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·Fiego 1o-The Daily Sei1tinel

Tun tilly.

Pon•ov Midd'eport. Ohio ·

t

Victory Baptist Church· has holi~ay. play

:People in.the. news .

~ 8,

1180

Holiday vi.rits

'

Salute

Holiday gu.eats at tbe hOme or
Ada Bissell and· son, Ken!IMh, ·
Ilea llabD In the video, has ·
" Tell It Again, Grandpa!" w'-s· Keeper, Shepherds, Wise Men, Joseph.
Long Bottom, were Mr. and Mrs.
Acting as shepherds were Tom Groeneveld and TOmmy,
reworked Moua&amp;ala' s "Missis- the title of the Christmas play
and a choir of angels, they
sippi Queen" to mock fallen presented by the Victory Baptist recreate wbat happened almost Brian Young, TOJTII)IY Roush, Worthlngton; Mr. •nd Mrs. Mark
and J .C. Buzzard. Dustin Zirkle, Miller, Eddie Haymaa, Wnter2000 years ago.
evangelist Jim Bakker (video to Church In Middleport.
Tbose acting In the play and the• Joe Cornell, and Cody Smllh ' v!Ue; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bissell;
The play portrayed both the
follow) and he also will have
parts they played are as follows, served as k!nis.
renditions of' the Rolliar I!&amp; ones' present ; lime as well as a
Michelle and Michael Patrick,
Accompanying on the plano Pomeroy; Mae McPeek. and .
John Harrison, granCipa; Phyllis
"Under My Thumb, " . Cheap recreation of the past. In the
. Trick's " Gonna Raise Hell" and . play, Grandpa, Christian man, Hudnall, grandma ; Jennifer Cor- was Heidi Smith.
Steve · and Judy ·Holter, Long
The play was directed by
nell, Kelly; Ashley Smith, Suzie;
Elvis Prsley's " Are )'ou Lone- explains the obvious me40lng of
Boltom.
•,
Joshua HarriS, Kevin; and J .D·. Angela Hall and Ailgle McClure,
some Tonight." The musicians· Christmas with scripture, along
Keesee, T()m.
, with. the opening .given by Cody
.playlng on ihe · album Include with hts better half,.grandma, a
Smith, Joshua AshleY , David
Christian
woman
at
his
side.
Portraylng:angels
were'
Trlsh
Mountain's ~Be West, Eddie
McClure, Andy Hysell, and
There
are
grandchildren
In
the
Roush
,
Julie
Young,
Jennifer
Moaey , Dweezll Zappa and
members of Boa Jovl, Wblles· household visiting and they be- .. .Ashley, Tangy Laudermlll, and Brooke Venoy.
A duet, ''Mary's Little Lamb' '
nake and P0118on. In addition, come Intrigued by grandpa's Melissa Young. The p;~rt of f11ary
was
performed by Mr. and Mr s.
Klnison has plans to tour the knowledge of the l;llrth of Jesus. was played by Kimberly Cornell,
Randy
Smith ..
Along with Mary, ,Joseph, the inn and Donald Laudermllt played
country.

'

Dance set ·
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
sponsor and round and
!!quare dance on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. Music will be provided .
· by True Country Ramblers. T.he ·
public II Invited to attend and,
ldmJialon Is $2. Those attendt~
are to·brlna snacks for the snack
table.
:.

wlll ·

Ohio Lottery

'

Pick3

P~e:rOy's

;

ll:r WILLIAM C. TROTI'
\laW Preta laleru&amp;looal
WOODY ON WOODY: Woody
:AIIell says he was amazed by the
;JJilmber of people who took Issue
with him over an article he wrote
for Tbe New York Times last
year In which he criticized Israel
1or being too harsh IIi combatting
lbe Palestinian uprising. In the
ll!tesnssue of Tlkkun. a Jewish
Interest ·magazine, Allen wrote
an article titled "Reflections of a
Second-rate Mind" In which he
said he Is convinced of the
correctness of his feelings . •'•1
have· frequently been accused of
belni a self.)Jatlng Jew, " Allen
says, "and while It's true I am
Jewtsh and I don't like mysel!
very much, It's notbecauseo!my
Persuasion."
NORIEGA'S LAWYER: Put·
tlng together a defense for
Muuel Norle1a hasn't been the
only problem facing Miami lawyer Frank Rubino lately . The city
has been trying to boot Rubino
out of his Coconut Grove law
office because It's located In a
residential .area where offices
are not allowed. Rubino's request for a · change In the zoning
laws was scheduled to go before
city officials Monday night. Long
before Noriega was sent to
Miami to stand trial on cocaine
tra!!lcklng charges, , Coconut
. Grove residents complained that
they didn't want Rubino's criminal clientele coming to their
neighborhood: Rubino told board ·
members that If his rezoning
request is defeated, he might ·
have to conVert the office Into a .
home. "Their worst fears could
come ' true, " · Rubino said. ".J
could move ln."
· AGONY OF DEFEAT: Zlnko
Bop&amp;aj, the Yugoslavian skller
seen taking that nasty !all off li
ski Jump on the "ABC's Wide
World of Sports" lrrtro, helped
Induct the man who rriade him:
famous Into the TV Academy
Hall of Fame Sunday night. It
was Rooae ArledJe, · now presldimt of ABC News, who chose!
Bogataj's fall to symbolize the
agony of defeat. "I would rather •
have been the thrill of victory," !
Bogata) said through translator
Jim McKay at the Los Angeles
ceremony. Also Inducted In the
hall were Perry Como, Barbara
Wallen, "60 Minutes" producer
Doa Hewitt, ''Sesame Street"
creator Jou Ganz Cooney and
actor Carron O'Connor. Como
took s()me kidding from Mliton
Berle about his lald-baek style
and even joined In by calling
blniself a "sleeper" among oddsmakers for his Induction Into the
Hall of Fame.. Tbe show will air
Jan. 24 over the Fox BroadcastIng network.
.
DOMESTIC LIFE AT TilE
MOVIES: "War o( the Roses,"
the Michael · Douglas-Kathleen
Turner movie a bout an espe·
clally ugly divorce, was Just
another day at' the office for
"palimony" lawyer Marvin Mit·
!lbeJ.o•. "lt might be fantasy for
many movie-goers but as a
Hollywood divorce attorney; It's
inore reality for ml)," he said.
. CHARLES LIKES WEE- ·
TABIX: Weetablx, the British
breakfasl cereal, now has Prince
. Charles's good housekeeping
!ieal of approval. Charles has
llisued the ·cereal one of his
personal "warrants," which
means It can promote Itself as
being certified by the royal
family after having supplied the
famlly for at least three years.
Just how much Weetablx does
Charles eat and at what time of
day? With or without sugar or
$orne of that dried fruit on top?
Nobody's talking. "A firm can't '
give :fOU that kind of Information.
It's between the firm and the
royal household/" a Buckingham .
Palace spokeswoman said.•
"They can' t give you any lnfor- !
matlon at , all." Weetablx, the '.
largest cereal producer In Great
J)rltaln, made It onto the queen ·
mother's warrant list In 1973 and
the queen gave It her seal of
approval two years· later. The
. , la~f list brings the total of•
Charles' warrants to 108, compared to more than 700 granted
by Qaeen Elizabeth, 222 by the
queen mother· and 45 by Prince
PhUip.
. ·· SAM'S BACK: Comedian Sam
IU..... has a new album coming
out next month and It will mix his
hlgh·volume standup act with
rock 'n' roD. Klntson, who recorded a version of the '60s hit
''Wild 'l'!llng" that featured Jes·

,I

I 50th

-

.

•
anniversary

a

772
Pick 4- •.
9763

•

•

al
Vo1.40, r,lo. 170
Copyrlglned 19110

Low lonlJhl tn mid 30..
Thursday , cloudy, windy.
HIJh In mid 4118.

2 Sictlono, 14 Pog" 26 Cento

Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio; Wednesday. January 10. 1990

A Multim·e dial·nc. New..,..,er

Roush to head Meigs
• •
•
,conu.....,...-ntsstoners agam
•

·L ESS"
• XLT Lariat Tdm
•Bit. Low Mnt. Mirrors
• HandUng Pkg. .
•Headliner and lnaulaHon Pkg.
·light and Convenlerq Group
•AM/FM Cg111He
•Spud Contlol
om Wheel
• All Concltlon
•Deluxe Algerlt WhMls.
• Sliding Rear Window
• Tqchometer
•And Much M0191

•XLT Lariat Trim

STOCK NO. 212

• Bit. LoW Mnt. Mirrors

•Hancllng Pkg.
.
• Heo lluer and Insulation Pkg~
•Ughl and Convenience Group
•AM/FM C~uatle
•Splld Conlrol
•llltWhlll
•A'I Condlllon
•Deluxe Argent Wheels
•4.D. Sllvlc:e Pkg. .
•And Much Morel

STOCK NO. 328

Cult -.leader, .famlly·arraigned,

.WAS 1 1

'AEROSTAR

·RAIDER XLT 4X2

•XLT Tdm

.

I

•OWLTINI

STOCK NO. 311

•XLT Equipment Qroup
•Power Slnrlilg

•Chrome ~~mpers·
•AM/FM C1111•n.
•IAl/IIJ Cloth Bench
•Silcllng hal Window
•Tachometer

•CCilt Alllnlnwn ~
•lrt. Low Mnt. Mlnan
•Air Condition -

•lociYIIde t.ioldlngl
•And t.tor.l

Manning Roush will again provement Corporation were glonal Board of Trustees .
serve as president and David
As' mandated, Commission
Paul Patterson, representing Ru Koblentz as vice president of the
Presldenl
Manning Roush, ProUand; Frank Cleland, representnile Judge Robert
bale-Juve
Ing Racine; Kathryn Crow, SyraMeigs County Board of CommisBuck
and
Auditor
William Wicksioners. The commissioners secuse ; Richard 'Follrod,
lected Roush and Koblentz dur- Pomeroy; and Bernard Fultz, line were appointed to the Public
As s istanc e . E xamin i ng
Ing Monday's organizational
Middleport.
Members to the Meigs County Committee.
meeting for 1900.
.
David Koblentz was appointed
Appointed as . clerk .t or the Tuberculosis Board of Trustees
for 1990 wlll be Rev. William as th e county's voting member
board and Cominunlty Development Block Grant administrator Mlddleswarth, Pomeroy; Jane on the Buckeye Joint-County
Walton, Pomeroy; Dr. Larry Self-Insurance Council and on
was Mary Hobstetler.
The commissioners have es- Kennedy, Middleport;. Paul Pat- the self-Insurance council's set- .
tablished Wednesday, 1 p.m. , In . terson, Rutland; Michael Stru- tlement committee, with Manble. Syracuse; Jeanetle Law- ning Roush as alternate to both
their office In the courthouse, for
rence, Racine; Lloyd Blackwood groups.
their regular weekly meetings .
and Donna Nelson, each represThe following other appolnl · Working hours for those county
offices under control of the enting Chester, Olive and Orange ments were also made by, the
commiSsioners were established Townships; James Hill and Joan board on Monday.
- Linda Benlz, as clerk of
as 8:30 to 4:30 for the commls- Wolle, each representing Sutton,
for arralpmenl 'l'llesd!Q'. Tbe three were fo~ In
ACCUSED ctiLT LEADERS ARRAIGNED Lebanon
and
Letarl
Townships;
~loners,
the
plat
map,
the
luberMeigs
County Court.
a N!Ulooal City, Ca., hotel, just north of Cbe
Allee, Damoa, ud Jeffery ._.adgren, acCIUied In
Charles
Riffle
and
Harold
Rice,
-Jennifer
Jewell, as deputy
culosls
clinic,
county
court,
litter
Mexican border, when arresled by lederal acents
llle rellllou cult I&lt;WIDp of a Klrtlu'il, Ohio,
each
representing
Salisbury,
Sa-.
clerk
of
Meigs
County Court.
control
and
the
counly
developSuaday wl&amp;b a )ar1e cache of weaporis. (UPI)
IIIIIID:r of 5, appelll' In San Dle110 Municipal Court
lem
and
Rutland
Townships;
·
-Wayne
Roseberry.
as dog
ment officeS.
Reappointed to . terms on the Helen Swartz, representing Bed' warden.
-John Stahl, as c our those
Meigs County Regional Plannltlg ford, Scipio and Columbia
Townships .
custodian.
Commission were Theron JohnAppointed as the TB board 's
-Homer Smith. as courthouse
son and Eleanor Thomas . A third
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A his three fugitives .have been daughters, Trlna, 13, Rebecca, 9, appointment, to fill the unex - consultant was Orion Roush. janitor.
Appointed as the TB board' s
•· - Everett Holmes. of Glouster,
religious cult leader and his wife
arraigned and It will be up to him and Karen, 5. ·
pired term of Herbert (Pele)
representative to the Southeast- as apiary Inspector.
and 80!1 were arraigned Tuesday
to Initiate proceedings," HewThe Lundgren family
Shields, who resigned, will be
ern Ohio Lung Association was
The appointment of persons to
on, fugitive charges and once lcker said.
captured Sunday at a motel In made later.
faye
Wallace
with
Mike
Struble
take
recognizance bonds for
Reappointed
to
terms
with
the
more refused to · agree to be
The Lundgrens had been the National City, 14 miles north of
appointed to the SEOLA 's Re- county courl was tabled unlll
extradltedtoOhlowheretheyare
target of a nationwide manhunt the Mexican border. Three other · Meigs County Communlly ImWednesday's regular meeting.
accused of killing five followers . hiunched after the bodies of five Lundgren children were placed
Jeffrey Lundgren; 39', a ~emel)lbers of Jeffrey Lundgren's In protective custody. Four wea·
ftocked mlnl!iter of tile Reorgansplinter sect were unearthed on a pons were found at the botel and a
farm lle~! . Kir,tland, Ohio, ":here cacheofweaponswlth. upt~l,OOO
!Zed Church o( Jesus Christ Qf
_, ..
,.
,4_~1Q' ~~n~; his wife .. ~- .~he·grqup.fl*d earl_le,r -ll\lf4. , . . rounds o~ atnmunl.tloll waul!illed
f./.
~··
'•
~
~
·'
be
fflQ!IiWH
ll-l!le.fOs.
. ,.
ljccum)llal!An.•
·
·~
-,
'
·
B)-' \Jailed ......Jalei.~iial
,l'?i
&gt;.-1"-.o ~l!ll~ ~I .:;;.,i~~Tlwa lilllildwere IIU1&amp;1..,...11 :~.'~"- ' ir ,l;l! 1,(: "\!ls'1!'~-p
LookJng
.,
ali'~ad
lhrough·
Sunit was to be a day of changeable
~ . i'alaritd QJI.fuflll CC!m· " l:i!nnis Avelry, ,9, hls·W!Te, lcic~r ren~by lhe family.
With the. approach of the chilly
day,
there
Is
a
chance
of
snow
weather for the Buckeye Stale.
plalnll&lt; tiled by S8J! Diego . Cheryl, ...s2, and , their three
, .
· .
Wolf ·Moon, Ohio's weather has
Friday· and Saturday, and fair
In the northeast rain mixed
·
"""
·
'
prosec\ltors. · .
turned Sharply nastier.
-sunday
. Highs will be In the
The thi'ee defendants, booked
The moon turns tun Thursday, with snow. was to·change to all
mld-20s
lhrough the period and
snow d~rlng the morning before
as fugitives on Ohio warrants
with Indian legend saying the
lows
In
the
20s Friday and 15 to 20
It ended In the afternoon. Accumcharging lhl!m wltb mqrder and
Wolf Moon Is one of the year's
ulations of 1 Inch or !ess were Saturday and Sunday.
conap!l;aCY,, r,malnld ·lncustody
coldest. And while Ohio won't see
The early morning weather
expected. In the southern and
wl.t hout llall pending a Feb. 8
temperatures as cold as the
map
Wednesday showed a low
western counties, It was to
extradition review hearing.
bitter pre-Christmas weather,
pressure
area over southeast
become partly sunny later In the .
The .Lundgrens appeared In
the wind will ma,k e · It
Ontario
and
a cold front from the
qolil't shackled ,together with
COLUMBUS, Ohio ,( UPI) nounceme11t at a meeting of the uncomfortable.
day .
.
·
aiea
to
Wisconsin.
Both these
For Wednesday nighl and
handcuffs and waist chains. State Sen. Paul Pfel!er will Franklin County Republican
Temperatures at mid-morning
weather
systems
will
be over the
Thursday the sky cover Is apt to
JeflreyLundgrenlookedstralght annoi\DCe Wednesday he is rein- Committee Wednesday evening. were In the low to mld-30s across
Atlantic
by
dawn
Thursday
. The
be quite variable. The southern
ahead wblle Allee kept her head oVIng himself from consideration The comJTIIttee Is expected ·to Ihe state, wllh a brisk west wind
latest
weather
map
also
showed
·tor governor and wlll seek the lssueatop-heavyendorsementof sending . wlnd-chlll readings
lowered. ·
· '
counties are likely to remain dry,
Damon, who was placed be- . Republican nomination for at tQr- former Cleveland Mayor George down to belween 9 and 15
but In the north rain or snow will a warm front over the north
be possible overnight and llkeiy Plains and a cold front ove r the
nyeel\ his parents, held hands ney general, a source familiar Volnovlch for .the GOP nomina· degrees.
·
Rockies. The warm front was
with Ills mother during the, with his campaign said Tuesday. tion for governor.
Thursday .
. 'Rain began falling Tuesday
expected
lo cross Ohio WednesLows Wednesday 'n ight were
prlJCi!edlnp.
Meanwhile, In Cardington,
The Franklin County party night and It changed to snow In
day
night.
The cold fronl should ·
Meanwhile, two other suspects Morrow Courlly Treasurer Ran- endorsement would be a strong the north ·as dawn approached. · expected to be In the upper 20s to
traverse
the
· Buckeye State
fow 30s, with wind gusts sending
ln. the slay!ng'of the Dennis .Avery dall Weber announced he will i-un Pl\ls lor ·Volnovlc~'s campaign Luckily, the temperatures were
Thursday.
the effective readings considerafamUy remained al large· Tues- · for the Republican nomination against Hamilton Counly Com- hovering enough above the freez ·
bly lower. Highs Thursday wlll
day. Federal agents were con- for state auditor.
misslonet'RobertTaftll, his only lng mark to prevent any
centratJng their search In
Pfeifer, 41, R-Bucyrus, t he announced GOP opponent.
Southern California.
~publican nominee for Senate
Volnovlch was endorsed TuesDeputy . san Diego County In 1982, never announced for day night by the Knox County
Dlsb'lct Attorney John Hewlcl\er governor but held out hope he R,epubllcan Central Committee..
said Ohio prosecutors are ex- could pull together the money Previously, he and running mate
seeln~ the weapon.
REVERE, Mass. (UP!) - FBI dumped the gun and his sister-Inpeeled to obtain a warrant from and support to enter the race. He "Mike DeWine were endorsed by forensics experts wlll examine a · law's Guccl bag on Instructions
The FBI also was examining
California Gov. George Deukn\e- could not.
GOP .o rganizations In Ashtabula, nlckel:plated revolver found In a
from his brother the night of the Stuart's suicide note, and pollee
jlanlnthenext30days. TheFeb.
Weber, 35, has twice been Medina, Belmont and Scioto river near Boston to determine slaying.
divers said they would return to
,
8 hearing will focus on the status elected treasurer of Morrow counties . ·
Divers
found
the
gun
afle
r
lhe Pines River near Boston
whether Charles Stuart used the
of that warrant.
Counly. He Is the first RepubllPfeifer, who finished a weak gun to klll his pregnant wife and John McMahon, a friend of Wednesday 10 search for a gold
11 the Lundgren&amp; persist In , can to announce In opposition to · third In the 1986 Republican wound himself In a staged
Malthew Stuart who helped watch and other jewelry also
fighting extradition, ' they may
Auditor Thomas Ferguson, who primary for governor, Is shown robbery.
dump lhe evidence In the river, allegedly thrown ln the river.
not be returned to Ohio unlll
said · last week he will seek In polls with a "hug~·' lead In the
Pollee said the gun " appears"
The .38-callber revolver, disco- re-created how he lossed the gun
April.
·
.
re-election rather than running GOP attorney general sweep- vered Tuesday morning by a . In the water, the Boston Herald to be the one reported missing
"1'11 be In contact with the
for the DemOCI'.a tlc nomination stakes, accordlnw · to hlil pollee diver In the Pines River In
from the Kakas &amp; Sons fur salon
~ aid Wednesday .
county prosecutor Iii Lake
for governor. ·
campaign.
"It certainly does look promiS- In Boston' s fashionable Back Bay
Revere, was flown to an FBI
Counly; Ohloandadvlsehtmthat
,Pfeifer will make his an,
Ing as the gun that was allegedly district. Stuart managed the
forensics laboratory In Washinglhrown
Into the river on the night store. and apparentiy stole ·the
ton to confirm whether It was the
In
question,"
Flanagan said after
Continued on page 5
weapon thai killed Carol Sluarl.
Pollee now believe j'drs, Sluart
30,
was killed by her husband In
'
an on-board solid-fuel rocket precisely timed rocket firings , order to coUect life Insurance CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
policies reportedly worth more
(UPI) - The- Columbia astro- . Ignited to. begl1,1 •th¢ relay sta- Including one early Wednesday,
than
Columbia
will
end
up
Just
35
feet
$660,000.
.tion's
journey
to
Its
!Ina!
orbit
nautslaunchedaNavycommunl·
Tbe
husband, who was se:
22,300
miles
above
the
equator,
from
the
30-fool-long
satellite
cations.satellite Wednesday, dlsFriday
so
Dunbar,
using
the
rlously
wounded In the Oct. 23
but the successful completion of
palchlng tile relay sta!lon like a
One driver complained of an Injury 'In a two-oar cillllslon al
the "burn" was not Immediately shultle's fragile robot arm, can shooting, . threw himself off a
giant Frisbee, and cloaed In on a
7: ta a.m. Tuesday on US 33, In Bedford Twp. , 3.2 mDes south of
bridge Thursday and drowned In
pull the LDEF Into the s~lp' s
conflrrried by NASA.
falling science satellite for a
the Meigs-Athens counly nne, . accordl!lg to the Melgs-Gallla
Boston Harbor as pollc\! sought to
With Syncom launched, . lhe payloat;l bay fo~ return to Earth.
space rescue Friday. ,
·
Post, State Highway Patrol.
·
·
"i •think we're In excellent arrest him following revelations
astronauts preased on with a
As the smooth-sailing CohJ~­
Tbe patrol reported tllat Angela Boyd , 21, PomerQY, lost
made by his youngest brother the
bla app,roached,.the equator east busy·schedule of experiments, all shape for a Friday meeting,"
·control of her .1981 Plymouth Turlsmo and collided head-on with
said
flight
!)lrector
Ro,
b
erl
&lt;::as·
night before. ·
the
whlle
continuing
l.
o
close
In
on
of Africa, astroitaut David Low
a 1988 lnteruational truck driven by Ronald L. Bullock, 52,
Suffolk County District Attorlaunched the Syncom F5~atelllte another aatelllle lhey hope to tie. "The vehicle's In good shape,
MIIUI~ld, Ohio. Damage wu heavy to the car; moderate to the
ney Newman Flanagan said the
the lra)ectorles are allllnlng up"
'
at 8: 19 a .m. EST by pressing rendezvous wltll Friday.
truck.
·
and Isaac Newton "would have · weapon "Is a very Important
· Low, 33, and hla c~ates .''arm'' and ''fire'' swl~hesln tile
Boyd complained of a minor ~nJury and was taken to Veterans
very happy" with the
plec;e of evidence that corroboshuttle's cockpit after a series of commandet Daniel · Branden- .
Memorial Hospital.
•
rates the IStlmOny of wll·
checks to make sure lhe costly stela, 46, co-pilot James Wether- shuttle's perform!Uice.
Tbe paiJ'Ol cited Boyd for talllll't! lo maintain control. .
neeses ... ltlle' Matthew. Stuart,"
Columbia 1.s scheduled lo glide
spacecraft · waa ~eady for bee, 37, Bonnie Dunbu, tO, and
Another one-car accident occurred at 6 a.m. Tuesday on US
to'
a
night
landing
Jan.
19
at
tbe
dead supect's brother.
Marilla
Ivins,
38
were
departure.
33, In Bedford Twp., 1.8 miles aouth qftheMelgs-Athenscounty ,
FI-aan said a grand Jury
On. Low's command, powerful ·launched Tu•ay on a 10-day Ed'lfardJ Air Force Baae, Calif.,
line, where a 191N Pcird Tempo driven by' Uoyd $. Jordan, 25,
lnvesllptlng
the crime will
to
cl~
out
the
~
shuttle
fll&amp;bt
to
deploy
Syncom
and
to
aprtnga pushed agalllflt one side
· Zaaeavllle, went ott the road, striking an emb~ent.
reconvene Friday to bear teatimof the 15,28&amp;-pound ~atelllte, reacue the Lolli Duration li:xpo- m118lon, tbe fll'lt of 10 plallned
Damage wu moderate. No one . was lbJured. Tbere was no
ony
In the case. The graild Jury
for
1990
and
tbe
most
ambitious
aure
Facility,
an
11-ton
science
forciJii It out of Columbia' a cargo
citation.
.
was expected to hear a transcript
bay l,Ur.e a slowly spinning pac(lage that Is falling back to to d.a " In the poat-Cllallenpr
The patrol Investigated a oae-vehlcle accident at 7:15 a .m .
of a telephone conversation from
era. ·
Earth.
Frlabee.
Tuesday on SR. 1)1, In Sutton Twp. , 0.2, west of mllepolt 24.
the Revere Fire Department,
LDEF wu launched In 191N to
As of early Tuesday, "LDEF"
'·'And Houaton, we bad a good ·
Troopers l&amp;ld Donald F. Hendricks, 30, Syracuse,lpst control on
where Stuart' a brother Michael
(pronounced EL' -deaf) was 206 ex~ a variety qf materials to
~IQY," Low radioed m118lon
the Ice ud his 1.-nl Ford truck went ott tbe road, striking a
works, that revealed that at least
control u tbe sAtelllte, carried miles up and barreling along at the. radiation, vacuum and
utility pole. There wu hellvy dUTII.Je to the truck; no damage
four of his slbllnp knew about
Into orbit on Ill llde aboard some 17,200 mph; about 1,110 temperature extremes of apace
to the pole. No oae wUIDjured. No one waa cited.
Charles Stuart's Involvement In
Columbls. alowly rolled away · miles ahead of Columbia with the to help enatneers learn more
Another Meigs county accident occurred at 9 a.m. Tuelday on
the crime before Matthew went
about how to build Ionier-llved
shuttle closing In at a rate of
Into apace.
.
·
SR. 681, In Olive Twp., 0.2 eaat of mllepoet 14. Troopers IBid
to pollee. .
spacecraft. Th~ satelllle also Is
Forty-!lw mlnulft later, wltb miles per orbit.
(Continued •n page 5)
'
·
Matthew Stuart told pollee he
If aU goea well with • series of
COntinued on page 5
'the abuttle a·satedlatabce aw~y,

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Experts·examine gun ·in ·Stuart case

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Commentary
.

