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,

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 .
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Page 4

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dent, conducted the meeting
during which time there was a
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March 17 was set as the date for
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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
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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
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Local
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briefs-....,
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.••. Driver injured in auto mishap

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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...----~----------~--~
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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)
.

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�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-:-Middleport,. Ohio
'l

Commentary

I

Ja~k Anderson I

.

· The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

~~

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,..,...._,..._...,..., I"'T"''!!!cd•=-

'q:JV

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Maaager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstanl Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER o!The United Press Internatlcinal,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should. be tess than 300 went!
tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unslgned letters wUl be published. Letten should be In
goOO taste, addressing is~, not persooaUUes.

Chasing a hallowed record
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPJ) -One of the last orthe old Southern barons.
Jamie Whitten or Mississippi, Is closing In on one of those
congressional records that most believed never would be broken.
• :The venerable congressman, who was first elected a month before
l')!arl Harbor, Is now one more election and pocket change from
breaking the House longevity record or Rep. Carl Vinson of Georgia,
which stands at 50 years and two months.
·Seemingly in good physical health .and politically solid as only an
old·time Southern Democrat can be, there Is every likelihood that
Whitten will ask the voters of northern Mississippi to give him
·
another round trip, or more, to the nation's capital.
:without question, Whitten, by virtue of his seniority and his
cl!alrmanshlp of the House Appropriations Committee, Is one of the
power players In Congress, ai though some or his feudal ways were
banked by the reforms or the -mid-'70s.
Now 78, Whitten, once a pious · segregationist and rock·solid
conservative, has become more of a mainstream Democrat, partly to
prevent more attacks on him ·- such as the challenge to his
assumplon of the committee chairmanship In 1979 .,.- and partly
beCause Mississippi blacks are now allowed to vote.
Despite his lengthy tenure -he has out· served nine presidents and
been the bane of numerous agriculture secretaries -Whitten Is little
known &lt;lUtslde the Capitol and Mississippi's 1st Congressional
·
•
District .
The old·tlme Southerners; by choice, never cottoned to national
exposure and attempts to decipher his pronouncements for just one
decent quotation have eluded generations of reporters. Whitten
probably could not care less.
By contrast, VInson was a well-known figure. Although he, too,
shunned the national limelight, his long career on the House Armed
Services Committee made him a towering figure in military affairs
during World War II and the postwar years.
Interestingly, Whitten Is neither the oldest member of Congress nor
does his service go back the farthest. Both those honors belong to Rep.
·
.Claude Pepper. D·Fla.
Pepper, a feisty George Burns 88, started In the Senate In 1937, four
years before Whitten, but was called home by the voters In the 1950
Florida Senate election, considered one 0! the dirtiest of all time. He
was elected to the House In 1962.
WhitteJI seems to have at least an outside shot at the all·tlme
congressonal longevity record of 57 years, held by the late Sen. Carl
Hayden of Arizona, a former territorial sheriff who was elected as the
state's first House member in 1912. He stayed In the House 12 years,
put In another 42 In the Senate, then put awaay his stirrups in 1969.
To match Hayden, who had reached nine decades In age when he
left, Whitten would have to win five more two-year terms. The voters.
unless he shows severe signs of falling. probably would return him
another 10 years, although Whitten would be just about 90 then.
There are other serious cont~nders to VInson's record among
House veterans. Rep. Charles Bennett, D-Fla., came in 1953 but Is as
old as Whitten and no one else dates back to the l940s.
Perhaps somewhere down the seniority list there Is a very young,
healthy and politically lucky congressman or congresswoman with
tbe staying power to challenge VInson - or, perhaps even Hayden.
For now, however, It's all up to Jamie Whitten.
·

Believes everything is rosy
WASHINGTON - The chief
regulator of the savlngss alld
loan Industry Is facing a financial
D·Day common to many bank·
rupt businesses - he may ran to
meet the payroll.
Approximately 1,200 people
should find this more · than a
puslng concern. They are the
employees of the Federal Home
Loan Bank BQard and Its Insurance arm, the Federal Savings
and Loan Insurance Corp. Many
of the employees are paid to
handle the problems or falling
thrUts. But because of those
problems, the day may come
when they aren't paid at all
without emergency Congressional authorization.
The latest storm cloud comes
as bank board Chairman M;
Danny Wall continues to Issue
blue.sky forecasts for an Indus·
try that Is losing up to $1.5 billion
a month.
Top bank board officials have
received the warning about their
own payroU In confidential brief·
lngs prepared by their auditor,

the General Account!Di Office. ·
According to two knowledge&amp;·
ble banking sources, the GAO
believes that If the bank board
failed to meet Its $50. million
annual payroll, It would deliver a
jolt to the financial markets,
undermine hundreds of strug.
gling savings and loans and
make It Inestimably more dltfl·
cult to cut new dealS to dispose of
Insolvent, federally Insured
Ins titutlons.
U the payroll wasn't met, "the
consequences could be dire tor
the entire Industry," said one
source; who was present at a .
recent briefing.
·
Bank board spokesman Karl
Hoyle flatly denied any eoncern,
past or present, about his agen·
cy' s ability to meet the payroll.
But If Hoyle and Wall aren't
worried, the GAO Is.
The bank board gets Its operatIng ·revenue pr!marUy from
assessments charged to the 3,000
federally Insured thrifts based on
their deposits. That money also
finances the FSLIC Insurance
fund to cover deposits It a thrift

A. '

· WASHINGTON (NEA)- "Gov.ernment relations" offices long
ttave been maintained here by
corporations that are anxious to
· Stay on the right side of the
110Htlclans and bureaucrats who
control the federal government.
: Now, however, a new category
qt companies with a very dltrer·
ent heritage also has Washington
ri!presentatlon. Included In that
classltlca tion are Honda and
Hitachi, Matsushita and Mltsubl$1, Nlssan and NEC, Sony and
Subaru.
Because those Japanese firms
~ow have substantial lnvest~ents In this country, they have

.

become Increasingly active not
only In the politiclll realm but In
the economic and social spheres
- and their lntluence Is likely to
grow.
Japan Is hardly the largest
foreign holder of this nation's
assets. The United · Kingdom
ranks first with $75 billion worth
of Investments, followed by the
N~therlands with $47 billion,
Japan with $33 billion, Canada
with $22 billion, West Germany
with $20 billion, Switzerland with
$14 billion and France with $10
billion.
"Bu I no country has Increased
Its U.S. Investments faster than

•
•

.

•

(

•

Berry's World

(

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•

•
'
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•

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•

•
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'

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.

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Cl , . . byNIA,tr.c

•

more than 500 hopelessly Insolgoes under. Wail's polyannalsh
vent
thrifts, an amount tbat
management of the crisis has
.clearly
overwhelms the avalla· ' :
cost precious time. And now the
ble
reserves.
The sum now t•
day may come when he can't
meet his payroll, let alone prop · needed to solve th!'! problem
equals the amount spent for the
up the Industry.
Sources iold our associate Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe,
Michael Blnsteln that the GAO's and the bailouts of Lockheed,
short-term concern centers on Chrysler and Penn . Central
.
the more than $20 billion In notes combined. ·
In
addition
to
saving
the
thrifts
and guarantees - essentially
as
they
fall
like
dominoes,
the ;
fancy IOUs - that Wall bas been
bank
board
Is
paying
Interest
on •
Issuing with alarming rapidity
$10.8
billion
In
bonds
that
Wall
and CIA-like secrecy. He prom·
borrowed In 1987. One GAO
lses the resources of the bank
worry
Is that the cost ot tbat
board to shore up falling thrifts.
One scenario presented by the obligatiOn Is severely depleting I
GAO Is that an Investor who took the bank board's already dlsap- ,
,
over a falling thrift based on pearlngreserves.
U tile GAO's nightmare mate- :
notes and guarantees Of future
help could collect O{l those paper rlallzes, you can expect Wall to ~
brush It otr with more "Danny·
prom~. That would draw down
speak."
An example of bill
the paltry $2 billion to $3 billion In
rhetoric
can
be fpund In a speech l
cash In the bank-board's cotters
be
gaved
lp'
the Gun Institute,
and create the alarming specta·
which
studies
~lnanclal Issues.
cle of tile government rescuing
The
meeting
was
oH·the-record. ,
the people wh6 we_re supposed to
several open- i
But,
according
to
rescue the thrifts.
Recent government estimates mouthed people In the audience,
show that the FSLIC will require Wall said It was a·myth that the
more than $100 billion to ball out FSLIC was Insolvent.
He argued that so lORi as the
FSLIC's notes and guarantees
had the tun faith and credit 0!-the :
. U.S. government behind them, •
the depositor Insurance fund · l
couldn't be Insolvent. That Ia on !'
ihe order of saying,- "I can't be
broke as long as I can use my ;
friends' credit cards." Every
penny that Wall promises In ••
notes or guarantees becomes the :
obligation of the taxpayers.
l
As each week passes, It be- l
comes more apparent that Wall 1•
Intends to save the thrUt deposl- •
tor, even If It means bankrupting
the taxpayer.
The GAO has Issued an opinion •
that the bank board probably has ~
the legal right to be issuing notes '
· and guarantees - essentially
operating Its own monetary j
printing press based on prom· ;
lses, but the GAO also has seriOus &lt;
reservations about that method '
of doing business.
•
One source close to Wall told UB
that a pall continues to hang over
the notes and guarantees and has
chased away many suitable
buyers who could have rescued
falling thrifts. They're not Interested In buying now and being
surprised later.

l

1

l

'

Celeste's-State of the State challenge
Sen.

Last week the legislature con- este have Issued numerous chal1bose two Issues locus on educavened Its 118th General Assem- lenges to the legislature andestionand the care of Ohio's elderly
bly which officially opened the tabllshed a wide range of topics
population. These Issues came as
legislature for business:- How· for legislative discussion and de110 surpriSe to many In the leglsJaever, this marked the delivery of bate, this particular State of the · lure because they bave been a
Governor
Richard Celeste's State address was somewhat great topic of discussion for msot
State ofthe State Address. which subdued and .d emonstrated two
of 1988. Indeed, the Issue ol the
traditionally Is the formal com- cutting Issues that the Governor · funding of education and the"deliv·
mencement of activity In the le- ldentltled as ldentitled as his ma· ery of educational services to
gtslature. While past State of the
jor concerns for legislative at·
Ohio's young people has been the
State speeches of Governor Cel· . tentlon In 1989.
subject of numerous commiSsion
and legislative committEe Inquiry
and investigation. Consequently,
JY/
thi!Governor'schallengewithresa
_ n
O
_w_
peel ot education focuse on therecommendations of his own Educa·
tlon :no Commission.
Japan," notes the Congressional Japanese last year poured $16
And of course, the boldest proEconomic Leadership Institute
billion Into purchasing lJ .S. real posal of the Governor was to seek
a non-profit. 'non·proflt, non: estate. This brought their cumul- the voter's approval of a consti·
government organizatiOn based· ative total investment up to more tutional amendment that would
In Arlington, Va.
than $42.3 billion and gave them not only call lor an Increase In
"Japan~ Investments In the
ownership of slightly more than Ohio personal Income tax and
United States climbed 611 per· 1.5 percent of all the nation's corporate franchise taxes, but
cent between 1980 and 1987," the property .
also specifically create and earInstitute says In Its recent report
mark fund to education through
on "American Assets." MoOwners of commercial real a special educational trust lund.
reover, It projects that, If the estate In this country reap an Thus, the Governor's hope Is to
trend continues, Japan will sur- annual return on their Invest- raise revenue lor funding partie·
pus "both the United Kingdom
ment of 6 to 9 percent, compared ular educational problems that
and the Netherlands to become
with only 2 to 'percent yearly In the Education 2000 Commission
the No. 1 cumulative Investor by
Japan.
was ldentWed.
1990. ,,
Other factors driving the JapaIn addition, the Governor calls
nese
Investment
boom
Include
!or
a shifting of funds from the
At plants In Michigan, Ohio,
the
strength
of
the
yen
against
delivery
of services to long-term
Dllnols, Kentucky, Tennessee
the
doUar,
exorbitant
land
costs
care
lnlltltutions
to that of the deand Indiana, Kentucky, TennesIn
Japan
and
excess
Investment
livery
of
services
of bome-based
see and Indiana, Japanese autocapital
1n
Japan
and
excess
care for the elderly. Again, this
makers are expected to produce
Investment capital In Japan, call is in"partduetoaspectaiGo1.3 million cars and trucks this
much of It the product or that vernor's taakforcethathas studyear\ wjth that total projected to
country's
International trade led arid Investigated the needs of
rise to 2.2 million by 1992. (In
surplus.
Ohio's elderly population and Is·
some cases the Japanese are
Thus, Japanese Investment sued recommendations focusing
partners In joint ventures with
constitutes an Indirect repatria- on the delivery of home care ser·
domestic firms, but most of their
tion of a substantial portion o!the vices. Thu·s, the Governor's emendeavors are Independent.)
money lost through this coun· phasls Ia on attempting to allow
But In no field has the rela·
try's International trade deficit. Oblo &amp;eDior citizens to maintain
lively recent surge of Japanese
Moreover,
the creation or 3 Independent living as lOng as
participation In U.S. economy
million
domestic
jobs Is attrib- poulble In a shift away from Inbeen more apparent -and more
uted
to
foreign
Investment.
stltutlonallzed care.
controversial - than In real
In an event, we must proceed
estate.
wltb
caution Into shaping future
Most of the Japanese pur·
But foreign ownership of a
chases have been confined to gf9wing (albeit still relatively policy dealing with both o! these
about a dozen cities - Los small) portion of the nation's Issues. Ftrst of all. we must ex·
Angeles, New York, Honolulu,
manufacturing base, Its finan· pklre tbe funding o! the educaS.:n Francisco, Phoenix, Chi· clal Institutions and Its real tlon Issue In terms o! not just adcago, Dallas, Seattle, San Diego, estate poses myriad. questions ding additional money to a syaAtlanta, Boston and Washington. that remain to be satisfactorily tem, but Insuring that Ohio's
educational system Is funded In a
According to one estimate, the . answered.
manner that Is lair and equllable

.

M• LO ng· ;'
JOR
J

·

to all Ohio students. Currently, 11
Is my belle! that the manner In
which we fund education lies
mainly In geography of where
one lives. Thus; educational opportunlty Is akin to where a tam·
lly decides to raise Its children. •
As we enter the last decade ot
this century, that notion should
not exist In the state of Oblo. ~
Rather, we are all Ohioans and
all of our chUdren deserve the
same opportunities. One school {
district should not·reap the bene- •
!Its of a we~th:f tax base and enloy beautiflll extra curricular facUitlea, while other school cllatrlcts struggle to meet Ita annual &lt;
budget and students learn from
textbooks that teach tllem about
man'sdeslretolandahumanbe- ·'
!rig on the moon. There must be '
equality In the system.
'
Thus, my locus as a m~ber of'
the Senate Education Committee
and In !act the ranking minority
member of that committee Is to '·
pursue that formula which seeks
parity.
With rtespec-IPI'itrto !he' funding or
senior citizen programs and the
cate of elderly ln"''lllo, there
should be no question In the
minds of any legislator that our
aging Ohio population needs the ·
ldncl nf care .that demands dig- ·
nlty and respect.
· Thus, the legislature mu,ex· "
amine whether the system Is not
working, whether the quality of
care Is at the level that we expect
It to be, and whether any changes
need to be made to attend to tile ~ .
needs of our growing aging popu- . ·
lation.
:
These \wo Issues will receive
the greatest amoung of attention
from tile legislature over the
course of the next few months .
and as such should continue tore- .
cetve a great deal of time and at- ·
tentlon throughout this _legisla·
tlve session. However, the Go- .
vernor's State of the State Ad· .
dress presents them as the focal •
Issues and now our leg!Jiature
must set out to respond.

l
'a_te_rs

Today in history_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ t '
.
lnteraa&amp;lollal
I

I·A

"So, what prospects do you ha'lfl OTHER
than buying tonery tickets ..wy -'c ?' •

·
By United Preu
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 18, the 18th day of 1989 with 347 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward fuU.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
·
Those bOrn on this date are under the sign ot Capricorn. They
Include English physlcll,ln Peter Roget, who co~pUed Rogel's

----.....-

--

•

Thesaurus,' In 1779, American orator and statesman Daniel Webster '
In 1782; English author Alan Alexander Milne, who wrote ''Winnie the :
Pooh," In 1882, and actors Oliver Hardy In 1892, Cary Grant In 1904 · '
and Danny Kaye In 1913.

..

On thiS date In history:
In 1871, William of Pru~la_ was declared the first German emperor.

'

Nolte DaM• rt, llaa~Mra ~ttl
Oakllll. atJ 11, . . . . . . . ('*)
PittiiMirt aMeN. t~.. 8tiiiiiM!rD81
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New Phlladelpbla11; II. M~alor lt; 17,
(lit&gt;) Toh-do Notrr Dam,. 111 ud Uppf'r
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Cln Foresl Park II. Oa Seton$!
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ctn NOI-" Damel1, DaWaiMI Hilla II
Col Wat 41, Col Brl1p 41
Col
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...lwrfttall

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BntoaM PhU.. elphla. 1i It p.m.

NV Teeb SS. Stevtal Tf'ch 37
New fork U. II, Ul;y C.llel• (N.\'.) 91

R b_e_rt
The IOng Meach 0 f the Jap ese__
· .·

Marauders upset Warren Local, 53-52

i

Page 2-The Daily~
!
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
t
Wednesday, January 18, ~19_89 1

Nlqara "11, Ni!!W HamPII!Ire II
No..-e•ln'n 1'1, llarlfonl11
PIIIP&amp;r"Jh '7S. Boatn Coller• 84
Rullera-Camh 51, Glullboro8tat• n
sa1""" 81. • · w~ ..d st. n
. st. Pfter'1ll, Pabfteidll
St. 'VIaeent (Pa.) 7&amp;, Oeat:Ya 17
lo~eplrt'a H, Pen.-,lvula 5I
Wl'llleJan IS. Skl-..,re I!

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Deaver a1 DaU11, 8:• p.m.
LA Olp~ra at LA Lalf'n, II: 31 p.m.
New Y•rk• Golh &amp;ale, Jt;st p.m.

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Game

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ArmatN•I 11, Nova 11
llryaa 73, Vlrs:Jata ID*ermont It
Clurwater Chrtlll.n 72, Soulll,.•t 11
HampleiHbdnf')' 88. Mary WIIShl.,-lon7't

Hock"'

ll&amp;rtlord a1 Moalrtt.l, 7:15p.m.
Mla..-ota at Balflolo, 1: :U p.m .
NY RMII!U ai Chlcqo, 8:31p.m.
EdmoMon at Wt••P"I· 8: :.s,.m.

Socctr
MIBL

Ubertyil, Campb•ll•
Mar)mo• .. II, St. M&amp;rl''l (M~) Ill
N.C. CHI ... 14, Shaw.
N.C. Weaieyu t8. Qrta-Newport 71
NorttlkSt Jlt. St • .\llptdnl' "18
Vlrllnla 14, Marrlaad 18 (et)

Wlcblta at TaoorM, 11:15 p.m .

.,...

Tr.n~s

Melbo•I'Df', Au.. r.Ua ..... A.uatrall•

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Albion M, Trbdil)' Clwlllllan 1S
lelol 71, RocktoN 1-1
Betkel 81. Grace 11
Coh..,bla81, Rarrtl-8tOM 57
Earlham 11, Ro•Halmu 81
IEimlll.nt Itt. Carrell to

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ftdder: Clau4ell Wllhla~&amp;on to a I- ,ear
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as, ....... 81

tnma wllll. abo1111ep 811-o•
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71,

1n•10 Tedl St. Tr .... e 1'1'
K•atSiat~ N. X..rvlft' (OIIkll 11
MalHI! 111, Vrll._ tl
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odleih Gaey Barr to Mil.,.. Alee lor
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ROCK SPRINGS -The score·
board read 4-2 favoring the host
Marauders prior to the clock
ticking as each team was as·
sessed technlcals resulting from
'slam-dunks' during warm-ups.
It may have been an omen as to
what was ahead !or the Warren
Warriors as th~ Meigs squad
pos led Its second win ofthe year
by a narrow 53-52 margin. Meigs
Is now 2-10 on the season. Warren
dropped to 8·5.
Following the technlcals, John
Burdette who had made all four
tosses, lilt a two point goal at the
2:16 mark of the Initial frame.The Meigs team tell behind and
trailed until there were only
three minutes left In the contest.
During the Intervening time
span, the hosts found themselves
behind by as many as nine.
Down 15-10, Meigs Goach
Rusty Bookman was zapped with
a technical after protesting a call
against his team. It appeared
·that, on the two shot foul, the
wrong Warren player was put at
the line and he sank the first two
and then added another pair on
the technical calL
Seemingly , this seemed to
Inspire the locals as they came
back to pull to within three
(22·19) with just over 12 minutes
gone. The Warriors, however,
had built the lead back to nine at
.the intermission.
Playing with abandon and
hitting the boards hard, Meigs
stayed within striking distance In

quarter three but still trailed by
seven with eight minutes
remaining.
Those hi attendance got their
. money's worth In quarter four as
the Marauders pulled out all
stops and outscored the visitors
18:10. With 3:00 to go, Todd
Powell completed a three point
play to knot the score at 48. Kevin
Fausnaugh then put the Warriors
back on top as he hit one of two
charity tosses and Matt Baker
repeated that performance for
Meigs to keep Meigs alive. Curt
Plummer connected on one from
the line lor Warren and the
Warriors held a one point advan·
tage at the 2: 30 mark.
Baker sank a two point goal
and Brad Holbert retalIated with
one of his own to put the visitors
up 52·51 at the 1:13 mark. After a
miss by Meigs and a rebound by
Warren's Mitchem It looked as If
the Marauders in lght lose
another close one. John Burdette
carne up with a steal and missed
.the shot but Ed Crooks. tralllng
the play. got the tip-In for the two
pglnter and again Meigs was on
top 53-52 with 38 seconds to play,
There were nine seconds left
when the Marauders were
whistled for a foul and Plummer
went to the line tor what could
have been the winning margin.
He missed the front end of the one
and one after Meigs had called a
time out to Ice the shooter.
Crooks dragged down the rebound and Burdette was fOuled

Rio Grande ou.trebounded the
Panthers 31·20, but turned the
ball over 19 times. Unofficial
statistics show ODC was more
caudous on turnovers by record·
lng 11.
on UPJ' s Division I All-Ohio
Kearns led the Redmen scorteam. "The tradition is excellent
Ing with 16 polnls and three
and so Is the football program."
assists. Schubert added 14 points
Thrush becomes at least the
and two rebounds and Larry
sixth player to verbally commit
Benning served up 10 points and
to Coach John Cooper's
three rebounds. Rob Jackson led
Buckeyes.
~
the team In rebounding with five.
The others Include linebacker
In shooting, the Redmen were
Don Davis of Gahanna Lincoln,
41.~ percent (29-70) on field goals
defensive linemen Dave Monnot · and 7.5 percent (18-24) on free
of Canton Central Catholic, Ja·
throws.
son Simmons of Akron St.
Holcombe also had six reVIncent-St. Mary and Chuck
bOunds for ODC, and Williams
Jones or Chillicothe and placekrecorded 10 points and three
Icker Tim Williams of assists. Dave Branscom com·
Waynesville.
pleted a competitive night with 10

points and eight assists, while
Corey Simpson was the Panth·
ers' top rebounder with seven.
Sartori's club sank25 of47 field
goal attempts for 53.1 percent
and was 77.7 percent at the foul
line (14·18).
·
The Panthers will host Tiffin
Saturday at 3 p.m. Rio Grande
travels to Cedarville for a 7: 30
p.m. Saturday game.
In other MOC games played
Tuesday, Walsh downed Cedarville 78-74 In overtime and
Malone put away Urbana 107·98.
Tiffin defeated Lake Erie, 76-64
In a Dis trlct 22 game.
Box100re:
RIO GRANDE (82) - Anthony
Raymore, 3·2·8; .B~Ian Watkins,
2·1·2·9; Brad Schubert, 1·3-3-14;
Lar-ry Benning, 4-2·10; John
Lambcke, 2-1-5; Jimmy Kearns,
3·2·4·16; Mike Tidwell, 3·0·6; Rob
Jackson, 4·0·8; Stewart York,
1-4-6. TOTALS 23.,_18-82.
OHIO DOMINICAN (64) Randy Tucker 10·2·24; Dave
Branscom,
Kary Williams,
3·4-10; Corey
2-0-4;
Chip
Mike

PRESCRIPnON SHOP
INTRODUCES .......

