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Paga

---Local news briefs ... ---..,
Contlnu~d

from page 1
Pomeroy , went olf the lelt side of the road, strlkl.ng an
embankment. Damage was moderate.
Houdashelt suffered a minor visible injury and was taken by.
her parents to Veterans Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
The patrol cited Houdasheit lor lalluire to wear a seat belt.

EMS has 12 calls Tuesday
'

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 12 calls
Tuesday; Middleport at 9:10 a.m. to Main Street for James
Brewington who was dead on arrival; Syracuse at 9:49a.m. to
Minersville lor Zelma. Hawley to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
' Pomeroy at 10:22 a.m . to Main Street lor Anna Roush to
Veterans Mernorlal Hospital; Racine at 12:19 p.m. to
Stivers ville RC)ad lor Dorothy Brewer to· Veterans Memorial '
Hospital; Syracuse at 12: 45 p.m. to Hill Road for Ulla Strauss to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 2:18 p.m. to Vance Road for
Taylor McGraw to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3: 15
p.m. to Barringer Ridge Road for Wilma Black to Veterans
MemorlalHoapltal; Pomeroy at 4:43p.m . to State Route 143 for
Walter Eblin to Veterans Mmnorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:32
p.m. to Mulberry Ave. for Ada Hoce who was treated but not
transported; Middlepor t a t 5: 38 p.m. to Plum Street for Jimmy
Casto to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 10:37 p.m. to
Riverview Drive for Charles Wright to Pleasant 'Valley
Hospital; Middleport at 10:41 p.m . to the Cedar Bar for Ernest
Ward to Veterans Memorial Hos pital.

-----Announcements---Letart Township Trustees will
· meet Monday, 7 p.m., at the
office building.
Round and square dancing will
be featured Saturday even lng, 8
to 12 midnight, at the Racine
American Legion Hall. Mu sic
will be by the True Country
Ramblers. The public is Invited.
---

night, from 8 to 12 midnight, at
the Eli Denison Post of the
American Legion, Ru Ua.nd.
There will be a live band and
refreshments. Everyone
welcome.
The Olive-Orange v. F. W. Aux·
lllary wlll meet 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day at the hall.

1.,

There will be square, round
and slow dancing on Saturday

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Beyce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elllo &amp; Loewl
Am Elect ric Power . .. .......... 27%
AT&amp;T ........................ ....... .. 31%
Ashland Oil .. ....................... 35
Bob Evans .......... ..... .. ......... 15¥,
Charming Shoppes .. ... ......... 16*
City Holding Co ................... 19
Federal Mogul... ................. 51~
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .49\i,
Heck's .. . ......... ...... ........ ....... \6
Key Centurion .................... 14Y,
Lands' End ...................... ... . 29
Limited Inc ...................... .. 29%
Multimedia Inc .... ...... .... ..... 81\6
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .. .......... 17
Shoney 's Inc ...................... .. 8Y,
Wendy's Inti ....... .... ......... .... 5')4
Worthlrigton Ind .. .... .. ......... 23\6

Wednesday, Febru.-y 1, 1989

Pomaoy-Midcleport. Ohio

14-The Daily Sentinel

The Mason Fire Depar tment
Ladles Auxiliary Is sponsoring a
soup sale on Saturday, starting at
11 a.m. Vegetable soup and chill
J.:&lt;.:ili be sold for 50 cents a bowl,
$1.25 a quart or $5 a gallon. Bring
your own containers. Hot dogs
will also be sold. Everyone
wel.come.
The Hemlock Grove Church
wlll have a potluck dinner on
Sunday, starting at 12:30 p.m., at
the grange hall. The dinner Is In
appreciation of Charles Domin·
gan, temporary minister for the
past eight months, .and also to
welcome new minister, David
Pre ntice. Everyone welcome.
The Red · Cross Bloodmobile
will be at the Senior Citizens
Ce nter on Wednesday, February
8. from 1 to 5 p.m.
Clergy Appreciation Night,
sponsored by the Meigs Civllan
Club, will be held Thur~day, 6:30
p.m. , at the Senior · Citizens
Center In Pomeroy.

Area
deaths,_·-----~-----~--:-:James Brewin8Jon
Brenda Graham

James E. Brewington, 70, of
Main Street, Middleport , died
Tuesday at his residence.
. Mr. Brewington was born Jan .
8, 1919 in Spartanburg, s:c., a son
of the late Guy and Lillian
And~rson Brewington. He was
retired from the U.S. Army
where he was a mastl!r sergeant
with Medical Services and later
wtth Combat Engineers. He
Aerved In World War II and the
Korean Conflict. After his mll·
ltary career, he worked as· a
school teacher and retired Iron;~
Meigs Local School District. He
was a member of Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion,
Pomeroy; Heath United Metho·
dls t Church, Middleport; and the
Meigs County Teachers' Assocla·
tlon and the Ohio .Teachers'
Association.
Survivors Include a daughter
and son-In· law, Sandy and Roger
Luckeydoo, and two granddaugh·
ters, Amy K. and Lee M.
. Luckeydoo, all of Richmond,
Va.; a sister, Mrs. John (Mary)
Rogers ,' Spartanburg, S.C.; a
brother-in-law, John Vroman,
Middleport; two nephews. John
E. Vroman, Westervllle, and
Charles Vroman, Belpre; and
several great nieces and great
nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by hls
wife. Frances Bowen Erewing·
ton, In 1985, and a brother, Cecil
Brewini;lon.
. ·
Services will be Friday, 10
a.m .. at Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home, with Rev . C.S. ·
Zuniga Jr. officiating. Burial will
be In Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
from2 to4 and7to9onThursday.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Zelma
Hawley, Syracuse; Dorothy
Brewer, Portland; Wilma Black,
Portland; Walter Eblin,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - Teresa
Wood, Chester Rose.

Funeral services for Brenda
Lee Grimm, 18, "Green Acres
Clly. Fla. who died Jan. 25 were
held at the Green Acres First
Baptist Church there.
The Rev . Richard Be hers of!J.
dated and special music was
provided by Mark Nalesnick.
Miss Grimm was a senior at
John I. Leonard High School
where she was a member of the
Future Business Leaders of
America and a member ot the
First Baptist Church of Green
Acres.
She Is survived by her mother,

Mary Lou Houghtaling. Green
Acres; her father. Roderick
Laurence Grimm, 818 N.F. St.,
Lakeworth Fla. ; a sister, Krista
Martino, a brother, Jeffrey . at
home; and grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roderick Grimm, Ra··
cine. and Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Wagner, Belpre.

Lillian Romine

surviving are ' her husband,
James R. Romine, New Have ; one
5on Harold Lee Howell, G ton·
one' sister and brother-in-law, Mary
Elizabeth and Evereu Pauley, Albany, Ohio; tWo sisters-in-law,
Sadie M. Marr, West Columb1a an
Mary L. Hoffman, New Hav
eight grandchildren; two gr !grandchildren ; several nieces
d
nephews.
Services will be Friday at 1 p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral Home
with lhe Rev. Clifford West officiat-

Ohio Lottery

slip past

Daily Number

858
Pick4 4284
Super Loato
11-16-24-25-33-44
Kicker

Buckeyes

Page 6

862270

•

Lillian P. Romine, 73, New
"
.
Haven, died Tuesday, Jan: 31, ing.
Burial
will
be
in
Wells
Cemetery,
1989, at Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal.
Born July 9, 1915 in Trimble, Hanisonville, Ohio.
Friends may call Thursday from.
Ohio, she was a daughter of the late ,
6
to
9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Pearl and Anna Hawk Wakely.

at

Jackson, Gallia now
included in new solid
waste district proposal

FEBRUARY

ARK DOWNS!
EVERYTHING IN STORE
REDUCED FROM
TO

70°/o

DINETTES
FROM

Soulll Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy , with a
slight chance of drizzle· or rain.
Lows will be near 40. Winds north
5 to 10 mph. Chance of preclplta·
lion Is 30 percent.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy. with
scattered showers. Highs will be
between 50 and 55. Chance of rain
Is 50 percent.

-

ve More Than A Lot.

PUNXSUTAWNEY, i&gt;a.
IUPil - Punxsutawney Phil,
apparently aware of the Alaskan
cold front working Its way across
the nat.ion made his annual
Groundhog Day appearance
Thursday - and reported In
"groundhogese"that he had seen
hl$ shadow, meaning six more
weeks of winter are coming.
Hundreds of people made the

s1s•
.• 52"

· ••

'• 1411

5tHI. Bog .

.

•
Phil sees shadow; SIX
more
weeks of winter predicted

Whifa Plltlto Sale

.

·o·

GROUNDHOG SEES SHADOW - Punxsulawcoming. "General Lee", no kin to Phil, came out
of his fashionable burrow early today In Lllbum,
ney Phil, apparently aware of th~ Alaskan cold
~. frtl@l worldn1ut w.ay &amp;lll'fJM the nallon, ,made·hls
Ga., after being awakened by buJh~rS~~ott Medlin,
annuat ' Grolilfdhotf ·Day aJjlol..-ance· TIIIi'rsday c • a memlier of ~ Georgta· ·Teeh's Navlil ~ ltOTC
and reported In "groundhogese~' thathe.hadseen
program. "The General" also saw his shadow.
his shadow, meaning six more weeks of winter are
( UP_I)

At Kroger You Can ...

a...a..
FFIQllN

Fox De Luxe

Pizzas.

trek to Gobbler's Knob on the
outskirts of town to witness the
forecast of "The Great Seer or
Seers."
Shortly alter sunrise, James
Means, Groundhog Club presl·
dent ... removed Phil from his
man-made burrow. Phil then
"whispered" to Mellns, who
dressed in top hat and tails .
"He has spotted a long dark
shadow ," Means told the crowd.

I

·

By NANCY YOACHAM
which dog In the pack actually
did the biting. The commissionSentinel News Staff
A resolution for Meigs, Athen s. ers debated ye~terday whether
Hocking and Vinton Counties to all of the five or slxdogs should
form a sollil waste dislrict was be confined at the dog sheller to
withdrawn Wednesday by the rule out any posslbllty of rabies,
Meigs County Commissioners and the county's responslbllty in
and replaced with il new resolu· such a situation. The commtsllori to Include Jackson and stoners said It may be ne~essary
Galtia Counties In the district to turn th e matter over to
with the original four.
Prosecuting Attorney Steven
Approval of the ·slx.-county Story .
solid waste district must come
The commissioners received
from Columblis by March 24. notice from Randall Lambert,
"We are pleased Jackson and fiscal officer of the Buckeye
Gaitia Counties decided to jQJn," Joint -County Sell Insurance
said Commissioner Richard
Council. that $500,000 In notes,
Jones .
which were issued March 15,
Prior to approval by the state, · 1988, are up for relssuance this
a solid waste management com·
March 15. A ballot was included
mlttee must by formed. The with the notice for Commissioner
committee is to Include Hve
David Koblentz, who serves on
members from each county In
the council, to vote on how to
the district , Including the chair·
handle the relssuance. Koblentz
man of tbe county commission- voted to authorize the governing
ers, the health department com·
board of the self-insurance counmissioner, the chief elected
cil to determine whether to
reissue the notes. .
officer from the largest municl·
pality In each county, one townThree bid openings took place
ship trustee representative and a
at yesterday's meeting.
" filth member to be selected by
Thefirst·bid opening was for an
the other four. These appoint ·
extendahoe for the county high·
ments must be made by Feb. 20.
w;:~y department. Two bids,
A problem .situation with at
$21,500 for a Ford from Fairplain
·· lea~t 28 dop Qn private prQPerty
Tractor Sales. Ripley, and
In the RaCine area was discussed
$21.995 for •a Case from So~ at some length. According to
theastern Equipment, Gallipolis,
Information from Dog Warden
will now be reviewed by Meigs
Wayne Roseberry, one of the ·county Engineer Philip Roberts.
The second bid opening was for
dogs. which wu In a pack of five
or six other dogs , bit ...a family
food stamp insurance coverage
member living next door to the
for the Meigs County Depart·
home with the dogs. However.
ment of Human Services. Only
the individual could not Identify
one bid, $16,000 for coverage In

AoU

79 c

Hudson

'25-lb

Cream Raur".. . ..,

S399

r.;t·c;.
n - T--'•...,..

uwwa ....s;"'"
Roll

By Unlied Press International
The warm unseasonable
weather that prompted people to
wash their cars or hang their
laundry outdoors finally left Ohio
Wednesday, but not before
record-high temperatures were
reached in parts of the state.
Sunny skies and southwest
winds pushed temperatures Into
the 50s and 60s across Ohio.
In Gallia County, Gallipolis
tied Its Feb. 1, 1988, all-time high
on that' date of 70 degrees.
Gallla's all-time February high
is 77, established on Feb.l5, 1945.
Every major city In the state,
except Toledo, set or tied a high
temperature record for Feb. 1.
· The mercury climbed to 59 In
Cleveland, 6llnAkron-Canton, 60
In Youngstown, 64 In Dayton, 58
In Flndllly and Mansfield, and 66
In Columbus. Cincinnati and

39c

cos r cuntFl

Cut
Green Beans
au"~Tf iiS

Coat Cutter
Margarine ..... ... .
Wntover
Cottage Cheese. , ....
~AOC~SSEO

fllGU~ 0111 wm111NY11&amp; &amp;WIE'I

IIG I - lht tiM

Soft Drinks

$169

90 DAYS SAMf AS CASH!

C0111ty Line

Ch... Slicn..... , ....

Wa

Local news bn.ef:s·

Layaway - Easy Credit Terms
"FREE .DELIVERY"

w-....vOII'
Fedelll
Food St8111ps

:( 1',

~heriJJ

OF

~::.Soup

. 25 c
10750&lt;

1.08 WEST MAIN

s experiment a success

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby conducted an
experiment recently which has proven successful.
'
As a result of a backlog of bench warrants, the sheriff tried
mailing letters to a number of persons wanted by ben~h
warrants and received 55 percent positive response.
Soulsby. reports that 18letters were mailed with Instructions
to make payme~tsto the Meigs County Court or to appear at the
sheriff's office on Feb. 1. Five letters could not be dellvered by
the post office, while 10 persons either appeared or paid. Only
three Individuals failed to respond and sheriff's deputies are
trying to locate thoae .three.
·
Soulsby says he will continue mailing the notices to help
eliminate the backlog of warrants.
Soulsby also reports that on Wednesday evening. he
·
Continued on page 12

EMPIRE POMEROY
992~3307

Zanesville.
In Toledo, the high temperature was 54. four degrees short of
the record.
Record high temperatures for
OhiocitlesforFeb. 1: Toledo58ln
1968, Cleveland 59 in 1968, Akron·
Canlon 55 In 1968, Youngstown 53
In 1988, Dayton 59 In 1968,
Columbus58ln1968,Findlay47ln
1973, Zanesville 51 In 1952,
Cincinnati 65 In 1887 and in
Mansfield, 56 In 1968.
Wednesday's spring like
weather changed abruptly when
a cold front began to move across
the state.
Walt Drag of the National
Weather Service office In Cleve. land said a cold front located In
the Central Plains area was
moving eastward, and put an end
to the balmy temperatures.
"There's a mountain of cold air

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:00 A.M,-5:00 p;r.;.

-~---., ...-~

J.

&lt;&gt;I a new type ol wln\et patching

material which contains fiber·
glass fiber. "just to try It out."
The material costs about $38 a
ton, Roberts said.
Also discussed with Roberts
was the liability of the county In
regard to creek drainage on
private property . Roberts was
asked by the commissioners to
on

16

I

Late Wednesday afternoon,
State Rep, Jolynn Boster, D·
allipolis. ended specu latlon by
confirming that she Is being
considered as a possible appoint·
ment to chair the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. The term of ·
current PUCO chairman, Tho·
mas Chema. expires on AprU 10.
"I am being considered for the
appointment by the nominating
council. Over the past month, I
have been contacted by people
both Inside and outside the
district and encouraged to per·
Continued on page 12

out there,'' Drag said.
The cold front was expected to
continue moving south and be
along the Ohio River by Thurs·
day morning.
A low pressure area was
expected to develop along the
front southwest of Ohio, causing
the front to become a ~arm front,
which would move back north
Thursday.
The National Weather Servjce
said rain was likely Thursday,
with highs In the mid 30s In
northern Ohio to the mid 50s In
the southern counties.
The cold front extended from
the St. Lawrence River Valwy
through northwest Ohio, to a low
over Oklahoma.
A strong area of high pressure
extended from western Canada
Into the Central Plains.
Drag said cold weather should
remain In the state during
February, but the longer days
will help mitigate most of the
bitter temperatures that may
arlve.
Arctic Express
Rolls thro111h U.S. ,
The supercold arctic air that
forced heartY Alaskans Into
hlberna t ion barreled through the
heart of the nation Thursday.
leaving snow, Ice and misery In
Its wake.
Snow carved a frosty swath
early Thursday from the upper
Mississippi Valley, the northern
Plains, the northern Rockies and
Wyoming to ihe Pacific Northw·
est, the National Weather Ser· ··

One county out of slx In
Southeastern Ohio showed a drop
in the December 1988 unemployment rate while the jobless rate
increased as much as 1.0 percent
in the five other counties, accord·
lng to the Ohio Bureau of
Unemployment Services.
Lawrence County's unemployment rate for December 1988,
was 5.4 percent, down 0.1 percent
from 5.5 percent In November.
Lawrence County had an avalia·
ble work force of 22,500 In
December 1988, with ~.200
unemployed .

ORAND OPENING WINNERS - Prlle
wbmen at the 1r1111d opelllnl of Rile Aid
Pblll.'lllacy In Ita new Main Street, Pomeroy,
strud~ were awarded prtze. W"-day. The
wlnnen were rrom the left, S.Undra Btuh,

Continued on page 12

----- --·-- ·----'(

'

the amount of $400,000, was
received from Downing-ChildsMullen· Musser Agency In Pome·
roy, which is already the food
stamp Insurance provider for the
county. The new bid was the
same as last, year's and wlf.S
accepted by the commissioners.
A bid from Middleport VIllage
to provide office space for the
Department of Human Services
was tabled by the commissioners
until next week. pending a
discussion with Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
The commissioners renewed a
computer hardware service contract with the ATEK Company,
Canton, for the courthouse compulers. The contract Is for a
two-year peflod at a cost of $634,
and is the same as the county's ·
expiring contract with the same
company.
Problems with two roads in the
county were aired by the commissioners with the county engJ.
neer. · Roberts reported he Is
planning some work this summer
on one of the roads, Sand Hlli
Cemetery Road between Chester
and Long Bottom.
Roberts also said he Is consid·
erlng purchasing a sma !amount

Jobless rateCo~uped ~age
· ·
in Meigs County

Bost~r being
consr,dered for
PUCO chair

Phll's predictloncamedesplte
what has been an unseasonable
warm winter In Punxsutawney, a
community of 7,500 In northwest
Pennsylvania. The thermometer
outside Hunger's Office Supply
on the main thoroughfare in
Punxsutawney ~it 62 degrees
under sunny skies Wednesday,
but the weather was more
seasonable Thursday morning
with the temperature In the 30s.

Record_high temperatures are
reported in Ohio Wednesday .

lib

2 Sectlono. 1 tl Pogos 26 Conti
A Multimodlo Inc. Now

February 2, 1989

18811

Weather

1..._ 111

•

Vo1.38, No.1 88

EMPIRE OF POMEROY

Low In upper 30s tonl&amp;'ht.
Chance of rain near 100
percent . Friday, cloudy,
chance of rain 50 percent.

r

-~-

•

The six county area had a to~tal
available work force of 81,700
employees. however, 5,300, or_6.2
percent, were unemployed.
Athens County's jobless rate
Increased 1.0 percent !rom 5.1
percent to 6.1 percent, with 1,500
pf Athens County 's 24,200
workers unemployed: Gallia
County, up 0.7 percent, 800 of
11,400 workers unemployed;
Jackson County, up 0,6 percent,
i,OOO of 12,000 workers unem·
ployed; Meigs County, up 0.9, 600
of 7,800 workers unemployed;
Continued on page 12;

LanpYille, a bicycle; Dorothy S.ayre, Racine, a
1'111 111opplnr spree; Jat1111ta Humphreys, Pomeroy, a 1100 lhopplag 1pree, and Carolyn Lambert,
Letart, W. Va., a VCR, belq presented to her here
by Randy Pierce, maaa~:er of the local aliore.

,.'

�Thursday, February 2, 1989

Comlnentary

•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel _
POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Thursday, february 2, 1989

•d
~
h•
·
.
Jack
Ann
. y pal .COntractor tOr not . mg
.
Anderson
.

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - The Pen· unnoticed in the Penl!lgol!'smas- Sooner had already failed to com- Sooner built munitions to meet
lagon
paid a Florida defense con· sive $300 billion budget. The plete five prior contracts. In total, Army specifications, they often
111 Court Street
tractor
$11 million for nothing. more disturbing answer may be . the Army paid Sooner $12.1 million did not work, he said. So Sooner
Pomeroy, Ohio
Now, after three years of steady that th~ Army is glossing over Its for six contmcts. There was a bso- spent -much of Jts time In reDEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA
payments and no return, the go- own Ineptitude by claiming that lutely no return on four of them. . search and development revisvernment Is finally investigating a small cqntractor was cheating
It takes two to do the contract- ing the poor Ar.my specifica- ·
the contractor for possible fraud. the government.
ing dance, so we asked the Army tions.
The Pentagon ought to be in·
Despite . the contract problems,
When federal Investigators in why it continued•doing business
vesttgating itself for stupidity.
at
least two Sooner officials were
with
Sooner,
"There
was
nothing
the Pentagon procu~ment scanROBERT L. WINGETT
Sooner Defense of Floti!\a Inc. dal stumbled on Sooner's records to alert us not to," a spokeswo- · living comfortably on the payPubllsller
got its first Army contract seven last summer, the red flags rose. man told us.
ments from the federal governyears ago and collected pay- Our associate · Jim Lynch reA top Sooner official, who ment At the firm's 1987 stock.hOldPAT WHITEHEAD
. ments on contrads up untU last viewed Sooner's resume of go- asked not to be identified, had a ers' meeting, it was announced
Ass..tant Publlsber/ControUer
March. But it hasn't successfuUy vernment work. ·
different version ·or the story. He that two top officials of the
completed a job in the last three
Sooner began building fuses claims that Sooner ran into pro- company were receiving base sa·
A MEMBER of The Unlte&amp;Presslnternatlonal,lnland Dally Press
yea11s.
and other small munitions for the blems with government speclfi- !aries of $240,000 and $250,000 a
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
The company's assets are now · Army in 1982. One of the first Jobs catlns on almost every munition year respectively, plus possible
being liquidated in bankruptcy was to bulld safety devices for an it was hired to make. When bonuses.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thari 300 words
proceedings . Sooner and seven of MK39 artillery round. The con- Sooner built munitions to meet
The government is now investilong. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
its oftlcials have been suspended tract price was $441,655. Sooner Army specifications, they often- gating the possibility that Sooner
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be JRibllshed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing ls$UeS, not persmalltles.
from doing work with the federal apparently never delivered the did not work, he said. So Sooner might have defrauded the Army
government.
goods to the Army, but progress spent much qf its time in re- through progress payment re~
Amid the ruins of Sooner are . payments amounting to $524,471 search and development . revise quests, but the Sooner spokesman
.I
questions. Why did tbe Army con- were pai!l to .the company.
ing the poor Army specifica- said that allegation was false. He
noted that all the payments were
tinue to award contracts when the
The tack of return on invesiment tions.
approved
who
by the Defense Contract·
A
top
Sooner
officiai,
company was obvtousiy not pro- dldn'tdampen the Army's enthusi.
·
··
duclng? And why did the Army asm for Sooner. The A,rmy contin· · asked nof to be identified, had a ing Administration Service in OrWASHINGTON (UP!) ~ The drought Is a major factor for an~send progress payments to Sooner ued to award contacts and send different version-of the story. He lando, Fla., and that federal audl·
abrupt increase in wind erosion damage this winter .in the Great
.when there was no sign of pro- progress payments into March, claims that Sooner ran into pro- tors routinely visited the Sooner
Plains, the Soil Conservation Service said earUer this week, reporting
gress'? Who was at fault?
1988. One of those contmcts was blems with government speclfi· plant
We asked the Army if heads
·
.The simple answer is that pro- for $8:7 mlllion to supply fuses. It cations ~n aimos t every muni·
damage to 2.1 million acres.
Damage In November and December was up ao percent from the
blems with small contractors go was awarded in June 1987 after tion it was hired to make. When would roll there, but the Army
spokeswoman said, "It's really
same period II\ 1987, the conservation service said. Texas reported
not the Army's problem."
damage on 664,128 acres - 30 percent of the total.
ARMS BUUJ)UP- Jamaican
In Kansas, more than four times as much land has suffered damage ·
~,ON\@DAY I . '
authorities recently confiscated a
this winter as compared to 1987. The state total is 135,550 acres: North
cache of weapons bound for a revoDakota was the only state to report a decrease.
lutionary group 111!ked with the
' The drought has worsened in Kansas and Texas since late October
Medellin cocaine cartel of Col·
and is affecting winter grain crops. A large par.t of both states suffers
~Rs.
ombla.
It is the latest development
·
·
from severe or mOderate drought.
in what appears to be an enormous
"A lot of the damage is a . result of the drought," said Soli
arms buildup by the cartel and the
Conservation Service Chief Wilson Scaling. "The reasons vary by
guerrllla groups it uses to do its
area, but major factors are a lack of residue and pOOr vegetative
dirty work. The Jamaicans COil·
cover, both caused by a lack of moisture."
!iscated 1,000 .assault rifles, 250
More than 80 percent of the damaged acreage in the 10 Great Plains
submacblne guns and 10 60-mllll·
states is cropland. Most of the rest is·rangeland.
meter mortars with 600 shells.
Where there is enough moisture, farmers are roughening the
They were on a Panamanian air·
surface to lessen wind damage. Nearly. 420,000 acres have been
plane bound for .Colombia. The pa·
treated with the emergency tillage so far.
.
perwork indicated that the arms
There are nearly 19 million acres in condition to suffer from wind
were
purchased by the Colombian
erosion, the service said. The total is up 6 million acres from last year
government, but the government
and is !he fourth highest on record.
·denied that. U.S. intelligence offi·
Here is a comparison of wind erosion damage in November and
December and the same period one year earlier. The firstfigure is the
ciais think the weapons were gomg
latest total for damage, followed by the year-earlier total:
to Colombia's radical Revolution-Colorado: 28,79~ peres, 17,070 acres.
ary Armed Forces, wblch maint·
-Kansas: 135,550 acres, 31.520 acres.
ains close ties with the MedeUin
-Montana: 510,875 acres, 304,023 acres.
cartel: It is unclealr whether the
-Nebraska: 54,405 acres, 74,590 acres.
munitions would have been used to
-New Mexico: . 51,100 acres, 3,300 acres.
advance the political agenda of the
-North Dakota: 188,200 acres, 230,000 acres.
revolutionaries or the business ·
-Oklahoma: 68,480 acres, 31,288 acres.
agenda of the drlll;l' lords.
:.
-South Dakota: 112,250 acres, 69,400 acres.
'
-Texas: 664,128 acres, 250;220 acres.
-Wyoming: 346.754 acres, 190,885 acres.
Co__:ng::._.
-U.S. totals: 2.1S million acres, 1.2 million acres.
I

•

n..::....
uruught

• · ·cause
·
maJOr
Or
.mcrease m
• wm
• d erosion
• .

NON@ oF
WILl. BE'

A banner

to

. The inaugural address is a~
Important occasion for a new
president and one of the most
symbollc rituals of American
democracy. A new president can
use the event to spell out the
values and the intentions of his
admlnistraUon as Abraham Lincoin did when he reaffirmed his
commitment to the Union. A
president can also use the tnaugural to rally J.lUblic support
behlnd his administration as
Fr~nklin Roosevelt did in 1933,
upon the advent of the New Deal.
The Inaugural address is most
traditionally used by a new
president to set the tone for his
administration.
President George Bush used
the occasion of his inaugural to
remind us of the basic ideals
which made our country what it
Is and in so doing, underscored
the need f()r more unity of
purpose, ·more diversity of
thought and more generosity of
spirit on the part of our citizens
and governmental leaders. Mr.
Bush proudly proclaimed that in
our citadel of democracy we call
America, we know that freedom
!VOrks and that this message Is
now being increasingly evi·
denced around the world. Demo-

cratic governments and free
market systems are flouishing
and taking the place of totalitarian regimes ail over the world.
On the domestic fi•ont, the
President appealed to the country to adhere to a higher
morality. He challenged Ameri·
cans to,work harder to overcome
the many problems that plague
our society such as drug abuse,
crime, homelessness and poverty. Finally, . the President
called for a renewed spirit of
bipartisanship in working to
solve our national problems. He
asked Congress to put behind it
those issues and partisan concerns that have divided us as a
nation and to work with hlin in
overcoming the many challenges
that we face.
His speech was long on Ideals,
but that does not mean that it was
short on substance. While he did
not propose specific new programs, or outllne particular
policies, President Bush did set
out the important principles that
will guide his administration. To
pursue the causes of freedom and
peace the President noted that
·we must stay strong, maintain
our alliances and remain vigilant
as our relationship with the

'

-

U. S. population to slow
down over ·next 50 years
ByDAVID E. ANDERSON

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The U.S. population is expected to grow
·more slowly than ever before in the next 50 years. the Census Bureau
said earlier this wee)&lt;, reaching a total ol302 mlillon people in 2038a 56 million, or 25 percent, increase over the current population.
After reaching that peak, Census estimated, the population would
begin to decline slowly until it fell back to 292 million people in 2080.
The bureau's estimates were based on the middle of three
projections examining assumptions about future trends in fertlilty,
mortality and net immigration.
•'After 1995, the population may grow more slowly than ever before
-more slowly than even during the Great Depression of the 1930s,"
the Census report said. During the decade of the Depression,
population grew at the rate of 0.7 percent a year.
During the next 20 years, the report said, the population that is
elderly would grow slowly but then accelerate markedly as theflrstof
the "baby boom'' generation -those born between 1946 and 1964begin to reach age 65.
.
Currently, there are about30 mllllon elderly . By 2010, it is expected
to be 39 million -about 12 percent of the population.
- But by 2030, Census said, it would total about66milllonpeople, or22
percent of the population ..
And, It said, the share ofthe U.S. population under age 35 may never
again be as large as it is now - 55 percent. "That percentage is
projected to drop to 48 in 2000, 46 in 2010 and 41ln 2030."
At the same time, the report estimated that the number of
elementary school age children- those between the ages of 5 and 13
- should be about 3 million people larger in 1995 than It was in 1987
· and is projected to stay above the 1987 level for the next 50 years.
The report also predicted sharp dispa~itles in the growth rate of the
races.
"The white population may begin to de.cllne within 40 years," the
report said. '• After 1990, It migl)t grow more slowly than ever before,"
Census said, projecting an 11 percent increase- 29 mUlion people 'before the decline sets in.
The reporfestlmated the number of whites in the nation would peak
at 235.4 million In 2027, then decline to 212 million ln2080, just6mlllion
larger than in 1987.
Blacks, on the other band, are expected to experience a much more
substantial increase. The black population increased by 7 million
people - 31 percent - from 1970 to 1987 and is expected to increase
another 7 million - 24 percent - from 1987 to 200'i and another 7
million from 2005 to 2030.
"IIY 2030, the black population would be 50 percent larger than It
was in 1987," the report said, but added that after2030 there would be
relatively lillie change.
It said that by 2080, whites would make up 72.6 percent of the
. population, compared with their current 84.5 percent. Blacks would
be 16.3 percent, compared with the current 12.2 percent and "other
races'' (mainly Asians, Paclftc Islanders and Native Americans),
the fastest growing group, would be 11.2 percent of the 2080
population, compared with its present 3.2 percent.
As tbe population ag-es, the report said, deaths will increase from
2.1 milllo;&gt;n currently to 2.6 mUlion in 2010. After 2030, deaths would
range from 3.5 million to 4 mUUon, exceeding the 3,3 mUllan births.
It also said that in 2000, the population Is expected to Include 9
million immigrants and their descendants wbo entered the country
after 1986. By the year 2030, the total would include 32 million
post-1986 immigrants, about 12 percent of tbe population.

