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•

14-The Daily Sentinel

'

Pom&amp;oy Middhpor1. Ohio

V:'ldnlldlt'. January 31,

'*

Ohio I~Jtery

Purdue
'

topples
·Michigan

·Pick 3

131
''ick 4
"'736
Super Lotto
4-10.20-23-34-38
Kicker 572854

_Page 5
.

•

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'

GREEN
BEANS

SHURFINE

GOLD MEDAl

TOMATO JUICE

FLOUR

46

REPSI
$149

'

I

'

oz. ins.
~'.:"'n.::~~:

JlftOZ.

6 9C_.·~!I!!!""!'!J!I!I!!II~......,IIIiioiiiii.~.....;~•GENERIC COFFEE.' CREAMER~.....!.~.~!~.. 5129
.
CHUCK COMBO .
.
·
SIRLOI·N PATTIES
PACKAGE 'ROAST •STEAK . t •. l.'·.9
'CHOPPED
.· •GROUND CHUCK f.
1

r

~139

..s

- . -. WESTERN STYLE
: . SPARE RIBS
~-

HOT DOGS
'

A. ·

BULK.~LICE I)
3 lb. or more
BACON__ •••••••••••••••••••

CRACKERS

uoz69C

1·9(

CHICKEN LEG QUARTERS

, .9.C

$ 599
SAUSAGE ••••• !~Z.~~...
_·
3 LIS. ORl'ORE
$179

' BALLARD

1-lL lOX ,

S lB. OR MORE

~

$699.
5, lb. pkg.
.

SUPERIOR

I 89(
•CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP.,.,;.,...........!!:...... 2I 79'

•CAMPBEll'S .CHICKEN NOODlE SOUP "..1!: ..:. 2

UNK

' '

LL

.:

GROUND CHUCK...

1

;LI·

'

S liS. OR MORE

s1
Sl 69
; ...

.GROUND BEEF'

PKG.

•••••••••••••••

s1·29

·L,OI ~ ...••.•...•..•.
. lB

·.

. . $149

HAMBURGER HELPER ••••••••••••

A Meigs Grand Jury Indicted four individuals. in a sesslqn
'which bl&gt;gan Wedll~day mQrning at 9:30a.m. and' continued
until. late in th~ afternoon; rep'ort~d Meigs Prosecutor Ste\.en L·.
Story. The Indictments on the four should be fU~d In the Meigs
Clerk of Courts office some lime on Friday, at which tlme
names of those Indicted may be released .
The same Grand Jury will reco1)veile later in February to
complete some unfinished business from Wednesday's session,
Story said.

Po~roy

has power outage

'

.

Sheriff probes accident .
Meigs SherUf James M. Sou!sby reports that his department
Investigated a deer-car accident Wednesday evening on Route
124, just west of the crossroads . According to the report, Deloris J. Winebrenner, Pomeroy,
was traveling west around 7:50p.m. when she struck and killed
I· Continued on page 6

JACK RABBIT PINTO OR

ROBIN HOOD

LB,

Meigs grand jury indicts four

-

,r BROCCOLI

S1
99 '
NAVY BEANS •••••••••••• ~.~~;.!~!.
3/
S1
PIZZA CRUST MIX .......:..... . . ·

$
BAKED ~AM .............·••••• 249
.

STORE BAKED .

..

LB.

SANDWICH SPREAD.••~~•• 99 (

I

ARMOUR'

·FRENCH FRIES

ICE CREAM

· 20 OZ. PKG.

2/99'(

5 QUART CTN.

$349

DONUTS
-n'

•

LARGE EGGs ·

ICED

ROYAl SCOT

-· SHEDDS

RAISIN BREAD

MARGARINE

'MARGARINE

'

$199 DOZ.

$1'19 LOAFLl.

4f$11-LI.

By OVP News Staff
Before a crowd of more than
100 people, the Gallla County
Local Board of Education rescinded a, motion It approved last
. week -tq ··negotfate. a . settlement
With a •dismissed teacher and
principaL
· ··
The action came Wednesday
night In a. special board meeting
called specifically to rescind
actions taken Jan. 22 to reach a
s~ttlement with
Larry Cre·
;iheims, who has filed suit against
· the board In Gallla County
Common Pleas Court.
The suit Is In regard to
Cremeens' termination as cadet
principal at Hannan Trace Elementary and as a teacher at
HTHS •'for gross immorality and
.other good and justcauses."The
board terminated his contracts
on March 27, 1989.
;
Included In the settlement with
Cremeens would be rernstate·
ment, back pay and the expungemen! of all records of · the
termination.
Last week, the board approved
. on a 3-2 vote action lo negotiate a

$199 :o~

DIICU88 GRANT- Orler Vore, lfDIBII'W hUIIe Ualecl Mlae

Wcrbn Auocla&amp;loa, lit left,lllld David Baker, ........ JWULW
-rerforSoaUlenOhi:CoaiCompuJ,d!rawa-.•lflld
froill the Ohl: Bureu of J:mplDJIIIent lervlcee to provide
retnt.,. for dllplM,Jed coal mlaera who Jut fall lwt tbeff loba
wiOI BOCCO. The retrallllill Pftii'IIJII will be eo~Mh~de41 bJ CommlliiMJ ~lea AaeaciM tllroqhl t1lelr nPA oflleel. Tile
wu u - M WedlleedQ bJ 8ta&amp;e Sea• .ru Mlehael Loq,
• D-CbiJIIcothe, aDd IMIIte Rq. M1117 Abel, D·otihnl, Ia a p .....
eoufenuee lit Athea1. Von ud Bak• were ~~near lleVeral who

pu'

•lie

lit tlie Prell couference.

··

settlement with Cremeens. re- ·
consider lhe termination of his
contracts and dismiss Richard
Ross, the Columbus attorney who
Is representing the board in the
Cremeens suit.
The vote aroused a confltci of
Interest controversy because
board member J .E. "Dick"
Cremeens, father of Larry Cre- ··
meens, voted In favor of lhe
motion.
Following presentations by at·
torneys for Larry Cremeens and
for board members Fred Deel
and Phil Skidmore as individu als, a motion to rescind the
previous order passed on a 3-2
vote.
The motion to rescind last
week:s action was made by Jolin
F~Uure and seconded by Deel. ·
When it came to Cremeens' turn
··lo vote, he said ' 'no, .. but he was
immediately advised by Skid· ·
more, who Is the board president,
that he could not ' vote on the
motion. Cremeens did not comment, nor did he nullity his vote.
Joining Skidmore and Dee! In
an affirmative vote was John

comes up
with idea

Fellure, while Bllley Halley and
Cremeens voted against.
Following the meeting, Cremeens was converged upon by
reporters, and g~ve no comment.
Blanche scraggs, ag!l !M?, a ·
However, Cremeens told the re~ldent at Overbrook, came u'p
Tribune this matter was.far from with an Idea for a fund raiser for
over, and would be ·brought the American HeartAss6c!atton.
before the bOard again. He also · She has a doll named Lucy and
said his personal attorney, Mark 'she thought It wo•!ld be nice' if
Foley, Is a member of the same Lucy could help In a fundratser
.law.' firm, Clopper!, Portman, for the Heart Association.
Sauter. Latanlck &amp; Foley, Co· So Blanche got busy and made
lumbus, which is representing a shawl for Lucy. On this shawl
his son. Larry Cremeens Is she would place hand knitted
.represented by Bill Steele,
hearts. 80 of them, and when
GaJlla Local Schools Superin- someone donates to the Hearl
tendent Nell Johnson said It's Association they can take one of
beep ho secret supporters of the hearts. To make the hearts
Larry Cremeens "want my job," Blanche called on the talents of
meaning . to see him removed . Miirtha Childs, · age 85, from
frolJ1 his position.
Middleport.
·
"I have lodo what lfeells right
Scraggs has done something
tor the school children of Ibis for the Heart Association for the
district," he said after the past four years
meeting. Johrison said that willie
Lucy, he r shawl, and her
ihe content of testimony In the hearts will be located at 111e
matter was private. he heard It
Middleport Library where the
and read the transcripts.
donations can be made, and
"I don't .think he (Cremeens)
where those who donate can gel
one of the hand knitted hearts .
Continued on page 6

Mason County residents
air_ views on highway project
Mason County residents were
joined .bY Putnam and Kanawha
represen181ives to express discootent in the change of the fourlane · highway feasibility study
being conducled by the West Yuginia Department of Transportation,
Division of Highways.
During Tuesday's public hear·
ing at the Armory, more than 175
residents took advantafe of the opponunity to apin tel DOH their
concerns for safety; agricultural and
historical loss, distance and din!ct·
ness for trucll:ers, and the continued
unwritten commitment of a new
Shaddle Bridge. .
•· ·
DOH has scrapped the findings
of the SIUdy.lhus far to broaden the
SC?JIC to a regional netwod:,
believed by many Mason County
residents u an act of politics in a
non-political projec:L
Accolding to John LaqciiSitl,
project coordinator and assistant
~ or planniq and ~h.

S149
DAIRY LANE

architect will be evaluating pres- the building 10 Middleport VIlWarner reported that the winent office needs of the depart·
lage which then leased tile . ter freeze and thaw process has .
ment, as well as future needs for
building lo the county. The damaged county roads only
the next 10 years. The architect . departtnent started moving out minimally, mainly on the edges
will review case load growth at
of the main building tohother of roads.
Water lias proven somewhat of
the d~partmenl and certain eco·
office units in 1982.
a
problem, Warner said, by
ilomlc Indicators within the
Swisher reported thai Jackson.
carrying
debris wlllch has
county. Based upon findings of
Vinton, Perry and Ross Counties
caused
quite
a few culverts to
the architect, a delermlnatlon
have · also been Involved in
become
clogged.
Quite a few
will be , made as to whether
feasibility studies.
·
current off.lce accommodations
culvert~
will
need
replaced, he
A resolu lion w.as passed l!Y the
meet the needs of the depart·
commissioners approving a said, as soon as the ground h.a s ·
ment, whether enlarging or rechange in · mileage on Bedford dried sufficiently .
Two representatives from
modeling of the existing main
Township Road 243 , also known
building In Middleport would be
as Hart Road. The change was · GTE North demonstrated a leleneeded, etc.
.
a'pproved to correspond with · phone system which might be
, Currenlly. the department
measurements by the slate ml· suitable for the Meigs Sheriffs
leases the main building on Race
leage man that the road Is 1.02 Department. The sheriff's deSt. In Middleport and three other
miles In length, not Including a partment has already seen the
office spaces on Second Ave.,
middle section of the road which system. The representatives
also In Middleport .
Is right-of-way only. The reso- presented pricing options as well
The main building was con·
lution was passed at the request as features of the system. Final
structed In 1966 by a group of
of County Engineer Philip R~; delermtnatlon on whether to
lnves tors. After paying off the
berts and Highway Superintend· Ins 1811 the new system will be'
. Conllnued on page 6
mortgage, the loves tors deeded
ent Ted Warner .

'

By Marga~t Caldwell

1112
.
• . DO~EN

LYNDER FARMS

2 Secttons. 12 P•gn 215 Cenu
A r.4ultimadia Inc. Newip•per

.Gallia board rescinds action to Overbrook .
.
·
·
·
l
resident
C
nego.
t
wte
remeens
sett
ement
·
-Local news· briefsLIS'l'ENING ~ GaJDa County Local School Board member J.E.
, (Dick) CJremeens listens Intently l1!i attorney James Foley speaks
to the board on behalf of members Fred Deel and Phlllp Skidmore
last night concerning his vote to reinstate hlsson, Larry Cremeens,
l1!i a teacher In the system. ( OVP photo)

About 158 Pomeroy customers of Columbus-Southern Power
were without electricity for' approximately four hours
Wednesday, reported Ron McDade, district manager of the
electric company. McDade said that a wire broke on Ebenezer
, St. In Pomeroy at about 10: 18 a.m., affecting Ebenezer
customers an&lt;! the rest of the Monkey Run area. and also
• Lincoln Heights. It was about 2:30p.m. before power could be
restored. McDacle was not sure What caused the line to.break,
however, a falJ!ng tree limb Is a possibility. ~
·

I ICY GREEN

TUNA OR

By NANCY YOACHAM
Seadnel News Staff
The !.fe!gs County Commissioners !n' Wednesday's regular
·meeting, authorized Michael
Swisher, d!reclor of the Meigs
Departtnent of Human Services.
' to begin interviewing architects
to carry out a feasibility study to
explore the possible need for
a,dd!tlonal office space for the
departtneilt. Tlie commissioners
··must approve the architect before actual hiring.
The commissioners au thor !zed
start of the interviewing process
based upon Swisher's report that
he . received a letter froni the
district director of tile Ohio ·
Departtnent of Human ·s ervices
authorizing the feasibility study
in Meigs County. Costs for the
. study are totally. reimbursable
· by the slale, Swisher explained.
In . the feasibility study. an

.

'

. ,_,_ 3I 99( ::.:h'lt,ll:~~~·---- S1 39

PORK BUn
efliU STEAK •PORI ROAST
COMBO •WESTEIN
STYlf

at

'

County authorizes Swisher to
liire architect to study request

POTATO CtfiPS '

· 99(

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·Thursday. February 1. 1990

1110

MISTEit BEE ·

16

•DELICIOUS SALTINES ............!:~~~~.~~ .......

Val.40, No.1811 '
Co

qqc

SLB.
BAG

oz. 79C
···,.

'.

mid..._
Chance of rain 88 percent.
Friday, high In mid IIOs.
· Cbance . ol rain near 100
percent .

bridge 10 replace the Shaddle
Bridge.
One concerned expressed by
residents which was initially
misunderstood was pinpointing the
shortest mule.
· Bill Wood, studying the locatipn
and cost, poinled out what appeared
to be second to the longest roule as
the most direct rou1e.
Looking at the engineering view,
the soonest IJ'8vel length includes
. existing roads with the consuuction
length measuring what needs 10 be
builL
. Lancasler, Jrying 10 explain the
difference, coofessed thai the shortest 'route on lhe ma'p l!'Ould be the
one most similar 10 the one
proposed by the Mason County
Commission, down through the
Chief Cornstalk Pubtic Hunting
Area.
Mason County Commissioner·
Kenton Sheline re-emphasized that
safety, bidden in the sllldy under
c,osl measores •. should be the number 01.1&lt;1 priorily.
Jack Fruth, or the Point Pleasant·
Mason County Chamber .of Com· .

the members of the Ohlilv IIIIJ
chan~ the stud roc'iiJ.'cqu·
cally as 1 rault ~ wllal wa being merce I'OIIds commiaee, SUDilQitCd
said at publk: meetlnts.
that fact'
"We were looldn• at Cabell ''We want to ICC the m0111 people
County from the beg{iuun,.· Lin· wllh lhe 'ulolt benelits with the 1eut
Caler llid.
IMIImmi 0( dam~ Ill Jhe 1eut
MIR lhaD 30 res!dentl poeM amount or people. . Ftulh lllicl.
· quest~Qns on how the members
Bob Wallu1011o a former truCker,
. were IOCJtina Ill faclon or ccacern 1101 only backed up the commis-:
that 1101 c:lart)' shOwli 111 the lion's piority, but elabariiU:d on
scale IIICid In the lllldy.
·
tho imponance of die most direct
~. DOH !Iliff lllelllben of n1111e 10 OIIIUI'C llfety.
the feaibllity lt1ldy p-ve few t11roct
'"Truckers want to 110 with the
answers to quellionli and concerns. shortest toute. (11)e present u,S •1
Conthlued
.including the constriiCdoa .of a new ·
.
. on page 6 ·

AOOC)D IDEA- Blucklcl ..... lell, a
Ceater, ud Marlla &lt;;JIIIdt, Mld•IIP•rt. calalllralell•u
Blauche'e for a fudraiHr for tile Am~ Heart
The dqD &amp;hilt &amp;craap 11 holdllllll aamed ._,, IH
Lucy'• lhawl cu be ob&amp;alaed bJ lilaldilla . ......_ to
auoclatlon at Ole Middleport Ubrary.

#'

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�Commentary
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Detroit ·downs· Edmonton 7-5 to stay 'in ·htJnt for playoffs

Page 2-The Dlllt Sa1dnll
Pomeloy-Midcleport, Ohio
. Thundlly. Februay 1, 1890

T_he Daily Sentinel · Worthwhile welfare program fights
111 Court Street

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

.

.

~rb
. rs:m~ ~._-r •....._c~,"""

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qjv

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
PubiiBher
·
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

. PAT WHITEHEAD

A"-"islanl. Publlsher/ConlroUer

General Manager

.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be le~slhan 300

words long. AU letters are oubject to e~llog and mull he signed wllh

name, address and telephone numher. No uDBilfted letters wUI he published. Let&amp;ers should ~e In good taste, addressin1lssues, not perHnall·
· lies. ·

Israeli aid .
sacred no more
By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -It used tb be that there were three things
in Washington that were untouchable and sacred: Mother's Day ·
resolutions, the flag and U.S. aid to IsraeL
Mother's Day is still pretty safe, although some cynics are
beginning to voice suspicions that it 1~ a way of getting women out of
the workplace and selling greeting cards. The flag lost its exempt
status when it was thrown into the political cauldron last.year after
candidate George Bush wrapped himself in 11 and Democratic critics
pol!lted out that it is, after all, a cloth symboL
.
Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, Senate Republican leader, apparently
launching a trial balloon crafted by Secretary of State James Baker,
raised the previously unthinkable Idea of cutting iJ.S, aid to Israel
(and to ·Egypt, Turkey, PakiStan and the Philippines) in order to
spread some of the money around to Eastern Europe and Latin
· ·
America.
Even more Interesting than Dole's suggestion was the lack of an
explosive reaction from Israel's supporters In Congress. Two years
ago, the Israeli lobby was a steamroller that would have flattened
anybody who even thought about cutting Israel's U.S. aid, which now
af1'lounts to about $1,000 per year for every Israell.I&gt;ut the other way,
It amounts to $1~ per year paid out by every American.
But things have changed In the last two years. First, there was the
Palestinian Intifada in the occuple&lt;lterrltorles, which created a new,
harsh image for the IsraeliS ~ as enforcers rather than gallant
.
defenders of democracy.
Then, too, Israell Prime MlniS\llr Yltzhak Shamlr, caught between
a rock, represented by the intifada, and a hard place, his political
r\ght wing, has grown Increasingly lntranslgeill a bout refusing to
give up any of the occupied West Bank or Gaza Strip. Secretary of
State James Baker. his patience growlng 'thln with Shamlr, threatens
to pull the plug on the whole Middle East peace process.
Another interesting result of the ~le proposal has been the first
serious examination of the Israeli aid package, and the growing
realization that some fancy boOkkeeping means that Israel receives
substantially more than the face value of $3 billion.
·
By one calculation, done by the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee, the main pro-Israel lobby, the real blll amounts to $3.666
billion this year.
The extra money to Israel includes $180mllllon for the development
and purchase of Israeli mllltary·equlpment by U.S. defense forces,
the purchase of $100 mllllon in Israeli mUitary equipment for a
strategic mllltary stockpile in the Mlddlt. East, and $183 mllllon for
the construction of Voice of America relay stations on Israell soU.
In addition, Israel gains by a unique payment system. In every
other economic asslstal)ce package, U.S. funds are handed over in
quarterly Installments. Butln the case oflsrael, the entlre$1.2 billion
In economic aid Is handed over on the first day oi the fiscal year, ·
permitting Israel, rather than the ·u.s. government, to earn the
interest on that money for the entire 365 days. AIPAC figures that
works out to an e21tra $55 mUllan per year.
Because of other financial benefits, inclUding tax exempt status for
Bonds for~srael, the real value of the U.S. aid package Is probal!ly
even greater than $3.666 bllUon per year.
What Is disturbing some State Department officials is the growing
suspicion that some of that money goes Indirectly to violate U.S.
pollcy that opposes the settlement of new migrants from Eastern
Europe In the occupied territories.
These thoughts would have been unthinkable, or unprintable two
years ago, bu I much has changed since th&lt;;&gt; first rocks were thrown in
the West Bank in December 1987.

Today in history

l

By United PreBJ~ llllerna&amp;loaal
Today is Thursday, Feb. 1, the 32nd day of 1990 with-333 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward lis first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, 'Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on the date a!'!' under the sign of Aquarius. They include
composer Victor Herbert in 1859; Hattie Caraway ,of Arkansas, first
woman elected to the Senate, in 1878; film director John Ford ln1895; ·
actor Clark Gable in 1901; poet Langston Hughes In 1902; humorist
S.J. Perelman In 1904; cabaret singer Hildegarde In 19Q6 (age 84);
film and special effects .director George Pal in 1908; singer Don
Everly and rock parodlst Ray "Dr. Hook" Sawyer In 1937 (53);
Princess Stephanie of Monaco In 1965 (age 25) and Usa Marie
Presley, daughter of Elvis Presley, In 1968 (age 22).

Berry's World

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~,

to Stlrvive _____·__~________J_oc_k_A~~-~_r_~_n_a_oo__D~a~~-Vi_~_-_A__
ua

......

.,... .,~.... ,..»

~'BRRRR/1 wonder what t"- wind chill factor
·
Is tonight?"