ule'M
Health Desk

All-Ohio player to sign with Buckeyes
COLUMBUS, Ohio' (UPI) Jack · Thrush or Cincinnati
Moeller High School, an Ali·Ohio
offensive ·uneman, .Said Tuesday
he will sign a national letter-of·
Intent with Ohio State Feb. 8.
"Ohio State seemed like a good
opportunity to me," said Thrush,
6·foot-5, ~5-pound, ~ flrstteamer

The Daily Sentinel
1".1\lh

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(U81'8 jfiHfl).
A. IMvilloa ol M.uJUmedla.lne.
Published every a.._ernoori., Monday

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.-·

on the play. Warren used the play at 22 on a free throw . Robert
same strategy and Burdette Fields then canned four charily
failed to convert the front end of a tosses to give Rick A,s h's squad a
one and one. Then with two · four point margin. Warren made
seconds remaining, a 30 foot a pair from the line but missed a
at ll?mpt by Plummer bounced off" final shot with two seconds to go.
the side of the rim and the victory
Fosh Win
belonged to the hard playing ,_ James Hower ron posted ·. up
Marauders.
underneath and his teammates
Shooting 21 of 55 from !he floor, got him the ball as he led the
Meigs posted a 38.2 average and Marauder Frosh past the
hit on 11 of 20 for 55% at the line. Lancers with 24 Points en route to
The Marauders had 38 rebounds a 49·36 victory.
with Baker leading the way with
Meigs led at the end of eacn
eight, committed 16 turnovers quartet and banged the bOards at ·
and were called for 20 team fouls. both end of the court as they
Warren canned 16 of 44 forl36.3 dragged down 27 rebounds. How·
percent and QO of 32 charily erton accounted for 9 and Shawn
tosses for a 62.5 average. Mit- Hawley chipped in with five for
chem led the way In rebounding the Meigs crew.
with 10 as they swept the boards
The Marauders were 45 from
for 33 caroms. The Warriors ihe floor (19 of 42) and 54% at the
were whistled for ·16 fouls and line (11 Of 19). They were zapped
turned the ball over 15 times.
. with 19 team fouls and turned the
ball over 15 times.
MEIGS - Baker 6-0-1·13;
Burdette 4-0-7-15; Betzlng 3·0-0Hawley and Jeremy Phalln ,
6; Powell3·0·1: 7; Nelgler 3-0-0-6;
pitched In with seven points each
Oller . 0.0-2·2; Crooks 2-0-0-4;
for Meigs and Bill Harless added
Greene 0-0-0-0;·Humphreys 0-0·0· six. Chuck Mash and Robby
0.
.
Wyatt each canned a field goal .
and Kevin Musser sank a free :
WARREN - Fausnaug\14-0-210; Mitchem 3·0-5·11; Plummer
thrqw to round out the Meigs ·
0.0·7-7; Ontko 5-0-2-12; Holbert
scoring.
3-0-2-8; Ryan 1-0-2-4.
Score by quarters:
Melgs ................ lO 111418-53
Warren .............. 11 19 12 10-52
The reserve squad posted a
thrilling overllme win. 26·24, In
the opener. Frank Blake tied the
score at the end of regulation

Early _Ohio Dominican threat
fades; Redmen win, 84-62
Ohio, Dominican, hunting Its
first win In 16 starts this season,
bid fair to give the Rio Grande
Redmen a run for their money
Tuesday at Lyne Center.
But ODC Coach Lou Sartorltelt
the removal of 6-6 center Mike
Lang for a technical foul on Rio
guard Jimmy Kearns 'a t 11:02 In
the firs I period "let the air out of
us," boosting the Redmen to
victory over the Panthers, 84-62.
Rio's record went to 14-6
overall and 4-2 In the Mid-Ohio
Conference, while ODC Is 0-16
and 0-5 In conference play.
"ODC Is a basketball team that
is getdng closer and ,clqser to
pebple, and that's a tough sltua·
lion," Redmen Coach John Lawhorn said.
"Our overall effort was good,
but we gave up In the last five
minutes," Sartori said. He ere·
dlted guard Randy Tucker and
center Chip Holcombe, who
scored 24 and 16 points respectively. for keeping ODC as close
to the Redmen as possible.
And close they were in the
opening minutes, exercising a
t~ugh offense that allow&lt;:'d ODC
to trail the Redmen by 1 twice
before Lang's foul on Kearns
spurred Rio to .take off for a
14-polnt lead twice In the period's
final five minutes. Brad Schu·
bert's 3·polnter-and a pair of free
throws, along with a Brian
Watkins goal, put the Redmen
ahead 46-27 at the hall.

.

•
'•••

�..

"f

•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

Notre Dame races past Mustangs, ·67-45
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U, N"' Rlehmelll It

By United Press International
Before the start· of the Notre
Dame-Southern Methodist game
Tuesday night, the Mustang
coaches presented Notre Dame
Coach Digger Phelps with a gift.
Southern Methodist Coach
John Shumate, a former Notre
Dame player and assistant
coach, and ·assistant coaches
Dave Batton and Roy Martin

Southe~it Method~!. 6-7. The
Notre Danie.
wanted to show their appreciaMus
tangs, 0-6 on the road, played
Jamere
Jackson
and
Keith
tion for their former mentor.
their
-nrst game without Kato
.
Robinson
each
scored
10
points
to
·
Shumate, a. 1974 All-America
Armstrong,
their leading scorer.
who nearly died of a blood clotln · lead a balanced attack that gave
Armstrong
Is academically Inhis lung during his sophomore · the Irish a 67-45vlctory.AII Notre
eligible
for
the
rest of the season.
Dame players saw action and 11
year at Notre Dame, received a
Notre
Dame,
8-2, notched the
of them scored against the
standing ovation from the crowd
game's first
points. The
·.
Mustangs.
of 8,440 at the Joyce Athletic and
Eric I.,onglno and Tony Patter· Mustangs didn't score until LonConvocation Center. He also
Continued on page 6
son each scored 1~ points to lead
received a sound beating from
players he had helped recruit for

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"

(Varsity only)

TEAM
W L
P OP
Trimble .. --...........9 1 725 614
Wellston- ........ .....8 2 702 609
;Bel pre ............. ....7 3 681 620
·VInton ...... -- .... ..... 5 5 646 613
.::tdlller ...... -.- .... -.... 4 6 652 689
•:Alexander ....... ... .4 6 616 656
: Fed-Hocklng .....:.. 3 6 547 628
: .Nels· YorL- .... -.. :.2 7 525 509
• Mel~ ............. ..... 1 7 498 584
:. Tueeday's results:
:Meigs 53 Warren 52
.:trimble 77 Alexander 62
-Federal-Hocking 65 Miller 62
·'Belpre 72 Nelsonvllle-York 48
: Wellston 71 Vinton County 55
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pocket because It reminds you
more of. losing the Super Bowl
than winning the AFC
championship."
Collinsworth Is mulling retirement after the season. He turns
30 on Jan. 29 and will be married
In the off·season.

IN STOCK

CHICKEN

Jewelers of Integrity

PADDOCK FLEXES MUSCLES - Notre Dame center Scott
Paddock ( 43) muscle&amp; around SMU center Glenn Puddy (52) In the
first hall of Tuesday niJht'a J&amp;rne In South Bend, Ind. (UPI)

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SUPEIIOI UIICH iEAT

BREAKFAST HAM ••••••••••••L.~. $2.29

..

IIISP..·SEIYE VACUUM PACI

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••••l~••· 51.19
JWDD1D st. It ll. .

SMITHFIELD

BOILED HAm •••••••••••••~·••~~~~. S1.19

Leg Quarters •••••••• 49&lt; I== n.,~I
0 ~I
FRESH PORK
$ 9 ! ;;
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FLAYORITE
Bacon ••••••••• ~ ••••••• ~.

WE WILL
REDEEM
UP TO

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09
Yell ow ·Onions ••~t Sl

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BROCCOLI SPEARS ••••••• ~~.~~·••••• 89(
MINUTE MAID
APPlE JUICE •••••••••••••••• ~!.~~-. S1.29

GIDin Gllll1

CORN ON THE COBt.~.~~!.'.'!S1.89
lutn JANE'S

16 OZ.

CANDIED DILL STRIPS ........ S2 .19
RAICIOSS
TOMATO JUICE •••••••• !6.~!••~,.~ S1.09

LUCI'S

PINTO
BEANS
••••••
~!.~~- 2 CANS s1.29
JIFFY
CORN MUFFIN MIX ••••••!~-~!•....29(

SWANSON . . . .

WHITE CHICKEN •••••••• ~.2!.!~~. S1.69
IILLOGG'S
14 OZ.
(RACK-N-OAT CEREAL ••••••• S3.05
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988 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 nnu"'•"'~;; 1
WAS '13,900

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'68..

1985 CHEVY CHEVETTE, 2*-·-- - 1983 CHEVY MALIBU CLASSIC,• • .. - S73"'
1984 CHRYSLER LEBARON--·--- 583..'

1986 CHEVY CHEVETTE, z•· ---··--·--- S91"
1984 CHEVY CELEBRITY, 4 • · · - - - - -... S92'"
1983 BUICK LE SABRE WAGON ·---·S94'"

4•·------ '96'"

1984 FORD LTD,
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___ S99"

.•'

FLAVORITE

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1985 CAVALIER TYPE 10, z&lt;tr...~...-......._ .... $114":
1984 CAP.RICE CLASSIC, .2 dr.................. $127"
1983 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE ..- ..--. $130"'
1987 CHEVY SPECTRUM,; . ........... ___ 5134'

Margarine ........... 3/

1985 CADI~LAC
SEDAN
DE VILLE...... S268"
.
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•5223"

1987 CHEVY 314 TON CON. VAN __ $295'

FLAVORITE FROZEN

12 OZ. CAN

FLAVORITE ·CHERRY

FLAVORITE SUGAR
..

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lAUNDRY .DETERGENT ••••••• S1.89

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Plua

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$

1
ELF
Peanut Butter 1 ~:!.J!~ 99&lt; Orange Juice ......... 89&lt;
Pie Filling ••••••••••••• 79&lt; Ice Cream ............ $1·09

1986 CHEVY CAVALIER RS, 2 *· ---- $135"
1988 CHEVROLET S.10 ·-------- 5138'
1986 CHEVY CAVALIER WAGON __ S139"

5208'

1987 CELEBRITY EUROSPORT, 4 *· _

(Max. 50(
Value)
(No Cigarettes)

GALLON

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LUXURY CARS .. . .. .. . . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. REASONABLE PRICES

1985 CAPRICE CLASSIC,••·----

COUPONS

'
$
· 2°/o Milk •••••••••••••

88,718 ,

UNDER 'lOOP;MONTH

PEPPERONI PIZZA ••••••'.5.M~. S2 .09
APPLE SAUCE...............!!.~~. $1.15.

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APPLES ......M!It-.2 Foa 89c
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TVC STANDINGS

·Jan. 19

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., JAN. 15 THRU SAT., JAN. 21, 1989

Solo• 'II, ~e .....
We ..6er II, Oail Hllll8
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.'

A BULOVA CLOCK ··
What a gift.it makes!

11

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Mei.IU, Vl~at Wllf"fta D

You... WI11011M, YOUIP Ch~J ft

It means much to have been
· there and won, but also to settle
-an old score. The Bengals meet
:the 49ers again Sunday In Super
:Bowl XXIII.
. "I remind the younger guys
' that the 49ers are wearing one of
: my rings and I definitely don't
: want them wearing two of
• them," Collinsworth said.
: "It's tough. Yougotothesegolf
tournaments and you see Ronnie
· Lott or somebody wearing those
huge Super Bowl XVI rings and I
• just have my little AFC Cham• plonshlp ring. It makes me want
• to take It off and stick It .In my

We Reserve The Right To

n

Xeala•, Lebii!DGN
YounpE.tll, VoanpR-.yNtl

. MIAMI (UP!) -The problem
• wlth the Super Bowl, saysCincln, natl wide receiver Crls Colllns.: worth, Is that the memory can
• ' last a lifetime.
·
; The joy of reaching the final
• game of the NFL season can be
: _washed away with the sting of
· having been there and lost. That
:Is what happened to Collinsworth
·In his rookie year of 1981 when he
: :and his teammates lost to the San
• Francisco 49ers 26-21 In Super
: Bowl XVI.
; The Bengals, who get another
• _shotat the 49ers Sunday, took the
:-day off Tuesday to meet the
:media and one topic Collinsworth
;found himself referring to was
, ;his lone Super Bowl appearance.
, • Collinsworth, Max Montoya,
• ,Anthony Munoz, Reggie Willi; ams, Eddie Edwards, Turk SchG: n~rt and Jim Breech are the only
.•plilyers from the 1981 team still
·:playing for the Bengals.
; "I remember walking off the
, •lield In Pontiac, Michigan, and
• how bitterly disappointed~!
• were," Collinsworth said. "And
: also to look at the faces of Jim
.LeClair, Glenn Cameron and Ken
·Riley, some of the guys who had
been there for a while, and
realize that this may be their last
: chance_ I saldthls Is horrible, but
; I am sure I'll be back to another
• four or five.
• "Now this may be my last shot.
I don't want the Eric Thomas'
·and Lewis Blllups' to look In my
eyes and say, 'Poor Crls. this Is
his last chance.'
,
• "So this one means a lot to

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L

;

Pomeroy- Middleport Ohio

1989

Penguins are
upset, 5-2, by
NY Islanders
By United Press Internatlonlt.l
Losing to the team with the
worst record In the league might
have seemed like a bad dream
for the Pittsburgh Penguins
Tuesday night, and after Mario
Lemieux was held to only two
shots on goai in the Islanders' 5-2
upset, even New Yo'rk had a little
trouble believing It was real.
"Holding Mario to two shots Is
.realty Impossible, I think," Islanders defensman Reed Larson
sat d.
Then again, some of the saves
goaltender Kelly Hrudey made
against Lemieux's teammates
))ordered on the incredible, too.
''Hrudey played realty welt,"
Penguins Coach Gene Ubrlaco
said. "He stopped us In the first
period, and gave them a chance.
The Islanders played a sound,
· light defensive game. Hrudey
came up big."
Brent Sutter scored two goals
with an assist and linemate
,.-David Volek added a goal and an
assist to lead NeW York and give
GOING IN - Randy Tucker (10), who scored :U points for Ohio
AI Arbour his 600th career
Dominican Tuesday, &amp;oes In lor a layup while Rio Grande's Scott
regular-season coaching victory.
Slusser takes defensive action during the Rio Graade-ODC game
Valek broke a 2-2 tie at 4: 03 ol
at Lyne Center. Following Slusser lsJimmyKearnsoiRioGrande.
the
third period with his 15th goal
The Redmen defeated the Panthers, 82-64.
of the season, on a power play.
Sutter passed back to defenseman Jeff Norton, who shot from
the right point. Goalkeeper
Frank Pietrangelo stopped Nor·
ton's shot, but the puck rebounded t.o the left circle, from
Volek scored on the short
where
Lea Ann Mullins scored 29 hosts cut·Walsh' s margin to one
side.
points to help the Rio Grande several times, but each time foul
At 9:29, Sutter tipped Volek's
Redwomen on to a second period trouble allowed the Lady Cavalirally over visiting Walsh, but the ers to pull ahead. The Rio ladies 30-footer past Pietrangelo for an
Insurance goa:.
Lady Cavaliers prevailed Tues· tied for the first time at 9:54 and
"The Islanders played well,
jl'ay with an 80-74 win tn Mid-Ohio Bergdoll had two to hold onto the
but
we didn't play as well as we
J:onference action.
lead at 7: 52. Stallworth's bucket
can,"
Lemieux said. "We had to
t ' Mullins added five rebounds to at 7: 12 tied It at 66 and her two
~4 1i&lt;i! Redwomen effort, which saw
points less than a minute later bounce back after Sunday (a loss
~the Rio ladles take the lead
gave Walsh the lead it never to the Rangers) but'We didn't."
Sutter scored the onlygoal of
ltP.:t·62) for the first time with 8:59 relinquished .
the
first period. Valek passed
left. Lalney Stallworth's bucket
In addition to her scoring,
at 6:illi gave the game back to Mullins posted seven assists. across the slot to SuIter for a
W&amp;lsh.
.
Bergdoll supplied 14 points. two six-foot tap-in.
In the second period, Pitts·
The Redwomen went to 7-8 on rebounds and two assists and
burgh
tied the score on a
the season and 1·2 in !lie MOC.
Hastings completed the tbp scorWa Ish Is now 8-4 and· 4-0 In the Ing for Rio with 12 points and six power-play goal by Randy Cunneyworth at 11:21. Cunneyworth
conference.
rebounds.
Walsh established a 15-2 lead
deflected Paul Coffey's 50-fooll!r
Box score:
past goalie Kelty Hrudey .
by 15:55 In the first period which
RIO
GRANDE
(74)
-,
Holly
Only 33 seconds later, New
the Redwo111en began narr11wlng
Hastings,
6-0-12;
Lea
Ann
Mul·
17 seconds ' later· when Betsy
York took a 2-1lead when Randy
!Ins, 6-2-11-29; Beth Call, 1-0-2; Wood scored on a 2-on-1 rush with
Bergdoll sank a 3-potnt shot.
Mullins went on to score 18 Betsy Bergdoll, 3-2-2-14; Ann Mlkko Makela.
At 3:03 of the third period, Dan
flrst:hall points to bring Rio Barnltz, 2-3-7; Kathy Snyder,
within six four times in the 1·0·2; Jennl Couch.- 3-0-6. TO.. Quinn tied the score 2-2, snapping
TALS 27-4·16-74.
a 12-footer past Hrudey from the ·
period's closing minutes.
Walsh was up by 10 (49-39) wilh
WALSH (80) Rlchelle slot on a power play.
Hatcher, 3-0·6; Lalney Stal56 seconds remaining when a
Tom Barrasso started In goal
lworth, 4-2-1-15; Holly Chapin, for the Penguins, but pulled a
Holly Hastings basket(: 34) and a
2-2-6-16; Missy Ulle, 5-4·14; Ann groin muscle and was replaced
set of Mullins free throws (: 3)
left the Redwomen trailing 49-43 Aipeter, 5-1-11; Naomi Thomas, by Pietrangelo at 5: 10 of the
2-0·4; Stacey Richards, 4-2-0-14. second period.
at halftime.
•
The second period saw the TOTALS 25-4-12-80.
Makela added an empty-net
goal In the final minute.
In other games, Calgary
whipped Detroit 7-1, Quebec
dumped New Jersey 7-4, St. Louis ·
stopped Los Angeles 5·2, and
Vancouver tripped Philadelphia
5-3.
Nordlques 7, Devils 4
• At Quepec, Gaetan Duchesne
sparked Quebec's five-goal thirdperiod outburst with one of his
team's three short-handed goals,
helping the Nordlques end a ·
nine-game winless streak. After
Duchesne gave the Nordlques the
lead lor good, Darin Kimble, Jeff
Jackson, Michel Goulet and
Peter Stastny scored.
Flames 7, Red Wings I
At Detroit, Joe Mullen scored
two goals and Doug Gilmour and
Colin Patterson each added a
goal and two assls ts, helping the
Flames end the Red Wings'
five-game unbeaten streak. The
Flames scored twice against the
NHL's best penalty·kllllng unit.
Can ucks 5, Flyers I
.
At. Vancouver. British Colum~ta, Dan Hodgson broke a tie at
8: 52 of the third period with a .
25-foot wrist shot that beat·
goaltender Ron Hextalllow tti the ·
glove side. Craig Berube cross-·
checked Vancouver's Rich Sut' ter head first Into the corner
boards and Sutter was taken
PRESSURE POINT - Walllh cenler Rlchelle Hatcher (55)
from the Ice on a stretcher. Ilkka
shoots as a Rio Grande player lrles.to block the shot atLyne Center
Stnisalo suffered a broken wrist
Tu~sday . Watching are the Redwomen's Betsy Bergdoll, rl&amp;ht,
. after checked Into the boards.
and Walsh forward Beth Abramowskl (53). Walsh won, 80-74.

Lady Cavaliers hand
Rio ladies 80-74 loss

'

Notr.e Dame...
Continued from page 4

''

gino hit a shot with 14: 16 left in
the hall.
"It was a feeling of frustra ·
lion," Shumate said. " They were
kicking o.ur butts."
In other games, Pittsburgh
defeated Boston College 73·64,
VIrginia topped Maryland 64-58
In qvertlme, Marquette upended
DePaul 72-64, West VIrginia
edged George Washington 73·71
and Utah shaded Wyoming 82-80.
At Chestnut ·Hill, Mass., Bobby
Martin scored 17 points, Jason
Mat thews had 16 and Sean Miller
added 15 to lead a balanced
Plt!llburgl) attack. Pittsburgh,
coming ott a 99-91 upset of
Oklahoma on Sunday, raised Its
record to 9-6 and 2·2 In the Big
East. The Eagles dropped to 8·6
and 1-3..
-II

•

Heat
tilt
....
·postponed
due to riot
•

BLUES SCORE - The St. Louis Blues' Peter Zezel comes oat
from behind the L.A. Kings' net to score allrsl·perlod ~against
Kings' goalie Mark Fitzpatrick In Tuesday nllbt's game In Sl.
Louis. ( UPI)
.

Woods takes lots of
pressure off Brooks
MIAMI (UP!) - Way back In
Week1 of the NFL season, before
a touchdown shuffle became all
the rage In Cincinnati, there was
just James Brooks. The Clncln·
natl running back was coming off
an Injury-plagued showing In
1987, but he was expected once
again to bolster the Bengals'
running game.
Enter the then unknown national phenomenon Ickey Woods.
It Is to Brooks' credit that as
the ponyl talled rookie brought
his dance to the Bengal sideline,
the elder running back moved
over without complaint.
Instead of pointing out that he
was the Cincinnati rushing attack In 1986 when he gained a
team-record 1,087 yards rushing
and another 686 passing, or that
he collected 19 touchdowns In
1985, Br09ks speaks appreciatively of the added dimension
Woods has brought to . the
Ben gals.
"I came from a bac!&lt;ground (at
Auburn) or Joe Cribbs and
William Andrews," Brooks said.
"I'm used to the competition. If I
do my part and theotherguydoes
his part, it makes It easier. A
year or two years ago I had to do
all the running because we didn't
have a fullback and everybody
keyed on me. Now we have lckey
In there doing his part and It has
made It easier on me.
"1 had to catch the ball and run
the ball and that put a lot of
pressure on me. Usually you
have_gu)!s who catch the ball or
run the ball a lot, but I had to do

size," Brooks said. "I don't think
there Is anybody In the league
who doesn't think I can play In
the league. I don't have the size,
but I have the ablltty and I can do
a lot of things that blgbackscan't
do."

And as memorable as Woods'
season has been, It was Brooks,
not the rookie, who was named to
the Pro Bowl team.
"I must have done something
right to get to the Pro Bowl,"
Brooks said. ''It means the teams
we played against the whole
year, they respect me.
"I haven't had the opportunity
to run the ball the way I would
!Ike to, but when something Is
going good, you stick with it."
Together, Woods and Brooks
combined to create the most
potent rushing at tack in the NFL ·
with an average of 169.4 yards
per game. Woods had 15 rushing
touchdowns which gave him a
chance to create a national craze
copying the Ickey Shuffle.
Brooks had 14 touchdowns, six
on the ground and eight in the air.
He ends his jaunts In the end zone
by quietly handing the ball to the
referee.

''

Well, you have to say this, the
Miami Heat sure have a way of
making news.
The Heat, who . opened their
first NBA season by losing a
league record 17 games to start a
campaign, made news Tuesday
night lor a game they did not
play.
.
The Heat's game at Miami ·
Arena was called off because of a
second day of rioting In a nearby
ghetto.
Although players and about500
fans already had made their way
inside the arena, Heat managing
partner Lewis Schaffel, alter
speaking with Pollee Chief Perry
Anderson and City Manager
Cesar Odlo, asked the NBA to call
the game, which was scheduled
for 7:30p.m. EST.
·"The safety of the fans is
everything," lichaftef said. "We
liStened to their (city officials)
advice. When the pollee chief
says the safety of the fans and
players Is In danger, we can't
play the game."
No makeup date was an·
nounced. The Heat's next home
game .Is scheduled for Thursday
night against Chicago.
·
The game was to be played In
the new, $50 million Miami
Arena, which Is on the ..fldge of
Overtown. Racial . violence
erupted In the . neighborhood
Monday night· when a Miami
pollee officer shot and kUied a
black man on a motorcycle. A
passenger on the motorcycle
. died Tuesday of Injuries suffered
when the motorcycle crashed.
· About an hour before the game.
was to start, pollee barricaded
all access roads to the arena and
refused to let anyone ln.
Heat official Joe · Crawford,
arriving with other NBA officials
for the game, rode through the
main area where scattered vlo ..
lence continued during the day. :

Elsewhere, Chicago downed
Indiana 103-96, New Jersey, beat
San Antonio 117-112, Atlanta
dumped Milwaukee 111-98, Seattie routed the Los Angeles
Clippers. 130-107, Utah nipped
Portland 111·110 and Sacramento
toppled Houston 123-109.

