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Page-D-8-Sunda'y Times-Sentinel

P~y-Middleport-Gallipolis,

January 15. 1989

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Two Gallians conclude their Tour of the Emerald Isle
By JIM DAILEY and JOHN Gaelic accent as Patrick, we
MCKEAN
think.
.
from Donegal, we proceeded
We had not planned to make a
south to Sllgo,and the area made big thing of the presentation; no
famous by the great Irish poet, adctress exchange, etc., and )"e
William Butler Keats; an' austere didn't. Now, wewlshwe had. But,
land of stark mountains, peat
he has our business card, and we
bogs, poor soil, and harsh ell· · hope \o hear from him- to know
mate.·That part of Ireland west
more about him. One thing, he
of the River Shannon is the
made our day.
ancient province of Connaught;
The rest of the trip seemed
the poorest part, to which were anti-climatic. The rocky barrendriven much of the native Irish ness of County Clare's Atlantic
alterthe murderous campaign of coast, culmlnatlng In the Cliffs of
Oliver Cromwell In 1649. When Moher; the monotony of unmeapenal laws were imposed on the sured miles o( stone fences; the
Irish after King William 's vic· majesty of the River Shannon;
tory In 1690, by which It was were registered In our memory
forbidden for the Irish natives to forever. The obvlou,.ly measured
vote or hold office, enter any marketing of Ireland through
profession, be educated, bear tourism was impresslye.
arms, enjoy .traditional music, or
Killarney, where we spent a
practice the Catho(lc faith, the night, was vibrating from the top
general Irish condition was ab- attractions of an Irish cultural
ject slavery.
week and bargain grabbers of
We hastened to Cong In Counry top-quality Irish goods.
Galway, stopping there to photoThe rural beauty and producgraph the village square, so tlvity of th.e land along the route
centra,! In the John Wayne movie, , to Kllkeenny was remlnls'cent of
."The Quiet Man," thence to the Shenandoah Valley. Herds of
Galway to find lodging at a fat .cattle and sheep, f·leids of
premium due to the Influx of golden grain, reduced to myth
tourists. Theclimaxoftheseason · the horrors of the Great Famine
was at hand, featuring music and or 1845-50.
arts festivals, races and not least
Our stay in Kilkenny was our
IR~H LAD - Patrick Walsh clutches a Jim Kelly football and
wears a University of Notre Dame ball cap he received from John
the "Rose of Tralee,' ' beauty last before returning to Dublin.
McKean (left) and Jim Dalley, ( not pictured) both of GaiUpolls, as
pageantln County Kerry to select Considering Its military history,
his ·mother, Sheila Walsh, looks on approvingly. McKean and
Ireland 's version of Miss Dublin is a well-preserved meDailey-toured Ireland In Augustl988 and took the Notre Dame ball
America.
dleval town devoted to its cultu·
·The contestants come from rat heritage. Among Its great
'
around the world, winners of · gifts is Kilkenny Castle, the
Irish reputation for hospttalitY'The Irish are a healthy, vigorregional pageants not only in ancestral home of the Butler
and geniality Is well-deserved.
ous, athletic people. They e11joy a
Britain and Ireland, but also family. The last occupal)t, th~
We were Impressed by the ropust free press, on the order of
centers olemlgratlon from Ire- Marquess of Ormonde, being
universally high stand11rd and th·e .,U.S .. before our press beland such as Australia. Canada, without an heir, gave the estate
cleanliness of towns and facili- . came timorous and
and of course, from the United to the city. A grand gesture,
ties. This Is not yet a television homogenized.
, States: Chicago, Dallas, and indeed.
.
culture - there are two Irish
We can not speak with any
Boston. Charm and modesty, as
Our efforts to obtain tickets to
Republic channels and lour BBC authority on tax matters, except
well as talent, weigh h~vily with the theater in Dublin were In
channels(available only by ca- the VAT(value added tax) 10
the judges. This year's winner Is val~~; Instead, we enjoyed an
ble) . Regular broadcast hours percent assessment we encoun!rom New Zealand.
evening hour at a pub near the
are 4 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. We don't tered with some· frequency, but
We found lodging at Gort late In Clarence Hotel, noted for its
remember seeing any sateliie refundable to tourists: This may
the day . We were rewarded by an traditional Irish music and
dishes.
be on the order of a common
evening of Interesting conversa- dance, retiring early enough to
There was a general air of European . custom of , heavily
tlon with some locals, one of contemplate our experiences.
prosperity, a surprisingly active taxing foods and services , not
whom was a civil engineer, home
To summarize our observareal estate market, available co nsidered neccessltiesl gasofrom Australia where he had lions and perceptions of today's
credit, and low unemployment line. cigarettes, restaurant
migrated to find work. This Ireland, we should first say the
(for Ireland).
fneals, liquor, etc.). There was
outflow of talented Irish labor is
enqemlc to Ireland, an unfortunate condition not known to our
own region.
Next morning outside Gort, on
a back-country road, while seekI
Ing the coastroadofGalway Bay,
we happened upon the highlight
•
of the entire voyage. . Before
leaving we had speculated that
somewhere in Ireland there
would be a boy who would like to
have an American football. Expecting we would chance upon
this youngster, we took along a
Jim Kelly model ball, a kicking
tee, a small pump, and a
University of Notre Dame ball
cap.
Jim stopped at a neat Irish
couage to Inquire the way. He
came back to the car to say,
"Uqcle John, if you can get to
that ball. I think we've found the
lad lor it."
Sure enough, there stood the
very picture of a sandy-haired,
freckled. nine-year son of Erin;
with. · his dog and beaming
mother. The boy was struck
speechless by the encounter. The
mother gave his name In a heavy
'•·~·.w,

"-• ,,

Jury finds

man guilty
of ml;lrder

EMPLOYEES REWARDED-RevcoDiacount ,
Drug Center, 308 Second Ave., In line with the
chain's holiday siogan "Every Customer Everytime," recognized three top salespeople lor their
•CUstomer service, holiday spirit and upholding
the slogan during the store's hoUday sales contest.
Recognized were (L to R) Mary \ll.VIor, sales

By ALISON GRANT
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - A
Montgomery County Common
Pleas Court jury Friday night
convicted a Dayton man ol
murdering his wife and burying
her body In a concrete slab Inside
a downtown building.
Theodore Sinks, 49, was sentenced to 15-years to liCe In prison
shortly after a jury of nine men
and three women returned the
guilty verdict. The panel deliberated about eight hours.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!)
Prosecutors said Sinks
- The former president or
hatched a brazen plan to g~t out
Cen t.\lry Business College has
of his marriage by killing his
been sentenced to two years In
wife, Judy, 44, and hiding her . federal prisloh for stealing funds
body In the Dayton Daily News · from !he school.
building, where both worked.
Phillip . Nlebergail was also
They said Sinks beat his wife
ordered to pay $100,000 In restituwith a blunt object Nov. 20, 1987,
tion by JUdge Robert Slaker.
strangled her with live loops of
Nlebergall pleaded guilty In
rope and, with the help of an
November to two counts of not
unwitting subordinate. carted
returning tuition payments to
her body In a barrel to the students who dropped out of
school. He had been charged with
newspaper building.
' The body was found five
26 counts of not making tuition
months later In a concrete crypt refunds between 1984 and 1986.
Federal law requires accredited
In a seventh floor u tllity room
known as the penthouse, which schools to repay a portion of
Sinks frequented during the
tuition to students who withdraw
course of his job as supervisor of
before the middle of the
beating, air conditioning and semester.
plumbing. Mrs. Sinks was a clerk
Pro~cutors said Nelber~all
embezzled
about $800,000 from
at the newspaper.
"Maybe he g9t his kicks out of · Century College and similar
that. When he went up to the schools he owned In Florida,
penthouse, he could say, 'Good using the money to buy a yacht,
morning. Judy,' " assistant pro- airplane, and condominium, and
secutor Herb Jacobson said to renovate his home.
In addition to t.he Huntington
during t~ trial.
"Maybe he'll get an 'A' tor campus, Century operated
orlglnallty. But ultimately the schools In Ironton, Ohio, and
poUce found out what he was beauty schools In Ironton and
doing. ·He gets an 'F,"' Montgo- Chesapeake, Ohio.
Nelbergall declared personal
mery County assistant prosecutor Leon Daidone said In closing bankruptcy after his schools
went broke.
arguments.

CBC presi(Jent
sentenced for
stealing funds

t

winner receiving a - $50 savings bond; Sharon
Sanders, top prize winner receiving ~$100 savings
bond; Rick Parrish, manager; and Christy
Cromllsh, sales winner receiving a S58 savings
bond. Revco operates over 1,900 stores IIi 28 states
and fills more than 85 m llHon prescriptions a year,

•

East topS

'

O hio Lottery

•
West Stars m

Shrine tllt

Daily Number
712
Piclt-4 4211

Page 3

Super Lotto
l-21-2S.26-31-38
Kicker 828374

Part~ cloudy lonlgbt. Low
In mid-... Tuesday, 801111)'.
Wgb In the mid 408.

•
Vo1.38, No.175
Copyrighted , 989

1'S.ctlon, 10 P•a• 211 c.n1o
A MultiiMdl• tnc. New_..

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 16, 1989
•

Oh!() . legislative activity: to be light this week
try. Amorig them: exposing
By LEE LEONARD
· spiritual healing to the child
UPI Stalehotllle Reporte~ .
COLUMBUS - "Turnpike abuse and neglect law, requiring
Wars" are back on the front stodent-athletes tomalntolnmln·
burner in the Ohio General lmal grades to play sports, and
Assembly this year, along with allowing high school soccer playAIDS treatment funding, ban- ers to play tor Independent teams
ning corporal punishment in out of season.
schools, and long-range college
Legislative activity will be
tuition savings programs.
light this week. Monday Is Martin
Senate and House committees Luther King Day, a state holiday .
have yet to organl2e for the Republicans will be preparing to
1989-90 session, but already 64 travel to Washington for George
bills have been Introduced In the Bush's Inauguration Friday,
House and halt that number In
The combatants over the Ohio
the Senate.
Turnpike wasted no time las\
Many of the bills are proposals week In Introducing the rival bills
that failed to make It through the providing for disposal of the
last session, and are being 243-mlle east-west toll road when
brought out again tor another Its bonds are retired In i992.

cap, football, a kicking tee and •mall football pump with them In
case 'lbey ran onto a boy who would like to have an American •
football. The Walshes live on a hack country road nearGort. Dalley
and McKean were searchlni lor the coast road to Galway Bay
when they happened upon the 9-year-old son of Erin.
no sales tax.
Ireland there will always be a
It was an'nounced that the friendly hand and a warm smile
Republic's treasury had paid . for any Yank who happens by. ·
250,000,000 Irish pounds lover
$400 million) on their foreign debt
In the 1988 second quarter, and
that foreign loves tment In Irish
assets was proceeding nicely.
Clearly there are problems,
also. The Reopubllc's education
system Is antiquated, there Is an
outflow of labor, and the ancient
political feuds, hamper development. Progress Is being made In
Improving the first two. There Is
Life insurance can help you
hope for the political probletn.
build a nest egg for future
In 1992. the Irish Republic
needs and setirement. The
becomes a full ·member of the
16w cost may surprise you.
European Economic CommunlCall and let's talk about
ty(ECC). Great Britain already
belongs to this alliance of some
MODERN WOODMEN
dozen other nations, comprising
SOLUTIONS
over 300,000 people , poised to
eliminate all internal commercial restrictions and unity the
currencies. The pressure will be
on the Engl)sh and Irish politi·
clans to settle the matter, for the t
good of all.
The Implications of this historic union for the United States
are receiving little auentlon
here. It will have major consequences buy the . year 2,000,
perhaps already so within NATO.
But, whatever, we wager that In

It's a great
life, if you
insure it·

'

PUBLIC
RECYCLING .
141H &amp; MAIN ST.
.PT. PUASANT, WY.

~;&amp;.·t;,~
MODERN WOODMEN

OF AMERICA
A ff\1\TlRNAL LirE INSURANC( SOCIOY

HOMl GfJICL • ROC I\ ISLAI'oiO, IUINOIS

LIFE • ANNUITIES •IRA'S

FRATERNAL PROGRAMS

THE FOLLOWING FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS WILL BE
CLOSED
·
MONDAY I JANUARY 16th
IN OBSERVANCE OF
MARliN LUTHER KING JR.'S
BIRTHDAY
BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN CO.
CIVIC SAYINGS BANI
CENTRAL TRUST CO.
OHIO ·VAlLEY BANI
STAR BANI
'•

Rep. Frederick Deering, D- .
Monroeville, who wants the turn·
pike under legislative control,
has submitted House Bill 31
aboUsblng the TurnpikeCommls·
slon and turning the highway
qver to the Ohio Department of
Tra!lsportatlon. Tolls would
' eventually end, he said.
The bill banning corporal punishment (spanking) In schools,
which cleared tbe Senate last

..

\('

year but died 1!1 the House, has
]l.een offered again by Rep. Judy
Sheerer, D·Shaker Heights.
Gov. Richard Celeste Is In
(avor of the measure, and cltE;d it
·as his administration's lone
legislative !allure In the justcompleted 117th session.
Senate Blll2, sponsored by Sen.
David Hobson, R·Springfleld ,Is a
duplicate of the bill his commit·
tee labored over for months last
year, providing for treatment of
- the victims of acquired Immune
-deficiency syndrome.
.
That bill died tor want of
money to support Its $6 million
price tag. It Is likely to become
the subject of budget deliberations this year.
Both Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R·

'

Icy roads mid-day on Saturday
cauSl!d
havoc !9r several Meigs
··'
County drivers. Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reports that his depart·
ment handled live accidents on
Saturday In the span of about an
hOur, due to the sudden Icy
condition of bridges.
The first accident, at 11:46
a.m., resulted In Injuries to three
people.
William W. Lawless, 27, Shade,
was traveling ellSton the Route 7
bypass and lost control of ~Is 1984
Toyota pliCkup as he was crossing
if-..the~bi'~e~ o-...l.almll---CIIfl .
Road. The vehicle went off the
road on the · rlfithl, struck the
embankment and rolled one
time.- coming to rest on Its
wheels.
The driver and passengers,
24-year old Rochelle Eichinger
and four-year old Delana J.
Eichinger, were slightly lnjurled. They were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by a passing
motorist.
The Lawless vehicle was
totoled.
.
At 11: 55 a.m. on State Route 124
at the LangsvUle bridge, Barry
Yeauger, 44, of Cheshire, was
traveling east and lost control of
his 1984 Blazer. The vehicle
DRESS REHEARSAL- With the Capitol In the dreis rehearsal for Frlday's'Presldentlallnaugu·
rolled severa~ times sus tal ning
backll'ound, a mUitary band marcbes up ration ceremonll!l. (UP I)
heavy damage, but Yeauger was
Pen•ylvu(6.o).venue early Sunday as part of a
uninjured.
Sue Fry was traveling west on
Route 124 at about 12:13 p.m. and
as she crossed the Ground Hog
Creek bridge near Portland, she
lost control of her 1982 Camaro
and sUd ott the road striking a
tree. Her vehicle was heavily
damaged but no Injuries were
reported.
VIola L. Car~. Athens, was
the gains Inspired by her hus- also recognized by every, state
By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
traveling
south on Route 33 at
band "fragile" and warned except Arizona, Montana,
United Presslnler•tlonal
12:40 p.m. and as
approximately
Wyoming, Idaho, South Dakoto
Americans kept the dream of ''much remains lobe done."
she
crossed
the
bridge near
King, who was killed by a and New Hampshire.
Martin Luther, King Jr. alive
Kingsbury
Road,
she
lost control
Demonstrators picketed In
Monday with holiday events sniper April 4, 1968, while standof
her
1978
Chevrolet
and
slid off
nationwide, from a parade In Ing on a Memphis, Tenn., motel Phoenix, Ariz., Sunday In supthe
roadway
on
·
the
right
Atlanta to California's "Free- balcony, would have turned 60 port of making the day a state struck a tree on and
the
.dam Train" In honor of the slain years old Sunday. His assassin, holiday. The holiday was rescivil rights leader's 60th James Earl Ray, was lmprl· cinded In the stole two years ago embankment.
Josle Carr, age 6, a passenger
by former Gov. Evan Meclulm
soned for life.
birthday.
In
thl! back seat, received a
King Is perhaps best known for who said It was not appropriate to
Some said' King's dream pf
bruise
on her lace.
racial equality and a brother- his moving · 1963 "I have a honor King as the only per110n
hood of man . has almost been dream" speech In Washington In tram American history with a
hoHday in his name.
.•
fulfilled, while others, Including which he proclaimed his belief In
King's widow, said the surface a just and equal America.
Civil rights actlvls ts and some
. President-elect George Bush Arl2ona politicians are trying to
has only been scratched.
In her annual "State of the scheduled an address to a prayer see the holiday re-enacted. MeDream" address In Atlanta Sun· breakfast at a Washington hotel cham was Impeached last y~r
day, Caretta Scott King called Monda9 - a federal holiday and lor unrelated reasons. ·
Three blacks were to be sworn
In Monday as comm issloners In
Selma, Ala., where In 1965 a
CLEVELAND -Sen. Howard
bloody clash with Gov. George Metzenbaum, D.Qhlo, says . he
Wallilce's troopers on the Ed- Intends to suppqrt a bill restoring
mund Pettus Bridge led to the to communities the right to
federal Voting Rights Act. ·
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 16 calls
· regulate cable television rates.
The swearing In of Erskine
Cable· television systems have
over the weekend, 10 Saturday and six Sunday.
· Saturday at 12:47 a.m., to the sheriff's office for Randy
Minor, Perry Varner and D.L. become unregulated monopolies
Pope will end 112 years of white with "an unfair advantage,"
Randolph to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:43
county
rule and 10 years of legal Metzenbaum told the Cleveland
a.m. to Chester Road for Rose Lee to Veterans Memorial
battles
to keep the Dallas County Plain Dealer.
Hospital; Syracuse at 10: 41 a.m. to Route 124 In Syracuse for
Commission white In a place
Ella 'QuUien to Veterans Memorial Hoapltal; Racine at 11:20
''Will there come a day when It
a.m. to Rbute 124 at Racine' lor Pam Wise to St. Joeeph's
where 55 ~rcent of Its resldeOts will coat us $10 to watch a day of
Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:43a.m. toamotorvehlcleaccldeonton
are black. The lhree new com- OlympiC covera~re? Will It run us
the Route7 bypass but the parties left betorethesquadarrlved;
m 1181nners were elected In a $16.50 for the prtvllege of watch·
special vote Jut month.
Middleport at 11:51 a.m. to Pearl St. for M411'Y Burton Who was
!ng an NFL football game from
"I can sUII remember how the our own famUy rooms?" Metzentreated but not transported; · Middleport Fire Department at
troopers and deputies came at us baumuked.
11: 56 a.m. to a two-car auto accidental the bridge at Hobson, no
and pushed us back off the
Injuries or transports; Pomeroy at 6:17p.m. to Mecbanlc St. for
Olilo's senior U.S, senator said
bridge,'' said Minor, 41, In ' last month the New York YanBlli _Lowen to Veterans Memo.r lal Hospital; _Rutland at 10:05
recalling prog1ea' made since kees signed a $600 mUllon 12· year
Continued on page 4
contract giving the MSG Cable
ConUnued on page 4

M~in Luther King Day is

remembered ·by

Americans ~

.-Local news briefs___,
Squads have busy weekend

Bucyrus, and Rep. Paul Jones,
D-Ravenna, have reintroduced
legislation setting UJta trust fund
which would take 18 years of
contributions from the parents of
prospective college students.
When the young people reach
college age, the money would be
there lor their tuition at any
state-supported school.
Senate Bill 3 Is an omnibus
reform of the domestic relations
law, comprising recommenda·
tlons made last year by the Ohio
Dom~tlc Relations Task Force,
chaired by Sen. Grace Drake,
R;Solon.
The measure addresaes divorce, dissolution, child custody
and child support.

Sen. Neal Zimmers and Rep.
Thomas RobE!rts, both Dayton
Democrats, have Introduced a
proposed Income tax checkoff for
hunger relief and homeless she I·
ter programs.
A half-dozen legislators have
reintroduced biUs permitting
school districts to levy a school
district Income tox. That proposal was law In 1981, but It was
repealed two yean )ater after
only six · school districts had
enacted toxes.
Rep. Ronald Mottl, D-Pa,rma,
has reintroduced his bill permit·
tlng lethal Injection to be used In
dlspetchlng convicted murderers. That same bill cleared the
House last session, but died in the
Senate.

Icy roads cause ·havoc in
Meigs County _over weekend
.,

.

COMING SOON

.

Senate Bill 7 by Sen. Ben
Gaeth, R·Deflance, continues the
tolls on the turnpike and gives the
Ohio Turnpike Commission new
powers to operate the turnpike
and sell bonds tor other highwayrelated projects.

The vehicle sustained moder·
ate damage.
At about 12:58 p.m., David K.
Reese, Racine, was traveling
east on Route 124, also crossing
Ground Hog Creek bridge near
Portland, when he lost control of
his 1984 Ford pickup and struck
the guardrail just orr the edge of
the bridge.
There was moderate damage
to Reese's vehicle. No Injuries
were reported.
On Sunday night, James
Counts, of tbe Countr;y Mobile
Home P ar·k, .Oarwin.,..reported.
that his 1989Whlte-GMC tractor
had been entered and Items.
lncludliig a CB radio, had been
taken. Counts advised the sherift's department that apperen tly the door of the tractor was
left unlOcked. The vehiCle was
parked just off Route 33 at the
mobile home park entrance.
On Saturday morning, Arthur

Sllamway, Route 2, Coolville,
reported that an unknoWil stabject had beaten his mailbox with
a realty company sign, sometime
during Friday night.
·
Sheriff Souisby also reports
that Randy Randolph, 29, Shade,
wbo was taken from the Meigs
County Jail Friday evening by
the Pomeroy Emergency Squad
after fallln11 from a top bunk ·in
his cell, was In jail on a DWI
conviction. Because Randolph
was Intoxicated when he reported to the jail at the appOinted
time to begin ·setving hla threeday sentence tor OWl, he was
charged by the sheriff with
disorderly conduct. Randolph
was admitted for treatment at
Veterans Memorial Hospital on
Friday and released on Sunday to
complete his sentence for OWl.
Randolph must now appear In
Meigs County · Court on the
disorderly conduct charge.

