<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11635" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11635?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-05T16:15:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42605">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/a133d8fa08eaa590775b6ba9ef026e48.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9f4399905fd5a6d19d9a8368f75da76d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36626">
                  <text>,.
Monday, January 16, 1888

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.-..-...,.

-·

Michigan
•
easy wmner
over OSU

"HOME BANI
FOR

.PEOPLE"

· Tbl1
Week'1

..um.t bAN

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number

758
Pick-4

EXXON
*•

ti

··u&amp;Ma
,;:.,;..,....,

•

iJI11181

oma

SYRACUSE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
949-2210'

MEIGS ~

Vol.39. No.

IOJS
Jan. 17-Waren Local
Jan. 20-At Trimble
Jan. 21-At Nelsonville

"Your Financial
Centel'" ·

'

IOYS

.97 NORTII SECOND

MIDDUPOIT, OHkf
992·6661

Jan. 20--At Oak Hill ·
Jan. 24-ICyger Crttk
Jan. 27 -At tlcl111iit Tract

GilLS
Jan. 19-0alc Hill

Jan. 23-At Kyger Cr•k
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace

somERN

INSTAl1MENT
LOANS
992-3077

I.~

Jan. 19-Trimble
Jan. 23-At Nelsonville
Jan. 26-Wellston

EASTERN

.

BOYS .

!;

\
'

Jan. 20-SymmtS Vallty
Jan. 21-At Ravenswood
Jan. 24-At North Gallia

,. _ )' ' '

'~~·· '
•

.Jim CObb.
.

Chnr•t.Oid ullile
Inc.

.Sales &amp; Strwice
USTII• ST.

PGPI•l
'

,,1

Year D••l•r •• ·

'''Riter

f

Jan. 23-At Oak Hill
Jan. 30-Waterword
feb. 2-Hannan Trace

VALLEY.

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE----------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 2-lilltr ............................ Home
Dec. 9~Tri•ble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-llllltllvlllt-York ............ Away
Dec. 16-Wtllston ...................... Home
Dtc. 20-Yinton Co...................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dtc. 30-L•n ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Baljlre ............................ Home
Jan. 6-Aieunder ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Fedtral Hockin&amp; ............. Away
Jan. 13-liller ....... ;.................... Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trh1ble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonvillt-York............. home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co..................... Home
Feb. 3-Balpre ............................. Away

Feb. 10-Federal Hockina ............ Home .

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19SB·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Miller ........................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ...... :........... ;... Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ...:..................... Home
Dec. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec.17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-FederaJ Hockina .............. Home
Jan. &amp;-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Catb .......... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28-M iller ............... :........... Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg Cath ...:....... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
Nov. 29-Eastern ......................... Away
Dec. 2-Kypr Creek.. .................. Home
Dec. 9-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastem ...... :.......... Home
Dec. 27'-Green ............................ Away
Jan. &amp;-Southwestern ............... :... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. -13-Kypr Creek ........:.......... Away
Jan. 20-Symmas Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Gallia ..................~Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill. .... .,................. Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Home

IRLSSCHEDULE--------------~
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

'*

* l~et · Sall~l

* R•l Ice C••• *

. Dining • Carry Out •

Drtve-Thru

DOCTOR AND STAFF - Dr. Daniel Trent and
his staff. From the left, Mary Dillard, CMA; Gall
Hovatter; Dr. Trent and Linda Trent. There will

GilLS

Feb. 7-Aieunder ....................... Home

featurln&amp;:
*GI'IIt.......,.
· •Roast 8elf ,.a CIVIulllt
Stuffld lr'rd PotltDa

Nov. 22-Eastwn ........................ Home
Dee. 1-liller .........:................... Awty
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston .................... .-.. Away
D~. 19-Vinton Co ..................... Home

Dtc. 21-E•stern ......................... Away
.lin. 2-Btlpre ............................. Away

Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-F~eral Hockina ........... ,.. Home
Jan. 12-llller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Tri11ble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-lelsonvillt·York... .......... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Ftb. 2-Balpn ............................ Home.
Ftb. 6-AitxiRder ........................ Away
Ftb. 9-Federal Hockina ............... Away
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-Kyger Creek.. ................ Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17-Federal Hockina............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern .... ~ ........... Away
Dec. 21-lleias ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble.......................... Away
Jan. 12-North Galli a................... Away
Jan, 19-0ak Hill ........................ Home
Jan. 23-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern .................. Home
Feb. &amp;-Symmes Valley ................ Away

l

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - For Dr.
Daniel R. Trent, the trlnsition from
emer~ncy room doctor 10 private
prachtioner was "a natural progres.Sian" in· hi$ ~- ~t:s a !ROve, he
says, that will allow him 10 become
more involved with his patients and
their families as he seeks to provide
a continuity of care 10 the people of
New Haven and the sunounding
Bend Area.
.
Dr. Trent began seeing patients
1an. 3 in his new office, located at
148 Main St., New Haven, in the
building previously occupied J&gt;y the
B,end Area Medical Center. On
Wednesday, the commumly-at-large
wiU have lhe opportunity to meet
the doctor and his staff at an open.
house from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at his
office.
A 1983 JU&amp;duate of the West Y'lf·

;' 'h'.

, ··~

.COMPLETE
SELECTION
•

SOUTHER.N HIGH SCHOOL
19S8·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Ky,er Creek ..................... Away .
-~"j,
Dec. 5-llelgs ........,.................... Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
:.J..t&lt;&gt;¥• ;Qt:~\ . -~ \'
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
FUUITU1lE!
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
. ~,.,
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterlord ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ............... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill... ...................... Away
Jan. 30-Waterlord ..................... Home
Feb. 2-Hannan Trace ................. Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................. Away \-..,..,.j,_ _....;.....;._---1
Feb. 11-Meigs ........................... Home
'

...,

WE WILL

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Results
of a new poll Monday showed thai
many Ohioans believe the rapid
!ricrease In medical costs is du-e
chiefly to rising doctors' fees. ·
An Ohio Poll, conducted by the
University of Cincinnati's Insti·
tute of Polley Research, asked
800 Ohioans. what they fell was
the main rea~on lor high medical '
.costs and 32 percent said an·
increase in doctors' fees .
High hospital charges were
cited by 20 percent as the key
reason, while 15 percent blamed
Insurance- companies and 14
perc&amp;nt cited malpractice !nsu·
rance costs.
,
,
The high cost of sophisticated
medical equipment was named
, by 11 percent. Other factors
mentioned were health care
salaries, Medicare, Inflation,
prescriptions, AIDS, people livIng longer, insural)~e fraud.

,&gt;.

&lt;,.

gm1a School of Osteopathic
Medicine, Dr. Trent came 10·
Pleasant Valley Hospilal nearly five
years a11o, following completion of
a rowmg inlerllship at Traverse
City Osteopathic Hospilal in
Michigan.
A West Vuginia native, he
earned a Bachelor of Ans Degree in
Biological and General Science
from Marshall University, and
worl&lt;ed for the Pittson Coal Com·
pany in its safety management
program for 4 112 years before en·
tering medical school. While
. employed with lhe company, he
was a member of both the First Aid
and · award-winning Mine Rescue
teams.
Of his decision 10 open an office
in the Bend Area, Dr. Trent says,
''I'm going where lhere is a need."

the first of February ."
Pomeroy's waste water treat·
ment system has not always been
out of compliance ~ But major
changes in Federal and State
clean water laws have created
major expenses for communities
all over Ohio, nol just Pomeroy.
To bring Pomeroy's system into
compliance with new regulations
w!ll be a mull1·m1111on dollar
project for a v11lage where the
majority of waler-sewage customers are on fixed-low incomes .
Mayor Richard Seyler and
members of Council are not
surprised that EPA ts l'osing
patience with lhem, but they feel
Ihe village is still no closer to
funding the improvements than
it was when EPA first called
them on the carpet a few years
ago.
Last year, former Pomeroy
Counc!lman John Anderson left
his Counc!l position to take over
as Pomeroy Village Adm!nistr~·tor. The v!llage administrators
position was created. and Ander·
son hired, so problems with the
waste water system could be
addressed full tlme and possible
funding sources located for eng!-

"New Haven i.s just a great little
town," the dociOr adds. ''The
people there are like a big family."
And it's the family aspect · of
private practice medicine that Dt.
Trent is looking forward to. While
he saw a variety of cases in the
emergency room during his time at
PVH, the doc lOr says he was never
really able to develop a relationship
with his patients because in most
cases they wc:re referred eilher 10
their family doctors for follow-uP.
treatment or to a specialist if
hospiialization was required.
In private practice, however, a
doctor is able to build relationships
with ''patients that you know... their
kids,
their
families,
their
grandkids."
Dr. Trent says he'll be doing
Continued on page 5

unnecessary treatments. greed, equipment than older Ohioans.
research costs and the failure of · But, the younger Ohioans were
patients to pay their bills.
less likely to blame doctors and .
hospitals for the increases.
Upper-Income respondents .
Pollsters said the wide variety
were
more likely . to blame
of factors mentioned lndlctated
malpractice
Insurance costs
keen public awareness that rea. WEST VIRGINIA'S NEW GOVERNOR - A
lower-income
Ohioans.
than
sons for increasing medical costs
special legislative session to examine ethics,
Poll results were based on a
are complex .
goverrunent reorf1anlzatlon and stl!le finances
Health care finance profession- random sample of 807 Ohioans
was called by newly swqrn-ln West VIrginia Gov.
als have often cited similar from throughout the state. PollsGaston Caperton Monday . Caperton told a crowd
reasons for escalating costs in ters said that in 95 of 100 cases,
of
5,000 on the captlal steps In Charleston the
are
the
stalewide
estimates
the Industry.
state's financial situation needed to be addressed
accurate
within
3.5
percent
·When the poll was broken down
Immediately, and members of West VIrginia
Into demographic groups, some above or below the poll totals.
variations In tho~U:ht were
apparent.
Blacks were less likely to
blame insurance companies and
malpractice Insurance costs
than whites. But blacks were
much more likely to blame
Medicare.
People unde'r the age ol30 were
more likley to blame expensive

According to a report from the Ohio Department of Taxation,
Pomeroy in 1988 collected $207,356 on the income tax rate of one
percent.
Pomeroy was one of 491 municipalities (232 clUes and 259
villages) which levied a tax. Rates of taxation in 1988 ranged
from a low of .25 percent in the village of Powhatan Point, to a
high of 2.5 percent in the cities of Campbell and Oakwood. State
law requires that the rate must be uniform within a
municipality and cannot exceed one percent without a vote of
the people.
.
I
Income taxes are generally imposed on wages, salaries and
other compensation earned by residents and on non-residents
who work In the municipality. It Is also applied to business net
profits which are attributable to activities In the municipality.
Pomeroy has had an Income tax il) effect lor several years.
Middleport passed an income tax last year.
Continued on page 5

.

PArlE

--·

ON SCHEDULE - The ·1410,008 COD8lructlon and renovation
project of the fonner Diamond Savlnp aad Loan Co. bulldlnKinto
a new county public library Ia right on achedule. Pan of the
exterior of the old buUdlng has been . removed and the front and

.

,.

•

neering and construction on a
phase-by-phase basis .Anderson, and John Goodman,
of the Burgess and Niple engineer!ng firm , Parkersburg,
W.Va., were at Monday night's
meeting to 'discuss engineering
costs lor lhe first phase of the
plan which would be the Monkey
Run area. Burgess alltl Niple
proposes to conduct preliminary
engineering to e's;timate the
scope of the project to bring
Monkey Run into compliance,
The engineers would lhen present this Information to CouncU,
and based upon Council's recommendation, would either scrap
the project or complete ~he final
Monkey Run design . Englneering for Monkey Run is not to
exceed $50,000.
But engineering Monkey Run
"is just the tip of the iceberg,"
Goodman told Council Monday
nlghl.
As for funding the engineering,
let alone construction costs, .
Council feels the village cannot
afford to borrow the money, and
a rate increase to water-sewage
customers is not a vlablesolution
Continued on page 5 .

legislature believe Caperton will call ·for some
kind of tax Increase. Caperton also said he will ask
lor a plan to "consolidate and reorganize the
various agencies of goverrunentot promote better
management, cost-savings and better delivery of
government services." (OVP photo by Glen
McCasland)

Pomeroy tax collection $207,356

·lff$.UIANCE
'\tfEEDS

_ ..... .

be a reception lor the new doctor at the Bend Area
Medical Center, New Haven, Wednesday from
6: 30 to 8 p.m.
·

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Pomeroy Is under fire from the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency beca)lse the v-Illage has
been u·nable to bring its waste
water treatment system Into
compliance with State requirements. And Pomeroy V11lage
Counc!l members fear that no
matter what measures they take .
to try 10 reach a temporary truce,
the long arm of EPA may st11lfile
a law suit against the v11lage
come February 1. The matter
was discussed att great length at
Monday night 's Pomeroy V11lage
Council meeting.
Although an EPA -approved
compliance plan for improvements to Pomeroy's system has
been developed, the village and
EPA have been unsuccessful In
reaching an· agreed schedule for
completing the plan .
Mayor Richard Seyler rece!ved a leuer from the Ohio
Allorney General's office In
December, warning thai if the
v!llage does not commit to an
.improvement schedule, the at·
torney general may "lnit!ate the
suit'' on behalf of EPA "around

LOcal news briefs:--.

JIU. XOUR

· PH..,

26 Cants

A Multimedia Inc.

Poll reveals many blame doctors
for higher medical costs!in Ohio

~tAll' OF

"T..JLI!!f!.._,.

.

Bend Area Medical Center
_o pen house slated Wednesday

.

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

91S.U01 ·

· 1 Section, 10 Pages

1989

EPA may .file law
suit against Pomeroy

GilLS
..,,

17.

Pomeroy-Mh;ldlepon. Ohio,

, . . . .4p)

THE :
CENTRAl
TRUST
COMPANY

Clear tonight. Low near 30.
Wednesday, sunny, highs in
lower 50s.

8515

sides have been extended. Much of the original .architecture Is
being retained, particularly at lbe front of the building. The new
library bulldlncls expected to be completed In early summer. The
building will feature a larce cralta and meetlag room on the first
floor along with a carage to house ~fie bookmobile.

�•

&lt;

....

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
m Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS 01' THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

/lib
fllm
:51

~~

1
.~·

J

rr'\-J . _
....... O"T"C' c:::~."""

.

ROBERT L. WINGET'{
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHE1\D
Assistant Publishe r/ Controller
1&gt;. MEMBER of The

•

U~lted Press Internallonal, lnlandDatlyPress

Association and the American Newspaper Publis hers Association.
LETTERS OF OP INION are welcome. They should be tess than 300 words

Raise taxes or eliminate
WASHINGTON- Federal bureaucrats are not reading
George Busll's Ups. They can't
bring themselves to believe the
president-elect really meant it
when he promised not to increase
taxes.
In times of a budget crunch, the
bureaucrats are accustomed tp
scrounging, but not for ways to
cut the budget. They prefer
' scrounging for new taxes. Then,
inevitably, they find new ways to
spend the money faster tllan If
flows ln. ·
The process was already underway before the taxpayers

-

· ©•~WI'T-~·~EM
HV~~E

good taste. addressing lssues, not persmalltles. ·

The verdict
on Ronald Reagan·

empire."
But he also ran up the biggest deficits in the nation's history and left
office with a national debt ln 10 figures . At one point, joblessness rose
to the highest levels since the late 1930s and scores of American
businesses were driven to the wall by foreign competition.
Both poverty and homelessness Increased as social and housing
programs contracted. And the balance of international trade tipped
so sharply against the United States that it became a creditor nation
for the first time since World War I.
He sent troops to Lebanon and 241 of them were blown up by
· terrorists . Like his predecessor, he was unable to free Americans
kidnapped In the Middle East and hlsassliClates were caught trying to
trade arms to Iran tor hostages.
Bls efforts against' the the Panamanian military dictator and the
Marxist government of Nicaragua failed and put him into constant
conflict with Congress ,
·
,
With this list of credits and debits, the final verdict on the Reagan
presidency wlll have to walt until the domestic and foreign policy
changes he installed have been tested and judged by succeeding
generations of voters, politicians and finally, historians.
The first judgments of presidencies seldom are lasting. Harry
Truman was regarded as a failed president when he left in 1953. Since
then, his standing among politicians has risen and historians appear
to be reassessing his standing . .
Three of the seven presidents since Truman - Lyndon Johnsort,
Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter - left office with ·s ome major
acomplishments but also with major defeats on their records that
many contemporary observers considered more Important.
All have avid supporters and scornful detractors whose judgments
are based on the still heated personal memories of the years those
presldenta 'led the country. And, like Reagan, they too must walt for,
the cooler verdict of history.

No. 5 Michigan rips ·Qhio State, 99-73
By United Press lnternallonal
The Michigan front line of Glen
Rice, Loy Vaught and Terry
Mills is developing Into a destruc tlve Ioree in the Big Ten.
The trio pressed Michigan' s
size advantage Monday night
with a combined 68 points to help
the No. 5 Wolverines rebound .
from their first Btg Ten loss with
a 99-73 victory over No. 16 Ohio
State.
''They took control of the
boards earfy," said Ohio State
Coach Gary Williams, an observation shared by Michigan Coach
Bill Frieder. "I thought we could
have done some things to keep
them off the offensive boards·. ''
" We established control of the
boards after they got a few points
Inside early," Frieder said. :·or
course when your front three
shoots 28 for 36, that certainly
helps."
The 6;1oot-10, 230-pound Mills
paced Michigan with 13 of lils 23
points in the first hall to equal his
career high· and also played one
of his strongest tw 0 -way Inside
games·. He made 10 of 13 shots
and had tlve rebounds.
''At the beginning of the
game,'' M11ls said, "they got a lot
of seconds shots and Inside
baskets. I did a better job of

waste_;___J--,-ac_k_A_nde_r_so_n~!

could brush the confetti off their financed health Insurance
New Year's party clothes. The premiums.
government officials have pre- r - 'Il!ey favor a 5 percent
pared a wish list of tax Increases national sales tax on most
they would like Congress to purchases except food , housing
bestow on them. Here are just a . and medical care.
few of tllelr Ideas:
- They. would like to limit
-They want to raise the lowest mortgage Interest deductions to
Income tax rate from 15 to 16 $20,000 lor a married couple and
percent and the highest nite from collect a 30 percent capital gains
33 tel 35 percent.
tax on the sale of a home.
- They would like to add a
To Introduce these measures,
$5-per-barrel tax on oil.
the bureaucrats will turn to their
• - They want to boost gasoline · friends on Captlol Hill who
taxes by 12 cents a gallon.
believe In tired solutions to
- They're ready to tax part of domestic problem~. The way has
Medicare benefits and employer- already been paved by a media

'-8

..

campaign proclaiming the. ur- ;
gent need lor higher taxes.
The real need, of course, Is for · •·
less spending. This has been . :
documented by Citizens Against ~
GQ_vernment Waste (a decendant ·
or the former Grace Comm!s· • ~
slon) whose chairman, J . Peter -::
Grace, has offered to- show - ;
Congress how to wipe out the ·-';
deficit without raising ·taxes.
According to official government
figures, the campaign has already saved $110 billion.
Grace's solution Is simple:
Just cut wasteful extravagance.
He will even show members of ;
Congress where the waste is, in ;
case they have trouble finding lt. •
The Grace Commission has unco- ;
vered waste galore, ranging
from a $649 toilet seat to the Mark
47 torpedo, which had the disconcerting habit of homing In on
Itself.
Citizens Against Government
Waste has the written endorsement of 5 million taxpayers who
want Congress to read their Ups.
They are fiercely opposed to any
scheme to raise taxes as a
substitute for reducing wasteful
spending.
They have organized pollcltal
action groups in 39 states to tight
the tax-more, spend-more spital.
Surveys show they speak for a
majority of Americans who are
sick and tired of federal
squandering.
According to the surveys, the
average taxpayers Is nervous
about the consequences of astra- :
nomical deficit spending and ·
worried about what affect tilts
wUl have on his or her financial ·
future. Taxpayers are frustrated
over their Inability to cope with
trillion-dollar finances. They
have a sense that the public debt
is soai'lii'g out of control.

accomplishments and falllngs.
He made us feel better about
ourselves. He rebuilt the milItary. He cut taxes, inflation and
regulation. He oppressed the
poor. He showed that capitalism
worked. He ran up a gonzo
deficit. He was lazy, Inattentive
and presided over a rogue White
House. He paid ransom to the
dreaded ayatollah. He made
pease with the Russians. He cut
back nuclear weapons. He
started Star Wars.
Sorry, too much. Vnder Luce's
rule that just won ' t do. One
sentence, maybe two. You say
that's not realistic? Too bad.
That's the rule.
What does Reagan get?
Feel better about ourselves?
Dubious. Too fuzzy. "We" never
felt so bad ; anyway, we may
start feeling that way again.
Taxes, Inflation and regulation? They are Important , but
they may go back up. Not
necessarily a lasting change.

Bashed the poor? The poverty
rate Is lower.
Lazy and Inattentive? Me too.
Not the stuff of history . RanSomed hostages, Iran-contra?
Pool! Another blip.
There are only two serious
candidates for lasting singlesentence Reaganesque historical
simplicity. Both are hostages to
·
history.
On!)IS the deficit. It Is big. One
can have fun by Imagining what
Ronald Reagan would say abou I
it If it had been run up by Jil)'lmy
Carter.
There are some people, e~en
economists, who believe that we
are in for a major crash, crunch,
bash or bump. If It happens, It
will surely be ascribed to Rea·
gan's promiscuous budget debt.
No matter that the relationship
between economic apocalypse
and national deficit is, at best,
unclear. In popular history It will
be Reagan's fault. His sentenc~
will then be: ·'He started the
Crash."

I don't happen to think the
economic apocalypse is now. I
think It Is the apocalypsemongers who are headed for a
crash, crunch, bash or bump.
Accordingly, I doubt that Reagan
will get a bad sentence.
His sentence, and It ls a good
one, will more likely be In the
realm of International affairs.
The ones generally offered are
too neutral, tactical or factual.
No pizazz. Started Star Wars. Cut
back on nukes. Rebuilt the
military. Made peace with Russlans. Too limited.
But it happened to come
together on his watch. He helped
make it happen. He reacted In the
right way. If Reagan Is lucky, If
the great struggle Indeed winds
down soon, there will only be one
proper sentence for the Glpper,
pe~haps simplistic, perhaps unfair , but there it is, In big neon
letters: "He won the ColdWar."
If George Bush is lucky, and
tough , he 'll be Included: "They
won the Cold War."

ROBINSON SCORES - 'Ohio State's Jay Burson (L) goes up
hlgb to ·thwart Mlcblr;an's Rumeal Robinson's shot as Glen Rice
looks on during the first half of Mollday night's Big Ten game In
Ann Arbor, Mich. The Wolverines knocked of! the Buckeyes 99-73.
(UPI)

Louisville moves up to
third in UPI ratings
NEW YORK (UPI) - Louisville, taking advantage · of a
disheveled Top 10, Monday rocketed six places to 'No. 3 in the
weekly college basketball ratIngs by Un lte'&lt;! Press
International.
LoulSvllle made the biggest
jump among the Top 20 teams
after a weekend In which half the
schools In .the Top 10 suffered a

j Tonight's games .,

· :·
. .
.'
:
·
. .

,

.'

While ·Reagan has, have-nots suffer

:Today
in history
.
.

By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 17, the 17th day ofl989 with 348 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward full.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
lnclude American statesman, scientist and author Benjamin
Franklin ln 1706. British statesman David Lloyd George in 1~,
Russian actor and director Konstantin Stanlslavsklln 1863, Mack
Sennett, director-producer of sJapstlck films, In 1880, gangster AI
Capone In 1899, English novelist Nevil Shute In 1899, actor James Earl
Jones In 1931 (age 58), puppeteer Shari Lewis in 1934 (age 55), and
~hamplon heavyweight boxer Muhammad Alllp 1942 (age 47) .
: On this date In history:
; In 1806, the llrst baby was born In the White House, the grandson of
President Thomas Jefferson.
: In 1893, Queen Llliuokalanl of Hawaii was deposed in a bloodless
revolution and a provisional government established, with
annexation by the United States as Its aim.
In 1917, the United States bought 50 of the VIrgin Islands In the West
fndles from Qenmark for $25 million.
•
· In 1950, nine bandits staged a $1.5 million robbery of a Brink's
armored car In Boston.
; In 1977, convicted murderer Gary Gllmore was executed by firing
squad in Utah, the first execu tlon since the Supreme Court reinstated
the death penalty In 1976.
In 1987, Presklent Reagan signed a secret order permitting the
covert sale of arms to Iran .

.. .

· A thought for the day: Benjamin Franklin wfQte, "There is a
difference between Imitating a gbod man and counterfeiting him."