Family Practice
. ·v

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
POMEROY - P9meroy B!&gt;y Legion Post 602 will meet In
Scout Troop 249 will meet at the regular session Thursday at 7:30
Pomeroy Amerlan Legion at 7 . p.m.
BURLINGHAM - · Word of p.m. on Wednesday. Annual
Life Church, Burlingham, is In election of officers. All members
revival through Sunday at 7 p.m. · urged to attend.
POMEROY - A newly formed
each evening. Evangelist will be
support group for family
Rev. James Hobbs, Palestine,
members or caregivers of vic·
THURSDAY
Ill. ·special singing will be
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- tlms of Alzheimer's Disease or
featured nightly.
port Child Conservation League related disorders, such as stroke,
will meet Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Huntington's or Parkinson's Dis·
· MIDDLEPORT - Nole Her· Mason Bowling Lanes . All eases, will meet Thursday, 1:30
to 3:30 p.m., at ttie Pomeroy
rman will speak Wednesday, 7:30 members urged to at tend.
Senior Citizen's Center. No
p.m., at the Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church In Middleport.
· RACINE - Racine American charge to attend. For more

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Homemakers Club will meet
Fire
Department Auxiliary will
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
municipal building In Syracuse.
Cindy Oliveri or the Meigs
County Extension Service will
MIDDLEPORT - Nole Her·
give a program ·on the use of and
rmann will preach Wednesday at
recipes for the crock pot and the
the 7:30 p.m. service at the Ash
pressure cooker. The public Is • Street Freewill Baptist Church In
Invited to attend.
Middleport. Guest singers at the

.

SATUBDAY
RACINE - Round and square
dancing will be featured Satur·
day from 8 to 12 midnight at the:;
Racine American Legion. Muslowill be by the True Country
Ramblers. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT -The Fellol"shlp Singers will be featured at :
Saturday, 7:30p.m. services, at
the Ash Street Freewill BaptiSt
Church.

'
••
With 'Low Prices And More
•

•

/

ADVERTISED !TEll POLICY
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale in each Kroger Store, e)(cept as
spacificaly noted in this ad. If we do run out of an ldvenised item, we will offer you your choice of a
compt~rable item, when availa~e. reflecting the same savings or a rainchack which will entitle yOu to
purchaH the advertised item at the advertised pr{ca Within 30 days. Onty one vendor coupon will be

accepted per Item purchased.
'

.

COPYRIGHT 1989 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOO SUNOAY, JAN. 15, THROUGH
SATURDAY, JAN. 21. 1989, IN""'""'",.,,..,••.,,,.,,_
WE.. RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO OEALEAS.

'
ROYAL CROWN 14-17-LB. AVG.

Whole Sem~Boneless
Smoked Ham
Pound

SLICED
FREE

·

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

·

Boneless
Chicken Breast

'
·

•
•

. .,
•

Pound
•

•
•
•

•

,.

Information, call 992-2161.

•

~ceHotifs:

Brooks started out this season
again as the Bengals' primary
running back, but with the
emergence of Woods, he has
become more of a threat In the
passing attack.
He !In !shed second on the team
in rushing (behind Woods) with
931 yards and was fourth in
receiving with 29 catches for 287
yards.
At 5-foot-10 and 182 pounds,
Brooks was considered by some
to be too small to play In the NFL.
He started his career In 1981 with
the San Diego Chargers, where
he led the NFL In total yardage
his first two seasons.
"Desire Is the thing, not your

MoP:day through Friday

8:30
-. 5:0Q
. ·- am.
·'·
.. .., ,,.p.m.
''

•:
•'

_

Suite 12
PVH Medical Office Building
(304) 675-6015

CHILLED

Minute Maid
Orange Juice

•

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64-oz.

.
••
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•••

~

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V~ -·....., - · · w.v.. 2SSSO t:IIMI 675~

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f

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Morton
Fried Chicken

&gt;
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FB Farmers
8 ank
w.,•ve Crown Deeauae We Have
·llelped Others To Grow

J.,

For

16-oz.

40¢ OFF LABEL

TEXAS

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TUPPERS PLAINS

915-3315
667-3161

Member
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•

$

Fresh Baked Daily
Italian Bread

'

Th,. Cummunity Ow11.,J Oanlc

Ruby Red
Grapefruit

• •

39-oz.

28-oz.
IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

THE WORD AT FAIMERS BANK IS SAFETY WHEN
VALUABLES AE CONCERNED. WE HAVE SAFETY
DEPOSIT BOXES FOR AS LOW AS $1 0 A YEAR
AND SIZES STAmNG.'AT 315 AND UP. CALL US
OR STOP BY AT EITHER OF OUR 2 LOCA'IIONS
FOR DETAILS.

Maxwell House
Ground Coffee

FROZEN

''

992-2137

The Daily Sentin'ai-Page-7-

church this SatQrday, 7:30p.m. ,
will be the Fellowship Singers.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Merchants Association will
m~t Wednesday at 8 am. at
Bank One. 1989 dues are payable.

·'On the way down to the arena, ·
a rock went through our wind. shield and covered all the ofll·
clals with glass," Crawford said.
"However, this did not have a
significant effect on our decision
to cancel the game."

David R. Ayers, M.D.

both. ''

POMEROY
992-2136

[,

Calendar

By Untied Press lnternallonal

'

II

Wednesday, January 18, 1989

Surf laundry
Detergent ·

•

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

42-oz. Box

18-lb. Bag

2-Ltr.
DIET PEPSI OR PEPSI COLA
t2-PAK 12-0Z. CANS f3.&gt;19

•

..

�•

The Daily ·Sentinel

By The Bend
File those petitions
By BOB HOEFLICH
If you plan to run for one of the .

four seats on Pomeroy and
Middleport VIllage Councils
which are
'before vnt,tPro
this year,
keep In mind
that you
les s than a
month to file your petition of
· candidacy with the Meigs County
Board of Elections, Mechanic
St., Pomeroy .
.
You are to pick up your petition
of candidacy at the board office,
complete it and return It by the
deadilne of Feb. 16 at 4 p.m.
The four present council
members In Pomeroy whose
terms expire this year Include
Franklin Rizer, Betty Baronlck,
Larry Wehrung and Bill Young.
The four in Middleport are
Robert Gilmore, Dewey Horton,
Paul Gerard and Jack
Satterfield.
Also In Middleport, there Is a
seat on the Board of Pubilc
Affairs to be filled this year.
We're batting 1.000 with our
lost and·found department.
The other day, I men tloned
that a sUvertone broach was
found near the Pomeroy VIllage
Hall. The owner stopped by and
picked It up after making property Identification.
We now have a pair of
brown ish, horned rimmed
glasses and case which were
found on the parking lot in
Pomeroy by Edith Cogar of
Syracuse. She left them at The
Daily Sentinel Office where they
can be picked up. We'll probably
give you a,n eye test In making
sure you are owner- now where
do we get one of those tes tlng
charts?

Caflf. They are back in Ohio now
however, and Fred who Is 94 Is
totally blind and Mrs. Russell bas
had some health setbacks .
Both James and Steve are
active In the Middleport Masonic
Lodge and Fred is a !orriler past
master of that lodge and Is the
oldest living past master.
At any rate, the visit was
pleasant and you are encouraged
to send cards or even st0 p by for a
visit if you ' re in that
neighborhood.
And - I do w;mt to mention
that former Middleport resident,
Mrs. Dorothy Harley, is also
living at the .Masonic· Home In
Springfield. She is completely
bedfast these days but did
recogtiize Clatworthy during his
visit.
So cards can be sent to either
the Russells or Mrs. Harley- or
to both - and the address is Ohio
Masonic Home, P.O. Box 120,
Springfield, Ohio 45501.
Columbus is launching a big
honesty Is the best policy program - with cost of the campaign to run thousands and
thousands of dolla~s . Shucks ·and we've known .about honesty
all along, haven't we? Do keep
smiling.

.: ·BIG BEND

. Pomerov- .Middleport. Ohio .

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 9

Your Independently Owned
low·Priced.Supermarket

Wednesday. January 18. 1989
Page 8

Area garden

·Beat of the bend

: Wednesday. January 18. 1989

____________

clu~ ~eets

Plans for the observance of the
50th anniversary of the Chester
Garden Club were made during a
meeting of members recently
held at the home of Dorothy
Karr.
The observance will take place
in March and Betty Lou Dean
asked that all members collect
whatever memorabilia they
have for display at the time. Jo
Hill and Mae Mora will work
together to prepare memory
books for the anniversary
observance.
The sprlng_meetlng of Region
11, Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, was announced for AprU 8
at Nelsonville with details to be
given later.
For the February meeting a
workshop ·on decorating heart
shaped Items was planned.
A report was given on sunshine
therapy for November and December and the club ·receivt?d a
thank you note from Clarice
Krautter for flowers set at the
death of her husband, Karl
Krau Iter. Dev allons by Ruth
Ervin Included a reading,
'·someday When the Kids are
Grown" and excerpts from Charles Swindol's book, "Come Before Winter and Share My
Hopes. "
The club voted to place a hook
in the Pomeroy library In remembrance of Rose Ginther, a

longtime member of the club.
Gemstones was the theme or
the meeting and members responded to roll call by naming
their favorite. ·
Mrs. Krautter of K '&amp; C
Jewelers and a member or t'be
club bad a program on crystal
power. She displayed numerous
stones a.nd jewelry made of
crystal and talked about each
one. Crystals, she said, are
formed by the earth's crust, and
can be described as an expression of man's light and design.
She said that stones are created
and change as the earth's
temperature, light exposure a!ld
movement change.
She talked about quartz which
she said can change moods as
you hold it in your hand, onxy
which channels healing to the
body, and diamonds which holds
power particularly when worn on
the third finger of the left hand
and causes a flush of blood
throughout the body.
Emeralds, according to Mrs.
Krautter, one of the most expensive stones, Is tied to emotions
and also to healing. She noted
that the garnet works on the
spinal column giving a source of
energy, jade has to do with
balance, and the tiger eye is a
sptrltual'stone. As (or opals, she
said they open to the light
according . to · how the wearer

feels .
_
The Meigs .County Christmas
flower show was discussed and it
was noted that Mrs. Dean had
made four arrangements, Dorothy Karr, one, and Jo Hill, one

Ooo•

Laok,
-..
.-••t•ltll

arrangement and a wreath.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Karr and Twlla Buckley
with Brandon Buckley assisting.
Kathryn , Mora won the door
prize.

Preceptor Beta Beta meets
group noted an lllvitatlon tram
another chapter, XI Gamma Mu,
to a card party. A game was
played and refreshments were
served by Mrs. CUster and Maida
Mora to Ann Rupe, Joan Corder,
Reva Vaughan, Ruby Baer,
Betty Ohlinger, Velma Rue, Jane
Walton, and Vera Crow.

.Plans lor the Jan. 26 meeting
where the Rev. Lee Miller will be
the speaker were ·announced by
Norma Custer, president, at the
recent meeting of Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi.
Meeting af the Grace Episcopal Parish House, Pomeroy, the

[

IJ.tt.

PIZZA
DEliVERS
fRff.

Pomeror. OH.

~rea

992-2124

MAXWELL
HOUSE

59

Coffee
LB.

LB.
39

$689

OFFER GOOD THRU
FEB. 19.1989

ICY

HOURS:

POMEROY

11 AM·l AM Sun.-Thurs.
11 A11·2 AM Fri.-Set.

STORE ONLY

oz.

8

CAN

NO COUPON NECESSARY

II

ELEC. PERK

Chuck Rocist

PIZZA

Limittlll D•liw•r

West Main St. ·

ADC • RtG.

Pork Roast

BONELESS

LARGE
CHEESE

DOMINO'S

tl.

TENDERBEST WHOLE
BOSTON STYLE

Red .
$1 59 Grapes
EMPEROR

.florida
Oranges

s Ll. aAG

U.S. NO. 1

Idaho
Potatoes

$199
' 10 LB. lAG

•REG. •LEMON
FRESH CHICKEN

PALMOLIVE

Leg Quarters
STANLEY

Everett Bachner of Middleport
has this photography equipment
which is Greekish to him.
The equipment belonged to Eli
Ellis who was extremely well
traveled using the equipment in
several foreign countries lnclud·
ing Russia. One piece Is a
twin-lens RoUe!Dex camer11
which is in good condition but the
shutter apparently isn't f!lnctioning. The other piece Is a movie
camera equipped for sound- it's
a Fairchild.
Is there any expert or camera
collector around who would like
to see the equipment and perhaps, test it for functioning or
perhaps, look at the shutter on
the Rollelfiex. It you're Interested contact Everett at his home
in Middleport - he can. use the
helping hand.

'---'1 1

'----'J'Dish Liquid

1" X 25'

Powerloc~ 11

Tape Rule with
Cflrome Case

EffiCient, spun glass fitters for use ·
in fumaces and central heatlalr

units. Six sizes.
10"x20"xt"

'16" X 20" X 1"
20"x20"x1"

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16" X 25" X 1"
20"x25"xt"

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RINSO
DETERGENT

. •.

BACON

31 Oz. Box

12 Oz. Plcg.
case

of 12

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7-114" CsrbideTipped Circular Saw Blade

Genuine 20-tooth tungsten carbide-tipped blades
smoothly
cut, ripptywooq,
and mHe$.~
in
solid woods,
partic:te board and
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99

~~·

I mentioned earlier that Edith
Spencer, the Salvation Army
bellrlnger, Is confined to Camden-Clark Hospital irt Parkersburg for treatment. Her room
number is 316-B for those who
wish to send cards.
Former resident, Olive Weber,
is doing pretty well these days.
She keeps up with you through
The Dally Sentinel. Olive receives mall these days at P. 0.
Box 226, Route 1, Fleming; Ohio,
457:l9.

Quiet SWitch

Single pole A. C.
switch. Grounded
frame. Brown, Ivory.
t140-14S1SP, 141-14S11S

5W
DURACEL~

Alkaline Batteries

Gee, I was glad to get some
word on Dr. Stephen Coats,
formerly of Middleport.
. I lose track of our young people
atte~ they get out Into ali parts of
the world.
' Dr. Coats is a member of the
medical staff at the · Ozarks
Medical Center In West Plains,
Mo., and recently was named
secretary of the medical staff.
He is the son of Mrs. Maxine
Gas kill, Middleport, and is a
graduate of Middleport High
School. Dr. Coats received his
pre-medical school education at
Miami University of Ohio and
graduated from medical school
at Kirksville &lt;:allege of Osteopathy andSurgeryln1968. He's a
general surgeon the~ days.

Last up to six times longer than regular carton

banertes. 2-pacl&lt; ·o·, ·c·. "AA" or t -pack 9-voH.

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$179
per pad&lt;

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TENDERIEST
ASSORTED
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Pre-slh for easy installallon. Four 3-ff. tubes per
pacl&lt;age. Flame retardant. tP10X, P11X, P12X

Pork _Chops

sav.rSwL

2" x ~Yd. Duct Tape

$

Proleulonal qualll)l. Silver laminated cloth with
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Seals all air ducts.
Many other uses.
ISSR-600

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399

Will• Metslmastef®
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MT. DEW, PEPSI
DIET OR REGULAR

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Jaws are loiQ8d of spaclaiii)Otybdenum steal.

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Stralghtlcombtnallon,
left or right cut
snipe available.

IM:!R, M1 R, M2R

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Disposable roller cove"' designed for usa with
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LIGHT OR

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Green Beans
16 oz.
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sav.rSwL 18"

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Spth cowhide leather gloves faaiiJre warm ~le
lining andshirred wrist.
17005LM
..

Mr. and Mrs. James Clat·
war thy and Mr. arid Mrs. Steve
Houchins or Middleport were in
Springfield recently where they
visited' with Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Russell who make their home at
the Ohio Masonic Home there.
The last time you heard from
Mr. and Mrs. Russell probably,
they were residents of Exter,

$:A99

Aluminum Snow Shovel
Sturdy construction laa!Urei illeet bl.- with po1y ·o· handle,$

.._, an

5

tX18A

'~
~

Revival continues
•

'

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY

Word of Life Church, Burlingham, will be in revival
through Sunday at 7 p.m. each
evening. Evangelist will be Rev.
James Hobbs, Palestine, DJ.
Special singing will be featured
nightly.
·

405 North Se~ond Avenue, MIDDLEPORT
•W• reHNe the Right to .Umlt Quentltles oPrlcee Etfecthle thru Seturdoy, Jen. 21. 1888 •USDA Food StMnPI Gladly ~coeptad
t

.\
.$___,...__ - -

'

-·----- -

"•

•

•N~1 Reaponalble for Typographical Errora

�- - ----------

------

..

:a!

•

•

P011l81py-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-:-The Daily Sentinel

SAN
'FRANCISCO
49ERS

National Football _
. Conference Champions

VIDEO

TOUCH

•2 LOCAnONS• ,

OVEI
3,000 MOVIES
TO CHOOSE FROM
HOURS:

"10UR OOOD
IIEIIHBOR"
MEMIEI F.D.LC.
Second St., • - . W. Ya.
773-5514
5th A"• New lln111, W. Ya. ·

112-2136

...._AYe., Pt.......1, w. Ya.

675-1121

Fumlshlnp

-liE

FUINITUIE

'SSOOO!!

Monday thru Saturday
10 A.M.-9 P.M.
Sunday
11 A.M.-I P.M.

992-3462

On J•uary 22, Super Bowl XIII wll
be . played in Miami, Florida. Tht
outcome of the game wll be deter·
mined on the field, llut YOU may
have something at stake, tool

01
POMEIOY, OHIO

Just fill out tht entry lllanlc, dip It
out, and takt it to any of the below
mtrch•ts for a chaiiCt to win $501
AI you have to do Is predict tho
correct final score of Super Bowl
and tht $50 is all youn.
ENIEI AS MANY t•Es AS YOU
WANT! .

xx•

PAT HILL
FORD

Do not predict the winning team,
iust the final score.
FOI EXAMPLE, 7 to 3
Tho Stntlntl will take all correct
tntrlts and s•t tht winner lly
random drawing. Pri11 awardtd lly
Tho Dally Stntlntl.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

461 So. 3nl St.
lllcllleport, Ohio

992-2196

"Jo.SJ07

ENTER and WIN!

101 W..... St.

· 101 Mulberry Awt.
Po...,oy

992-2121
Dignity and Serviee .
Always

Of!C'r~

Courueli"'f and A

Pre.Neffi

'""'B"""'""'

lEN H. EWING
11aa01

•AUTO •LIFE
•HOME •FIRE
•MOBILE HOME
•BUSINESS

Clip out the entry form 'below and
drop off at any of the participating
businesses.

•GASOLINE
•BEER AND
WINE CARRYOUT
•SNACKS

FOOD SHOP

••
CAR WASH
992-5552
820 EASliWN
POIIEIOY, OliO

LAMIEIT
INSUUICE AGENCY
992-6641
111 lut Sueild

PeiiiiNf, ....

•

! su:::t~_.~::"

SWEEPSTAlES

Ja•uary 21, 1919.
Elllploy... of this
1 M . . .per and the
I

I predict the final
score wll bo:

l
I

l1
1.

1I
1

participating

TO

are Mt Your
tlltlWe. Enter a• 111111e _ _ __:__ __
efttn as yo• like.
~*"•------------No purchall
nteenary,
No. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

IMniMIHS

P~.

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DIIC EMUOIDEIY
FLOSS

5/99C

'

JOHISOIS
VAIIm STOlE

992·3481
137 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

•
I

M-oi!IONC _ _ _

•

'

DOWNING
CHILDS
MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE
111' East Second St.

POMEROY
992·2342
See Us For All
Your Insurance
Needs

Clark's

-*.

Jewelry Store
Your l'rolenipool Full
Servke Jew•lers

• Wttch Repair
• Jewelry Repair

• Engravin11

113 Court St.
Pomeroy

FIGUERES, Spain (UPl) Surrealist painter Salva,dor Dall
was hospitalized Wednesday for
the third time In less than two
months and listed In stable
!:&lt;&gt;ndltlon with heart problems,
his doctors said.
: Dall. 84, was rushed by ambu·
lance from his tower residence at
the Dali Museum to the Flgueres
tlospltal in Spain's northeastern
region alter suffering serious
cardio-respiratory problems
(luring the night, a hospital
spokeswoman said.
: A six-doctor medical team
attending Dall later said In a
progress report that the painter
was under intensive care and In
stable condition. He was being
analyzed for an lq::egular
,,
heartbeat.
·
. The report made no mention of
4 previous statement·by Dr. Joan
Garcia San Miguel, who heads
the medical team, that Dall
appeared to be suffering a blood
olotln one of his lungs.
. It was the third time In less
than two months that Dall was
rushed to a hospital for emergency treatment.
Doctors feared lor Dali's life In
late November when he was
S:trlcken with a bou• of pneumo-

212 East Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785 .

•Low Prescription Price&amp;
•Photo' Flnlahlng •FnMI. De·
livery •Rapl-ment Con·
tact Lens Service •Monthly
Seles SpiiCiela •Shop 1t
Home Catalog Service
•W1Ikers. Wheelchair• and
Beaide Commode• •Carda
and Gift•

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992·6669

1-tl

PONTIAC
BUICK ~
GMC .
TRUCK

For All Your
TrQMportotian Needs Set
Us Today~"
"'We've G,ol ThfKeys To
A Beller Deal"

342 2nd Ave.

$'!UTJI·NELSON
MOTORS

PHARMACY
"3 Registered
Pharmacists
To Serve You"

·92-2174
soo ~an !lAIII

POIIIIOT, . .0

•

55 Park St.
Middleport,
Ohio

Open Till 9:00
Every Night
Sunday 11 to 8

992-6611

992-6491

WITH US"

SEE US FOR
SHOES FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY!

GOING OUT OF

FARMERS
BANK

I SAVIIGS CO.
"POMEROY. OHIO

182-2131
112·2137
TUPPERS PLAINS. OHIO
985·33811
1117-3181

------

786 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Ohio

'"I •

•

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BUSINESS SAU
CONTINUESII

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50°/o OFF
STOIEWIDI
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CIILDia'S SHOES

MARGUERITE
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'.
992-3639

1021ASl . . .
POMDOY, OliO

nla that led to severe breathing
and heart problems.
After nearly three weeks at a
hospital in Barcelona, the capital
of the northeastern region of
Catalonia. Dall returned Dec. 14
to the Gala Tower. a wing of the
Dall Museum. A week later, he
was hospitalized lnFigueres with
Internal hemorrhaging but was
released on Christmas.
Known as much for his ecc;ent·
ric lifestyle as for his surrealist
paintings, Dall Is a popular
figure In Spain. King Juan Carlos
was among the well-wishers who
visited him at his bedside In
Barcelona.
Dallls the last survivor of a trio
of three great modern Spaanlsh
painters, Including Pablo PIcasso, who died In 1973, and Joan
Mlro, who died In 1983.
Dall's .health began to decline
following the death of his
Russian-born wife, Gala, In June
1982.
Confined to a wheelchair and
fed through · tubes In his nose,
Dall has rarely ventured outside
since moving back to his native
Flgueres In October 1984. Four
round-the-clock nurses attend to
him there and security guards
protect his privacy.

Disturbances strike
third day in Prague

271 HITH SECOND
IIPDDUPOIT, OliO

992-2054

Gallipolis
446-2691

"The chain link fence around
the enclosure Is topped by a
string of electric·shock wire that
gives them a little jolt If they
touch It," she said. '"Usually
that's enough to keep them
Inside, but we think that with' the
older males hot on his heels, he
decided to go ahead and make the
break."
E.T. was sighted several times
during his 10-day adventure,
Including once by two elderly
J(shermen who lured him from a
treE! with bubblegum and bread
on Sunday.
U.S. Park Pollee were summoned, but the monkey darted
away, eluding his captors, when
. he apparently heard chatter
from pollee radios, said park
pollee officer Robert Zarger.
'"Like a (jog they can get a little
contrary and won't come when
you call them." she said, "'He
. probably wasn't ready to go
back."
,
Richardson said E.T. had
wandered about 4 mUes from the
Poolesville laboratory when he
was caught.
Another of NIH's research
monkeys !led the wooded enclosure last year but was caught
soon after, Richardson said.