•

Today in history
By United Preu bteraatloaal
•..

.

•

•

Today is Thursday, feb. 2, the 33rd day of 1989 with 332 to follow.
The moon is waning, inovlng toward new.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They include
French statesman Charles de Talleyrand in 1754, psychologist
Havelock Ellis In 1859.

,.

nHS

.

rally around ___

_Cla_re_nc_
. e~M_il_ler

Soviet Union continues to Im- past and to work with Congress in
prove. That ·Is not a statement of a bipartisan spirit likewise
abstract ideals. Rather it is a sounds abstract and idealistic,
commitment to follow pragmatic but it is grounded in the political
and prudent policies to advance realities of Washington. Goerge ·
the causes of peace and freedom Bush faces a Congress that is
in this complicated and danger- controlled by a political party
ous world.
other than his own. So, there is
Similarly, the President's call much potential for political confor a citizen commitment to solve flict. If such conflict is permitted
our social problems was laced to fester and permeate the
with the substance of what that process of government, we as a
commitment should mean. He country'"'will be seriously hinpoi~ted out that America has
dered in our efforts to deal with
learned its lessons from the. past the problems we face.. ~n his
and. that federal money alone address, George Bush served
cannot solve our problems. In· notice that he will do his part to
stead, he said we must find see that par\lsansbip will be
solutions to these problems In the downplayed and he called upon
goodness and CO\Irage of the Congress to do the same.
American people. While this
Beneath the President's sym·
sounds a little abstract" since it bolic references to "a thousand
does not spell out what those points of light" and a "kinder and
solutions will be, it in fact gentler America'' lle substantive
provides direction for those solu· Ideas of who we as a pe. ople are
tlons. That Is, we cannot look to and what we should do to
Washington to find the answers improve our lot and the lot of
to all of our problems. Rather, we peoples everywhere. With his
must increasingly trust the inge- inaugural address George Bush
nuity of the American people, we · provided all Americans with a
must first set to solving these banner to rally around for the
problems in our own neighbor- next four years, a banner which
hoods and communities.
hopefully will key the American
Finally, the President's call to people to new heights of accompovercome the dlvisiops of the lishment and success.

FEC refuses to police "soft money'
WASHINGTON (NEA)- What
would happen If your local pollee
department declared that, whlle It
· would continue to respond to citIzen complaints, It no longer would ·
patrol the community to detect or
deter crime on Its own Initiative?
That question describes the en·
forcement policy embraced by
the Federal Election Commission, which is supposed to regu.
late the financing of political
campaigns for federal office.
Lee Ann Elliott, who sits on the
six · member commission, ar-.
ticulated the policy at a meeting '
late last year of the National As·
soclation of Business Political
Action Committees.
When other participants at the .
session suggll!lted that the FEC
had not been aggressive In policIng abuses of federal law in regard to "soft dollar" contributions to the 1988 presidential
campaign, Elliott responded:
"I want to urge .you, If you
know of any abuse, to bring It tQi
the commission. We'D look at It,
but it has not been presented to
us at this time." ,
'That passive approach is hardly
unusual for an agency that has seldom Initiated Its own investigations, rarely displayed any Inter·
.est in aaressively pursuina those

Robert
Walters

who violate tbe law, and almost
derai candidates by financing of other corporations.
never referred a case to the Jusvoter registration and turnout
Meanwhile, the FEC alternately
lice Depariment for criminal prodrives as wen as assorted "par- claims that · no law is being
secutlon. .
·
ty·bullding" activities.
yiolated or that it is powerless to
But"softmoney"abusesinthe
That "soft money" cannot be halt the abuses. ·eomplalnts about
funding of presidential camused to directly assist candidates "soft money", says Elliott, have
paigns have attained the propor·
for federa,l oftlce. Moreover, In come from those who "puffed up,
lions of a major national scandal
order to qualify for $46.1 million misrepresented, twisted and lied
While the FEC has twice ignored
In public tu"nds to finance their about" the issue.
federal court orders to halt the
general eleotlon campaigns, the
abuses by tightening its regula·· two j major party presidential •
lions.
candidates last year had to r------------,
Funds that can bespentforany
pledge to forgo all other funds.
purpose In campaigns for federal
Both campaigns then brazenly
office - seats In the House and
circumvented those requirements,
however, by orchestrating ambl·
Senate, the presidency and the
vice presidency - are known as . &lt;tious nationwide "soft money" op"hard dollars." That money Is eratlOns that each coUected and
limited, ·however, by federal res·
spent almost $70 million.
trictlons placed on both donors
Both sides voluntarily established an arbitrary ceiling of
nad recipients.
For example, individual con· $100,00 per donor - but they
trlbutors can give no more than , could have just as readily set the
$2,000 to a single candidate or figure at $500,000 or $1 million.
$25,000 to all federal c~dldates
Indeed, the Democrats Issued a
and committees In any year· Cor- press release In 1987 to boast about
porations and labor unions are receiving a $1 mmion contribution
prohibited from making any con· tnm an Individual donor, and the
trtbutions to Influence the out- Republicans' most generous con·
com of federal elections.
tributor last year gave the party
But the laws of many states more than $500,000.
contain looser restrictions or
Moreovet, the five, and six·fl·
none at all. Thus, unlimited guredonors tothetwomajorpar~&amp;
.....
e .. ., .......
amounts can be tunneled thougb \(es last year included PepsiCo
••if• VERY · - · 1 "
state and local political organi· and Paine Webbel', Revlonand
zattons to . Indirectly assist fe- · · RJR Nabisco. as well as dozens

Berry's World

,,

,, \

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page.- 3 .

Southem-Hannan
Trace contest ·headlines SVAc· schedule
.
··By G. SPENCER OSBORNE.

.

.

..

Southwestern and hosts Symmes scheme on both sides remains
North Gallla·Oak Hill
Valley.
·
.in tact.
It appears that this game wlll
Should either Hannan Trace or
The Tornadoes will have to find be a clash of the. _titans , as the
North Gallla lose at any time, a way to gjve Hannan .Trace less league's biggest and strongest
OakHillandEasterncanclaima room and. time to shoot three- front-line players will meet·for
three-way tie with Southern for point shots· than Oak Hill did the last time.
the title if they win their last two Tuesday night, when Ute WildThe center battle between
league contests and Southern cats buried eight such baskets, a North Ga11ia's Ruscy Denney
does no better \han spllt its last season high, In that game. Tight (6-§, senior) and Oak Hill's Jedd
two games. However, if Southern . defen!ie by guards Todd Grind· Rawlins (6·8, senior) wlll be one
loses its remalnipg conference · staff, Andy Baer and Chad of three major · matchups to
games, the Eagles anCI the .Oaks Taylor, religiously applied, could watch in .this game. As this is the
can share the title if they win throw off the timing of those last time Denney and Rawlins
Wildcats · voted most likely to will meet on the hardwood, they
their last two SVAC matches.
Another possibility: If South· shoot from downrange - Riehle should make this mini· rivalry a
ern loses both teague games, Cornell, Brad Cremeens and J.J. lively battle of position, blocked
Eastern or Oak Hill wlll win the Bevan.
.
shots and maybe a dunk or two.
A stronger and hotter-shooting
championship. outright if one of
The Wildcats will need to use Don Mays (6-3, senior) will give
the two loses one more game.
Before we forget, the Pirates, their quickness to turn up the the · Pirates another scoring opwho need Hannan Trace to beat pressure inside against Racine tion, as he can go ·inside or
Southern wb"tle going for a front-liners Brad Maynard and · outside to shoot. It is likely that
victory over Oak Hill, must also Brent Shuler, force them to put
beat Hannan Trace next Friday the ball on the floor and lose the .
' a share . Of the champion· ball, be it by forcing an ill· 1
to get
ship.' The Pirates must also have advised pass or by traveling.
SVAC STANDINGS
a Southwestern victory .o ver Trace will .also need to cut
(All games)
Maynard
and
Shuler
offfrom
the
Southern and no .worse than a
TEAM
WL P
OP
ball
inside
and
force
the
Tornasplit by Eastern in its last two
North
Gallta
.....
10
5
1063
940
SVAC games and an Oak Hill does' aforementioned three
Eastern
.....
:
......
9
8
1248
1277
victory over Kyger Creek next guards to .connect from . outside
Friday to share the league iitle while the Wildcats' front line of Southern........... 9 8 1093 1065
with So11thern, ·Oak Hili and Cornell, Bill Bailey, Tim Brum- Oak Hlll ... . ... .. . . 8 9 1013 1054
field and Craig Rankin should be Hannan·Trace .. 8 9 10111 984
·
Eastern.
working to clear the Tornadoes Southwestern: ... 7 .9 1089 1199
Southern-Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek... .. 4 12 1010 1114
away
from the boards.
The Wildcats and the Torna.Symmes
Valley 2 14 864 1118
With
the
importance
of
win·
does will have their hands full of
ning
weighing
heavily
on
both
each other, as both teams have
· (SVAC games)
abandoned the run-and-gun at- teams, the Tornadoes' Saturday
W L P OP
TEAM
night
encounter
with
non-league
tack that made them successful
Southern
..............
9 3 .825 739
rival
Federal
Hocking
is
very
last year in favor of a more
Eastern
...............
8 4 902 864
patient, work-for-the-good-shot likely to end up in a Lancer
victory.
·
Oak
Hili
..
.
.
.
..
..
..
.
.
.
8 4 755 697
offense. The
defensive
. . pressure
..
North Gallla ........ 7 5 843 741
Hannan.Trace ..... 7 5 719 692
Southwestern ....... 5 7 794 861
Kyger Creek....... 2 10 738 836
Symmes Valley . . 2 10 652 798
"We came up with it as ·a TOTALS ............ 48 4n228 6228
. overtaking Wade Boggs and it
just did for four years ... I've practical joke to play on Bob,"
cleaned up my life and made Boggs said, insisitng that he and
(Reserves)
peace with myself. made peace Crawford later apologized to TEAM
W L P OP
with my family and gone on with Stanley and never told other North Gailia ........ 11 1 694 446
players about the prank. He said Southern .............. 10 2 604 467
my life.
"It's , a sad thing to say, he and Crawford had no photos of Hannan Trace .. :.. 9 3 610 469
something that I've never said, other players in compromising Symmes Valley ... 7 5 509 528
but It engulfed . me and the situations. But be said Adams Eastern ............... 5 7 527 614
kept thenegatlveofStanley "and Oak Hill .............. 3 9 479 576
situation kept getting worse.
"At the time when she de- · evidently she~s going to use Southwestern ...... 2 10 462 591
manded $100,000 from me, I · that."
Kyger Creek....... 1 11 398 592
thought the best thing to do was • Boggs . accused Adams of try- TOTALS ............ 48 48 4283 4283
Friday's schedule
contact the FBI and let them do ing "to ruin Wade Boggs' life.
that . .. (respond) along legal That's the No. 1 thing we're · Southern at Hannan Trace
dealing with right here and, North Gallla at Oak Hill
lines;"
Adams_ offered her story to secondly of. all ... she's ruining Eastern at Southwestern
Kyger Creek ·at Symmes Valley
Penthouse magazine, but Boggs the lives of others."
Boggs said he did not think
said "about hal(" the account is
Saturday's games
untrue, including charges that be trading him to another team Ironton St. Joe at KCHS
. made a "racist statement" about would "accomplish anything" North Gallia at Latham Western
and asked fans to forgive him.
·
Rice.
Oak Hill at Portsmouth West
"Don't give up on me. Wade Federal Hocking at Southern
"All these things are false. I
have· the uttnost respect for Jim Boggs Is human artd I'll do
Rice," .J;loggs said. But he did everything. In my power confirm her claim that he and hopefully, God willing that I stay
teammate Steve Crawford orice with the Red Sox - to take us
burst into teammate Bob Stan- back to another division chamley's hotel . room and photo- pionship, and hopefully on to the
graphed the pitcher in bed with a World Series (title)," be said.
woman.

· OVP Staff Writer
After Hannan Trace's 64-62 ·
victory over Oak Hill Tuesday,
five Southern Valley Athletic
Conference hardwood teams still
·have a shot at winning at least a
slice of the 1988·89 league t1 ~te ·
with only two games left on t111s
, year's conferenc~ schedule.
The HT Wildcats now share
third place with North Gailia
with a 7-5 loop mark whiletbeOH ·
Oaks have two things in common
with Eastern- an 8-4 record and .
second place. SOuthern sits on top
·
with a 9-3 re.cord.
Southern, ihe defending con·.
terence champion, needs a win
against HTHS Friday and a win
against Southwestern Feb. 10 to
win its second straight \lndisputed crown.
Hannan Trace !sin a must·win
situation, as the Wildcats need
wins aga)nst Southern and North
Ga!Ua in the season finale to be
able to claim a co-championship.
However, there are some other
things ihat must happen If the
Wildcats are to achieve that
objective. ·
First, Southern must also lose
to Southwestern. Second, if the
Wildcats win, they will need Oak
Hill and Eastern to do no better
than split two conference games
to claim a co-championship with
Southern, Oak Hill and Eastern.
Oak Hill hOsts North Gailia
tomorrow night and finishes the
season at Kyger Creek next
Friday, while Eastern plays at .

forward Chad Smith (6-2, junior)
will guard Mays, while OH
forward Bobby . Ward (6-1, senior) wili' be assigned to Brian
Stout (6·0, sophomore). The
Ward-Stout matchup should be a
study in guile and q11ickness, t.o
say nothing ·of who will work
hardest ,to play tlg]Jt defense and
stop ·the lol)g bomb from
dropping.
As it is do-or-die time for both
teams, the Pirates areas likely to
forget thai they have won their
last four games as the Oaks are
about losing five of their last
seven games.
. On Saturday night the Pirates,
who sport a 3-0 record against
non-conference foes, will play
Pike Western in Latham. The ·
Oaks, · who are Winless in lheir
five non-league games, will fake
on Portsmouth West's Senators.
Southwestern-Eastern
The Highlanders figure prominently in the league title chase,
as they could prove to be a nasty
burr in Eastern's feathers .
·In addition to a continued solid .
efforr from center Mike Martin
(be led the Eagles with 16 points
in last Friday's win 55-52 over
Hannan Trace), the Eagles may

.
SVAC standings I

see 6·4 forward Mike Frost work
to chill the Highlanders with his
boardwork. Junior point guard
Shawn Savoy will need to direct
traffic and keep his head against
a pesky Highlander defense
sworn to achieve one thing create turnovers.
The Eagles will need their
quickest defender to track forward/center Mike Walker, who
returned to his usual form with
game·higb 25·point effort in the
Highlanders' 76·73 win over
Kyger Creek last Friday. Bl!t
while lhE).-E&lt;rgles may try to key
on Watker, Southwestern . wlll
also look to forwards Zane Colley
and Jesse Ehman; who combined
for 26 points in last week's game
with the Bobcats.
KCifS.Symmes Valley
This basement battle wilt determine two things - whether or
not Kyger Creek w\ll take the
first step to ensuring that they
equal last year's 8·12 regular;
season record, and who will sit In
the conference basement.
The Bobcats, 2-2 against their
nonleague opponents, will try to
get on the winning track against
such teams when they host
Ironton St. Joe Saturday night.

a

ROUSH'S
.BODY SHOP AND PARTS
'·'

•FREE ESTIMATES

.

Boston ace says he is 'cured'
BOSTON (UP!) - American
League batting champion Wade
Boggs, embroiled in a $12 million
palimony suit with a forme_r
lover, said Wednesday a recent
TV show about over~exed people
made him · realize he suffered
from the same "disease" forfour
years.
But Boggs Insisted in an
apoiogetic broad~ast interview
that he was cured and bas "made
peace with myself, made peace
with my family and gone on with
my life." He promised Boston
fans hhe would "do everything in
my power'' to bring the Red Sox
another pennant.
For the first time, Boggs
confirmed that ex-lover Margo
Adams had "demanded
$100,000" from him to keep quiet
about their long-running a(falr.
He denied Adams' claim that he
had m&amp;d.e "racist" remarks
about teammate Jim Rice.
Referring to · his muchpublicized relationship with
Adams, Boggs told WNEV-TV,
Channel 7, "This is something
that I'm going to have to deal
with· the rest of my life. "
"I was watching Geraido Riv. era a couple of weeks ago and
there was a show on a bout
oversexed peopie and things like
this. Geraldo had a psychologist
on there ... and they were calling
it a disease," Boggs said, speak·
ing from Plant, Fla.
"I feel that's exactly what has
happened ~ that a disease was

Mavericks
get day off
.Wednesday
DALLAS (UPI) -Dallas Mavericks Coach John MacLeod
gave his beleaguered team the
day off Wednesday, a luxury not
afforded those in the front office
trying to work a trade and
resolve the turmoil surrounding
forward Mark Aguirre.
·"This Is not the best time in the
world to be going into the
marketplace," said franchise .
owner Donald Carter. "But Rick
(Sund, the player personnel
director) has been talking to
teams for about 10 days."
During January the Ml!vericks
virtually disintegrated, They
went from one of the best teams
in the league to one of the worst,
with prospects for improvement
dim. ·
They have lost forward Roy
Tarpley to a drug·abuse suspension and guard Rolando Black- ,
man is sidelined . for two more ·
weeks with a dislocated finger.
And Aguirre, the only No. 1 draft
pick the team ever had, has
fallen out of favor witll fans and
some teammates. ,
He has been the subject of an
increasing number of trade rumors involving the Detroit Pistons
and Los Angeles Clippers.
Aguirre did not play Tuesday
night in Dallas' latest loss -,- a
99·84 setback against Utah. He
. warmed up with his teammates,
then said his ankles were too sore
for him to •play. Carter said
Aguirre told him he could barely
walk. when be awoke Tuesday
morning, but Aguirre was not
limping as ·he walked briskly
from the arena after the game.
"I wlll not comment on Mark,"
Dallas guard Derek Harper'!laid.
•'All I can say is that nobody who
was on the floor against Utah
gave up .
.

'

Portland, Utah players are named
to Western Conference NBA All-Stars
NEW YORK (UPl) - Two a~sists (13:9) and Eaton ranks
players each from the Portland second in blocks (4.24). Drexler
Trail Blazers and Utah Jazz were is third in the league In scoring
named to the Western Confer- . (28.1) and steals (2.90.) Duck·
eilce&gt; team for the Feb. 12 All-Star worth is averaging 18.9 points
Game in Houston, the NBA · and 8.2 rebounds a game.
announced Wednesday.
The West will be coached by
The Portland players selected Pat Riley of the Lakers and will
were guard Clyde Drexler and start guards Magic Johnson of
center Kevin Duckworth while the Los Angeles Lakers and Dale
guard John Stockton and center Ellis of Seattle, center Akeem
Mark Eaton made the team for Olajuwon of Houston and for·
Ut&lt;jh.
wards Karl Malone of Utah and
Completing t~e Western Con· Alex English of Denver.
·terence reserves were: forwards
The Eastern Conference team,
Tom Chambers of Phoenix, Chris coached by Cleveland's Lenny
Mullin of Golden State and Wilkens, will start guards Mi·
James Worthy of the Los Angeles chael Jordan of Chicago and
Lakers.
Islah Thomas of Detroit, center
. Duckworth, Stockton, Eaton Moses Malone of Atlanta and
and Mullin are playing in their forwards Charles Barkley of
Philadelphia and Dominique Wilfirst All-Star Game.
Stockton leads the NBA In kins of Atlanta.

--SJi0118 brirfs .--.
Baseball
The St. Louis Cardinals announced relief pitcher Todd
Worrell signed a 1-year contract
Wednesday .... The New )'ark
Mets signed pitcher Rick Aguilera to a 1-year contract. ...
Reliever Brad Havens signed a
1·year contract with the Cleve·
land Indians. ... The Baltimore
Orioles announced plans to play
three exhibition games at Joe
Robbie Stadium in Miami this
spring. The Orioles, w)lo are
based in Miami for spring
training, will play Boston March.
11, Texas Mar~h 19, and the New
York Yankees on March 25. Joe
Robbie Stadium is home to the
NFL· Dolphins, and owner joe
Robbie wants to add a baseball
team as a tenant in the privatelyowned facility. The Orioles
played two exhibition games in
tbe stadium last year, drawing
42,000 fans. . . . San Francisco
Mayor A.rt Agos' special stadium
task force, which Is trying to
build a baseball park In downtown San Francisco, has chosen
Philadelphia-based Spectacor
Management Group to. develop
the project.
Baaketball
Milwaukee Coach Del Harris,
who led t"e Bucks to a 12-3 record
including a 6-3 mark on the road,
was named NBA Coach of the
Month for January.
.,

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�Thursday, February 2, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

New .R eds hurler welcomes change I Ml!r:'ph:~e:~arterback I
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) When Rick Mahler hit the free
agent trail last fall, he wasn't
looklng to break tbe bank. In fact.
the Cincinnati Reds signed him
with a welcome hand and a
chance to play for a winner.
''The Reds were Interested In
me,"Mahlersaiddurlngarecent
stop of Cincinnati's annual media
· caravan. "They made that apparent from the start. I like the
ballclub, I like the city and I like
the fans.
"I just thought 1-t was a good
opportunity for me, at this stage
of my career, to come over here
and have the chance to play lor a
winner.
" Actually," added Mahler, 916 with a 3.69 ERA with Atlanta
last season, "the Braves offered
more money . There were a lot of
Incentives. But, I didn't talk to a
lot of clubs.
"Near the end, I wasn't going

Sooners
trip foe;
Tar Heels
are upset
By United Pre$s International
In major college basketball
games Wednesday Involving
ranked teams, No. 1 Oklahoma
downed Kansas State 90-82, .
Clemson stunned No. 3 North
Carolina 85-82, No. 5 Georgetown
held off No. RSetonHall74-66, No.
6 Missouri walloped Kansas
91-66, No. 7 Louisville outscored
VIrginia Tech 108-95, Memphis
State upset No. 9 Florida State
99-82, VIrginia bombed No. 12
North Carolina State 91-71, No.14
Syracuse crushed Villanova 90-57
and No. 20 Louis lana State
pounded Mississippi 105-75.
At Manhattan, Kan., Terrence
. Mullins scored 21 polrits and
broke a late tie with his sixth
3-pointer to help Oklahoma lm:
prove to 18-2 overall and 5-0in the
Big Eight. Stacey King scored 27
points for the Sooners . . Kansas
State, 12-6 and 3-3. got 2l points
from La Keith Humphrey.
At Clemson, S.C., Kirkland .
Howling scored a 3-point field
goal and two free throws in the
last 53 seconds, enabling Clemson to knock off co-No. 3 North
Carolina. Dale Davis had 21
points and 21 rebounds for the
Tigers, 4-3 In the AtlantiC Coast
Conference and 13-5overall. J.R.
Reid's 25 points led North CarolIna, 5-2 and 18-4.
At Landover, Md., Charles
Smith scored 18 points, Alonzo
Mourning added 17 and Georgetown hit 11 of 13 free throws down
the stretch to hold off Seton Hall.
Mourning had 10 rebounds and 5
blocks for the Hoyas, 16-2 overall
and 6-1 In the Big East. Seton
Hall, 18-3 and 5-3, got 15 points
from John Morton.
At Lawrence, Kan., Byron
Irvin scored 22 points and Mis souri scored the final 14 points to
hand the Jayhawks their worst
loss ever In the 34-year history of
• Allen Fieldhouse. The Tigers.
19-3 overall and 5-0 in the Big
Eight, have won 10 straight. Milt
Newton scored 14 points lor
Kansas, 16-5 and 3-3.
At Louisville, Ky., Tony Kimbro had career highs of 21 points
and 12 rebounds for Louisville,
15-3 overall and 4-0 in the Metro
Conference. The Cardinals, playIng without Injured center Pervls
Ellison, received 20 points from
Kenny Kayne and 19 from both Felton Spencer and Keith Williams. Virginia Tech, 7-12 and 0-5,
was led by Bimbo Coles with 36
points.
At Tallahassee, Fla.. Eliot
Perry scored 30 points and
Rodney Douglas scored 17 to
spark Memphis State over Metro
Conference foe Florida State.
Memphis State, 14-7 overall and
3-2 In the conference, led by as
many as 19 In handing Florida
State Its first home loss since
Jan. 25, 1988. The Seminoles, who
fell to 16-2 and 4-1, were led by
Tony Dawson with 22 points.
At Syracuse, N.Y., Derrick
Coleman scored 20 points and.
grabbed 12 rebounds to power
Syracuse, 18-4 overall and 4-4 In
the Big East. Tom ·Greis scored
14 points for VIllanova, 12-9 and
3-4. The 33-polnt margin of
victory was the largest ever for
the Orangemen In a Big East
game.
At Baton Rouge, La., Verne!
Singleton scored 23 points and
Ricky Blanton and Chris Jackson
each added 21 to lead Louisiana
State, 15-5 overall and 7-2 In the
Southeast Conference. Mississippi, which got 29 points from
Gerald Glass and 26 tram Tim
Jumper. fell to 11-7 and 5-4.
Also, It was: Maryland 78,
Maryland-Baltimore County 66;
Vanderbilt 68, Tennessee 56;
Arkansas 88, Houston 87; Rlce90,
Eastern New Mexico 83; Southern Methodist 68, Texas Christian.57; Texas 85, Texas A&amp;M 80;
Texas Tech 74, Baylor 66; and
Colorado 102, Oklahoma State 86.

"'
to go with a club just because all Braves sent pitcher Rick Beof a sudden they didn't get the henna, ou1flelder Brett Butler
player they wanted and was and third basen1:an Brook Jacoby
willing to offer a lot of money. to the Cleveland Indians lor
(Reds General Manager) Mur- pitcher Len Barker.
ray Cook was always very fair.
''That was a bad trade," said
Basically, he told me Cincinnati Mahler. "Now. they think the
had a good team and they really best trade Is the one you don't
wanted me.
make.
"I told my agent that I'd like to
"I think you have to do
stay in Atlanta and to find out something to at least make the
· what kind of a commitment they public think you're trying to
(the Braves) were going to make win," said Mahler. "giving them
to w.lnning. If they were, then I something different that they can
wanted to stay there and, If! was get excited aboUt. They just
to leave Atlanta, there were only haven't done that.
two plilces I w.anted to go "You can't tell·the fans that a
Cincinnati or St. Louis."
team that lost 106 games Is going
Mahler said he concluded to be 20 games better next year
Atlanta, which finished 39 ~
without basically doing anygames out of first place with a
thing. You're just trylng to trick
54-106 record, wasn't going to them."
make the commitment he was
Mahler, who will be 36 May 5,
seeking; so he decided to leave.
pitched 249 innings last season,
Mahler said there also was the second highest of his career
language In the contract the and fourth highest in the National
Braves offered him he couldn't League, and his 9:16 record could
accept, Including lockout ian- have been much better.
In 13 starts from July 26 to
guage In case of a strike.
"Here's a club (Clnclnniltl), Sept. 24, he had a 2.45 ERA but
which has achanc!etowln, saying was 1-7 with five no-decisions In
we want you on our club to help us those.13 games. In each of his last
win," said Mahler, "while the 15 starts, he pitched Into the
other club, which isn't going to seventh inning or beyond.
Mahler led the NL with a walks
win, saying we'd like to have you,
per nine Innings ratio of 1.5,
but under our conditions."
Mahler sees the Braves as Issuing only 42 free passes In his
afraid to trade away their 249 Innings.
Mahler pitched on a divisiontalented youngsters to obtain
es Ia bllshed major league winning Atlanta team In 1982 and
·is looking forward to a title run
players.
Atlanta finished last in the with the Reds.
National League West a year ago
"When It means something to .
and is the only team not given a go out and win," said Mahler,
"It's a lot more fun than when
chance to win It this season.
Mahler blames Atlanta's reluc- youy say 'If we win today, we'll
lance to make trades on a deal only be 27 games behind instead
that went sour In 19831n which the of 28. "'

Ron Jaworski joined Democratic
legislators In the battle over Gov.
Thomas Kean's proposal to end
New Jersey's 72-year-old re-

qulrement that high school students take physical education
classes. Even for students with
no Interest In professional sports,
" for their befter sound mind, a
physically sound body Is Important so they can better approach

the mental side of their life." he
said.
Kean proposed the state's
physical education requirement
be made optional because it
takes too much time away from
academics.