WASHINGTON (NEA)- This, inarket value determined by the
Is a story about ~helter - those ci&gt;unty tax assessor following the
who have it and those who don't. sale was Jess than$6,200per acre.
Specifically, It is the tale of
Although Fox was the buyer of
President Reagan's multi· record, some journalists and
million-dollar houses · and his others who have examined the
callous Indifference toward those transaction believe that the tllm
·company acted as a front for
who have no home.
Upon leaving the presidency, unnamed Reag~n "friends" anxReagan and his wife, Nancy, are lous to provide him with financial
moving Into a $2.5 mlillon house security at the beginning of what
In the exclusive Los Angeles became an Illustrious political
suburb of Bel Air.
career.
The 7,000-square-foot home
Indeed, the Reagans In recent
will cost the Reagans nothing decades have enjoyed a life of
because It was purchased and luxury In magnificent homes.
remodeled for them by a group of Before entering the White House,
California friends. This Is not the they lived in a spacious ninefirst time the president has been room house In the fashionable
the beneficiary of a lucrative real Los Angeles suburb of Pacific
estate deallnvolvinghls personal Palisades. They have retained
residence.
ownership of Rancho del Clelo, a
In 1951, Reagan mad~ a down 667-acre spread near Santa Barpayment on a 290-acre ra:tch In bara complete with horses and
Malibu Canyon, just west o: Los livestock.
Angeles, that he named Yearling
Although the president's housRow. The total purcha~ price log situation is, to a great extent,
was $85,000.
the product of others' generosity,
In late 1966, a month after he his attitude toward those who
was first elected governor of cannot afford shelter can only be ·
California, Twentieth Century· described as mean-spirited.
Fox purchased 236 acres of
Legislation appTQved by ConYearling Row from Reagan for gress and signed by Reagan In
$1.9 million - a deal that gave mid-1987 required the government to make underutllized
him lifetime financial security.
That transaction has several federal properties available to
curious aspects. First, Fox state and locAl governments and
hardly needed Reagan's prop- charitable organizations for use
erty because it already owned as emergency shelters for the •
2,500 acres . of adjacent land. homeless.
Indeed, Fox eight years later
By the middle of last month 1~ years after enactment of the
sold the entire parcel under a
complicated deal to the
law - the foot-dragging omclals
California government headed
In Reagan's administration bad
by Reagan.
produced a list of only 12
Second, Reagan received more
pfQpertfes that might be suitable
than $8,il!O per acre for land he and only two were being utilized.
purchased for less than $300 per
That's because they decided
acre. Although the value of the
that the definition of "ullderuWIand had appreciated during the
!zed" encluded all slnlctui'es
1~ years he beld It, the fair
that were entirely empty and

applied only to those being
partially used with syme vacant
space.
After a federal judge condemned that "absurd" sophistry
and ordered Reagan's appolntees to comply with the law, they
came up with a list of 94 sites but 50 contained no buildings and
another 11 held structures
deemed unsuitable for overnight
occupancy. That left only 33
potential shelters for the

·

Robert Walters
homeless.
The president, meanwhlle, has
been busy providing his subordl·
nates with moral guidance on the
issue. During a television. inter- ..
View shortly before Christmas,
he shunned any responsibility for
the homeless and proclaimed
that those living In the streets
"make it their own choice for
staying out there."

I

'

Tuesday's r;ames:
OVCS at Kyger Creek
New Boston at Southwestern
South Webster at Oak Hill
Symmes Valley at Cross Lanes
Vinton County at Wellston
Chesapeake at Sj&gt;uth Point
Marietta at Fort Frye
Warren at Meigs
Alexander at Trimble
•
Federal-Hocking at Miller
Nelsonvllle-York at Belpre
Friday's r;ames:
Athens at Gallipolis
Jackson at Warren Local
Logan at Marietta
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
'North Gallla at Southwestern
Eastern. at Oak Hill
Symmes Valley at Southern
South Point at Ceredo-Kenova
Hillsboro at Greenfield
Pt. Pleasant at Huntington East
West at Waverly
Federal - Hocking · at Vinton
County
Meigs at Trimble
MlUer at Nelsonville-York
Alexander - Open
Belpre at Wellston
Ashland at Portsmouth
Minford at Wheelersburg
Saturday's games:
Galllpolis at V,Vaverly
Vinton County at Wheelersburg
Zanesville at Warren Local
Greenfield at Greenview
Southern at Ravenswood
Watterson at Portsmouth

;

(

loss. However, No . 1 Duke and
No. 2 Illinois won to remain the
nation's only undefeated teams .
The Blue Dev Us. 13-0, received
37 of 42 first-place votesand 625 of
630 points from the Board of
Coaches to keep the top-ranking
they have held since preseason.
Illinois, 15·0, defeated No. 5
Miclllgan 96-84 Saturday to stay
No. 2. The Illinl claimed five top
ballots and 593 points.
Louisvllle, 12-2, stretched Its
winning streak to 12 games
Sunday with a 67-Gfi triumph over
previous No. 16 Georgia Tech.
•· Georgetown. 12-1, climbed
three berths ·to No. 4 despite
playing Saturday without Coach
John Thompson, who left before
an 86-60 rout of Boston College to
protest NCAA legislation he says
wlll bar many young black
athletes from attending college.
Michigan, 14-2, held at No. 5
despite losing to Illinois. No. 66
Oklahoma sank three notches
after Sunday's loss to Pittsburgh.
No. 8 Arizona , 11-2, Improved
three spots. .,
Iowa, 13-2, and Mlssour1. 14-3,
tied at No. 8. The Hawkeyes
backtracked two spots with a
2-point loss Saturday to Minnesota and the Tigers moved up
four places. Nevada-Las Vegas ,
11·2, completed the Top 10.
Syracuse, with a pair of 2-point
Big East losses last week,
plummted the furthest in the
ranklngs: No. 4 to No. 11. North
Carolina, which fell by 23 points
to VIrginia Sunday, fell four spots
to No. 12. Syracuse and North
Carolina are both 14-3.
Seton Hall, 15-1, and Flor ida
State, off to its best start at 12-l ,
held their respective positions at
Nos. I3 and 14. No. 15 North
Carolina State, 11-1 and on a
nine-game winning streak, lm·
proved two spots. No. 16 Ohio
State, 12-3, dropped a position .

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports WrIter
The New York Knlcks, who
have raced to first place in the
Atlantic Division largely on the
strength of their home record ,
prepared for their longest road
trip of the year by winning their
14th straight Madison Square
Gar-den game.
. Mark Jackson recorded his
third career triple-double Monday afternoon as the Knlcks built
a 21-point halftime lead and held
off a late San Antonio rally for a
116-106 victory over the Spurs. It
was New York's fifth straight
victory.
New York, 25-11, has won 17 of
18 games at Madison Square
Garden this season, extending its
lead to five games over secondplace Philadelphia . But the
Knicks now embark on a sevengame, 11-day road trip, beginning a stretch In which they wlll
play 13 of their next 18 games
away from home.
"We feel we are unbeatable at
home. The fans have been just
amazing," said Gerald Wilkins,
who scored 18 points for tl!e
Knlcks. "We are very much
looking forward to this long road
trip. It will be our biggest
challenge of the season."
The Knlcks had to stave off a

San Antonio challenge in which
the Spurs outscored New York
36-26 in the third quarter and
pulled within 103-97 with 4: 47 left
following a 7-2 burst.
But Charles Oakley answered
with a dunk and a follow shot,.and
Wilkins added a steal and a dunk
In a 6-0 run that put the Knlcks up
109-97. San Antonio never got
closer than 8 points after that.
"I think we got a little bit
careless," Oakley said. ''We
have to stick to the basics and
play the whole 48 minutes. We
have to learn the game is not over
at halftime."
Jackson scored 24 points and
added 10 rebounds and 12 assists
for his first triple-double of the
season. Hls other triple-doubles
caine Jan. 18, 1988, against
Atlanta and April 15, 1988,
against Washington.
.
" I think I've moved my game
up another notch, " .Jackson said.
"The coaches trust me and have
asked me for more passing. I aim
to give It to them."
Patrick Ewing added 21 points
and 10 rebounds for the Knlcks,
while Oakley finished with 18
polDts and 10 rebounds .
San Antonio was led by Greg
Anderson with 20 points, whlle
Willie Anderson added 19 points
and 12 rebounds. The Spurs lost

until just 12:30 remained as Ohio 12-2 overall and 7-2 In the Big
State fell to 12-4 overall and 2-2 in West. have won 10 straight . Cal
the Big Ten.
State Fullerton fell to 5-7 and 0-4 .
Michigan. which lost at Illinois with its · seventh straight loss.
on Saturday, is 15·2 overall and Anthony's shot from above the
3-1 in the conference.
circle ruined the llerolcs of the
The Buckeyes came no closer Titans' Cedric Ceballos, who
than 13 points In the second hall wrapped up a 31-point effort with
- on the first basket of the hall. a three-point shot that tied the
Perry Carter led Ohio State with score at 63 wltll 11 seconds to
17 points.
play .
.
In other games Involving
At Hartford, Conn., Cliff Robinranked teams , co-No. 8 Missouri so n scored a !tame-high 24 points
do_wned Virginia Tech 104·99, No. and Phll Ga mbl e added 21 lor
10 'Nevada-Las Vegas edged Connecticut. Syracuse has lost
Fullerton State · 66-63, Connecti- four of Its last five games .The
cut upended No. 11 Syracuse Orangemen won their flrst I3
68-62, No . 13 Seton Hail defeated games of the season but have
Villanova, and No. 18 Stanford dropped to 14-4 overall and 1·4 In
pounded Mlam193-59.
the Big East. '
At Blacksburg, Va., Byron
At East Rutherford , N.J., John
Irvin scored a season-high 35 Morton scoreq 22 points and
points and Anthony Peeler came Andrew Gaze added 16 to lift
off the bencll to add 19, helping Seton Hallin to first place In the
Missouri outlast VIrginia Tech. Big East. Seton Hall, 16-1 and 4-1,
The Tigers; 15-3, opened a has never led the Big East race
20-point lead in the second hall after the first week of the season.
but had to withstand a late Tech VIllanova fell to 10-7 and 2-3.
charge. Missouri didn 't get a
At Stanford, Calif., Howard
basket in the last three minutes Wright scored 21 points and
but hit 10 of 14 free-throw ·grabbed eight rebounds to lead
attempts to seal the win .
Stanford, which 'Improved to 13-3.
At Las Vegas, Nev., Greg Todd Licht! tied the Stanford ·
Anthony 's three-point basket record he set last year by hitting
with three seconds left lifted his 35tl) consecutive free throw.
'Nevada-Las Vegas. The Rebels,

their fifth straight game.
"We had our chances," San
Antonio Coach Larry Brown
said. "But the Knlcks are good,
and I'm just proud we kept
fighting and coming back. They
got the big play when they needed
it, and you can' t make silly plays·
like we did late'ln the game."
In other NBA action, Charlotte
upended Philadelphia 127-122 in
overtime, Atlanta topped Washington 117 -106, Cleveland
tripped up Phoenix 126-110,
Denver held off Sacramento
116-110, the Los Angel~s Lakers
defeated Houston 124-113, Detroit
.whipped Boston 96-87 and Golden .
State squashed Seattle 146-117.
Hornets 127, 76ers 122 (OT)
At Philadelphia, Kelly Trlpucka scored 40 points and Rex
Chapman added 25 as Charlotte
ended its four-game losing
streak. It was the first overtime ··
victory for the expansion
Hornets, who also snapped the
76ers' five-game winning streak.
Hawks 117, Bullets 106
At Landover, Md., Moses Malone scored 11 of his 20 points in
the fourth quarter in his first
appearance at the Capital Centre
since leaving the Bullets. Dominique Wl!klns added 28 points for
Atlanta, while John Battle scored
21. Jeff Malone led Washington

Another basketball doubleheader Is on tap at ·t:yne Center
Tuesday as the Rio Grande
men's and women's teams host
Mld·Ohlo Conference rivals.
The Redmen will play Ohio
DOminican at 7:30 p.m. and the
Redwdmen host Walsh at 5: 15
p.m.
Tlie men's team enters the
contest 13-6 overall and 3-2 in the
conference for third place. Lou
Sartori 's Panthers are 0-15 an!(
0-4.
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
has shifted his lineup to start
Brad Schubert (6-3, freshman )
and Larry Benning (6-4, freshman) as his forwards and John
Lambcke (6-5, junior) at center.
Remaining as starters are the
team's top scorers, guards Anthony Raymore (5-11, senior)
and Brian Watkins (5 -10,

sophomore).
ODC is expected to start at
forward Craig Denney (6-3, junIor) and Kary Wllllams (6-0,
sophomore). Guards wlll be
Randy Tucker (5-10, senior) and
Dave Branscom . (6-1, junior).
Starting at the post wlll be Chip
Holcombe (6-6, senior) .
In 1987-88, the Panthers fell
three times to Rio - 85-66 in the
Muskingum Tournament, 104-65
on ODC's court and 105-75 at Lyne
Center.
Walsh's Lady Cavaliers enter
the contest with a 7·5 slate
against the Redwomen, who are
7-7 and 1-11n the MOC .
Redwomen Coach Cheryl Fleutz is expected to start as her
forwards Lea Ann Mullins (5'7,

•

senior) and Holly Hastings (5-9,
senior), her two top scorers.'
Facing them from Walsh wlll be
Beth Abramowskl (5·9, senior)
and Ann Alpeter (5-11, senior) .
At guards for Rio Grande are
Beth Coil (5-6, sophomore) and
Betsy Bergdoll 15-7, freshman),
whose opposite numbers for
Walsh ·will be Lalney Stallworth
(5-4, senior) and Holly Chapin
(5·5, sophomore).
Ann Barnitz (6-0, freshman)
will start lor the Redwomen at
center, wJth Rlchelle Hatcher
(5-9, freshman) facing her lor the
guests.
Last season, the Redwomen
defeated Walsh at Canton 77-63,
but Lisa Fitch's club came back a
lew wweeks later to hand Rio

Pomeroy, Ohlo 4576!1, Pb. 992-2156. Se-

I

cond 'c lass postage paid at Pome( oy,

Ohio.

·

Member: United Press lnternatlooal,
Inland Dally Pres&amp; Association and the
Ohio News~per Association. National 1
Advertising ~resentative, Branham '
Newspaper &amp;ates, 733 Third Avt'IIUe,

New York, New York 10017.

'..'

I'OS'ThiASTER: ·Send adcnos chanaos
to Tile Dally Seotlnel. lU Court St.,

Pomeroy. Ohio 457111.

SUIISCIIIPTION IIATES
By Cant• or Moler Boule

One Weelt ............... ................. .. .$1.10
One Month ...... ... ........................$6.10

One Year ........... ,..................... S72.80
SINOLICOFY
Doll~

PIIICE

...... :....... ..................... 25 C...ts

Subsl:rlbcl's not deJlrln1 to pay tbecarrlls may remit In adv~t.nce direct to

The Dally Sentlnel on a 3, 6 or 12 month

basis. Credit wlll be atven carrier each

week.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In

areas wbere home carrier

~ervtce

11

available.

~-­
boNoMolp
117
13 Weeltl .......... ...... ............... :.. $19.24
llaii8UI:I

26 w..u .................................. $37.96
52 Weeltl ....................... " ......... rTU6
Ool,..ellelp CeuiJ
13 Weeltl .................................. atl.IIO
26 Weelti .................................. $Ml.311
52'WHki ........ :......................... $1S.40

"Would you stop referring to me as a 'human

F"esource'l"

\

)

Grande a 63-59 loss In overtime at
home.

fJJr. fJJ an rJren t
ana fr.is office staff

PubliShed every 'afternoon, Mon&lt;1ay

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, 'by the Ohto Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia, Inc. ,

with 33 points.
Cavaliers 126, Suns 110
At Richfield, Ohio, Mark Price
scored 17 of his season-high 29
points In the second half and
Brad Daugherty added 28 for the
Cavaliers. Cleveland Coach
Lenny Wilkens earned hls ·IOOth
victory in a little more than two
seasons with the Cavaliers. Tom
Chambers scored 28 points for
Phoenix.
Nuggets 116, Kings 110
At Denver, Walter Davis
scored 7 ofhls 27 points late ln. the _
final quarter to help Denver snap
a tour-game losing streak. The
Nuggets outscored the Kings 15-2
down the stretch to take the
victory.
Lakers 1%4, Rockets 113
At Inglewood, Callf.. James
Worthy scored 26 points and
combined wjth Byron Scott to
fuel a torrid third-quarter shootIng performance that helped the
Lakers remain the NBA's lone
unbeaten team. Magic Johnson
contributed his eighth tripledouble of the season- 17 points,
18 assists and 13 rebounds.
Pistons 96, Celdcs 87
At Auburn Hills, Mich. , VInnie
Johnson s.cored 21 points and
Adrian Dantley added 19 to
power Detroit. ·

Lyne Center will host roundhall doubleheader

THE CENTRAL TRUST

( V!ll'S lfli-HI)

·'

'

Rice, a lightning quick 6-foot -7
forward, added 23 points on 8 of11
shooting. Rumeal Robinson did a
standout defensive job on Ohio
State's leading scorer. Jay Burson, helping hold him to just 12
points while scoring 14 himself.
Burson didn't get a basket until
12: 02 of the first half and' went
without one In the second half

The Daily Sentinel
A IMw..._ •f M.Jtllnedla, Inc.

Berry's World

gett\llg Inside. In most of our
games, I'm the blggestguyon the,
floor."
The 6-foot-9, 225-pound Vaught
scored 14 of his 22 polnis In the
second half, sinking 10 ol12 shots
overall. It was only the second
start of the season for Vaught ,
whom some feel has developed
Into a high NBA draft choice.
"I had a long talk with him on
the way home from the Illinois
game,'' Frieder said. "I reminded him of what has happened (when he's started In the
past) .
"He has a tendency to let bad
grades or an argument with' a
girlfriend carry over onto the
basketball court. You Just can't
do that.
·'I toJd him I was going to give
him a golden opportunity. We
need more minutes out of him . I
hope he continues this."

•

Knicks set for longest -road trip of year

Sentencing Reagan to history...:....·_B_e_n_~....:....ai_.te_nb_e--'-'-rgWhat about George Washington? He was the father of our
country.
How about Abraham Lincoln?
He freed the slaves.
Franklin Roosevelt? He gets
two sentences. Fought the Depression. Won the war.
Lyndon Johnson? A struggle,
stlll, between two sentences. He
got us Into VIetnam. He helped
the poor and blacks.
Millard Fillmore? James
BUchanan? Grover Cleveland?
Nothing, nothing, nothing.
It was a theory of the late Clare
Booth Luce that important presidents were remembered by only
a single sentence, occasionally
by two. The sentencees are terse,
sometimes unfair or simplistic,
but that's all that one gets from
history . Sorry about that. Lesser
presidents don't even get that
much.
What, then, •about Ronald Reagan? In the past few weeks there
has been much written about his

The

Ohio

Page-2-The Daily ~entihal : ·•
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, January 17. 1~8$

long. All letters are subject toedhlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in

_By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON -The first person In almost three decades to serve
two full terms In the White House will leave Washington Friday with
one big question to be answered: How good a president was Ronald
Reagan?
This Is a question In two parts. The first is how successful Reagan
was politically and the answer Is very: he was elected twice and he
achieved most of his announced political goals.
The second question Is how he will rank with the 38 men who served
as president before hill! and it wlll .almost surelr have to wa !t,
perhaps for a decade or more, for a consensus answer.
-But It Is hard to dispute the judgment that Reagan leaves office as a
president who actually did much of what he set out to do.
Siarting in 1981, he put the brakes on and in some cases reversed the
50-year trend af Increasing federal Intervention Into the marketplace,
the workplace and the schoolroom. Inflation and Interest rates
plummeted and unemployment dropped to the lowest level in 15years
during his administration. He cut tax rates - more than in half for
some people - ·and he put in place the biggest peacetime military
bul!dup In history.
He also achieved the first U.S.-Soviet weapons reduction of the
nuclear age, which he credited to the increase In U.S. arms, and
opened the friendliest dialogue with the Russians since World War II.
even though he came to office calling the Soviet Union an "evil

•

Linaa '!rent, Mary 'Di{fard,

SPECIAL

Open :J{ouse
at fr.is new meaica( practice in 1}1/j.w 9-faven
14!etfnestfay, January. 18 .1989

from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
1{§jresfmunts 'Will '.B~ Servetl

$3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO, N. A.

The Bank That Makes Things Happen
GAWPOLfS
M•mber FDIC

fjaif 9-(ovatter

invite you to att~;,na an

6 MON.TH
CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
RATE 8.00°/o-8.30°/o ~=AL

448-0902 .

!M.~. &amp;

'

Daniel R. Trent, D.-o.
Family Practice

·

138 Main St., New Haven, West Virginia+ (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

MIDDLEPORT
992-8881

..
•

�' Tueaday, January 17, 1989

UPI ratings

Nrw l'~t rklll, SM l\ltonlo 111
Ch!Yfhnd 121, Phoeah Ill
Dra¥H 116, Sau-amf'Dto Ill
I..A Laktrtllf, Hou.CODII I

N£\t' l ' ORK Clll"ll -TIIrV•rkdPrN!t
lniPrratkl •l Baard o f Coar be&amp;' TGp !II
COIIt"JP b•ldball nlll• . with flrllt·

placr valt't and ~corduhrouciaJu . II In
patf'ntflf'tif'!!l. t.otal potnh ( h.;..d on I~

DHriMIM. Boatoal~
Goldrn Stalf' 141. StMIIe lli
'1\Jftld 1,)''1 Ga me~
S anADiuftlo at New.lf'r ..y, 7:31 p.m .
PhCK"nlx at Miami, 1: !t p.m .

p oints for ftnl plat'p, 14 for' ltfl'O nd . f't C,)
lllftd last Wf'Pii's ranldn r.
TPam
Point•
I. Dukr 18il 03-0 1
• 6!5 I
~ . 1111~ 1 (51 ( 15-8)

Ht t

411J 1

378 $

5. Ml chl1an t iH)
B.
7.
14.
I.

Mllw&amp;u ..,,. at A.tlauia, I p.m.
lncii!Aa u Chi cap, 8:10p.m.
LA Cllppt-rs al Seat.tW, II p.m .
Houlton at Saa-ameato,lt: 30 p.m.
Vta h at Portland, 11:311 p.m .
M'f'dne•hv 'a GunN ·

"' '

3. LoulnUIP (IS.!)
.f . GPa rrt:awn ( IJ. IJ

:ut a

Oklahoma {ll-!)
Arizollllt. (11-tl
{lk') Iowa {13--2)
I liP) Ml!i ~uri II,._:J)

Boskln Ill PhUid~phla, nl&amp;hl
New Jrury at Del roll, •laflt

298 10
2116 '
:....t8i 12

10. Nrnda-Lu· Vtpo 111-21
II . Syra(IUMP (1 1-U)
1t. North Carolina ( 14-Sl
I S.S etonHaJI ( 1.._1 )
J.l. AortdastatP (11-1 )
JS, North Carolina 6&amp;&amp;1«" {II· I 1
16. Ohl• Staff { 1~ :.)

Charlo«.. a~ Mllwukre. nlrtl
O.n ~ r IU

. 2U 11
2U 4
211 8

NATIONAL HOCHE\' LEAGUE
Mond~'• Rftlul a
Toronto~. Hartford S

1:~!1 ·

.'"'...'

n . lndlan&amp; (IJ..t)

EdmonioD 2, O.lcqo 2 { tl~)
TuP.8dAJ'• Game&amp;
N~Je rwy at Qvf'~ i:S5 p.m.
Plllllbul'lh II Nl' ~l•dera, i :SS p.m.

~· z.

IR. SlaA lnNI(l l-31
11. ProvldrnCf' ( 13-1)

*'· ltk'l TPnrrurr tii -Zl

Dalla, nip;.

LA.CIIpptru.t Li\ Laken. nl&amp;flt
Nrw l'orkat Gol*n Sta.IP, nl&amp;fll

18!1 u
IUU

20. Hk-1 Gfo'orJi a l'l'dt (lHI
l:· UIInul llll'd
Oth trli rii'Cf'IVIIIJ Votf'li: ArkaJIMS
ArkanM• Uhk- Rock. Ball Stalf', Of'mso n., Conftl'&lt;llcul, Mrmphll!Siai t', Nolno
DllmP, Drf' p•sta_lf', $t , Mary'A /Calli. J.
Tt&gt;Ju,~ · El Pue. Vlllan0\'11, Wlchka Statt&gt;.

"'

CaiJllr}' at Oft roM, 1: SS p.m .
.
Lo11 An leif!IJ at St. Lou II, 8: 3$ p.m.
Phlladf'lphla at Ya.oo•wr, II: J$ p.m.
Wf'dDf'ld~ 'l G&amp;mM
Harlfonl a1 Montl'f'al, nls;ht

IMPERSONATION - Clnclnnall Benpls numlng back Ickey
Woods does his Impersonation of a Bengal llger after a news ·
conference Monday. The Bengals will face the San Francisco 19ers
In the Super Bowl Sunday.
·

at S..HIIIo. ni,CN
Nl' Rur:er a at Chla,o, niJN
Edmoalon .t WIRnlpe,, nllhf
,'M:inlll!uta

Cage standings
·MID-AMERICAN coNF_EB·E~CE
Conft'l'f'ncr 1\ll GMmt'!l
" ' L Pct . W L Pel .
:t I .1511 13 I .W.t9
Ba ll Stal"
KPnt Stall'
~ I .150
9 5 .&amp;U
2 I .681 9 ~ .1112
~lf'rnMich
Tolf'do
2 1 .if1 8 1 .D3
% ! .580 , 6 .!L.'UI
OhioU
Wf'flltf'rnMJ~h
t ! .560 1 I .538
C.-nlnd Mi&lt;'h
I ! ..133 1 7 .HO
Mlunl
1 3 .uo 5 11 .:un
Bwlhll &lt;hrt&gt;n
0 9 .000 6 8 .429

Glrili Ohio HirhSt!bool Bas tel ball
8)' Unltf'd Pnssln~r ..tkt..U
Mundii,Y, Jan. 11
Arcadl a J4. VanBul't'nft
Cardhtlfon J'!, Cf-nWburt: U
Culd~'lllit'l' 11, Uacoln\1PW ·U
fort JPnnlnp M , PIM.I ..DJ4t
l lppPr !klotuVal '/'t, JacboaCPIIW!rUI
__,
M'rii&amp;\Uit" 3&amp;. Su'Ubrn
WI Ito Cal hIll

OmO ATHJ.ETK' CONFERENCE
Conlt;'l"t'DCP A.ll Gamf'!l
Tum
\\' L Pet . " ' L Pd. :
Wlttf'n~r~

8 0 1.000 1!1 0 1.010

Caplal

6 1

Bald-"' au..:..

