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Pomaov-Midrlapat-~ia.

9Jfers a variety of specie8
Dyer, DI;'A
MeipSWCD
~- POMEROY - The Meigs Soil
•and Water ConservatiOn District
Ladles Auxiliary are again this
year offering lor sale tree ·
packets and ground cover plants.
• This years varieties lnclu.de
·quantity bundles of White Pln·e'25
·seedlings for $7.00, Colorado Blue
·spruce 25 seedlings for $7.00.
White Birch 10 seedlings · for
$5.00, Common Purple Lilac lll
ieedllngs for $5.00, • and White
flowering Dogwood 10 seedlings ·
·
'for $5.00. ., .
covering plants in·
. ..... !.. Gro11nd
..

.

r·r:;t;rew
·., · 00d...

elude Crown Vetch. 72' Pialtts tor
$20.00, English Ivy 50 for $15.00,
and Pachysandra 50 for $15.00.
This year we have a WUdfiower
Seed Packet with 1 ounce of seeds .
for $2.50.
·
·
.
All plants and seeds sold are
good for erosion control and
wildlife plantings.
To order any of these packetl,
send your order along with chec~
or money order to Meigs
SWCDLA, P.O. Box 432, }&gt;ome-.
roy, Ohio 45769. Or for further
Information call992·6647. Orders
wUI ~ taken until March 15 or
untU all packets are sqld·.

..
CATHY, WBAY

Continued·from D-1

~---'---D.V.M. ,' Extension Veterinarian
at O.S.U . The article, "Subcllnl·
cal Laminitis In Dairy el!.ttie" ,
takes a look at , a problem
frequently found on maqy dairy
farms. Cattle with unsdnnd feet
may be exhibited as an Increased·
number of cows affected with
sole ulcers and abcesses or It
may. be manifested primarily as
cattle with soft, fast-growing
malformed hooves. Call If you
would like a copy of this article. ·
Reminder of the meeting for
Gallla County beef producers on
Monday evening, ;January 8. Mr.
Gary Short, a cattle feeder from
Archbold, Ohio, will be the guest
speaker. Mr. Short has been
active In . both... the Ohio and
National Cattlemen's Assocla·
lion . . He has currently been
nominated for the Executive
Committee of the Board of
Directors for the National Catlle·
me.n's Association. The meeting
will start at 7 p.m. In the
Columbus and Southern Power
Company meeting room. Plari to
attend.
,
We have a few free tickets to
"Power Show Ohio" to be held at
the state fairgrounds In Colum·
bus, Ohio on J anuar)lo26. 27 and
28. They are free as long as the .
supply lasts.
·'

treat firewood with any pest!·
clde. Spray treatments applied to
the firewoOd will not kill wood·
borers within. Burning any
fusectlclde"treated firewood In·
doors could cause a · potential
liealth hazard due to the toxic
¢heml~al fumes .
·. :· The 1990 corn program may
{lave a new elemerit that some
are referring to as 0/ 25. This Is an
:attempt to bl!ild flexlblllty Into
the program, This new element
may be attractive to local
farmers who want to raise some
soybeans because of Johnson·
grass problems In corli. Produc·
ers that sign up for the 1990 corn
program Will have the option to
plant from 0 .to 25 per centoflhelr
per.m itted corn acres to soybeans
without losing corn base.
: The farmer would be eligible
for· corn loan. target price ~nd
defl~ency payments only on the
llartlon planted to corn. Word is
that slgnup for the 0/ 25 option
" will be available between 1-16·90
$nd 2·16·90. If excessive acres
are signed up in the program, the
Secretary of Agriculture may
·pro-rate the acreage. If Inter·
ested, check with the local ASCS
for offlcal interpretation.
; I just received . an excellent
article, prepared by Kent Hoblet,

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Ohio-Point Pfnant.·w. Va.

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\Vray joins staff
of Southern Hills
Real Estate, Inc.
GALLIPOLIS - Judy Dewitt,
Broker of Southern Hills Real
Estate: Inc., announced Satur·
day Cathy Wray has joined their
professional sales staff.
Mrs. Wray has .completed all
the required licensing courses
required by the Ohio Division of
Real Estate.
For the required real estate
courses Mrs. Wray attended the.
Southeastern Business Coll~ge
and the John Hondros Academy
of Real Estate In Columbus. Mrs.
Wray '1"111 be specializing in
various types ol real estate sales.
Mr·s . Wray, l)er husband, Ronald, and son, Greg reside at6C2
Fourth Ave:, .Galllpolis.

·.
Pick 3
227
.Pick.4
2450
Super'Louo
6-9-18-20-29-32

I 50th

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anniversary

Kicker 352467

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Vol.40, No.1 ia
Copyrithtod 11180

Company spo~esman estimates plant
would mean at least 800-900 jobs
RAVENSWOOD - A chicken
Authority director Jack Burlln· either primary or secondary
farm would bring at leas t800 jobs
game, Informing them of an Income"· for farm famllles.
to the area If a Virginia firm
Informational meeting to be held
Company officials have visited
decides to locate an operation In
at Ripley High School Tuesday, the county several times the past
northern JackSon County, W. Va.
Jan.' 16, 6 p.m. at which time the several weeks . They are due to
According to an article In last
president of Rockingham will arrive by..plane early morning on
week's Jackson Herald, Rock·
explain In detail the responslblll· Jan. 16·and are scheduled to meet
Ingham Poultry, Inc., has an·
ties of the farmer who will "grow with county officials, bankers
nounced .that It Is exploring the out" the chickens, the responsl· and_others prior to the evening
possibility of building an lnte·
blllty of the company, as well as meeting with the farm owners.
.
Rockingham Poul.try, Inc. Is a
grated chicken complex In the financial. requirements.
Rockingham President Gene subsidiary of WLR Foods, Inc.
Ravenswood are.a. The industry
Includes processing, hatcheries , Misner explained, "Our com- ... ~NASDAQ:WLRF). Rock ·
pany Is presently looking at Ingham Poultry Is ranked 19th
feed mill and "grow out"
, several possible sites while It . largest a !)long chicken com pan·
facllltles.
Plant spokesperson Gall Price studies the new feaslblllty of les In the United States. WLF
told the Herald that between 800 building this new complex. The Foods Is engaged In fully lnte·
and 900 persons would be em· Interest of area farmers Is grated turkey and chicken proployed at the plant. In addition to critical to our evaluation. Once ductlon. processing, further prothat number, about 300 "grow we have thoroughly studied the cesslng and mavketing. The
possibilities. we will make a company Is the eighth largest
out" faclllties would be needed
on farms within a 25 to 30 m lie decision as to whether to proceed . poultry processor/further proradius of the plant' Itself.
to build a new complex."
cessor In the United States. For
Burlingame said "the potential flscal1989, WLR Foods reported
Letters have been maned to
opportunity could be a source of revenues of $455 million.
more than 4,000 area farmers by
Jackson . County Development

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NEW 1989 240SX '

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3 In Stock,

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NEW 1989 PULSAR

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Racine Fire Department rejects
Syracuse Fire Department's request

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3 In Stock ·

NEW
' . l919 HARD BODY
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delay: ~bottle. ~auilch 24 hours

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83
84
84
· 97
86
86
83

KIT

by

·Do-H-yourself, easy to
Install

•Beautify and modern·
lze your bath

·rive prl"cut formed
panels

•four molded·ln
roomy shelves
I I

I,
I. :'
I

·Covers existing tile
'

·,

·Cieana effortlessly
: ··Waterproof r•latt

mold and mildew

Bi SUPPLY COMPANY

CAROLINA LUMB

Hours: Monday-Friday. 8 a.m.·5 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon
.

.

.P'IIDne·675-1160

312 6th Street

Point Pleasant, WV

0

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FORD Escort Wagon ...................... . $1,496
$2,095
FORD Escort .....................) ........ ~ ...
CHEVY Celebrity ...................... , .... .
$2,496
NISSAN Sentra ............................. ..
$2,996
CHEVY Cavalie'r Station Wagon .... ..
$3,996
CHEVY Gamaro .... , ....................... ..
$3,995 .
MERCURY Grand ·Marquis ............ ..
$2,996
88 FORD Escort ........................:........ ..
$4,79~
86% NISSAN Pickup ......................... ~. .$4,495
86 DODGE 800 ............................. ..':..
$4,495
· 85 V'l/1 Quantum ................. ~ .. : ............ · $4',495
87 DODGE A.ries Station Wagon .......... . $,4.986
86 BUICK Century ... :........................ ..
$4.~6
86 MERKUR XR4Ti..: ......................... ..
$4,Q96
87 NISSAN Santra. Red .....................
. . ..
..
$4,996
$6,496 -.
89 PLYMOUTH Horizon ..................... ..
87 FORD T
·
.
.
$5,4$6
. aurus ~······•······· ""··········~······
87 CHEYY Celebrity, blue ...... .'., ......... ..
$6.496
88 NIS~AN Pickup, white .................. .
$6,996
86 CHE\(Y Camaro ....... , .... ,~ ............. , ..
$5,896
87 CHEVY Camero ..... ~·....................... :
$6,496
•$6,496
87 OLDS Cutlass.~ ..... ~~·······················
86 BUICK Riviera: ....'.': ......................... , .$&amp;,,496 t
'U ,896
84 CADILLAC Eldorado ... .................... .
87 PONTIAC ;S'onneville .................... ..
$"1,896
89 PONTIAC firebird &gt;
.........................
1
•
89 NISSAN 300

'·

By WILLLU-f HARWOOD
. UPI SCience Writer
CAPE. CANAVERAL,, Fla.
(UPI) - Low clouds forced
NASA to postpone the launch of
the space shuttle Columbia at
least 24 hoursMonday, delaying
a crltlcallO·day flight to rescue a
science satellite .that Is falling to
Earth.
·. Columbia's three-man, twowotnan crew had been scheduled
to blast off on the decade's first
shuttle flight at 8:10 a.m. EST
Monday, but liftoff was delayed,
first by a minor problem with a
launch pad system and then by a
deck of low clouds over . the
shuttle's emergency runway.
"We're going to have to call it a
day," launch dire€ tor Robert
Sieck said · about six minutes
before the end of Columbia's
launch period. "Nice try."
It was the fourth launch date
delay In three weeks for the
· veteran spa'ceplane, originally
scheduled for liftoff Dec. 18. The
first three launch dates were
missed because of work to finish
an overhaul of launch pad 39A,
last used four years ago Friday.

o

After Minimum Trade

BATHTUB

the Kennedy Space Cen~ ear Her today were, left
to right, Bonnie Dunbar, mllllllon specialist;
Marsha Ivins, mlsllon specialist; David Low,
mission speclallsl; Dan Branclensteln, com·
manderi and James Wether lee, pilot. (UPI).

CREW LEAVES QUARTERS- The crew of the
space sbutlle Columbia must now walt 24 more
hours before their 10-day satellite deployment and
relrleval mission. This mornlDg' s blastoff was
del~yM by low clouds. Leaving their quarters at

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A Multlmodle Inc. Newopoper

PoultrY·~·m • Considering Ravenswood ·area

Address ........ ...... ............. .............................. .............. ..... ,........... ............... ............. ......... ............ ············· ··

·

2 Sections. 12 Pagn 25 Centl

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday. January 8, 1990

•

3 In Stock
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NEW 1989 PATHFINDER ,

0Wn11's Name ... .................................... ... .. ................... ........... .. ............... ..,........... ............................. .. ...... .

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2 In Stock

f.....,.,

Low tonight In mid 308.
cloudy Tuesday. 111gb
1n mid 501!.

Pard~

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· NEW 1989 MAXIM4

Continued from D-1
Involved were Informed, fair and
professional," the magazine
~uotes him as saying.
Although the $31 mHIIon move
was a costly one thai probably
would not have occurred without
the bridge plans . Colker ·concluded, "we think our new
lighting showroom will have .
twice the amount of sales IJ! Its
flr~t year than the old one had. ' '

.

A salute
to Pomeroy's

WOOSTER, · Qhlo &lt;UP I ) and 5 feet hlgn. Over bead lights happens outside."
Researchers at Ohio State Unl· 1 slr!lulate sunlight. A water bath
. For example, lab researchers •
v.erslty's new Air Pollution Re- t ~moves "stray" heat from the can simulate a temperature
search Lab are.in the midst of an
lights. A central air !landler Inversion, an uneommon atmos·
extensive study of the effects on 1·maintains consistent air flow, pllerlc condition that traps and
air pollution on plants, Insects
temperature and humidity.
. stagnates air. Pollution leyels,
and soU.
.
.
.
Only the pollutants vary )ISu&amp;IIY soar In an Inversion.
Using an ordinary mlcrocom· among chambers: tubes hooked
"We know that hlgh·level,
puter, the lab will let researchers to each chamber Introduce dlf· short-duration peakS are far
accurately study both short· 1 ferent amounts a.nd comblna· more Injurious to ' plant• than
term, high-level pollution effects 1 ·tions of nitrogen oxides, sulfiir lbwer levels over a longer time," · .
and longer· term, lower-level , dioxide,' ozone and other gll$e5.
Weldensaul says. "Sometimes
At the system's heart. is a there's physical damage. It's the
effects.
,
It's a . high-tech "tool of the I Hewlett Pac~rd mlcrocompu· CQQCentratlon f!lctor rather than
trade." says forest pathotogis \1 ter, whiCh controls pollutant tbe time factor · that's , most ·
Craig Weldensaul, director of the levels . Monitors connected to
Important to the prant. We can '
center's Laboratory for Environ-; each chamber relay the levels of . program t~at."
.
.
menta] Studies .
. •
gases'.'The computer tells valves · The new' lab will '· also let ': ·
In designing the lab, Welden! td open or cloSe to · reach
researchers study more subtle •
saul and colleague Jal)'les R•. programmed levels.
,
· !lffects:
It's . a versat!le and ,highly
' ''We'llotie able to loo~at eff~tll
McClenahe!l refined system~
· devflloped a.t the Boyc~· automated set-up, Weldensaul
on·yleld, chlorophyllconte!lt and
· Thompson Institute for Plant. says. ·
·
.
· Indirect effects ·such as Insect :
Researcb at Cornell Unlverslt~
"The purpose is to use real· 'infestation and disease," Wei·
and the Oak Ridge Nation~! w·orld conditions In a controlled ,. densaul says. "We can studY, the ~
Laboratory In Tennessee.
r system," lie says. ' 'It can fluctu· . long-term. lower·level pollution
The sealed-acrylic growth ate, It can be timed. All sorts of effects on vegetation that are
chambers are 4 feet In diameter .combinations can be pro- hard to' studY .with oth~r .
· ·
• r grammed to simulate . what

W. Va., ...

DEADLINE FOI PUIICHASES Of IHO DOG UONSE IS JANUAIY 20111. FOUl DOUAIS 1$4.001 PlNAITY •IKENSE IS
MCHASID AFTII THAT DATl FOI YOUI CCIIIYEMENCE USEI'HIS HANDY APPUUnCIIIIlAIIC Alii MAIL TO Tlli
COUIITY AyoiTOI AT Till COUITIIOUSEIIOW. FEES .UE FOUl DOUAIIS 1$4.001 FOIIACH DOG.IW.E 01 FEMALE.
IIEIIIIR LICENSE PlNAlTY $20.001. DOG TAGS MI. AlSO • ON SALE AT Till H.IIMANl SOC:IlTY lOCATED AT Till
COiflll OF N011H SKOIIII ST. AND Wauntr Sl. ~llPOIT, 01110 45760.
.
Malt $4.00
' S,.yod F-It $4.00
$4.00
KMMI Licanst $20.00

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Ohio Lotteey

THE 1990 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DECEMBER 1st

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.J.nu8ly 7, 1890

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OSU res~chers say new
air pollutiOn 'study, unt;J~rWay .

~ree seedling program
Op~

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D-8-Sunday Tmaa SMttinel

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$5.1
$56
. $67
$73
$98
$98
$100
$108
$110
$110
$120
$122
$122
$122
$122
$129
$134 '
$134
$136
. . $144
$169
$169
$173
. $176
• $210
$226
$382

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Commander Daniel Brandenstein, 46, co-pilot James Wether·
bee, 37. · Bonnie Dunbar, 40,
Marsha Ivins, 38, and G. David·
Low. 33. took the delay In stride
~n.d calmy worki!d with .launch
controllers to ''back out" of the
countdown.
·
Launch on the IOJig-awalted
10-day mission was. tentatively
rescheduled for 7:35a.m. Tuesday , pending a meeting to
discuss the weather outlook and
any other Issues.
· ·
It wllfbe the 33rd shuttle flight ,
the ll r's t of 10 missions planned
for'l990 and the mosf ambitious
yet In the post-Challenger era.
Forecasters expeCt a 70 percent
chance of acceptable weather
Tuesday.
The goal of the long-awaited
flight Is the launch of a Navy
Syncom communications sa tel·
hte and the retrieval of the Long
D11rat!on ~xposure Facility, an
ll·ton scl~nce satellite the size of
a school bus that otherwise would ·
fall back to Earth around March
9.
Columbia's la11nch Is tile first

"maneuver " In a complex ren·
dezvaus designed to put the
shuttle 35 feet above the 30-toot·
long "LDEF" satellltesoDunbar
can use the ship's fragile robot
arm to grab the science pa'ckage
and place It In the spaceplane's
cargo bay .
LDEF was launched In 1984 to
expo~e a variety of materials to
the swce environment, and
engineers with ~ASA's space
station project and the Strategic
Defense Initiative missile defense program are eager to get
the satellite back to learn more
about building spacecraft that
can sutvlve long periods In
space.
The satellite was Initially
placed In a 296-mlle-hlgh orbit.
As of launch time Monday,lt had
fallen 89 miles to an altitude of
aboul207 mUes.
LDEF'aretrlevalls thus a high
'priority for NASA andits rescue .
alone would make Columbia's
mission the mosiambltlous flight
of tlul post·Challenger era, the
first known space rendezvous
carried out by U.S. astronauts
since AugiJst 1985. '

Mild
weather to continue in Ohi~..
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. By United Pr.,.• International
,T he unseasonably mild
wea.t her that's mad!! most
Ohioans happy this year Is
expected to remalri at least
through the end oftheworkweek.
Early morning temperatures
· lh the Buckeye State were
roughly 10 degnes above normal, ranging from about 25 to 30:
. Even milder condltloni ar~ ·on
tap for the next coiaple of days,
. with readings at Umes u much
u 15 degrees above average. . '
Hlp Monday and Tlleldiy
were to be Ill tbe fOa and 10'11111101,
with Iowa Monday nlghtfalllnf to
. only 30 to 35.
Moat of Ohio had clear wdther

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. dilrll)g the night, a condition that
was expected to rt1Jlaln through
most of Monday ntght. There was
a small chance, · however, of
some cloudy skies. - and even
-. some rain -In lheextremesouth
Monday night.
.
For Tuesday, clouds should
become extensive and the
northwest counties may get rain
tate In· the day Tuesday.
The niorning weather map
showed Ohio between a blah
pressure aystem centered over
Delaware and a tow pressure
· system centered just northwest
· of Mllllll!lota. This position between the hllh and low pressure
centers wu to·res111t In a rather
.

11\lsty southwl!\t wind In the state
Monday.
·
The \)1gb pressure system Is
fontcut to mosUy ·dissipate by
evening. The low pressur~ system Is exi;lecte~ to pass to the
norlh of·the Buckeye Stated11rlng
the upcoming njght. On Tuesday
a cold front that win begin to
form over the upper Great Lakes
Monday should • approach Ohio
.from the northwest.
Lookln8 ahead thro1Jih Frl·
day, tberewlllbeachanceofraln
or snow Wedne&amp;liaY 11nd Friday,
and a chance of rain Thursday.
Temperatures, llowever, will remain mild, with blghs Of 35,to 45
ConUnued on page 6 ,·

Racine Fire Department In a
contract with the Racine Depart· they opted to refuse the offer.
meeting Sunday njght f1!1ected .- ment ••for 50 . percent of the : .._ "W-e'Ye ~SyracuwFITe9e'part·· •
an offer .from Syracuse !&lt;'ire revenue.
· meJ!t) caught In the middle,"
Department to divide the Letar!
said Chief ?lckens. He went on
Chief Pickens, who Is also the the explain that flye years ago,
Township revenue from a bme
mill. levy {or fire protection . Syracuse mayor, was at the when the one mill levy was first
65-35, with 65 percent to go to trustees' meeting . with a pre- enacted In Letart. Lebanon and
Racllle and 35 percent to pared contract. Racine Mayor Sutton Townships ; Syracuse fire
Syracuse.
Frank Cleland was also at the , department representatives
WhencontactedMondaymorn· meeting but was not prepared went to Letart Trustees to see
lngby The Dally Sentinel, Racine with a contract and could not about getting a percentage of the
Fire. Ch)ef Hank J,ohnson re· accept the 50 percent offer revenue. but the trustees had
ported that his men had "dectded without authorization from Ra· already signed with Racine.
not to sign a contract."
cine VIllage COuncil an!l fire Pickens said he was told then by
Syracuse Fire Chief Eber department.
·
trustees to come back again·
At the Jan. 2 organizational when the contract was up and
Pickens reported that he had
"heard through the grapevine" mretlng of the trustees, several · Syracuse would get a · percen·
that this Was Racine's decision, Letart Township residents, as · tage. "And l went back/ '
although he had not yet been well as representatives of Racine Pickens said.
contacted officially.
and Syracuse Fire Departments,
The one mill levy was renewed
A dispute over the division of were In attendance to discuss the by Letart, Lebanon and Sutton
the Letart Township revenue sit uatlon. Officials of the two fire voters In N'ovember.
stems from a Dec. 29 decision by departments left the trustees'
"We don't want a feud between
Letart Township · Trustees to meeting with an agreement to the two fire departments," he ..,1
divide the revenue 5050 between meet on Jan. 5 to see If a added. "We just want the best "'"
Racine and Syracuse Fire De· compromise could be worked out fire protection for the township."
partments, Instead of deslgnat· between the departments.
At least some residents of
"We ·offered the 6535 deal on Letar.t Township feel they are·
lng 100 percent of the revenue to
Racine, as had been done before.
Friday . night," said Chief also caught in the middle. These
The trustees then signed a fire 'Pickens .
residents have called a meeting
·protection contract with the
Members of Racine Fire De· tonight (Monday) at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Department for 50 partment then met on Sunday. store building in Antiquity, to
percentoftherevertue, and at tl)e night to discuss the proposal discuss the matter further.
same time, offered to sign a
from Syracuse, at which time
'

'

· Suspected .cult leader is arrested
NATIONAL- CIT1Y , Calif .
~UPil -The natjonwflle hunt for
a cult leader, ' his wife and ·
· teenage son wanted for the
sacrificial killings of five followers In rural Ohio ended when tips
led federal au thorltles to a
low-budget motel.
Je!frey Lundgren·, a 39-year·
old defrocked minister of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, his ·
wife Allee and 19-year-old son
Damon were arrested SundaY by
federal agents and local pollee at
a National City motel on Ohio '
warrants charging them with
murder and conspiracy.
· The three were housed at the
San Diego County Jallpendlltlan
extradition hearing scheduled
for Monday. said federal Bureau
of Alcohdl, Tobacco and Firearms Sp~lal Agent ,-\ndrew
Vita .
'
·
Lundgren, ·wearing shoulder·
length hair and a light beard,
onlY shook bla head iS "porters
shouted questions wben the three
suspect a were led barefoot and In
prtaon jumptults .from National
City poliCe headquarter no walt- ·
lnJ cars.
An otnclal release ·· Sunday
. from ATF dlrec:tor ,Stephen E.
Hlaglns said ' tlie ' nationwide
search bad Involved "countless
leads ' throughout the United
States."
I.

-·-·--- -r

•

•·

Higgins said Interviews with
law · enforcement officials,
church members, concerned cUI·
zens, public transportation offl·
clals and others, along with

"numerous covert surveillances
and wide-range Intelligence
gathering." had contributed to
the arrest of the suspects.
Continued on page 6

E. A. (Bud) Wingett,
85, die8 early today
Widely-known Racine resident manager of The Democrat, a
Ernest A. (Bud). Wingett, 85, died weekly newspaper that was tile ··
Contlnuti!d on
6
early today, Jan. 8, 1990, at
Veterans Memorial Hospital Ex· '
tended Care Unit following a long
Illness.
,
Mr. Wingett, . retired · school
teacher, businessman and
farmer, served several years as
mayor of Racine In the 194fla, 50s
and 60s, was. longtime chairman
of the Ml!igs County Democratic
Exe~utlve Commlltee · and
served 12 years u a member of
the Meigs County Board of
Ji:l~!,lons. He was also the flnt
chairman of tbe lOth Congrea·
slana! Olstrlct Democratic Action Club.
A graduate of Ohio University,
Mr. Wingett ta1Jiht schoOl for
mol"! ,than 30 ye\11'&amp;' In Meigs
County and addiUonal years In
Muon and Jackson Counties,
West VIrginia.
,
He also worked ·as business
E. A. (81111) WINGET!'

�J

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(:omme~tary
·The .Daily· Sentinef
~lb

~S:m~
~v

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,...,_..__..,.,...._=;.

ROBERT L. WINGETl'
Publisher .
CHARlENE HOEFUCH
General Mallqer

· A MEMBER of 1be Allsociated Press, lnlalld Dally Press Alllloclatlon '!lid the American New~ Publll!hen As&amp;oclatloa. •
LETTERS OF OPINIOI'i are welcome. They should he leoalllan 300
words long. A.U letters are subJ"'t to editing aad must be slped with
name, address aad telepllone number. No unalped lettero wW be published. Letters should be In good taate. addresslllg laoues, not personal I·
lies.

.'

