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P1

1G-The Daily Sentinel

~~Local

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Coolville woman

hur~

in crash

A Coolville · area ·woman was Injured In a two-car crash
Monday at 5: 15 p.m . In Chester Township at the junction of ·
. County Roads 26 and 25, accordi ng to the Ga!Ua-Melgs Post of
, ~ · the State Highway Patrol.
· Teresa L. Lambert, 19; Rt. 2. Coolville, was taken by
ambulance to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Lambert, driving a 1980 Buick LeSabre, was heading north ori
.,
C.R. 25 when she pulled from a stop sign and hit a 1985 Ford
Tempo driven by Chad A. Cook, 18, of 36436 Old Forest Rd.,
1, Pomeroy . Cook was driving wes t on C.R, 26.
.
Lambert was cited for failure to_yleld.

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;;· ~ · ---Area deaths~•

i~aul Myers
... "

:.~ PaulL. Myers, 75, of Sarasota.

;tl.a., a former Meigs County
§:!dent, died Monday at f
asota hospital.
..:. Born at Rutland on Dec. 29,
he was the son of the late L.
~- and Louise Myers. Besides hi s
:J1U1!nts, he was preceded in
odeath by a sister, Ruth Tinsley,
Sarasota, and a brother, Charles,
:Wilmington.·
• He Is survived by a sister,
l'tfarcla Denison, Rutland , and a
niece, Robeta Alexander. SaraJII)ta, Fla.
:· Burial will be In Sarasota.
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:ul5,

~Sara

Ann Siders

,; Sarah A. (Stover) Siders, 82, of
Gahanna. Ohio, fonnerly of Mason
County, W.Va., died Monday, Jan.
~5. 1990, died at home foUowing
ID extended illness.
·
:- Born Nov. 28, 1907, in Mason
County, she was preceded in death
11Y hc:l' husliand, Leonard N. Siders,
illl968.
' She was a member of the
(:ounay Fellowship Free Will Bap(ist Church in Gahanna.
.• ·She is survived by three

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la delivery mqst be made.
, Wehrung also discussed the
sidewalk slip on .Uncoln Hill
lqcated In an area below A.R.
Knight's house. Wehrung felt the
$1lp could be fixed by raising up
tJie sldewaJk and placl~~&amp; blocks
llllder It to brace it. He also
dillcussed the area In front of the
· i!sed car lot across 't ram Super
~erlca where Ice builds up,
stilting that the lot must drain to
storm sewe.r .
: The meeting concluded with
!he presentation of a plaque to
~ane Walton, village clerk, who
fvlll officially retire on Jan. 22 .
Reed Wlll was also presented a
jllaque and a gold watch !o"r his
"ark With the village since 1955.

a

Stocks
.- Dall;r slock prices
~AI ol18:30 a.m. )'
JfrJce and Mark Smlth
"'unt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

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;6.rn Electric Power .. .. ......... 31\ii
~Tt.T .... ;.......... , .............. ... 42%
~~land

on ................ ........38-v,,

J39b Evans .......................... 13%
Channing Shoppes ............... 934
City Holding Co. .. .......... ....... 14
"deral Mogul. ................... 20%
GQodyear T&amp;R ........ ...........41'h
Heck's ............... ...... ..... .......
lteY Centurion ......... .. , ........13'h
Lands' End ................ .. ....... 19li!
J,J;mlted Inc . ........ .. .... .. ....... 34'h
Multimedia Inc ....... .. ..........85'h
ltax Restaurants ........... ..... .. 1-v,
Jtobblns &amp; Myers ............... .15'h
liii!OJJeY'&amp; Inc ..... ..... .... ..... ... .10'V8
lltar Bank ..... , .. ......... ........ ..19'\4
Wendy's Inti. ................... , ..
Worthington Ind ............... .. .22%

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Oh~o - Lottery

news briefs...- - , Firemen will accept... _,..eo_nti_nuecl___..tr_om....;pa;_g;_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--;-_ _

Continued from page 1
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital: at 2:07p.m. the Tuppers·
Plains unit went to \he Eden Ridge Road home of Erin Reltmire
and transported him to St. Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg; at
3:15p.m. the Pomer oy unit responded to call o.n State Street aild
took OrvUle HI!! to Veterans Memorial; and at3:46 p.m. the
Syracuse unit transported Doug Enoch to Veterans.
At 5:18p.m. two Pomeroy units were called tothesceneof an
al!tomoblle accl!lent on Flatwoods Road. Chad Cook was taken
from the scene to Veterans Memorial Hospita l for treatment
while Teresa Lambert refused treatment.
At 9:05p.m . the Pomeroy unit went to Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Health Care Center for Alva Newell who was taken to Veterans;
at 9: 42p.m . the Middleport unit was called to Pearl Street.for
Clarabelle Riley who was treated but not transported, and at
10: 32 p.m. the Middleport un it· went to the Pearl Street
resldenceofLincolh Smith who was taken to the Holzer Medical
Cenl!!r.
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Tuu!My; J...,.y 11, 1810

Pomaoy- Middlapot;. Ohio

.

• John Stahl, longtime malnte. .Dc:e employee at the Meigs
blllnty Courthouse, Is now con-.
t~ toll45RhodesHatl, Unlverflty Hoapltal, Columbus. He
remalna In Intensive care al·
lboqh hl1 condition Is reported
~be ttablllzed. .
.

daughters, · Hattie Chandler of
Columbus, Bormie Simpkins. of
Kanauga, Ohio, .and Norma Jones
of Pataskala, O()io; . four sons,
Leonard Siders, Jr., of LondOn,
Ohio, the Re:v. Robert Siders of
Gahanna, and Donald Siders and
Aaron Siders, both of Columbus;
two sisters, Massie Parson of Pen'
nsylvania; and Mary Jane Gordon
of. Leon; dne brother, 1ohnnie
Siders of Leon; 22 grandchildren;
and 27 great-grandchildren.
Services will be Thursday, 2 p.m.
al the Raynes Funeral Home with
the Rev. Clovis Vanover. Burial
will be in the LeQn Cemetery.
Frie.nds may call Wednesday, 6
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Meigs among top 10
in slate on primitive · ·
weapons kill of deer
Meigs County registered
among the top 10 In the state In
the number of deer killed with
primitive weapons during the
season, Jan. 4-6, according to a
report !rom the Wildlife Division
ol the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources.
·
In the county a total of 121 deer
were checked. Other counties In
the top len were Tuscarawas,
182, Ashtabula, 175, Washington
169, Jefferson; 152, Guerrisey,
141; HarriSO!l, 14Q, Belmont, 138.
Coshocton, 13.2, and Monroe, 128.
In Ohio ·a &lt;total of 4,794 deer
were bagged by hunte•s using
primitive weapons. Spor(Smen
hunted with singleshot muzileloading rilles of .38 calibre or
larger, muzzleloadlng shotguns
using a single ball, longbows, or
crossbows.
The deer longbow and cross·
bow seasons continue through ·
Jan. 31 statewide for deer or
either sex.

department, he added. Firemen
were In the process of preparing
~peclficallons for tile new tanker
"when we got this kick in the
teeth," he said.
The majority or residents
aththe meeting also Indicated'
they were dissatisfied with Ute
arrangement. " Racine's ans·
wered our fire calls for 50 years, "
said one r.esldent. "We don't owe
Syracuse anything."
Said another resident, " We
just assumed our money would
go to Raci ne, just like . we
assumed we could put ourtrust In

our trustees."
Shortly after It became pubilc
knowledge that Letart Trustees
had · signed a contract ·with
Syracuse Flre.Department fOJ50
·percent of the township's levy
money, a petition to reoa.ll two
trustees was circulated. Twentyeight signatures were gathered
on tM petition with "phone calls
from as many more wanting to
sign, " a resident said.
Forty signatures, which ac-

Fog moves into
By United Press lalernatlonal
ThlckenJng clouds fed by Pa·
clflc storms dumped -rain and
snow In the West Tuesday,
whltenlng ski slopes but snarling
tra-ffic, while fog rrioved Into the
nation's midsection and the mlctAtlantlc Coast amid thawing
temperatures.
After a bone-dry December,
the second storm of the new year
was moving Into California, the
National Weather Sl!rvice said,
bringing an 80 percent chance for
showers In the Los Angeles area
Tuesday night.
Scattered light rain and·drizzle
· began falling late Monday afternoon In northern California, with
rain expected to spread over the
region . .
In Nevada, a winter storm
itumpel1'61nches of snow during a
two-hour period Monday In the .
southern Nevada resort area of
Mount Charleston, 40 miles from
Las Vegas. State Highway 157
leading Into the recreational
area from the desert gambling ·
mecca was closed temporarily
while pollee and Nevada High·
way Patrolmen unsnarled traffic ,
jams caused . by disabled vehl·
cles. ·

Weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy Tuesday night,
with a low near 50. Chanceolraln
Is 20 percent. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday. with a chance of
showers and highs between 60
and 65. Chance of rai.n Is 50
percent.
Extended Forecas~
Thursday through Saturday
A chanc~ of showers Thursday
and Saturday, with fair weather
on F r iday. Highs will range from
45 to 55 Thursday , and from 35 to
45 Friday arid Satul-day. Over·ntght lows will be betweell35 and
45 early Thursday and between
25 and 35 Friday and Saturday
mornh\gs.

Turnpike of Ga_
l lipolis
Proudly,
Announces
The
.Return
· of

Bob Ross
Bob Returns To
1,'he 'furnpike Family As
New Car Sales Manager,
Bringing With Him
18 Years Experience
With The Ford Co.

. . .pital news

counts lor 15. percen~ of . the
Alit atandl, the recall petiiiDJt
tOWII.Ihlp'l Valeri ln. the Jut will DO longer be Circulated. .
general electiOn lor IQWI'IIOI', ·
It wu pointed out tbat the
were i-equlred lor the recall ptopoeecU5·35fireeoatradswlth
measure, It wu reported.
~ Racine apd Syracuae are lor
However, when the public three years. "Atleastone~IH
hearings began and the fire -comes u~ for election be!Drt
departments themlelve. bepn then," a resident polated out. ,
trying to compromise, the petl· • 'Let's Just remember tb!!D what
t!on was put on hold.
. •
we've gone thi'Q~Wh now."
Altho~~ah at least two reslde1118
UnleiB aomethln&amp; unforeseen
at Monday 's meeting were 'n happens, · Letart residents are
favor of pursuing the recall assured now of fire protection.
petttlop.' It was finally decided It • Ulrewlle, With the Racine Pewould be wller to walt to make partment categorized as · the
sure the 6}35 contracts are prim&amp;ey responder since they
signed. "SyraC)Ise has a legally will recelve the maJority of
binding colltnct for 50 percent of funding, -residents are · assured .
the pot," a resident said, "and that homeowner's .Insurance
could stU! decide they don't want rates won't Increase. These were
to give up 15 percent."
.•
, the main concerns of towtllhlp .
However, Syracuse Fire Chief reildents.
Eber Pickens said at lui Mon·Some residents are concernell
day 'spub!JcmeetingatAntlqulty hqwever that the ttll&amp;tees mtgbt '
that his departmettt was willing . retaliate against thoae who have
to settle lor. 35 percent. ')Jte publiCly taken a stand agalut
· Syr,a cuse Department was not · them &gt;In this matter, by, for
· represe11ted at last night's example, "refusing to grade my
meeting.
roa~." as a resident pointed out.

.- Bertha Right·
Pomeroy; . Goldie RoLuc!Ue Braley,
Enoch,
Alva Newell,

area.''

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nation's. midsection· .lues

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Pick 4
9274 .
of rain ' " pereenl. Tllunclay,
In low 5411. Chance of rain

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vC.t.40. No. 1 ?~

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2 Soctlono, 14 Peg• 25 Conti
A Multimedio Inc. N-opopor

January 17, 1990

Caperton pledges support for poultry fil'm
. The C!!St is expected to be in the people. This an:a has a lot .0 entice overview, demonstrated the com.
$25-35 miUion range. WLR, Inc., us with."
· pany's chicken process, from · the .
or which Rockingham is a subAory explained that the com- laying of eggs to the packaging of
sidiary, would finance the project pany is still in a sill· to nine-month . the products.
through a combination of cash ftow, decision mating process. Aftt:r
Misner explained the feed mixproposed complex would meet our bank loans and industrial develop- taking apjlroximately a yeat and a ture, temperature controls, and the
corporate objectives to'~ profi- ment bonds.
,
half to be in operation, the earliest market fQCUS!lS, which include
tably while remaining competitive
The new complex would in- the complex would be in opei'ati!)ll Hong Kong.
in our indusay. Tl)is complex cmue RockinBham 's chicken · is in two years.
WLR Foods is. engaged in fully
would place us much closer to production capactty by SO pcn:ent.
"We have been looking at educa- iruegrated turkey and chicken
some of our major markets anct to
"With chicken per capita con- tion, transportation and acces- production, processing, further
the mid-western grilin belt."
sumption predicted to grow from , sibility to the mid-west com belt, processing and marketing. Being
The company is looking for the 67 pounds iit 1989 to 77 pounds by and the availability of labor,'' Flory the eighth largest poulay procesnew complex to produce more than 1995, Rockingham intends to be ·said.
sor/further processor in the United
850,000 chickens a week working positioned. to meet the increasing
However, during the question- States,. WLR Foods reported
~nder a tw&lt;hshift operation. They demand fur chicken," Misner said.
answer period, and after Gov. revenues of $455 million for fiscal
need a IQtal of 337 poulay ·
Still in ihe exploraro,ry process, Caperton had left . .Flory said thai . 1989. Rockingham is ranked 18th
buildings in the specified radius,
. ,
the state was committed to help largest among chicken companies
inclucling the ~ons of Misner saict, "We like West Vtr·
provide better rQ8ds and bridges to in the United States.
hatcheries,
feedmill,
growout ginia. We have eni&lt;&gt;yed working
the area, which received generous · WLR Foods also includes
operations; processing plant, ren- with the state agenctes. We like the
laughter from the audience.
Wampler-Longacrea, Inc.
work ethnics arid we ·enjoy the
dering, storage, and transpOrtation.
Misner, through · slides and an

··Meigs _deputies probe B &amp;-E
A breaking and entering of the
John Marzuchi residence on
Carpenter Hill Road Is under
Investigation by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department:
According to a report received
Tuesday evening by the sheriffs
department, thehomeownerhad
bee!\ away so the breaking and
epterlng was just now discoyered, although It Is believed to
. have happened sometime after
Chris !mas. Several Items are
reported mlsslqg from the home.
A two-velllcle .accident occurred on Monday O!l private
,· ~l;ll!z:ty , In ' ,1b~~£L~ areS:··,

Douglas F. Hensley, or Ch.esteF·,
hill, backed his 1977 Dodge truck
Into the front -of a 1985 Plymouth
owned l)y John Pape Sr . , Bas han
Road. Racine. There was light
damage to Pape's vehicle; no
. damage to Hensley's ..
Sunday at 3 p.m., the depart·
ment. took a report of another
two-vehicle accident In the Ra·
cine area. According to the
report, Sharon Wickersham, of
Route 2, Racine, was . backing
from her garage and did not see
pickup truck operated by Reid
Young pull Into the drive behind
her. ~ sj!g.!!.ac~ up, she struck

the front bumper of Young's
truck. The truck was not damaged. The tall" light on Wickersham's 19~7 Mercury Cougar was
broken. ·
Following his arrest Saturday
night following an accident on
County Road 25 near Meigs High
School, a 17-y,ear·Qid West Vlrgf.
nla juvelllle was .taken to the
Musklngum County Juvenile
Detention Center. He was re•
turned Tuesday morning by·
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell for a
court liearlng.
Following the court hearing,
the juvenile, who walvedextradt., &gt;
tlon, was released to the West
VIrginia State Po.llce. He was
wanted on two charges of auto
theft In Logan County, W.Va .
On Saturday afternoon, deputies arrested 32-year-oid Vicki
Payne on a bad check charge and
palgn, the Republican candidate also a bench warrant from the
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP!) must be able to make the case for Meigs County Court for failure to
Hamilton County Commissioner
the line against new appear In ·colitt: Payne · ·was
holding
Robert Taft II, whom Republican
leaders hoped to steer toward a
ta)&lt;es, " said :Taft. "How can conflnc¥1'to the Meigs County Jail
George Volnovich say 'Read my pending a court llearlng.
. ,
lesser statewide office. entered
lips' afte~ caiUng for these tax
the governor's race Tuesday !lDd
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
· threw the g_a untlet ·a t the feet of
Increases In the past• He can talk that Payne's brother, Br .~nl
his GOP opponent, George
about taxes all he wants, but his Chapman, has been clled to
record . will destroy · his Meigs County Cpurt for hlnde•·
In flames when they arrived. Pomeroy Fire Chief · Voinovtch.
HOME DEsTROYED BY FIRE - The
Taft.
48,
was
joined
by
his
. lng and obstructing an ofllcer by
credibility
.
DanJI)'
Zirkle
reports
no
one
Ia
11ure
what
ciwaed
one..tory frame home of the Marion. Wat1011
lieutenant
governor
running
"Wi;!
cannot
l!l!nd
a
candidate
.
giving ·false Information as to
the
fire
'to
slarlln
the
living
room.
No
one
wu
· lamUy on Old Che~~ler Road. was dl!l troyed late
Into
battle
wtthout
any
weapons,
name and location. Chapman Is
mate,
Franklin
County
Commls·
home at the time. Monetary loii8C!II have not been
Tul!lday manioc by fire. Pomeroy flremea were
stoner Dorothy Teater, In filing
and George Volnovich, unfortu- also to appear In court.
determined. The family lost everything, Zirkle
eallecl to the ~eene at 11:14 a.m., but &amp;be home,
The theft of a Troyblll tiller
nalely, Is a man unarmed," said
nominating
petitions
with
the
reportll,
and
there
wu
no
lnsuruce.
which was owned by Larry -Hudson, was enguBed ,
.
stolen !rom Karen panlels,,Dexoffice of · Secretary or State Taft.
Questloned ci0$Ciy by repor- ter, Is also under Investigation.
Sherrod Brown.·
· He not only created a primary ter&amp; on the Issue, Taft said state Daniels reportP.d that· the Iiller
fight, against the wishes of many revenues are growing by $500 · was stolen within the last month
top 'Republican officials, but he million a year. "I don't see any from an outbuilding near her
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI) I'll be talking a lot about (In makers to make Ohio a leader In
fired
a broadside at Volnovich,
need to raise taxes In the residence.
Reaction to Gov. Richard Ce- campaigning): education, job conflict resolution, care for the
future," he said. But
The 's heriff's department was
foreseeable
leSte's "Let's stick with It" State development, eeonomlc growth addicted and elderly, education saying the former Cleveland
mayor cannot be believed on the he declined to flatly rule out any not! !led Monday that the cross
the state message Tuesday and drugs."
·
and manufacturing and
Issue of taxes and Is an Invitation tax Increase between 1991 and . which had been stolen recently
wai Jow-key, Democrats ,agreeCelehrezze would not say he employment.
1995, when ·he would be governor from ' the Faith Gospel Church,
to
"disaster" for the party .
Ing Ohio Is headed In the right shares the exact same goals for
"II was a wish list with very .
If elected.
·
.• Long Bottom, was recovered
·
"When
George
Bush
says
'No
direction but Republicans saying Ohio as Celeste, but said If few specifics," said Rep. JoAnn
!eels
Monday evenlng. Mr. and Mrs .
Stetner
said
Volnovich
new
taxes.'
you
know
he
means
the governor's goals are not eiected he 'would havetoevaluate Davidson. R·Reynoldsburg. ·"It
that the last two state budgets Chester. Muridry, Reedsville,
It,"
Taft
told
a
press
conference.
specific enough.
each area of concern as he goes was his swan song."
"When George Volnovich says · have Increased by 20 percent found tl!e cross lying, undam"Ohio Is on the move, and the along.
· Citing bills on solid waste
'No new taxes,' hold onto your aplece and •'what we need now Is aged, on the lower edge of the
·.keYls to keep It on the move, "
''Each lea~er puts his or her dl~posal and recycling of trash,
Continued on page 10
Reedsville Cemetery.
wallets."
said Attorney General Anthony own set of goals In place," he House ·Spealter Vernal Riffe Jr.
. "We have anticipated a prim·
Celebrezze, a fellow Democrat said.
said many of the Items Celeste
ary
fight right from the begin·
wbo hopes to SUfCeed Celeste
In his final State of the State discussed are already being
ning,"
said Voinovich. "There's
:next year. "He hit on four_areas address, Celeste challenged law- dealt with by the General
going to be a primary (contest) ."
Assembly:
.
.
"It looks like Taft and Teater ·
The Wheelersburg Democrat :
have lost their grip,' ' said Curt
acknowledged the unemploy·
Steiner, a Voinovlch camplilgn
The Gajlla-Melgs Post of the State' Highway Patrol
ment compensation trust ~und
aide. "W.ben you start the cam·
InveStigated an "Injury" . accident at ·4: 16 p.m. Tuesday In
"needs some work on It," which
palgn with a negative attack,
Meigs
County, on SR. 7, In Salisbury Township, at the
Celeste suggested.
that'i
a
~lgn of panic." ,
Intersection
of CR. 1.
"In 1989 . ... we passed our
Taft
said
tha:t
during
his
tenure
.
Troopers
salci
Kimberly K. Eblin, 17, Rt.1, RutlanCI, driving a
Ct&gt;LUI\fBUS, Ohio CUPil - · Industries.
fourth straight balanced
as
a
countY,
commissioner,
th~
1984
Olds
Omega,
headed east on CR. 5, pulled Into the path of a
Gov. Richard Celeste challenged
And In what appeared to be a budget," the governor told a joint
commission
has
lived
within
Its
1989
Chevrolet
Celebrity,
driven south on SR. ? .by Laura L.
.the Ohio General Assembly Tues- final formal salute to the law- legislative session. "Let's stick
budget rather than Increasing
Sweet,
24,
Clnclrutllti.
There
was heavy damage to both
day to join him In setting the makers, he gave thef!! credit, with it.
the
.sales
or
property
taxes.
The
vehicles.
. "In 1989 ... we enacted compre·
•· ··" stage lor Ohio to lead the nation naming apecllli:: names, for var·
only tax Increases.• he said, were
Eblin, who suffered minor visible Injuries, was taken to
by the end of the century In lous successes of the past.
henslve education reform. Let's
levied
by a vote of the people.
Memorial. Hospital and treated but not admitted .
Veterans
.employment ud production, ed·
"I appreciate the relationship stick with 11.
But
Taft
said
Volnovlch
sup.
The
patrol
cited ~blbt for failure to yield the right or way.
"In 1~ ... we lnltlatec:i essenucation, care lor the elderly and we've enJoyed, when we agreed
ported
a
tax
increase
at
the
local,
till! reform to provide more
addiCted, and conflict resolution. and even when we dl8agreed," be
in'home
•s ervices for our older state or federal level in ".no fewer
· "We're lieaded In · the right said. '
.
than nine Instances aver a
citizens. Let's sUck with it.
direction," Celeste told a joint
The 35-mlnute message, Inter·
period."
five-year
Theft Or ~ .1987 Ford Thunderbird owned ' by ·James Mills,
"In ·1989 ... we created a
seillon of til~ LegWatw:e ill his rupted only 10 times by applauae,
Pomeroy,
remalnl uader investi1at1on by the Pomeroy Pollee
ke acculll!d Voinovtc.h Of twice
cabinet-level voice to tackle the
e{ghth and final "State of the wu rec.lved routinely by tbe
Depal'trlliDI.
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tougb cballenge of addiction," · supporting a Cleveland Income
State" addresi. "Let'·s atlck With audience, which for the first time
.
StoiC!il
trellll
the
Mills'
driveway
tit
250
Union
Ave. about 1:30
~
~a~r
sa&gt;'lng
In
;1981
he
would
said Celeste. "Let's stick with
In memory, failed to flll the seat's
It."
.
a.m.
TueldiY,
the
vehicle
was
recovered
a,tl!:
3'1
p.m. lut night
not
aak
for
more
mODC!)':
support·
lt."
Tbe governor recalled . the lor a goveraor's address In the
on
Powelra
Super.Valu
parking
lot:
·
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·
·
1883
lncre~
in
the!
atate
lng
a
"He fared pretty well,'' Senate
challenges that laced him when Hotlll! chamber .
inCOrlle
tax
and
oppo.tq
Ita
Pollee
repoclllthat
the
car
was
spotted
by
a
sheriffs
deputy.
he took oflke In 1983, particuCeliiiU! received a prolonee:ct . President Stanley Aronoff, R·
and calUng for a federal
The engine wuatlll hot when nfflelals arrived on the acen:e. The
larlY a buge state dflflclt, cl01lng s~lna ovat,IOD at the end, but Cincinnati. aald of Celeste's repeal;
c..Ia being checked for fingerprints, police report.
tax
hike
to
IJalallee
the
budpt.
.factories, record unemplb)'llltRI some ·oblervers lhoqht he two-term accompllabmenta.
,
Alao
lrivestWated by Pomeroy pollee Tuesday was an
"Wh-11
Gc!orp
VciiDovlch
rec"From a nat IDDal perspective, he
and a crumbling education tacked Ida custolnal')' oratorical
ognized
that
.theft
Ia
a
u.d
lor
a
·
accident
near tile -Intersection of East Main ind Coun Street&amp;.
ayrhnn.
.
fire. "This tsa't -arUy the was very amart to leave the
· tu lncreue, be' • had the cour·
Clareace f)'IUIII. ftaclae, w• ll'avellng eut In bli truck 011 Eaat
He claimed that b)' using the place for a pip rally,'' aid Sen. people feeUng good."
age
to.
~·k
the
cltlzeaa
for
It,"
Main
when Eatb~lla Powell, Long Bottom, pulled from a
AlthoqbnoUnatherewerefew
"three cardiDal principles" of Neal Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton,
replied
Steiner,
pointing
out
that
parking
place Into the rear pasaenpr llde or the Frank truck.
self·rellance, ·· Innovation and "but lt'1 been llaed lbat way· specifiCS In the lpeeeb, Aronoff
Teater
alto
oppoaecl
repeal
of
the
Thete
wu
moderate damaJe to the truck Uld llabt damaae to
nevertheleaa admitted, "He
cooperation. tile atate estab- before...
state
Jnrome
tax
bike
becau•
thll
Powell
vehiCle
on the driver's aide troalfender. Mrs. Powell
Jisbecl a baiiUicecl blldpt, In·
The IOWrnor aid Ohio' a awlft touched on the a me Issues · 1
abe
feared
a
·
1011
of
local
wu
cited·
for
failure
to yield the rllbt, of way.
·
lttated education refol At and ·recovery wu believed to be out would .have touched on."
gove~nrn,ntmopey.
"He'll be a bard act to follow,"
' Cc'11hlnued on page 10
bretlgbt about a re1urpnce In of lila realm of poulblllty In 1913,
''In a general . election cam·
Contlnlll!d
oa
page
10
till automcl\llle, ateel and other
Continued on Plfe 10

PQE&amp;IDENT'&amp; DAY
I&amp; JANUJ\~QY 18
AT PEOPLE£ ·BANK·
,

Wedne~day.

