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"'pr 12.,...The D!ily Senlinllll

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Porneroy-Midcltpo~t,

celebra~~

Ohio

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New Year with 'world's · biggest party~

WEST BERLIN (UPI)- Thou·
lions, most of thein when· the
saiiC)I ot people \jshered In the
screen fell on the cirowd.
III!W year along and atop the
On Monday afternoon, abOut
· BerUn Wall, dancing ·and setting 30:000 people took part In the
off flreworkll as they celebrated
BerUn Run, crossing the historic ,
thearrlvalofadecadetreeofthe
Brandenburg Gate, which. was
iron Curta!Jf barriers that dl·
reopened last inonth i!l a moving
vldedthecityfornearly30years., ceremony .
But the celebrations were
overshadOwed by the de.a th of at
Thousands of people cheered
least one person · as a huge as Jonathon. Grlx from London,
outdoor screen set up by East Kemal Yazld from· Paris and
German televisiOn collapsed Ingo Pluczlni;kl arrive~;! at the
·under the weight of scores of finishing line holding hands at
peQRie who cLimbed on the the end oflhe run. the first across
scaffOlding supporting It, •
· thedlvldedcltys!ncetheerectlon ·
, City otllclals said 135 people of the Berlin Wall28 years ago. ,
were · hurt during the celebraIn a gesture symbolizing the

new spirit that has pervade(Hhe
city since the Nov. 9 opening 'Cf
tl\e Berlin Wall, the mayors ot
East and West Berlin gave the
slart signal for the 4·mlle run.
~vera! soldiers from the'Unl·
ted States. British' and French
troops stationed In West Berlin·
were among the singing and
cheering runners.
One group carried a banner
that read " Greetings from Chi·
. cago. Happy New Year," while
an East German sportsman
released eight while peace
doves.
During all-night celebrations
along the wall New Year's Eve.

about two dozen people scaled
tbe Brandenburg Gate and
planted a European Community
flag alongside a German banner.
·East German border guards
tried tobarallbutEastandWest
Germans from cro8Sirig . the
frontier, but they were QVerwhelmed by the crowds and soon
waved everyone through after
glanclng ·a t their passjloriS.
:J'ens of thousands of PeoPle
gathered along the Berlin Wall
for the celebration, with most
packed Into the eastern side near
the Brandenburg Gate. A large '
video screen set upon the eastern
side played rock videos, and not

.Ohio Lottery

far away jleople 111 candles to the country's new provisional
commemorate those who died In government.
Romania.
The West Getman dally Ex· •
•·ceausescu 15 dead. Germany press billed tbe celebration as ,
greets Romania," 11 banner said, "the world's latgest ·party," •
reterrtngtohard·llnecommunlst saying that !lfter ~ yeara of
dictator. Nlcolae CeaUJeScil, who · division. QirUn would celebrate
who ex!!Cuied Christmas Day by "a feast 1M like of which the
~
w~ld bas 'never seen."

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Pick 3

.:centennial · .
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~missiol)e.-s adopt ·$11.8 million budget

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JUNCY · YOAC~
.ments. Ill. tile Jenera! hrnd, .
,
1
Dallf8enllnelli&amp;AIJ
Sl85,537·wu apprtipl'lated for the
·
•.
.county !1Udl~l office; $10.,720
Al $11.8 mUIIon budeet , to • ,tor'· the · treuw:er; $63,098 for
4plnte, Metp County tlfO'II!I'n· common pleas court; $136,'!01 for
,.., and liervlces In tbe coming the ·pi'OII!CIII1nl attorney • of.
• yeer wu adopted Tuesday after1 flee; a,757 t!lr the county plan·
JICII!D lly the Meigs County Coln· nlng commlillon; 152,3119 for
mlilllners. The commlaalolll!l's domestic relations - JuvenUe
held .a special meeting Tuesday ,court; ~.235 for probate court;
$120,472 for the cle~k o!-·courts;
afternoon to review and approve
the 1990 budget.
$23,2111 for the coroner, 193,832
· ·The .$11.8 ~Ilion e1'and·total ot
for county ,c ourt; $~02,784 for the
all county funds li down about board of elections, $208,150 for
, $1,000 from ltalt .ye!U';I total
maintenance services and operabudlet, Blld•l!tary . reques!S- lions ot buUdlngs,,whlch mainly
from thevM'Iousbff!Qefo~A~erecut
g~ to pay utilities; $387,620for
appraxlmately S111&amp;,11Kl to m"t
the sheriffs department; $72,957
am01111ts whlcll were certified tqr for the recorder; $5,491 for
1990 by the county budget com·
disaster S!!l''!ices; $85,794 for
mission, Commissioner Rlch•rd
agriculture; $131,663 for the
Jones rePOrted.
,"
children services board; $44,410
· Of the grand total, $2,840.~?
for soldier's relief; 535.1158 for
was appropriated to the co)llljy veterans 1erV1ces; $84,617 for the
· general fund whlj;h !s 'comprls~
county's share of public. uslstof county · offices and , ance; $22,000for.thecounty park
~· P"'Pnllllon: 138,177 for the 'plat
'lepjlrtments.
•
Among ,the offices and depart.. . ~P. office; $6,500for the blstor!·

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Brown named.

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VMH mediCal ·

cBisoclety.
,,,
Appropriated for the commls·
sloners' budget was $218,809.
Thii reflects a sizable lnereue
from 1111! $1'68,5!16 approprtati!d
lut yejU' for tbe commlsldoners.
The Increase comes about due to
a recommendation from state
examiners to p141ce moriey for
· s)lerlff's vehicles In the commts·
sloners' account sll!cethecounty
owns tllletoallsherlff's vehicles.
A new general fund budgetary
liem Is a $35,000contractwltb the
state public defender's office to
en8.ble Meigs County to have a
public defender to represent
Indige-nt residents • charged In
criminal matters. The contract
amount l"lll cover the expenses
of salary and office operations.
Of the $35,000 total, $17,500wlll be
reimbursed to the county
thrquah the agreement.
In other general fund Items,
~.ooo was approved to, pay the
county's cO'st for the annual state
• audit which Is mandated by law. ·

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Marli 0. Brown baa beea
l!&amp;med pn!81dent of the Medical &amp;&amp;aft ol Veterans MemorIal Jlolpltal In Pomeroy for
1118. othe'r, officers for llle
yellir. Include Dr. Wilma
A. Manafleld, vice president;
Dr, MefP. Simon, secrelar)'; .
and Dr. E.S. Vlllaaueva,

new

lreMUrtll'.

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Inf~rmational me~tings

.

Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 32%
AT&amp;T ...... .... .......... ,.... ...... ... 46
..Uhland Oil .... .. ................ .. 39%
· Bob Evans ...; ..... .. .. ............. l3l'8
Charming Shoppes ...... ... : .. .. 10ltj
City Holding Co. .. ...... ......... . 15
Federal Mogul.. .. ..... .. .. ...... . 21~·
Go\Jdyear T&amp;R ...... ....... .. ... .44\i,
Heck's ........ ...... ... .......... ..... .. .4
Key Centurion .. ........ .... .. ... .13%
Lands' End .. ... ...... ..... ......... 20ltj
Limited Inc . .... ............ .... ... 36\jj
Multimedia Inc..... .... ...... .. .. 91%
Rax Res.t aurants .. .... .. ....... ..... 2
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .... .. .. .. 16~ .
Shoney's Inc... .. .. .. .... ... ... .. ... 12
Star Bank ......... ... .. .. .. ......... 21~
. Wendy's Inti. ............ ... .... .. . .4ltj
Worthington Ind .. ... .. ...... ..... 22%

-Miscellaneous j!xpen$es lotat
$217,073, .which : among ·other
· llems, reflects $40,00o which !las
been earmarked for computers
, 1n the county cO\it offices.
Computerization of'county court
something that Is long
overdue," stated Comrillisloner
Richard Jones. but was just not
affOrdable In past years; The
miscellaneouS 'ca,tell)ry also In·
eludes ·the state mandated
·. crippled children budget, the
county's share of the soli and
water budget, the counJY's share
toroperatlonsofBiueStreakCab
Company, and · t~e county
Infirmary.
under contiJ!geneles. a total of
$75,000 has been earmarked, of
which a large part may be used
for remodeling the Interior ofthe
sheriff's department.
Under capital Improvements,
$70,000 was set aside which may
beusedtocontlnuetheupgradlng
of courthouse offices, and for any
unanticipated work to coun··

.

for

· ty.....owned ,&amp;ulldlngs.
Among the special revenue
fupds Included 111 this year's
budget. $3,491 was appropriated
for the community mental health
board fund; S8.307 tor the dog and
kennel tund lot the first six
monthsoftheyear; $1,466.850for
the county board · of mental
retardation and developmental
disabilities;· $4,468,149 for publlc .
assistance; $59,475 for the litter .
. con)rol · and · recycling fund;
$67,526 tor real estate assess·
ment, w~lch reflects anticipated
co.s ts for this year's property
reap'pralsal, as required bylaw;
$21,229 . to the youll\ . service
subsidy grant fund; $390,000 for
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Services; $114,822 for the
tuberculosIs clinic; $59,424 for
children services fulid~; $4,794
tor the state-required marriage
license fund; $120,346 which .Is
anticipated as the county's Com·
ill1Jnlly Development Block.
Grant alkltment for 1990; an~

·

Me~

Board OKs
school bus 'driver ·
certificates

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the

Including $34,984 for state foster
care.
·
The motor vehicle and gasollpe
tax fllnd which operates the
county highway department Is up
from $1,598,483 for 1989 to
$1,868,113 this year . The lncrea·se
reflects a rise In the state' s
gasoline tax.
,
All budgetary items are certl· ·
fled by the budget commission
(the auditor, treasurer jjnd
pr 0secull.!!&amp; attorney) based
upon last year's receipts and
anticipation of tecelpts for the
new year. Should receipts fall
shortofantlclpatedamounts. the
budget commission will revise
certifications to stay In line witH
receipts.
.
"From this , point on," said
Comm lssloner Jones, '·'this
board must watch expenditures
closely. Come January 1891, we
will really be scraping for
money. With no funding In·
creases on the horizon, we don't
want to make commitments we

S44.101forallotherstatefunds, ' can'lful(lll."

&gt;

·LoW·E
.~&lt;Atl'

Meigs Lqcal School · Dis'trict
residents ~~
..
.
~~~fl Jpnuary 8 ~!dents o~ dlstr~t.
!l!", wq,~l~

staff president
'

· Dallf aiQck prices
{All ol18:30 a.m.)
BI')'Ce 111d Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis It Loewi ·

·

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the dlstrlpt, ,

mea!!

•-lit' lu hla Cllinmeats to the 1~QI.. ·clGillll al~·th ·e\d ,tt)ile!_~en· ·

Melp Local
. "' ilven the
o!;::::.allcl:~·coat for the
P~
~two new
buildings at Informational meet·
lngs to be )leld lhli month at the
ellht elementary scbools.
·
The sessions will be held at tbe
.January ·PTO meetings of each
school and Is a ftrsta~ toward
e,J!UghteninJ resklen~ on . tbe
proposed bulklllli program priOr
to a planned survey In February
or March..
The ·Meigs Local Board of
EducatlonatitsNovembermeet·
lng passed a resolution to con·
duct asurvey ot the district to get
public opinion ori such a building
prograiJ'! on the recommendation
of Supt. James Carpenter. '
According to the superintend·
ent, all bonded Indebtedness of ·
the district will be paid olf In
December, 1990.
He said that If the four mUis
currently . being paid Is con·
tlnued, beiiDnlnglnJanuary1991
and extending for 23 years, over
S9 million will be raised toward
the proposed buildlnl program
at no ln~rease In taxes to · the.

Supt. Carpeuter said the dl,atrlct
will never &amp;lain have the oppor· ,,
tunlty to have that mucll money
·a t no Increase In taxes, but with
justa continuation of the current
rate.
The superintendent cited pupil
e11ro0ment as a factor In proPOS·
lng tile construction of two new
buildings; ·
lie said that currently tbere
are four buildings with less than
150 .students, that In th~ build·
lngs, excluding kindergarten, the
enroUment.lalesa thair130; while
lna.notber building, Uiereiu't!370
students.
The student·feacher l'llilo
ranges from 15 studenta to one
teacher one place, to 31Students
to one teacher In another: The
construction of two new build·,
lngs, which could he either
kindergarten tbrou1b sixth
grade or kindergarten through
elgbth grade, would equalize that
ratio and give more opportunity
for full-time bulldlni teachers
In specialized aress. of lnstrilc·
tlon, such as art, music and
language. .
.
If the -proposed buil~lng program li accepted by the voters of

tary schoOls and also tbe junior
~~~h school If, tbe new schools .
were kindergarten through
eighth grade.
. At the PTO Informational
ineethip, 'Car!Jenter said, the ·
emphuls will be on providing
Information to residents about
the proposed .building program
and ilve them an opportunity
ask questions. ' ..
The plan, he said, Is to have all
the meetings In January so that
when the survey·forms go out .In·
month or so, residents will be
better lntOrmed about the propOsed building program;
·
The schedule of meetings
follows:
Salem Center. 7:30 p.m.
Monday,
Ha1 rlsonvllle, 7 p.m. Tuesday .
;Bradbury, 7 p.m. Jan. 10.
Junior High, 7:30p.m. Jan. 11.
Salisbury, 2 p.m . Jan. 12 .
Middleport, 7 p.m. Jan. 16.
Rutland, 7 p:m. Jan. 18.
PomeroY, 7 p.m. Jan. 22. '
Supt. Carpenter urged res!·
dents of each community to
attend. "You are welcome to
attend whether yo.u are a P'J'O
member or. not," he concluded.

to

DUI
~=~:ae~~rreo;slard::;~ H~se approveS urug,
· sanctions
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Several school bus driver cer·

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CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
day's Winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3

387.
PICK-3 ticket sales toialed
$1,547,360.50, with a payoff due of
$411,139.

. LOWE SOLD ~ Lowe'a Motor lan, 41h and Mlin stneia in Point
Plesnnt, lllaow under new OWINnblp • of Jaa. I, 1990. RlverPolate ·
t That prOVIsiOn was Development, s Hunthratoa torpantlon, has Biped • lease·purchu, :.,
percen ·
.
_
apeement wltlllona-dme owaer H0111er Lowe, Jr. President rl Rlverdeleted by the House.
· ·.
i&gt;olate IIIII cnnrer fA tbe Inn, Hemsn Seum (center) said be plans to
· •
hiabUpt the HtlltlltidtJ Ud hllltorlcai lllllnner of the hotel IIIII ft•
The Senate already has passed panel on tbe public lilt of the banquet and private party rooms. SetwodrUI·flghtlnibllts, but House salcl 11e IDiendl .to open up the rourtll floor ror olllcts sad/or
D
Speaker Vern Riffe,
· spartmenta, to put a new l'lc:e oa the 6ve ltoftfronts belonBIIiR.on the
- WIIeelersburg; the orlglaal au· piOJIEi t)J sad to expand tile hotel's eervil:es lo the publ~ ,vllh 1 ftlo
thorofHouseBIU~,saidheWIU
taUI'IIIIt sad caterln1 service. Plclnreclue (left to rlahl) Point Plnsant
.
·confer will\ the governor and Mayor Ru.ell Holland, Seum, uti AI AlclerFer, dinctor or Poiat
Senate 'President Stanley Aro- Pleilslnt Ma'ln StntL (OVP pboto by Marpret
noff, R-Cinclnnati, on what
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should be In the f!J\al version.

lng of tbe Meigs County Board of
Education.. Driver certificates
COLUMBUS, Ohio· (UPI) WednesdaY.. II expected to reject
were approved for Fa lib varney, State representatives voted over·
the HoUle cllanges to the drunkell •
for the .::ounty. office; Max Hill whelmqly ruesctay for Ilea'
drMn1 bill and force the !slUe to
naltles a1alnst drunken driV·
a Jo!Jit conference committee.
J
Southern . Local School
· r., for
" and a comprehenilve bill to , Seli. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
District; and Albert Eutman, · •
Corey . Carnahan, ·R icky free. reduce the abu~e and sale of
the author, aarees with the Ohio
d Lew!8 H ph
Illegal drugs.
·
•
Deparllilent llf-HIIhway Safety
man an Local School
umDistrict.
rey, for
However, It ls•l.lltely to be
that law
. enlorc,ement officers
Eastern
weeki
before
either
ot
the
t,wo
si!Qulcl
be Jiven au~rlty to
Led M K
·
a ae raeuter was aP· biDs are sent to Gov. Richard ·su1pend on tbe SPOt the licenses
proved · by the board as a Cejeste bec&amp;use of 111sa.n..e- . of a"v motorists testlne over the
su_b stltute teacber.
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o1
Employed as a teacher aide for ments over details. Of special
II!IRI blood alcohol level of ·
.... ·
· ·
the Severe Blibavlol'!ll Hand!· concern II how to pay for the.
capped elm was Shirley . A, IIICI'euedjallapacenecellltated ' ~.._.I
'Willis.
,
by. harsh ~~lies PfOI!OIF~
~l!JU
Continuation of liability lnsli· for drue ..am-...
. . pro''~. b~
dept~u·QQ
ranee With Nationwide Mutual
The Hou• opened Ita. l9tO
,/
~
~
Insurance Co111pany was ap- 11111lon by IJUIIna, IIU, Sena,e
proved for 1990. · •
BIIIW, wbtdllncre. . . tbefba
Two , lncldenta' 'of arson are. set ori fire. The SyraCII&amp;e Fire
. Among routine matters; a andl~nasuapenalonsJorclriVi underlnveiU.atlopbytheMelp Department sell! a truck to ·
County Shertfra Dejlartmel!t. ·
extinauJah tile flll~es lind ,to
budgetary tranllfer of 12:10 was lng while Intoxicated iad pro- approved, alonawitbtbemlnuies vldel fll~ altlrllltlvll ·to Jail.
Tile~ lnefdentoceurredat9. prevent the .flre frOm spreading
• ·or the December meeting and the lllcllldiJW llouae· . arrest, elee- p.m. at the Rlvlrvllw Elernen- to other bales.
treasurer's report. ·
tronlll IIDIUoa lodiiiUid lmmo- tlry !lohool , at Reedlvlllf. AC.
·Deputies also, lnvestililled a
During an or1anlzat1onil blllZtittft of an offellder'l Cll'.
· col'diJII · to lllfllnJiatiDn trcm deercar aceideJit on ~lA! 124,
meeting of the county board,
Sbol'tly tberealter, lb!' . Sbll'lff JUMI M. Soulaby, Jobn above Loq Bottcm. Thelma J.
which was a110 held Tuelday chamber apJIOUid,
tbl !lalltll apd Mark lm(tll were Smltll, ot Reedivllle, wu travel·
evenq, Harold Roush waa Hollleverllollof•llltlodnlrllb! lrlvellllf' 10111141 ~ lilaautonRoutt1KWI!enad4!:fr
-lected plwldent and Orll Wblcb.,_iclli)'lliiii:IMII~ wllllltJIIYiaWIIIIoUIIIIItlamel ranlato1beleftrurfentler0fber
Ylce-prealdent Qf the tlfl lor drill abun ...,trllk:lr· comlq from belilatltlle aellooL
1 • Pon'llac~ The tall )llht W,aa
,
, .
· 1111 but hu elli • •
clll'1llf
· damapcl. The deer fled,
Regular meetlnp were e~tab- "' edllcllloll uti ~•at•, nt.
Wbn tbey Wlllt to tilt .,..,
Flnall)', Sberllf Soulaby relllhecl for 7 p.m. on the II!C.'Ond
It aliO IIIla up•DvQMtllclq . tbey IIIKO\'IIId tilt 011 Ill 'tile portl till a~ of '2-year-old
Tuesday of ead montb, atart1111 Board to aniiUilijt PUJII'tl a allr1dlllly tlltllltllhlltiDGrwula WIJlllm J. KIJII, of QuyaviUe.
In February, to be beld at llbe . atat. drill palley, ad pula tile flunel. The11Nba41lelllatlrtl!d , Kllll wu ~tid_ II)' tile Ohio
county board of edqcation offtce Goverlllll"• Offb of Crtmlaal wttll 1 Iller eartoll.
lflllllftYJ'atrol tor bl~ _ .
In Pomeroy.
Juatlce service~ Ill ci~ Ill.
Tilt MC.'OIId lllcldent Qecurred no-OJiaiat'l!l'l !leaN.
waa
8alarles tor botrd members apectal ll'Utl fountl-&lt;ln4J JI'O' around 11: 2111 p.nl. onlaiNr Road a110 lf1'llllll on a bfn:ell warrbt
wereaet!1Ull0pc!!'monthand15 tram• devlaed . by lo11al jult oft COUnty Road . 21' ~~(tat fl'omtheMelpCountyCqurtfor.
ceata per
for travel aowtnmeats: .
· Raclnt. two larp balm of bay faiUDI to comply with ~ court
~·
The ~·
~- 'llelclaPII to D,elblrt Smltb were J order •

&amp;:

lottery numbers

.afson incidents
·Me:k..

PICK-4

1135.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$281,646, with · a payoff due of
$245,100. ..

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16, 18;~4. 32, 36 and 38.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$6,628,026.
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·
. · Kicker
01«*!6. ·
Kicker ticket sales totaled

•1.

$1,023.~.

Tbere will be a drawing Mandar. New Year's Day. ·

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A Multwn.dlolnc, Now~

or.

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2 S.ctlon1. 14 Pou• 2il Conte

· Stocks

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s.,e.. Lotto

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Cloudy tonJcht. Low near a.
Cb1111ee ot rain 941 · percent:
Thanday, hllh In mid SO..
Chuce of rain 941 percent.
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/11/INHI/INifHIIHflllt!liJUIIllMJJlW.II

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Pick4
4395

0
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COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) , The Ohio General Assembly will
open the new decade .this week
with action on bills to· cu tb drug
abuse and drunken driving.
But as 1990 wears on, the
lawmakers will be faced with
legislation on campaign !Inane·
lng and lobbying, healJh insu- ·
ranee for those whocannotaftord
It, recycling of garbage to reduce
landfill requirements, and $600
million worth of capital
Improvements.
·: House Speaker Vernal Rlfte
Jr., D·Wheelersburg, and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R·
.. Cincinnati, hope to . send their
troops .home by AprU to cam·
palgn for re-election . . Sessions
will be sporadic for the rest ofthe
year.
]'be House bas scheduled a 1: 30
· p.ITJ. floor session for Tuesday to
deai with get-tough legislation on
drugs and drunken driving.
House members will be back
Wednesday to vote on bills
establishing an Ohio OWce of
Inspector General and 1tlvlng
home rule to townships.
The · Senate plans to meet
,Wednesday . and Thursday this
week.
House Bill 685, set for passage
·In the House, upgrades penaltles
for drill abusers and traffickers
and calls for the state to devise a
coordinated dtug·flglitlng plan
lnvoMng schools, communltles
other state offices ..
Titer~ , are questlon marks
about .funding !or drug educa·
tlon, who controls money and
aSIIets seized from dtug dealers
8lld bow to pay for Increased jail
s,.ce needed ·,to house drug
felons.
~
· •.• .,_.. ·ro
House Speaker Vernal Riffe
Jr.. D·Wheelersburg, the bill's
original author; said details will
have to be Ironed out before
AprU, particularly on the $2
billion-plus . cost of the
legislation.
Senate Bill 131, also being
voted In the House, was rewritten
slgolflcantly In a subcommittee
.' under the direction of Rep. Marc
Guthrie, D·Newark.

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Lawmakers open
new deeade with
cfmg, alcohol bills

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Local news ·briefs-;.....;.,;

No one hurt in Tuesday mishap
The Gallla·Melgs Post of the ·. State Highway Patrol ·
lnvestleated an accident at 6a.m. Tuesday on US33,1n Bedford
Township, 1.9 mUes south of the Meigs·Ai!P,lms County line.
Troopers said a soutbllouird 1988 Ford TemPO driven by Lloyd
S. Jordan, 25, ZanesviJle, went off the right side of lbe road, .
·sartklng ·an embanidnent. Dama1e was mod~rate . No one was.
·
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Injured. There was no ciiAflon.

