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P.u•

Pomeloy-Middlaport. Ohio

12-lhe Deily_ Sa ltil•.al

--Area deaths----Bonnie FISher
Bonnie Marlene Shields
Fisher, 53, of Raclne, died
Sunday at Holzer Medical Center
foUowing a brief Illness.
Born July 4, 1936 at East
Let~rt. she was ~ daughter of
Racine area residents, Herbert
(Pete)
and M~bel Robinson
Shields, who survive. Mrs.
Fisher w~s a teacher in Meigs
County for 26 years, most recently, at Pomeroy Elementary .
She was a member of the
Alpha·Delta·Kappa Sorority, the
Ohio Education Association, the
NatlonalhEducatlon Association, the Racine United Methodist Church where she was
organist, and the Racine United .
Methodist Women.
Surviving, In addition to her
parents, are two daughters and
sons-In-law, Molly and Mark
Kreuzer, of Dover, Dela .. and
Amy and John Mullins, of Rock
Hill, S.C.; a son and daughter-Inlaw, Larry and Bambi Fisher, of
Charleston, W.Va.; five grandchildren, and her maternal
grandmother, Bertha Robinson.
of Pomeroy.
!'!ervices for Mrs. Fisher will be .
Wednesday, 10:30 a.m., at the
Racine United Methodist Church
with Rev. Roger Grace officiatIng. Burial will be In the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at Ewing Funeral Home In
Pomeroy from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
today (Tuesday) and at the
church on Wey lor one hour prior
to the funeral. In lieu of flowers,
the family requests that donations In Mrs. Fisher's memory be
made to the Meigs County
Chapter of the American Cancer
Society and the 'Racine United
Methodist Church.

Edna Leach
Edna L. .Rowley Leach, 71, of
Township Road 145, Pomeroy,
died Sunday at Veterans MemorIal Hospital following an ex·
tended Illness.
Born M~rch 10,1918 at Charles·
ton, W.Va., she was a d~ughter of
the late Charles L. and Elizabeth
Duley Cas to Rowley. She was a
homemaker and a member of the
Rutland Church of God.
Surviving IV.rs. Leach are a
daughter, IV.rs. Robert (Hyllla)
Eblin. of Middleport; two sons,
David and Charles Leach, of
Pomeroy; nlne granchlldren and
seven great-grandchildren;
four sisters, Martha Anderson
and Hazel Pilce, of Ch~rleston,
W.Va.. Kathleen Brazelton, of
Florida, and Marie Friedenberg,
of New Jersey; and one brother,
Oscar Rowley, Charleston,
W.Va.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(AA of 18:30 a.m.)

Bryce aad Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
Am Electric Power .............32)18
AT&amp;T ................................. 44)18
Ashland 011 ........................ 38?1,
Bob Evans .......................... l31's
Charming Shoppes ... ............ 10
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul... ................. 20~
G'oqdyear T&amp;R ................... 43%
Heck's ................................. 3~
Key Centurion .............. .. ....13:Y.
Lands' End .................. ....... 20~
Limited Inc ........................ 33~
Multimedia Inc ......... .......... 88~
Rax Restaurants ....... .......... 1'V8
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .15:Y.
Shoney's Inc ....................... ll'Vs
Star Bank ........................... 21\i,
Wendy's Inti....................... .4%
Worthington Ind .................. 22~

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Dorothy Higgins, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - Jonle
Sellers.
Sunday admissions- Clara E.
Davis. Racine; Maggie Hoy,
Middleport; Nancy Neutzllng,
Syracuse.
Sunday discharges - James
Acree Jr.
.
Monday admissions - Nellie
Perry, Middleport.
Monday discharges -Dorothy
Higgins, Homer DeLong.

• has...
Ohw

•

Arthur Nease
Arthur Vernon Nease, 91. of
Forest Run Road, Racine, died
Christmas day at Veterans Memorial Hospital following an ex·
tended Illness.
A son of William Gilbert and
Cora Allee Holter Nease, he was
born Oct. 6, 1898 in Sutton
Township. _He was a farmer, as
well as a school bus driver for 32
years, an army veteran of World
War II and a member of the
Forest Run United Methodist
Church and the United Methodist
Men. He was a Methodist lay
speaker and was also a charter
member of the Meigs County
Farm Bureau Association, a
former Red Cross chairman for
25 years. a former 4-H leader and
one of the organizers of the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish.
Survivors include his wife,
Helen H~yes Nease; two sons
and daughters-In-law, Arthur
and Ada Nease, of Pomeroy, and
Carl M. and Helen Nease, of
Westerville; a daughter, Ruth E.
Power,s, of Grove City; a son,
Stanley E. Nease, at home;
seven grandchildren, four great
grandchildren and one great·
great grandchild.
He was preceded In death by
his parents and a brother,
Dwight Nease.
Services lor Mr. Nease will be
Wednesday, 3:30 p.m., at the
Ewing Funeral Horne with Rev.
Wesley Thatcher and Rev. Roger
Grace both officiating. Burial
will be In the Gilmore Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home this evening (Tuesday)
from 6 to 9. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to the
Forest Run Un !ted Methodist
Church.

Just south of the Cleveland
area, 4 to 6 Inches of snow was
reported In some towns, forcing
snow bans on many streets.
Cold air blowing a storm
across the warmer waters o!
Lake Superior created heavy
lake-ertect snow along the shoreline In Michigan's Upper Peninsula, forcing road closings, the
weather service reported.
"It's terrible. It's blowing and
drifting and you can hardly see,''
said Sheriff's Deputy Ann Lahti
at Marquette, a county seat on

the lake shore.'
Olllclal reports showed about 1
foot of snow on the ground and
"we're expected to get 12 Inches
more," Lahti s~ld.
Car plleups on Icy roads forced
authorities to close •about 50
mlles of road on the main
east-west highway from Marquette to Munising until later In
the morning. Wind gusts up to 30
mph were reducing vlslbllty to
zero at times, with temperatures
hovering a 3 above zero.

No jackpot winner in Saturday's game
CLEVELAND (UP!) -No one
picked all six correct numbers to
claim the top prize In Saturday's
$3 mllllon Ohio Super Lotto
drawing.
Numbers drawn were 1, 6, 11,
13, 14 ~nd 16.
The Ohio Lottery Commission
said the jackpot In Wednesday's
•

drawing will be at least $6
million.
In the weekend game, 137
players had (lve of the six
numbers, and can claim $1,000
prizes. And 5,644 players had four
of the numbers for $75 payoffs.
Total sales In the Saturday
_game were $3,470,750 and the
total prize payout was $560,300.

PLEASANT VAUEY HOSPITAL

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•

Continued from page 1
with the party's Central Committee, buthespllt wlthCeausescu In
the early 1970s and has been· a
leader In the reform movement.
Dlescu studied In Moscow In the
same university group as Mlk·
hall Gorbachev and is said to be
on good terms with the Soviet
leader.
The fledgling government also
appoln ted Roman, an archaeologist specializing In the Bronze
Age, as prime minister and
Dlmitru Mazllu, a human rights
activist, as IlleScu'sdeputy, Tass
reported In ~ dispatch !rom
Bucharest. Gen. Nicolae Mil·
ltaru was named defense minister by the new government,
Hungarian radio reported In a
dispatch monitored in Budapest.

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Excludes Dakota S.
'Muot bUy from IIIOCl&lt; by January 31st. Got details and guarantee claim form at dealer.

Carrollton: Janet M. Hlssner,
38, Carrollton, kUied In a two-

vehicle accident on Ohio 171 In
Carroll County.
Akron: Curtis A. Richardson,
26, Akron, killed In a one-car
accident on an Akron street.
Monday
Newark: · Marian Rlddlebarger, 73, Summit Station,
killed In a one-car accident on a
Licking County road.
Fremont: Verlon Hogan, 65,
Detroit, killed In a two-car
accident on the Ohio Turnpike In
Sandusky County.
Cambridge: John G. Pantle,
57, Byesville, killed In a two-car
accident on Ohio 2091n Guernsey
County.
Kenton: Matthew J. Ropp, 7,
Marion, kUied In a two-car crash
on U.S. 681n Hardin County.

I

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
Residents of the Rutland area
who have been without water lor
approximately one week will
' soon, If all goes as planned, have
,. running water once again, according to Rutland Mayor Jim
Fink In · a telephone Interview
Wednesday morning.
Fink Stl!led that the problem
began when the sub zero temperatures set In, causing a 16-lnch
line belonging to Leading Creek
Conservancy District to break.
This led to the shutting off ol
wale.~ to the vJ)Iage, as well as fo
Meigs Mine No. 31. More problems arose when . leaks in Ru·
tland's own lines were detected,
but those leaks have been fixed,
according to Fink.
As explain!&lt;\ by Glen Crisp,
president of th~ Leading Creek
Conservancy District Board, Rutland purchases Its water from
Leading Creek. Leading Creek's
water meters for Ru I land VIllage
are located on Route 124 for lower
Rutland and oq New Lima Road
for upper Rutland, Crisp ex;.,
plalfte\1. Once . the, W&amp;IIIF·'h'.rrvfs
tlioae meten1 tile lines belong
lhe village. "We pump Into their
line which fills their reservoir,"
Crisp said.
Although the break In Leading
Creek's 16-inch line was repaired
after about 10 hours at}d water
restored, Crisp explained that
problems which existed somewhere In Rutland's own lines
continued. to cause a substantial
drain on the Leading Creek
system. Rutland officials were
notified last Tuesday and Wed·
nesday, Crisp said, that they had
leaks which would have to be
repaired or Leading Creek would
have to shut off supply. The
village was notified again on
Thursday that If the leaks weren't located and repaired. LeadIng Creek would have to shut the
water supply off to allow the
system to recover.
According to Crisp, the leaks In
Rutland were "draining our
main 250,000 gallon tank affectIng all our customers." If the
main tank Is allowed to drain "It
would take probably a week to
bring the entire sy,stem back on
line," Crisp said.
Once the16·1nch Leading Creek
line was repaired and water
restored, upper Rutland was all
right, Crisp said. But the continued drain on the main Leading
Creek tank caused Leading
Creek to turn off the water to
lower Ru !land on Friday from
about 2 to 10 p.m., before turning
It back on. When It was turned
back on, Crisp reported, the
system began to drain again, so
on Saturday at 10.a.m., Leading
Creek shut off the water once
more. On Sunday, water was
turned back on to allow Rutland
. workers to locate the leaks which
Fink mentioned, and make necessary repairs. But, said Crisp,
Leading Creek was told by
village officials on Sunday after.noon to just turn the water off
again because repair work
couldn't start before Tuesday.
Water was turned back on for
four hours on Christmas day,
Crisp said, but at that point,
Leading Creek had a break In
their line gobtg to Rutland.
Becauseoftheageo!Rutland's
water system. unusual problems
exist at tie-In points where new
lines must be connected to old.
Because of the tie-In problem,
Leading Creek did not have the
necessary repair part and ~ould
not find a contractor wiJUne to
work over the Christmas hoUday
to correct the problem, Crisp
said. Leading Creek has since
obtained the needed part, he
added.
At this. point, residents at the
COntinued on page 5

to

,.

'

Lovie Watson
Lovle Watson, 84, a resident of
Amerlcare-Pomeroy, and
former Albany area resident,
died Saturday morning.
Arrangements will be announced by the Blgony-Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany.

..

Continued lr_om page 1

S.llday

Rutland
hopes to .
have water
soon -Fink

Domino's Pi11a

.·

•
2 Sections, 12 Pao• 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. N-opop..-

Weather halts construction on locks project

16 OZ.

Hrebates on thele vehicle• go up this model year,
wet pay you the dllterencel

Cloudy tonl&amp;ht. Low a ear •·
Chaace of • - lit perceet.
Sunny Tburaday, hlp aear 31.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 27. 1989

Copyrlphted 1189

PAT HILL CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE INC.
ANNOUNCES

Bonney L. Shaffer, 77, of 32540
Dark Hollow Road, Pomeroy,
died Christmas day at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following an
extended Illness.
Mr. Shaffer was a mlliright. He
was born March 27,19121n Roane
County, W.Va. to the late Stanton
and Cora Phylllp Shaffer.
Survivors Include a daughter,
Phyllis Crowl, of Geoi'gla; a son,
Russell Crowe!, of Buffalo,
W.Va.; several grandchildren;
and two brothers, Earl Stanton·
Shaffer, of Pomeroy, and Ralph
Shal!er. of Ripley, W.Va.
Funeral arrangements for Mr.
Shal!er are to be announced later
by Ewing Funeral Home with
burial to be at Rock Springs
Cemetery.

•

Vol.40, No.181

UMilED
DEUYERY AREA

(304) 675-1244

Pick 4-

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•

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERRGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"

108

Page 3

•

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

JOHN A. WADE, MD., Inc.:

Pick 3

0187 '

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
4-PEPSI'~,

Ohio Lottery

Celtics
•slip p~t
Clippers

·
Continued from paae 1
·
Departments w;slsted Columbia as well Pomeroy Rescue and
Rutland EMS.
Middleport was called at 10: 28 a.m. to the Overbrook Nursing
Center !or Clara Davis to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Syracuse was called at 3: 03 p.m. to South Fourth Ave. ror
Maggie Hoy to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:21p.m., Pomerey went to Brick St. for John Ulscarwho
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
Columbia Fire Deparlment 111 8:13 p.m. was called to a,
chimney lire at the Gordon ·Perry residence.
Columbia and Scipio Fire Departments went back to Laura's
Grocery at 1i: 20 p.m. when the fire rekindled.
On Monday at 3:08a.m., Pomeroy went to Route 143forMary
Hysell to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 7: 26 a.m. transported Nellie Perry from the
Overbrook Nursing Center to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 8:07a.m. to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy
• Nursing Center for Bonney Shaffer who was taken to Vetera.ns
Memorial Hospital and then back to Am ericare. At 6:10p.m.•
Pomeroy was called back to Amerlcare for Shaffer to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 11:30 p.m., Middleport tninsported Leroy Barton from the
Beech St. Apartments to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.allIll.. MD rtlAif D11M Mffll

Wads worth, killed In a two-car
collision at the Intersection of
Ohio 162 and a Medina County
road.
Saturday
Norwalk: Alwilda M. Mench,
84, New London, kUied when the
car she was riding In collided
with another on Ohio 162 In Huron
County.
Medina: Je!trey Ousley, 27,
HIIICkley, and Tracy Comella, 18,
Srunswick, killed when Ousley's
car blta utUitypolealongonU.S.
42 In Medina County.
Columbus: Charlotte Gordon,
33. Columbus, died when her car
bit a gu•rdrall alonr Interstate
270 In Columbus.

•
'

Besides her parents. she was
preceded In death by her bus·
band, Harold Leach; two brothers, J~mes and Boone Leach;
and four sisters, Claire Starcher,
Ara Lee Bailey, Maxine Grl·
shaber and Freda Hicks.
Graveside services will be
Thursday, 1 p.m., at the Tyler
Mountain Memory Gardens,
Cross Lanes, West VIrginia.
Funeral arrangements were by
Ewing Fu.neral Home.

Florida crops.. ._c;,:_on;..:.un:.:..::.ued:.:.--1r,;.,om..:.pa..:.g;.,..e1_ _ ---Local news briefs...---.

•

••

' ·,

~1

Ice slows barge traffic at

'

-'

•

• J ' ...

~'

Gallipolis Locks and Dam

I·

COIJ) WEATHER HALTS DAM CONSTRUC·
TION - Cold weather has halted constntctlon on
the S218,Galllpolls locks replacement project. No

concrete has been poured since Thuraday .Ills the
first major delay on the project since ground was
broken on Nov. 7, 11987. (OVP file pllolo)

Grocery bills may increase
because of cold temperatures ·
By United Prelll International
BerniSh said. "We expect to be
,,, .1:11~ .tr~!)( w.e.•tller.,,t), f.IDt:.. _ ·able~ to.~•eou·!'f' -,suppliet ·from
Ida and Texas m~··~~lh .iO . .N'~JC!co and Catlfo~nllfl' We don't
higher prices of !·fruit~ .aiid foresee ~short.a!(es ' llf' frUJts and
vegetables on grocery ~tore vegetables. but there may be
shelves In Ohio.
times this winter when certain
Paul Bern Ish; a spokesman for products are not on the shelves
the Kroger Co. of Cinclnnal i, the lor short periods ."
nation's largest grocery chain,
Bernlsh said damage was
said Tuesday retail ('rice• may
probably worse in Texas, where
rise later this week.
officials report 70 percent of the
Marketers of produce in the citrus corp and 80 percent of the
, Columbus area already are revegetables were destroyed. He
porting limited supplies of toma- said Kroger has lost half Its
toes, peppers, zucchini, lettuce,
grapefruit crop and as much as
squash, grapefruit. oranges and 75 percent of its green beens and
tangerines.
bell peppers.
"The situation Is very severe."
He said Wesco. a produce

buyer lor Kroger , has opened Its
office lnNogales.-Ar.iz,., t~secure
supplies dt ·'l'~ta·bteS • gJ'own in
western Mexico. Tlte1 comj)any
usually does not begin opera ttng
In Arizona unnl the second or
third week of -January.
Pau I Jones, produce buyer lor
the Big Bear !(rocery stores in
Columbus. said the effect of
weather problems on the food
industry is worse this year than
any he can r~all In 1i years.
"I've seen years when one
growing area or the olher was hit
this bad. but in 17 years I've
never seen a freeze that hit two
major regions this hard."

'

Galliil so·ldier wounded in Panama
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
Two area families have been
glued to television sets at home
and work, anxious to hear the
latest from Panama.
They have a special interest In
the huntforGen. Manuel Noriega
and the fighting In that Central
American country - their sons
are in the midst of the action. ·
Karen and Leroy Wonn of
Teen's Run Road have a son who
received a minor flesh wound
and returned to action.
Sgt. Bryan Wonn. 22, is in the
Infantry, stationed at Ft. Clayton
In Panama. He Is In his filth year
of United States Army service.
The Wonns heard from their
son on Christmas Day at 7 a.m.
"He doesn't tell us much,"

Mrs. Wonn said in a telephone
interview this morning. She feels
the situation there is confusing,
and the only news coming out
now is Noriega at the Vatican
·
Embassy, seeklrlg assylum.
Army PFC Mark Oliver Is In
the Military Pollee, stationed at
Ft. Drum, N.Y., was sent to
Panama City In mid-October,
according to his mother, Patty
Reynolds of Rio Grande. He Is
with the 51lth MP Company, and
is expected to return to New York
In February.
Mrs. Reynolds heard from her
son Christmas Eve, and !'Verything's line, execpt he "could use
a shower and a shave."
Oliver Is married to the former
James of Porter, and the
couple has a one.. yel~r-old

James Daniel.
"It's a relief to know h!''s OK,"
Mrs. Reynolds said by phone this
morning. "But It's been a hectic,
scary week," she conceded.
Both mothers said they were
worried, and searching out ever¥
bit of information coming from
Panama ,
Television at the Wonn home
has been almost exclusively on
Cable News Network, and Mrs.
Reynolds , a Nursing Assistant at
Holzer Medical Center, has spent
her dinner time in front of the
newscasts.
It has been a difficult time for
both families, but the women
said they've had calls and
support from numerous friends .
But now, all they cando Is walt
lor the next. phone call.