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

CoPY,rlghted 1110

[.ottery numbers

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of the Rijl\ey, W;VB., High School forts and ~ management to
to moet rept 1eutatives from ·the , ~ chu:tens of the highest
Rock:iugluun Poulay; Inc. Joining quality ·then we can't come to this
the 111!8 r'elidenll was West Vtr· area."
· .
ginia Gov. Gaton Caperton.
·
"You are the key to making this
The Vupnii-beaed poulay com- wort. We need to wort ·to show
.JWIY is looking at a possible site in this company lhat we want it here,"
Raveitswood to locate a new Rock· · Caperton said. ''This is a real
~ham Poulll)', Inc.; integntred partnerShip witb muwal benefits.
chicken production complex. This
"I pledge my full support of the
would crste up- to 800. jobs for governor's ofllce and the state's
people in i 35-mi.le nditis.
. · , ecollOOiie cle~~ent . ~ ~
· ''\Ve aJe finding that we are saris- this a real ~~ O!pertOn confying ourselves with Jackson eluded. ,
COIDity," said Douglas L. Aory,
The OOiripany is looking., for
chief oJ)erating officer of WLR families to join the company in

tng 46 degrees: In •Missouri,
Motorists Ignored chalri and dense _log advisory was lifted
Kansas Oty reporte&lt;! 55 degrees
snow-tire . warnings !lnd, at 0ne .after several hours lor northern
and
St. Louis was also warm at
l!oint, as many as 300 vehicles and east-central lndlllna where ..
53.
were stalled along the snow- visibilities had been reducect to
Patchy fog also cOvered east· ·
covered roadway leading Into the less than one-quarter mUe.
ern Pennsylvania, ~New
6,000-foot mountain recreational
Fog was blamed for a ·seven·
vehicle pileup on Interstate 70 Jersey and Delaware ~night,
and ski •rea.
with lows In the upper~ ·
The highway was reopened · near Knightstown, Ind., that
High pressure dominated th~
late Monday with warnings drlv· killed an Indlanilpolls couple Jate
South, glytng the region partly
ers would .b e ticketed for falling Monday. Hancock County sheto obey chain and snow-tire riff's officials said Gerald cloudy' an4 tnUd weather.
Temperatures ranged from 46 .
requirements.
Greene, 62, a!ld his wife, Viola
Greene, 52, died when tlie lead degrees In Jacks.onville, Fla., to
To the north, a Pacific cOld vehicles approached a bank of 51 In Atlanta and 70 In Miami.
front bringing rain swept ashore thick fog and their · drivers
,After a daptp day of flurries
jn Orj!gOn Monday night after a braked too fast, causing the
and drizzle, clouds broke over
cloudy · day with only a · few chain-reaction accident.
NI!W England early Tuesday,
sprinkles.
~nging clear skies In Provl·
In northern nunol$, dense fog
An upper-level disturbance en· creatctd hazardous conditions for dence, where temperatures were
tered Oklahoma, north Texas, motorists In the Cblcago metroIn the mid 30s.
and parts of Arkansas and politan area, reducing visibility
Louisiana Tuesday., bringing a and creljtlng slick .road condl·
chance of Isolated evenbtg showtlons. The temperature held at 39 ·. , . CLEVELAND (UP I) _ Man·
ers and thundershowers .
degrees
and NWS forecasters
day's wlnnlrig Ohio Lottery
A storm centered over the
said a "moist south flow over
numbers·
southwestern United States procold
iround"
caused
the fog to
· PICK-3
duced scattered snow over the develop.
western and northern."m01p1talns.
511.
.
Winter thunders!Qrms devePIC!&lt;-3 ticket sales totaled
of New Mexico while tog · loped early Tuesday In south·
$1,172,862.50, with a payoff due of
shrouded the Texas and Loulsl· central Illinois along a cold front,
$1,450,212.!50.
ana Gult Coast early Tuesday.
causl11g dangerous lightning and
· PICK-4
. Fog also caused problems In some brief heavy ralu. Unsea·
7674.
Illinois and Indiana, while south sonably warm temperaturesc()n·
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
to Missouri skies were clear and tlnued throughOut the state, With
$220,t73, with a payoff due of
temperatures held up Into the Pear~. In wesu;rn llllpols, reach~1.~00.
50s, the weatl)er service said. A
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~ · Taft

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a

rdes petition·for

Ohio governor's race

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We Invite· You To Meet Our New
President (f1 CEO ...

Reactio~ .

JOE ELLiroN

low-key to_Celeste's talk

ot ,

And

·Local news briefs--

•.• ' 11

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JOin Us In 'J1lankirl8 Our Qelinf18
' . President (f1 CEO :,..

JAME~

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Gov. Celeste. gives last
'state-of-sttite' message

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LEWI~
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At· An Open House, Thursday, January -18 .
From 7:00 ~ 9:00 p.m.
·In The 'Peoples ·Bank Lobby
Point PleaSant
.Program at 7:00 p.m.
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WELCOME!

MEMBER FDIC

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Driver injured in mishap

Police· probe theft of automobik

MASON • POINt PLEASANT • NEW HAVEN

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Foods, Inc. "But the most impOr· · l)uildil)g hatcheries, breeOO' Jtouses
rant aspect of aU this is you. If we and pullethouses.. , .
· can't find enough inrerest in a 25- . "What we need to do is expand,"
More than a thousaitd people to' 35-mile rildius • people willing said Dr. Gene Misntt, president of
croWded $ng the wall&amp; and aisles · to put in their time, money, and ef- Rockingham Poultry, Inc., ''This

. 7f:J"

- Charles waY,Findling, and Flo

Pick 3

· MARGARET CALDWELL
OVP News Staff

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"Are we goillg to stick taptlter U
thlllll like that sbould start to
happen?" Ute resident ukecl.
It wollld appear tbat raldellta·
are going to tr)' to atlck _together
liy continuing their publiC meet·
IIIIJ on a bi-monthly basil.
Committees of re1ldellla WUI.tao
.he lonned to at lind trut•'
· meeibtp as regularly as poul.·
ble, ·wtth those committees to
report back to the . public . •
1
meetbtgs.
The first committee appointed
Monday night IJICiucles Carrie .
·Roush, her daughter-in-law, also
Carrie Ro\1111, and Mae.Durst:
The trustees are alio be Invited
to the. public meetlnp With the ·
first one scheduled for 7 p.m.
Feb. 12, at the D&amp;R Tackle Box.
·"If notllingelse baicomeoutof
all this this," said Gary Jpe
Wolfe, who conducted Monday's
meeting· along with Luda .(Sug)
Anderson, "at ieast the trustees ,
have learned that we're con··
cerned abOut what goes on In our

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·J'he :Oaily Sentinet . 11. a JUI~&amp;etr..ao.,or isn't it?
i.

111 Couri street
Pomeroy, Oblo

DEVOTED TO THE lNTEiti!I!TS OF THE_MEIGS-MASON AREA
.
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Bm~ """""'._..,..,~=

qjv

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ROBERT L ..WINGETl' .
Publlllher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Auiowt Publlsher/ControUer ·

CHARLENE BOEn.JCH· •

Geoer-' Maaqer

LE1TER8 OF OPINION are weleome. They lllotold be leu lhanlllt
words Ioa1. AU letlero are Hbjecllo edltlnl • • mut be all!letl wllll
name, addrlBo and telephone number. No •ne!ped hit- wW be publlslled. Leltero obould he In JI'IOd Iaaie, addreloJalll-.-•tit ~f.

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Have the senior8
.
lost their clout?
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ByARNOLDSA~LAK

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WASHINGTON--IfltloobWre - ICoJII,
Thailand aad. Ha. ajunlretandflleii llke•Jutret.li It wall- the,.,._foftbeaunbeltand
. a junket? You be the Judge.
the 1hopplng belt - 1s led 'by
SeveralmembersoftheHouse Reps. Cbarles Rangel, D·N.Y..
Select Committee on Narcotics . and Lawren~:e Coughlin. R·Pa.
are due back thll weekend froma
A dl'aft ltile'afy obtained by our
trip to the OrieJ!t and Haw.all. associate Stewart Harris Indicates
There Is probably much to be that the members would not be at·
learned about drug t~afflcklng In ·tending .any of the fOrmal dlplothe Orll!l)t. But we wonder why matlc flinctlolui that require an esthe members thougb.t It wu ne- . cort for so-C:alled ''representacessary to take their wives.
Ilona! Jill!rpcan" - inQther popu·
The usual excuse won't work lar excuse for taking spouses.
' this time. Members or Congress
Most or the meetings were with
are fond or , saying thal their law .enforcement types to learn
spouses cost nothing on trips be- about heroin trafficking. In Seou~
cause they fill seats on otherwise for exaple, the group was schehalf·empty alrplnes. supplied by duled to meet wth Soutb Korea's
the Air Force. In this case, the attOJ;DeY gelieral. It was much the
committee asked up fro~t for 'a ', same In Banlkokand Hong Korig.
plane big enough 19.take wives. In Hawaii on Friday, the comThe "working" members of - mlttee Is scheduled to attend a
the delegation could have fit Into l)eartng. We t~ thilt the wives
an economical '16-passeilger Air wW skip the beach·and attend the
force Gulfstream; ' But what· hearing too.
they got was ·a fllel' hog, 61J.pas·
lbe committee o~lglnally asked
lll!nger C-135, the military's vei. for a plane big enough for 20 peo.
slon of a Boeing 707. After some pie. The89thSpecialAirMisslonmembers canceled, the plane We llketocaU It "Air Congress"took off with six congressmen · Is based at Andrews Air Force
and five wives.
·,
Base outside or Wubington. Its
Had the delegatio!\ kliown there function 1s to carry lniportant peawould be so many empty seats, -plearoundtheworld-peoplewho
they could have Invited all their are too Important to fly regular
third cousins tWice removed. After airlines.
all, the plane was going anyway.
•. If,a delegation has 16 members
The delegation to Korea, Hong or fewer, the Air Force as!;~~

UPI Senior EIJI&amp;er
- Over the years, a number or groups, "special
interests If you will, have exercised •heavyweight Influence on
Capitol Hill.
·
·
During the middle and.latter stages of the NeW Deal, labor unions
held big time clout In Washington.
·. . · ,
,
At the 1944 Democratic National Co11venuon, wohl WI!S pas'sed that
President Franklin Roosevelt had told•party leaders to "Cl!!ar 11 with
Sidney,'' meaning Sldney·lflliman, head of the CIO ·Political Action
Committee, before deciding any major Issues, such as the vice
presidential nomination.
Hillman supposedly preferred Vice President' Henry Wallace ror
another term but In the lace of strong party opposition agreed 'to Sen.
Harry Truman of Missouri. Assuming that Wallace as ·president
would have b,een less likely to oppose the Soviet Union than Truman
the decision had a decisive impact on the history or the last 50 year·s:
Labor lost Its "king of the hill" status with the death of FOR and the
: end of World War 11, which brought on a rash of ll)ajor strikes. When
Congress passed_the Taft-Hartley Act over Truman's veto, It was
clear Big Labor was no lOnger the pre-eminent lobby In Washlligton.
Other groups such as farmers and veterans al,sO wielded major
clout during the same period.
.;
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·· AgricUlture gained Its power much the same way as the New Deal
Itself - by coalition. Legislators from cotton and tobacco states ·
joined lawmakers from wheat and corn states In .a "farm bloc" that
dictated government agrlciljfural policy . ·
.
.
The farm blilc held sway until the heavy cost of agricultural
subsidies split its unity and Issues, such as civil rights, made Jt
difficult for the North and South to work together.
.
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The veterans got their clout from sheer numbers. World War I vets
had some power, but they had to fight for more than a decade to get a
relatively small bonus in the 1930s and a health care system through
the Veterans Administration.
,
But they did organiZe some .strong groups,- notably the American
Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and when World War 11
called 12 million men and women Into service, the vets bad the
numbers needed to Impress the politicians. The GI 'i'lll of Rights they
got - a broad and costly program of educational, housing and .
economic ·benefits - ·may have been the most valuable booty ever
awarded to any army. The veterans' Impact faded as they aged and
1
prospered and as the veterans of Korea and Vietnam resisted
established otganlzatlons.
· At the same time, another group, old people or "!ieniors" gained
influenee.
·
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· While It might be argued that the·old folks had power since the 1930s
~ \when Social Security was first enacted, It wasn't until Medicare and
cost-of-living Indexing was added to Social Security in the l960s and
1970s that "gray power" really reached Its zenith.
·
Now, with fractious repeal of the catastrophic ·Illness .Insurance
law, It Is possible that the elderly will follow unions, farmers and
veterans Into the ranks of second-rate interest groups.
WASHINGTON
!NEAl Does th~ extraordinary treat· '
The seniors still are numerous and well-organized, but the struggle
to pass the catastrophic Illness measure and then· to junk It the
ment of Panamanian Gen. Mlj.n· ·
uel ' Antonio Noriega' herald •the
following year may have exposed such a wide schism and angered so
many members of Congress that the elderly will lose clout:
opening of a nf!)W era In which ~e­
posed despots are prosecu tell lor
The fact that th~ elderly lost 's persistent and effective champion
with the death last year of Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., will only make
their crimes In office rather than
retired to tropical resorts?
It harder lor the seniors to remain at the top of the lobbying hill.
Nobody knows the answeli to
that question but It does present
the Intriguing possibility of the
beginning of a third phase In the
'
---~....;.;
~_;,-- . u.s. attitude toward the dlclato·
rial misfits who become other
countries' chiefs of state. .
The first phase lasted thrughout ·
the 19th century and most of the
. 20th century. On scores or occa. slons, troops were dispatched to
other nations not 10 topple tyrants
but to prop them up because they
had fubioned alliances with U.S.
commercial interest~ operating In
their countries.
A disproportionate number of
those military operations occurred In Central Amerlaa (In·
eluding three forays.,lnto Pa·
•
nama - In 1856, 1865 •nd 11103)
and the Caribbean, accou~ttlng
· for .the residue of lll wUI toward
WASH~GTON

bypasses:North·Gallia 7 ·-

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Jack,(~

PDI.,...

thousandl of "sldabeadt" In ;;
America- )IOIIJIIrplilplot,...ad· :
vocate racism and
vloleace ;
against anyone different (rom ·;
themselves. Most ·of tllem are :.
willie men between the ages of15 ·:
aad 25 who btve lOUred on So- ·;
clety. They .aeek scapegoats to •• .
blame for tbelr own failures and :.
fruatratlons. Fed4!ral investlgl· •·
tors have det'ected a common ·: ,
thread. Moat skinheads come ·.':
from broken families. The inse· ; : ~
curlty they felt as children devel- •
oped Into rage by attacking oth· :
ers.
;
MINI-EDI'fORIAI:. The •
American Heart Association 11 ~
ThetrlpwUicosttbetaJ~payers
angry becauie the AIP'Iculture •
$136,185.50 In filghl ho11rs before Department won't ~low Heart ;
.the delegation gets home. :That's Guide labels on meat and 1101!1·
·$32,357.25 more than the Gulf·
try. The labels tell CORS\IlllerS
stream would have cost. The de·
that a food product meets He.art
· legation would ·bave saved even Assoclalton criteria for healther
more If it had flown first class on eating. E~cept the Heart Associa commercial airliner.
· alton won't reveal what that crl·
ThreememberswhoWI!ntalong · terla Is. The seal ;Of ·llfitroyalls _:•
arenotexactlyregularsatNarcot· available to food ma~ wbo ·.
lcs Committee hearings. A source meet· the standards, and pay
close to the
committee said fee. Americans already rely. too
Herger, Parris and Sensenbren- much pn abbreviated labels and ·
ner rarely attend committee hear· sym bois when deciding what to
tngs. Maybe that's because the eat. lndead of enc:ouraglng res·
committee doesn't hold lts·hearlng ponslble decisions, those labels
In Honolulu.
frequently encourage reliance
PROFILE OE A SKINHEAD on someone else to Rl,lk!! the de-

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·. e'n'.· o· ut·.las't .
Red.Wom
h·'n:nm·e·.'b·'ack.
a ls

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1&gt; ·
:V!slUng Walah moun~ .• ·
strlll!ll!lic:olld baJf ,com~Uo
virtually
a healthy lt!acfby
the .Unlveralty of Rio Grllilde
women's team, but the ReCiwo- .
inen rallied to post a 78-62
Mid.Qblo Contereilc:e vli:toi:Y •
Tuesday at Lyne Center. . ·
·. The Rio ladles Imp~ lhell:

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.Berry's Wort a.

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Kl"l. Wl!l' .u10 lbe team'~ top
rebowl'derWtth nliie wbtii!FI'I!d·
rlck'reeorded•flve ..llata,
'
· • Cllftpbell bad 14 polnta II!('
four "'bounds for tbe Lady
C.vallen, with Hantaofaky ad·
dii!J iO markers. Jeanine Klein·
b - led ber teammates on the
boards wt~b eJaht.

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Kansas- ~tate up·se·ts No 3 Soo
. ne.r fi·ve

~=r::.:::c::~~ :d.t:: . ~r=~~e~~~~-

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Ne·w Boston·.
Sou·th'
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r...oMMllNIS15 HAVI?
INF ILT RAT~D T"~IP
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SOVI~ B\9C CoUNTRIEl~,

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this country ihat perslsts .across
the region today.
The second phase, a very recent development, Involved plac·
lng considerable pressure on die·
tators to relinquish tMir power
and flee their homelands but
then helping them escape to
sunny climes suitable for retire·
ment.
The two best known beneflciar·
les of that policy were President
Ferdinand E. Marcos of the Phil·
lpplnes and President-for-Lite
Jean-Claude Duvalier of Haiti,
both o~ whom were depcsed and
fled Into exile ,In early 1986.
Both despots and their families
were fiown out of lhelr native
countries In U.S. Air Force tran·
sport planes. Duvallerwascarrled
to Franch, where he eventually
settled on the Riviera and lives today. Marcus was taken to Hawaii,
whose comforts he enJoyed untU
.he died of natural causes last year.
Although there Is no evidence of
similar direct U.S. tnvblvement,
covert assistance· reportedly was
provided to two other toppled die·
lators - President Anui&amp;Sio So-

moza Debayte of Nicaragua and
Gen. Alfredo ·stressner of Par'a·
guay - who had simUar experl·
ences in recent decades.
Somoza went Into exile In Pa·
raguay In the summer of 1979,
but was killed ther;:&gt; slightly
more .than a year later by assas· f
sins firing ,machine guns ·and a
bazooka. Stroessner 'fled to a
Brazilian beach resort (where he
still lives) a(ter "being overthrown.!n a coup early las( year.
To the extent that there .Is no
cont;:&gt;mporary precedent' for the
tre.a tment or Noriega - unrelenting White House pressure for
his capture and rernoval to' this
country to be tried on criminal
charges -his handling could ~ig·
nal the start or a third phase In
which the United States-Insists
that tyrants be charged for their
crimes. .
But lhere also are mitigating clr·
cumstances that· suggest Noriega
could be the e""""tlon to the rule.
Indeed,' U.S. diplomats orteted him
the comtortable-exlle-ln-return-forprompt-retirement opUon at last
twice In recent years- In the spr·

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to be was a list or time-saving
hints w!Jereby we women could
,still "do It all" without bothering
our husbands and kids much: But
that's another story.
Things went downhill from
there: For most of the decaJ!e, I
held down a full-time job, a part·
tlmejobanddldsomewrltlngfor
maeazlnes .In-between. Why? .
Well, I'll have to admit some of ·
my zeal came from my belief
thall needed more money. But a
stronpr lniluence wu my feellng that 'I ahould·always do more
and be more, that It wasn't enouebt to be aatlsfled with what I
wu doing at the moment.
Columnist Ellen Goodman says
that this "lust for productivity" became the true passion of the cJe.
cade. It~s no Jonpr considered
~orkaholllm, she says, but a
bad,teofefftclency.Suchtwolers· ·
as dlallnr and drlvlng have become statui symbolti tor execu-

SVAC .•· ,.-dinO&lt;.a

TO QUALIFI.D BUYERS UP TO 60 MONTHS

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SoulltV.,.tern it t.alern,
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- ~k HliUt North Gallla · ·
t
Published ~ry 1111!1'110011, Monday· .
SyJ:lllnes,
Valley
at
K;ypr
Creek
lbr...h Friday, U1 Court St, .....

(VIPII._l , •
•.lllly-ofllllllltiD........

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UlldOI[ COinpany/Maltlmedla, lni:,,
l'elne&lt;Df; Olllo CS'III, Ph.ll2-21!11. !Je.

Sou..;~r.t:~:t'.~
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Kyeerer.tta~POrtsmotitli ~aat · .._ __,___...;.._ __ ,

Olllo.

Mlntoril It Oak Hill

Sarah Overstreet ;

·llembor: Unital Preaa lnternoltonal,
bland DilDy Pr- .luoclattonan&lt;l tile
• Oldo~IOCidatlo&amp; National
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Olle Weok .......................:,, ........

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IIIIOL&amp; ClOPY

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I .

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Com~lete Pre-Natal SerVices

Annual Gynecologi~ Chedc·Up
~ap Smears + Breast Exami ations

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F~ Planning

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rltr ~...., nmlf Ia ..........
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~Other c;&gt;B/G~ Procedutes

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$8795

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~bstetrics &amp; Gyneoo~ogy

:

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£tally ................................... 21

I

1987 AEROSTAR

Benjamin. J. Sol, -M.D •

Ont ..,....... ,; ..............................10
......................... ~ ........ m.10 '

'()at Year

'.1988'
.(.,WN VIOORIA
4 DR.

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$8095

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1989 FORD
TEMPO GL
4 DR.

=

eon&lt;! &lt;lou poor.,e paid at Pom....,.,

•
•
•

HILL fORD, INC.

~ 1·1.9 5~~0 A.P.R. FIXED RATE AYAILA~LE

a

tlves. 11 Isn't constdered dltzy anymore to drink coffee apply ma·
than we did. Ironically, when the
keup. and Insert eo~tact lenses s(H;alled "lald·back" days ofthe
While commuting to· work It's mellow era filtered down to the
seen, perveraely, as belng~U-orMidwest, J foulld It maddeningly .
ganlzed."
anxlety-provodlng Ju~t to~ !.o .
On one hand, tbla' productlvlty relax and slow down a lilt~. ,
just Is fueled by teChnology that
This constl!ll pressure . thal
mal(es 11 possible to dial 'n'
has framed my history m~ .
drive, exercise wbUe learning me believe our fut pace comes :
French and watch two television
not •o ltiU\!h fron! ,techDOIOIIY as
program• on one ·acreen Blit ftom an Ingrained ~tblc a«illlllt
that's only lhe most curre~t ver·
wasting time or being perceived ,
slon. I belan to feel Ill pressures , as lazy. Soclo~ta called It the .
way back In the late '60s In high
"Purltali Work Ethic" 30 year• '
school, when we Were' all ex· . ago, and I think the tmn Is just :
peeled 10 be Involved In 11 many
as flttlnr todJI,y. Let's fiCI!. It, :
school aetlvltlel 81 we· could
kldl, hard work and iUUt are our
handle while keeping up our
berltqe.
'
grades.
·
M
our teachers were pr~ded to tbe !:~~~:.:!"tl:;~~
have the best marching banda
vltlel moat Important tq us, the .
basketball teams and Fu~
time In wbteb to do them &amp;lid tile .'
Farmers of Ameria dl\rY·J•"'•·
ton to
·
lng. squadlln tbelr dtstrlcta ';:d compa11
i" easy on- ftr. ·•·
they suffered even lonpr hours
the fo~ tkerrrl,! ·

APPLIANCES

~PAT

.:

lngof1988upderPreslde!liR.ea!i!W .
and In the autw'nlt of 1989 under
President Bush.
' · '·
But the. combative Noriega
preferred to strut about Panama
City and ta,unt the United States
about Its inability to depose hlm
through · the Imposition-of I!CQn· · ·
omlc, diplomatic ·and. military. · · ·
sanctions.
·
The extent to which Bush then ··.
felt obliged to commit Ills persp- "
nal prestige to lhe capture of No. ·
riega ":" dead or aUve - was .n:
lustra ted by, the unprecedented ·· ·
act of offering a Slmlllion ""unty ·
fora former chief' of.state.
There were otber factors that ; •
made Noriega a special case :,_
InCluding ttie slaying of Marine ·
Corps lieutenant on the street&amp; of ·
Panama City and the pendliig' . ·
criminal Indictments In Florida . ·
alleging his extensive Involve·
ment In narcotics tra!flcl(ing.
Thus, the extent to which his •
treatment establishes a new '
standard for handling desjlots re· ,I
mains uncertain - but·we can atways hope that other tyrants wlli.
meet a similar fate. ·
..

·Our heritage .is· hard work and .guilt
Like most of ·you, i•ve ' been
readlne som~ of the plethora of
"end•of·tbe-decade" analyse!lln
newspapers and magazines.
To bear ~he writers talk, boy,
those ,must ve been some mean
times. We who lived ·through
them w.ere supposedly · greedy,
narclulstlc, obsessed with sta·
tus, extravagant, ~nxlolas and ·
sellouts to the ldeills of the '60s
(.which, might I add, have be'
come Idealized In the mlsll of
11J1!11!0'1Y a1 only liD-year-old blstory can)·
·
They may be' rlgbt, but what ·
i ~11 remember most allout the
1 801 II feeling I'- t wu alwaya a·
I' day beblnd wbere I sblluld have
. been. H notblnr else, the '801
werebu•y. ·Ibelanthedecaderev~r • book called "Superw!i~an, In which a wife/mother·'Tney reli me you re m oeepnole JOumaltsrr. . ..
professional laid . out,plans
. wher~!JY we women could '1Jave
.._._._ _...__ _ _ _..,...-.,_ _ _-:--.-~---.--- It all. What the book turned out .

