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~

"•

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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

four great-grandchildren, one
brother, Ambrose Kibble, Martel ta, and several nieces and
nephews.
~sides his parents, he was
preceded In death by two brothers, a sister, a grandson, and a
son-In-law .
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. Wednesday at the White
Funeral Home , Coolville. Mark.
Seevers and Scott Stewart will
officiate. Burial will be In the
Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the iuneral
home, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on
Tuesday. Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs
County Unll of the American
Cancer Society, Box 6~2.
Pomeroy.

Johnnie Ralph Kibbl e, 86 of
Reedsvli le. died Sunday at the St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
.
Born on June 12, 1902 at Torch,
he was the son of the late Lewis
and Belle Diles Kibbl e.
He retired from the FMC Plant.
in ·Parkersburg after being em·
ployed there for 38 years. He
became a Christian in 1943 a.nd
through the years has been
active in many chu rches in the ·
Reedsville and Long Bott.om
communities. He was a vo lunteer
for over 25 years with the Meigs
County Unit ·of the America n
Cancer Society.
He is survived by his wife,
Helen Ruth •Ki bble, Reedsville;
two daughters and sons·ln·law. Kent D. Campbell
Christina and Bernard Boston.
Kent Douglas Campbell, 73, of
Vienna, W.Va., and Delores and
Wtlkesvllle,
died Sunday evening
Harlis Frank, Long Bottom; two
at
Holzer
Medical
Center.
grandchildren. Cathy Spencer,
Born
June
4,
1915
In WllkesLong Bottom, and George
vtlle. he was the son of the late
Pickens, a missio nary in Africa;

Warren E. and Stella (Steele)
Campbell.
He was a retired employee of
the Kroger Warehouse. Poth
Road, Columbus. He was a
member of the Wilkesville United Methodist Church, and was
first master of the Wtlkes Grange
2716.
He Is survived by his wife,
Edith (Crabtree) Campbell.
whom he married Sept.1, 1937; Jn
Waverly, Ohio. Also surviving
are one ' brother-In-law, James
Baker of Phoenix , Ariz.; three
grandchildren, Mrs. Charles
(Bonnie) Amstutz of Westerville,
Ohio, Mrs. Ken (Penny) Drenten
ol Baltimore, Ohio, and Mrs. Ken
(Edye) Kendig of Columbus; and
four great-grandchtldren.
He was preceded In death by
his daughter, Barbara Jean
Baker, and two brothers, Warren
Eugene Campbell and James
Campbell.
Services will be Wednesday, 2
p.m. at the Wtlkesvitle United
Methodist Church wtth the Rev.
Robert Steele and the Rev. Kay
Puc kelt officiating. The body wtll
In state one hour prior to the
service. Burial will be In the
Wtlkesvllle Cemetery.
Friends may call Tuesday, 2 to
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m .

EMS reports 10 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend ; five Saturday and five Sunday .
Saturday at 9:29a.m., Middleport to Hysell Street for Wayne
Jarvis who was treated but not transported; Racine at 9:41a.m.
transported Clarence Wickline from the fire station to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire Deparbnent at 9:46a.m. to
Tan ner's Run Road to check on downed power Jines; Pomeroy
at 1:04 p.m. to Bailey Run Road for Guy Bush to Veterans
Me morial Hospital; Middleport at 4:22p.m. to the Middleport
Pool Room for Robbie Clonch to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday a t 1:54 a.m., Middleport to Holly Lane for Darla ·
Staats to Holzer Medical Center; Mlddleportat4: 41a.m. to coal
Street for Patricia Hill to Veterans Memorial. Hospital; Racine
at 10:27 a. m. to State Route 124 for Jay Carpenter to Veterans
Memorial Hosplta\; Syracuse al 10:02 p.m. to Dusky Street for
Everett Horner to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at
ll : 27 p.m . to College Street for Walt Laudermllt to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Admissions, discharges released
·Admissions and di sc harges at Veteran's Memorial Hospital
have been announced for the weekend.
Saturday admissions were Guy Bush, Pomeroy; Robbie
Clont'h. La ngsville; Charles Ohlinger Jr. , Middleport.
Saturday disch a:rges were Marie Thomas, John Coffman,
Bert ha P arker, Ocie Sears.
Sunday admissions were Ralph Jones, Racine; Mary Page,
Langsville: Nellie Connolly, Pomeroy; Everett Horner,
Sy racuse.
.
Su nday dischat"ges were Grace Allen. Zelda Weber, Steven
Eblin.

Ex-park manager in serious
condition following accident
For mer Forked Run State Park Manager Doyle N. (Skip)
Sma ll'S is In critical condition at Grant Hospital, Columbus,
following an auto accident on Feb.llln the Hamden, Ohio area:
Smales's wife, Ruth Smales, a vas sen~er In the vehicle he was
driving, was kllled In the head-on colllslon ..
Smales was park manager at Forked Run for over 11 years
before leaving to become park manager at Lake Hope State
Pa rk. Smales is now a district supervisor for the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, Dlvslon of Parks ·and
Recreation, overseeing 16 state parks in Southeastern Ohio.

CAA meeting slated Thurday
Ga llia-Meigs Community Action Agency wtll hold its
regularly scheduled meeting on Thursday, 5: 30 p.m., at the
Guiding Hand School in Cheshire. The public is Invited to attend
and provide community Input

No injuries in accident
There were no citations or Injuries In an accident on t!)e R. and
G. Supply lot Friday afternoon. Pomeroy pollee reported that
William E . Lewis, Syracuse. was parked on the lot when a
tractor trailer driven by James Hall. Pottstown, Pa. pulled
from the street and the right front bumper struck the rear panel
of the Lewis car .

Daughters of America to meet .
Chester Council 32E, Daughters of America, will meet at 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. Practice will be held for presenting the
colors at the spring rally, March 11, at New Lexington.

Robert Holley, M.D.
is pleased to announce
the opening of his

Family: Practice ·
February 20, 1989
2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV
(former office of Dr. Aarom Boofi.Sue)
Walk~lns

Welcome

Neio Patients Are Being Accepted

-Patients - Past and Present
of Dr. Aarom Boonsue

- -· r--·

Ohio Lottery

Duke, Illini
•
•
wmners
agam

Robert Eason or Pomeroy was
elected president at a recent
meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation.
Eason, who served as vice
president In 1988 and has been a
member of the board since 1985,
succeeds David Weber who completed his second term membership in December 1988. Eason Is
serving his second term on the
board.
Elected vice president was
Denver Rice, Middleport, currently in his fifth ye.a r and second
term on tbe board.
Established by law In 1967 the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation is a seven member
board with five appointments
made by tbe County Commission'
ers and two by the Country
Probate Judge.

Daily Number
215
Pick4
2834

Page 4

Vot.39. No.200
Copyrighted 1989

As
Seen
On

Seyler, EPA to meet
on wastewater plant

•

•

.
I

;

us. Gov't.~Aifant

BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)An amazing new weight loss pill called
"fill-magnet" has recendy been devel·
oped and perfected by two promineru
doctors at a world tamous hospital in
Los Angeles that reponedly "guarantees" ~ steady fat loss and calorie
reducuon by simply taking their tested
and proven new pill.
The U.S. goo.oemmenthasjustapprov·
ed the doc:tors claims for a hard·to-get .
patent that confinns "there has never
been anything like their fat.!Jonding pill
process before." !tis a tolally new major
scientific breakthroullt and is revolutionizing the weight ross industry.
\00 Can "Eat NonuaDy" .
Best of all, "you can continue to
c:,at your favorite foods and you don't
have to change your normal eating
habits. You can stan losing fat and
reduce calories from the very firs! day,
until you achie~oe the ideal weight you
desire without exercising".
Flushes Flit Out or Body
The new pill is appropriately called
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks
into thousands of panicles, each acting
like a tiny magnet, ''attracting" and

1

'

\,

NOCIYER ii'UTe

Clllms for New Diet Pill

••
•'

HURRY IN

Auf&lt;lmotlc Hetgl11 Adjustment

2985

qfj

200

"""""""""""

. JIEAVY LOAD -It takes ae¥eral helping bauds
to manipulate Into place just one piece of the new
. digital swlkhlng equipment for Pomeroy's G:l'E

offtc:e, II Wall expe.cted to take two·daysto unload
alilbeequlpmenlneededforthePomeroyCentral
Office. (Times-Sentinel photo)

I

Mfg. Sugg.

Retail '134.94

•U--

IIIIU&amp;elllla ••"II
•O.U.rua _ _ _

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

•

~~tft=~~~=
nd calories are naturally "flushed"

ceiSNl til-lllfllllelpillsdim:tJYfromthc
docton' w;lusiw: manufactUrer only
(includes optional calorie-reduction
MD beau reaulll). 5eDd $20

$3s':!.:,;f"Y
.
.
?-.~_3t-\
to: Fat-MIIilel.
Wlllh~.
Dept. W705, Be•CJ ly Hills, CA 90211.
(Ullco"lfliv•ll-.., lack~­

'" If ••t 100'1

•fiiii/W~.) Vin,
MasterCard and Americln Bxpreu
OK. (Send card number,lqlire elite,
and •.
) Por fiiiiCit terVic:e fur
credit~ra ONLY calllll)'liJne
24 hours, toll free 1(8110) 5lUJIIO.

EQUPMf!NT ARRIVES- GTE Central Office
Equipment Installers Buck Callaway and Chuck
Williams, assist In unloading pieces of new digital

U

llll'ftlll

1iitr · :r:t ? I
-

....

?