Redmen, Urbana will clash Saturday
Rio Grande's Redmen return In the MOC after losing Tuesday.
to action Saturday at 7:30p.m. at 99-96. to Mount Vernon NazaLyne Center when they host the rene. Urbana withstood a Walsh
No. 2-ranked team In the Mid- rally the same night In Canton to
Ohio Conferenc~. Urbana's Blue win 93-92 in overtime, bringing
Its record to 15-8 and 8-2.
Knights.
Anthony Raymore's career
The game will be sponsored by
McDonald's restaurants of Galli- high of 30 points spurred a second
polis. Jackson. Athens and Hend- period Redmen comeback that
sliced MVNC's·lead toone with a
erson, W.Va.
The Redmen are 15-10 and 4-6 "single minute remaining In ' the

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:_Beck to defend title
in Los Angeles Open
LOS ANGELES (UPI) ·- After
10 years on the PGA Tour, Chip
Beck made his breakthrough at
last year's Los Angeles Open.
Beck posted his first pro
victory by shooting a 17-underpar 267 to defeat Mac O'Grady
and Bill Sander by three"strok"sHe came back two months later
to capture the USF&amp;G Classic in
New Orleans .
Beck, who will defend his title
. .. In the 62nd annual Los Angeles
Open which begins Thursday,
said last year's victory by the
Pacific rejuvenated his career.
"It came at a time in my life
when I was having a lot of
difficulties," Beck said. "TQ be a
part ' of ,the history of this
tournament, to walk down the
hall here and see the name 'Ben
Hogan' on the wall, and to think
I'm a part of the history of this

ing $180,000. Nine of the top 10
money winners of 1988, Including
No.1 Curtis Strange, are entered.
as are nine former tournament
champions.
Also expected to compete are
Mark O'Meara, last week's
winner. of the AT&amp;T Pro-Am;
Steve Jones, a two-time winner
on the Tour this year; and·
two-time Los Angeles titllst Tom
Watson.
Most are looking forward to
playing the demanding, nogimmick course. Hogan won two
L.A. Opens and a U.S. Open In a
span of 18 months In 1947-48, and
the layout has been nicknamed
Hogan's Alley.
Riviera was built In 1927 at a
cost of $243,827, the world's most
expensive layout at the time.
"It's right up there with the
-Oakmonts and the Winged Foots
club ... "
and the other great courses,"
Beck, 32, earned $135,000 for said Lanny Wadkins. aiming for
that triumph at Riviera Country - his third victory In the tournaClub and flnl~hed second on the ment. "It's a good ball-striker's
money list with $926,817. In course. There are no tricks out
addition to the N!!W Orleans there. It's just a hell of a test of
victory, the former University of golf."
Georgia player finished second
Added O'Grady: "It's like an
twice.
ancient, priceless place. It
Beck had finished runner-up should be a national treasure.
eight Urnes and had led after one, Every hole has a unique persontwo and three rounds at various ality, like an aged movie star."
times bl\fore finally winning.
The par-4, 447-yard 18th hole Is
"I'm glad It took me that long," one of golf's finest finishing
Beck said. "If I'd won right away holes. It's uphill most of the way
1 don'i think I'd be the player I and doglegs to a blind fairway on
am · now. When you have the the right. The 17th Is a par-5,
confidence within yourself you 579-yarder virtually unreachable
can overcome many things. It in two shots. And the sixth hole is
was a long time coming."
a par-3, 170-yarder with a trap In
This year's Open is worth $1 the middle of the green.
million. with the winner receiv-

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Friday. 9 :00a.m. to 6 :00p.m. Saturday. and 10:00 a.m.
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Gallipolis

!l09 Upper Rim' ROIId
(614) 446·4103

The Rio Grande Redwomen, on
a roll with four consecutive
victories to their credit, are back
In the friendly confines of Lyne
Center when they face their next
opponent Thursday at 7 p.m.
Wilmington's Lady Q11akers,
coached by Sharon Sims, enter
the contest with a 5-9 record.
They were tied for 11th place In
District 22 with Mount Vernon
Nazarene earlier this week.
The Rio ladles carry an 11-8
overall standing Into the game
with them, following a 71-56
defeat of Ohio Dominican on
Tuesday. The win boosted Rio
Grande's conference record to
5-2.
Leading scorer Lea Ann Mullins again broke Into the 20points-plus range against the
Lady Panthers to key the Redwomen offense. The senior power
forward from McGuffey. Ohio,
again led the district this week In
scoring (422 total points), 3-point
field goal percentage (26-51 for
.510) and free throw percentage
(110-115 for .957).
Mullins Is averaging 23.7
markers, 5.6 rebounds and 3.9
assists entering Thursday's
game.
Overall, the Redwomen, who
started the week at ninth place in
the district. finished first in free
throw percentage (294-412 for
.714) and 3-polnt field goal
percentage (51-104 for .490) .
They placed second in offensive
scoring (77.1 points per game)
and team field ' goal percentage
(522-1113 for .469) .
Wilmington will be looking for

leadership from , Its freshman
center, Suzan'ne CQ¥ne (6-0), who
finished last week at fifth In the ,
district In scoring (18.4 points a
game) and ninth In rebounding,
averaging 9.1 boards ·per outing.
Last week, Coyne totaled 45
points and 14 rebounds in the
Lady Quakers' 93-55 defeat of
Thomas More (Ky.) and 83-50
loss to district powerhouse
Mount St. Joseph.
Ann Barnitz, the 6-0 post player
for Rio Grande, will probably
start against Coyne. Barnltz. a
standout at Warren Local High
School, is averaging 10.5 points
.
and 4.8 rebounds a game.
Mullins Is expected ot start at
small forward. Holly Hastings ·
(5-9. senior) will be at power
forward. Hastings remains the ·
Red women's ~·second- h lghes t
scorer at 15.5 markers a game,
and the leading rebounder with
an average of 9.5.
Opposing them will be. respectively, Deanne Arnold (5-7, freshman) and Angie Austin (5-10,
junior).
Beth Coil (5-6, sophomore).
Rio's top assist person at 5.1 per
game, starts at point guard. Coli
Is averaging 4.9 points and 2
rebounds. Betsy Bergdoll (5-7,
freshman, 9 points. 2 rebounds)
continues at shooting guard. For
Wilmington. Michelle Ray (5-5,
senior) challenges Coli and Lori
. May (5-5, junior) starts against
Bergdoll.
The_Redwomen. now facing the
final stretch of their 'l{lmpalgn,
will be .at Walsh Saturday at 5
p.m.

McDonald's sponsors
RGC-Urbana contest
Four area McDonald's restaurants will sponsor Saturday's
game between the Rio Grande
Redmen and !he Urbana Blue
Knights, set to start at 7:30p.m.
at Lyne Center.
Free tickets for the game can
be obtained at the McDonald's
restaurants in Gallipolis, Jackson, Athens and Henderson,
W.Va.
In addition, the game wlll
feature a drawing for prizes , a
free throw competition at the
halftime and a visit by Mac
Tonight.
McDonald's ' is another early
supporter of Booster Nights at

'

Rio Grande . and through Its
sponsorship of the game, the
college Is enabled to seek out
quality student-athletes, said
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn.
"Sponsorship helps fund at hletic scholarships that have
brought - and will continue to
bring top athletP8 and·scholars to
Rio Grande," Lawhorn said.
"Over the years. the support
shown by Mo::Donald's and our
other athletic boosters has been a
key to the success of our athletic
and academic programs.
"We very much appreciate the
help and encouragemel)t from
boosters like McDonald's." he
added.

game. In the third consecutive
game In which he has scored
more than 20 points, Raymore
boosted his scoring average to
15.5 points per game, In addition
to making 2.9 rebounds and 3.8
assists each contest.
The Redmen entered the week
fifth In District 22 and fourth in
the MOC. Orbana tied with
Malone for third in the district.
Playing without the services of
leading scorer Anthony Harris on
Jan. 10, Urbana reversed a 41-34
Rio Grande lead at the half to
defeat the Redmen 88-85. Some
familiar faces from that encounter are expected to start In round
two Saturday night.
, Brett Baker, the 6-6 senior
forward- from Eaton, Ohio, this
week's district and conference
player of the week, and Neal
Browning (6-3, freshman) are
the probables In the forward
slots. Baker Is averaging 23
points and 9.5 rebounds a game,
·while Browning Is credited with
9.3 points, 4.4 rebounds and 6.2
assists. ·
~
F,aclng them from Rio Grande
will probably be Larry Benning
(6-4 , freshman, 8.7 points, 5.6
rebounds) and Brad Schubert
(6-3. freshman, 8.6 points , 2.1
rebounds).
Coach John Lawhorn will probably start at guard Raymore
(5-11 ..senior) and Jimmy Kearns
(6-1, senior, 10.9 points. 2.3
assists). Confronting them from
Urbana are William Gqins (6 -1,
s.ophomore, 9.2 points, 3.4 rebounds) and Mike Garrison (57¥.!, freshman, 5.6 points. 5
assists).
Rio Grande's probable starter
at center Is John Lambcke (6-5,
junior, 7.3 points. 5.5 rebounds).
while Urbana mentor Bob Ronal
will start the game with Robert
Settle (6-6, senior, 15 points, 3.4

rebounds) at the post.
The Blue Knights have been 4,2
since their first meeting with Rio
Grande. They were winners over
Bluffton, 109-88; Tiffin, 86-81:
MVNC, 99-95; and Ohio DOminican. 96-59. Losses have been to
Malone, 107-98, and Cedarvllte,
97-88.
The Redmen will bean the road
for their next four games, but
return to Lyne Center on Saturday , Feb. 18, for a rematch wlt.h
Cedarvllte.
In other MOC games Saturday,
Cedarville Is at Tiffin, Walsh
visits Ohio Domlnlcah and
MVNC hosts Malone.

Havens signs with
Cleveland Indians
CLEVELAND (UP I) -Relief
pitcher Brad Havens signed a
one-year contract with the Cleveland Indians, reducln~ the
number of pending arb . .'.-atlon
cases with the Indians to two, the
club announced Wednesday.
Havens was 2-3wltha 3.14ERA
in 28 games for the Indians last
season alter going 0-0 with a 2.40
ERA In 9 games at Class AAA
Colorado Springs and o,owith a
4.66 ERA In 9 games with the Los
Angeles Dodgers.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Second St., Pomeroy,

J

I
l

YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

WINftR CLEARANCE
CONTINUES! ·
LAST WEEKEND FOR

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•CONNIE

htrit~~t hous.t
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SHOE
PLACE
992-5627
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Trestrnan says there was
no feud with Schottenheirner

Prestone
Super
Flush
• #AS-107

Radiator

.

GOLF TIPS- Comedian Tommy Smothers (rlr;ht) gets some
goH tips lrom last year's Los Angeles champion Open Chip Beck
during the pro-am arouiid Wednesday. Actlqn In the 62nd annual
event begins today. (UPI)

ture
&amp; Design
"Brand Name Furniture At Discount Prices"
675-1371

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Porrieroy-Middleport, Ohio

;
'

:::

_____ _)

••

"He's a real pro." Trestman
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - Much
said.
"I'm very happy he's llere.
has been said about the reputed
feud between newly named I feel very comfortable with him.
Cleveland Browns offensive He will show great leadership for
coordinator Marc Trestman and all of us. He won't beat around
former head coach Marty · the bush. He's going to tell you
like It is."
Schottenlielmer.
And the way it Is, Is that
Reports have said Schottenheimer, hired as the head coach Of Trestman will oversee Clevethe Kansas City Chiefs last week. land's offense, a rather lofty
brushed Trestman aside during position for someone so young In
the 1988 season. Then, toward the the NFL.
end of the season. Trestman and
"I think we'll take a hard look
quarterback Bernie Kosar reat
our package, our efficiencies
portedly "submarlned" Schotand
deficiencies," he said. "To
tenhelmer' s offensive philosophy
make
any statements of new
to owner Art Modell.
theory
right now Is a little
But Trestman says the rumor
premature.
We'll see what we do
. Is nonsense.
best
and
see
what the draft
"I'm not going to repsond to
that," he said Monday from the brings us."
Trestman said the Browns will
Browns coaches' office In Berea.
keep
Lindy Infante's system and
"I have to deal with Marty
build
upon lt.
myself. History will show that 1
''The
system has been successhad complete loyalty to Marty.
ful
tor
us,"
he said. "It gives you
"Marty and I worked closely
the
flexibility
to do different
together. Being one the new
things.
coaches on the staff. he relied on
"People said we had problems
some of the other guys a little
last
year. Anytime you have
more than he did me. But he still
Pro Bowl players (Kosar, ·
three
relied on me. He's a great coach.
We've talked several times since running back Kevin Mack and
wide receiver Webster Slaughhe's left."
Trestman; 33, must now show ter) out of !he lineup. you will
loyalty to new head coach Bud have some problems. We had a
Carson. The two have come off lot of people pick up the slack this
sounding like members of the season. It's a credit to Marty for
keeping It all together."
mutual admiration society.
Modell and General Manager
During a news conference
Ernie
Accorsl speak of Trestman
announcing Carson as the
In
glowlrig
terms. They both went
Browns head coach Friday,
Carson 'called Trestman "an so far as to say he'll be a head
ous tanding coach. " Tres tman coach In the NFL In the near
fut\lre.
returned the favor Monday .

'

WE'U HELP YOU our FROM UNDER TH~E BIW
'Tis the season for last month's holiday bills
to pile up and up. but we've got an answer. Pay them all off with a low-rate loan
from us. and make only one payment a
month.

In most cases. we can even defer your
first payment for a month.
So before you get buried under. all those
bills. talk to one of our friendly loan officers.

PLES
.

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

New Haven
•
882·2135

Point. Pleasant
675-1121

K
Mason
773-5514

'

J
I

�I

•

2. 1989

Page-6-The

Gophers fast start defeats
OSU; Toledo, Ball State win

Boys ralings
COLUMBUS. ' Ohio fUPII -

Th.lA

week's Unlled Prdis lnter•toral Ohio
Hlch S&lt;:hool IINnl ol
hDys
b•kf!tball nuiap cwlttlllr..-piatn"""

c.achte'

Mel wo•lo•• rrconls Ia .. re•1he.a):

DMdoal
Team

Polnt111
Ma(vJJftr Itt) Ot-llS2t

To~do

I.

.&amp; . "' arre~~JRfJ!ffY!l.fU.-.11
.s.
ro~do .
(l~n
~-....
I. tlndnrali , oodward (I) (IU)
1. Lon&amp;Ja AdlbJI'Il KIIJ (IS.!)

tt!l
, 110

Ill
iJ8

'73

I. Newi€1~2,
Sem

Ollie Colle~e Bu llrf:blill
We*teldlt', Fth :
BowhiGf'eftl J.t, Eu&amp;ernMicldpn d
Ohle Uatwrall:y 7L WriPt State a
~~et~Y t Pa) 11, CMe R.e.erve Sl
Oberh 4t, Keii)'I)D J!
Womet~ '•

!21

II. Warrenlf,.irdiiii(IJ-1)

Glrlt OhkJ Hl&amp;hfkhool BMIIetball

t4

olio { 11-1 )

We4111eNIO'. Feh 1

St

BeMenreell. U, ~aW!rvUie 41
C.mbr'd1e 11, St Clalrnllle Sl
Dl unollll Soli•~• 7t. Mo pdore $7
Galllpol .. U. Port.-neaib a

en: II.C&amp;I'ItoftMcKinleySt; 1!.

BU'IIt'rcren ll~ : 13. Coh.rnbu1 Brook·
haven t8: 14. Toledo WbUmer 17: Ui.
Trotwood-Madl.eo II; II . (th!)Tille.St.
...... ,.and Lopn , te~~~:h; 1!1. FMclld8; 11.
(llf'J LDNood Sl. Edward Md San-

GarreUs~lle

du.slcy, 7 eloe'h.

WGIIIIIWfle Ill,

Dlvlllllen II

IU
1!111

t. Wlllnrd (I) (1:5-1)

188

7. Orrville {4) (lUI

171
II'!
8S

II. lla)' VlllaJe (2) (I~)
t. •nalre (11-1)

6!

lb .CambrldiJe li4-Z)

Se:t'Ond len: 11. Wanrly &amp;8; 1!.
CtnclnnaH Fore!lt Park $1: U . Hllbboro
-II; 14. PorUn1oatlll&amp;; II. ftoi ..Ord 18; 18.
(lle) Lovel••• " 'uhlnat;o•Court Reuse, '
·$JW't&amp; Hl(hlaadand car Us If.!, &amp;e~~e•: 2'0.
Ketter InK A.lter 5.

Dlvlsian Ill
Tum
PohKI
I. Beverly Fort Feye (It (11-f)
111
t cruwnhll.s tkadem)' (I) ( 14-IJ
153
3. • eynu\\o'ynfonl(4)(1-1-l )
181
4. Pecersbtu'l Sprlnlfleld (I HI
118
S.. OberH• (If..!)
1!18
I.NorthColle ..eHIII(ll-1)
ltf
7. BamHla. •an (11-JI
I. Akron Hoban (It-!)

11
U

t . Tu~arawu Val..., IIH J

56

ID. Brookville ( 14-3)
4S
Set'O.-Ite•: 11. OIEUpeakeSt; l!.ltie)
C.db: ud Wlleelwtnu:rw, If ucb; l.t.
OIMnbarJt 8; 15. (lie) Key'llo•. Mh~

Ohio Col~.e au tecbaU RHifts

Points

113
lt3
HI

12

1. Cln £eu•ry Day ( 1&amp;.%)
81
8.Antwerp(IH)
52
e. Si. Henrr f I» I
411
II .Uma Central CILibollc. (le-3)
47
Seo011• tu: II. Uberty Cen&amp;er 41: U.
NewburyS&amp; I.!I.Tu~earawasCatiiDUc.!l4:
14. DeveiMd Hel&amp;hl• Lutheran EM lit;

11. Col..nbus W~luie 31; 11. 11flln
Cl.hert II; n. HI~) f'd•usler·Trlmble
and Mlnp, II each; 11. ~raft
Riverside It: lt. Ule} &amp;M-et Eulern
and Holpte, !I each.

Wl'ftltling poll
HOlJ.AND, Ohlu (UPil- This week' II
Ohio hl&amp;fl !IChool wl'flllttlnr rallnp,
cvmplled by Dick Rvo~r • .tecrelary·
tft•urer ol lhe Ohio HJtb Scboal
Wl'ft.tllll( CoacM Alltoelat~.. u•
dlltrlklied by UPI (ftr!t place vatu In
,.renthese&amp;):
DJvh .. n I
Tum
Potnt!l
1. Lakewood St. Edward (%2)

Point•

n:s

1!3
US

t . Ilea...

111

J. OakBarhor(l )
I. Vincent " '..-re•

'78
74
15

8. 01 n.ted Falls
t . Rocky Rlwr

n

1.Twi.-.IK'Chambff'ln

AdelpW It')', CeJPrdla 80
Albany 7S. Oneoa S&amp;. 111

'71, ln.... U Of Pa. 11

GeorptOWD 74, ~oa Ha.IIM
Grow City t'7, IUram H.
James MadiHa 14, N.,.y11
La Salle 11, Jo• n

Lowell H. lleeee St. 11
la'~mt.r can. 11, Messiah n
M.vllt 8'7, Mo _ ...u. 71
Mllkra•te u, o.,ae,- 11
Moravt• '78, Oett,..rt '71
Muhlellber1 8S. Dlekt- II
New Palla St. It, V uaar tl8
Nortbe•W•II!, Yermo• 75
Robert Morna '71. ~)'Gia 18
Sltlpp!nllbura: ~S. Lockhlven 'M
Slippery lloek a. aarkJn 77

81. ~•••• 81, Pro~deMe 7S
st. Peter's II, MuWCan 1Z
St. R01e U, Nyad1 M
Slecll&amp;on81. II, GIMtboroS.. 58 {0TJ

S1.aw• It, VIllanova 57
•
1'eWAH 81. Ill, Lehl.rtl 'n
~·•• St. 8t, RuiJ.-.Camden 88

"'

UrtbiUI tl, lo._ Ropldna 71'
M'Mie)t. . 'n, A..mbenlM
W•bnl-'« 71. W•ll. ADd Jeff. II
WidNer II, SwartMnore U
Wercl!ll~ Poly 82, Trllllty H

.BrewtM-P•B-. Ner1b Gf!Or&amp;lat:s
c. Flortu 71, Flacfer •

Shawnee I.

(!)

.....

ColleJe Bal)dbaJI Ra.A

Ill

I . Eul Uver pool
Jt.Wes&amp;en1Ue !WorlbU
tea: 11. Me- ~; \l.lk,.....
l&gt;Die 34; 11. Mapk HeiJhis U; U. Wa1
Cltl!llfr Lllkll&amp;a II; II. Toledlt 81. lo,_'l
18; II. Falrboni It J7. Oaefa.tl
Pr la::d • It; 18. N•rtll Canklllleo...er 8:
II. CllllllnMll Oak Rllllli M; !1. Uma

Seat.

National
college SCOJ'ftl

AppalaciiiM St. 'JS, WIIUam A Marytfl

..

4. V•••owD Lab ~
S. LoralnSG••vlrw
I . f'a.lrflel.
7. Oevelud st. do!ll!ph
8. Slow

74, M.v:Je4ta 57
Otterbein 17, Olllo Nonllera 51
wtltt:nber1 'JI, lleldelberll4
Cap lal 4', Wooster 13
Oltlo Wesleyu a. Denison as
Kenyon BS. OberUn H
n1nn 75 Malo• ,..
.
FIDclllf 71, Lake Erlt41
Grow Clty ( P•) 1'3, -'ram IS
Jolla Curollltl, Till!! (Pal ll
AlletMIIY {Pa) 101, cue ~rw 57

Eclhttoro

llo•ll

Cletna•IS, Nortll CartM•I•

E. Tea&amp; 81. II, Wale Feral k
Eclu!l'll: 71, Bur)' SS
P1a. Memortlll 81, St Tbomu 78

PIHWa 8J. Alabama 'Jt
Parma i1,
11

••••N
u ........,... ,,

oa..u~-.u.

~:

lam•Ma . . . . 7j,NavJ71
8t. 11, LaGrup! 71
a-tell;)' 1'1. - - . .. , .. 81. 11
Lo ....tlle 118. Vlf'llllla Tecb II
Lo....... !!If.. ttl, Mbl•s&amp;pp 71
Mar)taad 71. M.. ·lalt. C. . II
MemplllaSt. 11. 1"10116a.S&amp;. M

lle•-•

•••pi

New Mo:k» Ill, MIIITII (Fla.) IS
Nlcllolh Ill. "'I,
Coli. 1S

v......u. u. Tl!!li. .IU $I

Vlrataaa 11, N.C. St. '71
W•l Vlrsl* St. M, &lt;ll•ftl.on 74
W•l Vlrr!llla Tech . . Falnnoat IS
(OT)

4.'1
tR
Seco .. ten: lt.CulilfuttoaNonhwesl
It , 12. Orrvll~ 11; IS. St. Uarll Graham
U; 14. C~E U; 15. Med• a.ckere I I;
1&amp;. COiwnblls Ham•on ToWMhlp 111: 11.
(lie) CarN11t0111and Roaslord, 8uch; 11.
II~) Suululk)" Perllllns ud M&amp;ntlll
CretotW&amp;Od, leach.
II.Richfield Jtn'en

Dlvtsklntn

Te11n1
J, Richmond Helpte (I)

Polllt11

li3

*· Ardbolll (8)
J. Cadb\t)

Ul
1n
lit
lit

4. \lerallln (!}
~. Delta
I. OreJO. Strilch

H

1. a-111re~~en

•

I. UctlDI He I pu

U

II. COiwnbus

S1

Rf'~

ll .lkdford Ch.ael
tl
Soeoo_. ten: II. Han . . Lako&amp;a M: n.
M'rst U her1f Salem 17: 13. Apple CrN!:k
Wll,)'ftf'dale II: 14. West Jdfenoell; 15.
It If' I Oftcar 10 aJMt H•I'OIL tl':at!h; 17. (t 1e)
Thomp10a IAd&amp;emont • • West Salem
Nor1hwt!lll!&amp;ern. 8 uch; lt.Ubertyfinter
7; !II. BrooiNIIIe S.

Pro results
Thursdll,)' 's Sport• Calebdar
Bulletball
t;J~""elaad • New l'ork,1:JII p.m.
Suit&amp;.! 1a1: Miami , ~: II p.m.
Sacraml'llfo .. Chlcaro, 8: M p.m.

All&amp;lltl. ial: Dee~r. t:JI,.m
Nf'W &lt;ler,_y ad Goldea Stale, ·II: • p.m
Bobsled
·

CA!riiNI D'Arnpeuo, llaiJ' _ IWct-man
.,.. lour-man Ch llll)lloMhlp»
Golf
Lol All ~es- PGA Lis All Jdl!ll Opee
Hockey
Molltrul al Quebec, 1:3$ p.m.
Pht ... ra:h a&amp; Plllll.dflpllla, 1:J5 p.m.
Torollto at NY hiM den, 8:tl p.m.
BulfJIIo ILl Sl. Ln•s. II:J$ p. m.
DelrDi. &amp;I Ca.I(IIU}', t : SS p.m.
New Jer.ey id. Lo8 AIIJftes, II: II p.m.

..,..,
MISL

So ramestclti!GIIed
Skllftl
Vall aad IeDer Creek. Colo.-. " 'orld
Alpine 01 ampMIIIIAhlp8

Tean.,

ToiQro - Nil.... PanPadlkOpen
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASIJ)C.
We~IQ''I

Keults
rhlladelphla114, WIIM.Iqton Ill (0T)
lkl1lon JOi, Ot •lotW!

tt

PhomL-..; 114, lA LUers 11
.\Huna U . UL&amp;h a
.
Portland Ill, lA (.11ppet"slt7
Th•nd~GJ' 'I Games
Clrllf'land ILl Nh' York, '7 :Jt p.m.
Se•llf' at Miami, 1:Ui p.m .
8tcrame!Moiai:Chtcap,8: Mp.m .

Atlanta Ill Deawr, I: JI p.m .
· New Jerll!)' a1 GoldriiStat~ , It: II p.m.
1')- .. ay's Dam•
W•hlnatout Bostoft. Ill (IN
Su&amp;flf: at Ctlarlotw, •lrfi

8acnmento ILl Cl!'¥el•~· aiPt

Mllwull!e M lnd•a, al&amp;'t
" O.roM at Philallelptlla, ai.W

Dllc.ap at HoUlton. 1111111
n..t11 .. Dalllu, nlpt
Nw lerw, at Utal, oltlll
.......... LA Lakera, III(M
I • AM . . . a&amp;l.A.. CUppe", •lidl

NATIONAL IIOCXEV L£A.G\Jt:

we.-II''•Rq••

............ NY BMI'I'IJ tOT)

. . . . . . . 111. . . . . 1 {1~)
DIIMP'J,Wia..... 4

IW......• t. V-.wr I

........., •• o.m•

.

llell&amp;rrell Kct-llec. 7:11p.m.
PIU ...... M n•lelfltla,

a..•

~:U p.ln..

Te..-e&amp;IIHYI ........ I:IIp.m.

..
, ... • a
1:11 p.m.
Dtcrell at Cal,.,. t:. ,....

Sport8 birefs

'

'

Handicapped athletes are facing a "crtsts" becauseofplansby
the Un tverstty of Texas in Aus tin
to replace the artificial turf at
Memorial Stadium. interrupting
the Special Olympics, an official
of the games said. Dents Poulos,
executive director of the Texas
Special Olympics, said he was
told by UT officials that work on
the new playing field will begin
May 16. just one week before
Special Olympics' Summer
Garnes are scheduled to begin.
He said Athletic D(rector DeLoss
Doss and other UT ,officials
rejected a suggestion to move the
Special Olympics up by one week
or delay construction on MemorIal Stadium by five or six days .
Football
In1n Smith, a standout tight
end at Pemberton (N.J.) High
School. h~ made an oral commltmept to attend the University
of Notre Dame. Smith, 6-foot-4
and 225 pounds, caught 13 passes
for for 420 yards and three
touchdowns and also will be
allowed to play ba.ieball tor the
Irish.
•j

1,.

"He dou.ble-dribbled," dis·
agreed Minnesota coach Clem
Haskins. ' 'It's just nice we had an
official who had the guts to make
the right calL"
Williams was equally upset by
the technical call. "He (referee
Jim Baln) calls !ton my assistant
who jumped up and down. He
reacted thinking Jay got fouled.
We were excited."
Burton. who slapped the ball
from Burson before the call, also
agreed with the otf!ctals. ''He did
it so quick. I thought he did. But I
just waited · for the call to see
. what happened."
Burson. whO had one of his
poorest shooting performances
of the year, had a differing
opinion. "I didn't feel like I
double-dribbled. But that's a
judgment call."
Grady Mateen had hit a pair of
free throws at 0:34 to give the
Buckeyes a brief 73· 72 lead. But
Melvin Newbern answered with
a driving score at 0: 08.
Newbern added 11 points and
Ray Gaffney had 10 for the
Gophers. who their record to12·6,
4-4 in the Big Ten. Ohio State was
led by Mateen' s 19 points, with 15
. from Eli Brewster and 12 from .
Burson as they fell to 15-5 overall,
. 4-3 In the Big Ten.
Ohio State outscored Minnesota 11·3 starting the second half
to take the lead. Burson's three·
pointer at 17:24 gave the Buck· .
eyes a 42-41l advantage.
Ohio State used its outside
shooting, including a pair o!
three-pointers by Brewster. to
maintain its lead. Brewster's
score at 10:28 made the margin
60-53.
But Minnesota fought back
behind . seven straight points
from Burton. His three- point
play at 5: 56 regained the lead and
his free throw at 2:40 upped the
advantage to 72-69.
Burton's back-to-back threepointers helped Minnesota outscore 'Ohio State 15-2 to start the
game. Burton had 15 points In the
half.
The Gophers used their fast.
break and rebounding to main·
taln control. But the Buckeyes
fought back late In the period
behind the scoring of Burson and·
White. White's rebound score at ·
4!10 pulled Ohio State within
32-27. .
Burson's !rei! throws at '1: 13
made the margin 36-31 before
Melvin Newbern answered with
a charity toss at 1:11 giving
Minnesota a 37-31 halftime lead .
Ohio Roundup
Tony Yates has had more lows
than highs In his six seasons as
basketball coach at the University of Cincinnati. Wednesday's
night's 86-76 win over crosstown
rival Xavier definitely was a
high.
In what has turned Into a
hotly-contested rivalry. the two
teams play just once a year. UC
leads the overall series, 38-18;
Xavier has won six of 10 tn the
1980s; but the Bearcats have won
two of the last three.
"It was a great win for our
basketball team," said Yates, as
both Louts Banks with 28 points
and Keith Starks with 17 scored
career highs to lead the Bearcats
and also shared rebounding
honors with nine each.
Xavier slipped to 12-8. Cincinnati now Is 10-7.
In the Mid-American Confer·
ence Wednesday night, Toledo
and Ball State remained tie for
!lrst place at 6-2 with road wins.
Ball State beat Miami 66-51 at
Oxford and Toledo got by Central
Michigan 74-73 at Mount Pleasant, Mich. In other MAC
contests, it was Eastern Michl:
gan over Bowling Green 70-69
and Kent State over Western
Michigan 84-65.
Ball State's Curtis Kidd scored
17 points and grabbed 14 rebounds in the Cardinals' win over
Miami.
After a close first eight mlunutes, an 11·4 run gave the
Cardinals a 27-15 lead. Miami
managed to pull to Within 36-30 at
the intermission, but Ball State
outscored the Redsklns 13-3 to
begin the second halt and
stretched Its margin to 61-41 wtth
nine minutes to play. The closest
Miami got after that was 13
points.

,.. ,
!l i t

y

tested layup oft p. fastbreak with
5 seconds remaining. The ball
went out of bounds off an Eastern
player, but the Hurons' Carl
Thomas stole the lnbounds pass
with 2 seconds left to preserve the
victory.
Darreli McLane paced the
Falcons with 18 points.
Andy Fisher's 28 points paced
Toledo to Its narrow win over
Central Michigan.

·-

UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
New leaders emerged In three of
the four divisions In this ,week's •
United Press Jnternatto.nal Ohio
High School Board ol Coaches
boys basketball ratings.
Division ! leader Toledo Macomber remained comfortably
atop the big school standings
with a 326-242 margin over
runnerup Cincinnati Withrow
and a 29-1 bulge In first place
votes.
The other dt.vtslons all had new
No. I teams - West Geauga In
Division II, Beverly Fort Frye in
Division III and Springfield Catholic In Division IV.
·
•
Wes't Geauga returned to the .~ ·
top in Division II after a week's
absence, thanks to Lexington's ,. ,
first loss of the season, which
dropped the Minutemen all the
'...
way from first to fifth ..
West Geauga, a 77-48 winner
over Orange Tuesday night, held , .
a 353·313 margin over runnerup
Dayton Chamlnade-Julienne, although Chamtnade (16-1), which
lost Tuesday night to Trotwood· :
Madison, had a 16-15 edge In first :,
place votes .
Youngs town Cardinal Mooney
and Youngstown LibertY, both "
unbeaten. finished third and
fourth, followed by Lexington.
Fort Frye, which ran its record :
to 16-0 with a 73-56 win over :
Frontier Local Tuesday night, · ·
leaped all the way from fifth last ·
week to No. 1 this week, with a · ··
narrow 197-193lead over Columbus Academy, which lost for the
first time.
Fort Frye received nine firsts
to six for Academy (14-1). while
Bucyrus Wynford (14·1) was
third with 169 points and four .
firsts al;ld Petersburg Springfield
(15-0) fourth with five firsts and '
168 points. Oberlin. beaten 5548
by Avon Tuesday night for its
second loss, was fifth with 158.
In Division IV. Springfield
Catholic (16-0) and Canal Win·
chester (17-0) exchanged places . .
Catholic, which trailed the Indl·
ans by seven points a week ago, , .
held a 262-253 margin this week
and a 19-8 edge in first place
votes.