WASHINGTON- Welfare was
Slnoe Its Inception in 1972, WIC,
a dirty word In the Reagail run by the Agriculture Depart- .
administration, so dirty that ment, bas been an example of
even worthwhile programs had govenunent at Its bes,t. Needy
to fight for survival.
·
pregnant women and chlldren
Congressional Investigators recellie medlcBI care ana food.
are only now piecing together the For every $1 spent on WIC, the
story of how one program was · government saves $3 in later
put through the wringer for six medical costs.·About 3.4 million
years because Reagan adminiS- people are enrolled In the protration officials couldn' I accept gram, which costs $1.9~ billion a
the · notion that it actually year.
To the Reagan minions, It was
worked.
··
The program has the usual just another welfare program
government mouth-boggling beh'lg foisted · on them by a
name of Special Supplemental Democratic . Congres~. So the
Food Program for Women, In- first step for Reagan's Agriculfants ,and Children, but 11 Is ture Department in 1981 .was to
simply referred to as WIC.
stall an c;mgolnK study that would

Moynihan aside, we mtJst refotnt tax

\

V:'

·. C · l·l

The present tax, appalllngly high
as It is, stU! won't provide many
lncen't
. of today's workers with their
promised pensions.
retll;ement - something other
Social Security is a great deal,
than hlltlng the payroll tax again
of course, for present retirees.
and smo therlng economic
They paid low· payroll taxes
growth.
·
during most of their working
Two· posslbllllles~ Since prl:
.daysandsonowenjoyagenerous vale investments offer a more
return on their "investment." 'a ttractive rate of return than the
But the same Is hardly true for _payroll tax, Col)gress could roll
working people In their 20s, 30s back the tax for those ..workers
and early 40s.
willing to put an equivalent
Inflexible demographic facts · amdqntofsavlngslntoauntouchare the r~ason. During the next able retirement account that
couple of decades,. the huge th!!Y manage themselves.
generation of baby boomers wlll · Or, up-front tax credits could
enjoy their prime earnings ·ye, be extended to people ·who
ars, while· the relatively small ·contribute to private Individual
group born during the Great Retirement Aceounts but who
Depression and World War II then give up claim to part of their
retires.
· Soclli! Security benefits. Former
As a result, Social Security's . Delaware Goov. Pete DuPont
surplus will balloon. But accord- outllni!d a variant of this last
lng to the most plausible projec· proposal when he ran for the
tlons, this happy story will end presidency In 1988.
when boomers themselves begin
We could, of course, merely
. to retire. Tn 25 years or less, . rock along for the next '25 years
Social Security's annual surplus pretending all is well and then
wlllbecomeanannualdeficlt.By jack up taxes to liuttress a
2030, the system could be broke. collapsing system. How does a
Clearly, something should be payroll tax of, say. 25 percent
done to protect young workers' soundtoyou?

arro

Promising apprOaches to . ~ ~rsistent
.

progran.1.._____________;,..;_'"-..:·----'-----'---=Co:.:.:n£:g.-=C=la:.:...::re::.:..:nc::e:....:.M:,:.:i=lle::..r.
'

When President Bush unveiled
his comprehensive anti-drug
package last September ~ere
were ·sqme that · thought hts
approach to the user side of the
drUg problem was misplaced.
~ther than call for increased
penalties for drug takers, as the
President did, these critics
thought more emphasis needed
to be placed on drug education
and treatment programs.
Recent developments at the
state and local levels ot government, however, suggest that this
"get tough on users'' approach Is
beginning to pay off In more ways
than one. And the good part about
It ts· that this "get tough"
approach hasn't necessarUy meant lockln!J up these offenders
and overcrowding our already .
overpopulated prisons.
Before President Bush and
Drill Czar Bill Bennett tooli: over
the federal government's antldruiJ effort, most of the emphasis
for controlling the flow of drugs
was aimed atgoiiiiJ after the drug
dealer. Casual dl'u11 useta had
been "g~tlna off euy," with
most receiving minimal senten·
ces and ~. All that appears to
be chanpng, however, as 'more
and more state, count)' and
municipal governments look for
Imaginative and cost · effective

,,

•I

mld·1981 when the Investigator
appointed to the study by the
Carter administration was replaced by a Reagan appointee,
Dr. DaVid Rush.
Rush was no fan of WIC, untU
tile Ogures changed hiS mind. His
research team ended up writing'
a five-volume report that prO.
nounced WIC a success.
That wasn't exactly what the
administration wanted to, hear,
so the sial! began. Reagan's
appointees in the Agriculture
Department took nine months to
accept a draft of the report -a
process that usually takes abouf
two inonths. A wealth of material
was tossed out and a wholesale
. rewrite of the summary was
done, casting a less favorable
light ,on WIC.
By the timE! the draft was
approved and ready for print, It
· was the summer of1985. Then the
Agriculture Department began
to backpeddle in earnest. By law,
government P~rinting ·jobs must
be done at the Government
Printing Office. A loophol In
that law says smaller jobs, up to
25,000 pages, cail be taken to
commercial printers. •
. The department treated' the .
five vplumes o! the report~ils it
each were a separate report and
negotiated five separate p~intl!lg
,jqbs. Since the fourth voiUil\e was ·
489 pages long, that meant the
printer could only produce 50
copies of It, for a total of 24,450
. patJes.
· After six years and $6 mUllan,
the gutted study was finally
. distribute!! to a minuscule au,·
dlence In January 1986. Only 50
people got all five vollimes. ·
A joint .congressional hearing
Is scheduled today (Wednesday,
Jan. 24) to Investigate the fiasco
and make suie 11 can't happen
again. Leading the lnvestlgatton
are Sens. To!ll Harkin, D-lowa,
and 'J ames Jeffords, R-Vt., and
Tony Hall, D.Ohlo and
my Rep.
Augustus Hawkins, D·Callf.

have proved ttie value of WIC.
Congress had authorized the
study In 1978 and expected It to be
done within about three years for
about $4 million. By, the time
Reagan's people flniShed It, the
stUdy took six years and cost $6
mUllan. And then the department
printed so few copies that It was
effectively kept under wraps.
During the years .ot stalling,
the Reagan administration con- ·
slstenlly recommended less
funding for WIC than the study
r&lt;;&gt;sults warranted a11d less mo·
. ney than a suppclrUve Congress
wanted to give WIC. .
The first sign that something
polltlcat was · a(0 ot came In

"Hi ho, I'm the little slump In the economy you've been expecting -Is
room ready?" .
·
.
·
. ·

Sen. Patrick Moynihan ls dis- Americans. ·
covering that Washington likes to
You'll notice, however, that
be reminded of . lt.s self· many of the people ·applauding
deceptions every now and then,
Moynlhan'sbravurastopshortof
but rarely likes to do anything saying they hope he'll succeed. In
a!Jout them.
part, they simply enjoy the furor
The puckiSh New York Demo- his plan has provoked. But
crat has been praised up and mostly they revel in the spectacle
downforhlghllghtingthefraudof of a liberal Democrat embarthe Social Security trust-fund rassing ' an allegedly ~nserva·~surplus." Moynihan's bral.n- tlvepl'!'sldentbyoutflanklnghlm
storm Is as follows: Since excess on his own best issue: taxes.
Social Security taxes have been
Indeed, Moynihan himself may
used In recent years to cover up have no other purpose in ·mind
the size otthefederaldeflclt, why . than scoring political points.
not halt the charade and roll back After all, the New York senator
the payroll tax- which just went served as a member of the very
up for the 14th time in the pa$t commission in the early 1980s
quarter century?
that recommended raising payNot only does the payroll tax roll taxes to their present lofty
disguise the federal defl&lt;:lt, but It rate of7.65 percent (or 15.3, when
is a gruesome levy in itself: It the employer's ·contribution Is
raises. the cost of labor, so It factored In).
reduces the number of jobs. It
But whether Moynihan and the
favors the weplthy, since Income
above $51,300 Is · Immune - a Washington establishment get
person earning $100,000 pays the serious this year about revampsame as someone makhig little lng the payroll tax. the rest of us
more than half as m~ch. And It should favor reform. That's
has risen so fast In recent because the Social Security sysdecades (more than doubling) · tern would be a hoax even if Its
that II' s now the single largest surplus were not being siphoned
tax paid by mllllons of off to cover ·government debt.

ways to address the demand side
;
of the drug equation.
ment program or tlie prospect of jobs. Statistics show this probLet me share some of these · a felony 'charge. To date, 54% lem Is widespread at all levels of
encouraging new approaches
have opted'for treatment, which society and In all walks of life. It
with you. Late last year, Mary·
Is provided on a pay-as;you,can doesn't matter U you are rich or
land's Governor, as part of his
sliding scale.
.
poo~, a college graduate or a high
comprehensive anti-drug pai:k·
More recently, ·the U.S. De- • school drop-out, live In the city or
age, vowed to take away the
partment of Justice Initiated In the.country. Wherever you are
licenses of any professionals
public hearings aimed at Institut- and whoever you are, you are as
·convicted on drug charges. In
Ing federal regulations that vulnerable as the next person.
Massachusetts, the new penalty
would call for the imposition ot
The common myths sh11red by
for possession of even the smai- Civil penalties for simple posses- the casual user are that (1) they
lest amounts of drugs is a
sion of llllc11 drugs. The regula- don't think they are doing anyone-year suspension of driving
tions would give someone thing wrong, and (2) they don't ·
privileges. Those too young to
charged with posses&amp;ton the think they are creating a hazard
drive wlll be required to walt an
option of · paying a fine of up to to anyone else. UntO these people
extr,a year before they can apply
$10,000 per offense or going get the menage loud and clear,
for a driver's license. For !lie last
through the . criminal jusjj.ce that there Is a stiff price they will
t~o yeats New Jersey has been
system where they would face have to pay for such· cuual use, .
Imposing stiff .fines on those
the potential of lncarcera tlon.
be It in the form of a hefty fine or
charged will\ simple possessiOn
Because of the Images pro- the loss of certain prtYIIeaes and
as a way of dissuading users and 'jected on network news shoWs, prerogatives, they won't think
pb~ntlal users from acquiring
much of the . Amer~an public twice about such use.
and maintaininll a drug habit.
naively thinks that the drug
I'm encouraged that IJQVI!rn·
problem Is principally a problem ments at alltevels are l;leaillnltig
Thus far, some $6.5 million has · for our nation's big cities, for to get tluit message as well and
been paid In floes, and this certain elements of our popula· are co1ntn11 up with a series of
money In ~has been funnelj!d tlon that see 11 as 8!1 escape from Innovative and cost·effectlve
baek into drug education and reality, and at an attractive and ways to deal \VIth the demand
rehabilitation programs. In Ma- easy way to make a living. This side of the drug problem, apricopa County, Arizona, they perception couldn't be further proaches that in many caset will
have a user accountability pro- from tbe truth.
ease the detnandl on our courta
gram that combines treatment
According to the National and prllolll while at the eame
and law enforcement. A first Institute on Drug Abuse, 14% of . time proYidin!J these IJQVI!rn·
time offender, wben arrested Is our nation's resldenta Uled Ille- ments with new revenue~ , With
given tbe choice of either enter· gal druplast year, as did 22'!li of which to wage our nation's war
intJ a year-IOIIIJ outpatient treat- all Americans . witb full-tlnie ondru~.

..

I•

'

The Daily Sentinei-Pqe 3

Pomaoy-Middlepart. Ohio

Thursclllv•.Febru.,y 1, 1990

'

..

shot frOm the top of the faceoff
~lrcle.
·
Y,zerman gave the Red Wings a
6-4 lead at 10: 29 wben he beat
goalie Blll'ftanford on tbe short
side with a shot from the bottom
of the faceoff circle while Detroit
bad a two-man advantage .•
· Edmonton had a two·man
advantage when Yzerman arid
.Rick Zombo drew penalties with
6:301eft In the game, buttheRed
Wings · killed off the penalties,
allowtn~r onlv two •hot~ on goal.
"That wu so Important,"
Demers sald. "When you kUl oft a
S-on,3, you're going to win 75
percent of the time."
Edmonton cut Detroit's lead
ba&lt;1k ,to one 1oal at 16:18 on
· de!enseman Steve Smith's shot
from just Inside the blue 'line
after a faceoff in the Detroit end,
but Yzerman sealed the victory
with' his empty net goal with 50
seconds remaining.
·
Yzerman's second goal of the
game, a wrist shot from between
the faceoff circles with 1: 10 left In

to 39 With the first four-goal game
By JO)fN SWENSON
of his career.
. UPJ S,orta Writer
"I thought WI! played with a
"We needed our leader to take
charge add Steve Yzerman took sellae of urpmcy : Yzerman
charge tonight," si.ld Detroit added.
Cral11 Simpson scored twice for
Red Wtnga coa&lt;'h Jacq~ De·
mers said after Yzerman's four the Oilers, who en ~red the game
goals Wednesday led Detrollio a with a 22.0.1 record when leading
come-from-behind 7·5 . vtctory after two periods.
The victory was the secane!
over thC;! Edmonton Oilers.
straight
for Detroit, .while- Ed. Yzerman admitted there isn't ·
monton
lost
for the first time in
much time for the Red Wings,
four
games.
who · are. nine points behind
"Anytime you lead going Into
fourth-place Minnesota · in the
the
third period you should
Norris Division, to earn a playoff
protect
It," said Edmonton's
·
berth.
.
"We have togetgolnghow," he Adam Graves.
"We got caught in alotof2·on-1
said. "There's only 60 days left
and 3-on·2 situations anc) they
and you·r~. doQB. It's k.ind ill a
took advantage,,; Simpson
miserable position to be ln."
.
Yzerman said he was encour· · oftenid.
Joe Kocur triggered 'Detroit's
aged at the way the Red Wings
third period outl!urst when he
overcame a 4-2 deficit with 5:13
deflected Lee Norwood's shot
remaining in the' second period.
from the ·. point during a pOwer
"! don't think one game can
play at 6:05 to lie the score at 4-4.
turn 11 around, but our whole
The Red Wings took the lead 45
team played· .with more excite·
seconds. l!ller on Bernlj! Fedj!r·
ment tonight," said· Yzerman,
ko's deflection of John· Chabot's
who boosted his goal production

the second pelod, cut Edmon- maintained control oft he puck in
the slot area, then threaded a
ton's lead to 4-3.
Simpson tied the score at 2-2 at pass to Gallant at the edge of the
1:41 of the ~nd period when lie crease.
El-here in the NHL, St.
took a center(ng pass from
L,oiala
and lhil NY Rangers skated
Randy . Gregg and beat gOalie
to
a
2-2,
II~ , Washington nipped
Glen Hanlon.
·
4·3, Toronto knotted
MlnnesJlla
Craig MacTavls h scored on a
Wlnnlf!Cg,
5·5,
ahd Buffalo beat ..
rebound at §: 02 after lineniates
Quebec
6-3.
.
·
Adam Graves and Joe Mut·phy
Rancers
2,
Blues
2
had applied pressure on the
At New York, Dave Lowry
Detroit net.
·
scored
a short-handed goal to lift
The Oilers took a 4-2 lead at
·
the
St.
Louis Blues into the tie,
14:47 on Vladimir Ruzicka's
and
Blues'
rookie goalkeeper
fourth goal In six games. Ruzicka
Curtl.
s
Joseph,
subbing for In·
broke in alqne on Hanlon, puUed
jured
Vincent
Rlendleu
midway
·the goalie and llfted a backhand
through
the
first
period,
.com~ shot Into the far corner.
bined
with
Rlendleu
to
stop
31
Yzerman gave Detroit a 1·0
shots.
lead at. 2:31 o' the first period
W uhlngton •· Minnesota 3 .
when he knocked his own re· - At
Bloomington, Minn., John
bound out of the air and into the
.net.
Simpson converted a pass from
Petr Klima on a 3-on-2 break at
4:48 to lie the score at 1-1, but
Gerard Gallant put the Red Wigs
back In front at 5: 28. Yzerm.an

Florida's Smith to enter NFL drQjt
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) Florida Gator running back .
Emmitt Smith, an ·All-America '
and a 1989 Reisman Trophy
finalist, announced Wednesday
he wlll forgo his senior season to
enter the !'JFL draft in April.
.
Smith, a junior from Pensac- ·
ola, Fla., called It the hardest
decision he eVer made. He said It
was both a business and· emo. . tiona! decision.
·
· "I'm not going to give you
some sob story about my family .
needing the money,; we don't,"
Smith said. "This past season
\Vas tl!f! best I have ever had in
college. I am .leaving because,
rlg'ht now, I have the opportunity
of a lifetime.'' ·
In .the 1989 campaign, Smith
established several Gator re·
cords, including most yardage in
a season wtth-1,599 on 284 carries,
· and was named Southeastern
Conference Player of the Year.
In al(, he holds 58 Florida marks,
including most yardage in· a
career at 3,928 yards on , 700

Tucker's goal 35 seconds Into
overtime gave the Washington
Capitals the victory. Tucker
knocked in a rebound by Geoff
Courtnall as the Capitals came
from behind to win their 13th .
game on the road this season.
Th&amp; Capitals are 13·15·2 on the
road but only 10·)1 ,2 at home.
Maple Leafs 5, Jets 5 ·'
At Winnipeg , Manitoba' . Daniel Marois assisted on three
goals. including the final two of
the game by Tom KurVers and
VIncent Damphouse, 10 pull
Toronto into the tie.
Sabres $, Nordlques 3
At Buffalo, N.Y., Doug Badger
scored a goal and added two
assists to lead the Sabres In a
swe\'p of the teams' home-andhome series .

16 INCH DELUXE

PIZZA

4-16 OZ. PEPSI'S .

$999
•

carfle!i, yardagelnasinglegame back Rodney Hampton declared
with 316 ani! career touchdowns
themselves eligible-forth~ draft.
with 37.
Smith did not inform his
1
'1 have accomplished almoSt . teammates or head coach Steve
everything I wanted to, except Spurrier of his intentions until
win the Hetsman· and a national
moments before the news co.nfer·
.chllmplollshlp," Smith said.
ence Wednesday at Ben Hill
l;lls announcement ended
Griffin Stadium.
mQJJths of speculation that. he
"You just have to say thanks to
wo~uld part with the Gators for
the best running back In the
the lure of big money and the
NFL.
"It's been very rough these
past few months," Smith said. "I
haven't enjoyed myself, with.
reporters and agents knocking on
my door, c"Ung my family. I'm
glad It's over."
Smtih said he had had mixed
emotions since the latter part of
the 1~89 season an~ did not reach
his final d,eclsl.on until be talked
with famlly · and friends last
weekend.
He also said he wanted to see
what other top college juniors did
before sealing his plans . . Last
week, Alabama linebacker Keith
!VIcCants an.d Georgia running

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

history of the University of
Florida," Spurrier said. "We are
100 percent behind his decision If
that Is what he wants to do. We
understand the position he's ln."
Smith .said the recent turmoil
in the Florlda ~thlellc department played no role In his
decision.

MAIN STIER PIZZA
'92·2228

POMEIOY,
01110

-·RQ~s Sf: fifth in

Division III; ,
Portsmouth in Division II
By GENE CADDES
•
UPI Sports Wrller
COLUMBus: Ohio (UP!)
.Columbus Wehrle, despite Its
overuwp loss a week ago to
unbeafen Richmond Dale Southeastern, remained the .No. 1
team In lhls week's United Press
International Ohio High School
Board of Coaches' Division IV
bOys basketb~U ratings.
Wehrle''s 59-56 defeat at the
hands of the Panthers did take a
big bite out of the Wolverines'
first place lead, but they still held
a 231-199,margln over runnerup
New Madison Trl·VIllage In this
week's,ballotlng.
Wehrle, now 14·3 on the year,
received 16 first place votes out
of a possible 26, while Trl·
Vlllage, 17-0, got six !lrsts. The
Patriots were third last week.
· Springfield Catholic (13-2). second to Wehrle the past two
teeks,,sllpped dow.n to third with
168 points, followed by Vanlue
and Van Buren, both 12·1, In a lie
for fourth with 155 points.
Rounding out the small school
lls.t was Tuscarawas Catholic,
Cedarvllle, Berlin Hiland, Mlller
City and Upper Scioto Valley.
In the other · three divisions,
Toledo Scott, Kettering Alter and
Youngstown Liberty rolled illong
on top virtually unchallenged.
Scott, 14-1. received 27 of 35
first place votes In Division I and
held a comfortable 336-291 margin over Canton Mc(&lt;lnley, 1~·1,
which received just one first
place votes.
Beavercreek, 14-0, plcl\ed up
six !lr,sts but stlll finished in third
. place with 266 points, while
Newark was fourth with 199 and
Toledo St. Francis fifth with 134.
The rest of the big school list
consisted of Westerville South,
Mansfield Senior, Sandusky,
Mount Vernon_ and Strongsvllle,
which c~acked the top 10 for the ·

first time, sending Cleveland St.
Joseph from the lOth spot down to
12th.
.Alter, wplch beat ·Dayton co:
lone! While (73-65) and Carlisle
(94-29) last week, topped Dlv·
lslon II with a 290-217 margin
over second place Bellevue,l2·1,
The Knights also held a 24·3
advantage in first place votes.
Hlllsboro, 15.0, 1\dV.;mced one
spot into third pla~e this week
with 199 points·, . followed by
Canfield in -fourth with '149 and
West Geauga In fifth wl.t h 140.
'Rounding out the II Ust was
North Bend Taylor, Steubenville,
Columbus Whetstone and Ports·
mou~, ·Cracking the list for 'the
first time. '
Liberty's margin over No. 2
orrville this week In Division III
was 264-223, with thlrd·place St.
Henry close behind with 221.
Liberty got 17 first place votes,
Orrville four, and St. Henry five ..
All are unbeaten.
. Ontario remained in the fourth
position,, then came Richmond
Dale Southeastern, which ad·
.vanced from eighth to fifth after
lb wid over Wehrle. The Panth·
ers had 141 points to 139 for sixth
place Burton Qtlrkshlre.
The rest o( the list included
Beachwood in seventh. followed
by Eas I Can t.on, Houston and
Delta.

10W40or

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.Motor Oil

t .
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sunoco
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and FIIIKltS

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Pvbllohed every altern-. Moadoy .
tbrqh J:rlda~, Ill Court 81.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by tile'*'&gt; VaDe)' Pul&gt;,
llsblnc Campany/Muntm-. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Oh!61&amp;78;PII. 1112-2151. S.
cone! clan pootago pakl at Pomeray,
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chaps
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Pomeroy, IIIIo -

lo The Dllb'

.........

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~NIL\TIII

MARIE'M'A, Ohio (UPI) ·Andy Moore's 14 points and Rick
Brown' 1 12 ' led 14 Muskingum
'players who stored Wednesday 1
night all the Muskles rolled to an
86-42 Ohio ,Athletic Co~ce ..
vletory over outmannec!
.Marietta.
.
M~kingum, 15-5 overall· and
still tied for first place with
Blildwln-Wallace In tht:OACwith
an 11-2 record, scored Ule llrst 20
points of the game and led 26-3
wyh 10: 20 l~ft In the half. The
Muskles were on top 48-13 at the
lnterlnlsslon.
Marietta, Wlllcb fell to 4-16 and
2·11, wu lllcl by Ryu Wllll.ama
wftll nine pointa and Mike Con·
· , nautbton With eight. '
1

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One Month .................................11.10
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The Daily Sentinel

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!~~--~..~~._~t~;1F~z~':u~.n~r~11~,!18!~!02------~--------------~--------~Poft~NI~Gy~~-~~~~~-!~·!~~~~~~Ot~'!o~------------~--------------~The~~D~·~I~y~S~I~4i:NI~·:P~I~I~I~-=~~:
If Tornadoes ground Eagles Friday,

Thursdlly. February 1, .1990

Wa•Tiors get hot at foul line .to beat Trail.Blazers 135-130 .
By United Presslnlernatlonal
A near perfect night ar the free
throw line helped the Golden
State Warriors deprive Portland
of claiming the overall NBA lead.
T he Warriors made 49of 52 free
throws, br.e aking their previous
Bay Area best by two, In
registering a 135-130 victory over
the Trail Blazers Wednesday
night at Oakland. The franchiSe
reco rd is 52. set when the club
was In Philadelphia .
The Warriors hit 31 free throws
In ·the second half to tie the
franchise record.
·
The Blazers hit nine more field
goa,Is than Golden State, but was
limited to ·35 free throws, sinking
24.
.
Guard Mitc h Richmond scored
28 points and rookie Tim Haraway added a seas1&gt;n-best 27 as
Go lden State stretc hed Its ho.m e
court winning streak to 13games.
The loss broke Portland's sevenga me winn ing streak and prevented the Trail Blazers from
having the bes t record in the·
Nallonal Basket baiJ. Association
over the idle Los A~geles Lakers.

.

.

Portland now Is 31-12, ·a half- Pistons, who shot 65percentrrom
,game• lie hind the Lakers. who . the fiQOr, have won five games in
a row and eight of their las t 10.
lead the Pacific Division at 31-11.
Golden State trailed .by as
Sixers 112, Pacers 108
At Indianapolis, Charles Barkmany as 13 points, butwasableto
ley !'Cored 29 points and pulled
make up the difference at the
down 16 rebounds as Philadelfree throw line. Richmond , held
phia extended its winning streak
to only 6 or 16 from the field.
to nine games. The Pacers los t
made 16 of 16 tree lhrows and now
has hit 28 in a row In his last two for the sixth time In their past
g-ames.
seven games. .
,
Celtlcs 97, Knick$ 91
Forward Terry · Teagle also
At Boston, ·Robert Parish
had .27 points for Golden State
scored
26 points 1and Larry Bird
while PortJ.and's Clyde Drexler
added 19, Including six free
led all scorers with 38.
·
throws In the final 1: 25 of the
In other NBA games, Detroit
defeated Washington 133-109, game. Parish also grabbed a pair
Philadelphia topped Indiana li2- . of key offensive rebounds-In the
final seconds as the Celtics
108, Boston beat New York 97-91,
handed New York its 23rd
Minnesota mauled Seattle 110-82,
straight loss at' Boston· Garden.
Dallas . defeated Houston 98-91,
Tlmberwolves 110, Sonlcs 82
S;1n Antonio stopped Charlotte
129-95, Ut&amp;h defeated the Los
At Minneapolis, .Pooh RichardAngeles 120-101.
· son sparked a third quarter surge
with his passing to lead the
Plsanis 133, BuDets 109
At Auburn Hills, Mich.·, The
Minnesota_. Rlchards~n . In only
Pistons scored a season-high 133
his eighth start, dished out five
polnts In beating the Bullets.
assists as the Tlmberwolves
scored 21 str~;~lght points In the
Bernard King had 23 points for
washington, which has lost 19 of
second half. Derrick McKey had
Its last 20 road gimies. Tlie_ 16 points for Seattle.