·

Fergusoit'sdropout
_
·symptomatic of politics ·today
By LEE LEONARD
· UPI Statehouse Reporter

WASHINGTON- Ff!W people l.nue' a bizarre memo to hll
cofttuse Uncle Sam with Santa managers. "I am greatly dlasat·
Claus, especially the people who lsfled with the high number .of
work for the Drug Enforcement outstandln&amp; .(merit pay) ratings of' many local and state law
mented the plan. Rather than
AdmlnlstratiQn. It was an espe- . and I expect \O see Immediate enforcement positions. Lawn,
coming straight out and telling
clally lousy Christmas for the Improvement," said Lawn's Wllo Is. known f&lt;!r his heavy·
them that there wasn't enough
people In the trenches .of the drug memo; obtained by our as10elate · han(!ed management style, . money, Lawn simply ordered Ills
war', .
Stewart Harris.
hun't enhanced the romancl'll!d' managers to f!'duce the merit
The agen&lt;;y Is In the mlddleofa . • Yes, you ~ead It cOrrectly.
wotklng 'f or the .DEA.
·
ratings. Theagentswerenottold
plan to cut back on bonus pay for
Lawn's peculiar doublespeak . Qne DEA agent told·'u s that •a
until alter 'll was a done deal and
agentswhoperformedaboveand did not amuse the DEA work- third of all the ag~ts will be
the DEA personnel otnce had
beyond the call of duty In 1989. · force. "Rea1Iy a great way to eligible to retire within the next
finished the paperwork.
The problem Is, tooinanyofthem support, reward aJid motivate· three years. Tllose agents could
did too well and the agency could . ·your ~oops, don'ty0u think," one stay on unto they are 5~ . but
The DEArefused to answer our
not afforl the $500 to $1,000 disgusted DEA insider confided many say the rewards of fighting
quf'stions abo\lt the plan· and
bonuses each of them earned. As .. to us.
thedrugwardonotoul'A:elghthe
Lawn's doublespeak memo.
aresult,feweragentsfoundcash
The DEA could use some , Indignity o(.worklng for tbe DEA.
"This Is an lrtter.nal management
awards In their stockings this motivation right now. Bad rnalf the loss of the hard-earned
decision and that memo was not
season.
rale has dogged the agency· bonus pay was not bad enough,
Intended for public dlsseminaThe situation prompt;ed· DEA through Its war on drugs. Agency the agents are fuming about tbe
Uon:" said a . DEA spokesman.
· administrator John Lawn to payllasfallenbehlndthesalarles • way -the tactless Lawn ·lmpleOur request for an Interview with
'
Lawn went _u nanswered.
ETflt.
MU&amp;.t;:!, .
·
Lawn·left little to the lmaglna·
lion In his memo to the agents In
the field. He pointed out that he
had been griping about the high
number of outstanding perfor·
mance ratings since last Aprn.And he noted that last year the
percentage of outstanding rat·
lngs given out by his agency
exceeded the numbers at the rest
of the Justice Department and
government wide.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

OF THE
MEIGS.MASON UEA
-

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstan.t Publlsher/ ControUer

Gallia Academy
sl~ps
past
.
Southern .Tomadoes, 59-55

Pomeroy-Midtlaport. ()hk)
Monday, January 8, 1990

.DEA·_chief cuts bOnuses for good work

111 _(:oart Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV(1J'ED J'O THE INTEKES:f!!
.

PQ-2-The Daily Sa 11iuel

o1'

e&gt;''" -1"1!1111-•••,..

Eastern· .
W.s .69-57

COLUMBUS. Ohio - State Auditor Thomas Ferguson's decision to
seek re-election·rather than to try for governor Is a sad commentary
on the state of poUtlcs and government In today ~s society.
It Is the depressing story of how big money dominates politics, and
how the choices av~llable to the public are reduced by the cost of
television advertising and the news media's horse-race mentality In
election cam~l~s and preoccupatiOI! with the private .uves of
politicians.
•
, .
To !)ring down the. number of
Jt~s also the story of bow Incumbency has become so powerful, and
high ratings, Lawn, .In his inemo,
winning so Important, that few challengers want to take any rtsksimd
ordered his managers In the field
entrenched offlcehplders can have a career.
to reasses and Justlty In writing
For no mat ll!r what Ferguson $8Jd last week ln pulling In his horns
all of the ' outstanding ratings
and seeking a fifth term, he decided against gambling for the brass
they awarded this year. The plan
ring because he was perceived as an underdog and couldn't raise the
then calls for all these written
money needed to corp pete with fellow Democrat Anthony Celebrezze,
JUstifications to be bumped up to
the state attorney general.
.
Lawn's Deputy Assistant Admin·
Ferguson also was burt by the black cloud over his head In the form
lstrator Aaron P .·Hatcher Ill and
of a $1.25 mUllan sexual harassment lawsuit against him by a former
• other top DEA officials for final
employee - something certain to have come ·Into play during a
review.
gubernatorial campaign: .
·
And, In the end, he was chicken. It was far easier to go tot another
· The paperwork alone must be
.four years of public retirement benefits than gamble on governor.
worth a merit bonus in a
The same malady afnlcted House Speaker Vern Riffe, who shun11ed
..
bureaucracy that apparently
the governor's race last fall.
v~lues 'paper·over performance.
The result ls that Ohio Democrats may be left With no choice for
"So how far Is It from here, Mikhail?"
governor or for .most of the other statewide etauve offices because
'
'
the Incumbents Will scare everyone else away.
Ferguson, 61, who has long coveted a promotion, was widely
believed to be ready to make the move for governOr this year. After
all, he is approaching retirement age and may not have another
chance.
clally among cancer ·and AIDS
A proven vote-getter, Ferguso!l .has been particularly popular with · Shortly.after we ushered In the "Millennium":
1980s, a book hit the stands that . Human development psycholopatients. .SOme medical schools .. .
organized ·tabor and local Democrats over the years. But once
had everybody talking.
Celebrezze got the jump-with tlie party pros and In the prellp!lnary
gist Ken Dychtwald, one of the even InClude the phJiosophy In
their currlc:ulum now.
It was called "Millennium:
for several ·.inore years, editor
polls, the "smart" money began to move In his direction.
book's editors as well as a
Glimpses
Into
the
21st
Century."
Speakb)g
of
AII)S;
"Millenand contributor .Alberto Vlllol- ·
contributor, hit the mark ' by
Then Fer~n became damaged goods when ~e lawsuit loomed,
nium"
was•
written
just
before
The·
book
was
a
collect)on
.of
·
do's guess that '"It' s possllile the
and Celebrezze Is squeaky clean - an ·absolute 'requirement In
predicting that preventive health
the
epidemic
hit:,
Its
omission
futuristic
essays
by
"eminent
only lnfecllous diseases remain- ·
today's political climate. .
,
care would be an Increasingly
from
all
thinkers"
(the
editors'
term
for
ptedlc~lohs
Is
startling,
lng on tbe earth In the next
The fallout goes beyond the governor's contest. As Ferguson,
popular theme, and that more
.
the
contributors).
My
editor
at
especially
knowing
how
much
century
will be In laboratory
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown and state Treasurer-Mary Ellen
recognition would be given to the
the
ttme
was
one
of
those
people
·
\he
disease
ha~
affected
so
many
and·
museu'm s," seems
vials
.
Withrow decided to stay where they are, that discouraged other
theory that the· mind affects
aspects
Of
American
culture
In
who were talking about the book, physical states.
partlclllarly premature.
challengers for those offices, both Republican and Democrat.
such a short time.
and he assigned me to review it.
Vllloldo also pl'edlcted In 1981 .
No one wants to beat their brains out, spend S3 mUllan of someone
In the '80s, Insurance com~n­
Scientist and futurist "Willis · that "In the next 10 years If Is
I was excited about It - with les realized how much money
else's money and still come up short. Ferguson himself estimated
one resetvatlon: I knew the work !hey's save If their clients p~ac­ Harmon accurately predicted we highly likely that all the biochemhfll have to spend $2.5 million to retain the auditor's office.
of many of these "eminent . ticed preventive health care, and . would eventually ~rn away Ical parameters of the human
.Cleveland Mayor George Volnovlch was ridiculed for spending $7
thinkers" from reading litera- they began pushing such prosomewhat from our "consume- organism will become known,"
n\Ulion on his losing bid for the Senate last year. This year's
and-waste" ethic. He said we leading to the production of home
ture
published
by
the
alternative
governor's race Is expected to cost $10 million to .$12 mllilon per
grams. As hospitals began to
press.
And
although
I
liked
many
would begin to-seriously promote units which· would allow us. to
candidate.
·
experience shortages In many
recycling, and w~ are. He also monitor and regulate our brain
of them and respected their healtbcare professions and be·
What's the solution to assuring a wider selection of 'c andidates on
said
we would become better chemicals and 'hormones, and
research, I would have preferred came aware of the Income
the ballot? The obvious answer Is to remove money as a factor'ln
stewards of the' planet, and we
a broader look with a wider group potential of "wellness" pro·
thus our mind sell and moods.
campaigning, but that's easier said than done.
are, .although It's probably out of
You missed thall'one, Alberto,
:Television stations aren't going to give away enough air time to .of·· views and philosophies grams, they also began ·to de·
represented.
fear of the greenhouse effect and
at least by a few years. Maybe
m.ake a difference, and TV Is a powerful weapon for cam~lgn
velop and promote preventive
eventual extinction.
,,
Yet as we close In on the era health measures. ·
that just goes to shovv that a
managers with access to money. So the strong get stronger and the
these
authors
wrote
about,
I
On
the
other
hand,
a
few
of
tile
·
prophet Is without honor In his
weak remain weak.
Dychtwald's "mind-over·
prophecies
seem
downright
sUJy,
wanted
to
to
see
whether
their
own
country. What It teaches me
body" theory manifested Itself In
There was a time when three, four arid six people, even more, would
viewed.
target,
came
11
'
d
ecade
later.
In
light
of
predictions
were
on
Is to let others stick their necks
programs all over the country
be competing for an open statewide office. They ran, not because they
close or missed entirely. Here's
out, and I'll stick to taking pokes
stressing the Importance of pa· epldenilologlsts' · estimates ·that
were guaranteed a victory, but because they wanted to serve, or else
what I found when I re-opened
at them.
enjoyed the fray.
tient attitude In healing, espe- we may not have a cure for AIDS
Now the stakes are too high, and because of the system, the Tom
'
Fergusons can he auditor lor 16 or 20 years and the VernRlffescan be
speaker for 16 or 18 years. So they are.

Hannan Trace downs
Southwestern 74-59

Not all theories stand. t~t.~of time

Sarah Overstreet

•

U. S. show biz. probe m tatters

Letters to the ·editor·Appr~ciates
Dear Editor:
Our family would like to say
Thank you, through your paper,
to all the members of the VFW
Post ·9053 and the Ladles Auxllary of that Post. They have all
been very kind to our family
during the hOlidays. They gave
our children very lovely Christ·
mas presents, In the spirit of
" helping one another" .
'
So . many times our AuxUary
Ladles are overlooked and not
thanked ·for au the good deeds .
they do. They work very hard for
the rnen of Post 9053 and the

support

whole community. ·Today, when
you look at the Po.s t building, and
all · the "events", the men and
women of 9053 have put on, you
must remember, that 3 years
ago, there wasn't even a VFW
Post In Meigs County. Then you
begin to realize how tremendous
a job they have done.
So again, ThanR you ladles and.
gentlemen of VFW Post 9053. .
Your klnd!less will be long
remembered.
Sincerely
The Harbor Family
t :·

Today ·in history
By U1lle. Preu Jateraatlonal
Today Is Monday, Jan. 8, the ~lghth day ofl990 with 357 to foUow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward fuU.
-~
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are 11\ercury, Veaus and Jupiter.
... Those born on this date are under &gt;the sign Of Capricorn. They
include financier Nicholas Biddle In 1786; educator and hymn writer
Lowell Mas'on ("Nearer My God To Thee" ) In 1792; James Longstreet, Confederate gi!neral'ln the Clvli'War, In 1821; publllher
Frank Doubleday In 1862; act&lt;ir Jose Ferrer In 1912 (age 78); comic
actor .Larry Storcb .ln 1925 (a&amp;e 65); comedian ~py Stiles In 1926
(age 64); rock 'n' roll king EIYIII Presley In 1935; actres1 Yvetll!
Mlmleux In 1939 (age 51); and singer-actor David•Bowie ln1947 (age
43) .
On this date In blltory:
In 181:1, Amerlclll Ofteral Alldrew Jacklon's forces declllvely ·
. defeated the Br{tllll ID t... Battle of NeW Orleans, the ciOIIDi
eng&amp;Jernellt of tile War of 1812.
.
In 186'7,.
appi'OVI!d Jeglllatlon tluit, for the fiJll time,
allowed blacks to voll! In the Dis trlct of Columbia. ·

eo.,...

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LOS ANGELES (NEA) - A
learried th3t the profits from
year ago, the Justice Depart·
some of Plsello's deal may have
' ment's · Organized Crime Strllte
ended up In the pockets ·of
Force here was actively Invest!·
organized crime figures.
gating the entertainment IndusAceordlng to 5ourc.e s close to
try's ties · to organized crime.
the Investigation, Rudnick reToday that Investigation Is In
celved conflicting statements
tatt,ers.
from MCA executives about
Plsello'a work at the com~ny .
The. three principle federal
prosecutors Involved In the probe
But when he began to push
are no longer working for the
harder, MCA pushed back.
government: They believe they
MCA Is no ordinary coinpany.
It Is a S3 billion-a-year glai!l In
were forced- from their jobs
. through . pre&amp;sure brought by
the film, TV ilnd recording
those being Investigated.
Industry. It's head~ by Lew
Marvin Rudnick Is a former
Wasserman, once Ronald Reaassistant U.S. attorney, a 15-year
gan's personal agent .a nd still his
veteran who had prosecuted · very close frleiid. ·
organized crime figures and
The cpmpany first complained
to the Justice Department about ·
white-collar criminals In Miami
and. Las Vega&amp; before transfer·
Rudnick's conduct. It then hll'ed
Washington lawyer William
ring to Los Angeles.
In 1984, Rudnick was handed a
Hundley, a former federal pro~aJwvaslon cue against Salv!lsecutor who Invented the entire
tore Plsello. Plsello had failed to concept of the strike force when
rell'lt1 a relatively ~mall amount he headed th.e Organized Crime
of Income from hls business as a
and Racketeering section of the
sauaage salesman.
Justice Department.
Rudnick, however, was InterThen John Nevvcomer, &lt;Strlke
ested because Plselld, also Force head In Los AngeJes, wrote
known as "S.I the Swindler," MCA assurln&amp; It that neither the
was believed tQ bi!·lo41lember of com~ny not"lts oftlcera were the , ·
New , ·YOrk's Gambino crime subjects of an Investigation.
famuy:
· Later, In Aprn 1981$, when
RudDick successfully pt~ Plsello went on trial for tax
cuted the caee.
. evasion. Newcomer sat nettt to
He le«rlled that Ptsello Bud· Rudnlc:k to Insure - or so It
denly hacllhown up one day In the • seemed to . observers who
~tivt! otrlcea of MCA Re- watched tile two club openly on
COrda. He appeved there dally several occulons - that none of
and wu dolq for and with MCA. hla questioning would embarrass
He had no previous experience In MCA
the mualc lnduatry.
FI~Uy, last July, Rudnick was
AI tbe time, the record Indus- fired for InsUbordination when he
try had been rife with rumors refused to accept a tianaferoutof
about ties betWeen MCA and the Los Angelee office. Today he
organized crime. Rudnick also Is In private Jaw practice.

Ru~nlck has not been the only
proseeutor In the Los Angeles
Strike Force ·office looking at the
mob and show business to run
afoul of John Newcomer.
Prosecutors Richard Stavln
and . Wllll!lm ·Wagner were In·
valved in a wllle-.ranglng probe of
the entertainment Industry.
Colncldeilflllly - or perhaps not

•.

-----""""- SVAC Standings------

\

Robert Wagnl.an -

so conlcldentally - they were
Investigating ties between
former high-level MCA execu·
live Eugene Giaquinto, the ·
Philadelphia-based Bufallno
crime family and Gambino lam·
lly crime boss John Gottl.
Neither Newcomer nor the
Justice Department will comment on any of this.

.·. \\

lo:;:·

The Daily Sentinel
EASTERN (89) .:... Caldwell
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Ohio Newspaper Asaoclation. National

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Rates of Taxation for

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Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue;

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Reds' Davis ~igns
. three-year contract
CINCINNATI (UPI)"'- C)nclnnatl Reds centerfieider Eric
Davis slilhed a three- year con·
tract Sunday worth an estimated
total of $9 million.
Davis, ..__who had previously
complained the Reds weren't
_paying him as much ~J~C~n_ey as
star· out11elders on other Clubs,
said the new deal thro,ugh the
1992 sea&amp;on was •·comparable"
to what his peers have been
recelvln&amp; lately.
Reds owner M8Jlte Schott
called !he contract "simply biJ."
Davls, the Reds' mostvtlluable
player lut eeason, wu third In
the National Legue In horne
runs with M an~ fori 111 the
league wl~h 101 runs bat ted ln.

•

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Berry s World
.

Visltlni GaiUpolls snapped a
Gallla's lead to 54-51 (2: 18) but percent. At the line, SHSwas13of
ttve.game losln&amp; streak In the
the TornadoeS had to begin 20 for65 percent. Southern had 16
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium · fo11Ung the visitors when GAHS personals. losing Brent Shuler In
at Racine 's aturday night as
went Into a ~ssln&amp; game. Josh the second half. SHS had 21
Coach JlmOsborne's Blue Devils
Williams hit two charity tosses rebounds and committed 12
turnovers.
.
posted a 59·55 non-conference
(2 :02) to make It 56·51.
. Gallla Academy placed three
hardwood victory over Coach
Both teams misled several
Howle Caldwell's . Southern
scoring opportunities during the "'p layers In double figures. Strait
, next tew seconds before Wllllams finished with 19, followed by
Tornadoes.
' ·, Oujcome of the 32-mlnute con- hit imotlter freebie (0: 18) to put McNeal's 12 arid Neal's 10.
WliUams finished · with · nine
test' was not decided until the
GAHS up by live, 57·52.
final two mln11tes of play. During
Eric Murphy tossed In a ljlyup · ·and seven rebounds. He had six
the hectic tilt, the lead ex- . off a missed Wiliams free throw · assists · and two steals. Gene
changed hands 18 times. The
wtth 15seconds left totcetheBlue Sheets was credited W'th seven
assistS.
score was tied one ttu:ee
Devils victory.
~ts worsf
·Gallipolis, coming
occasions.
Baer hit a three-pointer from
performance
;'he
night
shooting
Before a standing-room 11nly the corner at ·the buzzer to
·before
at
Logan,
enjoyi,,lts
best
crowd, SHS, behind 6·0 senior complete the game's scoring.
Brad Maynard and 5·9 junior
''They really kllled us from the night of the year from .Jie field ,
Andy Baer, jumpeq off to a 11-6 field In the thii:d quarter," hitting 27 oi 44 for "1 _percent.
advantage alter five andone-llalf remarked Caldwell following the GAHS was, however, a cool four
game. "Shuler (Brent) got in foul of 12 at the line (33 percent),
minutes of action. TheTo~iladoes
le\f 13-12 after ·one period.
·
trouble. then fouled out. That ' Including three of nlneln Uf"'flnal
. ,; .•
.
Southern maintained a two to also hurt 4s"... CaldWell period.
.GARS had 18 personals ~nd 32
five polnttead mo~tol the !;econd : coniln~ed.
··
rebounds, 12 by McNeal,;,fl'ld 15
canto.before period ending goals ·
GAHS Coach Jim Osborne turnovers, eight In th ~;- first .
by Gallla's . William Strait and
''
Shawn McNeal sent the teams to said, "lt' s been a long tllpe." period.
FAST BREAK -Soutbem'aCbrlaMuJphy (10) · vllltlDI GtllUpollll. AUempdllg to break up play Ia
pointing
out
It
had
been
a
month
Friday,
Galllpolls
will
host
the dressing rooms at halftime
niltldle 18 Gallla'sJollb Wllllama (II). GABS won, . deadlocked at 25·all.
. passes off to Roy Bailey (18) on fut breali dat1JII
Jackson
in
a
Southeastern
Ohio
slnte the Blue Devils had won a
D-U. (OVP 'hoto bY Dave Harris).
Saturday nl1bt's non-league oudna apiMt
In a see- saw third period in game: "Our overall team play League battle . The Galllans play
which the lead exchanged hands was Improved tonight. We were a non-league tilt at Point Plea14 times, GalUpolls was a sizzling able to control the boards and we sant Saturday night. ·Southern
nine of 13 from{he field. Southern had a good night from the field. will host Kyger Creek Friday In a
was just as hot, canning eight of Most Jmportantly, we cut down Southern Valley Athletic tilt and
15 field goal attempts. Strait's on our turnovers." GAHS b~d 15. host Eastern Saturday In a
The victory lett Gallipolis 2· 7 makeup contest. ·
long jumper (0: 04) In the third
Gallipolis also won the rPserve
put ·GAHS on top 44•43 heading overall. Southern dropPed to 5·4.
Southern
placed
two
players
In
45-32 as the Blue Imps ,
game,
Into the final stanza.
By SCOTT WOU'~
double
figures.
Maynard
lead
all
broke
open
a close contestat the
Goals by McNeal and . Chad
S.endnel Correspondent
scorers
with.
24
points.
He
also
start
of
the
final period by
Neal early In the final frame put
Gallipolis up 48-43 before May· picked off seven rebounds for the scorrng the first 13 points.
· Placing three men. In 'double
The Galllans led 11-5 after one
nard hit two charity tosses and a Tornadoes. Baer tossed In 16
figures, the league-leading Eastper
lad and 20-16 during halftime.
markers.
cut
It
layup
within
a
minute
to
ern Eagles repelled a good effort
It
was
30-26 GAHS going Into the
on
20
of
51
Southern
connected
back
to
one,
48-47,
from· the visiting Symmes Valley
last
quarter.
The Imps, 9-0
field
goal
attempts
for
39.2
Later,
Baer's
layup
·reduced
Vikings to claim a 69-57 victory
overall,
were
up
43·26 before SHS
Saturday evening.
broke
the
Ice
on
Jeremy
Roush 's
Senior guard Scott Fitch 1!'11
three-point
goaL
Roush
led the
t!le way with 16 points, while
Little
Tornadoes.
now6-3.
with 11
Shaun Savoy was close with 15
points.
Scott
Lisle
added
10.
and yet another senior Mike
F.J. Hastwell tossed in 14 and
Frost had 14.
Clint Davis added 13 for the
GalUans.
·
The balanced attack saw eight
\1
arslly
box:·
men hit the scoring co 1\lmn,
0
GALLIPO.L lS (59) - William.
rounded out by Randy Moore
Powered by a pair of 20-point: the Wildcats walked away with a
Strait, 8-(1) -0-19; Gene Sheets,
with 7, Tim Bissell 7, Kenny
'Plus Performances from front63-43 win. Trace's Brian Unroe 1.0-2; Eric Murphy , 1·0-2; Josh
Caldwell with 6, Jeff Durst and
men Riehle Cornell and Craig led a!l cagers with 25· points. Williams, 3-3-9; Chad Neal, 5-0Mark Murphy 2 each.
Rankin, Hannan Trace returned while Adam Blair led the High· 10; Shawn McNeal, 6-0-12; Ryan
For Symmes Valley Paul
to 'the win column with a- 74-59
Ia~~;~:~!~~~ will host Hannan Smith, 2-1-5. TOTALS 26-(1)-4-59.
· Hayes paved the way with 18
triumph over visiting SouthwestSOUTHERN (55) - Chris
points, Kevin Nicholas had 10,
ern Saturday night.
(W.Va.) onTuesdaynight, wh_ile Murphy, 1-(1)-0-5; Andy Baer, ·
and Shawn Mootz 13.
"Our kids showed some charHannan Trace will be Idle until 4.(1).5-16; Todd Grindstaff, U-0acter after losing against East- Frlday night's home game o; Roy Bailey, 1·0-2;·-Kev Bur·
Eastern sank 21 of 54 from th~
ern," said Mike Jenkins, Hannan
against Symmes Valley.
gess, 1~0-2; Brent Shuler, 3-0-6;
floor for 39 percent and hit 2 of 4 ·
Trace's chief, of his charges . who
S~re by quarters
"
Bradley Maynard, 8·8-24. Tothree-pointers ·tor 50 percent,
dropped an eight ·point decision Southwestern ...... 8 14 14 23-59 _ TALS 18-(2)·13-55.
, ,
' hjttlng 2.1-pi 25 at'the line. The · ·
.'
-to
the
Eagles
the
previous
night.
Hannan
Trace
...
.
1~
25
21
10-74
,Score
by
Quarters:
MAYNARD SCORES .- Southern's Bradley Maynard (44)
losers. hit 5 of 15 from three point
Cornell, a 6·0 junior forward
• HANNAN TRACE (7f) G 1
12 13 19 15 59
scores lvvo of his game-high .24 point&amp; In Saturday night's
• land, HI! 15 of 59 from the floor for
Coronel! 4-5-0-23; Rankin 6-0-10·
· a llpolis..... ......
·
who
ted
'all
scorers
with
23
points,
•
non-league
loes
to
Ylllltlnr
GaiBpoUs.
Blue
Devil
defender
on
rlrh~
.
Boothe
4·0-1·9·
Bevan
2-0-2-6;
..
Southern
............
l3
12
18
12-55
25 !Jercent. and hit 9 of 17 at the
22 •
' was the launching pad for all of
•
Reserves - Gallipolis 45 South· ·
Is Ryan Smith (52). (OVP photo by Dave Harris),
line? ,
tlie Wildcats' five three-pointers . · Black 3-0-0-6; Lloyd 2·0·0-4; M. ern 32.
Eastern took an early 18-7 lead
Sanders 2-0-0-4. TOTALS - 23-5As a result, the Hlgh_landers'
in the first period , but Symmes
13-74
attempts to stop Cornell's offstayed In the game and clung to a
From the floor - 28-56 (50';1 )
shore shelling opened up the
semi-close 32-21 halftime score.
SPRIN6 V~llfY ClNfMA
Oak Hill ........ . ..3 3 281 . 278 Inside for Rankin , a 6·2 junior
AI the line - 13-22 (59.1 t;f l
(All games)
After a relative close third
446 4514
Rebounds ·- 36 (Rankin 13)
TEAM
W L PF PA. Symmes Valley 3 4 297 · 309 center who scored 22 p&lt;)tnts and
frame In which Symmes gave
Eastern ............... 8 3 791 7.74 Southwestern ....3 .5 319 388 tied Southwestern pivot Chris
Aaitsl!! - 22
EHS a 'scare by .outscoring the
'5 216 275 Metzger for boardwork honors
Steals- 16 ,
North Gallla ........ 7 3 711 651 Eastern .. ........
hosts 20·12 (the score now 44·41),
.....
0
7
184
325
with
13
grabs.
Kyger
Creek
Turnovers - 24
Hannan Tr.ace ..... 6 5 663 628
Eastern flexed .lts offensive mus- · Southern .............. 5 4 629 -571 TOTALS ..... .... :n :n 23111 2301
SOUTHWESTERN (59)
' "They played tough defense
cle and widened the gap to 69-56
Southwestern .. ,.... 5 5 777 683
against us," said Southwestern John Ehman 5-1-3·16; Metzger
at the.end.
Saturday's 'results
5·0·4-14; Potter 2-1+11; Bryant
·Symmes Valley ... 2 5 431 484
cage boss Jim Walker, who saw
Hannan Trace 74, Southwestern
4-0·1-9;
Hammond 2-0-0-4; Sites
546
682
roar
to
a
43·22
lead
the
Wildcats
1
8
E I
h d 32 bo d led . Oak HiCB ......... .....
59
.
2·0-0-4; Jesse Ehman 0·0·1-1.
re un s,
·. Kyger reek ........ 1 9 552 765
as ern a
at halftime, bold .Highlander ace
by Frost, Savoy, and Fitch wtth 7
Eastern 69, Symmes Valley 57 John Ehman to six points In the TOTALS - Z0-3-13·59
each, had just 7 turnovers. 9
Gallipolis 59, Southern 55
From the noor - 24-65 (36.9W l
(SVAC games)
first three quarters and Metzger
Tuesday's
games
At the line- 13-25 (52'!1)
steals, 10 assists , and 15 fouls ..
TEAM
W L PF PA .
to four In the same time span.
Oak
Hill
at
Kyger
Creek
Symmes collected 30 rebounds
Rebounds
- 33 (Metzger 13!
Ehman ended the game with 16,
Eastern ............ 6 0 420 354
on tht: night. No other slats were Southern .... ....... 5 0 403 288 Hannan (W.Va. ) at Southwest· while Metzger finished with 14.
Steals -10
available.
'fllmovers - 19·
North Gallla ..... 6 2 578 516 ern
In the preceding reserve game.
ln the reserve game, the Hannan Trace .. 4 3 · 445 394 Symm~s
Valley
at
OVCS
I
Vikings won 46-33. Valley's Andy
Southwestern .... 3 5 591 571
Lester "led an scorers with 15 Symmes Valley 2 . ~ 431 484
• points, ~line Chris Carleton led
Oak Hill ........... 1 5 380 · 468
the Eagles with eight. .
Kyger Creek .....0 7 . 377 550
•
TQTALS , .... ,, .. 27 27 3625 3625
•
In pu rsuance of ·Law. 1. George M. Col,lins, Treasurer of Meigs County , Ohio in c~mplianc~ with reylsed Code No. 323.08 ul State of Ohio,
Symmes Valley plays at Ohio
do hereby gi 11 e notice of the. Rates of TEi JCa{ion tor the TaM. Year of 1989. Rates e»~.prcssed m doll.ars and cents on each one thousand doll art .
(Reserve&amp;)
Valley Christian Tuesday, while
. .
tax \18 I UiHIOO
'
W L . PF; PA
Eastern goes to North ' Gallla TEAM .,
TOWNSHIPS
Southern ...........5 0 263 180
Friday.
Efl•c.Uwl
Elf•~:tlw•
AU
Atr.&amp;.
North
Gallla
.....
7
1
403
Scilre by quarters
,
300 '
Rue
R.11te
OIMJ
RUd .
M .R . Bd. of
SCHOOL DISTRICTS
•••
ou
•• ,
Hannan Trace , .5 2 338 246
Tot.111
R•l . lo Atr.
Eastern ............. 18 14 12 25-69
t
.M.S
.
Corp.
v
...
SChool
T.B.
CoUnt,.
T""P·
'"
Symmes Valley .. 7 14 20 16_;_57
..
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New York,

