would chej:k on the mattef right prtvate individuals for a !ami- federal and state law:
·
nated version will be $8:$10.
away.
The measure also provides
Accompanying Duhl to discuss
In other highway department: tbat, .except as required by state
with the commissioners a re- related' matters, . Roberts r e- law , no permit, llcens.e or tee Is
quest for an interdepartmental
ported that a new dump truck required to own, possess, transtransfer ohfunds, were Torn
was · delivered to the garage port or transfer firearms and
Theiss and Randy Cheveller, earlier in the week, and a request ammunition and that the state's
members of the Soil and Water. tor an Interdepartmental authority In this area is excluConservation District Board o~
transfer of funds for the highway s!ve, thus nullifying local
depar~ent was approved.
Supervisors.
ordinances.
In a related matter, the group
Finally, the commi~sioners
Supporters said the bill is
discussed pay raises for two
met briefly with Beverly Ondera, needed because of a hodge-podge
SWCD employees.
a service representative with of varying local ordinances that
' Approve Request
McNelly-Patrlck Associates, put an undue burden on hunters
The commissioners approved
Jackson, an Insurance consulting and competitive shooters who
the transfer request. which is to firm with which the county has a risk arrest by unknowingly car. be used for the salary increases , contract. Ondera stopped to rytng guns across various jurisintroduce herself to the commis· dictions on lhelr way to shooting
but Commissioner Jones asked
for the board of supervisors to
stoners and to other courthouse and hunting &lt;treas. ·
consider giving future raises in
personnel.
The Ohio Association of Chiefs
July at the same time other
•An executive session to discuss of Pollee and other opponents
county employees are given
a personnel matter with Michael sald the local ordlna·n ces are .
'raises, and in amounts that are in Swisher, director of the Meigs necessary because of weak state
line with the raises given other County Department of Human law under which violent crime is '
employees.
Services, and an .employee of proliferating.
Chevalier and Theiss said the
that agency, followed the regular · In floor arguments, Ney noted
board of supervisors would con- business.
the bill would provide for a
sider the suggestion, but ex·
consistent
gun law statewide
plalned that local SWCD raises
while
at
the
same time not
have always been given this time
dismantling ' any other existing
of year at the request of their
(cOntinued from page 1)
state law.
governing agency.
GaUipolts - t:umce N tenm,
"It won 't allow people to just
Duhl reporle(l on a new Meigs Emelyn S. Scarberry. ·
strap
on guns any time they walk
County project which is being
Syracuse - David ·F . Lawson,
down
the street," he said.
proposed for possible funding .. Tara D. Wolfe, Debra L.
But
Sen. Lee r. .
from Resource Conservation and Offen berger.
Development through the· BuckLong Bottom- Henry E. Bahr, Shaker Heights, cited
eye Hills-Hocking Valley Re- Earl Ritchie, trarlan E . Ballard.
gtonal Development District. If · Vanessa M. Sidwell, Laura L.
the project would be appr&amp;ved, It Hawley, Bruce Hawley, Kathy
would pay for a nature trail and McDaniel, Hazelee Riebel.
nature study center at Forked
Mason, W. Va. - · Teresa
Run State Park.
' Hoschar, Teresa L. Covert:
Duhl said the next project he
Rutland - Donnie R. Lauderwill work on will be a boat launch milt, Marta H. Blackwood, Wllat Forked Run.
llam A. Blackwood, John E .
Other Matters
Donahue, Jr., Mary E. Davidson,
In other matters, County Eng!- Donna M. Davidson, Dinah M.
neer Roberts reported tha t he is Stewart, Gregory M. Stewart.
sending copies of the new county
Langsville - Ellie E . Myers.

n

' the state.
across.
Forecaaters said heavy snow
waa expected to fall today north
of alinefromDaytontoMarlon to
Steubenville.
Four to six inches of snow was
likely northwest of a line from
Dayton to Cleveland by this
evening. 0 The remainder of nor·
theast Ohio was ex~te.d to get
about four inches of snow by
evening.

Two to ihree inches of snow
waa forecaat for tbe advisory
area, wh1cb inclUdes the clUes of
Cincinnati, Columbua and Zanes·
ville, forecasters said.
Utue or no accumulation of
snow waa expected today In the
southeastern part of the state,
where snow changing to rain was
in lbe forecast.
·
Snow Is eexpected t9. continue
acroas the state tontabt with
additional accumulation expeeled east of a tine frQm
ConUnued from page 1
Sandusky to Columbus.
A winter storm , watch Is In
tng most people agree that
effect for central and east central
law-abiding citizens should .be
Ohio tonight whUe the winter
allowed to own guns and also are
storm warning will continue for
in favor of gun contr&amp;l.
north · central and northeast
" It's a fact of life- and death
counties.
.
- that 60-70 Americans will get
A low pressure area developkilled by guns today," he said.
ing earty today in the Mississippi
Ney argui!d thatlocalgunlaws
Valley was responsible for the
don't, Work, tbat criminals Will • snow. The low was expected to !:K!
always find a way to get guns and
centered over southern Ohio by
put law-abiding citizens at a
this evening. The low is forecast
dlsadvantagewhentheyconfron~
to move northessn\'ard Into
them in their homes.
"But why 'ought we be in the
business of making it easier for
them?" countered Fisher.
•'We're telling some 44 munlclSollth Central Ohio
palitles in Ohio that have gun
Rain or snow developing today,
laws that Big Brother knows
with
little or no snow accumulawhat's best tor them_ A vote tof
tion
and
·highs near 40. Occaihts bill Is a vote against these
sional
snow
tonight, with a .low
men," Fisher added, motioning
betwee11
20
and 25. Cloudy
tow&lt;trd tllree unl(ormed police
Friday,'
with
scattered · snow
officers sl&lt;tndtng . In the back of
flurries
and
litghs'
hhhe mid 20s.
the chamber.
The
probability
. Of. precipitaSen. · Eugene Brans tool, Dtion
is
80
percent
today, 90
Utica, noted the bill appears to
percent tonight and 40 percent
violate constitutional provisions
Friday
:
pertaining to the, borne rule
Winds
will be from the east at
powers of municipalities, but
10
to
20
mph
today and from the
Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, Rnorthwest
at
10
to 20 mph tonight.
Hillsboro, pointed out that the
Extended.Foreeut
Constitution gives all Americans
Sa&amp;arday throu1h Moaday
the right to bear arms.
A
chance of snow each day,
The House passed, 90-9, and
with
highs ranging from 15 to 25
sent to the Senate a bill requiring
Satu!'day,
from 25 to 35 Sunday,
strict regulation, by the Public
and
In
the
30s
Monday. Overnight
Utilities Commission of Ohio, of
the transportation of hazardous lows will range from zero to 10
above zero early Saturday,. and
materials through Ohio lly high- in the teens Sunday and Monday
way or rail.
mornings.

Senate approves...

Meigs
• ...

Weather

Pennsylvania FridaY.
.
Snow Is likelY to continue over
northeast Oblo Friday as the·
storm conUnu8 to lntenalfy,
farecaatera said.
·
Temperatures tonight are expected to range from near 10 in·
the northwestern part of the state
to ihe low 20s in the southeaat. '
Higlfs tn the 20s a~ forecast for ·
Friday.
'The extended,forecast calls fat
a chance of snow Saturday
through Monday, with high·
temperatures ranging from 15 to
25 Saturday and from 25 to 35
Sunday. Hlru in the 30s are
forecast for Monday. Overnight'
tows will .range train zero to 10
above zero Saturday morning
and in the teens Sunday and
Monday mornings.

531
Pit!k 4

7273

•

0

•

Vol.38, No.113

Meeting tonlghl
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi· Sorority will
mee t tonight (Thursday ) at the
Grace Episcopal Church parish
bouse.

Administration
Middleport. ·

Building

' WASHINGTON (UP!) - Two
routine operations.. .. . There
Sovtet warships deUberately
were no U.S. InJuries in either
,bumped two t:J.S. Navy ships in
incident," the Pentagon stateinternational waters In the Black . ment said_.
.sea Friday, and the United
About 3 a.m. EST (11: 00 local
time). the Spruance class des~States will fils a protest, the
Pentagon said.
troyer Caron was struck on the
port or left side by a Mirka class
.. "Two minor collisions ocfrigate, the Pentagon said.
curred in the Black Sea Friday
Three minutes later, the
when two Soviet ships delibercr\llser Yorktown accompanying
ately bumped two U.S. Navy
ships, which ' were conducting
the Caron also was struck on the

port side b)r · a Krlvak .Class .passage;' even ·though they were
frigate, sustaining minor dam- , within the Soviet 12 mile territorage,-the statement said.
ialllmlt.
The U.S. ships were a pout 9 and
It .said tbe damage to the Soviet
11
miles away from the Crimean
vessels is not known, but is
coast,
the Pentagon statement
believed to be minor. "The
United States will protest these said.
The Pentagon said It planned a
Incidents to Soviet authorities,"
briefing at noon Friday on the
the statement said.
Black Sea Incidents.
It said the U.S. ships were
The report of the two incidents
"exercising their Internationally
recognized right of Innocent comes as Defense Secretary

'

I

DiMolution granted
'

A dissolution of milrrljlge has
been granted in Meigs County
C~mmon ..fJeas Court to Harold
E . Rose ailf! Betty K. Rose.

VISITING SENIORS -

$1000 ..

To wear purple-gold·
$0uthern Tornado basketball
tans are being asked to wear
purple and gold for Friday Meeting tuesday
night's games,J n Racine against
XI Gamma Epsilon Chapter of
- Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
Hannan Trace.
meet In the upper Pomeroy
Special meeting
parking lot on Tuesday at 6: 15
A special meeti ng of the Meigs p.m. to go to the Down Under
Local Board of Education has Restaurant.
been called for Friday at 4: 30
p.m. to consider ratification of Meeting canceled
the negotiated contract between
The spec!a.l meeting of Orange
the boa r d and the local Township Trustees which was
O.A.P.S.E. Chapter, and any sc heduled for Friday has been
other appropriate business. The canceled.
meeting will be held at the Meigs

I

Area deaths

Hazel McCallam

Mrs. Hazel McCallam, 95,
Minersville, died Th.ursday
morning in a Westwood, N. J .
hospital. She had been making
her h6me with a daughter, .Mrs.
Leonard (Mary) Martin•!n New
Jersey. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Harley Welker

charge of services. There are no
calling hours.

' (

with Melp County'• Se~r Citizens_ He Jlljned the
nearly 280 1111nlor cltlzena, staff memben, and

.. $1000.

CASH BACK

'

CASH BACK

RENAULT MEDALLION

ssoo.

ssoo.

I
CASH BACK .

Leland Kirby II
Leland L. Kirby,' 76, New
Haven, d!ed Wednesday, Feb. 10, .
1988 at his residence.
Born July 15, 1911, in New
Haven , he was a son of the late
George L. and Minnie R. Riggs

Kirby.

He was also preceded in death by
a granddaughter, Sandra Denise
Dingey; and four brothers, Herman
L., Charles L., Cecil L. and George

Hatley David We lker, 63, 1700
W. Silver Beach Road, Riviera
Beach, Fla., died Tuesday at the
Palm Beach Garden Medical Lester Kirby.
He was a fonner employee of the
Center following a short illness.
Mr. Welker was· born Aug. 3, . New Haven Porcelain Company.
He was retired from the West VIr1924 in Pomeroy, a son of the late
ginia Depar1ment of Highways
Darrell and Elva Saw Welker. He
where he was a tool repainnan. He
also .formerly lived in Mansfield
before moving to Florida 26 atltnded New Haven United
Methodist Church.
years ago. He was a veteran of
Surviving are his wife, Alice M.
World War II having served In
Kirby,
New Haven; two daushfen,
the u; S. Navy. He _was a
Leola
M. Dingey and Enna L.
construction worker.
Folmer,
bolh of New Haven; two
Surviving are a daughter, Jean
A. Wray of Belleville; two sons, brothm, Lenford R. Kirby, New
Haven, ~ Harold Kirby, Vienna;
Larry Welker, West Palm Beach,
Fla ., and Richard Welker, Mans- four grandchildren and foilr great·
'
field, and a. sister, Mrs. Marvel grandchildren.
Services
will
be
Saturday
it I
Davidson, Belleville, and three
p.m.
at
the
Foglaon1
Funeral
granddaughters, Sherry, Krlstie
Home with the Rev. Doyle Payne
and Ml1Ue Wray. s
Gravealde rites will be held at 3 .offidadna. Burial will follow in
Graham~.
saturday al the Carleton
Friends may call Friday from 2
Cemetery with tbe Rev._,WIWam
ro 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.1111;1t !he'funeral
Middleswarth offlc4allllf. The L--0
.
Ewlnl Ft~.neraal Home II In
""'""·.

'

'Manual
Transmission

Only

No Dealer ·Participation To Affect Consumer,Costs.

· COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Just a
"Every lawyer I talked to said
payroll and 15,000 employees in
·week after being Introduced, · It was clearly unconstitutional," Ohio. The company paid $25
legislation to defend Ohio com· Riffesaidofthebill, which would m!llion in 1986 taxes.
panies from hostile corporate have extended the state's taThe sports bill, · passed 84-8,
. takeovers zipped through the keover' law to certain foreign was prompted by the signing last
House Thursday and was sent to corporations licensed to do bust- year of Ohio State football player
-Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
ness in Ohio.
Crls Carter with a New York
- ·state represenlatives ThursThere's even·"some question•: agent to represent him in conday also passed and returned to as to the constitutionality of the tract negotiations with the 'Nathe Senate for concurrence in bill passed Thursday, said the . tiona! Football League.
amendments a b!ll by Sen. speakerThe National Collegiate AtEugene J_ Watts, R·Colurnbus, to
"I've questioned all along how hletic Association ruled that
regUlate sports agents_
far l¥e can go in this area," he Carter had taken money from the
The Sehate, shortly before added. "But this Is a unique agent , against NCAA rules, and
joll)lng' the House .In weekend situation liecause Campeau is not ' therefore was ineligible for his
adjournment, unanimously liCensed in Ohio. I'm not really final season at OSU.
The measure prohibits a sports
passed and sent to the House a sure how much good It's going to
~lll setting strict requirements
do."
agent from contracting with a
tor the disposal of Infectious
Campeau, described in debate student athlete unless a copy of
waste in Ohio.
as a "corporate raider," is the proposed contract Is filed
• The takeover bill, which House offering to acquire Federated for with the student's school.
.Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. ·S61 a share. Rep. William G. ,
Violation would be a first·
admitted is of quesuonable corr- Batchelder, R-Medlna, argued degree misdemeanor, and the
stltut!opallty, was approved 70- that stockholders ought to be attorney general could seek an
21. It lakes effect Immediately allowed to profit on any sucbdeal inJunction and civil penalty of up
upon belhg signed by the gover· if another pllrty is willing to pay to $10,90(1.
_
A "lonJ·Brm'.' provision gives
nor, who is expected to get It the rlg~t pri?C·.·
Friday . It expires July 1.
Supporters, however, coun, Ohio courts jurisdiction over a
. , The 'proposal, passed Tuesday tered that thousands of Jobs a,nd non-resident agent who contracts
by the Senate 25-5, Ia aimed· millions of dollars In taxes and With a student atblete at an Ohio
speelftcally at protect!nl Feder- charitable contrlbutl~s would school even If the signing \S done
a ted Department Stores Inc. of go down the drain It Campea4 out of state.
Ctnc!Mati from being acquired were successful and dismantled '· The infectious waste bill was
liytheCampeauCorp.ofCanada. thecompanytoattalnmaxlmum · described by Its sponsor, Sen.
, Supporters argued that If the pr&amp;fllllblllty, which It did in a Gary Suhadolnlk, R-Parma
Toronto company were allowed · · previous acq\llsltlon.
Heights, as "a health Issue, and a
Federated haa a $237 million safety issue for workers."
io buy up Federafed it would lll!ll
off portions of the company, r-------~--------------rnultlllf in !oat Jobs and reduced:
n.. D '
tax collections.
'1:'1'' .~
r~• •
n
• Wrlnen by Sen. Stanley J.
'
Aronoft, R:Cincl~tnaU, the bill
COLVMBVS - Slate Se-ater Jaa Mlcllael Loll&amp; (Dwould require a forelp bu~neea
Cll'llliYIIIa) today annoweed thM lie ~ appoblied to the
t~ file for alate Department of
Bnate S.bcommtuee COIOel'lllqtlle tUMrtllatioa of State IHue
· »evelopmellt approllal before
I fuDU.
'
·,
'
acqlllrlai&amp;D Oblo .b uiJiesl with·
- ''lam Pie... to k a member Gl IIIII Wllldq lllbtlominl&amp;lte
qut the approval of$be
to ettlltl a ranl .........tan
. . ,.. lea. !:J;.ItaltG.
.
'
Wille ~~~~ tiiM • .... ;::.·..
• ...
.. ..:....., :.~,
dJrectort,
: It 1110 requires tlledapartmeat
1111
w
...... ru111 eo IU\'11 a eom1111 • •a
.. wlerp 1111
with dll bill aDd au~
..
din the nate ateorllly JenM'II

Ln...

'

250

local poBIIcll leaders aad.candlclatea for a dinner
at tbe Center. Here he talks with Elizabeth Car·
penter of Porllaad, who 15 a •'regular'' at the Center.
~
·

· ·Anti-t8keover-· bill p~sed J&gt;y House;
'infeeiious waste measure described

r

p.m.

U.S- Repreaentatl\18

Clarence MIDer cune to town Tltunday to visit

$1000. $1000.

...

2 Soctiono, 16 Pogeo

2 5 Con to

A Multimedia Inc. New!lp•per

Frank Carlucci is preparing to
meet Soviet Defense Mi.n lster
Dmitrly ·Yazov in Bern, Switzer:
land, March 16-17 to dl$cuss
issues such as dangerous incidents between Soviet and U.S.
force~ .

The latest dangerous incident
occurred Jan. 10 when a Soviet
MIG-23 jet fighter twice buzzed a
·u.s. Navy patrol plane over
international waters in the Sea of

Japan. ·
At one time, the buzzi ng of
aircraft and the bumping of ships
was such a common practice that
the two nations form ed an
"Incidents at Sea" conference
providing a mechanism for mediating disputes.
This is the forum the United
States will probably use to file Its
protest.

Killer .stornt ·buries parts .·of
Midwest; New England next

in

'faking orders
The Eastern High Schoo! Sophomore Class began taking
orders Wednesday for a variety
of Items ranging !rpm nuts to
E;aster candy. Money from the
sales will go toward next year's
prom and other upcoming
events. The sale ends Feb. I 7.
For more information or to place
orders, call Elizabeth Bryant_at
985-3376, Amy Murphy at 667-6353
or Robin White at 696-1077.

.

Soviets deliberately bump ·two U.S. warships

-----Announcements.----To he closed
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient ~ervices will
be closed Monday in observance
of President's Day. Offices. will
reopen on Tuesday at 10 a.m.

Saturday.

enttne

Pomerov-:-:Middleport, Ohio, Friday. February 12, 1988

: Caprwlsllutcd ,981

Snow flurries ending today.
Lows aear 28. Cloudy tonight, .

••

at y

•

•

Am Electric Power __ .__ ...... .-28%
AT&amp;T .. .. .. ,_ ................... .- .. ._29~
Ashland Oil ....... ,_ ........ ,_,_., .57~
Bob Evans ............ -:·.. _._ ....... 15~
Charming Shoppes _, ........... 12~
City Holding Co ..... ~ .. -.. ........ 32 •
Federal MoJUL ............... .. 37%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... ........ 56~ '
Heck's II)C• ......................... , 1~ ..
Key Centurion .................... 39~
Lands' End ....... -... -..... -....... 18~~
Limited Inc.......... _. _............ 17 '
Multlme81a Inc.................... 55
Rax Restaurants ......... _,_...... 3~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 8~
Shoney's Inc... ........ .... _.. ,_,,22%
Wendy's Inti................. _...... 6%·
Worthington Ind.... ............ .. 17~

Daily Number

.'

Stocks
Dall)' stock prlees
( Aa oflO: SO Lm.)
Bryce and Mlll'k Smith
of BllUit EIU. a Loewt

Ohio Lottery

Church
•
notices
Page ·6

bull-•·•

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tptiidaJoiltaprovltiolll.
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•

By PETER ROWE
United Press International
A killer storm that burled parts
of the Midwest under more than a
foot of snow and was blamed for
at least 17 deaths plowed Into the
Northeast today as New Englanders braced for what could be ·
the region's heaviest snowfall in
a decade.
· Winter storm watches and
warnings COVIjred a slice of the
eastern United States from the
Ohio Valley to New England.
Tbe brunt of the storm was
expected to sock northern Ver·
mont, New Hampshire and parts
ot f-lalne, which could see 1 to 2
f4!!l of snow throughout the day.
,Up to 18 Inches of snow was
possible in upstate New York by
Saturjlp.y· morning.
.
.. '"''h!B may .!(ecy well be one of
" the heaviest snowfalls of the·past
10 years" in Vermont, the National Weather Service said.
"You should take this threat
seriously.''
The snow was already causing
problems by the morning rush
hour. School closings were widespread across New England, and
Logan International .Airport in
Bos~on closed to incoming fl!ghts
for almost two hours beginning at
.. 8 a.m:
The .. New Hampshire Statehouse .canceled legislative heari!lgS until Monday.
The storm dropped up to 3
inches of snow per hour In New
York state, closing hundreds of
schools. Police agencies reported treacherous driving con·

0

dltlons with many cars off the
road or stalled on highways.
The New York Catskills had
received the most amount of
sno.w by 8 a.m. with Bloomingburg lrt Sullivan County report·
lng 12 inches .
.More than a foot of wet, heavy
snow also was reported In the
northwestern New Jersey towns
of Wharton and Sparta.
The storm wreaked havoc on
Midwestern roads and airports
Thursday and left a mass ot icy
air in its wake from the Dakotas
to Michigan as it rolled east,
blanketing the Ohio and Tennessee valleys today with all of New
Engl&lt;!nd, New York, eastern
Pennsylvania and northern Maryland" in its path, forecaster
Pete Reynolds sa ld.
Coastal sections from New
York e!ty and the major cities of
Philadelphia to Washington escaped any significant snowfall,
the weather service said.
The storm Thursday extended
from lower ,f Michigan · across
eastern Illinois, Indiana and
western Ohio Into Kentucky,
Tennessee and northern Alabama. It brought Illinois the
state's worst snowfall of the
season, dumping up to 14 Inches
in the Chicago area and closing
hundreds of schools and businesses statewide.
.
At least 17 people have died In
traffic accidents or while shovelIng sriow since the storm ripped
into the Midwest and•the Plains
- four each in Texas and
Missouri, three in Illinois, two .

each in Indiana and Kentucky,
· and one each in Wisconsin and
Kansas.
William " Bill" Fogarty Jr., a
longtime St. Louis Post·Dispatch
reporter, died of an apparent
heart attack· while cleaning snow
0
o!f his car· In, Belleville, 111.
Fogarty, who had retired from
the newspaper. once served as
Omaha, Neb., bureau manager
for United Press International.
Kenneth Landolt, 70, suffered a
fatal heart attack While 'shovel·
ing snow at his home In Highland,
Ill.

In Missouri, authorities said
Raymond A. Williams, 69, of St.
. Charles, a candidate in the
Republican primary for the
Missouri legislature, suffered a
fatal heart attack while shoveling snow Wednesd-ay.
· Midway Airport on Chicago's
South Side was shut down for a
short time Thursday morning so
crews could crear snow from the
runways.
Flight delays and cancellations plagued O'Hare International Airport. United Airlines
said about 150 of its 400 flights out
of O'Hare Thursday were can- ·
celed, and 40 percent of Incoming
flights were diverted or canceled. About half of American
Mrlines' flights into and out of
O'Hare were ·also canceled. Both
airlines reported delays up to two
hours.
Other snow totals Included 11
inches In Montpelier, Ohio; 9
Inches in Moline, Ill.; 8 inches in
Continued on page 12
·

Ohio valentine stories abound
Most ever:yone loves a good the cliff into the Little Miami ship. He didn't want to hurt her
love story filled' with romance, Rlverandwereneverseenaga!n. feelings, so he told her he
passion and tragedy, especially · The Frenchmen burled Rosalie · couldn't see her again because
if the story Is a true 011e. Todd overlooking the site where her · her tam!iy,didn't approve of him.
Ambs, of public Information and · husband died.
Ceely was furious and started
education of the Ohio DepartOne of the most famous love plotting to get rid of her family .
ment of Natural Resources, stories is that of Hollywood She soaked flypaper In water ,
found sever.allove stories.across legends .Humphrey Bogart and then poured the arsenic-laced
Ohio in state parks and nature Lauren Bacall. Their wedding 1\'ater over cottage cheese.
preserves .
took place ;1t Malabar Farn;t · Within three months, her entire
An unmarked grave at the State Park in Richland County.
family was dead .
head of the waterfall In John
Bogart and Bacl!ll were marThere was a lot of suspicion
. Bryan State Park, Greene rled In the grand foyer of the Big within the neighborhood about
County, provides the basis for a House May 21, 1945. Bogart the mysterious deaths at the
tale of lost love.
choose to have the wedding at the Rose House. Hugh, fearing that
At the tum of the 18th century, home of his long'·time friend he would be next if Ceely found
Ga!Upolis was settled by the Lollis Bromfield because he out the true story, left the area
"French 500" escaping the . wanted the ceremony to be · and was never heard from agatn.
French Revolution . . Unfortu• private, said Carmen Hall. tour · .Eventually, Ceely was tricked
nately, the group was made up of coordinator' at Malabar Farm. ·
Into confessing and spent the rest
aristocrats ' and artisans ill preA garden weddtitg was orlgi· of her life In a me ntal Institution.
pared to survive in the Ohio nally planned for the 19·year-old But many people say her spirit
wilderness, said Tim Snyder, bride and the45-year-old groom, ·came back to the Rose House
preserve manager;
but news of the event leaked out where she waits tor her true love
Among the settlers were a and.thouaandsofpeoplelined.the to return and marry her.
young couple named Telespar. house hoping to see the famous
From Catawba Island State
One day while Rosalie Telespar couple. Visitors to the Bil House Park tn Lake Erie comes the
and a young boy were picking can still see the foyer'as it w•s in legend of the "Tree of the
· berries, they were captured by 1945.
Bleeding Heart." Soon after
three Shawnee braves. The boy
Astoryofloveandmurdera!IO Actomah;ayounglndlanmalden
escaped and alerted the village.
took place at Malabar_ Near the married Rai·Go, he went away to \
Ll,lcki!y, an old trapper was In main entrance of the Bromfield battle. RaJ-Go was killed and his
town, and he quicklY organized a , home stands a white farm house. body was burled next to a big
rescue party. They trailed the ' Durtllfl the late 18001, it was maple tree ,located on the caIndians to their c~p at the head owned by the ~se fiimt!y, who tawba Cliffs.
·
. of the fal!J. ~salle was tied to a ran a grist mlll on Switzer Creek.
Actomah was disconsolate and
nearby tree.
The Roses bad two aons and a wanted to die too. Suicide was
'nle trapper caution~ the dauahter named Cee!y.
arainst her religion, but sacrifice .
settlers that they would have to
Overweight unattractive and was permllslble. She sacrificed
kill all ~Shawneesatonceor alowlnschoo~Cee!yonlyhadone heriii!Jf Bid had her heart put in
Rosette would he klllecl, 10 the clole friend, Hqb nem~q, who the crotch of the maple tree, 10
Frencllmllllilled up and fired on · lived
acroa the creek, abe and RaJ-Go could II'DW In
the trapper'a Order. They killed said T_. Calllwell, naturanat each other's love and abe could
two allll WOWided ime.
.
at Malabar ~arm. Ceety took pard 1111 grave.
The WOUJKied llldlu iliot tile.. their frlenclahlp the wroaa way
Itlslalllthatthetreewillnever
I1'IIIP!II' Cllroulll .dll heart aDil and beaan tellliiJ everyoDe that die
a . _ oae wtll
~ !Ill
to kill she IIIII Huab were F~lllf to be alway• NP~aoe 11. The OI'IJIUI
Ro..u..
lluaballd rnari1ed.
tree 10 . . . . ltaaGI, but ......
IIIJIIP.ICI*I tile
~but be WU
WheJI . Hqb heard that, he lePnd pnHftcta, 1 •
tiiCJ lite. AI 'hliii!Nir II'JPPIId decided 10 break aft the relatiOII- 111111 pllae.·
·
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Wu
UtvUoaaJ, aatd ~. .
J&gt;New 10111111.
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Pomeroy, Olllo
DEVO'I'EP TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG&amp;-MASON ABE.t

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"ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Allsllltaat Publisher/Controller

BOBROEFUCH
General Mana1er

A MEMBER of The United Press lnternallonal,lnland Dally Press
Assoelallon and tbe American Newspaper Publls)lers Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be-lees than 300 words
long. All letters are subject toedlttngaad must be signed with name, address and

telephone number. No unsigned lett!fS wUl be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalJtles.