St. Pe&amp;er'IIII, 'Palrfleld II

liMBe 71. Rider II
Wmtmllui&amp;er II, Grow Cit)' 13
W.l*ner t8, Swal1hmore n ·
Wl'lltiiSI. tl, CeatraiSl. ! Ohio) Ml:
, ,
Soulh

I. Toledo Sco t1 (0 ) (14-l) ..... .. ... ...... UI
2. Canton M c Kin~ (I~ ( 1'-1) .......... !11
:L Bea\·ei-cret' k (I ) (IU) ................ .'UI
-1. Newark ( 15-1 1 ...................... .'....... IH
5. Toledo St. Fuacl• (I~)) .,,, ...., .... ,tu
• . Wf!!llf:r:\rtlle SGuth II:Jo-1) ..............,.111
7, Manlfleld~ldorliH ) ............. .... ll!
II. Sandu1lly ( lii-1 ) ........................ .... 111
S. Moura 'Y e riMUiliS.I) .......................11
1t..stronp\'ilte (I) 11M) ........ , ... ,, ......u
Second ten: 11. HamUton a; It'.
Cleveland st. JO!!epll tJ: 11. C1.eia. . l
Woodward :N; 14. TGINDSI . oJea.'1U: lS.
Clncln•l £1 .... 11: II. MM.Uioa P~rl')'
It; 1'7. Kenl Roo.wlll1; 18. Prlac:toton
15: lt. Lorat.ln ..tdmlnl
l.f; !fl.
Colurnbu ,~ Northlud lJ,
Dlvl!Jio•ll
Te iWI
PolfttM
l . Ketll'rlrq: After Cl!.f ) (1 5- 1) ...... ......
~. Bellevll' (3) (Il-l ) ........ .. ............. %11
3. 1UIIIboro (I) (15-f) ..... ........ ,,,,;,.... IH
l .·canlleld 121 ( Jt-IJ .. ...................... rn
' · WeitGe...-a !INJ ...................... 1..0
~. North Bend T.,-10r 04· 1)' ............... 124
7. Slf'llhl!n\'111.- (I J.f) .: .. .... ................ 111
8. Cohmbus Wbetllone 112-3) ,........... .ftt
9 . Fo•lorta ( 10·!) ~ .............................15
JI .Portfiii'IOUIII { I) II%-~ ) ................... .32
Seco nd ten: II. Daylon CoiHI'I Wlilte

A.ldl. ·lroo.!ldU• 92, Glftlrillf' 114

Duke 14, Clemson 80 ·
Geoqla88, AubumU
lame. Ma1lua II, William A Mary II
IAUa.u 81. 11, MJ1.11Ippl 77
Mereer TJ, Gt'G!flla 81. 11
Met..,...t8t, Gr.ee~~llllvron
Mlo ....pl st. M7, Ktnturky Ill, OT
NC SWt 14. \IIJ'Iinll 18
.
ReiU• Colleae '71, Central Florida 14 '
S.•dlnn Mlsllltlppl Aol. Florida Shit

"

Tenll!lwr 13, V aMerfllll 1!
UNC·AIIl~Uie 11. Davldaon IS
VMJ ts, Bluelleld .at
VI~"KIIIIIa Mil liar)· ti, Bl~fleld 46 •
W.Va. Teeh R8, FalnnoM •
MldwHI
a.lthrt~t-Wallace il. Mt~unl Un~• ''
Ball Slaw- 17. Ohio it
'B;owh1 G~N n, AkrM 71
Capl&amp;l 11, Hiram II
Cue WMii!l' nl07, A.lh!lheliY BM
DeP.. w tl, Wab•h I&amp;

•••1

:eto

0.1~.-u II~ Trl SlUe 41nd . J 11

Fru IIIIa 71, Huom ·e
Hel•bert Ill. .JoM Carroll 11
Ill. Wn~u AI. Aup. .na 611
K .... M,Colona•

Kea18tatt U, CeniN.IIIIclliiM 74

1. i1 lt. C:lncln•U GreenWih Sl; 13.
Palaentlte Harvey n : 1... Alllen1U; 1$.
Oak Hamor %0 ; II. Bellefontal.e It: 17.

Mhwnl fOhtu) 8t. W. Michl ran 14
Ml••urt IS, Iowa St. IS
Mutldqum 8t. H.rletta U

CaNal Full~n Northw ~l 1'7; Ill. (lie)
C11.nton Sou til allld CAPE, 12 nell: ' %fl.
Oay10n Chamlrw.d&amp;Jull~• 11.

O.. lo W•leyan •· Earlwn 12
011. .. ~.,.. IDII, Nellru)lll. 14

Ok .....,.. 81. 81. K...._ St. 8'7

Dlvll'l .. n Ill

Ot&amp;erbelp M, Oh .. Nel1hHn $'l
Puldue II. Mlctdpn 7S
PurctufoCallftel • . 01111• Tech a
SW Ml11111t1rt St. 8l. Mo.-Kaaflaa CleyU
91. Frucl• n, ........ 11
Ttftln lie. Cfdar~lle-1\0
Toledo st. J:u&amp;erw Mld.t,.. '711
......... ,. a.r~~t~ar~ · 1ll, Ro ...1 •e
"ta-Grte...,. fl. Oeveland St liS

Tt&gt; am
.
Poln'M
I. l'OUR«M• Ub!-11y ( 11) ( IJ.tl) ........... ~lf . •
:!. Orntlle (IJ C11-G) ........... : ..........:.. I!3

:t Sl . Ht nl')' ! 5 ) (ls.tJ .................. :.. ,m

4. Olriarlo ( IS-O f. ....................... ....... 119
, 5, ."iouthf'aitern (Hen)(~) (Ii-I) ....... IU
~ - Burton ~r~l~ (14-0 ) ... ...........,_,. 131,
. Re .ehwtiod CJJ.I) ......................... u ..
H. Ew.!l Ca1Hon ( IH J ........................ ,91

Wlttt•bera:IIJ. Kenyon t1
Wo..aer 81, Oenlloi!U, toT
Xavier (OIIIo)M, D.ciD.•tl 18

-9. Hou!llon ( l$- 1) ............................... ,61
IO. Del&amp;a 114· 1) ................................... .37
Se co... le n : II. Nortll RobiMOOn
Colonrl Crawford Jll; lt. H•ron H; IS.
East PIW!itlne 131 14. New Lfobanen
Dixie 10; 15. Wheelerllh!-11'1 !11: 16. M'Ht

.........

,.._. . . 7t. Rlee tl

IIQior ... 8oullern Methodlot as
Maine-'11,11W Teus St. 13
TaM AAM Ill, ·TellU Tech 8$

Mulltht~iTIII: I~ . WoiSit.l emNorthw~!lt·

_e rn 7; JR. (Ue ) 84lllbrook. Gfool'lttllll'n
and Br«~okvlll e, I uch.
Dlvi!! ..IIV
Te11m
Pol1111
1. fGhlnhuW~ hrle IIIII (IW.) ........ m
i'. N l' bd Trl-\lllla&amp;t' !I I f IHI ,;'....... Itt
3. Spl'ftK{Ield Calholk:(%) ( IJ-2) ......... 118

J

·,Jacbontt, Well•tonlt

V.linlue (:ZJ (11-1) .. ................ IU

n

Ot!t,_
Ill, Waahlqt.llll 118
PhU.dei,Wal 1!, .. dlan•ll8
We.._.q. Gani~

Bo•tonl"', Newl'orkll
Mlnnr11a&amp;a Ill, Snltk: 8t

Dallas t8. Houlton It
San i\aiODio Itt, 01.-tolll' l!li

Utah Itt, LA CUppa-11IIJ

Golden state 111, r,n, ... no
Thul'lll., Garnt~~
S~~ocnunento .. Ntw Veril, '7 : 31p.m.
Ora.Mo at Mllwull!e, " : 30 P.JII·

,.....,o.mea

It PMen~.ID: stp.m.

MIIWIUikte It P.hUadelphla
Sacraml!lltoal W•IIINton
San AIIIOIIIo a&amp; Ch..totte
lA Ol)lptro ai Ml oml

Seatdeall. . l ...

::::.n:: ~~. .1ft~

A.tlM&amp;a at LA. Laker11
New .JH•J .t Golden stale

. NATIONA.L HOCK£\' LEAGVE
WtdMIIdiQ'OimM
lie
Del roll "1, fArnOtllolllt
.llliff.ole I, Queobec I
W.-.lll&amp;ton4, Mln~Wiola 3
Teronlo I, WlnniPfl• S Uf'
81;,

Loa. I, H'f Baaatn I,

Ttnu..IQ G1mm
MolllrellatlktMGn, 1:Up .m .
.
HU'Ifo~ at Pltllllllelphla. 1:35 p.m.

Mewlilllll.ll 1S. ~cemlna U
Mlllersvllh- '1ol, llloomllbv r&amp; H
Monmouth H. C#ntral Conn. 13

Oil cap a&amp;IAa An pitA,' If: II p.m.
V~~~~Ce•wr at Cal prJ', t : II p.m .
FrldQ Game~

N.H. f.o lle1e 71. Fran ill• Pier-ce f.t
• '" New Ha..,ew 71, Sacred Reali &amp;M
Sl. Law..ewt.'l' I H. lltka H

'

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·PEPSI

•

ECIIICII

.· ~

.

CHOPPED HAM :

12 PACI

.

$299

..

·$139 LB.

CANDY BARS ..-.. ."... 3 FOI 99C

Regllter for our l•rge box of Valentine C.ncly to btt glv111
•way 2/13/90. You muat IM18, no purch•" nece. .ry,
-need not be prelent to win.

MIDDLEPORT
GULF
HIIIIICOID

.DDIIPOIT, OHIO

992·3i97

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Purdue tops Michigan ~l-73
to.stay unbeaten ·in Big Ten

STEAlS BALL - ChariOIIe's Robert Reid
steals the ballfron San Anlonlo's Vernon Mu:well

Ia Wednesday nl~~;ht's NBA game In San Anloalo.
·'
The Spurs won 129-95. ( UPI)

Sports briefs ·
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

Auto Racing
The Le Mans 24-hour race will
not be held this year because
organizers failed to meet Wednesday's deadline set by auto
racing authorities .... Racing's
governing body threatened to
suspend the JlilcLaren-Honda
' Formula One team if Ayrton
. Senna' s$100,000fine Isn't paid by
Thursday night. The Brazilian
driver was disqualified from the
Japanese · · Grand Prix ·last
October.

446 4524

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McDonald's to
sponsor Rio game
Sunday

•

Area McDonald's restaurants,
is sponsoring Sunday's game
between Rio Grande's Redmen
and the Wilmington College
Quakers at Lyne Center. ·
Game time 1s 3 p.m.
. Free tickets for the game are
available at McDonald's restaurants In Gallipolis~ Jackson, and
Henderson, W.Va. Door prizes
. •Will be awarded, and balloons .
will be dlslrlbu ted, and tbe Mac 1
Tonight character will be on
hand.

l ywo

I

DOUBLE.

1

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Fa-CTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Gold star
Samsung __
Soundesign
Zenith

Emerson
Shintom
Multi Tech
,Scott

·-WE REPAIR AlL MAKES·

HoME
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
391 WEST MAIN STIEET
POMEROY, OliO

By TOM WITHERS
UPl Sports Writer
Though they were trailing by
nine points at halftime Wednes. day night, Michigan coach Steve
Fisher told his teamnottoworry.
- After watching Purdue make
70 Pfrcent of Its shots In the first
halt, Fisher streJ~d to his No. 4
Wolverines that there was no
way the Boilermakers could
shoot 70 percent In the second
half.
·
. He was right. Purdue only shot
69.6 percent the rest of the way.
However, Purdue, ninthranked and one of college basketball's biggest surprises thlsy~ar.
remained unbeaten in the rugged
J;llg Ten with a 91· 73 thrashing or
the Wolverines. •
The Bollermakers .esJabllshed
a Crisler Arena record, making
35 of 50 shots and now hold a
two-game lead In the Big Ten.
"Everybody's chasing
Purdue, " Fisher said. "And
everybody could be In a big hurt.
Michigan State needs a victory
· (Thursday) over Mlnnesola.
"Purdue was running off the
floor saying, 'We're for real.'
And they are ~ "
"You play that well," Purdue
coach Gene Keady said, "you're
going to beat a lot of good teams.
The kids are really working
together."
Tony Jones and Steve Scheffier
combined for41 ·points as·Purdue
improved to 8-0 In the Big Ten for
the first -time since 1936. It has
won .11 conference games In a
row overall, one shy of the school
record.
Jones, who hit 11 of 21 shots,
scored 23 and ·schetner had 18
points while missing just
shot. Loren Clyburn' scored 1~
with Woody Austin and Ryan
Berning getting 13 apiece. BernIng made 6 of 7 shots.
Michigan dropped to 5-3 In the
Big Ten and 15-4 overall. The
Wolverines were led by Rumeal
Robinson, who had 17, and Terry
Mills with 15.
After the Wolverines closed to
within three at 55-52 with 13: 59 to
play., the Boilermakers went on a
13-0 run that put the game aw,y .
Scheffier who has made an
amazing 51 of 61 shots In Big Ten
play, converted his only miss Into
a layup tb11t started the spree.
"Scheffler misses and puts· ln
his own rebound," J'lsher said.
"It we get It, you never know.
They go on a 13-0 ~unand we don't
score for seven minute•."
Keady has stressed selfdiscipline to his team this year,
resulting In their excellent shoot·
lng percentages. The Boilermakers never took a shot from
outside of 12 feet unless It was·
wide open.
•'The coac hri emphasize If you
have a real good shot, be willing
to make the extra paaa to 'get an
even better shot," said Scheffler,
who made 7 of 8. "We don't have
much of a choice becauae If we
don't, we're dead."
"A lot of things can still
happen," iald Scheffler. "To
start celebrating Is very dangerous. We could lose our aext.flve
'g amea euOy.''
,
Wblle the rest of llJe country
walta for the Bol~kera to
collapae, Keady II CIUtlOUIIy
opllmlltlc.
"OIIrgoal wu toflnllhl2-tand
It loolllllke we ilhould.be •llle to
up rell
do !bat un1111
bad.''
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992·3524

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NESTLE'S

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By G. SPENCER ODO&amp;NE
get Racine out of position sa they Gage to race Southwestern Ji'rlOVP 8&amp;aff Wrller
may get room to drive In for day night.
The chance to do unto others, layuP$. but being on target at all , rn addition to the Highlanders'
·namely tbe Eastern Eagles, Is times Is essential for Eastern, as backcourt of seniors Brad Bryulldoubtl!dly the Nd. 1 thought on any pass falling short of the mark antarid Joe Hammond and junior·
the minds of Howle Caldwell's can be turned Into a scoring center ChriS Metzger, whose
season-high 27 points" in TuesSouthern Tornadoes when tbey opportunity for Southern.
Eastern had its six-game win- day's 26-polntloss t6 Hannan was
travel to TUppers Plains to face
tile Eagles Friday night.
nlng streak snapped after losing the seventh-highest single-game
In light of the"Eagles' handlng a . 73·!58 decision to Miller last pertonnance by· the Highlanders
the TornadOes their first league Saturday, which dropped its this year (behind John Ehman's
\OSS, a 92-87 decision In Racine on record agaiMI non-league teams five, games of 28 points or more
Jan. 13, Southern lsltchlni to do to 2-4. Though the Eagles' prim- and Btll Potter's 30-polnt effort
the same to the Eagles, who are ary concern ls , as it should be, to vs. Kyger Creek on Jan. 5) , Trace
unbeaten In the conference after win In the conference, Its. non- ·· must keep tl)elr eyes on senior
10 game~~ .
league record rqay serve as a
forward Jesse Ehman, who has
The return · of senior guard guide to how well they will do In connected for double figures In
Chad Taylor, who In last Friday's the post-season tournament.
his last two games and has
loss to North Ga!Ua scored nine
Speaking · of' non-conference _ ·established himself as Southwpoints on three three-pointers, records, Southern Is 0-5 outside estern's newest three -point
should ·spark the Tornadoes the league, but to their credit, threat.
further and add some more . there was only one Division IV
Southwe~~tern would . not be
wise to concentrate too heavily
punch to the perimeter shOOting school - . Beaver Eastern of guards Andy Baer and Chris among toe winners In tliose on junior guard Eric Lloyd and
Murphy, forcing Eastern to come games. The rest were either junior postman Craig Rankin,
Division II or III teams.
though Lloyd, the Wlldcats' leadout or the paint to stop whafcould
turn Into a barrage or treys.
But Inside the league, a South·
tng scorer with 218 jllllnts on the
. However, when that happens, ernlosswlllpiJttheTornadoesln · season has a five-game doublethe position of needing to win all . figure scoring streak, and Ranthat opens. up the Inside, where
Eagle 'frontmen Mike Frost,
of their games while hoptng for kln, Trace'sNo . 2scorerwlth21~,
Scott Fitch and Jeff Durst will Eastern losses In their remaining has accomplished the feat In his
have to stop Tornado seniors
three SVAC games, an unlikely Jasttour contests. Reason: junior
Brad Maynard and Brent Shuler
possibility, considering that the point guard J.J. Bevan scored 20
from using the strength that
Eagles have one game lett with tn last week's wln over Oak HHI,
· belles their six-foot frames to Symmes Valley and have yet to and In the last HighlandersScore on layups.
play their season series with Oak Wildcats game (HT won 74-59),
Knowing tHat the Tornadoes
Hill.
he was held to six points.
will play their characteristic
Wlldcats·Wghlanders
Plra$etJ-Boheats
Hannan Trace will have more
Remembering what almost
high-pressure, &lt;)efense, the EagJes will try their cross-court than just the usual weapons to happened to Eastern hi ·tast
passing attack In an attempt to . look out for when It travels to Friday's game aga,lnst Kyger

~\\~,\. \.

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MIDDLEPORT .GULF

v

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;;:-,;.;:;

mings SCOred ~ career-high 52
polnts to lead. San Antonio to a
129-95 triumph over the Char lotte
Hornets, who were playing their
first game under Interim coach
Gene Littles. About two hours
before the, game, Charlotte fired
h.ead coach Dick Harte.r.
Jaz1 UO, Cilppers 111
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone

W•lll•llon M NV llla. .! n
. Edr'r181ion .. PHtMJIII
Torello 11 Del roll
\IIM'O•wr at WlanlpeK

S(_'ftlllonlll, Delawart Vallt')' II

.--

Noi\TIONAL B.UKETBALL AS!n(l

~lanY.

Colll'JP 8auo lelball Rei! uk11
By Unltf' d Pre~' !I lrlt~r rauo,.l
'
~lUll
AmhPrM MI. W f:'l. ~llll i5
Brtd~r.Jitrl 711. So. roniL St 10
Bucklll'll !13. Delawart 11
Dull al l) 9'7, Sl . Ro~~e Mil
h rN',II'If' Melloa MI. Bethany M7, 0T
Cl!lrloft 1t California !Pa.t 71
Cnl~~:aae Ill. MMnt..uan 'ttl
Dh:krn!Htn i'l. Muhlenbura 711, OT
nr.-l( tl !15, lllllt~h 13
.
Ellzahethlown 9M, .Juaa. M3
GtU)'!'Ihui'JI H. MoraviM KS, OT
H~rdonl ss. Boslon l l, 54
HUIIIkr 91, Stul en h!lalld 7S
ln,.,/1, Lo;Y .. atMd.) ll
LemO)'IIl' 80. Hamlken n
Lock H•vll'n 7ol, Indiana, 4Pa.) II!
Manllfleldtt, Kut:down 78
, MulM H. St . Frand1 (N.\'.) 73

.-

New Co.:ord Glean 511; Camhrldle 5t
Welllqto•ll. Oberlla Flreluds 41

Chlcap at Houlton, II:·M p.m .
New J er_,. d De•wr, 1:30 p.m.

College scores

-.
-

Teu~~ LMtlltt'u Ill, Jn~•e Woflll ~~

Glrll Ohio HIp !klhool Bu!Bh all
Buwercl't'eek 'II, Sprtnr N U
Crfltwood H G'¥111 Garfield II
Fe Mal leekblcR, Melp Eutl!ra!1

"' "· t ile) VIVI Bu"'n (12-1) .................. m
"'i. Tutt•araw&amp;ll Oathollr: ( IJ.I) ........... .n
7. Ce dllr\'U e (I+!) ~ .... ...................... .fil
II. llf'rlln HlllUid (II · ~) ................ ...... ..U
&amp;. Miller Cliy i 11·3 1........... : .......... :.....U
III .UppPr Scioto Valley ( 11-'l ) ,.,,,.,,.,,J I
Seco nd len : II . Millltlleld St. Prier'"
2!1:
Convoy Creai~I'W %4: 13, Btrln
r:enter W~IW!rn 1Jf¥rve 18: 14. (lie.)
Holptr and Antwerp. Ill each: Ji. l\oullt '
('har~ton Seutheutern 14: 17. .bb&amp;a!J.
uti St. Jo ..'s II : Ul. fUf l Mlnp and
Drlptntli St. Jobn'11, ' eaeh: to. Cl.lllll
M'lnche!'tl!r ll.

.

By GENE CADD.ES
UPI Sporls Wrller
A little ,c reativity by ,J amal
Walker Wednesday night meant
victory for Xavier's Musketeers.
Walker, xavier's 5-foot-11 junIor guard, connected on a 3-polnt
field goal with nine seconds ·
remal.nlng In overtime to provide
the Musketeers with a 90-88 win
over Cincinnati In the annual
crosstown shootout between the
two Queen City schools.
"It wasn't the shot we diagrammed," admitted Xavier
Coach Pete Gillen. "We wanted
. to have Jamal drive and maybe
draw a foul. But, he hit theshothe
•
saw.".
~
Walker led Xavier jn scoring
with 21 polnts and .had plenty of
help from his teammates .
Tyrone Hill, whose basket with
59 seconds left in regulation tied
It at 75:75 and sent the game Into
overtime, scored 20 paints and
had 11 rebounds befOre fouling
· out with· 3:32 left in the extra
period. Jamle' Gladden.added 18
and Michael Davenport 16 for
xavier, which upped its record to .
16-2.
In the Mid-American Conference Wednesday night, Ball State
remained a game ahead of Kent
State and Miami with a 77-61 In
over Ohio University. Kent
downed Central Mlchlgn 84·74
and Miami ended a three-game
loslng streak with an 86-64
decision over Western Michigan.
· In the other conference contest, Toledo edged Eastern MichIgan 82-78, while Bowling Green
downed Akron 77-71 In a nonconference contest.
At Ken(, Ric Blevins scored 24
to lead Kent State to Its win over
Central Michigan . The Golden
Flashes' 6-2 MAC reCord Is their
best ever at the midway point of
the conference season.
Kent led 38-26 at the half and
buill a 71-53 lead with 4:12 to go.
Mike Klinzing added 16 points for
Kent and Harold Walton 15.
Greg Miller scored· 19 points
and three other Ball State players hit double figures In Ball
State's win over Ohio University.
The Cardinals jumped to an 8-2
lead and never trailed, leading
33-24 at halftime.
OU's Dave Jamerson, the
nation's second leading scorer at
better than 32 points per game,
managed just 17.
At Oxford, Jim Paul scored 19
points and Cedric Vanleer came
oft the bench to add 16 In leading
Miami to victory over Western
Michigan.