Dali hospitalized
~ain;· said 'stable'

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OF POMROY

Complete
Home

American Football
Conferehce Champions

January 22, 1989·

ITURE
See us For
Your

POTOMAC,Md. (UPI) -E.T.,
an adolescent laboratory mon-.
key who scaled an 8-footlence to
escape older monkeys who were
·'hot on his heels," was lured into
a cage filled with fruit after a
10-day monkey hunt through
woods near the National Institutes of Heaith ,Anlmal Center.
"E.T. is home," said Nrn
spokeswoman Michaela RIchardson. "We've known generally where he's been all the lime,
but we hadn't been able to get
close enough to catch him until
today."
Richardson said the6·year·old.
15- to 20·pound Rhesus monkey
escaped 10 days ago from the
5-aere enclosure he shares with
about25 other monkeys that are
used lor obServation research at
NnJ's Poolesville. Md., animal
center.
On Tuesday morning, NIH
authorities enticed him from the
woods between the Violets and
Pennyfleld locks along the hls(orlc C&amp;O Canal and trapped him
In a cage fl}led 11111'1 fr,utt scraps,
Richardson safd.
·
~- She said that, by nature, young
malemonkeyssuchasE.T.leave
their colony or are driven out by
older males.

MIAMI, FLORIDA

9~2-5209

.

Nature forces ·monkey
out; ~an cages him

SUNDAY

•

PEOPLESr..
BANK Iii

Wednesday, January 18, 1989

CINCINNATI
BEN GALS

'.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 18. 1989

.'

PRAGUE, CzechoslovakIa surprising thousands of workers
(UPI) - Hundreds o! riot police going home.
Fourteen activists who attemp· l:!acked by water cannon's cleared
ted
to . lay flowers Monday
crowds from Prague's Wenceslas Square for a third day, but remained In detention Tuesday
witnesses said it . was unclear at Prague's Ruzyne prison. Authorities announced 91 were
what prompted the action,
: One witness reported "bus- detained Sunday bu 1 gave no
.l oads" of people were det~lned figure for Monday.
"A man released today claims
Tuesday In the latest pollee raid
Is a whole floor occupied by
there
o,n the downtown square, where
freshly
detained people; which
protesters tried Sunday and
of 91 ridiculous,"
makes
figure
Monday to mark the 20th annlsaid
Independent
journalist Jan
v~rsary of the suicide of a
Urban.
"We
cannot
even estidissident student. Both of the
e11rller demonstrations were mate anything."
Urban said the wives of two of
broken up by pollee. ~ ·
: The witnesses said II was not the detained activisTS, Alexandr
clear what precipitated the mas- Vondra and David Ne'mec, were
.•slve deployment of pollee Tues- told by the prosecuting attorney
day. Earlier In the ,day.;.heavy that he would ask the court to
patrols of pollee had approached keep them longer- an Indication
people In the square aM asked they may be charged with
criminal acts.
them to leave.
Czechoslovak law provides
"There was lots of water
that
citizens can be detained lor
cannon and pollee used the same
up
to
two 48-hout periods without
brutal force as yesterday (l\1on-.
day). although there were not so charges-being brought.
The hostile ca.mpalgn In the
many on the squar·e ," said one
witness, who added no tear gas communist-dominated Czechoswas used Tuesday. "It was quite lovak press took a harsher turn
when the evening newspaper
surprising."
Vecerny
Praha, In an article
"My girlfriend was just then:
"They
are losing their
titled
and asked some people what
·
minds,"
published
the names,
happened and they said nobody
addresses
and
birth
dates
of the
started II - just pollee." said an
activist who was not at the 14 detained Monday. The 14
Include prominent members of
square.
Charter 77, a dissident organizaOn Sunday, several thousand tion that monitors human rights
people led 'by a small group of In Czechoslovakia.
The publication of names and
)Juman rights activists "tried to
mark the sulclde "20 years ago of addresses was viewed as an
student Jan Palach, who set ominous development by actihimself on fire In, the square to vists who believe It might make
shock the nation out of Its apathy them open to anonymous atf&lt;!I!Owing the.1968 Warsaw Pact tacks. Under Czechoslovak law,
Invasion to crush the "Prague the name of a citizen accused of a
Spring" refonn movement of crime cannot be used In the
Czech leader .Vexander Dubcek. media until he Is convicted -and
:Pollee broke up the Sunday the 14 activists have not yet been
ptotest before It began. When 14 accused of crimes.
"We know the names and
activists returned Monday to try
to lay flowers at the spot, pollee addresses of other organizers
cbarged Into the square again at who are stllltreebutwe have the
rush hour and threW tear gas mea1111' to solve this ·problem,"
down the subway entrances . the newspaper said.

•

-~~
-~
-. "'..:

The Daily Santinei-Page-11
•

--People in the

news---~--_,

By WILLIAM C. TROTf
United Press International
CASTING COUCH CORNUCOPIA: How 's this for an
ecclecllc movie cast?: Bo Derek, Anthony Quinn and Donald
Trump.
Derek will be the star of "Ghosts Can 't Doll," a film about a
woman who. Is haunted by the ghost of her husband, who will be
played by Quinn.
·
Billionaire Trump Is typecast in-a small part as a mysterious·
wheeler-dealer known as . Mr. Spectacular ant) some scenes
were recently sbotln his New York office,
. Derek's husband, John Derek, Is directing In locations like
New . York, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka and the
Maldives .
CAB STOPPED: Doctors decided to keep band leader Cab
Calloway In the hospital for at least one more day.
.
Calloway, 81, has been In a White Plains, N.Y., hospital since
undergoing surgery for an Intestinal blockage on Dec. 28 and he
had been looking forward to going home Tuesday.
"I just spoke to him and he's doing very well," a hospital
spokeswoman said. "It's just that he's Itching to go home, He
was scheduled to go home today. It's 90 percent certain he'll
leave sometime tomorrow (Wednesday)."
Calloway's daughter Chris, 42, a singer, Is due for some
hospital time, too. She will enter.-the same hospital for gall
bladder treatment this weekend.
MEMBERS OF THE HORN F AM ILl': The jazz ensemble at
Boston's Berklee College of Music won top prize over the
weekend at the 16th annual meeting of the National Conference
of Jazz Educators In San Diego. Each band member receives
$1,000 In scholarship money and the group will perfonn twice
with saxophonist Br1111ford Marsalis.
The shows will be no big deal to Berklee's trombonist,

however. He's Brandlord's younger brother and record
producer - Delfeayo Marsalis.
ADVICE FROM RON: Ron Reagan has been bombarded with
the ques.tlon "what's It lllle to be the president's son?" dUring
his lather's eight years In the White House but he never came up
,
with a good response.
·•r finally had to admit that being related to the president of
the United States wasn't like anything," young Reagan wrote In
an article for The Washington Post. "In alllt'sblzarre splendor,
II just ·was."' The second most-asked question - ''what have
you learned?"- was easier.
·
.
"You learn to convince White House switchboard operators
that you do too have a right to speak to' the Prez,'" Reagan wrote.
·'You can practice creative REM sleep during official even Is,"
Reagan had a warning lor the Incoming Bush family. '
especially the younger members. ''There will be a lot of people
flocking around whose sole purpose In life seems to be telling
you how to act, what to think, even what to wear," he says.
'"Ignore them . If they hap any credibility to begin with, they'd
be doing something more worthwhile."
GLIMPSES: Princess Y asmln Aga Khan, 39, will marry l"ew
York real estaTe mogul Christopher Jeffries, 38, on Feb. 4 at the
Plaza Hotel. Khan Is the daughter of the late Rita Hayworllt and
Prince Aly Khan ... Paul Newman's latest charitable donation
amounts to $5 million. The money comes from the sale of his
food products. One million will go Newman's Hole In theW all
Gang Camp for kids with life·threatening diseases and the rest
goes to Aging· In America, Research to Prevent Blindness,
Students Against Driving Drunk, Hospice of South Atlanta, a
rural health clinic In Washington and Valley Youth House In
Easton, Pa., which provides shelter and programs for homeless
children an'd lamllles.

Classes resume following flight disaster
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI) Counselors prepared for an outpouring of grief as classes
resumed Tuesday at Syracuse
University for the first lime since
35 students In the school's overseas programs were killed In the
explosion of Pan American
Flight 103 last month.
Gov. Mario Cuomo and Sens.
Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y., and
Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y ., were
among the speakers scheduled
lor a huge memorial service
planned for Wednesday at the
Carrier Dome, butconselors said
the mourning will last well
beyond this week's ceremonies.
"We anticipate lor the whole
next year that It Is going to be
dltrlcult for the university," said
Lynne Famllant, a conselor with
the university's Psychiatric
Counseling Services.
"For some people the transition back to the university will be
a mOsl dltrlcult one, as they
return and they remember the
studenTS In the setting they knew
'them In," said Famllant, who
was staffing a special hot line the
agency openea Tuesday tor people grieving for the victims of the

disaster. '"For others, maybe the
reality won't set In for a little
while."
Friends and' relatives of disaster victims might feel that It Is
appropriate to grieve· now, but
they may have difficulties If they
have not come to terms with the
loss In later weeks or months, she
said.
"I think that there.wlll be a lot
of different lime frames lor
people," Famllant said.
The students, Including 25
enrolled at Syracuse University
and 10 taking classes through the
school's Department of International Programs Abroad, were
among 270 people kUied In the
bombing, which caused Pan
American World Airways Flight
103 to crash onto Lockerble,
Scotland, on Dec. 21,
That day. Syracuse University
.was In the middle of Its final
exam week, and many of the
school's 22,000 lull-and part-lime
students already had left for the
Christmas holidays when the
news spread across campus.
Several thousand people are
expected to at tend the memorial

Dollar opens higher
LONDON (UPI) -The dollar
opened mostly higher Wednesday In trading on ml).j or foreign
currency markets.. Gold was
' higher.
In ea~ller trading In Tokyo, the
dollar closed at 127.90 Japanese
yen, up from 127.70 yen on
Tuesday.
·
In Europe, the dollar began the
day In Frankfurt at 1.8565 West
German markS, up from 1.8515
marks on Tuesday.
The dollar opened In Zurich at
1.5775 Swiss francs, up from
1.5765 francs on Tuesday. In
Paris, the dollar opened at 6.3265
French francs, up from 6.2980
francs the day before.

··

·

· .

The dollar started the day In
Brussels at 39.10 Belgian francs.
up from 38,89 francs on Tuesday
and opened In Italy at 1,360,25
Italian lire. up from 1,354,35 lire
Tuesday.
In London, the British pound
began the day at $1.7650 compa~ed with $1.7665 on Tue~day .
Tuesday, the dollar bought
$1.1978 Canadian, down slightly
from $1 .1980 Monday.
On the bullion markets, gold
opened 50 cenTS an ounce higher
In Zurich at $403 and $1 higher In
London at $403.25.
Silver opened unchanged In
Zurich at $5.95 an ounce and
opened 5 'h cents higher In
London at $5.945 an ounce.

~~~

service Wednesday, Including
about 70 out-of-town friends and
relatives of the victims. unlverslty spokesman Darryl Geddes ·
said.
"Some of the parents are
already arriving. so It's startlng," Geddes said Tuesday.
"There are some private gettogethers that the parents will
have this evening, and still more
will arrive tomorrow morning."
On Thursday, various counsellng services across the campus
plan to begin special group
programs to give students, unlverslty employees and family
members an opportunity to talk
about the · tragedy, Famllant
said.
"So far we have only had a

couple of calls," said Famllant. ;
"But.we expect as everyone gets ·
back and gets organized. that :
the~ will feel the Deed (to talk)."
• Familant said that Tuesday
was the first day that the hot line .
number was publiShed and that ·
hot line number Is ringing. "We :
have gotten calls from people :
who are In contact with grieving :
family members or grieving ·
students," she said.
:
"One person called because ;
she was expecting to have •
contact with one of the families, ~
and. she didn't know what to say ·
or what not to say," Famllant .
said. "For many people, It's not :
that they are grieving, but they :
want \O help and they don't know ·
how."

HURRY IN ·
FOR BIGGER
SAVINGS!
Come in Between 10 A.M. &amp; 12 Noon .
Receive 50°/o Off
.
Come in Between -12 Noon &amp; 2:00
Receive 40°/o Off
Come in Between 2:00 &amp; 5:00
Rec~ive 30°/o Off
Savings Good Thursday, 1·19: Friday, 1-20:
and .Saturday, 1·21.
'

Corner Collections

ON THE 'T' IN MIDDLEPORT
Sorry, No layaways

VISA, Mostw(ard
Diuaw•

MONEY SAVING COUPONS

Siort Hrs.: 10:00 o.IW.-5:00 p.m.
.....Sat

~~~

.... · " ·

,

---··•

�--LocaLl~u~!p~~1iefs ... ---. · Mild
EMS receives 7 Tuesday calls
.

•

I

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls on Tuesday; Mlddhiport at 1: 26 a .m . to Cole St. lor John
Blake to V_e terans Mt&gt;morlal Hospital; Middleport at 2:32a.m.
to Hartinger Par~ay for Don Klng to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 7: 21 a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for David
Ward to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 10:11 a .m.
transported Ella Qulllen to Veterans Memorlal Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 11:46 a.m. to Route 681 for Louise Posey to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:37p.m. to Route 143
for Florence Musser to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 10:26 p.m. to South Third for Ray Foster to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Middlep~rt nW:yor fines four