INCREDIBLE

Recovery is mom's
n
well-being additionally Landers
Dear ADa Landers: When I
read the letter signed "John's
Mother" I thought, "There but
for the grace of God go I."
My son, too, was a beautiful,
happy baby who grew to be a
compassionate and handsome
young man - when he was!I' t
bummed out on drugs.
Six weeks ago, "Freddie"
agreed to go Into rehabilitation.
For the first time since he was 15
his eyes are clear and bright and
his conversation is coherent. We
were lucky, and every day I bless
that luck. But I had a lot to learn
about tile lifelong road to recovery, and I would like to share
what I learned with John's
heartbroken mother.
Stop blaming yourself. In order
to live with your pain you must
admit that you were powerless
over the addiction that ruled your
son's lite.
You are right to say we need to·
educate ourselves. Part of that
education ·is accepting the fact
that there are limits to what we
can do. Our child no longer needs
us to run his Ufe, and we can't
force him to choose recovery.
You say you failed to keep the
lines of communication open. I
used to think that, too, until
Freddie told me It wasn't true. I
tried to get through to him, but he
shut me out. There ts no way to
get a person to listen unless he ts
ready.
Stop blaming yourself. Go to
Al-Anon and get some emotional
support. It's all right togrtevefor

what is lost, but don't punish
yourself for not having been able
to control your son's addiction.
As mothers we always believe we
should be In control of our
children. Drugs and aleohol take
that ability from us. Live your
life tor you and find serenity In
the memory of your son as he was
during his best years.
May you find peace. -Mother
of a Recoverln1 Addle&amp; In D.C.
Dear Mother; It was good of
you to share the wisdom born of
experiences. I hope the mUJions
of parents of addicted children
wUI find comfort In what you
have written. Good luck and God
bless.
Dear Aan Landers: My daugh·
ter is engaged to be married and I
have an uneasy feeling about \be
young man. "Hillary" is 25 years
old and 1 have told her how I feel.
To .put It bluntly, I suspect the
fellow is gay.
"Roc!" Is uncomfortable at
famlly gatherings. especially
around my three sons. When they
joke around. Rod seems Ill at
ease. He is an Intelligent person
but very quiet. I guess what
bothers me most Is !hat he never
looks you In the eye.
My younger daughter shared
similar feelings with me about
Rod before I mentioned mine. I
have tried to talk with my
husband about my susplel&lt;&gt;ns,
but he says I'm being unfair and
that some men just aren't
masculine.
Hillary has gone away for

TOPS conducts
w

A valentine exchange and
program with each member to
contrlbuteapoemorreadtngwas
planned for the Feb. 14 meeting
when 1'0PS Club Ohio 570 met
Tuesday night at the Coonhun·
tersbutldlngontheRockSprlngs'
Fairgrounds.
. Lennie Belle Aleshire wei·
C?med the members with Shirley

, Son of ~Rtchard Richmond,
Gallipolis and Ca!Ue Richmond,
Middleport. he will begin his
training in August and Is ex·
peeled
to complete the 11 weeks
•
I
of intensive training In No·
'iember.
: Richmond w111 be taught the

~.~ent

J.. \...'-'

bi!e.

. Runner up was Shllo Moore.
daughter of John and Lenora
Moore. The winner will partie!·
pate In the Meigs County spellln~
bee to be held at Meigs High

limited time only...

basics of battlefield sutvlval and
wlll be Introduced to the typical
daily routine that he Will experience during his enltstmept and
study the personal and profes·
slonal standards traditionally
exhibited by marines.
He wUJ participate In an active
physical conditioning program
and gain proficiency In a variety
of military skUls, inc1udlng first
ald. rifle and pistol marksman:

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - OliveOrange V.F.W. Alixlllary w111
meet 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
hall. ·

You can'ttop the comf011, quality and swle of an
Action recliner. And ~ou can't top the price unless

you get one free. Choooe any of tf1e styl•s shown.
Pay the regulllf pt"ice ... get anothet' of equal value
· FREEl There's 1 catch. Offer ends soon!

school on March 7. 7:30p.m.
Other participants were
Timmy Peavley, Josh Witherell,
Adam Jenkins and Betsy Houda·
shell, fourth graders, and Mindy
Patterson, Rana Justis and Do·
rothy Leifheit, fifth graders; and
•Joey Lipscomb and Annie Jessie.
sixth graders.

Community calendar

an awesome opportunity to get
twice as much for yoU" dollars!
r

STIVERSVILLE - Vic Roberts, of Little Hocking, will
speak at the Sttversvllle Word of
Faith Church, Thursday, at 7
p.m. Pastor Gary Holter Invites
t~e public.

If you don't need two, tell your
neighbor or bring a friend and
share the cost and the savings!

held Saturday at 7:30p.m. at the
Morse Chapel Church, RacinePortland Road, County Road 35,
MASON, W.VA.- The Mason
Fire Department Ladies Auxll·
tary Is sponsoring a vegetable
soup and chUI sale on Saturday,
starting at 11 a.m. $5 a gallon;
$1.25 a quart; 50 cents a bowl.
Bring your. own containers. Hot
dogs wtll be sold too .

---.

2 .Weeks Only

---

p.m~

· sATURDAY
RACINE- A hymn slngwtll be

•

Revival set

No. 10 envelope (65 cent1p01tage) to

Ann

Lander~.

P.O. Bux 11562.

Chicago, Ill.. 611611.0562.

Meigs County Is 9.2 percent.
·' The Meigs County Library, Is
Qfferlng a literacy program for
aqults wanting to learn to read or
learn to read better. A person
needing help will be tutored on a
one on one basis. Tbe material
and tutoring is free. Many of the
volunteer tutors are from the
RSVP Program of the Senior
Citizen.
Although organizations and
Individuals Involved in adult
literacy have offered thousands
of functionally Illiterate adults
and teens the opportunity to
acquire baSic literacy there Is
still less than 10 percent of the
functionally Illiterate population
The Meigs Local School Dis- being reached. If you know of a
trict Board of Education will person needing this help reach
meet Monday at 7 p.m. In the out and get Involved. The help Is
regular meeting room.
at 992-5813 and 992-2161.

In Meigs County, only 55.4
percent of the population 25 years
old and over finished high schoOl
and only 13.5 percent finished
eighth grade.
The Oblo Poverty Indicator ·
1986-1986, lists Meigs County In
1980 as having 4047 persons listed
at poverty level and In 1986 there
were 6049 persons listed at
poverty level, an Increase of 49.10
percent.
It is a known fact that Illiteracy
plays a large role In unemplo)'·
rrient. Tbe current figure tor

Meeting changed

•
Order of Eastern Star
POMEROY- Past Matrons of
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Star. wUJ meet Feb. 7 at

m.eetmg
condu cted by Mary Mar ti n w1 th
Linda Stewart and Maida Long
being the winners. Gifts were
presented to each one.
Each member brought a gift
(or the funny money auction.
Mrs. Aleshire was auctioneer
and was assisted by Mrs. Hysell
and VIrginia Dean.
·

the home.of
Members
areEmma
askedClatwortlty.
to bring a
homemade baked Item or hand·
made craft item for the Valen·
tine's Day gift exchange. There
will be a catered dinner prior to
the meeting at 6 p.m. Cost of the
dinner is $6. Any member wish·
tng to make a reservation for the
dinner 1s asked to call Twila
Childs at 992-6188 by Feb. 1.

shup. and close order drill.
Teamwork and discipline will be
emphasized throughout the train·

The Scioto Township Trustees
wll meet Friday at 6 p.m. at the
Pageville Township building,

1987 DODGE D·50

1984 FORD F-250
Slockt 1102.2 daonl, 6 eyt .. .no. nns.. PS.
PS. AIM'II - · 314 1Dn pickup. lhOn wide
bed, ,.-stop l!umper, 31,000ocl. miles.slidi~

Stock t 82541, 4 cyl .• 4 speed. PS, PB. AM.4'M
lll!lio. s10reo tape, long wide bed, sliding lilt

glus.

liiiQ1a&amp;s.

NOW

WAS

WAS

88999

'7995

'6995

1984 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS
Stodl I 116021, V-8, air ...-.!., Yinyt niOI, ouiO.
1nro, PS, PB,-door lod&lt;s, ~~-. cnile CDIIRI, 11t-

-.power1985 MAZDA RX-7

.., lapl, AI/&lt;RI-.

WAS

NOW

84299

'4995

1985 DODGE DAYTONA
'Siockt022C1, 2daonl, 4cyl.,lliranl.• &amp;1111d,
1nro.. PS, PB. t1 wheat. cni1e CXll1toi, AM.4'M
- · 11n0 llpl. radial tira&amp;,

WAS

NOW

811999

1981 BUICK ELECTRA

Slocktll5311, 2 dooll, 4 cyl.• aircond., stand.
nna.. PS, PB. AMfM 18dio, starao tapa.

WAS

NOW

'8995

Stock t .j()()92, 4 dooiS, V-8, aulD. nna .• PS.
PB. cruise con!IOI, AINFM radio, 18dial irts.
white walls.

1978 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

. WAS

Stock t 95163. 2 dooll, hltd t:&gt;p, V-8, 8llto.
trans .• PS, PB. power windows. ~!wheel, cruise
control. AMtfM radio, radial nras. while wal~.
buckat ...... gauges,

WAS

Stockt80641. 2dooll. hard..,, coupe. &amp;oyl..
11ir ani.• au». trW., PS, P8. power window~.
door lod&lt;s, $'Nheel, cnise conrol. ••
raotapo, AMII'M radio.

power

NOW

*3995

82889

NOW

*1595

WAS

~W

1 . CHEVY 8-10

91Dcktll4481,4 c:yl.lir ani.. IUID. lrd., PS,

POMEROY -Clergy Appreci·
atlon Night, sponsored by the
Meigs County Clvltan Club, will
be Thursday. 6: 30 p.m., at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy.

POMEROY - The Meigs
CountyR.E.A.C.T. wlllholdtbelr
monthly mee\ing at ·Pleasers ·
Restaurant on Friday at 7: 30

Meigs County Library Lines

*6995

POMEROY -Salisbury Township Trustees will meet Thurs·
day, 7 p.m., at the township hall .

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- A square
dance will be held Friday even· ·
lng. 8 to 12 midnight, at the
Middleport American Legion An·
nex. Music will be provided by
the True Country Ramblers.

Lynn Shuler, Nancy Broderick . board of deeaconesses, joining
Board of Christian Education, Glenna Riebel, Elizabeth Sea·
rles. Rosemary Lyons, and Dot
joining June K:ioes, Jerry Pullen.
Neutzllng,; and Wanda Shank,
Susy Heck,- Peggy Lewis, and
Mary
Brewer, finance board.
Donna Cruser; Kenneth Im·
joining
Carolyn Davis, Raymond
boden. Ethel Shank, and John
Fultz, board of trustees, joining Fields, Charles Searles, and
other members. Howard Wagen· Louise Thompson.
hals, Janice Daniels, Bob Lewis, ' Ushers named for a one year
Russell Mills, Nola Swisher and .t erm were Gerald Anthony.
Randall Davis, John Fultz,
Dale Walburn.
Dan Riggs, Dan White and James Grueser, Jim Grueser,
Gene Kauff. board of deacons, John Riebel, Jr .. Dan Riggs,
joining Gerald Anthony. David Stacey Shank, Jeff Snowden.
Darst, John Riebel, Bob Parker, Dale Walburn, Don Wilson, Gene
Kautf. Fred Hoffman, Ted Riley,
Don Wilson, and Mike Shuler;
Betty Gilkey. Helen Bodlmer. and David Darst.

1978 DODGE
3/4 TON VAN

1987FORD
MUSTANGGT
Slocl&lt;t 89792, 2d0011, Mid top. 6cyl .. 5 &amp;peed
sllr\d. nna.. PS, PS, power ..nclows. power
door lacl1&amp;, tilt whHI, cruise conrol. AM.fM
radl••••,.,.,•• lldilllirll,bud&lt;etsea•....,
dalog. gluges.

Sloci&lt;IIM263,3doors, YBII , V-8eng. 360,aul0.
1ran8., PS, PB, bucket seats, 3/4 ton Yilt

WAS

•
8118i l
89
~--------~
...·_~~--------~·1_~_,9_95__S~8~7~~~i~B~----------1987 NISSAN PICKUP
1988 PONTIAC

MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
County 8 &amp; 40, Salon 710, w111
meet Thursday. 1 p.m., at the
home of Rhoda Hackett in
Mlddleport.

t

New officers have been elected
at the Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Tliey are Darla Thomas, clerk,
Cathy Riggs, assistant; Dorothy
Anthony. treasurer, Marilyn
Fultt, assistant; Helen Fields,
organist, Sharon Hawley. assist·
ant; Donna Grueser. church
-weekends with Rod and confided school superintendent, Beulah
White, assistant; Sarah Fowler,
that they did have sex &amp;few times
church school secrelary and
In the beginning, but he never
treasurer, Clara Mae Darst.
enjoyed It much and suggested
assistant;
Dorothy Anthony,
that they walt until marriage to
treasurer, Machurch
mission
resume lt. She says that It's all
rilyn
Fultz,
assistant.
right with her, that sex isn't that
Elected to three year terms on
Important, it's just rlice to wake
·
the
various church boards were
up with someone beside you In
bed. She says she'll settle for that
until after the wedding.
· Ijustcan'tbelleveanynormal,
healthy illY could lie next to his
By. Ruth Powers
fiancee all night and not want to
go further.
Accordlnli to the national fig·
What do you think, Ann? ures
on Illiteracy, 21 to 25 mlllion
Mom In N.J.
Dear Mom Ia N.J.: I can people are unable to read at
understand why you are suspl·
functional levels.
Tbe U.S. Dept. of Education
clous, but It ts possible that Rod
has a very low sex drive. Maybe
cite 50 percent of crime Is
Rod Isn't thrilled about ~ex, but
attributed to Illiteracy, and 75
then neither Is your daughter or
percent of poverty Is attributed
she wouldn't settle tor this. Be
to illiteracy .
that as It may, Hillary should be
urged to seek advice from a
professional.
Wesleyan Bible Holtnes
Are you havin~ o problem Jindinll Church; Pearl St., Middleport.
a gift for the perton who h01
will have a weekend revival,
everythins? An.n Lander•' new Friday through Sunday evening,
booklet, "Gem,," it ideal for a 7:30 p.m. each evening. Ray·
nig'huUJnd. or coffee table . .,Gemt" mond Rice will be the evangelist.
U a collection of A.nn lAnder•' mo•t There will be special singing. The
reque1ted poem• and etaay•. Send
public Is Invited to attend.
14 plu• a telj-oddreued 11amped

l!.S. Marines announced TrusteeJ to ~et

~alisbury Bee winner ·named
Heidi Huffman, daughter of
Lim and Tanya Hultman, was the
w'lnner ,in the Salisbury Elementary School's annual spelling

New officers elected at church

•

· tat nIng th e new c 1own
oI',~ exp
certificate contest. It was noted
that Teresa Wood Is home from
the hospital.
Best loser for the week was
Julia Hysell who also won the
surprise package. Ola Sinclair
was the nlnner-up and received
the fruit basket. A game was
• -

·Enlistntent into
c. .

Famous quality
luxury built

Thunday, F~ 2, 1989
j
Paga 7

..

:P. J. Richmond, a senior. at
Meigs High School. has en lis ted
In the U.S. Marines and w111 take
his training a at Parris Island, S.

.

The Daily Sentinel

By The_Bend

..

BLOCKS SHOT - Mlnne~~ota' s ,Jim Shlkenjansld (right} blocks
shot attempt by Ohio State forward Jerry Francis (left) during
Wednesday's 76-73 Big 10 victory over the Buckeyes at
MlnneapoHs. (UPI(

Lamont Hanna had 13 points
and Tim Stewart 10 to lead
'
_
Miami.
At Bowun·g Green. !;:astern
Michigan built 'a 43-27 halftime
lead and held on at the end to beat
the Falcons. Lorenzo Neely
scored 14 points and Isaac
Henderson 10 for the Hurons.
BG had two chances to go
ahead In the final seconds but
Lamon Pippin missed an uncon·

OhiO polls
By GENE CADDES

~

way .' '

M~sld•aum

.

,
"''"
,."••
"

J . Saadilidl)'

·

Ill

..,~

t. Solon

KeaCState 84, Weall!fallldt IJ
DDcln.-181. Xavier 'll
llahlwta-Wallare a, Mt Ua~n H

Elmlra II( Naureth 14
FDU·Te ..eek tS. Wa,_.,. 71
Ge~~eseSt. Ill, R41J;erta Weal)'an 112

Cehlwalr:r, Huron and Oak Hamor, 1

I. Sprln&amp;fleld Cath I Ill ( 11-01
2. Caul Wl.:hM&amp;er (II) ( 17-0}
3. Setii'IDI McKinley p) (li-01
.f, Kalida()) 03-2)
:5. Manl!!llfld St. Pelef''s (IS.!)
I. Fori Lo....-.le (11-S)

Wt-driHdlt', Feb. 1
MlaaNat. '71, OMo StiLle '7S
lla.ll State. II. Mllftllll
EMiera Mh~h 'JI, Bowllnl Green •
t'DieciD 1t. Cea&amp;nl Mleh iS

2tt

.

Team

Be«•-• :57

Albrlpt st, Klnii'•CoiL 1S
Bates n. S.Wdetn13
Bla.,...._r! 84,, Muuillfld II
Buck.-11 'n, LaiiQ'rile It
•
C. eon .. St. 71. Lltr-Br~Jdyn 88
Curry 14, Wentworth 8J
Delaware Val. II, Scran&amp;ara 55
Eut Straulbburr81J. Klttz~wn 112

ford •d EutPal~tlne, hach: 18. Clle)
Akron St . VIncent-st . MAr)' and Doylntown Chippewa, t uch: te. fUel

Dlvlllon II
Te1111
I. Stnbenll~ ( 1!1
!. (lie) Lakeca&amp;holk !41
t. (tie) CoiiRlbtu DeSales

14, Wliterloo $t

Mut• C""twood n , Streetaboro4t
1\lak,y Val Q, Uhrld11w!Ue CI1Q'molll48

Tum
Polnll
I. M'ffit Ge-xa (15} ( 11'-1)
353
!:. Day Cll.mlade (II) { 11-1)
JJ!
3. v .. npt...n Mooney {!) ( 1~1)
!41

-1. " • • • • • Uberty ( IH l
S. Lex Ill Silo• (!) {15--1}

UPI Sports Writer
Willie Burton had 30 points,
Including a pair of contr.overslal
free throws in the closing .seconds, to help Minnesota hold off
Oh to State 76-73 In Big Ten
basketball Wednesday night.
The Buckeye's Jay Burson had
a lead-taking !teld go;tl dis• counted on a double dribble call
with 3 seconds left .. A protest
from Ohio State bench drew a
technical call leading to Burton's
heroics.
"I've lookec:\ at the replay,"
said Williams. :'I'm more upset
now. Jay Burson did not doubli!drtbble. Our kids played too hard
for the game to be decided that

Ohio scores

tn

%. On M'IUlrow t l ) (1&amp;. 1)
J. Lerai•Senilol" 114-t]

IO.Pidl.

' By GENE CADDES

New leaders
emerge in 3

PB. CNile comral. AUIFM - · - · ·

NOW

WAS

WAS

*6295

'7995

FINAJ,IST NAMED 'AIIB Bltchle, d•IIIW
of Mr. 111111 Jilin. B1te11 Bhcllle,
CooJvllle, hM beea lelecteclM
a n.JIIt for Ohio'• allltb
anlllllll bomeeombl&amp; q - .
contest to be held Aprtl1 111111 I
II&amp; &amp;be Dayton Marrllttt Ia
Dayton. Slle Ia Eulem IBp

Jayae

School'• homeeombl&amp; q-.

"

)
\

S10dt I 94561. 4 whHI drive, 6 eyt.• 4lplld.
AMifU radio, slerao 11lp11, lllllr stop bumJ&amp;'.

,

NOW

1984 FORD T·BIRD
SlOe.\ t esrn. 2doors, coupe. &amp;cyt.• lir c:cnd..

•

NOW

2495

GRAND AM

IUID. trans., PS, PS, power INt. ,.,.., door
lod&lt;s, lilt wheal• ..,.. conwl AUIFM radio.
.... tape,lldial titel. - wildow defog.

- . 83071, 2 dooJS, hlrd 1Dp. coupe, front
-drive, 4-cyl., air 1Xl11d., 8111D. trlns.• PS.
PB, paww wildows. power door - . AMtRI
. .•• budlat &amp;eels.

'5895

'10,995

WAS

NOW

WAS

~W

892811

I

rf

�'
•

..

"P age-8-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. February 2, 1989

Ohio

The sweet smell of success?
WINSTON·SALEM, N. C.
(UPH- RJRReynoldsTobacco
USA has drawn a bead on women
In a test·market campaign for a
new cigarette made with a paper
that em Its a sweet smell, com-.
pany officials said Tuesday.
The test marketing, along with
a new advertising campaign,
starts In April In southern Flor·
Ida and eastern Pennsylvania.
the COJllpany sajcl
The ad campaign for Chelsea.
clgaret res Includes the use of
scratch·and·snlft strips to call
attention to the cigarette's new
smell, and a free lighter with a
special cosmetic mirror att·
ached to a two-p&lt;~,ck, said John T.
Winebrenner, the senior vice
president for marketing.

"''Cios..U." Cllar- Saltll ·
AI types of lllcorating
cxctuOrill for IM II-'
Satwday. feb .... 9 cun.-1 p.m.
At tM .._.of S... lloyol Hll. 61
~- tM Gr•o loptilt Chordt &amp; t..tfic
cirdU..h of . . . . . . . . !llt•illo
is pricM to pi

,. ""'tlliot

"'"""·

IN CONCERT FRIDAY.:... Mylon and Broken
Heart will be In concert Friday at the Rio Grande

College and Community College Fine aad
Perfonnlng Arts Center at 7: 3e p.m.

·Today's kids being 'robbed of their
childhood,' Christian rocker believes
"! see kids where they are.
By LEE ANN WELCH
Thirteen-year old coke (cocaine)
OVP News Slalf
Although "nrtstian Rock" _ addicts. Twelve-year olds who
are sexually active.
seemingly is a contradiction in
' 'Kids are being robbed of their
terms. .Its players see It as
childhood," Joseph said. There Is
· 'ahernative music."
a deep need for this kind of
Pau.l Joseph, keyboardist with
ministry, and he feels his place In
Myion and Broken Heart. said
God's work Is reaching out to
their music offers an alternative
to the likes of Poison, Guns 'n young people, showing them
first, God cares, and secondly
Roses and Def Leppard.
that there Is an alternative to the
· "Our songs have scriptural
(Biblical ) basis," Joseph said In
"last lane" llfes lyle.
While Joseph was re;~red In a
a telephone interview. He said
their album liner notes have a Southern Baptist home and never
Bible reference for the song's had a lime of rebellion, the "fast
lane" Is not hew to Mylon
idea or a passage to give added
LeFevre.
Insight .
While from one or the most ·
"Our mall) objective is Bible
eodu ring gospel singing tamlllea,
truths. he added.
Myton and Broken Heart will LeFevre set out on his own
perform In concert at · the Fine during his younger years. Hew as
and Performing Arts Center ar a guitarist much In demand and
played for the Rolling Stones,
Roio Grande College/Community
College, Friday at 7:30p.m.
Ten Years After. Eric Clapton,
A classically trained musician The Who, George Harrison and
with a degree in pipe organ . the Atlanta Rhythm Section.
" I stayed stoned 24 hours a day
Joseph said he feels called by
for 10 or 12 years," he says In his
God to this ministry.
Broken Heart Ministries is ministry biography. But the
lifestyle caught up with him, and
bas ed In Mount Paran Church of
•
God in Atlanta. Ga., and the he overdosed on heroin.
He gave...up secular music on
members or the band and road
New Year's Eve 1978, then made
crew are ordained ministers
from that church, or are studying a per~anent commitment to
God's calling and became an
for the ministry.
H

F

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Happy birthday.'
COEU R D'ALENE , Idaho
- Willard Scott, Ihe
weatherman for NBC's Today
Show , wis hed happy birthday
Wedrtesday To an Idaho man who
would have been 109 - if he
hadn 't died last week.
Preston A. Johnson, who was
the country's oldest member of
the Frater nal Order of Eagles
and was believed to be the oldes t
man in Idaho, died Jan. 25 at the
Pinewood Care Center In Coeur
d'Alene.
Scott was on his way to
Alexa ndria. La.. Wednesday and
coufd not be reached for com·
men t. However, his New York
secretary , Nancy Fields, said
Scott was obviously unaware
Johnson had died.
"Oh my goodness," Fields
said. "We didn' t know. Nobody
· called to tell us that. As a matter
of fact, somebody called us from
some other state because they
thought he (Johnson) lnlght be
hls long lost brother."
Johnson had lived at the home
for the past "five years after
breaking several ribs while re· ...
turning from an evening of
dancing at lhe local Eagles
lodge. He settled In the Idaho
Panhandle in 1924.

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MANILA, Philippines (UP!} - VIce President Salvador
. Laurel left Thursday for Honolulu to meet with Ferdinand
Marcos at the request of the exiled former leader's wife,
Imelda, who said he Is dying and wants to talk to him.
· Laurel departed aboard Philippine Airlines Flight 106 at 7:29
p.m. (6:29a .m. EST) tor the nine· hour trip to Honolulu. He said
he was on a "humanitarian mission" that he hoped would lead to
"natiollal reconciliation."
In a statement, he said he h'ad advised President Corazon
Aquino about his departure •·on tile urgent request of President

Marcos."

Aquino spokesman Teodoro Benigno said the president gave
. no Instruct Ions to the vice president because he has declared
himself an Qpposltlon leader.
Aquino told reporters Laurel had said that " whatever he does
now , he does as a leader of the opposition."
.
"Whatever I do~ . ol course, as president of the republic. We
are on separate courses. He does his own thing and I do mine,"
Aquino said."
Laurel said Imelda told him In two frantic telephone calls
earlier ThurSday her husband "has been advised by his doctors
that he hasn't much time left to live."
"Since he cannot communicate with Cory, he Is asking me to
- help communicate with Cory and the Filipino people," Laurel
said. Cory Is Aquino's nickname.
.
Laurel said he wanted to bear whatMarcos has to say . He said
Mrs. Marcos would not have asked hlm"to go to Honolulu II the ·
situation was not serious.
"If what (Marcos) wants to convey to Cory and the nation will
heal the wounds that have been fragmenting our peOple and
finally lead to national reconciliation, then something good can
come out of this trip," Laurel said.
Marcos, 71, underwent surgery Wednesday for respiratory
problems and was returned to the Intensive C(ll"e unit at the,St.
Francis Medical Center In critical condition.
lmo!lda Marcos 1 59, was admitted to the hospital after
suffering a head Injury when she fainted at the hospital, said
hospital spokeswoman Norma Kop.
Marcos was hospitalized Jan. 15 for treatment of bronchial
asthma, pneumonia and a heart "accident." On Jan. 19 he
suffered a collapsed left lung, which was reinflated.
Aquino has rejected Marcos's repeated pleas to die in his
homeland, citing "considerations of national Interest."
' "Our Information reached us that Mr. Marcos underwent a
tracheotomy to drain the phlegm in his lung, but his condition Is
neither critical nor serious," said Aquino.
She also said she has directed her aides to "verify If there Is
any basis to the alleged desire (of Marcos) to talk about a
compromise' ' regarding charges he looted the national
treasury. •
Marcos and his wife have been Indicted on federal
racketeering charges, accusing them of defrauding U.S. banks
of $165 million by refinancing U.S. properties p)lrchased with
$103 million plundered from me PhUipplne government.
Opposition Sen. Juan Ponc~e Enrll~ said Aquino should allow
Marcos to return.
"Marcos is dying. He cannot do anything any more," said
Enrile, who CO·Ied the clvlllan·backed military revolt three
years ago that drove Marcos into exile In Honolultl after 20years
In power.
Sen. Aquilino Pimentel, member of a pro-government party,
said, ''Marcos Is sick. Alive or dead, he will not be able to topple
this government any more. Why don't they let him in?''

MANll.,A, Philippines (UP!} The Pililipplnea and the Interna·
· tiona I Monetary Fund annoult:ed
Thursday they have agreed In
principle on a $1.3 billion standby
credit that Is ellipected to spur
economic development and open
new t!nanclng for the debt·
strapped country.
The announcement was made
after negotiators from both sides
met for 40 minutes with Presl·
dent corazon Aquino, who was
reported doing well after a spell
of dizziness Wednesday from an
ear Infection.
"The president was Informed
tile talks were progressing sa tis·
factoriJy and have covered the
main policy Issues Involved," a·
joint statement said. "A tlmeta·
ble tor completion of all policy
and program details has also
been generally agreed upon."
Aquino expressed satisfaction
with the progress made after
three days of talks between
Philippine Finance Secretary
Vicente'Jay me and Central Bank Gov. Jose Fernandez and the
IMF team headed by Asian
department director Prabhabar
Narvekar,
·
Jayme said the IMF team
would depart Thursday and a
working group will begin discuss·
lng !lnal details within two
weeks. He said signing of a
formal agreement could take
place in May.
The talks were recessed In late
November over dlsagreem~nts
on growth and revenue targets
and questions over Manila's
ability to repay $28.2 billion in
foreign debts.
Aquino urged "speedy action"
by the IMF on the Philippine
request for a three-year S900

Iran official will visit New York

MIDDLEPORT

H2·Hf1

·Member FDIC .

.- -- .

