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                  <text>o.c.ma. 3, 1989

Ohio

Are the downtown shopping
centers filled with onlookers?
-..
•

By RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (UPI) - With
suburban areas being saturated
by shopplngl!lalls, there's been a
move back to downtown In many
or Ohio's major cities, but do
these downtown shopping centers make good business sense?
In Cleveland, word came last
week that the Galleria has lost
$20 mUUon since Its gala opening
two years ago that brqht
regular evening shopping hours
back to downtown Cleveland.
And In Toledo, Portslde Fesd·
val Marketplace opene&lt;! along
Toledo's riverfront In May 11184
amid predictions the $14.5 mUllon bHevel mall would help
rejuvenate the downtown area.
Business there ,has flopped, except for a recently' 'opened
Shooters restaurant.
..
But City Center, which opened
In downtown Columbus In August, has been such a success ·
that shopping hours have been
: expanded. And In Cleveland, an

underground shopping center
called The Avenue Is to open In
March with some 120 stores and
11 movie theaters.
The developers who wtll talk on
record say the the dme Is right
for shopping centers In the heart
of Ohio's major cldes, despite a
lack of downtown populations
slmnar to those In Chicago,
Phlladelpltla and New York .
Others apparently 110t doing so
well aren't available for
comment.
Jacobs, VlscOnsllt Jacobs, the
nation's fourth-largest shopping
mall firm, made public the $20
million loss at the Galleria only
while tryfng to convince Cleveland City Council to grant a $122
mlll1on tax abatement for an
unrelated 60-story office-hotel
complex.
They refused comment after
the hearing, and a spokesman for
JVJ did not return a phone call
the next day. •
The food court area of the

Pick 3

Shop early,
shop locally

Gal!f!rla Is al~ost always busy, I
but the retail area often seems
more filled with lookers than
buyers. A few stores, sue h as the
Banana Republic and The Ll·
mlted, seem to stay very busy.
Portslde has gone from helng
Toledo's centerpiece to heco!ll·
lng a financially struggling
albatross for Trustcorp Inc.; .
which held lts'mortgage.
Most of Portslde's orl&amp;lnal
tenants are gone; only a handful
of small s!tops and eateries
remain. The exodus was pardcuIarly, painful Iaat month when
The Real Seafood Co., one of the
key .tenants that opened with
Portslde, abruptly closed.
Financial dltflculdes led Trustcorp to push for the ouster of the
original deve.loper, James
Rouse's Enterprise Development Co., but succeeding managers have had little success In
turning a profit.
And now Portslde Is for sale
once again.

692
Pick 4

DALLAS (UPI) - Kaneb Services Inc. Friday said It signed a
letter of Intent to sell its Interest
in three offshore rigs to Atwood
Oceanlcs Inc. of Houston for $8
m Ullon, plus the assumption by
Atwood of part of Its $28-mllllon
debt related to the rigs.
Atwood will also purchase
Kaneb' s subsidiary Diamond M
Co. The transaction Is expected
to he completed by the end of the
year, subject regulatory
approvals.
Kaneb owns 50 percent of the
three rigs, Diamond M Falcon,
Eagle and Hunter, managed by
Loews Corp. of New York which
In JuDI! bought K.aneb's Interest
In nine other rigs for $26 mUUon
cash and assumed $33 million of
debt.
The company said the sale ts
part of a major restructuring
began In 1986, which Will leave
Kaneb with only Its pipelines
carryfng petroleum products
from Kansas to markets In
Nebraska, Iowa and North and
South Dakota.
In 1989, Kaneb reduced its
Iong·term debt from $574 mlllloc
to a current $111 million. At the
end of the third quarter, Kaneb's
assets were $130 million.

Kicker 834020

•
Yol.40, No.141
Capyrlphtod 1118

'

State officials decline
to talk; trial hits snag

VJiri'OR JI'ROM THE NORm - II was Jolt

t - cold oa Sullday after-• for Rudolph the
Red-N-d Reladeer lo Oy, 10 he lltlachetl
Stuila'• •lellb to roller •kel- aad puUed the
lftllld oltl man l r - the North Pole. a10111 the

street• of Raelae doriD&amp; lhe Racine Merchula'
spoasored "Kldll' Cbrlllmu Parade." Don' I tell
aayone, bot Rudolph Is really Troy Hobaek aad
Saata ta Troy'• brother, Aaroa.

~

1989 414 HAIDIODY PICKUP

$12,99
bNih guard. roll bar with light ber, aide tubular ttep bllr, bumper, It-o.

$11,500

NOW

tllldlng window, chrome llotted wheel1, tellgete - net cu.tom ltfipe•.
•

wnpped as Chratrnu pnseal8 aad Ioiii more.
Tbe parade was aptiiiiOn!d by lhe Raclue
Merehaa18 Aaloclatloa.

...

YotiiS FOR ss.SO WITH A SJO.OO PURCHASE OF
CARLTON CARD PRODUCTS. A SJO.OO VALli.

Prescription Shop
992·6669
2 71 N01 th SecOIHI
Middleport, OH.

,LDTLE TYKES - Cos lamed ehlldren rldlnl
blqelel, pullla1 waco•, drlv1D1 lUIIe battery
powa ed vehlclea, or Jual walklnc, were oulln full

2 FOR 1 SPECIAL!

'

l

+Tax

IRING YOUR OLD PHOTOS IN BY DEC•.
9TH AND WE WIU HAVE YOUR COPIES
FINISHED DEC. 16TH.

UCI a WIITE o•YJ

LEA~

(61 4) 446-7494 &lt;

or TOI.l FlEE

PHOT06AAPtiY

. . . . . YAI.dr lii\.AIA • 0" I
ClleM!Ifl ••

r

,.,. •

ONtO

1-100-272-LEAR

•

....,

I

~'

Roberta Steinbacher, a former
cabinet member to Gov. Richard
Celeste as admlnlStra:tor of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
ServiCes, has Invoked the Fifth
Amendment against self·
Incrimination.
Steinbacher resigned because
of health reasons after the
scandal struck the Celeste ad·
ministration In 1987.
Also declining to testify recently have been two of Steinbacher's deputy assistants and a
former official with the Ohio
Lottery Commission, Thomas
Smith.
A lawsuit seeking $15 mtlUon
from the company were flied In ,
Franklin County Common Pleas
Court and later transferred to the
Court of Claims. The suit said the
telephone company used Its
Influence wtth the Celeste admln·
lstration to avoid competitive
bidding and to win contracts to

lease telepl\one equipment at
exorbitant prices.
The telephOnes were Installed
at the offices for employment
services, the state auditor, the
lottery commission and the stste
agriculture department.
The suit was transferred to the
Court of Claims alter TeleCommunications counter-sued
the state for breach of contract
· and defaulting on leases. The
state has stopped payment on the
leases and asked the court to void
the contracts.
A laWyer for Robert McEaneney, a onetime Columbus lobby·
1st, said his client will also Invoke
the Filth Amendment when he Is
called to testUy about his role In
the procurement.
Lawyer William Summers said
McEaneney's records have been
seized by the FBI as part of the
agency's lnvesUgatlon.
The attorney general has also
tiled a suit against Smith and
Ronald Nabakowskl, executive
director for the lottery, claiming
breach of public trust.

'

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•

c.,,
..
of n...
O•t·Of·A·KI••
·- ·

P~····

••••
Perfeet .,,,,,

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,

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.

Ioree for Sunday's ''Kids' Cbrlalmu Parade" In
Raelne.

~-----,~~~

to tile north and a mtx(U~;e or rl!ln _.
and SJttiw to11the restofthestate.
Snowfall accumulations In the
north were expected to be aboutl
or 2 Inches, since the rapid
movement of the storm was not
expected to allow It to feed off of
Lake Erie for any length of time.
tenipe~atures.
It will be a little warmer
More than 1 foot of snow fell through Wednesday before
early Sunday morning In the · another cold blast Invades the
Snowbelt counties In the nor- Buckeye State Friday.
theast, with 3 to 6 Inches In
Highs are to reach Into the 40s .
nearby areas.
by Wednesday, before dropping
A fast-moving storm system back Into the 20s to. near 30
was to pass through the state Thursday and Friday.
Monday afternoon and evening,
On the early morning weather
bringing the threat of more snow map, a ·weak ridge of high

Rinehart
deflates
rumors

© 1989 carllon C.tnb, Int.

$.1 350

pany used Its COMectlons with
the Celeste AdminiStration to
overcharge taxpayers for telephone equipment.
·

,.,_ \Jnlletl-1\'_. lallerD&amp;tloaal
1bla .-lc'a wutllt!r will he
typical for Ohio In the late fall,
with warming temperatures erasing nearly all traces of a big
winter storm that pounded the
state over the weekend - fol·
lowed by more snow and chilling

Old Photos Copied

ONLY

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state's effort to pursue
crImina! charges In Its Investigation of a telephone equipment
scandal has been slowed because
two former top state administrators and two assistants have
declined to give court
depositions.
The testimony before the Ohio
Court of Claims . Is part of
evidence discovery actloi)S ongoIng In a number ol suits flied by
Ohio a,galnst TeleComunlcatlons Inc. of Brook
Park and Its president, John
McGill.
Nancy Miller, a lawyer tor the
state attorney general, · said
Friday at the Court of Claims
hearing that the former state
employees have been adviSed by
their lawyers not to answer
ques lions on the grounds their
answers may be selflncrtmlnatlng.
It was also revealed that the
FBI and federal grand juries In
Columbus and Cleveland were
Investigating whether the
Cleveland-area telephone com-

Ohio·to ·get more snow, cold
temperatures later. this week
MANAGER'S SPECIAL

I

1 Seetlon, 10 Pog• 21 Cent•
A Multlmodlolnc. N_ _ .,

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 4, 1989

Special Carlton Cards
Christmas Offer

'

....

8-12-17-22-24 42

the price of Marion's common
stock at the time.
At Friday's meeting, Michael
Herman, c hlef financial officer
for Marion, outlined projections
for Marion Merrell Dow's performance. He based the figures
upon the recent lndlvlduaal performance of each company.
Herman said net sales would
grow 20 percent, compared with
the pharmaceuticals Industry
average of 7.3 percent; return on
equity would be 36.5 percent,
compared with the average of 28
percent; and sales per employee
would reach $228,000, compared
with $138,000.
.
"It looks like the combined
company wtll he a bout twice as
productive as a very productive
Industry ," Herman said.

Copy Negative .............. S6.00
5X7 Print .••••.•.•••••.•••••••• S7 .50
Second 517 Print ........... FREE

Low loallllt aear •· Cheace
of rala to percea&amp;. Parily
cloud)' Tuetday. Hlp Ia mill

Super IAI(to

Adeliciously spicy blend of Christmas wtpouni - three ounces of a
wotlderflj blend of cinnamon, cedar, ci!llleS and more in a wicker basket
-shrink wtapped, tied with a plaid bow ..;til gift taa. A ~teat gift idea.

Kaneb to sell
•
•
•
tts
tnterest
m
remaining three
offshore rigs

'.

outstanding shares. But Marlon
officers have stressed since the
merger was announced In July
that Dow will not control the
company. Marion Merrell Dow's
headquarters will be In Kansas
City.
Marion executives said the
tots I cos tof the merger cannot be
estimated accurately because of
a complicated formula that Is
being used to protect Marion
shareholders from declines In the
new company's stock.
In connection with the Issuance
of Marion stock to Dow, Marlon
shareholders will receive a new
class of Dow publicly traded
securities designed to protect the
value of their holdings. The
securities will require payment
by Dow to Marlon shareholders
In 1991 or 1992, depending upon

•

4677

Mario_n holders OK final merger .
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) Marton Laboratories Inc.'s
stockholders Friday approved
the final step In the multibilliondollar merger of Marlon with
Merrell Dow Pharmaceudcals
Inc. of Cincinnati.
More than 90 percent of stockho)lers voted to Issue about 128
mUiion shares of company stock
to Dow Chemical Co., the parent
of Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals. Before the vote, Dow had
acquired about 39 percent or
Marion's stock In a $2.23 bllllon
tender.
Vote results were announced
during Marion's last annual
meeting. Marion President and
Chief Executive Officer Fred
Lyons, who will be president of
the combined company.. said the
meeting was a historic event as
the merger of two pharmaceutl·
c~ll IndustrY leaders neared
completion.
Sales of the new company,
Marlon Merrell Dow Inc., are
expected to reach $2 .4 billion.
Dow, headquartered In Mid·
land, Mich. , ultimately will own
about 67 percent of Marlon's

Lottt~ry

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Mayor Dana Rinehart said he
has no plans to enter the 1990
governor·~ race, but also stopped
short of ruling out a bid lor the
state's top office.
And Rinehart acknowledges
he'll have to make up his mind
about the governor's race by the
end of December.
"I'm not a candidate," Rinehart said In an Interview published Sunday In The Columbus
Dispatch. '"l'here Is no timetable. There Is no organ tzed effort
to explore this. I don't have any
team.
"But · 1 have to admit I've
gotten some encouragement
from some folks here and from
other parts of the state."

Deputies probe several auto
wrecks in area over weekend
Several accldentswerelnvesti- was an accldeqt that actually
galed over the weekend by the occurred Friday ·night at 11: 30
Meigs County Sheriff's p.m.
'
Department.
The driver, Garry Cremeans,
On· Sunday at 10:55 a.m., Rutland, was traveling east on
18-year-old Jason R. mack, Ru- Wilcox Road near Jesse Creek
tland, was j.ravellng east on and Titus Road when his vehicle
County Roacl"5 (Bradbury Road) struck a bridge abutment. Crewhen he lost control on the meau was throwa against the
snow-covered roadway, spun steerln&amp; wheel, breaking It In
around and went off the road on half. He ataye&lt;! In the vehicle
the .right, striking and breaking until Saturday mornln&amp; when he
off a Columbus and Southern was found by pautng motorlata.
Power Company pole. The road · Rutland EMS traaaported h1m to
was blocked for several hours.
Veter1.111 Memorial Hospital "'
No InJuries were reported. where be wu admitted.
There wu heavy damage to
Cremeaaa wu cited tor no
Black's 1986 Ford Pinto.
valid operator's licente.
There accidents occurred on
At 11:30 a.m. Saturday mornSaturday.
InK depudett were called to
The first report taken Saturday
ContinUed on page 6

pre·~~ . was "1011\!'&amp; ' ~c;r.jlas
Ohio. LOw pressure was over
nortbwes tern Minnesota with a
strong warm front south !rom the
low across Iowa and Missouri.
High pressure covered much of
the western and southern sections of the country.
The low will move rapidly
southeast to near Chicago Monday afternoon and then move
across Ohio early Monday night.
The warm front will sweep out
ahead of the low across Ohio
during the afternoon. Another
low pressure area will develop
over south central Canada poised
to strike Ohio Wednesday.

Bush reports summit ·
details to NATO allies
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI)President Bush reported to
NATO allies Monday on his
harmonious Malta summit with
Soviet President Mikhail Gorba·
chev, where both leaders highlighted Improvements In East. West relations and downptayed
their political differences .
Bush had an ear Jy morning
meeting with Belalan Prbne
Minister Wilfrid Martens at
Chateau Stuyvenherg and later
paid a courtesy call on King
Badouln at Laeken Palace before
motoring to NATO headquarters,
where he arranged to spend most
of the day.
Bush planned to conclude his
visit with a 'news conference
before returning to Washington.
The president arrived at NATO
'headquarters In a 10-car motor-

cade, following British Prbne
MiniSter Margaret Thatcher and
West German Foreign MiniSter
Hans· Dietrich Genscher.
Throughouf the morning durIng ·photo opportunities, Bush
fended off all substantive ques·
tions - particularly those relat, lng to the resignation Sunday of
East Germany 's communist
leadership.
Mrs. Thatcher, asked after
entering NATO headquarters
whether Bush had done well at
the Mediterranean summit, rep,
lied, "Oh, yes. I think so. "
Bush was greeted with a round
of applause from NATO staff
members when he entered the
headquarters. He met briefly
with NATO Secretary-General
Manfred Woerner In Woerner' s
Continued on page 6

-Local news

briefs~

Pomeroy man hurt in wreck
A Pomeroy man was hurt tn a car-truck wreck Saturday at
1:05 p.m. In SaliSbury Township on S.R. 7, about half a mile
south of the junction of C.R. 24, according to the Gallla-Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
P)li!Up D. Call, 30, of S.R. 143, Pomeroy, was taken by the
Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where he
was treated and release&lt;! for a laceration to the head.
Call, driving a 1981. GMC pickup ti'!JCk, was heading south on
S.R. 7 when he started to turn left to C.R. 24. At that point a 1987
Buick LeS&amp;bre driven by Bonnie J. Moore, 55, of Chesapeake,
passed the truck on the left. That was when Call made the turn
and hit the car In the right front.
No one was cited.

Sq1UJds have 12 weekend rolls
Twelve calls for assistance were answered over the weekend
by units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
Eight of the calli were on Saturday and four on Sunday.
At 12:39 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy transported Ken Leesburg
Continued on page 6
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�Moodey, Dtumber 4, 1989

Nuclear weapons

The Daily Sentinel
•
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO 'ME INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE.t

ROBERT L. WJNGETI'

Publt.ber
PAT WHD'EHEAD

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

AsslslaDI Publisher/Controller

Genenl

~ ..er

.

A MEMBER Ill TIN! AMoolllted l'rMs, lnlalld Dally Pnsa Auoclallon aad 111e Amo!rlcaa New...,.. Publl8hen "-'iii&amp;IDD.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION areweleome. ThOJ oboaldbeleoolbuiOt
word!i ....... AU Je&lt;tero are llllllleel to odllbor Md m•ll be olped IUIIIIe, oddr"'s and lelepllooe .....,ber. No unslped lelten wW be pobllsbed. Leiters should be In IOOdlule, oddreoU.r - · nol peroonal~
ties.