.Blame icy roads for
10 of 14 Ohio deaths
By United Press International Cincinnati, in a two-vehicle accl·
At least 14 people were killed In dent on an Ice-covered city street
traffic accidents around the In Cincinnati.
Buckeye State this weekend,
Cleveland: William B. Gill, 7•
_Including 10 on roadways made Cleveland, In a two·vehlcle acci·
sUppery by frozen rain, said an dent on a city street In Cleveland.
0 h to H lgh way Pat ro 1 Chillicothe: Connie Y. Minnie,
34, Bourneville, in a. on~car
spokeswoman.
Two of Saturday's crashes on accident on Ice-covered U.S. 50 In
Ice-covered roads took the lives Ross County.
of people from Portoge and
Cincinnati: Henry Schill, 84, on
Preble counties. 'Edwin Gunter, an Ice-covered city street In
68, Aurora, was killed In a Cincinnati.
one-vehicle accident on U.S. 422
Fremont: Laura J. Gehring,
In Geauga County, Leona Walt· . 26, Sylvania, In a two-car acclman, 79, Lewisburg, was killed In dent on U.S. 20 In Sandusky
a two-car accident on Ohio 49 In County.
.
Montgomery County. '
wooster: Elaine F. Drake, 65,
Also killed this weekend were: sterling. In a two-car accident on
Friday Nl pi
Ice-covered Ohio 57 In Wayne
County.
None.
Sidney: Janet F. Talbert, 27.
Saturday
Little
Rock, Ark., In a lourFremont: Randy Herr, 34,
vehicle
accident on ice-covered
FJemont, when his motorcycle
Interstate
75 in Shelby Cpunty.
struck a utility ·pole along a
Toledo:
William
Wells, 5, on an
Sandusky County road.
Cincinnati: Ethel Sewell, 75,
(Contlilued on page 4)

Sen. Metzenbaum says cable
TV has an 'unfair advantage'
Network the rights to televise 150
games.
"The .Implications are clear,''
be said. "Less than half of New
York City Is wired for cable ...
Ths.t meana plenty of~.a.qkee
fans won't be able to see tllelr
team ' on TV, even II they are
willing to pay for it.
"II baseball Ia going to shUt Its
games to ell* TV ud foree
couumen to pay miDiolll of
dollars to waic:b the lllltllllllal
puttlrne, thl!il maylle
should be toklne a barder lDek at
baseball's anUtrust exemption,"
be said.
Metzenbaum also attacked ca, ble TV rates.
"We (Congress) took the lock
off the chicken coop and til~ FCC

eo.-.

practically Invited the foxe5 In,"
he said. "We said there would be
no local regulation of rates as
long as there was . effective
competition In the community".
He added he plans to Introduce
legislation to define the term
''effective competition."
Metzenbaum said that In Ohio,
subscrlpUon fees for basic .cable
11ervk:e have lncreMed lly an
averaae of 27 percent·~ ate
derqulatloa ill 1987.
'l'lle selllltor 8Ua sald lelftllllen
advertlllna ratet should be re- ·
duced because they contribute to
the cost of poliUcal campaigning.
He also -encouraged the broadcut Industry to do more to help
the 23 million Americans who are
IIUterate.

�,.
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taey
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n
Comme

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The Deily Sentinei- Page-3

Page-2-TheDailySantinel
Pomaov Middleport, Ohio ::;:;::
Monday. Janu-v 1~. 1989

1

~==========~~~~.~~~~--~-~
- ~--------~
The· Daily Sentinel
111 Court liltreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIOS.MASON AltEA
~~

ts:m~

.
,...,_,,_...,..,.....,.,o;:::~,_

qjv

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'M'
Publisher .
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER o!The United Pre!islnternat!onal, Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspaper

P~bllshers

Association.

'

I..ETI'ERS OF OPINION are welco~. Tbey should be less tban 300 wonls
long. Alllettersare iubject 1oedltlng and must be signed with name, addressuad
telephone number. No unslgnW letters wiU be published. Letters shook! H Ia

'

Greyhound, which Is also a
popular method of transport In
Idaho and Oregon.
The report details an Interest·
lng wrinkle on the use of tile
malls to ship marijuana:
· "A common technique Is to
pure hase marlj uana 1n Arlzona
and have It mailed to oneself at
another location,_If the package
does not arrive within 24 hours,
the sender assumes that the
package may have been tempor·
arUy delayed because It was
'Intercepted by Jaw enforcement
authorities. The package Is subsequently not picked up."
The Postal Service Is the
meth\)11 of preference for marl-

good taste:, addresslng Issues, not persooalltles.

W~l.CO~TO

Public loses when govemor, Speaker hide in new office

'T_UISOLD

•110use\.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Whether you know It or not, your state government
Is gradually slipping away from you. From now on, you will have less
control; It will have more. You won't be able to watch it; it will be
watching you.
It's scary.
The process didn't start yesterqay, but 'ts significance was
underscored by the completion of the new state office tower In
.
·
.
· downtown Columbus.
Members of the Ohio House of Representatives, ied by Speaker
Vernal Riffe Jr. , D-Wheelersburg, have already moved out of the
Statehouse and over to the new tower. That was planned.
But more alarming, Gov. Richard Celeste and his staff of 65 will
vacate the Statehouse at the end of this month In favor of the entire
30th floor of the tower. That was never part of the scheme for the
building.
The tower was built, officials said, to consolldate agencies with
leased office space all over the Columbus metro(llllltan area. And It's
true that 32 agencies have moved In under the new 503-foot tl'!nt.- •
But the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, !or example, got
lis own building In the northwest section of town, leaving room enough '
tor Celeste to travel across the Stl'eet and take up the' penthouse.
Debra Phillips; press secretary to the governor, defends the move
on grounds It will make the governor's office function more
efficiently. ·'His office and staff are basically working on top of each
other and this place (the Statehouse) Is not wired for computers," she
said. "It's not very functional."

IW\ BJB VILA ••.
AND ToDAll,

FoR
.1JORE?

I~AS

AFFORD4BL~
MCXJSI~

When cAught, the drivers nor· · ·•mally admit only to being p~ld tci :"~
drive the cars. They claim to· ·
have no Idea; I I at Is In the- - ---..
vehicle. They i'Pr'\llegedly told
t
by those wl!o hired them to leave
~
the~arat theLosAngelesalrport
~
and walt'to be contacted or to call
•
a beeper number.
. . ~

,_

·'

........ __

......_ ....

_

tandem Shaun Savoy and Ml·
chael Martin ·sparked the East·
ern Eagles to their second
stralaht victory, an 82·77 non·
league triumph over the Parkers·
burg Catholic Crusaders here
Saturday.
Eastern Is ilow 7-6 overall and
6-3 lnslded · the SVAC, while
Parkersburg Is 4-5 overall.
The trmpo for the varsity
contest was ~t -by an a~tlon
packed reserve came which
Eastern won at the buDer on a
Mark Murphy bucket with just
two seconds remalnJng. The win
came after Eastern led 10·2, but
fell to a 23·18 halftime di!flclt.
Leading the Eaelee were the ·•
two winged Eaale caped crusdaders Mike Wheeler and Matt
Flnlaw with 12 apiece. Shawn
Sandy had'21 to lead all scorers,
while Kevin.Wright added 16.
The large non-league, Satur·
day night crowd wu keyed up for
the start of another great contest
that saw a lot of quickly paced
action, featuring a blghly often·
slve oriented game plan from
both sides. EHS grabbed the
early lead, but PC whittled back
to a see--saw first quarter, EHS
taktna the edge 16-15 at Its finish.
Point. guard Shaun Savoy has
certainly ¢orne Into his own
during the 1988-89 season and
nearly came up with 30 points for
the third time In a row, just one
shy with 29. The local has been
seen with a giant S embroidered
on his chest more than oni:e. this
season with floe Individual effort
as well-as exemplary tram play.
Althollgh many of the little
speedalers points are a result o!
being In the rl&amp;:bt place at the
rlgbt tline on the fut break, his

JACKSGN TRIPPED UP- Jaelraoa (Miq.) State ruimlilgbaek
te•la Tl~ el the Eut •11•11 Ia tripped up ~)' WyOmln,
deleuahie *k Eric Cole- el the Weet leam In the folll1b
quarter ol Sll8dQ'I Eu&amp;-W•t lUte Game Ill Stanford, CaiU.
'lllbnaa ~-..ned one rtn MVP Ill East'• IU vldOI'J. (UPI)

S·umming up the Reagan·presidency
William Rusher

a

I

:

l_naugura,l,'is an invitation-only gala Overstreet.
.

Today in history

......... ___ ..,.

EAST MEIGS- Dual 25-polnt
plus efforts from Inside-outside

&gt;,..

peace with himself, loves his
wife, likes other people, knows
what he believes, Is ready and
able to tight hard for those
beliefs, and can stUI g~t a good
night's sleep when he's done the
best he can. Ho~ many of us can
say as much about ourselves, let ·
alone about the neighbors on our
block?
•
·
·
It Is precisely because those
values stlll resonate In many
mllllons of American hearts that
Ronald Reagan, who so" splendidly personifies them, became
and remains
hero to many
millions o! his fellow citizens. He
laughs and cries at the same
things they do; he shares the
same fundamental concerns.
And he does !hese things not
(please understand) because he
Is an actor playing ·a part, but
because he genuinely feels thatway.
Is It any wonder that so many·
Americans love him?
.
:

-·~-·---- ....... ~·-----"'----.-..~

.
'
or a public entity?' The GAO IS.
saying let's define it."
High time, Toni. If you agree,
let him hear from you:
'~

and cassette buying for a while, an elaborate private function for
and then coming home with a the party faithful?" Johnson
riew Cadillac themselves. AI· asks. "Is the Presidential Inaugthough neither Bush nor his ural Committee a private entity
opponent of!.e red conclusive
answers to the deficit, Bush
stressed Wise, moderate spend··
lng as well as "no new taxes!"
This Is a heck of an example to

set.

And I'd like to know how much
o! the taxpayers' $7.1 million are
going for festivities ALL taxpayers can participate In, and how
much o! It Is going to the various
Invitation-only dinners and balls
Bush Is giving tor !be people who
helped elect him? Only $775,000
of that money Is going to the
construction of a heated Inaugural stand on the Capl~ol steps and
other hoopla that aoes along witb
the actual swearing-ln.
At least the swearlng-ln Is
something John Q. Citizen can
stand In a crowd and watch !rom
afar, I! ·he gets there early
enou&amp;h. But this year, getting
there early won't even get him a
decent view o! the parador
They're constructing bleachers
along the parade route and
charging '.'user fees," for crying
out loud. Over tbe years, we've
grown accustomed to tbe balls
and dinners being only for the
haves. However, during the other
IJIIIuguratlons, our share of the
tab wasn't so high, and at least
the have-nots could enJoY the
parade.
Tom Johnson of !he General
Accounting Of!lce, the lnvestlga·
tlve arm of Congress, Is put oft by
this year' a segi!Jtdted Jloo.ha as
well. He makes the point that
"lnvltatlon·only," offensive
enough to some, has gradually
become "lnvi~tlon·and-prlce-of·
&amp;·ticket only."
· "When does an Inauguration
lose Its public face and become

•

CoU·~~e8

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~

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. ........... Ok....... .
'hmple ... Oeorp ........... .

(All pmea)
TEAM
WL
POP
Eastern ................. 7 6 993 1015
Southern .............. .. 7 6 859 824
North Gallia .......... 6 5 759 697
Southwi!Stern ......... 6 5 739 769
Oak Hill ................ 6 5 658 687
Hannan Trace ....... 6 6 739 707
Kyeer Creek .......... 3 9 767 853
Symmes Valley .....1 10 605 773

•••
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S.ll Alaltarna 11. N.C.-da•t.«e II
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W•lll• ... • II Callforllla It

MOC _standin88

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tage of
to open
Fresno
Rogers

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This week's games·

••
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,... wen·.

......... ,.....
,..............,
,x.,•

Oltlo c.llep ............... le

a,v.wr............

~

·~
&lt;

outllde

post second
IIJII.~ ry, 82-77
......