..

r . ..

More .snow on way
By United Press International
Another winter weather system was moving across Ohio
Wednesday, but this time it's
being followed by a mild warm
front that will send temperatures
above freezing lor the first time
since Dec. 10.
A winter we11ther ~dvlsory was
posted lor southern Ohio, with 1
to 3 inches of snow expected , as
well as some sleet and freezing
drizzle. About I inch of new snow
was expected 10 fall In the
northwesl. with anothP.er 2
inches In the northeast.
The snow was to move ei::lst

during lh!' morning and rea ch
West Virginia and Pennsylvania
in the early allernoon.
Temperatures ·began rising
before dawn, with most 5 a.m.
readings higher than the mid·
night temperatures. Afternoon
highs were to reach the mid-30s
In the far south and the low 20s in
·
the north.
It was to clear in the south
Wednesday night. while remain-

lng cloudy in the north. Sunny
skies will prevail across the staw
Thursday. wilh highs In the low to
mid-.JOs.
Looking a head through I he
weekend. there will be a chance
of rain or snow Friday. fair
Saturday and a chance of snow
Sunday . Highs will be 35 to 45
Friday, and 25 to 35 Saturday and
Sunday . Lows will be 25 to 30
Friday and 15 to 25 Saturday and
Sunday .
On the morning weather
charts. high pressure dominated
I he central Atlantic and a frontal
system was located in the Mississippi Valley. The frontal system
was tomoveacrossOhloWednesday afternoon and evening and
reach the East Coast by early
Friday morning.
As the front moves to the East
Coast a high pressure area of
PPcific orl!(in will move east out
of t.he Rockies and help to
maintain the moderating
temperature trend into the early
weekend.

..-Local news briefs--Units respond to eight

calL~

Units of the Meigs County Emergenc~ W.edical Servi c&lt;'
responded to eight calls on Tuesday.
At 1:06 a.m. the Middleport unit was called 10 Overbrook
Nursing Center lor Bertha Tuttle who was 1aken 10 HoiZPr
Medical Center.
·
At4: 55 a.m. the Rutland unit went to Hanning Road for Harold
Gillette who was transported to O'Bleness Ho&gt;pllal in Athens .
The Pomeroy unit at 9:52a.m. went to Birlingham tor Jo~H·
Sinclair who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Syracuse unit went to Stiversville Road at 11 :33 a.m. for
Paul Shaffer who was transported to Veterans . and at 6:02p.m .
the unit went to Carmel Road for Florence Circle also taken to

Deputies
•
•
mvesllgate
four mishaps
Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department Investigated !our accidents which occurred over the holiday weekend.
On Christmas day, a report
was taken from Michael L.
Hanning, Albany. According to
the report, Hanning was travelIng on Hanning Road.when he hit
a slick spot and wentolftheroad,
striking an embankment. His
1988 NlsSlln sustalbed moderate
damage, and there were no
Injuries or citations.
On Sunday, deputies Invest!·
gated an accident wlrtch occurred shortly jlfler 10 p.m. on
Route 124. The report stated that
Gregory P. Rager, 19, Refugee
Road, Columbus, was traveling
. east when .he hit a slick spot·and
lost control of the 1983 Plymouth
he was driving. According to the
report, hlscarle!t the road, came
Continued on page 5

By United Press International
southern counties.
Inclement weather has de."I'm having a real tough time
layed construction on the $218
getting them through," Greeri
million Gallipolis Locks project
said. "All the barges are backed
up." .
and slowed barge traffic through
both the Winfield and Gallipolis
The snowfall that began Mon·
locks and dams.
.day and continued through the
Pat Morgan, field engineer lor
night dumped up to 3 Inches In
the Huntington District, U. S.
some parts of the state. Meterolo,
Army Corps of Engineers. said
gists with the National Weather
this morning "construction on
Service predicted more snow
the locks project Is presently in a
would fall through Wednesday, .
though not significantly adding
shutdown mode through the
sub-freezing weather and holito the depths already on the
days," adding "concrete was last ground .
poured on Thursday."
Temperatures were expected
Morgan concluded, "II the
to plunge into the single digits
weather Is warm enough, they
before a warming trend hits the
will begin pouring concrete on a
state on Thursday . Forecasters
said the mercury could riSe Into
day-to-day basts,"
Initial pouring of 800,000 cubic
the 50s on Saturday, and rain was
In the forecast lor both Friday
yards of concrete was Tuesday,
June 27. Ground was broken at-' and Saturday .
State highway officials said the
Hogsett, W. Va .. for the replacement locks on November 7, 1987. heavy snowfall has caused more
This is the first major delay on overtime to be paid than In the
the project.
past several years. but that both
Cold weather the past two and
personnel and equipment were
one half-weeks has also put a
working well. A salt truck driver
crimp In West Virginia's supply usually works between 10- and
of road salt, Division of Trans- 12-hour shifts.
portation olllclais said Tuesday.
Green said each truck deposits
Rex Green, dlrect.or of pro- 5 tons to 6 tons of salt on routes
curement lor the DOT, said most ranglpg between 15 and 25 miles .
areas had adequate stockpiles of He said the state overall has
salt, but that the unusually heavy ample supplies of salt. but that
snowfall in the southern part of there are sjtortages in some
areas, such as the most southern
'~!"state has caused a shori!J_ge In
j&lt;:Gunties.:·
·
'
tll.ata:rfa. ..
Grern s~ld the slowdown in
''}¥fare not puspl~g the panic
barge traffic bn the Ohio River button." Green said. "We can
has hampered salt delivery to the make It through."

Veter~ns.

At 7:22p.m. the Middleport unit went to Overbrook lor Seldon
Baker who was transported to Veterans, and a1 10:59 p.m. Ihe
unit went back to Overbrook for Leona Everrtl . also taken lo
Veterans.
At 11:40 p.m. the Rutland unit r.esponded to a call at Meigs
Mine No. 3lln which Bus Daniels was transportt•d to Holzer .

Police probe one accident

llellllleltii!J rllllt, Middleport,the bll winner In Saturday'• contest
Pomeroy Merchulll
AlaoclaUon Chrlltmu 11veaway. Preeent1n1 tbe wlnntnc
certificate Is Allnle Chapman, a member of the Merchants
Aaaoclatlon.

The Pomeroy Pollee Department lnvestl~tated one accident
which occurred on Tuesday evening at 10:29 p.m
According to the report, NichOlas Riggs. Talmedge, was
traveling south on Mulberry Ave. near the Meigs Veternarlan
Clinic when he struck the rear of a disabled car driven by Matt
VanVranken, Pomeroy. VanVranken's vehicle was stopped In
the road with no lights on and Riggs could not get stopped In time
to avoid the collision. Riggs' 1985 Oldsmobile sustained
moderate damage to the passenger side and front. Van
Vranken' s 1984 Ford Escort sustained heavy damage to the rear
and drlver!s side. There were no citatiOns and no Injuries.

'

'

�P.ga

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

2-lhe Deily Sentinel

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Bush says the critics of his attempts to
renew relatiOns with China are "deattng with emotion and not facts ."
"Once they deal with a full deck, I expect people w111 understand
it," he told reporters.
In responding to the opposition, Bush also explained what he has
learned about the presidency, saying ''there are some times in this
job, you've got to have the conviction that you're doing what you think
is correct."
"That's what the people elected me to do," he said. "This gets way
over any other issue, Incidentally. And so I can't worry.
"lf you'd ask me 10 years ago so and so crilicized you-all you'd
have gotten an honest answer out of me. I'd probably have said,
'yeah .'But not any more. because in this job, you don't do that. You
do what you think is correct. If you screw something up, you say
'hey," I was wrong. Butt! you're right, you don't need to gettnstant
credit for It. So just try to do your best. "
At a recent news briefing: While House press secretary Marlin
FitZwater warned reporters that there were times when the president
.would operate in secrecy-times "when he does things without
reporting them.
"And, he added, "the president of the United States has contacts
with leaders of other worlds."
Catching himself, he explained he meant "other countries."
Then In an aside after there were guffaws over his gaffe, saying
Bush had contacts with "leaders of other worlds, Fitzwater quipped
''wrong administration.
Reporters the chimed In:
"Going to move up the timetable on Mars?"
"Did the president have the Elvis telephone installed in his office?"
President Bush is not going to be deterred from going to the Drug
·Summit meeting in Colombia and scoffs at those who will be In his
• :traveling entourage who believe the trip could be hazardous.
Aides, nevertheless, are hOping to arrange a sanitized visit of a few
hours at Cartagena, Colombia despite some qualms about the 250
· bombings, instigated apparently by drug kingpins.
"I've got total confidence in our security people," Bush tol(j
reporters.
Under questioning, he chided reporters, saying: "Listen, nobody
has to go but me. l'm the only one who's invited. So where do you gel
this 'we' stuff. Tonto."
Reminded that the summit is only expected to last three hours,
Bush said: "It's ~cause I'm on the move. I want to keep going."
If anyone is hurt as a result of the trip to Colombia , "will you take
responsbillty?''
The president responded: "Just look over your shoulder. Somebody
may be following you."
And In case reporters had some trepidation, Bush said they should
all arrange to have their ... stringers" in Colombia handle the story.
He was quickly informed there were no journalistic pinchhitters in
Colombia.
President Bush had a houseful of grandchildren on hand when he
ordered the military intervention In Panama. The youngsters and
their parents were all invited to join celebrate the president's first
Christmas in the White House with him .
But little did the children know that while they were steeping, the
president was up most of the night carrying out his role as
commander-in-chief.
·
Vice President Dan Quayle says it's different being in the executive
branch of government, and remembers fondly hiS days on Capitol Hill
. as an Indiana senator when he could be more "free wheeling."
Quayle said that he could speak his own mind in speeches in the
Senate. As vice president he has to be careful what he sayg;andtostay
within the bounds of presidential policy.
Nevertheless, President Bush, who was the ultimateteamptayer In
the number two spot, has been tolerant of Quayle when he appears to
be straying off the reservation.

Today in history
By United Press International

Today is Wednesday. Dec. 27, the 361st. day of 1989 wilh four to
follow.
The moon is new.
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, JupitPr and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
include German astronomer Johannes KepiPr In 1571; English
engineer George Cayley, father of the science of aerodynamics, in
1n3; French bacteriologist Louis Pasteur in 1822; and actress
Marlene Dietrich In 1901 (age 88).
On this date in history:
In 1932, Radio Cily Music Hall opened in New York City.
In 1941. Japanese war planes bombed Manila in the PhillppinPs,
even thOugh it had been declared an "open city."
In 1947, the first "Howdy Doody" show, under the title "Puppet
Playhouse," was telecast on NBC.
·

George Bush is adept in the
arcane art or toadying to tyrants,
and it seems he has trained his
disciples well.
Eight ; years ago, Vice Prest·
dent Bush traveled to ManUa to
attend the inauguration of Ferdi·
nand Marcos, who had just won
the first election he had allowed
in nine years. The options for
Bush's formal toast were many:
He could applaud Marcos' apparent popularity (he had won 88
percent or the vote), or U.S.
Philippines friendship or !mel·
da's new pair of shoes.
But Mr. Bush chose to praise
the corrupt despot's "adherence
to democratic principles and to
the democratic processes." Then
the vice president added: "We
stand with the Philipines. We
stand with you, sir."
·
On Dec. 9, Bush's national
security adviser, Brent Scowcroft, and deputy secretary of
state, Lawrence Eagleburger;
flew to Peking to mend relations
With the unrepentant barbarians
who butchered hundreds of prodemocracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square last June. The
two had come "as friends," said
Scowcroft in his toast, "to
resume our Important dialogue
on international questions of
vital Interest to both our
nations."
The Chinese leaders beamed
and quaffed their mao· tal with
obvious satisfaction. Why
shouldn't they? They had cleared
the streets of the rabble. They
had executed a number of
apostates and billed their faml·
leis 27 cents for each bullet to the
back of the head. They had loudly
condemned the Bush administra·
lion for the sanctions it had
reluctantly imposed on China.
And now the Westerners had seen
the wisdom of chinese ways and
come to kiss the hems of their
garments.
Why did Bush do it? What Is so
special about the Chinese that he
would truckle to them in front of
the whole world? He had to be
pushed to the summit table wth
Mikhail Gorbachev. He Ukened
Daniel Ortega to a skunk. He

Letters to
the editor
Appreciates
support
Dear Editor:
The Salem Center PTO would
like to take this opportunity to
thank all the businesses thal
donated toward our Fall Festival. We would also like to thank
all the parents and relatives that
helped out in anyway. Thanks to
all of you, our Fall Festival was a
big success.
Thanks Again
Salem Center PTO
Ginny Barrett

supports "freedom fighters" all
over the world. Why not the
"freedom fighters" who want to
depose the doddering murderers
who cling to power in !;'eking?
He cannot abide a China that Is
"totally isolated," he says. Few
would disagree. But do the
contacts between governments
have to be carried on so visible
and at such high levels?
He says' China "has a strategic
position In the world that Is
important to us." So do Cuba and
Nicaragua. Can you see Scowcroft shouting "Salud! " In Havana and Managua?
Is it trade and commerce?
Given Bush's pro-business views
and his concern of the welfare of
the upper classes, this is a
credible answer. But the sanctions he imposed in June "to
express the outrage we feel'' had

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'roin Tolbert had 20 points and
Chris Mullin 17 for Golden State.
taken 104. IUap 182
At Inglewood. Calif., Magic
John90n.arored 27 pofnts, tnclud-·
tng two . free throws with 19
seconds left that t!apped ~

game-closing string of 10 unans·
wered points that lifted Los
Angeles. The Kings. who have
lost nine straight. got 33 points
from Wayman Tisdale and 21
from Kenny Smith.

State records show the Detroit
saloon owner was stopped by
Dearborn pollee on July 26, 1987.
and char11ed with operating 3
vehicle . while impaired. His
blood-alcohol level was more
than .07 percent, less than .03
percent below the level at whic h
thestatl!'conaidersdrivers intox1·
cated, recorda Indicate.
A Dearborn judge ordered
Reedy's licen!ll! restricted from
October 1987 to January 1988 and
also.· ordered him to attend
outpatient alcohol treatment
classe•

SNOW MEl1ER

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DowN 12.5"1. API. 1.. MO.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14~INII
A Divillan or MuiUmedla. Inc.
Published ('Very afternoon, Monday
thraugh Frlday. 111 Court St., Po·
meroy. Ohio. by rlle Ohio Valley Publishing Company! Multtmedla. Inc. ,
Pomeroy. Ohio 15769. Ph. 992·2156. 51&gt;·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Mf"mber: United Prl"S!i lntE"tnational,
Inland Daily Press Association and the
Ohio Newspa_per Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10011.

POSTMASTER: Send address chan~
to The Dally Sentlnel. Ul Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
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No subscriptions by mall pEnnitted in
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available.
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MaiiS.bocriptloM

bttlde Melp Coull&amp;)'
13 Weeks .... ...... ... ... ....... .. ...... ... $19.24
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~
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Manicotti, MlatbaHs &amp; Hot Garlic Bread.
SOUP AIID SAUD IAI lfiCl.U WITH IUFFD

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(latul• Price ''· ts J

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Friday 9 to I

..

At Salt Lake City, Kart Malone
scored 30 of his 39 point! in the
first half to help thi'Jazzsnap the
Wa~rlbrs ;. . six-game· winning
streak. John Stockton notched 18
botitts and 17 assists for ihe Jazz.

all(ht's 1ame aialul the L.A. CIJPpers In Los
An1eles, Ia shown shoollnl a free throw In the first
half. The Cellle&amp; won 112-111. (UPI)

~ ....

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Monday &amp;

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.Jazz 133. Warriors 118

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SCORES WINNING POINTS .::_lloallln 1 - d
Larry Bird ( 33) , who -red a pa!P of win niDI free
throWs with Jess than a second left in Tueaday

like "losing part .of my own drinking to the point where lie
family."
was Intoxicated," Ruffo said.
"He's going to be awfully hard •'We have to get the results of the
to replace," Steinbrenner said. blood test."
"There's only one Billy Martin."
Ruffo added, "It's possible he
Martin managed five teams: could face other charges. but I
.Min)lesota. Detroit. Texas, New wouldn't want to speculate.- It's
York and Oaklalld. He guided the tn the bands of the DA."
Yankees to a pennant In 1976 a:,nd
.Martin died Instantly of a
a world championships in 1977, fracturt'dneckandaromprened
and also led Minnesota, Detroit . spinal cord in the collision on a
and Oakland to dtvlston titles.
state highway. that rtlns near his
He played In the majors from sprawling horse farm six miles
1950 throu11h 1961 and had a .257 from Binghamton in upstste New
lifetime batting average. He York.
.
played in 100 or more games in
Broome County Coroner Dr.
only seven seasons and appeared Patrick RUddy said the former
in one AU-Star Game.
Yankees' skipper also 8uf!ered
Martin's ~mbunctious style severe brain injuries and mas·
became part of New York sports slve Internal injuries."
legend. As a player, he was quick
Ruffo said invetttgators• beto 11se his flits. As manager, his · Ueved Martin and Riedy were ·
stormy relatll)ns extended ~ to heading home for ' Christina~
owners, players, umpires a.rd dinner.
reporters.
Reedy. Martin's friend for
In one outburst that led to a more than 20 yea~s, sustalned".a
1978 dlsmtsaal, Martin referred crushed hip and hlp socket,
to Jackson asa"bornliar" and to broken ribs and cui! and brullles.
the Yankee owner as a "con- He was transferred in serious
viet," In , reference to Stein· condition to the SUNY Health
brenner's cpnviction for illegal Sciences Center in Syracuse for
p o l I tIc a I c a m p a 1 g .n reconstructive surgery.
contribution~.
Ruffo said no alcohol was found
Martin, 61, was under contract in the wrecked pickup, addln, it
as a special adviser to the was · difficult to deter~Dine
Yankees and was expected to whether Martin. who was a
work closely with manager passenger In · the truck, was
Bucky Dent next season. And wear11111 a seatbett.
M!lrtinnevergaveuponhopes~
"Both bodies were driven up
would return to manage a sixth into the windshield, but that
ttme.
doesn't mean they weren't wearAuthorities blamed his death lng (seatbelts) ,"Ruffo said .
on the combinatiOn of drunken
Reedy is an aide to a Detroit
driving and tee-slicked roads.
councilman and owns a saloon a
Broome County Sheriff An· block from Tlaer Stadium.
thony Ruffo said District Attar· Reedy's 19-year-old son, Bill Jr.,
ney .G erald Mallen would con- said his father and MarOn "went
slder vehicular mans Iaugher or way back."
criminally negltlent homldde . The Detroit Free Press recharges agaiDit Bill Reedy; 53, 1ported Wednesday that Reedy, ·
after ·tab testa determine his ·' 53, had been charged for driving
blood-alcohol t.vel.
·'
' .while Impaired and four other
"In the observation of the iinfracttons on his Mlcblpn
devutv. the driver had been license.