•

MANAMA, Bahrain · (UP!) sian rose after Iraq accused Iran
Western diplomats said Iraq 's attend the New Yor k meeting .
Iran said Thursday Its foreign of massing troops along the war lifting of a ban on civilian Iran praised the Iraqi decision to
mlnisterwlllgotoNewYorknext . front.
aircraft servicing Iran through torm a joint mllltarycommlsslon
week for what U.N. officials said
The U.N. officials said Iraqi Iraqi airspace, and Its accep- as " positive."
they hope will be a resumpHon of Foreign Minister Tareq Azlz tance of a U.N. after to !arm a
In Baghdad, the commander o!
stalled Persian Gulf War peace would be In New York at the Joint military commission with the U. N. Iran·Iraq Military Obtalks wltb lrag.
same time and was willing to ·. Iran and the world body to avoid servers' Group, Yugoslav Gen.
Iran said Foreign Minister All meet with
ills Iranian incidents along the tense 750·mlle Slavko Jovlc, said he will soon
Akbar Velayatl will attend a counterpart.
border, helped persuade Iran to nominate officers to participate
Security Council debate to ex· in the joint m Uita':x.comm~slon .
tend the mandate of U.N. peace.
· keepers monitoring the ceasefire between Iran and Iraq,
Iran' s Islamic Republic News
Agency reported.
Gulf-based U.N. otrlclals said
AS LOW AS
they hoped he would meet his
Iraqi counterpart In New York
and resume stalled peace talks to
end the war that began In 1980
and was suspended under last
summer's truce.
The agency said Velaya_ti 's
visit to New York ·'was proposed
by Jan Ellasson, the special
.MANY TO CHOOSE FROM!
envoy of the U.N. secretary·
general. ''
Ellasson visited Tehran and
-Baghdad last week as part or
intense efforts by the world body
to get both sides back to the
negotiating table after a two·
month break, during which ten·

8

'

Ask About
Our 5 Year
Product
Protection

million standby credit and $400
mUllan In compensatory !Inane·
log to ease Interest payments on
outstanding obligations, Thurs·
day's joint statement said.
It said Aquino noted the 6.5
percent growth target tor this
year approved by the Cabinet
was agreed upon by tl)e negotiators and that while no new taxes
were planned strong measutl!s
would be taken to Improve
revenue collection.
"Some fiexlblnty In the timing
of current expenditures was
agreed to as necessary to keep
the det!clt within targeted lev·
els," the statement said. It also
said the panels recognized the
need for large Investments In key
areas such as power and provided flexibility In looking for
foreign funds for theSe efforts.
Narvekar said he told Aquino ·
be was impressed with the
performance of the Philippine
economy the past two years
despite the constraints or a huge
foreign debt.
"The growth had been very
good, very Impressive. Employ·
ment had Increased.\ I think
inflation Is well under control,
the balance of payments Is under
control, exports are doing well,"
Narvekar said.
IMF approval of the credit line
carries w!.th It the possibility of
new loans and will lead to talks
next spring with 14 creditor
nations belonging to the so·ca!led
"Paris Club" for the restructur·
lng of$2.4 billion In offlclalloans
fa!Ung due In two years.
Organizers of a five·year. $10
billion "mini· Marshall plan" for
the Philippines also ~tre looking
at the IMF talks before proceed·
lng with their program.

North, South Korea agree

Chung Ju.yung, who returned
home after a IIH!ay visit to North
Korea - the first such trip by a
·South Korean businessman also said he and North Korean
ottlclals had reached basic ,ac·
a number of joint
cords on
,

The Bank That Makes Thing• Happen
448-0902

Philippine official
to visit with Marcos

'
SEOUL, South
Korea iUPI} 1A South Korean business leader
said Thursday he has reached an
unprecedented agreement with
North Korean authorities to
jointly develop a scenic area In
North Korea Into a major tourist
resort.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
GALLI PO US

_The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeeoy-Midtlaport, Ohio .

• •
•
on resort, JOmt
proJects,

lto~fnlll

~

Februav 2, 1989

Manila, IMF reach
credit agreement

ONLY.AT TOM PEDEN'S

pray with or ask questions or a
counselor. It's a time for spirit·
ual decisions and commitments.
and that Is the main objective of
Broken Heart.
Joseph said they try to show
kids that Jesus Christ knows all
the problems you go through He was through It long before
you. Christ has seen all the
temptations you are presented In
life. so He understands. Joseph
said.
"In this hi· techno (lechnology)
age, He's relevant. Jesus is real
and He' s alive today ," Joseph
continued. -

Steve Fivecoat and Dan Atkisson
of Rescue 251 were lending to the
girl when they were Informed the
boy was ion his way.
'11 wlis \0 surprising," Reed
said. "II was thrilling. I was
higher fhan a kite afterward."
Miller was stunned. He said he
saw a rescue unil leave a fire
station across the street from
where he was shopping'but had
no Idea where It was headed until
he arrived home.

aroma benefit," Winebrenner
said.
The cities for the test markellng Include Orlando, Tampa, St.
Petersburg, Sarasota and Fort
Myers, Fla., and Reading, Har- .
rlsburg, York. Hazleton, WilkesBarre, Williamsport, Scranton
and State College, Pa.

BLUE STREAK

ordained minister In 1981.
Each member or the band has
strengths and weaknesses and
they work together. ·
Joseph can relate to the kids
who've grown up In a Christian
home needing a reaffirmation of
their personal salvation.
LeFevre can relate to the
rebels - the ones who've been
out In the. world and all its
temptations.
"What l do now Is a natural
extension of what I grew up
with." Joseph said.
At the end of each concert, the
band has an altar call, where the

Shopping fo_r twins in Portland
"'!sent him to the store for food
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) ~
Mark Miller was childless when and he came back to some
he went to the store to buy food . children Instead," Shaw said of
When he returned home he was • Miller, 21 .
The babies, Jessica and
the !ather of twins.
Steven, each weighed 2 pounds, 8
The mother, Laul"l'l Shaw, 19,
ounces, and are expected to
was "'doing well" Wednesday at
Oregon Health Sciences Univer- remain in the hospital ' two
months. spokeswoman Marcia
sit y Hospital, the day after a
Williams said.
roomate and paramedics helped
· Shaw said a roommate helped
her deliver twins born two
her deliver the girl before .para·
months premature, a hospital
medics arrived. Mike Reed,
spokeSwoman said.

"ChelSea uses new paper technology to release a light, pleasant
aroma while the cigarette Is lit,
making smoking more enjoyable
for smokers and for those around
them. " Winebrenner said.
An Informal survey shows
people described the aroma of
the scratch-and·snlff strip as
vanilla, chocolate, mocha,
malted or candy .
Women are at tractecl to the
clgaret te's smell and floral pack·
aging, Winebrenner said.
"We're going to use a variety of
scratch-and-sniff strips on ads
and packs to help make smokers
aware of Chelsea and Its unique

Thursday,

projects.
They would be the first such
projects involving the two
Koreas.
Chung, honorary board chair·
man of Hyundal Group, said the
projects will include joint partie I·
patlon In the development of the
Siberian region of the Soviet
Union and combined lnveatment
In a shipyard and a rolling stock
plant In North Korea.
He said the agreements with
Norlh Korea will become ettec·
live as soon as he gets govern·
men.t approval,on thetn.

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'
Thursday, February 2. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

a statement released late hiStory Is any guide, then, launch
could be off until around March
Wednesday.
At ISsue: cracks In a bearing 15 at the earliest.
In any case, Discovery's crew
assembly found In a pump used
by the shuttle Atlantis In De- - commander ~chael Coats,
cem ber and concern about the co-pilot John Blaha, Jams Bapossibility that similar cracks - · gian, Robert Springer and James
Buehl! - now plans to fly to the
or more dangerous defects could develop In Discovery's Florida spaceport next Tuesday
for a traditional practice countpumps.
down
Thursday that will set the
The NASA statement said a
stage
for blastoff of the third
new target launch date would not
post-Challenger
shuttle flight .
be determined until Discovery's
Dlscoyery
had
been scheduled
formal flight readiness review a
to
take
off
Feb.
23,
but those plans
few weeks before launch.
Into
doubt because
were
thrown
Agency sources, however, said
of
concern
about
cracks discothe 28th shuttle mission will be
vered
In
a
turbopump
used by
delayed unto at least March 10,
Atlantis
In
December.
based on the delivery of new
No problems have been found
pumps from engine-builder
with
Discovery's pumps, but
Rocketdyne of Canoga Park,
their assembly histories are
Calif.
slmtiar
to that of the AtlantiS
But the processing schedule
pump.
In
the post-Challenger
leading to a March 10 liftoff has
NASA managers
environment,
no built-In contingency time for
were
taking
no
chances.
unexpected problems. HistoriWhile
Atlantis
was never In
cally, shuttle workers lose about
any
.
danger
from
a .005-lnch
one day a week during an
crack
In
a
·
bearing
assembly,
orbiter's stay on the launch pad
to
have
been
_
cause&lt;! by
thought
because of minor problems. If

corrosion triggered by trapped
water, development of lar-ge
cracks during engine operation
could lead to a catastrophic
pump failure and the destruction
of a shuttle. ·
After a cross-country teleconference Wednesday , NASA managers decided to proceed with the
replacement of all three pumps
at the launch pad. The replacement pumps are thQught to be
Immune to · the cracking
phenomenon.
NASA must launch Discovery
by around March 18 to avoid
delaying the next fl~ht on the
schedule, the April 28 liftoff of
Atlantis to carry the $530 million
Magellan Venus radar mapper
Into orbit.
Because or the positions of
Earth and Venus, Magellan must
be fired toward Venus between
April 28 and May 23 or the
high-priority probe will be
grounded for two years. For that
reason, NASA Is under enormous
pressure to make sure nothing

Interferes Wtth the launch of Atlantis .

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Driver of errant bus once honored .by mayor
BOSTON (UPI) -A teenager
who drove a stolen Greyhound
bus wildly through Boston,
wrecking cars and Injuring three
pollee officers before he was shot
to death by police, was once
honored by the mayor for hero' ism during a fire.
Police and family members
were baffled at what prompted
Donald Johnson, 19, of Boston, to
steal an empty bus from a lot In
Providence, R.I., Tuesday night
and drive to Boston where a wild
poUce chase followed.
"Whatever It was, he kept it In
his head,'' said his mother, Betty
Johnson, a community activist.
She said her son had hoped to
become a bus driver, but Greyhound spokesmen said he appar-

ently never applied for a job.
While acknowledging the recklessness of Johnson's ride,
family members also wondered
why police did not shoot out the
tires of the bus Instead of killing
him.
·
"f(e was wrong for stealing the
bus," said his younger brother,
David, ''Why shoot him? He was
not a notorious clrmlnal. He was
a good kid who sold candy for the
community ."
Pollee spokesman James Jordan said department policy prohlblts shooting out tires because
bullets can ricochet off steel belts
In tires.
Johnson was selling candy In
suburban Winchester ill 1985 as
part of Mayor Raymond Flynn's

-

Thursday, February 2, 1989

Minor.quake
reported in
·CaJifomia
0

LOS ANGELES tUPI) - A
minor earthquake on the ocean
floor off Malibu rattled coastal
areas Weooesday · night, but
caused no ·reported damage or
Injuries, officials said.
The quake, measuring 3.8 on
the Richter scale, struck at 8: 51'
p.m. and was centered In the
ocean 5 miles southwest of the
Point Dume peninsula, said
Robert Finn at the Caltech
Seismology Laboratory In
Pasadena.
A 5.0 quake hit the same area
on Jan. 18, but was centered 15
miles further east.
''This was not an aftershock of
the Jan. 18 qquake," Finn said.
People reported feeling the
quake from Manhattan Beach
north to the San Fernando
Valley.
"Yeah, we felt it. All the tile
cabinets started to shake," said a
woman worKing at the El Segundo Pollee Department. "It
wasn't a veryblgoneand It didn't
last very long. "
Vern Handy, dispatcher for the
County Fire Department, said
there were no reports of damage.
"We had about tour or five calls
from people (In Malibu) saying
their houses were shaking, but
that's It," he said.
r

of Trade.
·
If he Is confirmed, Yeutter
plans to limit his Involvement In
farming and to sell stock In three ·
giant corporations Involved In
agribusiness. As an additional
step to avoid any possible confilets, he has closed a deferred·
compensation plan will! the MercantUe Exchange by · taking a
$561,602 payment In December.
The last time Yeutter spoke
publicly about agriculture poUcy
was Dec.14, the day Bush tabbed
him to head . the Agriculture
Department, which employs
more than 100,000 workers : Its
responsbllltles range from food
stamps and the school lunch
program to operating the nattonal forests, monitoring food
safety and combatting crop
surpluses.
At that time, Yeutter said the
economic health of agriculture
was Improving and while "It Is
not what everybody would desire
.. . the trends are In the right
direction."

NEW YORK (UPI) - Britain's
Princess Diana took Manhattan
in a shimmering blaze of royal
blue, leaving the Big Apple's de
facto royalty - the moguls and
tycoons of fashion ·and Industry
- ooohing and ahhhlng In her
wake.
After a night at the BritiSh·
owned Plaza Athenee hotel,
where her $2,000-a-nlght pent·.house suite Is one of the priciest
m town, Diana planned Thursday
to visit the Henry Street Settlement, a model shelter for homeless children on Manhattan's
Lower East Side.
Also scheduled Thur~day were ·
a lunch and a tour at the
world-famous toy empOrium,
F.A.O. Schwarz, to promote
British toys.
A royal blue sky and downright
balmy temperatures greeted the
pearl-strung princess of Wales as
her BritiSh Airways Concorde
touched down Wednesday, markIng the start of her first major
&lt;?fficlai visit without her bus-.
band, Prince Charles.

It Is Diana· s first official visit

to New York and she was In top
form, smiling demurely at dlgnl·
tarles who greeted her, then
rushing off for the first stop on
her whirlwind visit.
The 27-year-old princess
dropped In at a reception for
Scottish cashmere maker Dawson International, where her own
regal fashion statement was
made with a royal blue wool coat, ·
a shimmering blue sUk tunic and
black skirt.
The crowd of 150 fashion and
retail Industry heavyweights among them Marvin Traub of
Blooinlngdale's and designer Oscar de Ia Renta - greeted .the
royal entrance with dropped
jaw,. and a chorus of "ahhhhs."
Diana reviewed the collection
draped on British-made mannequins, then received her guests In
the first of several receptions to
promote British trade - a
primary goal of the vis II.
The princess smiled politely to
gawking crowds outside the

Equltable Building but made no
comment as she was whisked by
limousine to her hotel.
"She was great!" one woman
raved ·after her first royal
glimpse. "She dl&lt;! that royal
wave, yoli know - elbow, elbow,
wrlst-wrlst-wrl.s ). "
The high point of Diana's visit
was to be a performance Thursday of "Falstaff" by the Welsh
National Opera at the Brooklyn
Academy of Muslcl foUowed by a
. gala dinner at the World Financial Center's cavernous Winter
Garden. About 850 people have
paid $1,000 each In hopes of
rubbing shoulders with Diana.
Irish-American and other foes
of British rule In Northern
Ireland have promised to dog
Diana's footsteps with a series of
protests, and security for the
visit has been Intense.
Hundreds of activists have
vowed to hold noisy demonstrations outside the opera performance and the gala, saying the
royal family symbolizes oppres·
slve British rule In Northern

Da~y

Sentinel-Page 11

brietlrig room full of grumbling
Ireland.
The BritiSh are ·hoping that, In reporters Wednesday that politeaddition to boosting trade, Prln· ness was at a premium and
cess . Diana will bring a bit of
England with her - Including
good manners for New York's
Aged cblefo
braying press corps, who will
The
Kid's
World
calendar
make up the lion's share of the says the president Almanac
who lived longest
200-odd people covering Diana's was John Adams, who lived to be ~0.
visit.
Tbe youngest president to take office
Officials of the British Infor- ' was Theodore Roosevelt, 42, and the
matlon Service, handling the oldest to enter office was Ronald Realogistics of the visit , told a gan, 69.

shouting questions at Diana was
just not cricket .
"The Princess of Wales dbesn't
operate In every way like a
president of the United States or
like a senior political figure,"
said FranciS Cornish.
·
"If people think It would be a
good Idea to shout questions, I
-can tell you here and now that
you won't get an answer.
Frankly, you're more likely to
get the back of .her head,"
Cornish said.

ON TV

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has a doctoral degree In agrlcul·
!ural economics and was a
successful lawyer and businessman before joining the Reagan
administration In July 1985.
Yeutter, his wife and mother
own 2,200 acres of farmland in
two Nebraska counties.

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Licensing Agency.Proposal Process Begins

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For parties interested in establishing agencies in
Perry, Morgan, Washington, Hocking, VInton,
Athens, l!lelga, Gallla, Lawrence, Scioto,
Jackson and Pike Counties, the conference
will be:
Tuesday, February 7, 1989 2-5 p.m.
City Recreation Room
733 East'State St., Athens

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The Ohio Department of Highway Safety/Bureau
of Motor Vehicles is seeking proposals for operation of Deputy Registrar agencies in all 88 coun- ·
· ties in accordance with Am. Sub. Senate Bill 1.
Those interested should plan to attend a special
conference where state officials will explain how
to submit competitive proposals for the agencies
which will be put under contract July 1, 1989. If
unable to attend, additional information can be
obtained by calling (614) 365-4425.

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outreach program, aimed at city the bus was trapPed on a
helping Inner city youth avoid dead-end street. The driver put It
gangs and drugs, when he into reverse and rammed four
spotted a house on fire and led a police cruisers and drove menacmother and three children to Ingly at officers who were on foot,
safety.
Jordan said.
''He had no qualms of injuring
Flynn cited Johnson for his
others.
He was running after
bravery and awarded him a
plaque, which his mother clung police officers," Jordan said.
to as she spoke with reporters.
Pollee opened ilre, mortally
"My son· was a dreamer," she
wounding Johnson. He lost consaid. "He fantasized a lot. He . trol of the bus, which crunched a
said, · 'Momma, I'm going to parked car and ended up on the
make you rich. I'm going to make lawn of a home, he said.
you proud of me. '"
Johnson died about 11:20 p.m.
The chase began at about 10:25 at Bo~ton City Hospital, Jordan
p.m. Tuesday when a Greyhound said.
The three Injured officers were
security officer flagged down a
Metropolitan Pollee cruiser to treated for minor injuries and
released, pollee said.
report the bus stolen.
After a wild chase through the

As trade ambassador during
President Reagan's. second
term, Yeutter succeeded In winnlng an agreement with Japan to
open Its beef and citrus markets.
Access to the Japanese market
had been a festering Issue with
U.S. producers for years.
Yeutter also'had a leading role
In the U.S. proposal for elimlnalion of unfair farm subsidies and ·
trade barriers worldwide. World
trade talks are deadlocked over
the Issue. He also was trade
ambassador as the "hormone
meat" diSpute with Europe
blossomed.
For the past few weeks, Yeut·
ter has devoted time to studying
the Issues he would face as
secretary, working in a small
office at the Agriculture Department headquarters. He has refused to use the· secretary's
office, saying It would be presumptuous to move ln.
Born Dec. 10, 1930, In Eustis,
Neb., Yeutter grew up on a farm
during the Great Depression. He

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Agriculture nominee faces Senate panel
WASHINGTON (UP I) -Clayton Yeutter, the former trade
representative who fought to
expand theworldwidemarketfor
U.S. goods. awaited questioning
Thursday to become the next
secretary of agriculture.
Yeutter's nomination to be
President Bush's agriculture secretary was Widely hailed In the
farm community. After Bush
made the announcement, the
gregarious Yeutter was forced to •
keep a low profile - traditional
for Cabinet nominees - while
waiting for Senate confirmation
hearings , and he did not talk .
much about his plans for the new
job.
"I think this will be our first
chance to see what agriCulture
policy we will have," Sen.
Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., chairman
of the Senate AgriCulture Commlttee, said in looking ahead to
Yeutter's scheduled testimony.
"I see a lot of questions."
The committee hearings were
expected to provide 1he first
details behind Bush's campaign
promises. Leahy said. The hearings were not expected to take
more than one day . .
Congressional leaders have
predicted a relatively smooth
path to full Senate confirmation
for Yeutter.
Yeutt&lt;?r was expected to face
questions about his seven-year
tenure as president of the Chi·
cago Mercantile Exchange. The'
FBI Is Investigating possible
fraud In trading practices at the
exchange and the Chicago Board

•

Diana paints Big Apple royal blue in .viSit without Charles

Shuttle launch delayed to replace . suspect turbopumps
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP I) -The shuttle Discovery's
launch on NASA's first manned
space flight of the year will be
delayed from Feb. 23 to "midMarch" to give safety-conscious
engineers time to replace three
suspect turbopumps, agency officials say .
Engineers at the Kennedy
Space Center, meanwhile, were
cleared to proceed wlth ,plans to
haul Discovery to launch pad 39B
starting at 12:01 a.m. EST
Friday.
The replacement of the highpressure liquid oxygen turbopumps Is tentatively scheduled to
b~gln at the pad Sunday, setting
up a race .against the clock to
beat a March 18 deadline NASA
must meet to avoid delaying a
high-priority science mission set
for takeoff AprU 28.
"NASA wlll proceed with a
plan to change out all three
high-pressure oxidizer turbo·
,pumps In Discovery's main engines, leading to ·a launch In mid
March,' ' the space agency said In

I. .

Reg . .1U5

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Hoover Keeps Making It Better!

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~------------------------·------------------------------------------------------

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

---Local news briefs--- Record high...
continued from page l
recovered a men's 10·speed bicycle on u.s. Route 33. Anyone
missing a bicycle Is to contact the sheriff's office and make
lndent!flcat!on.

EMS has 8 calls WednescU:ty
•

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Wednesday; Pomeroy at .9: 50a .m. to Pomeroy Pike for
James Little to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport Fire
Department at 1:22 p.m. to a brush fire at the Mike Hope
residence on Roush Lan e; Pomeroy Fire Department at 2:23
p.m. to a brush fire on State Route 681 East; Middleport at 5:36
p.m . to the Family Dollar Store·for Amy Taylor who was treated
at the scene: Columbia Township Fire Department at 6:20p.m.
to a brush fire but the exact location was not reported; Rutland
at 8:01 p.m . to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Theodore Walker to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Ra ci ne al10: 16 p.m. to Portland
for Paul Schuler to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
10:55 p.m . to County.Road 5 for Harry Garten to Holzer Medical
Center.

Four fined in Middleport court
Four were fined and three others forfeited bonds In the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Edward J. Dreyfuse, Middleport, was fined $100 and costs on
a charge of leaving the scene of an accident, $10 and costs on
improper l)acking, and $25 and cosl&lt;, for no Insurance. Also
fined was Donnie Slone. Middleport. $25 and costs, disorderly
manner; Vince Stone, Rutland, $25 and costs. disorderly
manner and $100 and costs, and 10 days in jail, resisting arrest;
and Debbie Wolfe, Syracuse, $100' and costs and 30 days
probation, telephone harrassment.
Forfeiting bonds were Stan B . Stanley, Flint. Mich., $50,
running a stop sign; Carlos Marlin. West Columbia, W.Va .,
$450, DWI; and William Catron, Columbus, $42, speeding.

Continued from page 1
vice said.
Below zero temperatures and
winds up to 40 mph produced
wind chllls over Montana and the
Dakotas from 60 below to 90
below zero Thursday morning,
forecasters said. Missoula ,
. Mont. , recorded one Qf the
coldest wind ch!U readings of the
day when It registered 78degrees
below zero.
The lower 48 began to feel the
brunt of the cold air mass
Wednesday, when the mercury
plunged and snow accumulated
along northern states.
·
"This Is the worst orthe winter
but we knew it was coming down
from Alaska so we are ready, "
said Virginia Hull in Williams,
Minn. "It was 31 below this
morning and we are expecting
wind chllls of 50 to 60 below.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2-H9
1 0 ~
.

-30

·40

and Vinton, up 0.5, 400 of 3.800
unemployed. ·
Ohio's unemployment rate for
December 1988 was 5.4 percent
with the jobless rate ·ranging
from a low of 4.1 ln Delaware
County to double·diglt high of 12.3
in Mercer County.

Continued from Page 12

Recolpto .... ...... 39, 741 .76
lntor•t .................. 737.71
Gifto ........... ........... 209.00
All Other
Revenue .......... 22.01 0.64
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .......98,803.58
DISBURSEMENTS:
Gen•al

Govorrvnent ... .. 16.822.31
Public Sofoty .. :.. 30,848.93
Public Works .....72,459 .07
Hoalth ................. 3, 136.12
Copital Outlay ........ 426.06

.P ublic Notice
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

Debt Service:
Note Principal

For Fiscal Year Ending

December 31, 1988
RUTLAND TOWNSHJP
COUNTY OF MEIGS

Poyment .......... 3,529.17

lntet•t and

•
QsNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

11

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Static . . Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Durin( early Friday morning, snow Is
forecast for parts of tbe extreme Pacific northwest, the northern
Intermountain Region, the norlhern Plains, the Great Lakes and
parts of the northern Atlantic Coast States. Rain Is forecastfor the
mid Atlantic Coast with showers and tbundersionns forecast for
most of the Ohio Valley and the lower Mississippi Valley. Snow
showers are possible in the central to northern Pacific Coast, the
central Intermountain ReiJion with snow possible In most of the
northern Plains and the upper Great Lakes. Showers are possible
In parts of the southern Pacific Coast with sho.wers and
thunderstorms In most of the GuH Coast States. UP!

--Area deaths.--- Six forfeit bo~d, one
Theodore Baker
fined in Pom_eroy court

He was preceded in death by a
brother, Ernest Baker, and a
Pomeroy native, Theodore H. sister, Kathryn Puhl.
Services will be Monday, 1:30
Baker, 80, of 1636 Marton Road, ·
Six defendants forfeited bonds , $63, expired license; Jin Jeon
Apartment D, Bucyrus, died p.m., al the Wise Funeral Home. and another was fined on speed·
Hyeon, Athens, $53, assured
' Wednesday mornlngat theBucy· 129 West Warren St., Bucyrus. lng charges In the court of
clear distance and $50, no tlnan·
rus Community Hospital after with Rev. Mary Martin official· Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
cia! responsibility.
being in failing health for a ing. Burial will be in the Oakwood Tuesday night.
Jeffrey Cundiff, Middleport,
Cemetery, Bucyrus. Friends
number of years.
Forfeiting bonds on the charge
was fined $63 and costs on a
Born Feb. 16, 1908ln Pomeroy. may call at the funeral home were Max Hlll, Jr., Racine, $47;
charge or fictitious llcense
Mr. Baker was a son of the late anytime after 12 noon Sunday Mila Raymond, Portland, $48;
plates; Edward Dreyfus, $113
Wllllam and Kathryn Zeisler with the family present from 7 to Cecil Blackwood, Pomery, $52;
and costs on a publlc [ntoxlcatlon
Baker. He was married Dec. 20, 9. Memorial contributions may Lola Whittington, Pomeroy, $45;
charge; and Charles Boso, .Por·
1937 to Gwen Ann Hess, who be made in Mr. Baker's name to Richard Hermann, Middleport.
tland, $63 and costs, open con·
the Alshehner's Association, $48; and Beth Stutler, Point
survives.
tainer, and $63 and costs, squeal·
Mr. Baker managed theCussln through the funeral home.
Pleasant, $48. Fined on the
lng tires.
and Fearn Store In Bucyrus for
charge was Michael Harris,.
several years. From 1948 to 1960, Missionary to speak
Lancaster, $53 and costs.
along wlth ·his wife , he owned and
Others forfeiting bonds were
operated ·a restaurant, The Co·
Bert
Bernard, Galllpolls, $43,
Madine DeLong, a foreign
Ionia! GrilL During this same missionary home of furlough, Illegal left turn; Scott Edward
time he served as a baseball will speak at the 7 p.m . Monday Russell, Clifton, $63, improper
scout for the Cinclnnall Reds.
night meeling of Women Alive to passing; Ginny Thabet, Rutland,
After selling the restaurant busi·
Three of the 1,683 students
be held at the Kyger Creek
ness, he went into the real estate Clubhouse in Cheshire.
receiving degrees at the Dec. 9
business. He then worked as a
commencement exercises of
The meeting will also Include a
building contractor until his painting workshop. Refres h· Dally stock prices
Ohio State University at St. John
retirement about nine years ago.
Arena were from Meigs County .
ments will be served ..
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Mr. Baker was a graduate of
Gregory Wayne Taylor, Pome·
Bryce and Mark Smith
Pomeroy HighSchool in 1926, and ,Watson heads trustees
roy,
recieved a bachelor of
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
a member of the First Christian
.1
science in electrical engineerChurch of Bucyrus. He was a
·' ing; Timo!hy Michael Wood·
, James Watson was elected
Am
Electric
Power
.............
27\:j
yard, Pomeroy, a ·bachelor of
former member and past pres!·
president and Wilbur Robinson.
..
...........
3H4
science
in allied health profes·
AT&amp;T
....................
den I oi the Bucyrus Lions Club.
vice president. at the recent
Ashland
Oil
........................
:l7%
sionals:
and Scott Vaughan Up·
In addition to his wife, survi·
organiZational meeting of the
Bob
Evans
..........
..........
......
15'
%
ton
.
Reedsville,
a bachelor of
vors Include two sons, Bill A.
Board of Orange Township Trsu·
Charming
Shoppes
.....
........
.1~%
science
In
agriculture.
Baker, Bucyrus, and Nell E.
tees. Regular meeting date was
City Holding Co ................. . 20 Y.,
Baker, Lit tie Rock, Ark.; four
set for the first Monday or each
Federal Mogui... ................. 51V,
grandchlldren; three step grand·
month. 7:30 p.m. except when
Goodyear
T&amp;R ...................49)7
children; one great grandchild;
that date falls on a holiday In
Heck
's
.................................
17
and one sister. Mrs. William
which event the meeting wlll be , Key Centurion .................... 14% On honor roll OSU ·
(Ruth) Grate, Charleston. W.Va.
held on the following day .
Lands' End ....... .'..... ........ .... 29% ·
'
Kelley Don Grueser of Forest
· Limited Inc ................. .. ..... 301&lt;! Ru~t Road, Racine, and Randall
continued from page 1
Multimedia Inc .................... 81
Scott Foster of State Route 124,
Rax Restaurants .................. 3% Reedsville, were among the 4,831
mit the nominating; council to Southeastern Ohio ln making Robbins &amp; Myers ................. l7
students at Ohio Stale University
consider me for the post," Bos ter pollcy for the state," she added.
Shoney's Inc .................. ... ... 8% to l)e listed on the autumn
said.
Rep. Boster cautions that the Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 5%
quarter honor rolL To be ln·
The nominating council nomination process is highly Worth in!(! on Ind .......... ....... 23)7
eluded on the honor roll students
screeM the Initial field of appll· competitive and her selection Is (Charming Shoppes January
must achieve a grade point
cants and then presents a list or by no means assured. Specula· sales rose 5 percent.) ,
average of at least 3.5 and be
four individuals to the governor lion as to her leaving the (~lmlted Inc. January sales rose
enrolled tor at least 12 credll
from which he will select Che- legtslalure to assume thechairof 34 percent.)
hours.
ma's replacement.
the PUCO is extremely
Reportedly, 57 people have premature.
applled for the position. The field
"I am concentrating on my
has been narrowed already to 10 legislative duties, including the
The Pomeroy Fire Depart· 2:21 p.m and returned to the
or 12 Individuals who will be stale' $26.1 bllllon budget." she
ment
was on the scene of a brush
station at 4:50p.m. T~e Tuppers
Interviewed by the nominating said. "As a member of the
fire
on
Route
681
near
Darwin
for
.
Plains department was also
councll on Feb. 6.
finance committee, I am working
over
two
hours
Wednesday
called
to the scene to assist In
The members or the councll to provide equitable funding for
afternoon.
controllng
the fire.
represent various segments of educallon and ensure that pro·
The
department
was
called
at
the public including senior cltl· grams which benefit Southeast·
zens, utility consumers and Ia· ern Ohio are adequat e ly
bar, as well as the utility funded."
Rep. Boster em'phastzes that if
industry. Other members in·
elude the director of the Ohio she Is nominated by the councll
1
Department or Development and and appointed by the gowrnor,
the appointees of the House she will have a very difficult
choice to make.
speaker and Senate president.
As a fourth term representa·
"I consider the posslblity of my
appointment to the PUCO as an tlve, a member of the influential
CHOCOLATES
opportunity to further serve the finance commitlee and chair·
people or Southe~stern Ohio in a man of the ethics committee, she
statewide office, ' said Boster .• reels she Is making a slgnlflcanl
"As chairman or the commls- contribution to the district In the
s ton I would be ln a position to state legislature and she Is not
vole~ the concerns and needs of anxious to leave her post.