••••

~~~-.:.'?"'· I I •299• rsaa •

.0:c-.....-

--

Wait until study· complete, .AEP says

S2Q995J~
lb.
IIRIJ II?

J

......

-

{

Mfg

Sug~.

. . . . . . . . . RW.II .

'319'1

IT BE1TER

APPALACHIAN TIRE
426 VIAND .STRIET

PT. PLEASANT, W. ·VA.

Clf.M ""

- - ---

r·~------

--·-----

switching equipment at the GTE office In
Pomeroy. Acconllng to Gary Bates, also pictured,
It will lake two days just to unload the equipment
pieces. (Times-sentinel photos)

.

.. a Ita

I HOOVER KEEPS MAKING

today, armed with statistics to
back up previous statements by
him and others, that Pomeroy
cannot afford the multl-mliUon
dollar wastewater treatment Improvements that are being demanded by EPA.
"I'm not going to belabor them
with facts which they already
know anyway. I'm just going to
present the facts as we have
gathered them and see If they
feel they can give us more time, "
the mayor said.
Some of the facts which the
mayor will present are that of
Pomeroy's population of 2,728,
1,405 residents (or 51 and one-half
percent) are on Social Security .
Another 218 residents (7.9
percent) receive Supplemental
Social Security Insurance. Of the
vlllage's 1,101 water customers,
. 367 of those households (33.8
percent), rely upon public assistance payments.
The figures were prepared for
the vlllage by the Meigs County
Department of Human Services
and Seyler hopes the figures will
prove that customers cannot
afford to pay greatly Increased
rates for water and sewage ·
service.
State officials have strongly
suggested that the village raise
service rates to pay the costs of
the needed Improvements.
AlthOugh the mayor and other
'Village officials are hoping the

state will extend the compliance
time, none of them wlll be too
surprised If the answer from the
state Is no.
"But there's no way we can
afford to do anything without
bankrupting ourselves, " said
Councilman Franklin Rizer.
Ron Ash, manager of Ohio
wer Company's Pomeroy ofe. Informed Council that rates
electric power at the village's
In pumping plant and five lift
stations are increasing from
$1.526.58 per month to $1,831 per
month, a difference of $395.
Ash had notified Council on
Dec. 13 last year that the rates ,
were likely to go up since they
had not b~en Increased for many
years.
Discussed by Council was the
current practice of granting one
paid day off a month to village
employees who do not take the
health Insurance which Is provided by the vlllage.
Currrently, the vlllage pays
$128 a month for single · employees who are enrolled In the
plan. Employees with family
cover age pay the difference
between a single and a family
plan out of their own pockets.
II is Seyler's opinion that the
"Insurance days" should be
eliminated since the Insurance
benefit Is available to employees
If they want it, and if they do not

Thomas J. Stewart, operator of
the Ohio Valley Livestock Company, Galllpolis, has agreed to a
suspension from business and
cease anddeslstorderby the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, according to Calvin W. Watkins,
deputy administrator of USDA 's
Packers and Stocky~rds
Administration.
The USDA official said Stewart
agreed to the penalties to set tie
federal administrative charges
ol operating with shortages in the
auction market's custodial ac-

count for shippers' proceeds,
operating while current liabilities exceeded current assets, and
with falling to malntalnadequate
records.
Watkins, said the suspension
went Into effect Feb. 1 for a
period or 28 days and thereafter
until such a time as Stewart
demonstrates that the deficiency
in the custodial account has been
eliminated and the firm's current liabilities do not exceed its
current assets . He said a supple-

mental order termln!J.tlng the
suspension would then be Issued.
The cease and desist order,
similar to a permanent' Injunction, is to ensure future compliance w(th the Packers and
Stockyards (P&amp;S) Act.
The P&amp;S Is an antitrust, fair
trade practice, and payment
protection law. It is designed tO
maintain illlegrlty in the marketlng of livestock, poultry and
meat, and economic Jaw and
order in the market place .
·

-.( See§.lj:YLER.

page~)

A rea
' stock yard suspends business

Heavy rain along Gulf Coast,
tomado warnings are issued

--

18818

By NANCY VOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler was to meet today with
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency and Ohio Attorney General representatives In a last
ditch effort to persuade the state
agencies to give the village more
time to bring its wastewater
treatment system l.nto state and
federal compliance.
VIllage Administrator John
Anderson and Councilmen Larry
Wehrung and Bruce Reed were
also to attend the meeting at the
EPA district office in Logan.
The meeting In Logan was
discussed Monday night in Council's regular session at village
haiL
Seyler was notified In December of plans by the Attorney
General's office to bring suit
against Pomeroy unless immediate efforts were made to
_Improve the wastewater treatment system.
The suit was to be Initiated
around the first of February
according to tbe December letter
to the mayor from Ass istant
Attorney General Paula T.
Cotter.
'
However. the mayor 's arrangements for the meeting in
Logan have apparently prevented the filing of the lawsuit , at
leastfor the present time.
Seyler was · to go to bogan

'

Eal\t ....., . . cup
Edge cl• CI•IQ on bol'llldle

•

right out of your body because they
cannot be absorbed.
Within 2 days you s)lould notice a
chan@einthecolorofyoilrstool,caused
by the fat particles being eliminated.
"Aut0madc811y" l..o8e Flit
According to oneoftheinventors, Dr.
William Snell, heart specialist and
associate professor of medicine at
UCLA medical school. "the new fat.
bonding process is a ~·lazy way" to lose
weight because the pills alone
"automatically" reduce calories by
eliminating dietary fat. It is 100% safe
and not a arug."
The fat-magnet pills are already
sweeping the country with t::ing
reports of weight loss from
rly
overweisht PC&gt;Dde in all walks of Iii:
who are noW slimmer, trimmer and
more a"A::.n.;s:jq,
Now
to tile l'llbllc
If you are trying to lose 20. SO, 100
pounds or more, you can order your
illlpply of theae "no-risk" hiahly StK:·

2 Soctlono. 12 Pogos 2&amp; Cants
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesdy. February 21, 1989

TV

Doctors Invent l
'Lazy Way' to
Lose Weight I

Periods of rain. Low ""''• 311.
Cloudy, with scattered
Hurries. Wednesday , p.,,ttl.
cloudy , chance of snow.
In the mid 30s.
•

•

\

Raymond W. Hplslnger, 82, of
Rou le 1, Reedsville. died Sunday
morning at his home following a
brief lllness.
!;lorn June 22. 1906 at Reedsville, he was a .son of the late
Robert and Lilly Bailey
Holsinger.
He Is survived by a nephew,
Russ Holsinger, of Reedsville,
and several other nieces and
nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by tbree
sisters, Ellie Bailey, Emma
Schaffer and Minta Givens; and
four brothers, Alva, Roy, Frankie and Herald Holsinger.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Whtte Funeral Home,
Coolville, with Rev. Robert Webb
officiating. Burlai wlll ·be in
Pleasant Grove Cemetery at
Reedsville. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Tuesday
from 6 to 9 p.m.

ext. W705.

.. _. _
_

••

Raymond W. Holsinger

r:.lbr

(304) 675-1675

•

MR board names
new president

- - - -· Alea news briefs--.... lie

Appointments &amp;

Monday. February 20. 1989

Pomer:ov-Midclaport, Ohio

-----Area deaths _ _ _ _.;_
)9hnnie R. Kibble

+

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,.

and Great Britain, 12 federal
:. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!)
agencies, four national laborato' - An Amerl~an Electric Power
ries, 11 state research agencies
~ executive has urged .Congress to
5walt until a 10-year acid rain and 18 private research Institu:study Is completed next year tions, Dowd said.
"It is the most comprehensive
:before acting on clean air
scientific study ever under) eglslation.
- "Not to wait would Involve taken," Dowd said. "By the time
·precipitous action on the part of of Its completion ... the American
:congress that could result in ' taxpayers will have spent $500
·imposing horrendous and, quite, million on this study."
;frankly, unnecessary costs on the
The NAPAP's final report Is
·:economy," Joseph Dowd, sen lor due in mid 1990.
'AEP vice president and general
"This will betheculmlna\lonof
:Counsel, told Marshall Un lversl- 10 years of comprehensive and
;ty's National Issues Conference detailed scientific endeavor,"
-on Acid Deposition Control Legls- the AEP executive said. ''This is
) atlon Monday .
exactly the kind of Information
• "It IS just common sense for
that Congress needs In order to
:the Congres~ to walt another
legislate rationally on this
~year and one-half until the
issue."
results of the NAPAP (National
Dowd noted that President
Acid Precipitation Assessment
Bush In his recent address to
Program) study are In," Dowd
Congress said the "time for study
said. "To do otherwise would
has passed," and new Environ:verge on the Irresponsible .... "
mental Protection Agency Ad• The study, ordered by Con- · ministrator William Reilly testipess In 1980, Involves nearly
fied In his confirmation hearing
J,OOO scientists from 40 unlversl·
that he would make drafting a
ties in tbe United States, Canada
rie.w clean air bill a top priority .

,,

Dowd said an acid rain proposal that was considered by
Congress last year would have
required AEP alone to spend
nearly $1.3 blllion by 1994 retrofitting Its older power plants with
scrubbers, forcing electric rate
increases of up to 21 percent for
some residential customers and
up to 48 percent for some
Industrial customers in a 7-state
region served by AEP
subsidiaries;
Dowd said the most promising
answer to the problem of air
pollution caused by the burning
of high sulfur coal Is technology
being jointly pursued by the
Department of Energy and private energy .
As part of the DOE clean coal
program, AEP Is to complete the
nation's first operating pressurized fluidized bed combustion
plant BrUllant, Ohio, next year.
The new plant Is expected to
capture 90 percent of the sulfur In
roal and reduce nitrogen oxides
by 50 percent as It bums.
(See WAIT, page 5)

rain and hall to the area.
By United Press International
used a helicopter to tote a
The rain was causing flooding massive pump tQ, the streets of
Moisture surging up from the
In an area already waterlogged Lebanon Ju,nctlon, 30 miles south
Gulf of Mexico and a · storm
system churning over Ken lucky from torrential rains last week. of Loulsvllle, and work crews
brought severe thunderstorms to Water in' the Florence, Ala., was reopened a 100-mUe stretch of the
high enough to seep Into homes Western Kentucky Parkway that
the Gulf Coast states Tuesday,
and forecasters warned resi- and flood roads after 2.71nches of was closed because of high water
dents of the region to watch for rain fell in the area.
since last Wednesday. More than
In · central Tennessee, where 100 other roads still were shut
tornadoes.
The National Weather Service about 2.5 Inches of rain was down.
·
said tornadoes were spotted near recorded in some spots, a highSchools In Lebanon Junction
Louisville, Ky., In east Missis- way !n Wayne County reported to and the nearby cities of Boston
sippi and In northwest Alabama. be under a loot of water.
and West Point, Ky., remained
Many small rivers were rising closed Monday .
Forecasters issued tornado
watches early Tuesday for the once again from Kentucky to
Elsewhere, rain was widesFlorida panhandle, parts of Ala- Louisiana . The Ohio River was pread along sections of the ·East
. out of Its banks from Louisville to Coast from the Carolinas to
bama and Mississippi.
_ Connecticut. Light rain covered
In Florida's panhandle, a C-141 Cairo, Ill.
F1ash flood watches are In most of Pennsylvania and -southmilitary cargo . )et with eight
people aboard crashed and effect for parts of Mississippi,
ern New York state.
burned In a heavily wooded and Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky,
A band of snow stretched
swampy area of Eglin Air Force West Virginia, Virginia and Ohio.
across southern Michigan across
Parts or Kentucky received parts of Illinois and Iowa to
Base Monday night while attempting to land, Air Force more tban 10 Inches of rain last Missouri. Snow was a lso widely
officials said. There were no week, triggering the worst floodscattered across the northern
Ing since December 1978. At least and central Plains.
immediate reports of survivors.
The 168-foot C-141 Star lifter, en four deaths In Kentucky and one
Most of the western third of the
route to Hurlburt Field from In neighboring Tennessee were
nation, meanwhile, escaped the
Colorado Springs, Colo., crashed blamed on the stormy weather.
rain and snow.
National Guard troops Monday
about 8 p.m. CST. Forecasters
reported heavy rain and golf
ball-sized hall in the area at the
time of the crash.
A severe thunderstorm struck
Jackson, Miss., Monday night,
packing wind gusts of up to 80
mph and downing many trees
Schools in the Meigs Local School District were closed today
and power lines, officials said.
(Tuesday) due to some nash flooding along county and township
· Power to several thousand
roads following heavy rains overnight.
homes was knocked out.
Today was tbe fifth calamity day allowed without makeup by
Authorities said a tornado
the
state for all schools In the district. Several of the schools
ripped · into Alexandria, La.,
have
exceeded that number due to electrical and other
Monday, damaging several
mechanical
failures In the schools.
homes and trees and cutting of!
Both
Eastern
and Southern Districts reported all schools in
power.
sessions
although
there were a few sections were buses were
The surly thunderstorms
unable
to
travel
due
to the high water.
moved across Birmingham,
Ala., early 'I'uesday, bringing

Meigs Local Schools close
due to area flash flooding

~·

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•
Tuesdy, February 21, 1989

Commentary _
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
AREA
. OF THE MEIGS-MASON
.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assl~tanl Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press Internatlonal,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEtTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess.than 300 wordS
long. All letters are s ubj ect toedlt ing and must be signed wlth name, address and
telephone number. No unsignEd letters wtll be publl.shed. Letters should be In

good taste, addresslng Issues, not personalities.

Page- 2- The Daily Senti~el
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Tuesdy, February 21, 1989

State Department urged 'buy American'
WASHINGTON- The discovery of electronic bugs In the new
U.S. Embassy in Moscow reinforces the need to stick with
American building materials for
security reasons . But the "buy
American" policy has some
problems of Its own.
Just ask U.S. diplomats in
Yugoslavia who ordered · new
doors for the embassy and got a
human skeleton Instead.
· The story Isn't one that the
State Department likes to tell.
Officials would rather say there
are a few problems with the
system. But the Yugoslavian
mlx·up shows the potential for

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

blunderswhtcharebtzarre.unot
serious.
The mistake occurred In 1986
during a renovation of the U.S.
Embassy in Belgrade. A crate
was shipped from Baltimore and
arrived In Yugoslavia addressed
to the U.S . Embassy. Diplomats
assumed It .was the new doors
they had been walling for. But
when they opened the box, they
found the remains of a Yugosla·
vlan poet who had died 40 years
earlier. The poet had originally
been buried In the United States,
but was being repatriated posthumously and had been shipped
to Belgrade for reburial. His

name has been forgotten in t his
macabre story.
Customs Qfficials In the Yugoslavlaii port of Rljeka discovered
that the boxes carrying the doors
and the corpse had been
m!slabled.
·
Here is how a dry State
Department cable described the
surprise:
" The bill of lading stated th at
the crate conta ined two doors
being shipped on the 'Tuhobic,'
5123/ 86, from Baltimore . When
the crate was opened in Rijeka,
the body of Yugoslav poet who

Democrat leaders leap
at President Bush's offers
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor

" comic strip, Lucy repeatedly
WASH INGTON- In (he "Peanuts"
makes a sucker of Charl!e Brown by promising to tee up a football for
a place kick and then whisking the ball away just as poor dumb
Charlie runs up to it.
Something of the sort has been happening to the Democrats In
Washington this winter.
· First, Speaker Jim Wright was lured into a horrendous pratfall
when Democrats and Republicans alike chickened out of a deal to get
them all a hefty pay raise. Then the Democratic leaders may have
may have let themselves be cast again to play Charlie Brown to
George Bush's Lucy in the 1990 budget fight .

I

·~

The start of all this was the expressed eagerness of Wright and
Senate Democratic leade r George Mitchell to establish a friendlier
relationship with the Bush White House than they had with the openly
anti-Congress Reagan administration.
. In the eight-year conflict between Capitol Hill and the Oval Office,
Crrngress prevailed in a few skirmishes, but there was little doubt that
Reagan won the war, at least on the level of public popularity.
The' new president encouraged detente by declaring In h!s
Inaugural address,' 'To my friends- and yes, I mean .friends -In the
loyal opposition- and yes, I mean loyal- I put out my hand."
The Democratic leaders leaped at the offer, saying they looked
forward to working with Bush ju s t as soon as the new president
disclosed his plans for the federal budget and all the programs that
depend on it.
The Democrats ma y have figured they were setting a trap by
proposing that Bush s how his hand first. It was their firm belle! that
Bush either would have to propose politically unacceptable budget
cuts, such as in Social Security, or to break his "read my lips"
campaign promise to seek no new taxes.
U that was the Democratic strategy, it backfired.

In his speech to Congress F eb. 9, Bush announced a select list of
high profile soc1al and educational programs he wanted to see given
Increased funds, but carefully avoided proposing specific major cuts
except for a freeze in Pentagon spending.
As for new revenues. Bush happily declared that any extra money
needed was just waiting to be collected In the form of additional taxes
on investments thai would be generated by cutting the capital gains
tax. He is well aware !hat is about the last thing the Democrats w!ll
agree to do .
Bush also had in mind some of the same major cuts In Medicare
payments to doctors a nd .price support payments to farmers that
President Reagan proposed in January, but he left it to Congressfor which read1he Democrats -tocomeupw!th therestofthemoney
to make the budget fit within the deficit -cutting requirements of the
Gramm·Rudman law .
The ~pshot of all this is that Bush got the "pleasure' ' of proposing
increases for some popular social programs and left Congress with
the ' "pain" of either finding other domestic progr,.ms to cui or
proposing tax increases to pay for the Increases.
The congressional lea der s certainly will try to recover the Initiative
as negotiations on the budget go forward, but their plans for a
booming kickoff in this game already seems to have been foiled by yet
another revival of the old Lucy fools Charlie scenario.

~

t

•

.

~~\~--1·0:
'

Ron Brown: leader or lemming __W_att_en_be---=-rg
Democrats have finally told us
what the "L-word" stands for:
lemming.
Professional pol!tlc!ans are
usually, the most accommodating
of people. A little pressure orten
gets a Jot of results. After the I988
election, public pressure was on
the Democratic party .• It was
said, by mai!Y Democrats and
neutral observers, that the party
was perceived as too l!beral, that
It was afraid to criticize Jesse
Jackson, that It was In danger of
being ' seen as the party of
minorities. In normal times, In a
healthy party, a response would
be expected.
But when parties spin out of
control, as In the case of the
British Labor Party, some of
their politicians go haywire.
, They don' I accommodate: they
don't respond to the public.
Accordingly, they near·myth!cal
little animals that periodically
march pJastdly into the sea, to
their death.
.' Our questions of the day are
these: Is the Democratic National Committee a collection of
lemmings? Does It matter? If It

Most party moderates took a
dive. They had a strong cand!·
date In former House Budget
Chairman Jim Jones. But, as
usual, moderate support was too
little and too late. Who wants to
fight about r11ce with Jesse?
Many Americans are wonder·
lng whether Democrats have
learned anything from the 1988
election. The message from the
DNC Is clear: Stop bothering us,
we've got some serious wading to
do and, yummy, the water Is over
our head.
Does it matter? The case has
been made that the DNC Is a
collection of 400 pollticans, many
of them nonentities and nerds ,
barely elected in weird ways
engendered hy now-archaic
McGovern reforms, representIng no one, doing next to nothing,
Ignored by all. Partly true. But
they are no longer ignored - at
least their chairman Isn't.
The media maw Is bigger than
ever. Television consumes pol!tlcal personalities with gusto. The
party without a sitting president
needs a spokesman. On many
days to come, Democrat Ron

matters, does It hurt Democrats?
If It's harmful, is It redeemable?
Answers: If It quacks like a
lemming, It's a lemming. It does
matter. It Is harmful. It may be
redeemable.
Other candidates having withdrawn, the DNC Is about tb elect
Ron Brown as !ls new chairman.
Brown Is an articulate, black
super-lawyer. He formerly
worked for very·l!beral Sen. Ted
Kennedy. In 1988 he managed
hyper-liberal Jesse Jackson's
convention campaign and forced
pro-Jackson rules changes on the
nervous and supine Dukakls
convention. ·
From the outset Brown's campaign was about liberalism,
Jacksonlsm and, unfortunately,
race. Brown claims he's his own
man and should not be regarded
as Jackson's mah, or a liberal, or
a black. But It was Brown's
liberal campaign that helped
raise the race Issue, making the
hardball case that a vote against
Brown would be seen as a vote
against blacks In America.
The Brown campaign worked.

High finance entangles rayon

Berry's World

LI\1\RY SA\D HE DIDN'T TH\NK
HE COULD TAKE AMOTK£R
BAR-SPLITTING COMMB\\C\AL
AND Kf. W/-S R•GKT.

died 40 years ago in the U.S.,
together with tombstone, was
discovered . No doors ."
'With single-minded determina·
lion the diplomat s condu deq
their cable, "Please find out
where the Sarajevo doors are:.
we cannot move forward with the
... project without them ."
Embassy officials told our
associate Scott Sleek how the
mistake was sorted out. The
doors were st!ll on the ship. They
eventually got to th e embassy,
and, as far as officals know , the
poet made It to his final resting .
place.
.
Shopping through the mall;.
despite Its drawbacks , is still the
best way for the United States to
protect the security of Its fore!g~
embassies, especially In coun·
tries where workers may be
moonlighting for the KGB.
The Moscow embassy was
expensive proof of that. In 1987,
the State Department discovered
that the chancery bulldlng under
construction at the embassy was
riddled with Soviet listening
devices . Soviet workers planted
them In precas.t concrete pillars
and beams. The Soviet laborers
were supposed to be under U.S.
supervision, but the concrete
work was done In a factory and
then delivered to the embassy
with the bugs already Implanted.
The State Department Is still
mulling Its options. Unless someone buys the bugged building, the
United States may have to tear It
down and start from scratch, at a
cost estimated at S35 million.
The case of the misplaced
Yugoslavian poet and other possible mix-ups are minor Inconveniences when compared to
razing an entire building.

FRONT ROYAL, Va. (NEA)During Its heyday In the 1940s,
1950s and 1960s, the Avtex Fibers
Inc. plant at the northern edge of
the Shenandoah Valley employed
as many as 5,000 people and was
the world's largest rayon
manufacturer.
Tile synthetic yarn it produced
at the 440-acre facility, which
was established In 1940, went Into
aulomoblle radiator hoses and
fanbelts, clothing, surgical and
sanitary supplies, home furnishIngs and a host of other products.
But the mill began experiencIng serious difficulties after a
group of Investors led by John N _
Gregg, now the company's chairman, acquired the plant In 1976
from the FMC Corp. In a $250
million leveraged buyout.
In a leverage buyout, the
purchasers of a company pledge
Its assets as collateral for the
loans they need to finance the
transaction. The high-risk financing for such deals (often In
the form of "junk bonds")
requires the borrowers to pay
high Interest rates.
"Compound Interest can eat
you up when you can't earn
enough to service it," explains
James Grant, an authority on the
sublect who Is editor of Grant's
Interest Rate Observer In New
York.
Nevertheless, leveraged
buyouts have become a hallmark
of an era of unrestrained tree
enterprise In which amoral tech·
nlclans and avaricious Investors
routinely structure multi-billiondollar transactions to · enrich

firm--'---'wa.:..:.:....:lte~rs

on the environmental charges Administration because It Is the
flied by the state attorney gen· country's only producer of a
eral) by agreeing to pay fines and crucial space shu tile component
make repairs totaling $7.7 - carbonized rayon used to
million.
Insulate the exhaust nozzles of
Late last year, however, Avtex the solld·fuel rocket boosters.
abruptly closed Its plant - a
Less than two weeks after the
drastic and seemingly perman· mill was shut down, It reopened
ent action (hat left all of Its 1,300 · with a commitment to Avtex
white- and blue-collar employees from NASA and Its suppliers for
jobless.
as much as $38 m!lllon In ,..
ButAvtex was balled out by the additional business.
National Aeronautics and Space

themselves.
"Everyone I talk to has the
same feeling that there Is something sick about a society where
you can get filthy rich doing this
sort of deal," says Robert M.
Solow, winner of the 1987 Nobel
Prize for economics.
The money Involved In the
Avlex buyout was far less than·
required for recent, far more
highly publicized takeovers of
RJR Nabisco, Kraft, Pillsbury
and other major firms, but the
transactions are fundamentally
,
similar.
In the case of Avtex, some
observers In the synthetic fibers
Industry believe that the high
cost of servicing the firm's debt
precluded It from spending the
money necessary to comply with
health, safety and environmental
Jaws.
Jn,1985, a permanent closing of
the plant was averted only when
Its employees .accepted pay cuts
of more than $1 an hour and
reductions In vactlon time and
other benefits. In 1986, three
Avtex workers were killed In
plant accidents during a fiveweek period. In 1987, the number
of work days lost at the mill was
nearly twice the national
average.
During the past year, Virginia
oH!clals have cited Avtex for
1,921 violations of the state's
occupational health and safety
laws and for 1,590 Illegal discharges of toxic wastes that have
pplluted rivers and groundwater.
Avtex has resolved both claims
(Including a $19.7 million lawsuit
'

Brown w!ll be it.
Brown will be dueling with a
Republican counterpart, Lee AI:
water, who is a colorful, quota·
ble, conservative white Southerner from the Reagan wing of
the party. In the simplistic world
of television, tl)!s Is how the
media match w!ll begin: white
Reagan conservative vs. black
Jackson liberal. These !mage$
may not be wholly accurate, or
fak", but It is the lay of the land.
My own view is that a black
politician can make It to any ltigh
office In America, but no palltlc!an c.an go high up the ladder.
Identified as a Jackson -style
liberal.
Is It redeemable? The Brown
people say Chairman Brown will
turn out to be l!ke Nixon In China,
l!ke Reagan In Russia . As a black
liberal, II Is said, he can get
tougher on Jesse than anyone
else.
Chairman Brown, I am dubIous. Prove me wrong. Make my
day. Rescind the pro-Jackson
rules changes. Give the marchIng Democratic lemmings the
order: "About face."

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of 1989 with 313 to follow .
The moon is waning, moving towar,d Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jup!!er.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They include
Mexican revolutionary and military commander Antonio Lopez de
Santa·Anna In 1794, Roman Catholic Cardinal John Henry Newman In
1801, German bacteriologist August von Wasserman, who developed
the blood test for syphilis, In 1866, Romanian sculptor Constantin
Brancus! In 1876, poet and author W.H. Auden in 1907, filmmaker Sam
Pecklnpah In 1925, humorist Erma Bombeck In 1927 (age 62) and
nrla Nixon Cox, daughter of President Richard Nixon, in 1946' rage
On this date In history:
.
In 1828, a printing press later used to print the first newspaper for
American Indians arrived In at the Cherokee Council In Echola Ga
In 1878, the ~ew Haven, Conn., Telephone Co. published the' flrsi·
phone directory. It listed 50 subscribers.
In 1934, Nicaraguan guerrilla leader Cesar Augusto Sandlno was
murdered by members of the Nicaraguan National Guard and
became a martyr.
In 1965, Black Muslim leader Malcolm X was assassinated at a rally
In New York City..
.
A thought for the day: Erma Hornbeck quipped, "Housework can
kill you If done right."
·
'

,.

"

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Cavs beat Houston 110-90 to grab 18th straight home win
~y

STEPHEN RUTKOWSKI
UP I Sports Writer
The Cleveland CavaLiers
gained another admirer Monday
after routing the Houston
Rockets for their club-record
18th consecutive home victory.
"The Cavs impress me more
than the ]Los Angeles) Lakers ,"
Hou s ton Coach Don Chaney said
after Cleveland 'took a 110-90
triumph. "This team Is scary.
They have size, speed, quickness
and they have guys who can
score. They did well on Akeem
(Olajuwon) , a different wrinkle
that we didn ' t handle."
.
The Cavaliers have a 24-1
record at Richfield Coliseum,

with their only Joss coming Dec.
1:i to the Lakers. Clevela nd has
won seven of Its last nine games.
and is 25-1 when holding oppo·
nents to less than 100 points .
"We're a bunch of guys v;ho
play well together," said Mark
Price, who led Cleveland with 27
poin ts. " We like each other . No
ego probl em s have surfaced, at
least not yet. "
- Brad Daugherty added 18
points, Ron Harper 16 and Larry