~

. 8~7

n s

:t .511 10 '
' .1
!I •

Ht•ldtollw.rJ

Moulllllnion

~
~

OHPrhf'ln
Ohio Nrthrn
Mu111dnpm
Mwk&gt;tbt

.s11

__

Ohio follr1r Buldball Relul11
Monday, ,Jan . I&amp;
l'lncln11111 88, Arbnllll1 state H
Akron t7. Younptown Slatl' '/'~
CIPVI'I and St. Ill. fllllloi.-Cblcaa-o 8.1

.110o
,1125

.eoo

.. .4%9 10 5 .lili7

..... ~11!.400

2 5 .%116

4 II .ftil

I 6 . IU
I 6 .IU

1 9 ,.1311 ,
l 12 ,!(10

Collfllf' Bull!tbaJI RMI\Itt
Eaol
Bloom5bu rr 8-6. Shlppeallbu 11' J4
Bu clf.W'II19, Army 77
Culll'ton St. ID7, St. Joseph'• ( Vl. ) 82
Colb)' 83, BatN 78
Ql nftl'dlcu168, Syracu .. 82
Dl\'klll.'IOII13, EIIAbfiCblown 17
Lflmoyl'lf' Ill. Maadl!ld 1t
l.,yt1lmln,JM, Gt'tl)'lllurw; 88
Mafnt-Maehllll !7, St. III~WJ~h's ( Mf'.)

Pro resuhs
Sport. l'almdar
Blasllf'(baJI

.•
•

•

..
•

.

San l\ltlo.to al NPW dH.¥)' , 1 :JO p.m .
PhMnix.lll Mlaml, 7 : ~ p. m..
Milwau ...t' al Aalanta, 8 p.m .
lndlau. iiJ &lt;'hlca,o, 8: 31 p.ni .
LA CllppPn at &amp;&gt;lilt It', JO p.m .
Hou&amp;lon a1 Sal'f'llmf'nlo, 11: :.0 p.m .
Ulah at Portland , 10:!0 p.m .
IJo,.;lnl
l..a.o; \'fllfiUl. Nt'\', - Pfltk'O Dfll'lmll VIi,
.Juhn Soli•. 10 round suJI('r b~&amp;nt.am ­
wt·l~ll boul; KIU'ama Lt-ot.a vs. IUio~
Brown. 10 round mlddiPWeltrlll bout.
Stf'Vfl
Sttorlln.: llflllh8, Mich. McCrory VA. Dlflp Brlonrs 1 12 ruund
"upt&gt;r ban&amp;amw~IJhl bct•l: Hurlfo)o Snt!ad
\ 'N, Edwin Ca!UUio, II round fPaiht&gt;r·
WfiiKhl hout.

Figuft' Sh.tlnJ
Blrmlnlflarn; &amp;!,P•nd -

EuropPIUI

( ' h IUlJplor.hips

Goll
Lll Qui.U . Calli. - PGA
GllmP
HOcckey }
Nl'W Jl"rtlf'Y lit

St&gt;nkJnS~in~

QurbPc. 7: !15 p.m.

Ptllllbu rfh at m· l~tlandl'rs, 1: 3~ p.m .
Calpcy at Driroll, '/' ~ M p. m.
Los
at St. Lou I&amp;. 8:35p.m.

-

An"""

PhlladPipNia &amp;t \'ancou..-r, ID: 9S p.m .
SkHn1

AdPibodf'n, Swllll'rlaad- mfl'n'" «lant
Jllldom

.
'

Socctr
MISL
KIUIJIIU. Clly 111 Lot; An tt'lf!ll, 10: :u p.m .
Tl'n.U

.,...

Mf'lhournP, AuU.raUa -

AWitndlan

Tran!lllcllons
&amp;asP hall
- A,v""d lo l·)f'IU' ronlnu,i l! wtth oudlf'ldrr Tuy ,\rmali and
ral:l'hl'r Bill Srhrot'drr.
l'lllntrlio&amp;A - Added oudltldl'r .rotan
Cllrl&amp;&amp;rn8f'll and f"' Jill mlftOI' IPapt&gt;n 16
lhPir ~prin('tral•lnl rOI!IIf'r~ plltchf'ni
p I AbboCI J •· ... L
*'
• Or..ftY • arr, rulan,
Jim Davln!l and Fnulctsco Oliw-ra~.
c allcJlt'l'!l Orando M!!rcado IUid Grfl'l
0111.011 and IW"l'O .. hasrman Chip Half'.
s,..,, \"ork (NLI - Namf'd nm
8hack ...-f'll mllRIIJf'f' ol Ptu!ilfl:ld of till'
Nt&gt;w Vorli-Pf'nn Lflapr tA ) IU'Id Bill
LRttwn C&lt;Ml'h.
Bas Utball

f.~t.llfornla

O.Onwr -

Aetho'BII'd loi'WIU'd .hly
Vlr~ef'nl: ptMc •d forward Bill Hant.llk on
lnjurPd rT!Ot'rvt .
Grand R .. llk (CRAI - Naml'd ,Jim
SII'(1K'r I.'OIIl'h,
Phot'fllx - Slp;rwd prd T.R . Dunn.
Colk&gt;Kt&gt;

Purdul' - Named Jim M'Wihburn
anlslanl football coach.
W)'omiD« - ln*llrdtf'lf !IU!ipPndPd
bukriball piA¥""' Chuavll Wllllanu.

Hoc•l'Y

st . LoW!!- Acq IJrrd drlm!M'man Mlkt
Lalor fr..n Montn'al for l•ttrf'
r oll!I6Mratlo•.
.
SoccPr
B&amp;llknOI'f' IMISLI -

•

DPIR!df'f" 0...!1·

moNI ArmMroos lii s ldrUnrtl for Cht
!II" MOIL
U.S. SMrH' F('dfratiOn - N•mt'd lob
Gaashor l'Oach ol utkt.al tram .

SATION!\L

BASKETBAll

AS!OCIATION

..·- Lanier named OAC
M9nd...r 's Rftllw.

OlarloUI' t%1 , Plllladdphlal%t IOTl

Violence on streets
upstages Super Bowl

Monday's
cage scores

T'""

U { IJr)

MIU'\M Bl, Lo111lalud V. i8
MM!IICIIu!lf'ttt H. St. &amp; .., .... hn• 84
Stat~

PPn

8!, 0.11..-e• '13

Rrr 71. Oark:Ha II
Sf'! on Hall 7!1, VIlla~~ ova Q1

S. .Conn. 88. MPrcy 81
Wlllitt! Ill, Monvlan Tl'
\'or~ Collt&gt;Jfo 1'r. Uo buon ValltY f7

'

Soulh

Aldflr8on-BroadctJA 10,! , Fairmont K

AIIPJhUI)' M. ChOWUI 80
Allantlc Chr. Ill, Lf'nolr-Rt\)'111' 1t
S.lm.·Ahbt'y 81. J .C. Smltb 83
(:harl~lon a,,, W.Va. Stllll' HD
Colit'r 'I':S , Brnrdlct M
Concord IS. Blul'llr.ld 12
Elk. Oly 111, u. W•l · CoiUQlbla tl
Emory I Hrnry !12, £mory 88
Florida AAM H. N .C . .UT 7$
G('orwr Mason 81, Ea•t CaroiiM 7-1
•JIIlchon\' lllr 81 , Ahbama ·
Blrmlnlflam 1:l
lhlnpion U. 11, .la&lt;:k&amp;o11Yillf' Sl. •
Lvnpood 8'l, FPrnm Iii
Mar11hll H . w. CaroHna n
Mar11 IIIII t'l. Cnl. W~lryaa c
MilL Tl"n•nl'f'-St. '71. Tf'n&amp; TPch n ~
MbiiMiri 104, Vlf'llala Tl'clllt
MonohP.ad St. 71, A.e.ln l'f'IO' 1S
Murn.y St . i.,, E . Kewt.:ky 41 '
UNC·WIImlallt•n'!I.Jam~MallhnS7
Ra.,o1'1183, " 'lftthrop ~~
Roan•lrll2. GuUfonl 'l't

South

Carollaa

Sl.

71,

BPCIIIII.,.

Coolanaall
Salpm 7!, Davl!l I EUd11111l
Shl'pllfrd 8%, Wf'IIIIJbt'rtJ 77
Tf'nD.-t'llatlanooJ(a 81, Va. Mllllary 11
(OTI
TuN. 81, Vlrttnla ComrnoawJ&gt;aldl 58
M'olford 7!, Prflllb)'l'l'lan IIi

~

Ml~l

Akroo " · l ' ounptown Slalt&gt; )3
C'lnchnaUI8, ArkauaJI stale M

Cltvrl•d Sl. 51 , Dllaoh-CIIIcaro g

Crf'IKhlon IU, Wlcldla Scalf' AI COT!

59

Drury AI. Ml!i80Ur1 WNiirrnS.f
F. . Dllnok 'l't, \\', Dllnoh II
Ft . Hay sSI.all' IX. k('.-llf')' Slatr t-t
Kan.- St. 84. S. Utah 75
Manch"'*"'r Ill. Sl Frud" SK (%111')
MlchiiJM !It, Ohio Stair 1S
Ml!nouri·Kan!!Ufii)'U. TI'IUftlll'eSI.

M!!Uil)llri-81. IA:Iubo H , Eunoka 78
Mh!!OUrl Valley 31, WI'Sind•t« 81
Southf'l"lllbl•ana I:IR. K~ltl..:ky St. 7t
sw Miuouri tt NortM'•Iowa 18
S11Jinaw \laiiPr MI. Nortlnl&lt;ood 18
St. I.e! ubi M'l, Brooldy• u
\la1Piltlllu63. WIS.-GI'f'm lla)' It
wts.-MIIwauWt&gt;IJ, . . ....,oUst!

SoudN·t'!l(
ArkanM!!'JI, Tf'Jiu AIM Ill
rolonulo 84 . • . Air Foret&gt; li!!l

Lou.lslua TPch '70, McNf'Nfl' Sl. "
NE U:IMhl-.. It, Nicholls Slalf' IC
PanhuJ.f'SI . 11J, Lubbod.Chratlan$7
PraiH• Vlf'W se. Alabama S&amp;aeP 71
S.F . Au11lln • • SE LDIIIIllula Sl

Souellrrn tLa~ . !!11, MIJJo. Valley 81 . 87
WNt
&lt;'ai.Santa S.rbll'lllt, 8• low St 4a
Lon~t Bl&gt;ach St . ll. Unh·. Of Padnc u
N 8d L v

""

.,.

M l'flliiii,CaJ.. J'ullforto.U

Nf'W Mf'Jt:lco St . ~,,, Frf"8110 St. M
Sacramf'l'liu Si. M. SclnomaSI . AS
Slanlurd 83 Miami (F'Ta ) st

UaahSI.I04.CaJ.Irvlnl"11

~---------~;.;.;.;;.;;.;;;:;;:;.;.:::;.;.:.._---J

TOLEDO, Ohio"(UPI)- Cap I·
tal guard Tom Lanit-r, who lt-d
the Crusaders to a pair of wins
last week, has been selectt-d tht&gt;
Ohio Athletic Conference men's
basketball player of the week.
Lan it&gt;r. a 6-3 st-nior from
Westervillt-, scored 21 points In
t-ach game as Capital beat

Player of Week
Heidelberg 75-63 on Wednesday
and Mount Union 64-46 on Saturday. He a;Iso had six rt-bounds
and seven as$1sts in the two
games.
Lanlt&gt;r made 15 of 24 field goal
attt-mpts, Including t-Ight of 12
from three-point range, and all
four of his freE&gt; throws.

Baumgardt honored as Player of Week
•
•
••

••
•

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) - Wt&gt;st·
t-rn Mi chiga n center Tony Baum·
gardt has been selected the
Mid -Am er ica n Conference
·men's baskt-tball player of the
week.
Baumgardt , a 6-9 senior from
Raclnt', Wi s .. had 45 points and 16
rt-bounds In the Broncos' two
wins and one loss last week.

He had eight points In a 68-63
win at Marquette on Monday, 12
points In a 71-63 home loss to
Eastern Michigan on Wt-dnt-sday
and 25 points and nine rebounds
in a 91-90 win ·at Ohio Unlvt-rslty
on Saturday.
.
In the threE&gt; games, he hil16 of
25 field goal attempts and 13 of 17
free throws.

MIAMI (UPI) - Participants
In Super Bowl XXIII, who just
hours earlier had been the
biggest news In town, sat In their
hotel rooms Monday night and
watched tt-levlston reports about
the violence In the streets
outside.
The death or a black motorcy·
ells! being chased by pollee
sparked a riot Monday night In
which as many as 100 people In
the largely black Overtown sec·
tlon of Miami fired on officers,
set flrt-s, looted and threw rocks
and bot ties.
The entire Miami pollct- force
was mobilized, and city officials
said that by midnight officers
had contained the fourth out·
break of rioting In the city this
decade.
The incident took place near
the hott-1 housing the Cincinnati
Bengals, who will meet the San
Francisco 49ers Sunday In the
nation's largest one-day sporting
event.
One sports writer covt-rlng the
Super Bowl was slightly Injured
when he and his wife made the
wrong turn off Interstate 95 and
wound up In the m.lddle of the
disturbance.
Miami officials had worked for
years planning for this week,
setting up a task force aimed at
promoting a friendly welcome
for the thousands of visitors
expected for the game.
Tht-re was no Immediate lndl·
cation from the National Foot·
ball League that any or the
planned Super Bowl functions
would be altered. The biggest
news conferences of the week
were sc)leduled for Tuesday at
Joe Robbie Stadium, about 15
m lies north of tht' sltt- of the
Incident. A section of I-95 betweE&gt;n downtown and the stadium
was blocked orr Monday night . .
The San Francisco 49ers wert- ·
staying at an airport hotel; well
removt-d from the scene of the
violence. Although tht' Bengals
hotel was near the heart of thtlncldent, a spokesman at the
hotel said no hints of thtdlsturbance co.uld be discerned
from the ground floor of tht&gt;
building,
A crowd of reporters In town to
cover the game followed tht-

--Sports briefs-Soccer
Baltimore Bias t defender Des·
mond Armstrong will be lost for'
the season after brt-aklng his leg
In two places Saturday night In
an 8·7 victory over Tacoma.
... San Diego Sacker mldflelder
Branko Segota, who collected
four goals and two assists In t\l(p
games, was named the MISL
Offensive Player of tht' WeE&gt;k....
Los Angeles Lazt-r goalkeeper
Krls Pt-at made 20 saves In a 2·1
victory over the Wichita Wings to
earn MISL Defensive Player of
the Week.

334 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

Ph. 446-1171

165 lroadway
JacUon, Oh.
Ph. 216·6934

television reports from the Super
Bowl headquarters In a downtown hotel, but one of tht-m saw
the action up close.
Houston Post reporter Ray
Buck and his wife Mary, who will
celebrate their fourth wedding
an nlversary on the day or the
game, wt-re rt-turnlng to their
hotel when they took a wrong
·
turn off the Interstate.
"Basically," Buck said, "we
wound up at tht&gt; wrong place at
the wrong time. We had a rental
car and my wife was driving. We
realized we had made the wrong
turn, but we were heading along
parallel with the freeway, going
In the right direction.
"We noticed a car stopped In
front of us at a red light. We
stopped behind It and five guys
wt-nt up to tht' car In front us. The
first thing I thought was that It
might be a drug deal.
"I said to Mary, 'I'vt- got a bad
feE&gt;Ilng about this.' Suddenly,
they started looking at us and I
told Mary, drive around this car
(In front of them). Tht-n they
started throwing bottles and
rocks and stuff and one hit the
side of the car and one hit the
passengt-r window and shattered
the glass.
"We sped away and got back to
the hotel and It was only then that
I reallzt&gt;d I was bleeding down
my back. My It-gs are !Ike rubber
right now."

Main Street Pizza

2~6

East llain St.

H&amp;l992·6674
BLOCK

611 UST IWN

.

POMIIOY, OHIO

LAIGE

. 992·2221
992·9922

$495'
Atlditio•al lopplnt•
Chlly 90C

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Knights of Columbus Invitational
track meet Is returning to Cleveland Ft&gt;b. 18 alter a two-year
•
hiatus.
The meet, the second oldest
Indoor track meet In the nation
behind the Mllrose Games, was
not held the past two years
because or financial problems.
It had been run at the Cleveland Arena for years and then at
the Richfield Coliseum. But this
year It w111 move to the Intt-rnational Exposition Ct-nter adJa·
cent to the Cleveland Hopkins
International Airport, where por·
table seats can be set up for 15,000
fans.
Three-time Olympic gold medalist Evelyn Ashford, who w111
compete In the 55-mett-r t-vent,
headlines the field that Includes
several rf!Cord holdt-rs.
. Among them are Roger Kingdom. who won the 110-meter
hurdles In the 1984 and 1988
Olympics; Joe Deloach, who
,beat Carl Lewis In the 200 meters
at Seoul; Peter Rono, 1500-mt-tt'r
gold medal winner In Seoul; and
Steve Scott, holder of the Amerl·
can milt- record.
Deloach is to compett' In the
55-meter event at the K-of·C
met' I.
Ashford told a news conft-rence
Monday she had two reasons for
entering this t-vent.

'

Units receive 7 calls Monday

CHEEZE PIZZA ·

PO!Hroy '

K of C meet will
return to Cleveland

CAPITAL GAINS
QUESTION: I own shares in a mutual fund. I have received notices of
capital gains that are being reinvested for me. I have also been noli·
tied that the fund is paying the tax
on these gains. How will this affect
my income tax?
'
ANSWER: You will receive a Form
2439. The undistributed capital
ga1ns are Includable in your income
and the capital gains tax paid on
your behalf is claimed as a credit on
your Ia~ return. It this credit exceeds your tax liability, the difference will be refunded.

Continued from pagt- 1

By MIKE RABUN
natl used to Its benefit In
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
defeatlnl Buffalo for the AFC
MIAMI (UPI) - The Clncln·
title emplo)l.ed two tlaht ends
nat! Bengals offense wtll be
with two rec;elvers.spUt wide to
Ullder a lot of pressure In Super
the left or the fonnatlon.
From !hat set, the Bengal&amp;
Bowl XXIII, perhaps more so
than any other group that wlll
persiStently ran slant plays totake the field Sunday.
ward the lett side with Woodland
The popular theory Is that San
he consistentlY gained subs tan·
Francisco . w111 .s core a reasona·
tial yardage.
He did not break along one, but
ble number or points, perhaps a
lot.
he picked up 4-8 yards on almost
That makes It Incumbent on
every try and ~liat softetled· the
the Bengals to do one or two
Bills defense.
things, Cincinnati must either
To be able to do the same thing
score a lot of points as well or do a
against the 49ers, Cincinnati
must be able to effectively seal
tremendous job of ball control to
limit theamoUJitoftlmethe49ers
off nose tackle Michael Carter
offense Is on the field.
.
and block Inside llneba~ker Ml· ·
Clnclnriatl comes Into the
chael Walter - who led San
gamt' with the NFL's No. 1
Francisco In tackles wltb 97.
offense - avt-raglng 378.6 yards
Once Clncl.n nail begins to pick
per game. The Bengals rushing
up some first downs on the
game Is also tops In the league,
ground, If It does, the Bengals
picking up an averagl! of 169.4
chances of hitting the big play
yards per contest.
will dramatically lmpro'\e· ·
Brown led the leagu.e .ln yards
· Coaches·who have watched the
Bengals this year believe th~th24andscoredntne
have a -couple of choices In
touchdowns. But Brown did not
attacking the 49ers defense.
catch more than two passes In
Cincinnati may feE&gt;! It can line
any or the Benaals last rive
up against tht- 49ers and run all
regular-seasongunesandhehas
day long, as the Bengals have
caught just one pass In the
done from time to time. Or the
playoffs.
Rather than Brown, Cincinnati
Bengals may feel like they need
quarterback Boomer Eslason !
the big play to beat San Fran·
cisco, in which case quarterback
will . likely turn to . tight end ,
·Boomer Eslason will try earJy
Rodney Holman and Brooks as
and often to hit flanker Eddie
his chief passing targets since
. Brown; whose 24 yards per catch
the short passing rame will more
leads the league.
smoothly blend with the running
The leading belief Is that the
attack.
.,
Bengals will try to run, at least at
Clnclnnatlls known tor Its trick .
tht&gt; start.
plays and the Bengals will
James Brooks and rookie
probably unveil a few against the •
Ickey Woods are certainly capa·
~9ers. But the Bengals' best ,
ble of producing yards. Woods
chance to beat san FranciSCO Is =
had a startling rookie year,
basic football. U theBenplscan
gaining 1,066 yards and averagrun, they have a chance. And that ·
lng 5.3 yards per carry. Brooks
determination should come ·.
picked up 931 yards and aver·
ratrlyearJylnSuperBow!XXIII.
aged 5.1.
But the key to Cincinnati's - - Sp;ll18 brief8 -...;;··
ball-control effort, and perhaps
Foo&amp;ball
,
the game, will bt&gt; the job done by
Pittsburgh Steelers guard ·
left tackle Anthony Munoz, left
John Rienstra and defensive end:;
guard Bruce Reimers and center
Aaron Jones eaeh Underwent .,
Bruce Kozerskl.
arthroscopic ankle surgery. ;
Munoz Is considered by. many 'Rienstra hurt his right ankle last ·
to be tht&gt; best offensive lineman
season while on Injured reserve
in the NFL and the Bengals have
with a fractured leg. Jones'
gained many a yard behind his
Injury, also to his right ankle, .
6-6, 28P.pound frame.
was a c hronlc probiem that cost ·
Ont- of the fonnatlons Clncln·
him no playlq tlmt!.

OUI PIICES· ARE
LOWER

EVERY DAY

· Monday· Thursday
~nth

FREE Local Delivery

of January

REPLACEMENT CONTAO LENS SERVICE·
Refill your ·

CONTACT .
LENS

CONTACT

LENS

350fo
10

65°/o
THE

o•y
and

SAVE
UP TO 65%
''

.DiffiiENa
IS TIE
PIKE!

a•• • ••

maD&gt;: !&gt;f the same things in private

pracuce thai he did in the emer·

gency room - treating sore du'oaiS
anc! ~y noses, as well as more
senous ~. handling minor
emergeiiCies and diagnosing a
variety of ailments.
,
With four examining rooms three medical and one StiiJ!ical in the newlr remodeled facility · Dr..
Trent will InitiaUy Offtf all of the
services previously available at the
· Bend Area Medical Center and
wiD expand services as the' need

arises.
· · Assisting him 11 the office are his
. wife Linda, office manager, Mary

Dillard, C.M.A., cmified medical
assistant, and Gail. Hovllter, recep-

tionist and billing clerk. Appointmcllts IJid walk-ins are wclcome from 9 Lm. to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday,
and 9 Lm. to noon Wednesday.
Dr. Trent, a member or the
American Osteopathic Association,
is certified in Advanced Trauma
Life Suppon and is a certified instruetor in Advanced Cardiac Life
Support. He wiD continue as an ac·
tive member of the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Medical Staff.
Dr. Trent and Linda are the
parents or two children, Lisa, 14,
and Dan, II.

