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Pomeroy-Middlepor".. Ohio

''·

•

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,.
·Purdue

THIS
EE 'S
CA ES

. BANI
•&amp; 'SAYINGS ·co.
,_IOY,QK.

PH. 992-2l36 .

defeats
Illinois
Page3

..•

Blower ~.c: ,
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GIRLS BASKETBALL

•

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.JAN.
JAN. 12-NOIITH GAWA- HOME
JAN. 15-SY-S VAWY - HOME

GIRLS IASIETIAU

..

BOYS SCHEDULE
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 8-Tramble
·
. ·
...............................
Away
Dec. 11-Belpre ............................... Hontt

Dec. 15-Aiexander ........................ Away
Dec. 19-Logan .............~..................Hon
Dec. 22 -Wellston ""'··········~........... A"ay

'

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"YOUR.FINANC.IAL
CE.NTER".

Jan, 5-Federal Hocking ................. Away
Jan. 8 - Mill'er •..•,.................................ltotne
Jan. 12-Nelsanville-York .............. Away
jan. 15-Vintan County .................. Home
Jan • 19 ---: Tnmm
· ble .....................,.... Home
· ·

97 N. 2ND STilET
MIDDLEPOiT

. 992-6661

Jan. 22 --.ltlpre .............................. Away
Jan. 26-Aiexancler ....:.••~................ Home

:INSTALLMENT LOANS
~

Jan. 30-POint Pleasant ............, .... Away

Feb. 2-Warren .•.•.... :...................... Away

992-3007

Feb .. 5-Wellston .............................. Horne

Feb. 9~Athlns ............ -.........................Homt

.

EASTERN HIGH SCH'OOL
1987 ·88 BOYs-BASKETBALL

·-

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

!

Dec. &amp;-Southern ............................ Away /-·
Dec. 11-Hannan Tr~t .................: Away
Dec. 15-Partc. . . .g Cath. (6: lSI ... Away
Dec. 22-North Golia (6:00) ............ Hame '
Jan. 8-Symmes Yaley ................... Home
Jan. 12-Kyget Crwk ...............,......HQ,M

Die:. 8-East•n ••.'.............................Home
Dec. 11-0ali Hiii ........ ~ ..................HOnte·
Dec. 18-HDIVIan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 22 -Kyger Creek ........." ...........Away
Dec•.29-lnlb Valty So.... Convo. Centw
Jan. 1-Soutllwttt._.:n L.....:...................

Jan. 19-Federal Hocking ......;......... Hame

Jan. 22-Southerri ...........................Home

Jan. l2 -North Gallia _ .................. Home
Jan. 15-Symmts Yallty ................. Home

Jan. 29-North Gallia .................... Away

Jan. 22 -Eastern ........,.................... Away

Feb. 2-Milltr ...........................

i ......

Away

Feb.- S-Hannon Trce ........................Home
Ftb. 12-Southwtstern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath........~ ... Away
Ftb.19-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb •. 20~Federal Hodcing ............... Away

Jan. 29-Kyger Crllk ......................Homt

Jcin. 30-MiHtr ............ ~ ...................Honie
.FEb•. s.:....oak Hill .........................;:.. Away
Ftb. 6-Federal Hocking ................. Away

-Feb. 12-HaMan Trace ...................Hot~~~
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away
'

GIRLS SCHEDULE
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
. 198 7-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOl
1917·II GIRlS IIASKETIA~l

•

Featuring ·

* Great ~amburgers

*Roast. Beef on a
Croissant * Stuffed Baked
Potatoes * Taco Salads
* Salad Bar
* Real Ice Cream '*
· Dining • C.a rry Out •
Drive· Th ru ·
Sun.· Thurs. 6 A.M .- 10 P.M.
Fri . &amp; Sot. 6 A.M.- 12 P.M.
698 W. Main Street; Pomeroy

992-2057 .

Dec. 7-Vinton County ....................Home
Dtc. 10-Trtmble .............................Home
Die. 14-Belpr, .............................. Away
Dec. 17-Alexander ......................... Home
Dec. 23-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 4-Wellston .............................. Home
Jan. 7-Fediral Hocking .................. Homt
Jan. 9-Miller ..... ~..... ~ .........\,,,.........Home
Jan. 14-Nelsanvillt·York ............... Home

Dec.
DK.
DH.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

Jan. 18-Vintan Count ..:................ Away

Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................ Holllt
Jon. 21-Southern .......................... Away

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
feb.

21-Trimble ............................. Away
25-lelpre ............................... Home
28-Aiexeindlr ........................ Away
4-Wellston ............................. Away

Ftb 8-Federal Hocking .................. Away ·

feb. 13-Southern ........................... Home ·

7-Southern ............................. ttome
1Q-.:..Hannan Trace ...................Home
14-Miller ........"..•••...•......••.•..•H0...
17 -Southwestern ................... Home
19-Federal Hocking .............. Away.
21-North Gallia .................... Away

23-Meigs ................................ Home

Jan. 7 -Sy~mes Valley ................. ~ Away
Jan. 11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away

Jan.
Ftb.
Ftb.
Feb.
Ftli.

28-North Gallia _ .................. Harne
1-Symmes Ylalty ................... Hamt
4-Han- Tract .................... Away
11-Southwtstern .................. Away
14-Federal 119dcing ........:..,... Hame

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f

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vice

Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................... Away ·
_/ Jan. 21-EaltJI'n ............................ Hamt
Jan. 28-llyger Crttk .........;.....:..... Away

'

c.....-n AM.ITIC

Ftb, 11-Ha..IDn Trace .................. Away

· .Feb. 13-..- ......... ~ ..................... Away

Two new members, Charles S.
Norris and Gary K. Willford,
were given their oath of office
. Monday night When the Southern
Local School District Board of
Education held Its organizational
session at the blgh school In
Racine.
Charles F. Pyles was elected
president .'or the new calendar

year and Gory .Denny Evans wa:;
· named vice president. The fl!th
member of the board is Scott
Wolfe.
The board set the third Mond·ay
of each month at 7 p.m. for Its
regular meeting times for the
year with the location to be 'the
high school cafeteria. Board
Contlnqed on page 5

Middleport VIUaae lult been apptloved for a slate grant of

$11,'711 and a federal IJ'ADI of M1,881 for' lbe public
trueporiatlon ayaMm In Ul8, aceardlnJ to an an•ouncenli!!DI
b:r Oavearorllelulnl Celeate.
·
·
'"l''leee fudl wiD lltlp matntalllservlclee provided eo that aU

f09TWIAI SIOIII

,,,. ue• '•••• ~

reald1ntr tllll.....,-tlle elderl:r ud people wlllldtubllltae.caa .
.-JOJ the bell• 1 eate, reliable tnalportatloa a;rs&amp;em,"

•

Oov.Ctlll...

.r

111NUP

111e Ohto Public
ad \ ' '1 ed br tile 0~
'1'111 putl .... aw....... to

appraWdbJ* V~baa llua
~ p1lbJie

tnnlpartallon

w•• • ........

oe1
tra&amp;lve ....,. for the Blue
wllklllll tile pllb1ic neqortlttaa a,.tem lor
I

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'

Massive oil· slick threatens
w3;ter supplies ·along the Ohio
Scaflde asked· residents to
store water in containers Monday .so the city's reserve tanks
c~uid be refilled before. th.e oil
slick reached the area .
East Liverpool supplies water
to its 16,000 residents and sells
water to Columbiana County for
about 16,000 more people, Sea fide
said.
" We should get a reserve of
about·36 hours, maybe longer" he
said.
Columbiana County Commls·
stoner David Halverstadt In
Lisbon said _two ~torage towers
should prevent a shortage In that
area unless the water supply in
. East Liverpool is cut off for an
ex~no:led period.

EPA olficlals had not estimated how long tl:le on slick
might affect drinking water In
the East Liverpool area. Scafide
said he would send a telegram to
Governor Richard Celeste ask·
ing for additional water supplies
lf necessary.
Scaflde ·said he also would
close .the city's schools to 90n·
serve water If a shortage ap·
peared imminent. ·
A tank at the Ashland Oil Corp.
refinery in Jefferson, Pa., col·
lapsed Saturday, dumping as .
much as 2 mlllion gallons of
diesel fuel Into the Monongahela
River. Debris from the collapse
ruptured another tank nearby .•
adding 20,000 gallons of gasoline
to the spill.

Jo!tn E. "Jack" Katllc, senior ple&lt;;e of baccarat crystal in the
the National Mine R~cue Ass~cl'To me, this just helps unders·
vice president _ fuel supply for • .shape of a large chunk of coal
atlon, and ~as served .as a
core · whaf I've been saYing
the AEP Serv.lce Corporation, . which is mounted on an ebonite
director of coal associations in
before, that we're doing the right
has been ltameq the recipient of base. The recipient's na!Jie is
three states.
things. in fact, the accomplish·
the 1987 Coal Age Award for engraved on a sterling silver
Finally, he has been a tireless
ments our people are making are
distinguished contribution to the · plaque.
·
advocate for the coal industry,
exciting.
coal' industry. •
, Coal Age editors, who deterandd for the· electric utility
"The miners'worklng for AEP
Katlic received the ·award mine the award winners annu- Industry which Is the coal Indus- Fuel Supply operations are absofrom .JosephF. Wilkinson, editor ally, could point to a variety of
try's No.1 custom~r. He's ta~en Jutely the best In the world · of Coal Age magazine, at a · reasons for Katllc's selection.
his message to such diverse · there's nobody better," Katlic
speeial p~esentatlon held at the
First, Under his guidance, "'EP
audiences as- coal buyers in praised. "When I thlrtk of our
Capital· Club in Columbus on mining operations have achieved
Europe, governmentlll officials,
training programs, our safety
·
tremendous gains in productivity
newspaper editors, .his fellow
achievements, the condition of
December 16.
The AEP Fuel Supply execu- and efficiency. As ex!ijX!ples, the coal producers, and to students · our mines, I'm sure of lt. I was
studying engineering in colleges never so sure of anything in my
tlve is only the fou(th winner of Martinka Division of· Southern
this prestigious a~rd, whfch Ohio Coal Company has regis·
and universities.
life.
was initiated by Coal Age maga,- tered !! ~3 percent lncrease, ln
"Obvious!~, it's an honor to
"We've mad e the Improve·
zlne In .1984. Previous winners tons per m,anshlft and the Meigs
receive an award such as this,"
ments, we've made the transihave been B.R. Brown of Consoli- Division of Southern Ohio Coal
Katllc said. "When you're In the lion, and we've earned . the
coal industry, it means a lot.
respect of the Industry."
dation Coal CQmpany (1984), has chalked up a 47 percent gain
Ceorge Evans of the Kentucky In that category.
Energy Cabinet (1985), and WllSecond, Katllc has been a
Jiam Carr of Jim Walter Resour- leader in the development of
By ALAN KRAUSS
ces (1986).
mining technology and, during
,
United Press International
The Coal Age Award was his near Iy 40 years In the coa 1
lnaugllrated, . Wilkinson said, Industry, bas been responsible
A small St. Louis b!'nk Monday reduced Its prime lending rate
"because there was no f.lttlng for more than 100 mines represby a quarter percentage poinllo 8 %percent, but major money
center banks did not·follow the move and analysts suggested
recognition for leaders in the coal entlng most major coalbusiness conditions do not merit the cut now.
lndustry.-We feel that the award, pr~uclng ,regions of the country.
,which we present each De·
Soutllwest Bank, the nation's 1,0171h-largest ~e basis of
deposits at the end of 1988, cut Its prime from an annual 8 %
cember, has filled a void."
Third, he serves as a director
. The award Itself Is a handsome of the National Coal Association, _ L....;p;..e.rc_e~.n..;t';..w,..h_e..,r.;.e.lt_h_ad_s_lood
__•;..1n_e_e_e_a_rl.:;y_J_as_t_m_o_n_t_h_
. ...;.._ _ _.J
·
·
.
·

Board, MT.I.JT.1_A.·~esume DeDiO.ti•ati.ODS toda·y

••

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.L •

Swear in two neu; Southern ' Meigs
Negotiations b~tween the
Local Teachers Assocla.
b
·
M
·
da
·
•
ht
tlon and the Meigs Local School
bo
. ard mem erS · On Y ntg .DistrictBoardofEducatlonwent

Feb. 1-Southwett•n .".................. Hontt
feb. 4-0ak Hil _ ......................:......Hontt

Middleport approved for .
state and fed~ral · granu

· · THI AREA'S MOST

''

•- ·

the Coil Ace macUlae award for disllnplsbed aerv)ce lo the coal
iDdtl8tl7 ta 1811'1. Tbe handsome piece of baccarat cryst!ll, ahaped
d Kat Uc
Jlkeaehallkofcolll,markathefourihiJ'anllngollheawar.
Ill ~e~~lor
prsldent of the American Electric Power Service
Corporailoa and bead ollie Fuel Snppiy Departmeat. He received
lheawardtromJoaephF.wuldDson,edllorofcooJAge,atrecent
ceremonies In the Capital Clab In Colwnbus, Ohio.