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has five Tuesday calls
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Five calli fpr medical a
tanee were 811.1wered OD Tuesday
by units of the Melp Co ty Emergency Medical Service..
At 12;28 p.m. , Mlddl rt lftllt to HlPJand Road for Mildred
Arnold who will takett V
ana Memorial Hoapltal.
Pollll\'0}' wu called at : 36 ·p.m. ID the Amerlc:IJ'I!oPP&lt;omm,..llr..,O)"
Nura!Jii Center for Mary Joaes Wbo wu taken to Veteraaa
Memrilllolpltal,
I
· At &amp;:~p.m., Mlddlfl)9rtwent toPsatSt. torJoaephLiaclato
Veterans Memorial llolpltal and st 10:0. p.m. ID Beecb St. For
Della Roaeberry Who"WBI taken lo PI-nt Valley Jfl)lpltal.
Syracu• Fire Department wu called at 11:..0 p.m. lllal!Q
bale fire on Salser Road.
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Author ,says .Tokyo

-· The ·Daily Sentinel

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WASHINGTON- Flully, af·

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· 111 Cotlrt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE' INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .UEA

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~~BER'l' L . WJNGE'I"f.. ,..
Publ.lsher

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PAT WHrl'EHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ CoolroUer

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. CHABLEmr HOEFLICH·
Geaeral Mua&amp;er

or

A MEMBER 'l1le Aooodated Phis, llllsncJ Dally 'l'relo Auoclallon and the Amwlcan Newtlp&amp;pel' Publltlhen ,a....,..,IDn.

L • ·

· LEtTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They lbould tie l01o
wonls lon1. All lellero are aubJeet 1o ediiiDI •d muot be olped w.ltb
name, lld*Oio ud leleP.IIone oumber. No ullllped letlero wDille publis hed. Letters ollould be ill..,..tute, addreool8cla-, not per...U.·
lies.

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· -Ohio Politics

Democrats awaiting
auditor's future .plans

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. ·~$ 000to,aniJitervtewabout
]at:k'AR.der.ton
To llettn with, Howe-told .ua,
2
there WU DO IIDJ)e Tokyo ltole. rer exPerienCes as·a Japaneoe

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

titul ~Dale

Vt111
tile' J1Jl dtellmeota.

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. II ,OIIah for flnt plaoe, 14 for
Me. l .... laot ....,••

:. lleHil;

ruldlla:
; Team

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Potato

L !!J"""'oe (II)(N) ;.:.nc I
; : kaa- (IS) IIU) ..... Ill t
3. Geeq"'- Cll CN) ,ffl I
4. DIIHII CIN) ............. ut
~- Clle) Mldllpa (lt-l) .s•
;&gt;- 'CtleJ Olllallema C...l .S.
, , ...._ .. (lt-1) ......... ...

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• L ta•aa CIM) ........... 181 A
i.L !\!.,......... Vepo C7·
. t:) oooouoo ; ,,·, . , • .,,,,,,., , .,._, , , ,I4J.

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It. Louli..Uie Cll-1) ........ tt811
·n. LouloiUa St. CU) ... 103 U .
...l ... l . II.
1 11. Cleel'lla Teell C

· Ii. Duke CI-Zl ............... 114 14
' tf. Ar..._ Cll-2! ......... it8 11
If. VCLA Uri) ......; .........If II
' II. C.fo..do 8tUe (IN) .•11 .s

17. Iowa

(Il-l) ...... .. ..........lUI

· II. Alabama CI-Zl .... 1 .....11 s
II. Cllel Arboaa ($-1) ......1111
II. C&amp;lel La Salle (Uf .....llll
.......Ired

· Olllera receiYilll vo&amp;eo!
.......... Y'"-1, Kawai!; LoJ·

O!a Mu:rmow, Meniplda
lf!ate, Mlclllpll IKUe, Ml••

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•ta, New Mexlep l.ltMo,
IJre&amp;ow Stale, S.•llnrl!lt Lolli·
llaBa, st. ,.._,., Toua,

Texu-I!J Pilao, Vl~lda,' Xav· '

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--ball . ....

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....... Jaa. Ia ,..._.
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·Today iD history

Pr-

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, , Alabama ot-t&gt; ... :..... ns 7
6. Mldllpa (It-!) ........ I'll 3
t. Sovillen Col Ct-2-1) ... Ul It
lt. Dllllell CJM) ........... IU 11
II. Cl...,.. Clt-I) ......... NIIS
It. Nebno .. (II-!) ....... 114 I
11 "rlwl- Cli-Z) ....... 111 i
lt. PeallStale CM'I) ......1118
'II. Vtl'll•la CtN) .......... .S1. If,
18. Teua Tech (N) ....... .illt
18. MIOhlpil ~ Cll-4) •.II . z
18. Bfllll¥! YOIIIII'' t,l~)l7 It ·

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!'IPw, It Connor can just come

up with a way to gel l .,
..ks to stop

going out of !hell; ho)lset wearing
enough of the stuff to mask the
odor of a bui:nlng landflll, .he'llgo
down In history as
great
politician and the savior of the
allergic. .
- My nomination for most
ffen
·O
s Ive a dver lisement ot t he
holiday season: ·t he SoutJjwestern Bell campaign to "give
yourseIf s II ent n Ig h ts. " 1nother
words, buy your teen-ager a
•- Phone ltne.
pr Iva...,
.
I have Southweslern Bell service IDII)y area, and, seriously, I
like the company. May they live
lollgan~J,proaper,andthesameto
their children and their children's children. I just don't think
their Children need their OWn
p"'vate
p. h
- !IDes
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Egad·, every time I say some-·
thlIll like this ' I tee1 Ilke a
hlghwll)' construction crew juat
dugupmybonesandareaboutto·
ship them off to ~e Museum' of
Natural · History. But unleso a
parent Is a pro1ess1ona1 who

a

neW year .

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depends on having a line open at

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a 11 tim es, .I , d oil •t see why,
teen·allers . 11eed to be !ln the
telephone enough ·to warra!lt an
' tlre Pr ivate phone I1ne.· And II
en
that:s the case, llln't the call·
waltlngoptlonenough?Iflt'snot,
I think I'd prefer the professi6bal
to have a business l_llie In . the
horne, an d s WI on 1y one f am 11Y
line.
Why? I'm not sure I know.
Per ha ps 1t rna k es perfect sense
to allow the rest oftbe family the
convenlen ce o f ..,__
u..-,_..s InI the
teen-agers. I Just like thts Idea
better: .Umlt their- phQne use.
Tell them they've aot X minutes
onthephoneperevenlng,andtcy
to stick to the schedule as much
· as j)osslble. Lighten up If the
~-y • 1 may be
Situation merits. tt·• ""
·a r ~" h a 1c •· b u t , .• m n 0 t
unreuonable.
1 Jus t prefer .,.v
..c tn g a t een-ager
t~ messace that p!lone use Is·a
privilege and a responsibility,
not a civil rl1ht.
- . This week I liStened to a '
pane1 of 1n nuentla1 WO!Ijen dls-

di~ident --::::-··.

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TEAM
W
Eastern ........... .... 6
North Gallla ........ 6
Hannan Trace .. ... 5
Soutltern .. ...... ..... .1
Southwelter n ...... .4
Symmes Valley .. .2

u•-tl,~··ll!llllllat

...........".........
...... ".,"'....01'
a......... .
a.•• .. ct..et•4.n:• •·"'·
AFC....._.I .....
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MI•~H.UIItR•F~

........ J • • 1

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Nft:

· LA ...... NV ·cw..t., II:•

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Co-&lt;11--1
........,,.... .
.,........
.............
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...., .
............
.._...... -,... "
.....
..........
.
P...._••n.•••
AFC

PltW*rah Ill.._..,, 4 ,.m.

...

s-........... .

. NATIONAL UID'n.u.L .USOC

'hHII., ....
~

..u......... -lkH Jl'f

lA lJINih at. .... ... "
OtWM MaW Ill. lJ&amp;alt IM

......

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W•IIII!'•••M ...ICMI,1:Rp.m.
MlliiU~• M New w.-, 7: M

ra.tftt,W•-'I•AM ..... A: ~, . -.. . .

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Clllnpat n ...r~. T;. 'lll.m 1

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IA.Oiptrr" i111Detn11,7:••·m · .
~•-atiiHIM~tti:•Jtm.

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..... .,........... ••·'"'· . .
,..... .., Oama .
.tta..aa .. NtwYM

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......
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XM&gt;k!r liS. l.eJII•IIwJtM. . US .a..
OIM DDnt.hlkl• 74, Lake Er~ • . ,':""

N.-. ,,..., I. . . . . .

. ... ,.. ... v.-..wrr

I'AIIIMIII•I.•. . . . .

......

Bai..,.•Wiill•" Kt.1... 1111•m 11

...,.............. cw .... .

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r.-.llPowall ll, Rohtrt Moi'rt. •

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WI ................. .'t:Mp.•.

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c., ... 7.1. ...let .. u

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;;;:·w;'~~~f ~~~rs:"!!n!!~

president, and realiZed with a
1
mild degree of shock that I don't

le:r• OIUe •IP!ko................
Jlr V•IWII Prtu _...., ..... _.

................
o.r
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.,.lillln',... "JJ.W..
•••lfn,r.a~-.r••

necessarilyelected
hope toInsee
president
thea woman
next 10
years.

••errru• "n.

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What I hope
the decade
brings
manyIs that
women
and

C.l_..

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n~w·v,Ma•-

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Tuesday's flnal8
North 'Gatua 114; Oalt Hill 66
· Southwelitern 102, OVCS 49
Rederal Hocking 91, Eastern-53
, Friday's acltoa· ·
Hannan Trar.e at Eastern
Kyger Creek at Southwestern
North GaiUa at Symmes Valley
Southern·at Oak Hill
Saturday's 1ame
Gallla A&lt;;ademy at Southe_rn
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UC defeats Marietta
87-71
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Ht~tgOt-Tii•OIII · ~899.,5,.

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·· ·ftelle..... .-41 (Hayw~ lll
Altlllll :- 8 .
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I!Mellll -14 &lt;J;Iuchanan 6)

.,.,......._11

IIAIUI:rrA &lt;'ll - Rodtch
2-t-O..i'; Caldwtll · l-3·0.15;

Hellier ~10; VIIIDtlllit 3-Nt: llurllltlt ~ Mal-lia 1-0-0.. Willie 3,0-0-6; WJIIIMDI 0-(1.3.3.

'I'Ot.&amp;U-IM+'n

"-tile._.29-10 (4U%)
rr.. tile._- 6-11 (5U'l5)

lkll111 d1 -47 (Valentine 11)
A rlzll 16 (Caldwell · i
ROd tell, &amp;each&gt; 111. · . .

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SVIIIIC&amp;IPTION IIATJ!8

IJ Cont&lt;r
w Mot4or .......
- ··
One Weelc
.. .... .... ..............
....11.10
One MDith ...................... ..... .. ....16.10

c&gt;neY-.ar ...., .................. ,.. ,.. .. .. 112.80

!liNGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally
..... :........................ ..... ~ Cools
'
Sublcrlberanol del lrlngtapoy thec•r-

1988 PONnAC -6000

'. 4 Dr., V-8, Air, 80/40 •et1, oruloe, PL. aluminum wheelo.
local one owner trada.
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rter may remit ln adnnce direct to

The D•lfy Se'nllnel (JD a 3, I or 12 n,onth
bulB. Credit Yt'DI
week.

~ ~tven carrier et&amp;eh

No oublcr lptluns by mall permllted In
aret.s where homr carrier tft'VIce is
available.

s 95
Vttg Nl• O~t Ott~ll ~rl. 64 , .
V·8, Air. Tilt. CruiM

·..

1917 FOlD F1SO ................................................SALE '6H5
1916 GMC ClSOO 'h TON.-·""'"""""'"""""'SALE '7495
1915 CHEVIOI.ET 4x4 "51 0" ........................... SAil '4J95

·1915 OM "S 15" ".........._ ..........................~..... SAal :1995
191'7 D06GI DAIOT A......;....;.."'""'"'"""""""SALE 5995
1917 S10 4 en. 4 SPIED.,,_,_,........;........... SALE 15795
1914 fORD MUST AHG, SUNROOF-"..........""'" SALE 12995

1915 OLDS CUTLASS SUPIEME ...........-.............. SAL£ 15995
'191S OL6S FIENZA 4 DR....."""""'"'""""'""'·· SALE '4495
·1

IIOimls 01 3,100 •us WAIIAIITY
ON AlL . _

liACI . . . . .,

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cw Wmt LISS

loi,OIO..asa•

Wt R C'!'fW Te Offer AI Of Yhr
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0• Owllttl · ~

Member: Untttd Prl!lslntematlonal,
InlandDIUyPresoAuoc:lotlooiJidthe
Ohio llewapo~!.uoc:latlon. Natloall
AdVertlllna
eDI•tiVe, Dronhlm
Newl()lper
8, 733 Tblrot Amute,
New York, N~ Yor k 1001'1.
~

is moving their business
.EFFECtiVE JAN.: 15I 1990
Our New
L8cation ·Will ·h.
.
SIDE
IOID,,nn ..... onw•• ·,.,

. ...... ..... -22-311 (73.3%)

. 1988 CHEYIOLO

4 Do(lf, auto. trano .. elr. PW. PL. tHt. IIIIa

meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley ~b­
lllhlna ('J&gt;IIIponyl l\lulllmfldl•. Inc..
Pomeroy, Olllo 4S181, I'll. 112-21M. SeC!Ond elass postage paid at Poms:OV.
Ojllo.

S -QUIPMENT
CO.
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~&lt;\11~..;: \:..n... ~ (45.5%)

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Publls~ evefy aftemom, Monday
thrOU(Ih Frl~ay. 111 Court Sl., Po-

-• ATIENTION ·•

CIIAJWI:invN ,(81)
Haywood 10.0.5-25; . 'Buchall&amp;n 1-5-2·
lt; Colllia ..0.7-15; Wood 5-().212; BrOfln f.l)-0-8: SoloJ'nOR
· J.o-3-s; M•lilllllatt o.o-a-3. 'fO.

.,.,.....-22

1985 BUICK RIVIERA

"' Fun Power". or.e of the Sharpoct Cars In Tha Area.

iUSPSUI-. .1
A lllv- of Mlllllmefia. lttc.

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. STOP IN AND SEE THE SAVINGS YOU'LL
FIND ON THESE PRE-OWNED VEHICLES!!

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Wellston ........ .... ..&amp; 1 465 381
Miller.,,: .............. 5 1 ~19 377
· Alexander .. ..... .. .. 5' 4 573 575
Vinton County ..... 3 2 . 311 303
Belpre .... .. ........... 3 3 411 401
Triml!le .... ...... .... .3 3 383 386
Fed-Hocking : .... ... 3 4 491 484
Meigs~ ....... .......... ! 3 1R7 • 282
Nels-York ........ .... o 6 284 411
'l'aesday's retult:
Federal Hocking 91 Easter.n 5J
Frltlay's aameo:
Alexander .at Meigs
Belpre at Federal·Hocking
Wellston at Miller
VInton f',ounty · at Nelsonville·
rork . •.
.Trimble- open
8a&amp;lll'llay'• came:
Melp at TrJmble (m.a keup)

Former Miami Unlveralty
eager Tl'lmlll HaywoOd sank a
game-htgh ~ polnta to lead. the,
· Unlve~alty of Chat INIOn to an
87-71 victory over M~t" Col· ·
lege Silturday nflht In the Cham:
pionsltlp gal!lf' of the Marietta
-shrine . Holiday $aaketball
Tournament.
, ,
· In the game, Marietta sophomore guard Jeff Caldwell (SoUth·
ern '88) ScOred 15 polntl. Jnc)ud•
lng three three-poiDtera. He
grabbed sb: reboundl, had one
steal, "locked a allot &amp;lid shared
the leild In usilll wttll felloW
sophomore Mike Rodtcb wltll
five. Bodlch led the Ploneen'
offenllf with 16 points.
Also scoriJig for the Ploneen
wao IOpllomol'l! auardlforwart
Kel~ Burnette (Nprlh Gal'la
'88), wllo had 111x polnta, four
rebolmds &amp;lid ·four aplats.
....~__!!~* .... -

Now Going o·n!

-POil'l'MIISTER: Send addr... cb•lll
lo The Dally Sentinel, Ul Court St..
Pom«ay. Oblo 457e9. '

J

TEAM

..

Jan·uary Savings

Oak Hill .... :..... ;3 2 237
Han han Trace ..3 2 : 223
Symmes Valley 2 3 . 212
SOuthwestern .... 2 4 240
Eastern ...... .... :1 3 149
Kyger Creek ..... O 6 156
TOTALS .- .. .... .. ~1 21 1'1'83 1783

(All Games)

potential presidents amo111 all
these
and I'd
them to
. have agroups,
re@l crack
at like
the job:

The drama(lc chan1es that are 'toward putting out countzy's eat com pam lea employ ljbout besld!!fl those ~i!d by the Soviet
now sweeping Eastern Europe
flacal house In order.
' '
200,000 Ohloam. As a result, ·· Union, aDd we mu•t remala
have made It obvious that tile
Thts ·In turn w.ould permit a
191Cale cuts In the defense prepared to respond to 'Intern&amp;·
Warsaw Bloc no 1onaer po1e1 the
reductkla In IJIIm"est rates and l!Udaet would aerlously harm our tiona! crlsea ' u they occur.
mllltary threat that lt. once did.
eiiCOW'IIIe Investment In such
stat.'l economy, at'leut ID the Unquestionably, deten..e spend·
Because of thts, ~ people In
thinp u ne.r plutt llld eq1llp- Hllrt·term.
·
lniC!IR be cut, butltlllouldnotbe
WuhiJI~ton are now. talking
melit and nfW lloualq starts. It · tl'ul'lhefmoill, an overly ·ambl· cut In a way that could 1111dercut •
1
anxiouslY about makU!i major would also help to reduce our ' 111111' -ult on Pentagon spend· our ablllty to retpond to any
cutaln the def~ bud1et. In a
International trade· deficit : iDir cOuld have aerloua conse- major threat
may face IJI the
preemptry qtOVe, Secretary of Therefore, In lhil.rwpect tbere Is quncellonur Jlatlolial security coming yeara.
.,
Defense RJ'chard Cheney has little doubt that the anllciP!Ited
at~lhls ilr!le. Wblle- It II true that
~. Collfl'fll muatteep IJI .
sutlftted · tbat the Pe.ntacon peace dlvldelttd wolillf ' prorilote
thethreatoUbe)VanawBioclW mind that a "~ dividend"
could unilaterally cut as rnuch as
hlllte!' economic arowth and been .COIUilderably dlmlnllhed iloa not rrtve It carte blanche to .
. $180 ll!lllon from Ita budcet .o ver more'Jobl over the Ioiii' IInn. " and • Jbat Mr. . Gorbicllt.v hu · spend tbe~e ~. dollar savlnp on
tbe next five yeara. ~er ,It Is ' . On lite other han4, a-.ble sublfallttallt alterld the' Soviet other federal ·fii'Oil'amt.
fartoQearlytotelllfllleao-c~led ~ense cuta would ~o ha'!l! UDioa'ur~JWatveiDtenaatiM&amp;l
/oll'eady tn&amp;IIY ta •aaltiqtoll
"!le8ce dividend" that Ia u- adVwH 411crt·l'llllf.IIODCUII¥l COD- ~. the .,.,illlllty remaiDa are proljoitq'tul!dlq anriOCiJ)
peeled to be raallzecl from tile
uq-c4e for t1ae iDilllltrlll tllat th old IUIJ'd In Ute SGvtlt proarama an.r ftiiUidlal exiatreol'llertlll (/f d'efftle expend~- wi!Jell ate depeaden~ on defeue UIIIOrl will. t1an1 on Prelldent IDr Pfllll'&amp;ml wttll t1IIM dollan.
·· turet will he u , promlatq u
coiltracta for ataree port1oa of ~-try~w.a1blm. However, IUCh I dlVI!'I'Iioa of
IDOl! llope.
their IM111 I 11. Def- f1P1114111 .U tllat allolllil ...pp u · ud tb1t fulldl .before tile flderal b1lllpt
. On !be ODe ~d. a atplfJcaat reductloa would llave a pertlcu· Jlovllt Ulllill retiii'DI to ita old 11 ...l..ced, would Ia my Juda· ·
~ton ID tile defeaw lludpt larly Hm'• qnpect 1111 U.. waya. ••W.•~ cuttlq OUF mat be lrres}IGUible~ lutelld,
could have lllllltllltial eeaNI'IIc atatea wlltch 'have a larae 1111 • &amp;uw6i..., -o~ .-. . the peiCe dl~ IINit lint ...
Muftta..Gtvn tilt fact Qlat tile aumller of defuae rata~ ta1a1J ,.... te • a mlltake ta viewed u 1 - . . ot rediJc:lllr
. federal aoverllllllllt' eoatll11111 to . llldultrlll.
.rttr 1 at. •
our lllbltaatlal fecleral liiJ4pt
tacur anaual budpt defletta of
Ul!fiDrttlllateiy, . Dllf of tlaole 'I I'IOVII',,Mtllei'eceateveniiiJI deftclt. In .oort. tile .....~
all011t ll50 btllloa, a fllellllUoa, •ta• II Oblo, Our 1tate rulciiJI
P&amp;MIIIa, tl.adclr. the Phlltp. dividend" allould be Invested ID
feductlon In defelue apen4fn• tile top lO,ID ~of coatracta
pines, aaci .Ciilu dernollltrate, the future of the ecoJIOln)l, aot
dttrlbuted liver the next ave · rac41ved from 1111 Dllpartmeat of
tile · United Stataa lace~ other. blown on a one-time aboppln&amp;
years would 10 a lonr wiy 1Defenie, andourdefeuellepead- · .PGMtial nn-e.~ In the. world
·~-'
!

'~
' (Rellel'\'ell)
TEAM
' WI: ppo r
Southern.. .:........ o 212
North Gall!Jl ... .. 5 1 351

rec~"tly.