Pfeifer is the lightning
rod for Democrats' fire
By LEE LEONAKD
UPI S*atebo111e Reporter
COLUMBUS -In March 1986, state Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
climbed on a stepladder beside the statue of former Gov. James
Rhodes on the Statebouse lawn and Issued a "wanted" poster of
Rhodes, challenging him to a debate.
"We buDd monuments to our past, not to our future," said Pfeifer,
who was In the middle of an unsuccessful challenge of the 77-year-old
Rhodes's right to come back and reclaim the Republican nomination
for governor.
The media had a field day with photos and fllin footage of Pfeifer
"debating" Rhodes's monument, and ever since. the northern Ohio
senator has been somewhat of a darling of the press corps.
This year, Pfeifer has been a lightning rod for attention. He has
been Involved with high-profile legislation and has, as usual, made
the most of his ability to cultivate the media.
Not coincidentally, Pfeifer ts aiming for statewide office against
next year. He wants to run for gowrnor, but odds are he will be In the
Republican primarY for attorney general.
In fact, Pfeifer Is raising such a ruckus on Issues that top
Democrats, Including Gov. Richard Celeste are retaliating, and the
senator hasn't even settled Into a slot on the GOP ticket yet.
: How has Pfeifer managed to achieve such vislblllty? For starters,
he's one of the few top-lf\1'1 Republican officeholders who Is
pro-choice on the abortion Issue. He was a teatured speaker, among
Democrats, at a rally In Columbus in October.
Pfeifer also sponsored a bill early In the year sharply Increasing
penal ties for drug abuse and drug trafficking. It passed In May,
.
before the drug Issue became highly fashionable.
Pfeifer was the author of legislation clamping down on drinking
drivers, and he was the co-author of a b!U providing parents and
grandparents a long-range method of saving for their babies' college
educations.
At the end of the week, Pfeifer stalked out of the governor's drug
"summit" meeting when the keynote speaker, a children's services
advocate from Washington, began assa!Ung Reagan-Bush defense
poUcles.
Democrats are worried that Pfeifer Is getting too much attention,
and· that he might be a strong threat to their domination of the '
attorney.general's office for almost 20 years.
They are also annoyed at some o! Pfeifer's tactics In playing to the
ll)edla.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, 0-Newark, chairman of the House Public
Safety and Highways Committee, has completely rewritten Pfeifer's
drunken driving legislation. It bears no resemblance to the measure
sent over to the House In May.
Pfeifer's fingerprints also will be removed from the anti-drug
legislation. House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·Wheelersburg, was
miffed that the senator accused him In publiC of dilly-dallying on the
Issue.
So Riffe burled the Pfeifer btu and appointed ·a select House
committee to study the drug problem and devise a solution. ·That
solution will be ready In about a week.
Riffe was asked last week why the original Senate-passed &lt;!rug bill
was not acted upondurlngthesummer. Atfirsthesaldltwasbecause
House members were on summer break. Pressed .further, he
retorted, "Who was the sponsor of that bill?"
Finally, Pfeifer was attacked by both Riffe and Celeste for fa!Ung to
foUow competitive bidding on the $53,000 printing contract for a
glossy brochure on the new tuition trust fund and college savings
program he co-au tho red.
The 2 mllUon brochures will be distributed to banks, schools,
gowrnment offices, businesses and restaurants, and one whole side.
of the pamphlet Is devoted to something called the "Pfeifer
Guaranteed Tuition Program." The senator's pi~ture also appears.
Celeste and Riffe have called for Investigations Into whether proper
contracting procedures were followed.
•'This Is very small of a governor whose piCture Is on every highway
map and outhouse In the state," said Pfeifer.
So the senator and.the Democrats continue to joust, poking at each
other like lumberjacks trying to stay atop a routnglog In the middle of
a mill stream. As the 1990 election campaign plot thickens, one
wonders what Pfeifer will try next, and who will fall off the log first.

Berry's World

~~
tMI c, NIA. tne.
(l

' 'I thOU(Jht sbout 'powtJrlng down to sn}oy life
morB, ' too. But I don't think t could hllck 11. "

~

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plan~ . need

NC State captures T of C
title, tops Panthers, I 00-87 .

tighter

•

8~t111lY----~~----~----J_oc_k_A_rnk
__~_w_n_a_nd
__~---~-oo__A_tt_a
WASHINGTON - It's no seUvermore National Laboratory
.cret that the nation's most
near San Francisco. The lab,
sensitive nuclear weaponS factopari of the University of Califor·
ries are v~lnerable to sptes,
nla, Is under contract to DOE to
thieves and saboteurs. But, the do sensitive nuclear weapons
Department of Energy, which -research.
runs those plants, continues to
camoufiage their weeknesses.
In a closed door congressional
Judging by the public prohearing, house members quizzed
nouncements of DOE, the we
DOE about a report from its San
pons InstallatiOns are as tight as
Francisco regional office which
a drum. But privately, top
boasted about Livermore's seofficers at the DOE have glossed ·. curlty record. At the same time
over glaring security problems.
Congress had a report from DOE
We have discovered one case In
Inspectors in Washihgton who
which DOE was supposed · lo turned up evidence of dangerous
crack down on lax security forces
security lapses to all DOE
and Instead told those forces to
weapilns plants telling them to
keep up the good work. One ofthe
shape · up. That official even
officer Involved In that white·
drafted the Jetter: "We cannot
wash Is now the head of security tolerate an attitude of apathy or
for all the natiOn's weapons
complacency about our protecplants.
tion programs," It said.
It happened at the Lawrenc~
But higher ups In the DOE

a·

thought the language was too tty chiefs - the letter that was
harsh. Why hurt anyone's feel·
never sent. Dingle didn't see the
lngs? They sent their own mes· real letter- the laudatory oneuntO after he held his hearings.
sage to the security chiefs at the
Nuclear watchdogs are wor·
plants lauding them for their
devotion, with a minor mention rled about the securitY lapses
and are looking to EnerJIY
of the security problems uncoSecretary James Watkins to ckl
vered by the Inspection. ·
The official who helped presomething about it. At stake are
pare that sugar-coated message,
not only secrets of weapons
·William Barker, Is now a deputy
production, but the makings of
assistant secretary In charge of weapons themselves.
If security lsn' t tight,.a terrorsecurity at all the sensitive
Ist could slip Inside. a nuclear
weapons plants.
weapons plant and swipe plutoA House subcommittee
chaired by Rep. Jobn Dtngell,
nium - the closely held lngre0 -Mlch, Is Investigating the • dient that many volatUe coun·
DOE and tbe.contractors that run
tries would like to get their hands
the weapons plants. Someone at
on to buDd their own nuclear
DOE must have .figured Dingle wei\P()ns. At the very least, a
was a pushover because when he
terrorist could wreak havoc In a
plant or steal radioactive matewas rounding up information for
a hearing, DOE sent over a copy
rials and use them to contaml·
o! the harsh reprimand to securnate public water supplies.

hands of LA forward A. C. Green (not pictured)
during Sund11y night's lone NBA tilt In Los
Angeles. (UPI)
·

KNOCKS
LOOSE - Los Anreles Lakers
center Vlade Dlvac knocks l!all away from new
York Kalcka forward Eddie Wilkens into walling

Lakers hike season mark to 12-3
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPl)Patrick Ewing got his points and
the New York Knlcks said they
know they can play with Los
Angeles, but the result was
another Laker victory.
Ewing had 29 points to lead all
scorers Sunday night, but the
Lakers still Improved to 12-3 best In the NBA - with a 115-104
victory. James Worthy scored22
points and Magic Johnson added
20 for Los Angeles. K!!nny
Walker added 16 for New York.
"I said before the game we'll
probably feel like other teams
did when we had Kareem,"
Laker Coach Pat Riley .said of
having lo faCe Ewing. "There's
very little you can do with
Patrick. We wanted to double
team him, but he gets over the
top before the double gets there.
He's a great player, he's going to
get his points, but we did a good
job containing their perimeter
guys.··

Why Bush didn't yield on abortion
Serious students of American
politics would be well advised to
pay careful attention to two of
President Bush's recent actions:
his veto of Congress' a !tempt to
finance abortions In Washington
with federal money m cases of
rape and lnces t, and his veto of a
foreign aid appropriation bill
containing $15 million for the
U.N. Population Fund, which
supports a Chinese program to
control population by means of
·
abortions.
The long and short of It Is that
Mr. Bush lsn' t the least bit shy
about using his veto weapon to
block legislation that favors
abortion. And that, In turn,
means that he understands the
vital Importance of preserving
the coalition between tbe "social
conservatives," who strongly
oppose abortion, and the "economic conservatives," whose
conservatism Is based largely on
economic consideratiOns.

That Is the coalition that has
routed the liberals In almost
every eleclion for a quarter of a
centufY, and which remains the·
dominant factor In American
politics today.
The old Roosevelt coalition fell
apart In the 1960s, when large
numbers of blue-collar, "ethnic''
and fundamentalist voters
stopped worrying about their
economic status and began worrying about what was happening
to the very fabric of their lives:
the decline of family values, the
so-called "sexual revolution,"
the rising tide of pornography
and drugs, etc.
They·correctly ldentuted mod·
ern American liberalism as the
political vector of these changes
and began voting conservative:
10 million of them for George
Wallace in 1968 and all of them
for Nixon (vs. McGovetn) in
1972. Then and subsequently,

with the sole exception of '1976
(when Jimmy Carter narrowly
bested Gerald Ford with the
support of a lot of temporarily
repatriated Southern Baptista),
they have contrlbu ted tlie whopping margins by which the
~publicans have held on to the ·
White House.
Ronald Reagan understood
this very well, and the fact that
he personally was both an
economic and a social conserva·
tlve made him unbeatable at the
polls.
Liberal Democrats, desperate
to drive a wedge between the
economic and social conserva·
ttves, have concentrated on attacking the latter. On the Issue of
abortion they thought they saw a
chance to pry Bush loose from
them.
They knew that Bush had
originally shared tbe moderately
pro-choice sentiments of his
Episcopalian heritage, and they

Rusher

assumed• that his slow shift to
opposition to abortion during the
1980s was merely opportunistic.
So when he coolly vetoed their
two legislative attempts to put
federal funds at the servlceofthe
abortion cause, they were
outraged.
"Is there no limit," liberal
columnist Tom Wicker walled,
"to what George Bush wlll do to
placate the zealots peering over
his shoulder?"
Let's put It another way, Tom.
George Bush Isn't crazy enough
to smash the dominant coalition
In American politics In a futUe
attempt to please liberals like
.
you.
Finally, reflect that Mr. Bush's
pollsters may not confirm your
happy conviction that you and
your fellow pro-abortionists are
riding some sort of tidal wave of
public sentiment on this Issue. In
short, look before you leap.

AIDS drama creates heartland furor
My city recently captured the
attention of the nation.
We've attracted television
crews from across the country
before, but It's usually been
because of a spectacular
murder, a presidential campaign
stop or a natural disaster. Never
over a college play. ·
·
The furor here in Springfield,
Mo., was sparked by a freshman
state legislator named Jean
Dixon. She charged that Southwest Missouri Stale University
·was flying In the face of the
communl&lt;y' s values by staging
performances of "The Normal
Heart," a play about homosexuality and AIDS.
She objected to what she called
"obllcenlty" In the script, and
charged that the play . "legitim·
lzea" homosexuality and es·
pauses a gay·rtahts political
agenda. She and supporters
formed a group called "Citizens
Demanding Standards," and set
about trying to convince the
university to quash tbe play.
In respoMe, a group of ptay
backers organized a group called

"PACT" - People Acting with
Compassion and Tolerance.
They supported not only tbe
university's stand that to stop tbe
play would violate First Amend·
ment rights, but also said they
·hoped to promote compassion
and help for AIDS victims.
I've seen a lot of college
!beater, but I've rarely seen It
done better than the production I
saw of "The Normal Heart." In
the play, the hero, who II a gay
man, tries to convince olber gay
men to stop belnr promllcuous
because the practiCe llapreadlng
a killer dlseue. The bero and
other gay men try to get city and
federal governments to recognize tlui crllll and do sometbing
.about it. That neither alm was
successful explalna mucb about
the rapid spread of the horrible
epldemJc.
It was a sUce of real life, and It
was certainly no day at tbe
beach. These men lost many
things: battle~ to bureaucrat.,
friends to a dread dlaeue, and, In
some cases, even lobs when their

•

fight became public. It was life
re-created, unglamorous,
moving.
Just before the play- while he
conducted a candlelight vtgtl ln.
the theater lobby for AIDS
victims - someone set fire to the
home of PACT leader Brad
Evans, who II a senior at SMSU.
His tJelongtnas were destroyed,
and his two pet cats were killed.
After the fire, Dixon engaged
in the most puzzling display of
backlt811ded support I have ever
seen. The night of the fire, sbe
told a reporter about reports that
Evans was , Involved In "The
occult and satanlam." The next
tlay at a press conference at
Evans' burned house, Dixon
asked to - his dead cats. She
then told reporters that Information had been "l)lven to her'' by
an SMSU . atudeat that lbe cats
had been "slaughtered or beaten
or murdered," poulbly u part of
a satanic ritual. After viewing
the cats, she buaged Evans and
presented him with bags of
groceries and blankets.
To those of us who live here In

'

Sarah Overstreet
the arson was
another periodic jolt from complacency. In 1906, a crazed mob
lynched two black men on the
public square; and less than a
decade ago, white supremacists
headquartered In nearby Arkansas - one of whom had been
reared In this town - tried to
burn a Springfield church attended by gays.
Once agaln we were reminded
that bate never goes away; It just
goes underground for a while.

{

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- Andre Cunningham scored 16
points Saturday night to spark
Marshall to a 65·58 victory over
Colorado State In the champion·
ship game of the Key CenturionMarshall Memorial Class!c.
Randolph Taylor and Jamie
Ross each scored 16 points to
pace Eastern Kentucky to a 78-38
win over the University of the
ntstrict of Columbia in the
consolation game of the two-day
tournament.
Marshall, 4·1, got double-digit
scoring from Omar Roland with
15, and John Taft wllh 11.
Colorado State, 3-1, was led by
Mike Mitchell with 16, ' Mark
Meredith with 11 and Andy
Anderson with 10. Mitchell was
named the tournament's most
valuable player.
Marshall oulscored the Rams
6-0 In the final 1: 46 to clinch the
. victory, which new Thundering
Herd coach Dana Altman called

"We'd spread their defense In
the first half," Altman said. "!
thought in the second half when
Scott hit the three-pointers and
spread their defense that that
was a factor , and then we hit
Omara couple of times.
"The win is encouraging."
In ·the consolation match, the
Colonels, 2-2, went ahead for
good at 1: 441nto thecontestwhen
Taylor hit back-to-back lay ups.
The Firebirds, 1-4, were led by
Eric Johnson's 17points. Eastern
Kentucky took command quickly
with 11 straight points for an 11-2
lead with 15:31 remaining in·the
flrst •hal!.
UDC closed to within seven at
24-17 with 5:57 left before the
half, but Eastern ran off a spurt
of 14 unanswered points to take a
40-19 advantage Into the break.
In the second half, Eastern
extended Its advanatge to 75·26
with 3:19 left In the game. UDC
scored only 19 second-half points
and went scoreless for 11
minutes.
Eastern converted 50 percent
of Its 58 field goal attempts, while
UDC shot 28.6 percent, hitting
·only 16 of 56 floor attempts.
Eastern controlled the boards
49-28.
Eastern coach Mike PoUio said
he was satisfied with the victory.
"We got what we wanted,"
Pollio said. "We wanted to
execute and play good defense.
We wanted to not drop off from
last night and make sure we
didn't go crazy. We got what we
· wanted."
·

Cam. Was flSI.U .............. NOW
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EVENING PHONE 949·2879 or 949-2045

ROCKET RACING

Jni&amp;IWI ST., UCIIE,

•o

Coach Paul Evans was given a
technical foul with 1:)7 left. At
the time, the Panthers trailed
92·86 but had possession.
"I wouldn't expect (a technl·
cal) at that time of the game,
especially when I hadn't said
anything throughout the game,"
Evans said.
"(But) the key was Rodney
taking off," he said. "We had one
stretch where we couldn't stop
him, and I thought we were
playing pretty good defense.''
Pitt, which led 49-43 at half·
time, fell behind by five twice In
the second halt l&gt;e!ore rallying
for the 82·79 ed£e.
In the first game, Richard
Dumas scored 24 points, lnclud·
lng two soaring baseline dunks,
to spark Oklahoma State.
"Richard Is very capable of
playing to another level, and
when he does he motivates our
other players," Cowboys Coach
Leonard Hamilton said.
Dumas, who reached 1,000
career points In the game, got his
first and most spectacular jam In
the midst of a decisive 24-5 run In
the second halt. The spurt. which
covered 11 minutes, wiped out
Ohio State's 45·39 lead.
Byron Houston added 20 points
and 12 rebounds for Oklahoma
State, 2·1.
Ohio State, 1·3, got 17 points
from Perry Carter and 12 !rom
Jimmy Jackson. The Buckeyes
shot only 24 percent In the second
half and failed to reach 60 points
for the second straight night.
Elsewhere In the Top 20, No. 1
Syracuse beat No. 16 Temple
73-56, No. 2 Kansas defeated
Maryland-Baltimore County 86·
67, third-ranked Arizona was
upset by Oregon State 84-61, No.4
Georgetown demolished Florida
International 114-67 to a 92-42
victory over Central Florida.
At Syracuse, N.Y. , Billy Owens
scored 21 points and the Orangemen held 17th-ranked Temple
without a field goai for an

11-mlnute span of the second halt
to capture the championship
game of the Carrier Classic.
.At Lawrence, Kan., Kevin
Pritchard scored 15 points to help
keep theJayhawks undefeated at
6-0. Rick CallOWay had 12 points
and nine rebounds for Kansas.
At Corvallis, Ore. , Gary Payton scored 25 points, Including 17
In the second half, to lead the
Beavers to the second upset of
Arionza in the past week.Payton
also had six steals and seven
assists as Oregon State snapped
an 11-game losing streak to the
Wildcats, who lost to Oregon
Thursday.
At Landover, Md., freshman
reserve Antoine Stoudamlre
scored 24 points for the Hoyas,
3-0. Alonzo Mourning added 17
points and Dlkenibo Mutombo
scored 15 for Georgetown.
At Columbia, Mo., Anthony
Peeler scored 15 points and
Nathan Buntin added 14 to help
the Tigers, 4-0, beat Division II
Tennessee-Martin. Shannon Red·
mon and Darren Lawler had 12
points for Tennesse-Martin, 3-2.
At Baton Rouge, La., Chris
Jackson scored 27 points and
Stanley Roberts·added 18 to lead
the Tigers, 2-1.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the blessings we've shared
this past year. For us it means saying" thanks" .to you, our many
friends,
and new, whose kind support we'll always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greateSt pleasure!

old

Wish all your customers ·and .
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our Christmas Greeting Edition on
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'

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Br U:1111 DRUM
UPI Colle1e Bulletball Writer
North Carolina State surprised
itself as well as Pittsburgh
Saturday night.
Rodney Monroe pumped In 30
points, and the Woltpack out·
scored the Pan !hers 21·~ over the
final 6: 16 for a 1()().87 victory In .
the title game of the Charlotte
Tournament of Champions.
Earlier, No.l80klahomaState
took the consolation game with
an 81-!19 rout of Ohio State.
"Going In, I didn't think we
could run with Pitt and have a
chance," said ·N.C. State Coach
Jim Valvano. "I thought the
game had to be in the 60s. But
they don't let you do that.''
The Woltpack, 4-1, not only
stayed with Pitt, bu twon because
they ran longer and faster. The
key player was 6·foot-9 sophomore forward Tom Gugliotta,
who finished with 21 points, 10
rebounds and the trophy as the
tournament's outstanding
player.
After Monroe's three-polnt ·
goal tied the score 82-82, Gugll·
otta twice beat the Panthers'
defe!'se for layups In transition
and gave the Wolfpack the thing
It most wanted - a lead to
protect over the final five min·
utes. And, the Wolfpack came
through, scoring their final 11
points on free throws. 1'
"H's just unselfishness," Gu·
gliotta said. "They found me
running the floor and I got 'easy
baskets. It was just being in the
right place at the right time."
Chris Corchlanl added 13
points, and Brian Howard and
Mickey Hinnant each had 'l l for
the Woltpack, 4-1.
·
Rod Brookln scored 24 ·points,
Brian Shorter 21 and Jason
Matthews 19 to lead Pitt, 2-1.
The Panthers did not score a
field goal after Pat Cavanaugh's
layup with 6: 37 remaining gave
Pitt an 82·79 lead. The Woltpack
clinched the victory when Pitt

$129.95

The Daily Sentinel

week.