.

~~~ -

Fined were Josephine Donohue, Middleport, $10 aiJd costs,
spinning tires; Dana Bentz, Middleport, $25 and costs,
operating without property regard for safety; VIncent Stone.
Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly manner, and Terry Stone,
Middleport, $50 ·a nd costs, criminal trespassing.

.

.

1989

&gt;

By United Press International
Snow and other evidence of
winter continued to stay away
from most of the country Wednesday, with most of the white
stuff confining Itself to the
nortllern states, the National
Weather Service said.
Low pressure In Minnesota
was producing snow from eastern North Dakota to upper
Michigan, with the ht&gt;avlest
snowfall totals. reported In
Wisconsin.
Up to 8 inches of snow blan·
keted Douglas County In Wlscon·
'

sin late Tuesday , with up to 6
lncht&gt;s or new snow on the ground
In Bayfield County. .
Up to 2 Inches of new snow was
on the ground early Wednesday
In Escanaba and Marquette,
Mich .• forecasters said.
Cloudy skies prevailed from
eastern North Dakota through
the Great Lakes region to New
England. with scattered snow
showers over New England.
A storm system moving Into·
the Paclllc Northwest brought
cloudy skies to the area and
nortllern Rockies, with ralnshow-

Common Pleas Court

ers scattered along some parts.
West Palm Beach, Fla.
Clouds also blottt&gt;d out the sky
Strong and gusty winds con·
over Louisiana, and tht&gt; clouds tlnued along the eastern slopes of
wert&gt; producing llgbt rain and the Rockies In Montana, and a
drizzle In Texas .
high wind warning was In effect
Meanwhile, · fair skies an~ overnight for the upper Yellowrelatively mild tl'rnperaturls stone. Valley.
prevailed across most of the the
Temperatures were In the 20s
rest ol the nation.
and 30s across much of the nation
The warming trend led to east of the rockies early Wednesrecord high temperatures for tile day, with readings In the teens
date Tuesday, including 59 de- confined to northern Minnesota.
grees · In Des Moines, Iowa
Temperatures around the na(breaking a record set In 1894);
tton at 2 a.m. EST r~nged from 3
85 degrees In Miami; 59 degrees degrees below zero at Craig,
In Omaha, Neb.; 55 degrees In Colo., to 72 degrees at Key Wt&gt;st,
Ottumwa, Ind. , and 85 degrees In Fla. ·
,
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·19-89

Dear Ann Landers: · My hus·

band and I have raised a large
family, each child very different
from the other. They range from
extremely a mbltlous to some. what unmotivated.
Our children received dllferent
levels of education. Some have
been more successful career·
wise than others, but on the whole
they have chosen pleasant
spouses, brought up respectful,
caring youngsters and have
managed to get along quite well
financially with occasional· help
from us.
I truly believe, especially In
thts day and age, that we have
been blessed. We have never had
any earthshaking problems wtth
any of our children or grandchild·
ren, or with each other.
My husband (I'll call him
"Dan") feels we have failed as
parents because "Mary" doesn't
keep an Immaculate house, or

Ralph Shain, Dave Sayre and
In a foreclosure action In Meigs
County' Common Pleas Court, Emil Plichta have been apBane One of Columbus, In care of pointed commissioners to partithe Bane One Mortgage Corpora- tion property In a quiet title
tl&lt;in, has 'been awarded action by Edna G. Parsons ·
$49,367.83, due on a promissory against Mark A. Parsons.·
note , from Larry M. Smith, et al..
Finally, a restraining order
State Automobile Mutual Insu- has been issued against the
rance Company has been defendant In an action by Tl·
grantl'd a judgment of $12,130 mothy A. Coats against Linda S.
Coats .
from Michael T. Manley.

"Johil's" car is never clean, or
"Joan" spends money on frivolous things, or "Bill's" kids have
atrocious manners and talk with
gum In their mouths.
I keep reminding him that It's
quite extraordinary to have had
40 years of marriage and no
major calamities in a family of
our size. A few hurt feelings here
and there, but no big blow-ups.
As the years lly by, I see Dan
becoming more obsessed with
''unmet expectations . " He
nurses his angry feelings and
becomes Increasingly bitter. He
doesn't realize that he Is not

Area deaths-- MUl• ffl;.,... - - - - - - - - - - , - - Continued from page 1

WiUiam Criner

William E. Criner, 67, 665
Beech St., Middleport, died Tuesday at Grant Hospital In
Columbu~.

A retired carpenter and a·
member of Carpenters' Local
1159, Mr. Criner was born at
GalllpollsFerry, W.Va., on Sept.
• '25, 1921. He was a son of the late
Edward and Nona Henry Criner.
He was a veteran of the U. S.
Army having served during
World War II. He belonged to
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans, and Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion In
Middleport. He was active with
the Meigs County Senior Citizens. Mr. Criner during ·his
career had worked for the
Imperial Electric Co .. thl' Carleton School and the Guiding
Hand School.
Surviving are his wile, Ruth E.
Criner; two daughters; Janet
Pauline Langley, Jackson, and
Susie Johnson Fralr, Pomeroy; a
son. Charles E. Bush, Springfield; three sisters, Judy Fields,
Hartford, W. Va.; Hazel Walker,
Columbus, and Leota Gardner,
GaiUpolls; a- brother, Leroy
Criner, West VIrginia; 11 grandchildren, two greatgrandchildren and several nle'ces and nl'phews.
·
·
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by two brl)th·
ers, cqarles and Lewis, and tliree
slstesrs, Vlrglnla,.,Ernes!lne and
Helen.
Services will be held at 10:30
: a.m. Friday at the Ewing Fun·
: eral Home '\Vlth the Rev. James
: Seddon officiating. Burial will be
In Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral 'home
fonn 7 to 9 this evening and from
7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

; Daisy Schuler

George W. and Julia May Ro·
maine Haley.
·
Surviving are his wife, Christina Stillwell' Haley, two sons,
Kenneth Haley, Gallipolis, and
John Haley of Corning; a daughter, Judy Mlller of Mi.ddleport; a
brother, Dwight Haley, Middle·
port, 15 grandchildren, and 19
great-grandchlldren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a brother,
Worley Haley, and a son, ·Robert
Haley.
The Rev. Mr. Haley was a
retired coal miner. He was also a
retired pastor of the Freewill
Baptist Chun:h In Rutland.
Services wlll be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Hunter Funeral
Home in Rutland with the Rev .
Robert Smith officiating. Burial
wlll be In Miles Ct&gt;metery.
Friends may call at the funeral
borne from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
today. In his memory, contrlbu,
tlons may be made to thl' Rutland
. Emergency Squad.

Aline Nix
Aline Nix, 68, died Tuesday In
Akron where she had resided the
past eight months having made
her home earlier . In South
Carolina.
Mrs. Nix was born In Braxton
County, W.Va., a daughter of the
late Floyd and Lucy White.
She Is survived QY two sons,
Luther White; Middleport, and
Wllllam Warren Harris, Middleport; a daughter, Juanita
McClung, Akron; two brotllers,
Paul B. White, Atwater, and John
F. White, Kentuck, W. Va.; a
sister, Pauline Riley of Long
Bottom; five grandchildren and
two great-randchlldren.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Parsons Funeral
Home Chapel in Ripley, W. Va.,
where friends may call from 1 to
8 p.m. on Friday .

nesday to investigate Monday's
pollee shooting ihat prompted
the rioting.
The new disturbances came as
a second black man died Tuesday
as a result oft he shooting. He was
Injured In a motorcycle accident
caused after a white pollc~
officer fatally shot a black
motorcyclist.
The Justice Department began
a civil rights Investigation Into
the Incident.
Some residents said Tuesday
looters were not responding
directly to the motorcyllst's
death and instead seized the
opportunity to steal goods. Many
black merchants stood by their

Man ...

Continued from page 1
------------~-------------------------

"I saw him holding this huge
rifle. He just stood there with his
knees slightly bent, just moving
the gun back and forth, back and
forth, firing at the students," she
said.
"He was just starlhg at the
playground. He had an Intense
look on . his lace . . He was not
smiling; he was not frowning.
The man's exp~esslon was
bland.''
Bullets hit at least 37 youngsters, killing flv~ ol the children
playing In the quiet, tree-lined
enclave of downtown Stockton,
120 miles east of San Francisco.
Authorities said several children wert&gt; In critical condition,
and nine underwept s~rgery .

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(Asol 10:311 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T ................................. 29\i
Ashland Oil ... ..................... 34'h
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Charming Shoppes . ....... :...... 16
City Holding Co ..... .'..... ........ 20 .
Federal Mogul ......... ::......... 51~
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. ... ..50'h
Heck's ....... .: .............. .. ........ %
Key Centurion ..................... 15
Lands' End ......................... 28'h
Limited Inc ................... ..... 29Y.
Multimedia Inc : .................. 76'h
Rax Restaurants ....................3
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16¥,
Shoney's lnc .............. .......... B'h
Wendy 's lntL ..... :..................6
Worthington Ind ............ .....23'h

Daisy Dell Schuler, 94, 56056
State Route 124, Portland, died
Monday at the Lancaster- Alva Will
Falr!leld Hospital, following an
Alva Will, 84, Pomeroy, died
extended Illness.
,
Tuesday
morning at Veterans
A homemaker, Mrs. Schuler
Memorial
Hospital. Arrangewas born Nov. 21, 1894, at
.
ments
will
be
announced by the
Cheshire, a daughter of the late
Ewing
Funeral
Home.
Enos and Sothrona Mulford. She
was a member of the Pomeroy
Geneva Swisher
United Methodist Church.
Surviving are a son, Paul
Mrs. Robert (Patricia) Harris
Mulford Schuler, Portland; a
sister, Garnet Folden, Titusville, of Pomeroy is a niece of Geneva
Fla.; a brother, Clinton Mulford, Marie Swisher, 88, Thurman,
Columbus; a granddaughter, who died In Ja.ckson Monday
Linda Lee Schuler, Columbus; a evening. A nephew not Included
grandson, Jacob E. Schuler, In the original obituary Is Paul
District meet Saturday
Pomeroy; a great-grandson, Thomas Washington, Jr., of
Thomas Earl Schuler, and sev· Letart, W. Va .
District 13, Daughters of Amerera! nieces and nephews.
" lca, will hold a meeting and
Besides her parents, Mrs.
practice session at 1 p.m. SaturSchuler was preceded In death by
day at the lodge hall In Chester.
her husband, Jacob L. Schuler; a
Practice Is belqg held for the
son. Anthony Schuler, and sevspring rally to be held at New
eral brothers and sisters.
Lexlqgton on March 11. District
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
olflcers
and members are asked
'Friday at the Ewing Funeral Zirkle reported Monday night to
to
be
·present
for Saturday's
Home with the Rev. Donald Pomeroy VIllage Council that his
meeting.
Meadows officiating. Burial will department, during 1988, ans· be In Gravel Hill Cemetery at wered .23 calls to structure fires,
To meet Tuesd~y
Cheshire. Fl;lends may call at 54 calls to vehicle fires, 21 brush
the funeral home from 2 to4and7 fires, seven calls for mutual aid,
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
one call to search and rescue and
to 9 p.m. Thursday.
will
meet ThurSday, 6:30p.m., In
two false alarms.
the
Masonic
Temple basement.
Of these calls, 36 were actually
Rev. I..dand Haley
within the village requiring 530
total man hours. There were 74 Plan square dance .
The Rev. Leland R. Haley, 75,
out-of-town calls requiring 727
Happy Hollow Road, near Ru·
A square dance will be held
man hours.
tland, died Tuesday at Veterans
A total of 4,790 miles were friday at the VFW Post In
)'demorlal Hospital.
traveled by the department dur· Tuppers .P lains. Music by the
· He was born Aug. 23, 1913 In lng the year, with a total of3,256 Kitchen Pickers. Donations, $2
Rutland, the son or the late
for adults and $1 for children
volunteer man hours worked.
under 12. Dances will be held at
the po,s t l'Very Friday night
through May ..
. Divorce actions have been filed Pomeroy.
A restraining order has been
·In Melp County Common Pleas
against the defendant In
Issued
Court by Iris E. Norris, Pomethe
Norris
action.
roy, against Michael Eugene
Veterans Memorial
Filing
tor
dissolutions or their
Norris, Pomeroy; Mark D. Ad·
Tuesday admissions - Clara
marriages are Vida Ann Deem,
klns, Pomeroy, against Dreama
Phllllps, Rutland; Wllllam
ReedSville, and Gregory Alan Young, Rutland; Vernon mev·
' K. Adlllns, Volga, W.Va.; Shirley
Deem, Reedsville; Wallace L. In~, Pomeroy; Ella Qulllen,
·A. Collins, Racine; against WilReuter, Pomeroy, and Judy E. Syracuse; Goldie Lawson, Ra·
liam 0. Collins, Middleport;
Reuter, Middleport; Almena R. cine; David Boling, Malta.
Alvin R. Smith, Pomeroy,
Roush, Pomeroy. and Glenn K.
Tuesday discharges - Mary
ag·alnst Dorothy .Smltli,
Roush, Columbus.
Page, Raymond Gheen.

Pomeroy releases
1988 fire report

Divoree acti(R.IS filed in Meigs court

Hospital news

.I

bulldings , hoping to deter
looters.
"(The looters ) just want to
steal. They were just waiting for
a chance," said Lorene Fleming,
the manager of a lounge in
Liberty City.
"People are using this oppor·
tunity because of the shooting
last night to steal from people
making an honest living,"
agreed black community leader
Georgia Ayers. "If I were In
charge, I'd bring In the Natlomil
Guard because the pollee are
outnumbered rlgllt now and I'd
clear the streets."
Rivero said he thought police
could better handle the situation.

Most of the victims were of
Southeast Asian descent.
Pollee said Purdy's motive
was a mystery and may nevt&gt;r be
known . About 70 percent .of the
students at Cleveland Elemen·
tary School are the children of
Vietnamese and Cambodian Immigrants, but it was not known If
that had anything to do with the
attack. Purdy was too young to
be a Vietnam veteran.
Pollee, relatives and neighbors
described Purdy as a nice young
man with a childhood drinking
problem whose fathl'r \1'3S kllled
In a t raffle accident In 1981.
He was placed on probation for
a 1983 conviction In \'{est Holly·
wood, Calif., for possessing a
dangerous weapon. He also had
arrests for suspicion of receiving
stolen property and suspicion of
possession of marijuana and
hashish for sale.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tuesday 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
545.
Ticket sales totaled $1,258,953,
with a payoff due of $331,317.
PJCK·4
1158.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$221,128.50, with a payoff due of
$128,700.

Licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to James Robert Wamsley_
Jr., 24, Racine, and Debra Lou
Rose, 25, Racine; Eugen~ Daniel
Tucker, 57, Belpre, and Sharon
Lynn Hartman, 46, Pomeroy.

t:·.:·lsNow
ERAIN
E::VIsHOWERS
. . Static , . Occluded
FRONTS: .. . Warm "Cold
Map shows mirimum lemperatures. At least 50% ol any.shaded area is IOI&amp;east
to receive precipilation indicated
UPI
WEATHER MAP - During early Thursday morning, snow Is
forecast for parts of the e"treme upper Great Lakes and parts of
the northern Atlantic Coast States wllh ralll/lhunderslonns In
most of the Gulf Coast. Rain Is possible In parts of the extreme.
NorfJiwest Pacific Coast. Snow Is possible In mosl of the Great·
Lakes. UPI

p~esses

Ten cases were processed
Tuesday night in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
. For!eltlng bonds were Debora
Nease, Columbus, $63, expired
tags, and $63, operating while
under suspension; Jeff Brown,
Middleport, $43, illegal left turn;
. Dana Haines, $yracuse, $48,
speeding; Delores Riggs, Letart,
W. va •. $47, speeding; Lola
Whittington, Pomeroy, $63, expired tags; Mary B. Smlthern,
Langsvllle $63, expired tags;
Keith French, Middleport, $48,
speeding.
Fined were Roger Bush, Galll·
polis, $113 and costs, Intoxication; Richard A. Russell, Athens',
$375 and costs, driving under.the

AN~ LANI&gt;F.RSO
perfect and that he has not
""1968, L.o. .4.nple~~
- always fulfilled (Ita!) my (uniTim H Syndir..a~ · •ad
tal) "expectations." Dan quit
Cre•IOI'II Syndit"l!lf'
going to chun:h because the
minister wasn't "spiritual"
enough. He openly encourages
the children (especially the adult
males) not to atlend church. I
love to waLk, jog and dance. Dan
will not join me In these activities
Prayerful, Ever Hopeful in Midbecause he "gels enough exer·
dle
America
else at work. " So I jog, walk and
Dear Middle America: I susgo to church alone.
pect
your husband's dlssatistac·
, My future looks bleak. It Is
with
his children Is rooted In
tlon
possible that I will be a widow
the
fact
that
he never received
with financial burdens because
unconditional
love a nd approval
Dan has a good chance of dying
ow
n
father.
The unrealfrom
his
from lung cancer before he Is 60.
is
tic
demands
he
makes
on his
The man lights one cigarette off
sons
and
daughters
are
the
result
the other and refuses to quit. If
of
his.
unfulfilled
dfeams
.' He
the cigarettes don't gel him, I see
wanted
his
cblldren
to
be
perfect
myself growing old with an
because he never was. Of course,
Increasingly angry and bitten
they
failed him and he feels
man, complaining more and
"cheated
."
more because everyone has
Onless
Dan gets some therapy
failed him.
(highly unlikely), your prognosAnn, please do a column on
tications
may well be correct. I
expectations, real and unrealisyou
are as strong as you
hope
tic. I keep telllng Dan that you
.
seem
to
be
and that you will
can't ch~nge people, but he says
continue
to
maintain
a positive
I'm wrong.
·
attitude
and
continue
to count
I believe this Is the reason so
your
blessings,
no
matter
what.
many adults (mostly males) say,
Whnr
are the sign~ of alcoholism?
"No matter how hard I tried , I
How can yo u .re'il if .tomeone you
could never please my father."
lo
ve is an alcoholic? "Al coho lism :
The result Is disappointed par·
How
"to Re cogni.z.e It , How to Deal
ents and unhappy children.
Wirh
/r , How to Conqu er It'·' will
I hope my letter will touch a
tender spot In some of. your · git.Je yo'u rh e an!lwers. To receive o
copy. send 13 and a self·adclreue d ,
readers. Please encourage child·
&amp;
tamped bu.!linesS-si::c enlJelo pe (45
ren and spouses to clip and mall
cents
posrage) to Ann Lnnl}prs, P.O .
this column to ·the offending
Box
11562,
Ch.icogo, Ill. 60611-0562.
member of the famlly . - Ever

East
Pomeroy

Main

St.

10 cases

Rates are tor consecutNe runs. broken updrv1will bech.-ged
fnr ea.-:h diN as separate ads .

•7 point line type only used.
for errors first diY ad runs in paper) . Call belore 2:00p.m.
diW after publication to make correction .
•Ads that must be paid in advance are
Card of Thank&amp;
In Memoriam

Happy Ads
Yard Sales

*A classified advertisement pieced in The Daily Sentinel (ex·
cept - cl•sified disptey , Business Card and legal notices)
will also appear In the Pt. Pleasant Register and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune, reaching over 18,000 homes.

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

COPY DEADLINE -

MONOAY

PAP~R

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00, A.M . SATURDAY

62 7 3rd An., Gallipolis
PH. 446-1699 ·
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

ltiURSOAY

PAP~R

FRIDAY PAPER

SUNDAY PAPER

•

'

$5 .00
$8.00
$13 .00
S21 .00
S51 .00

Announcements

Merchandise

, - Card of Thanks
2- ln Memory
3- Annoucements

51 - Housaht)ld Goods
,52 - Sporting Goods

53 - Antiques

4- Givaaway
5- Happy Ads
&amp;- Lost and Found
7- Yard Sale (paid in adllancel
8- Public Sale &amp; Auction
9 - Wanted ,to Buy

54 - Misc. Merckandise
55 - Building Supplies
56 - Pet! for Sale
51 · · Musical lnstrumenl s
5 8 ·~ Fru its S. Veget:ablflll
59-- For Sale or T rede

Employment
Serv1ces

Farm Sunplies

&amp; liveslock

11 - Help Wanted
12- Situation Wanted

13- lnsurance

61- Farm Equi pmen1
6 2 ~Wamed

-

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

- z·,oa P.M. W~ON~SOAY
-

2 .00 P.M . THURSDAY
2 ;00 P .M. FRIDAY

18 - Wanted To Do

Jollowing 'ti!lephpne exchanges ...

LARGE

Gallia County
Anta Code 61 4

Meigs County
Artpa Code 614

Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

446- Gallipoli!i
367 - Cheshire

992- Middloport

675- Pt. Pleasant
458- leon

388- Vinton
245- Rio Grande
256- Guyan Oist.
643 - Arabia Dis\.
379 - Walnut

90c

Pomeroy
'985 - CI"Iettor

843 247 949 742 -

576- Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven

Portland
Letart Falls
Racin e
Rutland

895- letart
937- Buffalo

!~ f67 - Coolvill e

'.
•

•

Get Results Fast

'
Monday-Thursday
. Month of January

'

.

Public N otice

28-35 WOROS
$7.00
$10.00
$15.00
$25.00
$60 .00

16·26 WORDS

17 - Misc~JIIaneou s

21 - Buslneu Opportunity
22 - Money to Loan
23 - Profesllonal Services

Real Estale
31 - Homftfor Sale
32 - Mobile Homes for Sale
33- Forms for Sale
34- Buslneu Buildings
35 - lols &amp; Acreage
38 - Aeel Estate Wanted

41 - Houses for Aent
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43- Farms for Rent
44- Apartmem ior Rrm t
45- Furnished Ro oms
46 - Spaca for Rent

47- W.nted to Rent
48- Equipment for Rent

49- For lelltle

Public Notice

10 Buy

63- Liveat ocl\
64 -' Hay &amp; Gnm1
65 ~- Seed &amp; fnrlili.:!flt

'

Additional Toppings

EVERY DAY
FREE Local Delivery

$4.00
$5.00
$8.00
$13.00
S33.00

14 - Bualness Training
1 5 - Schools &amp;. Instruction
16 - Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair

- z,OO P.M. MONOAY

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

$495

LOWER

0 · 15 WORDS

plid

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs, :
. GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

OUR PRICES ARE

Paying today
Jan. 13, 1989
!Subject to Change
Without Notice I
#1 COPPEll ............. 86&lt; t~
#2 COPPEll·- ........... 65' 1~
CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHUTS ................... 47' Ito.
CLEAN AWMINUM

PUBLIC

INSULAnON
Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofi~
Seamless utter
Re&amp;lacement Windows
lown Insolation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

AUCTION

Free Estimates

Call 992-2772

1115 /Hn

EUM HOME

CAST_.........: ........... 40c lb.

AlUMINUM
.YEIIAGE CANS ..... 46' Ito.
IRONY
SHIEl ............. S&lt; to 30&lt; 11.
IRONY CAST ... 3&lt; to 20' tto.
STAINLESS """'"'"""' 20c lb.

J&amp;L

1 - I Board For
SHior Cltlz- oiNI
HanlicapjMd
Good Rot01
T.L.C.
26 Yrt. Exp.
References

992-5114

992-6173

Located Off Bypeoo
At Jet. of Rto. 7 &amp;
'143, Pomeroy, Oh.

Joe or Pouloy lowlond
209 Sovlh .41ft St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOIII HOMI"

, ,,z.·as.tfn

Transportatlon.,
71- Autos tor Sal ~;&gt;
72 - Trucks for Sal~
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WD 's
74 - Motorcycles
7 5· Boats &amp; Mo tvrs tor Sa le
76 - Au to Paris
r\t'ceun ru.,.
77 -- At~to ReJlair

·a.

78 - Camp ing Eq1.1ipment
79 - Campers &amp; M01 or Homes

Services
81 -· Home lmprovemf!flt s
82- Piumbing &amp; Hemin g
83- hctNating
84- Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration
85- Gen oral Hauling
86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholsterv

Public Notice

Public Notice

LASHLEY
SERVICE

1 Mi. East of St. lt. 7
on 241 at Cho'ster
WELDING
AUTO 8t
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY 8t
WRECK REPAIR

985-3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1-5-'19-1 110.

ADDENDUM TO PART" 1,
ITEM E I&amp;) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPAN:rt : RACCOON MINE NO. 3
,
LEGAL NOTICE

!

Southern Ohio Coli Company, R1ccoon Mine No. 3,

·, P. 0. ao• 490. Athono, Ohio
• 45701. h.. oubmltted on

!· 1pplication to reviee 1 Coal
J~ Mining

and Recl•mation

•. Pormil numbered R-0463·

FINANCIAL. REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS

be conducted in Meigs

County. Solem Townohip,
Sectiono13, 2&amp;, 26, 30, 31 ,
32, 33 ond Frecttono 7. t3.
19, and 26 and Vinton

For Fi1cal Year Ending

December 31, 1988
Columbia Town1hip

County of Mol~•

County, Wilk•vHie Town·

ohip. Section• 1, 2E. 3E . 9.

'This ia an unaudtted
Flnenciel Repon"

and Gallia County, Hunting·
ton Townahlp, . Section 1 .

SUMMARY OF CASH
The propoood underground BALALNCES. RECEIPTS
mining aren encompa~a
AND EXPENDITURES
3.287 ocreo, and aroloc.li1ed GOVERNMENTAL
on the Wilk81Ville 7"h minute
FUNDSU.S.G.S. 'lu.odranglo mop, RECEIPTS'
approximately 0.2 mileo Toxoo ................ 57. 264.49

; 12, to the Ohio Dep1nment
, of Natural ruoureM, Div·
•.. ilion of Recl•metion. The
: .. PropoMd coal mtning and lOUth to 2.8 milee aouth of
" reclamation oper1tion will ~ WilkMvlle and 0.3 mil•
south to 2.8 mil• eouthw·

.

-

Card of Thanks

: 1

Tht Family Of

'

,
JOSEPH ZWlLING
: wishes to thank all of
'• the friends and neigh;' bGrs who helped in
:· any way at the timt
' af his death. The flow11'1 , and donations

w•r. greatly appr•·

ciatld. We also want

ta exprns our apprt·
citation to the DAY, the
• VFW, and the Amtri·
' ' con legion for their
partldpation in the

funeral lll'victs.
•·'

aatance ..... ,.... 62,469 .74

Ln• OuJtt~nding

Checko ........... 10,537. 72
TOTAL
BALANCE .. .. ..61.922.02
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
Outatanding

Jon. 1,.'88 ......... 7,933.33
Retired .... ............ 7,933.33

Outatanding

Doc. 31. '8B ............ - o(tl1a, 11c

Intergovernmental

Recelplo ... .. .... 33.8 t 0.38
Intern! ....... ...... .. 1,843.31
nt of Salem Center. Ohio. All Other

The application propo . . to
ex~nd the are• for room
and pillar method of under·
ground mining, and provkle
for pillar removal on thoM
area end on areu pre ...
vloualy approved to be
mined and for longwall

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWIIII: GIIG I. IOUSM

,':!;,&lt;
M

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

'

.CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS

•Ex:TENSIVE REMODELIN.G
•VINYL SIDING. ROOFING
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING. APT; PROJECTS

SINCE 1969
DUsn ST. IYUCUS

992-7611

KEN'S APPUANCE
SO VICE

mining.

The application is on file at

tho office of tho Molga
County Recorder, Moiga
County Court Hou• Se·

Revenue ......... 16,711 .97

Government ... 21,400.44

Public Sefety ..... 17.679.56
Public Works ..... 60,366.02
Hetlth ........... ......4.319.64
Copltttl Outlay .....7,607.66
Dabt Service-.
Nato Prlnclpol
PoymiDI ..........7,933.33
lnt-t end FioCIII
Chlrgeo ...... ........336.14
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ........ 109,630.67
T-1 Roetlpta Over/IUn· "
. dorl Olsb........... (800.641
TOTAL OTHER FINANCING SOURCES (USES!'
Dlob. I Other
Usoo ................. 1900.641
Fund C•h lloltnce.
Jon. 1, 19Ba ... 62.a22.66
Fund CMh aatonce.
Doc. 31, ·aa .... 61,922.02

cond Strlllll, P-oy. Ohio
46789 ond tho Vinton
County 11-clor. Vinton
County Court Hou•. Moln
Stroot, McArthur, Ohio
4111111 lor public vlowlnt.
Writ!., commonto end/ or
1'111-tl lor on inlormlll
co.-ce moy bo oont to
tho Dlvlolc!n of Redomotlon,
Fou.,..n SQu.-e. Bullclng
B-3, Columbus, Ohio
43224, wltltln 30 doyo· of
tho IMt dote of publlcotlon
of this notice.
Rti«VI for Eneurnbrance.
11118, 26; 1211. a. 4tc