:Reagan balks at making
·.: INF testimony bindi.Jlg
By HELEN THOMAS

UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The White House could blow quick
:ratification of the new arms treaty with the Soviets unless I! backs up
:the testimony of administration witnesses as authoritative and
·legally binding.
: The dispute flared Into the open when Secretary of State George
;Shultz was willing to promise In a letter that his testimony on the
·Intermediate Range Forces Treaty before the Senate Foreign
:Relations Committee was the binding vl~w. But then he reneged on
;his pledge,
..
· Shultz backed off under pressure from Senate conservative
:Republicans who feared It would jeopardize President Reagan's
:reinterpretation of the anti-ballistic missile treaty of 19721n which he
·contends the United States has the right to testthe "Star Wars" space
:defense system outside the laboratory.
• Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd and Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.,
:have asked for a letter from Shultz explicitly stating that his
:testimony Is the proper lnterpreta tlon . of the accord, So far the
·administration has balked on giving such assurance.
: White House spokesman Marlin Fl.tzwater said Reagan wants the
:Issue resolved w!lh Congress 111 "private talks."
• In an apparent diversionary tactic to throw the political blame for
:any setback to the treaty on the Democrats, Fitzwater said, "Weare a
;little surprised that,they would jeopardize the hearing process In this
·fashion."
'
: But there is surprise on the. other side · as well when the.
'administration refu~s to say that the· testimony It Is g!!vtng In the
:ratification hearings might not necessarily be so. So what Is the public
:to believe or know about the treaty that has strong support In the
:Senate al)d with the people?'
By Its flip-flop, the administration may have gotten Itself Into a
. :bigger box now that Sen. Joseph B!den, D·Del., the Foreign Relations
o·. ·Committee's second ranking Demcorat, and lts .chalrman, Sen.
Claiborne Pell, D·R.I. , are proposing a formal "condition" to the INF
treaty affirming the Senate'·s right to make the testimony _of
administration's witnesses legally binding.
In add! lion, the Senate !las the power to make wltness.es take an
oath before they testify.
.
It Is extraordlna~y that the administration refuses to flatlY endorse
Its own Interpretation of the treaty.
.
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The attitude stems. from the fact that after so many years when
Reagan wanted to forge ahead with the Strategic Defense Initiative
he found that he was barred from doing so by the antl·balllstic missile
treaty that provided for no testing In space. So he_,declded to go for a
"broad" vs. "narrow" interpretation of the U.S.·:sovlet ABM treaty,
signed In the Nixon era, to bend bend the terms of the pact to suit his
goals.
The adm!nlstr&lt;!tlOn fears that by _acknowledging that the testimony
Is authoritative It undermines Its argument that those who testified on
the ABM treaty at its Inception were not on"target.
¥
The negotiators of the ABM treaty are quite clear on what the
agreement permitted and prohibited. The Soviets have malnralned
all along that testing In space Is barred under the accord.
·
· Blden said the "condition" to be attached to the treaty would bf;o
1
more far reaching than any letter Shultz would sign, and looks to the
future when other administrations may want to put their own spin on
the INF treaty.
' But to keep the dialogue going with an adamant president, the
Soviets have become more flexible on the terms of the ABM treaty.
The United States and the Soviets can break out of the ABM treaty
with six months notice. So far, neither has done that. But the legacy of
the current adminisiratlon may be that treaties don't mean what they
say they mean In the. fine print.
Reagan broke out o! the SALT 2 strategic arms limitation treaty, by
adding one more bomber to the fleet, even though he pledged at the
start of hls .administratlon that he would abide by the unratified
agreement if the Soviets did likewise.

utters to the editor
Info sought for ·publication
Meigs County Genealogical
Society members . Christine
Fruth and friends have copied all
of the tombstones In the Beech
Grove .Cemetery In Pomeroy,
Ohio. We , are preparing this
Information for publication and
we would like to Include In this
· boOk all of those people who do no
have a tombstone. If you have
friends ·or relatives In this
cemetary without tombstones,
please send this Information to
the Society at Box 346, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or telephone me at

949·2~36

after 5: 30 p.m. When
sending or phoning this lnforma·
lion, please Include any birth
and/ or death dates or age of the
deceased If known.
Thank you tor helping make
this puj&gt;llcation a more complete
history of the final resting place
of so many.
Mrs. Karen Werry,
.. •
'President of the Meigs -County
Genealogical Society
31980 Court St. Rd.
Racine, Ohio 45771

Today in history
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By United Press International

Today Is Friday, Feb. 12, the 43rd day of 1988 with 323 to follow.
This Is Abraham Uncoln's birthday.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
ThOI!e born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
philanthropist Peter Cooper In 1791; Abraham Llncolll,16th president
of the United States, and biologist Charles 'barwtn, In 1809; actor
Lome Greene In 1915; and baseball player and sports commentator
Joe Garaglola In 1926 (age 62).
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Chinese tyrrany· intensifies

T_~~~- Da-ily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Midclapoi"'.. Ohiq
:Friday, FebNery 12, 1988 :

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On this date In history:
In 1877, Alexander Graham Bell's new ·lnventlon, the telephone,
wa1 p!!bllcly demonstrated with a hookup between Boston and Salem,
Mass.
.
In 1953, the Soviet Union broke relations with Israel after terrorists
(
bombed the Soviet legatio11 In Tel Aviv.

WASHINGTON -China's plan
to turn nbet Into a ldnd of
Disneyland In the'Himalayas baa
fallen on hard times.
Since last October, when nbetans rioted In the streets against
their Chinese overlords, the
country has · been closed to
Western journalists and most
foreign travelers. Reports from
·· Tibetan refugees who have managed to slip out to tell a grim
story- of ar~ests, torture, killing
.and a frantic propaganda campaign by the Chinese to bring the
Tibetans Into submission.
It Is a far cry from' the quaint,
picture-postcard Tibet that tour·

Ills aaw before last tall. OUr
IOUJ'Cel aay , the picture was
caretlilly crafted by the Chines'!!,
who 1ee nbet as a valuable
tourist attraction, a sort of time
capsule of Asian Buddhist theo:
cratlc culture. Exeept that the
Chinese have laid :waste to that
culture alnce they occupied Tibet
In 19l!o, destroying 6,000 monas·
tl!rles, temples ,and shrines and
sending the aplrltual leader, the
Dalal Lama, Into exile. That
leaves a facade of old Tibet for
tbe tourists, and since October.
tbe Chinese have made no
pretenae of keeping up that
facade .

Anderson and

The Tibetan plateau, called'the
Roof of the World, baa been
closed to outsiders for most of the
38 -¥ears ot Chinese rule. But In
recent years, the Chinese have
been allowing more tourists In,
and have been cultivating poten·
tlal trade reia tlonshlps with the
West. That ended last fait .The
'Dalal Lanlll visited the United
States to propose a peace plan
between bls Tibetan supporters
and the Chinese. To days later, on
Sept. 24, Chinese troops rounded
up 15,000 Tibetans In a stadium
and made them witness the
execution of two Tibetan
nationalists.

1\\EY VoTED~
·CONTR~ 1\\\&gt;! ·. ·

WN7 THEY 1!&amp;\\.\ZE
W~ 1"HIS h\EI\WS?I

~ 1'H~Y RE~llZ.E?!
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That, plus the public beating of
' monks, touched off anti-Chlneae
rlotinli. The Chinese claimed ltX
people died, and that most of the
Injured ·w ere policemen.
But two congressional aides
who met with the Dalal Lama
and Interviewed Tibetan refu· ·
gees In nelghl!orlng Nepal this
month say the death IOU may
have been as high a~ 40; Paul
Berkowitz, a staff ass!Jtant for
Rep. Benjamin Gilman, R·N:Y .•
and Keith Pitts, legislative dlrec·
tor for Rep. Charles Rose,
D·N.C., heard stories from refu· ·
gees about hundre.M of arrests
since the riots and a massive
"l'!!·educatton" etr'ort · ·by the
Chinese. They Interviewed one
woman who was "tortured with
an electric catt)e prod In her
private parts," Berkowitz· told
our associate . Daryl Gibson.
"They (the Chinese just !!'eat the'
Tibetans like dog&amp;. That's what
started the riots. They · were
beating monks with shovels."
Pitts said that whlle they were
In Nepal, a refugee confirmed the
rumor that the Chlneae are
paying a $100 bounty to ,Nepalese
border guards for every fleeing
Tibetan that the guards tupt In(
The Chinese turned to boUnties
wheri tlli!lr effort to close th¢;
border with Nepal failed. Retu~
gees were bribing the borde.! ·
guards to look the other way (
according to Michael van Walt,:
the Dalal Lama~s legal advlaer II\
Washington.
,'
John Avedon, a New York
author and ex}iert on Tibet, sale\·
·the latest twist In Tibet II the'
Intense propaganda campalgri
Inside the country, run by high:
. level Chinese party officials, not
regional underlings, ·BS In thE!
past.

LAMBCl!.E PASSES - Rio Grande freshman
· ·John Lambcke (41) passes off to a teammate as
."Walsh's Jeff Youn~t (10) comes out of the paint to

'

The current legal and political
attacks on Attorney General
Edwin Meese must be under·
stood as skirmishes In the ongoIng war of the liberal media and
the Democratic Congress
against the Reagan
administration.
Ever since the passage of the
special prosecutor law (recently
declared unconstitutional and
soon to be test~ In the Supreme
Court) , Congress and the media ,
have liad a field day using or
threatening to use It against.•
'Reagan's closest associates. Sev·
era! of these- National Security
Council ~;!!rectors Richard Allen
and William Chirk and chief of
staff Don Regan- were hounded
out of office without the need to
resort to it. .Others - deputy
chief of staff Michael Deaver.and
presidential aide Lyn Nofzigergot the full treatment; leading to
Indictments (though In both
cases for acts allegedly commit·
led after they had left the White
House). Still others - Including
NSC director ·John Poindexter.·
and Lt. Col. Oliver North - are
awaiting similar fates.

NBA results
LA Jaten no. De•wr los .

Ber~y's

cllned from tlie 12 to 13 percent of(
the early 1980s to a more:•
manageable 9 to 10 percent. Corn :
prices are expected to Increase :
this year, even though the 1
country's farmers probably will:
plant 67 to 68 million acres, up'
from last year's 66 million acres. ~
Hog prices, excellent for 1
years, should Improve even more ·
this year. The Mertz family has :
good reaion to be optlm!Jtlc - .~
but nobody expects to get rich :
quick.
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World

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THE GREAT BUSHINI I

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•oollfleld 5~, Warren a. am pion .f3
Burton Berlulhlrt.IO. Newb•ry 23
Colenel CJoawford 15, Carey IS
Copley "18, Hudson ag
•
Cortland Lakeview IU, New&amp;on Fait. 2.t
Falrbub 81 , N Lewlllbui'J' Triad !7
Field 13, Norton 5I
. GreenUeld 119. tln:levllle .g
GrHIIIIhul'l Green 58, Medlllll Hlrh·
land !Iii
HaDnlbal Rher 10, Bellaire 52
Kent Ro~elt 11, CUyattora FaDs 86
Kll'nlon IUdre It, Sprtlll( Shawnee 55
Lea"ltt.bul'l Lallrae 151, E Pale1dne 38
Ubedy ft, Klasmu Badrf'r 31
Ma'--'U• Eutem Ill, Manchel&amp;er U
Mandleld 8t Peten 80, Lucu 51
Mllrton EIJin 50, ~nfonl t8
Marll111ton 1t. All ron Coventry 19
MIUII Jackson 51. MM8 PeiT.y tS
Mlddlefteld Cardlr.l 81, Perry U

HDU!iloll alLA Cllppers,IO: 30 p.m.

Denver at Portland, 10: 30 p.m.
SatW'day'A Gaune~~o

Cleveland at New l'ortl, niKht
WMIIInctonat Atlanta, nlrht
Cbttap at Detmll, nlcht
Seallle al Golden stale, niJht

Phoelll:li at Sacna.JtH&gt;,.to, night

NHL
Thiii'IKi111'M R~ult
WMhlrwtlNIIi, NV Rafllen~3

' .

North Can Hciovtr 12, can Tlmken -17

T•ronto 4, NY hlt. .dena 3
N~ Jersey 4, Montreal t
Loa An«eiH S, Q111!bec t
Edmentea 7, VancoUYer 2
.
Frldllf'" Games
NV lllarNI~nat W_,.t..,lo!J, 7:SIIi p.m.

Raw ana 43, NUes 3'7
Rlclunond Mts a. Brooklyn ;11
Rlchfteld ReYere U, WadiW911h ..
Rldpdale 32, llllckeye Cenlral 3D
Sbe•Dcloah 41, Ba111e1vtUe U
Slow-51, Aleron Sprlnafleld t8
Talbnadrt 51 , Nerd:enla u

New Jene1at Detroit, 7: SD p.m.
C.IJ&amp;rJMPhlbulelpflla,7:S5p.m. ,
St. ~A.a al Clllcap, A: 35 p.m .
llallale at Wl•lpeJ, It: 31 p.m.
. a.. a at EilllhOIIIOII, t: l5 p.m.

n., C1ty.f3, Millon Union 1t
Union Local $1, 81 ClalrNvtUe 31
VieHa Mathewsts, Maplewood 21
WOOIIrld~t: IS, Hudun Wewm Rn 30

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•Ill....,., .,..
SM-.Iar'•Gamn

...... M V.-eM\Ier, •laW

Quebee

College scores . .

aJPt

'l!lllulellll!-.aaTof'O... al&amp;'ht

By United Pl"ftl In --.tt...a

PllaherallatLOaAarelta. ntiW
Detroll at st. l.ouls. nll'hl

"""

Brldpport tR, KeeM' Sf , 88
DoWhnc 88, Souther• Conn. ,7t
Duqur:~~ 13, Rtlf«er~~o Sf!

This week's ga~es

..

Elmira 70. Bhtfldo 6H

TlllA Wetk'8
.
Ohio Colh!11e Ba!Jke&amp;hll ~bedulf'

Georte Wuhl.,.ton 72.

By ·Unlted Pre!!tilnllernaltoMI

Hartford 71, Col(llll~ II
,John J~ty 18, Bar!&amp;!• Co li. 7:1
KJ 11«11 C•llep 81) Caldwell 'n
MUII·Botlon 108, Tuft I 9t
Northeuiern '7!, Vennont 10
Nyack 75, Po11t 1ol
Penn Stale U ; W \ 'lrwlnla II
Southll'fn Malnt" 100, St. •JoM&gt;ph'M t3
Soulheuk'rn MU&amp;. 9'1, Sahe Reclna 72
Stoneybrooll 7S, HonU&gt;r M
Val. Fo~~tr Chrlll. 101, Bapt. Bible 1t
Western New Dill lid 110, Batlllon ill
Wo~est.er Poly 7ol, MR 70

·
FrHhty, Fe~ 12
No Jl&amp;met~aeheduled

Saiurday, •'~h. 13
WIMJoi'Dlln 1.4 Ohio St
TolP.do at Bowtlftl Green
Kent St at Ceatral Mli'h
Miami at Wesll!!rn MI Chipn
Ball stat Ohle Unlv

.._

CinclnnaU M VirrhHa Tedt
Oneland Sl II Easlrfn Dllaobl
Da,toa at Hll.rQidk'
Xtavlu a1 Loy~tla

.....

llrDGklyn at Akron
Yo•ptown Sl; al Aualin Pf'a,y '
Wris.. Sl at (,'MCilA'O st
Baldwln-W ..Iac:e a&amp; WIUe nherA'

Appalachian SCale 18, F..a!K Tcnneskee
67

MuMtnrum a1 (:apUal

Rf'ldelberr a1 Mouat Unl&amp;n

..

Mar~ta

al Ohio Nor-.~rn
.o\lk&gt;lhtn)' (Pal at K~n,yon

WooMer at C11.se

Re~~~ervl'

"

Nora. Caronna 711. N.C. State 7J tOT)
Radford tl. Campbell 81 {lOT)
SUern Ill, BltatiJtld H (0'1')
Ten•. Cllattanoop II, Oavld!cln 77
'IUIC8Ilftl II, MIDicaa Jill'
Va. MllltarJ 71 , .lameN MIUII160a IIi
Wlnll1rap 5.1, N.C. All•e.vllte II!
,
MldwHt

F1NIIayal Ohio Domlrikan

Rio Grande at O,kll'
UJ'b&amp;na 11 Wapf'llhurx (Pal

UPI ratings

tbhland 71: Soulhern lndlau. 13

NEW YORK tUPI)- The UnltedPreu
lnlernaUoral Board ol Co schell' 1't! p 20
collep b•ketball nltlap, with lint·
plltce \'otea and recurd In partnthet~eiJ ,
lotal pt~lnlt~ {h&amp;Md on 15 ,-ints for lint
pla(!e, U for Reo_., de .) and Jut week'•

rankl ..;
Teom
1. Tt!mjllf (.Zl)(ll-1 I
l. Purdue (I) (18-2 I

Cedarwtlle Ill, Mo..t Vernoa 71
Dralle! Kt, O'eiJIItoo 'U
FeiT'IIIo state II, WIJIIe Stale 71
Dllnob !II, Ml..eso&amp;a 50
Dllnoi•Odcap . , Wh1eon~ln-GB 51
Indiana 74, Northweatem 45
..diana !Wale as, Wit hila SWeet
Lab Superior It, HID.talt 81
Lewt.ll8, lnci.·I'Yr. FW"
MacMul'l'll¥ IS, Greea~lllto 19

.

Po lith•

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. 540 6
$10 I

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J, Mboka(llUI·t)
4. Oll .. homa (I) (tt-l)
$.North carol!• ( IH)

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II. Nelilll Caroli• State (I H)

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...,..,., ...rida State, GeOPIIa Teell.

Rejuvena'ted by their 79-73 win
over Malone's Lady Pioneers
Tuesday, Rio Grande's Redwo·
men are taking a shot at
Mld·Ohlo Conference leader
Mount Vernon Nazarane, In a 4
p.m. Saturday game at MVNC.
Lea Ann Mullins' career high
of 37 ·points against Malone
boosted Rio Grande's record to
6·3 In the MOC and 16-8 overall.
MVNC Improved Its conference
standing to8·1 (17·2 overall) with
a 63-57·defeat of Walsh In Canton
Tuesday. . .
.
The Red women ·employed a
'
deadly accuracy
on free throws
to score against Barbara Easllck's .Malone club, sinking 31 of
37 attempts for 84 percent,
compared to 39 percent (21 of 57)
on field goals. Holly Hastings
provided 14 points and point
guard Beth Coli pumped In 12 for
the win.
A R.lo Gr~Jnde roll In the
conference was derailed on Jan.
26 when MVNC defeated the
Redwomen 74•66 at .Lyne Center.
Paul Swanson's team then took
over the top spot In the MOC and
has heid ·on slrice.
Swanson Is expected to start 1
some familiar faces from the last
Rio Grande game:. Samantha
Sadowskf (5·11, sophomore) and
Jandl - Ferrell (5·10, junior) as
forwards and Shari Robertson
(5·10, junior) at center . Point
guard will probably be Erin
Sharrock (5·8, freshman) and
Amy Fea therlngham (5-11, j un ·
lor) will take shooting guard Slot. ·
Redwomen Coach Cheryl Fie·
Utzw!ll agaJn start Mullins as her . ,
· small forward and Hastings at
the power forward position. Coli
will be point guard and senior
co-captain Renee Halley will be
shooting guard. Repeating at
center will be Billie Jo
Stephenson.
Following Saturday's game,
Rio Grande will be Idle until
Thursday, when they travel to
Wilmington for a non-conference
tilt. The Redwomen's final game
of the season will be played
· Saturday, Feb. 20, · at home
against Dyke.

Page 3

n••ia, Ka . . ., Lo,.la·Mar)'meul.
- - - ...... ....... tw. ,... •••
a.lllllten ........, a.•llen Millll-

tJCIAII,Io...... Cal,.

UNLYTicll'o-81 . 11
Vlakll,lJ0-.. 81 ...
Vlakll. II, Cal-l- Bolio.,. It

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...... Te...-11 PMD, ll&amp;all, VIall 81ate

Local bowling
•

Ro&lt;ocb'l Gun ShoD ................... ,...........18
lll1dlm:VI cam 0u1.. .......................... 16
!lm'9'a 'BIIwUI:IIJIDt Repair ............... 13

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Subscribers not dcslringtopay the car·
rlcr may remit tn. advance dlrtct to
The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basts. Credit wUI begivcncarrtereach
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Tonight's
games
.
'

Marietta at Gallipolis
Jackson at Athens
., Warren at Logan
Boyd at Portsmouth
Pl. Pleasant at Wahama
Hllnnan Tra~e at Southern
waverly at Wheelersburg
.,
Buffalo at Chesape!lke
Coal Grove at South Point
Gteentleld,at Circleville ·
Valley at West
Hannan Trace at Southern
Oak RIU _. North GaUia'
Symmes Valle)' at Kyger Creelt
Southweatern at )!:aatern

.

..

Dally ................................... 25 Cents

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INnul.c:tu....••

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54

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SINGLE COPY
PRICE

UpTo

Rado

HONOLUL'(J (UPI) - Jodie
Mudd and Richard Zokol took
opposite routes to their shares of
the lead through one round of the
$600,000 Hawaiian Open.
Mudd had to sink several long
sliots while Zokol coasted to a
6-under-par 66 Thursday. One .
shot behind the leaders In the
race for the $108,000 first priZe
were Brad Bryant and Scott
Simpson.
·

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Mudd, Zokbl share
Hawaiian lead

Lopn at NellaiiYilJe.York
r Walllut RldlllatAtl)ena
l

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Kent
State Coach Dick Crum signed
tlu;ee more players Thursday,
making him . 22 recruits since
Wednesday . .
Those signing Thursday were
Eric McMahon of Canfield,
Kenny Parker . of Saratoga
Springs, N.Y., and Leon Theodo·
rou of Edison, N.J.
McMahon, Is a 6·foot·2, 220·
pound tight end-linebacker from
Austintown Fitch High School;
Parker, a 5-foot-9, 172-polnd
running back from Milford
(Conn,) Academy; and Theodo·
rou, a 5·foot·ll, 180-pound punter
frop.1 J .P . Stevens High School .

to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Qhlo 4571B.

With

Wlleeletlblltl at Gaiiipolll
Tollla at 8otdli Palat

'';
.•,

Crum signs three
more grid players

·-Brakes

l'eb.JIP'!"'*

•

score at 60-60. Walsh guard Jeff percent. The Cavaliers were 46
Young then hit a basket to regain percent on field goals (23 of~)
the lead. Fouls called on Rio and sank 14 of 20 free throw
Grande allowed Buda and Chris attempts for 70 percent.
Fields to sink 2 at the charity
The Redmen play Dyke today
stripe (64-61) at 1:01. Redmen at 4 p.m . !n Cleveland, and host
center John Lambcke netted a Ohio Dominican for their final
free throw with 40 seconds left home gam,e of the season Tues·
and a Ron Rlttlnger basket at :15 · day. Walsh travels to Cedarville
narrowed Walsh's advantage to 2 Tuesday. Cedarville defeated
(66-64).
Mount Vernon Nazarene 88·79 on
A Young basket was nearly Thursday.
negated liy a 3-polnter from
WALSH (89) - Jeff Young,
Kearns, putting the score at 68-67 4(2)·5·0..19; Shawn Gamble, 6-2·5·
with 4 seconds remaining. A 14; Eric Manley, 4(1)-1·0·12; .
Brian Watkins foul on Walsh's B.D. Buda, ·8·2·1·18; Chris Fields,
Sean Mason allowed Mason to 1-i'4·3; David Selmon, 0.2·2·2;
sink 1 of 2 free throw atiempts. Sean f,Jason , 0-1·0-1. TOTALS
The Redmen then called a ~(3)·14-14-419 .
timeout, and after gaining pos·
RIO GRANDE (70)- Anthony
session of the ball, Raymore Raymore, 4-1·3-9; Jim I&lt;;ear!ls,
passed to Rlttlnger, who shot It to 0(3).0·1·9; Ray Singleton, 6-3·5·
Kearns for the winning shot. ·
15; Ron Rlttlnger,ll·1·2·23; John
"We didn't play as well as we Lambcke, 2·1·3-5; B~lan Wat·
should have, but we re!lllY klns, 0(1) -4·1·7; Rob Jackson,
handled the last two seconds," 1-0·0·2. TOTALS 24(4)·10-16-70.
Lawhorn said. "I think for the
most part, Walsh played better." ·
Nevertheles·s, . Lawhorn
praised the work done by Rlttln·
The Daily Sentinel
ger and Singleton, Lambcke's
effective defensive play and the
(USPS 115-HII)
utilization of Watkins as a key to
A Division of Mlllllmedla, IDe.
the win .
· PubHshed every afternoon, Monday
Rlttlnger scored 23 points and
lhroogh Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubSingleton added 15, while Ray·
Ushing Company / Multimedia •. Inc.,
more and Kearns each had 9.
PomE-roy, Ohi o 45769, Ph. 992-2156. SeRaymore also had 9 reboun.ds.
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
For Walsh, Young led with 19,
Buda posted 18, Gamble added 14
Member : Unlted Press International,
lnland Dally Press Association and the
and Manley supplied 12.
Ohio Nf'wspap er Association. Nattonal
Overall, Rio Gral)de connected
Advertising Repr~ntatlve, Branham
on 24 of 53 attempts on field goals
Newspaper Sales, 733 Th~rd Avenue,
Nf'W York. New York 10017.
for45percent, andnetted10of14
tries on free t.hrows for 71
POSTMASTER: Send address chanaos

Your Best Qualiti Ford Dealers
·· Want To Win You Over. ·.

UC R l " - 1fl, Col81 LA 10 (lOT) •

•I '

'

·Redwomen
to battle
Mount Vernon

,

LL Tech lit So•w"tem La. 51
t.•sloaltll. Not6eaa•rw18
Nnr o ....._ n, .\rk. . . . State $1
Nootl! ,-.,.. 81.-... MeN- 81. 11

1

II. PlllabUI'J. ( 18-!)
I. DIIIU (IN)
II. KeN~~elly ( lf.l)

It, }l!et.lraska 8'7

-·

8. llrllham Vo•a (I) (17:1'1

1. Nnadii-Laa Ve1u (ti-t)

MIMOuli

Norltlw0CM111, Sql~aw Valley 11
Oaklud IS, Gra.a Valley M
RloOn~.te 11, Walsh It

pOMEROY ·BOWLING LANES
EARLY WEDNESDAY MIXED
January 20, 11111
Mlddl~ LWIC. Room .......... ............ ~

•

I he U81fy Sentinel

Two points.down and 3 seconds
left to play Thursday, Rio
Grande's Redmen needed a ~
miracle - and tliey got it.
Jim Kearns' 3-polnt field goal
at the buzzer gave Rio Grande a
7().69 win over Walsh and first
place In the Mid-Ohio Conference
with a 10.2 slate and 23-6 record
on the season. Walsh goes to 10.3
In the ~:onterence and 18-8.
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
. wasstlil.marvellngoverKearns:
winning shot after tbe game.
, "Jiminy Is a clutch pla)Jr,"
Lawhorn said. "This has happened five times In his career."
The6·1 junior guard fromMcGuf·
fey, Ohio Is the Redmen 's third
highest scorer this season and a
specialist In 3.po!n.t ers.
"I don't want to take anything
away from anybody," Walsh
Co11ch Dan Peters commented.
" Rio Grande played a great
game. They didn't give up and
they played well until the
buzzer."
Walsh entered thegamelnflrst
place In · the conference. Rio
Grande can ·take undisputed
control of the top spot sqould It
defeat Ohio Domlnlcan and Ce·
danillle next week.
Capitalizing on the fact thai
Walshhasn'twonagameatLyne
Center since 1983, Rlo Grande
controlled the floor early In the
first half, leading by 9 (18·9) on
baskets by Ron Rlttlnger, Ray
Singleton, Anthony Raymore and
a 3-polnter by Kearns. With less
than 6 minutes to go, Walsh's
otfense · came together as for·
war&lt;! B.D. Buda, center Eric
Manley and guard Shawn Gam·
ble cutlt to2 (26-24) with 1: 15left.
· Singleton then scored 2 points but
was whistled ~or fouling on
Gamble, who shot 2 free throws
with 3 seconds left to put the
halftime score at 28·26 In Rio
Grande's favor .
The Cavaliers' renewed often·
slve strengtli lost none of Its
power In the second half, as
Gamble's basket tied up things at
19:24 and Manley's field goal
gave Walsh the lead for the first
time. The Redmen quickly reco· ·
vered and on the efforts of
Rlttlnger and Singleton , the lead
was sliced to 1· (39·38). Singleton
then broke through at 13:07 to put
the advantage back Into Rio
Grande's hands (40·39).
Rio Grande hung on grimly for
nearly 10 minutes until Buda's
2·polnter at 3: 30 deadlocked the
•

. Mlchlran 80. Wl.:o•ln t1

4t8 8
4111 1

,,.

.. '

Geol'lt- Mason liZ, Md .·Baldmore C(l.

LGullilaNl Tech It, SW LGuiiNana 57
. NC Olarlottc Ki. UAB 19

WUmlnctoa 1M Cedarvlllt&gt;
Maloac at Bluffton
Ml Vemo. a1 Dl-ltant·e

1

'

Brklrewater 70, Roanoke SO
Br)·an CoUea:e tl, f.oveltll.nl 71
Dulle 88, ;\'aile Forest 6i

· .Jackscutvllk 18, So , AI•. HO
Lee Col~,.e 108, TenaeAAell' Wnleya n 81

Ohio H'e&amp;ltyan11t flherlln
A.. laa~ a1 Krnlocky " 'eNk•yun
Hiram a1 Betr.~tay (\\' 'V~t)
,fohn r.arro11111 W A: 1 (Pa)

"

MMII (j,~uselta

•

•..

IS-

'

Thanda,y, Feb. 11
Auml"'l U , Klrd..d n
Barberton ts, 1\kron Hoban 50

Seattle ••• H111110n I U
FrldQ 'I Ga mea
New lerM&gt;y a&amp; t1evellnd. 7: ao p.m.
Atlallla a&amp; Delrolt,ll p.m.
BeiiOa at O.Uu. 8:30p.m.
LI\Lakert1at SanAntonlo,K: 30p.m.
Ch~qo at Mltnwbe, I p.m.
IDdlana II Phoenix, 1: 3t p.m.

S~OWIY--·_R_o_be_r_t....:...~_a_lt_er---4s.:

dollar spent for food 'be retail lty has shifted to· their two sons,
purchasers had been just under 34-year·old Peter and 31-year-old
40 ~ents In the 1960s and 1970s but David.
dropped to 30 cents In the early
In addition to raising 2,500 to
1980s.
3,000 hogs, the family has 320
(Of the 'r emaining 70 cents, acres planted In corn and 320
around.''
,
processing accounts for 31 cents, ' acres dedicated to soybeans. The
The . "things" are the condl·
retail charges cilnsume 23 cents, crisis reached Its nadir In 1986,
!Ions affecting U.S. agricultural
wholesaling takes 10 cents and when the entire soybean crop
- and during the first half of this
transportation accounts for 6 'was wiped out by a hailstorm on
decade they ranged between
cents.)
the night before It was ·to be
appalling and dreadful.
harvested.
.
Land values collapsed, crop
Production expenses, .which
The Interest rate the Mertz
prices gyrated, exports plum·
CO!!SUmed about 75 cel)ts of every family must pay now has demeted, Interest rat~ escalated
dollar eaflled by the typical
and bankruptcy filings soared.
farmer In the 1960s and 1970s,
~'The early 1980s were finan·
Increased to 85 cents In the first
clally devasta 't!ng for . many
lialf of this decade. (They now
producers," notes Juliana Krug,
have returned to the 75-cent
an Information specialist with
level.)'
.
the U.S. Department of
For many working the land,
Agriculture.
·those pressures .b ecame lntolera·
The agricultural depression
ble. The number of farms
during the early 1980s was, the
throughout the cou~try declined
great measure, the logical result
from 2.43 million In 1980 to 2.17
of an extraordinary economic
million last year.
bOOm that lasted through much
(Some of that decline Is attrlbu·
of the 1970s but could not have
table to lon11·term structural
gone on Indefinitely.
change. The number of farms
Farmers, 'says USDA econohas dropped every year since
mist Greg. Hanson, "entered tile
1935, With the exception o( very
1980s with an Inflated cOI!t
small increases In 1980 and 1181. )
structure, a burdensome debt
Now, however, net farm In· .
load pushing rapidly toward $200
come Ia up, gross farm debt Is
billion, huge production cupac· . . down and condlttona appear to be
lty and a critical dependence
slowly 1~. "No one exupon sustill~ed growth In export
pects a dramatic turnaJ'QIIIId,' '
TKE
demand."
notea the USDA's King, bufthere
QUiiSTigH
The average pHcie per acre of
II evidence that a frqlle recovU.S. farmland peaked at $823 m ery II underway.
the aprlng of 19112. Five yeara
On the Mertz farm, about 40
later, It had tumbled to N. In
mUes north of Fori Dodp, much
Iowa, the state rnOI!t aeverely
of the famUy'alncome clill'lq the
affected, the value of aU farm·
early 1111101 went to pay llltareat
land fell from $67.4 bUllon In
chargea of 112.000 to . 124,000
early 1181 to $25.1 bUIIon In early
llllllually. "Tbat tabllhe cream
1987- a lou of almolt63 percent.
.rllht ~ the top,'' 1&amp;)'1 Mertz.
At the aame time, farmera
.She Oj)ll'lted the farm wltll her
were IIJueezed from other dJreC, ,hllband until he died l!t,.l9113.
tiona. Their sbare of the average
Tocla_y, .mucb ot the telpOIItlbll'

i

'

Girl&amp; Ohio Hlp Sebool BulletbaJI

.

