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I

I •

•

February 16, 1988

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

l

THIS
EEK'S
8A ES

Ohio Lottery

dlympic
results

Oally Number

395
Pick 4
4120

Page4

•

BOYS BASKETIALL
Vo1.31, No.196

enttne

FEI. I S-East1m - Away
FEI. 16-Division II SeCtional
At Altxan... vs. Wellston
FEI. 11 1 Division II StctiOMI
Mtigs/Wtllston winner
vs. Galipolis

EASTERN
IOYS BASKETBALL
FEI. 16-Parkii'SIIurg (ath. - Away
FEI. 19-SymmtS Valley- Away
FEI. 20-f*'al Hocking -- Away

Pomeroy and Middleport VII·
!ages have pledged to work
together to solve problems which
are preventing the development
of property In lower Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Councilman Bruce
Reed reported at Monday night's
regular meeting of Pomeroy
VIllage Council that members of
both village councjls, both mayors, and others, met last Thursday in Middleport to discuss the
possible development of the
a,rea.
·
Development has been Impossible due to the lack of a sewage
line to the property.
Since Pomeroy's sewage line
goes only as far as the Pizza Hut
on West Main St., Middleport
wanted Pomeroy to annex the
property to them. However.
Instead of 1glvlng the property to
Middleport, Pomeroy wanted
Middleport to extend their sew·
age_Jine from the Sears Catalog
Store. which borders the property, and then Pomeroy would
pay Middleport a fee for 1he
sewage service.
The two villages seemed to be
deadlocked on the matter until
Thursday's meet\ng. The meetIng was Initiated by the attorney
· representlng''!Willlam Hapton:

GIRLS BASKETBALL

· FEI. IS ~Miigs - Home
FEB. 26~Divison IV Sectional
At Meigs vL Kyger Cretl!

SOUTHERN
BOYS BASKETBALL
FEI. 16-Ra¥tnswDIMI - Awav
FEI. 19-Southwllttrn -:- .Away

GIRLS BASKETBALL

BOYS SCHEDULE

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCHEDULE
BOYS BASKETBALL

.,,u
.
,.'
·• ·
,. ·
~;loat•
~' -'~

t;'&gt;-. '

fan. 26-Aiexander .........:.......... Home
Jan. 20-Pt. Pleasant................ Away
Feb. 2-Warren ·Locai ................ Away
feb. s_:WellstOn .....................~ ...Home

i·'

•

·Feb. 6-Logan .............................Home

Blower_

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

Fi:eeral

·· ·(; B;ome :... ,

9-Athens ............................ Home
12-Federai-Hocking .......... Home
13-Vinton Caunty............. Home
16-Federal Hocking ......... Away

Feb. 19-Miller ...........................Home
Feb. 20-Nelsonville· York ..........Home

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO'&lt;t''
614-992-5141
.

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHQOL
19B7-88
. . BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 1-So~tllern ............................. Away

Dec. 1-East•n ................................ Hornt

Dec. 11-Hannan Trace .................. A.,ay
Dec. 15:.....Parkenburg Cath. (6:15J ... Away
Dec. 22-North Galia (6:001 ............ " Jan. 8-Symmes Valley ................:..HG.ni
Jan. 12-llyger Creti! .............'.........Home
Jan. I S-Oak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. 19-Federal Hocking ................ Home

Dec. 11-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Dec. II- Hannan Trace ................ Away ·
Dec. 22-lyger CrMk..................... Away
Dec. 29-lnllcll Valty So.... Convo. Cint.Ja:n. 2-Soutlllostwn ..................... Away

Jon. 22-,Southern ............:..............Home
Jan. 2'9-North Gallia .................... Away

Feb. 2-Miller ...............:.........~........ Away
Feb. S-Hannon Tro ........................ Home
Feb. 12 -Southwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath ............ Away
Feb.19-Sy!11meS Valley .........;........ Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Away

M

'

"ci:NtRAl .
TRUST
'

MEIGS' HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCHEDULE
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Jan. 12-Narth Gallia-.................. HDIIM
Jan. I 5-Symmes .Vallty ................. Home
Jon. 22-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-llyger Cr"k~ ..................... Home

Jan. 30-Miller ................................. Harne ~
FEb. S-Oak ·Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Federal Hocking .....:.....)..... Away
Feb. 12-Haman Trau ................... Home
Feb It-Southwestern ................... Away

,., •

Jan. 2 S-Belpre .......................... Home
Jan. 28-Aiexander .................... Home

"YOUR FINANC·IAL
CENTER"

Jan. 30-Miller ...:.............~.........Home

97 N. 2ND STIEO

Feb. 11-Wellston ...................... Home

MIDDLEPO.IT

Feb. 13 -Southern ...................... Home
Feb. IS-Eastern ....................... Away

y

.

' . . 992·6661 '

Feb. 4~Wellston ........................ Away
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking............. Home

INSTALLMENT LOALftS

992-3007
.-

•·

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 7-Southern .............................Home

COMPANf\·
1

/

.A GREAT PLAa
FOI BHAICfAST
LUNC!H
&amp;. D...NER .
'
·~·

F·eaturir\g ·

• Great Hamburlers
doast Beef on a
Croissant * Stuffed Baud·
Potatoes • Taco Salads
' ~'Sa.lad Baf
. '* Real lee C~am 1t

Dec. I 0-Hannon Trace ................:.. Home
, · Dec. 14-Miller ....:.. .......................... Home
Dec:. 17 -Southwestern ................... Home
Dec. 19-Federal. Hocking .............. Away
Dec. 21-Narth Gallia ................ :... Away

Dec. 23-Meigs ................................HOllie
Jan. 7-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11-llyger Crtt1r~ ................... Away

Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................. Ho1111
Jan. 21-Southern ......................;... Away
Jan. 28-North Gallia ..................... Home
Feb. 1-SymmH Vallty ................. Home
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .................... ~way
Feb. 11-Southwtstern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hocking ............... Harne

. stall, owner of the property.
. According to Reed, both vii·
!ages . are "willing . to work
together" and the 'rna In goaBs to
satisfy the businesses which
have expressed Interest In local·
lng on the site. There remain
"some financial constraints,"
Reed said, and If those financial
problems can't bework!id out, "It
will be through no fault of either
village," he added. If the problems can be resolved, some
avenue of acUon by the two
villages should be decided on
within the next month, according
to Reed.
Included In Thursday's meetIng were Mayors Dick Seyler of
Pomeroy and Fred Hoffman of
Middleport; Pomeroy Council·
men Larry Wehrung, John Anderson and Reed; Middleport
Councilmen Dewey Horton, Jack
Satterfield, James Clatworthy
and Bob Gilmore; the develope~ .
· Dick Haycraft of Polnt Pleasant,
W.Va.; and Haptonstall, the
property owner.
In other matters at last night's
meeting, .Council took actions to
officially create the posiUon of .
street superintendent for the
· vlllag~ a.nd hired Jack Krautter
•
Continued on page 5

Jan. 1-SouthwiStern .....................H1111.

GIRLS SCHEDULE

THE

26 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Newtp~~p•

.CouncUs plan
joint effort to
solve problem

GIRLS IASKETIALL

FEI. 18-Division IV Sedional
At Meigs vs. Miller
FEB. 26.-Division IV Sldlonal
At Meigs-MIHer /Southern winner
vs. North Gallia

1 Section. 10 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 16, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Cloudy tonight. Low In
upper 208. Partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs ne~r 45.

•

aty

MEIGS

FEI. 16-F....alllocking - Away
FEI.I9-Mil.. - H0111t
.
FEI. 20-rw-villt·York - 1tom1

.

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Dec. 7-EC.stern .................,............., Away
Dec. I 0-0.a k Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia :................... Away
Dec. 17 -Haman Trace ................... Home

American Alloys production underway
.

.

By Matt Robertson .
The first batch of metal alloy in
mort than two years. has been
powed from the furnaces of
American Alloys Inc., New Haven,

·" ,over !he weeke01t ,

Jan. 14-Symmes Vallty ................ Away
Jan. 20-GaHipolis - ....................... Away

Jan. 21-Eastwn. ............~................. Hontt
Jan •. 28-lyger Cfftk ..................;_ Away

Feb. ,1-Southwestern .~••
Home
feb. 4-0ak HiD ...........................-Horne
H ...............

.Feb. ·11-Honnan Trace.:..........~.. ~- Away

Feb.

13~ ................................. Away

.

The facility, fonnerly a Foote
.Mineral ferroa!Ioys plant, was
·bought by a gioup of investors and
employees and reopened in
January.
Wolk at the pl111t is progressing
accOnling to schedule, according to
American Alloys Treasurer Jim
Thomas.
·
"We opened it lip on Jan. 1 afler
a two-year shut down." Thomas
said. "Our plan callell for six weeks
of start-up mainlenBIIce work with
lli'O(b:lion by mid·Febrwiry in one
furnace," Thomas added.
'"I'Iie second furnace should stan

Dec:. 19-Aieancler .......................... Away ·

Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ........................ H.
Jan. 7-Southwntern .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia ..................... Nome

.

.

producing about mid-March." he
said. "The third furnace, which is '
being completely renovated, should ·
be in production~by June or July,"
he added.
. The alloy that poured out of the
furnace won't be setting around the
· facility very long. "We have orders
to ship everything we expect to be
making during the first two quaners
of the year," Thomas said.
As orders pick up and other furnaces are brough1 on ' line; mote
employees will be brought back to
work. ~·As of this date, we have 70
·. employees called back," .Thomas
· said. "By tlie first of March that
number should be about 100. By
mid-year, the number should reach
175," he added.
Not only 'is the start-up going
ahead on schedule, the finances ate
·on schedule too. "Our raw material

.

costs to date are consistent with our
business plan," he said, adding,
"We're not far enough along to say
we're making ,this product for what
we expected to, . but we're on target"
.
The plan! still makes ferroalloys,
but it will be making silica alloys
now too, Thomas said.
Ferroalloys and silica alloys are
raw materials for the foundry and
steel induslries, he said. "It's not a
consumer product. Our product becomes a raw material for these
other industties," he said.
"In the foundry industry, it's
used in the production of castings.
In the steel industry it's used as a
purifying agent for steel," Thomas

said.

.

·After the alloys are cast Into ingots, the ingots are crushed to fit
the needs of !he customer, he said.

Thomas expects American Alloys to ship more than 60,000 tons
of alloys to indusuies this year.
American Alloys means a lot to
!he Bend Area of Mason County.
but'it mean~ something to the rest
of the county too. "There is more to
opening a plant like this !han just
the local payroll, we put many
people in olher locations to work,"
Thomas said.
The annual.payroll of the fai:illty
will be about $3.5 million, Thomas
said.
In addition to the payroll,
American Alloys will purchase
more than 60,000 tons of coal from
WestVirginia and Kentucky mines,
he said. The ,coal, in addition to
about 140,000 tons of other raw
material, will be shipped 10 the
plant on rail.

Candidates waiting for New , llamp~hire resuJts
I~

,

. By MATTHEW C. QUINN

candidates or delivering the coup second-place finish on the DemoVPJ Poll&amp;lcja) Writer
de grace to the already wouniled. cratic side as badly as Simon, an·
CONCORD, N.H. (UPl) A: defeat of Bush by Dole, Illlnols senator' to keep his
Today's New Hampshire prim· depending on the magnitude, candidacy alive. But Gephardt
ary has the poten II alto shake up would deliver a serious biow to would be hard-pressed to rise
the presidential race, but when the vice president after last above the tag of regional candl·
the . dust settles It , may only week's trouncing In the Iowa date wllo won In Iowa with· a
prolong the agony.
caucuses by the l\enate Republi- message applicable only to that
Some weeding out · of the can leader from Kansas. Another neighboring farm state.
12-candldate field almost cer, third-place finish behind former
New Hampshire polls ·bode Ill
talnly wtll result from the flrst- television evangells1 Pat Robert· fo~ former Arizona Gov. Bruce
ln-thttnatlon primary election. son wOUld be the unklndest cut of Babbitt. a weak fifth-place fin·
That proeess began even before all for Bush -and would appear lsher In Iowa, · and former Colo. the voting ' with last week's Impossible to recover trom.
rado Sen. Gary Hart, whose
withdrawal of RepubllciiJI .Alex·
Buslt,already ha§ blown a huge reborn candidacy has falll!d to
ander Ralg.
win back disaffected voters.
leaf~ In New Hampshire polls In
But whether the "winnowing" the wake of his Iowa debacle. He
But any Democrat emerging
J01!11 beyond the back · benches surety wtll claim revltlllzallon If from New Hampshire must !(Ice
waa very much up In the air, at he wins bY even one vote, and the the South's native sons, civil
least 8ccordlng 10 the public lwo·man jousting with DOle will rights lellder Jesse Jackson and
opinion polli. That will depend on go on. 1 :
Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of TenneshOw ,mo~ than 200,000 voters
As DbJe campaign spokesllian see, hi the March 8 Super
decide the major cllfthanaera '- Paul Jaeobsen' put It, both Bush · Tuesday primaries concentrated
the Republican race between and Dole "have the ·resources In the South.
George Bush and Robert Dole and the stamina to duke It out"
It could well be that aside from
and the race for aecond place on for montha.
drlvlni rock-bottom flnllhers
•
the Democratic aide ~n
If the New Hampshire race from the race, nothiDJ fundaPaul Simon and Rlchar~ ~· UJI as claee as the polls mental wtll be decided In New
Gepbardt.
.
Indicate, the GOP will face the HamPJhlre.
EviiD It Dukakll wlDI by the 20
Should Nilw HaiiiPJIIIn vaten . prospec:t . of · a . deleaate-bypull a "avprlle" Ill plucklna dellt•te "'all of 1ttrlt1011like the perceatage pointe forecaat In
110111110118 out of tilt llattom' of lii'N battle t.etweea Ronald Rea· some .polla. ht will ltave to 10
eltha' pack to 1 top IPOI. that Pll and a-Id Ford. The South u aa llrbiO Nartheu·
woui4 demouttate uew the IDCIIIIIbent Ford finally clinched terner 8lld
his appeal
.
.
pont
Ole Or1nllle ltate to hll vletory on the floor of the beYondNew
Repu-llcaa Natlollal
It II . entirelY ~bit the
IIIIIICII et!MI!dlclel.
Dei!IQI!ftte w11l conit out lot
But 1f. flit . . . . of NC!ellt ' C.V..IIoal.
'
YHI'II!Oiill up, New Jilmpllllre
-CIQM Gephardt WOD the supli 'l)e•lv tta\11111 ~
wW·IIIIt Ia •z 1117 •lllllw* t.y Iowa e1UC11181, the Mluourl ~ tblll bdGf dltlr delttratea
CGIIflrmlar tile ,..,.....,. ol CCIIIIftiiiiiiO ,.doea
not. Deed a with a WUil Ill "f4111QD11"
' .

&amp;';!"4

or

'

/1

~

'

candidates; Gephardt would
have won In Iowa, Dukakls ln
New Hampshire and Jackson or
Gore In the South. That would
raise the possibility of a brokered
July conv,entlon•ln.Atlanta unless
someone catches fire In the later
big primaries In Illinois, New
York, Pennsylvania and
California.
On the Republican side, Bush
campaign manager Lee Atwater
has claimed to have built a
"firewall" of Southern support
tha1 will . be there whlitever
happens In New Hampshire.

I

Weather

South Central Ohio
,
Becoming mostly sunny today,
with highs between 40 and· 45.
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a low
In the upper 20s. Partly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs near 45.
The probability of precipitation lad 20 percent this afternll!)n
and tOIIIght and near zero
Wednesday.
Winds wtll be from t))e south a1
10 to 20 mph this afternoon,
dlmlllllhing tp five to 15 mph .
tonliht.
Bxt.lded l'orecu&amp;
TIRIIIdq ...... ~Murda)'
Fair 1bundaJ, l\'ltll I C!hiiiCe
or raiD or IIIOW l'rtday and
llatvrday. Hfllll win ..... trom
35 to •~ day, wllll 0\/aridPt
loWIIID the Ill.

Claims more experience
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The Lucas County sheriff was .
challenged Monday for re-election by a security guard who
claims to have more law enforcement experience than the
Incumbent.
David Case said his background as a fonner patrolman and
. detective for eight years ae&lt;!ounts for more experience than
that of Democratic Sheriff James Telb.
Case, a Republican, Is acllng chili! of security for the Common
Pleas Court.
.
Telb attracted national attention In June, 1985, by his efforts
to uncover non-ellistent mass graves of witchcraft victims. The
-sheriff contented thai as many as 75 people were kiUed by cull
members and burled In a rural part of the county.
That statement drew Intense media coverage ranging from
the television networks to the National Enquirer, but no trace of
victims was uncovered afier several days of digging.
At a news conference, Case used the Incident and several
other highly publicized sheriffs department failures to lash out
at the Incumbent.

.Voters greeted
by warm weather
. CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) -The
presidential candidates, helped
by unseasonably mild weather,
made a last ditch appeal today as
New Hampshire residents turned
out In large numbers to vote In
the nation's first primary.
· Most of the 12 Republican and
Democratic candldlltes used the
morning 10 mee1 voters ln. the
state's largest cities of Manchester, Nashua and Portsmouth hi a
race that will dash the dreams of
some ,contenders and dramall·
cally boost the hopes of others.
Meanwhile, a new CBS poll
released today shoWed Vice
·President George Bush had
opened up a 4 polntlead over Sen. ·
Robert Dole of Kansas - 34
percent to 110 percent.
The survey which was conducted Sundat and Monday and
hal), a margin of error of 4 points,
also showed Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakts still holding a
huge lead over his nearest
Democratlq rivals, who were
locked In a bitter struggle for
second. It had Dukakls wtth 38
percent, followed by Sen. Paul
Simon of Dllnolsat 16percentand
Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri at 13 percent
Dukakls, campalplna · today
outside a Nuhua factory, played
down the polls. "I just hope we do
well. We have lote of work to do.
This Isn't over," he said.
Asked about Simon•• claim
that be caa pull Clft an U#llt.
Duklldl ·Aid, '1 thlak aJIYtliiD8
can blppen. _The peaplt of New

..

Hampshire are very
Independent."
Campaigning at a polling place
at a Manchester elementary
school, Dole appeared relaxed
and joked with ~tudents. "If I
win, there's no more school," he
said.
. Dole described the GOP contest as "very close. We've been
behlnd In some polls, ahead In
some and even In others . The
bottom is nobody knows. But
we're looking good and feeling
good." ,

Rep. Jack Kemp of New York..
who needs a strong showing
today. to keep his Republican
·campaign alive, . downplayed
specula lion that hIs effort may be
near an end. "You're talking to a
quarterback," the former professional football play~r said.
"You're not talking to a
pessimist"
Scattered reports across New
Hampshire Indicated a heavy
turnout, as predicted .
In New Hampshire's largest
city, Manchester, City Clerk Leo
Bernier said some 400 voters had
cast l!allots by 7 a.m. In Ward 6,·
"It's heavy. They're (thtwards)
all like that. People are doing
·their thing," Bernier said.
Unlike late Jut week when a
major ~nter stonn rlpJjed
throqb the state, the weather
today was unt~eBIDnebly warm,
with :'1perJturea raaeblna 40
daiS I - by mJd.rnornllll - '1
deere• warmer tttaa tile aann
Colltlllued OD pap II

...

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j

COmment
,

...

111 Conn Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
I.

~~

,.,..._,.,_
......

,,..,.._c:::l,_

'q:!v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHE.W
Assistant Publlsher/ ControDer

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mnnaaer

A MEMBER o!Th ~ Un lt~d Press Int~r natlon al , Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
L ETTERS OF OPIN10N ar e "',.el ('(]me. Th ey should be less than :nl words
long. Air letters l;!,re subj ect Jo.edttlng and must be: signed wUh·name, address and
teiephone number. No unsigned letters· will be published. Letters shOuld be tn
go~ taste, addressing Jssues, no1 pe r sonalities.

·

WASHINGTON- While Mlk·
hall Gorbachev and Ronald Rea·
gan were slplng an arms treaty
In December, Gorbachev's peo·
pie were In Washington threaten·
lng to scuttle peace negotiations
In another part of the world.
The Soviets, desperate to be
part of any global negotiations,
seem perfectly ·willing to let
chaos and bloodshed continue In
the Middle East unl~ they are
Invited to be part of the peace
talks there.
The hitherto-unreported story
Is that the Soviet's top expert on
the Middle East spent hls time
during the summit talks trying to
guarantee· the Soviets a place at
the table tor Middle East negotla·
tlons. And l)e threatened that If

·

talks:..___~an;.;..;;;d~D....::..;ale~Va7."":'n-:-:-At--="
t~

Israel and Jordan make a separ· Prlma·kov about an International
ate peace without Input from conference on the Middle East of
Moscow, the Soviets will create the kind that King Hussein of
trouble.
Jordan has been proposing. The
Moscow's · designated tough Soviets have secretly and vehe·
guy was Yevgenly Prlmakov. mently opposed this proposal
Officially, he Is thedlrectorofthe ·before In discussions withAmerl·
Institute of World Economics cans, primarily because their
and . International Relations role would be too limited.
under the Soviet Academy of
A classl.tled State Department
Sciences. Unofficially, he Is one account of the meetlrig with
of the Soviets' top experts on the Prlmakov, reviewed by Dale Van
Middle East.
.
Att!l. says that the discussion
State Department officials had · was ' 'vigorous" liut that ''no··
a meeting with Prlmakov, one of thing new" .came from It, other
the many that was overshadowed than . the Implied threat from
·
by the mala event of the De· Prlmakov.
cember summit: the signing of
He expressed " fundamental
the Intermediate-range nuclear disagreement on the (Middle
arms trealy.
East peace) process centering on
The Americans. talked with continuing opposition to direct

Robertson ain't Re8gan
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPijlenlor Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A fellow In our office with an eye for
parallels noted las't Tuesday that Pat Robertson Is a conservative, an
advocate of old-fashioned virtues , an accomplished television
communicator and, according to the exper ts , a sure loser In hls 1988
quest for the presidency.
•
In 1980, he continued, a man with the much the same credentials
, I
also was written off by political pundits , but Ronald Reagan won the
It
presidency anyway.
. .
The similarities are valid as far as they go, but there are some
differences be tween Reagan In 1980 and Robertson In 1988 that may be
'
more lmportant.
·
·
The first Is the experience of the two men. Although hls opponents
I
persisted in referring to him as a movie actor, Reagan ran for
preside nt with two relatively successful terms as governor of the
most populous state in the nation under hls belt. Robertson has never
been elected to any public office. ·
.
This point has some historical significance. Not counting George
Washington, only five of the 39 presidents since 1789 have not held
some elective office before winning the presidency. Zachary Taylor,
u .s. Grant ·and DWight Eisenhower were hero generals; WilHam ·
Howard Taft and Herbert Hoover were Cabinet members.
· Of the three 1988'presldentlal hopefuls \Vho never won an election,
Robertson, Jesse Jackson and Alexander Halg, only Halg can take
heart from that precedent. He has been both a general and a Cabinet
member, and some regarded him as defacto p r~s lde~t during the last
days of Richard Nixon.
Anothe~ striking difference between Reagan and, Robertson Is the
political party standing of each.
Robertson has never participated in Republican politics until he
decided to seek the GOP preside ntial nomination and is regarded with
some suspicion by many state and national party leaders. In fact , the
Robertson effort to date In both Michigan and Iowa pitted hls
church·based constituency· against the party establishment. The
.
.
party people appar ently beat him In Michigan, but he made monkeys
MERRIMACK, N.H. (NEA)- 6n abortion. "Life," he pro·
of them in Iowa.
·
''Dick has consistently discarded
claimed after being elected to
Reagan , on the other hand , was well established in the party
are
inconve·
Congress
in the late 1970s,
positions
which
before 1980. Not only did he restore the GOP to power in ·
says
former
Arizona
Gov.
"begins
with
conception."
nient,"
California, Reagan began as far back as 1972 to build a national
Bruce
Babblt.
"He
shows
a
'
At the time, Gephardt enthusi·
power base.
veratllity
of
conviction
that
takes.
astlcally
supported the "right-to·
By 1976, he had Ioyallsts in key party positions and in some cases
breath
away."
your
life'
'
philosophy
and campaigned
firm control of state parties across the country . Reagan also
not
j\!st
what
"Consistency
Is
for
a
constitutional
amendment
established a national political organization under the name Citizens
we
say
today
about
where
we
abortionspositions
prohibiting
For The Republic to support GOP ca ndidates . CFR converted easily
that
were
popular
stand,
but
where
we
have
been
In
the
heavily
to Citizens For Reagan in 1979.
throughout
tbe
years,"
adds
Sen.
Catholic,
blue
collar
South
st. ,
The reason for this is that no one in modern times has won a major
Louis
district
he
Paul
Simon
of
Illinois
In
a
slightly
represents.
party presidential nomination without significant support within the
more oblique swipe at Rep.
But in 1985, while · he was
pa rty. Wendell Willkie in the 1940s and Eisenhower In the 1950s had
Richard
Gephardt
of
Missouri.
preparing
to make a bid for the
the then· potent backing and khow-how of the Eastern, for which read
Is
a
tempta
tlon
to
·
There
presidency,
Gephardt's position
Rockefe ller, Republican faction.
•
'
dismiss
that
criticism
as
petty
dramatically.
Now, ,he
changed
on the Democratic side, the best example is Jimmy Carter, who
snipping from two of Gephardt 's embraces. the "freedom-of·
may have looked llke a rank outsider in 1976, but who actually spent
rivals who are jealous of his choice" approach and Is not
several years before announcing his presidential aspirations building
ascent
to the front rank of this opposed to a bortlon - positions
friend ships in other states and was the volunteer Democratic
year's
Democratic
presidential conveniently shared by many of
National Committee coor~ina tor lor state ottlce campaigns In 1974.
contenders.
the feminists who are active In
But Babbitt, Simon and oUter presidential politics.
critics of Gephardt have an
A host of other policy reversals
Important point: Any objective re·lnforce the argument that
analysis of the positions he has Gephardt is a synthetic polltlcan
taken and the votes he has cast whose beliefs are based upon
· shows him to be, In the words of convenience, popularity and ex·
· one neutral observer, "at best pediency. Some examples :
\ inconsistent and at w orst
Education - · Gephardt preunprincipled."
viously endorsed a proposed
Undoubteddly the most blatant constitutional amendment .that
of Gephardt's fiip·flops has been would have banned busing child·

.r..•

..,

...

bUateral negotiations" between
Jordan and Israel.
The secret report paraphrased
Prtm'akov ' s threat: "Even
should a separate deal succeed
between Jordan and Israel, It
would be 'blown up' like the 1982
Lebanon agreement, by the Pa·
lestlnlans, by the Syrians, 'by
everyone.' ''
He was referring to the deal
that followed the Israeli Invasion
of Lebanon In 1982, which Syria
soon violated by virtually taking
over the country.
Prlmakov was'l''·t mincing.
words. By saying su~h a bilateral
deal would be "blown up by
everyone," he left no doilbt tluit
·t he Soviets would create trouble
even if Israel and Jordan settled
thelt differences.
Secretary .of State George
Shultz tried for another Middle
East meeting with the Soviets
during the arms summit. Part ol
the Idea came from the Israelis ln
a roundabout manner, through ·
Romanian leader Nlcolae Ceau·
sescu, who has long been · an
Intermediary between Israel, th~
Soviet Union and the Palestine
Liberation Orranlzatlon.
:·
Shultz thought as long as
Gorbachev -and/ Reagan were
settling an arms treaty, they
could · ·settle the Middle East
conflict as Icing on the cake. ·He
wanted a meeting between King
Hussehi and Israeli Prime Minis·
ter Yltzhak Shamlr to occur lri
the presence of Reagan and
Gorbachev.
Shamlr reportedly was agreea:
ble. So was King HUssein, 'ln·
ltlaUy, but he was troubled that II
would be a meaningless roa«J
show on tl)e Reagan·Gorbachev
Express.
Hussein, according to our
sources, said, "Yes; I will go If
such a meeting will lead to the
International conference we
have been working for over the
past two years.'' Shultz said he
couldn't guarantee lt. The em·
peror had no clothes and King
Hussein knew lt. The meeting
never came off.
·
.