Jan. 7 -Southwestern .........-........... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia ............ ~........ HOme
Jan. 14-Symmes Valley ................ Away

--,.

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.
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"MAN
.. OFTBE YEO IN COAL"- JacaKaiUc, right, accepts

·rcCDIIVI..r

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'

temporary · appropriation of
$50,000'to carry village finances
until receipt of this year's budget
certification from the county
.auditor. ·
Chosen to serve this year as
president of council was Lar·ry
Wehrung.
·
Finally, council welcomed ·
Bryan Shank who was elected to
the board in November.

St. Louis bank cuts prime rate

Dec. 7-EC.stern ............................... Away
Dec.1 0-0ak llill ..........................~ .. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 17-Hannan Trac:t ................... Ho•
Dec. 19-AIIIIndtr ...................;...... Away
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ...~..~ ................. Ho•

, • .
.

a

ame.·ltddte . ·w inner of -Coal ~e Award

Jan. 2 -Soutlltastern ...,..,....._ ....... A-.,

Jan. 15 -Oak HNI ............................ Away

Feb. 12-Federal Hacking ............... Home

A GREAT PLACE
FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

1 Section, 10.Pagea 26 Cants
A Multimatlia Inc. Newspaper.

sion to OSM. It Is the mayor's
In another fire department
understanding that OSM , wou.ld related matter, a provision of the
not be liable for damages, but Ohio Revised Code for active
that the contractor would be firemen to undergo periodic
phy~fl:als was discussed by couninsured for damages.
The masonic bullding was cil. A motion was passed by
closed late last fall and is no council recommending physicals
. for Pomel'9y's active firemen,
longer used',
Danny Zerkle was appointed according to Code.
by Seyler as Pomeroy's n(!w lire
CouncU approved a request
chief; ·replacing Charles Legar from Clerk Jane Walton {or a
who resigned the position Jan. 1