.: EPA ... Continued from page1
- because most people could not
. · afford the tremendous Increase
• that would be needed.
Anderson, Mayor Seyler ·and
. · Council are hoping that State
· . Issue II monies may be a possible
"· fundlq source, but State Issue II
. · Is a wait·and·see proposition and
· . the village Is qulckJy running out
. . of time.
. " Anderson, Seyler, Council
-. President Larry Wehrung and
Goodman are planning to meet
with EPA officials In Logan as
• , soon as possible to \,t;Y to workout
·'· might glvtan arrangement tpat
' the village fllPre.,tl.rv,~ jlefort- a
suit Is tiled. . . '
.• ,, Although
is' n~t op·
be
, tlmlstlc th'at Pomeroy
, able to avoid the law · suit,

Nation continues to enjoy mild weather
By United Press International
t-astern slopes or tht' Rockies In
Winter-weary residents across Montana. Gusts of up to 80 mph
were possible.
much of the nation were given a
reprieve for a second straight
A high wincf warning also was
day Tuesday as rain and snow
In effect for the northwt-st
were scarce and temperatures Chinook zone of Wyoming, and
high winds also were expected
were relatively mild, the National Weather Service said.
for the southeastern quarter or
A stubborn cold front moved the state. Winds around Cody,
Into the northern part or the Wyo., gusted to 51 mph late
Monday.
nation's midsection, however,
The cold front In the Pacific
bringing light snow to northern
Minnesota. Another" cold front Northwest brought strong and
brought rain to the upper Paclflc gusty winds to the area Monday
Northwest.
night, and winds were reported
gusting to 55 mph along the coast
Nearly an Inch or rain fell at
Astoria. Ore., during the six hour of Oregon.
Temperatures were lri the 30s
period ending at 1 a.m. EST, the
and40s across much of the nation
NWS said. Qulllayute, Wash ..
received more than 2 Inches of early Tuesday, with readings in
rain overnight.
the 50s ·and 60s In southern and
Some snowshowers were possi- central Florida. ·
Subfreezing overnight temper·
ble later In the day for parts of
atures extended from the north·
Pennsylvania, upstate New
Vork, Vermont and Maine, the ern and central high Plains to lht'
NWS said.
Great Lakt'S region and across
the northern and mlddle'Atlantlc
Dry and pleasant weather
Coast states . Temperatures.
prevailed across much ofthe rest
dipped Into the teens across parts
or the nation t'arly Tuesday'
of North Dakota, Minnesota,
forecasters said.
upstate New York and northt-rn ·
Clt-ar skies were the order over
much· or the southern two-thirds • New England, the NWS said.
Temperatures also were .In the
or tM country. Fog was develop30s and 4lls overnight across
Ing over parts or eastern Okla·
much or the western U.S., In·
homa and eastern Texas, while
chlng up Into the 50s In some
clouds and drizzle were hanging
d.eserts In the Southwest.
over south central Texas.
Temperatpres around the na·
Strong and gusty winds contlon
at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 3
tinued along the eastern slopes or
degrees
below zero at Craig,
· the northern Rocky Mountains,
to
72
degrees at Key West,
Colo.,
and a high wind warning was In
Fla
.
effect early Tuesday for the

Anderson hopes that lfthevlllagt'
Is making a good faith t-ffort "to
get down the road toward com·
pllance, '' !him EPA may be more
Inclined to give tht&gt; v1llage
additional time before going to
court.
But whether EPA sues the
village In February, or rt-lt-nts
and gives the village a reprieve,
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Strlk·
according to Anderson, Pomeroy lng teacher;t are to vote.Tuesday
"will eventuallY have to" come on a "final contract offer" from
up with the mUUons of dollars the ~ ,of -education, a union
neE&gt;ded to bring the waste water olflctal s~
system Into comp~jln~t-.
The vote by 2,000 members of
It's not a qut-stlon " If" Pome- the Akron Education Associaroy will bring Its system Into tion was scheduled for 3 p.m.,
compliance, It's a question of 1Janna Bruner, st-cretary"when," and whether the village treasurer of tht&gt; AEA, said late
will dictate the Improvements or Monday.
be dictated by EPA.
Represen tatlves of the board
presented what they called their
final offer to the association
during a bargaining session
Monday afternoon.
The offer was then taken to the
AEA 's 30-m ember Board ofTrus·
tt&gt;es for consideration. The board
' By United Pr~s International a strong platform or support or had
thret- options: rej:ommend It
•• Five teachers from Ohio are education, emphasizing such lm· lor approval
by the full member·
amplllf the 230 chosen to partie!· portant prlnc)ples as rewarding ship; recorn!nend the teachers
t pitt\'. 1ft 11M tnaltgUratlon actlvl· success, setting high standards, vott- against the proposal; or
ties this week.
encouraging partental school make no recommendatfon at all.
.Teachers from Ohio Include choice, and demanding accoun·
Edna Shepler from the Whiteford tabllty at aUlt-vels of education,"
Following tht&gt; meeting, Bruner
Elementary School In Toledo;
said Stephen Studdert, executive declined to say what recommen·
• Michael Bllliraktil • ft'Omo Field director of the Inaugural dation the board had decided
• High School in Mogadore; Betty Committee.
upon, saying that would bt&gt;
Staebell from Sterling Elemen·
announced
first to the member·
"Those self!Cted for this expetary School In Wayne County;
rience represent the myriad or ship prior to Tuesday's vote.
• PauUneRieloftheWestEiemenThe Wllon went on strike Jan. 4,
•• tary School In Mount Vernon, and outstanding · teachers across
after
working the first half or the
Amt-rlca who t-xempllty these
: Wanda Adams, a social studies values and shart- George Bush's school year without a contract.
• teacher IR,die Northmont School commitment to education."
School officials havt- cancel~
' System In Clf.Yto!J, . . •.
classt-s, rather than attempt to
The Amer~alt ' 'm'~l!htt-nnlal
The teachers will attend the conduct school without substitute
; Presidential Inaugural Commit· opening celebration, the Inaugu- teachers, but they have said
' tee chose the 230' teachers, raJ parade, the Inaugural ball, classes must resume Feb. 2 with
1- representing every state and and the swt-arlng-ln ceremony. regular or substitute teachers to
·;.olseveral territories, to participate They will also attend Wednes·
~ In "A Teacher's Inaugural Expe- day's Department of Education~ rlence" at the Inauguration or
sponsored forum, "Education:
{ President-elect George Bush and The FUture Begins Today"
~ VIce
Presldent·elect Dan where Bush and Secretary of
li Quayle.
Education Lauro Cavazos are
Racine VIllage Council will
"Ge~&gt;I'&amp;e Bush campaigned on speaking.
meE&gt;t in recessed session at 7 this
evening at Star Mill Park.

bilod'man

Akron teachers to
vote on contract offer

will

:~Five Ohi9 teachers pickOO,
;--to att~P.d:_ inauguration events

•
i

Racine council
meets tonight

1

~ Report concludes Meese did wrong

WASHINGTON (UPI) - An
11 Internal Justice Department re·
[I port concludes that Edwin
~ Meese, once the nation's top law
~ officer, engaged In '·conduct
t which should not be tolerated of
~· any government t-mployee, espe·
~ clally not the attorney general,"
~ The Washington Post reported
~ .. Tuesday.
~ The review of the fanner
~ attorney general &amp;lso states that
~ .disciplinary action by the pres!·
~ dent would be warranted If
~ Meese were stU! In office, the
~ onewspaper said.
~ •
·
~
The Post obtained a copy of the
~ 61·page report, which Is expected
~ to be released Tuesday. The
~ review contradicted assertions

Meese made In July that he had
been '.'completely vindicated"
when Independent prosecutor
James McKay decided not to
Set'k an lndlctmt-nt against him
last summer.
McKay, who lnves tlgated
Meese's activities, determined
Meese had probably violated
fedt-ral confllct·of·lnterest laws,
but said . prosecution was not
appropriate. Mt-ese left office In
August.
In Its review, the JustlctDepartment's Office or Profes·
slonal Responslblllty found that
Meese committed numerous vtolations of department regula·
!Ions and a 1965 executive order
that established ethical stand·
ards for government workers.

~

Helen Washington.
She Is survived by one niece,
Patricia Harris of Tuppers
Plains, and a sister-In-law, Mrs.
.Paul Thomas Washington of
Letart, W.Va.
Services will be Thursday, 2
p.m. at the Cremeens Furlt-ral
Chapel, with the Rev. William E.
Curfman officiating. Burial will
belntheGraveiHUlCemeteryln
Cheshire.
Frlendsmayca11Wednesday,2
to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral home.

~ Geneva Marie Swisher, 88, of
~ the Tbunnan community, died

1 , ..,

o•••
01r Lew Prleee '* 01r
,,...,.,.,...

~ Monday evening at the Hear·
~ tland Nunlng Home In Jackson
~ following an extended Illness. .
Born May 21, 1900 In Mason
County, W.Va., slie was the
, daughter of the late Thomas
.; Samuel and Martha (Chamber·
t· lain) Washington.
.; She was a retired school
:: teacher and a member of the
~ Centerpoint FreE&gt; Will Baptist
~Church. She was the last or her
~ Immediate !amlly.
~
She was preceded In death by
~ her husband, Dewey Elmo
1:Swisher, oa Aprll20, ~983, whom
~ she married on May 29, 1942.
•, Also preceding her In death
,::were one brother, Paul Thomas
Wd.shlngton, and one sister,

~

FIR DIUVDI H AU. PIISCIIfiiOWS.
IF YOU 1011'1 IIRD. A PIISmPIIOII WI WU IIUYD
AllniiRG Ill STOll n&amp; 011 I $5.00 •••• OIMI.

' Dt1't Fereet Tt

Continued from page 1

~

IIDDLEPOII,POIIIOY,IIliiUIY,IIIIISVIlE,
lUlU., SYUC&amp;, .ISON, W. YA.
101- . . • ..

Bend...

.

The Daily Sentinel- Page 5

PIZZA

Ol~y

40

.,

Prescription Shop
992-6669

211 Nom

r.

.

'.

&gt;·

Rev. Leland Haley

The Rev. Leland Haley, Happy
Hollow Road, Middleport, died
Tuesday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Arrangements are being completed at the
Hunter Funeral Home In
Rutland .

l?.?i2J

5::3SNOW
. -RAIN
SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "
Cold
Static "
Occluded
Maps~ ml!l'mu_mcle~11tUres . At lell$t 50o/, of any shaded area is lorecast
priiCipltanon II
ted
UPI
WEATHER MAP - During early Wednesday morning, rain Is .
forecast for parts of the Pacific No.rthwest and the Northern :
Intermountain Region (wllh snow In the northernmost portions) . .
Snow Is also forecast for parts of the upper Mississippi Valley and
most of the Great Lakes Region. Rain/showers are possible In
parts of the Western Gulf Coast with showers In parts of the south
Atlantic Coast. UPI

w'

11

to,._,..

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly clt-ar, with a
low near 30. Southwest winds lt-ss
than 10 mph.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny ,
with highs in tht- lower 50s.
Extended Forecast
ThursdaY through Saturday
A chance of snow In the
northeast, but fair elsewht-re,

meet state requirements for the
number or school days.
Superintendent Conrad Ott In·
dlcated Monday that If the
board's offer Is rejected by the Dally stock prices
teachers Tuesday, the system
(As of 10:30 a.m. I
will begin the process or hiring Bryce and Mark Sm lth
substitutes so classes for the . ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
district's 35,000 students can
resume.
Am Electric Power ............. 26~
. "If they df!Cllne, then we go out
AT&amp;T ..................... .... ... : ..... 29
on a talent hunt," Ott said.
Ashland on ......................... 35
Despltt&gt; the board's final offer,
Bob Evans ...................... .... 15%
there was no Indication th4t the
Charming Shoppes ..............15)18
tv(o .. sides had agreed on · ecoCity Holding Co .......... ..... .. .. 20
nomli:,~ lssues, the main sticking
Federal Mogul. ................... 51¥..
points 'In the dispute.
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................50)18
"Economically, no progress
Heck's ......................... ........ %
has been made," Bruner said
Kt-y Centurion .. ................... 15
before Monday's bargaining ses- Lands' End .. ........ .... .. ... ...... 28"'
sion. "We have had .Prt-tty
Umlted Inc .... ... ............ .....29"'
Intensive discussions (Sunday)
Multimedia Inc .................... 76
on several non-economic items,
Rax Restarirants .................. 2%
but we have not reached com·
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ............ 161,1
plete agreemt-nt on any of
Shoney's Inc .................... .... 8%
them."
Wendy's Inti. .. ... .. ... ............... 6
The non-economic Issues In·
Worthington Ind ....... .......... 23% ·
elude disciplinary procedures
and starting times for elt-men·
tary schools, Bruner said.
Starting pay for the teachers
under a three-year contract,
which expired In July, was
Veterans Memorial
$19,550. The top salary with a
Admitted -Raymond Pierce,
master's degree, 18 houn of
Racine; Mary Page, Langsv11Je;
graduate school credit and 27
Guy Bush, Pomeroy; Kennt-th
years of teaching experlenct-was
Lawson, Syracuse: Robert Hill.
$37,900, union officials sald.
Racine; Karl Meeks, At.hens;
'
Lt-na
Carpenter, Langsvil!t-.
Lottery numbers
Discharged - John Larkins,
Dally Number
Doorls Neal, Clarence Creamer,
758 . .
Michael Bradfor~.
Ticket sales totaled $1,287,141,
with a payoff due of $434,217.
PICK-4
8515.
PICK-4 ticket salt-s totaled
$221,735, with a payoff due of
$65,200.

Thursday . Fair Friday. A chance
of snow Saturday. Highs will
range from the mid JOs to tht' mid
40s Thursday and Friday and In
tht&gt; 30s Saturday. Early morning
lows will rangt' from the mid 20s
to the mid 30s Thursday and
mostly in the 20s Friday and
Saturday.

Stocks

It's the DBDIB

OlDBuiDeu
Policy ... pack·
aged protection
for retail stores,

otllces, churches,
apartments, d.rug
stores. Simplt.ned

1n content, con·
venient 1n format

and very afford-

able.

OGAN

~

RNER~

Hospital news

aurance Service•

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992·GG87
, . St.teAuto
lnaurllnCfl

lll#h..J

SPECIAL CNSUAANCE PROOUC!S
FOO SPECIAL PEOPLE

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

DOMINO'S

DELIVERS .
FREI!.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM ESf.l-18-89

WHEN YOU
BRING YOUR
FIP
. n EXCLUSIVE
FILM IN
n~ PHOTO
TO
US
"""
·
YOU'LL
J.
DE~EFLF~~ING

DINNER FOR FOUR

t

LAIIIII! 111' 5·1TIM PIZZA

,-,,,~

.t,l

Gallipalis, OH

""""

" I I"''"'

!\.o • · .oc~

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

o-~11'-

••&gt;d ~'"'" l'o•

PWS 4 . 1e oz. Softdrlnks

$9.99

GO ONE cfi'o~~~!
OF THESE f-.~~~1::~-;:.::-M.;e;"Ss~Ec;;o;N"Noose;:]

...
446-4040

DINNER FOR TWO
ANY 12' 2 ITIM PIZZA

PWS 2 · 16 oz. SOitdrinks

Lunch Special
12' 1 tTQI PIZZA
PWS 2 · 16 oz. Softdrinks

FREEl

$4.99
.......

$6.37

.....

~·-

of 3V.x6"

PRINTS

~Oo· r " ""'"""

lllm · llm. S~m-1'-' "­

ll am~ &amp;.m Fn.&amp;t.

1 DAY

SERVICE
GUARANTHD

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.
~
·
Area
deaths-Geneva Swisher

FREE DEUVERY TO THESE AREASI
'

Seven calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emrgency Mt-dlcal Services reports.
At 5:26 p.m., Middleport took Christine Dallt-y from Oliver
St., to.Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at6:23 p.m. took
Leland Haley from Happy Hollow Road, to Veterans Memorial ;
Rutland at 6:23 p.m . took Bill Ashcraft and Jerry Campbell
from Meigs Mine 1 to O'Bieness Hospital in Athens; Rutland at
8:16 p.m. took Lena Carpenter from Langsville to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse at 9:08 p.m. took Mark Duerr !rom
Syracuse to Veterans Memorial; Rutland at 11:50 p.m. returned
Leland Haley, Happy Hollow Road, to Veterans Memorial and
· at 11;27 p.m., Syracuse took Kevin Knapp trom Maplewood
Lake to the Holzer Medical Center.
·
.

'.

~;

SAVE

Prescription
thru Our Pharmacy

TAX TIP OF ·THE WEEK

UILIDUI, I.A.
401 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant .
Ph. 6'15-4020

r--Loca l new.s
· b rleJ
· .1.s...
. --..,

Burden to beat 49ers rests
on Bengali offensive corps

Allanta 111, WMhlaPon JOt

Pomerov.... Middlepori, Ohio

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
r

Suite 215
Pleasant Valley Hospital
M~ical Office Building

Now Accel'ting Patients
Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

r

•

GET A COUPON for

.tt~~
8x10
~. .... ~'-'

FREE DEUVERY IN THESE AREAS!

MIDDliPOI1, POMEIOY, •&amp;DIUIY, MINEISVIUE,
·IUTUIID, SYIACUSE, MASON, W. VA.
OIDIU .sT II PIONID Ill moo 3:00 P..M.

FIB DIUVEIY ON AU PIISCIIPTION5.
IF YOI DON'T -~ I PIESCIIPTION FIUED, WE WILL
DEUVII INniiNG IN THI STOlE FREE ON A
$5.00 MIMMUM ORDER.

Do1't Fortet To Cheek Our Low
Prle11 0• Oar Preserl.tlona

(304) 675-3400

..
l7d PU:ASANT VAl' EY HOSPITAL

..... JIM family ol prllitulollolt

. i'olnl """-~ wv 255!111

Prescription Shop
992-6669
271 Ill. Second, Mld.eport, Oh•.

�--------

•

The Daily Sentinel

By The.Bend

'.

.

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
Page-6

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. When Or. John Grubb retired
from the Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal medical s'talt In 1988 he left
behind a host of friends and an
abundance of fond memories. He
: also leaves a legacy of compas·
'slon for his general practlc
patients and affection for the
·nearly 10,000 children he dell·
vered during his 37 years In
obstetrics, the last 25. of which
were spent in Mason County.
·' . "It's been a lot of work " the
. ebullient "Doc John" says of the
· past quarter of a century. "But
it' s been a lot of pleasure, too."
Forgetting for the moment the
long nlghts In l~bor and delivery ,
llle early surgery schedules and
the endless rounds; he insists that
"It's all been wonderful.. .It's all
been good memories ."
His greatest joy, he says, has
come in obstetrics. "Every baby
' Is a new thrill. because they're all
just a little bit different ... the
situations are all different."
Several years ago, he came
, upon his most unique experience
·as an obstetric! an, the delivery of
triplets, an event that occurs only
once in 8.000 births. " A lot of
doctors never see triplets," says
Dr. Grubb, who figures he was
probably due at the time. When ·
. he first discovered the young
, mother was carrying three fe·
·tuses, he says with a tinge of
excitement yet at the remem·
brance, he "started planning
right away how we were going to
deliver them."
And his only real anguish has
:£orne at the loss of a patient, such
:as the young woman suffering
·from cancer in the late 1960s. In
: what Maxine Lowe, recently
:retired herself from the position
Director or Medical Records,
cails "The dearest final progress
note ever seen In a medical
record," Dr. Grubb wrote of the
.patient: "Continuing downhill.
:Only slight response so keep
comfortable ... pray."
. . And later ... "Patlent expired
:without pain. Just went to sleep.
·

.

·or

•~ The

the Mason County Cancer Society,
· which was started IndeThat's the kind of man John M.
pendently of the state and na·
Grubb, M.D., Is.
And he's the kind of doctor to t.lonal organizations, to sponsor
Inspire the Medical Records free monthly pap smear clinics
clerks t&lt;i write In a mock for women.
He has since served the local
"Discharge Summary" pres- ·
J. •
en.ted to him at Ills retirement chapter In various capacities,
Including president, headed up
reception:
"Dr. Grubb joined the staff of the West Vlrglnta chapter for a
Pleasant Valley Hospital Sep- . time and Is currently medical
tember 1963 With a desire to take director for the state
care of the sick and deliver organization.
Last tali, Dr. Grubb was
babies. He came as a vibrant
presented
with the West VIrginia
man with a caring nature and
Public Health Association's "CI·
loving heart.
"On physical examination al· tlzens Award." The honor is
ways has a smlle and something · bestowed for public service to the
jolly to say .. .Past history slgnlfi. Association, Its members, most
cant lor a kind and considerate of \Vhom are affiliated with the
doctor, always with time to say West VIrginia Health Depart·
ment, and the · public. Mary
hello.
"Chest x-ray revealed a heart Hilbert, R.N., of the Mason
Pleuant Valley Hospital Stall. Dr. Grnbb Ia the
PHYSICIAN HONORED- Samuel P. McNeUI,
County Health Department, says
of gold."
firSt phy&amp;lclaan to be so hoilored In the 30-year
M.D. chief o(. the Pleaaant Valley Hospital
The doctor with the heart of Dr. Grubb was selected for his
blslory of the hospital. Looldnc on are Mlclulel G ·
Medical Staff, presents John M. Grubb, M.D.,
gold Is also a man dedicated to work with the local jlealth
Sellards, executhle director of PVH, and Dr.
long·llme ohs&amp;etrlclu, gynecologist and famUy
many causes. He's been actively department, specifically his past
Grubb'&amp; wife, Shirley.
practitioner at Pleasant Valley Hospital, with a
Involved In the American Cancer association with the !amUy plan·
plaque declaring him an honorary member of the
Society lor over two decades, has nlng clinic and the school health
acted as team physician for the program.
Dr. Grubb has delivered his
It was "a good challenge," he
his Medical Degree In 1951.
Point Pleasant Big Blacks loot· · And In December, doctors at
share
of second generation ba·
He says he almost came to says, remembering well the
ball squad and served as Mason Pleasant Valley Hospital named
bles,
and
has even delivered the
Point Pleasant then, but there early days when, as only one of
·county coroner from 1967, when . htrn an honorary member of the
granddaughter
of one woman he .
was "some mix up and confu· four doctors on staff, he took call
the Silver Bridge collapsed, until Medical Staff. He Is the first
bring
into
this world. "I ·
helped
slon" and instead · he went to In the emergency room every
· he turned over the reins to Dr. PhYSician to be so honored In the
said,
'that's
Impossible!'
It made '
Charleston General Hospital for fourth night. Pleasant Valley
Breton Morgan In 1987.
hospital's JO.year history.
me
afraid
to
look
In
the
mirror!"
a rota ling Internship and worked was only 40 beds then, and the
Dr. Grubb's path to PVH began
He Is also an a vld historian, his
as a general practitioner there entire hospital was located In he jokes ..
greatest achievement In that in 1939, when he attended Butler
Dr. Grubb and his wife Shirley
· what Is now the Emergency Care
untU 1960.
area being his research Into the University In Indtanapolls, his
are the parents of four children, ;
From 1960 to 1963, Dr. Grubb Center wing.
life of Dr. Jesse Bennett that Jed hometown, on a football scholar·
Watching PVH grow In both Roberta "Robbie" Corrie, a .
was a resident In obstetrics and
to the recognition o! tile Mason ship. He was pre-Jaw then, at the
gynecology at Charleston Mem· size (the hospital now has 128 nurse, of Charleston; John M.
County doctor as the physician suggestion of his lawyer-uncle.
"Johnny Mac" Grubb III, a ·
orlal Hospital and did work at the beds) and services has been
The War Intervened, however, · Salvallon Army Hospital. But exciting, he says. .
who performed the first successpublic relations officer for Amer· ·
ful New World cesarean section and before graduation, John · when Pleasant Valley Hospital.
lean West Airlines In Phoenix, 1
"I've done It all," he says.
Grubb the college student en·
and oophorectomy In 1774.
stlll In Its infancy, announced It "I've done about every• type of Ariz.; Mary Esther, a nurse In ·
His work has not gone unno- listed In the Army-Air Force.
was looking for another physl· delivery there Is to be done." The New Jersey, and Mike, owner of ·
In January of 1946, the service·
ticed. In 1986, the American
Duke Cleaners In Point Pleasant.
clan, Dr. Grubb packed up his youngest mother he's delivered
Cancer Society's national board man returned to college, finish· .. family and moved here:They
have seven grandchildren.
was 12, and the oldest, 45.
of directors named him "Medical lng out his Bachelor's Degree at
Volunteer of the Year," an honor West VIrginia Wesleyan College
he·describes as a thrUL "I never In Buckhannon in June of 1947.
' '
By that time he had decided he
expected It, es~clally with the
list of doctors they had (to choose was not lawyer materlal;but that
TUESDAY
support group will be meeting at
RUTLAND
The Rutland
from)," he says.
he just might make a good
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport the Senior Citizen's Center in . Fire Department Auxiliary wJII
But he may have gleaned a clue doctor, and three months later he
Cliamber of Commerce will meet Pomeroy on Thursday, Jan. 19, meet Wednesday at 7 p.m.
from his past Involvement with entered the Medical College of
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. , at city hall. from 1:30 to 3:30p.m. Tills group
the ACS. Dr. Grubb helped found VIrginia, from which he earned
Nomination and election of offlc· ·Is for family. memb~rs or care·
MIDDLEPORT - Nole Her·
ers will take place. All members givers of Alzheimer's Disease or rmann will preach Wednesday at
urged to attend .
related disorders, such as stroke, the 7:30 p.m. service at the Ash
Huntington's Disease or Parkin· Street Freewill Baptist Church In
POMEROY - A card party, son's Disease. There is no charge Middleport. Guest singers at the
sponsored
by the Xi Gamma for at tending the meeting and
he's home free.lf not, he's on the
church this Saturday, 7:3!) p.m.,
Epsilon
Chapter
of Beta Sigma new members are welcome. For will be the Fellowship Singers.
hook for the next 18 years. Sound
Phi SQrority, will be held Tues- additional information, contact
fair to you7 Not to me. day,
6:30 p.m. at the Senior Beth Theiss at 992-2161.'
Meditating In the Midwest
ANN LANDERSI
BURLINGHAM - Word of
Citizens
Center In Pomeroy.
-1988, Loo 4nl!'lot
Dear Meditating: I just love
Life
Church, Burli~ham, Is in
•
Syndil"'llf' •nd
WEDNESDAY
that phrase "she got herself Thnn
revival through Sunday at 7 p.m.
Cre•cn Syndlua.SYRACUSE - The Syracuse each evening. Evangelist will be
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
pregnant." No one who uses It
Homemakers
Club will meet
Chamber
of
Commerce
will
meet
has ever been able to e:nlaln
Wednesday
at
10 a.m. at the Rev. James Hobbs, Palestine,
Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m., at city hall.
exactly how this extraordinary
Ill.
Special singing will be
municipal building in Syracuse.
feat is accomplished.
featured nightly.
POMEROY - Drew Webster Cindy Oliveri of the Meigs
· Since It's the woman's body
Post 39, American Legion, regu- County Extension Service will
we're talking about, she should
lar meeting Tuesday; 7 p.m.
give a pr.ogram on the use of and
have . the right to decide what die~·
reclpes for the crock pot and the
I know your oath requires you
happens to it. Guys who are
REFIIGEIATOI]l GAS I
pressure cooker. The public is
POMEROY
A
newly
formed
looking for ••a little action" to.try to keep me alive
El£CTIK IIAHutS • TV1
Invited
to
attend
.·
So long as my body Is warm
should be aware that reckless sex
WASIIEIS' · DIYEIS
and
there Is a breath of life;
can be hazardous to their health
COUNTY APPLIANCES
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
But listen, Doc, I've burled my
·as well as damaging to their bank
627 3rd Au. Galipolis
Area
Merchants
Association
will
account. Question: What kind of wife,
446-1699
Freilerlck J . Blaettnar of 148 meet Wednesday at 8 am. at
My children are grown and on
idiot lets tliis happen twice-?
HOlliS:
8 a.m. to 6 11.m.
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, was Bank One. 1989 duesare payable.
Dear Ann Landen: The medl· their own.
among the 450 students awarded
My friends are all gone, and I
cal profession Is always thinking
degrees from the University of
up new ways to make a heart want to gel, too.
Dayton at the winter commence·
No mortal man should keep me
keep !)eating when the body is
ment exercises held at the UD
here
worn out and useless. The en·
Arena.
,
When
the
call
from
Him
Is
closed poem ran several years
Blaetmar,
a
teacher
In
the
unmistakably
clear.
ago and could stand repeating.
I deserve the right to slip Meigs Local School District,
Please, Ann, run It again. It's so
received a master's degree In
quietly
away.
spnslble. - From Sl. Louts
educational
administration.
My
work
Is
done
and
I
am
tired.
Dear St. Louis: I agreethatlt's
Your
motives
are
noble,
but
sensible, but. the malpractice
now I pray
buzzards circling overhead (orce
You can read in my eyes what
many physicians to practice
my lips can't say.
defensive medicine against their
100
Us ten to my heart and you 'II
better instilicts. Here's the piece.
Edward
TABLETS
hear It cry
Thanks'(or asking.
Pardon me, Doc, but may I
REG. 89'
Time To Go
Pardon me, doctor, but may I die?
God bless her."