In IJIJ, eiJbt memben of the Cbl·
cago Whtte Sox b•!JaU team aec:tpt·
ed llrlbllto "fill:' IN World Serla!Je.
t - the CbtclmaU liD and the
Whtte Sox. Wbea the caN went to trial
Ia JJ21, the el&amp;ltt were acquitted.
However, bueitaU Conlmllaioaer
Kenelaw Moutala L1Dt1i1 barnd the
el&amp;ltt players from profeaional baleball for life.
.

win against the Lakers playing
like that. They made the big
plays toward the end and we
didn't."
A.C. Green added 17 points for
Los Angeles, 1\'hich also got 11
and eight rebounds In 16 minutes
from Vlade Divac.
·

Marshall is Memorial Classic
champion after 65-58 victory

115002

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balls. Credit
be pvea carrier each

Blaek Sox Rudel

foulS in the first half," said
Ewing. "But our team did an
excellent job keeping the game
close. Idon'tcareaboutmystats.
We lost. That is the only thing
that counts. We were trading
baskets with them down the
stretch and you're not going to

Los Angeles led 58-53 after a ·
see-saw first half that saw both
teams put points on the board In
streaks.
"1, really can't fault our effort," said New Yor!&lt; Coach Stu
Jackson. "I thought we had a
good effort under tough clreum·
stances. We jus! couldn't come
up with the big play to push us
over the hump. They played well,
but we leave here knowing we
can play with these people.''
Asked if the Knlcks' 2-2 road
trip was a · success, Jackson ~&gt;encoutaging.''
Colorado State rallied from a
replied, "We're still going home
49-40
deficit to close to within 1 at
In first place. If that means it's a
59-58
on a Mitchell foul shot with
successful trip, then so be lt.. But
that's our objective to be in first 1: 58 left In .the game.
Marshall led 31-29 at the half,
place."
The Lakers scored the first six but the Rams rallied for a lead of
points of the second half to lead 36-34 with 2: 36 gone In the second
64-53 before Ewing hit a layup to half. Back-to-back goals by Rostart a 15-0 run that gave the land gave Marshall" a 38-36 lead
Knicks the lead 68-64 with 4: 49 with 17:25 remaining in the
game.
·
remaining In the third quarter.
Altman said Scott Williams
Los Angeles scored the next 10
points to lead 74-68 with 2: 15 left timely three-point shots In the
in the quarter. Mark McNama· second halt set the stage for the'
ra's layln with 29 seconds left In win.
the quarter put the Lakers ahead
for good at 80-79.
Mark Jackson's 3-pointer with
6: 25 to play In the game pulled
the Knlcks to within four at 97-93,
but Johnson scored five consecu·
live points as the Lakers built the
lead to 12 at 110-98 with 2: 14 to
play and put the game out of
reach.
·
"Unfortunately I had th•ee

Ohio.

.
Springfield,

The Deily Sutluai-Pqe 3

Pom811r:Yo1-Micklaport. Ohio

Paga 2-The Deily S.ltlnal
Ponwov Mk111rport. Ohio
Monday, December 4, 1989

'

�By The Bend

Bengals re~ain alive with 21-0·· triutnph
• ...en:ret'kU.,Wi

Saturday's

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blowout loser to Boris Becker two .
days ago durlng the round· robin,
came back with one of the
mightiest performances of his
career Sunday to upset Becker in
the $3.1 million Nabisco Masters
final.

IUram UC...Ial

aiCllarWtt.N.C.

DPn'-aiRaae•a...c

NEW YORK (UP!) - A day
after he gave warning that tennis
can be a strange game, Stefan
Edberg went out and demon·
strated what he meant.
Edberg, a winner of only one
tournament all year and a

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Gophers humble Toledo
By Unlled Press IDternatloaal
Not ' even Corporal Klinger
could help Toledo Saturday .
Actor Jamie Farr, a native of
Toledo who played the character
of Corporal Klinger on ·the
television series "MASH," was
guest coach for the University of
Toledo and sat on the bench
during the Rockets' game
against Minnesota .
Unfortunately for Farrand the
Rockets, Minnesota won 85-70 as
the Golden Gophers reeled orr 11
straight points early In the
second half and Wlllle Burton led
all scorers with 22 points.
Minnesota coach Oem Has·
kins had been hounded by press
reports that his club was not able
to perform well on tbe road. A
week ago, Minnesota was upset
on the road by Cincinnati.
Miami, led by freshman forward Craig Michaelis with 20
points, beat Cincinnati 63-59. The
Redsklns never trailed and led
until UC 's Levertls Robinson
gave the Bearcats a bx1ef59-59 tie
·when he hit two free throws with
55 seconds to play.
Two seconds later, however,
sophomore guard Derek Walton
put Miami back on top with two
free throws, then Iced the ~rame
with another pair of charily
tosses with 12 seconds left. Both
teamJ now are 2·1 on the season.
At Dayton, Anthony Corbitt
ICOred 18 points and hit eight
stralgllt free throws in the last
I

I

Community calendar
SUNDAY
CHESTER -The Community
Choir, under the direction of Sue
Matheny wlllhpresent "A Magn lflcent Season, " Christmas Conlata at the Mt. Herman United
Brethren Church on Sunday at
7:30p.m. The church Is located In
the Texas community and Rev.
Robert Sanders Invites the
public.
RACINE -The December
meeting or the Southern Junior
High School Booster Association
. has been changed from Dec. 7 aU
p.m. to Sunday at the junior high
buDding.
MONDAY
LETART FALLS- The Letart
Falls PTO will meet Monday at
the school at 7 p.m. Mrs . Shirley
Sayre's class will present the
program.
POMEROY -The Drew Webs·
ter Post39 Auxiliary wlllhave Its
Christmas dinner at Craw's
Restaurant on Monday at 6 p.m.
COLUMBIA

TOWNSHIP

-The board of trustees of Columbia Township will meet Monday
at 7: ·30 p.m. at the fire station.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Garden aub will have Its
Christmas dinner at the legion
hall on Monday at 6: 30 p.m. A
party will follow at the home of
Betsy Horky.
'

RACINE -The Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday
at 7: 30 p,m. at the residence of
the clerk.
LETART- The Letart Town·
ship trustees will meet Monday
at 6 p.m. at tl)e office building.

POMEROY - The Meigs Local Band Boosters will meetMonday at 7 p.m. in the high
school band room.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Poml!roy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, wll meet In regular session
at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Chester
hall. There will be a potluck
dinner and a $3 gift exchange.
Officers are to wear chapter
dresses.
MIDDLEPORT -There will
be an Alzhelmers support group
meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
qverbrook Center. A film will be
shown and the evening topic will
concern the holidays. Shirley
Findley. group leader Invites the
public. Refreshments will be
served.
POMEROY - The Salvation
Army will be taking applications
for Christmas food baskets and
toys for low income residents on
Tuesday and Wednesday from 10
a.m. to noon, and 1-4 p.m. each
day .
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle·
port Lodge 363 F and AM wlll
have Its open Installation on
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. All masons ,
their wives, and guests are
invited to attend. Refreshments
will be served.
REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Township Trustees will have
thler regular meeting on Tues.
day at 6; 30 p.m. at the Reedsville
Fire Station.
GALLIPOLIS -The Past Ma·
trans of Evangeline Chapter No.
172, Order of the Eas.tern Star
will have their Christmas dinner

.

PIID• 6
.

on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
Holiday Inn In Gallipolis. There
will be a $5 to $6 gift exchange.
POMEROY -TheLadieAuxll·
lary Fraternal Order of Eagles
2171 wlll have a meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. Those attend- lng are to bring a covered dish for
. the potluck, and also something
for the food baskets which will be
made up for the needy .
HARRISONVILLE -The Past
Matrons of Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of the Eastern Star
will meethat the Country Harv·
es I House In Albany for their
.annual Christmas dinner on
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. There will be
a gift exchange at this time also.
RUTLAND -The Rutland VII·
!age Council will meet at 7p.m. at
the civic center on Tuesday, not
Dec. 12 as usual.
POMEROY - The annual
Christmas dinner of Drew Webs·
ter Post 39, American Legion,
will he held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the hall.
POMEROY ~ Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, will meet In regular session
Tuesday at the Chester hall.
There will be a potluck dinner at 6
p.m. and a $3 gift exchange.
Officers are to wear chapter
dresses .
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE -All parents
and students ofthe Eastern Local
School District are. Invited to
serve on the committee for the
kindergarten through grade 12
grading policy and honor roll
attainment. The first meeting
will beWednesdayai7p.m. ln the
high school cafeteria.
·

Edberg regains fonn, wins Nabisco Masters

·w•.w•we • Marietta

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ByBOBUIM
UPI Spoi1S WrUer
CLEVELAND - The battle of
Ohio was no contest.
Cincinnati's 21·0 thrashing of
the Browns in frozen Cleveland
Stadium Sunday . allowed the
defending AFC champion Ben·
gals to keep their playoff hopes
alive with a 7·6 record. The
Browns, 7-5·1, have not scored In
six quarters and are winless in
their last three games.
Houston's win over Pittsburgh
put the Oilers in first place In the
AFC Central with an 8·5 mark. A
loss Sunday would have ail but
eliminated the Bengals from the
playoff race.
"This ·Is our. biggest rivalry,
especially here at Cleveland,"
said Cincinnati nose tackle Tim
Krumrie. "By shutting them out
21·0. it just sets the tone for the
remainder of the season."
Boomer Esiason threw touch·
down passes of 38 yards to Tim
McGee and 9 yards to Rodney
Holman, anq James Brooks ran 1
yard for the other score as the
Bengals handed the Browns their
first shu tout since the 1984 season
opener at Seattle and their first
home whitewash since a 9·0 loss
to the Rams Nov. 27.1977.
Cincinnati's last shutout came
Ina 14·0 win against Minnesota In
CleveiBDd during third quarter actloa Ia Cleve·
DMNG CATCH - Cincinnati's Tim McGee
1980. The Browns only scoring
land Sumlay . The Bengals won, 21-0. (UPI)
dives
for
a
38-yard
·
touchdown
pass
against
chances c ame when Matt Bahr
missed 48· and 51-yard field goals
Brooks scored two plays later. took advantage of Cleveland Sam Wyche, who failed to unveil
In the first half.
"We have a lot of mending to
"I don't think any play In the errors to put the game away.
his much-publicized secret wea·
first half can turn the tide of the
do," said Cleveland coach Bud
On Cleveland's second posses· pon. ''Tiley had everything going
game, " Minnifield said.
Carson. " This ball club has .not
sian of the second half, Leon against them and they come up
Still, that play gave the Ben- · White picked off a Kosar pass here and win 21·0."
played well in three weeks and
gals all the points they would Intended for Ozzle Newsome and
we're looking for answers."
Esiason gained 19 yards on two
need all day.
Despite temperatures in the
returned it 22 yards to the carries, and was not sacked. ·
Esiason completed 14 of 32 Browns 45. That set up the
20s and a wind ch!ll factor of 20
''This Is finally one time where
passes for 197 yards, and was McGee touchdown on a flea
below :zero, 76,996 fans showed up
we came In somewhere when
picked off twice in the fourth flicker play In which Brooks ran
to watch c game crucial to the
there are 80,000 people against us
quarter . Cleveland's Bernie right and pitched the ball back to and we went out and we played
playoff hopes of bo.th teams.
Brooks fumbled the ball away
Kosar completed 15 of 30 passes Eslason.
and we won,·' Esiason saidfor 130 yards and an Interception
on the Bengals opening drive,
The Browns gained 88 yards on
Two possessions later, Reggie
before being lifted for Mike Langhorne fumbled after catch·
and then the Browns stopped
23 carries, but 27 ofthose came on
Pagel In the final period. Kosar ing a Kosar pass and Carl Zander · an Eric ·Metcalf run after the
Craig Taylor on fourth-and-two
complained of a sore elbow.
on Cincinnati' s second possesscore was 21-0.
picked the ball out of the air and
"The arm Is a little sore, but I returned it 25 yards to the 11.
sion. The third time Cincinnati
"We've had no continuity over
don't think 't was a factor In our Three plays later Eslason hit
had the ball, Brooks fumbled
the last three weeks," said
again, but the Cleveland fumble
offense," Kosar said . "There's Holman, who used a referee as a
Newsome, who caught two
recovery was negated by a
no question we're not In synch. pick to get open on linebacker
passes to move past Don May·
PllrSOnal foul on cornerback . We are making entirely too many Clay Matthews.
nard ·and Into fifth place on the
Frank Mlnnlf!eld that gave the
mistakes."
all-time receiving chart with 634
''I am so proud of our football
In the second half, the Bengals team," said Cincinnati coach
Bengals a first and goal at the 3.
catches.

Monday, December 4, 1989

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The Daily Sentinel

five minutes to lead Dayton to a
68-62 win over Princeton.
Dayton trailed 32-30 at the
Intermission, but opened the
second half by scoring the first
eight points, and never gave up
the lead. Norm Grevey had a
basket and a 3-pointer, and
Corbitt converted a 3-polnt play
that gave Dayton a 38-32 lead.
The closest Princeton got was
53-49 at 5:38 on Matt Eastwick's
3·polnt goal.
In major tournament games
Saturday In Involving Ohio
teams, Ohio State lost 8!-59 to
Oklahoma State In the consola·
tlon game of the Tournament of
Champions at Charlotte, N.C.,
Ohio University beat Bradley
72-53 In the consolation game of
the Hawkeye Classic al Iowa
City, Akron captured Its Zip
Classic with a 63-53 overtime win
over New Orleans and Wright
State surprised South Alabama
9tHl2 In the semifinals of the
Lapchlck Memorial Tournament
In New York.
In Saturday's Ohio Athletic
Conference action, It was Mus. klllgUm over Capital50-49, Otter·
beln over John Carroll 97-87 and
Ohio Northern over Mount Union
~.

In other regular season games,
It was AJhlaml 79, Slippery Rock
75, Findlay 85, Heidelberg 63,
W&amp;J (Pa.) 61, Oberlin 57, Tiffin
119, Ohio U-Beimont 83, Shawnee
State 93, Wallh IN and Oakland
!Mich. ) 82, Defiance 67.
'v

This gave Edberg a sweep over
the world's top two players, Ivan
Lendl and Becker, In the space of
24 hours.
"Tennis goes in eire! es," the
23-year-old Swede said after
beating Becker, 4-6, 7-6 (8-6), 6-3,
6-1, to claim the winner-take-all
top prize of $150,000. "Today was
a very good day for me. I played
two great matches In a row.
' "It isn't the easiest thing In the
world to beat Lend! and Becker
on two consecutive days. I played
some of my greatest tennis."
Although Edberg virtually ran
away with the match, winning 12
of the last14games, Including the
final five, both men agreed the
outcome was decided by a single
point.
After capturing the opening
set, Becker had set point at 6-51n
the second set tie-breaker. But he
was long on a service return and
Edberg followed with an ace and
,a forehand service return to win
the set and even the match.
"It was that one ball that was
the difference," Becker said. "If
I make that shot it's go~g to be
an easy three-set win for me.
After that he got the confidence.
"That's tennis. ,S ometimes It's
good or bad. It depends on what
·side of the net you're on."
Edberg also sensed the Importance of that point.
"When I took the second set I
could see his game break down a
little," he said. "I started to play
better and better the longer the
match went on."
• ·
Becker, the defending cham·.
pion, steadied enough to break
service In the second game of the
third set, but he could win only
two more games the rest ot the
way.

"I have come back in many
matches, but I can't do It all the
time," said Becker, the Wlm·
bledon and U.S. Open champion.
""Sometimes I'm empty and get
exhausted. That's lhe way it
goes."
Becker self-destructed in the
final set when he committed
three double-f.aults In the fourth
game, allowing Edberg to claim
the decisive service break.
Becker bad a chance to negate ,
Ihis girt In the next game when be
got to break point, but Edberg
held with a smash. The workl's
No. ' 3 player virtually wrapped
up the t!tle with another break In
the sixth game as Becker netted
a forehand volley.
Edberg then served out the
match at love; ending the 3-hour,
2-minute contest with a back·
hand volley off service return;
This was onlytheseconcl title of
the year for Edberg, the other
coming In April, and he has been ·
beaten six limes In finals, includ·
ing Wimbledon where he lost to
Becker .
"I've been waiting for this
win," Edberg said. "It's something I really needed. It's been
very frustrating losln~~:.

TOOTHPICK TREE - Ruth Bennet&amp;, aiCIIIIf
with several other reoldeats of Overbrook Ceater
helped to make this toothpick tree whlcb wu

Lunch menus have been announced for the following schools
for the week of Dec. 4.
Eutern Local
Monday: hot dog with sauce,
peas, fruit, and milk.
Tuesday: chicken patty, veget·
1bles and dip, fruited jello,
~ookle, ·mtlk.
Wednesday: pizza, lettuce
•alad, fruit , and milk.
Thursday: bologna and cheese
&gt;andwlch. french fries, fruit,
cake, and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.
Carleton Sehool
Monday: hot dog on a bun,
vegetable soup, crackers, fruit,
and milk.
Tuesday: sausage gravy over
biscuits, mixed vegetables, fruit,
and milk·
Wednesday: chili, peanut butter sandwich, crackers, fruit,
and mUk.
Thursday: tuna casserole, but·
tered peas, roll; fruit, and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.

PolnsitHias 17 celorsJ

v-.

(Walch lor our Chrltl- Optn Housel

Open Dally 9 AM-5 P.M.
Sunday 1 P.M.·5 P.M.