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accident.
Meanwhile, Martin's old foes
took time to eulOgize the irascible
Yankee manager.
Slugger Reggie Jackson, who
nearly came to·· .blows with
Martin In 19n when the manager
puUed him out of the o~tfleld in a
nationally televised game. called
Martin "an outsta,ncjtng
manager."
·
·
''The ope thing I'll always
remember Is he wanted to win.
Some say at all costs. but! don't
think at all costs. Off the field, he
was justa helluva guy," Jackson
said.
Yan'kees owner George Stein'
brenner, whO fired Martin on five ·
occasions in what many des·
cribed as an overwrought soap
opera, said losing Martin was
'

1. •• .,, ..._,. ct-11 ................... tn

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IN TOWN ! !

FENToN, N.Y. (UP!) - AS
authotttlesponderedmanslaugh·
ter charlie&amp; against Billy Martin's old friend, old toes sang the
praises of the New York Yan;• kees' batutnaex-managerktlled
In an auto accident Christmas
Day.
PoUci!ialdTu~ay that manslaughter chara~ were being
considered for William Reedy, a
· loligttme Merlin friend charfll!(l
with drunken driving for the
accident on an icy road near the
home of the five-time Yankee
manager.
The Broome County District
Attorney's Office said It would
a walt the results of lab tests
before determining what addl·
ttonal c~arges would be pressed
ag.alnsttheDetroit saloon owner,
·
In the

FULl SET

OR

,

Prosecutors weigh manslaughter charges against Reedy

•LA-Z-BOY
•SIMMONS
. •STEARNS &amp; FOSTER
ALL WITH
DELUXE INNERSPRING MAnRESS

WALL
SAVERS

Hinson scored 31 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds and the
Netsusedan18-8runattheendof
the third quarier to snap a
three-game losing streak. Wa·
shlngton has lost three in a row
and 10 straight on tile road.
Bernard Kina scored 27 jlolnts to
Lead the Bulk!ts.
Balli 112, Tlmberwolves It .
At Chicago, Michael Jordan
led six Bulls In double fl111res
with 28 points as the Bulls
extended their home winning
streak to 10 games. Scottie
Pippen added 22 for Chicago.
Tony Campbell scored 20 points
and Sam Mitchell had 19 to lead
the Timberwolves, losers of nine
straight.
Bucks 183, Roekels tMJ
Jack Sikma scored 13 of his 26
points in the fourth period and the
Bucks used an 18-2 run in the
fourth quar-ter to gain their third
straight victory. Fred Roberts
added 18 for the Bucks. ,Akeem
Olajuwon scored 34 points for
Houston, which has dropped
seven in a row on the road.
Nuuet. 114, Slxen 111
At Denver, Walter Davis
scored 24 -points, including the
Nuggets'iastfourofthe game, as
Denver won its fourth straight.
The Sixershad a chance totlethe
game but Charles Barkley
missed a three-point attempt
with -five seconds remaining.
Barkley scored a game-high 32
poin\s and grabbed 16 t:ebounds.
Suns 121, Trallblazel'tl 105 .
At Phoenix, Kevin Johnson
scored 31 points and Andrew
Lang blocked eight shots for the
Suns. Johnson also had 13 assists
and 10 rebounds for his first
triple-double of the season. Tom
Chambers scored 16 points but
left in the third quarter after
being elbowed by Por,land's
Kevin Duckworth. Chambers requlred 14 · stitches over his left
eye.
:

While Martin is eulogized•

..'

SLEEP SOFAS

RECLINERS

•LA-Z-BOY
•LANE ACTION

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A SELECT GROUP OF

Movie producer Samuel Goldwyn said , "From success, you
get a lot of things, but not that
great inside thing that love
brings you."

quarter and Kevin McHale came
oft the beach to add 20 points for
Larry Bird got the call, but It Boston.
was .the Los Augele&amp; Clippers
Gary Grant added 24 points for
who were crying foul.
Los Angeles and Harper clllpped
Blr~ nnk two free throws.with
In with 20.
two-tenthl of a second left
Elsewhere, San Antonio buited
· Tuesday l)tght to g'l~ the BoaiDn Charlotte 107·82, Indiana downed
Celtlcs a 112-111 win over the Orlando 98-!lo, New York nipped
Clippers:
.
Mlaml100-!14, New Jersey toppecl
Aftet: Charles S!lllth had 111ve Washington • · 101.94, Chicago
the Clippers 111-110 lead with 33 tripped .Mil)pesota 112·99, IV'JI·
secorids to go, Boston lnbounded waukee dispensed Of Houston
the ball 10 Bird on the left side 103-96, Denver squeaked by Phi·
and Smtt~ was called for a foul. ladelphla 114-111, Phoenix dusted
Bird, a 92 percent foul shooter, Portland, 121-105, Utah stomped
calmly sank both free throws.
Golden State 133·118 and the Los
But Los Angeles didn't think Angeles Lakers rallied to nip
that Bird deserved the trip to the Sacrameilto 104-102.
line.
Silw:ll101, •••nels 82
"E"'veryone knOws it wasn't a
At Charlotte, N.C., Terry Cumfoul, "I know I ?idn't foul him:" mt,ngs sco~d 32 point~ and David
·said Sm!Jh. •'I even ask'!d Larry Robinson 14 with 14 rebounds to
after tl)e game and he said It sp'ark San Antonio to its sixth
wasn't a foul. It's political. This straight win and lOth inllgames.
stuff lllippens to us over and over. Cummings scored 18 in the first
..., , It's uncalled for. It's frustrating quarter, during which the
:. . :: • to co.me up with a loss when you Hornets were held to a season·
' .. , didn't lose."
low 16. Del Curry led CharlOtte
~
smith scored 14 of his game- with 171!Dints.
\ high . 33 points in the fourth
Paean 18, Malle 10
quarter for the Clippers.
-'
At Indianapolis, Reggie Miller
! Bird, who led the Celtics with scored 28 points and Vern Flem: 27 points, even urged the sellout tng handed out 12 assists and
• croWd or 15,350 to yell louder grabbed a season-high 10 re: when be got to the line.
bounds. Mike Sanders added 17
}
"Theonethlngicandolsblock points and LaSalle Thompson
out the crowd noise and shoot the added a season-high 14 with 16
~ ·'
ball the way I have a million rebounds. Sam VIncent scored 29
.. ~ · times before," Bird said.
points and Terry Cattedge 20 for
,
-Bird··only
got
the·call
because
Orlal)do.
1
•· he's
accordlhg to Clipper '
Kllleu 1M, Heat M
Ron Harper.
At Miami, Charles Oakley
'1'1iat's' Bird," Harper said. pUedup19pointsandl2rebounds
''There are four or five players to lead New York to Its seventh
wiiP 8J'e (Ding to get that call day straight win. Trent Tucker added
In aJld day out."
17 points for the Knicks. Kevin
The Clippers had one final Edwards missed a three-pointer
·· ' chance and Harper drilled a with nine seconds left that would
25-toot jumper that was disai- have tied the score. Rony !\eikaly
lowed because it came after the scored 26 points for the' Heat,,
bu~.
·' '
losers of four In a row. •
·
Reggte Lewis scored 16 of his,,
Nets 101, Bullets M
seaS;OIJ-hlgh 28 points In the final .. At East Rutherford, N.J., Roy1
UI'IS,...U Writer

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Celtics 112-111 victory

mr11.

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·Bird's clutch ft·ee thrtlws give

••

]opseph Spear

already begun falling apart in
August. Boeing has been deliver· burger - previously employed
tng jetliners to China . . The by Kissinger Associates?
Hughe5 Aircraft Co Is working on
Whatever the answer, it is
satelUte projects. And Chinese becoming increasingly apparent
technicians are in the United that George Bush Is not on
States learning how to upgrade Intimate terms with some of the
their F -8 figher planes.
paramount principles for which
Was tt the influence of those this nation stands. And he cannot
two moral giants, Richard Nixon seem to grasp the symbolic
and Henry Kissinger, both of Importance of right-minded be·
whom recently visited China? · haviour. As Senate Majority ·
It's probable that Bush was Leader George Mitchell put it.
swayed by litem. and It ought to "There are times when what
be prosecutable, given their
stands for and beiieves
conflicts of Interest. Opening the America
in is more important than ecodoor to China is Nixon's claim to nomic and geopolitical considerrespect. Kissinger has extensive ations. This is one of those
business ties to China, which
reportedly have been disrupted Urnes."
I completely agree. I beiieve
by the turmoil. And isn't it the bootlicking in Peking was a
Interesting that both of the craven display of moral deprav·
emissaries who recently visited
Peking - Scowcroft and Eagle- tty , and I am ashamed .

SALE

FILM
DEVELOPING

Duemb" 27, 1189

U. S. licks bootS at Chinese banquet

Backstairs at
the White House

I

Wednesday, December 27, 1989

•

II
I
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••

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... ··----···· - . - .
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. . . . . . . . . . ~. . . .- -........-......... _. . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . .- . . . r-.• .•