Gephardt's
recprd
o
f
flip-flops
.

:Be

.,

\

· ren to advance sc hoot desegrega·
tlon. Now he opposes the Idea.
He earlier favored tuition tax
credits to provide federal flnan·
clal assistance for parents of
children in private or parochial
schools. He now has abandoned
that -position.
National security -'-Initially a
hawk who supported the develop·
ment of the MX missile, ne"e
gas and the neutron bomb,·
Gephardt has transformed hlm·
self Into a dove. pressing for a
freeze on nuclear weapons and
opposing U.S. military Involve:
ment In Central America.
011 import fees - Gephardt
originally opposed a federal tax
·on Imported crude oil, arguing.
that It would be Inflationary and
would produce an unjustified
windfall for the petroleum
industry.
Last year , however, he
switched and proclaimed his
support for a $5·per·barrellevy,
on the grounds that it would
provide "energy security" for
the nation 'In general and vlabil"
lty to tt.e domestic oll industry In
particular.

PROTECTS BALL- Purdue's Everette Stephens tries to get
• around Iowa's B.J. Armstrong, rear, during Monday night's Big
· Ten contest In Iowa City, Iowa. The Boilermakers beat the
, Hawkeyes 73-66. ( UPI)

'

•

Kemp - just when hls standing
In the New Hampshire polls was
bj!glnning to take off. The pre·
Iowa surveys In New Hampshire
showed Kemp In third pl!lce,
climbing sharply, as Bush and
Dole were falling and Robertson
was Invisible.
My guess Is that Kemp has
been wounded liut not winnowed.
He Is a big-league ·candidate.
Personally, he Is probably tile
most exciting of the troop of
Republican candidates. His mes·
sage Is unique, yet Reaganesque.
His populist message can gain
votes from right and left.' But he
now must show hls stuff In New
Hampshire, running upstream
against the media "bump" effect
of Iowa. The New Hampshire
state motto Is "Live Free or
.Ole." Fl)rKemplt's "Door Ole."
For the Democrats Gary Hart
was winnowed and whipped (last
place). Goir. Bruce Babbitt, a
decent man who ran . a gutsy
campaign, Is essentially out of it
now ( fl.tth place) .
· Rev. Jesse Jackson's fourth·
place finish, ln a state with few .
blacks, was not a bad showing.
. He stm Hems likely to dO quite
well In some of the blf Southern
primaries, causmr the great
turmoU he seema deatlned to
bellow upon the Democratic
Parly.
Rep. Rlcbard Gephardt won
. the primary and probably muat
,be COUDted II the curreat front•
l'llllller. althourh he will face the
, "flip-flop" luue of a moderate

candidate who has played liberal
In Iowa. What wlll happen when
he tries to be a moderate agal!l
when the blg Southern prlmarle~
come up?
Liberal Sen. Paul Simon came
In a close second but may get
squeezed out In New Hampshire

Nuclear power ~ -In 1979, ,
Gephardt voted against leglsla· •
tlon that would have allowed :
states to delay federal licensing :
o'f nuclear generating stations. .
Now, he Is a fervent advocate ,
of the states' right to Intervene In •
those federal decisions - espe- :
cially with regard to the Sea· :
brook nuclear power plant In •
New Hampshire. Its operation Is ~
opposed by many political actl· ·
vists whose support lis crucial to ·
contenders in the state's pres!· .
dential primary.
Indeed, the evidence suggests
.that Gephardt has spent much of :
hls Washlt\gton career pandering ·
-'- first to the middle-class :
conservatives In hls congres·
slonal district · and now to the
liberal activists who .are partlcu· ,
larly lnfuentlal In the Demo· '
crats' pre.s ldentlal selection
process.
Gephardi argues that hls con·
stantly shifting positions reflect
growth and flexibility, but the
pattern oflnconslstency suggests ,
instead I! penchant tor opportu·
nlstlc maneuvering.
·

by Gephardt and the likely ·
winner, the nexl·door nelgbbor,
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Du·
kakls, who was third In Iowa.
Dukakls, also a liberal, wll)
probably .face tough sledding In
the non·lllberal South.
'
-

I

'

H

~•vu.I.CUPI~-fteth1KedPI'fta

· tnter..tiD-.J ....,. ol C.acka' Top It ·
coiiPp b•letball I'IIU..., WUII lintplace

•

V~Mft

15 , .••• lor flnt

College sco~

...ce, U fone~nd. ek.) an.llaat we ek'~

......

' ...kl ..:

PoiDis
... I

1. Temple {It) ra-J)
! . Arlzou U) f11-21
I . Purd11t (IJ ( . .!)

...... ''
....

551 3

t . Oklahoma (J) ( ft.!)
5. Nerd! c....un. {18-3 )

&lt;141 '

....

t. lhlke

( 18-l)
1. Brtpam Yo•t ( 3l (10-1 l

""'.
SOOIO

8. Pllblb•'lh ( 1'1·3)
I . KentaekJ ( 18-3)
11. Mlcldpa C%H 1
11. Nenda-LuVeru (21-SJ
Ul , ,
12. S)'rac~ (18-tl)
13. ton (17-tl

...

Mo.tay, f'e b..I IJ
Xavier lit, Detroit t7
Clen ... nd St '3, SW Mll!lliOurl ~
Akron IDS, florida JJuernallonal U
Wrllht State 81, Central Co1111 A2
Und avtne to. Cl.clnnatl'28
.. Mun-a1 state 11, Vo..,ptown State M

Girls scores

.. ,

n

.

II. Geol'l"elown CIH)

.

~

Deftanee SS, Continental 31!

Ed DD HI Petd tviUe

$-1

li'•rf!lh•lon 51, Grand ValleyS&amp;.
F&amp;felk 12, str)'ker 21
Fort l e..tnp 18, U.:olnvtew ~
IDI&amp;op +fl, Pioneer N Cutral II
de llenoa 15, i\sll&amp;abula S2
Lel ..lc ~1. OUovtlle 37
Maca• Eutern Sl, F airfi eld tl
Maclson Pi al• 37, Wuh'h11ton CH 3%
Mansfield Petel'l '21, Spar&amp;a HIPiand

II. V ... ertiiH (lf.ll )
1'7. Ml..ouil ( li-5)

18. Ule) Braille)' (11-41
111. (tieJ Wyomlac ( Ill-5 1
S . Lo,ola·Mar)'ITiodlt (2. 3)

14 •

Glrlll OhiO HIP Se hool Baskfothal.l
Mo.ta,y , Fe b:- 15
1\!ihta Edpwood n. Pal nes Rl wrftide

13t II

14, North Carollftll Slate (I i-I)

8111

Ohkt CoUep Basketball Results

!481 %

.

a-t~araakd

..

Others recel\1111( vote11: Ark anu~ .
A.rt.an_...U_Wt Rod., C.lllom.- - S ~~nta
Barban, FlorWa, Florida state, Dll•ola,
llldlua, Ka_. State, Rll«&lt;e !Bland,
S.lllllen Medutdltt, Te.ua-D Puo, tJtah
state.

MIUer OtJ U. .4.yenv1Ue 4'1
Pand• ..·GIIboa $1, Arllqton Sf
Pymat ..iq VaJ H. Altlt Harbor 47
St Henrr It, P_.way_&amp;a
Swaa&amp;oll II, Bryaa t1
Sylva ala Northvlew a , nlidlay 41
nnora 18, Archbo., P
Wape 'I' race II, Holple _M
Wesllraecll 58. Yo..,p ~•oneJ S1

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
MandiiJ'• Games
NY RAIIf~ J, Montreal I

Shackleford scored 20 points in
less than 14 minutes , powering
North Carolina State, 17·5. The
Retrievers, led by Kenny
Reynolds' 32 points, fell to
1J.l2.
At Peoria, Ill., Hersey Haw·
kins scored off a m issed free
throw by Luke J ackson with two
seconds 'r emaining to give Brad·:
ley the Missouri Valley Confer· ·
ence victory. Hawkins, the •na·
tlon's leading col legiate scorer
averaging 34.3 points per game.
broke out of hls shooting slump
with 38 points.
Elsew here, It was: Connectl· ·
cut 53, Boston College 49; Navy
75, Nor th Carollna·WUmlngton .
51; Alabama-Birmingham 80,
Old Dom inion 74 (OT); Florida
.83, Miami 73; Louisville 90,
Cincinnati 78; Marsha p 105, The
Citadel '78; Virginia Tech 87,
Richmond 74; Illinois ·s tate 82,
Creigh ton 70; and Illinois· .
Chicago 83, Northern Illinois 81. ·

IOWA CITY. Iowa (UPI) "- No . victory.
3 Purdue has found the magic
" I doubt If anybody else can
ingredlentln the proven formula
catch Purdue at this point, " said
for capturing a Big Ten title - . Iowa coach Tom Davis, whose
winning on the-road.
team fell victim to a. balanced
Purdue offensive attack and a
The Boilermakers, 21·2
defense that heid the Hawkeyes
overall and 10·1 In the Big Ten,
to their poorest shoo_tlngoutlng In
took a giant step closer to an
outright teague crown Monday
two season.
"I think h 's obvious we were
night by disposing of No. 13
beaten by a real good ball club, "
Iowa, 73·66, for their third
straight conference road
Davis said.

Local bowling ·
MONDAL TRIPUCATE LEAGUE
Weekol Feb. t, 118J .

1
Woal.-&amp;
Sbelly Co.. ............ ...... ... .. ......... 30
18
ChJiteau Beauty Salon ............... 30
18
Dairy Queen .......... ................... 26
22

Stewart's Gun Shop .......... .. ...... 24

24

Middleport Troples ...... .. ........... 18
30
Ohio Pallet Company ................ 16
32
HIGH IND. GAME: Jackie Walburn ,
1M; Jackie Walburn and Reba Board, 179;

Sharon Stewart let.

.

HIGH IND. SERIES: Jac•~ Walburn,
ReiN! Bo.trd. liO; Sharon Stewart, ~;H .
TEAM HIGH GAME - Shelly Co., 484.
, TEAM HIGH SERIES: Shelly Co. 1411.

~18;

WEEJI. OF IANUARY ~~
Team 15 Blue Streak Cab ............83
Team !6 7·33 Carry-Out .............. 69
Team Jl Shammy s Carry-Ou1 ....52

29
13
60

Team #1 ....................... ............. .45
Team Ji\4 ...... , ...... ...... .................. 36

67

Team

n ................... ..... ............. 5J

78

TEAM HIGH SERIES: Team 115, Blue

Strea k Cab, 965; Team 13, Shammy's 927;

Team •1, 770.
TEAM HIGH GAME ; Team tl5 Blue
Streak Cab 331; Team IS, 331; Tt!am •3,

Shammy's, 323.
. IND . HIGH GAME : Adam Barnett, !II;
Tim Petenon, I~; Heath Shoomaker,
128; Rachaet Hawley, !U; Candy Hensley,
119: Coady Hens!~ 109.
IND. !UGH SERIES: Tim Petenoa,
314: lleotb Slloemoker 335; Adam BAr·
rett, 3011; Candy
336; Rachael
Hawtoy~Aim.. K!GH, 159.
w...... OFI'DII1lA8YI
Team l!tl Blue SII'H• Cob.... .......91 37
Team 118, 7-33 Co~·OUt , .. .. .......82
It

:·.

~= ~~~:..~.~~:':1..::::: 75~
'!'tom 11 ...... ............................... 53

Team IH ...... ...................... .........40
81
TEAM !UGH SERIES: Team 115, Blue
Sti'Hir; Cob, IMIO:i!riTum 118. 7·33 Carry.OUI,