.

..

·-

'

_

~

.

Chinese nlob hurting .U. ·s·. ·

·~r~~ Daily SentineL
-··-· ....
··-·

Ill Cotart street

,

PMnawr,o••

DEVOTED TO TBE INTUEII'I'II OF THE MEIGS.IUSON .utEA

a~ .

- ~1 ~
'

.

.....

"'-c::l·- '
r

. ROBERT L. WINGE'i'T
Publlaher
. PAT WRrrEIIEAD
Assistant Pabila~/ Conhooer·

CILULENB BOEPLICB

o...~M1111111er

LETI'ERS OF OPINION ll'ewelcome. 'l1oej -~~~be lee1-Mt
words leal- AD Iotter• • • Hlojed to edltlar ud be olped w1t11
name, ddreoo lllld telepllotle Bunber. No .....edldten wll be ,.b..lliloed. Lett.... ... be Ia pod Iaale, . . . . . . ., ·-.1104 ,........ ~
lies.

Moynihan -and _a tax cut

WASHINGTON - A reputed
, street boss for tbe most sophlatl·
cated OI'Jianlzed crlmnyndlcate
·In tbe nation was executed last
August. ButuntllheturneduJfin
New York City's 107th Precinct
with seven buUet holes In his
bOdy,onlya!ewfede.r alandlocal
po)llce even kil~ who Kin Tal
Chan was. Two of bls alleged
compatrlo~, one named Wong·
an d another named Tung, recenlly vanished from the streets.
Theyareeltherdeadorlnhldlng.
Their names don' t make the
headlines .. They don't pack the
Mafioso mystique of a Gambino
or a Colombo, but !hey are mob
neverthel~!!!_s -Chinese mob.
The Chinese underworld ts no
longer confined to Chinatowns,
but Is spreading Its business of
gambling, drugs, prDiitltutlon
and gang violence to such unsuspeeling cities as Portland, ·
Maine; Keene, N.H.; Astoria, .
Ore.; and Spokane, Wash.
.
Our associate Jim Lynch has
reviewed a report by the rinml· .

'By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Lurching Into the blessed news hole of the
hoUdays, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D·N.Y., offered Americans
a most generous gilt- a sizable cut In taXes. •
Nothing small, either. About $7 billion this year, another $55 billion·
next year and more In the years ahead. For a !arnUy of lour, that
would be a $600 savings In 1991.
Moynihan .. taking advantaee of the paucity of news from the
nation's capital,_ summoned reporters to announce he would
lntr()!luce legislation to once again put the Social Security benefits
program on "paY·Wi·you-go" financing.
.
·
The Introduction of a bill, even one as Intriguing as Moynihan's, :
would get scant attention Ill a busier time o! the year but with no
competition on the scene, tbe New York veteran -gflt the notice he
wanted.
What Moynihan, who has been deeply Involved In Social ~rlty
legislation• for many years, proposed was to repeal this year's
Increase In employer and employee taxxes from 6.06 to 6.2 percent
and then to cut tbe tax to 5.1 percent In 1991 and even lower In ter
years.
·
·
, The revenues generated would, Moynihan said, be adequate to
·cover benefits Pl\ld Social Security retirees In the year of taxation but
:would not, as the present system·does, create a surplus.
: Moynihan's pr~posalls not motivated by the surplus, w~lch Is now
.more than $60 billion, but by what the admlnls!rati9n, with the
acqulesence of Congress, does with It- namely conceal the slzeo!the
.
·
·
·
federal budget deficit.
: The adminlslr.tlon and Congress, by lumping !he Social Security
:Trust Fund Into lthe budget, makes the deficit look much smaller.
·Moynihan ssld tilat the actual deficit, without the surplus, was $204
:billion In fiscal 1989, not the $152 bllllon proclaimed as within the
-':
·
: Gramm·Rudmaq targets.
· And Moylnhan'says, correctly, that this retirement tax should not
. be used to hide ttle purchase of B2s, nor, certainly, to hide the project
lqsses In future ~ears from President Bush's proposed cut In capl!al .
gains taxes. . 1
•
,.
UJ}fortunately, Moynihan failed to respond adequatej.ywhen he was
: a,ked bow muciltncome taxes would have to be-Increased In 1991 to
offset the loss of 1the $55 billion In Social Security taxes. ·
: -: Moynihan graddly replied. "It need not be any particular tax and It
: could come frorn' re~uced outlays."
· .
· No way, With Bush adamantly opposed to new tax.es, there will be
none. And the prospect of cutting spending by $55 billion more than
the $36 billion already required by Gramm-Rudman In flscal1991,
defies Imagination.
With equal aplomb, Moynihan skipped over another quesdon: WhY
not use the ·$55 b!Uion tor catastrophic health Insurance tor the
elderly?
Two years ago, Congress passed a catastrophic health Insurance
program - hailed as a major step In helping the needy meet the
staggering costs In old age - financed througli a surtax on the
beneficiaries. The outcry from the affluent old became so loud, a
panicky Congress repealed the program.
' Yet, surprisingly, no one turned to Social SecurltyTrlistFund as a
. '\'ay to pay for the catatastrophlc health Insurance program or, at
least, to reduce the surtax. ·

Letters to the editor
Has some answers _
Dear Editor:
I got . the word from Carlton
School - No Lunches for
Students.
Well here Is my answer -

Sprry no student till hot lunclles
are served.
Anna M. Leamoad
2G715 Tanners Run Rd.
Racine, Ohio 4577i

Berry's World
•

,.

.. -;, tnere ' 1: tna: s faKf: tu: cou1c · nave .I'Our
r:mone numoer " "

..

Pon•ot M"Y' part. Ohio
· W1dn11dll\l', ~ 10, 1880

N~turallzatlon

.poet

._-

·
H
Ia the United States by. ong
Kong residents Is earned there by
criminal elements. In' 1988, the
DEA arrested one Hong Kongbased heroin !rafficker who
brought a ton of heroin to the
United States and a over threeyear stretch .had Invested $20 '
mUllon In AmeriCan real estate.
U.s.- law enforcement efforts
are hampered by the unfamiliar.
Pollee whO don't understand the
Chinese community cbue a few
.commonsurnamesllkeChanand
Wong Into dead ends. The New
York detective trying to. figure
out whO murdered Kin Tal Chan
has a thick file on the case, but
few leads. ' 'The problem Is,
ev~one'sgotthesamenames,"
he told us. "It goes In circles."
'file most visible side effect of
Cblnese gang violence Is the
random bloodshed. One. federal
tnvettlgator told us, "Every time
they go to shoot someone, they
shoot everyone on the 'sldewalk."

·-

•

Applications available for program

.

POR'I: EVERGLADES, Fla.
- .In Augustl984, fire erupted
( NEA) - With the winter cruise aboard . the Scandinavian Sun
season now approaching . Its shortly after It completed a trip
peak, Imposing passenger ships to the Bahamas and docked In
with gleaming hulls, enticing Miami. or the 731 passengers and
names and bewitching ltinerar· crew m.embers aboard, two died
les regularly dock at this spra· from smoke lnbalatlon and 62
wllng southern Florida marine were· Injured.
terminal.
- In March 1988, an unconThe sblps' oper:ator~ promote trolled engine room fire erupted
the cruises as glamorous, roman- aboard the Scandinavian Star as
tic adventures - a portrayal It cruised of! the coast of Cancun,
enlhuslasttcally embraced by Mexico, with 439 passengers and
the · paisengers. Neither group 268 crew members aboard. Alhas lnucb Interest In the princi- though there were no casualties,
pal conclusion of a study'ricently both the ·vesser·s main electric
completed by a highly regarded generating system and the
agency o·f the federal backup system !ailed, rendering
government:
all four of Its fire pumps
"The National Transportation Inoperative:
Safety Board Is concerned that
(All three ·or those ships were
there Is ser)ous potential lor a based In Florida and operated by
high loss or ure."
SeaEscapes, a Mlamlcrulsellae.
That ~arning deserves far All three were registered In the
more consideration that It has Bahamas, however, and flew Ita
received, because It Is !he result flag.) '
or a yearlong study conducted by
- In February 1989, the
an ageacy wltb a reputation for celebration, operated by Miamidoing wperb work,
based Carnival Crulle Lines but
The Industry, however, bas flying a Liberian flag, was
cb01e11 to aummarUy reject the returning to Mlsml from a
flndlap and deD!JUnce In near· Caribbean crulle With 1,580 pashylterk:ti terilll the NTS8 re- seilpl'a and 671 crew membera ·
port, 'WIIIcb documents a disturb- aboard.
Ing llel'lel or accidents In recent
Tbe Celebration rammed ,
yean. Ariioq them:
· sliced In half and sank a Cuban
- lD Marelll91M, a major Ore bulk cement carrier, the Capitan
completely deltroyed the ablp San Lull, otf the coast of Cuba.
SciDdtnavtu Sea wiiUe It was Three deaths and 13 Injuries
IDdlored HYIID m1lea of! the were sustained aboard the Cuban
. Florida cout. The Sblp' a fortu· sblp.
.
nate prOlllmlty to shore allowed
. - In February 1989, the VIking
111 ..- paueneers and ~rew Princess, operated by Crown
member• to disembark, thus Cruise Lines of West Palm
avoiding a major disaster.
Beach, Fla., but flying a Pana·

'

Sen. Jan. M. Long

will be mailed out to all lending
Institutions on January 2; 1990.
Applications wUI not be made In Chillicothe onJanuary25, 1m.
available prior to this date.
I feel this program has been
Applications mut be.received by very successful during tHe past
the ot!lre 'at the Treasurer 'of · five years. The program has
State no later than 5 p.m. on given mani)' farmers the opporFebruary 23, 1990. By AprU 2,
tunity to ·afford tbe cost of
1990 all approved agricultural
farming. ' I will continue to·
linked deposit packages should
strongly support this program In
be funded.
the tu lure.
,
· State Treasurer, Mary !;:lien
If you have any questions
Withrow will host a series . o! concerning the Agricultural ·
meetings throughout the state to
Linked Deposit Program, do not
answer questions about the prohesitate to contact me at (614)
gram. She will be at the
466-8156 or write: Senator Jan
Plckaway·Ross Joint Vocational
Michael Long, Statehouse. CoSchool, 895 Crouse c·ha-pel Road.
lumbus, Ohio 43215.

Robert Walters

\

.Today in history

83.

. RIO GRANDE (11) - ~ary
HarriSon, 9·1·6-27; Mark Erslan,
1-5·0-17; Lyndell Snyder, 0-1-0-3;
Brad Schl,lbert, 44·0·20: John
Lambcke, 1-0-2; Darlul Willi·
ams, 2·1·0-7; Jeff Brown, 0-1-2-5; ·
Troy Donaldson, 5·0·10. TOTALS
2:1-13-8-81.
Halftime ~eore: RloGrude48,
Mount Veraoa Nuareae lt.
.

'

Sartta Brown' s 24-polnt perfor· Brown, 8·8·24; Cindy Frere,
mance. Kim Fields W!IS the H -18. TOTALS 15--21·71.
' assists leader with seven.
RIO (lRANDE (63) - Jennl
Rio Grande· (9·7) .t ravels to Couch, 2·0·4: Cindy R_ldgeway,
·Ohio Dominican for a game set 1·0-2; · Debbie Fredrick, 5·3-13; ·
for 2 p.m. Saturday . Urbana (9·4) · Kerr! Kidwell, 1·2·4: Mind)'
hosts Mount Vernon Nazarene on Montgomery, 5·1·1-14; Ann Bar·
Saturday .
nltz, 5·2·12; Renee Ward , 2·1-0-7;
BbK score:
Kathy Snyder, 2·J.7. TOTALS
•
URBANA (11) Jean 23-2·11-113.
TWehues, 6·o-12; Denise Martin,
Halftime ~eore: Urbana 32, Rio
2-2-6; Kim Fields, 2-7-11; Sarita Grande·:n.

· Sports briefs ·
SkUnr
Defending World Cup champiOn Vrenl Schneider. feeling no
pa!n from. last month's successful knee surgery, won her second
World Cup race In four days.

capturing a slalom at Hinter:
stoder, Austria. Austrian Anita
Wachter was the runner-up for
the second day In a row and .
Christine von Gruenlgen.of Swlt··
zerland was third.

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. ~ The
Daily Sentinel.
A.

Dl~ a.ton

of Multimedia, Inc.

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By Ualled Preu lnternalloaal
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 10, the lOth day oU990 with 355 to foUow. ·
The moon Is waxing, movlni toward run.
The morning atars are Mercury, Mars Bl)d Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on tbls date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Include anent screen actor Francis X. Bushman In 1883; poet
Robinson Jeffers In 1887; actors Ray Bolger.lil1901 and Sal Mineo 1n
1939; andslngersJohnnleRayln1927 (a&amp;e63); Jlm{JoceJnl942; Rod
Stewart Ia 1945 (age ,45); and PAt Benatar In 1953 (age 37),
·
In 1776, "Coinmon Sense" by political phUosopher Tbomaa Paine
wu published. The pamphlet advocated Independence from
England.
,
·
'
In 1901, oU was discovered at the Splndletop claim near Beaumont, .
Texas, launching the Souihwe~t aU boom.
.
· ,
.

Baxacere:
MOUNT VERNON NAZA·
RENE (81) John Church,
0·2·2; Steve Greaory, 5+3-25;
Ron Holmes, 9+22: Jamie Perozek, 2.0.4; Aaron Reynoldl, ·
· 3·3·9; Dave Slloewalter, 1-1·2·7: '
Eric Van Fouea, 1.0.2; Joe
White, '3·2·0-12. TOJ'AU 14-1·1t-

.

•

agency lacked jurisdiction to
Issue subpoenas because Its sblp
was registered In another nation
and the accident occurred In
International waters.
Meanwhile, the NTSB notes
that aboard many cruise ships
fire protedlon and suppression
systems are deficient, supplies of
life preservers and lifeboats are .
Inadequate, and crew members
speak a dozen or more different ·
languages, making It dlt!lcult for ·
them to communicate with tbe ·
passengers or among thems~ves
In an emergency.
Unt11 those condltlorw are
remedl~. the approximately 5
mOtion people who sign up for
fun·ln·the-sun vacations on the '
high seas every year are risking
an encounter with catsslrophe.

.•

(All Games)
.
TEAM·. .
W ' L P OP.
}filler. .. ... .... .... .. .. 7 3 682 . 630
Wellston .. .... .. ...... 6 3 651 555
Trimble-. . , .. .... ...... 6 ' 3· 577 556
Alexander , .. ...... .. 7 ~ 722 682
Fed-Hocking ........ 6 4 737 . 701
, Vinton County ...... 3. 4 406 410
Belpre ........... .,..... 3 5 . 570 482
Nels-York ... ._.... .... 2 7 ·461 704 .
'Melgs .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. l 6 373 512
'
'
Tuesday's
results:
.
· Alexander 76 Nelsenvllle· York 52
'Miller 88 Belpre 76
•
Federal Hocking 84' Meigs 70
· Trimble 64 Trimble 59
Vinton County - oilen
Friday's games:
Vinton County at Alexander
NelsonvilLe· York at · Federal
Hocking ,
Miller at Meigs
Trlmble at Belpre :
·wellston, open ·
··l'
Saturday's gamer,',
Nelsonville· York af Trimble .
(makeup) •
•
Meigs at Wellston I makeup)

'

· manlan flag, ·lost propulsion
control of Its main engine and
rammed a Navy ~J.!Ip docked In
West Palm Beach.l
Ejecause those and all other
major cruise ships operating
!rom U.S. ports are registered In
other cou nirles and fly their
"flags or convenience," their
safety ptecau lions are governed
by an International convention
. administered by a U.N . agency,
the International Maritime Or·
· ganlzation. The vessels are subject to Coast Guard Inspections,
but they are not as stringent as
those Imposed upon ships re,ls·
tered In this country.
.
· Moreover, when the NTSB
soughtt to Investigate the fatal
accident Involving the Celebration, Carnival lawyers convinced
a federal judge In Miami that !he

did a tremendouJ Job on Ron
Holml!l, who Is one of the better
player&amp; In the dt.trlet .
''Tile key fQr us was that we hit
fr~ throws down the stretch," he
added.
Brad SChubert scored 20 point~
for Rio Grande, Including lour
3-polaters, while Erslan suppUed
17 markers and nine rebounds.
· Jeff Brow!) also posted nine
boards" to the Redmen o!!ense.
Gri!IQry led the Cougars with 25
points and 10 rebounds, Holmes
had 22 markers and Joe White
added 12·points. .
·
Now 10-4, Rio Grande travels to
· ~fiance for a 7:30 p.m . Satur·
day meeting. Mount Vernon .
(11·5) hosts Ohio Doinlntcan
Saturday
. .

· .--'---.;_---------~------------------------------------------'-,

Southern Hlgh &amp;chool Prine!·
pal Jim Adams, alter conferring
' with Eas,t ern Prlpclpal , Charles
, Moore, announced lodjiY tl)at
only'900 tickets will be oil sale for ·
:.the "Eastern-Southern boys bas·
, iketblJil,game to be held Saturday
at Char'les W. Hayman Gymna·
sil:un In Racine. All tickets will
sold a! the gate only with' nope
· being sold In advance.
. Adams reported that tickets
will go on sale at5 p.m. Saturday
at which time the gates will also
open (or tbz game.
· Saturdays game could mwtch
two leai\(e undefeated&amp;, barring
a major \!p~t Qn.frld,ay, an«! the
wjnner would clearlY' take • the
upper han&lt;fina light SVAC cage
race. .
.
Eastern Is 8·3, 6·0 In the )eague,
while Southerq Is 'S-4, 5-0 In the
league.
·
•

Ships could be cruising for disaster

never looked back.
Both t eams shot evenly from
the floor, as the Redmen netted
35 of 69 attempt§ for 50.7 percent
and the Cougars canned 31 of 62
tries for 50 percent.
Rio Grande held the advantage '
on free throws With 80 percent
(8·10) and Mount Vernon con·
nected on 14 of Its 19trles for 73.6 ·
percent. The Co1,1iars held their
turnovers to seven and Rio
Grande had 11, but the Rio men
outrebounded the hOsts 37·32:'"l'liat's as·well as we can play.
II was a gteat conege game, "
Lawhorn said. "We got quality
minutes from our bench, the best
game It's played, partlcq~rJy by
- Dar ius Wllllams, Lyndell Snyder
and John Lambcke. Mark Erslan
.

'

'

agricultural purposes within
Ohio and be organized for profit.
To participate In the program, a
farmer must go to an eligible
lending lnslltutlqn and apply for
a loan. The ·lending Institution
will use Its standard criteria to
judge the creditworthiness of the
applicant. If tbe loan application
Is approved, the lender will
·complete a three-page appllca·
tlon which Is forwarded to the
Treasurer of State on the borrow·
er's behalf. This application
shOuld demonstrate how reduced
and fixed Interest rates will
benefit the !arming operation.
. Appllcation,s for this program

:-·••.

WID .

Redwomen fall 71-63 to· Urbana in overtime

900 tickets to :go
on s!lle for game
..

January 1990 wUI open the
sixth round of applications for
the .ll.grlcultural Linked Deposit
Program. This program otters
reduced-rate financing to Ohio's
farmers. Each year $100 million
Is made available through this
progrll,m. Since the beginning of
thiS program In 1985, $510 mllllon
has been · committed to · the
program. In five yeB!'s, th~ state
treasurer has approved 7,570
requests for Agrl-Llnked
Deposits.
To be ellgjble to participate In
this pr6gram, a farmer must be
headquartered In Ohio, maintain
all land and/ or facilities for

•

I·

theM84·70
triu·mthe
ph. field
saUlng
FHHS.tohit
of 72 from

e· aveme

•

The Deily Sentinei-P1g1 3

'·
Characteristic of earlier de- for 49 percent and ; canned 14 of
!eats, holt Meigs fell behind by a 24 at !he line. Mj!lp netted26of72
relatl\lely big marp early In the for a lower 86percentand hit 13 or
game, then played e¥n the rest 22 at the llae.
of the way In suffering an IN-70
FHHS bad 33 rebounds led by
TVC defeat .to the vlsltln&amp; Fed- .Shuford aad Watson wltb 9 and 8.
era! &amp;cklng-Lucers Tllesday In · Melp bad M rebounds. Federal
an area boys blgh school basket· H~~j:kiJ!&amp; ,had 9 turnovers and 17
ball Jlame. ·
periiQnata.whlle Meigs had 15 and
·.'
•·
' The 14Dcel's were led In lf.. _,"
scoring by Randy Shuford wbo
Meigs won a thriller In the
tall!~ a game high 25 polnta and , reserve game, 57-56, led by the
gralibad a team leading 9 re- offensive efforts of James How.bounds. Brian McP.herson was erton who canned 19 points. Malt
next with 18 markers, Ned
Harris and Mickey Cozart had 20
Watson had 11~. and Jeff and 19 for FH.
McKibben 14.
Federal Hocking Is 6-4 and
· For Meigs L.
Mitch paved Meigs 1-6 on the season.
the way With 19 rilarkers, Robbie
Miller the · domlllate -team tn·
Fields poured lnl8, Cary Betzlng the early portions of the season;
.10, Jay Humphreys.&amp;, and Sha:tn Invades Meigs Friday while
...
.
Hawley 7. .
·.
,
surprisingly red· hot Nelsonville. Meigs hit five 'three-pointers
York goes to Federal Hocking.
A sputtering offense and tur·
Rio Grande shot43.1 percent on
overall., three by Fields, and two
Score by 11 uartere:
novers worked against the Uni- · fielq goals, sinking 25 o! , 58
by Belzl!lg. while McPherson
F~ral Hocking 28 21 18 i7-84
verslty of Rio Grande women's attempts, and recorded 57.3
. had 21ong rangerS' tor FH.,
&lt; Melgs .......... .. .... l5 20 16 -19-'70 basketball team Tuesday as percent on free throws (1,1·19)._
.., 'Federal. showed It~ offensive
· FEDERAL HOCKING (84) Ur bana posted a 71-63 Mld·Ohlo Urbana was only successful on25
clout early when It erupted for28 Tracy Bilbo 1-0-2, Craig JarviS Conference victory' d~er · the of 72 field goal attempts (34.7
first quarter points to take a 28·15 2-4--4, Brent Lewis 2-1-5, Jeff ~edwomen.
percent). but canned 21 of28oflls
lead. Melp played near even In
McKibben 5-4-'14, Brian
Debbie Fred rick's jumper ' t ries at the foul line for 75
the second quarter, wl!lcll die- · MePherson 6-Z.,o-0-18, Randy knotted the score at 55 and sent percent .
tatedanupbeattempoo!·41 .totsl
Shuford 10-5-25, Ned Watson the game into the extra period,
Turnovers plagued the Rio
points. Meigs trailed 49·35 -at the 6-4-16, Richard Deaver but the Lady Blue Knights ladles throughout as the ball
half.
.
0-0-0. TOTALS 32-2-14-84 . outraced .the vis itors 16·8 fo r the went outofthelrhands29tlmesto
MEIGS (70) _ Robbie Fields win . Urbana held a slim halftime ·Urbana 's 10. On rebounding, Rio_
F_ederal Hocking, at one point,
hadpulledtoa23polntlelidlnthe · 4-3-1-18,Ryan Lemley lead and lost ita fewtlmeslnthe Grande held the advantage,
third frame, but Me'tg fought
0-0-0, cary Betzlng las t mlnutesofregulallon..
43-29.
· back to ·within lQ polllts to give - 2-2-0-10, L.J. Mitch 7-5-19,
" Defensively, we held them to
Mindy Montgomery led the
the, vlsltots' a legitimate scare. ·~ Shawn -Hawley ' 1-5-7, Jay 55 In regulation and when you do visitors' offense w~th 14 points,
\ ; The ileflclt proved: ~to · be too
Humphreys , 4-0-8, Mike • van th at, you ough t IP 'beatthem, but whlle' Debble ·Fredrlck added 13
overwhelmjng, hoW'evft, as:fed·
~eter. 2,- '0-4; ;rerry McG1:11re
we missed some clutch shots mar~ers and five assists, and
era! Hocking put Its -fo·at~ down
o-o-o, Tre:vor Harrison 1-2:....1. do:-vn the stret~h ." Coach Doug Ann Barnltz netted 12 points and
and said ' •·•no ·more• • lierore TOTALs 21-S-13~79·
Foo te commented. ·
' 16 boards. Urbana was led by