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....... . -~ ...:. ·· -·

�Wednesday. December

Ohio

~~~~~O..~~m~bw~2~7~·2!!!------------~--------~p~~~~o~y~M~~~~·~~;;;;-.;;~

27. 1989

--Areaideaths--

Muller's goals push Devils to 4-4 tie
was trying to get to the front of Muller's 15th goal of the season.
Mark Johnson c1rrled the puck
the net, trying to get open."
Into the Rangers end and passed
Driver knew where to find
captain Kirk. "You know be's to Muller In the slot. Muller's shot
going to be there," said Driver. beat Vanb!esbrouck to his stick
plckedsecond~!ndLem!eux!n
"He was yelling, 'Bruce, Bruce, side from 20 feet.
New York came within 3·2 at
tbe 1984 draft, but Tu~ay night . Bruce.' I was able to pick him up
14:05
of the second period on John
no one was questlonln&amp;' his worth early enough and when be
Ogrodn!ck'
s 21st goal of the
when the second of hiS tw.o goals hollered I knew he was going to
season,
a
tap-In off a blue
In tbe 1ame lifted New Jersey
be there.
line-pass
from
Kelly K!s!o.
lntP .a i-4 tie with the New York
"Bruce didn't panic," said
Klslo
and
Ogrodn!ck
combined
Rangers.
Muller. "He put the puck right on
the
second
again
at
19:21
of
The goal e31tended l';!uller's my stick." ,
period
when
Klslo
o~tmuscled
goal-scoring streak to·stx games,
Muller calmly st!ckhandled
and pulled New Jersey · Into a the puck and beat Rangers defenseman V!acheslav · Fet!sov
first-place tie In the Patrick goaltender- John Vanb!esbrouck In front of the net and converted
Ogrodn!ck's rebound for his sixth
Division, the latest point In the with a backhand shot.
season the Devils have ever been
Muller's gbal came after Mark goal or the seaso~ and a 3·3 tie.
Elsewhere In the NHL. Boston
In first.
Janssens scored at 14:20 of the
The Ranger, had taken control third period to cap a three-goal topped Toronto 6-4, Hartford and
of the game, scoring three comeback by New York that Quebec skated to a 3·3 tie, Buffalo
ripped Detroit 6-3, Washington
unanswered goals to take a 4-1 gave them a 4-3 lead.
lead late In the third period, when
The Devils took a 1-0 lead 62 popped Pittsburgh 6-3, Winnipeg
bested Minnesota 6-3 and St.
the Devils captain. worked his seconds Into the game on a
magic.
short-handed goal by Patrlk . Louis blew out Chicago 8-3. ·
Bruins 6, Maple Leafs 4
With Devils goaltender Sean Sundstrom. ·
At
Boston, Dave Christian
Burke pulled for an extra skater
New Jersey extend~ the lead
scored
the tie-breaking goal
and less tban 30 seconds left to to 2-0 at 6: 18 of the first when the
midway
Into
the third period and
play In regulation time, Bruce Ftangers were unable to clear the
Craig
Janney
collected a pa lr of
Driver - picked up a Rangers defensive zone and Randy Vel!goals and two assists to lift the
clearing pass In the offensive schek passed to Brendan Shanazone and passed low to Muller, han, who beat Vanb!esbrouck to Boston Bruins to their third
straight victory.
who had poSitiOn on Rangers the short side.
Whalers 3, Nordlques 3
defenseman Brian Leetch.
The Rangers closed to within
At Quebec, Kevin Dineen
"I was just trying to get Into 2-1 at 17:18 of the period when
their end and forecbeck," said Kr!s King: batted Darren Tur- scored the tying goal with less
Muller. "We've been having cotte's rebound out of thea!rpast than six minutes remaining In
trouble doing that In the third Burke for his second goal of the regulation to lift the Hartford
Whalers Into the tie. Quebec
period. The puck went around the season. '
extended
It winless streak to a ·
The Devils went ahead 3-1 at
net and popped out to the point.
club-record
14 games and reBruce made the·heads-up play. 1 5:05 of the second period on

B:r .NNIN SWENSON
1JPJ S,.rta Writer
Klrll Muller bas had to live
down a lot of compac!sons to
MarloLem!euxevers!ncehewas

:. ALL TIED UP.,.. Boston's Andy Brickley (25) ts·tied upqatut

die boards between Toronlo's Mark Osborne (U) and Allafr!Ue

I

mains In last place overall In the
NHL.
S•bres 8, Red Wlap I
At Buffalo, N.Y.,MUte Follgno
scored two goa Is and the Buffalo
Sabres taU!edfour In the third
period. Gerard' Gallant scored a
goal and assisted on two others
for Detroit.
Capitals 6, Pengulu 3
At Landover, Md., Bob Joyce
scored the w!nn.lng goal early In
the third period ·-to help the
Capltals rally from three goals
down and give Washington Its
fourth victory In five games. The
victory pushed Wash)ngton to the
.500 level (16-16-4) for tile first
time since Oct. 20. PlltsJ)urgh Is
4-10-3 on the road.
Jets 5, North Stars 3
· At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Dale
Hawerchuk's goal with 9:57 to
play snapped a' 3-3 tie and the
Winnipeg Jets scored four thirdperiod goals l'n a comeback
victory that snapped the Jets'
three-game winlesS'Streak while
Minnesota has dropped 11 of the
last 13.
Blues 8, Blackbawks 3
At St. Louis, Brett Hull, Paul
MacLean and Sergio Momesso
each scored twice to lead the
Blues. Hull, who leads the NHL
with 31 goals, became the first
Blues player to score 30 goals this
early In the season. The victory
ended a three-game losing streak
for the Blues.

Lovle Watson, 84, a resident of
Amer!care-Pomeroy Nursing
Center, died Saturday at
Amer!care-Pomeroy.
She was born In Gasaway,
W.Va. In Braxton County to the
late John and Laura Edwards
Simpson Watson. She was a
retired department store c!Eirk.
She Is survived by three
sisters, Avice Selvey and Pearl
McAndrews, both of Winter
Haven, Fla. and Virginia Shultz,
Artesia, Calif.; a brother,
French Simmons, Gasaway,

Rutland...

.

...

By JEFF HASEN
UPI Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)
When Southern Cal coach Larry
Smith heard about Bo Schembecbler's decision to retire, be
felt the Michigan coach really
Wanted a victory In Monday's
Rose Bowl.
"My first thought was some
guys would do· anything to win a
ball game," .Smith chuckled,
recalling the Dec. 13 news from
Ann Arbor, Mich. "My first
thought, really, was one of
sadness because anybody who
ever coached for Bo or with Bo,
anybody who played for him, or
anybody who knew him well
always thought that he'd coach
forever. He loved coaching so
much and he loved being In

. HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (UP!)- dates and the main qualification
Tile New York Jets fired Coach would be NFL experience.
Steinberg said the candidates
Jpe Walton and his entire staff
Tuesday, three days after the were employed by other teams,
club finished with Its worst so It mdy take a while before he
record since 19ffi.
can talk to them.
Candidates who have been
The moves were announced by
Dick Steinberg, who left the New
mentioned Include San Fran·
E)'lglaild Patriots to become the cisco 49ers assistant Mike
Jets' general manager Dec. 18.
Holmgren, Cincinnati Bengals
assistant Bruce Coslet, and col.Steinberg also said Mike
lege head coaches John MackH!ckey. resigned as director of
player personnel, but director of
ovtc of Illinois, George Perles of
pj'o player personnel Jim Royer
Michigan State and Howard
wpuld be retained as director of
Schnellenberger of Louisville.
pro scouting.
The Jets finished 4-12 and last
:"What we've done today Is tell In the AFC East In 1989, bringing
Jq_e Walton and his staff we're Walton's 7-year record to 53-57-1
In regular-season games. He was
g~g to make a change," Steinberg said at a news conference at 1-2 In playoff appearances after
the club's training fac!l!ty. "Obthe 1985 and 1986 seasons.
"The first day I signed the
v~usly, It's a very, very unpleasant day for me. But the contract I knew eventually this
day would come,;'_Walton said.
ol)tan!zatlon needs a fresh
start."
"Today was the day."
Walton has two years remainSteinberg said he had no target
date for naming a new coach but
Ing on the contract the Jets
would like to do It by the end of . extended after the 1988 season.
They will pay him a total of
January. He said he expected to
$800,000 for the two years.
talk to no more than six candl-

control."

·

Smith is a former Scheibbechler assistant, working with
him at both M!ain! (Ohio) and

Michiga~.

The two have remained close over the years.
"It came as somewhat of a
surprise," Smith said. "Some of
us thought if he was going to step
down, 11 . was going to be In the
next tw,o or three years. I'm
happy for him from a standpoint
that he's able to do It with his
health (Intact). I'm happy that he called the shot, not someone
else telling him that It's time. Bo
is always a person who did things
his way."
·
Smith credits Schembechlerwho will be replaced next season
by longtime assistant Gary
Moeller - with teaching him the
correc! way tq go about putting
together a winning football team.
"One of the keys to success was
getting to know your players and
helping them bring the best out of
thems'elvlls," the USC coach
said. '" Fundamentals,- blocking
on offense, tackling on defense,

the overall discipline of the
game. Assignments - everybody being where they're supposed to be, you work to keep
mistakes to minimum.
"As a coachheneverbentfrom
his phllopophy that It's Integrity
first. Look at. all the years at'
Michigan, all the years lie won.
His recru!ti_ng was squeaky
clean. If he found an assistant
doing something Illegal, he
would've fired him on the spot"
Smith was Schembechler's def. enslve end coach In 1967 and 1988
and followed his mentor to Ann
Arbor In 1969 to coach the
offensive line for four years.
"Bo wasn't married when we
went to Miami," Smith remembered. "He had a four-room
home and had his assistants
sleep on mattresses on the floor
until we could move our families
there. There was only one john
and Bo bad-It from 7 until 7: 45
(a.m. h We bad meetings at 8

Stocks

'
o'clock. It was a big scramble
getting to the o!!!ce on lime."
Smith's first day In Michigan
was as eventful.
"All the assistants drove In
from Miami real late the night
before and we checked Into a
motel in Ann Arbor," Smith said.
"He told us to be In the office at 7
o'clock In the morning, buthele!t
and we d!dn' t know how to get
there. ·
~

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
or Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewl
Am Electrtc Power ............. 32~
AT&amp;T ................................ .44'Vs
Ashland 011 ........................ ~9'!8
Bob Evans .......................... 13%"8
Charming Shoppes .............. 10'!4
. City Holding Co ............... .... 15
Federal MoguL. .................. 20';4
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 44%
Heck's ................................. 3%
Key CenturiOn .................... 13\-'.
Lands' End ... :..................... 20%
Limited Inc ......................... 34
Multimedia Inc .................... 90
Rax Restaurants .................. ! J.l
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .1534
Shoney's Inc ....................... 11 )'8
Star Bank ........................... 21'h
Wendy's In II ... .'................... .4')1,
Worthington Ind .................. 22%

GOOD USED
WASHEIS, DIYEIS,
IEFIIGEUTOIS, TVs,
GAS I ELEC. IANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe., Gallpalls

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ae

and 7 rebounds. Simmons has an
average of 9.5 rebounds a game.
Host New Orleans plays FlorIda In the second game. The
l~rs meet Thursday for third
place and the winners clash for
the championship.
The Bearcats will be playing In
the tournament In Hawaii with
Creighton, Drake, Duke, Hawaii,
Rutgers, San Francisco, and
VIrginia Tech. This eight-team
tournament goes four nights.
Wooster hosts Its 27th annual
Mose Hole Classic, with Haverford (Pa.), Hanover (Ind.), and
Olivet (Mich.). Hanover and
Olivet are paired In the first
game while Wooster takes on
Haverford In the nightcap. The
tournament Is named In honor of
a former Wooster coach who led
the team to a 411 victories In 32
years. ·
Mount Vernon has Invited
Kenyon, Ohio Northern and Celj·
tre (Ky.) to Its Colonial City
Classic. Kenyon playa Oblo
Northern In the first game while
Centre takes on Y.ount VernonIa
the nightcap.

A second accident on Sunday
occurred on private property.
According to the report, William
T. Snowden, Rutland, had parked
his father's vehiCle In a private
drive off Paynter Ridge Road. He
lei! the motor running and went
Inside the residence. When he
returned to the vehicle be discovered that It bad rolled out oft he
driveway and went over an
embankment, striking a tree.
The vehicle was heavily damaged and there were no Injuries.
Oil Saturday afternoon deputies took a report from Donald
Pauley, Beech Grove Road,
Rutland, that around 6 a.m. a
·male subject allegedly broke out
the driver's door glass and
smashed the windshield of his
truck which was parked next to
his trailer.

AT

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112 WEST MAIN

Weather
South Central Ohio
Cloudy Wednesday night. with
a chance of snow and a low near
20. Chance of snow Is 50 percent.
Mostly sunny Thursday, with
highs near 35.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance · of rain or snow
Friday, with fair weather Saturday and a chance of snow on
Sunday. Highs w!ll be between 35
and 45 Friday and between 25 and
35 Saturday and Sunday. Overn !ght lows Will be between 25 and
30 early Friday and between 15
and 25 Saturday and Sunday
mornings.

SAVE

Hospital news

3 VALUE PACKED DAYS ONLY!
DECEMBER 28 - 29 - 30

Veterans Memorlsl
Tuesday admissions - Leroy
Barton, Pomeroy; Mary Hysell,
Pomeroy; Joyce Sinclair,
Shade; Chester Young, Pomeroy; Florence Circle, Racine;
and Seldon Baker, 1\-'Jddleport.
Tuesday discharges - Hugh
Hanson and Leroy Barton.

10 /a ,.0
1

SPECIAL HOURS; TlllJR8DAY, 9 A.M.-5 P.M.; FRIDAY, 9 A.M.·7 P.M.; SATURDAY, 9 A.ll.·5 P.M.

AIU"

so•._ s.aa.t

After Banta Baler

PH. 446·1699

TALLEY HAM ••••••••••••••~...... S1 ~19

sixth with Michigan.
Oklahoma moved from seventh to fifth, beating LoyolaMarymount in Its only game
136-121.
Rounding out the Top Ten It
was Indiana at No. 8, Nevada-'
Las Vegas at No.9 and Arkansas
.at No. 10. The Hoosiers and
Razorbacks each moved up one
slot from a week ago, while the
Running Rebels made the biggest jump, gaining three spots.
Completing the Top 20 were
No. 11 Arkansas, No. 12 Lou!sf·
ana State, No. 13 Georgia Tech,
No.14 Duke, No.15 UCLA,co-No.
16 La Salle and Arizona, No. 18
VIrginia and No. 20 Iowa.
. The Haw keyes took the biggest
tumble, dropping from rtve slots
from No. 15 after being beaten by
UNL V over the weekend.
La Salle, Arizona, and VIrginia
entered the rat-Ings this week,
while Arkansas-Little Rock,
Memphis State, Alabama, St.
John's and Oregon State dropped
out Three teams were lied for
20th last week.

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THROUGHOUT THE STORE
VRVEETA
CHEESE ..............t9.~•• S1.59

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CHA

MARGARINE .....!..!fl.. 51.69
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After Christmas
Saflngs!!·

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CABBAGE ••••••••• ~!......... 29c

CARROTS .......... J.UM.... 39C

PARlAY SPIW

PO--OY'S QUALITY SHOE STOlE

Qhio teams head into cage tournaments
By Ualled Presslnternatloaal
Several Ohio college basketbill teams swing Into action
Wednesday night for the first
Ume since the Christmas
hoHday. ·
Dayton hOsts Southern from
Lollislana !h the lone regularseason game on the Ohio schedq~. while other teams are In
tournaments.
'Ohio State plays undefeated
LaSalle In the first-round of the
Suiar Bowl Classic at New
Otteana. Cincinnati Is In the
Rainbow Classic In Hawal!, while
ri.ount Vernon and Wooster host
tltl!lr own tournaments.
'l'be OSU-New Orleans game
pits the Explorers scoring maclllne. 6-foot-' ll!lllor loreward
LIOnel Simmons agalut the
BUckeyes freshman Jimmy
Ja~ Both players lead their
te&amp;RII tn ICQI'Ing, but Simmons II
rtiucb farther abud of Jacluon.
SlmmOJif can1es a 22.5 polatJ a
~
~~ trylq to
bHome
ftftll DIYIIIOII I
player to llieS,8110pollltclrcle.
Jacluon leadt the Backer• wltb
1.11 average of 13.8 polnta a game

Fink stated that "we are
s.t artlng this morning (Wednesday) on No!'th Main St. to
pressurize the lines, and Ru !land
and Leading Creek arE' working
together to solve the problems.''
Crisp agreed that ''everyone Is
working together" to restore
water to affected Ru !land
customers.

back onto the road, spun around
and flipped onto Its top In the
ditch. Rager was cited for !allure
to control. His vehicle was
heavily damaged but there were
no!njur!esrepotted.

HOIIS: I AJI..-6 PJL

~yracuse remains Number 1

~ansas received 11 first-place·
votes In staying at No. 2. The
J~bawks,
11-0, earned 392
pdlnts, defeating Arizona State
~7 In their only game of the
Wlll!k.
Georgetown did not play last
week, but earned four first-place
vofeS and a total of 375 points to
hold down the third spot. Illinois,
wli!ch defeated M!ssourt 101-93 In
the biggest game of the last
week. moved from fifth to fourth
w!)h 341 points. The Tigers
drppped from fourth to a lie or

W.Va.; and a special friend,
Carol Young, Mason, W.Va.
In addition to her parents she
was preceded In death by three
brothers, Dale Watson, Blaine
Watson, and Wilbur Simmons.
ServiceswillbeheldFrlday,l
p.m. at the Blgony-Jordan Fun·
eral Home In Albany with Leo·
nard McVey officiating. Burial
will be In Wells Cemetery in
Pagevllle.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday from 6-8 p.m.
and anytime before services on
Friday .

Continued from page 1

lower end of Rutland are the ones
who are affected by the water
leaks, Crisp said. Once repairs
were completed to the break In
that flrst16-lnch line, water to the
upper end of the vlllage was left
on, ,he said.
. Leal;s within the village have
also . been repaired with the
exception of one near the Hill Top
area, according to Mayor Fink,
that remains unfixed and residents In that area have had their
water shut off temporarily.
Fink noted that the difficulty In
fixing the leaks comes from the
sub zero temperatures and frozen ground. He wen! on to say
that many volunteers and
workers are busy trying to
correct the problem.

Jets:jl_re Walton, staff . Ex-Schembechler assistant meets mentor

to ~8-0.

Continued from page 1

...

In 'Grandaddy' of bowls, .!

(33) during lint-period ac:&amp;lon Tuesd~J !II Jloston Garden. (UPI) .

NEW YORK (UP!) - Syracu)e feasted on C.W. Post In Its
oniy game last week to retain the
N~- 1 co liege .basketball ra ling
T11esday by· United Press
International.
'l'h~ college basketball schedtOe was light last week with
schools completing final exams.
Tlie Or angemen received 15 of 30
!~!-place votes from the Board
of Coaches and totaled 428 points,
clahnlng the No. 1 slot a fifth
straight week. They routed C.W.
Post last week 129-72 to improve

---a·e Wa•oon

I.AJl'

0
R
CLEARANCE

Deputies...

IDAIIO

BAlliNG
POTATOES .........!U!•.52.29

MIS. PAUl'S

FISH STICKS ••••••••••••••••!..2!•• S1. 79 .
GREIN GIANT
.
NIBLET EAR CORN •••••• ::.'~:•• S1.89
MINUTE MAID
APPLE JUICE ............... ~!.~~·.. S1.3 9
3

''

LUCK'S ,

•
'
, BOLES SIDELINED - Michigan
nmnblg bliCII

ToJQ' llolel
(left), who will not play In Monday's Rose Bowl because of a liMe
Injury earUer Ia lite aeuon, watcba practice Tuesday with head
coach Bo Scbembechler, who will retire after lite rame aralnst
Soulllern Cal. (UP I)
;

Playoff tickets go
on sale Saturday

CLEVELAND ( UPJ) - l
Tickets far the Browft1 divisional ·
playoff game witb Buffalo Jan. 6 :
wtllaoon 181e$aturday at 9a.m., I
the team anllOUIICed Tuelday.
Tile Brawa1' 52,000 Ieason 1
Ucket bolderl bave unUI Friday I
to parelwe tlcketa. On Saturday ;
allllclllt!tanot IOid wt11 1008 sal~!
at all Tlclletroa otatlets and the
Stadium,
I

DOWNING CliUS

MUWN MUSSEl

INSURANCE

111 S.OIIIIIt,. PeMuar

.YOUIIfiiiPIIIIItn
AGitns

u•••

"'liS COUl!ll
SINCI1161

FRIED APPLES ••••••••••••••• ~:.~~-•••• 99(
DEL MOftTE
oz. 7-9C
SWEO PEAS _..•.•...•......•••.••....
POST CEREAL
SUPER SUGAR CRISP .~.~2.~~•• S2.39
HAWAIIAN PUNCH ••••••4!.2!•. S1.09
SOUl Dll
.
VLASSIC PICKLES ••••••••••1!.2!o. S1.29
NAIISO SWISS
CHEESE CRACKERS ••••• :~.~~!e. S1.39
nYII Pl(l
BOUNTY TOWELS •••••••••••••• S1.49
SHIELD BAR SOAP ••••••••!.2~••••• s9c
11

•ALL CHRISTMAS WRAP
•MUSICAL (HRISTMAS CARDS
•IOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS
•ANY CHIISTMAS SEASONAL GIFTWARE

Prescription· $hop ·
m ....,

271 . .11SIC. .

••o

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t
December 27. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By United P ress In ternational
Among volunteers for the
Ousted Roma nian dictator Nl·
Meigs Cou nty Methodist Coopershown on videocolaeCeausescu.
ative Par ish who helped to
tape
at
a
secret
tria
l in which he
prepare food baskets for the
needy this holiday season are the was sentenced to death and later
executed by firing squad:
following:
"I am the president and the
Gall Rowe , Betty Weyers- commander In chief of the armv'
mIller . Kristen Pa pe, Raymond I don't recognize you. You a
Furbee, Maybelle l hle, Fred E. just simple citizens here sltth :
Smith . Leona Machlr, Helen across from me! I a m tt ·
Holter, Betty Dea n, NelJie president of the Socialist Repul
Parker , Har ry Rlndflels h. Don ia lie of Romania! I will answer th
Crane, J erry Rowe, Kevin Wolfe, representatives of the workln•
Bill and Bea Cornell and Roger L. people bu t not here tn front o
coup d'etat plotte r s who usee.
Grace .
foreign help."

7-r.s OZ. CAN

99(

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH,

. SMUCKER'S GRAPE

."

Pork

Spare Ribs •••••••••••
LB.

·

•
SUPERIOR

FRANKIE
WIENERS

CAROLINA PRIZE

Bacon •• ,.............L:-••• 89&lt;

MIXED

12 Oz. Pkg.

99(

Fryer Parts •••••••':·••• 49c

CHICKEN

leg .Quarters ••••o:-••• 39c
ECKRICH ·
99
Smoked Sausage ~· $·1

GOLD MEDAL

·FLOUR ·
.

$ 39

5 LB. BAG

1

The Shawnee State University
Choir will hold Its first rehearsal
of the winter quarter on Jan. 2 at
7 p.m. In the music center, room
10, In Massie }fall on the
university canlpus .
Membership In the choir Is
open to all students regudless of
major, as well as Interested
people In the community. Potential members should have choral
experience.
There Is also an apprenilceship

A Christmas dinner at the
Steakhouse In Gallipolis highlighted the recent meeting of the
Fernwood: Garden Club.
During the evening. Christmas
cards were exchanged which had
been made by the members using
natural materials. Kathryn
Johnson also gave each one
present a gift she had personally
made for them .
Following the dinner. · tile
group toured downtown Gallipo1~ to see the Christtnas lights.
At the Meigs County Christmas

TrusteeJ to meet
The Letart Township Trustees
will meet Friday at 1 p.m. at the
office building to discuss end of
the year matters.

DUNCAN. HINES

CAKE MIXES
18112 OZ. BOX

$

On1ons ••••••••••••••• 2/ 1 69&lt; .
$ . 79
2°/o Milk •••••••••••~~. 1
CRISCO

3 LB. ~AG YELLOW

FLAVORITE •

'

.'

BLUE BONNET

Spread ••••••••••••••~~. $1l9

OIL

White B.read·~•••••••• $14 9

Zest a Crackers.~·••• 79C

·

Gala Towels ••••••••• 59c _Totino's Pizza •••••• 89&lt;
• •
•ntwT'IVW
• • • • \AIU C\11.-,

(REGULAR TIDE ONI. Y)

I

'

GRAN. SUGAil

$649

IMri . .

QI-

46

oz.

4LB.

"

99(

11M I Pa CUS'ICJIIII

_ ---~-o OilY AT POIIIU'S SUPIVAlU
SUN., Dl(. 24 TIIIU SAT, DEC. 10

10011 Ollf td I'OWIU1 SiiPIIYMU
10011 Sill. DIC. J4 n.J

"' ..-&amp;1 . . . . .

,.

BIG CHIEF

TIDE DEIERGENT ·
1360Z.

New Year:r Party
The LottrldgeCommunlty Center, Coolvllle, will have Its annual
New Year's Eve party on Sunday
beginning at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be served and the
admission Is free.

Now you know
By United Press International
One out !lf six Americans about 37 million - do not have
any health insurance. Many have
jobs but their employers do not
provide health Insurance policies
and they cannot afford them on
their own.

JID

OliO

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Flower ' Show , F e rnwood
members won one third place
ribbon and two fourlh place
ribbons for their arrangements.
They also supplied cookies a nd
sandwiches for the refreshment

area . ·
The next meeting will be Jan.
16-at the home of Suzanne Warner
at 1 p.m. The program will be a
flower arranging yldeo. Each
member ·Is· to ~pond-to ·the ·r oll
call by statlhg their New Year's
resolution for their garden.

Animal lovers
protest Bush
quail hunt
HOUSTON CUP!! - Animal
right s activists will be picketing
outside a ranch In Southeast
Texas · Thursday If Pres ident
Bush's follows through with
plans to "assassinate animals"
during his annual holiday hunting trip.
.
The Fund for Animals Inc .,
which said It has 20,000 members
In Texas, sent a letter to the
White House Tuesday urging the
president to skip his annual quail
hunt at a ranch In Beeville,
Texas, owned by Houston businessman Will Farish.
"Though the life of a bird may
seem insignificant In the fa ce of
world affair s. to each Individual
bird his or her life Is everything,"
wrote Dana Forbes, the group's
Texas representative. "Thus. we
are asking you to take a step
toward the vision of a kinder,
gentler world that you have
offered us by choosing to spare
the lives of the birds on the
Farish Ranch."
Writer Cleveland Amory, the
group' s national chairman, said
In New York that activists
planned peaceful picketing outside the ranch Thursday and said
he could not understand how
Bush could take time In the midst
of the Panama crisis to go
hunting.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1989
3:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M.
AND

DOMINO CONFECTIONARY
OR LIGHT

BROWN
SUGAR
1-LB. BOX

n.
1'. 11

I.h'•

Iii.&gt;·
Starting At:

MONDAYI JANUARY 1I 1990
3:00 P.M.-7:00 P.M. '

NOW*211
Reg. $799
IDW'411
Example:

SEAFOOD FEAST

.

CURIO
CABINETS

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTERS
Reg.$499

WOOD ROCKERS "DISCOUNTED"

MOM PERRY'S SMORGASBORD

l·lB.lOAVES

9.8 OZ. TO 10.6 OZ.

3
f$
l
._,,,.CISI'I

Therewlll be aNew Year's Eve
service on Sunday from 7:30p.m.
to midnight at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church .
Preachers will be Lynn Davis
and Calvin Minnis. There will
also be several special singin!(
groups.

48 OZ. BTL.

RHODES

program which encourages talen ted high school singers to join,
gaining _valuable musical trainIng and voc al performance
experience.
The choir schedule for winter
quarter will Include a performance tour of Columbus
churches, as well as local
concerts.
All potential members are
asked to report for the first
rehearsal a few minutes early for
an audition.

Fernwood Garden . Club
copducts holiday dinner

New Year's Eve
service scheduled

oz.

RACINE DEPARTMENT STOlE

Shawnee Choir rehearsal
to begin in Portsmouth

24 Can Case-12 Oz. Cans

•

La

10.75

PRICES GOOD IHIU JANUARY 2, 1990

MICROWAVE WINNER -Debbie SmUll, rlgbl, Reed&amp; ville, wu
the looky winner of a mlcr!)wave from Anderson's. Pictured wit"
Smltb 18 store owner, .Jim Anderson. Other winners were Millie
Midkiff, who wa.s the winner of a lamp, and Gerrl Hawk, who won a:
crock.

PEP·SI COLA
7-UP

$ 139

$ 49
Chuck Roasts ....L:.•• 1
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$ 99
Round Steak ......... 1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

NOODLE SOUP

SUPER SA~INCS!
1I4 OFF STOREWIDE

FRO

MT. DEW

CAMP.Ll'S CHKIIEN

Sacred Heart Cat holic Ch urch.
For information call 1·800-3335051

32 Oz. Jar

89(

Lunch Meats •••••L:.••

The Pomeroy group of Alco hollcs Anonymous and AIAnon will
meet T hursday, 7 p.m. at the

JELLY or JAM

PRICES EFFECnYE SU~., DEC. 24 THRU SAT., DEC. 30, 1989

FLAVORITE 1~LB. ASSORTED

AA, A/Anon meet

Quote of the day

Helpers named

PRINGLES
We Reserve The Ri1ht To
limit Quantities

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·_

$7 99 Pll PERSON

GUN CABINETS OVER . .Ia

OFF

RECLINERS FROM FAMOUS MAKERS...

** Stratford
La·Z·Boy

** Richmond
Benchcraft

. ·STAR'FfNG

AT&gt;JIII•

a••

Reg. $179

•ow•aa•

OTHER ITEMS...
• Lamps
• Mirrors
• Wingback Chairs