Meigs jumped out to a 13-l leao
533 at the end of the llrst quarter and ·
344 coasted to the victory. · Kel.ly
596 · Smith led the Marauders with 18
712. points, Jennifer Taylor chipped
lh with 9, Shannon NewS()me had
7, Deanna Haggy 6, Kim Ewing,
PA Marsha King and Chrissy
239 Weaver each had 2 and Kim
245 Hanning 1.
450
Meigs held leads of 24-7 at the
275 hall and 44-14 heading into the
441 final quarter e nr·oute to the
344 victory . Christy Bar lett led Bel·
382 pre with 12 points .
447
The Marauder reserve team
2813 under Coach .K im Adkins macie II
a clean s~p. fo~ · lhe,, ~yenlng
with a 27-9 vlctOf)'. Verna CompPA · $ton led tb.~ way with 10, Four
136 .. girls from Relpre had 2 points
261
each.
~:~
Meigs will travel to Alexander .
to play the Lady Spartans this
227 , Thursday evening.
297
177
289
The Daily Sentinel

.TVC standings

~~~~~;-

members
of minorities
Jobs
and.
elective
offlcel for towhich
they ate quaiUled. I'd like to
.
think aofemale leader will arise
who will have tbe ~rede"t,lala,
smarts and experience for- the
presidency.
.
. But what I want Is .a president
who
h will do the best job - black,
wJ. lte, woman, man, Metbocltst,
ew • orDemocrat,
Republican,
wl!b
without some
sort ·of ·
PhYsical disability. I want a
decade where condltlom create

---:""'"_c_ong
""-:-.
·
::.~-li.z-rence_
·
_.M_il...........
l£r
1

'.

PA
655
585
509
400

Coach Roge;· Fosters Lady'
Marauders bounced back · from
their-·only loss :&gt;f the season to ·
VInton County to defeat ·the
Belpre Lady Eagles 55-24.

)

NYI........ I.LtiMI!I•I

81 . ....... t7. v......... ..
.... ,........ Cellep . . . . ....
1JJ U•Mtod Pm~• ~wr .. .._.

01:..., .•• '71, ~-

.................
. . . . .=i··rr""·· .,

N.tTION.U.IIOC&amp;ft" l.&amp;A.GUE

• ._.._. • .,

Oak' Hill ,....... ...... 1 ·7 497
Kyger Creek . ... :... l 8 496

..

,.m.

· OtberareceiVIII YM: .-ti'la' "·
Fr,ea... Stale, Olllo .state,
SJracuoe, Texu -'AM, WNt'

'

PF
672
640
537
171
.620
:n!

(SVAC l&amp;met&lt;)
W L PF'
Southern .......... .'4 0 317
Eastern .... ........4 0 · 291
Norih Gallla .. ...5 2 507
· Hannan Trace ..3 2 319
SOuthweste~n .. : .2 4
429
Symmes Valley 2 3 308
Oak Hill ....... .. ..1 4 ;130
Kyger Creek . .. :.0 6 321
, l'O'J'ALS ..... .. .. 21 21 28Z3

At NCO. OrlnM. I ,. ••

VICI'"

L
3
3.
4
3
4
3

TEAM

..... -lXIII\'

.•

a 7 v.~ee•rrt.

cuss
they
bell~ the ·.
comingwhat
decade
. wlll
hold for
' WOmen; and what they hope Will
h
appen ""
In the area of women's
1

I All camea)

NI'C~I­

.

M·e·n .n--.1· .tri·p
'Belpre five,' 55~24

SVAC .standings

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

..._ C.llttfo a.lllth ..ISc.~n

Sarah Overstreet :,

E
·
INSURAN

I

•••

Ca@e srores · '

- ~:

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER ·

.

Vh'rlnla.

',

Gripe,s and hopeS fo.- the
.
thoughts

'

·ed ·UPJ
. · ' · · t•
h
·
•
•
.
Miami narn .
. 8 na IODa1"c amp

11. PKtobjlllh &lt;»It .......u •
28. Wuhl1111&lt;&gt;n (11"11 ......... 8 z

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

..

-

_. --Mo-"'
·-·
_..;,.,
............. .
.._ ...........
. - . ..............
............
·- .

r....

we

•••

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

liMI replar·oe- ruldac.
Potato
I. Miami C:ll) (11-1) ...... , , i
l Florida St. C7)( 11-Z). • 181 5 ·
-3. Notre Dame Cll CIJ.l)ltl f
t. COlOrado Cll·l) ............ I
5. T...,_oee CIJ.J) ......... 8
6. Aabum Cit-!) ............ fU 10

I

....

_,.._II..._..,_,,01'
..,_,
......
,. ..

...,. ... lllld ftnl-plaeo \'GUs In
pareallleaea, total ,.tala
cliMed 011 15 pola&amp;a .... 111'111
place, IHor IIOC»lld, etc.), and ·

,_

.... The . ~ce

Berry
s· Wo:rld
..

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

_ Final Fo;lblll Rallnp ·
NEW YORK CVPI)- Tlte
V.lted .._. lalenatlonal .
lloud of Coaelleo Top to
eoollep football rat!..., wtt•

A lew
for the
year:
- God .. bless 'the maaazlne
Publishing Industry. Representa·
tlves are promising to re..
examine.
the practice .or lettlnc
'
.
.
'(
perfumers stick thetr scents .up
the snouts of those Innocents
-•
among us who just want to read a
·'
lood magazine.
.
or course, this·re-examination
comeslnthewakeofablliiJINew
. By Uatted
laternatlonal
York state which would require
, Today Is Wednesday, ;Jan. 3, the third day of 1990, with 362 to follow .
smell-proof
sealants on all per·The moon Is wu:lng.~movlng' toward Its first quarter. . ·
fume ·ads that appear In maaa·
:The morning stal' Is Mars.
·
_
zlnes mailed to New York res!·
;The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter l(lld Saturn.
dents. St~P,te Sen. MartiJI Connor
;Those born on th!s date are under the sign of 'Capricorn. They
Introduced the bill earlier tbts
Include feminist and abolitionist Lucretia Mott In 17~3; British Pri!Jle
month. One ofhts. aides, Amy
Minister Clement Atliee In 1~; JRR Tolkeln, au)llor of the fantasy · . Solomon, says her_ gripe aoes
novel "Lord of the ' Rings,' \.1n' 1892; actor Ray Mllland, In 19ai;
further than mine- which 1s just
entertainer V.lctor Borge, In 1909 (age81); and Maxine Andrews of the
the wish to be able to run IJI .t he
A:Jldrews Sisters trio In 1!!18 (age 72) .
-mailbox,
•
. rip open ·my newest
Esquire or vanlty •Falr and' nilt
:on this date In history:
have my nose puff up like a
:In 1m, the 'c ontinental · Army commanded by Gen. George
poiSoned
pup and cut off the
Wjlshlngton defeated the Brlllsh at Princeton, N.J.
oxygen to my brain. Solomon
' In 1938, the first March of Dimes campaign to fight polio was · says she Is bypenensltlve to
o~ganlzed .
perfumeandgetarnt-aiJiehead·
.
•
aches froni the scent••strips.
...
.
•

.

nflhts, hitting 17 of ~ from the . 11 each for the winners as five and.Bobo 6.
floor overall and 2 of 7 from
men hli double figures. .
_ F H had 21 fouls:
.
Turntna up tbe afterburners . three-point range. EHS hlll3 ~f
Eastern was led by the fine . F ederal a lso won the r.e serve :
W 1 •••
Mlad9 •••
.shooting of Kenny Caldwell, who ~me 58-25 led by MICkey Cozart ·· ·
early ln the aame, the FeCieral · 23 at the line.
Hocking Lanc~s of the Trl·
In an effort to narrow the · netted 15 fo r the night. Caldweil ~lth 18, whll~ Jason Hager had 6 :
............
'r1h~n
.
Y_O ..,Y_ _
_
margin Eutern played closes Ito hit 3 field goals and 2 three lor EHS.
·
·
Valley ConferenCe defeated
nearby Eastern or Melp 91·53 FH In the third frame, ·but still polnter s'l!nroute to s par king the · E a ster n dropped to 6-3 on the
.
yeaf: and Is -undefeated ·along
here Tuesday ,evenlna In boys _ · feU fur ther behind, being ou t· . E HS Q!le~s lve drive.
· CoUep Hllll ea
high school basketball action.
scored 13-16 while faltering to a · Mlke'Frost and TimBissellh;ld , '\\lth Southern in SVAC play at ·
· . Federal Of Coacit Tim Simpson · ~33 deficit .
9 points each, a nd Sco tt Fllch B.nd 4.-0. Federal Js·H n t he year . .·
, . . I td.
,
~
Federal bad Its best quarter lit S~un Savoy 6 each. .
.
. . · Score by qliarteu:
· jumped to an early 1~ad.m then
waveredlortheonlytlmelnthe
the
tlnill
gt&gt;-round
\Yhen
·they
·
·
Federal
hit
33
ot
66
lor
50
· Eas tern ........ J O 10 13 .20....53
,.
tNCJ-.&amp;Moi'ntJN.I•
same before1 hOlding a slight 5co·r ed 32 pQtnts 1\l win 91-53.
. percent, hit 5.of 8 three pointers, - Fe dera l.. ....... 15 23 16 32-91
an....... o........, .........
15-10 edge at the end of the first
· The . Fl!'deral Hocking win and 10 of 14 from the line. .
Box score:
"
• .............. c.......... u •. . ,
period. ·
. avenged an earlier lou to East· · Eastern had 27 rebounds , led
EASTERN (53) Caldwell 3-2-3The second period was expJo. ern In the second week of the by Fros t with 7, Fitch 6, and 15, Fitch 2·2·6; ShaunSavoy 2-2-6,
slve
for the Lancers as they
season.
Savoy's 5. Eastern had 14 turnov, Mike F r os t 4-1·9,Tim Bissell
•••• 4 . . . . . . ., .
aalloJ!ed
undaunted
to
a
28
point
.
Naf
Watson
led
the
winners
eu,
6 steals, 3. ai§lsts, a nd 15 4-1-9, Jeff Durst 1-0-2, Mark
Q ...... fiC)tl.lr... l l
CoiL U
frame that widened flfe lr lead to with 17 points, Bryan McPherson team fouls.
Murphy 1- l - 3,J as on Hager .
.
42·20 at the half.
had 15, Randy Sheppard 12, arid
FH had 35 rebounds led by 0--2-2 , Matt Flnlaw 0:1·1. TO·
Meanwhile, Eastern was hav- JEff McKibble and Tracy Bobo Watson with 10, Sheppard with 6 TALS lH-13-53.
. . ..... (NY) 11Linelb•Cell. •
lng
one of Its worst offensive
Federal Hocking (91) Bobo
a . "'-''ifPa.tlt,Yt ........ u
1,
4·1·11, Cot art0-1-1-4, Jarvis 2'1·7.
.u..,... " 11. W.Va. • • _.. -·
Lewis 3-0-6. McKibben 3-1·2·11;
o.........
McPherson 5-1-2-15, Sheppard
1
•
.
,
·
.
·
,
5-0-2-12, Ned Slmspson 3-0·6,
0..11!~-··-,
_ .....
111.
NEW Y-Q}tK (UPI) ..:. The finished 12·1, the best record In State coach Dennis Erickson the ·watson 8-1-17 , Deaver 0-2-2.
"""' lltoloo .., - . . . .
University of Mlam.l, parlaying a . tht .c•&gt;uptry , and bea;e tormer title' In his first season with th.e · TOTA-LS 33-4·10·91.
.
Sugar Bowl victory with colora·
No. 1 BUffaloes 21-6 the Orange · Hurricanes. Miami entered tlie
. -·Lorol•t•••
Drlile1t. ......... Vlw11
do's
loss
to
defending
'champion
Bowl.
B.ut No he
e's only · postseason ranked second.
~
,
Notre
Dame,
Tli~day
won
Its
losB
,
27-10
to
Miami
Jn the
"Notre Dame In the Orange
OMta..I*•'M,LUt.Jrr.... .
a ....... n , ar11._ ..,...,..
th!t'lll United Press International
regular-seru&lt;on . finale Nov. 25, . Bowl Nov. 25 was the beginning ·
XMIIr 111. ...,._• .,,...... 'u
Board of Coaches college footb(lll · undoubtedly wei~~ heavily_ and the Sugar Bowl was the end ,"
champlonshtp·tn seven years.
with. the 49 coach~ who J)llrtlcl· Erickson said. "This champion·
(
lA••1a.
••
Tea.
tu
New Orluat .... _ ......
Miami, 11-1, beat Ala banta
pi\te(llln the final b~l!otlng. N&lt;;~tte ship was won by two groups : first
33-25 In the Sugar Bowl In the Dame entered the bowl ranked t he as~!!:Ui!!• c~a-::l!es and se·•
sw a....... •tt. Te~a.a.111. . At
flnal ·game of the 1989 season and
No.4-:.
condly and most Impor tantly
111 Second St., ~omeroy
. . Tnu ... ' '· ....... _ . 11,
OT
was lh~: onl)l team In the nation ~o
Miami captured ~ lirst-plaL-e the r~tball player s, es pecially
YOUR INDEPENDENT
defeat
Notre
Dame.
Miami
s
votes·
and
707
·of
,35
possible
the
senior
s.
This
football
team
At-'~ Caltlonola ~. OT
Le.. Bt~tlllfM. II, Padtk ,n
points, 46 more than Florida deserve 5 1 h e n a 110 n a l
AGENTS SEIVING
only loss came to No. 2 Florida
, . State,
. . ..........~c._.... ,.
which won 10 straight
Stat~, to give formEr Washilogton championship."
·
MEIGS COUNTY
•~ • .., .. (Call.) 11, P••••
games
ilft~r
·toslng
Its
first
two
··
. SINCE ,1868
~,. .
vc • ..,.. n. Dtmtr.• •
y U!I ..... r~tDMIII,! C.tlle'llll
games of the ~e~son.
:·
1,
1e~ e-• · 8
The No. 3 Fighting Irish

•i ICO'Ii WOLFE-

!ll!allll~ CoiTftpoadeat

: ····-·
·--·-·
.
•
...
_
.....____
..,.... ........... ......
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
=·.......................

c:.-..........1
~ Yaa (liPI) - Tile
· V.... J'lo~~~&amp; &gt;'raa&amp;llul

llil)leclltd
'Jbealle,edatataalliltaoftlletwo
She was 27 different EJ!IIIIIl· radio anaowieer. slle' never•aot
menarealmostlcllmtteal. Yet tile ' .
speakln( Alia I) women, 111011 of tile money and ·the stories were
FJU ·put. lhem..torward as tile
· them Americans, wllo wllliJICIY IVI'f(ten to make her took like the
i~nt,bearllid ta'tlmony of two
or . Uhwllll~Jy br()jldcaoted to !i(!toriQus Tokyo Role. u.s. a.~~; .dttrti-ent men: ;•
,
..
U.S. troops over J~panese radio · iborltles arreste~ -·~er J9,1 V • Rowe trackecl down tbol'e 'two :
during the 1"-'ar. ·
.
treason.
.
'.
·:" en, and they confirmed that
Iva Togurt was trapped by the
Altliough American . authOr!·
FBI agepts and other U.S.
war In J!lpan. •S he went there ttei at first clearcicl, Toiart or all ·offlclills had pressUred them;&amp;~~ to
from her native California In J941 charJes the sensatiiiJiallst ,e: "-uying exactly what tile proaecuto care for,a dyiJig aunt and was
porter Waiter Wlncllell, aided
tonr wanted them to say. Tbey
not allowed to return to the ·
to
·UnltedStatesaftertbewarbr 0'"ft and abetted ):IY F,BI Director J . claimed they were drWed r a
.""'
ou
Edgai'Hoover, reopenedtl)ecase month on what to ·say. The two
1anll ToJ111r1 was convicted pf men leatlfled about a CI')ICial
Togurl was fiercely Patriotic to
treason She spent el8"t years In
broadcast used to conviCt Togurl
the American side. She found a
·
...,
,
. .
.
job 1n the "'P'ftw pool 0 , · the
prison and t)le, later W!IS par· . - a broadcast . !bat w~s never
'J ,.,.
'
· doned by Prelildent Gerald Ford
. made or even wrllten. . · ·
.::.:~~~ stale radio network. In 1977; , r • . • · , \ , , • Mltsushlo· now 'says, ·,.1 wish I .
r
panese captured an Aus· . · Ford's pudon could not rrtve could just have five minutes to :
t allan broadcaster, Maj. Cha·
back'the loot yearl'ln Jan, nor.did explain to Iva why I qld It .. . We -'
· rles Hughes Cousens, and forced · It reveal the shallbY 'ievldeilce . were told ·that If we did not
him to produce a Proeram . that was uselt.tn e&lt;\nvtct Toprl: cooperate, the U.S. · might ardlreclejlatAustraltan andAmer· · FBI files contain the depool·
range trials for·us too ... Ill~. " ·
lean soldiers. Cousens talked
.
..
•
.
Tlll\ll'llntohelpiJighlm,shesays
lions ~ven by the two star
Oklsald, TheU.S. occupatton ·
on the promise that they would
witnesses for tbe prllfleCUtlon, _pollee told me tha! ,I, m~st testify :
SPOOl the Japanese.
George Mltsushl!' ~d ~nklchl agalnstlvaorelse. Once he was .
After Japan was defeated, two
Okl. They w~ Togurl s super- .
San Francisco for the trial,
American journalists offered Totors at the radio network.
we were told what to say and
Our a,plate Les .Whitten has what not to say" by U.S. ;
authorities.
.

ter 48 years, the Japanne·
American - "nllel" - have
been granted rest. ltutlon from the
U.S. 10vernment which th~
them lnJo concentration camps,
,during World W:!ir I~:
.·
The most (~mous nisei of an,
tbe !"lllllan called !Tokyo Rose,
dldn t 10 to one_o f tl\e camps. But
she can never be compensated
for what her country did to her.
She wlll get her day In the court or
bit
lnl bee
f t
P11 cop on _ auseo ve eran
Journalist .ltussell Warren Howe.
Howe hu traced the legend of
Tokyo Rose ~ . the Japaneoe
'"'
dl DJ h. ~:......'ed A
ra o
w o "~
mer,..an
Gls. Behind the legend be found
the true story of an American
woman, now ,72 years old, who
· tQPk the . blame for what was
more. legend than trutll. Howe·
wlll p1Jbllsh tl!e results of ,his
lnvestigatlo)l next month In a
·book, "The Hunt (or Tokyo
• Rose." In It he charles that the
Imprisonment of Iva Togu~l as..
tbe treasonous Tokyo Rose was a
f d rau ·

By LEE LEONARD
· \
UPI Stalehouse Reporter
•
COLUMBUS CUP!) - Ohio Democrats are waiting or .t he other
shoe to drop, telling them whether or not th~y'U have a contested
primary for governor In 1990.
.
It won' t take !O!Ig for them to find out; · veteran siate Auditor .
Thomas Ferguson ·is scheduled to announce · his political plans
Wednesday., He rna)I ruri for governor,
re-election or for noU.Ing.
So far, everything has gone smoothly. . for Democratic State
Chairman James Ruvolo, who hope&amp; that most of the Democratic .
state officeholders will stay where they are for a stro111 ticket.
While publicly remaining neutral, Ruvolo Is pleased that Attorney .
General Anthony Celebrezze, potentially the Democrats' strongest
candidate. has declared himself a candidate fdr governor to succeed
(,iov. Richard Celeste, who must bow out after eight years In office.
Treasurer ,Mary Ellen Withrow and Secr11tary of State Sherrod
Brown have announced thel_r lntentlo.ns to seek re-election, posing a
problem for Republicans who must run against the Democratic
Incumbents.
. Lt. Gov. Paul . Leonard Is retiring from politics, but the
~berl)Btoria'l ca_ndld!ites will ChO!JS!! their own .running mates
any.way. ·
·· ~
.
· . FerJIIISOp, who bas been auditor sln~f 1974, o;ould hold the key to the
1990s fot the Democrats.
.
:- He Is 61 years old and looking at probably his last chance to run for
lOVer nor. If he decides to challenge Celebrez:re, the result could be a
nasty lntraparty brawl that softens up the winner, and possibly other
Democrats, for the Republicans In the fall.
· In addition, a Ferguson candidacy could Invite Cleveland attorney ·
Joel Hyatt, the son-In-law of Sen. Howard Met2enbaum, D-Ohlo, to
enter the gubernatorial fray. Hyatt would ltave a much-better chance
ill a three-w~y race.
.
·
•'If Ferguson .runs lor gqvernor, It will leave the auditor's office
vulnerableloa·Republlcan attack. Ferguson has hadsi&gt;meclo.secalls
111 auditor races, biiJ he has not been beaten . .
· Republicans will be cqncentratlng on the statewide offices th~!
Involve the state ApportldDII\ent Board - the group that will redraw
state legislative boundaries after the 1990 censu5. Those offices are
governor, auditor and seeretary of state.
· The Oil to Republican Party already bas set a51de $2 mllllon to ·go
a,fter the secretary of state's and auditor's offices, and If Ferguson ,
-decides to vacate the auditor's office, theGOPwlll.target It that much
· mote. . ·
.
• Pressure may develop to Induce HamUton County Commluloner
Robert Taft n; currently a -candidate lor the Republican nomination
fpr governor, to run for auditor Instead.
· Control of the Apportionment Board Is Important for both political
P&amp;rlles. If RepubliCans win ll, they could contelvably reallp the
IKJslative districts to enable the GOP lo capture the House for the ,
lltst time In 20 years.
·
.,
: On the other hand, If Ferguson seeks re-election, chances are ,that
Qhlo DemciCrats will be able to retain much of t~e power in the 1990s
that they have held durllfg the decade now ending.
·

Rose·was innocen~Attal:·

.......
g.,
....
.... ..
=·:r..

drops· 91-53·contest . to ·Lancers

, ...... llllllldL

MOIIIS I I . . . , IIVIQS YOU TO
co• VISit ~~ BW SHOP .Ar Ill ··.
JA.AIY 15, 1990

··-- ...

~ -----~-.........:..

.SMI11·111UON IIOTOIS, INC.
992·2174
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Pllue-4-The Daily Sentinel

I

closer ~to lead,ers

_North Gallia beatS Oak Hill '84-66;
lly G . SPENCER OSBORN!!:

.

ov.p stall Writer

North GaiDa took advantage of
an offensive cold, spell by Oak
Hill In the first quarter of
Tuesday night's game and sailed
. away with an 84·66 victory,·
The triumph, the Pirates' lltth .
straight, puts them at6·3 overall,
and with SVAC co-leaders South~rn and Eastern (both 4·0 in the '·
league) not returning to league
play until FrJday night, moves
the second-place Bucs a few
· percentage points closer to the, ·
conference leaders With a 5·2
mark, Oak Htll fell to 1·7 overall
and 1·4 in the league.
"We were super cold,'' said
Oak Hill boss Doug Hale of hts
troops, who were hl!ndcuffed
offensively until junior forWard
. Shane Maynard, who IE!d all ·
scorers with 28 points, sank the
second of two free throws after
missing the first at the 4:33 mark
of the first quarter. As a result of
numerous turnovers, the Hill
didn't change the numbers on Its

side of the scoreboard until the
6-1 Maynard slipped Inside (yes,
he ' can do more than shoot
three-pointers, live of which
came off his hand In~ this one) for
a layup with 3:04left to c.u t the
Pirates'lead to 10·3, That was the
extentoftlfeOaks' scortngtnthe
opening round,
·
But the Oaks wouldn't remain
In the dark forever', as 6-4 sen tor
pivot Chad Smith, held scoreless
In act one, sank the first of two
tree throws 13 seconds Into the
second . frame. He mtssed the
second shot, but WO\jld make up
Jor It by . breaking free from
Hammel for a layup 58 seconds
later. Those would be the only
points Chad Smith would score In
the first half.
Partially . orr the strength · of
etght first-quarter points from
junior guard/ forward . Brian
Stout, who led .the Galllims with
26 pofl\ts, the Pirates caught that
strong tall wind and cruised to a
30-Slead, which came on a layup
by 6·5 postman D,J, Hammel (18
points, 13 rebo unds)with 5: 01Ieft

· hwestern
S. out
· pounds

·' ~, -Wellston frosh top Meigs yearlings
Bobby ,lohnson scored 22 way. Mike Welch . and John
poil.Jts i'nd pulled down 10 re· , Bentley scored 7 each for Meigs,
bounds as the Meigs Marauder Shawn Hamon 4 and John Crefreshman team downed the Well· means 1. Hamon also added 6
ston Golden Rocket Freshman rebounds for Meigs.
41-35 recently , The wtn warnte
Ratcliff led Wellston wtth 14
six th In as many tries for C,o ach points, · Meigs will ho~t Alex·
Gene Wise's L'Ittle M ~ra uders.
ander this Thursday evening at
Johnson had an 01,1tstanding' Meigs High School with action to
game fo r Meigs as he htt 11 out of get under way at 5: 55.
14 shots from thefloor !plead lhf?
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!n ,theftrsthalLJtiniorguard / for· cheers , when Chad Sm!th re- , . Smith S-0-0.10; Tackett 4·0.1·9;
'
AM!Itll
-18
ward Brandon Twyman supplied bounded his Initial miss and ' D. Smtih 2.().3-7; Ratltff 0-1·3·6;
steal•7
the assist on that score,
• ' scored on a Iay 11 p to produce that Farley 2·0-0-4; Twyman } ·0-2-4,
Tumovers
- 13
"We worked to es~&amp;lil!sh the .score, But the Pirates put the TOTALS -11-J.IJ.M ,
,
"OAK BW. (141) - Maynard
. Inside game early, " said North affair back to thel,r' ,favorite
~ tile field _ 34-87 (39.1%) . 6-5-1-28; Smith 7.0·2·16; Davis
Gallla skipper Tom 1 Riccardi, course when junior forward
'fttree-polld 1a1111 ,....3.9 (33.3%) 0-2·2-8; Potter 1·0·4-6; Haines
'who celebtated hts 38th"birthday , Shane Smith, who finished with
From tile JIDe _ 13-24 (54.2%)
0-0-4-4; Simpson 2·0·0;4. TOTALS
The Oaks came back by 10 ~tnts, followed a Hammel :.. Offtliellua -'46(Hammel13)
-1a.·H we
scoring the next 'seven points. jumper with a layup to gtve the ·
Blockeilihojll -7 (Hammei3)
From tile line - 13·22 (59.1% I
, which car'ne on tour one-and-orie Vinton flY!! a 49-36 lead and keep
buckets In an' 18~second span , them out of single-digit jeo~rdy
from guards Allen ·Potter and for good.
.
Brad Davis, followed by ,May"Theyk!lledusontheboards,"
nard's first bonus basket from Hal~ said. "They shot well ti'om
the left basel tile with 4:14 left the· perimeter, and·;Hamrriel and
. However, two more lrlfectas-·1!:. Shane Smith shot weUinsld~, .• .,·'
one by Maynard and one by
"Wewenttom~jn defP.nseinthe
Davis - tnthelast2:30stlllfalled third quarter," 'R iccardi said,
'to pull the Oaks wtthtn shquting · "We had to ..pressure on their
distance at the Pirates.
·
three-point shooters,;· .he added,
In the third frame Riccardi'S and It worked, as Mllyna~d only
sailors saw their lead founder· sank one such bomb In th a_t span.
·f
'
tng, as the south Jackson five In the game's last three minutes,
MEIG'$, SOUTH£RN, EASTERN, WAHAMA
outscored them 7·2 In the quar~ '· Maynard sank two and Davis hit
ter's first 2: 29 to shrink the Bucs' one to help trim some of the Bucs'
' lead to 41·34, Its thinnest margin '22-polnt lead they had just prior
since the first .llalf o! the first · to Maynard's fou~th mlssUe. But
·quarter. The somewhat sparse . 11 was North &lt;:iall!a , second·
&lt; ' ,,
crowd, two-thirds of whjch sup· stringer Jeff Ratliff, . not' May' '.
ported . the Oaks , erupted . in nard, who would have the last'
,
,
word from three-point land. ~e
one 'from the r ight comer
•
~ . sank
wllhslxsecondsleftandfollowed
1 GROUP
·
., ,. ~
'
It with a polnt-arter foul shot to ·
,
,
, produce the final' score, ,
In the preceding re~erve game,
1-13, Potter 5·0·0·10, Sites 3-0~2-8,
2-·
.Nortll s lipped away with ,00·44
Mershon 1·().0-2. TOJ'ALS 44·2·8·102
vict'ory, Charles Peck paced the
Midshipmen with 21 paints, while
. Field goals - 46-98 (46,9%)
Free throws - 8·14, (57.1%) ·
the Oaks' 'Lewis led 1111 scorers
Rebounds-44 (John Ehm an&amp; with 23,
Metzger, 6 each)
On Frjday' s scarf;'card, the
Assists- 13
Pirates will travel down the
(EXCLUDING, SP,RING I
Steals - 11
,
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p. k .
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f
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, 0810 VALI,EV (t9)
HJU ron on . ar way, o ace
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-R
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.,v
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Symmes
Valley,
-wh1ll?
the
Oaks
5 1 2 15·• aw 11ngs 3 0. 4 10 ., an
host Southern,
Matre 4-0-2-10; Hall 2-1·0-7; Score by quarters'
~~'1~ 2~0i~tu~~ack , 0·0·2-2- North Ga1Ita " ' "" 21 18 17 28-84
Fl ld al
( %)
Oak HUI '""""'"" ' 3 22 19 22-66
• NORTH GALLIA (84) - Stout
e go s- 18 ·75 24
Free throws - 11-16 (68,8%)
9-2·2·26· Hammel 8-0·2·18'
Rebounds - 29
• ,
•
Assists -17
,..
Steals- 4
SPAIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
Tumovers - 18
446 45Z4

•

, nve were

on cha!tb of

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•

of holldiY lnclcleata wlaen they
appeued_la tbe court of Mayor
- Fred Boff111aa Tuelday night.
nae~~ 01 and coati eacb on the
cwll!, were Doanle Stone, Mid·
· dleport; Richard Warnecke,
Ml""lepbrt; Jerry ,Armstrong,
Middleport; VIncent Stone,
Lanpvlile; Dwayne Priddy, Ru·
tlalld; Carleton Smallwood, AI·
biDY; and Michael D. H!Ddy, .

•

L. Neal, t.et.rt, W. VIL, SUO, on a
DWI e-.e Hll $210, deltruc·
ttoa of P"'Pri t)(; James
COLUMBUS. Ohto !UP[) Witllee, Middleport, l!iO Oil run·
Traces of components found In
nln&amp; e l1op alp; · Charlrs H,
guoline were found In Oh to
Bur:ltiB, Ml4dleport, Ufll, DWI;
Rl~r water at East Uverpool
ud John R. Albrllbt. West one day after as much liS 10,000
Qllunlbua, W. :v._., Ufl)~n DWl
gallons of unleaded galii!Une
and •210, dfivin&amp; under . seeped from a runaway petrO'
sua~~tnl!on,
·
, ·
Ieum ~ge (,ln the Monongahela
Curils F. illtne, RaclM, ,ftl· River.
~ered a plea o1 not gull ty to a:
'ohto Environmental ".Protec,
charp , Gil DWI !• the 11111yor's 'lion Agency officials tested the
court and tile mat ller - • 1rans· water twice Tuesday at East
ferred to Melp Qlunty Co\lrt,
, Liverpool, the uppermost Ohio

murt news

.dllal'dl!rJy man au u tbe result

-· '

Ohio

Traces of gasoline found
in Ohio River at East Liverpool.
.
c.
city on the riVer ,
· be the leading edge q! It:"

Pomeroy, wbo waa alao filll!d $25
and costs on a charge oUallure to
control 'bts vebtcle.
Others lllaed In the court were
Robert P. Hooten, PomerpY, $25
an(! costs Pn expired operator'' '
license and ai10 $25 aDd coati for
lack of financial respoftllbiUty: ·
andJ&lt;enneth R: Wbtte, Pomeroy,
$425" and ,costs and three days in
jail an a charge of OWl:
Forfeiting bonds were 'Michael

'

·'

Trac~ of components found In
gasPHne were found In the
morning sample, said Allan
Frank.\~, a spokesman for the
Ohto EPA , Hesaldhedidn'l know
the results of the afternoon
sample,
"Tr~ces of benzene and to·
luene were foun,ll In the water,
but the levels were not above
drinking standards," Franks
satd Tuesday night . ''This could

He sal.d the Ohio EPA had been
talking to official s in cities that
take drinking water from the
Ohio Rtyer, advisin g them to .
either turn off the va lves or take
other action,
..
.
"We .don' ta ntictpate a ny prob·
Iems," FrankS ~aid ,
It was just two years ago that ,
oil from an Ashland Oil Co, tan.k
leaked Into the Monongahela at
· Pittsburgh
·
·
·

I

•SCHOOl JACKETS
'

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&lt;

2·5°/o OFF
I

•LADIES CHIC &amp; LEVI

I

1/2

BASIC JEANS

s01·
/0. OFF

•LADIES DRESS PANTS
•LADIES DRESS BLOUSES

a

•HANG TEN

.

==-'=~=~-hK-S~~~~~~~o~~

Off

·

thil

of 1

If we do Nn out of an advertilltd ilem, we wiH offer you your choice
~ kern, when avallltM, reflllctlng the ..,.;. uvinpt or a rain ~

.

Your Qollars Go Further
·

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• "IHE KROGER CO, ITEMS I&lt;NO PRICES GOOD
::.~: ~.~: ·.!.'1_~1~~!~.SI&lt;TUROAY , JAN , 6,
IN
·

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ill

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·T·" ow Pr·t·ce· s ·A nd M·o re
·•

·. ~~~.~HT
~=;;H:::loJ:·~u~~n-::~~=~~.!"':c~~::c::"i~:w·
·th- I:J
1,
·
t99(l_
•

NONE SOLO TO

,

I

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BOMBER .JACKETS

MEN'S, LEATHER

GO()D USED
WASHERS, DRYERS;
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

••

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REGULAR OR LITE
U.S, INSPECTED 4·7·LB. AVG.

Kroger
Mayonnaise

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

Frozen Young
Turkey Breast

'.

CASUAL WEAR

30°/o OFF ,

•

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\

BOYS and GIRLS

.

,,

40°/o iOFF

Golden Ripe .
Dole Bananas

Pound

32-oz.

,,

. $J.50

25°/o OFF

.. 4 FOR 11. 00

COUNTY

APPLIANC~Es

•'

627 3td Ave., GaHipolis
PH. 446-1699 '
HOUIS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.

300 S)'iEETS PEA ROLL 1-PLY .
,,

SUPERAMERICA®

&lt;o;.
l

.

00
,,

.•,.

·PEBSI .

~uperAmerica

· Lay's Potato Chips

VIVA .PAPER TOWELS 77 O~O&lt;TC
SINGLE ROL L

·

.

We Reserve The Right ·
Th Limit Quantities

Speeials Good January 1 Through Jaadaey 7

10-10.5-oz.

For

C~dit Ca~s May Be Used
~Exclootng-wnery -

Frozen .
Banquet Dinners

&amp;.4-ilz. Tube or 4.6-oz. Pump

WI ACCI" CRIDIT CAllOS

For All Purchases

!EXCEPT BEEF , FISH OR HAMI

Crest
·'Toothpaste ·

-·

'

4-Roll

I

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Motor Oil

~

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"AS ADVERTISED ON TV" ·

Quart
IOW-30
IOW-40

IN

•

Sealtest Chilled
Orange Juice

•

OELI'PASTRY SHOPPE
DELl FRESH

'

Pepperoni
Pizzas

'

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12-lnch 211-oz.

Gallon

.I

c

w

••

SAVE
'SOc '

I

SAVE 40c

SuperCare Aspirin

SuperCare
tton Swabs

Lock

•

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BUY ONE
GET ONE

De~Icer

•

FREE!

Fix-A-Flat

••

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-~

12 Oz.

I

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•

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,, Sl.ftiiOioW.

•

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..,...,.

, , . CQ.IIffO

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ASPIRIN
,._

.
300 Ct.

Brown Jersey .
I

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SAVE 60C
Hot Dog ·&amp; i·

!

12 Oz Drink

SAVE 40c SAVE 35¢
I

,...

,. ,#

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•

Experience
SuperAmerica's
Quick, ,1riendly
·Service· '

...,

Pair

oc

·5/8 Oz.

:

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. .497 .Gen. Hartinger Pky. Middleport, OH .
·28tb St..·&amp;Jackson Avti, Point Pleasant, WV
Route 7 &amp; 35;' lauuga, OH ·
1'79 W. Main St., Pomeroy, OH
50tlaekson Pk., GaiUpoUs,. OH
BOllll" AVe., ~GillipoUs, OH
:
.

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l
-

~.

,., WIIUN

•-t"•
t iACoo
1\'I'M•-

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C'ottonelle
.: Bath Tissue·

2 Liter

I

"YO.I LOCAL SOURCE"

I

ovcs I 02' 119

. ·
·
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'Southwestern had six men warnfed yp somewhat In the
score In double figures In Tues- second quarter after a shakyltrst
qay n!ihl 's non-league game quarter, but the Ga lltpol!s squad
against visiting Ohio Valley found themselves down by 23 at
Christian and whitewashed the halftime and ,stllking fast after
that.
Defenders IOH9 .
John Ehman led lhf? Highland·
ers with ·23 potrits and extended
The Highlanders wtll return to
hts consecu live three-point shoot· SVAC play Friday when they
tog streak to eight games. Also host Kyger Creek, while the
scaring in doul!le ligures ' Were Defenders Will return to WVCEA
Brad Brya~nt, Jesse"Ehman, Joe action when they travel to Cross
Hammond, Chris Metzger and Lanes Christian.
Bill Potter.
Score by quarters
~ "We ran the ball well, and the
Ohio Valley ......., 7 16 11 15-49
middle was open a lot" said Southwestern ... ,16 30 23 33-102
Highlander coac h Jim Walker,
SOUTHWESTERN (102) John EhmaR 8·1-4·23; Bryant
·
ed
I
Whose .troops even the r over· 8 O·l· 7. J
8-0-0·16·
Eh ·
all record at 4-4.
- 1 • esse
man
•
The Defenders' offense ..~ Hammond 5·1·0·13; Metzger 6-0·

., 3. 1890

W dnultay• ....._., 3. 1990

Poinaroy-MiddlallQ1. Ohio

I

.Great Oas, Oo9d Goods, ·

~·

U.S. GRADE A

~

..._ ,
{

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U.S: GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
G.RAIN FED IEEF ,

,

Holly Farms ,
Pick pf the c•.· lb .
..

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~Roast.....

I

REGULAR OR DIET WITH
NUTRA SWET

DtK

lb.

~-....~~~

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Every Niaht 'n Day

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IUIIIDIARY 0, AIIIUND OIL, INC.

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P Ill 8-Tfie Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths.-· _..;..;..,_

--Pomeroy

cou~

news--

CLEVELAND (UPi) - L&lt;n- Newark. Ohio, Tuesday c~lmed
buyer for Gallipolis Parts Ware. Six were fined and silj-others violation; SteveR Howard, Harttery officials salq a couple from Saturday's $10 million Super
house and was a member of the forfeited bonds In the court of ford, W. Va., $49, speeding;
Lotto Ja~kpot. ·
·
Former Meigs Countlan, Ada Cheshire Baptist Church where Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesd1JYv Roberta Ba~ker, Ravenswood,
Jerry and JoAnn , Terrill told
Dawson Triplett, 90, of Marton, he served as deacon. He wa&amp; also night.
.
w. Vw .. $51. speedlq; Toll)
lottery' offlcla'- they oDj•-'ed t ... Fined were Darrell G. MlAlbright, West Columbia, W.Va.,
Dally etock prlcea
•
,.
~...':"yt' the""
Ind., died there on Sunday a U.S. Army Veteran and served
of
lt·
.
••
a.-.)
numbers
themselves,.....
ng.t 1
chael. Pomeroy, $63 and costs, failure to appear, driving under
,_
~·
• c
following an extended lllness. ·
during the Yletnam Era.
·
•-e'
d
Vark
sm.llll
ticket
at
Morgan
s
arry-ou
n
1111
1
h
I
nd
th
-3~
.,.
N
k
B6rn Oct. 5, 1899 In Meigs
i\]ong with his parents, he .Is consuming a co o u er e age suspension, S104.
Ill Blunt. Ella A Loewl
· ewar ·
County. she was a daughter of the survived by two sons, Seth and of 21. and $375 and costs, DWl; ·
e8
Am-Electric Power .............32*
Jerry Terrill Is employed at
late Anderson and Jane Dawson. · Sean Ferguson, both of the Richard Poulin, Middleport, $50 .
.
and
costs,
speeding;
Charles
..
.
,
So•lh
~nlral
Ohio·
,
AT&amp;T·:
.......
,
...................
-,
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46~
National
Can Company.in Mount
.She spent her early life in Meigs home; two sisters, Beverly
Snyder,
Jr.,
Racine,
$49
and
..
Becoming
cloudy
:WednesdllY
Ashland
011
........
.....
;
..........
.
39~
vernon.
They will receive the
County and her later YJ!ar~ In Fowler of Fort Smith, Ark., and
Bob Evans. :............... :........ 14
money IIi 20 annual'lnstaltmen!!
Indiana. She was a member of Mrs. Joseph (Brenda) Anderson costs, · speeding; Jenny . Bass, night, with rain develop•n~ after . Ch
1ng Sh Opp!!s
· .............. 10''of $382,500,
after ·mandatory .,.,
$63
and
&lt;:Qsts,
opera
I.
·
midnight
and
a
low
n
ear
45.
The
.
arm
'"
·
Syracuse,
the Methodist Chureh.
of Washington, W.Va.; three
perceni federal and"·3'.5 perr;.ent
. Survlvpng Mrs. Triplet 1 are brothers, Morris. .R, Ferguson of lng •a motor. vehlcfe without a • chance of rain Is 80 per&lt;;!&gt;nt. . City Holding Co ................. ,. 15
val.ld
license;
Scott
Gilkey,
$375
Occasional
.taln
Thursday,
witH
Federal
Mogul.
...................
21~
state
withholding.
. • · &lt;--·
one son, . .James C. Tr(plett,. of · Westchester, Ohio, Ron Fergu- .
ani!
costs,
DWI
and
$63
and
costs'
,
highs'
In
the
mid
50s.
The
chance
·
Goodyear
T&amp;R
........
..
.........
45~
.
.
•~ I .
Marton, Ind.; and two daughters, · son of ' Middleport, and ROd·
open
container
In
a
motor
vehi·
of
rain
Is
90
percent.
·
Heck's
·
.............................
·
:·
.
3'h
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Mrs. Stella L. ·Chevalier, ot Ferguson of Poq~eroy .
Exteaded Forecast
Key C~nturlon ....... :... .: .. : .... 13'h '
'DeWS
\Tuppers Plains, and Mrs. Myrtle
Funeral services will be 11 Cle; and' Kenneth White. Pomeroy,
$313
and
costs,
failure
to
••.
·Friday
tf!rOUJh
Sunday
Lands
End
.........................
20%
·
.
.
·
M rial
•
Hardiftll. of Pinellas Park. Fla.:. a.m. Friday at the WiiUsFuneral
0 Del · .
comply
w!th
.an
order.
from
a
_
A
chan~e
of
.
snow
or
rain
Limited
Inc
........................
36'%
'Vet~•
f!R'
12grandchlldren; 29gteatgrand: Home with Rev. Harold Trace.
·-..
Inc...........
.!.. ..... 96,
.';Tu~dllY admiSstownsV...,.
children and 17 great great . well and Rev. Michael Bearden. poIIceoffl cer.
• r ld ay., ..w'•th fa1r .wealher sa 1ur- ·Multimedia
R a . R tau rants
'
MasOD, ; a.; ,Mmar
ary .:
,...exander
2
grandchildren.
otflclatlng. ·Burial will be at Gay ,·' Forfeiting bonds were Dennis day and Sunday. HighS wiU · Robxbles&amp; M . .................. 711 Jones Po~eroy· Rlc!W-d ·RIIn·
R. Wingo, New Marshfield, $48 · rangefrom30to40each4ay,wlth •
ns
yers .... .. ........... 16
'
'
Sch 1 '
Mrs. 'I)'Iplell was preceqed In Cemetery, Gay, W.Va. ·
speeding;
Denzil
Lilly,
Shade,
overnight
lows
In
the
20s
early
Shoney's
Inc
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::
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12
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1
4'
~~~e
Racl,ne;
Ella
.
u tz,
death by her hosbanll, ·James
Friends may call the funeral ·
22
$48,
speeding;
Dixie
.Po.
r
ter
·Friday
and
.
mostly
In
,the
t.
e
ens
·
Star
Bank
......................
\.....
·
·•
·
·
Morgan Triplett; one daughter. . home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
• ·I tl · ' ' · •
dlschjU'ges. - · I,eona
W
d
Racine,
$43,
stop
sign
Saturday
and
Sunday
mornings..
en
Y
s
n
·
·....
....
...........
...
Jo~
Slnciatr.
.
McDaniel,
.'
Allee Leonard; one granddaugh· p.m. Thursd'a y.
ter and 11 brothers and sisters.
VFW Post 44.64 w!U fold ;lnd
Services will be held Friday ,1 · present the nag at the funeral
p.m . ." at the Hardman Chapel at home.
·
Nebo, W.Va.;near Arnoldsburg,
W.Va., with Rev. Dewey Tanner
'officiating. Burial will follow In Loatery numbers
the, Hardman Cemetery . Friends
may call at ,Spencer Funeral
CLEVELAND (UPI) - TuesHome, 220 Main St., In Belpre. . day's winning Ohio Lottery ,
after 2 p.m. Thursday.
numbers:
'
PICK-3
Audrey Smith
742.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
Audrey P. Smith, 74, of Reeds- $1,180,557, with a payoff due of
ville, cjled Tuesday evening at $453,856.
• ....
Amerl.c are Nursing Home,
PICK-4
Pomeroy.
4395.
Born on Oct . 10, 1915 at .Long
F&gt;ICK-4 ticket sales . totaled
Bot-tom, she was the daughter of $217,827, with -a pay.o!J due of
the late William and , Nelle $57,200.
Coleman Stethem. She Is survived by her husband, Garth A.
1n1dl•ui &amp;ecttonal
Smith, (Bertie) whom she mar·
tn
Luaudous Veluct '
.'
ried.ln August. 1941, and a sister,
It your IN:II~ ilto ~ ~bll
lumlelft you ·~•llild orut pleuure ~ ttllt
Inez Young, Payton City, W.Va.
~ • .,..,.. ~ .::tlonaL oo.r."" one ,
Preceding her In death besides
lim 10111 aftd ont a-m 1Q¥e1Nt Nl..,. !;aliiHn
I ~ thlllel you ...n bKl ii'IIO lloiJWI'iOJI
her parents were a foster son,
rt~a~c~~lon. Ttlll gr010p '- o;omplrtt• .nth I un~ Dt;
REGULAR $26,99
·2
End
Tables
•Sofa
w.v.~ COI'nll' 111111! . come 1nop !oGIYI
Kenny Reynolds , a brother,
Walter Stethem, and a brotherNOW
~
•Love~at ~CI:irner '{able
-In-law, Howard Young.
•AM/FM
With
Funeral services will be held
STARTING AT .
Friday at 2 p.m. at the White
Clock Built lril
Funeral Home, Coolville. The .
Rev . .Norman Butler will off!·
elate and burial will be In Sand
Iiiii Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home Thursday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