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~Vel' ~' 84-70

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

gratlon and
ServiCe tbat spells out the IP'owth of
tbe . Chinese mob In tbe United
And the gang keeP. them busy.
States. These are not your typical · The Drug Enforcement Admlnlarags - to -riches Immigrant tratlonestlmatesthat70percent
stories.
or New York's heroin 1s supplied
Chinese crime syndicates Ul!E! by Chinese gangsters.
,elaborate schemes to circumLast February, pollee seized·
vent u .S. Immigration laws -to 820 pounds of heroin In New
brlngthelrpeopletothlscountry. York's, Chlnatolwn. It was the ·
Secret pipelines feed
_ eager lm
. • biggest heroin bust In U.S. ·
mlgrantsfromChlns,HongKong his tory. Tho!le arres ted IncIud e
and Taiwan to the united States, prominent Chinatown merchants
The going rate. 10 get oneself andarespected7l·year-oldshopsmuggled from China's Fuklen keeper whOm pollee described as
Province to New York City Is a globetrottlng broker of "China
about $25,000.
white" heroin.
The smuggling requires fake
l'he_ ganp ' wUI only grow
documents and a roundabout larger- a fact ofll!ethe U.S. law
travel pattern through Central enforcement offlctlls are not
America, Mexico or the equipped to handle. When China
Caribbean.
regains control of freewhe~~ilng
. Once the Illegal allen arrives 1n Hong Kong In 1997,. the criminal
the United States, $25,000 In debt elements are likely to ball out In
totheChlrlesemoli, heorshehu ·.search ot a capitalistic
two options. "They can etiher environment. '
-wash dishes or tbey can join a
The INS report Indicates that
gang," a federal Investigator already "an · appreciable
told us.
amount" of the monev lnv~ted

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On this date In history:

13 WeelcJ ...·................... ,........... m.:u
26 Woeb ...... .............. ............... 137.96
S2 WeelcJ , .... ................ .. .. ...... ... r7t.36
Oootolde Melp Coalll)o

13 WeelcJ ..... ............................. l'lO.III

:IIWf$ .....................,............ H0.30
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�,,

YJ *I Ide~. "--v 10, 1880

10, 1110

Pomeloy- Middlaport. Ohio

Morgan, Paltner elected to Hall of Fa•tte ·;
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jim 32 votes shortofentrylaatyear ln
league .euou With Baltlrnore. averace. 1,8&amp;5 walkS, 689 atea!J,
'
Palmer. the glamorollS right· his first bid !or election.
'
And he wore ·u With atyle, and 1,851. runs.
bander of tile Baltimore Orioles,
Pitchers Jim Bunning and wtnnlqtheArnerlcaaLe.,ueCy
Morgan spent paru of nine
and Joe Morgan, a central cog of . Ferguson Jenkins have received Yoq Award 1n 1973, '75 and '76: years With .the Astroa, before l
the Big ~ Machine, Tuesday strong support .In recent years.
•
Born In New York on Oct. 15, being part of a trade that
night were elected to the Ba_se- Jenkins waa 102 votes shy last 1945, Palmer won 20 or more chanted tbe complexion of the
ball Hall bt Fame In their first year and just 37 short Ibis year,
garnet In ellht pf !l·lne year• . Naltona! League tor the r,ea I of
year of eligibility. .
,
fourth overall In ·the voting. beglnDin&amp; In 1!1'10. He pitched 19 ·the decade. ·
I
Iri resulta annollllCed by tbe Bunning, whose eligibility on the' · years in the majors, complllq a
On Nov. 29, 1971 theAstroa tent
Baseball Writers' Association or llallOt expires In 1991, misled by 268-152 record wttb a: 2.86 ERA.
Morgan, Dents Menke, Jack '•
America, Palmer received votes four votes In 1988, 53 last year and
Palmer, aa gifted In .appear·, Billingham, Ed Armbrister and
. 011 411 of the 444 ballots cas.t. His
was 76 short this year.
ance u he was· In skU!, also Cesar Geronimo to the Reds for
appear&amp;llce on 92.5 percent of the
The Hall of Fame now contains earned fame (as well as money) . Lee May, Tommy Helms and
ballots, was the second-highest ,206 . members. Seventy-eight by endorsing a line'. of men's Jimmy Stewart. Morgan ltelped ;
percentage for ' pitcher behllld were voted In by. tbe baseball briefs.
to form tbe Big Red Machine that
!
Boll Feller (93.75) . · ·
writers·, ~19 by the Veterans
Palmer pllchec! In elgbt pla:yolf included Tony Perez, Dave Coil· · &lt; •
Morgan received 36.'1 votes, 30 . Committee, and nine by the gamea, Winning four. He also cepclon, Bench and Pete Rose.
over tbe total needed for election. Baseball Hall o! Fame Commit· appeared In nine .World Series
Using Morgan's comblnltlon
His total of 81.7 percent was well tee on Negro Baseball Leagues,
games, Winning !our. Overall, he of power and speed, tbe Reds won !
above the 75 percent required !or
went 8-3 In post-season.play .
the NL West in 1972, '73, '75, '76 •'
election.
Ten-year veterans of tbe
Morgan, a second ba$ernan and '79. They adyanced to the
Palmer and Morgan became BBWAA are eligible to vote. A . fr(lm &amp;nharn, Texas, broke Into . World Series three Of those years
the 20th and 21st players to gain total of 20 !lrst-ttrners appeared tbe majors wttb the Houston · and won 11 twice. 1'41lrran wontbe .
entry in their first year on the on ibis year's ballot; but onlY AstrOI in 1963. By the time his MVPinl975andl9'!.6, bqtbWorld
ballot. Last season, writers , Palmer and Morgan - botb ..or · career end~. he owned two · Champion s.easons.
elected Carl Yastrzemski and them broadcasters after their National League MVP awards,
Among Others receiving con·
Johnny Bench in their first year. playing' day s - owned creden .. as he combined power and s(!eed siderallon were Orlando 'Cepeda
. In a way seldom seen In a: second with ~11 votes , Tony Oliva With
Gaylord Perry, who made a tlals necessary for election.
A graceful right-hander wbo baseman.
career of throwing the illegal
·
142, Bill Mazeroskl With 131, and · •
' spitball; was l3 votes short of befuddled ~ hitters and feuded
Morgan, whowasbo~nSept . l9, Harvey Kuenn wtth 107. 'l'he
election arid was named on 72 with Manager Earl Weaver, 1943, played 22 major·league induction· will be . Aug. 5, In
percent of the ballots. Perry fell Palmer pitched all 19 major· seasons, with a .271 battl.n g Cooperstown, N.Y.

Continued trom pap 1 ·
Frances L. Pillman, .u., Coolvl111, loat eoatrol Gil lee. Her 1979
LIDcoln. went oft tbe · road, atrlktng a: feliCe. lliJna&amp;e wu
moderate. No one waa Injured. There wu no eltatlon.

.

Units respond to 11 rueMkr caUs
~

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JOE MORGAN

JDrPALMER

;Girls ralings
~ COLUMBUS - Thr Ont 1. . Unkd
)'&lt;ft. 1 b ter-.t
. 1a.a Oltio .... 8c:ltool
~· of Coae ltea' • Ira. b_...U
,tal lnp . (Willi . ftr!il- pla.c ~ vo&amp;u · • •

.wolt'loM reco nli 111 pare• e.n t:
Dlv~ktnJ '

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Poh1t.
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t. CulM llldUa lq (5) ( 1-1) ........•... U4

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5. W• tenUie Nortll {If- I) ........... ,;... M
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t Oa~;la•tl M~y CNA) .................. .$7
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411; lt. AIIr.. Buc lll&amp;tl ~ 17. To._NG1rt
rDame !3; 18. Butlertoll tl; .11. (lie)
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olne: lt. Ell. . Ul U ; IS.
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11; II. Rldllleld Kfter'l JJ; II . • lktre
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t.olllntlle ! I; • · Drftdea Trl-VIIIhy ft.
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t. U111oto {1-!) ... .. ............ ...................'ll
l,Sitfi'WOOd FalrWew ~ t) (M) ...........SI
J. Bllcllll!)'l' Tndl(l)li· I ) .................. J1
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Aullat.n-hcllll'll. 1'..... a.,u ..
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llarber ... 11. Mr N' $7

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No . .3 Sooners down foe by 53 poi7Jts
By United Pren International
No. 3 Oklahoma won a game by
53 points Tuesday night, and the
victim said It could have been
worse.
"They could have easily scored
160 on us, but Billy (Oklahoma
Coach BillY 'I)Ibbs) C!llled his
full-court press of!," Arkansas·
Little Rock Coach Mike Newell
. said after the Sooners scored a
134-81 victory.
Skeeter Henry scored 35
points, hitting 10 of 12 shots from
the floor and 11 for 11 from the

foul Iitie. He hit all 4 of his
attempts from ~-point range.
"It was a very humbling
experience !or us," Newell said.
' 'OU was really that good, but we
are n.ot that bad. OU's helghth
and quickness reminds me a lot
of last year's Illinois iearn. They
ln!IY not be as strong, but they 're
definitely better shooters."
William Davis scored 25 points
and l)rnokey McCovery added 20
for the Sooners, 11-0. Terry
Evans scored 13 points and Tony
Martin and Kermit Hobnes had

12 apiece.
&lt;
David Hall's 17 points powered
Arkansas-Little Rock, H . Der·
rick Owens added 15.
The Sooners · used pressure
defense to take a 19·8lead·ln,tbe
·. first ha1r and took advantage or
. tbe Trojans' turnovers to grab a
59-37 advantage at halftime.
·
Oklahoma began the second
half With a 6-0 surge &amp;lid
eventuallY took a 118-G3lead With
5: 31 remaining. The Sooners hit
12 of 18 shots trom 3-polnt range.
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Oilers select Pardee head·coach

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·~~ll:mi~~u! d:~ta r:~2~

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WARMTH OF
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HARDWARE

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EFFECTIVE JAN. 15; 1990.
Our New 'Location Will Be ·
SIDE HILL lOAD,, •••

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Wt Wll .C011tlnue To OHtr AI Of Yow

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JANUARY 15, 1990
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•

'

Gallipolis; Moose Lodge 107 and
was a Kentucky Colonel.

Surviving are seven sons,
Robert H. Fisher, 62, Rt. 1,
J. Fisher of North Carol·
Robert
Gallipolis died .Tuesday after·
imi;
Gary
L. Fisher bt Bidwell;
noon at Holzer Medical Center.
Roger
I:&gt;.
Fisher
of Melbourne,
He was born Oct. 24, 1~27. In
Buffalo, W.Va. , to the · late Fla.; Donald E . Fisher of GalU·
Delbert G. and Amanda leal polls; Thomas A. Fisher of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; Shelby
Steele Fisher.
He Is · survived by his wife, S. Richards of VInton, and Craig
Jessie L. Bobel, whom he mar· A. Richards of Cheshire.' · · :•
Also surviving are two sisters;
rled April 26, 1969 in Galllpolls.
Gardner of Addison, and
Virginia
Mr. Fisher was a retired
Eula
Gardner
of Washlngton
rnlllrlght, World War II Army .
Veteran. He was a life tnember of Court House; one brother, G.
VFW Post 4464, American Legion Gordon Fisher oi Gallipolis; 16
Post 27 and The Military Order of grandchildren, and one great
grandchild .
· the Cooties 48.
He was preceded In death by
He was also a member of the
two
sons, Ronald Allen Fisher
Ohio Military ReServes, Dis·
and
Jay
Fisher and one brother,
abled American Veterans, The
Steele
Fisher
.
American Veteral)s, Ole · Car
Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Club of Gallipolis, Elks 107 of
Friday at the . McC(ly·Moore
Funeral Horne, Wetherholt
Chapel, GalllpoUs, with Rev.
William Curfman and Rev. Mar·
Soulb Cealral Ohio
vln Sallee officiating.
Variable cloudiness and windy
Burial ·will be in the Ohio
Wednesday night, with a low .Valley Memory Gardens. Full
between 30 and 35. Variable mU!tary rites with a flag presen·
cloudiness and continued windy tatton Will be conducted by VFW
• Thursday, with highS between 45 Post 4464.
and 50.
· Friends maY' call .the funeral
Extended Fo~ut
home from 2 to ' p.m. and 7 to 9
Friday lhroup Snnday
p.m. Thursday .
A chance of snow Friday and
Saturday, with lair weather on
Sunday . Highs will range from
the mid 20's to the mid 30s eacll '
Conlin ued !rom page 1
day . Overnight lows will be In the ' weapon.
,
20s early Friday, and bet ween 15
The Boaton Globe, quoting
and 20 Saturday and Sunday pollee sources, reported Wednes· .
mornings.
day that tlie gun's registration
numbers ,matched those of the
gun taken from the fur salon.
· Jay Kakas, co-owner of tbe
sa!QJt, told pollee Stuart had
Veteraas Memorial
access to the safe.
Tuesday admissions - Titus
Kakaa, wbo aotlfled autborl·
Plckenl, Pomeroy; and Agnea
Ilea the day after Stuart knted
Brown, Middleport.
•
himself, saleS he called tnveatlga·
.Tuesday.. .d!scharges · - Hilda
tors "as soon as" he discovered
Harris, and ·Hollla'Peguese Jr.,
the gun wa~ mlsstng.

Weather

. Hospital .news

c

'

IAt_._,_lunr
...,.
...I ....

'

E~perts...

Jenkins to head CougarS

a••

Area deaths ._____

Robert Fisher ·

•ELEURIC
HEATERS
•ORO-SUN .·
,
AND TOYOSTOVE ·
IEIOSENE
HEATERS
.

..

Eleven were lined ~nd live others forfeiled bonds in the court
•. of PomerOY. Richard Seyl~r Tuesday night.
·
Fined were Toya Wooten, Cheshire, $375 and costs, DUI;
.. Louise Carsey, Pomeroy, $213 and costs, petty theft; Rick
Mc:Clelland, Middleport, $;il3 .and costs; destruction of
property, and $63 and costs, failure to comply with a court
order· Diln!IY CriSlip, no address given, $63 and costs, failure to
.· compiy with a court order to pay old lines; Jimmy Harris,
Middleport, $53 and eosts, no valid drlyer's license. '
·
Douglas Freeman, Pomeroy, $113 and costs, public
intoxication; Dwvld Smith, Middleport, $48 and cost, speeding;
Tonya. Blackford, Pomeroy , $213 and costs, trespassing and$213
and costs, assault; Melinda Justice, Pom,ei'oy, $213 and costs,
assault; Timothy Justice, Pomeroy, $213 and costs assault; and
. Lawton Templeton, Mjddleport, $375 and costs, DUI, and $63
and cost, expired license.
.
.· Forfeiting bonds In the court were Reta Hi!ndrlcksol\. Mason,
w. Va., $45, speeding; Ronald Hm; Pomeroy, ,$63, expired
· vehicle regtstratton; Terry Ferguson, West Columbia, W.Va.,
$375, DUI; Ricky Birchfield, Rutland, 551, speeding; and John
.Cl;1rke, Pomeroy, $63' expired vehicle registration.
·

------

....

0 ak H I·u hand'8 K". .
e"'
creek ..455 d.eJJeat

. The Meigs County Children's Trust Fund Advisory Board has
announced that applications are.now being accepted !or grants
trom the Children's TrllSt Fund for programs designed to
reduce child abuse and neglect.
,
Applications may be obtained at the office of the Meigs
, County Superintendent of Schools. Deadline for submitting
applications has been set for 5 p.m on Jan. 29.
The Meigs BQard has set a public hearing on Jan. 30 to review
applications. Approved applications must be submitted to the
state by March 1.
·
.
Meigs County has been allotted $10,000 as Its share In the
state-Wide program.
Members of the local advisory board are Carl Hysell, Carol
Tannehill, Ed Bartels, John Riebel and James Diehl.

.. Elevenfined in Pomeroy court

i

.

Units of the 1\telgll County Emerplicy :M8dlc:al Se~C!!
responded to 11 calls on Tuesday.
··
. ·~
·At 8: 02 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was c'alled to Route 33 for an
au tQ accident In ~bleb Angle &amp;yd was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At11: 40 a.m. tbe MlddleportunttwenttoMurrayHIIlRoadfor
Fred Smith wbo was taken to Pleasant Valley Hotpltal.
.
The Racine u!lft, at 12: 32 p.m. wu called to Trouble Creek
. Road for James Hinkley who was tranllpllrted to Pleaaanl
Valley Hospital.
.
The Pomeroy unit at 12: 43 p.m, went to the Hol:ler Medical
Center Clinic in Mlddleporl for Sblrley Appleby wbo was taketi
to Holzer Medlclll Center, and atl: 05 p.m. tht! Wilt wu called to
Route 681 !or John Baxter who was transpor~ to camden
Clark Hospital .
AI 1: 21 p.m. the Middleport unit went .to Rock Spriags Road
for Charlel Xaulk wlio was taken to Pleuant Valle)' Ho.pltal.
At 3: 17 p.m. the Pomeroy unit reaponded to a call In
Han'lsonvllle for Kaylelgh Ward who was transported to
Veterans.
•·
The ~utland unit at 4:54 p.m. went to Melp Mine No. 2 for
Ronald Beech who was tr&amp;llsported to Holzer Medical Center.
The Middleport unit went to Overbrook at 5:31 p.rn~ for
Richard Blaine who was 'taken to Pleasant Valley.
.·
At 8: 26p.m. the Pomeroy Fire Department went to Mulberry
Ave. for an auto !Ire. The auto belonged to Sue Kibble .
The Middleport unit at 9: 59p.m .. was called to Overbrook !or
Agnes Brown who was transported to Veterans.

Board ilCCepting applications

It was tbe ·nlntb time tbia
season the Sooners topped the
100-polnt mark.
"I thought our guys really goJ
after 11 tonight," Tub be said.
"Arkansas-Little Rock had 30
turnovers tolllght and that's not
.. like them. They usually average
· about 12 ·o r 13. I think that Ia an ·
Indication of our detense."
' ''Skeeter played really great,"
'Tuhba said. ''He has a green llfhl
and he shot well In tbe aecond
half. Skeeter has been good
becauie be has a great atdtude."
In the only other game involv·

