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SIFE team questions
residents· about deficit
RIO GRANDE - Members of
the Rio . Grande ColiegP C'nmmunily College Students in Free
Enterprise team recently &lt;'On·
dueled a survey at each
member's home town lo fi nd how
much citizens in their local
crimmunities know abou t the
federal deficit .
Results showed tha i only :11
perce nt knew that the· fede ra l
deficit was between $130 billion
and $160 billion.
Ninety-three percent said th a t
to ' reduce the federa l deficit ,
spending must be reduced.
Forty-one percent of the people
polled indicated that the first
reduction should be welfare,
while 37percentsaid thai defense
spending should be cut.
Those surveyed who said that
Increasing taxes would hel p
solve the federal deficit problem
Indicated by 31 percent that the
price of imports should be raised.
Only 11 · percent said that busi-

nesses should absorb the Increase in taxes. Others indicated
that luxury items should be tax ed
more. ·
As a resu lt of this survey, SIFE
members will write press releases about the federal deficit to
be placed in the communities
where the ·survey was ta ken .
Projects like this are conducted throughout the academic
year by the SIFE students. ·
One of the ma-j or projects at the .
regional and national competitions is to make people more
aware of the federal deficit
America faces·.
Th e regional competition will·
be held in April in Cleveland. The
top Jour teams in the region will
be im1ted to compete in the
national competition to be hold in
Kansas City In May.
SIFE is a co-s ponsor o! a panel
discussio n t·egarding the deficit
at the monthly OVMA breakfast
meeting. Tuesday , Feb. 7.

Part 6

The Raccoon Creek Story

Jobless rate hits 5.4
percent during January
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Unemployment rose slightly to 5.4
percent in January but a robust
economy also created 408,000
new payroll jobs with. retailing,
construction and manufacturing
leading the way, the government
said Friday.
The jobless rate was 5.3 percent in December. The 0.1
percent hike in January was
caused by an unusually large
increase in the labor pool, the
Labor Department said.
Total employment as mea·
sured by a survey of households
rose by 700,000 out of an expanded pool of 870,000 workers to
a level of 116.7 mllllon, ·or a
record 62.9 percent of the
working-age population.
The non-farm payroll job increase of 408,000 last month,
after a revised jump of 221,000 in
December, brought total payroll
jobs to 108 million, according to
the department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
Ali figures were adjusted for
seasonal variation.
Jobless rates for most working
groups changed little in January ,
with unemployment at 4.6 percent for adult men. 4.7 percent

GALLIPOLIS - Raccoon deserves.
Creek has been subjected to the
For t he coon hunter or hunters
ravages of reckless timber cut- that like to run and train dogs.
ters, extreme flooding and many Raccoon Creek and many other
other ruthless treatments and no streams in our area can once
thought has been given to ways again become a. hunters parathat will correct these mistakes; dlse. ·For the hunter who favors
Those old oak, beech, hickory. the shot gun or we wlll say the
sycamore maple and man y other nimrod s, no finer habitat was
species that provided food and ever provided for squirrel, tab- ·
shelter were cut many yea'rs ago bits. groundhogs . racC'Oons, pasfor lumber that built barns, 's ums, skunks and minks .
By Constance S. White
houses and utility buildings on
We often think of pleasures we
GalllaSWCD
farms and in villages . That ts the used to have when we floated
era when those trees should have down the Raccoon and hunted
GALLIPOLIS- One of the new
been replaced with young see- squirrels, groundhogs and ducks
packets
offered this year with the
dlings of the same species that . .or various spectes.
Gallia
SWCD
tree seedling sale is
were cut.
These and many more are the
the
Fruit
Tree
Packet. Contained
We cannot order trees from
thoughts of your Raccoon Creek
in
the
packet
is
one each of the
nurseries today and get the same Committee. We are pleased with
Jon
nee
Apple,
D'anjou
Pear, and
kind or species that once existed,
the progress that has been made
for their replacement. We c11 n and hope t.o have much more Red Sensation Pear.
The Jonnee apple Is a true
get oak, maple, ash and others,
when weather permits.
.
Jonathan. On this variety you get
but they do not grow the long tap
It is going to take the coroot so necessary to re-enforce operative effort of the committee fuU color throughout the tree
even in shady areas. Color starts
the creek banks and shore line and many more people to acand -stop the plate erosion that is compiish that th'ings we would with a prominent stripe, fUUng in
later to a rich overall red with
devastating the creek channel.
like to see done.
stripes
barely visible. The JonEspecially effected by this are
Raccoon is a stream one
nee
tree
has proven vigorous and
the deep pools that once were the hundred miles long and does not
productive.
Its susceptibility to
have a major city or large
home of many large catfish,
firebUght
and
mildew is similar
bass, panflsh, walleye, and mus- !actory on or near its entire
to
conventional
Jonathans. The
kle that we today only hear and length that would u~ it as a
average
plcklng
dates would
read about. Yes, Raccoon was
wast.edlsposal plant to take care
range
from
Sept.
10
to Sept. 25.
the horne for many of these fish , of its affluent. But, it does have
This
Is
a
seml·dwarf
tree which
and can be again if we ran give old coal mines that In past years
In
three to
should
produce
fruit
the proper treatment and care it
have poiiuted its waters with
four
years
and
the
mature
height
sulfur dioxide or heavy concenwill
be
10-12
feet
.
trations of sulfuric acid.
The D'anjou pear has a light
In later years the acid has
become diluted to a point where It green color. The flesh Is a very
Continued from D-l
mild line texture. The fruit stores
does not klll !Ish like it once did.
estimated 97 percent of the 1988
well. It Is more blight resistant
it
does
sometimes
klll
However,
production. The season average
than the Bartlett. Picking dates
the
rough
types
such
as
carp,
price stood at $161.27 per
are
from September 15th to the
shad
and
suckers.
hundred. That Is about $4.76 per
hundred or nearly a ni ck~l a
pound higher that last year. The
Burley Cooperative (pool) tak e
for the season stands at 2.2. per
cent.
According to my figures that is
just a little over eleven million
'"We Manage Your Ri8k"
pounds. There Is a lot of rumor
437 Second lve!Mit, Gallipolis
SINCE
over next years quota increase.
Opposite
tht
Post
OHice
1951
The annual tobacco produce r
meeting is scheduled for Thurs- ,
day, March 9, 7:30 p.m. at
Hannan Trace High School.
"To no-lUi" or "not to no-!iii"!
No-till results varied widely this
past season. No-till experts adUFE
HEALTH
HOMEOWNER I
8Ui1NEIS
OIIOU•
A.UTO
vise against abandoning the
&amp; FARM
'
practice because of last ye ars'
bad experience. Indiana agrononlst are convinced that no-till
works over the lonjl'hauland they
have test data back to 1967 to
Mon.· Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-8:30 til 4:30
prove lt. The dry 1988 weat her
Thursday
&amp; Saturday-8:30 til 12 Noon
prevented seedling roots fr om
JOHN
H.
SAUNDERSBETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
developing normaiiy . Residual
HOWARD
BAKER
SAUNDERS
-CONNIE HEMPHILL
herbicides didn't have sufficient
moisture to become activated .
The Jan. 1. cattle on feed count
showed numbers down 4 pe r cent·
from a year earlier. Numbers
stU! Indicate that beef production
Is going to be down and prices up
this year compared to 1988.
Steer calves on feed under 500
pound on Jan. 1 were down 26
percent from a year earlier. The
500-699 pound group of steers
were off 16 per cent It ts likiey
that heavier cattle wUI partially
offset this void. Recent market
data and economic Indicators
point to beef demand remaining
OK for the year.

for adult women. 4.6 percent for
whites and 12 percent for blacks.
The jobless rate for teenagers
jumped 1.6 percent to 16.4 percent; for HisP.nlc workers, the
rate rose 0.8 percent to 8.4
percent, the department said.
The large growth In the labor
pool in January was caused in
part by the mild winter experienced by most of the country.
Because there were fewer layoffs
due to the weather, employment
in the construction industry,
when seasonally adjusted. rose
by 100,000.
Manufacturing added 45,000
jobs to the economy. It was the
fourth straight monthly increase
in factory jobs, the department
said:
·
Retailing provided 135,000 new
jobs in January, with a wide
variety of stores accounting for
the increase.
ln other categories, wholesale
trade added 35,000 jobs, transportation and public utilities employment increased by 45,000and
service Industries saw job increases of 75,000. In the services
sector, health-related jobs
jumped by 35,000 while business
services fell slightly after four

consecutive monthly increases.
the department said.
·
The average workweek in
private businesses rose 0.2 hours
last month to 34 .5 hours. TM
fact~ry workweek also increased
to 41 hours with overtime remaining at 3.9 hours, the department
said.
Average hourly earnings of
private . workers cltmbed 0.6
percent .last month while average weekly earnings rose 1.2
percent.

New fruit tree packets
are being offered this year

'I

Bulls...

HOWARD BAIER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.

-446-0404
COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL

February SALE

Fanner optimism
could boost fann
equipment sales
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Farmer optimism could boost
farm equipment sales in 1989,
says Allan Lines, agrlcu It ural
economist at Ohio State
University.
Lower debt, stronget crop
prlces and llredlrtions of continued high income through 1989
are encouraging many farmers
to think about replacing aging
eauloment.
The drought changed. some of
those thoughts but, Lines says,
better-than-expected yields
brought back some of the optimIsm and interest IIJ buyi ng
equipment.

eligiblC? for refund

Save

FILTER
SPECIAL

REG. 122.50

MOST AMERICAN CARS

5 qts. oil. new oil filter. lubricate chassis, chock ail fluid

lavals, tire preuure, balta.
hoses and check exhauet system condition.

ENGINE
TUNE UP
SERVICE
SPECIAL

·::t,
.t;j

Car~)

We'll Ht cater, camber and toe·
in to'fnenufacturer' s specifications. Check suspension Part!S tor
wear and damage. also tirBB for
wear and safety. Parts extra. if

needed. No extra charge for aircondit~ned can, or torsion bars.
Call for an appointment now.

BRAKE SERVICE SPECIAL

Moat Am. Cars

$ 7910

RETURN FROM CAMP DAVID- President
Bush and first lady Barbara Bush walk to the
While House Sunday foUowlng their return lrom .
. Camp David. While on his first lrlp to the

.~:.ln"cre.ase

in convicted felon~
·squeezes U. S. prison space

After Rebate

'

1989 PONTIAC LEMANS

SAVE BIG
ON

"2~'

1988 BUICK SKYHAWKS
HOLDOVERS -'- LOADED
•

$6714

ONLY SALES TAX EXTRA

Men's Converse Cons ......... S3QOO

Men's Converse Fast Breaks . S3QOC)

Sl 000 Rebates ••• Grand Prix, Park Avenue
S 750 Rebate •••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••• Bonneville
S 500 Rebate .•.•Grand Am, Skylark, Regal
S 400 Rebate •••••LeSabre, Century
lemonS IEIC. VALUE LEADER)

Men's Converse 200 •••• Now

$3 500
$3 500

Men's Converse 300••. ~••• Now

5QOO
LIMITED SIZES ALL GROUPS

Large Group Children's Converse
Kid-Cons &amp; Fast Kids
Mon. &amp; Fri. U I P.M.
, ••.• Wtd. Tlwr.
Til 7 P.M.
Sriturdoy U 5 P.M.

$2 900

presidential retreat, Bush meet with financial
advisors, includinK Treasury Secretary Nicholas
Braily, in an effort to resolve the crisis In the
savings and loan .lndustry. UPI
I

$12,990

26 Cent•

may take
over 350 sick S &amp; Ls

"" . . $19?0

12 Wheel Front Disci

Section. 12 f»ages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

~vemment

'FRONT ENO
.ALIGNMENT

REG. 122.50 fMo1t Am.

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, O,hio, Monday. February 6, 1989

WE HONOR GOLDEN BUCKEYE AND
AARP EVERY DAY.

FACTORY SPONSORED REBATES

Men's Spot Bilt ..................

Vot.39. No.1 89
Copyrighted 1989

With An Engine Tune-up or
Brake Service.

LUBE,
OIL &amp;

Cloudy tonight. Low In mid
leens. Chance of snow 30
percenl. . Tuesday, mostly
cloudy . High in mid 30s.
ehance of snow 20 percent.

•

10% On Service Repairs During January

•Power Windows
•Power Door Locks
•AM-FM-Cassette
•Tilt Wheel
•Cruise Control
•Aluminum Wheels
•Rear _Defogger

ONly

Pick4 5104
Super lotto
2-7-14-22-32-35
Kicker 969911

PLUS We'll Wash &amp; Vacuum Your Car FREE

FACTORY LIST S15,354oo

DELIY.ERED

808

Page 4

a

1989 PONTIAC GRANil PRIX

BRAND NEW!

Daily Number

ATTENTION SENIOR CITIZENS

$1795

25th.
The other is the Red Sensation
which is a beautiful, rich, red
colored fruit and is similar to the
Bartlett In flavor, size and
quality. The variety will have
reddi~h leaves and bark. Picking
·dates are from Aug. 20 to Sept 5.
The pear varieties are seedling
root stock, so they are classed as
standard trees and will grow to
about 12 to 15 feet tall. This, of
course, can be controlled tasome
extent with pruning. These seedlings will be 3 to 5 feet tall.
In addition seedlings offered
this year are white arid scotch
pines, Colorado blue 1 spruce,
hybrid poplars, flowening tree
combination packet, wildflower
seed packet, as well as myrtle
and crownvetch ground•cover.
For morE: Information please
contact our office at ,446-8687.
Orders must be prepaid and
made·by March 10. Pick up is set
for March 23 and 24.

·Fanners may be
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Taxes paid for farm diesel .fuel
may be refunt;led with interest
under
special one-time pro-·
gram offer by the · Inter nal
Revenue Service.
Richard Duvlck, agricultural
economist at Ohio State Univer-sity, says farmers who bought::
fuel between Aprll1 and Dec. 31.
1988, to use for farming may be:
eligible for a tax refund.
Apply for the refund after t.h efuel is used but before June 30,
1989, by filing Form 843, CLAIM .·
The IRS will refund the tax paidplus interest. .
,
For 1989, farmers need to file a·
tax exemption certificate with.
their diesel fuel supplier to avoid:
paying tax when they buy fuel. _

Ohio Lottery

Iowa
upsets
Illinois

February 5, 1989.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page-D·8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

WASHINGTON (UP!) -State
courts convicted about 583.000
felons in 1986, a statiStic that
reflects the worsening squeeze
on prison space in the United
States, a new analysis by the
Bureau of Justice Statistics said
Sunday.
The analysis, for the first time
providing data on state court
felony activity, found that about
46 percent of those convicted that
year were sent to a state prison
and anot.her 21 percent to a local
jail.
A spokesman for the bureau. a
component of the Justice Department's Office of Justice Programs. said the last nat ion wide
prison count showed there were
604.824 state and federal prisoners as of June 30. 1988, an
increase of 23,240 over the
numbtir six months earlier.
If that trend continued. the
nation would need 900 new prison
beds every week, said thesp_okesman. who noted that the statistics reflect the worsening

squeeze on prison space in tl\e
United States.
But, he said bureau statisticians have yet to fully gauge the
.significance of the 1986 felony
conviction numbers because
!herO? was no similar data for
prior years.
The analysis, based on data
from 100 counties selected from
·throughout ·I he country, found
that state courts accounted for
about 95 percent of all felony
convictions. with federal couris
contribut.ed another 31 ,537
convicts.

According to the data. 286.526.
or about half of those convicted in
state courts that year, were
convicted of murder . rape,
robbery, aggravated assault and
drug trafficking.
. The bureau said about 2
percent olthe 583,000 convictions
resulted In a death sentence and
24 percent in life sentences.
although many of those given life
terms later are eligible for
parole.

It said that of those convicted. ·

an estimated 31 percent were
given straight probation with no
prison or jail tlme. State court
sentences for tho~e not given life
in prison, it said, averaged just
less than seven years and a
typical offender was released
after IE&gt;ss than three years in
prison, serving about 41 percent
of the original sentence.
Robbers were sentenced to an
average of 11.5 years, serving
about five years before being
released. the study found .
•
The bureau estimated that 37
percent of the 76,437 drugtrafficking convicts received a
prison sentence and 27 percent
got a jail sentence. Drugtrafficking offenders were sentenced to an average of about six
years. of which they would serve
less than two years.
One federal -law enforcement'
official noted that state and
federal judges are fully aware of
the crowded prison conditions In
imposing sentences.

WASHINGTON !UP!) -The
administration is considering a
takeov~:r of 350 sick savings and
loans to control those Institutions
and prevent their problems from
spreading into healthy sectors of
the financial industry. It was
reported Sunday.
The New York Times, quoting
unidentified administration officials, said the takeover option Is
among those President Bush
discussed this weekend during a
meeting at Camp David with his
c hie! advisers.
The president is expected to
announce th.e administration's
plan sometime before Thursday.
when he is scheduled to address a
joint session of Congress.
The proposal, offered in a
report by the General AccountIng Office - the investigative
arm of Congress, calls for a
speedy takeover of the 350 thrift .
institutions that are in the dlresi
straits.
Thee Pitt of the industry U.S.
League of Savings instil utions
said Sunday on ABC's " This
Week with David Brinkley" the
takeover option is "one that we
favor" but said the proposal may
be just one of several that could
be needed to save ailing thrifts. ·
The Times reported that under
the proposal, the savings and'
loans would be turned over to the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp., which oversees banking.
The F-Meral Home Loan Bank
Board regulates and Insures the
thrift industry . Lax regula! ion by
that agency, mtsmangement and
possibly criminal activity over
the past five years apparently

"Big chill'
spreads to
lower states

By United Press International
The cold wave spread across
nearly the entire nation Monday
with record temperatures shat·
tered or !led In at least 11
Western cities.
The National Weather Service
said southern Georgia and most
of Florida were the only regions
in the lower 48 states escaping
the "big chill."
The arctic air. which originated in Alaska, should persist
until at least the end of this week,
the weather service said.
There may be a gradual
warming trend early next week,
forecasters said.
Temperatures broken or tied
early Monday included Casper,
Wyo., 120 below I. Eureka. Calif ..
(29), Grand Junction, Colo., 118
below), Midland, Texas. (9),
Oakland, Cailf., (33), Pocat.eiio,
Idaho, (20 below), Portland, Ore.
118), Sacramento. Calif., (28),
San Angelo, Texas, (12), San
Francisco (35) and Wichita
Falls, Texas. (10)
Six inches of snow fell during
the night across southwest lower
"They want to have the option
Michigan.
to be a part of their community,
In Austin. Texas, where sleet
no matter how old they might
and
freezing drizzle fell , Mayor
be," he said. "The system in .
LO?e
Cooke
proclaimed a state of
Ohio, however. is not geared to
emergency
and both houses of
what most people want."
the
Legislature
planned to take
He spoke of eldercare in his
day
off
Monday.
the
State of the State address and has
A Continental Airlines 727 with
made it one of his high priorities
in the budget .
42 people aboard skidded off an
ley runway at San Antonio
Some of the services for the
elderly outlined In the budget call
International Airport Sunday,
for expanding the PASSPORT
but no one was hurt, an airport
program to ail Ohio counties by
spokewoman said .
1990; developing housing options
Authorities blamed the
for the elderly by using existing
weather for at least nine deaths
hOmes; expanding the, funding
In Texas during the weekend.
for home-delivered meals; proFour people died of exposure and
viding transportation services
five were killed in accidents on
for the elderly; and developing
Icy roads. Two people froze to
six service delivery pilot · prodeath In Oklahoma and two
grams to help the eldery.
people have died on ley Oregon
highways since the chill
The PASSPORT program curslammed the nation, the latest
rently operates in 12 counties.
Saturday.
providing services to help the
.Light to moderate snow was
elderly remain living independfalling from Maryland across
ently as long as possible.
.much of New York state, northCeleste said that the Medicaid
ern
Ohio, western Kentucky,
program pays 62 percent of all
Continued on page 12 .
the nursinJZ home care

Governor Celeste explains
state's eldercare proposals.
~

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPI) Gov. Richard Celeste says he
wants to redirect future resources for the elderly to the home
and community and not to
nursing homes.
The governor, in his Saturday
bi-weekly radio program, " The
Ohio Report," said the state's

'

'

approach to eldercare is unbal anced, with Ohio investing most
of its money in institutional care.
. "This is not what most people
want," the governor said. "Every study that's done comes up
with the same conclusion: People want to stay in their own
homes for as long as they can.

Associates puzzled
over Lukens charges

•

DAYTON, Ohio IUP!)- Allegations that Rep. Donald "Buz"
Lukens had a sexual liaison with a teenage girl contradict his
Image as a pro-family, conservative legislator, associates of the
Ohio congressman said.
.
Lukens, ,a Republican from southwestern Ohio, is being
Investigated by the Franklin County prosecutor concerning
charges he had sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1985 and again last
year at his Columbus apartment
State Rep. Willian Batchelder, R-Medina, said he was
"shocked" by the charges. "! never would have guessed," he
told the Dayton Dally News in Sunday's editons.
But other associates. who agreed to speak only on condition
their names were not used, said questions have been r!llsed
about Lukens' private life In the past.

- · ...... ___. _ _ _ r-_

-

-

~

has contributed to the crisis.
So many thrifts are in danger
that administratiOn officials and
members of Congress h.ave predicted that as much as $100
billion would be_needed to bailout
the industry .
At Camp David, Bush was
presented with proposals to
rescue the stricken industry in a 3
\1,- hour meeting Saturday with
Treasury Secretary Nicholas
Brady, budget director Richard
Darman and chief of staff John
Sununu.
Administration officials said
the multi-faceted plan Included
the suggO?s!ion that savings lns!i·
tutlons carry much of the cleanup cost.
Late last month, Brady advanced an idea - apparently
originaling with Darman - that
consumers pay 25 cents for every
$100 deposited in banks and thrift
institutions to generate the necessary money for the savings
and loan bailout.
That proposal was pronounced
dead by congressional leaders
but Bush insisted he was still
considering the idea.
Administration officials confirmed Saturday a Times report

that another option was to raise
about $50 billion through a
combination of selling bonds and
raising premiums to liquidate or
sell hundreds of insolvent thrifts
over the next three years .
.The Sunday Times quoted
advocates of the ta keover option
as saying the FDIC, with 4,000
bank liquidators and a reputa tion
for toughness, would be better
able to control the indu stry's
problems than the Home Loan
Bank Board, which has a s maller
staff.
A takeover of ailing thrifts
could prevents the Industry's
problems from seeping into
healthy financial institutions.
The longer the insolvent thrifts
remain open, the higher the cost
to the government and the
industry. A sick ins!l!ution pays a
higher Interest rate on its deposits to retain its cash levels, which
forces healthy cash -rich inslil.u!lons to raise deposit rates.
With FDIC control of sic k
savings and loan s. limits could be
placed on the risks taken and
s lowly reduce interest rates until
Congress came up with e nough
money to close the Institutions or
find a buyer for them .

OpposiJion:·to 50
percent satary
hike is ·growing
WASHINGTON iUPll - As- .
sistant Senate Republican leader
Alan Simpson of Wyoming said
Sunday the loud public opposition
to"the proposed federal pay raise
is a reaction to an "undefeatabie" House that no longer is
responsive to voters.
A proposed 50 percent pay
increase for members of Congress, federal judges and toplevel executive branch o!ficlals
is to go Into effect Wednesday .
With !.he increase, a lawmaker's
salary will go from $89,500 to
$135,000.
Before leaving office. President Reagan approved the raise
and President Bush endorsed the
increase last month .
But since the raise was proposed late last year by a
bipartisan commission, Ameri caans have besieged Congress
with outraged letters and telephone · calls: one campaign,
aimed at recalling the Boston
Tea Party, has asked people to
send lawmakers teabags with a
note reading: "No 50 percent

increase.' '
Simpson . appearing on NBC's
"Meet the Press," said he
opposes the pay increase and
called it "an anguishing. hideous
thing." But, he suggested the
furor was the House's fault
because the chamber has moved
away from the Constitution's
intent for it to be more sensitive
to voters.
''The binding (between the
governed and the government)
disappeared when the House of
Representatives· became undefeatable," Simpson said. "(The
House) was the group that was
supposed to take the heat over
there, and get bounced around
and have to run every two years,
and now, they don't care. They're
in:"
· Both· houses of Congress have
to vote no to stop the raise. Last

week, the Senate voted agai ns t
the increase. and House Speaker
Jim Wright of Texas had planned
to let the pay hike to go into effect
without a vote.

Rood sentenced
by Judge Don Cox
Gary Rood, 20 , of Reedsville.
indicted in Meigs Cou nty on two
counts of rape from incidents
which occurred last summer,
entered voluntary pleas of no
contest to the two offenses in a
recent Meigs County Common
Pleas Court appi?arance before
Gailia County Common Pleas
Judge Donald A. Cox ..
Rood. having already under gone ps ychologica l treat ment
and testing, was in co urt for a
hearing to determine his competency to stand trial. Upon the
evidence produced, the, court
found that Roe&lt;! had been restored to compentency as prescribed by law and a jury trial was
set for Feb. 7 in Meigs County.
However. lhe defendant ad·
vised the court that his understanding of what had taken place
last summer .conform ed with
information presented by Meigs
County Prosecuting Attor ney
Steven L. Story . The defendant
informed the court he desired to
withdraw a former plea of not
guilty and e~ter the plea of no
contest to each of th e two counts·
of rape.
Rood was sent enced to indeterminate sentences of a mfnimum
of five years and a maximum of
25 years on each of the charges.
The sentences are to be served
concurrently. Rood is presently
confined to th e At hens Me ntal
Hospital, pending tra nspor tation
to the Or lent Correctional Center, Orient.
Rood was represented bv At torney John R. Lentes , Pomero;~·

r--Local news· briefs---.
Pomeray man cited by patrol
A Pomeroy man was cited ln a one-car accident Sunday at 2
a.m. in Chester Township on C.R. 32, five miles east of S.R. 7.
according to4be Gallia-Melg~ Post of the State Highway Pat rdl.
James A. Duncan, 25, was cited for failure to control after his
1980 Chevrolet LUV truck went off the right side of the road and
struck an embankment. Duncan was traveling west when the
accident occurred.
·
Continued on page 12

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Commentary

Page- 2Pomeroy- Middleport; Ohio
Monday, February 6, 1989

.