-

run 3 d-vt at no ch•ge.

•Price of ad fqr all c..,itelltllters it double pricoe of ad cott.
•7 point ~ne type only ul8d.
,
•Sentinel it not r•pontible for erroraafter firll dl'f'. (Check
for.errort ftrst dll\l' ad runs in paperl . Call before ·2:00 p. m.
dw after oubllcMion 10 make correction.
•Ada thai mult be J)lid in advance are
C~td of Thenkt
In Memorl~m

COPY DEADLINE - '
MONDAV PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPE~
THURSDAY PAPER
.FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

~0

•
:'

Pediatrics &amp;:

fb-);·_ ;'.

JAME'l D. IIUOSON II

i:fudson birthday

Long Bottom news notes
By Melody Roberts
Dorsal Larkins Is reportedly
Improving following gall bladder
surgery at the St.. Joseph's
Hospital In Parkersburg.
Also Improving following hos·
pltallzatlon Is Mrs. Doris Deeter.
Mary Ellen Andrew, Kathy
Andrew Salkowltz and Teresa
Collins vis !ted their father, Fran·
cis Andrew over 'the holidays.
While here, Mary Ellen Andrew
also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Thurston and Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Erlewlne.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wells
were recent visitors of, Mrs.
Emm 0gene Congo, Syracuse,
and Mr. and Mrs. Pike Smith,
Reedsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Bartoe

SuiteU
,
. P!.ant Valley Hospital
.Merlit:ll Office Building
Valley Drive
Point Pleutnt. W.VL 25550

traveled to the Carolinas over the
holidays to visit their children
and granchlldren.
Mrs. Sharon Fitzpatrick and ·
Mrs. Barbara Fitzpatrick and
children of Lancaster were re·
Cl'nt vis !tors of Mrs. Ernestine
Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hau~r
visited recently with Mrs. Ellen
Wells and Josephine.
Guests of Paul and Mildred
Hauber over the holidays were
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Hauber
and Timmy Lee Ball II, and Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston and
Jeremy, Tuppers Plains.
Ken Lawrence Is here for a
visit with his sister, Mr·s. Marie
Swan.

Office Hours ·
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
New Patients Welcome

(3~)

675-6015

.....

UG.$1t9

llDUtliiG

Caffe\ne free
.Form\-1
\O,to;PSUl£
ltM£0. RElEASE .c
'J\/eight ond
EnjoY l&lt;!&gt;SIO~ .

-

son, Stanley, at home, and Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Nease, Wester·
ville; John Nease, Columbus;
Ruth Powers, Grove City; Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Nease, Sr.,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Nease, Jr., son, Travis, Pine
Grove Road.

IJH

li

PLEASANT
VALLEY .
HOSPIJAL

69 ·c.

"24 DOV supply .

following telephone exchanges ...
Gallia County
Area Code 614

446 - GaU;polit
367- Ch•hire
388-Vintoo
246-Rio Grtnde
256- Guyon Din
843-Ar•bia Oisl .
379 - Walnut

Meigs County
Area Code 814

M•onCo.. WV
Aru Code 304

676 - Pt. Pleasant
468-Loon .

992-Middle'"'"
Pommov
986-Ch•ter
843-Portland
247- letart F1lls
949-Racine

676-Apple Grove
773-Meson
882- New H.ven
B95-Le1trt

742-Rutland

937-Bulflllo

667-Coolville

Announcements

51 - HouMhokl Goods
52- Sporting Goodi

4567-

' '

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
INSURANCE
-lOS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
Sooled PI'OPGMio will btl
. . . - by the Molt~~~
County Commlo.....,ero. Po·
meroy. Ohio, ot the Clork' o
Offi"' untl !wolve nobn ot
the 1ot doy of FobrullfY,
1989. Tho bldo will be
opened et 2:00 p.m. on
Februaty 1. 1989. ond rood
oloud by tho C._. of uid
BOM'd for M_.le Rob·
. bery •· ond ilulllhory Food
Stomp c.,.,ogo to protect
thom..._ ogoinot · robbery
ond burglory looo in the
amount of $400,000.00.
S-ote Md indepMclent
bldo will btl rec:oivecl wHh
r•pect to the inaurMce r•
quirod to be pu""'•ed 01
Pfovided by the opeciflco·
tiona. Spec:ificotiono ond in·
struc1iono to biddoro moy be
obtained •t the office ofthe
Clorll of tho Moigo County Commioolonon. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sold B-d of· Commioaio..-a ,..,,_. the right to
wlivo fonnolltioo to accept ,
and r.ject palrll or all of any
and all bldo.
Melgo Cou~~tv Boord of
Commialionws
Mory Hobotott•. Clorll
(1)17. 24. 2tc

qui red by the u ndoroigned.
Tho Boord of County
Commlalioners m~ require
eddl1ionol controct provioiono wt1h the ouccMoful
bidder inducting but not
limhed to tho right of tho option to cancel tho • - • if n•
. . . .ry.
The front of the envelope
t~~cloalng tho bid rnuot be
mortced "Sooted Bid. Humon
SltVi"' Deportment BuMdlng", BiddM to fumioh tholr
own bid fonn.
Tho Boord of County
Commlootonero moy occept
the low..t bid or oei1C1 tho
bid for the · intended
purpo• ..,d reserve the
tight to re)IC1 ony or oil blclo
and or any pen thereof
,
Moigo County Boord
of Comml81ion•s
Mory Hobotetter, Clerk
(1)17. 24. 21C

Public Notice

••

t' -------PUBLIC NOTICE
'

In occordon"' with Section 307.81 of tho Ohio R•
• vioed Code. oeoled blclo will
be roceMid by the ·Meilll
County - d of Commioin thoir offi"' located
Pomeroy.
• in tho
, Ohio. untl twelve noon on
: Februerv 1. 1989. Tho blclo
will btl opened ot 2:15p.m.
on Februory 1. 1 919 ond
reed oloud for the folowing
buMclng leMa Eecll bid to
• . - tho concltiona ond ope~ ciflCIIIiona • foAaw&amp;:
• Office buldlng to hou•
tho Moigo County Departmont of Hum., ServicM,
' 3000 aquer11 feet minimum
toto!-.
' 2600 equo1e min~
:• mum offloeepec:e conailting
.'- ol a minimum ol 1 I rooms.
• toHI feciNiioo lot mon ond
: women end ot ..., 18 periling s.,.c• for Mltomobil•.
RMtol required for uld
, bulding and roiMecl foeti!.. tiel - l d be brokon - n
for a five y - bello. An bido
• ohould indicote the rontol
for tho b l - to
· PfDVIde mlintononca for the
- l o r Mid intOtior of thti
' bulclng ond tho rentol ro·

• oion••Cou-•·

·-•rv
2

In Memoriam

•

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propooelo will be
received ot tho:
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT QF
NATURAL RESOURCES
1866 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
~
SECOND FLOOR
COlUMBUS, OHIO 43224
until Tuucloy, Februory 14,
1 989 ot 11 :00 o.m. and
opened tllerufter for furnlohing tho moterillo end
p-nning tho labor for tho
execution and conltruction
ot:
ABUNDANT COAL D-208
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG·Sb-21-F
in accordence with thll pl1ns
end eDtCificationa DNDared
by 1ho D~~t~ortment of Natural R•ourcea, The Divleton
of Reclomotion. Columbuo.
Ohio. lido will be opened In
the Mtond floor confererroe
room of 1856 (8uHdlng HI ot
The Fountoin Squore Offiof The Ohio Deportment of
N1tur11l R•ourca. The •tlmate for this project as
determined by tho Oivioion
of Reclamation i•
f34, 725.00.
A pro·bld meeting wHI ·be
hold on Moncloy. Jonuory
30. 1989 ot 11:00 o.m. ot
tho olho.
Coploo of tho pion a. opoci·
ficationo and proposal lonna
will be forworded from the
Dtviolon of lleclomotion, Do·
pertment of Netural AMourc... upon receipt olo chock
In tho omount of •e.oo
madt~ payable to the Department of Natural R..oun:M.
Th- moy oioo bo pur·
chMed wtth c•h in tha

3 Amouncementa

~!'~~~:d NOWSl s9
•

Prescription Shop
992-6669
I

. . .UPOIT,OH;

Local llllllllshed contpllly llllllllhart·tenn of.
lice help, wllh paaibillty
of penllllllll! 6lljllujlnn
In 1llt fubn. IIIII JIOI·

ROUSH
CONSTRUcnON

56 - Building Suppli•
56 - Pe11 for Stle

OW!jll: GIIG I. •ou111
GEII UAL
~ CONTIACfOIS
~ ,RESIDENTIAL
•
·
COIIEIClAl

,O:h

53 - Antiqu•s
54 - Miac. Mllfchandise

Giveawav
Happy Ads
Lotl and Found
Y•d Sale (paid in ldvan ee)

&lt;UllOM KIT(;H ENS • lATH&amp;

57 - Musical Instrum-ents

8 - Publlc Sale&amp; Auc,;tion

-£XllN81Yf REMODEUNO
•VINYL SIDING. ROOANO

58 - Erults &amp; Vegetables
59 - Fo• Sale or 'Trtde

9- Wantect to Buy

•METAL IUILDINGI
HOUIINO a MT. ltJIIOJECTS

lmployment

Services

SINC!l 1969
DillY Sf., IYIAQ/S

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1 2 - Situation w..,ted

13- lnsurance

14-Bulin•s Treinfng

16 - Schools &amp; Instruction
18 - Radio, TV &amp; CB Replir
1 7 - Mllceflan eou s
18-Wanted To Do

llhijUIMijll
21 -Busin•s Opportunity
22- Mon:ey to Loen
23- Prof•sional Services

Real Estate
31-HomesforSole
32- Mobile Homes tor Sale

33- Farm• for Sale

34- Bu&amp;ln•• Buildings
35- lot&amp; • Ac:reage
38- R..I Ettatt Wanted

HOME BAKED
GOODIES
Get Your
Holiday Goodie
Orders In Now:
AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI POWEll
IZ·&amp;-'11-lmo.

71 - Autos tor Sale
72-Truc:ks for Sate
73- Vant &amp; 4 WD's
74- Motou:ycles
75- Botts &amp; Motors for Sale .
76- Auto Parh &amp; Acceuori•
77- Auto Reptir
78- Cemping Equipment
79-Camp•• &amp; Motor Homes

MOBILE
HOME PARI

81 -- Homelmprovementt
82- Piumbing &amp; Heeting

83- hcwating

84- Eiectrical &amp; Refrigerttion
85-General Hauling
86-Mobile Home Repair

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rentals

-

87- Upholstery

Public Notice
exact amount. Plana and
opoclflcationo become tho
property of tho proopectivo
bidders and no refund• will
be mada. Addition~~l informetiOn mav be obtained
from tho Division of Recto·
mation, Dep1r1ment of Natul'lll Rea oureM, 1866 Fountoln Square, BuMding H,
Second Floor, Columbuo.
Ohio 43224. (Phono: (6141
216·1068].
Eech bid must be accomponied by l BID GUA·
RANTY. meeting the re·
quiromonto of Sect ion
,63.64 of the Ohio Revised
Code.
.
Cont111ctora are advised
thlt in eccordance with the
provilions of the January
27. 1972 executive order by
the Governor of Ohio and
•mended executive ordw
84·9, February 16, 1984.
equal employment opportuntty conditions are applicable to thl• bid. Wege r1te1
"tlblishld in\,.~,c~i:"'~~fj
with Hction
1613.37 ofthorevioed code
are olso opplicoblo.
Biela 1re Haled and ad dreued to: Department ot

NOTICE OF
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
DEALERS
In accord1nce with MC·
tian 307.86 of the Ohio Revi 1 ed Code, seated bl da will
be received by the 8ot1d of
Meigs County Comminionera. Court Hou•, Pomeroy.
Ohio 4&amp;769. un11112 Noon,
feb. 1, 1989. The bldl will
then I&gt;'! opened o11 p.m. on
Fob.1.1989ondreololoud
tor the purch•• ol:
ONE NEW 1989
4-WHEEL DRIVE
LOADER/EXTENDAHOE
Bid specifications may be
picked up ot the Molgo
County Engineer' • Office or
Melep County Ct;~~mmi•Office.
The Meigs: County Commissioners may acept thllowelt bid. or Hlect the bnt
bid for tho lntendent pur·
poH, and raaervu the right
to acapt or reject any or all
bids and / or part thereof.
Meigs County Board
of Commi..ioner•
· Mory Hobotattor, Clerk
(11 17, 24, 2tc

Natural Re1ources, Oivition
of Reclamation, 1865 Foun·
toin Squoro. Building H.
Second

Floor,

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On January 10. 1989,. in
the Meig1 County Probate
Court. Coot NO. 28123,
Charles M . McGrath, 37113
May Ave .. Chauncey, Ohio
46719, we• appointed Exec·
uto, of the estate of Earl A.
McGrath, deceu.t, late of
38186 Now Lima Rood,
Pomerov. Ohio 457119.
Roobert E. Buclc.
Probete Judge
lena K. Nea•lroed, Clerk
(J1)17. 24, 31. 3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On JonuiiY 12. 1989. in
tho Moigo County P - o
Court, Caa No. 21103.
lrMe C. Show Murphy.
Route 1, ~.Mart. WMt Vir·
ginio. 28263. oppointed
E•ocutrill of tho - e of
Corl M. Motlock, ~eel,
lo1t of R. D. RHtlovMio,
Mollll County, Ohio. 45772.
Robert E. Buck.
Probete Judgo
Lano K. Neoeotr..d, Cl•k
11117. 24. 31, 3tc

..

Read the Best

._.IIIII

t.,.,..

P.O. Box 729W, c/o
Dally Sentinel,
Pomeror, Ohio.

·New loaltion:
161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Ctrry Fittwng Suppll•

Pey Your Phone
Cable Billa Here

IUSIHESS PHON(
16141 992·6110

ll!IIINa PHON(
(614) 992!·77:14

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9 AM· 7 PM

Paying today
Jan. 13, 1989
!Subject to
Without Nolict
#I CDPPEII ........... I6• 1~
#2 COPPEll-........... 65' t~
ClEAN ALUMINUM
SHUTS .................. 47• 1~
ClEAN AlUMINUM
(AST ........................ 40&lt; 1~
ALUMINUM
BEVERAGE CANS ..... 46&lt; 1~
IRONY
SHfET ............. S• to 3Q• ..
IRONY CAST .... 3&lt; to 20• I~
IT AINUSS ............... 20' lb.

992-5114

Located Off BVJ&gt;Oat
At Jet. of Rto. 7 &amp;
143. Pomeroy. Oh.
1·12·'89·tfn

.

FY '90.

Thoae lnter•ted
ahould contact John
Hagerty
at 1 ·BOO·
228-3374 by Jan. 31,

1989.
or.

3 days weekly with po·
tential of becomin1 full
time.
Applicants must ·pos·
sess excellent typin&amp;
skills and have a knowl·
edee of office procedures; excellent communiCition skills witll
tht public; piNunt,
IIIII IPPNrance; will·
inpess to 111m new
thmp.

Box 729-C
Pomeroy, Oh, 45769

BINGO
POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB

. DOOR PRIZE -

992-6173
lot or Pauley lowiGnd
209 South 4th St.
Midllloport, Oh.

"UIW IICOIII lOIII"

2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchaa of min.
H.C. Packeg.e. Li!llit 1 coupon par cuolomtir per
••
bingo a81aion.
· WE PAY $60.00 PER GAME
OVER 110 PEOPLE '86 .DO PER GAME
Lie. #006-32
12·1 1-tfn

CARTER'·S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

Basbam Building

,9-19-18 tfn

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT '
6:30P-.M •.
Factorr Choke

Only

Strictlr Enforced
10·7-tfn
LATDT
Jl. I MISSY
FA! liONS.
HAIR muNG I TANNING

GltlJ o•ISTMAS Gtns
GRtlT PIKES • Gin

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

TOP OF JHE STAllS
AIID

DESIGNER
111 Wnt Soc. P-•Y

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE
I YIACUU, OHIO
Moat Foreign 1nd
Domestic Vehicles
A/C Service
All Mojor 8o Mlno•
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

. :.
.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

. CUSTOM IUIT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At ReaiOIICiblo Prkts"

PH. 949·2B01
or hs. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY WlS

LUBRICAnON
OIL FILTER
S1695

J!,s
SUIOCO

c•nn.•o

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

985-3350

Wa can r~air ami rt·
cart radtators and
heater cores. Wt can
also acid boil anti rad
out radiators. Wt also
.
rapoir Gas Tonk1.

PAT HILL FOlD ..
992-2198

Middleport, Ohio :
I·U·tfc

GUN SHOOT ·
RACCOON VAUEY.•
SPORTSMEN'S ClUB
Rt. 124 lttwttn Wi•a•·
ville and Salem C111t1r

EVERY SUNDAY ,
11:00 A.M.
12 Gaugo Shot.-

Onlr

Faclory Chob
STIIcn Y ENFOtaDI

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1·11-'19:"1 mo.

New H - lull!

.. FrH E1tlmetn' •

Pl. 949·2101
or les. 949·2160
110 SUNDAY CAUS

l·ll·lln

CBITIFIUUS

4-16-lf.tfn

PART TIME OFFICE
HELP WANTED

·
or at
Veterans Memorial lln,nitot
. Mulberry Hils. Pomeroy,

224 E. MAIN ST. - 992·9976
THURS. E.B. 6:4S P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:4S P.M.

Day or Night

Daily Sentinel

,

-

Good Rot..
T.L .C.
26 Yro. hp.
Rot.ronceo

"DOC" VAUGHN

el Office Ia recruiting
group homeo for ju·
venile delinquent• for

(6141 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Av111ue. Box.1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

3

Ha11.cappad

Certified Licensed Shop
5·15·1fn

Send complete hsume t~:

.CLRSSIFIED RDS ..

~

EUM HOME

CALL 992·6756
Help Wanted

Medical knowled&amp;e and
uperience with third
perty billine preferred
but not necessary.

Read the

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

• - &amp; 1oan1 ,.,.
S.nlor Cltl1- and

12 Goup Shotgun•

0

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S:

1115/ffn

1·28·'88-ttn

PlUMBING &amp; HEADNG

1 1·18·'"8-tfn

Lislenine Devices
Dependable H11ripg AitlSales &amp; Se111ic4
CJ ·Hearing Evaluations Foi All Ages

Call 992-2772

Middleport, Ohio

We are Equal
ortun
Em

References

Mastic &amp; Certainteed1
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

319 So. 2nd Ave.

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
YOUTH SERVICES
The Athene Rot~lon·

Public Notice

985-41~1
GENERAl .CONTIIACTOIS

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Rt. 33 North of

11

seallf*llolllceds,
incluclfW
com-'
,... Ulll; lilt• wrlliW
llllllty; lllllllty tD dallllllll
public; lllllt ICI.IMitlnj
upaiallal pufenad; pod
pnonlllty.
Send rnu111, includin1
reftrtfiCIIS and work
experience, to

We Service All Mekeo
1/22111/tfn

992-6282

chan\"

E:olumbus.

Ohio 43224. No bidder moy
withdraw hlo bid within oixty
(60t deya aher the 1ctual
date of thli"opening thereof.
Tho Director of Noturol
Rnourcn reserves the right
to reject any or all bld1. or to
accept the bid which em bra·
cet tuch combination alternate propo•l• •• m1y promote the best interest of the
Stole.
A1 provided in Section
123.161 of lho Ohio Re·
vised Code and Adminiatra ·
tlve Rule 123:2-16·02 of
the Deportment of Adminiotrotivo Servlcoo. tho CON·
TRACTOR shall m ... e avery
effon to eneure thM: certified
minority buainHI subcontrllctora 1nd m1terlalmen
participate in the contract.
The total v1lue of lubcontractt awarded 10 and mate..
rials end aervic" pu,r chued
from minortty buain•. .
ohall bo oo oet forth In tho
specification a.
Contractor•· requiring aa...tance in aacuring bids
from Certified M8E oubco,.
troctoro ond oupplloro moy
contact the stoto Equal
Employment Coordinator by
colling (8141 468·B380 or
the M1nortty Bulin•• Development Dlvioion by calling
(614) 488-6700 or toll free
on 1-(800) 282· 1OBI.
RECOMMENDED:
Tim L. Dioringor, Chief
Divlolon of Reclomotlon
JoMph J. Sommer,
Director. Depenment
of Netural RMourc•
Doto' Jon. 9, 1989
11117, 24. 2tc

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
· •ROOFING
•REMODELING 8t REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

992-7479

Public Notice

CHESTER, OHIO

•Washers ·•Dryers
•Rangea •Frvezera
•Refrigerators
"Must ........... lo"

Services

41 - Housttt for Rent
44 - Apartment for Rent
46 - Furniahed Rooms
46 - Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment tor Rent
49-For le•e

11·21·11-~n.

Transportation

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Free Estimates

992-7611

61 - Farm Equipment
62- Winled lo Buy
63 - li\lestoek
64-Hay &amp; ...G,.in
65- Setd &amp; Fert~iler

43 - Farms for Rent '

Public Notice

I·S-'19-11!10.

Merchandtse

1- C•rd of Tfl1t1k1
2 - ln Memory
3 - Annoucem&amp;ntt

42 - Mobile Homes for Atun

Cet Results Fast

985-3844
40 YRS. EXPERIENCE

for aar:h ds,r ., Moerate ad11.

'

271 N. SECOIID

)

NOW

Feet Better

Reg. 53.59

He}en N ease notes 84t h b•rthda
1
y
.

.James David Hudson II celebratedhlsnlnthblrthdayonJan.
1 with a party at Show Biz Pizza, .
Vienna, W.Va.
The 84t.h birthday of Helen
Attending were his parents, Nease was observed Sunday with
James and Barbara Hudson, his a dinner party at the home of Mr.
brother, Steven, Sally Beaver,
andMrs.JamesAnderson,Brian
Joshua Hooten, Mark StU!, Paul and Jamie.
Castanza, Brian Hoffman, JoFollowlngthedinnerglftswere
shua Bass, and Chad StilL
presented to Mrs. Nease, Attend·
' Bob Titus sent a gift.
ing were her husband, Vernon,

~~

Internal Medidne

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 '00 P.M . MONDAY
- _, ,00 P.M . TUESDAY
- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 P.M. THU~SDAY
. - 2 ,00 P.M . FRIDAY

Classified pages cover the

Graduates

Now25C

Yerit Sal•

wo~Ds

1 1 - Help Wantod

J-----------.;....1

.
Dr.Ayers

Happy Ad&amp;

•A clastlfied ad\l,rtflement piKed in The Otily SentintiiP:
cept - cl•s.ifled ditplav. Busin•• Card and legll noti~)
will also appear in the Pt. Ple•ent Regilter and·the Galli·
polia Oa~ Tribune. reaching o..-er 18 ,000 homes.

----

.PRESCRIPTION SHOP
DeWITT
ASPIRIN

Mason counties must be pre-

DEAD OIAUVE

WELDING
AUTO 8t
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY &amp;
WRECK REPAIR

26-36 WORDS
1 DAY
$4.00
. $7 .00
65.00
3 DAYS
$5 .00
68.00
$10 .00
6 DAYS
68.00
$15.00
'13.00
10 DAYS
613.00
621.00
$26 .00
1 MONTH
. $51 .00
$33.00
660 .00
R ltet aut tor consecutive runs. broken up d.-,s will be ch •gad

p•id.
•Receive t .&amp;O ditcount for ad1 ~id in •dv•nce.
•free Mit - Giveaway and Found ads under 16 words will be

.Who's in ·the wrong?
• Dear Ann Landers: An ac: qualntance of mine who heard
' Iter biological clock ticking had
no good prospects on the horizon
· so she picked a guy and got
herself pregnant. The sap mar·
·rled her.
: After the blessed event. they
' separated. The biological clock
continued to tick so she . got
herself In a famlly way again
(same jerk). He begged her to
get an abortion, but she refused.
.Five years later, El Jerko is
:supporting two kids that he
•neither planned nor wanted.
:They live 2,000 mlles away and he
•sees. them once a year. Person·
:any, I think the guy Is a saint.
If a woman has the right to
choose an abortion. ~houldn' t the
man have the right to demand
that she end an accidental
;pregnancy rather than pay
·$100,000 over the next 20 years to
.support a cl!lld he will probably
"!lever know?
: It seems to me the woman gets
a big break whlle the poOr slob
who only wanted a little action Is
.at her mercy.
· I know your old song, " It takes
:two to tango," but my point Is
:that today a woman can end the
·consequences of a meaningless
affair inexpensively and simply,
but the guy doesn't have that
:option. If she chooses to abort,

Of'

t&amp;-26

WANTED

1 MI. lont oUt. lt. 7
an 241 at Cho1tor

RATES
o. ,s wo~os

POLICIES

•Ads out1ide Meigs, G•lli•

LASHLEY
: SERVICE

Area's Number 1 Marketplace

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

.