'~:Oa

GAME: Teem 115. Blue
Cob, MO; Teem Ill, Blue ltrull

-

IND.
TtiB ,........
~~
~~~§camr.out,
au..

IT'S THE WAY TO GO IN • .
._.,.._ __
~·-~

m:~

..•

30j ~
:NS·.
-

ikii.

~

\1

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds obtained minor
league outfielder · Van Snider
Monday from the Kansas City
Royals In exchange for pitcher
Jeff Montgomery, club officials
sa:td.
Snider, 24, batted .328 with nine
home runs and 40 RBI in 48
games with the Royals' Class AA
Memphis affiliate last year. At
Class AAA Omaha, he batted .205
with nine home tuns and 27 RBI
In 70 games. Snider was assigned
to Class AAA Nashville.
Montgomery, 26, a native of
Wellston , Ohio, was8-5wlth a 4.14
ERA at Nashvllle last year. In 14
games with the Reds , he was 2·2
with a 6.52 ERA.

61

iiliiileY,

TKI NNITY AND
Tl4l! tiiAST.

Cincinnati, 8-13 and 1·7, was
paced by Ellison, a freshman who
came off the bench to hit 16 points,
Including 4 from 3-point range.
Senior Roger McClendon added 15
points, junior Cedric Glover had 13
and Jackson contributed 11.
Elsewhere Monday night, Xavier
thUmped Detroit, 114-97.; Cleveland
State whipped ~uthwest Missouri,
75-53; Akron bombed Florida Inter·
national, 1ffi-58; Murray State
defeated YoungstoWn State, 7H4;
and Wright State downed Central
Conilectlcut, 86-82.
At Detroit, Byron Larkin scored
29 points and TYrone Hill added 23
to pace Xavier to Its Midwestern
Colieglate Conference win over
Detroit.
Stan Kimbrough also had 21
points for the Musketeers, 18-3
ove rall and'6-1ln the league. Guard
Archie Tullos scored 42 points for
the Titans, 4·18overall and 2·5ln the
MCC. Marvin Owens also added 21
points.
At Cleveland, Eric Mudd, Ken
McFadden and WIUiam Stanley
each 51!0red 13 points to help
Cleveland State bea t Southwest
MiSsouri and moved Into tle wllli
the visitors for the lead In the
Association o( Mld·Continent
Universities.
Both teams are now 8-2 in the
conference.
Ray Foster added 10 for CleveEric Heck, a surprising Fresh·
land State, now 18-5 overall. Kelby
man, wrestled very well taking Stuckey scored 15 and Stan Worthy
third In the 103 pound class. He 12 for Southwest Missouri, now 18-6
won one rna tch by superior
decision (where the match ends
11 one participant is up by 15 or
Graham lop player
more points over his opponent)
and the other two by decisions .
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) - Ohio
Coach Kevin Sheppard was
University's Paul "Snoopy" Gra·
well pleased with the Meigs
ham, who had 58 points and 18
showing. He pointed out the
rebounds In a pair of Bobcat wins
Marauders had only six
last week, has been selected the
wrestlers in the match while the
Mid
-Am e rican Confe r e nc e
other .teams filled each of the
player
of the week.
thirteen weight classes.
Graham,
a 6-foot-6 junior for·
· Results of the meet were· as
ward
from
Philadelphia, P a. ,
follows :· .Nelsonville· York was ·
scored
31
points
and grabbed 10
first with 279 match points
rebounds in a 71-68 win a t Ke nt
followed by Belpre with 255,
State on Wednesday night and
Vinton County 219, Meigs 105,
had 27 points and 8 rebounds In an
Trimble 91 and Federal Hocking
88.
.
83,63 victory over Ball Sta te
Saturday afternoon .
The Marauders will partlcl·
pate in district competition · at
Washington Courthouse on Feb·
ruary 26th and 27th and , hope·
fqlly, can schedule a meet at
home prior to those dates . .

The Bearcats never led as
LoulsvUletooka94leadona 3-polnt
goal by Smith and Increased it to
22·12 on a basket by Felton Spencer ·
with 11: 15 remaining In the first
half.
Louisville's biggest lead In the
first half was 42·29 with on a basket
by Smith. Cincinnati then outscored ·
the C.ardlmlls 9·2 to cut the lead to
44-38; Smith sank a pair of free
throws to put Louisville up 47-38 at
tbe half.
Louisville took a 6047 lead on a
layup by Crook with about . 12
minutes left In the game. Cincinnati
then rallied, sparked by the shoot·
lng of Ronnie ElUson and Steve
Jackson.
The Bearca!s cut the lead to 6461
on a 3-polntgoai by Elllson with 7: 55
left.,Clnclnnatl again cut Ute deficit
to 3 on a jump shot by Jackson to
make It 75-72 with 4: 22 to go.
.
Louisville outscored the Bearcats
~5-6 the rest of the way.
Herbert Crook added 23 points
and grabbed 12 rebounds to help the
Cardinals lmprove to 149 overall
and 4-3 In the Metro.

,

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.

CONSTRUCTION

. ;i,..11Ht11111oomoUr,

c~~. ~~'~.
,
ot\

overall.
At Akron, E ric McLaughllil
scored 24 points to lead Akron to its
easy wl n · ove r Flo ri d a
International.
Scott Paterson added 18 points
and Shawn Roberts 16 as the Zips·
improved to 17·6. Sylvester
Whigham had 10 points, the only '
player in double figures for Florida
International, now H 5.
At Dayton, Scotf Benton hit a
layup with 1: 13 left to lift Wright ·
State over Central Connecticut.
Rodney Robinson sGI)red 27
points and Joe J ackson 20 for
Wright State, now 13-9. Bryan
Heron scored 21 a nd Brian Devlin 18·
for Central Connecticut, now 8-16.

·Montgomery traded to Kansas

Purdue five keeps winning on road

·

By United Press lntematlonal
Louisville's LaBradford Smith
played more Hke a seasoned
, veteran thanafreshmanlnMonday
night 's win over Cincinnati.
The Moot-3 freshman guard
equalled his season high of 32 points
and dished out seven assists In
pacing the host C.ardinals to a 90-78
Metro Conference triumph over the
I;learcats.
"Smith was excellent tonight,"
said Cincinnati coach Tony Yates.
"I think this was his best game.
"His ball handling was great and
he had a good understanding of the
court.and what he should do for his
team," added Yates.
But Smith, :.vho also scored 32
points In Louisville's 81·&amp;.l win over
Indiana on Dec. 19, drew crttlclsm
from Cardinals coach Denny Crurn
for his seven tumovers.
''If I could get LaBradlord with
that enthusiasm, and eUmlnate the
turnovers, I'd be tickled to death,"
said Crurn. "He's got to ellmlimte
those mistakes."
Smith hit 9 of 13 shots from the
floor and 13 of 13 free throws.

By JIM SOUL.'!BY
McARTHUR - Four Meigs
grapplers placed in the 1988 Tri
Valley Conference wrestling
meet held Saturday at VInton
Counly ·High School.
Wess Howard took first place
in- the 145 pound weight class,
Howard won five matches on the
day, pinning opponents from
Nelsonv ille~ York, Federal Hock·
lng, Trimble and VInton Counly
and won by decision over the
entry from Belpre. Wess has
fifteen wins . and one loss this
season, eleven coming by pins
with nine occurlng in the first
pe riod.
·
In the 171 pound class , Jared
.Sheets placed second as he took
four matches, winning three of
them by decisions and the other
· ,
by a pin.
Jeff " Cheez " McElroy pinned
one opponent and declsloned two
others as he chalked up three
·victories in the 160 pound weight
categor:y.

Hll receN Ia paMIIUINH ,

.......... rtt.e• on

Berry's World
HEY, GUYSTRY SENS11'1VIlYr

Pldladelpllla I. ..,Uord t (OT)
Detroit I, u .. AnpiM 1 .
TIINday'JGame•
..Hale al St. LDula, alpi
wa.atpe 1 a1 QueMe , • ...._
~ar:r at NY l•landen, nl«hl

UPI ralif188

.

.

Massey missed the second shot to
pull the Wildcats within 54·52.
Bekkedam scored 19 points a nd
snared 9 rebounds and Kenny
Wilson · produced 12 poi nts for
ViUanova. McDonald contrlb·
uted 12for the Hoyas•,
1
' Maybe we lost the game and
found a player In Bekkedam,"
Villa nova Coach Rollle Massi·
mlno sa id .
· In other games, No. 3 P urdue
topped No . 13 Iowa 73-66, No. 14
'North Carolina Sta te routed
Maryland·Baltlmore County 99·
77 and co·No. 18 Bradley beat
Drake 85-83.
At Io;wa City, Iowa, Troy Lewis
connected on five 3-polnt field
goals en route to 20 points for
Purdue, 21·2 overall and 10·1 In
the Big Ten. The tl ~st-place
Boilermakers hit 57 percent! rom
'the field. Iowa. 17·7 and 7·4, was
led by Jeff Moe With 13 pointsallln the first half.
At Raleigh , N.C., _Char les

Meigs wrestlers take
•
part in TVC session

Scoreboard ...

Robert Walters ·

The winnowing begins ____- =B.: :.:. :en;. . :.~.:. . . ;:a:. :. :.t . :. :.en:. :. . be: . :. . Qrg
The Iowa caucuses are over.
Weird as they are, they sortofdld
their weird work: to winnow the
minnows and either flail or hall
and whales. The Iowa process Is
a cross between a Soviet election,
machine clubhouse politics and
the old segregated .South. The .
vote Is not secret, It can take a
whole evening to participate, and
If you have to pay a baby sitterwhy Is that different from a. poll
tax?
No matter. It's first. The media
swarms over it. It can provide a
sling·shot for the first legitimate
primary , In New Hampshire on
Feb. 16, where people vote
secretly, quickly and without
cost.
On the Republican side the
winnowed minnows were two
good men, Pierre de Pont and
Alexander Halg. VIce President
Bush (third place) suffered a
humiliation, but one from which
he can recover if he wins In New
Hampshire. Rev, Pat Robertson
(second place) was catapulted
into the big leagues, but he wiD
have much more dltflculty In
non·caucua states. He has dem·
onstrated his ability to galvanize
hiS faithful In a caucus, but his
negative ratJnp remain high
among the general electorate he
muat now face. Sen. Bob Dole
won big and should be helped In
New Hamp~htre and elsewhere.
The .big question mark on the
Republican aide Is Rep. Jack
Kemp, who flnlahed fourth, juat
lnlo double dlglta, and - alu tor

a nd grabbed 6 rebounds, includ'
lng 2 in the final 90 seconds. He
also sank two free throws .with
seven seconds left to secure the
.victory.
"Charlie steps up to a nother
level," said teammate Percy
McDonald, who added 12 points
and 9 tebounds. ' 'He sees when
It's time to take over and he just
takes ove r."
Georgetown, 17·6 overall .and
7·5 In the Big East, won for the
seventh time in eight meetings
· against the Wildcats at the
C.apltal Centre: VIllanova, 16-9
and 8·5, lost Its third straight all to Top-20 teams - and has
dropped both games against the
Hoyas this season.
VIllanova's Gary Massey hit a
free throw with 13 seconds
remaining a fter McDonald .
missed the front end of a 1·and·1
·and Barry Bekkedam scored on a
layup three seconds later after

Louisville rolls over UC Bearcats, 90-78~

,

'

1\faking chaos
out of order

By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer .
Ge orge town Coach John
Thompson, renowned for hls
uncompromising nature, Is In·
dulglng Charles Smith.
Smith, a 6·foot·1junlor, scored
17 of his 22 points In the second
half Monday night to help No. 15
Georgetown post a 56·54 Big East
victory over VIllanova. During
one stre tch after Intermission;
Smith scored 11 straight points
for Georgetown.
" Charlie Is. giving us .the
offense we need," Thompson
said. " He has the abilit y to nail
the jumper and split the seams
(for layups).
''If someone else throws up the
kind of shots he throws up, I'd
curse hlm out . But he has an
· unusual ability to be stopped and
·
the n create a shot."
Smith converted 7 of 11 shots
from the field In the' second half

By Jack Anderson

.

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON !UPI) -Someone who is a better math emallclan
than I has figured out that the current presidential campaign Is the
four th the nation has endured since the Internal Revenue Service
began permitting citizens to earma r k a dollar of their federal Income
ta xes for politics.
.
I will leave It to others, es pecially pundits who were in Iowa , to
·figure out whe ther all thi s generosity has achieved the goal of making
: the candidates less dependent on "outside" campaign contributions.
I can tell you, however , that it has done llttle to improve the quality
of money•.
And would a nyone seriously suggest the batch of candidates now
assembled in New Hampshire is superior to those that went questing
for the nominations of both parties before matching funds became
ava llable?
I thought not. I ca n heat such s uggestions being made on the back
row but there is a question In my mind as to how serious they are.
There were, I understa nd , nearly 3, 000 reporte rs and photographers In Iowa, or almost one per candidate.
A qulck reading of history will show the past four campaigns have
done little to improve the quality of our presidents, who, in the order
·of their apprearance, were Jerry Ford, Jimmy Carter and Ronnie
Reagan.
And would you seriously suggest that Richard Nixon , say , was as
better president than, say, Abraham Lincoln?
If so, you must read different his tory books than 1.
Roll Call, a Capitol Hill weekly newspaper, recently published a list
of " negatrends. "' or "important things that will not happen" In 1988. I
· realize this is no histocy, but the list implied that those of us In the
media don't consider Iowa a very sexy state except during an
presidential election year.
. It said , "The day after the Iowa caucuses, no major media figure,
except Willard Scott, will mention the state by name untll1992."
Scott, the last time I tuned In, was a television weatherman.
However, any implication that the rest of the nation only cares about
the amount of snow Iowa exports is entirely false.
Sure there is a trade deficit . Butlowa gets mostoflts snowfall out of
Canada, wtth whom we recently signed a new pact, like the rest of us.
· It may have been a mite chilly during the caucuses, but that Is no
reason to suppose the entire state will dlappear down a pothole, or
something, untll1992.
Speaking of sexy, I note that Gary Hart finished well back In the
Democratic pack. Guess there weren't enuogh adulterers In the state.
that as it may, I personally amoglad the IRS provides a blank to
check for those of us whom wish to contribute. To me, Hart's
attempted comebac~, In Iowa was well worth a dollar. t.

Georgetown .nips Vlllariova; Purdue wins

Page 2 _:.The Deily Sentinel
Pomerov Midcleport. Ohio:
tuaadey. February 18, 1988

-Soviets want role in

The Daily Sentinel

Sentinei- Page- 3

The

Ohio

Member

.c.

-,

�-· .. . ..
Ohio

U. S. hockey learn beaten _bt
.

.

Winter Olympics tll~ Monday

. .
,
. . ,. ~- ,.

MJU,EN HITS ICE -Czechoslovalda'sRudoH
Suchanek (5) sends the USA's Corey MIDen ( 10) to

I

I.

the Ice In front ollhe Czech goaUe Domlnlk H.-ek
( 2) In Calgary, Alberta, durtnr Monday nlrbt's
contest. (UPI)

Chicag~

ends sl~mp; Cavs
post 104-95 win over Kings
'

Threatt 11.
By IRA KAUFMAN .
"Our problem lately Is that we
UPI Sports Writer
hadn't been penetrating mucli
Michael Jordan's Chicago Bull
anq not getting everyone In·
teammates are often so envolved In the offense," Jordan
tranced by his acrobatic moves
said. "We really craslied tile
they forget to move themselves.
boards today and thal'gotourfast
The rest of the Bulls transbreak going."
formed themselves from gawkAll-Star Dominique Wilkins led
ing spectators to active partners
Atlanta
with 25 points, but
Monday in snapping Chicago's
missed 13 of his 21 field-goal
offensive woes with a 126-107
attempts.
romp over the' Atlanta Hawks.
Jordan scored 32 points, includElsewhere, Milwaukee beat
ing 2 on a · sensational banging Washington 114·110, Cleveland
reverse layup, but he also made defeated Sacramento 104-95, Desure his teammates weren 't troit topped Philadelphia 102-95,
arrested for loitering.
New York edged New Jersey
" We needed to create some 97·96, Dallas eclipsed Seattle
more things for the other guys 128-122, Golden State downed San
and Michael did that," said Antonio 126-122. Boston nipped
Chicago Coach Doug Colllns1 Phoenix 107-106 and Utah beat ·
wliose team had averaged just 82 Phoenix 112-94.
points over its last four games.
Bucks 114, Bullets 110
"Michael did that and goth is own
At Landover, Md., Jack Slkma
poin ts. too . We got a lot oflayups shook off a first-quarter altercaand that's due to our crashing the tion wltli Moses Malone to hit his
first nine shots and score 27
boa rds."
Jordan, who shot 13 for 22 from points. Trailing by 30polnts In the
~ he fJeld , contributed 8 assists, 5
third quarter, Washington made
steals and a game-high 13 re- it close behind a career-high 28
bounds' as the Bulls outinuscled points from John Williams.
~tlanta 53-36 on the 1\oards at
Cavaliers 104, Kings 95
Chicago Stadium.
At Richfield, Olilo, Brad
: ''They played a sensational Daugherty scored 30 points In
'game, " said Atlanta Coach Mike leading Cleveland to its eighth
-Fratello, whose club bas lost six victory In the last 10 games. The
of its last nine. ' 'They played wltli Kings, wlio have lostl7 of 20 road
supreme intelligence. They got . games, wereled.byReggleTheus
ever yone involved and when they with 29 points.
do that. they are a dangerous
Pistons 102, 76ers 95
At
Pontalc,
Mich .. Islah Thoteam .' '
F ive other players scored in mas scored 24 points and Dennis
double figures for the Bulls, who Rodman, startling his fifth game
took command midway through in place of Injured Adrian Danthe third'- quarter witli a 10-0 tley, added 19 to lead Detroit to
spurt. c;harles Oakley delivered
Its fifth straight victory. Charles
•19 points , fo rward Brad Sellers Barkley finished with 32 points
added 17 points and a surprising 8 for Philadelphia, whiCh lias lost
J;ssists, Dave Corzine 16 points. 13 straight road games.
Scottie Pippen 12 and Sedale
Knlcks 97, Nets 96

At New York, rookie Mark
Jackson scored 12 of his 19 points
In the fourth quarter to spark the
Knlcks to their eighth straight
home victory. Dudley Bradley's
long jumper bounced oil tile rim
at the buzzer as New Jersey's
road record fell to 1-23.
Mavericks 128
SuperSonics 122
At Seattle, Rolando Blackman
scored 9 of Ills 28 points In
overtime to help DaUas hand
Seattle Its seventh loss In eight
games.' Seattle forced the extra
session when Sam VIncent's
jumper with one second left tied
the score 110·110.
Warriors 128, Spurs 122
At San Antonio, Chris Muljln
scored 27 points and Rod Higgins
added 26 In rallying Golden State
from a 25-p&lt;&gt;lnt deficit. Walter
Berty hit for a career-high 31
points lor the SpiJrS, who have
lost live straight:
Celtlcs 107, Suns 106
At Phoenix, Larry Bird scored _
20 ot his season-high 49 points In
the opening quarter and Danny
Alnge connected on \WO disputed
free throws with tllree seconds
left to lilt. With Boston trailing
106-105 and five seconds left,
Alnge received an lnbounds pass
to the right of the 3-polnt line and
started dribbling to his right
when he ran into Jeff Hornacek
and knocked him down. Referee
Jim Capers. whistled Hornacek
for the blocking foul.
Jazz 112
.
TraU Blazers 94
At Salk Lake City. Thurl Bailey
came off the bench to score 32
points and pull down a careerhigh 17 rebounds for the Jazz.
Portland was forced to play
without three Injured players:
Klkl Vandeweghe, Maurice Lu·
cas and AU-Star Clyde Drexler.

Temple retains number one ratr,ng
Monday, the streaking Lions of
Loyola-Marymount earned their
first-ever Top 20 appearance in
votjng by United Press International's Board of Coaches :
The Lions, 20·3 under former
Laker Coacli Paul Westhead,
have won 17 consecutive games
and were rewarded wltli a No. 20

Ohio Outdoors

Free bait available,
•
•
even tn wtnter

.

By JERRY PICKRELL
inside waiting for the warmth of
OutdoorWrlters
spring to continue . his
t\ssoclallon of America
metamorposls.
Distributed by UPI :
These can be Impaled on the
Free ball is something most · end of a small hook for some
fi sher men relate to summertime dandy lee fishing ball .
fis hing. Seining minnows from a
They even come wltli a "staystrea m or snatching crawfish fresh" wrapper. By breaking off
from beneath rocks is surely the stem above and below, you
someth ing that 's bes t done when can have a pocketful of effective .
th e weather andwaterarewarm.
baits ready lor use anytime.
Just make sure you don't take
But that's not the only kind of
free bait there Is.
them in the house or store them
Bugs make some of tile b&lt;i&gt;st lor a long time In a heated car.
fish-catching enticements you The warmth will have the same
can ge t at an y time of the year.
effect as spring and tliey'll begin
The problem is, there aren't the process of turning Into
many cr ickets under rot ling logs _ . butterllles. Not much good for
r ight now. They've all burrowed bait If t)lat happens.
deep Into the ground where they
MIMows can still be seined In
aren't readily -accessible.
the winter, too. It's a good Idea
A walk througli the tall, dead
not to get In the water with them.
weeds that you thought were
though. Have a friend help you or
making you sneeze last fall will use a cast net or a dip net.
be a revelation if you look at tliem
Look lor tliese small fish to be
closely enough . .Many of the gathered around the small open
stalks or stems of thes~ plants water areas that ·c an be found
will look like they have a bulb In
around Inflows, culverts and the
them.
like.
11 you gently slice this bulb
They may be somewhat slug·
open from one end to the other, glsh from the cold, but you'llstlll
yqu'll find a small grub nestled need to be fast to catcli them.
t

.,

Meilfs board to meet tonilcht

Flling deadline nears _
for Meigs-. caildidates

,.,y.-:r;

t

Reineke OAC honoree

ranking. While UCLA and USC
struggle In the Paclflc-10, tile
Lions are flourishing In tile ·
Western Conf~rence Athletic
Association. ·
"We are elated to get this kind
of recognition," said Westhead,
who guided Loyola-Marymount
to a 19-11 mark last season. "It's
exciting lor our kids and It gives
our university the kind of quality
recognition 'It lias been deservIng. We have worked hard tills
season and the pieces have fallen
In place."
Temple, 20-1, received 29 firstplace votes, eight more than last
week, and totaled 609 points to
earn tile top spot lor the second
consecutive week.

"We have a lot of pitchers
coming to camp, followlrtg the
Branch Rickey dictum that quan·
tlty might produce some qual·
lty," he said. "Everybody will
.
get a long, hard look." ·
In addition, I~ Indians- an- ,'
nounced tliat Bob DIBlasio, who ·
had been the team's public.
relations director lor five years ·
until midway througli the 1986
season, Is returning · In that
capacity .
DIBiasl_o, wlio workj!(} for the ,
Atlanta Braves last -year, also
Will handle community affairs
for the Indians . .
Rick Minch, the public rela·
tiO!\S director tile past 1 'h
seasons, has . been moyed to ,
director of media relations.

"We bad wanted a two-yell.r
contract because Mel could've
been a free agent alter this
season. We're glad we were able
to . secure his services In this
manner." added ·Peters. "He
provides left-handed power hitling and Ills defense Improved
last year.
Hall, 27, wlio Is expected to ·
start In left field, batted .280 with
18 horr.e runs and 76 RBI In 142
games last season. A possible
challenge to his role came when
the Indians signed free agent
outfielder Ron Kl tile last week.
Peters discussed the fact the
Indians have invited a plethora of
pitchers to spring training.

NEW YORK (UPI) - ·Former
Ohio State University 1\thletlc
Director Rick Bay lias -been
named executive vice president .
and chief operating officer of the ·
New York Yankees.
Bay's hiring was announced
Monday by Yankees ·owner
George Steinbrenner.
Bay will !le responsible lor the
everyday administrative opera.
lion of the ballclub, Steinbrenner
said.
In November, Bay resigned his
position as athletic director at
OSU to protest the firing of
former Buckeyes head football
coach Earle Bruce by Ohio State
president Edward Jennings.

Bay to NY

'

post

Councils~ ..

-I

Area deaths

......-.

Market

c·AR SERVICE

Take advantage
now of our. 5
Point Service
Special
. .

·By United Press International
That coo), dry Canadian air
Cloudy skies and cool Cana- will help clea r the skies over
dian air with west-to•northwest Ohio, allowing sunny skies tor
winds Monday helped make It a Tuesday morning. Temperadreary, day In Ohio.
tures my daybreak should be In
Dense clouds covewred most of the teens to low 20s, but climb
·or Ohio with morning rain show- 11tto ~he 30s to low 40s Tuesday .
ers turning to snow In the
A cold front In the Northern
afternoon In the north. Tempera- Plains Monday afternoon will be
tures in the 40s In the morning fell close enough to Ohio by la te
Into the upper 20s to mid 30s by Tuesday afternoon to pose a
late afternoon as the Canadian threat of snow for Tuesday night.
air Invaded tile Buckeye State.
This system will wind Its way
Temperl!tures fell from 44 at 8 east of Ohio Wednesday with
a.m: to 38 at 9 a.m. In Akron.
inore dry weather behind it for

-

TOLEDO, Ohio (t;PI) - Ohio
Northern forward Stan Reineke
has been selected the Ohio
Athletic C_o nlerence player of the
week for leading the Polar Bears
to a pair of wlns 'la5t week. ·
Reineke, a 6-loot-4 senior from
New Knoxville, Olilo, scored 31
points, grabberl12 rebounds and r~-----------'-----------.,­
had 11 assists In wins over
Wittenberg and Marietta.
On Wednesday, Reineke
scored I8 points, Including a
game-winning 3-polnt field goal
with 15 seconds to play In a 49-47
victory over Wittenberg. He
fol 1.owed tliat up with 13 points In
Northern's 83·60 romp over Marietta on Saturday.

Winter driving
(j}fire Rotation
may have taken
its toll on your IB-4 Wheels Balanced
car.
Blnspect All Brakes

through Ohio today

.Stocks

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Out·
fielder Mel Hall lias signed a
two-year contract with the.cleveland Indians, avoiding an arbitration hearing that was set for
today.
The Indians announced the
signing Monjlay, but would not
release his salary figures. Hall
had been asking for an annual
salary of $830,000, while the
Indians were offering $675,000.
"The hearing had been sche·
duled for (today), and we pretty
much got things done over the
weekend," said Indians President Hank Peters, who avoided
going to arbitration with all live
players who had filed. Outfielders Carmen Castillo and Joe
Carter and infielders.- Brook
Jacoby and Julio Franco pre·
'vlously agreed to contracts.
·

Name

~o,·ing

OterS,,,

Hall signs with Indians.

•

NEW YORK CUP! ) - Move
over uCLA . Step aside Southern
Ca l.
· There's a lot more to college
basketball in Los Angeles these
days than the Bruins or the
Troja ns: try the Lions.
While Temple strengthened its
hold on the No. 1 ranking

_1-

1

VARSITY PLAYER- Aligela E. (Angle) Spencer,
daughter · of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger A. Spencer, Tuppen
Plains, Is a member of the
otterbein Women's Varsity
Basketball Team. A rraduale
of Eastern High School,
Spencer ls.Junlor at Otterbein.
The Lady Cardinals have
compll!:d a 13-8 overall mark,
9·5 In conference play.

front

Thursday.
.
The Saskatchewan low will
Monday afternoon's weather move east over southern Canada
!JI&amp;P showed low pressure north
and drag the cold front Into the
Of Lako&gt; Ontario with a cold fr ont extr~me western Great Lakes by
vunn lng tile length of the Appal- morning and across Lake Michl·
achlans from Pen_nsylvanta into gan Into northwest Indiana bY
northern Georgia.
Tuesday evening.
High pressure was · centered - - The cold front will swing
over Hudson's Bay and over across Ohio by late Wednesday
Texas
with a .weak bridging of tr.Jrnlng with high pressure
MeJiSLocal Board of Education will meet t'o'nlglit (Tuesday),
high
pressure
joining these two filling In behind It Wednesday
7 p.m., In regular session. The meeting will take place at the
across
the western night.
systems
administration building In Middleport.
Great
Lakes
and
through the
Snow Is llekly Tuesday night In
1
mld·Mlsslsstppl Valley.
Olilo with lows between 20 and25.
More low pressure was over Mostly · cloudy conditions Wed·
southern Saskatchewan with a nesday wlll produce some scat·
cold front south tlirough the tered flurries · and highs In the
Continued from page 1
Dakotas Into Wyoming.
30s.
- - - - - - ' - - - - - - ' - - The cold front east of Ohio will
Fair weather Is expected
to !Ill the new J)osltlon. The It was reported by Councilman move east to allow high pressure · Thursday with achance of rain or
hourly wage for the position Is to Bill Young that a heavy coal to build from tile western Gulf snow Friday and Saturday.
', All candidates for public office Declaration of Intent by 4 p.m.
depend upon qualifications and truck has been coming down across the Great Lakes and Into Highs will range between 35 and
In the May 3 primary election (40 days before the election)
45 and lows will be In the 20s.
experience, and alter this year, througli theNaylor'sRunareaon Canada.
. must be tiled by Thursdl\Y at 4
. Apr. 4- Registration closes at
the Job will he renewable on a · a dally basi &amp;-and Young fears the J /
p.m., according to t!Je Meigs . 9 p.m. for Primary Election only
year-to-year basis from Jan. 1 road will be damaged because of y
Continued from page 1
County Board of Elections. Pres- (29 days before election)
through Dec. 31. Krautter, who the truck.
ented here Is a calendar of the
·Apr. 21 - Pre-Primary Elecbas worked for the vlllage for a
Young also reported that he for the· day. Fog shrouded much week's runner-up.
At stake today were only 23
!.IPCOrillng - filing, balloting and tlon campaign finance reports
number of years, has been hired received a call from a resident of the state as most voting booths
Republican
and 18 Democratic
opened
at
6
a.m.
report deadlines.
due by 4 p.m. (12 days before
at $8 per hour.
wondering If there · would. ·be
delegates·
to
the party national
Polls
released
Monday
night
Feb. 18 - Declarations of election)
money for backstops at the
conventions
this
summer. Yet
showed
Bush,
once
the
heavy
Gandldacy for partisan candl·
Apr. 22 - Qeadllne for filing
Councilman Larry Wehrung
Monkey· Run Park. Council said
despite
those
small
numbers, the
1\IDOng
Granite
State
favorite
dates must be flied by 4 p.m. (75 list of challengers and witnesses
suggested that Council consider
there Is money available for
primary
could
Republicans
,
virtually
tied
with
have
long-range
days before the election)
for Primary election (11 days purchasing used guard rail from
backstops,- etc., If work crews
Feb. 25- Boards of Elections before the election)
. · PDK ConstfUctlon, Pomeroy. to
can be p\lt together to install the Dole, the winner of last week ' s effect on all the candidates.
.•
must certify validity and sqfflApr. 30 - Applications for
be Installed .along an area of East
equipment. It was further re- . Iowa caucuses.
Among
Democrats.
the
surThey all generally had llglit
clency ot partisan candidate's Primary Election absentee bal· Main St. where the riverbank has
ported tliat the park seems to bo&gt;
veys
by
CBS
News,
published
In
schedules
today after a full round
petitions (68 days before the lots due by noon (3 days before eroded. Wehrung said he spoke draining properly since the area
The
New
York
Times,
and
ABC
of
blitzing
the state Monday ~
.
the election) 'Absentee ballots with a representative of l'DK was fllled , and tliat there is room
election)
News
together
with
The
W
aappearing at schools, shopping
• Feb. 28- Partisan candidates must be returned by . 7: 30 p.m. Construction and that the village
for a ball field, although tile
may withdraw from Primary election day.
could purchase the guard rail
property Is not wide enough for a shlngton Post showed Dukakls malls, rallies and even a boxing
with a commanding lead of more ring. Already.- lrequenttelevlslon
Election by 4 p.m. (65 days
May 2- Nomlnatll\g Petitions and have It Installed at a cast of
regulation s~e 'field.
before the election)
for Independent candidate (ex- $12,000 to $14,000. The village
Council was Informed by Weh- than 20 points. They also showed and radio commercials
. Feb. 29 - Protests against a cept president and vice presl- must accept PDK's offer by
rung that costs for required a virtual tie between -Gephardt, multiplied .
parttsan· candidate's petition "· dent, and candidates lor state March ~. Wehrung ~~&amp;ld, before
physicals for firemen and pollc- the Iowa winner, and Simon, last
must be filed by 4 p.m. (64 days board of education or county '. PDK becomes lnvoled In other men will be about $50 each. The
Bush, virtually requiring a win
before tile election)
cour~ judges) must be filed by 4
Jobs. Wehrung said the village physicals will be conducted at
to revitalize his ·White House
p.m. (day betore the Primary could arrange Installment pay- Veterans Memorial Hospital,
effort, brought former Sen.
ments with PDK at no Interest.
and the hospital will not be
Barry Goldwater of Arizona to
Mar. 24- Write-In candidates :Election)
Dally stock prices . ,
lor Primary Election must !lie
May 3 - Primary election
making money off the physicals
However, Councilman John
New Hampshire, hoping the
(As oliO: 30 a.m.)
\
Anderson voiced objections to
Wehrung satd . Possibly 50 people
stalwart
conservatlyewould help
Bryce and Mark Smith
Installing guardrail on tile river· will receive the physicals he
his
cause
among the state's
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
bank, and suggested Instead that
added.
populous right wing.
Council received a request Am Electric Power ........ ... .. 28Y,.
Council consider some type of
natural barrier, such as a sloping
from Charles Jerry Hawk, doing AT&amp;T ...'........ ...... ........ .. .. .. .. 28)1,
great grandchildren; two sisters,
Rev. Earl Eden
The vice president bas slipped
rise, In order to retain the beauty
business as the Pomeroy Wine Ashland Oil .... .. .. .. ... :.. ... .. ... 57Y,.
Flossie Petty of Pomeroy and
badly
In the New Hampshire
"
Store, 115 West Main St:, to Bob Evans ... .. .... .... :.......... .. . 15
of the riverbank.
Rev. Earl R. Eden, former Mary Tyler of Columbus; four
polls
since
he finished a poor
transfer a C1·C2llquor license for Charming Shoppes .... .... ... ... 12)1,
pastor of Middleport Baptist brothers, Carl a:nd Ernest Dorst,
In
Iowa
last week belilnd
third
beer and wlne·c arry-out to Mason City Holding Co ......... ... ... .... 33
Wehrung said he would just
Church, age 60, of 1600Thompson both of Sumner; Archie Dorst of
Dole
and
former
television evan· ·
·councy Exxon Inc., doing busi- Federal Mogul.. ....... ........... 37'h
He!ihts, Cincinnati, died Sunday Columbus and' ·Pearl . Dorst of . like something done soon along
gellst
Pat
Robertson.
A loss
ness as the Food Shop, 820 East Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .. ...... .... ... 59 %
In the emergency room of Provi- Baltimore; several nieces and the problem area to prevent
today
In
a
state
where
he
was
Main. Public comments on the Heck 's Inc .... ... ... ... ....... .. .... ... 2·
nephews.
vehicles from possibly going In
dence ~ospltal In Cincinnati~
once
the
solid
front-runner
would
transfer request will be taken Key Cen turlon ... ..... .. ... .. ... ... 40
Besides his parents, he was the river.
··
BOrn May 29, 1927 In ·Springuntil' the next regular council Lands' End ......... ......, .. .. ... .. 18% seriously 1amage Ills chances to
prec~ed In death by one brother,
Although no decision was made
field, Tenn., Rev. Eden was a son
succeed President Reagan.
meeting.
Edgar Dorst, and two Infant on either suggestion, Cieri\ Jane
Limited Inc . ....... .. ... ........... 17~
of th,e late Albert R, and Edltlt
Busli called Goldwater's apA visitor at last night's meeting . Mulilmedla Inc . .. :.... .......... .55'h
Walton pointed out that by law,
pearance ·'just exactly the mediMae·· Cook Eden. He served as brothers,
was Don Hunnell, of Fifth St. , Rax Restaurants .... ... ..... ... .. . 3:U,
Services will be Wednesday, 1 the village must take bids for ~ny
pastor of the Middleport Church
cine tile doctor ordered at the end
Middleport.
Hunnell is a member Robbins &amp; Myers ....... :.. .... ..... 9
from 1985-1987 and moved to p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home purchase over $5,000.
of Boy Scout Troop 253, Mason, Shoney's Inc . ...... ... .......... ... 22% of a long week or two."
Tile mayor suggested that
Cincinnati In June 1987 where he with AI Hartson officiating. BurW.Va. , and attended the meeting
was currently pastor of the ial will be In Keebaugh Ceme- CounciL· consider both sugges's Inti ........ .. ....... .... ... 6% r;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;
as a requirement for a t~nderfoot Wendy
Worthington lnd.,.,........... ... 18Y,.
Immanual Baptist Churcl\. He tery. Friends may call at the tions .and II necessary, a spec: tal
·
had aii!O·!!t'rved as a clergyman funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 meeting could be convened to · badge.
on
Tuesday.
take any action necessary ..
for churches in Indianapolis and
The ,problem of a blind enBrazl~ Ind.
'
PearrBunce
trance at the Intersection of
Survivors Include his wife,
Lincoln Hill and Butternut Ave.
Imogene, of Cincinnati; and two
Pearl M. Bunce, 60, .Middle· was again discussed, witli · the
.so~s. Rev. Thomas R. Ed~n and
Terry L. Eden, both of port, a retired Meigs County mayor suggesting that any
school teacher, died Monday changes at the spdt be decided
Cincinnati.
' Services were 2 p.m. todi\Y afternoon at the Care Haven right away, before paving In
(Tuesday) at the Immanuel Nursing Center In Point Pomeroy takes place later In the
year. Any changes should be