Former Navy surgeon under fire again

The Daily Sentinel

WASHiNGTON- The De!en·
slve Department Is pressing an
Investigation of an anonymous
tip that former Navy surgeon
Donal Billig bribed a military
panel to let him out of jail.
Federal Investigators recently
subpoenaed Billig's bank
records.
&lt;~
·
In one of the most sensational
court·martlals of the century,
Billig was convicted In 1986 of
Involuntary manslaughter and
criminally negligent homicide In
the deaths of three patients.
Billig had been chief ofcardlotho·
raclc surgery at Bethesda (Ma-

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-Ml\SON AREA

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shouk1 be less than 300 words

long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signEd with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
gocxt tas~ . addressing Issues, not persooalltles.

ryland) N~el Hospital. Details
of botched heart surgery and
Billig's legal blindness In one eye
were among the evidence at the
court martial.
But a Court of Military Review
overturned the Cl&gt;nvtctton last
April and freed Billig from a
four-year prison sentence on the
grounds that the prosecution had
not proved its case.
One month later, the Defense
Department hotltne received
four anonymous calls'!rom someone believed to work for the
military. The tipster told invest!·
gators that Billig used another

person to pass bribes to one or
more judges on the Court of
Military Revlew. according to
court papers filed by the Detense
Department.
Initial attempts to confirm the
anonymous allegations met with
" mixed results." according to
Defense Department papers.
flied In court. That may explain
why Investigators want to look at
Billig's bank records.
The Defense ,Department in·
spector ·general's office wants
Billig's records dating from
August 1982 - the date when
Investigators say Billig first met

College tuition plans
racing toward collision
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The race is on to help parents pay for the
ever-Increasing cost of college for their offspring by 2000 and beyond.
The Ohio House, with the skimpiest of hearings, whipped a bill over
to the Senate last week providing for a savings program for parents
Interested in put11ng money away for college.
In the Senate, hearings have begun on a bill sponsored by Sen. Pl!ul
Pfeifer. R·Bucyrils, establishing an Ohio Tuition Trust to virtually
guarantet' a fully financed [our years at a state university for any
student whose parents contribute every two weeks.
.
Pfeifer's bill. patterned after a program in Michigan. cleared the
Senate in 1987 and spent the rest of last session rnired in the House ,
Education Committee.
This time, as if by magic, the alternative bill sponsored by Rep.
Paul Jones. D·Ravenna. a favorite lleulenant of House Speaker Vern
Riffe, sprang directly from a subcommittee to the House floor without
approval by full committee:- a highly unusual procedure.
Sources confirmed Riffe was putting into play the unwritten but
time-honored rule that the first bill on a given subject that passes
either chamber becomes the one that will be carried through the
legislative process.
Thus it appears that Jones's bill, though It may later be modified .
has the inside track on getting to Gov . Richard Celeste.
Jones conceded his proposal Is nothing more than a savings
program using bonds issued by the Ohio Public Facilities
Commission.
A parent purchasing a bond tor $1 ,200 could expect to cash in for
$5,000 after 15 years. given curre nt market condit ions.
Pfeifer's plan would guarantee that a $22,300 loves rment over lime
would yield almost $60,000- more than enough 10 pay tor four years
at a state universit y even with inflation .
But that inflation isn' t being helped any by the way colleges and
universities are treated In the governor's proposed budget.
Celeste has held back on ·appropriations for higher education in
hopes an education initiative will pick up the slack later this year with
an additional $660 million.
·
President Edward Jennings of Ohio State _University has warned
that tuition will rise by 40 percent at OSU If that Initiative does not get
on the ballot and pas s. Even if it does, he said. tuition Is likely 10 go up
·
·
by 23 percent. Ouch!

.

Meanwhile. reports are s urfacing that state Tax Commissioner
Joanne Limbach. one of the governor's original Cabinet members. is
In line for the chairmanship of the Public Utilities Commission of
ohio.
Chairman Thomas Chema is vacating the post in April, and may be
a candidate for attorney general In 1990 If Attorney General Anthony
Celebrezze Jr. goes for governor, as expected.
The popular Limbach would have to take a pay cut to join the
PUCO. but she has confirmed she's applied for the job and would
:: relish the challenge. With Celeste leaving In two years. the
;; commission post would give her a place to hang her hat for a few more
years.

•

Berry's World ·
•.

"I toid you no.t to graze the sheep do,wnwind from Gadhafi's pharmaceutical plant."

Jack Anderson
the person who allegedly passed
the bribe, according to an alii·
davit signed by Richard Messers·
mlth, an agent for the Defense
Criminal · Investigative Service.
The subpoena does not indicate
who Is accused of acting as the
bag man.
August 1982 is also the month
that Billig first walked Into a
Navy recruiting office looking
for a job. just days after the Air
Force refused to recruit him
because of his eyesight, accord·
lng to evidence presented at the
court-martiaL The Naval recruiter who accepted Billig was
later convicted of misconduct for
concealing Information about the
doctor's record as a clv1Uan
surgeon.
Federal District Court Judge
Herbert Maletz granted the subpoena for the bank records over
the protest of Billig's lawyer,
Joseph Levin . Levin told our
associate Stewart Harris that
Billig opposes the subpoena
because the government's Investigation Is based on anonymous
telephone calls. In court papers
he calls them "polson pen telephone calls."
The Defense Department Is
also attempting to subpeona the
bank records of Billig's wife
Bonnie, but the judge has not yet
ruled.
After the Court of Military
Review learned · ·o f the bribery
investigation, It appointed its
own "master" to Investigate the
circumstances surrounding the
decision to overturn Billig's
conviction. An Interim report
filed with the court by the
master, Judge WalterT. Cox III,
says, "To date, no one has
revealed any !Qformalton that
causes me to believe that judicial
misconduct occured... "
Since his successful appeal,
Billig has won the · right to
practice medicine In Texas.

Secretary Baker niust take charge_R_us_her
w'hen Gen. Alexander Halg
became Ronald Reagan's first
secretary of state, I remember
thinking with reltef that here, at
.least, was a tough-minded professional soldier who ought to be
practically Immune to the blan·
dlshments of the State Depart·
ment bureaucracy.
All too often I had seen strong
personaltlies - from Dulles to
Kissinger - lose their way In
Foggy Bottom and become heavlly dependent on the competent
but utterly bland, unimaginative
and overly cautious guidance of
the department's foreign service
professionals. In Halg, I was
sure, Reagan had picked a Cold
Warrior who would not (for
example) succumb to the prevailing Idea at State that the
supreme desideratum In U.S.
. relations with the Soviet Union
was "stability."
A little over a year later,
however, the hairs on the back of

my neck stirred uneasily when I
read a New York Times editorial
Implying · that Secretary Halg
had "grown" remarkably In his
job In recent months, and that a
negative judgement on him was
perhaps premature. That
seemed to lend substance to my
fear that Halg was Increasingly
becoming State's man rather
than Reagan's.
Then In June 1982 Halg confirmed that Impression by resigning, and I read, with a grim
realization of all It implied, his
parting tribute to the staff whose
zombie he had become: "OVer
the past 18 months I have come to
develop the most profound re·
spect and admiration for the
talents and dedication of the
people of the foreign service and
o! the employees of the Depart·
ment of State. They have been,
and continue to be, absolutely
superb."

The relationship between

Halg's successor, George Shultz,
and the Stale Department bu·
reaucracy Is harder to assess,
,even though (or perhaps becau,se) It lasted more than four
times as ,long. One gets the
Impression, though, that most of
the really original thinking on
matters of foreign policy, from
Central America to Cambodia,
was done In the While House, and
even the Pentagon and the
Treasury.
What makes the subject especially topical just now, of course,
Is the fact that James Baker Is
taking over as secretary of state.
Precisely whose man Is he going
to be? George Bush's for starters , no doubt; but will The New
York Times be telling us, In a
year or two, lhlll Secretary
Baker has surprised friends and
foes alike and Is turning Into the
very model of a foreign service
poodle, who heels and sits on
command?

I sincerely hope not. Jim Baker
Is a highly talented man, with a
natural gift for the nuances of
polities. He wtll, what's mbre, be
the chief exec11tor of foreign
policy for a . president who
happens to know a great deal
about the subject. Together they
are capable of designing and
Implementing foreign policies of
great power and subtlety policies that will be a vast
Improvement over those that are
likely to emerge frorp the committee processes of an Ingrown
and self-satisfied bureaucracy.
That, President Bush and
Secretary Baker cannot affordnot In the Middle East, not In
southern Africa, not In Central
America. Yet a misstep In any of
these areas might be ~ven worse
than no step at all. Let's )lope
Secretary Baker knows (or
learns) how to use the State
Department bureaucracy ,
rather than be used by it.

Will bucks bring top talent .to D..C.?

.

WASHINGTON (NEA) President Bush's transition team
has been having a hard time
luring the "brightest and best"
here to fill some 3, 000 key
government jobs. Their dlfflcul·
ties provide a strong argument in
favor of the proposed federal pay
raises.

..

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() 1911i by N(A, 1nc.

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1- 11

zation, preferably In the defense
Industry.
The problem? The position
pays only about$89,000ayear, an
amount far below what a person
at a corporation would be paid for
a similar level of resp(inslblltty
and experience.
As a res·ult, the Bush team
found It was receiving applications from men of Independent
wealth, men at or near retire·
men t age, or else men who were
looking at the job as a prelude to a
better future job In the private
sector. These latter types are
tradlttonatly the ones that cause
ethics problems.
Donald J. Atwood Jr., 63, was
finally named to the Pentagon
post. Atwood comes from General Motors where he was vice
chairman and ran, among other
things, GM' s Bell Helicopter
subsidiary. Atwood will betaking
a pay cut on the order of a halflng

a pay cut on the order of a
half-mlltton dollars a year. But,
say Insiders, he Is able to do so
because he is nearing retirement
age at GM and has clearly risen
as high as he ·can In that
organization.

As one transition personnel
staffer described it: "What we
have found, by and large, when
we have gone out and sought a
. If passed, the substantial raise
top-flight candidate In his peak
-50 percent In some cases- wit!
earning · years, say from his
go to members of Congress,
mld40s to mid-50s, is that they
federal judges and others in
simply cannot afford to come to
government, who,l!truthbelold,
work In Washington !lnless
badly need the increase.
they're the kind wlio can take an
Take, for example, the difficul$89,000 job and then come to town
ties Bush had in filling the job of
and put down a million-three
Deputy Secretary of Defense cash tor a house.
the No. 2 man at the Pentago, the
"If they don't have indeliend·
person who actually runs Its vast
ent wealth, they Just can't swing
bureaucracy. For the transition
it, especially If they have famiteam, the key was finding somelies with children of college age
one witli broad experience In
or younger. We've been able to
running a large Industrial organ!·
get some Interest from several
key J!OSSibtlltles by holding out
the possibility of the pay raise.
But they have told us If the raise
In 1865, Gen. Robert E. Lee was appointed commander in chief of
does
not go through, they will
the armies of the Confederacy.
have to say no."
· In 1943, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was named commander of
Then there is the question of
Allied expeditionary forces in North Africa. He later became World
federal Judges. Currently, fed·
War Two supreme allied commander In Europe.
eral Judges make $89,500 - well
In 1952, Princess Elizabeth became sovereign of Great Britain on
above \lie average American
the death of her father, King George VI. She was crowned Queen
salary.
But a top-flight lawyer
Elizabeth II on June 2, 1953.
maki!S
five
to 10 times this
In 1974, the Caribbean Island of Grenada was declared Independent
amount,
or
more.
and a member of the British Commonwealth.
In 19B7, broad no-smoking rules took effect for 890,000 employees In • This year, !or example, many
New York law firms are starting
6,800 federal buildings nationwide.
new assocl!lteS right out of law
school at $77,000. With meal,
A thought for the day: Zsa Zsa Gabor once joked, ' 'Macho does not
clothing,
housing allowances and
·
prove mucho. "
the like, their annual take Is
about
. the same, as the federal

·Today in history._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, Feb. 6, the 37th day of 1989 with 328 to follow .
The moon Is 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
England's Queen Anne In 1665, statesman Aaron Burr In 1756,
author-psychologist Walter Pitkin, author of "Life Begins at Forty,"
In 1878, baseball great George Herman 'Babe' Ruth In 1895, President
Rouald Reagan In 1911 (age 78), actress Zsa Zsa Gabor In 1923 (age66), actor Rip Torn In _1931 (age 58). French fUm director Francois
Tru1fautln 1932, TV news anchorman Tom Brokaw In 1940 (age 49).
and singers Fabian Forte lnl943 (age46) and NatalleColeln1950 (age
~).

'

On this date In hlstory:

,

Robert ]. Wagman
judge who Is supposedly at the
top of the legal profession.
Reportedly, former President
Reagan agreed to go along with
the proposed salary increases
· out of fear that many younger
conservative federal judges he
had appointed wou18-eventually
be forced to leave the bench
because of the low pay.
For example, the National
Institutes of Health reports that
over the last five years II has lost
almost a third of its top cancer
researchers to private Industry
and hospitals, wlilch are ablE' to
offer them much higher
compensation.
In one case, world-renowned
scientist left to accept a job
paying him five times what the
government could, and be took
with him almost 50 associates
. because hewasabletoofferthem
two to three times what they had
been making.
In order to maintain the quality
of research these scientists represent, the government has
been forced to give out research
grants that cornpensate these
people at their new private·
industry levels.
Further. government agencies
pay outside "consultants" huge
amounts each year. Many are
former employees who could not
afford to continue working at
current pay levels. But once they
are no longer government employees, they can receive higher
levels of compensation for their
services.

Monday, February 6, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Southern posts 66-53 victory over Federal .Hocking five
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sendnel Correspondent
Moving one step closer to
Insuring a wi nn ing season. the
Southern Tornadoes rolled t_o a
66-53 non-league victory over
Federal Hocking Lancers Satur·
day evening In area high school
boys' basketball action.
Southern is nuw 10-8 overall
and holds a slight edge In the
SVAC at 9-3. Federal Hocking
dropped to 6·12 over all. The

Lancers are4-10 in theTri-Valley
Conference.
Southern's !:;had Taylor led all
scorers with 25 points, while
Brad Mayna rd added 16, Andy
Baer 7,Chris Murphy 6,and Todd
Grindstaff 5.
Federal had a well-balanced
attack led by Scott Burchwell
with 11. Mike Eddie also with 11 ,
Brian McPherson 10, Larry Dis·
han 10, and Jarvis 9.
Southern jUmped_outt Oa 15-14
lead. but stumbled somewhat in

·k
K.yg.er c·ree
Senior point guard Chad Leach
dropped in a court-high 28 points
Ia push Kyger Creek to an 83-67
triumph over visiting Ironton St.
Joe·Saturday night .
"After the first half, it was
pretty well over," said KCHS
head coach Larry Markha m of
the non-league contest, In which
the Bobcats kept the Flyers'
offense from getting airborne by
posting a 41-13 halftime lead. In
addition to Leach's hot hand ,

'

the secoQd frame. when Federal
roared to a 27-22 halftime lead.
The Southern troops made
ad justments in the third period
when they posted a 25 point third
period outburst. that led them to
a 47-381ead at the end of the thord
period.
Southern itself had a well·
balanced e ffort. and espcially a
good showing from Its bench. but
the main offensive cogs were
Chad Taylor and Brad Maynard .
who added a concl usive Inside-

outsidt' punch.
led by Maynard's 11 rebounds.
A flnal19-l5 fourth period blow FH grabi,Jed 36 caroms led by
allowe Southern to put the final · Sequoia Lemon's 9 rebounds.
nail in the Lancer coffin, and the
Chad Taylor led the SHS
resulting 66•53 defeat.
defense with 3 s teals to the
Southern hit 18 of 46 from! he team 's total 11. SHS had -12
field and canned 5 of 8 thrC&gt;c tur novC&gt;o•s, 14 teams fouls. and 6
pointers. while hitting 15-24 from assists. FHHS had 12 steals and
the foul line.
13 personals.
Federal netted 23-o f-55 from
In the reserve contest Mi chael
the floor . l -5 from th e 3-pt. range, Kincaid led the little Whirlwinds
and 4 of 8 from the line.
of Coach Scott Frederick to a
Southern claimed 34 rebound s, 51·50 triumph. Kincaid hlt 2 free
throws in the late stages to give
SHS a ~9 -48 lead, but Fedeo;al's
Bobo hit a goal to put his club on
top 50-49. With fi ve second s left
JeremyRosesea letlt heSouthern
Assists- 16 (Leach 5)
victory with two free throw s for
Steals- 11 (Leach 4)
thE' 51-50 win.
Turnovers- 2&amp;
Kincaid led with 16. while
IRONTON S._ JOE (67)
Bobo, Watson , and Simpson had
Akers 4·0-5-13; Brown 3·2·0·12: 12. 10, and 10 respect ively for the
Neisel 4·1·1·12: SmUh 3-0·0-6;
Lancers. Sou the rn is now 13-5 at
Woods 0·1·3·6: Fuller 2-0·1·5:
the reset•ve leveL
Rawlins 2·0·1·5: Bryant 2-0·0-4;
Southern goes to Hannan Trace
C:ooke 2·0·0·4. 'J'OTALS- :!2-H J- Tuesday tor an important SVAC
67
make-up contest.
•
Foul shots - 11 -20 (55 pet.)
Belpre visits Federal Hocking
Rebounds.,... 34
Tuesday .
Turnovers- 20
Score hy 11 uarters:
Southern ...... ...... I ~ 7 ~5 19-66
F H .................... 14 13 11 15-53
SOUTJ!ERN (66) - Murphy

·undS 1ronfon St Joe '83•67

DW\
,

e

e~"

junior forward John Sipple got 16
points, while senior post Mike
Reesesank15andsenlorforward
Alan Denney scored 12.
For St. Joe, Akers was the high
man with 13 markers, while
teammates Brown and Neisel
chipped in 12 each.
The win gives the Bobcats only
their second win In the last e ight
games. They are 5·12 overall.
Kyger Creek will play at
Wahama Tuesday night.

Score by quarters
St. Joe ..... ........... 7 6 24 30-'-67
Kyger Creek@ullO 31 22 20-83
.KYGER CREEK (83)- Leach
5·3·9-28; Sipple 6-0·4·16: Reese
5-0-5-15: A. Denney 4·1·1·12: Bush
1-0·1·3: Johnson 1·0·1·3: Lucas
1·0·0·2: Villanueva 1·0·0·2: Brad·
bury 0-0·1·1; Gilmore 0-0-1-l.
TOTALS- 24-&lt;!.23·83
Field goals - 28-66 142.4 peL!
Foul shots- 23·45 (51.1 pet.)
Rebounds- 36 (Reese 9)

Last-second shot gives Pirates 60-59 victory
Catching a halfcourt pass from
point guard Greg Glassburn,
sophomore forward Brian Stout
proceeded ro sink a three-point
shot from 28 feet away wl\h two
seconds left in Saturday night's
road game with Latham Western
to give Nqrth Gallia a 60-59
victory,
"We weren 't looking ahead to
Wednesday (when the Pirates
play a pivotal SVAC game at Oak
Hill )," said North Gallla skipper
Bruce Wilson, whose Pirates won
their fifth straight game anil
completed a four -ga me sweep of
their non-league foes. " It was a

close game in the seco nd halt. as
the lead went back and forth by
two. three or four points. "
The game wasn 'tas closei n the
beginning, as the Bucs went
ahead 19-8 In the first quarter.
but then, Wilson said , " we
missed four one-and-ones in the
second quarter, " which gave
Western the impetus to score 19
points In that frame and tie the
game at 27 at halftime.
With 1:30 left in the gam e and
North down 55-52, Stout buried a
three-point shot to ti e the ga meat
55. With 55 seconds left. a Steve

George pass to forward Don
Mays In· the paint allowed Mays
the chance to give the Pirates a
57-55 lead.
Ten seconds lal er. th ~ Indians'
Howard Wood s sco red to lie the
affair at 57. With fi ve seco nd s
left , the Indians cashed in a
P irate turnover and a foul by
George. Latham's Gary Cross
scored his only points of I he game
when he connected on both ends
of a one-and-one, giving Western
a 59-57 lead and selling th e s !age
for Stout's game-winner.
Score by quarters
North Gallia ....... 19 8 15 18-60

Portsmouth West dawns Oaks 73-61
Brian Howell led all scorers
with. 27 points In pacing Ports·
mouth West to a 73·61 non-league
victory over visiting Oak Hill
Saturday night.
The Oaks never led in the game
and only tied the coolest once.
which was in the first quarter
when the score was 6-6 .
Howell got offensive assist·
ance from Travis Tipton (13
points) , Scott Campbell (10
points and 10 rebounds) and
Chris Hamilton (10 points ) as the"
Senators. who found themselves
ahead by five points at halftime
and by only two at the end of the
third quarter. voted to increase
the offense in prime time, scar·
ing 23 points to pull away from
the Hill.

Junior fof\Va rd Chad Smith,
who· led the Oaks with 21 points.
got help from senior fo r ward
Bobby Ward (19 point s) and
senior pivot Jedd Rawlins (10
points and 10 rebounds 1.
The Oaks will host North Gallia
Wednesday night.
!l(:ore by quarters
Oak Hill .... ........ 12 20 16 13-61
Port. West ... ...... 22 15 13 23-73
PORTSMOUTH WEST (73) Howell 8·0·11·27: Tipton 4·1·2 13;
Campbell :l -0·4·10; Hamilton 5·0·
0-10; Book 2-0.2-6; Shupert 2·0·0·
4; Melvin 1-0·1·3. TOTAlS 211-1·20· 73
'
F1eld goals- 26,64 (40.6 pe t.)
Foul shots- 20-28 (71.4 pet.)
Rebounds- 29 ICampbelllO)
Turnovers - 9

Mullins bursts
2,000-point. mark
in 77-65 victory
CANTON - Scoring her se·
cond highest game total for the
season at 35 points, Rio Grande
senior Lea Ann Mullins not only
boosted the Redwomen to a 77-65
victory over Mld·Ohlo Confer·
ence leader Walsh Saturday , but
broke the 2,000-polnt mark In her
collegiate playing career.
Currently averaging 24.4
points a game. Mullins pumped
in B7 points last week to record
2,026 markers for Rio Grande.
In addition, senior Holly Hast·
ings snatched a total of 20
rebounds against Walsh to boost
her average on the boards this
season to 10 per outing.
The· Walsh win solidified the
Rio ladies' second-place slot In
the MOC at 6·2 (13-B overall).
while Walsh maintains a hold on
the conference crown at 8·1 and
13-5 on the season.
Mullins connected on eight of
23fleld goal attempts. two offour
3-polnt tries and all 13 of free
throw shots to spark the Redwomen offense on to avenge their
80-74 defeat at the Lady Cavali·
ers' hands at Lyne Center on Jan .
17.
Rio Grande jumped far enough
ahead In the first period to lead
36-24 at the half . The' Red women
defense hung tough to hold Ann
Alpeter, one of Walsh 's top
athletes and las t week's District
22 and MOC honoree, to six
points.
Hastings added 13 points and
two assls ts to the Redwomen
effort and Ann Barnitz supplied
12 points and five rebounds.
Mullins chipped In 12 rebounds
and led the t~am In assists with
seven.
Sinking 27 of their 58 field goal
attempts, the Redwomen re·
corded 46.6 percent and were 71.4
percent on free throws. (20·28).
The vis !tors turned over the ball
20 limes and were credited with
45 rebounds.
Naomi Thomas led Walsh with
14 points and veteran Lalney

OAK HILL (61) - Smith
9-0·3·21: Ward 4-0·11·19; Rawlins
5-0·0·10: Miller 2·0·2-6; Coon
1-0·3·5. TOTALS- 21·0-19-61
Field goals- 21-52 (40.4 pe t. )
Foul shots - 19·25 (76 pel .)
Rebounds - 31 (Rawlins 10)
Turnovers - 21

ANN ARBOR. Mich. IUPil Bowling Green goalie Paul Con.
nell was named the Central
Collegiate Hockey Association
Player 'of the Week, the league
said Sunday. .
.
Connell stopped 68 of 70 shots In
the Falcons· weekend sweep over
Miami of Ohio. The 5-foot-8,
160-pound junior turned away 34
shots in a 7-1 win Friday and
another 34 shots in a 6-1 victory
Saturday .

PITI'SBURGH (UP!) - Pitts·
burgh Penguins owner Edward
DeBartolo of Youngstown, Ohio,
wants the'ctty of Pittsburgh and
Allegheny County to give him
$5.5 million In Civic Arena
renovations .
DeBartolo's company, Civic
Arena Corp., had received $11.4
million for renovations completed before October that was
part of a 1985 deal reached after
he threatened to move the hockey
team out of town .
Mayor . Sophie Mas loft said
Saturday she is stydlng the
proposal from DeBartolo, the
nation's largest shoppin mall
·
developer.

Stallworth had 13 points and 11
rebounds to complete Walsh's
top scoring. Beth Abramowski
also had 11 boards and Holly
Chapin was team leader on
assists with seven.
..
Walsh was 32.9 percent from
the field (28-85) and netted three
of eight trips to the foul line for
37.5 percent .
Rio c;:;rande will be at home
' · at 5 p.m. agamst
'
Tuesday
Malone.
Box score:
WAlSH (65) - Holly Chapin,
3·1·0·9; Lalney Stallworth, 2-3·0·
13; Beth Abramowskl, 4-1·9: Ann
Alpeter . 3·0·6: Naomi Thomas,
5-1·1·14: Stacey Richards , 2·1·0·
7; Diane Campbell. 2·1·5: Rl·
chelle Hatcher, 1·0·2. TOTAlS
22-6·3·65.
RIO GRANDE (77) - J e nni
Couch. 1·0·2: Holly Hastings ,
5-3-13: Lea Ann Mullins. 8·2·13·
35; Beth Coil, 2·1·5: Tina Azbell,
1·0·2: Ann Barnltz, 5·2·12; Betsy
Bergdoll, 0·1·0-3; Kathy Snyder,
2·1·5. TOTALS 24·3·20-77.
Halftime score: Rio Grande 36,
Walsh 24.

Pomeroy, OH.•.

~i)'
~ -'.

TIME.
,.

(·All games)
TEAM
WL P
North Gallia ..... 11 5 1123
Southern ........... 10 8 1159
Eastern ........... , 9 8 1248
Ha nnan Trace .. 8 9 1008'
.Oak Hill ....... , ... 8 10 1074
Southwestl'rn .... 7 9 1089
Kyger Creek ..... 5 12 1093
Symmes Valley 2 14 864

984

S •h

PORTLAND- Former South·
er n Tornado and Rio Grande
College girls' basketball star
Elaine Smith has been a big
contributor to the Easter n Co n·
necticut State University basket;
ball tea m this season afte r
having transferred to ,the east
coas t sc hool.
The Warriors are now 11 -5 In
the Little East "Conference, 'the
ca mpanton league to the more
widely kn ow n Bl g East
Conference.
Smith, the daught er' of Mr. and
Mrs. James Smith of Portland
was a 1982 Southern High
Graduate.
Smith, averaging 6.4 points per
game as a som et imes starter or
sixth ma n, hit 12 important
points In ECSU's win over rival
Western New England. ECSU
won the game by a whopping
109·58 .Smlth has star ted 12
games this season and has scored
124 points this season.