Nance 15 points and seven
blocked shots for Cleveland.
Olajuwon was limited to 21 points
and Mike Woodson scored 18 for
the Rockets. who dropped just

time. so we wanted to come out
their second game in their last 10
and g().after them."
meetings with the Cavaliers.
Bulls 102, 'l'rall Blazers 98
"Nance was blocking a lot of
At
Chicago, Michael Jordan
shots and played great. He's
scored
33 points as the Bulls won
play ing with a much better team
their third straight and moved 10
that has a lot of talent. so his
games above the .500 mark for
game cannot he lp but improve,"
the fir st time this season. Sam
Olajuwon said.
Bowie scored 19 points for
CIPveland led 88·70 after three
Portland, which trailed thr6ughqua r tt'rs and Houston got no
out and never got closer than
closer than 18 points in the final
three points in the second half.
quarter.
Nuggels 103, Plslons 101
·'When, you're at home, . the
At
Denver, Alex Englis h
stak es are always high because
scored
30
points and Denver held
the other team knows they have
off
a
furious
seco nd-ha,lf rally to
to play harder," Cleveland ·
defeat
Detroit.
Danny Schayes
Coac h Lenny Wilkens said.
scored
16
points
anti Walter
"!The Rockets) are first in the ir
division and they beat us the last

Two UK officials had access to report
LEXINGTON, Ky. fUP!l
The University of Kentucky
moved Monday to Interrogate a
reporter for the Louisville
Courier-Journal to determine his
source of a story saying basketball coach Eddie Sutton Is
implicated In an alleged coyer· up
of NCAA viola lions.
The Louisville Courier-Journal .
reported Sunday that the university's response to 18 charges of
NCAA violations may have impli.cated the head coach in a
cover· up of one of those charges.
The university has steadfastly
denied requests to make its
response public and is Involved In
a lawsuit on the Issue. The
newspaper quoted directly from
the response submitted to the
NCAA withoul revealing how it
obtained the Information.
UK spokesman Ber'nie Vonderheide said Monday night the
university had completed an
Internal investigation and deter·
mined the source of the information for the story, reported by
Lexington bureau chief Richard
Wilson, did not come from within
\he university.
·
"Today the university moved
to take a deposition from Richard

Davis added 14 off the bench for
Denver. Vinnie Johnson scored
21 points to lead the Pistons.
Nets 117, Heal 109
At East Rutherford , N.J .. Roy
Hinson scored 24 points and Mike
McGee · hit two of his four
three-pointers in the fourth quartN to lift New Jer sey. Miami had
its two-game winning streak
snapped. The Heat , who own the
NBA 's worst record at 7-43, had
posted co nsecutive triumphs
over Charlotte and Atlanta.
Hawks 114, Clippers 100
. At Atlanta, Dominique Wilki,ns
scored 30 points as the Hawks
handed the Clippers their fifth
straight loss. Atlanta jumped out
to a 14-2 lead an d never trailed.
Moses Malone scored 21 points
and collected 15 rebounds for the
Hawks. Charles Smith scored 19
points to lead the Clippers.
~tavericks 105, Spurs 93
At Dallas. Rolando Blackman
scored 37 points. including 19 in
the fourth quarter, to lead the
Mavericks In their second game
without new ly-ac qu!r~ d Adrian

Daotley. San Antpnlo , whic.h lost
its seventh straight game. was
led by Willie Anderson and
Ver non Maxwel l with 19 points
each.
Jazz 11 8, Suns 92
At Salt Lake City, Kar l Malone
scored 35 points: Inc luding 16
points in the firs t quarter. as
Utah won its · fourth s t ra ig~t.
Jo hn Stockton added 19 points
and 17 assists for the Jam .
Phoenix, which had a flve·game
wlnf\ing s trea k sna pped. was led
by Eddie Johnson with 23 points
a nd Arm on Gi lliam with 13.
Lakers 100, Kings, 97
At Sacramen to . tali! .. rookie
Da\'id Rivers made two free
throws wi th four seconds le!t to
preserve the Lakers' \'lctory.
Byron Scan scor~d 33 points,
including 4 three·poi nters. to
lead Los Angeles. Kenny Sm ith
and rookie Ricky Berry had 15
points eac h to lead Sacramento.
which suited just nine ptavers .

sity,'' Vonderheide said, addi ng cover· up somet hing," Sutton
only two people had access to said, noting the tran sportation
copies of the report'and both said was not an NCAA vio lat io n.
Meanwhile, univers it y trustee
they did not leak the report:
Tracy
Farmer called for an
Asked why the university be•
independent
inves tigation of the
lleved those stateme nts. Vander.
The Daily Sentinel
leaks
by
the
board of trustees
heide said. " they ar e people of
Inst ea d of th e internal
honesty and integrity."
(liSPS 14~960)
A Division of Malttmedla, Inc.
Monday night Sutton joined hi s !'nves tigat ion.
/
" I t h!nk the lea ks should be
a ttorney in alleging there was a
Published every afternoon . Monday
inves tigated," Farmer said, addeliberate ef!ort to oust him from
tt'lrough Friday . 111 Court St ., Po·
meroy, Oh.lo, by the Ohio Valley P ub hi s job , although he sai d he did ding he believed the universit y
lishing Company / MuiHmedla , ln t' ..
should
not
a
ppeal
a
court
deci·
not know the source .
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
GREENVILLE. s.c. rUP[] ~
" It would seem to. m e that sion to mak e the response a
Ohio.
someone is cer ta inl y out to public doc ument. "I think it Is not Hal Hend erson sco red 21 points
sources.
the
administration
beneficial
to
"The purpose of this action is to di scredit me and I wish it would
Member: United Press International.
and fou r other Furman players
Inland Dally PressAssoclatlon and the
determine whether it applies in stop because it certai nly has or the university fo r these lea ks scored in double figures Monday
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
be continuing."
p 1 d!
this particular case," Vander· been very dam aging to our to Terry
Advertlslng Representative, Branham
McB ra yer, Sutton's a t· night.~ead!ng the a a ns to an
baskPtball . team ," said Sutton .
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenu~.
heide .said.
87-71 Southern Conference vic·
-New York , New York 10017.
Courier-Journal Editor David whose team is on the way to torney, said he believed the tory over Virginia Military
informa tion was leaked by so meInstitu te. . ..
Hawpe Issued a statement which compiling the worst Wildcat
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Oatly Sentinel, 111 Court Sl.,
one In the adminis tration In a
Da vid Brown added 20 point s,
said the newspaper would resi s t record In his tory.
Po!IH'rO)', Ohio 45769.
·direct
effort
to
get
rid
of
Sutton
.
including
all
three·
point
at
"rt
would
seem
to
me
that
any efforts to force Its report to
4
"lt is a • public relations,
tempt s, to pa ce Furman. 15·11
someone would like to see me
SUBSCRU'TION RATES
reveal confidential sources.
By Carrier or Motfl" Roulle
deliberate
leak
Intended
to
dis·
and
g.;; in th e conference. Joey
leave
the
Unive
rsity
of
Kentuck
y
Vonderheide categorically de·
One Week .... .............................. .$1.40
Brooks added 17 points, Bn:ce
and they are making It very credit Coach Sutton at a t ime
n i~d allegations from Sutton's
One Month ................................. $.6.10
One Year ................ ................. $72.80
difficult and that di sa ppo ints when he Is not·even named in the ·Evans had 13 and Chris Bass had
attorney that the leak came from
McBrayer
said.
allegations."
SINGLE COPY
the university's administration me,·· Sutton sa id in his pre-game
11
PRICE
Sutton is not named in any of
creg Fittz scored 20 point s to
in an effort to oust Su non. He show before KPntucky's ga me
Dally ......... .... ...................... 2:5 Cents
thcl
8
for
malcha
rgesflledby
the
lea
d
VMI.
.
14
and
5·7
in
11
noted that portlons of the re· with Auburn.,"But I don' t know
Subscriber s not desiring to pay the car N~AA agamst Kentucky ...UK ,.- confere nce play. Le nnon Min gs
sponse were released to those who it Is."
rier may remit in advance direct to
Sutton called for the release of Pt e~ td ent Dav od R?se lle has saod scored 14 points. Damon Willi·
named in the allegations and
The Dally Sentlnel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wlll be given carrtereach
all2 ,200 pages of the universit y's addlttonal al!egauons co uld re- ams 11 a nd Percy Covington 10.
their attorneys.
week.
Furman rallied from a 22-2i
"Without reservation , the leak response to the NCAA c harges, suit from mform.at~on gathered
No subscripHons by mall perml1 ted in
deficit with two minutes left in
did come from within the univer- but Vonder heide said th.c univer - dunng Kentucky s mvestlgatlon
areas wtlere home carrier servl~ Is
sity remained determined no to of th~ program .
.
the first half with a 15·1 outburst
avaUable.
Un1verslty and NCAA staff ate
to to take a 39·33 lead a t hal!t imc.
until ordered by the court beMall SublcrlptluM
The Paladins scored the first
cause of concerns over invasio n s~h eduled t.o m eet next month to
lnskle Melp County
dtSCUSS WhiCh c harges should be
nine points of the seco nd hal( tO
of privacy .
13 Weeks ........ ... ... ............... ..... $19.24
26 Weeks ....................... ,:......... $31.96
pull a way.
·
Sutton again denied be ing forwarded to th e NCAA l~fra c·
52 Weeks ............................ ...... $74.36
VMI cut the lea d to seven
involved in a cover·up . The !tons Committee. whtc~ 1s exOutllkle Mel&amp;~ County
point s with 13 minutes left . bu t
NCAA charged Sutton 's so n, pect ed to hear the case tn April.
13 Weeks ....... ............. .. ..... .... ... $20.80
attempt in BW's 70·58 Ohio · sophomore guard Sran Sutton, The com.mltte&lt;' ts e xpected to
26 Weeks ................................ $4().30
fou r stra l'ght Fu r ma n points put
52 Weeks ... ..... .......................... $75.40
Athletic Conference tournament and sophomore Er ic Manuel had
rule and 1m pose penaltt es on late
th e a rn e away.
g
·
victory over Mount Union, end· lied about a Lexington high May .
ing the streak just nine shor t of school coac h tran sporti ng them
the N BA record .
to the site of a co llege e ntranc e
She shattered lh e collegiate exam in the summer· of 1987.
LEGAL NOTICE
record last Saturday , hitting 9 of Manuel ha s been c harged with
the utility's energy demand, its peak load and
The Public Utilities Comm•ssion of Ohio has
9 free throws and running her cheating on lhe test a nd has
scheduled a hearing in Case No. B8·333·EL-FOR reserves . as well as a resource plan the utllily
can implement 10 meet anticipated demand.
to review th e 1988 Long-Term Forecast Report
string to 66 in her team. s n- 72 voluntarily sidelin er! himse lf.
Complete copies Of Ohio Power Company's
olthe
Ohio
Power
Company.
The
hearing
will
overtime los s at Oi ter bein
" It's no big deal, and In noway .
1988 forecast report may be reviewed by any
begin
at
1:30
p.m.,
on
Monday,
March
13,
t989,
College.
was there anyone trying to
member of the public at the following county
at
the
City
Council
Office
,
218
Cleveland
She had gone into Saturday's
public library:
Avenue, SW, Canton, Ohio 44702.
game tied with Jodi Beerman of
The forecast report contains information on
Central Mlchlgait, who had· set
Paulding County
Puskarich Public Library
the previous women's mark of 57
Ohio Valley Local Dostrict
Carnegie Library
200 E. Market Street
in a row during the 1985·86 and
Free Public L1brary
205 S. Main Street
Cadiz, Ohio 43907
Fourth Street
J$6-87 seasons.
Paulding. Ohio 45879
CHARLESTON,
S.C.
(UP])
Manchester, Ohio 45144
Napoleon Public Ubrary
- Slte also bettered the men' s
Patrick
Elmore
scored
25
points
Perry County
30t W. Clinton Street
Lima Public Li_brary
collegiate record of65 In a row set .
District Library
and
Leon
Bryant
added
22
Napoleon. Ohio 43545
650 W. Market
by John Barone of Monmouth
- 113 South Main Street
Monday
night
to
lead
The
Citadel
Lirl)a.
Ohio
45801
Logan·Hocking
County
(N.J.) College In 1969·70.
New lexington, Ohio 43764
to a 100-80 Southern Conference
District library
Ashl.and College Library
Tuesday's miss left her nine
Pike
County •
10 Walnut Street
401 College Avenue
shy of the NBA record of 78 set by ~ victory over Marshall.
Free
Public Library
Logan.
Ohio
43136
Ashland , Ohio 44S05
The Bulldogs lep 55·32 at
Calvin Murphy of the Houston
111
N.
High Street
Holmes County District
halftime and had a 31-point
Nelsonville Public Library
Rockets In 1980·81.
Waverty,
Ohio 45690
Public Library
95 w. washington
cushion with 10 m!nu tes to pla y in .
Kepner, who transferred two
Putnam
County
10
W
.
Jackson
Street
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764
taking their first victory over
years ago fro111 Lake Erie
District Library
Millersburg. Ohio 44654
Augtaize County District
Marshall
since
the
1984-85
sea·
College and sal out last season,
364
E. Main Street
Willard Memorial library
Public Library
son.
It
marked
the
fourth
time
Ottawa,
Ohio 45875
had made her final eight free·
6 W . Emerald Street
203 Perry Street
this
season
The
Citadel,
15·9
and
throw attempts at Lake Erie.
Mansfield Public Library
Willard, Ohio 44890
Wapakoneta. Ohio 45695
7-5 in the conference, has scored
43
W. Third Stre&amp;t
Kepner, a native of Hartford,
Jackson City Lrbrary
Martins Ferry Public Library
100
points
in
a
game.
Mansfield
, Ohio 44902
Ohio, and a graduate of Kinsman
21 Broadway Street
20 S. FiHh Street
John
Taft
scored
32
point
s
for
Birchard
Public
Library
Badger High School, also missed
Jackson , Ohio 45640
Martins Ferry, Oh io 43935
11-14
and
4-8ln
confer·
Marshall,
ol
Sandusky
County
another free throw try In TuesPublic Library of Steubenville
Carroll County
423 Croghan Street
day night's game, finishing 5 of 7 enee play, while Andre Cun·
and
Jefferson County
District Library
Fremont,
Ohio 43420
nlngham
added
10.
407 S. 4th Street
from the line.
70 N. Lisbon Street
Portsmouth
Public Library
Steubenville , Ohio 43952
Carrollton, Ohio 44615
t
220
Galli
a
Street
Mt. Vernon Public Library
Lepper Library
P&lt;msmouth, Ohio 45662
201 N. Mulberry Street
303 E Lincoln Way
Tiffin·Seneca
Public Library
Mt . Vernon , Ohio 43050 ·
Lisbon, Ohio 44432
77
JeHerson Street
Briggs Lawrence County
Coshocton Public Library
Tiffin, Ohio 44883
Public Library
655 Main Street
Start&lt;
County District Library
32t S. 4th Street
Coshocton, Ohio 436t2
715 Market Avenue , North
Ironton,
Ohio
45636
Bucyrus Public Library
Canton, Ohio 44702
Newark Public Library
200 E. Mansfield
Akron-Summit County
wheels, setting all adjust·
88 W. Church Street
Bucyrus, Ohio 44820
Public Library
Newark, Ohio 43055
'
able angles to manufactur-

Wilson to determine the source of
the information." Vonderheide
said, adding the action took pla ce
in the framework of the suit
between the Louisville Courier·
· Journal, the Lexington. Herald·
Leader and the Kentuck'y Post
over whether the docume nt
should be made public .
Vonderheide said the action
took place with full knowle dge of
the Kentucky Shield Law. which
protects reporters from being
compelled to reveal th e ir

Furman tops
VMI, 87-71

Free throw string
ends at 69-Monday
BEREA, Ohio (UP!)- Valerie
·Kepner of Baldwin·Wallace Col·
lege, who '1"1 a collegiate record
for consecutive free throws durIng the weekend, saw her string
snapped Monday night at 69
• straight, Including 61 this season.
Kepner, a 5-foot·7 sophomore,
' missed her fourth _free-throw
•

Stanford cruises
over Southern Cal

LOS ANGELES (UP!)- How·
ard Wright scored 20 points and
No. 17 Stanford went on a 26·9 run
following a technical foul Monday night to cruise to a 68-52
J;&gt;acific 10 Conference victory
over Southern Cal.
Wright hit 7 of 8 fleld·goal
attempts and all six free throws.
The Cardinal, 21·5 and 12-3 In
the Pac·10, scored the game's
first seven points and led 39·31 at
halftime behind Wright's 10
points.
Southern Cal, 8·18 and 1·13 In
the conference, started the se·
cond half with a 12-3 run to ta,ke
their only lead of the game at
43-42 with 15: 26 remaining. But
Trojans Coach George Raveling
· was callell for a technical foul
with 13:59 remaining and Stan·
ford took over.
Todd Licht! made both free
throws for the technical foul and
Scott Meinert hit a three-pointer
24 seconds later to start the 2&amp;-9
run that finished the scoring.
with 16
Licht! ' who finished
.
points, and Wright each had 10
points In the Stanford streak.
Southern Cal did not hit a field
· goal for 10: 02 before Ken Countr:Yman hit a three-pointer with 4
seconds left In the game.
Sophomore Ronnie Coleman
led the Trojans with a careerhigh 26 points, but no other
Trojan scored more than 6
points .
'

Oral Roberts tops
North Texas State
DENTON. Texas (UPI) Haywoode Workman scored 31
points Monday night, hitting 14 of
20 shots from the floor. leading
oral Roberts to a 117-116 over·
time victory over North Texas
State.
The Titans, 7-18, also received
25 points from Greg Sutton, 18
from Clarence Thompson and 11
from Ron JoJIE's.
North Texas State, 11-13, got a
career-high 23 points from Wendell Williams. Kevle Gulley
added 20 points, Deon Hunter 18,
Ricky Robertson 17, Will Smith
15 and Andrlen Chopl!ck 13.
Oral Roberts controUed the
pace to lead 61-56 at halftime, but
the ElWies came back to tie It
104-104 at the end of regulation,

Citadel thrashes
Marshall, 100-80

•

,.. llllliNDER THE CAR~,

We~lial?~!~!nt II

I
II

II

I
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I

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=~ domestic and iin.port

Parts Extra, If NHtltd

aAnERIES

High C,..i.. Amps for lltttar Starts on Cold Mornings

$4995 b:!.':. $5995 b:~
420 Cold (fOIIking

1

Aontlo

600 IAU MAIN
.

POMIIOY
992·20f'

Defiance, Ohio 43512

Marion Public library

Delaware County
District Library
101 N. Sandusky Street
Delaware, Ohio 43015
Fairtield County
District Library
219 N. Broad Street

445 E. Church Street
Mario!). .Ohio ~3302
Meigs Local School District
Public Library
200 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Dwyer-Mercer County .
District Library
303 N. Main Street
Celina, Ohio 45822
Monroe County
District Library
t 01 N. Main Street
Woodsfield, Ohio 43793

1

Lancaster, Ohio 43130

Public Library ot Columbus
and Franklin County
28 S. Hamilton Road
Columbus, Ohio 432t3
Gallia County District library

I

1.111 ..:.;: ;.A;;~e- ..1

Reference Oiv.

logan County

641 Second Avenue

!i t5 Cold Cranking Amps

See us Fo~ Dependable Quality and
Courteou8 Service1 For All Your Under

Greenville Public library

520 sycamore Street
Greenville, Ohio 45331
Defiance Publ ic Library
320 Fort.Street

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Guernsey County District
Public Library
800 Steubenville Avenue

Cambridge, Ohio 43725
Findlay-Hancock County
District Public Library
206 Broadway
Findlay, Ohio 4584()
Mary Lou Johnson Hardin
County District Library
325 E. Columbus Street
Kenton, Ohio 43326

District Library
140 N. Main
Bellefontaine, Ohio 43311

Kate Love Simpson·

Morgan County Library
358 E. Main Street
McConnelsville, Ohio 43756
Mt. Gilead
Free Public Ubrary

35 E. High Street
Mt. Gilead, Ohio 43338
John Mcintire Public Library

220 N. Fift.h Street
Zanesville, Ohio 43701
Caldwell Public Library
Court ·House
Celdwell , Ohio 43724

55 South Main Street
Akron, Ohio 44326
Tuscarawas County

Public Library
121 Fair Avenue, N ..W .

New Philadelphia, Ohio 44663
Marysville School District
Public Library
231 South Court Street
Marysville, Ohio 43040
The Brumback Library
2t5 W. Main Street
Van Wert, Ohio 45891
Washington County
Publio Library
6t5 Fifth Street
Marietta, Ohio 45750
Wayne County Public Library
304 N. Market Street
Wooster, Ohio 44691
Bryan Public Library
107 E. High Street
Bryan, Ohio 43506
Wood County District
Public Library
251 N. Main Street
Bowling Green, Ohio 43402
Carnegie Public Library

224 W. Johnson Street
Upper Sandusky, Ohio 43351

All interested members ot the public will be given an opportunity to be heard at the hearing.
Further intormation may be obtained by contacting the Commission.

'·
\

'•

'

�.

.

Monday , tPb. !II

tol'o nllrr 61!. Br~ls\1lh•G7
fo.Ai !Koo N 72, Bf'a''"r Lot·ll.l 63 ·
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( 'In L1tS.Itt• 50, t1n J'rhJ.' t•lon H
lm)' Belmont lit. C••ntenilh• -l!l
Da)' f(llonel Whitt• 7:~ f'ranklln 60
Mwudllo• MI. 1\kr Sprlngll~d -15
Mt•ttillll 11, Lodl Clo\Pt&gt;rleal .a:!
Wno!lll•r 119. A.llial.nt't Dli
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Hex lry 6:1. \\'hltehl\!161
Bloom ( 'arroll ..JH , (.1tdt'\-'lllf' -15
fit• t.:nlv ~t· hool .\II, Rl'\'t'tf' 56
Kt•nllton Iii, \\' lll'n'ft!idlll" ISO
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n.dtr: 66, \\'t&gt;lhn-i llf' 51
fin N follra:f' Hill 110, ~hdemont 51
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fiat.l.,. Mills Hawkrn ti7, Curdlaal -1!1
Root !~town 119, SodiPr• LoC' 54
Seuth KMIIII" 50, Columbl aaa H
Turonlo .W, Slt'UhenloiiW ('ath ~6
\' lt'f'llll. 1\llllhf'M'K 51, IUn!oman B~ad..-rH
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M'arnon kl'nnlltv II&amp;, .Ja c ~un Milton 61
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• \\'1 ndhm '?0, Mt nfnl HId~~ 611
.. ZAft~\1llr RoM'cnn11 14. Ml•ao 63

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Hi~hSchoo&amp;

Rarely -used Pat Cavanaugh
sank a pair of free throws with 32
seconds left to enable Pittsburgh
to hold off Villanova 73·72, giving
the Panthers t heir fourth
s traight co nference victory.
Cavanaugh' s only points of the
nig ht gave Pitt a 73-69 lead, but
Doug West sank a three-point er
for Villanova with two seco nds
left to cut the margin toone point.
Despite four victories over Top
20 teams this ~e ason, the Panth·
e rs. 15·10 and 8-6 in the Big East ,
had to consider the triumph over
Villanova thetr toughest. Accus·

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Oklahoma holds on to
No; I spot mpolls;
i'

•

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
:NEW YORK (UP!) - Okla·
hbma dodged the bullet that shot
dgwn the three previous No. 1
teams and Monday b~came the
·'first squad in a month to
nlaintaln the top ranking in
VPI's basketball poll. ·
The Sooners claimed 35 of 38
first-place votes cast by the UPI
Board of Coaches to take a firm
hold on tne No. I spot that had
been held by a d!(ferent team
e~ch of the last five weeks.
Duke was the last team to
maintain the top spot for consec·
utive wee ks . The• Blue Devils
held It from the preseason
through the eighth week of the
regular season. After Duke lost
the No. 1 ranking, Illinois,
,Oklahoma and Arizona each held
l(for a week before the Sooners
r~gained It last week.
: Arizona, which received two
!irst·place votes, was 'No. 2 for
the second straight week. No. 6
Iqdlana took the other first-place
vote. Georgetown jumped a
~ce to third, North Carolina
hi! proved from seventh to fourth
apd Syracuse remained fifth.
Rounding out the Top 20 were:
No. 7 Missouri, No.8 Duke, No.9
LOuisville, No. 10 Illinois, No. 11

PAINESVILLE , Ohio - Cold
shooting in the first period and
foul trouble in the second dogged
the Rio Grande men's basketball
team Monday_as Lake Erie went
in to upset the Redmen , 98-86.
" To say it 's disappointing is
puttlng It mildly.'' . Redmen
Coach John Lawhorn com·
merited as the Rio men finished
their regular season at 20-12.
Lake Erie improved to 6-25.
Jackie Watters. the top shooter
In District 22. lived up to his

reputation by canning three
3- polnt field goals in the first five
minutes to boost the Storm to a
17·4 advantage. Although Rio
Grande kept Lake Erie's lead In
single digits for most of the
period. the Redmen faced a 51·34
deficit going into the locker
room.
Tll!ngs didn't improve as the
Storm built its lead to .2 (74-52)
with elg)Jt minutes left. The
Redmen lost the services of
s tarting guard Anthony Ray ·

more at 9:51 after he committed
his fifth foul and forward Mike
Tidwell left in the final two
minutes when officials whistled
him for the fifth time.
Nevertheless, trailing 1!l points
(76·57). Brad Schubert connected
on two 3-pointers and sparked a
Redmen ratty that saw the guests
slice the margin to eight (81-73)
with four minutes remaining.
But the Redmen encountered
foul difficulties, allowing Lake
Erie to advance at the charity
stripe, A Jimmy Kearns 3-polnt

West Virginia, No. 12 Florida
State, No. 13 Michigan, No. 14
Seton Hall. No.15 North.Carolina
State, No. 16 Iowa, · No. 17
Stanford, No. 18 Nevada-Las
Vegas, No. 19 Arkansas-Little
Rock and No. 20 Ball State.
Oklahoma, 23-3, didn't go with·
out a scare in defending Its top
ranking. Kansas took the Sooners
Into overtime before losing 94-89 .
While the Sooners and Georgetown look like the natlon's two
powerhouses, Indiana and Duke
are two teams showing strong
form as the regular season enters
its final weeks.
Indiana, which beat Michigan
on a buzzer shot Sunday , has
taken control of the Big Ten a nd
has been on a roll since losing
four games In tne first month of
the season.
Duke rose In the ranklngs for
the first time since being dethroned from No. 1. The Blue
Devils have All-America Danny
Ferry back and took a five-game
winning streak Into Monday
night's game with Georgia Tech.
West VIrginia continued to roll,
extending Its nation-high win·
nlng streak to 21 games.
Arkansas-Little Rock and Ball
State joined the Top 20 for th~
first time this season.

Kings hold on to defeat· Sacramento
SACRAMENTO, Calif (UP I)
- Rookie David Rivers made
two free throws with four seconds
left Monday night and the Los
Angeles Lakers withstood tough
. Sacramento defense in the wan·
ing momepts to preserve a 100-97
victory over the Kings .
Byron Scott scored 33 points ,
Including 4 three-pointers, to
lead Los Angeles, tallying 15 of
his team's first 20 points. James
Worthy added 20 points and A.C .
Green 15 for the Lakers.
Kenny Smith pulled the Kings
within 98-97 when he made one of
two free throws with 26 seconds
left. Sacramento then trappe(!
Green In the frontcourt, forcing
the Lakers to take a timeout with
5 seconds left. Sacramento was
then forced to foul, resulting In
Rivers' two free throws.

Rookie Ricky Berry missed an
off-balance three-point attempt
with 2 seconds left that would
have sent the game Into
overtime.
Los Angeles used a 13·3 spree in
less than four minutes to assume
a 65-53 lead, Its largest of the
game, wilt! 7:38 left in the third
quarter. The Kings responded
with a 22·10 run to tie the game
75-75 with 1:15 left in the period .
Green's free throw gave Los
Angeles a one-point advantage
entering the final quarter.
Berry and Smith scored 15
points each to lead Sacramento,
which played the game with only
nine players In uniform.
Wayman Tisdale, who arrived
in Sacramento after being traded
from Indiana with a No. 2 draft
choice for Sacramento's LaSalle

THE CENTRAL TRUST

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"

Thompson and Randy Wittman.
received a standing ovation
during player introductions. He
watched the game in street
clothes !rom the bench, but was
expected to play Wednesday
night against Boston. eltics visit
Sacramento.
Sacramento reserve center
Ben Glllery also missed the game
with tbe flu.
The Lakers played without
guard Magic Johnson, who was
still sidelined with hamstring
problems.

Two locations In Meigs Cbunty were listed as places to
purchase 1989 boat reglstrat Ions in an announcement from Paul
Gregory, Chief of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources's
Qivlslon of Watercraft.
~They are Forked Run State Park, P.O. Box 127, Reedsville,
.and William C. Quickel, Davis Insurance, 114 Court St. ,
Pomer.oy.
In Pl!rchaslng boat registrations, Gregory reminds boaters
and agents that the boat registration must be completed In fun
Including title number , boat length and propulsion Information.
· Inaccurate Information on registration forms should be
corrected at the nearest watercraft agent's offices. In such
cases, If there Is a title for the boat , the title should be taken to
the agent's office along with the Inaccurate registration.
During the boating season, the Divlson of Watercraft Is
responsible for enforcing Otlio's boating laws on -the state's
waterways. During the non-boating months, the division
promotes boating safety, teaches safe operations courses, and
works with emergency personnel In water survival techniques.
Individuals and organizations Interested In obtaining
Information about boating safety courses offered by the division
or other boating safety organizations may call Boat US
Foundations' toll-free number 1-800-336-BOAT.

Trinity Church of Pomeroy will spon·s or a soup and sandwich
luncheon Thrusday and Friday, with serving between 11 a.m
and 2 p.m.
Homemade vegetable and chicken noodle soups will be
served along with sloppy joes , hot dogs , desserts and beverages.
Quarts of soup can be ordered In advance or on the days of the
luncheons. Advance orders can bt:&gt; placed by calling 992-3777,
992-3222 or 992·5480 at anytime or on Wednesday daytime,
992-3172.

Hospital report made

.

Admissions and discharges have been announced by
Veteran's Memorial Hospital for Monday .
Monday admissions were Raymond Pierce, Racine; Mary
. Ball, Racine; Arthur Johnston , Racine; Elizabeth Flck,
Pomeroy; Crystal Barnett. Racine. .
Monday discharges were Ralph Jones, Charles Ohlinger,
Robbie Clonch, Nellie Connolly , Wanda Jacks.

EMS reports six calls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Monday; Racine at 1:37 a.m. to Dorcas for Debra Smith to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10: 15 a .m. to an
lndustrtcal accident at the Dravo Plant on State Route 338:
Robert Spencer was taken from the plant to Jackson General
Hospital at Ripley, W.Va .; Spencer was later transferre d to
Charles ion Area Medical Center; Middleport at 1: 31 p.m . to
Stonewood Apts. for Brady Lewis to Veterans Memorial
• Hospital; Middleport at 4:28p.m. to Bradbury Road for Ruth
Priddy who was treated but not transported; Chester Fire
Department at 8:33 p.m. to a chimney fire at a residence on
Keebaugh Road; Pomeroy at 10:24 p.m . to Pleasant Ridge for
Valerie Large to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Chester council to meet
A silent auction by the good of the order committee will be
held at tonight's meeting of Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.

Overbrook slates party
OverF&gt;r.ook Center, Middleport. will host a February birthday
party for Its residents and their families at 2 p.m. on Thursday .
Dairy Queen will furnish an ice cream cake for the celebration.

Blowout causes accident
A tire blowout caused an accident at 7: 50p.m. Monday In
IV)eigs County on Cousty Road 26, 0.1 miles west of Township
Road 681, according to the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Troy G. Scyoc, 19, Reedsville, Ohio, lost control
wnen the blowout occurred: His vehicle went off the road,
striking an embankment. Damage was minor. No one was