• Coffee &amp; End Tables _• Wicker Baskets
• Hoover Vacuum Cleaners

SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

..; I II PC. Will&amp;
SUI ill .
.; IICftOIM.S

LARGE
SELECTION OF
BEDROOM
SUITES

PurchaseAny Bedroom Suite -BEST PRICES OF THE '89 - '90 SEASON .
Receive A Free Night Stand And
Example: Broyhill Sofa &amp; Loveseat
Free Full Size Boxspring and Mattres~
Reg.$1299

••• •aao••

Prices Start At

The

They Won Prllls In
Rutland Furnlture•s $10.000·Christmas Glveawayl
Bea London - Gallipolis
William A. Lewis - Gallipolis
Jean Moore- Hamden, Ohio
Kathy Smith • Cheshire
Doris Hensler • Racine
James Blank· Gallipolis
Sara Snouffer • Pomeroy
Margo Swisher • Cheshire
Ronnie. Searles • Rutland
.
Rebecca Hensler • Racine
Beverly Hester • New Haven
Karen Wheeler • Gallipolis
Mike Tillis • Pomeroy
Elaine Ralston • Pomeroy
Justine Neal· Gallipolis
Lewis Daugherty • Rutland
Doris Heniler • Racine
Benny Dent • Pomeroy
VIrginia Smith • Pomeroy
Kenneth Lorbach • Jackson

Frank Upton • Reedsville
Gary Palmer - Cheshire
Barbara Stroud • Gallipolis
Chris Wakefield • Rio Grande
Pomeroy Catholic Church
Ruth Graham • Hemlock Grove
Alice Davis - Rutland
D.C. Vance - Pomeroy
Willie Smith - VInton
Patty Dent • Pomeroy
Barbara Bissell -Chester
C. Ashley • Wilkesville
George Lamp - Point Pl~sant
Martha Sayre • New Haven
Iva Upton • Reedsville
Jerry Priddy • Gallipolis
Fannie Metcalf • VInton
R. Cottrill • Rutland
Carrie Roush • Racine

Myrville Brown
Bill Metcalf - Vinton
Valerie Nelson • Bidwell
· Brenda Elliott - Guy·svllle
James Snyder - Pomeroy
Jeanne Ours - Gallipolis
Leo Taylor • Racine
Kim van Metre - Middleport
Debbie Bishop - Creola, OH
Robert Barber • Reedsville
Sharon Bailey • Middleport
Mr. Broyles • Gallipolis
Doris Hensler - Racine
Krista Duffy
Jeffrey Tyo - New Haven
James Combs - Ravenswood
Joy Sauer - Rutland
VIrgil King - Pomeroy
Megan Manuel- Racine

Ludena

Crab Legs, Deviled Crab. SOIHops. Popcorn Shrimp,
Codfish, Catfish. Oyaera, Frog Leg1, Egg Rolla,
Bolecl Shrimp
FRIED CHICKEN, STEAK &amp; GRAVY •
SALAD &amp; DESSERT BAR

1-30.-273-9031
132 WASIUGTOI mm
RAVIISWOOD, WY •
1

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o.c.ma. 'l:1

Wednesday. December 27, 1989

POITlCII'oy-MiddiBport,·Dhio

: PI! I 8-'The Daily Sa •tinel

§_-Quirks in the news _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;.,-_ _ _ _ __
..

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:: By V•lied Presa lalernatlonal
.
: :: llljllftd duclr. spe~~ds Chrilllmu
• wllb cops
:: WATERVILLE, Maine (UP!)
-· - An Injured, disoriented duck
:; crash-landed In a pollee parking
·: lotonChrlstmasandhadtospend
;: the night In a jail cell.
The duck, a young mallard,
.was checked over by a veterinarIan Tuesday and found to have no
.- serious Injuries, then was turned
,; over - reluctantly - to state
' ga,me wardens by local police,
who had spent Christmas day
feeding It fudge and a turkey
sandwich.
The duck was first spotted
Chrlslmas morning, flying un. steadily through the air near the
pollee station.
· "He came out of the river,
: made a couple of loops and
: fly-bys, and landed smack In
· ·front" of the pollee station
. '' entrance, said Sgt. Cecil G.
Cates, who was on duty Christmas morning.
The duck scooted under a
nearby pairol car, but officers
flushed him out and took him
Inside the station, placing him In
a cell.
"It seemed like It was disorIented and cold," Sgt. Norm8JI R.
Michaud said. ''We put It In a cell
where It was warm and gave it
some food, and after an hour It
started to eat, and It got progressively better as time went on. He
was great this morning, just
quacking around."
Once the duck started to eat,
there was no stopping him.
Officers shared their Christmas
goodies, feeding the duck a
half-cup 61 hot chocolate, fudge,
popcorn, a turkey sandwich and

.
even some vegetables complete
with dip.
" I think he was the best-fed
duck on Christmas." Michaud
said.

KKK . launches anll -drug
campalp
LAKEU\ND, Fla. IUPll The Initials KKK are taking on a

drug dealers and their business.
"We're not requesting that our
people become vigilantes,"
Thorn Robb, grand wizard of the
national Knights of the Ku Klux
Klan In Harrison, Ark., told The
Tampa Tribune. "That wouldn't
help officers."
Robb said the Klan 's new
offensive Is a patriotic,

new meaning In one central
Florida town where the Ku Klux
Klan has kicked off a campaign
to rid the streets of crack cocaine
dealers .
Klan leaders said their " Krush
Krack Kocalne'' Initiative calls
on members of the white supremacist 'group to work with local
pollee to gather Intelligence on

community-minded effort that
should win support from both
white and black communities,
and help eliminate the Klan's
stereotype as a cross-burning
lynch mob._
'
Pollee arid the NAACP remain
wary of the. Klan's motives and
tactics, but George David Klrkl·and, an official of the KKK

81G BEND

AM~

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NEW YEAR'S
FRESH ·
FOODLAND NITE AT UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
VS. DYKE COLLEGE, MON., JAN. 15, 1990
RE~N

BASKETBALL

FD.I. LYNE CENTER

People
By Unlled Press lnlernallonal
CAPT. FVRR.LO NO MORE:
Daniel J. TravanH, whose por·
trayal of a no-nonsense pollee
captain helped make "Hill Street
Blues" a fixture on Thursday
night television In the mid·1980s.
· Is back on stage at the Cleveland
: Play House. Travanti plays a
; broken-down comic In "Only
· Kidding!" a play about two
,. . generations of New York stand·
up comedians to run through Jan.
21. Travant!, who appeared at
Cleveland In 1962 for a production
of "The Rhinoceros," does not
• like to talkabouthls "Hill Street"
·~ days, and refers to the show only
as "the series." "It's an odd
. phenomenon, me and the series.
_ All over the world, they have me
· .typed. It's as though I haven' t
played anybody else since that
. character. It's like having an
· ex-wife.. She's dating and I'm
; having a very good time, and the
; marriage was wonderful for
· seven years, but it's over."
'
ANYWHERE BUTWASRINGTON: None of that "Inside the
. Beltway" mentality for John
; FalrchUd, publisher of both W
· and Women's Wear Dally. He ·
· doesn't want to see anything
resembling a Washington politician or pollical wife on the cover
· of his publications. "The kiss of
death is Washington," he told the
Washington Post. "Politicians'
, wives! Everybody In America
• loathes to read about them.
: We've done a·ctual studies to find
· this. And, on the covers, If we put
: politicians' wives, or politicians
: themselves ... kiss of death. No
· one wants lt." How ·about first
: lady Barbara Bulh, a woman·
: said to be much admired and
: something of a trend-setter?
• "Absolutely no interest .In It,"
' Fairchild says. ''The newstand
sales will show that."
NEWS FROM HOME: Extennis nasty Ole Naslase says he
is shocked by recent events In his
homeland of Romania. Nastase,
• who was In Bucharest until
Friday, told the Sunday Telegraph In London that he had
believed d!cator Nlcolae Ceaasescu - now the late Nlrolae
Ceausescu - was "too powerful
for the people to succeed."
Nastase says he witnessed tight : ing between pro-democracy and
. pro-Ceausescu forces: "I saw
people falling down as soldiers
and pollee opened fire." He said
he had ''never seen a dead person
in my life before... . I wasn't a
- normal person. My legs were
: shaking . Everything was
· shaking."
RECOVERING WELL: The
Texas toddler who underwent the
' nation's first live-donor liver
· transplant spent Christmas playing with a mound of toys from
: across the country. Despite three
· additional operations since her
· Nov. 27 transplant, 22-month:old
Aly~~~a Smllll lett University of
Chicago Hospitals on a one-day
pass Monday. It was her. first
foray from tile JQP!tll tdnce sbe
. received a portion of ber moth. er's liver. Cardl,lltlffedanlmals
, and oilier llfl•, lneludlag a doll
froml'rMII,....,blvepoured · ·
In, the bolpilll aya. Abo recovering well - and alao lbarlng In
the lara- - Ia 16-moath-old
llulu~llfl&amp;llllqtoJI. rena.
' - the o11Jy oilier per1011 In the
United Stars f!Vfl' to ~rgo a
Uve-d~tnor llver lranspla,nt.

f

• NOW THII MilCH 31ST, 1990

SAVE OUI FOODLAND RECEIPTS FOR SCHOOL KIDS.

IELP YOUI LOCAL SCHOOLS SAVE EASTMAft'S FOODUNDS IECEIPTS TO TUIN IN FOI SCHOOL
AND COIII'UTIIS. SEE YOUI LOCAL SCHOOL 01 PTO FOI DETAILS. WE'll PIOUD TO
FOI
"

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,,'

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WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Bush combined his dlplc&gt;mauc stalking of Gen. Manuel
Noriega with a trip to Texas
Wednesday for a week of fishing,
hunUng and New Year's celebratiOn with family and friends.
"The president Isn't going on
vacation. He Is going on hoDday," said White House press
secretary Marlin Fitzwater.
"The president neyer goes on
vacation, He w~ks every day."
Besides, Fitzwater said; Bush
- while on hoUday break In
Corpus Christi, Beeville· '· and
Houslon - Still will get dally
brleflrigs and updates on Pa·
nama·, particularly, diplomatic .
efforts to pry Noriega from a
religious sanctuary,
And, J~e said, Bush will be
ready to take whatever act lon Is
necessary. The aclm!nlstratlon Is
trying to convince a reluct~nt
Vatican to turn over the ousted
leader who Is taking refuge In the
Vatican Embassy In Panama
City. '
"We want to get Noriega
back," Fitzwater said. "That"!!
still our objective."
The .Justice Department,
meanwhile, said the United
Stl!tes 1s moving to freeze foreign
bank ac\-'Qunts of Noriega that
hold $10 million or more In drug
proflta.
Despite the U.S. Invasion of
Panama, the biggest military
· ·offensive since the VIetnam War,
Bush Is slicking firm to his
prevlopsly scheduled plans · to
spend most of the week In Texas.
Bush was to depart from Camp
David, Md;, where he had been
since last Friday with his family
for a ion; Chrlslmas weekend.
He · Intended to go fllhing
Wednesday off San Jose Island,
near Corpus Christl, and then
atll!nd a barbeque later In the
day In the community of Bee-

-

----

.

ville, where he will be joined by
Secretary of State James Baker.
On Thursday, Bush plans to go
quail and turkey hunting at the
ranch of longtime friend William
Farish In Beeville, and then bead
Friday to his adopted hometown
of Houston where he will Hnit In
the New Year.
In Beeville, where Bush will
stalk birds with .a double-barrel
shotgun, he Is expected to be
confronted with some animal
right&amp; protesters. The FiJBd for
Animals group says It has
already asked Bush not to gun
dowa the critters.
"We see ... a public m11ndate to
end the most fr!vllous forms of
anlinal abuse," the New Yorkbased I!'OUP said In a lette~ It said
.
was R'!l to the presl~en t.
On Sunday, New Year's Eve, ·
Bush · planned to go to San
Antonio to visit soldiers wounded
In Panama at Wilford Hall
Medical.Center at Lackland Air
Force Base and Brooke Army
Medical Center at Fort Sam
Houston. ,
The presld~nt Is to return to
Washington on Jan. 1, after
making a stop earlier In the day ··
for some more fishing In Montgomery, Ala. ...
Fitzwater. In explaining
Bush's decision to go ahead with
his vacatiQn :.plans, said, "T~e ·
crux of thE: OJ!etatlb.n In Panama
has ended. There Is no reason
that the president should not be
able to spend the holidays, as he
does every·year, with his family
and friends In Texas."
Noriega's slx-Y,eai' reign came
to an abrupt end Dec. 20 when
24,000 American troops stormed
Into Panama, crushed his Panamanian Defense Forces and
Installed' a new democratic
government.
But the United States has been
fruStrated In Its huntfor Noriega,
and since Chrlsttnas Eve the

Classifie
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

ousted leader has been In the
papal embassy In Panama City,
seeklnr political asylum.
Fitzwater denied reports that
Bush played a personal role In
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 9~2-21 56
trying to persuade Pope John
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
Paul II to hand over Noriega . He
explicitly rejected a report Bua!J
I A.M. until NQON SATURDAY
·called the Vatican envoy In
Panama to press the U.S. case.
Fitzwater also disputed ac- •
Classified pafle-~ . Cot'er the
counts that the United States had
presented Its case In an extraorfollowinj! relephone exchanjles...
dlnarUy tough way .
'
Metgl Ccauntv
Mason Ca .. WV
"We've. told the Vatican very
Art• Co••· l 14
Ar•• Code ~o•
dlreclly what our feelings are,"
&amp;41-GaiiiPottt
112:-M•OCM•on 675-Ps Pl . . .nt
he said .. "We are having discus451-L.eon
, Pom•o\'
H7-Ch•hl'e
sions through estal!llshed diplo571-ApiMt Grove
311- Vinton
111-Ch••r
773-MIIO"
2.ti-Aio Gra~Jd• ••3-Pona.na '
matic channels with all parties
l.t7-._..., hll• 882-N....., H...,en
26&amp;-Gw,.A Diet
Involved, Including the (U.S.lli-LtUrt
l.t3-Afet.ia D••
l.tl-"•one ..
137-ButfM
371 - w ...... t
backedl Endara government
111-CooWOIJ
and the papal nuncio (Vatican
ambassador)."
He s'ald U.S. forces will maintain a securliy cordon around the
embassy Ill Panama City "as
PROBATE COURT OF
laid apptlaation wHt be
long
Noriega Is there."
ME,IOI COUNTY, OHIO
heard In Hid Court 11 1 :41
Bush was briefed . on . the
. NOTICE ·· .
P.M .• on the lth clay ·o f FeNotice lo horoby givtnthot bl:uary, 1110.
situation)In Panama Tuesday by
ot Maitll
unclereigned file In Cne County Court
Po·
Defense Secretary Richard Che- the
No. 2&amp;471 opplicotlon to mer!IY, Ohio.
ney, national security adviser the Common "'-• CCMOrt,
CLARENCE EDWARO
Brent Scowcroft and Gen. Colin Probote OMolon of Mlitll
MARLEY
Powell, chairman of the Joint County, Ohio, loran or.., to
ch11nge the nMneof lrittainy
.
Chiefs of Staff.
Hayman to Brittliny
Cheney, wbo returned Tuesday Nichol•
Nlchate Hunnol.
Said eppHcation wHI be
from a two.day trip to Panama
LEGAL NOTICE .
reported "a degree of normalcy heord in Nld Ceurt, ot j :30
P.M .. on the lth day offe- Notlco II giWn thetThe Pu•Is returning to Panama City" and bnoal')'. 1990,
at Mliga He Utltitilo Commluion at
morale among U.S. troops "Is County Court """•· p0 • Of+&gt;, pu.--t telt. .uthllr·
moroy, O~io 41789.
lty untlar -.on -..zs,
high." . '
JOHN
R.
HUNNELL
!levCo•• hoo .,.,....
Despite Noriega again frus"
(12) 27 ltc
M -lptlen to ~~-tratlng U.S. officials by hiding
mine the t'NIOi ttlanlite
out In the church, Fitzwater said
Public Notice
..,&lt;1 1M a..,iopri&amp;IC - of the ~no
the Pan11manlan Intervention
PIOVided by . ........,conhas been "exceptionally success·
tr1Ctou11-oolc-.11
OF
ful" and "went according to
Gat of Ohio. Inc. tc.lscript."
,
umbil), and to 4wtwwll••
whither 1M OU ...&amp;Ii•l ,_..
Fitzwater said with military
ameum of
prapal•• In·
mopping up operations almost
c,_._
t1wcomplete, Bush "would like to
jet of Calo..,llla'i .,....,0
start the Pl'll!'ess" of brhlging
me ciMa tC.a Nee. n111-GA-Aifl. et Ill.),-~some of ~he troops home as soon
l!f8IIOI _,.. as possible, but gave no date.
Of ....... IWVIRYI -.

'

-

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•DIET COlE and .

COCA·
COLA
'·

12 PACII
12 oz.

as

Hou•.

1::~~~~~~=

m-

~

ASST. VAIIETIES

HOUGHTON'S

MIKE SELLS

$199

SANDWICHMATE
SINGLES

SHERBET

POTATO CHIPS

'"

GAL

$159
FOOOUND

SEVEN-UP

TOMATO JIICE

::a

sac

. 41

99C

oz.
NOMEIEST

DIET OI.G.

460L
CAll

..'

....•• .,. ..,..,.,,.,.....

J9C

BLEACH
GAUON

89C

· fOODLAND

SAlAD DRESSING
Ql.

79C

1111 OUIDA F* ...mptl Glldly Aea.plld •Not R"ponelble Fer Typographical Errore

-·
-

,, the l'eC!en!
.~

I

I

•

I

tlareup In lnll!r-

a•ld th• gOQd
die young, .
And go to h~aven.

571
So if YoU atop
th• Food Shop,
For

.. -

..

•

• CLOIED IUN'lAV

1&amp;.00

,30

1&amp;

18 .00
113.00

.42

1&amp;

15

-

.20

°

.60

.06 / dwy

. broken upda¥swill be cn•old

DAT' IEFORE ,-u111.1CATtON
-11 :00 A.M . IATUIIDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2 :00 P.M . TUfiO&amp;Y
- 2 :00 P .~ . WIONESDAY
- 2 :00P .M . THUIIIDAY
- 2:00P.M . FRIDAY

R111lt• Fast
atniot.

Cotumbuo. Ohio.
Any lntorMtod peroon may
obtain further information
by addra..ing en inquiry to

tht Commisalon.
1121 27 1tc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice lo given thet UTel
Toteoommunlcationa CorpO&lt;etion IUTotl hoo filed a
ootf·comptalnt.withthePublie Utlitloo Commiuion of
Ohio IC..e No. lt-647-TPSLF) olloging that il• torlfl.
P.U.C.O. No. 2, il unjuot
and u,.....onabla In thM
culltom.... who 'do not uM
c8rtain odrnlniotrotlvo ond

I ~~=~
l'i

. . ,. ,.

Clll will be decided on the

booio of the infomlotion·conteined in the compl.tnt end
the .tfid.vits submitted by

UTol . Further lnfo,..,otion
moy be olr!Mnod by COIJtacting the Public Uttltloo Commltollion of Ohio. lBO Eoat
Brood ltiMI. Columbua.
Ohio 43288-0673.
112113,20,27. 3tc
..-:;:--.:-o.-:===:-2 In Memoriam
IN i.OVJNG
MEM'OAYOF
EDNA COX .

EML • .CONNIE .

011 bur;

MARTING
MAYNARD&amp;

with their coot. UTe!
p r o - to omlftd Ita tariff
to lncreMepr•entlylarlffecl
for tueh lerYicee
• inatlllhrtion, edminiltrll·
1i¥e
-geo.
phyoicol
ch...... ••pedltod MIVice.
aonv-o. llitllng
,_,.. chengeo, antl_,ice
-lottono. Anv in-

ell... .

DAVID.MORitiS
Tile pain ;, ,oirong,
lila teara are·true.
lt'l ..... OMyur

Since we loit you.
Your IMigllinl fece,
Your wtrm embrace.
Nothing else
Can take your place.
lut in our heart•
Your love will 118y.
And we wHI be with

-

brMied person, firm, COr•

-lrl"'

n. or entity
.. oral heerfng in tiWI'Mfter

···221!11

MIDUUrUttr -'- SMAll
HOUSE in Middleport, on ,a
good street. SmaU price
would make good rental in·

you
,
On Judgment Dey.
.
Sadly mlaaed by
· Famlly ·~ri·d,1riendo

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CIISTII, OHIO

heater cores. We can
alsa acid bail ttnt1 rad
ovt radiators. We alsa
repair Gas Tris.

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING

PAT IILL FOlD

AT All

H2-218t
Midtleport,

915-4422
1

COUNTRY

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
o8LOWN IN
INSULATION

MOiiLE

AUTO &amp; TIUCK
. REPAIR

•MoblleHParta

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•Mobile Home

. . . . . . . lltrlt

Rentals
•Lot Rentalo

nFree Elltim.....

. PH• .949·2101'
or Res. 949-2160
• NO SUNDAY

RUTLAND nRE
SALES and
SERVICE

·HOMES &amp; GARAGES
'"At laaaen•t• Prictl"
PH. 949-2801
!or les. 949·2160

742-3018

PoMEROY ~ COIME·-

CUSTOM IUIT

'

•Tire Sales
•Front End

AHgnment
•Oil Chenge &amp; lube
•Brake Work

'

' Day " Nilltt
NO SUN~Y

IIAIIII ST., IUT1AND
12· 7.'19-J mo.

DEll
CUT AIID
1f£APPED

UNDA'S
PAINtiNG &amp; CO.
•111101 IITIIIOI
lllllt .. Cltaoups &amp;
Palntillfl

MAPIIWOOD

FREE ESTIMATES
toh tilt , . •• of , . ....

LAD

....... foq•
Vllr IIAI-1
..HAVIIIIfiiiiOS

...
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Ana • ,.._
16141 915-4110
,_, ...... 1-.

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

,.~.JS
t.

·to«?···-

'D Oilll..l

1'10

.......

MillY, •••

DAVE'S

FUINACE
· fUINACI •
flliACI

~ARTI

ANO IIRVICE
AU.MAKU
GAS OR ELECTRIC

liN'S AIIPUAIICI

.,..,_........

SIIVICI
• "!-SUS • 91S·U61

I

SPAU 11111•
....II
..... ....,,

I

., lll:la,art, ...
PARTS ANO IERVICE
For Moot 2 - 4-cycla

··-. .=....

Homallte.'W a t T-all.lrllla•'
..

L

111 Llllit'A1.

_______...__.,..._________________________""'"'

......

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

r•·

and

BISSELL
· BUILDIIS

$7,000.00.

CIAL BUILDING - Start
your own business: On Main
Street. $37,500.00.

tiiCtir ....
COI'I

HOllE Pill

PH. 9¥·56~2
or 991·71 !1 ·

P~EROV, O.H.

vestm~nt.

1

ov., 1 6 WOrdl

11 .30 / day

11

MonthtV

tt. 124, ,....,.. Ohio

Alu Ti•••l~tl••

!.-

•

.t

For Good H•mr
Cookin' Comr """ U•!
HOURS: 6 AM-8 f'M Don,

Roger Hy11U
GaraP,

..-e

..:

·Dwcan •.

llll•k• tiure to wlllb'l tt..,:;,:::.:.;::,t~f;IiiiJ
· him '
'
t·•

.,,.,

!

.....tedliyMillie

g•• or

'
N,,N,.
y,.,

'

.IIStiftiln
Is stHI ewiM 1M

You're cleer. rrw-.,1
Fot' you're

miles

I;

3
6
10

It'~

SYRACUSE:._ Nice Modular
on corner lol_J bedrooms, I
Sl)llte fighting has Jeri at least 50 mmfllloy· said.
bath, laundry room, and
people dead, 150 wounded and
An I~raell commando force
some
carpet, Petio and close
more than 10,000 displaced.
attacked a comp~ulilst military
to
schools.
$21,900.00.
Hezbollah flghteri exchanged base In the Bekaa Valley In
.;·
fire with Israeli and SLA tan lei eastern Lebaltcin, . killing .two
POiiiioY -'- 2 kits With posfor an hour . and lnfilcted a communist f._.-s and wound·
lilililiesl Septic .. d elec.
nun'!ller of. C!llualll,es, the soui'C!e ·· tna four ot~ the sour«~ sale!. · avllilalllt lDts of shade lf8es.
said.
· Hours later, &amp;rull jets raided a
. Israeli officials have yet to communl.lt b.In 1\mefiel!, a
AIITIQUITY - One story
home wlh 3 bedrooms, and
comment on·the latest raid Into coastal town"Jtotth of the southcoal lurnKe. Would mille a
Lebanon.
, ern port city of Sidon, kUling at
areat summer piKf. has 3
Jabal Safl, controlled by Hez- least 10 and wounding 18, they
lots, indUding river lrorlboDab along with at least three · said.
tage.
$11,000.00. .
surroundlna villages, Ia 2 ~
The Communist Party Is a
north of the security zone. member of the Lebaneie Na~ [. Clll--·2-&amp;ltl
"HezboDah expansion to poll· tlonal Resistance Movement, a
.ltM T~t~IIIII--2MO
~fii-IIS-4MI
llona cl01e tp the security m .. ll coai!Uon of Syrlan·backed leftist
um-192-2251
a neeatlve develOpment." Israeli apd Moslem mUIUas that has
Detenae Minister Yltzbak Rabin conduc'ted suicide attacks
said daring a vtalt Tuesday iiltht aaa~t llrae.ll ttoops and their
to the Zotle.
siii'I'IIC8fe Soatli Lellanon Army
Rabin 'Aid Tuesday's altle$1 ltiWtla In the Israeli aelt·
were ''rOUtine operaUou" that lleclared "lllctlrlty zone" belara~l.cll'rlel o~t apiJIIt II'OIIJII tween llrael'a IIOI'thern bonier
Iaiiie IO.Jsrael.
and Lebbon.
A BeDolllh source acculed
No Israeli casilaiUes occurred
Amal lnUIUa of supporting tbe cluriDgTuesday'amilltaryopera~raelt attaoll Wednsctay by
t!Ou, slid the army spollaman.
F•CIIIMbj#lr
abelllllg 0. ltrateglc hill as the
)mlel atabllllled the leCIIritY
joint llneii.SLA force was ad- zoeewhellltwtlhdrew the bulk of
VaiiClltl toward the HezbOllab ltllj'oopl from Lebanon In 19111.
po~ltlon.
All e.tlinated 1,800 Israeli boop1
1
'l'uesdly, .I sraeli forces ai- al!d
tb4112.000 IIIIIDben of
tacked two polltlons of ~ I¥...1 a..,_.llt mllltll patrol Jl~•
Leban- Cammunlat Patty, ... Ule IIU1fflr - · wblalll'lltli up to
curtly sourc~ and tile Iar.eU 9 'frttiea north of larlel't borders. ~------....t
'

14 .00

Rete

·Business Services

Israeli-South\1ebanon Army
force attacks Hezbollah

.._t
bftll clli .t!"

15

finanCial Hrfon~~Moe. Tile .-hlfllureq-twlthtlla
Cemmiulen Ha ............ Cemmlallion, alo"l with ·a
IIIIa matter, Caa• No. • - - n to intorvene. on or
1111-GA-COt, for a "'*lc before Januilry 11, 19'10.
hearlneonWadn•day.Jan- Unl•• the Commlaoion ,..
"*'Y t?, 1110 lit 1:00 e.m.
celv•ouch areqiMIItfororot
ot the ofli- of t11a ~om• haering .,.d an accomp.,y- .
mlellion. 110 Eait BlOOd' ing nioilon to lnt.,..ne,'the

WASHINGTON (UP[) - Gen. "lncreu!ng stabllty" as the ~or the job . because of Its
Manuel Norll!ga.bad been on the pollee force Is ~tO~d. ·He&gt; said ' Jariellng abl,lty:
·
run without rest trom the mo- . the Unltei! States bas ftowh in:
He aid the.two major·alrports
ment u.s.. forces Invaded Pa: food and llllnkets_for up to-13,000' had ~n 'reopenl!d, at least for
namll until he sHpped Into the retueees. and added thettinewis hlima~,itarla!t ~t., and said a
Vatican Embassy In Panama nearing for. officials . to think t, nutnber •of u:s.: filghta went In
City, an American military offl-· about whtt,n U.S, forces W!JUid Mpntlay an~ ~ were· headed to ..
clalsaJd, . ' J..
be,~rl wlthi'lrawlng.
~
·
l&gt;S!fama Clt)l'in th.ecomJnrdays.
Penta~Qn spokelman Pete WllI think we .te at tile PDIDI . WUUams 111110 said the number
llama said Tueaday the one-ttme where w~ can begin to di8CUsa if •. of·weapons c~tured or turned In
dlctalor, _accordlng to a body- . (the flrsttroopscomlng ba!:kJ/,' ·bu reached 33,00o, wltli some
guard who surrenden\d to u.s. said Wlllla~. But he Added It &amp;.Oflll surren~ed In response to
forces, "had no rest. U.S. troops was "too soon to start 'putUii!r a an offer of $150 per weapon.
Sufficient packaged mUitary
constantly tailed Noriega. It was date ... and a n.umber together."
clear Noriega was on the run.
He said officials were Ullrllng me~IS - known as MREs or
from the moment the operation to consider rotating new trocips In
?'meal, "ready-to-eat" - were
began. He never was In com- to replace those now on statll&gt;rt- · f}own In to replace tlj,ose, handed
mand or the PDF (Panamanian · . Williams als,o detailed the job ,. out to civilians by soldiers, and
~ddlllonal footlstilffs such as
Defense Forcees). He was busy done by the F•l17 stealth fighter,
trytn8 to save his own skin. "
sent .In to a base a.t Rig llato to _ ~alii. rice and Cllioklng oil were
''The U.S. mJJ!tarydldltslobln drop two IarKe bombs. The bla11 belbt; sent. Enough food for
bringing Mr. Noriega to · was ln"nded "to conf~ae, dlsor- 511.000 peciple for seven days had
ground," said wnuams, addlag It ganlze, to frighten" the two PDF been sent and anotherseven-day
was up todjplomats and lawyers units at the- b~. Wllltan;u sa lei, pa~kage wu en. route, along with
to !leal. wltlf•the. next chapll!r In and the bombs hit their tar.aet, a , 31 tollS of medicines and 10,000
·the life of the ousted dictator.
· field·adjacent to the barracks.
. blankets and' sheets.
U.S. forces Invaded Panama
Disputing 1,1ew~ acco11l!ts that · Wllllams said Defense Secreearly Wednesday, and Noriega the stealth plane had failed In Its tary ·Dick Cheney - who with
requested political asylum at the mission, the spokesman said the Gen. Colin Powell; chairman of
Vatican Embassy on Sunday. barracks were not targeted; and the Joint Chlef~J,,of Staff, went to
The United States Is seeking attacking U.S. paralroqpers d~ Camp David Tuesday to brief
custody of Noriega, but the not encounter heavy. reststence Pr~ldent Buoh - spent the
Vat~anba.snotsaldwhatltplans when they landed a sbort time
morntngcalllnifamllymembers
·to do wJih blm.
atte.r the ~:117. attack.
ot: ser.vlcemen hE: met during a
Wlillamli descrlled the sltuaIt was the first time tbe stealth'. whirlwind' tour of Panama Suntlon In Panama as one of fighter had·been usecnn combat, -day and Monday.
and Williams said It was choaen
·
'
' .·'

SEIRUT, ' Lebanon IUPI) Israeli 'tro6pa and a pro-lli'ael!
Lebanele militia Wedni!sday at·
tacked Hezbollah fighters near
where two rival Shiite forces
have been battling for five days,
a Mos~. milltary source said.
The Israeli operation against
the mditary arm of.the
pro-ltiBIIJf Hezbollah was
'
Jeru.alerit'a third Into Lebanon
1n less thaD 36 hours. The first
two struck bases of the
Lebanele .Communist Party In
IIOUthwetll!ra Bekaa tn eastern
Lebanon and In south Lebanon.
The ~ attacks killed at leas I
12 people and wounded 22
othera, teCUrlty sources said.
The Hezbollah mUitla has
made niiJIII!l'OIIS atlaeb larael'l
northern setll8meata and In the
laraeli-dec:llre4 "tecurlty 10ne"
oa Ita. notlbern bonier.. with
Lebanon.
laraelllrclopland the larlel~
b1Ciee4 Solllh LeJUa,. Army
•lfiiCII ...llllt the Hezllolllb
mDIIll at a strategic hill at the
eutllrn elld of the 'l"'ltab NffiOD,
Wilen! fliltft bettles betwtell tbe
Amal allcl Hezbolllh Sllltte mdIUultl'tllllllll toeontrol Lebllll011'1
aeet ~illl!d tor a

Wordt

-nt
..ft.-..... -...- ..... ........

Noriega-'r~Portediy.:. exhausted
wheri h~ reached .e~~sy

.

,

D•v•

"2-"'*-''

.

i.!

-

Ohio

Bush Texas-bound for
fishing, bunting, celebration

chapter In Lakeland Insisted
minorities are not the target of
the anti-drug campaign.
" Black, white, Cuban or Mtxlcan, if he's selUng hard dope,
we'll get them one way or
another, and I don't mean that a~
a threat," Kirkland sa ald. "We'll
get In touch with law
enforcement."

OPEN
NEW
YEAR'S
.
D
AY
~~
. MONDAY, JAN. IS'r, 1990
~~~-.:.~s~
8 10 PM Z-1•=~·..-.l