11 27
1199
1181
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• t t
tOr
qutn e

Saturday's rl"sults

Ana

992·2124

OP
999
1118
1277

0-2-11·6, Amos 0·1·1, Todd Gri n·
staff 2·1·5, Taylor 4·3·8-25, John·
so n 1·0·2. Lavender 0-0-0, Baer
3.-I-7. Burgess 0·0·0, Shuler 1·0·2,
Maynard 6·4·16. TOTALS 18·5·15·
66.
FEDERAL (Sa) - Burchwell
~-3·11, Ed diP5·1·11. Dishon!l-0-10,
Lairson 0-0-0. McPherson 5·0·10.
.Jarvis 1·1·9, Lemon 1·0·2. TO·
TAI.S ZH-4-53.

Kyger Creek 83, Ironton St. Jo e67
North Gallia 60, Latham Wester n
59
Portsmouth West 73, Oak Hill61
Southern 66, Federal Hocking 53
Tonight's game
Eastern at Southwestern
Tuesday's schedule
Southern ill Hanna n Trace
Kyger Creek al Wa hama
Hannan. W.Va. at Southweste rn
Symmes Valley at OVCS
Wednesday's games
North Gallia at Oak Hill
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley

Gmittd Dtliury

Wost Moin St.

Be1inning Classes
Startln1
Tuesday, Feb. 7th at
7:00 P.M. At Carleton
School in Syracuse.
For Information Call
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After 6:00 P.M.

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Latham Western. 8 19 16 16-59
NORTH GALLIA (60) - De n· ·
ney 5-0+H : Glassburn 0-4-0·12;
Stout 1·3·1·12; Mays 5·0·0·10;
P etrie 3·1·0·9: George 1·0·1 ·3.
TOTAlS - 15·8·6-60
Field goals - 23-63 (36.5 pet. )
Foul shots - 6-15 (40 pet.)
Rebounds- 40. (Mays 15)
Assists -14 (Stout 6)
Steals- 7 (Glassburn 31
Turnovers - 11
LATHAM WESTERN (59) Woods 2·2·4-14: Mustard 3·1·2·11:
Branscomb 3-0·3·9: Fite 3·1·0·9:
Montgomery 3-0.0-6; Legg 0-1·0·
3: Williams 1-0-1-3; Lightic 0·0·2·
2: Cross 0-0·2·2. TOTAlS 15·5·14·59
Field goals- 20-57 t35J pct.1
Foul shots- 14-21 (66.7 pet. )
Rebounds - 33 (Fil e 9)
Assists - 14 (Legg and Mus·
lard, 3 each)
Sleals - 4 (Cross and Fil e. 2
each)
Turnovers - 13

Connell CCHA
·player of week

Wants $5.5 million
for renovations

.,

.

The Daily Sentinel- Page 3

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Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 6, 1989

Monday, February 6, 1989

Iowa upsets No.2 Illinois; WVU ~ive w-ins _1 6th in row
By JEFF SHAIN
tMir work because there's ail
UPI Sports Writer
kinds of distractions," Iowa
:-lo. 2 Illinois. poised to regain
Coach Tom Davis sai d. ""I just
the top-ranked position it lost a
th ink, not worry about it and get
week ear lier , instead ran Into an
ori about your business. And, you
Inspired Iowa team trying tq
know , let's get after what we're
overcome the s ting of drug
here for .· which is to get our
accusa l ions published Sundav degrees. to work hard in th~
morning.
classroom and then get dow n on
the co urt.""
Ed Horton scored 26 points and
pulled down 17 rebound s to lead
The three at hletes were not
the 13th-ranked Hawkeyes 10 an
identified by the newspaper in
86-82 victory over Illinois . The
the copyrig ht story, but univerFighting 111inl were gi'"en a . si ty officials were quoted as
chance to regain the- top ranking saying $16,522 was spe nt for the
players" rehabilitation.
when No. 1 Oklahoma lost
Saturday 10 Oklahoma Sta te.
The funds came from a genera l
Ins te a d. they were ambushed expense fund in the university 's
by a Hawkeye team under heavy athletics ·department. The m&lt;fscrutin.v a ft er a front -page story ney for that fund comes from
in the Des Moines Su nd ay Regis· athletic revenues.
ter that sta ted three Iowa basket ·
Illinois' loss was its third in
ba ll players ~ ubmilt e d to four games and its sixth in its las t
s ubstance -abuse rehabilitation seven co ntests against Iowa. The
last s ummer.
lllini, 18·3 and 5·3 in the Big Ten.
""Thi s team ha s been terrific in were led by Nick Anderson with
the sense of get tin!! the! r mind on 25 points, while P.J. Bowman

added 18 poin ts and Stephen
Bardo had 17.
""1 think we played about as
well as we can play, " lllinois
Coach hou Henson said. ""We just
don' t have a lot of size. We have a
pretty good ballclub, but we just
can't walt z out there and win a
ga me."
B.J . Armstrong added 24
points and Roy Marble scored 18
for Iowa, 17. 4 and 5-3 in the
conference. Horton. Armstrong
and Marble combined for 21 of
Iowa' s last 23 points.
The new heir apparent to t he
No. 1 spot whe n United Press
International's next ran kings are
announced . Monday · is No. 3
Arizona, which won its ninth
s traight ga me Sunday with an
85-68 tr iumph over Washington.
Anthony Cook scored a seasqnhigh 23 points and Sean Elliott
a dded 21 for the Wildcats, 17-2
a nd 11-1 in the Pac-10. Arizona
held a 27-point margin from the
free- throw Una , hit ling 29 of 32

free throws. Washington made
the on ly 2 fro;&gt;e throws it
attempted.
Eldridge Recasner scored 18
points to lead the Huskies, 9-11
and 5·6 ln the Pac-10.
In other games Sunday , No. 5
Georgetown ripped Villanova
69-55: No. 10 Duke routed Notre
Da me 102-80. Wes.t Vjrginia
nipped Rutgers 60-58, Geo rgia
stopped Kentucky 84-72, Florida
defeated Mississip pi 78-67 and
UCLA clubbed Oregon State
92 -75.
At Philadelphia, Jaren Jackson scored 27 points as Georgetown took its Plght h victory ln
nine games. The Hoyas,17-2 and
7-1 in \)le Blg East, received 11
points !rom Mark Tillmon and 8
blocks from Alonzo Mourning.
Tom Greis scored 18 points for
Villanova. 12-10 and 3-5.
At South Bend, Ind .• Danny
Ferry scored 28 points, inc luding
a 4-polnt pla y that sparked a 20-2
r un fo r Duke. Alaa Abdelnaby

""MenIally. we told ourseh·es

Debevec to sin k two charity shot s
a t th e buzzer. Urbana led, 41 -39.
The !Pad rocked back and forth·
us .'han January. That was the
at Illude we had when we went m betwee n both tea ms as th e
there... .
.
.
Redm ep countered every UrThcat1ttudcdescn bedbyR1o banascoringru n.Apair@!Brad
Gran de Redmen Coach John Schubert 3- point~rs ha nde d Rio
Lawhorn helped the RIO ~en halt Grande its biggest lead at 11
a four-gamesk1~ m theMtd·Ohto 175-64 1 with 6: llleft to play.
Conference when the;· edged the
"' I. knew Urbana had another
Urbana IJiuc ~nights84·82b?fore r un l.e!t in them. and tha t cou ld
a McDona ld s Night audtence have hu r t us, ·• Lawhorn sa id In
· S~turd ay a_t Ly~e Center.
.
t'et rospect.
. rh e WID Improv ed RIO
Urba nacameascloseastwoi n
Gra nd e."s season s late to 16·10 the ga me's final moments. Rayand 5-6 '" the MOC Urbana, more pumped in Rio's last two
ranked _th ird in District 22 and points a t the fou l line while
second'" the co nference. went to Debevec's last-seco nd basket
15·9 and 8-:L
netted the visitors their final two
Anth ony Ray more scor!'d 25 markers .
points a nd a _car!'Pr high of 10
""lf we had rebound!'d a nd
ass is ts. spu rn ng the Redmen to executed better , it would have
take early co ntrol of the ftrs t been di(fe rpnt ," Urbana mento1·
period.
. .
Bob Rona l sa id later. ""But I
Fueled by D1stnct 22 ' M0C couldn't ask any more of our
honoree Brett Baker's hi~h of 27 kids. we played hard and Rio
points, Urbana remained in Grande played good .""
conl entlon ail the way through
LarrvBenning scored 17point s
the first half. tyi ng with the host s a nd four rebounds for the .Red·
four times and holding the lead men wh ile Schubert had 13
on four occasions before Ray - markers, nine boards and three
more' s fo ul shots with seven ass ists. Mike Tidwell. whose
seco nds. remaining tied"the sco re scoring dom ina ted the early part
a fifth ttme at ~9.
.
.
,
of the second period. broke loose
A foul ca lled on RIO Gra nde s for 12 point s and seven rebounds.
Jo hn Lambcke a llowed Ttm
Statistically, Rio Gra nde wa s

This week's games

Ohio llnmlniN&amp;II 111 Fhtdlay
Luke Erie utll rhiVIU

T hl"' \\ 4&gt; t•k' )j

Molltuy 'H /'Iports ( 'alt&gt;ndKr
BIINkie-lhall
l lh1b at Phot•nhl:, !I: :to p.rn.
1J11.IIw; al L t\ f llpp-n, llt::LO p .m .

BM~Iwlllldl S t~ h!• duk•
~tonday. ,.~(' t\ 6

Ohio C'olh•gr

Pu rthlt' ill Ohio Sllllt• •

(lt•,•t•htnd Shatt&gt; a 1 Crt'llhi On
iUI1'on Ill !\1o1't•hud Shttl'
Ku n yo n a t \ 'oun,: .. tw.·•dUah•
Tuel'odU.\' , Ft• h. 7
Dt-l•uu I at llaJ ton
HID Grandt• ut l ' ln t; nnut Blhlf'
l&gt;)ilt· ut .1\la lonr
Flndll&amp;J' at 1'111 \'~ · rrton N:u
Ohio Oomlnlt·an at Blufh on
\\ lllsh 11.1 \\'il ml nKton
Thh~

Doh II It'd
ror tltw D 'Ampeuo, Italy - two-man
and loa,.m 1111 Ch ~~.mpklfl!ihlpt&lt;
Ho('key
All--lStar hrt•uk. no l{llmt'!o JOI' hed!.tl t d
folle1111'
&amp;"~t on -

Jkoanptt

Ra lllmo...-. ChiUnploMhlps

t Pa.) at Hlr11m
~atf'

Ft&gt;b II
Grt&gt;I.'R
i\llaml ut"Oh lo l!n iH•f!&lt;it y
Bowlin ~

MISL
No «'ltnll's

Tolt•do (II Marquettt&gt;

Ronl~llll ~o:,

. S,\'l'IOSAL KA;SKE'rB ,\LI. AS !iiOf .
S wunl~a• 's Kt&gt;!ritllt ~

1\tllv.'llu ~f' I 1:1. \h!Oh lngton ID'l
Ne-.· \'ork 11 1. 111•111W 1(16
lh&gt;n,,.r l ~i . Ut111 h l=tl
A.llanla 1111, Phllt'llb: 116
Go hte• Stllt p 116, LA CllpJI'!rs Hn
l"ordand 1:n. SIUI Anljlfllo 101

Su nll u.~'ll

Jtt..~ull!l'

fh•ll•l:tnd l UI , tlliU'IOlk• 9 1
Ih&gt;trllll 113, Chlt• a,~to 102
~al it..• ~t. Bos to n lt1
,\fla~nii Bt.i'lal'l'll.mt&gt;nln !Ill

llouJoton 12-1 , l&gt;flft\'t'r ll'l
l.A L a ke r !' Ht Ne w J l"t!C'y 116
.\lorwh\}' 'l!l Gam eli

Ut11h a t Phoenlx, t :30 p.m .

Da lla&amp;s Ill LA CllpP'r'~ . Ill : :10 p .m .
Ttn•sth~.v'11

G11m tos

Wa,o;hlnKton 111t Ntw \'ork, nil{ hi

Sf&gt;!U IIr a t Nt&gt;w JH*-'Y · ni~:IK
flt•\'t&gt;IIUid at Mllwau IWI'. nl~~:ht

•

JSa

an
power line?

Cedarville. 79-67; and Wal sh
net ted a much-needed 86-66 wi n
over Ohio Dominican.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (8~)- Anthony
Ra y mo re, 9-7 -2 5; Jimm y
Kearns, 1·0·2: Larry Benning,
6·5·17: Brad SchubPr t. 2-3·0·13;
.John Lambcke, 3-1·7: Marc Go·
th a rd , 2-1-5; Brian Walkins,
2-0-4; Mike Tidwell. 5·2-12. TO·
TALS 30·3·15-84.
URBANA(H2)-Rober t Settle,
4·3·11; TimDebevec.1-3-5; Brett
Baker,ll-1-2-27; Neal Browning,
8-4-18; Todd Charles, 1-0-2; Rodne;• Williams. 2·1·5; Antllony
Harris. 1+0:14 . TOTALS28·5· 13·
H2.

..,. .

Halftime score: Urbana4I. Rio
Grande 39.

REDMEN NOTES: A big key
to th e win, Redmen Coach John
Lawhor n said. was holding down
6-6 center Robert Set tie to ll"
points. Settle was averag ing 15.5
poin t s e ntering Saturda y's
co nt es t.
' Ti ckets for .the Rio GrandeDyke contest in the Richfield
Coliseum Thursday afternoon
are ava ilable at Lyne Cen ter at
$6. The ticket s are also good for
COLUMBIA, S.C. IUP})- Joe
the Cava liers-Pacers game that
Morris on, football coach at th e
wil l follow .
University of South Carolina and
a s tar player for 14 years with the
New york Gian ts, died Sund ay of
a n apparent heart a ttack. Hew as
51.
Morrison. who had a his tory of
hear t disease, collapsed at a
university athletic facility after
playing racquetball with friends.
He was dead on arrival a t
Providence Hospital in Colum bi'a, were he was taken about8: 45
p.m .
In hi s six years a t South
Caro lina. Morrison had a record
of 39-28-2 and led the Gamecocks
to three bowl appearances. Last
year, the Gamecocks, 8-4, lost to
Indiana In the Uberty Bowl.
Morrison 's best season at South
Carolina was 1984 , when the
Ga mecocks went 10-2.
" !think he will be remembered
as the 'man in black' who brought
class to a foo tba ll program tha t
very much neede d it. " said
universit y Pres ide nt J ames Hoi·
derman. ""It was a never· say-lose
attitude with Joe. He could find
something positive to say about
even the very grea t disappoint ments. He never gave up.''
lnclutling ear lier stints as a
head coach at TennesseeChat tanooga (1973- 79) and New
Mexico (1980-82), Morrison 's
overall co tlegiate record was
101 -72-7.

•

.

........

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You Can Look At Them Both, But Don't Touch. Play
it safe around electricity at home and at work. Call
us for a free booklet of electrical safety tips.

Heart attack
claims life of
Joe Morrison

Scouts of all ages are the pride oi our
community. We congratulate them on all
they do to make our lives better.

1'flJI!' OHIO

lilil POUJIR

1989 Tax

Supplement

Making good things grow-in nature
and in life-is what Scouting is all about.
Keep up the good work, Scouts!

..
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VALENTINE'S DAY :
DINNER AND DANCE 4

•

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1989 4
ROYAL OAK PARK
DINNEI 7 P.M.-IIBEYE STEAK
DANCE 1:30 A.M.·12 MIDNIGHT

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Music ly IUICH WAX &amp; THE GUSS PlCS

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4

. 992-6333
SYRA&lt;USE, OHIO

992-2210
RACINE, OHIO

BANKS.,ONE.

Eighteen Thousand People Who Ca~e.

'.

THENS, OHJO, NA I ONE PART OF THE CARING TEAM

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN-MUSSER INSURANCE
992-2342

r

POMEROY, OHIO

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

POMEROY, OHIO

..\
.I
~

•

BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE

K&amp;C JEWELERS

992-6687

POMERO.Y, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES
. . 992-6128

.·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

••'

PAT HILL FORD
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1989

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Contact Your Advertising
Representative For De.tails

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-6491

992-2156

~-99_2

The Daily Sentinel

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2121

-R~OY,O-HI-0-'_:99~2-:66=;~1~------------~·=D~DL~EP~O~RT~,O~H~IO-t--99-2--2-05-7-------------PO_M_E_RO-Y_,O_H_I0-1

__2_13_,___._____.___P_mM
__

STATE
- FARM. INSURANCE

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

.

.
992-2039 - 992·6454
POMEROY, OHIO

"

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2104

PLEASERS

'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

.

RilE SWIGER

992-6685

,,
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

A Special Section •
Coming February 21, 1989

NV hl.,.*n S, Qu.ehtt• t
MlnntMilla 5, NY RAR!If'r!t OJ
C~&amp;lpr;t· :Jo , Vaat'OUwr .a
St . Loulll ,, 0tiCII{O .J

•

992-3481

HOME NATIONAL BANK

CHESTER, OHIO

992-2955

Sund~W'II ~lilts

POMEROY, OHIO
I

SWISHER and LOHSE
PHARMACY

rtullbu rrh 5. Ruto•!
Philadelphia :I. W_.lnl{lon I
~roll. I, Wlnnllk'• ".l
~w .l trllll'y 4 , Edmonton t

i\II..SIMr

992-2174

JOHNSON'S VARIETY· STORE

,. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

985'-3301

Sat unl ll,.Y'i'l Rf's ulb
i , Min~ oW 3
r-'\' blamlerli 3, HU'U'Ord 3
MOMn&gt;Mt 7, N\' Rut!lt' r~ ~
C'hlu,«o 3, Torotllo 1
('at pry '· V IU'('Oa ~r ~
l..o11 An~tt~/5, Buffalo :t

Hiram at Bethllny ( K' \ ' a)
\\ oLI ( Pa ) a t John Car ron
WllmlnJtto n IU (t' dllnilif'
Rlulll on lll :\hlonto
0 f'rliU1Cf' 111 Mt 'te rnon Nat

POMEROY, OHIO

·

BAUM LUMBER

Qllf'he(-

Kf'nt~ky Slat e

·

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

NATIONAL HOC KE1' LEAG UE

OhcrHnutl)t nNo n
\\'uU$'lt&gt;r ~~ot Kl'nyon
ShiiWIIl't' Still(' IU Ewo\ern Kfl nlurky
Kl'nh• · ~ y \\' fl.&gt;o~ lo:yan ttl 1\shland

~----.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE ·

DMIIM .u Portllu!d . al~t

Uhlo\\'..,.~~a n 111 Allerlk&gt;ny ! P:a)
.Juhn~ Ho pkin .: au rasf' Rt'S&lt;"nt·

Outdoor adventure teaches Scouts the
·vatue of teamwo•k and instills admiration and respect for the environment.

•

fllllriOIIf' IIJ C'hlcqo, nllht
Mlam l11.1 Utah, niPt
San Ant unlo WI Sacramf'nt o. ni ght

Snt!lhN n lta h at "' rl~:ht Statf'
\\'ltlt• nht•r~~~: 111 Martrtta
Mtul ldnf!Um 11.1 .'t fou llll l !nlon
Buldwl n· M lllhu·t• a t Ohio Nurth('rn
Cap\1.11,1 ut Ht'l*lhPrl{

CEDARVILLE , Ohio iUPil Players of the week In the NAIA
District 22 are Walsh Co llege
ju nior guard Jeff Young of Akron
and Rio Grande senior forward
Lee Ann Mu II Ins of McGuffey. ·
Young, who also won the
Mid-Ohio Conference weekly honor, scored 73 poi nt s in three
games last week. He had been
averaging 19.9 points a game, but
scored 22 against Urbana, 31
agai nst Shawnee State a nd 20
aga inst Ohio Domnican. He hit 24
of 46 shots from the field ,
Including 10 of 18 from the
three-point range, and 15 of 20
from the free-throw line.

L!lldllt&gt;o

Kolll'rdam. Th•• Nt&gt;lhl'l'land ~ - mf'n '...,

frh 9

Mullins player of
week in District 22

Bonl~ · aux

tournllmo•nl

LuJ· ula (111 1 at Dayton
:\:Q\i('f'Ut M'll'hilll Slalf'

:u

f'loll.ftl't'-

C'up

Uhlo Stalt• a t llllnoi!O
Loyola at Xll\' ier
~uthl'r n t'lah at ;\kr on
l'hom u... i\1or•· ( 1\,\ l ut Ohio Domlnlt•an
ftl u l~ randt•at D)ill"
l'lndn111il Hthl .. a t Urh&gt;lfta •
"ouiJwrn Indiana a l ."-Iiiii Wid
Ut•l roll at nay to n
I o•ntr.ll SClltt' a t " a,o;hln~o n D.C .
llt•fluiU'I" W llldi!UI U Trt·h
t'rldu,y , Ft' h. 10
Rio G rand•• at Walsh
K l' nlll ' k~· ('hrlsllan al Tiffin
1-.,kf' Erlt• at ('t'diU'vilh.•
Sat utd f\\', t~f' h. II
Mt o"hlj:llfl Stalt&gt; a t Ohio Stall•
Toloodu a t Mt•nt !'ihUt•
Bowlin~: (Orl't'n at I&amp;MIISiah•
llhlt~ l 'n l\'o'r,.lty at Wt•,.;U~ rn Mlc h
1'ounl"&gt;lfM n Stalt' at EIL'ilf&gt;r n Mlt•h
r\&amp;.:.r on u t l'en tr.~ol Florida
finc_'i nmll a t S() uthe-r nMh!!olssippl
\\ I~··Grt•t-n 8a;v at (' l ~f'lilll d Slal t&gt;

(', nl nll ;&lt;qatl'

~;o: ht&gt;Wk• d

Tenri ~

LottiJ; \1II I'.u.t l ' ln..tnmtl
U'riKhl Siah• at l'tlldtat• Tl'Rfr.i M!f'
Ohio 1\orlllf'rn a t l 'ap ital
l'tln tlnt l 'nlon at Mark&gt;tb
Raldwln-Waii6W't' II.I · MLHdtin~•m
t\llk'nhe r I{ 11.1 Oltt'rht'l n
llP irloJ II!!rtr aA ObrrHn
All••~~;twon,\' I t"a } 111 \\'oo.~k&gt;r
O.•ni!'Qn at Ca,;e ftf'st"r\t'
Hr n)·on at Ohio "-'rslf'yan
Clorn•l{it'":\1e llon ( Pa) at ,John f 11.rroU
ThuM~v .

FII(Uit' Skalln~

VW1il11.od IWIWf'r C'tt&gt;f'k, Ctllo. - \\'orld
1\lplltf' C'hllll1 plonohlps
Soccer

It! •\llc_•p Uo~·d

\\ t'dn.-r;li~· ,

Kt•n t Sllltr Ill

U.S.
Slo:Uo~

Lakt• t; rlt· at i\ s hland
S IUtWnl' f'

Tou~ment

8h ttn ~~:

!\1. 5 percent from thelield t3J-641
a nd 15 of 23 at the fo ul line for 65.2
percem . Turnovers were held to
15."
In addition to Baker, Neal
Brownlngadded 18pol nt sa ndll
assist s for the Blue Knig-hts.
Anthony Harr is scored 14 points
and five rebounds , while Robert
Settle netted 11 markers a nd
ei ght boards.
The Bl ue Knight s were 55.9 o n
field goa ls (33-5!'1) and 81.2
percent at the charity line
11.1-161. Urbana turned over the
ball13 times.
The Redmen outboarded the
vis itors 34·27.
Rio Grande will travel to
Cincinnati Bible on Tuesday for a
7:30 p.m . contest. Urbana hos ts
Cincinnati Bible on Thursday.
In ot hcrMOCgamesSaturday,
Mount Ver non Nazarene upse t
Malone. 108-74; Tiffin up-ended

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

scored 15 points and Phtl Hender·
points for the Bulldogs, 13·8 and
son added 14 for Duke, 15-4,
5- ~ In the Southeastern Confer·
which entered the game having
ence. Kentucky, lHl and 6-4,
lost four of Its past five starts. Joe
was led by Chris Mills with 19
Fredrick led Notre Dame. 12-4,
points.
with 21 points.
·
At Gainesville, Fla., Dwayne
At Piscataway. N.J., Steve
Davis scored 21 points and
Berger scored 16 potnts and West
Livingston Chatman added 17 for
VIrginia held Rutgers scoreless
Florida, 12·10 and 6-41n the SEC.
over the final 4:23 to posl its 16th
Gerald Glass scored 27 points for
straight victory. West Virginia,
the Rebels, 11·8 and 5·5.
17-2 and 11-0 In the Allan tic 10, ·
At Los Angeles, Trevor Wilson
scored the last 5 points. Tom
and Don MacLean scored 26
Savage scored 18 points to lead
points each to lead UCLA to Its
Rutgers. 8-11 and 6-4.
fourth straight victory. Pooh
At Athens, Ga .. Alec Kessler
Richardson added 18 points for
scored 22 points and grabbed 13
the Bruins, 14-5 and 9-2 In the
rebounds to lead Georgia. Pat
Pac-10. Gary· Payton scored 23
Hamilton added 16 points and
points for Oregon State, 14·5 and
freshman Lltterial Green . 15 H.

Redmen halt skid; Urbana falls, 84-82
1hat Februar;· had to be better to

.

;

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..

985-3308

CHESTER; OHIO

. .

,

�------

~

·----- - ------

~·

.

-- --Monday, February 6. 1989

Pomeeoy-Middlaport, Ohio

COMPLETE
SELECTION

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER
Featurin&amp;:
* Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on Croissant
Stuffed Baked Potatoes
Taco Salads
- Real Ice Cream

*

*

*

*

Thi1
Week'1

Page-7

If you could see what I see...
Bay More for
lt11 It
EJJPIIE

FURNnUIE
' 992-3307 .

MEIGS

992-2067

POMEROY, OHIO

BOYS
Feb. 7 -Alexander
Feb. 1o~Ftdtrai-Hocking

WE.WIIl
.
.
TAKE CARE OF
.: ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS

GIRLS
Feb. 6-At Alexander
Feb. 9-At Ftci.-Hocking

HARDWARE

"Youtlui.... Mot~rill._btPiace"

915-3301

SOUTHERN
BOYS

CHESTER, OH.

Feb. 10-Southwestern

MUZZLE LOADING
and HIJNTWG. SUPPUES
HOURS: Mon. thru Fri.
7:30 a.m. t4 5.:00 p.m.

Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Dear Ann Landen: This piece,
. by Cpl. Carl Meadows of the
White House, Tenn., Pollee
Dept., appeared In the Nashville
Banoer. I think It's good enough
to rate national exposure. If you
: agree, please print it. ...: L.H.
- Dear L.H.: I do, Indeed. The
- piece has to be shortened a bit but
Is very close to the orlglnlal
version. Thanks for sharing.
U You Could See Whal I've Seen
Parents, It you could see what
I've seen, you wouldn't be so
critical when I stop your child
and take his beer and drugs, and
have him come to the pollee
station at 2 a.m., and call you to
· come and take him or her home.
They arenotbadklds. They are
the same ones. who ring up your
groceries, deliver your paper
and hang out with your children.
They are the same ones you see
every Sunday In church.
If you could see what I've seen,
·you wouldn't call the pollee chief
and the mayor to try to get that
speeding ticket torn up, or
·complain that I had It In for your
·boy when I clocked him on radar
at 75 m.p.h. In a 30 m.p.h. zone.
I know your Insurance rates
are high, butdon'tblameme. I'm
only trying to succeed where you
failed - to teach your child to
drive safely.
If you coultl see what I've seen,
you'd make the punishment a l(lt
tougher · when you catch your
child (irlnklng and di-ivlng. I had
to check lor slJ(ns of life In 17· and

OF
FURNITURE!

Qsmel

Mon.-Thuro. 8 A.M.-11 P.M.
Fri. • Sat. II A.M.-12 P.M.
Sunday 7 A.M.-11 P.M .
898 W . Main Street. Pomeroy

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUS$ER.
INSURANCE
.·
"

GIRLS
Feb. 6-At Southwestern
Feb. 11-Meigs

~·

. '

111 SE(OND AVt

EASTERN ·,

POMEioY
.,

BOYS

CAll 992-3381 or

Feb. 10-Symmes Valley
Feb. 14-At Parkersburg
Catholic

, . . - - - - - - - -_- Feb. 6-At Symmes Valley

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

By WILLIAM C. TROTI
United Press International
MADONNA TO CHINA: The Chinese may soon be getting a
look at the "Material Girl." Promoters are trying to arrange a
tour for Madonna this spring, whlc)t would make her the first
American pop star to sing In communist China, the Clllna Youth
News reported.
The newspaper said negotiations are under way between
mainland Chinese promoters and agents. in Hong Kong for the
singer to arrange the tour. Back when she was happily married
to 'S ean Penn, the couple filmed the box-office flop "Shanghai
· Surprise" In the Portuguese colony of Macao near Hong Kong.
Promoters In Shanghai were reported last year to be
negotiating with agents for Michael Jackson to arrange a tour
for him but the talks have apparently broken off.
·
SAMMY IN TAP·TOP SHAPE: "Tap" was the ideal movie
for Sammy Davis Jr. "I didn't care about billing," says Davis,
who plays Gregory Hines's father in the film. "I didn't care
about money. I did it for the movie itself.... If we aren't the
· peopl~ we're pOrtraying In the movie, we know enough people
like that to emulate."
"Tap"ls Davis's first movie In many years and he got a kick
out of the shooting location In New York's Times Square. "You
ain't never had · fun until you've been there at one in the
morning," he told the New York Dally News. "I've got one of
those faces that everybody recognizes. Junkies were saying hi
and ladles of the evening were asking me, 'Hey. Sammy, you
want to party?' I told them, 'I'm too old for that. ...
STARRY TURNOUT FOR KHAN WEDDING: Princess
Yasmln Aga Khan, daughter of the late Rita Hayworth, wasn't
saying where she and her new husband, Christopher Michael
Jeffries, were heading for their three-week honeymoon.
The two were married Saturday In Khan's New York
apartment and then celebrated at a black· tie reception at the
Plaza Hotel, where the guest list Included U.N. SecretaryGeneral Javier Perez de Cuellar, Palty Hearst Shaw. Sens.
Christopher Dodd and Larry Pressler. author Jerzy Kosinski,
Atlantic Records executive Ahmel Ertegun and !levelOIJE!r
Donald Trump and his wife, Ivana.
"We're very happy," Khan, 39. said as she posed for
paparazzi, while her husband. Jeffries. 38, added, "It's very

· ''DIGMITY AND
.SERVICE ALWAY$"
Ben H. Ewing-Director

PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AYE.

POMEROYI OH.

lit];J•J

"COME ·GROW
WITH US

.
........
.fARMERS

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE----------------~
SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·89 BOYS BASKETBAU

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19B8·89 BOYS BASKETBAU

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov,
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

25-Athtns .......................... Away
2-lliller ............................ Home
9-Trimble .......................... Home
13-Nelsonville-York ............ Away
Dec. 16-WIIIston ...................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co............... ,...... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-lopn ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. AwiY
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren .................... " ... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nel sonville· York ............. home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co ............ ,........ Home
Feb: 3-Belpre ............................. Away
Feb. 7-Alexander ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

Nov. 22-Miller ................:.......... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ...................... Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 13-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 17-Federal Hockiha ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath .......... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28-M iller ........................... Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern ............:..... Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg Cath ........... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
Nov. 29.:....Eastern ......................... Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Dec. 9-Symmes Val.ley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Galha ..........,...... Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ............................ Away .
Jan. &amp;-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill.:....... :.............. Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking.............. Home
Feb. tO-Southwestern .............. !. Home

. BANK

&amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMIIOY;' OH•
,. ,. 992·2116·
992-2137 .
TUPPERS PLAINS, OH.
915-3315
. 667-3161

...

.

-

\~.

POWELL'S

--------------------GIRLS SCHEDULE-----------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB-B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

USBI U.IS
NEW UIS

~~1:~

•COMPinE RA'DIATOR SERVICE
•MAJOR REPAIRS
•COM PinE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
• BALANCE
•MOlT MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED

PAT HILl FORD, IlK.
IODY WOIII

1992-2196\

INSUIUKE

CLAIMS

WBCM
461 3RD AVE. IIIODlEPORT, OH.

Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-lliller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 8-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. IS-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co ..................... Home
Dec. 21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-lliller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ............. Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 3D-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking............... Away
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19B8·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-lleigs ........................... Away
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17-Federal Hockini ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................ Away

r

. Dec. 21-MeiiS ........................... Home

Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southtrn ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble........................ Away
Jan. 12-North Gallia ............. :..... Away
Jan. 19-0ak Hill ... :.................... Home
Jan. 23-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home.
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home
Feb. 6-Symmes Valley ................ Away
y

romantic."

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away
Dec. 5-Maigs ............................. Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia ................ ~.Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern ........... ~ ...... Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ............... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 3D-Waterford ....................: Home
Feb. 2-Hannan Trace ................. Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 11-Meigs .........................., Home

298 SECOND ST.
'POMEROY I OH.
STORE HOURS:
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M.-1 0 P.M.
SUNDAY
10·A.M.-10 P.M.

..
•
'

-

''HOME BANK
FOR

HOME PEOPLE"
MEMBER FDI(
• I

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
"Your Finaneial
Center"
97 ~SECOND

SYRACUSE OFFICE

992-6333
RACINE OFFICE

IIDDIDOII', OJIO
"2-6661

'

..

=
LITTLE DAN'S

Jim Cobb · VALLEY
ChtvroleteGidsmobile
•Cadillac, Inc.

Sales &amp; Service
EAn IIAIII n.

POIIIIOY

LUMBER
't,

555 PARI ST.

Yoar Dealer ••
T•• River

EXXON-

•

Rtw11a.t•
.

18-year-old kids last week when I
knew darn well they were dead
before I arrived.
I tried to comfort the parents of
those dead kids. I saw their
minister stand there and cry hls
eyes out because he didn't teach
the kids better, as It It was his
fault. He sees them two hours a
week. You have them the rest of
the time.
If you could see what I've s.een,
you'd begin to teach your child·
ren at an early age some of the
things that are Jusl'as Important
as reading and writing. For
example, It Is wrong to drink and
drive.
If you could see what I've seen,
would you still do my job every
day? Ask any policeman why he
stays on. He can't tell you,
because he doesn't kno\ll. It can't
be the pay. Your garbage collec·
tot probably makes more money
at his five-day 40-hour-per-week
job, and he doesn't have to work
nights, weekends and holidays.
Try calllpg your garbage collec·
tor when you need more service
and ask him to come over. She
what he says.
If you could see what I've seen,
you'd take parenting a lot more
seriously. Come along sometime.
You'll get a real education.
Dear Ann Landers: The radio
announcer says! "Tune to station
103 (one-oh-three) on tl)e FM
dial." The sports announcer says
the basketball score Is 101
(one-oh-one); the telephone oper-

AND

I;. ' FOOD STORE

EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY
•Self Serve Gae
•Ohio Lottery Tickets
•VCR
•Milk
. Rantala
•Bread
•Hunting Ucenee

992-6611

.

OWNER: DAN SIDWEll

949·2210 •.

992-9907

Community calendar
MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS- Women Alive
meets Monday, 7 p.m., Kyger
Creek Clubhouse. Speaker Ma·
dine DeLong; demonstration by
Darlene Jordan.

on
Landers
ANN LANDERS•

.. 1918,l.OI A.np&amp;M
Tim" Syndlcwt~ and
C"'f:lllon S)lndlule

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will m~t
Monday, 7 p.m., at the office
building.

ator says the number Is 555·0011
·(five·five-five·oh·oh·one-one).
It's common practice to use the
. 15th letter of the English al·
· phabet for the number zero, but 1
wish people would stop mingling
and alphabet and numbers together. It's ridiculous.
Be our spokesperson, Ann. Tell
Engllsh·speaklng people to stop
using the 15th letter of the
alphabet when they really should
use the number zero. - K.G.S.,
Port Richey, Fla.
Dear K.G.S.: From now on I'm
saying zero Instead of"O" when I
talk numbers.
I'll say "0" only when I'm
surprised, which after all these
years doesn't happen very often.
Take charge of your life and turO
il around! Write for Ann Lander,,'
new booklef, "How ro Make Friends

.a nd Slop Being Lonely." Send a
check or money order for $3.50 and
a ~tClf~addressed, slumped. bu.sineusiz.e envelope (45

t'Pnlt

posrage) to

Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 606/1-0562.

RACINE - Sutton Townsh lp
Trustees will meet Monday, 7: 30'
p.m .• at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.
HARRISONVILLE - Columbia Township Trustees will meet
Monday. 7: 30 p.m ., at the fire
·
station.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees will meet Monday,
6:30p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
Station .
POMEROY - The Columbia
Township Board of Trustees wili
meet Monday. Feb. 6, 7:30p.m.,
at the fire station.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club will meet Monday
at 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Dorothy Roller. Each member is
to take a valentine.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet at the Kyger Creek
Club house in Cheshire, Monday,

.--People in the news·----. 2 Mardi Gras days left

992-2342

GIRLS
'

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, February 6. 1989

Dining • Carry Out •
Drive-Thru

BAUM

-

.-.
..

..
.

Khan's ring bearer was Andrew All AgaKhan Emblricos. her
3-year-old son from her 1985-87 marriage to Greek shipping heir
Basil Emblrlcos. Jeffries, a real estate developer, has a son I\Jid
daughter from a previous marriage.
HIJACKING RELIVED: Neva Small ls one of the co-stars of
the upcoming television movie "The Hijacking of the Achille
Lauro" and ihe story has special meaning to her because she is
a longtime friend of the Leon Kllnghorter f~mlly.
Kllnghoffer, who will be played by Karl Malden, was the New
Yorker who was killed by the terrorists who hijacked the cruise
ship off the Egyptian coast In 1985 and his daughter Lisa had
some input In the making of the Feb. 13 movie. Now Small is
portraying Lisa In the movie.
"Lisa's main mission was to make the story that much more
believable by involving the actors In the real background,"
Small said. "It wasn't easy but it was a mission. It would have
been harder to know the entire thi ng was being filmed and not
having first-hand Input." Lisa traveled with Small to Australia
for ~the fllmlng and helped with her character.

'Sesame Street'
co-creater dies
NEW YORK (UP() -Joseph
Raposo, a composer who helped
create the children's television
show "Sesame Street," died
Sunday of complications from
lymphoma at at LawrenceHospl·
tal in Bronxville, N.Y. He was 51.
Raposo was co-author of the hit
play "You're a Good Man,
Charlie Brown" and of the public
television show "Electric Com·
pany," the New York Times said
Monday. In addition, he was the
longtime music dlffctor of "Sesame Street," the show he
created with Jim Henson and Jon
Stone.
He won live Grammy awards
and a had a fialr for writing and
orchestrating Instructive songs.
His compositions Include "Sing,··
"Beln' Green," "You Will Be My
Music," "There Used toBeaBall
Park," and "Somebody Come
and Play."

NEW ORLEANS &lt;UP I) Booze-sodden Carnival revelers
jammed the French Quarter
between P.a rades Sunday, refus·
iilg to let a damp chill interfere
with their bacchanalian buildup
to Mardi Gras.
With two days to go. 11 parades
rolled through the streets of New
Orleans and its suburbs, giving
paradegoers ample opportunity
to scramble for "throws."
mostly plastic necklaces and
aluminum medallions, but also
Including everything from ladies
undergarments to digital
watches and plastic alligators.
The biggest parade - or
"krewe" - was Bacchus, with
comedian and movie star Billy
Crystal riding as king, which
capped the day's events with a
night procession tl)rough the ctty
referred to by locals as the "Big
The hedonls tic Carnival season
Easy."
climaxes Tuesday on Mardi
Gras, when an estimated 1
million people will jam Into the
downtown area for a last incoherent blowout before the solemn
Catholic Lenten season begins
Ash Wednesday.
Temperatures remained in the
40s for a second day, but few of
the hundreds of thousands of
revelers seemed · to notice the
cold or the Intermittent drtzzie
that fell part of the day Saturday
and Sunday.
Much of the activity In the
French Quarter, which Is off of
all parade routes, would earn
Carnival an X rating. but for
most local people the festivities
are very much a family affair.
The spring break feeling of the
previous four days was gradually
replaced Sunday by an older.
more sedate crowd. Travel
agents generally book two differ·
ent packages during Carnival one that lasts until Saturday for
college students, and the other
for older people which ends
Tuesday .
In the French Quarter on
Bourbon Street, up to 10,000
people jammed Into each of the
first seven blocks of the famous
thoroughfare Saturday and Sun·
day night. creating a traffic jam
of people that made any move·
rrient virtually Impossible. The

7 p.m. Madine DeLong, mission·
ary, will be the speaker. Darlene
Jodon will conduct a painting
be
workshop. Refreshments
served.

will

MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Garden Club will meet at
7:30 Monday at the home ol Mrs.
Dorothy Roller. Each member is
to take a valentine.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodg~? 363, F. and A. M. will met
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at · the
Middleport Masonic Temple. Refreshments will be served.
Members are urged to at tend.
TUESDA¥
POMEROY- Past Matrons of
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Eas tern Star, will meet Feb. 7 at
the home of Emma Clatworthy.
Members are asked 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 wishIng to make a reservation for the
dinner is asked to call Twila
Childs at 992-6188 by Feb. 1.
POMEROY -Pomeroy Chap·
ter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star,wlll meet at 7: 30Tuesday at
the Chester Lodge Hall. .
TUPPERS PLAINS -The St.
Paul United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains. will hold a

mostly young throng swilled beer
and llquor·and -punch Hurrl·
canes and Implored young
women on balconies to remove
their blouses in a bawdy chant.
"What, you want n\e to take it
off for a string of beads?"
shouted one woman on a third·
floor balcony.
When she refused, the crowd ·
moved beneath the next balcony,
and repeated their bawdy chant
to another woman twirling a
string of white beads.
A third woman on a balcony
finally consented to remove her
blouse, sending the crowd of
mostly college-age males Into a
frenzy on the street below. Many
threw beads to the woman. who
replaced her blouse and ' said In
an embarrassed tone, "I can't
believe I did that. I hope my
mother didn' I see that."

will be available at the door.
Proceeds will go towards the
church building fund .
POMEROY - Xt Gamma
Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center. Preparations
will be made for Founder's Day .
Members are urged to attend .
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion,
Pomeroy, will hold its regular
meeting on Tuesday at 7 p,m.
Refreshments will be served at
the start of the meeting.
RACINE - The River Valley
Herbalist CJ.ub will meet Tues·
day, 7 p.m. .
the Bethany
Church in Dorcas, near Racine.
Everyone is to bring potpourri.
Hostesses will be Dorothy Karr.
Debbie Miller and Bobble Karr.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday. 7: 30
p.m., for their Hearts and Hands
Social, at the home of Lynn
Shuler.
Special film
POMEROY - A film, "The
God Makers." will be shown at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
212 West Main St., at 7 p.m. on·
Fepruary 12. The public is
Invited.

at

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20,000 Afghan troops
remain, official says

.

Monday, February 6, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Plp-8-The Daily Sentinel

TERMEZ. Soviet Uzbekistan (UP!) - More tllan 20,000
Soviet troops are still inside Afghanistan but the pullout will be
completed by Feb. 14, one day before Moscow's deadline, a
Soviet mtlltary spokesman said Monday.
In Moscow, the Communist Party newspaper Pravda said all
Soviet soldiers had been withdrawn froin Kabul, the Afghan
capital, as of Sunday but the report was premature, according
to U.N. officials, witnesses and soldiers left behind to guard the
city's airport.
L! . Col. Sergei S!neln!kov told reporters in Termez that some
20,000 .Soviet troops remained in five Afghan provinces but
would be withdrawn between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. on Feb. 14- one
day ahead of the deadline laid out In April's Geneva Accords.
Slnelnlkov said Soviet soldiers remain In Ballth, Samangan.
Her at. Baghian and Takhar provinces.
.
"Right now there are stili about 20,000 SQv!et soldiers In five
Afghan provinces," Slneln!kov, 42, said.
The Soviets said they had 100,300 troops In the country at'the
time the Geneva agreement was signed. During nine years of'
fighting In Afghanistan, 13,310 Soviet soldiers were killed and
another 35,478 wounded.
·
Slneinlkov said the commander of Soviet troops In
Afghall!stan, Lt. Gen. Boris Gromov. would make good on his
vow to be the last Soviet soldier to leave the country when he
walks the 600 yards across the Freedom Bridge into Termez on
Feb. 14. ..
·
Slneln!kov said the decision to withdraw was a "wise and
correct" one and acknowledged that going into Afghanistan
back In 1979 had been a mistake.
The scene in Termez took on a surrealistic atmosphere
Monday as trucks and tanks, red and white flowers protruding
from their long barrels. rumbled across the bridge over the
polluted Amu Darya River from Afghanistan.
In an awkward mix of county fair and flower power. some 64
vehicles and 250 soldiers, flowers stuck down the barrels of their
AK·47 assault rifles, returned home to speeches and cheers
from residents and Communist Party officials.
As the lead vehicle moved into Soviet territory, a loudspeaker
blared the Stevie ·Wonder tune "I Just Called to Say I Love
You." Vendors hawked soft drinks and kebabs as the troops
later goose-stepped past a formal reviewing stand.
The convoy. comprised of soldiers from the J50th Regiment of
the Alexander Nevsky Brig'!de, had left Kabul three days
earlier and camped overnight Sunday on the Afghan side of the
border to await Monday's formal ceremony under brilliantly
clear skies and summer-like temperatures in the low 70s.
•'These celebrations are good but the celebrations only show
half the story." said Sam!r Nasibulian, 20, who was wounded
several times during his service In Afghanistan and now is
crippled.
"If they had asked the people about going into Afghanistan in
the first place, no sons would ever have gone," said a woman
who said she was awaiting the return of her son.
The troops arrived at the border Sunday with some soldiers
playing guitars and singing to celebrate the end of the nine-year
Involvement !n the longest Soviet war and first military defeat
since 1920.
The column had met no enemy fire during the trek from Kabul
but had to brave snow, ice and avalanches while going through
the Satang Pass in the Hindu Kush mountains. The Hindu Kush
stretches across the country at a height of more than24,000feet.
Although the distance from Kabul toTermez Is only250m!les,
the convoy had to travel 310 miles because of the twists and
bends in the narrow road leading through the forbidding
mountain range.
Soviet forces went into Afghanistan In December 197flln an
attempt to Install a Marxist people's state In the Texas-sized
south Asian nation. Instead. they were plunged into a guerrilla
war against. some of the world's toughest lighters.
The Communist Party newspaper Pravda claimed Monday
the last Soviet soldier had left Kabul on Sunday but sources in
the Afghan capital disputed the report by two special
correspondents.
· The report also quoted Gromov, the commander.ln Kabul, as
saying the withdrawal was proving more difficult than the
Soviets thought it would be.
.
Gromcw said the Soviets continued to lose men in the
withdrawal. Some of the losses were from natural disasters
such as snow slides and some from rebel attacks.

Polish gover·nment, Solidarity talk
WARSAW, Poland &lt;UPI) The government and Solidarity
began_ negotiations .Monday on a
wide range of economic, social
and political reforms, including
re-legallzation of the banned
union.
It was the first official contact
b!'tween the stato:- and Solidarity
since the Polish leadership imposed martial law in 1981, a step
that led to the outlawing of the
labor union.
Polish television broadcast
live as representatives or the
. goverttl1)ent, the Communist
Party, the official trade unions
and the Roman Catholic Church
entered a large hall in the
Neo-classical palaceoftheCoun·

ell of Ministers.
with his familiar pins- Solidar- II was legal and the union Is
The officials were led by ltyandOurLadyofCzestochowa, expected to agree to some
Interior Secretary Czeslaw the patron saint of Poland- on restrictions. Solidarity was
Kiszczak. who first approached
his lapel.
banned Oct. 8, 1982.
Walesa .Informally last August
Following a break Tuesday,
Poland Ls saddled with a SJS
about reconciliation talks.
the group will divide Into subject billion foreign debt, obsolete and
Th!' hall was lined with green ·• teams to tackle such Issues as the Inefficient industries and high
marble columns and contained a conditions for re-legallzation of Inflation. The deteriorating
circular, cherry table with 60 Solidarity, more open elections standard of living set off two
waves or labor unrest last year
chairs - the feature that gave anq economic reform.
the name to the round-table
As the talks began. there were by workers demanding higher
talks. In thecenterwas a bouquet clear Indications Solidarity and wages and revival of Solidarity.
of white and red carnatiOns, the the Polish leadership under Gen.
The concerns were addressed
colors of Poland.
Wojciech Jaruzelskl had differ- by an interview on Polish radio
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa ent priorities.
with a man identified as a young
and his team of 24 negotiators
The government and the party ·communist worker:
arrived In the hall15 minutes late hope to forge a political alliance
"Living conditions of young
people are very difficult " he
for the talks and immediately with what Is called the "construetook their places at the table. He t!ve opposition' • that will Include said. "We are witnessing a 'crisis
was wearing a navy blue suit electiOn of opposition candidates of authority, mark!'! shortages ,
to the Sejm, or parliament, and
houslngproblems,butweallowa
support of stringent government situatiOn in which there Is not
economic reform measures.
hope for the future.
"We badly need some authorThe
electoral
.reform,
which
new eight-year presidential
Solidarity
Is
expected
to
reluclty,"
he said. "I hope the round
term. His defeat means he must
tantly
endorse,
will
give
the
table
talks will mend this
turn over the presidency to the
system a measure of the legit!- situatiOn."
person elected in December .
Other,· issues expected to be
Aylwin, a lawyer, had been macy It has SQUght with the
Polish
population
since
the
com·
discussed
during the talks lnexpected to easily wlri his party's
nomination after he ~the munist takeover during World elude the status of the Independ·
ent Students Union and Rural
opposition coai!Uon to Its grea- War 11.
Solidarity's first agenda item, Solidarity, which also were
test political victory in 15 years.
on
the other hand, is Its own banned In the wake of martial
But an internal party election
revival.
The government has law, freedom of association,
that began in November was
insisted
that
Solidarity will not be judicial independence, media
plagued by accusations of fraud
allowed
the
influence it held . access and the democratization
and mismanagement that
during
the
unrest
of 19ffi-81 when of local governments.
stopped Aylwin's momentum
and gave other ·party factions
ammunition to attack his
candidacy.
"I hope that from now on out,
there will not be a majority nora
. minority, but only that we are
united In th!' struggle th;lf faces
us ahead," Aylwin said after he
won the noml,pation.about 6 a.m.,
following an ali-night session.

survive and may die anytime,
possibly by reason of a sudden
heart attack," Laurel said. "He
has less than 10 percent chance of
survival within the year."
He warned of new unrest in the
Philippines If Marcos d led
abroad.
"If Mrs. Aquino remains stubborn and refuses to allow Mr.
Marcos to return, and he .dies
there and his body Is not
permitted to be returned. I am
afraid this will be the fuse that
will ignite violence here,'' Laurel
said in an interview over radio
station DZRH.
"This. is ~o longer the time for
vengeance or vindictiveness,"
said Laurel, who added he will
exhaust all means to meet with
Aquino and deliver to her the
message Marcos entrusted to
him during his 19-hour visit to
Honolulu.
Aquino has refused to see
Laurel, stressing her vice pres!·
dent had broken away from her
and had gone to see Marcos as
leader of the opposition. She said
Sunday there should be "nothing
secret" in what Marcos has to
say to her.

• The Area's
Number 1 Marketpla'e

SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) Chile's largest opposition party
elected lawyer Patricio Aylwin
its presidential candidate, end·
ing a political stalemate that.
threatened its efforts to oust
President Augusto Plnochet.
Aylwin, the 70-year-old leader
of the Christian Democrat Party,
was selected to run in a December election that will determine the successor to Pinochel, a
general who led a 1973 coup.
Aylwin Is now expected to be
chosen In March as the single
candidate of the 17-party opposition coalition thaI defeated Pi·
nochet in a referendum in October or last year.
Pinochet, 73, the armed forces
cll!ef who assumed the title of
president after the coup ousting
the elected leftist government of
. Marxist Salvador Allende, asked
voters last Oct. 5 to give him a

Public Notice
truck from 8;00 to 4:30 et
Dlolrict office.
Bidt wYI be oponed Mon·
dey, Februa,Y 13. 1989 11
tho office of the District.
3958 I Bar 30 Rood. Roedovillo. Ohio ot 2:00 P.M.
Tha Diotrlct ,.....,.. the
right to reject ony ond/ or oil
bido.
111 27; 121 1. 6. 3tc

Public
TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. t,9 5 P.M.
PUBLIC NOTICE
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
Public water supplioo •••
required by Stoto RogulaL.__ _ _. .,:C::L,:;O:;SE::D:..:.:SU:,:N::,:D::A:.:Y_ _ _ _---Itlon, Rule 37 46·8 t . 21.
r
Ohio Adminlotrotivo Code,
POLICIES
"Ad• oultide Meigt. Gellie o.r Meton countie1 must be -pre·
p•id.
"Reeeive $.50 discount for ad1 pAid in advance.
"free 4Mh - ONe .way ..-.d Found edt under 15 wctdtwill be

run 3 d-• at no ch•ge.
"Price of ad for ell eepitallttters is douttte price of 1d cost.
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for etrors lirat d81/ ad runt In papert . Call before 2:00p.m .
d.,

•ft• publlcMk)n to mike eonee'lkln.

the month of November.
1918 andwu not able to be
analyzttd for coliform bacte·

ria. A check aampla was
reauired but was not col·

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made in January, 1989.
The wet• department hll

teken ltepa to inture that
•deqUIIte
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in the future.
(2} 6, I 3, 20, 3tc

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Aet•lfl'l tor consecuttwe runs, bfOken updtllfswMI bef!hMged
lnr ellir.h rh1111 as •Pafate ads.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Columbus. Ohio
J~~nuery 20. 1989
Contr•ct Sal•

logo! Copy No. 89-83
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
IRG·0001 t8BI
FG-000fl361
RSG-OOOR(289!
received
the officewill
of the
Sealed Itpropaul•
be

Public N alice

Publte' N otiC'e

Director
of tho Ohio Deportment of Trensportetion. CO·
lumbuo. Ohio. unU 10:00

LEGAL NOTICE
TUPPERS PLAINS·
CHESTER WATER
DISTRICT

tour w ~I teevo 1111 :oO from

Wodnoodoy. February 22.