Injured and there was no citation.

-Area d e a t h s - - - - - - - - - - - - - Kent D. Campbell

to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home In
VInton. :
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests that contributions be
made to the Calvary Baptist
Church, Rio Grande.

Services for Kent Douglas
Campbell, 73, of Wilkesville, will
be Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the
Wilkesville United Methodist
Church with the Rev .• Robert
Steele and the Rev . Kay Puckett
Raymond B. Hudson
officiating.
Burial will be in the Wilkesville
Raymond Bryant Hudson, 37, of
Cemetery. The body will lie in Albany, Ohio, died Sunday, Feb.
state one hour prior to the 19, 1989, in SL Marys Hospital,
service.
Huntington.
. Friends may call today, 2 to 4
He was born July 18, 1951 in
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the Mason, son of George B. Hudson
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home In of Pomeroy, Ohio, and the late Be·
VInton.
. ssie L. McDaniel Hudson, who
.
died Feb. 2, 1985'.
Helen Sayre
He was a coal miner at Meigs
No. 2 Mine for the Southern Ohio
Helen Lanier Sayre, 63, of Rio Coal Co. He attended the Christian
Grande, died Monday afternoon Brethren Church and he was
at the Holzer Medical Center.
graduated from Wahama High
Born Jan. 12, 1926 in Jenner- School in 1969. He was a member
stown, Pa. , she was the daughter of the Adoniram Masonic Lodge
of the late Dr. Charles A. and No. 517, F&amp;AM,Akron,Ohio.
,
Beulah (Blake) Weed.
He is survived by his wife, Mary
She was a former Rio Grande L. (Anhur) Hudson of Albany,
College Postmaster. She was a Ohio; two daughters, April L. and
member of the Calvary Baptist Heather B. Hudson, both of AlChurch and the Thurman Order bany; one son, Heath B. Hudson,
of the Eastern Star 444.
also of Albany; one sister, Cheryl
Also preceding her In death L. Russell of Pomeroy; a
was her first husband, Glenn
grandmother, Ola M. McDI!niel of
Lanier, In 19~ .
·Hartford; several aunts and Wlcles
She is survived by her second
and nieces and nephews.
husband , Richard G. Sayre,
Funeral services will be Wednes·
whom she married January 1987.
day, 1:30 p.m., at the Christian
Also surviving are three
Brethren Church, Mason, with the
daughters, Mrs. William (Patty)
Rev. lames H. Lewis officiating.
Fletcher of Pickerington. Ohio,
Burial wiD be in the Graham
Mrs . David (Sheila) Bevan of
Cemetery.
Middleport, and Mrs . Ryan
Calling hours are 2-4,7-9 p.m. at
(Brenda) Easley, Rt . 2, Bidwell;
the church. Foglesong Funeral
two step-sons, Larry Sayre of
Home is in charge of the ar·
South Bend, Ind., and Edward D.
rangments.
Sayre. of Ocean Gate, N.J.; one
step-daughter, Mrs. Charles Geraldine Zuspan
(Rosa Lee) Mayne of Wheaton,
Mich.; two granddaughters; five
Geraldine Zuspan, 63, of West
step-grandchildren; two broth· Columbia, died Satunlay, Feb. 18,
ers, 0. Gilbert Weed of Bowling at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Green, Ky ., and Roy S. Weed of , ' Born Ian. 21, 1926, in HunSt. Augustine, Fla.
tington, W.Va., she was the
Services will be Thursday, 1 daughter of the late Ted and Pansy·
p.m. at the Calvary Baptist Burger Rogers McCalistu.
Church with the Rev. Paul White
She was a housekeeper at Lakin
.and the Rev. William Clark. State Hospital .
Burial will be In the Calvary
Survivors include her husband,
Cemetery. The body will lie In Charles H. Zuspan lr. of West
state one hour prior to the Columbia; a daughter, Barbam A.
Hall of Point Pleasant; three sons,
service.
Friends may call Wednesday, 2 Charles Kay Erwin of Norfolk, Va~ .

The first Europeans to explore
North America were probably Norse·
men, or Norwegian VIkings, sailing
lrom Iceland or Greenland around
A.D. 1000.

''

Racine Village Council will meet at 7 p.m. tonight (Tuesday)
in recessed session at Cou ncil chambers at ~tar Mill Park.

Luncheon planned .by church

shot with 1\2 minut es left cut th e
Storm's advantag e to seven
(88-81), but it would be the closest·
Rio Grande would ever come.
Melvin Selmon scored six
points and Shannon Rucker four
- all at the foul line - to
complete Lake Erie's ~co ring .
Schubert fired in a 3-pointer and
Marc Gothard a basket to finis h
Rio Grande'-s offens,ive play.
Watters scored 33 point s to lead
all scorers.
The Storm ends it s season ·
Tuesday at Walsh . The Redmen
will now await pairings for th e
district playoffs. to be announ·ced
early next week .
In the only other district game
played Mon(jay, top-seeded Findlay defeated Tiffin. 86-58.

Customers wishing to
place service orders
please call 1-354-7921.

Registration loootions named

Free clothing day wll be held at the Salvation Army,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday from 10 a.m to noon. All
area residents In need of clothing are welcome to come.

credited to Dlrene Thomas with
28 points , Ann Hancock with 20
markers and Pam Ellebywith 17.
The Lady Bulldogs were 52 .9
percent (45·8.'5) from the field and
70.5 . percent (12·171 on free
throws.
Wingat e finishes its seaso n
Tuesday at Lenoir· Rhyne . N.C.
Box score:
WINGATE (99) Direne
Thomas, 11-4-28; Lynn Waddell,
2·0.4; Pam Elleby, 8-1· 17; Ann
Hancoc k, 8-4·20; Audrey Sherrill,
2-1·5; Angela Blakley, 5·0-JO;
Tracy Williams , 1·1·3; Lori
Champion, 1-1-3; Ton i Cress,
2·0·4; Tammie Laney, 2·1·5.
TOTALS 42·3·12·99.
RIO GRANDE (H3) - Holly
Has tings , 6+16; Lea Ann Mul·
!ins, 13·1·16-44; Ann Barnitz,
1-4-6; Beth Co il, 1·0 2; Bet sy
Bergdoll. 0·1·0-3; Jcnni Couc h,
4·2·10; Angl e Packard . 1·0·2.
TOTALS 27·3·26-83.
Halftime score: Wingate 44,
Rio Grande 34.

Beginning Monday,
February 27, the GTE
Phone Mart located at 238
W. Main in P~meroy will
be open Monday, Tu.esday,
Thursday and Friday 9:30
a.m. to 1 :00 p.m. and
2:00p.m. to 4:00p.m.
Phone Mart personnel will
make minor repairs on
telephone instruments
and accept billing
payments. ,

Racine council. to meet

Free clothing day slated

Lake Erie upsets Redmen,-98-86

( t 'l nal )

Conferenl't' All

21

tamed to playing with just six
players, Pittsbu rg h was forced
by injury and fouls to go deep into
Its little-used bench early and
often.
Elsewhere, Memphis State
upset No. 9 Lo~isville 72-67, No.
15 North Carolina State crushed
North Carolina -Asheville 90-75.
No. 17 Stanford topped Southern
Ca l 68·52, No. 18 Nevada -Las
Vegas trounced Long Beach
State 104·74 and Louisiana State
beat Georgia 97-83.

ladles lost, 100.96.
Wingate led all the way on Its
home court, but Rio Grande
mounted a determined effort and
the cut the hosts' margin by five
(3.7·32) on a Mullins field goal at
3: 02 in the first period . Wingate
then went on a run to outscore the
visitors 7·2 prior to the halftime.
The Lady Bulldogs posted
three. baskets to outdistance Rio
Grande further In the opening of
the second period. A Holly
Hastings bucket at 10:44 saw the
Redwomen trail Wingate by
seven (65·58 ) . the closest they
would get •for the half. Wingate
forged ahead to run up the score
by 22 (87·651 for its largest lead of
·
the game.
Hastings scored 16 poin ts and
Jennl Couch added 10 to the
Redwomen offense . Rio Grande
connected on 30 of 68 field goal
attempts for 44.1 percent an&lt;;!
sank 26 of 30 tries on free throws
for 86.6 percent .
High scoring for Wingate was

OHIO ,\THLETIC f Of\'FF.RESCF.

MID-OWO GO!"'.'FERENr'E

01\'kdon I
Cil.nton Mr Kiak'y -li. N fanion -11
M'oO!itl"r 61 , MaM411on P e rry -Iii

Dlvl11ion Ill
l 'nlolo'fll, Whrelf'nhuf'K 81
~ ,Pikaon31 , Lul"wowilleVM.I 21
..
Dhblon IV
.. ('roo~n1ll i• $6, P~rt!olnoultl Clay

lhdnt&gt;

·" lll-A.'HI&gt;: Rif' ,\N «;UIIro' Ft~ RENC E:
·
Coni'l'r&lt;'flt:t' 1\11 G!llmt'l'&gt;
'fl'am
" ' L Ptl , " ' L t•!!t .
811\1 Slil.lt•
Ill 2 .11:1:1 2 1 '! .. ,U
Ke nt Stalt•
II -1 .66i I ~ II .Mi

I 11 .ll!!3

Mon:II{V. Ft'h. 21
1'oumament Reiit*!l

•

BRICKEY GOES UP - Duke's Robert Brickey (21) goes up
against Georgia Tech's David Whitmore (center) and Maurice
Brittian (left) to score two of hlsll points In the firsthalfoiMonday
night's game in Durham, N.C . The host Blue Devils won 91·66.
(UPI)

llw;aethWI

By Un!kd Prt'fl 8 IJIIerfMiio~~~~ol

Low In numbers but high in · Athens.
Top individual performances .
morale, coach Kevin Sheperd's
of
the day came from Wes
matmen wrestled with desire
Howard
who captured the scc·
and determlnatton. Lacking In
personnel, the end of the first two tiona! championship at 145 lbs.·
A reversal by Aaron Sheet s
rounds found the Meigs team
scoring behind · Wa rren , New with 14 seconds left on tn c ctock
Lexington, Sheridan, Vinton to co me from behind and win th e
consolation final at Heavywe ight
County , and Gallipolis.
·
Despite the handicap of only to take thi rd.
Jared Sheets finish ed third a t
seven of -thirteen wrestlers, the
senior leadership of Rod Stewart, 172lbs, Jeff McElr oy third at l 60,
Jeff McElroy, Wes Howard: and Eric Heck third at 103, Rod
Jared Sheets moved the team Stewart fourth at 130, and Joe
Into third place by the end of the McElroy fourth at 125. The Meigs
Wrestling team 's record now
final round, defeating Sheridan,
stands a t 30-14.
VInton County, Gallipolis, and

puts in 44 point game:
as Rio women fall to Wingate
WINGATE. N.C . - Lea Ann
llullins finished her regular
season career with the Rio
Grande women 's basketball
team with a 44-polnt perfor·
mance against nationally·
ranked Wingate.
.
But the No. 3 Lady Bulldogs
prevailed, handing the Redwomen a 99·83 defeat Monday In the
Rio ladles' season finale.
Wingate went to 20·1 for Its fifth
consecutive season of 20 or more
victories. alld the Redwomen
finished at 16·10.
Mullins broke Kathy Detll·
lion's 5-year-old record for the
most points scored by a Rio
Grande women's player In one
season with a total of 644
markers, 37 more than DetUiion.
It was Mullins' second highest
game total of her career. the first
set Nov. 19 when she tallied 46
points. That was also against
Wingate in the women's cham·
pionship round of the Bevo
Francis Classic, which the Rio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Area news briefs---------.;..._--------. Seyler .... &lt;From SEYLER, page I)

Mull~s

Ohlu folle~tf' •llllt'lltall Stanclnp.
Hy Unilrll Prf'Ss Jnlt'rrullo"'tl
( ltlro-.:h Ftoll IMI

Rt•I(Uiar St!ll'ion Re!!ull s

Tt'"Y"' VIPJ

Meigs High School had seven
wrestlers qualify for the district .
tournament to be held at Lancaster High School next Friday and
Sat urday. Qualifying were Eric
Heck, Joe McElroy, Rod Ste·
· wart, Wess Howard. Jeff McEl·
roy , Jared Sheets and Aaron
Sheets.
The day started early for the
Meigs wrestlers weighing In at
8:30a. m. at Warren HighSchool.
As a result of flu and injuries,
Meigs weighed in only seven
wrestlers of the thirteen weight
classes.

t'r~tnktln f'urn&amp;f't' Gree"n ~ .
Sotllllf'rn 3t

ftoJ,.' Ohio HIJ~:hSl'ltool B.w.,.Ji:f&gt;thaJI
Bv llnllf'd Prl"i~ lnlf'rtat klml

. Tuesdy, February 21. 1989

Howard sectional champion,
Meigs advances to district action

Duke, Illini
dominate
games MQnday
By United Press International
No. 8 Duke and 10th-ranked
, illinois showed tnc dominating
' form th a t ear ned them No. I
ran kin gs ea rlier thi s season with
routs of confere ncP foes Monday
night.
Duke, the No. 1 team at the
start of the season, posted it~
slltth straigh t victory and
notched Its sixth consecu live
20-win season, F ushing Atlantic
Coast Conference ·foe Georgia
Tech 91·66.
·. At Durham, N.C., Danny Ferry
sco red 26 points, Christlan
Laet iner and Pnll Henderson
added 12 points each and Robert
Brickey and Greg Koubek had 11
ap iece for the Blue Devils, 20·4
and H in the ACC.
Dennis Scott's 2-6 point s led
Georgia Tech, 17-9 and 6·5 in the
conference. The Yellow Jackets
played without seniors Tom
Hammonds, who missed his
second game with a slight tear of
a knee ligament , and Anthony
Sherrod, who was suspended for
three games for a violatio n of
team rules .
Illinois, which replaced Duke
as fne No. ) team a month ago but
has since stumbled , crushed
Purdue 102-75 in a Big Ten game
at Champaign, Ill.
Nick Anderson and Marcus
l.lbertyscored 21 points each and
Kenny Battle added 20 as the
II lint,' 22·4 and 9·4 In the Big Ten,
rebounded from a loss Saturday
to Wisconsi n.
"That !Wisconsin) game ob·
viously made them very mad."
Purdue Coach Gene Keady said.
"Th at seems to be our problemwe play the big games at the
wrong time."
Tony .Jones led the Boilermak·
ers, Ji-15 and 4-9 in the confer·
ence. with 20 pointp.
In co ll ege basketball's other
elite conference. the Big East:
Mondav's only game was much
closer.

Tuesdy. February 21 . i989

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Also surviving are one daugh·
David Lee Novell of Mason;
Steven Wayne Norvell of Leon; ter, Mrs . Randy (Linda) Brown
three Step·daughlers, Connie M. of Gallipolis; two sons, Lewis
Fields of Hartford, Debbie E. Pickett of Racine, and Larry
Keams of West Columbia, Brenda Pickett of GaiUpolls; four grand·
A. Norville of Winter Haven, Fla.; children; f9ur brothers, Forrest
two step-sons, Charles H. Zuspan Warren, Howard Warren and
Jr., of West Columbia; Kenneth W. Ervin Warren, all of Crown City,
Zuspan of Columbus, Ohio; a step- and James Warren of Gallipolis;
father, Rev. Charles W. Rogers of and four sisters, Mrs. Adele
Poinl Pleasant; 10 . grandchildren, Syrus of Columbus, Bonnie Spil·
one great-grandson, and 11 step· !man of Ft . Lauderdale, Fla .,
Mrs. Feddle (Mary) Phillips and
grandchildren. .
Services will be Wednesday, Feb. Mrs. Oral (Georgie) Bevan, both
22, at the Foglesong Funeral Home of Crown City.
She was preceded In death by
with Rev: Bill Banks and Rev.
brother and one sister.
one
James Dunn officiating.
She
attended the Dayton
Calling hours wiD be Tuesday
Avenue
Baptist
Church In Xenia.
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the
Services
Will
be Thursday, 2
funeral home.
p.m~
at
the
Willis
Funeral Home
Burial will be in the Zuspan
the
Rev.
John
Jeffrey.
with
Cemetary.
Burial will be In the Big Four
Cemetery.
Thelma R. Pickett
Friends may call Wednesday, 7
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Thelma Rose Pickett, 56, 1136
N . Detroit St., Xenia, Onto,
formerly of Crown City, died at
her residence Monday morning.
Born Jan. 31, 1933 In Crown
City, she was the daughter of the Daily stock prices
late Russell and Mary (Johnson)
(As ol10: 30 a.m.)
Warren.
·
Bryce and Markk Smith
She Is survived by her hus·
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
band, Max E. Pickett, whom she
married March 10 , 19511n Crown
Am Electric Power ............. 26%
City.
AT&amp;T .................................31\j,
Ashland Oil ........................34%
Bob Evans ........ .................. 15%
Charming Shoppes ..............17%
(From WAIT, page 1)
City Holding Co .................. 20%
''Over the long term, clean coal Federal Mogul. ..... .... .. ........52%
technologies will produce an Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 49
equal ·or greater amount of Heck's ...................... ,..... ... .. \2
emission reductions at about 20 Key Centurion .... .. .... ... ..... ..14%
percent less cost than reductions Lands' End ....................... ..31%
mandated by acid rain leglsla· Limited Inc ............. , ........... 31
Multimedia Inc .................... 84
tlon," Dowd said.
Rax Restaurants .................. 3~
AEP, headquartered In Colum·
bus, Ohio, serves 7 ml!Uon Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16%
customers In 7 east-central Shoney's Inc ......... ............... 8%
states through eight electric Wendy's Inti ....................... . 6\1,
Worthington Ind ...... ........... 21%
subsidiaries.

Stocks

Wait ...

2 WEEK SPECIALS! !
FRESH

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TAX TIP OF THE WEEK
FILING STATUS
QUESTION: My wife died during
1988. Wh.,lfllemy 1988tu return,
muot I fileu • tingle poreon? Or con t
OIHI file e joint return 1
ANSWER : You con otll file a joint
return with your decMied apou• for
1988 eo Jong .ao you didn't Nmtrry
before the end of tho yoor. If you h • depondent child. you moybeallleto
joint return ret• for 1888 end ·
1880 by filing u
o qUIIIIfylng :

u•

widower. To do so. you mull: remain

•

IAIL IEIUI, I.A.

unrn.,.iod and provide .,.. holt the
colt of mlintelnlng 1 r•kllnce where
you live with your dipondont child for
the whole yoor.

BROUGHTON'S

Beef Stew

Ice Milk

$109

$129

24

992·6674

POMIIOY, OHIO '

oz.

'It &amp;AilON

BROUGHTON'S

CANADA DRY

2°/o Milk

Gingerale

S129
GAUON

With Each
PurchaM of 10
lbs. Idaho
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$119:~

C&amp;K

Exp. 3·6·89

CHECK OUR
MYSTERY
SPECIAL
EACH DAY!

I PACI-16 01."

Bananas
3 LIS.
$100

RC Cola &amp; Diet Rite

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618 EAR IWN

CASTLEIEHY

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Sunny Buns

79&lt;
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SUP~RMARKET

. On the "T" · Middleport. Ohio

'

want It, that 's their decision and
they should not be compensated
for not accepting a benefit.
The Insurance days started
back when the Village first
Initiated its health Insurance
coverage. Since then, employees
who do not take insurance are
allowed one day ott each month.
The day must be taken within the
month and d ays cannot be
accumulated.
Council Instructed Clerk·
Treasurer Jane Walton to draw
up a resolution to eltmlnate
insurance days, to be discussed
again and voted on at the next
Council session In two weeks .
The need to paint yellow lines
on the streets In two or three
locations of the village was
discussed and approved by Coun·
ell. The corner at Second and
Sycamore Streets and Mulberry
Heights where Hiland Road goes
over the hill from Veterans
Memorial Hospital were two
locations where Mayor Seyler

I

The following other business
matters were also di scussed by ·
Council but not acted upon:
- The need to purc hase a used
four-wheel drive vehicle for use
by the fire department as a brush
truck.
-A request from Mary Powell
for Council to consider closing
Second Street from Court Street
to Lynn Street for this year's
annual He ritage Weekend
celebration.
-Hillside drainage problems
caused by abandoned coal mines.
-The posslbl!ty of purchasing
a 1988 vehicle for the pollee
department.

Blue Cross reports·
$6.7 million profit
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Blue Medlflt coverage, lor Medicare
Cross and Blue Shield of Ohio, recipients, Increased 27 percent.
which Insures 1. 7 million
and prerplums for IndiVidual
Ohioans, reports a $6.7 million
policyholders under the age ol65
1988 profit based on gene1·ally · increased 28 percent.
accepted accounting p~lnclples.
Clapp said he does not e xpect
But the company will report a $4 premiums to Increase this year
million loss to the state.
for Medlfil or under-65 Individual
The Cleveland-based com·
policyholders. But Clapp said
pany, which reported a $99 group plan subscribers can ex million loss during 1987, said the pect an average 10 p!'rcent to 15
small profit was achieved by percent Increase.
charging Its customers more,
Although year-end financial
paying hospitals less, and redac· reports lor the state's two other
ing administrative costs.
Blue Cross· Blue Shield plans are
The loss flied with the state Is not yet avallble, the Cincinnati·
due to Ohio's earnings formula,
based Community Mutual Blue
which does not credit corporate Cross and Blue Shiel&lt;;! Co. told the
fixed assets- such as computer newspaper It expects 1988 losses ·
software, Kent W. Clapp, tne to approach $100 million. The
firm's chief financial officer, Cincinnati company covers 23
mUllen people.
said.
The company raised Its rates to
The Columbus-based Central
employer groups an average of Benefits Mutual Insurance Co.
20 percent last year, The Cleve· reported a profit of $877,000 as of
land Plain Dealer · reported. the end of September.

North 'placed .himself above law'
.WASHINGTON (UPII
Oliver North, the self·
acknowledl(ed "action officer"
of the Iran-Contra affair, went on
trial Tuesday facing 12 criminal

Weather
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Cloudy, with scat·
tered snow flurries. Lows will be
near 30. Light northwest winds.
Chance ot snow 50 percent.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
with a high in the mid 30$. Chance
ot snow 20 percent.
Thursday through Saiurday
Fair Thursday and friday,
becoming cloudy with a slight
chance of snow on Saturday.
Highs will be In the 20s Thursday
and Friday and In the 30s
Saturday. Early morning lows
will be in the teens both Thursday
and Friday and In the 20s
Saturday.

charges stemming from hls role :
In the worst scandal of the
Reagan administration.
Nine women and three men
chosen as jurors In the case were
sworn In by U.S. District Judge
Gerhard Gesen at 9:38a.m. EST
to hear the case against North.
Lead prosecutor John ~eker,
In a dramatic 90-mlnute opening
statement outlining the case
against the former White House
aide, said North "placed himself
above the law'' by allegedly lying
to Congress In 1985and 1986about
his actions In support of the
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
Keker also said a host ofpeopie
involved In the Iran-Contra atfalr
would be government witnesses,
Including former Attorney General Edwin Meese, North's
former secretary Fawn Hall, and
· ex-national security adviser Ro· '
bert McFa~lane.

STOP IN TODAY!!
ED ODULE
HEALTH DESK
What Is "Mid Module"?
Metl Module is an 11dting
new concept to help you
k..p track of yow own
good heolth. itiHI't , _
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lhtlps eYaluate your risk of
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eprorides you waluctltlt Information through its "Health facts
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•

MEMBERSHIP $600
-·

PreHription Shop
"' 992·6669
271 1101111
_.,LEPOU
OliO
J

'

said, "we'll hand palntthe lines If
we have to."
In other business, Larry Weh·
rung was again elected to serve
as President of VIllage Council
lor 1989 and Council approved the
renewal of Its l!abllliy Insurance
coverage at the same rate as last
year.

�Tuesdy, February 21, 1989

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
I·

Community .calendar

An0 the r happy ending ===::TUES:::::::D::A::Y====m;:;;ee;:;;t;:;;ln~g;:;;of;:;;Bo=y=Sc;:;;o;:;;ut;:;;T;:;;roo=p

~==========re;:;;vl;:;;va;:;;l;:;;w;:;;l;;;ll;:;;b;:;;e=hl!;;;;_ld=F=rl;:;;da=y

;:;: ;24;:;: ;9

By BOB HOEFLICH
I lave stories with happy
endings don't you?
If so, you
might want to
know t hat at
least two residents - Nancy
Cale and Charles Faulk came through
with offers of refrigerators for
the woman living in the Racine
area· who was using the great
outdoors to keep food from
spoiling.
With three sma ll children, II
was an inconvenience, to say the
least.
·
In addition to the two offers I
know a bout perhaps, some who
wished to help made a contact
with a third party who had
reponed the need. .
So - apparently the problem
has been taken care of. Isn ' 1 It
good to know that there's help out
there?

Phil Dirt and the Dozers are
quite popular in this area and the
group will be performing at the
Green Elementary School in
Ga'llla County on March 5.
There will be shows at 2 and 5
p.m. under the sponsorship of the
school's PTO.
The Meigs connection is Mar·
vln McKelvey, Syracuse, who
has tickets for the performances.
You can line up your tickets by
calling Marvin at 992-2638.
If you' re a customer of the
General Telephone Co., perhaps,
you s hould be pleased that with
the current billing, you're given a
few more days to pay your bill.
I think that 's an improvement.
It seemed that deadline for
payment previously came just a
little too quickly . While we all
know that the bill is coming, still
a few more days to get it together
should be helpful.
Is that a little gutsy or what?
President Bush speaking at
Washington University exhorted

the nation's young people to drop
the self-centered, money-hungry
yuppie as their role -model and
get into serving others.
Now , in essence this is good
advice since we in Meigs County
know that helping others Is a
crucial part of satisfaction in
living. However, I wonder how
receptive young people are to the
advice from ,someone who was
born with a silver spoon in his
mouth and is a mUllonaire .

POMEROY - Drew Webster
will be held Wednesday, 8:30
Post 39 of the American Legion . a.m.. at the legion hall in
will hold its regular meeting
Pomeroy.
Tuesday With dinner to be served
at 7 p.m . .A special Invitation is
POMEROY
Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesextended to new and transferred
members.
d_ay , 7 : 30 p.m., at the home of
Marcia Arnold.
'
POMEROY -TheMeigsCooperativ~ Parish, 311 Condor St.,
THURSDAY
Pomeroy, is sponsorl!ig a tree
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
clothing distribution Feb. 21-23.
Youth League will hold its 1989
Good used clothing for men, organizational meeting on Thurswomen and children will be
day at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
available to the public !tom 9:30 Council Room. Interested
a.m. to3p.m.eachday. For more
coaches and parents are urged to
information, call992-7400.
attend.

Mildred and Gerald Shuster
who observe their wedding anniversary on one of the most
WEDNESDAY
romantic days o! the year ~ ·
POMEROY
Wildwood
Valentine's Day - and this was
Club
will
meet
at the
Garden
their 57th - enjoyed a wonderful .
home
ot
.
Marcia
Arnold
on
day . They greatly appreciate ali
Wednesday
at
7:30p.m.
of your thoughtfulness In helping
making it so special.
POMEROY - A committee
meeting
of Boy Scout Troop 249
The next wild -horse adoption
will
be
held Wednesday, 8:30
program for our area will be held
p.m.,
at
the America.'! Legion
April 7-9 at the Jackson County
Hallin
Pomeroy
. All members of
Stockyards In Ripley, W.Va.
committee
are asked to
the
We've had the programs preattend.
viously at locations as close as
the Bob Evans Farm in Gallla
POMEROY - A committe
County.
At the Ripley event there -will
be 100 wild horses from the West
olfered for adoption. The adoption fee is $125 per horse and
there are a few qualification
Dear Ann Landers: You rerequirements. All animals have
cently printed a letter suggesting
been vaccinated, blood tested
that it was unwise to tell a
and dewormed and have clean
grlevingdlvorceewhatajerkher
bills of health before being
form er spouse was. That letter
shipped.
was great, as far as it went, but it
didn' t go far enough.
The Holly Hill Inn in Pomeroy
It is amazing how many people
is more and more being used as a
have no idea how to handle
facility for various social gatherthemselves around a divorcing
ings of groups from . across the
person, A good rule of thumb is
county. Smail wonder. The Fultz
this: If you wouldn't say it to a
family, owners, have provided widOw, don't say It to someone
such a great atmosphere at the who is going through a divorce.
spot in furnishings and decoraHere are some examples:
tions - quite an asset to the
When a friend (sister, daughcommunity.
ter, etc.) calls and says her
husband died, you wouldn't say
And whatever happened to "Are you certain? You could be'
such hit tunes as "I'm a Lonely mistaken. Maybe he'll come
Little Petunia !nan Onion Patch" back. Go to the morgue and stick
-gone with the age of Innocence, a pin in him, just to be sure."
no doubt. Do keep smiling.
Rest assured your divorcing
friend Is In a pretty good position
to know whether or not her
marriage is dead. Trust her
judgement.
Would you ask a widowed
friend if she killed her husband?
Even if she had made a mistake
that contributed to his death,
Tracey 0 ' dell, treasurer; and would you add to her guilt and
Mrs. Morris, secretary. The
group voted to send donations to
Bethany Mountain Mission and
Sine Cera. Sharon Folmer led in
prayer for the sick and bereaved.
Among Items discussed were
holding a Sunday morning worship, purchasing and preparing
The 50th anniversary of the
health kits for the Fes tlval of
Chester
Garden Club will be
Sharing in September, and accelebrated
at a meeting on
quiring, program booklets , as
Wednesday,
March 1, at the
well as electing a nominating
·Chester Un lied Met hod is t
committee.
Violet Hysell suggested hold- Church.
Plans for the observance ·w ere
ing a klt.chen shower. It was
decided to have a potluck in the made at a recent meeting of the
fellowship room with admission club held at the home of Betty
being that of a small kitchen Dean.
The celebration will carry a
item .
Virginia Wears had the closing theme of ''Flowers and Friends"
prayer before dismissing to the and will featured a demonstrafellowship room for refresh- tion program by Mrs. Dean on 50
years of flower arranging. All
ments and a social time.
·
members of the county's garden
clubs are invited to attend the
open meeting which will be held
at 7:3(/p.m.
Katha'yn Mora gave devotions
on reaping what you sow. She
said that people should dally sow
seeds of friendship, study, love,
vent ion In Louis vile, Ky., in July work and good health habits and
and the Council discussed ways cau Honed her listeners top look
in which they can help lund the well to the seed because as you
trip.
sow so shall you harvest.
Tlieme of the mother-daughter
banquet to be held on May 19, 6: 30
p.m . was announced as "PreMrs. Carl Hori&lt;Y reviewed the
cious Moments, Precious Memobook, "A Death In the Family"
ries." Committees were named.
by James Agee, at the WednesA "Christmas In July" program is being planned. Next day meeeting of the Middleport
meeting will be held on March 13 Literary Club held at her home.
In her review Mrs. Horky
at the church.
Refreshments were served to described the book as a "work of
those named and Diana Bing, art, a masterpiece, a story of a
Paula Pickens, Becky and Be- universal human situation." She
thany Amberger, Madeline Pain- noted that it tells the story of a
ter, Jackie Reed,
Charlotte loving closely-knit family , and
Haning, Gerry Llghtloot, Suzie their great courage when the
Will, Cherie and Caitlin William- fl!ther is killed In an automobile
son, Nancy Morris, Sherry and accident including the tragedy
Elizabeth Smith, Carolyn Nichol- and the changes that take place
son, Tina McGuire, Bonnie in the lives of those left behind.
Mrs . Wilson Carpetner preWarner, and Dakota Smith.
sided at the meeting and

A love theme was carried out at
a meeting o! the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church Women
at a meeting held at the church on
Valentine's Day.
· Group singing of "It's Just
Like His Great Love" and "Oh,
How I Love Jesus" opened the
meeting with each member reading a Bl ble verse on love.
Virginia Wears led the group in a
Bible quiz concerning love. First
Corinthians , Chapter 13, the love
chap)er, was read by Violet
Hysell. Other readings were
"Life's Storms" by Virginia
Wears; ·'God Loves Me" by