N~

York 10011.

Send addr... chanaoo
Jo The Dolly Sontlnel. Ill Court St., \
Pomeroy, Ohio «1789.

BEOFORO
Meigs L.S.D.
I L.S.D.
CHESTER
Mtios L.S.O.
· L.S.D .

Eosttrn L.S.D.
L.S.O .
LET/IRT
LSD.
OLII,'E ·
, L.S.O.

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•

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Dr~f Rheu6df' 511, FalrbanD st
DelawuP ~S. WhiUhall .W
Drf!Mt&gt;nTrl \ ' alley 11. Mort• U
Eulwood St. M'oodmoft' .48
Eudakf!. !'liol'lll ~ Akr• Kr-1nnorr -13

1-19 1-10

HH 138
131 1 !1~

Falrlleld UniuH, Col HamU Twp-15

Federal Hocktar•. \\' Arft1l Local 411
Flf'l:d lt1 Rooltltowa 5!

Frankfort -'de• S$, Cln!l"llle $1
Fr~&gt;mo• Joe
Gru..tl~ M,

51, llop!Well Lcudon3S
lit liNn Lak.ewOCMI Sj
Grl'edeld 19. Athens 5t

lndiM Valley i3, Co notiOn \o'aJI U
•,Jonatbn ,\lc&amp;Pr 51 , mentanl)' -l6
KalWa 87, Uma a.th .Jt
.
UdUn« HIM M, New Altwly 32
Lucu n, .\llbl.,.d Cre~~tvlew .t&amp;
Mll.ll~dd

"

Mond"-'' Gami!!O

al :\'\' RanJI!rs , 'i::J$ p.m .
~at

\\'""'hln,;lon

N~avarn&gt;
~~·

Toro•o. 1: 35 p.m .

..u"'

l'liPWarkCatil

'

I

llfolr'l)it, nl«hl

· Spr1n• SIE ~. Sprln« Grunon 2'i
Sprtn• ~hawnn U, Sprtn.- !'11\' 46
To I MMoomhH &amp;II. Tal Ro,....!l29
To I So lift Damf' 51. Ort' strlh· h !J8
Tray 51. Plq .. -t':'
Troy 31. Plq• 1'7

nda.v R e!llult,. ,

Ba.lllmnn • 7. " 'lchkil :1
San Dh•r;o a.. Klln-'i f'lt , · :1
·'"onda,\' G:tmt'!"
S o l(llf'fU.,. "t hf'duk'd
Tu•!idiY Gu.ml'!i
No f::.lli'I'N'II!M' hf'duk'd

l'\l~· JU'awa!4 \ '11Jiey4&amp;, ~MK"Jackson31

Tllllll;y \'alk')' -H. Mu" ·••~lolon 31
l lp,..r ArUa&amp;ton 1-1. Gron- Cit)' 13
UrtuaM !II. Bfolltlonlah.. -IK
l,:rh.,.. :U, . l ..lonlalnr -IK
M' Holrnrt~ ftil, Our Fork M

Thbi M'rrk'M
Oh io folh••t • Ba.. ~~t-thall ~ - heduk•

Mold""·, .Jan . ~

.

flndnnUI at Tol.. do
Loyohl\lll l 1U Xll\'lrr
Salem \W V111 ) 1111 Ct! nlral st
Tu~:o"· .Jan. 9
Ohio Domlniofan al ( 't."danillr
Rio Gran*' ld Mt Vl'r mn Nu
" 'r ca-Md._, , ·lllft. IP
Miami al Bowlin• o;een
Ohio lfnlw a.t To~
WIM'Omin-GFI'I'n Bay 111 Akron
'fou~!llnwn St Ill Cll'\'l'land St
fh lc qo Sl ld Wrlitlt !-41
.. Mar~ til a1 Muld ncu m
Baldwi•M' MIIlll r f'IU ~U Union
llllpial •t HPideltlera:

M'IU'.-w Rlnnlf'W' 51, Phllo311
·war-.w Rlv•r\IN' 5I. PhUo 311
M'llllkl,n• Mrmoriall'i, Ucktn, \ 'MI -Ill
Wll~:rd

Prep scores .
BoJ~t

Ohio Hia:hS~hool S.lrf;haU
By Unkt'ct Pl'f!. . lnlf'r•tlo•l
Slllwdi!I''IIIW!tuii:K

.&gt;\Jtr Hob• U. Cr.n CCII
A.llr fin How•r U , Kf'nl ao-weJI lit
Allr Ylntnttl, Warft'nntll&lt;e HIM 541
Bealk..tlW 81 , se ...... h 'nl
ller Cl \\loin Rn 51. 1Awelh411f' It I Oil

Olllo " 'f!!lltoyan at TlliMhll.l&gt;l Mol'f' IK)'l
Ohtorln 111 M'oWAit&gt;r
falif' ICHM'w at .\Jir«hHY I Pll
Kfonyon at E111rltuun 1P1111
,..nbion ;&amp;~: Wlllitnhfor•

BI«WIAia•ll, Gnutd¥tew. 51
•l'lieyl!' \'.rley
Cl'dal"o111e 13. Spr1aA" NE S!
Cardl~o•M,

Col Harillf)&gt; '11. Growplll'l :iA
fol W,.,.lll, Mario• Hardlll(l3
Col Tl't'~ 01 Uft •· Del•wa" C'br 4i
Colln•JII!!IMif'Drf' 1!, Col " 'hrilltont' 70
Co&amp;hotion Sfi, Zanswlllt S3
Danville 11. P'rf'dH'kklow•ll c_.)
Day PatM!r11011 51, Sprin' N .&amp;1

WIJM ld UrhiUIIl
lkoJIItiM'I" at M' llmtn~on
Thuntday , ,JIUI. II
OllloSt ..lll Mt clltpn St
nortda St at flncln_.l
'

1\Nhl.nd M &amp;.IMrmhw (J:{yl
Ohio f)omtnk:Mlll Brl'IK'ill ( K)'J
Llak~ Erk&gt; at Flndl~ty

Fairfield UniOnM, Ut:klllll Hlit U

F'ori ,Lonm'e 45, Covl. . onoll
Frank 1'u~ Grf'enll S Wt._W II ( ot)
GaiHpolbl 51, Kadlll!! S..tlteraJS
Han111M Tract l&amp;, Gallla SW H

Frkl"'. J11n. U
Malollf' 1111 (;e•tn:ll St
' SatW'dQ, .lan. U
Wl~enMJn U OhiO' Sl
G~n at " 't'Kk'rn Mlrh
Mldt 1111 ,'fl~~ml
( Minai Mldut Ohio l lntv
To ..do .Ill KPftl Sl
nrw:ln .... l at St.uth Cw.rollr.
,\lahama-BirmlnJfllam .a1 Xavlf'r

* Ill

Ienton Rldae 61, GrHM¥1ew J1
Lant•Mif'l' n , Tal Ulllwf n
Ud1 \I all II. .JoiiiiM:"'a Noi1lnld1e U
Lolli 11. C.IWai ... IU.1t
'Jt, Col Marlo ..Praalllln •
LoiiiH n '7tl. Colll•lltn.Frullllnl!
Mapolla (In') II, Fr...
Cot I
M'ulfleld Peters11. Lo . . IIVtllf' lA
Mulflel4 M. . . . . .. Tolllo8!....
MulenBID•• Morral IUdpUif'H

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Mllllldnpm lilt OIN-rhf'ln
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•

TUESDAY

«.

t..o••

D~t~lofl

\' uuap~.,..

game. ' '

Bullard, who sat out Iowa's
first ten games·because ·of knee
surgery, made his first appear·
ance on the court with the game
less than two minutes old. He put
on · a superb shooting display,
hitting all three or his three-point
attempts In the first' half and
went six of eight from long range
for the game.
"We wanted to · play him no
longer than two minutes at a
time," Davis said. "My hat is off
to Matt fordoing such a good job.
We needed hitn and he sensed
that. How he could do what he did
In 16 minutes just amazed me."

Trimble hosts Wellston Tues·

R. .

Hocking.
Score by quarters:
Metgs..... .. :....... . 15 16 14 16-61
Trlmble ............. 18 21 10 24-73
MEIGS (ill) -Terry McGuire
~ll-0, Robbie · Fields 4-ll-8,
·Ryan Lemley ll-0-0, Richard
Peyton 0-0-0, Cary Betzlng ··
1-1-0-5, Jason Wright
2-1-1-8, L.J.Mitch 7-4-18,
Shawn Hawley. 3--4-10, James
Howerton 0-0...:0, Trevor Harri·
son 0-2-2. Totals 21-2-13-t1
TRIMBLE (73) - Charlie
Gatchel 0-1-1, Jeff Herbert
5-2-12, Curt Moore 1-2-4,
,Ryan ' McClelland 9-1-7-28,
Roger Bingman 4-3-11, Bobby
Burdette 0-1-1, Scott Ausllck
5-4-14, Bryan Mecum 1-ll-2.
TOTALS 25-1-21-73. ·

...,...... " · ........... $1

Mar,.,.wtUe SA. Col

-'c~

NIGHT
SPECIAL

MIMra1AidpM,I&amp;•p41
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52 GALLON ELECTRJC......'1597s'

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let"'helpyoa
chooot lhe ldn lher'o

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$

29¢
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SCIEDUL£40
ST. JOHN
4" IIW£18
; TRINIDAD ......... sa. Fr. ....... 35¢
DRill PIPE
•
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or
PERFORATED
i CAYMAN ............. sa. FT.........35¢
1/2" 10' CPVC ............................:......................*1.99
BARBADOS .... sa. FT. ......... 35¢ 1·1/2" x 10' SCHEDULE 40 ................................13.99

STEP LADDER .....s·a1.49

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.36" SHOWER~ ..........................$219.99 .

MONTE GO :....... SQ. FT........

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OlfiiiMo M. rc.. _.....,a
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"""•II.Y•-~••
PtrtOI. . IL'IWIW.III • • •

PRE-ASSEMBLED FOLDING

12• Main Tee ................

2' x4' LAY,tl

-.,,

11, . . . . tlnlenll

Nei.....U.Vei1171,......,.tl
New•1111, c.1 en..... a

889!..YD.

s

CELOTEX CEIL

GRENADA .............................

(All Game&amp;)
· TEAM·
W L P. OP
Wellston .. ..... ....... 6 2 592 491
Miller ....... ........... 6 3 594 554
Trlmble ..... .. .,....... s 3 , 507 497
Alexander ............6 · 4 646 . 630
Fed·Hocl&lt;lng. ,...... 5 4 653 631
Vinton County ...... 3 4 406 410
.Belpre ................. 3 4 494· 494
Nels· Y.ork ....... ... .. 2. 6 409 628
Meigs .......... .. ., ..... 1 5 303 428
Saturday results:
Trimble 73 Meigs 61 (makeup)
Federal·Hocking 69 Waterford 64
Nelsonville-York 71 Miller 65
(makeup! .
Tuesday's games:
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Belpre at Miller
Federal Hocking at .Meigs
Wellston at Trimble
Vinton County - open
' Friday's games':
Vinton County aj Alexander
Nelsonville-York . at Federal
Hocking
Miller at Meigs
Trimble at Belpre
Wellston, open
Jan. 13 games:
Nelsonville-York at Trimble
(makeupi
· Meigs at Wellston (makeup)

1

CUPEftNG

(WHITE ONI.V)

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6'x12' .

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26'' X' 12'·.......................................... s7.67

TVC standings .

82395

DOORS

. ..
· s511·
.26 "X8' ....................................................
26.1' X 10'... ................ ~ ......................... •6.39

J ....... A.ldf'r • • llellq ..

S...IIII,..Jau Tt&gt;t:h •I .\krett
fiM'I"I - ~ tt.l SM' LouhliMI
Allllllftd at North..-n llt'lltwlr.)'
wht·W alllan al Oh6o Norther•

Plan tournament ·

getting Into the flow of the

UNDERPINNING

liLIANIIED
CDRRDIATID

~\lay and Meigs Is at Federal

•
•

, 111' 1 lADlE

PRE-BUNG

83.48

;.

lrankln 1-1, " 'lllllt'ler..,.,.. II (of:)

Bowlln.r;

Wrl(hl

·

IOWACITY.Iowa (UPI)-'No . victory was, Ayers said, ''When I
17 Iowa regained the services of lookl!d at Indiana and then Iowa
forward Matt Bullard Saturday on the road, it's a . good start
night, bill it wasn't enough to .because It gives our young club
beat Ohio State.
confidence."
Despite a team·hlgh 23 poinis
Iowa coach Tom Davis. who
by the senior !r.om West Des saw his team fall to 8·3 for the
·Moines Valley, t.he Hawkeyes season and 0·1 111 .the. Big Ten,
suffered tllei~ second consecu·- said he knew going into the game
tlve loss an,d t~elr first In the Big that Ohio State could hurt the
Ten, 79·73, to Ohio State.
Hawkeyes in many ways .. · ,.
Freshman Jltnmy Jackson
"We lacked cohesiveness bescored a career-high 28 points to cause of.only two days practice
lead the Buckeyes to \heir second time." Davis said, referring to
straight upset of a Big Ten Jolia's 77-74 loss to Northern
opponent and put Ohio State atop Iowa Wednesday night. "We
the league standings with a 2·0 struggled getting started artd
record.
have to do a much better job
· "I was really pleased wlth.our
effort tonight," said first-year
Ohio State ·eoach Randy Ayers.
who led the Buckeyes to a 69-67
Meigs High Coach Rusty Book·
upset of Iijdlana Thursday night. man reports th&lt;~l the Meigs High
"For a young ballclub. we really basketball program is sponsor·
came In and were mentally ' lng a "three-on-three" basket·
ready. People will look at Jack· '· ball tournament beginning next
son's ;&gt;olnts, but he really did a Sunday, January 14 at Meigs
sound job defensively."
High SchooL
.
Ayers said one of the keys to
The double elimination tourna·
Ohio State's victory was the way ment will have two age groups.,
t~e Buckeyes handled Iowa's
has a four·man roster, and
fuU·court pressure.
begins at 10 a.m.
"We wanted to attack the • Prizes will be awarded to the
pressure," he said. "Our kids are first place teams and entry feels
used to seeing it. Our quiCkness $25 per team. Each game will be , ..
in the open court was certainly a a 20 minute game or thirty points;
factor and we wanted to throw whichever comes first.
the ball long to spread their.
.For more Information or to
defense."
enter call Rusty Bookman at
When asked how big the 992·5298 ,. or Ron Drexler at
992·6387. .

DOG
HOUSES

•

··•11.18·

EXTERIOR
or INTERIOR

28" X 5' .

PLA.SftR BOARD
•

.LA'fd PIIIT

·DURHAM CHERRY ·TERA OAK
·UGHT BIRCH •FREEDOM PECAN
•AMERICAN WOOD

$49.95

8'

.JacU.Cnter M. Dl'paiiUnrlldf 71

~a.ttr n

LoyDI• IIIII at

~~

Glf' Hh H. \\'o11111111l . . S1

St al TIRin

M!U'.,.IW' 1111 DII)'IOG

51. nffhl C.hmblan 47

Zan"!tn·i l .. -17, Fremonl RoiUI.fl2
bntw RoM!l'NRII II, L•nc•~r .fl':

.John C!ltrollal Ohi-o ~orth•rn
Ol .. rtu•I•IU Hl ... m

~h111'rrM'f'

Utlu!ll

OaAI Harbor -IR, llllron U tot)
Oakwood H. Milton Uak:lnn
OrrvUie SO, Kf'M 4!1
Prrl')'~ ra: U . Tol WIUimer 3!5
Plclltrln~rtoa 7t. ChiUicotht r.
RaVPIUil U. LGuiAwlllf' Aquha~ -12'
Sudu!!ky 4i, Grafton Mldvlrw '!i
Sidllf~ .. 8. TPatmlf'b U,
St•y -t9, TetvmMh 18

MA.roR ISDOOR !HK'CER LEAGI:E
SLY urd 1Q' Re ~ uk !i
( 'lt•H ·Iilnd 'i. &amp;!timon.• ~
Tll&lt;'C)Inu -t. Dallau. :!
~

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Northwood .U, Gton~a 31 .

Monlrt'lll Ml Quf'hPc, nll(fll
Edmonlon at CuiKJU')' . nipt
:~ . IAul,. at ~a,. An ~es. nl~

f'

Lr:l llnctoa Ml, Shertdah U

Sew Coneonl Glena$0, Crookn111e It

M'innlpt",lid Sf'W ,Jt.-r,...y , i: 45 p.m .
'Nf'HCI a.v G11mf!'i

Mlnrr...

.

Falrk'll• 33. Dovrr at

and played four gpPd quarters of
pointers ~dded up for the Tom·
basketball, prompting Coach
cats as they added nine points to
Rusty Bookman to say. "l was
their total when Meigs was fac~d
pleasl!d with our entire game. We
with · a · come.· tronl-behlnd
never let UP: and pl;lyed great . sltuatiOI\. ·,
.
team balL All night long we did . · MeigS hlt23 Of 61 field goals for
what we were s.upposed to."
37' percent and dlc!n'l dO too bad
Bookman continued, "At the
at llie line where the Marauders
'first of the' year we were
hit 13 .o fl8 for72 percent. Trimble
concerned with just showing
hlt25 of 64 for 39 percent and 21 of
Improvement every game. To·
21 at the line for 79 percent.
night It seemed to
come
PromiSing was the fact that the
together. We played some good young Marauders made only 9
ball Friday. but didn't show up
turnovers In a fine ball haridllng
for one quarter and that hurt: game, while lo4ing a slight edge.
To.night's game was four points
In reboundlllg, ~1-34: Ausllck led
difference most oft he game, then
the winners with 12. while Mitch
late we had to foul and they
and Betzing .had 11 and 7
capitalized . making · the score
respectively for Meigs.
look wor'i@ than It actually was."
MHS had 6 steals (two each by
Betzing. Hawley, aqd Wright),
Meigs played a tough first and had 25 personals. Trjmble
quarter ag;1lns the seasoned, had,3 ste'als, 14 turnovers, and 16
experienced Tomcats who were i&gt;ersonal fou.ls. :
Trimble won the reserve game
playing their 11th game ot the
65-54
led by the brother Gatchel
season. After the dust had set lied
combination
that tallied 39 total
In .that round, Meigs' trailed
.points;
23byDaveGatcheland16
18-15.
At the half Trimble found It trom Charlie Gatchel, while
couldn't shake tlie Meigs Coun· Tyler hit double figures with 13. .
Meigs Trevor Harrison had a ·
llans and led by a narrow 39·31
great overall game to lead the
margin.
Meigs held tough 49'45 after Maraudel's with 24 pOints, while
·
three frames, but already foun&lt;1 James .Howerton added 10.
Trimble Is 5•3 overall and
the free throw line becoming a
factor. In the final round the one · Meigs Is, 1·5.

OSU upsets No. · 17 Iowa, 79-73

Mounl \'ermnn, !'II:.Wark31
S C•nton -ll. Grt'81ihal'J' Grein' :It
N C'anlon Hoow.r.a&amp;, Grun!lbu !'IGrrPn

. Bo...aon ~. Buffalo I
. f :dpry :J, F.Aimoncon I
PIU!ihur~h

Pl'tf'l'll '7K. I.A..orMIIe 5K

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MU11n Edl110• t:l, Port Cllnion $1

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·Jo~llgwn :1~

Huth U,

By DAVE HARRIS
Playing one of their best·games
of the year, the Meigs Marauders
basklitball team : held tough
against TVC league contender
Trimble, trailing by just four Into ·
the waning moments before
Trimble utilized go'od foul shoot·
lng to widen the margin of
victory to 73·61 Saturday
evening.
.
Meigs, whistled for 25 fouls,
sent Trimble to the line 27 times
where the Tomcats successfully
· coimected 21 times for 79 percent
accuracy.
Nine of those successful tries '
came late In the fourth period
when Meigs was at a last resort In
trying to catchup.
.
Overall, Ryan McClelland led
the Tomcats with game· high 28
points, whlledeff Holbert trailed
with 12, Scott Auslick 14, and
Roger Bingman 11.
Meigs was ll!d by a balanced
attack and super team ef(ort
which was pacl!d by L.J. Mitch
with 18, Jay Humphreys 10,
Shawn Hawley 10, Robbie Fields
8, Jason Wright 8, Cary Betzing 5.
and Trevor Harrison 2.
Always a tough rciad game to
win, Saturday's contest was
quite a good exhibition by the
young Marauders, whO !ought for

X

2 Gil,, .PilL (WBI I &amp; OILY)

PER SHEET

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II

EACH

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AILS

8 cc SINKER...~M!·.!~~....s1'799

8' FDIIIIG lftiiPI

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The Daily Sentinai-:'Pig• 6

4'x8' REAL WOO,D

PBNR

Improved Marauders drop 73-61 tilt
BRISTER HURRIES THROW - Bronco linebacker Michael
Brooks (~) forces Ste.e ler quarterback 'Bubby Brister (6) Into a
hqrrled throw during fourl~ qilarter action .Sunday In De!lver. The
Broncos advanced to the · AFC fi!Jals the playoff contest, 2&lt;1·23.
(0PI)
.

Pornaov-Midrlapon, Ohio

HOGG G ZUSPAN MATERIALS COMPAN¥7 INC.