HUBIARDS GREENHOUSE

syr...., Ololo

Home

Past matrons to meet

C"ris

'
Stefatn Edberg of Sweden

DISPLAYS TROPHY holds 'up
wtnaer'o trophy after capturlal the Nablsco Masters final with a
4-8, H, 6-3 and H victory over Boris Becker Sunday. (UPI)

The Past Matrons of Evangeline Chapter 172 Order of the
Eastern Star will have Its Christ·
mas diMer on Tuesday at 6 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn In Galllpolla. A
$5 to $6 ilft exchange will be held
at this time also.

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

WE STEPS!

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

the
Ads

4-PEPSI'S; 16 OL
Ullll'ED
DEUVDT AliA

11/(rlt/".f.IJI(

Domino's Pizza

992·2124
PO.IOY, OHIO

..

Educational exhibit
Brightly colored table cloths,
napkins. dishes, and flower arrangements decorated 12 card
tables recently at the Christmas
Flower Show sponsored by Meigs
County Garden Clubs at Royal
Oak Resort.
Each garden club was to make
a decorative luncheon setting for

SlindereUa
class meets

given to ·the Meigs County Mu~eum. The tree Is
presently on display at the mu~eum.

Christmas · show

the show which made up a special
educational exhibit.
Clubs taking part In the exhibit
were Vlrglniq Chadwell, Bend of
the River Garden Club and
Chester Garden Club: Marjorie
Purtell, Fernwood Garden Club;
Brenda and Krista! Bolin,
Friends and Flowers Garden

Club; Margaret Edwards and
JoAnn Fetty, Rutland Friendly
Garden Club; Rae Reynolds and
Betsy Horky, Middleport Garden
Club; Marjorie Fetty, Middleport Amateur Gardeners; Eva
Robson, Rutland Garden Club;
Melanie Stethem, Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts; Allegra
Will and -Pauline 'Atkins, Star
Garden Club;. Betty Milhoan,
Wlldwood Garden Club; and
. Alley Thompson and Addalou
The Olive Township Trustees Lewis, Winding Trail Garden
will have their regular meeting Club.
oil Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
The garden clubs will display
Reedsville Fire Statton.
the arrangements oa Sunday as
part of the holiday happenings at
the Meigs County Museum.

Visitors named

Jea:n, Norman. and Ronnie
Wood visited during Thanksg)vlng with Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brlckles, Jeffrey, and Michael at
Germantown.
Traveling from Pease Air
Force Base, N.H. to German·
town for the holiday was Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Carrie,
Cathy, and Donna.

Auxiliary to meet
The Ladles Auxiliary Frater·
nal Qrder of Eagles 2171 will have
a potluck meeting on Tuesday at
7 p.m. Those attending are to
br lng a covered dish and something for the food baskets which
will be made up for the needy_
\

, .. . . .~~~tMt.~~....~'!'-t.-YY-'-~-~.._,_.._~.._.

Officers will be Installed at the
regular meeting of the Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM on Tues·
day at 7:30p.m.
The installation is open and all
masons, their wives, and guests.
Refreshments will follow the
installation.

t

CHRISTMAS TREES

f~

BRADFORD'S

t
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FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Turn East at Darwin
onto ' Rt. 681, go 4 mi. t.o Mil~post 13. Turn South
on gravel road, 1112 miles to grove.

-~~J.~.!~!'..!I~!~.. --~.e~~~;..!~~~-"!~

FINAL 2 DAYS

Due to a massive overstock situation. this
White Sewing Machine Warehouse is now
offering for_ sale to the public a limited
number of new special 1990 HEAVY DUTY
Zig Zag sewing machines that are made of ME·
TAL and sew on all fabrics; Levi's, canvas.
upholstery, nylon, stretch. vinyl. silk, EVEN
SEWS ON LEATHER I No attachments needed
for button holes (any size), monograms, hems,
sews on buttons. satin. stitches. overcasts.
dams. appliques and more. Just set dials and
see magic happen without old fashioned cams
or programmers. These HEAVY DUTY MA·
CHINES are suitable for home, profeasional or
school room sewing. 10 year warra"ty.

Monday, December 4th.

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Tuesday, December
9 A.M. --8 p.M.

GUARANTEE
We will provide complete
manufadurer's warranty

PHONE 992-2284

Sale Held at White Warehouse

• Up to 25 year factory
warranty
• Up to 1 yearfree service

Check, Cash Welcome. VISA &amp; Mastercard
accepted. 90 Days Same As Cash, Beneficial
Financing. Brand new in factory sealed cartons .

LOCAL SERVICE AND
LESSONS AVAILABLE

5t~

I

services with all
machines sold,
even at these incredibly
low prices.

YOUR PRICE WITH AD 1139
WITHOUT THIS AD 1399

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9 A.M.-5 P.M.

OUR

MAIN STRm
.,.

POMEROY, OHIO

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Hls\MI.clA Ia \stL ~=.:x
)&gt;

MAIN STREET

PAlliNG

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Trustees to meet

Cindy Lambert lost the most
weight in the Nov. 20 Five Points
class of Sllnderella.
Nellie Casto and Kate Stone
tied for weight ioss In the Nov. 21
class of Sllnderella at Mason,
W.Va.
In the Monday night class,
Mary Browning lost the most
weight and Cindy Lambert was
the runner up,
In the Tuesday night Mason
class, tour new members were
taken In and Joan Vaughan lost
the most weight with Nellie Casto
as runner up.
Gasses begin at 6 p.m. and new
members are being accepted .

FUMIIUB, APPUOO~, JY'S, FLOOR COYRWG
106 un IIIII
OliO
-f-

put on display. Here, Lessle Osborae, kaeellalf,
and Lee Ann Cundiff, are adding some flnl•hlalf
touches to the display.

Lunch menus

Poinsoltia Hanging laolrtts 01111 r•..,
Chrillmat Cactus, F... laolrttJ,
llerriocl Holy Tras ..,. ~.tt Show
Plants, Uvt and Cut Christmas TraL
Far lht l:ovod One's Gran l ...t!J,
Monun.n• Sprays, c...,.,

Qutlllg Futtllthltilt Fot

DISPLAY- The Home Ecoaomlcs I claae a&amp;
Meigs 111gb School reecently completed a COUJ'IIe
In aewlng BDd texUies, aDd the outfits made were

Lodge to meet

. NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON

992-5776 '

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P1 at I

The Dely Stnliutl

....---Local news briefs... - continued from page 1
from an auto accident on State Route 143 to Veterans Memorial
Hoapltal.
Mlclclleport at 2:45a.m. transported Ersel Blevins trom from
North Third Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 1: 23 a.m., Rutland transported Garry Cremeans from
Depot St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
Center lor Bertha Rlabtbouse to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Scipio Township Fire Department was called at 12: 52 p.m. to
a brush fire on the PhUllps property on Route 692.
Pomeroy Fire Department and EMS unit were called to a auto
accident at the Intersection of Route 7 and Union Ave. all: 11
p.m. PhWp Call was transported from the scene to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Bonnie Moore reluse&lt;ltreatment.
Pomeroy at 9:03p.m. was called to Naylor's Run lor Charles
Stewart,to Holzer Medical Center. At10! 27 p.m., Pomeroy went
to Pooler Road lor Trlna Lee who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 3:11a.m. Sunday, Tuppers Plains was called to Route 681
for Gerald Barringer who was treated but not transported.
Racine at 8:39p.m. was called to Elm St. for Marie Spaun to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Pomeroy at 1: 56 p.m. transported Edna Leach from Oak
Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:38p.m., Pomeroy was called to Second St. for Lisa Lilly
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
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By United Preu lnteru&amp;loaal
factor that made It feel like 20
Wind-blown snow burled roads degrees below zero.
and made travel nearly ImpossiNew Hampshire, where
ble Monday In northern New temperatures were In the single
England, and trlgld tempera- digits, also reported blowing
tures coupled with bracing winds snow and bitterly cold wind
sent the homeless.crowding Into chills.
shelters throughout the East
Icy winds also whipped the
Coast.
mid-Atlantic stales, locking most
High winds !rom a winter ofthereglonlntotemperatures In
storm that dumped up to 2 feet of the high teens and low 20s. New
snow In northern Maine and 8 York, Trenton and Philadelphia
Inches In Vermont over the shared 18 degree temperatures
weekend made dr1vlng !reacher-· early Monday morning. Temperous. Gusts ol up to 50 mph were atures In Richmond reached 23,
reported In some areas.
the NWS said.
''We're getting a lot of windThe winds rode In on a storm
blown snow," said Thomas Cur- system that started $0Uth of
ran, a state pollee dispatcher In Nantucket Sunday and IntensiHoulton, Maine. "There Is no fied quickly, dropping the frigid
travel now.·· ·
temperatures on the region, a
The National Weather Service weather service spokesman said.
said a strong northerly wind and
New York's emergency policy
• 'blizzard-like conditions" burled for br lnglng homeless people to
much of the area In shoulder-high shelters went Into effect at4 p.m.
drifts and packed a wind chill Sunday and complaints about

Middleport; 19 grandchlldren,13
great-grandchildren,
and one
Orville Thomas Chambers, 73,
great-great-grandchild,
along
.
who resided at the Presbyterian
nieces
and
nephews.
with
several
Retirement VIllage In North
when his was hit by a truck as be
By United Pre1a lnternallonal
Mrs. Hackett was Rreceded In
Dallas, Texas, died there Friday.
At least a dozen people, were
walked on U.S 20 In Wood County.
death
by
her
husband,
George
W.
Formerly of Middleport, he Is
kWed In acclden ts on Ohio
Xenia: Tabetha L. Vince, 25,
Hackett,
Sr.,
an
Infant
son,
survived by his wtre, Marlon, two
· roadways during the weekend,
Xenia, killed when her hit a
Joseph
Edward
Hackett,
and
two
, sons, Thomas D. Chambers,
· the State Highway Patrol reculvert along a Greene County
Lakehurst, N. J., and William grandchildren, Marsha ijlsler
porled Monday.
road.
and
Thomas
Scally,
Jr.,
along
Herbert Chambers, Pittsburgh,
Zanesville: RoUin V. Davis, 67,
The count showed two deaths
, Pa., a daughter; Sara Elizabeth with several brothers and
Friday night, eight Saturday and
and Maxine Davis, 66, both of
sisters.
Jordan, Dallas, Texas, three
two Sunday. Three double- Pittsburgh, kllled In a twoWake services will be held on
grandsons, one sister and
latallty accidents were reported vehicle accident on Interstate 70
at
7:
30
p.m.
at
the
Wednesday
brother-In-law, Esther and Willis
In Musklngum County.
Saturday.
Aleshire, Dayton, a sister-In-law, Ewing Funeral Home. , Funeral
In
a
Columbus: Harold ArmenA
Pittsburgh
couple
died
Martha Chambers of Mlclclleport, services will be held at10 a.m. on
County
crash,
'
an
Musklngum
trout,
41, and his mother Annaand a nephew, Eric Chambers, Thursday at the Sacred Heart
Edgerton couple was killed In a
belle, 61, both of Reynoldsburg,
Church, Mulberry Ave., PomeMlclclleport.
· Williams Counly crash, and a kllled when Harold's car jumped
roy.
The
Rev.
Fr.
Robert
Boror
Memorial services were held
Reynoldsburg man and his a gllard rail and hit a bridge
at the Presbyterian VIllage wpll officiate and burial will be In
mother were kUled In a Franklin abutment along Interstate 70 In
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
CemeChapel today (Monday). He was
County
accident.
Columbus.
tery.
Friends
may'
call
anytime
pteej!ded In death by his parents,
Anc;thet victim was a
Montpelier: Charles Albert·
at
the
after
1
p.m.
Wednesday
Herber I and De II a Cu rtls
pedestrian.
son, 35 and Janice M. Albertson,
luneral
home.
Chambers and a brother, Rl·
33, both of Edgerton, killed when
Killed were:
In lieu of . flowers donations
chard J. " Chambers of
Friday
van driven by Mr. Albertson
may
be
made
to
!he
Sacred
Heart
Middleport.
New Philadelphia: Keith A. collided with another van on Ohio
Renovation Fund.
Carver, 20, Kensington, killed Route 49 In Williams County.
Mary Tyler
when his car hit an embankment
Sunday
Walter White
along a Carron County road.
Circleville: wetsey L. Bode, 29,
Mary Ernestine Tyler, 84, of
Walter W. (13111) White, 79,128
Centerville: Thomas C. Laurelville, killed when his car
the William Brook Christian Ebenezer St., Pomeroy, died
Cleaver, 45, Centerville, kWed slid oft a Plckaway County road
Home at Worthington, a former \Sunday at Veterans's Memorial
when his .car struck a cement and hit a tree.
resident of Meigs County, died Hospital.
Oeveland: Sylvester Penny,
culvert on a Centerville street.
there Saturday.
60, Cleveland, killed when his car ·
Born on ~uly 8, 1910 In Meigs
Saturday
Born on Aug. 11, 1905 at Long County, he was the son of Walter
Walbrldge: Joseph D. Van- collided with another on a CleveBottom, she was the daughter of P. White and Lucy Jane Moore
sick, 82, Chatam, Onta~lo, killed land street.
the late Jacob Dorst and Rosie White.
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Powell Dorst. She was a cook at
He Is survived by his wife,
. Meigs General Hospital prior to Margaret M. White, Pomeroy,
, her rettremeut.
. two sons, Walter D. White, Rio
• She Is survived by four brothGrande, and Kenneth R. White,
uwomea Alive" to meet
Council to meet
. ers, Carl and Ernest . Dorst, Pomeroy; two daughters, Mrs.
There will be a "Women Alive"
Chester
Council
No.
323,
PomerQY, Archie Dorst of Colum- Ferris (Margaret) Justis, Phomeeting and Christmas banquet
Daughters
or
America,
will
meet
,bus, and Pearl Dorst of Balti- enix, Ar., and Mrs. Larry
Tuesday evening at 7: 30. Noml· on Monday, 6: 30 p.m. In the
more, Ohio, along with several
(Agnes) Sellers, Portland; a
nations ol officers will be held banquet room of Shoney's Res·
and nephews.
step-daughter, Kay Klonowski, ·and quarterly birthdays will he taurantln Point Pleasant, W.Va.
' Besides her parents she was Canton; two sisters, Mrs. Carroll
observed. The kitchen commit- The speaker will be Wanda
preceded In death by her hus(Eva ) McKenzie, Gallipolis, and
Faulks.
tee will serve the refreshments.
band, Albert Tyler, and brothers, Allie Hetz, Oregon; and a
Edgar and Oalr Dorst, and a
brother, Ell White, Minersville;
sister, Flos51e Petty. She was a
Continued from page 1
nine grandchildren, and four
member of the Hemlock Grove
great-grandchildren.
Church.
He was preceded In death by private properly on Route 681.
following· a collision with Louise
Funeral services wll be held at
his first wife, Hettie Marie White,
Roger Murpby, Route 1. Reeds- Myers, of Pomeroy, at the
1 p.m. Wednsday at the Ewing his parents and a sister, Freda ville, reported he bad just gotten Intersection ol Routes 7 and 143.
Funeral Home. Burial will be In Ebersbach.
,
his Chevrolet Blazer running, According to the report, Stone
Keebaugh Cemetery. Friends ·
Funeral services will be held
had gotten out of the vehicle to was northbound on 143 and had
may call at the funeral home Thursday ill 1 p.m at the Ewing · put some wrenches In a tool box stopped. Myers started to pass
Tuesday !rom 7 to 9 p.m.
Funeral Home. Burial will be In
In his van, when he heard a click, when Stone made a lell turn Into
Meigs Memory Gardens,
looked up and saw the Blazer the side or Myers' vehicle.
Friends may call at the funeral
moving. The vehicle went off the
There was moderate damage
Randy
borne, Tuesday, 7 to 9 p.m. and driveway and over a 900 lt. to both vehicles.
Rudy Alexander Warden, 28, of W~nesday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. embankment, striking a tree.
No Injuries were reported.
..._, W.Ya., died Thlnday in
There was heavy damage to
The sheriff's department also
Wiad ems
Medical
Center
the vehlc Ie.
reports that Robin Slater, RuHolpln', W"n:hcster,
At1:30p.m. Saturday, Thomas tland, was arrested Saturday
Ben Dec. 24, 1960. Ul SchenecContinued from page 1
0. Stone, of Harrisonville, was afternoon on a parole violation.
!IIIJ, N.Y., he- tile son or Cluir- suite.
,
&amp;:rested and jailed on a charge or Slater has been transferred to
Wilden m of Marlinsburg,
Asked If he was conltdento(the drlvfng under the l,nfluence, Athens County.
W.Va. He-~~~ auto mechanic.
allied leaders' reaction to the
Alia IUI'Viving 111e his wife, shipboard summit, Bush ren • 11 A. (W)'IIl) Warden of sponed, "Well, that's .that I'm
Un ••: daugbtt:r, B!lllldy M. W81- here to discuss with my friend of
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) - A hands of the defendants. In
dal. llld IWO step-sons, Steven A. longstanding," and, ''I'll be In a
Dint and Tony A. Dust, all of better position to answer that Soviet Union firm has llledsuttln particular, their value as show
bollle.
when we hav~ . our press U.S. District Court against an horses has declined due to the
Ohio company and two Buckeye absence of a proper training
Scnices will be Wednesday, 1 conference.''
State residents.
regimen and lack or proper
p.m. 11 Foglesong Funeral Home
Woerner opened the NATO
The suit, filed last Friday, food."
wldl tile Rev. George Hoschar· summit Monday by calling for "a
A copy of the sales contract,
oflki•ing.
new European order" and say- claims East-West International
ahd
George
Cowan,
both
of
attached
to the suit, shows that
Friends may call Tuesday, 2 10 4 Ing, "These consultations are the
Medina,
and
Walter
Threllall,
a
payment was to be made within
p.m. and 7 10 9 p.m.
lifeblood of this alliance." It was
the first time In the 40-year Powell veterinarian, have not 10 days In U.S. dollars by a letter
history or the alliance that paid for eight horses, thtee of credit through the Bank of
carriages, some harness and a Foreign Economic Affairs of the
Rhoda Hackett
leaders met twice In one year.
sled
purchased In August 1988 USSR In Moscow.
Bush arrived In Brussels Sunthrough
Skotolmport Foreign
Rhoda H. Hackett, 87, of 428
day night from the r.tedlterraSouth Second Ave., Middleport,
nean summit, where torrential Trade Organization or Moscow.
The sult, 111ed by a Cincinnati
died Sunday at Overbrook Cen·
rains failed to dampen his upbeat
firm, seeks return of the
law
Veterans Memorial
ter, Middleport, following an
spirit. He went directly to the
20
percent
of
their
value
horses,
extended Illness. She was a
Saturday admissions ·- Garry
Chateau, where he spent the
housewife.
Cremeans, Middleport; Kenneth
night and dined privately with as lost profit, and the difference
Born on June 26, 1902, at Black
Leesburg, Albany; Walter
West German Chancellor Hel- between the amount the horses
bring at sale and the purchasing
Betsy, W. Va., she was the
White, Pomeroy; Keith Musser,
mut Kohl.
price of $139,381.50.
daughter of James Matthew
Racine.
White House press secretary ·
The suit says the horses are
Ingram and Theoda Meadows
Saturday discharges - DeMarlin Fllzatwer. said Kohl ~;on­
being
unlawfully
detained
at
Ingram.
lores
M. Aelker, William N.
gratulated the president on the
Threlfall's
farm,
the
Stallion
She was a member of the
Pickens,
Wilbur Smith.
outcome ol the superpower
In
southern
Delaware
Station,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
Sunday
admissions - Samuel
summit.
County.
aDd Its Woman's Club, a past
Meadows,
Letart, W.Va.
''The chancellor said that the
suit
also
claims
the
The
president of the American LeSunday discharges - Kenneth
discussions there had pushed
gion Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Leesburg, Magda Wolle:
forward East-West cooperation "horses have suffered at the
Post 39, a charter member and
and were a demonstration of
past president or the Meigs
America's commitment to the
County Salon Eight and Forty.
luture of Europe," Fitzwater
She Is survived by four daughsaid.
ters and sons-In-laws, Mary
Hackett Pickens, Middleport;
The two leaden alfl!ed that
Barbara Hackett and Don E.
NATO would remain the comerMullftl, Middleport; RoN Hack- ltone of the W•t'l efforts to
ett and Joaepb Tribble, St.
manage peaceful change In EuAII:Jua, W. VL; and Yv011ne rope, headded.
HacbttSeally,CapeCoral, Fla.;
They a~ to dlaa,ree on tbe
Jnd two and daughter•IDla11', Mlr"'ll and Lucille Donalee touchy quesdon of arms 1UppUed
to Central American leftbt
)fadrett, Ft. Myers, Fla; and
Georp, Jr. and Phyllis Hackett. rebeil.