·

Cavaliers went to 5-8 and 1·1. ,
sank ·eyen !'f nine' free throw '
,
~
.
e
·.
Wblle IJ'II~eflll fQr the win,
attemptS for.77.7 percent. W•lsb
' .
·
"
'
.
.
Coach Douj Foote was .con• ·, coi)III!Cied on 2&amp;-bf 61 field ' ~
.
B:y~SHAJN •,
. A~kla Jones ?dded 14 as a very and scorg_alotofpojnts . You just and then the game kind of broke
c'erned about his , team's ~,~,te~PII for '38.8 percent aad
' UPI8pa111 Wfltei'
I
dellberat,e Kansas State game want· to score more points."
down from there.
pertorman~:e.
•!'
. . ~·:t1.4' -~iii (10.1•) from ·, 'Kan!'lls Statt: simply slq~!! l!s:· plan .set up a 66-51 ·upset·vlctory
Oklahoma shot just 29 percent
"It was kind of a keep-away
''TIIere wu not a .loi of . the ·line.· Tlie keclwoinen ' lleld
game down, aiid-tftat caused No. · over the Sooners. ·
from the floor and was held 71
wrestling match. I don't think
intensity on our part," he said. · their iurnovers 'to 17 wbllli.Walsh 3 ~klahOlJia's · blgh-octan~ oi-·
"We got It out of the up-and- points under .its' nation-leading either team really shot the ball
"When we reached 42 points In ' · loet the ball 23 Urnes, and Rio tense to sputter and die. •
, down tempo," Kansas State 122.2 scoring average In suffer·
really good, except they do have
Transfer Jean Derol!lllerf! Coach Lon Kruger said. "The · lng Its first loss oft he season. The one player that really had the hot ·
scoring in the first half ·we Grande Jed In rebollllj!Jna, 37·29.
assumed the game was over, We . The Redwomen 'f ace former scored 23 points and fresbmari objective Isn't to outrun them · point to!al was Oklahoma's low- hand that I thought was the big
gotcomplacent, we gotoutofotar MOC opponent Malone at home
·
·
est since a 6H91oss to Indiana In
difference In the ballgame. "
offense and we dJ'cln't del the, Sat'w~ !II' p.m.,wblle Wallb
de~eats
the 1983 NCAA tournament.
Derouillere, who missed all10
tbinp we did to ac:ore •2 PQinll,
holts Moulit Vernon' Nazarene
.II
"It was as bad as we've ever
shots In Ills last outing, hit 10 ofl5
~ WaWI never quit once. It Saturday.
·•
·
had," Oklahoma Coach Billy against Oklahoma . He said the
onlyshowsuswestUJhavesome BeXIMlOJ:t!:
. . . ..
w~t ;
Tubbs said. "Webrokedownin victory was particularly satisfy.
tblngs to learn.~·... .
,
~10 OBANPE (18) -' Jel\lll
·
. . ,·n ~0 .
'J:Iabout every phase or .the game lng because when he was being ·'
·: Co,k hhootlng which ~w :Wilsh · ,Couch, 2·2·6; be,bble Fredrick,
"'.
• 1;
·
you can break down ln. We recruited by Tubbs last year out
COft!II!CI on l)lne of:IJ!fleld ;go81 · . 4:.6-ll; Kerrl Kidwell, 7·1·15; Ann
Pciar 'slioot1n1 by visiting . New Boslpn ....... 30 16 26 22-94 weren't bad defensively for 30 of junior college, the Oklahoma
' ll,)temptslntheflrsthalfderal!ed .• ~rnlt~! 5·2·12; ~tby SnYder, SouthwesJernlnthetblrdquarter •1 , NEW · BOSroN (94)- Loper mlnute.s. but we never got our coach . mentioned that the Soon·
the visitors' chances as th!! · ·, 1·0-2;,f'. ,Cindy l;tldjeway, . 2·0·4; ·of T\,tesday nlgrit•• tame against J 12-0·0·24; Truitt 8-0·2·18; Hoi- offense on track and missed free . ers won three times against
throws.
dedWcimen surg~- to a . ~g , lt{llld)' Moil~mery, f.l\417; An· . New Bostop spelled. trouble for :l brook 3·3·2:17; Howard 2-3-0-13;
Kansas State last season.
ll)lrgln within lhe batrs first 10 . .'&amp;~ ~ackatd, 1-H; - Re~ Ward, tbe Hlilhlanders, who ·fe1194'75. :·pose 3-0·H; Todd Grant 3·0·0.6;
"I'd have to say we played as
1
IJ!Inutes. .
, . ' ' •., ,.
, 2·'2·1·~1.1'0T.Uiti-1·1·'JI.
-The Tlll!rs· •urvlvj!d strong ~ Dillow 2·0.1-5; Tony Grapt1·0·0· bad as we can play. We don't
GOOD USED
.Debbie Fredrick. ADa ·Barnitz .
WALSH
Jill Hanl· ' offensive efforts by·Hlgblanders · ~; Keeney ().().2-2. TOTALS have any excuses. We played
1!1'11 Renee Ward eac~ 'icclred · Jolsl!y, 3+10; -~ Rlchai'dl, John E!Qnan .·· (gaine-hlgli 32 U 18 N .
bad." .
WASHERS, DRYERS,
eight points to lead the hn,l b In 1-3-5; Jeanine ~elnlle!IJI!, 1·0.2; ·' points) andBtJ!Potter i20polnts)
'\ J'l'ee tbrowa- 8·13 161.5%)
Actually, Tubbs might have
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
domlnatloll of tbe perlocl, _reaJilt·
Amy Slatlt, 8-0-l&amp;; Diane Camp- to talce · a ll~polnt letd at '· 80\lTJIWESTERN (15)
anticipated the outcome earlier
lne In a 2i-polnt '!'~~Vantage with '- bell, \41~; Kathy O'Connell, halftime. ''WeranwiJhtbeltJ~Il JpJin '"Ehman 8-4·4-32; Potter In the day. Tubbs said he was
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
two minutes remallllng. ·
H-9;' Mar1aret MuUen, 1-1·3; In tHe flilt·balf, butln the second · sl0-4-20; Hammond 5·0·1·11'
uncomfortab~e all day with the
"We've had trouble In our, last · Marcie. -ROui!ebuah, 1·1·3. TO- half they ..lowed tlitnp· ,down, Metzger 3-0.2-8; Bryant 2·0-0-4.. prospects of tuesday's conies tin
few games with pla~ng a good TALIU..lte.
and It got uaoutof our rl\ythm," ,.:rp..-ALS- 28-4-11-15
Manhattan, Kan.
• flrstbalf;" WalahC~~
~...._.-re: ltloGJ'IIIIdete, · aald Soutliweatern head coac!t · ili1.eJd ioal•- 30·58 (36.6%)
"We were not totally prepared
. Steele remarked.
rea little Walal,l ft.
.
Jim Wallq!r. "W:e dldn'tlllloOt the It&lt; :~ tllrowa- 11-19· (57.~)
to really get with tt:" Tubbs said.
627 3rd Avt., Gallipolis
s,low atflrst, but we~ gotten.our •
ballln. tjle,tbln! quarter, and they ·.•~Ji'nda - 27 (Bryant 7) "
''I never felt good thorughout the
1
,.
game going dilrtng the ReGild . · '·
.
~· ~"e"
did;" he ad.ted. ·
· ., ·
',~ 'i~ .. - 12
·
· day and I don't think we were
'"· 446·1699
HOUIS: I A.M.·6 , ...
hillf."
· ~.: (All raiD•) ,. ..
Partly on ti.e' atreiiJIIt of point · ""'... -)1)
·
ready to play physically as tough
' Steele's observation was_ 110 TEAM ", ·· 'W · L. PJI' , 'PA . iuard 'I'ockll.ojler'alelm·bllh 24 . ?~meverit- 19
as we were going to have to play
truer than, In the flrat five . Eastern.,,..........lO 3 961 937 potnt1, the.Ttpra.outac:oredthetr
J!llnutes of the bottom half a, . Nord! Gal~ .... : 7 6 ~902 856 guestl26-llln'roundtbreetot&amp;ke
~Y Slack, Diane Campbell and . Hannan Tr;ce ; .. 7 '6 '19f 734 · a 16-pofnt. lead Into tbe fourth '
Jill . Hanlgofsky reeh. -~ off 10 Southem ..... ,,...,. 6 5 . 808 705 Period. · In addiUon to Loperr
~UW~nswered points to cut Rio
Southwestern .... ,,5 8 976 910 other major lnvestora · In New
Grande's halftime lead to seven · S.V•Iley ........... 4 6 625 650 Boston's assault were · Jason
1~39), the closest the visitors Oak Hill ........... 3' 9 711 854 Truitt, ROger Holbrook and Josh '
would COII')I! to rivalling the lead. Kyger Creek ..... 1 11 649 921 Howard.
..
·
: The home offense got back Into ·
.( SVAC ramea) _
The Highlanders, who fell to 5-8
gear wltb key 3-polnlofleld aoats . TE~
W L PF PA
return to SVAC
by MIDdy Monii!Omery .and def- . Easte~;n ........... :S 0 ~ 517 aetlon
lilgbt whf!n they
enslve work fr~ Cindy Rk!ee- ~- Soutllef!l.. :........~ ' 1 ' 512' •22
at Tuppers Plains.
way that helped the hosts recoup •)j: Nor.th.GaUJa ,:.,.6 _3 .8114- !JH
sbme breathing space.
· _· ·· Ha'ltian Trace •.4 · '4 ..t ~
: Walsh trailed 58-48 at 10:49 Qak'Hlll ...... :.... a 5 500 577
when Barnltz, Rlclpway · and !!Y;mmes Valley 3 5 • 489 535
I(errt Kidwell damped In a brace. : SOtalb-liern .-... 3 6 M5 627
olbaakei.;allliW8J'dnettellatree'• ;IC)Pr ~k. \...0 9 474 · 706
J.
Qlrow to put ~ ~ TOTALS ..... :... IS a uat . 4411
~lid 61-411 bY 8:26. By .• •:.{'
•
(a.erw.)
Walsh wM drained by -llerei ,
W L PJI' PA
cbun~tt~eJt.: and ad\!~ Si)
b; .. .: .......'l 0 3jj8 236
qaly ..,.._. lilllde Wlq ;lll4 . N , o.llla.....o8 1 453 '. U2
sporiOI w · ~ck, w11o Wit"' ~ .._trace ..&amp; 2 :ril 2'11
~ammalet ·WUb 16 jlollltl. \ '· ;~· -~!1 ,c......... .&amp; 3 375
• '.'After · ftil comet»'~~: ••
S»nrntiii:Valllf
5 329 . ,UJ
c'oulifna alk~ more at ~~·~sou~ti!J;n.,:·•a,. &amp;. . 349 · ., •
Steele said.
. . . ·~
·. E.-tettn ....... :.•. J '.' 7· 29S
; lndlvlduaily, MontaQmery'net· Kyaet dieek :•.'..b 9 237:: .ao
ted five 3-pointerund 1 field goal ' TOTALS ......... IS IS . tm m'l
o~~~.:~1,uuu mile•
on her way to 17 points for Rio
6rande, while Kidwell poUred hi
Ta•d:q'tfllllll
15, Barnltz 12 and Ward 11. Chesapeake 7t, Norlh GaiUa 63
New BOs.tiln 94, Soutbwt~~tern 7!i
South
Webster 63, Oak.· HID 45
The Dally Se.n tinel

Noriega·
capture
could
mark
new
t
rend
.
,
:
·
·
Robert W.alters-

__

I '*-U1111111 the first ~uar~ tl1ey times .In ihe game, nor did It game honors with 23 points, wblle :
· , led H ·wftll 4:36 lfft after allow them to enjoy the double- Charles Peck paced the Midship'";,;::=~:;~tun
D.J. Haniinel, who · digit cull\lon they enjoyed as late men with 10.
OJ
or woldll drop In bls flnt..ver 81 tbe third quarter.
On Friday's agenda, Chesa· :
~i..~=~!
tllrle=-.,oitter
Ia
the
flaal
aet
"''
•w
1a
peakewlll
hostSoutb Point, while •
belped · trtqer _c
r~ to 1 -an-blgh 23 polnll,
' e P yed In spurts, and then
North
Gallla,
7-6 overall, will ;
Pantbera to abed a·-•one-polnt _ toliDMd l ' pme.t)llng trey by we'd let them back In It," said
return
home
and
to SVAC action :
deficit In tbe fourtbi quarter of T~t Wttb uhprt]umper frotn Chesapeake pUot Norm Persln,
Tuesday night's ' i e against the lalle.
•
·
whose · charges bo.osted their Friday against Oak Hill.
•
record' to 7·5. "In the fourth Score by quarter•
lsltln N .thG
v
g or
aUla nrduteto.a , The Plra
. tes shot seven .tbree- quarter. we turned the ball over, Norlh Gallla ...... 10 21 21 11-63
72-63 victory. ·
, .·
• poilltera, , fOJit: of which were
The Pirates hiCI ~el! a 511-57 Jnsttumental!n cutting the hosts ' and they started hitting threes. Chesapeake ....... 13 26 18 25~72
1 ad
Chr
We got lackadaslcal on the
CHESAPEAKE (72) - Demp- '
liTabk~ jllmpedn lead ,'9. -flve, po!nts or less, but boar.ds, and when we looked sey 11·0·0·22: Osborne 6·0·0.12;
e on a
II\~ •key With _6:.~ left,_1alld after · l'fort!J !JIICI no effective antidote around'. we were down by one," Henson 4-0·3-11; Marks 3-1-0-9;
Uli! Paatbers bad committed a lor Derllpley. a 6-1 Junior Who he added.
Lykins 2-0.4-8; Thacker 2·0.3-7;
turnover, resllltq In\ the PI· sank 18 of hla team·hlgb 22 points
B
Maddox
0·1·0·3. TOTALS- 28-2.
rates' takma the ball Into thel ·m 1~ first half, which helped
ut as ·the contest moved Into
10-72
paint, Chl(lapeake forwiiod Curt . Plllh 'peaketoanelebt·polntl!!ad Its final minutes, the Panthers
·From the noor- 27-46 (58.7%)
Dempsey po~ Nortli Gallla ' ' halftime,
·
responded to the Bucs' challenge
ani/~
rd j
..D
with a Uor-13 el!ort at the
From the line - 10·20 (5()'!1)
1111
orwa DatiD !!Iilith In ." ' "e were-coJICentrating on the charily stripe for the fourth
Off the boards - 33 (Henson
ther!Jhteye\"hlleDem~WIS
blgman.(6-6ceilterRonHenson), frame, While the Galllans sank 13)
tryln1 to keep ·hlm from scpi'lng ·and D.J. did a helluva jobonhlm
Assists - 18 (Osborne 10)
In tlie paint. With 6:031elt,,DariD ,IHammel held him to 11 point$)
two foul shots (by Hammel) In
Tu
movers - 13
Smith went' to tl\e, tgul une to -bu~ liecause we. focused on him: seven tries from the line. " We hit
.
NORTH
G.ALLJA (63) -Tack·
lhaot two, buthemluediln'both .we tell him (Dempsey) open., ~~r:p:r~r:. we needed them,"
ett
5-4-2-24;
Hammel 8-H-23; ·
•!tempts. After the Pant!lf:r• got sal&lt;! Norlh GaJUa skipper Toin , s
Stout
1·2·0·8;
D.
Smith 2'0·1·5; S.
. tile rebound, It took the hosts trve Riccardi.
.
peaking of hitting, Tackett's '
· lid'
·
·
game·,hlgh 24 points, which ln- Smith 1·0·1·3. TOTALS- 18·7·8~ • ·" to . get . Julilo~ , pard
·'
eluded . four bonus baskets, put
83
· ~anriy Lyklhi to · pt· open ·a nd ' HOJ!!Ver. such ri le.ad and. an him over the 2QO.polnt mark fQr
From the noor - 24·58 141.4'!1 ) .
connect on·a jumper lh thela.iteto opportuplstlc defense thatturned the season. His 206 points puts
From the line -' 8-15 (53.3%') ·
give the Panlhera .• 59'-!18 lead. the Bucs' off-target passes and him nine above Hammel, the
Off the boards - 24 (Hammel'
From that point, peake never Upped away some of· their team's No. 2 scorer.
Ill
trailed.
. l
betier-thrown passes didn't keep . In theprecedlngreservegame,
Assists- 12
The Bucs, who fell to 1·3 the Panthers. from letting the the Panther's won 56·38. The
Steals- 7
aealnst their .non-league oppo- VInton five cut their lead to five Cubs' Rick Edwards earned
Turnovers - 15
nents, were not always behind, or fewer points at least three

and Dale Van Atlli.

Culfltream. But any more requires a C-135 or C-137. Botb are
. more expeaslve to fly, but they
have plenty of room for spouses.
That' a h_a ndy beCause, o,n thla
trip, nine wives were originally
scheduled to accompany the 11
committee members. Several
canceled after the Air Foree had
already reserved a C·135. Only
six members and five wlvee rat'
tied around In the blg jet!
.
Besides Rallgel and Coughlin.
congressmen Stan Parris, R·Va..
Jim Sensenbft!llner, R·Wis., and
Wally Herger, R-Callf., brought
their wives. Only Jim lnhofe, R·
Okla., did not.

\?.ACI&lt; To THe
FuruRe m

r-----------....

The

MONDAY, W!I)NISDAY: AND FA.DAY OPEN TILL 7:00,
1,,
TUESDAY. TI:UiftiDAY OPEN TIL 15:30 ·P.M. ·
.
. :SATU ..DAY OPEN TIL 4:00P.M.

SEE RICK TOWVEB, JAY HD,J. OR PAT BD.I,

~~~ ~!~,~~..~!LlY
•

'

I

•

.

...

•

,,

Plelllf\l VllltY. Hoaplt«t Medloal Ollice 8ulldi;,; + Su~e 215
· Valley Drive, Point Ple-nt, WV 211!150 .
'

AT ·HILE .FO D, INC.
~~~~~

.

I

991•2196 •

-..oat

�•.

'.

.

......,iltl't""'~· ...._, n. Jllo

Ohio'

Pae•
',

'

15

. r

-..
;

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~~

~ETZING

EYES OPEN MAN .- Melp' Cary
, Bet:das (11) eyes Mike VIIIIMeter (4$), held Ia
: check by two Warrea deleaders aad a le&amp;plnl

Kevlu Faa-lh (50). 'l'be Warriors won the

noD-COnfel'ence 1~. 81-M. ·

Seven Indians
seek ·salary
arbitration

Scoreboard ...
Boys scores
Bo1 •0llo HIJII SeMel Btiai!Kball

Tuad .,.........

CLEVELAND (UP!) _Seven
members or the Cleveland Ind
. 1-

Altr EM• '71, Tallmadp 14

..

Akr P1re~u.r 71.

Nor~n 1.1

Akr GIU'flel.lt, lllldlen

WK~kot!«W

ans, including right fielder Cory
Snyder and catcher Andy Allan-

Alexaa•r 511, Trlmbltlt
Aaii....._Fitelt D. llowlud H

Bfftai7,P.....,.I•
BlrWaiDII&amp;It, M...,.YIIItlfl (ot)
IIMm Carrwllll. Uhrrty Ua ..alt
IIMr411W11 II. Nile. P
•MIIII* 78., £IJ ria O,et Deer 43
•u• lll'klp (I lid) ts, Oa Rll,a IS
Calli 57, •ckeye N 4t
Caktwell N. Sb,..lldoah 511
CambrWp 'II. •111.1re 14 (OIIJ
CaJIIII M•II.Wr !M, LueaaterCMb 5I
Cadeld 11, C.mllbf'll fl
Caatoll8 II. Dowr 11

IS,

Cia Wl.rW 11, aa Laklle IS
Cia Prllleet• 11. Oa Moeller 14
Cia Rlllnftt II, X:e... Wllll.oll 41
Cia st Ber.,..ll, Wllu.m.b!l• 411
eta Me. Hll.. N, Oa Cti'J 0., U

11,
C.tll..,... 1'4
Cle811Heplllf, W Gt:..,;all

ae o, ....,. as. W•re•a¥11,. •111111

.adiWoell lAIII EJI

•m

Cle\lll hl ScMt111, G MIIIIIH-kenll
CGIIJ Gow '11, a.c•
II

Col M.....a.IIIA, (Mala lh~ M
Col w..-... •. 0.1_.... II Clot)
CoiBamiiiHTw,ll, •r•llalllltS

er"'•"' •· ........

•c•eyp

frtoiDiwllkoH, NIN~III.OIIAS
C.niMtJ• Fala. U Allr I&amp; Vl.ce11t 14
Da, 01 ........ 1 'JI, 0., t'ol WMie SA
Day NorillrWa:f' 11. Twl1 Vall H II

aacaJ, awra

FtUciiJ It, F.Mkra • • • N
r •.._.. .., N. . . . aW
FraiiWia 71, Wllml ... oa U
rrerae• 11, EMtwoM n

, . , ... 8t.leei4.Ho~JtWellt..e_..,. ..

G.aa Mnll ou-- u. ~He,t•••or

"

GN1111:d•• 11, N"' ale-... .. IS

Grrn1111W It, Tedlan•ll•
~ ... a..... 71. Akr Dlf!l u
Hamill• a. .. 41. 0.1111fa 41
Hamlte.(lacl) s.t, F"tllllteu
Hunlt•Ba ... U. Cllii . . •r•m•ll
Hlllllben 'Jt., Wn&amp;eralrewa It
,.... • • Qr M , .,..., Olr 5t

..... b.,.4S,8t~U
..... " ' ..... Ed .... ,.
....,_. .la.,t
Itt._. C\r 5I

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. College 800l'e8

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. ......hilt, ....... Ill
..,.... 81. tl, MetCJM Ml4

r.w. PoliN. ..,..._ f.l ·

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LHa-.ll.hlilrt....
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Ullmp11.1.1-- ...... 51

Con~IIM,

u- C'.eM C'... '21,

u,,...

Vermont U

PonUtam at,

!Ut~~~~

11

Claubero 91: .... ltallrr....CamRn
Grow Ctty ~t, car• . .M•IIotll3
Hattwtck 'Jt, fJmllaiA
. Holy o-.. 11, """'' 1t
.
Hllaca1S. Ka.., fl

a

a..,_ El• 11, UrW.. ftu It
...... n.z... wtllrHI4111

erstoR

RG-Cedarville contest
.

·over again!

I

"Voir Ooo4 ·

0

!)

Ui:sooverreruns 1NT style. Oassic movies from ·
oyr ~pp.nsive MGM, ~0 a_nd Wam.erBroS: fitm library.·
; !?()years of
films, 24 hours a day. · •·'

,

, MEMIE.I F.~.,.c:
Second St., .._, W. Va.
&lt;
773:5514 . .
Sth!'lwe.,' Niw HaYin, W, Va. •

112:2136 .
.lcKDcln &amp;,.. Pt. Plla...t,

STOP IN TODAY.
AND LET US IIIII
. .
YOU.

w:

67$:1121

,,_

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'

L

VIQEO ,
TOU.(H ...
.'

~

·55 5 PC,rk ttreet .' Jr:i. ' '
,y,
\
.. ,
M~dCIItpo~~i~ .'·.
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Ir

.

,; '

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·ohio

992-6611

..,'

•'

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·"01~ -..·
·~ ~."':;

'

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'

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'

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'

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. . .,;;

people
"2 Reiistered

h•

t•
··~

~:

''·

•GASOLlNE

•lEER and
..
.t . WINE {ARRYOUT
;,,. ..~stiAc•s '
1 1,1 East .Stcorid St.

l' . ,AI Entries Must Be
1Sufl:miH-.1 ·wore 5:00
l P~ • January 26,
l 1990. llllploy•s ·of
thh ·new1p sper and
I
I .... participating
'I fl:us.._t!es are not .
·; I' .UIIIIIe. IMer .. o.ften

. POMIIOY
992-23.42'

us For All' .

.

'
______
~~_,
., ,

"You Don't Oqy
. A Pol~cy, You
Hire An
. . Agelft~"

rgop
.
., ,.....·s-.op
-

·c

~

'

.

'

CAR WASH

. ,.
192·5552
'
120 ll$.1' Mllll' :.'·
POMIIOY, 01110 •. ·
'

~···-•;.f;ne
- &gt;~ · eli.
t
.
.
.1
.

.. ,.,-_ .;. _

"~-----~-~
---~

'··
MCHIG!\Y•
,1

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•.

a,,CUI

OM~

Get One ;

•Lf~ •AUTO •HoME

.,,• ...,.s~ ·
·eaoal5 'IOI•s

M,.. Ike, No ·

··a~,.{,;.i; 1,

'

.

.~f .
• Integrity

••"

,

Every Night
SufMI!iy 11 to I

992-6491
716

1 predict the final score
wiD H:

Middle~t,
'

•

Ohio

C*o

.l

FORD

.BUICK

IIDDLEPOn

GMC

. ' ·••2-21t6 -~--

~~~.
·1

·· '

.Ph . N'Q,,$_ ; _ - , - - - , . - - - ..... _.__, ____ '-·---'

.-ri'.-·~4

'

'

•.•.,..,

101 Mllbeht lve.

992·2121Diplty and Service
.41woy• 0//erm, Pr .. Noid

MASON, .WV.

I

.

.

675-3398 or 1-800-344-3331

..

992·3715

-

H.IWIIG
•••C101

TransPOrtation Needs Set
Us Today.

Key• To t,

"'We've Got The
A Beller Deal"

'

SMITH-NELSON ~
MOTORS

·'

..
,·F

............. 1

S
BANI ·

For All Your
Bedding NHda..•
See A Perfect

Sleeper

&amp; SAVIIIS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
112-2131
112:2137
TUPM"I PLAINS. OHIO

IH3311

· H7·1111

1/l(deJI'tfOI('
~ APPUANCIS,
TY't,fLOOI~

992-3671

CouRHIUtf Gild ,4....,.p1111RII

HARDWARE '

For AU Your

500 UST MAIN
. POMEIOY OliO

,,

N
··FUNERAL

~

992-2174

. Addre~s; ----'--___;:......' ;,_t~

....FIK.

i

TRUCK

·DOI:DE

··11c.TIIID .

lilem ...

'PJ)NTIAC6kJ
. rf1

l , PAT Hll':,
CHIYSLE• .
I
l PLYMOUTH
I

Name: · ~----'------'-~­

Established 1913

(

Aft......_
Of LUIC Olfl COfi'DIQ.TM)N
ColltM....
PDIC

461 lrd AVE.

TO

'

Availpble On

N:.2nd St.

. PAT HILL

HOME

tMDTQkY(US

your banking
and borrowing
needs. ,

Open Till 9:00

,·

1990 SU~ER
SWEEPSTAKES

care.

Services for all

To Serve You"

__________ ________ _________,

f ..•

who

Pharmacists

(ilip out, ~he entry fo~ . below and drop
, off ~~ ·an·y of t'he· pal;'tictpating ...
•
businesses.
·
,.._ ....
.;..
.

remarked.

;OVB•a donation to the ·club is
ctedited to scholarships, which ·
are used to attract quality
sfudent athletes to Rio Grande,
I..;awhom said.
.
. • •'The baalc has a toqtraditlon

,

~ ~

,.. •

Your Insurance
Needs

•

thousand

···ENTER.an~ WIN!

..

992-6669

271 Nomt SECOND .
OHIO

~ight~~n

·:~ (. IIIJ.QS

~...;._...,

'

342 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis . ·
336-2691

..

'

'

DOWNING
·~: MULLEN
.
,

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

-

,.

''

Coming ,S oon On Cable ChaMel-.21~,
·&gt;:.
.
.

•

•WALIIEIS •WHERCHAIIS
•IEDSHiE COMMODES
. •CAIDS anti GIFTS

~

~

.~

,...

Just flU out the intry bl-..k, clip it out, and
take It tct .-ny of the belowi'JMrchants for a .
OVER' 4;000 ·
MOVIES TO.\. . . ·ch.... to win $501 AI you have to do is
. IPilct ~comet final ~ore of Super Bowl
cifoos£·
.
. ' . . .•
, XXIV ..arid ·th•
$50
is all yours
•.
"'
.
.
· ' 'HOURS:· - '1 ':
'
. lNTR AS MANY TIMES AS
Mcmday ·thru Saturday .. .
. 10 A.~. 7 ·9 . P.M. ;
~ . · .";· .
YOU WAitll
·'
Sunday 1 A.M.-8 P..M .
1
.
'
. ~ r.;;. Do \ot prlclict the winning team,
VIDEO' TOUCH · J:· ~ . ,. ,· ·-'~ lust the finaf.Hort.
. 992-5209' .'
. ·:., FOIEXaMPu, 7 3
··
'P9MEROY, OliO ..
· TIM.~fitttl .wll
all tortect entries and ·
. 992-3462
MIDDUPOrr, OliO ' .
s.UCt tit ~··• 2 r~iidom drawing. Prize
awtlhle•
iy 1he .-...., Sentinel~
'
.
"
'
.: .!ftO ·"ICIIASE NECESSARY
•. .·2
LOC&amp;nollf.•
'

·· ......

•Watch Repair
•Jewelry lepair.
•Engraving

On. Ja~,~Uary ·28", Super Bow! XXIV win a..
playett·~" ·~ Orllans, Lo""isiGIIa. The out•.
,..,,of ~. . .:.......dttennined on the
fi~i but · ~ou·', iftay. hawe ..-mething at
stakt','-'too! : ; (: ... ' ,,\ r '
.

'.,

•Low Pr-riptlon Prlcea
•Photo Flnithing •F- Delivery
•Repiecement Contl!ct lAna
Service
•Monthtv StiH Sptcilla
•Shop et Home C~li.og
Service

1-1 3 Court St.
Pomeroy
·992-2054 .

IN CA.SHI

•

.•

..

Service Jewelers ·

SSOOO!!

,.

.
· Pcpwoy, Ohio ·

Your Profe11ionel Full

'·

TWIN Cln
MACHINE &amp; WELDING
992-3768

Jewelry Store ·

,.

J'

'

VALLEY -~

see

.,

Wire

Adapters ·

ow- .

..

Clark'~~-

ENTER TODAY ·AT THESE
.PARTICIPAliNG BUSINESSES .
You May Win

RADIATOR REPAIR
and REPLACEMENT

. Nelt~br" .

Amen can Football
Conference Champions

·:; ··Sunday,
.January 28, .1990 ,

COMLET~

.,

University of· Rio Grande in
many areas," the coach continued. ·'One of .these ' areas
includes athletics, and for that
support we are very
appreciative: •'

{j

1

- SUPPLIES
PE·OPLES· , , WELDING
FABRICATION
·.,,_ BANK·.- ii. SHOP SERVICE
MACHINE

CD

9t working with and hj!lplng the

WE HAVE
TELEPHONE
ACCESSORIES:
0
Wall Plugs
o Jacks ·

.·': NEW ORLEANS;LOUISI~NA
. ~{SUPERDOME

'

"INSURANCE

opinion
berqre

'

; "Ohio Valley Bank has always
taken a deep interest In advancifla the lives or youq people, and
t!u'oagh Its commitment to the
Athletic Boolter Club at Rio
Qrande, the bank, It1Ieaders and
111 employee• are reempbUiziag that commitment,"
~ Coach JohJI LawhOm

. . . . . .,

~r

co

Faeto 111, Ad ..... At

I

J11tiollll footiNtll
Conference Ch1111pions · ,
. •· .

.Machine.&amp; Welding

;' '

m•

'

TWIN
CITY

1

:6 VB set to sponsor

.

1•

'

NMftl' 0amf'1;1. a.fl~~'~'••

"-111•\411P M. MIGf'I'WI 15

: For the fifth consecutive year.
t)le bank will sponsor a shooting
. contest for a $500 cash j)rtze.
Larry Lee, assistant vice president and head tetter a~ OVB, will
be the referee.
.

"'

,.. .... u ......... u

k6eCe VII

: Ohio Valley Bank will again
sponsor ·the annual meeting of.
I he Rio Grande Redmen and the
,::edarvllle Yellow Jackets at
Lyne Center on Saturday, Jan. 20
at7:30 p.m .
- Free tickets are available at ali
OVB locations: the main office at
420 Third Ave., Gallipolis; the
mini-bank on Fourth Avenue in
yaillpolls; the Jackson Pike '
&lt;?ffice; and the Rjo Grande
branch.

;~ JI .

Lock Kana M. O.rmn. •

NYU II, COil' 11
New l'oril Tedl•. N)'aekll
Nle--111, flJrl'}' Ill

-

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LRI·Br..Wy•1t, W.,.w 18

Ulll'rtr a. 111. Me :Ver . . a... a

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lacbH IIUI••· Cel..nbl-11

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.

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............. 1"1, NN Palla It, OT

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"Ealll... e N IS. Me.tor Lake Calh II
Edl,...8l1, ToroMeU
f".IJrta Wsllt, GarfleW HelaM•I3
Falrfhlllll, ae s, .. ......, u
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CoModo• lit.
SW f.t ,

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Spo-.. bn"etis.

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.......,., aames:

CI. .NAL IECOIDS ··

Cia,....,.. II, Noi'WMIIII U
Cia Pll~~rellll. Gin &amp;teo H
Cta !I Xmer 11', "-••• •
ctaOakJai.. 'M, Oa Mke. I!

Cle ••~d Ill.

.

.

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.---------.....

.,...,nehl11, MI ... Canll-' 51

~=:;•n,a~-:::.-:,111~

..... .

DENIER
BRONCOS

•

TV·C llandi"• ·'· ...