&lt;'•-

W ther

•

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Hospital

~==

Cold Weather
Sometimes
Brings

Busted Pipes!

cassette

seg.g·

~

IN STOCK

Michael Ferguson
Michael Roy Ferguson. 41, Rt.
5, Ga!UpoUs dti!d Tuesday at the
Cabell-Huntlngton Hospl1al,
Huntington, W.Va.
He was born Febrtfary 6, 1~48
In Ripley, W.Va. to Ralph and .
Ruby Morris Ferguson of Rt. 1, .
Gallipolis..
·
Mr. Ferguson :-vas a parts

•PVC Pipes
•Fittings ~
•Elbows
PLUS' MORE!

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WY.

BEDROOM
.
SUITES
STARTING AT

Chatter d#b
holiday meeting
he/4 in Chester .

'

Sul&amp;ll Cleland hosted the !loll·
day meeting of the Chatter Club
.
at her home In Chester.
Members exchanged gifts
from their secret pall. Refresh·
·ments were served Wid games
· enJoyed · dunn&amp; the evening.
Wlnnlne prizes were · lsabelle
Couch, Dorothy Roach, and Delores Whitlock. Unda Hubbard
received a birthday gift and Ruth
Young an anniversary gift. Lynn
McKinlle)' won the door prize.

Blood
.·
clinic scHeduled

ch~~~~ ~~ t~~eflr~~~~~a;~~

ADRIENNE BUCKu;Y

:~ovcs honor roll announced~__.;.-.;......,._ ____
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COFFEE &amp; END TABLES
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FlAT

'·

fOP

DESKS
•

f

'Gilligan's
·actor Alan Hale dies

• •,

~C'

Melp Coun,ty, reports
Ashley, ol_ Letart
Fal.. , whO..was.aniong t~e ll'OUP· "See If you can
Ideality them," Ashley says. . Another such
n!Unlon will be held thiS COifllitg September .and
Ashley hopes even more' of local fellOws wn~ tum
0~

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o.mc.•,a•... ""'1'1111-.,.,

.22 CAUSER SHELLS.".......j.,.,500 ROUND CARroM

Community..· calendar '

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-:;;;;::;::====;;:::=====;;::;::===========' •

WEDNESDAY· ·
POMEROY - Finger stick
cholesterol screenings will be
admlnlsteted on . Wednesday
!ron\ l2: 30-3 p.m., Thursday
!rom 11 a.m ..to7 p.m . and Friday
from 9 a.m. ·to 3 p.m. Call
992-6626 between the· hours of
9-11 a .m. and J-3 p.m. Monday
through Friday. to s~hedule an
appointment.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Lodge
164. F&amp;AM. will meet Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the Middle.
port Masonic Temple.
. SHADE - Thi! Bedford Township Trustees will hold ·their
organlzatlonaimeetlng' on Wed·
nesday at 5: 30 p.m. at the
town hall.
BEDFORD -: The Bed!ord
Township Trustees will meet for
an organizational meeting at 5:30
p.m. Wednessday at the
town hall.
'rHURSDAY
POMEROY - Tbe Pomeroy
group of AA and Alanon will meet
thursday. 7 p.m. at the· Sacred
Heart Catholic Church. For more
Information call
1-80().:...333-5051.
MIDDLEPORT- Evangellne
Chapter 172, Orderofthe£astern
Star, will meet at the Middleport
Masonic Temple, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. O!!lcers are to wear chapter

'

dresses.
POMEROY . - XI Gflmma;
Epsilon Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi ,
Sorority, will met Thrusday at 7
p.m. at the Senior Citizens
:. .
Center.
,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The'
Ladles. Auxiliary of Post 9053,
VFW, Tuppers Plains. wlll meet ;
at 7: 30 Thursday at the hall .
RUTLAND - The · Rutland :
Township Trustees will hold Its ·
organizational meeting followed
by a regular January meting _
Thursday at the Rutland fire
·.station. The meeting -Is· open tq
the public.
FRIDAY
.
SCIPIO- The Scipio Township
Trustees organizational meeting :
will be held Friday at 6 p.m at the :
Scipio Township building. .
·
POMEROY The Meigs, .
Cunty Pomona Grange will meet•·
at the Rock Springs Grange Hall
Friday at 7:30p.m. Star GrangE! .
wll serve refreshments.