·
·
·
·
At Tuscaloosa, Ala ., Robert
Cu OIMibk M , MU'IIIII'••It
HOUSTON (UPI) 7 j ack who served under Pardee with process.
Horry · and Kellh Askins each
CU'NIK•T7, W BI'Udl '7t (at)
Pardee, who turned a probation· the Gamblers, he!ped institute
., "Seeing Jack he~ Is like . scored 17 points for the Crimson.
a.T.. • . aa..\1._ ..
Oa Dtr M. aa Cea . . 11
laden· University of Houston the red·gun offense .at Houston evaluating a ballplayer, The · Tide. The Tide, 11·3 overall and
:fl
aa CAPE U. Oa Moell• M
' d to an early
football program into the most before go Ing t o, the Ll ons, w ho . inore and more you loqj(, you , 2·1 in the SEC, jumpe
Da Cou&amp;ey DIQ' "1'1 , Glen Ell&amp;e tl
Cia Wu 111111 tl, Oa L.a.lat II
productive team in NCAA his· have since gone to their version .realize you have a real good · lead over the Bulldogs, ~. 1·2,
Cia Wal.- ..... M. M&amp;· •~~t~u 41
tory, Tuesday was named head ' ot the run-and0sh. oot . J ones Is man," Oilers General' Manager who shot only 18 percent from tbe.
Qa Bllbwt 'ti.IIIMet•• C... tl11-e.. a.acna
(}) ,._....,
aayta Nol"'luul. . 11, Tr., 11
coach
of the Houston Oilers. ,
reportedly conslilerlng returntn1 Mike Holovak ald. '
lleld in the first half and only 33
Cle 1111 71. p._ Ne..-.IJ II
Pardee said be Will have no percent for tlie game.
Pardee, 53, replaces J erry to Hous Ion t o wor k underpardee .
Cle·Calll..... II, Oe Mll'tll ... II
ae Be. . .d II. Oufl. Tr._., 18
Glanville, who resigned Satur· .. . Pardee's current offensive problems dealll)g With Holova!t.
rn other games, Notre Dame
Cel Werllle M, Col"'"' 71
day, and takes over a team that . coordinator, John Jenkins, sue· Glanville, In his llnal days, had beat Bclston College 80-67, Con· .
C.l u•a 1t, 0.1 Mltllt.lt
Col Ce•te•ll .. 81, C.l Eut 71
.•
IMvllktaiV
has made the playo~ the last ceeded him atUH. Under Pardee · wantedJnput In llt~ft picks and nectlcut blasted VIllanova 71·54
(A)IS..a7a. C.JM.,...•J\o•kD
Kal.
. . 4) ('l·l) ............. .... .... ....... 1'74
three
seasons, Pardee; the 14th and Jenkins this season, the player personnell!lovei.
and Clemson heat Vlrg1nia 76-70.
Col
EMwnoer
M.
C.l
w
..
Rfdp
N
S.dt .......toa8E ($) (IH) ....... .tt
· COl Welllallo•·n. Newark Pail£ M
MeDHilld (II lil-t) .......................As
head
coach
of
the
Oilers,
has
Cougars
became
the
most
pro"As
far
as
personnel,
l
think
At Chestnut Hill, Mass .. Keltb
Col NorW_. IL 011 WW•• 141
1. Port &amp;ee»wr:r 111 CA-IJ ................. .11
impressive
credenti.
a
ls,
both
as
a
llflc
offensive
team
In
NCAA
.
you
rely
heavily
on
your
scouting
Robinson
scored 21 points and
• . ,. . . . . . . . (!) 11-11 - ................. .11
Col .......nee 11, C.IBrlcll II
Col1'ree CN Llf~ IN. 011 .. Dltl II
&amp; z... •ae Re11cruA { t-.1) ~ ..... ..... .11
player
and
a
coach.
history
and
quarterback
Andre
department,"
Pardee
said.
"f
NotreDarneshot6Qpercentfrorn
t . MIMet..-• Ff'owlcl C11-1) ............ .51
Col IJMidurwn • • Oil Beee~ter.n It
CohnW- IL Roc 81, Ll*t'• W 41
"Jack Is a dedicated, loyal Ware won 'the Helsrnan Trophy. might see som'ebody I like, but the floor.
. ,
fl. M'ortll ... o• Or ... • Cl) 11-IJ ....... ff
C.l.,.bl~
O'Mt~e.w u, Sebrtaall
t . MIIW City CII·J ) .... ..........................
hardworking
football
man,
•
•
Oil·
.
Pardee
said
he
,would
lrnrnethere
could
be
four
or
five
At
Philadelphia,
Nadav Hene- ·
11.8pe~~eenUie Il-l l .................... .... ..Jl
Co•••• N. MMfs.. ll
Croolcavll~ 11, Rlwr.erwn
'~Set~~llllllea ~ II. Jlllelit)'e Ce•lrsl(l )!f;
ers owner Bud Adams said. dlately begin formulating his (players) that 1 didn't see. It's up feld and Chris Smith each scored
t. (Iii!) r.on~oy Cralvfew and Ubl!rty.o.r v llllt)' CA. n ..... Wsa a.v u
"Football is' his lite. I've known staff and already h!ls a list of to the coach who he lteeps, not 19 points to lead UConn. David
nlon. !3 rath:' 1-1. M_..ra (I ) n ; 11.
eu,.Mp Falls •· -....~ tt
OIJaiMp Nls . . . . . . . It
li!) SUur&lt;:rua.o.,.•ar..tM&amp;III!•etd
who he brings lit."
·
Miller scored ~.• 11 points' for
l;lbn
many years, and he •s had severa 1 po te n11 a 1 candldates .
o., Clor n, Yel..,. . , , . . 11
. Pder'!l. lteacll: li. No1'111a1118l. P•J
successful
programs
whereever
Pardee,
named
coach
of
the
VIllanova .
; II. ( lie) D81n411e . .d ~ralf
D~ Wape M, Sf rill a Ore•" II
OQ •IIIIHiM. f'abtlenll(et)
Jl~er~dt. 17 ucll: • · Ca.WweiiiS.
he
was.
Jack
was
probably
the
year
with
all
professional
teams
g....H.
briefs
AI Charlottesville, Va., Kirk·
0., .lelf«"Na 1'7, lll9 PII&amp;W•• tt
Innovator
as
far
as
professional
he
has
worked
with,
said
he
was
~"'"land
Howling hit a pair of free
o.,
...... '' • .,.... .,.
E P..._.ae 71, UabeaU
Volleyball
throws with 18 seconds len to
football Is concerned with the contacted Monday by Oilers
EutWHI IS. llrnwM41 U
Eutlllle N a. Or•aell
run-and-shoot
ol!ense.
.
.
owner
Adams.
The
Soviet
Union's
1988
Olyrn·,
give
Clemson an Atlantic Coast
· ~liege scores
ENhro.. IS, ElmwMtll U ~ oC)
·'When
11
became
obvlo11s
that
Pardee
wan
ted
Immediate
ac·
.
p~
gold
medal
volleyball
team
.
·Conference
victory. .
Elyrtall, Nore. Rldlevllle 41
Collese Bulletball Re8ta a
Eucll4118, Me• .... 18
there
was
'
a
head
coaching
lion
because
the
college
recruit·
defeated
Bulgaria
in
four
sets
in
,
In
other
games,
It was: DePaul
'
Fe._.. Hoell . . 84, Metp 71
to
fill,
Jack
was
the
only
lng
season
begins
in
earnest
next.
the
opening
match
of
the
G-rnex
·
s
s,
Duquesne
55;
La Salle 106,
vacancy
•mo.nwhu ra: 88, c .w . Post 7&amp;
Fnulk hr Ore. M. Ports ND II
... 8rld1ewal er fU, M'l!ll!llfldd U, 30T
Fr.al•11.
&amp;llrwe 41
.one
I
wanted
to
talk
to."
week,
and
he
did
not
want
to
be
tournament,
a
three-day
event
In
Siena
90;
Temple
60, George
•co.-:dtcut 11.1Vlllanow 14
Q"yUie Oulel.11, 01 ...... Sit.
Pardee,
a
former
standout
caught
up
in
a
long·
term
search
Manchester,
England.
Wilshlngton
57;
WestVIrglnla
82,
: Dartmouth t!, N~• Ham ...lre 51
GaiWQ w...... II, PIH•·-•• M
t DtPMIIM. Duqun .. IS
GatMUGUJMVII.GIIIMIIR. . .•t:z
NFL
linebacker,
has
an
81-65
St.
Joseph's
(Pa.)
62;
and
Pacific
. or ow CH 1 1!, (ieneu It
Gf!..na n, M*tllla llarbltr t&amp;
career record In the professional
70, UC Irvine 58.
. Rolf crou At. Falrlletd " '
Gea•11.Wo .... orell
~J•IIaoltr U, Ll!hma '71
Geotlel . . . 84, . . . . . . . . . ri ..
.Jollfl" Hopldn1 M , GeU)'IIhurK 11
football ranks, having coached I
Girard h. It,.•• 14
M, M" lllatl7t
'
GoUH U, New Rldmoal4f ·
the Chicago Bears, Washington
y~r
!IUap
La Sallt Itt. SleM tl
Gren~h n, 11-., II
t
Red&amp;klns,
Florida
Blazers
of
the
,
.
~ IW••ehu..chl t l, Rllodf' bland 17
· Gre8li!ld Md.81•11, E Cl. . . tS
•Nl' THh fll. Moll_, M
·
HIUhllt.. ,., a. rr~~~ra. u ltotl
WFL, and Houston Gamblers of
~
~
' No. Ad.,. st. 1'7, f'l'aml~t~ham S1 . 14
HuiUvtr 71, PalleaCilJ11 (WVI (Oil
the USFL. Since takllig over at
\J't4• Noe~ Damt 81. lllaltln Coli. ti
Ru- (W'V) n, Oalh8Wil
' '
•n•. Tell CU e lA, MetTyhu• 6il
UH in 1987, the. Cougars ·have
IDIIIIale II. ....... .
: rroviiiiMte 1&amp; Sl!lon Hall '7t
llo ..... lprtliJ ... .,.. l ' l t - $8
gone 22-11-1.
, a.bertMorrU81, St. f\o-aacl a il
RowU41 ... Ye-s
It
Kyger Creek's Bobcats wei· Kyger ' Creek will face Southern
• S.Iqllfllaa•11. Dll ekN ... 'lt
Jlow ...41 Qr • • ~H Chr •
Glanville resigned Saturday
Temple • • neo,.e w..w ..... $j
corned
the return of junjors Sean in Racine.
......tf, ilo...... "'' ..
ilfter posting a 35·35 overall
. ~ W"'I VlrK)n&amp;a II~ St. doepb'• (Pa. I~~
~~~·- LeU 11, ......... .,
Denney
a nd Shane Swisher, who Score by quarlers
, won:eater St. " · f1lc:hba11 U OT
lro . . •tl. f'alrluMII7
record since 1985, He guided the
; Wofl: ea ter Tech II, Weat•rth 81
KM- Lakllla II, Nortltwooll M
'
'
Oilers to three straight AFC shook ciff their previous illnesses Oak Hlll .......... .. l6 i.8 14 16-64 '
i
,. 8oull
ltea. .alt, Twl..-11 H
with
10
points
each,
butit
wasn't
•A.Iabama1t, ~!'Kiat!
Kyger
Creek
......
.
ll
18
8
18-55
I
.
Latru 74, CorclaMI Lakftirw II ·
wild·canl appearances, but three
.Cim.oa ~• . \'lrPnl• '71
Laatc:.-r ,., C.l Dehlil a
OAK Bli.L (It) - Smttb .
straight losses to end this season · enough to slow down Oak Hill's
~EmorJ 1: Henry H. Hamplett-S)'daq
Llulcailter c.tlll71, Ullel1)' u......
I.
.
Oaks,
who
claimed
their
first
Lett .... 1.a,IW.... N4t
Maynard 4·2·3·17; M.
8·0·2-18;
cost Glanville his job.
't.J•Ilt.r~l t. Vll'l1 ... Wetlefu 18
Lut-.11. Edltot~PMPa ...
Pardee signed a five-year road victory of the season by a Simpson 4·0·2·10; Haines 4·0-1·9;
'Mai"'''.)'SI . 54, Nilan. . St. 52
UleriJit,Ntw••P.J .. n .
.,
~ortollt Sl. 1t, Hamplon 53
UckhW llta 'JI, .\111M• Cllueelll D
. Lewis 1·0-4·6; Potter 1-0-0.2; C.
contract with the Oilers believed . 64·55 count Tuesday night .
Damlalo•t4, N.C.-0..-Iotle 18
ut~ ..--111. lloUI.el Tile 41 ,
postman
Chad
Smith
led
Senior
Simpson 0-0-2·2. TOT.tLI to
be
.
dollill-Maot• M. !Milt'ra Mt11_.
wOrth
at
least
$300,000
per
Larat• M. ur•IIIM&lt;Iew • .
o
I
'
Lowl ... 41, ...... .,
· the Oaks with 18 points and 12 21-!-14-M
year,
fie
had
a
four-year
rollover
I·
~ r.. UllloRII$, DIMrkt OfColwnblall
Luc•~IIP Va114. W.• a.. .. M
From lhe Door .::. 24·54 (44.4%)
~
contract at UH which pal&lt;l him a rebounds, and junior scoring ace
MMclll•_. •• Jlllilldt' II
Ce..,WIIf' III, OhloDomllllr:MG
M•lll'l'd• ta. Fremellii.IH tl
From lhealrlpe -14·29 (48.3%)
'
base salary or $110,000. Glanville Shane Maynard extended his
Cealnl Medaolllllll , ""Ia II
~•I!'JII•Il. .. .,... .... _., 11
three-point
scoring
streak
to
nine
Reboundll
- 31 (Smith 12)
Crf'ptMIIt.Jitdl . . St. II
Mllt•ew•1t.•Hft'IIMM
lett in tbe final year of his
w.... Sc. lit. 8. lllalt 81. 5I
M•meeVaiDIIJ rr,.,.._I')LabM
straight
games
en
route
to
Turnovers
..:: 12-"
'
contract that would have paid
No I'll Park Kl, Plmlllln11S
M11J .... 7t. N.. 't.-.,.1'11 01•• tl
'
storing
1~.
Teammate
Mike
North Ce•lnJ Ai, DL Wtslt'!)'U Ill
KYGER
CRE&amp;K
(II)B.;4d·
'
him $300,000.
Mth_. • 11. •t..-a~ • • n
'
IUo Grande&gt; II , MI. V«•• NM U
Me•• '17, Not6 . , . .... R
J&gt;ardee Inherits a team led by Simpson scored 10 points in his · bury 6-().0.·12; · Denney 5-0-0-10;
ll.ti ... A..pllltaaa 1-1
Mllil!r . . lltllft 11
.
S.. . .HI
'
two-time Pro Bclwl qul!rterback first double-figure scoring effort Swis he~ 5-0-0-10; Sipple 3·0-2·8;
Pitlahoma IS4, A.rll.·lM~ Bock 81
' MepM.el~ ........ lll
M. Vlllinueva 3-CJ.0.6; Hall2·0-l·
Warren Moon and an offense that of the season. ·
•
Weat
·
N Cu ... Hotwr ~. La ... YIIIe 41
Sophomore forward Phil Brad· 5; Blrchlleld 2-0-~. TOTALS f,oloSprtap AI, Plldnc ChriiiiM 71
Nt~~ . .•11,W•--•41
uses
the
"red-gun"
!onnat,
PadRe 71, UC lrWile II
New 8MtMI1, I Webdtrlll
UC 1Uvtrlll*71, c.JSMBtr.,..lao41
which is similar to the run-and· bury led the &amp;beats with 12 218811
• NN Lella!Poall, Dreoll~aTr ..VII41
U.S. lat1 117, 8 acrameate St. 11
Nil• 11. \'o. . Ur••• t1
From lhe Door- 2&amp;-55 (47.3%)
shoot attack used by the Cougars. points. •
MA$~N, ,WY.
game,
the
Hill
From lhe alrlpe- :HO (30%)
In
the
reserve
"I just couldn't be more
won
52·32.
Ryan
Morgan
paced
Reboudl
28
(Swtsher
8)
excited. I have rritxed feeilngs
leaving UH and the players · I · the Oaks with 14 points, while · Tunovera - 18.
. '
&gt;
love. They've all been so good to Dave Wellman led KC with 10.
On Friday's agenda; Oak Hill
me. But I thank Bud Adams for
HOUSTON (UPI) Two
''Thai was an emotional period his confidence," Pardee said.
will host SouthW!!t~ll!rn,
while
.
'
weeks ago, John Jenkins was !(lr me (Interviewing at UNLV).
"We're going to tcy to keep tbe
considered the leading candidate . But I wanted a position where winning tradition establlshec! ·
to r:ebuild the tootball program at 't here were controlled elements hitre. This Is the first · job I've
'
Becaue
Block
Nevad4·Las Vegll$.·
.
and a position that had to be just taken where I've had this kind or
caree.ab011t , . .,
'l)lesday, he wlls named to · right. Some of the elements tbe~e situation. I hope to maintain
replace Jack Pardee as head were not right."
oar taz preparera:
what they've already estabcoach at ·the University of
Jenklns first became asso- llshed. They've got some good
• Have comprehelllllve tax
Houston. '
elated with Pjlrdee In 1984, when . players anc;ll hope to do a good
knowledge
Jenkins, 37, who spent the last Pardee was head coach of the job," Pardee added.
•
Receive yearly tax tralmJill .
three seas ons as the olfenslve USFL Houston Gamblers.
Detroit asatstant June Jones,
•
tdalle tax laws work for you
coordinator . Of the Cougar's
Jenkins coached the receivers·
,
•
CID
prepue any state o~
'
record·setdng run and shoot and was promoted to ofteulve.
local
return
o!fense, .sald he was happy With coordinator In 19811, wttll the
: GOOD ISR .
Out OflutlaMI) '
both decis ion~ .
departure of Darren "Moule"
' .
Davis and quarterback coach
(IACI 011 M fl.l
The Cougars' position became June Jones, nQW both ' With
llfiiGDAIOIS, 1¥1,
open witen Pardee accepted the Detroit. The 1985 team stabGAS &amp; IIIC. UIIGIS
head coaching job of the HoUlton llshed 20 leMIID aM alaele pme
~T ... " '
.fpllljllll ••• ~••
. ...........
•
Oller•.
pro fOOiball-...
''lt's tunny that thlnp have a
111111C
11•1U
I
&amp;1
L1
This pa:at . . . - , tbe Courara.
way. ot worklng out," Jenkins led by Hellman Trophy Winner
sal&lt;!. "I can't explain why things Andre Ware, were the nation's
992·6674
happen the way they do! but I'm top seorln&amp; oftenle, and set
617 Jrtl Awe., I •••lh
6 I IASIIUII niiiT
really happy and excited to be NCAA recorcll for moat paella&amp;
...
446-16tt
named the head coach here at Yllfd&amp; and total offense In a
PO.IOY, OHIO
HOIMS: I A.M.·.6 P.M.
·For More lafowalfltlon CaR
Houlton.
seuon.

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Mayor's annual report released
A total ol .......06 wa eol·
1ected by MiddlePort Mayor Fred
HottmtD'a oftlce..lt wu reported
at Monda:)l nspt'l meeting of
Mlddllport VIllage Council. ·
'Jbe receipts lacluded bondl
forfeited, , U11,937'; fin~,'
$16,3234.22; court costa, $5, •
merchAnt pollee ·collectlona,

$366; traah hauling permits, S~: '
demolition permits, $20; trailer mentanawereda totalofti36Calls tnvolvinc aa esdmated lola of__
perrnlta, $120; accident reports, during 1989, Including 9i fire and $201.80, and 10 ~re vehicle ~ . -.
$56; aiding permits. $70; rO!lflng rescue and 542 emergencies, wltb eatlmateillosll!l Pt $3,200.. ·.;~!
perrnltl, $150; remodeling per· 11ccordlng to a report rrom Jett
A total of 1128 man bours weri - •
mila, $20; building permits, Darst, fire cbtet,' to Middleport Involved With vehicles being • ,
$255.52; alclewalk permits, $30;
VIllage Councn. .
driven a total of 15,817 mliH. • .•
.miscellaneous permits, $162.32; . Of the fire calls. six were brush Three runs were answered In the )
taxi license, S50; poster permits, and truh related With a 1oss ot VIllage of C~eshtre, and 12 In :~:
$125.
.
$200; 11 were false alarms, ttve Cheshire ToWnlhtp.
•..;.
Involved hazardous condition; 11
The December report shows a
were mutQal a id, 19 were of a · total of 53 calls including 11 fire
rescue nature, five were service and rescue.
A total of $201,843._., remained tenance, $25,882.52, $9,347.94,
In all fundi of Middleport Vllllge 13.45120; Income tax, no receipt,
Council at the end of De!:ember, $2,925.67 dtsbursemenJ, no bal·
.
.
'
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Blick ance; !Ire equipment; $10,850, ' Ten accidents were lnves II· port Pollee Department, There
$389.86, $1104.92; tire truck,
reported.
. were no receipts Into tbe parking
· Recelptl 'f or tbe month totaled $5,000, $4676.24, $66,897.57; sewer gated and 71 arrests.rna(le durlng meter fund since the meters were
the
month
or
December,
accord·
$155,9'17.99 while disbursements escrow, $2,448.84 balance; eco- ing to the report of the Middle- covered during the holldfiY .
nomic development, $1 ,380.03,
were 1183,319.76.
$1,06570;
$3,894.48; public trans·
Receipts and disbursements
portatlon,
$17,357,$13,358.37 with
With the balance aa of Dec. ~1.
-,
$283.71
balance.
.
listed ~pecttvely, were as !ol·
•
. Water tank. no receipts, $9,000
•
lowl: (Ji!neral fund. $40,496.41.
$'10,033.11, $24,124.81; · pollee, no disbursements, with a balance of
receipts, $19,383.45 disburse- $60,736.43; water $12,912.30,
''
ments, no balance; street main· $17,327.21, $13,120.1)1, sanitary
"
sewer: $11,446 .32, Sll,839.28,
$8,716.24; swimming pool:
$17,450, $889.23. $297.88; ceme. tery, $8,178.41; $2.191.25; $211.27;
water ·meter trusts, $975, $552.83,
. CORAL
,
$16,478.65; mtnl golf · $4,000,
TIE OXFORD: . aoft N•ppa
$339.62, $77.32.
leather,
lined with tuper
One person was fined and two
· 10ft lining on a 10ft, flexible
others forfeited bonds on charges
urethane· aola. ·
of DUI In the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tqesday
IN BLACK and TAUPE
night.
Dally slock prices
Fined on the charge was Earl (As of 111:30 a.m. )
'w. Wines; III, Middleport, $425 Bryce and Mark Smith
and costs, with 3 days in jail. He of Blunt, ~1111 lo Loewl
ANITA
was aiso fined $50 and costs on a ·
CLASSIC CASUAL
. financial risk suspension charge.
A,m Electric Power ....... .. .... 31~
•''
Forfeiting bonds on the charge AT&amp;T ......... .... .. ........ ..... .....45'4
IN BLACK and TAUPE
were Vicky Sue Bell, Beckley, W.
Ashland Oil .. .......................38)1
ll ;
Va., $460, aqd Ralph J. McDa·
Bob Evans .. ... ..... ........ .. .. ... ,13% .
•
ntel, Pomeroy, $460.
Charming Shoppes .. ... , ........ lO~
STOP IN AND SIGN UP TO WIN ONE OF 2
•
Steven Taylor, Pomeroy, was
City Hol&lt;ling Co ................... 15
17" PlliAS FIOM "MliN STilET'~ PillA
''
fined on three charges. $25 and
Federal Mogul.. .................. 20%
costs, no driver's license, S50 and
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... ......... 43lr;
•'
TO
BE
GIVEN
AWAY
SUPEI
iOWL
SUNDAY
•
costs, consuming alcohol In a
Heck's ................................. 3~
•
motor vehtcle,'and $101! and costs Key Centurion ..... ............... 13~
'
and five days In jail, fleeing the
Lands' End ... .. .... .......... ~ .....·.. 20
OPEN MON :·FRI. 9:00-8:30: SAT. 9:00·6:00
'
pollee.
'
Limited Inc . ...... ................. 35~
'
Multimedia Inc. ...... .. .. ..... .... 92
Others !!ned In the court were
•
c. Scott Newell, Long Bottom. Rax Restaurants ........ .. ........ 1V.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15~
$10 fined only, expired reglstra·
•
210 EAST MAIN
POMIIOY
Shoney' s Inc ................. ...... 11%
lion; John W. Stumbo, Pomeroy,
,
Star Bank ...... .. .... ............. .. 20'4
$10 fine only, expired license;
992-6254
Wendy's Inti. ·... .. ........... :..... .4'%
Richard D. Darst, Cheshire, $25
•
Worl!llngton Ind........... ....... 23%
•
fine only, disorderly conduct.
Also fined were Joe Powell,
Mlddli!port, $100 and costs and
•
five days In jail, menacing
'•
•
threats; Steve Powell, Middle•
port, $25 and costs, disorderlY
manner; and Dennis Wise, Mid·
'
dleport, $10 fine only, expired
tags .
Foi1eill!lg bOnds In the court
'
'•
were John R. Whitcomb, Chilli·
••
·' cotbe, $50~ speeding, and Jeffrey
•
Curtis Craig, Buffalo, W, Va .,
•
$60, running a stop sign.
•'
Steve Powell, Middleport, en~
tered a plea ot Innocent to a
charge of assault and the case
was transferred to Meigs County
''·
Court. Also transferred to county
. court were Charges ·of OWl and
.'
leaving the ·scene cif an accident
,•
filed against June A. Powers,
Middleport She entered ·a plea of
•
Innocent to both charges in
•
\
mayor's court Tuesday 'night.

Clerk-lrea8urer releases report

I)ecernber police report released
.

From 5:30 to 7 p.m. Kan111 City
The January meetln&amp; of the Royal Jelf Moni&amp;IIJnerY will be
Meigs Local Board of Edilcatton tbere tO IIIJI&amp;UIOIJ'&amp;phl. Admll·
has been changed ti'om Jan. 23 to · slon Ia $1 a person and a2 per
Jan. 15 .at 7 p.m. In the board family.
office.
Plaa AA •rt'a1
Plucard
The · Pomeroy IP'IIIIP of A.A .
The Wellltoa Ohlllco Society
and
AJ Anon will meet Thunday
will have 1 bueball cud allOw
at
'l
p.m. at the Sacred ileart
Jan. 18 at tbe St. Peter ud Paul
Ca:tllollc Chureb. For lntorma·
Parllh Hall on S. Pennaylvan Ia
Ave,, Weill• . • p.m tel: ~fi.RI. lion ealll-8DII-333oaQ51.

MeeUa1 dMe cbaapd

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CORAL OR ANITA
by NATURALIZER

Middleport

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THURSDAY·FRIDAY-SATURDAY ONLY

codrt news ·

Stocks

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

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Astronauts
...
Continued from -page 1
equipped · With a . variety of
science experiments, moat Cl!
them passive In nature.'
NASA ·orte~nally Intended to
retrieve the satelUte after jllstlO
months, but the rescue flight was
delayed to now by a series of
· shuttle launch delay,s and ulli·
rnately, the 1986 Challenger
disaster.
But since its launch In 1984, ·
LDEF has been steadily falling,
a victim o! the slow but Insistent
braking effect produced by fric·
lion with the outer reachi!S of
Earth's atmosphere. Lett on 118
own, the big satelllte would
plunge to a fiery rl!"entry around
March 9.
Wltb the rendezvous proceed·
lng smoothly, the highlight of the
crew's sevond day in space was
the deployment ot Syncom F5,
built and owned by Hughes
Communlc;atlons Services Inc.
and leased by theNavyfor$16.75
mUtton a year.
It Is the fifth' and final such
·satellite In a series of relay .
stations used by all four branches
of the mUitary for communications between· forces at sea, on
land and in tbe air.
.
Two ot .the previous four
Syncoms · failed alter reaching
orbit, but one of them, Syncom
F3, wu successtuUy repaired by
two · spacewalking astronauts
who "hot·wlred" the relay sta·
tlon in September 1985.
Ironically, It waa durlnl that .
flight tbat Syl!com F4 waa
launched only to faiUater after · .
reaching Ita flna:l o~bltal outpost
22,300 mllel abOve the equator

---Meifp ~men18·--- Clarilieaaion

'

Pai• •. .~ual Middleport tare repoit releaaed ;:·
•
The Middleport' Ft~ Depart· runs" 27 ,were struCture nrea;.::
The o.ily Sentintl-

Pomlroy-P#idrJJpoft, Ohio . .

.----Local news briefs....---.

.

The Pomeroy Senior Cttlzena
Will have a round and aquare
dance on F,riday fromS.ll p.m. at
the center, and not Saturday u
reported earlier. Mualc wiD be
provtdec! by True CoUDtry
Ralnblena:lld theaclmllalonlla2
per peraon. The public II Invited
to attend and thole attendi!W are
1 to brill&amp; sna:cu for tile anack
table.

·-.

•••

I

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I
I

Do be polite to adults
Bf:JT .

'
•

I

Don't open the doorto
strangers
·' .

When your p~r.ents
and teachers tell you to
be polite and friendly to
adults, they mean it.
And when they tell you
not to trust strangers,
·they mean that, too.
So how can you tell
W)len to. be nice an~
when not to? ·
The. most important
thing to retnember is
t~is: If an adult you
don't know wants you ·
to open your door, or
get in a car, or go for a
'

•
•
'

walk, or do anything
that makes you feel
uncomfortable, say

•

'i

'

~ 'NO!''

· And after you say
"NO! ", find tan adult
you ·can trust and tell
what happened.·
· ~ Strangers have no
business asking you to
do things. When they
do, they're the ones
breaking the rules, not
you .

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1hla Mnna• 111 11 1 To You ly
'·

The Daily ~entinel

111

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eoun Slrlei, p_.,,. Ohio 417t1· (1141112·2151
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10,1880

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CAINAnON

By The Bend

HOT COCOA

.MIX

We Reserve lhe Ri&amp;ht lil ·
Limit Quantities

:Mary Ann Rankin, Tuppers
Plains, celebrated her sixth
: birthday on Jan. 6 with a party at
· . the home of her parents, John
_aad Connie Rankin.
.. - A-"Pee' Wee Herman"
theme
•.
'
!
~.was carried out and gam~s
. played.
Attending were Mary Ann's
brothers, Jeff and David Rankin,
Shirley Jones, Mattie Pullins,
- Faye Stover, Sue, Matt, and,
Lilly; sandra Dixon, Anthony
and Valerie DeFreitas, Cathy
• West, Tylor and Carrie West,
·· Casey Kibble, Bill. Jessica and
.. joey Scarberry, Wesley and
; Todd Shafer, Tony and April
Vance, Michael Stephens, Judy
Jones, Kenny Taggart, and Joey
• Kimber On.
·
: . Others presenting gifts were
Herman ·Carson, Mr, and Mrs.
John Arbougb, Mr, and Mrs.'
Jack Richardson, and Mr. and
~ Mrs. ~~ FI1far.

99.(
LIGHT BROWN

SUGAR
• 1-LB: BOX

2/Sl
'

$

9
2
. Round Steak ••••~·••• 2
. U.S.D.A. CHOICE .
· .
$ .89

.T-Bone Steak....... ·.3. ...·
LB:

. '

ZESTA
(RACKERS
.1-LB. BOX

·$ 69
Stew Meat •••••••• ~~. 2·

BONELESS .

.

·

CAROLINA PRIZE

'9&lt;
Sliced·
·
Bacon
8
•••••••••
.CHI(K(N .
· .·. . . . ·
..:
$119
·Breasts................. . LB.

·KY. BORDER

.
.
oz.
W1eners ••••••••••.••••.•
LONGACRE

.

'

OIL

s199
Bacon ········•·······••!_ .
3 LB. CTN.

•

LETART -The Letwrt TownShip Tru1tees will have a special
meeting on Wednesday at 1 p.m.
at the office buJldlng.

KENNETH R. WSEv

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Sprinp Gran~ will meet Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the Grange
Hall.

Carsey birthday
Kenneth Ryan Oar!lt!y, son of
Kenneth and Sheila Carsey.
Middleport, recently celebrated
his fourth birthday at his home.
A "Batman'·' theme was carried out. · ·
Attendlng the. party were his
grandmother, Grace Clark, his
great grandmother, Hazel Grate,
·Harold Grate, Cindy and Nicki
Mlolls, Jared Woods, Heather
Ph~Un,~hley Joh~tson, Eloise,
Travis, Marla · •adn Michelle
Drenner, Ronnie, Connie, Sam
and Beth Thompson, Jim, Beth,
Jerry and Megan Clark, John,
Cindy, Missy, and Amanda
Clark, Louise Car !ley. Steve
White, Kenda Carsey.
Sending gifts were his grandparents, Mary and Ray Birch- .
field, and Thor and Pearl Carsey ,
and Cherry and Leroy Cadle.

RACINE -There will be a
special meeting of .ihe Southern
Local School Board on Thursday
at 7 p .m. at the high school.
BURLINGHAM -The Word of
Life Cbutch In BurUngham will
have revival Thursday through
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly . The
evangelist will be James Branch
from Huntington, W.Va. There
will be special singing nightly.
. Pas tor Ray Laude~mllt htvltes
the public.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
at the hall.
·
·
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle.
port Order of the Eastern Star
will be having a spaghetti dinner

Who pays
for hotel
souvenirs
t

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'

Dear Aan Landers: I am
another one who "never thought
I'd be writing," but today I
reached the boUing point when I
read about lieople who eat their
way through the grocery stores.
(A few grapes here, a Bing
cherry there •. a ha~dful of nuts,
etc.)
, We operate a small but elegant
- country Inn ·and restaurant In
,.Pennsylvania. Over the years we
have had customers help themselves not only to the ashtrays,
salt shakers and towels, butalso
silk flower arrangements,
Christmas decorations, valuable
paintings and, today, an antjque
soap dish from tlte l!ldies' powder
room. Many of these Items are
. ' glfts ·from friends and customers
and have sentimental value. We
treasure these knickknacks collected over ibe years.
Why don't customers realize
J ·,
r
· . that we put nice things around to
J
them feel at home, not so
.
they can •take them? I wonder
'
..bow they would feel If house
•
By WILLIAM c. TROTI'
:.guests walked off with tl'a towels,.
United Press International
pillow cases and silverware?
KnTY , SEEKS MORE TREATMENT: _ KI&amp;IJ' l)uhkll,
Please, Ann, do all small In•hospitalized two months ago after drinking tub~lng alcohol,
nkeeperg a f!lvor and print this
letter. - Ripped Off In Wy•
checked Into a rehab!Utatlon center last month, The Boston
Globe says. Tbe52-year·oldwlfeofMassacbusettsGov.Mlcllael
. combe, Pa,
Dukakls went to ail out-of-state medical faclllty ai!Out two
' DearPa.: Notonlydothesmal!
'weeks before Christmas and may still be there,. the newspaper
' Innkeepers suffer from this prob'said. The governor visited his wife at the facility at le~t twice
lem. The large chains sustain
but he Is not commenting on her situatlpn In an efforttopreserve
losses that run Into millions of
her privacy . "The governor has asked that Kitty be allowed to
dollars every year. Guests steal
bed linens. pillows, bath mats,
'recover In private .and urges that the 'press and pubiJc .
understand her need for prll;acy at this time," a .Dukakls
lamps, pictures off the wall,
spqkeswoma11 -sald. In 1988cMrs. Dukakis publicly .ackn!)wltrays. dishes, TV · sets, coffee
tables, anything that isn't na[led
edged an' earlier 26-year addiction to diet pills and last spring,
'lifter her husband lost the presidential election, she chE'Cked
to the floor.
Into a rehab!Utatlon tenter In Rhode Islaad for treatment of
Some hotels have begun to
.
secure lamps and porcelain
alcoholism.

48 OZ. BTL.

24 12 -OZ CANS

$599

:n

~reopte

th
.
,
tn.. e new ---~., j' make

.

LAY'S REG. S1.99

Bananas •••••••• ~.~.~~ •• 39(

10 OZ. PKG.

.

FLAVORITE

2. /o Milk ••••••••••••••
0

G.ALLON

.

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'PARKAY .

·. ·

.

•

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$189

·~ N&lt;;AA HONORS 'TilE GIPPER': F:ormer Eureka College

2

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LJ. ,QUARTOS

KEMP PAIL

5 QUART PAiL .

•

7

1

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• BIG CHIEF SUGAR
4LI.

lAG

99(

. . CWy At Powtll's .Sopor Vatu
11_. s..;Jan. 7 thru Sat., Jan. 11

MlXWBL HOUSE
.

·CHUCK
ROAST ·

$129•Ll

. J.'AGE TURNS ON AD AGENCY: PatliPapsaysatelevlslon
,commercial for a Los Angeles ban); sounds too much Uke her.
Page, 62, [S suing for' more than $1 million, clalmJIIf
/Asher·Gould Advertising Inc. uaect a "sound-alike" of her 10ng
:"Old Cape Cod" In commercials for Amerlclll Savtap Bank.
The suit charges the firm with unfair "appcoprlallon of a
distinctive voice" and points out tht!tlleUeMJ'IrwonulrnDar
:Suit against Ford Motor Co. Page, who hal 101t1 70 mllllon
·records and has 13 gold all!Ums: said the ad ap!lcy did no.t ask
•her permission to use the 10nsc.
•

BANQUET

3 UTER IR. .

.

u