By JEANNE REALL
United Pres&amp; International
Officials have ordered resl·
dents to conserve water and said
they would close schOols if.
·· ·necessary rn some eastern Ohio
communities threatened with
water shortages by a massive oil
slick sliding down the Ohio River .
East Liverpool Mayor Jim ·
Scaflde said the Environmental
Protection Agenc~ predicted the
oil. slick would reach his community about noon today.
"We are anticipating some
problems," Scl\fld~ said Mon- '
day. "We're anticipating the
Monday alght oJonc with MaYor
Seyler, . legendary slick coming down the
rjver am;l hitting here around ·
center, and Counelbnan Bruce Reed, who were
1\00n. '' .
re!'leeted to their po~~ltloDB In November.
~~~~~~----~~~--~----,

JAN. 7-SOUTHWESJEitH- AWAY
JAN, 11-NOITH GAWA - HOME
JAN. 14-SY-5 V~EY - AWAY

COMPANY

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BOYS IASIETiALL
8-SOUTHwmEIN - 'N o•

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST

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SOUTHERN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
614-992-5141

ei1ttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·Tuesday, January 5, 1988

celved a request from OSM for will be looking lor sulfates !rom
general
permission to temporar· mine water In order to justify
Sentinel Newa Staff
lly
stop
traffic
and parking In the reclamation, Seyler added. AcThe Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement area near the masonic bulldlng tuallength of time for the project
plans to have test drllllngs taken and courthouse for varied peri- Is undetermined and will depend
ods of time during the testing upon the ·outcome of the test
· of the hUislde behind the Pome·
·drilling, and if reclamation Is
roY Masonic Building accord lng proceedures.
Testing · of the area Is to be carried out.
to Information from Mayor RICouncil felt li would be wise to
chard Seyler at Monday night's completed by an individual contractor
.
the
mayor
said.
Since
.
c:onsult
an attorney 'r egarding
regular meeting · of VIllage
the village's llabillty in · the
Council. •
·
· there are abandoned mine shafts
. Seyler reported he has re- uilder the hillside, the contractor project before granting permls~
~'· --,-......,.-...,......

l'
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JAN. 7-SY-S VALLEY- AWAY
JAN. 11-IYGER CREEK - AWAY
JAN. 14-0AJI Hll ....,.' HOME
.

.Funeral
Hotne

•

at y

By NANCY YOACHAM

JAN. 8-S\'MMES VAWY- HOME
. JAN. . 12-IYGEII CIIEEI - HOME
JAN. 15-0AII Hll ..::_ AWAY

·

.

(,.ow between five and · 10
below zero tonlg'ht. sunny
Wednesday .. Jnghs'llear 15. ·

.Plan test. driUings behind ·Masonic Building

-BOYS BASIETIALL

Rawlings
Coats

Pick 48198

Vo1.38. No.1 6&amp; ·
CDP'fl!!hlod 1988 .

EASTERN

••

84'5

•

ALL GAMES SUSPENDED
UNTI. FUIIHER NOnCE
DUEl TO THE LABOR
PROBLEMS IN THE
.DISDICT.
,,

•

Daily Number

•

.MEIGS
·•

Ohio. Lottery

for · some g hours Monday In
Athens.
Today at a p.m. negotiations
between'the two_groups resumed
· 1n an attempt to 'reach a settlemen! in the teachers'. strike
which began on Nov. 6. ·
While some .may look upon the
two days of negotiations as an
encouraging factor, Monday was
a "no progress" situation, accordi Ill! to a statement Issued this
morning . by Michael Wilfong, .
president of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association. The state.' ment reads:
''The Meigs Local Teachers
Association's negotiating team
Monday met for seven hours with
the group representing the bOard
of education. There was no
progre11 ~oward a contract settlement as the board failed to
respond to the · teachers' last ·
proposal' which was !1l&amp;de on
Dec. 22.
•
•
·

niutualagreementonacontract.
"Until the board Is ready and
willing to negotiate In good faith,
to simply sit down and talk out
the Issues with the MLTA, there
will not .be a negotiated settle·
ment to the contract dispute. ·
"Another negotiations session .
has been set for Tuesday after:
noon at .one. The MLTA would ·
have preferred to start the
!&gt;'!SSion earlier but remains
ready and willing to negotiate at
anytln:'e· anywhere, and around·
the-clock tp reach ~~ equitable
contract agreement:

Meantime, classes In the six
operating schools of the Meigs
Local Scl\ool District were being
held today after the schools, plus
those ot the Eastern and Southern Local School Districts, were
.closed on Monday due to weather
conditions. Classes In the six
Meigs Local schools are being
conducted. by substitute
teachers.
• Oltlclala , bave reported no
lllcldenta of vandalism within the
dlltrlct In tile pas~ few days . .
A temporary inJunction has
"Collective bal'l&amp;lntne pro- ·
tocol Clllll tor a neaotlatlng team
been granted against the MLTA
to counter the. oppoalq team'•
bY Jucl&amp;e Charles Knight In the
propoeal; lo makt a eo)lllter Meigs County Common l'Jeaa
offer. It Ia tllll &amp;lve-alllfstalre
Court tllld Judp Knlabt 'laJt
· prooea tbat leadl to the mltlclle week alia 01~ the board o1
IJ'OUDCIIJICI eventual~)' ntiulta In edllcatloll and teachers to nego.

tiate· before tomorrow and to
report back to him the results of
those negotiations.
rt was reported that teachers of
the dlstrlet held a meeting

Monday night at the Rock
Springs Fairgroun~s, but since
negotlattqns are. stoll underway
. there was no actoon for the group .
·to consider.

I UC8T TO I'll&amp; - Bma...- Ho..teta COtaco, Melp County
A rellOrdet, WM $he fin*JOI= te file I ,ell~ of CladldaCY at the
MeliiiCeuaiJIIDMdof
A
·~·· 'deca_.lulterma
reeoJ'IIer. lfbe fliH Iter petllloe .._.., momhl1 willa .Jane
Frr!DJtr, rlaht, boanljll~. 'fte
CM1 prlll'!ll'f .. -., 1.
Tile iJ1i 11tda"1' elecltlae II Nov. a........... lor the prlmtU')'
claellt,p.m. AprlU.
.
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Pomeroy7"""Middleport,
Ohio

Tueadiy, January 6, 1988

Comment

Page 2-The Deily Sentinel

111 Court S&amp;reel

Pomeroy, Ohio
'
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~fib
~.
~~- ......_,._.....,...,~=·ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT.WHITEH.EAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB JIOEFLICH

Geaeral MIUiager

. AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland D~llyPress
Assoclallon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF ~INION are welcome: They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must beslgnf.ld wltbname, address and ·
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publts.hed. Letters should be In
goat taste, addresstrig Issues, not personalities . ·
·

R~agan

prepares for
State of Union talk

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan returned to the Whl.te
House earlier this week, ready to plunge Into a series of briefings on
his flscal 1989 budget and to prepare for his upcoming State of the
' Union address.
. ·
.
With the 100th Congress Still . recessed for a ·few weeks, Reagan
faced a lighter-than-usual workload .on his return from a traditional
. year-end vacation stay at the Southern California estate of publisher
· Walter Annenberg.
·
White House spokesman Marlln Fitzwater ~aid administration
b\ldget director James Miller was scheduled to begin briefing the
president Tuesday on the new fed era I spending blueprint that he will
submit to Congress in mid-February. ·
Fitzwater said Reagan also has arranged an extraordinary series
of joint meetings between the National Security Council and the
Economic Polley Council to review U.S.-Japanese Issues In advance
of a Jan. 13 visit to Washington by Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita.
The presidential spokesman sal&lt;! a commission headed by
financier Nicholas Brady will present to Reagan Its assessmentOfthe
stock market Friday In the aftermath o! the Oct 19Wal1Streetcrash. .
'Ih.e next f(:lw weeks also w!U find Reagan and his advisers charting
an agenda for the home stretch of his presidency, to be outlined to
Congress 11nd ·the American people in his Jan. 25 State of the Union
·address. .
·
A senior White House of(lcial said that 11genda will include few , If
any, major'hew Initiatives and Instead will concentrate on '!building
on what's been accomplished over the last seven years" on domestic
and lnterna·tionaf fronts.
Top among the priorities for 1988 will be.ar ms control - winning
ratification of the Intermediate Nuclear Forees Treaty, whlch.wauld
eliminate a full class of U.S. and Sovlet.mlsslles , and pursuit ~fan
.agreement to reduce arsenals of longer-range nuclear weapons by 50
percent.
Senate ratification of the INF accord, which would require the
des truction of ground-based missiles with ranges ol300 to3,400mlles,
see,ms all bu t certain despite reservations by conservative
Republicans.
Fitzwater said Reagan will have an "awfully busy" spring travel
sc hedule, with lour summits already on his agenda. Reagan plans to ·
to to Cancun, Mexico, In mid-F~ruary lor an annual meeting with
'
President Miguel de Ia Madrid. The president also plans to meet Canadian Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney In Canada sometime after that. Reagan and Mulroney
signed an historic f,ree trade agreement Saturday In separate
ceremonies in Palm Springs, Calif. , and Ottawa.
The president also Is scheduled to hold another round of summit
talks In Moscow with Soviet leader Mikpall Gorbachev, perhaps In
la te May, and hopes to be able to slgn a longer-range strategic arms
agreement at that time.
Still, prospects for such a treaty remain clouded by disagreement
between the. two superpower leaders regarding the extent to which
the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty Inhibits work on the U.S. "Star
Wars" anti-missile program.
Reagan also will attend his elgnth economic summit meeting with
Western indu stria l leaders, this time In Toronto In June.

••
•

''

'

•

•

Letters to the editor
Mud slinging
Mud slinging should be left lo
!he politicians.
·
' i always read the letters to the
editor and don' t think too much
about them one way or the other.
Lately, the big issue Is the s trike.
They' re slingin mud and diggi ng up bones on one another. Ii's
pitiful. It's gone so far now, no-

DWino

pro~lem ·for

WASHINGTON -Pilots with
chronic alcohol or drug problems
who have lost their drivers'
licenses · can still climb Into the
cockpit o! an airliner lull of
passengers and take off. That Is
because the Federal Avtatlon
AdmlnistraUon trusts the pUots
to confess their drunken driving
records. And a hefiy share of
thqse pilots with a reeord He.
An ongoing Investigation by
the Department of Transportation's Office oflrispector General ·
looked for serious traffic violations In the driving records of the
nation's 711,648 licensed pUots .•
The sample turned up 10,300
pUots who had lost their dtlvlng
privileges In the past seven years
for driving while Intoxicated. Of
those, 76 pe_rcenf or 7,850 pilots
lied about the convictions In their
periodic medical reviews submitted to the FAA, In which they

•

•

•

.•

. I

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•'

••
•

•..

••
••

----

•
J

f

By Jack Anderson
an_d_J____
os--=--ep___,h·-=-Sp_ea_-r

LOS ANGELES (NEA) "' - " the government boasted of a $2
Here's another disconcerting exbillion cut hi federal expendl.ample of your tax dollars at work
tures produced !:&gt;y a late reduc- but this . one Is especially tion In the m111tary budget.
bizarre. 'Pre5ldent Regan's apHow was It accomplished? The
pointees at the Energy DepartDefense •Department's regular
ment want to sell the underpay checks were scheduled to be
ground crude oil reserves the dated and ls~ued on Sept. 30, the
federal government . owns In
last day of the 1987 fiscal year.
California and In Wyoming,
The "savings" were achl~ved
· ·Then, they want to use the through a one-day postponement
estimated $4 billion In proce~s that pushed the expenditures Into
form those sales to buy crude oil,
the 1988 fiscal year.
which they will store underOver the years, uncounted
ground In Louisiana and Texas.
billions of dollars worth . of
If the logic of this escapes you, government transactions have
that's probably because · you been shunted Into assorted "offdon'--t understand the blue- buget'' . ·categories · thai technl- ·