(steals) and super
point) shootlnc also

are~:~~~!~~
!acton.
Martin spearheaded
early In the came
the stretch, as Martin
a dual threat attack
play Inside as well
the 15 toot jumper with
~~~it! Parkersburg's Tom
scored his team·hlgh 28
pol~ts;fle Eastern defense cur·
trammates' etfortnnd
Mr~rltv'o &amp;Oing down the

fi

stl-etl:~

runs that cleary aave
the momentum It need to
for the win, shootlna
and unheralded bal·
ihaJBdfr Scott Fitch scored sev· •
eral
one
three
on the
Cald·
ended up with points
.lv••rat assist&amp;. Fitch closed

.

McCarty's 14.
l!:ull!rn made 27 turnovers,
bad 13 steals led by Fitch' a four,
and bad 10 assists led by Savoy's
7. The team had 16 fouls.
PC had 14, 11, 16, and 24
respectively being led In·assists
by Hinckley a!ld McCarty with 4
apiece.
After winning !be reserve
contest Eastern's JV's 'are 4·9
overall.
Eastrrn Is Idle until it plays at
Oak Hill Friday _
In a des tiny
decldlne SVAC contest.
lleere bJfllllll'tera:
Eaatern ............. 16 27 16 23-82

PC .................... 15 25 15 22-77
~

(U)

-

Martin

11·3-25, Frost 2·0-4, Sinclair 1·0.2,
savoy 9-11·29, Chris Llllce O.Jol,
Fitch 3·1·2·11, Caldwell 3-2·8,
Durst 1·0-2, Bissell ().().0, Murphy
0.0.0, Wheeler 0-0-0, Smith 0·0·0.

ToTALS .l-INt.

.PARUR88URG CATBOUC
(77) - Cullen 2·2·6, McCarty
10.1·5-28, Labarre 3·3·9, Boice
346, Parsons 448, Dehmlow
1.0·2, Davis 0.3-3·12, Hanlin 2·0-4,
Hinkley 142, Joyce 0.().0. TO-

Eagles maintained the
tempo and went on to hold
lead, before closing to an

T.U.S ti-4-11-TJ.

DIUI

82· 'Tjj~IMie.
man Mike Frost was held
his average to just4 points,
bu t!t.&lt;as a faqtor on the boards
his dominate size. Chad
S!nfalr, ChriS Lance, JeUDurst,
Bissell, and Mark Murphy
kept Eastern's fast break

BUSIIISS SERVICE

._.A. I Mer .. CPA

wide left on a 33-yard field-goal
try.
The West pushed Its lead to 6·0
early In the second quarter when
a turnover by the East gave the
West possession In East terri·
tory. Oregon State quarterback
Erik Wilhelm drove the West to
the 25, setting up Walsh's 42-yard
field goal.
_
The East moved 76 yards In 13
plays midway through thei, se.
cond perloll to p1dl.ln ·front 7-6.
The big play was· a 22-yard pass
from Louisville's Jay Gruden to ·
Michigan State's Andre Rison.
Rison, slanting across field toward the left, carried to the West
12. Tillman carried four straight
times, the last a 1-yard burst over
right guard for a touchdOwn.
California running back Chris
Richards got the second half
started In a more excl tlng
fashion by returning the opening
kickoff to the West 40. Nebraska
quarterback Steve Taylor guided
the West Inside the East 20.
The drive stalled and a bad
snap resulted In no chance !or
Walsh_ to kick a field goal. .
Imnead, Walsh flelde the ball and
was tackled for a 24-yard loss.
Steve Atwater, a defensive
back from Arkansas who was the
game's defensive MVP with two
Interceptions and nine tackles,
picked off a pass and the West
had the ball at the East 35. But
again the Weh could not translate good field position Into
points.
The East drove to the West 27
on Its next possession and
Gillette converted a «-yard field
goal that barely cleared the
crossbar and provided the East a
10-6 edge.
In the fourth quarter, the East
travelled 57 yards In 10 plays with
Tillman being used as the work
bourse. Tracey Johnson of Clemson plunged 1 yard for the
touchdown to make It 17-6.

118 EAST MAIN STREET

•

•ACCOdl£ IE liD

.,

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY, OHIO
992·7270

t USPS 14Htl)

A lllvllloa of M... bnodla, J•c.

·~ Publlsbed every afternoon, Monday

4001111111.

PC Brian Davis closed
12 behind McCarty's fine
lea~ng role. ScottLebarreended
Steve Parsons 8, Matt
6,-and Bernie Boice 6.
111s1~rn bls 30 of 55 from the
19 of 26 at the line and1of53
po.t:ers. PC bit 26 of 62, 13 of 18,
4·6 long distance.
grabbed 38 rebounds led
Martin's 12 and Savoy's 6,
PC had a total of 47led by

. . .IIICIAL STI11MIIIS
•liDS
ePIYIOU.

111 Court . St ..
l1 thr..,P
moray. Ohio.
the Obto Vail&lt;!' Put&gt;lllhlll&amp; COmpany!Muh!mt!dlo, lne.,
Friday,
by

Po·

Pomeroy, Olllo 657811, Ph. 992-21116. SecoDd clua ~ta1e pald at Pomeroy,

Ohio. ·

Member: United Preas International,
1 lnlandDa.UyPretiAuoclatlonandthr
Oblo Mewapa~ Auoclatlon. Natlonal
AdVer\1111111
.--ntatlve, BraD bam
Ntwll)aper

•· 733 Third Avenue,

New York. Now York 10017. '

P08'IMASTER.: send addreu ch&amp;n&amp;e~
lo The Dai\Y 5entlnel, 111 COurt St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4117811.
SUil8CB~ON

lUTES

BJCII'I'IerorMol&lt;rOne Week ...................................$1.60
One Moatll .................................$6.10
One Yeu ......... , ......... .............. $12.110

SINGLE COI'Y
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Dally ................................... 2!1 Cents

SUblerlben not ~eolrlDI to pay Uoe clll'·

rter may ~mit tn advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel ona3, 6or12 month
bull. Credit wlll be given carrier each

Saturday's reault
.Eastern 82, Parkersburg Ca'
thollc 77
'l'ueadiiJ'I ~elledule
OVCS at Kyaer Creek
New Boston at Southwestern
South Webster at Oak Hill
Symmes Valley at Croas Lanes
Friday's camea
Symmes Valley at Southern
Eastern at Oak Hill
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
North Gallta at Southwestern

MJD.OJIIO ro,NP.D&amp;NCE

ftek.
No sulllcrlpUons by mall penn!Ued tn

areal when home carrier servtce ts

.~vall able.

Moll-rlll&amp;loao

IMide Melp CouiiJ'

POWELL'S SUPER -VALU
291 SICOID STIDT PO.IOY OHIO

13Woekl ... .. .... .......... .. ............. $19.24
26Woekl ............... ..... ........ ...... $37.96
52Woekl ...................... ............ l74.36

O.IMe Melp coa..,.

13 Woekl ............... ................... $20.110
:1&amp; Woekl ... .................... ........... $10.30
52Woeki ... .................... .... .... ... S15.40

Olllo_........._

•

v ........ I&amp;Me • Atr ..
A.,..._IMMeiiCIMiaMII

ll......ot...,MCinei••IWe
I

•

:Berry's World

Wake Fomt's Mike Elktns on
the third play of the game and
returned 18 yards to the East
17-yard line.
The West settled for a 29-yard
featured three
field goal by New Mexico's Rick
West took advlll·
Walsh and a 3-0 lead.
first mistake
The Eut drove to the West 15
Tracy · late In !be flnt quarter and
a pus by , Michigan's Mike Gillette missed
senior talent.
the aame's
was one of the

I syAC standings ' I

.

Collep .....bllllleo . .

•r .,..,. p,.. ~~er.ue.s

I
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•

•

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Eastern
-s.traight cage

•

• OK, call me a kUljpy. Call me a
spoUsport. Call me the only one t'n
my crowd who'd have rather
stayed home by the fireplace
New Year's Eve wlth a cup of
eggnog (OK, several cups) than
. what we ended up doing fighting tor toe space In a smoky
room full of middle-aged people
IIYrating to songs popular back
when they could still hold their
liquor and the Swim dldn'tlook so
sUiy.
Call me a party-pooper. But
I'm plenty put-off by the preparations and price tag !or George
Bush's
Inauguration. Thirty-two
By United Press International
million
bucks seems like a
Today Is Monday, Jan. lli, the 16th day of 1989 with 349 to go.
amount of money just
ridiculous
Birthday of Martin Luther King Jr. Is observed.
to
swear
In
a president, when all
The moon Is waxing. moving toward fuU.
the
Jaw
requires
Is that Bush take
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
the oath of office at noon on Jan.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
20.
The cost for Bush's gala Is
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
double
that for Ronald Reagan's
Include German philosopher Franz Brentano In 1838. Andre Michelin,
bash
In
1981, and 10 times Wh{lt
the French industrlaljst who flrsi mass-produced rubber automobile
Jimmy
Carter's
cost In 1977,.
tires, In 1853, Canadian poet Robert Service In 187&amp;, Cuban dictator
Why
do
I
care
how much he
Fulgenclo Batista In 1901, singer Ethel Merman In 1909, baseball
spends,
when
an
estimated
$25.
pitcher Jay "Dizzy" Dean In 1911; race car driver A.J. Foyt In 1935
mUllon
of
It
will
come
from
(age 54), and country singer Ronnie Milsap In 1946 (age 43) .
private corporate donations? A
gOOd
question. I've given It
On this date In history:
considerable
thought, because I
In 1920, the United States went legally "dry" as.·prohlbltlon of
understand
my
pronounced blue·
alcohOlic beverages took effect under the 18th amendment to the
collar
proclivities
and don't
Constitution. It was repealed In 1933.
beiii!Ye I should foist my partytng
In 1925, Leon Trotsky was dismissed as_chairman of the Russian
values
on another party's party. ·
Revolution Mllltary Council.
· .
But
I
think
at least two of my
1n 1942, screen star Carole Lomliard, her mother and 20 pther
objections
don't
stem from ·the
people were killed In a commercial airliner crash near Las Vegas,
fact
that
all
I
need
for a food
Nev. Lombard was the wife of actor Clark Gable.
wlng·dlng
Is
a
barbecue
grUJ and
Ii11984; President Reagan called for "peaceful competition'' with
10me
&amp;QOtl
friends
.
Moscow. He authorized research and 'development on space-age
weapons caP:Bble of destroying Incoming- nuclear mlsJUes, the
.U for the coat, $32.3 million
program known as "Star Wars."
dollars ollly ll!emalllte an affront
In 1986, U byan leader Moammar Gadhafisald Ubya would train, wbea you ,l tandllt up lilonplde
arm and protect Arab guerrillas for Palestinian "suicide and our manlve and lncomprebenal·
terrorist mwtons," his first explicit endorsement of terrtll'lsm.
ble deficit, and the belt·
In 1987, Chlna'sNo. 21eader, 71-year'old Hu Yaobang, was forced to tlgbteniJitr and pi'QII'am-cuttlng
resign as Communist Party chief for falling to curb student Buah aaya must be part of our
demonstrations for more democracy.
IOiutiDn. I gue11 It' a sort ol Uke
Mom an~ Dad telllq tbe klda the
A thoughtfor the day: Poet Robert Service wrote, ''The)!appyman · rua~~y•s a little 111ort this montlt
Is he who knows his limitations, yet bows to no false cocts."
so they'll need to curb lbeir toy
'

.
·.·~
joana ~owets In Hawall. The:-;;.:
re~eatimates that ''90 to 95 :~
pe~' of the pot grown In the _..,
IslA~)&lt;!, - ~te "Is shipped to the -~
malnlandvlaU,S.mall, whllethe ~
rest Is consumed on the Island.'' .,;:
•
• &lt;If
f
"'
Law en orcement authorities . ••"'
th t marijuana has become
sayN a1
h
1 H
11
..
the o. ellS crop n awa , an~
the DSA. report provides some,
figures : "Of the 90,000 residents ;::
on the tstanllofHawall, 15,000are . -.
(believed to be) Involved in some,::;;
way tn marijuana growing an&lt;~o .-:;.
t ffl kin
t1005 "
• •• _.
ra c g opera
•
•
Alargeshareotthesegrowers, .-.·
the report states, "come to .:..:
Hawaii fromJ;allfornla for the :::=::
express pulliPC.of growing rna- ··~
rljuana. Wllen7ftley have made : ::;
what they consider enough prof~ .;::
Its, they m1&gt;ve back to the : ~i•
mainland and are replaced In the · ~
. cycle by someone else."
•~
Meanwhile, Jaw enforcement
autho;ltles In New Mexico have
coinpUed a profile of "courier
cars" used to carry drugs
throughout the Southwest. Ac·
cording to a· confidential drug
Intelligence report, the typical.
drug vehicle's occupants ar!l •
usually resident aliens from .~.:
Colombia, and · the cars are not &lt;"'
registered to them. The vehicles . •:;.
are usually - scented with air . •:·
fresheners and other deodoraJ!tS. ·

.;

It will be many years, If ever, lively prevented the Democrats
Finally, despite the ongoing
before the world comes to a In Congress from playing their partisan battle between 'the presettled conclusion about the ancient game of Tax, Spend and sldency and the Congress, which
adinlnlstration of Ronald Rea- Elect.
!or decades has literally crippled
gan. He will, for one thing, like all
In foreign affairs, Reagan our ability to formulate and
. To reporters based In the Statehouse and coverln&amp; government
major historical !lgures, un- entered the White House as a pursue national policies of any
operations on a day-to-day basis, the move Is a palnln the neck . Hou~
derao alternate periods of favor· determined aqd Implacable toe sort, Reagan leaves the presld·
members, their staffers and governor's office personnel- until now
able and unfavorable evaluation, of communism, and his first act ency after eight years a stronger
no further away than a good nine-Iron shot -will be reached only by
as the Ideas with which he Is was to brln11 ~be Free World back and far better respecte!i lnstltu·
telephone or by a hike amounting to a city block.
asscclated lose and regain their to approximate military equality tion then It · was after the
Tough, you say. Nobody cares about the lnconvenlen~es o! a
popularity. In addition, as long as 1 wltb the communist bloc. He also administrations of Johnson,
reporter's job. Just do it.
•
·
the American academic com· ~ gave anthcomm.unJ~tJ'eslstance . Nixon, Ford and Carter. In
And you're rj.ght. '
.~·.."".~.:· ,:
;,.. ~ ........··:;~:;:• milnlty continues to ~· doml·
forces hi 'A1ghartlstan, cambo- ' addition to everything else, as
But there's something more sinister about these moves; somet]llng
nated by liberals (which happily dla, Nlaragua and ·Angola the Walter Dean Burnham shrewdly
beyond the control of reporters.
· · ·
won't be forever), he can count means to go over to the offensive observed, Reagan has been a
Rltl'e and his members have moved out of sight. Included on their
on as low an evaluation as they •at last aaalnst their communist splendid "pontlfex maxlmus of
four floors In the new tower are two committee rooms where th!!Y can,
tblnk they can get away with.
foes. Partly as a result, not a the American civil religion."
If they choose, consider legislation out of \'lew of the public.
But It Isn't too early, even now, square yard of Free World That alone was no small
The governor also Is moving out of sight. He'll be able to leave his
to Identify some of Reagan's territory lias been lost tocommu- contribution.
car under the new tower and go by private elevator to his hideaway on
major achievements as pres!· nlsm on his watch.
It Is . commonplace to note
the 30th floor without anyone knowing.
_
.
·
dent, and to' try to explain the
Reagan's enormous personal
,_ d~p roots of his popularity.
But when, with the advent of popularity, but precisely what
In
the
field
of
domes
tic
policy,
Mikhail
Gorbachev, the Soviet explains It? Part of the explana, State government reportage Involves the senses - touch, feel,
Reagan's
major
Impact
was
on
Union
at
last
signaled Its recognl· tion, I think, lies In his basic
glimpses, sniffs - watching who's talking to whom.
taxes:
his
stubborn
resistance
to
tlon
of
Its
own tremendous normality. Let's face tt, most
It has meant Intercepting the governor when he arrived at or left
tax
Increases
and
the
major
tax
limitations,
Reagan
Instantly Americans - certainly most
the Statehouse, asking hlm questions on Important Issues of the day,
·
reform
bill
passed
-In
his
second
understood
the
enormous
slgnlfl· presidents -are nervous wrecks
and generally observing the comings and goings of other government
administration.
Together
with
cance
of
what
was
happening,
· by comparison: Look at Carter,
officials, lobbyists and groups and lndlvldl,lals.
the
Gramm
and
moved
to
encourage
Gorbaor Nixon, or Joltnson. Ronald
By seeing the Interaction, two and two could·lle put together about
Reagan, on the other hand, Is at
what was going on. Questions could be asked, ne,'.'s stories obtained to , Rudman Act, these have e!fec- chev's reforms.
Inform the public .
·
No more.

The speaker and the governor, hidden In the tower, can do business
as they please, without prying eyes. When they get their stories
straight. they can feed them to the media. Their Interaction with the
high-powered lobbyists about whom we've read so much In the last
two years- the ones that receive five fil!!JreS a pop to get things done
- will be Invisible.
These are the same lobbyists who will sell the government the
sophisticated electronic equipment that can be programmed to know
everything about your life.
·:: .
So while the government watches you, your eyes ancl ·ears are
slowly being obstructed. It's unnecessary, and a shame.
•

STANFORD, Calif. (UP!)
Jackson State's Louts Tillman
rushed !or 86 yards and a
touchdown .Sunday to belp the
East overcome turnovers, penal•
ties and generally sloppy play to
dump the West 24-6 In !be 64th
annual Shr!Ji'e game.
Pro scouts at Stanford Stadium
watched slueilsb play by some of

Druggers distribute pop_'-----"-:'~a___
_ck_A_nde_rso_n
WASHINGTON - More than mall service." The carriers do
100,000 Americans are Involved what they can to detect drug
In the production of marijuana, shtpwents, but In most cases are
and many of them deliver their no match tor the Innovative drug
lllegalproducttothelrcustomers . dealers.
the same way you send ChriSt·
The most favored method for
111as packages to cousin Nellle: shipping pot In Idaho, Oregon,
They mall dellve""
It or send
It'" s.via Alabama, Oklahoma and Ariz·
commercial
system
.,
ona, according to the DEA,Is the
According to a secret D1;11g United Parcel Service. In Ariz·
Enforcement Administration •rath
~
ona, e secret report discloses,
port, which we have seen, "Var- autborltles "seized a 19 pound
lous states have· reported that package (of marijuana) destined
many o! their marijuana traf· for IllinoiS." In Oklahoma, of!!tickers are distributing their cals reported "that small
products through the use of amounts of marijuana are
United Parcel Service, Grey- shipped through UPS !rom
hound bus parcel delivery and C 11,
a "ornla."
the U.S. Postal Service express
Traffickers In Texas favor

24-6 ·i n -64th Shrine tilt

East downs

:-:1:

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Rates of Taxation for 1988
i

Ololo Dnoloio• 11.111• Grudo

...................
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M. Collins, Treasurer of M.tp County, Ohio in compllanc:t with rl'liltd Codt No. 323.08 of Stitt of Ohio.
of Taxttion for the Tu Ytar of 1918. Rttn upreslld In doiiii'S tnd ctnh ~ IICh ont tttouund dollan- '

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Women's scores

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11.

LARGE ,
CHEESE

,,,.,
"

Will

St.

HMI24
0 1 - by NEA. Inc.

"Know whst I hste - being rushed into adult
roles before I'm ready. "

""

OFFER GOOD THRU ~
FEB.11.11H

'

'

'

:,

. '

$689

Roof Eno,. wlllclJ hiVo not booio fllld •• mo.,. . of_, oalltctlon corrv a PlfllltV at,..,..__ T-IIIIY llo 111\d at 11ot office of
lhl county nnurer or by m1H. Pl. . . bring vour lan til r~e~lpt; ... if you PlY by meil, bt ue to IOCit'l your property by taint district

NO COUPON NECI!SIARY

POIIIIOY

•

PIZZA

titllta4 llillllrr··

51011·~

HOURS:

11 Al·l AI Sun.-Thurs.
11 Al·2 AI Fri.·.set.

•

lind--

.-poe~
11111--'""'·
Alwoys ....,,,.
yOur,
.. rocoflot 1D
....that II co- aH Y&lt;M -~· Ofllca Houn 8:30A.M. to 4:30P.M.. M - "''"~idoy-CI~
on Saturd1y. .
•
,
1
· .

•

.

.'

I.

GEOIIGI M. COWNI, 1lhitJ
.

-ourw
•

�•

•

Commentary
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AKEA

:q:J~

.

,. . ,. ,__. '-_,.....

.
r'T"'e:!=IF=t

' .

.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

••

..

.'

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Un!ted Press International, Inland Dally Press
· Association and the Amertcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome . The'l shoukl be less than 300 w«ds
long. All letters a re subject toedlting and must be signed with name, •ddrestaad
telephone number. No unsigned letters wW be published. Letters should be lq
gocxl taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

mall service." The carriers do
what t hey can to d et ect d rug
s h lpments, b u t In mos t cases are
no rna Ic· h ror the 1nnova tlve d rug
dealers.
The most favored method for
shipping pot In Idaho, Oregon.
Alabama, Oklahoma and AriZ·
ona, accordlni to the DEA, is the
United Parcel Service. In Ariz·
ona, the secret report discloses,
authorities "seized a 19 po4nd
package (of marijuana) destined
for Illinois." In Oklahoma, off!cals reported ''that small
amounts of marijuana are
shipped through UPS from
California."
Traffickers In Texas favor

Public loses when governor,
Speaker hide in new office

'-TUISOLD
~WJU~.

IW\BJBVILA ...
~D ToDAII,
l~AS FoR

,f!!J(E?

AffORD4BL~

Members of the Ohio ~ouse of Representatives, led by Speaker
Vernal Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg, have already moved out of the
Statehouse and over to the new tower. That was planned.
But more alarming, Gov. Richard Celeste and his staff of 65 wlll
vacate the Statehouse at the end of this month In favor of the entire
30th floor of the tower . .That was never part of the scheme for the
building.
•