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

f$1
$
.
2
99
.Kidney Beans!'o~:~ 3 · , Ice Cream ••••••••••••
89
·Lotsa
·po·
p
·
69&lt;
•••••••••••••
V o·.nn·ers
c
.
JOAN OF ARC

' jock Ronald Reagan proudly accepted the NCAA's highest ·
. ' award Monday night at a banquet In Dallas. "NIIIICy has my
,football sweaters from Eureka," the ex-president said after
' ~accepting the Theodore Roosevelt Aw~rd. "Walt until I come
' ·home with this," Thet,,NCM . gives the ''Teddy" to "a
;dis tingulshed citizen of national reputation and outstanding
·accomplishment" who earned a varsity letter while In college,
'but women had threatened to protest the presentation because
Reagan had vetoed a bill giving equal opportunity for female
'·athletes . There was no dissent, hoWever. and' Reagan recalled
·his football career for the crowd. "There Is no other sport quite
) Ike It," be said. "It's the closest thll18 to war'wlthoutthe hatred
,!lnd ihe deat!l. It doesn't ma~ter whether you are black cl( white,
Chris dan or Jew, rich or P.OOr• I' ve often wqildered If we could
..capture ihat spirit of brotH'er;'bood after the ~ames are over.'\

'

Margarine •.•••••••••
·

POTATO·
·CHIPS

.•

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36 OZ. FIENtl IOASt •
39 OZ. AD, EP, lEG.

$499s.,.r

..
SUNSHINE
. •"•I••

61111 ...... At,.. ....
v•
61111 s;;:_•,_ 7 t1wu Set. Ja. II ·•

oz.

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DOG FOOD .

.$ 299

Geotl Dlllr At ,....., s.,.r v•
GIM Sun..... 7 tin set..... U

THANK YOU CHERRY ,

PIE FILLING

7·9(

: 21 OZ.
UMIT 3 ::
CAN
PlfASE . ••
GtM cw, At
s.,.r
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CUBE
STEAK

$269

THEY LIKE ELVIS, Tiui SHOW: !lome .cJ0 .... falll
reacted favorably MllndltiiiKhl tea Nll't"" 111f of~ JI,IW
television series "Elvis, Which will 10 oa the ~
prime-time ttehedllle 101111!11me thll aprlq.lllllliiMIIt. 0
•
· plays a youJII Prelley In the aeries, which II belq fumed Ill
Memphis IN1 depicts Elvia' life befort 81lnlom. 111111 Pelldlitjl
,plays Presley's motller, ~··which .II a !wilts~ Per~.
•played Elvla'sl~veJnterest In the movie "Wild In the Country
'in 1961 when she was 23. "I was never treated any better thlll
'Elvis treated me on the set and I mean !hat," Perkinlsaid. The
'TV series II belllf profuced by 1 productloncolllpuy formed by .
iEJvls's ex·wlfe,
l'rllcllll Ptale).
. .
.'

":Pi

Ll

~

......

* ..... ~

••
'•

-

on
·a .m . to p.m .
The menu will Include sjJaghetU,
french bread, jello; coffee, or tea
for $2.75. Orders will be available
for eat Ill or carrY out.

.••

..
•

'•
.,

•

••.

•••

'ftiURSDAY
SATURDAY
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP -The
PORTLAJI!D - There will be a
Bedford Township Trus~s will hymn sing at the Morris Chapel .
meet Thursday at 5:30p.m at ·the · Church on Saturday at 7: 30p.m.
town hall.
·
The Grubb Family will sing.

Kalllln Beaver, daughter of
Jeff and Sandy Beaver, Racine,
celebrated her first birthday on
. Jan. 3, at her hom~.
Attendlitg the party were mat- .
ernal grandmother Judy Battey,
maternal great grandmOther,
OP.al Biggs. paternal grandpar. ents, Lowen and Nancy Beaver,
Chuck, ·Lena. Samantha, and
·
L&amp;ura .Bailey, Debbie and
HJ~ather Riffle, JeH and Tyler
Wayland, Carolyn and Bill Biggs,
Bette and Nathan Biggs, Brenda
·and Shauna Manuel. ·
Sending gifts · were Detible
Wayland , Larry, . Joy , and MF
. cliael Fridley, Jteynoldsburg;
Jyl and Steve. Warn.e r, Shaw
' '
A.F.B., S.C.; and maternal great
KAlTLJN BEAVER
,gtandmother, Juanita Miller,
carried out with an Ice· cream
" M!ddl~ort.
·
· A •'Sesame Street' ' theme was cake featuring Big Bird. ~"

PEPSI
· COLA

.

.

·~

Beaver b\rthday

'·

Ground Turkey.~.. 89C

END &amp; PIECES

CRISCO

$199

12

..••

wrre

DOMINO
· CONFECnONARY or

·. . .

'

·: Rankin birthday

10 1-0Z. ENV.

U.$.D.A. CHOICE

Sentine~
.
.••.
Wedna•day, Janur, 10, 1980:,.
Page 7:f:
.'·

The Daily

... 1

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens will have a round
and square dance on Saturday
from 8-ll p.m. at the center.
Music will be provided by True
Country Ramblers and the admission Is $2 per person. The
public Is Invited to attend and
those attending are to bring
snacks lor the snack table.

Ann
Landers

ANlli LANDER~
" i919, .t.o. Ao ......

Tim"" !'h·ndiNI.. •nd

Cr.l.aor..

s~ ncu.... r

•

. ••
8,-\LEM CENTER ROYALTY - The 1888 Klq and Q!leen a&amp; :::
Salem Center Elementary School are Orion Barrett ud Klmberl7 : .:
Pleree. Orion, left, II the 10n of J.D. ud Ginny Barrett, Uld • :1,
Kimberly Is the dauber of Kim and Barbara Pierce. Bolli are : :~
second graders at the ICMDI.
~ .~

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

..-.-.:.
..............
............
.................

•
•

Hold on to your penny

• •

of art with nuts and bolts.
The truth Is that we an pay for
.thievery In terms of hi1Jher room
rates. Nothing .ts for nothing.
Dear Ana Landers: For two
years I have been dating a man
whose fo~er wife manages his
very sqcceh!ul bu~lness. "Chet''
.. and "Lila" have been divorced
for 13 years. He hired her four
.. ye'a rhgo because (In his words ),
she 1.1 one of the ,most competent
and smartest women he's ever
known . and he trusts her
· implicitly.
I am not allowed tovlsltChet at
his office because be says Lila
st!ll cares for him and my
presence upsets her.
I should tell you that Lila·
remarried after , their divorce,
but that marriage didn't work
out, either. Tberelsnomanlnher
life at present.
For a while I was able to accept
all this. but since I've been told 1
cannot go to the convention I've.
been feeltrtg Insecure and blue.
we have beenargulngaboutLlla,
and l am beilnnlng to feel
threatened by her.
Chet says I'm foolish and that I
have an eco problem. According
to him, If I weren't so Insecure
none of this would bother me. II
Cher right or am I justified In
J eellng as I do? - No CIIJ' Ne

:1

Special meeting
The Olive Township Trustees
will have a special meetlna- on
Monday at 1: 30 p.m. at the
Reedsville .Fire House to discuss
appropriations .

. The Meigs County Salon No. ~
710 Eight and Forty will meet ~
Monday at 1 p.m. at the home of ~
Loretta Tiemeyer. Members 1:
should pay dues at this time.
••

••

~------------.-; n~
DOWNING CHilDS ~
MULLEN MUSSER ::•

INSURANCE

Club to meet

-

Ill S.Cancl St., Pomeroy

The Third Wednesday Syracuse Homemaker$ club will meet
Jan, 17 at 10 a.m. · at the
municipal building. Members
are to btlng sweatshirts, material, scissors, etc .

I

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

-·- ·.
•

YOUI INDEPINDENT
AGENTS SDY.G
MEIGSCOUNn
SINCE 1161

DAN'S

sute

Seaconal Clearance
2 5°/o TO 40°/o OFF

Dear No City: EventuallyChet
ts going to have to decide who Is
more Important to him, you or
L.lla. In my opinion you'd be
smart to say, "Goodby, dear.
Call me when you have replaced
Lila. If I'm not marrl.e d by then,
mayiM! we can have dinner' ...

$1,000 to ·$5,000." But Eilts and
other OU officials were surprised
when Kllnder's will was
probated.
·
'
"We didn' t envision -a .gift of
this magnitude. " Ellis said afte1
learning that OU had received
$1,051,686. ·'The Immensity of his
bequest definitely was
unexpected."
The money will be illed to fund
fellowships and. scholarships fo~
students In the Contemporary
His my Institute and the Couep
of Fine Arts, emphislzlng the
perfonnlng arts. JQ lnder was a
bachelor who had worked In the
accounting department of General Electric Co.

'E'

8&amp;40 meets

"HANG
TEN

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

CASUAL
40°/o O~F

40°/ooFF

.-••
.,
••

:f:A!

l

.••

HAND
BAGS·

LADIES
BOOTS

.30°/ooFF

400/o-500/o oF~

•••

-

LAMS

DRESS &amp; CASUAL
PANTS &amp; BLOUSES

25°/o.on
.lADIES SWIATEIS 25°/o OFF
'

...... -. .......,. a,.w.
I

-

Revival set

. . . Ylllla '1 rill ._II II

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

••

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI) Public Aid agency disallowed! ,;
When It comes to bureaucracy, $15.79 of a $15.80 bill submitted by: ~
· sometimes a penny saved Is not a the Spring Valley Medical Clinic,: :~
penny earned and becomes a then sent the clinic a one-penny: ·!
major annoyance.
check to cover the b·alance.
- ·:
That was state Rep. Dick · " It does not take a nuclear:..•
Mautino's point when he blasted engineer to figure out 'that a : ;:
the Illinois Public Aid Depart· check In theamountofonecentls· ·~
ment Tuesday for sending a the result of someone at Publtc: : i
one·cent reimbursement check Aid re.duclng the service provld-: ·
· to a medical clinic In his home er's ~ost by 99.99 percent, ... , •
town of Spring Valley,
Mautlno wrote In .a letter to: ::
"This type of Incident Is Acting Public Aid Director Kat-: :
absolutely ridiculous," fumed bleen Kustra. "This type ofsnafu. · ·
Mau tlno, who said the action · Is what frustrates legislators and; •:
"reflects the. Insensitivity and creates an lmos!ty by vendors.- :~
lack of common sense of bureau· service providers and citizens of '
this great state. "
;, :.l
cratlc departments."
Mautino said an angry doctor
Agency officials were una vall-; •'!
complained to him after the able for comment, but Mautlno. '
said the whole Issue was a · · ~
- · sense'tess money wa~ter that will: !:
~· ·
obviously cost the state far more: •.
than the $15.79 It refused to pay .· ••
~1
The Word of Life Church, · "The clinic's local bank won' t:
Burlingham, will be holding cash a cheek this small, and the ~
revival Thursday through Sun- clinic and the state probably face · ~
day at 7 p.m. nightly.
more bookkeeping costs trying to I:
The evangelist will be James straighten the whole thing out. ~
Branch, from Huntington, W.Va. It's just ridiculous, " he said.
'•
There will be special singing
1::
nightly and Pastor Ray LaudermUt Invites the public.

'ou·surprised by alumni gift
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - It
wasn't untU more than two years
'after he.dled that Ohio University
discovered how . enthusiastic· a
1929 graduate was about his alma
mater.
Throug~~ut the 58 years since
John K)Jnder of Erie, Pa., lett
school, Ii'econtrlbuted just$315 to.
the university's alumni fund. But
officials said Tuesday that as a
parting gift, Kllnder left the
school more than S1 mUIIon In hil ,
will.
Jack Ellis, vice president for
development, said his office ran
a background check on Klinder'a
contrlbu tiona after he died In
October 1!187 and was told he had
remembered his alma mater In
hll will.
Baaed on hlaglvlnghtstory, the
ac,hool expected a contrlbu Uon 9f

••
••

')

. BURLINGHAM -The Modern
Woodmen of America Camp 7230
will be having a soup dinner on
Saturday at 6: 30 p.m. at the
MOdern Wqodmen Hall. Soups
available Include vegetable, oysier, 'and chill. There Is no charge '
but those attending are to bring
~methlng they like to eat with
soup. , ·
P.OMEROY -The Meigs
County Association .of Township
Trustees and clerks will bold Its
annual meeting on Saturday at 7
p.IJI. at the Senior Citizens
Center.

,-,-..

,_

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CiiHtl

__,. ,.·. ·. .-i-~----------~---.---------------------·-- ·--·---~---..._....__-;\ ~_;____

'---'-fW'"-"-'

�..
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•

Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~~~~
. ~--~.------------~~~~~~------------~~==~~~~ .
0

Vacation, ·home improvement shows start their wmter
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
· Unlled Presa lltternatlonal
One sure way to beat the
doldrums o! winter Is th ink about
·summer time - vacations, outdoor recreation and · home
Improvements.
·Such shows are now opening in
Ohio.
A Boat and Recreational Vehl·.
cle Show wfll be held In the
Multi-Purpose Building at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds In Co•
lumbus through Sunday.
The Great L.akes Recreational
Vehicle Show will be held In the
International Expositions Center
in Cleveland through Sunday.
A Home Improvement, Farm,
and Garden Show will-be held In
Hara Arena In Dayton through
Sunday . A Camper and Recrea·
tiona! Vehicle Show
be held
there Jan. 17-21.
The Greater Toledo Auto Show·
will be held Jan. 17·721 at the
Se~Gate Centre In Toledo.
The Ohio Historical Society is
offerng its winter Candlelight
Dinner Series at the Co lone!
Crawford Inn at the Ohio'village
in Columbus with live programs:
"A Winter's Interlude" Friday
and Saturday nights; "Tavern
Fare" Jan. 26·27; " Valentines by
Candlelight" Feb. 9-10; "A
. Gazebo Concert" Feb. 23-24; and
"Wlth a· Banjo On My Knee: An
Evening o! Stephen Foster"
March 9-10.
January is also a favorite time
for those who love the out o!
doors.
.
Winter hikes will be held
Saturday. at the John Bryan Slate
Park at Yellow Springs; through
the Hocking Hills Jan. 20; In
Hues ton Woods Jan. 27; Findley
State. Park Feb. 3, and Caesar
Creek Feb. 10.
Skiing weekends are offered
Saturday and Sunday, and
Jan.20·21 at the Malabar 'Farm
State Park near Mansfield.
The Ohld Championship Ski
Race at Punderson State Park at
· Newbury is set for Jim. 20 ( n'o
snow date Is Feb. 11), and the
Permanente .Frost Belt Classic
Skl Race will be held at Punder·

will

r:uns

'

•

Plan to transforln
fanious Paris sbeet

•

.••

Send him best wishes

•

-------

l990 .....New Deeade Of Savings
Continges~ At

992-3471

TORE DAILY 6 AM-to PM
HOURS:-SUNDAY 8 AM-to PM

HARTS BRAND VEGETABLES

~~.

..Oil companies accused. of picking

Japan prepares.to
resume· aid to China.

.

'

"

lima ·

"Super Sa.,ings"
'GROUND
CHUCk

2°/o MILK

$189

3 LBS. OR MORE
I

S169LL

FAT
GALLON

•

CHICKEN
ASSORTED

· .

$169

ui

PORK CHOPS •••••••••••••~.

SUGAR CREEK OLD COURTHOUSE

Sl49
'

JUMBO
HEAD
'

..
"

,.

..
"

&gt;

'

9 COUNT

ONLY )99(

oz.

16
8 PACK

"

' WASHINGTON STATE
EXTRA FANCY -64 CT.

'

APPLES

·Sll9

·I

BACON •••••••••••••••••,••~~.

COnONELLE

RAGU

.

$·3 99
·

·PIZZA SAUCE...JJ.~.z,..

·BATHROOM nSSUE

$189

'

MARTHA WHITE

6
ROLLS

SPUD FLAKES ••!.~~~.

10 LB.
BAG

69(
·

$] 00

w

'

qulred not just an Improvement
"but decisive and brave re!onn
o!theentiresystem,arev'oluttonary review of principles andmechanisms."

iesslon.
begin operatlnl
As expected, delegates said · dlately.
Others couldone
walt.lmme-·
that Poland, Czechoslovakia and &gt; cZec:hoslovakla backed. away .
Hungary led the calls for re,torm. · !rom a threat to pull out of the
li Prillr to the meeting, au three, organlzaUon but made clear It
plus Romania, urged theellmlna· wanted to- aweeplnJ clwtps.
tlon of old Comecon structtll'e&amp;
The h~ of Cuba' a deleiatlon,
arid fOf . c:reatlon of· new trade ' Carlos Rafael Rodrlpez, aald ·'
pacts bQJd on converdble ·cur· cipltallat marllilta 11'0'•ld not be
· rency. Cuba expreaaed the 111011 tdealllltd. Tile BliiJarlu news '
~us ~tlon abtlpt tile · apaey BTA Aid R.odJ1&amp;uez
rebma. .
• , •·
•• added that while Cuba did not .
Tile CciQieCOD delegalel . U. oppoae refonll, lt did not WQt t
tened to a report trom Andrei Comecon to tura Ita ~II: com·
Loull:aDIIV;COmeeoll's Executive plt!tAily on what be called "pres·
Committee cbalrmall, wbo said ent practlcel." ·
,
!r,ade waa . ~ npalldlnJI as
RyzllkOv .aid In a tele¥1aion
· enviaaged, and tbat JrDodl traded lptervlew that Comecon was bent
·were of
quality that could on retonn - wllat he called "new
not·meet·lnternatlonalltandards prlncllllei of cooperatloll."
a~
iltllwrecl late. .
"We aNd Qomecon, bill a
, LoultaltOV said Comecon re- different ComeeOil.... 1 have not

·--

I'

..-,

~~-~===::-.oil!-------~~--16.• INCH DELUXE

PIZZA

'.,,,

.

.

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'I OM.l:
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA·U:O~

MAIN S11m PIZZA
"'·till

were

'

·-

"~

..

.

,_.,.

. ....
''

CHEESE

•

ONIONS .... ~ •••••• ~,••1!~ ... "69&lt;

SINGLES.!1,P.~· s2.59

HEAD
LEmJCE •••.•••••••• ..lfJ!9.... 59c

IEAVIJ VAllEY

MED. EGGS ........~!... s1,19
StiDD'S TUMILER

.
16 oz· $1 59
Brocco I1•••••••••••••••••••••
~........
•
Fox Pizz·a •••••••~ •••••••••••• !!.2!. $1.09
NEW YORK
Garlic Bread •.:•••••••••• ~ •• !~.~~•. $l. 79
. '"

DR MONTE

Apricot Halves •••••••••••• u.~~•. $1.19
lAKER'S
·Chocolate Chips ••••• ~ •••• !~.~z... $1.59
2 ROU PACK ,
.
.
Bounty Towels .................. Sl.S 9
POST HONEYCOMI

-

-

RED GRAPES-........J!... 99&lt;

MARGARINE ....•..9l;2/s1.09

"} . •

Cereal•••••••••••••••••••••••~ ••!~~z... $2.29
111AFT.
Mac.
&amp; Cheese ....... !~~~!•. 2/S1.29
CIICIDII NOODU .
Campbell's So·up •••••••••!~.~~. S1.0~
·Man WIC
° h •••••••••••••••••••••••••···
lS'h oz $1 '29
•
' ftCH'S
.
OL Sl 39
Gr : 'JUICe,..........•.••••••.24•••••
.
.
'

'

4-16 01. PEPSI'S

poor

•,

"--·--'-'---

-·

heard anyone speak ot dissolving miSsion Vice President Frans
Comecon but all ' talk about Andriessen would visit Comecon
renewal," Ryzhkov said.
nations Czechoslovakia, Bulga·
The Soviet Union opposes the
ria and Romania this weekend
dissolution o! Comecon and .
!01· talkS about relations with the·
says It favors restructuring It to
Western European trade group.
After Tuesday's session, Pol· . create a. tarlff·free, single
The spokesman also said Ro·
Ish Prime Minister Tadeusz market to rival the one
manta had asked to establish
Mazowleckl told Polish televl· proposed tor 1992 by Its
diplomatic relations with the EC,
slon that he spoke to delegates o! Western equivalent, the Eurothe only East European country
Pi! land's urtent wish for reform pean Gommunity. ·
,that had yet todososlncetheEC
toward a more reallettc, market·
Moscow agrees trade should be
and Comi!CQn ot!lclally recogoriented system.
based on a convertible currency
nized each other In June 1988.
"If some . Comecon member and prices shj&gt;uld reflect real
An extra session of the EC
countries are not ready yet for market values.
foreign J'1'llntsters has been called
change, Poland Is ready to start ._ Comecon- an acronym tor the
In Dublin for Jan. 20 to discuss
Immediately on a new method o! Council for Mutual Economic · relations with East- European
y~ar.
cooperation with those countries ' AssiStance..! Is based In Moscow countries.
• Members have complained . which are ready now," he said.
and was formed In 1949 to
Since June 1988, the EC has
lhat Comecon'.s highly ~entral·
The Hungarian national news CQordlnate trade between social·
concluded trade and economic
!Zed trading system Is toorestrlc·
agency MTI said Hungarian' 1st nations. Current members are · cooperation pacts with Poland,
live, serve&amp; Soviet Interests and Prime Mlnlstet Miklos Nemetb·, the Soviet Union, Poland, Cze·
Hungary and the Soviet Union,
irades In shoddy, unwanted made similar remarks to the choslovakla, East Germany,
11nd a trade aeteementon Indus- ,
iioods.
meeting, urging abolition o! the Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania
trial products with Cz'lChoslova• ·The concensus for . change present "deformed" system.
as · well as Mongolia, VIetnam 'kla. Prague recently asked to
appeared based on proposals
Nemeth Sllld Comecon needed . and Cuba'.
.
extend the deal.to Include ecomade by Soviet .Prime Mlnl$ter' a new currency and market·run
' The Euro~an Community an· · nomic cooperation.
Nikolai Ryzhkov but no state- pricing system, saying countries nouncPd Tuesday that EC Com·
inent was Issued after TUesday's · who were , ready , for It should
·

SOFIA, Bulgaria ·(UPI) -The
Soviet-dominated trading bloc
Comecon met Wednesday to try
to reach agreement on demands
!rom retorm·mlnded members
' for c)Jange io match sweeping
poll~lcal changes, In eastern
·
Europe.
· Delegates said there was a
concensus that a study commlsslon would be fanned !o look at
proposals to change the ·whole
cbncept Of· trade among the
member states by basing the
'system on· world· market prices
arid a convertible currency · · •... ~slbly before tbe en4 of the

..

'CAULIFLOWER

PEPSI

FAMILY PACK

BREAST ··•··~--~~.

LOW

·C omecon edges ·towards. ,agreement

,,,.

Produce Sa.,lngs

Chopped Ham •••••••••• .'•• ~~•••• $1.4 9 Cooked Ham .............~!~..'!. $1.99
Red, Bologna ~~•••:.........~·••••••••• 99&lt;
Meat Salad •••••~ ••••••••••• ~••••••••• 89&lt;

.

••

?' '
; 0.~

pocket~

'

,.

FRESH

"

death. These threats are real. ... putes the existence of a "peace
People have been killed and dividend, " despite reduced ten·
there Is a posslbiUty that other slons with tile Soviet lfnlon.
In signing the prQCiamatlon for
people could be killed."
Hooks, who also was to meet King, whose birthday was first
with White House chief of staff · observed as a federal ~ollday In
John Sununu, sal.d .civil rights 1986, Bush said, •'This Is an event
leaders would ;·ht;. meeting will! that celebrates the greatness o! a
Bush soon todlscusstheadmlnls· man whose life and legacy helped
!ration's overall clvJI rights set America free."
Kl ng, who won the Nobel Peace
policy.
Prize
for his campaign of non·
. "President • Bush has made
violent
opposition to racism, was
some excellent statements and in
also
an
outspoke n opponent of the
the ne)\t few months we will be
Vletoom
War. He was shot to
moving to get him to go fordeath
In
19681n
Memphis, Tenn. ,
ward," said Hooks, who was a"
frequent , critic of the Reagan where he was supporting a •
sanitation workers' strike.
administration.
The president also noted the .
The events.at the White House
took place as the National Urban · civil rights theme song - "We , •
League released Its aimual re- Shall Overcome" - has been
port on the state o! , black adopted as the freedom song in America .a nd said savings from Eastern Europe,
In the . proclamation, f:lush ·
the waning of the CQid War ·
should be put toward Integrating said, "Like President ' Lincoln,
blacks and other ininoritles into Martin Luther King. Jr .• knew
that the United States could not
the work place.
,
Hooks said he would support remain a tree and great nation so
diverting the funds Into social long as the rights of any lndlvid·
·. programs . .Bush·, however, dis- ual are denied." ·

., A.key part o! the plan would be to give the avenue -a special
status, as "a zone of protected architectural and Urban
heritage" to preventthe construction.of "unsultable~ulldlngs
. or ' fllcades," said Chlrac, who hea4s the coQServatlve,
Neo·Gaulllst Rally for the Republic Party.
"·
There also would be a blueprint lor encouraging "appropriate ..
economic activities" to stop what he called "the bllnallzatlon of ·
'
the avenue." This would Include prevel)tlng the establishment
of more !asHood restauf!lnts on the Champs·Elyaeea, he
during the cold weather, an«).said average price per gallon costtng Citizen Action, a nationwide ~
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
sald.But Chlrac also hinted there was little he could do to close
many consumers -particularly $1 .26 In New York, $1.37 in New consumer organization with ·.
oil Industry took advantage of
existing hamburger parlors that liave sprouted to cater for
those with low Incomes - were Jersey and $1 . 47 (n more than 2 million members,
consumers during. December's
overburdened with' high heating Massachusetts.
tourists strolling along the aven\1!!. ·
.
said a federal Investigation cold wave, a House subcommlt·
"The situation Is worse and worse." he said. '" We 'have to
bills.
Both Republicans and Demo- would not result In any slgnlfl· :
tee was told, as members of
reballltate, which means no more can on the sldewa)'s, better
"l think mosf consumers are crats called for a federal investi- cant changes and blamed the
Congress called for a federal
architecture, no more last foods or such commerce."
reasonable," said Rell. Matthew gation of heating .oil price ln- Bush administration and Con, .
lnvesttgatlon Into alleged price
· · Chlrac sald he would create a new unified thematic line o!
gouging.
. Rinaldo, R·N .J., a member o! the 'creases and urged the forcing of gress for encouraging an anti- :
street furniture on the avepue with re-desig!led mail boxes, ·
Oli lndu'stry o!fjclals .have . House Energy and Commerce a price rollback It evidence cit competitive oil Industry ..
trash cans, street signs and news stands to be Installed frQrn the
Subcommittee. "They know De· price·gouging Is found.
'
"The administration was
attributed the price surges to
cember
was
cold,
and
they
would
Arc de Trlomphe to the crossroads with the vast Place de Ia
warned
of likely problems this
several factors, but mainly an
to
pay
more
tor
their
''The
federal
antltrust'statutes
expect
winter but did nothing," Roth·
Concorde.
Increase in demand during the
The street furniture would be created by two well-known
heating oil because they were shQuld prQvide grounds tor loves- schlld. said. "An.d as prices •
coldest December on record.
designers, Jean··Marie Wllrnotte and Jean-Claude Decaux.
using more. But they don't want · tlgatlng and stopping any collu- escalated, the Bush administraDepartment of Energy offiChlrac did not blame any particular Interest group for the
to get bilked and It's our slon among energy companies to · tion not only refused to grant
cials noted that the Increase In
obligation to see they don't."
· Increase prices," said Rep. Toby Jones Act waivers to' tankers
burgeoning squalor.
demand from November to DeRoth, R·Wis. "With the across· carrying needed fuel supplies to
"I believe It quite simply Is economic life," he said. "The
cember was over 1 mllllon
whole w,orld Is responsible . .So now 'We have to react with a
According to the U.S. Bureau the-board Increases .we have, the Northeast, but had .the :
. barrels of fuel per day, while the
program of rehabilitatiOn." ·
.
·
·December demand of 4.1 mllllon of Labor Statistlcs, the national sutfered, It would seem likely, temerity to propose a 25 percent
that antitrust violations have cut In federal fuel assistance for ·
barrels per day was the highest average. of a gallon o! No. 2 fuel
occurred."
the poor and low-income. ''
monthly demand since January on was 91.3 cents In November
Asslstan
t
Energy
Secretary
The Jones Act . requires sea1989, compared with 82.6 cents In
1981.
John
Easton
warned
the
commithorn(' , transportation between
But some members of Con· .December 1988.
tee that except In instances of two U.S. ports to be carried In
Last month, the Northeast
gress accused oil companies
"major national emergencies U.S . fl&lt;ig vessels, but can be •
Tuesday of holding down supp- experienced the largest Increase
and energy supply disruptions," waived as administration off!. ·
lies In order to jack up prices In healing oil prices, with the
the Bush administration would clais see !it.
•
oppose any regulatory action by
On Wednesday, energy offl· ·-:
TOKYO (UPI) - Japan satd
Slno-J apanese negottations on
the government. ·
· cials from New York, New -'
Wednesday that China's anttcl- lmplementaUon of Japan's $5.6
"Covernmeot intervention Jersey, Pennsylvania and the six : :;
pated lifting of martial law In , billion aid commitment have
Beijing would not Immediately since been suspended. ·
Force Base adjacent to · Fort through regulatory schemes will New England states are sche- : ~
FORT BRAGG, N.C. (UP!).lead to full tlormallzatlon ol
Bragg. Hundreds or family signl!icantly worsen the situa- duled to meet In Albany, N.Y., to , ~:
More than 2,000 o! the paratroop· relations .between the. two
: 'Moriyama made th~ remarks ·ers who invaded Panama · In members and a brass band tion just as it did In the 1970s," set a, strategy for preventing :·:
Easton said.
huge heating fuel price Increases ,:~
COUI!lries.
.
.
as major dallies In Tokyo i!llld the · December will return to their awaited tl)elr return.
Edwin Rothschild, director of In the future. •
1.'We· ha\&lt;e .to consider each
: :
government and banklnl Indus- · home base Friday the same way
Many returned to belated
. ,.ipect (of relations) that have
try w~re l,ltepared to resume they arrived In the Cehtral · Chrlltmas celebrations.
·!ieen put on hold;ndependently
· The . battalion had been 'In
American country by
negotiations fQr aid to China.
(since last June)," Mayurnl
Panama
since Dec. 10 for train·
The dallies said a senior paracl)ute.
·
Moriyama, · official · spokeswolng at the United States. Jungle
official of the Foreign Ministry :
Paratroopers In 'the 82nd Airman for Prime Minister Toshlkl will be sent to BeiJing this month borne Division are to jump Into · Operations Training Center.
Kaifu, told a news conference.
When the ' Invasion began,
to Inform Chinese ot!lclals of Fort Bragg's Sicily Drop Zone
"! don't think (nonnallzatlon
Japan's readiness to resume near Fayetteville, N.C .. for a members o! the unit attacked key
9! relations) can be done In a day
economic and technologlcl!l welcome home ceremony and targets I il the northern region of
or two," she said.
·
·
cooperation to China.
. . reunion 't with · their' families, the country.
Moriyama added, however,
The remaining battalions In
Japan earUer pledged to pro- Army officials said Tuesday.
that a lifting o! martial law In
vide loans totaling $5.6 billion About 2,200 troops, most of the regiment and another'battal·
BeiJing·would encourage Japan
over the slx-yeu period starting them from the 504th ~ar~cllute ion !rom the 325th ·Parachute
•
·to resume economic assistance
In flsc~tl 1990 to help finance
Infantry Regiment,, pa~ttclpated Infantry Regiment regiment
DELl
MADE
,
·
.
.
SHREDDED
lb.
$2.19
to China.
. various Industrial and economic
In the Dec. 20 assault. Others were tlown from the Air Force
· Japan joined the United States
from the unit joined them later, base for the night parachute
projects In China.
and other Western allies Iii
assault on the International
The reports said Japan's dec!·
raising the total to about 3,300.
lmposlng , sanctions against slon also Includes ·a grant of
SUPERIOR JUMBO
airport.
'
China, Including a freeze on aid,
About soo· soldiers from the
, The. troops returning .Friday
about $69 mllli~n to finance'
to prQtest the bloody June crack·
regiment's 3rd Battalion re- will arrive after a five hour fltglit
construction of an environmental
\!Own on dissidents at Tlanarimen
turned
In Alr Force transport ' !rom Panama, Fort Bragg offl·
protection ce~ter symbolizing
H0l11MADE
.
Square In Beijing.
aircraft
Monday at Pope Air clals said.
·Sino-Japanese frlendsh!P·
'·