.the

'
By TOM WITHERS
TheY finiShed th~ regular seuon
Browns. It will ·· be
third Ellard for 13 to the Rains' d .
by defeating New .Ena:lalld, then
Broncos-Browns matcbup In the
UPI Spo~ W'litel'
On the !leXt play, Giants
•
title game In the last four Years; cOrnerback S_beldon . White was whipped Philadelphia 21·7 In the
The Los· Angeles Rams and Denver won poth previous called ftr ln~rference aa:alnst NFC wild-card gaml!. Now they
Denver Broncos, who both meetings,
are one trjumph from advanctna
Ander~ at the New York 25.
earned hard fought playoff victoBoth of Denver's victories over White said there was no way to their first Super. Bowl since ..
ries Sunday, will be meeting the Browns have come In dra·. AndersOn could have caught the . losing to Pittsburgh after the 1980
opponents looking to avenge past matte fashion. John Elway drove pass over tlJV middle, and be did season.
losses In next week's conference the Broncos . 98 yards Jn the not think there was enough
The Broncos weren't expectl!d
championship gam~s.
' game's final two minutes tor the · contact to justify field Juda:e to have much trouble with the
The Rams advanced to the tying touchdown three years ago, Bernie Kuka~'s Interference call. surprising Steelers but found
NFC Championship game when with Denver winning In over·
".We were both going for the ·tttemselves trailing with seven
quarterback Jim Everett found time, arid ' a year later, Cleve- ball," White said. "Tbe hall was mlllutes to' play before quarter·
Flipper Anderson for a 30-yard land's Earnest Byner fumbled on . at le"t five feeUWay from both hack John Elwpy marched the
touchdown pass i : 06 Jnto over· · the goaHine .as the BrownS were of us. Superman couldn't have Broncos 71 yards to .s et up the
final score.
·
time for a 19·13 victory over the attempting to .score the tying caught the ball."
"You have to give John the
New York ·Giants. ·
to.uchdown In tbe waning · · Anderson disagreed.
The victory sets up the third moments.
' 'I was hit, tile ball was crl!dlt for (the wiMing drive),"
meeting ot the year between Los
Clltchable . and I touched 1!." Denver Co11ch Dan Reeves said.
"He's·.the catalyst that everyb·
Angeles and the San Francisco
Cleveland survived a frantic Anderson said.
49ers. The two teams split the two two-minute drive . by Buffalo
"WIMing Is a great relief," ody looks to In the clutch
regular season matchups, the Saturday. escaping ·with a 34·30 Everett said. "The Giants tried situations. And he dld'a great job
Rams winning 13-12 at San . victory when linebacker'. Clay to KO us at the start 1 bJlt Flipper today.
"Hopefully we'll be ready (for
Francisco and losing 30·27 at Matthews Intercepted a Jim did his thing one-on-one."
Cli!Veland
next week) . We need
home a month ago, blowing a Kelly pass on the Cleveland
Anderson alsocaughta 20-yard,
lead late In the game.
goal·llne with three seconds TD pass wlth.l7 seconds left In to play better next week. partlcu·
larly ori defense. We'~jusi glad
The 49ers ear~d their second . remaining.
·
the first half for a 7-6 lead.
. i
straight trip to the title game
The Rams won the.toss to begin
·Giants Coach . Bill Parcells to get this win. "
"We came up just one ·potnt
Sai\U'day with a 41·13 pounding of the 11th overtime In playoff protes.tedon thesldellnes, butdld
the IV(Inne§.Ota Vlk)ngs.
· .
history and miwed 77 yards tor not knoCk the officials afterward. short," said Steelers quarter·
The Btbncos got two TD the vlttory, alhelt a controver·
"Pne play' doesn't make. the back Bubby Brister. "We played·
plunges from Melvin Bratton. the sial one. ·
game," Parcells said. "Still, It's well enough to win. We just didn 't
win, but we're heading In the
Everett hit Pete Holohan for 12 very dlsappolntlllg." ..
final one coming with 2:27 to
·
play, setting up an AFC title yards, threw Incomplete tor
The victory was the Rams' right direction. We'll be back." ·
showdown with the Cleveland Henry Ellard and then found · third straight on the East Coast.

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8" BETTER KITCHEN FAUCET --2 HANDLE
.38
8" BEST KITCHEN FAUCET ·---··1 1HANDLE ....·-···-··----'51.29
. 8" ECONOMY KrTCHEN FAU~ --,---··-············--·~: ••'20.22
4" ECONOMY LAVAroRY FAUCE'f ••• - ••·~·--······--113.05
4" BETTER LAVATORY FAUCET .__________:_ ___.'31.81
TUB
SHOWER
FAUCETS-.:...-...
TUB &amp;
FAUCIT
ONLY. ....._,..____ 41.118

·-----------·'54.88
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Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio -

_En_aeti_Win_~~ ~~~·!~po-rt

I

f-orm-any .