Weather
Soulh Central Ohio
Tonight: Occasional rain, with
a low ln the upper 30s. Winds
northeast 10 to 15 mph. Chance of
rain ls near 100 percent.
Friday: Cloudy, with a chance
of ralnduringthe morning. Highs
wlll be near 40. Chance of rain Is
50 percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturday throurh Monday
Fair Saturday, with a chance
of snow Sunday and fair Monday .
Highs will be between 30 and 40
Saturday, ranging from the mid·
die 30s to the middle 40sSsunday ,
and in the 30s Monday . Early
morning lows will range from the
upper teens to .the mt(l 20s.

Three from Meigs
recent OSU grads To meet

Stocks

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RE~EIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL
FUNDSRECEIPTS:
Taxoo ................ 35,904.47

Racine American Legion Post
602 will hold its regular meeting
tonight (Thursday) at ; p.m.

Ovar / ~Un­

der) Diob ...... (28. 777.80)
TOTAL OTHER FINANC·
lNG SOURCES (USES):
Diob. &amp; Other
u............... (28, 777.80)

Intergovernmental

Fund Cuh Balance

lnteraat .......... ........ 316.12

Fund Cuh Belance

Receipts ........ .. 39,741.76

Jan. 1. 'B8 ...... 82.763.91

All Othor
R""enue ......... 22,0t 0.64
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ..... 97..971 .99
DtSBUSEMENTS:

Dec. 31 . 'BB .... 33.976. 11

Depoaitpry

Bot once ........... 39.033. 71
lnvntmentl ·......... 2700.00

mont ............ ,. 16,822.31
Public Safety ..... 30,648.93
Public Works .....72,469.07
H811th ................. 3:138.12
Caphal Outlay ........ 426.08
Debt Service-

Payment .......... 3,629. 17
lnt.,.t and Fiscal

Charges ............ ,.369. 72
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ........ 127.381 .38
Total Receipts Over/(Under) Diob.......{29.409.39)
TOTAL OTHER FINANC·
lNG SOURCES !USES):
Diob. &amp; Other.
Uses ..... .........{29,409.39)

Outatanding

Dec. 31, 19B8 .... 2587.60

. I certify the following report to be correct and true,

edge.

Jan. 1. '8B ...... 67,844.24

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
THE BARTLETT
FARMERS BANK
P. 0. Box 67
Bartlett, OH. 45713

:-o-

der) Disb.............. 631.59
TOTAL OTHER FINANC·
lNG SOURCES (USES):
Dlsb. &amp; Other
u... ..................... 63t .69

Plaintiff

vs .

BOBBY G. JOHNSON,
ET AL
Delondonto
CASE NO. 88-CV ·240
LEGAL NOTICE·
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
As Sheriff 'of Meigs
County, Ohio. I hereby offer
lor ulo at 10:00 A.M., on
Friiloy. Morch 24, 1989, A.

Fund Cash Balance

·as ........ 4,909.67

Doc:. 31. '88 ..... 5,541 .26
TOTALS &amp;
FUND BALANCESRECEIPTS:
Taxes ................ 35,904.47
Intergovernmental
Continued on Page 13
•

3 FREE DRAWINGS
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

D., on the front atepa of the
Meigs County Courthoul8,

&lt;
Pomeroy, Ohio,
•
•'

·'

•
.•

1

d) unho of generol tqcol

Privati.

lndultry

oroo
or tMir og!lnciea:
gD'Iernment
in the subl..te
e) local off10111 of Stote

a atone; thence south 100
feet to an iron pipe; thence
eut396fHttoan iron pipe;
thence north 100 feet to the
place of beginning. being
39,600 square feet. more or
leu.

scribed rNI estate:
Situated in the Township
of Olive, County of Meigs
and State of Ohio: Begin..
ning for reference at the interMC!.i;on of the north line
ofLotNo. 11!i8andthecen·
tar lin•of State Route #124;
thence weat on the north
line of Lot No. 1168, 28.70
feet to an iron pin; thence

and artavocetional achool•.
Propo•l• will be accepted

untH 4:30 p.m. Fobruory 9,
1989 It tM lronton·low·

Service
DeUvery
Area
(SDAI. are requesting that
penlel interMted in becom-

renee County Community
Action Organization, 306
North 5th Street, Ironton,

ing the Subatate Grantee
and Adminiatretive Entity
that will provide tor delivery
of urvica to dislocated

all

Ohio 45838 . Telephone
&amp;14-532·3534. All propo•
should

bt marked:

EDWAA Propo111 in lowor

try Council Executtva Commin'H and repreuntation
from the consortium of

a) the needs of area dit·

loclted workera:
b) the proposed method
of service delivery, induding recruitment. at1811·
ment, teating. carMr coun·
aeUng, reterrel to training
and supportive servic• or
proviliion of training and

oouth 18 dogroo, 02' 01"

Elactocl Ollicialo. Ajoint "'c·

ommtndation from the Privata lnduatry Council and

Eloctod Offldolo wit

c) the eligible entity's re·
cord of performance on any
prior Title Ill programs;
d) the eligible entity' 1 ra:.
cord of perlortnance on prior
amptoyment and training
progr~~ma. including admin·
iatrative capacity;
a)demonatrated ability to

2)

1

liot of thooe entities

which responded to this requnt; ,

3) • doocrlption of tho
procno by which ontHies

coordinate octillltleo with were a~e to preeent proother employment and train- po•d ·plans of aarvk:e;
4) a deacrlpdon of the r•
ing providoro.
Eligible antitleo indude: view procea1 whicf\ r•u.tted
Prtvata lnduatry Councila tn the aubttata area:
b] Service Delivery Area

north_t.,ly

Gront Recipients end Ad·

. 101.88 feet to an
pin; thence aouth 89

miniatrativa Entitieli;
c) privata non-profit or-

18'01" eaot 318f81tto

&amp;Ia description of how the

PIC's Worker Ad]uotmont
Advisory Committee Pfir·
ticipated in the procen 1nd
a copy of that committee' 1
written commenta of the
proce11 and "election.

12) 1, 2, 3, 3tc

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

8

I

ESTATE AUCTION

To the pretty
~~~Y contest
wi1ner of
' 1955.
Happy 34th
Birthday

Said real ntate wu
appraised at Five Thou-.

11nd end 00/100 Dollars
1•5.000.00), end will bo

sold as a single unit.
Sale of uid real 81tate to
be for not less than two-~

thirds 12131 the eloraoaid
appreiaed value.
Said ule is subj act to approval by the Common Pleaa

Court, Meigs County, Ohio.
Jam11 M: Soullby,
S~eriff.

Sal, Feb. 4, 11:00 A.M.

little Hocti111. Ohio on Co. Rd.
26. II'! miles from ~0 &amp; 7.

SiiJIS pos1od.

Wow~lsell ~ems !rom Cecil

KnGWies &amp; his dautlhlor. Joroe
EniOid rosldtneo.

FURIIITURE &amp; ANTIQUES: 3
stacl&lt; oak bookcase, surpenl~~
oak dresser w/mirroc, square oak
la~e w/fancy legs, clawlocied

I. Canon Crow, Attorney

lor Plaintiff. Tho Bartlett
Farmers Bank.
Bartlett, Ohio

9, 16, 3tc

the follow-

2

~odor, t.,~ ~·
miiChin~ ml!)le

pewriers. sewing
bed, ~ ...., metal otlice desk &amp;
chilir, cooch &amp; chai&lt;. TY. lamps,

l.n Memoriam

~

piduu~.

:: . I appreciate your
calls,
•••
.• ' cards.
flowers and
•
prayers during
my stay in
Camden Clark.
God Bless you

ARTHUR ORR
who passed away

.'

Feb. 2. 1982.
Sadly missed by

BeHer IC•o•• 11
fllule ~f htr
frlu4e ...

Wife Ethel,

all.

Daughters and
Families.

'•

Edith Spencer
..;• L---------------~

wheel~rCM,

rel1thru.

lru oilll!SC. ~ems.
,
IART KWOWW, OWNER
ROBERT C. KIOWLES,
ADMINISIMTOI
PATRICK H. BLOSSU,
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-428-7245
Nell Responsible lor loss or
Accidents

Middleport, Ohio
1-28-'88-tfn
PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE
MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.
Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured
CALL 992·6681
1·31·'88·1 mo.

ZO

now U our I urn to 1ive loY'"'·"

2 Bedroom
ranch type
home with
full basement,
enclosed
porch, good
. '
locataon.

SAVE S200

PlUMBING&amp;- HEAnNG
Now t.cotiton:
11&gt;1 North Socontl
Midclttport, Ohio 4S760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C1rry fllhing SuppN•

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Hera
IUSINiliS 1'11011!

Vol.

...,.

SWISHER LOHSE

s.,. .... t1".tS

Phar rnac y

$99.95:::

308

Page

249

(6141 991-6550

Balance with DHd within 30 Days

'•

House available for, . viewing by calling
992·2259 and 1 hour before auction

.'

Salt Conducted ly:

••

MoR. thru 111. 1:00•·"" tal,,,.,
10:00ua. te4:00p.M.
ltftiiC .. IPftONI
PH. "2-DII

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

Down

Day

LASHLEY
SERVICE

&amp; Auction

Service 774~2114 '

Cleland Realty-608

Main, Pomeroy

East
HENlY
E. CULAND~ IIALTOR992-6191
'
.

&amp; FLORENCE IETZ
AnORNEY, BERNARD RITZ-PROlAn COURT WE NO. 24979

STIUILE,

MAILE ICE

AUCTioNEER-lARRY DtPUGH
,,

•

1· 3 -'88 ·tfC

1-11·'19-1 mo.

WANTED

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Reasonable Prices"

PH.

949-2801
or R••· 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

DE~D 01 AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Rangea •Freezers
• Refrigerators
"lilust It Ropairablt"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes

1/22188/dn

4·16-86-Hn

PUBLIC
RECYCLING

NOW OPEN FOR
IUSINESS

,._,.nt,

We Buy Aluminum

Cans. Olaa1, Brau,
Copper and More
MON.-FRI.: 9 am-6 pm

SAT.: I am-12 Noon
1·14·'11· 1 ....

GREENHOUSE
Foliage Plants
Baskets
AND UNDER
EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. I
Ml: past
Southern
School

$6

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Fa&lt;torr Cholto
I 2 Gaugo Shotgun• Only
Strictly lnlor&lt;ed
IO·I·dn

MARCUM CONTRACTING
•

CHEnERr OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•RO.OFING
•REMODELING 8t REPAIRS

1 •· East of St. lt. 7
0. 241 at Chester
WELDING
AUTO&amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY 8t
WRECK REPAIR

985-3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1+'19-1 mo.

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

915-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References

11-1 6- '88-tfn

BINGO
POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224 E.

MAIN ST. - 992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. E.B•. 1:45 P.M.

Ann uu 11 ce men1 s
3 Announcements

DOOR PRIZE

2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchae of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon percu1tomer per

bingo aflsion.
WE PAY e&amp;O.OO PER GAME
n\I'FA 10 PEOPLE '66.00 PER v"•••~

Wt will hMII 0011 for lm•gena;"
County Otot. of

HEAP. Molgt

Hum., serv-. end HEAP

SERVICE

•.

, I

~ LISA M. KO.CH. M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

and rt·
core rodiotors and
htatlll' cores. We can
also acid boll and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gos Ta'*s.

PAT

:1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
3 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

HILL FORD

992·2196 .

Middlepon,

aw•NUM

IEVEIAGI CANS _,, 41&gt;' lit.
IIONY
Sl&amp;T _ ..... _. s• to 30&lt; ..
IIONY ~AST .... 3' lo 20' ltr.
ST AlliUSS - .........-20' Ill.

992-5114

Loctttad Off Bypua
At Jet. of Rta. 7
143, Pomerov.
1-12,

Wt

Cll'l

glvt yoo

prompt deltJerltl. EclltlorSett
Devices
Worka. Inc. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Dependable HeariiiC Aid. Sales &amp; Sar•i•• 814-982·3891.
CJ Hearing Evaluations For ~II Ages
Don't Tr11h It Ceah ttl

We can r~r

Jan. 13r 1989
(Sulljtc1 to Chanp
Without Notice)
#I COPPEI-.......... 16' ttr.
#2 COPPEI _ .......... 65' Ill,
CWM ALUMINUM
SHEETS ........- ........ 47' tit.
QWI AWMINUM •
WT _ ......_ .......... 40' 11t.

of Audion

in Co-operation with

OWNERS, A~CE

""""' .... Oft.

985-3350

16141

Paying today

Records

.•

;

RoNIW ........ II . "-·

Dttd

TERMS: 10-t.

•

un•IH
O.al• Rlttl .. R.Pit.

Meigs Co.

•

Martin-DePugh Realty

. . 1111

CHESTER, OHIO

IESIDENCl 'HONE

. OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

.,,,'""

Equpment Dealer.
fir• E1•1P•I!fl
Seht &amp; Serwl11 ·

1·13-'89-dn

TRI-COUNTl
RECYCLINC'

'199 95

I#'

Bush Hog Farm

SUNOCO

Youchlf'l.

•.

•

614 -662-3121

11·2l·la.ttn.

••

'
'

U. S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVW, OliO

304-675-3161
For More Information

992-7611

•

POSIUHPIIK

.St.s

Authormed John
Deere, Now Holland,

OWNII: GIEG I. ROU!II
GENERAL
~ CONTRACfORS
~ RESIDENTIAL
'
COIMERCioU

. luy Ariy living Room Suite at the Sale Prire af S39995

IO u•/or

$1695

Rt. 33 North of
Pom•roy. Ohio

SINCE 1969

"You ltlltJe &amp;iwn

BOGGS

SALES I SDYICE

,"tt•,

..

Factorr Cholto

STIICnY ENFORaDI
1-11·'19-t mo.

14th lllalot St.
Point
W. Ya.

•sn Sl., SfUCIIR

FREE
TnEVISION

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S ClUB
lt. 124 IIIWHn Wilkll·
•illo and Salem Center
EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.
12 Gaugo Shotguns Onlr

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals
992-7479

•M!TAL IUILDINGI
HOUSING 6 AliT. IIROJECTS

or Mon and Recti¥1 A:
3 Frtt Rooms of
24 Month Frtt
01
(arptt Cllantd 01 Financing with
b,y Frontier Corpet Cl-ing Approwed Crtdit

llelpr t, Ohio
CONSIGNMENTS WRCOME
PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-421-7245
1·11·'19·1 mo.

MOBILE
HOME PAll

IICUSTOM MITCHENI. 84TH8
-EKTENBIVE REMODELING
•VINVLIIOINQ 6 ROOANG

.•

•

319 So. 2nd Ave.

GUN SHOOT

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

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Be Giving Away A Recliner, 1-Mattress
and Box S
and A Beautiful

Don't Forget
Valentine's Day
Tuesday,
February 14th.

. Op'" ............ .

992-6282

rea:rct,

pCJch s"ng 2 ced!r ch~~ leadmill, aw CO"'fli'I!SSO', I drawer
chest. &gt;ice. new kO'-e ~Uer,
boo!G, boolo;hell, II'Od 3M ~ng
dorum011 ropier 2 siOOd w/su~
pies, augers, suilcases, slainiiSS
steel slitS, Jl(lS &amp; pans, dishes.~
i,Urines. bas~ Will deoorati&gt;rs,
lloo' ion~ dinotte Sl!l, nisc. looO,

In loving memory
of

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

treadle sewing machine, oak cali-

dryer, lawn char~

Card of Thanks

S/15/ffn

PUBLIC
AUCTION

oak sideboard, Victorian dresser,
humpback trun~ 12 tin pie saf~

TIIATS RIGHT! On Feb. 4th We Will

COME IN AND
SEE OUI FINE
'SELECnON OF
WHITMAN'S
CHOCOLATES!

lu"""

R.

net w/Or. Dan ieis tin, violin, 2 pc.
bedroom sui~ Duncan Phrle table &amp; 4 Chair~ 2 Gld cu ~rds
lops, kichtfl calinll. oak dro~
leal latle, telepillne stand &amp;
char, 4 w~nut end ia!jes &amp;oolfee
table. 2 woxl tal:les &amp; 8 chan
eye.teYel range, swiYel rockO', hid~a·bed woch, MaJ!ag wasllJ &amp;

OA-~

Meigs County, Ohio

APPROVED:

J&amp;L
INSULAnON
Mastic &amp; Certainteed 1
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Reracement Windows
!own Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
WindoWs
Free Eotimates
Call 992-2772

Public Sale
8t Auction

1;========.
1;:::;;::::::::::::::.

REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
lumo 280. Page 966, Meigs
County Mortgage Records.

~========;-r;::=======:;rr========;r;::=======::;

1

tion;

gonlzotlono;

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

Business Service·s

in the joint recommenda-

a)

Brush fire is reported near DarWin

KM_,. Moe...... II.Ptt.

bo

made to the Governor of the
State of Ohio containing the
following;
1 ~ a description of the
method uMd to contact all
aligibte entttiea in the sub·
state area;

supportive oervicoo;

iron pin; thence nonh 88
59' 01" west apprmr.i398 feet to an iron

2,

I) othor public ogonda.
IUCh a communtty colleg-•

workoro under the Econ- left hllnd corn•.
Propo•lo will be opened
omlc Dlolocotlon Worker
Ad]urtment Aooiotonce Act ond molowed Februory 10,
(EDWAA), submit e propo- 1989 by tho Worki&lt; Adjust·
ul, in writing, that ad· ment A1111tance Committee
{WAAC). the Prlvoto lndu•
dreaMt the folloWing :

REFERENCE DEED: Yo·
lumo 284, Pogo 643. Meigo
County Deed Rocordo.
ALSO the following de-

(2)

agand•; and

Porry ond Vinton) thot hll
d•ignotocl by tho Gov·
ornor of Ohio, H 1 Subototo

Town 4, Range 11, Section
10 of tho Ohio Company's
Purchase.
OliveOhio.
Township.
Moigo County,

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

Hoclr..ing. lawrence. Meigs.

cro•- the llno of Section
1 1; thence - • 3961Ht to

1·23·89

(2) 2, 1tc

Total Disbursementa ...................
Tolal receipts Over/ IUn-

LAST .2 DAYS!

stone on the Wht ~de of the
County Rood where h

P. 0 . Box 326 loot, more or less. Said root
Rutland. Ohio 46776 estate being o part of One
742·2806 Hundred Acre Lot No. 1158.

Doc. 31. '88 .... 28,434.86
NON-EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDRECEIPTS:
Interest .................. 422.59
Gifts ...................... 209.00
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........... 631.69
DISBURSEMENTS: ·

Public Notice

The

Opall. Dyor, Clark 1~llining
of ~ginning con-'
Rutland Township 1,
40,344.48 oqusro

Fund Caah Balance

Public Notice

of Olivo. County of Meigs Council (PIC) ond the Con·
end Stoto of Ohio: Being
of Locolly Elected
In Section 10, Town 4,
(LEO'o)oorvillg H·
Ronge 11, Ohio Company's
South_ I Ohio
Purch•e. Beginning at a I' C•oun.tiel (Athena. Gallia,

to the best of my knowl-

•fund Cath Balance

20th Anniversary
Celebration Continues

Situated in the Township

INDEBTEDNESS
264, Page 543, Deed Re·
Outa!anding
cords, Meigs County, Ohio;
Jon. 1. '88 ........ 61 16.67 thence south 16 dog. 02'
Ratired .................3529. 17 01" e..t 101.881oet to an

Note Principal

Jan. 1.

ing deocrlbod root eotato: .

e•t 100.00 feet to an iron
Cash on Hond ....... 2073.98 pin, said point being the
Total Treasury
place of beginning for the
Balance .......... 43.B07.69 . tract herein dascribed.
leaa Outatandi.n g
·
which point is also thi
Checko ... ........... 9831 .58 southeat corner of teal l!tl·
TOTAL
tete owned by Bobby G.
BALANCE .. .... 33,976.11 Johnaon and Edna M. John·
SUMMARY OF
son and recorded In Volume

General Govern·

•

Boster...

Total Receipta

Fund Cash Balance

tonight

~lacal

Chargoo .............. 369. 72
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ........ 127.381 .38

''This is an u nauditad
Financial R8port"

Map shows minimum temperatures . At least 50% ol any shaded area is lore&lt;:ast
UPI

Continued !rom page 1

Hospital news

The Daily Sentinei- Page-13

Ohio

Public N oticB

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Wil·'
liam Mitchell, Athens.
Wednesday discharges
Naomi Hawes, Wilma Black.

to receive precipitation indicated

Jobless ...

1989

Thursday. February 2. 1989

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

:t

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE
Melg1 lndu.l lrlel. Inc .• in addition to providing general office and commercial cl••ning.
now offll'l
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
a a a service.
We wll contract to clean your home on 1 fixed
schedule, attending to tt.na you delira.
We provide full liability coverage, workers
compenaa1ion, and pay all tax
requirement•.
FOI A PIICE QUOTE CALL:

LADY HOFFMAN -

PH. 99ll·6118

START SAVING
FOR NEXT YE.R'S
VACATION! I
Call

the

District Manager
Openings In Your

Awon

For Job

AVOn

Ar-:; ••

,9a.n11

Public RteyNng now op., for
bu1ln1M. w; •• on Meln .,d
14th Str111. Point Pl. .~rtl,
W .VI. We buy Clnl. 1lurnn.
cooper end mort. Monda¥ thru
Fridor 9:00 ~II t :OO, llatur&lt;t.,

8 :00 till noon. For mcM"elnfor.,...
llonccoll304-8711-3llt .

GrWid Me's Anla. 407 Meln St.,
now opening Ftb. 4. houl'l
lO:OO oil 4:00.
Experitnced Accoumant want•
to provtdt eccoundng. bookkiiiPin:.!T'a.•dta tetvlcel
to riMI
1 or •mall bu•lneaes.

8 t4-387·0304.

4 '

Giveaway

Puppie• to 11v1 IWIV· Ptrt
Chow, Blue ~lltr • Germ.,
Sh..,herd, 2 ,.,..., 3 melw.
Coli 114-4411-ttee lflor 5:30
PM.

FJWto good hD.,._18 month old
red mele Yz Chow pup. Shots.
Colt eftor 5:30 PM, Jl4·4411-

1BS4.

One yew old. t.mel• Gwm.n

Shepherd. V-'1 O""'lo. Qood
oround klcfo. Coli 8l4-258·
8285.

10 aid port Oormon
Shepherd puppy. Shoh &amp;.
wormed. Froo. Coli 814-448-

1188.

5 mlxld 8rltolny lp.,lol pup.
.-... 2 whftt lnd tlro.yn Md 3
blodc ond wlllto. Coli Sl4-9811-

3197.

llu.eyed white llmele c•. 1
..... ald. Colll14-742-2321 .

2 port Eoglloh .., J!!!rt Pit . . .
dogs. Call 114-H2-77a8.

�_.. ------------

-

'

·~----

4

LAFF-A·DAY

Givi!IIW8Y

42 Mobile H OIT18I
•
for Rent

rlli:Hd lnlldt. on• bf.::tc. OM
blade .,dwhh:.. 304-871-NOO

z t.m-oom trel• in Hendlrlon.

tor Aoqnn1.

01711.00 N f • - r-kod, coil
oft• 1:00 304-175-1172.

I

I

2 bl~oomfurrilt.dtNI•wlth
..,..._ ..d dryer, locatld 5n

- o " W.Yo. 304-773-81158.

44
and

lost

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDCIET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 838 Jodtlon
Pilla from .l113 • mo. Wllk to
shop .,d moYies. 114-4412588. E.O.H.

FOU- ""''-dog Found

onVin18t. &amp; ~rthA~. Call to

T•• Townhou .. aptrtrnent1- 2
BAo.. 1 'h b•ho. CA., dlohwllhlr, dllpoul. prlvlte ....
cfoood potlo. pool. ployground.
Wst•. IIWtr, • trelh inc.uMd.
81:1rtlng 11: t219 .,. mo. CeH
114-387-71150.

ldontlfy, 814-446-3897.

LOST: RodmoloHuolly-dog.
of 141. Call 114-.WI1180.

Vicinlly

o,.... ,_........_ ............

t ·1

''Try tO fmish it all. Y0U

Moct.n 1 IR. downtown, oom-

ploto ldtcllon. olr, -Pit. Dopotlt. no P•" CIH 814-44tr
0138wonlnva.ott•5.

know how fussy the dog is.".
LOST · M.,·, llrthltonl ring in 1
Staond A~.
Furnished
efflden-'
~=========-r:::~;::;:::::;:;:::===1
SHADY
LAWN
APT&amp;729
Point P I - t Fooclontl Mon- 1 1 Hel w
ed
32 Mobile H ornes
ci• otortlng .. t175 • mo.

doy PM. REWARD. 304-8752111.

p

ant

dodtl. unclwponnlng. 304-1717113.
.

Inducting - · &amp; garbogo.
Slnalo ...,"' only. e111 61444&amp;.4107 or 441-2802.
N-ly rornocltlod 1 BR . "1&gt;1.
Appl. fur . . hed. ldeaftoctn:kut-1
blodt &amp;om downtown. Coli
ll&lt;a..We- 4831 .

33

Nice 1-2 Hdroom eplrtrnenta.
A¥1MIIble furrWahtd or unfur·
n6shtd. Dreoo11t required. Cell

for Sale
&amp;rn mo,..,. 1t honwl A•W'I'Iblt

.-oily.
1&gt;\'0. olo&lt;trtlltfco, othFT Md PT wort weHebl...

Yard Sale

trl.

..... ··p·......................,.
omeroy
Middleport ·
&amp; Vicinity

•
lnllaor.

Sot. Fob. 4. Cloltoola. .. .. jowolry . ......
ftenq. luftdlng _,Oil VIdeo
Shop In Roc:ino. Ohio.

-····· 'P'fPTeiisaiir ·····
&amp; Vicinity

Coil (rolundoblol 1·407-7443DOOo•t 1122. 24 hro.

0-lcolfv RoGr- '14 Sc:hul
14xe&amp;. c•hldrel ceiling. 2
bottoom. .,,.. ttioctrlc. 2 1•110

Schools

16

Instruction

Farms for Sale

I I 4-446-4345 oltw I PM.

-r.lnt.

2 IR . opt., ..., pfuoh c•pot.
n
udlhlol portlofly pold.
•11 omo.CaR304-175-8104.
171&gt;8381. 875-7738.

RE-TRAIN NOWI
Gent!..., f•rn-40 ICI'., SM
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS up for
or c.ttla Good
COUEGE. 829 J-on I'll~ houoo. bor" 6 pond. loout!lll
Coll446-4387. fteg No. 8e-11· viM. 8iodtl09 rood. Col 11410881.
215-118hvonlngo.
·Un•mWhed 2 BR . a•-o•spertment. In 10\Nft. CtrpMed. Adults
only. No polo. Call 814-.WI36 Lote 8t Acr1111ge
18 Wanted to Do
4561 .

hor••

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

8

Apertment evalebla HUD aoBt.,ltl.l hot'M '"' &lt;N'eriooldng
AICCXIIOft Ck., corner lot In
ClurviM" E.tat1 Subd. . C.ll

Public Sale
8t Auction

114-oWI-8187 ott• &amp; PM.

cepttd. Call 304-876-5104.

Furnilhld 2,3, Qr 4 roqm1 •
boll\ Ct..,. ~uMo only. No
pat1. Rlf. 8r. dap. ~aqulraf . C•ll

3oc:r•wMhpond. 8-otrocto.l·..:.1.:_4-..:.4.:_48:....:_15:.1:.::9..:.
.---90 ecr•. owner wll ·l na.ce • with down poymont, 304-4811- Mocltrn 1 BR. ,..., ...... Call
1171.
114-446-0390.
Efllcllnqr .,......,... w / privlte

fIll~ !It: lid
9

Comp'-• houolitoldi of ..rn&gt;
11n 6 ontiq-. Aloo wood •
coli hMf... SWIIIn's Fwnlture

a.

both In Rio Q,.,clt. CaM 814245-8221

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH pold for '83 modo!
and niWif" Ulld c ... Smtth
lulc*·Pontlw:. 19 11 e.....
Aw .. Golllpollo. Cal 11"'.WI2282.

A.uatkln, Third •

Ollv1,

11"'.W.3159.

2 BR . furtilhld ell'tment in

21

- n. Coil 61&lt;a..W8-9332.

B111inen
Opponunity

41

I NOnCE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CD. ,_rnmondo- you

dD l:ueln• wllh p.,le you
~· •d NOT to .-d mont¥
thrOugh
m .. untl You hw•

t._

Junll: Clra wtth" or without

Furniture •d ..,plllf'IWI bv thl
pi.ce or .mlrl hoUIIIhold. Felr

"''-' boingpold. Call814-oWI3188.

TURN KEY BUSIOIEIS
Comp""Y -bllohod - AIIo...tofol no OOmpoiMiorL Eom
up tp t1500e month. Pwt time.

n-.,-.
... - ._,.,n.,.
..........
No •perl~n•

lnt•

Olt801-III0-3Z7-8119.
- - Coil 24
houra.

H1~a l

w.,t_.

Eslole

To Buy- Us.cl Mobile

Hom•· Call 114-.WI-0178.

Homes for Rent

31

Homes for Sale

Woukflll:lto...Y 1 t~5Kr•af
lend ovariDoklng Reccoon

Vory o......... bridt 4 -oom.
2 ... , ,..... ........ with 11&lt;•
Ctook . .Call 814-.WI-7914.
pi- formol dining. ...... ...
room. 30ft. CUitOI'ft 0111 ldlchM
............. _ _ ..... flnloh
· Uud fumtture bt thl piece or
entire houllhold elso ..&amp;Hng. ... _ . . 2 D"'"'l• lwol
loncltcopod lot, 4 mloo from
114-742-2481.
- - Hoopl!ol off RL 31SubdlllloiorL Coli
814-oWI-4119.

Motol rJpo offldoncv. 1 molo

3 IR. '-""' Dtt&gt;ool ""'"irod.
10 Old F., Troll. Call 814-.Wfl.
2583, 9 to I doflv.

St:fVII,I~',

11

Help
,, Wanted

2 BR . Lo ... oci-BBMihJ"Ookwlh
relrig. 1110 • mo. •75

•ow a
dop. Coil

114-446-3170 or

44e-1340.

Pwt-tlmo MLT for fuffV-Ippod
Pft¥sk::iM'I Offloe Llboratorv.
- I n - to'lllo -col
PriiEL 203 Jadl•on "k• be-

• - 1:»4:30.
S•cr-,.-Rec.aptkH•t for IfNI
lnc'lclt
purchMiftg. ecaountl peyeble •
word proceuing • Will 11
...... , _ ....... .,d NCIP'
tlonlilt ..U. lame t•lbl•
haurs. lend rwume a I.e• of
interllt to: Plreonntt. P.0 . lox
910, Golllpofll. Ohio 48831 .

"'""'' .,..,,.,., o.-

BONUI INCOME '
Elfn OZOO.fiiOO -1\1. MoilIng 1111 _ . , lr....,ra For
mot1lnfonnltion _,d stamP«&lt;
........,.to:INC. P.O. Booc2139
Ml""'l FL33211 .
Beb¥sltttr netdld In "'V home
for 2 ,_..._ Rof. roquirod. Col
814-441-3131 · doyo. 4418347-evlflinp.
Bile RIP.-

Corrtmlnic.clons.

Full
or - -0111 lob
Browring It 81 .... 448-2411.
GOVERNMENT JOBS
018,040.- 089,230. )e•. Hhlrlng. CoK (11 801-517-1000
EKt. R -9808 for ''"'""' -~~
ln.

A~ON •

AI • -· Call Marilyn

Ia-

dont. Prl• nduOid. awe IHo

..._. loo 01 F,..cll Clly
Mo .. oHorna 114-441-9340.
-

28xl4 Lond Morlt, ........
don with h•dwood !loon 8

polo •

nane ftr.-1-. Prfae ,...Did
13,000. 8oo ot ,,..., Clly
Mo ..oHom-. 114-oWI-9340.

-

3 IR.. 2 bllha. fomlly

* · Loceted on
en,.l•lll tot In MledDwH•• l
room. C*lt,.l

...eppolntment,
'"""Pt. Pl-....
eon""
114-448-

1n

9340.
2 Olooy-4 IR .• IIIII urflnloMd
. , _ _ , 20d0 lnpaund pool
on 2 plu1 . . . . In vtnton. c.tl
114-381-81842 IR . -•1 hou• pfuo nl•
-loop. IL, c - . Cttv.
Ohio. 011100. Coli I I 4-44111111 .

tn SVrecu•. 3 blztccm ..,.ch

bedroom on Third St. in

Mlddepon. Close to tftopplng.
0178. pfuo dopooi1. 614-9922879.

Fwnilhld 3 rOOIN 1nd b•tt.
Flm floor, priv•t• Mlr.nc:a, no

rofrlfll'otor furnlohod. Homo lo
drtptd 111141 oerPI!I•· Sorry, no
cltlltton. •221. month
pfuo cltpaolt. Coil 814-8921292.

wMh op-

2

m.,.•

21xllllnoolnPor~ •'Cocf•

litln1&lt;

Rio G,.,cfo-2 IR. opt. Stow.
rlfrlg. &amp; weter tJrNthld. 1226 a
mo. . No
c.ll 814-44680 :JB,

OI'Kiout fving. · 1 end Z ~
room .,.,miMI 11 VHiege
Mwlor Md Rlvtnlde ApertIn Middleport. From
0112. Call114-892-7787.

room1 plus lowly sun poroh .,d
off ..,. . perWng. Stow •d

Lot/.',

e 14-441-0338.

2 bt*oom Apt1. for rent.
Corpotod. Nice uttlng. U..nclry
7 room ' - • with 2 bolla 838 , fociMioo 001ollob1Cl Cllll 81 ..
Th~d A110. ~rnlohod. flof•·
.. _ ..... Ired. Cal 11"'44. 912-3711. EO H.
0239:
In SyrD.IH, 1 bedroom. 1120.
momh plu1 dapolft .,d
Hou• for rent ~ tt.nnen Tr1011 par
utiMI•. Call 814-992·1138 0&lt;
• • Rot. 6 cltp. NqUkod. Col 81"'892-5732.
11"'215-1093,. 446-7187.

llolu•o 3 IR . houoo lor •lo. 4 IR .. 2'/o bMh. 75 ~01 St.
aw- fin ..... Cal 304-17S. . •300• mo. Ott&gt;- .......,. Call
8104.
114-44.31187.
GOVERNMENT HOMESI From 3 bottoomo. io ... od In Syr•
. , 00 (U Rot&gt; llirl- 1'&lt;&gt;&lt;....... TM Delinquent Proper- ...... ean 11"'892-711&amp; ""•
tloo . NOW I ELLING THIS 1:00 p.m.
AREAl "Cal IRoll-41. 1·
318-733-1014 ht. G 2732-A. Nloeoneftoor pl., hornell: 197
FOR CURRENT USTINGII
Mulliorry Aw .. Pomwoy. Fhlo
-

onf¥. Mobile home, 1 mil• below
cfly owatooldng rhler. Adutt•
onl\l. CA 6 hNt. Rot. Coli

P••

f'brt--

F:npi11VI'II'Ill

3 lA .- I Court St. Kttc:hen wlh

• - • rofrlg. 0250 pfuodep. •
Nf, No polo. Clll 114-44.
4928.

ln\l . .lgotod I ho offorfng.

moton. Call L•rv Uvetv- 81.._
3ee-9303.

.,flO,
utlitla

4 - - I n SynttiUO"'

moAth. you . ~

-

· Call 114-141-2253.

looch Sb'lllll. Mldtloport. Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished ap_.ment,
utlttl• Plld. l'lfwenc~~. Phone

304-892-2811.

Now eccapdng eppUct1lon1 for

2 bottDMt ............ fully
c•p«ld. eppi.,OII. Wltlr end
tn1h plckupe Ploo..idtd. Melnt•
nanca .._ lvlng clo1e to lhop.
pin• bonito ond oc:lloolo. For
mon•lnformltion Clll 304-882·
3711. E.O.H.
2 bea'oom unf\lrnlahtd 1250.
.,. month lo.wld • ,.. Holr.•

CMnlc. WV. 2108 Joo~oon A110.
lor morelnf. call B14l44&amp;-5181
"' 304-875-3398, 8:30-8:00
Mondoy thN Fridor.

46

F~n~ished Rooms

Fwnilhld room-911 Saoond

-Trll• ..-=- In Point "--IITt
for ront. 304-171-30111.

Mercllandlsl:

61 Household Goods

IUhll. O..kl, wringer" WI...., I

-..rnltu,..

aomp'-• lint of ua.t
NEW· -t1B
- • -up. 1St_.
038.
Workboots
&amp;
oolt tool . Coil 814-448-3159.

c .... M~tol. 814-44e-7318.

_ ..._'"'..C''to...,.......
. n 1n

wt.a h• e .-:

. . .- - N o • p o-

,.._ nu

11

31500Co~
-814-446-4018.
-10
contuoc:ft.

Saf11 and cheira priced from
1391 to 1911. Tabl• 150 end
up to 01211. Hlcfo-o·bodo 0390
to 15115. R•clln.,. 1225 to

Nloo roltlg.·Arnona !root troo.
let melrer. OrMgtrldin«. Teble
• 4 c:llctlro. . . . . . . . . . . .
......... Call 814--3Z24-

Din..-... 1108 end up to 1411.
Wood tllblt w-e cheirs 1211 to
1781. O.k 1100 up to 1375.

11 . . a..wn CNef mower, la"
CUI. Ike ,_.,, e700. RotDtllll
for a.....,, •MO. Call 114317-0141.

U71. Lornpo 028 to 0128.

Hutclloo t400 ond up. lp
bedl comptete w·matr....
t291endupto t385. 81ilr;' I;IJidt
1110. Mettr-•orbox
full or twin 118, firm 178. lftd

..,.p

188. au-

lltl •

250 • up.

King U80. 4 d , _ .._ tl9. ·
Gun ctblnth B. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
Bobr m011- *35 • 045.
Bod trorn• UO. t30 • King
fram• tao. Good Mlactlon of

lllh•.

baoom
m•al eabln•a.
hllldbowdt UO and up to ttl.

10 Devs • .,., a

Cllh wtth
•PProvtd credit. 3 Ml• out
Bul•lle Ad . Op.. s.m to 5prn
Mon. thru ·s.-:. Ph. 414-.ua-

Mlxodha&lt;dwoodolobo. t12pw
bunch. ContolnlnJI -ox. 1 'h
ton. Ohio P..l• Co .. Pori'l•oy.
Ohio. 814-892· 1481.

111 'Farm Equipment

Coli 814-892·3139 oft• 5:00
p.m.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE

bill•.

••110.
Own• w• ftn.,a.. c.•
11"'218-1822.

1030 C•e W/ Cib 2700 hrJ.,
•48B0-1081nt.-lonolcltiool.
UlfiO. 241 lnt.-io,. round
..... •21110. , ........
tefiO. lang .......... 01800.
Own.fh11no.. Cel 814288-1!122.

lo-.

w•

FirmEIIUIDmlnt. ZatorTrectorw.
Howerd "otwltor.. 811d•.
Food• Ringo. B..P,golcf bolt"'
I&amp; MGn'lo Equ .. mont. Rutlontl
Ohio 814-742· 2488.

1480 , 814-388-9773 .
......
,n ...

63

liyestoi:k

l'brtolllo llahtod olgn with fott0329.00. l'roo d.... ory. Plootlc
'"""'" t47. 10bo&gt;t.1·1110-B333483onytimo.

Roglot- 6 grodo Nublon
IIOota. lroocflng
Tl·
mot"" ho\1. Col1114-31e-SI41
Young

Pur••

64

Hay

Yorbhlreloer,
0300. 814·371·8311 oftor
7:00p.m.

8t

56 Building Supplitts

Gold upright flo- 1&amp;. 3 o:ubic
ft .. !roOt fr•. Vory IIOod ocndl- ·
tlon.· Callll4-44e-1304. s.. , lulldlng
1041 locond A...
llodt. brldt. - · pip• - .. lntola. lie. Cl.,clt Rio Orondo. 0 . Call 814two.
W•hlw-0rylll' Pairs. Norge.eve.
cado. t280. Whirlpool, whlto. 245-1121 .
t271. Whirlpool. IYICtdO,
Concr•• blodll· all ..... i:d
t290. Poruble Kenmore Dryer.
0128. Ulrgo horvoot gold rolrltt ordlflvery.M•on-.cLGal &amp;llo 8iocl&lt; Co .. 123'h Plno t ..
.,..or, e175.Sm.. whit•refritit'
Ohio. Call 114-448.-11or. 1130. Norge g• dryer,
2713.
IYIC;Ido, 1171. Whirlpool, lVI ·
cado W11her. t160. ken' s ApWESTERN RED CEDAR
pllence. 217 E11t Second.
• Ch.,nel Ramie .
Pomoroy . 114-992-533! or
ond -olod lop Biding
81 4 · 988 - 3581 . 90 doy
• Dedi: MMerilh
Wlrr.,..,-d ..-hnc..
o ........, Quollty
CETIOE, INC .. Alhono-8\4large hutch, l•a-OVIItlble~nd
594-3578
cflolrs • • 3.88.00. -n• 304175-1429. ...

M•-

Cloll-.

I pc. ooctlonol oolo. 0225.00.
304-87e-2941.
8 ~.,... • pedenel watw bed
with cenopy with mlrrOONt.

• • -· 304-n:J-1418.

66

Pets for Sale

Groom ond Supply Shop-Pot

Grooming. All brHdl. . . All

ae.oo I!•

Graund •hell corn.

100, 8:00 till 12:00 PM dolly.
Form. Rt. 38, Piny,
30 &lt;a.937-2018, doood Bat. Fob.
8.

-gon·,

Tram.p o r

t ~ l lllll

71 Auto's For Sale

Govwnmont Slizod Vohlc:l•
from
noo.
Fordo. - - ·
Corvetll.
Ch•V· Surplua. Buy•• Guido !II 108-817-11000
Ext. S-1 0188.

1910Htrt.,Sport1W,II.entw,
iowml- 1977MontoCo~o.
Coil oltw7P!il, 11"'28e-1304.

1948 Padtwcl COif 114-2511207,. 888-11509.

Antiques

oo-nwynd COI1ory llonnol

"-lon ondSI..,-•dHim•
luy or Sen, Riverine AntiquN.
1124 E. Main StrwL Pom•oy.
Hou..: M,T,W 10e.m . to S,.m..
ft:'2e~ 1 to lp.m. 81&lt;a.89Z.

AKC Ceirn TtlrTW puppl• Cal

Reg. AKC milo Po_.,l.._
uoo. Calf 114-371-2101

F'cw rent 2 -oom u..,rnlo"""
houoo. 8071'1 2nd St. How... UIO. montlt pfuo clllpoolt 304-171-8271.

Sletplng room1 with ooollin;.
A. .. o Trill.- spece. AI hoolt upa.

Young ~ioM Rlidh..t Plrrot
w•h 11x19o21, lor oolo.
Pluo op--111¥ 20 110. RoiphPrott.
227 I . Fifth Aw.. Mldtloport.
Ohio 417tq.

WhMied Mect:rlc ICGotfJf'l. Call

Rog.-. Mobltty oollect, 1·814870-N81 .
Fir..,ood tor ••• HlrciNOOCI

....M. 030 - p tNclt dollvory.
co11 e 14-441-4812. .

- --•zoo.

1971 LTD, 4 tt.. AT, AC. Pl.
AM-FM-topo. 13,000 mil•.
•aoo. Call 814-317-0314.

1~ Oldo. !Ill Royol lrhm LS
Std~no
Lollled. Low mla

12x10, 1171 ..... - Freedom. /IUt, ........ t~rver.
M"nln.. underiMnNft&amp; fur.

· ·~~~--~7~
· ----~---3111. wlh nlooyorclllonougo.

19711 Flro 8kd 380 2 bortol 4
opoodHunt.nMtlr-.noruot.
3D4-87e-23t1.

57

'711 Ch..., NDVO, 2 door, 40.000
mn._ 1o1o " ' • • - n.10o.oo
ilfm. 304-178-4883.

Musical
Instruments
PIANO FOR SALE

AC, AM·FM. P8. PB. 511.000
MI-. 304-878-1124-

Wontod: .... _...,. porty to
tllkt on ...,.. uwnlllt peyrnente
on piono. loo focolly. Coli
Monogor 01 100-131-7811
onytlmo.

1882 FO&lt;d Folrmont. 4 cvl.
121.000 ..... "'""-body
good. tl71. Porch •wingo tfi(),
304-48.1918.

Rute and Ctllt. • • niW'. t1 &lt;4-

7B - . . 310C.I. onalno.good
contltion. 304-17e-41119.

•
I I' II' ~Ill
1\

l1

V

I Iii '

t '; I~

I

61 Farm Equipment

Mo110-1
... - ocr•12x70,
-·"
f1 3, 100.00,
Rt.'
oat l!ootololo. ,._ ... for on In
2 N. 304-171-7119.
op,.;lnl-. .,. . . . . . 14.

~.....

.,.. Clhl._

u=.

72

Tnu:k1 for Sale

'•

'.

"That's the flret dollar the business lost."

___-

w.

PI, A.M -FM-C.u, running

-

C.ol 114-387-0429.

'""*

1914 C,.,.S-10
Tohoo,
AC. AM-FM 01--. ~1. P8,
CNIH,

Af~lfi

'(OUR fc:IPNf:Y WA$
TflAN&gt;rLANTfP FROM
A SINNS~.

e

1

Horne
Improvements

(I)
(I) A l'lila ROIMLoulse Qall
killer's
search for a
cflelil:e.
(l) ll!thlca In
The
reapon&amp;iblllty of penCMOI with
knowledge of crimM are
dlacuuad .

,

!II 41 Houra 1;1
IThe([])•Otltar
IIIOVI!: Poltat
II:
licit
(1 :31)
11111
(PGI3)

grulla.,..••
&amp;Calsasllalketball

·'«JJ'Vf.. SEW l'RESIDWT

.,...,h...

How
1.-otl (I) MOYIE: Hltlh Pl-.
llilllar (II) (1 :45)
1:30. (J) Ill A ftDIIIIft""'ar"'an"'t WOIId

. ~, sn&lt; ....

"

niP*·

y

Boor. . c - Rd. Call 11 .. ,
44~0294.
• t

Mamberl ol the Cosby Show
gueat ...r -.o Clair
·
l8cturn at Hillman. 1;1
t:OOeCJI 111
Cllll'•
altair with hie poatal tral,_
coutcl OOit him hll Job,

Tr11 • ttump ~~~mCNtl, mulcli. ·
topoolf. Mono, ._..,.. f1 19

a-

41mped. HelP Vouch•• IQ' ,
cepted. Don's landiCIPing.
114-441-5141.
---'.
,,

we-... .......

Ill • (I) Dynnly Blake
oiiii'B to conleea to the

Hou•e c.U. on RCA, Quaur•

CIE. Spodolln\ In Z..Mh. CoN
304-87e-239 or 81"'448,•
2414.

Fetty Tr" Trtmmn._ .w:ump 1
NmCM~I. Coli 304-17e-1331. ;

''·

murder of Grtmee: Sammy Jo
Ia allot. !;I

MORTY MEEKLE AN~ WINTHROP .

ID

1179 C,.,. 4 WD

t0t1

tNCk.