Sarrame•to US, Portland 113

.

FORT DODGE, Iowa (NEAl"Hogs have , been good this
year," says Delores Mertz, sur·
veylng her family's 640-acre
farm In north-central Iowa.
"Things are starting to turn

I

1n•ana 1118, GoWen State 117

'

Farms bounce back

Girls scores

Thtnday'!l Re11ull11
· Philadelphia 119, Milwaukee 113

_,...-_w_u...;._tia_m__R_us_he_~

Sut Edwin Meese -'- first as
Well, Harry , Truman saltily caretully Insulated from all poUt.';
couselor to the president' and remarked, If a public . official leal pressures, whose ~le and;
then as attorney general - has doesn't like the heat he can solemn duty It sl!all be to Inquire;
thus far repeatedly eluded the alwaysgetoutotthekltchen. The " Into the conduct (or misconduct) ·
liberals' wldeswlnglng scythe, only trouble with this game (to of members of Congress.
:.
and. their exasperation with him change the me'taphor) Is that,
It may be argued that It II too··
has grown proportlona tely. under the current rules, It can be late In the Reagan admlnlstra·;
Nearly five years ago, they played only between the 50-yard lion -to · embark on aucb an:
demanded B;nd got a special llnCl and the executive branch's ambitious and con~lal ln·i
prosecutor to probe Meese's goal posts." · '·
ltlatlve, but on the contrary this.:
· Ws high time that the ranking Is the perfeCt time. Such a panel,:;
alleged misdeeds as White House
counselor, only to have the Democratic crooks or\ Capitol once created and hard at work,;• .
wretch conClude that Meese had · Hill, and the media liberals who would be 111most Impossible for :
committed no Indictable offense. have repeatedly conspired with even a Democratic presld~nt to :
Since then, they have kept up a them to break vital federal laws, disband without a massive public"
steady drumbeat of unsubstan· were forced to 'explain their uproar, 11nd lis existence would ,
tiated charges, wild speculations actions to a grand jury on pain of spare any Republican who sue· •
and empty Innuendos against Indictment, pro~ecutlon, ·convlc· ceeded Reagan In the Oval Office :
Meese, forcing him to appear tlon and jail.
the onus of having to appoint It :
In theory, Meese himself, as himself.
before one grand jury after
another to explain his actions In attorney general, could and
Apparently the American peo·.:
should Initiate such probes. But pie rather llketheldeaof electing :
this or that connection.
he would, of course, Instantly be Republican presidents and De· ·,
Rec~ntly, for lack of any better smeared as trying to retaliate for
mocratic Congresses and· then.:
weapon, they have taken to the attacks on him, so In practice letting them tight It out like two :
adding up the hours Meese has that route Is closed.
scorpions In a bottle. A panel of·
had to spend on this sort of thing,
What Is urgently needed Is a special prosecutors to probe : I ,
and have cynically s_u ggested permanent blue-ribbon panel .of congressional wrongdoing would.;
that an attorney general so · · cold·eyed special prosecutors, !lnsure that the Democratic scor· 1
heavily beset really ought to appointed by the president, fully pion Isn't theonlyonewlth a sting( ·
resign even If he has never been staffed, adequately financed and In Its tall.
.:
proved guilty of any wrongdoing.

defend In Thursdia, night's · 1ame In lhe Lyne
Center. The Redmen·won 70-891n the 1ame'slasl
minute.

Scoreboard ...

'·

Let's prosecute··Congress:.....___

'

Rio Grande edges Walsh at
;the .buzzer; .regains top spot .

Paga 2-The Dally Sa~

'I

.

t'UfilljllUV-IIilkkiiHpori, 01110

•

�.,

I,.

I

deemed to render Richmond
hazardous In a race car," Ten·
nant said In a statement released
by NASCAR. "Pseudoephedrine
can cause dizziness, rapid heart
beat, hyperactivity, nervousness
and shakiness when taken at
normal levels.
"Inappropriate dosages or
overdosages can cause tnc~eases ·
In these effects, posing a hazard
to the sale operation ola racing
vehicle. Ibuprofen ... could poten·
tlally Increase the effecls of·

·; , 76ers outlastBucksll9~·li3; &lt;:~
·} Lakers roll over Nuggets •
:.

Tar eel$

.Richmond fails another ·drug. test
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI) - Stock car driver Tim
Ricbmond failed a NASCAR·
Initiated drua test when high
levels of drugs normally used to' '
combat colds were discovered In
his system, It was announced
Tbursclay night.
Richmond tested positive for
pseudoephedrine- sold over the
counter as Sudafed - and
Ibuprofen, the active lngtedlent
In the paln-k!Uer Advll. NAS·
CAR's drug adviser, Dr. Forest
S. Tennant, said Richmond's
sample had between five. and 20
times the normal-dosage of the
drugs.
'
Richmond, a native of Ashland, Ohio, tested positive in a
test last week and was suspended
Indefinitely, but two days later
hiS licell§e was reinstated when
be passed another drug test.
Richmond Is the only \!river to be
tesled under NASCAR's substance abuse policy, whlcb was '
·announced last 11\0rlth.
· "Pseudoephedrine :.. was

.
Slotnick of New York, said
Wednesday a report on Rlcbmond's condition was being sent,
but Wllllarns said Thursday no
report bad been received. Slot·
nick bas threatened legal action
If Richmond is not cleared to
drive.
.
NASCAR tests for marijuana,
cocaine, heroin, PCP, other drug
derivatives and alcohol. It also
prohibits "the misuse of overthe-counter prescription drugs at
any time," Wllltams said.
Tennant would nofrecommend
driving a race car whUe using
normal dosages of pseudoephedrlne and Ibuprofen, Wllltams
said.
Richmond won seven races In
1986, but was ill most of last year
and took part in only eight races,
winning two. The suspension
kept him out of Sunday's Busch
Clash, and the dispute over the
medical records has prevented
· him from·trylng to qualify for the
Daytona 500.

slip ·past
Woli k

,.. "•
•

By Ualted
btenl111oM1 ••
Nottb Carol
State did an ••
admirable job containing J.R. •f
Reid and Scott William&amp; dutiD&amp; ~.
regulation ThursdaY nlaht. But •;
the Tar Heels' big men eveatu·
ally proved unstoppable In •~~
overtime.
~
. ~~
·Reid and Williams, n,eld to 9 : &lt;!
pseud~phedrlne : "
points each after40rlllnu\tli,IPiit :~
. NASCAR spokesman Chip Wll·
their
team's 8 points In overtime ,
Uams said there had been no
In
lifting
flftb·ranked North Ca· ·
progress in efforts by Richmond
rolina to a 75-73 Ailantic Coast •:: •
to gain clearance to drive in
Conference victory over
No. ;.:
Sunday's Daytona 500. Rich13 Wolfpack.
·:•
mond will not be permitted to
North Carolina led by ~0 In ·the
participate until doctors at Daysecond half, but a flyrry of : ...
tona International Speedway in3-polnters plus baske!J flY. N.C. ~:;
spect medical records from his
State's Rodriey MoruW .a nd . ;;
stay In the Cleveland Clinic
Cbucky
Brown trimmed tJ1e Tar :~
during 1987 for treatment of
Jieels'
lead
to 67'65 wltb 40·•..:
pneumonia.
· "Richmond's attorney, Barty .
s~onds left.
, '
- :~
.
With
25·
seconds
to
play.
and
! '•
•
1
North Carolina trying to freeze ·
the ball, Wolfpackguard VInny ••
.,
Del Negro tipped the ball Into : .;
N.C.State'scourtandtappedlna '•
'
season,
had
been
relegated
to
the
Devils
4,
Canadlens
2
Brown
miSs tb tie It 67-67 with 18
By JOE ILLUZZI
press
box
In
recent
weeks
and
At
EastRutber!ord,N.J.,Andy
seconds
left.
UPI Sports Writer
was
the
subject
of
trade
rumors.
Brickley
scored
two
g011ls
to
help
''I
was
very proud of our team
· The Toronto Maple Leafs have
"It's
been
frustrating
all
the
Devils
snap
their
three-game
for
coming
back and winning In
been welcomed opponents for
overtime after losing the·lead at r
almost every team. In the NHL Y,ear," said Damphousse. wbo losing streak and exten!l Mont·
entered Thursday's game with real's losing skid to three.
the end of regulation, because we·
except (he New York Islanders.
.
...
didn't
play smart," Tar H~ls ~
The Leafs, whose 39 points are six goals and ·18 assists . "It's Brickley's short-banded goal at
PATH BLOCKED.- Weet VIrginia's Tyroae Shaw, left,
Ids
Co11ch
Dean
Smith said.
'•
the fewest In the league, have good I have a game like this. It 10: 36 of the third came about two
p~th to .the basket blocked by Penn ·state's Bruce Blake· during
my
confidence."
minutes
after
a
penalty
negated
wtll
help
Reid
scored
to
open
the
overbeaten the Islanders In their
first-half action of Thursday night's game InState College, Pa. The
In other games, Washington . a tying score by the Canadtens:
three meetings this season. That
NlttaQy Lions, who at baUtlme were down 21-18, came back to win · time, aJ1d Williams, h~ ~foot-9
topped
the
New
York
Rangers
·
Oilers
7,
Canucks
2
teammate, put the Tar Heels on
represents 20 percent of Toron· &amp;:HI. (UPI)
- ·
5-3,
New
Jersey
downed
Mont·
At
Vancouver,
British
Columtop with 2 dunks, the last wltb
to's victory tQiaL
real
4-2,
Edmonton
pounded
bta,
KeVIn
Lowe
Ignited
a
fourseven
seconds left. North CarolThursday·s·4-3 victory over the
Vancouver
7-2
and
J.,os
Angeles
goal
first
period
and
Mike
Chris Corchlanl bit a
Ina
State's
Islanders came at a particularly
5-3.
Krushelnyskt
scored
twice
for
.stopped
Quebec
jumper at the buzzer.
.
M
good time for the Maple Leafs,
Capitals 5, Rangers 3
the Oilers, who have not lost to
"It was a beck ota comeback," · 11
especially secona-year center
At New York, Kelly Miller the Canucks in 25 games datlng·to
Wolfpack Coach Jim Valvano
Vince Dampbolisse. He scored
satd .."Inovertlme, wef.adevery .
two goals, tnchlding the winner scored a goal and added two March 10, 1985.
assists
to
lead
the
Capitals.
who
Kings
5,
Nordlques
3
opportunity
to win. It's a very . ~
with 22 seconds left, and added
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Eddie
friends on the team, too. It's · difficult loss for us beca~ we · '
won
for
just
the
second
time
In
At
Inglewood,
Calif.,
Luc
Rob!·
two assists. The goals were his
Milner left the Cincinnati Reds a
convenient for me. •·
have " Louisville coming Ut;!,
first since Dec. .12, a span of'26 their last seven road games. tallle recorded three straight . year ago unhappy with his role as
The
Reds
were
seeking
a
Washington
took
a
4-0
lead
early
goals
for
the
third
hat
trick
of
his
Saturday."
games.
a reserve. He now says he Is
:backup to center lle'lder Eric
Toronto entered the . game In the second period, but the two-year career to ltft"the Kings. returning to the team ready to
The Tar Heels were led by · :.I
Davis,
and
l'YJilnerfit
the
b)ll
Rangers scored tl!ree times In a Robitaille's perfm;mance came
1·15-6 .tn its last 22 and was
Ranztno Smith and Steve Buck- .·•J 1
nicely. General ·Manager Murspan
of 3: 35 to e11ter the third In his first game since c~llectlng accept .that same role;
playing for the second lime since
nail with 14 points each. North ·,. :-(
conMilner
signed
a
one-year
ray Cook said Milner Wlll also
two goals and an assist In
owner Harold Ballard fired Gen- tralllrig 4-3.
Carolina
Improved tol7-3overall •:&lt;1
tract for $250,000 Wednesday,
pinch hit, pinch run and' be used
Tuesday's All-Star Game.
eral Manager Gerry McNamara.
and
6-2
In
the ACC, a balf·game .. .o u!.
bringing him back to the team as a late-inning .defensive
"In the situation we were In, I ;
"behind
league-leader
Duke.
with which he spent his first
replacement.
think It was a great effort by
N.C.
State
freshman
Rodney 1 ''l
seven major league seasons .
"Yes, I'm looking at this as a
everyone," Toronto Coach John
Monroe
led
all
players
with 19 ·
The Reds traded Milner, an backup role, and that's what
100, UCLA trailed Notre Dame,
Brophy said.
By United Press International
points.
Del
Negro
had
16
points • ,!, '
outfielder, to San Francisco in Murray Cook conveyed to me,"
which signed 12 Top 100 players,
Mtroslav Frycer set up the
and
Brian
Howard
14
for
the ·~-.
January 1987 for reliever Frank Milner said, "and I'm g;ettlng
decisive goal, taking the puck · UCLA Coach Terry Jlonahue, and Auburn, which notched six.
Wolfpack, 15-5 overall and 5-3 In c&lt;•c•
Williams and two minor league paid accordingly. Hopefully, I'll
down the left wing before sending in true Hollywood tradition, not But the overall quality of UCLA's
the ACC.
·"I;
players.
He
became
a
free
agent
to
be
able
to
add
some
leadership
It back to Damphousse. who fired only signed the leading· man in recruits, recruiting analyst Max
Elsewhere in the top 20, J:Jo. 3 , "l:
when the Giants released him this team."
a 40-foot drive that beat Kelly
this year's high-school recruiting Emfinger of Houston said, after the 1987 season.·
Arizona downed Oregon 89-57, · ·
With the Giants, Mllner.batted
Hrudey low to his glove ,side.
field but acquired a star-studded makes the Bruins No. 1 In the
·"It feels good to be coming .252 with four home runs and 19 No. 6 Brigham .Young defeated ' •:"
.
"I think he (Damphouuse) just supporting cast to go' along with nation.
Wyoming 78'69, No. 7 Nevada- ,.,,
him:
·
On a 10-polnt scale, Emfinger back," said Milner, who Is from RBI. Last.(l.prtl he entered a drug Las Vegas beat Cal Stat~ · &gt;,b
made up his mind he's gotta play
· Columbus, Ohio, and maintained rehabilitation program after apThe Bruins signed live players said UCLA's top 10 recruits had 'hts Cincinnati residence while proaching club of{lclals and
hocltey ... noi gotta play hockey,
Fullerton ,77-61, No. 9'· Duke '' ·
ranked among the United Press ·an average score of 9.32. Auburn'
want to play hockey," Brophy
pounded Wake Foresf98.jl7, No. • dr.
with San Francisco. "My family asking for help.
said. ""He had two gi&gt;als tonight InlernatlonalTop 100, Including and Notre Dame were tied at ties are here. I've got a lot of good
12 Michigan thrashed Wisconsin .11
on tremendous individual ef- running back Kevin Williams qf 9.28, followed by Tennessee and
so,.;7 and No. 17 Indiana routed· .rh
forts, and that's the type of thing Spring, Texas, the nation's No. Oklahoma ·at 9.25. Florida at 9.23
Northwestern 74-45.
that has to happen to make him 1-ranked prospect; and Brei and LSU and Pittsburgh at 9.20 .
At Tucson, Ariz., Anthony Cook "l:
·Johnson of El Taro, Calif., one of Texas A&amp;M and Nebraska round
come around."
equaled a career high with 23-' •' '
out the top 10, he said.
Damphouuse, who had 21 goals the nation's top quarterbacks.
polntstopowertheWlldcats,who · ,,
Despite getting five of tht? top
and 25 assists in his rookie
improved to 22-2 and 11-1 In the •4
Pactrtc-10. Steve Kerr, who con-. ·,
CLEVELAND (UPI) ~ Free­
"Moose might come In when
trlbuted 16 points, set a confer- • · ·
agent rel(ef pitcher Bill Caudill, we bring ln. our young pitchers
ence record with bls 69th 3·polnt &lt;t&lt;
· who spent last season In the Feb. 27," Indians President
basket of the season. Anthony , J~
minor leagues, signed with the · Hank Peters said. "Right riow, he
Taylor led the Ducks, 10-10 and
Cleveland Indians, 'the· club an- doesn't feel he's quite ready. We 5-6, with 17 points. ·
. . ; "·
nounced Thursday.
· madeltcleartohlmthatwewant
At Provo, Utah, Jeff Chatman • •.
The Ini:ltans, meanwhile, re- · to see if he can pitch."
scored 22 points to llfl , the . "' '
main Interested In free-agent
Crawford, 29, was 5·4 with
Cougars In a Western Athletic •.111
pitchers Moose Haas and Steve Boston last year but had elbow
Conference game. BYU Is 19-1
Crawford. Caudill, Haas and surgery at the end of the season. overall and 8-0 In the league. The :·1~
Crawford have ·all had arm He recently Impressed an IndiCowboys, who r~elved 25.polnts - ..
problems.
ans scout.
from Fennls Dembo, tumbled to
Caudill, 31, will receive the
The Indians had also shown an
6-5 and 17-5.
·
major league minimum salary of interest in Bill Dawley, who
At Las Vegas, Nev., Gerald I
$62,500 If he makes the Indians' pitched for the St. Louis Cardl·
Paddlo scored 19 points and the 1
roster and an additional $1.5 nals last season, but Wednesday
Rebels pulled away frol'l) the ..'1
million from the Toronto Blue . he signed a Class AAA contract
Titans In the final minutes to
Jays from a previous contract with the Philadelphia P)llllles.
Improve their record to , 21·2 ,
regardless of whether he plays
Cleveland's pltchll)g staff was overall and 10-2 In the Pacific , ·a
this year.
baseball's worst In 1988, with a
.
Coast Athletic Association.- Rl- • ,. ·
Caudill, once one of baseball's ' 5.28 ERA.
chard Mortol) had 20 pol,n ts for ,. f ,
top relievers, was 1-4.VIth seven
Fullerton, 6-15 and 2-10.
, ~~
saves for Class AAA Tacoma,
Wash .. in the Oakland organization last year.
He has 106 career major
leagues saves, including 88 dur'
Ing the 1982, 1983and 1984 seasons
when he was with Seattle and
Oakland. He then suffered arm
problems.
Haas has -a 100-83 career
record, Including a 2-2 record for
Oakland last season before arm
• &lt;
and shoulder problems forced
him to go on the Injured reserve
DEFLECTS SHOT - Quebec goalie Mario
Ust.
Brunetta deflects a shot off the stick of Los

By United Press laternatlonal
Pbtladelphta's Charles Bark·
ley , who wound up playing all but
three minutes of Thursday
night's game, 'was understandably apprehensive about the possl·
b!llty of overtlm~.
. "I was hoping it didn 't go tntQ
overtime," said Barkley, who
played 50 of a possible 53 minutes
and scored ·46 point~ to give th,e
. Philadelphia 76ers a 119-113
victory over the Bucks. "It was a
very physical game." ·
Barkley missed 2 free throws
in the last two minutes of
regulation ibat could have given
the 76ers the triUmph, but scored
9 points In the extra period.
"I was just fortunate ·! got the
ball In a good situation," said
Barkley, whO had scored · 47
points Tuesday night in a loss to
. Atlanta. "We had to win that
game (Thursday~ or we would
really have been In the
doldrums."
The triumph was the first for
new co~ch Jim Lynam, who
replaced.,. fired Matt Guokas
Monday. The 76ers have won only
three&lt;\! their last 11 games.

;.!

ule

::i

Maple ,.Leafs slip past Islanders, 4-3

Milner acceptmg role
in return to Cincinnati

··v·,

Notre Dame gets best cast Wednesday

Indians sign Caudill; still ,
·interested in-Hass,·Crawford ·

1

.

Illinois slaps 86-50 loss on Gophers
CHAMPAlCi,N. Ill. (UPI) Nick Anderson led all scorers
with 18 points Thursday night to
allo·w Illinois Its first victory in
five games, an 86-50 Big Ten
decision over Minnesota.
Illinois Improved to 14-8 overall and 5·5 In the conference as
Minnesota fell to 8-12 and 2-8.
Illinois used a full-court pressure defense from the start and
led from the outset. They took a
16-4 lead on a .6-foot jumper by
Anderson with 14: 50 left In the
first half and built the advantage
to 38-17 on a jUIJIP shot by reserve
center Lowell Hamilton with 2:23
ieft. The .llllnt led · 42-22 at
halftime.
IIUnots' lead swelled to 60-30
with ·14: 51 left in the game on a
short basket by forward Ken
Battle .. At the 11:31 mark, the
. cushion was 69-34 and 'the lead

reached 39 points twice, the last
time at 77-38 on a breakaway
slam dunk by Hamilton.
Hamilton ha(l 14 points and
Kendall Gill added 12 for Illinois.
Willie Burton led Minnesota
with 16 points.

.
1985 FORD RANGER PICKUP ......S6595 ·

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" Charles has really been expending energy In the last two
games," Lynam said . "I don't
know what more you could ask
for ."
Barkley , who had only 8 points
in the first half, sank 2 free
throws to give the 76ers a 116-112
lea(! with 22 seconds to play in
overtime after Gerald Hender·
·son's driving basket had broken a
112-112 tie With 48 seconds to go.
. After Paul Pressey bit a free
throw for Mllw;~ukee, Barkley
sank 1 of 2 from the Une to put
Philadelphia up 117-113 with 15
seco.nds to play. ,
Milwaukee's Sidney Moncrief
was called for traveling with 10
seconds to go and Barkley scored
on a dunk for the !tnallilargln.
"Charles is a lesson to people in
the NBA," Milwaukee Coach Del
Harris said, "You have to be
aggressive."
Ricky· Pierce, playing only his
second ·game after a long contract holdout, and Terry Cummtngs scored 23 points eacb and
Moncrief added 21 for Mllwaukee. Mike Gmtnskt had 22 points
lor Philadelphia.

'

~!-

...

,,

'·
'

.''
'

GRABS REBOUND- Los Angeles Laker cente
Mycllal Tbomp11011, right, comes away with a
rebound as Denver Nucget forward BIU Hanzlik,

'

left collides with ieammale Lafayette Lever,
'
center,
during second-ball action at Denver ' s
McNichols Arena Thursday night. (UPI)

•

Rookie grabs lead tn tourney
SARASOTA, Fla. (UPI)
' said. "I felt uncomfortable out
followed with a 2-foot 'btrdle putt
Llselotte Neumann, an LPGA there over my putter. I'm going
on 13 and a birdie of Jess than a
rookie but a,J..year'veteran of the to go practice."
foot on 14. She then hit a 7 iron
· Vete.r an Donna Caponi, who
European tour, shot an 8•underinto .the hole from 144 yardS out
was seven shots off the Jeild at 71; on the. par-4 15th for her eagle.
par 64 Thursday to grab a
Her closing; surge started with
!our-shot lead after the first · had a bole-tn-o~e on the 17!i-yard
round of the $225,000 Sarasota 12th bole. Sbe scored her second
a o~e-fQot birdie putt on No. 7, .
tour ace·wlth a 5-wood.
Classlc.t _
followed by ones from 3 feet on
Neumann, a 21~year-old restNo. 8 and No. 9.
dent of Ftnspang, Sweden, bad
The 64 bettered by one shot her ·
"I'm ·exhausted," Neumann
six birdies and an eagle as she
said. "I'm excited and my bead is career-high round, ;md missed
pulled away from the 144-player spinning. I'm really happy with by one shot tying the Sarasota
field over the par-72, -6,124-yard
the way I played today. (But) Classic ·record of 63 set by Judy
there are three more days left so Rankin in 1977.
Bent Tree Country Club layout.
I don't feel like a winner yet. I'll · Neumann won her LPGA tour
Tied tor second place at 68
were 1982 champion Beth Daniel just try to play my own· game card In October and played in her
first tourney last week at .Boca
. and· Jan Stephenson, wbo each again tomorrow.'' .
.
cardetUaur,blrdlel.
.
Neumann was Jn the third Raton, Whfre she finished 15
· Fow:•. player• were- another . th.,:._ome to start on 'hie back · shots back of the winner and
shot back•at 69- Rosie Jones, nine . In a first round delayed collecteil her first tour winnings
·• Kathy Postlewait, Sherr! Turner more than one hour because of -$767.
.
and Laurel Kean.
·
fog, and s)rung together three
Prior to joining the ,LPGA, she
Play was suspended because of birdies and an eagle to make the was the second leading player on
darkness with four gotfer.s still on turn at 5-under 31. After a stretch the Women's Professional Golf
the course, with only Amy Benz, of pars, she closed with birdies on Association tour In 1986 and was
at 2-under-par with one hole to the final three boles.
eighth last year.
play, In position to move in to the
"I think I .had to start thinking
"I wanted to meet the best
tie for fourth at 69. They will again," Neumann said In ex- players in the world," she said of
complete their round Friday plaining her final surge. "l her decision to join the LPGA. •'I
before the start of the second looked over to the left on the just want to see how good a
round".
fourth hole (her 13th~ and saw player l -am."
Defending champion · Nancy my dad was reading the newsThe field will be cut to the low
Lojlez managed only one birdie paper and I. thought I'd better . 70s and ties after Friday's second
·
- that on the first hble- and bad start making some birdies."
round.
two bogies to finish nine sliots off
.Neulllann started her .charge
The winner will collect a check
with a birdie on her third hole for $33,750. The runner-up will
the pace at l-over 73.
"r bit tbe ball well today, but I when. she bit a 5 wood to within 12 take home $20,812 .
didn't putt well at all," Lopez feet on the par-3 12th, and

5 Sedan DeVllle

1 Brougham

614-992-6614

308 E. Main Street

Pomeroy,

1988 Tax
Supplement

• I

I

Sports briefs...

By United Prenlalemalloaal
BasebaD
A trade tllat would swap San
Diego 1 Padres reliever Rtcb
"Goose" Gossage and Chicago
Cubs third baseman Keith Moreland Is still 'In the works and
binges on salary
·between Gossage
the Cubs. Gossage's contract
an
year for 1989 and be
the Cubs to pay
a guaranteed· $1 million for
season." ...
Pittsburgh chapter of the
,~~~~Writers' A.ssoclatlon or
A:
bas selected outfielder
Van Slyke as the 1987

~

~:::~
of theThe
Roberto
IAward.
awardCleIs

annually to tbe Pirate
best exempllltes the 1 tandof excellence established by
late .Pittaburgh outfielder ·
t'rh·-·· Minnesota-area aporta
haVe been ordered by U.S.
~trlc Court in Mlanesota to pay
~ach. to ,Major LeagUe
• for transmlttlni unalgnals or Twins'
Baltimore signed
Sheets, the last

lo~~~~:t=~·~~
al'bltra·
h
contract. •.ast
who was .cbefor an arbitration helll'lq
16, led till! Orioles In battlni
home runs (31). Be
••-~'ond on the club with M
... The Blue Jaya alpld
~rts111111 Tony Femaadel to a
r pact, avotdlllJ

albtttnH&lt;m.

Orange Bowl. The game Is
tradltlonally played late in October .... Bill Shumard, a frontoffice administrator with the Los
Angeles Dodgers for the last 13
years', wa~ named executive
d"irector of South~rn Cal's at-·
hletlc centennial.
.Golf
Casey Nakama of the United
States and . David Feberty ·of
Northern Itelanci s!lot 4-underpar 67s to share the lead after the
first round of the-$150,000 Hong
Kong Open golf tournament.
Three golfers are one stroke
behind.
Hockey
The Detroit Red Wings have
sent rookie forward Joe Murphy

to their Adirondack farm club In
the American Hockey League.
Murphy, Detroit's No . 1 pick in
the 1986 NHt. entry draft, has not
played since Jan. 18 when he
suffered a sprained left ankle. He
was expected to rejoin the Uneup
last week but respralned his
ankle in practice Feb. 2.... The
Pittsburgh Penguins assigned
goaltender Pat Riggin to their
Muskegon farm club in tbe
International Hockey League.
Riggin had a 7-8-.4 record and 3.90
g_oals-agalnst average In .22
games with Pittsburgh.
Soccer
Johan Cruyff has agreed In
principle to become the new
coach for Barcelona of Spain.

Aspecial

Section
Coming February 19, 1988
.

'

Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1988
'·

.

Contact Your Advertisi.ng
Representative For Details

"992-2156
l

The Daily. Sentin~l

CIIIS1II
.'

•

'

Elsewhere, the Los Angeles
Lak~rs pumme'led Denver 120·
· 108, Indiana edged Golden State
l(l!-107, Seattle ~unced Houston
120-115 and Sacramento sacked
Portland 123-113
Lakers 120, l'fuggels 108
, At Deqver. Magic Johnson
'scored 26 points. and Byron Scott
added 22 to sMp the Nuggets '
'
five -game winning streak. Los
Angeles, 36-9, h&lt;ts won 11 of its ·
last 12 and 25 of Its last 28. James
Worthy had 18 points for the ' .'·
Lakers, who ~lso received 17
points and 14 rebounds from A.C.
Green.
Pacers 108, Warriors 107
At Oakland, Calif., Steve Sttpa·
novlch sank a 'tallow shot from
3-polnt range at the buzzer to lift • &lt;
the Pacers. The Pacers rallied
back from a 16-polnt deficit to
snap the War.rtors' two-game
winning streak. Johnny Long led'
Indiana with 22 ·points and
•
Sllpanovlch had 17 .
Sonlcs 120, Rockets 115
'
· At Seattle, Tom Chambers
scored 16 of his game-high 36
points In the fourth quarter,
rallying the SuperSonics.

t

"

�,

.

Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

'.

..

.:-...

--·

...

,:c ....... _

-t..-""'---------~

-.:;..:;;.....-

Polt•ov MIHepart, Ohio

This Message aiul Chureh Directt,Jry SpoR;SOred By The Int.~ Businesses Listed On ThiS Page.

i

"F,.tltllfl K11111elf Fllei Clrl~b•" .

'

. 992-5432

Safety tips were presented by
Linda Montgomery, Woman's
Activities chairman. Patty Dyer
was nomlnatedasdelegatetothe
state grand convention with Opal
Dyer. being named alternate.
Ruby Lambert, lecturer, pres·
ented the program on the theme
of "February Days." Readings
Included "February Greetings"

.

\.1l•i1f·" fnunr~· ·.'i Oftlf' .~t Flori~t
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45769

.;;14/ 992· 2844 .

i

. RIDENOUR

FU~NI~!e~~RDWAR:tE·1
Hom elite Saw&gt;

'

.Rawlings-Coats-Blower
FUNERAL HONE
"Serving Families"
264

s. 2nd; ~dleport
992-5141

~ISHER

PHMMiCY

50 year pin at the recent
)neetlna of ·.the Harrisonville
fpapter 255, Order of the End
iiVJrs. Robert' Reed and Mr.
;andemp)e.
·· ·
Maklllg the presentation was
!Bernice Hoffman who also gave a
llrlbute to the work of Mrs. You.ng

~,

We Fill Doctors'

Prescriptions

rect 10n o1 Lots Bun.
POMEROY CHUROI OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Correr Unlop and Mulirny, Rev.
Thomas Glen McClung, pasrcr Norman Pres·
ley, S. S Sui" .. Sundi\Y &amp;OOol. 9:ll a.m.;
morning worstdp 10: ll a.m.; evmtng scrvk.'e 6
p.m.: mid-week servk.'e, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURQ!, ll6 E.
Main St .. Pomeroy. Sunla,y services: Holy
communon on lte ftrm Sunday of each month.
and coml:inEd wtth morling prayer on t~
third Su.OOay, Morning prayer and sermon on
all Cf~r Sundays of thfo month. Church School
and Nursery care provt&lt;Rl Coffee OOur In t~
Par~h Halllmmedla!&lt;ly foUowlngtlrse!VIce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHHIST, 212 W
Main St.. Leo Nash. evaniO'IJ!I. Bltle SchOO
9:00a.m.; Morrdngworslip.10:00 a.m.; Youth
meettn~:~.

s,oo p.m.: Eventng worshlp, 7:tllp.