smoke-and mirrors techniques - cally .- but only iechnlcally l:ttat Congress and the executive are not part of the unified federal
branch use as a substitute for budget
responsible financial
There are off-budget trus.t
management
funds for everything from Social
Their desperate attempts to Security to ·airport construction
obfuscate the huge federal deficit and off-budget _loan guarantee
have. produced the government's funds for students, farmers,
version of othe three-card monte home owners and others.
that con men use to confound
I
suckers on big-city streets.
Nowhere Is there a greater
At the conclusion of the most concentration Of financial gimrecent fiscal year, for example, mickry · than In the omnibus
appropriations and deflclt reduc-

FAA __

local district attorney had com.
period would . make the pU. :
plalned to the FAA about the
Immune tram FAA administrative penalties, bu I not from _ man's driving record, . but the
FAA took no action on his pilot's
prosecu lion for lying on a government form , an offense that· llcense.
A pilot · In Titusville, Fla. ,
carries a penalty o! up to five
bliZzed an airfield so low that he
years In prison and a $10,000 fine.
McArtor said that even after ·took the top ,off a parked van.
Jan. 1, the FAA would not punish · Witnesses sal~ he was drinking
a pllot for lying on the medical' before, during· and after the
form If the pilot tess~ up before .!light Tbe man also had a prior
the FAA learned about the drug arrest and had flown his
driving problem from another
plane between the towers of a
source.
hotel at the third: floor level. The
Our reporter Frank Byrl bas .. FAA knew about th episodes and
seen the Inspector . general' s
certified bim In O&lt;:tober 1985 to
report an_d It lists several exam·
continue flying planes-"
.
.· '
pies of a[rllne pUots with serious
The Investigators found 262
DWI convictions. A Milwaukee flrsi-class pllots with at least on~
man with seven DWI convictions OWl conviction each. Thirty of
died In the February !986crash of them were working for major
a cargo plane he was piloting. He airlines. One had eight tra!!lc
had a blood alcohOl level four
convictions In six years, and his
lime§ that which the FAA consldmost recent DWl offense In 1986
er~Uots Impaired for flying. A.
cost him his driver's license for .
five years. Yet he is stlllllcensed
to fly .
..
. Among non-commercial pilots,
the auditors found that 10.5
percent of toxicology tests on
pilots who dledin plane acclden ts
turned up alcohol in their blood.
But the FAA-continues to flnd
reasons not to act. FAA officials
say they don't have the resourc:e~~.
to Investigate pilots; thai theyt
don't have easy accessto driving
records; and that cumbersome
reg)! Ia Uons make It bard to
revoke a pilot's license In less
than a ye11r.
.
The Inspector general's office·
has taken matters Into Its own
hands, preparing a list of offenders gleaned from driving records. Sen. Frank Lautenberg,
D-N.J., proposed legislation 1n
October to allow the FAA access
to 'the National Driver Register,
a nationwide data bank that lists
_serious driving convictions. ,
The FAA reports that It will
consider an objective standard
for revoking a pilot's license and
will look at the relatiOn between
drunken drivers and aviation
accidents.

tlon measures that Congress
that wUI cost taxpayers more
approved Just before 'It adlater than it saves them now_
journed In late December and
The underground 911-ex@ange ·
Reagan then signed Into law.
Ulustrates the folly ofthe Reaglin
Those laws mandate some administration's reliance upon
genuine savings, to the exlent
asset saleS. To .be disposed of are
that they Impose restraint on the
two government-owned oil refuture expansion of agricultural serves - Elk Hills In Califonila
subldles, medical care reimbur- · and Teapot Dome ' In Wyoming.
sement and other fast-growing These two reserves were set up
components of the federal
early In the century but have
budget.
.
'
been replaced by the Strategic
More than $1 bUIIon of the Petroleum Reserve.
reductions promised during the
The proceeds from sales of the
·next two years," however, are to older reserves would be used to
be achieved by delaying or purchase crude oil for deposit In
deferring expepdltures - which the SPRhardly constltule real savings.
. Government leaders are comAnother $7 billion are to be mitted to filling the SPR at an
attained by allowing various accelerated pace, so the money
Institutions that have borrowed needed to buy that cr\lde on Is
from the federal treasury, rang- virtually certain to be spent. But
Ing from the Israeli government the sale of the dlder reserves here
to rural electric cooperatives, to In the West would proililce
prepay tbeli. loans. Again, that unexpected revenues.
provides only a short-term InfuThus, $4 bUIIon can be •'saved' • .
sion o! cash.
when E.lk Hills and Teapot Dome
Finally, the new budget claims are s'old .:.. but such financial
to o!fer almost $8 billion worth of · legerdemain · cannot produce a
savings this year. thr.ough the durable solution to an Intractable
sale of government-owned assets problem.
- another quick-fix- alternative

JAM SESSION - Gerald Palldlo (28) of tbe UNLV "Runnlli'
Rebels Jams the ball tbrouab the boop as Mike Matsuno (10) of Cal

state-Long Beach's f9ers can only follow for a pol!ilble rebound
during first-half action at the Long Beach Arena Monday night. ·
(UPI)

Scoreboard ...
•

UPI cage poll

MinDHOta at NYialaDIIen, 8:M p.m.

WedDHd.ay'a Ganws
Edmoato• at Hartford, •llht
Bulfalo at Mo,.re.., niKht

NEW YORK CVP'IJ - TheUnltetiPfttls
~uernatkual &amp;o.rd of Coac•• Top ICI

Quebeil

collep buke«ball r.IIDP, w11• first·

place ve~ and .t MOrd In par.,nthe~e~,
lot.al pol,pil• f baRd on U polnu tor ftrtt
pla(!e, It forll!f:ond, etc. ),and last week's
....kl ... :

Te.,n

... .VIIobl (t) (Il-l)
I. WJOinlq(Z) (11·1)

11. Pllrde (Il-l)
11~ Mlr.tllau ( ll·ll
II. Ne\l'a ...Lu Ve~U {lt-1)

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

17. KUIIU (8-SJ
18. DllltOia (t-t)
11. (tie) Iowa !!late ( ll·t}
It. (lie) St . .lohn'f!l (3-1)

,I

4·..- '

It I

LA La•n ISS. S,llll An&amp;plllb Ill ·
JaeMAJ'I Gll\nel
Phoeab: .lt New \'ortr.,'l': 10 p.m.
N~ .Ieney ~ W_.ln«~en, 7:311 p.m.

!117

Detroit a&amp; AtlaDta, 8 p.m.

tl 11

ladlaaa at Chk:alo, 8:30p.m.
LA Cllppel'l al Mltwaukee, 8:0p.m.

"'
Braf.

z-unraabd

San ADtonlo at Goldea&amp;a&amp;e, 11:10 p.m.
Sea.tUe at Portland , II: SO p.m.

otllen re«Mql'oks: Aubura.
ley, Brl(ham Yom1, Del'llll. Georrla
Tectl, Louisville, Mluourt, New Mexko,
Nortll carou-. Slate, Notre; Dame,
Southern Metbodl1t, Teus EI·Paao and
V. . .rbiN.

W~111'1 Game~

New fork a1 Boston, nl&amp;lll
Denver at New ,le,.y, aii:W
l/P.h a1 Phlladelpllla, niJIII

Li\ Cllppen 1M CJewlaad, nlJ:hl
Atla91&amp; at DeCMit, niA"hl .
O.IIU·at LA Lala!ra. nl1hi.
Ho1111ton at Seattle, nlsht

..

calendar
Bag"etba:ll
Pln)t!nlx a t Ntow \'ork, 7:11p.m.
New .leraey at W~lntton, 7:311 p.m.
Detroit· at A.l...la, !I p.m.
Indiana at O.iciao, R:JI p.m.
LA Cllppen a1 Mllwaullee, 8: It p.m:
San Antonio at Golden State, It: SCI p.m.
Seatde at Portlaad, lt:38 p.m.

I

Boool ...

1

On"el.-cl 1ft, Du...er 101
loUitoall'l', Dallu tn
Boa&amp;oa 111, Utah •

llllJ

... . . . . (114)

ll

......,•• Res. .
PYadelplllalll. Pllloem: IU

.... 111111
131 12

17114

:
'

N.\110NAL BASkETBALL ASSOC.

101 I

IJ. ....... (8-2)
If. GeerpC.owa c•l)
II. f1ortda (8-3)

'

NBA re8plts

lit 1
IIIII

a. ~CJII;II.IIIma(ll{l ...J
~~ .... t•l) '

•

..

Wlml,rr at Calrary, niJbi

H7 8

o•t) '

i

St . Loal• at DetroM,al1ht

Ul I
185 I

I. Tem~ (7·1)
'7.1,r ... cu.a

a. leap, nlaht

Mlnae1o&amp;a at Toron&amp;o, nllhl

.,.. .

1. N•rth caroUM ( ll {t-1)

at

Vanco\1\'e r ., NY Ranren , nlsfil

....•• •
....

4'

I. lleat.ck.y (!I) (t-O)
t , Pl-tahUI'I(h (J) (S.I)

• Lu Veru. Nel'.- Ro1erMaywealller
w. «JeJ Ferrell. II rouad auper 11&amp;111·
welrhi bout.
HockJ
Wllhlnll•• at Phlladel~la. 1:35 p.m.
._., A.nr;elea at PIU.tlurwh, 1:a p.m .
Mlr.eaola at NY lelanden, 8: 05 p.m.
Socur
Major Indoor Soccer l.eli1ue
s .. Dlep at Chlcap, II: 31 p.m .
Dallaa at MlnMSOta, 8:!5 p.m .

,

Cage scores
OMo Collep Ba•kftba.ll Score11
By United Preu lnternaUo•J
,., •. f
vo ... ptDin State 1"/, Deti'Oit 113

Clncl ...atl' l«t, Sollihern Ml allllalppl N
WooMer 74. Jolul carroll 6t

Glr .. Ohio JOp School Bukelhall
Mond~ , laa. f
Arcadia II, Cor)'·RawM• Jl
Brot*l~ld H. Leavllmbufl LaBrae 48
Corila... lAkeview .U, E Pt.lntlae 33
Olyaqa Falll 58, Stow 41
Po,. l'r,e II, Sltelalld~h 41

GartelllavtiR M, W*rloo 40
Klnunan lladaer •· Newton Fa lit !'l'
Mu&amp;u Crettwood u. Streetsboro 34
Poliap 8o1llllleMi M, Mosadore g

Roots&amp;own II. Wtollrldp II
Warren Olam ...a II, Llbert)l h

·,

Wnt Bra*:lh 11, t.o•Y~ne 43 (toll)
Windham Jl, Brlskll !3

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEo\GUE
Wales 'Conlere~~ee
Patrtck IHvlllon
WLTPt.. GFG.t
NY l~t~lanclera 20 14 J tl lit . Ill
Phllll.delpllla 19 ll I tl liS Ut
New ..f!nr)'
Ill 17 I U 111 IU ,
Waablqton
18 11 I f I lit IH
Pia:lbul'lll
II II . , II Ill Ut
N\' R&amp;~~~e ra
II lt I S1 Ut lSI
Ad ama Dtvlalon
!! 10 t IS lit I!S
Montreal
• BoaiOn
Ul4151118111
IS J1 7 11 Ill 111
' H~t.rtfonl
· ~4 11 7 II lit 1%1
II · 11 t 14 IJI 141
Quebec
Camphell Coalere~~ee

resurrection · surfaces one new
possibility - a Republican blOwout, a -landslide. That could
yelld a ·small coattail vote bonus
to some Republican Senate candidates. Conceivably -barely that might mean a Republican
Senate.

........

Berry's World

'

Ten shooting·fhat way."
While Illinois ~as shooting
poorly. the! Boilermakers were
blazing. Purdue shot 62 percent
from the !loor, paced by the 10 for
13 shooting of Troy Lewis. The
senior g11ard finished wl.th .a
game-high 25 points.
"He shot the ball extremely
well and 1 he handled the ba\1
extremely well," Purdl!e Coach
Gene Keady said. "He played
like the great player he Is."
Lewis opened the second half
with. a ~-pointer and a basket to
give the Bollermaliers a 37-31
lead ..\itth 18:43 remaining, nunols got no closer than flve points
the rest o! the way - · · ,
Tony Jones add~ 14 points for
Purdue, 11-1. Glynn Blackwell

Weather expected to.play
big part in NFL enco~nter

Hart-Jackson ticket ?---,--------:-Be_n_-~~at_te_nb_er-=--g
Ism . . But · are they "un- Ideas tilt the positions In the .
nomJnatable"? Individually., tt primaries stlll farther to the left,
seems lmpos~lble for either one and even farther from the
to get nominated. But suppose American mainstream?
Hart gets 26 percent of the
Now, I have preached In this
delegates selection rules provide -space that the primaries. are
delegate bonuses to candidates unpredictable. And we will
who gel more than 15 percent of surely stlll be surprised In the ;
the vote. Suppose Hart then says;
months to come. But Hart's
"Jesse, I want you to bee ·my
running mate- just deliver your
delegates to me for the first
ballot " A Hart:Jackson ticket
could get the smallest percen- .
&lt;! •
(
tage of the two-party vote In
· American history .
If It Isn't that bad, 11 could be
bad. Even with fevler votes, Hart
and Jackson could still be the two
biggest delegate-winners- say,
40 percent betwee!l. them.
.Neither of them would get on the
ticket. The other candidates and
d 1 t
ld
a1 t
e ega es wou gang up ag ns
them. But then we will have a
screeching chOrus o( "we wuz
robbed,". leavlng the Impression
of a chaotic back-room deal, with
a candidate selected who didn't
get many ·votes tn the people's
primaries.
·
There Is something else about
. Hart. He's very llberal.ln his last
Senate session, 1985 and 1986,
Hart's ranking by the liberal
Americans for Democratic Actlon was 95 percent and 100
percent!' Will large Hart-Jackson
delegate totals push the Democratlc platform ·to tbe left?
(Platform delegates are apportioned on the bulB of delegate
strength.) ·wm Hart's liberal

'I_

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer Illlnols gu11rd Kendall Gill ·
offered an apology for a sorry
performance Monday night.
The host Illlnl, ranked 18th In
the country, shot just 29 percent
·from the floor and 30 percent