The tower was buUt, officials said, td consolidate agencies with
leased office space all over the Columbus metropolitan area. And It's
true that 32 agencies have moved In under the new 503-foot tent.- ~·
But !he Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, for .example, got
its own building In the northwest section of town, leaving room enough ·
for Celeste to travel across the street and take up the penthouse.
Debra Phillips, press secretary to the governor, defends the move
on grounds it will ·make the governor's office functl~n more
It will be many years, If ever,
elflclently. "His office and staff are basically working on toppf.each
before
the world comes to a
other and this place (the Statehouse) Is not wJred for computers," she
settled
conclusion about tbe
said. "It's not very functional."
administration of Ronald Rea·
gan. He will, foronethlng, like all
To reporters based In the Statehouse and covering government
major historical figures, un·
operations on a day-to-day basis, the move Is a pain In the neck. House
dergo alternate p.erlods of favor·
members, their staffers and governor's office personnel- until now
able and unfavorable evaluation,
no further away than a good nine-Iron shot -will be reached only by
as the Ideas with wblch he Is
telephone or by a hike amounting to a city block.
associated lose and regain their
Tough, you say. Nobody cares about the IJ!convenlen~e&amp; of a
popularity. In addition, as long as
reporter's .Job. Just do it.
. , ......,. ,
.. '\ -~·~· ....; -~· the American academic com·
And you re right.
•. ·~·. .,:
~·" ..
.·•• munlty continues 'to be doml·
But there's'somethlng more sinister about these moves; sbinet.hjng
nated by liberals (which happily
beyond the .control of reporters.
·
·· '
won't be forever), he can count
Riffe and his members have moved out of sight. Included on their
on as low an evaluation as they
four floors In the new tower are two committee rooms where th~y can,
think they can get away with.
If they choose. consider legislation out of view of the public.
But It Isn't too early, even now,
The governor also Is moving out of sight. He'll be able to leave his
to Identify some of Reagan's
car under the new tower and go by private elevator to his hideaway on
major achleveoments as pres!·
the 30th floor without anyone knowing.
·
dent, and to try to explain the
, ~P roots of his popularity.
In the field of domestic policy,
State government reportage Involves the senses - touch, feel,
Reagan's
major Impact .was on
glimpses, sniffs - ·watching who's talking to whom.
taxes:
his
stubborn resistance to
It has meant intercepting the governor when he arrived at or left
tax
Increases
and the major tax
the Statehouse, asking him questions on Important Issues of the day,
·
reform
bill
passed
·In his second
and generally observing the comings and goings of other government
administration. Together with
oftlclals, lobbyists and groups and lndlvldyals .
the Gramm .,
By seeing the Interaction, two and two could·bil put together about
Rudman Aci, these have effec·
what was going on. Questions could be asked, news stories obtained to
Inform the public .
No more.

~OOSINe.

Sum~ing

The speaker and the governor. hidden In the tower, can do business
as they please, without prying eyes. When they get their stories
straight, they can feed them to the media. Their Interaction with the
high-powered lobbyists about whom we've read so much In the last
two years- the ones that receive five figures a pop to get things done
- will be Invisible.
These are the same lobbyists who will sell the government the
sophisticated electronic equipment that can~ programmed Wknow
everything about your life.
.
So while the government watches you, your eyes anq ·ears are
slowly being obstructed. It' s unnecessary, and a shame.

East downs West 24-6 in 64th Shrine tilt
' STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) the tOp collqe senior talent.
Jackson State's Louis T111man Tillman, named the game's
rushed for 86 yards and . a oftenllve JIIVP, was one of the
touchdown ,Sunday to help the few br llbnpots.
East overcome turnovers, penalThe first ,half featured three
ties and generally sloppy play to turnovers. The West took advan- ·
dump the West 24-6 In the 64th tap of tht 1~1 first mlatake
annual Shrine !fame.
to Opel! the IICDrillg.
Pro scouts at Stanford Stadium
Fresno State linebacker Tracy
watched sluggish play by someot l'!Dgera lnllltrcepted a pass . by

By Ualted Press International
Today Is Monday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of 1989 with 349 to go.
Birthday of Martin Luther King Jr. Is obs~rved.
The moon Is.wa.xlng, moving toward full.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jup.lter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Include German philosopher Franz Brentano In 1838, Andre MlcheUn,
the French lndustrlaljst who first mass-produced rubber automobile
tires, in 1853, Canadian poet Robert Service In 187,, Cuban dictator ·
Fulgenclo Batista In 1901, singer Ethel Merman In 1909, baseball
pitcher Jay "Dizzy" Dean In 1911, race car driver A.J. Foyt in 1935
(age 54 )', and country singer Ronnie Milsap In 1946 (age 43) .

Juana growers In Hawaii. .,.,, • -·
' ". ot th e pot grown In the
per&lt;!$11
lan" -'·te "Is shipped to the
Is · "'
1 ""'
d ' " us -all while the
main1an ..·•a ed
' ''"
' Island "
on the
rest s cons.m
'

re~ estimates that "90 to 95

II

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up the Reagan·presidency

•

}

i

lively prevented the Democrats
Finally,' despite the ongoing
In Congress from playing their p.artlsan battle between the pre- ·
ancient game of Tax, Spend and sldency and the Congress, which
Elect.
for decades has literally crippled
peace with himself, loves his
wife, likes other people, knows
In foreign atfalrs, Reagan our ability to formulate and
entered the White House as a pursue national policies of any
what he believes. Is ready and
determined and Implacable foe sort, Reagan leaves the presld·
able to fight hard for those .
of communism, and his first act ency after eight years a stronger
beliefs, and can stU! get a good
was to bring the Free World back and far better respected lnstltu·
night's sleep wh~n he's done the
to approximate military equality tlon then It was after the
best he can. How many of us can ·
' wltb the communist bloc. He also administrations of Johnson,
say as much about ourselves, let ·
' gave antbcommunlst resls~&amp;nce . Nixon, Ford and Carter. In
alone about the neighbors on our
·
'
block?
l forces In &lt;:A-fghanistan, Ca'mbo' ' addition to everything else, as
dla. Nlaragua and Angola the W111ter Dean Burnham shrewdly
It Is precisely because those
means to go over to tlie offensive observed, Reagan has been a
values still resonate In many
•at last against their communist splendid "pontlfex maxlmus of
millions of American hearts that
foes. Partly as a result, not a the American civil religion."
Ronald Reagan, who so splen·
square yard of Free World Thl,lt alone '!'as no small
dldly personifies them, became
territory lias been lost tocommu· contribution.
and remains
hero to many
nlsm on his watch.
It Is commonplace to note
millions of his fellow citizens. He
·
Reagan's enormous personal
laughs and cries at the same
But when, with the advent of popularity, but precisely what
things they do; he shares the
Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet explains It? Part of the explana·
same fund'a mental concerns.
Union at last signaled Its recognl· tlon, I think, lies In his basic · And he does ~hese things not
tlon of Its own tremendous normality. Let's face It, most
(please understand) because he
limitations, Reagan Instantly Americans - certainly most Is an actor playing a part, but.
understood the enormous slgnlfl· presidents- are nervous wrecks
be.cause he genuinely feels that·.
cance of what was happening, · by comparison: Look at Carter, way.
··
and moved to encourage Gorba· or Nlxo!l, or Johnsoh. Ronald
Is It any wonder that so many;
chev;s reforms.
'R eagan, on the other hand, Is at Americans love him?

William Rusher' •·••
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Call me a party-pooper. But
I'm plenty put·offby the preparations and price tag for George
Bush's Inauguration. Thirty-two
million bucks seems like a
ridiculous amount of money just
to swear In a president, when all
the law requires Is that Bush take
the oath at office at noon on Jan.
20. The cost for Bush's gala Is
double that for Ronald Reagan's
bash In 1981, and 10 times what
Jimmy Carter's cost In 1977.. ·
Why do I care how much he
spends, when an estimated $25
million of It will come from
private corporate donations? A
good question. I've given It
considerable thought, because I
understand my pronounced bluecollar proclivities and don't
believe I sbouldfo!stmyparty!ng
values on another party's pari}'.
But I think at least two of my
obj~lons don't stem from 'the
fact that all I need for a good
wlng-dlni Is a barbecue grUI and
10me load friends .

On this date In history:
·
In 1920. the United States went legally "dry" as prohibition of
alcoholiC beverages took effect under the 18th amendment to the
Constitution. It was repealed In 1933.
In 1925, Leon Trotsky was dismissed as chairman of the Russian
RevolutiOn Military Council.
In 1942, screen star Carole Lombard, her mother and 20 other
people were killed in a commercial alrllner crash near Las Ve&amp;as,
Nev. Lombard was the wife of actor Clark Gable.
':
Ih 1984; President Reagan called for "peaceful competition" with
Moscow. He authorized research and development on space-age
weapons caP.Bble of destroying Incoming nuclear mlsaUes, the
AI for the cost, $32.3 million
program known as "Star Wars."
dollars oaly seeme like an affront
In 1986 Ubyan leader Moammar Gadhafl said Ubya would train, • wben you .s tand' It up alongSide
arm and protect Arab guerrillas tor Palestlalan "suicide and our maulve ud lncomprebeul·
terrorist missions," his first explicit endonement of terrorism. .
ble deficit, and. the belt·
Iri1987, China's No. 2leader, 71-year-old Hu Yaobang, was forced to t)&amp;hteftlnl and program~uttlng
resign as Communist Pari}' chief for falling to curb student Buah says must be part of our
demonstratto~ for more democracy.
IOiutlon. I gue11 It' I IOrt of like
Mom 81111 Dad tellln8 the kldl the
A thoughtfor the day: Poet Robert Service wrote, ''The l)appy man fUIIIly't a little lilort this mont!\
Is he who knows his limitations, yet bows to no fal.e lfllds."
10 they'll DeeiJ to curb tbelr toy

and cassette buying for a while,
and then coming h'Ome with a
new Cadillac themselves. AI·
though neither Bush nor his
opponent offered conclusive
answers to the deficit, Bush
stressed Wise, moderate spend-'
lng as well as "no new taxes!"
This Is a heck of an example to
set.
. And 1'd like to know how much
of the taxpayers' $7.1 m11llon are
going for festivities ALL taxpay.
ers can participate In, an9 how
much or It Is going to the vjlrlous
Invitation-only dinners and balls
Blish Is giving for the people who
helped elect him? Only $775,000
of that money Is going to the
construction of a heated Inaugural stand on the Capitol steps and
other hoopla that goes along with
the actual swearing-ln.
At least the swearlng-ln Is
something John Q. Citizen can
stand In a crowd and watch from
afar, If he gets there early
enough. But this year, getting
tbere early won't even get him a
decent view of the parade.
They're constructing bleachers
along the parade route and
charging "user fees," for crying
out loud. Over the years, we've
grown accustomed to thti balls
and dinners being only for the
haves. However, durlngtheother
Inaugurations, our share of the
tab wasn't so blgh, and at least
the have-aots could enjoy the
parade.
Tom Johnson of the General
·Accounting Office, the lnvest)&amp;a·
tlve arm of Congress, Is put off by
this year' 1 segrega.led hoo-ha as
well. He makes the point that ·
''Invitation-only," offensive
enough to aome, has gradually
beCome "Invitation-and-price-of·
a-ticket only."
"Wbeil does an · lnauguntlon
l_ollll Ita public face and become .

an elaborate private function for
the party faithful?" Johnson
asks. "ls the Presidential Inaugural Committee a private entity

~

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Eastern ................. 7 6 993 1015
Southern ................ 7 6 859 824
North Gallla .......... 6 5 759 697
Southweslern ......... 6 5 739 769
Oak Hill ...... .......... 6 5 658 687
Hannin Trace ... .... 6 6 739 . 707
Ky&amp;er Creek .... ,..... 3 9 767 853
llyrrunes Valley ..... 1 10 605 773
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McCarty's 14.
Eastern made 27 turnovers,
had 13 steals led by Fitch's four,
and had·10 asslsu led by Savoy's
7. The team had 16 fouls.
PC had 14, 11, 16, and 24
respectively being led In assists
by Hinckley and McCarty with 4
.
apiece.
After winning the reserve
contest Easlern's JV's 'are 4·9
overall.
, Eastern Is Idle untO It plays at
Oak Hill Friday In a destiny
deciding SVAC contest.
lleere b)' qiiBl'tera:
Eastern .... ......... I&amp; 27 16 23-82
PC .................... 15 25 15 22-77
EASTERN (U) Martin
11·:1'·25, Frost 2·0-4, Sinclair 1·0.2,
Savoy 9·11·29, Chris Lance 0-1·1,
Fitch 3·1·2·11, Caldwell 3·2·8,
Durst 1·0-2, Bissell 0-0.0, Murphy
0-lJ..O, Wheeler 0-0-0, Smith 0·0.0.
TOTALS 18-1·1MI.
PARKERSBURG CADIOUC
('n) - Cullen 2·2·6, McCarty
10-1·5·28, Labarre 3-3·9, Boice
3·0-6, Parsons 4-0.8, Dehmlow
1·0·2, Davis 0-3·3-12, Hanlin 2·0-4,
Hinkley 1·0-2, Joyce 0-0-0. TOTALS 11+11-77.

UILEI

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or a public entity?' The GAO Is:
saying let's define lt."
High tlme, Tom. If you agree,
let him hear from you:

The Daily Sentinel

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C..lly .. ........ .. ..... ....... .... ....... 25 Cents

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New t;loston at Southwestern
South Webster at Oak Hill
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Friday's 1ama
Symmes Valley at Southern
Eastern at Oak Hill
Kylfer Creek at Hannan Trace
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Women's scores

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end tne~Pid lllf·lddresttd anvtlopt.
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'Berry's World

' 'i:

The West pushed Its leoad to 6·0
early In the second quarter when
a turnover by the East gave the West possession In East ter ritory. Oregon State quarterback
Erik Wilhelm drove the Wes t to
the 25, setting up Walsh's 42-yard
field goal.
The East moved 76 yards In 13
plays midway through the ~­
cond period to pull In front 7-6.
The big play was a 22-yard pass
from Louisville's Jay Gruden to
Michigan State's Andre Rison.
Rison, slanting across field toward the lett, carried to the West
12. Tillman carried four straight
times, the last a 1-yard burst over
right guard for a touchdown.
California running back Chris
Richards got the second half
started In a more exciting
fashion by returning the opening
klclmtt to·the West 40 . Nebraska
quarterback Steve Taylor guided
the West Inside the East 20. ·
The dr lve stalled and a bad
snap resulted .In no chance for
Walsh to . kick a field goal.
Ina lead, Walsh tielde the ball and
W$1 tackled for a 24-yard loss.
Steve Atwater, a defensive
back from Arkansas who was the
game's defensive MVP with .two
Interceptions and nine tackles,
piCked off a pass and the West
had the ball at the East 35. But
again the West could not translate good field position . Into
points.
The East drove to the West 27
on Its next possession and
Gillet lilt converled a 44-yard field
goal that barely cleared the
crossbar and provided the East a
10-6 edge.
· In the fourth quarter, the East
travelled 57 yards In 10 plays with
Tillman being used as the work
bourse. Tracey Johnson of Clemson plunged 1 yard for the
touchdown to make It 17-6.

818 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Rates of Taxation

"Know what I hate - being rushed into adult
roles before I'm ready."

wide lett on a 33-yard field-goal
try.

CORRECTION

. SatlllUr'• reault

!WJD.OHIO CONJ:ERENC&amp;

MaiiR

quickness. (sleall) and super
ouutde (~ point) shooting also
are contrlbiltlllll'actors.
Savoy and Mlli'Un spearheaded
theE~ attack early In the &amp;arne
. and down the·stretch, as Martin
combined a dual threat attack
with 'blg,man~ play IMide as well
as hltUn1 the 15 foot Jumper with
much success.
Althouch Parker.tbura's Tom
McCarty scored his leam-hl&amp;h 28
points ~ the Easlern defenlll! cur·
· tailed his teammates' efforts and
also McCarty's eolng down the
stretch.
In two rune that cleary gave
Eastern the momentum II need to
carry. on for the win, shooting
guard and unheralded bal·
lhandler Scott Fitch acored sev.eral key goals,lncludlng one
bac~breaklng · · three pointer.
P'ltc11 was also lnllltgrill on the
fast jlreak, as was Kenny Cald·
well ,who ended up with 8 points
and several assists. Fitch closed
with 11.
Eastern won a 27·25 dolflght tn
the second round to lead 43-40 at
the halt
The Eagles maintained the
torrid tempo and went on to hold
a 59-55 lead, before closing to an
82·77 nnll!le.
Big man Mike Frost was held
below his averaee to just4 points,
bu ~ was · a faatol' on the boards
with his dominate size. . Cbad
Slnelalr, Chris Lance, Jeff Durst,
Tim Bissell, and Mark Murphy
also kept Eastern's fast break
fueled.
For PC Brian Davis closed
with 12 behind McCarty's fine
leading role. Scottl..ebarreended
with 9, Steve Parsoaa 8, Matt
' Cullen 6, and Bernie Boice 6.
Eastern his 30 of 55 from the
field, 19 of 26 at the line and 1 of 53
pointers. PC hit 26 of 62, 13 of 18,
and 4·6 long distance .
EHS grabbed 38 reboundl led
byn Martin's 12 and Savoy's 6,
while PC had a total of 4~ led by

I syA~ standings ' I

ColltaeBMIIIIIballa. . .

~

~·-·

'

.... ...... , .... ,, ........ ..-~- .... .... .·.~--~- . ,.., .... ~... - - · - -..- -.............&lt;io--.....:...

CoD. scores

••

a

.

o~. ce,tl me a killjoy. Call me !I
spoilsport. Call me the only one In
my crowd who'd have rather
stayed home by the fireplace
New Year's Eve with a cup of
eggnog (OK, several cups) than
.what we ended up doing flghtln(l for toe space In a smoky
room full of middle-aged people
gyrating to songs popular back
when they could stU! hold their
liquor and theSwimdldn'tlookso

EAST MEIGS - Dual 25-polnt
plus efforts from Inside-outside
tandem Shaun ·Savoy and Ml·
chael Martin ·sparked the East·
ern Eagles to their seccind
straight victory, an 82-77 non·
league triumph over the Parkersburg Catholic Crusaders here
Saturday.
Eastern IS now 7-6 overall and
6-3 lnslded the SVAC,- while
Parkersburg Is t:5 overall.
The tempo ior the varsity
contest was ~t -by an action
packed reserve 1ame which
Eastern won at the buzzer on a
Mark Murphy bucket with just
two seconds remalnlni. The win
came after Easlern led 10-2, but
fell to a 23-18 halftime deficit.
Leadlng tbe Ea&amp;les were the
two wlnied Eaile caped crusdaders Mike Wheeler and Matt
Flnlaw with 12 apiece. Shawn
Sandy had 21 to lead all scorers,
while Kevin.Wr)&amp;bt added 16.
The Iarce non-league, Satur·
day night crowd was keyed up for
the start of another great contest
that saw a lot of quickly paced
action, featurlni a highly offensive orienled came plan from
both sides. EHS grabbed the
' early lead, but PC whittled back
to a see-saw first quarler, EHS
takln&amp; the ed&amp;e 16-15 at Its finish.
Point. guard Shaun Savoy bas
certainly come Into his own
durlni the 198&amp;-89 season and
nearly came up with 30 points for
the third time In a row, just one
shy with 29: The local bas been
seen with a giant S embroidered
on his chest more than once. this
season with fine Individual effort
as well-as exemp.lary team play.
Althoflgh many of the little
speedleers points are a result of
being In the r(&amp;bt ptace at the
right tfine on the fast break, his

..

• •

Wake Forest's Mike Elklnl on
the third play of the game and
returned 18 yards to the East
17-yard line.
The West settled for a 29-yard
field p i by New Mexico's Rick
Walsh and a 3-0 lead.
The East drove to the West 15
late In the first quarter and
Michigan's Mike Gillette missed,

Eastern Eagles, post ~econd
straight cage victory, 82~77

Law enforcement authorities '
say that marijuana has become ·
theNo.1cashcrop.lnHawall, andthe DEA report provides some.
figures: "Of the 90,000 residents
op the Island of Hawaii, 15,000are .: :
(believed to be) Involved In some&gt;~-:
way in marijuana growing and- •• :;.
trafficking operations."
: ::_,.
Alargeshare·ofthesegrowers, .;:::
the report stat&lt;!S, "come to . :!~:;
Haw~lllrom .j:allfo.rnla for the..,...
express pur~llpf growing rna- • :~
rljuana. Whett 1ney have made ·-;.,
what they consider enough prof· ;v
Its, they nfove back to the '. :J.':
mainland and are replaced In the ·.,..:
...J!a,