Baptist Church. Burial will be Pleasant.
Mrs.
Bunce
was
born
In
West
made
when, the paving takes
Wednesday In Springfield, Tenn.
When you need us, we'll be
VIrginia,
Aprilll,
1907,
a
daughplace
the
mayor said.
Arrangements were by tile Chathere ... with prompt. conter
of
the
late
Harry
and
Matilda
Also discussed was tile vilrles Miller Funeral Home, 4138
Kinser
Miller.
She
was
a
member
cerned insurance service. We
lage's ordinance of a five-ton
Hamilton Ave., Cincinnati.
always try to be friends you
of the Bradbury Church of Clirlst, load limit on resldeni!al streets.
can d,pend on. Call us today.
Middleport Chapter 172, Order of .
Esther Pa,tel"80n
Eastern Star, and the Ohio
· Esther · Farley Patterson, 49. Retired Teachers Association.
Infant brothers, Wilbur and Burl;
She Is survived by her hus7339 Brook Valley Rd., San
a grandson, Gary Putman; and a
Antonio, Texas, died Sunday at band, Walter Bunce; a son and
great granddaughter 1 Rebecca
Lockland Alrlorce Base Hospl- daughter-ln·law, .Larry and Reva
Lance.
. tal, Lockland, Texas, after a') Bunce, Middleport; a daughterServices will be 1 p.m. ThursIn-law, Lena Bunce, Ml'ddleport;
extended Illness.
day
at the White Funeral Hoine
214 EAST MAIN
•She was the daughter of Mary a brottter. Harry Miller, Middlewith
Rev.
Ronald
Vogelsong
MILLER
SEEKS
RE-ELECTION
Congressman
Clarence
Pridemore 'Farley and the late port; six grandchildren, live
POMEROY
officiating. Burial will be In
MIDer (It-Lancaster) is shown preparing his nomlnallng petitions
Hiawatha Farley, She Is a former great-grandchildren and several
Stewart Cemetery at Hockingfor submission to the Fairfield County Board of Elections for this
992-6687
nieces and nephews.
resident cit Rt. 1, Ewlngtori.
port.
Friends
may
call
at
the
year's
primary
election.
Miller,
serving
his
11th
term,
Is
seeking
Besides her parents, she was
She Is survived by lier husState Auto
relectlon to the House of Representatives from Ohio's lOth
~uneral borne on Wednesday
band, Robert, and'son,JUck, both preceded In death by a stepson,
fro'm 2. to 4 and.7 to-9.
Congressional District, which consists of all or parts of Athens,
of San Antonio; ·three brothers, . Wendell Bunce;' four ·brothers,
Fairfield, Gallla, Guernsey, Lawrence, Licking, Meigs, Morgan,
Companies
' Delmus ·Farley, Forrest Farley Earl, Denver, Leon -and Hubert
Musklngum,
Perry
and
Washington
Counties.
Opal
C.
Capehart
and Do lye Farley, all of Colum- Miller, and three sisters, Gladys
Opal C. Capehan, 85, New
bus; and eight sisters, Mrs. Doris L. Miller, Dessle Mottu, and
Pridemore, Rt. 1, Ewlngton, Minnie Brown.
Haven. was pronounced dead on ar· '
rival at the Camden-Clark Hospital
Mrs. Marcus (Linda) Prater, . Services will -be held at 2 p.m.
Aslivllle, Ohio, - Mrs. James Thursd~y at the Rawlings-Coats·
in Parkersburg on Monday, Feb. 15,
AmENS UVESTOCK sALES
(Brenda) Wright of Pataskala, Blower Funeral Home with Mr .
1988.
- Februacy 6, 1988
Mrs. Cecil (Mary Jo) Baker of Bill Carter officiating. Burial
Born. March 25, 1902 in Grimm
CA'ITLE PRICES: Feeder Sleera:
will belnGraveiHIIICemeteryat
StatJ.On, She was a dau~hter Of the (Oood
Columbus, Mrs. Robert (Kathy)
ODd Choice) 1100-1111 tllo. 711.1111-81.00;
Cheshire.
Friends
may
call
at
the
late
Elwood
J.
and
Luel
BeUe
Oh·
sot-11111
tbo. 18.1111-11.10; Feeder ReUen:
' Henthron, Circleville, Mrs. An·
linger
Lt'evt'ng.
_
(Oood
ond
Choice) 1100-110 111o. 10.1111-11.00:
funeral
home
from
2
to
4
and
7
to
9
thony ():lena) Grllllth. Clarkssot-'100 tbo. 10.1111-'11.10: Feeder Buill:
p;m
.
Wednesday
.
.
Her husband, Henry William (Good ODd Cbolce) 300-M lbo.IS.OII-88.00:
burg, W.Va., Mrs. Michael (DebCapehart died in 1968. Also preced- • • tbo. 11••71.118; SIUfhler Cowo:
bie) Bishop, Creola, Ohio, Mrs.
lJIWUeo 48.1111-11%.:11; Caaaen and CUUen
Mary' Putman
Gary (Avonda) Kisor, Rt. 1,
ing , her in death were lhree •·-·"' SprtqerCows: (BylheBead)
Dote:
Thursday , February 18
S3UHIIUO; Veolo: (Cholco and Prime)
brothers • Carl • PaUI• and Charies 111.01-...
Ewlngton.
.
,
Time: 7:00P.M. ·9:00P.M.
lt; Baby Calve_, (By tho Bead)
Mary Margaret Putman, 74, of Lieving; one sister. Wilma Roush 61........, Baby CalvH: (By the Pouad)
Services will beTiiursday at 10
Place: MtiJIS Cpunry Senior Center
a.m. at· _the Fellowship Chapel C&lt;;~olvlll!1, ,dled Monday afternoon and a granddaughter, Shelba J. ao.oo-tza.oo.
Moiberry Heights
ROO PRICES: Bop: (,., llamlwlaad
Church In VInton with the Rev. at Camden-Clark Memorial Hos- Jones,
Glllol) lbo. u.-.10: Bulcher
Pomeroy. Ohw
Surviving aq: six sons, Garland s....: 21.owuo: Rutebet' Boan: 18.111Elmer G!!lser officiating. Burial pital In Parkersburg, W.Va. alter
Clyde Roush, Mt. Gilead, Ohio, 11.110; Feeder Pip: (RJ lbo Bead)
wjll be a\ the VInton . Me~orlal an extended Illness.
A
homemaker,
Mrs.
Putman
Delbert L Roush, Guysville, Ohio,
Feed.. ......,bo, so.otPark.
Friends may visit at the was born July 17, 19131n Weston, WiUiam R. Cailebart. Middleport, ...;.a_
....
_._o._aa_b_y_lhe_H_•ad_:_u_.OO-_a_•·_•_·--j
Capehart, .McCoy-Moore Fun~ral Home In W.Va., a daughter of the late · Ohio, . Buford L.
Coolville, Ohio, Irwin C. Capehart,
'-'lnton Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Wade and Lora Simmons Clem.
She Is survived by four daugh· ' Houston, Texas, Edwanl E.
p.m.
ters and sons-In-law, Thelma and · Capebart, Pomeroy, Ohio; three
Joe Lantz and Edith and John daughters, 'Juanita N. Abbott, Point
~J)onl
Henderson, all of Reedsville, Pleasant, Lenora J. McKnight,
•
· Clair Milford Dorst, 76, of.40095 Dnrothy and Mlch11el Lance of Pomeroy, Ruth M. Thompson,
State Route 681, Shade, died Coolville and CoMie and Jerry Bolivia, N.C.; four sisters, Wilda
Saturday at Veteran~ Memorial Saylor of Guysville; five sons al)d Brinker, New Haven, Catherine
·aoapltal, followtne an extended daughters·ltl·law, Dnn and Mar· Paris, Knland, W., Alice Lieving,
~--­
letle Putman of Reedsville, Jim Ada Oldaker, both
Ulnels.
Mason; two
.
Born Feb. 14, 19llat Sumner In and Ruth Putman, Wllaon and brothers, Bernard LieYing, New
·····~!··········~
Me(Ja County, Mil, Dorst was a Frances Putman, Burl and"Bon· Haven, Donald Lioving. Wilerman.
, Sllili!IUT'llll.
N
,, MLACI
iOa or the late Jacob and Roale _Die Putman and Dale and Becky ~~;41 peat·
..
.;
Powell Dorst. He bad been a Putman, all of Coolville; three
·············~····
tural mall carrier · and was brothers, Hall, Carl and ~belt . Servii:ea will bo Thuriday It 1:30
~from employment at Ohio
Clem or Coolville; two ataters, P~: ~- the Now HaYell Uniled
UIIIIWntty. He wu a member or Betty Allen and Ruth Barnbouile ~ Cbaldl of wbich lbo
or~; 28 atandclilldren; 21
the Proteatant faith.
was a member, wldllhll ~v. Doyle
.
~Jtat
grandchUclren; several Payne ofklltilla Barial will fol· Survivors Include two aons and
.......,.ABOI(I'INIMATOUQ-VACA'DONPACI.MIII'
Gaqbten·ln-taw, Milford and . lliecel ud nephewa.
low In Ore'aa I IIIII)'.
01&lt; lillY CllllUPTOua AT 1DOIIII 1101111- lAVI AN ADOI'DONAI.IIO• .
Rtta Dorst of · GaW• • Ud
llellldel her parents, she was
Friencll iltl)' all 'It' ' e. 'If
- ,1\. ,1
Donald and Mary Dont ' Of ~ In death by her bUJ· . from 2 10 '4 ~ 7·9 p.m. • .
itnd ~-­
- - ODe daUJ!Itlr• Lula Bille bliltt, WoodrOw, In 1967; a 1011, Fosleloni Punaill
GtAtbeai: ~~ 11x Euplle; a brother, Ken; tWo boll' priol' 10 . .
die church.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Servjce reports three calls
· Monday; Pomeroy at 9: 33 a.m. to Lincoln Terrace tor Caryl
Cook to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at10: 46 a.m. to
Rbute 143 for Florence Musser to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 10: 02 p.m. to Brownell Apts. for Fred Stewart to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'
'

CALGARY, Alberta (UPI)
Plrmln Zurbrlggen, a deeply .
religious Swiss sk I racer wlth
· Instincts, sl!lrts on the ·
devilish
secoild leg of his Journey today
toward making Winter Olympic
.. .
history. .
Zurbrlggen, whose dramatic,
ferocious attack on the Mount
Allan course Monday earned him
•
the gold meda I In the men s
·
downhill, competes today In the
downhUI portion of the men's
combined - an event being held
ln the Winter Games lor tile first
time.

..

·•····· ·&gt;' ,.

EMS has ·three cal/.ri Monday

.•

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

P,omeroy Middleport, Ohio

-Local news briefs____, Col~.

•

G
the third period after Scott Fusco ;
surpass them since the Super
hadbrokenaf-4tleat6:27. Paaek ;
and combined Wef1! added to the
h final
11 to
and also scored t e
Ill&amp; n an ~
alpine Program for·ca'"ary,
1 lth nine seconds
•
1
he Is amonJ.
•
" the favorltes.ln
. both. · emp Y Inne w
His .downhill triumph Monday reComaln gM.Ill
C lg J ney '
en, ra
an
, '
Was electrifying. Skiing from the AI rey
Bo be
d Dave Snug '
14th start position, Zurbrlggen
an
ur au an
·, •
appeared on the verge of losing gerud scored the other U.S. :
kl .
his
goals·.
·
·'
control of Ills s sear 1Y 1n
run.
Prokourorov, 23, ~ged coun· •'
However, he recovered to regisf h
ter a time of 1 min·ute, 59.63 tryman VladlmlrSmlrnov ort e
•nku
ld med 1 t c
seconds and-beat his arch-rival """ ometer go
a a an·
M lie b
more with an Olympic record
and compatriot Peter. ue r · Y time of 1 hour, 24 minutes, 26.3
·a half-second - about the time It
the fifth consecutakes to blink Your eye. Mueller, .seconds . It was
1 v1 t
tile world downliUI champion, live Olymp c
c ory f'or the
'w
- as first down the hill, with a Soviets In tills cross-county ski
After three days of competl·
f 2: oo:14 for the 1.9-mlle event, and they a 1so 11ave won the
lion, the Soviet Union and East time O
last three sliver's.
·
Germany have two gold medals · course.
Smlrnov, uie Soviet champion
each. The Soviets lead the overall
"I had to go as fast as possible I at 30 kilometers, was second In
medals race with five and the · couldn't make a mistake I knew l: 24, 35 .1 and Vegard Ulvang of
United States still Is without a this and l accepted this," said Norway was third In 1: 25: 11.6. medal.
Zurbrlggen, 25, a devout Catliollc Dan Simoneau of Bend, Ore., had
Medal hopes worsened Mon· who prays twice a day·
tile top American finish, placing
day fpr the US hockey team
.When Zurbrlggen crOS!!ed the
. ·Th.e Amer Icans
. · twl. bl . th · finish line and knew he bad won 49th In 1: 35: 21:f.
·
ce ew reeIn winning the luge event, Jens
goal leads to fall to Czechoslova· the race. he put his hands · Mueller, a 22-year-old physical
.kla 7-5. The Americans next play· together and _looked up toward education student from llmenau,
tile defending champion Soviet the sky In silent prayer.
posted the fastest time In three of
Union Wednesday night. The
"I was so happy," he said."! the four runs· down the 13-curve
Soviets boosted their record to 2·0 thanked God I had won lt."
course lor a total time of 3
Mueller tlius had to settle for mlnules, 5.548 seconds, Georg ~
Monday by crushing Austria 8-1.
The United States Is In position the honor of being the first man to Hackl of· West Germany .
to claim Its first medal tonight win the sliver medal twice. (3: 05.9161 won the silver and
when the pairs figure skating Is _ Franck Plccard of France won Yurl Khartchenko 01 the Soviet _
completed with the long pro- the bronze medal, becoming the
•
) h b
gram. That Is the only medal · first Frenchman to win an Union (3: 06 ·274 t e ronze.
event scheduled today.
Olympic medal In 20 years.
·
Defenc!lng Olympic gold me·
One of tile few racers on the
The other two gold medals dallst Paul Hlldgartner of Italy
finished lOth In 3:07.696. Frank ·
. World Cup circuit who excels at awarded Monday went to Alex! Masley -of Newark, Del., equaled .
both downlilll and slalom, Zur- Prokourorov of the Soviet Union the best U.S. finish ever In ·
brlggen Is entered In all five In the men's 30-kllometer cross- Olympic luge, placing l2th In
Olympic ski events. He Is the country ski race and Jens
3
favorite In . the combined: a Mueller of East Germany In the
' ~~·~ay's scheduled long protwo-day event tliat consists of a men's luge.
gram of pairs figure skating, ,
downhill and a slalom race. He Is
The U.S. hockey team, 1-1 In U.S. champions Jill Watson and
trying to become the first skier In the rolnd-robln phase, scored on Peter Oppegard go Into the tree :
Olympic history to win lour gold Its first tliree shots Monday skating, their strongest segment; :
medals.
' night, tlie'n led 4·1. But a 1n third place, just behind Soviets.
Only Toni Saller of Austria In shorthanded goal by Igor Llba Elena Valova and Oleg VasiUev.
1956 and Jean-Claude Kllly of with 5: 29 to play put Czechoslova·
The Ame~lcans, w,o rld . bronze
France In 1968 ever won as many klil a bead for tile first time, 6·5.
medalists behind the two Sovle~
as three gold 'medals In Olympic
Dusan Pasek, who assisted on pairs In 1987,_have a chance _for ,
alpine competition'.
Llba's winning goal, pulled CzeZurbrlggen has the chance to choslovakla even 5-5 at 12:35 of the sliver a·nd should earn at least
bronze.
-

.

Tuaadey, February 16, 1988

.

,

":=l.:·ntcits:

19fnspect Front End
Chassis Parts
~!!Align Front End

or

LAMBERT INSURANCE
AGENCY
992-8841
116 EAST SECOND

POMEROY. OH.

·~
~- ~ - ~=rsmrce
~ 4es:mu know us.
\

•MOlT PASSENGER CARS.
PARTS ExtRA. .

I

•

CALL FOI APPOINIIIENT
992-2094

PonHWoy ~ &amp;Auto

600 E. MAIN ST.

'·

.

.

-·'

·;•

Cf

,OIL ....

a...
•ll:ell•

n

.,
'

Ill

~·

•

�.'

T~aday,

P-oe 6-The Daily Santillel

Beat of the Bend
•'

..,,

Presidenfs Day . seen. as
most boring day of year
. By BOB HOEFLICH
I nominate Presidents' Day as
the most boring
of the
Not only was It
gray- but not a
creature was
stirring - not
even a mouse, It
seemed.
·
So how about
my adding some
excitement to your. life? You
know- like lost and found stuff.
A la.dy has lost.one of her new
Isotoner gloves - probably an
expensive Christmas present, ·a t
that. The glove, very near new, .
was found on Court St. -It's grey
and lined. The loser can pick up
the glove at The Sentinel office.
Another lady apparently left a
brown and yellow checkered
covered memo book · at The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
on Saturday. It contains recipes
that are probably tried and true.
This, too, Is now at the Septlnel
office and the loser can recover It
at our place.

This Is the evening that Dav
Pllkey, Avon Lake, Is scheduled
to present a program at the
Pomeroy Public Library begin·
nlng at 7 p.m. Pllkey was to
present programs at all three of
the county high . schools today.
Pllkey gained national recogpl·
tlon as one of the three winners of
the 1986 Written and Illustrated .
by contest for his book, World
War Won, a book dealing with the
· stockplitng of weapons.
Jeff Montgomery, Wellston, a
Cincinnati Reds pitcher, Is mak·
lng numerous personal appear·
ances at area businesses. · !{Is
latest was as the Pomeroy Pizza
Hut last week, Jeff is always well
received by local Reds fans. ·

---

February is Heart Month and
the annual door·to·door sollclta·
tlon will be held to raise funds for
the Meigs Chapter of the Ameri·
can Heart Association. Sandy
Ianerelll is gener)ll chairman for

the drive.
Incidentally, the Meigs Chap·
ter has received a $1,000 gUt
through the estate of the late
Sallie Cadle, who felt she wanted
to help the local gro'!P· M)'s.
Cadle was the mother of Mrs.
Thelma Banks.
Tile first annual Muscular
Dystrophy Association Ball !las
been set for Friday, March 11, at
the American Legion Annex In ·
Middleport, from 8 to midnight,
Crossover and the Shady River
Shutners will be·providing enter·
talnment. There will be an
auction· held during the event
with baseballs autographed by
Cincinnati Reds team members
to go to the highest bidders.
Advance tickets can be pur·
chased at $10 per couple and $6 a
peuon.. Tickets at the door. will
be $12 a couple and $8 per person.
Advance tickets can be pur·
chased at Middleport Trophies,
the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Fun·
e~al Home( Clark's Jewelry and
the Blue Tartan. All proceeds
will benefit the . Muscular Dys·
trophy Association.

Chris . Ball, Matthew Morris ,
Fern Morris, Mar~ Showalter,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Leifheit,
Dorothy Leifheit, Michael Lelf·
belt, Israel Grimm, Janice
Grimm, Jeremy Grimm, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Broderick, VIncent Broderick, John Jeffers,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Mash, Bert
Mash, Leigh Mash, Sieve Hysell,
Joyce Hysell, Stephen Hysell,
Jr., Pavld Hysell.
Mike Struble, Evan Struble,
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Young, Rayan

Young, Billy Young, Reggie
Pratt, Ryan Pratt, Sharon Pratt, .
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hubbard,
Cassie Hubbard, Jeremy Hulr
bard, Gary King, Tony King,
Jeremy King. Mr. and jlolrs,
Danny White, Eric White, A"dam
White, Ruby King, David Lam·
bert, Brenda Roush, . Michelle
Roush, Chris Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rams·
burg, Melissa Ramsburg, Ryan
Ramsbury, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mash, · Christie Mash, Bobby
Mash, Jim While, ·J ames White, ·

.

RUTLAND - A special mls·
slonary service will be held
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m., at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church,
located off Route 124 on Hysell
Run Road, near Rutland. Mark
and Crystal Becker will speak
about their work · on a South
Dakota Indian Reservation.

MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, at 7 p.m . Tuesday for
SATURDAY
practice . .&gt;n the master masons
RUTLAND- An old·fashloned
degree. All officers and
·members who have taken part in bean dinner will be served at the
the fellowcraft team are as ked to · Rutland American Legion l:!all
attend. Lodge inspection will be on Saturday, Feb. 20, from 11:30
March 4 with dinner to be served a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Cost will be $2
for all-you-cari-eat. Sandwiches
at 6:30 .p.m .
and pte will be extra.
POMEROY - The Fraternal
SUNDAY
Order of Eagles Ladles Auxiliary
POMEROY -:- Mr. and Mrs.
will hold nominations. for vice· Eddie Wayne, of Canton, will be
president at the regular meeting featured singers at the Flat·
on Tuesday at 7 p.m .
woods United Methodist Church
on Sunday, Feb. 21. at 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of
the Middleport Presbyterian
Church will meet Tuesday at the
David· T. Gruesser Is a patient
home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Bible study, led by Mrs. William at the Holzer Meillcal Center. He
Morris, will be on the second suffered a heart attack Tuesday
chap,ter of Concern Magazine. and was In the cardiac care unit
Mrs? Don Lowery will be In until Saturday. Grueser Is expected to undergo surgery soon.
charge of devotions.
Cards may be sent to him at the
hospital.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Fire Department Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hensley,
the firehouse. Anyone wishing to
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, are an·
join the auxiliary Is welcome.
nounclng the birth of their second
TUPPERS PLAINS- Orange child, a daugher, Brittany Rose,
Township Trustees will hold a born on Feb. 11 at '!he Holzer
special meeting Wednesday, 7:30 Medical Center.
The Infant weighed eight
p.m., to discuss Insurance .and
pounds
and ·was 21 Inches long.
cable television. The meeting
Maternal
grandparents lire Mr.
will be held at the home of
and
Mrs.
Larry Hudson, PomeDorothy Calaway, township
roy,
and
the
paternal grandpar.
· clerk.
ents are Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Hensley, Long Bit tom. Great·
'111URSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle· grandparents are Mrs. Thelma
port Child Conservation League1 Grueser,.Pomeroy, andDavldT.
Mr. and Mrs. Hensley have
will meet this Thursday at 7 p.m.,
another
daughter, Tiffany Irene,
at the Mason Bowling Lanes.
·
·
tour.
Devotions will be given and the
.. traveling prize will be proviaed Grueser, GallipOlis. ·

Hospitalized

Hensley birth

Jamie Broderick, Becky BroderIck, Emma Broderick, Cljrlstlna
Grueser, Mr. and Mrs., Gene
Whaley , Marissa Whaley •. Brent
Whaley, Jane Russell. Daniel
Russell, Jeremiah Russell,
VIckie BIUingsley, Christ Bll·
!lngsby, Aleta Billingsley Thomas Blllngsley, James · Geiger
and family, Jeanie Witherell,
Josh Witherell, John Witherell,
Jaon Witherell, and Dr. James
Witherell, Pete Sisson, and Ernie
Sisson.

CAP project presented at area preschool
The staff of the Community
Assault Prevention Services of
Gallla, Jackson and Meigs Coun·
ties had the opportunity of
present1!18 one componet of the
Child Assault Prevention Project
to the parents of the "Gingerbread
House Preschool In Middleport
recently.
·
Tills week CAP will be conduct·
lng a children's workshop for lhe
preschoolers,,there.
CAP Is an awareness program
that seeks to end the verbal,
physical and sexual vlctlmlza·
lion of children by educating the
children and adults In the
community.
It Is· made up of three campo·

nents, a parent program, a
Parents and teachers are en·
teacher·staff · lnservlce, and couraged to attend the program
children's workshops. Materials since all components of the Child
presented to the parents Include Assault Prevention program will
Information on the nature and be presented. There will be a
extent of child assaults locally, detailed description of the child·
ho.w to.Identify possible victims, ren's workshop. Tills wlll .lnclude
how to report chllq albuse, and a video-tape of :an actual work·
how to help a child In crisis. shop, along with information on
Parents were then given ·a the nature and extent of child
detailed description of the child· abuse locally, clues to Identifying
ren's workshops In which the possible victims of abuse, where
preschoolers of Mrs. Shlrln J. and how to report suspected
Nuggud will be participating this
week.
Tonight (Tuesday) at 7 p.m.
the adult presentation will be
given at the Letart Falls Elemen- · The natlon.al sewing contests to
be held March 4 at the Pomona
tar)- School.
meeting were announced by
Westina Crabtree; chairman of ,
women's activities, at the recent
meeting of the Meigs County
basket. The one night class will Pomona Gra11ge held at the Rock
be held on Feb. 29 from 6: 30 to Springs hall.
9:30p.m . and the cost will be$12.
Pauline Atkins, master, pre·
Each person enrolling Is asked to sided at the meeting. 1t was no.ted
take six spring clothespins. ·Only that Patty Manzey will be the
six will be accepted Into the chairman of women's activities ·
class.
for Columbia Grange. Feb. 23,
To register for either class, 7:30p.m. Eldon Barrows, legislaresidents are asked to call the tive chairman, gave his report
Museum, 992-3810 before Feb. 24, and urged members to contact
1 to 4:30p.m.

cases of abuse, and how to help a
child In crisis.
1 •
"The success of . the CAP
Project for your child depends on
the support of the entire school
community. Because a . child
might see you as a trusted adult,
It IS Important that you know
what to do," Carol J . Edwards,
Executive Director, emphasized
In stressing the importance of
school staff and parent attend·
ance at tonight's meeting.

Pomona Grange,meets
their representatlv.es regarding
various Issues and bills,.
A tribute was glyen ln. memory
of Elizabeth Jordan, a longtime
member and forme!\ ,CWA
chairman.
Arthur Crabtree, lecturer,
presented the prog~am ', using
"Events of the Monlp',' u the
theme. It dealt with presidents
born In February, He~r~ Month,
and Valentine's Day. \ \
Columbia Grange Will serve
refreshhlents at the illfarch 4
meeting to be held at tl\e Rock
· Springs hall, 7:30p.m . . 1,

•

1988

.,

FORT SMITH, Ark• (UPI) The government launc bed
another offensive In Its war
against the white suprema~;lst
movement, placing 14 men on
• trial' on charges of slidltlous
' conspiracy and plotting to asaas·
slnate federal o(flclals.
Tight security was In place for .
the !Jpenlng of the trial today,
which marked the first time
sedition charges have been used
against members of extreme
rlght·wb\g groups.
The men are charged In a 1983
plot to overthrow the govern·
ment and establish a white nation
In the Pacific Northwest. Prosec·
~ • utors say the conspiracy was
financed through robberies and
', · counterfeiting and was to be
w carried out by bombings, des·
i tructlon of utilities, pollution of
'·• • public water supplies and kll·
· lings of federal officials and
. minorities.
Ten defendants are charged
" with scheming to qverthrow the
federal government. One ofthose
men and fo11r otl)ers are charged
with plotting to assassinate fed·
eral officials Including H. Frank·
lin Waters, cble! federal Judge
for the Western District of
Arkansas, and Jack Knox, an
"' FBI agent In Little Rock, Ark.
Tile cllarge carries a maximum
· ' sentence of up to lite In prison.
'' · The defendants contend fed·
1- · eral officials are conducting a ·
. , Witch bUilt and tcytng to abridge

their constitutional freedoms of
speech and religion.
security for the trial, which
could last up to three months, Is
unprecedented for Fort Smith, a
city ot 74,000 on the Arkansas· .
OklAhoma border. A security
fence has been Installed behind
the courtflouse and cameras and
metal detectors placed Inside.
Those charged with seditious
conspiracy Include the · Rev.
Richard Q. Butler, 69, a Bennett,
Colo., native and leader of the
Aryan Nations Church at Hayden
Lake, Idaho; Robert E . Miles, 63,
a Bridgeport, Conn,, native, and
leader of the Mountain Church of
Je3us Christ the Savior at Cohoe·
tab, Mich., who Is a forrrier grand
dragon of the Michigan Ku Kluli'.
Klan and Is saki to be the No. 2
man of the Aryan Nations
Church; and Louts R. Beam Jr ..
41, a Lufkin, . Texas, native
arrested last year after a shoo·
tout near G\ladalajara, Mexico.
Beam Is a former grand dragon
of the Texas Klan. ,
Others !acing sedition charges
Include David E. Lane, 49, a
Woden, Iowa, native and Denver
resident, affiliated with the Klan,
the Aryan Nations Church and
The Qrder; Ardle McBrearty, 60,
a California native and Gentry,
Ark., resident, affiliated with .the
Covenant; the Sword and the
Arm of the Lord and The Order·a s
Intelligence chief· and legal ad·
viser; Bruce C. Pierce, 33, a

Kentucky native and former
resident pf Metaline Falls ,
Wash., affiliated with the Aryan
·Nations Church and The Order;
Richard J. Scutarl, 40, a New
York native and 'security chief
for The Order.
Lane and Pierce were con·
vlcted of civil rights violations
last year and sentenced to
150·year prl,son terms In the 1984
slaying of Jewish radio talk show
host Alan Berg, who was gunned
down outside his Denver home.
Scutarl was acquitted of the
charges In the same trial.
The Fort Smith Indictment was
unsealed the same day the
Denver lndlctmen ts were returned In the Berg case. · ·
After Butler surrendered to
FBI agents that day, his assist."
ant, Rlcllard Masker, called the
Indictments "a Marxist media
extravaganza staged at the·tax·
payers' expense. It Is nothing
more than a head-hunting expe·
dltlon In true Jewish fashion."
Beam was on the FBI's list of
most wanted fugitives when he
was arrested In Mexico In No·
vember. At a hearing at which
bond was denied, Beam was
questioned ai1out his writings
.urging the assassinations of
International figures. Justice De·
partment attorney Markton Carl·
son asked Beam, "Who would
you 1«11?"
"International bankers, Inter·
national politicians of some

P~ 7

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Council to meet
Ches ter Counc ll 323, f&gt;aughters
of America , will meet at 7:30
p.m. th is evening. The goodofthe
order co mmittee will stage a
silent auction and practice will
be lle ld for the spring rally .

Announcements

Meet tonight
Unified Citizens for Education
In Meigs Local will meet tonight
weight, that kind of thing. Most of
(Tuesday), 6:15p.m., prior to the
them white - just lllle' you. My , regular Meigs Board of Educa·
duty Is to absolutely oppose them
lion meeting, at the admlnlstra·
and remove them from being a
thin building In Middleport.
threat," I)eam answered .
Breakfast slated
"You would commit murder
The annual Lenten breakfast
for those reasons?'' Carlson said. for women of the county will be
"Murder? It's not .called held al•·,7:45 a.m. tomorrow
murder when you kill an (Wednesday ) at the Trinity
enemy," Beam said.
Church In Pomeroy .

Correction
RUTLAND - A special mls·
sl&lt;inary service · will be held
Thursday, Feb. 25, and not th iS
Thursday, Feb. 18, at the Hysell
Run Holiness Church. Time for
the service wil):be 7: 30p.m.

.Conrail .engin~r allegedly smoked
marijuana before Amtrak wreck
14·car Boston·bound Amtrak
train carrying 800 passengers.
The National Transportation
TOWSON, Md. (0Pl) - The
Conrail engineer who allegedly Safety Board concluded a year·
smoked marijuana just before long Investigation Into the crash
pulling In front of an Amtrak last month by saying, "The
tra.ln faces trial on 16 manslaugh· . probable cause of this accident
ter · charges for the bloodiest was the failure, as a resu.It of
Impairment from marijuana, of
wreck In Amtrak's history.
Baltimore County authorities the engineer of, the Conrail train
have charged Ricky Gates with ... to stop his train. "
Gates, the engineer of Conrail
16 counts of manslaughter. If
No.
5044, tested. positive for
convicted on all counts ln the
Baltimore County Circuit Court marijuana In toxicology tests
trial that Is scheduled to begin administered after the accident,
today , he could get an 80· year which claimed 16 .IIves and
prison sentence . and a $16,000 Injured more than 174 people.
fine.
Edwared Cromwell, the brake·
Gates, 33, Is accused of lgnor· man of the Conrail train, report·
lng trackslde stop signals Jan. 4, edly told a Baltimore County
1987, and driving his three· · grand jury that he and Gates
locomotive. train through an smoked marijuana In the .cab of
lntersectlon and Into the path of a the train shortly before the
crash. Cromwell Is expected tQ
By STEVEN GINSBURG

testify against Gates at the .!J'all.
Investigators said when Gates
realized he had passed a wayside
stop signal, It was too late. He
tried to reverse his locomotive,
but there was not enough time to
a.vold Amtrak's Colonia.! No . 94,
which was traveling at more than
120 mph when It plowed Into the
tear of Gates's locomotives.
The NTSB cited as another
cause of the crash "the failure of
the Federal Raliroad Admlnls·
!ration and Amtrak to require
and Conrail to use automatic
safety backup devices on all
trains on th e Northeast
Corridor."
In ,· November, the FRA
adopted a rule req\llring all
trains operating on the
Washington-Boston corridor to
have · automatic train control
devices by Jan. 1, 1990.

·T.

"The lfoad to Calvary" will be
the theme of the Meigs County
Ministerial Association's lenten
worship services to begin Thurs·
day night.
The series of services will be on
Chapter 13 of First Corinthians .
All services will be held on
Thursday evenings at 7: 30 p.m.
and following each service re·

freshments will be served during
a fellowship time.
This week's service will be held
Dear Ann Landers: After having
at the Southern Baptist Church been a nurse in geriatrics for 20
on Pomeroy Pike using the years I wrote a make-believe letter
theme "Love Is Patient and that is very close to being a real one;
Kind." Next week's service will · in fact it could have been written by
be held at St. Paul Lutheran any one of the dozens of people I
Church, Pameroy.
have cared for in the past two
decades. Please print it.
.
Dear Caregiver (wife, husband,
· son, daughter, brother, sister):
• I'm sorry you have to go thrQugh
all thiS unpleasantnesS 'every day,
Thomas, John R. Thomas, and I regret that. I am the cause of
Cheryl L . Thomas to Dave L.
Bumgardner, Shirley J. Bum- it. I luite not being able io do so
many thirigs for myself. It's awful
gardner, parcels. Meigs.
be totally dependent on someone
to
!George A. Wolf, Helen Wolf, to
George A. Wolf, Helen Wolf, 2'h else.
. I feel ashaJI!ed that I can't go to
acres, Chester.
the
bathroom on my own. It's
James E. Hunter to Judith A.
.
f
rustrating
to be fed by another
Hunter, 1.02 acre, Chester.
I'm
absolutely disgusted
person.
Teresa Collins to Larry Col·
that I am unable to get a tissue up
llns, 1.50 acre, Olive.
Edna McKinney, H. C. McKin· to my face so .I can blow my nose.
Being old and helpless is much
ney to Shannon Fleming, 'h Int.,
worse than any illne,ss or disability.
Salem:
Nancy J. Vance to Ronnie It does things to one's feelinfiS of
Vance, parcels, Rutland.
personal worth."
Charles Humphreys, Vernon
Worst of all is knowing how you
Dale Humphreys aka v. Dale hate beins my caregiver. I see the
Humphreys, Allee Humphreys to
resentment in your eyes and I !lear
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan Co., it in your voice. I know that deep
sheriff's Deed, Middleport.
down you wish I would die and set
Mildred W. Hawley, dec. to
it over with so you can get on with
Nan Moore, Jack M. Hawley,
your life and not be bothered with
cert. of trans., Middleport vii·
me.
. !age.
•
Well, I wish the same. Surprised?
NanMooretoJackM. Hawley,
I have no choice, however, but to
Elizabeth M. Hawley, %Interest 'live out the years that have been
In lot, Middleport village.
Jack M. Hawley, Elizabeth M.
Hawley to Jack Hawley, Eliza·
beth M. Hawley, pt. lot, Middle·
port. .
Bernadine S. Meter, dec., to
Patricia Suchoza, Carolyn Pod·
besek, Phyllls May, Robert P .
'S
1
Meier, cert. of trans., Middle·
port.
Sara Hawk, dec., .Marion
Hawk, Dennis Raymond Hawk,
.afflda~&lt;lt, Sutton.

TO PLACE AN .AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
'
I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
• · CLOSED SUNDAY

CompUedBy
Emmoreae Holateln Con~ro
Record, Melp County, Ohio
Myrtle M. Gardner, dec., to
Edward Dale Anderson, cert. of
trans., Rutland.
Gale Roland Heiney to Max H.
Long, Deanna M. Long, parcel,
Olive.
Meigs ·Board of County Com·
missioners to Wllll~m Chapman,
Patricia Chapman,. Roger Hawk,
Shirley
Hawk,.
resolution,
Orange.
Ray L. Karshner, dec., to Cora
A. Karshner, affidavit, Orange.
James M. Haning, Maxine
Haning to Jimmy C. Haning,
Gloria J. Haning, 2'h A., Col·
umbla. ·
Ralph Webb, dec., Cora B.
Webb, parcel, Sutton.
Sara E. Brown, dec., to Wll·
llam S. Brown, cert. of trans.,
Middleport.
.
Cletls Dalton to Frederick
Oyler, Anna Howard Oyler, 2.75
A., Scipio.
Barbara w. Beymer, Robert
H. Beymer to Joe A. Dress, Jr.,
Joe A. Dress, Sr. , tracts, Scipio.
Roger Escue, Carol Ann Escue
to Rick D. hawson, Cheryl L.
Lawson, parcel, Columbls.
Herman Trout, Roseen Fay
Trout to Michael A. Heck, Susanna Heck, parcel, Salisbury.
R. Clifford Hill, Pauline Hill to
Steven 0 , Jenkins, 13.23 acres,
Letart.
James B. Thomas, Darla N.

Ann
Landers
'

Fruth Pharmacy
.

In Today
Clearance Sale Tab!
r•
·-·
.

.•:· . .
. ... .•• .
,1

1'

•

Plans for a St. Patrick's Day
dinner on March 13 at the fire
station were made when the
Racine Firemen's Ladles Auld!·
lary met recently at the hall.
Serving will begin at 11: 30a.m:
and continue through the afternoon. Menu will consist of ham,
mashed potatoes and gravy, cole
slaw, green beahs. rolls, bever·
age and pie for $3.50 a serving.
Fire Chief Hank Johnson was
pr!'sent for the meeting and
Introduced the village's chief of
pollee, Keith Harder. It was
reported that Jacob S. Holman,

•.

4

r.J1 ·~.ft~•ia·

. DE~~s

1/2 PRICE SALE
•~
ON ~CI OF WINJEI KOUHS I DIESSIS
LADIES and GilLS KNEE HIGH SOCIS
MORE SPRING SUITS by Dtvon and Nikki
uour Price• - Mo•t RetuOMble"
STORE HOURS: Mon. 111ru F~. 8 e.m.·l p.m.; let. 8 a.m.·1 p.m.

•fl

-

•
•. .

·~

~

~,

.PRE I I V'N STRONG
·DESIGNER LINER
GARBAGE BAGS .

2

YOUR CHOICE!

FOR', $

I

'

7-Yn toto'""' tn .......1
1-Publo ..........

•-~ootE .....

w......

1-W-toluy

lill '.fllll l.illl\11

.

OPEN
WED.·FRI.·SAT.

.•

7:31)-10:00
Call for Birthday.
Churc:to, Private
Parties Mon .• Tues..
Thurs.• Sat. &amp; Sun.

r

985-3929
or 985-9996

Q

.

71~-·MotoJOforloto

·71-AuiDP-·A-rloo

77--~-n-c•.,..... E....,,.....

:JI-C.,.... •

iYlr•Jr ' I 1111!1: I
l111 rill 1

. NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT OF

!

C
'0

43f31 -

Mlddlrtport. Ohio
1·13-tfl:
•VINYL SIOING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

.... ....

.. FraeEatlmetea'"

oppolnlld Ex•

cutor of tho oouto of Emm~
V. Bo.er, dtceaHd. Iota of
13688 Edon llldtte lid.,
ReOdoyille, Ohio 411772.
Robert E. luck.

PH. 9·9·2160
or 9•9·2801
NO SUNDAY

BenhaM lullclng

EVElY .
SAT. NIGHT ·
, 6:30P.M.

Public Notice
-OfliiGintOdE--of

1M - . of Jounn E. Simpton. dec II~ of tM \Ittloge of MU I IP 011. Melgo
County. Ohio.
.

Robert·

Factory Chctlit
12 Gauge Shotgu11 Only
.·

10.7-tfn

J&amp;L

INSULAnON
HIAnNq &amp;
COOUNG
•FUIIr&gt;!ACES
•Alii CONDITIONERS

•HEAT PUMPS
FIIEE ESTIMATES

PH. 992·2772

Prabote Judgo

Lono K. Nnnlroed, Clerk
(21 2, 8. 18. 3tc

Public Notice

·FilE DEPT.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

.

RACINE

repair Gas Tanks.