Violet Hysell; "Did Jesus VIsit
Ancient England" by Frances
Goeglein; "Recipe for Love" by
Trecie Abbott, and "Living and
Giving" by Fern Morris.
Members responded to roll call
by telling how they met their
.' spouses. Reports were given by

POMEROY Riverview
Garden Club will meet at the
home of Janice Young on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Mary Grace
Cowdery will be co-hostess.
MIDDLEPORT
The
Women 's Fellowship of Meigs
County Churches of Christ will

through Sunday at the Middleport Ash Street li'~eewili.Baptist
Church. Buddy Jane~. !rom Kentucky , will be the speaker.
Services will be at 7: 30 each
evening.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Youth League will hold its
1989 organizational meethJg
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Middleport Council Room. Interes ted coaches and parents are
urged to attend.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club is
sponsoring a dance on Saturday,
Fe b. 25, from .8 to 11 p.m., at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy . The caller will be Billy Gene
Evans. All western . square
dancers are welcome.

RACINE- The Racine American Legion Auxiliary Post 602
will meet at the post home
Thursday, 7 p.m., to vote on
Girls' State.

•

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m .. at the home of Janice
Young. Mary Grace .Cowdery
will co-hostess.

POMEROY - A basket class
has been scheduled for Saturday .
at 1 p.m. at the Meigs County '
Museum. A round gathering
basket will be made with Janet
Theiss instructing. For reservations, call Theiss at 949-2714 by
Friday.

CHESHIRE - Gallia-Melgs
CAA will hold its regular meeting
on Thursday at 5:30p.m. at the
Guiding Hand School in Cheshire. The public is invited to
attend and provide community
input.

SUNDAY
RACINE -The movie "Jon!"
will be shown Sunday, 7:30p.m.,
at the Racine First Baptist
Church. The movie depicts the
true story o!JoniEareckson. The
public Is invited.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A weekend

grief by asking, · "What happened?" Show the same respect
for the divorcee.
Would you tell your widowed
friend how much happier she is
going to be without her husband?
Why then say this to a woman
who is being divorced? The death
of a marriage is often depresslng, even though she may be well
rid of the bum.
Like the widow, the divorcee
must go through many stages of
grief. There are no shortcuts, so
don't suggest any. Whether she is
gleefully proclaiming her rreedom or sobbing In despair, she Is
1 th ta th t h
d
be 1
n e s ge a s enee s to
n
at that moment. Your patience
and understanding are the best
gifts you can bestow, whether she
is blaming hersel!, blaming him
or Jumping into the arms of
another man. Both parties In the
divorce will go through the
st~ges, regardless of whom lefl
whom .
Divorce Is never easy, but it's
not the end of the world, either. It
may be the end of a life style, but
It can also be the beginning of
anotheronethatmlghtbebetter.

It was noted that the club had

given a book entitled "Flower
Power" by Helen Ness to the
Pomeroy Library in memory of
deceased members.
A sunshine gift was sent to
Carolyn Barton, daughter of
Mace! Barton, who recently
injured her loot.
Gardening gilts will be presented to Howard and Eleanor
Knight in observance of their
50th Wedding anniversary.
·
An auction of valentine goodies
was conducted by Maidie Mora .
Twlla Buckley condlJCted a workshop on making mini-mats and
wreaths using flowers and ribbons In a valentine motif
The April meeting will.be held
at the home of Clarice Krautter
with a miniature flower show to
be held at that time. Arrangements are to be between three
and eight inches high and there
wlll be spring flower specimen
classes.

SPRING FASHIONS

members answered roll call with
a quotation on death. Mrs. Gay
Perrin was a guest. The hostess
served candy.

Sometimes family and friends
try so hard to protect the
Institution of marriage that 1~.ey
forget what really matters is the
well-being of the people involved.
Believe me, the best thing you
can do is be non- judg~ntal and
supportive. I know because I've
- Been There In Grand Rapids
ffear Grand: So have I, and
you've made some excellent
points. Thanks for those sensible
guidelines.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband has a job that keeps him on
the road 20 nights out of the
month. Six months ago I was
sexually assaulted by an intruder
who gained entrance to my
bedroom by climbing the balcony
and prying the window open.
Since that terrible experience I
have been afraid to sleep alone so
I asked my two sons, 10 and 12
years of age, to share my
king-sized bed,
It Is a great comfort to have
those tWO WS[m bodies next tO
me. There Is no nudity involved.
We sleep with our pajamas on.
Some relatives heard about
this and told my husband it is

ENDS SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1989

4200

Add-On Furnace

Preferred
drl~er• deterve
preferred relet
There ahould ·be lpecial Clll' inaur-

ance for mora mature, aafer drivers.
Now there is.
It' 1 State Auto Companies' Medalill Auto policy .
The rates are lower. The covaragn
are broader.
If you have had no violation• or at·

fault accidents for three years and
old, you coukt
be qualified to become • Mtdoliot
policvholder, enjoying opociol, ,..
duced rate&amp;.
And If you are middl•oged (45·
641. you' ll got the biggoot rote
brNk of ell.

v•••

Whet' 1 more, as a Medalist poll·
~holder you ere not charged far
your firtt accident. Th.t' aeffective
immediately. too. There' a no thrH
year waiting periodtoqualify. once
you
Model lot policy.

,.

-n •

Cell us about thia car insurance

$599°0

42504

42510

H4067oa

10
HEATER •••• S11 '5 00
H
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$
RADIANT 36 HEATER •••• 14900
H40668 ·
$ 14600
OMNI
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OS
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•••••••

Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550

~ ~~
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• Sl'lctAt INSUMNC£ PIIGOUCIS

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42500

602581 FAN FORCED COMPACT ELECTRIC

390245 FAN FORCED ELECTRIC

BASEBOARD HEATER...................................
198796 ELECTRIC FAN FORCED

.

RADIANT HEATER........................................
431114 ELECTRIC FAN FORCED

$1 7200

$
$

519 5

3
795
$

UTILITY HEATER •••••••••••• !.~~!.~~!!~................. 3495
OMNI 120 HEATER.......
369751 ELECTRIC DUAL HEAT
wAm
$
H405035
·
QUARTZ HEATER ••••• ~•• ?.~?;.~~?.~...................... 519 5
PICK-A-WICK KEROSENE HEATER FAN ••••• $3295
375550 MULnPLE-HEAT FAN FORCED
.
$
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H40667B

.

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GAS
HEATERS

siNGLE wALL
20% OFF ALL TRIPLE WALL &amp; ACC_ESSORIES
~'Some Quantities May Be Limited"

SALE STARTS TODAY
Ends Saturday, March 4, 1989

&amp; SUPPLY CO.

214 EAST MAIN

992·6687

s6'99"0o S285
$1995
HEATER &amp; COOLING FAN ••••••••••••

RADIANT

'w.~~sr:?
POMEROY

REGULAR S323.00

ECTRIC
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$
95
ROOM HEATER ............................ 59

KERO SUN HEATERS

breakthrough for Nfe drivera.

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STOVE

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FUEL HEATING
SPECL\USTS,

..

HEATING SPECIAUSTS,
"

"HO'IBLAST® 1200
FROM 1HE SOUD

Grubb family to sing
The Grubb family singers will
be at the Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church in .Ru tll!nd Sunday at 7 p.m. Paul Taylor,
pastor, Invites the public.

WONDERCOAL® 2727
FROM THE SOUD FUEL

UTILift

•

Family Practice

SPRING SWEATERS &amp; SUITS
RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

.- ~ -

•Window Kits •Storm door Kits •Door Sweeps .
•Tape •Caulking Cord • Air Conditioner Covers
•Heat Tapes •Garage Door Strips •Pipe Wrap AND MORE!

TODAY

friends and relatives.
Edna Wood underwent major
surgery Tuesday, at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Golda Krackomberger returned to her home Wednesday
from Camden Ciat'1&lt;. hospital In
Parkersburg where she had been
a medical patient for two weeks.

i'

-··~-

Weatherstrip &amp; Supplies

SALE STARTS

PlanninJ( a weddinf{? What's
rijtht ? What',, wrong? ""Thl' Ann
Landen Guide for Brid.e11" will
relieve your anxiety. To receive a
mpy• .~pnc/ $3 plus a ~elf-addrf'JM'd,
.unmped hu$1ines~.~i:e envelope (45
C'Pnts poJlOf(e) to Ann LanderJ, P.O .
Box 11562, Chica~o. 1/1. 60611-0562.

David R. Ayers, M.D.

(304) 675-6015

IACINE, OHIO

()
ALL IN STOCK

disgraceful. I think they are
evil-minded. My husband isn't so
sure. He said I should write to
you , Your word is law In our
house. Please give me your
opinion. - Worcester, Mass.
Mother
Dear Mother: Beef up the
security system and get those
boys out of your' bed pronto.
Those "warm bodies" may be a
comfort to you, Mom, but the
arrangement is unhealthy for
your sons.

. . 111: lebt 26

ALSO

949-2100

'.

ANN LA.NDt:RS•

A new member Becky Edwards, was welcomed by the
Ladles Auxiliary of the Chester
fire department at the Wednesday evening meeting· at the
firehouse. President Inzy Newell
opened the meeting with prayer
and pledge to the flag. Minutes of
the last meeting was read by
Paula Wood and the treasurer's
report by Betty Newell. Commit·
tee reports were given and bills
were approved for payment.
Several cards were signed for the
sick of the community. Refreshments were served by Opal
Hollon and Clarice Allen to those
named and Erma Cleland, Marcia Keller, Bonnie Landers ·
Ethel Orr, Cleo Smith, Dorothy
Hawk and Margaret Christy.
Bonnie Landers, Cleo Smith,
Barbara Sargent and Florence
Well recently attended a school
of instruction of the Eastern Star
held at McConnelsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Frederick
have returned to their home in
Winter Haven, Fla. after a two
weeks stay at their home here in
Chester. Elizabeth Hayes accompanied them to Florida for. a
several week visit there with

complaint about this or any other
charitable solicitation, he or she
should contact Celebrezze's
Charitable Foundations Section
at 614-461&gt;-3180.

" Heart Friends" by Marjorie
Holmes , and 1eiUng of how
friends add flavor, value and
delight to lives . She closed with
prayer and a reading, " My
Friend Forever" pointing out
that God is our deares t friend .
Bernice Carpenter presld&lt;'CI at
the meeting with the least coin
being collected. There were 182
sick and shutln calls reported.
Plans were made to serve
refreshments at the March 9
community lenten services .· Mrs.
Downie volunteered to be key
woman for Church Women
United .
Alice Wamsley was at the
plano for group singing of several
songs. Polly Eichinger had grace
and refreshments in keeping
with the Valentine motif were
served by Mrs. Wamsl;:,y, Ruth
Moore and Helen Fisher.

GOUT
I
TOC •

.. 1988, Loe 4.n ....
Tim.- Syndif'•e •nd
Crulan Syndic-al~

By Clarice Allen

"Busy Women - Dealing with
Stress" was the title of the
program given by Jackie Hildebrand when the Pomeroy United
Methodist Women met recently
at the church.
·
Emphasis of the program was
on helping busy women deal
creatively with the stresses that
develop at various stages of their
lives,- the heavy demands up(ln
the mother-homemaker, I he
multi-commitments of employed
women and the e ndless care
giving and nurturing responsibll·
ities of women. Dorothy Downie,
devotional leader used love as
her topic reading Psalm 16,

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE GREAT SAVINGS•••

Auxiliary welcomes new member

PVH Medical Office Building

MASTERCARD-VISA-GOLDEN BUCKEYE

ces. Stone's name, return ad·
dress and signature appears on
some letters received by Ohioans
appealing for donations to the
Walker Cancer Research Institute and Cancer Fund of
America.
Celebrezze has formally requested further Information
from the organizations, and sent
a notice to Stone that he must
comply with Ohio's registration
and bonding requirements.
There is evidence that Stone's
name Is used on new solicitations
that contain no sweepstakes
gimmick, but Instead make a
direct plea for donatlons'.. Celebrezze is conducting further
investigations of the language
used \n thesollclatlon letters and
is working with 13 other Attarneys General who are contemplating legal actions against one
or more of the organizations.
Should a consumer have a

U.S. STOVE.COMPANY

LADIES' DRESSES, SIZES 6-20

31D STIDT

and the Cancer Fund of America
"Over 200 consumers hav~
complained to my staff since the
solicitations began appearing in
mailboxes throughout the state
last October " Celebrezze said
"Consumers' should read th~
sweepstakes wording carefully
and consider the use of their
donation before responding. In
addition, they should note that
these organizations are not assoelatedwiththeAmerlcanCancer
Society or the American Heart
Association."
The five organizations and the
professional fundraiser are reglstered to solicit in Ohio. However, Ohio's current charitable
laws. do not expressly prohibit
deceptive fundralsing practices.
One state which has a clearer
charitable enforcemel)t statute,
Missouri, has taken legal action
against Robert R. Stone for
fraudulent and deceptive practi-

E'
OUR

I

Middleport club reviews book

Church Women plan
for Day 'of Prayer
Church Women United o!
Meigs County will have ·a planning session for World Day of
Prayer at 1: 30 p.m. on Friday at
the United Methodist Church in
. Minersville. Key women of
member chu rehes are asked to
attend the planning session.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the post
home. A vote on Girls State will
be taken.

Chester Garden Club
celebrates 50 years

Lydia Council planning
rremembering} projeas
Several projects of remembering others were planned during a
meeting of the Lydia Council held
at the Bradford Church of Christ.
Vicki Smith presided at the
meeting during which time the
missionary and motherdaughter banquet funds were
accepted. Visiting cards were
pas ~d' out the the members.
The men's prayer breakfast
was announced for March 4 at the
church, 9 a.m. A school shower
was planned for Shelly Stobart, a
student at Christian Bible College and a list of Items which she
needs was passed around. The
women were asked to take Items
to the next meeting.
A box will be prepared for
George Pickens and his family ,'
missionaries in Africa. The youth
group is planning a trip to the
North American Christian Con-

-....--

~:~f~~~sg~~~-:30 p.m., at the

Treating a divorcee: be ·non-judgmental Ann

Love themes meeting of
Rock Springs. UMW

I

February symbolizes affairs of
be extrem11ly helpful to those
the heart, both in love and fund
suffering from heart disease.
raising drives by some charities
Of the $1.2 million raised by the
)Vho claim to be dedicated to
American Heart Disease Preven!ion iFoundation last year, only
discovering a cure for heart
dlsease. Attorn~y General An - about three cents of every dollar
thony J. Celebrezze Jr. is warndonated were directed to relng Ohioans that some fundrais - search. The remaining ninetylngeffortsaredeslgnedtopullat
seven percent went to Watson
your heart strings and wallet
and Hughey, the organization's
professional fundralser, to cover
_linings, not raise money for
research.
·
the company's consulting fees,
· The American Heart Disease marketing, and malllngcosts.
Prevention Foundation (not to be
Watson and Hughey 's tactics
confused with the American
prompted the Attorney General
Heart Association ), is sending to issue consumer alerts in
thOusands of Ohioans solicitation October and November of last
.letters seeking donations and
year.
clalmlng each recipient is a
Celebrezze has Identified four
other Watson and Hughey. $5,000 sweepstakes winner.
. Celebrezze advises consumers afllllated charitable orga·niza.to read the fine print carefully • !Ions which use the sweepstakes
before responding to these let- pitch: the Walker Cancer Reters. The award most consumers search Institute; The {:enter for
.wlll receive is about ten cents, Alternative Cancer Research;
and the money thev e:lve may not the Pacific West Cancer Fund;

Page-6

Beat of the Bend

Busy women dealing with stress
tops program at UMW meeting

Attorney general offers "donation warnings .

Tuesdy, February21. 1989

.

The Daily .Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

614-992-6611
Toll Fr": 1-800-733-3334

555 PARI ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

H040122 21,000 .TU

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· BLOWEIS AND STANDS FOI
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�.,

Tuesdy, February 21, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

People in the news------ - - - Vietnam veteran to
By WU..LIAM C. TROTr
Unlled Press lnlernallonal

•

TEDDY IV MOVES ON: Ted
Tomer's 25-year-old son is leaving the nest and going to work for
another cable television company . Robert Edward Turner IV,
known to mast as Teddy, will be a
sales and marl&lt;etlng executive
with the Country Music Television network in NashvUle, Tenn.,
after a career that included stints
as Moscow correspondent for his
father's empire, which includes
Cable News Network and superstation WTBS. ''I' m going to a
small outfit with a great deal of
potential," young Turner, who
started working for his dad at 16,
told the New York Daily News.
"It's an opportunity to take

something small and make It big. wonder l!ow the supermarket
This place (theTurneremptre) Is tabloids go about getting their
already big. I've got Dad's sensational photographs? Andy
blessing. They're even throwing Mun:la, husband o!.actress Ann
me a going-away party."
Jllllaa and her former manager,
GOODMAN FOR GOOD says he was approached by "a
CAUSE: John Goodman of the young publiCist friend" who was
ABC hit series "Roseanne" and offering five figures for photoTess Harper, co-star of "Crimes graphs of JUlian alter she went
of the Heart." will be the through the pal nand trauma of a
headliners at the Cumberland double mastectomy In April 1985.
Company for the Performing Murcia, appearing with Jllllan
Arts In Warwick, R.I., on March on an episode of "Geraldo" to be
18. They will host a music,
aired Wednesday. said. "There
comedy and magic show to raise was $25,000 On the line for one
money to replace $50.000 worth of picture of Ann in the hospital bed.
lumber and scenery lost jn a There was $15,000 If they got her
Christmas Day fire. The group walking In the hallway because
has another benefit scheduled for that wasn't as good as the one of
Sept. 15 and hopes to get her lying In bed. I guess." Murcia
Kathleen Turner to host that one. had no trouble turning down the
TABLOID PAYOFF: Ever ., offer.

''The Science of Movie and
be held Sunday In the Lausche
Building on the ' Ohio State Television Magic, " at Ohio's
Center of Science and Industry In
Falrgtounds in Columbus.
downtown Columbus through
-The
Central
Ohio
Bottle
Club
·.
Dressing for sk iin'g normally
Aprll30.
·
Show
and
Sale
will
be
held
requires heavy clothing, but
- "The Creative Camera" Is
Sunday
In
the
Arts
and
Crafts
that 's not the case at this
the
display at the Dayton Art ·
Building on the Ohio State
weekend's Ohio Winter Ski CarniInstitute
through May 29.
Fatrgrou11dS in Columbus.
val at the Snow Trails Ski Resort
-The
Cleveland Museum of
-The home of H.B. Stewart,
near Mansfield.
Art
has
a
display' 'Lutes, Lovers,
founder of the .Akron, Can ton &amp;
A highlight of the weekend is
and
Lyres:
Musical Imagery In
Youngstown Railroad, will be
the famous Bikini Race, one of
the
Collect
ton"
througe June 4.
the many. races Saturday and open for tours Sunday afternoon
-"Faces of Creativity: Porin the Quail Hollow State !,"ark
Sunday .
traits of Artists, Writers and
near Hartville, Stark County.
Meanwhile, In Chillicothe. the
Musicians" is the display at the
·
state's first capital, Ohio State- Special Exhibits
-"Steven Paternlte: Photo- Toledo Museum of Art through
hood Days are celebrated Saturday and Sunday with open house graphs'' wiil be displayed Feb. 28 June 18.
at the museums, an arts and through March 25 at the Rose·
.:..."Beat, Sweep and Clean!
crafts show and muzzleloadlng wood Arts Centre Gallery In Rug Making through the Ages' 'Is
Kettering.
the display Sunday through the
shoot.
-The display at the Allen end of the year at the Hoover
Other areas of the state are
involved in the making of maple Memorial Art ·Museum at Ober- Historical Center in North
syrup. a sure sign that spring is lin College Is "17th Century Canton.
Netherlandish Paintings from On lhe theatrical schedule
on the way .
Demonstrations of that activ- Switzerland," Feb. 28 through
-"Hawail"ls the theme at the
ity are offered each Saturday and April 23. .
La Comedia dinner theater near
-Exhibits at the Butler Insti- Springboro for luaus and enterSunday through March 26 at
Conestoga Farm near Minerva, tute of American Art in Young- tainment through March 26. Call
stown include: " The Grand Gen- 513-746-4554 for reservatiOns.
Stark County.
: Hale . Farm and Village near eration: The Folk Art of Older
- "Cloud 9" Is performed at
Bath, Summit County, demon- Americans,': through Sunday; the Cincinnati Playhouse in the
strates the process in an 1800s "The West Explored," from tne Park In Cincinnati through Sun·
setting each Saturday and su·n- Gerald Peters Collection of West- day. 800-582-3208. •
ern American Art, through April
day through March 19.
- " Steel Magnolias" is presOther maple syrup events this 16; and "Andy Warhol Myths,' ' ented by the Human Race
through June 3 In the Children 's Theatre Company In Dayton
weekend include:
-Maple Syrup Festival Satur- Gallery.
Thursday through Sunday (513-A Mask Exhibition at the 222-6873) and at the Cincinnati
·day and Sunday at Township
·Park In Boardman, with pancake Dairy Barn in Athens features Playhouse In the Park Feb. 28
masks from private collections through March 26 1513-421-3888) .
:and sausage meals .
-Pancake breakfasts at the and children's artwor~. through
-''Italian-American ReconciFire Hallin Burton Sunday. with Sunday, with a Mardi Gras dance liation" Is presented at the
syrup making demonstrated at Saturday.
Cleveland Play House In Cleve-"Home and Family," a pho- land through March 12. 216-795the Log Cabin on the town
tographic collection of Cleve- 7000.
square.
-Sugar in' Days Sunday at the land's working class and black
-The Dayton Ballet's Winter
Brukner Nature Center In Troy. community from the works of Program incldes "Carnival of
-The History of Maple Sugar- Allen E. Cole, Is displayed at the the Animals" and "Romance,"
Ing Sunday at the Rocky River Western Reserve Historical So- Thursday through Saturday In
Nature Center \n North Olmsted ciety in Cleveland through Convention Center Theatre. 513·
with syrup-making demonstra- Sunday.
222-3661.
-A "National Exhibition of
tions and guided sugarbush tours
-"The Mystery o,l Edwin
each weekend through March 12. Blind Artists" will be on display Drood" Is performed at the
at the Canton Art Institute Palace Theatre In Columbus
Among other signs of spring:
-The Pre-Spring Flower Show through March 5. Other displays through Sunday. 614-224-2121.
at the Krohn Conservatory in at the same time are "Photos by
-BalletMet's Winter PerforCincinnati runs through March 4, Joy Timken" and "Watercolors mance will be glv&lt;!n Thursday
and a Peach Blossom Festlva.l ls by Alice Schllle."
through Saturday In the Ohio
-·'Setting the Stage for Ballet Theatre In Columbus. 614-269·
offered each Sunday.
-The Franklin Park Conser- Rusee: Designs from Picasso to 0939.
vatory In Columbus offers a Mlro" Is the exhibit at the
-The Cleveland Ballet perSpring Floral and Foliage Show Columbus · Museum of Art forms "Swan Lake" Friday
through March 14 that offers throu~th March 5.
through March 1 at State Theatre
early scents of and sights of
-Glass By Dominick La blno Is In Playhouse Square Center in
spring.
·
an exhibit of 87 works of art In Cleveland. 216-241·6000.
-The Ohio Historical Society glass made by the studio glass
-A Big Band Classic will be
Is taking reservations - at artist Dominick Labine. The peformed March 1 at the Ohio
614 -297-2684 - lor Its "Museum display can be seen at the Toledo Theatre In Columbus. 614-469Hit Parade" .Concert Series Museum of Art through March 5. 0939.
Saturday night with a presenta-Pianist Cyprlen Katsarls
-A Folk Festival Exhibit of
tion of "A Night at the Bljou." art and vintage Instruments can performs with the Columbus
The · third in the series will be be seen at the Kent State Symphony March 1 and 2 at
March 18 on the theme "Stardust Unverslty Student Center Weigel Hall on the Ohio State
Memories.''
University campus. 614-224·3291.
Gallery through March 11 .
-Reservations can also be
-Grammy and Dove award-"The Anonymous Soldier,"
made for other winter dining Civil War memorabilia from winning vocalist Cynthia Clawprograms each weekend at the both the Union and Confederate son peforms Saturday. at theCol. Crawford lnn at the Ohio armies, is dlsplay'ed at Lawn- Towne and Country Theatre In
VIllage In Columbus ..
field, the home of President Norwalk. 419-668-1641 .
-Reservations can· be made James Garfield, In Mentor
·-"To Gillian on her 37th
.through the Ohio Historical So· through March 19.
'Birthday" will be performed at
·ctety - at 614-297-2606 - for
-Exhibitions at the Cleveland Wittenberg University In Springworkshops each Saturday and Musem of Art Include: "Colla bo· field Thursd~y through Sat urSunday at the Ohio Village. rations , In Monotype," through day. 513-32H443.
where craftspeople In the various March 12; ''Granet: Watercolors
-Pianist Peter Nero performs
buildings help participants make of lie de France !rom the Musee with the Dayton Philharmonic
Items.
Granet, Atx-en-Provence" and Orchestra Friday and Saturday
Also on the agenda :
"~vocative
Images: African at the Dayton Convention Center.
-The Country Peddler Show Sculpture from the University of The Dayton Philharmonic Junior.
will be held Friday through Pennsylvania,'' through March String Orchestra performs Sun·
Sunday at the Lucas County 19.
day evening at the Wright State
'
Recreation Center In Maumee.
-Photographs "Dayton Hos· University Concert Hallin Day-An Ohio Wines Weekend pice Center" are displayed at the ton. 513-224-9000.
Friday through Sunday at the Creative Photography Gallery In
-Louie Anderson performs
Atwood Resort in Dellroy Is an Dayton through March 24.
Sunday evening at the Ohio
Informative weekend of wine
-"Chinese Jades !rom the Theater In Columbus. 614-469.
tasting.
Gerald Godfrey_ Collection" Is 0939.
-The Cleveland Home and displayed at the Dayton Art
-"Sherlock's Last Case" Is
.F1ower Show opens Friday at the Institute through March 26.
performed at the Weathervane
-convention Center and runs
-"Eastern European Art Community Playhouse In Akron
:through March 5.
Since 1960" Is the exhibit at the Thursdays through Sundays
: -The Central Ohio Home and Akron Art Museum through through March 19. 216-836-2626.
Garden Show opens Saturday ·on March 26.
-The University of Dayton
the Ohio State Fairgrounds In
-"Cargo to Extinction" Is an Symphonic Wind Ensemble and
Columbus and runs through exhibit of wildlife trade at the the Wittenberg Uritversly Wind
-March5.
Glen Helen Nature Preserve in Ensemble perform a joint con· -Tbe Greater Cleveland Auto Yellow Springs through March cert Sunday afternoon In
Show opens Saturday at the . 26.
Kennedy Union Boll Theatre on
-International Exposition Center
the University of Dayton cam-Chinese Folk Art Is an
aad 1'11111 throlllrh March 5.
exhibition of the crafts or the pus. 513-229·3936.
-Tbe Afro-AmeriCan Arts
-"Love's Labour Lost" Is
rural Han Chinese people dis·
Fewtlval Saturday and Sunday
played at the Taft Museum In performed In Blair Hall Theatre
at the Kent State Trumbull Clnclanatl through March 28.
on the Sinclair Community College campus In Dayton Thursday
Campus In Warren features arts,
-The West Central Ohio Quilthrough Sunday and March 2·6.
.ethnic roods and entertainment.
ter's Guild displays traditional
513-226-2808.
-The Maumee Valley Gun and
and contemporary quilts at the
-Mitzi G;~ynor performs at the
Knife Show will beheld Saturday Lazarus Skyvlew restaurant in
E.J.
Thomas Hall on the Univerand Sunday at the Lucas County
Uma through April 3.
sity
of
Akron campus Thunday,
Recreation Center In Maumee.
-Bruce, the 25-foot mechani-A Gun and Knife Show will be cal shark from the movie and the Ahmad Jamal Trio
held Saturday and Sunday at
"Jaws," and hundreds or other performs there Friday. 216-375Hara Arena In Day kiln.
7595.
Items from the movies are on
-An Antique Flea Market will
display at a traveling exhibit,

-

_ __ ... _____

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesdy, February 21, 1989

be honored

no expense or other obligation is
involved in partlcipat ing in the
recognition program.
For those veterans who choose
to participate in the parade,
there will be floats for those who
prefer not to walk as well as
walking units . The American
Legion will lead the parade.
There will also be a free lunch for

Plans to honor VIetnam Vel!'·
rans during the annual Rutland
Fourth of July ox roast were
.made during a recent meeting of
the Rutland Fire Department.
The firemen are asked all
VIetnam veterans from Meigs
County to participate tn' the
parade which will be held at 10
a.m. on July 4. It was noted that

those who participate provided
by the Rutland Fire Department
an~ the Rutland American
Legion .
Ideas and sugges lions for the
VIetnam veteran recognition are
being solicitated by the firemen
with residents to contact either
Lilly Kennedy, 742-2861 or Char les 0. Barrett. Jr .. 742-2578.

catch up wll.h yourself," Rol· have adverse side effects.
Researchers now know that.
fwarg said.
insomnia
, the Inability to sleep, is
Changes In body temperature
a
symptom,
like pain .
also appear to affect bodily
"We
used
to thinK. insomnia
functions sue h as the production
of certain key hormones. What was all psychological. Now we
researchers do not know Is why know only about 50 to 60 percent
the body produces the bulk of Its of it is psychological. " Roffwarg
. supply of ad~enal cortisol, t he said durlng a recent inter view.
About 10 perce-nt of people who
stress hormone, during sleep , he
complain of Insomnia aclually do
said.
Since exposure to light can sleep. but are unable todiffet·en •
affect body temperature, re- Hate between being as leep and
searchers are studying how awake, Roffwarg said.
The rest is linked to breathing.
environmental light levels affect
the brain's pacemaker and var- difl!culll es and body
ious biolOgical cycles.
, movements.
Depression, anxiety and\worry
In the past, sleep researchers