~~~1;1

w
LUNCH •

(RI (1 :25)

Gil Devltl ~n·•
1111 AIHn\11.., Oavtd

1:30e(J)

~n·a

..

seventh-ennhlernry special
features reoem 1toowa anc::l a
apocitll !n-lludlo edition of
the belt stupid pet trlel&lt;a of
the last year .

.-............ _----.4,_, .. ._........

"- .........

• YltleOCountly
10:oo(J) 700 Ch*

BARNEY

Ill

"HO 600"

(l) &amp;Neon
W-glon Report With

(I)

SNUFFY?

Robert Byrd

Ill • • ~ Landing
Gary begl111 to believe \Tal's
ltOry that Jill tried to kll

her.

ia:D-Halt

• Craolr and Cline
10:11 (I) MOYII!: Drnrl (NR) (t :38)
tO:JCI(l) MMMf1111Ca T . L.ady Slane move• Into liar

Electrical
Refrigeration

'

·w;.

Anidsn:illl or ODm,..ciel
~
tng, New .-vice or repeirl.
Ucens• electrld1n. Rldanour
Boar;col, 304-171-1786.
•

86

General Hauling

Dllwd W•• Swviot: Pools,

Clot•no. Wollo. Dollvory Any·
time. Coli 114-446-7404-No
·

J • J WotwSorvloo. St11lmming
· 1'11 . 114-

R &amp; R WM1r S.Vk:e. Pool1.

cllterns. w.ll1. lmmadiat~
1.000 or 2,000gollonodo11Yory.
Col 30"'875-1370.

new holliS anc::l belrlenda Iter

w....on's W.trHMIIing. .....

1onebl .. rll-. votunw dlt- - 2,000 to 4,000cop-

87

Upholstery

lanciOrd. C

..-···
.... ..... .
Bernice Bede Osol
..

store. He named the salon

;a ·

"'lnr

(I) Dltlslaflt Drummar: Your

'

Pubic .....nt A. James

eCJI

'

I

U.l ~ 21·Aiirtl11) Something Y11100 (Aug. 1:1 l1pt. 221 Good lllingl r
quite unexpected may oc:c:ur today that , caukl " - tor ·you today through ,
will- the potent181 o1 either enMnc- ' people you'R be lnvatM wltll oocldy.
lng or dlmlnflhlng your repulatiOn. For· •Don't tum- My IIWttatkln you get
Fab.l, 1 tunately, you'll handle II like a ; to part1e1p1ta In ICIMtlal ol thlo nature.
The yur lhMd may turn ou11o be one clllrnplon.
, ~ (lept. 1:1 act D) n you haW a

TAURUS (April....., 20) Defend
your -today, eapectally n thay are
cllllanged by a penon whooe mlllintormatkln could harm a friend who follows ,
your ac~VWN~y'a '
carl Cller 21..1Una 20) Be both
~ and profll-conacloua at
IIIIi - · - t h e r e It a poulbllfly
you can enter Into 101M type or ar·
...,..,..,_ t11at could generate lunda
fOryoutllrougloa.,...cflannal.
CANCIII (..... 21. . . 21) Have an Indlpth talk today wltll your mate regard110n1111p - · Ma11IJ2 to
lng e n - that ha8 cauMd d'-'llion
P.O. Box 81428, Clevatand. OH 44101· lalaly.- good can come from IIUcfl

ofyourmoetllc
ilulperlod•...-tally. E-ll COUld untold In waya that
will put you In the rtght place at the right
time
·
(.IML 10 ,.... 11)1t'a · to kaep your amblllouo objlet- to
yourae11 today limead o1 dllewllng
tharn wtth lllhera. You'R ba mut:11 more
.,_.hle n you can ,.. the
or
lllrprlle at the tight mon••t. Trying to
patcflupabrotcen-?Tha~
Graph M a t - can halp you to undeMand to dO to maka the ret.

...,111

M-•·

·
a cllct181fon.
NCU (,.10 M 1111101 SometNng .UO (...., II-Atlg. D) Tills can be a
'111ay oocur today t11at wllf klndtututura wry productM *Y tor you, PI Oljlded •
ltapa.Ho•sv•.youmuatbesuretofOI. ~appiJ' , _ p!oplfly. U.. your
low thratfOII tamorrow wtt1t tlla snthual- flaiiiiS. mind and lime lor conati\ICIM!

. 3421

, _.tllatftrelyounow.
. .
.

~VOla.
.~

.AJDI6
tJ
+AUZ

I
I WEST

EAST

+KQIDIIU

•xQ7

• 53
Tradin1 on his elpt-card diamonli • a 4
+i
suit and favorable vul!t1!111blllty, South +KJ 8 7 5
jumped rigbt to five diamonds over 1
SOUTH
Ji;ast's opening one-spade bid. When ·
everyone passed, South suspected he
.54 .
mipt have caugbt a decent dummy.
+AKQiot76Z
Sure e111111gb, two aces are notblllfl to
.Q 10 6
sneeze at when you've made an aa·
Vulnerable: East-West
ar-lve bid. Prolpects looked quite
Dealer: East
good when be ruffed West'a spade ace,
sillce East, the openiD1 bidder, could , West
Sao..
be played lor the remaining high
51
cards. But Sou!h llboulcl also be capa- Paa
ble of making a table decision based.
Opening lead: • A
·Upon human psychology.
Declarer drew three rounds of
trumps, discartlin1 a club and a heart
from dummy, and then played a heart wrong, but I can't help feeUDa iiiai my
·to the eigbt. East won the kin1 andre- late father and many other experts I
turned the nine of clubs. South put up have known would bave flaured out at
the 10 and won dummy's ace when the table that East bad no club hoaors.
,west played the jaclt. Declarer !ben So when the Dine of clul11wu covered
ruffed a spade, played a few more witb tbe 10 and jack, !bey - ' d have
.rounds of trump, eventually played a played low from dummy, lettbtJ Welt
heart to tbe ace (he hadn't been fooled hold the trick. Tlten, whatewr hapby tbe falsecard of the king), and a pened, they would play tbe beart ace
club toward his queen. West took the · and ruff out tbe heart queen. Of
kina and eight of clubs, and the con· course, lllloulcl West continue clube,
they .-ld IUiow to duck aroancl
tract was one away.
Notblng declarer did was really their ~

I

.I

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

to

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 Garden
Implement
4 Harney of
boxing
fame
8 Not. a bit
9 Hunter
constel·
lation
11 Russian

39 "One"
in Tours

r

DOWN

I

El Cld's
Ravieca
2 Top elTon
3' Lamprey
4 Fonn
of pra)'l!l'
5 Cracker
Yeeterda)''a Aawel'
city
8 N .M.
12 Marine
Indian
15 Gibson
25'Actress
being
7 Up to
and Tonn~
Gless
14 Donkey
one's
18 Raw-boned 28 Eradicate
1 5 - Tse-tung
ablli\J
2llnferior
29 Pavilion
111 One- timl' 8 Tennis
22 Verdi
31 Soccer
17 "Catch 22"
star
heroine
great
author
10 Inborn
23 Light
34 Actor
19 Demon charaeter
unit
Selleck
20 Slippery
13 Handle
24 Alumnus 3 5 - markee
21 Trim
221lardner
and
namesakes
23 Affectation
24 Cagnt•y film ho:--+--+-25 Go away!
26 Ele!'. unil
2 7 - ' s nt&gt;st
(risky
situation)

30 Prlt&gt;st's
garh
31 Host S~ak
32 Defore
33 Weight
watcher
35 Scrutinize
361talian
37 Kiln
38 Dennis
O'Keefe

\

film

DAILY CRYPl'OQUOI Ql- Here's how to work It:

-·!On .....

·--

1t:OO(J)
,

NORTH

+Hz

Manchln

~.

' ~· 'llrthday

" HEAD over HEE;LS."

+A74

. . . . Country

AGiiARtua

'l3

F•lolo'71JoeCJ7........
.. .,.,_ 304-'773-1348.

e

Ill Helllllllt Dr. Plul
Jared Ia ombrolled In a bettie
w1t11 prlaon olllclel1. 1;1

AN' THAR'S
A nMe TO GO

HOW DO Ye
UKE MY N!W

!IJ l!wnlng - .

lty,
- .... - · ""'"· ....
304-17.2919.

&amp; 4 W.O .

.

I)JMOYI~­

"

ARANDIAIY.

"78Fcwd plcl&lt;up. fiOO. 00, good
30..171-2417.
Vane

MPfarY1 Morae

nlgllt of ~ Kane's
"' murder. ~-

I 'M OLfr

IMNOT
HERe:.

(I)

trace• a car spotted on the

'rO.l CAN SA.Y
"'!HAT A6AIN.

HEY,
FOSTER ...

Ak•• Trw Trtmrria.!:ad Stump •
RemCMI. Fr11 ..c:
• · c.~ ;
304-871-7121.
•'

84
' 8t

Eyelid - Beach - Pansy- Nephew- HEAD ewer HEELS
A hair salon owner moVed his shop abotle a shoe repair

ACROSS

11J llunlar, lila W1018

. fQ&lt; JUST A H.I.U WEEKS

SWEEPER .,dMWingmiChlne '
.-t., 111d IIUpplla PI'* :'
up Md d ..illl'lfY, 01¥11 VIGI"'\'1 1:
Cleaner, one h1lf mile up •,

__ ___
_______________.,

an.r

lights 00
Dunkirk. The
RAF wllll the Bettie of
Brltlln. (0:30)

lAS EMENT
· ·.,
WATERPROORNG . , _,
UnoorMitioMI lf•lme .,• .,... ~
ta Locaf r ... ence~ furMhtd. ·

"l"

WOIId at War Britain

(I) The

'
,

1·114-237·0481. clor or nftllrt, :
Roger. slalement .,

z:

lrlenc::la over. C

....,.
.....'·••·''

Plumbing
8t Heating

I

••••

With his parents end lliatera
awsy, 'Tloeo Invites a lew

;

,.

W•• prouftnt-

1

' .
SCIIAIMETS ANSWERS

. • 1032

e
91 eo a
ea:D

• '

tit. 2 - . point Only

Coli 814-446-2712.

llsctlsl/ Lallrer

I)J-VIce
7:06 (I) Andy Qrlfllth
7:30 e (J) FamiiJ l'aud
(I)~ Tonight
(I) UIA Toeley
~J;aO,ap••,.nl11hyt 1;1
lrA'I'H
·
!I) Cnl8sfh
9 Night c• Craolr l!ld ChaN
7:311)) ..,_and loot
1:00 (J) MOVIE: Wild nnt.., Part

=-----=---------·
- - - - - - - - -...;...
' ':·,
.'

82

(I)

9ChMra

'

'

DDHIICS:

reachecf an agreement. I'd like
a long , extended honeymoon.
andhedoesn'twanta- .· ·

Complere rno chuckle quoled
•
_
by fill ing in the missing word s
L...l.-.L.....L-.1.....1-.J you develop from step No. 3 below.

.ByJamesJacaby

I (2:00)
• (J) Gil The Coaby Show

1179 Free Spirit 20ft. umpW. 1
Totllv Iliff contain ... Clll 814- '

(:.11

e (I) Culrent Altair

!I) MolllyiiiiS

79 Motors Hom as
&amp; Campers

Frw •lnwta

Ie

The feel
of the table

e ltD 'lllrila'a l;ompany

y~ &lt;::AN COME IN1

,vT I'M

'

Va. Ch••-' tir• M'GUNi, Du~ ·
lop, Firetton• ntw 1nd ......._ •
30&lt;a.871-3331.
;
Trudt t - 18x82. flto oliO
' 0...._• lltoo f130 00
.....
.
. .
Phone 30"'773-5177 otter
5
0
i - ·_ _o._ _ _ _ _ _ __

81

" My beau and I haven ' t

BRIDGE

il\~'~or

.FRANK AND ERNEST

-~~~·-r-· 12moo. CVC

1188 F- 110 Ford pldtup, 245-9288.
· -- 37,000 mi-. e oyt., 4opd .. Pl • -

c,...,

Rt 1•

....... llooct.
"'·
- ...
lllndtcalt
p!14-17t-1071.

(l)

Us tel &amp; · rebuilt 111 typel, ~.
Wln'.enty-30 . . .. Prl.- ••••
up. Uud &amp; Nbullt torgue ·:·
DDnverl... ltlndlrd dutch•. ..
P"•IUre pllt-. • throw out •:

Sunct.v cllts.

1171 a..., v .. with • . 402
lla • motor. Coli
lf4-lt2-7107.

Ufttlrnlohod. Couploo,

(I)

BUDGET TRANSMISSION:

14.000 mloo. A-g U900.
Colll14-44.. 1111.

nlohod. • -· Col lf"'lt2·
7479.

_ . .N.UWS&amp;ilo . . . . pQWn.

·'
----------------..~

CARTER'S PWMIIN.G
•~
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth Md Pine
Ohio
Phone 11..._
3888 or 81444S..W77

AKC ...,.,, pup. mota 304175-1148.

Cl 1100,
XLT1-·
100ell moblo
boM.
1 bMdo.
lncWo • ..,.. · - • 304175-2123 oflw 1:00.

'*· W. wll t.-.nr

I

One old maid to another:

GRAN 0 1
1.5:--.f.l:..:;.1.:.:..;~~6..;,1...:.,11'17-i

.

wc-...~aa~ca~~~a~

'Jolt":'·

- · Muoio. 11 .. 446-oea?,
Joff
-leV
-_
·
4~1077.
Urnltod
. . •114.

Cllll14-446-7473.

.

Excolortt ooncl. •1100. 080 .
Colll14-oWI-Itll.

1815 Doda• Air-. 4 door, AT.

MoWle Hom' 2 bedroom.
.111. Cal 114-:ll.ft04-

mil•.

445-2752.

• ..

. . PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
'1:11' IN THESE SQUARES

Glmbla.
1:31 ()) Ono Day at a Time
7:00(1) O u r e (J) PM Magnlfla

acel. oond. Cell
114-245-5432 oft• 5 PM.

Auto Parts
8t Accenories

"

special musical guests T.
Graham Brown, the Gl~a
Next Door, anc::l Johnny

Rono Chlmnor • - &amp;podol;
ftuJonuory . 304-773-5348. •

Space for Rent

3 • , doubfowldo. untlrnlohod.
.,., - • f278 o mo. pfuo
...... Coli 814-Zie-1717 or
«e-3017.