~~~hcl~';::.!:~ti~e ~;st ~~c;:
Baaeball
,
The Mets also announced
Welilton ~~ Bel~
,.
• •· }
salary arbitration Tuesday.
· \l Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden pitchers David Cone, John
In addition to Snyder and was examined Tue~~day in Mai- Franca, Jeff Muuelman and
AI !anson, others flUng Tue~~day ji&amp;ChusettJ by Boston Red Sox infielder Dave Magadan fUed for
were pitchers Greg Swindell and physician Dr. Arthur Pappas, arbitration.
Tom Candiotti and outfielders 1who reported to, the club that
Dion James, Chris James anff ,Gooden's' right shoWdj!l' is showMilch Webster
I ing continued improvement.
. 4J Ca.T ST.
,
Relief pitche~ Doug ,Jones filed ·
Gooden sut~red a tear in 'the
GAWPGUs-.-.not
Jan. 5,, asking for $1.15 million. ; shouklerlast ·J uly,forcinghim to
Acron from·Lafayen. 1111•11
The Indians have offered · m!ss more th!ln two months. Jfe .
$950,000.
; returned fO!: two retlet app11aran-,·
NewtitC....=I••C.S.
11tt1 Sl... n,
Selle; ,
Catcher Joel Skinner also was , ces In September,
·
'
flellefC.....
.
,,_..,..,
eligible for arbitration, .but he · "Doc will be .gradually prolhtt••·
' ,; . . ..
and the ream reached agreement ; gressed in Ills t_hrowlng program
on a one-year·contract. Tuesday. both· as ,to time and velo;c:ity .and .,
He will receive · $280,000, an should be at fUll strength 't)y, the ·~
••o·~·
Clltftl• .....&amp;· ·
· ...
""·
.,
$80~000- raise over last year start of spring training.'.' Mets
Pa ••••.. W..&amp;Senlu
when he hit .230, with one home General Manager Frank Cashen
. Open tM 8 l!wry Night
run 13 RBI and 42 strlke&lt;iuts lri said. "No further MRI te~~ts are
. CloMcl S . --·---~
.',
178 ~t-bats.
· I schej:)uied a\ this time.·~
Snyder hit ' just ·.215, with · r'' -...:.· --------------.-----'.....;..~.......,......-_,.:;_-:-:--"-......_--:-------;
career lows \n )Iamers (18) and
.
•· \'I~J
•
RBI (59) , and 134 strikeouts in 489 '
)
'
at-bats. He made $340,000 last
season.
'
I
Allanson, a .152 ~iller with
runn·e rs in scoring position, hit
.
I
•
• .
.232 with three home runs and
' !
RBI. However, with the acq ui 1-'' I I
"
tion of Sandy Alomar Jr. in t e
Joe Carter ~ade, he_'s unilkelyjto
be in Cleveland when the season
starts.
1
Indians General Manager
Hank . Peters said, ''There are
.. '
several things i,n':'olved in a~bl ·
!ration beside last year's perfor·
I
' '.
mances. There are years [' ot
service and stats."
,
,.
He said h,e is close to sigtilng
some of those who filed: but
facing a difficult task with ,the
others.
1 •.
One oflhose who may go all tile .
way through ·the proees~ Is
Candlotti, who has won 271!ames
th~ past two season for a
with a miserable offense.

1

.....\fll•14, ...c ...,.. Trail.
Bel )1ft '71, P!lellieM'II~ Yorll SA
Ben t.JU 1'4, DI!GraiiiU\IH .. dr 15
ler Ctr W11 Rl\151, Mdte-.11141

Scott Mltebem both a'$ 4 U.
TbeWil'llo.nhlt33!1fMfnla.lbe
Door tor r1 Pf1 cetlt, &amp;1111 D ot 31
frllll tbe lllle tor 61 peJCftt.
Wana Local bAd f7 rebowldl
With· F..M"'P and Mltebem
each pt.., 7.
For MeiPC8ry BetZiq led tile
way with . 13, ·Mia VIDMeth
added 12. ~ W!fr8 joiHd 1!1
double ftprea by Jay Humphrey1 wtth 10. The Maraudenbad
29rebolllldlwtthHumphreyund
VIIIIMeter lfabblq 8' each.
MelpwuwtiiiOuttbellei'Vlcsof
's tarter L. J. Mitch who did not
make tbe trtp L.~ue to Illness.
Melp hit 22 ot eG from the Door ·
. ---.---""~:r
for 33 Pft'ce1tt and only 6 of 13
.
v '
frOJll the line for 46.
.-,._,.. · (All GII!*L) p• ""'"'
._.....,..
n
,.,,...
Warren held otf a rur10~ Miller ............... 9 3 122 .!150
Meigs comebac_k to will tlie
Weillton ........... .8 .a 781 te5
reae~ came fSM. The. WarAlexander·........ 8 5 836 771
rtors were led by Scott J:~rackinFed-HockiJilr ..... ·7 • 5 887 8!17,
grldge with 11. trevor Harrison .' Trimble ............' 1 ' 5' 749 · 721,
ICOred 17 for Melas aad Terry
Belpn1 .............. 6 . 5 78f 6691·
McGuire added 12.
Vinton County .., f 5 !122 '514;
· TheWarrtorsreco~improved - Nels-York: ...... ,. 2 111 62'7 9161
to 10~. They will hOlt leagueMeljpl ................ l · 9' 523 ' 118'1
I
Lo
Fr
M
Tield••'l,
1-.d Dll ll&amp;D on lday. . eip
..., resalta: '
11 now 1·9 on tl!e year. The
Alexander 511 Tr1mble 52
. ,,
Marauders will host Trimble. on
Selpre78Ne._vtlle-York!l8 ;
Frl!)a~ night and will ir!lvel ,to Miller 89 Federal Hoekl!IC 74.. '
Belpre OD Satw:day night. . .
:)lls\Oll 61 VInton Co!!ntY
~;
Meip 9 23 34 54
.warren Local 86 Me·•- ••
!
warren16 42 61 8&amp;
.
MEIGS -Robbie Fields 2-l-1Alexailder _'Open'
j
8, Terry McGuire 0-0-0-0, Ryan . N I 'vttle y Ji t Mille . , .
Lemley 0-0-0-0, Cary Betzing
e 1011
• · or . a
r ' .·
··· Trimble at Meigs
.
Vinton county · at Federal
am
Hocldna
·

,
BJ D!VE IIABBI8
WarreD
lbot 57 percetlt
from tbe
aad placed fCIIIr
players In
flpre1 u tbe
Warriors
over the Melp
Tuelday Dtabt
contest.
·
1umped outto a
12-4 lead the tll'llt quarter aad
wltJl a !Puah prea1 that the
Marauders had trouble break Ina
the Warrlbra were able to extead
the lea!l ,to ,l6-9 at the end of tbe
tirst qua~er.
.
Melp cyt the lead to 16-10 at .
the be
Ina or · the ~eroad'
quarter, on a Cary Betztng -touJ·
shot, but the Marauders couldn't
stop the red hot : warrlora as
Warren went on a ·26-l4 tear and
went Into !hi! locker room at the
halt on top 42-24.
In the third quarter the Warriorsqontinllf!d topresafullcourt
and Joi'ce the Marauders :Into
miltlfkes and Warren continued
to convert on the offensive end
ourSfOring Meigs 19-9 to build a
61-341ead headlqlnto the final
elglt\ ' minutes.
· ··
'l
In the fourth quarter the
Marauder$ could get no closer
thah 26 as Warren continued to
· pialv outstanding defense. Melp
ouiScored Warren 20-15 in the
final quarter to make the final
0
Scr:re '54
}Jeff Ontko led the way for the
Warriors with 18. Curt Plummer
a.d ded 14, Kevin Fausnaugh and

106WTMIII
PCN80Y,OIID .

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P.omerov

~By
=·.·-/:·~

De Bend

Wedlalday, Jenuii'V 17, 1ssD
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Page 7~~
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p::p ! I

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. ·:-80--th_;..B~ir~.·..::t:;.;h_d.. .:;.a:.__
.y _O...:_;.;.b....:se--rv~c-d--._r.;.ec_e....:.n~t~l...;;y-.~....;..__;_;;,__..;:._.;;...._ _-:_R=-A~-t~-:~:-rece-::~:-f-!~.~-~-:-~t-~ r-h-~_-a;n-th-;-~t-~!-~-gr-.n~g~~.-

We Reserve The Riehl
Llmit Quantities

....-a-Mha?-,r
•.

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM
.'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH~ .
EFFECTIVE SUN:, JAN. l4 THRU .SAT., JAN. 20, 1990
"•The total ,value of the
double coupon may not
exceed $1.00, ·

'

:•Any

'

manJfacrturarls coUpon greater than 61 C w_.
be redeemed at face value
only.
•

J

.••.

•

•

• •!

•Only -one · maoufaCtiJr·
er's coupon per item.

•The total ' val~ Or the qouble manufaCturer's
pon cannot exceed the
purchase price of the item.
Money . will not be ie·
' funded. '
,
'
'
•This offer iloes not apply
to · Powell's Super Valu
Coupons, free! c·o upons
· or lliny competitor' i coU·
pons.
' '
·•This offer excludes cigarettes, or any other items
' prohibited by law.

·$ .49
Chuck Roast •••••••• 1 .
' .
$ .. 9
1/4 _.· Pork ·Loin •••• ~·.;~. ,]6_.· ·
.

CHOICE . .

• _

cou-

lB.

ECKRICH

·

,Smoked Sausage ~ $199

(
Frank185 •••••••••••••·•••·9"
. :7

SUPERIOR'S
CHICKEN

•

I'':.

.

12 OZ.

.

.

S: 29
Sausage ••••••••••••••• 1
. ...
CHICKEN

may re·

~

.DR. PEPPER · ·
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·. 12 'PAIC 12 OZ. CANS •

Livers ••••••••••••••••••••
FLAVORITE
$139
Lunch Meats ...•....
lB.

·.

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Good Onlr At PoW'tll's Suptrmarket
Goocl Sun., JOn. 14 thfu Sat., J1111. 20

'

,.

STUPENT OF THE WEEK - .Marlo White, physical education
and health student of Bob Aahley,-wu las&amp; week'.s recipient·~ the
"Student of the Week'' award at Melp Junior Hllh SchoQI. Marlo
was selected · on the buts of her aciulemlc excellence In &amp;hose
· · subjeda IUid her general .classroom conduct. The reooenl\~n .
·-:" p•epamJaltlatedbJPrliiclplilotbbleBr.__.:WUJbe~.ate,dl!."'· ·
lor tbe remainder of the school year.

-~People

,- LI.

fowell's Coupon .
.. .: :, 20 OZ; &gt; •· . _;,
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a
·
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a
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FLAVORITE
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•

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$. ·189:
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SINGING _ Joan~t Welling·
ton and Fellowship Stniers
will be a Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church In Pomeroy, Saturday, 7 p.m. They
will also be at the Church of
Christ In Christian Union In
Middleport, Sunday, 7:30p.m.

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Mary Folmer, president; VIvian~
Humphreys, vice president; De&gt;:·
rls Snowden, treas.urer; Kelly:
Eichinger. secretary and music:
leader; Darlene. Newell, mem; .
bershlp chairman; and Mar:(
Bush, public relations.
,•
The next meeting will be held:
Feb. 13 at 7 p.m. at the senlol';
O!!lcers were announced for citizens center and the public I~·
the new year and are as follows, ' Invited to attend.
·~
,:
;~

Mrs. Adrienne Buckley, the
International VIce President of
. U.S.A. Affairs of Flame Fellowship, was the guest speaker at the
recent meeting of the Pomeroy
Flame. Fellowship held at the
senior citizens center In
Pomeroy. ·

Community calendar

.Co11pon : ,
.DIET OR ·REGULAR · ,
.I

Good Only· At Powell's S- uptr111111rktt
Good Sun., ,Jan. ~ 4 tlwu Sat~ Jan.

Po~ell's Coupon
SUGAR CREEK

- J.'Y.

Pat Holter had the program 14•
which she read an article 09:
stress. Ot)ler readings Included ;
"Grandma" by Barbara Fry; ''-"•
Little Mixed Up" by Charles :
Aldridge; "Safety Tips lor Your :
car" by Wllllam R!idford; "HO'I;' ·
Cold Is It," "Capsules of Wls; ;
dom ... and "Thoughts lor the:
New Year" .by ·P at Holter.
. .
It was reported th'a t John ~tahl;
and Leona Karr were 111.
,: '
Refreshments were served by .
sarah Caldwell and Janlcl';
WPhPr.
.
.
•

Flarne re
'C' 11
h.
. .
QWS tp meets

Plans tor a ho\Jse-to- ho~se
260 kits which will be alstrlbuted.
canvas for donations to be held
to the chairmen, who, In 'turn,
during February, National Heart . wlll distribute them tow.or~ers In
Month, were m!lde at the 1'ueS· · ihe anodal lund drive. As a part
day meeting of the Meigs Dlvof the fund drive, cannlsters will
lslon of -the American · Heart
also be placed In business houses.
Assocatlon at Veterans Memor··
The group also made plans for
ial Hospital.
the establishment of a speakers'
, During the meeting presided
bureau from wit hln the board
membership. Dan E. Morris.
over by Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
president, plans were made to
,James Diehl, and Sandy Ianna·
. distribute the kits which workers
relll agreed to speak before
carrying out the canvas will various local groups . Speakers
need.
will address work of the Heart
Denver and Nora Rice, board Association or their personal
members, have pr~pared some , experiences of having suffered a

· Powell'~
''

.Rock Springs Grange, Barbara
Fry, CWA, reported on the
Christmas project of the gran~e
which was delivering a Christ·
mas dinner to a needy family.
Stuffed toys which have been
on exhibit at'the museum will be
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital soon.
Entry blankS are available tor
the needlework and quilt con·
tests, as well as the stuffed tOY
contest.
· It , was announced that the
. Meigs- County pomona Grange
wlll visit Athens County on

Heart Association plans home canvas next month

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you

o.R:.~ ~ o.z._UNK

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.
ham, Henry and Mary Hunter,. B,uckley, Ke~. Ann and Kyle
Herman, Nan!!Y and Matthew Fausnaugh, all local.
Schul, Kimberly Roberts, Tracie
Out-ol·town guests Included
Colyer and Joe, Connie Connolly. Mike, Regina Greg, Brian and .
Rlcllard, Macel and Caralyl\ Michelle Cooper, Morgantpwn,
Bar.ton, Clarence Ath!!rton.
W. Va.; David, Klro · and -!Ill
Robert, Janice Mlch_ael and ZU:mbach, Stow; Eddie Life and
Roberta Pullins, the Rev. and Lori, VIncent; Carl McPherson,
Mrs. Robert Sanders, Jonathan, 'Archie James1 Vernon. James
Mrs. Lavina Brannon, the Rev, Estella and Sharon Miller, Edith
and Mts. Herbert crate, David and Dillon Hoover, Parkersand Delores Holter, Frena and burg; · Delta Hafer, Marcella
Julie Rllfie, Bob and Linda Jones, Ravenswood, W.Va.;.
Boggs, Willard and Lois Ebersb- Clara Board, Little . Hocking,
ach, Ike and Bertha Smith, Jackie Goodman, Donald and
Barbara Jean .Tripp, Diane wolf Wilma Marks, Belpre. . .
and Terri, Joe and Barbara
BasU and Clarice Boggs, Bar·
Masters, Gladys and . Wa.ld !lett, Lloyd and Doris DI!Unger,
Spence~. Marvin -and Mlma , Shade; FloydandJoanDIIUnger,
Walker, Ralph, Jenny, Jimmy, Guysville; Maxine Miller; .John
·and Jessie Parker.
.
·· and Marlene Elswick, Athens;
Dick and Betty Gaul, Ranson, · · Edna Coe, Coolvllle; Brysop'arid
Bernice, Jessie and Seth Cala· Mary Catherlnll Carter, Leland
way, Lowell Boggs, Jeff, Edna, and Wanda Boggs, Gallipolis;
-swrah and1 Jack Householder, · Sunny and Sue James, Marietta;
Ray,J3nlce,·KllaandJoeYoung, Waiter and Phyllis - Giddings,
Fritz and Nadine Goebel, Naomi Little Hocking, Edward and Bea
Williams, Norma Koenlg, Doh· Douglas Nemecek, Lorain, and
rman 'Reed, VIcky Gillilan, Oar· Dpon and Betty Brlckles,
lene, Michelle, and Miranda
omeroy.

'•There is a liniit of 10

1

Leg Quarters ·~~··'!.. 49&lt;

: Mrs. Edna Ule, Reedsville,
, was honored recently with a
:surprise party In observance of
:; her 80th birthday annlveraary.
The surprise came after Mrs.
· . Llle had been taken to church by
'• her granddapehter, Paula, and
' out for a 61rthday dlrmer In
Parkersb11rg by her grandchild·
..•reo, Paula, Terry, Larry and
' Janet· Lite; and a friend, Tammy
· Leachman.
· Upon returning to the home of
her son, Paul, Mrs. tile was
· surprised by a group of friends
and relatives ' who had gathered
' to celebrate her birthday.
The affair was hosted,.by her
children and their husbands and
'wives, Mr.· and Mrs. Paul Life,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Spencer,
.Chester; Mr. · and Mrs, Bert
Boggs, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Zumbach, Lancaster;
and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Life,
Vincent. Also 'attending were
Anna · Lindeman, VIola Tea·
garden, Maxine Hollman, Caryl
Pooler, Opal Hollon, Opal Wick·

•Offer is good only for
' product on !land. No
. Rainchecks.
·.
·

·

&amp;

BALLAR~'s LB. ROLL

·if.he Daily Sentinel

.

in the ·news· ;;._.._
'

WEDNESD.&gt;\Y
SYRACUSE -!The Third Wed·
nesday Homemakers Club will
meet at the municipal building on
Wednesday at 10 a.m. Members
are to bring sweatshirts, mate·
ria , 'clssors, etc.
.·• ~ .
.! ~

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-~

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tfl -~

Board of Elections.
POMEROY -The Middleport
Child Conservation League will
meet on Thursday at 6:30p.m. at
tl)e Royal Oak Resort.

•

.t

.

·',••

cholesterol testing program'to. ~
I •
conducted for all Meigs County.
ninth graders this year. Tbi! •
tes ling will be carried oui coopet•
atlvely by_ the Assocatlon an~ 1
Veterans Memorial Hospital. -~
Attending the meeting werlll
Or. Mansfield, Morris, Wilson,'
Diehl, Iannarelll, Hoeflich, Mr :
and Mrs. Rice, Dr. Mark Brown,:
Rhonda Dalley. Joann Tewks-:
bary, Susan Oliver , Ida Dleh[,~ .
Mlllle Midkiff and Donna Carr. ;•

.
DOWNING .CHilDS .
MULLEN MUSSER

I'SURANCE

111 Second St~ Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT

AGENn SEIY.G
MEiGS .COUNTY
SINCE 1868

•.

RUTLAND -There will be a
regular meeting of the ·Leading
Creek · Conservancy District In
Wednesday at 9 a.m. at j44Bl
Corn Hollow Road In Rutland.

WILLIAM C. TROTT
lzed on the sidewalk Tu~sday ·
THURSDAY
United -Press International
across the street from Mann's
POMEROY
-The XI Gamma
CRUISE MARRIAGE
Chinese Theater, where many of Epsilon Chapter,. Beta Sigma Phi
CRASHES: . 'rbe tabloid stories his· Bond movies premiered.
about Torn Cruise and Mimi Telly Savalas and Louis Jourdan Sorority will have Its card party
Rogers turned o.ut to be · true. already have bro~e markers on on· Thursday at 7 p.'m. at the
.Cruise, whose career Is at · a · ~lgh · the famous sidewalk honoring senior citizens center In Pome_'with the success of "Born on the their Individual career achieve· r.oy. Members .are to bring two
·Fourth df July," and hls actress ments, Including · their roles as snacks .
.wife Issued a joint statement bad guys In Jam"' Bond movies.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Tuesday to announce they are
TYSON IN TOKYO: Heavy· chapter of A.A. and AIAnop _wlll
•splitting up. The statement
. said weight champ Mike Tyson ar· · meet Thursday at 7 p.m. al the
there had been some "very rived Tuesday night In Tokyo and Sacred Heari Catholic Church.
·positive aspects" to the mar· liidlcate&lt;t he Isn't mlsslngex-wl!e For lnlormatlon call
-rlage but there also were "some Robin Givens. "'l'wo years ago I 1-80o.-333..o..5051.
Issues · which could not ' be re· was married;" he said .."Now I'm
~olved." Cruise, 27, and Rogers,
a baclielor and l!'s much better
POMEROY - The Meigs
·33, were married on May 9, 1987. being single.'' Tyson, who fought County Democratic Executive
: IN COURT: Even IIBjom Borg in Japan two years ago and will Committee wlll meet Thursday
;hadn't .retired from tennis, he'd take on James Douclas at the at the Carpenters hall on E . Mal~
!le speridlng more time In a court Tokyo Dome on Feb. 11, snowed St . tn Po·meroy for Its regular
than on one this year. Borg was In up In a full· length white fur coat . meeting and for recommenda·
Stockholm courtroom · Tuesday and his promoter, Don King, lions of the appointment to lhe
for the first of six lawsuits he's wore an Identical one.
Involved In this year. In Tues·
day's caae, Borg Is bel_ng sued lor
$85 mUllan·by Lara 8karke, who
'
'
'
claims Borg violated the share·
,hold agreement In their partner·
_ ship In the Bjorn Borg Design
Group, which went bankruptlast
'
Hospitalization Insurance now available not only for
summer. On Monday Borg will
healthy people, but qualifying people with pre-exist·
be taking on a Swedish magazine, Z, In a $620,000 suit because
ing health conditions. No physical exam or long
of an article quoting Jannlke
health history. Meigs County area enrollment has be·
,)Sjorllng, the mother Qf · his
g\ln so;
·
•
·
·
. ~-year-old son, ~s saying he u11ed
,
,
Call Toll Free 1-800-462-8161
1
,cocal!lf'. Borg IS also aulne Z over
Meigs Locttl 892-2670
,
a T-shlrt the ma1azlne produced
Ask for Eugene Anspach
with pictures of ex-wile MariMa
.,
Slmonescll and current Wile
'
;~l
Loredana Berte, an Italian ROP
singer, under the word.s "Bjol'!l )
Borg Collection." Also on Borg's
legal agenda I~ a $40,000 case
against aqother magazine that
said he and Berte had broken up,
a suit against sun another
magazine that published nude
pictures of Berte, and a cusiOday
fight over hls.son.
CAULII'LOWEB AND :a&amp;OC. ,COLI: No OM comes between
· Brooke Slilelda and her .cauUflower. Shields's latest endoraement Is lor the Foxy vegetable
company, which baa releued a
poster featuring lour alluring
photos of the actres• and a
picture of two headl of cauU· '
tiower. She aiiiO will be doing
television comiMI'C1all for 1I'Dill!
... For tlle ant'tlme, a atar •
Hollywood's celltutld Walk of
Fame IS aolng to be awarded to
·10111eone coiiiii!Cied to the Jall'lt!l .
Bond films "bo did not play a
Vlllan. Albert B. "CUbby" Broc·
~u. 80, who produced 16 Bolld
movl•, lneludls "Dr. N'o" Mid
''Liceue
. te KID.;;
' wultn 1 Cal·

heart attack.
Other speakers wlll be added to
the three .persons named Tues·
day. Any organization wishing to
secure a speaker from the local
organization should contact Bob
Hoeflich, who will serve as
coordinator for the · speaker's
bureau.
A discussion was held on the
annual .sale of carnations by
board members and Rhonda
Kincaid, !leld representative, ·
reported that the board can now
secure the carnations locally If
they wish and the time.structure
as to when the annual sale Is held
Is more flexible.
Kincaid also reported · that
Mary L. Phillips of the Trl· ·
County Vocational School has
agreed to provide training lor .
Morris who will serve as lnstruc. tor lor teachers ol Meigs Culnty
who wish to present a heart
education program for first
through third grader.s.
.A discussion was also held on a

..

'

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• EXCLUSIVE
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Woo $339.48 (FE 68701);

Naturol gu 13~9. 48 .

Woo 1379.•6 (FE 78701 i

'

Meigs County Health Insurance
· Enrollment
'

TOUCH OF BUTT£R

,Kraft Spread :.'!:::~
$11
q
.
I

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BANQUET

·

f

u

.

46

1 1
••• :~ ~.o:•• ~·8 9"
C

TOMATO SOUP
10.75

oz.

3f$1

G..,. O!olp At P.well's S.,.. Vall ·
.... s..., ...... J4 "'"' S.t. Jan. 20

. ,' •

.
UNaNTED or .GUlAR ONLY
.

.

FLOUR

89&lt;

1M 01o1p At Pew••s Su,tr Valu ·

.... s..., Jill. 1_4 !In Sit. Jan. 20 ·•

GOod O..y lt Powell's $uptrmOrktt
Gootl Sun.. Jan. 14 tlwu Sat.; Jail, 20

'

;

5 Ll.llG
GOLD .• AL

59(

•

'

CAMP.LL'S

LB. PKG. .. '
•

JV
Dinner~
.
oz. 6.9&lt;
·Tomato Ju1ce.••••••••
'FLAYORITE
REG. 52;99 , .
$
oz. ..~ ;:/ $·,
Dor1tos ••••••••••••• !~~!· 199 ·Pot· Pies ·······~··t·~ ~. ~:~~-'! . !.
STOKELY

SLICED BACON
ENDS/PIECES .

.

TIDE DETERGENT

;· 1~:z..$629

Gild Only AI Powllll's Su,tr Vllu
GtN
Jon. 14 lin S.t...... 20

s.n..

7

6-6.5
OZ. CANS·
' . . '
r

Powell's c~ ... P,On

YELLOW
'

ONIONS
·3 LB. BAG

·9-UVES CAT FOOD

.4/Sl

hMI o.ly At Pewofl's . . Valu
GeN ~ .IIIIL 14 thrv Sat. "- 20

;

,

-

· cNnnolo.no a.t·up
• Up 10 181 eobla·compotlbl•

Kit_ .. 4.1 peak HP
Pow. ,...~vot.

d'l.,nlla

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w/1tllrtp/o fl.rlllon srotom

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• Quartz tuning loCI&lt;IIn

bMhi"V' lutllon
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• Com~tt· - r y lit
• 32 ft. cleaning rangt

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built-In

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13-ln.1V

• 1M function

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• Up to
cl!~nnela ,

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Including-

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lku. ft.
, _ MIMr tltla alor
• Tti&lt;IU!td CIOor .
• Acljutllbll rollera
; DynaWhitlehllvM
1 • 'IWin Cltlpera
• Roomy door 11111¥11
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1110 111:11)

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tnciUCII/'41
poll'n pona
• 113-HP ......,

$198.88

s 1o montti~·

IEINVII(O .~l•l

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Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

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Supreme
Court
bicentennial
celebrated

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,,--:0,._'• ··•..

·'····--N ,..,_
·-&lt; ' .

AKRON SHOPS DE11TROYED - Akron and
other area firefighters try to control a tire In the
South Pl~a shopping center In Coventry
Township, which destroyed most ol the plaza. The

/

anilounce "we got him," refer· coarse skin and weight
rin11 to the surrender In Panama fiuctuattoni .
City of f\iattive Gen. Manuel
When asked whether she was
' Noriega, who was later flown to
the United States to stand trial on concerned about her husband
going to the Andean drug summit
dr\18·tra!!lcking chargl!ll.
Mrs. Bush, whO wore a suit In violence-wracked Colombia
with a bla~:k. and white checked . next month," Mrs. Bush said,
skirt and a red jacket, looked !It "I'm a little testy about all the
and granted the Interview on the letters I've been getting about
occasion of the anniversary It," which have expressed fear
· Saturday of her first year In the for the president's safety.
White House.
·
"I can't change his mind and
, StUI suffering from bloodshot · make those·declslons," she said.
eyes and double vision stemming · ''I don't like It when he leaves the
from Graves' dllease, a thyroid country."
Looking even fUrther ahead,
ailment, Mrs. Bush said she Is
Mrs.
Bush refUsed to say whether
"cautiously optimistic" that the
· 10 radiation treatments she un· · she would like her husband to run
derwent will eliminate the prob- tor a second term, saying ''l want
'lem, aJ though sbe won't know for htm 'to do what he wants to do."
Reflecting on her llrst year as
two to four months. She Is still
taking prednisone; a steroid, first lady, Mrs. Bush said the
which causes side effects such as most surprising thing , abol!t
'

living In the White House was
that she liked it . "I never thought
I would.
"People In the White HQU&amp;e'
spend all their time making life;
happy for me, " she explained.
"I'm a spoiled human being." •
"I never dreamed that I would.
love It," she went on. "lmagine
the things we've done this year.
Besides, the world has done such
excUlng things," she said, refer·
rinfl to the pro-democratic revolution In Eastern Europe. ·
Told that her popularity polls '
were even · higher than the
president's, whose approval rat·
lng In a USA Today sam piing
stood at 63 percent, Mrs·. Bush
explained she .did · not ·have to
make tough decisions . "I don't
have to do anything ... just be
there. I don~!' threaten anyone.
I'm justa nlcefatgrandmother."

fire, which atarted In a atore called VIUage Tbrlft
Sbop, quickly spread to other s&amp;Oresand required
more than 75 flreflghten to filhl the blue for
several hours to get II Iunder control. (UP I) .