115

Pomeroy

99)·2955

..

:veterans
Memorial Hospital

·~ ·

~·

........I Dr.
992-2104

,_,

DWIIfiS

SONS SlORE
GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949· 25SD,

CHAPMAN SHOES

g,,"
104 E. MAIN ST., POI'IIROY

"P'"""IJ ·, o..nfiJ s•,
992-2815

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . 011
Rt. 124, 3 mll t'!l from Portland-Long Bot·
tom . Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday School,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning preaching
10: 30 a.m.; Sunda )' evening services. 7: 30
p.m .
1
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Corner As h and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Su nday SchoolJP:OOa.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m .; W~ ·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7:30p.m.
·

m . Wednesday night prayer meeting and Bible
Sllliy. 7:00p.m.
.
MEIGS
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 But!ernul
COOPERATIVE PARISH
A:\ot'., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining ln charge.
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH ,
&amp;trday hoUncss meeting 10· a.m.: Sunla,y
NORTHEA8TCLUSTER
'
&amp;!tOO. 10: ll a.m. Surd'(; &amp;hOot. YPSM
Rev. Do'a Areher
Eloise Adams, leader. 7::11 p.m. Salvatk:ln
Bel'. Roy Deeter
mOC'(lng. various sr,cakB"S and music sJI"CCals.
Rev. Seldon Jobuen
Thursday, ll::J) a.m . to2 p.m. Ladles Home
ALFRED - Chur,ch School 9:30 a .m .:
League, memt:Prs ln chargt:?. all wcmen '-'Worship,
lla.m .: UMYF6:30p.m .; UMW
Invited: 6:45 p.m. Thur.Jday, Corp; Cadtt
Third Tuesda y, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
Classs (You~ People-BIIje), 7: :ll p.m. Bible
first Sunday. (Archer)
·
St \.XIy and Pmyer meeting. opEf1 to tre public.
CHESTER .- Worship 9 am.: Church
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURrn OF SchoollOa .m.; BibleStudy, Thu rsday, 7p.
CHRIST. 33.!.!6Chlldral's Home Road ICoutiy
m.: UMW, first Thursday , 1 p.m .; Com·
Road 76). 002-52.1&gt;. Vocal music. Sullby Wor- munlon. first Sund ay (J..rcher).
slhp 10 a.m.: Bl tj eSt t.zy 11 a.ni.; Worship. lip.
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a .m.; Church
m. Wil!dnesda,)', Bible Stu:ly, 7 p.m.
SchoollO: 30 a .in. Bibl e Study Wednesday,
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRIS!lAN
7: 30p. m. (Johnsoo) .
·
CHURCH , Aivln Curtis, pa&lt;;h:r: Linda Swan,
LONG BOTTOM - Ch\lrc h School 9:30
Su~ . SuOOay School 9::JJ a.m.; preachlngser·
a.m. ; Worship 7 p.m.: Bible Study, WedVices. fu&gt;t and third Sunla.Y follwlng Su nla,y
nesd ay. 7:30 p.m .; UMYF. Wednesday,
SChOO. Youth mf.'el:ing. 7:.}) p.m . eve!JI Sun6:00
p.m. : Co mmun ion First Sunday,
d~y .
•
(Archer) .
CR.\HAM
UN ITED METHODIST.
REEDSVILLE -Church Sc hool9 : JOa.
Pr('u c hlng 9: 30a .m . fi rs t and S('("Ond, Sunm.; Worship Service 11:00 a.m. {Deeter ).
days of. C'ach month : third and fou rth Sun TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL day £~ac h mon!h wors hip service-sat 7: 30p.
Chur&lt;;_h School 9 a .m.; Worship 10 a .m.;
m.: Wf'dn esday evenings at, 7:30 p.m.
Bibl e Sludy, Tuesday, 7:30p. m.; UMW,
Prayer and Bible Study.
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .; Communion
SEVENTH ·DA Y ADVENTIST , Mul ·
First Sunday (Archer) .
be rry Heights Ro"ad, Pomeroy. Pastor
CENTRAL CLUSTER
.John Swelgarl: Sabbath Sc hool Supe-rin Re\1 . .Jamt'll!l E. Corbitt
li&gt;nden t. Darline St£&gt;warl. Sabbath School
Rev. Kancb Bureh
b(•gins at 2 p.m. on Saturday arte&gt;rnoon
Rev. Melvin Franldla "
with worship service foll owJng at 3: 15p.m .
· Re\1. Clemmte S. Zunt&amp;a, Jr.
Everyone we lcome .
Re\1 . Robert Muumao
RUTLAND FIRST HAPTIST CHURCH
ASBURY (Syracuse) - Worship 11 a.m.
- Sister Harriett Warner , Supt. Sunday
: Chu rch Srhool 9:45a.m .; Charge Bibl£&gt;
School 9: 30 a. m.: Morn ing Worship, 10:45
Study, Wednesday , 7: 30p.m .; UMW, first
a .m .
u
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m.: Choir Rehearsal,
POMEROY F'IRST BA PTIST, Lyslon
Wednesday 6:30p.m.: UMW. fourth SunHa lley, ministe r; Saturday evening
day, 6' 30 p.m. !Burch).
C'Van~ell st!c servi ces, open to public, 7 p.
ENTERPRIS.E - Worship 9 a .m .;
m.: Su nday Chu rch School. 9:30 a.m .:
Church Scho o\10 a. m.; Blbl eStudy, Tues·
Morning Wors hip 10: 30 a. m .
day, 7:30p.m.; UMW, First Monda y, 7:30
fiRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po·
p .m .: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir RemE'roy Plkf.'. E. Lamar O' Brya nt , pastor:
hearsal, 6:30 p .m . W~n esday . (Franklin )
.J:tck Ne('ds, Sunday SC'hOOI Director. SunFLATWOODS- Church School,10 a.m .
; Worship, 11 a. m .: Bible Study, Thursd!ly Sc hool. 9:30a.m .: Morning Wors hip ,
J0: 45: eve ning worship , 7:00p.m . (D.S.T. I
day, 7 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
&amp; 7:30 j E.S:r.. 1; Wf'dnesday Prayer Ser(Franklin ).
vire, 7:00 ,P.m . (D.S.T .J &amp; 7:30 P .M. tE S.
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
T.J: Misslon F'r\('nds /ag£'5 2.6), Roya l
Church School 10 A.M. : Choir practice,
Amba ssad or~ ! boys &lt;tg es 6-18). and Clr ls
Tuesday, 6:30p.m .: UMW, fir st Tuesday,
In Ac-llon (n~r&gt;s 6-18 ~ on Wednesdays, 7 p.
7:30p.m. (Burch ).
m . tD .S.T.I &amp; ?: 30 p.m . (E .S.T. ); 1'ul'sday
HEATH (Mlddl.,.rl) -Church School,
9:30 eLm.: Morning Worship 10: 30 a .m.:
Vls ltotlon. tl :JO p.m.
Youlh Group, 4 p.m .; Wednesday, Church
FA ITH TABE RNJ\ CLE CHURCH , Ba l·
IPv Run Road, R{'v, Em mP tl Raw son, pa sChoir rE"heo rsal, 7 p.m .; Thursda y,
tor. Handi Py Dun n. supt. Sund ay School.
Prayer Service. 6:30p.m. ; Bible Study. 7
p.m . (Zuniga) .
to a .m .~ S und a~· rve n!ng Sl'rvlcE'. 7: J:U p m.
: Bl blt&gt; j('a l· hln~ . i : 30 p.m. Thursday.
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service 10
a. m.; Ch urch School, l1 a.m.; UMW, third
SYR ACUSE MISS ION. Chf'rry St . SyWednesday, 1 p.m.; _Choir practice, MonraC' USC'. Sl"n IcPS. 10 a .m . Sunday Eve n In~
day, 7:30p.m . (Bur ch) .
· S&lt;'fVI&lt;'PS Sun&lt;lay and W{'dnesdav at 7: OOp.
m.
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:30 a. rp.; C hurch School 10:15 a.m.;
IN CHRJSTit\ N UN ION. Dwi~hl HalC'y .
UMW Second Tuesday, 7:30p. m .; (Muss·
man )
flr~l PldC'r: W;Jnrl t• Mohlf'r, Sunday Sc hool
POMEROY -Church School, 9: 15a.m.
~u pt. Sund ~ • .v School 9: 30a. m .: Morning
Worship to: .30 a.m .: Evening Wor ship i : JO
: Worshi p 10:30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
p. m .: WttdnC'sda y p 1· a~· E' r meeTing 7::.10 p.m .
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m .; UMW . second
Tut&gt;Sday, 7:30p.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
MT . MOR IAH CH URC H OF GOD ,
I Corbit t) .
Ra r1nf' . Rf'V.. JamC's Salll'rfleld. pastor .
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9:15
Frt•eman Willi am.;, Su pt. Sunda;v Sc hoo l
9:45 a. m.: Sunda y a nd Wednt:•sda y ('\'(I n a .m. : Worship 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wed·
n&lt;"Sday, 7:30p.m.; UMYF 18eniors), SunI n~ ~rrv i r·Ps, 7 1).m .
.
day. 5 p.m.: (Junlors l every other SunMIDD LE PORT
FlRST
BAPTIST.
day, 6 p.m. (Frankli n).
'''"""'
Corn{'r Si:\t h lmd P:ilmer. James Seddon.
Paslor Edna Wll ~o n , S.S. Supl. ; Ca thy
RUTLAND- Church SChool, 10 a. m.:
Worship, 11 a .m .; UM W F lrs1 Monday,
Riggs, A ss i ~¥S upl. Sunday School. 9: 15 a.
7:30p.m.
m.: Mor nln JJ WOrship . 10:15 a.m .; Sunda y
SALEM CENTER"- Church School9: 15
Eveni ng srrvlcf'. 7 p.m . Prayer mf' rll nf!
a .m .: Worship 10:15 p.m . (Mus!man) .
;.~nd Bibl&lt;' Study WednC'Sday t'\'e nlnR. 7 p,
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9:00 a .m.:
m.: ( hlld r(• n's choir pracllce, Wrdncs day . 7 p.m : Ad ult c_hb! r practlc(', Wed . 8
c hu rc h sc hool9:45 a. m. {Mussman I
p.m .; Radi o progr a m . WMPO, Sunday,
R: 30 ·a.m.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHR IST,
Re\', Rocer Grace
:)l h and Main. AI Hartson , minister:
Rev. Paul McG•Ire
Rl churd DuBas(', Ass ociate Pastor; Mike
Rev. Kellh Rad.,.
Ger lac h. Su nd ay School SupcrlntendC'nl .
APPLE GROVE- Chu rch School 9:30
Bibl e School 9:30a .m .; Mor ning Worship
a .m . Worship, 10:00 a .m . (flrsl and third
10:30 a. m . Evening Worship 7:00 p.m .
Sundays); E\lble .study every Sunday 6 p.
wron esday, 7:00p.m . Prayer meeling.
m.: UMW Serond Tuesday, 7:00 p.m .;
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
Prayer mee11ng, Wednesday, 6 p.m .
•
ZARENE. · PASTOR Fred Penborwood .
(Grace) .
1
Bill White. Sunday School Supl. Sunday
BETHANY - Wouhlp. 9 a. m .; Church
$chool 9:30a .m.: Morning Worship J0: 45
School, 10 a .m .; Bible Study, Wednesday,
a. m .; Evan~el!sllc meeting 7:00 p.m . .
10 a.m.; Dorcas WQmen's Fellowship,'
Wf'dn esday. 7:00p.m . Prayer meeting.
Wednesday, ll a.m. (McGuire) .
CARMEL - Church School 9: 30 a .m. :
Worship, 10 ;45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sundays: Fellowship dinner with Suttoo
'
UNITED PRE.qBVTERIAN MINISTRY
l hl rd Thursday, 6:30 p.m. il\lcCulre}.
OF MEIGS COUNTY
EAST LETART- O.ureh&amp;ltool9a.m.;
Rev. Charlet. Talbott
Worshlp 10 a. m . seco nd and fourth SUn·
HARRfSONV ILL'E PRESBYTERIAN
da,ys: UMW first Tuesda,y, 7, :.1 p.m.
CHURCH - Sunday: WOrship Services
(GracE').
9;00 a .m .; Chu rt'h SchoollO: 15 a. m ..
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m. ;
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Chu rc h School 10 a.m. (Grace).
Suntlay School. 9 a .m .: Ch urch service,
MORNING STAR- Worship, 9:45a. m.;
10: 15 a .m .
Church &amp;boo!, 10:30 a .m .; Blbl• STudy,
SYRACUSE FIRST UNitED PRESBY.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. (Ra dP!') .
TERJAN - Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
RACINE WESLEYAN .,- O.ureh School,
Churt h service, 11 : 15 a.m.
10
a. m.; Worshlplla.m.; UMWtourthMonRUTLAND CHURCH OF' GOD, Pas lor,
dozy al 7:ll p.m.; Men's Prayer Breakfast,
John Evans. Sunday School 10:00 a .m.:
Wednesday, 7 a.m. (Grace).
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a .m . ChllSUTTON - Church School, 9: 30 a.m.;
dr(l'n 's Church 11 a .m . Su nday Even in g
Morning
Worship 10: 45 a .m. first and thtrd
ServJce 7:00p. m. Wed., 6 p.m . You ng LaSundays; FPIIowshlp tlj.n ner with Carmel
dles' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Fam·
. lly Worship.
.
\ third Thursday, 6:.t) p.m . IMcGulJ? ).

•

' FRIDAY
A square dance
~Ill be beld'Frlday, from 8 to 11
~.m., at the Senior .Citizens
!j:~nte~ !n Pomeroy. Musl~ will be
)jy True Country. Caller will be
. ~ed Call. Admlsslqn $1.50. Bring
!llnacks. Everyone welcome.

(614)992-2039 or '
(614)992-5721 ~'

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, ~10

A VALENTINE EXPRESSFS YOUR IDVE
. •~UT DOFS Naf REPLACE IT
\;
love is sending a greeting designed to convey
OUr-expression of highest reg;u:d,
Yet it means a lot more than a simple display
Of some cupids and lace on a card;
For it..also means caring for someone in need,
With concern for the sick and the poor;
As 'We see from the lessons contained in our creed,
We can make others feel more secure.
So apply the instructions your faith has to give,
While remembering this, come what may:
That ourlove is essential as long as 'We live,
And it's not just for Vakntiiie's Day.
- Gloria Nowak

106 Iutter ... A¥1.

'-'Y• 1111.r

I

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

m~~f·

GALLIPOUS--:_ Gallipolis
Flatlle Chapter will meet 6: 30
,.m. on Friday at Dale's Smor·
J!'BSbord. Pastor David Adams of
tolumbus will speak. President
t!fary Folmer welcomes all.

PO,_IOY, OHI0-992-6677 ;
IIH Qlllckol tn1 lulh Ann fox .l :

.

day &amp;hoOI 9:30a.m .; morning worsltlp,JI
a.m.; Sunday evening service 7:30p.m.
Prayer Meeiin&amp;. W!!dnesd•Y· 7: 30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
nozi..Pentecostal. Worship service Sunday
10 a.m.; Sunday School 11 a.m. EvPnlng
worship service 7:00 p.m. WedneBday
prayer meeting 7:00p.m.

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Lo&lt;ated In Texas
Community oH Ct Rt. 81 Rev. Robert
Sanders, puttr. Jeff Holter, lay leader;
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9:30 a.m.; morning w&lt;rshlp and
children's chureh 10:~ a.m.; evenina
preAching service first three Sundayt,
7:30p.m.; Special service fourth SUnday
evening, 7: :JO p.m .; Wedneeday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow-

'

---I

m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St., Middleport. 1\eV. Gilbert Cral&amp;.•

~ambling

can keep
:¥!Y. ~ff&gt; your 1V.

· Delr Alltl Landen: May I share
ail experience that may be helpful
to others?
I had had ii ·Up to here with my
loail cable oompany. I'd tune in
once io a while jUSI to see what the
kids were watching on MTV and
I'd go into shock.
What with the viol~nce, the filthy
lafiiiiiiiiiC and the "star" prancing
across the Slll(le with a three-footlong. hot-dog shaped balloon prD'
truding from his pelvis, I finally
told my 1O.yeaN&gt;Id daughter that
she could nev~r again watch it
Then I got a ;look at George·
Michf!el'~ video, "I Want Your
Sex," and thai was the last straw.
·~The 0ext day, I telephoned the
cable company and demanded that
'they take MTV off my TV. I was
told by a customer service represen·
tative that it was pan of the basic
service and all I could dQ was not
watch the channel. I went bock and
fonh with her for 10 minutes. She
\ept repfllting that nothing could
be done.
.In desperation, I asked to be put
in tt;~uch with
son of pareniS'
advor:acy.group or an or(!Bnizatron
that monitored cable TV . After a
brief pause, slie said, "Just a mD'
~~. sir, I'll connect you with
repair !iervice."
· "Hello,'' I heard. "This is repair
service.'' ''Yes." I saic;l. "I was told
·by a customer service representative
that you could belp me I!CI MTV oft'
cable line." "Oh, no problem,"
replied. "we just dimb up your
hone ·pole and scramble it for
And that's exactly what tl)ey

"lllj!

be

t·"

.

~

t

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rro.r

£,_ ....... -

Dllf

make
uatn

f_.

are

In our

we
aperletlctl
came

Son

auw:-

u

oop;

wztll

wu born, That was
years qo. We hlven't aeen 1
d
sin« the lint' (lild only)
ptyment of $250 In Marth of 1985.
Last week dtly droW up co- ..
their brllllkttrw Old91oll8e.

'

I 11W tbil car I iald, "How
-~ ... lhlloulh I w11 bollln]
• When ~ left. I !Old 111J
1....hcl lhlt f diO'IIpHhey bad I

our

•WI,IIt . . . V..... Mat ... CIMU.

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

claimed it would , ha~e been in very
poor taste since they were guesiS in
our home.
...
Your opiniop is wanted. " SPIT·
·TING TACKS IN OKLAHOMA
DEAR TACKS: Your husband
would have been perfectly justified·
had he brought up the. subject. The
fact ·that they were guests ' in your
home is of no consequence.
Doq't hold your breath waiting
for him tp do it, however. I have a
feeling he is afraid to. But since the
money was part yours, why don't
you apeak up? Deadbeats should
not be let oft' the hook so easily.
Dar Ann Landfts: I'm a parent
who 1111151 send an ·unaccompanied
child (qe 8) across the country to
sperid holidays with his father from
whom I am divorced. ,
I do not expect the flight attend·
ants to take over parental responsi·
bilitirs, but I do feel that they have
SOllie oblipti011 to a child travelill[l
alone since that child must pay full
adull · fare. Thanks lor lettill[l me
have my say. - SAN MATEO,
CALIF.
.
DEAR SAN MATEO: I wonder
how many people kfle'Y that unacoompanied children must pay full
fare on planes. I didn't. And now 1
am wonderiq WHY'! Any answers
outthere?
·
Deer Ann Landers: This letter is
for "N.Y.C." who was dis(ressed
about a friend who returned to
work when her baby was 6 Wlll!ks
old. (She felt lucky to find a
day-care . ·center 1hat wOuld take
such.a tiny Infant.)
.
I work because I h~t•e to, and .I,
too,- returned to work when my
child was 6 Weeks old. But I was
lucky to have had a wonderful boss,
terrific co-Workers aDd !he kind of
ofllce set-up that. could aa:qnntD'
date my baby. I .went to the oflke
five days a week 10'ilh my child
• tucked under my ann.
And by the way, ~n landers, I
don't"bave ihll." I IIJD.r&amp;islnlthis
child *lone. There is no time or
eneJIY to lnvesc .iri a relationship

riiJbtnow.

•··

Each of us mUSI make our own

1 · r lint child

'·

we

=.::::?.'j;o.:·l

tllank for you wbal may well be a
fiiOJiumeatal contrlbutiotJ to thll
n.~rents who l'lll!d t.!tls column.
A-.1 ' Iii My h111blnd's
bfotl*' and hil wife lllbd him ror
aJ$5,500 lOIII 10 they could put I

.

Tllere are

Concerned pareniS should know

t we call ~ not to have our
lldren ' sui\JeCted to this !)'pe of
,.rbaile riaht in our own living
~ms. Pia., Ann, print JIIY letter.

.,

rA nerw ctnll!l .lllrt tQ lhow
lhir !leW c.r ~ - llilt

.lilt

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I tlllJ. I
lie llllllkl lllvt llltl .....
aboullbe klln. DIY hlllbud

111

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_

gomery; "George Washington
and the Cherry Tree" by Ruby
Lambert. There were questions
on George .Washington and rid·
dies by the group.
A potluck supper was enjoyed
by the group following the
meeting.

--'-!NON-MERCHANT MEMBERSHIP $35.00

"BrlghtSaylng~"byLarryMont ·

__,MERCHANT MEMBERSHIP $75.00

NAME -------------------------------

decided that the sunshine collec:
lion will be donated to the heart
fund. Margaret Parsops · was
reported hospitalized and·
a card
1
was signed for her.
•
Bernice and Betty Bishop,
president of Dlst. 25, gave a
report of the district meeting
held Feb. 3 at Middleport.

!

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - Maii to or stop at the bank. Thank you .

"GIVE YOUR HEART TO POMER.OY"

!

~t

•

MEMBERSHIP DRIVE UNDERWAY ·- The Pomeroy
Area Me1'tlha11ts Association, organized In mld-1984, Is conduct·
log a meinberslp drive. The organization has worked to promote Pomeroy with elyle shows, midnight madness sales, side·
wal.k sales, cleanu p programs, 'business window displays, arts
and crafts shows on Court Street, the observance of Christmas
In October, a Christmas season open hoii~e and has participated
In Heritage Days. All Interested Individuals and business
houses are asked to join the active group by completing the accompanying form and sending It with a dues payment lo Joan
Wolfe, secretary-treasurer, P.O. Box 586, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
or by leaving their payment at the bank. Meetings 'of the group
are beld on the second Tuesday of each month.
·

Doyle Knapp, Mr. and Mrs .
Joseph Evans, Tyson and Jona·
than, and Harley Johnson.
Henry Wells of Ball Run was a
recent caller at the hrnoon
meeting and !'VIrs. Charley Smith
and Iva Johnson. Also .-lsltlng
there recently was Bryan
Reeves.
Mrs. Jack Peterson of New
Lima .Road spent Monday even·
lng with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Knapp.

Do you have

r

'

rent or royalty
incotne?

Helping Hands circle meets

H&amp;RBlock

church Sunday night, the meri's
An article entitled "The Never
fellowship • at the Middleport
Changing Christ" dealing with
false teachings of the album •. church on Feb. 15, and the
women's fellowship at !'VIIddle·
"Jesus Christ •Superstar" writ·
port on Feb. 25.
ten by Hoyt Allen, former Meigs
Ruth Underwood wlll host the
pastor, was read by VIrginia
next
meeting of the Circle.
Wyatt, devotional leader at the
recent meeting of the Circle of
Helping Hands held at the Zion
Church of Christ.
Marge Purtell presided at the
meeting with members respondIng to roll call byay 13. Potluture
with the word assurance..
Quilts were made duJ'Ing the ·
day·. Announced · wer~ several
prOII'J'I!PIS Including one carrying
a ·love.' theme to be held at the

''

"

can make the
new tax laws·
work for you .
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM - 8

Ann
Landers·
based
and ci r·
cumstances. People who make'
wholesale judgments a,bout what is
right for everyone should, as in lhe
old Indian proverb, "Walk a mile
in the other person's moccasins"
before deciding what others should
do.
·
I have· a fulfilling career and a
healthy, happy child. and I would
never be so presumpnious as to tell
N,Y.C. or you, Ann, what to do in
your life.- j.M. IN LOS ANGELES
DEAR J.M.: If you wrote an
advice column you had darned well
better be prepared to tell ll(Ople
what to do with their lives or .you
would be useless.
People who look to • me for
guidance expect clear-cut, unequiv·
ocal, · no-nonsense answers, and I
am not· afraid lo give them. I am
well aware· that the inabili!Y to .
make a decision can be Infinitely
more ~ng and produce more
anxiety than makill[l the wrong
one.
I refuse to budllt from my initial
'stand. ,Mothers of iqfan!S who must
work have no choice, but mothers
who can ·stay liome with thei,r
babies should do so l'cir six monihs
minimlim and ope year, if possible,
to ensure the prolltr bonding.
Yoil were lucky, j.M., to have bad
an ol'llcte set-up that allowed you to
brin1 your baby to work every day.
· I know of precious few workplaces
where t~is is possible.
So, when' you talk about moccasins, bear in mind t!tal yours were
quite special.
What are the signs of alcoholism?
How I'D" you tel/If someont you lol't
ts arr alcoholic? "Aicoholtsm: How to
RI!CO!Piiu It, How to Dtal Willi It,
How to Conquu It" Will girt you the
answm. To rectll't a copy, mill D.SO
and 'a No. 10.-~~ rllllllped
en1111IO,W (39 ctnts j,ostap) to A1111
Lantkrs, P.O. Box I 1562, Clllcago,
Ill: «)6ll:as62.
AMI LANIIlRS •
•1881. 1411 Aneota
C...•Stntbt•

r- ,..,._., ;ttWJ

YOU
-·
rw
ln•l• .....

PM Weekdays,

9 -5

Sat . Phone

992 ·6674

87 NINETY-EIGHT
REGENCY
•
0

As
LQwAs

$1.5.802°0
'

Your Payment '306.00 mo.*
f'.S., .P.B.• auto .• air, cruise, tilt v.11eel,.
cassette, defogger, int. wipers, 4 doors
and much morel 2 IN STOCK

'87 DELTA88

$12

As
LowAs

'

I

'1

Your Payment
'250.00 mo.*

I
.,

P.S., P.B., AC., auto. tfl!nS., P.W.•
int. wiper, re(r defogger, till'wheel,·cassettE', cruise, and m~ch mo rei 4 IN STOCK

'87· FIRENZA

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

$9 71. aoo

As
LowAs . '

Your Payment
1189.00 mo.*

'87' CALAIS
·a T COUPE
21lJ!One
In Stock

.$12,270°~
Your Payment '238. 00 mo.*
Auto. trans, V-6, AO.. am·fm
Jllf80 cauettt

Te·am &amp;ltlllll
...
lt!ttll
Fw a....... 11M IIIII ••1!111111\. (I I I It lltt . . .
(I If U.. Canllll, PJ. PUI'J IIIC.. lwthu• ....., Ce.,

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Old .It ...., •••,,.,. ..... ....

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'

SATURDAY
Mrs. J.R. Murphy, Peggy
. TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange · Murphy, and Mrs. Joseph Evt
Township Trustees will meet In and milk; Wednesday , turkey
special session Saturday, 10 and noOdles, br. Jack Downs and
a.m., to discuss Insurance and sons. The birthday of !'VIrs. Downs
cable television.
was observed .
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans,
.SUNDAY .
Tyson and Jonathan were Sun·
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. day visitors of Mrs. J. R. Murphy
Stan Walters and children, and Peggy.
Brandy and Jason, of Heath,
Sunday evening visitors of Mr .
Ohio, will be singing at the and Mrs. Charley Smith· and Iva
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene Johnson were Mr . and Mrs .
on Sunday morning at the 9: 30
. service. Everyone welcome.

---

.