~~~1~·2~7·~··~·1::m::o~.
Public Notice

GUN .SHOoT ·

We can repair and recore rad 1ators and
heater cores. We can
ilso acid boihnd rod
out radiators. We also

FIOUCtAIIY
On Jonuory 22, 1988, fn
!I!• Meigo County Prabote
il .Court. Cou No. 2117110.
o1 Mlc- betn .. kor. 44611
;. Oriago llood. Logon. Ohio

••
'•

.

74-lllo--

Clauified page&amp; cover the
following telephone ~changea.:.

RADIATOR
. SERVICE

.SlATE-A-WAY
CIESTEI, ·oa.

'!

~

M----Ingo
31-l.olo·A....o

,.

Motar Ha,...

~~I' r V I I I''

I

,.

~: Business

'.

i

I ill

!

I '_,

ill

71-V-. 4WD!a

,.

e. Suck.

Proboto Judgo

leN K. 1\!--d. Clerk
1 . .11. 3tc

r8IW. UIORATORY YKHNICIAN
FUll- POsrriON FOI IIGISIEIED
.ileAL UIOIAIORY IICIINICIAN ON I
IOIA11NG SHifTS

2·5-'111 •o.

WANTED

DIAD OllUYE
•We1hera •Dryera
•Rengea•Freezera
•Refriger1tora
"WII luy • Haul ,...,..

lEN'S lPPUlNCE
SEIYICI
985-3561

We ServJca All Mekaa
1/22111/tlil

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M•
lA ClNE
GUN CLUB ·
IACINE, OHIO

10·9-tfn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

lG-8-tfc

R1-acquaint yuurnlf
with ttt. styHsts Mory, Naomi, June,
Grace, ~onna, Angllo·

ond Kay at

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. IIIII An.
....h. trf, Ohio

992-2725
WAUl-INS WW:OMI
2·5-'111 mo.

AUTO I TlUCK

..,.......".
IEP~IR

r'

FIREWOOD
Locust, Ook, Cherry
Now ·Locotion:

161 North Setond
Midlloporl, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Supplie1

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Hera
IUSINISS PHONE
(6 I 41 992·6550
IIIIDIN(I PHON!
16141 992:7!.!.4

TRIPLE P
. EXCAVATING

•Do- • •ckhoo Work

•WIR Do Houlng With
OumpTruck

•w,...u.lervice

-.Junk Yord Bullnou
WANT TO IUT -CIID 01
JUNII CAIS 01 TIIKIS

-FIR ISTIMAIDFor any of those Hnic"' cal

614-742-2617

I t t - 9 a.m.-6 fiJII.
or Llwt ••••~
·1
.lfa

J&amp;L ILOWN

INSULAnON
VINYL&amp;
AlUMINUM SKIING

otneutatlon

•Blann Doora
•Storm Window•
•RepiiEIIHIMt WindOWI
.

•N- .llooflng

FilE unum

JAIIIS IIESD
PH. 992-2772
2· .

$3500

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SlACK
614-992-2269

lmm MOVIII to VHI TAPE

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

let Uli (Onvert those aid

Home Movits over to easy
VHI.
CAll AMY CARTER
or lOB'S IIECTRONICS
446·6939 ... 446-7390

New &amp; Used
SALES-SERVICE
SUPPLIES

.

Royal &amp; SCM Typewriters
Royal &amp; MAX Calculators
Royal &amp; Max Cash legisters

HOMER BELT

Long BottoM, 011. 45743

.I

Ann uu nce111 en Is
3 Announcements

Ph. (614) 843-5486

1·26.'88· 1 mo.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
·&amp;HEATING
·992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST ·
GUYSVn.lE, OHIO
. 614-662-3821

Autlooriud John Dooro,
Now Holland, lush Hcig
Farm Equipmont
Dtaltr

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable l'rkas..

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY (AW

Giveaway

free puppie1. Call 614-4-t07648 .
Free boxer-hound . All lhota,
honey brown witt! wt'lltt und.,

379· 2198.

Puppy, may be part Labrador. ·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Female. Call 614-318-8895.

a..utiful bllck rnele hou" cat. a

mGt. ald. to good home only.

- Addona 1nd remodtUng

Coli &amp;14·441·7104.

- Roofing imd gutUr work

- Conc:ret• work

4 month old mhtld breed puppy,
pl•vft.d, good wit~ children,

- ptumbing and lltctrlcal
' work

304·175· 5&amp;88.

l ~reo Eotlmotea)

Ill

YOU~G

Went to make a qulh top In 1 d-.y?
Aeglater Feb. 24, fairgroundtQranga Hall , 2 PM· For fur1hir
inJtructionS for clus- St1rtlng
Mar. 9.

neck. Well trained. C1ll 114·

YOUNG'S

V. C.

MARINES; We' re looking for 1
few good m*'' For more infor.
mtt6on, call SeraNnt Mike Abell
at 304-420-1018 collect.

4

Futtt E••IPIII••t
Partt &amp; Sem~•
H· 16 tic

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Reduce Hf• &amp; faat with Goa ...
ctptuln • E·VIp "w1ter pillt" .
Av1i11ble - Frutt! Phtrm~~cy.

8

.

f

lost 1nd Foqnd

992·6215 .. 992·7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-1~

·
'ob·fc

FOUND: Dark grey &amp; bl1ck Cit,
11 Foodl1nd. At. ·31, Frt.-2·12·

II. Coli 114·441·1421 .

lol"' Hysell
Garaat
tt.IJ.. ......,_

ON PG. 8 OF FRUTH PHARMACY TAB. INCORRECT PRICE IS
LISTED FOR ABOVE ITEM. CORRECT PRICE IS 2 FOR $3
APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY HAVE
CAUSED OUR

(

1-HIIIPY&amp;-I.aoiMMI,_

.

(.

!ri

I

ill

.

.,

C

\

,I

71-Auto• tor ....

.

121

ALL LOCATIONS

MD.ao

'

72-T•u*" tor lolo

a.v•

' I

~

00

. •u.oo

f21.tl0 .

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
~11,00 A .M. SATURDAY
- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY
A . - 2'00 P.M. lUESDAY
- 2:00 P.M. WEDNESD"Y
- 2'00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2'00 P.M. FRIDAY

w

.\

o11.0o

f21.DII
o11.oo

Ratee arefCYCIDnMCUttvarunt, bJOk., up dlytwll be dttrved
iDr . . . .VIIIIP.nte .. l.

-t...._. edverdeement pltced in The Deily S.ntlnll (ex-

;,

..".•.
...•

•30 Count Waste Basket Bags 4 Gal.
•25 Count Waste Basket Bags 8 Gal.
·.20 Count Tall Kitchen Bags 13 Gal.

o13.00

I

31--forlolo
32-lllobMo H - tor Solo
:13-f-forlolo

hom•.

;
•

I

RACINE DEPAITMENT STOlE
II

•

. a . "( " ....

.

M.oit

o11.ap

z-•·-"

1-Conl"' - ·
1-A--to
4--01'

, Geltt - ct...afled dlaplay, lualn_. Card end
noti·e .e)
_... alto .,..... in the Pt. Pleaunt ....liter and the O.HipoM. o.llyl'rlbune, reaching over 18,000

i.t

'l

allotted to me. I'm sorry that the
job of caring for me has fallen on
your shoulders. 1 wonder ,which ot
us carries the bigger burden. NIAGARA FALLS
.
DEAR NIAGARA FALLS: Your
"make-believe" letter is so real that
it brought tears to my eyes. 1
1emember so well how my dear
mother and her sister took care of
their elderly father and what a
deinanding job it .was.
I'm sure a great nian~ people can
relate to what you ha~ .written not only the elderly who feel that
they have outlived thei~ usefulness
and are l'ftldy to go, but their
caretakers who feel guilty for wish·
ing they could be free of them.
What irony that so many people
would Hive anythins for a few more ·
years of life while' others are
granted years that they neither
want nor enjoy. More evidence that
life can be unfair.

,.

1 MDNTH

.

I

- ·c oRRECTIO

Jr. was !he winner of the
valentine project. A card was
signed for David Grueser, father
of Kay Holman, who Is confined
to the Holzer Medical Center.
Ann Layne led the pledge and
prayer to open the meeting.
Others attending were Rhonda
Lyons, Jean Johnson, Sandy
Patterson, Wanda Patterson,
Dee Autherson, Sherrie Holman,
Irene Roush, Missy Johnson,
Angle Patterson, Misty Grueser,
Mae Cleland, Kay Holman,
Emma Lyons, Trudy Spaulding,
and a junior member, Valerie
Patterson.

IOAYI
10DAYI

*Price of ld fof en caphellm.rt it double pric:e of ad cost.
•7 - · Hno 'YfiO only . - .
·
.
•aentmll It nat ,....onslt... lor erron after flrtt d11y. (Check
IOr.,...ftNt da, lid rune ln...,...). Ctlt before 2 :00p.m.
· ~ aftw publioation to mae correc1ion.
·~·that must be paid in ectwnce we:
Card of Thanks
Happy Alh ,
lnMemora.n
Ynhlll
·~

Auxiliary conducts meeting

11-11 WOIIDI 11·21.WOIIO. Zl·21 WOIIO.
1DAYI
M.OO
ti.OO
t7.tl0
fl.tiO .
ti.OO
f1D.tl0
3DAYI

~~ e .&amp;O discount for •d• paid in 1dv1nce.
,
"Free aclt - Givaway and Found Mit unci., 11 words will be
run 3 cNyt et no ch-ve.

I

RATES

POLICIES
.
"Adl O':'tlide MeiGs. Gellla or Meson c&lt;iunti" muat be pre- ·

\

Meigs·property transfers

-"-

februrt 18,

SOO.ition trial opens ·With tight secarity

An·open letter . \·
to all caregive~s

Lenten service scheduled

by Ann Colburn. Members are to
TUESDAY
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu take layette Items for the special
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi. project.
Sorority will meet Tues.day, 7: 30
--~
POMEROY
Pomeroy
p.m., at the home of Evelyn
.
Church
of
Christ
will
be
holding a
Knight. A white elephant sale
C.A.R.E.
semlnat
on
Thursday
will be held.
and Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. each
.--POMEROY - Salisbury PTO night. The seminar will be
will meet 7 · p.m. Tuesday. A conducted by Hoyt Allen. Eve·
representative of Parents For ryone 'll(elcome. Call the church
Education will speak. A fathers ' at 992·2926 for Information.
night program will be presented.
. SATURDAY
SALEM. CENTER - Star
BRADBU 1W- BradburyPTO
will meet Tuesday , 7 p.m., at the Grange and Star Junior Grange
will meet on Saturday for a
school.
potluck supper followed by a fun
CARPENTER - Columbia night at the Salem Center Fire
Township Board of Trustees Station, 6:30 p.m. All members
meeting at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the and Interested persons are ·tn.
vited to attend.
fire station.
POMEROY - XI Gamma
Epsilon Sorority will meet a.t
upper parking lot at 6:15 p.m.
Tuesday before going to the
Down Under Restaurant - in
Gallipolis.

A .theme on folklore was
carried out for the flr~t. blue and
gold banquet. of Salisbury Cub
Scout Pack 246 held at the Senior
Citizen Center.
The scouts and their families
enjoyed a potluck dinner. Advancement awards were given
out to the scouts In their respective dens. Songs and skits on the
banquet theme were presented
by the den leaders.
Attending, were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Peavley, Kim Peavley,
Timmy Peavley, Debbie Ball,

Classes plann~d in Meigs

Community Calendar

Tueedey,

Cub Scout Blue and Gold banquet coriduct~

Descendants of John Barnhlsle
of Culpepper County, Va., have
formed the Hisle-Hysell Geneal·
ogy Group. Any Meigs residents
having Information they would
like to share or those wanting
Cake decorating and basket
' Information on the organization, weavlng:'Ciasses have been sche·
should contact Deborah Hysell duled at the Meigs Museum.
Sanders, Route 1, a&lt;&gt;x 209·A, . Bunny Kuhl will be teaching
Hampton, S. C. 29924.
the cake decorating classes In
four sessions, March 2, 9, 16, and
~ook for a lot of action at the
23, alit to 4 p.m. Costls $12 for the
Big Bend Foodland In March. classes plus the cost of supplies.
Don Perry has taken over many Only 10 persons will be accepted.
activities being planned for the
The basket classes will ·be
store on March 16·wlth proceeds taught by Janet Theiss and the
to go the Meigs Unit of the project will be :a small market
.
.
.
American Cancer Society, We'll
enlighten you on the details as
plans progress.
It won't be long until we find
out If _the groundhog pulled a
number on us? Meanwhile, do
keep smiling.

februllrV 16,1988

':#1:/tl:

- -.Television
Dtpendrtblt 11Nrin1 Aid Slits &amp; Sfrvi~
~ Hurlna Enluations For AU Aces

I
I

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Ueensld Clinical Audioloeist
1&amp;14~1119 or

417

(614) 992·2104
A-. Box 1213 '

GIINpalla, .!Jttio 45131
or
~:llmllrill HiiiPI'!!

111

Jilts, Pomeror.

LOIT:
I'MM

lr~

,.,. with· btlak

a lraH. ...nnsn y,._ .,.._

,._,.._ Coli 114·211-1302 or
IIH·111Z,
Loti dogs• 1 .......00.. Mid 1

motom....,lrrooot,oolllort

,...,2.·~ - ..............

l'ourth
"' ........_
- " ' · Colt 114·112· 1311 .;
114-lt2·1277.

Pound on Court lt. tn Porz•oy
~-~

-•~ove.c~o~on.; ·

llllllllwiOtfloe.

�..

...
.

,.

' The

8

Ohio
44

LAFF-A-DAY

Public Sale
• Auction

Apartment
;.for Rent

'

Furnllt\tdap1.· 1 lr. t235amo.
Udlltjoo pold. 120 4tll. Avo. Coli
441·4418 ofl•7 PM .

Wed.,..,..,., Auctktn s.rviceavtit.blt at YOUt' convenience
.nd locttionl. MMMn

.....,.. AUC11o-·

1152 ._

9

w-..
114-241·

Nlc. 2 BR apt.

w.-• . g~a

po~c~ . I t - • m,.tg. furnished.
Coli 114-4441-7028.

Wanted To Buy

G - IIYinl. 1 ond 2 bed-

room apertmentt tt Villege
Manor and Rtverslde A~Mrl·
mtntt In Mlddtepon. From

We pay c..tl for let• model clean

uM c••·

1211. including utilld... Cell

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Johnaon

114-982-7787. EOH.

114-446·3172
Co~•

etftdency, total electiic. refrigwator. . .oVII. nice.

TOP CASH poid for '83 model
tnd MWtf uMd ·can. Smith

HUD opprovod. 2216 Mt. Vor·

Buidt-Pontloc. 181 1 Eootom
A.... OoHipollo. Coli 114·441·
2282.

iii.:aia. Pt.

Complete houuholds of furni-

Nic. 2 bedroom tpl. in Middl•
port. ltl8 P"' montll. O.poOit

ture • tntiqUM . Alto wood •
co.l hHttu. Swtin's Furnhure
&amp; Auction, Third • Olive.

814-441-3151.
Want to buy: Used fumituurt
tnd ~tlquts. Will buy entire
houMhold

tumlthlng. Martin

/'l:fc 1 •"""4"....,..s~. lnc

World..,_,..._

Z · lfo

"Before I tell you what it cost, bear .in mind

would like to buy junk coro.

they charge

2423.