Meigs announcements

nieces

Deputies. ••

w.ro.m

Bush.. ~

a. w.

Ohio fmn is sued by Soviet company

Hospital news

JO._,. ·A. WADE, M.D. Inc:
ft••s. v••n IOIPIIAL
Ul, 108 I IIBAT

1111111
"IIIM . . . Aitr'

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heating phoned Into emergency · In the South, clear, dry
lines reached 2,200 late Sunday weather persisted over New
Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Arnight.
There was a gale warning kansas and Louisiana with the
Issued for the coastal areas of only precipitation being llgbt
Delaware and south New Jersey, rain In extreme south Texas.
where the wlndchlllfactorwas 10 Temperatures were generally In
the 50s with a few low-60 readings
degrees below zero.
and highs tor the entire
Sunday,
Elsewhere, westerly . winds
area
will
be In the 50s an!l 60s
brought unseasonably warm
today,
except
for low 70s possible
weather to the northern Plains
In
far
south
Texas.
early Monday, while a cold front
Warm weather continued to
chilled the Ohio Valley and upper
·
grace
the California coast while
Great Lakes with temperatures
heavy rains In the Pacific
In the single digits and teens.
The warm winds kept early Northwest washed the Puget
morning temperatures above the Sound area as well as the
Olympics and Cascades·. The
40-degre~ mark In the Dakotas.
Pacific moisture riding In on the only two Cascade ski resorts ·
westerlY winds brought cloudy opened so far this year - Mt.
skies to Minnesota, Wisconsin Baker and White Pass - were
and Iowa, and raised the posslbll· forced to close because the
lty of freezing rain and sleet over downpour ruined the snow.
Nearly 3 Inches of weekend
those states, forecasters said.
The cold spot In the nation's snow fell on Mount Baker.
More rain was forecast for
midsection Monday morning was
Sault Ste. Marie, Mlch, with a ·Monday with temperatures exreading of 6 degrees, while It was pected to rise Into the 50s, • or 5
16 In Detroit and 19 In degrees warmer than usual.
Indianapolis.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORr,;crST TO 7 AM Est 12·5-89

•

30

0

II

-RAIN

Em.) SHOWERS

ft

Warm "
Cold
" ' Static
Occluded
FRONTS:
Map show$ mi,.mum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded a,.a is lorecast
to receive precipitation IndiCate!!
.
UPt

LAMPS
BOOKCASES ·
OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS il
CROCKS
BEDS
;
DRESSERS PRIMITIVES ~
DI!Y SINKS TABLES
;!;
POCKET WATCHES
~
"n• llllt .,.., N_,, 111111':
1124 L MAIN
992·2526
POMIIOY OHIO
GLASS

ZETOR liAUOIS
AUlHOIIZm
ECHO· YARDMAN DEALER

Stephanie Haggy and Crystal
Summerfield werevlsltorso!Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith, and Jo
Stacy and Daniel Worley.
Mr. and M.rs. Robert Bailey Sr..
were recent visitors of relatives
In Florida and other places of
Interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp
were Th an ksg IvI ng dl nnerguests
of her grandmother, Mrs. Peterson, New Lima Road, and other
relatives.
·

Recent visitors of Ida Murphy Robbie Murphy, Debbie and Tim
and Iva Johnson were Helen Desmond, Cas.sle and ,Justin, of
Eblin, Suzanne Warner, Thelma Spring Hill; and Cherly Holley,
Giles, DebbleandTimDesmond, Calvlnlee and Justin were Sunand Cassie and Justin Michael, day visitors of Mrs . J .R. Murphy
Spring Hill, Fla,; Robbie and Iva Johnson.
Thanksgiving Day guests ol
Murp!Jy, Eagle Ridge Road; and
Mr. 'and Mrs. Jeff Bole, Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy ,
Stockport.
Thanksgiving day guests of and Daniel, Daniels, W.Va.; Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. John R . Murphy and Mrs. Doyle Knapp~ Langs·
were Iva Johnson, Robert and · ville; Mr. andMrs.KevlnKnapp,
Robbie Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Michelle, Amy, and As()ley, and
John E. Murphy and Chris, of · Mr .. and Mrs . Charles Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summer·
friend, Amber
Racine, and
Cummings, Syracuse; Mr. and field and Crystal, of Medina; Mr.
Mrs. Jeff Bole, Stockport, and and Mrs. Donald Russell, Harrl·
Elaine, Adam, Eric, and Dickie sonvllle; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Downs, Glouster. They also cele- Russell, Michael, Mandy, and a
brated Mrs. J .R. Murphy's friend, of Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Haggy, Stephanie, and
birthday.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stanley, Brad, were Thanksgiving vis·
Athens; Ruby Diehl, Stella At- !tors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
kins, Harrisonville; Robert and . Russell.

CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
were no winners or the $3 million
jackpot In Saturday evening's
Super Lotto drawing - pushing
the estimated Jackpo_t for Wed·
nesday's game to $6 million.
The winning numbers were 8,
12, 17, 22, 24 and 42.
The lottery commission said

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis A Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 31~
AT&amp;T ...... :..........................«%
Ashland on ......................... 38
· Bob Evans ........ .. .... .. ........... 14
Charming Shoppes ..... .........11 ~
City Holding Co.................. H%
Federal Mogul. ......... ... ....... 20&gt;,1
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 47'%
Heck's ................................. 4%
Key Centurion ...... .......... .... 14%
.Lands' End ................. ....... . 28%
Limited Inc........................ 34%
Multimedia Inc ................... 92'%
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ...... ...... 14'l&lt;l
Shoney's Inc...... ........ .... ..... 13%
Star Bank ................ ........... 20%
Wendy's Inti.. : .. ......... .•. ...... .4)1
Worthington Ind .......... .... .... 24%

.&gt;•id.
•
•Ree*"&lt;te $ .50 discount for ads paid in adYance.
•
•Free 1d1 - Giveaway and Found ads under 15 wcrds will be
run 3 d-r• at no eh•ge

10

15
15

Monthly

15

Announce 111 en Is
1-Card of Thanks
2-ln Memory
J-Annoucements

•Pri'ee of ad fot all capital letters is double price of ad cost .
•7 point hne typt· only used
•sentinel 11 not res.pons•ble for errors after lirst dav, (Check
tor euors first day ad runs in p•per) . Call before 2 :00p .m

4-Giveawav
5- Happy Ads
6- lost and Found
7- Yard Sale (paid in actvance)
8 - Publi c Sele &amp; Auction
9- W•nted to Buy

datt after publ1cltion to m•e correctio"
•Ads tha1 m~o~st b• paid in advance are
Card M ThllftkS .
Happy Ads
In Memoriam

Yard Sate&amp;

Employmenl
Services

•A clauified advertiameflt placed in The Daily Sentinel (a•·

cep1 - classified display , Busineas Card and leg•l noticesl
will also •pp .. r in the Pt. Pleasant Registe r and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune. reaching aver 18 ,000 homes.

11 -- Help Wante-d
12 -Situation Wanted
13 - lnsurance
14- Busin•• Traming

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A .M SATURDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

MONDAY PAPER

- 2 ,00 P.M. MONDAY

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

-

FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

-

2 ·00 P.M . 'TUESDAY
2 00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 00 P.M THURSDAY

-

2 :00PM FRIDAY

1 S- Schools &amp; lnstruclion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miscellaneous
18..:.. Wanted To Co

lihfthlrifill
Cla.~sified patte~

corer the

21 - BusinMI Opport~,.~nity'
10 Loan
23 - Praf•sional Serv ices
22 - Mon~

following telephone ex.chanw•s...
'

.

~eigs County

Galli a County
Aru Code 614

Are• Code 614

446-9thipolis

992 - MiddlllfJOrt
P~t~merov

367 -C hMhire

fW 01 TWit SIU

388-Vinton
245 - Aio Grande
266 - Guy~~n

Dltt.
&amp;a3 - Arlbia Dlst.

379- Walnut

IIGIIUI•.• -··---··----'71

Real Esl ale

Mason Co., WV
Are• Code 304

31-Hom• tor Sele
132 - Mobi(eHomes for Sale
33 - Ferms for Sate
34 - Busineu Buildings
35-Lots &amp; Acre1ge
3&amp; - Real E1111e Wanted

985- Chester
843- Portland
247 - L111art Fellt
949 - ~acine

742- Fiutland
667 - Coolville

675-pt , PltiSIRt
458 - Lilon
576 - Apple Grove
713-MISOf'l
882 - New Havan
895 - Letan
937 - Buffllo

IU§iif1UI
41 42 43 44-

Housesfor Rent
Mobile Homes to r Rent
Farms for Rent
Apartmen t tor Ren t
·~ - Furnished . Rooms

Ia·--·--···~···-·······---···

IIIlA laM. •••••••• --··-··-·--·'tl
0 1 - DIG 11!1 SIIS-·-·'310 &amp; UP
-11!1 sm ..............•.•.- Sirs &amp; ur

' 46,- Spact for Rent

Get Results Fast

111• 8TTIIIS.....•.....•....•.- -...... I &amp; UP

IIDIIMIIl

47 - Wantfld 10 Aflrtl

IIGIIUI-·-·-········-··------'25

---··················-··---····1$0
HOUG: liON. nau YT. 9.J
I'lL ......Jtl - . . . . ~~~, . . .
S .IS OUt MAYUI

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
1 Yz b1tha and a 1 car garage
APPOINTMENT OF
with centr11l heat (g• forced
FIDUCIARY
floor furnace) aituatiKI on
. On Novtmbor 13, 1989. Mulberry Holghto. PomO&lt;oy.
'"the Meip County Probllte Ohio.
Court, Cuo No. 28436,
Coli 992·21 B6 lor further
Barbero J. Whlto. 5! North informltion.
Jemea Roed,

Columbus,

Ohio, 4321 3 wu 1ppointlld
EJCecutrlx of "the estate of

Edn•'J.I.,cho Cooper, de·
ce• , loll of 620 Mulberry
Heighte. Pom.-oy, Metga

County. Ohio. 46769.
Robert E. Buck.
Pro-Judgo
Lllno K. Noolllrood, Clerk
(11), 20,,27: (t2) 4. 3tc
Public Notice
i,U&amp;LIC NOTICE
Off••
w• be r-ed un·
t" the 11th doy of December,

1919, It tO:OO A.M It

the affl01 of hrn•rd V.

Futu. Attorney tt Lllw.
111 'h Witt Second Strwt,
Pomll'oy, Ohio 41718 for
tho purah•• of the Ednt
Coopor ,.-.,.. ,..... ••~
dlnae conolots of 3 btd·
roomo, kltch.,, utility room,

--

48 - Equipment for Re nt
49 -Fo r Leue

----···~···················-···········•···'IS
DIG

W. Ya. Chipping,

Inc.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

•FIREWOOD

PH. 992·3561

BILL SLACK

Buying Hours;

992-2269
EVENINGS

7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30-4:( () Saturday

Public Notice

Office epace to houM the

Molgo County Dopartmtnt
of Human ServiCI!o Child
Support Enforcoment Dlv•1
lion. 888 """'""feet mini·

mum totll space.

992-2198

51 .30 / day

.05/dav

51-Household Good!i
52-Sporting Good•
53-Antiques

54-Misc. Mercnandise

61 - Farm Equtpment
62 - Wanted to Buv
63-livestock
64 - Hay &amp; Grain
65 -.Seed &amp; Fert;,i.cer

Transporlat10n
71 - Au lo s for Sale
12 - Tru cks for Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WO ' s
74 - Motorcycles
75-Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
76- Auto Paris &amp; Accengriel

77 - - Auto Repa1r
78 - Cempl.,g Equipment
79- Cempeu &amp; Mgtgr Homes

Serv1ces
81 ~ · Home

ence for the exterior end in·

FRESH CUT
&amp; SHEARED

su to S18

WEBER FARM
IITUND, OHIO

742-21

New location:

I 61 North Stcond
Middleport, Olio 457 60

SALES

My love and
Thanks to All
Guy Shaffer

SERVICE

terlor of the bulldinu,

ORDINANCE NO. 1219-89
funct. for 1989.
it orcl.lintd by

eluding but not Mmtted to the

priation• be incru..d In the

following fundi:

morlttd "Beolod Bid" Child

olon. Bldcl.lr ohtll tumloh
thtt"r own bid formo.
The Boord of County Commll!!lonoro moy, ""-' tho
1 - t bid o r - thl! lrott
bid for thl! lntonllod pu._,
.,d tho Bowd of County
commission•• _ , . the
righiiO roltet """t.:::'fbi•.
ond/or •nv port t
.
Molgo County
Commll-•
Mory Hobtt_,, Ctorlt
~;.:(1:..;1.:.1;.27;.;:.:(.;;12;:1..;4.:.,;.2tc;;,._ _..j

"*fl aWilt ~
~

.6"\:~t;:-.,.A'~

BISSELL
BUILDERS

An Ordin MlCI to lncr. .e
Appropriation• in Veriou 1

Oenerel Fundi -

Street M•lntenence fund

- t78,000 to S88,000.

Tren1~rtetion

F d fr
t21 936 t 0
un om
•
$237.936.
Swimming Pool Fund from t20,380 to •30.3110.
SEC. II. Thot this ordlnonce It hertby dtclarod to
be on -llrfltllav in ord•
thlt the v•- moy - tho
coot of vortouo -'ing oxpon- ond urvicle for the
,.molndtr of 1918.
SEC. 111. This Onlintnae
, _ .rteot ond be in
from ond .,._ Nov.
27 1811
'
.'"" 27th doy of
Possod
N
ber 1881

=
OVMI

•

1

CUSTOM IUII.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

I"At Reasonalalt Prices"

from

1396,2110 to •446,260.
Public

PH. 949-2801
1

or los •.949-2860
1
Doy 'ar Night
I NO SUNDAY CAlLS

MAPLEWOOD
_LAO
;614-949-2734
or

·

~-".f.;,l'.:'· Cleric
·

IICRO OVENS-$79 up

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Homelite, Weedeeter.

·92-5335 .... 5·3561

,.,_ , ... , ... Gffln
POMEROY, OHIO

Str•tton.

PH. 992-3922

10/30/"89

6·21·'19-tfn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE .
FIRE DEn.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTEI, OliO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT All

Basham Building

EVERY
. SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Foctory (hokl
12 Gougo Shotgun• Only
Stri&lt; tly Enfor&lt;1d

985-4422

MY·T·SHOP
CUSTOM SCIHN

PIINTING
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS

' CHESTEI, OHIO

985-4300

L. W.
STEWART
TRUCKING

DOUBLE I
TACK SHOP
ALBANY, OHIO
698-6500

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

Westarn Boots. Hats,
Shirts. Belts For
Men, ladies &amp;
Children.
SADDLES &amp;

9-20-tfn

PAINTING &amp; CO.

FURNACE

lllliiiOI EXTUIOI
Rentel Cloanups &amp;
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

FUINACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
OAS OR ELECTRIC

l«*t the pain •t of pointing.
ltt Ul • jt for J DU.
VERY IIIAIONUII

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

HAVE RIIIIINCIS
AfTEI 6 P.M.

992-5335 at' 985-3561
Atr011

(6141915·4110

F,_ Post Gfflc.

211 L Sec. ' - • Y
Ill 13/'19 tfn

lefere' 6

I

ENTEIPIISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271

GnmA.IIiwliili"

c

--

LINDA'S

FURNACl

DOZER
DEER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CUT AND
CLEARI~G
WRAPPED . NEWUND

I'Ntidlnt of Council
(t2)4 11 2t

·

,t....,

Ia Middle,...,, Oh.
PARTS ANO SERVICE

11-24-1 mo. pd.

ThoBoordo!CountyCom·
Be
the
miulon•• may -Ire odell- , c
11 0 f tht VIII
0f
o~nc
IQI
tionol cont&lt;Kt P&lt;VViliono Mlddloport
u follows:
withtheou.,..olulblddorlnSoc. I. That 1989 ApproThe front of tho onvelopa

90 DAY WABAJITY
WASHEI5-$100 up
ORYERS-$69 up
REFRIGERATOR5-$100 up
RANGIS-Gos"Eiec.-$125 up
FREEZER5-l125 up

HORSE EQUIPMENT

Public Notice
Public Notice

11-6-1

11-17-tfn

PlUMIING &amp;IlEATING

in our need.