Slollf . . QOklll, OldWet~tbu I')'~~
Templf 18, St. lolll!ptl'• ll3
TowMn8t II. Hor.traU

COLUMBUS. Olllo · IUI"I) - Thla
weel '1 V111ted Press lnle rnaUo•l Ohio
HIKh SchMI Beard of Co~t.e~' boy1
ba!lkelball n.llnp (wMh llrM -place~ttes
and wo~t-lo11t record1l11 .-r en&amp;hnn):
1
1&gt;\"tskln I
Team
PoiD11

~ . {lip)

Southem will close gap with -co.,ference leader Eastern -. ·

scored 29 points to lead four
teammates in double figures as
Utab defeated the Clippers.
Utah, .which saw a nine-game
winning streak end In Portland
Tuesday night, raised Its home ·
record io 20-3.The Jazz scored .
the game's flrstelght points, then
went on a 17-Zrunen routeto29-14
lead after one quarter.

Xavier nips
Cincinnati

Boys ratings

'

Mavericks 98, Rocketa 81
At Dallas, Rolando Blackman
and Sam Perkins combined ·for·
eight points doivn the s tretch and
Dallas held Houston scoreless for
6: 03 of the fourth quarter tor
their seventh straight win. Houston scored only three points over
the last 6:35 of the game.
Spurs 128, Hornets 95
San Antonio,
Cum-

I .

Shooting 70 percent, Purdue nipped Rice 70-66; No. 5 Duke
downed Clemson 94-80; No. 8
can't miss.
Elsewhere in the Top Twenty; Oklahoma pounded Nebraska
No. 1 Missouri edged Iowa State 105·114 and No. 14 LSU nipped
·95·93; No. 2 Kansas buffaloed - Mississippi 79-77.
No. 3 Arkansas
Colorado

''

Creek, North GaiUa coach Tom
Riccardi has surely told his
sallon to take their opponents
seriously, which Is what the
Pirates must d9 when laking the
fioor at Cheshire ag~lnst the
Bobcats.
With an lnjJired ankle having
kept . Southwestern's John Eh·
man out of action, Pirate guard
Brian Stout has secured second
place In the three-point department with 34, tralllng-only Oak
HIU forward Shane Maynard, the
SVAC's leader In deep strikes
with tO.
Stout and fellow backcourt
artist Chris Tackett, wjlose 27
bonus buckets comprise about a
third of his team-high season

SVAC standings
(All rames)
TEAM
W L
. E$stern .. ,....... 12 4
North Gal !Ill ... 10 6
Southern..... .... 8 7
Hannan Trace 8 8
s-valley ......... 7 8
Southwestern .. 6 10
Oak
3 13
Kyger Creek... 1 15

Jim .. ... ....

· (!!IVAC ramea)
TEAM
·w L PF
Eastern ..... ..... 10 0 742
-Southern ....... :. 8 2 71!4
North Gallla ... 8 3 797·
Hannan Trace -5 6 · 664
S·Valley ......... 4 6 . 001
Southwestern .. 4 7 781
Oak Hill .. .. .. .. . 3 7 599
Kyger Creek.. . 0 11 592
TOTAUI .......... 4! 4Z 5540

'

PA
645
590
698
629
661
769
720
828
U4G

(Reserve~~)

TEAM
W L PF PA
N. Gallla ........ 10 · 1 548 422
Southern.. .. ..... 9 1 504 350
Hannan Tr acf! 6 5 474 409
Oak Hill ......... 6 4 450 424
S.Valley ....... ,. 5 5 419 406
Southwestern.. 3 8 418 513
Eastern .......... 2 8 361 453
Kyger Creek... 1 10 308 505
TOTALS .. .. ...... 42 42 3482 3482
Friday's slate
Southern at Eastern
Hannan Trace at Southwestern
North Ga!Ua at Kyger Creek
Oak Hill at Symmes Valley
Saturday'• action
So~thern at Federal Hocking .

one COMtant In their' offense, as
he holds the distinction of being ·
.the only starting center In the
league to have scored In double
figures In every one of hJs team's ·
games. However, with Maynard •
being Inconsistent in his shooting •
In the last six games and the
backcourt of sophomore Allen .
Potter and freshman Benjl J.,ewis ·
averaging about 13 points per .
game In that span. the sad streak
may go on.
Though the Valley's backcourt
or Paul Hayes and Shawn Mootz
!las done a solid job of keeping the ·
VIkings' ·offense · ·o n track , Symmes needs to get more •.
oifense out of 6-2 center Kevin
Nicholas, . who· has only four _
double-figure · scoring eftorts In
the Vikings' 14 games (before
Tuesday night's loss to Cross .
Lanes Christian, for which no •
scoring figures were available) . ·
If tllat doesn' t happen and Hayes
and Mootz cool off, the Norsemen
will be fn serious trouble.

Family Practice

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Frisfay
·
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Wednesday
9a.m.- Noon
Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome
Office Staff:
Lisa Thorne, LPN
Gail Hoveatter
Linda Trent

~

138 Main St., New Haven, WV

+ (304) 882-3134

Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

L--------.:...-------------.....1

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SPORTCOATS

SUITS

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1 UCI OF

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IIDUCED

PURDUE SCORES -PurdUe's stepbea Scbefller (116) gOf!ll up
for two polilte u Mlclallan's Mike Grlffla lrles to draw a cbarre
durtnr the flrll bllf of Wedneaclay atrbt'e Blr Ten coiRea~ In An•
Arbor, Mich. (UPI)

•

•

IIDICED

SH
DRESS SHIRTS SPORT
IIDUCID
· GRIP~..,

..

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent

SAVE ON FINE WEARING APPAREL
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
AT BAHR CLOTHIERS
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300fo

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•

"

PF PA
1171 il38
1133 1018
1049 939
9EO 911
940 958
1180 1146
911 1116
857 1191

total of 253 points, are likely to
put up similar numllers against
the Bobcats as they did In the
Bucs' _30-polnt thrashing of Iron·
ton St. Joe last Saturday (Stout
had 18 points, and Tac_kett had
12) , as Riccardi Is likely to let his
bench get some more playing
time In preparation for the
upcoming tolirnament.
·
The Bobcats, who have
dropped their last eight games
and are carrying the burden or a
a 19-game conference losing
streak, must try to recreate the
valiant effort they put forth
against Eas terp last week and
c~eate
a ·slightly dlfterent
ending.
·
Oaks-Vlklnp
The black-and-red Oak Hill
Oaks are singing the blues, as
they will be looking to shake a
five-game loslng streak when
they travel down the Ironton
Parkway to face Symmes Valiey.
·_ Chad Smith, the · Hill's 6-4
senior cen\er. has been the Oaks'

•

�..

•

· hga 8 The Daily Sentinel

--Area deaths.---Cecil Caldwell

Minersville, she was tile daughter of the late David Joseph and
Clara Genlielmer Joseph. She
Cecil M. Caldwell, 79, ol old
was a member of the Minersville
Route 7, Road, Reedsville. died
· United Methodist Church.
Wednesday at his residence.
She Is survived by three sons,
Born on Sept. 26, 1910 at
James
Custer of Columbus; · ·
Tuppers Plains, he was the son of
Joseph
Custer
of Middleport, and
the late Clyde C. Caldwell and .
Jerry
Custer
ol
Miner sville; and
Lola M. Baker Caldwell.
three
daughters..
Mrs. Dale
He was a m e mber of the St;
tJane
)
Sayre,
Hilliard;
Jean
Paul Uniled Methodist Church at
Custer
and
Janet
Smith,
Middle.
Tuppers Plains.
port. Also surviving are 13
Survivors Include his wife,
grandchildren
, 12 great Mildred Summerfield Caldwell,
grandchildren,
five
sisters, a
Tuppers Plains; a son and
brother, one uncle · and several
daughter-In-law. Kenneth E . and
nieces
and ·nephews.
Sue E. Caldwell, Tuppers Plains;
~Ides
her 11arents, she was
a daughter and son-In-law, Jerry
preceded
In
death by her husancpanet. Carter , Rocky Mount,
band,
Theodore
Custer In 1977, a
N. C.; two sister s, Pauleta Dean,
Jack
Custer,
two sisters and
son,
Roc k Ri ver, a nd Maxine Chaptwo
brothers.
man, Tuppers Plains; and five
Funeral services will be held at
grandchildren, Kenny E. Caldthe
Ewing Funeral Home Saturwell, Jr., Michelle D. Caldwell,
day
at3: 30 p.m. The Rev. Wesley
· ar.d Mat thew P . Caldwell, all of
Thatcher
will officiate and burial
Tuppers Plains, and Jelf and Jon
will be In Gilmore Cemetery . .
Garter, Rocky Mount, N. C.
Besides his parents, be was Friends may call at the luneral ·
preceded In death by two broth· home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
ers, Howard and Garland Cald·
well, and a sister, Dorothy
Cowdery.
Ondlna Tubbe, 61, of Coolville,
Funeral services will be held at
formerly
of Nacogdoches, Texas, .
1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
died
Wednesday
night at Cam;
Funeral Home. The Rev. Don
den-Clark
Memorial
Hospital.
Archer will officiate and burial
In
Frlesti·
,
Italy,
was
Born
wUI be In Tuppers Plains Chris· the daughter of the lateshe
Joseph
tlan Cemetery. Friends may call
at th e funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to Creavltln and Catherina
Crea.vltln.
9 p.m. Friday .
She was a member of the
Florence Custer
Ladles Auxiliary. VFW Post
,.
3893, In Nacogdoches, Texas.
Florence E . Joseph Custer, 76,
Mrs. Tubbe Is survived by one
of 134 Hudson St ., Middleport, son, John David Tubbe, of
died Wednesday at Camden- Coolville; orle daughter. Nlves
Clark Hospital In Parkersburg, Knisley , Coolville; four grandW. Va . following a brief Illness. children, Rhonda Eddy, Cool·
, Born ori ~eb. 1, · 1913. at ville; Ron Eddy, John Knisley,
and Jason Knisley, ali ol Coolville; and two great ·
grandchildren, Tiffany and Ste: Continued from page 1
phanie Stone.
made at a later date.
Preceded In death by her
Notice has been received from
parents, her husband, John Ed·
the Ohio Oepariment of Natural gar, two brothers and two sisters.
J;!.esources that a proposal to
Funeral services will be held
eorrect a drainage problem In Saturday at 11 a.m. at the White
Pomeroy, caused by an ·aban· Funeral Home In Coolville. -The
Ooned mine, will be presented to Rev. Robert Markley will offl·
!be governing bQard of' Unre- elate and burial wUI · be In the
clalmed Strip Mined Lands at a Coolville Cemetery. Friends
r;neetlng on Feb, 12.
may at the funeral hoine Friday
. After obtaining approval from
fr.om 7 to 9 p.m.
the owner of the former Ohio
Bureau ol Employment Services
Tiffany Stover
building, the comrillssloners,
who sublease the building, apFuneral arrangements for Titproved a request from Ferrel· !any Stover, 9, daughter of
!gas to erect partitions In the
Michael and Mary Lou Stover,
ofllce which they rent from the CoolvUle1 who died of Injuries
commissioners.
suffered In a truck accident
Homer Smith Jr. has · been Wednesday evening, wlll be
employed by 'tbe commlsslo~rs announced by ihe While Funeral
'
·
·
to replace the late John Stahl as Home.
courthouse custodian. Ray Parsons has been hired to replace
Smith as courthouse janitor.
Continued from page 1
The following other business 35) is unsafe for truckers because
matters were also approved by it's too narrow in some spo!S, and
the commissioners.
has large drop offs in other spots,".
· -A request to advertise for WatterSon said.
. lood stamp Insurance . .-.
Sheline mfonned the audience
-A request to a.!ilo'ettlse for a that if truclcers had to go even 11
leased van to J:le used by miles out of their way, they would
continue to use the present U.S. 35.
Children' s Services,
-A transfer of one-half, or · With SO trucks qaveling a new, less
$30,000, of the county's share of direct road every hour, 24 hours a
public assistance from the day, 365 days a year, the tolal fuel
county general fund to the public cost wasted would· Ill: over $2 mil·
assis tance fund.
lion.
- A request from EMS personBut the value. of propeny is
nel to attend several out-of- measured on a more personal
· county seminars.
economical scale, according to area
-A request from Linda Bentz. fanners.
Meigs County Cou·rt first deputy,
Kyle McCausland, a native of
: to visit the Wasplngton County . · Mason County, quoted figures from
Court ollice to review tllelr the 1987 U.S. Department of
computer system ..
Commerce Census and Agriculture
. -A request from Meigs Soil to show the importance of the '
and Water for a budgetary . county's property and agriculture to
transfer.
the state.

-Ondina Tubbe

Gallia boord...

~.

Thlndav. Febru.-y 1, 1890 '

F*uiiY 1,1810

Boot of the Bend

..:c:::on:::tln:=ued::..::;from:::!pa::!g:.:e·1:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

he salt;!.
contract with a person such as a
1n addlUon, a referee wii&lt;IJnve&amp;tl·
The attorney also told the gated the matll!r for the board
teacher or public achoollnstruc·
board, If the prevloua action was did not make any find In&amp; one way
D. James Foley, of the Colum- tor to whom he Is related, such a
rescinded,
his client would still or anotber on tbe aexualabull! or
bus law firm of Vorys, Sater, contract or act Is void.
seek
leta!
recourse
In the matter rape allegatloDB.
Seymour 1: Pease, who represThe bottom Jlne of last week's
appealing
the
board's
decision
e nted Deel and Skidmore, said action, Foley saki, -~as that
Aiter the meeting board
and
asking
for
$!500,000
In member HalleY told a television
the vote of board member board member Cremeens voted .
damages.
Cremeens was a clear violation to give his son a contract to teach
reporter he got the letter from
Larry Cremeens has never . Deel and Skidmore's attorney
of the Ohio Revised Code In both and In doing so, used his position
been accuSed In criminal court of Tuesday and "I Just came do~
criminal and civil provisions.
and influence to accomplish that
sexual abuae or rape, Steele said. bere to see wbat WaS going on."
.
' Foley said the ORC states that goal.
a publiC official cannot autho- Following Foley's address to
rize, or use the authority and · the board, Bill Steele, 110 attor·
Influence of his office on any ney representing Larry C~
contract In which he, or a meens, told them there· was no
member of his family, has an confilct Involved, . only that the
Interest.
·
original . motion was In part
Foley also pointed out that , In "poorly worded ."
his opinion, the violation was 'a
·In addition, he -contended the
felony subj eel to fines : and removal of Larry Cremeens
•
Imprisonment.
from his job was solely ''an act of
Last week's vote further vio- l?uperlntendent Nell Johnson." ·
lates the letter and spirit' of the·
Steele said If any action on the
law, according to Foley, In that previous motion was made, It
the ORC states that whenever a should be to strike the word
member ol a board of education "reinstatement." That would
votes or lakes part ln making a remove any conflict of Interest,
should

be

teaching In .this

( ~hool) system," Johnson said.

STOREWIDE

SALE .CONTINUES,

~___;Local news briefs~ .. ·-·. _..;..--.
Continued from page 1
a doe that ran Into the pwth of her l981 Oldsmobile. The rigHt
front fender of Winebrenner's vehiCle sustained moderate
i!am11ge.
. '·
·
·
Sheriff Souls by also reports that deputies are Investigating a
complaint from Portland Elementary. !bat an unknown vehicle
was driven through the back lawn of the school -some time
Monday night.
Anyone with Information about this Incident Is asked to
contact the sheriff's deparlment. '
.
Tom Deeter, Valley Bell Road, Por.tland, reported on Monday
that a five-day-old lamb was possibly stolen from Its pen some
time Saturday. Deeter valued the lamb at $800.
,
.

112 WEST MAIN

•
-

Time flies when you are having fun.~.

My, how time tiles. when you •re difficult for me. My status ~me several questions. I dido' t
down as a "trouble" customer.
hivln' fun.
changed from : head of a housereally knOw the answer to any of You think that's bad. No-that's
It wu one
hold to a dependent. Among otber
thena. But I did manage to say good. The company will send
Jan. 31,.
some little cutesy things. Appar- someone on Friday to work out
things this means that I am a
that 1 moved
ently In desperation, the first my " trouble".
dependent on Charlene's health
Into the "Golden
Insurance pollcy . This bothers
young lady gave up on me In parting, Ml'li. SWisher .asYears" of reme ri lot. I mpan supposln' she
really, nice about It thougll..:.. and sured me that I probably could
.tlrement after
gets real mad and drops me. tumed me over to a second lady handle the "trouble" by reading
some 40 years of
who Is Mrs. Don Swisher.
Then what do I do?
an Instruction pamplllet that she
newspaperlng In
I' m playing It cool though.
I ·didn't mention to Mrs. was sending along with me. Now
the Bend area. I
When she tells me on a dally buts
Isn't that blind faith on her part?
fully expected someone to stHke about the trials and tribulations Swisher that I had known Don
.
SM
should know me like you do.
.u p .t he ba11d tor a special concert of the newspaper world, do I ROP since be was an upside down
You
KNOW hOw I hate reading
or the unveiUng of a statue. ott and say I know all about those clown at a Halloween party at the
those
Instruction pamphlets apHowever, another of life's dlsap- things because I've been there? Pomeroy Junior High School
parently
written by aliens from
.polntments - no one even noted No, Indeed! I smile niCely - al;ld years ago ...., a neat costume outer space. ·
:the annlv~rsary. Oh well pretend to be attentive - that's created by his Mother, Mlna. Nor
Have I r ead the pamphlet?
maybe another time, another · 'cause I don't want to be dropped d,ld I mention to Mrs. Swisher
that I'm not a frequent television Naw - I'm gonna: waJt until
.place.
·
from the lns~i'ance policy . You
viewer.
When I get time to watch Friday and let someone who
. . One year ago, It seems, I was see, I am·rriore than just another
I
just
take whatever happens really bas know-how take care of
expected to ride not Into the pretty face.
my' 'trouble" .I'm really pleased
,sunset but onto the couch, there ' Irs again a case In which the to be there -:- and that's okay.
be a "trouble" customer.
to
.to become a potato. I can see that helpless, but pleasant, attitude
Mrs. Swisher also · seemed Thanks to Mrs . Swisher I'm
might have been a good Idea. I pays off. As I say, It works for me baffled by my answers -or lack
.think I could have become a and it. really paid off TueSday of answers - to her ques tions. In going to be able to enjoy the new
_great "Soaps" addict. Now the when I went to Hudnall's Plumb- fact, my replies were so vague cable features before the end of
·" Soaps", as near as I can figure Ing Shop In Middleport to pick up that It came down to her asking If the next decade. See - I am an
optimist.
out, are those television stories whatever I needed to enjoy all the I. were sure I really have cable
So how Is retirement, you ask?
STUDENT OF THE WEEK - .Chris Lane, left, was the recipient
where none of those good looking new stuff that Cablevlslon ·Is service. Later, I thought! should
Durned
If
I
knowI can 't seem
•
of
lhe ~udenl of lhe Wee(!. award at Meigs Junior IUgh School lui
people seeft'l to have much to do going to bring us. The · cable have told her,lfl didn't I'd like to
to get It worked Into the schedule.
week.
IUs selection for tbe award was made by one of his teachers,
Jn the way of actual. Everybody . company had three pleasant have my money back for all those
VIcki Hughes on lhe basis ol academic excellence In math and
lives In plush housing with ·no women on the job and · people . years I've been paying. My But - hey look - I'm smllpng.
Hope you are too!
spelling
as well as classroom conduct.
visible means of Income - could were eomlng In and out of the af(frthoughts are always so good
they possibly be dealers - and plumbing shop like busy bees -aren't yours? At any rate, Mrs.
they have all of these ' problems getting whatever they needed Swisher treated me extremely
which they talk, and talk, and and there were no problems.
well and was extremely patient
talk a bout. In belween there . And then came I.
This takes a lot of coping. I was
seems to bj! a great deal of hanky
One of the three women asked delighted when she wrote me
pank. There never ·seems to be
~he problem of taking out the
garbage or a leaky faucet. Of
~ourse,, I've always felt that If
you ·didn 't haye to expend· so
• By WILLIAM C. mOTr
much energy In making a living,
United Press International
you could easily manage a
MOVJE CRrrrc: General 'Motors Chairman Roger Smith
.consljle~able amount of hanky
hasn't seen the highly praised movie "Roger and Me" but he
pank. The "Soaps" se~ln to be
knows he doesn 't.like It. "If you like sick humor, you might like
the nearest thing to perpetual
the movie," Smith said during a speech this week to the Tower
motion that I knqw about. They
Club In Fort Laud'e rdale, Fla. ~ 'Whatever 'Roger &amp; Me' Is , It's .
go on and on. If one of the hanky
not a documentary." The acidic low-budget film documents the
pankers decides to quit or wants
hardships that General Motors layoffs caused In Flint, Mich.,
more money, It's a simple matter
the hometown of the filmmaker, Michael Moore, and Moore's
just to kill hlm or her off. Writers
attempts tQ confront Smith about the layoffs. Smith says he
~an do lbat. Under the same
'·
hasn't seen the movie. " I read the review In The New Yorker
1
clrcumstwnces In real life, the
*25·1402M43n33t
and decided not to go," he said. "I feel mostly sorry for the
Mafia can do that too.
Reo.
Seporoto
tteme
t473.80
people In Flint. They don 't deserve lt. The people In Flint are
At any rate, a year ago, I had
• 'Iindy 1000 SL/ 2
• 10-ln-1 DeekMete®
nice people and I hate.to see them made the butt of a sick joke .
such lofty ambitions for the
It's a disservice to them ." .
With 512K RAM 1nd
• Quicken .
future. I wasn't going to'get hung
TO ALL :t'HE GIRLS WHO'VE SUED ME BEFORE: A
3'12" 72!)K Drllle
• Instant Pages
up on•television. Not me. 1 was
Miami woman Is SlJlog Julio Iglesias qn the grounds that he
CM-5
Color
Monitor
•
RlghtWrller
•
going to be helpful and construcdefrauded her of royalties from a song they wrote together.
tive. It seemed to me I was at a
Grecla "MII)ll" Kol'fllan · wants $50,000 In damages, plus
..
DiscoVer t11a DlskMata
J)olnt In time when I should prove
Interest, court cos is and attorney fees. Korman says that In 1978
1 Difference ••• Tile Friendly
112'!!t~
t.o my wife that my I.Q. aoes
Iglesias asked her to help write a Spanish adaptation of the
Face In the PC Crowd'"
exceed 50. Well - l've spent the
French song "J 'al Oublie de Vlvre" ("I've Forgotten to Live" ).
entire, year on that effqrt;md you
She says she wollked with some of his preliminary lyrics and .a
know wl\at? I haven't ·gained. a
month later presented him with a finished product.
point.
I bad Intended to become a
culinary giant. After all, Frenchmen are 110ted for their expertise
...... .
·---~......,_,_
In the kitchen, why not I? Well,
let me assure you - 'it does take
talent. My efforts were il disaster. I read a book which said I
· should fold In an ·egg, saute an
onion, blend well, marinate and
S~ereo
put In some wine. What In
Save
hea v!'n' s name were these people
talking about? The· cookbook
lingo certainly brought my cull·Reg.
1~8.85
nary ambitions to a screaming
.-~halt. Enough - already!
'
Low All15 Per Month•
Reg. 349.95
..._
·- -. -·--.
•
Auto-Reverse
•
5·111ild
Equalizer
I had also j!ovlsloned myself.
- · C0ATEO ASPrRIN
~ I N ~ E LI [ V EP
'
'
also as a 'super shopper In my
• Digital Frequency/Time Dllplay
=
retirement. I would be turned
_, ·-·
...,...
24 watts total power! Tuner has 12 station
Caseette \Yith
loose With long lists of good stuff
presets, seek, and FM mono/stereo control.
to buy and plenty of money to
Front/rear speaRer fader. N12-1930
Dolby• B·C NR
really literally bring home the
bacon. That little dream got
Flush-Mount
l:li:a=::::Ilill.-"''ii.l
nowhere either, · I was quickly
Car Speakers
reduced to short lists and limited ·
finan~lng. !learned not to pay 69
cents a pound for bananas under
100 COllin
10 CAPS
the .phllosophy that If! didn't buy ·
REG.
.10-Channel
REG.
at that prlceandyr;~udldn't buy at
NOW
S1 J83
Scanner Radio
that price then the grocer would
•2.13
NOW
have to bring down theprlceorbe.
DIGITAL READY
stuck with bunches of bad banaThree~ speakers with
nas. And who waniS that? It's
5•1.•
er. N12-1708
Low
AI
115
,.,llonth•1~
called ·consumer rebellion but
only works If we hang together In
bunches. I learned that cabbage
Is the solid one and lettuce heads
40-Channel Walkie-Talkie
Duai-Caseette
are kind of cushy. Geez! And I
had always thought II was the
AM/FM Stereo
other way around. I also learned
the hard way that we buy only
Save
Low AI $15 Per Month. 40
two brands - and I'm whisperReg.17U5'60
Our best! Five watts. Ready to go on
! ng now - of toilet paper.
81140 CB channels. H21-1663
Low AI 115 Pti' Month •
About the only other thing I
Bln\rln •~tra
Synchro-dubbing ,
learned about sho!Jplng was how
turnlable. N13-1237
to appear helpless ,- and this Is
Mlcrocaeaette
my long suit. Jdon't run the aisles
Recorder
UQUID 8 OZ.
20 CT.
Weatheradlo®
looking for a product. No Sir!' I
. Receiver
stand In one location looking
IIG.
lEG.
helpless and clerks and Shoppers
NOW
NOW
•Ut
•2.73
alike are quite helpful. As they
Rot~. 91.15
give me' a pltllul glance, I ask:
''Now If I were a jar of pickles,
.Hands-free "notetaker"l
where would I be?"
114~1044 Batttfielexrra
Cryetal Controllld
Hey, the help Is rlghi there.
~ IHFANTS
·
1'1!ey even tell me to find the
~ Nan AI, lin
Remote-Control
1\vo-Line Desk Phone With "Hold"
bread, salad dressing, peanut ·
TV/Monitor
For Home or Office
Color
~ DROPS
bu tier and soft drinks. It works
•., _..,
- ~"'
.,..-... . '
for me.
~ ;::·-- ......
1 · can truly say that I never
..... ,_..
33~
A
looked back at the newspaper
after walking out the door on Jan.
llanlh• :.~.
Aeg. SUI
31. I just haven't missed the
Super picture! 116-261
Ring/hold LEOs. 143-373
endeavor and that Is probably ·
TOOOI-1 dlollng
Atmote bltt•ltt tldrl
because I remained · Involved
through this column. At least ·
Portable 10-.Diglt
Blg-BuUon Phone
lb!JI's the mily reason I can think
Desk1op Calculator
'
of for not having looked back.
, However, It dldn'·t take long
110.
3~
NOW
lrlto the retlremen t scene for me
tt.59
Off
u~ realize that I just wasn't going
tQ ffil the role a Helpful Henry
Toueh·rtdlll. f-43·345
t9&lt;&gt; well. Despite my good IntentiOnal broke more than Itlxed. So
a week after the big over the hill
deal I went to work on a part-time
bl!lls . In publiC relations at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Alid I like that.
Now 'my short lived retirement
dld bring about one major
change which proves a little

--People in the news--

POMEROY, OH.