A.M., Ohio Standard Time.

"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"

the Diatrict Office.

Tha Tuppen Pleino-Choo·

tar Water Di1trict rMervea
the right to waive inform .. i-

,. Sealed bida will be re-

ceived

(304) 675-1244

Tu-• Plain•. tieo. to reject any end ell bido

by

or to •ccapt such bid that
will beat •rv• the Oiatrict.

Ch..ter Water Di1trict at

their office. 391111 Bor 30
Rood. R-vHio. Ohio, until
2:00 P.M. on Fobruory 13,
1989 covering the pointing,

Tuppers Plain1-Cheater

Wat• Di1trict

By: Herold Btockoton,

UBLE PRINTS
EVERYDAY .

and apeciflc~tionl may be

and edge linN.

Road. AHdlvllle. Ohio on

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tupp0&lt;1 Ptoina-Choo-

,.. Fob&lt;.uory 13, 1989.
Each bid muot be ""doood ter Weter District ia invh:ing
in an appropriately marked bido for o 1989 1-ton cob
and Maled envelope and ond choull wkh the follow·
mullt contlln the ful name
of every per•on, firm and/ or

corporation interMt in the
aame. end mull be accom·

ponied by o 100% 8id Bond

in the full amount of eech
proposal to the aatilfaction

of the Diotrict Boord oo e
guorllnty that H thti bid Ia accepted. 1 contract wHI be ent•ed into end ita performance 11aured. On bidl thlt
.... rejected the au•rantaa

SURF

ROulo 33 in AthenoCountv

and other various routeS end
section• In Athens, Gellia.
Hocking. Meiga, Monroe.

w~l be promptly Mtumocf to
the bidders. On the bid that
is occopted ouch Bid Bond
wilt be rotumed to the ouc·

W11 hlngton

for center linM, lane linea

infonnation

obtained at the office of the

42 OUNCE

Monroe. Morgen.
Noble, Vinton •nd W•hington Coundu, Ohio. on aec·
lion ATH-33·20.40 on U.S.
Meig1.

vated water .torage tank.

tt I 22, 29; (2} 6. 3tc

District at 39611 Ber 30

RESERVE nJE Rt(:HT
TO UMIT QUA.\TITJES.
FRO!! OlLOR 110, U6, I 3:i A~'D DISC 111M
~OT llESPOSIBLE FOR
C41 PROCESS
TYPOGRAPHICAL OR
~LI"U!fll'KA'Ii'IUi'l ERRORS• . __ _ _ _ _ _....

1989, for improvements in:

Athens, Goltio, Hocking.

Morgen. Noble. Vinton ond
Counties. by
applying flit dry eikyd point

President of the Boerd

both Interior end Extertor for
ono 200.000 fiiiiiOn ot•

Additional

ing:

1. 15 apeed .tandard manuel overdrive tran8mlaalon
2. Dual rear wheels - mud
and snow tires
3. Enpino 410
4. 8 ply th'M ffont and rear

6. 137" wheel boll

Proj- Length: 0.00 feort

or 0.00 mite.

Work Length: various feet
Dr VlriOUI mile.
Pavement Width; varies

Tha Ohio Deportment of

Tran1port8tion hereby notifi• oil bidders thet It will
affirmatively ineure that in
any contract entered into
puriUint to thi1 advertisement, minority bulina11 entorpr'-• will bo offordod fu II

opportunity to oubmh .. do In

to thia invUtion
6. Heavy duty Mor oprlnflll and will not be diacrimlnated
7. P - .._ing ond against on the grounds of
pow• brak•
race, color, or natio~l origin
8. Heavy Duty vinyl soot
in conaideretion for en
9. Rubber floor moto
award.
10. Domolomp
"Minimum wage rates tor
11. Cig...Uo tighter
this project hwa been prad&amp;12. Color red
. tarmined u required, by law
Two bids are requested, and are aet forth In the bid
JUponM

cea.tul bidder upon execu~ one with trod•ln of 19811 PfOpoiOf."
Ch.. rotort 4 W D end one o
"'The date aet for comple·
tion of the contnct.
Thoro will be one ttlnk in· ot~ight out purch11e. fntor· tion of thia work shell be set
apection on Wedn..clay. Fe· •ted bidders call office to forth In the bidding
twuory 8th. That inopoction alee eppointm.ont to view '85 propoNI."

22 OUNCE ORIGINAL

PALMOLIVE LIQUID

t~i·
PRICE
2.21

POMEROY - VERY NICE
NEIGHBORHOOD - Nrce 3
bedtoom mobile home. garage, sheds. Palio, A.C. and
other features. $15,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Very nrce
&amp;neat 3 bedroom home on a
big lot. Nice krtchen, FAN.
G. heat. and much more! Call
f01 more details' PRICEO TO
SELL AT $32.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Recently
remodeled, including
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 1\'1
balhs, part basement. stor·
age building and much
more' $32,500.00.
POMEROY - This neat
homers ready lor rmmediate
occupancy. Fi•e rooms with
3 bedrooms, large lot, other
features. $19,500.00.
POME~OY

- FLATWOODS
RD. - 10.73 acres of .acant ground. Would make
nice home site. Call for more"
111formation. $21,500.00.

TOILET BOWL
CLEANER

YO\J!-.,,1oonnnu
cnO\"""'
"':."'

1

,,..

"'Jusl UJrite· you·r

DECONGESTANT

TABLETS

show rlaal you core. ••

ONLY

'169=.:

'

,~' '

20¢ PER WORD-MAIL CHECK OR BRING liD TO.

TheI 1t Dailv
Sentinel
Court St.. Pomeroy, OH. 46769

'::.Z·

'

'

....... , , t''

SHEETS

2~

1

:·'

1

t ·l"···~

I

'

I

~----~

BATH.I\OOM TISSUE

I

I

1'IIICI
I.H

Valentlne Love Line !
COMPOSE YOUR OWN MES&amp;IIQE BELOW

t

I
'

SYRACUSE SUPPLY CO.

992-6136
2189 THIRD ST.
SYRACUSE, OHIO

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

KAlEN'S

GREENHOUSE

.NAME .............. ............ ...................... .. ...... : ....................... ......... .

I

ADDRESS ............. , ., ............................................................. ..

... ~
,.....,
CITY .................................... -.... ~ .~-•................ !~~ ...... ,.,~
Cltp •net MIMI Y-l.DV•LIM- AN Adl Mw• •• PttHid

I

I

Foliage Plants
Baskets

$6 AND UNDEI

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. It, 124, S Ill. past
Seuthlra 111t1t Sdloel ·
·

¥·

'

1·27 ~'88-1 mo.

a:

LUBRICAnON
OIL FILTER
$1695

SUMOCO

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
:J:
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213

3

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy.

PlUMIING &amp; HEAnNG
Now lototion:
,, 161 North Second
Mitldloporf, Ohio 457 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We CaJJy Fishing Supplita

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINISS PIMINf

16141 992·6SSO
llfSIOINCI PlfONf

16Ui

CLEANING

'·

... _________ ...;.,

GUN SH 0OT

EVERY SUNDAY

1:00
RAC P,
INM.
E

GUN Cl.UB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE

12 G'UGE SHOTGUNS

LADIES WANTEDI
PERM, CUT, STYLE
OIU

AND

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
Ill W"t S.tend. Potnwoy
· 1/26/1 mo:

FIREWOOD

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIYICE

u. s. IT. so un
GUYSVI1E, o•o
614·662-3821

Authorl!ed John

Deere, New Holland,

Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.
ftr• E41lp•Ht
IIIII .. Stlfltt

$3·SDELIVERED
PER LOAD

LIGHT HAULING DONE

1 1 · 1 6· '88-tfn

INSULA nON

Mastic &amp; Certainteed 1
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doots &amp;
Windows
Free
Call

Repairs

NIASE

Certified Mechanic

Certified

3 A 111touncemtinta

RADIATOR _
SER~ICE

We con r~r and recore radtators and
htattr corn. We can
olso acid bail and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

smcnY ENFORaDI

Mlddleport. Ohio
1·13-tlc

1-11-'19-1 mo.

p
AUCTION

PUBUC

RECYCUNG

NOW OPEN FOR

BUSINESS

14th &amp; Maht St.
Point Plea-, W. Ya.
We Buy Aluminum

ltlpro, Ohio
CONSIGNMENTS WRCOME

Cons, Glooa. Bruo.
Copper ond More
MON.·FRI.: 9 am·6 pm
SAT.: 8 am-12 Noon

PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-428-7245

304-67 5-3161 ..

Ftw More Information

EVERY
~AT~ NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Only

LASHLEY
SEIYICE

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Annuunce me nt&gt;

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"

1-24-'U. t,..,

SHOOT

1-1-'11- tin

SYRACUSE, OHIO

12 Gauge Shotguns Only
faotorr Choko

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

992-2269

Most FortMgn and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp;. Minor

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

BILL SLACK

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

J&amp;L

Rl. i 24 ltlwoon Wilkes·
vHlo and Salem C1111or

mo.

OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

985-4141

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,

CALL 99.2·6681

1 Ill. Eon of St. lt. 7
on 2 48 at Clteater
WELDING
AUTO&amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY 8o
WRECK REPAIR

985-3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1·5-'89·1 mo.

Loae weight flllt wtlh MuiiTIJm
Strength Oolete lnd E-YIP
"~ater Plitt" at Fruth
Ftti•nwcy.

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

HILLSIDE MUZZU
lOADING
AIID

MODDN GUN
SUPPUES

OPEN 7 DAYS
9UI-7PM

Paying to~ay
Jan. 13, 1989
!Subject to Chanr

•Mobile Home
Part•
•Mobile Home

Rental•
•Lot Rental•

992-7479
It. 33 North of

Without Notice
#1 COPPER ............. 86' lb.
n2 COPPEI ............. 65' tb.
CI.IAN AlUMINUM
SIIHTS .................... 47• tb.
ClEAN AIUitMIIUM
CAST .... _ ................ 40' lb.
ALIIIIIINUM
•vaAGE CANS_... 46• tb.
IIONY
SHEET ............ sc to 30( ..
IIONY CAST- 3• to 20• tto.
STAINlESS _............. 20• tlo.

HIIY .. ROolty
Jack W. Car..v-Aeallor.
814-992·2403 or 814-8822708. Clll fol llotinga or Ml•.

Don't TrMh It Cooh kl
Public Recytlng n&lt;W~~t 011., 'for
llueln-. We •• on Mlln ., d
14th Stroot, Point Pl._!

W.Va. We bUy c ..., llumn:
coo.,_ and more. Mon~ thru
Fridll'l 8:00
8:00, Sotu•doy

•n

8:00 Ill noon. Formorelnform~ ­

flonc clll

992-5114

Located Off Bypa11
At Jet. of Rtl. 7 lo
143. Pomeroy, Oh.

'-12-'89-tln

..

304-8711-3181 .

Rodu.. -

ond ,., with

OollaeTat.t-.•ndE-Vap "W..
ter Plla" tvlllllbfa at fMh

Ph•rNc:y.

4

Giveaway

Pup plat to gtv I awty-P1rt
Chaw, Blue "--'• • O.mM
Sh.t..d. 2 fomll01, 3 !OIIoo.
~~ 814-448·1858 .... 5:30

.'

15·~rt INgle pup1. Call &amp;14-

25&amp;.8830.

.

.....

10 month old. ar!ed flmlle

rn.~:r;38Col

5:30,

'"'ppl•

·S
to -d homo. Reodf
to go. 814-948-2227 dll'lo.
' Fr• undlton.. Medium IRa
Clll 814-H2-S954.
.

.. Old Yellow"' type dog loolui to
be about 8 monthl old. YlfY
tool II and lew" kldl. 304- 882·
2001.
'

Lost and Found .

lOST: Young bladlendtan pup.
loct In the Centen-v 1r11. Cell
S14-38S-8213 or 31&amp;.9310.
Fem81e blldt and whitt dog
found. lookl ••• plft Coon

Hound. Found In Tupp. . Plaint

Munltloadint Suppli11
MMorn Guo Suppli•

ar•. Cell 1!11,.817·3463. Mwtt

Gvrw • Antmo ·Slugs
U Ammo

Sh•on
Vtlfll'llld .. County Ad . 35. R.od
ka¥ rtng. Nlq., from Att-.a.
814-843·5247.

Rt. 124 Eut of Rut;.nd
Acrou Happy Hollow Rood
Ph. 614-742·2355
t/20/lfn 1 mo. pd.

CONSTRUCTION

OWNII: GREG I. lOU!II

u

-!~rr~C!ORsl
0

,'!t.

'

.

We wll ha81 co., for .,.•venot
HEll!'. Molgo County D.t. of
Hurnon lloiv'-, ond HEll!'
vouch... We c.. give you
prompt d...ortM, E-lor Soli
Wo&lt;ko, Inc. . Pomor- Ohio
114-182-3881.
-··
- :

6

MOBILE
HOME PAll

$27

Plut FlEE.....
I T...,ing S.sllian .....
I S.uian at Fit &amp; TrinL

TOP OF THE STAIRS.

GENERAl CONTRACTORS

SERVICE
INC.

.

ONly
•
.9·19-lt·ttn:

"

CHESTER, OHIO

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

. 12 Gauge s~:=~~
Strictly I

I Om 110 Pooplo '6l.DD 1I
1 U&lt; 1005.31Ptr Gomo 2-l·ttn .1

MARCUM C

References

Choke

1 •Wo Pay 'SO.OOPor Game

992-6720

OliO

1-3 1-'S8-1

'1

DOOI PillE

H.O. FREE wrth coupon and 1
1 2pun:hase
of min. H.C. PadI ·~ lim~ I coupon per CUI· I
I torner per blnfJ stSSIOit
I

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING 8o REPAIRS
PHONE OAY OR EVENINGS

.l!.s
s;:o.r-

I

224 E. MAIN ST.
I
1
992·9976
I
1 TIIUIS. E.L 6:45 P.M. 1
1 SUN. 1.1. 1:45 P.M. 'I

licensed Clinical Audiologist

We Service

l·ll·tfn

949-2612
1

I

z LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

NO SUNDAY CAllS

:

L-----------------------------------~

I

DEAD OR AUVE

"Must lo lopairalllo"

I

I

I

LARRY HOFFMAN - PH. 99'2·6681

•Waehers •Orvers
•Ranges •Freezare
•Refrigerator~

,----------...,I

1
'BINGO
POM
II
EIOY.fAGLES
ClUI

Meigs Industries, Inc .. in addition to provid·
ing general office and commercial cleaning.
now otters
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
W
ill
as ~~~rvice.
e w contract to ,_n your home on a fixed
IIChedule, anending to items you desire.
We provide full liability coverage, workers
compensation, and pay all tax
requirements.
FOR A Pllct QUOTE CALL:

Television listening Devices
Dependable Heariue Aid. Sales &amp; c:..n,;,.l
Cl Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160

j

I
I

I

OWNER, BRIAN HOUDASHELT

•

WANTED

NewH-Iullt

I

IU&lt;lOUIIT

1.11

• '
2-3-'IH mo.

"Free Estimetea"

IEncloaed , ..... Find My IPKial Prepaid ...

:

SOFrtN GENTLE .·

!!!,
1

onr

(6t 4) 99 2 2.. 22

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

,------------------------------------i

. " ' ' ' ••

·~!

L.eesa Murphey
&amp; A~ociates

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
iNSULATiON

MESSAGES WILL RUN AS LINE ADS.

,.,

\

Basham Building

meuage in the heart
of your loved one and

~

·

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

Business
Services

614·698·· 7111

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

279rm,...,
............
CHILDREN'S BOXED t-------..P:':.':-1
·24COljN'f
VALENTINES
MICKEY MOUSE · ALF
SUDAFED
PlrrER PAN - OTIIERS

LYSOL

ail710

. NEW LISTING - A freshly
newly built home is jusl the
ticket to enjoy th e comrng
sprrng. Qu al rty conslruct;on
ranch wrth 3. bed rooms, ?
baths, and elec hear pump.
and Andersen
wlrttlows.
beauttlul lr onl porch, and
gara ge on a lar ge lo\
Loc ated ;n a gr owin g devel·
oprnent on Mor nr ng Star
Ro ad. $59,900 00.
Henty E. Cleland
992-6191
Jean Tru sseil ..... 949·2660
Dottie Turner ...... 992-5692
Jo Hill ......... ..... 985-4466
Office ............ .. .. 992·2259

BIG ASSORTMENT

Call the Avon District Manager
For Job Openings In Your
~~on A
rea.

4·16·15-tfn

PRIVATE HOME

-Y..J.l!2i::t:.Jl'iORMAL · HARD TO JIOLD

START SAVING NOW
fOR NEXT YEAR'S
VACATION! !

.

NEW LISTING -MIDDLE·
PORT - Good street. This
n~ce I 'h story home features
3-4 bedrooms, modern
kitchen with dining bar. all
slorms &amp; many olher lealutes. 111ctudes trailer lot.
Call for an appointment.
$26,500.00.

SILKWAVE
PERMS

V-'.,.ine m._• will be in ourTu_., «&lt;t ton on V.. enllnl's Dey. Tu•day.
Februery 1•th. tr..,d m•llfl• to your loiwW one~~ndtri~dl in M••ll' Courwvt

CALL DAY 01 NIGHT- 7 DAYS A WHI

992·2259

NEW LISTINGS NEE.I!ED We have buyers for Meigs
County Property. List with
us for best results.

B A.M.TO 5 P.M : MON.-FRI.
(114) 992·2168
DEADLINE: FRIDY. FEBRUARY lOTH, 2 P.M .

NOW IN STOCK
•MOBILE.HOME PARTS
·eWATEI HEATERS AND ELEMENTS
•,_liNG. SUPPUES

601

E. M•ln ...&amp;1.1;;,C,I~-

DANVILLE- Lrke new mo·
dular in the country. 2 car
garage with shed on a nice
lol. Plus an addition onto
modular. $31.900.00.

L-------------------4
tS.OO

Doy or Hight
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Ph

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

- 2:00P.M.. FRIOAV

u .oo
t6.00
$8.00

PH 9•9 2IOl
• • •
or Res. 949·2860

108 High Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 457 6 9

Public Notice

- 2 :00P .M . THUASDAY

0-16 WOAOS 11-25 WORDS

"At Reason•!• Pricos"

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

NEW LISTING - HAkRISONVILLE - Really mce
14x70 Schultz mobile home
~nh 2 bedrooms, fireplace
in lt•mg room, equipped
kitchen, drshwasher. brg 2
cat garage, slorage bu~d rn g,
and mce 1.06 acre lot. ASK·
lNG $33,000.00.

:- 2:00P
~ gg =: ~u~~g~~
.M . WEDNESDAY

_
L::::;:;::=;;:=:;::==r:=:::::::::::;:::;:::::::==~

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Real Estate General

the month of December,

Oet Results Fast

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:

BERNARD ~iRHE~~~~
11}30: 12}6. 2tc

- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

CUSTOM BUIT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

bidt.

DAY 8EFI!IRE PUILICATION

'tHURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER

BISSELL
BUILDERS

rig~~·t~i~':j~ ~~dt~ .

pQMER0Y, OH.

~lt~e'i"o~~~:m

DAY
J DAYS
6 DAYS10 DAYS
1 MONTH

Tha Vill"'l• of Rutland is
required to coiiKt end exam·
ina 1 minimum of one

no event more than fifty

thouoond dolloro. oro bond
for ten per cont of hio bid,
poyoble ta the Director.
Bidder muot oppty. on the
proper forma. for quollfica·
tiono ot ,_t ton dey• prior
to tho dote 10t for opening
bido in occordonce with
Chopter 6526 Ohio RIYIHd
Code.
.
Pions and opocificotiona
ereonfileinthaDepertment
of Transportation end the
ollie.·
of tho D'-trict Deputy
Director.

loctod. In addition, no oam·
pleo wore onalyzed during

MONDAY PAPER

1

diatributlon ayltam in ordar
to insure that aafe water is
being tupplied to the
conaumer.

II

coltoctocf ond onolynd for

"A cl•uified advertillment placed in The Deily Ser,tlnelleJt ·
c~t - el•aified dlaplay, 9i.rtlnsll Card and legll notlcn)
will alto appur In the Pt. Pleasant Register end the Gallipolis Dally Tribune. ruching over 19,000 homes.

'll

the drinldng water in lt)eir

:

month. One Nmple was

Yerd Sltlei

COPY DEADLINE -

microblologicol quolity of

Bustness
•
services
~=~;~:;===trt;::::::::;::::::::::;::::t::::::::::::::::::;r~========

mlcrobiologicol sample oech

." Ach th.t must "! p~~ld in •dv•nce are
...,
Cud of Thanks
Heppy Ads
In Memoriwn

to routinety monitor the

Public Notice
Elch biddO&lt; shell be,.
quired
filo with
hlo bid o
certifiedto check
or cMhier't
chockfor•n•.nountoquotto
five percent of hlo bid, but In

Sentinei-Page-9

: · The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classified

Aylwin named Chilean candidate

Philippine official
. urges Marcos' .return
MANILA, Philippines (UP I)Vice President Salvador Lau rei
warned Monday of a violent
upheaval if President Corazon
Aquino remained "stubborn"
and refused to allow all!ng
former president Ferdinand
Marcos to die In his homeland.
But Aquino told reporters
Monday she would hold fast to
her decision banning the return
&lt;~f her predecessor.
.,
"I'm still sticking by my
original position that it is not In
the interest of the nation that he
be allowed to return at this
time." Aquino said.
Laurel returned to Manila
Saturday after traveling to Honolulu to receive a secret message
the hospitalized Marcos asked
hill to deliver to Aquino.
--The vice president, whO split
with Aquino a year ago over
: disagreements In her handling of
the nation's 20-year communist
tn·surgency. said he agreed with
medical findings that Marcos
was nearing death and should be
allowed to ret urn to his homeland
after three years of exile in
Hawaii.
"The prognosis is that he has
less than 50 percent chance to

Monday, February 6, 1989

·

~ESIDENTIAl
COIIIERCIAl

.CUITOIII KnCHINI 6 IATHI
lfiXliNIIYI RIMODILINO
•VINYL IIDINO • ROOflliiiO
•METAL MJa.DIIUJI
HOUIINO. ATf. PROJf.CJI
SINCE 1969

ltlllf

ST. SJIACIIS

992-

find horn..

Keya found at ..-d ot

lrl1h. Setter found on Vanoe
Aoed, Pom1rov . l14· 882-

7n&amp;:

•

Loot, Stolon, Stroyod. 8 monthl
okt O.rmlfl Shtphlrd m111 tan
and bl.ck. m1H6ng •lnMJift, 12
from lallrnead • • · .,.. . . call

304-1711-3702 .,.. 8711-5408

sn d ,..,. m..ag&amp;

LOST f..-nlle cat, whtte with
poy -

m•tring. Nomo T..,.

drop. fi• fl• ooll•. kist JM.

"!PI•

21, 1988. Brown Lono.
ooll olr• 4:00 P]ol
304-1711-2701.
.

o..,.,.,

LOSTII t100.00 AEWA~D
loogto. In tho louthlldo . . .
An-.. 0&gt; Ill. Clll 304-~

mll•r.t JndwhttaCopJ* Not~

7484 or 304-1582-9218.

�Page 1 0 The Daily Sentinel
8

------

--- ·-

--Public Sale
&amp; Auction

42

LAFF-A-DAY

Mobile Harnes
for Rant

46

eon

&amp;14-448-1558
ano.

._,ocl.
.,. .we-

44

Compltll:e houMholck of t..rnJ..
ture &amp; enUqua. Allo wood •

388-8303.
FlWnlturo ond lpplloncoo ll'llho
phtoe or entire houllhold. Fair
prtCIO bolngpoltl Coli 614-4483188.

"How can you get THAT
dirty bul'ldl·ng' a snowman?"
•

Wll buy or
lpproiao ony;hlngl
AntkJu•.
furnftuN~pli.-.CII,
00

lurnlthln111. M•lln
&amp;14-24&amp;-8112.

homo
odornoyor,
·
••

Wontod To Buy- Uold Mobllo
Ho,... Call 814-448-0t76.

. . d 1PPII111ce1. All IYPII· Call

1B

Wented to Do

tIll pi uv1111~ Ill

Ser v1ces
Will do batJ(atnlng in my home.
Uve In Cent .. _,. . . .. C.H

11

814-441-0102.

Help Wanted

Cullom Wilding. 25r-o•po-

rlence. NDrth of Radn 1 on

Part-tlmeMLTfor fully equipped

Physlcl.,'• Office Laborattvy.
Apply In p••on to The Mldic:al
Piau, 203 ,.ckaon Pike · ~
tw- 8•30-4•30.

VISA / MASTERCARD

US CHARGE

Guar~.ad

Reu•dl••otCredltRitlng. C.l
Nowl 2t3-9211-9S06 ••· U
2524.

Ci;rmol Rood. Coli 614-9492481

Income r .. prep•et6ont. NanO(
Ervin. 814-849-2590. ' .

WMI do bobyolnlngln my homo in
Syracute. lnfenh a.n d pr•
lchool•• 814-949-3029.

· 32

Aportmonl ovoloi&gt;l&amp; HUD socoptod. Coli 304-1711-5104.

1980 Sp.,or; t4•70. 2 SR., 2
IMII hi. 11 electric. CA. wood-

FurMhld 2,3, or 4 roomt It
Nth. Clun. Adulta only. No
poio. ~of. &amp; dop. ;oqu~od . Call
814-4411-1518.

Bllbvakt• n•ded in ITif home

21

for 2toddl .... Ret. r.,uired. c.n

•uoo.