·

requiNd . Day

114-892-2311 , Wookondo614·
112-2101.

Wodomovtr . ., 4-241-6 t 12.

wrecked Cll'l and motorcycln.
Cell 114-379· 2 1 80 or 379•

,...,..~

and

Pl.-nt. 114-

$12.96

for their CATALOG."

1 beclf"'OOI\ epertm•tt- Furnllhed end unfumllhtcl. UOO.-

nllllod. Coli 11 4·982·&amp;724.
2 bedroom opt . f&lt;&gt;&lt; rent. Stow

814·982·311 1 E.O.H.

33

"PARTMENTS. mobile hom..;
houau. Pt. PIHHntlnd Gllllpc)-

Went to buy Jttnding timber •
pin1. Pay TOP DOLLAR. 15 acres
or more. Excellent r.terencea.
Cell L..rry Stric;kland logging.

18

614·682·7823.

Wanted to do houHCI..ning in
O.lllpolit area on regular bella.
Heve reference.. Call114-. .l ·

N••
l 171.

2 bedroom iumlud apt, ref and
deposit", N1w Haven. W. V• ..

Want to do we.kty Ctaanlng in
your horne. hperi.nced. Can
auppty good rlf..-et'len. Call

39.4. acr11: older hOu... •
outllulldlnp, pond. Appi'O• . 20
acrea ti11Hl1. countywltlf'. FDnf
tractor. K~eer Cf'Mik tchooit.

Beec:h Sti'Mt:. Mlddllpo~. Ohio,
2 bedroom furnlahMI apt, utilitill paid. ref-.ncetand depolit.

3·4 BR. hou• whh var•e• at
..... 1 BOO tq.ft. Gellipolia .,.e.

CeH 304-075-8806.

Buying dlily gold, aitver coine,
rln11. jewelry, sterting Wire, old
coins. larg1 curtWicy. Top pricelll. Ed Burken: Barber Shop,
2nCI.
Middleport, Oh. 114·

"ve.

912·3470.

Standing timber . C1tl 114· 742·

Farms for Sale

llo. 014·448·1221 .

88et.

114-280-1113.

30 . ., f•m: Moedy tillabl1.
Rio Gnnda. Pond, b.-na,
ood hom•. Call 81 4-248·

t38,000. Neg. Coli 114-388·
8704.
.

Mother ot 4 y"'i old a baby wiD .
blbyllt In my horne. Weekdey1&amp;
lfter echool. Close to Addw••
111m. 114·317-nBBifter&amp;pm. 1,~=7"~-:--:-----

36

232,.

Lots • Acreage

Buying junk benerjH. Cell 614·

742·2411:

Cornmerciel proplfty and houH

FilldllCidl

f lllpliJVIIII'III
Sl'l

11

vII:I:S

21

Buainass
Opportunity

Help Wanted .
NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
I

Sell Avon. Get your OW!l Avon It
a dlacount. Calll14-446-3358.
Enthutilltic &amp; outgoinu~M:rton
to •••ist with marketing and
• 11l• projecta and othll' offic;l
duti•. S1nd rnum1 to: BoJi Cia
136 c / o Gellipolia Dlit';''fribune,
826 Third Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio
45631 .
EXCELLENT WAGES for apare
time 1111mbly work; tl1ctron·
iCI, Ctlflt. Othlt'S. Info. 1-(50•1
841 -0091 Ext. 2987. Op1n 7
davs. CAll NOWI
· AN 'S : Earn t21 .000 piua, with
over 20 p1id days off 1 at y1ar;
Adva-car• inturance peid. Tui·
tlon relmburHment and m1ny
oth•r benefits. a. part of ""the
highlv skilled teem at Pinecrest
Care Canter. C1ll 614-•4&amp;71 12 . EOE.

Seeretary ·Needad
Meigs 1r11. Mutt• bl i1liabl1.
Av•il•be ·fol immedi1te employmint. Send reaume to: lox Cia
1 36 cl o Galipolit O.ily Tribune,
825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio

4&amp;631 .
GET PAID for reading booksl

$100.00 per title. Write: PASE·
33i. 111 S . Lincolnwav. N.
Aurora, IL 60542.
Government Jobs, 816,040$59,230 year. Now hiring. Your
eree. 1-805-687-6000 Ext. R·
9805 for current Federal list.
AVON · All areet. Gall Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2845.
Avon all erees, Shirley Spears,

304-675-1429.

lNG CO. rKOIItmllld1 that you
do b•inlll with people you
know, 1nd NOT to sand money
through the m1il until yo~ heve
inY"tigatld the offering.
lnltllnt Credit- No credit ch"eck.
no lntarett chargl. Everyon•
eligllbla. Applicetlon : Rush e
large. addreued, oampMI envelop..:t to: 011•, Rt. 2 Box 228
Vinton, Ohio 415681 .

23

Professional
Services

Furniture retinlahing and repair.
qualltv work 1nd reaaon1ble
rat". free e1tim1t11. 304-675·

7991 .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 BR., firepl1ee. full b11ement. 3
mi. so. of G1Uipolit . t29.900.
Call Oayt-614-«1 -1815, 1f11r

GET PAID for reading boobi
S100.00 per title. Write: PASE517h, 161 S. Uncoinwav. N.
Aurofl. II 80642.
MONEY .FOR COllEGE! Part:
time jobt. Join the Armv National Guard. 304-675 ·3950 or

1·800-642-3619.

12

Situations
Wanted

Hav• room for penon in priv•tl
home for thaN who with not to
be In nuralng hom•. Fll•aaonabl•.

Coli 814·2&amp;8·6109.

Have room In private home for Z
elderly ladi ... Tholl not wlahing
to be in nurtlna hom1. Bed f. .
will · be eonaldered. Will P,ne
good c;ar1. C1U anytime. 614-

3a8-8193.
Senior c;itb:en . Room and board
for on11ady. Special Clf41! in my
home. Aeuan.We. Call 814-

o..loblo. 80 ft. 238 fl,
Coli 814·2~11-1610

long-•-·
after I PM.

1 acre land . 3 mll11 from town.
H1rd roed r~.ty tor mobll1 home

"' 110011 building olto. Coli

.. 4·'"8·1480.

Home• for Rent

Nicety furnilhed tmall houte.
Adult• only. Rat. raquirad. No
Pitt. Cell 114·441-0338.
Very nice, 2, poallbll 3 BA.

houu in Middleport. OW. GD.
AC, full blllment. E~~:c1Uent
loC.tion. C1ll 114-441-9206
1ftar 5 :30PM.
Avall1ble March 1tt.· 4 BA .
houH, full b111ment. t1 00 dep.
&amp; ret. required. 1300 1 mo.
GrancNiew Hgtt. .,... Call

Hou .. for 11le. elo11totown.12
1cres land. 3 bldroom1, Clf'ltrel
heat and air, hou11 Utiler and
other extr11. · 141.000.00 or
bell offer. 304·876·1231.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sala

FRENCH CITY BROKERAGE ·
014-448-9340.
19715 K1nt · 10a31. Good
condition . Priced to · 1111 .

FRENCH CITY BROKERAGE·
Coli ., 4-4411-1340.

PRICE REDUCED : 1887
14x72-Fentaay II- DLX .. lath.
colO&lt; TV, VCR . Reduced 12000.,

FRENCH CITY MOillE
HOMES· Cotl 114-441-1340.

PRICE REPUCED' 1887 Sun·
nybl'ook 1••10. 2 lfll .• 11..i batt;.

utility room. f12.100. FRENCH
CITY MOBILE HOMES· Col
014-441-1340.

W11kty, monthly ratte. utllitl•
"paid. Cooking f.ciiHI11. Down·
town loc8tion. s...lon welcome. P1rk Central Hot.t. Call ·

114-448·0118.

48

Space for Rent ,

Commercial buUdlng for INte.
Downtown Pt. Pl. . .nt. Starn.
offlcat. A· 1 Real El'tatl. C.rol
Ya-a•. Broker. C1ll 3~·176·

Sp1c1 for small tr1ilera. All
hook-ups. C.ble. Alao efficiency
room•. air and cable. Maton,
W.Va. Call304-773· 5851 .
'

Merchandise

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR.,_watlf, aewegefurnithed.
8tflutiful river view. No city
~xea . Fo11er't Mobile Home

P.. k. Cell 614·441·1102.

2 BR ., utllitillpeld·IXCipt elect·
ric. furniahed / unfumi1hed. Sec.
dep. required. Convenient loca·
tion. Call 114· 446-4758 or

448·86&amp;8.

Furni1hed 1 21t80, 2 BR .. mobile
home. Good location. 2 miiH
from town. t200 1 mo . $100

dop. Coll814-446·2390 .
2 DR houu with atov. &amp;
refrigerator. 1226 mo. depotit
required . VInton, OH Cell 814·

388-a121.

14x70. 2 BR., axcel. cond. , near
Eureka on At. 7 . 2 ·BR·. It
Mareerville. mint eond. Cell
814-•4&amp;¥121 1 or 258-1420 .
2 DR. total•l•c. 1140 plut dep.
On Ory Ridge Rd. Call614-379·

2 bedroom partally furnithld
1pt, Kan1ug1, Ohio, ref•enc11
raquirad, 304·8715·1196 or

Sof11 and ch1irs pric:ed from
t385 to t99&amp;. T1bln tl50 and
up to e125. Hide·a·bedt $390
to 8696. R8diners 1226 to
1376. Lampe 128 to 1125.
Dinette• t 109 end up to 1496.
Wood table w -6 ch1ira 1286 to
~791. Desk 110Q up to t375.
Hutchll 8400 1nd up. Bunk
bedt complete w-mettflaMa
1291and up to 1391 . Baby beds
t1 10. Mattrt11e1 or box springe
full or IWin $88, firm *78, and
t88. · Queen aett t226, King
$360. 4 drawer chett $89. Gun
c1bin~a 8 gun. G11 or electric
renga t37&amp; . Beby manre1181

U&amp; I *45. Bed t.emoo •20,

t30 &amp; King tram• -60. Good
Mlection of bedroom aurtea,
metll eabineta. hudbo1rdt 130
1nd up to 185.
90 D1y1 same at cash with
epproved cr•dit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9em to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 614·446-

0322.

V•llev Furniture
New and ueld furniture 1nd
epplicancaa . C111· 614·446 ·
7672. Hour~ 9 -B.

Aw. 04111pollo, OH .

912· 7831.

Wuhert, d,.,.., ratriallltort.
rang... &amp;hggt Applltnaea,
Upptr River Rd. Mlidt Stone

2 drivo. t1000. Coil
114-11,48-2801.

C,... Motel. 114-441·7388.

304-112· 2141. Aloo : outo.
I~ h -.

1homo.

BE

A~L.L-L.L-"-

GONNA
KIGHT

AM-FM-Ceea. C.l 304-875·
l..!:•:-::":-=.,.======;::=========~ 1124.
1t81 CMvy4x4 ~ton . Smith•

.'•.

ondW~. tO:ooo.m.-8:oop.m... 66 Building SuppUea

Sun. 1:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m. By
chance or appointment .. RuN

81

Farm Equipment

all

64

Misc. Merchandise

Bulldhtg Maurlala
Block. brick, plpoo, win·
dowe. llntelt, etc. Cltudl Win·
twi, Ala Granda, 0. Cll 114·

241·8121.
Callahan'a UAII TIN Shop. 0wr
1,000til'ft,lb:lt12,. 13,14, 11.
11, 11.15. I mi. . DU1 AI. 218 .

Co11114-211·1281 .

SWIMMING POOLS· *818

N•w l.tt awr 1187 Mod.t
Poole. Hugh 1 &amp;x2• fl. twlm
trAil, 4 ft. daep. lnclud11 dec:k.
fenee. filter • warMnty.lnltlllaUon a financing av1llable. C1ll
24 hre.: 1 -800·34&amp;·0941. ·
Big '3 BR. ' tarm hom.. built on
yoUJ lot, 11 5,99&amp; and up. C1ll

Concnte bloakt alltizea yard or

dellwry.
Mo- · Ploo
Goltlpollo
I lock Co.,
1 23~
St.,
Oo-lo. Ohio CoN 114-441·
2183.
· IUILDtNG 8UPPUES
SAVE 10'1\ 1071'1\
I·Woler boortl 7118•4'4'·
01.91.... ~4'•1'·U.91.
2·T· t·11 yollow .plno oldlng
llol4'd'·013.81ooch.
3· 1Ax4'x8' Lluan plywood·

u.&amp;luch.

1-114-881·7311 .

4·Rqugh IIW cedar bolnll
14x12"x72"-2 for 19.00.

firewood-Large plck·up toad.

I ·No.2·1"opruoo born lldlng
v·grovod·31e lin. fl.
8 - C - - muonho 1.p·
lldlng· 123 oq .. 20
oq, tuN
llfto-111 ....
7-7111•4•8 , . , . . _ .....
gray Dr almond aldlng-t13.11
ooc:h.

f36 delivered. All ho-.od.
Coli 014·441-1431.

1978 City piexl• aluminum
dump 'trailer. 32 foot bo•. Qood

cond. Colll14·448·1379.

Saan-naw power IIW. 7lh ln.
elrcular uw. Cell 814·441·

3388.

FIGURE SHAPING TA8LES

Open your own figure ..Jon with
the original St.uff• Concept
Fluure Sh•ping Tablet. Buy
flctory direct. Call 312-2:J•·

9547.

Colll14-448-3077.

16 ft. Aluminum truck bed box
bend. Cell 814-44&amp;-32.43 aftlt'
6 PM.

Atarl 800 XL computer. 10!50

dltc driv1. 3 joyaticka. 8 gamea,
1 tab'-. Ex. cond. Priced right.
Clll814-448-14&amp;7.
. ...

Gun eablnet1 for ule- 2 hind
. made, n•wly flniahMf eebln1b
tor 111• 1 walnut, 1 eherry. 8oth
,.,.,. 11 gun c.ptcity, Aeldng
$65081ch. Cell 814· 441-40415.
Elvis colleotion for Ale. t1100.
See at 241 rear J1ckton Pik..
Mixed hard wood alabt. 112.,.
bundle. Con .. ining approx . 111l
ton. FOB. · Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 814-992-e4t1 .
Firewood for ale. 135. larg•
piekup load. All hardwood.
Delivered. Ca!l 114-742·2411.
Oak. roll top deak. •mall. A•·
mington 870 Wlngm01ter, 20
ga. shotgun, like new. t2715

oooh. Call814-949·2801.
Newly i-1-upholitered aofa ,bld,
new cuahiont, heilvy·duty cat·
ter1. $300. Underwood Electric:
Typ1writer. 8100. 114-982-

2386

For Sale: Ferguson Trac:tor.l ft.
8u1h Hog, 1978 Honda, 76•
Motorcycle . C1ll 614-742-

2466.

U Haul trucks and trailers for
rent, 304-676-7421.
Oak firewood. Call 304-176·
2767 after 4:30'p.m. Atk tor
Woodman .

J I S FURNITURE
(formally Parton'• Furniture)
1415 Ea..ern Aw.
Uvlng room tuitea from $179 •
up. Bedroom ultet U88.915 &amp;
up. Comphtte miorOWIYe 1tand1
•39.915 &amp; up.
Come in and meet the new
Owners.
Uted refrigaratora-whltl, al·
mond • copper-liklntw. Corbin
• Snyder FurnH:ure, 966 S1cond
Ave ., Gellipolis.· 814· 4•6·

3224.

896·3448.

'

Mc,Danielt Custom Butc:hering,
6 days • week. tlaughtlrlng
(beef 110.00 and hoga 19.00 ••
14(l lb cut and wrap. 304-882-

B·Maaontte rock or brick
unflnl1had pan•llng 1t•a4al·
U.tl oocfl.
9-AIItibo florolo ond ' - ponol·
lng 1Aa4xl-t7.11 ....t 11.11
Nch.
10. ~x4xl All woad paneling
o1k and Dine and birch- I 11.11
to 118•• 1111Ch·
1 1· Bath room paneling,· glued
till and tm~lh pattern- •1.91
to •12.11
1 Z·Whit• 48"xZ2" bath room
Vlnlti81 with marbl• top
CBI

grodn-f188.95.

13-Chlna 1nd merbl• round and
OVII Vlntly bowlS,• white and
color-t 1 1 .91.
14-Color commoclll·f49.9&amp;,
Whita commodll-139.96.
115-Color pedlatal lav1torlet·
Ul .ll. 2 lor ftOO.
1 I·Whlte stall bath tubt t69.915 NCh, 2 for 11 00· color

t79.88HCh.
17-Whlrlpool tubt·flblrgl••·
complltl plumblng-1196, reg.

•nil.

74

3100fonl-witf1Nif-.
moct.1 NH mowina
-~~. U780. o - will

oond. col 304-171-1780.

f9 .81.

Z1·5QII.IIuminum fiblred roof

cootlng-UO.II. ·
22-K·Lu• whho bricll I 011· ft.

'*'

ctn.-•1.10.
Z3·Eproxy coat:ld•
clollt
1nd door aheMng. law
t~

78'1\.

24·Wood. aluminum and vinyl
dad windowa. (Iowa). 1•vs1.
(Ca11m1nt •• IDoubllhu.ng).
Save at whoteulallnd below.
2&amp;-~ Tam~ thennfll p11n1.

·Gtooo ponolo.(3Zrc71·f28.111.
(34 x78· *31.001,(47•78·
...15.00)·. Full c ... Jot:J-115.00

pr.pc.l-.

•

21·21" Ocotgon th..-maiiMded
IIII wlndowe-119.18,
2 fOr

I 121.00.

27-72" W1lnut etarllr kltchln·
Including (2·18"wall),
(1·
72"b•H), (1 · 72" pc. top)-

f181.8&amp;.
2a·2 gol. poll K·Lu• wllho
morter- 14..915.
21-Pine Louvered lnllriof 1hut·
tera. Bilow WhGIIUie price~.
30·1 pc. polo - . . color
commodn, reg.-12... 11, now

0129.81.

31-lnwlor prehung doors, flniahed •d unflnllhed. Choice

li-f21.8&amp;-.

32-Ext.-for l1elllnsu18tad

pnllung doon·I71.H
t89.88oecfl.

33 All typ-. of door 1nd window
trim. Flnlllhed 1nd unflnlahld.
PIAIItic ·and wood-11.00 to

,..._ 1...

- · Col 114-211·HZ2.
8 HP Troy·bllt dlor. -colly
- · HOO. Coli 114· 311·
1111.
AC Dill&lt; Horrow. Model 2311.
, f l . - Cl!ll14-112·3378.
I allege waoons. 1972 Ford toUr
drlvo plcll up. 304-171·
2881.

82

76

PC

Boata end
Motors for Sale
.I
I

1978 2&amp; HP Evlnrudo boot

I

motor to trad• for 1 12 or 14ft.
Y· Bottom . al~o~mlnum boat a

lro..... Coll814·388·8718 .

7&amp;

Auto Parts ·
8o Acca11oriaa

',.

'.. ..
t

I •'

FRANK AND ERNEST

''

Now buying .... oom Dr . .
_,., C.Htoii--11- ond...., 3000- or 30dowo
CIIY Form SIIPIIIY. 114·441· . we"''""· (whkllln• ocaura
2181.
flml.
w._
- ...,._
11o1p w1t11
to
find _
Colihn
11 4·
441-0IH.

83

:-...a..__, gROiHfR/ WHERe WILL '(oV BE

&gt;

ON THE DA'(

--.

of

JUOGMENT{

--------·
....,..

PROBAgL'{

llortfna ol IH, u·
ch-. - N I M I I I I IIolle. change over ldtl for OM
owrdrive to 310 Turbo, 2 wheal

UNCI·

Liveatock

Hoi'HI for Ale:- Standardbred
.and Tenn11.. Walk111., C. II

114.441·4711.

fo~ · A

'

• 4· wheel drive, custom built
look-up OM lorquea. · Ouaren·
tMd a~ptooneyur . C,eh•carrv
or lnotoll. CoHI14-379-2220o•

''

Hay

l

Grain

800 ...,.. of oondH- hoy.
Colll14· 441·4.3 44.

-----------~--lc­
Mbr:ld hay or atfaf1 In ICfUIN
bal11. Mlxld hay In '-ell round

bolee. Coli 114-211-3334,
Joclloon,Ohlo.

77

Auto Repair

Jhn't

Import Auto III"Yicl,

71

St~/ VIC(! ,)

81 ,
Home
_,I
I mprovement•

''
•••
•

.

Auto's· For Sale
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1983 Chovy. Cllltlon. Am rodlo.
Mo. trine., PS, PI, 19,000
miiH. 111150. C.n baiHnAi i:i•
O.lllpolia Dilly Trlltune or for
mo,.lnfol'rftlllon caU 114-.WB-

2342.

ALLEY OOP

Rlploy, WoOl Vlrvfillo. Spodellz·
lng In Honda ptf11; end .-vice I&gt;~
..... 1878. Phone 1304) 312· •
1117. Nlnotollvo.
,.

GoOct mixed ~.,. tor oolo. Coli
114-882· 3708.

Tl.tiiSpllrl~lillll

'

I,

Unconditkmll llf«lml .,.rantea. Lo~ flflrencee fumllhMI.
Fno
Cotl oolloel
1·814·237-0488. day or night.

ootl,.,.....

01,

For parta- 1971 Old1. Cull•
Supreme wfth 210 VB lfnlln•.

Coli 814·4411-0&amp;18.

.

1911 C.maro·rMI with extra

llrip ......go, V-8 fuollnjoclod.

AC, i:ruiM• .tilt, plulh interior.
rear louver • ~-- t81500.

Col1814·387·0&amp;19.

·Bradley GT kit car wtth 1ide
turbo 1tcoo11•· Cuatomld. New

tlroo· 721. noo. Col 114·441·
3128.

1117 ford Muotong II. Neodo

e•hautt. 1700. Call 11•·441·

1741.

Wotorprvoflng.

F &amp; F C.rpantry. Carp.ntry and
plumbing work ~ R111on1bl•

·'

price. eon 814·3Ba-an3.

·•

I

Concrate leptlc T•U· 1 000 ,.
g.... 1100 gal. end ,.t Aeration .::
syMem. Factory tralnld r~Pair ..,.

liON EVANS ENTER ·
PRIIEI, .Uclcoon, Ohio. 814·
280·8830.

ohop.

boonlo. 21,000 mlloo. 112000.
Colll14·441·7137- I PM.

GE. s-illlng In 2onhh. Coli
304·1'11·2388 or 814· 441·
2454.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

··,

1810 Dodge Horiz011. AUio, AC,
t.onl 4rfVo. o - ........
•1oo. Coiii14·88Z·H41.

44

Coii&amp;14·H2·3281.

1181 T0'j010 Colloo. Auto .. 4
PI, PI, ..,_,, ill•,
AM-FM - · Exo- concll·
tknt. CoN 114-111·381e or
114-HZ:7H1.

lllrllt Tr.. 1nd Lawn S1Mce.
lewn ure. land~lng, etump
removal. 304-171-2842 or

82

CARTER'S PLUM81NG
AND HEATING
'
Cor. FoUrth and Pina
GollpoHo. Ohio

84

_...
Nape

IIIDnl. C.l1·101·117·

.

IGOO. bt. GH·I- ..,.....,..
_

Par llle or •II• owr to. on
tiM CO...
2 -·
31,04!0
- .Covllof.
,.._ 304-171·
2741.

•

'

Electrical
Refrigeration

RHklll'ltill or comm.-cll4 wirIng. New urvice CM" riplir1.
UcenMd liectriciM. Eltlmate
fr11. Ridenour Electricat 304071·1718.

Hom. from 11 .,tu

(2) (I) . . (J)

86

General Hauling

e

oamu

BARNEY

'.
'
•

Phone 81...,«8-3888 or 114441-4477
.~:J

. 8J.

Go•••••~et~t

.
1111 mi!J 48 Moura
1121 PrimaNawa
11!1 MOVIE: Private Benjamin
(R) (1 :40)
• CZl MOVIE: Jeremiah
Jollnton iPG) (1 :48)
1:05 (I) NIIA hokelbatl
· 1:30 I]) llnonded Nice Day lor a
Hanging
1:00 I]) 700 Club
8 (2) 1111 Hun1er Devana
violates his forced leave of
absence to pursue a killer.
(!) liD FronHina Probe the
air traffic dll1mma Inside
America's busiest airport 1;1
all IIIIIJ Jake and the
F - EyewMess to
decade-old \J~Urder comes
forward; c:Ompllca11ons arise.
1121 Llrry Klllll u.er
10:00 I]) Strllght Telk
.
8 .&lt;2l 1111 NBC Nawt $peclal
New H8mpShira Primary
Covaraga
(!) Volc01 &amp; Vlalona
Readings ol Whitman's
poetry conve,y hls
exuberance. poignancy &amp;

THAR COMES
A TEENY
SPECK OVER

.

TH' RIDGE,
MAW!!

12:001]) Bumt- Allon
(!) lnlkle the POA To,. (R)

iiJI NewtNiahl

w:kiiL.ahl

·'

Movla IRI

t"

12:30 I]) Jack lenny
e&lt;ll 1111 Lite Night with

·.r

w-

(I)

;:.

:;1

.,
M1usscte Uphol...... ~ 1
.. ll)llllly-~IVMn. 1'he- '

Ill.....,.~ 'nsre. •. C.l • •
I04·171-otl4 for free ~ ~

..

'·

..

Floating
ice
36 Albanian

j

,:..

coin

I

•

•"

39 On the
qui
vive
42 Metal
ftom
ammonia

l

.. ,,'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES ~Here's how to work II:

Z/18

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW '

Nlal1tlltwl;l

(]) lcltolallllc lpot1l

~(R)
·.
(I)Na..,fledGemt
DCI IIRia

eez&gt;Chadl••...,....

-~

. ''··

'·

~5

Dad~ Hunt iRI
(1:37)
1111 MOVII: ...And JuaiiCe lot
lit IA)(t :57) •
1
11:31 (I) MOYIE: S.llllgrouncl (NA)
. •(t:58)
1:GO(I)Iattot 0o uOho

•

'·'•

.z.

(Lat.)

llll MOVl!:

c,.;

.
••

34 Georgia
specialty
35
Stew
191J Duce 's
36 Dust
daughter
bunnies
20Ponce de
37"~of
Darkness"
21 Engrossed
38
N
parrot
22 Man, e .g .
89
Arab
23 The sun,
gannent
for ·
40 Fly catcher
one
25 Hitchcock 41 Altar
constelfilm
lation
27 Abundant
43
Kiwi
kin
30 Overly

part

• (J)l'll Guj' .

,•

Col 114-

18Window

Daily-,
· Clark
Kent's
, .
paper
31 Hymn of
praise
32 Thrice

Dlvtclll(!) Ski
_!_Rl

••
-~
f

P8111 Rupe. Jr. Water hrvtce.