cycle by someone eI se.
· ..,_
Meanwhile, law enforcement
authorities In New Mexico have
complied a profile of "courier
cars" . used to carry drugs
throughout the Southwest. Ac·
· cording to a· confidential drug
lntelllgenc~ report, the_lyplcal.
drug vehicle's occupants ar~ .
usually resident aliens · from ;-~
• Colombia, and the cars are not ·:!
registered to them. The vehicles • •.•
are usually scented with air . "
fresheners and ~ther deodorants . .
'
When caught, the drivers nor·. · :.~­
mally admit only to .being p~ld to ·. :
drive the cars. They claim to' •
have no Idea al I at Is In the- · .,.
vehicle. They il'l"allegedly told
~
by those who hired them to leave
'
the car-atlhe Los Angeles airport
~
and walt to be coritactedortocall
•
••
a beeper number.

ln~ugUral is an .invitation-only gala Overstreet:

suty.

Today in history

Greyhound, which Is also a
popular' method Or transpor t In
Idaho and Oregon.
.
The report details a n Interest·
lng Wrinkle On th e use o,f the
malls to ship marijuana:
" A common technique Is to
purchase marijuana In Arizona
and have It mailed to oneself at
another location. If the package
does not arrive within 24 hours,
the sender assumes that the
package may have been tempor·
arUy delayed because it was
Intercepted by law enforcem!!nt
authorities. The package Is subsequently not picked up."
· The Postal Service Is the
method of preference for marl·

The Daily Sautinai- Page- 3

Pomeeoy-;Middleport, Ohio

..

V#EILCOMEI TO

By ·LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Whether you know It or not, your state government
is gradually slipping away from you. From now on, you will have tess
control; It will have more. You won 't be able to watch It; It will be
watching you.
.
It's scary.
The process didn 't start yesterday, but Its significance was
underscored by the completion of the new state office tower In
downtown Columbus.
·
·

-

~

TIJe Daily Sentinel

pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday. Ja~-v 18, 1989

.

WASHINGTON - More' than
100,000 Americans are Involved
111. the production of marijuana.
and many of them deliver their
Illegal product to their customers
the same way you send Christ·
mas packages to cousin Nellie:
_They mall It or . send If! via
commercial delivery systems.
According to a secret Drug
Enforcement Administration 'report, which we have seen, 1'Var·
lous states have reported that
many of their marijuana trafflckers are distributing their
products through the use . of
United Parcel Service, Grey·
hound bus parcel delivery and
the U.S. Postal Service express

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
.ll'b_

"

Page--,2-

Druggers distribute pop'--.----:,~---:-.~!!1c_k_Ancie_·rso_n

The Daily Sentinel

~m~

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"

--

GEORGI M. COWNI, Mile• County Truou•!"
!

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·· ~~----------~~~--------~~--~
~

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The

anuarv 16, 1989

· Saatitel

,..--Local news
· Continued from page 1
·p.m. to Harrisonville tor Carolyn Sue Stapleton to Veteran•
Memorial Hospital; Scipio Township Fire Department atl1:08
p.m. to a structure fire at the Roger Carsey resident at
Pa&amp;evllle; assisted by Rutland Fire Department; Rutland EMS
treated Ora Carsey at the scene.
Sunday at 9:03 a.m., Racine to Pine Grove Road for Kim
Follrod and Bill Harris to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy ai 5:20 p.m. to-Union Ave. lor Carolyn Reeves to
Veterans Memorla!Hospltal,later to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Syracuse at 5: 55 p.m. to the Syracuse Nazarene Church 't or Liz
Rice to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire Department
at 10: 15 p.m. to a propane tank fire at the Ross residence on Old
Portland Road; Syracuse at10: 17 p.m. to Route 124 for Vermont
Markins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:41
p.m. to the pollee department for Paul Steinmetz who was
treated but not transported.

•

B lame_(~Contlnu
__ed_fr_an--=-Page...:;_l~&gt;_ _ _...;;..__ _
lee-covered city street when the
car he was riding In struck a tree
and flipped on Its top. ·
College Corner: Henry Ford,
32, College Corner, passenger,
thrown 'from the car when.lt sled
off Ice-covered U.S. 27 In College
Corner In Butler County.
Sidney: Laco Trimble, 83,

Nancy, Ky., In a one-car accident
on a wet and Icy Shelby County
road.
Sunday
Sandusky: Michelle Stimmel,
24, Sandusky, when she was
ejected from her car, which
struck a utility pole on U.S. 6 In
Erie County.

--Ar.ea deaths.---Osa Riee
Osa Beulah Rice, 84, Letart. died
Saturday, Jan. 14, 1989, at the
residence of a daughter, lann Han

of Letart.

She wu born Oct. 25, 1904 in
Point Pleasant, a dau~: of the
late Harvey z. and . beth c.
Fowler Berldcy.
She was alio ~ in dcalh
by her husblnd, Albeit Rupen Rice
in 1970; tllllle children, Alben
Rupert Jr., Beulah Faye and John
Halvcy Rice; one pandloa; two
great·gnndchildlen; four brothers
and one siu.
She wu a memher of the Peniel

'

.

United Methodist Chwth,and bel·
~

the Followen oC
Christ m 19'19, wbo met in her
home.

ped

Most

'

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nation weather . mild

•,
•

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VIDEO

TOUCH
•2 LOCAtiONS•

..

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•

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"YOUR IOOD

NEIIIIOR"
IE.I F.D.LC.

....&gt;'

.;

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Seca •• St.. .,...., W.Va.
773-5514
Sth A•t.. New !11•111, W. Va. ·
112·2136
""k an Ave.. Pt." tl, W.Va. '
·. 675·1121

•'

.

..

Lulann Sapp McGriff, pres!·
dent · of the San Francisco
NAACP, said, "It Is tY!IIcal of
Ronald Reagan and It Is typical
of what clvli rights leaders have
had to endure over the yel!fs."

::·

,OF...aoY

~

~~·..;:::::::':::
· =:=:::::;

NG
ERAL
HOME

_,,,.

Weather

''•••
.'

..
.·';

..,
_.
...

Estlbllslled 1913

'•

10IIIulbtrry Awe.
• • ...,oy

992·2121 .' .

.•..·•

_.....,. Offerin(( Pre-Need
CounNiin!c mad ArrGIIPmenu

'

...-··

..

liN N.IWIIIG

-~

.-

•
-

David R. Ayers, M.D.

•AUTO •LIFE

•HOME •FIRE
.... •MOBILE
HOME
:rc...

Family Practice

~

'"••

992·2196

'
•

H&amp;R Block has the anawers. Wbat's more, our
profesefonal preparers will help you get the
maximum refund you're entitled to.

•

,.

••"

. ·~'

.~

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~-

===::::
•GASOLINE
OIEER AND
WINE CARRYOUT
•SNACKS

FOOD SHOP
AND

CAl WASH
992·5552
120 US1IIAIN
PO.IOY, OliO

618 East Main Street

.-..

•

LAIIIEIT

'
.•

ltlf ~'!m~!~o~~LL£Y HOSP~~.
•

. .:. sac
IADIAIICI 4 PLY

FLOSS

..

(304) 675-6015

.. .siUIICIAGaCY
·~ ·

,
'•

,.,

..

•

.

Volley Drfw. l'olot -~ w.v.. ;wso !»oil MS .._
.

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111-...ln•••
PI !Of, ....

. . _CIMIC--TIOH

,g••••

5/99C
JO-OIIS

va•mno•
812·3481
137 NORTH IECOND
MIDDLEP9RT, OHIO

Jewelers
of
lntegri'y

212 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785

&lt;&gt;:'sM'm 0t110 ..... Pile

.

Just fill out the 111try blank, cilp It
out, and take It to any af tile below
morchaats for a chance to wla $501
AI you hawo to' do is pr•lct the
correct final score of s.,., lowl
xx• and the $50 Is al yo•rs. ·
INTEl AS IU~Y T.IS ·AS YOU

-DOWNIJtG
CHILDS
MULLEN
MUSSER·
INSURANCE

W~NTI

the

Do not predict
winning teaM,
just the ,lnalsc.,..,
FOI EI.PLI, 7. 3

t.

· 111 East Second St.

POMEROY

Tho Sentinel wiR take an correct
entries and select the win.., by
ra•dom drawing. Priu awarllod by
Tho Dally Sentinel.
·

992·2342
Se.e Us For All
Your Insurance .
·Needs

ENTER aa~ WINI

Clarlc's-*
Jewelry Store
Your ProNSJionol Full
sa...ic• Jewelers

.-------------------------~
AI lntrlos Must le
1989 SUPER

..

su=:~ ~or•.

SWEIPSTAiiS

Jaauary 21, 1919.
Employ... of tills
newspaper ancl tho

I prttlct the final
icoro • • bt:

participating

-....,_ _T..,.O'----

busiHIHI Drl

not

......... Jntll' ..
ofttn as yoa llko.
No purci!a••
ntco•ary.

• watch Repair -

Yout
llutt
Addrns

------=------

1'11. No.

•Low Pretcrlptlon Prlcee
•Photo Flnllhlng •Free De·
livery •Replacement Con·

11ct Len• Service •Monthly
Sale• Special• •Shop at
Horne Catalog Service

•Walkeri, Wheelchelra and
S..Jde Commodea •Card•
1nd Olft1

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

'""""

171 101111 SICOND
MIDDUPOn, OHIO

PONTIAC[!]
BUICK· ~
GMC
TRUCK

• Jewolry Ropolr
. • Eng,..vtng

113 Court St.
Pomeroy -

...I

"We've Got The Keya To

342 2nd Ave .

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

446-2691

~--------------------------·

For All Your
Transportation Nttds Sot
Us Today.."

992~2054

Gallipolis

A Better Deal"

992-2174

SOO lAST IWII
POMROY, OliO

"COME GlOW
Willi US"

COKE

'

"SM Ua Firat"

IN CASH

On January 22, ~per lowiDIIwll .
be playld In Mlallli, florida. The
outco• of the
wlf be lhtll'·
mlnld on the fltld, but YOU IIHIY
have something at
stab, tMI..
I

Clip out the .entry form below and
drop....off at any of the participating
bu.inesses.

DIIC 18101DIIY

Suite 12
PVH Medical Office Building

I

NO PUICHASI NICISSAIY

69C

~ ~~

Services for all
'
your banking
and borrowing
needs.

'

YAIN

~

•

. ,.

•BUSINESSI

...C·.

''

PHONE 112·1174 OPEN I AM·I P.M

IIWI••p•rt, OWo

~ ··~--------------~ ~--------------~

,

Sunday adm!llions - Ray·
mond Gheen, Pomeroy.
.Suaday dllcllargea - Ivory
B111b, Randy ftttlclolpb.

Diplty and Servlee

SSOOO!!

-

' ft2-U07 .

101 ...... ~t.

•
,;

Lands' End ......................... 28%
Umlted Inc ................... .....29~
· Multlmed!J Inc ................... 76~
Rax Resaiurants ....................3
Robblllll Bo: Myers ........ ........ 16~
Shoney'slnc ........................ 8~
Wendy's l_ntl ..........................6
Worthington lnd ........... ......23)8

Preaton.

.

461 So. Jnl St.

-···

;:

Am Electric Power .............. 27

Saturday discharges - Curtis
cautborn, usa Compton, Zelma
Hawley, Frank Wolford, James

992-5209
POMIIOY, OliO
'

Furnl1hlnp

FUIIITIIE

•
;::

Middleport.

ql

Complete
Home

..,..
:·:

BrJCe allll Mark Smllll
of IliuM. Elllllo Loewt

Veler··· Memorial
Saturday admllalona -Randy
Randolpb, Shade; Mary Burton,

. •,..992-3462

American Football
Conference Champions

Eighteen
ENTER TODAY AT THESE
thousand
·PARTICIPATING iUSINESESe
people
YOU MAY WIN
whoCare

VIDEO TOUCH

·II.AT H·ILL
'FOR.D

'

See u1 For
· Your

SUNDAY
January· 22, 1989·

HOURS;
M11ulaf thru .Saturday
10 U.-9 P.M. .
Sunday
11 A.M.-I P.M.

....

'

oflt:ll a.m.) ·

neW8

3,000 MOVIES
YO-CHOOSE FIOM

EMPIRE
•• · FURNITURE

~
~··::

KeY Centurion ..................... 15

PEOPLESiii
·BANK •

-OVEI

OfPO-OY

'

MIAMI, FLORIDA
'

National Football
Conference Champions

' ,,

(304) 675-1244

CINCINNATI
BEN GALS

,._

'

Dallf .t.ck prieetl

Hospital

49E S

'
'•

..' )

Heck•s ................................. %

I. _,.,

FRANCISCO~·

••• .

President-e ·· ct Bush pledges
commitme t to King's dream

Police are staking out
known drug locatio"s

SAN

'·.
"
,•'
.·'..'

AT&amp;T ........................ .'........ 29\t
Alhland 011 ............... ..........343,4
Bob Evans .......................... 14%
Charming Shoppes ..............161,1
City Holding Co ................... 20
Federal Mogu1.. .................. 51~
Goodyear TBo:R ...................52%

'f:t'e Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

Pomeroy-Middlepoit,
Ohio
,

'

Snow was forE~Cast later MonBy United Preu In!~~~~~
day for northern New York state
Rain and snow ·
and northern Vermont ~and
Monday as most of
across the upiJer great lakes to
enjoyed a dry, pleua:rtt
parts of North Dakota and
Luther King Day.
Montana.
Even the Pacific N&lt;lr·th,.•P• t .
Temperatures at 2 a.m. around
which suffered through)a fierce
the
nation ranged from 15 dewinter storm over the
kend
gress
below zero at Hibbing,
that killed a woman an InJured
Minn.,
to72
degrees at Key Wesl,
her husband and daug r In a
Fla.
_
.•
rock slide, saw the begl tngs of
Sunday, a fierce wln!f!r storm ·.,
reltef earlY Monday as · ly light
pounded the Pacific Northwest,
snow and rain fell In altered
closing highways In Oregon With
areas, the National
eather
blinding clouds of wind-whipped
Service said. ' ·
snow, while rivers In the SouRain also 'developed oytr east·
theQst overfiowed their ·banks
ern parts of the Carolb\as but
after torrential rains.
most of the nation h d dry
In Coos_Bay, Ore., a rocksUde
sent a boulder crashing into a
passing car on a secluded logging
road Sunday, killing a woman,
Injuring her husband and leaving
their young daughter trapped for
six · hours In the mangled
College Fund, and Mrs. Bush Is wreckage.
It took rescuers frori\ several
on the board of directors of the
predominantlY' black Morehouse agencies and the Weyerlwleuser
College School of Medicine ln. Co. about six hours to remove the
Atlanta. Bush has named Dr.· 6-year-okf girl from · the car
Louis Sullivan, head of the following the massive sllde. .
"It appears to hl!ve been a
school, to be secre~.ary of the
rock and mud·
weather-related
Health and Human Services
slide,"
said
Sherlfrs
Deputy
Department. _
Nelson.
"(The
father).
Steve
Yet at the same time, Bush
escaped
miraculously.
We
don't
supported - at least publicly know
how
he
got
out."
.
Reagan's veto or the Grove City
The
victims
were
Identified
as ·
blll, a major piece ot civil rights
Vera
A.
Edwards,
24,
of
Coos
legislation overturning a Supreme Court ruling that nar· Bay, hev . husband, Perry Ed·
rowed the reach of government wards, 24, and their daughter
·
'
'
sanctions against universities Tasha.
Ra.ln doused ihe central and··
and other Institutions found to
discriminate against minorities, northern Pacific Coast as a cold.
women, till!, aged and the front moved through the Northwest, and snow fell In Interior
handicapped. '
Introducing Bush to the break- Washington state and Oregon.
"The weather conditions are
fast Monday, Episcopal Bishop
John Walker ofWashingtongave still bad - It's still snowing,"
him credit for helping fashion a Oregon state pollee Sgt. Roger
compromise on fair housing Washbond In La Grande said
legislation that at first was Sunday night ·'Visibility across
bitterly opposed by the the valley Jus\ before you get to
Ladd Canyon Is about zero due to
' administration.
drifting, blowing snow:"

received 586 essays compared
with about 150 last year."
Clvll rights workers Sunday
blasted President Reagan for
questioning the motives of move·
ment leaders and urged supporters to repudiate thecrltl.clsm by
turntn11 out for holiday
observances.
.',
'
.
.~
In a recent television Inter·
view, Reagan ques tloned the
sincerity of some black leaders.
''Sometimes I wonder If they ·
really want what they say they
want, because some of those
leaders are doing very well
leading organizations based on
keeping alive the feeling that
they are victims of prejudice,"
Reagan said.

'

•. Monday, Januay 16, 1989

Stocks .
(Aa

•

weather and n\lld temperatures
for the early part of the holiday,
with clear skies from Southern
California ihrough New Mexico
and Colorado to ihe middle of the
Mississippi Valley.
Clouds were prevalent over
eastern Texas to the Atlantic
Coast, with fog In some areas,
especially Oklahoma. Clouds
were also thick over the Pacific
Northwest and across to the
Dakotas, the NWS said.
Strong, gusty winds were re·
. ported reported over the Rocky
Mountains In Montana and
Wyoming.

•'
the 19i5 clash.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson In a
sermon Sunday at a church In
New York's poverty,strlcken
Harlem section lashed out at
those who set back King's efforts
by ' 'self-destruction" thi'ough
drugs and violence.
"Dr. King was our gift from
God. Martin Luther King did not
fight and die for your right to use
cocaine, crack and heroin,'' said
the 1988 presidential aspirant
who marched for civil rights with
King.
Jackson was In Atlanta Monday to deliver a sermon a:nd help
lead a parade.
On the West Coast, San Francisco was to shut down Market
Street Monday for the King
"Freedom March," which fol·
lows the annual "Freedom
Train, oi bringing thousands of
people from San Jose to San
Francisco._
Tens of thousands were ex·
pected to march from the foot of
Market Street to the Civic Center
Plaza for the noontime rally,
organ*s said.
Organizers said Interest In
King holiday events has escal·
a ted this year.
'The Interest In Dr. King bas
Increased tremendously," said
Julie Anderson, organizer of San
Francisco's student King essay
contest. "More educators are
motivated to teach about him,
anil more and more students are
eager to leirn. This year, we

.

FB .

-PHARMACY
"3 ·Registered
Pharmacists
To Serve You" ·
Open Till 9:00
. Every Night
Sunday 11 to 8

992-6491 '
716 N. 2nd St.

SEE US FOR
SHOES FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY!

GOING OUT OF

•
''

.; 55 Park St.·
Middleport,
Ohio

FAR,.,ERS

' -

992·6611

BANI
&amp; sav•os co.
POMEROY,

OHIO

812-2131
112·2137

TUPPERI PLAINS, OHIO
111·33811
117·3111

BUSINESS SAU
COMTINUESII

500/o OfF
STOIIWIDE
600fo OFF ON

CIILDim'S SIOIS

MARGUERITE
SHOES

992·3639
" 102 EAS1IIAIN
POIIIOY, OliO .

'

�•

.-.

••

:By The. Bend
- -· .

•'

!f.appier, healthier .a jtear later
:Dell'

Landen: I'm COD·
cerned about the glowing publicIty surrounding Oprah Winfrey's
weight \oss. I admire the WDm·
&amp;JI'S extraordinary self·
discipline, but one aspect of her
al:compllsbment worrles 'me.
:Let me tell you my story: I
h•ve been fat all my life. For
niany years I pretended that 1
didn't care, but deep down I was
rbl.serable and ashamed. I can
still remember the embartass·
f1!ent of trying to squeeze Into an
al~plane aeat, barely making It,
ahd the ''joktng'' comments from
tl)e•people around me. I laughed
with them but I was hurting
,iqslde.
.
· ' On Feb. s; 1987, I awakened
with a start. It suddenly dawned
011· me that If I didn't do
something about my weight, I •-~lild die before long. It was as If
Qod was giving me one last
chance.
:The next day, I went out and .
bjlught an exercise bike (I stm
hate the thing) and put myself on
1;800 calories a day. For calorie
lnfonnatlon I used an old stand·
AIID

~nkin binhday
~ Mary

Ann Rankin, Tuppers
Plains, celebrated her fifth birth·
~a_Y recently with a party at the
home of her parents, John and
· Connie Rankin, Tuppers Plains.
; A strawberry short cake theme
was carried out.
~ Attending were her brothers,
Jeff and David Rankin, her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
tpny Jones and Mr. and Mrs.
~roy Frya~. Susie Mash, Shlr·
I~ Harris, Missy and Jennifer,
:atlan Fryar and Kathy, Maude
Qr~y. Jack Rankin.
.sending gifts were Mattie
P!Jlllns, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Richardson, Randy Fryar and
Tammy. Gifts were also sent
from her preschool class at the
carleton School.
•

••

Page

•

.,..

Plans for a lweetheartbanquet
were made at the recent meeting
of the LauNI Cliff F.ree Metllodlst Church WMIF held recently ·
at the church.
,
The banquet will be' held on
Feb. U at 1M chureh. Bc!nnle
Friend ·pl-ealcled at the meetbir
...
.duriJI&amp;.wbleh tlmetliep-oupalso
..__....._ _ _ _ _ _............,~---~etMondayforaworkmeetlngto
population 1ft America II over- prepare boxes which will be rent
nlcbt. Tbla I&amp;JI ICIIDetlllllg to ove~u mllslons. Pledees
abollt our eatlnc babtts and
D
/"'falluretoexerclae. The only way
\_I _
fi
to lose weiiJIIl-andkeep ltoftlato
chanp your eatlq habits and
A report on the recent state
exerclae replarly.
Tbls me~~~t Jlvlllg up forever 'KI"anae convention. was given by
...... ,of tbe ..,,.._
..._.you___love t oea1 Patty
h, ·Dyer, delegate, at Friday
nil t s meeting of Pomona
and g etH•a
.._ off your duff. un1ess · G
you are prepared-to make thla
G~:::::::~aNheRock-Sprlnrs
I&amp;CI'Iflee, foraet it.
· ..,L_· •
M111 Dyer noted that 601&gt; items
l'l•ninl • -.ldin~Y .. ,.., 1
bad bee
rifh•P IFI&amp;al'o -,.ro..,t "Tio• Ann
D judged In the granae
Lctnfkro Cuid. for BriM~" 111111 cojdntesedls wttb over 7110 beJng
u II
In the juniOr grange

__.

__,

,_ ...

•·

.,

.

.

.-..lew your .......ry. • o ,._.., •

eopy, Mnd 13 plu • oelf--Ur.....l,
,,.m,.-d INuln-llre onHlope (45
..nu ,...,..)roAnn L.n&lt;kroo"P.O.
-,_ 1156%, Ch....,.,; II~ 6116114J562.
.

- -~ legion A~liary
•

.

-

co:,tests, C
.
•
esUna rabtree, CWA chafr·
man. reported that there wtll be
no national sewtnr contest this
- ·

I -

•1

\Yard. · .. ,t

t
mee s

I

~he

.. ~ f.:}·;u. {t ·h·Ht

.

•An outlide Meigs. GaUia or Muon counti• mult be pr•
peid.
·
,
...
.
...
•Receftte $.50 discount fot Ada p.ld In ..,V-.ce: ' · ~.
·
"Free adl- Gifttw.Y anti Found ·· • unci• US words will ba
run 3 d.,, at no ch•u•"Priee ot ad for .•II c8phal IMters tl double price of ad coat.
"7 point Hne type onty 1.118d.
··
•sentinei it not rnponaibl•tor error a after first dllf. IChldl
tor errors first