'

TAMPA, Fla. !UPI) - Two merce International S.A., which bank officials supported a poUcy
subsidiaries of an International has headquar!f!rs In Luxem- to accept drug proUts.
banking company , having bQurg and operates In London
' pleaded guilty to charges of and New York, pleaded guilty to
Drug profits were fUtered Into
laundering drug money through three counts of money launder- the Tampa bank from coll~tlon
Panama, wiJJ cooperatl' In the Ing. Twenty-four other counts sites' In Houston, Chicago, Los
prosecution of Manuel Noriega's were dropped.
Angeles, Miami, Detroit, New
. former banker and other .coUnder terms of the agreement, York and Phlladephla, according
defendants.
both · corporate · defendants to the Indictments.
Under the plea agreement agreed to forfeit all funds held In
arranged ·.Tuesday, the Bank of 90-day certificates of deposit,
Cash was brought to Tampa or
Credit and Commerce Interna- including Interest, at the NCNB Wired there by other banks
tional Overseas Ltd. and the Bank of Florida' In Tampa.
cooperating · In Operation . C·
Bank of Credit and Commerce
Chase,
according to the docu·
Prosecutors said the COs were
International S.A. must forfeit bought with Illegally obtained men!. For Ins lance, Mazur would
more than $14 million In certifi- money.
deposit huge amounts at Florida
cates of deposit bougiJt with
Hodges placed both companies National Bank In St. Petersburg,
Illegal profits. The companies,
on probation tor five years and which was cooperating with
which were caught In a federal
said all fines would be waived If Investigators. The bank · then
undercover scheme, also were they meet the terms of probation. would wire the money to BCCI.
placed on probation for five
The Indictment claims BCCI
If either corporat19n falls to .
years•.
o(flclals
would wire the money to
live up to the agreement, Hodges
The companies are subildlar- can fine them up to $500,000 per offices In Panama and deposited
les of the Bank of Credft and vlalatlon, or allow the govern· In accounts of dummy corporaCommerce International, a
ment to seize an amount equal to tions.
Luxembourg-based company two times the companies' gross
run by Pakistanis and backed by
gain from Illegal operation~.
Saudi Arabian funds .
Jury selection Is still scheduled
The bank holding company and
to begin Thursday tor the other
nine of its officers - including defeildan ts In the case. They face
Amjad Awan, whoonceservedas 33 counts of conspiracy to Import
a personal banker for Manuel
and distribute drugs and,l aunder
Noriega - had been scheduled to money. If convicted, each faces a
go on trial Tuesday on charges of maximum penalty of life In
helping to conceal the Illegal
prison without the chance of
sOUrce of $32 mUllon worth of parole.
.
drug profits.
Their defense attorneys have
Under terms of the plea bar·
asked that ihere be no mention of
.. IOYS' &amp; GIIILS'-Siz1 0-14
gain, the corporate defendants
Noriega during the trial. Tbe
must cooperate In additional
deposed Panamanian dictator's
federal Investigations and testify
name was mentioned only,once In
at trial, If asked. There was no · Tuesday's hearing, during a
Indication whether they would be
brief reference to money laun·
asked to testify against Noriega,
dered through Panama to Eurowho Is awaiting trial In Miami on
pean banks.
drug-trafficking charges.
The case stems from a nation·
SIZE 27-36
.. .
U.S. 'District Judge William
wide U.s: Cusinms Service lnvea·
HOdges placed a gag order on the
ligation called Operation . C·
defendants and their attorneys,
Chase, which reached Ita apex In
Lawrence H. Wechsler and E.
IOYS' ' GillS'
.
Tampa Oct. 7, 19811, with the
Lawrence· Barcella Jr., barring
arrest of the defendants at a
them from commenting on the
staged bachelor party.
case.
Nationwide, eight lndlctmentl
In T\ielday's proceedings, the
were returned, elw'alnl more
Balik qt Credit and Commerce
than 80 people with laundertq
ln~natlonal OV'erll!liS ·Ltd ..
drug money.
which has offlCH In Miami,
Federal lnYe~tlptors ebarse
Tarhjla 'and BOca !talon, Fla.,
that officers at BCCI. IUQI!Ited
pleaded ll'UIIty !CI 26 counts of
ways of lauJH!erm, drUJ money
money laundering. Seven other
amounts as large as $1.8 mUtton
counts were dropped.
to an undercover U.S. CUstoms
The Salil! of Credit and Com·
a1ent, Robert Mazur', and that

of women with four or more
children declining from 42 percent In 1920 to 15 percent In 1988.
During the same period, the
percentage with two children has
risen from 13 percent to 35
percent, inaklng the two-child
family today's most popular
family size.
· Overall, the U.S, fertility rate
is just below that, at 1. 9 children
per woman, but that Is up from
the record low of 1.7 In 1976 and
the United States "Is stlll the
fastest gr;owlng lndustrlal!zf!d
.nation In the world."
One reason the total number o!
births remains l)lgh Is because
the BabY Boom generation those born between 1945 and 1960
-has grown Into Its childbearing
years. "However," the report
added, "there Is Increasing evl·
dence that younger 'women are
having more children, too. AI·
ready, 40 percent of the current.
'Echo Boom· births occur 'to
women under 25 - not to Baby
Boomers."
· The report said fertility climbs
slightly - to 2.2 children per
woman, a bout what It was before
World War l l - and Immigration
remains constant, the U.S. popuIa IIon will reach 348 million In
2040, about double the 1960
populattop.
''The nation Is already expe·
rlenclng escalating traf!lc prob-

LOS :ANGELES (UPl) - An
elderly woman feeding her
grandson's pit bulls was severely
mauled by the animals, forcing
doctors to amputate an arm
before she died early
Wednesday.
·
Lilly Marjee, 70. died at the
County-USC Medical Center . at
2: 33 a. rn. PST Wednesday, hospl·
tal spokeswoman Adelalda De Ia
Cerda said. Marjee underwent
about six hours of extensive
surgery as doctors struggled to
save ber Ute following the Tuesday morning attack, De Ia Cerda
said, ·
The woman's arms had been
"chewed to the bone" by the
dOgs, De Ia Cerda said.
Marjee's grandson, Clarence
Hubbard, fo·und the woman on
the kitchen floor In a pool of blood
when he returned to his South Los
Angeles home from work a bout
9:30a.m. to check on her.
.The dogs are usually kept on
chains In the front yard, but
Hubbard had allowed them In the
house because of bad weather.
Marjee, \\'hO was visiting her
'grandson and his wile from San
Diego, told paramedics she had
just fed the dogs whep they
attacked her. She said the attack
went on tor 15 to 30 minutes.
Pollee Lt. Alan Kers~ln said
officers arriving at the !lome at

'

Jay, who resltpled after serving
leas than six years, called the
position "lntoterable."
Attendance, however, was not
a problem Tuesday. The COllrt
had a quorum plus. Besides the
nine members of the current
court, retired Chief Justice
Warren Binger was ln
attendance.
''The young Supreme Court did .
not enjoy the prestlge'that·lt has
today ," Burger said In an ad·
dress to the justices. "It was not .

Chief Justice William Rehn·
regan;ted as • c~ual branch,
and 10me quesUontta whether It qulst closed the session with
could survive. Even Chief. Jus- remarks that noted the U.S. •
tice Jay·, one of the greats among model of a written constitution
our founding fathers, did not see that guarantees basic human
much of a fUture for the court. He right s has taken hold In the
resigned after about six years to post-World War II years and
become governor of New Ynrk ."
continues to expand.
· "As we look todaY'' towards
In addition to Burger. former
Solictor General Rex Lee, and . Eastern Europe - where a
current Solicitor General Ken- curtain which had been drawn
neth Starr delivered speeches, for nearly half of a century has ·
most ot a historical nature, to the been lifted only with the past
year- it may not be too.much to
court.
·

ne- et

·!ems. declining air and water
quai tty and landfill space too lull
to handle our mounting gartiage," said Pamela Wasserman,
author of the study .
"The decision to have asmall
family Is a contribution every
American can make to help
guarantee the fUture for all
children, both In the United
.States and worldwide."
fn looking at pocketbook
issues, the study estimated that,
assuming a 4 percent Inflation
rate, it wlll cost parents of a child
born In 1988ab0ut$150,000over 18
years to provide the baste neces·
slties, such as food and clothing
for the child.· And It does not
include amenities such as
summer camp, ballet or plano
lessons or even orthodontia.
College cos.ts take an even
larger bUe. The report estimated
that with a modest 6 percent
Increase In c(lst, the average
price of four years of private
higher education for a child·born
In 1988 will be about $160,000 and
. an In-state·. public school would
run over $77,000.
•'Approximately 30 percent of
fa!1111Y spending Is co!Dmltted to
the direct costs of raising a child
to 18," the report said. "This
amount rises to between 40
percent and 45 percent with two
children and to· 50 percent with
three children."

21

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•If ~·nu'rc: un&amp;! nf rh,· .fi~·t.' finali!'ib dra"'" ·•• randnm

'

•Durin. v••ur toki • .,.... ~-. ... n~ ~· ·tu'll h..• ~i\' t.•n u k ..·,· ~ It \'ttUr
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JAil. 19

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NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. VOID WHERE PR()HIIUTt:O.

10-7

01.
•'

,..-

les on the American model, "
Rehnqulst said.
'
After the special session. the
court and lnvhed guests attended
a reception In the court's ornate
conference rooms down the corrl·
dor frOil'l the chamber. In add!- .
tlon to' .a number of couri
employees a variety of federal
judges, members of Congress
and Attorney General Dick
Thornburgh at tended.

DON'T MISS THIS ONE
-ltt~IU

·- ·

hope that theie natlou. too, will.• ,

MOTHERS!
r

.

see flf to re-shape their judlclar· .•

••

ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY
Each ot these adverttted •htms is requir~ to be readily
available fOJ sale in each Kroger Store, except as
spec•fiCally noted in this ad . If we do rur~ out of an
aavertised item, we will otter vou vour choice of a
comp.:trable 1tem, when alo'allabte. reflecting the same
sa'olings or a raincheck wh ich will entitle you to purchase

2651 Kenwood St. shortly before times and gotten along with the
dogs.
10 a.m. deScribed a grisly scene.
"What's very alarming about
"Tbeie were hunks of flesh all
over the floor: Both arms were this Is the unpredictability and
stripped o! flesh from wrist to the qUickness to violence these dogs
can exhibit," Kerstein , said.
shoulder," he said.
De Ia · Cerda said doctors · "YO'u really have to take pause
amputated Marjee's left arm and -question the sensibility ol
just above the elbow but were having these kind of dogs at
home.''
able to save her other arm.
Lt. Skip TUcker said the dogs,
Kerstein said charges will not
be brought against Hubbard. He weighing 45 to ·50· pounds each,
described the woman's grandson mJght have become excited wuen
as "extremely distraught." · Al- Marjee was trying to feeq them,
though the pit buils have no at tacking her as she removed
food· from a large bag.
record of violence, Hubbard, who
has owned the dogs for 14
months, has asked ·that the
IIG liDS &amp; IAI.S PIOGIAM
animals be destroyed, he said.
. TUESDAY, JAil. U
· ·Both dogs were Impounded . .
' 6:30P.M.
What triggered the attac~ was
PlEASAIIT VAwY IOSPITAL
unknown.
COIUIUIITY lOOM
Kerstein said the woman has
·
675-4340
f• Mare lnfattMiiOII
visited ' her grandson several

DAN'S JEAN SALE .

..

WASHINGTON (UPll -The
Supmne Court celebrated the
leas·lban·auaplclou begbminga
of that august body 200 years ago
with a apeclalseallon of the court
and a reception.
Tbe first meeting of the Su- ,
. preme Court was held on Feb. 1,
1790, In the Royal Exchange
· Building In New York. The court
.adjourned shortly thereafter as
· only three · of the original six
1us!Ices were able to make II. Tbe
court's first c.btef .j!lstice, John

Grandmother falany inauled by dogs

Bank companies plead guilty
..
to laundering drug ·.money '

I.

.-,

Population group urges small families
WA~HINGTON (UP!) ~ The
link between childbearing· and
the environmental future Is more ·
critical than ever, a population
control group said In urging
couples to have smaller families. ·
"The oniy l,asting remedy to
our national and global environ·
mental woes Is a combination of
more efficient consumption and
a · stable, and perhaps smaller,
U.S. population," Zero Population Group said Tuesday In a new
·report, "Planning the Ideal FamIly: The small family option.''
"Efforts to relieve environ·
mental stress by cuttl~g consumption would be undercut, If
not negated, by continued population groY.rth or by stabilization
at a size larger than our resour·
ces can sustain."
The 20-page report marshaled
a host of studies and ·reports to
offer support to couples deslrl'1g
small or childless families.
•'Couples need to consider bow
the childbearing decisions will
affect their pocketbooks, their
lifestyle, their prospective child·
ren and the global environment,"
said Susan Weber, executive
director of Zero . Population
' Growth.
Some ' trends already
support
'
.
the group's vision.
The large family, for example,
Is becoming a rarity In present. day A,m erlca with the percentage

-j'

..

The Deily S••tlnii-Prp• 9

Wadnaatt.y. J.....ary 17. 1190

Barbara Bush ·gives qualified. support for women in coinbat

a

.

V'v'dnlldaf, Jenu.y 17, 1990

Pomerov-Middleport. Ohio

WASHINGTON (UPI) -First certainly they are, mentally and
When the questions centered
lady Barbara Bush says . she emotionally, more than able to on Panama, Mrs. Bush said the
would support women in _cpmbat compete with a man.
president told her o! plana to
lr they are physically up to tile · " The only problem I have," Invade the Central American
task because they ;ire " mentally she added, "Is if It risks some- country before the troOJII mo~
an!l emotionally more than able one's life."
ln. "I tholl8ht It had to be done,"
to compete with a man. "
The Issue of' women In combat she said, but adcled 1114t "I
· Mrs. Bush took the qual ifled arose when It was revealed that thought It was tragic we 1011 the
stand on the Issue, which has female U.S. soldiers were In· · lives," referring to 23 Americans
·burgeoned since last month's · volved In Incidents where u .s . killed during the Invasion.. ,.
U.S. Invasion of Panama, In an troops exchanged gunfire with
CaiUng herself her husband's
Interview Tuesday wltli wire P anamanlan Defense Forces.
"biggest tan, " Mrs. Bush never·
service reporters. ..
It was unusual tor Mrs. Bush to theless said that d1u1ng the
While avoiding other contra-. take a position on controversial Invasion "I couldn't get over·liow
versial Issues, the first lady Issue since In the past she has level he 'was, 11ow steady f!ewas,
responded to a questio.n about the taken great care to keep her how right I thOught he was. I
role of women In combat by opinions on sensitive topics to always think he Is, but l was
saying she supported the idea ''If hersel!.
doubly Impressed by the enorI thought a woman could physt.
The .only time she showed any mous burdens (and) that he
cally pick up ·someone who was Irritation during Tuesday's inter- managed to keep everything In
wounded and carry them to view was when asked for her focus."
safety."
.
· views on abortion and gun
Ten days after the Invasion,
" If they could throw a hand control, 'dtsmlsslng them with she said the president came
grenade as far as a man, then I "nice try. nice
Let's get on" racing Into her office In the·
would say 'fine' because I think with another
. family quarters to
. .' . ' .

.

~

I'

•'

!

�I

Paga 10-The o.ly Santinoll
r---

~Of

Local news briefs ..- - .
Continued !rom page 1

EMS has .six
'

Tues~

calls

'

Six calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday by units of
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
,
· At 6:28a.m ., Middleport was called to the Overbrook Ce nter
fo r Leola . Scha ffer who was taken to Veterans Memorial ·
Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 6: 51a.m . .to Route 143 for Carl Schaffer
to HolZer Medical Center and at 9: 54a.m. to the .multi-purpose
building on Mulberry Heights for Donald VanCooney to
Veteraps Memorial Hos plial.
·
Pomeroy Fire Depar tment was calle\1 at 11 :14 a.m. to a
s tructure fire at the Ma rlon Watson residence on Old Ches ter
Road.
Middleport at 12: 10 a.m. transported Nola Bradshaw from
Race St. to HolZer Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 12:12 a.m. transported Ella Rolltns .from the
Arbaugh Addition to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospita l.

Help sought for family

'l

The Marion Watson family lost their home and all .their
belongings to a fire which occurred late Tuesday morning at
· their Old Chester Road home. Watson Is a part-time worker for
Pomeroy VIllage so good, used Items of cl~thlng, linens,
furniture , etc., will be accepted for the family .at village hall.
Watson has three daughters, ages 4, 5 and 12, and a son, age 9.
His wife wears size 12-l41n clothes. He wearsmen' sslzesmall.
Help for the family would be most appreciated, said a
spokesman from the ·village hall.

Reaction~ ..

continued from page 1

said House · Speaker Pro Tem- agreed with Celeste that Ohio
pore Barney Quilter, D-Toledo. shol!ld be prepared to con;~pete
" He's left a lot of programs In nationally and internationally In
place."
·
the 1990s and beyond.
Senate Minority Leader Harry
"However, the fact Is that Ohio
Is
not a leader today, and our
Meshel, D-Youngstown, c alled It
a " good speech" arid said It won't current state of mediocrity has
take "that much new money" to been engendered during Gov.
Celeste' s seven years In office,"
achieve Celeste' s·goals .
" We can finance the drug he said.
progra m for the next couple or
"It took the Celeste admlnls·
tratlon six years to begin pU$hlng
years from surpluses." he said.
But Assistant Senate President for education reform," said
Pro Tempore Richard Finan, Votnovlch, adding, ' 'Ohio Is jii"St
R·Cinclnnatl, pointed out the beginning to react to the drug
·
governor talked very little about problem.
"As an Ohioan, I am dlsap·
the problem of solid waste and
said nothing about the avallabll· pointed with the lack of progress
ity and cost of health insurance. made during the past seven
"! see those as major prob- years. As an Ohioan, I am not
lems, " he said.
happy with a 'C' report card.
Former Cleveland ·Mayor Ohio Is · not working up to Its
George Voinovlch, a GOP hope· capacity. We should work to be
(ul for . the governor's office, the very best,'' Votnovlch said.
Continued from page 1
Gov. Ce. [este···------

much as the idea one year ago of
a reunified Germany, a no.nCm:nmunlst · Poland and . a
market-oriented Hungary.
"Seven years ago the ques lion
was: could Ohio recover?" said
Celeste. " Together we did. Together we brought Ohio back In
the 1980s. Now, with continued
common effort, we must strive
for. leadership Into the 21st
ce11tury .
"For the 1990s the question Is,
·can Ohio lead?' My answer- I .
believe our shared answer - Is
lead we will."
The governor set a series of
specific goals he hopes will be
accomplished by 2000:
-Makllig Ohio's work force
the best trained andmostflexlble
In the nation; moving the state
from third In exports past Texas
and ·challenging California for
first;
-graduating 98 percent of high
school students, 25 percent of
them with an International baccalaureate which Is standard In
Europe and requires fluency In
two languages; sending twothirds of high school pupils to
college:
. .
.
-raising the state · minimum
wage from an "embarraslng"
$2.30 an hour to at least the
federal minimum of $3.35, to be
$4 ,25 in 15 months; obtaining a
commitment from business lead·
ers for day care for chlldrel) of
low-Income working families;
-providing 100 percent of
older Ohioans with healthy !liternatives to nursing homes, and all
Ohioans access to treatment for
addiction; furnishing employ- ·
ment to one-third of all welfare
recipients and cutting the housing shortage by 50 percent;
-stabilizing the prison popula·
lion, now 30,080, at 43,000, and
providing "swift , sure punish·
men! for drug traffickers and the
crimes they spawn. "
.J
The governor also set less
tangible goals for environmental
protection, calling for res trlctlon
of out-of-state waste, strong
recycling legislation, safe drink·
lng water. and the creation of an
environmental education fund
and an environmental trust fund

to conserve and enhance parks
recreational areas, and to
restore damaged areas.
He also set goals for a pet
project · of his - peacemaking
and conflict· resolution. Celeste
said by the end of the decade,
every young citizen should know
mediation skUis and every community should have access to a
dispute resolution center.
At least 20 percent of all court
cases should be resolved without
trial, he said.
"We have worked together for
a long time," said the governor.
"1 have been with some of you.ln
these halls for almost 20 years:· I
have · n~ver seen the pace of
change move so swiftly as In the
past few years.
"! have suggested ambitious
goals for Ohio as we move Into
the decade of the 1990s. Some of
you may even feel that these
goals are unrealistic or beyond
our reach."
The governor quoted , the
prophet Joel: "Where there Is no ·
vision the people shall perish."
''I ask you to share with me
today a vision for Ohio: leading
In global competition, leading In
world class education', leading In
community-based human service, leading In conflict resolution skill-building.
"Today, the ques Uon Is: will
Ohio lead? Let us answer together we will!''
&lt;~nd

'

Vo'i dnntsy. Jlnurf 17. 1810

Mldrlaport. Ohio

Wanniilg trend continues in Buckeye.State.
By UBMed Preas lateru&amp;lonal
Mlsslaslppl . Valley to central
Ohio's mild winter weather Texas was aldlpg In thedevelopecontinued Wednesday as what ment of showers and scattered
normally In January would be thunderstorms from the lower
snow came In the form of rain Mississippi Valley Into the westacrols much of the state.
·ern• laket1 and the loWer Ohio
Drizzle and a little light rain Valley. This wet weather was
that occurred over parts of Ohio expected to remain acrQSs Ohio
Tuesday died our by Tuesday Wednesday night and Thursday
evening but returned across morning.
·
much of the state early WednesThe weather service said the
day as temperatures ranged · cold front will swing across Ohio
from the 40s to the lower 50s.
WednesdaY tonight and ThursLow pressure ott to Ohio's day morning and a turn toward
west, and higher pressures to the lower temperatures will take .
eas t were combining to cause Ohio througll the second half or
southwest breezes responsible the week.
for the mUd and moist air In Ohio.
On the early morning weather
The National Weather Service map, low pressure was over
said very mlld, If not record western Wisconsin with a warm
breaking warmth, was the rule. front east to upstate New York. A
Tuesday and slmllar Conditions eold front trailed from the ·low
· were predicted for Wednesday.
Into central Texas. High pies·
But more clouds were expected sure occupied most the East
to trim a few degrees orr Coast stales from New England
Wednesday's highS.
to Florida. More high pressure
was over western Canada.
A cold front from ·the upper

Approval given for .
.trash collection pact
sends out for garbage cojlectlon.
, By LEE ANN WELCH
A~cordlng to Mike Patrick of
OVP News Staff
The Gallipolis City Commls-' Mid-American, some changes
slon gave Its approval Tuesday to, will be made In the coUectlon
the·flllSt reading ofth.e new 3-year service to make It more efflclen t.
trash collection contr!ICt with
For example, coUectlon will
Mld-Amerlc;m Waste .Systems of begin at 6 .a .m . .on Tuesday and
Jackson.
Thursday. Each Tuesday, gar·
· Under the contract's ·terms, bage will be coUected east of and
the commission agreed to a price . Including Spruce Street, with the
o{ . $7.50 per residential unit, exception of a few narrow streets
determl.ned by active. water that will not accommodate . the
accounts monthly. In turn, the larger truck. On Thursday, the
city receives 10 cents ·per bill It
remainder of residences will be
serviced with a smaller truck.
Other days will be fo~ ~ommer·
clal ·accounts.
Continued from page I"
Patrick feels this system, with
sound management. He's ,looked two people on each truck and an
at the state budget and does not earlier starting time, will add to
believe there Is a need for a tax the efficiency of the operation.
Increase at this time."
The contract also makes provl·
Taft also decried Vo111olrich's slons for recycllng ·an.d compost·
humbling 1988 loss to Sen. How - lng programs In the future and
ard Metzenbaum, D'Ohlo. Volnoensures the collector will make
vlch. despite spending $7 million, every effort to not Interfere with
was trounced by 607,000 votes. the traffic ·now .
Taft said he carried only four
Material being picked up in·
precincts In Cleveland and only· .ciuded In the contract are house-·
34. percent of the vote in Cuya- hold trash and refuse, discarded
.hog a County.
furniture and yard materials. It
·''If we lose 'the governor's race
specifically excludes earth, sod,
. and the other offices that make
rocks, concrete, refuse from
up the Apportionment Board, our remodeling or construction of
party will re~J~aln the minority
hom!!S and trees exceeding two
Into the 21st century," said Taft,
Inches ·in diameter. ·
"As Republicans, we simply
All materials. collected will go
can't afford to give Goerge
to the Galila" County Landfill,
another. unchallenged ride to
Patrick also noted.
disaster."

·Taft ...

Norma K. Wilcox , 70, 129
Huntington Place, Sandusky.
diE!!! Tuesday morning follow! ng
a lengthy Illness.
She was born In Pomeroy on
Aug. 4, 1919, daughter of Archie
and Mary Ellzlibeth Knight
Butcher, and was a member of
the Sandusky Baptist 'temple.
She Is survived by her hus·
band, Wooclrow (George) Wilcox
to ·whom she was married ta
years; one son, James Wilson of
Sandtllky, and three daughters,
· Sally Miller, Little Hocking;
Diana Missler, Belview; and
Lynda Jane Dale, Norwalk; 10

726.
PICK-3 ticket Sales totaled
$1,248,150.50, with a payoff due of
$684,53~. 50.
.
'
PICK-4·
9274.
PIGK-4 ticket sales . totaled
$230,723.50, with a payoff due of
$72.700.

.

, Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions ~ Char·
lotte Conley. Portland; John
Houck, Pomeroy; Ina Daines,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - Larry
Curtis.

WEATHER MAP - Durln1 early Thunday mol'lllnl, snow Is
foreca.st for parts of the soatheru Jalermouplalnlwglon and paris
, of the southern Plains. Showers and thunderstonns are forec1111t
for parta of the southern Plains, the Mid Ml881s&amp;lppl Valley, the
. Ohio Valley aad most of ~he mid to north AUanllc Coast Stales.
Showers and thunderstorms are p0881ble l"n most oftbe Gulf Co1111t
Stales. .
' ·

~-----Weather .----South Central Ohio
percent. Occasional rain ThursRain, possibly heavy at times, day , with highs In the low 50s.
and a chance of thunderstorms , Chance of rain Is 80 percent.
Wednesday night, with a low
Ohio extended Forecast
near 50. Chance of rain Is near 100
Friday through Sunday
A chance of rain or snow
Friday and Saturday, with fair
. weathet on ' Sunday. HighS will
range from 35'to 45 Friday and be
In
the 30s Saturday and Sunday.
Dally ~lock prices
Overnight
lows will lie ~tween
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
25
and
35
early
Friday and In the
Bryce and Mark Snilth
20s
Saturday
and Su11day
of Blunt, Elils &amp; Loewl
mornings,
Am Electric Power ........ .. .. .31 Y.
AT&amp;T ........ ............. ...... .... ..42Ji,
Ashland 011 .... ....... .............39',8 ,
Bob' Evans .. ... ............. .........13\fz ·
Charming Shoppes ...... ..... ...10%
City Holding Co .. .. ......... .... .. 15
Federal MoguL. ........ .... ...... 20'h
Goodyear T&amp;R ............... . All-8 ·
Heck's ....... .. ............. ..... ..:... 3%
Key Centurion .......... .... .... ..13'h
Lands' End .. ............... .1 . ... .. 19%
Limited Inc.·...... ..... ..... ....... 34%
Multimedia Inc . .... ........ .. .... 87'h
Rax Restaurants ................ .. !%
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .... ... ....... 15'h
Shoney's Inc ......... .... ... ..... ... 11
Star Bank ..... ....... ................ 20
Wendy's !nth .. ... ......... ....... .. 4'h .
Worthington Ind ... .. ........ .. .. .22%

Stocks

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 9.92-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
• Ads outside Me tgs. Gallia or Mas on counties mu st be prepatd
'Receivtt $ 50 dinounl for ads pai d 1n advancu.
' Free ads
Gitoteaway and Foun~ ads~o~nder 1'5 words will be
run 3 d.vsat noeh•ge
' Price of ad for all cap•talletters ts double price ot ad cost
··7 pomt line type onl'y usod .
'Sentinel is not tesponsible lor err on aftet first d&amp;\' . (Check
.to,. euon fin I d., ad runs in paperl - Call betore 2 :00p.m.
dav after pubhtalion 10 mak 8 conect lon.
'Ads that must be pa•d inadvancearB
Card of Thanlils
Hippy Ads
In Memon.-n
Yard Sal•

SWin ECKRICH

turkey Breast ......~.'••••••!!. S3.79
MARGARINE
SPREAD ........... ;.t~P.... $1.79

SWEET POTATO

c•ESE ......~••.••••Wi.... '2 .19

YAMS ....................L.Q ••••• s9 c
RIPE
TOMATOES ..........J.t s 1.89

SMALL EGGS ......~;.. S1.09

GRAPEFRUIT ••• J.t~•. 3/99 1

COLlY LONGHORN
HAVEl VAllEY

1

MARSH RED

OlE-Ill

Hash Browns ••• ~........u~~l•.. s1.5 9
IEEMS
Egg Noodles ..............n.~l•.. S1.49.
•s. PAUL'S
.
Fish Fillets ................. ~...•••• s2 .2 9

OUR LANGUAGE AD-VICE: Today's Ad-Vice Award starts this year's
Mriel 011 apelliD&amp; problema. Tbe recipient ill New fork publicatloa thllt
repeatedly •predjudlce." Tbat
word lllould be prejM!ee, with oaly
· one d; Ill ~IJ: II pre- (not Jl"d-). The
ume pubUcatloa 111e11 "prl¥iledse."
and It's my privilege to point out tbat
tbe • In thltt 1IOUD sbould also be

HOIMEL

dlopped.