.· 992-2151

.

ONLY AT
TOM PEDEN'S

1000 SL/2

~
•

NO M·ONEY DOWN!*
.

~

-

109895 ~:~u':n~

-----

"FLU &amp; COLD RELIEF CENTER"

Take a~vantage of up to $2000 Cash Back or 4.8% Financing up to 48 months on approved credit ON SELECTED ~~DELS. Hurry, rebates and factory sponsored
financing ends February 3, 1990: ·
.
.

•.

This reduction fs FOR R'Er All CUSTOMERS ONLY~ NO sALES'PERMllTED TO DEALERS. Prices apply to available units oply. NO ORDERING pERMfTTED AT

thlil1f YOU PLAR ON BUYING All AUT'DMDBILE,
uo:JT:
'

1

OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

· and

1989 CADILLAC BROUGHAM

BRAND NEW 1990
BUICK.REATTA

.Loaded with Lealher'
'
.

· BRAND NEW 1990
GRAND PRIX TURBO
· 1990 OLDSMOBILE
TORONADO

Discounted

$4,000

Delivered' ·

•

LOAOED .
WITH
EXTRAS!

BUICK REGAL

.

•

PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

~~
$13,99~Dellvered'
Will Equipped!

.

.$7,488 .
1989 BUICK LeSABRE
Loaded with extras I

-

Loadad with axtra11

$12,988

1989 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
· Loaded Wltti extrasl

BRAND NEW
1990 BERETTAS

.~~~9,999~~1
Dlllvnd'

BRAND NEW 1190

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1989 DELTA88

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onr$14,988

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CAPS

7,9(

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HALF PRICE!

~~·

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$1 49

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._
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.,

--

l '

i!~!1 1~~~2U5
~~2·0
Low"".,. ....

1~5

or

,........

·- •~

o~

...

•.roe 7995

=.........278•
---.

S1 1

992-6669
271 North Second
llldcleport, Ohio ·

...:...-

9915

Cut 'MMlll
...,--

.

------"~-------.;.~-- ..--~.

29! 5~~5

PINK BISMUTH

P-SCRIPTION SHOP

·--------

9915

. Save
,50 .

. ...

$159

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HI-Power AM/FM
Autosound Cassette

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COATED
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COLD MEDICINE

LOided with erfllsl

27915

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Carlton cards lifer the
finest selection.

'70

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.-

Tom ..... huanlnven101yolover400btlncHiewChlvrollts,Oidlmoli'"-Ponllacl,lluleQ,IIICIGeneriiMotarHponiOIIdvehlc:lesthatlllllllbeiOki.Tom..... wlll
deer out his Inventory ltlilllllantlal di-.nt~, up to $50011. ·
fi.W
.
,

.,

_..::,...

Save
37481

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$18

•

. -'

PRESCRIPTION. SHOP

•

M·ason .

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Complete Computer System.

TANDY®

County...

·For the Best
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Pomeroy- Midcleport. Ohio

'

.. - .

·. . ,_,, .... ·r-:;: . :..: . - ....~ ,.

,t. ·-~

•-

""'·-.

~ave

�----~

•

Page 8

The Deily Sentinel

'

Th&amp;ncMv.

Pomeloy-Midclaport. Ohio

•

The District 13, Daughter~ of
America. met recently at the
lodge hall in Chester, with Eileen
Clark presiding.
The meeting opened with the
reading of Psalm 89, the Lord's
Prayer, and pledge to the Ameri·
can flag In unison.
The receiving of the .national
and state officers was held
officially with Dorothy Ritchie,
past state councilors; Esther
Smith, vice state councilor;
Alberta Hartshorn, state law
cqmmlttee; .a nd Margaret Cotterill, state credential committee.

lal, and Belle Prairie Council the
silver shower.
Committees for the followiai'
tables at the rally were appointed, state ways and means,
Mary Moose, Betty Wolle, an4
Betty Young; national ways an4
means. Charlotte Grant, Jo Ann
Baum, and Thelma White; dis·
trict dep1,1ties, council deputies;
district good or order, Elizabeth
Hayes, Lora Damewood, and
Mary K. Holter; 25 cent gift
packages, Ports Grueser, Mar·
lea Keller, a'nd Mary Reed;
registration, Jean Hall, Mar~
garet Cotterill, Maxine Russell,
Janice · Lawson, secretary.
and Elizabeth Roberts. ·
read the minutes or the previous
The next dlstricthmeetlng will
meeting .and Opal Hollon, treas·
be Feb. 24, 1 p.m. at the Chester
urer, gave that report.
lodge hall.
Margaret CotterUl gave a
Helen Wolf was pianist for the
report on the condition of Esther meeting, Esther Smith read a
Harden, deputy, who Is in River·
poem, "Be an Active Member,"
s!de Methodist Hospital In Co· and refreshments were served
Jumbos. Also reported Ill are by Chester Council.
Faye Haselton, past state counci·
Attending were Faye Kirkhart,
lor, Belpre, and Erma Cleland, · !3etty Roush, Everett Grant,
deputy state councilor, Chester· Jean Frederick, Ethel Orr, Eliza·
Members ·slgned cards tor them . beth Hay(\s, Betty Young, Do·
Dorothy Ritchie, district 13 rothy Ritchie, Opal Hollon, Doris
deputy protem, iilstalled Doris Grueser, Thelma White, Char·
Grueser as warden and Janice lotte Grant, Helen Wolf, Mary K.
Lawson as recording secretary.
Holter, Marcia Keller, JoAnn
Dorothy Ritchie and Esther Baum, Lora Damewood, Esther
Smith, due to the sickness of Smith, Chester council; Eileen
Esther Harden, made plans for Clark, Janice Lawson, Margaret
the spring rallY, which will be Cotterill, Elizabeth Roberts,
held March 17, at the ·senior Maxine Russell, Betty Spencer,
cilizenscenterinPomeroy.Ches· Bette Riggs, Guiding Star Coun·
ter Council will do the colors; eli, Syracuse; and Alberta Hart·
Guiding Star Council the ballot· shorn and Betty Wolfe, Perry
tng; Perry Council the memor; Council.

Racine lJMW meeting held
A memorial service for Marlene Fisher was presented by
Martha Dudding w})en the Ra·
cine United Methodist Women
met recently In the fellowship at
the church.
Lois Bell presided at the
mee.t lng a !tended by 19
members. She read "Life By ihe
Yard is Hard."
.

Meigs
County
honor rolls
announced
SALISBURY ELEMENTAR)'
First Grade: ApriL Blankenship, Swrah Clifford, Danny
Custer, Amy Frecker, Sandi
Gilkey , Abby Hubbard, Grace
Kitchen, Carson Midkiff, Chris
Self, Billy Soulsby, Heather
Whaley, Michael Brumfield. ...
Second Grade: Beverly
Burdette, Kim Conde, Marjorie
Halar, Tiffany Harder, Ryari
Jeffers, Morgan Mathews, Kim
Peavley, Ryan Ronquillo, Anna
Story, Marissa Whaley._
Tllird Grade: Lacy Banks,
Jeremiah Bentley. Trlcia Davis,
Becky Johnson, · Tamra 0' Deli,
Ryan Ramsburg, Crystal Salser.
Fourth Grade: Mlck Barr. Bill!
Bentley, VIncent Broderick,
Jesse Eastman, Chad Folmer,
Jason Frecker, Myca Haynes,
Heidi Le;;~ar, Mpchael Leifheit,
Randy Mayles, Seth McDonald,
Melissa Ramsburg, Jared
Warner.
Fifth Grade: Chelsie Dodson,
Raquel Maddux, Tim Peavley.
Chris Roush.
Sixth Grade: Nlkke Bentley,
Jeremy Hubbard, Dorothy Leif·
heit, Mindy P a;flerson, Tracy
Shaffer.

MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH
Seventh Grade: Sarah Ander·
son, Joey Barrett, Sonja Bateman, Vanessa ColJlpston, Jered
Cook, Becky Diles, Ryan Dodson,
Phillip Edmonds, Tara Erwin,
Benny Ewing, .Marie Flowers,
Travis Grate, Kelly Grueser,
Jered Hill, Heidi Huffman, Kim·
berly Janey, Annie King, ShUo
Moore, Reggie Pratt, Sherr!
Ramsburg, Clndi Roush, Adam
Sheets, Brent Smith, Brian
Smith, Kelly Smith, Lisa Tatter·
son, Jason Taylor, Crystal
Vaugha·n. Tonya WIU, Melissa
Wilfong, Walt WIUiams, Adam
Wyatt.
.
Eight Grade: Heather Burch,
Lorrt Burnem, Jason carpenter,
Joey Casto, Matt Clark, Ryan
Conde. Tom Cremeans, Danlelle
Crow, Crystal Donohue, Arnie
EUlott, Tracy Fife, JaaOif
George, Danlelle Gray, :Mer1111
- Grueser, EmllyQelghton, Dawn
Hockman, Heath Hudson,
Heather Hudson, Racbael Hy·
sell, Tony KliJI, Brad Knotts,
Andrea McDo..-Jd, Juoa MIDer,
Kenny Napper, Ronda Raymond, Ann Rlltle, Deaile Shenefield, Mike Sloan, Jay Smith,
Stephen Smith, Jack Stanley,
Matt Stewart, Tllri Vance, Eric
Wagner, Marlo Wblte, ~ky
~llltams, Jasoo Wltberall.

Th.ank you . notes were read
from people who hild received
gifts and Christmas flowers.
Eighty-six sick calls were re·
ported and cards were signed for
the sick and shut in people In the
community.
Sue Grace reported on the
mission work. The UMW will
continue to pay for the children's
mission hour held one Sunday of
each month.
·
A donation of $100 was given to
the Charles Yost family who had
a fire In their home recently.
Com.mittees. were appointed to
bily table cloths and drapes· for
the fellowship I:Jali.
It was noted that the group will
have a bazaar thls .wlnter.
•
Etta Mae Hill and GladYs
Shields served delicious refresh·
ments during the social hour.

A catered noon luncheon. was
served when members of the
Wildwood. Garden Vlub met
recently at the home Betty
Milhoan.
Kathryn Miller gave the bless· ·
lng and during the dessert
course, a birthday bouq11et feat·
uring chocolate chip cookies was
presented to Doris Grueser. The
group sang "Happy Birthday" to
her:
Following the meal, Mrs.
Miller conducted a sliort business meeting. Connie Hill gave
devotions by reading two poems
written bY her niece, Linda
Weber, entitled "When Winters
Past" and "Sharon's Garden."
Communications received
were thank you notes from Helen
Nease, Dorothy Karr, and Vlrgl.
nla Fisher.
For the program, Evelyn Hoi·
Jon had a contest and games.

OSU honor list

Song/est set

D .of A meeting held .Wildwood Garden .Club
has recent luncheon

Febrully 1. 1110

ANTIQUITY - The Spiritual . Fout Meigs Countlans were
Faith CltOrch, Rt. 338, Antiquity, · listed on the honor roD of Ohio
will host a Songtl!llt saturday,
State University for the aulllmn
Feb. 3, at 7:00 P .M.featurlng the
quarter. Those honored received
HermanFamUy, theUnltedGos·
a grade point average of at least
pel Singers, and the Highway
3'.5811d were enrolled tor at least
Gospel Stagers. Pastor A. Ste·
12 credit hours.
wart Invites everyone to Come
In the group were Jared
and enjoy the slnglhJ!'.
Allctrew Sheets, Pomeroy, who
attained a 4; academic pertor·
mance record for quarter. Oth·
ers
listed on the honor roll were
The Southern bOosters will
Carolyn
,Lynn Fisher, Racine;
. meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Eugene
Rice, Reedsville,
David
.
high school. All paren(s are
and
Douglas
Scott McPhail,
urged to atlend.
Syracuse.

Prizes were awarded to Connie
Hill and Dorothy Smith.
The December Christmas
party had been cancelled due to
Inclement weather, so members
had a belated gift exchange. Gl~
wrapping was judged with prettl·
est going to Juanita Will.
The next meeting wlll be held
In the afternoon at tite home of
Dorothy S!'hlth. ""

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
~ A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

.Boosters to meet

POLICIES

OES to meet
The Past Matrons of the
·Evangeline Chapter 172 Order of
·the Eastern Star will be held
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. _at the home
of Emma Clativortliy. Valentine
.gifts will be exchanged and
members are to bring hand made
items.
·

•'

Notice '

GURIO
CABINETS

Beautiful Accents - Corner Curios
Bunching Curios and More.
' SALE PRICED
FROM .ONLY

'

,_ Ohi9,lnc. to Eatablltha Unl-

f torril Rate lor Nat~rol Gu
, Service w~hin tho Corn.
• pany't .Lake Erie Atglen.
: North-torn Region, C.n·
. trot Region, bourn Roglon.
· ind soum..t., Rfllon;
" Cue No. St-143-GA·CMII.
: In Tho Me- of tho Corn·
• plaint and A-1 of Col·
: umllia 0.. of Ohio. Inc.
from Ordinance No. 1022·
89 Paned by the Council of
· the City of Columbuoon
; May 111, 1981; (;11eNo. 89·
. 944-GA-CMR. 'In tho Mot·
; tor of tile Comptlllnt tnd
, Appaet of .Columbia OM of
, Ohio, Inc. from Ordinance
1 No. 89-87 Paned ' bY · tho
Council of tile City ofZ•n•·
, ville on MIY 18, 1889: Cue
· No. 89·11186-GA·CDI, In
• tho Matter of tho Commlo•.Ilion'• tnv,..tlgetlon of hr·
· vicH Provided by Columllio
· ·Gu of Ohio.- Tho h-lnio
..-.,. ocheduled fD&lt; tho pur·
poM of provlclng an oppor·
Junlty to
"*"b·
oro of tile public to t•tlfy In

$

Captivating oak.finish!
Open ltock savlDSJI on lhe enUre All· Wood coll•c:tloul

• All·•·ood
COnllrllcljOn

• Rich C•Uncrr

' Olk t111l1h
• Hlp p-urt

'

.

._miflatr.l tor' •.. .

j]F::.I\;;.;:

The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday at(: 30 p.ni. In
the Syr~cus~ Municipal
Building.

CVlq_tage
Oak._
a;. ~ (CT

•-•tod

; •,

; ttt.e proceellnp. Thelocel
wiJ ba hllid at tho

•

WALLAWAY, RECLINERS,
ROCK,O-LOUttGERS and
SWIVEL ROCKERS

.
-Limited Time Otter~
For All Consumers Answering Our Ouestion~ai re

THE NATIONAL AIR SAFE'TY ADVISORY
SERVICE WILL PROVIDE ROUND TRIP AIR
FARE CERTIFICATES TO ORLANDO, FLORIDA OR FREEPORT/NASSAU BAHAMAS FOR
6*17'' NIGHTS. . .
.

Beautiful. yet durable,
fabrics and Berkline'a
famous quality .
construction.

$33~~""

2

questionnaire when it

(NASASJ makes ' survey results available to U .S. passenger air lines,
consumers and other Interested part1es on request . NASAS is a privately
held firm denving its general revenue for operations from the distributiOn
of air travel certlf1cates. and 1s not affiliated with aoy government body
o r agency . '6 n1ght certificates are fur one passenger to Orlando only and
are not available to the Bahamas. 'Two passenger certificates are available
to Orlando or Freeport/ Nassau for 7 n•ghts . or longer if desired. Recipients
must be at leaSt 21 years Old (although second passenger may be younger) .
Reservations and arrangements for room accommodations must be made
at least 45 days m advance through des•gnated agen t. Some restrictions
on travel t•me may apply as reservations are subject to airline/ hotel
ava•la~Hiity . Therefore, travel during major holidays and other designated
times 15 hot accepted . e.g ,. Christmas week . Easter week. July' 4th week .
Rec•P•ents pay standard room rates of $52-200 per night . depending on
se1ect10n . Al l taxes. _meals. ground transportation. teleP.hone calls. extra
beds. etc., are recipient's respons•bihty, TO better accommodate departure
reque~ts_: a sel~ction of 3 departure dates be1ng 15 days· apart are asked
for . Cert•f•cStes are transferrable. by sale or g ift. completely at recipient's
d1scretton . Based on a comparable study of ten origination cities across
the co niiQ.uous United States. redeemed a1r tare certificates have an average
value of 5990.00. Actual value will 11ary by origination city, destinaUon.
and tome ot travel. No C.O.D ·s. IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED. RETURN

-

SERTA PREMIER
COMFORT

11 - ~ ...

GIIN• Countr .
ArNCade614 ,

···--.....

Public Notice

m., at

office~

Commlulon. 11th
BoAien Building, 180
Brood StrMI. ·cotumbut.
Ohio;
.hllm_ - Wedneocloy, Fe·
tifuiiV 21, 1180, at 1:00 p.
m. at tho City Hell, Councl
Ch-bero · leaond floor,
231 tloutlt 8rCMtdway. le·
tem. Ohio;
lbauto.nvillll - Wedneodly,
F86iUa!iif. 181!0, at 1:30
p.m.. at the City Municipal
Building. Firat Floor· Coun·
ell Chambert. 123 Iouth
Third Stroot, Steubenville.
Ohio;
'
Alhl!ta. - Thurldl'/, Fe·
liluiiY22. 1990. at 6:30 p.
m.. at tile County Extenolon
Ofilco. Extllnoion Me!ltir)g
Room· Second Fl!&gt;or, 280
Wnt tlnlon StrMt, Alheno.
Ohio;
Marton - Thurld..,, F•
JiiiiUYl2. 1880, at 1 ::SO p.
II~H. Council
1 ,m~;=~"'iln'•ttt~he" City
I'
· hConcl Floor.
IIN!'i.

,..

M11on Co.. WV
AN8Codtl304

l;iijlidl
41 42 434oi48-

171- Pt . Pl....,t .
Pom•oy
• 451 - Len
181--....Ch-r
171...:. Apple Growe
an- Pc&gt;rtlond
773 - M•on
2•7 - ~.,. fallt 882 - New Hann
141- R•••
891 - Letert
742 - A~Illnd
f31 - Bufl ..o

311- Vtntan
2.4 5- Rto GNncfe
211- QuW'In Ditt.

143-:- A,.bia Oi!lt,
379- WIInut

..

.....

•I tho 11111 ..,._ ......,...
tloncrfthown f n'atlepr•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
~=-~.:.~
FIDUCIARY
fl tho eppropr111e oHooa· . Dn Jenll!'ry 18: 1890. in
tlon methll-.v to ba ueed she Meip County Probeto
to - - plent. - • • · Court. ca.. No. 211499.
• Jom• E. Diddle. Box 1187.
d
omong .cu · Racine, Ohio, 46771, · .111 the oppropr~ leYol of appointed Eucutor of tho
--lzetton .,.,... to
of Roy Edwerd Profba ollowed tho ·company; !Itt, ~••••eel. let• of Box
d
128. Reclne1 Mel go County.
enl\lthoiPproprlatacolcuill· Ohio, 46771.
tlon of tho lolld foetor for dlRobart E. Buck.
termlnin1 - n d wllfa.
Probate Judlll!
(3~ 211; (2)1, 2tc ;
LenoK. N•..rood. Clerk ·
..__,....,....,......,.,..;...,---1111 211:121 1. a. 3tc
PubMc Notice

:,..:pan-

•••te

IN THE
COMMON PLEAI COitRT
OF
MEtGI 'COUNTY. OHIO

P~fu~MJN

Dw-.

71 .-.. Autol ior Sale
72 - Truckt for Salv
73 - 'V•n• &amp; • WD ' s
)4 ·• M010fCyCIM
76 - Bo•t• &amp; Motors fo• S&lt;t~le
76 - Auto Parts I. Acc•totl•

oi8 - EquiPm.,t for Aent
49 - For Le•e

17 ...... Auto Aep•ir
78 - Camptng Equipment
79 - Camptn &amp; Motor Homet

Mw:hond 1se

a.-

Serv1ces

11 - Houlflhold Goodt
12-loon~n 1
&amp;3- Antiqutt

8l - H9melmprovemen1 t .
82 - PIUmbmg I. Het~ing
83 · hC:lWiting
84 - Eiectncll &amp; Refrigeration

&amp;A- Misc. Mf1rCh~ndi•e
51- Building Suppli•
58...oPett tor Sal a
&amp;7- Muticallnatruments ·
58- Fruitt &amp; VegstabiQJ
69 -FO~ S1le qr Trede

.21 ·- luttn•• Opponunity
23 ·-Prof•lion•l Servic•

Public N otlce

Public Notice

85 - Guneral Hauling
86 ·· MobH11 Hume Aep11 i.r
·a7 ...:Upholstery

Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The followl~g _,. recelv·
od/prepored by ' tl\e Ohio
Envlronmontol Protection
Agency IOEPA) l•t weak.
Effective de._ of fino! ac-

tor within 3 deyo. Pr-Hd . 10 any oct ton; includin~ ro·

tion• and iaiUinCII dltes

revl. . /withdrewa ttie pro-.
po18d eotion. Any pereon
rt:~IY tubml,t comm.ente en a.