ad run• in paper) . Call before 2 :00 p:m.
dw .lftur publlclllton to m•e correctkm.
•Acfs that ~st tie l*,d in advence ere
Clfd of Thll'lkl
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Y•d Sal•

..
LOS ANGELES
(UPI) Home Box Office, the nation's
ok!est and blaest pay cable
network, dominated · the lOth
. annual ACE ca'ble TV awards
Sunday on the strength of three
dramas featuring the Vietnam
Wa;r, AIDS and Nelson Mandela.
HBO won 35 Awards for Cable
Excellence announced Sunday
on a live cable TV broadcast, and
'•garnered 17 or the 46 awards
announced Saturday In non·
.. televised craft categories.
"Vietnam War Story," ab
anthology on the war, won five
ACEs and "Tidy Endings," . a ·
play about. AIDS, · and "MandeJa," a movie on the !He of the
South African black activist,
each won four for a total of 13 of
HBO'a ACEs Sunday.
A &amp; E Cable Network won
ellht: CNN tJve; Bravo Cable
Ne'trowrk, The Discovery Chan. net, ESPN and Showtlme four
each; The DIIJII!Y Chlllllll!l three;
Clnemax, Nlc:lu!lodeon and USA
Network two eacll; aud Lifetime,
Prime Ticket and TBS one each.
HBO was also p~ted with a
prevloualy announced "Golden
ACE," the cable Industry's high·
·eSt honor.

TUESDAY PAPER '
WEDNESDAY PAPER

'tHURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER ·
SUNDAY PAPER

Galli a County
Are• Code814

•

,..

The ACEs are cholen by abOut
500 members of the National
Academy of Cable Protram·
mlng, which was formed to honor
programmJng on tile. crowtn1
medium.
. ~·

-tof$25, whlcbcovenall-

.

,_IOns. Clu- wt11 beabl....,
so.e xpectantparentsareurpdto

rqllter Immediately.

·

il'or more IJifonftattoa. ~
Jlld)' Doty, R.N., at (IN) fJ&amp;o
CMO,.at. 1111.
•
.

·'
•

I

FamUy Practice

•

138 Main St., New Haven, West Vlrpia • (304) 882·313,4
·
Formerly Btnd Area Medical Center
l

1-C.rd of Th~nkt
2-ln,Memory

CAST-- ··-···· 40( 111.
Ali.IIUM

•vaw CANS _,_ 46• lk

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING • REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EYEIIIIGS
'

Here

IIONY
•
SIIIT -----5• te 30• ._
IIONY CAST- 3' '' 20' tlr.

S1 AINllSS - .....;...:20• ..

992-5114

Located Off B'iJ)8aa · •·
At Jet. of Rll. 7 • :

915-4141

16141 "2·6550

Area Code 614

GINEUL ClltlnlCTOIS

Pom .....

388-Vinton
985-Ch••r
843- Pan ..nd
245- RID Grande
216- 0uYtn Dist. ' 247-Letert Fall&amp;
643-Arlbil Oist. 9·'9-Aacine
742- Aulland
379-Wel"ut
817-CoolviUt

4-0i¥e8Way
5-H..,py Adt

1- Loit and .Found
7-Ywd Selelplid In adw-anee)
I- Public ltle • Auction
9-~Mtld to luy

:-,1'1

143, Pomerov, Oh. • ·

'

ARM.

• .•

... (.&gt;'IU C"

NEW UStltlif¢

SliAI.L

21-:_ BI.iiia•• OppOf't:unlty

"'"

IIIDDLEPOIT - Garage
apartment, 2 bedrooms, of!
Hartinge- Pky. $12,500.00.
REEDSVILlE - Beautiful
view ol the river from this
nice 3 bed1oom ranch home
on 1. 6 acre lot ·Many nice
features! Well insulated, modern equipped krtchen, central air, Gio-Thermal heat,
mature frut trees, rose gar·
den, ~arage Priva,cy. -~IUo~ , 1
Appomtment.
-

.,

MIDDLEPORT- 2stcryhome
that has hai some remodeling
Nice kib:hB\ 3beO-ooms, attic
area and much morel ONLY
$26,900.00
TUPPERS PLAINS - Very
neal 3 bildroom ranch wrth
attached garage. I acre•,ol . ·
ground. fmHa approved.
$39,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice I
floor ·ranch home located on
a good st1eet. 3 bedrooms,
bath, nice level lot. ONLY
$23,000.00.
Henlf E. Clllllld
992-6191

JtMI Trussell ..... !149-2660

Dottie Tu,.. ..... 992·5692 ·
Jo Hill .. :........... 985-4456 ,
Office.............,.. 992·2259 ·
NEW LISTINGS ITEEDED ~
We ~-· blt,.rs lor lelp
Co•tttJ Pro,erty. List wHh
us tor belt mills.

~2-MobileHorMI

~3-flrrn•

fDr Sale

for Sale

· 41-HouHI for Rent
42- r.,oblle Holt'• for Rent
43-Ferms for Rent
44-::A.-rtment tar Rent
45-Furniahad Roams
41-lpece for Rent
41-W.nted Ia Rent ·
48-Ecau!Pment lor Rent

'

Darrr11d.

Local •ISIIIJiiWd Ctll!'
P111Y -'s sllolt--tn of·
lice help, wlttJ possibility
Ill Plf1UMflt ll!iploymtnl
in lite fdln. .......

sess ....,.. al'li:l llllills.

induti!W-- 1M COtllput• Allis; lib .....
abilitr, ability -to dtlll 111111
public; SOIIII ICI:Illi&amp;i
tiCPIIienot puf11ntd; J)M
telephone IJifSGUI\Y.

Send resume, includin&amp;
refereaces and wo1t
t.P.rience, -.to

P.O. Box 729W. c/o
· D1ily Sentinel.
Po1111roy, Olllo.
11

HelpWa~

PART JIIE OFFICE
HELP fANTED

3 days .weeklr witll potllltial of becomilll full

time.
Applicants must pos·
sess exctlltnt , typitll
skills and hive a knowlldp of office proct·

dures;

munication skills wlllt

•t appe~rMce: will·
inpm to -learn new
lhiiJII.

71-AutOI tor s .. a
72-Trvckt tar Sale

-·~

lledicil knnll!lll IIIII
t!tJitrltiiCt with- IWnl
perty billitll pnflmd
but not IICIISII'J.

Sllld COIIPIIle . . . . to:
Dailr S.atlnll

Box 729-C
Pomeroy. 011. 45719

-orders In Now.
•• AUNT n•s,92-5119

~

GaiHpolls, Ohio 45631

o-w.

EITATE NO. 23784- Fi·
n•land Dlltrlbut..,. Account
of Ruth Elle, EQCUtlbt 'o f
the
E118t1 _
of Edith
H..,..,.,o
_ _ Aurilto

SUIIOCO

or at

LAr~n
&amp;MISSY

\...-'._, · fASIIOII!,
H. . 5niiNG I TMIIING

.EAT OIIISTJIAS GlffS
IIIAT PI1CIS • GIFT

...

CIITiflCATES

TOP OF 111 STAllS

DISIGNIIIOII'RQIIII

, .... s.r••_.,

TERRI

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESU

----·· .......
CIIIS1II, 01110

915-3350

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SERVICE
SYIACIISf, 01110
MootForeltft.and
Domaetlc Vlhlcl•

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES·

AU

"At •a•o••l• Prictt'"

NtASE

PH. 949·2101
or 111. 949·2160

CALL 992-67
"DOC'"' V!~;~p

llcly " Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

Certlfltd U01

GUN SHOOT

uc•

78-Camping Equipment .
79-Camp,.. • Mol or Hom•

CARTER'S
PLUMBING ·
&amp; HEATING ·....

FilE DIPT.

'

Ia....... . . ..

EVDY

SI:IVII'C'

SAT. NIGHT

81 -~ttOme lmprowmwrtt

- "' • ·

84-Eiect:Hc:.l "•frlg.-etion

12 &amp;...,
StrktiJ

8&amp;-Gen. .l "luling
88-Moble Home Repatr
87-Upholo!Ofy

PUBLIC
Wont!. Flltly, .01111rdl.., of
the htllte of LHII.., Y,
Gtldn•EITATE NO. 111008 T-ty·eight Account of
The
Hundngton
Trull
Company. Flduc:lll\' of ti10
Tho- A. Mey TNft.
Unl•• uceptlont are
flied therMo. llld account•

wtn ... lo• he1rtnt11 t&gt;efll,.
uld Court on 1be 20111 der

of fallruaoy. 1t88, It whlcll
1iml llld IICCOU11111 wRI bt

COMidaoM Mid C D tr.... dey to tier untl fln.tly
dllpoaod of.
Any par- In-ted
""'Y fit. *rlttan •-'lont
to llld'- n t e or to ,..t.

Probata OIYielan
Mltlge CO!Inty. Ohio

.
111 18, ltc

SAVE STEPS!

Shop the

EITATE NO. 21514- Fl·
niland Dllt~butt..Account
of Robtrt P. Mil.,, Phyll1
Mey, P.t~cl1 Buchou, ..,d
Clrolyn Poc1'111h. Co-Ex•
..,...._, dt the E118UI tif 8er·
-eS.Mei•,o.a-ed.
I!ITAT! NO. 15838 T-ty·Tlllrd Accou m of
-The
Huntington
Truat
Compeny, Tru- of the
Valme W. Felger Trullt.
I!IITATE NO. 17880- Fl-

AUCnON

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GlOVE PAll

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.
lfACINE
GUN -CLUB
RACI

. . ..,ONe

CCJ!!SIGI

NTS WRCOMf

PATRICK H. •ossn

a.lle .
IWy

WANTED

·

•Waaho,.•D.,.;a

CAIPENTER

SEIIYKE

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 949-2101
or liS. 949·2160

992-6215

Ar rllllllll J:llll!llls

NO SUIIDAY

: ~ Amoune~~mentl

FIIEWOOD

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

qr:.

OAK, LOCUST •
. CHERRY

..

W.w• hU OHIIDr II'IW. . .
IIEAP, M~ County Dotlt. ot
........ •d HEAP
'fllloch- W. aloe you

=--.E..... _

$35::

I. S. II. SO UST
IIYSVIILI, 0110
614·662-3121

Rl-.t E.Jone~: TNatetof

the TNII CNIIed by Item
Fhle of the Will of Manning

Authorlled Jolwt
D-a. N- Holl..,d.

D. Webtter, D-•ed:
ESTATE NO. 21010 Flrlt •nd Flnltl Account of

Bu1h

HOfl F11m

EqupmantDul•.

flral4tlt•...

84 Mile. Merchondlee

• .... &amp; 11!'1~.
This really is an tlltra sped~ property. trun 1860brick in •·
cellent cond~ion. The 5•ooms dOwnstairs indude livinl room,
laree family room,llilchM, din lite, 1&gt; blllht and kids' pleyroom
which could be 1 lor11111l dinlna room, Hllfary 01 dowilstllrs
bedroom. Upstai1s llln are 2 modetn bllhs and 4 betlt001111
wlh access to a large pc:ivate pan: h. The entire home is in P.J11
co9d~ion wth new Wlrinc lhroughoul, modern plumbinaand
heiiin&amp; cenl11l air, hardWood flous, pretty stairway 111d lrCIII
· eotllnce. Antique It~ 111d unulllll ilntique cenmicclllinp
dalinaback to civil war period. Besureton.thuxltl ..lt
.comer location with f.,ced i~ play·yard l!"d brand new over·
sized 2 car garsga Maybe thare IS SCJIIIIIthingbdter 11 Mlddlepolt If there is tis nli on the marMt. We pnced hl$59,500.
You look and lell us what you'H pe.
11101

TE
,

.•

(FIIEE ESTIMATEBI

"fr• ElllmiiiM"

SAUS &amp; SDYICE

.,.... .. ..

~:::::::1:Z·:Z1~-1~mo~.·~ .

-AddoiiiMd-tllntl
-Rooting •d guHit' warll
-conoroto-k
-Piumlllne ont1 ol ...llcot
-k

BOGGS

~

T.L.C,

, .. ,.. holey lowt.nd
209 s.tlt 4th St.
pu• I I I • Oh.
"UIW IICOIIIJJCIIII'' .._

.1 .....2-~.r-·

GUN SHOOT

UCCOON VALLEY

SPORTSMEN'S ClUB

....
,..Cent.
EVElY SUNDAY

lt.12tlll••n ....

11:00 A.M.

12 . . . ~"··· Only
~y ENRIICIDI

..""Glib

011

""

-ootata.d. US Ch•go
Gwtwtt- 'll•cl• of CNdtt
Aelltlg. Coli ,_, 213-12111 - -~ u 114811.
"

992·2269

.

11 ••,, ••

Good-Raw

25Y... E•p.
Rafwan-

BILL SUCK

.hnlahy

,..,~.-

e'Rango1 •F 1'111«1
•Rofrlgoratora •
' "Mitt • I • 111'11111"

12

BISSELL
SIDING CO•

of Bern1ud v. Fultz. Ex110u·
too of the E11.tt of M11geret
Jo•phlno Hunttr · P.te•..
D-ed.
ESTATE NO. 211138- Fl·
ntl1nd Dlltributlvo Account
of Pout lllchlld Roush, ExeoutDr of ' the ' Eftftl of
PMIIIne H. Roush, De-ed.
ESTATE NO . 25002 Tlllrd ·A...,... Account of

Stove ·
992·2673

Bill HO.

.._.--.~,.

OHIO

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

lllllanfl Dlotributille'~ccount

•rnlni

... .-

DUIIIAUYI

UGHT IAIUNG DONIII

Warm

_ '_ •
.._ _ _,.:1~·2:.::;S.;.:'I8:.;·.:::Ifl:;!

1·11-'H·l -

Real Estate General

as,ooo nu

319 So. 2nd Ave:
Middleport. Ohio ;

AUCOONEER
PH. 304·421·7245

Want Ads

FOR SALE

992-6282 .·. .

6:30 ....

82, _P lumbing • He•lnn

'· a'3-Eaa.,ai

' ESTATE NO. Z4318- FI- ter1 parglnlntlltO the - ·
nal indOiat~but..,. Account ·tkin of the truM. net le11
of Connie K. Shalder•. Ad· th., five deya prlo• to the
.mlnletratrilt with the WHI dati Nt tar h-tn •.
Rohrtll. !luck. Judge
Ann•lll ol the Eallttt of
Common PI- Court.
E"'l 1!..-tiM Moodll·

poouah.

~-·~ ..

1614) ...7619 cir (814) 992·2104 ..
417 SlcQIId Avenue, Bolt 1213

73-V~n~&amp;4WD'a.

.

... .. .

~

74- Mdtorcycl•
71-ao.ta a Molars for S11e
76-Auto P.-tt • Ac:c•eorl•
n - AutaRapllir

excell1nt COII-

the poblic; plesant,

"'

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Januory 3, 1981, In
the Moige County Probet•
Court, C•• No. zane,
Botnlca . Hollllk•. 800 Jn.
41'!'1 · A..,u..
Mallon,
Ohoo. 43302- •PIIOlnted
EXecutmt of the of
. Mary B. flllchoie. "-ed,
lett Of R - #1, Box 12,
Rvtland.
Mllge County,
Ohio 411175.
·
.UiemMit:'
llo'*t E. a....; ·
E!JTATE NO. 22828 .,-' FI·
,
,.
Probate Jucl.. nat •d Dletrlbut..,. Account
lena K. Neo . .rcod, Clerk of Leo R. Story, EMcutor of
j (119. 18, 23 3tc
the Eatet. ol Luelle C. Story,

H8ip Wanted

Holiday Gaodie

$1695

m: .Licensed Clinical Audioqist

a

•

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

35-Lota • AIDfeage

CI-ForJA•o

.;

RIVERVU:W - Here is a
good home wrth a beautHu I
VIew. basement, garage, 3
bedrooms. MUST BE SEEN!

lll'vlce~

3e.....:. Aell Eetate W~nted

HOUSE ill Middleport. on a

Get Your

Tr;rnsporld lrun

773-M8ton
895-letlrt
937-Buffolo

/; II \/I!,IIILk

61.-SitMI &amp; fertlizer

34- lutln•• luHdlnoe

882-Naw -Haven

F.~rrrr Suppl1~s

HOME BAKED
GOODIES

59- For Sale or lrtde

64-Hiy &amp; Grain

23-Protwaion"

1 •• last of St. lt. 7
aa !tl at Cllut•
WELDING
-AUTO&amp;
FAR'M REPAIR.
AUTO BODY.
WRECK REPAIR

Veterans Mem·orial Hos(lilll
Mulberry Hils. Ponltror,

58-Fruhs. V-u••bt•

e3.:..L1¥4itodo '

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE OIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHtO
IN THE MATTEA OF
IETTLEMEN'r OF
ACCOUNT&amp;
PROBAT! COURT
MEIOI COUNTY. OHtO
A~countt end Voucher• of
the tot._lng n1med flducl·
11._ h - btan fled In th•
Pr ·--Court, Mltlge Coun.
ty, Ohio. fo• •pprovol and

~ sliM. Small prlCII at
$8,900.00, ~wid malle good !11
rental investment

1-12- '18-lln

Dtpendlbll H11riD1 "'~·--·
CJ Hearinr Evalultions Foi All Aps

SEIYICI

51-Ptts lof Slle
&amp;7-MuliclllnttnJmente

61-Ferm Equipment
82- Wantad to Buy

458.,-I.Mn
176-._.e Qrov-a

, Public Notlco

nea- town..tireal. Jocetion lor
house II( tlaier. $3,900.00

t15.00
t25.00
860.00

53- Antlquet
5•-Mit;c. MetehendiM
51-luldlng SuppN•

vI Ll!'

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

Cet Results Fast

NEW LISTING - 5 aaes, va,,
cant wourd on top of-a hil

11D.DO

f lli!JiiiVIll"ill

31--larloto

' "

I'

28-31 WOIIDI
t7.0Q

&amp;2-S-IngOOOdo

3- Annoueem~ntt

Are•• C'"'• ••
~.

992- Middl"""'

446-Gallipolil

t6.00
tB.OO
t13.00
$21 .00
•s1 .00

51 - Houuhold Goodt

. M•ilnCo .. Yiv

Meigs Coumy

38'1- Ch•hir•

inflite ·you to attent! an

''Mandela."

~---..- .... 47( ..
ClWI AliMIIUM

CMSID,o•o

IIISIIIISS 1'110111

1--'0f e8fth d., . . ...,.,••• ad-•·'\""'-~---~--

- 2,00 P.M. FA/DAY

~

Daniel R. Trent, D. 0 .

#I ccwa ----.. "' ...
:l.:"a
--·-.. 6s• . .
AU...UM

MAICUM CONnACTIIIG

1611farth - - .
·"Uioput, Ololo 45760

Aat•are torcon•cutive runt, broken upd.,twiU bech.-ged

following telephone e:tchanges...

(jail !Jfovatttr

ftym .6:30 to 8 p.m.

WE PAY Jl50.00 PER GAME
OVE&lt;R 110 PEOFiLE '&amp;15.00 PEf! G~r._E

lfaw'-mtta..

111·2BWORD&amp;

22--'Mon., to loan

,,

. Weanutlay, jan,uzrg 18 1989

ISulljlct to Charlgt
Wlt..ut Notkd

bingo-ion.

'

, ~ ... ,._ Ceble Blls

0·16 WORDS

Classified pages cover the

Olildbirth
1ass· set '

at liis new mtt!ita! practia in f}(f.w Haven

lt. •• lotlh of

Paying today
Jan. 1!, 1989

2 H.D. FREE with coupoq end puiCh• of min.
H.C. Pacluogl. Umh 1 COUponJ*CUIIIomerper

. Pay Your Phone

OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
-UOO A.M. SAlUROAY
- 2'00 p,M _MONDAY
- 2'00 P.M. TUESDAY
- z ,OO P.M. WEDNES!IAY
- 2 '00 P.M. THURSDAY

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER

'

Open !/{ouse

- 992-7479

SUN. E.l. 1:45 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1 DAY
t4.00
3 DAYS
tli.OO
&amp;•DAYS · .., lB.OQ.
10 DAYS , t13.00
1 MONTH
t33.00

•A cluaified idlli'*iMment P,l.ced in TheDalty Sentinll t•~
cept - cl•aified dilpl.,, Butin•t C.d Mel I.. II notice~l
wil alto ~pp...- in the Pt. Pl...,.. Aegit ..r and the Oalli·
pofi11 Daity Tribune. reaching over 18,000 homel.

.- --

LinatifJrent, !Mary .1Jiffartl, !M.

Perta

OPIIt 7 DAYS
9AII·7PM

- -- - - - ·
RATES

d"''

__ _

']J-r. tJJan rtrent
'antf ms office s.taff,.

224 E. MAIN ST. - 992·9976
THURS. E.l. 6:45 •P.M.

111!• c..., p-._luppll•

.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S. P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY CLOSED SUNDAY .

.Calendar

HBO
dominates ACE
.
awards with dramas

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUI

•Mobile Home

Pl.-lltG &amp; lib111NG

.

j

news
.

· Quore -(i)f the_day .

MOBIU
HOME PAll
•Mobile Home
,
Rentals
•Lot Rental•

TII·COUNTY
IECYCUNG:•

BINGO

1, ·11·: 88-tfn

Past
Councilors· meet
•

!New officers were Installed at
tile recent meeting ot the Past
&lt;$uncllor's Club, Chester Councp 323, Daughters of America,
hi!ld at the home of Marcia
Keller.
llultalled by Ethel Orr, vice
preildent, were Marcia Keller,
piWJildellt; Laura ·Mae Nice, vice
prtstftnt; · Elizabeth Ha(Yes,
t.urer; Margaret Amberger,
seallnel; and Betty Roush,
flo)¥er committee....
Mrs. Orr opened · the meeting
by readiJii the 29th Psalm. -'l,'he
Lopd's Prayer and pledge to the

Major, and 1!)1nor-le&amp;ille play·
eta from ieve~t- baseball organ!·
zatiOIII' - the Giants, Athletics,
Angels', Cubs; Indians, Marlfters
and Brewers - participated In
the study last year.

Business Services

· · ·• Th'e. Area's Number , 1 Marketplace

'

j

bllcco users could be a precursor·
to oral c~r. but the type of
lesion observed In the players
ap11eared to be reversible If the
tlll!\lmoted before the
more advanced. .

'

POLICIES

.

.

The study confirms the link
betWI!f!ll smokeless tobacco -and
some of-the negative oral health
effects associated with Its use,
researcher VirJlnla Ernster said
at the annual meeting of the
Amerlc811 Association for the
Advancement of Science.
Ernstey, a profesaor of epidemiology and Illternatlon~.l
health, ll&amp;id the good news from
her •tuc!Y was that all the lesions
that were blopsled were benign.
Oraf lesions In smokeless to-

.aSsifie

year. Eldoit.Barrow., legislative
aeent, had. t r,cport. and Linda
M(lntgomety, Yftth ' chalrman.asked that symbols from Hefty
trash bags be saved tor a special
project of the junior grange; ·
It was noted that Nonna Lee Is
confined with . a broken hlp
received In a recent fall. Ms.
Dyer, newly elected lecturer,
gave a procram on "Our Govern.
ment and Us."
HarrlsonvUie Grange served
refrelhrnenls.

... A eontrlbuUon was ~de to the ' ·F!orenc;il Rlebards made a fl'on\ the National Legtsiatlve
Hampton Included ROTC, civil
-ml!slonarles of Africa when the ~portonChrliimasltemiaentto Bulleton,she noted propcilals to
preparedness,crbneprevenUon,
Lewis .Manley Auxtllar)' 263, tlleCbUUcothe Veterans Hospital close several of the obsolete
fire protection, and the U.S.
Middleport, met at Dale's Res· . She also handed out-pamphets mUltary bases lftcludlng Fort
savings bond program.
··
tau rant recently , wtth Rulli entitled "Children Beware" and Sllerldan near Chicago, Pease
ReporUng from the flrlftr line,
~own as hostess.
• 'Safety Tips for Indoor Air Force l'laR In New HampMrs. Richards tallied on the lack
The opening ceremony was Awareneu."
shin!, and Fort Dlx In New of tight security Ulill!ll represencarrled out by Dorothy Casey,
Lula Hampton made a report· Jeraey.
,_
tatives of hosUle i'lrttntrles visit
first vice president who had a on leglalatlon concerning veteShe said that communication Is such places as the EnerJY
special prayer for Lucenla Lewis rans affairs. Using Information the key to all phua of the
Department and Nuclear Wea·
who Is 111.
legislative program and dis·
pons Laborator!es. She said that
culled letter writing to represen·
In some Instances, foreign vis·
latlves and contact with the new
!tors have come and gone before
Veterans AdmbtlstratiOn Ca·
the CIA or FBI were advised or
blnet. She' also distributed a
on the scene.
pamphlet ,. enijtled ''How" a
There was group singing of
,
America and a prayer for peace
Thought Becomes a Bill and How
By WILLIAM c: T&amp;OTI'
. ,Tbeshlfttsn't,llvlng _Brlnkley, 11 B11113j!comet Law."
by the chaplain, Annette Jol!n·
Ual6ed P..- lateraulolllll
34, fits of lnaecurlty, however. "I
-Others topic dlaculled by Mrs.
son, to close the meeting.
,BAD PENNMANSIUP: fie•
don'thaveanyoftheanxletythat
·P.eaaapparently keeps calling Ill ' a-, 'Oh, God, I'm not at the top
MARY ANN lt.\NKIN
sick and milling performances
a11ymore, "' aha says. "I really
, , of ," Hurlylluriy" at the Westwood . did enjoy modeling. Now I'm Into
Playhouse In Los Angeles. lq
other things. Mothering 11 my
Schwarh, theaasoclateproducer
primary job (Alexa 'Ray, ber
Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m., at city hall.·
MONDAY
of the play, s~ysPennhasmlased .- daughter with BillY Joel, Is 3). I
Nomination and election of offlc·
VII'O'ON - American Legion
seven
shows
alftce
"Hurlybury''
plan
on
havlnl
Iota
more
kids.
ers
will take place. All members
Auxiliary· 161 meeta .· ~onday,
and Ronald spent the _holiday
'
o
pened
In
l:'ovember.
The
key
Ia
not
to
fall
victim
to
the
urged
to attend.
6:30 p.m., home of Mary Ann
with Mr. and Mrs. Leslle·Frank,
Penn
has
been
embroiled
In
a
·
_
$Upet'Woman
eyndrome.
·n•s
not
Fitch.
· ·
· Sarah and Matthew, Texas Road.
..
·POMEROY - A card party, .
poptble to do · t'Verythlftg '
Mrs. Iva Johnson Is spelldiDc much-publicized spilt ,wit~ . bli
wUe,
Ma•ana,
ln.
recent
Weeks
,
something
has
to
give/'
,
,
sponsored
by the XI Gamma
· REEDsVILLE - Olive townsome time with Mr. and ~s.
and
Eddie,
the
Character
.Penn
·
L\l.Jit.\
IO'S
I'
A
TilER:
The
·
EpsUon
Chapter
of Bata..SJema
ship Trusteel will meet Monday,
Howard Thoma. ·
·
l.
.
plays
In
''Hurlyburly,".·aJso
Is
lnipresalve
resume
of
James
Phi Sorority, will be held rues6:30p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy and
Watkins, Geo,l'le Bush's-cholce to . Station, to finalize · 1989
day, 6: 30 p.m. at the Sep_lor
Dan lei, returned home after suffertnr tl!rough a marital breaCitizens Center In Pomercy&gt;.
spending a few days over the kup. Schwartz says there's no be energy iecretary, doesn't a~proprlatlona. ~
.
.
Include 011e very Interesting
hoUdays ·with Mr. and Mrs. reason to believe that Pen~ wtll
Udblt - that he was once In the
MIDDLEPORT -'- Mlcldleport
MIDDLEPORT- Reorganlza·
Charley Smith and other miss future performat~ces but