.

Business Services

Classified

Grubb leaves legacy of compassion;
dooor given honorary status at PVH

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

PUBLIC
AUCTION

BOGGS

SALES I SERVIa
u.s. n. so un
GUYSVI11, OliO

614·662-3821
Authorized John ·
Deere. Now Holl.,d,
Buah Hog Ferm
Equpment Deal•.

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK

ftt• E••lt••l
IIIII l Sertltl ,
1-3-'BI•tfc,

lolpro, Ohie
COHSIGNMENTS WBCOM£

PATRICK H. BlOSSER
AUCnONEER
PH. 304-421·7245 .
1-11-'19-t mo.

CLOWNS .
Colltctors of
Emmitt Kelly Jr. ·.
.LIMITED EDtnON

YOUNG'S·

50°/o
TO 75°/o

S.E

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addona end remodtUng

-Roofing •nd gun.r work
-Concnt• worl!:
-Plumbing lnd .tectrlc.f
work

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 1-992-6822
12·11·88·1 mo,
I

4.-,

. 992-6215

P-ay, Ohio
·

I H4.'88·1fn

IUY
NOW
PAY
,LATER

flar6C:t t:

•

With Cub Cc*l Fina~t~lng

10% Dawn"

...

HIUSIDE MUZZLE
lOADING
MODliN GUN
SUPPUES

With APII'awod Craliil

or lnt ..ost
•nt July 1, " "

No "''"'""'

D. J.'S TRADING POS~
614-992-7301
MIDDIIPOn. 0110

:
7

ll-2-'la.l m .

............ luppli•

...... Gvn Sttppli•
Gu• • Amme· Slup
22Amll0
At. 124 Eeot of Rutlond
Aor011HoppyH-Roecl

Ph. .. ...742-2155

8/20/tfn I mo. pd.

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST

CHERRY

$35

{llllllllllll.l! 1111!111~,

3 Announcementa

PER LOAD
DRIVEllED

IUGn HAULING

BILL SUCI
992-2269

llono Chimnll' lwooP ........
1hN ~onuory. 304-n3-1341.

•

�----

~ --

Page- l!-The Daily Sentinel

P011181 oy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

4
•ullul I

rna~.

41

Nl...... lJr ..hed ontll houll.
Adub onlv. Rot. -~od. No
Poll. Col 814-4-41-0331.
.

old m ... hou•

.... llv•, IOgoodhomo. Col
., ....... 11104.

~

Homes for Rent

.,_...4

COUNSELING

for Rant

c•l*.t.

PI pp' lf, c:.ll 114-379-2338.

Sec. dip. NQUi'ld.

Col 114-441-1111111 or 44147511.

2 BFI . mo..e horM fDr ..m:. Ref.

• dopoolt. Col 814-4-41-0127
•ftw 2 PM.
- l v - - l d . 2 SR . DOD.

:r::~.r~~.n:.. ~~,.. C.ll

,..on.

Found

.21 "•ewAIID:IDST· Mlda.m
. . . lghtbrown. mlllodogfrom
.
_ Colt
II. 814-441-9370.
.... Anlworo to
.......,.

3 I!IR. h i • for ..m: or • • on
land conti'8Ct. Mollohen Fwn~
tu... 114-..... 74-4-4.

"I made it to the top of the
heap, then I found out what
it was a heap of!"

lfOUND: Pk:tu,..

In pleltic

well•ocwtr-NIIr P.nt. e.n bli
~od up 11 the Glllllpoll Dllity
M.

pu-

Mon. .Jill. 8 to I .

FOUND: a...tllut bl ....
on . Ktn- Dr. eon 114-4U·
0001.

Loot: ••ooROdD-mon. toot 2
wooiloogolntlwlri• Ridge Rd.

-·-In

HELP WANTED· Hourllr Clnlc
Aldollmllv
plonnlngalftc-.Mull""ohlgll
school cllplorm or oqutwellf'l"";
~
good oomMmlcotion oloilo: ••·
..,_ with figuroo: m. . ool

pert.,. htfptlt

offtoe p

will

trlln moturo lndlolkllll who 11
•-tt"'•
to -oc*.lctllle he*:h

of dionto. Lootdng for
•omeane who II ...,_motNated
.,dctn grDW'Inthe,..ttlonea
nMd • • • Po11tk»n baed In
G.lllpo• or Ch•IIP•e. Ohio,
requlr• Nlabl• tr••pcntkJn;
wlllngn. . to trwel to other

011. Clll PPIED ofll-. W.'*dov· .. ..,.
114-742·2811 or 114-992· . me •d Slltu...., hounaretobe
IXpoctod. fllndiott•oflnt•llt.
1379.
,..unw Md two employrMM

rlf•'"'* to Pl•ned · , ...,.
hood of Sout- Ohio, 388
Rlchlond A-uo. A-o. Dhto
41701' bv J ... .., 21. 19N.
PPSED II on Equol Opportunity
lmployer,

Public Sale
lla Auction

"''* , _ _ Auction•. I~
Olllo tnd - t Vlrglnlo.
EtMe. • • · f•m. t6qukl..
tton ..... 304-773-1711.

31

Home• for Sale

------vtrY· ~ ~•· bri~4~~
•"'-"',..' ~oR ....woorf\
2 btlh. lomllv room w~h tlr•
pi- torrnlll clnlnt •oo .. lng
30ft
-~ ldlroorn.

. cuatom u -

"'*

uolr'l

- - · 2 w-arlr. flrlllh
b.....nl,
c. O•fll&amp; ,., ..
londlcopod tot. 4 . . . fl'om
- . . Hoopkll off At. 311-

Pbrt•brook Subchlllan. Cll
8t4-44&amp;4119.

DM.xo 3 Bll .. houll for Mlo.
Ow- ftnonco. Con 304-1711Rep lir) For.eclo1ur-. T• Delln'!"lnt Praporty. Now Slllllnt
Thil orlli Coli (Rollo nolllllll
1·511-419-3141 Ext H1122
far ........

In Pom•ov. rwnodlled. 2 Dory.
3 boctoorn. 2 bolh. ...........
pklmblnt corp«. ondcoblnoto.
Alto 11- ....1-or, _ ....
1nd dryer. Full •ement.
n9,eon Low-nondpoyllllo
- · Colt 114-1149-2121 ..
114-992-2841.

• home flrlt ,.. 111.,. oomm ·~·
ernev-.
1ftowlnoe. EJCIII.W oppMun·
1ty for •Pirionood tHo ond
_ ..lty lfllntl. with

Wenttd To •~- Standing PfO"M'' treck recorda. Phone
11-. Coli 814-371·2718.
304-812-3309, Lot'o tlllk.
1 I'&lt;J!~" of ShOIP Lard I ~-~-od: 1-o-ooi-IM_oftl_oo_n__
_
(mutton t
. Coil 114-211- boo-•. -et.y: ,.. • ..,.
1321.
cetrllqUir ......dr..,..toiDIC.
P-13 ••• Pt Pl. " " ' - · 200
Moln St.. Polm PI_.... W.Vo.
Utod .......,,. bv tho .,._ or 21110.
lntn - l d
et4-742·241a.

•o••••

1180 EICDnl 141170, 3 lA ..
l•ae liw'lna room • tdtdlen.
Good ODnil., ool. Rlfl.
'10.11008podtl.-........
Otv Moble Home.. Inc. 81444&amp;.8340.
1874 Wlndlor. 1411.70. 2 IR ..
frono ..... room. tpool• orlco.
lpooltl . . .Ill.
frondl City Moblo Hom-. l~c.
814-441-13411.

.... ••11110.

1072. 1~ 1D Uborty, 2 Ill ..
p.,IIIIV "rnllhool eiiDOD. Coli
114-378-2112.

1878 Ubortt 141170, 3 bodroom, 87,800.00. 304-17111171 ond 1711-1713.

• 1 1 1lii1 1 VIIIi~lll
~ 1:' VI I !~ :)

For ........... , 1077 _
...
141118, 3 bl*oom. fu.. -ICL
A= Grov1 • • 3D4-171-

73

~~;::::;;;:::;::;;:::;;;:;:

WORLD IDOlneeded
·CHILDtor
CRAFr&lt;
,IP,...tallvt
SPE·
Cl-'1. PIIDMDTIDN, full or.,.... 33
timo hou... Call 304-1711-1817
or 882-2481.
Situations
Wanted

•·••s-

......... . . . .
&amp; Pllid
-•tonoallol'-•· •-renco
lllnollta Cont10t D...cror of
Nurelnt Pin .... ClroCont•.
E.D.!.

_,o ...

119 ACRES In PlhCo. Ohio. 4
BR . Noma lern. ToMoaDie1e.
a•dcaiJinlhwonnretnh.
Call Boo Hrryo II.E :, &amp;14-847·
2111.

35

Lots

a. Acreage

Instruction

flenL1Is

•trr•ltt• noodod fDr 3 a I yr.
old! from 7 AM to 1 PM In ltl'l
ho- - o n .... Col 814117·0101.

T-"" ""*

Country Mobile Home Plr ..
Aou11 33. No"h of PomlrO';'.
lot.. IWitl... parts, ..... C.l

.

49

1877 Ford hill'"" trudo. 302
•to. t710.00. 1015Chlllral•
hllftan.lcyt4•JIIICL n111.oo.
304-175-1917.

For L1111se

Plrti ........ lwd ...........
Suitable tor one or toNO -..Ita.
R.t. requi'ld. No p ... Inquire
al: 831 ,Fourth Aw., O.lllpoll.
814-441-0231.

~--~~~-----·
Pomeroy·2 IR. remodeled

s.,.

.,.,...,. off lllrlna Avo.
dop. 6 rot. Clll IIi• 8 PM,

1 ·14-992·11111.

- l v remodolod 1 lA . opt.
AppL furnlllwd. ldotlloOIIion-1
bio'*
from
- - · CIH
114-.....
4131.
1 ••oo ofll...,cy opt. furnlllwd
..... Alto 1 BR . opt. lloth
In lito 0 rendo. Col 114-2418223 or 4-41-3187.
w~h

.,.,"*"•·

Nice 1~2 bedroom
Awlllble lwr•hed or unfu,..
nilhool
Dlt&gt;OIII -~-114--.41411ft•
8 PM. C1H

2 IR. opt .. now pl&lt;lh c•pot.
n.., .......... _........... prold.
I 17hmo.Coll304-171-ll04,
175-13811. .,.. 7731.

lpo •

Cllll

114-4-4.. 240(

Un.,_.....

2111 . e•lfi•IP.,.

m.m. In town. Cerp.-1. Adults

ontv. No
4511 .

pol~

Coli 814-4-4..

21R . II)t. on CourtStr.... Oes
h. ., air. Stow• rtfrlt- [)ep011t

roqu~od.

Collll4-4-4.. 4-428 ..

~411-21011.

2

for rent.
Corpetod• Nlco oettlnt Lou ndry

, ... ~.. .......... Coli 814992·3711. ED H.
One Month Free Aenl
Qulllfled ,.,. . pev t 200.
Depa.ll: •d no IWit for the
month. Decwnblr • Jenuery

A,..._

only. VJIIIJI Monor ond
In
Mldcl-. From •182.
I 14-112-7787. EO H.
...... ldo

Sol• ond oil.,. prlcod from
1311 to 0991. Tobl• 110 ond
up 10 1125. Hldo-•t.dl U90
to 1181. ~oolln.. 1228 to
1375. Llmpo •21 to t121.
Din- I 108 ond up to 1481.
W..Od tlltlo w· l oil .... UBI to
•111. Dnk 1100 up to .371.
H..-. t.OO 1nd up. Bunk
bG
w·mlttfUt&amp;ondupiP'311.Bo..,._
'110. Mitt-10orboll-ll
fu• or twin ell. firm t7il, ond
..8. Qu- 1210 . • op.
Klnge310. 4dr-ch•tel9.
Gun cobln• 1. a 6 10 ~n.
Blbv mottr-11 135 a 141.
Bod -~~ 120, e30 &amp; King .
tr ... liD. Good Mloctio·n of
-oom ...~• . mollll coblnoto.
h - • d l t3D ond up to 181.
90

o.y1

;;;~··;;· c•h with

oporovod ,....... 3 Ml• out
BulwfHe Rd. Open 9Mn to lpm
Mon. thN Sot. Ph. 814-4-41-

VIII., Furniture
N.w 1nd uHd lnnttuN •d

opplloon-. Colt 114-441·
7172. Hour~ 9·1.
PICKENS USED RJIINITURE

Complete hou•hold furnllft.
lnge. Yt mHWerrk:ho. 304-875-

1480, 114 · 388·9773 .

PRICES SLAIHED-W•*o.,._
now *715. au.., alni
mettre~~ .... reg. •119 nCM"
etOI. Country wood trblewkh
3 ch ..... bonCih-reg. 1519-

riQ. t 149

1A

rnle on Linootn Ptka

Sorvlcod ond gu•omlld. 1225.

114-387·0322.

Super &amp;Ingle Wllt•bed oom·

plote, Ileo now. 304-882· 2824.

53

Antiques

2

"*""'" .,.,...,... .. ...

c•ptted, IPPII•~. ~- Md
trllh ptoloupro ..ovldld Mllnt•
nlnOI fr• IJvlng doee IO thO~
ping, blrtko ond IChooll. FO&lt;
morelftforlftllion clll 304182·

Plrt=rnllhod .., .........
hood.-No Pwtt. Clll

nlc. n

II E·TAAIN NDWI
SDUTHEAITEIIN BUIINEIS
CDlLfOE, 120 .-on Pille.
Cail4-41-4317..... No. ... ,,.

- - - -::fo,--r:::R:-- t,..4..-1.-"'H:-01
1181
811

lB

Hom• for llontiLI- tond
com-. Crou11 Bodo lid ..
Ro .. _, VJIIIJO II, E-1 llgto.
......... ll'ld dtPotftl , .
qu~od. ll.... blrn Fleofty, 814441-00DB.
.

tONI .

Wanted to

Do

Wo do lk•otlono. Ulci•Chcloo

Fobrlca a Foohlono. 417 looond
Aw. Coil 114-441-0431.

lnCh•'*•3-oom.2 . . r..
814317· 11e1
1· 703-318til ....
Dot&gt;'. orroqulrod.
Clll
1108.
3BR . ' - •.d"-•. AC. e310•

87'i.~s. 304-17&amp;-1104. "'

46

Furnished Rooms

Furnil hod room-9111 IICDnd
Auo,
t71 I lh••
mo.
Utllll•~-·
llnalemlla
bolh. Co -.44'1811f1or7PM.

Room~

fDr rwnt· WHk or month.
St.nlng M •120 • mo. 0.111

Hot.ll14-441-9180.

71

54 Misc. Merchandise

L..geplc:tuNI window. tile con d.

clll304-812-3130.
55

Building Suppllea

-a. ..,., ••·

Building Motorillo . , .
Btodl. bride. - • tiiPoiro. 'Winct.. do-.
toro. Rkl Orendo. D. Coli 1142411-1121.
COIMHII blodc• all sn.- ii:d
ord6t.ry.M•onund.o.l o-

F~Mook·Mblld

or
IIMon«&lt;. t21 deUvered loml,
8-11 - - Dovld Hll 114318-8138.
Flr.wood for ,.... Hlrdwood

- · 130 pldlup truclc doliv~.
Coli 114-44.. 4812.
Hond qultld quKto fDr •lo. Coli
304-4111-1978.
Trudl toodl of -lng 6 cbollng
IU........ Duot worlr. A oollo a
much more. WHI t8ke off•. Cell
114-441-07011.

ONiiO.

WESTEII N liED CEDAR
• Ch•nll Rultlc
ond lovolod Lop llcln g

1917
1414.

•o•MIII•I•

. Quorontlod Dulllhy
CETIDE, INC .. Athono· l14114-3178

e 121. Caitl14-4-4•41ao.

Beattie

•

I ....... 114-tt:Z. 7201 .

BR ..

"*

85

Mualcll
lnltrumenta

I

1&lt;1 I

BuainMa
Opportunity
I NonCE t
THE .0 110 VMLEY PUIU81f.
lNG...
CO.
tfoo1 you
you
do
, .. _- ...
h·
PIOplo
lonc&gt;w, Md NOT to - d monor
- g l t tho ntll urltl '"" hwo
............. tbo oflllolnt

I .

--- - -

3 Bll ' . _ . '""""' b... V'l•d.
l•go-'"'41t.llt. 31. UIO
I mo. Clll14-..... :11171.

61 Farm EqulptMnt

a...... ,""* -·

U~ILITY BLDG . II'L. :

30 .........
11'xr
1·1' *&gt;or: e - !llrcrm. '"'"
=~ CIII14-33Z.I7411

3 811 ., 1 . . 1\ CA. No - · 1
mit eM 110. UIO. Dip. a rol,
1 rr. - • Cllll14--1310.
- " ' - - 3 .. . _....
- - 8210. ,_ Poy
- · - · - 304-773-1814.
I r - •d btlh. IIOI'n

J.ff••on IW.. e210. • P•
mo"'b. 304-171-2&amp;14 llf1•
8:00PM.

31 MF, nlco.

t"': a ..... i ft.

:";,~hole ,.f"'lc';.
" I came, I saw, I execulad a leveraged

buy oull"

=:::

•1ur11o. 1.10. tZII.AC-

. ..._ _ , . , 811&amp; NH liD
r""nd "'!.•L 1281(). Owtoir wl
flnlnoo. .... 114-21.1822.

-o..

IIIOGMCpldlupll.,oCI-o
piig., 310
w/11 tbo
opdono, IDw .... _,.. _ ,
ond In A· 1 oondltlon. - •
I•OO.CIIII814-2... 1114.

-lclco W•• Hooting llorvtoo.
phono 304-171-2311 or 814441-4DH. ·

1:::-:---:-=-.,...-------·•-•Hiullng.-

ton_,
•......... lOCI ...........
..., '*· IOod .....
.....
_,._g_
1-;;:::~;;:;:;;::::=:.
I;..,
1180Cholrv '16

IOftiM.. ,..._ Yc*IIM dill·

cou- 2,000 10 4.000cop ...
ollt- ........ - . ••.
12·14 J04-1711-2t1t.
e1:100. Coil

114--.781"-

...., bid for 1177·1178 Ford.
........ Col 114441-4113.

VI

u pholltery

Mow.-r' o Up _ _.., wvlng
trlaounty•r•23,..._
Thea.t
1111Cholrv c.aa. 1 opd.. 2 opel.
. -...d. 'HI motor. Lorog In ... - .. "rtr:"····~ Cll
304·171·4 14 lor !roo
- - · 1 1 1 1 • - " " " · HtlrMt-.
Coll304-lnD7D.

,,

'·

II &amp; II - - 8orvtoo. . . _
ol1terni. wt111 . lmmecNII•
1.000 .. 2.000aolo..dlltv-.
Clll 304-1711-1370.
-•

....

I -de
cuisine
5 Subse·
I0

II

.

.IOIIIainey Miler

45 NCO

Ho_,
IIJ lilamottde

46 Means
47 Salver
DOWN

• ..... Counlly
11:00 ()) Rlflllngtoil 8tHie

• Ill

(I) •

1111 Newl

Cll dll • 1111

.101 LaM Connection
IIJ •1a IIIJIIM
CHI HonlrmODMn
IIJ Miami VIlle 1:;1

•LEO (J...,. 23-Aug. 221 Something
w0f1hwlllle can be derived lodoy lrom a
PIICEB (Feb. :!Q.Mron:h 211) Smail de- discussion you'll have with a friend who
lails cOUld be a bll more impOrtanllhan doet not ilmH lhlnkln; to lradlllonal
usual today. Fortunately, ycu'il be concep1a. Be a good ilalenar.
aware of lhla fact . and you probably VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bepl. 22) Try lo actin
won't leave any loose lhreads han;lng. harmony with yo&lt;~~ lhougllla loday, eo..... 17.1111
ARIEl (Mert:h 21·Aprtltl) You're ilkoly pec:laily thooe you feel can advance
tn lha year ahead lhera Is a PoaatbllltY lo be more al ease today partielplllng ycur ambltlono or worldly aaplrallona.
In mental aellv!lleo 1'81her than physical. Whll ycu'll ltWiolon wll be wllhln lhe
thai you mlghl malce some major ad.
luslmenls In your WOi1&lt; or ear-. You Try lo share your lime wllh frlendl whO' realm of poaalblllty.
have similar deslrea.
LIBRA (Bepl. 23-0cL :111 You may have
may even enter a field you've never
TAUIIU8 (Aprll'2o.M., 211) AI today'a· an C&gt;Pi&gt;ortunlty loday 10 exhlbll knowl·
tried before.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.1-. 11) loolc forl d~opmenla unfold , you might be able edge you've . learned recently about
lo spot a lliluatlon for ycursell lhat will something lnllt'fll11n;. h wll lmj)(est
lillie ways to economize lodlly. If a
ho,_otd llam Ia brol&lt;en, -11 you can offer you a nominal opportunity for fl. • ptdl with whom you'll be chlt-chaltln; .
nanelal gain. Don't - • • • your ICORPIO (Oal. It No¥. 22) You're a
flx II youi'Nif or have It repaired Instead
quick thinker loday llld there Is a·
of buying a . _ one. Know where lo expec1allona.
look for romanca and you'll find it. Tha GE- (Mar 21.June 20) Some ,.,.: · c:Mnee you'll recogniZa lhe mertta ot'
Astro-Graph Matchmaker lnolanlly ,._ ycu've beMI hopln; for lhal will ema- llhltllng concltlotta that wlllallect ot~~en ·
veils which slgne are romantically per• •••• from a diltanl source could be. u Mil u you,..n. Your compraheth
fac1 for you. Mall S2 lo MBichmaker, c/o comln; lodoy. It may contain lnforma· olonl will g..., you an oc1ge o lhla
P.O. Box 91428, C'- llon lhal , will subslanllala your aaiOdateo.
expec1atlons.
·
· 8AGITTAIIU8 (1111¥. :a Dec. 21):
land, OH 44101-3428.
CANCER (.lune 2t.Julr 22) Today you Frlende will find you a dellghllul ponon .
. AQUARIUS (.lan. :10-Feb. 11) Your
may have a chance ~o closely obtei'V8 to be around loday baca1111 your
words will carry alol of welghl with peo..
lhe
w a y - ycu admire handleo • lhoughla are apt to be foculltld upo&lt;,
pte you'll be Involved wit~ today. If any·
one doea aomethln; detervlng, be aa ·, delicate Issue. Thla lesson een be iltei , doing all you can lo pleale
Uled to your advantage,
around you ..
complimentary as poaalble.

q§rthday

=·. .

•YouCanllaltal'

11:311.
Gl-..Cinllrof. Cnon
(I)

I(l)~~~
1:;1
.101

a-

:r,:.:;.f'~.

........ _Grace
Undlr I'I'IIIUre
• Amel1can . . . . .
- · - ~ -· --- -- .
12:00 W MOYII!: Home In~
(NR) (1 :43)

(I) Adwnn Rafting Siberia
(I) lllgl.... 1:;1
(l)lljnOII

newsp-.

• (I) Et1ltt1llltM- Tonight ·

GIPatlljiiiiMw

•IIJ 0......
IJullOiwaael Rt111rcfl
_

~=Now

•hoM!

1:1:2111]) MOVII!: Yllllllhecl 13:16)

·~,

'·

~

'1

. ...
•.
"'

.,"'

. '.
'

•

I

7 Mariner

~

DAILY.CRYPrOQUOTF.S- Here'1 how to worlllt:

(J) LlgiMr . . . of 8porta
(!)Sign Oil

~r

•'

.••• •'
·""'"'.'

2 Trumpeter
• AI
3 Night
before
4 Go get
5 Taciturn
6 On holiday

Frecl L.ewl8

'

....-. .

I MuRic
symbol

Examine ctlmea commilled
agalnal banks and tha people
whO commH !hem.
·101~­

Bernice Bede Oaol

'

~

44 Italian
city

au.lnnt ol linking · Tlte

--

Yesterday'• Anawer

35 Manumit
36 Sea gull
39 Nimble
42 ToiPrate

111:30 (l) Moner In -

•

one

•a

• CIOCI4t llld ChaM
1!J:211(1) MOY11!: V - (R) (1 :34)

'

was

30 Fishy
38 Undersized
21 Fountain
namesakes
product 39 Candlenut
drink
22 Hot
34 Minimal
. tree
24 Diatribe
spot
35 Type of 40 Job
26 Slave off
23 Refuse
custard
(sl.)
28 Cuban
25 Hitchcock 36 Star
41 O'Neill
dance
film
In Cetus
play
29 Instructor 27 Outburst
37 Nervous
Sl!lldbenk
31 Bird sound
:o-ft"""''"r.....,.,_
.,.-r.-""1':'-,~~-.
32 Curved
plank
33 Function

Show Diabetes

·.

seaport

16 Aglow
17 Dray
18 HamieL

14 Frequently 19 Brink
(poet.)
20 - tide
15 Surfeit
21 Actor
17 Palaver
Jaffe
18 Scout unit
and .

1111 CMidan Ctar1l Metnollal

''

quently
Breathing
Cognizant

8 Go wrong
9 King (Sp.)
10 Finn

12 Cap
13 Bear

IIJ Ev.nlng NeW8

'I
..,)

ACROSS

(I) Implant Hlp Replacement
SII"'J"r EmotiOns eaeoclaltld
with art r;1

OR YOU GIT
TH' WHOLE
POTU

&amp;OODY II l GIT
HALFTH POT··

CARD GAME,
ELVINEY !!

Qeneral Hauling

JaJW••8orvioo. awtmmtng
........ - .... · Ph . 114245-12811.