Monday• .Mnu.y 8, 1880

to continue 'around Ohio.. :-

Mild weather

~ontlnued from page 1

years, and a member of .
Continued from page 1
flood watches and warnings In
precleceslor ·of The Dally Sen·
Feeney -Bennett Post 128 ,
accident Su.n.day that killed a land Monday, as tempera tum
Wednesday and Fr lday, and Georgia, Alabama fU!d MissisWomen's Auxiliary. She gradu· from 45&gt;to 55 Thursday. Lows wlll
tine!, during the 19~s and 40s. He
3&amp;-year-old physician from Ad- remain e d . above freezln"
sippi. Flooding around Sylvester,
left the newspaper business In
ated from Ohio University and be In the 30s or low 40s.
rian on U.S. 121n southeastlower throughout mucb of the region.
Ga. , washed out roads and forced
tile early 1950s to resume teach·
was also a former teacher In the
·
Michigan.
Vermont reporled mostlY cloudy
many families to evacuate Sun• Jng and tarmlflg.
Jack.sDn School DIStrict In Jack·
~kles
from
northwest·
Cloudy
skiel
with temperatures In the
Around the N atlon
day night.
Born April 2, 1904, at Pratts
son County, Ohio.
..
~rn Wisconsin Into the Upper
mld-30s,
and _skies clouded over
Snow and 70 mph winds ripped
The Pearl River was expected
Fork In Lodl Township of Athens.
Surviving Mts, Lewis are two through northern California
Peninsula C)f Michigan were Providence, ·R .I._, where the• ·
be was the son of.the late WllUam
daughters and sons-In-law, Seren Monday, heavy rains led to to crest abOve flood sta1e MonrepOrted Monday morning, while mercuty dropped to the freezing
Ellaworth and Minnie Whetstone
and Troy livingston, of North· · flooding In the South and unsea- day In the Mississippi citieS of
clear
.skies dominated the mark. · ,
·
Philadelphia and Jackson, but no
Wingett. He was also preceded In
brook, lll.. and Ollta and Emer- sonably warm temperatures in
weather picture from Mllwau~~~ny skies and mUd temperadeath by his wife, Maxine · son Heighton, or Middleport; a the Mldwes.t took a shar11 plunge. major damage was expected.'
~ . south · through Chicago,
tures werE! the rule tor most of
"this Is the first time we've
Spencer Wingett, o.n July 14,1988, brother. Harold Jenkins, of JackKansas City and St. Louts.
·
New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas,
The California rain and snow been over flood stage in quite a ,
an adopted son, John; two· son; a sister, Helen Michael, of
Clouds moved Into. New Eng· Arkansas,.and Louisiana.
spread aS far south as the San while now , butwereally'don'tsee
sisters, Finis Outtehon and Ruth
Columbus; five grandchildren.
Francisco Bay area and Yosem- any problems for homes and
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE fORJ;:CAST TO 1 AM EST 1-~911
Boyer, · and rour brothers, · Scott, Daniel and Megan Livingbusinesses,"· said Lar.ry Fls.h er,
Ite
National
Park,
generated
by
a
.
Wayne, Ray; [;owen. and Paul ston, and Emily and David
nearly stationary Pacific storm qlrector of . the JacksonHlnds
Wingett.
·
Heighton; and two great grand·
system centered over the Pacific Emergency Operations Center.
Mr. Wingett was a past master c.hlldren, Jessica and Frances.
The weather system was head·
·'
Northwest, the National Weather
and member morethan60years
. In alfdltlon"to her parents, she
lng east and camed rain to· th(l
Serv
ice
said.
of Harrisonville Masonic Lodge was preceded in death by her
Heavy rain fell over northeast· mld·Atlantlc statt's late Monday
No. 411. He was also a longtime husband, William, In 1980, and a
ern Caflfornla and the northern morning. The precipitation fell in
member ol the Racine United brother, Samuel.
.
ServiceS Will be Tuesday, 2 Sacramento Valley through the the form of sleet and snow In
Methodist Church, Bosworth
.,
weekend, with 6.41 Inches re· West VIrginia and southern VIrCouncil No. 46, Royal and Select p.m. • at the Rawlings-CoatsMasons, OhiO Valley Command- Fisher Funeral Home, with Rev . corded in Shelter Cove during a ginia, · and sleet, wet snow or
24-hour period before the rain freezing rain was possible north
ery No. 24, Knights Templar, O'Qulnn Kelly officlat~g. Burial
••
and west of Washington, D.C.,
Pomeroy Chapter No, 80, Royal will be In Riverview Cemetery . tapered off,
Up to 8 inches of snow fell at the . the weather service said.
Arch Masons, Racine Chapter Friends may call at the funeral
A weak rold front , moving
high levels around Lake Tahoe
No. 134, . Order of the Eastern home today (Monday) from 2 to4
Star, Order orthe White Shrine of . and 6 to 8: Iri lieu of flowers, . arid winds to 70 mph blasted the · across the Midwest brought In
Jerusalem, life member or the1 rnemorlal contrlllutions may be region overnight Sunday and some clouds and coo'le(l tempera,,
Meigs County-Pioneer and His- made in Mrs. Lewis' 10emory to , · early . Monday . Winds . also tures Into the 20s Monday after a
'
torical Society and Ohio Retired the Middleport Presbyterian ' pounded California's north coast weekend or unseasonably warm
and nortl!ern mountains, and temperatures that reached Into
Church, or any other church.
'l:eachers Association.
·
more rain and snow was ex- the 40s and 50s.
Surviving are a daughter-inDense
fog
covered
southwest
pected over the next few days,
law, Mary Wingett, Cleveland:
es
peel ally in the northwestern· lower Michigan Monday morn a brother, Franklin Wingett,
Ing, reducing .visibility to less
section of the state.
.,
Eclectic, Ala.; a sister, Jane
t : :•; o1SNOW
BRAIN
SHOWERS
Dally stock prkles
In Oregon, rainfall amounts than 350 yards In some areas. Icy
Yozl, Bridgeport, Conn., and sev(Aa of 10: 30 a.m.)
reached up to 8 inches in the roads were blamed for a tr.artlc
fRONTS: f t "Warm "Cold .. . S'i!tic "Occlude~
eral nieces and nephers.
Bryce and 'Mark Smith
southern' coastal mountains ,
oil/ ~
Map shows minimum temperatures. At !east 50% of any shaded area is forecas!
Funeral services will be held at or Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
"
while winds of up to 50 mph
to
receive precipitation Indicated
.
· · UPI ·
2 p.m. Wednesday at the Racine
'
.
'
.
'
churned theCQastofWashlngton. .G~d
~ate
United Methodist Chureh with Am E)eetrlc Power . ............ 31%
Wf;ATHER
MAPDuring
early
Tuesday
m!)mlng
raln,/sh!lw·
·
A low p~ssure system carried
t~ Rev. Roger Grace officiating.
ers
are,forecast
for
parts
of'the
Pacific
northwest,
the
nort,bern
.
AT&amp;T ........... .. .; ..... ... .. :...... .44% more rain Into much o!the South
At the request of Me'Jgs AssistBurial will be In 'Letart Falls ~shland on ........... ...,......... 38¥, and prompted the NWS to issue
Intermountain Region and parts of the northern PlaiiUI. Rain.
. ant Prosecuting Attorney Linda
.
,,
Cemetery.
showers
are possible In parts of the central PlaiDS and the mid
Bob Evans ..... .. ...... ............. 13 %
Warner, a session of the Meigs
Friends may call Tuesday
Mississippi Valley with snow possible In parts of the upper
Charming Shoppes ....... .. ..... 10%
County Grand-Jury has been set
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the 'City Holding Co ............... .... 15 .
Mlss!sslppl Valley. Showers and thunderstonns are possible In the
for Jan. 31 at Jl: 30 a.m.
Ewing Funeral Home In Pome· F ederal 'Mogul... ...... .... ....... 20%
extreme south Atlant{c Coast .. (UPI)
The court matter of Bonnie L.
roy, and at the church beginning Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. .. ...... .. ... 44%
Veterans Memorial
Brewer
against Terry Brewer
one hour prior to the time ot Heck's. ..... .............. ....... ... ...... 4
Saturday admissions ·- Mary ha s been dismissed.
services.
Key Centurion .......... .......... 13';4 B. Hindy, Middleport; Charles L.
South Central &lt;lhlo
A chance or rain or snow
Lands' End ..... .... .... ...... .... .. 19% Collins, Reedsville; Hllda HarPar-tly cloudy Monday night, Wednesday and Friday, with a ·
Limited Inc......... .. ......... ....36% ris , Pomeroy .
Neva Seyfried
with a low between 30 and 35. chance of rain only on Thursday.
Multimedia Inc ....... .... .. .. .. .. 92%
Saturday discharges - None.
· Partly . cloudy Tuesday. with Highs 'will be between 35 and 15·
Rax Restaurants ...... .. .. .. .. .... 2 ~
Neva Seyfried, 95; of 288
Sunday admissions - Dallas
highs· between 50 and 55,
Wednesday and Friday and be,,
Robbins &amp; Myers .. !".. .. .. .. ..... 15% Varian, Mason. W.Va.; Hollis
:,_ Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died
A divorce action has been filed
' ~xtended Forecast
tween 45 al)d 55 Thursday,..
Shoney's Inc.. .... ::-:......... ,, ... 12% Pe~;:Uese, Pomeroy; Esther Har: In Meigs Common Pleas Court by
Sunday at Veterans memorial
Wednesday through Friday
ov·e rnlght ,lows will range from
Star Bank .............. .. ........ .. .20Y,
din, Syracuse.
, ' Dennis Edward Boyd Sr .. Pome.
Hospital.
the 30s to the low 40s.
Wendy's Inti. .... ......... .. ... .. .. .4%
Eliza- roy , agalnstBettyDarleneBoyd,
Sunday discharges
A homemaker, she \YWs born
'
on Sept. 9, 1894 In Rutland · Worthington Ind .. ... ..... .... ... .23'h · beth Flck.
Pomeroy .
Township, the daughter of John
A. Scott a,nd Myrtle Hysell S~ott.
of Commerce will not ·hold a
DAR luncheon postponed
She was a member of .Trinity
__________
Chapter Report Day of the 'monthly meeting In January.
Church and the Meigs County
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, The first meeting or the new
The Lundgrens and 10 other ·formed his own congregation
Senior Citizens Center.
Sharon Bluntschley, 31, Inde- Daughters of the American Re- group will be held Tuesday, Feb.
sect members are accused or the with about a dozen followers.
Survivors include a daughter
pendence, surrendered Saturday volution, originally scheduled for 13. with location and time ·to be
shootlngdeathsofDennisAvery,
In April, the FBI went to the
and son-in-law, Myrtle.and Joe
to Michigan State Pollee in Bay this Wednesday at the home or announced prior to that date.. .
49, his wife; Cheryl, 42, and their Kirtland home · to Investigate . City, Mich.
Sisson, Pomeroy; grandchild·
•
the regent, Mrs. Ronald Rey - Bloodmol!ile to vlalt . , 1
ren, Carolyn and John Teaford daughters, Trina, 13, Rebecca, 9, threats the group allegedly made
Two more,mote susp~cts In the nolds, ha·s been postponed until
The
American
Red
Cross
·
and Karen. 5, _in Kirtland, Ohio, a against members of theReorgan .. case, Kathryn ' Johnson, 36, of
,,, ...u4.GIIo~P and ~ley. Siason,
Bloodmobile
will
be
atJ&lt;rogers
In
.
riex.
t
WednesdaY
,Jan.
l7,
due
to
a
ized Church, and found pistols,
rura:t suburb or Clevela-nd.
and great-grandchildren, ~r)stai
Holden, Mo. , and Daniel Kraft of
' Porner\ly on Tuesday from noon
·
The
·
family
·
members,
also
rifles and semiautomatic assault· Nau-voo, Ill., remained at large . . farnily illness.
BoUn, Beth · Kennedy , Brian
4ntii 4,p.m. for those individuals,
~o
'
J
anuaty
meeting
believed to be part or Lundgren's weapons ·at th&lt;;&gt; home. After the
Teaford, Brent Sisson. and Rick
Jeffrey and Damon Lundgren,
wishing
to donate blood.
The
newly
POMEROY
breakaway sect," were appar- · search, however, the residents of Brand, Kraft and Ronald Luff ·
Gaul. ·
formed
Meigs,
County
Chamber
ently killed in April, bu·t their the home van lshed.
She was preceded in death by
were each indicted on five counts
bodies were not found until
Lundgren a _nd 12 other s u~- of aggravated murder with death.
:her husband, Roy Seyfried
earlier this week In a barn.
peels were indicted . Friday in penalty specifications and five
in1943, and two daughters, Eliza·
\he Cleveland Plain Dealer Lake County. Ohio. on various counts of_ kidnapping. The others
beth and Ruth.
quoted an unidentified pollee charges in the slayings ol the were each indicted .on five counts
Graveside sen1ces will be held
source as saying investigators Avery family .
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
of kidnapping, five counts of
believe the Averys were killed·in
Two other suspects ... Richard
Beech Grove Cemetery. The
complicity to commit aggra- .
a sacrifice performed so the rest , .. Brand, 26, of Indepenpence, Mo. , vated· murder and five counts of
Rev. William Middleswarth will
. 4-PEPSI'S, 16 OZ.
of· Jeffrey Lundgren's group and Gregory Wtnship, 29 , or conspiracy to commit aggraofficiate. Friends will be recould travel to ti:le wilderness, Euclid, Ohio, surrendered Fri- vated murder. '
ceived at the- Mulberry Ave.
·
where they would be cleansed day . authorities said . Those
residence. There will be no
Though motel employees said
LIMITED
and could search for a golden arrested Thursday night wer e at least two other adults were
;•. , visitation at the Ewing Funeral
sword .
identified as Ronald Luff, 29. his seen leaving the Lundgren room;
Home.
·
DELIVEIY A.IEA.
Eight other suspects have been wife, Susan. 31: Dennis Patrick; an _ATF spokeswoman said there
In lieu of flowers donations
arrested
In the case. Two others 35; and his wife, Tonya, 33; and was no evidence to Indicate that
may be made to Trinity Church '
remain
at
large.
Debbie Olivarez, 3i, all . of the two remaining suspects were
or the Meigs County Senior
ATF
·
agents
tracked
the
Independence.
Citizens Center.
with the Lundgrens before their
Lundgrens to a low-budget motel
992-212.
arrest.
'
in
National
City,
about
6
miles
Ruth Anthony
WEST MAIN
POMIIOYI OHIO
south or San Diego and 15 miles
north of the Mexican border.
Ruth S. Anthony, 83, Coolville,
Lundgren offered no resistance
died Sunday evening at S.t.
when was arrested about 11 a.m.
Joseph Hospital following an
PDT Sunday as he walked away
extended illness.
the Santa Fe Motel' toward a
Born in Denison, she was the
publiC telephone.
daughter of the' late Edward and
Twelve calls for medical assistance were answered over
Sylvia Wooley Cable. She prethe
weekend by units of the Meigs County Emergency
· In a · motel room, agents
viously owned and operated a
Medical
Services. Six of the calls were on Saturday and six
arrested Lundgren's 38-year-old
.- Texico Station In Coolville begin·
~~~~
.
wife and his son and took
nlng In 1961 and the Lakeview
Saturday
at
2:25a.m.,
Middleport
went
to
North
Second
Ave.
Motel in Caryville, Tenn. in 1967 . . temporary custody of three more
for
Mary
Wallace
who
was
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
She was a foster grnanmother of the couple's children, aged 15,
Hospital. At· 3:35 a.m.;Middieport went to Pearl St. for Opal
for the Athens County Children' s 9 and 10.
Pugh who was also take!\ to Ve~ran,s Memorial Hospital.
Agents searching the room
Services, a member or the
Pomeroy at 4:01 p.m. transported Hollis Peguese from Main
Coolville Volunteer Fire Depart· found four guns - an AR·l5
St.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
menf Ladles Auxiliary, and a assault weapon, a .45-callber
'
At
6:51p.m, Salem Township Fire Department was called to a
member ot the Coolville Senior pistol, two .44-callber revolvers,
hay bale fire on the Roy Vaughan propel'ly on County Road 1.
ammunition, knives, gas masks
Citizens group.
At 7: 39 p.m., Pomeroy was called to Peach Fork Road for .
Mrs. Anthony Js survived by and ' "survivalist-type gear,"
John
Hess Jr. who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
three sisters. Elsie Humphrey, Vita said.
' '4 It)." burger lopped With
at 8:30 p.m. was called to - the Riverside
Middleport
' Jeffrey Lundgre11's alleged
coolville; and Audrey Masters
Apartments for Joseph King who was treated but not
grilled pastrami, swiss cheese,
and Nell Graham, both or Colum· ylctlms died from .45-callber
.
.
.•
,
transported.
lettuce, IO"!!ato 6 our tamo111
bus; several nieces and nephews. slugs. An ATF spokeswoman
at
7:01
a
.m.
,
Middleport
went
to
Ra-ilroad
St.
for
Sunday
McGvver sbuc;e In a grilled
Besides her parents, she was said ·balUstlcs tests would be
sesame seed bun.
Memorial
Hospital.
Thomas
Roush
to
Veterans
preceded in death by her hsu· necessary to determine If the gun
\
Syracuse
at
11:44
a.m.
was
called
to
Second
St.
for
Esther
recovered was · used In the
band, Fred, liJ 1967 and four
Hardin
who
was
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
~""""'
slaylngs.
• brothers.
At 11:58 a .m. , Middleport went to the Overbroo~ Nursing
VIta said it was unclear
· 698 West- Main
· Funeral services will be held
Center
tor Joseph Leach who was taken to Veterans Memorl!ll
' Wednesday at 11 a.m at the whether the Lun.dgrens were
Hospital.
·
Pomero~ ' Ohio
White-Ethridge Funeral Home, headed tor Mexico. Lundgren
Rutland
·Fire
Department
at
12:
4J
p.J'Il.
was
called
to
a
126 Lee St., Belpre. The Rev . had been In the Navy In the San
·
furnace fire at a residence on Depot St.
Jack Burdsall will ottlclate and Diego area In the early'19711s and
Syracuse
at
4:05
p.m.
went
to
Second
St.
tor
Fredericka
IND·R WIIOl~ Lor MOIMI10 111m
burial will be In the Oak drove ''may liave felt he was comforta·
Farris
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
' ~-" . : Cemetery·ln Logan.Friends may bie with this location," the A TF
Middleport at 4: 36 p,m. transported Rose McDade from tile
caJI at the· funeral home 7 ·to 9 agent said. ..
Stonewoods
Apartments to Holzer. MediCIII center.
Motel manager ' Joy Llu said
p.m. on Tuesday.
· Allee Lundgren checked in to·the
motel late Wednesday night,
Wlfh the purchaae a1 a Poatramt
using name Anna James and
•urger,
Large French Frle1 ana
I
.,
saying sbe had left" her nearby
Large
Drink.
Long time Middleport rest· home to escap'e beatings by her ·
dent, Frances Jenkins Lewis, 74; husband.
.
.
.
'
One coupan·pel CUitomer, per
died Saturday afternoon at the
Lui .said Jeffrey LUndiJ'I'n
VIlli. Nolva!klwllhanyafher
Overbrook Center In Middleport came to -the motel office dally to
, dlsoaun~. Good thr• 2·21·90
after an exlellded illness. .
pay tor the t37-a-day roOm In
Born· July 16, lt15 at Oak Hili, . c~h.
.
Mra. Lewll waa a daqhter of the
Lund,reri's splinter group was
late Robert W. and AJina Mae believed to constat ot about 29
Eva Jenktn•. She wa• a mea, women and children before
memlleroltbeMiddl~rtPreab­
It; disbanded last month.
•loll •Celt Slaw
yterlan Cllurch, the owner and Lundgren had proclaimed him·
epetafo
Goed ""' 2·21-911
: operator, of Crays . Hardwll!e · self a -prophet last year 'a nd .

.

-.

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SlOCks . .

H·;d

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jury

set

Hospital news

------Weather------

Seeks divorce

~ttS])E!Cte£l... _c_o_ntl_n_ue_d_f_ro_m~p-a~ge_l

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---Meigs. announceme~ts----

e

NOW ~,T DOMINO'S PIZZA

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA ,

II
.

Domino's Pizza

.--- Local news briefs---.
EMS has12 weekfnd calls

PASTRAMI
BURGER·

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.

_Mondav. J.....-y B. 1990

Pomerov MkJtleport•. Ohio .

--

Th~ year ·in .review...

..._.

., -

The Daily Sentinel-.,.-7

'

By .J1,JLIE E. DILLON
8mtlnel New1 Staff

Ding celebratlODI, Rutland VU·
lege staged Ill first annual
Rutland Block Party with a
Whatwu the most memorable variety of entertainment and
ev~ ot 1989 tor you? Could It ~ratti on display. Middleport's
have been the redecoration and block party was hlghlllbted by a
renovation of the Sacred Heart car show with· Gt!ile Whaley
C!'thollc Church, Perhaps' It was taking the belt ofshow trophy for
the grand opening at the new his Ditty sU:ver Chevene, while at
~elp County Public Libgary, or
Racine there was plenty to ~o.
maybe It was the formation ot a . · see and l!nJoy at the harvest
brand · new Meigs . County festival.
·
Chamber of Commerce: ·
Elizabeth Smith who had·been
· Na matter what tile top story .dismiSsed from the l'!atlonal
~as .for the year, good news or
Honor Society following .l!er
bild news .. Meigs Countlans took · conpooverslal valedictory B.d·
everythl"' In stride and look - dress at So11thern High $ch09l
forward to making 1990 even was reinstated Into the honor
better than 1989. But tor now let's group after naonths ot controvtake a look at the year end in ersy and Involvement ot the Civil
review.
•
· •
Llbertl.es Union.
AUGUST
Pomeroy Attorney Charles
Knight was named to fill ·a
A plaque remembering Kermit vacancy on the Eastern Local
Walton, long time Pomeroy rest- Board of Education created by
dent and businessman, was set In the resignation of susie Heines.
c:oncrete on the corner ot East
RJ!clne area native' Gregory
Main . and Lynn Srre«)ts in Dci,!IOhew was one ot three men

LD~K,I\KY - Nearly 20t p;athered In front

and "tour of the faciUtles.

1

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• ·. -

or· ihe new Melp County rUbllc Ubrary for Its , dedicatiOn program, ribbon cutdng,

·

,

Po:':~~tapsule to preserve the

e)ectrocuted on 8 construction years.
self Insurance . company was · lems when temperatures fell well Powell, all of Poll'\eroy; · Nl.c k
·
1
•
th
f
ed
·
site
in
Columbus.
·
The
R·
e
·
v
.
Robert
Borer
·
w
as
- considered by the Racine Village "below the zero degree mark on Robinson, Lenny Eliason; Chuch
presen .or e uture was plac
.· Gregory Hicks, Pomeroy, on
the thermometer.
Kitchen , Dick Owen, a nd Mike
In a wall at the new Bank One . federal prObatl!)n In connection named the new administrator of Council.
Middleport Village Council reLaura's Grocery Store, a long · Gerlach, all of Middleport; ·.
autobank. The bOx waa sealed With the 1988 break;..,Jn of the the Sacred H_e art Catholic
and Is scheduled to be reo}iened Pomeroy Post Office, entered a Church and David Meelot was . celved a $25,000 grant from the time establishment at the Inter- David Baker, member at large,· •
Ohio Department ot Natural section ot County Road 1 and and Bill Nease, representing :
Ie or
named the pastor associate.
In the -year 2040 when Pomeroy
will celebrate Its bicentennial.
P a
gu 11 ty to a charge of
The nearly $50,000 renovation Resources, Division of Water- Route 143 in Columbia Township, Racine .
·
aggravated assault.
and redecoration ot the acred ' ways, to upgrade launching was leveled by tire.
A 22 unit apartment
Christmas bonuses for Middlecomplex.
Needs of the elderly, roads and
facilities
at
the
Middleport
levee
.
Concern
'for
future
financial
port
VIllage employees were
.to be built In Racine near the high highways, and educatlonalflnan· Head Catholic Church was
Roger
Manley,
who
opened
the
.
status
of
programs
of
the
Meigs
given
final approval.
school, was ·e ndorsed by Racine cia! Issues are the matters of completed.
Law'rence
S.
Manley
Memorial
County
Board
or
Mental
RetardaHood Family Shoes, the former .
VIllage Council. ·
greatest concern to Meigs CounA $1.4 million congregate housRecycle
Center
In
lower
Middle·
tion
and
Developmental
Dlsablii·
Melgs County CommissiOners
rdl
ing
project
Jldjacent
to
OverHartley
Shoes, celebrated Its ·
1
slgnedaf!JIIIlresolutlonautllorlz· , tans,
acco ng to a survey brook Center wa s proposed by
port, was Meigs County's first ties, led to 1990 cutbacks totalling grand opening. The store Is owile •
lng Melgs'Jndustiles to apply for conducted by Rep. Mary Abel at Dr. Harold Brown.
re_clplent of funds from the new about $90,000.
by John and Crystal Hood.
000
11
t th
the Meigs County Fair.
Meigs Cou. ntians donated ·94
.
Ohio
Mini
Loan
Program.
·
Paul
Beegle
and
Jim
Anderson
a....,, _,recyc ng grant or _ e ·
Syra~use .saw an Increase in
were named to serve . on the
The 8_.9 mill, emergency three
Meigs band s.enior, Melanie .
Ohio Ilepartment of Natural garbage collection rates due to unltsofbloodwhentheAmerlcan
year
levy
for
the
Eastern
Local
Board
of
Trustees
at
Veterans
Beegle,
performed with·the Ohio :
' Resources.
the charges which the ·hauler Red Cross bloodmobile came to
Memorial
Hospital.
and
the
two
mill
School
District,
Band
Directors
Conference All ·
dflll
the
county.
~ A county wide schedule of
d
·
dlsclpUnary options tor grades mus 1 pay 10 ump a 1 a 1an
·
An ordina nee regulating the continuing levy . for the _Meigs
Dan E. Morris w~s welcomed Staie Symphonic Band . The b~nd
Meigs MJne No. 1 and Raccoon
Local School District · were as a new member of the Meigs was made up or students from 42
klnde~garten through sixth, was
No. 3 established a "first" tor use or skate boards In the village
soundly defeated by voters In the DlvJslon of the American Heart high schoois who were selected
adopted by the Meigs Local AEP mining when the two mines of Middleport was adopted by
by audition.
Association.
general election.
School District Board or connected·In a historic final cut, that council.
W
. lima Casto, Portland,
Bids on the purchase of 48
Nearly 200 gathered In front of
· Education·
·
and nearly 200 employees were
The possibility of appointing a
the new Meigs County Public computers and wheel alignment
. Ohio Republican Party chair·
laid oft as a result of the physical claimed the $100,000 kicker from
man, Robert T. Bennett, anmerger.
·
an Ohio lottery drawing. She Library for the dedication pro- equipment for Meigs High School publiC defender to represent :
nounced durlng a meeting with
A county-wide Chamber of purchased the ticket from Eber gram, ribbon cutting, and tour of were accepted by the Boar(! of indtgent residents or Meigs
Pickens of Eber's Gui!Statiom·ln
...,~ County GOP officials • that Commerce ·was proposed.
Education of the Meigs Local County charged In criminal matthe facilities.
Mel..
ters was considered by the
School
District.
After sever;ll monihs or con·
Meigs Commissioner Richard
A decision to dismiss a case Racine.
county
commissioners.
officers
Board
members
and
Jones was being considered as a
against. Elmer Parsons'on cU:ltiThe Rqtland Post Office was
structlon the new BankOnedilve
Meigs
County was noted as
for
the
new
Meigs
County
.
thru In Pomeroy opened tor
vat ion of marijuana In the Melgli named as one of many post
possible candidate tor state rebeing
part
of a national problem .
Chamber of Commerce were
business. ·
,
pres!'ntat.ive from this .area. · "· CoUntY. CommonPleasCourtwas · offices across the nation where a
where
more
than ·one in five
Meigs Industries' employee arinoUI1ced. Board member~ will
,Aril~nda Fetty,l&gt;om~toy, was
reVersed by the Eourth District , special. postage s~mp and can·
residents
have
been indentlfied
crowned Little Miss, and Daniel Court ot Appeals. ·"·
.. cellatlon was available. . · · Charles Grueser was selected by be Ron Ash, Tom Reed , Bruce
as
not
being
able
to read.
the Community Employment Reed, Joe Clark, and Mar:(
Lee Sidwell · 11, Chester, was
Nearly 300 volunteers cilntrl· ··,
The New Meigs County LiP.rogram as the year's OutStand·
cr&lt;iwned Little Mister' at the 1989 butlng over 63 ,000 hours of brljry was completed and opened
lng Employee of the Ye,a r.
·
Meigs County Fair.
·
volunteer-service over the past to the public .
A
publiC
hearing
was
-held
!n
· NOVEMBER
Local residents donated 61 year were recognized at the 16th
A catered dinner was set'Ved to Colburn, ortgtnal package; and
A housing s.ubdlvislon was which the OhiO Department of
units of blood at the American annual recognition program ot
Red Cross bloodmobile visit,
the Meigs County Retired Senior
proposed tor Sutton Township by Transportation officials ex· the Middleport Child Conserva- Linda BroderiCk, prettiest and
Law enforcement otrlclals con- Volunteers.
.
.Eugene Triplett or Triplett Engi- plalned they were cautiously lion League when that group met most unusual.
ftscated 1110re than $1.7 million in
Poll workers With more than 25
neerlng Services and · Bruce optimistic about possible future In December at the Rock Springs . Attending were Tammy Mash,
activities regarding the proposed Unll!!d Methodist Chureh.
Becky Broderick, Nancy Broder· mariJuaJia plants and arrested years.ot service were honored at
Teaford of Teaford Realty ..
·
connector
raod
to
the
Ravens·
A
gift
and
ornament
exchange
ick, Kitty Darst, Bonnie Scott,
one nian..
·. - ·
a reception at the Meigs County
Ordlna_nce~ establishing court
wood
Bridge.
· was held and secret sisters were Llnda Broderick. . Tracy ..O'Dell,
Greta Rltfle and Steven Gra_c)y Board or Elections and presented costs In mayor's court. and costs
D~EMBER
revealed.
.
Peg Harris, Helen Blackstoli,
were ·n,med th~ ·1~ Meigs cer\lflcates from ~ecreatry ot of permits were presenteA ·and '
Residents or the Rutland area
Gift wrappings were judged ])!ancy Morris, Cor~ Kennedy,
State Sherrod Brown.
given a first reading by,Mlddle· ~
· Coupty Fair Queen and King.
encountered ·severe water pro!&gt;· A resolUtion to place a new two
MGM Far111 City, Inc. an- port Village Council. · .
and the winners were Ann and Ann Colburn.
Hundreds of Bend area restmill continuing operating levy on nounced Its closing arter more
the November ballot W48 passed than a halt-centUry ot business : dents lined the streets of Middleby the Board of Education ot the
lh Meigs County.
port and Pomeroy to view what
Meigs Local School District.
ld ed
t
' '
.
many cons er one o the best
It , was announced .that the
OCTOBER ·
Christmas parades In years.
Pomeroy and Mldd leport.
The month of October saw
Construction or two new build·
Chambers of Commerce would furnace work at the Chester
irigs In the Mlegs Local School
combine to form the Meigs Elementary School completed at
Dis trlct to serve as either an
County Chamber of Commerce a cost of $31,577.
.
elementary or combination eJe- ·
andwouldlncludeallareasofthe
James Languell, a member of
menta~y and juplor high school
counzy. ·
the Southern High School Chapd 1 M 1 Lo 1
. T'-"d W. Michael. a 12 year old t
tF
F
was ~ropose a a e gs Cll
vu
er o. IJIU_re armers o_r Amer·
School District Board of Edu·ca
Mel""·
··
... County youth, was killed lea, Urban Soli Judging Team, . tlon meeting.
ORTHOPEDIC and GENERAL SURGEON
' '
:rheSouthernAthleticBoosters
Instantly In a freak farm ace!- received first place· In the Dis'
'
trlct 10 Sou· Judging Contest.held
· lb ~ $3 ooo
·
dent on a cilunty road.
Syrac.use VIllage. Co_uncll con·
contr ute,. '
to the Southin Washington , County . David
ern Local School District Board
sldered .constructing, owning, Custer received forth place In the
of Education to help finance the
and operating Its own TV cable District contest and Southern
spottsandolherextra-currfcular ·
Dr. Lentz, Board Certified General, Thoracic and Orthopedic Surgeon will con·
service due to lack of falling FFA placed first overall with a . activities programs.
tinue to sern 0!'1 the staff af Veterans· Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
revenue.
total or 1,593 pOints.
A group or Meigs County
Bikers donated toys to the
SEPTEMBER
Debogilh Brennan was hired as
· Dr. Lentuarned his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania in
The case ot Pomeroy VIllage
principal for the Meigs JuniOr
Salvation Army which could be
. 1958. His internship was at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. He has had
against the U.S. Corps ot Eng!· . High School.
.
use.d for UlJderprlvlledged child· ·
neers and property DIK"ers, I;lot-.
Herbert (Pete) Shields, Raren of the area. i
separate surgical'and orthopedic residencies at the University of Cincinnati Hospitie Turner and Jimmie Cain, In cine, reslgnedasamemberofthe
The.elimination of the Reedsta,l. Dr. lentz is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons and a member of the
an effort to stop excavailon o.n Meigs CQunty Regional Planning ville voting ,p~eclnct through
the East Main Street property
Comn\lssloi!."
·
redistricting "Qy the -·. Meigs
American Coll,ge of Chest Physicians.
. ·
preparatory to building a bOat
Nancy Raye Kimes, Racine,
County Board of Elections ·was .
Dr. Lentz's patients at Veterans Memorial Hospital will still see him as usual
dock waa dismissed In U. S. was reunited with · her real · challenged by a committee ot
District Court.
rather, William ;flay · Finken· Olive Township voters.
at the ho.pital on Tuesdays, Thursdays and-Saturday mornings. The telephone
Communities were busy plat\· . bind.er, Orville, after nearly 47
The possibility of going ln.to a
s·

•=

Child Conservation, Leagzie"meets

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Is Pleased To Announct!
The Retention
Of ·.- .
..
DR. MALCOVJI W. LENTZ; M.D.

.

-Orl. Our Hospital Staff

number for

or appointments Is -992-3632.

Veterans Memorial Hopsital
Is Also Pleased to Announce
The ·Addition Of
An~ther Surgeon to the
Associate Medical Staff
PR~ JACK M. LEVINE

$2.29

)

DR. L£VINE
Dr.'levlne received ·his Doctor of Osteopathy Medkal Degree from the New
York College of Ost. .athic Medicine in 1982. He ilid his internship at the Detroit
Osteopathic ~ital and the Bi·Community Hospital, both in Warren, Mich., in
1983. This was followed by a residency in general surgery at these two hospitali
from 19.14 through 1911.
•
Ht hai claM .additional ~ourse wOrk in trauma, abdominal and pelvic ana- ·
'' tomy, diseases of the pancreas, ·general surgery and past·oPtrativt.management.
'The telepholie nunlbtr for r•hlng Dr. levine for information or appoint"
ments Is 992·3632.
.

BURGERS &amp; CHICKEN

rr.nces Ikvis

JOHN _A.·WIDE, MD.~ ' Inc~:
PLEASANt VAU.EY HOSmAL ··:.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLEIIGIST
"WE HAVE HEARINO AIDS"

I

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L..;'

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VOEIANS
RIAL
HOSPITAL.
115 EAST MIIIOIIAL DIIVE
PO-OY

~--~-------AFTEI4:00
P.M.

2 PIECE
CHICKEN DINNER

(304) 675-1244 :

)

w....

$229

UP IN
- ~ (liveD a llree&amp;
Vallie ol ...........p I . . Ofa'MIIll. au
bllaalf Jal 1 CW tidal ........., ol . . . bJ tile
lllelp Ca V 11111111'1
DeparbiDL
llere,ne of '
.
'

.

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992·2104

..

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----·-----.• -..,. .. ·---- ·,
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T~e

)Jy The Ben.d
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·Community-caJendar
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MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The !'.fiddleport Garden Club will meet
Monday, 7:30p.m., at the home
of Mrs. Daniel ThOmpson. The
evening's progr~m will be p~s­
ented by Mrs. Ron Reynolds.
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladles
Auxiliary will hold their regular
meeting on Monday at 7 p.m. at
the · hall on Butterl)ut Ave.,
Pome.r oy. Refreshments will be
served.
KYGER CREEK - Women
Alive will- meet at the Kyger
Creek Clubhouse Monday at 7
p.m Becky DeLong will be tbe
speaker. There will be a CPR
demonstratiOn. Those attending
are to take homemade cookies.
POMEROY .::. The Meigs Lo·
cal Band Boosters will meet, In
the high school band room
Monday at 7 p.m.
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Academic Boosters will meet at 7
Pm. Monday at the Eastern High
SchooL The public is invited to
attend.
·
POMEROY Information
about the Chlld Registry Program, and. various· aspects of
personal safety. will be presented Monday, 4'p.m., at Pome0

'

Slind~rella

· ~..et

them
'
dance ·

Ann
Landers

Daily Sentinel

Cleveland's poor

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
loss of manufacturing jobs and
roy Elementary by Pomeroy Cub
migration of the middle class
Scout Pack 249 and local law
'
tlver
the last two decades, here,
ANN LAND£118
De11r Alln LADden: The letter
enforcement offlcen. The pr~