Ill: ......

.

e1121 MOVJl!: 'DHIII of e

w.-. s.nno.. •Home ••
,
a!nlra. wellt, pooll flhd. for'\
"
~.7'i.H?o._ w.......c." ~:}

_a7__u_P_I)DI_,_.._rv.:...'__

Cltnrl

fll;~lnel;l

A

.- ·

5

33 Poet
Alexander

PresldenHal campaign
coverage
·• 11!1 Magnum, P.l. Don't Eat
the Yellow Snow In Hawaii

•'

-o. cl,....•. -11•. Ph . .. 4·
248-.21u.
.
'

:::sa.~

ACROSS . 44 Pierre's
1 Corps de
cap
ballet
• 45 Cuban
item
dance
Skewered 46 Lessen
meat
47 Abhor
10 Bittern
DOWN
11 Vexed
1 Legendary
12 Charlie
archer
Chan
2 Soviet
portrayer
river
13 Of birth
8 Cargo
14 Draper's
· weight
measure
4 - the
15 "East of
weather
"
5 Of motion
17 Race, ·
6 Irish
in a way
islands
18 Fencing
7 Dracula,
dummy
sometimes
21 Acclivity
8 Taxonomic
24 Diatribe
sufftx
26 Showy
9 - canto
flower
10 Garden
28 Type
tool
of apt.
16 Finish an i
29 The
17

•1121 CBS Newa Special

'·-

,,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

·

em Toxl

Oitlerd Wlttr hrvice: Poole, ';~;
Cltteme, Wille. O.llvery Any- , .,
time. Call 814-..,1-7404-No 1"1~
lundey cltll.
[ 't~
,;,~
J • ~ W- lorvfoo. lwlntmlnli •. •

" •

f.

iiJI 8porll Tonlght

(J)

+10862

·.

1111 Magnum, P.1.

SHUX .. THAT AIN'T
NO TOURISTER!!

!.1!,11

+At
I "
There are many advantages to play·
iDga suit contract. You can establish a WEST
EAST
side-suit l)y ruffinf out opposina high . +Q' 3
+KJ9
cards, you can ruf losers in dummy's •to
.J97f
1u•or1 suit and you•can even arrange to +J91f 3
+A5
have a defender play his high trump on +QJ97
+10862
his partner's winner.
.
SOUTH
Tbe four-heart contract was sound.
+A 10 f
The defenders were entitled to two
.AI6S2
spades and the ace of diamonds, with .
+KQ
declarer succeeding as lana as trumps
+K53
split 3-2. But South found a way to
Vulnerable: Neither
make 10 trlclls even !bough trumps
Dealer:
South
broke badly. He won dumrpy's ace of
clubs and led a diamond, winning the W..l
Nor" Eul
king when East ducked. He then con·
tinued with his queen. East won the Pass
2•
Pass
ace and played the nine of spades. De- Pass
P ...
clarer took the ace, played a heart to Pass
the king and ruffed a diamond, hoping
Opening lead: • Q
the jack would fall. East threw a·club,
since declarer would simply discard a
spade loser if East ruffed .with the
heart nine. Declarer then played his spade jack. declarer scored his r..:
club king and ruffed bis losing club. maining small trump, and the heart
Next came the queen of hearts from ace was his lOth trick. The hapless dedummy, West showing out, and now
dummy's last diamond was led. Once fenders took the remainder. West's.
good spade queen and East's hear!
· EasI ruffed • declarer w.ould jack falling together on the final trick.
again. if
discard a spade. So East discarded t~~ .

1111 .1121

• CZl Love Conntc1Jon
11:30 8 (2) 1111 Tonight Show
· l!l BporiiCenter (L)
(I)
(I) XV Olympic Wln1er

Plumbing
• Heating

cyt.,

ropofr) . .,..._.., ... _orty.

e

0111111_1;1
· tli .«JJND11aC

11)1 Monayllne

lor. Cofll14·812·1313or814H2-2214.

n- lfnto. UIOO.

·K·Q 3

llil Soap

1117 Com...o. T·,.,, outo.
AM-FM. 0 I Iitlw, l:lurgancty CO·

Rolly-·

James Jacoby

(!)Sign 011
liD Tho lll'llln Examine the
role of stress in two unique
. case histories. (1 :001 Q •

'•

17&amp;·2903.

11M C h - 4 d -. .4 cyt.,
MilO., alr, PI, PI, AM·FM radio,

11!1 Ctoeero

•

111801·11;·1000 EXI. 8·1808.

112·1141.

Frf!f1/y - Blimp - Jewel - Halves -' ALL by MYSELF

IIJINewa
l!l Lighter Side ol Sporto

removal. Clll304·1715·1331 .

..

NORTH
• • 752

ow.ner.

' Fetty Tree Trlmmln• atump

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS .
TO GET ANSWER

·Grandpa SCOWled at hls enormous denial bill. "I knew l would
have lo pay lor the dentist's schoolln~ and experience," he
_•.
mumbled, "but not ALL by MYrS,;.;E,;.;L;,;.F,;_!_.- - - : - - - - - - - - ,

e

ATONESITTINS.

.

$CRAM-LETS ANSWER$

the Moocher
liD Tony Brown•a Journal
CZl Hogan'• Heroeo
11:00 I]) llemlngton Steele S1eele
on the Air

•

his -

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I)

(1 :43)
10:30 I]) Celebrily Chelo Minnie

MY r::::lo&gt;\D ONCE ATE
35 HAMBUR~ER5

HouM cella on RCA, Quaur,

AM Hot barglin1l Drug dulw1'
,·,-;;;;~_;;; c1ble toot drilling.
oara. boltl, pla.,.repo'd. Sur.,
completed tam• dey.
plu1. Your Aru. Bu.,.,. Guida. I- •··-'and tlf'VICI. 304-

1180 Chovy Cltellon. 2 door,

8

1111121 Cagney a. Lacey
Cagney and Lacey learn
lassons In and out or class at
police academy. £;1
&amp;I CZJ-Benny Hill
1~:20 I]) MOVIE: The Outfit lPG)

'1

I

MU RT S I

I

power. C
liD . IUIKawa
1!J Evening News

.,

!!

BRIDGE

I!) NHL Hockey .
(I)
ill_ XV OlyrnpJc Wlnhlr

-:,·

lloorgoo CrHk lid. Coli 814·
4411-0284.

RON'S Telniaion Service.

Call 304·n3-1111 or 7731811.

~cu.

SWEEPER and Mwing machlna
repair, p1r1.1. and auppU•. Pick
up end dlliYiry, Davit VIICUum
Cl11n1r, on• half mil• up

1881 Plymouttt Voyager mini·
vln, fully lo1ded, running

t 187 Oldo. CUIIoH 8upromo.

f..WL .•. I G()ES)

IT'S BkK 10 OLD

RogertBaa•m~nt

gu.s-.

1 1. 1 I

all NIWI
1121 Monoyltna

1111 Wheel of Fortunog
II) Cro11flre
·
m1121 1111 JaoPirdYIQ
11!1 S.meyMihr
• CZl WKRP In Clnclmatl
7:3&amp; (I) S.nlord and Son
8:00 I]) Crooobow The Banquet
8 (2) 1111 Mlltlock Ma1toek
defends an Investor accused
of murdering a company

HE~E, .WAITIN~

304-178·4230. .

64

STILL.

t

Complete the chuckle quoted
,_J..
_.J.L-...L.
_J..
_.J.L-.J
by filling in the missing words
I
you develop from step No. 3 below .

cas Newa

m&lt;ll Ju""e

-

Ii

f--T~.;_::;I"'~.:.:.,.;I..:..:;.I...:..,I"'s-l ()

!;II

•CZJ M•A'S•H
7:05 (I) Andy Orillllh
7:30 8 (2) (J) Hollywood
Squoret
l i!J MagiC Vearo Jn Sporll
1980 ·Mike Sohmidt

\

..

•' I

The guy I had been dating
wasn'l too smart. I found out there
.
.
•
•
.
.
was a gap between what wenl on
, . . . . - - - - - - - - - - . i n his mind and what came out or

m1121 1111 Wheel of Fortuna

NIMIIIt ln-olono.
u,.d 11'11 lnwnelty II 1111atec1

A1acty miX concrltl and 1U
COMrltl tuppN11. C.l Yl Vllley
lrooll C.m• and Suppi&amp;H.

Pata for Sela

,

UNCI •

euto. front whHI drtv1. 43.000
- e l miM. fiOO. CoN 114-

68

1887 Hondo CR80011,

Wanted to 1Buy .

U.OO pr.pc.
PENN'S WIIREHOUSE
Welloton, Ohio
814·384· 3114&amp;

304·173·8234.

Motorcycles

f3780. Coiii14·ZII-1122.

18·1 pc. fibergla11.tub • ehOW•

era 1169.815 11th. white
or
eolor.
1 &amp;·Bright find antique br111 •oct
chrome vanity and tub
&amp;
ehowt~r fauc ... lev• 10,.,
20·2 gal. bucket • off white
teX1ured wall paint- 14.81, NO·

'·~;

~-

:.,._..jl

,.....;A:.:.'...:N:,...:Y...;..:H_E;....-ll

• (!) Too Close lor Comfort
8:351]) Carol Burnett .
7:00 I]) Remington Steele Altared
Steele
ern PM Magazine
l!l SpoiiiCentar (L)
(I) Entellllnment Tonight
e (J) Poople'a Court
(!) liD MecNall/ Lehrer
NeWIHow(1:00)

MM VCR • com- • •'

130, Call d.._l traCtor. Wkfe
from wilfl 3 bollam plowo,
l r o - ' dloo. I I fl. buill hofl.

e~a~

y 0 M A· F

3

11211nolde Politico '88 ·
11!1 WKAP Jn Clnclnnatl .

1:

304~171-1174.

·,

Moore. 114-992·2~21 .

e

pl410d:

I
r

IIllllocly Electric

~· ;"'i..

Sofa, qhl!llr,lampe, a tebtn. c.n

(I) ABC Newa

·- -

of tl'li

p L E MI T.

1---.,;[2~,. :. .;. :. . :'

(!) Nightly lullnell Report

WIUOn 311, 11,6 ta.tr.~l ....... " &gt;t~~

.

I

•

(J) 1111 .1121

(2) (J) •

(J) 8

1811 ....... II. V·8, AC. • \

Antiquo, buy or Mil. Alverin1
Antlqu•. 1124 E11t Main St..
Pomeroy. HQUrt: ·Mon •• Tun..

letters

::::

low to form four simple words .

ill lllllde 1118 POA Tour

.
• •
'•

63

lnaure11ce

C1ll us for your mobile home
lneurance: Miller ln•uranc•.

EVERYTHING'~

•

'
13

TUES.• FEB. 18

Rearrange

V fQur Scramb led words be·

1111 Newt
l!l Spolllloolc (T)
(!) Dr. Who Planel of Fire
liD Owl 'TV E;!
1121 ShowBiz Today
11!1 Focto of Life
• (!) Happy Dayo
8:051]) Allee
8:30. (2) 1111 NBC Nightly Newo

CAPTAIN EASY

·,

992·1173.
Will do hOUH work In Pomeroy
ar1a. Haw referenc•. C.lll14·

•

a

8:00 Cll c'rezy Like I Foz Sunday
In the Park with Harry

.'

1112 Ford V·l, ....... , ..... Rot
bod. t1Z00.1171 Ct.y~ ton,

GOOO USED APPUAIIfCES

_ _:.....:..__:::.._= ldllo4 by CU.V I . POLLAN

r·

EVE NINO

I~ ,:

1118 Chovy Co,_olon Von .
Good oondltlon . 1111. 114247·4282.

T=!:t:~' S©~oUM-~'E~~c

TeJevision
Vl·ewi·ng

•

814-448' 4597.

Apartment
for Rent

•'

W.O.

1111 fonl;lko-11. 4•4. fully
loodod. E•ctl. cond. Coli 11 4·
311-1780.

ulld · I
eel Md TV • •·
Open
M ' to IPM. Mon thru
Sot. 114-448·1818. 827 3NI.

Firewood d1livered, atackMI,
.. 36.00. M.. onCounty, Ollllpo·
lit, Ohio &amp; Other ereu within
re11on, our diaereatlon. 304·

1171.

'

County=r.lilnce. Inc. Good

Moving S1le: Spaniah Wedding
uown, balw lt1m1, formel1. 3
d•v• only. Call814·"8·39152.

304-8711-1436.

4

...

...... . . . .encl• .

NEW· w - . boo... UO.
workbo. ... f 18 I up. (SIMI I
oofttoo). Coll814-448-3118.

LEASE _large bulin ..,
building, 1608 J•tferton Blvd.,

FOR

2 Bldroo.;n briek in town . No
Pltl . Refaraneea &amp; aecurity
dtpolit required. t300 month.
Witeman Real Estate. 441·

42

11M

Set of atalion~ry liv11tock
acaiet, 1 daep freeze. Both good
ahape. Call814·448·2683.

61 Household Goods

814-992·686a.

•1tt-t2tl . Dttkl.

For Lease

49

Vana.

1112 Oodgo 280 11om. c-...
oonnojllon. ,,..._ reedy, c.n
114-441-4313d.,..441·013e

USED- ledt, d,......, ~ tdroom
c~

Q&lt;A'(,&amp;If ~~N;.AiliPJN­
tar, ~. AjX;)'tiO',:e
Df1.',D '~lilt' llA~l

u.ooo.oo.

:J04.1'11· 7208 or 178·

73

.............
tultll,

rnt~~~--------~------~~~~~~~~~ir--~==~~~~~~;;~~~-

c

llody, . .............

'The Daily Sentil"'RI-~age-~

. Pomaroy.....Middleport, Ohio

'73 fotd pickup, holt ton, good

wood_.,.

wringer wtthlr, •
of uNd tumhure.

BORNLO

Truck• for Sale

=-

I WAIN
AUCTION I fURNITURE 12
o... lt.• OoAipolll.
NEW· 1 pc.
uee.
U.""room ...._. UH·fllt.
l.ank bed1 with t Jdlnt •1t9.
Futl 14n INftrell • foundation
ttlrtlng - ·tat . Recllnerl

Reetlurant eqUipment tor Hie.

furniehed: .3 room conage in
Q.llipolil. Adult1 . Cl..n. No
•pett. Water furrtiahed. Ref. •
dop. Coli 81 4·441-2643. ·

6024.

038,600.00. 304-871-5184.

Room• fOr rent. dav. we1k.
month. 0111ia Hotel. Cell e1.a-·
•4;1-9510. R•ntlllow•et120
month.
·

814·441·3181 or 211·1448.

In Syracu11. South•n loc1l 2828.
School Dil1riet. New o.e.. e•
bineta. dith Wither. tireplat:e, 2 bedroom mobile home in
quality cerpat, g~raga, I 1cr11. · Middleport. Ohio. AlfiH'ence
No rtpalrl nMd.ct, nie• home. and Securitv depotit required.
30-'-882-3287 or 304-773·
Tranaferred. 114-992-1801 .
Home for aale, Gallipolis Ferry, •
bedroom•. four c;ar garage.

Furnished Rooms

7479 .

41

2 bedroom hou11. Nice. Fully
c;arplted. goDd location. C11l

2 bedroom. 2 bathe. 2 · c.r
garag1, •leval lot on At. 33.
Swimming pool. aatelite, close
to Meigs High . Cell 814-992-

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Royte 33, .Nonh of Pom~roy .
Rlnt•l trail••· Call 614-992·

Cottage in Florida for S1le. 2 BR,
1 bath. p1rtly furniahMI . lot
80x1 20. Location-2 block• from
beach .&amp; 2 blockt hom bay.
Asking 129,000. Call eve~lnga,
18131 987-8944.
3 BR . houteln Crown City-Main
Street. t27.000. Call 81 4-446·
11511 or 446· 1622.

304-882-2186.

8104.

3044.

1985 Ov1rl1nd f'lrk·14x.M · 2
BR ., total 911. Price reduced.
Older l1dy to liw-in. Light
houae - ke1ping . Room and
bo1rd. Call 81 24·4•6 - 898~ .

2 Iota tor Ml• 'II mil• north of
Eurft1 on At. 7. Aural water

&amp;:00· 448-1244.

Local physican needs reception·
ist to handle billing, filing.
ap pointments . patient tche• 3264.
dules. experience p~eferred •. but - - - - - - - - - ·lcnot necasury, minimum waoe Ruttie c"ar home with o1k
or over, 34 hn weekly. write Box floort, two-way fireplac1, Pelle
P-2 care of Point i»teatanl Coloni1l windowt , custom
Regittar, 200 Main St.. Point woodiNOrk, ttudy, 3000 plu1 s.q.
h . approa. 8 wooded acrat in
Pieaa.ant. W. \Ia. 251560.
Sutton Twp. Countryside. ApPART ·TIME JO.BS! Join the praited at I 1 12.000. Sell tor
Army National Guard . 304·175· $77.000. Cell 814-849· 2630.
3950 or 1·800-642-3819.
4 bedroom. firepllcl. full fin" WANTED" Respectable mid - ished bltement. 2 c• u••ve.
dle age woman, who needa • hot water h11t 1nd wood burner.
home. to live with elderly lady. On 15 woodlcl aerea at Tuppers
Would ha11e own room and •m•ll ptelnt, Ohio. C1ll 114-867·
WI\IQIS per week. light houM 8206 after 8 :00 pm.
worlol and to t8ke c.ve of elderly
wom~n who is not an Invalid. 7 room houae. 1 V1 bath. 4 BR.,
Cai1304-676-1578
. garag•, on Ora,.l Hill, 770 Ath
for mor11 information.
St .. Mld4leport. Cell 814-992if yo~:~ do not need a home.
~6..:7..:14_:._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Car deateJthip seeks salts people (male or fem ele). No experience ne~:;easary, will train.
Apply in person with resume or
call fo r appointment. Jim Cobb
Chevrolet Oldsmobile Cadi1111c.
308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
614-992 ·6614.

IOII·Oolllpolll mry. Coli 304·
171·008.

304-882-3287 or 304· 773·
1024.

72

Houaahold Gooda

•221. I * month. UtUid" fvr-

LM---------~r---~-------i Carpeted.
and refriglt'8tor are fumith.cl.
P"
. Nice uttlng. C., II
Wanted to D .o

61

TuBJt'ey, February 16, 1988

16.1988

Tuuday•

SOMETIMES PEOPl.E
PASS &amp;'I ANP TAl.K
TO ME ...

OTHER TIMES THEV
JUST l..OC* AT ME
LIKE

(M DIFFERENT..

1130

llld HaNir

..... ....

•applrig

i~~~~~Of lpot1l ~,.,...

One letter stands for another, In this sample

A is

used

X

for the three L's,
for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

.,

•I

'

"

CRYPTOQUOTE
U I ' R

JFTE

LXBF

EJQ'GB

\,

GBCZE

I J

I X C I

E J Q

c

I XCI
FJI

K QE

TJ I

..

c

XJQRB

ZURPJNBG

UR

GBCTTE

-·
...
'

.'
,,

D Q P X • .-CFJF.

Y•&amp;erdaJ'• CI'JptCHaiiOte: A MAN'S LOVE THRIVES

'

....

P"AR Btl'i ER ON 11IE STIMULANT OF SUSPENSE
ANES111ETI~ OF MEMORY. - HELEN

. TIIAN ON THE
RO~D

:a:

•

..

I

~ ·

�.,..
~

'·

~

Tuaulev. ~ 18, 1981~

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

Page 1G-The [)tilly Sentinel

'

""

Meigs County school honor rolls announced ______· ·· -~~'

The second six weeks honor roll ,named to the roll were:
frlnk, Travis Gilmore, Gary
for the Bradbury School has been
First Grade: Erin Dillon, Mat·
Stanley, Tlibltha Swearingen.
announced. Making a grade of B thew Dillon, Kristina Kennedy,
Fifth Grade: Melissa Vance.
or above In all their subjects to be Jennifer Lambert; ShannonStev·
Sixth Grade: Crystal Donohue,
· ers, Christopher D'Augu~tlno,
named to the roll were:
Misty Frum, Meron Grueser,
Fifth Grade: Vanessa Comp- Jason Preast, Franco Romuno,
Shawn Ingels, Jonathan Vance,
ston, Usa Honaker, Kevin Lo· Malthew Vance, Paul Williams,
Timmy Vance.
gan, Melissa Wilfong, Adam Alicia Chapman, l'ofelanle Mat·
Wyatt, WillY Childress, Sam thews, Jason Qulvey.
The second six weeks honor
Second Grade: Michelle Bis·
, Cowan, Keith Darst, Becky
roll for the Mlddleporl Elemen·
Diles, Chuck Legar, Walt sell, David Staats, Scott Dodson,
tary School has been announced.
Williams.
George Miller, Tina Fraley,
Making a grade of B or above In
Sixth Grade: Beth Buskirk, Joseph D'AugusUno, Robin Do· all their subjects to be named to
Terlcla Cogar, Jennifer Fink, nohue, Rusty Haning, Jessica · the roll were:
·
Dawn Hockman, Brian Penhor· Wheeler, Melissa Reeves.
First Grade: Zebedlah Batey,
I
wood, Heather Burch, Erin
Philip Burch, Austin Carr, .J es·
Third Grade: Joshua Howard, sica Evans, Michael Honker
Harper, Ann Rlffle, Danlelle
Cheryl Jewell, Timmy Stearns, Jennl HoWerton, Jessica John:
Scott, Cora See, Kevlq Whobrey.
Laura ·Arlx, Jessie Blackford, son, Sarah Larkins, Cindy Lewis,
'
The second six weeks honor Slacey Cotterill, Devin Curfman, Patrick Martin, John Owens,
Jesse Dillon, James McMurray, Joshua .Price, Josll!h Rawson,
roll for the Harrisonville EleJoshua Wandling.
'
' Jeremy Rowe, William Scanlon,
mentary School lias been anFourth Grade: Amber Ben- Mellsha Swisher , Jeremy Tho·
nounced. Making a grade of B or
nett, Bethany Cohee, Keith El- mas, Chriss Triplett, Kyle
above In all their subjects to be

•
Leg

AUXill•ary

ton .
·
_ .
Contributions were made to the
uso, Veterans of the Vletoam
War,CARE,andFeedMyPeople
when Lewis Manley 263 Amerlcan Legion Auxl)lary met recently at Dale' s Smorgasbord In
, Gallipolis.
Margaret Bowles, president,
was hostess for the meeting. The
bulletin from the Eighth District
.r president. Mary Moose, ~as
read Lula Hampton made a
repo~t on legislative and national
security. She noted that the
American Legion and its Amdl.

ducts· . · •

r.on
~
·

lary are being ur11ed to show
their ln!erestln thewelfareofthe
veterans by ~rltlng to their
represenlatlves In support of
programs benefiting veterans.
She noted that some of the
resolutions approved by the 69th
national convention held In August at San Antonio., Texas,
Include support of adequate
funding for veterans employment and training services.
Mrs. Hampton also called for
the auxiliary members to·suport
legislatlon.enforcln!l affirmative
action. for veterans. She also

Paet's corner
WHAT TIME MEANS TO ME
As the hands of t he clock moved slowly

on,
And the seconds ticked by, one by one.
My mind went back, many, many years,
When m y lite on eaz:t_b first begun.

It makes me wonder, when Its my time lo

go.

If God wtll see good anywhere . .
E nough, to maybe assure me a place,
In that home He prepared for us there.

I know many times In my past lUe,
I did things, I knew were not right.
I tr ied, but·I failed, by .theweakness of
nest,
Until one day, God gave me my sight.
He opened my eyes, so blinded by sin,
Told m (&gt; just what He would do .
He lp me prepare tor a Heavenly home,
And be one of His chosen lew.

Once again, my eyes went to that clock,
The seconds still Ucktng away . .
Letting me see by the passing of time,
My lUe getting s horter each day .
My ttme to make.ready,l see very plain ,
t:heres no way, that 1 can stop tlme.
1'1! trust Him to help me, ana not let me

fa ll,
As up life' s ladder I cUmb.
Olen D. Harrison
Pomeroy , Ohio

1ILIISS THE NAME OF .IESUS
Bless the name of Jesus.
Above all names on earth.
Bless the name of Jesus,
For He dled to create birth:
Bless ~he Cross of Calvary,
That opened

ur

Werry, Tiffany Allensworth, Zachariah J'latey, Bambi Breedllli,
Jessica Cale, Secky Karr, T.J.
King, Beth Kniiht, Joshua
Lynch, Jonathan Roberts, Robby
Smith, Brandy Stevens, Rusty
Stewart, Adam Williams, Jessica Wrliht.
Seco11d Grade: :Melissa Coppick, Glnaer Darst, J .R. Deem,
Angle Goodnlte, David Grimm,
Chad Hanson, James Hudson,
Scottie Sellers, Jennifer VIning,
Matt Williams, Michael Wyatt,
Dusty Andrew, Rachael Ashley,
Jason Chlldress, Brad Daven·
port, Misty Ebersbach, April
Foreman, Cortney Haley, Bran·
don Smith, Mariana Staats, Tory
Swartz, David Tlemyer, Nancy. ·
Whaley.
Third Grade: Ryan J'lareswllt,
Donald Elkins, Paul Epperson,
Anna Fink, Michael Parker,
Lynn Robbins, Darrick St. Clair,
Stephanie Stewart Christina
meettngWIU!ams, Ryan &amp;ker, Misty
Chaney, Amy Clonch, Lucas
Compton, Chad Dodson, Ricky
talked about the national secur- Hoover John Kelly Libby King
lty committee which has been ' Brandl 'Meadows Caleb Shuler'
formedtoprotecttheherltageof Amber Slav~n. Trlsh~ ·
future generations, and asked for . Thompson
contlnuedsupportoftheUSOand
Fourth ·Grade: Jill Burch,
purchase of savings bonds.
Chris Chapman Alison Gerlach
Mrs. Bowles read an article on April Halley 'Brent Hanson'
~merlca a.~d a poem entitled Laura Penho~ood. Erin Smith:
The Flag, Grace was.given by Dodger Vaughan Butch Bradthe chaplain, Annette Johnson. shaw, Donald Gdheen, Michael
;,rayer for peace, ~!nglng of Lillie, Nicky Mills, Tonya
God Bless America and re· Phalln
!Dilrks bY Mrs. Bowles closed the
·
· meeting. Next meeting will be
The second six weeks honor
hosted by Dorothy Casey.
roll for the Pomeroy Elementary
. ()tr
School has been allilounced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
First Grade: Carrie Branham,
Missy Darnell, John Michael
Da vldson, Jessica Hamilton, Jes·
Take a lost sOUl and redeem tt,
sica Hensley, J .R. Hoover, MIAnd make lt the same as brand new.
. chael Krautter, Jessica Matson,
Help ease a mind that Is troubled,
fut hope In the future ahead.
Rachel Reeves, Justin Roush,
Let them see what Is there tor the asking,
Michelle Roush, Jimmy Travis,
Wilh the !Ue tha t He offers Instead.
Lester Lowery, Holly DeLong,
Turn away from all sin, and all evil.
Ricky Hysell, Dwlghtlcenhower,
With It, there's just one place to go.
Satan can stm be defeated,
Ryan Jeffers, Amanda Jewell,
But God In our lives, has to sh ow. ·
Ben
Molden, Chandra Moon,
We have to be an example,
He has to be first in our heart , ·
Jennifer Morris, Hope Neace,
Unless we ao that, lt Is useless,
Stefani Pickens, Gary 1Reltmlre,
·There's no other way He wm start.
-Olen D. Harrison Cortney Scarberry, Bonne J .
PomerOy, Ohio
Smith, Brandy Snider, David

the way.