84 - Eiectrical &amp; Refriljlefltion
85 -General H1uling
86 - Mobile Home Repair
87 - Upholsterv

Support Enforcement Olvl-

Iowa:

WHIR &amp;
SCOTCH PINE

am-5 pm

USED APPUANCES

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REP All
.....-.. •• v••

10-9-tln

CHRISTMAS
TREES

CARD OF THANKS
To the Maigo Co.
Health D41pt. Clinic, Dr.
Brown, the nu,.. on 2
West and Dr. Whitetav
II Holzer Clinic. Special
thanks to my brothers
and sisters, my pastor
and wife, Bro. Clark
and Bonnie Baker of
Midcleport Pentecolt!ll
Church, for !hair prey·
ers. flowers, cards and
food. My flmily and
daughtw, Lindo, who
h• always been there

83- bctveting

conclttoninQ. ldeauate fluo·

1n occordlnae with - ·
tlon 307.811 of thl! Ohio R•
viood Codo, -led biclo wll
be r-ed by tho Mllgo
County Boord of Commlsslon•s In their office loaettd in the Co•-•·
Pomeroy, Ohio untl noon on
DoCI!mber, 13, 1888. Tho
~w11 be - t t l It 1:30
bip.m. on DtGtmber 13,1811
ond Nld oleutl for t"" lollowtn~ buldlng 1-e. EliCh
bid to mwt tho con-•
ond opealflettlont oo fo~

Card of Thanks

&amp; Heating

Edna Cooper

---------1
PUBLIC NOTICE

1

lml'rovements

82 - PI~,.~mb!Mg

encloelng the bid muR be

---=-:-'"""=-:--'---1
Public Notice

742-2455
Salem

&amp; Ll veslock

m.-t. Said office 1pece ahell

rMCont lighting oufficiont
for office work. Wirln! lor
thr"prong o1'-~ P ugo,
-·rol-rlc81 outltto opeood 811·
etY olx fMI opon, ond tie
flo::l:ovoffi-CIIgl.poco muot ~
I·~•
.,...,_ within 1 r-onobit
dlotl!not from our extottng
lo-lon• ttl thot the cwnty
I I - -1 not Incur unn-•rv coot In the lnotoilotion of our telopl!ont,
llorm. ond computer ov•
tl!mo.
RontoI roqu lodf
r
or sold
bulolng tnd rtloted IICIII·
till -lei IN! broUn .._
for I two (2) YHf Iloilo. All
bidl thould includt thet bid·
dlr Is to.,.ovldt molnttn·

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Pon1•n11Y. Ohio

58 - Fruiu &amp; VegetahiM
59- For Sale or Trade

oftwoofficea. Acce11totoi·

h - both hutlng ond olr

Tractor Dealerahip

lt. 33 North of

5? ~ Musi cal lnstrumtnl5

Farm Supplies

sns

9

949-2168

__ .,. _

UYING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
DINEnE
"NEW" RECliNERS
Locatad Bohind

992·7479

66 - Buildtng SupphBI

56 -Pets for Sal a

Saturday

Tocumooh. Brlfllll:

USED FURNITURE

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

Merchandtse

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday

PH. 949·2101
NO SUNDAY

IACINE, OliO

GUNS· AMO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS... S2 .20 Box
GUITA~S &amp; GUITAR STRINGS

••• "-•loilt
"free Eatimltea"

or les. tolt-2160

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

.42
.60

S13.00

.9919 .NEASE HOLLOW ID.

For Most 2 and 4-cycte
engines
Stock Pans for

1·13-tfc

.20
. 30

The right ia n~~erved to reject any or ell bids.
Berbltr11 White, Executor
of The Elllte of

let focllltleo for mtn and wo·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Middleport, Ohio
Ov,t 1 5 Words

right of the option to cancel
the . . . . tf MC81MfY.

112) 3, 4, 6, 6, 7. 8 , 10. 7tc

Coftlilting of • minimum

•VINYL SIDING
oALUM INUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

cores. We can

PAT HILL FOlD

RACINE GUN SHOP

4/6/89/ tfn

alsa acid boil and rad
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

.

~earin1 Aid Sales &amp; !lor1•i""'
1l·~~:~~~:~~
Evalu1tions For All A&amp;es

'AIDMAN MOWas

•LIGHT HAULING

loclcsprlngs ld.
Po-roy, Ohi·o

heater

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

,[::=.==:::~~~== Listening Devices

I'

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

Aates are for conseOJtWe ruJlS. broken u~days will be cturoed
fnr e.n. thw as separate ads.

I

MAmESS 01101 SPIINGS

I'

We can r..,air and recore radiators and

15
15

II-WI 9. 1 mo.

9·9·2949
101101891'"
I~====:::;;=:::~ ';::::::;;;:;:::::::::;::~

SER~ICE

1
3
6

HIGHEST QUAliTY
FREE lOCAl DBJYERY
. POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONlY
LOCAUY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

ECHO SAWS &amp; l'IIMMERS
OREGOII!AIS, CIIAIIIS
lYAII SIIVICE CENID
Pertt &amp; S•vk• On
AI Makto
VISA " MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 9· 1
Sot.9-5
Closed Sunday

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
a
TrltiMI ..Itt
,.110
PH. 90.9 , 5682
""'
or 992·7121

RATES

•Ads outside Meigs. Gallia or Mason countie1 mu•t be pre -

LAYNE FURNITURE

Garage

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

POLICIES

players had five of those
numbers, for $1,000 prizes, and
another 5,656 players had four
numbers, to collect $75.
Total sales for the weekend
game were $3,567,843, and the
total prize payout was $561,200.
In the accompanying Kicker
game, two players had the
winning combination ol 834020.
They will each collect a $100,000
grand prize.
Six tickets had the first five
numbers, In the correct order,
for $5,000 prizes; 48 tickets had
the first four numbers, worth
$1,000; 589 tickets had the first
three numbers, for $100; · and
5,869 picked the first two, for$10.
Total salesfortheKickergame
were $655,140 and the total prize
payout was $395,590.

.:,:::- l,.~~~E

.'
Rt. 124, Po!Mroy Ohio

The first dentist to use video games
to distract his patients was Dr. Arthur
Zuckerman of New York City. He In·
stalled video games on the ceiling of
his office so that his patients could
play them While be worked on their
teeth, notes The Kids' World
Almanac.

Rate

lra6ury td • ..~!_topowt

992-2228

Roger Hysell

Video dentist

Words

SUNDAV

992-771

Pizza.Subs·Salads-Daily Specials ·

Salem St., ~~~~!"~·

Classifie
Days

CLOSED

LOWEST PIICES

MORIIS EQUIPMENT
742-2455

'

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992 •21 S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY'
CLOSED SUNDAY

HOURS: I AM·I ,M D1itv'

STREET
PIZZA

•New Gripe
•Ciubo Cu•-

7-'89-1 nio.

of snow In the northeastern part
of the state .Thursday and fair
weather elsewhere. Fair across
the ~tate Friday. Highs will be In
the 40s Wednesday, ranging from
tbe upper 20s to the upper 30s
Thursday and between 25 'llnd 30
Friday. Overnight lows will be
between 25 and 35 Wednesday
morning, In the 20s early Thursday and between 15 and 25 Friday
morning.
·

i.37

WE DO SAW
REPAIR
•Saw Supplies
•Chains •Chain Olla

----Wolf Pen notes----

For Good Home
Cookin" Come See Us!

992·527

GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP

INTERStATE UntRIES

pennies at the FuU Gospel IJghthouae Church In
Pomeroy. How many pennies does li take to make
a mOe? It lakes $844.10 or 16 pennies per looi. Tile
pennies were attached to regillter tape which was
provided by Pleasers Restaurant.

IESTAUIANT •
Is still owned and
operated by MiHie
D.mn.

KOUNTRY KLUB

•IN STOCK•

A MILE OF PENNIES- Randal~Gib..,oJoAnn
Fetty, Thaunda Van Meter, and WesFett;y,aloaJ
with several oilier people, had their banda luD on
Saturday morning when they rolled out a mAe of

•

· 11600 GAU.ON
WATII SEIVICE
UMESTONe
SPIEAD
Dill HAULED

WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

------Weather·-----

No one claims Ohio jackpot ticket

ALLEN'S
HAULING

Shop
Wher;,
SMnla Shops;

WEATHER MAP -Snow Is possible In parts of the upper
Mississippi Valley and parts of the norih Atlantic Coast. Showers
are possible In ibe exireme soulb Atlantic CauL (UPI)

Soulb Cenlral Ohio
Variable cloudiness Monday
night, with a chance or rain or
snow, possibly changing briefly
to freezing rain or sleet. Lows
will be near 30. Chance of
precipitation Is 40 percent.
Partly cloudy Tuesday, with
highs between 40 and 45.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday tbrouch Friday
A chance of rain changing to
snow Wednesday, with a chance

Business. Services

•

a

f,:;!iJsNOW

The Daily Sentinei-P8gt 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Snow buries New England; travel 'risky'

--Area deaths. - - Ohio records at least
On-WeOuunben
12 highway .fatalities

Y+

Monday. December 4, 1989

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

.

--·~...,--

__ ,__

7-11-'.tfn

-------

p.m.'"'·' Mtnogt

RACINE
GUN CLUt
GUN SHOOT
MRY SUNDAY
hginning Sapt. 17,
Stam at 1:00 P&amp;
Factwy Chebd IZ
Gauge

- ,;

·-

-

--.

.,

�- ---

-

•

1 I

I

I

LAFF-A-DAY

~~

..'..._,$£!§;:!

.......

'
"$100....-~~.
On
ClorU
Chopol
"""' .......
Tr.llr 12d0 ........ 2br,
laGD'Nw. l100 ......, 11 . . . .
1471.
:tllf , _ , P$0'1110. loo. Dop.
RJf't M Dll, No ..... llulie

.s-Jr~
I

R

!!11:1'4

D

I

I

....

4111

ChoP
?or - lfoolloy
t:.:
- ' t " - I ...
ld., 1M PR ; Ut.....7711.

-~~~~~

~

...........
.,...
Al----!dl_,_&gt;I.
...
-_____
.........=:,.-.
.........,

4 lor, In Kn;or Sohoo!
Dlotrtol........
- aludn
,.....
t121.......,

IIIOLIIWIU'III.

42 Mobile Homes

Glvw.way

4

,

- ..

· Rol. one! tlopoo!l. 17WMI.

=·.::..::=.=,:;

....... epofed.
211
::::

Help wanted

11

-r-. I mo. old - . wll~ t

18 Wanted to Do

!,1ry
. . . _~,!..~~ a.te, &amp;lfordab
Paula'l Dly ea.. c.ntw.
- o( -m n.- ... all!lciMN. II.F
~:':a...:::-':..:~
:.,~
:~: ~~i:!
PI
II, WVZIIID.
·--.
1

. _. aler I p...., lOt ••

-

3021.

T o - _ , 10 wt. Old iMJo
-3011.
St='lonl.
:IOWl5_..

ASIC Jh&amp;, 114 448 1224.

EARN MONEY lyplng· M homo.

==.·.,:·.d.~~ 4HZ.
&amp;:i~(r.o.\J':=:r..a£'~~
'

6

Lost • Found

-

: -c-Hounc?on

141,-. 771.114-S7Nt41.

~ :::•-...
.!'~ '.:.~::

:.::•::-,n;::...-;:
l:dll~...
~i·l~.illk~~~·~~.0~ ~··

--

-- -

Pmm'"""nlor
....?onlol,
I

.....

Tlolr, Woltllng P u ; - ol 1Hlao •
.... _ , . , . o l - . .,..,.,...,_ Shortlionc? 1 ptuL
-.101111110-. 104 112 Sorid lo lox P-17 cora
17!0.
o1 P - Rogioiw, ZOO

lll!n 81, ...., P - WY
?.ool: . _ -- - 25110.
,. wllh cl;a!n, ~ Moo..In . . . . , Run - . 114- .loll Hunllnt:7 a llllm7 wa
lalla • Auto
II • a h 1 n I c a ,
7
.Yard S81e
Aooount?ne:put?nt
Ill ICII!! I ,
.,._ C.