Of

propoted octlono end of
draft octlono ·ere ototod. FInal octiont mey ba eppuled,
in wr"Jng. wh!&gt;ln 30 day• of
tho dote ol1hlo notice, to the
Environmentel Board of Re·

vi-, Rm. 300. 236 E.
Town St .. Columbuo, Oh .•
4321 &amp;. Notice of any oppoal
llholl ba filed with the dlrec·

ectiona wHI become fin• un· clipt of verified completnt~
I•• • written adjudication anv p1raon mey obtain no·
hearing requ•t ta ._bmtttld · tice of fl.trther act I~•. and

within 30 day~ of the It·
ouonce date: or tho d'r,octor

/or • meatlng rtljerdlng any
draft ectlon w~hln 30 dl'/t
Of tho datelndiO!Ited. "Ac·
lion", u uted above do"
not include roM! of a verifled compleint. If tlgniflcant
public inter•t oilta. 1 pub-

lie mooting may ba hllld. Aa

eddltionol Information. Un,
lu• othorwlto · provided in

nOtice of .p,~rticuler a·ctiona•
ell communicMiona shall be
unt to: . 1-teerlng Chark.

OEPA: P:O. Box 1049. Col·
umbuo. OH. 43266·0149
Ph. (614) 644-2115. Con·
.. tt ORC Chop. 3746 and
OAC Chopa. 37411-47 end
3746-11 tor requloemenu.
Finllleauence of Permit to

tnttoll:

Public Notice
Dairv Delite
Stale Route 124 and
Bailey Run Road

Middleport, DH .
Effective Date: 01 / 24 / 90
hcility Description: Air .

Application No. 06-2672
'This final action ·not prec·
lded by proposed action ~tnd
ia' appeel1ble to EBR . G•·
aoline diapenaing facility .

1211.

1tc

More Legal!!
On Page 12

Business Services.

·

CASE NO.II·CV·\47
THE VINTON COUNTY
NATIONAL !lANK
112 Wut Milln Stroot
McArthur. Oh. 46851
. PLAINTIFF
-VS..
CLETIS DALTON, P. 0 . Box
324. 'Aibeny. Oh. 411710;
IVA JANE DALTON. P. 0.
!lox 324. Alblny,
Oh.
48710; DANIEL E. WIL·
LtAMI. lox 972 A.P.O ..
len Francloco. CA. B811111:
The Unkn- m!rt. 0..
v - . l.afllll- end A•
tigno of Jolin L. Clerk. De·
ce•ed In- 1149: The Un·
" - " Helrt.
La·
gilt- end "\lolgnll of David
Radford. Doauoed; . LOLA .
CLARK, Rciutll 4. Pomorgy.
Oh. 467-81: The Unknown
Helro. D!IV._, IAg~­
.,d A•lgno of John J-ell,
Dece•ecl: CLIFFORD H.
BRYSON. 419 S..corne
Awnue. .Pittoburgh. PA.
11214; lETTY BLACK·
WOOD. 31945 Mlnorovlla
Rood, Recine, Oh. 4&amp;771:
DEFENDANTS

TransporlaltOn

\.

oi7- WMtld to Rent

11$22 - M!j)n.,. lo Lo1n

Public Notice

Hau•t for R•nt
Mobile Homea lor Rent
Farrns for Rent
Apartment lOt Rant
Flltnithed fllooms

ott- &amp;p•c• lor Rent

lliliiiikhll

, •17 -'Cootirille

Pubic Natice

,t' :~

18 · ·WtntMI To Do

112 - Midcl~r1

317- Ch•""•

OAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
-· 11.,00 A.M. SATURDAY
2 00 P.M . MONDAY
-· 2:00P.M . TUESDAY
·.- 2'00 P .M . WEDNESDAY
- HO P .M . TttUIIIOAY
- 2 '00 P .~ . FRIDAY

..... Count,
Are•Cochl14

w-•

63- li.v ettock
'
84 ~ Hav &amp; Grain
66- Seed .. Fertilizer

36 - Rell El\ete w_.ted

U - liluttion W_,.ted
13- lnawanct
14- lulin•• Trainiftt
1 e. i.lchoolt a lnttrvc\ion
11- RNia, TV • Cl Repair
17 - Misc•l•mus .

followin/{ telephone! exchanges...

.

FURNACE -·

SER~ICE

Wt can r~r and rt·
cort ridiators ant!
'hlohr cor•. We can

aho •itl boil and rod
out rlllfiaton. Wt also
repair Ga1 Tat*s.

FURNACE
FUilNACE

PART-S AND IEIIVICE
ALLMAKEI
GAS Of\ ELECTR~
1111111'5 APPUIIICI

. PAliiiLL FOlD

·RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

RUTLAND TIRE
·SALES and
SERVICE

EVDY ·SUIIDAY

•Tire Sales
•Front End
Al.ignment
•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Brake Work
IIMIII
IMLAIID

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choktld
12 GauJ141 qnty
.
. ....... 1111

912·2198
Midd..port",

'·

. Publl~ N otic&amp;'

3rd Str•t,

Oh.

•

,_,.,, ....
992-7479

lt. J3 lhrtll ..
·

Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

. ..21-Wf.tfft

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

•Mobile Home
RanUIIt
•Lot Rantala

.

en ginn
Stock Pane for
Homelite, Weedeeter.
Tecumaeh, Briggs &amp;

la1han Buldlng

P1rt1

FOR SALE
949~2493

nf .,

Lecat.d at Y. .y Luntltllr
In Middleport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mott 2 end 4-cycle

IACINE
FilE DEPT.

•MobHt Home

TOP SOIL

742-3088

DAVE'S
. SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII

GUN SHOOT

COUNftY
MOMLE ·
HOME PARK

EXCAVA'hNG
&amp; TRUCKING

sa a

GROOM
SALE
new covers in

OUI PIICES SJAIT

ONLY

$499

SOFA

~------------~---·~~~

1

Hill

325 Pennsylvania Ave .. S.E. Dept. 334
Washinglon. D.C. 20003
Cuslomer SerVIce Number: (612) 448·8826

Name ----------~----------------~------~---1
Address ----+------------;;-;:;------'-;----'---'---=--.,--1
Cily/Stale/Zip -----~-------'-"'-------------------1

S&gt;~gte Certificate-Orlando only

*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

•ocl•y

· 1·12•'11-tin

Factory choko
12 Ga. . Shtt...,. Only
Slricktly Eoforcotl
·
10·9·1fn

SlOB

-~----------~~
..

Roger Hysell
Garage .
lt. I 24, "-roy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AIM y,._
.........
PH. 992·5612
or 9t2·712.1

WANTED
LOW GUDE OAK

,.
Public Notice

"YOUNG'S

--

CARPENTEI SERVICE

-,~oom

Acldlllonl.

--Eieotrlcel •

Plumbing

OHIO PILLET
COMPANY

FREE ESTIMATES

POIIIIOYr 01.
'
1/I/'A/1 mo.

-Concr!lte Work · •
-Rootng
-Interior • E-ior
Plllnt~

CFREE

Yu. It' o baen two vaero
end life gOM on.
Thougi1 by death wo hod
· to port.
Tho preclout me!'lori11
will novar fade
That ore otored whhln

ITIMATEI~

V. C. YOUNG II

992-62U

•• ;...,,, Ollio
••

-~'lt-1-1110.

DOZER
SITEWORII - ROADS
CLEARING

BISSELL
SIDiNG CO.

..........

NEWLAND
. ENTERPRISES

"FrM Eltlmltet"

DUMPTRUCK ·
Sand·Stone-Dirt

PH. 949·2181
orin.

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. •wland

NO

'

992-2772
12-13-'1!1-1 mo.

USED APPUAIIIICES
90 DAY WA.AJnY

.IASHER$-$100 up
ORYER!-$69 up
RlFRIGERATOR$-$100
RANGES-Gas·Eitc.-$12 up
FREIZEI5-SI2S
IICRO OVEN$-$ up
Dill'S APPUAIICE

'/l

CUSTOM IUIT
HO.S &amp; GliAGES
"At lunn•h Prlct1"

... 949·2101
or 1-. 949·2160

Huge Selection of Patterns To Make Your Home ~eautiful,
PLAIDS, PRINTS, STRIPES AND MOREl
Most are pre-pasted and washa.ble~

o.,., fllht

NO~YWlS

WllfiiD

HAuutiG

W.

UMESTONE
AND DIRT
SPREAD
10 T~ Minimum

1600

!:-}!;'•=

f.i.lnc.
P•••r8f, .OIH

PH. 992·3561

Galt..Wot~r

Dlllwery

sn•,...
..
Buying Hours;
7:30-1:00
Mon. thru Fri.

992

7:30·4:00

SEIVICE
I'OIIIIOY, 01110

10/30/'19 tfn

-·-

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

FlEE DEUVERY
1.00

STORE HOURS

NEW -IEPAII

Gutter~
Down1pout1
Gutter C.Jeaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
. l·I-'91J.li1IO. pd.

' Monday

'----1

Payment by: Personal Check. Cashier"s Check or Money Orders Only
Payable lo: National Air Safety (10 certificate nmit)

9:30-8:00

~trf8/6'11JK ~-

· PIZU

lOWISf lbCES
·,

I

••••• AfPUAIICIS, 'IV'S, fLOOI C0¥11111110

Cecelia U., uboratory Supervteor

v-.... Memorial Hoep~el

992-3671

DOWNTOWN
•'

r

v

OliO

•UMIITONE
•FILL DIRT

Plea• ICiiltact:

•

nU.~DIIve
Peaar
,....,.. .
lit.,

1J2

:o4. lxtaneion 215

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

'

...si'CIUIIIY
flU LOCAl IIIRDY
PG-Y- ....OU'S OII.Y
LOCAllY OWIB fiUA SHOP.

Pint·SI*·S IJ II·Daily S111dlls

Mt-tna

...,

L. WrltiHI

ROOFING

SET AN EARLV ITART ON IPRINI FIX·UPI

(1

"f

992-5335 ... 915·356 1
•·-•-PIItOffke

Hawarcl

ledly mined by
Wife, Ethel;
D.iuthtero, •n•ln·illw
encl endci1Hdran

0°o OFF

VINYL SIDING
VINYl REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

• 7·1.. '1!1-111

aur he811a.

•

INSULATION
Wlattt S~ecl•l 0•

DIUVEIID TO

SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIDING
•BLOWN IN
INIULATION

J&amp;L

SAW LOGS
.S160 n.!:.....

4-25-tfn

marly tlmoe;
When I look at VIMlr favQrlte chlllr,
lt'.a eo though if I'd only
blink my..,.. .
I'd - .YOU •~tlng there.

Wallpaper Sale

I

*I:.IGHT HAULING

I Itnow you• 111 gornt. but

FULL MAnRESS
or BOX SPRINGS

Grailt
trllditlonll contemporary and
Early. AmariCitn 1tyla1. Quality Furniture bv
Beikline: Craftmestar and others.

*SHR,UB •• TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

In Memoriam

v-•

TWIN_MAnRESS
or BOX SPRINGS

----------------------------------------------MAIL TO: Nat 1ona1 A•r Safety Advtaory Service
W/112

I

· Yard S.tM

In Momory Df
Our Huobend and Felhor
ROY G. PR IDDV
Who Dloc! Two YoeraAgo
;rod..,, f•l!- 1. 1881
Two
ego
We oaid our lut goodbye,
' To one - 'iov.ed wMh all
our heutl
And yat ud IN" we cry.

THE UNUSED CERTIFICATE WITHIN 30 DAYS FOR AFULL REFUND.

~·)

C(WPr lhP

Chambaro, 213 South Main
"Street. Foo1or1e • Ohio:
, Ebula_- Thurlday. Febrilery
·'IT.1990. at 1 :DO p.m. et
the Lorain CIMJ ntv Admin·

NOTICE - PLEASE READ: The National Air Salety AdvisOfY Service

l

Classijif•d pa/{es

t

g 1 - Farm Eq,uiprn.,..t
62"-Wanted to Bu v

3 1- Butln•• Buildlngt
36 - l.ots &amp; Acreage

: --1·" lllt•·nl
\I', \,

&amp; LtVI",IIitk

31 - Hom• lor S81e
32- MolliiiHom• tor Sale
33 - F.rm• lor Sale

7·-V•d ••• (paid ift actvaneel
8 - Public Sltle • Auc:tion

11 ~I !IIIII, '.

1

. ,~

lodging: • In Orlando-tO national hote l/motel chains to select
from-(alllocations' convenient to Disney/ Epcot!MGM)
• The Bahamas-Seleci from 4 world class resort/casinos
Hl!!l.!!i!l!: • Round trip air fare from virtually any major U.S city
one or two ·people on regular scheduled airlines • Stay 6"
or 7' nights at standard room rates (no inflated charges) •
Certificates are transferab le and can be given as gifts (usable for
up to 18 months )

. ...,. To h

•1 .30/ doy

.42
.60
•..06 / dly

end John J~l
whou nam• and addr•. .

Your Request llust Be Postm.srked· No Lit• Th• Wedn•dilf. 2/7/90

:;:;a.::,••:••:an~

C.d of Thenlls
ln Memo,Annouc•n..nts
Giveaw..,
~ - Hippy Adt .
e-·l:Oit and ~OU.f1C!

the . uftknown heira.
I ~::h~·T· and nut crf ldn of
I.
L. Clorf1. David Rod·

SALE PRICES
· YOU'LL LIKE -

For Only

f13 ..00

111

1234-

.30

t9.00

fM

A "",I .. 11.1 llll'fll.

Happy Ads

~EGAL NOTICE
. Tho Public UtlltiM Commiuion of Oh~o hM - . uled -•rot lo...t public
. • heorlngo In the following 1~1"11
~ c••: Cue Noo. 89·6111·
GA·AIR, 11·117-GA·AlR.
~~-·-,_-_,
. 89-618-GA·AIR, 89-811·
• GA·AIR, and 80-620·GA·
: AIR. In Tho Matter of Appll·
,· catfont ·of Columbia Goa of
1990, at

Trustees_to meet

adull for 6 nighls) .............. $33 each
• u·out&gt;IEI Certificat...... Orlando
12 adults lor 7 nights) ..... .•... ... 566 each
Double Certificate-Freeport/Bahamas
,
(2 adullslor ~nigh Is) ............. $66 each

MONOAV"PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
&gt;HIC)AY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

••

BERKliNE
'SALE

C~pilol

DEADLINE -

.4.00
...00

9 - Wantild 10 Buy

·A t l•sifled •nhertilement placed in The Deity 'sentinel t•·
c~t
classified ditpl-r. Busin•• C•rd •nd leg• netic.)
w1tl also appa• in the Pt Ple•ant A•eflter and the Oali·
pohs Dally Tribune, reaching aw ... 1, , 000 hom";f

C'OPY

.1 II

ov,r 1~ Wordl
.
.20

· Illite

A••.,. tor c:on•anive runs. broUn upd.tWt will bt ch•gld
lor e.ch d8¥ •• ....-ate . ..
·

"free ads Gi_,eaway •nd Found ads under 15 wordt wiil b4t
run l d.,, at no chlrge.
' 'Price of ad for 11 capitall81tert it double pri~ of· ad cost
'7 p01h11inelype on~ uaed .
,
'Sentk'lel .. not rnponsible for errors a her fir.. day , ~Chedl
for euou t lrs1 dav 14,runa in PIPM") . Call blrfure 2 :00p.m.
d., aher pubhcMton to mall a corre'"'ton.
'Ads th8i must be pt~i d tn actvf,nce are

' In Memotilm

.,

answer our short
I ~~~~~yourS imply
air fare certificates .

•

Card ofTh .. tts

15

10
Monthly

p ..d .
.
'RecUN~t t .SO .di-counl foJ ads P'id in advance.

Chatter.Club meets
The January meeting of tlte
Chatter Club was held at the
home of Brenda Bolin lri Rutland.
Birthday gifts .were pres en te~
to Mary Myers and Mary
Starcher. A gift was presented to ·
Dorothy Roach for being In the
club for 25 years. ·
Games were played and prizes
were awarded to: Mary Myers,
Linda Hubbard, Susie Cleland,
and Dorothy Roach.
It was noted that there will Ilea
bake sale next month.
. Re freshrrients were served and
the door prizes was awarded to.
Isabelle Couch.
The February meeting wUI be
held at the home Janice Fetty In
Pomeroy.

1
3
6

"Ads owlside Me igs, Gillie or. Maton counti• !t'Utt .be pn ·

.

Wordl
111
111

O.yo

'·

�•.

Page 1 0-The Deily Sentinel

· PCJma"oy-Midl:llaport. Ohio

LAFF-A-OAY

tbr, 311H'41.

Glv81iwey
7 - Old,
· puODIOo
1o glwowav.
ana
miXed .......
,,...-

·1101 oltotlp.m.

FIM

·

Phyaleal
Clwnltolry,
S:IG till
, . _ ,.._~- II PI

2 bodn&gt;om, PIII11Y rum-. ...
- -· :JOI.Id.:MM. .
2br - l
·t 0
II0IIIII
Cnok,
1110/mo.
-. f14-141o

'''

17 ,.,. ,.,.. 111 1411111.

0151\T .... Ollss.

vane • 4 WD'a

73

·-.-.-

,.'

........ .

2br, ..... Ul

1:00
I

t,..,

- -. lt4-7Q.ZIIC--

lloblle Home Plrk.
U, Narlll of P-roy.
~~1111010, ,.~•• - · Coli

lit

1 2

.,.I~Pr'•

Lalo;olto Mol. 114-141-4222.