have been able to reset an still are very important compoil:ldlvldual's sleep-wake cycle nents of Insomnia over a few
naturally over a period of about nights, but some patients develop
two weeks. Roffwarg said It now persistent conditio ned , or
appears that brief exposure to learned, insomnia that grows out
high light levels can reset sleep- of a temporary loss of s leep.
"A few people begin to get
wake cycles within 48 hours.
"It may be that we can help conditioned-and it leeds on Itself.
people going on trips or facing They start worrying about it'
abrupt shift changes In Industry during the day . They approach
With strategic short exposure to sleeping hours worrying about
not sleeping. They try to sleep,
light,'' Roffwarg said.
Psychologist Jvhn Herman, an and the more they try, the more
associate of ·Rof!warg's at the difficult it becomes," Rolfwarg
Dallas medical center, said he said.
For these patients. the bedenvisions booths in airports
where foreign travelers can drop room becomes a pia ce where
In for a "dose" of light to reset they don' t sleep. Roffwarg said
they often think a lola! nlg ht ,and
their biological clocks.
Understanding how the sleep- this type of insomnia se~ms to be
wake cycle works means doctors alleviated If the individuals can
now can use behavioral tneans of be trained not to think by using
treating sleep problems rat her biofeedback and relaxation
than relying on drugs that may
techniques.

By .JEANIE STOKES
DALLAS (J.JPl) - A quick
·'dose" of light" rather than an
array of pills may soon prqve to
be the answer for people suffering from sleeping problems after
a long jet !light or working the
swing shift.
Dr . Howard Rof!warg,
president-e lect of the American
Sleep Disorders Association, pre·
diets the most effective ways of
resetting sleep cycles will likely
be based on understanding how
changes In body temperature
~nd light levels affect the brain's
wake-sleep pacemaker.
"The 24-hour temperature cycle Is an lmportan t sign of what
the sleep-wake cycle Is doing, "
said Roffwarg, who is a psychiatrist at University of Texas
!iouthwestern Medical Center.
The body's temperature drops
gradually· during sleep and rises
. before wak)ng. ''We know that as
we change sleep stages, the body
changes temperature," Roffwarg said. "If you try to sleep
when your body temperature Is
on the rise, you don't sleep long."
Scientists are working to un·
derstand how temperature
changes affect disruptions In the
body's circadian, or 24-hour,
rhythms. It may explain why
people do not do well when they
-move between different time
zones or change work shifts
frequently.
"If you keeping changing time
-"ones or sleep cycle. you never

PRESCRIPTIONS AIIUALLY
LET US PRICE YDIIR IEXT PRESCRintON .

By SANDRA L.-LATIMER
U11 lied Press International

TYLENOL
GELCAPS
tiD'S

•

Expensive lesson in customer servtce

ROBITlJSS/11
COUBH
FORMULA

oz.

4

•

99
SIMVE

SHAIII'OO OR

CIJIIDITIDIIER
, Ol.

a•USQI &amp; LDIIi
EFFEIMS&amp;ENT:....281

OR THERMAL-fi'S.

98

0 - 15 WORDS

MOUTHWASH

d~.

diY

•fter publiclltion tu make correction.

Happy Ads

Y•d Sal•

9 - Want.t to Buv

446-Gellipdit
367- Ch•hire

ALL
MANUFACTURERS'
COUPONS

Popcorn

143- Portllnd

247- Le,art falls
949- Raelne

742- Autland

..
-· ·--::-::--::7""-:--Public Notice

UOLW

'2 99(
,...ltH.,,.._

PUBLIC AUCTION NOTICE
Tho Bo..-d of TruateM of
Columbio Township witt of-

fOI
....... Prlct ,,, .,.., ......

fer tor .... It 1 public auc·

i

the following item:

882- New Haven

:'

937-Bufftlo

.
.
RITR
AID
DISCOUNT
PHARMACY
RITE
306 EAST MAIN STREET

74 - Motorcycles
76 - 8oats &amp; Moton for Sale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; AccMsories
77--Auto Repair

Farms for Sale
Busin•s Buildings
lou &amp; Acreage
Aeel htate W.nted

47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - Equipment ·tor Rent

78 - Camping Equipment
79- Campars &amp; Motor Homes

Services

~

48- For Le•e

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FtOUCIARY
·On febnary 16, 1989. in

On,.......,
tho

11. 1889, In
Meiga County ..
eourt. Cuo No. 211162.

R-

Buell,

Probote Judge
Leno K. NM ..rOIId, C._..
121 21, 28: 1317. 3tc

WITH BARGAINS

72 - Trucka tor Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WO's

42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - F~rms for Rent
44 - Apartment fot Rent
41i - Furnished Rooms
48 - Space for Rent

Roborl E.

' ARE JUMPING

71 - Autos for Sale

41 - Houtes for Rent

fast

Hobi••·

WANTADS

Tran s ~orlalion

1;1Qdldd

896-Letlrl

O.• Ro.d,
Ohio
4117711, - ::ppolrlbid bellitor of 1ho - · of l!dilm
Mr11 1t1. lite of
400 UniKtln HHI, Pom•ov.
Meiga County. Ohio.

'
1 Sandborn Air ComprBI·
: wor, U ia.
' {2}14, 21. 28

I

\

jti!'r!/lljl'i!lil(!

./;rnt..'J 1/!lli~/

81 -- 'Home lmprowm ents
82 - Piumbing &amp; He•ing
83 - EIIICIIV&amp;ting
84 - Et&amp;c::trical &amp; "Refrigeration
85 - General Haullnt:~

86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholstery

5

Happy Ads

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
·.

111 W01t St&lt;onol. Pomwoy

992-6720
1126/1

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Flahlng Suppli•

Pay Your Phon e
• and Cable Bills Here
.•

IUSINEII PHONE
16141 492-6!!0
RISIDINCI PHONE
16141 9.92· 77!4

.

mo.

1128/ tfll

304-675-3161

for More Information ·

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

- 992-7479

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

It. 33 North of

Pomeroy. Ohio .

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE
MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.
CALL 992·6681

Jo's
Gift ShOJl
SYRACUSE, OHI
Everything Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•Flower Pots

1-31-'88-1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNa: GREG I. IOUSit
::t,
. GENERAL
-

CDNTRACTOIIS
RESIDENTIAL
·
COMMERCIAL
.CUSTOM KITCHENS a. BATHS
efXTENIIYE REMODELING

•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments
Because of Cold Weather
Everything Inside.
Ring Door Bell for Service

•VINYL SIDING. ROORNG

•METAL BUIUMNOS

-

r HOUSING&amp; APT. PAOJECTS

:SINCil. 1969

IUIII'

GUYSVI.U, OHIO
614-662-3121·
Authorized John
Deere. New Hofland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.
Fmo E••l••"t
hlu I. Smioa

. 992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SIIIDAY

992·7611

11-21-88-tfn.

RADIATOR
SERIIICE

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

2-10-'88-1 mo. pd.

DEAD 01 ALIVE

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196 .

Middleport, Ohio

•Washers •Dryers
•Rangea •Freezera
•Rbfrigerators
"Mu~t It R'I'Girablt"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All MakH

1/22111/tfn

1-13-tfc

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

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

FACTORY CHO.E
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

.9-19·88 tfn

1-28-'88-tfn

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

Reasonallle Prirtl"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
Ouy lit' Night
NO SUNOl Y CALLS

aO&amp;

ROOFING

WANTED

We can repair and recore radiutors and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiuton, We also
r1pair Gas Tanks.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Howard L. Writesel

949-2168

n .. uucu•

1-3-'86- tfc

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

· Noow Ho- luilt
"Free Eatimatea"

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

B-1·'11· tin

OF BUSINESS

8/ ISJHn

1-13-'89-Hn

PERLOAD
DELIVERED

LIGHT HAULING DONE

Mastic &amp; Certitinteed'
Vinyl Siding
R.oofing
Seam less Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
. Windows

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

I·U·' II• 1 mo.

FIREWOOD

INSULATION

MOBILE
HOME PARK

MON.-FRI.: ' am-6 pm
SAT.: 8 am-12 Noon

l.eesa Murphey
&amp; Associates

PUBLIC

RELATIONS
108 HIMh So..-.-.
l'omrroy, Ohio 4.5769
Phone (6 I &lt;l~ 992-2922

2·3-'89-1 mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE. 01110
Moet .Forelgn •od

Domestic Vehic'•
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

Repairs

NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certitied Licensed Shop
5-25-tfn

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE

·Meigs Industries, Inc., in addition to providing gen!ll'al office and commercial cleaning,
now offers
'
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
as a service.
We will contract to clean your home on a fixed
schedule, attending to items you deaire.
We provide full liability coverage, workers
compen..tion, and pay all tax
requirements.
FOI A Pita QUalE CALl:

LARRY HOFFMAN -

PH.

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
Foliage Plants
Bask!ltS

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 MI. past
Southern Hftth School

949-2682

1·27·'11· 1 mo.

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

#1 COPPER ............. 16' 1~
#2 COPPlll ....1........ 65' "'
CLEAN ALUMINUM

Raborl E. Buck,
Proboto Judge

Leno K. Noo.tr011d, Ctoril
12121,28: 1317. 3tc

,

•f little

STAINLESS ...............20• ._

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

located Off Bypeaa ·
At Jc1. of Rta. 7
143, Pomeroy, Oh.

Wo1'r1

•.•

Lou,

992-5114

a.

·

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1-12-'BS-otn

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

INTERtOI·EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

lalce the pain aut of
paintifti. let me do
it far you.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

VERY IEASotiAILE

985-4141

HAVE IEFEIEIICE

614-985-4180
2"15-'88·1

SHIETS ..................... 52' 1~
CLEAN ALUMINUM
CAST" ....................... 40&lt; 111.
AlUMINUM
IEVIIIAGE CANS ..... 50' 1~
IIONY
SIIEET ... _ ....... s• to 30' ._
IIONY CAST ... 3' •• 20' 1~

DorloA.c-,d
,toto
of lloll233. Coltoae Ro.d, SyOhio 411-rnt .

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

_S6 AND UNDER

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

mov-ooC-. 8ox233.Co~

lf/JJJ'l';JJJS

AND

Brian Houtlaslllft, Owner

Copper end More

toge ROlli!, Syrlal-. Ohio
48779, ::ppoinlod Admin- of tho of

-

TOP OF THE ST AilS

992-6135

We Buy Aluminum

(Subject to Change
Without Noti&lt;t I

racu-.

1 Tanning Session and
1 S.ssion at Fit &amp; Trim

Night

Cana. GIMI, Brau,

tho Meiga County Probate
Court, C..o No. 28183, Em-

' --------~------~~------•
- --·----

I
J

333436 36 -

468-L•on

161 North St&lt;ond
Mi41dltport, Ohio .4S760

63 - livestoek

64 - Hay &amp; Grain
66 - Seed &amp; FertiJi&lt;Eer

31 - Hom• tor Sale
32 - MobiteHomes. lor Sale

tion hold March 6, 1989 ot
7:00P.M. ot tho firo aulion , _ W. Hobitet... 33222

• fWII:fl fF'ICTM , . . , . . , If Tllllll FfPUA/IY If. llf! • lrf llflfllrf THf IIIIIIT TD 11i11r DIIUTITIES •

\

BUSINESS

14th &amp; lloift St,
Point l'llarant, W. Va,

61 - Ferm Equipment
62 - Wanted to Buy

Re al Esla!e

667- Coolville

R~tults

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltve stock

21 - Butln•• Opportunhy
22 - Mon.,. to Loan
23-Prof•stonel Set'lliees

571- Appte Grove
773-Mtton

98S- Ch81ter

245-Rio Granda
266-Gu..,.n Dist.
643- Arebil Dist.
379-Welnut

Gat

992- Middlaport

675-Pt. Ple•ant

Pom•ov

388-Vinton . •

••·s

Area Code 614

M•on Co.• WV
Aree Code 304

58 - Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59 - For Sale or Trade

1 1- Help Wanted
1 2- Situation Wanted
1 3-lnsuranca
14-8usin•• Training
15- Schools &amp; Instruction
16-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17-Miscellaneous
18- Wanted To Do

following telephone exchanges ...

Sporting Goods
Antfqun
Misc. Merchandi&amp;e

55 - Building Suppl1es

Emp loyment
Se rvices

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M. THURSDAY
- 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

HousehOld Goods

56- Peu for Sale
57- Musicalln •truments

s..

C1rd of Thinks

Meigs County

Merchandise
51 52 5354-

6 - lolt and Found

Classified pages cover the

QiiJ

833.00

$51 .00

In Memoriam

Galli a County
Area Code 814

510 .00
515.00
$25 .00
$60 00

St3.00 r

$21 .00

7 - Yifd
e (paid in advancel
I - Public Sale &amp; Auction

COPY DEADLINE - ·
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
~URSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

RITE ACCEPTS

$8.0\)
$13.00

3-Annoucements
4 - Gi\l&amp;tJWay
5 - Happy Ads

{Check

"Ads thlt must be paid in advan~;e .,.

HOl.

87 .00

sa.oo

' Now l.odlion:

J&amp;L

NOW OPEN FOI

·

$27

Plus FREE.....

MON.-IU£1.-WED .-fll.
9 A.M.-6 P.M.
THURS. 9 A.M .- 12 NOON
SAT. 9 A.M.·2 P.M.
Call A•ytimo Day or

1-17-' 88-1 mo.

PUBLIC
RECYCLING

$35

ONLl

•Electrical Supplies

3rd St., Syraw11, Oh.

u. s. 11. so un

26· 35 WORDS

$5 .00

Announcements

tor ·arror~ first d~ ad runs in paper). C.tl before 2 :00p.m .

&amp; SAIISI1

$5 ,0\)

16-25 WORDS

1- Card of Thanks
2 - ln Memorv

polis Daily Tribune. re.ching over 18,000 homes.

'

Stri&lt;tly

, Rat• ere for consecutive runs, brokt~n updlfl(swill b&amp; ch argad
fnr ear.h dw 111 Mpa,.te ad! .

run 3 d.VI It no ch•ge.
•Price of ad for all capiullle~ters is double price of ad cost.

sctllf

$4.00

tO OAYS
1 MONTH

•Raceive0t .60 di1count for adt paid in advance.
•Free adt - Giveaw•v 1nd Found ads under 16 wo~dl will be
-.,point line type onty ul8d.
•&amp;tr~tioel il 001 rnpontible for erron aflet first

DAY

3 DAYS
6 DAYS

1

POLICIES
.
"Ads outaide Meigt, G1llia or Mason countiea must be pr&amp;paid.

.

Only

BOGGS

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

•A clauitlad advertisement piKed in The01ily Sentinel lex ·
c:ept - cl•sified dispiiY, Busin•• Card and leg !Ill notieltl)
will also appall' in the Pl . Ple•ant Regiller and the Galli·

AID

Basham Building
EVERY
SM. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
12 Gaugt

SUPPLY COMPANY

•Mobile Home P•rt•
•Plumbing Supplies

SALES &amp; SERVICE

• The Area's Nu"'ber 1 Marketplace

REIU EIZYIIATIC
CI.EAIIER JJBLEJi

POMEROYI OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

LADIES WANTED! .
PERM, CUT, STYLE

SYRACUSE

2· 1·lmo.

Classifie

••

DISIIIFft:TIIIII
&amp; SJ'OIIASE SIIUITIIIII
fUl.IM
IIITRIIDIICTIIIIY 1'112

"She told me the bank only
validated parking tickets when a
cus IJ)mer made a transaction
and that cashing a check wasn't a
transaction ,'' Barrier said.
The millionaire said he askea
the teller to call a bank manager,
who also refused.
·"He looked me up and down
and stood back and gave me one
of those kinds of looks," said
Barrier, turning up his nose to.
imitate the manager.
"I said, 'Fine, you don't need
me and I don't need you."'
Barrier withdrew all his money and took it down the s treet to
Seafirst Bank.
·

GUN SHOOT

J

98
AOm'1

tiona! Bank parking lot in
Spokane.
He paid a quick visit to his
broker, cashed a check at the
bank and then· went outside to
drive away.
The lot boy said there was a
60-cent parking fee, bu I that
Ilarrler could take his slip inside ·
to get It validated.
No problem, he thought, because he had done business at
ONB now U.S. Bank of
Washington - for more than 30
years.
But a teller took one look at his
grubby clothes and refused ilo
stamp the parking bill.

SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) -A
bank in Spokane learned an
E'Xpensive lesson by refusing to
validate a 60-cent parking slip for
a destitute-looking man , who
retaliated by withdrawing his $1
million account.
. "II you have $1 in a bank or $1
million, I think they owe you the
courtesy o! stamping your parkfog ticket,'' John Barrier said In
·an Interview putljished Monday
·in the Spokane Spokesman·
. Review.
' Barrier, 59, said he was wear' lng his usual shabby clothes last
October when he pulled his
pickup truck Into the Old Na·

The Daily Sentinel

Business Services

Little light can reset sleep cycles

RITE AID PHARMACISTS

Bikini race highlights carnival

'

----

•

mo. d.

HILLSIDE MUZZ.LE
loADING

-

MODEIN GUN
SUPPLIES
Muul I

'•a Suptliieo

• ...... Gun Sorlltlii•

liiiN • A-. • $1uga
22 Arimo
Rt. 124 Eoot af Rutlond
""""'H::ppy H - ROlli!

Ph.

5

Reference•

GENERAl. CONTRACTORS

11-1 A- 'AA.tf,,l!

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING
CHESTER, OHIO

INSTALLATION AND SERVICE OF
HEll ENERGY EFFICIENT HEAT
PUMPS. AIR CONDITIONING AND
95% EFFICIENT FURNACE.
. . ., .

..,;,;; . .

..,• ....,,_..,__,,.

985-4222

DAY OR EVENING

2·15-1 mod. pd. '

•

�•

CHECK THE

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

V

2

7Zfi:IIE/''

2 BR ., 12x:80. ~lldr., .cCIPted. In Ewrgr_,, Cell 814-

45

~

2 BR . Mobile Home. 4 mil•
north of Hotzer-Hwy. 180.
Adutta onty prefwred. No P•t.
·•226emo. plu• $150.-::. dep.

Coil 814-4411-1866 or 44116188. .
14• 70. 2 bedroom. ~·~~~~·
front porch. back dedc.. Deposit
.,d r.t .. m• Shown bv ippointment on~ . Cal 614-8981346.

SMALL

WANT ADS
PACK
A00 PUNCH!

~ : OOp . m .

2

be~oom.

"furnilhed. weah.-

and dtyer, air. •225 per month
pk.la deposk .,d uditl•. Cell

o ,-~;.,....,...,... ~..,.,.._.,., .z.,

·

,.

"All I keep getting are ski"
Itt

rep0rts. •

T'reil . .. Unlnnilhed. Coupf•,
smell chit«en eccipted. Rt. 1,
LD1111t RoM, Pt. Ple•.,t. behindKU304-67s-to7s

_;.________

for .Sale
lost and Found

114-367-0426.

8

AVON · AI • -· Coli M•ltvn
w ..... ~4-882· 2645.
AVON all••ll Shirl I¥ Spe•s.
304-675-1429.
Just w.n to ~•n a Httle tKtfa
monev? Or would you ilke co
.,..... • c.-..-1 Etther WIV Awn
can help you bet he belt you CIP
belli CeU Marilyn Wet~~•. 304882-2646.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pe .. son Auctioneer. licensed Ohio end W.t Virginia.
Ettete, antique, fll'm. liquid•

12

tiOn . , ... 304-773-6786.

AUCTIONEER
EMin Winter now booking
t,Srlng ••••· 17 veer• .,...
rlilnce. Phone 304-273-3447
Rwenwaood. W.Va.
MOving S.le Mu.t Sell, 4 pc.

living room euhs. 26 cu inch
Amana aide by lide ref. frelller,
Full size book e•e bed Chain
saw. RidJng mower, phone
614-258-6505.

hp•i~noed

bai7;' sirier. In own

home. Rehrencea iupplled.
Pameray •ea. Call 814-992·

3145.

Will do ~lncing. carpenter work.
general repair. Clll 814-992·
7638.

16

9

Situations
Wanted

Wanted To Buy

c••·

•nd ntJNer u1ed
Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Ea.e:ern
Ave., Gallipolis. Cell 614-446·

·2282.

Complele houlilholda of fllrnitu,. • entiQu .. . Alto wood &amp;

2 bectoom. 1 ZX 15&amp; mobile home
for ••e. unct.pinning IWning.
porch. lnckl.._ storage b.IMdlng.
H600. CaR 614-2511-6494 cw
2511-6863.
CA•H for your used home. Call
Ul flntl Now buying 1972 thru

1984 .modtll. Ohio Wits 800826-0752. a&lt;t. 315.

USED liOM~ S.O.L!!I T• &amp; Title
Down on 30 Pr•Owned Hpm•
in Stock. We fin1nce. Free
Oeii'IIMy. Use raur TAX RE·
FU NOI Call ELSEA liOME CEN ·
TEAS Todavl Ohio W8ts 80().

8211-0752.
1964 Eloon .. 10x&amp;o w•h •·
p•du. complllety furrMihed.
8x16 porch. 10x10 bllldng.
•4600. Cell 814-192-8831 or
614-992-7887.
1981 Perkwood. 14Jc70. Centr..
air concltloning. 2 bedroom.
underplrmfng. w...,thtng mun
go. Call J .D . at 814-992· 2174. ·

Schools
Instruction

TOP CASH paid tor '83 model

1980 ap_. .. 14o70. 2 IR .. 2
~hi. ell electric. CA. woodllur-. 10.18 dock. 12x14
wood lluHdin&lt;&gt; CaR 814-24116028.

R E·TRAIN NOWI
_
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 629 Jocbon i'tko.
Cal144&amp;-4387. Reg. No. 8tl- 1110668 .

1972 Von Oyi&lt;o 50o12. 82100.
Middleport loCIIIon. 814-9923488 doy. 614-992·2367
evanln9

35 lots

&amp;

Acreage

coat hoot era. ~woin'a Furniture 18 Wanted to Do
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Olt'lle, , - - - - - - - - - 614-4411-3159.
'
Junk C.rt with &lt;it- without

moton. Cell Lam&lt; lJvety. 814388-9303.

Wanting to do c:arpeint....., work.
Have own truck &amp; tools. Byhour
or job. Call 614-448-8232.

Fwniture .,d ..,plienOM bv the
piece or tnt~ hou.ehold. Fek

Wlltekecer~oftld.-tv

priOII belngpMd. Clll614-441-

3158.
One
Wit

ow,.
r-r

Z door c• or tNCk.
c•h. Guna:, knhr ...

f•mm~ehinery.
&amp;14-379-~180.

watch•. •

Call

person in

lhelr home. EJ!Juwienoe. C.ll
114-441-0820 envtime.

hinting and Wlllpep.-. ~0 yen
..paoienco. CAll Ill. 114-7422328.
Will do hou• cleaning h.. e
f'llf•enoea. 304-nJ:-9186.

Wanted To BU¥·U ..d mobile
~omoo .

Coli 814-445-0176.

Junk cara &amp; trucfll, •1&amp;· •60.
Socii• tawed .way. C.ll 814245-9264"' 682·1760.
Used l.Jrnlture by' the pl.ece or
entire hou.ehold elab selling.
814-742·2455.
Top pr~ tor uMd furniture.
generef houeehold. enUquea.
Md . ,....... All typl:l. c.n
614-9111-4386.
•
.

Emp In ymr~nt

Serv•ce"
11

Help Wanted
BONUS INCOME

Earn • 20C). 1100 w.-ly. Mail·

ing 1989 trwel broCih.lret: For
more k\tormetion lll'ldttemped
envelope to: INC. P.O. 8mr. 2139
MI..,L FL33211.
Ne8d •tr1 · c•h7 CeH Avon.
I 14-44.4397"' 4411-4882.

Hotp w.,t.,·FIM ttmo. mt6
night, LPN lor 35 bod lodllty In
Golllpollo ICFIMR. Coli 6144411-7141 botw- ••·4 :30.
Go-Go girt. wonted. CaN Called
304-5711-2083 "' 57.2447,
•k ior Jeff.
H..r

dr•sn wtlh M.,

eg•'•

license. Call 814-446-3383 or
446-i312 Ilk for Joann.

F1nanml

AM-4 PM. AN• Front

..,ndo.aaklorChuct.orKottv.

21

· Business
Opportunity

41

Homes for Rent

3 SR . hou•. deluxe. AC. •3501
mo. Clll 304-1711-6104. cw
6711-5386.

3 IR . ilou ... Oopook """'Ired.
1001dfortTreil. C•ll614-+412583. 9 to 5 d-'lv·

49

Re,lf Estate
Homes for Sale

73

Rt. 7 aa"DIS from Skylirlel.an•.

t:::::;=::;;::::;::::;;::::r;.;:;~;:;;~~~=~

SWAIN
AUCTION lo RIRNITUAE 12
Olive St., GellipoUI.
NEW· I pc. wood group- *391.
Living room adt• f 199- tDI.
Bunk bedl with beddlno- *248.
foUnc~Rion

starting · •st. Aeclinera
lterting- . , ,,
USED· Beds, *••en. bedroom
suit•. Dttkl, wrlno-w•etw. •
compl•eline of u...t *.lrntture.
NEW- W.tern boot• •31.
Workbooto t18 lo up.· CStool •
10ft too). Cali 814-441-3189.
Countv Appll.,ca. Inc. Good
used ..,pn..cae and 1V ellis.
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sot. 614-441-1891. 127 3rd.
Ave. Otllipolle, OH.

64 Misc . Merchandise

81 Farm Equipment

llftoce d•k. credenzea. 4
drawer latt.el fl-.. doc* plat•.
4 nM 18 ln. dr• • rima. CeH

ew

Vans

&amp; 4

114-448-2351.

For•lo. Klnglizohldebod. 5HP
rototltler, dehumictifi-• . C.ll
114-441-2157.
.
Ateri 2100 W I 21 g.-n-. .70.
Good · cond. Call 114-4413551 .

M'"od hord wood alobo. n2 P•
lamdle. Comeintng approx. 11ft
con. Ohio , ..,.Co .. Pom•ov.
Ohio. 114-992·6411 .
flloyel Oak Re~ort .,..,..,..,
for _.le, '5000. Cell 114-992·
1811-

N.H . 7 It h., bln&lt;l N.H. 362'
Qrlndlr Mil•, both good oon4
30 4-27 3-4215:
83

Livestock

Athens ~iveatodc Sale. Albany .·
Salo .,_,., Soturdo\'· 1 PM.
Uvootock .._ .. oltor 4 PM
WefY Frld.,.. 1 mile
of
lllblny on 5t. At. 60. Coli
814·592-2322. 198-3531

••t

•aa.

DO YOU ~AVE AN'&lt;
OF
COMFORTING YOURSELF AFTER
·YOU'VE LOST A CASE'

W .O .

ri'll•.

Gracloua lv lng. 1 111 d 2 bedroom apertmentl It VIllage
M.,.or •d Rtv~lde Apart·
menta In Middleport. From
0182. Call 814-992-na7.

...ch Stroot. Middleport. Ohio.
Z bldroom furnilhld •ertment
utlltl• peid. ret•ence~. Phone
304-882·2668.
Now •cctpting IIPPiicationa for
2 bedroom ..,ertmentl. fu lly

Whh.e g• Tappen A., a-. White
Montgomery W.-d wa-....G .E.
Electric D,.,. Cell 814-992·

3145.

Whit8 wicker 1«, Mit wood
rode• brown veNM: aMt Md
beck. JWOYldental calfw tebtl
-'Ilk
30•&amp;7•t•••
on-. ~ ~ -~
•
Bror..vn coueh, both endt redlne
•2110.00. Ben Franklin •tPI.::e.
caU 304-882· 2744.

,.,ood

2be•oomhou•and2t.ctoom

IIP.-tment. W·D hooklp, rwnodolod Security d4poolt. eon·

nM

n•

dr•, Aaldng e1200. Cel

114-448-7371 ""•. I'M,
56

Pats for Sale

Groom tnd Su~ Sho~Pet
Grooming. All breecfl . .. All
otytoo. ,...,. Pot Food Cool•.
Julio Webb .... 114-448-0231.
Dragonwynd C.nery Kennel.
P••lan end Slam . . .,d Him•
I-ran kittens. Chow dUd ....
vice. C.ll 814-441o3844eft• 7
PM.

AKC EngUah :J:rtn-9: ~.,lei•.
1/w, 8 wka. d. .t . ecklld.
C
~digr.oo. UOO. Call
11h~~.P
-2&amp; .. 1 u&amp;O.
llnontlon Hunt-AKC a-toterMIIrtn.nylpanieL bor~~c.

4, 19B8. •171. Call 114-245I MI.
1 mos. old male Poodle. brown.
C-'1 614-4411-4201.
Full blo~
·-~~. 'liiW
~m.,
~ -Shoplwdpupplooondcolortv' •
Calll14-44&amp;'1141.
Pure bred f..- A• T•rl•.
Reel • ten. Allahote a wormed.
••ft
Call 11•
••• 13••
vv.
. . - - IJ...
.u:c 8aOHtt Hound pup .,d
• ... Ito. U5. to .,OQ, Cal
114-887-M67.
fioh T.,ll. 2413 Jldlo.., llw.
.Point
304-878-2013.
10 gel let r:1.1.4 .ftllnd 10911
•-0 1
21

PI--

_co;mp;::-=

=
· ;:::===

::;;;;::::;:'

;::
57

M111ical
ln-·ments
.,, u

lndNklual guitar I...., beglftrwo, - · . , . _ lru~
..... Muoio. 114-44.0887,
Jell w...."' ... ,, ...
441-1077. llmltool oponlngo.

"'":':r

19M Cadillac Eldorodo, oun
roof, alum. whle.. MW tlra
Loodod. Eoo:el. cond. 4-42"
~up• Swemp• tlr•18. &amp;".
Coil 114-387-0148 or 317·
0141.
1817Grw~d Pril Pontiac. T-top.
•..., .. motcw. now point job.
goodtlr-. 1988C.... olleConv.-tlbla Qoad tlr-. Interior.
Runt good...... 742-2105.

1888Cadii•EIOor... BorTitz.

Excellent condltkm. 41,000
mH•. To ..... _.... CaM

304-8711-4131.

74

5534.

lor
Loeddodtoot•
· - - herd-~'
..72
Trucks for Sale
. b.,d,
worll. Wocl-8un
304-171-3022 0. et my homo
oddr- 220 Alv• It llpt C 1187 Ford "-'II"' XLT 4•4.
llftwl:30. oOk"" 111.
llalaotolol..--ml. . . . ,..lilt OVIf Pftt'menll.
Calll14-.... 2711

-~.~ -odolod 3 br houiOin

coli'"""'

Full booomlnl 1"1 ltory, qulot
loCMDn. 8 ,... North -of Pt.
Pl-ant. 304-1711-1071.

i II ill \iippi••·
6 L1v 1:,1111'

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

81 Farm Equipment

"I hope he crumple&amp; up lhe 11okat and throws It
away so we can gel him fll' littering, tqo!" .

MF dl•tl tr-w/1ft. ...oh
""• '3110. ............
JD groin . . . 1111.- Ideo
PTO drtwtn lftlnUnt IIII'IS •• •
'MI.IIO I i i , - •kwlh

76

76
Ia

1.-t ............ . _ • •

lin . . . Cal 114--8822.

t-.C.ON- 114-311-1711.

*"'

11111 Dftvn TrwiL 4 ottf ruN tootL
13100.llr.
Colll14-ll2-3112.

·,.

......

.......

I

)

f-==B
~
=A=~I=:I=T==~
r
.
I I - ~ ;...' .
1
l
5

.

_

.

.

Overheard
zoning
board
meeting:
Firstatfellow
; "Is
thiS
going to be a permanent
thing?" .Second l.e llow. "Yes ·
for the-~ .:·
·

r-- -- - - ---.
G R I E N F 1· ..
1---i~;;_;;l,_.;;-,:;17;-.;;,.li,.;...,l""'...-l ·O Co~pi~te t.h e drvc k!e quote d '
IL......I.-...1--L...J..
•
•
•
.
•
by f1lli ng in the m1sstng worcfs
..L.-' you develop from step No. 3 be low

ill Nlglltly llualneu Report

~ e Gl C88 Nawo.
8 ([)) WKRP In ~-11
!IJ Sllowlll1 T-y
® WKRP In ClnclnMti
aJl C.rtoof1 Expro"
G!1 MentH Demond: Wha11

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .

Uka Louis Mandrell, Ths
Jets. Tanya Tucker. Jessica
Bouchar, and Helan
CorneOus loin hosl Merrill
Osmond lor his flrs1 solo
performance speclai.
1:35 C5l Otto Day at 1 Time
7:00 (]) Our HDUM
PM Magtozlno

Quamt - Pound - Jewel - Cravat - VOTED
The bes1 ihing abqut having secrel ballot eleclions is lhat
,yo u c~n claim you never VOTED for lhe jerk .

BRIDGE

e (])

8 (I) Cunni Aftalr
(!) ill MIM:Nelt/IAhNr
. NewoHow (1 :00)
1111 • Gl tiS) Wheel of
«Jl M-yllne
® Cheora

IIJ Mllml, Vtca

1

SEMINAR

7:05 Cll Andy Onlfllh
7:30 G ill Family Fe!ICI

EARN MONEY
IN YOUR
LEISURE TIME

Uaed Tr~nsmiiSiolll
FordC8tuto 11.0 0.00. FordC4
auto 10.000 mn. ainoe over·
h-..lt12&amp;.00. Fordpickuplruek
3 ·~ otlck 076.00. Chevy 4
opoed otlck 8160.00. 304-67116662.

79

e ([)) Th,..., Company

Ill
,.

$.

(I]

ec

;

'

'

•

•

ALLEY OOP

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

e (])

1$7&amp; Cl. . A Motor Home.
85200. Call 614-387-01543 al· ·
ter 8 PM.
- - -- - - --,-___:j j

RICing

Services
B1

Home
Improvements

ill •

·'

e

BASEMENT
WATERPRO()ANG
U.ncon .. \Onal HfMime guarantee. Local ref•ance. ltrnilhed. ·
Free eetlmM•. Call collect
1-614-237· 0488. dov or nigln.

Arrierlcans' lives are in hands '

' ..,.

&amp;MEEK

-'·
t1

'

0

eetlmlles. BLdget priCM. Call ,.

114-H2·3497.
RON'S Tel..,ilion Service.
Houae cant on RCA, Quuer, .
GE . Speei1Ung in Zenith. Clll •

AND WINTHROP

304-176-23$8 or 614-446·
2454.

HE U5ED 1V F'LlT BUBBLE:
GUM IN HEf&lt; HAIR IN
KINI:B&lt;€iARTEN. 1 •

Fetty Tree Trimming. ttump
Nmovel. Ceii304-67S.1331. ,
Rot.-y or cable tool di'IUing. ,~'
Mostwels completechemedlf;", •
F\Jmp • • .,d t41rvice. :JO+ ·
8111-3802

i • C MOVIE:

B5

General Hauling

R &amp; R WMw Service. Pools,
titterns. welle . lmmadlat•
1,000 or 2, 000 gellonsdeliv.-y ,
Call 304-1711-6370.

w..-

1000 gill ..
aervice. Umeetone spr-.:1. We haJI gra~et
lind. coli, ·etc. Cell 814-992·
6276..
Wltlfton' i Wat• Hauling.'"''

aontbtee rat•. volume dit-

Mowr_,·, Upholrtt.tng nrvlng
trl OJUnl'llrN23ye.._ The bll;t
In trrnltuno -uphollt-11 Cal
304· 171• 4114 for free
tttlm••·

.

'Brtdoltn.rcll' Cll Tuelclay

~~King Llval

IIJ Llw and Heny Mc:Gntw

8:30 ta VldeoCounlry
10:00 (]) 100 Club •

e ill

tiS) Mldntglrt C.llar
Killian falls In love with
singer, unaware she has
murder on her mind.
(!) ® ill Etlllc8 In AmorCca The
dOCIOr-pa11ent relallonahlp
and lhe Idea of autonomy aro
dtscussadC
811D Anerilo Hell

z·2t

BARNEY
TH' BARlOWS
HAD A REG'LAR

KNOCK·OOWN
ORA&amp;·OUT

· YPU

SEEN IT?

RIN6SIOE
SEAT!!

THIS

IIJEvM!Ig-

MORN IN'

aJl~lde

'

ta CIOOk and Cillo•
10:20 (I) MOYIE: llhlft'a Big
SCol'ltiR) (1 :44)
10:30 (!) Ametlca by Dotlgn See
1ha changes taking place In
lhe archl1ecture of the

WOtkplaca. Q

ASTRO•BRA~I!,

,9

.

• Naw Cauil1ry
11:00 (]) Remit ogton 8leola

• ill

(I] •

w

at the
ufll&lt;'P"
II lnt&lt;'Rri1y
13 Of thP
kitlnpys
If IJ .S. Rymhul
15 llut.dt

IJ)

SOUTH

•K&amp;

.AB7&gt;43
• A 10 2
.Jl

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

,.

Weot

Nortll

Eut

Sootk

Pass
Pass
Pass

Z.
s•

Pa!S
Pass

2•
Paaa

Opening lead: +10
a free finesse or play a black suit to
give declarer a sluff and a ruff. If the
defender who won the llnt heart trick
uite&lt;l with a heart, then hearts were
probably 2·2; in which case nine tricks,
would always he safe.
•
What if declarer bad playeclace and
a heart? East would cash out the JC·Q
and get ofllead with a club or a spade.
South would then have to gueu how w
play the diamond suit without alooer

to

.

addr~ss
good
&lt;•heese
3 f'tench
palhteT
f IIUiillllilll(·
bird
5 Trust.·
.. wmthy

tuwn~&lt;hip
6 lleddin~ 20 Butl~et
Caddoan
16 Cholrr
il(~lli
itPm
Indian
18 .lapanesr
7 Arrkan · _ 23 Laughing 31 Unyielding
versr
worm
sl.t lf'k
32 Florida
19 ( :haratter8 t:rooked Zf Salt or
dty
istic
9 EIP~trit'
lll' l'ller
36 Arab
21 Fall
potential
holder country
behind
12 President 25 Chewy
37 Asian bird
22 Finis
born in
candy
39 Grassy
23 Silly ·
Tampico, 28 Tavern
· ground
2f ~ea~rr
" . Ill.nwner
41 Hansom
27 SunnuwPr 17 !:1•1. - of 27 V••rlmCim
- Ohls
scar
r'T-1-,rr-r.::-28 llold it!
291nlet (Sp.)
30"What you lalkin~
nluml'!"

:11

ll••at.•••l
;u·~llntPnt

33 llurma
tribe
34 Golf lcnn
35 English

river
38 Rousseau
book
40 Willing
f2 Allude (to)
43 Mel or
Grade

·

44 British

45

diredor
Climhht~

vhu•

1111 e1121