Helps More" by Ruby Lambert;

Wolfe Pe~ happenings

,POMEROY - Return Jooa·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters Food coUecllon
ol the American Revolution, will • EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the High chapter of the !'VIelgs
Meigs . Museum. American Hls- Clvltan Club will be collecting
l~ry month will be observed with canned gOods for the needy,'
essay winners to be present. through Friday. Anyone wishing
Hostesses will be Mrs. Robert to donate may drop Items off at
Ashley, Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mrs .. the school.
Harold Hager, Patty Parker,
Mrs. Lawrence .Smith, and Mrs. Yearbooks
POM~ROY - Monday Is the
James·Werry.
last day to order Meigs Ma· ·
GALLIPOLIS - Pastor David rauder yearbooks for '1988. All
A:dains of Columbus will be guest 'orders must lie placed by 3: 15
speaker at Friday's Gallipolis p.m. ' Each book Is $18, plus an
,F lame Fellowship meeting. The additional $2 for engraved names .
Jlleetlng will be held at Dale's and $1' for plastic .covers. Names
Smorgasbord, starting at 6: 30 and .covers are optional.
p:m. .
.

pastor. Melvin Dl'&amp;ke. S. S. Supt. Sund.tiy
S&lt;hool9:30a:m.; MorniniWoroltlplO:JO; ,
Evenina Worship 7:30. p.m.; Weditesday
Prayer ServlcP, 7:30p.m.
.
'
FAITH BAP'J:JST CHURCH , RaUrood
St., Muon. Sunday School !D ·= m
.; ICortt •
Ingwortlblplla.m.; Eveqina rvlce6p. '
m. Prayer meet in&amp; and Bible Sl
Wed- '
nesday. 7 p.m. '
'
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. NyJe,
Bonlen, put or. Cornelluo Bunch, oupt. •
Sunday S&lt;bool 9: :.1 a.m.; Semntl and '
• fourth Sundayt worshtp servtce At 2:30 Jk i

Jr., puttr. Mra. Ervbt Bauqartlner,
Sunday School Supt. Sutttlay School 9:30 a.
m.; Wonhip Service, 10:45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OFCIJRJST,,
- Josepb B. Hoskins, evanJeiiJt. Sund~
Bible Slutly9a.m.; Woroltlp, !Oa.m.: Sun. •
ship, 7:30 o.m.
day evening servJce 6 p.m.; Wednesday '
. evening service, 7 p.m.CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Ract;· ~
Worship service 1U::W a.m. Bible study,
Located on o. J. Whit• Road ol Highway
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vernon
Rt. 124. William Hoback, palttt:r. Sun
,
Tuesday . 7:30p.m .
Eldridge. min Isler; Oltver Swain, Sunday
,160. Pat Hensm, pastor. Sunday SchoollO
School10 a.m.; Sunday evening .eervte. ,.
a.m. Clasle! for all ages. Junior Cburcb ~1 · p.m. Wednesday ~nfng service 7 p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
School Supt. Preaching 9:30 a.m. each
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Port·
Sunday.
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m~ Adult
• CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle, ·
land-RactneRoad. WilHam Roush, past(J'.
Cholr practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Y'ourtJ PeG· HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, George
Supt. Sutlday School 9: 30a.m. MorniDJ
Linda Evans, church school director.
pie' s, Children's Church aDd Adult Bible
Anedo, pastor. Sunday service, 9: Xla.m.;
Worship 10: :.1 a.m . Prayor servt..,, aliA!~·
Church schoolS: 30 a.m.; Morntngworshlp
Study, Wednesday al 7:30p.m.
evening aen'ice7: 30 p.m. Prayerin~tlng,
ate- Sundays . •
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
THE CHURCH DF JESUS CHRIST,
services, 7:30p.m .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
APOSTOUC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
BETHLEHEM . BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
CHRIST. Joseph B. Hoskins, pastor. Bible
next to Fort Melp Park, Rutland. Robert
St., Mldclleport. Afftllated wllh Southern
Shuler, past cr. Worship service. 9:30a.m.
Class, 9:30a .m .; Mom1ngWorshtp10:30a.
Hlc!tards, paolor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Baptist Conveii.uon. David Bryan, Sr., Mi· .
Sunday School10: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
m. ; EvenlngWorshlp, 6:30p.m. Thursday
Wednesdaya and Suntlayo.
nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Mornlb&amp;
prayer service Thursday, 7: 30p.m.
Bible Study, 6:30p.m.
. HARRISONVILLE .HOLINESS CHAP·
W(I'Ship 11 a.m.: Evening worship 7 p.m.:
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
NEW STIVERSVJLLE COMMUNITY
TER of lite W•Ioyan. Hollo. . Cburda.
Wednesday evening Blble study and
AI. CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev.
CHURCH, S~n4ay S&lt;~oo! service, g, 45 a.
Rev. David Ferrell, pulor. Henry Eblin.
oraver meetlna 7 o.m .
•
Clyde W. Hendersoo, pastor. Sunday i
m. ; Worship service 10:30 a.m.;'
~anday SChool Supt.; Suftl(ay lkhotll 10 a.
.
Schoo19: 30 a.m.: Ralph Carl, Supt. Even·
Evangeltsttr Servi.o e 7:30 p.m. Wednea·
m.; Mornlna Worship 11 a.m .; Evenlnc
•
BRADFORJi
CHURCJI
OF
CHRIST,
St.
lng worship 7:00 p.m . Prayer met"tlng,
day; Prayer meettng 7 ~ 30 p.m . Thursday.
service 7:30p.m. Wedn.esday evenlntaer· .~.
Rt.124 and Co. Rd. 5. Mark Seevers, minis·
Wednesday 7'00 p.m.
vice 7: 30 p.m.
.
\
, •
· ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomer&lt;ty·
ter. Sunday SchoQI Supt. Harry~ Hen·· LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Harrismvllle Rd. Robert Purte~J. rnlnls·
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
dricks; Sundl.»ichool9: 3D a.m.; Morning
Eldridge, pastor; Wallace Damewoo:l, S.
ter; Stove Stanley .. S . S. Supt.; Bill McEI·
Harry Holler, pulor. Sunday oervl~
Worship 10: 31JB.m.: Evening worship 7 p.
S. Supl. Sunday School 9:30a.m.: Worship
roy, Asst. Supt.; Sunday Schoo19: 30a.m.;
9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m:; MldwHk ,.rvtce, 1
m . Wednelda:v worshtp 7 p.m.
Service, 10:30 a.m.
Worship ~rvlce 10:30 a.m.; Evenlngwor·
7:30 p.m. Thurlday.
ship Sunday 7p.m, and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third •
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHUHCH , Pine
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
0 . H . Cart, pastor. Sunday School at 9: 30a.
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, putOr. Carl Not·
Grove. The Rev. Wllllam Mlddleswarth,
Corner
Sycamore
and
Seomd
Sts
..
Po·.
m.; Morning worship at 10:30 a.m.; Sun·
!Ingham, Sunday S&lt;b&gt;ol Supt . Sunday
pastor. Church service 9: 30 a.,m .; Sunday:
meroy. The Rev. William Middleswart,
day eve ning service at 7:30p.m . Thursday
School 10 a.m. with cla11es lor all agea.
S&lt; hool10::.! a.qt.
pastcr. Sunday School 9:f5'a.m. Church
services at 7:30p.m .
Even Ina oerviCH at 6 p.m. W-esday Bl· .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
servtce 11 a.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a l Bald
ble llucly at 7::.1 p .m . Youlh servl""' Frl·
John Wright, pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.
Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev.
day at 7::.1 p.m.
·
,
m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor. Rev.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St. r ,J
SACRED HEART CHURCH, M•i"·
worship 10: 30 a.m. ·
Roger Willford, asst. pastor, Preaching
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. ~2-5898. Satur·
Middleport.• Brother Chuck McPheroon, ·
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
services Sunday 7: 30 P·lll· Prayer meeting
paotor. Suaday School 10 a.m.; Sunday t
day Evening Mass 7: 30 p.m.; Sunday
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D . Grimm, Jr., pastor.
Wednesday, 7: 30 p ,m., Gary GriHIIh,
Mus, 8 a .m. and 10 a .m . Confessions one
evenina servi.,.o at 7,p.m. aad Wedittld~
Ora Bass, Chairman of the Board ofChrLsleader. Youth groups Sunday evening at
servtcet at T p.m.
,
half hour before each Mass. ceo classes,
tlan Life. Sunday Schoo19::J) a.m.; Morn6:30 p.m. with Roger and Violet WOlford,
11
a.m.
Sunday.
.
ANTIQUITY
BAPTIST.
~nneth
Smith,
'
Ing worship 10:30 a .m. ; evangellstlc serleaden. Communion service ftrst Sunday
VICTORY BAPTIST, 52!1 N. 2nd St.,
pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; church ,·
vlce7:00 p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Middleport. James E. ~esee, paotor.
service 7: :.1 p.m.: ·youlh fellow.hlp6:30 p • •
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH , Dex· · ea~~~!~· CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
Sunday mornlne worship 10 a:m. ; Even~
m.; Blble.atudyl Thursday, 7:30p.m. . ' •·
ter. Woody Call, J)llstor. SerVices Sunday - CHURCH- CoolvUieRD. Rev. Phillip Rl·
lng service 7 p.m .; Wednesday eventng
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedllesday, 7 p.m . .
FULLRoad.
GOSPEL
LIGHTHOUSE,
denou'r , pastor. Sunday Sc'hool9:30a.m.;
wocahlp 7 p.m. VlsllatlonThurlllay 6:30p.
Hlland
Pomeroy.
Tom Kelly,- pas·''
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, $tev•
wor ship service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
m.
tor. DaDDy Lam-~ S. S. Supi . Sunday
Deaver, PasiM. Mike Swig«, Sunday
and worsblp service, Wffinesday, 1 p.m .
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
momlrig..-vtce at-10 a.m.; Sunday eveR-'',~~
.School Supt.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.:
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Curfman, patitor, Sunday School, tO a.m.;
Ing oerv(ce 7:30 p.m . Tuetoday aad Thura; ,
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.; S\lnday
BUI Carter, pastor. Sunday Sch0ol9:30 a.
w&lt;rship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
day Sorvteott at 7:30p.m..
·
evening worship 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
m.; Morning Wor.shlp and Communion
worJilip service 7: 30 p.m.; Midweek
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA· '' .
evening Bible study 7: 30p.m.
10:30 a.m.
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m.
.
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastor. ,
8\JRlJNGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
Sunday School9 ::rt a.m.: Worthlptervlce.'
Burllngltam. Ra,y Laudennlll, put..-; Jlo.
Tillis, pastor. Sonny Hudsoo, supt. Sunday.
CHURCH of Mlddl eport,Inc., 75 Pearl St.,
10:30 a.m. ; Youth service Sullday 6:15 p:'&gt;
bert Olrzart, usbfaltl past cr. Suntla,y Scb&gt;ol
School 9: 30a .m,; Morning worship, 10:30
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor; Roger Manley,
m. Sutltlay eveninroervt.. 7:00p.m. Wed1...
10 a.m.: worship 7 p.m.; WedttfOday, 6'p.m.
a .m.: Sunday ~enlng service 7:00 p.m .
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
nt!lday Prayer Met!\lnl and Bible Study "
youth meeting; Wed., 7 p.m. ctturdl servlcel.
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO pr~
7:00p.m . '
•1
9:30A.m.; Morning Worsb"lp 10:30 a.m.;
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, \1
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday.
Evening: Worship 7:30 p.m. WednE!Iday
NEASE SETTLEMENT OIURCH, Sun· i
mll~otfRt . 3~. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pa,s tor.
RUTLAND OIURCH OF )'HE NAZA·
evenlng Bible study, prayer and praise
day afterna&lt;~S Jervlcet at 2: 30.. Tbundll): ;
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
RENE . Samuel Basye, .pastor. Sunday
service, 7: 30p.m.
. ·
e\lenlng aeMees at 7:30.
'
\ ' •
9:30a.m .; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Scho&lt;i 9: 30a.m. : Worshlpservlce10:30a.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, ~a1011, W.
Sunday evening service 7:30p.m .; Wed·
m.;
Young people's service 6 p.m.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
Va. Pallor, Bill MurpltY. Sunday School 10
nesday service, 7:30p.m.
·
Evangelistic service 6:30p.m. WednESday
OF
GOD
_
Gllbort
Spencer,
past..-.
Suna.m.:
Sundoy evening 7:30 p.m. Prayer' ' '
SILVER RUN' BAPTIST. Bill Lillie,
service 1 p.m .
day School 9t30 a .m . ; tdornlng service
meetlnc and Blblelludy Wedll-y, 7: 30 •·
pastcr. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
10: OOa.m .: Sunday evening Service 7:00 p.
p.m . f=veryone welcome.
t ~J
School 10 a.m.; Morning worsfp, 11 a.m.;
~1 .. M.. oo, W. Va. Sunda,y Bible Study 10
RUTLAND FREJ;: WILL BAPTIST, Sa· '
Sunday evenlne worship 7:30p.m. Prayer
a .m .: Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p. m. Wednes·
m.; Mid-week prayer service Wednesday
tern St. Rev. Paul T~ylor, paatcw. s•ay' j ,
meet ina and Bible study Wednelday, 7:30 .day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
7
~:
OLIVE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
School
10 a.m.; Sund&amp;yevenlng7:00p.m.; 1 ~
p .m.: Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m .
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
Lawrence Bush, pastor. Max Folmer, Sr.
Wedaftday evening prayer meettna 7:00 •
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH. ding Lane, Mason, W.Va. J . N. Thacker,
p.m.
.'.J!
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
pastCf'. Evening service 7;30 p.m.; Wo·
Supt. Sunday School and MornlngWorahlp
SOUTH BETHEL I'IEW TESTAMENT'
SchoU 10 a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m .:
men's Mlnlslry, Thursday, 9:30 a .m .;
9:30a.m.; Sunday ovenlng,.rvke, 7p.m .;
CHURCH, ~ver Rtdae. DUane S)'llen·
Mtd·week service, Wed., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 : 1~
Youth meeting and B\ble Study, Wednes·
atrlcker, patter. Sunday School 9' a.m. ~ 1-"
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
p.m .
day. 7 p.m .
•
Worsblp Servl..,lo a .m.; Sunday fYfttt~l(; rl '
Robert E . Musser. pastor. Sllnday School
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Pt&gt;
servk:p, 7:00p.m . Wednesday niJitt Blbl' ,. ,
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
9:30 A. m.; Paul Musaer , supt.; Morning
UNION. Hartfonl, W. Va.
.
m.
~~o/~BY··-P.a•.••. R.~
. ..D•a•v•~•W•I•oe•m•a•n•.~--... .~sl~~;_7~:00~p~.m;·~--------------~"'
W&lt;t'Shtp 10: :wl a.m.; Sunday evening ser- . CHRISTIAN
Rev.
David
McManiS, past(l'. Church r
I'
vice, 7 p.m.; mid-week service, WednesSchool 9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
day, 7p.m.
I
&lt;
vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday eventna aervice,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
7: 30,p.m . Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30
' J
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn MtMUianl paator.
pm · .
.
.
"Never to Be Left Out"
Mary Janice Lavender', ·sunday SChool
' FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURC~. Letart,
Supl. Sunday &amp;hool 9:30a.m. : Morning
wtrshlp 10:30 a.m.; Evangelistic service, ,w. Va., Rt. I, Jamfl Lewll, p ..tor. Wor·
servl~ 9:30a. m.; Suaday School 11
6 p.m.; Prayer and Pl'aiseWt!dneaday, 7p. ·lf~lp
•a.m.;
·E venlni wonltlp 7:30p.m. Tueoclay
. BasiCally. to
left out Is.to feel that one Is excludect frOm
m.; Youth meeting, 7 p.m.
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
some
relational
experience:
the aging and sickly nursing bOfl\e ·
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
9: 30 a.m.; Worahll! oervtce, Wediteoday
CHHIST, Elden R. Blake; pu.t ..-. Sunday
resident
who
baa
yet
to
be
visited
by ber.only son alllce twelve
~:30p.m.
SchoU 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay Ioder.
•r
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
years
aao.
the
bem.opblllac
boy
who
Ia forbidden from attendlnl
Mornlna: sermm, 11 a .m .: Sunday night
Walnut
and
Henry
Sts.
,
RavenawO!)d,
W.
services: Chrisllan EndeaVor 7: 30 p.m .,
schqol because he baa the AIDS virus, or theolderdaUJbtetwho
Va. The Rev. Geo111e C. Wetrlek, palltr.
Song aervlce 8 p.m . Preachlaa 8:30 p.m.
.
felt left out becauaealltheattentlonwaaeJven to her newly-born
Sundsy
SCbool9::.!
a
.m
.:
Sulldayworshlp
Mid-week prayer meettn1. Wednelday, 7
lla.m.
.
~rotber many l)hyalcal problema. Then there are tbole very
p .m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH. loco led on
able
penou who could not find meanlqful jobl primarily
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roi·
Pomeroy P\kt, County Road 2:1 near Fill·
er WatsQ\, \&gt;astor. Crensm Pratt, Sv.nday
wootla. Rev. Blackwood, pul(l'. Servlcea
because
they Jl4ppened. to live In an economically depressed
School Supt. Momlnc Worlltlp 9:30a.m .;
m Sunday at 10::.1 a .m . and 7:30p.m. with
commull!ty.
·
·
Sunday School 10: 30 a .m .; Evenlna •er·
Sunday SChool 9:30a.m . BlbleStlldy, Wed·
vice, 7: :ll p.m. ·
M I pollder on these.-. mall)' othen of tbe same condition, I
. nesdoy. 7: 30p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Sbuo,
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
tllouahtabov~Jeau.
Dtd be ever feel lett out? Dldbenotfeelleft
pastor; Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt.
CHRIST, Sl. Rt. 338, Ant(flulty. Rev.
when
be
buq
on
theCl'OII,
IOIIlUChiOthathecrledOilt, "My
Sunday School 9:-ts a.m.; Evenlna wor·
Franklin Dickens, pasttr. Suaday mom·
obi~ 6: 30p.m .: Prayer Meetlnf, 6 ;30p.m .
lng 10 a .m.; Sunday .... Ina 7:30· p.m .
God,
my
God,
why
did
yOil
aballdon
me?" (Ma~ 27:'G,
Wednesday.
Thut'ltiii.Y ..-enlnc 7::.1 p.m.
.
TEV).
It
-~
to
t!lat
he
did
feel
left
out at t!lat moment.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
STIVERSVU.LE COMMVNn'Y IW'·
CHRIST. Dove Prenu.,.,,. mlniJIA!r. ~I
many
lnataJICel
Uvea
wben
wW have
TIST CHURCH. Paotor ·Byers.
Well•, Supt. Cbureh S&lt;bool 9 a.m.; Wor·
Sutlday School 10 a.m.; Wonhlp liPI'VIeell
experlencea
that
trytDJ,
IUid
IOitl8
of
thele
ahlp Service, 9_:45 p.m.
·
a.m,; Sunday evenlaa oetvlce.?:30 p.m.; ·
Ul
alou and foqottea, The
of God
to da to · c'
' CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA· . Wodnt!lday evetlln~:servtce 7:30p.m.
RENE. Rev. Rer-i Orale, putor. ·
Join
au
our
human
experlencea,IOt!lal'We
mlcht....,fMI
MIDDL£'PoRT INDEPENDEJiiT HOU·
Fruk Rllne. oupt. Sunday School 8:30 a.
NESS CHURCH,Iac.. . 75 Pari II.~ ·
that God Is 10 tar away; So J11111
111. be Ulllnld hit
m .; Wontdp HrVIce, tl a.m. and 7 p.m .
Ivan Myers, ocflu P..ttr; Ropr ICaDioy,
Sunday. Wetlaesday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
flrlt dllolplea, "I wtJJ not liaw you desolate" (Jolla 1': 18,·
Sr., Sunday 9clltiOI Suporlnteadat. Sun·
lnJ.
.
RSV).
. .
day
Scho
..
8::.1
a
.m
.;
ICOI'IIbtr
•fll'lhlp
LAURE!. CLIFF FREE METHODIST
10:
30
a
.
m
.;
evenlal
·•fll'lhlp
7:30p.m.;
· Ill the Chrllttan life tbi1e II no .-rutee t!lat
Will lOt face
CHURCH. Dovld Bell, putor. Robert E .
Wodni!Oday evenlnl Bible study, prayer
BariOtt, Dti'PCior of Cbrlllliut Education;
tr1a11
Ud
llllflerbtp.
But
tllm
II
till
promise
tllat
II Ill o1
and pralle servl&lt;e, 7:30p.m.
rl
Steve Eblin. Ullttlant. Sutlday l!l;hool ' ' 30
CHURCH
OF
JESVS
CHRIST
AJ'OS.
trtbalaUoal
GGd
II
with
•·
For
not!dq
CID
e¥11'
NJ
I ate U1
a.m.; MornlD&amp; worship 10:30 a.fn.:TI!ftl
I
TOLIC - VonZIIidt and WanllW. Eld•
from tile love at God Ill JtluQIIIItoar Lord (Rmu!•l:. . .l.
In Action, 6 p.m.; EVj&gt;Dlni Woroltlp. 7:
Jamea MIUer, . puler. Sulldlqr lkbod
m . Wednetday evertln1 prayer and Bible··
In Cbrlll we will.,.. be 11ft Ot1t! - I 1 I 'J , Pa1tu,
!0:30a.m.; WorlhlpSorvliijce
SaitdiiY,7:il
otud)', 7:00p.m . O.olr pradke, Tliunday,
p.m
.;
Bible
&amp;lady,
Wedit
p.m.
7p.m.
.
CALVARY PILGRIM
Bll'tlo
II
'
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
IOttvtlle Road. Rev. Dewey ~. putor:
Charlfl Ru11ell Sr., minister. Rick Ma·
11
Clint~ Faulk, Sunday School Supt.; Suacomber, oupt. Sun&lt;~A.~ Scltool 9::.1 a .m.;

me

.

I· POMEROY -

I\OWIIS FOI l'lnY OCCASIIN

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

· Community Calendar

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WAID CROSS

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p,,,,g Fl1wet S6o,

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TRINrl'Y CHURCH. Rev. Jom 1111!, pasl&lt;r.
IA&gt;bllio Buck. SundaJI &amp;hool Su(L Chureh
School 9:15 a.m.; ·worship Servle lO:ll a.m
O.olr rl!hearSal. Tuesday, 7:30p.m. u - di·

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&amp; LOHSE

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In the chapter. Mrs. Young was lnspe'ctlon will be lield oil Saturescorted to that altar by":Stella day night,' and the Eastern Star
Atkins.
·
Chapter Inspection on men's
Allthosehavlnggrandappolnt- night.
,)
'
ments, 'all having held ~and
Pt;~tluck refreshments will be
appointments, and Ruby Diehl, a served at both Inspections.
60 year member, were recog- . Donna Nelson announced the
nlzed and welcomed. It was past matron's club meeting for
announced that the Masonic Feb. 23 at her home. It was

111

FRANCIS FLORIST

by Ruby Lambert; "February"
by Bernice Midkiff; " Mr. Lin·
coin, President" by Keith Ashley; "QUestions Abqut Abe", a
group activity.
There were jokes' by Wald
Nicholson, "Little Red Valenti'
nome of Mr. and Mrs. "Farming
Likely to Become DaDJI!I'OUS
Job" by P11tty Dyer; "Nothing

.
Pomeroy Area Merchants Association

"

1 ·Frances Young was presented

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astern·Star holds ·meeting; 50 y~r pin given

•

St~ Pomeroy'

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The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ Winners"In ihe national sewing
contest were announced at the
~cent meeting . of Star Grange
l!eld .at the ball.
.: Patty Dyef received first place
In Claas A, whUe Bernice Midkiff
look first place ln.aass C of the
judgtog. Other winners were
.~mice Midkiff, second place In
tlua A, with Cindy Midkiff,
~~In~~

(row's Family Restaurant

rI

.

~tar Grange conducts meet#ng; winners announced

lOON

ltlfJOY Of

- ....

'·

Fttct.y, NbruMy 12.• 1988
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228 W. Main

·- ---- ----------·-- --

·-=--~-·

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c614-992-6614

Pomeroy, Ohio

r

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!!~:I!:D.~~O.~h~v~S.~·~·m~·~~-~~----~~----------~--.~~P~on~~~O!Y:!M~~~d!•!~~~~~
2~-!---~~----~------~~--~--~F!~~~:V~·~Fa:~~"=•~~~1~2~,~1~9~8B~ ~ ~

•te ·House unveils space researCii_policy

WASHINGTON (UPI) - NASA will spend $700

orbital research station as part of a new national
policy ordered by the administration to open the
hfah frontier to commercial exploitation, officials
said Thursday.
·
The policy also endorses future flights to the
' moon or Mars as long-range goals of the U.S.
space program and recognizes NASA's planned
space station as a requirement for ensuring world
leadership In space.
. The space policy was unveiled at a White House
bfleflng after weeks of anticipation about what
direction President Reagan would choose lor the
nation's beleaguered civilian space progr~m. still
struggling to recover froin th.e Challenger shuttle
disaster two years ago.
The policy was signed Jan. 5, but sources said
details. were delayed by a bltt~r battle between
NASA and the Commerce Department over plans,
now approved, to Ioree the space agency to lease
room aboard a privately developed orbital
research station, called the Industrial Space
Facility, In the early 1990s.
·
The plan would cost NASA$700 million over five
years, money most NASA o!tlclals . said the
agency could ill afford to spend at a time when Its
own multibillion-dollar
space station will be
.
.

gearing up for construction.
Shllre Of the project.
· · But the admlnlatratlon has since el)do~ . a
With the i(lvernment euaranteelng siiJiport,
three-year, $6.1 biWon plan to fund early
start-up mOney will be easier to obtain; officials
said.
~ .....
development or NASA's permanently manned
space station.
F1etcher (aid backers of an !SF "only want a
commttmdi from the federal government to
NASA Administrator James F1etcher Sllld
lease a plffion of their facility. It will be In the
Thursday he supported the presldeQt's new
policy.
nelghbo ' ' of $140 million a year over a
five-year - od."
"It does not water down the scope of the I NASA·)
space station In any way," he sa1d. ''We're talking
"That
'comeoutofNASA'sbudget but as an
about 1993 and before, and the space statlqn
· add-on to,i
's budget," he said, "at least
. comes later than that. I think It's clear the
that's the li!lentlon at the present time.''
president Intends us to go ahead with that and
In 150 ~. NASA expects to receive proposals .
we're on that track."
from private Industry In a competitive process to
determine wbo will build an !SF. In the past,
The Idea of an Industrial Space Facility was
NASA has said 1t did not have a clear use for an
developed by Space Industtles Inc. of Houston. It .
Is envisioned as a man-tended, habitable module · ISF, given the agency's plans to build Its own
space station, but ·F1etcher played down such
that would be carried Into orbit abOard a space
shuttle to serve as a mint-research station.
~ concerns Thursday.
Several ISF modules cou)d be linked together In
"We think we could make very good use of It,"
orbit but they would contain only work space and
he said. ''Seventy percent of It will be used by the
government. The other 30 percent of Its use will
no separate living facilities. They would be
staffed only while docked to a shuttle or the space
probably be purely commercial.''
.
station.
The space policy was designed In part to cut red
tape and make It eesler for private companies 'to'
Under the space policy, the ISF will be built by
the winner of a competitive procurement process, ..
set up a commercial launch lndustty that call
compete with those of Europe, the SOviet Union.
apparently meaning Space Industries will have to
compete with other aerospace companies fer a
and China.

.,•

· NASA and other goverrunent agencies now will
purchase unmanned rockets and launch services
from private Industry. In the past, NASA was
responsible tor all launch ser~ces, manned and
unmanned alike.
"We've now got the U.S. government sending a
·clear signal to the private sector that It will n~
longer attempt to ... monopolize this business, ·
said Transportation Secretary James Bumley ·
"It further directs U.S. government agencies to
go buy launch services for their needs where you
don't need a manned presence." ·
In the wake of the Challenger dlsas ter. Reagan
banned most commercial satellites from !he
space shuttle, reserving the costly manned
orbiters for high-priority mlll~ry and scientific
missions.
·
The move left more than 20 commercial
satellites grounded and as a result, three major
aerospace companies are vigorously marketing
power.tul rockets - the Titan, Atlas-Centaur and
Delta - In commercial ventures.
.. ·
Under , the new policy, the government has
worked out plans to make . launch faciUtles
avfllable on a commercial basts and to minimize
red tape that In the past has made ltdH!Icult to.g et
such programs oft the ground.
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Nofziger .convicted of· illegal lobbying

IN CUSTODY - Student Jason Harless Is begin arrested by
poDce al Pinellas Park (Fla.) Wgh School in connection with the
shooting of three faculty members. ( UPI)

Government to appeal ·
drugtesting ruling

I
~

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - A
divided federal appeals court
ruled Thursday that a federal
program req ulrlng drug and
alcohol testing of entire railway
crews after accidents or . rule
violations Is an unreasonable
search In v.iolatlon of the
Constitution.
To test blood, breath or urine of
a railroad worker there must be a
reasonable suspicion that a particular person Is under the
Influence of drugs or alcohol, the
9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled In a 2-1 decision.
!fhe ruling Involved a pro·g ram
begun March 10, 1986, by the
F~eral Railroad Admlnlstra·
tlon and Transportation Department, covering some 200,000
wor.kers.
The program required testing
of all members·of a railway crew
after rule violations or accidents
Involving death or Injury or toxic
spills. Failure to submit to the
tests would result In a nine·
month job suspension .
The court said to pass constitu·
tiona! muster there must be a
reasonable suspicion that a particular Individual was using
drugs or alcohol at the time of the
Incident to mandate testing. ·
Transportation Secre·tary Jim
Bqrnley said In Washington the
government would appeal, ad·
ding, "We are convinced of the
constitutionality of the FRA drug
and alcohol testing program." ,
American Civil Liberties Un·
ion attorney Edward Chen called
the ruling "significant," noting
that three other federal appeal
courts upheld some form of
random testing for customs
workers, prison guards and racIng jockeys.
"It Is the first federal appeal
court decision to overturn drug
teSting that Is not based on a
re'asonable suspicion," he said.
Chen said the decision will
"present substantial problems"
to!' President Reagan's plan to
Impose random drug testing on
all federal employees·.
.,'It was a much na~rower
program Invalidated here," he
said. ''It this one does not survive
I don't.see how Ronald Reagan's
call."
Lawrence Mann, attorney for
the rallway workers unions that
fllj!d suit In San Francisco
challenging the regulations In
1985satd, "I wanttomakeltvery
cll!ar we do not oppose testing.
Wll&amp;t we .do object to Is testing
t,Qposed by the FRA without
sulftclent protections lor
workers::

,,.•

Mann said In the two years
since the program began approx·
lmately 90 people were tested
under the mandatory rules, with
3 percent showing positive for
drugs and 2 percent posltiv~ for
alcohol.or perscrlption drugs.
In the ruling, Judge Thomas
Timg wrote, "We conclude that
lntruslve.-Urug and alcohol testIng may be required or autho·
rized only when specific artlculable facts give rise to a reasonable
suspicion that a test will reveal
evidence of current drug or
alcohol impairment.
"Accidents, Incidents or rule
violations, by themselves, do not
create reasonable grounds for
suspecting that tests will demon·
strate alcohol or drug Impair·
ment In any one railroad em·
ployee, much less an entire train
crew ," Tang wrote, joined by
Judge Harry Pregerson,.
" We hold that particularized
suspicion Is essential to finding
toxicological testing of railroad
employees justified at Its Inception," he said.
Judge Arthur Alarcon dis·
sented, saying he accepted the
decision of U.S. District Judge
Charles Legge that public Interest In railway safety outweighed
worker's rights.
Tang wrote, "We think when
testing Is undertaken to detect
· drug or alcohol abuse as a means
of Improving. the safe operation
of a railroad, It poses no lnsuper~
able burden on the government to
require Individualized

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lyn
Nofziger, the political operator
who helped Ronald Reagan cap·
ture the presidency, was con·
vlcted Thursday on three counts
of Illegal · lobbying for the
scandal-tom Wedtech Corp. and
two other clients.
. ~he . eight-man, four-woman
jucy"dellberated for 6 ~ hours
over Wednesday and Thursday
before finding the ex-White
House aide guilty of three of the
four Influence peddling charges
against him.
The charges Involved business
contacts Nofziger made with
Edwin Meese and other White
House officials less than a year
after · he left government In
January 1982 to ojlen a consul tlng
business. Such contacts violate a
key provision of the .Ethics In
Government Act, and Nofziger's
trial marks the first prosecution
of violations under that law. ·
Independent prOsecutor James
McKay accusee! . Nofziger of
trying to cash In on his friendship
with , Meese and other White
House aides to win business for.
three of his clients - Weiltech,
Fairchild Republic Corp. and a
maritime union.
Nofziger, who sported his
trademark Mickey Mouse tie
throughout his monthlong trial,
displayed little emotion as the '
court clerk read the verdJct. but
shook co-defendant Mark
Bragg's . hand when he was

acquitted of one charge of aiding
and abetting illegal lobbying.
Nofziger also was acquitted of 1
that Illegal lobbylilg charge.
The eyes of Nofziger's wife,
Bonnie, glazed over with tears as
she sat quietly In the first row o!
the cqurtroom with their two
daughters.
.
Nofziger ,.taces.,·alx years , In
prison and a '$30',000 fine when he
Is sentenctid March 25. His
lawyers said they would appeal
the decision.
Outside U.S. District Court,
Nofziger professed his lnno·
cence, '· as he had since the
Investigation began a year before the trial.
"I feel I'm Innocent. I don't
think I did anyt~Jlng wrong," he
said. "It's a lousy law. All men
are not equal under the law.''
AI thoUgh McKay defended the
strength of the law, he displayed
little glee at the outcome of the
trial, · calling It a "long, hard
battle.''
·
·
"We think the jury's verdict
confirms we had a case to
make," he said, but added, "I
hate to see someone get convicted of a felony. That's just
tough."
The most politically sensitive
c barge .In the ' case Involved a
memo.Nofziger sent to Meese on
April .8, 19112, .urging the White
House counselor or even the
president to help Wedtech win a
$32 million Army contract to
-', )'

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build small engines,
House to bpen a consulting
Nofziger's letter triggered a business With Bragg, a fellow
pivotal May 19 White House Californian, who was found lnnomeettng that cut ttu:o!lgb nearly cent by the same jury on one
two years of Army resistance to count of aiding and abetting
the Wedtech propOsal and even· Nofziger with his Wedtech
tually led the contract to be lobbying.
awarded tq the New York fh'lll"Obviously, I'm very happy
Purlng ,1!\l!J.rlal:Mee~
.
that this Is over for me, but I'm
testified h(!;,uid no memory of
pretty devastated by what has
the memo or any other ·
happened to 1 my parlner, He
disCussions with Nofziger on .
doesn't desenoe tbls. He's a great
Wedtech- now tbe focus of
man," Bragg said. ·
state and federal probes Into
The count both .Nofziger and
allegations of bribery and .
Bragg were found Innocent of
fraud.
Involved a May 28, 1982, note he
McKay Is also lnvvestlgating allegedly sent to Meese's deputy,
Meese's alleged lnvolement with . James Jenkins, seeking add!Wedtech, but the emphasis on ·. tiona! White House help with the
that probe bas shtfted to a Wedtech contract.
.
billion-dollar Iraqi · pipeline
During the trial, .the proseucproject.
tlon and the defense clashed over
One of the jurors Interviewed whoactuallyslgnedtheletter.An
outside federal coUrt ·said the FBI handwrlttlng analysts never
panel disregarded most · of resolved whetl)er Nofziger
Meese's testimony Since he bad penn~ the-note.
'
little recollection ortheletteranll
Soine ~the most.fmportant
Instead relied on the contents of figures In Reagan's two-term
the memo.
presidency testified at the trial,
Nofziger's trial came on the .Including Meese, now attorney
heels of the December perjury general, ex-presidential aide Ed
conviction of another White Rollins and former budget dlrecHouse aide, Michael Deaver, tor David stockrrian.
who was found guilty of lying to
The defense wrapped up Its
Congress and. a grand jury about case Moaday without putting
his lobbying activities.
Nofziger on the stand, relying on
No~ger bristled .a t \pe notion
the , testimony , o1 , only , six
the back-to-back convictions re- wltnesaes. . ·
!lected poorly on the. Reagan
administration, sayltig, ···1 don't
think this affects the ethical
standards of this administration.
Frankly, I kind of resent any
Implication that It does."
The White House refused to
comment on the conviction of
Reagaan's former political
director.
Nofziger, who has played a
pivotal role In Reagan's pres!·
dentlal campaigns, left the White

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Cardinal JVol steps down
for Archbishop Bevilacqua_
By VINCE PISCOPO
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Cardinal John Krol stepped down
as leader of tile Philadelphia
.area's 1.31!11lllon Roman CatholIcs ·Thursday and turned the
reins of the archdiocese over to
Archbishop Anthony Bevilacqua.
In a ritual reminiscent o!
medieval Catholicism, Krol, 77,
l!anded BevUacqua, 64, a simple
· ,~Voodeu crosier, or staff, symbol- .
izlng the transition of power.
Some 1,900 dignitaries, church
leaders and members of the
public jammed the majestic
Cathedral o! Sts. Peter and Paul
-In Center City to witness the
ceremony.
Bevilacqua, previously bishop
of the diocese of Pittsburgh,
~!Jcceeded Krol to become Philadelphia's 11th archbishop. Krol,
a close friend of Pope John P au!

church's flnarices and, until he Is
80, on the College of Cardinals,
which elects the pope. He will
also share his residence In
"How do I begin to build on the Philadelphia with Bevilacqua.
tremendous accompllshmen ts of
Dressed In a white robe and a ·
Cardinal Krol," Bevilacqua said mitre, Bevilacqua, the first man
during the three-hour . mass. of Italian descent to become
"The archdiocese of Philadel· archbishop In Philadelphia, se·
phla Is renowned everywhere . lzed the crosier (rom Krol with a
largely because of what he has smile ;~nd took his seat In the
done."
'
·cathedral- a throne that represKr()l, In his liturgy. said ents the archbishop's authority.
Bevilacqua would not seem a
Before the transition of power, _
s!ranger to Philadelphians b!!- Archbishop Plo Laghl, the poiJ:e'S
cause he Is a man of God.
representative, read a letter of
"God has been good to Phlla · appointment to the audience.
delphia. Today, God has chosen,
In his homily, Bevilacqua
through the Roman pontiff, Arch- urged Catholics to become Christ
bishop Bevilacqua," Krol said. '. to others.
He's not a stranger. He's a
"If our role, mine and yours, as
member of the human family." · church Is to be Christ tel others,
Krol will remain active In the then we too must chip away from
church, serving on a papal ourselves everything that Is not .
committee ·to restructure the ,Jesus Christ," he sald.
before he reached the mandatory
retirement age.