••

SI\TURD.,_Y
,.
Star Grange and Star Junior,·
Grange will meet In regular."
session Saturday, 7:30p.m at the.
' grange hall, located on Count y,
Road 1 · near Salem Center: ·
Members are reminded to pay
their 1990 dues.

DANCE FOR JOY
AEROBIC DANCE CLASS
9 WEEK WINTER SESSION

..

BEGINS-JANUARY 8, 1910
18 CLASSES 1 39.00
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS 1 36.00

CARLETON SCHOOL-SYRACUSE, OHIO
CLASS TIME
.
MON. &amp; WED. EVENINGS 7:30P.M . &amp; 8:30 P.M.
TUES. &amp; THURS. EVENINGS 1:30 P.M. &amp; 7:30P.M .

For cleu Ntl•t,.lion or Information c.ll
lnatructor, Joy King 9112·3794
ANiatant lnatNCtor. Junnll Owen 992-18113

· HOLZER CLINIC.
.

·bor's surprise New Year's Day
appearance In the lOJst Annua1
Tournament of Roses In Pasadena. Calif .. dtew jeers from &amp;orne
parade.watchers. Gabor. rode
whlle ·horse named Sliver Fox as ·
part of the Belles and Beaus of
the 1890s, .~n equestrian entry In
the parade. !'Slap the horse," one
sidewalk critic yelled. The
former Hungarian beauty queen
took It all In stride: "I'm an
actress." she said. "You get boos
and•you get cheers."

,,

Is Pleased
·To .Welcome

a

MALCOLM W. LENTZ. M.D •
.Orthopedic And
General Surgeon

To The Clinic ·Staff
.

•

Malcoln~ W.

Se!:!i {rom our
most popul.!r styles. '
Atlas. Apollo,
· Athena or Laurel,
with hwtdreds of
mascolS and acUvlty dll$/gns.
It s your choke

from R. Johns. Ud.!

,.

. REGULAR $99.95

95

VALADKIM'"

'•

~ BY R. JOHl'l8.

LTD.

Lentz, M.D.,· Board Certified General, Thoracic,
and Othopedic Surgeon wll foin the Clinic Staff on January
3, 1990, having previously been .in private practice at Hill·
crest Clnic. Dr. Lenh earned his medical degru from the
Univenity of Pennsylvania in 1958. His internship was at
the Univers'ty of Pennsylvania Hospital. He has ha~ separate
siwgic~l and orthopedic residencies at the Uniyenity of Cil,l·
dnncrti hospital, completing Orthopedics in 1978. Dr. Lentz , .
is a fellow of the AmerkGII College of Surgeons and a metn·
.btr ;of the American College of Chest Physicians. He has ..n.
loyed a very successful practice in the Gallia, Jackson, Ma·
SO.n, and lltigs (O-'f •eat.
.
'
r
Patients who have an appointiMIIt with Dr. Lentz at hi sHill·
crest locatiOn clf_ter JaRu•y ·1, 1990 s._.uld ketp their GP"
pGiintn~ent ·date and tlnle at his new oHice in the Orthopedic
Depart.....lt of .HOiur CWc. for ..Ore infOinaation or to
sa.dule an a,.oiiiiiiiiHt, call the Holur Clnk Orthtpellc
D. .rt111111t lit 446·54~J~
Dr. a..tz's · patients at Veterans Me•orlal Hospital .in
. PGbiiiNJ
:~as MUal at the helpltal• Tu••Yir
......... IIJI _. _.· •e••*ts. 'lhl telephone nuu • er for
infOILLLIIIDn or •••lniiiiRfl· at Vetwt I is "'·1611.

Wll•t:.

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~~~~~----"-------------· ':~
.
famous cop-slapplng~onvtct. Ga-

l

..._... • ..... manaaer

.

A cancer support group Is
The first meeting, will be held •
being organized by the Meigs on Jan. 26 at 7 p.m: ln the Cancer .
Chapter of the American Cancer . Society office In the old. Meigs
Society, Johp Hunnel, lnforma· General- Hospital building on •
tiona! officer, announced today . Second Street In Pome~oy.
,
The group .will be called the
Purpose of the group will be to:
Bonnie Marlene Fishel' Cancer lend support to the victims or
SupiJO~ G~oup In tribute to Ms. cancer and members ·Of .their : · ·
Fisher. along-timeMelgs.Cou.nty families. through an exchange of ·
teacher, who recently suc· lntQrmatlonand Ideas, as well as ,
cumbed to the disease.
emotional sustenance, Hunnel .
said.
·

But the 6-foot-2 actor's best·
known role was · as Jonas
Grumby, the likeable skipper on
the "Gilligan's Island" series,
from 1964-67.
.
The series featured the comic
· attempts of an oddball group to
live, and hopefully free ' themselves, from a deserted Island on
which they were shipwrecked.

'

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: B:r,;Unlted Presslalernatlonal
WKRL. which until Monday was
;: PLAUDITS FROM THE OP· Tampa Say's '"only classic rock
fOSITION: Actor and conserva· station." The new format Is so
)lve activist Charlton Heston restrictive that even 'sqlo efforts "
~sn't one to le.t politics gl!t lri the
from · me1t1bers of the n,ow.way of appreciating a good defunct British band Will not be
)ierformance. In an Interview to aired. T.he group released 10
be aired on .J.oan Rivers' televl·
albums over a 12-year period,
. slofltalk show Thursday, Heston and broke' up In Decem~r 1980
iays: "The best actress alive Is · after drummer lohn Bonham •
V1111e11ea Redpave .... She does a died oi an alcohol overdose.
ZSAZSA, CONT.: The dawn of
wider stretch of Parts and she
takes more' chances than any a new year d,ld not put an end to
other actress alive." Heston the trials and tribulations of Zsa
concedes that he and Redgrave Z8ll Gabor, Beverly Hills' most
- the Oscar and Emmy winner
known for her support of leftist
causes - are on different Ideological wavelengths. ,"Vanessa
makes Jane Fonda. look 'Herbert
Hoover," he said. "She and 1
differ politically, but that's OK."
' GE'f A GRIP: Pro 'rassling
· fans hoping for an In-court
r,e-enactment of Hulk . Horan's
notorious chin lock on comedian
Richard Belzer wlll be dlsapjlOinted. A lawyer fqr Hogan and
the other defendants-. lncludlq
; 'The A Team's" Mr. T - has
Settled Belzer's $5 1 mlllton lawsuit out of court. Jury selection In
pte case had been scheduled to
begin In New York Tuesday.
. Belzer needed eight stitches . to
RIOse' a head wound he suffered
.when Hogan used him as a
.p ractice dummy during a 'ras' .
sling demonstration on a .March
i985 edition of Belzer's cable TV
)lhow. T and the Hulks ter ·were on
lhe show to promote Wrest.leMa·
dla I when the latter. demonstrqted a chln lock.on Belzer, who .
ended up slumped on the floor
al)d unconscious. "I hope' now
that the trauma of this unfortu· ·
· nate. event Is over and Richard·
can eet on ~th bls life," said
Betzer's at tol'ney, Bo)' Grutmu.
111801 IIRICC ZdiMY31.1990
. STAIRWAY TO OvERKILL?:
_"1\ Florida radio station has
ltwltcbed to what It Claims - ilild
OFFERED
l4'ho would doubt them? -:- li the
"orld's onlY all-Led zeppelin
dlo fonnat. WKRJ..FM In
earwattr made the cutoVer
n.llftlrlpdltdiJ11NewYear'i
8ve repeatedly playing the 1971
llt ''!ltidrway to Heaven." Led
~pelln It "Jut a wry, very
ttro111 Nlalc rock 'IP'OUP· very
pile alld ellplbil." aakl

__

$1299

'

Cancer support group
being organized in area

each
month
Bolin of .,
Rutlimd
to with
hostBrenda
the January
meeting,
. ,
1

' The followlllg s.tudents made grade: Vandana Agrawal,
The following ~tudents made
Island~
.1 .t he A Honor Roll for the second
Brandy Bahr; Donovan Davis the B Honor Roll tor the second
six week~: First grade: · Brad Deanna Martin, Bo Pollard, slx weeks: First grade: Joshua ·
; Bowman, Tommy D;~yton, Na· Esther Simmons, and Lisa Vol.- Commons, Joey Johnson, Molly
: than Williams, Whitney .Ashley, I born; Fifth grade: Micah Lan- Johnson, and Seth Easton; ·.seLOS ANGELES (UPI) -Alan
"Jl{ent Haley,. Erica Massie, Nl- ler, Melissa Brown, Joy Chak· cond grade: Rebekah· Frans,
: cholas Mulholand, Jason Perry, upa, and Benjamin Taylor; Sil!lh Jemllfer Gordon, ~nd Rachel Hale Jr., the burly skipper on the
. Jordan Shaffer. and Andrea grade: Aaron Holley, Amy Pol- Steele; Third grade: Joyce Gra- popular 196Qs televisiOn series
. S!1ns. Amanda Wlloox; Second lard, Jill Bock. and Gabe · ham, and Jessica McCoy; Fifth "Gilligan's Island," died Tues. · :grade: April 'Agu,s1!n. Derek McQueen; Seventh grade: Car a ,grade: Jam! Gtanechtnt, and ,day nlgh,t of cancer. He was 71;
~ale died at St. VIncent s
,Baker, T.J. Frash,er, Courm!!Y Bahr, Jenny Hagar, Abigail Lelsa Walters; . Sixth grade:
Nat~an
Lusher
Kristen
Sas·
I&amp;
Medical
Center. a hospital oftl;Gooch, Laura Pollarc!, Miranda Henry, and Robin Rice; Eighth
sylva.
Rachel
'
Cochran.
·and
cia!
said.
Th.e actor had been
,Simmons, Jonathan Taylor, Jes· grade: Dail Chaksupa, Jason
Anesa
Van
:Matre·
Eighth
grade:
-sufferln~
from.
cancer of the
:sica VIckers, Erin Walker, Nl· Cheng. Jodie Hager, Anna Marie
Jeremiah
.
Brow~.
Andy
Brum·
'thymus
gland
for
a little mol'j!
~h9le . WatS.On, · •Ell Watson, . Hamrick, and Ellza~ih Wooten;
field,
Amy
Carnes,
Sa,raliMII!er,
than
a
year,
said
Bonnie
Chur' ; j\manda .Brown, and Joshua ·· Ninth grade: sandra Adams . •
;Simmons; Third grade: Rebecca
Brian Rice. and Christopher Susan Steele, and Andrea Lewis; chill, his neighbor for 20 years.
Ninth grade: Meredltll Pollard;
Bob Denver, who . played . the
Brlchfleld, Lisa Bowman, Emily Walters; Tenth grade: Beth
"HI,lll, Alan Haley, Lacy Hamm,
Blevins, Darin Peck, Cindy Tenth grade: Pam Holley; Elev· title role on "Gilligan's Island,"
Racliel Lusher, Amanda Kohl· Sheets, Jenny .Hughes, and Ja· · enth grade: Chris Graham, and reme'!'bered Hale as a hearty
Jonathan . Turner· Twelveth man and serious actor.
ho~t. P.nl Jenks, Natalie Pyles,
kim Lanter; ·Eleventh grade:
grade:
Mike Brumfield, Sa man"He could ~? great comedy."
·stephen Roberts, Daniel Size- Amy Brumfield; Twelveth
tha
Mooney.
Jeremy
Perkins,
Denver
said. He was a prates·more, Bethany Simmons, Regrade: Eric Burgess, Kelll Flllln·
and
Heather
Wood.
slonal.
He
really worked at his
'bekab' Smith, Jessica Walker,
ger Kevin
To01 Rawllngs.
~raft."
·and
Fourth
Hale closely resembled hls
father, who had a successful
career as a character actor and
played Llltle.Johit In the Douglas
Fairbanks Robin Hood movies.
Like his father, the younger
Hale played supporting roles In a
series of films, beginning In
Paramount Pictures'' "l Wanted
·wtngs, ... released ai the start of
World War II.
After spending the war years In
the Coast Guard, Hale went back
to the movies, making more th!ln
60 turns. Including "West Point
Story," "Young at Heart," and
"The True Story of Jesse

"

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Flame Fellowship meeting
set
.

3, 1990
Pag, _ l,

••

. , Adrlenne· Buckley of BrOOk·
SChool Class. The Buckleys have
parlt WUI be the IPI!Bker-,at the four daughters, th~ee. of whom
· Tuesday meetlne of the · Pomeare m•rrled; ·and seven
grandchildren.
roy name Fellowship Chapte~
be held at 7 p.m, at the Senlbf
Clt~ens Center,
•,
pr~sure
"" The International 'VIce P~l·
dent of USA affairs for '· Fiame'
Fellowship ipeaks and ministers .
at vartoua women•s·meetlnp as
well as other C~ti!ln aftalrsall
The Harrisonville SeniOr CIUover the Unlted~tates. She also zens wi~ hold a free blood
miniSters with ber husband, pressure clinic on Tuesday from
Wllllam. at meetings, conven· " 10 a.m. to noon at the townhouse.
!Ions and seminaries.
There will be a l!leetlngfollowlng
In their home church, the . the clinic. In the event of
Church of God at Parma, they·. Inclement .weather both .events
teach the College Career Sunday will be cancelled.

~

W~nuday. ~

feople in the .news._ ___;;,_____;
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12 GA.

1~999 ~

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FRIEfo!D8 - Tlle~~efon111er
, emplOyees of'Dravo•s Union Barp Une r;alhered
.(,back In September for a pod · old.l•hloned ·
; •reunion. Captains, plots, matl!ll and decll banda
&lt;turned out for the Jel·tor;etber which w• held at
:.the Betit WesternMolellnParkenbart, W.VL 9n ·
::Sept. 17. Ten of the former employees were from

PUMP ACTION
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Newark couple win&amp; Lotio jackpot
•

Ada TriplEtt

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Wedne$day, January 3, 1990

American designer
Patrick Kelly dies

. .. PolO, CzechoSlovaks to f()nn federation .

20. people charged in failed coup

Ke lly arrived In France from
the United States in 1979, straight
from . the fields of Mississippi
where he had worked alongside
his grandfather Ubtll he was
bitten by the curious amblllon 'to .
be a fashiOn deS'Igner.
'
He started up by selling his
dress creations on .the sidewalks
of the fashionable Saint·
Germaln-des·Pres on· the ·Left
Bank and soon persuaded sev- ·
era! chic stores to market them. ·
His first official show was held In
1985.
.
By the late 1980's the " cute
lillie black American, " as he
c alled himself jokingly, had buill
up a thriving business with
annual turnover of $7 mllllori and
his ellen ts included actress Bette
Davis ·and cover girl Isabella
Rossellini. A funeral will be hEM
in ParJ s Saturday .

MANILA, Phlllppl!les CUPI)- months to 12 years.
chambers before the consoll·
. The military Wednesday flied
In their complaint , military
dated version was sent tor final
rebelllon charges against four lawyers said the accused were
approval In a special session
officers .and 16 soJc!lers and Identified by witnesses to have
Wednesday called by President .
eor11 zon Aquino.
civilians accused of joining the fired at gover·nment troops at the
tailed . attempt to overthrow height of the Dec. 1·7 failed coup ' Debates on the controversial ,
President Corazon Aquino. ·
· attempt, the sixth and gravest , provision on the powers of the
Charged by the mUitary judge challenge against the ,Aquino - five-man commission tq look Into
advoeate general's omce before government.
the bank accounts of suspects In
government proaecutora were
A ·m llitary lawyer said De
the uprising had prevented pas·
Lt. Cola. Eduardo Matlllano and Gracill was caught by govern· , sage Q! the bill ·befo~ c;ongress
Rodolfo Tor, Capt. AntOIIIO ct. Ia ment forces with dynamite, . w.e ntlnto a monthlongC~Fillmas
, · Cruz, Sgt. BertBulos,Rolandode ammunition, radios an.d gasoline
recess Dec. 22.
·
Cracla and 15 other Individuals.' bombs . ·
The bill authorizes the commis,
Only Mati!Jano and De Gracia
The 'rebelliOI) charges ·against ,stan 'to ' 'ask the Monet11ry Board
· are In custQdy. The military has the 20 brought to 32 the number of
to disclose lnfotmatlon-on and·ot
Offered rewards or up to $47,800 people accused o~ _rebelllon in · grant authority to examine any
for· Information leading to the connection with the coup at·
b~nk deposits, trust or .invest·
capture or 15 coup 'leaders, tempt, which left 119 people dead
ment funds ·or banking transac·
Including Tor.
and nearly toppled Aquino. . t!Qns" of persons or firms when
GOvernment prosecutors wl)l Among those· facing charges tbere is "reasonable ground'' to
conduct a hearing to decide if a were opposition leader Sen. Juan believe the deposits were used iq
case should be lodged before a PonceEnrUeandFelixBrawner, connection with the coup.
civilian criminal court. Rebel· a mllitary COflSultant In the
The measure also allows the
lion charges carry a penalty of Senate, and Jaime Echevarria, fact -finding commission formed
~prlsonment ranging !rom six
both retired generals. . .
.
· b,Y Aquino shortly alter the
PATRICK KELLY
Mat
Olano
has
been
in
military
uprising to cite for contempt
Deadat37
custody since he was· accused ·or witnesses who refuse to cooper~
· leading renegade troops that ate and impoSE' a maximum
took over Villamor Air, Base in penalty of 30 days Imprisonment.· .
the military. mutiny .of Aug. 28, ·
Findings of : tho commission
1981. '
·
·
will be turned~er to. state ·
aceount for all of Vietnam's uted $200 million to .th!! state
. Congress apptoved a biil Wed· prosec.u tors who wlli initiate _
heavy industry and most of •lts budget - $10 million more than
nesday authorizing a presiden· cases against those involved lrt 7:,
large- scale production.
In 1988.
.
\
tial investlgaitve commission to the uprising. Cases_could elthe~ .­
By May · last- year, "many
Despite ' the Improvement, examlne bank accounts 'of com· be "filed before civilian courts.or' '
enterprises laced acute shortlige about 30 percent of all state panies or people suspected of military tribunals .
of capital due to the unsalability· enterprises have not been able to· involvement in the recent coup
Defense Secretary . Fidel Ra· ~ ·
of more than 1,000 billion dong stern their losses and are not attempt.
mos said Wednesday the com.. •·
(l\bout $250 miilioa ) worth of expected to survive, the report
The 20!J.member House of mission also is looking Into the
stock," It said.
Representa,lives unanimously involvement of foreigners·tn the
said.
.
Abdul 20 percent of the work·
approved the . bill, while the coup a ttempt.
·
Earlier, government econo·
fo'rce had to be laid off and some mist Tran Dang Doanh painted a
Senate voted 15 to one with three
Ramos did not elaborate but he
_f~ctories were closed, the repprt
somewhat gloomier picture In an . abstentions to :pass the me~sure. stressed that no foreign power or,
said.
·
Sen. Sotero Laurel opposed the government was l_nvolved in -the ·
interview with United' Press
The criSis brougl!t demands to International In Hanoi.
bil). ·
·. .
. rebellion. He said the'forelgners'
bring, ba.ck the subsidy ·sysiem
A joint conference cqmmittee Involved were indiyiduals ·who
He said only 30 percent of stat~
that ate up 37 percent of the enterprises were currently operon Tuesday reconciled differen· '"' stood !o profit in ·the event the
nat tonal budget In 1988.
ces lh the bllis passed by the two uprising succeeded.
ating in the black.
•
Most enterprises mamiged to
Another 40 jlercent required
stay afloat by cutting · staff, . temporary state · credit while
producing new consumer goods they reorganize, he said. Many
and ·using direct marketing and employees and managers at the
advertising techniques for the troubled enterprises have been
first time.
.
cut back to half of what were
It said state factories boosted already bare subslstance wages,
output by 3 percent and contrib- 'be said.

still competition by other eco·
nomic sectors," the agency said
in a dispatch dated Tuesday.
It said the state sector, hard hit
by economic reforms ending
state subsidies and monopolies,
''showed visible embarrassment
due to its cumbersome and
inefficient managerial mecha·
nism and o~tdated technology ."
Government-owned factories

.:Beat of the bend
By BOB HOEFLICH .
: I hope you made it through ok.
l know . It wasn 't easy but it's
only once a year
;... and all In
!' 11 bet your
day season
great. ·
· If you
dare think abcJut
It· and have
strength and wherewlthai~they
fell me that now is il good time to
piCk up decorations; wrapping·
paper, gift tags and all that good
Stuff related to ·Christmas at
·bargain prices. ' If you 're this
courageous then all.you have to
!jo is locate a little storage space
and remember next December
that you 're ahead of the hounds.
~ Lotsa Luck!

--------

: Charlene and I made a senti·
tnental journey to the Fleming
area during the holiday season to
i)ay a visit to Olive Weber. who
resided in Pomeroy and Meigs
County for many years ;tnd is a
fprmer good, ·good ·accompanist
, for the musicals of the Big Bend
~instrel Association. ·
·
~ Many of you, I'm sure, remember Olive affectionately .
. She's doing well and Is being
rp ade quite comfortable at the
home of her son-in-law ~
daughter, Bill al)d Sandra Kay
Strauss. Fleming isn' t that far
away and we feel that we should
Have made the trip long ago naturally, Olive is delighted to
see home faces -even ours.
: By the way, Sandra Kay, and
Bill are into what they call pump
organs. However, I prefer to call
them grind organs which is what
you do to play them- grind away
on handles . They have several
nice ones and these were given to
them by Sandra Kay's father, the
late F . Whitney Ingraham, also a
former Meigs County resident.
Whitney had .taken up collecting
!he old fashioned grind organs
which date back 1to the early
1800's before his death. He had
.lear ned "restoration as · well as·
'how to make his own rolls which
are p layed in the organs. They're
quite unique and beautifully
res tored.

'

.