1981 P•lcwood. , ..x70. c-tr ..
air oondltioning. porctv undM-·
pinning. weryddng mutt go, wll
-lftco. coil J .D. 114992·
2t74.

Business
Opportunity

614-446-3131 - days. 4488347-woninlll.
A W1NMNG TRADITIDN

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAlLEY PU8LISHapart of IWinntngtlllft. We •• · lNG CO. reoammen• that vou
oneoftMI•gett ••• organize- do bualn•• wtth ptople 'fGU
tlon1 "' thl He•lng. Reattt\ knOw. In d NOT to ...,d mon..,
Thlaloyourlnv~lliontobo'"'mo

h~~te

C1refllld .,d•eetll wowing. If
you •• int•ldwd In a
opportunity wfth r..uonM end

through tlw mal untl you
lnv_....
off•tng.

• • ttable dl.m • • TNt ·m.,
be tt. '*' .. tar you. Qualified
appiiCifttl ehouid h.,e a prot.•5oMI IIIIPP_.anoe •d mann•
llld po..... an •call tnt orgen~
11Mn tklll. Formoredlt• c.ll
Athena, Ohio 514-4310,

Compa-ry _..bU•hed eccounta.
Abt~tel¥ no oompell:ltion. Earn
l4J tp 11IOO•Manth. Pert time.
No •peri•OI n. .urf. lnt•
en tr• •!*'lion lftw ttlf1 up.
18910 lnv•ment. Cell 2•

•II•

_.,l'w

local ICIIr.,lttlng oupport11-

MondiV· 9 AM-12 PM, athor
buainBII hOUri, ,.800.122·
&amp;999.

ADMINISTRATOR
Smllll dl.m e..U mottvetld Wid
dedlcltld licenaed .Nunlng
Home AdmlniltrMor for Ill 50

bod nurolng loclllty In Souttllalt.-n OhiO. Good compen-

aat5on pkJ1bonut. hellthtndllf•
lniUI'WII.. retir.-nent •

mONo

Send r•ume to: AdmlniltrMor.
40&amp; No . ,_k Aw., WeUaton.

TURN KEY BUSINESS

hour~. 1 - I00-327-1919.

1m11 lp..:illlty ltorl in IDI.I•......., Ohio. own.. .,.,.
t•red. Prindp._ ont,. S.nd
5nqu ..la ta: P.O. Box a.ta,
.......... Ohio 46140.
8 t...e AMF BDWing Lane fDr

olio. MaiM W. Vo. E-lont

condfllol\ ll'nlll dawn .,.,.mtnl,
own•r flnenclng avellable.
Ptictd for quick 1811 to ..nle
lltete. 1·11,·992·2403 ar
114-992-2710.

Ohio 4&amp;692.
GOVERNMENT J08SI
Now Hiring THIS AR EAI
t 10,213 to e76,473. Can rr•
fundoblol 1 -31 &amp;· 733-60&amp;2,
""'· F -2732·A.

TEXAS

REFINERY CORP.

n_. .....ture P••on now In
Qllllr,o* • •· Reg•cl•• of
trlin ng. ·wrll:e LL. , .. ., IOK

BUlin•• fCN' s.te
Tel..,hona . . . . . . d s.rva.

••mo

GOVERNMENT JOBS
·.,e. 040.· •s8, 230. vo•. How
hiring. CoM 111 8011-697-8000
El!t. R-980&amp; for ourront - o i
llat.
An Equ .. OpportunityErnpluJ•.

The Netk)nel AIIOd•lon of
State ~--'~ Df AgriOJ~
ture n..dl pirt-thn• ~griCI.Ihural
lntwv••• ., the count• of

Mel111 ond Goilla Appllc•nd

mutt be18 ven old. h•evalld
Q-Noer'• liotntetnd M:CIII to en
automobl• Stll'llng pev il

8!.118 por hour Inducing troln-

lng time plu1 21 c.ot1 Plr mh
for tr~~~et A f•m background il
dMi'.t.le. but not ... .,till. C.H
Ptl1cill1 Thomtn, 81~392·
8539.

AVON • All ...... Ctll Marilyn
w• .,. 304-882-26ai.
AVONeU .... I!Shirltr8P•••·

304-6711-1429.

Attentfon E.::eflent Income for
A-bly Work Info. call
504-848-170() Oopt. p 2301

Hom"

WANTED · Jim Cobb Cll.,.,

Oldt, C.d. it laoldng tar .,.
.nbiUou1 p..on to oompl•
ment our 11111 tore.. W.want an

ambttlouslnt .. lgtnt ..tf-.t811.•
who h• 1 d•lr• to . . n •
etcepUon.. tnooma. No •PI"
rlence nece~ury. Wa wll t,....l
REWARD· W• off• 1 pt-lnt
work envfron"*ft. l•ge paten·
' tllllnoome .,d JnauiWICI blnBf.
ttt. Volume telling and tl'lltnino.
Join our t..-n Md glfn a c...,,
not

Jult a job. ,.._,cal for . .

tppointmem. 6,4-912- H14.

Mature r•ponaibte pnon to
blb¥11t In our t.Gmt. inf..t and
todcl•. rhMc:. lrld •peritnm requlrld. non amok.
pt'..trred, 30 4-875-74,3.

WANTED• boll'loltter port tlmo.
3 dWI wlllc for 2 chilcttn, 1t
mo and 5\h vra. FOJ more

lnlor-ion Clll304-875-11835
Ill• 4.00.
lmmdlllop~inglorenA8CP

roglll- MT-MLT, fuH tlmo
-lnll. oNft poolion wMh ,._
- · ·Hooohl.
Ropfv .,P.O.
Jaad&lt;oon
Oirll
8ox Gln720,
RJt&gt;lll'. w.v•. 21171.
RADIOLOGY
lmmectt•• op1n~g tar M uttra
SOUnd 1nd ar Recloloalc Tec::hnofotllt. lui limO wtlhllonolho.
.-1v to Jocbon Oond Hoop&gt;
111. P.O. Boo 720. lllpl111, W.Voc
tl271.
•

.:,•1• !'AlE
IIIIa

011 plld fllr r

lloollal

.100. 011 pot
_ 1110. ti11. Unwlnaa;.N .
Auroro. II 10142.

nlthod. •1100. Cotl 114-9927479.
~

1978 Comnlunity 12lll0trlll•.
2 bodroomo, lurnhhed ,
14, 100.00. Plio,.. 30467113018.

31

Homes for Sale

-----VWtV 1ttf1Cttvebridl4bl*oom.
2 bat\ famlv room wtth fir•
pl-. forrNI dining. ..oe Nvlng
room. 30 ft. cullom oak kltd'l.,
cabln«l. Ollie woodwortt, finillh
2 c• a•~ge. 1.,111
18Wcllclpld lot. 4 ml• from
Holl1&lt; Hoopitll off Rt 35·
Fbn•brook 8ubdtv "ian. C.ll
814-4411-4189.

-.lmlftt.

o.lux• 3 lA . hou11: for ....
Ow,.- fln.,01, CaH 304-8755104.
Nlw Zlxll Lincoln Perk ''Ced•
Log", oidlnQ ioldod wMh opdona. Price raced. Swe· big
mon-r. See It Frwu:h City

MobloHomoo. 114-448-9340.

N- 28•84Lond-l&lt;."""ntry
tt.n wtth I'I•Mood floor• •
ltona ttr.aace. Pria. r•u:ed
•1ooo. Soo • F,..dt c11y
Moblo Hom•. 814-4411-9340.
N- 3 IR .. 2 b.. ho. !111tlly
room, central tir. Lo~ed on
extr•l•oe lot In Melldow HRI, 3
ml• from Pc. PI••.,.. Call for
an eppolntment, 8U-·441·
8340.

35 lots &amp; Acreage

IWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 12
Olive St., GoUipolll.
NEW· 8 ;rc. wood 1fi'OUP' •399.

Full aiM m.rt,... • foundlllon
our ling· 198. Rocllnoro
mrtlng- •sa.
USED· IIIdl, dr-on, boclooom
oultH. Dooka. wrln!ll&lt;woiahor, 1
compl-llno of uHd furnllun.
NEW• Wilt.,. boota- t31.
Worlclrooll •11 a. up. ISiool a.
oo1t too). c:-'1114-4411-31&amp;9.

3 BA .· I Court St. Kttchenwlth
novo a. rofrig. '250 pklo ~So

rot. No pMo. Con 814- 8492e.
Motll ty~ effldencv, 1 mala

dry DVII"'ooklng rfver. Adult•
onfrr, CA • he... Rat. C.ll

Rio Gronde-2 8R . opt. Stovo.
'"'lg.•wat~tllrrit:hlct t2215e
mo. No pML CIH 614-4488038
'
Bea~tfltl

2 BR•. equipped kitctl.., low ulllli•. EUiant
loCIIion. Sec. dip. No pet1. Call

n Pll'm.,., 304451-

•a-•

12
long Hollow Rol!d.
304-.5-3829.

41

Homes for Rent

~~--~--~~~
3 BR.
dlh.rxe. AC. 1350a
mo. Con 3041715-510' or

hou•.

3 BR. houoo. bopoo• ...,..lrod.
10 Old Fort Troll. C.ll114-4482581 9 to &amp;dilly.
In Ch•'*•3 8A, 2 bellw. 11
electric. Dip, required. C.l
81 .. 317· 7817 or 1· 703-3881109.

7roomhouoowkh2boli'o. 831

Third A.,., UntJrnlllhld. RM•-

""'"" roovrld. Col 81444110239.
2BR . Local:ld-51MIIr:rllllcwtth
IIOVI 6 rlllrlg. •110 I mo. •11

dop. Coli 114-4441-3570 or
44f.1340.
UruMrgraund 7 room houN. Cui
utlltla In half with ttD en•IPI
effldent hom1. Localld 3 mil•
from HMC. E-..rgr~ . Prtf•
ln&lt;lv!Gial or aouple will'! no
chll~on but wM oonoldor. Rol.

1100 ..,o,lt. •250 1 mo. Call

814-4411-17&amp;8.

---------------4

Unf\.lr,.t.d. 2 bedroom. Nice
Md d.,, no lmkte ptlla.

Dopo.. requlrld. Coii81499Z·
3090.

riont. naoo.Nicolldl•dllk(7
" ' - · 1460. Clll 114-2411-

54 Misc.

Merchandise

90 o-., ~~.---~- c•h wtth
"'
approwd credit. 3 Ml• out
Rd..,,., Ad. Open 91m to 5pm
0Mo
32n:i ·•thru 511. Ph. 814-448-

c...,...,.

V.tlar Furnitu,.
NM and uMd furniture M d
appllcanc•. Call 814·4•1·

lnoulllod c ..on11o. 304-2738868.

VI'Ra Furnlturw • Allollancet~
Op., Dolly, 9 ANf:5 PM

Sunday, 12 noon-S PM
814-448-3158

,.. •. Call 814-949-2253.

Truck to.dl of neN furniture
h•• jl1t •rrMMI. Bring your old

furniture • TRADE-IN for ..w.
8 pi~ wood group, 13e8.
Sol• So
U89. 7 ploounby dlnnette 1ft, 1110
(lnctudll hutcht . 5 roon 1uhe. e399-ut,. nice.
Mlttr....helf off regullr price.
Sunk bedl w/ boddlng. U211.

ch-.

BMcli Str- Mlckl10&gt;ort. Ohio.
2 bldroon, furnished ..,.-tment,
utiMI• pold. ""•""-· Phone
304882·2588.
1---------------Naw Kaptlng application• for
2 bo*oom .. .,.....,.,_ fully
cwpet... appHenCII, v..t•lnd
tr•h pldlirpo provided. Malnl&lt;&gt;
nonoo "" living cion to ohopping. b.,ka ond ochooh. For
moro lnlor-lon coli 304-88237il. E.O .H._ _ _ _ __
1.:._..:.:__::__:_
2 btdroom un~rniehed • 250.
.,. month toc.t• • ,... Hob•
Clinic. WV. 2105 Jilek• on Aw.
10&lt; morolnf. coil 614-4411-5186
or 304-8711-339e. 8:30·8•00

Rt. 1411nCemenary, 1Amileon

Unooln Pike.
Ap.-trrant tla waaher &amp; dryer.

Clll .114· 24&amp;· 6087.

Sllollto ••h. phono 304-17112269.

Mondly lhru Frtd.,. .

5 room opt, •t88.011 month.
llel.llt• ontv. 11015Yz .Mff••on.
phone 304-175-2184 efter
8:00PM.
l-...:_
_____________

WII'Tinty•lii

Fwnllhed lower IPt. dupt.c on
Mt. Varnon A•. arnal one
beli'oom. c•pettld. •tr oond,
prft lingle working aclltt.
e2115.00 rnDnth Plu• electric.
rlf•tnoe and d1P01It requred.
304-&amp;75-2151 .

1- - - - , - - - - - -

Furnilhld efftclenav downtown
opt, • utlkl• olid. dopook
roqulrod. 304-9911-3450.

.,.,..,CIJI.

outbuilding. Call 614- 992·
1281

..
Gllll;oollo. Ohio. Coil 814-4482781
.
· WI!ITERN RED CEDAR
"ChonnoiRIMIIc'
ond...,_lopSitlng
"Do&lt;*Molwtofl
GulroniiOdCiuoilty

CETIDE, INC.. Athon•l14184-3171

Pets

56

for Sale

lllonlngo.

Aoglll- I

Hoy lor Sll•be-v bela Nw•
wet nao por bela Cll 814218-17400ft• dorl&lt;.
'

71

Auto'1

Far Sale

o._.._ Silled

.....,..L

from 1100.
F• - - earv-.
CI;Wy
1111'•• G~do lll -1117-8000
Elll. S-10118.

1910 ttert., IDa: lblttl. Ill• n•,
lowmlooaa tli77MontoCirto.
eon llfi•7PM. 11 ...281-130'

lnl-.

...
Farm Equipment

QoYtrnm•nt Hom•l From
•1-00 IU
For-au-

Mobile Hom•. 2 ttedraDm.
1181. In K.r. Cal 114-3189804.

1177FordGronodo.
114--1180.

lllellndlblli 1- 111-733-1084
l!xt. 027 •lA for current
lollngol

2 Itt., furnlohld, -hor I...,..,
1'1 .... crl ,., .... '210 ...
mo. e200 dep . plua ullltla Cal
.
814-311-9963.

10 • • 3 beitoom home Stnd
Hllllold. 304HI-3427.

Ow- wll 211-1122.

3 - - 2bllhl..,llflnohld
b•.,..._ nM llrnece tnd
oentnd air, g.-IIJ&amp; fenmdyerd.
2414 MI. v • ..., Aw.. Pl. P~..
priood on fnlpotlion 304-87111774.

1 bedroom. In Mlddl.,an.
1280. por month. utllllto pold.
eon e ,._ H2-'11107.
lt'lln. Unfl.lrNihed. Coupf-.
1nYII chi*• ICCipt. .. At. 1,
1.o..,11 Rood. Pl. PI_..., ,._
hlnd QIC 304-1711-1076.

•t200. Cll1114---

Onatlelll\r ,...Old 1•111-lot ...,,... J . ., . wllh
,.......,.,dlllllll&amp; 304-17130 30 or 115-3831.

F.. nlolild 2 - - molilo
homo 10&lt; ""'· •200-oo pl111
~lllltiM, 1100.00 dopaoll,
phono 304-1711-6812 or 17113800.

Coli 11 ...

8N ...... ........ , . oond.

-.__---...i
,

--. ... .

-- ~

··· ·~

••

'
'
•• •'

I N..IAJflWS ~T .
lHAT Am.R IIDJik&gt;G
~

PDtnt.

w•twa.

trry.. 1n d

"ORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHRO;_P_ _ _ _..._..-~---~

'

HCMI DO 'fO.J
l-1 KE '1'0WR 1-1 EW

1117 Dodo• Ch•... 2. 2.

......
*· ft.OIIO rill•.
814-378-1721

Coli

BEiTEl&lt; THAN

I HAVEN'T
Fl&lt;aWREV ll-\t'.T

WHO':i

BETTER.

OUT YET.

·'

'

Akwo
TrooTIIm"*'e,:.ds"'""'
A.....,...
Free en
a C.l
30... 171-7121.

84

a

BARNEY

1~3f'tt~~~y!!

CARTER'S PWMIING
ANOHEATING
Cor. Fou,.h
0&lt;

HE SWALLERED
TH' BAIT··HOOK.
Llt-JE AN'
Slt-JKER !!

814-

WHEN DID
TAKE U
CATFISHIN',
DARLENE?

Elecblcal
&amp; Rafrlgeratlon

tt1Z-o~

I'I.PilAC,
AM-FM-Cuo. Eat oontl Coli
.,..... . . . . .17....

5HE'6MUCH

T~s&lt;.~

· - - 304-178-2398.

3918

-"'-

him.

"''a.... 2 -- •1.-.

86

General H1ullng

Bernice Bede Osol

Dll•d w... s-~co. - ..
Clot-- Wlllo. Dollor_., Anylimo. Coli 11 ... 448-7404-Nio
... • • calli.

CfOur
'Birthday

1988YW-4~........
rlr.AM_c_
......

--Coli

114-112-2811.
-d

A • R WM• Sonrlc&amp; Poa1o,
clatarna, wllle. lmmecMet•
1.0011 .. 2.0110-ilol~ory.
Coli 304-11711-1370.

---------m
1000 gel. wM• ,_.,iol. Lim•
lone.......,_ W. hal1 gr..ll.
-i&amp; aall. Mo. Coli S14-BII2-

- ---..- -...........-.......

,_e.,...... on •n• orUMCI
., Jhn •• ,..

c .... , .....

0 1 · - · 111 ... 448-3172 ..
304-773-1134.

1111 OodDe Alrll. 4 - · AT,
AC, AM-I'II, PI, PI, 1&amp;0110
. . . 304-8711-1124.

-·Coria,

·---4-.w-.. .

................. 30...137.

1278..

- - w... Harllna Sonrloa

.. 304-178-2311 .. 11 ...
441-4088.

•-bf•

r•-. volume dia_,... 2.0110 .. 4,0011 · · ltv. - - - '
....
104-1171-2111.

87

Upholltery

1----------

Our Pun.
trim the
shrubs sometime," the man

~--

.

.

""'

Comp lete ihe chvc klo quoted
_ V by filling in the mini ng words
'{Ou develop from step No. 3 below.

f t PR IN T NUMBEIED LEIIER~ IN
~
THESE SQUARES

•
.,

V••·

ARIES (Mwch 21,Aprl111) Conllnue 10
VIRGO'
21-Sept. 22) Guard
be axtra cautious regarding money
epinlllltindenclM tOday to magnify the
maners today or aloe some oort of fl·
dlfllcultlea of riolallvely 81!1)1tasks or aananclaiiOIII may be IIU!Iered, through a
slgnmenla. Don't let your own lmeglna·
friend or a group with whom you are in- · liOn deiMt you.
~ (lepl. D-Ocl. 23) Someone you
votvad, due to poor tudgment
Feb.l,1888
TAURUS (Aprii:IO-..., 211) You mlghl
mliY have to deal with tOday might try to
mDe the Ierma more dlsegr-ble II
In the year ahead you are likely lo' expe.- be son-"at slack tOdl\l In sltuallons
you prtlt'Miurely r - 1 how eager you
rlence a number of beneficial changes that require oelf,diiiCipllne. II 11111 al11·
are ta have wliatll being Olfered.
In importanlareaa of your lila. Make ev- tude conllnuos. you could looe e great
SCORPIO (Oct. :M-Now. 22) Uniorlu,
ery effort to capllallre on your oppor1u, deal of momentum.
(118J
2t.June
20)
Be
eure
peonalely prom- made 10 you tOday by
GEMINI
nHios as they davalop.
AQUARIUS (Jan. JO.Feb. It) Allow, pie you aaslllltoday ore truly d..-ving IPtlly membere or relatiVIII should be
yourself actequale time lo think through of your help and not tust tDing advan, laka'l with 1 grllln of ..11. They'll want to
all of your Important movae tOday. Poor I&amp;Qtl of your easy-going nature. You ~you, but they may not be able to
follow through.
ludgment or lmpulll- are threatl llhould be able 10 dletlngulsli IAGITTAIIIUI (No¥. 23-Deo. 21) It
with which you ml)l have to contend. the two type~.
CANCI!II
(.lunl
21.....,
22)
In
order
to
could
foul up your IChlduletor till next
Malar changes are aliaed for Aquarius
in the coming year. Send lor your Allro- make your pt 818nce felt with your peer Jew dl\ll H,OU brusli aide rnattwsthat
Graph predlctionlloday. MallS 1to As, group today, you mlghl It)' lo make need hnml~late ltlenllon now hoping
some elilngM lhat are not In accord ~;:""to tt.n latw.
tro-Graph, c/o lhle - - · P.O.
(Deo. ~ 111 E Box 91428, Clewland, OH 44101-3428. with the majority. Be eooperallve, not
INIIIW.
though~ eonciH!ona are sliowlng
. Be eure to lllale your zodiac sign.
PIICE8 (,..._ ..,_.. :Ill) Be optl- ~ (.lulr 21-Aua· 22) AffeCtions or lndlcallomt ollmprovemaut, thllll not a
mlslle regarding the outcome of events _,lng will pr01111 10 be eounterpr&lt;&gt;- day Ia 1111 IIXIravegent or wasteful. It .
today, but also be realistic. Don'l be- ~ today. For example, don't p,. ml)l 111'0\111 wiN tO pretend any ourplushave In ways - e you rely more on , tend you're tlghl with 101118 big sliotr ; .,. you've accumulaled don'! exlat.
you only know caoually.
·
.
.
tuck lhan your abllltlas.

c

'•

close lOOk at the power of
1he press, lobbyists and
staffs r;l
ID i!]) Areenlo Hall
I!) Evening Newe
I 0:20 (I) MOVIE: Bonnie and
Clyde lPG I (1 :5 I )
10:30 D (2) ll5l Night Court Pratty
bul inepl bailiff-In-training
lets mental patienl escape.

(RJ £;1

(l) Brown Sugar Female .

performers who made thetr

mark from 1900 to 1929 are
examined . (1 :Oil) r;l
New Country
11:00 ()) ReMington l t D (2) Cil II (I) I!§J Ill 1121
1111 Newo

a

110• Oft
C8 i!]) Lava Connection

(!)

You

.J6

+AKQH
+KH

WEST

EAST
+API
.Q75 2

+s
.AK983
tl0642
+Jl09

+9
+86S32

SO liTH

.,0
4
tsH

.KQ~842

+AQ .

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: So!!th ·
Wool

Nortb

Eul

Pass

Pass

Pus
Pus

Pus

Opening lead: • K
set. In this particular deal, since West
holds only five hearts, he should reason that declarer probably doesn't
hold four ·hearts, since he didn't bid
two hearts at bis second turn. At any
rate, it costs nothing for East to play
tbe heart queen, and It may get Weal
to draw the right conclusion, thus set·
ling the contract.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Sl:ulium

DOWN
I Ma•l••

&lt;'hl:lt&gt;r

4 An Llll

2

lll•ag h•
7 Nimhus
8 Alhirsf
10 Start over
11 Cui
13 "-was
going to
St. lvl's ..."
14 Slt't&gt;ping
st'tup
16 "Make
- . double"
17 Sewer
opening
19 Consume
20 Soul (Fr.)
21 Of England
(abbr.)
22 Took ·
an oath
25 Villain
26 Bihliral
WPt&gt;d
27 Camhridge
campus
28 Prif:'sl's
garh
29 Elahoralf'
flourish
in musk
33 Asian

an arn'st
Inn ordt•r

3 "- Yuu
llu MP Like
You llo'!"
4 W;Lql.c•
mak!'r
li Garden
evit'le&lt;'

6 .let

Yeeterday'l Answer

st&gt;t's

vac·ation
w-ea
7 "Forjolly
good
fellow"
9 Imprison
10 Collide
12 Shahhy
111 Bullring
rheer
18 l..eporinP
heing

21- noire
22 Unimagin'
ative
23 "Ain't
Mls ·
hehavin'"
performer
24 Planetary
path
25 Crisis
tlmP?
27 Rad
(pref.)

29 Late
actor,

llarry30 She may
cry
"Uncle!"
31 Re~inn
32 Chemistry
suffix
37 Airport
ahhr.
39 Sugar
- LPonard

rivt•r
34 Every
pf.'rson
35 Subatomic
partidP
36 Prf:'yPnt
3811er name
means
'jpeacP ..

41 Encou ntc~ r
42 Sf:'&lt;'ular
43 Wat.&lt;'lt

DAJLY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
IJLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is ust!d
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, UJe length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
RKDI

JWRJDW

can 1141 • IUir

11:30 G (2) 1111 Tonight Show
(I) Spor18Canlar

QYRNFYQ

(}) Clleera

VWECRK
FWQ

T C

CR0 W

DRCQ

T K

LWPENCW

w v-

(l) Europe•n Joum•l (0:30)
(I) NlahdiM r;l

T Q' C

e l!ll NewiJwld Gemt

VTQRVI. JEND
ZTM
Yat...Uv'• CryptOflaote: HOUSES ARE BUILT
OF BRICKS. MORTAR AND GOOD WILL, NOT
POLITICS, PREJUDICES. AND SPITE. - WINSTON

e

OJ USA Today

•

Realm - Feline - MONEY

One of the more unusual recent
bridge books is Allan Fallt's "Spingold
Challenge" (Granovetter Books, 18
Village View Bluff, Ballston Lake, NY
12019, $11.95 postpaid). It is a fictional
aCCOIIIIt of a team match played in the
finals of the prestigious summer
North American Cbampionships. This
week we will look at some of the lnterlestlng problems depleted.
A&amp;alnst four spades, West leads the
king of hearts, and defender East
needs to convey to West that the best
defense is a diamond switch at trick
two. Wben East eventually wins the
ace of spades, be will get West back on
lead with auotber heart and get a d;amond ·ruff. Obviously it would not be
eaougb to simply play the deuce of
hearla on the Dpl!!ling lead, since West
would almost surely then play clubs.
Is there an answer?
The recommended play lor East is
the queen of hearts. And the hope is
that West will be able to determine
that It is quite unlikely that East holds
only two hearts. Therefore, the wasta~ol the heart queen must be a dramatic suit,preference play. calling lor
the play of a diamond. U West reads
all that correctly, the contract will be

QYW

@Moneyllna
®-ymoonero
II! Mllirnl VIce .

a

~

40 Vclnl'ity

m
IDJ !'few•
(!) PoWIIr Game Take a

Realdlntill or ccunr...dtl wlr-

u . . .od 11-on. Rldlnour
B - . 304-8711-t?U

.1111 DodpA~-. Pl. Pl. AC.
llrli • ........ 12.700.
1112 f'l\lmouflh !loll.,;-..
PI, Pll AC, 88.0110 rnla
•1.1100. ltll l'ly-h flo.
Cilll
114-448-1211 ""• 6pm ..
114-448-3138.

e

a

,.. _ _ ..._. _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ ... ~·~-- ,

i

AT ARl..ln&lt;AL

lHIMC.IMJK .. .