PASSING THE·STAFF- Cardinal ,John Krol,
Archblllhop of PbUadelphla for the past 27 years,
hands the ~taff of office to Bishop Anthony
Bevilacqua during ceremonies at.St. Peter and

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Jersey for Roberts since Sunday
By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
NEW YORK (UP!)- The FBI night, when a television program
Thursday arrested a convicted flashed his wanted poster on)be
killer of five people days after a air and the station's switchboard
.television show revealed the man ·was flooded with telephone calls.
About 75 callers . Identified
- who had· escaped from prison
In Indiana and was on the FBI's Roberts as Robert Lord, director
.
mo$t wanted list -'-. had been of Carpenter Men's Shelter.
1')1nnlng a Staten Island men's
Valiquette ·said a fingerprint
check after Roberts was taken
shelter. '
FBI agents nabbed David · Into custody confirmed that Lord
James Roberts, 44, about 4 p.m . was Roberts.
Roberts was serving six life
near his home In the Stapleton
section of Staten Island, said FBI terms tor five murders - IncludIng those of a 2-year-old girl and a
spokesman Joseph Valiquette.
FBI and pollee had been 6-yeat-old boy - rape and arson
scouring New York and New

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when he escaped In October 1986 Sunday, and employees and
from guards of the Indiana State board members of nle Carpenter
Prison.
Men's Shelter recognized the.
Valiquette said agents took nian as shelter director Robert
Roberts, who was unarmed, into Lord, officials said .
custody without lncld~nt.
The .Fox program "Most
"We've been running out leads Wanted" each spotllg)tts a dHferall week .and tracing him to this ent criminal on the FBI's list of·
house was a natural outgrowth .of most wanted criminals and en·
those leads," Valiquette said.
courages viewers who recognize
The bureau's fugitive unit had fugitives featured on the probeen searching for Roberts, a
gram to call authorities.
.
native of Perth A,mboy, N.J .. In ·
The case was the second this
the New York-New Jersey area.
month In which a TV program led
A wan ted poster _of Roberts
to the capture of fugitives. Jerry
was aired on the Fox Television
Strickland, 26, and Melissa Munshow "Most Wanted" program
day, 17, were arrested Friday by

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agree to cooperat~

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on states ·pronnse

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Mothe,r ,re1ects
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w•N IT COMES TO FIEUNG
Aiid -fliRI!I 110 N.ACI liiE
lOME COITINim OF CAU r

"Home Health Care":
PRODUCTS

, NOTICE
Noticeiaherebyglventhai
the undersigned filed in
Caoe No. 2-5132 application
to Probote
tho Common
Pleas
Co.urt,
Divioion
of
Meigs County, Ohio, for an
order to change Michael
Vincent Ron's nome to
Mic""ol
d Ell Vincent
•
h R W1msley
8
:~ Eliea
j,t Wa~":::v~ame
01
Said application will be
haord In uld Court, on WedMadey,
the 16th day of
Mon;h. 1988.
Debra l. Rose
Jamo1 Robart Wamsley, Jr.
12) 12. 1tc

"'1!

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rv'f • V.f'f ne n nOme ..,,,o

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cooking at the -v.rybell prices around I
MONDAY

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$J49

Hot loast ..., Sandwkh .·~·•••••••••••••••
TUESDAY
La
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$J49
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WEDNESDAY
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SO
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&amp; Corn ' lriGd ..........................

$1

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$J49
Pork Chops &amp; Droulntl ......................
fRIDAY
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Potato S.., &amp; Sandwich""'"'"'""""$
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HOUIS: Moil. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.·I:OO P.M.

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Nebulizers
, Oxypn Concenir•tora
IIIIth room S.tety Otvicu , Partible OJCYIIn
Whltlchtirs
• . Atternatln&amp; Pnluure PICI .
Tens Units
• Walkers
•
Glucose Monitors
o Respirltary Therapy
Commodn
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Plan For Retirement Today
1.18-to Average Since 1975

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Public Notice

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• . i ......es not consiste·nt
m
Wl•th rou gh. ·sex·'story

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"It seemed like they were ,,·":::
Moses Lake, Wash., police after
15 to 20 residents called to say talking about two different peo"
they recognized the two as pie,'' he said. "He did a good job, ·:': ·
suspects In a Waterford, Mich., was diligent and conscientious ;~
slaying depleted on the NBC and very well liked and very •
program, "Unsolved well-mannered."
Lord applied for a New York
Mysteries."
,
driver's
license In the summer of
Anne Ormsby, a spokeswoman
1987
and
then registered a 1979
for the City's Human Resources
Chevrolet
In his name, using the
Administration which partially
funds Project Hospitality to address of the Project Hospital·
provide beds for the homeless, lty outreach center In Manhat·
said Lord Jirst came to tl!e tan, according to Department of • ·
shelter as a homeless man in Motor Vehicles records. He also
held a taxi license.
1986.
Roberts escaped from two
''The guy showed up sometime
In 1986 as a homeless man and guards taking him back tp the
Indiana State Prison In Michigan
started working for them and
City
from im Indianapolis hospl·
worked his way up," Ormsby
tal
where
had undergone a lung
said. "He was a .competent,
examination.
congenial guy.''
Roberts pulled wh.a t a replica Officials at the shelter and
Project Hospitality refused to 1 of a gun on the two guards, and
I made his getaway after handcuf·
comment pn Lord.
A . man who answered the · flog the guards and driving them
telephone listed under Lord's to Hammond, Ind.
Among his convictions was one
name at his address Identified
hlinself only as his roomate and for the 1974 murders of a couple
expressed shock at the FBI's and their 2-year-old daughter. He : ,
also was convicted In 1974 for the "'
allegations.
kidnapping and rape of an
'.'1 guess ~veryone was sur·Indianapolis
woman and the ,
prised," said the man who said
kidnapping
and
murder of her
he lived \vlth Lord for "some
6-year-old
son
.
-,
time."
~

By JONATHAN FERZIGER
Cuomo at a news conference
attack, and Brawley's lawyers, tlgators to speak with Brawley,
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)- Law· after the meeting. ·
who also represented tlie victims although not lmmedla tely.
yers ror the -black victim of a
."(We) hopethatwecangetthls · of the Howard Beach racial
·~Tawana Is still traumatized
racially ' motivated · rape said Investigation rolling and that the
assault In NE)w York City, had by the rape and will require
advised her nbt to cooperate with extensive psychiatric therapy,"
Thursday they would cooperate Immediate ap!lrehenslon of the
with state Investigators after assailants and their successful · .a uth.orltles on grounds they he said. "She Is not yet ready to
Gov. Marlo Cuomo promised the prosecution will take place very
would not aggressively seek out march Into Robert Abrams'
her assailants because of racial office."
state attorney general would he speedily."
. '
personally Involved In the
Abrams, In a Statement, COD·
bias.
Mason also lashed out at some
Investigation.
-./'
firmed his "direct participation ·
But Mason said Thursday he local residents who have branded
The l!lwyers, Alton Maddox In every phase" of the case and
was pleased with Abrams' par, the teenager, a high school
and C. Vernon Mason, have said scheduled a meeting · Tuesday
tlclpatlon and would allow lnves- cheerleader and athlete. a liar.
tbey know ~he Identity or at least with Maddox, Mason and other
one of · the men who attilcked ' black leaders.
.
TawanaBrawJey,'16,butl-efused . Brawley,of,WapplngersFI'l.ls, ..
to share their Information be- 50 mUes nprth Of' New York (:lty,
'.J
cause they were unsatisfied with who' was 15 at the time of the
at~ck; told Investigators she
By DAN JACOBSON
she said. "! thank God for the
La done and two other .white
the Investigation.
But the lawyers agreed to WI!S kidnapped Nov. 24 by six
' NEW YORK (UPI), - The s.trength I have been given. We youths, Jon Lester, 18,.and Scott
cooperate during 'a 3 ~-hour whlte _men, one of whom showed
mother of the black man killed In
are all God's children, but ne one Kern, 19, were convicted In
meeting at ·'the state · Capitol her a badge· and said he was a · the Howard Beach racial attack
has the right to take another December for the attack In
Howard Beach. A fourth defendrejected an apology from the last
person's life."
wbereCuomosaldstateAttorney policeman. shesa ld shewas th en
General Robert Abrams would repeatedly raped.
of three white teens ' to be
Ladone begged the judge for ' ant was cleared of all charges.
"not only supervise," but be
Four days later, she was found
sentenced In the case, saying,
mercy. calling himself a "kid"
;?t'
ut
his
wrapped
tn
a
plastic
bag,
curled
.
"We
are
all
God's
children,
but
who
in the past few months ,has
Lester was sentenced last
and
personally Involved
h
th
"
rl
s
o
lngup
I
monthto10to30years.Helsheld
I
ht
t
t
ke
d
reputation on the line" t prose- In the fetal position. Her hair was
no one as
e rg
o a
one some se ou gr w
.
cho"""". "KKK" and "nigger"
another person's life."
hope to have the opportunity to In Isolation at the Attica prison,
Cute those Involved.
,.....,.
' gged f or
threats on
"On beh~lf of the entire Braw· were
scrawled on her chest In
Jason La done, .17, be
rna ke my !Ife aprod uc 11 ve one. " where he has received
.
Thursday
and
Su
State· ·
Demako! , Citing Ladone 's his life. Kern was sentenced . to
mercy
•
ley family' I want to extend my. charcoal and her body was
C
· d and lack ·of a crlml
six toreleased
18 ye•rsonlast$300,000
Friday ball
but
tl
Th
t
J
b
serious thanks for the efforts smeared with excrement.
preme our
us ce
omas
ac kgroun
·
· was
made here today," Mason told
No one has been charged In the · Demakos ordered hilll to serve.. nal record, said his character
'
, ,
· five· to 15 years ~In prison for was "exemplary before this · Wednesday night during his
second-degree manslaughter Incident." But the judge noted appeal.
I
and . first-degree aSsaUlt, the that On the nfght Of the DeC, 20, .
lightest sentence Imposed In' the 1986, attack he was a "violent
•
•
1986 attack that came to symbol- person·. "
lze racism In America.
Most troubling, Demakos said,
· _',1 u.a 'A
·
Ladone was the first' of the was that Ladone not only partie!·
three young men convicted In the pated In the chase that forced
attack to show remorse and the Mlchae!Grifflth,23, to flee onto a
highway where he was struck
only one to ask forgiveness from
,
Jean Griffith, mother of the man and killed by a car, but, un·
t
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Assistant 'District Attorney killed and fiancee of a second shaken, he then Joined In the
lly ESTHE~ PESSIN
NEW YORK (UPI) - A Linda Falrsteln outlined the black man_beaten In the mostly beating of Cedric Sandlford, 37.
"This behavlordemonstratesa
accused murderer's tate · of sex white Queens neighborhood of
pathologist i-ho performed an
Howard
Beach.
,
mind
that was criminal and bent
and violence . and 'asked the
a11topsy on ·a teenage girl
'.'I
want.
to
say
pllbJicly
that
I
on
violence,"
the judge said. His
pathoioglst If she had an "opinion
strangled In Central Park said
am
sorry,
.Mrs.
Griffith,
for
your
actions
~·cannot
go unpunished."
whether or not those those
ThurSday her Injuries were not
Ladone's family and supporactions are consistent with the sensele~s loss," Ladone said,
consJ.t"nt w~th tlie story told ,by
.
reading
slowly
from
statement
ters
cheered the teenager as
Injuries
sustained
by
Miss
the prep ' school graduate
In
which
he
also
apologized
to
his
court
officers led him away to a
Levin?''
charged with murder. In her
"I'm
sorry,
Mom
and
courthouse
holding pen until his
parents.
"Y ~!!!; I have an opinion," the
dejlti). Dad,
that
_your
lives
lfave
so
·
release
later
In the day In $150,000
medical examiner replied. ''The
But under relentless crossviolently been turned around.''
barn:..- - - - - - - - - ,
Injuries are.not consistent." ·
ei:mlnation froin the lawyer for
Mrs. Griffith sat silently durde endant RobertCiiambers, the ' ' She testified Wednesday that
wl ness admitted some of the · Chambers'musthavechokedthe Ing the sentencing, reading a
Injuries on the . vjctim's neck
youug woman for at least ~O.or 30 Bible while defense lawyer Rocojlld have been ·caused by the . seconds al)d possibly more than a nald Rubenstein repeatedly asa~used murderer's wristwatch
mlnute. ,The question of how long sailed her son and fiance's
and shirt, not his hands.
. ·
It took Levju to die .Is one of the character and argued the attack
.was not racially motivated.
centra! Issues or the trial.
' ptambers, 21, charged with
Afterward she said she was
second-degree murder 1 says he
skeptical of Ladone's apolOIIY.
gribbed t)te young woman · :·
"I hope that he said It from hif
around tl)e neck with his left arm ·gold-trimmed watch that C!lused
horizontal wounds on the ·vic· heart and not just from his Ups,"
"Ia a frenzy" when she hurt him
during rough sex and · acclden• . tim's neck. He then got'Alandy to r----:--------'-------=---:---:--:--:-::-::-1
tally kUled her. The goverment
aclcitowlecige she saw gold necks
Insists the Aug. 26, 1986, killing of
on Levin's neck. ·
.
· Litman then asked: "Are you
Jennifer Levin, 18, was
telling. u• that the watch never
lntlmtlona!. ·
.
came In contact with the neck?"
~n direct examination Dr,
Marla Alandy, a crucial wllness
"No.'' sbe answered.
In ' the trial In state ·S upreme 1 "Are yau telling liS the watch
Court, said Chambers could not
didn't leave an Imprint on the
have killed the woman the way he
neck?" Litman pressed.
"No," she responded ..
he did.
SIICI 11/3/lt.

•f•
testJ Jes

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Paul Cathedral Thursday. Bevilacqua takes over
as Archbishop of Pblladelpbla after serving as
Bishop of Pittsburgh. UPI.

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• Hotpitll Beds
• Lilt Chtirs ·

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II, was archbishop for 27 years

Olle of FBrs most wanted found running a men's shelter

••

LYN NOFZIGER

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&amp; IOI.II
s a i d . ' ' ' ' ' " ' '...................
"Privacy Is Implicated," said
Chen. "They are not measuring
whether a person was drunk on
the Job but what they did at a
Saturday night partY three
weeks ago. It allows employers
·to monitor off-the·Job conduct."

FebruarY 12, 19

e ·
P.,a t·h0 Ioms"
e- t

suspicion."
Chen said this could have I&lt;r;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;~
broad applications for other
professions. He said If railway
workers' privacy rights take
precedence over safety considerations, the same standard could ·
apply to other professions subjected to testing.
The court said the program ·
was flawed for a second reason
because blood and urine tests for
drugs, unlike blood-a)cohol tests,
do not measure tlle degree of
Impairment at the time or an
accident or rule violation.
Marijuana and other drug
residues can remain In the
system for weeks and thus· the
measure Is not a measure of
Intoxication at the time, the court

Fridly,

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mlntoa to rent space aboard a privately developed

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f
!.I'
i

�12, 1988.

ittua1ion•

. LAFF·A·DAY

Wanted

46

....

49

.

7 _pomt hnetype only uted. ·

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• sentinel ia not reapontible for •rors after first day · !Check
tor errors first day ad run t in paper) . Call before z.'oo p m

Card of ~ankl .

·

- cleattftad d11play. luslneu C1rd and legal notieea) ·
wo 1! • 11Q, IPIN!"!' in the Pt. Pleaunt R-eitter and the O.llipo 1•• 0 11ly Tr~bune. reaching over 18,000 home~. ·

SUNDAY PAPER

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'.,7'M.___
1--·-··
__.....,....
.--

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Wontld to do hOuoodooo1ing 1n

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t~::::c:r:f4~ ·"It's very .simple, we dori't
:··~
· · · · · have · any :r;noney.=·problems

77--R.IIr
,.~

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.. Wlldol'eilwolondltatal-ma
T•81: ,
booking. onc1

""*"'
-

PUBLIC NOTICE
· NOTICE io hereby .g iven
that on Sliturday, February
13, 19BB, at 10:00 a.m .. a
publiC ule will be hold at
106 Union Avenue, ·Pomeroy, Ohio. to sell tor :c ash
the following coll•teral:
19BO CJ7 JEEP .
JOM93AC709013
The Farmers Bank and

Saving Compiiny. Pomeroy
Ohio reaervealhe right to bid
at thi1 uJe, and to withdrew

the above collateral prior to
ule. Further; The Fermer•
S.nk-and S.vinga Company
re~rvn the riiht to reject
any or aH bide submitted.
, , Funher, the above collateral will be sold in the eon- ·
dition it is in . with no ex·
preseed or implied Warrentie• given.