·---------- .....

I

�Pomeroy- Middleport,

LAFF-A-DAY

Business Services

--por
,
,
.
.
.
.
------·--

'

Aohlon

CIIPWOOD
WAN lED

lltiJO

ant .. I:GI pi1ft. 114 111
oolllor-

1.o1o For 1o1o • Clalllpallo ......,,
11,000. PuiiiiG ..... IIIW-n;
2722.

, _...,,Ollie
... "J-3561

•n

I

EVENING

~.!;Jill

91 .1121

illlllewo

....... liMOn,

I1J Dear1111 Junior High
Days (R) 1;J
(!) Square One TV 1;J
Ill liD Andy Griffith

........
wv. 1'1111111•

I I I I T - T~c4 .....,,

..... fl .... IGU?I-

S141.

f WANNA KNOW!

ALL Ri61-1T, WI-IO DID IT ?
COME ON ~ CONFESS!

1110.

Dog

INSULATION
Wlller Speel1l 0•
VINYL SIDING
VINYl REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS

992-2772
DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

.NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt ·

1614) 667-3271
Grllllf 1.

Ntwa

7:00 (]) Our HOUII

e (2) PM Magazine

(!) SportaCenter
Cl) llJ Ill Curren! Affair
11J (!) MacNeil Lehrer
NewoHour
1!11 1111121 Wh"l Of Fortune

St.-ts at 1:00 P.M.
,.,., Olokt4 12
Gauge

LONG!'"

Q))Ch..,.
illl Colleaa Baokelblll 1;J
1!J MlemT VIce
VldeoCountry
7:05 (1) Jefferson•
7:30
(2) Family Feud
® College aa ...elblll
Cll entertainment Tonight
elll USA Tqday ·
1!11 ·t111121 Jeollardvt I;J
Ill liD M'A"S'H
I!]) CrOIIfire
•
® Night CoUrt
@Top Card
7:35 (1) Sanford And Son
8:00 (2) MOVIE: Tho Loneliest

a

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENitGS

6 · Lost &amp; Found

loa-

~'-malo,

collar, 304-no-oo31 or

MY·T·SHOP

15

CUSTOM SCIUlli
PIIIIITIIIIG

LOST - REWARD • ar-n,

Block, end Whfto IIIIo looglo In

3104-...-..

tho l!loolloon A - a Lincoln

Annu. ...._ Chlld'e Pll. Phone

LOST: -

dc!o. .ll 111.1 Alii
tiNioWI... wJIIi~, DOCked

HATS
T-S,HIRTS
JACKETS
c•nn, 01110

.=-·
....