~~~~Beans

BROUGHTON'S

PARIS (UPI) - Mayor Jacques Chlrac unveiled a plan
Wednesday to restore the famed Cliarnp.·Eiyaeea to Ita tanner·
glory by widening sldi!Walks, planting more trees, redesllnltll
street furniture and preventing the open!Dg of new fast·lood
restauranu.
.
"We want to g,lve back to the Champa-Elyaeea the prestiee
and pleasure ot a superb promenade," the co-rvatlve fOITI!er
prime minister told a .news conference at City Hall. "Clearly }t
. hu been spoiled."
. ·
·
· .The plan would ellmtnate parking on the (Ontre-allees, the
minor roads on either side of the main avenue. This would
· enable the sidewalks to be widened and covered In ll'anlte ind a
second row of trees to be planted, the mayor .ald. Cblrac said ,
work wOuld begin within a year and would be completed within
flve'years.
Three undl!riround parking lots will be COMtrueted to make
ug,tpr th~ loss or .parking space alone tlie contl'e-allees. One of
' the lots Wtll be under the Lido Theater and sites tor the other two
are under atudy. Chlrac !llildt·
·
•
· Resld"'ta' associations and other pressure II'OUps long have
been pressing city authoniles to crack down on wbat they see as
· the degz:adatlon of.the avenbe, which the French consider the
most beautiful street ·ln the world.
·
'Chlrac said the cosi o! the ambitious clean-up sHills under

WASHINGTON (UP!)
bomb killed Robert Robinson, a
Promising to bring to justice black, . Savannah, Ga., lawyer
·'the blaots who stain this land, •' . active In civil rights causes.
President Bush denounced as
"hideous" last ptonth's bombAn Atlanta television station
Ings that killed a civil rights later got a letter that claimed the
attorney In Georgia ~t~nd a federal bombings were retaliation tqr
· judge In Alabama ,
tbe death of a white woman
Bush, who signed a proclama- · whose accused attackers are
tlon Tuesday marking the Jan. 15 black. The letter warned more·
federal holiday honoring the judges and civil rights activists
birthday o! slain civil rights would be killed "any time a black '
, leader Martin Luther King Jr., man rapes a white woman In
also Issued a statement saying Ala~ma, Florida or Georgla. 1 '
his admlrilstratlon will not stand
"I have asked Reverend Hooks·
· lor racial Intolerance.
to let his membership know that
After a White House meeting this adm!nlstratlon will notlet up
wltb NAACP Executive Director In the tight against raclem and
Benjamin Hooks. Bush said he that we will work . to bring the
had expressed "outrage at the perpetrators of these hideous
recent bombings, obscene phone crimes to justice," the pres!calls and hate mall" received by dent's statement said.
NAACP o!!lces nationwide since
Alter the meeting, Hodks told
the attacks.
.
reporters .he had sought the
"I w\11 use the bully pulpit to ' session with Bush and was
br.lng to ·justice the bigots who assured the president was bring·stain this land," he declared.
lng all federal resources to bear
' Appeals Judge Robert Vance on the problem.
was killed Dec. 16 at his home In
Stressing the urgency o! the
Birmingham. Ala.. by a mall situation, Hooks said, "This Is a
boml;l. Two days later, a letter cliche, built's a mattero!ll!eilnd

·Airborne returns by jump ,

'laugha.n'sst: •Cardinal!"""""._. . ,

. Middleport; OH. • CO..ner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Pearl

Bush denounces racism, mar~ holiday

I

•
son Jan. 27 (no snow date Is Feb. ·photograpbers on foreign people Industry In Columbus: A Dlno- tlon: 100 years of Aft-lean Art"
tor
reservations.
•
10).
and places SatUrday through ,sau r display through March 4.
through March t.
-Chlaese Music Society per· :
Sled dog races will be held Feb. March 11; " Parallels and Con-At the Columbus Museum of
-Antique Toy Display at Ros· torms Thursday at Otterbein •
3-4 at Maumee Bay near Toledo. trasts: Photographs from Ste- Art: "Linear Grace: Evening . coe VIllage In Coschoton through
eollege, wes~erville. · 614-898, :
Also on the agenda:
phen White Collection" through Couture of the 1920s and 1930s," Feb. 28.
1600.
'
' •
-International 3-Ring Super Jan. 14.
through Feb. 4; "The Art of Paul
- Ar the Cincinnati Museum of
.,.."Phantom
o!
the
Opera,"
the
:
Ci rc~s Friday through Sunday at
-At the Toledo Museum of . Manship," through Feb. 4. '
Natural History: "Gorilla - the silent movie with organ and •
the Hara Arena In Dayton.
Art: "A Page In Time: Trea"-At the Taft Museum In Struggle tor Survival In the orchestral accompaniment :
-Truck and Tractor Pull show suredBooks from the Toledo Cincinnati: "The Historic lqte-.' Vlrungas," throuch Feb. 28.
Thursday: Ohio Theatre in co. :
at the Ohio State Fairgrounds In Museum of Art Collection" Sat· rior In Mln~t ure" through Feb,
Theatrical ~elledule l~mbus. 614469-0939.
'
, .:
Columbus Friday · through. urday through June 3.
g.
.
·
- ' 'Hawaii' 1990" Is featured at
-"De
Oonde?"
at
the
Marx
•
Sunday.
-At the Municipal Services
-At the Cincinnati Art Mu- the La Comedia Dinner Theatre Theatre In ClnclMatl through : ·
-G&amp;L Antique-Flea Market Center In Upper Arlington:
seum: "The Steckelman Collec· .. at Springboro. Call 513-7464554 Jan. 28. 513,4~1-3888.
•
; Saturday and Sunday at the Allen
"Votes .for All: A History of
.
.
'
County Fairgrounds In Lima•
Suffrage" Sunday through Feb.
· -Lebanon Antique Show Sat- 23.
•
urday and Sunday at the Warren
-At the Miami University Art
County Career Center In MuSeum: Photographs bY' Con-.
Holzer Medical Center; 110 to . bas been a patient at the Holzer : ·
By BOB HOEFLICH
Lebanon.
stance Stuart ·Larrabee, Jan.
l'm sure many of you wiu want · Pleasant Va,leY Hospital and 85 · Medical Center but now has been •
-Antique Flea Market Sunday 16-Feb. 28; exhibit o! 11rlnts and
in the Lausche Buildings at the drawings by Chicago arttst John to send along best wishes to Scott to other hospitals. Unlta chalked · returned tohlshomew)lere card'
Lucas·, long·
up 63,264.7 miles In making the can be sent. The address 1e 35279
Ohio State Fairgrounds In Hlmmel!arb, through Feb. 28.
.
-time
adminisruns.
Isn't that Incredible!
llashan Road, LongBottom, Ohio •
Columbus.
-At the Riffe Gallery In
did
we
do
before
the
45743.
Whatev!!r
trator
of
Vete-African .Culture Fest, 'a cele- downtown Columbus: "Contem· •
units were organized Into such an
bration of African and African-' porary Folk Art In O!l(o•' through rans Memorial
Hospital.
effeCtive
force. IIi addition to lhe
And, . the Pomeroy ·Fire De'
American culture, Jan. 15 at the Jan. 26.
runs
made
bY
the
regular
units
In
Scott became
partment held Its annual New:
-At the Allen Memorial Art
Cincinnati Museum of Natural
1989. there were 689 transfer runs Year's lund drive awarding
Museum In Oberlln: "American ill last Thursday
Hls1Dry.
·made taking patients basically some 22 prizes given by local
Graphic Art since World War while working at
-The National Afr-o-American
the . hospital.
He was kept out of county hospitals tor merchants.
•
Two" through Jan. 28.
Museum and Cultural Center, at
And winners are, one through •
· Wilberforce celebrates Martin · · ,-At the Taft Museum In overnight, underwent testS and specialized treatment and the
on Friday was moved to River- ·.transfer runs counted for 32,245.2 22, Rusty Tucker, Racine; Philip
Cincinnati: "Little Things In a
Luther King Jr.'s birthday Jan.
side
Methodist Hospital In Co- miles. Then, there .was the Werry, Chester; Eagles Club; •
Big
Way
II,"
through
Jan.
28.
15 with a "Rhythm and Poetry"
performance.
-At the Buller Institute of lumbus. As a result of fUrther aero-medical service tor 1989 Pomeroy; Jodi Cowap, Middle- ,
tests lrl Columbus, Scott was and 18 trips were made by fllgl\t port; Laura Horsley, Pomeroy.;
American Art in Youngstown:
-Christmas . Floral Display
David Reed, Pomeroy; · Randy
scheduled
tor triple heart bypass units to city hospitals.
Photographs of Georgia
through Supday at the Krohn
In
the
final
month
of
1989,
the
surgery
·
today
at
the
Columbus
Rice,
Vinton; Carol Ann •
O'Keef!e works through Jaq. 28;
Conservatory in Cincinnati .
· Meigs Medical Services made Kennedy, Pomeroy; Mike Dub!, •
-Holiday Festival of Lights at landscaJ&gt;I!s of Maine by Nell hospital.
His spirits were good on 223 runs travelog 4,919.3 miles Portland; Mefinda Dunn, PomeWelliver, through Feb. 4; "CreaClay's Park Resort In Canal
tive Children's Book ntustra· ·Tuesday and he does have a during the month with tra11ster roy; Roger Hottman, Chester; :
Fulton, through Sundar."'
positive outlook about life and units making 36 trips drMng Ross Roush, Mason, w. va.; ' '
tlons," through May 29.
Ohl.o Wine Weekends are
2,440.8 miles In completing those Melvin VanMeter, Pomeroy; . ·
these
factors will be helpful.
'
-At
the
Dairy
Barn
Cultural
planned Friday through Sunday
missions. In December along, Ula Ml.tch, . Pomeroy; Pearl
And.
of
course,
you
know
how
Arts
Center'
in
Athens:
"The
at the Salt Fork State Park near
units considering the 223 run5, Sisson, Pomeroy; Frank
much
your.
support
and
prayers
Illustrator's.
Art:
A
World
of
Cambridge and Feb. 9-11 and
105
patients were taken to Vete- · Vaughan, Pomeroy; · Jean Nor· •
mean
at
times
!Ike
these.
Children's
Books"
through
Jan.
M;u-ch 2-4 at Punderson State
28.
'
.
ransMemorlal;
27.toHolzer's; 11 ton, Pomeroy; Paul Slnion,
The
address
Is
W.
$.
Lucas,
Park near Newbury, and 'a
to
Pleasant
Valley
and 17to other Pomeroy; Dave Fox, Racine; .
Room·
3011,
Riverside
Methodist
.-At the Alma Gallery In
Valentine Weeks Is planned Feb,
hospitals.
Hospital,
3535
Olentangy
Ri.ver
Brent Zirkle, Pomeroy; Joe ·:
Memorial Hall in Lima: Plates
16-17 at Hueston Woods Lodge. ..
He111 are the niiJJiber o! runs Cl~rk, Pomeroy, an~ Harry'
·
Special Exblblls
' and Vessels Exhibit through Jan. Road,. Columbus, Oh. 43214.
26.
'
made by units making up the Cunningham, CheSter. I! you are
-At the National AfroWow!
serviceS during 1989: Columbia, In the llstcheckwlthyo"rnearest :
American Museum and Cultural · ' -At the Dunlap Gallery at
The Meigs County Emergency 17; Middleport, 560; Pomeroy, Pomeroy fireman for your loot. :
Otterbein College: "African Art
Center In wilberforce: Jacob
•
Medical
Services did a land 733; Racine, 404; Rutland, 355;
from
the
Collection
of
Otterbein
Lawrence Paintings and Draw·
Syracuse,
191,
and
Tuppers
of!lce
business
In
1989,
according
Personally,
I
think
we
earlled'
•
College:
througll
Fe~?.4
.
lngs Saturday throughF.ebruary.
,
and deser\ied thO&amp;e beautiful -•
-At the Cultural Arts Center In ' -At the Cleveland Museum of to the annual report of Admlnls- Plains, 229.
.
trator
Bob
Byer.
So
it,
Indeed,
was
another
ilU&amp;ll
days we have enjoyed In Janu.'
Art:
·'French
Drawings
!rom
the
Columbus: Paintings and prints
year
for
the
Meigs
County
In
1989,
units
of
the
services
ary. 0! course, It can't last but
17th Century," though Jan. 28.
by Elizabeth Ginsberg through
we can dream can.'t we? And we •
"Scholar's Studio," through Feb. · made 2,489 runs . with 1,207 Emergency Medical Services.
Jan. 30 .
patients
being
taken
to
Veterans
can
keep smllinJl'.
·
4.
-At the Akron Art Museum:
By the way, Hayward Bissell
-At the Center of Science and Memorial Hospital; 376 , to 'the
"Wanderlust", an exhibition of

Beat of the-Bend

The'Oeily Sentinei-PIIQI 9

Wedl Tl~lf, J....-y 10. 1980

w.dn•d.Y. January 10, 199().;

'

0

'

'

-

.

--

�... .

...

·:.•~ -

~-

--· ·- --· ·-

-··.