from the foul Une In falling io No.
10 Purdue 81-68 In the Big Ten
opener for both teams. Gill
finished with eight points on 4 of
13 shooting.
"For all the fans, I'm sorry for
the showing we put on tonight,"
Gill, a sophomore, said. "It's ihe
~orst game s.lnce I've been h~re.
I myself, I think I played the
worst game of my career."
·
Said Illinois Coach Lou Henson: "Nobody can win In the Big

Deficit ·hocus-pocus ~·--~----'-__R_ob~er_t_~_al_te_rs

boby wants to give. Well, ~ome­
·body will give and there's going
to be hard feelings about this
mud slinging.
Children get mad and are over
it the next day, but lt 'sa dl!!erent
story with adults. .
ijow bad Is the Gary Hart
sue Hayribt.ll ,
r
e,e n try orbIt for the
Long Bottom, Ohio _
Democrats?
Very bad. There Is a tendency
In politics to consider any hot
election news as monumentaL
But Hart Is likely to· be big-time
. stuff. His revival show. can not
only torment the Democrats, It
·can
humtuate them and -sUm
By United Press International
posslblllty
- even steal the
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 5, the fifth day of 1988 with 361 to lollow.
Senate
!rom
them.
The m~.on is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
To
begin,
lq,
the public eye, 11.
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
trlvlallzes
the
Pllrty's
attempt to
· The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
choose
a
nominee.
Many
years of
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
serious
work
by
many
candl.ln~ lude Zebul.on Pike, discoverer of Pike's Peak In Colorado, and
dates are, for the moment '
Navy Capt. Stephen Decatur In 1779; King Camp Gillette, l'nventor of
transcended by the raunchiest: '
the safety razor, in 1855; West German &amp;talesman Konrad Adenauer
cr.udest
Jokes heard In Washing. In 1876; 1984 Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale In
ton
since~lnce maybe forever,
192!! (age 60) ; aCtor Robert Duvall in 1931 (age 57), and actress Plane
.
"Win
One
tor
the Zipper" is not
Keaton In 1946 (age 42) _
the clarion call of a serious party_
A candidate, or a party, can ·
Cln this date In history:
.
.
survive
a great deal, but being
Iri 1914, Ford Motor Co. Increased Its_dally wage from $2.34 lor a
laughed at J•. ·t he most dlf!lcult.
nine-hour day to $5 for eight hours of work, confirming the cost
Right now, it-"ls Johnny Carson
adVantages of standardized mass production.
and David Letterman who haunt,
In 1919, the National Soclallst (Nazi) Party was !orml!d 1n
the Democrats.
Germany.
.
•
.
And consider possible results.
In 1925, Nellle Tayloe Ross of Wyoming was sworn In as the first·
Hart,
despite massive dtsappro,. wQman governor In the United States.
·
·
val
num!lers,
Is for the moment
tn 1964, Pope Paul VI and Greek.Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras
in first place In the Democratic
, rnit In Jerusalem, the !li-st meeting of a pope allli a patrlarfh In more
polls~
Given the fact that he Is
thtn five centuries.
.
-.
runnlnJ
ln.a seven-man field, he
In 1975, President Gerald Ford named an eight-man commission to
may
stay
there for quite a time.
Investigate charges the CIA conducted Illegal espionage against
In
second
place
Is_Jesse ·Jackson,
Anierlcan citizens inside the United States. ·
the
candidate
who- stUl hasn't
In 1987, President Reagan sent to Congress the first federal budget
apologlzed for halling Fidel CaspropoSa.l to top S1 trillion.
·
tro. The two frontrunners are
regarded as "unelectable" Athought for the day: President Calvin Coolidge, who died on this Hart
mostly. because of the ·
dale tri 1933, Did, •'The business of America Is business and the chle!
character
Issue, Jackson mostly
Ideal of the American people Is ldeallsm;''
~ause of his political radical-

Today in history

are· required . to report DWI
convictions.
Even If tbe .pilots had told tbe
truth, the FAA . has no uniform
· policy for revoking flying 11- ·
censes based on drunken driving
offenses. And 10 states have no :
laws on the books that make 11
Illegal to !ly drunk.
The FAA Is finally ex~mtnlng
Its "self-disclosure" policy after
years o! making excuses fpr ·
-doing nothing. One o! the more .
startllng excuses offered by the .
FAA Is that there Is no correlation between drunken driving
convictions and aircraft
accidents.
·
. Faa Administrator Ali an
McArtor has decided he will glvepUots a grace perlld untu Jan. 1
to correct the record of drunken
driving convtctii:ms on their medIcal certificates. That grace

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

·P urdue socks lllini in loop opener

1saa

•

The Daily Sentinel

-

'

Pomeroy-Mi.illlport, Ohio

Tua~ctav. Januaiv_s.

.

DetroH
fM, to•
Torollo
Cb k:&amp;IJU
Ml nnrM&amp;a

'I

•

Nor: ~~-~~ H
II 18 I J7
14 •
I JJ
II tl t 31
d

ti

I

SI

Sm,iloeiM ......

ow,..•

st . lAo• - PromoWd Gene,.l MaD&gt;
apr 0.1 Mu:¥111

141 Ill

rice ,.....• ..,

141 111
IJl Ill

14 11

4

It

1M 148

t:l II

f

II

181 1M

Wl-~1

II 11

4 Sl

Ill IH
lJI lf7
Ill lit

aamed

~

•Ice prelldell;

Man, Hendla aDd

Mark Gorr1a

Baakl!lllall

Pllladel,.la - Suape.. ed

. ~rewTo.eJ.

... ..,..... -

CoBtp

••rd A•
.

.......eil hakedlall

'a.r.lLellll OatUn.
" ·
Nerdlwnlera - Named ltmS.Uie 1011

......
........ .,,..,.,_..,
'
•fill• ........................
lllllll1n1 Cal - Name4 Mille Belafeldt

.......,... atlllftte dlftdor 11 c barae ot

........... o....

Waahlllll• at Pll. . .l.... , If: II p.m. •

Redwomen play Glenville

-,..

Sell ,....._.,, Damn
..........-jAIIL).

. . . lllld lea will lti'Vfl Man111110n ·
................. (ARJ.),

I

Sta~e

Area Foodland supermarkets
will sponsor the next Booster
Night with the Rio Grande
Redmen Saturday when the
Redmen host Mount Vernon
Nazarene's Cougars.
Game time wlll be 7: 30 p.m. In
Lyne Center. Tickets are available, free of char~e, at area
Foodland stores.

'

,

·-

··
'

90.
,.---------,

' gets under
Conference play
way for the Rio Grande Redmen
tonight when they host Malone's
Pioneers at 7:30 In Lyne Center.
The Redmen enter the game
with a 12-4 slate following Saturday's .Jiopolnt loss to Findlay. In
the Ml'lf-Ohlo Conference, they
are 2-0, de!eaUng Ohio Dominican 85-66 In the consolation game
of the Musklngum Tournament .
Nov_ 28 and Tiffin 58-56 on Dec. 1.
Malone IS' 5-8 after losing 72-69
to Defiance Saturday- The Pioneers are 1-11n the MOC, having
defeated Cedarville 82-76 and
losing to Walsh 58-55.
Redmen CQach ·John Lawhorn's probable starters will be ·
seniors Ron Rlttlnger and Ray
Singleton as forwards, juniors
Anthony Raymore and Jim
Keii.rns as guards . and senior
Doug Fogt at center- F,resbmim
Brian Watkins will be the first off
the :bench for Raymore and
Kearns.
The Pioneers, coached by Hal
Smith, are expected .to field
serilor Rex Adams and sopho- .
more Keith Troyer as forwards,
while sophomores Todd Martin
and Tim Schlabach will be
guards. At the post w111 be junior
Andy Booth.
·
Tonight's game will be the first
of three home games for the
Redmen. They play Mount Vernon Nazarene Saturday and host
Urbana Tuesday, Jan. 12.

The Daily Sentinel

'.

(USPS IU-9611!
A Division of Multlmedla. Inc.

Published every afternoon, Monday ,,
throogh Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by th ~ Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!i769, Ph. 992 -21~6. Se·

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No subscriptions by mall permitted In

areas where hpme ·c arrier service is

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a vail abl e.
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13 We&lt;'ks ............. ......... , .. ....... $17.29
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52 Week s ... .. .... ........ .. ... ........... . 566.56
Outside MeigS CoUnty
~, .

13 Weeks ....... ....... ................. ... $18.20
26 Weeks .. ... .. ... .... .................... $35.10
52 Weeks .......... .................. , .... $67.60

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The game will mark the
Redmen's second consecutive
home appearance in Mid-Ohio
-Conference playRobert Eastman, owner of the
Foodland supermarkets In GaiUpolls, Pomeroy, Point Pleasant
an&lt;t Ripley, W.Va., •has been a
longtime supporter of athletics at
Rio Grande College and Community College.
- Eastman's donation to the Rio
Grande Boosters Club has not
only provided free tickets· for
Saturday'seame, butbelpsln the
education of the school's athletes. The dQnatlon assists the
·promotion of sports thro\llh a
variety of activities, Including
the establishment of athletic
scholarships, explained Redmen
Coacb and Athletic Director JohnLawhorn.

Tonight's games
Wahama at Kyger Creek
OVCS at Southwestern .
Warren Local at Point Pleas tan!
· Belpre at Marietta .
Chesapeake at Coal Grove
Ceredq-Kenova at South Point
Portsmouth at Waverly
Friday's games:
Logan at Warren Local
Jackson at Athel)s
Gall1pollS - Open
Portsmouth W.est at Valley
Circleville at Greenfield
Chesapeake at Fairland
South Point at Buffalo
Wheelersburt at Waverly
·J
PortsmouJh at Boyd County
Point Pleasant at Milton
Southwestern at Southern
Sa&amp;urd.Y's games
Warren Local at ZanesvUie ·
Galllpoils at Marietta
Portsmouth West at Notre Dame
Oreentleld vs. Zane Trace In OU
Convo.
Ironton at Wheelersburg

MUD &amp;·SNOW TIRES
SALE PRICED TO GO
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Malone toniuht
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"Through Mr. Eastman's help,
athletes are rece1Vlng direct
assistance In obtaining their
education at Rio Grande," Lawhorn said. ·

.2351n ll1ames With the Oakland
A's In 19JI, He hit .310 with 62 ,
runa bat1l!d 111 BDd nine home
1'\1118 with Class AAA Tacoma
(Wuh.). He apent the first part
of the · llfiQon with San Joae In

FlnckUJ!, .of Rlehmom; CaW.,
spent the 1987 seaaon In the
Ore. Harper wu Invited to .tbe ( Cleveland hlcllana' orrBDtzatlon. ,
TWIDI' 111111 •PriD&amp; tratmna In He- bit .2!18 for lllaffalo ID C1Ua
Flortda, a club 1polrelmul Ald. AAA and .310 wltll47 ~~-II billie&amp; .\
Harper, of Lot Allplll, ~tied with Wlllfamlport Ill 0.. ~·

rally UNLV. over Cal State Long
Beach. The Rebels have won
their last 27 Pacific Coast Athletic Association games and
have beaten the 49tlrs 14 straight
times since the 1980-81 seasol}.
At Gainesville, F1a., Vernon
Maxwell led a balanced attack
. with 13 points to help Florida
.· down Towson State and · give
Norm ·Sloan his 200th victory as
coach of the Gators, Florida had
lost two 'of Its previous three
games.
At Seattle, Lincoln Minor
scored 11. points In the final 12
minutes . to rally Kansas · over .
Washlngtop. Danny Manning
topped all scorers with 17 points
and Minor added 15. The Jayhawks trailed by 19 points lit the
first half.
-At New York, Doug West
scored a gaine-high 21 points and
. hit four free throws.ln the closing
minutes to liltVUlanova over St.
John's. The victory was the first
at Alumni Hall for Vlllanova
since January 1984 and the first
home loss of the season for t~,
Redmen,
·
Elsewhere It was: Lafayet
83, Notre Dame 68; Yale 71, New
Hampshire 69; Louisville 80,
South Alabama 69; Old Dominion
80, Western Kentucky 66; Vlrginla - Commonwealth ·72. Richmond 53;' Cincinnati 103, Southern MJsslsslppl 94; Illinois State
85, Bradley 74; Missouri 86,
Southern Illinois 66; Southwest
Missouri State 58, Wichita. State ·
56 and Pepperdlne 99, Marshall

Foodland to sponsor booster night

Twins sign 2 minor league free .agents
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - The
Minnesota...l:Win.tl said Monday
ibey have signed a pair of minor
1eaeue tree qentl.
Catcher Brian Harper, 28, and
outfielder, Wlnlton Flaklln, 26, ·
both rlihthandera, were u llped to the world cbamploDI'

tonight

After splitting a pair of tourna - guard from Gallipolis, was third
ment games last week, Rio In scoring and fifth In !leld goal
Grande's Redwomen re-enter percentage. Mullins, a 5-7 guard
season play Thursday against !rom McGuffey, ranked sixth In
Glenvllle (W.Va,) State on the scoring, lOth In rebounding, first
Lady Pioneers' court at 7_p.m.
In 3-polntlfleld goals and second
The Redwom!!n are 8-5 enter- In free throw percentage. HastIng the gam!!, while Glenville Is lngs, a 5-9 forwa.~d froll\ Circle-.