•.

h'"'"" coil oorvr.tng 0 E, Hot ,
P'olnt. w•t... dryen •d '
· 304-878-2311.
'

PM.

114-317-7700.
4l'f.tec:ret.m. f•mmechln.,Y,
U5,000.00. 304-488-1188.

.

.~ ;I,•T,.;.IA;,. ;.1"~EI-C1-r- il -~!
.

• Amettcan Mullc
Cslsb stto.t Brenda LH anc::l
Ray S-1 co-host with

1179 Hondo CR-280. good

76

I

(I) Nightly lt11ln111 Reporl

ooncl 1986 Kow- KLR 250,

780

LEVOW

91eoca-.
e ltD WICRP In Cincinnati
o 1ttow111 r-,

- - - - -'
RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE. :

ltrll'l kitten&amp;. Chow a1ud ·-"'"'Calf 114-446-3144oft• 7

....... - · ......... lftll.

pinning.
worytlifrtg-...
olr
..- ........ · wfl
-~~~... ... J .0 . 11"'"22174-

®8pottiLooll

Ill e (I) AIC -.1;1
(l) lloclr llaotrlc

Rotli'Y or ceble tool *lllng.1'
MOOI-....,..otodoomo.,.,, •
!'limp ooloo •d ...,leo. 304- '
185-3802
.
'

Julio Webb Ph. 11 .. 446-0231.

Whlllcheir•I'IIW or uaed. 3

3 IR . -rnlohod trolor In
- -· U71 o mo. pfuo
- - • cltpoo(l. Call e 14-

i':3o.

RON'S Televl1lon Service. •

otyloo. lorno Pot Food Ooolw.

63

Motorcyclas

Grain .

Mlxod .... hay. eaN 11 .._ 31 ._
1419.

PI••

114-38e-9n3 .....

74

Se rv1~; e:;

lndlll- ....... I _ ....

1 4o 70. COntrol

• ltD MIPPY Dare
9F-o1Uie
IIJ lhe-lla
Ill Amettcan Magu..,.

1989 380 Ford C.... Von. 7.3 :
dt•tl towing pkg., dbl .. ..... ..
moro. •23,331 Coil 814-445- .
1914. '

Pbor Bov• Tlr-. Hendlnon.

"""'leo.

985-4427 oft• 1:00 p.m.

1181 Por .... _

Daleb

A~~t( •

2220 .. 304-175-17!111.

OMt, W. Vo. 30"'875-1410, or

_"'_ilo_
. - - -- - - -

1110 .. .,.., 14x70. 2 . . .. 2
....... II Il-k:. CA. ,_,.
lllr-. 10.11 12x14
wood bultln.. Cal 114-2488021.

of_.,.._

•

8:061)) Levarna and 8hiMy
(J) Gil NIC lltglltty Neon

)o..o-ol ty~. CoM 114-371- :

2 Halotlln boiJir 11u11 .,....._ ea11
38•024 or 241-flll57. .

Compll'le houithold furnl•~
lnos. '!\: miiNarrlc:ho. 304-1715-

Pldl:.., U•• Furnttu,.
Rod Tog Spocl*
Bunk beds-complete. 198.
Ou.n mlttr•s. box spring~ •
fr.., . . . . . 4 v.nlly . . . . ..
t38 • up. lg. c:ed• wardrobe.
.158. Doy bod. t15. lclooico. 038
6 up. Moplo 3 o:uohlon coucfl6
chlir, e48. Meny morelpecl• .
"'h mU• out J~rrichD, Pt.

mechln&amp; h., conditioner, NH
038fi0. 11020 JO W/ Chllle plow.. 14 ft. rat-v ho•

A - Lhlootodt Ill• Albony.Slit . .... loturdoy-1 PM .
U.ootodt ....... _, 4 PM
.... '"""' 1 ....... of
Alborty .,. at. Rt. fiO. eon
114-192- 2322. 198· 3531
IYinin • .

VIlli¥ Furnlrurt
New end 1.11ed fumltur1 .,d ·
eppllcencet. Cell 814·441·
7872. Hours 1-1.

Good uled color t.v.a for . . ..
Coil 11"'441&gt;1149.

Loto Mocltl SIOOIIII•wl plowo.

rot..., hoa cornpl.rt•. mawlng

Twa H . ooo.,ruet~tor•le.

03~ .

2 Olooy, 3 llodr-. 2 bllhl. on
rlllw In Mldtloport. Cal 81491e-4134 wonlngo ond - •·

11111--..d-bonof·

•

3-17 Inch , .......... 2-17'h ft ..
1-I II'. ft. 4 · - • af pdng-4
tt.•8 tt. u110. eon 814-.We8121.

Roo-. tor ra'!t.~week or month.
Stwtlng .t 1120 e mo. GeiUe
Hottf.81"'.WS.9B80.

IIIIW411Q • W. . . . • p i -

... v_
...............
......
_ ......... o-'"•
. . ..

2-toboca&gt; boling ....... 028

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

oqulppod ~Mellon. . - o d ....
ov•1-oof..,dw•h14x1111.
outbullclng. Coli 114-192·
1293.

••l*ienol.

IT
SAID ''BLACK EARS''

I

I

HEARDE

1-...=-1Toll:...,;;1-,
•i--t ·~

8 WKRP In Clt1ii101okoNOIIISIIIH
I)J~I!xprw..

-1\1 -dolotl 3 lr hou•ln
12110. por month. Poy
own cdtloo. 30"'77J.9114-

46

1 TlolOUG~T

TI-lE INVITATION
SAID 1'BLACK
TIE " ,

Cl 000 USED APPUANCEB
Wllhlrl. dry.,., r.,igtr"ltora,.
rang11 . Skaggs Applltncel,
Upp• Rhler Ad. belidl Stone

Anla .. nt Director Nursing.
1 24-btd multi-lwlllc.t..,,..G
cwn• tillkl rtOIIt..r ..,,.

WANTI!D • Jim Cobb Ch.,.,
Oldo. Cod. lo iooldng for on
1111l:llrlaul J*80n to oompl•
ment aur . . . tDI'cl. W.wMI:en

54 Misc. Merchandise

Sot. 814-.WS.1899, 827 :It'd.
Avo. Oollipollo. DH.

Chlhuohuo 6 Torrlw mloc. •30
for~ .,.._ bll Hod • ohoto 6
wormod. Coli 81"'441-0100.

AM electric. n_, \Any I MtdDw-.

PTV's verlion of 80 Minutes
draws oo journalism ol
Children's ExDreu. 1;1
(I) Dr. Wloo: 0..11 10 ...

lh•P· l-oti
e12.000. •
Coil 814-oWI-3897.
•

Cl IMI by NEA, Inc

County ADpliii'IOI. Inc. Good

used IPpll..... .,d TV ••a.
Qp., 8AM to BPM . Mon thru

v.,. te.ooo mil•.

•&lt;ll 91 •o

(I)

())Mala •nil .... ,led

',

I 988 Dodge Ront Cha&lt;gw Uloure

I

1D CE Neon Magallne

1981Dadao0olcoto, 4WD. Col
814-441-f838 oft• I PM .

64 Misc. Merchandise

Homes
for Rent

·--

10~1 .

otortlntt 099.
USED· ltdl. dr•..... bedroom

O tReorrange Jitters of the
fou r tctambled worda be·
tow ro for m fovr ai rnple words.

8:00 (J) lottanu: The .._
lpludu

1914Ch.,yBI•wK-I , ........ •

NEW· I pc. wood SIJOUp- 1398.
Ltvlngroomtuit• 1198-1189.
Bunk bids with beckt&amp;ng- 1249.
F_. 1llt mlltr- • foundltlon
starting· 199 . Recllnera

lAIII

EYENINQ

eCJI

16

SentinelWOlD

THURS.. FEB, 2 •

Rrm

4 w1too1 drlllo. 1.0 lkw onglno.
V-8, 4 · bill.. 4 opel ....... ttir,
AM·FM 1Ureo. Apple red ,.
w / wNte top. Cell 114-UI-

bftl\ Cab .WI-4418 oltw 7 PM.

42 Mobile

•

19N FO&lt;d Rongor 4o4. V.a, 8 :
opel.. 31 .000ml• .7200. Col •
114-446-1492.
'

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNfTURE 82
Olhlo St., Gollljlolo.

The

Television
Viewing

1117 f&lt;wd F-1110 41&lt;4, 48.000
mi-. - EICOI. - c l Coli ,•
51"'248-1432 oft• I PM.
,;

, SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

T•.,• Voller. 30-a. 717-1121.
COntMI J*IOnnetDtvld WU tur
Adm .. •••lllc&gt;n.

S.iouo lnquirloo ......

Aw., Ollllpoll. 175 • mo.
Utllltl• .-d. Slr\glem•• Sh•e

CAll ott• 2p.m. 304-77J.
1851. Muon WV.

Pcimaot-Middlaport, ·()bin

&amp; 4 W.O. ,

Pri.,. Mofbo • - at 111111trd
Aw., OalflpoiiL

layod p....,.. onfv, 81"'
8IH.

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Vans

1817 Dodge 280 Foctooy Edl-..,_
lion .,.ury Van. Mu• Ill to •
alll:tl• eMMe. N . PI, lit. elr, '·
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81&lt;a.441-1141 from t-8 PM.

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Houoo for oolo or - - 2
bottoom. 'h .... ground. In
AVON oil •-II SIHrloy Sp.... Pom-. -IN ...... No pMo.
30&lt;a.l7fl.1429.
1 14-ftZ-3122.

au...,.ory
Copolllllty for -fling ond
c•lng. g._, 1M lnt-..tln Geriatric nurling. E~eeltent Opportunfty for Nu,.lng Mnlnln•tlon c., .. , growth end
dev1lopment. Inquire Cere
Havtn. 590 Poplw Ford Ad.
Hurrk~Mt. WV or c•• Hlft•

73

Pom•ov on St At. 143. No
dN g~. drinking or J*"la Mu.W:
hwe
tiO. plu1 utlt11• por month Col1-30&lt;a.SI22904.

Wo..., 304-512-2148.

wfth

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Space for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

Found

LOST: 1,_. 6 grov Chow
· .,,_.. to "Goobor" . Vlcirllly
of Mtr• Oek Ad. R.w•d
Olforod. Call 11"'317· De13.

7

46

Trelt• ~for rent. 2mM•Irom

2 ocll h ,..,... opoyod .....

6

Thursday, FebnJ.-y 2. 1989.

POmeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page- 14 The Daily Sentinel

-eotoleCtlonyouwouldllketo
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your~ today fOr what you
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apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters a.;e different
CIIYPTOQOOTE

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~INDS BE BOLD. - LOUIS BRANDEIS
CJ liMit King Featuro Syndicale. Inc.

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�Page-16-The Daily Sentinel ·

Vicious cold

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPil
- Alaska's vicious cold wave
eased 20- to 30-dPgrees, but th E·
phenomenally high air pressu r•'
forced federal officials to ground
all air tralflc requiring lnstru·
ment approaches.
The 60- to 80-below·zero
temperatures eased Into the
minus-40s and mtnus-50s Wednesday. a warming trend that
brought many people out of
virt ual hibernation.
But one of Earth' s Strongest
high-pressure air masses lntensl·
fled, covering virtually the entire
Alaskan land mass with barometric pressure so high that
·small planes, commercial jets
and military aircraft could not
get reliable altitude readings,
which are vital to Instrument
'!lying.
The Federal Aviation Amlnls·
!ration issued an emergency
order that effectively grounded
all air traffic requiring Instrument approaches In tbe state
with the highest per capita
nu!T1ber of licenSed pilots and
whose scattered villages are
normally resupplied by air.
Those flying In weather clear
enough to see to · land were not
restricted, but night flying was
banned to all airports where
barometric pressure is greater
than 31.00 - virtually everywhere In Alaska. Daytime flying
was banned to areas where lee
fog required reliance on
Instruments.
"It could mean up to 50 percent
of flights canceled." Alaska
Airlines regional manager Bill
McKay said. He said airlines
were scrambling to figure out
how to cope with the situation.
Alaska is a maajor refueling
stop for over-the-pole flights
between Europe and Asia,
Planes may still leave Alaska
because tl\e emergency FAA
. order affects landings, notdepar·
lures . But, according to the
order, no plane ma,y land at any
Alaska airport from twilight
until dawn while the extremely
strong high pressure blankets the
state.
Most air traffic occurs after .
dark, and Anchorage Interna·
tiona! Airport operations manager Larry Michou said up to 80
percent of flights could stop If
they are not rescheduled to
daylight boors.
Throughout Alaska, "the barometric pressure exceeds 31.00
inches, which Is the maximum
calibrated reading of known U.S.
manufactured sensitive altimeters." FAA spokesman Paul
Steucke said.
"As a result, accurate altitude
readings required for safe and
efficient Instrument approaches

Jackson ...
Continued from page 1
check on a specific drainage
situation In Lebanon Township.
In othi&gt;r matters, the commls·
stoners discussed an unemployment compensation question re· .
garding a former county
employee an,d approved a request lor Meigs County Court
First Deputy Linda Bentz to
attend a computer demonstra·
tlon in Vandalia.
Two executive- sessions to
discuss personnel matters were
called Wednesday. One session
was called by Engineer Roberts
and the other by the commlssion&lt;'rs. The problem involving the
county highway department was
referred to the county
prosecutor.

.......,._.."""-'"""

-

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

:~= ;~~~r~~~~-~"~~e;;,~~~~.:~.~~!!~~!:~~~~~r ~by pilots In flight and an
emergency exists which requires
Immediate action to assure
safety In air' commerce and
transportation," Steucke said.
Barometric pressure was 31.18
inAnchorage,3l.351nFalrbanks,
and 31.85 - third· highest ever
recorded on Earth and hlghestln

Steucke said the emergency
order should not affect normal
daytime flights, In !act, pUots
were rushing to deliver a huge
backlog of mall and groceries to
dozens of villages cut of! for two ·
weeks by the cold.
Air services in hard-hit west·
ern Alaska were flying tens or

dozens of villages.
The Intensified high pressure
came just as temperatures were
rising enough !or small planes to
fly badly needed food and fuel 10
bush villages .. The "warming"
also enabled people to start
emerging from the safety of their
homes to carry on near-normal

:"rtual hibernation.
. ,
Northway was Alaska s cold·
est spot Wednesday at 59 below
zero. T~ns suffering In the
minus
lo minus 80 range
warmed to the minus 30s, 40s and
50s. Fairbanks was minus 37.
:nchorage was 15 belowWednesaScy hmornlng.
·
ools reopened, but students

staged a sll-ln protest because It
was so cold In the classrooms.
State offices closed for a second
day h1 Fairbanks because ice log
made driving hazardous.
011 flow through the trans- .
Alaska pipeline approached nor- .
mal, and tankers resumed ship· ·
ments !rom the port of Valdez to
West and Gulf Coast refineries.

Ohio Lottery

upsets
Illinois

Daily Number

308

Clolldy toalcbt, low In mid
teeas. Chaace of snow 20
percent. Sa&amp;urday, cloudy,
hllb ID mid 208. Chance of
snow 50 percent.

Pidt4
4684

Page 3.

•
Pomeroy-Middleport: Ohio,

SyracuSe pool rates
approved by council

Plaza
by pickets

Come
Early •
Lots of
.One of
AKind·
Items

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..

Members of the Tri-Staie
Building and Construction
Trades Council are taking a
stand at Ohio River Plaza
construction site against the
Robert Darden Company, the
general contractor for the
project.
_
An Informational picket,
which began Tuesday by
members of the council, Is
opposing the employment of
non·unlop workers on the plaza
project. All craft workers,
building trades, operators and
laborers are joining the Informational picket.
According to tile picket signs .
"Robert Darden Company. a
contractor on this project, pays
substandard wages and subjectsemployees to substandard
working conditions."
Robert Darden refused to
comment.
·David Gllmcher of the Davi~
J. Gllmcher Company. said he
was not aware of the lnforma·
tlon picket.
"I have no Idea why they
would be a picket there."
Gllmcher- said. "We have a
general contractor and that's
who Involved here."
The Ohio River Plaza project
Is also under the development
of the Glimcher Group. Robert
Gllmcher. president of the
grroup, said be. too, unaware of
the picket and declined to
comment.
ConstructiOn of the shopping
plaza resumed this week when

PUBLIC INt'OBMATION - Four members of the Tri-State
Bai..IRJ and Construction Trades Council talk among themselves
while concluctlniJ an Jnlonnatlon picket, opposing the use of
noo-unloa workers on tbe Ohio River Plaza construcllop site by the
Robert Darden Company. The picket sign reads: "Robert Darden
Company, a contractor on this pr11Ject pays substandard wages ·
. and subjects its empl!lyees to substandard working conditions." .
ihe total prints of the plans
were approved by the state on
Monday. Heritage Construe·
tlon, a local masonry company.
and the S.A . Johnson concrete
company, are presently work·
ing on the site.
At the same time, workers
· also are staging an informa·
tiona! picket ~t the .,Ashland,
Ky., mall project, under the'
same general contractor and
!be same developer, David J .
GllmchPr

' ·we're just trying to protect
our . rights, and give local
people jobs," said Sam Boston,
a representative for carpenters
In Pomeroy. ' 'We'll be here
~ unless we're removed, If that's
what It takes. "
"We're just trying to keep
wages up so )ieople can make a
good wage In GaiUpolls,"
shouted one picketer:
"Let's keep the money In
Gallla County," said another

By KATIE CII,OW
away from contracts and are
SentiDel Correspbndent
going wltb street llgbtlng tarl!f.
Syracuse Village Counc\J
Councll Is currently under
Thursday night decided the 1989 contract with Ohio Power until
rates at London Pool wllf be $25 March 1996. At the end or the
per pass, with nofamllyJlasses to contract jlerlod council wlll no
be Issued.
longer be under contract since
In addition to the $25 per pass, Ohio Power Is abandoning all
dally rates will be $2 for adults, contracts.
'
$1.50 for students and $1 for
Under the present contract
preschool children. Pool party · council Is paying a base rate of
rates will be $50 and hour with a . $6.65 per light fixture. It they
would drop the present contract
two hour minimum.
Cost of the pool operation and the hase rate would be $4.67 a
maintenance of the pool made , · fixture. Also council could add
the Increase necessary.
five additional street lights for a
· Meeting with council were cost ot$5.82 per light If they drop
three representatives of Skyvlew their present contract while
Cable. Spokesman !or tile group, under the present contract It
John Hogan asked council for would cost $13.65.
permission to make a study o!the
The new proposal would be a
village and for a franchise to self-renewing contract each
ser:"ce the village.
year. Under thepresentcontract
Council stated that they would fuel rates change monthly while
like more Information as to what under tile new proposal fuel rates
the cable company offered, would only change every six
number of channels and the cost. ' months.
.Council agreed toglvethematter
However. under the new con·
consideration and will meet on tract there Is no guarantee that
Monday, February 6, to discuss rates will or wlll not be In·
the p~oposal.
creased. At the end of the
Also meeting with council was contract period council wlll have
Skip Rife of the Ohio Power no choice but to go to the new
'Company. Rife explained that contract.
It Is up to council whether they
Ohio Power Company Is moving

wish to make the change now or
walt out the contra!. If they
would drop the present contrac~
and go with the new proposal
councll would save 11.6 percent,
or $725.95 the first year. Council
wlll make a decision In the very
near future .
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Morrow
met with council In regard to
placing a gate across the entrance to a driveway In front of
their home. The matter was
discussed at great length. I.
Carson Crow. solicitor for the
:"llage, ~nt a photostatic copy of
the original plat which shows
streets and alleys. A decision will
be made at the next meeting of
council when all members are
present.
Phil Roberts, county engineer
met with council In regarc) to
Issue II money. Roberts ex·
plalned \\jhat steps council should
take and advised them on how to
complete the necessarY, forms.
Council Is to receive $16,000 the
fltst two years of the live year
plan. The money Is to be used for
roads. bridges, water supply
stormwater systems, wastewater treatment facility. sanl·
tary system, solid waste disposal
facility etc.
.
Continued on page 10

·Eastern District. ·residents to •
vote·on 12.4 mill levy Tuesday
f

absentee voting for the special
Voters of the Eastern Local the additional proposed 12.4 mills
election
Tuesday.
School District will go to the polls on the same property with no
The board office will be open
in a special eleetlon Tuesday to change In assessed value, the
cast ballots on a 12.4 mill annual groSs taxes would be from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday
which Is the deadline for that
continuing tax levy for schools.
$345.4'i.
.
If passed the levy will generate
The · Meigs County Board of type of voting In the special
·
·
an additional $383,893.99 per year Elections Office on Mechanic St., election.
Polls on Tuesday will be open
!or operating expensee based on Pomeroy, will m'llntaln special
from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30p.m. ·
Four Meigs County establish· conduct with regard to the sale of
The Order of Eagles, which the 1988 property valuation, office hours Saturday to process
tobacco
products
to
a
minor:
anq
holds a private club liquor according to William Wickline,
ments with liquor licenses !rom
the Ohio Department of Liquor a thjrd !or permitting or allowing
license, was also cited for selling · Meigs County Auditor.
beer to a non·lflember.
· Currently the school Is operal·
Control were cUed In January for gambling on the premises, In·
I lcense violations. according to a volving a raffle or drawing.
On January 118, liquor permit lng on local tax monies or
In addition to the citations, two
spokesperson !or the Depart·
holder May Mayle, doing busi- $619,183.80 received !r001 20
arrests were made. Robert
men! of Liquor Control.
ness as the Old Liberty Bar, West milts. This, of course. does ilot
LPD Carry·Ou t In Chester Combs. 19, of Long Bottom, was · Main Street. Pomeroy, was cited Include state funding for schools.
!or selling and or furnishing beer The· .50 mill in the 20.50 mills
Township and the . Fraternal arrested for iurnlsl)lng beer to a
There are currently openings of Meigs County, must be deterto a minor.
being -collected Is for bond
Order of Eagles Club In Pomeroy minor, and a 17-year-old Long
In the Meigs County Health mined to be In nutritional need by
Two arrests were made at the retirement. The 20 mills In
were the most recent establish· Bottom yputh was arrested !or
Department's nutrition and food the WlC health professional, and
purchasing
beer
while
under
the
Old Liberty, including Mayle, general operating funds curments to receive citations. Both
program for low Income preg- must meet Income guldelineswho was charged with furnishing rently being collected Is required
were visited by liquor control legal age.
nant and post-partum women, .Once certified for the program,
The Fraternal Order of Eagles,
beer to a minor, and Gregory P . - lor the district to participate&gt; In
authorities on Friday evening,
known WIC (Women, Infant and a participant Is eligible for a
East Main St., Pomeroy. was
Rager 18 of Columbus· for the State Foundation Funds.
January 27.
Children) program, accordlpg to specific period of time and then
As for taxable personal propThe liquor permit for L.P.D. cited by the department for purch~slngbeerwhlleunde~age.
Deborah Babbitt, R. N., the must be re-evaluated on a
Carry-Out, State Route 7. Ches· permitting and-or allowing gam[ The Watering Hole. s.tate erty, W!ckllne explained that
regular basis to determine conproject director.
ttoute 7, near Pomeroy, in there Is an exemption of$10,000
ter Township, Is Issued to Ralph bling on the premises, involving
As
of this month there are over tinued eligibility. Women who
Sallsb4ry Township, was tnvesti· before the 12.4 proposed levy
B. and Mary E. Wells. The Wells electronic video gambling rna·
a thousand clients participating are pregnant, post-partum. up lo
gated on January 13. The permit would apply. Trailers, he said,
'were given three citations: one chines. Two Riverboat Poker
In tile program which Is admlnls· six month after delivery, or
holder for the Watering Hole Is are taxed at thesamelevyrateas
for selling and-or furnishing beer machines were ~onflscated ·by
tratered through the local Health ·breast-feeding (up to one year
the department.
F.R.J .C. Incorporated ..The cor- real estate based on the assessed
to a person under 21, a minor;
Department with annual grants afler delivery) and chlklren wbo
·another for allowing Improper
poratlon was cited for selling valuation.
are less than five years old may
of federal dollars.
and-or furnishing beer to a
While the county Is scheduled
WIC pro:"des screening tor be eligible for the program,.
minor, and for selling and-or for a tri·annual u~ate on propnutritional problems Including The monthly food coupons which
furnishing Intoxicating llquor 10 erty valuation thts year, Wick·
assessing growth rate, analyzing eligible partiCipants receive can
·a minor
line anticipates minimal
blood lor anemia and evaluation be redeemed for specified foQds
Three .arrestsweremadeat the changes. Reappraisal Is scheof diet Intake. Nutrition educa· at participating grocers, and
es tabllshment Including Todd duled for 1992 and should the
lion Is ,an Important part of the Includes milk, eggs, cheese.
Ackerman, 18', of Long Bottom, assessed valuation be up, the law
Approximately 1,860 Columbus Southern Power custpmers
program, according to Mrs. juice, peanut butter and Iron
for purchasing beer and lntoxl· provides !or a reduction factor so
were without eleetrlclty for abouttwoand one-hal! hours Friday
Babbitt, who says that an eflortls fortified cereals.
morning. .u •• ~ ... ~·...
eating liquor while under age· that any levy would produce only · made through education to bring
Each Individual certified for
)..crena Ackerman, 18, Long the same amount of money It did
Rod MCibl!de, manager - of C:olurnbus Southern Power's
about positive and permanent the program receives a food
Oalll~a~e~. reported that the outage occurre&lt;tat 6:50a.m.
Bottom, for consuming tntoxlcat· at the time It was pasl!f(l.
changes In ,e atlnl patterns so package designed lor special
and a~customers In upper Cheshire and the.south hal! of
ing liquor while under age; and
Wickline explained the effect
that health Is Improved.
needs. Each food package varies
MlddlepeN-Hieludlng Bradbury, Roush, Bone Hollow, Bailey
Jacqueline K. Carl, 46, of Racine, on taxes by the proposed 12.4 mlll
WIC Is also a health program In amount and types of food
Run and Leading Creek Roads. Power was restored by utility
for furnishing beer to a minor.
levy to be voted on Tuesday.
designed to operate as an adjunct prescr~.
.
Agents for the Department of Using property In Chester Townworkers at 9:18a.m. ·
Further Information on the
to existing low cost prenatal and
The• problem- oceurred, McDade said, In tbe vicinity of
Liquor Control Investigated the ship as an example, he said that · pediatric clinic or physician program or appointments for a
Bradbury Road and State Route 7 where two Insulators failed
various Meigs County establish· under the 20.50 current tax rate
services. Mrs. Babbitt consuHatlon may be made by
ments based upon complaints structure, property with an as·
and had to be repfacecl. McDade said a resident In that area
calling the Meigs County Health
explained.
received In Columbus.
sessed value or $111,500 has an
reported that people had been target practlclngwlth a gun In the
Par~lpants must be resldenta Department, 992-6626.
last lew days. He said It Is possible that t!Je Insulators were used
Arrest charges are to be heard annual gross tax of $215.25. With
as targets and sustained damage, but continued functioning
In Meigs County Court; with the
until moisture from last night's rain caused them to fall
exception
of the 17-year·old who
'.
will appear In Meigs JuvenUe
entirely.
Classes at Middleport and Bradbury Elementary Schools and
Court.
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Vol· just discusses It and does not act, wlll 10
effect at 12: 01 a.m.
Meigs Junior High School were canceled due to the power
Citation charges will be ans· tng to kill a proposed 51 percent which Is a strong posslbiUty.
. EST Wednesday unless both the
outage. A spokesman lor the school reported tliat only a few
wered In Columbus before a raise for lawmakers, the Senate
Selljltors said tht! 51 percent Senate and House V\)te It down
students were on buses at the time classes were canceled at the
three-member commission for tossed the politically sensitive· lncre*se Is unjustified at a time And Wright, In response to tm;
three schools 'and they were returned home. The day lost from
the Department of Liquor Con·
Issue to the House, where of budget deficit• and possible confidential appeals of hts col·
school counts as a calamity day the spokesman said.
trot. No date has been set !or the Speaker Jim Wright Is lighting to cutbacks ltpopular social prct- leagues, bas declined to schedule
rescue a less generous Increase. grams mplalnta that are the question for a vote.
hearing In Columbus and no set
,
certainly r fleeted In the heavy
penalties exist for liquor license
:"olatlons. According to the deThe recommendation of lt bags of mall being deposited In
lns!l!ad, he has called for the
,partment
spokesman,
the
compresidential
commission
that
tile
thelr.olflces.
House
members to consider a 30 '
The deadline for applying lor the Home Energy Assistance
percent
Increase In their salary
possibly
suspend
a
salaries
of
members
of
Congress,
But
critics
such
as
consumer
mlsslon
could
Program (HEAP) has beentl!xtended to Feb. 10.
license
and
Issue
a
line,
Issue
a
judges,
and
senior
executive
activist
Ralph
Nader
say
the
from
S89.500 to $116,300 The Ohio Department of De\'elopment has added 10 days of
re!onns of rules
coupled
with
fine
alone,
find
a
violator
guilty
branch
officials
be
raised
from
Senate
vote,
and
Wrlgbt'sefforta
sign· up time to alloW more botllebolds to seek assistance.
restricting
their
ability to earn
without a penalty or dismiss the $89,500toS135,000wasdeleatedln to scale the Increase down to 30
HEAP, a federally funded program, provides either a credit
outside
Income.
citation altogether. Each case
the Senate on a 95-5 vote percent, amount' to political
on beating bills or a voucher to purchase fuel. The amount of
But If that 30 percent pay
before
the
commlsslollls
decided
·
Thursday
night.
posturing.
.
assistance depends on household Income and size as well as the
on Its own merits, the spokes perBut the pay Increase will go
Thl.s Is because the recommen· Increase Is accepted, It .ts unContinued on page 10
son said.
·
Into effect anyway If the .House . dation of a 51 percent 'pay raise likely the Senate will accept lt .

State liquor· control cites
.- 4 Meigs County area firtns

~IC program

has openings

for Meigs Cour:r-ty women

One player gueses
all Lotto numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - One
player picked all six numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed·
nesday night to become eligible
to claim the $9 million jackpot.
The name of the winner will be
announced after the winning
ticket Is redeemed at a state
lottery office, a lottery commls·
slon spokesman said Thursday.
The winner numbers were 11, 16,
24, 25, 33 and 44.
The player will receive the
winnings In 20 annual payments
of $360,000, after mandatory
federal taxes are withheld.
In addition to the top-prize
winner, 217 players picked five or
the numbers to win $1.000 each,
while 8,665·players selected four
of the numbers to win $84 apiece.
Ticket sales for the midweek
drawing totaled $6,338,709 while
the total prize payout was
$9,944,860. The jackpot for Satur·
day night 's drawlngwlllbeworth
$3 million.
In the accompanying Kicker
game, there also. was one winner
of the $100,000 grand prize. The
winning Kicker n4.m ber was
862270.
.'
In addition. to lhe one ticket
that had the slx Kicker numbers
In exact order, five had the first
five, w)llch pays $5,000; 69 had
the first four, which pays $1,000;
&amp;38 had the first th~. which
pays $100; and 8,099 had ihe first
two, which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$906,613 and the prize payout
totaled $358. 79().

.
•

Punlue

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Power outage reported today

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SALE 1HIU FEI. 11TH
ONE OF A liND mMS

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