, Doc. 31, 1988 ... 1.100.00

"

PlUMBING I HEAnNG
New locallen:
161 North Soc•d
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C•ry Fishing Suppll•
Pay Your Phon~

and Cable ,Billo Hera

• ...,. - IUSIN!SS PHON!
(6141 992-6550

HSDINCI PHONE
16141 ••, •. 7J

FOR SALE
85,000 BTU

Warm
Morning
Stove
992-2673

Ben Batey

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs

NIASE Certified Mechllllic
CAll 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN .
Cert ified Licon !led Shot

S·2S·I

GUN SHOOT

BOGGS

RACCOON VAllEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
Rl. 124 letw..n Wilkesville and Salom (onter
•
EVE_RY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.
12 Gougo Shotgtins Only
FO&lt;Iory Choke
STRICTLY ENFOiaDI

SALES &amp; SEIYICE:
U. S. IT. 50 lAST
OUYSVIU, OliO '
614-662-3121
Deoro. Now Holland,
Bush 'Hog Form
Equpment Dealer.

ftr• , •• .,.....
Stl" &amp; Sorwlto
1·3·'8S·tt:
LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

GUN SHOOT

$1695

RACINE
FIRE
Basham luilding

DEPT.

.1!.5

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

SUNOCO

6:30 P.M.

CHEnER, OHIO
985-3350

Fa&lt;lory Choltt
12 Gaugo Shotguns Only
Stri&lt;lly Enforced

J.ll-'1!1-1 ••.

10-7-tfn

HILLSIDE . MUIILE
'LOADING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

AID

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES .
Moulolootllng Suppli•
Mo.torn Gon Sul'!'ll•
· GUM • Ammo • Slugs
22 Ammo
Rt. 124 Ealt of Rutlend
Ao:o-otl Happy Hollow Rolld
... •• 14·742-2355

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now H-lullt
"Free Eatimatet"
PH. 949-2801

8/ 20/tfn 1 mo. pd.

or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAUS

3·11-tfn

FIREWOOD

ADDENDUM TO PART 1,
ITEM E (5) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY MEIGS MINE NO. 1
. LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal Com-

pony, Meigo Mine No. 1, P.
0 . Box 490, Athena.: Ohio
46701. hao oubmlttod an
Application to reviars a Coal
Mining and Reclamation

Petmit numbered A-0364·
7, to che Ohio Department of
Natural ree:ourcu. Oivi1ion
of Reclamation. The proposed coal mining and reel•·
mat ion operation · will be
conduct&amp;d in Meigs County,
Selem Town1hip. Section•

1, 2. 6, 7. 8.12. t3, 17, 1a.
t9, 24, 25, 28, 30, 32, 33

and 34, Fractions 1, 2, 7,

13. 19, 24. 26, 31, 32. 33,
and 3&amp;; Gallla County, Morg•~ Township, Sections 5,
t1 , 17, 2i ond 29: Vinton
County, Wilkesville Town·
ahip, Sectional. 4, and 4E.
The proposed underground
mining areas encompau
7 ,055 a.c rn, and are located
on the Wilk.. ville and Rutland 7Yz Minute U.S.G.S.
quadrangle maps, ax tending
West to Wilkeavllle Town·
ship and 2 .6 miles lOUth of
Salem Center. Tile applica·
tion propolt&amp; to expand the
areas for room and pillar
underground mining, provide for pillar removal on

~~::~~"::,:.~~:;·~opr:~

mined and

to

.

Authorized John

Public

permh are•

for Iongweii mining.

The eppticotion io on filoll
tho office of tho Melgo
County Recorder, ·Meigs
County Court Houl8, Se·
cond Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 and tho VInton
County Recorder. Vinton

MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•l.ot Rentals
992-7479
Rt. 33 North of

GUN SHOOT

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319

So. 2nd

Ate.

Middleport, Ohio
1-28·'88-tfn

RACINE
GUN CLUB

BILL SLACK

992-2269

RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

1-1-'11-lfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RADIATOR

CUSTOM BUILT _
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Roasanable PriCOJ"

SER~ICE

We can repair and recare racllatars ond
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repcir Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-16-tfn

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1-13-tfe

Annu uncenren Is
3 Announcements

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELir~G &amp; REPAiRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

We wiU hlul 0011 for to1trgMa(

HEAP. Molgo County
Humin Servia.,

M

l&gt;tp~.

o1

d HEAP

vouchers. We c.. gtve you
prompt dellv. . .. E ~Ia tor Selt

Worb,

Inc. Pom•oy

814-992-3891 .
.'

.

Ohio

.

Low Mell. 10 Dtu• fwnalewould

ttt&lt;o Pon Pot. 8o, 352. Mlddl•

port. Oh. 45780.

Aona Chlmn~y Sw8111 Specill
thru J ..•""'· 304- n3-&amp;348.

4

Giveaway

To gtvefNiay· Pert Bordet'Collle
puppl•. C.ll 814-371-2338 .

IJr----":T;i;~i:'llirt;.~~;tc;:;---,

PuppiM. C•ll 814-25&amp;-1Hi04 or

_25=6-~8;-5_:60..:.·:_--:-:-----

Dependable Heariae Aid.SaJes &amp; ~onri•• 8 ott
· g Eva Iua t'tons f or· All Ages
m
puppy.
mludgood
brood.
,,. Heann
momht
old. Moke
eom-3

B-3, Columbus, Ohio
43224, within 30 dsys of
the h111 dale of publication

"-"

or th 1a• notic a. a
4
11 1 1 25 121 1
· :
· · tc

Send resume. includinc
references and work
experience, to
P.O. Box 729W, c/o
Daily Sentinil,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

PER LOAD
DELIVERED
LIGHT HAUUNG DONE

1:.00 P.M.

Written comment• end/or
requata for an informal

Local established Cllfll·
~ needs short·tenn of.
fioe help. with possibility
Qf pet'IMlent employment
in the future. Must pos·
sess JHI«al offlct ltllls,
inctudi11 typinc and comput• skills; letter writi11
11M lily; ability to dill with
public; some uounti11
aperienoe pmiTid; JOOd
telephone penonllity.

$35

EVERY SUNDAY

98 S•4 141
Street , McArthur, Ohio
45851 end 1he Gollia
GENEI 1 ' CONTR•CTORS
County Recorder, Gotlia
,.
"
County Court Houoo, Locust 1-ti=Roce~f=eroc:e~n=celea:ilc:IO~:M:ICIO~~·:M:1:1&gt;1=·1N6::1·C'BICB::I·Ctf:Mn
Street, Gall ipollo." Ohio II
45631 for public viewing.
conference
be nnt to
the Oivi1ion may
of RaclamatiDn,
Fountain Square, Buit"lng

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

.9-19-18 tfn

P.,lon tor child or old" peraon

3; USA M.·KOCH, M.S.
a: L'teensed Cl'Inlca
. I AUd'10IOgJst
.

514-992-7401 .
·
a iv-11'1· 8 month old • .,

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue, BoK 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

r;'tG:;.";8-#'~::'..'"n Coil

i3
:z:

3 Announcements

TOTAL
Roceipto ....... 108,630. t 3
DISBURSEMENTS:
Gonorol

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK
lolpro, Ohio
CONSIGNMENTS wncOME
'PATRICK H. BLOSS.ER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-428-7245
t . t't-'19· t mo.

11·21·18-Un.

Countv Court HouJe, Main

Depository

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE.
SYRACUSE. OHIO

1·11·'19-1 mo.

1122188/tfn

POliCIES
•Adl outside Meigs, Gall ia or M110n countilllllll must be pre-

•sentirtel is not retponslble tor errors after first day . [Check

Only

RATES
1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
t MONTH

•Receiv• $ 1 ~0 dltqount for ads paid in •dvan~f"·
•free ads - Giw-eaway 1nd Found ads und!Bf' 15 words·will be
run 3 d"fS at no charge.
•Price of ad for all caphalletters is double price of ild cost.

CHEEZE PIZZA

992-2228
992-9922

OPEN 7 DAYS ·
9AM-7Plt'

985-3561
We Service All MekN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Classified pages cover the
216

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must 8t Repairable"

• The Area's Number 1·Marketplace

influence; $63 and costs, drlvlnll
under suspension, and $63 ano
costs, failure to control; Buddy
Sams, Waterford, $53 and costs,
speeding.

Main Street Pizza

Ann

Classifie

mainly In north counties Friday
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a and . Friday plght, with fair
low near 30. West winds 10 to 15 conditions Saturday and Sunday.
Highs will be In the 30s Friday,
mph.
Thursday: Partly cloudy, wjth between 25 and 35 Saturday, and
· In the30sSunday. Early morning
h lghs between 50 and 55.
lows will be In the 20s Friday an(l
Extended Forecast
between 15 and 25 Saturday and
Friday Utrough Sunday
·
A chance of rain or snow Sunday.

13

Page

Daily Sentinel

Business Services

·wANTED

------Weather------

Pomeroy mayor

The

Ohio

-How to you ~easure
success of a Child?

weather lingers over _United States

'

Five defendants forfeited bonds and four others were fined
Tuesday night In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Forfeiting were Patricia A. Whitlock, Point Pleasant, $40;
David A. Carpenter, Rodney, $1, and Rodney A. Stewart, Little
Hocking, $40, all posted on speeding charges; Donald J. Fry.
Pomeroy, $50, spinning tires, and Fred Priddy, Rutland, $225.

.

Wednesday, January 18, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page :!-'12-The Daiiy Sentinel

3-

.

·or at
Veterans Memorial Hosoib
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

a.,...., lhophlrd, bl ocl&lt;. Need

Moto8onJietvpodog.1 v•• old.
good
w~h chAdron. 304-1752320 ""• e:oo PM.
a.... llul wMe hoUM .... -v
gWIIIo w-h chlldr... call bo5,00 ond g,oo PM
304-89tl-3e45.
'

6

BINGO
POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224

E. MAIN

ST. - 992·9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.
S.U N. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

DOOR PRIZE

2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchae of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon per cuatomer per
bingo sNsion.
WE PAY UO.OO PER GAME
L~~~ 110 PEOPLE '615.00 PER GAME

Lost and Found

121 REWAR o,tOST· Modlu m
llze. light brown, m• dOg from
Spruce St. • • Answwt to

Born.,. Call 814-4411-9370. •
FOUNt&gt;, Cod&lt;or Sp.,lol. VlcinHy of \linton. Call 814-318·

1804.

FOUND, WMo mil&lt;od brOOd
dog. Found In TvcoonU!ke••
Coli 814-241-leBJ oflor .j

- d e y• .

FOJJND' Pt.lureo ir&gt; rol•tc
wlfll• cover-Ne• P•k. Can bl

picked up ot tho Goltipalo Oolly

Tribune. Mon.-881. 1

'•

.

to 1.

�·--·---

.. 6

44

LAFF-A-DAY

lost and Found

Apartment
for Rant

.BEAIJnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES. 138 Jocbon

0008.

FOUND : Sll!oll blade pup. H•
chock• ehllin. C.ll 814-24653&amp;3 bot_, 8-6, or 24114322 oltor 6:30PM.

Pike from t113 1 mo. Welk to

ohop and ...... ..._ 814-4-482558. E.O.H.

TI!J..J TownhoU• ep.-trnent• 2
8th., 1 V. bM... CA.. dlo-

Lott: llrgeAedOot.rrwn. lost 2
WMkaego lntheBrt• Ridge Rd .
vicinity, ~nAIVIIe. ()h . 0111

twlilher,

dilpoe~~l.

privat• ..,..

514· 142-2511 or 114-992·
5379.

ciooed pltlo. pool, plar8'ound.

Lolt: 9 month old,. ... Beegle.
Brown .,d white. On Rodupringt Rd . .nd · fllltw~ •••·

51 .. 387-7810.

w• •·

trash lncklc:fed..
Slert:ing at 1289 P• mo. CeH

"

Modern 1 BR , downtown. co,...
pl. . kitchen. elr, c•p«.. Depostt. no pM.. CIH 114-4410 139 evanlng&amp;. 1.ft• 15.

...... t5 . Caii51 .. 992· S855.

LOST in Letlrt ere.. small white
end brown mele .,_aula. any
fnfornwtlon wNI be IIPPreeill td,

Pomeroy·2 BR . remodet'ed
ap ... ment off Sprlna AI... S.c.

304-195-3382.

B

IIWtf. •

dop. &amp; ref. Call ali• I PM.
01 .. 982·S818.

Publi.c Sale
&amp; Auction

SHADY LAWN APT&amp;- 729

Riel&lt; P•••on Auction•. 11-

';.~'!"!:..:":...• ~"::'.t'

&amp;toto, -!Que. twm. liquid•
lion ool•, 304-773-8785.
Wanted To Buy

"There's $485,000
missing
,

'-----------T"'---------i
from petty Cash!

r

11 .

31

Help Wanted

Homes for Sale

1911 Eert•n

Avo.. Golllpollo. Call 514-4482282.

Compl•• houMhohh of f.lrnia lntlques. Alto wood &amp;
coM helt•a. Swain' 1 Furniture
a Auction, Third &amp;. Olive.

ttn

514-4-48-3159.

Junk C.rs whh or without
motors. C.ll Lllrrv Uvely-81.4-

318-9303.

Furniture .nd IPPII.,I;lll tav tN
phtCI or entire houllllhold. Fair

prl... bolngpold. Call114-4-41·
3158.
Will buy or IPP,.ile M'lythlngl
AntiQues, furnfture. appiiiWlCM.

eltttn, .,t01, complele home
furnlahlngt;. Marlin Wedemtyer.

814-248-5152.
~ 1 'h: gill ton of Sheep lard

l"""'on tollow}. Call 114-258t:IU

Uaed l.~rntture bv the piece or
entire hou.-hold
ttllllng.

••o

Malt CoHit or male Shepherd.

I14-H2-2042.

EII IJJ I0 yll ll! lll

Am•lc•e of Pomtroy .h• lmmedl"t openiniJI for pirt·tlme
R.N.'s ..,d l .P .N.'t . AN thfftt.
ft•lble sdut&lt;*.lllng. COmpe~itllll'e
talary and bwlafttt aff•ed.
Contact Ll Rue Hill. R.N ..
D .O.N., Amerlcere of Pomerw.

36719 Rocl&lt;oprlngo Rd .. Pom•
'"'· Ohio 46758. 814-9828808.

GOVER NME NT' JOBS
f1B.040.- Q9.230 . . -. How
hiring. CoH 11} 805-117·1000
Ext. R·9806 for current ted• II
Hot.
AVON - A. 1riiM. Cell Merity n

w...... 304-882·2845.
AVON Ill ._.n ShiriiiV Spe••·
304-87&amp;-1429.

MAJOR NAT'LMULn-LINE INSURANCE CO .

S.tktng mttu,., -agr_..,e kidlvicklalto mkt. Home-Auto-llfeHetlt h k'tt., 2 ve• training
benellt plcg, *25-t38,000.00
first ye• 11lery comm apente
ello..wnae. EJCtllant opportunIty for uporloncod l~e .,d
proparty CaiUifty egentt, wfth
prawn t.-.dc riOOf'dl. Phone

Help Wanted

rtf•ence~

to Pltnned Plf'ent-

hOod of SouthMet Ohia, 398
Richland AVII"tu .. A then .. Ohio

45701. bv Januor; 25. 1919.
PPSEO It tn Equal Opportunity

Benlficllll's dyrwmlc opwelion.
We hwt ., lnwnlldiat• oppor·
tunfty for 1 welt· orgenir:ed. Mlf
mothleted indlltidual lnt•.-t~
In dwetoplng 1 cw.., in Conaum• Ftn.,cilll S.Vicel loonaum• ..,.,,, home equtty line~,
lntu.-nce ul•. credit c•dt.
and ven . .l office edmlnia1re·
tlont. The tucc•tful ctndld.te
must enjoy challenging . work.
po..- good comtn~nlcatton
tkll• ... d hwe the ability to
eblorb tnd IPPI'y comprthenaiY•
training program~ to pll'form
IUceetlt.llly '" credit, •1•.
callecttont .,d edminil:lretkm.
Tlkt
opportunity 10 join the
proHulor* .-ff • Beneficial.
We l)ff• ., at'lr.ctlve starting
talerv and oom.,.t'tentNe b•
nefttt l*:kege. For prompt
cona~tt;of\ ~:~~-• cell Dutne
Cl•worthy.

t.._

J14-4-48-2756

Beanlqian needed new shop, AIJ
IUpport, Kathv's Kut •d Kurl.
Help wanted, ~" tlmew1~reu
end cook. 3 w~nlng~. epptv In
l*ton. no phone cella, VHiege
Pine Inn.
.

12

Situations
Wanted

Cere for etd•tv in or out of
home. Refwen~. 304-87~

1219.

fhpr...m.tNe n411ded for toea~
blain. .. Some college nll*IW'f. Sal• ....,..... al helplll.
Send ~me to: P.O . Box 1915.
4~514.

Now •cceptlng appllcMktnt for

v..ltr- &amp; oook poaition. U . 35
per .hour'*'' tipt . Village Pilu
fnn, Spring VIII8Y' Pl111 .

Golllpolls.

18 71 .. d 5711-1711

814-448-4341 oft• 5 PM.

2 BR . IIPI.. now pluth c•pot.
.... point, util~·- portlollv paid.
t175amo. Call 304-578-5104
575-5315.175-7731.

Furnilhld apt. t280 utllltl•l'd·
1 BR, 920 4th. Gallipolis. Coli
445-4415 tft• 7pm.
Furnished 2 BR . g•ege apt.
Adulto only. No polL Call

1:00 ()) .....,..,

......

Detroit delaet engine,

Ep11a1:1aa

oofltoel. Call 114-4:45-3159.

County ~pll~noe. Inc. Good
used IIPPU.,CM and TV

••a.

73

IBII'-oiU.

AYO. Golll!&lt;olla. OH.

7378.
'79 Windlor 14at70, most of
furniture.
ow.tral
air. tS. 000. 00. Call 304-875-

w••-·drvw.

4528 after 1:00PM.

Farms for Sale

119 ACRES In Pike Co. Olllo. 4
BA. Home. Bern, Tobeeoo Bite.
Build ctblnt hare n•ure trait.
Call loa Hoyo R.E .. 114-9472919.
27 acre mini tw~• ml• from
Gllllpo\11-12 ac:r•meedow. 15
1cr• wood. Hardtop rold,
tehool route. Mall r()Ute. Tel•
phone. Good well w...,, electric. Good shade tr... Call

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 629 Jocl&lt;oon Pike.
Collol-48-4317. Rag. No. 85-1 110558.

1B

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

1---------Will do hou• cle~nlng in Rlo
Grande endGalllpali •r-. c.n

614-379-2171 .

oot&gt;lad. Call 30..175-1104.

2 bo(lroom Apta. for rant.
CerpM.t. Nice s8ttlng. Laundry
f•clh:i• w1Uebl• Clll 11,..

992·3711. EOil

One Month F,.. Rent
Qu .. HIIll rent. . ~y t200.
Deposit .nd no ,...., fof' the
month. December &amp; Jenuary
ontv. VHiege Malar and
RivnldeApartmenlt 6n
Midcleport. From 1182.

HOW DO 'C'Ol) II•NITE 'C'OUR OWN
!5ROTIIER TO AN ''U6L'(. D06 ''

11J 8he-RI
Ill American Magazine

Pear Ugly,

CONTEST? 1 DON'T EllEN II.NUIAJ 1
HOW TO 8E61N TI-lE LETTER ..

2 bedroom ap.-tment In Mlddl•
port. t175 P• month. depoth:
requir.t. C.ll 814-992-2381
dey• end 814- 112-2109
evenlngt.
2 IMdroom unfurnished with
ttCNt •d rllfrlca-etot". No

p••·

6 14-949-2253.

Nictfv furnla:htd tmll hou•.
Mitts ontv. Ref. requit'«&lt;. No

Hom• for R-.t!Le•e. t... d
contntet, Croute Bee* Rd .,
Rodnt¥ VIII age II, Ewnt Hgt1.
Atf•tnc. and cltpoeltt r•
quired., Bled!. burn Rellty, 814-

hou•.detun, AC. •3150•
•ns •

3 BA. hou" fenced btdc yerd,
l•gefront-,.rd. St. At. 31. t3150

~HI.

Pettte. Oenc:ewe•. Aero-

• mo. Call11114-446-2079.

3 lA., 1 both. CA. No p. .. 1
mle au1 110. t350. Dep. &amp; r.t.
1 yr. laMa Call 81._448-23150.
Anract:Ne home. Mulberry A-. ..
Pom•or· 2 bedrooma, living
room. kttc:h.-t. dining room.
lovely "'"porch. Full bliemtnt.
forced air halt. C.rpettd end
dr • .t. Sorry, no chlldr., or
pt11. Awllabla about F8b. 1.
U21S. p• month plus depolit.

rl• Store. Add color enetvlil. · Coli 814-992·5292.oftw 5o.m.
l...,d n.m•: Liz: Cllliborne, or -.ytlme week.,dl.
H..tthiM. Ch•1. L... St. Michel• For-.zt, Bugle Boy, lwL -~.-.doled 3 br hou•ln
Comp Bwarly Hllo, Orgonlcolly M"qn. U50. per month. Pay
Grown, Lucia awr 2000 Olhert own utiUtl•. 30,.. 773-91584.
or t13.1t one pri011 ct.lgn•.
Muttl tlw pricing ditiXIVnt or &amp; rooma •n d bat h. 110 I'A:
femlf¥ thO• rtore. A.-teA .,,._ Jtffwaon Btvd .• 1280.00 pw
u rDsfl..,able tor top queNty month, 304-176-2664 1fter
sho• noriT'IIIIy priced from t11. 8:00PM.
to seo. Ovtr ZISO brlf'tdt 2800

IIY'-· *18,900 to 129, 900:

"'"'"G.

31

Beeeh Str..C. MhkiiiPort. Ohto.
2 bedroom 1\.lrnllhld .,.-tment.
utliti• Dllld. refwenCM. Phone

304-882-2581.

.

3718. E.D.H.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

.

Homes for Sale

PICKENS USED RIRMTURE
Complele hou•hold furNthlnge. 11.1 mlle-Jerrlcho. 304-871-

114·318·9773 .

Dog-.30· • 7 8- 23 • 9 ~.

Colloct.

-v

v •n

8:00PM.

dol-

S.Mo.lod 0 .. tlr-ocd. * 30· 00
. . .... pldt up load, oplt .,d
304-418-ll3l.

lM•plclurewtn.,_,, aeoand.
co11 30._ae2-3130.
UHd Aohlor wood bu'"lng
ttow,afireplece•cloturewtth
fir e•cre.w • d"'
.... door• pho ne

30..175-4038.

t101J. Country wood tlbl•wt:h

3 chalro&amp; bonch-rog. t518-

1211. MMr More Mon.,. SwIng Values.
141ln Centenary
1A mHe on Lincoln P•e.

,.t.

Oak coffM 1Mfe. Pr. end lebl•.
Pr. wing cholro. 311 vol . . , .....

Brit....... Call 814-4-48-1720.

Whirlpool Weiher Wid Dryer.
S""lced and guaren1eec1. 1221.

81 .. 357-0322.

Antiques

nicenlllahborhood. No Peta. Call

304-575-5329.

'45

Furnished Rooms

o.n:r.•·

*''

Buy or So1!1 Riverine Antlq1 124 E. Miiltttatr... Pom•&lt;&gt;i·

Hourt: M.T,W 101.m. to lp.m.,

SUndar 1 to 8p.m. 614-992-

2121.

.

'

Now~

dtoorllod. 2 BR .. fullv
c•r•td. sec. dep. required.
Col 814-4-48-8558 or 4-4847541.

Wheelcftarra-MW or u..:t. 3
wheeled el..:tric tcoot••· .Call
Rogers Moblty collect. 1-114-

870.9151 .

-

'

For Solo Flr-ook-Mirod ,..

F...-ntahed toom-119 Second
Ave. .
•7&amp; a mo.
lltllttl• .., . Slnatemlle. Shee

318·81 38.

Roome for rlnt·WMic or mon1h.
S.tnlng tt 1120 • mo. Gillie,

Ftrtwood for 1ele. Hardwood
flO JMckup truck deiiY.-y,
Call B14-441-.t882.

Hotol-514-4-48-9610.
Sl~tplng

rooms with cooking.
AltoTrall•..,.c•. All hoolc·!,f)t.
CAll after 2p .m . 304-77358111 . Muon 'NV.

46

Space for Rant

3 acre prfvete mobile home lot.
1 I min. from Galllpollo. Call
114-4-48-0801.
Country Mobile Home P•k.
Route 33. North of Pom•oy.
I.Dtt. ,.,. .... partl. ..,. . C.\1

114-992·7479.

47 Wanted

a

Mele 30'• outdoor dog ....a
PIIC4 to Nnt, Gllllpo6it lrH.
Prel• cou my or f.,oed yard.

. Colll14-448-9211, 8-1, M-F.
Ask

49

tor Kent ••. ,...

For Lease

Pertlelfy furnilhld tiPa"tmertt.
Suite~• tor ant or two ecl.lna.
R... , .... i'ed. No Pitt. Inquire
at: 131 Fourth Aw .. G•llipola.

I 14-448-0239.

, ...onld. Ill 25 deiNer.t local.
BidtNeJ arN. Owid Hill 114-

a~tt.

Truck lotdt of he.tmg&amp; caollng
au~Ducf

wort!. A milt •

mudt rhOft. W1tl take afftr. C11ll

81 .. 448-0708.

Queen watw bed. conaol• tv, &amp;
wood ttow. • 500 for •II or wit
.... ...,..... Call 614-38.
8139.
Fuet oil tank wlstend • n •
flher, full oil nove w/f.n •
thermoata1. Call 114-379-

-·-for

rl-. 304-1711-2741.

Volkawegen Van for

peru

v...

PrDill.- WWII6ng "Farm
ffMh" colw• 'B0-1111e.. Hof-

11 ..... ~7

245-11181.

84

oil!- Col .,._

doro

grouJ&gt;-owned
d1Uy MWiplp« heedl IMperi ..Cid Advtrtlling Sll• Pr~
fMtioMIS immedi•ely. W1' rl
looldng tor eggr•aive. compedu..... h•d-ctl•glng .... ,..,.

wk'dw. Wood or ooel ltove.
Excellent eondition. t«)). Cell

114-992-284-1.

Hay

&amp;

mouft,o l.,d bladc Whltol.
SAM DMlRVILLE'I , OLD
ROUTE 21, NEW ERA. WVA
Inoon - 8:00pm, Doc. only I.
Other mont.. Fridov, SI!Ufdly,
... ~....... 30 ..273-1111.
For ule: Olllk flrMood. Cell

304-178-2717 ""• 4:30p.m.

71

-II•
,,._4-411-

1911 a-v Covoll•. . . .dord
ohlft, AC. t210o.Colll1._3n272t.
1917 DotlaaCh•gor. ..,o., olr.
3 2.000 mila eo~-~oo. Call 11437.. 27:n.
1977 Dodge Colt, 18.000 mi..
.. to...... Ne.m .-b. tiiOO

080 . Call 814-4-48-4478 ali•
I PM.
1974 D... a 18. da•n't run.
*100. 1174 Monte Corle. folr
bod&gt;. Nno good.
c.11

514-448-2475.

Rag, Golden Rolrlwr pupplao.
Born 12·23-88. e111-. Can
61 .. 384-2117 oft• 6 PM.

Ow- flnonco. CaN 304-578-

chilli no polL 304-882·2411.

1104.

"'ed.

noo.

1113 Cluy... E a- EC.
cn.lo&amp; 1111. p. lodca. AC. Sllv•
.... 2.8 ~ 73 k. *3400. Col
114-448-3487.

Tho-oChl.,
P.O. loo 14..0
Wlnl• Hav.,, FL 33182

Smll Engine Mech. .lc a1d
P o r t o - - - · Muot
hallo ............ Col f14-1853330 or •Piv ot loum Lumbor,
Ch..t ... Oh.

w..tad to 1..,.1 AKC roglat...i

....... c..... lp.. lol ... ,
304-578-11412.

-or.

57

at Jim Mink Chevrolet-

Mu.lcal
Instruments

lndlv~ol

glnnera.

0 1 - o 114-448-31172 or
304-773-1134.

Clllltar IM-. bo-

•riou• ......... 8NI-

c•dll Muolc. 11._4411-0187.

Jotf-lor - . .. • , ..
44-8-11077. Lfmled _

1877 F~rd .Mu.-g. UOO. 4
cyL, ..... ~ fair. Col 11._
98:1-20....
'
Foragr. . de.. onanMOtuled
c•. tluakor..-. -.C..nyll11

.....

*•

1171 Codllloc ll. ..,, gocd
lhopo.,..
44,000mR-.
flnoolltPi&amp; 304-882-3451
1880 UnCDin Town c ... new
302 •gina nM
b-...,
and brellee, muet tell,

*•

...,_

I &lt;~I

111 :,till!ill'''

1112 1'1\&lt;.-..h ........ ....
good, uoo.oo. 30 .. 195·
3427.

Farm Equipment·

_ .....,..
.

-

llurry

lpre•der

New compl•tely furnished

f1 1.000. OCl oall for
114,400.00. Modal JIB
Grlndat - · too bu wlh
oaal• • hrtl- drlul 10.100.00.
381 Wlh m-lcol-0 •d
---OO.Woh-1 .....

-.unrnent I

IItrvlaoConl•,lt.ll~17.......

-

~;·iThe equall•er

McCall mull rescue lhe
kidnapped aon of a nolorlous
mob Ieider.

RON•s Tel•itlon Service.
HDu" Clll.. on RCA. Guaur,
Gl. Spadollng lo Z..lh. Col

t

--..

'1

·,

... _

10:00W 7GO Clull

0 llonlllcl Raagan ...
An Amarlcan Buccaao Story
III e (J) A Fine Ramanca

•

•

•'

'

....'
Clrll'nic tie wart tloon. be- ,

o,..,...

throom. etc. very ....
... - - · · 304-875-3753.

-\
I

i

Plumbing
&amp; H11tlng

I

I

,''.

Cor. Fourth •d Pine

'
OoiiDolo.Dhlo
Phone 114-.....,3888 or 114445-4477

84

&amp;

1111

BARNEY
COME ON, LEETLE
BUNNY--LET'S ·'
00 HOPPIN'

A OAOBURN
PARTY ANIMAL
IF 1 EVER
SEEN ONE!!

1B1 Newa
ill Crook and ChaN
10:011()) MOVIE: llubJ ~R} (1 :25)
10:30 (l) Newa
. (!) Dltelne Fr11dam: Ctvil
lllghta the .liD
Odd Couple
ill Country
t1:00 ()) Remington 8tMce
• (2) (J) • ill Ill • G2l
81 Newa
til NCAA Final Four

'•

}

''

Electrical
Refrigeration

I

'
RMiclentlll or oo,..._..clel wlrIna New IWVICI or rtpllra.
Uc..e• el•rld8\. Ridenour

Bernice

Gll!llral Hauling
'

-

~e

Osol

e~

Qbnr
~hday

...........

-clot.. . . .

J . JWit•Sorvloo lwlmming
514245-8215. ~-·

'

ft • II WM•

Hlghltgh18 1982. North
carolina, Georgetown.
Houston. and Louisville
(l) Morera: JG11,m
Campbelllnd the P - of
the Myth campbaH tells
about the powerful myths ol
earlY hunting aociltlaa. C

'·

B-lool. 104-178-1785.

86

s-1oa. Pool~

olllllfnl, wall•. lmmecllt1e-

1.ooo or 2.000goloMdollv.-y.
Coli 304-175-IJlV.

"

eo WIH(IIIY wllh

Elrosa Fashions going under,
David end Ell's ralallon8hlp
enda. C .
.liD IMlay MHier
OE....tngNewt

•'
•,

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING

(2)

Women and her ex-husband
solve mysteries In glamorous
pieces.

'

PISCES (Feb. 20-Men:h 20) Find ami- LEO (.luiJ 23-Attil. ;&lt;apt you nago1ia1e
cable companions with whom to ahara an anai1Gemen1 wllh aomeone today
•liD
CoooiiCtltwl
your lime and ln1ereslsloday, because who needs your l8rVk&gt;ll, don'l undertiJ Monewllne,
you won't enjoy being left to your own price your lalen1s. Thla per1011 knOWS
IBI~aaners
Ill You Can Be a 81ar
devices and doing lhlnga alone.
what you have to offer hu real value.
Jan. 18, 1111
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) If your aspt- YIIIGO (Aug. 2S-Sepl. 22) You're In an
11:30. (J) ~ Tonight 8how
rallons are In accordance with your lnterestl"ll cydl where people you
til~
Tiel you have already establlslled will highest Ideals your chances for success know socially can be o1 great help· to
III Caltll S.llt_.
Hcome _ , slronger In 1he year 1oday are excellent H.,_r, If you you en olher a r - o1 your IIIII. Oon'1
Purdue va. MIRMaota
ahead. From 11me lo lime, you and your lend to deviate, you mlghl nol accom- abuse IIIIa condition, bul uH It If you
.IJ)Nialtlllnll;l
cherlahed lrlenda win do h&lt;!!Pful things , pllsh what you hope Co do.
have a need.
1111 IliA Today
to brl"ll happiness lnlo one another' a TAUIIUB (Aprii20-May 20) Try to con- . UIIIIA (llpt. 23-0ct. zt) 111ooka like
H-.
dyc:t your affairs Coday baoe&lt;f upon things are going to wore. OU1 ralhet' well
CAJIIIICDRN (O.C. Zl..,..,. 1t) People whll you have -ned from your perIn a 111ua11on tlla1 hu _ , c:auelng you
with whom you'll be l n v - loclay will ..,.I experiences. Your acquired some concom lalely. Slr!WI to be~
be lookii1G10 you 1o establlah lhe pace knowledge Is likely to be beltar 1han the ful and I!Jtu• on hiPPY end muKa.
0111er Sldl o1
end latta cherge ollhe eganda. Don'tle1 euggetlloM.el-ptnlona.
. tCOIIPID (Dct. M Nao, 22) You li10Uid
IIJ ...... VIce
lhem · Cepllcorn, IIMt yourself 10 CZ'FII (lleJ 21..._ 20) In your com- • -. be¥«'/ good at cr811Ne or mentll pur• Arlaltaan Megulne
a birthday gift. Send Ill' your Aatro- marclll-nga today be aware of 1he ·111111 1oday. K COUld be 111 extremely 12:00(DMCNie
Graph precllcllono for lhe year.- by face thai you llave cer111n advan111g81. If
gra1tfylng uper1et10e If you 111emp1 to.
CJ) Raed II.- of the Monlh
maiHIIIJ $1 10 Aatro-GI'IIPh. c/o 11118 1 you think o1 youraelf u being In 1he
do - = 1wtlallc.
Tl1a HonolUlu Marsthon
,_IP-. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, drlv«'l - · you'll make 1 be11er 'IAGITT
(llllf.ll Deo.ll) II you
(l) ill llgn 011
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to llate your IITillg8nHMI.
'11111 your mind to It today, you -..cl be ,
• ill llilllllllt
Tonight
·zodiaC lign.
CANCIR (.luna 21-.lulf 22) If you loolc
able to rn.t~~ge your material .,....
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Felt. 11) You llave II life from 1!1e other guy's f*IPICIIve
more competently than IIIUII. 1111a Ia a
.liD Twtlglll
a gift for geftlng to Chi bo1IOm oltblngl loclay, h will enhance lhe quality of your . good 11m11o look for way~ to get more l
IIJ Na.,.Ntght
today and IOivlng problem• at their root .. one-on-&lt;&gt;ne lnvolvemenls. However, a . oul of your budget:
cautM. Pu1 your probtng powers IO loci&lt; of 11ne111V11y could creale a
work where needed.
misundwstanding.

r....

w........ ,w•• Htulln&amp; ....

\

... .... 2.000 • 4.000 • ..,...

..••

Vtllufftl dll•

-

410.

••
"'
...

W7 uphohltary

-: ..=-:=-The
one-• ·

.

......... ._••nt

PM. 114--ai.f721.