5-1.
ville, was 12th In scoring, fourth
Rio Grande won the first round In rebounding and sixth In field
of the Ohio -Northern Tourna- goal percentage,
men( Dec. 29 by defeating ·
For the Glenville game, Coach
Kenyon 65-48, In the champion- Cheryl Flelltz Is expected to start
shlpgameDec.30,0hi&lt;?Northern Halley- as shooting guard, Mulhanded the Redwomen a 70-56 Uns at smali forward and Hastloss.
lngs as her power ,for\vard. Point
Three of the Redwomen placed guard will be freshman Beth Coil ·
In double figures In the Kenyon and sophomore Angela Packard
game - junior Holly Hastings will be back at center.
Glenville, coached for the past
with 21 points, senior Renee
Halley with 20 and junior Lea _9 seasons by Tim Carney, will
Ann Mullins with 16. Mulllns probably start junior Nlkl ·Ranouts~ored all 'players In the dolph . as point guard, 'junior
championship . game with 28 Karen Wooters as shooting guard
points.
·
__ and sophomoreMonlqueJohnson
In the NAIA District 22 pre- ,. ' as small forward. At power
Christmas ranklngs, Rio , forward wlll be sophomore
Grande's woinen have placed Tammy Pence and Kim Creel, a
fourth out of 15 teams.
junior, will be at the post.
The Lady Pioneers last played
Halley, Mullins and Hastings
each placed highly In Individual Dec. 10 when - they defeated
performances. Halley, the 5-5 Blue!ield State 94-77.

&amp;..eball '

Loa Aapla- O.&amp;:riiiMed lblrd buem .. T,.ef Woii!IIMaud o.aleYer Chrll
1o Altlll'll•r.- (PCL),
Ml..euU. - Aaalpetl uteller Brian
Harper ucl oillldleiMr WillMon f1aldbld
eo r.rt~ut~ ot t1te Padlle eour t.eape
(A.AM.
·
Oaldud - Slped aeco ... ,bueman
Gle• Hubbanl Ia 1·,-ear cont,.d pi•
option,...,.,
rtt••l'lll - Slpe4 catcber Tom
l'rlace Ia I-,.ear eoMraet.

Ill IS
lSI lfl

C.Jprr
Edmoaloa

Vueoanir
IJ ft I Sl
· IAI Mplel
II 24 t Jl
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NV R. .fl'lll ~St . La'• I
JWntOIIIoll '· IIIHieal cue)
VaaroiMtr 7, To. . . 1 (Ue)
Loa Aaples I, New ,..,.., I

Transactions

INDIANAPOLIS ( UPI) _.:. Bad Cleveland quarterback Kosar
weather and the NFL's two while · treacherous field condlstinglesi defenses could make It tlons would bother the Colts'.
to~Jgh lor AFC passing leader
Dickerson. Meyer plans to take
llernle Kosar and AFC rushing at least three· different types ··ilf
champion Eric Dlcklerson In shoes to Cleveland, Including
Saturday's divisional playo!f basketball sneakers for ley
game between Cleveland and conditions.
Indlanal&gt;olis.
"Going to Memorial Stadium Is
"It's much more difficult for · notaproblem.Piaylngonagrass
any offense to perform In lnclp----' field brings teams down to our
. men! conditions)" Colts. Coach quickness and speed level,"
Ron Meyer said Monday . "The Meyer said. "Whi!t concerns us Is
ball gets hard. ' It's tougher to · the type o! surface. It could be lee
kick. It's a heavier balL It's or like sand or mud. We're going
difficult to thr.ow or catch. We to have to take a lot of dllferent
have plans to climatlze. We don' t shoes and see what conditions
know what conditions will be but we'll be running on:"
I don't thl!lk It will be a balmy 60
degrees. "
The Colts w[ll practice outLow temperaturE:s and chilling doors at least three times In
winds ·a re expected at Cleve- chilly Indianapolis before going
land's Municipal Stadium for a
to Cleveland on Friday _ Some
game that will determine which workouts may be moved Into the
team advances to next week's Hoosier Dome to ensure·the team
AFC title g&lt;tme.
of practice time without the
Both defenses are tough nor- distractions of cold, Wind and
mally. The Colts have allowed snow . .
only 238 polnts,lewestln the NFL
Climate has not been a probbut only one less than the lem for the Browns, who have
Browns .
·
been worklng.outln Vero Beach,
· Poor weather would hamper Fla.

scored 18 points and Ken Battle
finished with 15 lor the Illlnl, 9' 3In other games Involving
ranked team's, No. 6 Temple
bombed · Rutgers 86-60, No. 8
Oklahoma pounded Austin Peay
109-69, No, 9 Duke routed William
&amp; Mary 101-70, No. 12 NevadaLas Vegas edged Cal State Lqng
Beach 7'1-68, No. 15 Florida
pounded Towson State, 77-55, No.
17 Kansas topped Washington
67-57 and Vlllanova surprised
co-No. 19 St. John's 69-62.
· At Philadelphia, Mike Vrees~k scored 17 points and Tim
P!)rry added 16 to power Teipple
past Rutgers. TheOwlshavewon
40 of their last 41 games at
McGonigle HalL
. At Norman, Okla., Harvey
Grant scored 22 points and Ricky
. Grace added 20 to power Okla,homa past Austin Peay and
e;octend the Sooners' winning
streak to 13. Oklahoma went over
the 100-point'mark !or the ltlnth
time this season. At Durham, N.C., Danny Ferry
scored a career-high 26 points as
Duke bullt a 25-polnt halftime
lead and~olled over William &amp;
Mary. The Blue Devils have won
39 straight home games against
non-conference opponents and
lead the series with William &amp;
Mary 22-2.
At Long Beach, Call!., Gerald
Paddle sc9red 25 points to help

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..·&gt; Tueaay. January ·s, 1988

6.

Ohio

r---Local briefs-__, ------Weather------

Rockets_snap .Dallas streak
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BIRD GOES INSIDE -The Celtlcs' Larry Bird

:~:Gretzkyless Oilers tie Bruins, 2-2_ ·

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(is) goes Inside for two points, as Utah Jazz Carey

Scurry tries to stC)p him. ( UPI)

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: ; By Ualted P~ Intematlonal
: · Conditions seldom will be bet•: ~ for beating the Edmonton
· Oilers, a fact the,Boston Bruins
: must bemoan after Monday
' night's ile.
, , With Wayne Gretzky missing
··Ills second straight game be, cause of a ' sprained right knee,
and Mark Messler sidelined with
• a . hlp flexor lnjuty, the Oilers
;;·· were without their top two
• · scorers. Through most of three
.: periods, they stayed close with
· ~ defense and goal tending, and
..· with 2:17 left lri regulation,
) Charlie Huddy tied the score 2-2.
·.:
"I think Edmonton wanted to
" sbow that they weren't a one-~ dimensional team," Boston roo.• kle Billy O'Dwyer said.
;
The Oilers dldn' win three of
: the last four Stanley Cups by
;: ·being a one-dimensional team.
,
"We knew we were wlthouttwo
·: scorers, so we had to pull our
~· · socks up and play good defense,"
;. Oilers ·center Craig MacTavish
•· · said. "It just showed that eve·
· • ryone on this team has a lot of
• heart. It was a special effort', and
;: I'm really glad to get the point."
Gretzky, the league's MVP the
,.''· past eight seasons, has missed
: only 10 career games, and \he
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Oilers are 2-7-1 In those. He Is
expected to be out for as long as·
three weeks. Messler Is listed as
day-to·day.
"We had a chat before the ·
game and said, 'Hey, they're not
here and there's no sense worryIng about It,"' Oilers Coach Glen
Sather said.
Oilers go~ltender Grant Fuhr
made 28 saves and Boston's
Rejean Lemelin had 27.
"He did It again," Huddy said
of Fuhr, "Grant has made the big
saves for us when we've needed
them all year."
Huddy Intercepted an attemp·
ted clearing pass and fired a shot
from the left point that deflected
off the stick of Bruins center Ken
Llnseman an!l past Lemelin.
The tie mo\ed Boston, 2-0-2 In
Its last four games, within two
points of first·place Montreal in
the Adams Division .. Thii Oilers
climbed within two points of
first-place Calgary In the
Smythe.
Boston had grabbed a 2-1 lead ·
on Ray Bourque's power-play
goal at 3:23 of the.second period.
O'Dwyer's goal 1:44 Into the
game moved Boston In front 1·0.
Rick Middleton centered a pass
from.behind the net to O'Dwyer,
who . slid a 10-foot wrist shot

Inside the right pos(.
The Oilers tied the score 1-1 on
Glenn ·Anderson's power-play
goal with 26 seconds remaining In
the first period. Craig MacTavIsh fired a shot from the left point
and Anderson, positioned to the
right of the net, redirected the
puck Inside the left post.
In other gaines, L.o s Angeles
tripped New ·Jersey 6-3, Toronto
tied Vancouver 7-7. and ·the New
York Rangers.J!_umped St. Louis
6-2. .
Kings 8, Devils 3
.
At East Rutherford, N.J., .
Bobby Carpenter and Bernie
Nicholls each scored a goal and
added an assist, sparking the
Kings to their third straight
victory. New Jersey Is 0-V In Us
last three games. The second.
period contained three brawls,
and ' referee Bill McCreary assessed 124 penalty minutes.
Maple Leafs 7, Canucks 7 ·
At Toronto, Russ Courtnall
scored. an unasslted goal with
2:16 remaining to cap an eight·
goal .t hird period. Courtnall
picked up .a loose puck near the
Vancouver bluellne and bei't
goaltender Kirk McLean with a
high wrist shot frorn15 feet: Petri
. Skrlko had gl11en the Canucks a
' 7-6 advantage at 16: 45.

McFadden named

player-of-week

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PAY-OFF YOUR
';CHRISTMAS CARDS

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Save up those department store cre~llt card bills as they
arrive. Then, see us about a "Christmas clean-up" Joan!'

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You'll save each month In two ways:

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214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY ..
992-66.7 .

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Miami crowned
.
UPI grid champ

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Two weekenc) accidents were ln\!estigated by Pomeroy Pollee
with moderate damage to all the vehicles and no Injuries. .
At 4 p.m on Saturday. pollee Investigated an accident at the
_Intersection of Butternut Ave. and Brick St. VIcky Harris,
driver of one of the cars, was left of center and struck the vehicle
Raymond Stew.,rt, MlddlepQrt. She was cited Into mayor's
court. ,
,
The second accident occured on Union Ave. A car driven by
'Peggy Reltmlre reportedly struck a small rock on the roi.d,lost
control of her vehicle, hit an embanknient and then struck a
utility pole. When the pole was hit It pulled lines from the hOuse
at 295 Union Ave. causlng·damage to the siding. Rellrnlre. was
charged with failure to hive her ·Vehicle under control.
Ponieroy firemen were called to the Landlicre residence on
Spring Ave. at 8:02 a.rri. Monday for a. chimney (Ire. Damage
was mlnlnial and the firemen were back In the station house at ·
8:42a.m.

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• • &amp;MNIIDf cnnBD- Deu Kelllledj of tile
: . : IM'q•l-. llllp II IUGII-claolred uul talten oul
,. ~~. ef tile flai llr H.~ Dml Ken Dueyko In

Auto
the lhlrd period, at B)'l'lle Areaa Monday alghl.
Tlle'Kinp won t.S. ,(UPJ)
.
.
7

Vou'ltonly have one payment to make, Instead of Hvtral.
Also, department 11or1 CfldH cards have high finance
charges. Our loans cost less, 10 you pay less!
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APPLY AT ANY OF OUR·THREE
CONVENIENT -LOCATIONS!·

PEO~LES -

BANK
Member F.O.I.C.

5th S1rllt 2212 JlckiOil AYI. SlcOnd belli I

.., Hattn Polill Plllllnl
882-2135

875-1121

...

77NI1.
LINDIII

MeigS included.in

road

. "EMS has 11

Southern ...

Will pick up trees Thursday
The annual ChriS!mas tree pickup will be held In Middleport
Thursday. Residents are asked to put their trees In front of their
. hOmes near the curb, where lhey will be picked up by the Street
Deparlment at no charge.

}fospital news

Area deaths
. Alexander Vennari

and squalls In the ·extreme
. CLEVELAND !UPl) .:._ Llne.s
Monday night, "They 're, playing
norlheast where accumulations
forme!~ at lottery agents as the - -earlier than usual. I expect we'll
are possible, Highs will be In the
prize In Wednesday's Super Lotto · get most of our business the next
low teens. Flurrie;; In the ex- jackpot swelled, but agents ex - couple of nights."
treme northea~t Thesday night peel business to be better as
Bloomberg said the last time
as lows dip to zero \O five below. game time nears .
the jackpot grew beyond $15
million was last Sept. 26 when a
Partly cloudy Wedfesday with a
chance of flurries and highs In
The_jackpot grew .$2.5 million $20 mllllori grand prize was won.