•t.
.(.Ao... •
hav.e left more poor people
il'am Is sponsored by the Frater· from that addlebralned teenTllftftS,IMII,..._aad
~
.
isolated In high poverty areas. ,
aier signed "Pardon My Pop"
er..... s,~,.
N!l Order
., of Eagles, Aerie 2171·' made me see red . .
says a new report slated for
and· the Farmers · Bank and
release this week.
He was embarrassed, he said,
Savinls eomjiany .: Chlkl Seats· ·
However, the . report, cotry boOks are being provided by because his father loves to Jet ~ut
sponsored
by t1if. Cleveland
Meigs County Juvenile Coun. on the dance !Iocr, jump around heard from a s1n11e person who Is
·Foundation,
has Its skeptics
Tbe publ.li: Is. Wl!icome. . All like a kangaroo and do fancy on his side. Herels a letter from
among
local
community
leaders
children will be flngerprJbte.d , If steps he learned "a million years St. Petersburg. ·
say
what
Cleveland's
poor
who
ago.''
desired.
Is
action
not
l
tudy.
needs
,I'd like to tell that Hille twerp
De.ar feea·a1er: The next time
Cleveland was selected two
that
I would give ,a pythlng.ln the your dad would like to 10 dancing
. RACINE -The Rli'ctne VIllage
years ago as one.of six. cities to
Council wlll meet Monday at 7 world to see my father on the and you don't want to be
study
by the Rockefeller Founda·
p.m. at the Star Mill Park for the dance floor again, He was a embarrassed by his bopplhg
tion
which
views poverty as one
terrific person, so full of fun. around, I wish you would send
first meeting of the year.
of
the·
most
troubling social
Everyone loved him.
. him to me.
In
the
country, today.
problems
My father taught me how to
After living lot 40 years with a
MIDDLEP'O RT- The MiddleThe
other
cities
are Boston,
port Fire Department ·will ·be dance when I was 10. ae called sourpuss who.think$ It's a sin to
Denver,
Oakland
.
.Washlilgton
having a game party on M.onday · me' this "s~nd:best dancing ha~e fun, I would welcome · the
and
San.
Antonio.
at 7 p.m . at the !Ire bouse. partner." (Mom was . hi~ first.) chance to spend an evening
Clev:eland'.s report ·written
When I began to date and go to dancing with a man like your
. primarily by Case Western Recharity balls, my parents were at dad.
serve University social work4!r
a good many of them. They
From Bosl011: Please tell the
TUESDAY
professor Claudia J. Coulton,
so
well
together
people
danced
·kid who complained about hls
RACINE -The Racine LD9ge
using
census, housing, crime,
No. 461 F and AM will have a used to clear the floor and step father that I'lllake the old guy if
back to watch. I always consi- he'll take my mother. Every time
welfare and other data, found
re~n~tar meeting on Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. All masons are wel- dered It an honor to dance with she goes to a party, she gets
mY father.
.
bombed and does her famous
come to attend.
replied, "Do . you have false
nat wonderful man passed strip-tease number. (She used to
teeth?" She became angry and
·
. SYRACUSE ~ The Syracuse a way three years ago. He was 75 be In burlesque.)
said I had Insulted her. Did I? and
had
been
out
dancing
with
Mom
doesn't
even
need
music.
PTO will meet Tuesday .a t 7 p.m.
Saraaola Query
Mom just two nights ' before. He All it takes Is for someone to yell,
at the grade school.
Dear Sara: I don't think your
always said that .dancing kept . ;'Take II off, .Bernice," and she , qqes lion was any worse than
starts to peel. Some kids don't
POMEROY -The Ohio Eta him young, and I 'believe it. ·
hers. ·
'
The only. sad part of this story know· when they're well off.
Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Drug• are ev~rywhere. They're
So, dear readers. this wraps It · .jOIY to ger , etuy ro ""'· and even
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7 Is that since Dad died, Mom
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal refuses to dance anymore. "Af- up . . But before we leave the
e01ler to get hooked on. If you have
ter your father," 'she ' told me, subject, let's have a long round of
Church.
question• abour druga. your n ~ed
"how could I possibly enjoy applause for Ginger Rogers. She
Ann lAnder.' booklet, "The Lowdancing with anyone else?" Just did j!Verythlng Fred Astalre did
down on Dope."· Send • Jel/·
sign this - AMelody In My Heart ... only she 'did It backwards and
addre..ed. long. bu11ineu·si.:e enve·
'· (Alabama)
.
In high heels.
lope ond a clteck or money order for
D!!&amp;r Melody: A great many
Dear Alln Landers: Last evenwas the runner up.
13.65 to: Lowdown, cl o Ann Land·
New members are now being people had a lot to say to that Ing while playing cards a woman
ero, P.O. 8o% 11562. Chicfgo. Ill.•
accepted into the classes. The young fellow, and so far·I haven't asked, "Is that ring real?" I
6061141562.
.
'
group Is open to women, men,
•
children, teenagers, and expectant mothers; .

Class meets rece.ntly

· Cindy Lambert lost the most
weight in the Monday night class
of Slinderella at Five Points.
In the Tuesday .night class In
Mason .. Joan Vaughan lost the
m 0 st weight and Betty Burton

New phone books collectors item

Mondi:,., Jenulrv a. 1890

Ernest C. Wright, Rosalie
· Paul D. Cardone a!ld Janice I.
Wrlllht, Lari'y Wrlghtand Wanda
Cardone, right of way, .to Ohio
Wright, aaslgn right of way, to
Recorder,llelp ColllliJ, Oblo
~ower Co., Sutton.
Harry a . Cleland and DanielE . SoutMrn Ohio Coal Co.; Melp.
Ernest C. Wright, Rosalie
Charles Earnetl Arnoldidec'd
Gheen, right of way, to Ohio
Wright, Larry Wright and Wand a
cert. of trans., to ·Dorothy J.
Power Co., Racine:
Wright, assign right of way, to
Underwood, Martha A. Cun~ Grant A. Newland and Linda S.
O)lio Coal Co., Meigs.
Soutbern
ningham and Mary E . Coleman.
ewland, right of way, to Ohio
James
,
F. Swa'tzel, Sandra S.
Scipio. • .
' (jwer Co., Pomeroy.
Tate,
Brenda
Kay Hopfer, Joe D.
·
David F. Sorden and Held! T .
•' Vona M. Chapman, parcels, to • Sorden, right of way, to Ohio
Tate, Kenneth · L. Hopher, and
Sandra S. Pate, pt. lots 6&amp;7, to
Un Bricker, Columbia.
Power Co., Rutlt!nd.
William E. Swauet, Chester.
Robert D. Fife and Gladys E .
Ernest C. Wright and Rosalie
Clarfnce E . Llght!oot and
Wright, BOA, 4.22A, to Southern .
Fife, right of way, to Ohio Power
Bonnie J. Lightfoot, parcels, to
Co., Sutton.
··- Ohio eoal Co., Salem.

Meigs
Property
Transfers·

Monday. January 8, 1990
Page 8
•

bas grown

that in 1970,less than a quarter of
poor Clevelanders lived In areas
of high poverty. By 1988, nearly
half did.
Coulton also found Ieday's poor
stay . poor longer. About 70
.percent C}t. residents . In high
poverty areas have been poor 10
years or longer.
.
She Ill So found those at greatest.
ctsk are black children In femaleheaded households, and discovered teen pregnancy and crime
that seem to be strongly related
to poverty, vary In neighbor- .
hOods with similar economic
· ·
,
backgrounds.
The key to poverty's growth
over 20 years has ~n the
· disappearance of manutacturhig
jobs and highiJ:r demands from
employers, Coulton found . .
The exodus of the.non poclr was
a key to raising the poverty rattis
In the 1970s, she reported.
Those Involved with the project
praise Coulton's work and say
the repoN gives a cQmprehenslve
look at poverty, and will provide
Vital Information for helping to
eradicate the problem.
·· But Roland Smtih,- executive
director of the Net;hborhood
Centers Association, coalition
of settlement houses and gras.s
roots agencies said. "Among our
members ·there Is fear It will
remain an academic exercise .. .
We've had lots of repons. Everyone ·knows there's poverty.
Everyone knows the gap Is
widening."
David Roth, executive director
of Cleveland Works: an. agency
that In ~over three years has
helped riearly 1,000 welfare families find and keep jobs also
questioned a need for more
study.
·

TO PlACE AN .AD CAll CJ92-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A:M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. uritil NOON SATURDAY
·CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

,

'A~~.9iJI!Iide

pat .

By Untied Press lriternallclnal

.,

WOI'ds

&lt;.

14.00

16
16

te .OO '

6
10

$9,00
$1).00

16

jillonthlv

·

16

.,

Rat~ are t'Df con~eaniwe runs.

.
$.60 discount for ads pa1d 1n advance.
'free ads
Gtveaw•v tnd Fo~o~nd ads undlf 16 words will be ·

fo{ each d~ •• HP•r•t• ad•.

349
..

nBYJIY I I - fiiCI4,4f

72 01. . . . . ...;. 3.99

........

' PJice or ad lor aU capilli leners ''double price ol ad c:ost .'
'7 pomt line type only used .
• .
'Sent~nel 11 l'lOI relpOI'llible for en ora atter tirat dav . {Check
for errors first d-v ad runs in paper) . Call before 2.:00 p .m.
d., afler publication to make eorrecljon.
Car'd of lh111ks •
ll'l Memoriam

'&lt;

COPY DEAOLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIOA'f PAPER

SUNDAY PAPER

GJORGE W•

.Q6 / dav
·

Glas.~ifil'd pap;t·.~ covl'r

Happy Ad1
Yard Salet

j11iowinp; h•lephom•
'
Galli a Coun1v
Metgs County
Areo1 Code &amp;U

.CARMI-Fil .

OFsnJF

.
2 · 00 ~, . M . MONOAV
,. 2 '00 P.M . TUESDAY
- 2.00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M. THUASO~V
+

Aree Code 11•

448 - Gallipotit
'3 83 - Ch•hife
388 -,. Vinton '
246- Rio Gr•nde

992 ~'Middt..,or1

643-At•bi • Oist.
379- WIInut

949,.. f\a~~;ine

' Pomeroy
985 - Che~ter

84 3- Portllfld

256- Guyan Ditt .

24 7 - Let•rt hll1

1•2- Rut...,d
117 - CootvWie

2 IJO P.M . FRIDAY

4 - GiweMay
5- Hlippy Ad•
• &amp; ~~lOst 1nd Found ·
7 ·-YIId S .. ei~U~id in tdllancel
· 8- Public l'alt&amp; AucHon
9 - W.nted to &amp;uy

.

ROSES'
EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

LOW GRADE OAK

_Aug.' 1,·' 1893
Jan, 6, 1980

Sl 60 111o'::_.

TOP· SOIL

DIUVIIED TO

OHIO PAWT
COMPANY

FOR SAlE
. 949-2493

POMIIOY OH.

Gripo

CUI·
· tomlzed

12 NOON

CALL OR WRITE FOR COLOR BROCHURE

999

Stanley &amp; Son ·
A~ction .&amp; Real Estate Service
126 E. 4th St., Chillicothe. OH. 45601

614-nS-3330
LET THE PROFESSIONALS WORK FOR YOU![
r

1 Card Of Thanka
NOTICE OF
APRECIATION
l with 10 8Jltelld . I

. 24COIIn'

tlncere ''lblnk You"

tilt- your ,...,. .. Clnla.

ADYIL
'

tt011Nf8 lllcl Nlaphone

lnqulriM during Ill'( . .
0

-llniiJ'It Ia IIOinfortlng t
ber-'*Miby
many fr!Mdt end cue'

TARITI. ~~~~

249 .

tom••·
.tfopefully,

'.

I wHl be

retu!".::Lto tM berber'

thop

,. long.

Aglln, I

aay th1nll

youforyournwn.....
•n1nd .,_, wllllet
for my
;eao~tt~y.

lllloerily.
ICIIITeni=::::Jt

300 . .10nd

P-ay. Ohio 41171t

'.

67&amp;- Pt. Ple. .nl
458- Leon
576- A.pple Grove
773 - Mason
882 -, NcW H1111m
895 - letart
937 - Bulhlo

72 ~Trucks

75 - Boats a MotOfs for Sale ..
76 - Aulo Parts &amp; Aec:enDf t•
?? - Auto Repair
.

R•n•

48 ..,.- Equipment tor Rent
49 - For u ..

78 - Camping Equ1pment
79 - Campen &amp; Molar Homes

Serv1ces

6 1- Hou•hold Goods
&amp;2-SpDfttng,Gooda
53- Antiquet !
.
54- Mite . Merc:han~l•e
&amp;&amp;~ Building SuppiiRS
56-Pet• lor S1le r
57- Musiclllnttrufl1entl
58- Fruitt &amp; Vegelabl•
.59 - For S1le or Trade 1 ~

- But!~•• Opportun•tv
22 - MoniiJ¥' to loan
23 ~ ProfMsianal ServicttS

tor Sale

73;--VIn s . 4 WO 's
74 ··MotOtcycl•

48 - $p•ce for Atnt
47 - W..,ted to

,2,

8·1- Home lmpro'lo'Om•ns
82 - Piumbing &amp; He lilting
83 ·-.EJtCIIIilting
84 - EieCiric:ll ~ Refrig•alion
85 - Gun••l Hauling
.
86 ·~ Mobil a Ho,ne Rep1 ir
8 7 - Upholstery

Business Services
J&amp;L

STREET
PillA

MY·T·SHOP

INSULATION

FREE. ESTIMATES

PAT IIU fOlD

CUSTOM SCIHII
PIIIITING
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
CHima, 01110

992-2772

Middleport, Ohio

985·4300

MIWE:S

CHIPWOOD
WAIITED

lfl•ter Speel'l 0•
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPlACEMENT ·

·-,;.andre·
care .
and
heatll' corH. We can
aha ncid beil and rnd
out 1acliatars. We also ·
r.,air Gas T.....

WINDOWS

!192-2198

12:13-'89-1 mo.

CHESTD,· OHIO

oCII~bl

. EXTRA NICE i977 Case 480C Construction Kin~ backhoe
wrth open air .cab, only 2221 hrs.,' Diesel motor, 6ft. front
loader bucket - 24" rear hoe bucket; 1986 C-30 CHEVY I ·
· ton t1uck with 70,339 miles, 350 V-8 motor, 4 speed standard trans., power steering, power brakes, AM-FM radio,
dual rear wheels w/ gooc1 rubber and new tires on front. Mid·
West flat bed w/side racks, running boards. red exterior and
red vinvi·interior. in exc. condition. ONF OWNFR l~R? MASSEY FERGUSON. Model 245 (small field trac\o~;42 hp diesel .
mOtor, 3-speed, 2 range, power steering, live power. only~
255 hrs.. same as new; 3 pt. Bush Hoggrader blade; 6ft. Re- •
bel bush ho'g 1986. 16-ft. Trail Magic goosenec~ lowboy
trailer, tandem axle w/16" wheels, IOAOO GVW, 4ft. Deaver
tail &amp; ramps; CONSTRUCTION &amp;WOODWORKING EQUIP· •
IIENT: eiec: 'A yard concrete .mixer wf'h hp molor; Red Devil
floor edger:·.sander; Rig;d 40 lb._ pipe vise; VuJsan &amp; Reed
pipe vise: 6" RockWell 10inter; 10:· Crafts!11iln tabh!$8w;
Craftsman router w/cas\1; 12" Craftsman bandsaw: Crafts·
man 6" dual table sander w/disc &amp; belt &amp; 'h mot01; Amrox·
hor~ontal &amp;vertical band saw: cer ·motor stlnd; ·;Ruud"
100,000 BTU fu.rnace w/'h ton.central air a-coil condrtioner;
12ft.· 1-ton treated lumber truck b,ed; 21uel tankS w/pumps
(275 &amp; 300 gal.); NEW 5/8x6x20 cedar siding misc. b~ild ­
ing materials.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This is a small sale. but oilers elot
of aood clun, hi&amp;h quality piecu. Vt!Y few smlll items
for sale. Everytllin1 sells to the ebsafut• hi&amp;hllt bid4er,
' rqerdlns ol price.
TERIIS: cash or checlat time of salt w/2 positive ID's.

ua•

7' - Auto5'for Sll1

46 ~ Furnlthed ~oomt

17 - M i tcellantc~us

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

LOCAnON: From Pomeroy, Oh. tab Rt. 33 N. to
100 St. Rt.611 Not Aibciny, Oh.ISoli almost on
Athens &amp; Meigs C11unty lint.)

MAXI PADS

Transpurl a110n

'

1-13-Hc

lOWEST PRICES

HIGHEST QUAliTY

FREE lOCAl DRIVERY
POMEROY AND MIDDlEPORT'S ONlY
lOCAUY OWNED PIZZA SHOP• .
Piua-Su~s-Salads-Daily Specials

. 992-2228

11-16-'89-1 mo.

11-17-tfn

•. ' ~ .

II(ICHOE • 1·TON lJUCII • MF RACTOI
GOOSENECK LOWIOY • WOODWORKING TOOlS
St•ley &amp; Son Audion &amp; Rtal Estate Serv'ce
wal sell the fallowing equipment on tht
premises, rain or shi1111 to the highest bidder
regardiHs of price.

I''

l;fMjlill

14- lulin••Trainlng
15 - Sehoolt • lnllruc:tion
16- Redio, TV. C8 Repair

MasOn Co.. WV
Ar. . Cede 3Q4

.

WANTED

61 - Firm Eq~ipltlen'
62 ..:... Wanted to BLI'I
63 - Livtlllock
64- Hay. ·• Grai ntiS - Seed • Fertilizer

42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Rent
4.111 - Apartment tor Rent

11 - HelD Wanted
1 2- Situalion W1nt.:j
13 - l.n turanc•

l'xchanl{t'-~---

-·

SAWED LOGS

th1•

Far111 Sup~1l1es
ll. L1 vesluck

Hom• tor S.lfl
Mobile Homw for S.le
Farms for Sale
BusinMI Buildings ·
lota • A(:rnge
36- ·R·el Est1te W11nttd

18 -W.-Ited To Do

·' DAV BEFORE PU.iLICATfON
- 11 :00 A .!VI. SATURDAY

HAtKETT, SR.
Barb &amp;.
Mike

PAPEI
TOWELS

. i

11.30/ dav

broken up day a will be ch•oed

IN '-EMOIIAM.

no OR IIIC fiLM

....., 1111.

THAJJA

Eslole

31 3233 3 136-

l . . . . A,.noucem.,ts

~)1'1 VII.I~S

• A cl••••• ed advertisement placed 1n T~e 01ily Sentinel Cea· ,
cept
ct••lified di$pl.rv. Busin•• Co1rd and legfl natic*'l ,
will 1110 appear In the Pt. Pla•ant Ro'iJi5ter and the G1lli·
• poliS Dally Tribune. ruching over 18, 000·homn.

a

_.CT.•IWM
CT.

.42
.60

1- Card of Th.,kt
2-- ln Mttnory

[ IIIIJIII'illll:n l

'Ads that 'm ust bt paid 1n advance ara

DIAPMI
60 CT. IM.t"

u

-

.30

Rt~'''

·:1 - HDUMI far R..,t

, lanlcruplcy C011 No. 2·89 -0571S

,.,....=::;;;:

·'

AIll ill lllll:l: Iii~ Ill,

run l d~s at no ch•ge .

ABSOLUTE PUBLIC AUCTION

.•••••

Ov'tr 1 ~ WQldo.
°
.20

Rate

15

3

'Aec~~We

Lee

a-

1

Me1g1. Wllitl or Ma5 on counti• must t»e pre ·

'

LA. . .IY DltMGINT

MEANWHILE,BACK AT THE RANCH: MlcbaeiJackson led
82 children on a tour of his 3,000-acre ranch outside' Santa
Barbara, Calif., Saturday and later served them lunch.
Childhelp USA, a non-profit organization for the prevention of
child abuse, '·sent residents of Its village for abused and
neglected children near Beaumont, Calif., to Jackson's ranch,
where he keeps giraffes. llamas and; other exotic beasts.
Jackson donated the proceeds from his last concert In Los
Angeleo to Childhelp after it ren~tmed its research facility the
Michael Jackson International Research Institute.
JOEL'S HISTORY LESSON: Billy Joel says it's tun. to sing
the rapid -tire words to his latest hit, the historical "We Didn't
Start the Fire," but there's always the possibility' of contusing
the lyrics. "If I remember the first word, I'm OK," Joel told The
Washington Post. "Otherwise, I'm dead. I do. get the feeling
people are out there watching me like the Indy 500 -In the back
of their heads they're wondering If they're going to see a crash."
The.song chronicles 40 years of U.S. history but a lot of It seems
ro go over the heads of some of Joel's younger llsieners. "I sing
'U-2' an~ a lot of people say, 'I didn't know that band.was outln
1960. " ' Joel says. "I have to tell them It was the spy plane that ·
wrecked the peace conference between Khrushchev and
Eisenhower."
REDFORD'S FILM ~TIVAL: The documentary competl, lion at Robert Redford's Sunday Film Festival in Park City,
Utah, wlll be dedicated to Emile de Alllclnlo, a New York City
filmmaker who died Dec. 15. De Antonio bad been scheduled to
· preview his film ''Mr. ~oover and .I ," about how the FBI
Investigated him when he joined the Young Communist League
while a Harvard University freshman . De Antonio wrote,
directed and produced the 90-mlnute documentary and appeats
in the film. The festival, which runs Jan. 19-28, also will Include
world premieres of ''Stanley and lrls," starrlngoJaaeFondaand .
Robert De Nlro; "Blue Steel," starring Iamie
C.rilli and
. Loulse· Fl~htir; and "Love atLarge,"starrlnJ1Tom'Bereapr
· · and Anne Archer. ·
· .
TREY LOVE ELVIS: The oldest and youngest presidents of
Elvia Presley fan clubs '!'ere honored at a lunc;heon Saturday at
Grace land In Memp~ls. Tenn. Numl Stiers, 86, of Hot Sprtnp,
Ark. , formed her Elvis Fan Club In 1957 and Nleole Mead, 8, of
Fort Thomas, ~y., formed her's al)out a year IJO. Fan club
pre~jdents from across the United States attended the function,
whleh•ls part of the anniversary of Presley's birth. Elvis, who
died In 1977, would have turned 1!5 Monday.
GLIMPSES: Prelldenl Buu and his wife, Barbara, marked
their 45th anniversary Saturday. They gave eac!h other a 'Joint
gift - a promise to redecorate their vacation home In
Kennebunkport, Maine . :. Civil right&amp; pioneer
P~~rb .wlll
have a bli 77th birthday party on Fe~ '· Ref, le• eoa,en,
D-Mlch., Is putting fDielher a Kellllldy enter show that will
feat\ll'e ·LOU ....... J)Jolllie WII'Wic*, C1c111J '1)- Dlell
Grepey, V1 .... WllllaiM, JWII• Maaa' llr llld tJie
N..UJe BnCII a. who wrote a ICIIIIIbout Parks; Parb, wbo
gave tlie civil right• movemeat 1110111111twn In 19tlli wllen abe
refused to surrender her bus ·Hal to a willie man .In
Montgomery, Ala., once worlled on Conyers's s.taff.

Days

3rd Streit, Racine, Oh.
1-1-19-1 mo.

TIDE

I~~~~'IE"II~"~~~Eit

'

SATURDAY, JAN •.13 -

People .in the news

A
OF

• The Area's. Number 1 Ma,rketplate

PRINTS

IU,

Larry w. Rapp and Linda .M.
Rapp, Cheater.
Gayle Salyer and Artis Saly.e r,
parcels, to Roger Qale Adkins
and l'amera Lynn Adkins,
Lebanon.
Addle R. Buck, sec. 16, to
Family Homes, Inc., Salisbury.
· Edith Welch, 10.07A, to George
·W, Stout and ·Pauline 'Stout,
Sctpto.
Larry J . Roush and Grace
Roush, pt. tract, . to Harold H.
Blackston and Helen E . Black·
ston, Chester.

Colllplet IIJ:
Emawpae Bolllela Conp

DOUBLE

While the name Mlftllnvllle
COLUMBUS, Ohio ·(UP!) The new edition of the white seems to have faded away with
some people, apParently not with
pages of the Columbus telephone
book are just beginning to hit a draftsman who made the map.
doorsteps, and already they're A postal official says the draftsbeing looked upon as a collectors man apparently had a long
memory ... and wrote Mifflinville
item.
In the front of the book is a map when It should have been what
the area Is now called - Mlffiln
of the Columbus metropolitan
Township.
area, Including. a community
"It was just an error," said
called Miffilnvtne.
John
Coughlin, manager of ad·
But Columbus postal officials
dress
proerams for the Columand the administrative coordinabus
post
office. "It will be off the
tor for the Columbus Office of
master
map
now.''
Housing say there is no MlffilnThe
Ohio
Bell manager of
. ville among the 153 neighbor· ·
community
relations, David
hoods In Columbus.
·
-Kandel,
says
next year's white
There used to ·be a Mlffilnville,·
pages
will
not refer to
but it became a part of Columbus
Mlf(ltnville.
In the mid 1950s . .

Pom•ov Mkldlap!Dit, Ohio

'

RESTAURANT

Is still awlllll and
. operated by ~Uie

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT ··
. •ANYTHING
AT ALL

Dunwn.
for Gooil Home
Cook In' Come

See U1!

HOURS' I AM-I PM Dolly
CLOSED SUNDAY

985-4422
1 1-8-81-tfn

992·77

......... , ••• _I~IIJI'I'I

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAIIAJm"

W.Va. Chipping,
Inc.
lodcllpl'ings Ill.

1'-roy, Ohio
PH. 992·3561

WASHE15-SIOO •P
OIY£15-$69 up
RlFRIGERAl015-$100 up
RAIIGIS-Gtis-Elec.-Sl25 up
FREEZER$-$125 •P
IICIO OVU$-$79 up

ICIN'S. APPLIANCE
. SEIVICE

Buying Hours:

7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30-4:00 Satunl.y

RACINE .
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Starts at 1:00 P.M.

992-5335 or 915-3561
Acre~~

FnNIIPMt Offico

t1117·'1t· '1 mo.

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only
9-6-19-tln

\

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS

TRIM anil RE, MOVAL

~LEAIING

FURNACE
. FURNACE·
FURNACE

PARTS AND aERVlCE

ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

KEN'S APPliANCE
. SEIVICE
992·5335 or tiS-SS61

..... , _ ..... Office

·

217 E.

S.C. ' - e y

IV13/'19 1111

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES
"At llta1111tllltlt Prices"

PH. 949·2101
or let.949·2160
Doy or Nipt

NO SUNDAY (AUS

with a dcicumemed poet 2 ,..,. Clinical
aui*Yielon hOtl ~erred·. Wcrik willable
In rMrct.ntial illl with edult - n lnNrly
recovery. P,.r.rred certified acldlcmonr
counMior ar eligible tor lmmadletl nrtlfl·

cation. Muet demonltrate etrong commit·
~.nt to ·accounteblllty, pear ravltw ..,.•
teme indiUbatanca abuu NCOv.ry. Negotiable •lary range dependent on expert·
enoe and aduoatlon ....... rBpclnd to 1M·
ley Plollellng, M.H.I.A., C.A.C., Director

ofOp,,.....wlth...,ma,'Co,..llttlrand

thrM ~ ..,.;.11011 10 P. 0.

Grant A.

•ox ..

· 724, Atllane, OH. tll-701, 814-184-311 1.

EVENINGS
.4-6-19-1111

Dlld

DOUBLE I
TACK SHOP

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

ALIAJIY OliO
I

742·3011

691-6500

•Tire Sales
•Front End
Align""'nt
•Oil Change 8a Lube

Wntern Boott, He11.
Shlr1a, lett• For
Mtn, Ladl• 8t

.......

•B•IIke Work
12·7·'19-1-

.

csz LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a:

Ucensad Clin~l Audiol()list
~ (&amp;14) ~1619 or (614) 992-2104
. Veterans Mttnorial Hospita1
-. Mulberry Hats. P0111troy,

RACINE GUN SHOP

49919 IIEAJIIOILOW ID. · · IAC..E, OliO

GUNS·AMO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• $2.20 lox
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS .
OPEN 9 AM· 7 PM Monday·friday

SAMUS&amp;

Saturday 9 am·&amp; pm

11.

.

949·21

11-~11110.

,
•

•VtNY~

·.DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE

BIDING

•ALUMINUM StOINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

••a~•

at..:''t:. for _
HomeiiW, We1dntir,

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

.... ....

••, _ Elltlmetle"

....
-.
PH. 99i·S91J TecumHh, lrtggo a

PH. 949·2101

er ... t••t·JII60
. 11011Mil1

Roger Hysell
Garage ·
lt. 124, ....., Ollie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

~

Hearin&amp; Evahiatians For All Aps

ChHdrtn.

"'- . 1H4-1-

MAIN ST,, IIIITLAIID

.. '·

z..- ·Glllipolis, Oltio 45631
·
or

992-2269

7-ti-'19-Hn

Deperidlble lltarin&amp; Ai~ Sales &amp; Slrvijcjl

•417 Stcoad AYSIUI, Box 1213

BILL SUCK

67 271

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot Z Md 4-cycle

CUNICIAN- Part-time po811ion avallab)a
with • flexible IChedule. Individual who
j)oeHne* a Mut•'• D~~grH In Guldanca
and Col!ftHIIng, Paycttology. Soalal Work.

"FIREWOOD.

DUMP TRUCK
Sa -Stone-Dirt

L_,..llt Ylllley L.....
"' 'I' ....... 011.

11

"LIGHT H,AULING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
(614

.Device·s

"SHRUB 8a TREE

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

PH. 991-5611
or 992-7U1

4-25-tfn
__ j.._
•- -

COUNTIIY
IIOIILE
IIOME PAll
•Mobile Home

P1rte
•Mobile Homa
ftenuls

•Lot Ren1aia

992·7479

lt. II lhrtll et

......,•.ow.
,

I

"

.

1-IZ.'..Ifll

GUll

1AC811 ·

fill DIPT,
IOihRhltllat
IVUY

SAT. •oHT
6110 , ...

Flllln .... ·

u:::.::;:::

�•
1 0 - The Daily Se; 1ti11al

Paga

11

Ar rnou ncPments

.

Pomeroy- Middlaport Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wanted

44

Mondly. J-...rv
JUT 'N' CARLYLEII by larry Wrtpl

Apartment

a. 1990

---··
. Te

tor Rent

3

1111 Cliu I

Announcements ,

SIGNATURE

LOANS

LOAHI.

•
1111 , _ . ...............
~ . .~
............
Jill. ••

2 ..,.,, pupploo, 1 - l o 1
mala will bo smoU doge, I!Vll-31185.
. .
2S" RCA .L1DOTV!or patto. Old
playor, plano. Phano 304-1711.

:II
11

Black frlimale cit whh whlll on ·
. choot and pows, 1 yNr old wh~
gray 4 mon1h old ltltton. Yart
•mall, lllter trained. ,,..._..
4248.
F,.. mocilum alza clot ..,_n I
block,lrno, old, hod oi.Cio. 114245-6117.
304-&amp;71-1i1711ovanlngo.
Long halrod PonlM 11gor ol~p­
Dad spoyad Nmoio. 4 ,..,. old,
beiulltuf, lovM ldda. 11 .......
42•1 anytlm• t.lora 1:00 Lm.,

........ wl1h dump -

EARll MONEY 1yplng II homo. ·

non-dllllblod paroono boiWMri
,._ ol 40 Inti 12, i!GIIII
Oppottunuy.

Datda, (1) ·- 7 - Erl ...

"Uf&gt;y, not to worry! We'll

Esm 1300 • MOO. p.- -It,
Rudfna Boob"lt ttome. caM 1·

HJlJl('al and fight it ri"ht
up t.o
h
Ia-,t dollar."
.vour

101ft.

.

&amp;1~7J.7UO

Ert.·l-303.

Lost

&amp; Found

Losl or strayed; largt male Nd
Chow Chow from Uncoln Hill
ar• Po_meroy. A. ..-d -~
to whllr•abouta. L.a Vaughan,

614-192-2588.
Loot: Ahub cap for 11185 Pon11oc. 814-446-4620. .
Lost: Naw Lady'a allver cotor
Puis• Wrist Watch lost In or
nHr C.ntr11 Trull P1rklng Loc,

or Alloy, 114-446-0185,

Yard

7

32

Help Wan1ed

='=

· · ·
·
·
lo aHralaryiJiacaptloollot, noadod
A
10&lt; tourist lnfanna1lool ofllca,
von oond mu
. mo to Box ala lor
1122,010 Golllpolla Dolly Trlbuf!!t
125 Thlld Ave. CloUipollo, ""
pMi11on · - ·1

Froo Cola .. lll Flrtl iJ
r
II A
..,n up 1o so von.
11COII.I14-IIV2·7180.
lmmodlala · Dllri~lmo
avallabla with l!lljor ....... - · •
_,pony, Penna"'"' non sol
ling paolllon to ,_ch8ncl•
ancl
lnvon1ory
dlDoportmont ol ootlbll.- acIn 1ho Gollipolla IIOL
Dopondablo coni nocc:-ry.
aalary and 11 ...,. por mill,
113-112-1511 on f!lday, January
12, 1110, bat..-10o.m. lnd iZ
VISMo1ASTEJICAJID.
,_,only.
URE
.B.;. CHAD~~~!- GOFUARANTEECREDITD.
LPN . ar JIN wanted lo&lt;
-'""an'a oHico. Ap,_ at Dr. RATING. CALL NOW114CI2-142·
•,..,
1087 EX'! IJ2S24
ado'a oltlco, Plo-nl Yallay Wan~-•·. :....,lmo. ·~~ondor ~Hoop111t1, Sulla 1_12.
- ~ ..~
_,
ow
._.. Drivllll club. E1c. warklng
••• 01
liE"
p;::rn..~£R
oondiU.,, WoaUnd nlahla only.
Enlry lavol oooltlool wllh lond mumo 1o lor ciit o:a, cfo
NOUOnal 010trt&amp;u1... hrvli:o ~~:t"~ ~-" o!,~~'l:. ~
n11~omen rn ~ : qe31 .
,
.
:l'~,..'!t:!:=io. Nooo'l• Wlilbobpllln..,hoollll.n·
lnvolvM. Ap-lmotoly 11 10 - - - . .n ......- .
:ZOhouropor_._NoOYeu..,.a Cl lull ., -11 11mo wllh
·•
~
ot
- n d s.
Ellporianco
blohtMn,......,.blor11oo,
llllpflll bul ... 1111n......... - - - ............. . _
.-y · · hou-'"'F'"
-·
:lalla .;li,'1~r18101 ~-2 ~ ~181.
12
Situation
....
EARN IICNEY Anding want""'
....

e::

Sale ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

..

ALL Y1rd Sal.. Muat Be Plld In
Adv1nc1. DEADLINE; 2:00 p.m.

.t h• d•r before the ld Ia to run.

Sunday l&lt;lltlon • 2:00 ·p.m.
Fridoy. llondoy odllon • 2:00
p.m. Slturday.

9

11

Wanted to Buy

Junk Clrt with or without
molol'l. CAll Larry Lively 114--

388-1303.

Excellent

Income

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1173 2 Br., good - . , po~ly
lum vinyl ..,.........lng, llaril
bulk/lng. SU~cilii-=44e-im.
1110 ·Buddy 14115 Balga,
··~ . . . - · ' lllo.
lh
, 211r, 2 baths. 114-241-

1114.1...
1112 "• Inon , ~x58,
110,000; 1183 Folrmont ~x52,
111,000. Kanauga Mobllo Homo ·
Saloa, ·Kanauga, OH 114-441118112.

,.,m

:::
:;:;;1111
1 ~11::ob;:;l::la-:hc:::ma:::-,-:1 ::4r:::70:-,-.,wl1=h

-1aral ,olrl all oiiUCirlc, vary
~ oandlt an. Phcna 3GU71171341
8130 trarror wilh 10ll30 oddHion,
1600. 114-441-14111ohsr 3p.m.

Fire domlgod lrllllr _31JU7111078.
,
=,.,
~- -=...,,.-,- 1-=0x!IO-=-. "'21!1
,...,-_
...,..,
bl,...
lo
....... pattly lumlahocl, 1 ,.......
011hftor4p.m.
·
.
33 Fann·8 for Sal•

..

R1.7,10ml.-hCiaNI....u. 46+
.-.
.. _
hcu•nasda ...,..lr,
1n1111r 101, •11,100 ou11, 114117..220.

35

pol_,..lal.

Lots&amp;Ac......,e .
·-•

Do1alla. (11 80H87-IOCIO Ext. Y·

4M2.

ourna

~

=~illl

Pre 1140 qulite. Any condition.

~

•

-

one,..

Employmenl

j:::;j

11

ou

llct1t\llllll'•

lllnlollft. ... .....
........,, ~ Onnd Biro,
AKC. Aloe p ~ tiny Tors.
odulls. Cliolvlllo 114-1117·
••••

~.
1:'7
.,,

Musical

11

SJSODina raorno wl1h CO!'Idna·
Aloo·1rolior .,.... All - -·
Call altar 2:00 ·p.rn., :104-773-

AVON I , All Arwos I Shlttoy
Spoal1, 304-1175-1421.

1111,1b.anWV. ,

Clanorolllllnl- • ...,..,..,
· lllurnblng
corpon1ry.
11-7-0111.

a

.t8

Rentals

Space for Rent

welcome. 11t 4411224.

Call 304-1711-2807.

•

,.qu~od . l14-4~24~11~

4421,114-441-232.1.
For Laaso: Second ftool unlurnlshocl opo~mant, t25ci por
mcnth. OVerlooking cHy '111rk.
Golilpolls. 7wo bodr-s. Goa,
wtOve &amp; nfrlg.,.l9f' provtcleil.

. SUBTRACT" THOSE

Na p«a. Depoelt and ret.,.nc•

........... &amp;14 441 4241, ., ........
4421, 114 441 232'.
.

GATIIRIIDUSt
JDr DOLLARS
.

YDIIPOCKET
WITH A
Q.ASSfiED AD

Frnanc1al

21

Merchandise

2 lr., In lklwell. 114 441 1111.

.'

Business

2 bodRIOIII 1rlllor lo&lt; ~10
;:;rClo1s) lor 11n1;
71-

51

Household

GoOds

Opportunity
!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocornmando lhll : you · do
buslneot wl1h pooplo,.., know,
ond NOT 1o lhrough h moU Unlll haVI
l,.,..llga1scl1ho ollortnil.

54

In

2br, unfumllhod ~ - .
GAlli OF THE IO'a
lolld 8101a Yldoo s - . ALL on I lctW lol:, rwfwtnce rl!ll•d.
Avail- Fob, 1. 11........11A.
----~----------------------~--~CMH
MM WM~. ·~N
L.oc:otlono.1-I00-44~.
3 llod.-n hlmlshad. Out ol
IIAAKET RESEARCH N11D1 ,_,, Porch, - · ......
YOUI

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

BEllER
THANA .
GARACE·Fil
OF STifF

Nat~

OOhii*'J . .a

lnd•:•ndlnl
DOIIlrectora. Help
of _ _ .....,_ _
bull

-

.......

11om "'

lid bJ ponol. No to ••·
Unllniltad -..lng polantlaJ.
Training provl~ tU Ul U07
tlollllo.

Miscellaneous
Merciha!ldlse

-J.

114 ..... dlam«KK rlng, .... I.

QDO. CliU 114-112-3127.

1178 llaMion,

11!100.

Good
· 71 Will
11Z n111- 1111
property,-~.ooo.
on lano c0111roe1. 1111 Club
C.b, 414.L_ Ford Allnger, SI,DDO;
Lot 10&lt; Nla, IIIli Cnok, Cly
4mJta, SI000.114417-oN1.

2DO .., . o f - tor nla, mull
bo-1ool~poul, _ , .
chip . - , ......_ Co. WY,
1114-67l'-o41 .

21 .. Claoloy ..... iW . rolligo!ltor, lrOot lntl,:,2'~ ,_..

now t4oo· :;ruu
4 .,.... old, .100.304-1711old.

•=liar,
.

lhp, brick,
now,PBO.a144

Farm Equipment

=-.

410.John 'DMrw 1..-. . ..,.._ 114 441 ·
141 Ford lnotor wlh F.......,
-SIF!IO,FconiJubliaswl1h
- I dloc, IM=,
llvl1on »ttl.11
522.

a-

oo~hI I cholr1 300
milk·11nk,
It
1217.

m...,.

!:

Rlly 1100, fl82
rog'ad. gak!lng.
-ram Plau~,_-8oMy
wllh chllchn,
0 Borr
- n g••1...... Smirol .......
to chooia trom. 114 2111m
Pllnt PIUI,.. hu 8adllln .nit

-·Wei-

31

Estate

HomH for

"'14"'ft'"'.lloh~l~ng-""""!'iioi~';:-~'"'·..-:--~~.. . '
llvo ...ICM
l. IIO'IIP.
11,200.
..a:t331. ury - ·

:MI •••••••• p.m.
Ground oar ...... $4.!10
hundrao!i. SI8.DO lon. Your

Long lol·
tom, Cltlo 114 Ill iii1.
_... """ after I

Hay .... -

oo...wKrr

'91 I lfiGl IS

t1 Church SirMt Sl8tlon
8:06 (Jl MOVIE: The Final

-.18
- · dollvary
114-44f.11112.
Square ., round boloo ol llrow
""01!1•. CaU 114-IG·7302.

Sandy's paren11 allllnd their
villi alter getting snowed ln . .

&amp;

i

POOR BOY TlRU, 304-17113331, ond ... _
111.111, ~4,000 good ...a tlntl,

Transportation

71 Autos tor Sale
1m eutteu. d&amp;PIIldtbk cer,
11roo, oltlm. now
i1uaJ
uhouot AIIIRIIGS-•.
lluo1ooll. siOO. 114-24..-, ..
~11112'

117
. 4 Oldlmoiii:E:.. Rune
· llody
........
,DO. 114-1

.....
.

•

Of

v.. ........ "'"'
....
,_..-work.
,..,

tranMnlilllon,

Jl!oVIIa C2:00) C

-------

NASTY MCNA!2F

YOUEiOI~
1VDO~

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

Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATEAPROORNG
UnconciHionol Ulotlmo ,...,.,
.... l.oc81 ...,• • 011 turniiMd.
FIN Mtlmot•. C a l l - 1•
114-Hl~. . , .. nlghl.
RDIIIW
· ,
ltlllttenl
Wllo'llft'OIIng. . .
, . , TNI Trimming, ......,

wMoJ811: A ~na
OfCDAmerica'
Melt Robert Biy. one or
s leading poets,

WHATAI&lt;E

QIALL.f:NGEO Ml': ·
TO A FlraHT.
,,

Home

explores how men think and
feel abou11hemselves. their
. rqles in aocl81y. and
relationships between sons,
(1 :30)
1111 • !1J Mulphy llnlwn
t,lurphy goeS: to Jail when she

/

refuses to reveal her source.

.i J!D Allen Nltlon

Detectives Investigate e
suicide 'and disappearance of
the body. CR) C2:00)
dJ Ulny King Llvel

N~al? call304-t7f.f331.

Aon'a TV Sarvlco, _.........
In Zanlth a1oo •rvli:lng moil
alhor bnnda. otills,•IIH
IPIII._ _..._ WY
101-171-2:111 Ohio 11._.
2454.

BARNEY

•

HAND ME THAT
CHOPPIN' AX,
MAW

TEE HEE HEE
THANKY FER
;r AKIN' OVER;
. HONEY POT

® SWnd..IJp: , . .........

WHAT I'M TRYIN'
TO TAKE IS MY
· OADBURN NAP II

lllcle 01 (:OmeciJ
llJ Pl'tmiTlnte Wreailloog

t1 Elvia: Tile Echo Wll

Ne- Die The people whO

'

Divis
llow-Yso
illlvloo,
01ar"" CrWI: Rd. Parta. ••
r~
and dollvooy. .,..

Br.

...

e

Plumbing &amp;

r~'-"

Sale

....·-.:1..

-

,__

Heating

1110 wllh
...... - llluolona,
-·
nd
lnlorlor.
OrMI

Cottor'l Plulllblng

11.200. 1, ...

-·

ondHOIIIng
Fourth Inti Plno

1111 Copltoo Clooolc, - · 114-441 Galllpclla,Ohlo
,.,.
7G,OOO miiOO, 11100.

l1 ....... fD1.

.

1!4 .

Electrlcll &amp;

8E-IngNeWI

t •.

.
un1Mr:'ll an old lldo!n t...- to~
former and~~ OJ. Today you may

IBl......

85 General Hauling

J.,

....

Ignore 11111 end get

tllrough thl IJIII of hllfsna;

~non 11 examined

8tuclt wltlt burdens

===with
hll

::-.:'g........
til:~'\~'·~
.....
'

"*'·

'•

~~!:.";~Of .

3). Jeoqull and Jean.Michel
Co'C"ll make I hiiiiOric
axpedltlon up thl Seplk
Riwr,
1D:ao(J) .,.. On Tile ......
· AIRIIIOII'I Clvlllllgltlll Y_ _
o.t.llld ... patllmt oi
.... dlwkitlniUon lfilr

·
---,--~·-·-- -

Chrlilt.mas !reel"'

------u- ---.......,--------'

CIIA-WNtDiittlllliltlr
Thil ·~ ... fallowllhl .
wortcdaY .. ol 11M llallilr,

-ol~-·-­

-·--.-~
..........
,... .,......,

"TI'le o!Mr lhl.~ you're not allowed to yell
beeldes 'Firel' Is, 'Time 10 take down the

WOriCI w. u. Q

wti:Md lftd OOilbOMIIII

Gr1oMin&amp;AIIIINid&amp;AI

,.. ..... ,

WtiJII. Clill14 •• 0111.
~IIIZIDVIhlrln
.......... Dlll1lr ........
~~~,~=
.,.... okl ..... tzTt01... . C1)
CAU11 "111117.
.
'