~~~-K-

"-••d,.lor flood. phone
304-HI-3174.

z-

===-Now

•

-·-

-

-~------'

'•

I return trip - 1 "

I

PRIN T NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lOS ANSWERS
Revoke - Pffch - Fetch - Encamp - TICKET
While preparing for a visit to a vary small town, I asked whet
I should taka alqng wilh me . My friend laughed, "A return

TICKET!"

trip

BRIDGE
.

1-11-lt

NORTH
tl

•u

Opportunity
· for deception

tAI08714

•sat

EAST
+AI72

By James Jacoby
•Qs
Strange lhat East did not make a
•u1
.K6SI
nuisance bid by bo!&gt;Sting West's weak
jump overcall, but perhaps he knew
SOUTH
his partner's penchant for interfering
tK
with a long suit and little else. South '
.AKIOB$
reopened with a double, and then, aftKQ5
ter North had bid three diamonds, he
.AQ109
bid three spades . In this instance the
Vulnerable: North-South
cue-bid says: "I don't know what to
Dealer: East
play in, partner. Please help me de- ·,
cide." Since North had not supported w.11
Nord! Eul
Sootlli
hearts earlier, he felt safe in now sug- .
Pus
gesting game in hearts as a final 2 •
Pus Dbl
Pass
Pus
contract.
•
~·
Pass
Pus '
After the friendly jack ol clubs lead, Pass
declarer won the queen and played A· Pass
K ol hearts. When the queen appeared
Opening lead: • J
from East, South continued with a
· third round , hoping that the suit would
split. But West won the nine and now
.
played queen of spades. ~st. won the . trumps, he plays the queen of dlaace, drop_pmg declarers king, and monds from his band, rising with the
· kept on w1th the sutt. Declarer ruffed · ace when West plays the jack Weet
and played ~he king ol diamonds. might be fooled. l'fow a club to 'the 10
When ~he jack appeared ~rom West he would tempt West to rull. H not, elow . _
overtook With dummy s ace and diamond toward dummy's 10 ml&amp;llt·
played a club to the 10. West was care- confuse the iaaue. U defender West leta·
lui not to trump. Nl!ll:t came. a low dia· declarer play clubo from dummy one
mond, but West was up to th1s play. He more time lour bearla wlll come rollrufled in and continued spades. Even· ing in.
'
tually declarer had to lose a club for
J...,.J....,y'll&gt;oob . , _ , . , . , _ . . _
down one.
·"J.-o6yooCanfao-"l--llltfalaor, :·
Declarer mighl have gotten away
O..ald ~.•,'".- . - at
with aswlndle earlier. U, after A·K of h_ •
Bothroo ... •

••

L--------------1

·br--

tile,.'-!"
=

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH ,
ACROSS
1 Colombian
city

Macaw
Drink up
4 Losing
money
5 Types
6 neyond
7 Original
8 Historic
period
9 King (Sp.)
11 Surf noise
15 Reverence
16 World- ·
27 Real
34 Apiece
weary
or rourth 81 A Gershwin
17 Seek pr~y 28 Ex~lud~ 37 Abe and
18 Big game 31 Peaked .
Mary T~d'a
19 Totted 1.\P 32 Go hon,lters child
20 Whirl
33 Actors
38 Wing

5 Oead duck
10 Irish
Islands

&lt;

2
3

·

11Noted
patriot

12 Engrossed
13 Like
some

streets
14 Bigot
16 Teresa
or song
18 Ulsreaturc
21 Showiness
22 Dwelling
24 Enthuse
211 Mining
nnd
28 Out. of
the way
28 Swiss city
29 Craving
30- out
(whacky)
3Z Uarc
33 Type or

21 ()Qrlan -

(II'O~p

23 Shiner

(abbr .)

(Lat.)
39 Be busy

-.
.,

••

.,•'

..

anesthetic
38 Greenland
' ha.qe

40

Make

'

effervescent

41 Asian
river

42 Rlbicr,

43

e.g.
Popular

cheese
DOWN
1 Lift cage

· DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here'allow to work It:

..

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

Muy•a' World o(

15tCM:t:,~

........... Colol1•1

-

ill YlcleoCountrJ

·'

--· ......--.
1112 Oadga 0-80 4o4. Low

Michael and Joey enroll In a
sexual tty ewareneaa seminar.
III • ill Hooperman
Hooperman rants an
apartmenl to McNeil and .
dlacovare ha'a a swl"llar. 1;1

CORNL.ICCflA CF
ANONYMITY.

J

'

w•Nrt. drvert end

=-4-~:;1;-

.,

AVERITA&amp;-E

ROLAN!AA. MIO&lt;LE,
MINDY' P. CI..OPP,
WARRE:N BLEG,LE,

ROBERTA SNAFF...

........ 304-171-2318.

11711CiwvC.... lopd., hpd.
,.....&amp; Ill motor. Lan1
Colll04-171-11'70.

0 l.llrry King Uval .
11J MOVIE: A S a - r
Named DilliN (PGI (2:02)
9:30 • (2) ~ My Two Dada

I-ll

1
~'

Fetty T•• Trtnunna itump
- 1 . Cal304-175-1331 .

IOntbl•

--~

•

'

1

In 1 eleatrlcll, ranw~ dalln g oo m-

82

A
'1;11'

c

pllto. Call14-4-18-7829.

Point,

e

(J) Tile Wonder Y11111
Kevin acts as amlasary
beCWeen Winnie and har
boyfriend.
Ill (!) PIVIIIIIne Examine
Reagan's public career and
ISHII his ldmlnlslration's

Corplnlry work' bv tho job or
hour, ..nollnQ dry wol. plumb-

:=:-..~Tno."c'!ral'::
441-40....

._. ___ _

....., on ..,ny .,.._. Lll•

,on
......
-D
- ...
..d .....
.-undwa.
New
- - Moclol L-113. 42 lop

III

1'

Dllord W•• 8orv. . : Poolo,
a.twM. Willi. D II ery Any~- 0111 114-448-7404-No

tiZ.IOO.OO. 10 yr Wlk -

"I still buy a new outll1 for each
weak's maatlng!"

•

Plint:ing: Interior 6 Exterior.
ffM - - · · CO! 81 .. 4451344.

175-2121.

gel

Apartment
tor Rent

''

Floh Tonk. 2413 Jadcoon Avo,
304-175-2081
10 galoot .. •14.81.,d 10gol

18 . . Corvette conttertlble.

9:00~~~1;1

Ooorgoo c - Rd. Call 814- . ..

441-0214.

1188 DadgoAd._ AC, PI, PI,
naw • • • •d tlra t320Q.
Colll1 ...... 3831. 448-1211.

month pluadepa.tt •dutltti•.

City. Adu~o
114-~8-0331.

""'*·

1:011()) MOYIE:. Nigh! SchDOIIRJ
(1:28)
8:30 III
(J) Hud of the Clau
E~c and Simona have a poor
flrst date. 1;1

AaJSE

FOR?

part&amp; .,d oupplla Pldt
'·
up and del~.,-. 0..,.. YMIIum :• '
Cl•••· one helf mite u_p ~ 1'

RON 'I APPUAN CE SERVICE,
hou .. cilll ..rvk*lg OE. Hot

Orlglnol
310 4 opaad.
now lOp. PS. nM - oorlngo.
•noo nrm. Dov 114-14112885, ...... g 81 .. 247·4-111.

(()Jsrrruwr

Wt\AT

IWEEP!R •dt.w-.gmechlnt

1984 VW Robbll. ...,dorll
t2288. 1184 Dotlgo Ad•
w..on. auto.• elr, 12219.
John' a Auto lol• Wow Hollo
dar Inn. ~~on .. 90.

compltte e43.21.

'

"'

AKC Rag-ad Cocl!• &amp;p.,iol
puptlia Blenda .,d whho. 4
,..,..., 0110. 2m .... e121.
fleodv lorVol.,.lno'oDoy. .,._
9111-4407.

2 ba&lt;*'oom, furnlohod, . . ,hor
and ..,.,, air oondldon. 82~5

mobile horne In
onlv. P•klng. Col

Wllwpfoof'••a.

Now

e

EEK &amp; MEEK

Slam. . Klttlnl. I wtilb old.
Sool or Uloc Pain~ 1 long holrod.
lohort. 51 .. 9112-7201.

,_,.-y
.... - Glllndlr
-Milt·
- ..,_PI.PS.AC.AAHM.
mlftLII'IIiMAdn.
•o.,dald-L-.Moclol prlcotl to ... 304-773-8301.
1213 lproa~or 10114
t2.7BO.OO. Motlol321, 1:11 bu
12.110.00. Motloll14. 177bu
$3,100.00. ........ 104. 1,221
....... nylpr- 17.100.00. 11711 ford F·1110.:. Y-1. .....
lllotloiiOI T.,..., .... 2.271 -.. •••a.,.l. Pl. I fl.

-,-------44

, ... Local re1W•0111 u ..hed. • ,
F- _.._.. Coli oolloco
1-81 .. 237-048t. dor or nlglw. ;
Roger•laltm•nt

Rot.-y or coblo tool drlllns
MOll-o oo..-oomottor.
"'"" .. d -leo. 304UI-3102

-oecl-.

1113 0 - - four-·

ttov ..

• Nlllll'lllla

· BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unaonclttonll. lf•lme ~·an- : •

1977 Oldo. Dolle 81. 380 ens.
PB. PB. Good tlra N..do
........ Ru• good. eaoo. Col
814-2411-IOH oft• 7 PM.

81

8 14-992· 7478.

hlotary
""
DonHatlor.
P-""

Improvement•

304-171-2311 or 814-445- '"
24114.

-p-

1;1
.
liD MOYIE: A Change of

10111 ~RI(1 :42)
OPI.iDINIWI
ill MOVIE: Shamue CPO)
(1 :48)
. I(J Munier, 8ha Wrote

G-morll S ... ad V•hlcl•
fl'om noo. Fonlo.
Corvetta. Ch•Y- lur... a. Bur. . Guido 111 108-lii7-IIODO
&amp;1.1-10118.

Blocll &amp; ollv• AKC, molo Koo
Shound, 1 yr. alll l!lltr.,.oly
afloctlonoto. father chomplon.
A-g UOO or bN1 ollor. dollv•. Coli 51 .. 245-11100.

I~

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Yohl-

1000. Ext. S-10188

AKC Roglol•ad Chow.
natured. u10. eon
2108.

'~

·'

Auto's For Sale

cl• b e100. Fordl. Merced•.
CCM'\I.U.t. Chewys. Surptue.
'luyon Guido. 111 105-887-

vlco. Col1114-448-3144ott•7
PM.
.

.,

;i;;;---..-----·!
81
Home
'•

Ch. . nel Aultlc

Orogo-vncl. Catt-. -nol.
,.,.... and Slam•• ... d Him•
Ieven ldttena. Chow atud • •

~

\

Tran spn1 t.illilll

Oroomtna. All brHda. , .All
otyloo. e.no Pot Food Dooltr.
JuRoWobb Ph. 114-4-48-0231.

',

w-

Ohio. Coli 11._448-

6 li VI' Iii k

occoptad. CoH 114-448-3597
or 245-5223.

throw out

.

2 BR . mobile home for f'lnt. Ref.

Fur,. heel or unfurnlthed.. 1

pr-.ura pllll-. •

)

~erV I C I:S

&amp; dopotlt. CaN 814-4-48-0127

DM.Ixe 3 BR , houH for ....

8UDGI!T TAANBMISSIONUied 6 rebuilt Ill ty ~··
W'"'anty-30 .dort, p~- eH &amp;
up. Uled &amp; Nbullt ,.._
cxuwert.-.. atMdlrd c:lutdt•.

or dMtwwy. MMon Nnd. GaUlpao tw,. IIOred out of wMttw. 120.
Uo llodl Co.. 123'h Pine St.. . Ctoll 11 .. 948-2102.

Pets for Sale

. 1:00 ()) MOVIE: Moltawk ~NRI
(1:19)
• (2) Ill) lln8tllwd
MyiiMiel A Sr111ah
pros~ who vanished,
leaving a fonune, Is
examined.
III e ill Growing Paine
Carol hu a walk on lhe wild
side by 8neakii1G oul with a
college guy. 1;1
(l) (J) Natloniii.Giogrtlphlc .
Speclll A primitive lrlbe In
Cameroon adheres to a
lradltlonal Ufestyle. (1 :00) 1;1
IIDI e111 TV 101 Vance
returns to his drug habits to
win lhe 1ff1C11oos of a new

I

'

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

12xSO 2 BR . mobile ho.me

7:3511J S.nford enct son

)
,

1Mgo round biiM d gocd mload

•z.ooooo, 1111 moblo homo
14o'70. ....... 304-773-1310

locmtd In Ewergr..,. Chll*•

campenution
pill\ IMn.tt.. c•.., . growth.

'•

Auto Parts
8t Accessories

Conc:r•• blocb- all , _ . .,..d

~

IBI Night Court

ill CroM And Chua

•

Grain

Tl-llr hor. Good ..-.,.

WESTERN RED CEDAR

IIJCroufiN

.''

4 &lt;Notom truck
11. I
Inch. 8 lug. 10· Inch 304-175-7134.

Plllt. 1 child accapttd. c.l
114-21&amp;-2384oft• 5 PM.

in«*'f~•drfven

I:'J'Af·:Opardyii;J

bhn buck kld1. Ianum
Chid&lt;.... COIII1._ 3118-8841.

SURPLUS ·Original Armr. Denim. Aentll, C.rh_. Caothlng.
USA Jungle loot1, GNWI Ca-

··

'3147.
:.'::"..."':;;o.~1' r,r=s~

*•

Tral•
eleetrlc furntee.
f1 00. W•rm Morning gal
hHiw, f325. Both uttd one

~

uao .,. bola Regilt- Nu·

and llevolad Lop Slclng
"Oodl Motorioll
G.......... Quollly
CI!TIDE, INC .. Ath•a-514584-3171

IBICMen
I(JMiamiYice
ill Fandllngo
7:011()) Andy G!fflllh
7:30. (2) Family Feud
III E-lnment Tonlgh1
.(J) USA Today

·•
18ft. ftNgl• ' 1ttNng ·bolt

78

PA NCEM

..--1;1

.,••

bo•lns Wwranty-12moo.CVC
lointo-ol IYPII· Cal 11._3792220 .. 304-575-57118.

-her ...- . . , - - diO&lt;
- ofltr
""
'fleodvflther
now. ...
Call
4.' "
304-

&amp; ref. Loc•.tn..,Thurrntn. No

vo•· We provtde.., uclll.,f,

•

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

' B..... gMotorioll
pipM, wk&gt;Biocll. brick. dows. lnt• •c. Claude Wino
two, Rio G..,tll. 0, CoH 51._
245-1121.

Mlood 1\8-d Wood I I - n2 P«
bundle. Canulning •prox. 114

- l v .adoooretod. 2 BR. Dop.

whcr&lt;*l helpunxuedounll•

76

'

aft• 2 PM.

c.ntrat Ftorldl

~:

•liD ThtM'a Coniplny
Ill Monewttna

.

L-...L-.1.-...L-.1.--L...-J you develop from step No. 3 below.

Mact•IIJ Lehrer

1111 e111 !Ill WhMI of

.,~

-

While preparing lor a visH to
a very small lown, I asked
what I shoul.d take along with
me. My friend laughed, "A

. I I' I I I o"~·;;~:~~: ~~h~h:h~~~i~gq~~'rd~

NewaH-(1:00)

.,'

DAIRY FARMERS

Mload gr... hoy. .Call et 4-318UII.
·

Building Supplies

Peek-1-Poo puppl•. •100.

ton. Ohto P .. lllt Co .. Pomwoy,

'

---------

2104.

Ohio. 81._H2·Me1 . .
to Rant

·Is

·-Countrr
(l) (I)

-

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

1:35()) I to I
7:00()) Our Houle
.(J)PMMIIgiZine
til Colaga --~~
til eill eun.nt Affair

Livalltock

.:ce~t~

Groorn and Bupplv Shop-Pot

WANTEDII Old hand-modo
quitt1. Any ~mount.
con•
Uon. C.•h ~cl. J . White.
814-245-94-48.

Bled•.

,~&lt;~_..:

~

1884 Hondo CRIOO mot'"
cyclo, gocd cone!. coll30._8953884 or ·304-175- 1888 oftw
1:00.

F•mEqulpmom. ZotorT...,on.

How•d Rotev'f tore.
........
ll .. go.
·~·old-•
1•.
Morris
Equlomlnt,
Rutlend.

ROIP-'Iotionoloolru-Comm..- paof tllble •d

56
53

bel•.

83

Ooll-

Oolc pod. toblo. loot. 8 chalro.

buoh hol • .,.... bled&amp;
'3710.
C 190 liT SoriM
3-tu&lt;bo, *4880. 12ft.ACwlloo-oyllncltr, -5. NH 8150
round
•2110. Owne • •
fln ... oe. c.. 11~211-1122.

IMgou-olloii&lt;OII• for hindichid up to 120 Ie.,
304-171-1058.
.
CliPped

65

PRICES SLASHED-W•now t71. Qu.., tile
menr... Mt·NQ. t188 now

311MF.nlco.-&amp;dll~5ft,

Ohio 114-742-2418.

3168. .

r-o. 8149

IIJ Carta on

and ioto of . . . -~
•z.aoo.oo. Coii304-H5-3427
m. 1:00, '-'• n~me .,d

Farm Equipment

UTILITY
Cl-.....
treck cbor. 1 _3 • ,_.
15
door' .,.

VIRA'S FURNITURE •
APPUANCES

0p., Mon.-Sat. 9 AM-I PM,
SUn. 12 noon-11 PM. 114-448-

81

CET H F

IBI WKRP In ClnclnnaH

1173 SUbJrbln, 41114, ·4154 engino ..,.. 1'8, PI,. • - dr-.

C-TriSIIIrmociMa-•
-·~
with ettechmentt,
or

t100.00. 8ft.
Ford F100 bolgo .,d brown
.,00.00. 2 pc llolng room ouh
e•c cond eeoo.oo. 304-8122052.

w..unga.

54 Misc. Merchandise

b•h. CoN 448-4415tft• 7PM .

814-4-45-3870.

Own your own •P•II or shoe
ttor1, choose from : J11n,

IPPllclneet. Cell 114·4417572. ,Houri 9 :5-

In SyriCUI8. 1 bedroom eppel'lment. 813&amp;. p• month plua
d11p011lt lnd utlttl•. 114-992·

ping. .,..kt ~d
For
morelnformetion calf 304-882-

2 BR . loOMed It 1925'h Ch. ..
nut St.
mo. t75 diP. Call

lNG CO . recrlnwnendlthM you
do busln- with pmple you
Mow, end NOT to send mon.,
through the melt untl you h••
lrNnrlg•ed the off•lno..

lufwltle Rd. Open 9em to lpm
Mon. lhtu Sot. Ph. 814-4-45-

Merchlndiae

Ii

.

/Ji NIA Today

.',,..
30'x40'•1'8"ILDO . SPL.1-: ;"';-;:::;';::;::::;:;:::::==
*188.00
.JCJ'
c•ll
wmo .,....,.oc~, P-•
'.
199 EIIECTED. Iron 74 · Motorcycles
30._I75-4-41I.
Horoalldro.Coiii1._:S32-8741 1----------

2783. -

c:to••
IChoot..

mo. Coil 304-878-1104 or
175-5318.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISfl.

----------·90 D•v• s.-ne •• cath wtth
•PProved Cfedft. 3 Ml• out

54 Miac.

TICPH

I .j I' I I

I:OillJ One Dlly II I Time
1:10. l2l ~ NBC Nightly Newe

I:::::::::J:;::;::=::::::==;:-1 •'-ot

Pertl•tv turnilhtd ..,anment.

3BA .

Business
Opportunity

complota w-- r f295andupto*311. 8obv*'10. Mlltr-orbo• oprlngo
full «twin f68, ilrm •11. end
tal. Ouoian- t210 &amp; up,
King t380. 4 drowor- M8.
GOOI cabin . . 5, I &amp; 10 gun.
B•bv mottr- t38 .• •a .
lod from• •20. t30 &amp; King
frame f50. Good H4_.ion of
bedroom IUit•. met .. c:~binM
h-ordo 110 Wid up 10 , 55 .

814-992-7787. EOil

c•Pited. appllanC*. 'Mit• .,d
tr•h pidrupt ~ed. Maintenance free !tYing
1o ~hop­

448-0008.

F1nanwl

Woodtllblew-lchalrat211ta
•78&amp;. O..k noo.., to e37&amp;.
Hutm• 8400 .,d up. Bunk

14,~0.