~~~lJih* Bide of &amp;poria

Bernice Becle Osot

.A632

2 Like

10 "-

MlniMIIIIC

.4

• Q97
.Kt09U

DOWN
1 King's

iRiantl

(!) ill FtOndlne FOllOW what
happens 1o !he profits !rom
!he lnternallonal drug trade.

v ........... ...

CARTER'S PWMBINO
AND HEIITING
Cor. Fourth •d Pine
Goll'f,.ollo· Ohio
no::..~~... 6-3888 .. 6, ... ,

6 Czerh

e

THEY5TILL Sf'END C.YENING&lt;S
TRYING iD ~T ITOUT.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
houae cllll aervlcing GE, Hot
Fblnt, WMhera, dry•• and ,
....,... 304-5711-2396.

Plumbing
Heating

CPG13) (2:13)

RoS8anne can't afford 10 buy
Becky !he pany droll she
COVell. E;J
·
8:00 8 ill iiJ In lhi.Heel of lito
Nigh! Gillespie and Tibbs ftnd
the mother ol an lnfan11eft In
a dumpsler. C
iD Top Rank '8oxlng
(I)
(I) 'Pinion ancl
Pll'ldiM, Pat! 2' ABC

A .. d T Build.-• from four.tetion to roof· inside or out. Free

EAST

.JI0432
.KQ9

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 l'hiii!Jiline

® MOVIE: llrlwiW'I
IJIIHOnl CPa) (1:41)
Ill Mun!M, 8llo Willi*
ta NallhvHII Now
1:05(5) .............11
1:30 (I) e !ll Rouanne

-'·
'•

.J

WEST
tQ9 7&gt;

CROSSWORD

of V181N1mesti command and
new recruHs·. C

«Jl PllmeNawe

wat:...,o,7ftng.

.KJBU3
.Q4

Many playel'lt I know will automati·
cally bid game when they have an
opening bid with a six-card suit and
their partner eitends an invitation.
That can be the winning approach on
occasion, but whenever your partner
bas reason to assume that you have
that six-card suit, you should definite·
ly examine your total hand befor~ &amp;oing on. In today's deal, South's bidding
showed a six-card beart suit. When
Nortli simply raised to three, Sootb did
well Ill make a Cflllllervatlve pass.
~'Was a reasonable play lor 10
trickS. (If hearts split 2-2, declarer
would simply play the A-K of spades,
and then ace and a heart.) Nevertbe·
less. South had·to play with great care
to give himself the best play for his
contract. The &lt;lefen&lt;len cashed the
ace and kin&amp; o( clubs and tbim playecl a
spade. Declarer took the A· K of
spades and then playecl a low heart
Declarer. did not care if that was won
by a singleton heart honor, since the
defender who won that trick would
then have to either lead a diamond for

• ([)) MOVIE: Sllvlrldo

Rogers8a · sement

SWEEPER .. d sewing mechine
repair. pertt, end supplia. Pick
up tnd d.U...ery. Devil Va~um
Cleaner, one half mile up
Gaorges Creek Rd . Cell ·814446-0294-

(I) Who'l lhllloM?

To rebuild her 8811-aeteem,
Tony asks llngeta on 1helr
first real date. Q
(!) ill NOVII Nov.a a d d lhe evolution and creationlltn
debe1es. C
·
~
D tour of Duty

--~------------- :·

Ak•a Tree Trimming .,d Stump
Removal. Free Mtimat•. Call
304-175-,7121.

E-lnment Tonight

e(I)UIAT-r
111
iiJ JIOI*dr'
8 ([)) M'A'B•H
«J) CtollfCN
® Night Cautl
G!l CIOOk and CIIIIM
7:35 (I) s.ntonl and Son .
1:00 (]) MOVIE: Ro_n,. McCoy
INR)(1:40)
ill) Mellock Mattock
tries lo clear psychlatrls1
accused of murdering a
patienl. C
IJl 1111 hftle of 1IMI
MIIMW Trucke and Mud

I

&lt;!

..

IJ) AII·AIIIOf'tcan Pulltna
SeMI Rae! Man{TNT Crom
Memphis, TN (T)

1-11·11

•ton

By James Jacoby

ForlunoQ

FRANK AND ERNEST

NORTH

.AI

Getting out
of the woods

(I)

Auto Parts
Accessories

bOll.,._

-

I;

(I] e (I) ABC Nawa Q

Bill Boat-1987 Land._. 16'5",
1987 M;r()Jry 35 hp motorwith
power trim •d a~to oil injection.
1987 MerQJry Trolling motor.
1987 Stiorellne trailer plui
mora Allin good c:onciUon. Cell
614-992·2770.

1171 Cam•o. 1171 Ford ono
ton tnrck. IN l'clrd ... AI 30 .. 5711-2911.
.
good oo-ton. I I ft. Rot bed
floor • point. Cal Patrlcb Wit• H...,llnti"Service,
114-.... 3146
phone 304-5711-2311 or 61444.4086.
1171 Dcodao PU. 811,000 ntla
No nrll f310. Cal 114-371.
2184B7
Upholstery
It whllo Ford . ftblrglIn roof, v.,., good

·-

TIODI
3 --IF--.;,Irl,
1--~"'--"1lr;-'

~llporlalook

Boats and
Motors for Sale

COuntt, 2,000 to 4.000 c.-~e­
lty, ~tt•na. poole, welfl, •c.~

I

~ e~~J

w~por~ac:.nw

Oill•d Wat• ServiC:.: Pools.
1171Volvo241_n_IL Clat•na. Weele. Oeiiv tJry Any·
• • oond •1.1100.00. 1174 tlma Clll 614-4411-7404-No
luldl R~t. wrt cond, Sunctav clllt.
1100.00. 1187 Cfiwr- 4
door, Ne•d• Pelnled, J • J Water Service. Swimming
... ooo.oo. Call 304-895- poolo. ciltoma. wotlo. "" - 6142411-92111.
3001.

'81 Chwy Covol•. lti good

ew

Ill Amelk:an Magazine
1:05 C5l t . - and Shirley
1:30. (]) 0) NBC NtghUy NoW11

11300 Call 114-388-9679.

1182 Ford eo- 1.'. 4 - ··
AC, Pl. AM-FM
manuel, 4 epllid. •1.895.00.
304-8711-1731 .
B4
E lee trice I
&amp; Refrigeration
1181· Mera.uy Cepri OS, •c
.oond. 81.000mft&amp; tlntodwtndawa. ..nroof. ~ at.-.o,
c•Hite. orulu oontrol. Mklng RMidentill or comm•cill wir·
U.IOO.OO. 104-112-2369.
lng. New tii'Vice or repairs.
Uc.,s.t etectrid111. Ridenour
1177CIItyolorLo lloranwnd&lt;od e .... ,... 304-675-1786.
·in · -· ..... """ out, 304-17113024.

cond. one DWIW, 304-171-

(I]

o-··

MOtorcycle$ .

Ia

1171-arry Clprt Ra&amp;r Sport.
muet •II e1.400. 00 ar .,_.
oft• 814-.... 2511.

,

®FIIC1Iofut.

1984 V·30 Megna. Low mi·
le19• Show room .oonditioon.

82

tt•• c••·

•

.
.

!e tte rs of rhe
four scra mb!td words be·
low to form four simple wor.ds

• ([)) Happy Dey•

C1ot'!:9; v•-

•eel•

GAMJ

O Reorronge

Three are stories set in a
traveling circus. C
CIJSqujN One 'n/ Q

1980 Chw half ton 4x4, auto,
PS.tttwhlei.AM
-FI\1radlo. 8ft
bodwkhtopper. chromowooon
wheels. W-31 - 10. 50 tires ,
03,6!15.00. 304-875-1731 .

..........

11

WOlD

(!) 8odJ Elecllk:

11 an:;p rtation

ch••

l~itod ~y

O)Ntowa
(!llnalde 1IMI P(IA Tour
(l).Lona llgo lo Far Away

1971 Chwy 4 wheel drivetluck,
400 en_glne 350 t' urbo ,
• 1. 200.00 or b-' off•. 3048711-1772.

GOOD USED APPUANCES 23 Inch RCA color T.V., 850. 64 Hay Ia Gntin
Wuhert. *vera, relrigttM:ort. . Sev•el dlft•tm: Red tlr-.
rengea . Skegga Appliancft; tiS.OO .lind up. 2 snow tir-. -Millod h"" far n 60 per
Upper RNer Rd. belide Stone pr8C'IIcaltv rii!N, on wheels. Cell b-'a Cal 614-74~·2270 """'
11
4-992·2105.
Eldon
Wollom1,
Cr•t Motet 814-44&amp;-7388.
4:00p.m.
380 Sout~ Th"&lt;l Mlddlopon.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Pecan wood dln.-te 1111. Large
,.. 1 304-875-1304.
tabla pedded ch. .. L•e "..,..H
- :,:OV:..:,:.:_:'":_::o._ _ _ _ __
S HAOY LAWN APT !I- 729 Sof• end chain priced from
t3915 to t99&amp;. Tabl• •so .,.d oondltlorL Aoking • 200. 614- Second A .... Furnilhld effiden·
up to •1215. Hld.. e·bedl •380 742-2728.
cl• atartlng at •176 • mo.
In eluding -.wt.- a gerbege. to $1595. Redln . . •225 to
Single 1cl.llla only . Call a f 4t371. Lampl •21 ·t o •121. 1988 510 c... Backhoe. .... io
Ne. . some work. Alao
4411-4607 or 448-2602.
Oin•tt• t109 and up to t411. t153100.
ft. ,_.,. .•121. 13
Wood ..ble w-1
•211 to Inch,.,blc
Auto'• For Sale
color
T.V. .,00. 114- 742·
New tv remodeled 1 BR . apt. · $795. Cook •100 up to·~·
2328.
Appl. furnished. ldeellocation-1
Hutch• UOO md Up. Bunk
GOVERNMENT SEI2EO )loh&gt;
blo d£ from downtown ~ Cal
beds comp._e W·mattr-•
1295ondupto $385. Bolly bodl Qulh topt for •le. C.ll 81~ d• for • 10Q. Fordl. Merced•.
614-4411-4838 .
992-3183.
Corvettn. l:h..,.y1. Surplus.
t110. Manr-•orbox springs
...... Guld~ 11) 8011-1872 IR . •t .. n.w pluah c.-pet lui or twin
finn •11. .,d
For ule: Olk fire.vt)Od. Call 1000. ut. S -10119.
RIM'r.lnt, utliti• partilllfv paid
•ae. Queen tett •2&amp;0 • up. 304-171-27&amp;7
lift"' 4:30p.m.
• JIO. ~ dr-"' ch•t t89.
H~sael: ~~~~7&amp;- 5104- 0King
1963 ChwV lmpola 2 dr.. hard
un eebln«a I. 8 • 10 gun.
Bebv m.nr..... '35 • •411. SUAPLUII-O~glnal Army, Do· tap. ec. 283 enafne. EJCeU.
cond Mult .... 13900. Clll
Aprtment IVallabte. HUD ac·
Bed fr.-n• •20. •30 &amp; King . nlm. Romot
et-Sern 114-448-7019 - • e I PM.
coptod. Coli 304-675-5104.
frtme •so. Good seied-ion of eornoullargo lblock·
bedroom suit•. m•el cebinets. So.....,IHo'o Old Route 21·
Furnished 2. 3. or 4 rooms . •
hoadbo"'do •30 ond up to tH. Ju~ lndeptnd.noe Rotd. 1974 VW lug. Blodc. Make
1-EAAI.CEutRov.,_d),
bath. Cle.,. Aduhs ontv: No
·work c•· •eoo or
poto. Ref. &amp; IMp. ~equlrod. CaH
90 D•v• seme u cah wll:h fridoo, lotunloy, Bu....,. ontv ree~oneble offer. Cell 814- 24~ ·
Noon-1:00
P.M
..
10
t
~.
5040.
114-4411-1519.
epprovtd credit. 3 Mille out
BulwiHe Rd. Open 9em to 5pJ1l C.h.-t clothing. Camoufl.,ge
Nicety furniahed smell hou•. Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-441- lnaulotod - c . -.... 304-27!1515&amp;.
Efficiency ept. -1 men. Mobile 0322.
home below 10wn overlooldna
McD.-.iet Cllltom BUICh•lng.
Voile( Fumlure
ce • hMt, lclllts ooty, .ef.
Cal 614-4411-0338·.
New tnd used .,rntture Md Open I d-rs • week. Mon_.
epplicaneet . C.ll 814-448· tlwu lotordoy. CaH 304-112· 1971 Ch""' Mallllu. E&gt;~:ollont
3224.
concl V-1. Cal 814-379-21942 Br. l.flfuroished page apt . No 7572. Houn 9· &amp;.
P•l. AdUJI:I only . Call614· 448One•tnl•gedoghouse. brand • 1973 fl'htmouth a.BOJda. 1t'
3748 or 26.&amp;-1903.
PICKENS USEO RIRNITU.RE
- · phone 304-878-2225tnt...... call 114-256-6411
Complete hou•hold furnitft.
Fur nil heel effici!Mlc::y. 607 St· ings. V2 mlle-Jerrlcho. 304--876efl•l:30 PM.
C()nct Gllllpoltt. t1711. Sh•e
1450 , 814 - 388·9773 .
56 Building Supplies
both. Call 448·441hftor 7PM . eveninga.
1110Cutt•e. newenglna. Runs
. - . Lookagoodineide.,dout.
Nll'l¥ one BR .. furnithed apt. in
VI'Re Furnfture &amp; Appliencee
• 3000. Nog. Coli oft• 6 PM.
Rock Spring~, Pom.-oy, Ohio
114-448-11820.
Open Dottv. 9 AM -6 ~M
Bulldog Moteri*
Call 614-992-6304 .. 446Sundll\'. 12 noon-&amp; PM
llook. brloll. plp•. win8888.
614-448-3158
dows, lintell. Me. Cl.. dl Win- 1112Doto.. :nt~ . 42.000mi.
Excellent condition. Call 614,.,., flllo Gr•de. 0. c.l 814-btra nice 2 BR .• l•nld'V 100m. Trude. loadl of n.., furnitu..- 2411-5121.
246-M57.
Excell.,t location. low utllitt•. have just errw.d. Bring your old
Sec. dip. 'No pata. Refer'"cee.
furnhure &amp; TRA.DE·IN for new. Caner•• block~- all til.... .,..,d 1877 Toyota Coroia 2 door. 4
Call 6 14- 4411- 1B17.
8 Diece wood •oup, *319. or deUvery. M..onllf'l4 Oalllpo- cvt. &amp;opd. •4110. Calll14-21tlSof• &amp; ct'jein, t281. 7 piece llo 81odc Co. , 1 23'h Pine St .• ,644.
Nice all gaa etfisienc:y w l c•pel
ooumry dlnn.n• tit. •6&amp;o
Clalllpollo. Ohio. Coli 114-4411for oM or two person on Third lindudoo tw..tch). 5 piece bod- 2783.
1179 Cam•o Z·21. t1100.
A w . t190 1 mo. w / depottt. c.n roan suite, $399-extra niC41.
1916 Chwottt. 2 dr., AC.
Cynthio. 814-448-7483 before Mettrea-helt oft regul• price.
12200. 1985 Dodge Ch•eor•
WESTERN REO CEOAR
6 PM, 4411-4062 lifter 5 PM .
Bunk bedl . w / blddlng, t221 .
2 .2, 5 opd .. AM-FM·top,. oun
* Ch.,nel Ruttic
Rt. 141 in Centenll"(. Y4 mile on
1001, olum.' · 13100. Cal
ond -oled lop Siding
2 bedroom Apts. for rent. Uncoln Pike.
114-2511-1410.
•OeckMot•t•
Carpeted. Nice sening. La! ndry
Guaranteed Qu.ttty
taclhi• ..,.,..,, .. Cell 61~ Queen sl:r:esofa bed. Good con d.
CETIOE, INC.. Ath.,o-114- 1977 ..onti8cFlr ... d. 310eng.,
992· 3711 . EOil
.
8125. Coli 614-2411-96418.
..to....... Pl. Pl.
paint.
594-3571

own utMki•. 304-773-96414-

_.......