Countl r

A
~~~~--....
-dopoolt,
- •
Nfrta.-UIG/Ino.
utiiHTIII, m.l14 4ft 41131

CEBDE~

IVINI,_ .

fat ronl. 1100 por

~All uiiiUHII d1d1d Clll

FINt

'

W JHUR80. fll. 1 •

~

l

e&lt;Jl Cll •\, • • •

~=OIIpudw•ll

741'1.

AIMitol .....

!I! •••,.,.,_ ..... Q

Cocllor Sponlol ~loci! Doa.

1 rr. old,
0527.

6

CAl;

,.,_..,. ~

spai:e for Rent

1 _,. -

~.lt4-44t-t34b.

11

Rail, 30W71-.M.
Pli~

Do WTif

lol

Television
Viewing

'

1m ....., •• 111 ._. ......

so- . .
Algobro

tudoring,

In Alo Orondo, 114'

72 TIUCk8 for ....

·

lrteany Sponlol lo good homo,
....... 1 1/Z Yf1 okf, low•
........n, 304of73.1172 ... 7'/S-

11241 .

-

FurniShed
Room a

45

41 Hou... for Rent

11

Thutadily. Februry 1, 1880

TV t:;l .
V::'la:;:..
1111 Cll8ltet In
.

•orr p1oy1u1. 11~

~···II Olle

l

0

LOif &amp; Found

0......

.

(!)

1-2·1 ~ t:;l

(J) AIC

I tiC=.~

.

;=In
0
.

STopCM . ·
' 1:31 Cll Andy GrtfiHII
7:00~ aaar... ow ...... King

.I
LAYNE'S FURNITURE ·

1115. AMII- U2l to ·IS71.
La- 121 to ttZI. ~­
Jtot ond up to MM. Wood
tabla ..,., cholro au lo ms.
•Doollo 1145 up to IS71. Hutchol
t400 I up, bUnk complllo
wllh . .n_ SZI5 ond up to
1381. boll!' 1110 - - or boO! IIMI-. lui or twin
S'll, firm 411. llriil .... a.olio $2711 I up, King $180. 4
d,._ chootiGt. Gun Clblnllo
!..!• I tO gun. lllbv 111111-

&amp;':

Couch I choir, rolrlg., hid-·
war bed, wood dln.n. •t, $135
-h, twin bod, 111. lt4-141o

t- ate-.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

~'.VON I All A,... I ShiMy
~peii'W, 304-175-1421.

AVON • All 01101, Coli Marlyn
w..v.. 304-812-ad.
.
EARN MONEY Reading BOobl
$30,000/yr Income potlldlol.
Dolollo. t.aos.aa7-4000 ExlY·
10181.
Echoing M o - Ro-111
Clntor and ICF MA-00 31 bod
f•cllhy lo curronny -.,ti~
ojillllcollono far pa~ Umo RN o
and LPN'o. Starting LPN
11.25 pot hour oncf RN'oi •10.00
per hour. lnt.,...ed .-11•
como In llon.f'rl, •12 ond H to
1111 olll oppllcollon. I'll- bring
r11ume at lhlt time lo 311 W.
Union' St., Ath•n.; Ohlo or call
114-5114-3141 lor lu~hor lnlor·
matlon.

Fr11 Cologne! Flrot 5 pocplo to
sign up to Nil Avon. 0.. Avon

· al cost. 814·992-7110.

·

Fin haua• for ule. Mldd-rt. Good ....., lhOomo.
J47,100. 8otlouo lnVOitDI'I on!y.
Clllt·21&amp;.8SI-3852.

S.ltuatlon
wanted

12

eo..

lat. ombulatory ond ·bod
potlonto. Good coro, oldl on

duty. - · -

_.,_.

114 112 •••••

.

23

Professional
Services

hoino.l14-117·3402.

Wll do lilbvolttlng In ...,. homo.

lion. lhru ~~. Diyo oniJ. Coli
114-..sot•
.

18 Wanted to Do
Gonotal

ftlolntlrionce.

-fro,

-~.· plumbing I oorpontry.

lneurance clllrn -looiM, C143e7.0111, ori14-ZH-tltt.

Portllble S.W Milt.
Don'f HilA Yow ~ To Mill,
Wo'K . _ fo youl 30H7S.
tN7.
·
·
H1111 owoy ony t.. oh, bruoh, I
?1 rps

unw~ncecr

Aauont~me

lln'IS.

rotoo. Noaolllblo. Coli anytime
114..2. . . .21.

•

1-.

Real Estate

31 Homes for Site
2..:J!Ir, on 112 oc,.lcl, chy
echOQ4a. eu 111 4447.
.
I or 4 blclroom, r.r~~n, •nd
IIUndry
· 11444&amp; 4134 room
or 114 I4414G4.
home, full flnilhecl
bMelnant, Hannan Tract School
Dlotrlct. Prload In 40'1. •14-2811172.
B~ck Hollll, 3br, 1 liZ bltho,
goo hoot, control olr,
.........3.010.
3br,

OW..

ooch. AI Aplllloncoo hn o so dly' guoronloo. Dolbott
Ulod Apollonooo, Corner of and
Perch II. K11111up, 114-4417473.

&amp;w-·•

Falnl Pluo now hoo
T.ck. 304-175-4014.

Whfto robbM fur coot. r,.othlr
aGol wnrn•. 3. lonnolo worn
oncollko now. 304-17fi.204S.

=·==~~~=~:::-::;
'Good mlxod ltly'IDr Nfo. • 1.21
,... boll. 114-112·370t.

55

Building
SupplieS

Benchcr•ft .aofll and kwe Hit, 3
yro old, $240. 304-47HttZ.

Block, brick, Dlpaa, win·
- · llntolo, ate. Cl1udo Winloro, Rr, Grandi, OH Coli 114241-4121.

County Appllonoo

lne. Good
. - oppllon-, T.'v. ooto. o1 o.m. to I p.m. - .-811. 614- UTILITY BLDG. SPECIAL: 27131'
441-tlttoH 127 3rd. A'!e. Gof. wMh tlllll' gorooo door I - ·
.
.
vtce daor.·.14... •ected. IRON ·
2 bid oam apt8. far r1nt. C.r· llpo+ia,
ltw•• tr••
Dllod.. Nloa ooHI!!_g, llundrY GOOO USED APP~IANCES HORSE 1'·001
" · '
-· -·
locllftlto ovolllblo; &lt;.i01llt4-tt2·
drylhl, ,.lrliltJrllor~, 56
Pets for Sate
3711 EOH. c
'

w........
,.._. . -

-·

.

looalo pupa 180. -h. 304-4752075'.

lor 811• 11v - · 2

- - ... -,.3br.2bllho,

.aFIED
fllTII ill

CAl WASH

Sl01f1 2nd St., Middlfl!llrl

For Appt. Call

'II

992-6717

1m Lincoln

tJ) lntwtlllnmewt Tonight

2..

•=

!G) (2:00)

~

ttl, JIIO.

. ;:;.c

S•turdey 9 a.m. to 12 noon

FOR INFOIMAnON CAU 992-3194

My... rlla Father Dowltng:s
brother II1J)IIcatea him In 1
murder. 1;1._ ·
1111
GJ) 411 Houri CBS
NIWI axpioles the sad and
baffling WOflc:l of Alzheimer's

;.., 1n1nt - · fat Ford Flollo, •
Hkl now, ton, 304'171-841.1 oltor '
5:00PM.

DIMIN.C

e

1-'---------79 · Campers &amp;

aftotlp.lll.

iiJ ~nllr. lllle Wroll

. (1:30)

"'

HJIIle
Improvements

t:OO • (]) 01 ~ Sam faces

IASI!IIIN'T

an llthiCII mat11r In teHtng

u.-.lltlor\ll 1111111111 !lUItil. L008I ......... CII fumlifled.
F,.. Oldmlllll. Coli COIIoct 1·
' 114~37-0411, dly or night .

· 2Cll Ca-=
....111111
(])
Marcua ••u

"

a: Licensed Clinical AudioiOiiSt
:i :417
(614) 446·7&amp;19 (614) 992-2104
S.:ond Avenue, b 1213
Gallipolrs,-Ohio 45631 '

1

- · ·· . . .

5TAY FOR ONE:...

F=;::=jl :)

"

or' at

.~

·

Veterans Memorial Hospital

~====:;:!

J

'

BARNEY

•

1 GqT SQMf BAD NEWS
AN' SOME •DDD NEWS
TOOAY,' ELVINEY ·

Electrical &amp;
Retrtgerjdion

MY MAN SNUFFY
WAS JUDGED GUlLty
AT TH~ COUNTY
· COURTHOUSE

'

.

8NiilllwlllaNow'
t:30 e CJl OII.Me Night Willi
David Lenerman: lth
~ JolnlnQ Devid
Letterman wll be P'1ul
Sheffer lnd 1M Lata Night
band u well •• ~
guem Tom Petty IIF1d the
Heer1bfelkers. A live edition
ol Stupid Pit Tricl&lt;l lnd
comedy guests will eltio be
laatured.

t:;1

I:;II(J) NIIA lufl1111811
10:00 (J) 700 Club Willi Pit
"'lllt11Gft

~

,e::::.•lllfil

(!) L11trt...,.

•

PRINT NUMBUED LHIEIS
IN THESE S()UARES

•

GET

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
ANSWER
•

a8ncl~~~~~~~~~LI--nt
1(•1
-return• .. """

'''\

eiDllllw

.iiJ IV8111ng New&amp;

. ·-~..

27E~~r

i '""

.

...,., . . --"' I ~

-

tKQH

•••

I' t7S
WEST

.

EAST
tQI
9KQH
+H3
+tot 7S

SOUTH
tKJIOI3
9A 73

tAQ3%

Vulnerable: Neither

-

Dealer: Wesi
W..t
Puo

Pus

I•
4•

Nord!
Paa

st

AII-

Openinslead: +6

L..------"-----...1
hand wlllt stronc cards in the ~jor. .
Why not try it yourself? lncideatally,
if your partner is rabid about never .
open!Jtc a four-card major suit, don't ·
lOok for arcumeail wben you violate
1t1s rule. Just tell bim tlutt you were
tired •nd bad a diamond mised up .
with·your bearts.

.-

. ":
Yeaterdey'a~nawer

17 Pindaric, 29 Romney's
e.g.
cry
20 Come In 31 Go far
seoond
afield
23 Boundary 32 Join forces
24 Cable
36 Raw·
25 "Born
boned
Yesterday• 37 Allard ·
star
31 - Marie
26 Finished
Saint
27 Ship's
41 Needle·
steadier
lish

r.-~~~~-

40 HH It off
42 Ruaslan·

·

river
43 "Bonfour

.'

rrtetesse•

authOr

I

.2/1 .

~YPI'fll

.•

AXY.DLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

Clommlio'r • I
·~-rill
'-1;als~4, ......,., 11~ ";'

.

'

BERNICE

1

One letter stands for anather. In thla umple A is used
for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. sl..le letten,
IPC"'ii aphll, the a..th Mel flll'lllltlon af the WOI da are all
hinll. 1!:8ch day the code lelten are different.
·

BEDEOS~l.

.

cauiOQUOIE
I· I

~==
Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

QEZ

OPFIIS J LOCAIIOIIS fO ISDYI YOII-

POMEIIOY. OHIO: lit. 7'• I .R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: At. 110 • S.R. 1 U
H~ON. WV.: Rt. 31 Adj. loll&lt;*oEqulpmont
NEWHOUM:
POMEROY: 8 a .m.· 7 p.m . 7 Dlyo
ALBANY: 10 o.m..ll p.m. I Ooyo. CIOOid
HENDERSON: 10o.m.·6p.m.1Doye.~oadl_l~u'n··

..,.

'

.

·' f

'

51 FMft Equipment

PAYINO AS OF TODAY, JAN. 30,
· # 1 Copper 70C per lb.;

1-0ioor~...........

Cion Dry Aluminum C•n•. 3ec per lb.

-

······to-...

"Orson Welles, right?"

••

'

.. ..

....... . . - ..... 2

::::r.;nr.~arnone.

WE BUY AI.L NON FEIIIIOUIIICIIAP. IATTIIIIH.
ITAIITIIII.
lTC.•

211ft. ..... -

-

good "'l'f.lt-.otiZf.

-··~--

LEZK.J

QEZXHDKO,

--·

fl'lftor,
1

•

\'

..

. StrlllQer~

z-

lion .• ...,......

:.:a,:-

•tou

35 Building
Wing
31•-Lovea

DAILY

- " "· 1
•orRicMnour

1-1·11

(1160-81)

111Newa
I•

Notml
tAI4Z

· creature .
30 Warts end
. 31 Oregon.ctty
33 Groom's
phrase
34Chess
champion

~~

1.

..

L

28 Aperture
21Ceve

u•::

8ncl ......

I'• r1'r1·rr1
I 1111111

15 Greedy one (poet.)
111 Michael,
5 Type
to Klrll
of
1~ French
strength
season
8 French
11 Omit a
·river
syllable ·
7 Allan
21 Crib
' river .
· 22 BUtHight
8 Cupid's
cheer
' conon
23 Unspoken 11 Little
24 Fletch · ; 14 Baste
portrayer
precept

Live 1;1

'•

••

,-Mulberry Hats. Pomeror.

\

lon 'A

. Tlltn!IIY Nltlht l'lghte

I'

, .'
'

huablnd FI!Uma. wllhing to

Mxualabuii.CI
Ql.ln'rfllniLlftf
'IIJ ~ PnHIIII:

'

,
·'

e (f) YGtf118 llldwi ·Emma·•

suicide attampt by a tMnage
girl rl'18811 I hfaiOrY Of

r• .

Of

1

z

ISA FReE:
OVER NISHI

'

' ;cc;;·i...ct

AT:THcetT 1
SCAA"'t:H .M01'5L..
INYUBAO'TY,
; W'YOMI\o.l&amp;. .

'YOUR PRIZE

p1Hoo;plok,., ond dollvoty. 1144
-4Ua4.

- · $4,100.1A-17Wtll.
-., 111w1,......, 1111.
1117 Cl1ryoiOr La · - Coupo.
~ low mllaogo, 1 ........ II_,. Etoot
I Conotrucl

114·7G-liGU.

..

Pol..ng, lraorlor ond extlllor,
' " " - - · 304-1'18-2111.
Aon'l Chlm1107 - p u
Plll1onoo -nlng and rollnlng: • ·
Wo kOIP tho hOmo firM bur·
~: net r - homo. 304-Tn- _,

orlrtng,
I' : 1n1 now
"

~ L.ISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Poir01 lor Mtp In duttng_wlth
.......... lgllnllt hll 1011. r:;;J

' .1

:,::,~r..:::.r::= ~
. Dependable Hearina Aid Salas &amp; Sen1ict
Hearina Evaluations For All Aces

-·rt

RebeCCa of Robln'e lnlklellty.

••• • nent

IIJtch.

*'

' ;u:i'c-

WATERPROOFING

84

.

VIdeO
(!) Wild Amlricl Marty
Stouller admires graceful
egMtty f America 'a tree

...

:-----:-~-­

by filling in the milling words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

ACROSS
44 Writer
1 Sebastian - Bradbury
or Susan 4S Tendency ·
SWire
DOWN
.measura
1 Johnny
I Wide open
or June
10 Drooping
2 Exchange
12 Seduclive
premium
belle
3 Canal
13 Melal
bOal
faStener
· 4 Unclose

.

babyehs Edell while Janice
Wayne In a hoWl

Cllari.ik Prev141W8

Services

_

.

tlio chuckle quoted

tty tHOMAS JOSEflH

1:30. (J) 1111 Grind DeltnOnd

,_...a

..

CROSSWORD .,.

.

• Cllurohl1rMI .......
1:05 Cll MOYIE: The Klllghl

tt73 Country lqulnl compot,
304-4'18-7113.
'
1177 GIIC IIIOI:or tn.ne, 22 ft, iJ
olr, cnlloo, ale. 41,000 mlloo,
rood INdy, $7,500. or tlko 4 WO
lour - - partlol tro•, 304- •
. . 1001• . . . .7~-aM~.
.•

crulao, A•lfl•

·

MIWIE: The

&amp;"Mowwe

.... .
.litQ....Complll&lt;l

a common question when new pari·
nen sit clowll to dilcUII their system.
TM question ol course refen to the
metbod of biddinll in which an openln1
bid in a major suit shows at least five
cards in the suit. In fact, in today's
deal, East-West were playillll just sudt
a melltod, so lite biddln&amp; proceeded as
lltown. Do you need to know the result
in four spades after Ute openin1 lead
of the lis of clubs? It's no surprile tlutl
Soullt made 12 tricks. And what would
bappen witb a beart lead? Four spades
would be let one trick.
Peter Kichline in ' BridliRII the
Gap' makes lite point that even tbwbo play five-card majors llltould open
the biddlns witb tbe l!:ut cards with
oae beart - a practical bid, unlikely
to result in disaster. Today moat espert partnerlilipe tlutt sutrecrlbe to
five-card majors will 11111 open witb a
.four-card major IUit in third or fourth
position whea they hold a lll,lnimum

0 PallnaN•••

Motor Homes

81

(D)

.r-•tor (AI (2:00)

*'"'""· '

1. . 810 IIIEW, 114 Ulll41

12·14·•9· 1 mo.

='fl.....

e

• - 21 ......, 12200 or Heating
-.lt4-4*1143oltot Sp.m. 1--::::::::::"::
' ~~~1114 Pllntloc~OOO __,
eo~•·• Plymblng
....ondHootlng
~ ....10.
·
F-ond Plno '
1114 T-po, 4 -·tiM . - .
GoUipollo, Ohio
cru1oo 001'111111, »UUIPG. 114- 114-441-:1881
11112-IITZ.

HUUAS: Mon. · Fri. 12:00 to 6 p.m .

0141

(f) ........ Do•il1•

•

roniY. 30 mlloo pot Olllon &amp; up,
ollllw poy off, 114141 2301 a~ s.,tlc Tonk P-ng 110
....~1111
tor 3p.m.
Co. RON EVANS ENTEA.,.SES.
' tll4 Plymouth Rollont Stotlon ~. OH t - . a7'152e.
Wagon. ~utcmotlc, PS~.P~, 82 'Plumbing &amp;
olr, tilt

=

'L..

caae end fr111Tl41 door1 lind
wlndowl. t:;l

.,_, • ownor, ' " • ~"• lllltHl~~llllll~.,--..,.,-_:'___
-~~. - d o o r locka, I:
. . . ., lnl.nrt~, Alti/FM c....ne, DaYle
S.W·Vac
Strvtce,
~.:· crulto, _, lilndow Q voo c..or. Ad. p 1 ~ 1 • ,..,..
-

.,_Thea

.cotta tiling begin~ . Others

I ;2414.;:;::::--;::-=:;:"=:-::=- ~ .

ot, Volour lntlllor, 11
on tr-blo ..,.

01 Coebr

Huailtbln.

'

-r

(J)

• end Elvin .,. thrilled when
RIIW J8Ckl0n vleta the

orl14-117-.
LlliiO Knock Woothor Guont

- · low mllgo, :104-115-l'ttl. !lollrY or cable tOOl
1114 CutfM C.. - I 11,100 willa Complllod Mml :.
.._ ·nd
P8 ~. " - . . . ond OotVIci,

for Slle

•

Ex- ·

3,'·

tin Font EXP, I . - . -

32 Mobile Homea

GJ) Crololtre

91 Nlgltl Couft

I IDol Font TIUCk bod. Ffto lull
aiU ff.at. -tonkl.
lhlpo. $110. 0110. 114-tll :MZZ

uuclo tool box, 304-41'5-DIIZ.

;iQ

7:31(J)IIlnfonl And 8on
1:00 (J) MOYIE: Coug1r Coun~ r

Aon'l TV Sorvloo. opocfollzlng
In Zonlh oloo oorvlclng moa1
1•2 Oktl: cut .... Supreme. attwr bnlnda. ttou. 011r., 1-.o
!luna &amp; ~=,;;d. Excollont. - - -fro. wv
$2100. It
1.
:lll&lt;f.I'II-Htl Ohio 114-441-

s b•~.

181A''~IGP:

fVI'U$fU/VI
'$NAGfc IAfl.

.

9861
+tOt142
tKJ6
'Do you play five-card majors?' is

.e (f) M111111'a Fllllllly

Acceaorlel

v...m... 4· doOr ,.,.._. · .

*"'" .-.

1 112
liotho, gu lumoco, control olr,
dock,.
_ ,b•·-~,.
. condmonl , 01-·
_ to
.,rlll14-lf2.3727 oltori:OO.

992-2 56

1· 16- ' 90-1 mo.

~,t7Z~~,=7-ft~.-s=t~
.-...
-ft~~~~ull :

I
oodon llkl now, oH oqul_.- WMorpftiOIIng.
'
on
t~fZitl.
fine lt
llllnt.......,.: Z ~
mlloo.
1. Low Mao hold
llocflng, . . . .,..,.,, oldl...
1171 Yol""- Aobblt, air
- ' · ·114-37......:u,
_,.~!!..odd11lclobi.
cond, 1700, 11~7·7113.
..llftlltN.
for "•

1tl0 Font Groniodo. Auno good.
1400. Con - 11 71 CUotor II.;
lllddlaport.
1110 Old&lt;l CUtlu LS. 4 door,
1110. t2ot l•ndhlll Rood, Point
PI-nt, WV.
1110 ' Old&lt;l Dono ·11. 4 d oodon. Lookl rul'oo.
font. VI. ltii0.1t4-11112.e7tl.

---------~---------1 II.
1 mlllooudl
of A o541t.
Granda on
Ill. 321.11+245
CHUCK'~

71 Autoa for sate

•

= : . -. 114 ~41 4134, 114-

ORAIIP OPEIIIIIO

Tro ns port at 10 n

--:::""::",-',.:lp.,..m-=.===-

3 hdroom, llrgo lomiiJ room, 2

1110ry,

Hoy For Solo: Slorod In blm
Coildltlonod. Clour ond TimothY
IOOibo. - · et4-a45-!tt7
"""""" ilnlloblo.
'"
Hoy ""ull. Squoro blloo. 11411112.a133 or 114'1112·7712.
AOWICI Bolto of Hoy, St0/1111,
will-. 114 1!1 1030.
.

Allllricon Eokl- . Spftz Pup.
2br, both ,!.IZ 11 Cou~ Stroot, Good uaodwuhoro 'l dryorO. Hoo hod all oholo, wormed, 1t75 ~ Do~. 221 VI · 4
$t00.114-38NIIO.
\
dOortG,workcor. $1000BO.
ldtqhan .,..... 6 re!!lg. Cor· QuarantNd~ 114-387-0234.
4
IMlted. ~o. Plua D'f.aa.n, King Sf• Wolorllod, wipoddod AKC Reg. B..... Pupo, Will [ .1::1=:
':-:::,
·
Utllllle., ,.,, ~ pet.,· ...........
moko
oxc.
gun
dogl,lor
noxt
It'll
Chevy. $180.114-tiZ·nlfl.
rolla I mlrrorod holdboanl,
$200. 114-441-1428.
~.,~: :l't:ia~:O~·
tt77 Font Ltd. 4dr, $2711; 1143 room apt, adub ontv, no petl,
445-2045.
prolar - r middle ilgod por·
AKC Smon -ronlon, IZ Wkl
-., 304-175-4023.
old. Hu hod OOIJI!I-1, 1110. tt78 Olda Doftoll351, PI, PB,
lt4-37f.ZZ47/ II connat rMCh 1uto t111na, AC, good i:Ond, 304num•.!i ~lllM otl14'1 tum On 411-11104.
()lgo .... I Trolllr - n over
hll, behind bluo &amp; whfto trolllr, tt71 Ford Ltd. Good lhlpo.
.0:11::010:'.-C:CI;::I:.:I:::.I.:_,4::'44=.1~.::;431~.~...,.....,..
ThotroloriO a.-.&amp; whfto.

-~--------'----------!cor prop, 2 liolhr- .,.

. one

milaage. The former owner

.

By Jame1 Jacoby

7:30eCJl , . . , ,euc~

Hay &amp; Grain

64

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

-01.

Business .Services -

YldeoCountly
7:01 f.l) Jetlenort8 .

s-... and

W.t.rbod far Solo: .100 Aond
StrMt, K~~~t~uga, $200. 114-441IZZZ.

A6illonooo,
111ono •~=--::7::'-:::-::-~~~
2br ~IMnt, all UlllhtM peld, u - 111- Ra. loaldo
c- - 1 . CIH 114-141·7311.
I m-h old malo, AKC 1'111·
In RIO Grande, ~1C ~ II~.

- l-..
l&gt;
r2
. - rlity...,.
..........
ro or
flmolo

•

78 . Auto Pane &amp;

m':.f.if.""'

Auto Woohor'o.L . IIJ.L.EIOclrlc
Dlyot'l, 165; ..... urylr llkl
new, MS; EIKtrtc Aangt'l tea;
0.
Aansa-'a,
NO;

1

75 Boats 6 Motors
for Sale

3224.

low-··

noo.•

.

.

Learning
to be flexible

0 Mlellll Ylca

2i
ft.. ~- . - · 65 hp
nta!~ axe corid, no t1'8ller, ·.
$1, ..... 304-475-14tl.

Z4 ou ft. ·Konmora upright
$110. Zonfth · - - FI-IDr - · 114-112-4244. Ono ldoo oorn
AM-FII, I l,..k
FIOhor Grondmow, air flghl, ... ccnd, -3Cf4.171-411St
. plcllor,
·-player, •rtc=$71. IMM 1 ....an, wlfN 1 Nn,
lolh ... ccnd, 3Cf4.l
•.
It ,ooo rww, wiH 1111 "" 1110, 83
Llveatock
:;;~~~~::-;..~::::--:::
50 COrpll Old, labor, 114-245-5204.
112r, - k uo .,... lor quoiMy 1 Kin a CooI •~•OVI, · Grain
lad tOO. lo 120'-odJ
fat
g .
lloughtor,
llo," $15.
Mollohon At.7N.It4cond, JIZI. llf. -h, Kon'FJY304o7n-lllll.
445·7444.

1, 2, Dr Sbr, •pl.
PI'
mo. All IIIIIHIM paid, DopOon
roqulrod. Contact Loflyono
~~ 114-441-7733, 114-441-

.

BRIDGE

111 Abbol And Cot1tll0.

- · 121 HP, Evlnrudo Englno, •
••· new uphollterr.
King I ft. pickup doc. com••
C1Ult4--13tloftot 7:00p.m. :
114-10.

u,. • .,.

.w-'o,

e

.o;ner.£

I 11¥1ng , _ oulto fat
AlOe ......... ., ..... - - . 3 0 1 0 - . .- . _ , Wl.lolln liM.. s
3et4.
..-·.
battOm plow, 2 ,_. aorn pMnt•,
Alwoyo tho ,.._,ptlon tionoport dlac zoo .
prfoaio. 11. K·Mirt'o Phormocy, -yor,Wiellli,bccm,
.
aoll today lor pMI que41. 114OWner WIH - · · 114-211441.a31e.
1522

"""""·
............
hoodboanto motel
ISO ond up
1o 111.
·10
U CliO wfth ,.,_
........, crodft. 3 mi. outllulovlllo
Ad. Opon t A.M. to I P.M. - ·
lhN let. C.ll &amp;14 411 1 !2.

$10i

..

rte•altD•
e al 01 WIIMI 01 ·
Court Q
tiJ llaJ•tlll•

.r..

• .... hd lro- 125.
a.-.
SID lSI &amp; kllJII '"'"'"
tao. Good ooloctlon of bild100111

rRitrl~or'l,
St~

Used car dealer to prospactlve .

iPa

-

Apartment
for Rent .

MIIIJIIIIM

I

SCIAM Lm ANSWIIS
t-31
Keenly - l..ilac - \obuch - WNpon -PAY lhe CHECK
The after dinner speaker had talked lor qurte awhile
when somaonil muttered, "The best. way he could end
ht.s speech is lo say ha will ~'~';;:~.:-::;the::...::C;:.:H:IEC.:;K:.:;·~·- - - - . . . . ,

(I)CGIIgllaketb811
.
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Pomaoy-Midclaporto Ohio

12-The Dilly Saltine!

Drugs reduce hip fracture risk
BOSTON (UPI) -

A drug

llDIIIJIIOIIJy UMd to control high

blood Pl'e$slll'e apparently has
the unlDtended sldee effect of
reducing the risk of hlp fractures
ln. Older people, It was reported
Wednesday.
~archers who studied 9,518
people age 65 and older In New
Haven, Conn., rural Iowa and
Boston found 1hose who took a
diuretic drug known as thiazide
suffered one-third !ewer broken
hips than a comparable group
that did not.
·
Andrea LaCroix, an epldemlol·
oglst who led a team of lnvestlga·
tors In Seattle, Wash., said
thiazide helps .prevent bone loss
In elderly people because It
reduces the amount of calcium
they lose In urine.
• Thicker bones · means !ewer
fractures, said LaCroix, whose
work appeared in The New
England Journal of Medicine.
She conducts research at the
Group Health Cooperative of
Puget Sound and the University
. of Washington.
.LaCroix said up to30percentof
the study group took thiazide
sometil)le during the slx·year
peri&lt;X) · that Investigators fol·
lowed them. The average age of
the participants was 74. Seventy·
one percent of the thiazide users
were women but only 57 percent
of the non·users were women.
Although several past studies
have established a link between
thiazide use and bone·loss prev.
entlon. LaCroix said this was the
first Investigation that took Into
account such variables as the
sex ; bone mass and relative
mobllltv of the users.
Because their bones thin with
age, elderly people are espe·
cially prone to breaking their
hips . Estimates are that one
older woman In 20 will suffer a
hip fracture.
LaCroix said that 217,000 peo·
pie age 65 and older were
hospitalized In the United States
for fractured hips In 1987.
If the same percentage of the
elderly in the general U.S.
population use thiazide as those
In the Seat tie study. LaCroix said ·
the drug.concelva bly reduces the
potential hip fracture rate
among older . people by nearly
one·tenth nationwide.

Stray dogs
check. into
l.J:Jara 'hotel'
BEUING IUPI) - The TliJe.
tan capital of Lhasa has built a
special "dog hotel" to house 400
of the city's 10,000 stray hounds,
which because of religious rea·
sons cannot be kUled, . the China
Dally reported Wednesday.
. ·The newspaper said the "dog
hotel," or kennel, cost the city
$12.766 and the administration is
working on other ways to deal