Not for what I did for Him,
But what It means today.

Bless•tlJe home In Heaven ,
With beauty beyond COt]"'pare.
The one He has for me,t
If I can make it there.
Bles1 again, this Jesus.·
Who gave His lire for me.
Opened eyes so bltnd with sin,
That could no longer see.

F rom the mount ain top so barren,
Down the valley to the plain.
The lltUe st ream will prove to all,
Jts course Is not In va in.
II will grow In size. d ay after day,
Jts banks,.Jt m ay overflow.
But. u nlike many of us today ,
Jt has a place to go.

It s tart ed out so very sma ll,
Just a trick!(&gt; here and thfre.
Jt had no guide to follow yet,
lt could go a nywh ere.
Like we today, sta rt out in life.
Too small to reallze.
Unless we. pick a goa l to reach,
We' ll never grow In stze.
We 'll b£&gt; content. and never care,
Give up wit hout a fig ht.
Wha t could have been our brightes t
hope,
Turned out, our darkest night .
But the lit tle strea m , sta yed on Its
cour se.
And finally reached tll e sea.
You SPe. It cared what was a head ,
It knew, what had to be.
Olen D. Harrison
Pomeroy. Ohio

t:.

•

at y
Vo1.38, No. 191
COpyrighted 1 988

a

~-~

J,

'
0

z

&gt;::

THE BEAUTY I' LL SEE

PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1988
WE RESERVE- THE. RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
TYPOGRAPHICAL OR lllUSTAAnDN ~AAORS.

When 1 h ear the Angelic chorus,
Stngtn~ rralses to God and the Son.
Then I 1 knDw the true meaning,
Of Joy. that· has Just now begun.
I'll know I've received wh at was
promised,
.
By tbe SOn, s o long, long ago.
As the beauty of Heaven surrounds me,
The gUt , He said He ' d bestow.

'

I 'll reallz.e Joy. and contentmen t,
No worry, no heartache, no car e.
That, which caused earthly trouble,
Will be a burden, no longer to bear.
Nothing but love of tbe Savior.
To last thr oughout ages to be.
As time will be of no esse nc e,
To see all thats up there to see.
Sin, I will no more remember.
Sa tans name w\11 no longer be hea rd ,
But theres one thing, I' ll always be.
thankful.
\Yh en I confessed, J esus heard every
word.
:
Olen.D. Harrison
Pomeroy, Ohio

'720UN

OXVDOL

SEAFDAM OREEN • SUNaURST PEACH

ENOUIH AOI&amp;

2~9
liMIT 2

MY FEATHERED FRIENDS
With th e cold, cold, bl ast of winte r,
Tl'le trees, they sway and bend.
Comes a tinge of sorrow In my heirt,
For my little feathered fr iends.
" WINNIE"
A young lady, name of Winnie;
Moved next door not long ago,
A petite a nd ravi ng bea uty ..
Forever on the go.

Miss "Personality P lus " was s he.
With a for m beyond rompare .
Sporti ng eyPS as black as midnight.
And shiny. sleek brown hair.
No matter where you ventured ,
Nor the hour of the day .
You'd Und Winnie engrossed in fun ··
The cente r of the fray .
The friends s he made were num erous.
Fro m a: U :s hE" drew a sm ile.
And anytime she wandered by,
Someone wou ld chat to her awhile.
Then her perscmality altered somewhat ,
Altho st ill friendly s he r ema ined;
Her manner seemed s li ghtly mellowed,
Her playtuln(&gt;SS, restrained.
She developed a different countena nce -A sort of "l nner glow"
And long before others guessed the
reason,
Winnie seetned to know .
Winnie's rorm grew robust,
Her light a nd bouncy steps grew s low.
And folk s conversed 111 whispers
Wherever s he would go.
Then she wasn·t seen around so much.
Her tr ips were lew a nd far between.
And overnta:ht , her form had changed,
From robust to lanky-lean.
But \t, on one of her excurs ions,
You would care to aee·her home.
Winnie wUI gladly show you the reason
She's suddenly ceased to roam. •
She'll lead you to the kJtchen ;

·. 'To a bll brown box against the wall ,
PermUting you to 1aze In wonder
At the explariatlon for It al.l.

You'll see ''plnt-llzed'' reprod\lcUona
Of che moac ..,..._. gatln town:
For Winnie's the proud molher of live
new puppies
And hasn't Umt to nan around.
Geraldine Bratton
Cheshire. Ohio

•

(

All summer long, they chirp and sing,

Their work Is never done.

It seems like winters on them ,
And lhey have only just begun .
Tll ey gather twigs to build a nest ,
For the little ones to be.
It seems Uke they're so ha ppy,
As they fiy fr om tree to tree.

1280UNCE

4.3 OUNCE

TIDE

COLGATE

LIQUID
DETERGENT

20COUNT

SNUGGLE
•

SOFTENER SHEETS

The fields have a ll been harvested
The barns are filled with gratn. '
Man has made provisions,
"Till spring retur ns again."
But each littl e bird rhat choae .fo stay,
May not make U through " till spring.
May not see the w.armth return ,
Or have a chance to sing.

CORICIDIN -'D'
TABLETS

2~~14

But summer now, has came a nd gone,
And fall Is In the air .
Each day, a little colder,
And the trees are looking bare.
Their food supply Is dwindling,
The worm s have burrowed deep,
Th ~ bugs have hunted warm spots,
To begin their winters sleep.

24 COUNT .

TARTAR
TOOTHPASTE
PUMP

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stafl
, The Meigs LOcal School Dis·
trlct Board of Education, meet Ing In regular session Monday
nfght, voted to place a five mill
current ·expense levy on the
ba1lot of · the May primary
elections.
The five mill continuing levy
would bring In 01n additional
$515,000 annually to the district.
According to the settlement
agreement between the board
and the Meigs Local Teachers
Assn., the board Is committed to

140UNCE

DOVE

AJAX

DISHWASHING
LIQUID

CLEANSER

30 COUNT CHilDREN'S

04JR REG. .st EACH

TYLENOL
CHEWABLE TABLETS

·a

0~:~~·229

FLAVORS

OURRICI.

So knowing thla, I'll put out food,
And hope .they come to eat.
I'll Cry to be a lrlencl to them,
Becauae they s tna- so sw-eet.

1;,

l'ti pray each one wtll make
That made up Ita mind to stay.
l'll .bope thai God wUIIet them live,
To brta:hten up my day .
Olen D . Harrison
.Pomeroy; Ohio

THE WAY TO A NEW LIFE
Let me craap the band ol my Saviour,
Whole mercy wsu ..ve nw from 1111 .
All open heart' a door for Ht1 entrance,
T\lm the tcnob, Chat Ia turned tram within.
Let my llelrt be IIUed wllll Hlo·..........
.o\Jid doalre to help otllenl ....
.

BIG 250

SOFTIQUE

B·ARBASOL

FACIAL TISSUES

SHAVING cREAM

¢

EVIRYDAY

I.OWPIICCII

I¥111YOAY
LOW PIICII

IVIIYOAV .,
LIIIIIPIICII

WHITE RAIN

70UNCE

HAIR CARE PRODUCTS

RAVE HAIR SPRAY

.

Novtr lorpttlnl the debt tllat He paid,

To uve a poor sinner like me.

Help me to tell othon about Him.
Of Hts mercy, and what It 'can do.
I

enttne

ttme because of a lawsuit against
the attendenee imd makeup work
policy brought by two parents of
the district. He commented,
however, that the respective
building principals of the district
can discuss any problems with
parents.
·
PoUcy Questioned
The parent questioned why the
policy was apparently different
for each school and was advised
by Board President Robert
Snowden .that the matter could
not be discussed because of the
lawsuit. The parent then questl·
oned why regular substitute
teachers are paid lower than the
substltules during the strike and
charged that substitutes are not
being called for classroom duties
now dl!rlng the absences of
teachers.
·
r
Snowden and Morris answered
that substitutes are called but at
times there are not enough
available to fill every vacancy
create.d by t.h e al;lsence of
teachers for various reasons.
&lt; Supt. Morris pointed out that
hiring additional substitutes was
on the agenda at last night 's
meeting.
'rhe parent asked why there
were enough substitutes during
the strike but a shortage now and
. was told. by Snowden that a
lawsujt filed against the substitutes and the State Superintendent of Instruction by local par·
ents made It Impossible for that
· question to be addressed.
Another parent asked ques tions In regard to the closing of
schools due tO:Inclement weather
and why schools were not put on a
delayed schedule or cancelled
last Friday morning wherl it
s!IOwed. She said that a school
bus or the.cfistrlct was Involved In
an accident at 8:55a.m . and that
, ~AWARDED CONTR.\cr...:. The Melp Vendlag
the forthcomlnr weeka, an average of 20 per
children
on the bus were not
Co., owlled by Mr.. and Mrs. Thorlelf (Tiny) Bentz
county. The flnt m~hlne was placed Tuesday
taken
to
Veterans Memorial
' Of 'aelne, hu beea awilrdett a contract to place
afternoon at the Racine Home Naltona! Bank.
Hospital
until
after 12 noon.
· bUbble lfllll1 ball veadlDif mac!hlnes thJ'OUihout
Pictured during the placement, I to r, are Gary
Recounts
Processes
Ohio with lbe procei!da to 111 to the Ohio Special
Norris, bank CI!IJhter; Dee Brown, repre!j!ntlng
Supt:
Morris
recounted the
Olympics. Over 11110 suclllO cent maclilaes will be
the Special Olympics Prorram, and Bentz.
processes taken in determining If
placed throughout Ohio by the compaay during
scbools are to beopenen or clased
due to weather. He ·pointed out
lhat decisions must be made by
as early at 5:45 a.m. on the day
'
. CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) -In
Dukakls, governotofnelghbor· Tuesday night. ''Reporls of my Involved and . that numerous
the snows of New Hampshire,
lng Massachusetts , posted a death were greatly
sources are used In an attempt to
George Bush rescued his slipping commanding victory that, exaggerated ."
determine if the weather will be
The man whose loyalty to
. Republican presidential. camcouplec;i 'wl th his relatively close
too bad for schools to open. He
palgn and Michael Dukakls thlr~-place showing In Iowa Feb. President Reagan paid off In a
pointed out that It Is a difficult
made himself a Democratic 8, ..gave him a strong boost strongly pro-Reagan state · dedecision and cited once recently
force to be reckoned With as the heading Into Super Tuesday clared: "l'in going for a change when Meigs Local did have
race for the White House turned
the 20-state slate of primaries of laundry and then on to. the classes on a particular day when
toward warmer climes today. :
and caucuses held mostly In the South, where we're going to rise two other districts of the county
again."
The vice president, badly sunny South March 8.
were closed. As It turned out
With 96 percent of New Hamp- there was no need for any schools
wounded by a third-place showThe story of New Hampshire
lng In last week's Iowa caucuses , clearly was Bush, shown by final shire's precincts reporting; Bush to be closed, butthat lsdlfflcultto
firmly re-established himself as polls to be dead even with Dole had 38 percent of the GOP vote;
tell In advance, Supt. Morris
the GOP front-runner Tuesday after leading the senator by a Dole, 29 .percent; Rep. Jack stated.
night with a convincing defeat of huge margin just two weeks ago. Kemp of New York, 13 percent;
Hitting upon last Friday's
"Tonight, I somehow feel I and former Delaware Gov. Pete school bus accident, Supt. Morris
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole In the nation's first presl· have a lot In common with Mark du Pont and ex-television evan- said that the State Highway ·
dentlal primary.
Twain ," Bush told cheering . gellst Pal Robertson, 10 percent
supporters at a Manchester hOtel each.

Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Charles H. Knight
today announced flUng .of petitions to seek nomination In the
May ptlmary election to run for
reelection to his post.
During Judge Knight's first
term of office, he has presided
over every felony criminal trial,
Including · three aggravated
murder cases, with the trials
Including convictions for both
murder and rape and Imposition

60COUNT
POLIDENT
DENTURE

May never see, or greet the ones,
Who teh before the
Thats why I feel so 10 ,
For the feathered 1rl
I know.

place a levy before the voters at directed to the board and adminea~h May and November elecIstration. The meeting was over·
tion for the length of the tour year all orderly.
contract or until spch time when
The first parent spokesman
a levy Is approved by lhe voters, during the public parltlclpatlon
If that Is a shorter length of time. portion of the meeting questioned
Standlnr Room Only
· . the policy of· makeup work and
It was standing room only at attendance during the strike and ·
last night's meeting as parents asked who monitored work In
and teachers packed Into the classroon;w during the strike and
board's · meeting room at the asked how uniform makeup work
administration building In could be obtained.
Middleport.
Supt. Dan E . Morris explained
'rhere was a period of public that the board and the adminisparticipation ·during which time tration cannot discuss theSe
a number of questions 'were matters publicly at the present

Judge Knight ·seeking reelection ·.

BUY ONE
@ 1.69
ONE

22 OUNCE

Clear tonlgbt. Low In mid
20s. Clou1y Thursday. Hlgbs
bi upper 4011.

•

•

2 Sectiona, 14 P•gea

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. february 17. 1988

Bush, Dukakis
post
Tuesday
wifis
.

CHARM IN

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

'

25 Cen10

A Multimedia Inc. NawopopOt'

Meigs ·board seeking .5 mill continuing levy

Wash High Prices Out Of Your Budget!'

•

Daily· Number
171 .
Pick 4
2849

Page4

9'eorge Birthington
WASH DAY SALE!

The place where streets are Golden,
And His glory Is everywhere.
Tbats _why 1 like to bless His name,
Because for me, He cared.
Olen D . Harrison
Pomeroy, Ohio

When I think of the glories of Hea ven,
That the eye may someday behold.
When I thlnk .of the beaut)lae promised,
In the land where no one grows Did.
REACH \'OUR GOAL

WIUJamson.
~
Tatterson, Audrey Travis.
Second
Grade:
David
J'lankl,
:
..
Second Grade: Wayne J'larnKindell
Brown,
early
Chasteea.
hart, Davtelle Grueser, Rop
Hirth, Amy See, Adam Thomas, Brandle Elliott, Emily Fowl~' ,.
Brad Walker, Michael Brown, · Brandee Gilmore, Brtanna Gil· "'
Nalalle Granda!, Erin HaggertY. more, Nathan HalfbUI, Jill Lem·
Roy Powell, Shella Neece, Wend! ley, Danlelle Peckbam, Tabldla .:,
Daniell, Heidi DeLong, David Powell, Andy Robinson, Elisa j
Anderson, Jerrod Clark, Sara Smith, Lisa Snodgrass, MIU&gt;: ,
Crali, Amy Hayes, Steven Titus, Mellssa ~~w~. Sand1'4 :•,
Michelle .~
McCullough, Christina Neece, . Young, Sean 0 Brien,
'
'
· , _.,
Wendy Shrlmplln, . Jared Ramsburg.
Third Grade: Chad J'lartrum, :,
Warner, JennlferYeauger, Chris
Jessica
Counts, Brooke Da~· · :·
Stobart.
•
Elizabeth
Ellls, Shaun Fife, scow..··
Third Grade: Tara Grueser,
George,
Frank
Herald, MlcheUe -1:'
Shawn King, Erin Krawsczyn ,
MIUer,
Amanda
Muuer, Ashlq '
Jessica McElroy , Josh Phalln,
Roach,
Beverly
Stewart, Jal)'lje ~
Stacie Reed, Krista Sargent,
·
·• •.c
Nate SissOn, Whitney Hapton· WIUlamson.
Fourth Grade: Phyllis Clark, ::;:
stall, Matthew Ault, Taryn
D!lldge, Kristina Grate, Chad . Jeremy Coleman, Kristen DQ· ;..:
Molden, Kimberly Petrie, Stacey sylva, Timmy Priddy, Lori Rilll· -;!·
sell, Clndl Stewart, Roxade ;o.
Price, Jodie Sisson.
. •: ::
Fourth Grade: L,aDeana Williams.
Fifth
Grade:
Kan!D
Clelan4,'
·:
Grover, Carla Hughes, Wade
Lori
McGhee,
Sherr!
Ramsbu~:::~
Pooler, Jessica Stobart, Travis
. •&lt;~"
AbbQtt, Anne Brown, Paul Chap· Tyler Wolfe.
Sixth Grade: Lorrl Burnem;~J
man, David Cunningham, Corey
Darst, Israel Grimm, Erica Arnie Elllott, Rachel Hysell, &gt;1
Missy Jeffers, Cindy McGulrtl,
Phillips.
· ' : ::;
Fifth Grade: Kelly Grueser, Jason Miller.
Jerod Cook, Adam Sheets, Jason · DH Class: VIckie Dolby, Tashar•'
;. ·~
Taylor, Sarah Anderson , Tara Jude,. Penny Napper.
Erwin, Adam Krawsczyn, Reg•
!he second six weeks bon~ :;:
gie Pratt, Julie Young, Lisa
roll for the Salem Center Ell!- •,
Yeauger.
mentary
School has been an' ~ .
Sixth Grade: Tracy Fife,
nounced.
Making
a grade of B or ·~
Jeremy Grimm, Tony Roush,
above
In
all
their
subjects to i!;e·-~
Brad Anderson, Danlelle Crow,
• •"
Sandy. Morris, Stephanie See, named to the roll were:
First Grade: Tara Butcher, ,
Jack Stanley, Erin Warner, J .P.
Jonathan Dellavalle, Andrea ·.:
Davis.
D.H. I: · Jeremy Johnson, Dunfee, Clinton HendrickS, Jes. "
sica Priddy, Brandon Morris; •::
Chuck Stewart.
D.H. II: Michael R,eltmlre, Amanda Miracle, Stephea "'
Keith Landaker, Eva Crabtree, Thornton, Bridget Vaughan, ·:
•
Carl Carmichael, Eulonda Jesse Williams.
Second
Grade:
A.J.
Vaughan.~
Rumfleld.
Latlcla Metheney, Amanda
The second six weeks honor · Napper, Angel Lambert, Ra·
roll for the Rutland Elementary chael Edmiston, Leigh Ann Can- :
~·
School has been announced. terbury, Matthew Metheney.
Third Grade: Jenny E~vln, •
Making a grade of B or above ill
all their subjects to be named to' Andy Myers, Jo Sandy, Stacy
Silvers, Amy Cleland, Carrt.e »'
the roll were:
Harmfln.
,
'14'
First Grade: Kristin Brown,
Fourth
Grade:
Gary
Canter..-~
Robby Dld&lt;!le, Ben Fowler,
: :
Amanda Hays, Chaslty Hess, bury, Bryan Colwell.
Fifth
Grade:
Kim
Janey,
SJI.'::'
. Matthew Justice, Waylon McKin·
ney, Tonya M111er, Alyson Pat. san Page, Crystal Vaugl!an.
Sixth Grade: Matt Clark, An· ; .
terson, Bobbl Jo Stewart, Clayton Tromm, Clark VanMatre, drea McDonald, Steve Smith; · :
• ·
Kasey W•llllams, Stacy T(lnya Thornton.

Bless His name and hold II high,

Let me il'asp His hand.
To guide me thru life's )OW'ney ,
To the place In Glory Land.

Ohio Lottery

Olympic
results

.I· . -- _fl
I'

of life sentences. Addltlonally 1 Knight. Their chlldlren Include
Judge Knight has presided over Jena Welker, a teacher In the
several cases Involving the min· Athens City and · Alexander
lng procedures of the Southern School Districts; ,Jackie Welker ~
Ohio Coal Co. and decisions by a student at Ohio University, and
Judge Knight have enabled the Grady Knliht, In elementary
continued operations of the school. Mrs. Knight Is owner of
.Meigs Mines and the Raccoom the Nautilus Training Station In
Mine by virtue of the longwalllng Athens, and she Is a former .
technique. This decision, It Is deputy clerk of courts In Meigs
'
reported, permits the continued County.
Judge Knight Is a 1968 graduoperation of the mines and the
ate
of Eastern High School where
uninterrupted employment ofthe
he
was valedtctbrln; a 1969
miners working there. '
graduate
of Ohio University
Judge Knight took an active
.
whe.re
he
received
a bachelor's
role In the orderly nerotlatfons
In
management;
a 1973
degree
Instrumental In the fl!lal settlegraduate
of
Ohio
State
Unlver·
ment of the recent Melis Local
Schools strike and It Is reported slty with a Master's Degree In
was credited by members of both Business Administration, con·
·, the Meigs Local Board and the centrated on tlnaaee, and Is a
MI.TA with an Instrumental par,t 1974 graduate of the Ohio State
Unfvenity's College of Law. He
In !he settlement.
was
a former ualalllnt prosecut·
The Ohio Supreme Court has
llli
attorney In Melp County,
appointed Judp Klltaht to pre-:
servtq
under Bernard V. Fultz,
llde over nUDI8f0111 Important
and
·
waa
prevloualy Melis
CIOIJrt casea In AtbiGI, Waslllq;
·County
Court
Judp.
·
ton, VIntOn and GaUII Countle
Juclae Kllflbt IJ a member of
aad contlnuea to exlllblt ·Ill faith
In Judp KnJIIlt's abWty with tbe SJJade ftt'llllt L¢1e 453, Free
and Accepted MUOJJJ; the Pbl
numerous pending apponteDelta Tlleta 'bill Fraternity
ments to prealde..
aad
waa a fowlder of t11t Oblo
Jlldp KnJaht and )Ill wife,
State
tlnlvenlty Ch,a pter of the
SbtroA, l'lflde In Chalar, ·adja·
Den•
. Tlleta Pill Leral
eent to tile family farm OWil8cl by
Fraternlty.
hl'l parenll, Howard ~l:leuor

\

~

Patrol and • the Meigs Local · policy of expulsion for drug and
Director of Transportation were alcohOl abuse In the district Is
both at the scene of the accident quite firm pointing out that In
and questioned If any of the 1986-87 tbere was not one expul·
Chlldren were hurt In the ace!· slon for drug and alcobol abuse
dent, which, he reported, was not Indicating that It Is a good policy .
weather related. Since no child He also repcirted that the district
Indicated any injury, the child· has a $6,000 federal grant tO
ren were taken to their classes at conduct a drug free program this
the Pomeroy Elementa:ry school year. .
DiscuS.. Problems
School. Later one child Indicated
Problems
Involving the first
an Injury, then a second child
grade
.
at
Harrisonville
were
Indicated an Injury. U was then
with
Sup'
t
.
Morn~
discussed
d~lded to take all of the children
to the hospital for examination, reporting that attempts are 1&gt;9"
Supt. Morris said. There were lng made to secure a student
problems with emergency medl· teacher to help Iron out prob- ·
cal forms and parents had to be lems. He also said suggestions
notified and had to give permis- have been made to the teacher ori'
sion by phone or go to the conducting the class and how to
hospital. Consequently , inuch make better use of space. He also
time was involved, Supt. Morris reported that ' the number of
students In the class has desaid.
clined.
Supt. Morris Indicated he
More Questions Asked
continue to work . with the
Another parent asked if there
Is any orientation for eighth problem.
One parent asked If It Is the
·graders and their parents before
the students move to the high policy of the district to notify
school building. She was advised parents If their children are not
by High SchoOl Principal Fenton In school. Prln~lpal Taylor adTaylor that last year an open vised that it Is policy to try to
house was held for eighth grad· locate the parents and so advise
ers and their parents to acquaint them.
The policy on makeup work for
them with the high school and
students
not attending classes
that a similar open house will be.
during the strike was brought up
held this year.
·
·
Another parent as ked lf a new sever a I II m"' .
One parent said .that all but two
band director will be hired soon .
pupils at the Hatrtsonvllle School
Supt. Morris said that the resigattended
classes during the
nation of the last director, Lori
strike
and
that they'· were not
Klinger, was on hist night's
given
credit
for work during the
agenda. The position Wlllf\ext be
strike
period.
She chargecUhat Is
posted for hiring within the
unfair
to
the
pupils. Another
district and If ·there are no
applications, , then It will be parent commented that It Is
lmpcisslble .for her children to do
opened to. all ;applicants. Supt.
makeup work and keep up with
Morris said tpat It could be that
the
current ·assignments. A
the position .will be filled on a
of 21 years, Jeanne
teacher
"sub" basis un,UI hiril!g Is done
Bowen;
said
that there is no way
for the next school year. He
she
can
give
makeup work and
Indicated, however. that he does
the
objectives
she has
achieve
have several applications for the
planned
for
her
students
this
band directing job on hand.
year.
She
said
ali
her
materials
One parent asked If the board
had plans for · bringing .more were used during the strike
·
money Into the district and was period by a substitute.
Again,
the
complaints
were
told by Snowden that the board
princirefer
red
to
the
building
would att on a !ax levy last night.
pals because of the lawsuit , bui
Snowden also reported that the
Snowden
cm;nmented that there
boarcl Is making known to Congive and take Involved
is
a
lot
of
gressmen and Senators the need
and
everyone
must make the
·ror more · state money. The
best
of
the
situation.
district currently gets about two
Accepts Resignations
thirds of Its funds · through · the
The
board accepted the resigstate, Snowden stated.
nations
of Lori · IOinger as a
To a question asking what
~nd
band director; Suteacher
program Is available to alleviate
san
C.
Nickels
as a teacher;
any drug and alcohol problems at
Larry
A.
Gibbs
as
a substitute
the high school other th;m expul·
teacher;
Mark
A.
Whitman
as a
slon, Principal Taylor said that a
substitute
teacher;
Clair
E.
.teens against alcohol and drug
Swan
as
a
custodian
due
to
abuse program Is conducted at
retirement
with
a
letter
of
the high school each year and
that students attend seminars. commendation to be sent to him .
Frances Thomas, Kathelee A.
There ate also centers in the area
Peyton,
Mary B. Slavin, Darla L.
to help students and parents with
Kennedy
, Pamela Bentz, David
such problems, Taylor reported.
Kucsman. Todd Bissell, Steven
Supt. .. Morris said that
the
.
Continued on
5

will

'

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