12) 10. 11 , 12. 3tc

~~~!6~~~~ 24 · Longaville.

High Street. Box 156
WiU.eaville, Ohio 45896:
waa . appointed Administra:
trix of the estate of Janice s.
Card of Thanks

The family of
PAUL "Happy''
HAPTONSTALL
~ish to gratefully
g;va our thanks to
all our friends and
neighbors, the
Middleport ,
Presbyterian
Ghurch and Rev .
AI Hertson, to the
Staff of Veterans
Memoriel Ho1pital,
and to
Feeney - Bennatt
Post 128.
Thanks to the
Rawlings-Coats
Blower Funeral
Home for their kind
words and help,
and thanks to all
others we might
. have missed . May
God bless each and
avery .one of you.

,,

:I: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- GalliPolis. Ohio 45631
or at
.Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Mulberry Hgts., Pomeroy, Ohio

z

wea appointed Executor of
the eotole of Opal Randolph,
deceooed, late of Box 64
Roedavillo, Ohio 46n2. · ·
Robert E. Buck,
. Probllte Judge
Ler\o K. NnHir..d, Clerk
11
121 , 2 •. 19, 211, 3tc
Public Notice

Pearlene · Lambert. South

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

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
O'l.!obruary" 8, 1988, in
tho meigs County Probate
Cou!l, Cou No. 25749
BernardY. Fultz, P. 0. Bo~
723, POmeroy, Ohio 41719

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APP()INTMENT OF
,
FIDUCIARY
·
On February 8 , 198.8 , in
the Meigs County Probete
Court, Caae No . 26771.

Devices
Dependable Hearint Aid Sales &amp; Son•ir.•
c:J Hearing Evaluations For All Ages .

PUI!LIC NOTICE
The Clerk of Leta!l Township wll occapt oNied bids
on 1 1989 Dump Truck until
8:00 p.m . on March 7

Rt•. 124, Pomeror Ohio

AVTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto TrantMiuln
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

Help Wanted.

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E. M ..n

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Looking for a few good nurses to join
our dedicated staff who are
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If you feel you share this dedication and
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for an interview . WEW wage scale and
excellent benefit package .
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Box A, Main St.
Coolville, Ohio 45723
14-667-3156

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lot w/ dozer work already
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·bedroom home in good condrtion. Equipped krtchen,
washer and dryer included.
'fireplace, front sitting porch
HI baths. $18,500.
'
.NEW LISTING -Just out ol
town. 64'h acres of vacant
ground. Elec. available, barn
appmx. IO'x90' w/loft area.
Salisbury school district.
$52,000.
'
RUTLAND - ,Nice ranch
type home on • level lol 3
bedrooms, equipped kitchen,
close to schools. ~II in good
condrtion. $33,5QO. · ·

FULLTIME POSIT10N FOR REGISTERED
MEDICAl lAIOIATORY TECHNKIAN ON
ROTATING SHIFTS

MIDDLEPORT· ..., 3 ·bed,
room 2 story home.in· Mid·
dleport. Nice krtchen,_WBFP.
Much more. Only s1, ,500.

Requires independent worker, with
· capabilities in all areas of clinical
·
laboratory.
·
EXCELLENT FRINGE IENEFITS

SA ~I - Secluded in the
counlry. ~pprox . 76 acres
and a24'~14' cabin. Owners
want a sale at $29,900.

PltaM contact: 1 ·
Ce.celia G. lisle
V1t•ons Memorial Hospital
115 fut Ml111ariol Drln

PH • .992-2772

2·5-'81 I mo.

MEIGS 0
MACHI
New &amp; Used
.· SALES-SERVICE
SUPPLIES

Royal &amp; SCM lypewrilers
Royol &amp; MAX Cakulatoirs
Royal &amp; Max Ccntl Registers

HOMEIIELT

Lent lettoM. 01. 45743
Ph. (61•.,. a1~..J··:t•110

BISSELL
BUILDERS~
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;, GARAGES
"At ReosOIIGble Prices"

PH • .949·2801 .
or 949-2860
Night
SUNDAY CAllS

Day
NO

or

. KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makea

1/22/81/lfn

SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT .
6:30 P.M.
Chokt
12 Gayge Shotguns
Factory

R•-acquaint yourself
with the stylists Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Grace, Donna, Angelo
and Kay at

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd Ave•
Middleport, Ohio

992-2725

SKATE-A-WAY
CHESTER, DH.

Get . ,your
plcturee · for your ..,noune4t-

Attention

7:30·10:00

985-3929
or 985-99~'6

II 304-4Z0·8jlf 8

F,.. firewood f~thecutting of •

tree In O.Hipolla. C•l 114.-441-

7325.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING .
&amp; HEATING

.

441-2957,

992-6,282
319 So. 2nd Ave~
Middleport, Ohio

,Ilia_,.

f-•·Alrtiody -onad. 4 wloo.
old. Coli 114-182-7020.
8

1-28-'88-tfn .

Loat and Found

FOUND: lmoll ~. mboad

loraad, · fwmolo do;;. WoM'Ing
. brown collar. At. 110 - ·

a chlkiNn In h . Found In ttettttt.
~~kporldnglot, ~1111•·812-

Loot: f-lo IIMgla In I PolntoFI•iwooda .,... Lost 8und.Y

Con 114-112·1810.

8

- Concret• work
- Plumbing 1nd electrical

can
core

and re· .and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
We

repair Gas Tanks. •

PAT HILL r.ORD
992-2198' .·

locust, Oak, Cherry

$3500

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
Bill

~LRI-~

• 6)1.'11117.117

Public Sale
8r Auction

!Free E1timateo)

WM•m•t•'• Auction S.rvloe_, • ..,., 11 vour conwm.no.
lind lautlana. Mllltln Wed•
Auctlonw· 114-241-

rnr.

4- 1~· '8\i,fc

Wanted To Buy

Wapeyouli '"' 1-modol-

-Jim
- ..
Mlnll,Chev.·Oidtlnc,
Johnoon
.,111oen.
.......
n .

RACINE
GUN CLUB
'

iF.........';.T"~
_r_....
..~

. SAUS &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVW, OliO
. 614·662-3121 .

,.,.. .
'

r,

lng Potftl0ri7,Scenic Hila Nura~ 1 · .
lng C.nter often compRftift ' ·
tuttion ,.lmburwnMnt, :
paid. hoi~IIYI. nAtion. ft•lble ·.,.
.Checlullng. retirement pl•n.
health lneul'llnce wltl) d"-'1 card( ~
~1. and vlllon •nd It\~ •

. . .
11.._,.,

with

,

··
- !OJ - - - ·will
will -Hll ...
123.-.
121.-. Cal1,14-44t-718f,
co-m~.. ...~ :iaR.
1 ·both. OW1IY fumlohod. Lot
10x120. a:o.ta'n I blockl fuim

- •··2 _ . _ bov·
A - t21,00Q. Call ..anlnai.

f

111311uokrid•ir Ail.; Clolllpollo"~·

(1131117·-·

"

t.. ••

.AN'S: E•m •21 .000 plul. With .
over 20
day~ off 1n ~·r:·
Advl·care l•un~nce peid. Tul:1 ~ ·
tlon reimbursement lnd meny' · ·
other · Mnwlttl. . . pllrt :..:~~·

"

,.w

,

~

f

A,.., -·887·8000 ffxt. A: '
9801 for ournnt Federalllat. ~~

.44

Apartmsilt
for Rant

·2342.

=·---'Y
dodo.. Rogaroo:y,_lnc.
APII, ' Cal 304-8'11- 7718 or
175·111)4,

-TV.

PIIIC! R!DUCID: 1817 IOH1·
n,IJrook I 4al0. 2 IR, 1 l'l - ·
utility., 112,-. FRENCH
CI1V MOIILI HOMII· Cal.
81"-448-n\lo.

.-w Wll• nt YP on 4 lotJ In
c.u· &amp;14·441- ·
.

-IL-·

'1113 Scloultz. 14a70 on · ·1.1
• - - Zl ft,x 30 fi..
C.II&amp;14·74Z·2177.
·~ .,~

""

.

'

1882 Mon-. 14a70, 3 bod""""· 2 fuH ·bothl, _ , tiulkl-

lng. .-tn1 olr. · polclo ond
M!!nli9.. wlnyl unci~.

. . . . . . . . . . . . lot ... Mloidieport, Call 114-892-1131 -

1:00.

.

.

.

Now 1181 Counfrv VIII,,
'14!172. ol 181 ,. on
rkwf•unt tot.

-·p.oil.

114-H2~3341

lltlrtNI Dad. 12Ji...

. -.

puppl...

Now - . . Z Br:, aqu;pp.j
ldtahwo, low ortlltlai. • - locotlon. No - · Dop. . . . ..

......... COli et 4-441-1210.

Court 11.- 2 Badooom. z
Htha, kitchen turidlhed, w/W
carpot.tll21.anio. pluioutH-.
No patio, doiooOII • ref,
2ZI Plnt A--- I Badruom,
kitohen fumllllwd. river vieW.
1171o rno. ptuo utilltlaa, .Siolalo
or Maple. a.,- • Nf.. lilo
ptti, CaR 114-448·4821.
.

. .
-· -· • d-.

114-44t·47h.

Call
.,

~arm• for Sale

a •· t'an, Third a 01ve.

..,._
_Nloatlon In oily, oil utllld• fumlohad.
Muot hovo Nf. • d111. CaH
11"-448-4118.

30 ·..,. f.,.: MOody ~-IL
Nl• Rio Gronk Pond. blrno.
aod hom.. Call 11-.241·

l 112,

.

114-44t•l111.

10-t-tf

--with

ud l•undry room wtth w.lher·
dryar hookup. AM oiOCirlo. eau

11"-441-1832,

.... Nfrltl-. 182·18111;
Nlc!o 2 b d coin

-

=

J

'"WANTED"' lt81PJ7 'r'l ...... '"

··••-lullt

die ... WGfftlft, Mto ...... ,rJJ
1

=
.
.
----~
_.,
....
.:
..
=· .... ......

-WooidhOVOI-roornanol~u
· to ... oldorlv """'- 'i• •

PH. 949·2860
or 949·1801

\i'.:=~ .

~,
.If -dohtla"

' NO SIINOAY CAliS

· you

' .3-11-tln
·'
{

.

Jhil~
:.Denettllf"'
llotnoodo-.
11•
2

.'
\

up. Cs _"I ae mlorowew ttandl

•31.tl.up.
,
.
eon. Jn Hd maet th•

r.frl..r•tort·white,

U.W

67

'

1171.

oak and Dine end birch · $16.96
to t18.tleach.

·

Call 114-211·1211 .

arodoo-1169.15.

·

SWIIIiiMING PODUI · J999
loll """r 1187 Model
, _, H1111h ,11xZ4 ft. oreo, 4 It, diap. lncludN - -• "'""'"'v. lnotollo·
tlon • . llnandna .-lioblo. Col
24 hro. :.I·IOo-341-0141,

built

8077.

1-3-Chln• 1nd mirbll rOund and
owl vanity bowie- whll• and

-=

bNf w.ry four montba.

Cluartar·t181, flm ..... o"-rn .20 alii. Cut • wroPIIOIL Coli
304-137-2100,

fl-. Plok-up - · 121 •
- · You haul. Call 11 4-448·

. . .,..Iron_
--lor-·

81 .Farm Equipment

·

·

.1981 HondeAccordLXI . 6 ipd ..

76 · Auto

Parts
&amp; Accaaaorie•

~C.

aun roof, 30,000 mlln.
UO,IOO. CoD 11"-441·2126.
.~

.d.

'

U1td • rHulh tr~~nsmlulona. All "'
Internally lnapected • xu.rn-:

- · Call 114-44..091 , Wo
buy junk tranMNuiona.

1973 Z 28 C.m~ro. Many
axtraa. C.ll 814~ 441 ·.70n.

1911 Malibu SW, 71.0oo mlln.
G,.ll ohopo. 12900, Call 81•·
·48-4430.

..•

77 · Auto Repair

1981 t.V.u., RS . Clean 1neide
.• out. 20,000 n'lll81, auto.• PS.
PI, AC, AM·FM-CaA, tilt. 2.0
fUiillnjected angln•. t5800. C. II

·Jim'• ImpOrt Aula SeMee.
Ripley, Welt Virginia. SpecializIng' '" Hond1 JN'rtl end Mnrlce

114-388·1240, .

~nee 1878. Phona 1304) 3725867. Nine to five ,

1972 Mollbu Chavy, 350, auto,

Serv1c1:s

198~

·CJMvv

81

C.pric •. 2 door,
whh, bulh in g•uu•·
17.000 actual mil. .. C.l 614Mrtom~a

Home
Improvement•

',:

CADS&amp; • SONS '
U.S. 31 W..C, ·J ecbon. Ohto.

tuba·

~14- 211- MII .

color

MeallY Ferguaon, New Holl•nd.
Bulh Hog Salea • Service. Over
40 u1ed tractors to chooH from
• Complete line Of new • u'llld
equipment. Lllrgelt Hlection In

....
18·1 pc. fiberglell tub • thow,,. t11i9.95 each, · white
or

S.E, Dhlo.

eolor.

136 MF diiHI tl'llctor, sharp,
with 2 row MF plantar. t3710.
990 O.vJd Brown trector. nice.
with new 15ft. buah.hoa. 133&amp;0.
Owner wtl fln•nce. Call 814·

19·Brio,h t •nd tntique brass and
chrome vantty end tub
1:
ahow•r faualt . Save· &amp;0%.

ZO·Z got buckot · off white

taxtui'ed wall.,.lnt- e4.95.

19.95.

. '

. ..

ntg.

ze ..en2.

21-&amp; Dll. llumlnum fiber«t roof

coodng-t20,96,

.

IOil
WAlT """""
Colll14-44&amp;'3011:

·

130 Ca• dl-1 't.rector. Wid•
ftont whh 3 bottom plowa.
lrenapol"' dlac. &amp; I fl . bulh hog.

·

white briCk .&amp;· IQ. tt.

13710. Caiii14-Z81-15ZZ.

3600 Ford tractor with NH baler,
rake. lata mod1l NH moWinft
madllne. •1110. Owner wl

"'

24-Wood, eluinlnwm Md vinyl
clad windowt. (Bows), (hYal,
(Ce••m•nt) . (~oublehung) .
Stve·et whoiiUie •nd below.
26·~ Tempered thermal pilne.

fl"ance. C.lll14-281-1122.
I HP 1'roy-bllt tiller. PNctlcalty
now . t700. Call &amp;14-381 -

Olooo ponalo, (32x78-129.81),
(34x71 · 131 , 001,(4 7x71••5 .00) . Full CIIH lot•t6.00

8819.

i121.00.

27· 72.. Walnut iiUrter

1·81"-237-0488, dill'

Aoldng

price

985-~&amp;5,

coll.a
01'

nluht ..

==-:.=;____ ,
r I 8
'Waterproofin'g.,

&lt;A 0 0 I

Rune good. MI_Y to melntain.

11110. Cal 114·

I I I

m en t

SW~EPER •nd HWing m•china ~
tel)llr; perti!J. and auppll•. Pldc ~

Red Hot bargains! D~ deel1t1'
Cart, bolte, plln•• repo'd. Surplu•. Your Anta. Buyer• Guide.

up •nd ·deliVery, DIYII V•cuum "
Cl.. nar, ORI half mill Up :
Oeor~• Creek "Ad. Call au.. ..

111806:887-8000 Ext. S-8BOI.

448-0294.

.

'

euto, front wheel drtve. 43;000
origin.. mll81. $800. Call e1-.

F • F C•rpentry. Carpentry •nd
plumbing work. At~aon•ble

1980 Dodge Horlron. Auto. AC.
front ~ drive. Great shape.

""""' Call81··388;8713,
•
Concrltl Septic Tar'!lu- 1000 ~
gel., 1&amp;00 gel. •nd Jet Allntlon w

1984 Ptymouth Horizon. ~2 . 2
qln~. 6 !lplld. Uke ftew l_.de

ohcp. ADN EVANS ENTER· •
PIIISES. Jocbcn, Ohio. 114· "
,
2BI-1930.

9fZ-1148.

syatem. Factory tnlnld repair •

•aoo. Ca!ll14·992-5141.

and out. Phono 81 "-182· 3719.

RON'S T•leviaion Sarvlca . "'

Hou• cell1 on .RCA, Qu•ur, r•
GE. &amp;peciellng In Zenith . Clll .
304-676·2398 or 814-441· 1
2414. '
•

1987 C.m110. T·top. auto,
AM·FM 9 - · bvrgancly co·

lor. Cell 814-992·11313 or 614-

992-Z2U.

•

1981 Mercury Lynx, 4 door

Jrlfnmln~. ·atump :
removal . Call 304-171-1331 .

7403,

Ro..ry or .cable toot drMIIng,
Most walla completed tame dey
Pump hi• •nd service. 304~

Fetty TrH

w.gon, 4 1peed, runs good.
$1100. Cill S8ndy'a,l14·992·

· 1971 Chwy ChiVItte. • door

8911-3102

autom•tic. tS&amp;O. Call Sendy'e
814-812-7403.
. '

'

.

'

~~=-~--~-----St.rka Trea end Liwn S.Mce, ~

lewn c~. l•ndsceplng, .rump
removtl. 304-171 -2142 or _,

1980 PoniiiC Sunblrd. Auto.
runa good, 84.000 miles. 1800.

Coli s - · · &amp;14-992-7403.

871· 2803.

19711mPIIII. 4 doOr. runsaood.

Tren trimming and removal •.
odd j~bl, frM 81tiniltH 30.:
&amp;71- ~312 .
'

Grend Prix, Qobd Interior.
runt toad. P8, Pl. •lr, Power

"

Plumbing

82

wlndcwo. UIO.OO. 304·171·

kitchen ~

&amp; Heating

111&amp; evenings.

--~-- ·
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
•'

1884 C!vvoior T - • Country

1198.811
.
H-Z gal. poll K·Lux white

Ste~n W~gen,

.. ext•u. exc

cond, 304·882-2018.

morter- e4.81.
29-Pine Louwrecl interior thut.,.. Below Who....,. prig ...
~·

Free 111lrhMe1. Call

1981 Galt. Dl..tl. lt8nd.-d. 4

door. folding apllt rear M•ta.

•7e

~for

Including '(2-18"well), · (1 ·
72"b..el, (1·72" pc. top)·

30· 1

Uncondhion .. .lffetlm• gu.r•n-•
tH. Locel..referencet fumithacl.

1200.00, 304-175-4823.

. 1-.
Ocotgon thermeiiMded

ala.. wlndow•tllS9.91,,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1980 Ch... Cltotlon. ·z door.

62 Wanted to "uy

Cot' . Fourth •nd Pine

'71 Cutis• Olde. autorMttc.

GoiU-. Ohio
Phone 814-441-3888 or 81 ..

.t3ZI,OO, Caiii14-448-Z171.

lemOn cotor
comrnoc:lil!,......-t219.81, now
Pille

Now buying shell com or 111
oom. C.lltarlatutquotee, River

City Fonn Su-. II .a-44&amp;·
2181.
\

WM1 to buy, YellOw i.ocutt
pootod, ooH 3114'175-2130.

83

' end wood-n.oo
for ..... . Pl,.tlcpr.po.

.'

SIIIIIJIII'~:

,., IIU~~sliit:k

color-119.9&amp;.
14-Color commodes~ J48 . 95, ·

22-~·Lux

1f79 City trlaxla olurnlnum
dump INIIor. 3 2 - box, GOOd
cond. ean 114c448·1278.

· I

I ,1r111

.

'

-

rt..

Mutical
lnlltruments

1Z·White 48 " x2.2 " .bath · room .
wnltlea with merble top
IB)

,18,• •·•8.5.- 8. -•12.13.14;
16,
mll• .out At. 218 .

.

441-0S477

1911 Ch..,... - PS, auto. traM .•

Auna good. ~llli04-171-3H8,
1971 XR 7-Mercury CougM.

Low-" -akopt, hell.
concl. 11800. Call 304-875·

.'
84,

·

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

1228,

. Livalltock

n.oo

PENN'S WAREHOUSE
Woloton, Ololo
114-314-JMI .

I

86
Aa#Miod - H - . April
lll,t.-Mo... flllliymorklnga. tiiO. CaHI14-2II•IIZZ.

for Saki ·

197&amp; 26 HP .Evlmude bolt
motm to tntde .,.. .• 12 or 14ft. '
Y·Bottom 1lumlnum bo.t· •
trailer. Cllll1-i--:388·9718.

2 door. Sedan. C.ll after 4

11·1oth ..Om ponoling, •lued
ttle.on d •mooth ponem- •' 8 ·96 '•110.00.
lnt.,..tional
plltCII drum 1 trt
"·II530.87"-41"2.
to t12.86
~ •
•

ea:=;'•oUud' Tiro Shop
. , Over.

Colll14·44t-107?.

·

1878 Pontiac G,.ndprix . 2 dr.. ·
auto . e9&amp;0.. C.III14·et48-18115

18000. Call 814-7•2-3080.

448-02110.

- • - • • -. Cortoln
·• ....,_ fumlturo. 951 Second.'
A.... Galllpollo.· 114-441 · ' IO·'hx4x8 All ~~d paneling

. . . . .UNlit ..........

32 Molblti Homes

Hr. Fora• owtbo•rd motOr. UMd
1 ~ aum~ . Excel. cond ..

Oult.r Utuons/1 Individual In- · ----~---atruction. Brunicardl'a , Mu.lc.
1987 Olds. Cutllti Supreme.
eu.-441·0187 or call Jeff Call .304-773-51115 or ·773Wemtl.y Instructor. 114-4418911 .

•1-

...,.. IUpjna T - . luy
f - ........ CaM '3 12-23&lt;1·
1147.
.
.
'

•

1988 Boylln• Copri, IB it.. 128

1977 C.m~ro (red!, 98,000
n'Jiln, auto .• V-8. n 200. Call

1977 Bulcl&lt; Rogal. Body-good
oh•r:· Motor nlldl . r..,.aring .
Col otter&amp; PM-114' 441-4289.

n8W

a-

Boata and
Motora for Sale

PM-eu ..we-77&amp;7.

FIGUIII IHAPING TAILES
O;ianyoul_...,,._
With
... ·ortvlnll .,._ c -

~--·

Cell todoyl . 1·111·41. . . .
!foii·Rafunclolollil -~ 1 1214 !
24.....
'"
1-.P::A:::II::T:-:,n::M:-::-EJ':"O~I~I-I_J_Oin
__1'!ti_,':,
N - Guoni.ID4-I'II· v,
or 1-IOo-IMI·IItl.

2082;

LM'!P""""-f"""ll71.
up. - 'GO~ aultea t418.81 •

11"-M2.·2ZI1,W-114- 8811.
.
HI·IIOI.
.
Rofrliiarotor, Eorly 1-ll..!} OChlft I bW&amp;II, Fur~· · ~.-· fold-up- bed,
- onc1 ~ t2oo,,
t2H. ~ - · Ut111t1o0 tur- r111ttr111..CIIIIt4-._, ~.12'24.
nlohod. Colll14-111·1724.
''
.
8011.
aln.hltlh.
Air CIOmpill_,, 2 ... 2G_.....
Collatw• PM .f14-44t·7717 .

a - "t

mlllf-.-·

-In Mlddle-

polt, till ... : Dopoal\
ond- ,.,. • .,. ...,;rod. Ooy

and rock pie- coli lt4-91~";· ·
, .•
4238.
. . .
-::-:-:~-.,.,-----=-~-·'•
AVON • All IIMI. CaP Marilyn "
w- 304-112-2141.
-

~oy~ano~.-.n•ror-•'

gentle. e&amp;o . Call 61 • ·148-

J • 8 fURNITURE
(f~
- · · FumltuNI
·· 14f1EutornAvo.

.-...~ . Groin
Choo• ' - a d,
lad. l'lo drugo. w.....a..

HUD ,..preved. 2211 Mt. VII'~ Avo.. Pt. 1!1-M. 11"-

'

,.;;

P-2 ..,. 200
of Main
Point lt.,
- "'1M'· ··•
Aoglotar,
... W, V•; 21110. .
:N
-

oppllconcn. Coli l14•441·
7172. Hour• 8 ~ 1 . ·
,.,

1-·- .

a..,wo;o Apart...-r 1 BR.

if0110111~~~~c~ency, -

1" ' .
J• tl

orovor.34hro~.-- ,

New •nd wMI fumltun ·· end

oale, ~871·2130.
,
~umllhldapabnMit.AHutilttl• ~~i=iii::.=~~;=::::;:::
ra~:.~ultaonly.~ne1 4 -44t- 6'4 Miac. Mllfchandiaa
~um\lhod

.

PUrebred m•le Whlta 'Germ1n
Shepherd. 3 YIIU old. Very

New lleatrio Hotpolnt dryer for

lI.

''

· :,..

flllflt, •

VollayFiRnlture

1:00. ~171·1410.

1

F-ol, St~. end civil ..,;....•4l
jobo 119,84C to;tii,II1·Yelr '~
. now hiring. C.ll JabUn•1~111~;
•58·351 1 Ext. FIIZZ flo!' Info~ 1
oount

814-187-8817.

.

1:00-1:00 ·Sund•v• 12 :00-

ZI&gt;OII•"'"""""""'entonUncoln
Hll, PornaiD¥. COU 114-992·
liD or 114-182-:Mte.

Nurtlngand Rlhobllltotlon Can·"
.... 114-992-eeoe. E.o.E.
,:;;·

Al\v- &gt;lr•MIWIN In ~

AKC llllltt pup. Tri-color hu

bean ~rmed . AI . stud. · AKC
a.auti: 1nd AKC Shattl•. CeU

' PICKENS USED FURNITURI
llada. •-·· , . - .
_,.,..,
...-. chain. dlnnottl, mila.
Hatf mDI out Jericho Rold,

tdtchin full¥ ,

.

1983 D!)Ciel Colt. 2 dr., dull
lhlftar. 79,000 mil•. tiiiO.
Coii114-378·Z721.

n

Nloa 1 lA. opt. ..., HMC.

75

1174.

1&amp;%.

AN naadod for nulling rohobH~~

lot to handle blUing,

'.

1972 Ch.... .~ton truck. 4
Good cond. C•ll 814-251 ~

atAunFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAICEI AT JACK·
ION 117ATII, Ill Joobon
Pika frooil 1113 1 rno. 1'/olk tO
-a•e.E.O.H.
ond - -·
. · . 114-448'

·- Ue
-COnd,
. ~1.000
btu eir
oond,
30417"7277 or 871-1131 ,

33

Call 814·&lt;14$·3844

•h•r 7PM.

2 IR. opt, a- • l'llrifl.
fumlohod. No• Go Mort. Col
114-441-7021,

Nlea 2 BA, 4 'h· mlloo from
~lllpolla, .......
- 1215omo.
·fumNo'Col 11•·448-8038.
·

.

or448-120S4.

Orttgonwynd C.Uery Kannel :
CFA Himlli:Y.n. hrll•n and
Sl•m~~~ kittlln.. AKC Chow

J

utlan unit. , Re;qulrM cering
lnd~ctuel who'• nunlng pnc- ~
tl... lo v•rad toward~1 ,
raid- to th• home environ- 1'
ment •• much •• ~bla ~·;
Corateet Nancy VlnMete f'C::
D.O.N. Am•rla•r• Pomero~+q

ot fumi- eppolntmentl, petlent • •
............. Atoo_ • . ~illn. l•pJrllnGI r::lfwrecl, but
ooeltte~Wa.~· aw.ln'a Pumftu,.
not ntoiiU,.,. m nlmum wae•
Compteae hoi 11 I Dl.

I

114-441-1115-Doy, 441-1244
aft" &amp; PM. .
.

oppl, !Urnlohad, Wllli•· D""'

Flrwwood•Lorva piCk-up load. · ..... 11 .60. .
23-Eproxy coated at.l clolll't
131 dallvorad. All hordwood, and
door lhelvlng. Save
to
Collll~·441-1.37 .

c.-...

'

Pats for Sale

'
21A.-. ·I-.Idicllon-

1·114-881,7311.

=:---:-,..---.-:...__:_:=-: ~

band tog.eMr . pUyhl

Motorcycles ·

•

:..t1o.

f.,

EaceUHt wag~~~ 'fci;r .,.,. tlma··~
~aHmllly wark; electronlos/ .:
creftt. Olherw. Into 1·104-141} .'
0011 ex~ 3o2e. opon 1
"~.

·

..,

rent, 304~876·7421 :

for .

1883 Chwy. Ci~tk»n. Am
auta. tnna., PS, PI , 11.000
mba. t1110. CanbeiHf'IUthe
Clolllpolilo Dolly TribunO or tor
more informltion c•ll814-441·

Big 3 BA.
homaa
on
your lo~ 111,111 ,orod up. Co~

"

114-441~ 1

Gov•rnm•nt Job1. t1t.OU-1 ~
t58,230ye•r. NowHirina. Your ~

2411r.

trailer~

102".'

,.----.:___..._:.;...,......:•

7112, EDE.

U Haul truab and

Z bedroom moblll horH In
~. Qhlo, Ral....,..
end; lun~ diPolh: required.
304·182-3 17 or 304-7?3-

L.dv 'w .m.cl to .V.In ~ ll
wld&lt;&gt;w o1x dayo o Voiaalo. Ught i

~I p h y o l - - rocapt~on.;·

' 'Free E1tlmt1tea" '·

\.

371-2752. ''
2' 111. - . .

oQPOf'tunity for edvancwnent:
Send raume or eppty In peqo ' '

li04-171·14ZI. '

BISSELL
SiDING CO.

'

PRICE REDUCED: 1817
14x7Z·Fontoay II· DLX.. loth.
VCR . A - •2000.
FIIENCH CITY MOilLE
HOME8· Colll14-448·11140.

tzo.ooo. .

1

C.rt1 Canter. C•ll

74

.bellvorad. Coli 51 4· 74Z-Z411.

FRENCH CITY BAbKERAOE·
~1111"·441-1340. .
. '

Muat 111.
lloOII lnu........ .praptrty. Call 114-

· waa•.

Ohio :41131.

1~71 Kant .- 1 Ox~. GOOd
coqdltlon. Priced . to tell.

8'11&gt;-Tornnlum ~- -11¥o
,.,...., J.DG•ed ........ I mo.
frOmRioG..-. Countyw-.

8c- Hill ~1

Avon 1U ...... 1111rley.

•VIN¥t SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

- -

=r. ......

.HHI ,....P o•ntnl a&amp;. Outdoor
Call Sl4-....

1ldllt to oversee nurllnQ dec-rt· '
m.,t of , • 100 bed INF/ICi:' ;:
f~eiUty. BecMIOr . degrte wtth ~
o_,• or·mare ·v e•n of exp4rlena .
dlllred. Exa ..a.nt •lary &amp; t.

EARN EltCEWNT IIONIY In''~

BOGGS

=

fnpl- - - · - of

. , - - - - - . : : . : _ : . : : __ _ • I

1:00 P.M.
UDNI, OHIO

Middlllport.'Ohio '
1 · 13-tfc

·

..

·

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

CIR •• fll jJI-fvH~-.t.l
mi. oo. of O.llloolll. tz8,100.

. QIRECTOR ,Of ~~~~~
0~
-lng AN "'!if' ·
mon: . '
og....-. laod-l;i, • nurolnli,,

highly oldllad ..... ot Pin

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Roofing •nd guner work

992-6215 or 99'2-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Home• fQr Sale

31R,1¥o_,_DII.-

II

'

for' ule. •35. lllrgt
load. All · hardWood,

•••· Raclln•n

P,uppleo to
Port P~
•nd Plrt lttepM~. Very nice houMWOrtt. Slllary. Cell 814-t ..
.
•• '
cotoring. Five ....... ·enct one . 441-1023..

Colll14·448· 7382.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

31

,.,.

lllftt packttge. Slf'd ,...mill or

1173-' 1Z..R flllll-. I 1ft ..
ala
f u - - •I lchehM
llr.
\Wiher-ctryar,
.
.
p l - ·dlnabo .... omdarplnnlng. • perch•. C.H
et4-a?-Oia3 ,
•

'

8ZI1hlrd A'vo .. Golllpollo, Oh;,i ; .

Looking 'I&gt;' chollonglng, - -

.

2 li• month Did t•bby ftmale
ldttona ond one bloclo ond gold
tomolo k~ . Call eu.a.:J.
1441,

985-4141

work ·

'

c•11 Dovo-114-441-1811.1:00-448-12....

..

----.--:

1184 14x?&lt;r lhuiU troilor. 3
bedroom. 814-HI-3001.
2 - · E -...
condhlon.
'

•I•
dutt... s-.c~ rwumtlto: ao. ct. ~

apply In poraon

1 m~le Bird oOg. 1 ye~~r old.
White with bl... opo1a to _,t
homo. Call 114·448·2917.

._..,...........
CARPENTER
SERVICE

· .,

'

•RDDFING
REMODELING •
REPAiRS '
SEPTIC SYSTEMS lo
BACK HOE WORK

.YOUNG'S

r.:

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
· · ·SERVICE JOBS.

To give •w•v.to eld;.ty pereon or Nunlng C.n..rwl31 Buallrklg•. :
couple for 1 iood hom•• very . l!d., OOIIIpolla, Olilo 48131.
. · ., •.
emell York Terrier. femele.
ATTENTION AN'i
~
opode&lt;l, Z yro. old. Coli 81•·

I

. 11·3-tfn

• discount. Caiii1"-0S4&amp;-33111&lt;'-

4~131.

4

·Sarvicee·

Fumllurw Mffnllhlng 1nd ..,.lr,
work end rMMnlble
-7881, 1......- . 304-8711.

131c/oO.IIfpOIIaO.HyTribune r.

To• down 3Z..Z4 old born for
hombor. Coli 114·441·30113.

·i -5-'88 I mo.'

FIREWOOD

N- Hllnil, IIUJi; Hog
F- fquiJIIIIMI
llaaler
.

I

colle&lt;;t,

to Loan

~llty

· s· aUAYOn . .GetyourownAvonat~
·
• ''

·

.

18t7 H.... . Plrk • 1Z..IO. Z
lA.. 1 INIIII, 27lt10 on

Cantal Flj&gt;rldo.
1471,

--=-----------..,'

MARINES: Wo'ra looldng for 1
few good tnll'l . For more Information. ull8eraeant Mike AbaU

.

A CAIH LOAN TO 110,0001
NO CREOIT OR EMPLOYMENT
NIIDID fOR NEW PliO·
Gil AMI (71 31 182·1401; 24
HOURI.
.

Help Wanted

EnthUtlmic • outgo!ng:pe,..,Q
to aullt wHh marketing n 1
projects end other Office '

1

Reference.

22 Money

·'

your plctulft.lt4·1•8·3DIO or
114-948-2803,

MliCUM I
CONTIACTING
CHUTER, OHIO
1
::~g:E~~~~~fT~~

-.!e_the,_.·

23 , PrQfa11lon11

Now Hiring. Vourarea. t13.110
to •n.480. lmmechte OpenI~•· Calll ·3 t.l- 733·1013 Exto,
f •. 71B.
.
.
'

.rMnU Hrfy. C.l now •nd g.t

Z. v.e•rs old. ll)flde. Good Wlth

. Call for Birthday;
Church. Priva1a
Parties Mon., · Tues.,
Thurs., .Sat. &amp; Sun.

•HPME BUILDING

llniort.

ldda. Caiii14-Ziii-IZII.

G..IUL 1-CTOIS

WALK-INS WElCOME

Phonnocy.
Backy Skin_ Ia rioaily only 39ll.

~· O.nnan Shepherd·ml11..

OPEN
WED.-FRI .·SAT.

throuilll the mall u!llll you h -

Sl~f 'JICt"·;

Announcements • ,.
\
'

Cbntrol · your Wol;jm - Toke
"New Sh- Dlot •Plan" ond
E-Vep ·Weter Pilla . Fru't h

9

ftn~E,el,.,lf

..

3

•Washers •Dryers
·•Ranges !'freezers
•Refrigerators
"Wm lur or Haul Away"

- · ond NOT to Hnd monay

f111ploynll~111

Feundr pondonl with plctu,.. of

,Aufhoil... !ehn ....i.

I

A11111111 Ill: I! 1111!111 s

JAMES IEESEE
PH.

'"'

,,

FIE£ ESTIMATES

10-8-tfc

NEW LISTING - Approx. 4
acres of wooded vacant land
near Pageville. Elettric avail·
able. $3,000.
·

REWARD

or IOI'S ElECTRONICS
446·6939 or 446-7390 .

•lnaulation
•Storm Doore
•Storm Windowa
•Aepl.aement Wlndowt
•N- Roofing

. DEAD OR ALIVE

992-3410

re~rve the right to aC~pt or

Announcements

CALl AMY &lt;ARTER

WANTED

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL . 1.
JUST CAll!

LIMESTONE
. wdl
1989.~at opened
which time
It oil
regular
bid~ t~9~a~.m~.
a~nd~~4~:3~0~,~m~-~~ GRAVEL • SAND
meo~ong. Spaclficlotioria con
Real
TOP SOIL ·
be pocked up It the clerk's
home a1 23238 Hill Road
FILL DIRT
Racine, Ohio. The trutteei

3

VINYL &amp;
. AlUMINUM SIDING

' '

Bualna11
Opportunity

....--.with--

WANT ADS ··' ::
ARE JUMPING ~; ~
WITH .BARGAINS ..

11

WANTED- LP.N.
VERY UMITED HOURS
App!y in !*SOn at Midi·
col . Plaza; .203 Jackson
pL.
i,.., Gallipalis, betw"n

reJect •II bida. ·
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
LETART TOWNSHIP
Harry ·Hill, Wolter Rouoh
Do.n Hill, Joyce White, cle..;
(2) 12. 19, 28, 3tc
.
.

1 - MOWS to VMS TAP£
lot· ·. , CGnvorl those oW
Home MoYies- onr to easy
VMS. '
·

BLOWN
INSUUnON

1188 Chwy4x4 'hton. Smith•
W-n 3&amp;7, 814 boriall nlcloOI
pletod, 8 MM VCR I com••·
lcfo. ohalr, lamps, • 1 -. Call
304-871t·ll7..
'
·•·.

,, ,

for Sell

tu-..

I NOncE' I .
' . THE :OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· •
lNG CO. - d l that YGtl

~

. Roger Hysell ·
Gar-age ·

ttee .Bronco 11. v-e. Ac,:
AM-FM ·Caoo, Call 304-171-.•
&amp;&amp;2•.

' . - .

Con lf4-44t-HII o11ar I PM.

21

1
Ro~E.Buck,
Probate Judge r:::::::::::::::::::r:::::::::::::::::::-r-----------~------~--------~----~-=~=-~==--------------~------------~--~ :

Lena K. Neaaelroad, Clerk
(2) 12. 19, 28, 3tc

money.'"

rflom, CA. luil oil
10xiD front IWI)Ing, -

•'tc

8 USI•.ness .s
.
~ ..
· ervtces

Kinnison, deceased, late of

1

lahoot HouN

f II 1.1111 I II
\

••

because we don't. have any

locatad

-

.... --"i'J.T7~ ~

Public Notice

'83 Ford wn. 7e CUil•u8tdon
.
.Wogon, 304-4118-1&amp;30
.
'

0

~Tjhi~~~~~=-[i~iii~~~~~~
C'..:"r' 1n my ~oo- Pirklr 1·3;2
Mobile Homea
for Rant
. ,,

I Ill' 1111 I ': I

.•
Public Noti'ce

'

Fl rew~

room..,._

-.

'.

'11---1-iorllll

' DAY BEFORE PU8LICAnoN
- II rOO. A.M. SATURDAY
·
- 2r00 P.M. MONDAY
- 2r00 P.M. TUESDAY
- 2r00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2r00 P.M. tHURSDAY
- 2r00 P.M. FRIDAY •

~92·1310.

D

.,...,. for
Nit. In ..,.ry gOOd condition. C.H

pl....

. ~

1881 C - Ford Yon.
11000. owr o&gt;av·oH. Cal 11"-

a.....o . _co"'ponent

SWAIN
AbUCnON • FURNITURE 12
1M Itt, Oallpollo.
NIW- I po. V"'"P' 1388.
Uvlng
t199·"18.
lunk _ _ _
lngo1111
Full . . m.tt:Ma • tound8tlo~

'

247-4282.

81"-892-7758,

.

:

Chevy ConWrlion v ... 1
Good condition. 1971. 11"-

ll"-892-5293 after 1;00 p.m.

Claui,fied pages cove~ the
following telephone exchange• ...
Mill• c.Uncv
: ...c~'r.""
M - co., Vlv
14
roo 4ol1
-Codol14
~Codo304

c~t

"FRIDAY PAPER

~

.

61 Houea!'lold Goods

· ·

• A clauifltld a~ertil;8m•~'t placed in The Daily Sentinel (P·

COPY DEADLINEMONDAY PAPER
·TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

.

.

'

72-TNolii-71-Y-·-··

H; ppy Ada
Y•d Sel•

In Memor•am

.

" . 0" . . . _ . , ....

. .

~ fJI78

• - I PM.

Ho1P't1l bed •nd holpit.al klung•
chair whh · feeding t f'lly. Ukt
naw. c.ll 814-992-1431 or

·-·.::.=.-

. .
,.._.r.tor.,n~l~rune. luokenup•pW•e.ChM"Qiiiii

·

dty after publie~~tion: to make cof~tian.
• ~dt that must be paid in advanct are:·

..,".........

1 '110N'!H

• Re~ive S.50 ditcounHor ~dt. PIIid in advancil
.
. • free Mia - Give1w1y and FOund ads und• 16 ~~rdt will be
c;un 3 d~a at no ch1rge.
·
·
: Pri~ of ~d tor a1 ctpit~ l I.Uers it doUbte price of ed cost

11 fl. Aluminum boetband. c.n

11 4-448-324~

For Lea18

appro•.

:n---··
u_,_..,_.
:::r::-......

••

wtn lngJ,

For Rent.;. LHM: W.;_
•
llxet fi. Electric~ water •
fllttvom: 24'!2 ...,:,.,.,.. Aw.;
~or lmaiiBual-o; 11xa·
UvinD room 1011. 2 wtvetcheira
ft, 2411 Jo~ A... 304·171·
Very good """!'lilon. Call J.O
21114 or 17.. 1748. .
Struble 814·112· 3&lt;124.

- · RoGm and boord
';;;.:lolly.~- CON In my
,182·11~' CeQ 114-

1 DA\'11
ll DA\'11
I OA\'11
10 DA\'11

a ond. Call 114-2 41 -51115

Mlllld hord WOOd olabo. 112 par
bundle. Containing
1'h
ten.. FDB. Olilo P - Co.
Pomeroy, Ohlo. II4·99Z·a.et .

· &gt;W

21· · WoRDS
·t1 .Oil
ftO.OII
•11.011
121.011
. MO.CID

autO . ~

1100, CaN .... 44..7382 .

- " " - I n prtvln for-whoWiolonotto
~"::.~~

'
woRO.

camal'll,

macro, convlwt ·fllm ·to VHI;

' Call12"-44t·.....

RATES

1179 Dodge Rom Ch_,.,.
12,000 mi ., • u to., ak'. EXcel.

Cannon 310XL 8 - 8 MM

movt.

locly to -ln . . Light
Ull· kMplng. ..OQIII •nd

G-Il WORDI ll· • .
M .CID .
...011
...011
.. .. CID
. ..CID •
Uli.OII
eu ,011
ftli.OD
. . 1 .OD
n:a.oo

· Sentinei- Page--:11 •

64 Miac. Marchandi1a

Space for Rant

li.,

. . TO. PlACE AN AD CALl 992•2156 ·
MONDAY thru FRIDAY a A.M. to S P.M. ..
aA.M. Until NOON SATURDAY . .
(LOSED SUNDAY.
POLICiES
• Ad~ outside Meig1, G111i1 or ......on count ies mult be pr•
paid.
.

•

Ohio

1917 Ford R - 1. I opel,
AM·FM·Cau. 8,000 mMN. Coli
·11·" -448-2323- 4 PM.

hug-.

R...
Yorto!wt.HOiia. 1etl J.10, 4 opd. s - 1r 1 , , . onlv·t310. a~oo~a. 0na olr. ~~- - · ....... e7000.
-old. CoiiS14-211-I-. . Coli 814'441-1811.
117?
Chwy, Good
FOR BALl: C - Conte. Prlood. to oolll Call 12118. Colll14-441.f118,
cond, ' opd, - · - ·
114-44t-40U.I..,..only.

llo,lory"-

1-oldoaWI"tt_H_
· -· Colll14-tiZ·UIO.
ful Waod Urneu.ln
lrull, 2~ yn old, - · - 1 M I
"

I

.....

-·:OOpni. .
14

Hayi Or4!11n

-lilyor-.--

1171 Doole• 110 ....... 4
·-tl4-44t-a317.
· l6 ton ..... . Col

s.,.. . .

1 - ootoloa .,...11'11- and
11'"' KW. Col 114-991·4444.

111'1 ~ Luw, ..... d .
. . . ,,_,
,.Gd.
71,000
....
Coli .......
114-112·7401.

--hay · *-"Hloo 1 Call 114·211·1114,
.II tinn.Ohkt.
·
. - - - . ·e1o-.
Colll14-44t--l.

73

V1111 'i 4

w.b.

'

Gener al Hauling '

'

'
Dllilord Wotor - c o: Poolo

CIJternl, Welle. Delivery Any~

Call 114-.W&amp;-7404-No
8und11Y Dolls,
J • J Wlllr 1 - . Swimming

•

241·1211.
- · · '· · - .-llo. Ph . 814- •

�Page 12-The o.lly

s. tllilll

NATIONAL WEATHER SER~ICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2·13-88

Winter
.s tornt rmally
hits Buckeye State
.
.
By Uatted Preu ll!tematlonal

D

t ;;.:lsNOW
fb/@iJRAIN
SHOWERS
FRONTS: . . Wa rm " C old . . . Stat~ . . O~cl~ded
Mao s:-:c ... s ~ . "'r~ ;...., ;.:;!-::e·a:·..: ..es At 'eas: =·~ ~~ c' a':'ty S:"' aci': a·9a s •:,~a s '!
to rece··•-= or~ : :: • :a : · cn &lt;:"CCa:-:c
· UPI

A delayed winter storm finally
ltlt Ohio overnlght. pullln&amp; a coat
of snow over Ice-covered roads
and causing li myriad of problems for morning commuters.
As of mld·momlng, Toledo and
Findlay had 10 l~hes of snow.
· Also hard-hit were. Mansfield ( 7
Inches) and Cleveland (61nches) .
Youngstown and Dayton had 4
Inches , ·while Cincinnati had 3
Inches . Akron and Columbus and
2 Inches and ·Zanesville had 1
Inch.
·
One of the worst areas . for
drivers was hUiy Cincinnati,
where It took some drivers up to
four times as ·tong to get to work.
Even Interstate highways
around the cl ty, which are·

Vehicle
'
.
regr,stratwn
.lmprovement
ordered
.

. · WEATHER MAP - l)urlng early S.iiurday momlng, rain II
forecast for parts of tbe northern lntermountala reglou, aad aaow
Is forecast lor parts of tbe nortbem lntennOalltaln l'l!gloD, tbe
upper Great Lakes, the lower ~reat Lakes, lbe Ohio Valley and
parts of the northem AtlaDtlc Coul, with rain alonr the coast.

.

(UPI)

-Loeal-dnews briefs-.....
~

Plari supper Saturday
The Teen-age Class of the Chester United Methodist Church
wlll stage a P.ubllc soup supper from 5:30 to 7:30p.m. Saturday
at the church.
.
Oyster and brocolll soup, chili, sloppy joes, hot do~:s , various
beverages and homemade pastries will be available.

To conduct special meeting
' meeting of Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, will be
A special
held at 7: 30 p.m. Saturday for the purpose of the annual
inspecti(ln. Work will be in the feUowcraft degree and
refreshments will be served. All Masons are invited.

Release financial report
All monies in the Middleport
VIlla ge t r easury totaled
$253,598.83 as of Jan. 31, accord·
lng to the report of VIllage

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of i0:30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark "Smith
of Blunt EIUs &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. ... ........ 28%
AT&amp;T ...... ... ... .... .......... ....... 29'f.z
Ashland Oil .:·:... ........ .. ...... ..57%
Bob Eva ns .......... ....... ....... ..15%
Cha rming Shoppes .. ... .... .:.. .13 ~
City Holding Co .............. ..... 32
. Federal Mogul ....., ... ........... 37'f.z
Goodyea r T&amp;R ... . !........ ...... . 58
Heck's Inc . .... ... ...... ... ....... ... 1 Ys
Key Ce nturion ... ..... ..... ........ 40
La nds' E nd ..... .... :.. ............. 18J1.
Li mi ted Inc . ... ....... ........... ..1611.
Multimedia Inc.:... .... ..........55'f.z
Rax Restaurants ... ............... 3%
. Robbins &amp; Mye rs ..... ............ 8%
Shoney's Inc . ...... ........ ....... .22Ys
We ndy's Inti. .... ..... ...... ..... ....6%
Worthington Ind ... ... ... :.. .. ... .. 18

I

Clerk·Treasl!rer·Jon Buck.
Receipts, disbursements and
the end of the month balance,
respectively, of each fund In·
elude: general, $11,763.32,
$6,046.37, $23,280.58; street main·
tenance, $2,534.08, $1,892.99,
$1,653.40; fire equipment, $1,175,
$313.61, $1,803.51; fire truck, no
receipts, no c!lsbursements,
$4.898.44: sanitary sewer escrow,
· no receipts, no disbursements,
$74,400.29; economic develop·
men!, $1, 709.40, $604.38,
$12,796. 79; public transportation,
$8,969.33, $12,791.12, $1,082.93 deficit ; water tank, no receipts. no
disbursements, $112,079.81; water, $12,261.59 , $10,547.43,
$5,590.22; sanitary sewer,
$8,919.32, $9,743.47, $2,955.71;
swimming .. pool, no receipts,
$29 .66, $759.03; cemetery ,
$1,344.79, $1,834.09, $732.54; wa·
ter meter trusts, $580, $529.12,
. $13,368.44.
Receipts for tlie month totaled
$49,255.83 while disbursements
amounted to $58,209.77.

Area deaths

John Swisher

John Swishe r, 70, Route. 2
VInton, died Thursday. He was
born April 4. 1917 at Bradbury,
Ohio. a son of the Ia te JohnS. and
Dolly Baird Swisher. ·
He mar ried Lavina Thomas on
Aug . 17, 1936, In Pomeroy , and
she survives wi th one son, Don
Swis her of Gallipolis ; one daugh·
ter , Mrs. Richard (Dororthy )
Sechrist of Sunbury, Ohio; seven
gr a nd ch.lldren. fi ve great grand·
c hildren, six step-grandchildren.
He waG preceded in death by two
brothers and two sister s.
He was a United States Navy
·Wor ld War II (Seabees ) veteran
a nd a member of VInton Ame rl·
can Legion Post 161; the Hunting·
ton Grange 731; former coach for
the Westside Merchants Football
Tea m In Columbus and a partie!·
pa ntln Coon Dog Field Trials.
Graveside services will be
conducted 1 p.m. Sunday, at
Campaign Cemetery, Rev. C.J .
Lemley officiating. The family
reques ts flowers be omitted.
Tltere will be no calllng hours.

Hazel McCaUum
Mrs. Haze l McCallum, 95,
Minersville, dlecj Thursday at
Valley Hospital, Ridgewood,
N. J .
I.
Mrs. McCallum had ooen viSit·
lng her daughter, Mrs. Mary
Leonard In Westwood, N.J . She
was born Aug. 18, 1892 In Mason
County, W.Va., a daughter of an
old pioneer family, George and
Mary Ellen Roseberry Chllcls.
A member of the Minersville
United Methodist Church, Mts.
. McCaUum Is survived by two
daughters , Mrs. Leonard, and
Margaret Harbrecht of Wor·
thlngton, a half-brother, Georre
Childs of · Florida, and five
gtandchlldren.
Besides her parents, ~he !"as\

-.

~·

•

- --- -

•,

.'

preceded In death by her hus·
band, Norman McCallum In 1962.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Kandy
Burch oftlclatlng. Burial will be
In Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Sunday.

Letha H. Wood, 92, Scout Camp
Road. Chester ..dled Tltursday In
the Extened Care Unit of Vete·
ran's MemorlalHospltal.
A homemaker, Mrs. Wood was
born May 22, 1895, on Silver
Ridge, the daughter of the late
Peter and Emma Cole Betzlng..
She was a member of the ·
Chester . ·united Methodist
Church, the United Methodist
Church Women, a charter
member of .the Chester Council
Daughters of America Revolu·
lion No. 323 and member of the
Past Councilors of the lodge.
Surviving are two sons, Virgil
M. Wood, Columbus, Robert P.
Wood, Long Bottom; two daugh·
ter s, Margaret E . Christy, Ches·
ter, Jeraldine Hawk, Tuppers
Plains; two brothers, Roy Betz·
lng, Pomeroy, Donald Betzlng,
Middleport; two sisters, Freda
Miller and l-enore Betzlng, both
of Pomeroy; six grandchildren
· and eight great·grandchUdren.
Beside parents, she was preceded In death by her husband
Marion (Browning) Woodln1965,
a brother and three stater.
SerVIces will Ill! held Sunday at
2 p.m. at the Cbester United
Methodist Cburch with the Rev.
Don Arcber offlclalln&amp;. Burial
will be In the Cheater Cemetery.
Frlendl may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to
~ p.m SatuJday. Services by the
DAR wUI be held 7 p.m Saturday
at the Funeral !lome.
The body will lie In state at the
church one bour before the

·

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Pending passage of reform legis·
latlon, Gov. Richard F. Celeste
Issued an executive order Thurs·
day for the state Department of
Highway Safety to make changes
tn · Ohio's system of registering
motor vehicles.
. To be carried out by the
department's Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, major changes Include
a centralized, optional mall·ln.
registration renewal system.
The system will provide a
notice of explra lion, mailed to
the vehlc le owner no less than 45
days before the registration
expiration date, and allow the
owner to mall In the registration
renewal.
Celeste said the mall-ln option
will cost the state an additional
$l.25 million, and he ordered the ·
department to absorb the cost In
Its current budget. ·
.
Another major ·c hange . would
be registration expiration based
on date of birth. The governor
said this would help prevent long
Unes at the end of each month
when vehicle owners meet cur·
rent monthly registration
deadlines.
Other changes Include com·
bined driver's Ucen·stng testing
and Issuance, one-stop shopping
and Inspection of .vehicles enter·
. lng Ohio from out Of state.
The changes were tecommended by a gubernatorial task
force to Improve lite system and
agreed upon by the Ohio House
and. Senate, Celeste said.
"We feel these changes should
not be delayed while House and
Senate conferees discuss and
debate the Issue of how we
depolltlclze the deputy registrar
system," said the governor at a
·
news conference.
The Senate passed a bill early
last year eliminating the 272
deputy registrars and replacing
them with 150 l!eld offices
manned by some 1,100 new state
employees .
The House, concerned about
the cost and loss of serVIce, voted
to keep the deputy registrars but
prohibit solicitation of them for
political donations, subject to a
fine of $10,000.

Southem gets share of SV AC title

C-2

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tmes
Vol 23 No.1
(:opjlfllilld 1888

Middlaport-:-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point

-u.s. will file protest

.

For Your Old
Car or Truck!

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Two
Soviet waFshlps deliberately
bumped two U.S. Nav}' ships In
International waters ill the Black
Sea Friday atter warning they
would do so, Navy officials said,
adding the United States wlll file
a protest.
. The two U.s . ships were ·
"shoi!Ldered out of the way"
after, the Soviets had warned,
''Soviet ships have orders to ·
prevent violations of territorial
waters. I am authorized to strike
your ship with one of ours," Capt.
I
:Jerry Flynn said.
The operations officer In the
chief of naval operations olflce
told a Pentagon press conference.
ihe American ships responded
pnly by maintaining !heir courS:!!
and speed.
.
·
Flynn and Cmdr. Rick Scliiff, a

-

~';. 50

Navy legal eJ!'pert, said Jlle
dispute was over the "right of
Innocent passage~· wlthln the
12·mlle territorial limit claim~
by the Soviets.
The United States only recog·
ntzes a 3 mile limit, and the U.S.
Navy periodically tests their ·
right to operate within the 12 mile .
Umlt In a non-provocative way,
Schiff said.
The Soviets recognize this
right, but only In sea lanes they
have previously approved, Flynn
said. He said such tests of this
right must be approved In
advance by the White House as
this one was .
..
Earlier, the Pentagon reported
that about 3 a .m. EST (11: OOiocal
time) , the Spf\lance class des·
troyer USS Carori was struck on
the port, or left , side by a Mli"ka
•

7 Section,. 48 Pageo
A Multimedia Inc. Nfwopaper

m ship · 'shouldering'

ciass frigate , the Pentagon said.
TJlree minutes later, the
cruiser USS Yorktown accom-·
panylng the Caron also was
struck on the port side by a
Krlvak class frigate, sustaining
minor damage, the statement
said. The Pentagon said the
damage lei the S9viet veslll!ls was
not ~nown, b\11 was believed to be .
minor ... .
"The United States will protest ,
these Incidents to Soviet auihorl·
ties," the Pentagon statement
said, adding that the U.S. ships
were· "exercising their lnterna·
tlonally recognized right of lnno·
cent passage," despite being
within the Soviet 12 mile territor·
·l alllmlt.
The statement said there were
. no U.S . Injuries In either
"incident.

, ,...

Pleasant. Fabrulry 14, 1988

•

Flynn said the same two
American ships, which are both
based In .Norfolk, Va., had been
Involved in a similar Black Sea
test of the right of Innocent
passage In March 1986.
Schiff said the worldwide tests
by American ships had begun In
the 1970s by the Carter admlnls·
tratton to ' 'discourage expansive
~oasial · claims""
by foreign
nations.
Both officers denied the U.S.
ships were on an Intelligencegathering mission, and stressed
they were not doing anything
provocative.
Schiff , noted that Soviet
intelligence-gathering vessels
routinely operate 5 miles off the
American coast.
.
· flynn said the Caron was about
7 mlles south of the Crimean

Peninsula whim It wa s struck and
the Yorktown about 10 miles. He
said the ships spent a bout an hOur
and 1$ miles within the Soviet 12
mile territorial limit.
Flynn declined to say whether
there were other Ame rican ships
operating In the Black Sea on the
grounds that fleet operations are
not disclosed In advance.
·
The earlier Pentagon state·
ment described the Incidents as
"minor collisions ." But, Flynn
said, "We view (the Incident )
with considerable concern."
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, traveling aboard
Air Force en route to California
with President Reagan, said the
president had been briefed about
the Incident. ·
$tate Department officials
said, "The Unlte4 States will

protest. There Is no excuse for
ra mming a ship which Is engaged
In Innocent passage."
In Moscow. the Soviet Ministry
of ~tense said the U.S ships had
viola ted the Soviet border by
entering wlthlng 4 mlles of the
Crimean coast. It said the
American vessels did rot respond to warning signals and
" dangerously maneuvered" In
Soviet terri tQrlal waters .
The ministry said the U.S.
ships stayed within the Soviet 12
mile limit for two hours and four
minutes , according to the Tass
News Agency.
Earlier, the Soviet Foreign
Mini stry r e called earlier
claimed violations that had pro·
· duced a strong Soviet warning of
; possible retaliation.
'
(See ti.S., A3)

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years

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Octoher.• cra8h will have minimal
impact on ~tate revenue this ye~
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
October stock market crash will
haye minimal a.to no Impact on
sta,te revenues' during the cur·
rent biennium, state officials
·
sa\d._ ·
Itevl.sed stat~ budget projec·
tlons Indicate money for capital
. IJIIpro'vemerifs will be tight, the
Colu!llbUS Di$patch reported , but
officials said a downturn In the
economy may be delayed.
Ohio Budget. Director · L. Lee
Walker said any necessary rev!·
slons would amount to ·a finetuning of Ohio's $21,8 billion
two-year budget.
"We believe the timing of a
downturn In the economy Is most
likely to occur In the second half
of 1989 or early 1990," analyst San
Nemer. said In a memo. The next
biennium begins July 1, 1989.

State budget officials said they
believe Ohio will collect $8.41
bllllon In taxes this year, $22
million more than expected.
They ~a)d they anticipate collect·
lng $8·.8 billion during 1989, which
Is $8.4 million less than pre·
vlously projected. ·
"The bad new~ Is that V(e we re
unable to lde~j fy significant
• other resources 1or the capital
btu and other "spend lng bills the
legislature might Identify , "",
Walker said.
·
State lawmakers had hoped
additional money would be found
for the capital Improve ments
legislation, which will be made
public later this month. The ·
two-year blll covers major state
construction projects , most of
· which are financed with borrowed money. However; some
tax money Is Included for lmme·

dlate payme nts .
The General Assembly added
$60 million In general fund taxes
to the capital budget that elfplres
June 30. No genera l fund money ,
however, was ear,marked for
projects c ontain~ In t~e two·
year operating budget p~sed
last June. And revised estim~tes
do not anticipate much new
money .
The new projection Indicates
only $22.6 mlll1on wlll be availa·
ble July 1 for capital Improve·
ments and other expenses. That
money would come from several
areas, Including money left from
the previous budget.
If the $22.6 million Is spent, the
Ohio Gener al Fund would have a
June 30, 1989, balance of $55:2
m1111on. That would represent
only 0.06 percent of ·19~9
appropriation~.

Chamber names executive secretary
II wu 10 yean aro Sundar that a;rndlcated
. colanmiR 0.0. Mcintyre died In New Yon at the
age of Ill:Mcintyre spent his boyhood Ia Gallipolis

died In 1885 a&amp; the age of 111. Here, Galllpolllans
gather at Gatewood for 0.0. Mclatyre'a funeral.
Be was burled In Mound HID Cemetery,

~M!!;ayb~~~Ue~,!k~e~pt:;__j;•erllool&lt;lng
GaiUpolta aad the Ohio River. (Photo
one of her.!hls~wlf:!e~,
homes: Mn.
Mcintyre
L~aa:!d:!!!,!lo:Jio!!:wt~·!asn~g!h~ll;.d:!e~ath~,
•

Killer storm..
CO~ttinued

wm

Cloudy and warmer. High
45.

•

s1 I·ooo
,
.

South Cenlral Ohio
Snow diminishing to snow
flurries today, with tempera·
lures falling to near 20. Mostly
cloudy tonight, with a low between 10 and 15. Variable cloudiness Saturday, with highs In the
mid 20s.
The probability of preelplta·
tlon Is 60 percent this afternoon
and near zero tonight and
Saturday.
~
Winds will be from the northw·
est at 15 to 25 mph today and from
the west near 10 mph tonight.
Extended Forecast
Sunday throarh·Tuesclay
A chaqce of rain or snow
Sunday. with a chance of snow
Monday. and fair on Tuesday.
Highs will be In the 30s Sunday .
and Monday and ranging from
the upper 20s to the middle 30s
Tuesday . Overnight lows will be
between 10 and 20 early Sunday
and between 15 and 25 Monday
and Tuesday mornings.

eastern

Along the River ... .... . B·l·8
Bulneaa .................... ..D·l
Comics·TV .............. Insert
Clasalfleds .... .... ....... . D·Z·7
Deatlul ........... ...... ,...... A·3
. Editorial ...... .... ..... , ..... A~2
Sports .............. .. ...... C·l·S

A-2

Drag, Push or .Pull
'

Sports C-1

Inside

· Baekstairs at the White House -

Weather

from pager 1
Mount Clemens, Mich., Bryan,
Ohio, and Fort Wayne, Inc!.; and
7 lnchea Jn Detroit.
The storm weakened over
much of 1he northern part of
DUnois late Thursday as ' It
headed out of ·the Midwest, but
forecasters predicted up · to 4
Inches of SIICIW as well as colder
lemJ18ratures In the Cblcaao
area today as a blalt of frliid air
swept In behllld the storm.
"Subzero readlnp .. .
be
from tbe
Dakolal alld
eastern Nebraska . throulh , the
upper and middle Mlslllllppl
Valley and across upper Michl·
gilll," ·Reynolds said. "Much of .
that area already Is belOw zero."

Winter Olympics begin

Valentine
gteetings

Snow was to continue over
freeways.
·
inost
of Ohio today, but only the
In the north, freeways w.e re all
snow-covered and slippery, but Northeast counties were to ret
authorities said tbere was no any significant accumulation. A
unusual number of accidents. winter storm warning continued .
The· Ohio Turnpike reported a In effect this momiiiJ for North
mixture of cleared lanes, slusll Central and Northeast Ohio, with
total snowfall to reach 5 to 8
and sno\v across Its length.
At daybreak1 SJI9W was falling inches by e\'enlng. Strong winds
'tn the northeast part of the state were causing considerable drift·
lng In that area.
at the rate of 1 Inch an hour.
As the storm moved througlt
The ·storm was centered ove~
central Lake Erie, but was Ohio, northwest winds brought
moving slowly east and was much colder air Into the state, .
expected to merge with a storm with tempera lures dropping Into
the teens by early morning.
moving up the east coast.

I

Letha Wood

services.

.

supposed to be a snow-clearing
priority, were anow-cl)vered lind
became l()ng parking lots.
Traffic on Interstate 275, the
beltway around Cincinnati, alter·
nated between 20 mplt and a
standstill.
'
'·'It took me three times as long
as usual to get to work," said a
weary motorist. "The h11ls .were
terrible. Cars came to a stop,
then a lot of them started slipping
when they tried to move qaln.•'
In Columbus, motorist faced
similar probleniS, with numer·
ous minor accidents snarlln~

·I'IJ•n•ts ftandwttll st.oae._ 01111 • 111111 • • • • •aa7~~reo-.•aator54•.. M&amp;I3tar
41 -. IZ l oNif fir liM. Pttlll11 tl wlllaiM tuao ! ..., 111111 • .... ,... or Pill ,. - .

Re~an

anives in Mexico
to· discuss trade, ~afficking .

MAZATLAN. Mexico (UPI) President Reagan arrived'Satur·
day In this scenic coastal cross·
roads for the drug trade - a
symbolic backdrop for a brief
seaside U.S.·Mexlcan summit
between two leaders In the final
months of their 1Jresldencles.
Without a hint of drama and
with little advance·fanlare, Pres·
!dent Miguel dela Madrid played
host to Reagan.
The sights and sounds of
"carnival"- theannualequlval·
ent of Mardi Gras - were In the
air as the leaders prepared to ·
meet In the barricaded Camino
Real Hotel In a modest suite
overlooking the Paclflc.
As Reagan made the 1,080-mlle
trip from Los Anaela, where he
attended a poUtlcal flllld·ral!er
Friday, h'lll four·hour StOP In
Mazatlan 'llad more cereJIIOnlal
than substantive Importance.
l'rade reladollll, Central Amer· .
lea arid narcotics trafficking allsourea of tension In the past
- were among the laaues to be
addressed by the two leaden or
In separate dllcuulona betWeen
other lll&amp;h-leVel offlclail.
.
In lJII Wllek1Y radio adclreaa,
taped Tbunday. Reaaan aet tbe
1011e tor the tal1cl with a cleclara·
tiQn
"there Ia every reason to
be
a!lOUt U.S. ·Mexlcaa

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff
_ GALLIPOLIS - Elizabeth
M. Vandawalker has been named
as executive secretary of tl)e
Ga111polls Area Chamber of Com·
merce. Ms . Vandawalker will
replace Thelma Elliott, who will
retire on May 31.
Beginning .Monday , Ms. Vandawalker will be in the Chamber
offices to learn about the work Ings of the office from Mrs.
Elliott.
.!Uso Included In her duties will
be assisting the Retail Mer·
chants' Association and the
Safety Councll, In addition to
cooperating with the Ohio Valley
Visitor's Center and the Com·
munlty Improvement Corpora·
tlon. She will also wprk with all
committees of the Board of
Directors of the Chamber In
addition to the River Recreailo11
Festival and Us chairman, Mike

Reagan that the United States zatlon of an up·and·down bllat·
"will continue to do our best" to eral relationship strained over
find solutions to the debt crisjs .'
the past five years by Mexico's
De Ia Madrid hoped for such a economic woes, U.S. lmmlgra·
promise to bolster prospects for a lion laws and sharp disputes over
U.S.,backed debt restructuring trade restrictions, drug enforce·
plan. Mexico Is offering Its ment and U.S. policy In Central
commercial creditors new long· America.
term bonds In exchange for
"The relationship has come a
reductions In Its foreign debt.
long way ," a senior U.S : official
Before his arrival, Reagan also said. "It's not that all the
sought to put an end to finger· ' problems have been solved, but
polhtlng over an Increasing flow
that they have been addressed.
of drugs by acknowledging "the When! solutions have been posslreal solution" lies not only In a . ble, the effort has been made.
crackdown on traffickers In Where they have not been, we
Mexico, but curtailing American have agreed simply to disagree. " .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio's
demand for their Ulegal ·wares.
At a high point of the tourist
workfa-:e progranns In five coun·
Reagan brought along a bat· season , vacationers were booted
tie' have been very successful, a
tery of top officials, Including out of the beachfront · Camino
Washlnaton consultant reported.
three Cabinet secretaries, to deal Real to make way· for scarcely
The programs· In Butler, Han·
with what one aide described as more than two hours of meetings
cock, Mad!.son, Marion, and
"the nitty-gritty" of u.s .. between Reagan and de Ia
Wood counties dramatically reMexican relations as he and de Ia Madrid.
duced w,ltare caaetoada and
Madrid deaU with more general
A tiff over protocol ~ whether saved $20.86 million since 1983,
themes.
Reagan would ride ill ail Amerl· the Columbus Dispatch said.
But cooperation and progress, can or Mexican helicopter - led
The Potomac Institute for
rather than confrontation and . d!! Ia Madrid to ll"f!tll his pest
Econonllc Researcb atudted the
sore points, were the watchwords not at Rafael Buelna In'terna. · results of workfare programs, In
for the alllth and probablY last tlonal Airport, but what until · which· welfare recipients must
formal meeUq between Rea· recently waa a junk·ltrewn•lot, work for tbelr benefits. ·
PA, wllo leaves office In Janu· since paved over, ~jacent to the
The. report lbowed a 30 percent
ary, 1111'1 de Ia Madrid, w.hoae hotel.
reduction In reneral reUef cue'l'lle drug lslue was apoUtpted loads in the five colllltles, 11 well
' term eadlln December.
''The peoplel and pwnunenta by the fact the meettq look place as a 7.9 pen:eat decrease In
of tJnltad Statel and Mexico are In stuJoe alate, 1 major ceater predicted Aid to Dependent
and
to be trlenda. OUr of tbe Mexlcu narcellca trade ChUdren cueloadl.
.and I p1lypQund for U. proejt·
Gov. Riolwd Celeste will
It
1b1a . . . But .......... lD blla~· Pi 11at • M welfare propoal
With .=•~OO)le!atloll, u
u to a Wlttce Ko~~~t P*Nl thll -~.
. ·'
tle
~t muat
..... tlll ..... to • teeolldary ' apptoll a ~- before Ohm

Simmons.
Mrs. Elliott said the re were 18
applicants for the position and
the top candidates were Inte r ·
viewed last week.
.
At least one- half of the appli·
cants had degrees In fields
related to the Chamber of Com·
merce work, Mrs. Elliott sa id.
· Among the degrees were educa·
tlon, bulsness management,
communication, adverilslng,
marketing and public relations.
Some were recipients of bachelor's degrees, others had mas·
ter's, Mrs. Elliott added.
Ms . Vandawalker Is a graduate
of Gallla ACademy High School
and has a bachelor's degree In
English from Marietta College,
and has been In continuing
education In business admlnls·
!ration at Ohio University.
Since last November, she. has
been employed as a cle rk In the
Common Pleas Court of Gallla

ELIZABETH VANDAWALKER
County. Prior to th a t, she was
employed In retail merchandls· ·
lng and sales.

•

Workfare successful, report says