Monday, to $17.5 million as sales An $18 million jackpot also was
the low· teens.
picked up for the $1 tickets. Sales given away that month. The
Ohio Exteadecl Forecast
bloosomed after Saturday. largest Super Lotto jackpot was
Tbund&amp;y tbro~ch Saturday
· Fair. Thursday and Saturday
$30,0(),1,568; given away last Aug.
night's jackpot went unclaimed,
with a chance of snow Friday.
the fourth straight d.rawlng that 1.
·.
Hlgh_s will range between 15 and failed to produce a winner.
25 Thursday anti Saturday and In .
"The revision Is based on
the 20s Friday. Lows will range strong early_ sales and our
between zero and 5 above Thurs· . proj~tion as a result of past Seek divorces
day arid between10and 15Frlday history when we get Into · a
To Meet Tonight
and Saturday.
·
Divorce actions have been flied
jackpot of. this level,'' lottery
Pomeroy Chapter 186 Order of
spokeswoman Anne Bloomberg In Melg~ County Col)lmon Pleas
Eastern Star will meet In reg\Jiar
Court by Donald Icenhower.
said.
session tonight (Tuesday). 7:30
Slie said the jackpot, originally Portland, ' from Latona D. Icen·
p.m., at Chester. RefresJ\mehts
million, may grow even bower, Fort Lauderdale; Fla.;
improv~ments $15
will be served: Officers need not
larger. depending on ·sales be' and Katrina L. Stambaugh, Mid·
wear chapter dress.
POMEROY ~ Meigs Co\ln'ty
tween now and the Wednesday dleport, from Darren G. Stamhas been ln~luded In the latest night drawing.
baugh, Colorado Springs, Colo.
•
A dissolution of marriage has
Ohio Deparlment of Transporta·
In Lima, at Fat Jack's Pizza
c~lls
tlon highway projeets.
shop, night manager Kim Bishop been granted Carla Jean Soulsby
The department has awarded
notlced.some lines for tickets, but and Patrick SQulsby. _
· Meigs County · Emergency
A d lvorce has been gran ted
Medical Services reports 11 calls 30 Improvement projects totaling expects longer lines.
$9.7
million.
·
William
R. Haptonstall from
"I
can
Imagine
what
It
will
be
o\&gt;er the weekend, four Saturday
Jenelle
V.
Haptonstall.
Shelly
Co.
of
Thornville
like
by
Wednesday,"
she
said
The
and seven Sunday.
been
awarded
il
contract
for
has
Saturday at 4 p.m., Pomeroy
resurfacing 4.99 miles of US
transported Mindy Harris from
·
Route
33 from the Athens County
the scene of an auto accident on
_,;&lt;..:.co=n=Un=u=ed:..:
,. tr:::om:::.::P::;:.ag~e...:l):___ _ __
.17 miles east of State
!hie
to
Brick and Butternut to Veterans
Route
681
and
from
County
Road
Memorial Hospital; Middleport
'
al 8:24 p.m. to 297 Mill St. for 25 to State Route 124. The bid of members pay was set within the A needs budget was approved to
Charles Boyles to Holzer Medical the company was $405,879.36 and maximU!ll allo)l'ed by law, $80 . · be submitted to the county
the scheduled completion date Is per meeting. Membership In the budget comml~slon. Others presCenter; Pomeroy at 10: 37 p.m. to
Ohio High School Boards of ent for the Initial session were
Darwin for William Hoschar to July .31, 1988. .
Education Association was re· . Bobby Ord, superintendent; and
Holzer Medical Center: Middle·
newed and bonds were approved. Dennie·HilL treasurer .
port at 11:04 .p.m. · transported
Claude Eblin to Veterans Mem·
orial Hospital.
.
Veteraas Memorial
Sunday at 12:15 a.m., Tuppers
Admissions- Charles
Monday
Plains transported Teresa "DalPayne,
Middleport,
Robert Parley to St. Joseph's Hospital;
sons:
Dennis
Hart,
Pomeroy.
Tuppers Plains at 4:37 a.m. to
Monday Discharges - Roger
Route 681 East for Roy Taylor to
Williams,
Edna Roush, Etollla
St. Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at
Hayman
Barnltz.
Cassell,
8:25 a.m. to Woodyard Road for
Robert McCall to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at . Ucence issued
10 a.m.' to Naylor 's Run for Hugh
Leifheit to Veterans Memorial
Marriage licenses ·have been
Hospital; Racine at 10:15 a.m. to
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Stlversvllle for Violet Brewer to
Court to Willie· Causey Sr ., 57.
Veterans Memorlill ,Hospital:
CoQivll)e, and Minnie Mae Welsh,
Tuppers Plains at 12:51 p.m. to · 27, coolville; Joseph Elmer
· Eden Ridge Road for Emmett
Ohlinger, 24, Mason, W.Va., and
Baker to Camden-Clark Memor- Sharon Lorene Luikart, 16, Ma·
lal Hospltal; .Pomeroy at 10 a.m.
son, w.va.;',Jeffrey Alan Wolle,
to -Route 7 for Crystal South to
24, Long Bottom, and Lora Jane
Veterans Memoria) Hospital.
Wood, 21; Long Bottom.
'

Announcements

.EMS has jive rolls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday; Racine at 11:06 a.m. transported Charles Spaun from
an auto accident on 'Apple Grove Road tq Veterans Memorial .
Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:06p.m: to Pomeroy Health Care Center
. for Robert Parsons to Veterans Memorial Hospllal; Middleport
af8: 17 p.m. to Poplar St. for Linda George to Pleasant Valley
·Hospital; Racine at 9:43p.m, was called to the scene of an auto
accident on County Road 28 but no transports were made;
Middleport a) 10: 05 p.m. to North Second for Ma..Y Ann Pierce to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Lines form as Super jackpot swells

South Cenlral Ohio
Wlridy today, with highs near ,
15. Olear tonight, with a · low
between five and 10 below zero. ·
Sunny Wednesday, with highs
near 15.
the probability of preclplta·
tlon · Is near zero through
Wednesday. .
Winds will be from the west at
~5 to 25 mph today and light and
westerly tonight.
. Oblo ·
· Windy TUesday with flurries
·
•

Pomeroy police prQbe"~ wrecks
..

0

By United Preu lalernatloaal
Cavaliers. Denver reserve Mike converted 9 shots from 3-pqlnt
.The Dallas Mavericks found . EvaDI hit 6 of 11 shots from range. Utab led 85-79 early In the
out what the .Atlanta ilawks, 3-polnt range and led all scorers fourth period. KeVIn McH11,le
Detroit P~~OII§ and Milwaukee with 28 points. He was one shy of added 24 points and,Danny Alnge
Bucks all learned In the la&amp;t two the seaaon-hlgh for3-polnters In a 20, lncludlni 6 3-polnters, for lhe
weeks: the Houston Rockets are game.
. Celtlcs. Karl Maloile scored 25
a dead-end for winning streaks.
Celtlca 101, .Juz 19 ·
points and gra~ 17 rebounds
At Salt Lake City, Larry Bird to lead the Jazz. ,
Dallas, tile Midwest Division
leader, took a five-game winning scored 28 points and Boston ..
. .
, I
streak to 'Houston Monday night
and left with a 117-107 defeat .
Akeem Oiajuwon matched his.
.
.
.
season-high with 31 points, and
·· Purvis Short added 25 In the
Rockets' fol1rth straight victory.
"Dallas has been· playing ex·
NEW YORK (UPI) - The_ convince ourselves of that if we
tre~ly well, so this was an
Important game for us," Short Miami Hurricanes earned Sun· were No. 3. " .
The Miami-Florida State finish
said after t_he thlrfi-place day what their Orange Bowl
victory
Indicated
they
.deserved,
marked
the first time In the
Rockets pulled within 21·2 games
history of the UPI ratings that
of the Mavericks. "We need to the 1987 UPI national title In a
keep them within striking unanimous vote: with their. teams from one state were
strongest challenger this season, ranked 1·2 In the final poll. ·
distance.''
The loss at Houston was no Florida State, fhllshlng second ..·
Oklahoma, 11·1, which )las lost
novelty for Dallas. The MaverMI11J11l was selected No.~ on all one time In each of the last three
Icks have dropped seven straight 47 ballots cast by the United seasons, all to Miami, collected
at The Summit. ·
· Press International Board of 595 points and finished third.
Syracuse, 11·0-1, stayed at No. ·
The Rockets ended Atlanta's Coaches followinj( Its 20·14
OrangeBowlvlejOryFrldayover
4
following
a controversla116·16
five-game winning streak De&gt;.
then
lop-ranked
Oklahoma.
The
Sugar
·Bowl
deadlock with Au22, stopped,_.Detrolt's 10-game
winning streat11~s I Tuesday and Hurricanes, who . entered the 'bum. Tigers Coach Pat Dye
stopped Milwaukee's three- bowls ranked second, won their decided for a tying. field goal on
second national title In five .the game's last plar Instead of
game streak last Wednesday.
years.
going for a winning touchdown.
"It got' our attention that we
The Hurricanes earned a That move greatly disturbed
aren't playing weak teams,''
Houston Coach ·Bill Fitch said. '$32,000 non-athletic scholarship ' Orangemen .Coach Dick
"The heat was Intensified be- from the Gerrits Foundation and MacPherson.
cause we ha'd to go play good
UPlfor an Incoming fr8Jihman In
No. 5 Louisiana State, 10.1·1,
need.
. .
climbed two notches with a 30-i3
teams. We weren't playing the
"It was kind of a sigh of relief . Gator Bowl,rout of $0uth Carol·
Little Sisters of the Poor."
Short hit 9 of 18 from the field
because we've bi!en under . the Ina. N(/. 6 Nebraska,_10-2, slid a
and 7 of 8 from the line. Eric
gun around here for quite some spot, bill reacbed the final T~p 10
Floyd added 23 points a,nd 11
time;" said Coach Jimmy John· for the 14th straight year and the
· assists, Jim Petersen a.nd Joe
son, who failed In the two '!'OP 20 for the 19th time In a row.
Barry Carroll each scored 10
previous years to win a Jan. 1
No. 7 Auburn, 9-1·2, dropped a
points and Olajuwon grabbed 11
game with national-title lmpllea- place and Michigan State rerebounds.
tions. "Winning (he national malned at No.8 followiilg Its 20·17
Mark Aguirre finished with 31
championship Is even more sa· Rose Bowl decision over South· .
points, Derek Harper had 21.and
tlsfylng than what It normally ern Cal. No.9 Te)[as A&amp;M soared
Roy Tarpley scored 19forDallas,
might be because we've come so four places with Its 35·10 thrashwhich played most of the second
close."
lng of Notre Dame. No. 10
half without Rolando Blackman,
Miami 12·0 ended with Dlv· Clemson, 10·2,Jumped two spots
w.)lo left the court favoring his
lslon I-A's o~ly perfect record . !lfter a 35:10 Florida Cltrus.Bowl
left knee after a collision. Black·
and collected 705 points In the drubbing of Penn State.
man scored 16 ppolnts.
voting. The· Hurricanes' most
No. 11 UCJ..6., 1,0·2, sl!pped a .
"Tonight Is a better Indication
troublesome opponent was Flor· notch despite a 20-16. ~loha
of how well lhey can play,' •
Ida State, which ·earned 648 declslpn over Florida and N,o. 12,
Dallas center James Donaldson
points. The Seminoles, lH. led OklahomaState,10-2, l[llSO sank a ,
said. ''We've been playing well
Mlaml19·3 midway through the spotevenlvltha35-33Sunvlctory;
al$o. We've been on a roll. We've
third quarter, but the Hurricanes over West Virginia. ·
,
still got them four more times."
rebounded to take a 26-19 advlin·
No. 13 Tennessee, 10·2·1, po•:
In other games, Philadelphia
iage In the Oct. 3 game-at Florida wered three positions with a2'1-22 • ·
stopped Phoenix 122-114, Cleve"
Peach triumph over Indiana. No. ,
State
land dumped Denver 122-101,
Th~ Seminole~. who diimlnated 14 Georgia, 9-3,lnched a spot with '
Boston clipped Utah 107-99, and
the game statistically, got a a ·20-17 Liberty win against •
the LA takers routed San Antotouchdown In the final minute to Arkansas. Tied at No. 15 were.
nio 133·115.
make It 26-25. Coach Bobby South Carolina, 8-4, and Iowa,
Slxers 122, Suns 114
Bowden decided for a two-point 10-3, which edged Wyoming 20·19:
At Philadelphia, Cliff Robinson
conversion, which failed. That In the Holiday.
,
:
scored 31 pol~ts and Charles
Southern ··cal, 8-4, waa No. 17
led to Florida State's lone loss
Bal'kley added 28 1· to help the
and ruined ·Its · niltloital-title and Michigan, 8-4, entered· the '
76ers break a five-game losing
ranklngs at No. 18 with a 28·24
hopes. .
streak. Eddie Johnson led the
. Hall of Fame victory over
Suns with 27 points, Including a
"I have never really sat back Alabama. No. 19 Texas, 7·5,
trio of 3-polnlers \" the final two
and though! about that day and . joined the ranklngs for the first
minutes, and (Jay Humphrles
regretted what we tried," said time this ·season with a 32·27
added 21. Maurice Cheeks scored
Bowden when reached Sunday Bluebonnet · deCision· against
21 for Philadelphia.
and Informed of his team's final . Pittsburgh. Indiana, 8-4, held at
Cavaliers 122,,Nuggets 101
ranking. ''The loss b.others me, No. 20.
·
· At Richfield, Ohio, . Brad
but not the progression of events
Notre Dame, ·Penn State and