'

I, .

.J

•s

.J

ab~cRopsswOfiond
.

-

by THOMAS JOSEPH
42 "Tesl

ACROSS
1 Cry of
contempt
4 Word (Fr.)

u.rD1.

DtiGIDr

1"'-IDIIIIII*III
palllnt ~llwi.IU wilh AIOS. Q
11:00 (J) lind n 111 And
lrlaCaiWill' (R)

......

•=
I

aC1l Ill ew 111 .

Pilot"

star .

43 Distaff
lamb

ing symbol
.8 O'Brian
role
tO- Gables,
Fla.
11 Blazing
13 Gw (sl.)
14 Lemmon· oanson
· film
18 Coq au 17 Urban
bllghl
19 Marsh elder
20 Nol al home
21 Max or ·

'N

Buddy

·

22 Initiation
25 Nick of

DOWN
1 Comedic

piano
player
2 Turkish

3
4
5

8
7

9

title
of
10 Pasalng
honor
grade ·
Wllhstand 12 Finnish
Union
lakl' .
ganeral
15 Vocallon
Lummox 11 Hurting ·
Ollltlle
21 Adriatic
Import
. wind .
Sluggish 22 School
Hedge ·
of fish

23 Fear

plenl

24

Homecoming

25 TeN a tale
27 Aunt

2t Eel

(Sp .)
·

30 Task
31 One
aild cinly
32 Large
shoe size
37 Alter -,.

~3t~~=

r

the llltks
28 Presenl ·
27 Paving
material
28 Boston
Bruins
• ·. great

29 Occurrence
" ·at Cana

33 Greek
nickname .

34 Row

:

35 Tool
· 38 Don Juan ;

38
40

for one
United
Hindu
music

form

41 Vetch
DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'ES- Here'l ~to worlllt:

oOntroverolal Ita II Hen

peofOo
10:011J) CIM &amp;I I •lit .I COVIIJ .
. 01 Tile Wettd Papua New

,
l'llh 'Ill... 1411 lo I • ..._

.

ill Ei¥11: Tlte Fana Tile Elvie ·

uo

BERNICE
· BEDE OSO.L.

.... --

.

that

Refrigeration

~ WIIM' Hiullna. ~~-·7Y20.

knew hlln bell and looad him
most taka a relreohing look ·
at the King of Rock &amp; Roll. .
1:30 1!1 Cal1111 llaketbali
llll • aJ Datlgnlnll
Tha ladlll of Sugarbakar' a
square off on ·whether to
. talie on a ctlent. Q
10:00 I]) C8N Tllell1on
111
!IJ Newhart A dlspule
erup11 whan Slephanie bani
Michael from 1he labor room.

w-

.

_Apenment
torRent ·

a

W MOYfE: 'Rock
HudeOit' ABC Monday Night
Movie C2:001

(JJ

Serv1ces

••loo
•d02

m.y

11-.00. (]) !Ill 'Dnlg · - The
CamiNiti atory CPt 2 3)'
NBC Monday Night At The

Aatary or co blo 1oo1 *1111!19- .
_.,. oomplolad...,. til¥.
Pumf.
and oorvlco, 304-

llobllo homo lor ..,., call 114441-tiOI lor mon ln-Uon.

•!IJ Famout TedciJ Z

iw....

uml-tne. new lirM.

81

....,
EAST

WEST
tQJ102
72

7 Identify-

· COuntdown CPO) (2:00)
8:30 e (1) !IS Hogan Family

Acces'&lt;)rles

Lorge roo,ond boiaa ol hoy for

•u

tA83

By Jameo Jocoby

So'!"lhlng Borrowed,
Someone Blue

1111.,

-

~77.

Auto Parts

NORTH
I·I·H
tKH764
.o\K

Two chances
to make it

llJ Myrder, She Wro18

•

76

BRIDGE

Daaigner drugs are
manUiecturad In e university'
chemistry lab. Q
.IIJ PrlmeNIWI
® Dlglt81 DlocOV8ry lnfinlla
Voyage

Sola or trodo. ) 2 opd. billa, AI.
1144111-17:11.
.

114-7424083. .

Hoy, ..... -

U04.

'

o ·r.-YtJM

·EEK AND MEEK

. ,&gt;

OUI llorcury · ~~a~.,. I HP.
Clood . lhapa, t1DO. I14-IA-

aRlDE.·

=4

Boals &amp;' Motora
for Sale

64

eau 114-IG-nn.
t1co z
lumlshad1roRor. II 314 P.-ch. 81, ~ 114IJVSINESS OPPORTIJNITY
4411-7.r3.
CRUISE o\GENCY
If you ad in--.d in ownina J'OUl" Troll.- ·tor Jlont: 2br, R1. 211.
own· OuiN A
, ca11 Cruilo 1144M-6551.

Real

75

Tock,:JOW-.

Ma-a37 or TIN3t0.
Cui •aned akwer · 1: UftiDI:hy,
100 •· bolaa llorsdln bom. 111
por bolo. Dallvary IVIIJobiL·I14-

\1190 ·~ l'tEA. In&lt;;

=

1m n a. Ston:rofl- . 121 HP, Evlnnldo lnalnl,
oompa.te t~. new uphotil1 ry.
Cllll14-21111-1311.1ftor 7:DO p.m.

Hily &amp; Grain ·

ilJ

'
f.
·---lh
~~ a'::.:::•wl~or

·

Policeman's embamissing moment... Lacking himself out of
·the cruiser and having to ask the driver he has just tick8ted FOR

2.

"''
\~AVE,S' ; ~- 8

for

or ploy. -~· 114-14t-111111.

•·S

....

nkl~ own 11'8U.

Bid 11-3 Ng'ad Ouartor ..... 1171, 2 yr. okl ........

-on.~.

Wuld, 1-100-:M'S.
- "---- - ---144

FR-"Nl'- AND ERNEST .

Molorcyclea

milo•

.

tAKQ9HZ
South's biddina was aggressjve (two •Jio63
® ~And Cottello
10 7
.K9
.queens were biB .ooly honon), but he
llJ Miami VIce
• YlcleoCOuntry
ldid have 7·&amp;shape. West had Jl classic
SOUTH
.~ative double - four cards in the
7:05(11 Jell..-.ono
•s
spade suit and values that could com-·
.QI098643
7:30 8 (1) llll Fomlly Feud
pete for a part-score but could not
(J) eonege Ba'aketblll
tQU42
promise a gartte lacina a minimum
(JJ Entlftlllnment Tonlilhl
openiJtl. North, with half the prime
8 (II M-'1 ·P•mlly
Vulnerable: East"West •
all)) M"A"S"H
.
cards in the deck, wondered il face Dealer: East
cards from the previOus deal had per.
oc-n..aa o Joopardyl Q
haps been mind in with the other Soa111
W..l
Nordt East
1
It .
IBl Night Court
playen' cards'to justify all their bid7:36 (Jl Benford And Son
Obi.• Redbi. s '
' ding. South eventually made the right
u
••
5t .
, decision to bid five hearts. Even if be ••
1:00 (1) MOVII!: Famllr J - o
llbl.
o\11 pasa
(2,00)
failed to make the contract, that '5 •
•negative double
8 (1) 0 ALF ALF dreams
would be better than letting East
he's a famous stand-up
make a vulnerable five diamonds.
Opening lead: t J
comic. 0
But South played biB doubled game
CJJ a ell MacGvver Mac
contract well. He ruffed the opening
haa an unusual dream. o·
diamood lead and played a low spade. get to dummy with the club - to
CD Cil Mathnlt: The CeH
When West put in the 10, declarer de- shed three , clubs ~ the K-V-8 of
Of Tile Swami ~m
·
·
cided to play the opening bidder for spades.
Mathnet'a crack detective
duo transfer their
the ace. So he played low from dum· . Declarer could still have made the .•
mathema11cal crime-solving
my. West could do no better than play COittract even If be mlsgueslled the
skills from Tinsel Town to 1he
. aitOtber diamond. Declarer ruffed, spade position, but It would bave re- •
played a heart to dummy's king and quired hil playlltg West for the double- •
~lg
Ded Mac's ;
railed out the ace of spades. Another ton kin&amp; of clubs. A club to dummy's . _
former glrllriend swings back
to dummy's ace allowed him to aCe ana a club back, Wltb declarer
1n1o town. Q
· heart
ruff
one
more Utile spade. He wu now playing low, would be a wilmer. Would
aiDl 21 Jump StNet
.you have played It that wa_f?
·

11117..8uxultl1~-whoolor. 2 · ar _ . ..,.._ 11111
j,ow

Complete th• chuckle quoted .
by filling in the missinSJ words

Deacon - Gnarl - Unfit- Praise -, FORa RIDE' .

.

,. e ~!Ill WIIMI Of
.'11":~ Court Q

•.

":a'J

1111 Kli:ZSO, QIDO, Ella. - ·
1144U-071,

Ousrlor -

-

==-~~=-===

riding or

·

. SCJlAM.lETS ANSWERS.

Nenttow

1117 8-10. 4x4, 31,000 ml1oo,
OM owner, chrome row bu,
bodll-. oldro lhorp, wllfi'Only,
INDO. 11~7S1 .

74

r e

. I I' I I

(J) 1-2·1 Col*cl Q .
111 aacsaNenQ
a !Ill Tfiree'o Contpany
®.MY Wtllld Anti Welcome

CD· Cil MecNiil Lehrer

1111 Aalro Ccn\&lt;lrllool vono,
"".Jl~ condl11ori, Ill Ollllons.·
114
1358.
1118 ~C...van,' I:SIS;
11111151 ~~ -Con-Van, ~~
~
•41,000 mllas
nlco, 11iil
1 - a X'~.
W/oll,
liD
1·
ll~':i~ 110.1111111115
111
11 .._
1117 Dodgo Dlkata, 4r4, llad,
aac.cond.,.ltl0. 1113111171.

•

there's plenty I clonl understand, .

ffi"e-~r:;a

G(1) PM Mllgazlne
(J)~
(JJ a W Cunllll Affair

•

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

FO.. aaio: . . _ , HEAP

llco~loL Uahlad orolgn.
· 11_..
2125.

!i.!....=""..::':l.~oo~, ~
d ,_

HU

-tt

•

aff1C8

and

®~co:301

/

--.
1174 c.ll, com-aly
,_ l

don' unc:lersWld.

.
.
L.....L.,.-L....L.....J-....L...J
you de"'elop fro;m step_No. 3 below. ·

8:35 ill Antty ortt.fl!!, ·
7:00 II( Sctt~mt 6 Mrs. Klllg_

M11111_. good ool
.. I ~.
158'4.

61

\

I'm. fasCinated .wilh 1t*1as I

- ~lleedavery ·-----.

B 0 L iJ D Y

.·.

.

·uo~em

t!Top,Cerd ·

J.ovl

1111 Dalta-nock4honl
lrollar wllh 4 • drilling """"·
D,:IDO. 104-1112-

I 1

Ton
llJ He-Man ·

l::.~~~~onnowH!Irrlc304:m:..,.klill

......... - - oi Hay, 304-

- · - a d. -114IIG~711 or 114-7424421.

2111', , ............. cHJ. 11' 441 Dill.

0 Woold Today
·
!81 Chllrleo In Chllrge

'1111 P.U., t4!!!; ' 1N7
~- ~. S3tfl· 1MT a-.
s-1o, Pill; 1111 ltiiiiin King
Cab. .1111· 1111 Fconl lllnaoi
l1tl5; 111J f·IDO Fconl IW.: ,
••115 1- - Ill¥-•·
I ~-.
wP.U,, 1.2 - · h1 !!i, 1171
Chov. P.U. v... outo1 11D!'J llD
llot'":d ~ ~ 1!10, ., ........
11M . 1 ·

11114.

::::·:::·: : ·=·=.:.,
5

a«D Antlr Gritfttll

·

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
y.....,. PA .........
-kors, 1 llonhor lpalokor,
114 311 11:11.

~~=K=R=I=B=S~~·
:
_
·
I' I ~

1:05 (Jl Beve!ly I llllblll11
1:30. (1) 1111 NBC Nightly ....

11!!!
- 1,;10q'ua"'!!:
•
· - pt':n*.
drlw. 114-2A·!I011.

- - -·-- -

For Lean

For Laaso' Second unlur·
nlshocl apa~mant, ii3 par
mcn1h. COfnsr ,_... l Plna,
Gallipolis. Ono bedroom. Wo1or,
IIOV. &amp; Nfrig ....tor. provldld.
No pots. DlposH and roloro-

.

==-==-=~~~==

Fonl l-or, w11h
- . . . . - P1oWt, ~
· 1 - Low -dlso.4- - . . . . . . . .
.
coot oooh ..,._ ov II No Vl'llo 4010 JD wtJD foodor,
·
FumMuro.ll1.141 4·()pon 114 211 '1:12.
7. dip I ..... Mon. lhru Sol. I ...... e~-~- 31,
Lm.• 1 p.m., 11111. 12 •I w
T77
•
• •1
i
P.m. l14-t ...31U. ~
lrocloro . I lmplomonls. Buy,
•UCTION l8WI'Uli~NITUAE. a
sOl~ 1rado, I:OH:DO -~
~
. Olive
II., IIIUipollo. - a Uoad aot uu-.
lwnRuro,
...
63 Livestock
- .-. '
~
•-~..,.._4Ww
e "
n-• - •· 1~ 1-·
.......
12nloo -Ciil-.11011 ...
Anti.....,..
53
112U-. 11~

Buj .,; HIL R l - Allllquoo,
Counlry -Ill H - Pork, 1124 E. lllln llrMI, .P-IOJ.
~ 31, North ol P -. Houn: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. 10 1:00
Lolo. - l o , patio, - - Call p.m.~ 1 :00 to 1:00 p.ro.
114-ww.
114-ta-7471.
Taking aptlllcoilono lor oltloo Top Cliah paid. Old fumM&amp;n
ouboanlo, quina. orlontll,
or spattmenlo. palnllnp, 1oys, ., on11ro Slloto
bulldlna being bull, all · - Coli
COIIIUCI 30UIIII-3278, or
- · ..-..... porkln;. Olllco up :IOW2M854.
10 1,440 sq.ft. Nortl1 lnd 1own:

llln Peuljt's Day Cora Clin1ar.
lola, aflanllbla, ohllclcon. 111-1'
I Lm. • 1:30 p.m. " - 21+-10.
BefoN, after echoof: Orop-lne

STONE~EN6E'?

...

wordl.

·1

I .L

I, I t I I

muskrat flourlthel deaplte
civilization and !!!PI!!'•· Q
(J) . . . . . . 0.1'( Iii

NO, TWIS IS ~E RE6ULAR
SCI-IOOL BUS T~AT 60ES TO
PINECREST aEMENTA~ SCHOOL
. EVERV DAV OF '1'0\IR LIFE ...

•.•

.
4~ '

i

·

-w•-

Siartlng ot 11:10/mo. Clallla
Hotll.l1 .....,11510.
. .

TO

DH

en Wikl Amlllcll , .

.

L==~===::;~===.,===~ 1'"
..1o ,..._ v...
a .. -~ ~--........,
...'
,.,_,_,
PI, .......... - ..
13.-L
- r , 1 1, 56 Pets for Sale
12'11..,.,Of4,.,.

ous.

_ . . . , _ _ _ atmonlh.