'

Christmas tree ornament addict .
With that in mind, perh'!ps, you
will forgive my taking the Uberty
of telling you of a. very special ·.
ornament created for me this
holiday season by the Jim Adams
F'\ffiilY of Sy.racuse- that's Jim,
Carol and the kids - yeah they
are big to be called kids aren' t
they - Kim and Todd.
Well, the Adams' created a
clever newspaper theme ·retire·
ment ornament for our Christ·
mas tree and it's all about Bob.
Done in black and· white - now
that's appropriate - the really
neat ornament Includes informa·
,
tlon that pertains only ·to me "Keep Smiling" and "Beat of the
Bend". both outlined In black and
white beads, my name and the
Jan. 31, 1989 date or my retire·
ment,from newspapertng. Talk
It safd local officials who have
BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI)". about being creatlve,.1 hand It to
extorted.
money or goods from
the Adams Family -and how the Vietnam has ordered the remofamily pleased me with the val of .mega! roadblocks · and the people must make Immediate •checkpoints set up by local reltltution Or pay compensation.
gesture.
"Orgaqizattons or Individuals
officials
to ~tort "taxes" from
. My clown collection increased
who
haye abused their authoritY
travelers,
Hanoi
radio
reported
· by five over the ljoliday season. I
'
Wednesday.
·
to
cause
iriconvenlenc~ and nee '
tell Charlene the collection
"Recently,
on
many
routes,
gattvllm
must be strictly pun·
bring a good price when the
the
government order
!shed,'
•
mostly
notably
the
south-north
auction is held in our front yard.
said.
·
manylocalities
have
set
route
...
The ornament' WILL NOT bring a
It said onl;r a small number of
goop price at the auc~lon . It's all up checkpoints and collected
checkpoints
at ports or entry are
'taxes'
in
defiance
of
a
govern·
about me -and rightfully so no
permitted
and·
they must avoid
ment
decision
to
free
the
cii-cula·
one else would want it"-. But
lion
of
goods,"
the
communist
the
circulation of
obstructing
that's o.k. 'cause I'm sure it was
said
In
a
toughly
goods.
government
made only to bring me happiness
''One day following receipt of
worded cable to local authorities
- it has and it will.
this
cable, If Illegal checkpoints
around
the
country.
•·
So -that seems to make mestill
exist, th~ chairmen . of
.The
radio
quoted
the
cable
as
even at my age ·- a part of the
people's
committees of ihe prq-saying
officials
have
been
IlleMe' ' generation -but down deep
vlnces,
municipalities,
or special
gally
collecting
taxes,
lmposhig
aren_'t all of us bentjusta-llttle bit
be· held
zones
concerned
will
in that direction- don't all of us fines and seizing goods at the
•
checkpoints.
·
.
·
':
responsible," he said.
bask· In the sunshine of a little
"People's
committees
of
proThe
report
was
an
Indication
of
personal attention or a compll·
the
problems
the
central
govern·
vinces,
municipalities
and
spe·
ment? If that be ttue, then
maybe this "Me" generatlom cia! zones are hereby requested ment has had "in Implementing
thing is really not so new after to order the Immediate removal economic reforms meant to
of these. iilegal checkpoints," the release the economy from the
all. Do ~eep smiling. ·
weight of bureaucracy.
cable said.

,.

will

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- .. '

flHIClS tH lCfiV[ IHHU SAT .. JAN. G.
UISP &amp; SERVE VACUUM PACK

I~I~U

1 Ll'
' 99(
Sl.1ced·Baeon ••••.•.•.•..•••...••••.•..

Breakfast Loaf .•••..••••• !~~··· S2.S9
Homemade M•at Salad .• :.L.B.~.89(
'I

I•

RED DELICIOUS
APPLES ............ ?.t~t. 2I 69'
TANGERINES •••m.f.t. 6/ 99'

OWN
FIESHUIE

TWIN MAniiESS SO

SS2S
WIEl
TWIN

MATTRESS

MICROWAVE

HQTCHES

•
~

________

$660~
•Q-N ANN. COF.FEE .
. AND END.
TABLES
.

s

70

Gr-een Peas ............... ~!~.~~•. S1.7'9

CHINA HUTCHES

.IAfiQUR ·· ·

Salisbury Steak ••••.·.••• !!.~~•..·s2 .59
TIOPICANA
· ,,
. .·Ju1ce.....................
•
12 OI $2 •09
0range

Sl 07·5

WRII

IECUNEIS '

MAftHAWHITE
I
,

~645 "
4 DIAWEI
CHEST .
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JAN~

4, 10·3

•
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SERTA PREMIER COMFORT
.
.

1 YR. WAIIAN\'Y

·::.saa

$1"8
v

FW
lA.
K. .

·.

ROPER a_
nd
WHIRLPOOL J
APPLIANCE SALE

SERTA SUPREME ULTRA
10 Y~. WAIIAN\'Y
$' 9 FW EA. K. $144
~. 9 ··QU&amp;N sn S344

Microwave

Ovens ......;.......STARTING AT

' 15 Yl. WABANTY

TWIN

sn

,$2 9...9;'s': .53~~
·

QU:N

S

144

JvMt-in Dishwadler ..... SAJ.I S299
Gas ell' Electric
~
lange ........................ ONLY .299

SERTA PERFECT SLEEPER

Automotic Washer .............S359

..S309

Electric Dryer ...................
frost fr• Rtfriprator .....$.4 79

1459

. '.

AUTOMAnCWASHERANDDRYER
.
.

'

•

January
Sale
BEDROOM SUITES

'

.

·50.,. ·Off GlllliWAII
&amp; IIISIES
25.,. ····~

Old Fashion Noodles ••••.••• S1.19
•
·Puffs Facial Tissue ... ~.!!!.~. s .29

'

__ ____

•

MUIWIS16 oz.

IT. 141, 4 .U • GAWPOUS, OH. • (614) 446·3151
&lt;

.

'Brea kf as t Cerea I ..............
. . Iaoz S1 •s·9
Squeeze-it ·Drinks ;~ .•~ •••~ .... 2I 69(

VI'RA FURNITURE

'"_......,.
r
.

•

QUAIEI OATS

WDI

EVEN LOWD IEII'IAL aans ON UPO' AND UruiNED ITEMS.

,

.

Corn Bread ••••..••••••·.••• ~.~?•• 2/99C
CAMPBILL'S CHUI!IIY
.
1' oz. s1·•49
.n Burger
· Soup ..........
• I01_
S1r
SWANSON . . '
.
·.
:
22 oz. 21s1. •1·9·
(h.1cken.. -··aro·th. ...•.•....•••.
Joy Liquid Detergent.~ ••.-•• ~ Sl. 9'9

•

WDI .

er,v

OAK, PINE and CHERRY, SUITES .

_- ,
547
5 ~c. Sutte .............................................. SALE
7~

leg. S6~9 Ook Contemporary ·
'.

.. MOSCOW (UPI) - The VreNow It has taken on new Ute.
rilya TV news prog~am •.a fixture
Urider glasnost.
·
·at 9 p.m,.for 21 years, now will be
The mos~ dramatic changes
broadcast three times a day with were instituted last' year under
'twq anchor broadcasters In a
tlie new director o!Gosteleradlo,
or State Televlllon and Radio,
.w estern format.
· "The format change 18 because Mikhail Nenashev .
of the Increased flow In lntorma·
Nenashev, who earlier relnvlg·
tlon." Ivan Ilyoahln, a senior orated State Publishing as head
editor of the Vremya l:rlme) ·, Ot that or.ganJzatlon1 sent televl·
progrl!m; said Wl;!dnesctay.
S"lon ·crews to cover Jive pollee
On \(an. 1, Soviet viewers dragnets and e4en the capture of
~ddenJY saw an .anchorman and
a gang ·of thieves In the Balttcs:
anchorwoman Nading the news
TV crewe also barged Into a
uDder soft llgbts, sllliPg behind · store whose shelves were empty,
!Ow desk.. A third .ilewaperson and exposed stocks ot aoodl In
rep.cirted $porf4 but there was no the basement destined. for black
special weather reporter.
market cusklmers.
TUesday night, the broadcas·
The store director, hiding her
·ter said that Vremya, which has tace, put ber hands in front of•the
been shown at 9 p.m. slnceJan.1, camera to try to keep them back.
1968, now wUI have ll'a!J·ho~ TV When the creW left, the goods
•1\!!WS • progr41ms at 12: 30 p.m. ; "Were on lh~ she1ves and In the
e:oo p.m:, ·9 p.m. plus a newJ store Window.
.1
summary at 11: e p.m .. "
i · •In an earUer format cbange
The noon offerlilg Wednesday laat year titled "Seven Days,"
devotlld at least four mlnulft to tbl: Suilday Vrell)ya slot· re-.
lleWs contereri~ In Rpmant8 · viewed ihe week's developments
lild ahowed exultant dnea or · ·with analysea -lnste"d of giving
~118~ a~d West' Bei'll·r~ at the straight news.
Brandenburg Gate, plus scenes ' •
ef llle•laraell ~ter coli\pinny,
Hablma, arrlvtna In Moacow to
jive a series of per!ormancea.
, , VremyawaaoncetheduUestof
TV -~ 1lloy.oa teatarfna en·
-~• broadc!aa!l ot tractor• ,nd
~bbtiN reputedly letUna new
· batvelt records. Previpusly, tbe
ancbor jut looked Into the ltudlo
eamera
i'ead to the vtewera.

MARK RED
GRAPEFRUIT .... ~.~-~!.. 2/99'

· CHEESE ''""""""\""~.Q... S2 .19

PEOPLES~ ~JPI•

WASHINGTON (0PI) -First

'

Jumbo Bologna ...........!·.~··· Sl.99

'

J.,.'"

lildy ~~ Bulh, plagued by

'

B£AVE11 YALI£'1

DISCOVER WHY .

Soviet ..TV newscast .
~cfnpts . Western ··lbok',

'

ECKRICH

.OHIO COLBY LONGHORN .

IBn TO

tng treatment.
•
.On Nov. 28, the first lady went
double Vlllon and watery blood·
to the Mayo Clinic In Rochester,
shot
and hoping: to avoid · Minn., where·. she ~ad a 3.hot~r
--~rge17 ~ w~ schedul!!d to,begin . examination,by II!P special !Its In ,
a new radiation treatment Wed· . the field. AI that time. she was
~day at Walter Reed Army
told tbat the Jirogno~ls li "hard to .
· Medlcat.~enter. .
, ·
predict because ever'y case is so
. Anna · Perez, the 1irst lady's · different,'' according to Per&amp;.
press lll!j:re,ary, planned to m~e
Mrs. Busb, who Ia one of the
a _fcmnal announce!'lenl after tile
most aftlve president'• wives in
dally t~atJ1!ents In her eye
recent -h istory, has not let her eye
·sockets, expected to last for 10 condition slow her down. Built Is
days, ut ll!ldflr way Wednesday
extremely frustrating for her,
at the \Vaahln..ton area ,hospital.
although she frequently jokes
. . Mrs, 'Billb has-.b een suffering about hoping to~ the "en~ or this
,for I! year from G~aves' disease,
dumb allmtm~· '' .
.
,
whlc)t iS caused by- a_ thyroid . ' The tint' la'dy . always lnsllts
dlsOJ'der. Sb 1ar she h~ un_der· · that she fe!!ls fine, despite her
gpne twQ separate treatments,
eye condlttoil ' Even In tl\e bitter .
w~tc;h. 'have . tl!.)jed to heal her coklor~ibberlnwa'atililgton,
allment_.·severaii!IOnthl ago sh~ •l!e woull!:'sWim ·a,·mne _• tn the.
w~ ·~rlv•a_ a radl~ct_lve .lffll·
O\!tdoor pOOl e!lch•motnlila. She
ment ·d~ to•llestroy her IS up ana.ati)uncl!the .!lO'JIIIIawn
tbyrolj! &amp;land. Arterw,ard, dally . at 6 a:m:, walling het ·EngUsh
~ ot : prednllolle, a aterdld,
spanlel -MI!Jie.
!"ere admlrilatered ,to com~: ', F:,ollo!VIn¥'·'her cheCkup at.
~te for the thyl:o.l.d. ·
'
Mayo, · she told a reporter: ·
lmmedlatelytodowina!he.des· "Usten, 1 could wrestle you to
trucUOII otlbe tbyrold gland Mrs. the ground. Nobody feels any
·Bush underwent_ a dramatic bel~ than I do. Truthfully, when
weight loss. t..,ter, a~ ~jng ~ wake up In the momlrii I can
prednllone, . she !:Iegan to· l?Ok hardly walt to do that which I'm
putty and galned'well(ht,.aad the . go!Jig to.do today. I'll ju" !,Ike It ·
~ptome perslstell.. · , "•. • .better If I could just see It once."
[' The new radlatioft treatment1 ,. USA Today quoted Dr. J)ouglas
·admlnlltered In lbwer ,tban J118' : Gouman-, a Unlwrllty of LouJS.
ll~nal'CY. JeVe~s ~: .. to tnllllm_
lzi! viii(! IPecJalla t, aa aaylng that !he
' side effects, Ia •lmec! at redUcing success rate of tlle trealmelit Is
·!he sWt!llinl of the eye ni\IICies. · 5o percent to 90 percent, depj!nd- ;
'
.
'•'
·
·~: · :•. · .
lng orl Mr~. _Bush's.condition: ·
Mrs. Bush, who has a .beavy
Eye surgery II' considered a
janusry schedule, was expected flnal .opdon and the treatments .
to be ·able to carry on with b•r sbe will unilergo are designed to
,
normal activities while undergo· avoid that.

SERTA
.-SALE!!

. ,~~~~I•. .

'

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RITENBURGER LUNCHMEAT
'

r

eye radiatlon treatment

..

PHONE 1,1)-2100

,

Barbara.Bush

.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

PAIKAY
MARGARINE.;........;.. S1.09·

DAILY

•

•

I LB. QUARTERS

KICK-OFF ·~EWAIIWAlS

OPEN
MONDAY~FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M•.
SUNDAY 12 NOON-S P.M.

,.

Tadeusz) Muowtcki
his tint vlllt to

w

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

SMALL.EGGS........'!9!;. S1.09

NEW YEAR

Q

And I don' t know about you but
I wa s pleased to see Claudette
Colbert, one of my favorite
'leading la!lies from the movies
way back when, as one of five
~ple honored at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, D. C. last
week .
Had you also -wondered wh;~.·
tever happened to her? Obviously , from b,er appearance at
th e· Center pte!lentatlon. she has
iieid up beautifully through the
~ear s. · And - of course - you
remember her Academy Award
llf!rformance with Gable In "It
Happened One Night." Now that
c'ould test ·your mem\)rY a wee
bit.
.: Another favorite among ' the
iionorees. was. Mary Martin who
delighted the nation with "Peter ·
P-an" - she' s the mom of J. R.
· Ewing of_..Dallas,fame.
. : I hate -to see the holiday season
IJght§ come clown.
r can't
remember ever havlil&amp; seen so
many before: QUite at tractive, to
-_ay the lea1t, and I admire the
_people who brave the elements to
decorate the exterior at their
homes - your decorations cheer
tis all up. Thank you for doing
tltat.
· You probably can grasp with·
ciut too mu,ch stretch of the
Imagination
that I am a

50°/o

'

nomic attuatlo."tndlc*- 'there _,.peopleaJ!daterrltoryaurpelaJna
lbo.uld be eo PI att!lo lletruilll tbat ot tbe ~mblned Gennuya,
Slovakl, Caella . 011' '"Polea,''
wblelltopther ba~ a population
· Brzeztnald,· . , . . wu born 1n ot 10_mWio~ people. Eut ud
Wilraaw, aald 'l'Miclay 1J1 Polllh West Gennaay, divided 11nce
on a live' radio ~!~He ,.,.,am· Wo~Warll, have)IOI~IIJIY ·
eriglnatlq IJI W•fhliwtOD. D.C.
deaaltlve move towll'd reimlfl.
"Astandlhouldbetak•l'ontlie catiOn but' tbe PJ'OIIiect Is
formatiOn of a . 1ecllratlon of .. poaalble. i
Czechoslovakia and Poland," he , Many Polea. Ire "l!fCJally
'aald.. ·'The -~ CJeellolkwlk ' I.'OIICei'Ded abql!t a uU&amp;d Ger·
autliortUes have a rrleadly stand . many. partly becaule !bey bave
on So~arlty. ud tlllder !lie
not roraotlell that &amp;m!IUon Polea
situation tile vacuum. should lie died In 'l{orld War II ud aliQ
filled between Germany and
becau•ICIIJie IIOICea In Germuy .
Ruula."
,.
. are detna~~diJII return of o-. ·
Tbe Po'llab-IBJIIIIaae proaram
Ger1J1811 territory awarded. to
orglnated ill Voice of America. Polaucl after the war.
.
studloe tn Waah!D&amp;ton and ln.
Czecbollovakla, meanwblle,
eluded ' que~tlons .from Po.._h . wal the f~t viet!~ or Hitler's
repor~s in ·~stw~oe of Polllh ·: mtabt.ln 19l!B wll~ a third ottl!e
-R adio tn ar111w; .
,
country wali awarded to Ger·
· A federatkln between tile &gt;two .. many l!ll ~rt of th11· lnfamQUs .

Briezln$kl, a naturalized U.S. of martial Jaw ' temporarily
citizen who served under Presl· crushed the S_o lldarl!y
dent Carter from 1971·81, also movement.
said the United States knew the . Brzezinski, not~ for his con·
Soviet \}nlon, was planning to ·servatlsm while serving under
l)lvade Poland il week before Carter, said communism had
Polish Gen. Wojclech Jaruzelskl been " tully discredited" In East·
lnatl!ad declared martial law ern Europe and was still attrac·
Dec. 13, 1981.
.
tiveonlyln some Latin American
He said Washington sent pro- countries th a t are ' . anti·
tests to Moscow. The Imposition American.

aew

CHAPMAN SHOES

-Government
orders·
OFF
.
.
.removal .of 'V ietnam SALE CONTINUES
illegal checkpoints CHAPMAN SHOES ·

Praglie and lt'a a pity (new
Czechoslovak PrealdelltVaclav)
Havel die! not make hll flnt ~It
to Waraaw,'' BI"ZZ!Zinakladded.
Mazowlckl'a finl trip~ head
of , state after bll Sci!ldarlty
government aaiDed .power last
year was to Rome and lh'e Soviet
Union. while Havel, who waa .
sworn ln. to office Tbu~y. ·
vlalted boih Germanys'l'ueldJy . .

WARSAW, Pollllll ltJPil ·CIM!Jiqtll ,... . PfOIIP rd aJid. Munlcb'.Ail'et!mertt
·
Fonner U.S. JllliDial tioulty · . ~led llletwe1111 World War I , Allted how Czechollova_k la
aitfller Zbllalew a 1 ' • " llld World Will' 11. but IJitereat In would benefit from a federal loa,
Poland &amp;ad Cleello?lll\lakla . tbe •Idea bu lleeD J't'VIved In Bnezlnuisald, "forCZecholloV·
nllould· rona a fldaatlGD to
receat ·moutha aa political Ida tbe problem of aecyrlty Is a
protect tballlelwl frOm tbe
Cblfll ucl'refol'llll have awept very esRDtlal Issue becau-ae or
Soviet UBJ. 011 'one llde l.lld a · Euttrn Europe.
' daqer on the side of Germany
reualted ~ Q1i tile otller.
. Cleeboalovakla , and PoJand • and !be ~)CIMIIeaB of llussla.
''The aeollllll*lll u4 ecoecllllbllled would blve lllmlllloD
'"It"a a pity tblt (Polllh prime

Vietnam's state enterprises i~ trouble·
· BANGKOK. Thailand (UP!)About 30 percent of Vietnam's
state enterpr-ises, burdened by'
$250 million in 'unsellabie goods
and hu r t by the loss of govern·
ment subsidies, . are heading
toward bankruptcy. the Vietnam
News Agency reported.
· " 1989 was a year of big trials
fi&gt;r the state-owned economi.c
sector ·in Vietnam marked by

•

•

Page-8-lhe Daily Sentinel

PARIS (UP!) - American ·
fashion designer Pat'rick Kelly, a
self-made . man who ch;Q-med
stars Iron\ Bette Davis !p Isa~
bella RossellJnl with his outfits
that featured huge multicolored
buttons and bililard balls, died &lt;tl
a Paris hospital, friends said
.Tuesday . He was 37. ·
: Kelly, a native of Mississip'pi,
was elected June 1988 the11ewest
me mber and only American in
ihe · prestigious international
··Chamber' of Couturiers and Fa·
sh't on after being proposed by
established designers Pierre
Berge and Sonia Rykel.
· He died Monday of a bone
disease and a brain tumor, hts
friends said. Kelly had been Ill
for several months and was
una ble to present his ready-to·
wear collection at the ·Paris
shows In ~Iober .

•

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:-J~.-:~:.~.~ ~ ~~.1.!..~~!~~~ sALE s7n
~~.'~i::~ ~~.~~
SAlE S1177

. . . . . . ;. . . .

Reg. S1 ~99 Oak Cont1111porory
$
5 Pc. Suttt-....................................... ~SALE 1·077

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___ -"-· .,_--l.iglll·

AUTOMATIC · WASHER

_,._...,,

•IA .. OIMIIo _ _ C,...•4W.
J . . . . T. . . C t'IIIIIIMfer

2W.h.l ..........

... IJ09 .00

WllllPOOL ElECTRIC DRYER

Sllpll' Salt $4 39

.

LorooLAiof eop.-yo IM. .IIIoTypo• Dl••

Auun•loDRY·Mtlllle C-al• Urn
DU~WHITE• ,- . , • -

BG. sm.oo

..

s..« Scirt $299

GLID~·R .ROCKEi
SALE ·
. .
Conatruoted of IOIId oak and aolld
alder with revenlble cuahione.
. . . utlful fabrlca 10 eocent any

decor.

Enhanc&lt; the beaury of your .horne with ·your choice of an el&lt;pntly
•vied deolt by OM!. Each io aocemed with br""Piated.hordwort mel
finished in DMI'o own Oyma guard protective finishing prOCI!III to inou...,
limb._ and durobiiiry •'lainst manv spills and staiN.~

JatJIItg S•l•
KNEE-HOLE DESKS OAK-PECAN-PINE

IIG. 1149.00 . ......................- ................SALE 1119
.. aa. •219~10. ._.......-~............-~
· ........ _ SALE *22 '
lEG. •nuo ____................................ SAlE sm.
....
.
*219

FBE DIUVEIY

•••

'149

STORE
HOURI

t.so:::Z.~
T-..s.t. , ,

,.,o ...s.oe,.

..

�,.

'

..

Paga

10-lhe _Dtlily Slntinei

on

B:r Ualte4 p.._ IDterutloaal.

'

'.

STOR.E tiOURS .
Monday thru S,unday '
8 AM-1 0 .PM

0 '

Ar:, ..

298 .SECOND ST;
POMEROY, O.H~.·
PRICJ:S.EFFEcnvE suN., oec~·· 31 THRU SAT., JAN. 6, 1990

· .TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M; to S P.M•.
a · ~.~ unJii .NOON SATURqAY .
.
· ' · CLOSED SUNDAY

.

•

c

.MiXED

_Fryer Rarts ••••••• ~~,~~ 19 C.
Whole fryers •••.•~ •• ·59(.
.

.

· FLAVORITE

.·

·

.

·

.

.

.

· '.

.

',·Slied Bacon ••••.••:.•• $.1

.•

POLICIES ,
'Ada OlJta.de Meigs, ~lia or Mason coUnties must be pre·-

paid.

'AecMH! $ .ftO,dtscounl lor ads paid m 11dvance.
'Fr . . ads
Give.wey end foul'ld HI under 15 words will be

• I
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I.

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I
I

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DAV BE'FORE PUBUCATI'ON
-· 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
• . TUESDAY PAPER
2 .00 P.M . MONDAY
· 2'00 P.M . TUESDAV
WEONESDAV PAPER ,
- 2.00 P .M . WEDNESDAY
THURSOAV PAPER
.. 2 '00 P.M . THURSDAY
.. H.tOAY PAPER
·• 2 00 P.M . FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

COPV .D EADLINE .. ·

MONDAY P.i.PER

•

RATES
Ovt; I~ Wpr~·
Rate
.
.20
14,00
r ~o ·
18.00 '
.42
19.00
.60
t13.00
.06/ day
11 .3D/do'i

WordS
15

.P•v•
1
3

16
15
. 16
15

6
10
Mont!llv

Anno unr. t: 111 ent s
1 - Cerd of Thanks , ~
2- ln Memory
!
1
3- Annou.;:ements

7-.,Y•d Stlelpt!d in tdv.tncel
8 - Pubhc Sale &amp; Auction
9- W.,I.d to Buy

Serv1ces

follqwing telt'llhon(!
G•llia Count.., '
Area Coda., ..
i46367381• 245256143379 -

MeiiJlCo~nty
Ar~,.

11 - Help Went«&lt;

12 - Situation Wented
13 - lnaurence
14 -. Bulifl•• Training
.
1 &amp;- Schools &amp; lnatruc:~~n
16 - Aadio. TV &amp; CB Repair
17 - Mitcellen8ous
18 -w.-nted To Do

e~changt·.~ ...
Mno_n Co .. WV

Code 61•

Area Code 304

Gallipolis. · 992 - Middl-n
Ch•hir• ·
Pomtroy
Vinlon
. 985- Chllttr
Aio Grenda 843 - Ponl~nd
Guven Dilt. 247- letart Fall1
Arebia Dlst. 949- fbQne
Welnut
742- Rutland
617 - Coofville

17&amp;- PI . t»teaalint
458- LeGn
676 - Apple G,ove ·
773 - M••on
882- New Hften
896- letarl
137 - Eluffelo

61 ~Farm Equipment .:.