- ,....... lor

"*'''i
' ~--.
fooc!
8enlcti WoltMft.
E'tclN4b
TIOha frl1ne.
lndl hlal
~~~---

Galllpolla

'-'-•

• VIcinity

wa.-.
Md
o.Nuollll.
..•

_,.and
1

• • •

AU---IoPold!n

Me. . . DEADUNI: 2:00 ......

n

I

:. -

..:

olon.
.. &amp;llollllll AdulCol
C..« II 1·
• 2:00 p.m.
1:00 IONil'-aai.A-,olfutt.
cling ..,.,.~to pey fof trlllnlntl
... lor-lllt:llllo.
Llo?IIO. _ , - I joll? We
lroln Jol;e •
RIIICNnllll8 In ow "rchiM

lor

"''f:N""'
• ....,...;::,..:...;..:.;,;,;;.;.:.....,,...,..-1 : ;

...,.
~~;~;:~~~~:1..,

9

wanted to Buy

..... -

;:m,Coll

...~ .. wlhoul
?..ony

u..tr ""'

lhol you do
with pooplo rau k-,

._.......

NOT

010n0J

10 oond

1hrough the m.l ua.UI pu haw
ln..ug.JIId I"" ollo~ng.

An.nllon

MlCouniJ
-diNa: A public oilor?ng ol
ICocll lo bolng modi by MoCounlJ Wlloro Toura, Inc. lo

_... an IKCU ...... P-nl on tllo
Ottlo and Konow?ta AI-.. R•
from Point

qUill lcf lnlcrmodon by moll
only. Maeon County Wlter

Huttord, WV 25247.

~HDING
ROUTE
n;

GALUPOUS AREA
DaTING NEW Am.....,llll
. . . 1200 per .... MINIMUM
CASH tncome AND your tn-

Real Estate

tor rent. car-Ina. llunc?rv

Will apia.

..... -

llollli!H 1 -. Cilllt4-llf..
1711EOH.

2

otU. WoM of HOJu.., ott Rl.
tl.lt...,..t351.

go-.

10 1 - . l o - lrlcll Sbr, 2 Mth, 2100 llqft. hut
pliol, hill ....,
--..... 1 - o t pump,
oily ochioalo,ltol-241-1171.
...,.. "' ,,. MMIII. .
Flvo ........, I bolt, 2 ot I bod-

=-:.":::r":'.J:..r,-; -and
~:=:1.U:
:.;~r,:i

-

Rot. ....._

,_, , YIOJI lldlng, Morm windoofo, CINrol hool •
lie, ......... 104-175-3118 oltlr

2 , _ , lplo. All ....... paid.
S1UJmonllt.ll4-ll:l.fiOt.

a......,"""'· 1n , _ , . ''"'
11112-6. . .
..,c. 2 br., 1 bol?t,

prtw;la
• claaad patio. CioN to
a - Y ~~- I lltopplng oonfw,
wat.,, Mwer trHh

31 W.

provld1d. t215/mo.
441-G213.

l:al1

lt4-

Ml7
~111111 _ . , . - .._...,

-

?login .:......,

-

1 uon. holld8y, llcllflne pay
......_, ...., olhlr
tumllure Mil tw I Ill
rrh I Ml off, ltartN howty
114-70 1111. t:D.75,
aMI.
,.n.no., oontllal the D.O.N. ..
P I - C.. Conlor, Ill
•

Employ:nrnl Servoces

--loP,__

lining

"*"•

prop lnolde _,..,_, , _
roof, new wiring. Prlold lo MIL
Phonoi14-IIZ·Z007.

32 Mobile Homes
Rnllrtt lookel
for Sale

-..eY-

~y

1112.

11011111111.
Exl. Y·

ITJIIoL
""" cl- ..,
...
-~-Forln­

· 2000 ,..,..

lonlciod. IIWI7•77f0.

BJOYI;In DDUOh, lou
I one?
Oh·~ bhM C811cct. Olk trlin, 304-

loblo, lour .,.,.,. · bumor 110,.. 11$0.00.
2170.

Chrl1tmn .,._ ttl. •all ..,
- · l i Z _ ... _ _
?lc;od,to4-17141Uor1714111.
C p:fllt 11b1e Oft 0M111te
..,.,.. K J YeNion OfciiMW._.
- · " ' ... Dill

••z&amp;.oo. Wlrm mom~

~--.---'

2 ond llbiM. I14ZII 11111.

Appll~

....:
Oppilo._ T.V.. ..._
..,._ 0oo11
Ooln
CounlJ
I a.m. •• I p.m. lion..... tt4~Ill, IZ7 :In!. Ave. Qol.

..,.......011

OOOD

w.-.

USED

--

57

t- ---··good

...

dry... ro?ri;;o!olloro.
...... Skai?IIO Aoil11
UpPor ·Hi.....__..,....
CrollCol

oond. 1M. a14 441o0f41.

lncllwtdiMI
par 111n -.
boa?IM- gu!torill,
Jtft WMitfeV lnltrudor, e14ttt 11n, lmll.t apt nil.-,
'
;...
·1117 l'otd Ronaor PIIIOfl ploPio '
good . . . boolllllui .taft lfM~ oonc?., l48DII. ~1WI7· : ~
..,... Will unll Dlo.
::1.
:=--:,;:.,-:::,.,:-:::-=-,
.
-:-=--.~.,.~..
I!WI:GG
Pll.:10
.. ·
llmllard, tlr, ~
•0
" " - l?po. c?runt ... 2 tlk?jlln

- ...... --

:=..-.:.::::::.:'"='--..,...--

~PlATO~

F" Jrm

Suppl1£",
&amp; Ltvestock

No·- · 114-167-7111.

I.

4Do!l,-"" R-.

-tzl,ll,._,.,.
aao. ••

fOf SolO: 121$0 moii?IO , _ ,
new..:r;-mcdalld on 1.t acrw tot
It
of IOWn. Alto I houN
on 1"" lot, In ....: o1 ,_,,.,

u..· in

ono """ .... 10. Olhw,
$15,100. 11t ttl d» :tier
4p.m.

33 Fanns for Sale
Rl.7. 10 mi. Soul~ Ool!lpollo, 41+
ac,., houn n1 I' I
NPIIr,

,..,

....

. . :li:::'\'t~.....,.,J..$1800.
, dJoo~M;Ior,

!Ill Chewy - . -

MY

~

··wttn-

I c?.-o,
wilh 2 m:n-.. Uahl,

E?llolonoy Apt., . .,.. qulol, -

llopl=n?oil
lumlohld, oll!lllld
th
, ldul tor 1 pereon,
2102.

. . . . ..,ftiA. !fO;.

piaeel . (2:00)

.

(!) Counlly Muek: P.egenc?o

Country grea?s :eam up to

•

~~ :104-17W111 •"- 1:00 :

eonv.r-.

1•1 Chevy Altro
Von,..., aOod oond, .. - . 114'-141-1:111.

74

Do-. ~.

df

pay tribute to country
l~enda. lnotucllng Patey
Cline, Lefty Flzzell. Merle
Travis Inc? Marty Robbins.
(3:00)
Ill B?Ry Qrahem Llll?tl Rock
CRIUIII
• 4]1 21 Jump Street Hoff
suspecta a teenager Is being
battered and abustd by his

~
'

~;

Moto....,.•.......

1171 - lul!y
Gill*,

•

35 Loti &amp; ACI'IIGI
Ao?llon • • bulld!na

·:l•
1
010 • I,

-.Q

441-171

DPttmaNewa

!
l'

George Jones. Lorrie
Morgan and !he GaHin
Brothers open !heir homes to
• host Loria,..,. Crook.
8:05 (I) MOVIE: - · LOOM (R)
(2:00)
8:30 (J? (JJI llog8n Family
Sancly invi?es !he twins'
bio!Ogy teacher to stay wl!h
the family. Q
8-.00 G &lt;21 &lt;Ill MOVIE: 'Howard

-·lOp........= -.,
for Sale

tm

11

a. - •

Trl-llol

'

.:

· .12IIIP, 1 Collt14-ZII-t:l1ha• 7:GD,..... : ;
-

Roth!!- · bull. 11
...........
old. 114-111:1·7211.
lpealal ,__Sale, Dla, Mh, ..
!p.m. -.g ,...,., .....
aatt .. .actlllled, 1fter 4D.m. on
Frldq llliP until loll lime on

8oh1:JSS3HIIIIllno IVIDib?o,
114..
I Of ltwt2•2122.
U - k lollo.

At,.,.

76

Auto Parts &amp;

......
--.-1-

·.l

l

Ac:c8ssorltl

POOR lOY Tl,.., ttl4-l7fl.

"''

lll.ill. • • -

e

-

l

....a,__,
,,_ '

~:

MORK MEE_KLE AND WINTJIHQP

Ulhhloo r:IIP. tllr, 7 -

tt1l1hw~p.m .

and Sikes discover a human
dOctor Who Is killing

Newcomers.

Servoces

0n;o?ouo living. I Inc! Z bod-

...... • ... ~- ., V!l1oao
MoInc!
Rlvorllao
Atoll!_ In Mldd-. F,.,..

In

wrote. (R) I;!
• .4liA?Ien Netlon George

.....,t.Gw•• "

Fum- lol. 241 JooUon
Plko, 1231, u::.... pd. lllr, .....
~11after 7p.m. '

.j..,,-

teenager threatens to go
public with a memo Murphy

Tiwwc P ';;w lo • 310 Chi¥,
Chow one! Olea, ........

Oo~

Home
lmpiOYamtnts

l h - 'lloroll II.

._.,.....

..••·'

••

BARN~Y

_ . , ._ - ·

NfM W CII NCfUlreil. 114-1854441 ollw I:OOp.m.

looking far Mr. Right. Q
10:00 (J? 70D Club With Pat
1 Aab1rt1an
(l) ?IIHplng ...uty The
ctaeslc talryta?els performed
on Ice to Tchalkovaky' s
glor(oua music performed by
the Lonc?on S~mphony
Orctoellra. (1 :20)
ill
D Newhalt Stepltanljl
slaps 1 iltcurity guard and
lllltdl In jail. Q

50 THEN ELVINEY
SAYS TO ME,

HOT TEA AIN'T WORTH
A HODT IF THAR'S
N0800YTO
HODTWITH

Tr ansportat oon

0 Larry King Uvel
11J Tlml Wralllllng
• NuPov?le Now
8-.3Dila Dftlg ollog Women
"Mary Jo buys a book on
power dating and beglna

SHE SAYS.-

o-·
lion!.,.

-..
-·
.......
-------lor.. In -

· fooc! -

................ 1n

lllolobor

. . . . In lllo Adull fooc!
I!!JIItlll===••r,il
anc1
flow;,w .. ""Adulll+
tloi;

cat_,..

=c:::--

Buslnlll ·
Training

14

c:.nloo Til
iiiiiOI.
w. CounlJ
,... • _.,o1 _,.AL

-~-, _ ,

.......
- quofiiJ. Collilor
-

117-Ua

-,z. ~-

-.-•

~-111
11111.

--Ext.
!IOIIriiiiL

y.

.101s:

-

Rentals
•

&amp;-·

e 4ll -TWilight Zone
(IJ Evening Nnl

Fumlshtcl
Rooms

_ . . , ___
llortlng

ot

S1201m0.

Ho:ll.ltt-4~.

10:05 ([I MOVIE: Car Waoh (POp

,.monl~.

year. Send

41 Hou- for Rent

Pll.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOlo
'

IAQITT

I

'

Puctwlt to

~

,ow luclgoneo;q

In

1-

••r

eonp'a I ~.
· · ·VIIGO (ALII. II llpt.ll) Be ...,.· to
PIICia(JIIII.• .. •II)Youhevu · upla?n your dloiCII~~a~ln W IMiel toililnll:eo who ,_ ~ 101y1ng1 Idly r you n tu: cue ll:og In • ....,.,.._
·. :o:. ol nice thlngl about you to
1101)' capacity~ ouon. Don't ....,.;y

(llltr• • D1a h) Per·

IOitlllnltrMII- blllldvlncecllodey
K you "" ,.,... 1?11nc1 IIIII ; ' o1 your!
mu1C11 Don't 11u1r your way tttroua11
'meolll toc11J ?1t1nk your way'
thr
·
cPIIngM :nl
·
for ~...,. :n Pile com?na&gt;

e

(

oif?PII(Mtjh.,_21)0onolbere-

cled--

1/U'....,

o

Aatro-Greph pre-

dlcllona todiJ. Mel? $1.25 to AltroGraph, c/o IIIII lllllllfiiPif, P.O. Box
81428, Cll\llllllcl, OH 44101-3428. Be
...,. to ttate ,ow zoclllie llgn.
CAIIUCOIUI (Die. D., 11) Know?- 1

In the
lloere are ttrong Pnc?h
cations you . . llqlelll- 1 contlnU0U1 !mpl ~ In ,ow -"1 IP!w. The
dWogel=lVII III . . .Pic. but liCit
one will 1111 ~d.
.

"Don't you think you're overdoing It? We'll
be line, really ... "

tor" y&lt;iur

lmporlentdllllllnglyouh:Miwllllotllera
todiJ. Your aplniOoil could haw e poet.
tlw Impact·on villi mtttn.
.
CAIICIII (oluole h-.ltilr II) You miJ
edge Ia power todeJ, 10 don't Pf81M- Pi 1 o?ly be lmiOt ad In
ma:ture?y
11M w1tet you ..__ Will untH. ter 11ta1 f8lll*tt lldciiiPOnal ells. , , the proper 111M 10 Pltal H can be ultld CU111on beiMe procetcllng tlong a per,
wtth the ..-tMI effect.
·
t?cu?lr line. Don't movt until you're
AQUAIIUI (,_21 l"tb.11) In your,._ · rltldy.
.
latlonth!pt with 1r1tnc11 tociiJ 11y to _ LIO (oii:IJ . ., . . II) I you . . eble
avoid IIMVY 1op1ce or...,.. 11ta1 could
t?metoday to tun actlvlglll ~,. all on a ll8l'loul train or till, try to Mlot Pltal .,. a bit more
,tltoughl. Thlt Ia 1 c11J w111n P?ghl and ·,, mtnflll lhlln p?tJIPce?. They wlU prOIIa
breay
_...,.
lltou?d
be · •t?ot-•tiOitU!•

Dla.4,1-

I

· 1o-.3Da eo Doctor, Doctor

I •

.

Schools &amp;
Instruction

(2:00)

. •.

Gollo

·
· · - · L'or
- ......
llliP tl'r,
.... . 2 bod-n howe, 2 bod""""
pllaotlonlnlo.
CIU!
011 1:131 1 - - 7..__
1o1, 4 bodroom 104-171-·
r·• -•··
272:1 bot on I:GG AM IO 1:00

u111 - Y -Pn:l _ , 15

m.-vr. -

~

mz.

e

=:::"'·

45

e

(J) AIC ~ Nlgltt
Faotllllll D
l!JJ • =~urphy llfow1l "

..

$221.

Co!Ptoe BeNetbiM

(I)

\. __.._

:

opo;~"*'!o ...

llpotlll, I t 441

i

HE 1-V.S 10 &amp;TEP S'Q::
FIVE: FEET'IOQIAKE
I-IANDB WITH 'lbi..l.

Fum?olloc? .,...._, • Iduna,
Fumlohod

Maklna n. caee

FtH Murder' NIIC MondiiJ
Night At The MoviH (2:00)

'

-Wll•, prtc•
ponttlllod;
public
flldUCIIld,
•leo
lola • • 4 liZ m?. 011School, $231, no
wlh
CIJdl
I lhluloy cPCI
lloortl
lor ..........
- l f r IIIC!
"""' - · Jf. IOW71-zatl.
ptca. •u u1 eon.
. . ..
114-3'JI.
2171.Bulldlnt lOla lfloOne llr., tum. ot untur;-.:"· In
loll. llnonc?nt. HlllliiRI,
11,_
.,
WI ooro lor O!dorly Inc! hln- wv •• 112 2811.
21,..,. lolo !'or • Oolllpo;llo l'ouuy,
• LPN on ?.ow
- .. Clllii14-M2-117t
lllw 7:00 p.111. lor - . 1-· · · -· Publla - -·
mltlon.

eru-

em~l?llr a..(!11 MOVIE: E?epltllnt IMn

plld, ., ...

104-171-2257.

bol~.

lolo,

'

c:-

·

-.

.

e

ACCoVNTf

,'

75 Boats a Motora

Seooncl Ave. t ...41-H41j
FurnWIM Enlcleuc,, Wr1

111 or 7p.m.

•

,,

Maior

othtrs' : 1 • - eo.IIOidlo••• undeot..,od your
Pall?y. There'ugoocl~youmlgllt!

..... ol thllln .,.._ ciiiiiiP todeJ.
lt~lllliol?ol._
.. . .1(1?1 IIIII-AIIti11)Tryl01111eet L.u(llpt.ll OILII)A-Ir?encl
companlonl tociiJ wlla. lhlnldoog IIIII , ol VO!ft who
111111 1111' bullclollly . . Ill ,..... Con- : - : - - - · .. ,., ......
to

CCII-

Mike' I ego becomeS lnftaflld
when he , _ , _ art award .

iQIOnltege
4]1 C,._Watclt Ton?gld

tJ:OtU

.J7S

· 111011111 .a. Ill Welt's bud, Welt caa
be farced to pw up an e~~tr:r to Soatb.

Rowe; a, for declarer to briDI Ill U
trldtllll Ills flft.cltdl CGDiriCt. It locll:l
u If tile deftDden mUll:"""""" an error, bit tM:r an Ill fact belple&amp;
Dedarer cltnmm:r'• ace of

• V?illoC'JI .. ,

11 :311 (J) . . . . . .

~=caraon
I cr;t...i

.,:::..........

leow:r'C::
'12:00 MOYII: ......
CJ)

:=.:-

(POp !2:00)

(l? ....

p!1.::~

yau--

a=z=N..

---.

1:1:011 (J) w.ltl 01 Audllll DR
12:30

e (J)

i11P Lllelllght Will

DlwldLe. . . .

.Jt.
••

PIOO'IB
. I POl

•uuu

•

vw-able: Eut-w.t
Deller: Soutb

.....

••••

()peala&amp; lelld: • Q

CMIMid. tile diUD!!!!d ace aDd
.UUD!!!!d, aDd IIIIa Dlaftd A-K
ol clt:lil. He ruffed .IILJtiMiP l11Jn411!11
.
aDd led I llelrt toward tile ldJtc. U
Well likes tbe ICI! be will' be ei!CI-1 LIP8lle .U. d!am:(a eh:b ~ Deplayed, farced to leld .,.,. from el· cllnr- 1lied oalJ- mare tr1et
Iller tile Jack of 1p1des or lbe Q-10 of for 1111 ...,tuid. He played lbe 1ut dlllelrta. Sa Welt played lbe 10 of IJIIGI?d fram '"Pl"'IJ aDd n:fftld. Tile
•~e~rts, aDd thmuD:r - lbe ldae-De- tllf&amp;AI to:* tile 1aat two trieb,
.Jii.er ruffed 1DD'.Iiet di1!!WJ'I, Clshed Eltlt rufbli 1111 ...n-'1 .,ad ace of
.die kiD&amp; o1 spades aDd ruffed Ills 1ut beal111llilct 11
•
ap~clett,
ruffed I

L------- ----...1

CROSSWORD

••

by T,HOMAS JOUPH

-.

ACROSS

31 Ward off

1 Aching
5 Boxing

3t- fries
40 Paper size
41 Soviet

term
9 Ancient
gold alloy
100pposlle
12FDR coin
13Educe

15 Candlent.it
tree ftber
16MGM's
lion
17 Summer
(Fr.)
18 Table
with
31egs
20 Churc;h

court
21 Shade
of blue
22 Clly of

...

..

Inland sea

DOWN
1 Anwar2WIIIow
3Show no

emotion
4 Uncle
'(Scot.)

25Set

of type

27Aione
30 Coffee's
asset
31 Stairway

5 Swift
8 Venetian
traveler

posl

7 Boxing

name

33 Uteh
city

I Be
eager
to start
11 Tex or
Thelma

311 Dutch
commune
37 Shinto
~~

Manesseh
23Tob0g·
ganlng
slope
25Ablaze
26 Fontanne·s

..

husband
27Defeat

21JTV award
290ne kind
of band
32 Finnish
city
33Can.
province
34 Mining
find

35 He rode

1hrough
the night"
37 Lay IWI!Y' ..
DAILY CRYPIOQUO'I ES- Here'• hew to •art II:

:!:::::;:;:;::-;::

1214

A:iYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

e&lt;2J • ea • -

• 4]1 AoMniO Hill?
GIIID...,_
I&amp; IIIIMII!t
0 M!8l Wortcl ,_... 1111
From Hona Kong (II)

I

.7

11:00()1.._

,_=
.

llructhlalnlonnlllonGIIIbe-hlngTdj 411111 IQ yLlll I
In dleCU81lonntth u- il?dlvlelullla.
.,.,_your tlnlntll:l po?lllloiL
TAUIIUe (April. P l . You' re ~toe! 10011110 (OIL M lin, II) Vowpnon who might bllibie to lind mlal-1 Ill ~lp l•d !lhciuld be _ . tltln
lngl?nllllhll could be 81111•1• llePplul : lfiUIII 10 111r : : : will WIIICIII you
to 1011100oe who . . who cen'lllnc?i ;mayheW to
tociiJ, Ill ITM-J
-o)?lervet?onl.
own - • today. Va?CII your ' - IIIII be o.otvld w?IIIIOglc
• .lllcl pr8CIIoiiPiy.

EASr

.7UI

Tben Is an euler pme coatraet
tbaD fiw cluhl - perbapt Soatb
lbaald haw bid two DO-trump after Ida
partaer'a hnHpade c:ue-bld. But three
-lnmp wiD """wllllll:r Udeclarer
c:an aet to Ida u.d after pi!JIDI A·K·
Q of clabi.ID fact, wltb 11ie IC-Q Of ella·

7:35 cil .lenfortl And loll
8:00 (J) MOVII!: Po- (POp !2:00) .
(J? g IU ALF cetchel
his flratell1hbound cold. Q
. (I) • (J) MacQ,...
. MacGyver 1o aerioillly lnlured
when hla IMP~. (R) Q
(l) ,....,, 'PIIjl And ...,.,
Holkley
The trio
sings both aeasonal songs
and soma of their popular

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

Cl? I rw filr - · 42 ....... lt......-7111.

-Col .,_
lo - ~tr114-11112-7717.
· 114- "'"'
EOH.
•
l.arae, tine bedioom 1 ·112

lrollr .... $11,500 -

117-6220.

Chetn

1111 Cooullte
(!II Nlgllt Court
18 Tap Clod

-f

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all.

lloMoa lor 1Z.I!W!IZ..1zt.

:::r4t1"!'n u:m11oo

tt - l

ByJmnJ-"1

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- clrlw,
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PI, a~~o - . Allll'll •
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tllw. $1200.00 .....,..

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e C1P USA TodQ

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0.. R.... 10 1no1t ..1; Clol
Mollln
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M!lftlltlt
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DO ln on It, 11,710. 304-7~
G.E. $~j Dry•, ..--. .71;
.-.~
Dry• Mnmora, whit.. mi
Kin_, Wuhor, - . ,
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- - a Pol[om CrviC&amp;

fum?olloc? Apl. on Ulll_, pokl,
...... bol\ I!IIGIIUio. Itt

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SCRAM LETS ANSWRS

position

7:05 (I)~-·
7:30 (J? Flllltlly Feud
(I? 1!--..t Tonight

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A TINY 1-fifl.t

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FRANK AND ERNEST

~~~n~st~rumF:.:;.';.;;nt;;;_•~-.

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CHRISTMAS

I I• I• I•

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LEITERS
10 GEl ANSWER
•

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0 M!ltnl Vloe
rll YltleoCountry

Musical

~

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APPUANCEI ololtit DNro Loa - · 1140-A,

Fum?olloc? Apt. '"' 1120 FoiHih,

lloura, I bo 1blo to 1ft 121$0 N - llollllo-, corpol, aPr oonc?h-. 2 clook1,
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Inno
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colla.Fumlltwl, ::&amp;.building. $1,000. .....

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Wanted

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Complete the chuckle quotoc!
by ·filling in lhe missing words
V"" develop 11om IIOP No. 3 below .

Whiten- Frown- Unwed - ltlnder- WIFE WHY
All cas were stopped on the freeway. The man in the neiC!
car leaned ower with acar phone and said, ''I'm late, would you
tell myWIFEWHYI"

' 0 ...,_, Sloe Wrote

quiet Mighbortlck. 3 bedroOm,
1111...... , _ - k l u l -

....,_, PIU, OoiU- OH

EARN

(l)
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arwt ~b&amp;e
rarilal 304-171-1131,
or
00
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7:00 (J? O u r (J? PM Mrp•?ne

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bed wtlh two diasee.ra inllf.

... -

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8:31 (I? Antlr Ottflllll

Couch Exo. oonc?. 110.00. Old

..... -··

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PRINT NUMBERED LEIIER S IN
THESE SQUARES

OHe-Men

171•7111.

~ali:
paid. Dip. •

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44

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31 Homes for Sale
a llr., UIIIIIJ, llngiO PJIIII.

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11t •• 3140.
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announced

NOTIRE
1--n.ls-T-1
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18.Amttltlll Mrg r?ne

· ~ eCIPE~-g

ZU..t721.