Rot.., &lt;ir Coi&gt;ll tool *lllnl
--compl-lllltOdoy.
"'""' ool• ond IIIYioa 304111-3902
RON'I APPUANCE SERVICE,
houM 0111 I.VIdng G!, Hoi

States has coma to rely on
nuc&amp;ear weapons for Its
defense. C
.
!Ill
1121 Newhart Aher 25
years, the former maid
returns to-answer George's
proposal. C
1D I!)) MOVIE: Peycho Ill (RI
(1 :36)
1!11 PrlmeNewe
il)l MOVIE• Silleen Candl"'
{PGI (1 :33)
1111 ALF ALF has an allergic
reaction to an infant brought
10 Kate's shower. r;1
11J Munter, She Wrole
Naslivllle Now
8:05,(I) MOVIE• Bulll11 (PO) (I :53)
1•30 0 t:) ALF ALF has an
allergic reaclion to an infant
broughlto Kale 's snower. r;l
I!§J ID 1121 Kille I Allie Janme
moves into eo~d dorm : but
she has an unexpected
roommate. Q
1111 The Coaby Show Sammy
Davis Jr.'s granddaughter is
a patient of Or. Huxtable . r;l
9•00 (2) 1111 Ooklen Gl~a
Oorolhy has a blind dale with
a very troubled men. C
(i) Ill (I) 'ColumbO' A"BC
Monday Myatary Movie A
viilanous psychic murders a
magician with his trick
guillcline.
(l) POWIIr Game Take a .
close look at the power .of
tho press, lobbyists and
statts. r;l
(!) Secret lnltilllgonce A lOOk
at the excesses of the
Intelligence community . Q
t1)) • !l2l ~Lone10me Dove,
Part 2' CBS Mlni-Sarlea r;l
1!11 LillY King Llvel
11J Prime nme Wreelllng
9:30 D (2) Empty Neat Harry
arranges to have Carol hired
as the hospital's PR director.
1!J College Bo•kalbol
Holiday Gourmet Mickey
Gilley joins hosl Sylvia and
Chat Tell Erhardt to prepare
a Valentina 's Day feasl
Including Fish Medallions in
Red Pepper Sauce. Che~sy
Tomatoes and Zucchini, and
Chocolate Cream Strawberry
Tart
10:00 ()) 700 Club
D ()) 1111 Chee" Woody
wrestles with hOw to handle
a former boxer who insUlted

a

RoN·I Televl•lon Service.
011 fiCA. Q,_r,
OE. loeollllln' In l8nlh. Col
30... 11'78-239 "' Sl4-44824114.

o•tt·Oh•

2021.

------~~~--, ------------~

.. .

•41'1n•

'79
390 Y-1 , _
"''_..,...,.,.._.._ ~..... ent.oo. 30... 171c. 1487.
CIII .1 ... 387-'7411.
1113 111-* ,..... . . . . . .e
.. _ _ _ 12.0011ml-.
......... ·4.-011- .....

...... -"lOr-...

'

granddaughter is a patient of
Or. Huxtable . C
(i) ct (I) MacGyver
MacGyver's friend captures
lhe lead in a musical . r;l
(l) (!) War and Peace In the
Nuclear Age The United

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
UnaDndtkn.t lhltm. gue-.
.... ~ rollr- ..,... _
F,.. 81timM:a c.11 oohet
1·11 ... 237-0488. day pr .......
Aog•taBaaement

Phono 1144411-4477

...
.
••eo. ••eo. ,_ -·

1030 c - w/aob 1700 1111..
•4180. IOIInlenlll 1111-ol.
13110. Mt lnta;iiiiDnll round
. bel•. Lont ...._
,,_

a

.

•aoo. Coli

Lllo Moclolll008v•wl,.._.. condition. Automatic. AC.
etaoo. Coli 114-BII:Z.IOII 111.....,
ho&amp;OO&lt;tl ,.... •• - ·
m.ahlne. hit ........... NH ,_ 1.00 .......
bllw. ••eo. 80211JDw/CIII·
llo 14 R. hoo. 11'711 c::;~o. lllloC:..•Ior
F
... 88011. Col
OWn.w•
flnonoa Coli ,114-241-1112.
•
11 ... 281-1122.

"*·

a

Crook and Chaee
7:35 ()) Sanford and Son
8•00 ()) The Blue and the Gray,
Part 1(NR) (1 :00)
(2) The Coeby Show

EM!

-or

&amp;Heating

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

61

-. . .

1

F- Troo '!rimming. . . _
- 1 . Clll304-171-1331.

I

C UJ E 0 0

From the Pardon
Department: ''I'll

BRIDGE

1!11 Croullre
1DJ Night Court

._. LET'S ASK

Campers

Home
lmproveonm"'llllnntsts

r. I' I I I _~·

Keenly - Crowd

Sammy Davis Jr.'s

Motors Hornell

B1

I

Some men were talking aboutllle on other planets. "There
can' t be.any lila out there," quipped one gent "No one has
asked for MONEY. "
NORTH
1-1-11
+1075

It II]) M•A•S•H

ASOUT IT!

AMOUNT Of
gRAIN At:TIVITY·

82 : Plumbing

Instruments

for Rent

•

Vllild•

Point - · Cllh. ·N O -·
Colt 114-992-2107.

!""'--~:--_..,

MY

1977
Homo. Good oond.
. .800. Low ml- Clll81 ...
2411-17118.

pie&amp; Regllltered Slam. . a.e

,\liJIIII'

tiAVe THe I..EA.$T

- a..,.nr., - -

IT MAtce$

/ MINP ~Ac~
~ TO iHIN/C

~IGHE..fT · I· 0-

w.
Vo.Cfleop . . tlr•oround,D..,_
lop, F6rett..... RM ..d Uled.
304-8711-3331.

Regls:taod Cocll• Splftlel pup.

Bruce Beattie

&lt;tfr.!

.... one hlllf mile up
-~~~~ c - Rd. Col 114-

1817LinaolnT-nCir. LOidod.
1011'E - '"'"d.
21,0110 ...... Col 11 ...4418tl7oft•IPM.

Musical

Wr'f"H THE

""~ ~ ·
............_

c~e

o._nwynd C.Uory -nil.
Pnlln ..d Slam. . and HlrMIII'on- et.wlludvioo. Clll814-448-31441ftw7
PM.

57

IT 5AYf pEoPLe .

w••Pioof'••g.

1188P'antlool_.oLE.AC.
PW, AM.fM, orull&amp; Ill. E mnd. 22.0110 mla Coli 81 ...
44&amp;1117llfl• I PM.

Filii Toni&lt;. 2413 J_.., Aw.
Point P I - 30 ... 8711-2011
10 goiHt,. •t4.99ond lOgo!
............4128.

FRANK AND ERNEST

grldo Nubian

GrOOin ond SUpply lhop-P«
Oraomlng. All brMdi .. . AII
...,._, IM'no Pol F - Dooi•.
.klllo W.blt Ph. 114-448-0231.

6 pc Olio dining tablo ond dtlno
cabinet, like ..... arto~naHy
.1 .200.00 will lift ""
00.
304-1711-8282 ""• 4.00.

•• •J

•llln•

Servll.t:S

I

NEVORG
2
I I 1 I 1

SCRAM.t.ETS ANSWERS

a

Ol•rolll 301
341
IMernetktnll truci .. gine.
~ • holst .. Clfl ., ..

&amp;

below to form four slmpla words,

a

'88 S-10 • - 4whlol •~o.
38.0011 .....
•100.00 down •d
t*e ewer
- -.. 304-171-2144.

oo.... llrHdln'l a.-viDe. Tl· 79
mCilfly hoy. Cll 14-398-8841.

---------

Dog hou- far •lo. 1"1 mil•
out141. Coiii14-448-0illl

Mobile Homes

vo

of

on 11. · 111. 10. Coli
114- 592-2322, ltl-3531

1882 P'antloo -

..........

PM

1948 - · d . Coli 114-2181207 Or 888-11108.

42

~a""'N-T•_.In~-1
.,
IIIIo I.:•~1

A-

Solo .,_.,

Uv- - - oft• 4
ovory Fr1drlr. 1 mlo -

I AMI

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LE TTER S
TO GEl ANSWER

New Counlt)'
6:35 ()) One Pay at a Time
7:00 (]) Our Hou"
U (2) PM Maguln•
(1) SportaCentar
(1) II (I) Currant Affair
ill (!) MllcNell/llhrer
Ne-ur (1 •00)
1m C8 1121 IBl Wheel of
FoliUM r;l
ID l!ll Three'• Com~ny
1!11 Monerflne
®Cheero
0 Mlt;mi VIce
Fendlngo
7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:110 D (2) Family Feud
· l!l College B. .ketbeli
(i) Enter1Jilnment Tonight
0 (I) USA Today
I!§J ID 1121 1111 Jeopentyt r;l

.. lly - -

4 411-02114:

2 otooy, 3 beclooom. 2 beth&amp; on
rlvw In Mldcllport. Coh 114915-4134 ....1n111 ond _.,._

.....

A-.·
lllunlor-1 PM.

e 1121 CBS Newo

ID l!ll WKRP In Cincinnati
i1J ShowBiz TOday
® WKRP In Cincinnati
II! Cartoon Elpren

livestock

i.

Electric no.,. peen tl50.oo.
Orange recliner chW *25.00.
Tan 1wtvel ro&lt;:ker e:20.00.
W.,her and drvor gr- bolh
•100.00. All good condllon.
304-nl-5231 .

Antiques

(!) Nightly Buaineu Report

wheel•·

..,,_ Livoatodl .....

the

C&lt;AY l , POlLAN

1,5,......;.1:...;;.1-:-6:.....;1::...;;.1...:..,1---i

m Body Eleclrfe

'71 ChltVy Cuatom V•n.
'11100.011. 304-8811-3828.

Con.... blodlo111 · 0111
or~~~~~..,.
M•on-d.
lit llodc Co.. 12~ Plno

AKC c.lrn TiM._ pqrrh Cell
&amp;14-387-7700.

53

~ SpartoLook

1179 Clitoy Von wMh olr. 402
•• llocfc ChllrV - • · Coli
814-112-7107.

IWEEPER ond -lng modtlno
npolr, por11, and oupjiN•. Pldl
up Md clelw-r. Dwll: Vacuum

f ,1 fll &gt;~ 1 JiJ.Iill

month depotlt 1nd rwlw~no.
roqulrod. 304-876-3185.

83

*"'•

_,_lim..

s.,,.,,.,

m.m. , _ sc:hooa..

"*• -

Rearrange '-tters of
0 four
scrambled words

--Ti-H..;E...:.:W-TL:...;I::.,--..,1

(}) U (I) ABC Newe r;l

Lo-

Holond - l - 6 8 4 12 hp. Repo 421 tue
f10.800.011.
Moclol ~442. 30hp 11111001n. 74 Motorcyc•-.71100.011
N.H . . . . - ' a i . 1 0 0 b u 0 r ! n - ) - - - - - - - - - acM• ond h¥*e.
110,100.00 -.e modll with
,.......,...
ond oal• 19881Cow-1Boyou.1B5four
.9.-00.
E..Un conlldon.
•1200. Coli 61 ... 99Z.731Z «
lloofor Sonrloo Coni•
81. Rl. 17 Polnl , . _ . , ond 814-317-0278.
Rlpi.,Rold
Phone 304-111-.74.
78 Auto Parts
&amp; Accesaories

r;l

American Maa-zlne
6:05 ()) Lavome and Shirley
6:30 U (2) 1111 NBC Nlghlly Newa

~

~V

WGID

1~--Lr-.~CIL.-E.l-r-l.y,__.q

1m ID 1121

a

'

11

S© \\4i.llA.;. ~ t. tfS•

_ _ _ __;___ 141,.4

I

® Facta of Ute
II! Sh•Ra

BUT TI-lE PRINT ON
TI-lE MEt-IUS IS LARGE

1817 Ford Aor- Mini Von.
LorolnoC-n. ExCIIIonl-clllon. 30,0110mloo.
•tz.ooo. 114-881-4331

Mc.CI.,di1Mnlwo, Rio Grande. 0. Coli 8142411-6121.

Ohio. ..500. Coli 614-44&amp;1111.

•o•1weofl~r~dwlth14«11ft

Grln,.mk.._ -.,,.8prood...SiddSte.-Loadn.
Modll 213 Spr- 101 bu.

8.

llf'ge hutdt. large OVIII table~nd
choirs, *3.85.00. Pliono 30487&amp;·6429.

'*·

Rooms

Nnllhed room-919 Second
Avo.. (J;;Hio&gt;olio. •75 1 mo.
UtHttl• .-ld. Sin ale mala Sh••
b•h. Col 4411-44"11llfl• 7PM .

~NAFU® by

»4-17&amp;-7421.

pmy,
,......,. Sale...,. Holan•

Building Mll.-lofl
Sloc:k. brick. _ . pip•, win-

hookup, Mllin St. Crown Ctty.

*•
*32&amp;.00

e..-

PerakHt1. Cllnwl•. cagn. Condltlonlll ,.., for .... c.1
compound bow• .,d .,.owa. 11 .._ ........... ..
hond modo quilts ond • - 1--~-=--...:..-_:______
304-1711-4803.
Ground '""'" •e.OII ,.,
100. 1.00 .. 12.00 PM dolly,
56 Building Suppllea
- ...·a F....._ AL 3&amp; P...,
304-137-2011.ctlol0dlo1.Fob.

l•r•ll game tabla w / 4 Mrel
cholrl. eon 614-441·3834.
W•l'l•-0,.,.... Pelr1. Norge. av•·
oodo. U90. Whirl~. whlto.
*276. Whirlpool, n•cado,
U SO. Portoblo Kon..- o,..,
1125. lorlllhorvolt gold rolrlgeretor, 117&amp;. Sm~l whiterefrig.,.tor, 1130. Norge 011 dryer,
avtcado, .171. WhlrtDOOI. lVI·
cado WHher, t110. ft.n'a Applllnct, 217 E11t S•cond,
Pomeray. 114-912-1331 or
614 - 915 · 3661 . 90 doy

TlolEV
SERVE SMALL
PORTIONS ..

4W.O.

1988 FO&lt;d a....... 302 ""
inJooiod. .,...,._ .... -fnic-. mort- E -. oond. Cll
S14-a7-0119.
.

c.m.. -ltln.. Clm-.. ,.

2 IR. renlal hou• plua nn•

3 bedroonw, hnced v•d.

hi!IO""- PI'- on
- ..... J - ond ifut&lt;l'
- . . choln _.,d-•&lt;&gt;rloo. lltllro
Carn-

....,....,odYor""'*••-·
· Y""•
uoo. 114-378-1311 •"••
(bl.ldt·
... Sam 7.00p.m.
8ort111Yitl1 I Old Routt 21·
Junction tndeptndlnoe Aold.
(N.w ERAt.IEat:R•-wcadt. 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Friday, - - · lundor ..,1y
Noon-I:OOP.M:,tO.,..Oonlcrlf.

2 atory·4 8A .. lull unllnlohld
-2 -·
20x40Inlnground
on
Diu• aa-a
VInton. pool
c..
114-318-1194.

In
3 bedroom ranch.
AI . . .ric. n.v vinylwfndow1,
oqulppod k • ..,.._ . . . . - . a•·

w.

~.J':7.:0.'1o.lprood•

Colll14-448-1148.

.,.,..,c:e,

45 Furnished

v..., ....... daublo
,_...,..11"1' w,-.., VIele&gt;-

81 Farm Equipment

County -Honoo. Inc. Good t~~inf.~'!:.."":'i~~i.•
uHd oppMrin- ond TV •••· ft.xa fl. , 350. Col 8 14Op~ 8AM to IIPM. Mon ttwu
28
s •. 814-448-1889. 127 3rtl 11 .
Avo. Golllpollo. OH.
CllrfnM. bun-. 1 z 1n. blldl
•
RCA
11ro F'--88
GOOD USED APPUANCES b•-= ....':'·eo" e 1 ~eW11horl. dryoro, rWirl!ll&lt;llon. 08911.
ranges. Skagg1 ApplianCH,
Uppw Alvor Rd. bolldl Slono Fli·-- lor •I• •30 pldlup.
Crta1 Matoi. 114-448-7398.
·dollv-. U5 U-1;.,~ ROCCOOOI
Rd. Clll814-448-4982.
lAYNE'S FURMTURE
FirMood ~r Ill• e21 to 130
Sof• 111d chain priced from d.,tv-.d. D.vld H• 114-318•395 to 1995. Tobl• •eo .,d 8135
up to 1121. Hldo-l·bedl .390
.
to *195. Recllnere e22s to· ML~ •-dwoocl-•• 112
U78. Lompo 128 to •t28.
~- ·~
Din- •109 ond up 10 •us. bln&lt;lo. Cotrtolnin.11 _ . . . "'
WoDd table w-1 chllu t285 tO ~.~..=~~::1. Pomnv.
t?ll. De1k t100 up to 1371.
Hutcli• '400 ond up. Bunll Fir-- tar oolo. Mixed h•dbeds compiMe w-m•tt I I wood. HEAP VOUCHERS ec.295onduptDI39&amp;. 1oll'l-~ PI~
~,.. Coli
1110. Matt,... or box .,m 11 c~-.. ""'up ar•
lui or twin •ea. firm •79. and 614-742·2421 . , . _
118. au_, UIO &amp; up, Silty In good oondlion.
Klng,350. 4dr_.._,l8. Coll814-992·71711.
Gun ctblnMI I. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
Baby mill,.... 136 • U6. For ooir. Ollt lrowoai&amp; Col
8od frlmoo 120, '30 • King 304-1711-2787. lftw 4•30 p.m.
frtme 160. Good llfiCtkni of

Good uMCI color t.v.e for •le.

3 bectoom1, located in Syra-

cuo• Col 814992-71S91ftw
8.00 p.m.

Antiques

•2.780.011.
Moclol 3zt Spr- 138 bu,
*2.8150.00.
114 . . . , _ 177 bu.
11300.00.

PICKENS USED RJRMTURE
Compl.ta houMhold furnlahlngt. V.mii.-Jerrk:ho. 304--871t uo . 814-38 8-9773 ,
evening•.

fociMI• iiVoiloi&gt;l• Clll 8t4982-3711 . EOH.

Apertrnw.t fDr I'WII. Badroom •.
!lYing room. · kltehen. b11h.
Corner of Cole .nd Third in
Mldcll!pOI't. t131. ,._., d..,Oiit.
No P•L Collll4-992-2403or
11.,.992·2780.

bo-..

53

(I)

I!) Sportralt•
(l) The POWitf of Choice
(!) Square OM TV
C8 i!]) Happy Daya

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

Wliiiolaholr•,_ 01 uood. 3
whoolod oiiOirfc • -. .. Coli
Rao-a Moblty coltect. 1-114I~Hn

7872 . Houro 9-&amp;.

C•p••· Nice ..fting.LM!ndry

F\l'nilhld 3 rooma end blth.
Rm: ftoor. priVIIte
no

D &lt;Il &lt;ll 0

1111 New•

I-~~:;;;:;:::::::;:~:;=~~~~~~1Bt3CIIwyVon.--.
CII
114--....._ 7110.

~::~;; ~n~~:: ~~p'il'.!;~rt,:'i"·gr:;

6.1.. 446-0338.

31Ctll with pond, 5 acutractl.
90 aCI'.. CJWr. wfll flnii'IOII

Vam&amp;

•

1:011 (I) Bonan . .: Tlie Loot
Epi-

1988DodaoDIIuilo, 4WD. Col
114-448-f1311ft• I PM.

v•

Efftdtnov ..,.tm.t w / prtvate
bllh In Rio Orondo. Clll 6142.-&amp;-11223.

Reocoon Ck.. oorner lot In
Ouv._, Eltlte Subd. Call
114-448-8t87oft• 8 PM.

with 1875.

'

1988 Ford Ron111&lt; 4114. V.S, 5
lpd., JI.OIIOmla 17200. Col
114-448-1482.

~!.'ko~::'w':;:d~~::::: IMI.

Modorn 1 8R ............. Call
814-4411-0390.

o.-uo lvlng. I and 2 bodroom IP lr'lmentl •t Village
Manor and Rlv. .lde A panmtntl In Middleport. From
•tat Coli 814-992-7787.

lla~ttrul home 1tte 0\Wiooldng

- - - -- -

•

1 -------------

2 bedroom mobile home 14x70.
3 M*oorn mobile home home . 8t4-448-1817.
14o7D. 304-8811-3427.
2 be&gt;*oom Aptt. for rent.

·1715-1381.

:-&amp;::;

. MT- MlT

12x60. ,971 two bedroom
Freedom. Air, w•her-dryer,
..vnlng.. Uf1dtrplnnlng. fur-

for nav com.-. M'utt

hiYo blllc 11-ronlc boct&lt;ground. For oppolntmont coli
304-675-H&amp;1

51 Household Goods

:.,.7.:-:::-:::---:-:-- · onty. Mobele home, 1 mile below

Soundbloln . . to. ly. . . wMh
CIDDd a.~11:orner bile. low OWl'
liNd .,d good lo.,..lon. Good
o-"'rily for growlli. Wll . . o

711. Ft Worth. Tx. 7110 t.

Babyetuer needed. Mondlly·
Frldlll· Rol•onOIOroqulrod.CIII
614-448-0009 1ft• 5pm.

73

'::~:t~~'

EVENING

PEANUTS

,,
729

Mobile Homes
for Sale

"'"ed

•

For lease

~,-,-,---~..,-,-=-"'7""'

:kl~;."'c!::~n;:.;!~:
wu*

env•peto: INC. P.O . ICil 2131
MI.,.&lt; Fl33261.

lng 1989 trwll broda.lra FOf
more tnforml'tlon ~Md ltlmped

49

Homes for Sale

burrMr, 10.18 dlock, 12XI"
Eld•tv care. hou• de.-tlna wood buHcln. Coft 814-2411belr(1fttlng.
nul'lllng ••· 6028.
1ilt1nt l•perianoed), ,..,• .,..
cet. E. Che• It MiuiDn. 304- Cull:am Manor, 2 BR ., 121:80,
175-9788.
. . llrnac•ltow. rlfrig. , WI·
1hlr/dryer, n_. air condlttoner.
CoH814-2ae-e28a.
hnanml

BONUS INCOME
E•n UOO- UOO wooldy. Moll·

Modorn18R
pi• kilctt.,_, -mown,
lir, c.-pet. oomDepOlit. no p - Ctill &amp;14- 44 110139 ...,.,lntiL lift• 5.

MON., FEB. 6

•

12110.

lAWN APT5SICDndAw. , .... hod orllld...
cl• lll,.ing at . 1175 o mo.
~ 2
lnctJdlng - · • gorblaa
ln PomwO\', ...,._..._ otorv. Single ldulla only, Coli 8f4441-4807or 44&amp;-2802.
Alia t~ove. rl'friger•or,
Ntw't{ remodel ad 1 BR. apt.
ond dryor. Full b•emont. Appl. furnlohld.ldeolloellion-t
•19.&amp;00.Lowdownlndpavl•• blodl from downtown. Call
..... Coli 8t4-949-2528 "' 814-4411-4839.
814-992-2848.
Must llftle 11t1te. Hlvii.,Wel Nice t -2 bo*,_. 10&gt;11'1mont1.
hou ... CSinaledwellnci. Som• AVIIIable furnilhld or unlur·
tplrtrMnt hou.... (Multiple nlo- DeotooM ,.qulrod. Call
dwellingt . Stveral llu1fn•• 8144411-434llifl• 5 PM .
tuHclnga. Th•• propwtl• In
Pom•ov. Mlclcloport AI good 2 M . opt .. n... pklohcepor.
inveot,... P"'P. .I • . AMpriOid n., point, ud~l• ..rtllllv pold
to. ..,lok ooltlo c;uallfled luyon. 1171hmo.CIII304-175-5,04.
If you oould'nl lftord to buy a 875-83511711-7731.
hom., now you c~ . For more
informltlon ell! Jack W. Cll'lllf Unt.r,.hed2BR . g•eg•epert.. 614-992-2403"' 814-982- m.,t. lntown.Cirpllod. Adulta
on~. No pMa. eon 614-44112780.
4581 .

31

Schools

Instruction
Used t.rniture bv thl piece Of'
RE-TRAIN NOWI
entire hou11hold llao uUing.
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
8t4-742-24&amp;5.
COLLEGE, 829 Jockaon Plk&amp;
lOp ptl~ for uald furniture. Co114411-4387. Rog, No. 811-11·
gen•ll houelhold. Mtiqu81, 10566.
8 ~ 4-9BII-4396.

1874 Cliowy '14- RiiM _..
.710. Clfll14--0792.

mw

ret&gt;~~~~~
\l.lfrn A~IT 6/&gt;a
TH~ !OlTt~ "f

T nu:kl for Sale

bo••

Television
Viewing

111olFO&lt;dRin111i4Wiilol .,.._
V-1• .to., ...,.. • ..,., lhOrt
bod. 11211 Col 814-448-

r::;:::::;;::;:::;:::==T~~~~~~;;;~i &amp;HADv
15

Far Sale

1811 F·160 fo•d plcliu p,
37.000ml-.1.,_,4opd.,PS,
PB. AM-FM-Ceee, runnlnt
Clfllt4-387-0428.

1at1io«com-cllforrtllldon·
till 1pace-l roomt. 11A: b•hi.T•• Townhou• apa1mentl· 2 RHtor«&lt;hlltorlcbuldlngontM
8Ro., 1% batt., CA., dlo· pwk. 1380 pwmonth•cluclng
hwllhor. dia-l, prlvlte 1ft:
utili I•. Alii. roqu~od. con
cloood pMio, pool, pl..,ground. · 61 4-448-442&amp;.
Wt~t•. ~M~Wer. &amp; traah lnckuled.
Slortlng 11 t289 pw mo. eon
814357-7860.

Junk Cen~ with or wfthout
· rnoton. Cell Larry Llvttv- 81 4-

HtiiiO, .......

Apartment
for Rant

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jod&lt;oon
Pike frDm I 183 a mo. Walk ro
shop ond rnovloo. lt4-448268B. E.O .H.

oo.t hMt•a. Sw.ln•• Fwnlture
So Auction. Thbcl a. Olivo.
814-448-3159.