1178 Ford P·110. Y·B, Wit&lt;&gt;
tr-. .... Pl. PB. I fl.
bed wllh loppll' 10.000 mi.
"""' ........ • 1110. Coli 114441-4048.
.

l WON BIG AT
TH' ALL-NIGHT

a ... rlcel, 304-1711-1798.

72

Trucka for Sale

BARNEY

"P*•·

Dll•d W•• 8..,1,.: Poo1o.
C111•no. Wlllll. Dotiv~ Any·
timo. Coli 114-441-7404-No
Sundrrrcello.

br JHOt,\AS JOSEPH

.ID MOVIE: 'De. . . .

p0111ician. r;1
(l) lUI NeWt

•edrlol... Aid..our

1112 Plymouth Rlliont. NOW
ao&lt;&gt;&lt;l. esoo.oo. 304-llll·
3427.
'

Wrote

Michael takes the hHI for an
ad eampeig!&gt; for an oHenolvtl

,. _ ..........

,.

1178 Ford Gronldo. I crL
83110.00. 304-ln2417,

Now

1:311. VldeoCountrJ

!roe---. 304-175-3713.

Uc.t~ed

CRO$_SWORO

10:00 w 700 Club
• Ill lldnlgltt c.(J) • Ill tlllrtyeometlllng

Cerlmlo tUe w~ ftoon. b.ltwoom, .. c. wry re~~~onllbl&amp;

Electrical
lla Rilfrigeration

He

for Love' CIS T111odly
Movie
0 Larty King Llvll
11J Law end Harrr McGrew

304-175-7121.

Wontodt B t••c _.__

;;;:=~:::;::::;==:

i

\

-----

,...._owl.

"-ldlntlll or commercilll w1r·
lng. New ..vta. or

'"'-

Fi€f!.li&lt;E CUT WHSRE THE

I

Akn TNe Trfmniilc_:.d Slump
frM lit
... Clll

1110 UnGDin Town Cer. n•
302
now bMtorv
and bnket. mutt tell,
12.000.00. 1111 mobllo homo
141&lt;70. """"' 304-773-1310

pup.

CONVENTION WA!!:&gt; HEl-D.

· 304&gt;1?1-2388.

P*-..

0

HIS 8L.l5 iNE:55
I O::lNV'ENiTIClN YE'STERC)!.Y,

11,:.::

De-·:_:

(J) TDp Rink=
(I) .Ill Ma--·-1111
Maddie and David are on
opposlle sides In a sexual
harassment caee. r;1
(l) (!) The Ametlc8n
E..,..._ Golhlc New
England lale of the lrlendshlp
of two vary dlfferenl women.

ADN'I APPUANc£ SERVICE.

84

•atn•

MY NOMS STILL TRYINE!-

-"

II

'"''*"
r;1

MY DAD r:pT e,ACK FROM

..,

+

disagree about the
In prosiiMe's murder.

hou11 c .. l ,...,6dng OE. HOI
f'oinl. WMhlra, dry•• 1nd

•77 Ford Qrenede e· cyl
14711.00. 1171 DodaoA- 8
oyl alia. t371.00. flhone 304171-2417.

...

1:00 •III In Bte Haat 01 Bte
Nigllt GHieeple and Tlbbe

..

''

.-·

Roaeanna and Don argua
over which posee..lons go
to a rummage sale. r;1

·'

• • &gt;.

.QJIOtU

SOUTH

ev:

8:05 Cll NitA IIUketllltll
1:311 Cll •111 R-anne

,•

Hou• coHo on RCA. Quonr,
GE. lpooltllng In Z..Mh. Col
304-871-2398 or 514-4412414.

*•

7104.

F111~111

UJHAT \S IT?

RON·s Telwlalon Service.

CARTER'S PWMBINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth .,d Ptne
1871 CodHioo E l -. good
Ohio
Phono 1143111 or 1114'''"'"'
now
44.000
m•-.
441-4477
fine ...,,. 304-812-3453.

\ I ; , , .I· 11 I·

t~bolhhomo.Lirgolot. 3
114-4-4~

.... from city, Col

11J Munier, h
18 Nalhvtlle

8344.

a.•t":"

I lli ~ I Ill I I

GOOD.

Pointing: lnt•lor a Extori&lt;W.
Fr• ootlmlt•. eon 814-4-41- : .•:

Dog tnlnlng c l - p,_...
vlo. Dhto. 304-122·3111
for Sonctv.

1

s::uJ~

.

•u

...
ne!1!18 a situatioti that comes up
· ery now a~d then. You and your part·
.KQ~
tJIOt864
ner are silent during the auction as the
.A 76 2
opponents bid back and forth, finally
,
reaching a game contract. Your part·
Vulnerable: Neither
ner now doubles, and it is your opening
Pealer: South
lead . What are you supposed to do?
The logic of that parlleular double
W.n
Norlll Eatt
is that partner hopes your side can dePass
Pass
leal the contract if you lead the first
Pass
Pass
suit bid by dummy. Lacking such sug·
Pass
Db
I.
gestioo, you would be likely to lead
Pass
somethin1 else. So we see the reason
for East's doublinl today. With A·Q-J
Opening lead: 2
of spades, he feared that the probable
heart lead would cost a trick. Then,
too, South's bidding sounded some- doubled contract.
what reluctant.
. So West dutilully led a small spade.
West will do much bet er
he
Declarer ruffed, played ace of clubs nares partner's sugestloo and simply· ••
and ruffed a club. He next played A·K· leads the ace of ~Iamond&amp;. When be. ~
Q of hearts (East could not rulf the sees tbe dummy • It II easy lor blm to_ .
. third round), ruffed another club, , ~ the danger of a croosrull, and be .,
ruffed another spade, and used dum· wtll contonue with a secood tnnnp.
my's king of diamonds to trump his elarer can then take only lliDe trlclai "'
lasL losing club. That left him with - a far betler reault for the deffllld., ,,
only J-10·9·8 of diamonds.
had to ers. The moral 11 simple: Wben you
. know better, feel free to !pore part" •
If
tb
to
A
b
t
h
bad
payo
e •Q' u e
rna de hIS nerswt
'
'sbes. But you 'dbetter berl""t
.,... ,"• ..'

9) PrlmiNewa
lUI CDIIglllallttbiH
01 Coltgt llakelbiiN

EEK &amp; MEEK

...
....

.AQJ74

•Ka

(1 :40~

.,

d•werv. Devil VHUum
Cl11ner. one h1lf mile up
Cllor111 C - Ad. Coli I 14441-0284-

Plumbing

Andy Qrlfltth

•a

up •d

lla H1111tlng

~

••

•.
..

1-1'1-U

EAST

·~32
IAQ~2

(1 :28)

ALLEY OOP

••

WEST

.JI084

• Ill Mattock A psychopath

replllr. 1*1:.. lftd IUppli•. Pick

-

JAMES
JACOBY

Is determlned~o
t revenge
for his brolher.
(J) W0111111'a
llcllttg
Champltlttlhlp From Naw
York, NY(R)
(I) •111 WhO's the loU?
Tony gives Sam her first car
- a glganlle~rlng old
·
clunker. (R)
(l) (!) Nova ova lool&lt;s al
tha envlronmentaHy
devastating Ql'llllnhpuse
eHecl. D
1111
Tour o1 outr
Taylor Is tha primary auapeet
In tha murder of an American
offlctr. D
•101 MOYII!: EJtPoeod {RI

r- · - ·

· For • . . . dHI on 1 n• cw ulld
Filh Tonk. 2413 Joolu!on A... c•. true:* or-., ... Ken.., ....
Point P'-t. 304-171-2013. It 'Jim Mink Chevrol•t·
10go1Htupl14-8911tdt0gol Dldl.-,. 814--.3172 or
304-773-1134.
co.,.... 143.28.

wtt•.

l'ar Ul•o. 11ont. lti•Nioo 3

gNiil
J.noh' !INIHJ. .Lfal 3/ol.l.

- - - - - - ··

1114"1!1: Mu118ng. Whllewlthrld
•
- - Coli
.. E-lont
running 82
oo-ton.
114-742·2422.

2 . . , In OOUnby·Yinton ....
Stove, ,..,_.
eiiCitric.

- h lnoludid. UIO 1 mo.
Dopollt. Colt 114-3111-"BI.

814-4-4..
·

18M VW Aobblt. oton.Wd.
12298. 1884 Dodgo Ad•
Wqo n. auf o.. elr. t22t8.
John'o Auto 1111• Hot~
..., '"" ICon .. go.
1181 Corvette oonwrtlblt.
Drlginll motor, 310 4 oplld.
· - - P a, n_ _ .....,.,
ea100 firm. Dor 114-14112811. ....... 114-247· 41&amp;1 .

.._
Klttono. I old:
SoolorLQocPolnt. 1 iolllJhllrlol

57

.SI
NY
. '&lt;11~"'1'
.

1977 DldL Dolt• 81, 31llong, Rot.-y or cHI• tool ••ling..
PS.
~~-eo•
· Molt welt comptltldaemect.,.
. . . .Pl.
.. AuGood
.. good.
11100.
PUmp • • ond ....... 304ltll-3802
11 4&gt;241-10211ft• 7 PM.

AKC lllflll1•od Chow. gontlo
notured. UIO. Coli 114-...._
2101.

304-17tJ..81S8.

N'r.&gt; A&lt;Jojoi'J J.'r/UJ.

Corwtu. Ch111r. Surpluo. Bw·
. . Guido (11 105-187· 1000 Fetty Tr• T,lmmlng. stump
Ext. 8·10181 . .
r - 1 . CIII3D4-175-1331 .

1.,.. ktttlr'll. Chow ltucl .....
viol. Cail814-..... 3144olt•7
PM.

Att .... woocllurn•. Nobtower.

w•

c.•

F~"*4

a-.--· Vohlcl•
fl'orn 1100. FordL Mlrood•.

D-muynd Cltt"'' Klnnol.
P'lnlll'l 1nd Sl.,....ll'ld HI,..

e-..

;~,noA k'rl~ ~a
·'

NORTH

.KlOUI
IK7S

E_,_

·i:Jc:IYHS :Jo J.no

.'.
'"
.....

;·:..,,

.~~. 7 3 2

of Champions
(J)
Tonight
.(I)UBAT-J
Gl .ID ID Jeopardy!
" •101 M'A'I'H
(IJ Crollflle
18 Nlghl Court
• CIOCI4t and ChaM
7:35(1) Sanlotd and Son
1:00 ()) MOYlE: DakDII Ul {NRI

.,'1

llodr tooko good • rurw good
Coli 814-31.8472.

...,... IMnl Pot FOOd DNI•.
JillloWollb Ph. 114-..... 0231.

wood ...... 11100 far ol or
Ill sep.ma Call 81 4-3888131 ·

Queen Wll• btd. oontofe tv, •

1:05 (I)

....... ..,
. ..
...-

,. ;. - .. ,..,,,
. ------"-----------.
.

BRIDGE

7:311. Ill Family Fauci
(J) TNT Molonporla Profiles

Crull• 120 hp, good ohope.
304-IIIZ.34131ft• 1:00
Auto Parts
lla Accenori11

her elaborate hair dOne. "I don't know," she quippec1. " I'm

n-THEREI"

18 Fandango

1118 Ford M•CI'ry Man.-ch.

P!lfl for Sale

Polk·• ·Poo pupplll, 1100.
Mothlr illlkteied IPrlaot poodlo: folher - RNdr now.
l lfl• 4. "304111-2121.
AKC rqkiWed Coc*• 8p8'1llt
for stud ,..,..,. (luff), alii

..•

s .. ,.orlt

•eoo

1813 Cl!rtll• e Cl-. ec.
1111. p. loeb. AC , Bllv•
111'11'· 2.&amp; L 73 k. 13400. CIN
114-..... 3417.

Coil

56

c•b.

-g

111 Bloclc Co.. 1 23\'o Plno ..
Gill-.
Dhto.
'11 4-4412713.

·

N. . .

PR INT NUMBERED

18 CIIMnl
IIJ Miami VIce

FRANK AND ERNEST

•

LETTEI! S IN SQUARES

.IOI~'e
CompanJ
IIJ ....,....

•

. ,j

Comp leoe tne chuckle quooed
by filli ng in the miSsing w ords
you deve lo p from step No. 3 below.

SCIAM-LITS ANSWERS
FfiKial - 81011 - Vault - Whence - THERE
A well-lcnown ICCIIIIIe wU Biked haw long II lOOk to have

1:35 (I) I to 5
J:OO(J) Our HouM
• Ill PM Magazine
00 tlpat1ICeritar
Cll •111 CUnettt AHalr
(l) CD MacNIII/ L11nr
Newalioow (1 :00)
~a dll WIIMI 01

..

DID. Clll 114-44.. 4-478 oft« : , - - . . . , . , . - - - -81
8 PM .
. Home
Improvements
1974 Dett• 88, do•n•t run.
e100. 1974 Monte Corio, fo~
bodv, Now t10od. UDD. Coli
BAIEMENT
114-4-4.. 2475.
VVATEIIPIIDDRNG
18M Nlloon ""4 plclcup king UnoonciUoNII 1'-:lme ..,.,....
ooJI,P8,P8, tilt -Ina
too. ~911 rotw .. _ ...... el300. 1172 Ford lronOD 4114
Colt or...noc:t
night.
' netdl eome work. 302 en aiM. 1· I 14- 237·04111. drr,
Aoger111aement
·~· lfi.OOQml-. 1871, ..d
Pinto. 4 arllnd.. outo. ...... Wol«proollng
....... work. noo. eo•
114-2411-1231uk.,. Oonnil. SWEEP !A lr'ld •.wing m.c:fllne

For ••Dog Hou•. 11,.i mR•
outllt. 141 . WOI'nolho-•.
114-..... 0183.
For lllo

oca.-.

w-

..no. nn..

.J..--'

ANSWER

18 New Counlly

'··,

..,,
..,
.'

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR

18 WKRP In ClnolnnatJ
l!ltPNM

Boats and

Chwy1, SurDiulINdo. 111 aoa-187· BUDGET TIIANSMISSIDN·
Used •
rebuilt ell type•.
8000, Ext S ·10189
w•rr•tv·30 d.rt•· Pri4* til •
1985 Bucik Summ . . • lllflll. up. Ulod &amp; robull tor~• ·
C..... 4 cy~ ...lo., AC, cru•e. convert-.. ••ct.d dulah-.
tilt, AM · FM·CII~. 17.500 pr•su~ pl.t-. &amp; lhrow out
~ ....... w..omy.12 mco. eve
_m~ .. Colt 311-8240.
Jolnt...l . typ11. Coli 814-3791911 ChillY Covill«, ...,ad 2220 or 304-8711-171111. ·
- . AC. t2aOO.Coill14-379- 4 cuot'"" t ....
te.-l
2721.
inch. B tua 10 Inch w1c1o.
1887DodaoCh•o-.oute&gt;,llr, 304-175-7134.
32.000ml• . 141100. Coill1437.2721.
Sl~i Vlf.P.S
1877 Dodgo Colt. II, 000 mi..

I.,.
•lgn wkh 1320.00. Froo d.......,. Pl . . lc
1.,_ e47.10 bo• . w.vo. 1·
800.142-2434: Ohio 1·8IJO.
8.:.3.:.3-_34.:.8:.:3.:.'- - - - - - - Dog houM. 3D4-175-23191ft•
~8.:.:'0.:.0_P.:.:M.:..- - - - - - - - - - RoguiMion llll'nlwl'* pool
tibia 1Y. In ..., top end e1
, . . .. t&gt;hono 304-8752113.

II Ill llepart

•a ces Newt

•101 WIIRP In Cincinnati

lllumn bool.
, ln..,.d outbo•d wllh new

Vlh~

@

•111 AIC Newt Q

(!) Nlgllllr •

1111

Motors for Sale

76

L--l..-l..- -.1.- -.J..-

IZl 11oc1r Ell cttlc

Motorcycles

11 11.

..

h7..--.f,,.:....:.;.l_;,..;,_;;,.,i;_,l---1 G

~-BtePCJAT-

Corvett11.

21R. Lacotod •l821'h Choot·
nut I~ 8171omo. e78dop. Coil
114--3170.
Ml do '-11 d-lnll CoR
114-"2·2870.

Iff !MoRa

(1)

a._

....
-lld---------

m-•

Auto's For Sale

GOVERNMENT BEIZ ED

Grooming. All brHdt ... AII

Sundov 1 to lp.m. 814-992·
2121.

. -.

75

Upon learning · that his
oldest son, who was a
vegetari111, was iatumlng from
"::~~~:::;~-., EuroP._e. the dad annQ,Unced,
rl C A M p I T I "We ~ ..better kill the fatted

1:30 .Ill dll NIC Nlghllr -

cl• far •100. Forck. M•ced•.

-=~-.u..,..--._-

flmllo c••
Sponlol
~=========l==========~ 304-171-1412.
uy ~
•.....-·

SNAFU® by Bruce

Ti~lloiJOiLtlillli

Groom ond SUpply Shop-Pet

Hour.: M.T,W 10•.m. to lp.m ..

occoptlng oppllcetlono fDr

Eor Corn u .oo bu. Dot hrr,
•1 .10 bllo. 304-4111-1112...
tor 1:00PM.

with MteChiM"II, •111. 00
o•h or .,_,.1 .,..,..._. phcno
3D 1
.4- 71-4-411.

1289. MlnY More Monev SIV·

lngV.W•. Rt.1411nCentMirV

"*'"

-

SURPLUS -Ortolnel Ar'"', 0.·
nl"' Rontot. Corh., Clothlnt
UIA Junglo - · ·
Co·
mouiiiJO (ond bl"* wh~ol.
tAM SDMEIIVILLE'B, OLD
ROUTE 21, NEW EllA. WVA
(noon • I:OOI&gt;m. Doc. onlvl.
Other montbo Fri!Wt. lotunlor,
SUndor ontv. 304-273-1111.
For ""'" 0.. flrMoool Coli
·
30 4-175-27171ft•
4:30 p.m.
CompoctTri-modrl-•

,. ·. .,Z;:..A,.f..,;E....:.
R;..-...ll. ~_:t.
I
6
rs I. I. 1
. .
.

.101 Hoppy O.,a
18F8CIIolllfa

e 2.100.00. Clll304-llll-3427

19M Hondo CAIOO motor,
good oond. croll 304-NII-3194
or 304-1711- 15981ft•1:00.

0322.

Buy or Sill. Aivorlno Antiqueo.
1124 E, M•ln ltr•. Pom•ov.

2 Ndroomtp.tmenl1nMkldl•
pon. 1178,. month. dlpook
r.,.~od. CIH 114-892·2381
doro ond 814· 992·2109
ivenln01.

IN OUR i=AMIL't', THE OLDER WE
6ET, THE CUTER WE 6ET!

''

·,

a,_

LAYNE'S FUIINITUIIE

Whlrtpool Wa._. 1nd Dryer.

biWoom Aptt.

.I(SAR5 .. MA't'6E HE
ISN'T U6L'( AN't'MORE ..

I

•AmetloanM8guiM
l:fll (I) One Dar ... Tltttt .

'

W•hera. dryWI, refrlgerltora,
rengH . SklliJI' Appll•nc..
Up,. Rw• Rd. booldl Btono
Cr- Motll. 814-4-41-7318.

Furnllhod 2 811. g - · 'opt.
pltl.

I HAVE!&lt;IT SEEN OLAF IN

Ii

1--n1HI
! ......
., T~,ER
•...;.;.,~

i!J ShowiiLI Today

eft• 5:00, ,..,. "'"'· tnd

74

Moytogalto. h..,duty-her
end dryer, •210. Klf'lmor.Aw·
codo "-v lluty ond
d - 1200. 814-742·2312.

H.

VIRA'S FURNITURE 6
APPUANCES
Open Mon.-Sot. 8 AM ·I PM,
Sun . 12'naan--1 PM. 814-44&amp;.
31&amp;e.

ND

Flr•oodfDr . .o.UI. ,.tood.
Col 114-N2·3190 or 814982·1057.
*

IJiecl .pH•CII Md TV •••.

evening~ .

A*ltt1 onty.

WE WANT YOU TO WRITE TO
,'t'OUR ~ROTHEROLAF,ANDINVITE
filM TOT14E ''U6L't' D06 " CONTE$T

·'

31 18
-

1973 ............. 4114. 414 . ,
gtn,. outo. PS, Pl. now lit-.

Mblod gr. . hoy, CIH 114-3118419.

•

(l) Rotnon11 The resulla.are
dlsaslrous when Beazus
pays for har own s alon
haircut.
·
(!) Dr. Wh9! p -

nhalst end 1011 of ntw .,.-ta.

'lilt Dllltv . . . .,..
.,offl_co.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

County AJIIIIIInCO. Inc. Good

,., ........ opt. 1210 utlkl• pd.

1 Ill , 920 ;It~ GIHipolio. Coli
4411-4411 olt•7pm.
,

•

Vanella 4W.D .

1977 Chov ....,.. 4a4, good
oond.' itt• 1:00 c•l 30~115.
3584 or 304-1711-15911.

OOml · - ..

loft teo). Caill14-441-3119.

co,._•

3 IR .·I Caurt St. Kitch• Wtch
...... rolrlt 0210 ...... dip, •
..... No poto. Coli 114-4414921.

00 8porttLoolt

304-4111-1791 .

Hay lla Grain

0

·=

01 Newa

1978 CJ7 JOIP, 304 V·8 IUto-

64

wo••
'::~~~~,
S@~c{llA-&lt;Zt.~s·
IAMI
_ _ _ __.;._..;. f4itod br CLAY i . POLLAN

Rearranga IeMen of the
f.:~ur scram bled word1 be.
low to form four simple words

1:00 (J) llonetlu: The Loti
l!piiU"
.()) (I) .(J) at

mMJc, quktretrldt. 11,500. 00.

Mblld herd
ola. 112 ,_
1
ton Dhlo PIIIM o
•
., rporoy,
Olllo. 114-N2·1411.
BRAND NEW FUR JACKETS·
9..,... Plr1. bl"* · ••
rtd ,_, bolh blarttlllidlll.
111n 12· I 4. · 878 ooch. Col
114·912·2111 d.ytlm•. or
1 1 • - 2 129
-- •
2 WtnlntJI, or

....,.... t99.
UIEO. . . .. . . . . .. bedroom
IUit•.
0..111. wrlngsrwethw. •
comol«• line of uMd fllrnltwe.
NEW· w.n.n boot:• t31.
- - · t18 • up. 181111 &amp;

ve.

61 Farm E"'iptMnt

TUES., JAN. 17

·

9

EVENING

18818·1081-4x4.1Uto-

w....... eon-"'11: rm· *

SWAIN
AUCTION a FUIINITUIIE 12
Olivo St., Gill-.
NEW· I pc. WClOd grout&gt; e399.
U.lntrocmou~• ttta.ewa.
lunlc- will! bldclng. 1248.
Full olio m - a lou....,ion
•tertlng· t t l . Recliners

0000 USED APPUANCES

II&lt;, . .PM. Dopo
oolt. no p... CIH 814-4410131ov•tngo. llf1• 1.

73

54 Misc. Merchandise

8t. .lng II Ull ,_ mo. Col

ldt-

~
....

•

-=,....,.,.....--..,.-.,..,...,.---,~;:;:;;:::::::;;:::;:=~=Ti~~~:;~~~~="1*w•.
AM.fMot•oo. 1.000
51 Household Goods I
m1..• '*·
E.=-'1'"'oond.c.• 1 14-

doood pMto, pool. plll'ground.

pllle

.•

~

a,_, lAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot. 814-441-1198, 827 3&lt;d.
A
0111 No D

Modern 1 ... dDwntown, aon.

19110 Chevrol• halft.., pldr up,
Itran1rnlulon.
... ~ · - wldo
- . Good
IUto
e2100
........ 304-112·2819.

1•11

Men:hiinrl1se

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

T•• Tawnhoul8 IP8'tment• 2
IRo.. 1 ~ b•bo. CA.. dll·

304-87 1128.

lubrlcllntt to .....u6w:turlng.

_.... ...,
..........
- ·Petroc.u.
.....
__
...... Boo KlOOS. Ft. Worth.
'Ill 71111 or phono 1117)3322331.

BEA1111FUL APAIIT1\IENTS AT
,BUDGET PAICEI AT JACK·
IDN EITATEI. 131 Jlckl..,
Pike from n83 I mo. Wllk lo
lhop ond movill. 814-4-412818. E.O.H.

3711. E.D .H.

Schools

15

Dlp•-•l'lr·

-·--·-firm

Fermi for Sale

C1r1 for •dertt In or out of
..., . . ._ . 304-17111219.

UrgOIIII!r NMd
tollnoof-quollty

-tr*itt
In Qolllp
... - f •·
Thor .....
Pfi+Wii.

11 mtn. fl'orn Gollololil: Col
&amp;14--.oeo..e.

I Mol! ltrlll Midcloport. Ohio,
120 ecr-. e room f•m hou•. 2 bedroomt.lrnilhed"' . .
c.n 114-n.Z?tl.
utlllr. .................. Phone
_________________ . _30_"-_~~
__
~_2288-•l_s._________

OOVIIINM!NT JDIII Nl*lnt In , _ . . . bolh .......
ond u-14 Fot 1 1111 of lot.
ond op-lon. Clll
313-2127. !at. J 1113.

....

New completely furnl1hed
1f1 .-tn.nt • n:~blle home 6n
ctty. Adultl onty. Porldng. eon
I 14-4-41-0331.

w•

htt•-

--~-~11 113
-.P
.. tlnll
E-·

Apartment
for Rent

814-317· 7810.

c...

Help Wanted

'*

2 "dryor,
* - fur'*hool
ond
ooncltton.-her
1228
month plu1 depOIII endutlltla
114-992-7479.

Oov•nmlnt Hom•l •1. 00 (U

,..,ald.

11

z.z411 '

w••• '"*· • lruh tndudld.

bon-H..