'

·=

m
...-..lowi
V 1..... ~~ L~~~
Ballimora va Dallas

:~1i~.i:'1 ~_'"1t..'=-=

ooom

Room a

Services

PEJ\NUTS

~~~~---~~
IS Tl-115 T~E TOUR BUS

-o..

QIIC ~ -

1-_

m.gae -

Furnished .

~

1m
Ford
-.·
Flatbed.
Cllll1
. .HlnY
..,.. .Dulr . ·.,

-. ·-pill•

Cash Paid. c.n 814-112·5657 or
&amp;14492-2461'

.

I1,UO.~.

IEAUTIAIL
APAIITIIENTI
AT
BUDGET
PAICU
AT J - ESTATESiZJI31 ..-on Plu
~- 1
oholt ••
to I. E
EOII•. 51
1110111oo. c.u1!14.
t14-44f.211N.
- h ltrwl, lllddlopOrl, Ohio.
1 and 2 - - l u ,.,., a1ao 1 noom afflcl-, ,._,_ .....,...... lno. Good
ulllllloo paid, nr.nnc• ,._ ;;;;.j"[_."'!""'"-.L T.V. lOlL~
qulrod; 3Q4.882,2511.
...,...
I a.m. to I p,rn. llon.-8al. 1!1F,umlahad 3 , _ and bath, o141-1ll!i . 127 W. ...._ CW.
pttvola, - n , .,..,_ alnglo Upolia, ""
worldng-. non........, no
pots ~71-21111
•
Dry.- gold ... .,.,.
'
·
Wfilrtpcol ovocado ~-~. !1rJo&lt;
Fumlohad
·~lncy whho •75. ·"""'pool
1pll1mllllo,
csi'J)IIad. woll ....,., 111111=•,-washarOIII.
aicond "-· kloai!Or
'Nhlll ~r--.
Mn, ota~lng a1 1111. l14-o141- 111, 11ac111o ronp • I Y 2102
til, oloctrlo rongo Ill" S'IS,~
.:c.:.:..'_---'.,_ __ _ _ ..... 2V"
Fumlohad oHiclancy, 1171, whllo roltlgtrl10f IPI. &amp;
I,
111Uhloo paid, 101 . Fou~h Avo., ntr!gln1or 2 * · a - •121,
Gslllpollo, 114 441 4411 allar rolrlll!ro1or -pottono lroot·
7p.m.
. . lroo 11 !10. 11118tJt11.Ai&gt;lll-.
U - AI- Ad. 11~7111.
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bodopa~IIIOJI10 ot VII- 0000 USED APPLIANCES
llsilor
and " Alvoralile WI.,_ !lfyorl. rojltp1don,
.tp~rtmenteln MklcftetMHt. Front rangee. 8kilap ADDII•nall,
1114. Now through 'llarch 15. U - Alvor Aa. looW. 810111
First month ron1lroa lo , _ Creotllotal Clll11 ........7llll.
who q..lily. 'CaU 814-1112-7787.
upholol- couch, QC
EOH.
phono 30U711-2175.
lllddlopo~. 1bodrooonaJj'.S12! Now bod, d - a roaJna
!!",•,•h. pi•.• u1ili11oo. !4-IIG· chair. Good cand., wuhor '
'" a •• p.m.
d-r. l14-441·1701 .
·
·r8 'AII1URE
llodom 1br, downlown, cor~ .... -pl01o kHc•-. Inr--:.o!"-~~...
....- _ ,
•-•
-·sulalad,llrcond., 114-441-0131: lurnlohklg. 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. ,. ..S?nf, WY1
Nlco two bod"*", tully cor- coii30U711-1potad,
alr,
ovary1hlng
molnlal,.... Including pnl. No
RENT TO OWN
polL 114-112-2807.
Top Quollly llrond Homoo
Llvlna room eull• S1Qflft.,
owiMI rDCkor h.IOiuuk, dw.t·
1al4 ohaln 17.1Go'!'&lt;IL1_ bunk

for_.,.,.
•• ~ ~========:r:::=:=:=::::=::====i "~"
1

bcellant
b l y . Wagao
Eaay _

No uparionce noodod. CIIH 1·
Eld. 5214. Opon ·:M
w.m •uto waiher working 104-641•7778
hc&lt;n,lnqludlng Sunday. ·

6

IVIilable lor

130,0110 yoor .,._ .,..anu ...

JIIINewti

1111 ...... !11!1'111 ....k - - '
11100.
rill ................... .....

_,_

.ablad.

hll hid ahota. 81~·7131 .

coftd, needa rapall'll, 304-1751504_.

llamo

101ft.

IICCaomlci1 g

. • (2) Cll • (J) Ill

Trucks for Sale

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

t._

MoNEY R'scllng lookll
130,000/~r
lncomo · I&gt;OiamJ ...
Dotals. (11 --1!111. Y·
EARN

1:00()) "-dCIIII Anti

..... -.Gfpo

71 Ford F-100 . . . . . . . . . . . .

-OJ.

1·

llao-41H215.

72

10 form four ~mplt

1

EVENING

wll GCN eldn ... 104-171-4111
aft.- 1:00PM.

L __ ......,.
· - ' ohopplngprovided. 12Uimo. '-- 114441.0213.
4 , _ , opo~monl lor nnl In
1325 PM' - h . All
utlllloo pald. I14-IG.fi01.
Allinnioms lor Nnl. ,..,..,
Alvors Tower Houol~ lor
Eldottr; Hondlcoppad lnd ,...

Tractar, Trailer Driver tar IDeal
COi'd...ct work, mutt t.ve txa

after 1:00 p.m.

lllxad Broad BaogiO, 1yr. okl,

-

r..~.....,, ....

.

au llaar fum_. worb ·fine,

1 belli, poMio
patl_o. CtoM to

.I
.11'1 ' 11 I
low

LEBMME

Wlnleol 1o • .., 71, 1'2. 7ll

w. ..... 2 br.,

:land

.

•
0'"
............
ol tho
four ICIQmblod word• 1&gt;0-

8

MON.. JAN.I

..

='

- - 114417·'1a11111J11n1L
Giveaway

2038 lftet' 5 p.m.

Viewing

1

DIIT

appllcauono. 1-..e2-1111 :14
· houri day.

4

......_ Ill - · -

- 11411'1101.
MolY. Tnnt. llul ........

cotjSOLIDATlON. Aloo .....
carde. lad cr.dll:, Banlcivlllcy,
low lncom. no probfam. }r,..

.-.

1he o.lty Se1tlnt1-Pagl · 11

Aut&lt;» for ·h ie

71

..•.
. ' ·'

..

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

1

1.

•

.

'

One letter itands for another. In this sample A Ia ua,ed
for the three L'a, x·for the two O'a,_etc. Single letters, :
· aptrophes, the length and fonilation cllhe words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
:
· CRYnOQOOTE

l-1
I K .R
EPIK
ST

.

K X F' ·C V
C

.

i'

TC G R

GTXR .J

PQ

ZCG R l

GKSPGR:

ESTM

L C B .I P f' R I. R TXII'f Q P S V .

QSXTGR

XV~VSEY

.

Vut u dTI"=t:• flll•h•IONOIIANEI GIVES A,
SQitt OF ~I
10 ~- PEIIETUITY TO ERROR. - RtaRT
·
••

�Ohio Lottery

A salute
to Pomeroy's

Pick 3
008
Pick 4

I 50th
•

•

FOIALL YOUI
HDDIIG NEEDS SEE U$
TODAY."• .

lflfdY.fOI(

t.

. f-11·1 • AI'PlWICIS '

tv'S • ROOI COYDIIIG
tft-1671
IOWMIOWII, ~ lllVY,

•o

..

.I: . . ,.

~"

,.

THE
'CENTRAL'
TRUST
C,OMPANY
.
.

"Your Financial. ·
Center" ·
97 NORTH SECOND
MDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6661

INSTAUMENT
lOANS

MEIGS
Voi.&lt;IO. No.tn "

.

EASTERN.
BOYS

..

Jan•. 12-North Gallia-Away ·
Jan. 13-Southtrn-Away
IMAIE UPI

GIRLS

. Jan. 10-Yrin~blt-Home
· Jan. 11-North Gal.lia-Home
Jan. ·15-Miigs-Away

SOUTHERN

Fa~furleg .Ktetoekr ;
. ' Ftld Chi•••i
·&lt;•

OATH OF OFFICE ADMINI8TERED- MIQ'or

GIRLS

'Fred Hollman· admla!Mered tile oath of office to
lour Middleport VIllage Council membets MQnday night precedlq the first meetlag of the year.

Jan. 11-Kyger (rHk~Away
Jan. 18-Honnan Tract-Away

.

'

rJcbt u they took tile oath were
J.ack Satterfield, begl1111ln1 bla tblr4 ·.term; Paul
Gerard, biB flnt lull term; Bob Glbnore bta third
luD term, and Dewey Horton, bla fourth fuD term.

·. Pletured left to

--------~------~BOYSSCHED~LE--~-----.. --~~~

'

....

....·', ''
~

sss:PA~K · S1.
·~'

MIDDLEPORT .

· 992,66H

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL .
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 21-Miller ............................ : Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .... , .......•... .. Away·
Dec. 5......,Kyger Creek ...... ~........... :.. Home
Dec. &amp;-.:-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec .. 15.-Southern ......... :..........•.. Away
Dec. 1&amp;:....symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 22-0ak Hill ·········/········· ...... Away
Dec.29-30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2.,..-Federal Hockin{ ............ ,. Away .
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .......... ........ Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia .................. , Away
Jan. 19-Southwestern ................ Home
·Jan.26-Kyaer Creek .............. ~ .. :: .. Away
Jan. 27-Miller .... ,...................... Home
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ Home
Feb . 9-Symmes Valley .......... :...... Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

'
786 N. 2nd··
'
Middle110
· rt.
992-6491
•
,f

'•t.~..

.f

'

i.&lt;.

1

pated expenditures Is about In the village.
.
Sentinel News Stall
·
$67,000. higher than the 1989 · Aletter was read from the Ohio
A total of $1,378,709 was ap· appropriation figure whloh·, was Department of Transportation
propria ted for operation of Mid· $1,311,779.
regarding the availability of
dleport village In 1990 In a
The oath of office was given to mass trans!x&gt;rtatlon funds (Blue
resolution passed by Middleport four councilmen, Dewey Horton, Streak Cab) to the village lor this
VIllage Council Monday night at beginning his fourth full term;
year. 'The total Is $106,982 with
Its first session ofthe new year. Jack Satlerfleld, and Boll Gil- $47,356 being In federal funds and
The breakdown on expend!· more their third f4U. terms, ~nd $59,626 In state funds .
lures approved for this year Paul .Gerard, his first full term
Council approved a fire protec·
Include $486,180, general fund · by Mayor Fred Hottman. ·
tlon contract with Salisbury
Including safety fund ;. $106,100,
'H.orton was re-elected presi- Township for$1100, and agreed to
fire truck; $102.810 street malnte· dent of council and was also retain Floyd Brown Associates
nance; $27,200 cemetery; named to serve on the Middleport as water-sewer consultants for
$31 ,2!\0, swimming pool; $202,100 Planning Commission.
the village at $1.000 a month'.""
public transportation, $177,850
During last night's meeting the Mayor Hoffman noted that the
water; $30,000, water system first reading of an ordinance contract can be cancelled on a 60
Improvement; $2,449, sanitary .providing for the an.nexatlon of · day notice In the event the village
sewer escrow; $9,000 meter dep· acreage below the ;Middleport hires a certified systems openi·
oslt; $146,715, sewer; $25,055, fire corporation limits to Story's Run tor .and no longer needs that
equipment, $21,400, economic Road on the river side of Route 7 service !rom an outside agency .
development, and $10,600 mini· was given.
i
·
On recommendation of the
golf.
Given third readings ''and' !3oard of Public Affairs, the
· "The estimated receipts avalla· adopted were two ordlnapces, village approved an Increase In •
llte In 1990, according' to the one set ling mayor's court costs . reconnect charges to $10, and a!)
at $35, and the other establ~hlng Increase In petty cash funds from
approprlatiO[\S Is $1,445,430.
This year's figure of antlcl· fees !or various required permits
Continued on page 5

.

hearing on·fire contract· issue.

'

SOUTHERN HIGH $CHQOL

1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL .
Nov. 25-Sauthwestern ................. Home
Nov. 28-Kygar Creek .................... Away
Dec. 1-0ak Hill .... .................... . Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Away ·
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 16-Eastern .Pike ............... :.. at O.U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley.: .. :......... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern·................. Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home
Jan. 5-0ak. Hill............................ Away
Jan. 6-Gan•pohs ................ ........ Home
Jan. 12-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ........... :.... Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia . ~ ................ Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood .................. Home
Feb. 2:-Easterp ........ :.......... ;.... :.; Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hockina.: ............. Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern ................... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley .............. : Away

a

By NANCY YOACIIAM
night's public; hearing that Cle. Department In meeting which
Sentinel News Stall
,land had brought a contract·for they heldc;m Sunday night .
Many ques dons still remain 100 perc'ent of the funding, and
Among reasons given by Jta·
unaqswered a rter Monday that when Instead, a 50 percent cine flrefllen for their rejection
night's public meeting' at Antlq· contracthwtth Racine was of· were that they worked Letart
~y, ~lillll~a reaillen~rt - · fered, he.felt he )lad no au1bolity&lt;.o-TOWDalriit-._:.tlw·~lle of· the
Township, and membe.-s of the to accept the contract without origtnaf levy, ·as well as for ~e
RaCine an&lt;! ' Syracilse Fire De· Instruction from village council renewal, and that they always
partment( met fO ·discus&amp; a and the fire department.
· protected Leiart Township In the
That left Letart Township with yea,rs prior to levy money for
problem that has been brew1n111n
the township since Dec. 29.
a fire protectiOn contract with · "just a few hundred dollars a
After.. an,' h\)ur of dtscuulon, · Syraeuse Fire Department, but year" from the township. When It
residents and members of the · no contract with Racine. When was found out that Letart Town·
fire departments decided to fo.rm . word of this reached, residents of ship would produce big pot of
a commltlee to try to solve the · the township, they became con· money (due to the hydro-elect·
dilemma that began when Letart cerned tor the safety of their rtc plant) "then everyone wanted
Township Trustees signed a fire properties, since Syracuse Fire a piece of the pie," a fireman
protection contract with· Syra· Department Is several ·mnes said.
cuse Instead of Racine. Approxl· farther away than RaCine. They
Letart Township generates apmately 90 . people attended the also became concerned that their proximately $32,000 a year from
meeting which was held at a home ·owner's Insurance rates the one mill fire protection levy.
store In Antiquity.
might Increase due to the ·In·
Racine firemen also pointed
The Letart Township Trustees creased distance between· Syra· out thai they have always ans·
were not In aitendance.
cuse and the township.
" wered the majority of fire calls In
The meeting began with a
Such concerns were expressed Letart Township, with Syracuse
recap by township residents .Bud by to)llnshlp residents at a Jan. 2 being called to assist on just two
Rose and Luda Anderson of organl2atlonal meetihg of the or three occasions In the past·flve
events which led to the public township trustees, which Is now years.
meeting. It was explained that on comprised of Don R. and Harry
Among questions asked last
Dec. 29, Letart Township Trus· Hill, and a new trustee, Dave night by residents was this- "Is
tees Don R. Hill, Harry Hill and Graham, who was elected to his the 50 percent contract with the
trustees and Syracuse binding?"
and Herbert Roush voted un· post In November.
, anlmously to divide revenue
At the Jan. 2 meeting, officials No one ·could answer for sure
generated from the township's of the two fli'e departments since Syracuse has·already lndl·
one mIll fire protectlqn levy on a agreed to meet last Friday night cated they would be willing to
5().50 basis to Racine and Syra· . to try to reach a compromise In
accept ~5 percent of the revenue
cuse Fire Departments, Instead the situation. Any compromise instead of the 50 percenl. '
of 100 percent to Racine as In · that mll!ht be reached by the fire
Also, It was alleged that to sll!il
years past. On the same night, a departments was to have been a five-year contract - which Is
contract to that affect was signed acceptable to the trustees, It was what the township and Syracuse
with Syracuse Mayor Eber reported. However, the· com· Fire Department slgiled - Is
Pickens, who was present at the promise offer from Syracuse Illegal anyway. The alleged
meeting. Picken~ Is also the Fire Department to Racine- a Illegality was not verified, except
65-35 .split of the money, with
that Racine Chief Hank Johnson
Syracuse Fire Chief.
Although Mayor Frahk Cle. Racine Fire Department to re. reported that Racine VIllage and
land of Racine was also at the celve the larger percentage fire department contracts bemeeting, It was reported at last was . rejected by Racine Fire tween Sutton and t::ebanon Town,
ships are for three years. How·
· ·.
ever, someone pointed out that
the township's previous contract
with Racine had' been lor five
years.
Chief Pickens of Syracuse
explained llbat he had been told
five years ago by Letart Trustees
tllat they would divide revenue
with Syracuae the next time the
.lire contract was up, and that
was why he had approached
Letatt Trustees at their regular·
meeting early In December
about dividing the money . He
then return~ to the Dec. 29
end-of-the-year meeting with a
prepared contract In lland.
Chief Jobuon of Racine said
he had not contacted the trutees
'
becau11e It wu the respoDSiblllty ·
of the trultees to secure IJN
protection for the townJhlp, not
the fire departll)ent's
responatblllty.
·
It wu also pointed out by
someone that If Syracu11e Fire
CONDtiCT IIAiiHO - 011 .._.., ....... r I lt'&amp;w ! i, · Departmeat needed fundi, tben
relld..aall'on.. lllto tile ...,. IIIII 'sa a&amp; A•~ te dleog• a
why didn't Syracute VIJiaae pall
their awn levy, u Ract1111 Vlllaae
· prolll-tllalbepa..,...LelariTr I •"'• ebaealt::wtferfbe
did, In adcllUon to paytnr the
pretec.aH wltPI ~rae.• Fire De;Nirtmewl lor 11 pene11t .t
Sutton TOWIIIhlp fire piDtectloD
- • fnm &amp;Ilea blp'l fire pnlslliiN :..,• .. ,.a,._,
• Lltllrt
levy.
Tow 7.1 !nJ BIIWIIJ' Will&amp; ealn!J te tile aiiCiwe J'lre
Bu 1 the main concern of
lllletll, eildQ's meet'sa- aoatt~ln br ........,
realdenll, even thole who' pub- .
. . . lind .... &amp;...,. , .. Wolfe .... Lada (lluc) Alldei-.
Pic&amp;.....: are WoPie aad Alld(Continued on paae 5)

a

--------~--~
" ---GIRLSSCHEDULE~
· --~----------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-M iller ...:........ :................... Home
Dec. 2-Eastern ................................. Away ·
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home
Dec. U-Nelsonville·Yoik .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wellston ............................ Home
Dec, 18-Vinton Co............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpree .............................. Home
Jan. 4-Aiexander .............................. Away
Jan. 8-tederal Hocking ...... :.............. Away
Jan. 11-Miller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastern ............................... Home
Jan. 18-Trimble ....... :........................ Away
Ja ..22~Nelsonville·York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ............................... Hoine
Jan. 29-Vinlon Co........................... Home.
Feb. 1-Belpre ............................, .... Away
Feb. 5-Aiexander. ................. ,........ :. Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hacking .................... Home
Feb. 10-Southern ............................ Home

,•

~

1

.

More than 90 on hand for ·
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989~90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec: 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 8- Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ........................ Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co......:.............. Home
Dec. 22-Belpre .... ....................... Away
Dec. 29-Logan ........................... Home
Jan. 5-AI~xander ......................~ Home ·
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking ....... ....... Ho(lle
Jan, 1~-Miller ................. :......... Home
Jan. 16-Warren .................... ...... Away
Jan. 19-Trimble ................ .... ..... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ....... ...... Away .
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home ,
Jan. 30-Vinton Co................ ~ ..... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre .... ;..................... ., Home
Fe~. 3-Athens ··'·....................... . Away
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9. Federal Hocking ............... Away

'.

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Jan. 12-Kyger (l'ftk-Home
Jan. 13-Eastern-Home ·

'

c ...,.

A Mul1imedio Inc. N•WIP•P.,

Middleport Council
OKs operating funds

GIRLS

Jan. 8-Fttleral Hocking-Away
Jan. 11-Milltr-Away
Jan. 15-Ealtern-Home

BOYS

99~-3077

21i

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, January 9. 1990

CopyrlqhtH 1180

Low tonl&amp;bt In ;lOs. Chlillc~
of snow 70 percent.. Wednesday, high In upper SOs. Chance
of 1now .. percent.

..

•

at

BOYS

Jan. 9-Federal Hockli.g-Home.
Jan. 12-MIDer -•-•
•
Jan. 13-Wtllston-Away
IMAII UPl

.

2340

anniversary
•

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov .. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace ..................... Home
Dec . 2-Meigs .................................. Home
Dec. 4.,-Kyger Creek ...................... ..... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble ................................. Away
Dec . 7-Southwestern ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dec. 16-Federal Hocking ..................: Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill ............................. Home
· Jan. 4-Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan. 10-Tri111ble ............................... Home
Jan. 11-North Gallia ................. ,...... Home
Jan ..15...-Mei1s .................................. Away
Jan. 18-Southwestern ....................... Away
Jan. 20- Federal Hocking ................ ~ . Home
Jan. 25-Kyger Creek ........................ Home
Feb . 1-Southern ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Dak Hill ................................ Away
Feb. 8-Symmes Valley ..................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Meigs ........................... ~ .... Home
Nov. 27-Kner. Creek .. ;..................... Home
Nov. 30-Dak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallia ......... ................ Home
· Dec. 1-'-Hannan Trace ..........,............ Home
~c. 11-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ........,. ............ Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ........................... HDme
Dec. 21-Symmes Valley .................... Away
· Jan. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away·
Jan. 4-0ak Hill. :.............................. Home
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ........ :.............. Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ................ Home
Ja. 25-North Gallia ........................... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford ........................... Away
Feb. 1-Easttrn ................................ Home
Feb. 5--'Symmes Valley ..................... Home
Feb. 8-Southwestern ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Mei~s .. ,............................... Away

&lt;

.:=•

-·

---- -."'

I

--·- --...--

SWEARING IN
- New and
re-elected members of Raclae VIllage Couqcll
take their ~hA of office prior to the start pl.
Monday night's meellng of council, the flnt of the
new year. The oath Ia administered by · Mayor
Frank Clela11d, at left, to Carroll Teaford and

Robert Jeerle, retamtnr counclbnen, and lelf
Thornton and Ronald Clark, new counclbnen,
pictured left to rlrht. The other two members of ·
council are Henry Bentz and' Larry Wolfe. ·
Clerk·Treuurer Ia Jane Bee111e.
.I

Columbia G03 to reduce .rates
Columbia 'Gas of Ohio an· ·
nounced today It plans to reduce
rates to customers by about 4
percent. This will average more
than $2 a month for the average
residential customer.
"Despite the record cold
temperatures which have forced
an escalation of prices for other
heating fuels, we are pleased to
once agajn be able to reduce
costs to our customers," said
John M. (Jake) Koebel, Colum·
bla Gas manager at Galllpoijs.
"It's especially gratifying to be
able to Implement these cost
reductions at a time our custer
mers can appreciate It most ~
right In the middle of a very cold
winter."
'

1\~minent

· The reduction will amount to
a bout 20 cents for each 1.000 feet
of gas used by customers. For !he
residential customer In Ohio who
uses 10,000 cubic feet of natural
gas per month on an annual
basis, It will mean a reduction In
the average monthly bill from
$55.61 to $53.65.
The reduction In customer
rates Is a reflection o! lower costs
that Columbia projects It will pay
the next three months lor gas It
buys to serve Its customers.
Those costs, re!)ected In the gas
cost recovery rate (GCR) flied
quarterly with the Public Utili·
ties Commission o! Ohio, account
for approximately sixty percent
of the tolal customer bill. Ga~r

r.

purchase costs are passed on to
customers on a dollar·for-doUar
basis.
•
·
· Koebel said the unusual lncl·
dence of a reduction In winter·
lime gas costs is the result of
Columbia 's relentless and conlln·
uous search !or the most loexpenslve, yet reliable supplies ·
available.
· "It's a combination o! Colum:
bla's dlyersllled supply base and
our dedicated supply planning
people who are committed to
keeping tile costs customers pay
for natural gas at their lowest,"
Koebel said.
If ·approved by the comml.s·
slon,. the reductions will be
rellecled with February cycle
bills.

Racine businessman
Roy Proffitt, .81, ·dies o~- Mon.,ay .
'

"

....

'

.

'

Prominent Racll!e business- ness over to his grandson In 1973, Florence Palmer Proffitt. He Is
man Roy .E. Proffitt, 81, died Mr. Proffitt devotecl hla time to survived by his wife, Lillian
·unexpectedly' Monday at Vete. . opera tine his other bUsiness of · Mosler Proffitt - ~cine, two
rana Memorial Hospital.
wholesaling easolllle In the area. daUIIhters, Fr'eda Fei"JIIson .nd
In the on and 11as drllllllll
He wu a member of the Ohio Maxlnj! Sellers, botll of Racine,'
bu1lness !or many years, l,fr. Oil and ·Gas Alsocatlon lnd the. , five grandchildren,. 10 !!featProffitt Ia credited with having Ohio Oil and Gu Hall of Fame, grandcblldren, one great-ereat
dtUied more than 700 welts In and was Itated Ia "Wbo's Wbo In grandcblld, and eeveral nl-."
OhiO ud West Vll"llnla from 1936 tbe Midwest."
and nepbewa.
,
when he formed the Roy Proffitt
Mr. Proffitt was a tonner
Bftldel his pa,-ents he was
Dr1lltng Compa~y and drilled hta trustee of Lebanon TOWIIIIIIp, ·'preceded In death by a dauehter;
first well .at Bald Knobs In and a fonner Melp County Betty, three brother•. and a
Lebanon Townablp, to 1973 wllen Commluloner.
grandson. .
the company wu.turlled over to
He wu a member of the
Memortal 11ervlcea will be held
his grandlql!, the late Roser L. Reol"lanlzed Churcb of Jesua at 1 p.m. on Tlluraday at lhe·
Adami •. , ·
Ractne.Portlancl Road Church ot"
.Cbrtat of Latler · Day Jlalall,
Mr. ProlfltteottntothedrUllnll Racine-Portland Road, and a
Jesua ·Cbrllt of Latter Day':
bustneu after workiDJ for a tonner pastor and .elder of that
Saints. Elder Dave MlJIIIII will,
Parklenlburg firm as a tool church.
offlcilte Uld burial ,.will be In
dres.aer and well tender In the·
Born on · AprU 6, 1~ at
Bald Knobl Cemetery. Memorial
early 19:.11.
Ravenswood, W. Va., he was the donal lou may be made to the
Churcll, Danny RoUih. PortlancJ:
After. turning the drUIInJ bus!· . son of the late Albert Proffitt and

-.....

..

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