Auto's

72

Sp.ce ide~ for afftce ar IIMI
bu1ln . .. On North S.c:ond in
Mldcloport. •zoo pwmon1ft. AI
utiMiel . poid. Coli 814-992·
&amp;546 dllll .. 114-948-2217
night"

TOP CASH poid for '83 madol
B'Uidt-Pontlac. 1911 Eatt•n
Avo., Oalllpollo. Con 814-4482282.

71

'*"'· ••.

814448-0527.

and n.-..., uMd c••· Smith

KJT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrichl

Coumry Mrtbile Home Pw'k.
Aoute 33. Nort 1'1 of Pom•oy.
I.Dtl. ..........
c.•
114-992-7478.

Mob. . home~ 1of rwtt. Oep . •
Nl. required. Coli lifter 2 PM.

Wanted To Buy

Space for Rent

The Daily Sentinel-

Pomeroy-Middeport. Oh,io
IIDi'ileve

- l y docorllod. 2 BR .. llllv
c•p«od. Soe dep,

9

Monday, Fabrurt 6, 1989

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

1!11 Sports Tanlghl
ec
ll4ljllll 8how
all HIH'"
ltNel
aluH Eva and
Me. Bebt

11 American Magazine

CHURCHILL

NKZEOTDTEV

Q

�L

\

Monday, February 6. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

r---Local news briefs ... -----.
Continued from page 1

Conference slated Tuesday .
A conference for proposed operators of deputy registrar
agencies In all Southeastern Ohio counties , lnctuatng Meigs,
will be held Tuesday from 2 to 5 p.m . In the City Recreation
Rool'l\, 733 East State St., Athens, according to an
announcement from Michael J . McCulllon, registrar. Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, and State William M. Denlham,
director, Ohio Department of Highway Safety.
State officials will explain how to submit competitive
proposals for the 202 new deputy registrar offices whlj:h wilj
open for business July 1. All proposals must be received by the
BMV no later than March 1, and all proposers will be notified of
the results by April 1.

.Chamber to sponsor events
The band, Butch Wax and the Glass Pacs, Is returning to
Meigs County this weekend for Saturday night's Va! en tine Day
dinner-dance at the Royal Oak Resort. The evening of fun Is
being sponsored by the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce.
lfhe same band played at a dance sponsored last year by the
Chamber and response to the band was so favorable, according
to Sherr! Hart, chamber secretary, that Chamber members
decided to Invite them back again this year.
" If you missed the band the first time they played for
Chamber. you won' t want to miss them again," says Hart. .
The evening will start at 7 p.m. with a steak dinner and all the
dressings, followed by a brief presentation of awards to
deserving Chamber members, and then dancing from 8:30 to
midnight.
Tickets for the dinner and dance are $25 per couple and $15
single, and are available at Bank One, Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Top of the Stairs, Clark's Jewel~. Royal
Oak Resort, Ohio Power Company, Amerlcare of Pomeroy, the
Pomeroy Chamber office, and from Tom Reed, Jennifer Sheets
and Jay Hill.
.
Additional Information about the evening may be obtained by
calling the Chamber office at 992-5005.

· Sheriff probes B &amp; E Sunday
A breaking and entering occurred Sunday evening at the
home of Ron Rife, AI bany, according to a report from Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Souls by. Rife lives on Buck Run Road
near WllkesvUle. Miscellaneous Items were taken from the
home Including a lawn tractor, stereo and television.
Michael Gray, age 24, of Route 2, Racine, was arrested for
disorderly conduct at 4: 20 a.m. Sunday, after a call to
authorities from a residence on Happy Hollow Road. According
to the report, Gray was attempting to gain entrance to the
wrong residence. Gray was Intoxicated and using loud and
abusive language. He was confined to the Meigs County Jail
pending a hearing In Meigs County Court.
Deputies took a report of a vehicle fire at 6a.m. Sunday. Floyd
A. Hartley, Athens, reported he was traveling on Mudfork Road
when he noticed smoke coming from under the hood of his 1981
Mercury. Scipio Township Fire Department responded to the
scene. The vehicle was totaled and no Injuries were reported.
According to an accident report taken by deputies on
Saturday evening, Timothy C. Gaus, 19, of Richmond, Va., was
traveling east on County Road 41nRutla)ld Township.and struck
a deer that jumped Into the path of his vl!hicle. The deer ran Into
a nearby field.

Meigs EMS has -1 3 calls ·over weekend
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports 13 calls
over the weekend; six on Satur-day and seven on Sunday.
Saturday at 12:31 a.m., Middleport to Hudson Street for Dorothy
Jenkins to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 11:35 a .m .
to Meigs Mine No. 1 for Albert
Loveday to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 12:14 p.m. to
Palmer and South Fourth Streets
for · Joe Bowland to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport
at !2:40p.m. toCoUegeAvenueln

Rutland for Bridget Davis to
Veterans Memor.lal Hospital;
Rutland at 3:07p.m. to Hill Street
for Carl Dennison to Holzer
Me dical Center; Middleport at
4:02 p.m. to State Route )24 for
Bertha Evans to Vetera9s Mem·
orlal Hospital. ,
Sunday at 12: 02 a.m., Pomeroy
to Locust Street for Terry Ml·

cha els to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Scipio Township Fire
Department at 4:09 a. m. to an
auto fire on Mudfork Road. The
vehicle was owned by Floyd
Hartley. Pomeroy at 6: 59 a.m. to
Peacock Avenue for ·Grace
Campbell to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 10: 04
a.m. to Bailey Run Road for

Mary Bush to Veterans MemorIal Hospital ; Middleport at 11:29
a.m. to South Second Avenue for
Ida Martin to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 8:02
p.m . to Eden Ridge Road for
Jonny Kibble to St. Joseph's
Hospital; Racine at 8:24p.m. to
Mount Olive Road for Ruth
Bennett to St. Joseph's Hospital.

Vot.39. No.190
. Copyrighted 1989

..

. 'IIBUJS

,...

vo-AG STUDENTS - Mike Thomas and Jason
Fife Involve themselves In a Vo-Ag project which
will be pari of the voca&amp;lonal openhouse a&amp; Meigs
Wgh School · Thursday, star
at 7 p.m.

Round and square dancing will
be featured Friday, from 8 to 11
p .m ., at the Pomeroy Senior
·citizens Center. Music will be by
the True Country Ramblers.
Admission Is $2. The public Is
Invited. Those at tending may
bring snacks for the snack table.

lin•

Sophomores from Southern, Eastern and Meigs
Wghs, and their parents, are Invited to a&amp; lend_the
open house. (See story and additional photos on
page 6).

Syracuse hikes water·rates
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
In recessed session Monday
night Syracuse VIllage Council,
following a request made by the
Board of Public Affairs, voted to
Increase water rates an additional $1 per· hlonth, beginning
Aprll1.
According to' board members
Gordon Winebrenner, Larry
Ebersbach and Bob Cunningham, the . rate is necessary
due to an Increase in electric
rates t$2,300 a year) for the
pumping station.
A request made by Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Morrow to place a
gate across the entrance to a
driveway In front of their home
was denied. There was a tie vote
with Mayor Eber Pickens castIng the deciding vote . The motion
was not to close an alley between
lots 16 and 17 with Minter Fryar,

--..
DEl'

EXIIIA CGimlt/l.

• oz. 1/ZE 011

DIMMX

Kenny Buckley and Jack Willi·
ams voting for the motion and
Jim Hill, Ernie Sisson and
Kathryn Crow voting ~galnst.
The mayor broke the tie vote
by voting for the motion.
.•-The driveway, according t-o the
photostatic copy of the ·area
submitted bY solicitor I. Carson
Crow. shows an alley between the
two properties. However. the
alley dead ends Into another alley
and that alley goes from Hubbard Street to Seventh Street.
Council made no decision Monday night In regard to the
proposal made by the Ohio
Power Company to drop the
present contract and go with a
new proposal. The rates would be
less under tlie new proposal for
the time being but council has no
guarantee that rates would not be
incre~sed. There have been
approximately nine Increases In

IUI'f1l. IIJI'ftl
I'WI OllltBIDEII
IR.-1'111. (II.

WASHINGTON (UPil -PresIdent Bush's $90 billion bailout
plan for the ailing savings and
loan industry was met with both
cautious approval and concern
among lawmakers, . many of
whom seem to support his
approach to the problem.

59
._EVERYDAY•
COCA t:aU .....am
AT liTE All

Bush outlined his plan Monday ,
offering a set of proposals to be
forwarded to Congress. He said
the . proposals were developed
after a lengthy Investigation of
the thrift crisis by " the best
minds that this administration
can come up with."

But Rep. Henry Gonzalez,
D-Texas, chairman of the House
Banking Committee, Issued a
statement saying he wanted to
"wlthold judgment until we have
a thorough analysis In hand."

I PN:Il

1Z oz. CAlli

)69

House reverses
itself; pay hike
is all but dead

HERR'S

Pretzels

9&lt;

SHOW ·U HAVE A HEART

- ...

-·-

- .. ----r

RITE

Sen. Donald Riegle, D-Mich.,
chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee, who was In regular
contact with administration offl·
clals while the plan was formulated. called It "a sensible
proposal" and' said the proposed
structural changes for the bankIng Industry "by and large make

sense.''

Hospital news

led Cross Bloodmobile
Wednesday; ••bruary 8
Ponteroy Senior Citizens Center
1:00-5:30

lighting service in the pas t 10
years.
A request made by Sky view
Cable to survey the village of
Syracuse for possible service to
the village was tabled until the
next ~gular meeting of council.
· According to Kellny Buckley
Skyvlew does not carry CNN.
Columbus, weather channel.
HBO , Disney or MTV which Is
· presently offered to residents.
The cable COJl\pany does offer 14
channels for $13 per month also
Showtime and Clnemax for $10 a
month each. If a customer would
want all channels, plus Clnemax
and Showtime, the charge would
be $31 per month according to
Buckley.
Council agreed to again advertise for sale the town's dump
truck.
Attending to addtlon to those
named was Janice Lawson,
clerk-treasurer.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
Pomeroy Village Council
ado pled a $1.03 million budget for
the village for 1989 when they met
Monday night In regular session
at village hall.
General fund allocations for
the vlllage total $277,559. Totals
for some of the various-depart·
ments which comprise the general lund are $170,000 for pollee
law enforcement; $91,359 for the
village's administrative offices,
Including the mayor and his ,
secretary , the tax administrator,
the village administrator, the
clerk-treasurer and related expenditures; $9,200 for basic utlltles; $7,000 for legal services and
related expenditures.
Special revenue funds for the
vtllage Include $177,450 for street
construction, maintenance and
repair; $15,900 for cemeteries ;
$68,000 for fire funds, which
in~ludes a la rge fire truck
payment.
Debt service fund appropria'
tlons amounted to $6000.
Under enterprise fund s ,
$300,350 was approved for the
water fund.
The budget may be amended
later in the year to reflect
anticipated revenue of $28,500
from State Issue II. Because the
State Issue II funding has not yet
~en .certified to the village by
the county budget commission, It
was not Included In the current
budgetary figures .
Council approved the 1989
budget as ou tllned by ClerkTreasurer Jane Walton.
Matters discussed at the last
regular meeting of Council were
re-Introduced by Mayor Richard
Seyler. Seyler was not present
for the last meeting when com-

Bush's bailout plan meets approval

JJMIWS

OIIIIMIIM.IIIIIIL.L.

RITE AID DISCOUNT. PHARMACY
306 EAST MAIN STREO
POMEROY I OHIO
PHARUCY·PHONE: 992-2586

ENCOVNTERS BDISTANCE - Eastern center Mike MarCin
( 4!) enCOIDterl r1!81111111ce In the paint from SoutllweslerD

defeaden (L-B) John Ehman and Bill Bapr, as Ea1le forward
Mike Freet laolll cia a&amp; far right ID the secoJMI quarter of Monday
a~t'a . SVAC 1ame oa the ID1hlanden' borne court. TbOIJib
Mllrtlll -red on)Jr alx poiDta and 1pent much of the second hall oa
the bench, the Eaales 1urvlved alaie Southwestern comeback to
win 86-tl. (See game details on pare 4).

(

•

I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tbe
House, afraid of reprisals from
voters who mlrht perceive lawmakers as · greedy, reversed
Itself and moved Tuesday to kUI a
51 percent pay raise hours before
the $45,000 Increase was to go Into
effect.
The Senate was expected to
awllt)Jr follow salt by voting to kUI
the salary lncreue, reafllrmiDg
a political reality: a pay raise Is
probably the most dangerous
Issue on which to face the
American electorate. ,
Hou~~e Speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas, saw that reality
emerre on the Hou~~e Ooor
Motlday, torclq him to bow to
the demaauls ollawmaken fearful that maneuver1D1 to aUeni)Jr
pocket tile raise would cost thein
their job&amp;.
·
'1t Ia apparent to me, and I
thiDk all of us, a maJority of the
members desire to vole up or
dowu on the quesUon" of a pay
raise, Wrlj!bt said.

EDISON HOBSTETTER

Retired bank
president dies
Edison Hobstetter, 83, of Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, long-time
president and chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Pome.roy National Bank and later
Bank One of Pomeroy before his
retirement In 1983, died Monday
at his res ldence after a several
weeks' Illness.
Mr. Hobstetter began his career In banking In 1928 when he
accepted a position as bookkeeper at the Pomeroy Nation'a l
Bank. He was named cashier In
1932 and that same year was
named a member of the Board of
Directors. On May 28, 1941, he
was named president of the
Bank, and In 1952, chairman of
the Board.
From that time he remained as
president and chairman of the
Board of Pomeroy National Bank
and later Bank One until his
retirement In 1983.
Mr. Hobstetter during his
career had numerous banking
affiliations holding offices in
most of the organizations. He
was a past president of the Meigs
County Bankers Association,
past chairman of the Agricultural Committee, Ohio Bankers
Association, past chairman of
· Group Seven, Ohio Bankers
Association, and Council of Ad·
Continued on page 10

plaints about the Pomeroy Pollee
Department were aired.
Seyler noted that It his respons ibility to oversee the pollee
department . " As administrative
officer In the village, It Is my job
to see that laws which Council
passes are enforced," he said.
The mayor touched on each
specific complaint which council
members disclosed at the last

meeting, Including alleged excessive ticketing for speeding.
With regard to ticketing for
speeding, Seyler pointed out that
council passes the speeding laws
and to tell an officer not to make
arrests for speeding would be
contradictory to the iaw. He also
noted that speeding by motorists
Is a constant problem In the
Continued on page 10

Meigs board
places levy
on May ballot
tiona! basketball tournaments, •
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Feb.
11 and 14 at $100 for the two
·&lt;.:
Sentinel Stall Writer
nights,
and for the boys ' sectional
Action to place a five mill
tournaments for $300
basketball
continuing tax levy on the May
for
three
nights,
Feb. 13, 15 and
Primary ballot was taken at
Monday night's meeting of the 18.
On recommendation of the
Meigs Local School District
superintendent, the board voted
Board of Education.
The 'board as a part of last to advertise for bids on the
year's contract agreement with one-half acre of land located on
the Meigs Local Teachers Associ· Township Road 34, Salem ;rownatlon, following the strike, shlp. A minimum sale price of
agreed to place .a conUnuous $2,000 was set by the board which
operating tax levyon.the.ballotat reserved the right to reject
each election until It passes or bids.
A policy on Immunization
until the contract expire.~ . ,
adopted
by the board stated that
The levy went down to defeat In
·
no
student
shall be admitted to
both the May, 1988 and No- ·
·school
without
Immunization exvember. 1988 elections.
cept
If
the
Immunizations
are In
Discussed at length at last
_the
process
of
being
obtained.
night's meeting was the probable
The board reviewed the di svacancy In the head football
coaching position at Meigs High trict's emergency medical au School. Supt. James Carpenter thorization policy with Supt.
reported that " right now there Carpenter noting that annually
are no openings on the coaching authorization forms are sent to
staff" although he later stated parents and after being returned
that Chancey (Charles) has told to the school are put In the
him that he Is not Interested and student's records. School personnel adheres to the Instructions on
really doesn't want to continue.
It 'was decided by the board to the form In providing treatment.
advertise for coaching positions, It was noted that Veterans
accept new applications, review Memorial Hospital now requires
applications already on file, and a notarized form for all treatafter Interviewing candidates ment except In a life-threatening
proceed with hiring as soon as situation wh en that requirement
posible. May 1 was thedatesetby Is waived.
The policy of due process
the board to have filled whatever
coach ing positions may be open . rights In -cases of expulsion or
The board hired Roger Birch suspension was di scussed. The ·
as head teacher at the Bradbury policy adopted by the board
school on the recommendation of provided that written notice be
the 'superintendent, employed given of the action, students,
Nina P. Bias as a substitute parents or guardians, with the
teacher and James Vanaman as opportunity being provided to
a substitute bus driver for the appear before the board .
The student transfer policy
remainder o~ the school year.
adopted
at last night' s mee ting
The resignation of Phyllis
on
recommendation
of the superEnglish as a cook at the high
school was accepted e ffective Intendent , states that no student ·
Feb. 20. The board also accepted shall be released from the Meigs
the resignation of Rebecca Trent · Local School District to another
as reserve softball coach, and district for the "express purGregory Bush as a substitue pose" of participating In another
teacher. Maternity leave was district's athletic program.
As for handicapped students,
granted to Kathy Reed effective
Carpenter
reported that In cases
Feb. 24 through the end of the
of·
suspension-ex
pulsion It· om
school year. She will use accumu more
than'
io d ays, the
school
for
lated sick leave and personal
school
by
state
law
is
responsible
leave.
for
an
alter
native
placement,
The board agreed to lease the
Continued on page 10
high school for the girls ' sec·

all

Local news briefs-Webb case goes to circuit court
The Mason County Circuit Court wlll hold a hearing at 2 p.m.
Wednesday In the Bill, Webb case.
Circuit Cqurt Judge James 0. Holliday wlll hear a request for
a. temporary Injunction that would send Webb, a Point P leasant
High School math teacher, back to the classroom un til a state
hearing examiner rules on the case ..
The Mason County Board of Education fire d Webb Dec. 19,
1988, after Webb refused to follow a dress code.•
Webb Insisted that It was not part of his contract to be forced
• to wear a tie and dress pants. The teacher was suspended
repeatedly for wearing jeans and no tie before he was fired .
Webb, who will be represented In court by Charleston
attorney Larry Harllss, said he expected the hearing
examiner's decision to take up to 60 days.

EMS has five Monday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medlcal Services reports five calls
Monday; Syracuse at 9:14a.m. to Third Street for Rosella Secoy
Continued on page 10
.

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26 Conti

. A Multimedia Inc. New.,aper

Pomeroy council OK's
$1.03 ·million budget

BAYER ASI'IIIII

! Ill. TUIE

1 Section, 10 Pegoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. February 7. 1989

Dance scheduled

roy, Joan Dalley and Cathy
Black, Portland, Diana Hysell,
Reedsville, and Cheryl Hysell,
Daisy Elizabeth Lawson, 91,
Pomeroy;
15 great·
Barringer Ridge Road, Portland,
grandchlldren,
and
three greatdied Saturday at the Holzer
great
grandchildren.
Medical Center, Gallipolis, folBesides her parents, she was
lowing an ex tended Illness.
preceded
In 1953 by her husband,
Born on Dec. '1:1, 1897 In Meigs
'L.azy Wily' to Lose
Homer
Lawson,
three sons,
County, she was the daughter of
Altftltdy Sweeping U.S'. ·
Floyd,
Russell
and
Dana
LawAndrew and Emma White Coch· .
son,
three
grandsons,
a
,
greatBEVERLY HILLS, CA (Speciai)ran. A homemaker all of her life,
grandson, four brothers and four An amazing new weight loss pill called
she was a member of the Mount
sisters.
"lilt-magnet" has recently been develOlive Church.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
oped
and perfected by too prominent
She Is survived by a daughter
Wednesday
at
2
p.m.
at
the
at a world liunous hospi~ . in
doctors
and son-In-law, Helen and .
Ewing
Funeral
Home.
The
Rev
.
Los'
Angeles
that reponedly "guaran·
George Black, Portland; grandLawrence
Bush
will
officiate
and
tees''
you
steady
lilt loss and calorie
children, Larry Black of Carroll,
burial
will
be
In
the Bethlehem reduction by simply taking their tested
Robert Black and Danny Black of
and proven new pill.
Portland, Garry Black of Pome- Baptist Cemetery. Friends may
The U.S. goyemmenthasjustapprovcall at the funeral home from
•
ed
the doctors claims for a hard-to-get
2:30 to 4:30 and 7. to 9 p.m.
patent
that confirms ''there has never
Tuesday.
been anything like their lilt-bonding pill
Dally stock prices
process befure." It is a totally new major
· (As of 10:30 a.m.)
scientific breakthrough and is revoluBryce and Mark Smith
tionizing the weight lOss industry.
Continued from page 1
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;.. Loewl
\bu Can "Eat NormaUy'~
western Tennessee', northern ArBest
all, "you can continue to
Am Electric Power ............. 27%
kansas, Wisconsin. Indiana, eat youroffavorite
foods and you don't
AT&amp;T ............. .......... .......... 31:1!
northern Minnesota, the Dako- have to change your normal eating
Ashland Oil .......... .............. 34\ii
tas. Montana, Wyoming, Colo- habits. You can start losing fat and
Bob Evans ............. .. .... ... .... 15~
rado,
New Mexico and the Texas reduce calories from the very first day,
.
Charming Shoppes
....... .... ... 167Y,
Panhandle. Freezing rain and until you achieve the ideal weight you
City Holding Co .... ............... 21
sleet fell In many areas In desire without exercising".
..
Federal Mogul .. ........ .......... 52'h
between, and south across much
Flushes
Fat
Out
Of
Body
·
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 51
of the Gulf Coast and Texas.
The
new
pill
is
appropriately
called
Heck''s ................................. 'h
the "fat-magnet" pill beCause it breaks
Key Centurion .. .................. 14Y, , Pancake supper slated
into thousands of particles, each acting
Lands' End ......................... 29%
like a tiny magnet, "attracting" and
The
annual
Shrove
Tuesday
Limited Inc ....... .... ......... ... .29~
pancake supper will be held at trapping many times its size in undiMultimedia Inc .......... .. ........ 84
Grace Episcopal Church, Main gested lilt particles. Then, all the trapped
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
St., Pomeroy, tomorrow night . fat and calories are naturally "flushed"
Robbins &amp; Myers . ........... ... .16%
Serving will begin at 5: 30 and right out of your body because they
Shoney's Inc ....................... . 8:1!
cannot be absorbed .
Wendy 's Inti ........................ 5:Y, .,s:ontinue until 7:30 p.m. In the
Within 2 days you should notice a
parish house. The menu will
change in thecoiorofyourstQ,OI, caused
Worthington Ind ................. 23';6
include juice, pancakes, sausAmerican Eleetrle Power and
by the fat particles bein~minated.
age, and coffee.
·~tomatk:ally"
Fat
Bob Evans Farms are ex dlvl·
According
tooneof'the
inventors,
Dr.
To meet Tuesday
dend today.)
William Shell, heart specialist and
Pomeroy Ladles Auxiliary No. associate professor of medicine at
2171, Fraternal Ord.er of Eagles, UCLA medical school, "the new fatare asked to bring Items for grab bonding process is a "lazy way" to lose
Veterans Memorial
bags to Tuesday evening's 7 p.m . weight because (he pills alone
Saturday admissions - Cindy
meeting.
"automatically" reduce calories by
Wolfe, Racine; Joseph Bowland,
eliminating dietary fat. It is 100% safe
Mldddleport; Bertha Evans,
and not a ilrug."
Schools closed
Middleport.
The fat-magnet pills are already
Saturday discharges - Hazel
Students In Meigs, Southern sweeping the country with glowing
Combs, James Boyd. Robert and Eastern Local School Dis·
reports Of weight loss from formerly
Lewis.
trlcts got a break from Monday overweight people in all walks of life
Sunday a dmissions -William classes due to Icy road conditions who are noW slimmer, trinuner and
Hart , Shade; Alva Luckeydoo,
and further threat of freezing more attractive again.
Letart, W.Va.; Mary Bush,
rain throughout the day. Parents
Now AYallllble to the Public ·
Pomeroy.
are advised to listen to local radio
If you are trying to lo.e 20, 50, 100
Sunday discharges - Dennis
stations for announcements of p'OUnds or more, you can order your
Palmer, Gladys Lewis.
supply Of these "no-risk" highly sucschool closings.
ceSsfullilt-magnetpills directly from the
docto~' exclusive manufacturer only
(includes optional calorie·reducti&lt;m
plan for CM:n better resulrs). Send $20
for a 90 pill supply ( +S3lilndling), or
$~5 fOr a 180pi\lsupply ( +$3handling),
to. Fat-Magnet, 9016 Wilshire Blvd.,
Dept. W705, Beverly Hills, CA 90211.
( Uncollllitiolllll ~ ~­
t~• if not 100., slltisfitd.) Visa,
MasterCard and Amencan Express
OK. (Send card nmnher, expire date,
and signature.) For fislest servi~:e fur
credit card orders ONLY call anytime
24 hours, toll free 1(800) 52'-l'lOO,
ext. W705.
C&gt;F-M 1919

GIVE BLOOD

•

•

LET US PRICE YOUR NEXT

ASI'EIICIIEIIE
AI/AIIlfSIC RUB

Cloudy tonight , low In mid
teens. Wednesday , cloudy,
high In mid SOs.

3339

4

60M
PRESCIPTI.

--Area deaths-- Weight Loss Pill
Daisy Lawson
Approved for
U.S. Gov't Patent
Mllaht

Big chill.. ~

556
Pick4

New Docfots Discovery

Stocks

.Daily Number

RITE AID PHARMACISTS
FIUOVER .

Deputies are
commissioned
'
Meigs County Deputy Sheriff's
Commissions have been flied In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for Don Snyder, Eleanor J .
Logan, Patrick Soulsby; Clara S.
Soulsby, Walton Manley and
Charles Rife as special deputies;
and Brian BlsSI)ll as deputy, for
. teriT]s ending the first Monday In
January, 1993.
In an action by the Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
against Donald Scott Reuter, et
al, a co-defendant In the case,
Four and Forty Inc., Is to recover
from the defendant, Reuter, all
personal property as contained
In an agreement dated May 30,
1987. Plaintiff, Farmers Bank
and Savings Company, Is to
recover $5,178.03 from Reuter,
and a 1985 Oldsmobile, for which
Farmers Bank holds the lien, Is
to .be brought by the defendant to
the bank for sale or other
disposition.
·
The cases of Calvin Ray Dowell
against Sandra Kay Dowell, and
Carol A. Lucas, formerly known
as Carol A. Smith, against
Clifford R. Smith, have been
assigned to Meigs County Probate-Juvenile Judge Robert
·Buck.

Ohio Lottery

OSU five
downs Purdue
five, 70-58

----'

'

•

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