- ~~

Pllga 10-The Deily Se d'inel ·

WASHINGTON . (UPil - A
joint U.S.-Soviet technical team
. recommended that the superpowers create an International
park on the frozen frontier they
share In the Bering Strait.
The Berlngtan Heritage Inter·
national Park · would consist ·or
nearly 3 mUllan acres of land
alreadY under park protection on
Alaslui's Seward Peninsula and a
comparably sized piece of Siller·
tan territory on the Chukotskly
Peninsula.
The proposal was contained In
a report presented Tuesday to
Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan
and V.G. SOkolovsky, the first
deputY. chairman o! the Soviet
State Committee for Environ- . ·
mental Protection, 'In a brief
ceremony at the Interior
· Department. ·
The report does not recommend opening · the SiberianAlaska border, which bas been
formally Closed since !946, to
allow visitor access to both sides
of the park. But U.S. officials said
they envision freer mpvement
for scientific and culhiral
exchanges,
. Lujan said the report, which
. was the product of four months'
work by the techn)cal team, ,
stands as "an excellent example
of cooperation between the two
countries."
_
Sokolovsky said, " I think not
only glasnostplayed (;~ , role) but
the whole process of democratization o.f our society, and of
course, the lessening of International tensions .and the strengthening of our relatloll$."
The report Is to be ·fonnally
submitted later this week to a
U.S.-Soviet environmental commission that convened In Washington Tuesday. The commission must approve the park
proposal before It can proceed.
Establishment ot the park also
would have to be adopted by law
In both nations. U.S. officials said
they were ·hope!UI the park could '
be officially designated as early
as August 1991, the 75th annlver·
sary ot the National Park
Service.
The study does not 1&gt;roi&gt;ose
boundaries for the park, but the
u.s. side has already Identified
· Its portion as the 2.8 mutton-acre
Bering Land Bridge· National
·Preserve north of Nome, Alaska,
, said Park SerVIce Director
James Ridenour.
The Soviets have several areas
of slmUar size under consideration In the Chukotskly Peninsula

Blacks

returning "

::According to the report, the
national black population bas
111creased 14 percent between
1980 lind 1988, compared with a 10
percent Increase ·tn tbe white
population, which now stands at
203.9 mDIIon peop~. The black
; proportion of the total population
!'Ole from 11.7 1Jercent In 1980 to
12.2 percent In t988.
EcoiiOJIItc:ally; the report said
tile mediaD earnlnp of black
· men who worked ~ar round and
tuD time was virtually un·
cUII,ed since 19'19, at $19,010,
But for ·comparable black
women, there.wa1 a 7.8 percent
lncreue, from llU•o to $16,000.
ReatonaJJy, tile ntpol'l said
black families Uvtq In tile South
had a median lilcome d $17,300.
•
(
,, .

•

VJt ~

Bering Sea between Sovietcontrolled Big Diomede Island
and U.S.-owned ·LI,ttle Diomede
Island.
Depeildlng on the Soviet choice.
ot sites, the closest points· 'between the American and Soviet
portions of the global park would
be about 30 miles, Ridenour said.

The United States currently
has live International .park
agreements- all w!th t:anadathe' most notable of whlcli Is
Water!On-Glacler International
Peace Park. The SoVIet Union·
last year established an International park with Finland.
In addition to the global park

•

.. . .

. '"

,.

••itav. JMu.y 10. 1980

The Daily Sentinel· Page-1't·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Somehow, you just knew It would come·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Hetahts Trinity Ia Division II, down to this.
.
Once-beaten Pickerington has Wellsville In Division Ill and
The Browns once again are one
claimed the No. 1 spot In the first · Kalida ·ln·Divlllon IV.
game away from theSuperSowl,
United Press International Ohio
Trinity, 10-2, beat oui\Milters- . and once again the Denver
High School Board of Coaches burg West Holmes (12.0) for the Broncos stand II! their way-. If
glriJ Division I basketball rat- top spot In Dlvts!Dn II. Trinity God really was a Browns fan,
· lngs of 1990.
finished with 161 points to 146 for · Bubby Brister would have
The Tigers of Coach Dave West Holme.-, althouah both thrown his long passes accu-. .
Butcher.- whose only 'loss In 11 · received seven fltst place votes.
rately, David Treadwell's field
games came durtni. a holiday
'l'he rest ot the Division Ill top goal would have hit the upright
tournament In Altoona, Pa., to 10 consisted of Coldwater In and bounced away, and the
powerful St. Plus of Milwaukee, sixth, Sprtngtleld Kenton Ridge Steelers would be coming to
Wis., 58-48, received 15 of the 26 In sevei!UI,' Tuacllfawas Valley Cleveland. ·
first place votes In the first of six and R1.¢bmond Dale Southeast·
, Anyone who has followed the
weeks of balloting.
ern tied for eighth and Richwood Browns for any amount of ttme•.
They held a 200-154 margin lp North Union In lOth.
however, knows that t)le football
points over runnerup Canton
Kalida, which beat South Cha- gods smile brightly on the team
. McKinley (9-0), wblcb received · rleston Southeastern In last yeIn orange and blue while laugh·
ffve first place votes. .
·.
ars' Division IV championship lng at the orange and brown.
. In third p!Jice was North ' game, · had the edge on the Instead Qf a bucking Bronco on
•Canton GlenOak, last year 's big Trojans again In the first week's the side ot their helmets, Denver
.
school state champion, with fou~: . balloting.
should replac~ the horse with a
first place votes and 120 points.
:Kalida, (7-1) finished wlt!Jl74' horseshoe, !lie symbol of good
. The Golden Eagles are 9-1. this points to 92 fpr Southeastern luck.
~ season.'
·
·
. . · (10-0), although the·Trojans had.,
For the Denver Broncos cerUnbeaten Logan (11-0) was
a 5-4 edge In first place votes. · tainly have bad more than their
distant third w!th 67 points,. . McDonald, 11·0, · picked up share of good luck over the years.
followed In order by Westerville three firsts and was third with 85,
While the Browns must live with
North, Beavercreek, Cincinnati points, foUowed by Fort Recov! the Ignominy of some-of the mos I
Mother ot· Mercy, Rocky River ery /8-ll) with 68 and Berlin
Incredible defeats In playoff
Magnlflc&amp;t, Westlake and Hiland, another state tourna,·
history, Denver has played _In
Lancaster.
,
ment teanl from a year ago, fifth
three Super Bowls.
The first week's other three With 65.
:
No. :r teams were Garfield

proposal, the report deta!IJ the ous J!!lgrltlon of people and :
common heritage and lifestyles · wllcU!te that has occurred be- :
of the Eskimos- who Inhabit the tween the two continents.
:
tundra on both sides ofthe llerlng: . The joint study, which grew out -;;'
Strait, .once a wide land bridge of a 1972 superpower aareement
ilnklng Asia with North America. on the environment, also calli fpr
The area Is of scientific and the esll!bllshment of :i joint park ~
archeolog)cal lnter~st to both research and public Information ~
nations bec'a!llle ot lh{\ tremend· , .facility._
•

BIG BE" D.Yo~r ~f:ldtl!lpendenttw Owned
Low·Ptlced Supermarket
.,

~

U~ten Ingan dli~ Browns face old nemesis for AFC .title ·.
in·UPI girls cage poll ·

Strait 'peace park' urged · i
across the · Bering Strait from
Alaska . .
·"l;:ach side would manage. Its
portion of the park In accordance
with Its own laws and
regulations.
The United States · and the
Soviet Union are separated by as
little as a 3 mIll' Icy stretch of the

..

'-

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,,

a.-'

•FIVE ALIVE ·

Elway complained earlier this playoff.a ppearances, yet a gener·
atlon of football fans have grown
year that he was suffocating.
It's only tltdng the Broncos are up knowing only that the Cleve- .
favored by four points. Cleveland land football team has mastel'e!;! .
the art of coming close.
.
Is an underdog city filled .with
Get tlng to the Super Bowl .
people who have -overcome long .
odds through hard work and would help fill a sporting void
persistence, a population that no that has grown steadily as the
matter . bow many times fate years pass from the last Cleve- .
·•
knocks It down, somehow comes land championship In 1964.
Beating
Denver
W\11
be
dltfl·
crawling up ott the !loor ready
cult. But If the road to the Super
for another fight .
Bowl
must go through Mile High
· TheBrownscanwlnatDenver.
The Pittsburgh Steelers proved Stadium , there- would be no ,
th!lt when . they outplayed the sweeter plac~ to leave the
Broncos, but made a mistake foQtprlnt . of ·the Clev~land
many teams have made against Browns than on the hearts and .
Denver, namely leaving Elwlly minds of the Broncos and their ·
enough time to bring hIs team fans.
.
back to victory,
The Browhs know only too well
Sports briefs
bow the Steelers felt walking off
the field Sunday, secure In the
Sumo
knowledge that they deserved to
Hawaiian Ozekl ·(champion) ·
·win, yet tortured by the reality Salevaa At!sanoe, hoping for
that they did not. The Denver
promotion to the highest.. rank, .
Broncos don't just beat you on the easily gained his third straight '
scoreboard. They toy with your
victory In the New Year Grand ·
emotions, let you get In position Sumo Tournament at Tokyo.
to win, then yank the dream out
Yoko~una
(grand champion) ·
from under ·you at the last · Chlyonofujl, Ozekl Asahlfujl and'.
minute.
two other low-ranked wrestlers ·
The Browns are a team that
also scored th eir lhird victories ··
prides Itself on lis number of
to tie for the lead.

Never mind that one more loss
In ~ most-hyped single-day
sporting event In blsiDry w!ll tie
the Broncos with Minnesota for
the Super Bowl futility award.
Denver has gone to .the Super
·Bowl. The Browns, despite their.
foiU' NFI, championships. have
· never made It to the big ga,me.
· Sunday's game matches more
than two football teams. It Is a
clash of cities, a coU(slon of two
different ways of IUe. ·
De.n wr Is the ' mile high city
where snow 1s king. Celebrities
come to Colorado to ski arid
lounge In front of the ski lodge
fire chasing snow bunnies . . The
tew celebrities that come to
Cleveland do like Dan Quayle did
on Monday". They · come In,
conduct their business, say what
a nice city we have; then get the
··
hell out.
Denver Is mountains, · pine
trees, fresh air and John Denver.
Cleveland Is steel mills, burning
rivers and Dennis Kuclnlch.
The one love both cities share Is
football. Bronco fans love their
team as· flercel~ as Cleyelanders
love the Browns, and the atten·
lion lavished on football players
out west Is so Intense that John

FRUIT JUICE

Buy OM 64 Oz. Carton
_
Get OneWIT

'

Oz. Plcg•.

Buy .Qne 7. 10
Get One

'FREE
A 90-SECO(ID FREE
FOODLAND SHOPPING SPREE

POLICIES
'Ads outside Me•gs. G1lha or'Maspn counties mul! be pre·
pa,d.

c:U~N

ARMOUR

' free ads

MEAT-eRE~.

.
E

ORANGE JUICE

1f2

• A cl•sl11ed adverlisemen.J placed in The Daily Sentmel jell ·
cept
ctanif•ed' displl'f. Busin•• Card and legal nD1ical
will 1110 appe• .n t~e Pt . Ple•ant Register I!Rd the Gtlli·
Pohs Daily TribUne, reaching 01.1er 18,000 homes. ·
•
'

'I,

COUPON

ORANGE ~

-

JUICE

CTN.

FREE

WITH
COII'ON

l11y .One 12 OJ. Pkg;

. puraulnt to the

Get One

FR.EE ' ~:.:~~N

10W30 • 10W40

Jane Fry, Tr...urer
Mitigo Loco! Board
of Educ ..tion

6?\·PJ.I·I'IIClD

~' ' YALYOLINE

HI·DRI·
.

MOTOR
OIL

.

FRESH

ROUND
STEAK

bM.Is

~

(11 10, ltc

I

CHICKEN
LEG QUARTERS .

Public Notice

3 - 9~-us.

89
ll.

, LB.
OR MORE
oAiioo 2o oz.•lox:::.!~~l1!AD~p~~~::_·~ ;~a:!:.,L·E: !.~:. ;:.~..S~2~5::9:_;.___:__:Fi~r~E:!e:__:.._jL_•!!!ON~Et~n~sJS~TE~A~K.::..~·~'~;S~1~9:,:9....;..J:.~~ON!!!HI~~~!!-~~N~B!!R~EAe:s!!T.:.:..u::..~~S~2.:n:.·,...J
n oz.$1 39

SUGAR

WAFERS.~~.

'

MARGARINE
QUARTERS .~;

39·(

Gaflia County
Artl Code 614
. 446 - Gollipohs

'RED ar GOlDEN

'DELICIOUS
APPLES ...~.~;.

~·~
'·
'WHOlE SnCI

9·9( "-\( . ..

.

101 EVANS

'

79.&lt;'
BOLOGNA.~.. · .

••

•

SMOKED. $199
SAUSAGE ..!!·
..

KY. IORDER

•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIAllY ' , •
On Jonuory ii. 1990, in
tho Moigo County Prabete
Court. Cue No. 28453.
Phyl,llo PouHn. I 2 Fiahlr
Street, POII!troy, Mol go
c;ounty, Ohio, · 4117119; oppalnted Executrix of tho
llttlto . of J. Lucien Pouln.
docoMed, loto of ·1 2 Flo her
Street, ' Pomoroy. Molgo
County. Ohio. 4117118. •
;. llobert E. Buck.
Prabetl Judge
Llna K. Noooolrood, Cieri&lt;
)1' 10. 17, 24, 3tc'
''

11

817 - CootvUie

recovwy. Preferred cenlflecl ltddlctlone

coia'mllor or eligible for lm.,.cllata c:ertlfl·

cation. Muit demonatrata .-rono commit·
me.n t to ec:c:ou!!Ublllty, ptllr review lVI·
'tame and eubettnce
recodl'\'. Negotiable lllary fllnge dependent on experi·
-and educe.,., l'tdH 1'81poncl to Lll·

eb,...

WI 11..- thl !light to Um~ Quont~lof. · • Prlaoo !H~" _ _ d,., ~- 10 lh'¥,loeu....,, Jon, 13.

-

.
o USDA· Food ~"11'1 o~d WIC Coupono Acctpted,,• Not llooponolbto Fo,r Ty-ophloll or Pl-lrroro.

. :_

~1

~95t - letart

I

'

8.1 - 1-iome lmpro....emenl s

937 - Butlalo

..•
"

~

~

' 82 - Piumbmg &amp; He•ing

83 ~ hcBYaling
..
84 - Eiectric .. &amp; Retrig.-atton
85 - Gt.~neral

57 - Music-' lnsHuments
58 - Fruits &amp; VegetabiB&amp;
69 - For S1le Of Trade

- Bu1meu Opponun•tY

Business
Services

PACK
A111 PlltHI

.

Rea I Estate General

FURNACE
FURNACE

POIIEIIO\' - 5 acres, va·
cant ground on top of a.hill
near town. Great location lor
a house or !railer. ·.
$3.900.00,,
Rd. 35, ranch style home on
paved road, sitting porch, 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms, recrea·
lion room, fireplace, large·
living room, llt1dscapin&amp; 7
mil~ tram Ravenswood
Bridge. $53.5'00.00. PRICE
1
.REOUC£0'!
•
IIIDDlEPORT - 2 Unrt
Apartment House, needs
some work. Afixer upper lor·
a rental inq~me. Corner I~

.

.

$6,900.00.

IIIDDlEPORT -

Ntce I

·floor home wi~ 2 bedrooms.
I balh, carpet, with b'l5e·
menrand a nice block gar·,
a~a Slltin~9n a double lot.

$ 1,500.0 '

'

POMEROY - A 2 stOfy
holne wrth a large lot. big
krtchen, 3 bedrooms, built'" china cabin(!!, nice deck
~n·· back, and · a part base-

ment. $25,000.00.
E. Ctlllltd-992-6191

In lll!ldleport' Oh.
PAIITS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 arid 4-cycle
en gin•
Stock Pono for
Homeltte,-Weedeater,

Tocumoeh, Bilggo $o
Stratton.

Haul•ng

86 . Mobile Hum e Repa.r
87 - Upl;\otnerv

EXCAVATING

&amp; TiUCKING

.'TOP SOIL ·
.FOR SALE
9

·3561

Offla

3

•VINYL S'IDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN 'IN
. INS!JLATION

90 DAY WAIIAJm
WAS"EI$-$100 up
DITER$- 169 up

...._....

REFRIGERATIIII$-SIOO u_p

RAIIIIES-Gos-Eioc.-$125 up,
.

KEN'S . APPliANCE
SIIVI~E

g92-5335 or 915-3561
Acron frot~ Pelt Offla
POIIIIOY, OliO

, Wl1tet Speel1l 0•

S1DING CO.

VINYL SIDING
' WINDOWS .

PR. 949·2101
or ln. 949·2160

FREE 'ESTIMATES

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

"

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PAll

Ol!io

, •Mobile Home

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

~1111

eMI!bile Home
Ren"'lo

l••

•Lot ltentlllo

PH. 99f;5682

LOW GlADE OAK·

SA)YED LOGS

$160 i~!.
DEUVERED TO

OHIO PALLET

COMPANY
POMEROY, OH.
1/a/'

AHANDFII .
OF CASH

'

OF STUFF

Depe11dable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Se~wd
Hearing Evaluations For All Aaes

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a:

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

z

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
'417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
-

· oral ·

. Veterans Memori'al Hospital
1 ..:utb:n7rillts. Pomeroy, Ohio

ClEARING

'

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK

Sand·Stone-Dirt

161'41 667·3271

•••• ,.,,Ollie

o.-~.

1·12-'P-1111

Tr~sllll-949-2&amp;60

Jo Hlll-91~446&amp; - •

. Olfl~992-225t
I ( Hilt lllftiS FIJI

.

••
coum PIOP&amp;ltn
IF YOU IMf TO SRl
PWSE W TOW, IE
Ill IEI'tlCE YGUI IJST.
lit I ( IIEED US11118S111

•sHRUB • TRiiE
TRIM and . Rl!·
IIM)V~L
'UGHT HAULiNG

GUN SHOOT

•FIREWOOD

\

BILL SUCI .
992·2269'

tey Plok4i.t.ig• .M.H.B.A.. C.A.C .. Director
of Op~r~tione with .Uume. cover letter arid,

MANUY'S•IECYCLE CEIITEI

me• ~
s••~;:r;•J.DOU, •o
s...,.
11
BUYING'1LU"M'tJUM ~~~~GLASS, .

UCIII
FIRIIFI.

I

••

·. 97

h .......

'•• llillllln1

•

11 . . .

PLASTIC, COPPER. BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM, 8ADIATORI AND MORE

IVIIY
SAl; .GHT

I

SPECIAL ACCOUNTS~
\.. NQN.PIQflT GIO~ .

6130 P.M.

Ftlttwy dleb
. 12 . . . . . . Oily
Strldt11yW.1141
. ,
10.9-tfn

)

'

IS BEllER
THANA ,
GARAfi·FUL:

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS

It, .33 Rerttl of

. 4-25-lfn

WANTED

r-------~-r,~~~LUi~st;en~in~ctD~e~v~ic;es~----1 ·

12-13-Ul•o.

992-7479

or 99t-ntf

4-1&amp;-86-tln

992-2772

4-16-11&amp;-tln

·· Garage ·
y,.... ,••

'"· 949·2101
Res. 949-2860

or

VINYl RfPLACEMfNT

"Free Eetimlltea''

NO SUNOAY CAW

Roger Hysell

~ ...

J&amp;L
INSULATION

BISSELL

10/30/'lt tfn

REPAIR

"At Reasonaltla Prim"

mo.

USm APPUANCI$

II. 124, P...-.y

CUSTOM BUtlT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Oh.

9-~·19-tfn

FREEZER$-$125 up •
IICIO OVU$-$79 up

992-2196

BISSELL
BUILDERS

lEN'S
SERVICE

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

PAT HILL FORD
Middleport. Ohio
.
1· 13-lfc

PAIITS:AND SE!IVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

P.M.

SER~ICE

We can repair and re·
aJI'e radiators and
heater cores. We can
also cxid bail and rod
aut -radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PH.
992-3922
.
. 6-Zl-'lj.tlft

FURNACE

EVERY SUNDAY
1:~

Loalfetl at Valloy L..... r

.

RACINE'
GUN ·CLUB
'GUN SHOOT
Starts at

DAVE'S
SMAU ENGINE
REPAIR

HUUIIS: Mon.·Fri: 12:00 to .IS p.m.
lllttmllly 8 a.m. to 12 noon
fOI •oiiMAnOII CAll .,.,z.:~a,r4

(

•

Services

54- Misc. Merchandise
55 - Building Suppli•
56- Pets lor Sale

22 - Manert lo lo1n
23 -· ProtMsional Setw1 ces

724,•Athtne. OH., •41701. 114-1584·3111.

,,

Merchandise

'•

WANT ADS

,three tNCie. .onel refe111nce1 to P. 0. Box

'

~oom5

Space for Rant
Wanted to Rent
EqUipment for Rent
Fo; U•e
'

51 - Houtehold Goods
52- Spor\ing Good•

ljUEUj46JI'

676 ..:.. Appie Grove
773 - MMon
882 - N.., H.,..en

SMALL

vita submrtted by the appll~

CUNICtAN - Part-time po8ition available
with a 1tlexible IChedule. Individual who
po11e11ee .a Muter'i Degree In Oul.ilance
end CounHIIng, Pll'(chology. Social Work
with 1 documented poll 2 yee111 cllnlcll
· eu~rvl8ien 1reck preferred. Worll available
In rellkleirtlal lite with adult women In urly

46 47 48 49 -

•

for at•l hearing 'in thlo
mitiOr the cooo wHI· bo de·
cldod an tho b•lo of tho lnform~ian contolnotl In the
oppllcotlon ond the affldo·

Help Wanted

•&amp; - Furnished

71 ·-Autos for Sale
72 - Trucks lor Sal e
73 ~ Vans &amp; 4 WO ' s
74 Motorcy ciBS
75- Boau &amp; Motors tor Sate
76 -- Aut.o .Parts &amp; AcctsSOflllll
77 - Auto Repair
78 -'- Camp~ng Equ1pmen1
79- Campe.rs &amp; Motor Homn

53- Anliquea

458-teon

98&amp; - Ch•••
245- Rio Grande
843 - Por11.nd
2S6- Guyan Oi1t. 247 - lttart Fallt
643 - Arabil Oitt · 949 - Racine
379 - WIInut
742 - Rutland

an accompanying .rtquelt

' NOTICE ..
P\IBLIO 8A~~
,
PUblic Solo.t!J be hold an
J•nuory 18, 1990 ot 12:00
noon 11 D&amp;W MotNie
Homoo, 2nd &amp; VIand St.. Pt.
Pl-ont, W..t Vlri;nlo
2111110 on • 1 888 Kirk·
wdod 78x 14 Monufactured
Honle.
Minimum
Bid
110.000.00.
11 10. He

Area Code 304

Pom8r~

27. 1890: Unlooalhl Com•
mll8ion recelv• 1 written
ototemont to thot offect ond

C.nt.
.:
·
Furth• infoi'mltion may
bo obteined by Cilntoctlrig
tho Public Utilities Commit·
olonof0hlo.I80EutBrojd
Street,
Columbuo, OhiQ
432611-0573.
Ill 10. 1tc

Mason Co., WV

Transportation

41 + Houses tor Rent
42 - Mobiie HomM for Rant
43 - Faim, tor Rent ,
•4 - Apartmftnt for Rent

992 - Midclepo,- ·675 - Pt . Pl. .ent

·3&amp;7 - Ch•hire
318 - Vintori

RACIIIE- 2 ~ miles out Co.'

BuY. 3, Get 1

fOODLANO .

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is given thlt Pen·
tegan Computer Doll, Ldt.
hao filed on oppllcotlon with
tho Public Utlltieo CommIt·
olon of Ohio ICooe No.' 89·
465· TP·AC~I
requ11ting
outhot-ity to ~~rovldo lntro·
otote , telocommullicotlon
aorvlcoo ltltowlde in Ohio.
Any intwested per1on, firm,
corP~Jro~IOn. or, entity who
c1n ehow ·good ceu• why
thlo opplicotlon ohould not
be gronted ohould flit with
the ·Comml11ion • written
ototemont detolling the roelOne on or before JlnUIIry

require·

monto of tow.
A public hooring on tho
propooed budget far the
Molgo Locol public ochoolo
will be hold ot 320 Eaot Main,
Street. Pomoray. Ohio an
Mondey, Jonuory 115, 1980
It 8:00A.M.

Good Thru Jan. 13, 1990

DEliCIOUS

Public Notice

-on

'·

SLICED BACON

'

'

'
Meigs .County
Araa Code 114

- 2 I'JO PM , FRIOAV

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEAII lNG
ON BUDGET
Notil'li lo herobyg!vonthllt ,
coploo of tho proposed
budget ond ootlmote of coot
of op-lon oflhe Molgo Loco! SchoOl Diotrlct of Molgo
County of Pomoroy. Ohio,
incl.,dlng the coR Q:f op•et~
lng the publlcochooloofoold
diotrict fdr the fiocol '(eor of
1 July I 810 tlwough 30
Julle'1891.
flleioithe
office of the tr-urer of the
baord of education end open
to inopoctlon of tho public.

Good Thru ·

NABISCO
'
PREMIUM
SAniNES

''

FRANKIES

Buy One 12 01. Pkg.
Get One

7 · - Ve~d Sale(paid in advance)
8 - Public Sale&amp; Auction
9 - W~tnled to Buy

11 - Halo Want ad
12- SitUetion Wanted
13 - lnsuraflce
14 - B"usinees Train ing
15- Schools &amp; Instruction
11 - Radio. TV&amp;. CB Repa ir
17 - Miscellaneous
18 · Wanted To Oo

exchangl'.~ ...

Jtillotvinl{ ldl'l'honl'

2:00P.M . THUR~OAV

- Public Notice

GALLON

62 - Wantrd t o Buv

63- l ivestock
64 - 1-tay &amp; Grain
65- Seed II Fert illler

Employment
Services

Uassifi1•tl p~I{~S rot•t•r lht• ·

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
- 1"1 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
2:00P.M . MONDAY
.
- 2,00 P.M . TUESDAV
.. 2 '00 P.M . WEDNESDAY

COPV DEADliNE ·~ ·
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

WITH

t-HIDAV PAPER

.

.

61 - Farm Equipment

.