,.

20°/o.
OFF

'IIIUISDA Y•
SAYUIDAY

Cla.~.~ifit•d pOJ{I'.~

W./114./t#..ftuJ
L.FI. tiSB~:

HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
210
MAIN
'992-6254
EAST

POMEROY

OPEN MONDAY , _ f.AY 9100-6:30
SAMDAY 9100-5100

.

Vienna Sausage ••-....~.qt.2 fS1.29
BUSH'S
.Chili Hot Beans••• ~.••••1.~.~~-•• 2/99&lt;
HUNTS 4 PACK
Snack Pack Puddings ••••••• S1.59
CliiPIILL'S
.
·
·
Cheddar Soup ...........1.~.~~-••••••• 79&lt;
1.011
Corn·
Beef
.................
~1.2...~!••• S1. 8 9
DISH DITIIGIIIT
. .
.
22 oz. . $1 ·49
·
A• L"1qu1"d ••••••••·······~··
AlGI
.. ••• • . .

Retirod •... ,................. -0-

11

3 Annouilcements

. ·log homes
dealership

ncau.ur'JHCOu POJEPr1'W.
l.th\.'Sinh'lll JOC)I;t '~.;u r.:d hy
"lan i nf!. ~ l SI:!.·P." .
..:urrcnt _joh.
C:all Don Hh:kman

mn\ld hnmc.

Rl•l,tin

~ n ur

li. 1lll· r..:L' 1·XIIU-MJ -(W.7U or
Colll'1.'. l hl ~~ .ltN-17.! 1.

lt48 -- Gallipolis

992

367- Ctl•hire
388 - Vinton
, 246- Rio Grande
256 ~ Guv-n Pist.
643-- Arabia Di1i.
379 - WIInut

Part time pollitlon ia avtllable for a Medical
Laboratory Technician to wolk rot1tlng

lhHt1 lall 1hlftal- Require• independent

Bath Tissue ...............4.~... S1.69
lOYAL Clln
.
fig Bars ....................3.~.q~••• S1.69.
Mr. ·Juice ...................\P.~... 3/3-9f

worker with i:lpabllitiaaln all1reea of clinical lllboratory. Excellent fringe beneflt1.
Pleaae contact:
Cecelia Lllle, labora101'y Supervlaor
VeteraN Memorial Hoapltli
116 E. Memorlel Driva
Pomeroy, OH. 41718
·
(8141882-2104, Eatenlion 216 E.OE

I h1•

61 - Farm ~quipm8nt
62 - Wanted to Buv
63 - live stock
64 - Hay &amp; Grain

65 -Seed &amp; Ferl1lizer

Transport at ion

Mc rc l1andtse

1 5 - SchOols • Instruction
18 ~ Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair

Bu~t~n•5

81
82

54 - Misc. Merch~ndise
Sti' Building Suppli•

Finanml
..21

Services

51 - HouMhold Goods
5~ - Sporti~g Goods
63 - Andques

17 - Miscellaneous
18 -Wanted To Do

83

Oppor1un11y

- Excarating

84 ~ Eied ti c• &amp; Rehigt~~ation
85 - Gunaral Haulmg
86 · Mobile Hom e Rep11r
87 - Upholstery

56 - Pfls tor Sale
57 - Musical Instruments
58 - Fruits &amp; VJ gM•bl•

22 ·· Moner lo lo11n
2 3 Prol•t~onal Servu: ltll

~ofTie tmpro..,.fnem~
Plumbing &amp; He •inu

59 - For Sale or Trsde

Business Services

Eoalom Loco! School Dlo·
trict d•ir81 to r~ve
-lod blclo on the following:
Bi~ding ond Poroon~
Propony lnouronco
Speclflcetiona 1heet1 are
evaHable at the TreMurer'a

11- ·90.1 mo.

In Order to be conekterad
all ooalod bldo ohall bo received in the Tr. .Urer' 1 of·
fice by 12 o'clock noon on
March 1, 1890.
Sold Boord of Educotion
r•ervee the right to accept

•nv end ell pert1 of

ony and all bidl.
Bo•d of Education.
E11t8rn Local School
Diotrlct
Eloiae Boaton, Treuurer
.
38800 SR7
Roeclov~lo. Ohio 46772
]1) 17. ltc

ROSES'
EXCAVATING
&amp; DUCKING

WANTED

office. 1

LOW GUDI OAI

SAW LOGS
,
$160 Tho:...
'

3rd Str11t,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"LIGHT HAULING

Wlat1r ~~..111 Or

882-22119

.-_

. -""-·
NEW llSTIN.G - LONGBOT·
TOM- 6 room cabin sitting
on l 'h acres with a view of
the Ohio River. Newly remO. ·
deled, carpet, electric heat,
rei. and range. $21 ,500.00.

NEW LISTING - RACINE
- Ranch home with 3 bed·
rooms. I \7 beth. carpetin&amp;
and 2 car gaiage sitting on
3.2+ Acres. Wliodburnet to
supple111ent heat and spring
available. $28,900.00.
MIDDlEPORT - 2 Vacant
Lois. all utililies available.
Ready to go lor a mobile
·home or build a new home.
Just $7,500.\)0
FIVE POiNTS AREA
Three-one acre building
s~es. ~lee. &amp; water available. GQod locatiOA for your
nt!!&lt; home. $5,900.00.

. NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16-16-tfn

PLUMIING

IlEA TING

161 North Socaml .
M''ll.,ert, Olio 45760

IUSIIISS PIIONI
16 UJ 9·2-USD
PIIONI
'1614)

COUNTRY
MOIIU
HOME PARI

......_.........
117 L llcl 1

OUMPTRUCK
Sand-Stone·Oirt

(614) 667-3!71
Gr...t A. Newland

7-11-'19-do

6:30 ....

Homellte.
T-.lrlggo.

NO SUNDAr

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVElY SUNDAY
Starts at 1.:00 P.M.
Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only
9-6-19-tlr!

~ (614) 446·1619 or (614) 992·2104
'417 Second Avt~~~e. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·
or at
Veterans lletnoriat Hos1~it
' ~ulbeny Hils, Pomeroy,

'

z

Stratton.

PH. 992·3922

.

or los. 949-!160

iE Ucensed COnical Audioloaist .

WMdMtw.

a... S.:;t;:~Ontr

PH.• 949·!101

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Stock Porto for

Strkktlr

........ hilt

"Free .Ea1imuoa"

listeninc Devices
Dependlblt Harin&amp; Aid Slles &amp; S.n•i••
Hearin&amp; Ev1lullions For All Aps

engtn•

.

W. Y•~•;t Inc.

PI

ey, OW.

Buying Houra:

7:30·1:00
Mon. thru Fri.

182-2188

7:30.4:00 Satunl.,
1·2-'... l•o.

:Roger Hysell

L L HOLLON

I

.

I

PH. 992-3561
11SH,...ton

Middleport,

FIINACI

992-SIJS • tiS·S561

EVDY
SAT. fiGHT

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moa1 2 ond 4-cyclo

PAT HILL FOlD

FUIIIACE

SIIVICI

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

ln
..... Oh•

...,

•• ratllaton and
lltater car". We COli
ako add bol and Nd
out radlatan. W• aho
riJIII!rGerTns.

lt. 33 Nertt. ef
••• ...,. Oltle
I·IZ·'...tlr!

&amp;II'S APPIIAIICI

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

Le.t.llet Ytillly l

Wt can repair alld rt·

H2-7479

PARTS AND SIAVICE
ALLMAKU
GAl OA ILICTAIC

dn

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

WAllED

•Mobile Home
Plrtl
•Mobile Home

UAJIACI

Aaou p,_ Poot Office

REPAIR

F•hln chlflt

12.

992-5335 or 915·3561

DAVE'S
SMAll ENGINE

IACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Pay Your Phone
Ceble Billa Here

lEN'S API'UANCE
SEIYICE

12-13-'19-1110.

...... hlhllnt

SALES &amp;SERVICE
Wo C""'f Plohlng luppll•

•Lot Rentala

a

992·2772

GUN SHOOT

New locotlon:

AIIIIUla

woodburner tor cheap heat.
$43,900.00.
lll1lly £. Ctlllnd-992-lltl
.11111 TruiMI1-949-26SO

VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

Day or Night.

POMEROY, OH.

J&amp;L

INSULATION

949-!160

up

1-15;'90-lfrl

"FIREWOOO

RtaiOIIablt Prlcts"
Re1.

•o.

"SHRUB • TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

PH. 949·2101

' or

MAIN n., IIU1lAND

Oh.

1/l/"19/ 1 ....

CUSTOM BUlLT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
11..1~1111.U..J

•Tire Salea
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change • Lube
-•Brake Work

949-2493

· POIIIIOY, OH.

~'At

742-3018

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE

OHIO PALLET
' COMPANY

•VINYL S IOING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

RUTlAND TIRE
SAUS and
SERVICE

'

DIUVEIID TO

Reel Estate General

Jo Hlll-985-~6
Offl-912·225.

48 - -Equipment tor Rent

49 - For '--••

'

NOTICE TO 8100ERS

! .101
M...

45 - Furnished Rooms

46 - Sptce tor Rent
47 - W•nted to Ren1

Middl~n

The Boord of Education of

r~ect

44- Ap•tm.nt IOJ Rent

1 1 .. Help Wanted •

. '

11 ·v Autos lor Sale
72 - Trucks for $al e
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WD ' s
74 Mo t or cycle~
75 ·Boats S. Mot Ofs tor Sal e
76 . Aulo Part s &amp; Aeceuon•
77 ··Auto Repatr
78 Camping Equipmtnt
79 CampBt'l &amp; Motor Homes

43 - Farms tor Rent

••c•o
. ..........

Garage .

rer Oh!o
AUTO &amp; TRUCK

lt.•U4, PI n

•GRAVEL
•UMESTONE
·•fiLL DIRT

REPAIR

Allr
tn••••••••
PH. 992·5612

·•ANYTHING

AT ALL

or 992·7121

915.;4422

4-25-tfn

,.

.

MobileHom" for Sale
Farms for Sale
Bulin•• luildin9s
Lots&amp; Acre~ e
Real Estate Wanted

l;iijUIJld

12- Siluation Want8d
13 - lnsur•nce
14 - Busin•• Training

M•on Co .. WV
Area COde 304

Public Notice

,\ nho.,; h, 1&lt;'1111•'"'''' .1] 111 .1

MEDICAl lAIOIATOIY TECHNKIAN

6 -· Heppy Ad1

675- PI . Ple•anl ·
Pomeroy
· 458 ..-Leon
985 - Ch••r
57&amp; -· Apple Gtove
843 - Portlend
773 - Mason
247 letan Falls 882 -· New Hewen
949 - R•ci.ne
891 - letan
742 -· Rut'-"d ,. 937 - Buff.to
&amp;67 .- Coolville

.'" I I Mu r tr~·•·' t'"'' ' N:,l

,

CH"A•IN

Meigs County
Are• Code &amp;1•

c.,.,.,~

Help Wtntld

c-m•t•r

Galli a County "
Area Code 61•

Public N01ice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIQUCIARY
On Jonuory &amp;. t 880, In
tho Meigs County Probote
Court. Caao No. 284&amp;3.
Phylllo PouMn. 1 2 Fiohor
Stroot. Pomeroy. Moip
County, Ohio, 46719, appointed Executrix of tho
111111o of J. Lucien PouHn,
decoaoed, lato of 1 2 Fisher
St.-t, Pom""'Y,
Meip
Courttv. Ohio. 467119.
Robort·E. Buck,
Probote Judpo
Lena K. N11MI101d. Clorti
11} 10.
.. 17, 24. 3tc

32 33 3I35 . 36 -

·

6 -lost 1nd found
.
J .-.. v.,d Sele tpa.id in achsn cel
8 .., Public Sale &amp; Auc1 fo:n
9 - Wanled to Buy

ftlllowinl{ lf'it•t)hont• I'Xt~hmll{t&gt;S ...

1UBTRACr THOSE TillS

for Fiocel Yoor Ending
Docombor 31, 1889
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
COUNTY Of MEIGS
'~Thll II An Unaudited
Financlol Report" ,
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES ,
REC El PTS ANO
EXPENOITURES
REVENUE RECEtPTSTa- .... ..... .. .... .38,666 .62
lntergovernmentll
Receipts .... ... ..40.31 1. 71
tnterott ... ..... ....... t ,922.61
All Other
Rovonue .•.. ..... 27,290.1!2
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .... 108. 181.71
OISBURSEMENTSGen•al
"
'
Governm'ent , .. 23,674.28
Public SafetY .. ... 11,944.80
Public Work• ... ..68.479.70
Hoolth ........ ........ .6,520.89
Capibl Outlay ...23,11 1 .20 .
Dobl s.rv·ICO;
. lnter•t end Fi1011
Chargll .............. 360.68
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ..... ... 128,881 .36
Tow RocoiptoOvor/ (Unclorl
Dlab.... .... ... .. [20.809."4)
Total of Roc. • Other
Sourcoo Over (Undot]
Diob. • Other
·
UaOI ... ....... .. ]20,809.641
fund Caoh Batonco
Jon. 1, '89 ... .. ...51,922.02
Fund Caoh Balance
Dec. 31. '89 .....31 .112.38
bopoiMory
Botance .......... 37,824 .61
Total Tro01u ry
Balanco ... ....... 37.824.81 .
.• Len Outlltandlng
. Chocka .......... , ... 6.712.23
TOTAL
.
BALANCE .. ....31,112.38
SUMMARY OF
iNOEJTEDNEII
Ou-ndlng
Jiln 1. '89 ......: .......... -0Now t n - .. .: .... .8,000.00

4 - Gl\learwav

31 - Homes fOJ Sale

Employment
Serv tc1:s

2 '0Q PM . WEDNESOAY
2100 P.M . THURSDAY
2 00 P.M . FRIOAV

Outotandlng
Doc. 31. '89 .. ... .. 9,000.00
1 certify tho following ro·
portto'be correct ..,d true to
tho bill of my knowledge:
Gloria Hutton.
Jan. 11. 1990
Townahip Clerk
Rt. 2, Albany, Oh . 46710
(614) 698-6204
(1117, '1tc

1 - Card ol Th ... ks
2 - ln Memory .
3 - Ann.oueements

42 -- Mobile Homea tor R ent

2 00 P.M . TUESDAY

Public"N Olice

t6
t5

FMIII Suppl1es
&amp; L1vesluck

Real Estate

41 ...:.. t1ouMs tor Rent

11:00 A .M SATURDAY
2 00 P.M MONDAV .

•

t6
16

for each d., as SBP.Ifale ads.

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

... DOI1A8S
TO YOIIlPOCKET
" WITH A

15

Rates are for contecutive runs. brollenupd~swill bech•ged

'A cl•s;flad advert isement placed 1n The Daily Sentmall81t ·
CllifPI
clasSified displiiY. Bus1n•s Card and legal notices]
w•ll ai!IO app e ar 1n the Pt. Pleasant Reg.ster ,and the Gall1·
polls Daily Tribune. reaching over ,8.000 hDmBI.

COPY DE AOLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESOAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY .PAPE-R
f-HIOAV PAPER.
SUNDAY PAPER

Ann ou ncP.lll ent s

OvtJr 16 Words
'
.20
.30
.42
.60
813.00
.05/ da_y
51 .30/ day

Rate
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

Word I

Davs
1
3
6'
. 10
Monthly

POLICIES

·fiNANCiAL REPORT

Gut Bologna •••••••.••••••••!!.- S1. 99

RED OR WHilE

The nrst public school In the ·United
the Bosl-on . Latin SchOOl.
opened in 1635.

States.

'

OFTOWNSHI~

BlUE IONIET

the Baku airport and train
station to prevent Armenians
from fleeing the city.
Iran's official news agency
meanwhile qul)ted Iranian spirit · · •
ual leader AyatoUah All Khamenel as saylr.g his country att·
ached "great Importance" to the
Islamic zeal. ·~ f people In Soviet
Azerbaijan, scores of whom •
braved a n Icy river to cross Into
Iran recently .
Over the past. tw.o weeks I RNA t
a nd Tehran · radio reported that
thousands of people assembled
on the Soviet side of the Aras
River to chant Islamic slogans.
Scores swam across, some using
Inflated tires to r each Iran's
shore.

·· • The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Public N 01ice

OLD FASHION

MIKE PATRICK

parliame nt 's two chambers,
warned the ethnic violence
" could be a death blow fo r
perestrolk!l'' and derail GQrba·
chev's reform drive.
Maj. Gen. Yurt Kosolapov ,
commander of the emba!Ued
region, said, " What Is going on
now here In Nagorna-Kara bakh
and northern· Azerbaijan can be
unambiguously called civil
war.''
But the central government' s
redoubled effort to stem the
violence appe ared t"o be
faltering.
Tass said " at least 300 tr ucks
carrying milita nts' ' had massed
on · the boroers of NagornoKarabakh and nearby Armenia
and that supplies to the regtori
were cut off by a rail blockade.
Radio Moscow's lnterfax news
service said Azerbaijani Popular
Front nationalists were blocking

.

;

UPI

Meat Salad ·········~······ ..!!••• ~.89&lt;

· Hospital news

but many have left In the pu I two
years.
About 4,000 Armenian refugees
have been evacuated from Baku,
2,000 of them across the Caspian
Sea Into Turkmenia by ferry and
passenger boats and the others
flown north to towns In the
Russian republic, the Tass
agenCy said.
"Tbe situation Is extremely
tense," said Yurl Shatalln, commander of Interior Ministry
special forces . "The Information
we are getdng Is more and more
like reports from a war front."
.. Shatalln said one Interior Min·
Is try soldier had been killed and
11 badly wounded, .a nd that four
of his troops were missing. He
said 49 " Instigators of pogroms"
had been arrested and hundreds
of weapons were confisCated.
Lawmaker Yevgenl. Prl ·
' makov, head of one of the

'

or

Rt-.1 orders back or returns to
Cllltody. U you demand a· pn!Duncia. tioa .clue, I recommend ending re-.1 the way that you end demud.
Pvvlew indicates the range of
one's control or authority. Look at this
noun carefully, 1od you'll nOtice the
view tbat ends ,...view.

Green will officiate. Graveside
services 'wtn be beld at 1 p.m.
Friday at ~lvervlew Cemetery In
Middleport. Memorials may be
made to the Sandusky Baptlat
Temple.

.

MOSCOW (UPI) Some In the enclave of Nagorno- Independence ralites and demon11,000 fresh Soviet troops were In Karabakh, a disputed region strations In the capital of Tbillsl, ,
place Wednesday to reinforce populated mo~ttly by Chris dan . reports from Georgia said. But a
soldiers trying to stop ethnic Armenians but located within general strike there eased and
warfare between Armenians and Moslem Azerbaijan. ,-\zerbaljan transportation resumed, the
Azerbaijanis. Soviet news re- has resisted efforts by Its nelgh- Gudoltc railroad ln!fustry newsports said the death toll In the borlq republic of Armenia to paper said, while adding, •'Not
Transcaucaslan battles climbed take control of the disputed all the enterprises are working In
to 76.
enclave.
Tbllls.l."
The dally Communist Party
The latest ethnic strife, the
Pr11vda newspaper justlfled the worst since Soviet leader Mikhail
· The dispute over the moun tam·
huge troop deployments as a use GOrbachev ·assumed power In ous Nagorno-Karabakh region
of ' 'force In the name of life, In March1985,broughttornorethan has been the focus of contention
the name of humanism; force · 270 thOSe killed since the dispute between the age-old enemies
which alms not at bloodshed, but over'Nagorno-Karabakh er11pted ·since February 1988.
at putting an end to it." .
nearly rwo years ago.
,
Even a Soviet decision In late
The official Tass news agency
Tass said 6,000 Interior Minis- November to restore control of
said "56 people, mostly (Chris· try troops and 5,000 army soldi- the enclave to Azerbaijan did not
tlan) Armenians, have been ers ordered to Azerbaijan under mollify the Azerbaijanis; whOse
killed and 156 woundf!( In Baku,'' · a state of emergency decree had powerful Popular Front has now
~he capital of the mostly Moslem
all arrived by Wed~Jesday.
•. called for expelling all Armen·
republic of Azerbaijan, since the
· Meanwhile, , another crisis Ians ·from the region as well as
ethnic fighting began Saturday. brewed In the third Transcauca- from Baku.
The Izvestia government news· , sl ~ n republic of Georgia. where
Some 300,1)00 Armenians once
pal?"r said 20.others were killed thousands attended · p~o- lived In Baku, a city of 1.7 million,
.

ASSIIDAD

by Jeffrey MeQuiD

BapdatTHnple. TheRev . ~r

l li; \lSNOW .
.•
RAIN
bd BHOWEI\S
Wal'f!' "Cold "'Static f t ,Occludad
FRONTS: "
Map shows minimum temt:~e~at~na. At least 50% ol any shaded area is forecast

•

PICK-3

--Area deaths--Norma Wilrox

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·18-90

to receive precipitation lnckaled

The Deily Sentinei- Pagr 11

F1 esh Soviet troops arrive·_, battle death ·toll rises to 76

Lott~ry n~mbers

OUR LANGUAGE

grandchildren, three greatgrandchildren, ancj one brother,
Edgar Butcher, Pomeroy.
·
She was preceded' in death by
her first husband, Lawrence
Wilson; and a brother,. . VIrgil
Butcher.
.
· Friends may call from 3 to 5
and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the·
Grotr Funeral Home, 1607 East
Perklnl Ave. In Sandusky. Funeral services will be beld at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Ssndullky

Wuli 111My, ~ 17. 1110

•

...,.

UNUY'S IECYCU CINYEI
t7 .CI SIWI,

-

IIDOII,llw
- .........

,---

&amp;. . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ _ •

BUYING ALUMI= =GLASS
PLAITIC, COPPIA, BAAlS, SHEET
ALUMINUM. IADIATOAI AND MOlliE

Is::.~:~r:;cr I . ..

Moii.·Frl. 12:00 1o I tt.M.
ltMUy·JL... Io11--1101 CAl&amp; 'f'ni-H'M

HUUIIS:

' POl

,

�'

P.a•

-

Ohio

LAFF-A-DA

Announcements

.

17 1180

Mobile ttomH
lor Rent

Zbf,12dlllw.4?111.

Pomaov- Midcl•pcw;. Ohio
. . .•

-

ar, 1

7t ..... tar ....

Television

.,

v

aiiii==!!
t'T

46

4'&amp;

qa,

44

q,r

..

-I

Rtdueo ooto ond fool ,..h

s- ..,......

EVININO

I:OOi =::•• And

Qo.

,....

•w.tor P111o• ~~ Frlllh - - r.
Roduco your wolahl • Toke
•Now Shlpo 01ot Plan" ond E·
Vop Witll Plllo. AVII- Fruth

OlkilndvaMinneiOII

4

'

-ns-

•

1 Thr" month old ma~ puppy.
Mother reg. Glrman Sheperd, ·

-.

:-a,I;--.=..._oiJ;'.;;
.....
.,.. -""'"
.... ......

·

~a

Merchand ise

51

3 molt pupploo lfll to a aoocl
homo, Shaphlfd Col..
1111od, lwki old,l14-317-ovt.
1 WH k o ld
, Colli•,

··

~

4211.

I rlf!lt.
turnlol'iod... w1111 a -" turnlahad. 1111. ,...Ired, daPMfl

2br,

.,..,.., ... ,...,....,.__ •

CIWI t

G.,man Shlph , mllclld, 114-

+IHHt oftor 5p.m.
Bed wHh monroN.

w..w,.... ........,.
1

35 W. •1'1· 2 br., 1 111111, prime

1

:=i~.,..,::a:.,.:o.:.
fer, _...,, ....,.L _trBh

·

'1

Qlclhaanh.lnt•~·;:a•ndii•••Y·
lllloo clllldron,
-2325.

llaylot dryer lor porto. 11~
3117.
Pupploa to glvoowoy, will bo
omou d&lt;&gt;go. lf4o441-tlll.
11
6 Lost &amp; Foun d

t.ll (l

1

pra:vtd.t.
44
213

I

~- ::O~:i.~ ~:- ~~~
uz-3348 .
·

"=

Lftt:
ml11d brHCI doG,
Labrador, Gtrman Shephera.

Bloc:k, brown opo&lt;o. ~on. 13th

Klngtbury .,11 , 614-H2·3811 .
Rtcf collar. Large reward.

I

7

Yard Sale

Mobile Homes

18 wanted to Do

tor 'S ale

NorthAuror~,ll10542.

G

u---

I

roup ~ 1or
uvon1It
daUn~nta 1111 Hlng rKrUhlld

thll Athent R-alonal 0Hicl1
Olllo
01 Y~h
hr·
WC..Dot&gt;ortmont
Tholl lntii'Hted
lhoukl
by

contoct olohn Hagerty 11 1.221-3374 by 1131/!10, Wo are on
Equat _Oppcirtunlly Emplopr.
Linlll C...ar'a Plua 18 eMklng
aggrM.,VI incllvlduall for ' 10

Wanted to Buy
Junk can with or wHhout
motQro, COlt lorry Uvoly 814388-1303.
'
,Qulni
'

-i.

I

l

I

tMI CIIMY. 114 10ft. 1NI Ford

,..

· My wile is supposed to ba'lhe .
watch dog over our llnaneas."
·
•
·
·
· ·
sighed the man. ·but tlha's
. - - - - - - - - - . turned into a -··... ,,•

I

. ....J.I-..J......J.
L...,....J.._ .L.- L

Business
Qpportr.,mlly

$30,000 yr. Income o::;enllal.
~·z.llo . (11 t108-187-t
Ell. y.

Trailer lor Bile; 111'77 Gonnor,

"sWl

Sulloblo lor 1 or 2 - - 114~l.0 338·
'
One bedroom ttflclency. Par·

8834.

required. 814-02-1877.

402 112 1\Nonty-tourth St, PeNni

electric rangal,
Inch g11 range,

-·
•Golllpollo
.-lng oil 11pork,
downtown
porkl,ng, ran111 I ;;;;!,. no polo.
AoloriiiCIII · I daooillt roq'd '
$271/mo. 114~411-4421.
'

31.

For sale
.o r Trade

Fa • rn Sunp\,.
&amp; Live:,IOL k

bollrd $200. · Alao care for ...
d1rly. RNIOI'IIble, In Pomtro)'.

114-la-taa1.

46

Space lor .Rent

1 room office tor Nnl. 1100 " '

,_,, All utltltlta lnchldod. Coil
LatoJ111ollln.11....-222.
C&lt;&gt;u.-.ry Mobile Homo Park,
Routa 33, North of Pomoroy.

Lot1, rentel1, ,.n-. ..-.. call

114-ttz.-7478.
F
L
49

61 Farm Equipment
1011

IIF

with

.........unl

pi- ......... - . IIIII;
118 MF - · dlao,l- hoa,
15,150. Owner wiU nno-. 11'1'

wv.

211-8122.

·

l--ll--•·

iHAVo!'S

I7

I-

.IJ lttOb, HfA.. InC

1172 17 ~- 11-roft Tri-HuU
Boot. 125 HP, E¥1nruclo Engine,
comt&gt;loto
u"""loliiJ.
Calll14-211i13tl oftor 7:00 p.m.