with the growing stray dog
problem.
. The report said there were
about 50,000 dogs In the clty of
100.000 residents- some kept as
watchdogs or pets and others for
religious reasons. The dog Is
revered because Tibetans believe It has brought the peopl~
their favorite food, highland
barley. from Buddha.
The "dog botel" was buill as a ·
method of de&lt;~llng with homeless
canines while respecting local
religious beliefs. which do not
allow destroying strays as other
cities do, the China qally saiil.
"Dogs create problems, "• the
newspaper saUl. "Public lawns
became dogs• · playgrounds.
. Dogs' droppings can be seen
everywhere, while peOple go
bathing In the Lhasll River with
their dogs In summer and bring
dogs on buses a.nd other public
places. Dogs bark at night and tle
up traffic In the daytime.
"The clly's 10,000 homeless
dogs are more than a nuisance.
Sometimes they are a danger.

However, she emphasized that
"this study alone Is not good
enough evidence" that doctors,

when choosing amona blood
pressure drugs •. should choose
thiazide for Its role · preventing

inte,..t in 'the Villoge rNI •·
tllte. h.,eby ebMdon any In·
• tareat the VIHoge of Po!ll·
aray may h8Ya heel in noel •·
tate, whether rlght·of.way,

---Of'"

In lot•-t
', of 41111, inluding
the un·
, numbel'lld lot 37 - · mora
' a.t11oln width. lot 111112, lot
' W113. and • lot - t of lot
W113 being
by '
the Maiga County lowd of
County Commloolo-• an .
behalf of Melga Cou!d'f .,~
the ....,_..,. United Metho·

po_...,

• clatChutah.
:
If the lhiiJO County Cam·
mte....,. re11 to buy the El·
borfald IIIIPI If wltllin 80
dayl.,. ...... prop orty wll
Mall to the lllltoge
.,., thle ........wll be
........ Wild.
'
f'UUDI ..... 11. 11110
AI liST: .lANE WALTON.
Cterlc·T,....
A......OYID:
''

RlaUrd '-Yier, May~

•

Lany Wellrung,

,.,.!dent of Council

• Ill 1, I. lhc

can produce aide effects such !ll
calcium loss and uric acid
formation.
LaCroix also strealled that
thiazide should not be used by
people wltbout hilb blood pres·
sure "'erely becau~e ot lU

'.

Ohio Lottery ·

Ohio State

apparent effeet 011 bone ' - ·
Sbe aald the bat way for tbe
elderly to keep bonetbbullnatoa
mlnlmum II probably exerclle,
In addition to. eattnc a . well·
balanced diet and retralnlDI
from lllloklnl.

losing

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Pick 3

etreak

685

Pick4

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8527

t

Lo.w toallht near to. c•uce
or rata 110 percent. lOp Ia mid
SO.. Chaace of rain 80 percent.

Page 4 .

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2 Sectlono, 18 Pagn 21 CenU
A Muh~dia Inc. Now.-

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·Syracuse Council QKsl .
1

BJ KATIE CROW
•
'tery, $19ti. · Grand toial or all
!lelltlnel Conwpol!deat
appropriations, $152,289.
Syracuse " VIllage ' Council
Council discussed the financial
.Thlll'lday nlgbt appi'()Ved the . situatiOn of the village at great
annual appropriations ordinance length. Earner council had dis·
tor 1990 Ia the·amount ot $152,289. cussed and had tentatively
THe ordinance was given tile agreedtoasktheBoardofPubllc
three neceuary readlnas unde~ Affairs for $150 a month to help
emergency meuure. .
· cover monthly expenses since
· A brea'kdown of the annual they hav~ an offiC:e In the
appropriations' are· as foUows: • municipal buUdtna a'nd the vii·
general fund, $32;000; · streei !age has been paying· all ex·
co~tructlon maintenance'· and )ienses wltlltheexcepUonol what
repair, $18,00o; h!ihway;$3,000;
the fl~ ·departmel)I;P,ays for Its
. park, $SOO; fire, $8,500; current share.
_! : ;
•
· expenses, $12,000; water, · At last nlgh,t's il:teellrjg two
. $62,610; swlmmlDg pool, $12,794;
members of the board of affairs,
guaranty ·meter $2,000; pool Gotdon .Winebrenner and Larry
• repair $89;· marina $70; ceme: Ebersbach met with council in ·

It's Fantastic February ••••
This. Annual Event WUl Save You
ThousandS
On Select New
.
.
D8monstrator Units.

Choose From Ford, . I,Jn~ln,
:Mercury And Jeep Eagle.

... . .

Burt7ln

to the request. Water conditions as best they can for
board members offered $100 a
the benefit of the residents.
m(lnth. A !llscusstontollowedand · In other business Mayor Eber
$125 a month was offered.
Pickens stated that repair Is
A motion to accept the $125 a
needed on SR 124 In upper
month was. made with Kathryn ,Syracuse. It was also noted by
Crow and T. Tyson Drummer- -·· -crowthatthesltuatlonlnfrontof
voting no and Jim Hill, Kenny
the Syracuse Elementary School
Buckley, Minter Fryar and Jlrn
was In need of Immediate atten·
Pape votlng yes.
IIQn. Mayor Pickens stated that il
Council wlll now accept the
the culvert at the Intersection of
$125. Both Crow and Drummer Church andSeventhStreetswas
felt that the water board could lowered It would eliminate the
well ·atlord the . addltlonlll S25.
water problem In lront of the
Crow. pointed out that all elej:ted school to a degree. Work In front
otllclals should work tottejher to of the school is scheduled as the
accompllsh.,wllat 11. n~s~y to
next p;oject when Issue II money
operate the village since the·one becomes aval.lable.
goallnmlndshould.be!Olmprove ,
Mayor Pickens noted that

.

Ohio De~rtrnent of Transpor.'
tallon officials would not specu·
late this morning as to when
Route 124 at Porperoy might be
recipened The road was closed to
traffic ar~und 3 a.m.
·
Friday after a Meigs County
Sheriffs Deputy discovered that
a section of Route 124 near the
While House Bar on Pomero 's
East Maln .'S treet had caved· I~.
Ohio Power Company Colum·
bi a Gas, ·GTE N orth• omeroy

.

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1980 TBUNDERBIRU

:!~!~~~1 ~~.n:-r!~:~~~

scene early to · remedy the
sitU.tion as best as possible
Sagging telephone and eleetrtc
lines were 8 concern, as wel,l.as
an .exposed gas nne rupning
'parallel to the roild, reported
Pome~o)i • Foll,ce Chief Jerry
Rought
·
' · .,
·
An ODOT employee at the site
reported that the cave-In ex·
tended for about five feet from
the edge of the pavement. Wet
weather Is believed to have
caused this morning's cave·ln,
although OOOT has been ·aware
for some time that problems
existed under the road.
'
A deep hole developed In the
hill beside the road about a year

STOCK NO,. 201

STOCK NO. 201

MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED RETAil: PRICE.....'12,29r

MMUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED RETAJL PRJCE.._'17.914011

.SYP FORD DISCOIJNT......................................................: ....'1,f'IJJflf' .

SYP FORD DISCOIJNT...........~.........."'!............................_

'1 ,fiJP

....

TURNPIKE DISCOlllT................................................................'931 11

- ~............................................~................v..l'IJRIFIKE
£UI:.~-

.
'
FACTORY REBATE
..............................................

FACTORY REBATE............~ ...............................11,0QODO

9,

'

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YOVRP.BJC.I

13.,.*
'

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8
'fOUR PRICE

.

"

. "TAX. T1Tl£ AND FEES EXCWDED

'

"TAX, mu AND FED EXCuioED
.

CU)SJ:f;'"'r' ·tr.fnc going to and from·
j!oJIIfJ "AIICi'i'nlfe 'iilte~lectllln of Route 124 and u .' ·.
•ROAD

'

s. 33 at Nye Ave. In Pomeroy II belnc rerouted.
Tile road was cloeed before dawa thlll momlnr
when a cave-In near t)1e White House DIU' waa
•

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. ., .

-

dlsi:overed. The Qhlo Department of TJ:aaapi,ra·
lion, utility crews and Pomeroy Street.and PoliCe
Departrn~nt!i were on the scene ear~. A lai'Je tree
rei! clown with the c~ve·ln and utUity lines bepn to
88,1· .
'
' "~

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Qpl
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U&amp; '

·

PREIOER...;...............STOCIU 117
1990 SUMMJ.T...·.......:..........s~ t lH
1989 PROBE.........;............STOCKt 9830
1990 ESCORT
1 228
.

.. ....... ; ...........S:WCK

1989 IIUSTANQ...............IITOCK. 98tS

1989 MU8TANG.,...... ...... STOCK t 988;5
1990,:I'EMP0t....... ,...............
1 ITOCitt201
1990TEMPQ....... ~..... t""'""STOCKt219
1990
.. J.....~ .........STOCK t 202

· ··
· ':
'
By ALISON GRANT ·
United Preu lllterwlo..I
An outbreak ·of Influenza has
fanned across Ohio, prompting
the state Wednesday to ran~.the
flu activity as "widespread.
Ohio joins 18 other states listed
by the Centers tor. Disease •
Control In Atlanta as having
epidemic proportions of tb,e dis·
easecharacter;:lzedliyhlghfever,
muscle aches and respiratory
. aliments.

1990 lduftDERBJRD.......STOCKU82
1980 '1'111JN1)ERBJRD.......sTOCK t ._j
.1980 COUGAR. ...................STOCK t 282
1990 COUGAR.....................STOCKt 3H

1990 • 'TD '
.1#

•••••••••••••••••••••••• ,......

1990
t
1990 RANGER 4~~ ............8'f0Qt t 148 ·
1989 RANGER 4 4 .........STOCK t 8881
1990 RANGER 4X4...........aTOCK t 210
STOCK t SOl 1990 1'·150.4X4........:.......810Cit t M8

1990 1'-150 4X4.................I!iTOcK. Sll

u .................

1990 GRAND IIARQIDS..IITOCK t 357 1990J'·USO 4
s:rocz:t 208
1989 TAURUS.SHO...........STOCKt9702 1989 AEROSTAR. ............BTOCK t 8306.
1990TAURUS......................ITOCitt381 1989AEROSTAR..............81'0CKt9811
1989 SAID.E......................S'I'OCK t 8317
AER08TAR. ..........:...IITOCK t 3511
1989 BABI.E••......•...••••••....I'lOCK. 93118

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NOW

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gist for the C!X:. J:iut the VIrus Is five· year average tor December
striking people ot all·age groups,
of 1,223 cases In Ohio.
with the vety young also espe, .'
However, the state has not yet
chilly susceptible.
·.
compUed figures for January,
"It's your 70·year·olds and
and Payton noted flu activity
your 3-year·olds with thecompll· usually peaks In · late January
cations," said Anita Richwine,
and early February.
spokeswomanforKetterlngMed·
Payton said outbreaks are
leal Center In Dayton. 'They're reported as "sporadic/' "regetting hll hardest."
,
.
glonal" .or "widespread," deThe predopt\nant virus strlk· ' pending on their severity. Ohio's
lng Ohio and other. states Is ranking was upgraded to wldes·
· Identified as the Type· A pre a&lt;! Wednesday because of a

· In ' Montgomery County, Ill! Shanghai vl~us. Symptoms In•
contributed to the death last elude headache, fever, nausea,
, week of an SO.year·old . county . cough,-aches and a sUI! neck.
resident, Jiealth Cqmmlssioner
Antibiotics don't help the nu,
Morton Nelson said.
Richwine said, and doctors liSii·
St. Clement elementary school · ally prescribe plenty of. fluids,
In Lakewood was forced to close rest and aspirin.
Tuesday after 50 ot the 350 pupils
Tony Payton, a health planning
missed classes Monday..
administrator for the Ohio peThe majority of the outbreaks partment of Health, said there
nallonwldti! are In nursing homes,, wi!re 1,314. reported flu c~ In
said Susan Gpod, a!' epldemlolo· December, slightly abo~ ,the
•

noUy ~lice chle!. It was noted
that Con119llY is attendl_n g c,laslfS
tor reclassification for ftrearms
use. All firearms used by the
'illaae must now be registered
With the State of Ohio, Pickens
stated. .
Meeting with council was Mal·
coim Parks of National qu and
Gas just to keepc~un~lllnformed
what . the company has lM!en
accomplishing.
,.
The pool committee will meet
Febr11ary 12, at 7 p.m. at the
municipal building. Attending
In a,ddltlon to those named were .
Gene Imboden of the lire di!Part·
men! and Janice Lawson, clerk·
treasure~:.

ag~ .. The area was Immediately move as fast as rlghls·ol·ways
barricaded and danger signs can be .p urchased and stale·
posted to warn pedestrians.
requirements can be satisfied.
That w~s among the first clues An example of a state req.ulrethat a problem was fast develOJ?' , men! IS ~ hazardous waste .
lng under the road. AcconUng tel assessment which Is !)eeded to
Paul Hoffman, operatiOns eng!· . verily that . no burled tanks lie
neer lor ODOT.s District 10 within the·11roposed corstrucllo~
O!flce. Marietta, the probleOl ar~;:a, Hoffman added.
,
s.te~s from the deterioration or
Just how Jong tl)e road wiU be
an old sandstone block culvert close~ and just wllat can be done
whl.c h runs beneath the ,road to, to_reo~Jet:lthe f&lt;!Ute to traffic are .
the Ohio River.
'·
unknown at this time.
Since then ODOT has been
"We can't give any posslblll·
developing pians to replace the ties of a time ira~e until we know
culvert and construe! a new road exa.ctly what we re up against.
to ,also eliminate .the . j!Xtreme Were doing all we can to assess
turn at the l!)tersection of Route the·damage and we'll be making
124 and U. S. 33 at Nye Ave. every effort to re~pen the road as
Repairs were rnade .to the old ~.oon as possl~le, Hoffman said.
culvert In anJ:!fortto hold It until
We_!~st don I know what It )"'ll .
it coql!l be fi!Placed and the n~ , ~&lt;!)(e.
,
.
road built, Hoffman said, but
. Meanwhile, traffic to and from
ap~rently the problem'beneath , areas above the cave·in Is being
the road progressed faster than rerouted to County Road 30
the solution to the problem.
(~orest Run Road) and over
Hoffman was leaving Marietta · County J{oad 403 (Minersville
·tor Pomeroy ' shorlly.,.!lefore 8 Hill) ,
·
.. ·
a.m. this morning. ODOT's
Although no alternative exists
· bridge engineer was already on but to reroute the traffic, county
the scene at Pomeroy.
off.l,c !als are coricerne~ that
Although Hoffman said that heavy traffic flow for an ex·
ODOT will be doing all it can-to tended period of lime might
expedite construction ofJhe new cause damage to tl!ese county ,
rclad; the state agency can only · roads .

p

UP TO 60 MONTHS
TO QUALIFIED
APPLICANTS

~
1,uuu--

Syracuse Fire Depariment now
has . a fire contract with Letart .•.
Township with Syracuse to re.
celve 35 percent of the revenue
derived from a Letart Township .
one mill levy lor fire protection.
The fire department plans to
add additional space to the
Municipal Building, nocosttothe
village, to accomodatl' the tire ·
department since they do not
haveenoughspacetoho.u sethl'ir
equipment. It 1\'ill cost between .
$22,000 and $25,000 to com)llete. ·
The addltlonal space will be 30by
40 feet amj ~II Include two bays .
accordlng ,to Plcken.s.
Council agre~ to purchase a
summer uniform lor Jim Con·

: Route 124 cl9sed·· by cave-in

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appropriations

reg~~d

This Offer -.pira. J'eiJ. 5, 1990!

GL

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. Vol.40, No. 187
COII'fritllted 1180 ' · •

Pub!ic Notice
RESOLUTION 1-111·90
BE IT RESOLVED, that
- · the m""'bero of tho
PorMroy Vill-ve Council,
duly authorized to convey

bone lou.
''We're simply saying lhls II
one thin&amp; to co~lder." sbe uld.
Thiazide generally "Is used
safely by the majority of people
wttb uncompUcated high blOod
pretillll'l!," said LaCroix, but It

steady Increase In cases during
the past two weeki, he said.
Across the 110untry, this sea·
son's epidemic II the worst since
the 1984'85 season, said Good. '
Th.e national dlse(lle center
declared an epidemic Friday
alter the number b! flu· and
pneumonia·related deaths 'ex.
ceeded the numller ·expected In
121 cities around the country. In
cities sui'Veyed by theCDC,,1,132
deaths IIi' one week thiB month
wpn·eeum
.re oanttatr.lbuted , to flu or

Rusher addresses
area news media
.. .
'

'

TheedltorlalstaffofTheDally journalists, media represent~~·
Sentinel wasamongthecrowdof uves. and. guests on the role of
· over 100 guests that attended media In society. He spoke
Thursday eventng's Media AP:
during a dinner In the James A.
preclatlon Day hosted 6y the . Rhodes Student Center.
University of Rio Grande's Of·
Those attending were treated
flee of Public Relallons.
•
to a world premlereofanorlglnal
Guest speaker .tor the e;vening
play, "Four Dead, Four Hurt .ln
was William· A. Rusher, pubTwo· Vehicle Crash," written by
· llsher of The Nallonal Review
Clifton Spires .Jr .. editor of the
and syndicated columnist.
'
Wellston Sentry. a twice-weekly
nawspaper in Jackson County.
, Rusher addressed the groupo! . The play focused on the ethics

and drama of journalism .
"The area media have been
very supportive of the University
of Rio Grande," explained Larry
Ewing, Blrector of University
Relatlo115. ''The Media Apprecla·
flon Qay Is our way of saying
thank you to the newspapers,
radio, and televlslop stations who
have l!elped us promote the
University's mission.' In the
region."

£
il
Pun
· s'xutawn
' . ey Phll. a-· 8 ·t o see
_
shado~; sp·nng
.·• . J•us·t'
und co'mer'
a
· ro

,"

PUN xs UTA WN E y, p a.
Prophets hOlds his own ·against
make Phil's job,. _q ltllcult this
(UP))_ Punxsutawney Phil, the the National weather Service,
year.
..
•
world's mostramous groundhog, except perhaps with torecasters
"I'm a scienllflc _person my.
emerged from his burrow Friday In the Pittsburgh office. The
self," ~aid .~orecaster Richard
and saw no shadow. According to weather service predicted rain
Leonardon. Every grollndh!ll I
legeild, that means spring Is and temperatures in the upper
know has been burrowed In since
near.
30s ·for Punxsutawney on Friday
about Nov. 20 and you probal!ly
It was the 103rd tl"'e that
and that, coupled with the TV
won't see ·em a gal~. until ~round
Punxsutawney Phil emerged lights and flashbulbs, could
mld·to-late
from his burrow In Jetter.an
County to predict the weather. U
n
.II
he'd seen his shadow, II would
Potential secondary illnesses have meant 'six more weeki of
from the nu Include pneumOnia, winter, according to true
•
bronc.bltls and encepllalltll, or bellevera . .
Heavy, damage waa Incurred to a veht&lt;;le drl~en by Joan
, tonammatton of the brain.
About 1,500 cheering ground,
Edwards, Middleport, when she struck a deer. as she. traveled
In' J&gt;.8,yton; ,Children's Medical hoi . falthfl!l braved a 11aht
north on State Route 7 Thursday evenlnc. In her report to the .
Ceab!r reported that most of Its drizzle, fog ind temperatures In
MeliJ County Sheriff's Departmen,. Mrs. Edwards said that .
, beds · In mkJ.January were full . the ~ for the annual dawn ·
the deer ran Into the path of her car and was killed.
'
with -children .llllfferiJII from nu. pr~aston to Gobblet's Knob,
I
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,
or rea!di'•tozy lllaeal. A.l Ketter! the erO\llldllog's den In Wf'!lltern
Inc f,fedlcal Center, doctors.ere Pennsylvania, ·to obller~ hll '
see!Pi at leaat a , half doll!ll prediction for the new IE!!llon. .
Unlta of l)le Melp ~unty Emergency Medtcal','S ervlceJ
paiJ~nll With ftu·lllt.e problemJ
Jim Means, pretident ot the
· responded tp l!lne calif on Thursday.
·
.
daiJY, Rlcbwl~ Ald.
PuDXJUtaWJiell Groundboi Club,
At 12 a.m. the. Pomeroy 11n1t was called to ~ce Street for
D!'. Rlcbard Weuel, Toledo- lees' the 1• memberl ot tbe Inner
Gary Sprooae wbo w!ll. taken toVe~rans Memorial Hospital ..
· Luclu County btaltb cvminlll· . Ctrele to PhD's lair, tapped hll
At 2: !!!I a.m. the Racine unit went to County Road 3J1 tor Kevin •
sloner, aald tbere~DONPOfll cane on tbedoorot ahollowed'OUt
Ducan wbo was transporte4 to Vl!tetana, an!l iater to Pl~asanr
of ,I nti-.' to bll apncy by tree •tiiiiiP ud _called PbU.
Valley Hospital.
.
.
m~.January. However, Toaedotorwl,rcl. GroundllOI haiiCIIer
· Tbl.fOmeroy U!lll, ·at •:02 a.m. was called to i\merlcare for
area ~ aaid tbere were Bud Dunkel mrleved the ~ent
Bertha RJabtbo- wbo wu W1:111 to Vetera~. ·
·
· ·., ,
.· PlefliY of . . of ,.Uenll .with ·'· for bll place on Qle slap•
8"aaNO IUI'l' ABOVND coaNE8 - ''08-.1 Lee." tiM
At .. ~ a.m. t1ae Rutlalt4 unit wu l)alled to Metaa Mine No. 31
a)'lilptllmllll~t lli!W''ad tile flu.
·~· majelty, PwtxJuta~
Saae'.l
on
Oer r.r.u•ln, alepa fr4111 Ida
for r-nl KoeDJa Jr. wbo wu takl!ll to VeterUa, ud at 4:52
IJJ addiUon tel Oblo. 1~111 PbUI" Metal aa1d, ilvt118 bla ute'belltmii!OIIIe
ct.elcfor
..........
....., before pndloda1
p.m. the UDI~ Willi to Main st. for Dul~ AclklDI,wh~ W!ll tall ell til
~ wtdelpread WI~ tradltlonal iiii!'Otuctlon. .U the
lllewealllerfer•e
..
DMiqweell.
•oo.-.JLee,"wllollu..._
Hollier Medical Cenlltp'. , '
,
,
.
,,
·are · Kftt11Cir)', -.cbuaetll, cbeeu cll4!11 doWII. at1:27 a.m., _,..fer 111e lallllllt&amp; ,....., till net lltllllllllllll•• uil t111a
The TupPerl Plains unit, at 6:38p.m. went to Mount Olive for
New
. Yclrk. MI.""IIU, W~IIIID, PbB thea '~llpeied" 1111 MCret
·
·
Continued on page 8
,:
·
Ml-!1, Miuo~¢, Nebra,ka, predlctloa · lfOUIIdhople. , · ~ wJtJa Pen!IIJiuall'l "Panxlidaw., 1'1111" 111M .....
,
·
south Dakota, Vtrtlnla.
.
Tlae kt
ot the Weather will be aa eartr apH81. (UPI)

Local ne.~s

bn·e~s .

Auto damaged 'by deer in mishap '

I

'

·Squads receive 9 Thursday.rolls

P'•••llllr
••
ae

'

•·

'

I.

.

)

~

..

-

'

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