play-goers are ur,ed to clleck
running to llfto_m e be Prlace tlon meeting of DeMolay 7: 30 - Chamber of Commerce will meet
relatives.
d
)
Charles's father·ln·law.
Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m.• at city hall,
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith with the box office.
p.m. Monday a! Middleport Ma·
A LOOK AT UINKLEY:
_ In 197f, Charles struck up a
.
were recent visitors of Mrs.
sol!tc Temple.
Cbr
..
l6e
Brjnkley
says
ber
looka
warm
friendship
wttb
20·year-old
POMEROY
Drew
Webster
Georgia Smith, Kanauga.
•
may be going ouf of style b!at pJallnum·hAlted Ltwn 11 Wa&amp;.!\ACINE - Southern Local , Post 39, American Leglon,.regu,
she's finding solace In mother·
k• -during a 1'6arch visit to her
lar meeting Tudday; 7 t:m.
Board of Education wtll meet
hood and wants more klds,:!31ue rather's San Diego naval post.
Monday, . 8 p.m., at the high
eyf!s and blond hair aren't Three months later, Watkins was
sehool .cafeterta: .
necessarUy "the.. loo~·: ' now,_. In . the galler)' of the Houae of
flag were given In unison. Chari~ Brinkley says,
I think !he Lords'In London when the future
TUESDAY
tote Grant read the minutes of magazines are. really looklnr king made his Parliamentary
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
the last meeting, and thetreasur· . good right .now ~ause of. the debut.
Cham~ofComm~ewUlmeet
er's report was given by Eliza· variety of models, she says In
Royal watchersonbothsldesof
beth Hayes. Mrs. Keller and , ~e Februal( Issue of Glamour.
the Atlanuc.recafled that the last
Laura Mae Nice served refreshThey don t have _.t o fit the
prlnceofWalell tovlsltSanDiego
ments. Games were conducted blond-hal~· blue-eyed mold
wasEIIwartiVIDandduriilgthat
by Betty Roush and PauUne anymore.
-.~
1920 vlllt be reportedly met By UaiiM ·l 'le8 bUnatleaal
Rlednour. Mrs. Hayes won the
Wlillll Wal'fleld Slm,.O., the
door prize. Others attendlq
·'
woman for whom he gave up.the - Jnae Jackloll speaklnl-t nNew
York tobonor the 60th birthday of
thfone.
were Faye Kirkhart, Sadie Trus, ,
selll, Goldie Frederick, Opal
• BOCK NEWS: Mq Puc. the Rev. Mart1D Luther King Jr.:
· "Dr. King was our gift from
Hollon, Thelma White, Mary K.
lou·L ea-'sone-Umemlstress
Holter, and a guest, _Sandra
(
and the author of the blogl'!lpby God. Mart111 Luther Kina diet not White.
"Lovlna John," will marryTeDJ fJrht llld die fo~ your'rl(ht 10 use
POINT P.U:AS:ANT, W.Va.;- ·· -VIIilotdl, David Bowie's record cocaine and crack and heroin."
;Joy Russell, chUdblrtb education
producer, iin Feb; 25
'
Instructlon. Ia planning prepared
'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l~!l!!l!!!!!!!lltll!!!!:!!!!!l!!l!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!ll=!!!!l!l!!!
clllldblrtb claaaes at Pleuant
,
··
Vafley Hospllal.
.Both parent&amp; are uraed to
atlmld the seven III!SIIona. In
situations of slftgle parentht&amp;', or
where busbandl . are -ble to
·at111nd, ·a relative or friend .II
e~~couraged to attend to help the
Honors for best actress and -expectant mother , with '- class ·
actor In a dramatic or theatrical
exemaes and actlvttln.
special went Saturday to Stock·
.(11.. &amp;
The prepared cblldblrtheduca- ·
ard ' Channing for her perfor•
.
.·..
j
'UIIt program Include IUbjects
mance In "Tidy Endlnp," and
such as lltatCIIIl)'. body lloulldlng,
Daniel Massey for his work In
breathllll patten~~ and relaxa·
another HBO Showcase presenUon, lmpca:tance of good nutritation, "Intimate Contact."
tion durtnr pregaancy, labor,
Rip Torn In HBO's "Laguu- sips of early labor, contracHeat," and JuUet Stevenson In
tions, medlcatlou and uedtet·
''The Race for the Double Helix"
•
lcs, poeltlon or baby for llll'th.
on A&amp;E won ACEs for supporUnr
-breast feedlne; llottle feedlna.
actor and actress in a movie or
polt·partum care for metber &amp;lid
miniseries.
baby and IliON. A lloipltal tour
Pop singer Bll~ Joel took an
aid orientatloD Ia a1ao lacluded.
ACE for his music special, "H!IO
Mn. Ruuell, a prepareil cJdid.
World Stage: Billy Joel from
birth Instructor IInce 19'1&amp;, reLeningrad, . U.S.S.R." In the
ceived her traiDIDI tbrouglJ an
.'
Initial craft awards announced
•
o•tetrlcal COIII'Ie at St MarY•
Saturday.
Jroepltal In HUiltlngtoll, C01UW1
Pamela · Reed of HI'IO's
at the Mid-Ohio VallayChlldblrtb
"Tanner '88" won for best
EducatiOn Auoclatlon ud a
actress In a dramattc series.
tacber tralnlne WOl'klbop lpoDRobin WU!lams won for perfor·
.-ed by the lllternatiDnll Childmance In a comedy special,
birth Education Alllf!Ciatlon.
HBO's " Comic Relief '87," and
'
The cluae are held 1ft the
Alfre Woodard for actress In a
ground floor confer~ .._,at
movie or miniseries for
Pleaeant Valley Holpltal at a

People ·in

~

.-

makes recent contributions

lP'
. olfe Pen communtiy note.s
JNew Year's holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
~re ¥r. and Mrs. ' Robert
~s~ll and famUy, Racine; . Mr.
a11d Mra. Steve Hargy, Stephanie
de! Brad, and Mr. and Mrs.
J:llnald Russell, Harrisonville,
•Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp,
Ictal, and Mr. and Mrs. 1&lt;evln
Kaapp, Michelle and Amy, Syra• • wereNewYear'svlslto'rsof
'4:'- and Mrs. Doyle Knapp.
oDorothy Reeves was the New
Y'.ear's guest of Gladys
Tjickerman.
lMr- and Mrs. Eugene Haning

..._
-...
''
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Half the prolesstonal baseball
players who have a~ cheWtng
tobacco or 'llll!!f 1 ~,y.o\'r~:o~~am·
lned as · ~~ B - i! · 'itllnt!!l1 school
study to ~ IJie.effects of those
products hild lf1S\ops lru!lde their .
mouth.s, researchers said
Sunday.
The University of California,
San Franclsco;·study found more
than half the 1,109 players
studied were current or fonner
users of smokeless tobact;&lt;&gt;.

'

The Daily

using - ~nuff

or cheWing
tobacco are examined
..

a

were tll.ken for- missionary support for tHe eomlng yea'r.
Belinda Soulsby •gave a proKT&amp;m on stewardship. The friend·
ship basket was won by KathY
Pullins.
.
Refreshments were served to
the 15 members and . guests
attending bY hostesses, Iva Po,well, Eva ' Robson, and Octa

oanoe
0

.romoru

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Profbaseball :· pl~yers

Laurel Cliff ladies .,meet

•
•

u... •

person.

16. 1989

Monday, JII'I'*Y 11, 1:888

To

-

'.

•

The Daily Sentinel

ard cookbook. I didn't do anyI am · llvlq ~f that It 11
tlilng unusual, just stuck to bran -possible to- acbleve one'• Ideal
cereal for breakfast, salad for weight by eallng senalbly and
lunch (no dressing) and broUed exercising dally. Plalle, Ann.
!Ish and chicken a11d two vegeta· tell the world they doa't have 1,0
bles for dinner. Dessert wu a be rich _ juat rendlle and
piece of fruit.
put tt simply, i determined. - ·SUm, llapPJ...
• cut out sugar; salt and fat.
Beaiii!J
•
OR Nov. 9, 1!187, I reached my
Dear Slim, aa,., aad
'target welgbt. I was 3112 paundl •altl!J: Oprah deserves a p-eat ·
when 1 beran and I was down to deaf of credit for acblevlne beJ'
150 pounds. In nlrle months I went coal, but she made 11 abundantly
from a Size 52 dress to a perfect clear on her show that the way
size 12.
she did ltwu not the onJY way It
On Feb.. 9, 1988, 1 celebrated could be done.
my first anniversary of malnte-_ Oprah made another strong
nance. In all that time my weiJht . polnf: Tall:•·~ welaht off li only
h_asn • t var 1e d mo~e than · .• llalf the battle,· keep•·~ It ott 11
pound s.
. even tougber.
. ..... ,
My concern about the reportS'
·Jamrladtbatyousucceededlft
11111
.of M_s. Winfrey's welaht
loss
Is
los'""
_ ;....-... l,
•
- ....., pounds Ill nine
...........
this: Most of the articles I've and that you were able 10 aljn·
read gtve the Impression tllat the •yourself "Slim, Happy .and ,
Ideal way to lose wel""t Is to, go • Heal""•," but I w.""kl not recom- ·
Into a program that costs several metllll your approach to evethOUSand dollars. Those mfik ryoll, All)' penon Whq needs to
shak'es Oprah lived on, plus the lote:..,pc)unda ormoteihotild!Je ,
vitamins, blood tests and medl: und~ doetcn"aaupervlalon.
cal checkups (almost dally.), are · Near-lY 40 percent of the adult
' 'm uch too costly for the average
·
'

•u

--

•

..

·. - :..--

,_

~'

Ro,. Chhmer lw""' 81100111

ftuJ-ery. 30+773-83CB. . '

CLOWNS
Col1etors of
Emmitt Iaiiy Jr•
UIIITED BilliON

50°/o
TO 75°/o

SAVE

NEED EXTM INCOME? &amp;.n' ~
up to U,IOO lll •ottlllg 7-

-·--b•odOft- .
Wil!K I'ROMOTIOM

o-.,_ . ·

.a..dantandNI•.Off.-theno
1 ...,..,. In Ill tleld for Ioiii
Plft•llme Jnd • - opportunJ.
dol. 30+1711-8117 or 882- •

ZCII.

· •

.

'

-------'-'

\

t

· Glv11way

PH. 1·Y?4E-r~l:zz

IEhlel .

We en ........ ,..
tnl
lllat• cw.. Wt en
.._ •hi llol IIIII rod
outratllltors.Wtolto
repalrO..Tanb.

c•• r...._,

PAT 1111L fOlD
811·2181

Middleport. Ohio
1-IJ.tfc

....,... to

alit• - · mix"!' :

·
·........ bloo.. .
m•-lhop-11-c1tt COl •
t14-44f.IIIO ollat I I'M.

- - tor -.............
.... ...,..... d 1*1

·•

Colt ..·.'

c........... - ;

. ..,. Clll ..... ....

�•

•
Monday, Janu.-y~1~6~.!19~8!:9~-------------_!P~om~181~~oy~M~idd~le~po~.rt~.~O~h~
-io~---.,.---------·.!The!!!_D~.ail~·~y~Sentinel!!!~
· !!!!:~!2!:!.9
8

LAFF-A-DAY.

Lost and Found

44

U&amp; AEWAROolOIT· - m
tiM, light brown, mele dog *'om

61

Apartment
for Rent

lan: IIMI 7 wk. old II'own Md
white
healeon Rt. 241.
Jon 11t~ - . t l:OOp.m. Cd

ftm.,,

Plk1 from *113 • mo. Wll• to

LOST tn Utert 11'81, .,r~lllwhltt
ond ..._Boogie. ony lnfot..,.

ohop ond - •· 814-44a.
2888-E .O.H,

tlon w• bo 11Jpred•od. 3048911·3382.

T•• Townhou • .., ... ,.... 2

BRo.. 1\\ boll-., CA. dltl·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

cloood polio. pool. piOI'ground.
Wol•, - · 8 t,.h lndculod.
ltwtlng tt 1219 P• mo. Col
814-387-78eo.
Modlrn 1 M , downtown. corn-

plttt ldt- .... ..p... Oop.
otlt. no ptto. Ctl 814-444101311 ..- . . . .... I,
Pom.,oy -2 IR. remod•l•d
lila"!"*" "" ID&lt;Ing ..... Boc.
d&lt;IP. • tol. colt oltor 1 PM.

TOP CAIH pold lo&lt; 113 modol

"No , ·offense. No offense.
N0 ...

md n..,• u,.. a. .. Smhh
luldt-PontiiiC. 1111 Ee.t•n

t~:::ii:;i;?ffi=;:;~:::~-;,;::;;;:,:;;:::;:;:===:1
11
32 Mobile Homas

Help Wantad

for Sale

AVONIII••oiiShWI.VSpe•o.
Junk coro wtth .,. wtthout 304-178-1421.
mo-. Coli lArry Llvely· l14- "
388-9301
12 Situations
Fwnllu,. lnd IIPPII.,CII b&gt;;' the
Wantad
plooo or ontlro houoohold. Ftk
prl-botngpold.Ctll114-44• - -- - - - - - 3181.
Htve v•canct for 6lclv In pf'Hite

::;;:::::::;;:;::=:;::===

\WI buy or tppr.l11 .nyt'*'gl hD.,. •d nwt to 1hire "'
Artttqu-. lurnllurl, IPPII .. aa IP.-1:ment AI t.:rnilhed. IV~tnd
etttat•. MrtOI. compt•• home 'hot m... R••onlbt• Clft

'"'""hlngo. M•lln WodomOI'or. _8_14-__;_2&amp;:..11-:..:.1&amp;:.:0~9. ---814-24.&amp;1&amp;2.

bin•

ena.

PIP• a -b. 2 or 4 otrolO: Col
8l4-44e-17&amp;8.

15

Schools
Instruction

18

f IIIIJIIIVIlli~IJ'

Wantad

•noo.
fhndl CttvMo..•Hom-.lnc.

814-446-11340.

to Do

Help Wantad

Will b1br alt In my home.

'

'
--~mo
MLTfor "llvequlppod

Mond"''·F ~dW. dll\'0. Col 81444•0891 oft• I PM .

' V18A/MA8tERCARO
US CHARGE GUARANTEED
Rogll'dl- oiCrodltAotlng. Cd
N-1 213-92.99011. •t. U2~24.

1 11ACA E8 In PllcoCo. Ohio. 4
8R . Home. llrn. Tob.cCD I1H.
l u l d - hotlo- tniL
Col lot Htvo R.E •• 114-147·
2119.
Ctll 814-3711-27&amp;8.

8,3!)-4,30.

c- Morel. 814-4411-7388.

Short bod 1o&lt; 1977· 1979 Ford.

36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Wll dotnoom•l•retunw.Lona

lnd lhort- fornw. Phane 114· ·. 3 cl . ..t 8G'• wMh pond. 3 I
ICUtrecta. •c bldatltN olfRt.
192-BI21 lor' 111PGHnMnt.

Ml do ·hauOO cl-g. Ctll
814-992-2170.

2 bodroom AptL lot ""'·

CtrtMood. Nloo •-g. ..... ndry
, ................ Ctl B14992-3711 . EO~
Quollllod ront. . poy •zoo.
Dtpotlt and no rmt tar the
month. O.oi::;D:::: a ...,uery
· onlv. VlltgOMonorond
RlvonldtA--In
Mldd-. Ftom e112.
8 14-112· 7787. EO H.

ta
*191.
Redln..
10
•m.
Ltmra
t28 toJ226
. ua.

a holkll¥•· lniUrMOt

f718, Dook '100 up to U71.
Hutdl• f400 end up._ Bunk
betk . comp... w-m111,....
f291 on~ up to •388. Bo..,e110.Mttt,_...,,__uo

ful • twin

•ea. firm
*'78. ~nd
*210 • up.

•••. au_, ....

King fJIIO. 4dr_or_ fiB.
Gun c_.,.ntltl e, I • 10 gulL
lo.., mort- Ul 8 148.
Bod fr..,• •20. f30 • King

frame ISO. Good ... ecllon of

bt*oom IUitt~. mltel cabin...
hNdbo•dl f30 •nd upta _ltl.

80 Dev• ume u c.h with
approved a"d. 3 Ml• out
Bul••• Rd. Open hm to &amp;pm
Mon. thtu Stt. Ph. 114-44•

0322.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complllte hou•hold furnl•hlngo. \\ mll.....,rlcllo, 304-17•

1410. 814-388-9773 ,

Wll'llngl.

41
1111.111Cidl

Urgontly NMd D111ondobto ""r·
_ ......... llnroolhlahq~

Botoh Slrott. Mldd-. Ohio.
_.. ........... .-tmonr.
utlltl• oOid. roloron-. Phone
304-992·2118.

2_

• •lubrloent• lo ~Mnuilcturtng..
trucldng. coftltNCdon and ferm

lngVolu•. At. 141 lnC.,.ronory
'A rnle on lincoln Pile:..
'
Rortoloto GE dlohwtot.- w~h
countotopoce top. EO!CIIIooncltlon. e75. Col 814-44e0191 oftor 4 PM.

Sporting Goods

63

Antiques

1-.,..-------Buy or Soli. Rlv•lno Ailrlquoo.

outt-t....,lng
In Otltpollt
•· 21
1124 E. Main ltr• • P~m.-Gf'.
.. .,..,,,•For
,
.8 us Iness
Houra: M,T,W 10a.m. to lp 1m .•
wrtto c.o ,
Opportunity
Sund"'' 1 to lp.m. 114-892·
·r•t. Southwlll.,. Petro- - - - - - - - - 2&amp;28.
loum. 8oo N100&amp;. Ft. Wwth.
J)l 78181 or phone 1817)332·
INQnCEI
23311.
THI OHIO VALLEY ~LISII­
64 Misc. Merchandise
ING CQ , ,_,_,do thot you
Dttk Clerk Wented· do ...... _ with pooplo you
8ookkMPina exp.,....ce r• know, •d NOT to 1Md mon.,
BRAND NI!W FUR JACKETIIApply lotu.... SundOI' through the mil untl you
Brvtnt Port. bltok robblt, ....
' Mon., from 8to8. No phono lnvootlgolod tho ofl•ln;
rod lt&gt;x. !&gt;9th bo.. tHul JtokoiL
Ollllo. Eoi&gt;nolodgo. 389Jodcoon
'
· 38R . '-ot...... ,.,AC.f3eot
Sin 12-14. f78 otdl. Ctll
Pllco
mo. Ctl 304-178-5104, or
114·lt2· 21U dlll'tlmo. or
87.131&amp;
114-992· 5292 011enlngo. or
Mlddtlon Eotot• wtl bo ttldng 23 Professional
COIN . . . . The O..ly Sintlnel
11Jplloltlono lot Dlroot Core
Services
46
Furnished
Rooms
z lA. Lo. .od .. 1928~ Cllott·
olftot.
Stoff, Tu•-· 11-4'30 PM.
nutlt. •111tmo. f71diiJ. Col
814-44.3870.
Fumlthtll room-111 lo..,nd
AriWood tor ..... •21. per to...
........... for 3 a 8 yr.
Ave., OIIIDolll. e71 1 mo.
Coli 814-892-3890 .. 114oldt lram 7 AM to 1 PM In my . Giving prt.oto plono
3-4 IR .• lg. I'll • LR.Iou....,, HI Utili• pold. Sinoltmolo. Sh•o . 982-eol7.
honw. Addllon .,... C•• 114- Limited oponln~ -~ or otudont. Ctll K
Johnoon In b•ho. ltlfrig.. o~-. No Indoor b•"Ctoll44e-4t1"18oltor7PM .
317·0101.
•
Botdbury. 114- 2-1071 .
- · CoD 0~4-440.31107.
Mll'ftlll .,to. herory tlltv ""''h•
Room~ fDr ..m: •...- or month.
1nd dryer. •210, KMmoreAva·
Body Men noodocl. SIK .,.. .
2 I~. In -nrry-VInton • ._ Siortlng tt •120 • mo. OoNio CMio .._,, duty Wlllher md
nptrWJGII Plul toolt. C.M I14dryer '200. 814-742-2312.
ltove. ...trig., - · · floctrlc. · Hot.814-44.9880.
31.N1B.
~
trtoh
f2IO • mo. - : : - - : - - - - - - ....,... """"" wtth oooldng. SURPLUS ·Ddgln• Ar""'. Do·
HELP WANTED- HourlY Clnlc ,.,,-.,..,---.,--T:-..-.,-- Dopoolt. Ctl 114-38a.HS8.
Rontlll. Ciorhort Clotldng.
AlooTriii•-AI-~o.
Aido -·timo In - l l y 31 H omea tOr Sale
For Lo•o. _,_ III•Nioo 3 c•• ~
• m 30• 77~ nh"
USA Jungle 8oot1, Green C•·
plonnina ofll-. Muot hovohlgh
SA .• 11\ .... hho-l.atgolot.3 sis'dr:on'te\i. ,
~ ~
(ond block
oohool illplomo or -ltttlonoy; - - - - - - - , . - - - ....
from airy. Ctl 114-44•
SAM OMERVILLE"S, OLD
good oommunlc•ton rldlt; ec· Very tn-hrtlorldi 4 - - 7804.
ROUTE 21. NEW ERA. WVA
ourOO¥ with ll.,roo; moclool 2 btth. fomlly ..,.... with lit•
(noon · 8o00pm. Doc. ontvl.
olflot u,.l.,oo holp"t wHI pi- formll..,lnll t.go lttklg 3 IR. hauot ltnotd- prtl. 48 S p - for Rant
Other monthl Frid..,, S•urdiV.
tno1n mttll,. ln ... lcllol who It room. 30 fl. COittom
lwgolr-.,.,d.IH.Rt38. t3SO
. Sundt¥ only , 304-273-8811.
to--·-~ o -... oolt woo""'•"- .,loh t mo. Coli 114-44e-207U.
n - of ell.,.. Looking for boo-. 2 . . 1•111• lwei
3 aae
moble home krt. For oolo' 0* lltowood. Ct1
_,.who It otll--lwotod londtotllod lot. 4 .... from
1 I ril. from Otllpolt. Ctl 304-8711-2717
3
IR
.•
1
......
CA.
No,_
1
oftor 4:30p.m.
., d - gnow kl thO pooMion tt Hoopltol off At. 38814-44e-0808.
. - trlta b•od In Rort.torook lu-•ton. Col ... e out 110. · - · Dop. • rol.
1 vt. ••• Col! 814-. . . 2310. . :C,-ou-.....,-...
-,.-o-H_om_o-,..,~._
CompocrTtiSttrmodol-•
0 ...... or c:hotlll .... o. Ohio. 814-. . . 4188.
•tuchmentt, *189. 00
r ....lroo .................-..
Niae hou11 tor ..n In town.
Rout• 33, Nonh ol Pt&gt;m•D¥· whh
CMh or WrN arrawged. phone
-~~ kl COOl.- Oolu•o 3 BR . hauoo
.. _
Sptolouo. good ...... - · ..... Col 304-1711-4418 .
PN!O oilOwn• ftn.,ot Co' 304-871- . Un
nolghborhood. 3 l•go bod- 114-89,.7479.
·

~It«-.

Bulldont, f3IOO . 1912
Chotrotte•..r-lo.4dr.. poot
ml ...o. good
1110. Coli
814-3711-2&amp;81.
. .

h••

-no.

tl-

;;;;o;..-;==.,.---,.,.-

66

Building Suppllea

•

Building Mottriolt
81odl. bttdl. pip-. w ..
- ......... cl.,•t ... Rio Orondo. o . eon 11424•&amp;121.

i.

ConGtto blodto- til ok•
ot delivery. M•on - • Ooll
lit
· - Co
.• 123'h
""'• ..
&lt;lollOhkl.
Coli 114-4462781

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Ch.,nal Rultlo
on d llovolod Lop 81cloig

M8t..... .
o . .onto.t 0ut11ty
• Deck

CETIOE. INC.. Athono' 8i4H4-3&amp;78

68

Pets for S•le

-two

"* -

- -.to Wtr..... .....
tna•d

llltu..,

houraereto be

......... ... dlo!Wollntr-..ml •d a.o empiD\"*''
,.,_..a. U1 PI•Md P•Mtthood of . . . , _ Ohio. 3111
Rlahlond A...... A - Ohio
4&amp;701. II¥ J ...orv 28. 1899.
pPSEO lo on Equtl Opportunity
llnp...,.,,

whit""

frit••

lot-

1--------15104.

- - doublo flll'lll• Col Eo~

3 •orv A-Fromoln nloo •-;;:
onRodn.,.CoroRd. 3ml•
0111
Coli 1141111.

c-.

114-44e-0332 "' 4460111-....

Flr ..ood lot •I&amp; .30.00 lood.

49

For

Laase

2 be*oom. on Unton Aw. 1ft
...,_..,, t225 l*montll. May
aol'llllcle •6al on ...,d

.

trld. 114-117·1231

co•

coil Wlll'no Molton 304-41111881 .

Pnoblollghlod olgn wMh ton..
U29.00. F. . dtlvery. Plottlc
POrtlolly b'
..r .
. hod
·-·
a.M:IIble
one
or twO.-.~~:
..
R.t. r.qulred. No p .... lnqu ..•

ot: 831 Fourth A.._. Otllpoll.
114-44e-OZ3fl.

61

Voh~

ol•lor f100. Fordo. Mor-.

Cor,.ttoo. Cllwvo. Surpluo.
8....,. Guido. 111 805-187·
8000, Elll.l -10189
1940 Dodge Buoln•• Coupo
fl1•t.M

e...-eel.

1178 Ford Puru ... 2 dr. tiiOO.
Coll814-2411-182&amp;.
191&amp; Buolk Summ..,. Rogel.

Cl..,, 4 cyL, 'a uto., AC. cruiH,
tilt, AM·fM · Cooo. 17,800

mn •. Ctll 381-8240.

1187 Dodao Chwgor, tuto.. tlr,
32.ooomr• . e4800.Ctll 114371-2728. '

1183 Pontltc 1000. Ps. PB. llr.
4 OfL tuto. E-. cond. South-

•n c•. No rutt 12100. C.ll

1974 Delta 18, do•n't n~n.
•100. 1174 Monte Corio. ftlr

boc!i'. Nno good. noo.
114-. . . 2478.

c.•

PM.

1984 4x4 pickup king
ct.. PS. PB. 1111 -lnG eekklg
~1300. 1972 Fotd ln&gt;nco 4x4
ft. . IOftW work. 302 ll'laln&amp;
'lOCI. 88,000 ml•. 1171 Pord
Pinto. 4 Ofllncla'. ...........
- - - e 3 0 o. Cd
.814-2411-1238 ookiDr Oonnlt.
Dog trtlnlng .. _

--•10&amp; Ohio. 304-822-3881 ....
lot ......

AKC rtglot- Codtor lp.,lol
lot . . . . (lufll. ooll
304-8711-8111.
.

1983 Chrvll• E ctloo. EC,
'""""' tilt. p. lode&amp; AC. Sllv•
2.1 L 73 k. f3400. Ctl
114-44.3417.

Vl'"' ·

1187
1414.

F~oblrcl

CoN 114-44•

::::::::-::-77:-----

1978 Ford -DJIY Montreh.
AKC rtglot- Codtor lp.,lll . lodr good. ru"' good.
pup.
old.
Coll814-38a.l472.
f78.00. 304--1917.
0Ch81U:w• leil:ed Vehld•
Wonted to Buyl AKC rtglot- hm noo. Fordo. - - ·
lomolt
Sponlol pup,• Corwttt. a.ry, Sur....a Buy. . Guido 11} 805-887·1000 .
304-87S.8412.
!Ill 1-10111.

I.,...,.

·-Mol&amp;

C._.

67

· Musicel
lnltNments

l.tt. . 147.10 box. W.Va. 1·

1INCJTO. 1112Bulclc lltywk.
11,000 mllu. C.ll •f1•r
e,OOp.m•• 114-11,.3111.

--go.

800-842·2434; Ohio 1·1100.&amp;33-3411

1111 Corvett:e convtnfbl ..
llri9inol - . .. 310 4 tpood.
now ..,. Pl. nUIOO lltm. DIY 814-1482188. ovonlnt 114-247-4811.

DoghauH, 304-1711-2359oftor
1:00PM.

Mu-11-_
-ewlhrod
111M\\
. .1.-_E
_ _g
.on.ton. Col014-74,.2422.
Houae11old Goods

_tc.n..,
....
Chevrol•t·

Pore • • drHion • n•orulld

Hou• kl oountrv tt Lotort.
304-112-2011.

c.. t:Vakorwn.

•• Jfm Mink

61 Farm Equipment

42 MobHe Homes

torRent

Oldtmobla 114-44.3872 or
304-773-1134.

1178 Codl., Elodr-. IIOod
ohopa- droo. 44.000mioo.
........... 304-812-3413.
'77' Ford Gr1ned1 I oyl
M78.00. 1178 DodooA- 8
nt MO. U7LCID. l'hono 3048'7.2487.

In

1110 Choim,. hrHt., plr*u p,
e ort.. . -- . . '1.200.00.
1114 good
tuto
....
thlll&amp;304-812-2118.

11om..,.......... 21tory.

1180 Unoatn Town C•• ..,.
302 ...... . . . btttory
and llrek11, fiiUII 1ell,
•z.ooo.oo. 1181 mo,.o homo
14x70. phorto 104-773-&amp;310
•~¥ .. ••

3 - - 2 ...... wlrlnfl.
... -.-~dtllltlntto.
Aloott-.
·end dryer. F
UI.IOO.
· Ctl 814-.-.2528 or
814-H,.2848.

Law-n""".IJ!II'••

...

.................,__,