62 - W.nted to Buy
63- live stock
64 - Hav &amp; Grain

35 ;-:,lot&amp; &amp; Acre~~ge

6 -·Lostand Found

pagt•s cover rh(•

&amp; Livestock

3 1- Busin•• luildin.gJ

Em~loym e nt

Clu.~.~ifit•tl

F~rm Stipp lie s

Real Est ate
31 - HOmta for :$ .. e
32 ..... Mobile Homn tor Sale
33 - Farms tor S"ie
'

4- Gtve.wty
S - t1tppy Ads

R ..n ere lor c:on•a.tive runs. brokenupd•uwill be charged
for each d-w •• sep¥ate arh

run 3 d..- sat no ch•ve.
. 'Puce of ad f01 all c:..,ullelteu IS doubfe price of ad C0$1
'7 pomt line type Oftty uMd .
'Sentinet it not rnponsible tor IHfOfl after tint d., . IChedl.
tor ..-ron firtt d., ad nrns tn paper! . Call befOfe 2:00p. m .
d~ attttr pubhc:Mton to make C:offection.
•Ads thM must be paid 10 adw1nc;e •••
C1rd ot.thanks
,..appy Ads
. In Memoriam
Yard Sal•
'A c:l•silied adverti.. meru plaCed in The Daily Sentinel (ell ·
c::eP,I
clatlified diapl-v. Bulin au Card. and legal 1;11nieesl
will also IPPIIIf' tn· the Pt . PIW•ant Regiat•lf and the Galli·
, polt&amp; ~aily T.r ibune. ,e.chi~'Q over 18,000 homn.

.

'

bly In ~9~ Imposed a total ban on B'!ckln1 htto the ~ ...
taking rockfish as striped bass
grew scarce lil'lhe bay and Its · MINNEAPOLIS (llPII
A
tributaries.
..
· Minneapolis man backed Into the
The Legislature two years ago new year.
.
·
permitted rockfish farmlngoper·
Anthony Thorton walked 95.7
atlons to be set ·up across the miles backwards be!ween 12:30o
state-and decided to allow those !hilL Sunday and 12:15 , p.m .
hy6rld rockfish to be served in Monday. Thorton bettered his
Maryland restaurants beginning pe~lormance of the previous
Jan. 1.
·
year when he walked nearly 90
While Maryland has several miles backwards.
roc.kflsh farms on the..,E;astern
Thorton lrudged 'back and ,
Shore, those fish are not yet big for)h &amp;Gross- the Washington
enough to b~ 'served In Avenue foo tbridge on the Unlver·
restaurants.
slty of Minnesota campus. ·

• The Area's. Number 1 Marketplace

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11

,.. .

Classifie

..Z1 • Bu•in•• Opportunny
22 - Mon·. ., to Lo•n
23 · Prof• lienal Set'vi cltS

36 - Real htate Wanted

65 - Seed &amp; Ferul il:ar

'.41 - Ho U.. , for Rent
42 -- MObile Homa for Rent
43- Farma tor Rent
44 - APartment tor Rent
45 - Furniah.cl Rooms
46 - ~p~~ce tor Rent
47 - ~ted to Rent
48 - ~tJuipment for Rent
49.-For Lo•e

Me1chandise
51 - HouMhold Goods
52 - Sporting Goodl '
13 - Antiquel
54- Misc. Merch""dise
s ·s...-Building Suppli•
66- Peu tor Salt
57 - Music::ellnatrumen11
58 - Fruits • Vevel•bl•
59 - For Sale or Trade

Transportation

~

71 ---; Autos for Sate
72 - Truck• for Sale
73 - Vans S. 4 WD ' s
· 74 Motor~ C IIfd
75 - Boeta S. Motor1 tor Sale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acc::enori•
77 - Auto Repair
78 - Camp.n g Equ1pmern
7~ - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

Services
Q1 ·- Home lmprovemenu
82 -- Piumb•ng I. Hul ing
83 - Eac ... aHng

8!4 -- Eiec:tric .. . &amp; Refrtguration
Haulmg
86 -MobileHumeRepau
8 7 ..--Upholiterv

85 - Gt~neral

FLAVORtTE

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.W1eners•.••••••••••••••••
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LB.

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IESTAUIANT

Is still owned and

.•)

PLUMBING &amp; HEADNG
Now location:

operated by-Millie

··· ua North S.C...
Middleport, Olio 45760

Duncan.

· · ,La

For Good 'Homr "
Cookln• Com.- ~.. l lt!

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

HOURI• I AM·8 FM Dally
CLOSED 'IUIIi' lAV

1 ..$ 1.29
L1nk Sausage •••.•.•

W. C•rrv·filtung luppll~·

Your Phone
,c~~~a a ill• Here

.i

B~LLAR~'S ·1-LB. ROLL or . 0~~:.·

IISIIISS PIIONl
16141 9'2-4550
IIESIDDICI

I

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t i

I .i ,

·. $· 9
Lunch Meats •••••.••. 13 .

FLAVORITE _1-LB. ASSORTED

..

I

$. 29
R1bs •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ~ ·

CO~NTRY .STY~E

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:Pork Steak ...... ~•... $1~'29
.

La• .

L HOLLON
. TRU(IUNG
CHES\'11, OliO

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•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

DEER
CUT AND
dlPPED

(614) Ht.n..

BUILDERS

MAPLEWOOD

.
LAKE
614-949-2734
or
In

CUSTOM BUIT

1

HOIIS &amp;GAIAG£S

"AI lttasonable PriceS"
PH. 949-2801
:or Res. 949-2860
i
Day or
NO SUNDAY

In Memory Of
Arnold J, Hupp •
Who Laft ·Us

aoa

WYI
POMEROY, OH.
. 992·2269 ..
E.M....

'.

F2LA:~ORITEM,· ·~· ~ ,k·.
I~

•

.,

"'

'$

'
......
·••••••••••••••

79

1,

.
9
4
5
Amer. C-heese.~:!·:!G• 1 ·

FLAYOR~TE

IND. SLICES

·

.

$·

.

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STOKELY CANNED

.

FRESH BAKERY ·

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:

$•

69
Donuts·...........r:!E:... . .1

Vegetablesi!~~:-~·:.5/ 2
4 ROLL PAK .
• .. - .. ·- .$ AS~ORJED EXTR~~~I~E BANQUET .. $ ·
99
.
119
..
oz.
.
·
1
N.orthern T1ssue ••• .· . Dinners .•................
~r

. .

.,

'•

·.,

11.4-19

#

MRS. limrr•liinir

#P17-01·0~·

Buy 1 24-0z. Btl.. •
Get 1 24-0z. ltJ, ·••

FREE ···

FREE ..

Good Only AI Powllll's Super Valu
0
Good Sun. Dec. 31 thru S.t., Jan.,• ·'' •

STARKIST
·TUNA .
'

·

• •

49C

•.

Gotll W-. Dtc. S1 IIIII Sit. ,_ 6

'

·.· .
!

''h0~: .

•lilt•• ·. CAN ··
·
·o .- Only At ,....,, s.r v•

•••

992-2156

,, .· . .

•

PANCAKE SYRUP · ·.

MIDDLEPORT - II! story
Irain e home with 4 bed·
rooms, separate 2 car gar·
age w~h room above, and
extra lot, satellite dish and
mort. $~7.000.00.

.

NEW ~LIMA ROAD- Vacant
acre lot in Harrisonville.
$~.500.00.

.

I

n. RT. 33 -

Right on Kingsbul)' Road. 2 acre .buiding
sles. Wrlef &amp; etectnc avail•

ble. MAKE OFFER, TERMS

AVAJI.ABt.E. $6.500.00.

POMEROY - S.R. 33 -

One Acre bllilding or m~le
home lot$. water olo electric
available. Land contract wih
down, 15% interest fD&lt;
· yeBJ term. Monlhly.pay·
ments of $101.06 on bal·
ance of $4,500.00. Total
Price $5,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Here iS alit
60d 13. Y011 can set 2traillrs
011 and lillie 1 pxl rental inrome. Has electric, water and

still:

In my heart you
hold a place
No one else .c an
·ever fill.
·It b~oke my heart
to Jose you,
But you did not go
alone,
For part of me
went with you
The day G~d took
you home • ..
Sadly missed by
Wife, Ions: Sons,
and

.N"'' N• r•'
F"" ew. w,

'"'"''

.NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

Basham 'Building
EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

DUMP TRUCK
Sand·Stone-Dirt

(6141 667-3271
Grant

A. Newlariil'

7·18.'89-lfn

90 DAY WAUANTY

•REFRIGDtATOR5-Il00 up
IIAIIGES-Gis-Eioc.-1125 up
FREIZER5-$1Z5 up ·
MICRO OVENS-$79 up

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE ·.-·

· 992-5335 or 985-3561
Acra.. ,,_ Pest Offko
.PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE lo horlby gl•en
. that on , Seturdlly, Januory
lth, 1989, 1111D:DOe.m., o
, public 01lo wll be hold It •
1D5 Union Awnue, Pom•
rOy, Ohio, to Mil lorc•hthe ·
following colllllorel:

8.

1a87 Chevrol.t Spoc:trum
J81RGIS170HB401123
Tho Formoro Bank ond

llvlneo Com-. Pom•

nry, Ohio, ,...._ thio right

to bid 11 lhla Mle. and to
wllhdr- tho obove .Otl•
terel prior to Olle. Further,
The Fennoro Bank ond Bevlnlll Compo~ny ,..,.,.. tho

right to reject ony or ott bldo

IUbmlttod.
.
Further, the abovo coli•
tore! will be aotd·ln the co.,.
dltlon It Ia In with. no ex·
pre..od or lmptlod werron·

CHIPWOOD
WANtED

w. !=1i.lnc.

,_.,.....

PH. 992-3.561

s1511 per ton
Buy,'ng H.ourl:
. 7,30·8.00 .
· Mon.
Fri.
7:30·4:(!0

J&amp;L

tloo/.lven.

(11 , 4, &amp; 3tc ,

....., ....,•• o.

Wanted '

11

CLINICIAN ·- Part·tlme politlon avalla.b le
with a flaxibl8 aohedule. Individual who
po....... a Ma8t•'• _
J )eg,.. II'! Ql!!dance
and CounHIIn·g . PSychology. Social Work
with a .doounMmted polt 2 yeal't clinical _.
aupeflilllon
P!'tferrect. Work available·,'
In ralldentillelte with adult women In •rly
. recovery. PM•rrecl cartHied addlctlont
coun ...ar or eligible for !mrnedlate certlflcetiOn. MUll demonatrate etrontr commit·
. IMnt to'
,.,iew ava·
temtand ilublt.,...abuaa recovery. Negotiable ....ry r.nge dependant on operl·
ancl.,tlicetlon. Plea.. fBIPOnd to' lea· .
'-\' Pla. .rlng, M.H.S.A.. C.A.C., Director
of Operation• with ...ume, cov• lett• and

tt•

'

ShoP..·
: Wh~re

:-":!'=':~

Factorr CWo

12 Gaugt Shottllll• Ontr

Strictly El1forced

10-!1-1111

•SHRUB . &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVI.\L
. '
•LIGHT HAULING
•

•FIREWOOD

' BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

VlNYL SIDING •
VlNYL IEPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

RUTLAND
SALES and
SEIVICE

MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER

RACINE
GUN ClUB
' GUN SHOOT

·742-3011
•Tire Sala•
··Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change &amp; Lube

•Brake Work

MAIN ST., nn.1111u

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

·97 .-EcH mm, MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

Locattd 'RirN llo..• lolow 54fl*.' Allltrlce lltxt

I

EVERY SUNDAY

•

5f11111 at '1:00 P.M.

HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 12:00 to IS p.m .
Beturdily 9 8.m: to 12 noon

Ftx lory Chokld 12
Gauge

CALL

STREET
PIZZA

KOUNTRY
GOLf &amp;

LOWEST PRrcES
IIGHEST QUALITY
FRU lOU.l M\l'nl':
POMEROY AND NIUIDUPOIT'S ONlY ·
LOCAI.L Y OWNED PIZZA $HOP.
Pizza~Subs-~lads-l)aily S~ials .

TROPHY
SHOP

•N-Orlpe
•Ctubl
tomiz41dJ

FREE ESTIMATES

:. ' . . ·:·992~2228

. 992-2772

RACINE GUN SHOP ·

4"" •••1ow

11. .

uc-. •o

GUNS·
12 Ga. DEER SlUGS ... S2.20 ...
GUITARS &amp; .GUITAI stRINGS

•nee

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Frlcley .
Saturchly I em-a pm

thr.. profellional Nfe18ncelto P. 0. Bo11
724, Athena;·OH. 411701, 8'14-1594·3611.

9490:2161
•

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.

. SPECIAL ACCOUNTS POl
NON-PROFIT GROUPS

llginning Sept. 17

--tablllty. '*"

,,, '

I

BUYING AWMINUM ·CANS. GLASS,
· PLASTIC. COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM, RADIATORS AND MORE

PH.

..

· Sanaa Shop,. r.

4/1/H/ dn ·

INSULATION

sewer. mooo.oo.

Henry E. Cleland-992-6191
J11n Tll!SMII-:-149-2660
Jo HUI-915-44&amp;6
Olfi-992·U59
OUR 190 sALES •owiE
HAS BEEII GOOD AIID It .
REED PIOPERTIES TO
SELL, lOT JUST
ADV£RTISED.LIST WITH
CLEI.AIID llAI.TY FOR
THE lEST IUULTSit

.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

WASHER$-$100 up
DRYER$-$69 up

A million times
I've needed you.
A million times
I've cried .
If love could have
aaved you.
You nev•r would
have died.
In life I loved
. dearly,
In death I love you

DOZER
ITEVI,ORK • ROADS
CLEARING

USID APPLIANCES

Jan.4. 19B7

Buy 3 20~0z. Btl. Get 3

-

. New Year'a wrd =d • baby
bOIIn for &amp;line • ..,..
AUSTIN. TeXJIS 'IUPI) -New
Year's weekeacl proved to be a
baby boom for Ron Thompson,
who saw three daughters give
bl~th to rour hoys Ilite Sunday and
early Monday: ·
And; one of the new arrivals,
J~ftl~Y ~drew Thompson

We Reserve The Right TO
Limit Quantities

LOTSA POP

..

The Deify Senti-tel- Pag1

Seven bouts later. her prophecy ' Rockflah retlli'IIS to ~arylaiHI
proved true. The third sister, ....-&amp;a~~ranlll
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI,) · ..Carol, hustled her to Seton,
where J~n gave blrlh to Jeremy Rockfish raised on aqua farms In ·
Andrew, who weighed 6 pounds Pennsylvaifla have returned· to.
10 oun~~·
'Maryland restaurants.
Mlddleton'sTavernlnAnnapo- .
· Then It was Carol's tum. The
24-year-old WOJ'!IIn went Into liS Monday served some o~ the
labor several hours later, giving • first rockfiSh In Maryland since
birth to as yet unnamed twin the state Legislature banned the
boys. The first was born at 2: 55 · .. harvesting of the endangered
a.m. The second ' came two species In the Chesapea~e Bay
minutes later.
.
live years a_1!!l.
Seeker; who dellverl!d all four, · .In Oct~er, Maryland's water·
said, ''It's been a busy day."
· men ·will be allowed to catch
- --;
striped bass for one month.
The Maryland General
Assem. '

mendarlz, was tl!e flrat ball)'
bOrn In Austin In the 1990s; sald
. Seton hospital spokeswoman
M.A. Bengston.
.
1t all' sjarted New Year's Eve
mornlng;when Mary Tolson. 28,
of Dallas, gave blrtll ..to Shane
Taylor Tolson, who welg~~ 7
pounds 9 ounc:es.· When Tolson
went Into lllbor, she' asked her
19-year-old sister, Joan Thomp- ·
son, to drive herto the hospital. .
Joan was also In her nlnlh month ·
Qf pregnancy.
At TOlson's delivery, Dr. Chris
Seeker $Bid Joan told him, "You
will pta~ly be seeing

Quirks in
the news

.
contlnue

I

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Pomeroy-Midd'aPon. Obio

freedom

BEIJING (UPI) - China dis·
missed Wedn~ay as "specula·
lion'' reports of a deallo free the
country's leading dissident from ·
refuge In the U.S. Embassy but f
Western diplomats and Chinese
sources said the negQtlatlons i
w11re continuing.. .
. The Chinese Foreign Ministry
.statemern came after a Hong .
Kong magazine reported the ·
dissident, astrophysicist F1ang ·
Llzhl, and his wlte, r.l Shuxlan, '
would be allowed to leave tor
Australia under an agreement
negotiated with tM United
States.
An Aus trallan government spokesman In Canberra denied !he
. report. But the Chinese state.. ment fell short of a flat denial and
appeared to leave the door open
for a bargain.
''The only way · oul lor.. Fang
Llzhl and Ll Shllxlan Is to plead
guilty Immediately and mend
their ways so as. nofto alienate
themselves from the people," the
Foreign Ministry said.
Speculation about the couple's
release has Intensified since
President Bush's ·controversial
lnlllallve last monlh to Improve
relations wilh Beijing. The ad·
ministration Is known to want
concessions from China to stave
' off sharp critiCism In Congress.
Fang and Ll ·have lived In the ·
U.S. Embassy since taking ni·
fuge th!!re last June 5, two days
after the Chinese army fired on
pro-democracy protesters In
Beijing and brutally suppressed
the massive demonstrations !hat
swept !he nation last spring.
A week later, Chinese au lhorl·
ties Issued arrest warrants for
Fang and Ll, charging they
Ins ligated what !he government
has branded a "counterrevolu·
llonary rebellion." If captured,
the couple face lengthy prison
·
terms.
"The recent rumors about the
queslion of Fang Llzhl floating
around abroad and overseas a;e
speculation pure and simple,"
the Chinese Foreign Ministry
statement said, reiterating that
the embassy refuge was "Interference In China's Internal
affairs."
Western diplomats and Chi·
nese sources, allhough unaware
of the details of !he talks, said ·
negotiations had been under way
for some tlme·a nd appeared to be
nearing a conclusion.
"II looks like something may
happen w1thln the nextlO days,"
one diplomat said, adding the
couple would be allowed to leave
for a third country, bu I the
deslinallon had not been fixed.
The U.S. Embassy has declined to comment on Fang.
Senior U.S. officials In Beijing
privately have even attempted to
play down reports from Washington quoting admlnlsU'allon officials as saying a deal had been
concluded.
The · Chinese statement appeared to leave room for some
form . of bargain, saying "this
problem · can · only be solved
according to !he laws of China"
and the United S!ales was
"obligated to work for Its
settlement."
·
Western analysts believe the
Fa.ng Issue has become a dispute
between moderate Chinese; leaders seeking Improved relations ·
with Washington and hardliners
arguing that allowl.ng the cou·
pJe:s release ~ould show a lack of
resolve.
Communist Party leader Jiang
Zemln told visiting Hong .Kong
newspaper executives last .
monlh that Fang would have to
show "repentance," suggesting
the leadership was seeking a
face-saving device as a catalyst
for releasing the couple.
The Bush administration also
faces a time problem, as Con·
gress resumes session Jan. 23.·
amid simmering outrage over
last o.tnonth's surprise trip to
·Beijing by National Security ·
Adviser j;lrent Scowcroft In a bid
to Improve relations.. C,:rltlcs
. have derided the move as
"kowtowing."
Bush has also ~!nee eased ·
economic sanctions Imposed .af·
ter June, freeing the export of
three U.S.-made !UIIellltes to be
l.l~unched by Chlr)a . .
China .~as so far made only
minimal concessions, granting
long-delayed foreign . press ac'credltatlon to a new Voice of
• America corresl!Ondent, with·
drawing machine · gun-toting
1111&amp;rdl ftom around U.s. Em- .
.,. busy bulldlnp and halting ha·
rassment of U.S. diplomats.

.. .

-- ---·-··

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.....

. ----·······-

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LAFF·A-DAY

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Pom;ioy
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51

'N' CAJII.VLE;e by Larry WriPt

Television
Viewing '

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• . WED., JAH, 3

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I VINING

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I VIcinity

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44

Wanted to Buy

~~~~~ WIIHf 01

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Apartment
tor Rent

a ' d oom
- ..••oo

Junll Otrt ••h Of wlthoul
Call Larry Uvoly ,, ...

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EARN IIONEY typing II 530,000 yoor ..........
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Ellm hOO • IIOD por wialo.
Adding Booka II holM. CoP 1·
511-t?S-7440 Ext . . . . .
hOO.fiOO por roodlna 1ioo1uo II - . CIIJ·1·

Ellm

811-4lt-7440 Ext. 1111.

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l1 :msportal1011

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Phontl04.f7"'!0M.

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Ctllllrellon Zubil\ Mehta
conducts tho Los Angeles

tr I lllliiW - - . . L 'For

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AND He.Rel:. .AI.

Phlllllrmonlc. Th• Joltery
Balle!, the Los Angeles
Maallr 'Chorale and the
raownld violinist Midorl are
feii!UIId. (1 :301
1111 eiiJ Jak• And TIM

ITCAN'T'Be

MINE!... MINE
WAS VICia.IS,
13UTCL&amp;\N.

L.E:TTER FROM

ONE'OFQ.JR
VJE!-WEORS.. .

~)
Furnllhed
Rooml

F-n Old nioney and
corpol'lte takeovers Is a

) ·

backgrounc! tor murder.

'utllnltcllon. s,ipd. -*Iva;

11~7720-

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goo~~,

......good, 1371.114 .......

·-=;

(JJ •

GOVIJNIINT MIZID N let•

......
......... =-·=
====I···

12 Run rampant 4 Blissful

IF.SNUFFY MAKES ONE MORE
REMARK ABOUT MY WIIIIHT;
. I'M PACK IN' UP AN' tiDIN' HDMI It

IIIII- ~-··
....,.._ Aloo-

·

FATStJit

monkey

• ()) Gil Quantum Leap

river
·" 33Gioomy
341ndua

a
(J) CltlftlleiiCII

lllllaeman
:fTHeadWear
3t ..

McMurphy llama lhot lr•
love 'Cin exact 1 hllvy
emotlanll

:£

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A~Fl~:W'
· hOI!* tltll apec:lll which

41

by miiMng S1.25 to

-

to-Graph, ' hive to

c/o IIIII MWIPIPII'.' P.O. Box 81428.
Cfeveltnd, OH 44101·3428. Be oure to

'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

llato yout ZOdlle algn.
AOUAIIIUI (,_ 2Heb. 'It) Gtlllrd
llgllfnlllndiMilonl tod1y to tnttt your
rii(IOIIIIblltltl too lightly. Don't lei

1111m lntllllldato or i M I - you. but
It IIUt ~ tfllm lho reiPIC( tltar
dill " ·

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to .any tit

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for U. tine L'1, I for lhe two O'a, etc. Slnlle lettera,
. , • ...,..,.. the leactli...t r.,.uon ci the warda are all
M , lllleh daJ tile liodllettm Ire different.

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ANO'M!:R YEAlt IS

:n..-. Ill Tlkultlnl
time

fOGk IIyaw up~ttdltuiW II IIIII
10
Cllllltll. . Whltlllr or not you'relltlllnfl
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113

AXYDLB.UXR
IILONOFILLOW

e.......
0 !lfi..WIICII Tonight
• Clft llltga

Here'• hcJw to wort It:

2

•

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•-ell

10:3lCll Haw.. lteh
(!) Alt And Vlalon 01 -

Dl "IGftiiDtl.wllhulllrtor .........
llllgllltly 10 ,_.you- mlllnkll.,..
11011. VertiY fltotlwftll ....... _

•

"Some days I get so depressed I feel like...
llke...flying
.
- into a car windshield!''
,
.

(AMi,

DAILY CRYPTOq(JO'I D-

10:0111) MOVIE: Throl Vloflnt
Paopla (2:001

TAUIIUS(_.••••IIIIH'abellnot
to llllleW -rthlnfl you ' - tocl8y,

'.

Read the

with p.opto todar wltOM

hope to .l llllngln tt.mony, d~·t­
on too 11rong. 8trlft, to be !ll*"'
mlndld.
LIO (.IUIJ II-AIII. II) DO not r-'1' too
, heaVIly upon your Intuitive petCIPtlonl
todar. blc 1 . . tttar could bllaufly. Try
to IXIIIdne PI DIJIIIIII from I logicll
perapectlvl
'
·. ¥1100
KMp aix:urate
In -

PII C18 (Ptill, • P1 1!11 . , Vow: bud·
flel COUld . . . be doni In II thll tlmiM
you trat • ffkt a a.crap 01 paper .""d
yield to IKII a 1g111t whiml ot lho mq. .
!Mnt. ~ IXPI!'~. don't generate ,

thom.
'
..,_, (llariii11-Aprll1t)ln 1 orttiCII
. , . . . , _ tOday pt 1111g11t 1a11 you,
haW fill In IN Jiafl upon whloh to
' ·bank. HOI'III/Ir, thla oould be wflhiUf '
thlnklnfl ~I G • your lifO a.d 1111)1 bl

~

FolloW ~

44Paulve
45 Pleaaurable

IIJivenlngHewa

oplnl- .arelnconfiiC1wt1hyourt.,Hyou

:&amp;:n

....... hllarloul look lithe

avtriiQI !lllliena reactton to

..

JYIKPIRI l . . oati0111tiid•

.CANCIA ,. . .

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11:t0()) MOYII:

.,

31 Hallen

Sam mutt atop • lgvely
polllical rtvolutlonlry from
bombing • lib.

•

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eKplretton
dale
29Load
30 Squirrel

(J) Aliftlllltg 11111 L.o\18

Ralllrtlort

(JJ •

·.

26Beyond

in a hotel. Q ,
10:00 ()) 700 Club With Ptt

LET'S GO
FI5HtN',

setting

14 Welcoming
5 Seealde 20
_;_
Inky
word
8 Terrllory 22 Arab land 34 Outbursl
(abbr.)
24· 35 Algerian
· 18 Formic
· acid ·
7 Ukraine
speedwell city
. prOducer
legislature
{plan!)
36 Appraise
17 Sheepish
8 British
25 Athena's 38 Sicilian .
sound
river
title
volcano
18 Arrow
9 Left
26 Sir Carol 40 Precious
polson·
11 Perfume
llem
2,1 Downright . 111 Microscopic (dlreclor) 42 Rink
23 Swordsman's17 Shed teara28 Singe
covering
token
18 Length
30 Canadian 43 ' Manana"
27 Like
. by wld\h
river
songstress
some lots

Hannah Inc! Mlrty are forced
to epend tho night togethlf

·--f1)1N.f17
~~~..,.,

okl books

.