'Price of ad fo• all cap•tal letters \S double price Gt ad cost
'7 po.nt line type onty used . •
·
•Sentinel Is not responsible tor ~rrc»s after firSt dav . !Check .
tar errors '"'' d., ad run·s in paper). C•ll before 2 :00p.m
day illller publu;.attooto. m1ke cor,ret:tion.
~ ' Ads that mus• be paid m edvl!lnu frill' ·
Card of Thanh
Happy Ads
In Merr'oriam
Vard Salas

Buy One 12 OJ. Pkg.
Get One

'

1- Cafd of·Tttank•

Gnteaway and Fo!ind adS under 1 5 Words will be

run 3 diPfS at ,no charge.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

2 - ln ~tmotv
3 - Annoucements.
4 - Gi"'"''""'v
5 - Happy Ads
6 --lost and Found

'Reei!Ne S &amp;0 discount lor tds paid m altttance.

SLICED BOLOGNA
.

Announcements

Rate
Ovtr 16 W~r!IJ
$4.00
.
.20
16.00
.30
$9.00
.42
813.00
.60
$1 . JO/ day
.05/ day

Words
16
16
15
16
15

R~t•s are for c:on .. Q.IIfva tuns, broken upd~swill be ch•ged
lor e.ch.dart as separ•1e ads .
·

'

SUNDAY PAPER

SEALTEST

Davs
1
3
6
10 .
Manth!v

..

SEALTEST 100% PURE
'

. TO PLACE AN AD CALL"992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. u~tifNOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

T.V. DINNER

AT liNE CENTER

Number . 1 Marketplace

I .

MON., JAN. 15
. 7:30P.M.

DYICE COLLEGE

Are~'s

I

Thru Jan. 13, 1990

vs.

• .The

.I

.FREE .COUP~N

·to South
. WASHINGTON (UPI) - For
the first time In this century, the
proportion of blacks living In tlie
South Increased during 1980-1988,
with 56 percent of tile nation's
29.3 million blacks living In the
~glon,
the Census Bureau
reported.
At the turn oft he century, more
than 90 percent of blacks lived In
the South. The proportion steadIly declined to a low of 52 percent
In 1980, when the downward trend
was reversed and ' the black
Southern population Increased to
56 percent by 1988.
In a new report Issued Tuesday, "The Black Population In
the United States: March 1988,"
the Census Bureau predicted that
given current population projections "the concentration of
blacks In the South Is likely to
continue well Into the nex·t
century."
.
' It. said blacks In !he Sout!l
numbered 16.4 mUllon In 1988, an
Increase ot 2.8 million over 1980,
while for the rest of the nation
t~ere was no significant chang~
In the number of blacks at 12.9
million In 1988.
· The Northeast was the only
region. to show a slgnlflcan t
decline In Its proportion . of
blacks. dropping from 19 percent
to , 17 percent during the 1980-88
period, the report said, while the
~JrOportlon In the Midwest, 19
J:tercent, and the West, 8percent,
·
did not change significantly.
: It also found that just 43
p;ercent of the black population In
the South lived In central cities,
cempared with 75 percent In the
North and West.

~

.'

..

�Ohio

Sentinel
Annou ncernPnts

11

-

Apal'lment
forRenl

Help Wanted

3

10,1tl0

KIT ~N'.CARLYLE® by Lairy
Wrilbt ,
.

Television

~

•.~:.~~~f •

ME-,
~
~ ­

•.

..

~.
~

.1:00

IDIVi

"
0

.• .

.

'

I!WNING

Iii,

..••
_ _... .... -

c:::::::;;;;&gt;o

•

'

•

4 cute puppl11. 2 brown, 2
black; mix brNd ·,.maLM. 614-

•Cil

lr

E N0 R

Miami VI Washington
CZl Dl.tr: 1l.ltlnl0r Hllh

P-•-!R1~

Ml{ .IIADMINTOt-1

.

SCIIOLARSioiiP
FELL TloiROU6H

iOWOfkltodar
fD•AJ.~""'p

neighbor ·· was v«Y
invofved
equal
rights
. . . . . . ...J.
rnavement.inHethe
asked
a lady
car·
;----------.~.a small baby, "Is~ a boy or_

l1ll Charlea lto·Ciaa...
O;teon

1:30. (J) till NIC Nightly Ne. .

•

. ~-::~~=~" .

•

(l)
(!)

. '' .

IIOclr lleclllc

I
·
_.· I
L......ti"---LI---'-l---'-L' !~
I INuI MII MI EI Ie
Q0 A T U

1:05 (J) . ....., _,., ••

441·1195.

•

.

.

•

7:00 ()) karecrow·• Mil. King

6

Lost &amp; Found

.

41 Houses for Rent

LOST malt Beagle wearing red
collar, 11111 ,,.n Ratroc:k area.

2br, houH furnlahed, very nlcel
In Vinton. 114-3814121.

304-675-t75t .
Loo1; hnuory 8 In Mlddltport or

Pomerpy, ladles gold watch.
~usan' Knight, .61+992·Sg,&amp;6,

46 Space tor Rent

Rtward.

••oo por
-·"" utll-1-: Col

1-

Lolt: black and white mille
Cocker Spaniel. Answera to

'. ,

Forgor - Lucki-.Caper -: Napkin-POPULAR

.,

ofttce tor ...._

Lo.t : N•w Lady'• i:llver color
Pulsar Wrist Watchjllolt In or

~-~s•,M~
.'1.Hof....
p..,.
·Ptrll.
-~ •
oroy.

~ AI'-J,

11UII2·7471.

Loll ronlllo, porto, -

near Central Trust arklng lot,

.

114-446-0185.

blue collar. camp Conley

304-675-6660.

7

.

Yard Sale

buut1fiA rlnr vllw In KanaugL
Faster'tllobU. Ham• Pllrk, &amp;14-

Wanted to Buy

Junk

c•rs with

·

For LIIH: Second floor, unfur·
nllhad apartmonl, 5250 por

2 Br. ciblo, ctoon. ond quiet,

9

.

Colt

Tilling opptlcotlono tor otllot
IPICI 01 Oportmanll. IKIIIdloG bolng butM, oil around
"-· P'•vod portdng. otllcoi up
1o P,440 1q.I.~North ll1d t-n.
Nloo 2 otory, olooo 1o town, 2 Cllt ;1114-675-2607.
.
bodi'GOfiiS, now:•• 01DWI. 49
nolrlatrator
1u
·. =
..,.;...,.._F_or'='"'L;;.e;;.a;,.se;,;..._....,._
~-'
304 75-2651.
. '
FOI Lloot: s-od "W2s"nlurR11111oto ovollablo Homntood nllhod IIPirlmlnl,
por
RuiiY, Brokw. 304.f'11-11411 moroh. Cornar a-nd • Pint,
.,d 3b4-882-2406.
O.lllpollo. ano bodroam. w.tor,
llovo • notrlgontor ..,...dod.
No polo. O.poilt and,.._.,...
42 Mobile 1:1omes
noqulrad. f14-441-4241, tt4-4414425, 114-4q.2325,
tor .Rent

.,...i

or without

motors. Call LarrY Llvtly 614-

388-9303.

Oullte
Pre .1940 qullta. Anr condhlon.

month. Ol!trtoot&lt;lng city porte,
Gallpollo. 'TWo bodi'oomo. Gao,

.441-11102. .
2 Br.,)n Bl~tll. 614.-41-IIMG.

.IIIOVI &amp; ..trig. .tor pn:wlct.ci.
No~·· O.poilt•nd refertncta

2 bedroom trailer lor IWnt, 1lso
tpltll (Iota) lar rant, 304475--

4425, "4-448-2325.

6t4-692-246t .

·.· .Goods ,

Help Wanted
12
DEPUTY QI~ECTOR POSITION.

11

The Board ol Alcohol, Drug Ad ~
dicllon and M1ntal Health Ser·
vleet of Gallla·JacUon-MtiQII
counllea · Is ...ki!'lg a deputy

chr. l14 441 0803.
•
3 btdroom lumlohod. Qui ot
town. Porch, yard, aoocl ellen
condition. 304-882-2a&amp;.

Situation
Wanted

Fumllhed,

woohtrldiyor.
2251

3

quiloll ol,;. ... ' _ .
.......
304-f'i'J.'III88.
.....
COUntY Apptlanco,, lno• . Oaod
u~ oppllan-, T.Y. 111111." a-.
1 ""''· .to 1 p.m. Mon.-1101. 814441·t611V, 127 3rd. A... Go~
llpotlo, OH
.
SWAIN '
.
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Olivo st.,Odlpolll.-. UHd
lumllure,
. ., - - •
Work-o.liNt
tt4-448-3tiMI.

Ill Ablaolt And Coetello

61 Fann Equipment

0

-

'.

·· -- •

cubolrda.
painting~,

quiHs,

z

of cpntract agtncy Medicaid

orlenlll,

Htlll
call collect , 304-525-3275, 01"

Tacll,304-67~

No poll. ltol-041-

64 ' Hsy &amp; Grain

:. . · .

e

Appn&gt;1. hiM ot Hay, 1104182-2137 or 773-1380.

and Title XX contrlcla;: IKh·

nlcal as1istanc:• to contf'lct

agencies in thtlr prepf!rtUon of

Unllltd Financial Management
Plans; BOard lmpllmtnlallon of
quality atturance actlvlll•; tnd
managamant support for the
· Board and agency

1,., OII.IB.

mull poSHII I Ml81111''1 diQfM

tc;~~ OF s::D:;. ,..

().£ ~

1POSf' OClSSiff'r' .
1E£L· AIL moos ?

~ ~TalSt-\tP.

Coll614·11112·7479.

44

. VJ!\AT

II.RITI~G A~ ~6:)JT

Apartment
tor Rent .

,, .

attacking OOOgie, Wenda, !he
Howeers and more. Q

18 Wanted to

Trarosportat1on

fields ol human aenlcea, men-

71 · A~~ for Sa!•.
t975 Mtvollck. Oood -or •

tal health, mental relardatlon or

and

Posillon Ia

alcohol

ctaSaltl~

tlrvicta.

11 a Men·

tal H..lth Administrator II"Wilh a

salary range from 128,458 to

$34,510. Qualified applicants
are atked lo eubmit thllr
reaumta to: Or. Romola H•
klns,
Gallla.Jacklon4ttlgti
Board of Alcohol, Drug Addfctian and Mental Haith S.rvic!~l

Gtntral Malntenarw:e &amp; rtp~lra,
electric, plumbing &amp; 4 carpentry.

Min Paula't Day Cart Ctnttr.

Spaars, 304-675-1421.
AVON • All artll, Call Marilyn

Weaver 304·882·2645.

\

81C30 trallerwlth 10X30 addition,

S.'-, aHordable, chlldcar11. M.f $600.114-448-14118 otho~ 3p.m.
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agn 2'.1-10.
Btfort, after achoof• . Dro,:Hnt
wtlcomt. 614-446-8224.

mo.t

AVON I All Araas I Shlrlay

2 door HWing machine ClblntiC

614-3417-0588.

P. 0. Box 5t4, Golllpollo, ""
4563t . Appllcotlon dNdllnt: Pick-up tor Hlro: will haul al·

January 21 , 1990.

anything, coal, WODd,
gravel, appllancet, etc. Aleo wUI
clean out Qlf'IIQHI, IItties,
beMmtnts,
barnt,
Me.
Rtnonable
prletd.
C..ll

anytlmt. 6t4-3711-2973.

For . ·a .ll : 10x50, 2br, ntObUt

homo, portly lumllltad. 614-146-

0&amp;14 eftlf'4p.m.

For Sale': 12x60 mobile home,
newlY rt~modet.d on 1·.1 acrt~ lot
at .dp at town. Alao 1 . houH
on the lot, In need ot repairs.
Uve In one and rent ,the Olhtr,

$t5,900.
4p.m.

6t4-44~33

. •"•r

GuarantHCI
Wagn.
Paid
Vacations. Fantast&amp;C Sam'•· &amp;14'!48·7267.

Will taka care -of elderty In thllr
home. &amp;t4-682-3947.

Financial

21

c~mmiUion

101851.

CALL TODAY about

Earn 1300 • li!QO Ptr WHII,
Read ing Books at home. C..ll16t5-47:J..7440 Ext. B-303.
Earn 1300-$500 por watk

..
_ ,.. territory lor a&amp;fomoUvt
photographer~. 31mm camm 1
muot, PhotQ9nophy nporlonea a
ptuot Mull lio .ollie to wort&lt; ..,.

,. .ding books at homt. Clll 1·

Excelltnt Wagas far tpart time
asu mbly. Easy work at homt.
No tlfptrilnce nllded. Clll 1·

504-64t·m8 Ext. 52t4. Open 24

33 Farms tor Sale
YOUR OWN COUNTRY HIDE-A·
WAYI 41 HCiuded
~-t

WOodland

Buslne$S
Opportunity
EARN MONEY Rtadlng Bookot
INOnCEI
$30,000/yr lneome potenllal. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
DetailS. (t) 805-687-6000 EJd. y. recommenct. thlt yau do
10189.
bualnu• with p~opCe you know, ·
NOT to Nnd money
EARN MONEY typing at homo: •nd
$30,000 year Income potential. through the m.all unlll you hlvt
Details, (t) 80Q.687-6000 Ext. B· lnvnfigatad tiM ottoring.

6t5-473-7440 EJd. B5Vt .

Auto Waahar'l, M; EIIC1rlc
Drytr'_o1 • $05; On Dryer, Ukl

w. lpl. 2 br., 1 bolh, prlvotl

patio. Cine ta
g.-y .11. . . • ohoPJIIng ean-

f•,

water,
uwwl. _
provldad. 121&amp;'mo. """

44t.0213.
Aaartmenta

lor

riN.

con10~. $50. l1444iw

;::oaa,_..s.'--:'--:--:::-:-'C7---:cVOry nlco
Genll'll ,•

26 Inch ·conoote
EleCtric

color

ltltVIolon. $75. 114-11112-8975.
- · - ;-Etactrto Rl!lllt't, tal; Wadding ·rtngo I diamond wodO•• RI!'Ot'o, ,95; R~rwtor'o dlng '*'d, ~ dlomond ,,..
'118; ·D!ih wo-·o uu1; !lllllmtiM ~~g1 COil S500. HOoting ltove, •80. Dtlborl ~riil.t75. 30-7fl.21t4.
.
Swl-, Uood Apptllnceo, 314
Tlolnl st. Kanauga. Ohio, .114Building
441·7413.
.
Supplies

roqulrad. 6t4-446-3MG.

31

9ter.a

truh
lt4Twin

RJ..... Towor Houolng tor tho
Eldtrty, Handlcti'Pod ond DJo.
abltd.
Sornt
apenlntntl
avalllblt tor non-hondlcapptd,
nDIHIINblld perMM Mlwlln
tho oa• o1 40 ll1d a, &amp;qital

appreciate• your hard wortc?
Art rou looking tor mor1 oppor-

· Buckrldge Road; Qalllpoi,I,' OI!
to apply.
CoomotologiS1o
Natdodl

SU. Huvy oolld wood higH
INick rocloor 1711. IIOW82-3201:

2br, up .. alrw. .tove .A refrlg.
fumlahid wat« • t,..h fur~
nlohod. ilot. roqulnod, dtpoolt

·~lottd

·

Attantian RN'sl Are you tired of
tha ume day lo day ruahed
routine? Do you'"' that no ant

IUnitits far carar advancamant? It you •nswarld yH lo
any or thl abova qutstloM, we
are lnterastad In you! Scenic
t-HIIt Nursing CentM Ia now of.
terlng txclllng MW WICIII and
Mntlita! If fntara.tecl, plaH
coma to Scanic: Hlllt .t 538

I

i

O.lllo

~~c::r•

of l.Kia

of

Cauntr

otr

Houll'ng Oppo~unlty. :i04471H7t.
BEAunFUL' APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AY. ~ACKSON
ESTATES, 136 ~lokaon Pika
hom StH/mo. Wolk. lo ohoo •
movltl. Coll6t4-448-2588. EllH.
Beach Strttt Middleport, Ohio. New bed, d,....,. . a rocking
1 and 2 boctrclom lltmllhod cllalr. Good carid., 'wUhlr' •
apto, 111o 1 100111 etllcloncy, drytr. lt4-44J·t701.
uiiiMIM pold, ,.._,... ,.
qulfod, 304-811:1·2111.
••
PICKENS FUANnuRI!
Ntw/Uood
Fumlthecl· 3 rooma •nd bath,
lurnllhlng. 112 mi.
pilvott, ciMn, pretor olnglo, Houuhold
~orrteho Rd. Pt. Pt-nt, WV,
Woi1dnG weon, non .moker, no can 304-671-14(10.
...... 304-t71-a51.
. ..
·Fumlohocl , Oanogo

Apl. Including Wither Dryer, air, cl.. n,

no petoil oult- lor ' - 614-

-Ut.

Fumlohod

liar:..;.~

814-a5li:ist~:'4-44w11
Colt 814-11112·~

lnl-

lion, $1,100. 304 112 2241.

197tlllllbuSio~::...loyt.

new parte, aoocl

,

.-1.000.

mllte, MOO.I14-24U
1079, 280 ZX, ·auto - . tlnttcl'
wl..-., good oonct, aftw 4:311
PM, 304-815-5272 or e'lfi.Hll.
11181 Caprlco Cl•alc, loodtcl,
exc. aanc:l., 70,000 mU•, 11500.

·Home , ·

MR. FRI LLIE: \o\ONT SE
DRIVINGOUR5CHOOL

WA'(iiiiiROOFING '
u.-.t~ ...,....
tM. Local illoiM
turiolohod.

!:'US ANY,\,\ORE .

1...- .

= ·
114-237-....,
W11 rproollng,

Cocbr~ Sponltl pupploo tor
..... 5 . . . old. Oood blood

lint. 114 11124434.
Coon Doge tor IAio, to 10111o
Au Hollty Jr. Eot1tt. ft 4-1117318.
~
Dog Hou- tor Salol 1 112
mlln out A1. • 141. Wayne
Shoemakor,I14-448-0IMIS.
Dn_gonwrnct cau.rr Klnnot.
Btamno

I

'1·
.. nlghl.
llltmenl

~~

............ Now
1:30 C2l tlll.MJ T- Delle

SHE SQUASHED MY
SQUASH AN'

114-441-

IIAT UP

::l: '

.r;,.,,

DID SHE

TURN UP
ALL YORE
TUIN,I? ·

li"'i~='L
liJ
Evening ,._
Ill-·

::

'

.
..

10:30 CZl e,.a On The Pttze:
AltWICII'a ClviiiUglda .,. . .
Collage IIUdenll taka an
active rote in the Olvll rlghll

cmr..~:r::~r:.&amp;.

lnd

p.m.

. '

Graph predlctl01111or the year ahead by
m8111ng $1.25 to Aatro-Graph, c/o thll
P.O. Box 91428, cr-tand,
OH 44101-3428. Be...,. to atlle your

,_.paper.
ro:r~

own

crul. . agency call CriJIM Wor1d

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1~47-4470.

not Wiecont:ln

Lite tnturonct, -~lng. ~:~:~
1&gt;1.,. advonct .. ,. opportv;.~

tull or part time, 1...QD.~
or 304-1211-1 050.

,·

Phant oollchtrw ntOdod, tul~
tlmo I po~-tlmo, 114 Ul 31tll.

.

- -·-

You lhOUitl do t'lllllr Wllln 11w y.elilad In WIIIIUnil .... you 0111 01*·
IU
atalhdoiPitodli•- ol OIJin.tll- * IIIII rtquft Ill I MI.. ntlgllt IIIII
work out loo nlftr.
C.AI NIIONI (OtiL INttn. 111 Men

~-

. )····~

-~~-

'• '

'

=r

ship arr_......,tln which ·you're pr•
entlylnVolveci llunr-abl)ldemand·
lng. ltriV8 to e1t11er atretghten" out or
d-11 .
LEO l.luiJ 21-Aul. 21) ~~~ who
huulterlor~mlghttryto1... yclu
Into 8MUII1lng lddltiOnal re.ponelblllllee II thle llmt 111111 n again~~ your
ti111er judglnent. Turn a tiNt - to
, hie/Iter pteedlngl.
. VIRGO IAfll. 11-llpL 8) H•vy c»mahdl might Ill made upon your _clally lOIIey 111111-'d tum IOIMihlntl
thetlhOuld llelunintoa-'tlllt. Don't
let condltltlnl dlltol1 ' the _ . . ,

~noAprt•)lmaliemtty ·
DeL •1 vq.r·,.L·na)
Ill leillllllll COUld a-1 IIICIWn out ol pro- , likely to"- too muall IlK K IOitleu
portion todlty
rift'" lng ~ ladly " ,_. wllll u.t .ll
. 1M llaJIIhGid, Doli'l tel 111'111*10 you. ICIO'QOwdlcj. 1Jm11 VOUI' golle 10 I'*'
.., or 1111 ODIIIrllluta to IIIII.
·
vou Tltn't 1
.t.II)Thllll~prablltlll
llfl . . vou ooulcl ---~- _,. ' ol " - - wllln a.y lml you apen
In
aon tocMy. yourmoutllvoullllglllftild',........,..
e.tiiiOulhVOUitlll'nallnllndlohurt tng 11t1ng1 VOU lila IS l't. llul&lt;•; If
. , . . ·~ phrllll oou1c1 dolt* you 1eug11 olf your baD Ull camp ill'· ton&amp; W(lt too.
.,..... II) To iWIITTAIIUI (IIIII', • Die It) Be

tiiOnlllge
10:.0 (J) MOV•: Gulla Of The '
MttgltiiiDtnllavtn (0) (2:1 5)
11:00 (J) Nlltdclllle w
.
MaComtlclt lA)
·

......
e(J)

TAl- (Apiii=V=:=

-••'IJ ••-.•
IODLIO(Oat.M

eCil a eo

_, don't up• ..., mltJIII put vou
•
. Cipt1oom, trell yainlll to 1

·

no lltiiM II·' w1t11 a 111'11111 or ttnn wlllt w1111m
Olhlrl.
· ·· you•,.notlamlllar.lfyougtloanllll,lt
II)"·'~- ' oould llgllten your ......

ByJameaJac:eby
Although the Flannery two-diamond
convention is for ·the most part 111eful
(it is handy to be able to show ~pecili· .
cally (our spades and five hearts),
there are drawbacks. One disa(lvan·
taae is that the oppooents can manu·
facture a way of showing a balanced
stron&amp; band without having to bid notrum~. Thus in today's deal, by part·
nershtp agreement, East's double of
two diamonds showed the strength and
shape for an openin&amp; QPe-no-trump
bid. When South bid two bearts and
West paued, East did not need to bid
further. since be bad already told bls
story. and West had no interest in
competinc.
On the openin&amp; l~d of the ,spade
nine, declarer carelessly played low
from dummy. East won the queen and
returned a small diamond. Regardless
of bow be played, declarer was now
sure to fail in his contract. West would
aet back on lead with the queen of dia·
m • to come through the ace of
spades a second time, and South would
. l01e two diamonds. two spades. the
club ace and the heart ace.
·
To make the contract, dl!CI•rer
must abandon any temporary posi·
tiona! advantage that would come
with ducking tbe first Irick. Instead be
'

The Mr.

o-..Vtoa

· • ConweriiiiOn With Dlnlh

11:30e!JU!!on~g~~~llhow ·.

&lt;II a;;.;' I IIIII
Alulir Art"-

. !ll

9

.A4

tKQH

•s
72
• QB 2

.... 10 6 3
+A 75

+109632

SOUTH
tJ64

.,0 9S

t Kl5
+QJ81

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Sou1b

West

Nor1b
2 ••

2•

All pass

Eu1
Obi.

•Flannery convention
Opening lead:

+9

must win dummy's spade ace and play •
the kina of clubs. If East then under· .
leads tbe diamond ace. South must rile
with the king and take two pitcbea oa
the Q-J of clubs before 10in1 alter . ·
trumps. East is more likely to pllly
three rounds of spades, but South can
ruff the last spade witb the nine of
trumps and come· to eight tricks. Tbe
applicable rule is simple - plan .
ahead before playing to the lint trick . .

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 40 French cily
1 Equivalent 41 Dlkdlk
.

5 Naughty
lyke

8 Chinese

port

DOWN
1 Heroic
ta.l e
_2 Prleslly
garment
3 "Catch-22."

10 Shaping
mach.l ne
12 French
author
IOf
13 Walt upon · one
15 Top card
4 Prlvale
11 "Aelaled
27 Dark
· 18 Dissemble
maternally
brown fur
17 Charlotte
5 U.S.
14 FDR'.s New28 Amal·
statesman
gamate
11 Task
( 18~0-93) 18 Fictional 30 Nimble
20 LeHer ·
8 Appraised reporter
34 What the
before
7 Old
18 Debauchee
nose
theta
Siamese . · 22 Hemmed ln. knows
21 Not a whit
coin
24 Shanks'
36 ·swinging
22 Writer
I Genuine
-· Slar•
Greene
article
25 Llslen
37 Curtain
23 Prompt
(sl.)
21 Start
holder
24 Wire
measure
·25 Opening
27Winary
refuse
21 Spanish
queen
2t Flrsl lady
of first ·
ladles
31 Dunderhead

32 Before
33ConceH '
311 Holiday spot
37 "The Green 1.,---I---I-Hornet's"
name·
31 Tincture
311ts name
was
Kristlenla
DAI~Y CRYPI'QQUOTES-Here's bow

to workU:

till

One letter stands for jlnother. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. El!ch day thecode letters are d!ffe\"ent.

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RE·TRAIN NOW!
SOIJTHEASTERN
BUSINESS 32 Mobile Homes ·
COLLEGE, 529 Jaek11011 Plkt.
Call 114-ololl-4317. Rog. No. ...
tor Sale ·

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winning back Kate. 1;1
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UNSCRAMBlE ABOYE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

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