Apartment wdebl&amp; HUD ac-

Now accepting 1ppiiC.Cion1 for
2 bedroom ep_.ment•. fulty

Hanas for Rant

Din.... t109•dupto t495.

Vlll8¥ F..nlturt
NBW •d uHd furNture and

polo. Call 614-445-0338.

Wanted to Do

21

41

,to *591. Roclln. . t225 to
0375. Lampo *28 to *125.

Unlu.,Vohed 2 BR . g•og• oport-

448-2105.

I

1!1 .Ill Cll8 ......

t385 toand
t915.
Tabl•
flOfrom
end
Sof•
chWt
prictcf
up 10 f125. Hlde-o-boclt t310

KROVEE

~1---ri-12 . :r.-11'-rl---rl--1

(I) Nlghly lu1ln111 Report

0322.

4581 .

I

•liD Happy Daya

1181 s- 10 81- 4x4. Milodrill&amp; olr. AM·FM .. ..._ 5,000
mn• E-ont oond. Col114318-8110.

Open BAM 1o IPM. Mon 1hru
8ot. 114-448-1598. 827 3t4

low 10 lorm fou• simple words

·=

(l) Dr...e Junior High 1;1
(!)Dr."Who: GNen Dolllh

&amp; 4 W.O.

:::

four scrambled words be·

•

........ 304-882-2818.
Vana

CLAY I. POUAN

Loll

.(J) (J) .ill Ill
®Spa 1 'aak

1810 Chwrolal e,olfton plcl&lt; up;
• ayl, """" ...... bod. ....
tr~nemtuien. f2100. Oaod

comp..a line of uMd tJrnlture.
NEW· W•t_,. bool• *315.
Workboots t18 • up. 1St_. •

The

~~

OReorronge lofft" ef lhe

EVENING

141.00000. 304--1031.

elf•-.
...w , o..u. wring.- Wlllher, •

114-448-2404

Smol flwnlohed IIPorlmorll. A!
private. Call81._445-3318.

Renl als

HELP WANTED

•

1978 Llborty 1.._70, 3 bedroom. •7. 900.00. 304-17&amp;.

Schools
Instruction

UPto t15HOURPROCESSING
MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUARANTEED. FREE DI!TAILS , 111 21881-4228.
WRirf. SD, 1017 W. PHILADELPHIA. SUirE 239-GO, ON TARIO. CALIF 91712.
Re al Eslale

.nd-' Mnllen1 llfeltvle. We'r1
lih Equol Opportunity Employer.
We're ~eel blh~;~~ Orl•do
end Tempa, n•er Cyprtu
O.rdlna. D.. _, end other 11:·
tr~~CiioM. MINt tmportentty,
we're In • ltrOftl tan hlghfr¥'
aomPidllwe m•nt- If lnt~~r­
IWid rMI.nnetn d•ntnga

Nice 1-2 _.oom apartfT*rtt.
AY811a.bl• llr,.hed or unfur~
nllhed. [)epotlt requir ... C.ll

2 BR . ..,.. on Coun Street. o..
h••· elr. Stove a r.trlg. Dtpo•tl
rC~uired. Ctll 814-441-&lt;4428 or

87, 304-458-1876.

15

lnventorv,
fbnul'tll. elrf•e. gra1d op.,lng. etc. Can
open 15 days. Mr. Loughlin

Advertitlng 511• P rofM1ion11 in
Ftoridl

bolh. Aloo 1' 1A . opt. lOCh
In Rio G••do. Call 814-2455223 or -t48-3187.

1981 VIctorian, 2 be*oom. ell
electric: moble home. Glrden
tub. bl¥ wkldow. toaded Priced
to 1111. hclllent concllllon. CaH
304-812·3411 oft• 5:30p.m.

•cr•

bic. Brid ... llng«t• or Acc•af&gt;

.

- l v remodolad 1 aR . opt.
Appl. furNihed. ldaol loation-1
blodt from downtown. Cell
5, ....a- 4138.

ment. In town. C.rp•ed. Adutta
onl&gt;(. No ptll&amp; Cttll 814-441-

3 cl . . ed
with pond. 3 a
ICI'I 11'1Ct1.. 8JIIC bldg ttNI off At.

Equal Opponunlty Employer

BldWol, Ohio

t1100000. T·IOO V•o,_
T..,dl• on . - alto 24 1o
.......... ftdaiiPiorocll. 411

•o
WKIIP In Cincinnati
11J lhDwllz Today

81311 or 114-H2·6732.

Sltvw Bridge Pl.,

M/ F,

WED., JAN. 18

_ _ _ _..;,.._ f4ktd

bra•

hoa matar with 24 In

-II'""

•

446-4e07 or 448-2102.

1977 1 2K 80 Uborty, 2 BR ..
p ..lollv lurnlohod. $1000. Call
814-319-25U

814-4411-2105.

Sportswear. ledlee, Men• 1,
Children. M•ternlty, lerge

Goilipolio. Ohio 46831

for Sale

-,---------

Emp . .r.

SERVICE PR EPRESENTATIVE
AT BENEFICIAL
Your oldill .,d .. .,...,.,.,. will
milk• you en lmportent ~rt of

32 Mobila Home•

Main St,. Point Ple•.,t. W.Va.

ofllco uporionco helpful: "'~

ing •dS•utdly haur. .retobe
expct:.t. Send tetter of lnt«ett..
r•Lnne lf'ld two emplrwmtnt

-a•.

33

304-178-4241 or 875-3011.

r-aulr• ntl.tli• trWitporetion:
"' wlllngn.. to trM'el lo other
PPSEO ofllcet. WeekdiV. even-

-n.

3 bt$oom modern ho,.,._ *"II
b•ernn. I
1 mila from
1104-176-3030 or 1753431.

en required, ..,drewmetoBox
P- 13 c•a Pt. Pl. Rogiot•. 200

BodV Men noodad. Sbo v......... pluo toolo. Coll814-

Golllpollo or Ch•IIPOIIl&amp; Ohio.

all or wll a'plil il. If lnt•llf_.
write Point Pl. . ant A-alit•.
lolil C-18, Pt. Pit.. W.V1.

,..., 85, 3 boclooom, fullv loedell

28550.

trllln mlture lnclll'icllll who II
,..,)ttie to reproductWe hutth
needl of ctient&amp; Looldng for
tommne who II llllf·mottvated
.. d can grorN In the posttion ••
need n • . Potttion bMed In

Slold Hll Rood, $79,100.00 lor

Appla Grove • - . 304-176-

Phvticl-''1 Office Laboratory.
Appl¥' In p•aon to The Medlcel
PIMI, 203 ~ackaon Pike be.
tw.., 8:30-4:30.

HELP WANTED- Hourly Clinic
Aldt needed p.,..-tim a In family
pl~nnlng afftce~ . Must h1111e high
1 ~ol dlplom~ or equivllencv;
goOd c;ommunle.tion skill: ace~~racy wtth fig.~.-; mMICIII

ml• from Point Plea•'lt Qn

WORLD BOOK· CHILD CRAFT

bookkeep•. ,.,. • ..,; ..f .. ,...

388-8815.

ground fac• bid top ro.t. 7

For Sill• or. Rent: 19n Schultz

W•U.t: loCIII II'N office needl

Plrl· rimto MLTforfullv oqu;ppod

10 Plus Acr•. 3 beeoom. 2

tCorv home. two 14x70 mobile
hom-. barn. 2 w.-t• wllll, aM

304-552-3309, Lot'o 1alk.

rapr..,tatNe needed for SPECIAL PROMOTION. full or ~rt­
tlmt hours. Cell 304-875-15817
or 882-2486.

~ er v 1ce s

11

1974 ............. load . . .
1100. 10ft.,mpl&amp; 2. 341ga
"'""'" t3.1100.00. 11711 C710
Foidwlh 20 ftft~t,I'B, Pl. I&amp;
2. e3.1100.00. C•• QO c bade

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FUftNirURE 12
Olivo St., Golllpolo.
NEW· I pe.
I&gt; e389.
UwW1g room ..,.... t189- 1199.
S...k- wllh boddlntt t248.
F~,j~ eize m.-tr- • tounHtion
1terllng- t99 . Atcllnfrt
olarllntt t98..
.
USED- Bodo.
-oom

'::~:t~~' S@tl&lt;iUlA-~t.trs·

Television
Viewing

:

~uE~--1;1

w~h

progrorn, training program oluo

. , .. 742-2451.

BORN L

&amp;.oand Ave. Furnllhed efftdtn..,rting M e171 a mo.

1 l•v- efflcl•cv apt. furnilt.d

TOP CASH pllld for '83 model
.nd RIW'er Ul . . CWI. Smith

Bulck·Pontlwc.

Houeehold Goods

Trucks for Sale -'

cl•

ewt~ed Ohio .,.d W.-t Virginll.

9

72

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

M e r cli.J il!il st

51

FOUND: Bo"'tlful bladc P"PPI'
on Klneon Dr. C.ll 814-448-

VVednasday,Japu:ay~1~B~·-1~9:8:9~_________________.________~P~omao~~v~_MT-i~~~~~·-o~~~~;-~--~r---~:::::;:;:;~;The~~D:~:'y;Se~m~i~n~·~-~P~~;;:-1--5

. Wednesday. January 18, 1989

POmeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

One letter stands for another. In this ll8nlple A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter~~,
.apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words ~re all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
\
CRYPTOQUO'IE

.-

. ··-.'
'

1·18

SJERGRDP
C Z MMD
.L G G

VII D

OSLO

A VIE

SMLOMWGP

G I Z ,

ZSORUS

ORVDJMC

EHVM
v......... CIWPIIII•• ..c TO LOVE SOMEONE
IS TO REVEAL TO ntEM ntEIR VALUE AND HELP
THEM DISCOVER THAT ntEV ARE PRECIOUS. JEAN VANIER

CSIID.-DSIELC

C) Ita King FSIIurft ~; Inc .

,,

�•

Paga

16-The Daily Sentinel .

Wadna.-~y.

Pomeioy-Middlepolt, Ohio

Janu..,18, 1989 ·.

Tar Heels
upset Duke
five;9l-7l

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
052
Pick-4 4094
Super IAlcto

·Page 3

4-5-10.27-38-40

Kicker 8383ll

•

e·

'.J

•

January 22, 1989

Cloudy tonl1ht, low In 30&amp;.
Friday, cloudy, hllh In 30s.

en tne

Vol.39. No.178
Copyrighted 1989

· 2 Sectlono. 1 I Pogoo 2&amp; C•nta
. A Multlm.,!lo Inc. N-IIN'PW

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday. January 1$, 1989

Officials told State
Issue II funds have
limitations, liabilities
'

•

By NANCY YOACHAM
SenUnel Staff Writer
Meigs County governmental
subdivisions have been anticlpat·
ing that State Issue II might
provide financial means for
much needed capital lmprovrnents ln their local areas. But
the wind was knocked out of the
sails of several local goverrunental officials when they learned
Wednesday night at a meeting at
the Meigs County Courthouse,
the liabilities and llmitlltlons on
the use of State Issue II funding.

Good Luck To The Bengals and 49'ers
01.
Faehlo•••

Potato
Chips

t lb. paekage

Kahn's Wl·eners
-~
· R•t•l•r,

J•••• or I•• Size ·

69

Pepsi Pro~uots

+

2 Liter

Ratular •t.09

•

Deli M••• -:- 12 l11eh .

DISCUSS ISSUE II FUNDING - Representatives of Meigs County's live villages discuss how
they will dl,vlde $100,000 In State Issue II funds.
l'lctured left to right are, Fred Hoffman,

Pizza
$
99
FOR
MADE TO ORDER

•' B,--NMICY· YOACRAM

R11eh
Stvle

Ground Chuek

.$' 49

•

$229

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
House of Representatives. In its
first action of the new session,
Wednesday adopted legislation
allowing the Jefferson County
vlllage of Stratton to put a
property tax levy on the February ballot.
The bill cleared the House
unanimously and went to the .
Senate. where similar action Is
expected next week.'
The bill. sponsored by Rep.
Jerry Krupinski, D-Steubenv!lle,
grants Stratton temporary immunity from the requirement
that issues be certified for the
,ballot at least 75 days before the
·
election. ·
Stratton plans to place on the
Feb. 7 ballot a property tax levy
for the community's operating
expenses, incl11dlng the purchase
of equipment for the pollee and

t•••

''• , .., ',.,., .t..,,""
~·1

,,
••
,
........

Look for ,,., IRANDARAMA
·o~r4 to errlwe ,.,, 111• It ''''.
• 0•• or pld ••• •P et ,., etor1 •
Aek fer rotr. FREE
lldet ..,.
"•• , ....0.. Olr ...,.,

,..

' '-i&gt;

·*1491·;&lt;.:~,.

·''

1;

;;·.~

' ~··

·Ptrlf R•lf• Tnr

ttt"

'

MUST PROVIDE GOLDEI 'BUCKEYE CARD • DRIVER'S UCEISE

I

I

For S

fire departments. ·
Krupinski. told his colleagues
that Stratton planned such a levy
for last November. but removed
it from the ballot In anticipation
of a huge windfall In utility
property taxes from the Ohio
Edison Co. this year.
Ohio Edison. which operates
the Sammis generating plant
near Stratton, furnishes about 80
percent of the village's property
tax revenue.
Ohio Edison owns a share of the
Perry nuclear power plant near
Cleveland. That plant was valued
for tax purposes last August at $2
billion by the Ohio Department of
Taxation - the largest evaluation of ·a single piece of property·
in the history of Ohio.
After Stratton had removed Its
levy from the ballot. the state of
Ohio reduced the Perry valuation
by about 50 percent, but by the
time Gov. Richard Celeste

signed that law, It was too late to
meet the 75-day deadline, Krupinski said .
Krupinski said the 1 mill levy
would have generated about
$188,000. He said the 1988 law
gave affected school districts 75
percent of the money that would
have been generated oy ballot
Issues they removed, but "we did
nothing like that for municipal
corporations."
It the levy passes, Stratton
·officials will be permitted to
immediately borrow up to · 50
percent of the amount generated
In one year to help the village
cash flow.
· The House adjourned for the
remainder of the week. Commit·
tees will be worklng·for the.next
two weeks, including the House
Finance Committee, which plans
to hold three days of hearings
next week on the governor's
1990-91 budget proposaL

I

By Unlled Press International
Weather forecasters struggled
Thursday to find signs of winter
a~ a spell of mild weather showed
no .signs of subsiding, confining
snow and freezing temperatures
.to the northern reaches of the
country.
A stubborn.cold front brought
light snow to parts of North
Dakota and Minnesota early
Thursday, and strong northwesterly winds accompanying the
snow were sharply reducing
visibilities.
. AdviSOries for blowing snow
were In effect early Thursday for
the eastern part of North Dakota
8J1.&lt;I )&gt;arts of Minnesota, where

winds . up to 35 mph were
expected to cause problems
related to blowing and drifting
snow.
Another cold front !rt the
northeastern part of the country
produced rain and snowshowers
along the Atlantic Coast from
Maine to New Jersey.
Rainshowers were scattered
across southern Louisiana and
the southern half of Texas.
Lafayette, La., received more
than a half inch of rain during the
six hours ending at 1 a.m. EST.
Fog was developing In parrs of
California's central Valley as
Well as In iiOUthern parts of
Texas, forecasters said.

Fair 10 partly cloudy skies,
meanwhile, prevailed across
most of the rest of the nation.
Strong winds were blowing
overnight in parts of Colorado,
with gus!B .uP to 65._mph reported
In the Boulder area.
Temperatures weere In the 30s
and 40s across much of the nation
early Thursday, dipping Into the
teens and 20s prlmarUy In the
upper Mississippi Valley, the
Rocky Mountain region and
some par!B of the Plateau states.
Readings were still In the 50s
overnight from the Rio Grande
Valley of Texas through Louisiana and Into tlie Florida penln·
sula. Temperatures remained In
'

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

cussed upcoming meetings; a
Fair Housing Seminar on Janu.
ary 25. 11:30 a.m., at the Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy; a
meeting with representatives of
the Ohio Department of Development on Jan. 26 In Columbus; a
seminar for new and veteran
commissioners, Feb. 14-15 in
Columous; a meeting of area
state legislators, In Athens on
Feb. 17.
-The minutes of last week's
commissioners· meeting were
amended !or the purpose of
appointing and authorizing
Pomeroy Police C.hlef Jerry
Rought to take recognizance
bonds for Meigs County Court, In
place of Edith Sisson who has .
retired from the Pomeroy Police
Department.

-...,.._.;....-.---

Hayman gives Southern
Local District $10,000 gift

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slaff
Mrs. Irene Hayman. Westerville, widow of Charles Hayman.
long-time Racine schooladmlnls·
trator. has presented a girt of
$10,000 to the Southern Local
School District Athletic Fund.
This was reported when the
Southern Local School District
Board of Education met In
regular session. Details on how
the gift' Is to be handled will be
worked out later and Supt. Booby
Ord wlll send an appropriate
thank-you letter to Mrs.
Hayman.
In another action. the board
adopted a policy on students'
rights In regard to suspensions
and expulsions.
According to the policy on
suspensions, ' the student will be
given a written notice of the
Intent to suspend with reasons for
the suspension and the student
will oe given an opportunity for
an Informal hearing with the
principal to challenge or otherwise explain his-her action. The
student wlll be given within 24
hours a written notice of the
reason for the suspenslon.and the
right of the student to appeal the
suspension to the board of
education.
In regard to expluslons. a
student and parent-guardian will
oe sent a written notice of the
iritent to expel with the reasons
for the expluslon. The student
will be provided an opportunity
for his or her parent, guardian or
representative to appear for a
hearing before the superintendent to challenge or otherwise
explain his or her action.
The time of the hearing shall be
scheduled not earlier than three
days from the date that the Intent
notice is given and not later than
five days after the date the Intent
notice Is given unless the superintendent grants a time extension.
The student and parent-guardian
will be given within 24 hour~
written notice of the reasons for
suspension and the right to
appeal the expulsion to the board
of education.
The board ·considered a request for cooperation from the
Ohio Education Association ask-

Mild weather .continues around country

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
SIMI DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( ::,::!t)
•'

_ The following other buslnes~
matters were also conducted by
the commts·sloners on
Wednesday.
.
-Fred Hoffman, Steve Story,
as elected officials, and Eleanor
Thomas, as a citizen, were
appointed by the commissioners
as Meigs County's representatives on the Buckeye Hills·
Hocking Valley Regional Development Dis tr let execu live board.
-At the request of Larry
Ewing. publiC relations director
of Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College, the commissioners passed a resolution declaring the month of February as
CommunitY College Month. The
same de.;laration has oeen made
on the national and state levels.
-The commissioners .dis-

House passes bill to aid Stratton

t•••

,•.

Middleport mayor; John Anderson, Pomeroy
vlllnge administrator; . Bob Beegle, Racine
councilman; Frank Clelnnd, Racine mayor; and
Minter Fryar, Syracuse Councilman. ·

Meigs, three other counties to
form joint solid waste district

Naeho
or

oritos

•'

Last night's meeting was for District 18, which Includes
called oy the Meigs County Meigs County. Interpretations of
Commissioners and Engineer the State Issue II law are
Philip Roberts. All villages In the constantly changing, he said.
county,. all townships except · "But," he pointed out, "District
Rutland, and at least'one water 18 Is farther along In the State
district. were represented at the Issue II process than the state."
meeting.
As yet. there is no State'Issue II
State Issue II "Is one of tile director, although one Is supmost mixed up affairs I've ever posed to be appointed by Goverbeen involved with," stated nor Richard Celeste by February
Jones. who serves on the 23- L And until a director Is apmember State Issue II Integral· pointed. some procedural prolng Committee and the nine- cesses could still change.
-member ExecutlveCommiHee
· Continued on page 16

lren~

"·· Sentinel Staff Writer
On January 27, Meigs County
will officially join Athens, Hock·
lng and Vinton Counties in the
formation of a Joint Solid Waste
Management District. The formation of this district is in
keeping with new state laws
regarding solid waste disposaL
The commissioners are to
meet In Athens on January 27, at
which time, final documents
should be completed for subsequent forwarding to the Ohio
Environmental Protec(lon
Agency. The commissioners
passed a resolution In Wednesday's regular meeting authorizing themselves to sign the final
documents in Athens.

ortllla Chlpt

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1-..-----~--~---·--' ~

.

·-

the 60s in south central Texas and
southern Florida.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 2
degrees ~low zero at Craig,
Colo., to 72 degrees pt Key West,
Fla.
The unseasonably warm
weather continued to claim It's
share of weather records. The
afternoon high of 51 degrees at
W!Uiamsport, Pa., on Wednesday equalled the city's record for'
the date.
The National Weather Service
reported that six cities either tied
or broke their record high
temperatures Tuesday.

IDg that schools be closed on Feb.
14 to allow all school people to
travel to Columbus for the
purpose of meeting with state
legislators about the need for
additional funding for the next
biennium. The board did not
agree to close the schools but did
agree to send representatives to
Columbus with Supt. Ord to name
personnel who will make the
Columbus trip.
Kay .Wilson a.nd Jozte P.
Roberts were · named to the
· substitute teachers list for the
current school year and approved an employees benefit
plan as required by· the tax
reform act of 1986.
The board tabled joining the
Ohio School Board Association

legal assistance fund for 1989
until a later date. Plans were
made for the Installation of three
new light poles on the high school
football field and It was agreed to
Invite the union leadership to the
board's February meeting for
the purpose of discussing the
district's financial future. This
wni be an execu live session. The
board approved lour day~ of
holiday pay for Milford
.Frederick.
It was reported that the recent
staff changes necessitated from
last spring's staff cuts have been
delayed until the beginning of the
1989-90 sc boo! year for the benefit
of the 'students. It was reported
also that the Southern Local
Continued on page 16

Buckley first runner-up
in national essay ·contest
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Jr.
High School student Jeremy
Buckley, son of Bill and Twila
Buckley, RD., Pomeroy, recently placed as first runner-up
In the 12-years old and up
category of the Valvollne "Why I
Say 'No' to Drugs" essay contest,
sponsored by Valvo line and Area
Auto Racing News of Trenton,
New Jersey.
Jeremy will be honored at the
Miller Motorsports '89 racing
trade show on Saturday, January
28 at the Valley Forge Convention Center In King of Prussla•Penn,sylvanla near Philadelphia. Award presentations will
be made on behalf of Valvollne by
NASCAR's teenage driving sen·
satlon Todd Cray.
Buckley will receive a trophy
for his fine work, free passes to
the three-day Motorsporrs '89
show, and complimentary TShlr!B. Winners will also have the
opportunity to meet Winston Cup
stars Richard Petty, HarryGant.
Rusty Wallace,Bobby Alllson,drag racing legend Don Prudhomme and NASCAR series
champions Mike McLaughlin .

and Glenn Gault.
The first place winner received
a 'team Valvollne Jacket. a $100 :
savings bond. a trophy, and free
•
passes.
The winners were chosen from •
more than 10,000 essays from
across the Eastern United States .
and judged on the quality ot the
message and on neatness. The ·
essays were limited to 100 words. :
Eastern students were entered :
locally by Eastern teacher and .
stock car driver Scott Wolfe, who :
made the essay a class assign- •
ment In each of his six English :
classes .
Many notable auto racing
personalities and racing corn- : ,
panies will be feat~red at the :
event which takes up over 125,000 :
square feet of exhibitors space .
and three floors of the Valley :
Forge Convention Center.
Radio controlled race car
races,Big Wheel races, various :
displays, antique automobiles,
vintage racers. photo contest- :
s,and the Ms. Motorsports - '89 •
beauty contest will highlight the :
affair, the biggest such event In
the United States.

..-Local news briefgflli-----.
Mans truck reported stolen
Meigs Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that an all points
bulletin has been Issued for a 1987 Ford Ranger piCkup truck.
Owned by Roy Newell, Route 1. Middleport. the truck was
apparently stolen over the weekend. Neighbors said they did not
see the vehicle on Monday. Newell, a truck driver, was'on the
road and found his truck to be missing when he returned
Tuesday. The vehicle carries a non-commerlclal license NY
2627.
.
The sheriff' says that Investigations are being conducted on
mailbox damages at the Sandra Patterson home. Letart Falls,
and the Sara Voss residence, Route 124, Racine.
The department Is also Investigating tile reported theft of
approximately 500 feet of double copper wire from the H. B.
Harmon farm at Dexter. A reportfrom Carol Jeffers, Route l,
Middleport, WIIS recorded stating that a pistol and a boxofshells
are missing from her home. There was no evidence of forced
entry.
Charles Green, near Albany, Is being held In the Meigs County
jail for Clermont County ·officials and Is to be returned there
Thursday to answer charges of falling to appear In court.
Continued on page 16

,,
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