13 Enctrcle

Mlclllll anc! Joey lOCk horns
with NIColl about dating. r:;J

tm; 1m"'"' LTP.,~.

=:..*!.....~

a

IOl Ulrry Kina U.OI
0 MOVIE: The FOIQOHIIII
(2:00) 5111'10.
' .
a!INt.tMIIINow
t:30e()) 11J1 My Two Dedi

, . . fold - I .100; U

55

eCil 0ooa11 HOw-,

DOWN
1 Way off
2 Psychla·
. 'trial's
group
(abbr.) .
3 Like some

of papers

.

M.D. Vlnnilllllks Doogll Into
. competing on 1 TV qulz ·
show.
Cll (!)'(ow Anatllt Mutlc
. ~~ 21th J.nnl¥. ·
.

POOl! lOY 1111D ~ . •

1114 ......~::.3~
ac.-.
....

45

Making a joke of an
assignment, Dennis
lntiGOIIIZII T.J. r:;J •
IBWMkur
1:00 e ()) Gil Highl COIH1
Chriatlnl take&amp; stock ot her
romanO. will! Delecllve Tony

"lX) .R€fE,RR(IJ(5 . .
1b CHIIJA. Sl~ ?

~lf.MW~O:,

.'.

. ACROSS .
1 Meet a
dice bet
5 Trifle .
10 Footless
animal
11 Bunde

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Thl JtrMwkera.
(2:001
. .
1:30 (JJ e (J) Hlld 01 TfJI Clan

•·

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I5£LIE\,{. 'TAA1' -~
CAIJ ,~1E ' fl ~IJG
r&lt;:JRQ61J. R:x.IC."t'·Wl\L ().£

t OOIST

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F,lrrn Supr:!lr",

t , ,
~.':. ~ ,.,, 11""

by YHOMAS JOSEPH

a convo..- With Dl,.h

j

-

!Millo ...... 'i'llr, ·7

'

CROSSWORD

fiJ)PrtmeNo'"
0 MUlder, Slla Wroll Mr.

and lila - · ;:::'::~.:...:;.:·;.:.•c.;·::·
111 Ill iliA - - IM"~L

33 Fanna tor Sale

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Merchaildl•

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Wlftted e•

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torSa·-

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IE.AUTlFUL AMRTMINlW llr
IUDCIIT PRICII AT JACKSON
HTKrES, 1:11 Plu

I lll*loy

GOT rti'T'O

SfNSO~Y IJip~IVAjiON
eY ACCft&gt;tNT" - .. ;r
l'lA~((IiP GioteGf.

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OOIIIPI.. t 143.21.

Employment Serv1ct&gt;s

AVON I All

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Ctth Pllld. CoP 114'11H117 .,
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JAMES
EAST
WEST
•, ·
'JACOBY
+K
+Q 5
• A 10 3.
Wben you bid a close garne, you • J 7f&gt;
+Q10 9 63
tKH4
hope that all your hlgb cards are work·
.
K97f&gt;
.QJ
8
2
lfl&amp;. U ootbing is wuted, 10 tricks will
· 7:30 e ()) F1mU, F often eorne rolling in. Unfortunately
SOUTH
(JJ E-lnllllflt T~nlght
deelarer wasted bls ellort by trying
+A 10983 2
• Cll USA Todlly
.K 9 8
for a iwindle play rather than for a Ia·
t8
vorable distribution of carob. West led .
~JIA·T·~Irdyl r:;~
. A 10 4
a
diamond.
Declarer
rose
with
durnfiJ) Crouflrl'
my's ace and lrnrnediately led the jack
Vulnerable: North·South
®NBAielkeiiiiU
of
spades
frorn
durnrny.
He
hoped
t.hat
Dealer: West
7:31(1llenl0rd And Son
East would cover the jack wltb the •
1:00 ()) MOVIE: Tile Fulfla (2:001
West North East
doubleton king or queen, thus crashing South
• ()) Gil Untolved
Pass
Pass
It
his
partner's
lone
honor
under'lhe
ace.
My1..,._ Examine a case
1+
H
3+
Pass
No
such
luck.
Declarer
now
led
a
club.
Involving 1 young woman
4
+
All
pass
.
West won the elgbt, cashed the queen
who dltappearld 8 years
of spades and alted with a diamond.
Opening lead: +4
Eventually the defense took two heart
Cll Growln!l Peine
....
Mike and Kate laiT lor each
tricks to ~~et the contract.
· .
other while rehearsing a love
The correct play oilers good Le-a-sy""'f""or.....,.de_c,..
la""re-r-:t-o-m-a'~"ke.,...,..tw-oco:hear
chances
for
succeu.
Win
the
ace
of
di·
tricks,
but
W
est mighl cause South tl ·
~';) icovtr: Wolfd 01 . amontls and rufl a diamond. Then lead go wrong by leading
the jack of hearts .
Sctenc1 This program ·travels
a low club. U the defenders play an· 11 declarer decides that West hOlds J
to Grell Blltaln and viSits 1
otber club, win the ace and ruff a club. 10 of hearts, he .will play low froq' .
IMeh farm. r:;J .
Rulf dummy's last diamond and then dummy, and East will later make tw&lt; Ill ei!J -uty AIICI TIM
1011 Burch bltraye Vincent
plaft ace and a spade. West will now be t · ks ·th th A 10 It · ..
Ilk I ·
· ....
ead. Rather than give a sll!ff and a that
riC West
WI
elead
• the
· heart
'' rnore
e &gt;·
11 part o1 1 deal with
""
will
live,
anc·
Gabriel. a .
rulf, West must lead a beart.Of co~rse. now declarer should have no troublE :
e II]) Colege Beakellllll
il you are looking at all the carob, •t ts holdinG his heart losers to one triek.
Penn State vs Rhode Island

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: ptg&amp;-14-The Daily Sentinel ·

BEND

Pomeroy-:-Middeport, Ohio

Wednetciay, January 3, 1980

-

Vour ln~ependently Own4!d
Low·Priced SuperJpar.ket

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Meigs ,f:O!Jnty Sh ~rlff's deputies Investigated a one-ca~
i!CCideht Wednesday morning In Lebanon Tewnshlp. .
Accordl'ng to the report, Junetta Beegle, 16, of County Road
35, RacinE', was traveling. west on County Road 3S In a 1987
ChE&gt;vroJet when she lost control on a p~tch of Ice. Beegle's
vehicle wentoffthe road Ql) the left, struck an embankment and
flipped on Its top.
·
Beegle was transported by Racine EMS to Holzer Medical
Center tor treatment.
,
The vehicle ShE' was driving&gt;was listed .heavily damaged .
Sheriff Soulsby reminds rE-sidents to make a record of serial
numbers of various Items so there wlll bE&gt; a''fecord should the
Items _be stolen: "It Is very Important that you be able to prove
ownership," Soulsby says. SE&gt;rlal-numbers are Important In this
regard.

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#116 '

1 Wlth, &amp;ddiltiaRtal ;urchaH

BEEF STEW

· Ferrellgas in new location

ULTRA
DIAPERS

· 24 02. CAN

Ferrellgas which has been located In Minersvllle has now
moved to the building at thE&gt; Intersection of Route 7 and Union
· Avenue In offices formerly occupiE-d by theOhlo Employment
ServicE&gt;. The phone number remains the same. All services are
being offered from the new location.
,

$999
. 101

No one hzi~t in Meigs actiderz.t ·
The Gallla-Melgs · Post · of · the StatE&gt; Highway 'Patrol
lnvestlgatred an accident at 9:40a .m .. Wednes.d ay on CR. 5. 0.4
of a mile east of milepost 7. No one was lnjilrE&gt;d. .
Troopers reported that Kim W. French. 33., Pomeroy. driving
.a 1984 Ford f!ronco, lost control on the lee. Her vehicle sua left
of center, colliding will!· a 1986 Cavalier driven by Donna R.
Neece, 38, Middleport. Damage was moderatE&gt; to both vehicles.
The patrol cited French tor !allure I omalntaln co.ritrol and not
wearing a seat belt.
Another accfdent occtlr[ed at 7:20 p.m: Wednesday on TR.
135. 1-4 miles south of CR'. 35. No one was Injured. There was no
· cltatkil.
· ·
_,Troo~rs . ~aid a 1977 Buick Electra driven by Howard L.
Continued on page 10
·

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United States and would seek his
harassment"
extradition back to Panama.
Ford, who along with Pres!·
. "We owe It to democracy and dent Gulllermo Endara and VIce
we owe It to the Panamanian President Ricardo Arias Cal·
p.eople to give them due process deron were Installed as Panaof law.'' said Ford following .the rna's leaders soon after the U.S.
surrender of Noriega, who ar- Invasion Dec. 20, sa.ld ·the evlrlved Thursday In south Florida dence Panama has against the
deposed leader "Is going to shock
under i.J.S. guard. ·
' 'He w,lll be charged with so the world; things .that people
many crimes" In Panama, said ; would never Imagine. To me,Mr.
Ford, "murder, , torture. dlsap· Noriega was absolutely mad."
pe a r a nce
o f p e o p 1e ,
Gen. Maxwell Thurman, head
··
,., of the U.S. Southern Commandtn·

Panama and the overall com- ·
mandE&gt;r of U.S. military operations in Panama, said during a
news · confE-rencE&gt; Wednesday
night that Noriega lett. the
Vatican Embassy after 10 days
"of his own wilL"
Thurman said events unfolded
when "we had a contact with our
e)lpert negotiator . . .. and he
received a phone call that said ·
would yo~ kindly report to the
(Vatican Embassy) gate and, we
dld report to the gate."

'.

By CHAR~NE HOELFICH ·
Senll~~el News Staff
1
lt'.s 1~ and we·~ on a roll
, down the pages. of J~iluary.
alreaw.
· •. ·
'. ·
But before 1989 becomes lost In
the .shuttle ot coping with the
January blahs, let'srenect on the
year now passed and consider the
Influence of those · events on
, thlnrs to come.
It was a good year, not a IJ'eat
year; but certainly not a year
'without .leavlrig pr~lle and
c.h allenre tor 1990.
.Beta~ aettlna on Into the NeW
Year, hOWI!Ver, ler'a reneet on
the events of the year !Je.hlnd ua, ·
• so that we can look more clearly
at the dllnp to ~:~~me. ·
laa,IIU')'
Anll.TmUIJonbudietonwhlch
to operate MeJp County government and provide services for

• 11
1

screening clinic. '
A cancer screening clinic wlll
Watching for a change tn bowel
be held on Friday. Jan. 12, from 9
or
bladder habits. for a sore that
a .m. to 11 a.m. at the offices of
does
not heal, tor unusual bleed·
the Meigs County Health Departlog or discharge, thlcke~ or
ment, ·Norma Torres, n!Jrslng
lump In breast o·r elsewhere,
director, announced today.
Indigestion or difficulty In swal·
The ct lntc Is free to Meigs
lowing.
obvious change In wart or
County women with the costs
mole,
nagging cough or
Involved betng paid for from levy
l!oarseness.
funds .~
.
In conjunctlol] with the ctlntc,
the American · Cancer Society.
witt provide educational mate·
rial and support during the
screening clinic.
The clinic Is tlmtted to 12
patients. Appointments are to be
made with the Meigs County
Health Department at 992-6626.
' '
The .ctlnlc serVIces Include pap
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
smear, hemoccult ;· urinalysis,
Sentinel News Staff
, height and weight check, blood
· Robert Barton was elected
· pressure, and a . generalized president and JE&gt;ff Werry, vice .
health' examination.
·
president, of the Board of EducaDr. Mark Brown wtll be the tion of the Meigs Loca1 School
examlntrig· physicians, !lonattng District . at Wednesday night's
his services ' to the clinic; wlih organiZational meeting held In
'Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs, women's the board meeting room.
health care technician, coordl·
While Barton was elected presnatlng the.services. .
Ident by unanimous vote of the
As pointed· out by ~s. Torres, board members pre~nt, Werry
cancer Is · the second cause of was elected vice president by the
death In Meigs ,County. She said '•yes" vote of Robert Snowden·
that white II ' ts on the rise, and Barton. Larry Rupe" votE&gt;d
'nat!Ononwlde,
'
'
It Is one of the "no" and Werry passed on the
most curable of aU major dis· vote: The tilth board member,
~ases If It' Is diagnosed In time ..
~!chard Va!lghann, \\.las not
Early detection of cancer Is one present.
of the alms of the MeigS County
The board also Increased ·ttie
Health Department cancer number of regular meetings per

1989 wa~ adopted by the Meigs
County Co!ltmtssloners.
work bepn on the first phase 1
of CQnverting the former R .. c .. .
Bottling Co. building on North
Second Ave., Mliklleport, Into
neui quarters lor the Rejolclnr
Life Church and Christian
School,
·
·
A S2 mUllon lnvesttnent by
GTE North, Inc. macte 11 possible
for Pomeroy-~ddleport tele·
phone subscrlberuo take advantaP, of totla)''s cclmputerJzed
telephone lervlees.
. ,
A Sl,3H,T79 appropriations resolutlollfor1989wuapproveclby
Middleport Oounell.
Overbrook Center In Middleport received Ohio Department
of Health certltlcaUon.to accept
Medicaid Intermediate level at
care resldentt tor admlnlon.
Melp County Commllalonera

IJ:

•

·Cancer
clinic 's lated
.
Friday,.January 12 ·
Cola Bottling Co.
has preeeated the Chester Elementary Scl10ol with a sports
scoreboard lor the gymnasium. Here HenryThrappof Pepsi hands
over U,e coatrol panel to Ron Hill, head teacher at Chester. Pepsi.
Cola has presented scoreboards to several schools In the are&amp;",
Thrapp liBld.

Meigs Board to .meet

twice ~

a month; Barton is president

M~igs Countians· s~e·· hope

&lt; •

'

.

..,

news bl'iefs .·
'

4 ROLL

ICE CREAM · ·

.'

D~p~iies pr-obe one-car mishap'
.

.

• FLAlORS DAIRY LANE

..

By NANCY .YOACHAM
the matter.
. Department.
·
· Deparu;,ent might no\ garner
.Sentinel News Staff
· The trustees held their organ!·
Another concern stems from any benefit from revenue coiLe,t art Township .resloents are zatlonal meeting this past Tues· . another decision by the tr.ustees lected from Letart 'Township
expressing concern over a Dec. day night and several township at the Dec. 29 meeting to divide residents. At this time, the
29 decision by township trustees residents, as well' as representa· between Racine and Syracuse township and Racine Fire De·
to sign a contract for fire . tlves from both Syracuse and Fire Departments the revenue partment do not have a contract
protection with the Syracuse Racine Fire Departments, at· from a· one·mlll levy for fire of any kind, the person said .
Fire Department .Instead ofwlih tended .that meeting and voiced protection. The one-mliUevy was
Also, there appears to be hard
Racine Fire Department . ·
their opinions to trus.tees.
renewed by Letart, Sutton and feelings 'between the two fire
The contract with Syracuse
According to a person who Lebanon Township residents In departments over the whole
was signed at the trustees' Dec. ;~ttendM Tuesday's meeting, but the November election.
matter, the person from the
29 el)d·o!-the-year 'ineetlng. Re·
declined to ,be quoted, a main
It was the understanding of the meeting said .
· .· · ·
presentatlves of Syracuse Fire · concern Is Over fire protection person who.,.ttended the meeting
Oftlclals from the tire departDepartment · attended thE' Insurance and whether or not the that unless some kind of contract lnents were supposed to meet
.
cost of !Ire Insurance will In· Is' also developed between the )ater this week to try to work out
meeting.
.
In the days . following the .c rease w ·Letart To)Ynshlp rE&gt;sl· township and Racine Fire, De-. :any problems that may have
• Jl~nlo1;of the contract.o,Jnany
den,t$ ll~,1use . ~yracuse Flrt . P!lrlmen!..., b.e.}~1~f.l!l'.,!?~t\()JI _ resl!,l!E\1\.!r.o~. tM, declslol1 of the
• ~1111'1-&lt;·~•lii'jlll'l!~ide~b\iglll!*t"'Dep!u'lrnent Is so ml\«:b ~ar.th~r .tor part oldie yea~t orS&lt;$1!otJier ' trustees. tlfe person added .
.expresslng: ;·th!!lr .cqncerri oyer· .away than Racl;nE&gt; FirE' s~agreenient-RaclneFjre · .
'
·

TIAIL ILAZR

110

-'

Letart . Twp. ··residents express. concern
over trustees· decision ·o n fire contract

SALnNES.

MOlTON HOUSE

'

MANUEL NORIEGA

3 LIS. 01 MOlE

F.OODUND

99(

0

PANAMA CITY, .Panama
(UP!) :.... Ousted Panamanian
strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega, who surrendered to U.S.
authorities 10 days after taking
refuge In the Vatican Em)Jassy,,
Is stlll a . wanted man: ·tn his
homeland.
•
Panamanian VIce President
Gulllermo Foro !iatd he wants
Nqrl~a to face charges In
. Panama regardless· of 'the outcome of hls legal deattngs In the

BOB EVANS

.-~~- z . SAUSAGE .

!if

'

Noriega surrenders; aJTives·
•·
m U. ·.S. to face ·drug .charges

•

· ·

.1"1 , .

•
•

VS. DYKE COLLEGE·, MON., JAN. 15, 1990~ 7:.3 0 P.M.
.

Low tontcht In die 3h.
hlp In lower 4h.

~ Frida)',

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, January 4. 1990 .

. FOODLAND NITE AT UNMRSITY OF RIO GRANDE
REDMENBAsiniAU

•'

0865

Vot.40. No.111
c;opyrightod 18110

·

.

39-3042-23-29-7

,..

.

.·

.

month to two and designated the chase renewal of llablUty msu·
second and fourth Tuesday of ranee for board members, treas· ·
each month it 7 p.m. on the board urer, school admlrilstratlon, .·
meeting room. Board members · cE&gt;rtlfled and non-certified perare compensated at $80 a meet · . somiel. Ms. Fry was also au tho·
lng whether' the meetings are the rlZE'd to secure advances from
ones regularly · scheduled or the auditor and to lnves t Inactive
funds at the most productive
called f!)r a special purpose.
.
The motion to Increase the rates.
ThE&gt;
superintendent
or
his
number of regular meetings
from one per month to two per designee. ~as assigned as the
month passed by a vote 'o f three agent to apply for, re·c elve,.
extend and account lor federal
to one with Rupe voting "no".
funds.
!( service fund of $500 for the
In a 'final action before moving
board was approved, and TreasInto
executive session to haildle
urer Jane Fry was authorized to
pay all bllls as presented provld· personnel matters, the board
lng necessary . funds are . voted to renew membership In
the Ohio School Boards
available .
Association.
The board authorized the pur·

J

in future; face challenge in ·'90.

received approval to put $106;900
.In community development
block IJ'ant ~antes Into the
construction of an elevator . tor
the Melp County Court Rouse.
Work on the new Melp County
Public Library, a $4!10,000 con·
s.tructlon and renovation project
of the tanner Dltimond Savings
and Loan Co., got uooerway.
Solid wute and .Ita manage.
ment became a much talked
about problem and Melp County
Jollied witll several other counIlea to torm . a Solid Waste
Mangement District. ·
Irene Hayman otWeatervWt
widow at Charles Hayman, lonr: ·
time Racine school adminlltra·
tor, presented a gift of •10,o0o to
the Soulherll Local School Dla·
trtctAtbletlcFund.
Jeremy Buckley, Eutllrn Jun·
lor Hlp School student, placed

:)

as first runner-up In . his age
category In the "Why I SAy No to
. Drugs" essay contest.
.
. A donation of $4,935 tor SJ)Or'*
and extra-curricUlar was pres.
en ted bY the Eastllrn, HJal\ School
AthletlcandBand.Boosjer.s tothe
nnancla'ly atrappl!d Board of
Education.
After more than 40 years In
cOnlmunlty newapaper work.
Bob HoefliCh l"!tlrl!d 11 1eneral
manaaer 'of The Dally Sentinel.

,

Pomeroy ·. Vlllage Coullcll
adopted a $1.03 mllUonbudgetfor
the villa2e.
.
.
The 12,4 mill continuing l~y
lor c:uJTent expen1es of the
Eastern 'Looal School Ota trlct
went doi;VII todeteat In a special
E-lection. .
.
The Racine Home National
Bank was robbed and there was
speCIIJatlon that It was the same
·person Involved In a robbery at
the Syrac:uae branch a couple of
months ago.
Up they wept, t~ water rates
A IJ'OUP of Melp County senior
In Syracullt!. Council voted to citizens traveled to Columbus to
ralle the curreat rates by an pardclpatelnarallyat the State
additional dollar. .
.
Houll! Rotunda In suppor.t of the
Edllen Kobltetlllr, retired Elderc:are propillal.
prelident and chairman of the · The Melp ·.c9WitY Board of
.board of dlrectcn at. the Pome- ElectloJ!!I vo~ to eliminate five
roy National Bank and later · votlnjrpreclnctslnthecounty.
associated widl Bank One. died .
Overbrook Center .after walt·
on, Feb. 6.
.
tnr several months wu certified
..

Fe__, .

..

as a skUied nursing facility,
maktna It elfllble to aceept
MedlCIIId and Medicare patients .
~ulrlni t~at level '!f nur1lng.
.•
Middleport Village Council .
adop~ an ordl~ce providing
a4Qcentanhourpaylnc~easelor
vilLage employees.
. .
Marell
The Chester Garden Club ceJe.
bra ted Its 50th anniversary and :
hOnored Its charier members.
Other annlvenarlea celebrated
durlni the month fncludecl Lhe
50th w~dlnr annlver1181'y ol
Gayle and Edu Ptlce, and the
30th annlvernry of Kac
Jewelers.
.
carrie Morrliii!Y, an elgbtb
rtader at Eutern Junior Hlfll
School, emaraecl .11 the 18 .
Melp County apaiiJna bee ,·
champion.
.,
ContinUed on P811! 10

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