'* ,_

76

Auto Parte &amp; ·

2-

__

..._... ,

•

a

I

POOR BOY TIIID, • 304-175-

Of

·t·---

-4.000 _
...
· ,IIIII.
, j, uaoi
aentilrel.
MW-.lrM.
.,
r

EEK AND MEEK . '

V-1 orP.. tuna . . : . \ . tran.rlllllnf . . . .
For
loll or • - 12 opd. blko, hi.
114-1...1711.
•

79 ·

=

kl~"lrg"hl':l""~·..::::.r Point Pluo ,_ hoo Stddill ond
1350.w 080. Othar, otondoiil Tack, 304-4171~14.
klnll-lllo, 1200. 080. 11Wtlll· &amp;4
zen or 114-HZ-5140.
Hay &amp; GrJin
..::::oo-::-o-:Bo~ltl~of~Ho~y.-:3:::Wattrbed, 1 ou..n alu, tulliiH ~A~ppro::-.~.-=
04
mottroaa I bol . ollrinao, Mka 1182-2137 00: TIW3QD.
now, Full alu motal boa noma.
Conclhlonod mlood •- 100 lo.
114-4-18.
bello. .10: Don c:,-;~ Pllrlol,
114-378-2171,
WHtlnt Houoo 22cu.ft .... lw
... rofrig, good cond. 1150, ~
ohlllro, dlilotlo Ill, f40, 114-446.- Oood ml•od hoy, f1.10 bolo,
lltM-t711-1813.
2310.

"7:2s

lET~

SEIJA10R

·ilnp!eu a ll!!f.
.·
IIJ Collage
etblll

A

aWiftdly
1:00 (J) Night Court Moe Ia
reunilad wltl'l hill Old singing
group, the Starllghll. !;II
®Colllgllllllklllblll '
()) DOOfle t+ow. ., M.D.
Katherine Howler pursuoa
.her dl'lllm ot llnglng wltn a

e

Clmpet'S&amp;

:;i.llfloAntiThe
.

IAIIIENT
W.UERPROOANG
i),_,diU"""' lilllimo
.... Locot _,.,., tumllllod. • ..
0111....... Coli 1•, •
114-2S7-. •r or night.
R- •
8 nnt.

I""""'

__,..,_

71

oFDOG-15
CHIFe~

8:30 II (J) Dear Jolin ,Kirk
IICI1amla to conquer the
MWIII member Of the

\oi/HATAM I
SUP?OC L&gt;
TOFOINT

· WEL-L,MY
C¥-.DSA'YS
HESPART

WHAT KIND

GJ~~uGi,.Q._ A

ATi

R:)JNfER ••.

young wrltlr Hanntlh
belrlende tuml out to be a
anlke In thl gra11. Q
10:00 CD CIN Tete".
e (J) 1111 au.ntl!m L.up Sam
leapa Into thlllle of a
.
tHn·aic football stir In tne
barrio.

.

•!mal•.

Pllntlna. lnlorlot ond · - ·

e .

,.._..,....,304-17Wtlt:

W
Chilli Beach
Dodger reaorves to tt'y to
·
ra&amp;CIII hil Ameraslln son. Q

1· 7

f\ lllllloi•U""'

BARNEY

ID Newawelelt

(J) AII'IIU

fltJill flAW II
HE DON'T
REMEMBER

Rollry or oabll *lfllnt.
.._..,....,, .......meda¥. .

-~-ond-.301o
.

HAVE HIM
BACK TO
HIS OLD SILF
I'LL

PhU-phla Orchetltra In

BHthoven'a 4th plano
concerto.
1111e1D W~~agUy Sonny
StHigr~ya·a demonic ·
numlllra man, Sid Royce,
ratums. Q

IN NO TIME!!

NOTHIN'!!

'

'Autos tor Sale ·

el!ll NeW Twtllgl1l z-

.,., new dUll ..._...
- - . I n pr-....... ltiGO,
30MlWII7.

.

I!J!wanl,.,....

10:10 Ill MOYI!: Lell Trlllt Frotit
Qun Hll (2:00)

. ,.
IIIII TO DIVORCE: . . _ _

.·-

1011 llnaor Futuro -lnO Illchine. Ono of llnao• moot
tar .-~o. oolilr OOIIId,

-

let his/her presence spoil your good
time.

"""'"

- Bunon-. .., _

•IIDh, oww

I,

· CANCER (.U. 21-.IIIIJ Zl) Be tx·

llnoy
.......... under _,.....,. ....
e¥811

PI,_,.., or Juol
PlY .....
_. to!

orlglilllly lor -- ·

-- d u o ot, 1117.70. Cin IMi

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

-locally, ... loll-.1.., - .

man•a•r.

Ilk • lor

-

131"'

992-2156
675-1333
446-234

,..rie-

. '

In lite veil' lltlad ~ might he.. to
tlhauldtlt • lttlle ·, _. '"'**bllltlal
1hln you ..... In 1111 Pill- Don't Ill thll
~ JOU1 b I m the bigger the

•..
•

tllk. 1111 arillr 1111--.1.

...
..
. ,., .
.;.. . . ..

......... - -.....
.

'

IIWIN.117 .... 1111.IIorroi-~~.._741-ZZ11.

'

gift. Sand

'
{

.

c~ (Del. • • 11) LOfty
objiCitvel aran't likely to lie .-y to
.coiM by today,-· In order to
tiChiM ttwn,lt.mlgiiii'ICIIfA mora II· .
. !ott .lhell you'rll Jill~ Pld to BlfPIIIII.
capriOorn, ll'tal youi'IIIIIIO a blrll1diY

• •• •• j

f

· MGCa unlalt IRI

,....

ac siQn.

eCJlaleCIJ•••o

AOUARIUI (olin. »Feet. 11) Todoy
you mlgllt llfl ltMIIYetlln • diiO '111M
wl1h 1 group of 11M tllklng obout a mutual friend who lln't ~1. Even II you

(J)

Meta

(0:30)

•1111

• ill)

know aonldllng unuvory about thlo

tor yow Aetro-0111P11 ~

.,..., ... , . . lmmadllll dlllrM.
~ ,..,._ II OBI II) '1111
110111 you fill lOIIar - notllltiW to 11e
dttl to olltn. 10 clon'tllltllltlnlll aut
on litem. h IIW, ltlllecll to 1 p Ill,.

lllllllde.
.
'
.
ICOIIID(OIILM MII.II)HJOUielll
1111 ntgl"vvlodlr. 1 CICIUkllll ClUB to to

=n-..·~.:-:l::.; c;·---=~==

lit l;ialed

-

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AvoldpJ rbllll•llllr'•-~
lOOk .. ""-'IIIIWIIIIJIII G1tlotnY Gul

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IIMJOU_~WIIIIIJOU 11111 ' -

tun--

\ooltl IIIII 101M mencllng

'

'

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•su

•• 76
+AK9
+9 ·781 '

tQI!G11

.... 53

SOUTH
tKQHSIS
.... 3
'

+as
+J8

'

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Eut
Pua

-•

Nor•
Pus . z•
Pus
ZNT
All-

Paa

third lead of that suit if be held the
heart ace, aDd therefore the play of bls
lowest diamond 1uggeated the club
ace. So Weit played a club to part.r'a
ace, and a diamond back let Wat
make the setting trick with the 10 of
spades.

6 Scope .

. 7 Mine-entrance
5 Minimal
8 French
10 Penn. city
port
11 Hot Item
9 "A poem
12 Better hall
as lovely
13Wrlte
as a- ~
14 Eat away 11 Beverage
18 Pagoda 15 Nasal ·
. ornamenl
sensation 25 lnlrequenl 35
17 Flat (mus.)17 Ariz cily 28 Bra,zllian 38
19 Car mar 18 European
tapir
21 Newsroom
river
28 Heredlly .38
employee 20 Pastry item
factor
231ndlan clly22 Perfeclly 30 "M'A'S'H"40
27 Spanish 24 "The - Is
role
42
till£"
wailing
· 32 Headdress
28 Plaint
lor us .. ." 34 Golf
43
29 Field
. (Skinner)
greal
30 Repartee
31 Federal
agent
33 Goddess

Russla1i r.ity
Enlant
lerrlble
Pequod s
skippet
Mature
New Guinea
lown
Hockey
great

(Lat.)
34 Tennis term
37 Perfect
39 Printing
_gaffes
41 Hawaiian
. seaport
44 Scant .
45 From a
distance
46:Modlly .
47 Beverage

DOWN
1 Cut down
2 Mr. Onassis
3 Vllal

ln-+-++-+-

.

souree

DAILY CR\'PTOQUM'ES- Her.e's hmr to work It:

, 1/H

One leller stands for another. ln.this sample A is us.ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, ell.'. Sinj!le letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
'

CRYPTOQIJOTE

'••
•

l-17

r

NWKXAPM

VA

GXYWNVQS

RL P

SEXLP.

8

VA

PW

WQX

VA

PW

KVH

n v.

:

GX · NWKXAP
'
.
.

'

VA ' QWGWKM . -

.

.

ZCD)lA

'

ARY. - FRANKLIN P. ADAMS
I•

'..

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

.

Yntn•p'• C.,te.ntsa 11tE BEST ' PART OF
THE FICTION IN MANY f«)VELS IS THE NOtiCE
niAT THE CHA8ACTEIIS ARE PURELY IMAqiN..

than """

•

Opening lead: t K

EXQLEK

1·1~

EAST

WEST
tAI08

4 Nasly glance
5 Fabric

'

I (MIJ 11...... II) Today yau
qufttlln. vllultl rtiBtiOt1lltlp yau ..... . W
mlglll
ol your 1-'le , .•.
w111t alrlettCL 1t11t IIIIJtlng-tdiIIIION 1111 lltaalatton tiMaiOta* ' 1011111 • gllhlr'~ of your.,..,.. Don't!

t..-.

ACROSS
t TV's
Arsenio

BRXQ

AI ponll-

+632

+K Q 10 2

by THOMAS JOSEP.,

YCDP

111111111 11111 PC1P up lOr Wlllolt yau
plllloied oauld In I III~~DU 10-

.._.t
cs.y. They'l lie 1111t11UI Ill, p!O
::m;;a"(:',~ ':&amp;:""'.,'; " ....
you dOn't mlkl "*" will be ,.._ .

l1llllllt . . . . . . .I. Tlta doltlnlml will

.KQJ101

CROSSWORD

PRX

kllll ODUid .......

•• •

in the early days of contract bridge,
North would surely bave responded
two bearts when SOuth opened the biddin&amp; one spade. But that two-heart bid
was known to sbow ulittle as 10 or II
bigb-card points, and a South mini·
mum rebid of two spades cou.ld be
passed. Nowadays most people prom·
iJe their partner that they will bid
again when they respond with a new
suit at the two-level. So North wu under that obligation. Despite the lack of
a diamond stopper, two no-trump Will
the most descriptive second call.
South, even with a gooll seven-card
suit, still bad a minimum, so he signed
off at three spades.
Suit preference was the key to the
trump-promotion dele,. agalnat this
contract. West led ·king of diamonds,
aDd Eall encourall!d with the queen.
West played ICe and another diamond.
On the Dille, Eastllayed bls lowat remaining dlamon , retainiDg the jack
aDd the 10, as declarer ruffed. Declar·
er led jack of spades out of his hand,
witllling the trick as West played low.
Then declarer played the spade king.
West took the ace aDd thought about
bow he c:ould aet bil partner on lead to
aDQtber diamond. He correctly
reasoned that East would have played
bls blgbf!ll remaining diamond on the

1::"..£
11:00 (J) lllnloa... -

your-.,.,..

-~
olln.17,-

tremely carelul today not to bring In
ootllderl on any diHQr_,ll111 be._you and yoor mate. ..._,..or
thle type will mer.ry add lull to the rtre.
LEO(""" . .Afll. 21) Crltlelllng the el·
lorta of another wll nol help hllllter
petfOtmence.ln tact. H could cauM this
IndiVIdual to Wilt olf the fCJb and let you

the ,...- ahtl8d by 1111Hint
$1.25to Aalro-Graph. c/o 111'- - P •
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
4-4101·3428. Be ture tootare yourzocll.

tlons lor

10:30 1D L.IM* RultoyHI'I 1180
.~ Oulda Louie
Rukayur looks ahead to
1990 wltl'l 10p llgural In
buolneu, government and
communlcatlonl• 0 Ctha•watct Tonight

AIMniD Hell
Ill Manevtilte
~-dOn't mul "·
Ill Hot Oil Tlia WIN ·
PilCH (l'eb. II M1 olt Ill Try to
lend lor youraell.
9
Miami Vlca
VJIIIGO (Afll. II SapL II) n you lteve mike duf wl1h w1t11t you 111.. at thla
•
Ca
uuawiOD• Wilt DIMII
,... rMIIIglng
11-lnlteld oiiJOIIII to Olhlra In hCIIIII
lltow
1y ...c.n~. yau might tllld ,.,..,..,. In a ·or bllnll billed Out. lWei -~~~~~ 00111!1 . 11'*1
tlgltl pallllon II 11111 ttme·llld not have ..-..u~~ 11 rou·.. UMIIIf to repay 11tem

. yw?

•

a Mull a

••IIIIHMit
Mull condUcts
pianist Claudio Arrau and the

t l 7 2 - e.to,- OM .....

3 Willi pumpo
aompi!Mt with wlrtng, ap
_ ..,.tank, POO. ooCII, goOd

·

a Nluvtlle Now

Houoahotd
.............., "
-Rng, ,_,..,...,, lldlnt,
- - r . -po.-.ry, odd lobi.
114-37141130, oalor
Mhcll.
&gt;
•

""'z:l

Merchandise

,....,. While lnve1Ug1dng
111 auto ~nt aurprlslng
evidence tuma up. Q
Ill Larry lOng Uval
0 MOVII!: , _ And
!xb- Pra)udlcl (2:00)

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

....

MOYIE: RalalnG_

1111 Collaga' lolk:e1b11
0 Mutdar, lite Wnlle
c - . . - W1ll1 ot1111h
I:OSIIl MOYII!: The llolltpllunteN
(2:05)
1:30 (i) Tlte Clau
Cha~le '"'I to dltcOUrage
Arex· 111-adv\~ to ·

.,., - o n

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

!!on

~ (P01~) (2:00) Q
Ill PltmeNewt
aJ llogen'a H-•

:':;QQ;:.7:...,.·,__ _;......,.....::_.....,:•

Se1 v1ces

5 ... ""' .....

~Tonight

and panic o!!P the Seaver ·
houeehOid . ~
· ·
1D CJl Uva From Uncollt
Cettter Wort&lt;a of Beethov.en.
Hayden, Wabem and Ravel
are pr-ntld. (2:00)
elll CoiiiiJIIolketblll
llllelll ......, And 11tt
Beall Diana ilea to Joa .in
order to protect the Beaat.

1171.

ioonll,to4-'112-2330.

Y1ciiOCountl)'

~ Qrowlng Paine ContusiOn

'

I• IT

a.ASSFED
. All

0 Miami VIce

e

- . uHd, ortalnll- II,Daa.
wlll-rallco af f3,500.114-381-

54 Miscellaneous

ISA
WANT
AD
wtl).().().()

aJ AIIIIOit And Caatetlo

(i)

NORTH

BRIDGE.

1:00 (]) MOVI!: El Paao (2:00)
(J) Unaolved Myalerilo
Prolllae an Oklahoma boy's
lelrch tor hie grandlatner.

.... - . ...................r

Good ml•od ':;/• ·oq11111 bolol,
Antiques
wot.l1
...~~, 304-al7·
unfuto. Buy « oatl.' AI- Anllquoa, 3111.
por 1124 E. llotn 81-, Pomoroy.
1 Pinl, Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m.,
t :ao to e:oo p.m.
114-IQZ·
•
T6 C.... pold. Old tumhuro
.UIIolnlo, qulfto, onontot,
polntl""', toyo, or ontlro 111111
call oolloct 304-41211-3271, or
lltM-t23-1114.
Transportalion

Beattie.

Mother of seven teens : ·we hide valuables in the bath·
room, with all my kids there's no way a burglar is going
toGETinTHERE!"
·

W.IWIIHIOf
eIIJIIIOMYIIM
II]) Nlg" Coun Q

7:311Il-Sanford And

Motor tt0!,118S
t1117 I fl. llldMI ......,.; tUtiy

~..,......:..:o;;.r..:;;;:ea;;;se;;::..-~ 53
For LuN: Socond
nlahtd oportma.-.,
month. e ..- -

'

13:11

45

Furnished
ROOfiiS
Roomotor,.... • ,..lk or·month.
Stortlng 11 1120/mo. 011111
Hotol. 61 4-4~0.
Stoopine roomo wHh oooklne.
Allo trolltl' opoco. All hook·UPI.
Call 1ft11 2:00 p.m.. 304-7nH51, Maoon WV.
'
Slooplng roomo, •1aa. With

1
· W:.1~:',."'
· - """· 75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor 9ale ,

1m ChoVJ -

NawA.iud

..11304-1711-1450.

.

:100 lour P.- llhii.1NI
ICimlutd 300

114-2511-11!10, 114-251-1041.

Vorr nlco -ond floOr, '"'"' e Hloouo-•hhciQitkld turnlohlng. 112 mi.
room, unfuml•hMI. apl., tor Jorrlcho Rd. Pt .. PI-nt,

~ llota) lor Nne, 304-171-

THE BEST

. _-:::;.: .::
or

bra••

.

Worlcer- Tl'ite-Agile- Trough - GET in THERE

.

·==nJyiQ

Acceasorles
t878 Chevy 4 whoot drive,- '79 ea-ro porto,· and tloaro
whlll booo,l cytlndor, 4 """"'· .._ blado, fii,OO, to4 Ill

1100. Eloctrlc drvor, .50.
Tara Townhou•. Apor1mtntl. · · - · 111.114·142·2352.
Elo;.•ont 2br, 2 floor, 11H oq. ft. MIDII lr, oliho, wing choir, &amp;
bed, Corbin &amp;
1 112 both, CAICH, dloltwaahor, antlqua
dlo-1, piiJirouna. 2 IIQOio, Snyd1r ~umlt ure, 114--«1-1171 .
- • · &amp; gorf10cjo lncludod. Stort Moving Solo: Evorytlilng mull
11 sae. eH-Ul-1110.
.
go, hltp mo mon, coli
UnfurnlahH apt. 4 ~ 6 114.. 41·1701 .
both, Cantlirolly loeltod.-o~~ti I
PICKENS fURNITURE

Colt

1534, call late.

. 59

PtNunt.I1C..tl2·5851.

Sec. Dep. Aeq'd. 114-44&amp;

e

® CoiiiiJI lolfle1bll
Cll CUneftt Aftalr
ID CJl MacNeil ~rer
Newaltour

PERSONNEL
SCREENING·

1MI -

Musical

W••h,riDryer,

Ono bedroom, upotalro. Nlco.

(i)

PM Mapllna

lUI Croutrre

retrigMator,

tiKtrlc

(J)

el!ll rra•s·H

maln1, ·1 .nonltar. 114

General

e

elll MMta'a Family

Instruments
:-ln"'dl"'vl"'duat....,..-,-u"'lto...;r....,...........
~~.
boalnnoro, oiorlouo tulllrlll,
JoR Wamaloy lnotructor, 114448-1017, fmhtd · oporllngo,
Mon-Thuro, Sot.
Yomoho Spookor IJ:"i':•· 2

tlolly tumlohod. No onlmolo. .... cond.l1~&amp;-3141,
Traih ptck..,p provided. ~n Kenmof'l

-

'

·

Clou to new ehopping ctnttr.

14170, 3br, 2 both, now
room, corpot, 17,100. 114-

IOIOT

7:05 ,Ill .lllleiiDI1I
7:30 e (J) ill 'llltlly Feud

'

you develop from step No. 3 below.

. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7:00 ~ S e l l - ' Mrl. King

•.

1881,.,.. tMj 4 w-r,llu '
new, 11001.114 ~tl . 0114.
tM7 ICI-Id ' - 300, 4
whHIIr, good conCI. 304-171-

Comp.lele the chuck.le quoted
by filling in the mluin9 words

aTopC.nJ
1:311Il Andy Qriffllll

'