Epllode•

1971 Joep CJ -5. 304, 3 opd ..
chrome wheels, new top.
UOOO. Call 614-2611-1410.

Merchandise

FIAI eize mattr- •

EVENING

T::~::~' S©RlllA-~ttfS!
_ __ _ ...;,_..;
CIJ.Y I . POlLAN

1:00 &lt;D -nu: The Lm

83 Ford 4 wheel dr Ne. "A ton.
480 engine. AC : Towing pack·
lng. Looks • rune good . Call
614-255-1261 .
.

For Sale or L•••Busln•e
Bullclng.Store or Office epleel.
1608 Jolf ..... llvd. Cal 304176-1435.

51 Household Goods

TUES., FEB. 21

•

Can 614-384-5615.

c•pated, applianc.. vwlt• end
Will holt&gt; tlnanco. Calli14-4411- tr11h plc:kupot provide&gt;d. Mein... Queen aize ultr• w,vel•• ..wt•
nenqe free living close to tholt
btd with mlrr~ head bo•d.
1340 .. 614-4411-3870.
ping.. bltlks Wld t&lt;:Mol1. For . exc cond. •250.00. 30•&amp;7155 roorN &amp; bath w / baement." more informetlon eeii304-88:Z... 3731 .
c•pet. eppllanCII. Ref. • dip. 3711.·E.O.H.
No pot• Coli 814-4411-1113.
F..,nilhed ont btd room ..,t,
Few A-·Nicoty ~rnlohod 3 •200.00 pluool ... rlc:. t100.00 . 53
Antiquea
room cotteg• Emploved aAiha depa~tt, 304-8?15-3SOO.

2 IR .• cable avallabl' bealttll 1
rW• vt.w ~ Kan_.ga F01tw'1
Mollllo Homo Pori!. 614-44111102.

•

' 85 C'-V 510, V8 en gina 4
speed. 27, 000 mil•. ailv• end
block. 304-675-4126evontngo.

Le•-.

-;:-;;--;;;----;-;-:oc;:;--c--;-:-

Television
, Viewing

1978 Dodge pick up. t lant siX ,
lour -~~ 8460.00. good •
con4 304-875-24157:

Comm•cill Lot for
440'
x 250'. Located in Zlnn Dock on

Meson. t 2150. P• month. Pwy

Deluae 3 IR . hou11 for •le.
GOVEANMEN .T JOBS Own• ~~n ..... Cal 304-1711'16.040.·159.230. 'IU'· Haw 5104.
hiring. Col 11) 8011-687-1000
Ed. R-8101 for currtnt ....... GOVEA NMENT HOMES! FrO&lt;n
Hot.
n 00 Ill Rep olr) , For octOouRepos. T• DlflnqlMit Pf"OJ*-Avon c.-mg. went to do aome- tiM. NOW 8 ELLING THIS
thlng ·n• ..d •altlnt? Frw AIIEIII C.OI tll... ndollitl. 1·
...,.•..., kit d"lng ,.-h of 3111·
733-10e4, Ext. G-2732·11 .
Februo,.,. 614-992· 7180.
FOR CUIIIIENT UBnNOSI

W!l6 TU~
-...~..-OF

u .60o.oo. 304-5711-2941.

614-992· 8818 oft• 1:00 p.m.

31

GI.D NOft~ ...
W~AT

IPMd. loob and N nl good.

For Lease

7y...

•om

~
....

'-l.AI'':f- 6ABLE: I~ lH,A.T

1113 OMC, 51 6 pick up, 6
Country Mobile Home Perk.
Aoute· 33, North of Pam•~·
Loti, .entail. l*'ts, ul•. Call
614-992-7479.

IOIIU"'"'·

v••· PI•••

"'""'&lt;\'-~·····

48 Space for Rant

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . ...., , _ d o thor you
do bu•ln . . wtth peopla vOu
Buy or Soil. Riv•lnelmtlquOt.
ki'NIW'. •d NOT to eend moner · :i~:":.t.ll ':; ...~&amp;.2:~i lo One 3 room lurnlohod utlkl•
pald verv nlc-. refrenoea ,..
1124 E. M81n StreM, Pom•O¥·
through t .. m .. untl you'h•e
For R.m orSei•28R ., madwn qulr.t. Two bedroom, 4 rooma Hours: M,T,W 10e.m. to lp.m..
'""ootlgolod the oll•lng.
homa Clooo to town. •300 a ondbothgoundlweL_on.._
SIJncfov 1 to lp.m. 614-892·
mo. pluo dep. • rol. Cll required, 304-875-2722.
252e.
TURN KEY BUSINESS
Compeny _.blilhed ecoount1. 614-4411-3548.
One bedroom IPt. furntshed tnd
Ab1alutefv no camp•ttion. Eern
54 Misc. Merchandise
up tp •1100emomh. Pert time. 2 BR . ...... Moln St. Crown ell utilll .. pold. ,.,.... - · ...
No eperienoe n~..,Y. Int.-. City. '17hmo. Coli 114-4411- qulr•. 304-175-2722.
lit trw. eKpanalon.tr•••" up. 1&amp;11 .
18960 - - - t. Call 24
~ 011
•c:r..::~pilcatlon•ltyfor Wh...diH'• ntW or wed. . 3
houro. 1 ·800-327·8919.
2Nlceyerd.
8r.. lr, df:,
batt\ utility•210•
room. P-v
-·'·fullt«A.~rltydepolltemounl
- ·v - u n · w-od ol110trli: •..........
- -.
.. Coil
clotetot&lt;M"n.
~
N
C.l
814-44&amp;.
get
one
montha
fr•
r.,t.
Rogere
Moblty
collect,
1-814CO-OPERATIVE
mo. o P 304-nl-6107.
870-9661 .
OISTRIBUTOII8HIP
1617.
High Volume route lor ule In Lor•e 2 BR . homo In Pt.
FirO...ood lor alii• '21 to UO
Galfi80J:I· Average lncomt
•
45 F umishad Rooms dotlv-.
Dovtd Hll. 814-3811Ul.
to U3, 000 Plua. Port
Pt-ant. Good locotlon. Refer·
8131.
time to ~~ time. Soil "" on-. uc. dop.
CaH
·•
U3,600Caah. CoN 1·800-·7tl- 114-245-1118.
Rooms for rant:· week 011 month. Big Deko• Ferm hofN buM! on
1363onytlrno.
Stl!rtlng It e120 e mo. Gellla your lot '13.99"•
S
ald. 3bectoombrl'*· "*"vl Hotet-814-44&amp;-9580.
·
u up. . . our
1000 WOLFE SUNBEOB . Ton- toto! ot-Ic. """' .... homo. I.:=========:.L:m:o:dol::.C:•:ll:1:·:':,""::•:s-::7:3:1:1.;.j
ing Teblil, Comm•aiiii--Home crpotod throughout 1 ..,e T
T.nning leda. Swe to 80
tn bode yard w~h dodc.
por-. prtc•
•249. Body Loc•MI 7 d • from Holz•
Ho1pltel on Rl. 180. Awhble
WriiPI·LampH.otkuw. C.ll tod.-. FR n oalore.t•log. 1 .80(). MDerch 1. •380. p• month. If
lntor.,od. coil 614-2811-1316
228-1212.
IJocklon) ofler 7 p.m.

POSITION AVIIILAILE
SubltlluteiMtrudor· Bechtlort
.dogr ... 160.00 p• d.,, Hold •
IHII: OM wild t•oNnLowttft.
coto · - "' tho Ohio o., ...
mtnt of Education. A,.labletor
198&amp;81 progr.,
...d r-.une to.OaUI• County
Bo•d of MRI DO. P.O . 1 .. 14.
Ch•'*• Ohio 45520 or coli
114-36').7371.

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

Rentals

Rent or ael 3 BR modern home
.t PetrkJ't. t 250. mo .Wt dep.

Full time Sai11-E JIIHM'Ienoe htfp1ul. Apptv in p.-.on Tu•,·Fri.,
10

60 aa-• on Rt. 143. 7 mil•
from Pomeroy. Free gas .
121.000. 614-992-1239.

'0:! ~100 ~ ALOr Cf

e

5851 . Muon WV.

milo out JerTicho Road, 304t7,S. 108Z.

._p

BORN L S R

Trucks for Sale

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesdy, February 21 , 1989

197' GM C Aatro 310 C...-n·
minL 13 •peed t ransmilsion.
ne-H •-ing t i-• .,d minuet
tt•lnt 1971Fruheuf42 ft lit
bid wit" side kit eh .. n. an d .
bin.,.. 2 sm~Mer •rps. must
Hll • unit, • ·1 5,000.00. 30477~6068"' 304-675-8881

CAll eft• 2p.m . 304-773-

2 bectoom mobile home. hllf

We will" had cp .. tor em•gtr'lct
HEAP, Moigo County Oept. of. '-----------r--....,-----~
Human S.-vK:.. and HEAP f"'
2 bed'oor.n .,rnkhed mable
vooch1r1 . We Clfl give vou '
hom&amp; 304-876-6612 or 875pro...,.dolivori•. EoccololorSah 11 Help Wanted
31 Homes for Sale
3960.
Workl. Inc. Pomen;i¥. Ohio.
~--------114-992-3891 .
For Solo or rant. 1988 2
bed'oom moble 14x70 home.
Government
J
.
o
bl!:l
Now
hiring
Hey~ Aeetty
304-8711-718B lifter 6:00.
thl11r..t • 1Q.213. to t75,473.
Jack W. Cer.trt-Re.ator.
lmmtdiltt Op.n~n_g1l ~II (r•
614-992· 2403"' 814-992·
fundoblil1 ·315-733-6012 Ext.
44
Apartment
2108. C1ll for IIMin9' q, ....
f2748A .
for Rant
1 will not~~ r-.ponsibfe for lllftY
Modern Blick-3IA .. 11f.t blttwr
Job
Hunting?
Need
•
akll?
We
bills othDr ltw't my own, Signad
u•aa.. eeectrie door
train p.,ple tor iobl • Auto ett~ehtd
Oe!l• Spurlock.
open•. g• hMI, CA. Locltld 8
Mach.Ue., Cerpwrt.., Cosm• mil• up At. 7 . Kv.,. Ck . .::hool BEAUTIFUL APARl'MENTS AT
tologlott. Dtv. .Hiod Modio:OI dilt. Can
fin.,.cit. Cell BUQGET PRICES AT JACK·
Work.,, Elecxrld~n~, FoodSer· 114-445-2573.
SON ESTATES , 636 Jocko..,
4
Giveaway
vice Work.,:. EI.Uronlm TechPike from 1183 e mo. Wal .. 10
nici.,l, ln'*'ttrilll Meinten.,oe
ohop ..,d movloo. 114-44112
story,
3
bedroom.
2
bettw,.
on
Wot k.-s. NunlngA lllld.m:a., d
2588. E.O.H.
•
·8 weet.: old puppi•. Mix_. Orq-11•. Mtchinirta. Office riY• In M idcllport. Cell 8 14breed. Cute, will bli medium Work. . . . d Weldrwl. Regiater 98&amp;-4134 evenings and week·
T•• Townhou• ap.-tmentt· 2
size. Cell 814-742·22P1.
nowfot' d•••beainningMirch ondl.
BA1 ., 1"'1:1 bllths, CA., dit27th. C.l T&lt;i-CountyVocalonal
hwnher. diapoul, private enSpring8r SQ.,ief. m-!a Abaut
Cent• at 7153-31511 ••· Gov•nment Hom• I t 1.00 (U closed path), tJooot ptavground.
2Yt. ytt. o;ld. Country hOrne Adult
1 4. A Wrilty ol tJ nding IDUteel Repair) Foredoturea. Tu DelinWater. teWer. &amp; trash Included.
preferabl e. 614-99~· 630.5.
to PIV for training are -..ail able quent Propwty. Now Selling.
Stirling .t t 289 per mo. Cell
for tho•• eligible.
This
areal
Call
(AftJndablet
614-367-7850.
5 months old female Cotlie
1· 518-469-3548 Ext. OH16 22
Puppy, 304-675-4312.
Modern 1 BR, downtown, co~
for ktinp.
pl... kttchM, .,. CM'pel, Oep·
10 months old f.nal .. pwt Collie
ostt. no pet.. Call 814·448dog. 304-6.7 5-1703.
o 139 eveninga,, .tt.- 6,
32 Mobile Homes

LOST:Besgle type dog-light
blown &amp; white we•ing red
coli• w / Galli1 County t-a.
ChUct"en's J* · Lost lnvldntty of
Africa Rd. •100. R•.,d. Cell

72

Sl eeptng rooms with cooking.
Also Trail• ..,.ce. AI hook-141s.

Cell 814- 992- 7889 after

Announcements

6

N' CARLYLE® b y Larry Wri11ht

J bectoom. locllted in Syracus e.

614-992· 7479.

Announcements

KIT

Furnished Rooms

l

4411-3697"' 246-5223.

3

Tuesdy, february 21 , 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

VAILY CRYPTOQUOTES -llere's how to work it:

2 ' 21

illllgnOII

e ([)) Lave Cor.nutlon
!IJ MoneyCIM

'Your

.

AXYDLBAAXR ·
lsLONGFELLOW

~==Q

q§rthday

TAURUS (Aprii:IO-May 20) Nice lhlngs i.IBRII (iept. 23-0ct. 23) Follow your
could happen lOt' you loday lhrough _ hunches today and do whal comea na1Fob.21, 111111
several involvements . The focus will be uratty, especially In your bualneu deal·
on people wl1h whom you'll deal on a lngs. Your parcep11oris are vary keen
Condlllons thai have been reslrslnlng
and you should be able 10 sae 1he pic·
personal baals.
you will come to an end In the year QEMIII (MIIJ 21-.IUM 20) This Is a lure lrom.all angles.
ahead and you will begin 1o experience. good day to finalize several matters you · SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) Fresh and
new postllva lnltuences in your life. have noI llnished yet . Strive 1o comple1a · innovative ideas are likely to come to
Wh~t occurs will be a happy change.
you 1oday as a rosul1 of being around
them in an organized manner.
PIBCEB (Fib. 20-March 20) Today CANCER (JUM 21-July 22) A favorable lhoughl-provoklng people. Op11mlsllc
could mark 1he beginning of lmprove- line or communtca1ion can be ealab- asaoclaltona bring ou11he in you. 1
monls tn reta11onahlps wllh several peo- Hshed loday with. a person who Is In a 8AGilTAIIIU8 (NoW. 23 Dec. 21) You'll ,
ple with whom you nav,n'l seen eye-lo- postllon lo help you ex1end your current · be held tn high es1eem today beeauN,}
eye recen11y. Bolh you and 1hay are ambttlons. Lay your Intentions out In the your nobler Ideals will be tnc:orporaladf/
anxtouslo mend lances. Know where 10 open.
In aH lhal you do. Th- enviable al1rt-·
took for romanoe and you'll flnd 11. Ths LEO (JUIJ 23-AUi- 22) 8a alert Cor 11- butee WCIC 1M obYtoua 1o onlookers.
.\
As1ro-Graph Matchmaker ins1anlly re- ~anctal opportunilles1oday, even In sit· CAPIUCOIIN (Dec• ...,..., 11) Thl6ls a ;
¥8111 which signa are roman11calty par· ua1tona where you ha\18 previously mel good day 10 con1ac1 lhat apeclat Indifeet ioryou. Mall $21o Ma1chmatcer, c/o dlsappotntman1a. Lady Luck Ia calling vidual wiiO Ia Cmportant1o your prM8nt
plana. You shOUkl..-ve 1IMI 1ype of,..
ihta - - · P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- the shola now.
land OH 44101-3428.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Because caption lor which you've been hoping.
IIRIES (MMCII Z1·Aprll 18) .O.Ithough you'lllnnalely know how -lo· blend sin· AQUARIUS (,_, :IIH'a 11)
you'll be applying concertad ellorf : eerily with logic 1oday. you are n911tklly changes •• likely lo lake pe- loday
where your Iaski are concernad loday, lo have any problema tnnuenclng oth• !hat you will no1 have a hand In orcf1et.
11 mtgh1 nol appear so 10 lhe casual ob- ars. Thay'U lns1tnctiii8Cy know wha1'a lrattna, yel you mtgh1 be 1he one who '
sarver. because wha1 you'U do should ROOd lor you can also be good Cor 1hem. derl- grealar benem1 !han 1he o1harl l
lnvoMid.
· '
'come ra1her easily cor you,

IIIYouC.nll eSW
t1:30eill tiSl 1oa1 of c.,_

~=-' .Joumal

(!) T~'•

1\JbQ
Newltwad
e([))

GatM

IIJ) 8potll Tonight

2·21

Waehlngtori Decraasad

VUMKX

- CNR) (1 :40)
IJ)1111W-'aKCIIIIper ·
OpanHCIIN

~=~Q

8(1) 1"""'*-'! Tonight

IDPM=Ihow
ei!D
z- .
ONe.wllljjl•l
.....h.... Now
12:20 Cll MOYIE: Mltecle of lito
HHtl: A loyllcwn 8tary CNR)
12:30. ill 1111 1.111 Nlglilit!llli

.

CR\'PTOQU01 E .

• iii'Pat ...... lhow
®HIIItl'letllluel
18 AmaoiGin MltgUlno
12:00 (]) MOVII: Ro•aan;ll McCor

Somal'

letter stands for another. In this !latnplt&gt; A is usNI
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single teltPrs,
apPSlrophes, the length and formation of the words are aB
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
One

Devtcl Llillnun

TKIX
..EZUXH

NK

HYYZ

MXYUEN·
KD

U, VBSY

NOUN

BC

VBNNVY

AYVYENBUV

DBXY

-AKCEABYCAY . - W .YKXWY
' FUEOBCWNKC
Y...enlav'• C11JPI041•ot•: THE HANDS fHAT
HELP ARE HOLIER lliAN ntE LIPS THAT PRAY. ROBERT INGERSOLL

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesdy, February 21, 1989

Military cargo jet crashes attempting to land in Florida
HURLBURT FIELD, Fla.
(UP!).- A C-141 military cargo
jet with eight people aboard
crashed in a heavily wooded and
swampy area of Eglin Air Force
Base Monday night while at ·
tempUng to land, Air Force
officials said.
.
There were no immediate
reports of survivors.
The 168-foot C-141 Star lifter, en
route to Huriburt Field from
Co lorado Springs, Colo. , crashed
abou,t 8 p.m. CST, said Air Force
Capt. Thomas Connell. It went
down about 4 miles north of
Hurlburt Field, on Eglin Air
Force Base, he sal d.

Connell said there were seven
crew members and one pas·
senger aboard when the plane
crashed during its final approach
for landing. "There's no word yet
on the posslbitity of survivors. ''
Connell said there was no word
on what caused the aircraft to
crash or what cargo it carried,
but he said there were no
munitions aboard.
Military officials said the
crash sparked fires near the site
tha t were still burning be.fore
dawn Tuesday . Investigators
were unable to get near the
aircraft because 5·foot deep

water and -thick underbrush.
"There Is no vehicle access to
the site," said Col. Dale Stovall,
commander of the First Special
Operallon Wing at Hurlburt
Field. "The water In the area IR
about 5 feet deep and we're
having great difficulty because
of the dense undergrowth ap·
preaching aircraft.
"There are still some fires
reported burning In the area, and
we have not located any of the
crew or the passenger at this
time," Stovall said.
Airman Randy Lanier, a spo·
kesman for Norton Air Force

'

Base near San Bernadino, Calif.,
said the plane was assigned to the
California base but had been In
Colorado for several days and
had taken off from there.
Stovall said the plane picked up
a retired military passenger In
Colorado. After a stop In Hurlburt for additional passengers
and cargo, It was to leave for
Howard Air Force Base In
Panama , he said. Stovall was
unsure when the plane was to
leave tor Panama.
Military officials said Army
Rangers reported hearing what
sounded like an explosion at 8: 02
p.m . CST. At about the same

time, controllers at Eglin Air
Force Base lost contact with the
plane.
' 'There was no reported explo·
slon invotv.ed, other than maybe
the aircraft impacting the ter·
rain," Stovall said. " But there
was no reported airborne exlo·
sion that we have at this time. "
The National Weather Service
reported heavy rain and golf
ball·slzed hall Monday night in
Fort Walton Beach, just east of
Hurlburt Field. Forecasters
Issued a tornado w.,_tch for the
area, advising peOple to beware
of lightning and damaging thun·
derstorm winds.

"(Officials) found an engine, ..
sai d Lt. Dan Fr iel of the Ocean
City-Wright Fire Department
near Fort Walton Beach. He said
the crash site is "very
swa mped."
The C-141 Starllfter, an all·
weather aircraft that can carry
200 troops, has been used by the
Air Force since 1965, Air Force
officials said. It carries troops
and lightweight vehicles and
equipment. The C-141 and C-5
form the strategic airlift force.
Stovail said the plane normally
carries a pilot , co-pilot, two flight
engineers and at least one
loadmaster.

TAX TAB

'

The Daily Sentinel

February-1989

Ohio

Nowszo 983

NOW

five-story buDding on St. Clair and West Slxtlt
Street In Cleveland on Monday. ( UPJ)

NOW

'16,900

•

Sl] 698

A MuiHmedla Inc. Sewspaper

•

1989 CHEVY CAVALIER

THREE-ALARM FIRE - Flreflgh&amp;ers battle
heavy smoke as they fight a three-alann lire at a

TAX TAB

62

NO
1988 OLDS DELTA 88

'13,900

NOW

S11,]47

Suspect in Va. trooper
critical after shooting himself
SALEM, Va. tUPI) -A man
suspected of killing a state
trooper and two other people in a
crime spree stretching over 100
miles was in critical condition·
Tuesday with a self-inflicted
gunshot wound after his getaway
car crashed and burned, pollee
said.
Lt. D.R. Jessup of Virginia ·
State Pollee said a warrant on
murder and firearms charges
was issued for Dennis Wayne
Eaton, 32, of Mount Jackson.
Pollee said Eaton exchanged
gunfire with an officer at a
fast-food restaurant -before lead·
lng pollee on a through Salem
that ended when his car crashed
Into a several utility poles.
After the crash, Eaton, armed
with a .38-callber revolver, killed
a woman passenger, Judy Ann
McDonald, 24, of Mount Jackson,
fired several shots at officers and
then turned the gun on himself,
Salem Pollee Chief -Harry Has·
klns said.
The car then burst Into flames
and both Eaton and McDonald
were pulled from the vehicle,
Haskins said. He said he could
not comment on the relationship
befween Eaton and McDonald.
Eaton was taken to Roanoke
Memorial Hospital and was In
critical condition.
Jessup said authorities con·
slder the Salem gun battle linked '
with the fatal shooting of Trooper
Jerry L. Hines In Rockbridge
County just before midnight and
the slaying of another Mount
Jackson man earlier in the
evening.
''They certainly are connected
as far as we can tell," Jessup
said.
,
The 1981. Ford automobile
Eaton was driving was regis·
tered to Ripley Elwood Marston
Sr., 68, of Mount Jackson, ,who
was found dead as authorities
lnves tlgated the discovery of his
'

car .
Marston's wife was orglnally
considered missing but Jessup
said she was away from home
and has been located.
Haskins said he did not know of
a relationship between Eaton
and Marston other than the two
men lived close to each other,
Hines, 48, a 22-year law en·
forcernent veteran who helped
organize the Virginia State Po·
lice Association, was shot twice
and killed on Interstate 81 In
Rockbridge County as he made 'I
routine traffic stop of a vehicle
carrying Eaton and McDonald,
Haskins said.
Hines stopped Eaton on suspl·
cion of drunken driving, Jessup
and Haskins said, and radioed for
assistance. But when another
trooper arrived about five min·
utes later he found Hines shot
once in the neck and once in the
shoulder. Hines died at the scene
before medical help could arrive.
Haskins said charges were
pending against Eaton In Hines'
death, but Jessup said he could
not comment on charges and said

only the matter "Is being thoroughly Investigated."
Hines was well known In pollee
circles as the editor of Trooper
magazine, a publication of the
Virginia State Pollee Assocla·
tlon, which he helped organize In
1974.
Haskins said authorities were
put on the alert after Hines was
killed and that Salem pollee
spotted Eaton near the General
Electric plant In Salem shortly
after midnight. Eaton led pollee
on a chase through Salem at
speeds reaching 100 mph before
the crash and shootout
downtowp.
Pollee also reported a burglary
In Rockbridge County Monday
evening before the Hines shootIng. Authorities said two wea·
pons were among the Items taken
from a van, and the thief
appa:renuy tett a note saying he
had committed a serious crime
earlter In the evening. Jessup
said poltce are working on
possible connections between the
Rockbridge burglary and the
crime spree.

Teens charged in eat's
ritualistic mutilation
PITrSBURGH (UPI) -Three
teenagers were charged with
multllating a neighbOr's pet cat
In what pollee said was part of a
satanic ritual . .
Brian Dale Cargill, 19, Do)lald
Connor Jr., 18, and Melinda
Settles, 18, were arraigned Mon·
day night on charges of cruelty to
animals and conspiracy. They
were put In the A!Jeiheny County
Jail in lli!u of $10,000 bond each.
The three were arrested at a
house on the city's ·North Side.
Pollee said Settles· told them

•

she and Connor watched · as
Cargill took In a black cat, the
12-year-old pet of a neighbor,
k Uled It and then cut It up. Tbey
then went Into Cargill's room,
where they conducted a satanic
ritual, Settles told pollee.
The blood was spattered on
some walls of the bouse and
satanic symbols were etched on
the walls with animal blood,
pollee said. Cargill had the eat's
tall pinned to his jacket, pollee
said.
,
The three face /1. prelimlnar.\C
hearing Feb. 28 In City Court.

WAS

NOW

'12,400

NOW

S11,19

1988 CHEVY CELEBRITY EUROSPORT

NOW

'12,200

NOW

S11,2]4

r1.::!!~:7:-:::-:==~=:"":":"~~~!:.=!~.:!!::~~""1:"--:..:.:::.:.::.....::2~~~~:!~
.
1988 CHEVROLET CORSICA·
1988
RANGER PICKUP

WAS

'9,700

NOW

S8412

NOW

7

INSIDE YOU'LL
MORE
TO MAKE YOUR TAXES
LESS TAXING.

1989 TAX SUPPLEMENT
Tuesday, February 21·,
. 1989
.

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