985-4300

7

1oll ........ .,. ...........In

..... -aall1youhowo
_ . hii'IL. 114 ,..

_.,

Laal: ..... ~lllocll, -

..

1100 _.,. . ....

-11112,114-441-t711.

.

Yard Salt

Schools &amp;
Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOWI

SOUTHEASTERN

JU$1 J&gt;fei,L, PIL/..
Af'IP fiLL.

BUSINESS

COLLEGE, 521 .lack- Pika.
Coli 114 Ul t:ll7. Reg. No. 8111-1GIU.

18 Wanted to Do
_ . . , plumbing I aarponlry.

IIIIa Paula'• Day ea.. Canlor.
Solo, lflardabla, chlldcanl. II·F

p.rw...:r•
2\i-10.
. Doop.lno

t Lm. - 5:30
lo'-. Iller oc

w._. 114 Ul 1224.

Apa~monla,
- · , and
bulldln1111 far ...... 1171-UIO
rnantll.ltUD. 30W7W104.
BEAUliRJL APARTMENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JAatSON
ESTATE~•. 531 J110ban 'Piko
from $1.-.urno. Walk lo lhot&gt; I
ma•loo. Co1111t ttl 2411. EDit

I Lon. le I p.IO. .......... 114441-1"!,. 127 Jill 0...
llpollo, un
..u~..... 0000 U11D AIIPLUNCII
-· ~

_. _,...........,

~-~~~c:ftll-.
Collll4-441-.,...

Bullnlll
OpportUnity

I NOTICE!
OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
lhll you do

Norlll. 114-441-7444.

I

Employment Scrv1ces
11

Help wanted

......
..
.....
--:-e··--.
.- ...,-...,_,

and Placido Domingo as
Radames. (3:00)

eeeet Vincent declares war

75 Boatl&amp;'llolln
for Slit

1!)1 PrimeNeul
® MOVIE: Satvodor !RI

DOIIIpl-'1 -

11J Murder, She

(2:00)

,_

~uto

Parts &amp;
Atc:IIIDI'III

8:05 (1) Jefferaono
8:30 (iJ IDIIJ Head 01 The Clall

-TIMill.'
=,.
.
_,..._'*-_ -.... - ""'.
........,... 1171........,. W

-

. . --All In-

•·

Jut..-.

... NO.

Colle!Y-

111m 111

--~y.Hool-...,4

IIMI

. . . . . 1144111111 ...... 7

......

- · Calll14412-123f.

Real Es1ate

1171.

Eric and Simone secretly
wisn to data their new
classmates. (R) 1;J
at Crook ChaM
8:35 (1) NBA llaokolball

t:tO,
tor

9:00. (2) IIJI Njght Court

4 . . . . Pari! ............

. . I Ill, MW.,;:-~
, MY 011

a

---~

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

~·-

-·~·~~~
.
~
111
4,000 ..........
-.
-

-'llrw.

V..!ll!tllo!a. .... -.lfM

a

-..tL,.,

.... hill ........

...... -12 ..............

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

11WII-1-

992-2228

OH,MYLORD.. .

r'wtaarA'&amp;"

,•

ON MY REFOC! I
cARD/

jl-11615.
AWFUL..!

IF I. FOUND A "e"
ON MY REFORT G6-J&lt;D,
I'D FAIZ1Y R:'lR AWES&lt;..

0 MOVIE: Spy (2:00)

a

Naihvtlll Now
· 9:30 (]) To Be Announced
0 (2) IIJI My Two Dada
Michael's convinced he 's in
love with Nicole 's bOytriend's
mother. {A)
(!) Colllgl i....llboll
(iJ llJ (J) Anything lui Lo..
Hannah challenges Marty to
a baltle ol the bylines. (RJ I;J
10:00 (]) 700 Club With Pal
Robefloon
. 0 (2) 11J1 NBC Newa lpac:lal
The Eighties . Tom Brokaw
and Jane Pa.uley look back
on a decade like none bther
before it. TheY examine the

a

__

..:-~
.., =:.-:;_~:3
- :'
_.,.._........_wv
,
-..-.a..

1414.

ONo

.,.......

-=~or---­
............. _==

'

•

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

BARNEY
PAW SAID HE'D NEVER
PLAY CHECKERS WITH '
YOU AG'IN, LUKEY ..11__ _,.,,

TELL HIM

NOW II

l GOT TH'
PROBLEM

JUMP HIS
DAD BURN
KIN' II

SOLVED II

social, political and economic

F. CNM Rd. ,.,... ~
~ ... - . . . . y.l14-

JMhiD

•

•l

;.0H1...,...._

10:30! I]])

Plumbing &amp;
Hutlng

CrimeWalch Tonight
On Siege
10:50
MOVIE: A Dlollnt , ·
Trumpat t2:30)

Astro-Graph , preciiCioona lor the year
ahead by mailing $I .25 to Aalro-Graph,
c/o lhla
P.O . Box 91428,
Clewland. OH 44101-3428. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
AOUAIIIUI (,_:Ill Feb. 11) You tend
to count on a IItle mora than you have
coming loday. Tlolo Ia not an eopeclally
smart opproach, becauoe you'll be oe..a~y disappointed- you don't gel
all lor which you hoped.
PIICU (Faii.IHI oil 20) Don't wear

-Pill*·

A11ld1

•w •

DDIIun••lll

or _.,._

'llrtng, , _ -

BERNICE
·BEDEOSOL

I'
~ ... at I
Rlclinour
.._ . . 1144711-1711.
I

••

out your welcome if you're IIWttec:l to a

-. ...._
... . ' ...
o:mOP., ,

'

:where

s..... ~

aoclal allalr at a lrlend'o place today. If
you - • OM of the a.ty tnlvatl, try to
be one of the lint to leaVII.
A,.l (MINh at-April It) Someone
upon whom you have to rely loday
mlghl no1 be lhft - · The
moral or the etory: count on the only OM
you c:.n - youroell.
TAUIIUI (Aprll81 . . . 81) Today you
m8y get Involved In ., lnlenM dlaeua-

llon wttl1 a penon whO ,_.strongly

i

IIIIOulsn 111111• WIN do.~

!y,you'.llaOIIGPPUilltitfllllolthelne.
,.., .,...... . , 8ome flnlnCial . , _ . . m8y lie brouGM to beer on
you today~ In Old obligation. H
It 11111'1 IIIMHIId , to elllar.ctorlly. H

-

•~
.~

"I Ml'ed for thll becailll I knew I weudn't be
able to deckM by Chrlltma8 what I wanted."

wow••·

WOUld
CWICIII (o!Ufta .,......, II) E-

•

though you're ap11o solicit odYice 1rom
ottlersloday, lhlk construcllve suggesHOno aren'l likely to lmpr- you and
you may go about doing things as you
nrst Intended.
LIO I.IUir ZS.Aug. II) H could prooe
wloe to be attenllve to health manero
lodtiy. Don't overindUlge or .,_..en
youroell, and stay away from thlngo you
know you lhouldn't eat or drink .
VIRGO (Aug. II 11111. 12) There's a
polllblllty you may have problema handling youngolero today, bul not newly
as much u you'll have If you let aome
outsider bun In 111d reelly gum up lhe
wortcl.
UIIIIA (..,.. zs.oot. 12) Your ludomenl m8y be a trilla q-tlonable today
regordlng' matllfl that pertain to your
- · Tltlnk your moveelhrough care-

ful!y,

.AIH

EAST
.AQJIS
.It ~ .

+62

.JI4

was agressive to go 1111 to pme. but
sourH
be felt that partner's bend ml&amp;bt be 1B
.IUU
points wltb something In spades. In
.Q$4
tQt
lact, it all turDed out very well for de•uu
clarer when Eut took three lpiiCie
tricks and played a fourth lp8lle. DeVulnerable: North-south
clarer discarded two bearll from
Dealer: North
dummy 011 tho third aDd fourth spades
aDd limply knocked out tho ace of dia- See*
N.,. East
It
1•
monds. Tbat wu nine tricks, aDd a big
Pill
Pill Db!.
P111
"thank you• to Eut.
P..
2NT
P. .
Eut sbollld realize that South bolds INT
S
NT
All
pus
four apac1et to the 10. U that Ia the
case. the best chance for 1 _ . ful
Opeoin&amp; lead: • 9
clef- Ia 10 let dec:larer win tbe flnt
spade trick. uWelt bokk tbe- 01 dl- ...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
uaonda or -other quiet aatrJ, tbe
~~! o1 a secoad spade will thft allow apln, If West leads the Dine, aa olwit to Mill eaoup trieki in that llllt - daubletOII, often tbe best play to
preeerve defellllw eommllllieatioal ill
to defeat tbe c:oatnct.
nere are varlatloas on tbla play, lor East to allow declarer 10 win the
depending on the strength of l!!ut's flnt triclt. Walch for these plays, aDd
1ult. East mJpt bold A-K-Q-x-s of blame me U par._ bas led the 111M
·
spadll, auc1 dummJ two 1111811. ODee frcm t-'1-2 or some tltiCb boldlug.

:=:.:II
fiiiOhl

1!11 • 1121
iiJl Newt
11J NewaWatch
Ill liD Araenlo Hall
1121 Moneyllne
® Jeffereona

·

Nll'f, 12) Keep your

o•llla oil

crtttca1 •

IIIII tMI . . 1111111, bUt
ttl&amp;
IACIITTAIIUI (.... D Du, 11) Ill a
bit Plllllllil lllln ...... 01 your
pa
Ia •
ar • ¥011 fiiiOhl
llndalll•fll'l=alllnGIO- ·
thing you'N
fond ol youroell.

*"'·
u.-

,.,

mulberry
23 Loathe
24 Fanatical
27 Servant
28 Foreshadow 1
29 Craggy hill 1=-+--+-~
30 - solr
31 Fine fabric
35 Now (11 .1
· 36 Tyke
37Buddy
. 38 Dilatory
40Circa
42 Nasty
glance
43Ftowered
evergreen
440bserve
45 Diner

··~ ,

i1J Mllml VIce

a

v~c~eoeountrv

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here'sllow to work It:

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the Ienglh and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE

12·27

I1J Anlallcan All Forum

MBX

(!) SporteCenl8&lt;
Cl)CIIeerei;J

Dill Nlgh.lne~
1111 Night Court

!1J1 Sport1 Ton I
ID 1121 Pat Sa(ak ShOW
® H i l l · - - · The
Long Law Of The Arm

a Crook &amp; ChaM

12:00 CD MOVIE: Tht Lonellalt

..

~~l.!·lllt;llllll :onlght
!111P8IIajalt
e®CIIIII

lllklllil"

Clrallna(T)

.