~~~;~;;•tsdlctate

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•111111•.weuret.
'"" -••l'lll
••

:=..tilt r.o'*un.
~

caa'l1le

·
ellpalld tile

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workfare program to all88 Ohio
counties during the next three
years and extend ·health care
coverage for 12 months to moth·
ers with young children who find
a job and leave welfare rolls.

It also would require welfare
mothers who a re 18 years of age.
or younger to be working toward
a high school degr ee or Its
equivalent.

Board apP,roves contract
MIDDLEPORT- Meeting In special session Friday evening,
the Meigs Local School District Board of ~ducatlon approVed a
. new three year contract for non-certified employees of the
district.
Members of the district's OAPSE had approved the new ··contract which Is retroactive to last Sept. 1 at a meeting on
Thursday eveninJ.
The new contract will run thtough the 1990 school year and
contains some lanauage changes · as well as the rtaht tor
members of the chapter to reneaotlate for additional pay oa any
new mo!lla comtnalnto the dlatz1ct tor the 1811'11'! llOI'CeDtaae aa
received by other employees of the dlltrlct. Mlleap allowances
were equalized with that received by tHeben of tha dlalrlct and
lbe new contract allowa for the ~tad ICC!IImulatloll of lick

leave.

The board alao employed the tlrlia Gf Reid, JokMQII 1nd .
Barry, Columbus, to III'W "UlepJ C!eot"lll for tbe llDard.

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