Toura, Inc., P. 0. Boo 243,

I

OJem

N?glll Match·Up Buffalo &amp;
. Sut!le
.

t

Apartment
for Rent

L..

8 Cllerlee In Chargil

·,CIJ Zenltll'l NFL llandi:J

- · It 4-112-1112.
- J1 aom,
-."
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,_
ldtollen, llullon lvlnl r00111, 2.3
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...,..,_ Lobo-. T_,.hlp.I14-

.

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r11erchandiSE'

l

While disa11sing the lack
of driving court- one
woman smugly
· ~-==·::_·.......,!hal
shebyrespondjld
to aother
rude
,..~-==
driver
ttJrning the

iGl WortclAnclvfacleJ
Ottflllll

IS LOOSE!

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fiiiO. PO! -.!~ olw uii!HIM.

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INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

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for the three L's, X for the two O'e, etc. Single letters,
· : aposb aphel, tbe tencth and fonnatlon of the.words are ell
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

..

caYPTOQUOTE

11-4
GDM YHGMXXYUMHG POH
OXP~BG

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MLMZWGDYHU

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OHWGDYHU.- U.IMGDM

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c Jill HE WRITES so r

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. HE JWCES- FEB. LICE PU111NG MY QUill. lACk
IN 11tE GOOSE. - FRm AU.EN

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Ponwov-Middlapat. Ohio
-

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Ohio Lottery
·Shop early,
shop locally

Pick

3

389
Pick 4
6797

Ftltulilll:

Low tonight In mid 30tt.
Weclnesday, high In mid 408.
• Cbaace of rain 40 percent.

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* Shifted ..H PcJtall*

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Senlluel StaffWrHer
Each Pomeroy Village employee will soon be receiving an
additional $125 In the form of a
Christmas bonus check. Pomeroy Village Council suspended .
the rules at Monday night's
meeting of Council arid unanlmously approved three readings of
a proposed resolution to give
holiday bonuses to 24 hourly and
four salaried employees, · for a
total expenditure of $3,500.
A let1er Informing Council of
the upcoming retirement of VIIlage Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton was read by Council Presldent . Larry Wehrung who
•
presided · over the meeting in
BAISDEN
.HEARING . - Acculled murderer,
declared Balllden competent to stud
and lei
place.
of Mayor Richard Seyler
18-year-old Dennis J. Baisden, (center') and his
the trial for Aprd Sllolflll. Baisden
Indicted
who
was
absent. Walton plans to
allorneys, Herman Carson, Athens, (left) aad
for tile Sept. 24 cleMIIa of Marvin W. Wean, 91, hla
Dec. 31, or as soon
retire
on
Ronald J;t. Calhoun, Gallipolis, (right), are shown
wife, Beullth, 84 both off15 Fonrth Avj!., Kanau1a
thereafter as a replacement can
al Monday's competency hearing lnGaiBaCounly
and Mrs. Wears daapter, Mrs. Au!lrey F011ter,
be appointed to fill the remainder
Common Pleas Court. Judge Donald A. Cox . 58, Millon, W.Ya.
of her term which d~s not expire
'.
'
until March 31, 1991.
Council accepted Walton's reslgnatlon "with much regret."
Walton first began working as .
By LEE ASN WELCH
Accused In the Sept. 24 deaths
connection with the leaths of clerk-lreasurer In 1969. She asOVP News Staff
of a Kanauga family, Baisden,
91-year-old Marvin M. Wears, sured Council she would remain
Dennis J. Baisden was found. 18, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., ,Beulah Wears, 84, . both of Ka- In the position until an appropcompetent to stand trial Monday remains lodged In the Gailla
nauga, and Audrey Foster, · 58, rlate replacement Is found, and
In Gailla County Common Pleas County Jail In lieu. of $250,000 Milton, W.Va.
·
wo~ld also train the replaceCourt, with an Aprll30, 1990 trial cash· bond.
Gallla County Prosecuting At· ment. Since tbe annual audit of
date set b&gt;' Judge Donald Andrew
After testimony from Dr.
torney Brent A. Saunders called. village books has just been
Cox.
James R. Hagen, psychological only Hagen totesti~. ThereWfir~ . (
. ,/ B
.
.
·

~shop
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Baisden trial set April30

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL ·

SOUTHERN HIGH !iCHOOL
1!JB9-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov.- 25-Soatllwestern ................. Home
Nov. 21-liller............................:Any .
.. NOv. 28-Ky&amp;ef Creek... ... ,............ Aw.Y
Nov. 24-Federal Hockina ............ Homw
Dtc. 1-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Nov. 28-North Glllia ................. Home
Dec. 5-North Glllla .................... Awry
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dtc, &amp;-Hannan Trace .................. Awry
Dtc. 5-Kyltr CmL ................. Home
Dec. 15-Eistern ........................ Home
Dtc. I-Southwestern .................. Awry
Dec.• 16-Eastem Pl~e .................. at O.U.
Dec. 15-Southem .................... ;.. Awry
Dec. 22-Sym111es Valley.............. Home
Dec·. 16-Symmes Valley.............. Home
Dec.•23-Soiltheastern ................. Away
Dec. 2280ek Hill .... ,.....................Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home
• Dec.29-30--Holklly Toum.':at Pt. Plelllllt
.
~an.
5-!)ak HiH ........................... Away
Jan. 2-Federal fl.ockilll ................•AWi,y
Jan. 6-GIIIIpolis ........................ Home·
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace ... ,............ !.:'Holde
Jan, ~2-Kyaer Creek .................. Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia ...:........... ::·:. AW'ay
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Jan. 19-Southwestern ................ HQI!'l,e
Jan. 26-North Glllia .................. Home
Jan.26-Klf.l!r Creek.. ................... Awn
Jan. 27-RivenswooL ................ Home
Jan. 27-lllltr ........................... Home.
Feb. 2-Eistern ........................... Away
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ Home
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ........... :.... Aw.Y
Feb. 9~mmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. !!-Southwestern ................... Away
Feb. 1
k Hill... ...................... Home
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............ ,.. Away

, lnl!4d1Uon,Jla,ls4~l!l.~Nii.. . ~\lll!t.(f.c;lln-·Bbawnee F~~-......,.:;"1=ns ·a =·.qoss··-• . ·•
aalc Center, Balli!':: - · ~ et n-·-ll.t ~
Cari!On · ··

rllJ!lt ~~~a ,I'll~ jtla\.t~dH{g
'to ihe blllo'Revlsed Code.

-+~------~--~-HIRLSSCHEDULE~--~---------. : iJ
I ,,I .,•i. I·'
. i.

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 2o-leip ................................ Home
Nov. 27-Kr~er Cr11k.. ..,................... Home
Nov. 3o-Oik Hill ...................... ,....... Any
Dec. 4-llorth Glllia ......................... Home
0~. 7-~annan Trace ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Eastern ............................... Any
Dec. 14-Southwestem ........... :.......... Any
Dec. 18-Waterford ........................... Home
Dec. 21-Synn~~~s Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Any
Jan. 4--0ak Hill ................................ H01111
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 11-Hannln Trace ....................... Away
Jan. 20-NIIsonville York .................. Home
. Ja. 25-North Gallia ........................... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford ............................ Any
Feb. 1-Easttn ................................ Home
Feb. 5-Sym~~ts Valley ..................... Home
Feb. 8-Southwtstem ....................... Home
Feb. 10-laiiS .................................. Away

...._

............................ HOiftl.

....................... -·r-:

.............................. Home .
_. __ ............................ Away
................. Away
.................................. Away

PEOPI..ES ·
·aANk ··~·

comJ)etent to ~tan!\, trial In'

of Athens; lead def~se attorney.
Carson also did not produce any

loi7

·-'

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. _

I

II

.

.

,.

·.
as

·~· . ., ~- . . . ._.

_

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1

'-'

collides with semi on SR 7
Both vehicles were demolished.
Galila County Coroner Dr.
Edward J. Berklch was called to
the scene along with the Gallla
County Emergency Medical Services and the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department. The Gallla County Sheriffs Department
also had a unit at the seene.
The palf9l said the accident
occurred at 7:40p.m. Monday on
SR. 7 in front of the Highway Inn,
one-half-mile north of Gallipolis.
Troopers said Johnston's car,
headed south on SR. 7, collided
with the tractor-trailer, striking
the fuel tank on the left sldeofthe

blgrlg. Youngwaspulllngoutof
the the Highway Inn parking lot
to head north on SR. 7 lo
Middleport when the accident
occurred.
The fuel tank burst upon
Impact, spilling flaming fuel on
the roadway and engulfing both
vehicles In flames . Young escaped from his semi but Johnson
died in the wreckage of his
naming vehicle.
.
It was Gallla Couny's 12th
traffic fatality of the year. The
patrol has Investigated 12 fatalities In Gallla County and four In
Meigs County.

Ohio IG recommends dogs, testing
for inmates in correction facilities

The Bend of Time ...

How the sesquicentennial
logo came to be•••

as

,,

ing two village water storage
tankl!. Cost of the contract with
Burgess and Niple is not to
exceed $9,500 without consent of
both the company and the
village.
The village has received a
$30,000 plus grant through State
Issue II to pay for the needed
repainting of the tanks.
Council is still giving consider·
ation to creating an "assigned
parking only" section toward the
river In tire lower parking lot.
Councilman Bill Young, whp
suggesfed the assigned parking
possibility at the last regular
meeting of Council, reported that
out of 35 metered locations along
the river In the lower lot, only
four places actually have meters. Meters at the remaining
locations have been vandalized
so many times that the village
finally stopped replacing them.
Young proposes to make 17 of
those spaces "assigned parking
only" and thereby elbnlnate a
need for meter replacement In
those spots, which In turn could
help end the problem of night
time vandalism.
Young proposes charging '$75
per year for assigned parking
permits, which Is currently the
cost of yearly permits to park
Continued on page 10

·l ilfiji
·1t .,..,-.,O··z·•· •,~•--.,~·
·• ·n"· ' ;k. -~~~·a~
• ....,._.,

wi:rae::ns.ntervlewedBalsdenon
Nov. 3, and reviewed Information
of the investigation.
B;y DICK THOMAS
Hagen said tbe teenager was
OVP News staff
competent to stan6 trial and he
A
Gallipolis
man died In the
round no eVIdence of mental
Illness In Baisden. Furthermore, f.lamlng wreckage of his car last
nlglrt on SR. 7, at Kanauga,
Hagen testified Baisden demonaccording
to the Gallia-Melgs
strated a knowledge of the
Postof
the
State
Highway Patrol.
circumstances leading to his
The
victim
was
Identified as
arrest and was able to partlcl·
John
J.
Johnston,
37,
10 Airport
· pate in his own defense.
Road,
Gallipolis.
Johnston
was a
Sittlng between his attorneys,
salesman
for
.
Ohio
Valley
MeBaisden answered Cox quietly
mory
Gardens.
with "yes, sir" w~en asked if he
A Meigs County man, Dallas R.
understood the charges, and
waived his right to a speedy triaL 'Young, 50, Middleport, escaped
According to the Ohio Revised Injury In the collision of his 1984
Code, a person n\ust be brought Frelghtliner tractor-trailer and
to trial within 90 days If they are Johnston's 1978 Buick Regal.
jailed, and 270 If not lncarcer·
ated. When a psychologlc;•l examination was ·Ordered by' the
court, the time w.~ extended.
;• I
Carson and Ronald R. Calhoun
of Gallipolis, Baisden's attorneys, felt they could not prepare
his defense within 90 days, and
By LEE LEONARD
therefore waived, speedy triaL
UPI
Stalebolde Reporter
Indicted Oct. ~2 by a Gallla
COLUMBUS
- Ohio Inspector
County grand ju~y, Baisden was
charged with three counts of General David Sturtz recommended Monday , that drug,
aggravated murder, two counts
dogs be used by the Ohio
snllflng
of aggravated rqbbery and one
Highway
Patrol at all state
COlli)! of aggravated burglary, In ·
prisons
and
youth correction
the deaths of the Wears and Mrs.
facilities,
and
that
random drug
Foster. He pled not guilty by
testing
be
started
on
Inmates at
reason of Insanity.
adult
prisons.
Each of the aggravated
Sturtz's recommendations
murder charges!carrles a death
were contained In a report to
penalty upon conviction. The
Gov. Richard Celeste on an
burglary charge carries a sentslx·week
Investigation of drugs
ence of 10 to 25 :Vears. .
Inside prisons and youth
.J!;jllt:qr's qote - Tbjs Ja the flrat In a series of articles which will run
facUlties .
.
on Tuesdays aad Tburadays as Pomeroy prepares lor Us
Published reports In October
seaqldeealennlal celebrailon.
·
indicated a widespread Infiltration of drugs Into Ohio's prisons.
Poflltr,oy's iesqulcentennlai celebrations will begin In 1990. In
Sturtz said how often the dogs
ol'der to establish a common link or association for the events, a l!iiO
are ulled at tbe Ins titutlons should
~¥- been destined. This logo will appear on everything that deals with
depend on tbe size and population
the sesq!llcentennlal.
·
·
of the facilities and how many
'X'~~ , logo was designed by Roger Gilmore. 'rhe following Is an
visitors tbey have.
COLUMBUS, j Ohio . (UPI) .account, by Gl,lmore, or how the logo came to be.
,
He said II a dog detects drugs It
"~liVIng spent my childhood In Pomeroy on Lincoln Heights, I
Gov. Richard ~leste s.ald Monwould be probable cause for a
always had the opportunity to view my surroundings from a rather
day he Is not l~klng to become thorough oearch. ''These
president of Ohio State Unlver· searches should be documented
good,vantage point. My penchant to~ viewing my surroundlqs grew
dramatically one year when I received a telescope for Chn.tmas. I · slty when his alrrent job ends In and conducted In aCC!)rdance
January 1991, bUt added he Is not with current agency rules and
quickly discovered that the low powered telescope was nearly useless
closing the ' door on the pciUcy," the report said.
for ~~~g celestial boclles so I turned my spy glass on subjects of a
more terrestrial nature, spec,flcally the town of Pomeroy being
possibility .
.
All policy changes, the report
Speculation on Celeste u OSU said, should be Implemented
clearly visible a mile below.
~t I &amp;IIW Impressed me. The mighty Ohio River cutting a wide
president was.' renewed durlna with the cooperation of appropthe weekend w~en Eclward .Jen- riate employee Unlona and the
swath throu,i~ the Appalachian footbllls, those hills sheared to a two
hullllrecl toot cliff by t001 of running water, lllld tbe site tbat . nlllp announced he will leave the Of1lce ot CollectiVe Barplnlng
poll Sept. 1 abel return to the •'to protect the lnteJII'Ity of tbe
lrnpi-eslll!d me most, there precariously perched between the
a finance exladng COUectiW! barplalng
towerlngundatoae clltfs and the eterlllll river, was a town, albeit a· classroom
~I'IIW ribbon of a town stretching as far as the eye could see, .a
protesaor.
'
81PeelneDtl.,.
''I don't want to even speculate
civilization ~Vliere 110 cii(IUzatlon had a rlgbt to be, squeezed between
Tbe bllpector general' a report ·
thole two mighty glan)S, the mountains and the river, occupying tbe on It," said the gover110r when •Id security proceduree abould
asked II he "ould accept tbe be tleh1ened at the lnaUtuUons,
o~ 1pace, Indeed~ apace, tbat wu neltber mountain nor river.
presidency If It were offered. "It strenJlbenlllg the procedurel for
Tbe town, ioQowlng the exact arc of the great bend (for It hlld no
choice to do otherwlie) seemed to me to be more a part of tbe river · Ia not aomethlq I have given !bat searching vl.slton and W!lldora.
·
·. Continued on page 10
· kind of thouiht to ...
11ncomlng mall and paclrqes

OSU P,siti~n

•

completed (ai a cost of approximately $8,000), Walton feels this ·
would be a good time to begin .
training a replacement.
Since clerk-treasurer Is an
elected position, whoever Is
appointed to complete. Walton's
unexplredtermwlllhavetohave
his or her name placed on the
ballot In 1991 and be elected by
the public to retain the position
after that time.
Applications for the clerktreasurer's position will be accepted at village hail, said
Wehrung. However, only area
residents with knowledge of
bookkeeping need apply.
It was also reported by Web·
rung that Reed Will, who has
worked for thevlllage.forover30
years, also plans to retire Dec.
31. Council commended Will to~ •
Ills many years of unfailing
service to the village, noting that
he has been a valued employee
and will be sorely missed.
At the request of VIllage
Administrator John Anderson,
Council gave the first reading to
a proposed resolution to enter
Into a contract with the
engineering-architectural firm
of Burgess and Nlple, Parkers·
burg, W.Va., to prepare job
specifications and any related
contract documents for repaint-

·

Celeste' not
interested in

•

2&amp; Conh

A Multimedia Inc. NewiP•P•

Pomeroy employees
to receive Yule bonus

t

' ' :r .

1 Section, 10 Pageo

December 5, 1989

Ohio,

-

.~

&lt;1

.\ .

should be thoroughly searched, It
said.
The report recommended that
training . be Implemented on
"personal relationships between
employees and Inmates, hotllne
availability and drug ldentiflca-

tlon and detection."
Sturtz also recommended that
a system .of data collection and
record-keeping be developed to
determine the scope of the
problem. He said current methods are not adequate.

Local news briefs---.
· Food distribution slated
The Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency will distribute
peanut butter, com meal and butter to Individuals holding foOd
commodity cards on Tuesday, Dec. 12, at tbe following times
and locations:
Melp County- Distribution will last from 9:30a.m. to 12:30
p.m., or until the supply Is exhausted, at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds, the Racine American Legion Hall. the Tuppers
Plains Fire Station and the Pagevllle !'own HalL
Gallla County- Food will be distributed from noon untl12: 30
p.m., or until the supply Is exhausted, at Woodland Centers, Mt .
Carmel Church In Bidwell, Guiding Hand School and the Crown .
City Fire Station.
People picking up food for others·must bring a signed note
from that person and their commulty card. Ali people picking
.. up foods are also asked to bring paper bags.

Driver cited after au,o wreck
One driver was cited In a two.car collision at 4:15 p.m.
Monday on CR. 345, 0.3 of a mile west of SR. 7, Salisbury
Township, Meigs County. No one was Injured, according to the
State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said a 1985 Olds Cutlass driven b)' Lois J -Cundiff, 46,
Rt. 1, Cheshire, pulled onto CR. 345, coUidlng with a 1979
Mercury driven by Done! E. Larkins, 56, Long Bottom. The~
moderate clanfaae to tbe Larklnl car; moderate damage to the
Cundiff veblcle.
The patrol cltecl'Clnclltf for failure to yield the right of way.
The patrol also Investigated a caNieer accident at 6:10p.m.
ConUnlll!d 011 page 10

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