UnN. 01 Kantucl&lt;y ¥1 No.

~~~~
'
OJ!IMrMbHammar
Otadly Prey

12127

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

till Tonight Show

A-(1 :30)

-

1 Bernhard!

· 11:30 (I) Batmen

e (2)

..

DOWN

. . (2) (iJ . . Ill

ICIIIIMaln mllrt: panpacttw today.
AltiiGUgll ;ou may llllnll In grlncltaae .

- . you

9 Brazilian
3 Speed
bird
demon
10 Dry
4 Exasperate
12 Adrian's
5 Cargo
6 Inclined
husband
13 French
way
7
painter
Altar
YHierdey's Anlwer
15 Chemis1ry
constelsuHix
lation
24 Automaton 32 Direction
16 Drink up
8 Least
25 Withon ship
· 11 Slg ·ty
out
33 Engender
18 Daughter
n•
principles 34 Modify
of Cadmus 14 Rental
sign
26 Indian
36 Ancient
19 "PI an t'mum
.
city
Phoenician
blonde" 17 Shoemaker s27 Electro·port
star
tool
Flat
Reclined
motive
39 Sandra
20
21
(mus. 1
23 Stringed
force .
or Frances
22 Indian
ins1rument 29 PhiHppme 41 Feather

11:00 CD Batmen

*•'" l m p u - could cr.

'

I.

_....,,__
. -------·----~'-------~--'-'-~----'---'-------__,_-'-'-'--""'------"""-'----------..._-----'-...:.I

.

changes that look place. I;J
Cll CJ (J) China Beach
McMurphy and K.C. are
kidnapped and held caplive
by the Vial Cong . (R) I;J
®l til@ WIOIIIIUY Vinnie
learns about Lifeguard 's
problems wllen they go·
camping. (R) Q
I!]) ~vonlng 'llewo
Q))lleWI

-a -Yoc -.
'""""Tonll
PO-.LCo.E_ Pu.......
_llniR""IIU,

.

Harry's day, Buddy. moves on
and turns H1rry 's tile into
chaos. (A) t;1
Cl) llJ (J) Doogll HowMr,
M.D. When Doogie's folks
reave 10wn, he' s persuaded
, to lhrow e party. (R)
1111 ID1121 Jake And The ·
Fatman McCabe's lprmer
partner is killed In a fiery
auton)Oblle accident. (A) t;1
I!]) Lally Klnt Live!

110011 lOY 111111, .....,.

3i Homutor Sale

Wrole
Church Street Slalion

a

"

bullnne wtlh ptop11 you know,
NOT lo Nnd rnonoy
t=llomall101tllyout.ve
l_,a!od lito ollortnQ.

reopening double. ADd maybe South

.IOU

war

by THOMAS JOUPH
ACROSS
2 Lake
1 Gaza basin
mineral
LA
6 .. pro

Conqueror (2:30)

1m " a. ...,.,. 7e

•• 7
•11111

·CROSSWORD

on Gabriel when a killer
infill&lt;ales the TuQnels. I;J
1D I]]) MOVIE: The
.

Coii11.-.:1SM-7ltlp.ot.

. 1br, 114-

.AQ7

It wu agressive for North 10 raile
to two ~trump , siDce hll parlller
could have as Uttle as tbree or faur
bip-eard points aod no better bid 10

1111 ID @llaeuty And The

-.,as ..,l&lt;'••1lllo=
41-•·

end

z.

pupo.

Fumlolted .,.~........ U2l.
UtiiHIN paid. 1br, f Noll Clalllpollo, Itt 441 tt11 ollw tp:iii.
..

Motorcyclll

...... ~1371.

_ __lit....,
.... Me Rl!lkl et1 ......
•
l:alpol7 .... .,.........

FumlahM Elllcloncy, ohm
bolh, 1150• UtUI- pold, 514441-Mtl an• 7p:.m.
·

the princess stave stars
Aprile Millo in the IKie role.
Oolora Zaiick as Amneris,

74

u........ ~3fa
Aot. 1br 120 Fou.,.,, .........1111 - - -

l1~46-4411ofte• 7p.m.

21

Preaenta Veirdi's opera about

CO\IIIIY.
uaid 1PP'ii1o11,
T.V. .....
H11. -Olen

- l o , 035. iliiiHioo Pold.

234

64-year-old psychic is
profiled ; an update on an
Iowa embezzler . (A) C
Cll llJ Ill Growing l&gt;elno
Mike is inlimidalod by trta
pretentious people in his
acling class. (R) I;J
11J (!) MttropOlltin Opeqo

114-311.-.

FumlahM

lOWEST PIKES
IIGIIEST QUALITY
FIEt lott.l 'Ml\'Ul'f
POMEROY AND I'IQDlEPOIT'S ONlY
lOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.
Piz~a-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

R..,ner (1 :30)

e (2) Unsolvad Myalerial A

'

_ , , . . ,........_ ......Ira,

114-444-11171.

::=. ,:...:.=-""=
=:....-=.•::-,:-:,•::::

Llt&lt;=E firM BiCAlJ$E
l'if~ (&gt;UIC.(c" - ~ •

For...,., 3 ~ zapt. on 111 .._

STREET
PIZZA

l

,,

FOUND Clfton aroo -

Hound, len I

IW'I-U

4
.AJZ
.ltJ1013

make than one no-tramp after North's

e

. FRANK AND ERNEST

NOIITII

By Jemn Jacoby

ilJ) Moneyllne

•LIGHT HAULING

.It

BRIDGE

Iii]]) Nlghl Court. 1;J,

Giveaway

77W121.

EVERY SUNDAY
leglnning Sept. 17

SCRAM-t.ETS ANSWERS
,._,,
.
Haggle - L~- Knock-Ensign - SO LONG
While balancing the checkbook the husband soghed, ;ou
know the old saying 'money talks?' Well ours just saod. So

6:35 (1) Andy Griffith

•

Announcements

4

ol/ l / 89/ tfn

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

@ _WKRP In Cincinnati

11J He•Man

CLf\SSfED

•SHRUB 8t TREE
-TRIM and· RE-

MOV/'L

11J Body Electric
(!) 3-2-1 Contact 1;J
1!11 1111121 CIIS Newsi;J
ID liD Tllrtl't Compeny

Read the Best Seier
Read the

tomized

JOHN TEAFORD

mo.

SportoLoolt

•Clubs Cus-

46317 Scout Camp load
Chest.-, Ohio
11·17-'19-1 mo.

V
filling in 1he miuing words
l-...l.-.1.-L..--l.L.-...1..---' you develop tram step No. 3 below.

li\Cll llJ &lt;IJ ABC (0:301 1;J-

•N- Grips

FREE ESTIMATES
1~- 13-'89-1

e

GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP

:e

l

A11111'1can Magazine

6:05 (1) Be•eriY Hlllbllllll
6:30 (2) illl NBC NighUy N-1

KOUNTRY KLUB

Is

I hardManto wrile
in car showroom. "It's
I'
I
one check for such
'
I I_ I. . . ~...· asalesman,
large amount." Quick thinking
"Nol to worry, we'll
f-ra--rN~E::;..-;C=-r.CriArl.--;1
I I It I I ~Y;~m~~:: the 'chockle quoted

I!J Jem

J&amp;L

II

I

A H0 y 0

I!]) Worid Tocllly
@ Charles In Cherge

a

1

HAWTE

' I

Motorcycle Aoooclation

-Coull.

2

1 1 I I I

I

(!) laotOfAmanc.n

... 1110 -

I

THECKS

1

8:00 (]) Harclcaolle And

-_ -

41 Houses for Rent

.....

WOII

TM1 MilT
PI IlLII

WIT!l Me,.mr
-$0\

1m-~•m ~

lllrd, 1110

Rentals

Buying Hours;
7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7 :30-4:00 .Saturday

Tele·vision

f:lO tni'T ~ 10

AA~e ~

I

1111 Dolallll 110 ................

...... ....... .. JOG. ~Mot.,.
,_. Iller I:GG iii -11 I:GG

lola,

""" t - Clydo
._.lr.IIIW-.

W.Va. ChWiRI•
bw:.
ledrspri••• ....

(II) 7-'8!1-1

::,:r.

I.D(ll:: ,IF

71 Autos tor Slle

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Ohio.

NC

PXUVSDSXZY
UBDM

' BDSSXP

DZX

CEHH

UX UNEHV HJAX MN

MN

EV DPV UBDM

UX

••'
•

... :'

BNSX UJHH PXKXZ BDSSXP MN

c.,........
F-

EV . - FNBP
Yeetertlar'•

CNUHXY
YOUNG PEOPLE.

NOWADAYS, IMAGINE ntAT MONEY IS EVERY-

THING, AND WHEN ntEY GROW OLDER THEY
KNOW Fr. - OSCAR Wft.D£
C) 1990 by King

Syndlcote. lne

•

�~pt

I

State foundation funds distributed
'lbe December State School
Foundation Subsidy payment of
$199,818,054.79 to 612 Ohio city,
exempted village and local
school districts has been r~
ported by State Auditor Thomas
: E. Ferguson.
Eighty-seven county boards of
education received $10,021,572.31
ilr the month, Including the
Meigs County Board of Education which received $68,198.
The State Teachers' Retir~
ment System will receive
$43,045,798.36 and the SchOol
Employees' Retirement System
will receive $11,343,803.63 as the
e·mployers' share of the pension
program for December, Ferguson added.
'
The 191 . city school districts
divided $120,271,671.46 while the
372 local school districts split
$69,957,404.99. The 49 exempted
village school districts shared
$9,588,978.34 o(thedisbursement,
Ferguson said.
Fergusons' s office reported
that 600 school districts and
county boards of education had
their December State Scllool
Foundation Subsidy payments of

Wed1'181dey, December 27, 1989

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

12-The o.ily Sentinel

$195,207,796 electronically trans·
!erred to local banks. Additionally, payments lor the State
Teachers' Retirement System
and the School Employees' R~
tlrement System have been elec·
Ironically transferred for the
month of December.
In Meigs County, a total of
$131,492.37 In state subsidy payment went to Eastern Local 5151,!!26.37 in basic and transpor·
tation allowances, $5,019 · to
school employees' retirement ·
and $15,315 to state teachers'
retirement .

U,.tery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - TUes·
day 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3
108.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,170,629.50, wl!h a payoff due of
$750,360.
PJCK-4
0187.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$211,898, with a payoff due of
$646,000 . .

Meigs Local received
$380,837.23 with $437,907.21 for
basic and transportal lon allowances, $13,904 for school em·
ployees" retirement and $43,166
lor state teachers' retirement.
Southern Local's state subsidy
total is $140,054.07, with
$169,811.07 for basic and trans,
portatlon allowances, $7,706 for
school employees' retirement
and $22,051 for state teachers'
ret Ire men t.

Celebreeze reports on program

Attorney General Anthony J.
Celebreeze Jr. has Issued a
report on the successful compl~
lion of the 1989 Marljuna Eradi·
cation Program, a combined
local and state law enforcement
project which, lor the first time,
Involved active participation
from all88 Ohio counties and the
Ohio National Guard.
"We have worked closely with
the Buckeye State Sherlfr s Association since this program was
started In 1981," Celebrezze said.
"This year, we were grateful lor

marijuana . This year, 651 marl·
Juana plots were eradicated and
50,463 plants were destroyed
valued at $50,463,000.Inaddltlon.
66 weapons were seized, 33
greenhouses were raided and 200
Individuals were arrested.

the additional air and ground
support provided by the Ohio
National Guard. By working
together In this manner, we were
a !;lie to cover more territory than
we could In the past. "
From the beginning of June
through the end of September,
Celebreeze's Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Inves tlgatlon,
the Buckeye State Sheriffs Association. local county sheriffs and
the Ob.lo Nallnal Guard, con·
dueled air and ground operations
eradicating domestically grown

·'While It Is difficult to assign a
dollar value to these seizures, the
U. S. Drug Enforcement Agency
generally points to $1,000 per
plant, based on a national aver· '
age," Celebreeze added. "The
price of an ounce of marijuana
has nearly doubled In the last
four years'. Enforcement experts
claim this Increase Is attrlbuta·
ble to greater demand for the
drug while traditional sources of
supply may be slowing down.
Here In Ohio, marijuana Is
confiscated more often than any
other drug except cocaln~."
The raids usually take place at
the request of a county sheriff if
he suspects cultivation in his
county. Although most cuttlva. tion takes place at night, the
raids are conducted during the
day through the use of hellcop·
ters and low flying planes.

____ Audit reports are released _ _ __
The public release ol43 audits
of local government units has
been announced by State Auditor
Thomas E . Ferguson.
Included in the release of
reports were audits of 16 tyown·
ships, nfne villages, six counties,
five human services providers,
four schools, two cities and one
library.
Ferguson said copies of the
reports were mailed to the
Involved local and state officials,
at least three days prior to the

release date.
"Advance releas~ to the In·
volved public officials serves two
purposes, "the auditor said.
"one, to provide them opportun·
lty to study the report prior to Its
public release and any Inquiry
from the news media concerning
the contents of the audit reports.
He added, ''The advance notice
of public release of audits to the
concerned officials Is salutary
since the audit results are

reviewed with them in exit
conferences conducted by our
state examiners at the close of
our on-site examinations.
"At that time, the officials are
provided the opportunity to discuss the audit conclusions with
the examiner. or examiners, and
to have any explanations, objec·
lions or statements Included as
part of the public audit report."
In Meigs County, the audit
report of Columbia Township has
been released.

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Vol.40. No.t82
Copyrighted 1989

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By United Press International
A shifting jet stream chased
warm air back Into the cold·
stricken South early Thursday,
while blustery cold numbed the
Northeast and light snow pow·
dered portions of the Midwest.
The National Weather Service
said temperatures would leap
from biting cold to above aver·
age Thursday In most of the
South, and although the deep
freeze caused serious damage to
citrus crops and winter vegetables, agricultural experts said

'

the Icy weather will bring bene!·
Its this spring.
Atlanta expected tern per a·
tures a bout 10 degrees warmer
than normal, reaching into the
60s, forecasters said. States
south of Kentucky benefited from
warming temperatures as the jet
stream moved north and fun·
neled warm air back Into the ,
region.
Although the freeze that
ushered In winter for the South
caused heavy damage to citrus
crops and winter vegeta btes,'

agricultural experts said the co kl
killed .several bugs and viruses
that normally cause problems In
the spring.
"I think the cold weather will
be beneficial. We always notice
In Georgia that after a warm
winter, there Is a buildup of
Insects," said Georgia Agrlcul·
ture Commissioner Tommy Ir·
vln. "It's only logical to expect to
see a sizable decrease In Insects
after this cold weather."
Irvin said the cold also may
slow down a virus that in the past

79(

2 UTER

has damaged peanuts, tomatoes
and peppers.
The rebord·setting temperatures that chilled Flortda over
the Christmas holiday weekend
not only wreaked havoc with the
state's fruit and vegetable crops
but also threatened sea llfe as
water temperatures dipped to 46
degrees.
In Merrttt Island, Fla., 76
cold-stunned sea turtles were
pulled Wednesday from the
chilly waters where they were
floating helplessly 0': their bel·

lies, bringing the total number of
ailing turtles rescued this week
to 232.
In the Midwest. clou!ly skies
and widely scattered snow
storms dominated the Great
Lakes and Central states.
The weather service reported
some large breaks In the clouds,
especially In the area of O'Hare
International Airport In Chicago,
where a forecaster said tempera,
tures were "bouncing like a
yo-yo." Within an hour the
temperature. ranged from 20

degrees, down to 15 and then
back liP to 19.
Lake flurries were reported
along Lake Superior In Upper
Michigan and light snow fell over
parts of Minnesota and Wlscon·
sin. Freezing driZZle in southern
Ohio slicked roads and created
dangerous driving conditions.
Temperatures ranged from the
30s along the Ohio River tothe20s
In central Ohio, Indiana and most
of lllinols. North through Wlscon·
sin, the temperatures fell Into the
teens.

Gal.lia records 15th
auto fatality of 1989
County Emergency Medical Ser·
It's been a deadly year on
the road, striking a tree.
Gallla County Highways.
The car, which was wrapped vices ass Is ted the patrol at the
Wednesday, the Gallla-Melgs
around the tree, was demolished. scene.
Neal suffered multiple injur·
The accident Is under inves II·
Post, State Highway Patrol.
ies. Trapped In the wreckage, she galion, according to the patrol.
reported its 11th fatal accident
No one was Injured an another
and 15th traffic fatality of the was extricated with the "Jaws of
Life." Officials called lor a accident at 12:20 p.m. Wednesyear.
medlcopter. LlfeFlite at Well· day on Little Kyger Road, 0.5 of a
Irene Neal, 65, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
ston, Ohio, was unable to respond mile north of SR. 7, at the
died at 11 p.m. Wednesday In
Qecause of the weather. railroad underpass.
Cabeli·Huntington Hospital,
Troopers said a 1987 Ford
.
HealthNet out of Huntington,
Huntington, W.V·a .
Bronco
driven by Jon P. ThompW.Va.,
managed
to
reach
the
Only lour persons were killed
all last year on GaiUa County scene and transported Neal to the son, 18, Rt. 1. Cheshire and a 1987
Cabeli-Huntington Hospital.
GMC truck driven by James F.
roads, according to the patrol.
One lane traffic was main· Harwood, 39, Lucasville, Oh.lo,
Neal was critically Injured In a
one-car accident at 3:44p.m. on tained until the arrival of the met and collided In the under·
SR. 141, at milepost 21, about one HealthNet chopper. then all pass. There wqas moderate
traffic was stopped on the .main ' damage to both vehicles. There
mile west of Gallipolis.
,, ..
According to the patrol, Neal highwar, 10 make .a landing zone , was n(l clta~l9n.
.
,
Th'e patrol also was called
last control ofberwestbound ~98f · tor'llle chopPer.
The Gallla County Sheriff'S yesterday ' to •''lnv~stlgate two
Dodge Aries K on 'the slick road.
Her car went off the right side of Department and the Gallia car-deer accidents.

seriously Injured Friday by one
on X-ray and it was treated with of two hOmemade bombs In a
seriousness.'" ·
parcel delivered to his door
Police, prior to determining disguised as a gilt food package.
the package's contents, evacu- Investigators have said that case
ated families fr,om adjacept does not appear to be connected
homes. Traffic was also with the four others.
rerouted.
' A Washington D.C. television
Mail bombs, thought to be • station reported Wednesday
racially motivated, have shaken · there were four hom~ made
the South in recent weeks. bombs wrapped In the package
Courthouses and judges are' that exploded and seriously In·
taking extra precautions in r~ jured Corderman last week.
sponse to the man · bombing·
Federal Investigators said the
deaths of .r federal appeals court package had contained two
judge in Alabama and a civil bombs but WUSA·Tv, citing
rights qttorney.ln Savannah, Ga. sources, reported there were
· Package bombs were . also four bombs In the box, three of •
discovered, unexploded, at the which detonated.
Federal officials refused to
federal courthouse in Atlanta
and an NAACP office in Jackson- comment on the report, but ·
ville. Fla.
confirmed reports Tuesday that
In Hagerstown, Md., Circuit the explosives used In the attack
Judge John Corderman, 47, was on Corderman were different
from those used In the other
attacks in the South in the pastlO
days.
In Del roll Wednesday, 11 man
lobbed a small firebomb on the
steps of a courthouse In Detroit
but he was q\llckly arrested and
Due to water problems in the Rutland area, the
authorities said the .fncldent did
Environmental Protection Agency tEPA) Is warning that
not appear to be connected to the
Rutland residents shOuld boll their water at least one minute
recent rash of bombings directed
prior to drinking because the water may be unsafe.
· ·
toward judicial targets In the
South.
Darrell Marshall, 33, was ar·
rested alter he allegedly tossed a
Middleport businesses, with coin-operated amusement
firebomb on the,lront steps olthe
machines, are being reminded by village officials that all these
federal courthouse in downtown
.
licenses expire on December 31.
Dctr.olt shortly before noon WedUcense fees are $50 for a juke box, $50 each for the first three
nesday. There were no Injuries or
coin-operated amusement machines and $25 for each machine
significant damage and the lire
after the first three.
was quickly ex linguished, auThese licenses may be purchased at the mayor's office
thorities said.
Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
"ll'.arshall was apparently at·
tempting to get attention regard·
tng several civil cases that are
pending In U.S. District Court In
Detroit," said U.S. Marshal
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
Anthony Bertoni. He described
investigated two accidents on Wednesday eventng.
the firebomb as a bottle 'filled
The first accident occurred around 5:30p.m·. on Morning Star
with flammable liquid.
Road about one hall mile off County Road 28. AcCilrding to the
Judge Constangy In Charlotte
report. Ina K. Cost, Newark, was traveling west on the §DOW
was
sued last month by a group
covered road and lost control of her vehlele In the curvl.' The
that
objects to his habit of
vehicle spun around and slid backwards Into the ditch. There
opening
court each morning with
were no injuries but the vehicle sustain~ light damage to the
a prayer. That suit, llled In
left side.
federal court, has yet to come up
The second accident occurred In TUppers Plains around 8:45
for a hearing.
p.m. According to the report, a semi tractor trailer owned and
The judge, who describes him·
driven by Mark Rutledge, Ironton, was attempting to pass a
self
as "pro·llfe Democrat,"
southbound vehiCle owned and driven by James S. Rucker,
earlier
this year was Involved In
Reedsville. As Rutledge was starting to pass, Rucker turned left
cases
Involving antl·a borllon
Into the side of the tractor trailer. Both vehicles received
protesters,
whom the judge
Continued on page 12
released.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. &lt;UP!j With the spale of bombings that
have hit the South recently,
District Judge Bill Constangy
decided not to tear open the plain
brown wrapper on a package that
arrived at his front door.
But when pollee arrived Wed·
nesday and opened the parcel
witli the most up-to-date bomb
handling equipment, they found
nothing more dangerous than a
doll.
The package; 18 by 13 by 4
Inches, was X-rayed and detonated at the scene because of
electronic circuitry inside that
could have been part of an
explosive device. pollee said.
"It turned aut to be a &lt;loll, but it
had fancy electronic circuitry
and everything, and showed up
on X·ray," Charlotte pollee spokeswoman Mickey Casey said.

"It appeared rather foreboding

SLIM HARVE,ST - Farmer .Tullo Arrayo
checks the quality of the small percentage of red
peppers that were able to be harvested from the
willed vines at DuBois Farms near Boynton

Beach, fla. Several nights of freezing tempera-

tures destroyed most of the plants left uncovered,
resulting In lllgher prices lor peppers and
tomatoes. (uPI)

Emergency HEAP program ·
will continue to March. 30
Friday at the Gallla Outreach
office, 220 Jackson Pike, Gallipo·
lis. and at the. Meigs Outreach
office, 39350 Union. Ave. , Pomeroy, from 8: 30 to 12 noon and 1to
3:30. Applications n\ay also be
made at the Cheshire officeofthe
Gal Ua· Meigs Community Action
Agency on MondaJI through
Thursday during the same hours.
Applications may not be made at
Cheshire on Fridays.
The regular HEAP program
for the 1989-90 heating season
closes Jan. 31, leaving only one
more month to apply for assist·
ance through the regqlar
program.

This program provides heating
assistance of a non-emergency
nature to enable low-income
Ohioans help meet the rising cost
of home heating. Applications
are available at the Gallls-Meigs CAA office: Cheshire,
the Gallla County Outreach Qf,
!ice, the Meigs County Outreach
Office, as well as at post offices,
senior citizens centers, court·
houses. and other public offices
through! the Gallla-Melgs area.
To discuss your healing situation or need. call the Cheshire
office at 367-'341 or 992·6629,
Gallla Outreach at 446-0611 or
Meigs Outreach at 992-5605.

Rutland water should be boiled

The Emergency HEAP program is still in effect lor the
1989-90 heating season. The
current program began Oct . 30
and ends March 30 so assistance
cab be au thorlzed on behalf of
eligible households that'have not
been assisted this program year.
Assistance through the emer·
gency program Is limited to once
per heating season. and must
resolve an. emergency heating
situation occurring from disconnection, threat of disconnection
or a bulk fuel supply that would
last only 10 days or less.
Emergency HEAP appllca·
lions are taken Monday through

Old vendors licenses to expire

Liquor won't be flowing .at some
Ohio taverns this New Year's Eve

T'l.Vl! wrecks probed by deputies

SLICE ORANGE
MUG ROOT BEER

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Wamt weather heads to cold-stricken South

Local news briefs-.....

VLASIC

oz.
can

46

2 Soctiono, 1 2 PogM is Conto

Pomeroy-Middleport...Ohio, Thursday, December 28, 1989

Suspicious box on judge's
stoop tums .out to be a doll

Natural

Cloudy tonight. Low In 301.
Cllance of rain 20 percent.
Friday, hlch near n. Chance
of rain 90 percent .

'·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Some tavern owners who do not
have permits to sell liquor on·
Sunday are unhappy because
they'll be allowed to sell only
beer on New Year's Eve this
year.
State blue laws will prohibit
drinking of hard liquor at many
taverns this New Year's Eve
because It falls on Sunday.
"It's lousy," said Jerry Robey,
owner of a Reynoldsburg bar.
"New Year's Is traditionally my
biggest night or the year, and I
can only sell beer.
"I'm going to close down," he
added. "I wouldn't have any
customers."'
Bars, restaurants and night·
clubs as well as grocery stores
and carryouts that normally sell
liquor on Sunday can do so on
New Year's Eve. But many
permit holders are not allowed to
sell hard liquor on Sunday.
State liquor control agents say
they will be out checking taverns •
New Year's Eve to catch any

cheaters. Those found gllllty
could lose their licenses.
Robey . said · he hopes his pa·
trons will be willing to celebrate
on Saturday.
"I ordered all these hats and
horns months ago, before I
realized It would fallon a Sunday,
so I guess we'll have our New

Year's party on Saturday night,"
he said.
Marty Calhoun, owner of a
Columbus tavern, said she will
serve beer until midnight and
then pop the champagne corks at
12:01 a.m. Monday, when her
regular liquor license kicks into
effect.

Firms get funds to study pollution
The demonstration project will'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The governor's office says two be operated at Ohio Edison's
northeast Ohio firms will receive Niles Station in Niles.
The governor 's office also said
$43.3 million In federal and state
grants to study ways of removing Wednesday Babcock and Wilcox
pollutants from coal burned by of Alliance will get a $4.7 million
federal grant and $500,000 In
power plants.
The MK-Ferguson Co. of Cleve- state financing to build and
land Is to receive $33.1 million In demonstrate Its Low-NOx CeU
federal money and $5 million of Burner, which removes 60 perOhio money to build and demon· cent of nitrogen oxide emissions
strate Its NOXSO process, which from certain coal-fired utility
is supposed to remove more than boUets.
95 percent ofsulfurdloxldeand 80 , The process Is deslgaect for 1llle
percent of nitrogen oxide emls· in plants that provide about
one-third of the electrical capatslons from coal· fired boilers.
ily In the state.

.

'

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