Wont"'' low olloobo.......... - - · · P.U • • Pt. 1'1. lloglttor. 200
Mtln ·~-- Piootlltl. w.v•.
2111110.

BUDGET TRANSMISSION · ·

n•SSJI.

1----------

72

TruCks for Sale

•

•

(

_PUaK:.

Wille and Merk team aboul
Soulh African rlcllm. C
1&lt;811 Aile~
rethlnkl her lllreerrwnl wtlh
!lob not 10 ~•ve children. Q

sa&lt;lif(f; ...

y

• eo

•

1:00

~MoolaQ
(l) (!) MlllllpiiCI

MORTY MEEKLE

a
eD """""' .._ Q
Ill Latty ICing U..l

I SURE HIT THAT

WHATSIN11-IE
I...LINQ-1 60X ~

AON"S Televl1lon Service.
HouM Clllt on RCA, Quaur,

ONE

w-

Anlhany ICII ~ surrogllt
brother to a young con ar1111.

i
10:00

ltump

romovol. Coll304-1711-1331.

M-wol• complttodtomodorf.

lDOK AT TH' CARD
TATER MADE

• · Cal

.

WHAT DOES
IT SAY?

.JEST FIR

Plumbing
8r Heating

OH,_ SHORr II

10:30e11!1 Telk wtlh Lrll

1 StE IT PLAIN
AS DAY NOW II

11:00 (]) lllmltiiiiiOol-•

IIJ MolltJIIM
tHI HoMJWID DQII'I
0 Mllnll VIet

Electrical

•
...._"'' ~Iii
..-6r Clomm•clll wit, ~ , .&gt;.J:.. ·'

ln t t4iw MI'Yict or rtplira.
Ucent.t electridat. Ettlm8te
free. Ridenour ElectriCII, 304• 711-1781.

86

•

®..-elllllt
(1)

aowr
~·

Dll•d Wttw Service: Pool•.

Ciotorno. Willa. Delivery Any·

"

Sundov collo.

IOnltll•

r.c•. volume

::.'""' 1,000

Ill

dl•·

4,000 CIIJIC-

J04-~~
poolo.
••19.

-

u pholatery.

· ....

lntoreallng llmat are In the oiling, and In
lhe year ~ YOI! inliy blcome In·
· valved In arrangemenla thai you woukl
have fall _ . lteiOfOCl 'lfJIJII .-p~~ lut
year. That won't,ln1itnldall you In IIIIa
cycle/
· .!'(r~ 1a
CAPIIICOIIIOI (Die. • ....._ 111 Van·
lures you pu1 yout tullloroo behind loday ha.. acelllnt c.,.,_ oltucceed·o
lng. Once you dalwimtue yrNt tatgel. 1
conllnue to focul an the bUII'I eye untU,
you hh your mark. MajOr chiiiQIO are'
C8pllc0m 1n the comtng
Sand lot your Allro-Grapll predlcltona
loday. Mal S11o Al1to-Graph, c/o thla
newspttpa", P.o. ao. 91421, c....,and,
OH 44101-3421. Be IUfl 10 alale your
1 zodiaC llgn.

.-ror

•

Noo•t,••

• 0
GMw
AQUARIUS (.IM. :ID Fab. 11) s-al
people you t1'8111ed kindly lolely 1111 • ger IO reclprocale aiKI lqiiW1! ac- .
.. , ,
.
111• ltrwllllull Fuch
Me? Fuch YOU·
coun1a. Good lhlnga could happen lor ~ ... D ,....., ZI-AIII· 22) This can be a
you overlha next lew days.
'vwy rewarding day far you, ptOVIdeCI
• Anw'a.- Maguht
PIICEI ,,.... :ID Mltrch :ID) A hope you !you locua on ..tgnmen1a that a
11:00 lD MOYII: Analllllcl.aw
lit timan (NR) (f:40)
have,..,nurturlrlgthatlwl'1olamete-i pr8Ciat purpoM. Don'1 your .
rial nature h• a good chance of be- poalbllttet by -lng time on MyIll NI'L TIIMIIt Focul on
coming a reall1y quicker than you thlnk. • thing frl¥olcluo.
Foott.ll
Being axpectenlla not -.tu1 thinking. VIIIOO (Mg. D lopl21) You thoutd
ARIEl (IIIIMell 21·Airi 11) ConCihlono be to Milly out-poll your peero In
.(I) ll•llllwail Tanlght
In generel IIIYOr you today In both ca- peroonal popularity loCiay. The majOr
r - manara and - . your peraonal · leclar that rnak• you .., - l i n g will .
flriancM lrot-COIICIIInad. ,WtJrk- the• be your unpti. .OIIOul...,._,..,.
.11!1
ttow aiKI try to upgrade your poahiOn In ...,_ (lepl .oct. II) Primarily
'IIIIIIJINiglif"'"
both ......
thtouglo your tlllortl, IOtt-lllg gooCI
[TAURUI (April :1D 1i1111!1 :ID) Your k11u may dlvllo~ altllllt.tlma that will loaW a
aiKI concap11 pertlinlng 10 turthloktg vwy baollllallll an your 18tnlly. ,
12:01lll MOVII: """' ..,.. ...
your peroonalln1- ... very ....nd; !&lt;liP up tloa gooCI ~.
. . . . (II) (2:24)
pertoapa-. moN 10 than you gi¥1 iiCOUIO (Gal. II 1111. 21) There are ·
.
12:311
.IJ) Ill Lalllllglll wllll
yoonollcraclh lor.
gooCI u•cr•lor you to~ ·
DMid l.-.ilillt
Glllll ,..., 21.....,. •1 You could ' -llllultl'-lnOiftalltocllly. Contln- ,
(I)
On Tntl
lbaneltl II thla lime through -hlng Ill IO hold poalli¥1 lhoughla iiiiCI IIJOVI I
e(I)UIATOidiY
ool s conllclenllal naiUN. You may not ' ~ linN you think . . proCiuoe dellr·
. . IICMI: 11011'1 1.1101111011:
ileal like ~IICUIIing IIIIa - - . ilbllrearllta.
Tile 11D1Y Clll.fllor 18111111
aiKI ptlrftapa you lhoulcln't.
·' aAQI1TAIIIUI (lltrl. D Deo It) To-t
f'lllll (Nil) (1:38) .
CANCIII ,...... .,......, 21) A - - - ~ you oould be r - lortuNole
NIJIIII
lure In wlolch you,... blca ualn1-- ~""~'*!thai retale to your IIIMellaiWII
1:00(1)
NI'L
Tllll"
~Wirt.n110r10r11,
ed ts1e1y haS ll'llrll. You ...-n·t ...., &gt;etng. lll_.lnd don'llll any goklln
Wlllrdlllnd Woudlltboya
loo much trouble In gettJng - t o go oppor1un111ea Olllp lhrough your ·
(I) , _ . , •• Ia .. c.Mr
along What you hope to
e(l) Wlpnut .
acoomptl..,,

[Jl'r=i

. .,._,.,_

J • J Wltw S.Vioa. Swimming

ILT.d;;Q

==··~\·.:....

'Birthday

tlmo. Ctll 814-.W&amp;-7404-r&lt;lo

c:l.nt .

(l) ~~
Joumal (Q-.30)

ASIHD•lliiAPH:

v-.

•. .=--

z-

~=-

'"I

. r'

a ..... "'

•ann
Vulnenble: Nellller
'

Dealer: South
W..t

Nor11o -

Paa
Paa
Pua
Pua
Pua
Pua

s•

It

••••
••
Opening l~d : • 4

"

L---.---....,.----con-

In loday'1 champlotllhlp deal, Sout.~

reacbed an excelleat six-club
tract. But be played too quickly: Wilen
•
tbe beart four wu led to East'I jack, out. declarer will lwildl 11c11eadeclarer took the ace and immediately
· bea ·
'
ruffed a beart;Thenhe played thel&lt;ln&amp; throwiD&amp; 1111
rt ~on tiM ICIIII_ .
•. diaJIIonda ud nluraiJIC to lllllllntl to '
of clube, There wu now no way to ~ the el""t of clube ,.._... West. ·
avoid 1 RCODd club looer.
· •
tba...tlte
-•
llllfortaate club IIJII\l ,,
Dec:larer does IKit hurt his chances if t 1 true t
he wi111 tbe bear! aee and tben starts tbat the lllam will now dlpwil .,
tbe clube. If both defenders follow, he ~ apAdea splltlin&amp; S.S, ud they clo. will be able to lllfely ruff a heart in .It I IIIII true tilat I '-0 club apllt II.
dummy before drnilll tile remalninl
but SaltiJ llllould lllw lft'Oo: '
trumpo. But ltoere, dell. East ~

CROSSWORD

' f' '

by THOMAS JOSE,H
• Eisenhower's
ACROSS

..
...

command
(abbr.)
5 Valuable

I Admiral
Graf5 State nr
N. Hrazll
10 Hret11 One kind

8 Swab -·
7 Pub drink!!

13 Nol. at all

8Set the{Initiate)

.

thing

or enerf!Y

15 Written

.

,,

'

..

9Greek

letter

18 Cherlotte

river
II Wandering

17 Vast area

14 Orient

Yesterday'• Anewer
'

28 Latin

38 Uppity one

34 Hello
(Sp.)
35 Plteher·

18 Stitd1
18 Cap
greet20 Convincing 19 Bring joy
lng
23 Work no 10 Grimalkin 28 Mlll'llh

..

21 Palm leaf 28 Glrl·s
37 Inheritor
22 Toothgarment II MMIIIJe

more

17 Give a

30 Leading' It VIctim

paste
type
2• Viva
Joaellto!

19 Story

.

..

player 41 Crone
3:11 Acl:retiB 41 Writer

lfentorr

·~

....

30 Glossy

·-

fabric
31 Appel·
latlon
33' I laggard
novel

~

•

38 Traitor
37 In the know
Far rnlm
&lt;13 City

' .,

In N.Y.

44 Roost
. 45Can"

transport
· •• l'nker

player's

•vouc.nlaa...,
11:30 e (]) Gl Tot1lglll IMw

-

General Hauling

:4::-4-:::•;;;40:-'-~-·- - - - - ' - Wtt'lli'i""'' Wtt• Htullng. te•

fll

lilalaf:. CotMIICIIon
ei1JI

&amp; Refrigeration
lllor

(]) (I) (l) • (J)

ec
•·
CIJ • Mo'tn' WOifd ol

'

•"u
••••

•o

•W1181101*
J:W Cat.tt*'

YOU,PAW!!

•un ·

volvlng teams from $1 !MIIIber COIIII-

In twain

\!

CARTER 'S PWMSING
ANOHEATING '
Cor. Fourth and Pfne
a.•~:.or·3888
ohio or' 814Phono &amp;14448-4477 '

84

·=

• Crook IIICI Chilli
tO:OI
11ooc1 a Otelldo, Pllt z

Ak•• Tr" TrlmrMtCd stump

.....

.QJIIU
tltJU ,'

Octotiei

. 18 Cut

.......

AON11 APPUANCE SERVICE •
hou" csU a..vldng G!, Hot
Pblnt. w•h••· dryen and
.. ,..., 304-&amp;7.2388.

-:- - - - - - -- ·

YlcleoCounlrJ

illl
The Judcla: · tloa Htlllllnd
.11!1..._ ....
0 l!venlng lltwa

MrViae. 304-

~

warning

(I) 700 Club

RotMY or catitt toot c*'lllng.

82

w,.,.......

o-

TIIIW
lt11C'II
1:30 (J) CGIIIge ..........
Ill elll Dulg llttg

I=&lt;I~TCN

11-\E NOSE.

GE . Spoclollng In lAin-h. Cta
304-17a.23SB or 114-44112484

Remov11. Frw ..-:

-r....

Perkins's lerm 1e flllecl wtlh
var10u1 tcandlla and
Clemand8. g

8344.

304-875-7121.

QIIf lllcl the Cop' NIC

Willie llorJ' AIC Mandl,

Polntkll' lnt- • Eldlrior. ,
11-tt ootlmll•. Coli 614-448- '.

895-3102

e (]) 1111 MOVII: 'l1w c:~ e(l) MOYII!: 'Tiw llpn

Otorgoo_ Cr"* Rd. Coli 11444.0284.

~d

a

.._, NWtt at t h e -

up end deiW.-y, Dwil Vtcuum
Cleen•. one h11f mila up

F.ny Tr• Trfmrrino.

On:lllc!a. Part 1

8:30. (]) 1111 Tile Hogen ,lllllly

SWEEPER 1nd •.-.wing mechlne
rep., pll'ta. Md luppll•. Pldt

87

''libe yo\1 _ . the stilrolda OOIIITI8IciaJ with
the guy dclng • betO!l routlr)e with barbells?"

1:01! 110011 J

W.t•prooflng.

:O:."t"t;
=-~:=== .l!otrlcb Wii«.HiouHng Borvlco.
-oloior...... t710.00. 304- •• ,..._ .alltU7.2311 or 114-

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

r-'

»

1·114-237-0488, dOl' or night.
RoglraB••ement

.

. . . . .h . . . -

'SCI-IOOL ...

Unoondi:IOnll lf•lme • • •·
t-. Local ref••a. furr*hed.
Frw lltlmlt•. Cell collect

0 Murdar.... w....

_,

1!-IAT IF 1 FIIJISH lA~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Almp 1111•

Olf')l (A) (2:32)

tloa.,_

Improvements
.

Nooallltt

Ill ..... Llllher ICing: Lhlng

Serv1ces

f

E.UT

United States team of Bob
HIIIUIWI, Seymon Doullcll. Eric
well, Jeff MecUtrotb 1nd Jim Jacoby .
. won the World Team Olympiad, wlticb
is beld every four yean. Wilen it was
held for tbe lint lime In 'l'llrln, Italy,
In IJIO, my father played 011 lbe U.S.
team. I too played oace before, in
, 1872, and our team tbat year wu run·
ner-up. My teammates Wolff and
HIUIIIIWI were oa the team In IJIO
and 11114, but bad yet to be victorious.
Tbll week and later we will look at
. tria of tbe World Brld&amp;e Federation.

A-tg

.....

·-·.

Bird and Elarklty team a11ou1
Japen... lood, cuatoma, lind
langu~ge wlltn ,!hay villi
Japan. More Importantly.
!hay make 1r1tnc1a wllntttr
they _GO. (NR) C
f11 · 0
The Inn
beCOmM a camp ground lor
Joanna's ,.sl-eata\10 ct-.

(IJPui&amp;M:Ua••

HE OOJLD 1-RP 'fit..
.ST'AR'f w (~ ~~

•

SOOTH

some deall from the competition in·

i 11!1 MOVII!:to The Wolld

Jolnto-tll typoo. Call 114-3792220"' 304-571-1781.

Home

••

n;.~ee.::':!:·~5'Big

e

..-..ltt

cltt•no. · Ph. 1142411-112111.
A •
R W•• Borvloo. Poolo,
terna. 2 =:~~mmdedl11:eol
1••000
or •
M lltvlfy.
1180 - - _..._ 4 oyl ' Coli 304-,t~ . .:p. ,

.._.,....t.

wtlh a hidden camera
expoM. C
(J) .(J)lll Cit••
MICGyver II II OOCII wtlh I

U1ec1 • rtbullt an types.
Wanen'Y-30 cliVI. PriC* •99 &amp;
up. U.ld &amp;
tor~•
convert.., llt.,d.-d clutd't•,
pr•turt pill-. &amp; ttwow out
bo•lng. Wortonty-12 moo. eve

ml•.

Groom ond Supply Shop-Pot ' 1977 Ootlgt Colt. 88,000 mi.•
Grooming. All brMdt ... AII arto. - . . Noodt .... eeoo
ttvloo. 1..,, Pot Food Ootlor. 010 . Coli 114-44a.4479 oft•
Julio- Ph. 114-44t-OZ31. I PM.

81.,_

ea crool&lt;ed
(]) 111D ALJi
"'IIIIoALF
repair thop

&amp; Accessories

roof. law
niJw motor, MW
btlt. . . . . . . . .. f11&amp;0. Coli
114-2&amp;0.SH2.

!~~!'HJ&lt;JIHCIDPIIIFNIII!!IIII Q

I:OOi=~=rt tloa

Auto Parts

81

•

.KQS

JAMES
JACOB'/

7:31 (J) IIMIIInllnd lon

~.[.·· .s'rf(llt-l~otNIJ t'IY .J"Y$Te"M.

EEK &amp; MEEK
WH FA1~ PJ&lt;ar11SW ~

•

.EQf

Ill Nlghl Court
• CIVoi&lt;Mld Chua

304-882·34&amp;3 .... 1:00

1878 MUinlnD 4cyt, '4tpd, aJn

814-. . . &amp;71i9.

Orogonwynd Cottory -nol
,..lon ond
ond Hlmo101'.,
ldttCMw
- 7
.,... Coll114-. . . 3844olt•

!

,.. .: f~ Hf leNT l"'t$
~ AtoJOTHf/t ''''- 1°~

•

t.\10t7U

e (J) UIA Tadar

Jt..OOP 101£. •

•

NOil'l'll

BRIDGE

,~,. Wlwel of

7:30e (]) P~ FIIICI
(J)Cabp·......._.
(1) 1 f t - - -TOIIllhl

MY pocro~
Hll I'LL- MAPt MY

•

I

•ran~••
7:01 (I) ~ Gltllltll

18 ft. SWor.tt •mn bcu:t,
fnbO•d oulbo•d w+th n-.v
CNII• 120 hp, good sh::pa

118&amp; Chttry Covell•. - - d
- _ AC. f2800. Ctll814-3792728.

Cumlnl Alllllr

'llcllel/ ~
NeasHot• (1:00)

gaa..
0 Mllnll Vlcl

:X: T'OL..P

•

(l) (!)

p.- t1&amp;00. 1181 Moped.

••eo. Coll814-3fl•ae20.

.

_

Ill Moneyllnt

1184 Hondo CR&amp;OO motor.

motor, ...,.

•

e11!1 'l'hrile'a Cam~an1

good cond. call 304-815-3694
or 304-1711-1598 tftw 5:00.

76 ·

I' r ,, ,. ,. 1
I l l l I I

SCJIAM.lm ANSWRS
Enfold - Bride - Froze - Tlg/l!s - DISTORTED
lllwayt belieYwd a little while lie causad no rul hlrm. It
was reallY the truth moderately DISTORTED.

•(J) (J}
'C:C:0
lp PM
1 *'
Clld

..

PRINT NUMafRfP lEITUS IN
1HIS! SQUARES

•

• New Cot lbf
11:31 (I) I to I
7:00 (]) Our .....
(1) e (I)

8

•
UNSCIAMII.E AIOVE lflliRS
:::..
TO GEl ANSWEI

0~ .......

Auto's For Sale

GOVERNMENT SEIZED

'"'*'-

moul1•

I!Jhw•Todly
Ill WKRP In Clnclnnd

tit•.

Mlllod 1.-dwood
112 p•
bundle. Contolnlng opprax. 1\\
ton Ohio Polloi Co.• Pom•oy. ,
Ohlo.·814-U82-1411 .

1

ae11!1•aceeNawl
WMP In Clnellw.a

Tr.msrlllrla!IOn

71

;,I'm . _ , . - ! "
Completo 1M chvcklo quotod
-.1.-.J.-.J.-.J.-.J
.
.....J
by I;IHng ;n tho m;,.;ng -dr
L
you dev•lop from step No. 3 lalow.

(l) lloclr llntrlc
(!) NllhiiY lullnlll Repotl

'
"83 Ch..iv. 810, l .W.B., olr,
AM·FM, V-8, 6 •pMd. flt.gl. .· : , .
toppao, •c cond. *3.&amp;06".00. ~.
304-175-1189.
'

..

8138.

E II H E C

.,__;;_,~:...:,r-::.,,:.:...;l...:..,,s,...;...t

cti
•;a111'
1b
(1)
(I) ABC NaWI Q

·-hoy.

t• &amp;QOPM.

.
A well-known eoclelltt wu
t
uked hoW long It took to have
. . . .
her ellbotate hllr done. "I
.-------!..,
' --,don't know," 8he quippad.

I(])

''

. .;L:. .:U:,. Y:. ;A.:. .T.:. . . -.~1 ..!

.

1:01 (J) One 0., II I TltM
1:30
liD NIC Nlghllr NaWI

'-':;;·

Etr Com u .oo bu. Ott hOI'
au... wat:• bed. oonaot.tv. a f1.eo
bolo 304-4811-1182 of·
wood 11:0W. •eoo for a1 or ••

~I I I I
"
I
I

.11!1 ......, .,.,.
lll'eotsotUII
0 ... Rtli
• Amellcen Magntne

~e'S THE ONE WE S~LD INVITE
TO THE ''U6LY P06' CONTEST!

1

.r111.

en.

SEE ?IT'S A PIIOT06RAPH
OF ALL THE PUPPIE5..5NOOI'V
AND SPIKE ARE RI6~T
THERE IN FRONT...

F•mE ...,
Howard RotiYalora. •••d•.~·
or ulod. 3 "-Ringo,
luylngbld-• ;; ~·~-=~;:=;;.:;:;:=
.
,,.
whllltd ll•fc ecooc... C11t too.Morrlo!qulo&gt;m
... Rutl'.,tl. 73 Vans&amp; 4W.D.
Rogora Mobllty ooll.,._ 1· 114Ohio
814-742-2411.
'
- - - - - - - - .:170-NI1.
1914 Bronoo H, V-8 , 82.000
mila. ST. PS. P a. Good con d.
For Solo F~ . .- ·MIIIod or 84 Hay &amp; Grain
Coli &amp;14-2411-&amp;022.
•-oned. tH c1e11v.- lo.r.
111""'11 • •· O..ld Hll 11411118-1011_,4x4, MOtoovor
3111-113&amp;.
M.. od
Coli &amp;14-388- drtv• air. AM·FM 11:«eo, 6,000
fltMood lor olio. Htrclwood 1419.
ml•. E_...m cond. CaH 814oollt. •30 olclwp trudl -ery. -n-mot-h¥-h"''_·_Ooo_d_q_uo_l_lty. 3811-llleo,
Cell 814-4'4a.4812.
•2.eo P• bola llogltt•od Nu·
Hendqultldqullt•for ..te. Cell bi1n buck. kid• : 81nUm 1978 CJ7 J-. 304 V-8 outo304-4111-1179. .
chlclc-. CtK 114-388-8548.
mttlc. quldra trtdc. •uoo.oo.
304-45.1791 ,
w-h 111 tho IMgoroundbol• olgoodmiKod
St.,..olltlhtlv
0011 • wood 1 h••l.tl ~ • 300 t.;o. ltorldoutolwllthlr. t20. 1877 Chov truck 4x4, good "
cond. oft• 8:00 coli 304-8911- •
·lltm. Coll814-387·0481.
Ctlll14-9411-2102.
3&amp;94 or 304-175-1 &amp;98.
• ·
Good conditioned hill'· *1.&amp;0
bole. 114-185-4281.
74 Motorcycles

a..,,,..

t2tl. Min)' More Mon.,. S.v-

81 Farm

.::...B..;.I...;.R:,;..
,

(l) , _ , of CIIOiCI Q
(!) Dr. Wllo:
IIMih

1977 Ford htlf ton tnJclc. 302
..rp. ,7fi).OC). 1088 Ch..,rol•
Equipment
htlft"" 8oy14opood. fl7&amp;.oo.
. ZttorTroctoro. · 3p4-57.1&amp;17.

Whooloholro-,_

PRICES SLAIHED·W•droloo-

1'011· e149 e78.
n•lh- ..t·reg. t111 now
• 10&amp;. Country wood toblo w•h
3 cllolto• bonclt-rog. f889,_

3&amp; col .... tctlon. Col
114-2511-1197.

Homes for Rent

Merclulndlu

otl 0111-L Coli 114-388-

Sun. 12 noon-1 PM. 114-44.
3118.

·

~~;;;,;;:;.:~~;:;;;~=i~~~;~;"~""'~""~·~""~~

~"'.::J~ .!:'.!:0t:=~~ 54 Misc.

~~!arlin

E.O.E .

~

DUEFAL

a ec

•(J)

1111 NaWI
(J) Ill art ' oolr

4411-40&amp;3

Sol• •d chlin prlwd from

I
-~---o;r;.....:,..l
I ~~.:..;,...:.1.......-~1... ·
...;L:;-=..0
-ll !
~

0 1- "'- T\1 L-...g ~.InC. ~~ Warrt, TX

Excll. oond. $1500. C.ll 814-

LAYNE"S FURNITURE

62

Hn-"'t. Com.at Director of

NlirUio. Pin..... c.•• c••.

814-448-7914.

M

MON., JAN. 18

=

1980 Chotrv % ton plclolp. noW
•gln•leu thin 100 mtla

boc!i' '"'·
good ·~··
mil•
P• . gallon.
t 1200.12·14.'
Call

PIULII

1:00 (]) ...,_., The Loet

t38oo. Ctl 814-21&amp;-1114.

dry. .. ...... _.....
,.,,... Sklggl Applilr'ICIII,
liPI*' Rlvor Rd . booldo Stano

TUTMILT

EVENING .

option&amp; low miM. Cllrtl'l •h•P
lnd In A-1 oondhlo" A•k'"p

w......

flUB
•sue. Tobl• •eo tnd
up to •121. Hld••·bodt e380

M

1980GMCp .... pSf.,.,CI••Ic
pllg. , 310 .,t;g., w / 111 lhe

GOOO USED APPUANCES

VIRA'S FURNITURE •
APPUANCES
Un ..r.. hod 2 BR. e•111• 111trt·
ment. In town. Cerp•M. Adulll
onlv, No P•L Ctl 114-4464811.

H~~A1~!

I ll!fW'O.J

1971 Dodao 318, outo., t5eo.
Honod 110 Moped. 011cll. con d. 8 •
HP riding ..,_.,, f1110 . Ctll ·
B14-448-8181,
,

Sit. 814-. . .1199, 827 3rd.
Avo. Golllpoll. OH.

e 17tlomo. CtN 304-1711-1104.
87a.l388. 8711-7738.
Fumlohod opt ueo utll~loo od.
1 IR, 1211 4th. Oolllpolt. Coli
44•4418 oft• 7pm.

1979 Ford F-1&amp;0. V-8, .,to.

bed
Fl.lna • •· $18150. Call 8 14- .
448-.4048.
-

. . •d TV •• L
M to 8PM. Mon thru

VIII. F11nttu,.
Haw .. d Ultd furnttUN lnd
2 IR. 1111.• now t*aoh corptt. . IPPiic•ncei. C1ll 114·448·
now taint. utl~l- ,.,,... ptld. 7872. Hourt fl.&amp;.

On• Month Free Rent

17. 304-4118-187{

NOw hiring oriented ANolo&lt; ol 3
ohlfta. Fulltlmopooillono. E -·
lent bonolfto -~~~~~.. Ptld

~

su. 40V ,AfE!

*•· ,.•. Pl. 8 ft .
with topp« 10.000 mi .

Coumy:tif11101. Inc. Good

()plft Mon.·Sit. I AM-5 PM.

120 aar-. I room t.m hou11.

Phv•lolll'l'l Offtce Laboratory.
ADDtv In .,.... IG Tho Modioli
Pf.lr:ll. 203 J•dl:•on Pille be-

v1Ut1on1

SHADY LAWN APTII- 728
Bo!»nd A,., F.... htll oflldoncl•
_ . ,w.tw
. • e111
• '""'
lnalnlng
a ~~'':f.•
Slnolo .,..., only. Coli I 444ll-4807or 44t-2eo2.
3M.·&amp; Court St. Ucl!on wkh
t t - • tolrlfl. ueo t*aodott. &amp;
rof, No p.._ Coli 814--448.
4121 •

W. do olt-lono. Lodi•Choha

Ftbrl,. • Ftohlon&amp; 417 - n d
Aw. Coll.14-44e-043&amp;.

-

1974 Wlndtor. 14x70, 2 IR .•
front lvkll room. Spedol ortco.
Reg.
Spoclol •iBIL

P ALL ftEOlH

f*. AT , 4 nM" *•·
Muot'ltl, Ctll 114-2&amp;8-11S4.

'II'IM. , nM

1uita O..b, wrlngii'W.Ifw, I
OO~ete line of uttd llrnkure.
NEW·
13&amp;.
·
ttl
8
up.
(Siool
•
10ft too) , Ctii8J 4-. . . 3189.

Ulld
OpM

Television
Viewing

I.IXli.YT~

Trucks for Sale

&amp; Maine

to

Farma for Sale

S1~l VICt~;)

1~

'

1972Borr~on i2k8tl. 31R..
2 , . .... u
p1nn1n•• porch.
teooo or . . . Plll'montL - l y -dolod 1 IR . opt.
:C~oll__;_8.:_14-__;_44.:.8:..1::37::_:4.:.__ _
AppL .. r. .hod.ldool -lon-1
0
Socrlonol ho-· 1 u .... ,..,. bloclc lrom - -· Ctl
- - Bur,_ .,d 814-44t-4839. ·
-o. 19SS Mo-. Fronoh City
...,.. Ho.,... Inc.. 114-44111 l•go olftclon"f . ,, fur . . hod
w•hbtth.Aioo1 SR. opt. Both
.340
•
1n Rio G... do. Ctl •14-24111910 Eloont 14x70. 3 BR.. 1223 or 44.3117.
•11 ltv Ina room a •ltah.,_ Nloo 1•2 .....
. oom 11Ja"tn.do.
ooll Reg.
....,..
Good ..,.,a., e1Q.8008poclol USN. Froncl! A... lllllo .. r..hod or unlurCitv Mo.. Ho
1 1 •
nlohtd. O.ooit _.rod. CtN
4 4 ._ 1340,"
m-. nc. 1- '814-44e-434&amp; oltor I PM~

Wtnted To Buv St1ndlng
nmw. Coli 814-379·2788.

R E·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 129 Jocb011 Plko.
Uted l.lrnlture bv thl piece or Coll44.4387. Reg. No. 8.11·
entire houtlhold lito telling. 101118.
8t4-742·24U

814-992·8899.

BORN LO

1974 Cllotrv Plclcup ttUclc. Boctv

-on
-om -..
.......... ........... ,_....

114-90-3858.

Hondl 210 ce or

72

SWAIN
,
AUtnON • FURNITURE 82
Olivo Bl, Otllpoll.
city. """"" only. l'wklnfl. Col NEW- 8 pc. wood group. e39t.
.Living room- f18fl.fll89.
"814-. . . 0338.
Sunk- w~h boddlntt f241.
8EAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT FuH 11M mtn,_ a foundM:Ion
IUOOET PR.IC!S AT JAC1t· •t.rtf .. a · ••• · R•clinen
SON EITATES, &amp;38
otortlntt. .'dl.
"·dr•. . .. btctoom
USED-

Blrn"'', Coli 814'44e-9370.

Avo .. Oolllpollo. Coli 814-44•
2282.
C-l•o hauooholdt of .. rn~
tuto
a ontlqu•.
Aloo Farnkure
wood •
oo.t tw.twa.
Swain'•
• Auction. Third • Olivo.
814-44t-31&amp;9.

House11old Goods

KIT N' CARL\1EII by Larey Wright

N• complltety lurnlt ... d
1pa1nw11 a moble home In

Sprue. St. ·~ Atww.-1 to

8

Monday, Janu.-y 16, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Pag8- 8- The Daily Sentinel

·u,ree"

DOWN

"

1 Knlre
(sl.)
2 Window
pllit

3 AquatJc .:~~~;!;~-:;=

1111

DAILYCRYP'roQUOil!l'i- Here'allow to Wort It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter st.ends for another. In thla sample A Ia Uled
for the three L'1, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apostrophe~, the length and fonnaUon of the words nn all
hlnta. Each day the code letten an different.
•

F G X

TC.IO
•T' C H P

D X

:H V N A W H G

I XK

.I X X M H

FWPGXCP

XA

•

..
..

CIIYI'JOQUO'I;U

1·16
GO

•

N

I

N

INC .I P

..

-1 X X p· .• -

V K X S 0 K E

Yael • .,•• CliP•••• Us&amp; I SAID MY PRAYERS
AND ATE SOME CRANBERRY TARTS FOR BREAK.
FASL_..,.. WUIAM ayRI\

•'

..
·••

. .. -

:..~ - -~ .. _...... ... ·•t:- . . . . ............. ~_...,. --·-----·-----------~

l

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