I

H uT J E K
~~~~~~.:..1,::.._...;1;...::.,1,..7-l O

Ill Hot Ofl The WIN
0 .......,

$50. Good M*llon of tilllroonl

.
lllddlopofl. 1 bedroom ape. •125
month pluo utllftllo. d14-H2751 1lftor Sp.m.
Nlcoly turnlohod •-II houoo.

OHIO UA INOnCEI
33 Farms lo' r Sale
•ALLEY PUBUIHING co.
recommtnd!l that y_
o u da
Pre 1940 qullta. Any condl11on. AN C.H Manager nHdecf for bulln10 wtlh peOPf• YO\I know,
111 acret, e.e mlltl eouthtalt
podiotrlco
I
aduno
lor
homo
Cooh Paid. Coli &amp;14-182-5657 or
and NOr to Olnd monay of Point Pt-nt on At, 82 and
care nurwlng. I mo. to 1 yr. through tho -11 until you have Rock Caatlo rood. 211 acrot 114-5Q2·2411.
Home care Nu,.lng E1perlence l,....figated'theon.ri.,g.
t"re, bllance woodland ~pulp
wo.-.1&lt;1 To a..,: Plno - · o,... requlrltd, ~In•• c•R Michelle, at
qUIIity)
SSI,OOO tnagatlabl•• ~
BI'QI. 11~·1117 a..m. to Klmborly Quality Caro, II 1.can "Pitt Sommer 175-3280
•p.m.
752-t511.
Tuoa
or
F~.
1:30.4:30.
Real Estate
RooplrotQry Thoropy T 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
nlclon, Elperloneocl 111 Art11lol
Employment Services Punctun Blood Guoa. Ful~
tlm11 ar pilt-tlma. Send mUm. 2 M:NI 8pf'lng . .tar,ltpnm.m, 4 112 acroo bollom ltnd. •sooo.
to P.O. lol 33, Golllpollo, OH new Lennlx Pul. . Furnac., nice CPih or land contract. &amp;14-742·
2080.
45131.
11 Help Wanted
gordon •Pol. ' Colt aftor 10 acr.., all miAIIrlll near HemtJp.m.l14-31'1.-l.
.
wa.-.od·
Fulnlma
live-In
Nanny
AVON I All Arooo I Shkloy
lock Grove, Molgo County.
to ~,. for one child In ~hem
Spe1,., 304-871-14~.
113.750 or - • ot111. 114-187·
llllnolo. Elallont -lng aonw•h
·
3112
- " lond" ........ dfah, ofty 2154.
AVON • All oroo,, Call llorllyn dlllona, llrivala living qUIIIora, ...
.,, 2 1a mil• out Dunham
WMVIr 304.a&amp;2·2645.
exclllllld 1111ry. lend Wtw wtlh Rood
1.-. a-. Rood, Aoldon Iorge building lolo,
quollllcl1iono ond pfloiQ to .loon AI.OtlO.oil304-&lt;111•1713.
mobllo h - pormmocf, public
Auto Mechanic, axperiMce ... Brolnonl, Bo1 1411, RFD, Long
water, prtc.. reduced, aleO loll
qulr.cl, muat hlvti own ~11. ln- Orovo, Ill. 10047.
17 acr...tlmlter, ,... ~.."!i 1 wltfl ~var r.ontogo, Ctydl
lenltw by •ppolntment only
har, lobKc~lqilnwnt, COUICI Iowen, Jr. 304-t'No2331. ·
304-t75-2531 .
12
be dav...... 4 bldiOGII\1 0 11/2
Situation
both, trl'lovll brick A-tramo Bulldlnt lol 314 - • Hlokory Hill
B•rto-o. Wlllro-1 eonWanted
houoa,
llnlohld booomont and lotaln, Nllrialod, 304-41711toct, Brott, 114-4411-4751.
laundry room. 2 car detached lllotl aftor I:GO PM.
CINnlng perton 01 Jannor tor Boby Ill, nMbom to 4yro. 5 ;orogo, locotod 3 :114 out Eaot
1oc11 oHico, I cton por -k, dan a - k In .., homo, 304- Rannan Trace Road. Glenwood.
By·1ppolntm.,t only, It lnte,.....
approx. 2 or 2 112 houf'l per IM21t.
Rentals
ltd,
304-518~148
uppor
wook, applY In poroon at P&lt;&gt;lnt
Business
brackll.
Plooaanl Job Borvlca, P&lt;&gt;lnt 14.
Pl~..nt,WV.
Training
Houoo tor Solo bv ownor, 2 41 Hou~s lor Ren•
acru more or IH11 ~br, 2 balhl,
EARN MONEY Reading Boolcol
POSTAL
JOBSI
Ston
11
1 mile Iouth of Ato Grinde on - - 1100 dopoaft, IIIII
130,DGOIJI lncQmo polontlal.
CrHII Rd. W1111 tum-,114Dlttlla. 111 - 7 - Ell. y. $10.381HR. For exam and IP. St. At. 325.114·245-1411.
plication lnlo, COl 2111-831-8117,
441-2418 oak lor David.
10111.
Mutt 1e11, nNt 4 beclroom brlc:k,
ext 1331. tam-8 pmi 7d•ys.
comer tot, llrp llmlly room, 2 bo droomo. In lllclcl_. orat.
Eom hOO • 1500 por - k .
11Wtlll.al07.
garogo, .,.,....., yard,
Rotdlng Booka ., homo. c.tl 1- 15
Schools &amp;
Jot• of at0111ge, tllutnlblt 211r, hauM, 231 rur Flnt
115-473-74411 Ell .. . . .
81/2llo morfltl, WW7WIGII or
·-•
Instruction
AwnYe, kHchen, w/8tove a
Eam .....,...100 par
1---;;;;~.;~;;;--- 875-3512.
rotrto. 1230/mo. pluo ~.
readlng - . II ""'""· Colt 1•
utlll1fll.. rot.l14-4411-4112t.
115-4.,.74411 Ell. 8581.
SOUTHEASTERN
IUSNESI 32 Mobile Homes
COLI.I;OE, 1121 ollckoon Ptko,
3br, 2 bath, cine to lown,
Echoing M - lloaldonllol Coil 114-4411-4317. R•t· NQ. . . .
lor Sale
131G/mo. olua utlllll~ $310
Cantor lloo lmmodlalo _.lng 11-10118.
tor 1 part-lime LPN or RN".
11M Cullom .._, 2br, gia · R
o - roqullod.
114-44Witt
114-441-7071.
Benefit• and ~ 1re comfurnaoe,
,..,..,
Nfrlg.
waalwr
polllvo. Accoottna opptk:ollono 18 WQnted to Do
dryer, very Doad corid. $4,300. 3111, homo rlv11 vllw, wlllrgo
with r-mo. 'Coif 114-5113-1074 Adul care In my homo 304-175- 114-.Z...af.
1onc1 _,...., eu us 0031.
or llop bv 318 W. Union Avo., 1181.
Athena, Ohio.
117S Comoron 12111, 3l!r lOIII In llllorn lahool Dlltrtat. Nlco,
Ulltltloo
lob'• lawn care, gru• cualng, - - t7MO. 1171 Dliln&gt;ltor, 2 litd,_ aoo. Fi1111 Hair Fuldona. A Loader tree
11&amp;10, tu.1. bolh olGI 14,W. onc1 c1opo111. 114-Mt-2101.
worll,
trimming,
k) tho boauty lnd..try It 11.-ajiln;, lfll oltlmatoo, t14-441-01lo.
"'"'"' Wo'ro lllonlod
-lnt 304-1711-2111.
rowlng
a proloollonal,
1171 GlenwOod. 2 bedroom. 42 JIAQblle Homes
alyllol WhQ It onthullutlc I Dump Truck Houtl,., Coal, Eac.~Mnt
lor Rent
oddod on.QOftdltiQO.
Silo, $50.
love to wort&lt; with poopll. Wa of. WOOd, l und, Haul In aprud, Largo ·room
month 114-111-6721.
fer lbon aven~ houflr rile, •one a gravel. 114-251 1254.
2 lr.l oablo, cloln and qulot,
ptuo . COflllftloolon,
,_
boout lui river vllw In Kuou;o.
1112
Hllftillon
Houu,
24x58,
,
benefits, Kucltkml I ldva• GonoraiMalnt-lropolra.
FOIIor'o 11011111 Homo Pork, 114S10,000i
1183
Falrinonl
24x52,
-~~~ polonttol. I you have ot-Ic, plumbing a CllllllllrY.
441-1102.
whal II t1k11 ell Amy, 1-100- lntUI1UICI C:lalntll . .~come, 114- f11,000. Kino"'" Mobllo Homo
Saito, Konaugo. QN 114-448- 21r.,ln • -. 114 441 ••·
317.-,orl14-:zati.1111 .
825-13&amp;3.
8802.
I

'

~

-rO:.....;V,..;A~I_L;...-11
I I Ig 1 7

1!t.=.=~ny

-

NO WAY! WU'U. CUT .
()ff 'I'IICM f'IAIGIRfl!

I

.

•

2101.

RIPPE

3-2-1 Co-Q

1- 17

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
- . _Mntlll, ate. CloUclo WJr&gt;. lp.111.114-11118111.
Sotu ond chalro prlcod ..... Mio Grandt, ON Ootl 114f3tllo IMI. T.- PO and up 245-8121.
t-1110 D-10 llodao jilckupo. II
s,.., gooc130Wft.1137. .
to f125. H)du bodo f3IO ~
f5tl. Roollnoro 1:121 to, $371.
LaftiPI Ql · to •121. DlnlttN
73 Vani &amp; 4 WD'I
•tot and up to 14111. Wood
llblo ... Qholre tall to ma.
O..ko f145 up to U71, H...1400 I up. bunk complllo
whh ... n,... 1211 and ,up to
1311. boby.1110 ....._
- or boll oprtngo lull "' twin
tn. firm ...-• ..,., m au.... 1271 I Ul!, King 1310. 4

1NIOokWood,14114,114-251o a bed_,trolllr lor IIIII, oloo

r

....._. .......

EOH

r.

I

.

I:OSIIllawetty Hlllllllu
1:30 • (J) 1111 NBC NlgltUy Newa

-

_.,._,_ ....,.,,..,-,.,,_,Colt

BUilding
. Supplies

=

1""'"'-

•

55

HousehOld
· Goods

1uttn,
mllal
ublnat1,
Solo, a - , chi-. 11-F 1873 2br, klrlwood, good eond,
I o.m. • 1:30 p.m.- 2\t:to. llovo, Nlrlg, ooui:h, choir, Fumlohod Eftlcloncy, .141, hndbolrda 130 and up to $11.
Bot-. 1ft11 ochocl[ Drop-In• wo-. I d!Yir, VlnJt Undor· utllltllo pold, ohoro both. 701 aa darl uma u oaah whh opo
Wllcamt. l1141t 8224.
pinning I 8K8Hm bldg. 15,500. Fowth. QelllpoUa, 114 ttl 4411 provod clodll. 3 mi. out Butavlfll
Rd. Opon 8 A.M. to I P.ll. lion,
Wll
114_.48-1711.
1 ttar7n.m.
.... building rroeoa
::;;;::_,:.!~::::::.....,~_.:_....,.._ _ thru Sot. Co11.114-441-Cm2. .
a belaftlltll:t, bur 01 Mr1p 8x30 trailer whh ·tOJ:30 addtllon, Fumlahed GarJgt Apt. '""
Iron. 81 .....1711.
MOO. 11W...1411tlter ~p.m.
eluding W11h., ory.t, air, ciMn. Aulo Wuhar'o PI: Ellclrlc
SHi Clu ~~ UU
Wll d4&gt; bo'-·-l
,
For •·•·: lvAON
-••1 2br, moblla no •poto,• ouhoblo lor two.
114- Dryer'a,
New, SIS; Electric A~gt'l, IN;
...1 -.n ng, 12 mo. or
.
448 151111
Gal A1ngt'1, SIS; Ae~er1tor'1
younger, hove rot. Uvo In chy h-·r."'' tumllhod,l14-446ollmb. l14-448-4208.
0814 I or 4pm.
Graci- living .. 1 ll)d 2 bod- Ill: Dlih Wo-·o f2U5;
Hooting Stovo, PO: Dotbort
Wll tlvo
lloaona In my For Soli: 12110 mobllo homo, ,_, oportmonta II VII- lwlohor,
UHd Appllanooa, 314
•-•
Monor
and
R
I
·~ to
lnnere, advanced newly reiiAa dalad on 1.1 acre lot ADII'tmenta In UlddllaOrl. From Third ... Klnauga, Ohio, 114and adult ttudentl. AIIO t ..ch at ~~~ of town. Allo I houH St84. Now thrOUIIh llarch 11. 441-7473.
'
ohondlng ond tronopoolne. It In· on 1110 lol, In natd ot {Opolro. Flrot month ront lroo to 111-tod, 114-IMI2-5403.
Uve In ONI ond - 1ha othor, who quollly. Call 11 .._ 11112•1117.

2801 for apl., uk far Ur.

Stowort.
··
EARN MONEY Hooding Bookil

~~s.''1!: J:.:r,~

utllltlel

Gallipolis
monagomont polblona.
&amp; VIcinity
Stop 1n any location .. moM
ALL Yord Sa los Mull 8o Plld In r.eume to: P. 0. Boa 70, Bar. WID lay carpet:, low rllet, call $11,100. 11c..441-0233 1f11r
Adv1nc1. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. bourovlllo, WV 21104.
~~lor~oot~rmato~!!·_!l1~4~4~41~12~50~._
&lt;~p.m.
tM day before the ad le to run. Now c:ompony In oroo . For Solo: 1172 Klrl&lt;wood 121165
S"nday edition .. 2;00 p.m. Top Monogomont a Salol Rop.,
homo, 2·3br, rongt,
Frtdty. Monday edition • 2:00 S25,000 10 f71,000 poi' yoor.
Nlrla, WID, pi- tumlahlngo,
p.m. Saturday.
. ·
Potontlal oamlnga. 114-448ll,o&amp;l, 0.8.0. 114-448-3281.

9

UPON A VICTIM ...

from fte2/mo. Wall to """" I
movllo. Cllll1~21111. iOH. d,_.,. eMil II•. Quri Cablnlle
- h St- 11-por~. Ohio. e, 1, I 10 ..... Bobv mon1 and 2 bedroom turn~ 135
141. Bod lra- 121;
apta. aloo 1 room olllcloney, au-I Silo
135 1 king troma
paid, ret.,.nc•
qullod, 304-112-2511.

Mil:• Ptula'• Day Car. Centtr.

GET PAID FOil TAKING SNAP·
SHOT$! NO EXP. WRITE:
PASSE, 33W, 111 S. Llncolnwoy,

._... lla.

8

t=========t-=========t-=::=:::=:=:=:::::;::====:1
32_
Help Wanted

~mo.

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BEAUllFUL APARTMENtS AT

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required. 114 448 at10.

1a .. are you {~omp1atnl::tj .
aJJOU t?.. ( Jf' t,tJOC1 't.here ..'IS ~- ta f

11~

111111, Border Terrier, I monlh

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1::'" In Cl1arga Q
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~~:5. U. mather toot 11~1 ·

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.

iii lporlaLOok (0:30)

12 wHk old lomoll AKC Wlro
Fox Terrier. 32300 st. Rl. 141.
2 puppiH, vorr~~ 1 .,_,, 1
black, mlncl
, Vou can

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J.IE«E'S TI-lE FIERCE
.SNOW SNAKE SNEAKI!-16

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111at1 . u 1111.. ·

1NM •100. C&lt;&gt;lolltao, Chnyo, '

Apartment
lor Rent
1br, opl. In Rio Grandt, All
utlllliM palcl. t?'''mo. .• ,14-1111-l

'

Giveaway

phone 304.-675·1151.

a •• ••

44 .

Ron 'a Chimney SwMp ••·
. peri111Cie cleaning and Nllnlng.
We k•p the home Hr• bui·
nln;, nol your homo.

5348.

I

.® luparlloWI Xllltg( 1\ghte

Pharmacy.

1

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eiJlale~••DIIII

E-V.,.

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SHamoo. Reel• ..• • I eecurltv
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Burrta

\-•

17.1880

•z

3 Announcements
NOTM:E-1 wiM not a. n t &gt;
llblo lar ony olhor than
my-nuotthle•to.Hugll

.

•·
•

•

�•
PqJ 14-The Daily Sentitiel

Pomeroy Midcleport, Ohio

~mday. J~-r

.

17•. 1910 .

W.Va. shooting leaves one coal miner dead, two injured

WORTH. W.Va. !UP)) - A
small group of United Mine
Workers protesters mingled with
state pollee Wednesday morning
near the scene of a shooting that
lett one coal miner dead and two
others wounded In a battle thai
"sounded like World War I:"
State Pollee Superintendent
Jack Buckalew said troopers

Pomeroy
Court news

remained at the scene through the site Tuesday morning to
the night. He said the troopers escort tbe combatants from · the ·
would remain visible and on scene. collect weapons and resalert.
tore order.
" We ·had people In there all
Buckalew said It would be a "
night long, which Is probably not _ lengthy Investigation.
ordinary," Buckalew said. "We
" There are a lot of people '
had people In there doing the Involved,'' Buckalew said. "It
lnvestlgatlon, trying to filter out will require a lot of Interviewing.
the truth fr.om the fiction."
We have men In there. We are·
State troopers descende&lt;! on · ·looking Into the Investigation; we ,

were Ronald E. Johnson, · Rio
Grande; S.S; Cecelia Harris,
Mason, W. · Va., $52; Jeffrey
Reltmlre; Columbus, $46; Brian
· Pothast, Delphos, $49; James ·
MCCloud, Middleport, $50; and
. Hester Eblin, Rutland, $48.
Other forfeiting bonds In the
court were Charles Lewis, Jr.,
Point Pleasant, $43, assured
clear distance; Lynette Aelker,
Middleport, $63, traffic ttghthvtolatlon; Michael Wallace, Gallipolis, $43, Illegal turn; Phillip
. Custer, Middleport, $63, expired
. vehicle registration; Michael W,
King, Pomeroy, $63, no valid
operator's license, and $63, ex·
· plred plates; and Michael Gil. key, $63, operating under
· suspension.
Fined In the court were Cyntbta· Sannln, Sctotovllle, $49 and
costs, speeding; Sean Patrick
. Liberatore, Roanoke, Va., $63
. and costs. driving under suspension; and Mary Ellen Sheets,
· Pomeroy, $63 and costs, operat. lng under suspension.

wer,e

BIG BEND

e

FRESH 100°/o PURE
SEALTESl .
ORANGE JUI~E

BJLBE....ON~

SEALTEST

ORANGE
JU\CE -

ability
control their own
des't lny," said Luebbers, adding
COLUMBUS '!'he Ohio tha~ townships which used to be
mainly rural now have popula·
• HoUle of Representatives Wed·
., nesday passed, 92-4, and sent to !Ions ranging up to 60,0011 people.
the senate a bill granting town· ·He cited Colerain 'fwp. outside of
ships the power to· govern Cincinnati.
·
'
.. themselves.
If a township chooses home
UDder current'taw, townships rule, It would have hire a law
may do only wllat .state law director and establish a law
permits their trustees to do. The enforcement agency. Luebbers
I)Ul SJX!nsored by Rep·.· Jerome
said It could set up Its own pollee
Luebbers, D·Cinclnnatl, permits district, have a joint district with
them to establish their Qwn · another ·township or contract
with a city, county or township
goverllments and lell&amp;late.
"Tlils Rives townships the . pollee force,

t/tii!Weho- a.orter

SPREAD

'

KRAFT
TOUCH OF

'12
GALLON
CTN.

aunER .
,.

l«hUL .Ol. IIO\IAlfSI

EASTMAN'S FOODUNIS IN
GAWPOUS ANI POMIIOY

Win a Coso or Diet Pepal,
Callolne Froo Diet Pepal or
SUpermarket Caah. Winners
Orawn e..,., F~doy through
March 2.
m Sti)IE 01m-Y F011 ~(UIL$

The House also passed, 91-5,
and sent to ·the Senate a bill
regl!latlng private full!!ral escorr
services.
Sponsored by Rep. Charles
"Red" Ash, R-North Industry,
the blll permits such ser.vices to
use flashing red or red-and-white
lights Instead of amber lights,
and allows them to stop traffic at
Intersections.
Rep. David Johnson, R·North
Canton, said the legislation was
prompted by an accident lnvolv·
lng a funeral escortservice In his

area.
The bill also · requires the
operators of such a _service to
take 20 hours of training and to
carry at least -$1 million In
liability Insurance. It also provides for random, unscheduled
Inspections of funeral escort
vehicles.
Some members com_plalned
that the legislation might apply
to law enforcement agencies
which conduct funeral escorts.
Both the House and Senate
adjourned·for the week.
•.

By NANCY YOACHAM
lion to that road and the road ·or a letter from Sharon Bailey,
·
SenUnel News Staff
leading to Veterans Memorial director of the county Infirmary ,
The mileage count on county Hospital " Warner $ald. How- of some Items which may be
roads In Meigs County ~mains ever, Si!it Is u~ on the hospl~~ needed at the facility . The
the same this year - 252.12 road while a mixture of salt and commissioners plan to visit the
miles.
cinders Is used on County Road home to review the list of need~ .
Melg~ EnglneerPhlUpRoberts 19, he reported. 'l'blslsbecauseof
Alilm Kohnen, representing
reported briefly during Wednes- the expense of salt and also Seasongood &amp; Mayer, Cincinnati,
d~cy's regular meeting of the because If the temperature goes ··a nrm which specializes In tax
Meigs County Commissioners on below l5 degrees, "salt won't 'exempt financing, attended Wedthe re:cent visit from the state work anyway,'' Warner added.
nesday's meeting to . acquaint
mileage man and the resulting
In the future Warner suggests,
himself with the commissioners
If residents 'see a changing and offer the 'services of his
mUeage _certlflcatlon. .
Roberts also reported that be condition on their road- such as company. Kohnen will be represwill . be working with other If cinders · blow ·away or salt entlng his company ln·southeastgovernmental units In the county doesn't start snow and Ice to melt ern Ohio.
to prepare bids for the next round - call tlie highway department
Finally , Interdepartmental
of State Issue II prol!!l!ts.
and explain the problems.
,
transfers were ~pproved in the
Roberts was advised by the
The commissioners were ad·
public assistance and ceunty
COIIUI)Iailoflet:av,.tlu!tA bey · !lave ~ ·v lsi!d"'ly Clerk Mat'y Hobstet•tel' coroner budgets.
recelvell a "titlzens petition asklng for more reliable snow and
.l ce removal ·on County 19 betweenRoute33andCountyRoad
20. The petition carries 66 signa·
.
tures .and .stated that during
.
recent bad weather, many close
·
· PI
uld
be di 1 sed
calls and several accidents had . An 18-year-old Point easant
dealh wo not
sc o .
occurred on that stretch of road man was killed in a Wednesday
Bolh Huddleston _ and SullivWl
which leads to the Amerlcare- evening accident on S.R. 2, near
were extricated ftom lhe wreckage
Pomeroy Nursing Center.
Point Pleasant, marking Mason
by the Valley Volunteer Fire •
RobertJ ·satd h.e already had a 'County's first aaffic fatality of the
Department and Rescue Squad,
copy of the petition.
.
·1990's.
dl
using lhe Jaws of Life. ·
Dead is Scou Alan ,Hud eston,
Acconling 10 the Mason Counry
As explained by HighWay .Superlntendent Ted Warner, when Main Street, Poinl Pleasant, a pasSheriff's Depanment, lhe accident
. bad weather strikes, the second senger in a vehicle driven by Charoccum:d approximately one·founh
truck . sent · from the highway les Clay Sullivan, 21, West Colummile soulh of Goodyear Plant in
departmenthto treat . roads al· bia. Sumvan was ftown to Cabell- Apple Grove. Apparently the Sui·
ways goes to County Road 19. Huntington Hospital by a ~ealth· livWl vehicle, which was traveling .
"We ·try to P!IY particular atten- Net helicopter, where a nursmg s~- north, crashed imo the rear of a ·
pervisor listed him in good cond•- garbage truck, owned by Sanitation ·'
lion. The olher driver in the two- Service Co., Inc., and · driven by
.j
vehicle acciclent, Randy L. Jordan, Jordan.
,
•
The sheriff-'s dcparunent srated
Point· Pleasant, was · tak:en to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by the the truck was stopped, partially
r ' II
1 r
Point Pleasant EMS.
. parked in the roadway, apparently ·
While aulhorities at PVH ·stated to pick up garbage.
·
~
.
Jordan was treated and released
Another Sanitation
Service
I H..I4Afrom the emergency room with con- empioyee, Fred Pearson, was unin·
tusions, lhe cause of Hllddleston,'s, jured.
By u,lled Preu lilterna&amp;lllllll
Showers and a tew thl,tndtr·
storms paraded across Ohio
Wednesday night, but the
weather dried out Thursday
before a predicted return to wet
weather late Friday.
Glenn Rizer, Racine water supervisor, reports that .the
· Mild temperatures were the ·
automatic waterman station Is now open for an~one who needs
rule over Ohio lhrougq the
to haul water. The station has been out of commission since the.
evening hours Wednesday with
freezing weather caused problems with the machln~ry . Repairs
most
temperatures
In
the
50s
to
~ill; ADVER'l1SING __. Memben . of
· tbe annua) Girl Scout_Cookie. Sale whlcll alar~
were held up while Rizer waited for necessary parts which had
lower 60s.
·
Bad..e Girl SCobt,"'"' lD« bave beeaiMII)' the
FrldaJ and will condaue tbrouch Feb. f.
A
cold
front
moved
across
most
to be ordered to arrive.
puf few dqoa maJdar JHIItera Ia prepariltlon lor
'of the state during the second half
...
of the ntaht and the mercury took
a dip behind It, falling Into the
upper 30s over .westl!rn parts of
It's that time of year again. Girl Scout cookies will beonlale
the state.
'
In
the area beginning Friday and continuing through Feb.4. The
.
A few showers were lingering
sale price remains at $2 per box with troops to recelv.e 30 ceata
over southel!St parts of Ohio just
ffrom each box sold.
•
, before dawn. Drier air was on the
A new variety of cookie Is being Introduced this year ' way In to Ohio but the clearing
Cabana Cremes - whlcl\ Is an assortment of lemon and vanUia
process was expected to be slOw.
.•
sandwich cremes. Other varieties Include Samoas, Thin Mints,,
l A larre cloud mass covering all
Do-SI-Dos, Trefoils, Chocolate Chip and Tagalongs.
'
Tbe. Middleport PTO has voted. meetings In preparation for a · ·--bundtnl proposal.
.
tbe Great Lakes, mid and upper
For more than ·so years, the sale of cookies has been a major_
The Ml!ldleport PTO' s state· Mlsal.lslppl Valley and the Ohio
to oppoee any proposal (or a- new survey of residents In the district
source of fundln&amp; for Girl Scouts. It Is also a real learntnr
bulldiDg procram In the Meigs which Is planned .1or sometime merit released by Bev!ln reads 1!5 Valley was 1low to breaking
experience for the girls as they learn to l!andle money ,Improve
' Local School District which within the n4!1't tew weeki.
follows:
.
down Thursday but some suntheir communication skills and build self confidence. Troopa
Aa explained by the auperln·
"We are In favor of maintain· shine wu expected to be vii lble
would result In ciOI!na the
uiie their profits to finance girl-planned projects such as troop ' ,
. ten~t all bonded Indebtedness Ina community schools. not big ThursdJY afternoon over the
Middleport Elementary School.
camping or special weekend trips. Co~ncU profit Is retlll'lled to
Accordlna to Sheila Bevan, of the dlatrlct will be paid ott In city factory scboo~. Parents do. .south~t quarter of the state.
troops through malnleriance of carnplnl facilities, training of
December, 1990, ud Jt the four not want to bus their children 16 Skill· sbould clw more quickly
secretary of the PTO, approxl·
adult volunteers, purc~ase of equipment, books film strips and
mately 100 parenta, teachers and mllll currently beiDa collected Is .mllel to and from school; nor do Tbul'lday atabt.
through staff support services.
.
. '
Other 1Dteres111!d citizens ra· conUnued, IJeiiMiq 1n Jan. 1991 they wut them rldiDa with
More law prn•1re II expected
If
a Girl Scout does not call at your doot, ask around the
thereclattheMiddleportElemen· and aliiDdllla tor 21 ye1n1, over junlllr and senior hiJh atudenta.
to deveklpe aloq the 1011thern
community to find t)!e nearest Girl Scout or Girl Scout leader.
· tary Scbool '1'118dJY ntaht to •• mlllloD will be ralad toward We feel that · there should be end of tha 1.'0111 froat In Taxaa
Theil ttl":e them a call.
.
·
)lear Melp Local SUperintendent thi propaa1d buJ)dllla pi'o&amp;ram · cbeaper alternat1v11 to th111'8dl·
later Thlll'lday IIIJht. The Naat
·
no
Increase
In
taxea
to
cal
acUon
of
cl111ln1
seven
' '
Ja.- Carpenter present the
tional Weather Ser\llce said th1l
. ICboo!l...
prGp(WI for lha CODIOUdation of relldenta of tha dlltrll:t.
law pres....-e wtll movw norlhlut
The pupPI- populaUoa Ia the
The location of the proposed and will brlq cloudl back IDto
the •lesnentary IICbooll.
'nte plall u proposed by the seven IICbooll, wbJoh varln fnlm. . new l:!uUdlnp. hu no! yet been IOUthem Ohio on Floldey. '
Seven calls were answered on Wednesday 11)1 unlta of the .
, · Melp Loell .Board of Education leas than 130 to more than 370, tile determined ~ the Melp Local . There Ia a slim cliiiJC8 for rialn
Melp COunty Emerpncy Medical Services.
.
II to co..truct two new bulldlnp student-teacher raUo, and the Board of EducaUon, but Supt. rettlna back lllto IOUihenJ OhiO
At 12:04 a.m .. Tuppers Plains went to Route 7 for Emeat
In the dlatlict to ~erve either u . tnab!Uty to offer run-Ume carpenter, accordtna to Bevan, by late afternoon Friday, but the
Perkllll Sr. whO was taken to O'Bleness Memor1alllolpltal.
Indicated that the O!le which the ·more serious threat will be
ele~~~entary or combination teacberiiD art, mualc and other
Pomeroy at 9: 2&amp; a.m. went to the Amerleare-Pol I!Of .
~ areu In the seven eJe.
Middleport studenll would at- Friday nljbt, with thlt -wet
•: elemeatary·Jun!Or. hiJb schools.
Nunllla Centl!r for · Roxie Moore , to yeterua liB:n;ortal
tend Would "probably he near tile· weatb(er spreading over mueh OC
· · .. Curritntly the superintendent mentary schoo~ Were lilted u
·
. ConUnued on pare 6
hllh school."
Ia presenUq the propaeal at PTO some ot the reuoaa for the
the state by Saturday morning.

Mason
·
county
. h88ms
· t
f alali·t y·
auto
1990

REGUlAR •

TROPICANA

1 BUNCH ()F

CORN • GREEN lEANS
CARROTS • POTATOES • SAUEIICRAUT •

FREE BROCCOLI . I

FOODLAND V.EGETABLES

.,

ORANGE JUICE

I

I

WITH PURCHASE OF 1 HEAD OF 1

I

CAULIFlOWER
AND THIS COUPON

16 Ol.
CANS

c....,~

... 1114190. 1/20190

oz.

12
CAN

I
I
I

c...,. Volltl 1/14190 - I

.

1i11o1t I P• F...y With ( - ... ~tioaal

-----------

rDorecas''·t

I

•a:n· JloJP '
r

'...: ,IIW!t.l'

J

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I..Dcal news

briefs-~

·water station back in operation

Cookies sale starts Friday

GRAPE JAM or
•caiS
GRAPE JEllY

ASSORTED HEll'S

100'- YEGOAILE

·

POTATO CHIPS

Sl 491ooz.

(

lAG

Middleport
. PrO opposes project
-. that would close elementary -school
.

oz.

32
JAI

ECIIIICit.DEU - WATD ADDED

CRISCO OIL

COOKED HAM

$ .99uoz.

1·99_w.

-. tu;.-ctn!i' :~r~;Tommy Romine,
· RutlaJid, $25 arid costs, open
container; Sally A. Gloeckner,
·R acine, $10 fine only, running a
atop slgrl; Curtis Lemley, Mid·
dleport, $100 and costs, driving
. ~~J~Mr auapenalon, and $100 and
-ta. Insurance suspension; Tl·
mothy E. Price, Jack!lon, $16and
eoata, speeding; Roy Boggs,
Middleport, $25 and costs, and
Gina R. PhiiUps, Middleport, $10
alld cosll, running a stop sign.

•

2 Soe1ion1, 1 2 Pages 2&amp; Cents
.A Multimedia Inc. Neww:aaper

County· road mileage count
same in Meigs, Roberts says

ENTER 'NOW AT

Six were fined and three others
forfeited bonds In the t'Ourt of
• - Middleport Mayor Fred Hottman

I

Lllebllers said township ordl·
The only neg.tlve votes on !he
nances could not supersede state b!Uweregenel'atedbyanamendlaw or city ordinances. Town- ment offered by Rep. Michael
ships would notbeabletolm110$1' Fox, R·Hamllton, and approved
jail time for crimes, only fines.
by the House.
The townships would be prohl·
The amendment gives an add!·
blted from offering services tiona! two-year moratorium for a
already In place In the county. township annexation dispute In
"No way do we Intend to give Butler County.
townships the authority to proFox said Sharonville · and
vide serVIces that the countle~ Springdale In Hamilton County
provide," said Luebbers. . ·
and Fairfield In Buller County
The townships would have no are attempting to annex Union
taxing powers, but they could . Township. He _said a one-year
collect taxes approved by the moratorium expired last ,July.
IJeDPle.
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·Court news

at

Representatives
OK
township
home
rule
bill
.to

speclai meeting

Middleport

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,_ Thu111day; Jeinuary 18, 1990

Meigs
announcemenls
There will be a special meeting
of the Chester Township Trustees
· on Friday, 7: 30p.m . at the town
hall.
Dance planned
The Gallta Twirlers Sqaure
Dance Club will hold a dance on
Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at the
Henderson Community Center In
'Henderson, W.Va. Thec~llerwlll
be Herb Shelton and the dance Is
open to all western square
dancers.
Amerlc1111 Lepon meeting
There will be a regular meet·
lng of the Racine American
Legion Post 602 on Thursday at
-7:30 p;m. Refreshments will be
)erved follOWing the meettDg.
Tra&amp;eea lo meet
The Salem Township Trustees
will hold thler monthly meeting
on Jan. 27 at 9 a.m. at ·the fire
bouse In Salem Center.

Lew tonlJb&amp; near •· Friday,
Jijsh near 40. Cliuce of rain 31

•

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Your Jndependently Owned
Low·Priced Super~ark•t.

sought

Dpvorce actions have been
filed In Meigs Common Pleas
Court by David E. Huddl~ton.
Racine, against Lori L. Huddleston, Al'llngion Heights, IlL; and
Diane E. Brickles; Pomeroy,
against Larry H. Brlckles,
Pomeroy.
Filing for dissolution of their
marriages are Timothy R.
Priddy. Middleport, and Ll nda F.
Priddy, Pomeroy; Ada Mae
McHaffie, Middleport, and
.George W. McHaffie · Jr.,
Lancaster.
A dissolution of marriage has
been granted William Boyd
Deem and Beth Ann Deem.

Piek 3
428
Pick 4
6162
Super Lotto
4-18-22-26-31-34 .

'

A foreclosure action has been
' filed In Meigs Common Pleas
· Court by Citizens Federal Bank,
Mlam~ Fla., formerly known as
· Equitable Federal Savings and
Loan Association, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., against Wllllam E .
: Morris, Pomeroy; Sandra · K.
- Morris, Pomeroy; et al. .
The court cases of ·Michael
Burke, doing business as Rain·
bow Oil and Gas, et al, against
Untve'rsal Well Services Inc.;
and Barbara Queen against
Robert H. Eastman, doing bust. ness as Big J:lend Foodland, .e t al,
have been set Ued ahd·dismissed.

l

or

Wltnesfi!S heatd as manr a,
200 rounds tired In the first ata
Incident Involving the .UMW Ill
nearly six years.
f
Coal mine operators In our
pickups told pollee they
fired upon as t.hey drove Y
piCkets around 8. 30 a.m. at an
Intersection on t~e access road.
Pollee confirmed that all four
trucks had been damaged by
,.

n~eltlng bonds on the charge

Divo~

non-union mines where United .
Mine Workers 'members bad
gone to protest the firm's alleged
failure to pay back wages and
medical benefits,
.
_ . UMW Preside-nt Richard
',TrUIIIka expreslled outrage and,
1n a brief statement, said the
three miners were prates Ung
$357,000 owed thl'!ll In back pay
and medical benefitS.

I

•

Six forfeited bonds on speeding
charges In· the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday

: Foreclosure
action filed

are not even sure what !he truth
Is, yet.
''With this type of thing, you
may never find out. You got a
difference of opinions and perceptlons as to who started
shooting fii'Bt. Someone m~y
eventually step forward. It Is too
early to tell, yet."
Shots whistled through trees
near an access road to a pair

Ohio_Lottery

EMS has seven coUs ·

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'I

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