Htatel. eut01. oo
... ,....... Mlrlln
114-2411-1112.

81

8104,

AmwiC81'• of Pom•O¥ h• im5 room1 1nd bllfl.l•ge lot.
mtcl•• opll'llny: lorJ:'!· dm• _.on lind cmntreut, "304-1753431 or 1711-3030.
11 .N. '• 8'1d L.p • ••.. 1 • 1o1ft•• - - - - - - -fl•llll• sdl...,llng, comptlltNe ' 10 Plu• Aorei. 3 be*oom. 2
ulrry lnd
-od. llory homo. two 14•70 moblo
COIUGI La Rue
A.N..
horMI. b•n• .2 w ..• welll. 11
.. Am•i. .l of Pom«&lt;Y.
ground , _ bl .... tap rood. 7
TDP CAIH poid fDr '83 modol D.O.N
387151 RodtiiJI'tnge Rd., Pom•
ml• from Point Pl..-t on
~nd
Ulld
Smith
Srr!dHIIIIolol e7t,IIOO.DDior
• ,......,nt,.,, 1e1 1 e..... roy, Ollio U71ll. 814-H2·
1111 or wll opllt k. If
Avo.. Qolllpcllo. Col 114-4-41- uoe.
22112.
.
Q D V E II N M E N T J D 1 S
Wtkl Point Pl-ont fllolot•,
118.040.·'"·230. yoor. H- 8011 C-18, Pt. Pit., W.Vo.
c-'o1• ....,_,. o1 "'"~ h~ing. Col (11 105-117·1000 3 -oom mo~n ho- ""
"" a lntlqUOO. Alto wood 6 bt. R· IBOI tDr amn ,.....
~
b....... e .... 1 mit from
ooll ,_... lwHI'• Fwnlture lill
a A - llll&lt;d a Olive.
·
- " 304-1711-3030 or e75.,_3111.
AVON · AI • - Clll Mlrityn 34,31 .
w.... 304-812· 2141.
JuOk Coro with or ,..hout
32 Mobile Homes
· Call Lorry U.oty-114- AVONIII•-IISh~lrr,S,_.,
1111-1303.
304-175-,429.
for Sale
, _ , . ond opplon . . bv tho 7M:cAJ-DR-:-N-Ii::-J,-'L-M.,.-U"'~::-TI--L-IN_E_I_N·
.,._ or Ollllro '-Mhold. Fe .. 8UIIANCE CD .
S.dlonol ho_. •• cllploy
....... -gpol4 C.H 114-441- IHiclngm.ture,eggr. .flftlncfr
madill
Buy now • d
I1N.
vlcllll to mkt. Hom•AUio-Lif•
11110. till Modoll. F..,Cih City
~rolo _ _ I Httlth lno., 2 trelnlng
Moblo Hom-. Inc.. &amp;14-4-4•
Wll _, or opp
• -·•
g , . _ trelnln
., plu
Antlqulo, .. rnltu ...
= i o n -. bonolt 'pke tl.r.~.~ 8341).

n••

"'

44

H_el_p_W_a_n_ted__

v...lty. ....._....

8

..
:U't":
';..."""'...:0"1!..~
30

-;;::::;;::::::;====:.
'

1104

.......

12x6o 2 Ill. moblo homo
lolllt• In &amp;............. Chldren
ICcoptod. Col 114-4-411-3187
2411- 1223.

1-------------------.......j

' POUND: Code• sp.,lrol. VI- ,_1_1_
tty of \lint"" c.11 114-381- , -

FOUND: Wilko mllcod !wood
~ ,aund In Tycoon Llk•••·
Cll! 114-241-IHia3 •"• 4

3 ecre privlle mobl• homa kll.

• ,.,, Loca,ctn•Thurn'W\. No

...... I'UPPI'· lllixod brOOd. 3
ol4 - . . .od .......
·p - for child or o1•

Lost and

1874 lnt-nol lold , liDO. 10ft dump 8. 2. 341 ...
onglno 13.1100.00. 1178 C710
Foid wkh 20 II fta Pl. PB, I a
2, 13,1100.00. C...IIO C bo'*
""" motor wkh 24 In lw"*ol
113,000.00. T-100 V • IUto 241n
trondl trr 1 11 doop In rode. 411
Detroll dtlltl eng i ne .
.... 000.00. 304-41 .. 1031 .

The Daily Sentinel-

Television
Viewing

for Sale

1171ChllfV Y.o tan ......p. P.S ..
P.l ,. 310 culllc indo. Auto, vor;
good co-lon. Wlloll 0&lt; trOdo
" " _ ... 814-141-2237.

S p - for Rent

., 4-892-7471.

Trucks

1882 Dodo• 0 .10 4•4. Low
m l - good ohopo. CoNorltorl
PM. 114-2111-172&amp;.

ll!owllr docor•ld. 2 811 .. fullv

Toglwo-· P.rtaor-Collo

8

72

liMPing_room~ wtth cooldno
At. a TriM• epee e. AI hoolf. upt.

46

114---- llf1• I PM.

114-992·7401 .

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Fumiehed Rooms

CAll ott• Z.,.m. 304-77:15811 . M11on WV.
·

42 Mo bill! Homes

CAREEP.

,..,.....
.
. . M 10
ll•glwl
itH blo:·t c' Oet11 wb. okl. c.11
m..

45

Pomeroy- Middleport. -~- -

Tuesday, January 17, 1989

lilT

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

••

'•

' ',

..,.,..

••

·~l

..•••. .

One letter stands for anoUrer. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

.. _
...

..... .

.

.......,'i
.......

..
... f''

l-17

....••
•

PM

R M UT

STUTKR
UK R IT

EMFTMDT
PM

KDH

HLEOMUTS

PYTF
YTRQ

P.Y K P

LE

PM

'

PYTLS
P Y T F

PVTG '

KST

......,

...... .

-··

-·....t

c.,,.......,

QSTOLMIE.-W'fKD
UKDL. TS
v......, ••
HE WHO LOOKS FOR
A MULE WlntOUT A FAULT MUST GO ON FOOT. ~
SPANISH PROVERB
.

.,.............
··•. '")

�)

,

Tuesday, January 17, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Concert set for Phil, Dozers

RED· BOT.
SPECIALS

Phil Dirt and the Dozers will be Eleanor McKelvey, Syracuse,
coming to the Green Elementary 992-2638. The musical group
School In Ga\Upolls, Marvin which plays early 50 and late GO
McKelvey , principal, announced rock and roll music, appeared at
-the Lit up the boards first on a
today .
The concerts w!ll be held at 2 goal by Scott Nelgler and with
and 5 p.m. on March 5. Tickets one minute gone, John Burdette
are available from Marvin or hit another for a 4-0 Meigs lead.

Mary Andrews spent the holt· .
days with her children and
grandch!ldren In Columbus.
A family get..,.together was
held at the home of · Mrs.
Andrews' son In Westerville on
the Sunday before Christmas.

From there she went to Dayton to
visit several days.with her sister,
Frances Mcintosh, and then
returned to Columbus to visit
another sister. Josephine In
Columbus.

--People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
United Press International
SEE JANE EXERCISE, SEE JANE MELLOW: Jane Fonda
admits that she might havll,_overdone It a little In her previous
exercise videos. " I'm not as macho as several years before,"
she told The New York Times .
Her latest video, " Jane Fonda's Complete Workout,"
Includes both h!gMmpact and low-Impact aerobics and Is not as
hard-driving as some of the 'previous tapes- an Indication that
she doesn't "feel the burn" quite so t'ntensely as she once did.
The mellowing encompasses not only her attitude tOWard
exercise, but her personal Ute ·" In the old days I was very
driven," Fonda says. "Now I'm striving hard ..!9 control
compulsive tendencies .... Now I want to enjoy things more, to
add more moderation to my life."
ROSSALYN -ABROAD: Former first lady Rossalyn Carter Is
In the Soviet Union promoting truth, justice and the American
way. Carter and Anne-Ayrnone Glseard d'Eslalog, once the
first lady of France, are participating In a Moscow meeting of
the Executive Council of the East-West Conference on Human
ru~L

"That's what I think. The whole
thing Is a trap.''
He said he would rather have
gone to trial to prove his
Innocence but pleaded guUty so
he could return home.
GottWal\1 and his girlfriend
rented a Zodiac boat on Maul
Jan. 3 to go snorkeling. On the
way back from tiny Moloklnl
Island of! ll(aul, they saw ,other
boats looktnk at something In the
water.
Austrian Consul J. Hans
Strasser said Gottwald followed
the larger vessels, Which were
commercial whale-watching
boats, and whales surfaced
around them at one point.
But U.S. Attorney John Peyton
'said every time the whales
surfaced, Gottwald drove his
· boat toward them.
Gottwald said he was not told ·
specl!lcally what the word "ha·
rassment" meant or how far he
must stay away from the whales.
Authorities,' however, said Got·
twald 'was warned by a number of
peo.ple about the regulations.

Bashan
Auxiliary holds meeting
.

-------

Daily Number
545
Pick-4 .
ll58

~

Page 4

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

!MID:
•••••••••••••••

NyQuil®

~rn~rnwm~

Strong Nighttime·
Colds Relief

miCRO~AVE

6

3FOR$·1 00

Complaints heard by
Pomeroy Councilmen

oz~

REG.

419

KLEENEX
FACIAL
TISSUES
BOX OF 175

-'

XATRIM
PRE-MEAL
CAPLETS

JIFFY
CORN MUFFIN
MIX
8.5 oz.

FOR

30 COUNT

$100

REG. 4 99

HILLS

dent, conducted the meeting
during which time there was a
discussion on how to get more
members.
March 17 was set as the date for
a smorgasbord with serving
from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

$299

BUY ONE
GET ONE

BROS.

..
•

OLD FAS

HOT COCOA
MIX
BOXOF12
59 VALUE

79

SNICKERS
MILKY WAY
3 MUSKETEERS
CANDY BARS

VELVET
2 PLY

4 88

aevelan: FJennentary

40¢

'

STOCKTON, Calif. &lt;UPI) -A used. and that cards he carried
young man In full combat gear bore ttiree different blrthdates.
who sprayed a school playground
Officials planned to open the
with a Russian assault rifle, Cleveland Elementary School as
killing five children and wound· scheduled Wednesday In hopes
lng 32 others, was described as a that carrying on normally would
troubled drifter with a long he! p soothe the survivors. Psy·
· criminal history.
chologists and counselors were to
Within hours after the brief, be on hand to talk with the
furious and methodical at tack at children, their parents lrf\d
• a predominately Asian elemen· teachers.
tary school Tuesday, a picture
"We expect tha't the absentee
. : began to emerge of Patrick rat~ will be higher than normal
;: Purdy, 26, who killed himself but we felt It was very Important
· alter Uttering_ the schoolyard to .s tart the healing and recovery
e with dead and wounded children.
process today," John Klose, a
-~ Pollee said Purdy had many
spokesman for the Stockton
.· aliases In a long arrest record, Public School District, said on
::tncludlng a weapons conviction. NBC's "Today" show.
· They said he had an apartment In
When he went to the school,
::- nearby Lodl, although his car Purdy was dressed In fatigues
···had been registered In Sandy, and a flak jacketandwearlngear
::- Ore., near Portland.
plugs and carrying two pistols
•. Deputy Pollee Chief Lucien and an AK-47 Sovlei assault rlfle
· Neely said the names Patrick · with fixed bayonet.
:: West 11nd Eddie Purdy West were
The attack b'egan when Purdy
: two of the many the gunman

TENDER
LEAF

TEA BAGS

$19
GGIE$
SUPERTRIM
DIAPERS

6 ROLL PACK
,

CONVENIENCE PACK

:::~M~~s
32's

LARGE

$999

WHITE CLOUD
TISSUE

SJ59

EX. LARGE 28's

School~nStookton, ea•:··

after a gunman opened fire Tuesday In her school
playground. (Ul'I)

·Drifter kills &amp;ve st~dent~,
Wounds .32 then killS himSelf

59'

39¢

FOR

REG.

CONSOLES DAUGHTER - An unldimtlfled
molh(!l' co1180les her uninjured daughter at the

PAPER TOWELS
REG.

..

Local
news
briefs-....,
.
.

.••. Driver injured in auto mishap

-

·.
..

DIET COKE

··'

PAK$249

.•

OR

NEW COKE

.
~

$2~

.•

Middleport, Oh~

- .... --

. ..

•

•

__

,

.

I

One driver suffered minor visible Injuries In a two-car
accident at 12:55 p.m. Tuesday onm the SR. 7 Middleport·
Pomeroy bypass at the lntersectk&gt;n of SR. 7, according to the
State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said tlie accident occurred when Shirley Simmons,
55, Middleport, Ohio, slowed to make a left turn. Her car was
struck from behind by another vehicle driven by Thomas N.
Swan, 29, Racine. Damage was heavy to the Swan car and
moderate to the Simmons vehicle.
·
Simmons suffered minor Injuries and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
The patrol cited Swan for fallulre to maintain control and an
expired registration.

.••. Fire destroys Pageville home
•

--· ·---·

\

26 Centl

ORIGINAL OR CHERRY FLAVOR

NATURAL oR BUTTER

5·

Mos Uy clear tonight. Low
near 30. Thursday, parity
cloudy . Hfgh lp mid 50s.

•

Man fined $1,500
for chasing whales

Two new officers were named
at the recent meeting of the
Bas han Ladles Auxtllary held at
the hall.
Pauline Riley was named vice
president, and Kathy Riley,
secretary. Becky PuUins, prest-·

Ohio Lottery

. ·

·'What we would like to see tnlthe Soviet Union, what the
officials are working on, Is a legal system or a legal code to
protect the Individual rights of the people we are talking about,"
' Carter said at a news conference.
The next meeting of the East-West Conference will be held
next summer In Atlanta at the Invitation of Carter's husband,
Jimmy.
MARCOS SICK AGAIN: Ferdinand Marcos Is back In a
Honolulu hospital for the third time In two months. The former
Philippine president will be subject of a hearing In New York
Thursday to determine If he ·Is healthy enough 1o travel there to
face racketeering charges.
Marcos was admitted to St. Francis Medical Center Sunday
with what was diagnosed as acute left-upper-lobe pneumonia
and acute bronchial asthma with resulting bronchitis. Marcos,
71, was previously hospitalized twice for treatment of
congestive heart failure and has been recuperating at home.
Marcos and his wife, Imelda, were Indicted In New York on
charges they used $103 million to buy four Manhattan•bulldlngs
and defrauded banks of $165 mlllon to refinance the properties .
Back In the Philippines, Marcos supporters are hoping he can
come back to Manna soon- despite the health problems- for
the burial of his mother. Josefa Marcos eight months ago at age
95 and the body has been lying In state since.
PRACTICE WHAT YOU PREACH: Jeb Stuart Magruder Is
now preaching ethics. The Watergate conspirator who turned
Piotestant minister Is kicking off his first major campaign as
chairman of the Columbus, Ohio, Commission on Ethics and
Values this week.
The yearlong campaign will use billboards, television and
radio advertising and 'messages from employers, teachers and
clergymen to educate Columbus residents about honesty.
Guidance from the top Is a key to making people think about
honesty, he says.
"If (Richard) Nixon had called us all and said, 'We're not
going to have anything done In this administration that Illegal
and unethical,' It (Watergate) probably would not have
happened," Magruder says.
REAGAN RADIO: Michael Reagan, the adopted son of the
president, began his first day on the job at KSDO radio In San
Diego Monday. A camera crew from CNN was on hand as
Reagan co-anchored the morning news program at the station
where he worked last summer as a flll·ln host on a talk show.
Reagan received a wake-up call from his dlst111gulshed dad
that was ·played on the air. President Reagan, who gave his last
radio show of his presidency Saturday, said: "This Is your old
man. I'm a little too far .away to hear your program, but I
wanted to call and wish you good luck on your new show."
He also said he was homesick for California and looking
forward to moving back. KSDO cannot be picked up In Los
, Angeles, however.

HONOLULU (UPJi An
Austrian tourist pleaded guilty
and was lfned$1,500Monday, but
was spared a jail sentence sought
by prosecutors for harassing
endangered humpback whilies
off Maul earlier this month.
Peter Gottwald, 30, the first
person to be criminally charged
with harassing humpback
whales. pleaded guilty In a
special hearing at federal court,
which was otherwise closed for
the Martin Luther King holiday .
U.S. Magistrate Daral Conklin
• said It seemed " perfectly' cleat:"
to him that Gottwald was chasing
the whales. "Were he a U.S.
citizen, he would spend several
nights In jail," Conklin said.
Instead, the magistrate lm·
posed the $1,500 fine, the highest
levied against someone In Ha·
wall for violating the federal
Endangered Species Act prohibIting anyone from approaching
within 300 yards of the whales.
"All I can say (is) It's !lOt the •
Aloha Spirit," Gottwald said
after the c~urt appearance.

Irish roll
over SMU
Mustangs

..

ARMACY

Andrews returns home

I

The twO:story frame home of the Roger Carsey family at
Pagevllle was destroyed over the weekend by fire. Neither
Caney nor his two sons were home wben the fire started,
reported a spokesperson for Scipio Township Fire Department.
Tbe fire was discovered and reported hy neighbors at about
11:08 p.m. Saturday, but the home was engulfed by the time
firemen . arrived. Origin of the fire Is unknown. ~utland Fire
Department as~!sted Scipio Township at the scene.
(Continued on page 12)

'
·1...----~----------~--~
..
'.

set his car on fire about noon In
what pollee called a diversionary
tactic. He then strode to the
playgroumj and began flrlng the
au tomatlc rifle "wltli a full
banana clip" of ammunition,
pollee said.
Pollee said one pistol bore the
word "Victory" In white letters
on the grip. One clip bore the
letters S-S·A.
Investigators said he fired 50 to
60 rounds from the Soviet-made
rifle, stepping out from behind a
portable classroom and ducking
back to reload.
Lori MacKey, who was teach·
lng hearing-Impaired students In
the portable classroom, a bout 6
feet from the gunman, said she
could see his face clearly as he
mowed the childdren down. ·
Continued on page 12

Complaints from Pomeroy resIdents about certain pollee department procedures were aired
Monday night by members of
Pomeroy VIllage Council.
Councilman Bryan Shank re·
ported that a few merchants
have complained to him that
business In the village Is being
ruined by alleged excess ticket·
tng for speeding by policemen.
Shank also reported that
members of the force have
complained about unfair scheduling of days off.
Councilman Bruce Reed said
he has heard complaints of
serious matters not being given
adequate Investigative time,
while much time Is spent on less
serious matters.
Reed said he feels that some
things which have been taken
from Council's hands regarding
·the pollee department, should be
returned to the discretion of
Council.
It was pointed out by Councilman Bill Young that village
pollee chiefs used to give regular
accountings Qf department activIties to the Council.
No action was taken by Council
In regard to the complaints.
Action was taken by Council to
have Pomeroy Inc! uded In the
service area of the Washington
County Building Permit office,
Marietta. Meigs Co~nty, with
exceptlo'ii o! the ftve villages. t·s
already In the service area.
Council signed a form requestfng
Pomeroy be considered for Inclusion In the service area, which
will be returned to Marietta right

A letter objectlng·to tbe tearing
down of a bouse on West Main
Street by GTE North, Inc.,
without review by Pomeroy's
Historic Preservation Comll)lt·
tee, was sent to Council by
committee-member. Frank Porter. Although the transfer of
house and property to GTE took
place prior to the enactment of
Pomeroy' s Hls.torlc Preservation ordinance, Porter challenges the subsequent tearing
down of the house without going
through the new ordinancerequired review process. In
order to eliminate future prob·
terns or this type, Porter urged
that Council develop a definite
review procedure.
Councilman Bruce Reed said
that the gu ttlng of the house had
already taken place before the
ordinance went Into effect, therefore, he did not think GTE was in
violation of the ordinance when
they razed the structure.
"Councilman' Bill Young- $\zggested a letter to that effect be
sent to Porter and the Historic
Preservation Committe.
Council did not say If they were
going to develop a review proce-

dure or not.
Council President Larry Weh·
rung , who presided over the
meeting In · place of Mayor
Ri chard Seyler who was absent,
reported that Council has received copies of zoning ordlnan·
ces from Shaker Heights and
Hudson, Ohio. Council still In·
tends to obtain copies o! a few
other ordinances, Including
Athens' and Gallipolis'. The
vlllage' s zoning committee, comprised of the mayor, council
president and Joe Struble, Joe
Clark and Lisa Murphy, citizens
who were appointed by Council to
the committee, and Attorney
Patrick O'Brien, who acts as the ·
vlllage's legal advisor, will review the ordinances to determine
which asPects of each ordinance
apply to Pomeroy.
Other matters discussed by
Council Monday night included
the following.
-The possible purchase of
storm windows .and doors for the
fire department.
-A suggestion to base .1989
employee Christmas bonuses on
the number of hours worked, at a
rate of 10 cents an hour for each
hour worked.
-A request from the merchants to determine In advance,
the time period during which
parking meters will be free for
Christmas shoppers.
Present were Co~ncllthem1&gt;ers
'w ehrung, Young, Reed, Shank
and Betty Baronlck, and Clerk·
Treasurer Jane Walton. Absent
were the mayor af\d Councilman
Franklin Rizer.

Notification requirements by
EPA include Meigs farmers
Meigs county's roads are a far Industrial facilities, up to 30,ooo farmers are also required to
cry from urban Industrial parks, Ohio farms could be subject to report spills or accidents when
the effects could extend beyond
yet local health and safety these notification requirements.
"Farmers are usually very
the boundaries of their farms.
officials stlll worry a bout the
threat posed by common but conscientious aboUt applying ha·
For Instance, If a farmer splllsas
hazardous chemicals found zardous pesticides and fertilizers
little as one pound of Counter Into
there.
carefully, but unforeseen
a stream running off his propIn response to Increasing con- weather conditions and other
erty, the Iarmer Is requited to
cern that firefighters need more · events can result In health or
report the Incident to the local
information when they respond environmental problems," Ohio
fire department, the county's
to emergencies, State and Fed- EPA Director Richard L. Shank
Emergency Planning Commit·
era! laws now require anyone said. "The new reporting regula·
tee, which In Meigs County may
who uses or stores certain !Ions will help everyone respond
be reached by calllnfi 992·6663,
amounts of some 66 chemicals to more effectively If significant
Ohio EPA's Office or Emergency
Response. at 1-800-282-9378, and
notify local and state authorities. amounts of these chemicals are
For Meigs County farmers, accidentally spUled or catch
the National Response Center
that means that If they have as fire."
1·800-424·8802.
lltile as 10 pounds of a chen\lca1
These hazardous substances
A booklet containing more
such as Thlodan or 500 pounds of can be flammable, combustible,
Information and reporting forms
Is available In Meigs County at
Dyfonate, they must provide toxic, reactive, volatile or easily
written n~ to the county's dispersed Into the atmosphere. . the Agricultural Extensk&gt;n Of·
Emergency Planning Commit- Some of the agricultural pro·
flee, the Sugar Run Mill, MGM
tee and the State Emergency ducts that Include these cheml·
Farm Supply or from the State
Response Commission.
cals are Phostex, Furadan, CoEmergency Response Commls·
Ohio EPA officials estimate Ral, Monitor. Supraclde,
slon at Ohio EPA, 614-644-22!)1,1.
that, In addition to some 1,600 Phosdrln Phos·KIIl, Dlmecron Callers should request the
and Cou~ter.
"Guide to SARA Title Ill!orOhio
Under the new
Farmers."

Miami is quiet early today
after second night·of riots
MIAMI (UPI) - Teams of
pollee roved black sections of
Miami, arresting 250 suspected
arsonists and looters In the
second day of racial violence that
spread from one neighborhood to·
another and continued until dawn
Wednesday.
Gunfire kUied one man and hit
eight others Tuesday - justflve
days before the city plays host to
Super Bowl XXIU. Pollee, para·
medics and firefighters were
fired upon.
Pollee hoped the arrests would
take some of the troublemakers
off the streets and allow pollee to
regain control of black neighbor·
hoods Wednesday.
"I think that once we started
making arrests, that had a
tremendous effect on the violence, and It pretty much solved
most of our problems," pollee
spokesman David Rivero said .
VIolence began for the second
straight day In Overtown and
some rock throwing was reported In Coconut Grove a few
mlles to the south. But whlle

away for reVIew
"" In March.
Although th ~ schedule fee to
obtain permits will be higher In
Marietta than going through
Columbus for permits, Council
has heard that local building
contractors, who would pay the
higher fees, are In favor of going
to Marietta because the. time
factor Involved Is expected to be
considerably shorter.

calm was restored In Coconut
Grove, rock and botlle throwing
and arson continued In Over town
and spread north to Liberty City
a few miles north and continued
there until early Wednesday
morning, said Miami pollee
spokesman .George Law. Both
areas are mostly black.
At dawn, at least two fires were
burning, one In a furniture store,
and one In a storefront housing a
church, senior citizen center and
a paint store. Pollee said the
stores were looted and then set
afire, but burned themselves out
shortly after It became light.
Pollee said by daybreak there
were no Incidents of looting or
sniping as the city quieted down .
"For the sake of our city, I
appeal to every citizen, regardless of race, to stay calm, get off
the streets and · stay in your
homes," Mayor Xavier Suarez
said In a televised appeal Tuesday ntgnt.
He promised to appoint an
Independent review panel Wed·
Continued on page ·12

-----

OFFICER GUARDS ,\RENA - A shotgun-toting Miami
officer stands In front of the Miami Arena Tuesay, where the
Miami Heat WM acheduled to play lhe Phoenix Su1111. The NBA .
game wu canceled because of rioting In the area after two blacks
· were kUled In an altercation with pollee: (UPI)
.

•

'

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="113">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2679">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="36628">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36627">
              <text>January 17, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1358">
      <name>haley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1058">
      <name>swisher</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