Daugherty scored 25 points and that led tQ the loss; After that we Pittsburgh fell from the Top 20.
Mark Price added 23 to pace the put It In others' hands for us to
The ratln.;s featured four ·
win, a national title.
schools .from the Southeastern
"This Is our highest national Confet'en~e, Big Ten and major
ran)dng to finish a season ever;" Independents, three from the Big
added Bowden, whose team used Eight, two from the· Southwest
a last-minute touchdown to beat Conference and PaclfJc,10, and
, Nebraska 31·28 In the Fiesta one from the Atlantic Coast
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP!) Bowl. "The fact we played Conference.
Cleveland State guard Ken Miami so well and probably
The coaches each vote for 15
McFadden has been named bas- should have beaten them makes . teams with points based on 15
ketball player of the week In lhe us feel we•can beat anybody In points for first place, 14 for
Association of Mid-Continent .the country. It would be hard to second, etc.
Universities for his 67 -point performance In three games.
McFadden, a junior, scored 23
points to lead Cleveland State
past Niagara 86·76 In ·the first
round of the First Bank Milwaukee Tournament and scored 21 to
lead the VIkings to a 72-70 win
over Marquette In the championship ' game. He was named the.
tournament's most valuable
player.
In Saturday's game, McFad·
den scored 23 points to lead the
VIkings to an 84-70 vlc!ory ,o~er
Bowling Green.
In the three games McFadden
also dished out 25 assists, had
. nine steals and grabbed 13
rebounds. He Is averaging 20.1
points and 6.6 assists per game
for the VIkings, 8·2.

. ~ Daily Sentinei-Page..:..s

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

He was born In Meigs County
on June 24, 1906, a son of the late
Ernest and Emma Warner.
Surviving are his wife, J'tachel
Rees Warner; three sons, Rod·
ney of Sarasota, 'Fla.; David of
Wauseon, al)d DaUas of Louisville, Ky., 11 grandchildren and ·
10 'g reat-grandchildren.
Mr. Warner was a member of
the Christ United Methodist
. Church, . the Jackson Rotary
Cluti, Trowel Lodge 132, F&amp;AM,
Jackson, and the Valley of·
Columbus Scottish Rite. .
Services will be held at il a.m.
Friday at lhe Christ United
Methodist Church with the Rev.
James Kuhn officiating. Burial
will be In Fairmount Cemetery In
Jackson. Friends may call at the
Mayhew Funeral Home, 135
Broadway St., Jackson, from 2 to
· 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday.

Mr. and Mrs. JameiVennarlof
Pomeroy have !1llurned home
from Baltimore. Md., where they
' attended the funeral of his
, brother, Alexander Vennarl.
Alexander Vennarl, a former
Central West VIrginia coach and
·athlete, died at St. Agnes Hospl·
tal In Baltimore, a few days after
suffering a stroke of paralysis.
, As a young man, Mr. Vennarl,
known to most of his friends as
Alex, was a popular athlete
playing on winning basketball
teams at Lumberport High
School and. Fairmont State College. He was one of the highest
basketball · scorers at both ·
· schools and he also played on the
. football and ba,eball teams of
both Schools.'
· Mr. Vennarl was a former
.' coach at Webster Springs High
• Scllocll''a'lld 'also "was' fontier • Della WOods
· · · coach ·at Roosevelt·Wlison High
Della ~- Wonds, 55, of St.
· School In Harrison County, W.
Albans,
W.Va .. c\led Sunday In
Va. He was' coach 17 years at
the
Thomas
Memorial Hospital,
Belington High. For the past 18
South
Charleston.
: years he had taught In Baltimore
She was born Oct. 25, 1932 In
· County and was retired as .
c halrman of the ~par_tment of Letart. Sh.e was .preceded In .
Driver Education . at Lansdown death by her husband, Walter
High School In Baltimore County: Woods, and one daughter, Sheila
He resided at 1111 Malden Choice · Chase.
Surviving are one soh, ClarLane In Baltimore. ·
ence
W. Bing of St. Albans; and
During the 1963 centennial of
one
half-brother. Albert E.
• West VIrginia, Mr. Vennarl was
Moore,
also of St. Albans.
- bono~ as oneofthe100greatest
Services
will be Wednesday,
· athletes ever to play on .West
1:
30 p.m., at the Foglesong
· VIrginia teams.
Funeral
Home, Mason, with the
· He was a graduate of Lumber·
Rev.
Bill
Skeens officiating.
port High School, Fairmont State
Burial
will
be
In the Broad Run
College and did his graduate ,
Cemetery.
work· at West VIrginia Unlver·
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m.
slty. Almost as prominent for his
today
.
speaking, dramatic and toast..
- master abilities as In the coachCharles Richardson
IDg field, Mr. Vennarl was
! · prominently known for his wor.k
Chari~ Eugene · Richardson,
as toastmaster and speaker and 41 , Chillicothe, formerly of Ashfor his recitations of 'poetry at ton, died sunday evening In the
.
• H • Ita\ In Chilli othe
public gatherings.
c
He was born In Pontiac, Mich.. Veteran s o.p
"
after a long IUness.
: a son of the late .oseph and
He was born Oct. 17, 1946 at
: Rachella Mazza Vennarl. His Ashton to .the late Jal'hes RJ.'
', father was a former·tumberport chardson and Ethel Sturgeon
businessman.
Richardson.
. Su rvivlng Mr. Vennarl are his
He was a veteran of the
;. wife, Muriel; two children, VIcki Vietnam War.
.
•: Leventhal of Southampton N:
Surviving are four brothers.
';Y., and A,lexander D11vld Ven- Wade from flawall, Robert,
· narl of Ellicott City, Md ;, five Huntington, William, Ashton and
grandchildren; , two brothers, Wayne, Gallipolis Ferry.
'• Jame~ ,_Vennarl; Pomeroy, a
Services: win be Wednesday at
' Clnclncnnati Reds Scout and 1: 30' p.m. at the Wilcoxen Fun•: retired teacher, principal and · eral Home with the Rev. Max
;• coaoh, and Paul Vennarl, Beck· Spurlock officiating. Burial will
•·! ley, w. va., a fo,rmer member of· follow In Moore's Chapel Ceme-,
the West VIrginia Hollile of tery, Ashton. Military graveside
, Delegates who Is now an em: rites will be conducted by Amerl·
'! ployee of the West VIrginia State .c an Legion Post 23 of Point
•: Secondary
. Principals' Assn.,and
·
..
Pleasant.
.
j two sisters, Beulah ness o1
Friends may call at the tune~al
' Lumberport. and Kathryn Byers home Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m .
! of Baltimore.
· . ·
'l Services were held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday at the Our Lady of
, VIctory Church, Baltimore, and
tntl!rmen t was In Louden Park Dallf ~k. price&amp;
'Cemetery In that city. .
.
(Aa ~ 18:18 a.m.)

.

PLUS
PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY,
. JANU....RY·10: 1988
WI AUIRYE THE RIGHT TO U.. T

au.umna. NOT R I - L E FOR
TYPOCIRAPIIICAL OR
ERRORS.

OISHWASHING LIQUID 32 OZ. SIZE

PU~fE

$'1.39

~t~ ' -$1.39
TO\IR AEBAIE
PAICE
AflER

F"EE

-$2.00 :·
+22¢
POSTAGE SrAMP·
UIIIT 2

¢
24 OUNCE

•

SNOBOL

Mnb

TOILET BOWL CLEANER

Cr

EVERYDAY LoW PRICE! '

• .11\01

M)NT FLAVORE!l'
SODIUM·FREE

• 1 OZ. REGULAR
8.4 OZ. GEL
6.4 OZ. TARTAR CONROL

NO.
78

WHITE RAIN
SHAMPOO

CONDITIONER
H~IR SPRAY

ATAT ...... ;........................... 29
Aahland 011 ........, ............... 56%

KAZ 1.2 GALLON

VAPORIZER

'

·5.99
eoz.

1

129

INHALENT

1

~~ect•a Iae...........................
Key Centurion ................... .38\6

LaJidl' End .......................... Ia~
Limited lac.................}.....
Multimedia Inc................... 113~

Earl R. (Jaek) Wlrller, 81,
'famllrly d. Molp Collnt)l, died

Ru Rntauruts. .•. :............. 3~
Robbllll 6 Myera ................. 7li ·
Shgalf'• Inc................... l ... .22~

..,; Jiebon,

Wortlllqtcla Ja4. .........:...... J7

MOIIdJY at JIIII!Om* at-GO Carr

.

W~alatl........................

ONI.Y

CASH REFUNO

.18"

I:Eul
. . ,warner .

FEATURE PRICE

1.78
LESS

Br,ee ... Mark SmHh

1,

2~~Ea :

sunLICiHr.

I JoeePh Clark .
!If BIUD&amp; Billa It Loew1
'' Mrs. Jean · Null, Middleport, Am Electric Power .............. 27
Bob Evua .....•••••..• , ............. 17
Cbarmtna Shoppes .............. 12%
City Holdinl Co .. -................ 34
Federal Molul ............. ,,. ...... 34
Goody'ear T'R ...................63~

.

COLD
. MEDICINE ·

·. Stocks

has receiVed word of of lh,e death
f of her brother, JOIIfPb (Joe)
Clark. formerly of Mlcldleport.
· Mr. Clark, . 73,
of Tacoma•
! WaahiJIItllll, died S11nday at a
; Tacoma H01pltal where be un• derwent heaqr aurpry on Sattlr·
day. l'wleral arranpments will
be announced.

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20 TABLETS·
ALKA-SEtneJ\

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·The Daily _Sentinel

By The .Bend

•

Tualt1ay, January 6, 1988

.

Pag&amp;-6

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•••

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By BOB HOEFLICH
situation. Residents charge that
HI Babe!
the blasis are coming from a coal
I need to talk to you about your
mining operating In the arel! of
arrival.
Clifton, W. va., and they feelthat
I knpw you're
the rumblings are damaging
new on the scene
their properties . Hope you
and very young.
brought along an .answer to the
However, I hear
problem. There has to be some
that you are
relief even though no one seems
pretty quick on
to 6e taking a lead In getting the
the trigger when
situation worked out. · One
It comes to socking a number on
shOuldn't have to .put up with
people - and without any war n- · such a nuisance even In his or her
lng yet: •·
own slate let alone from another.
Already you've gone too far -I
I hope that you are going to.
mean thanks to the snow you
bring a lot offamllles who believe
brought Monday we had to close
In doing things together.,The Ben
ali the Schools on the first day of
Ewing and Robert Buck families
classes after the holiday. Now Is
are Just some of our families who
that any way to' start your act?
already practice this. The Ew• Your predecessor wasn't all- Ings' were an present for tile
that great either. He closed our
lovely wedding of Dr. M!Usa
bridge, gave us a bumper crop of
Rizer and they were beautiful.
mariJuana, dumped a huge rock
You should have seen them on the
slide In Pomeroy and walked off
dance floor at .the wedding
leaving us stuck with a two
reception - obvl.ously they enjoy
month teachers strike In Meigs
each other. Alhd the Robert
Local.
·
·
·Bucks all took part . in the Big
Now - we can ltv~ a little .. Bend Minstrel Association's Vasnow, of course, but we're going
rletiels of '87 even down the the
to expect a lot more from you on
smallest. Jackie. The Bucks are·
" the positive side.
. .
great at working out details for
Since this Is going (o be an
NEW GROUP- The newly organl~ed Midnight Crlssy Blake, a11d Sally Rouah, 88 weD aa d-.cen. ·
taking part ln·tltlngs as a family.
el~tion year, we do need a lot of
Cloggers of Hartford, W. Va., directed by Bruce · Members are from Rae~. Pomeroy, Middle·
By the way. Bob loves Disney
qualified candidates who are
Wolfe, made their Initial appearance In holiday
World so do try to arrange that
port, Rutland, and Gallipolis ill Oblo, and Mason;
willing to take all of the public
parades. The group conslsta of 43 show team
IM family gets another outing
Hartford, New Raven, Point Ple88imt and Letart
grumbling that goes with the
members and lneludes !'ng carriers, pictured ·In West VIrginia. Their costumes are In bot pink,
there In the near future.
territory. It can't be·easy. On the
here, left to right, Betty ~ve, Bonnie Wears,
A lot of us would appreciate It,
black and silver and they are tbe first area group 1
other hand, perhaps, we ought to
·Betty Latby, Judy McDanle_l, Linda Roseberry, to be led by flag !Jarrlers.
If you would look out for.Trell and
stress that 'in that Prersldential
Edna Schoenleb. They are althing, perhaps, we need more, ways.on hand to stand by friends
quality and less quantity. Would
and relatives at trying times that be good or what?
that's sue!\ a good quality.
.
..
.
Heaven knows that there are
Eric Chambers was guest the "anti-senility" homes and the ·He descrllied the.art as being an
. While you're on the scene, times when we all need as much
speaker at the recent !l),eetlng of care given to the. people and the art of contrast, wet and' dry,
: Babe, yo,u might look Into the . moral support as we can get the Middleport-Pomeroy Area
rocks and t~s. birds antl flowers,
• earthquake-like rumblings that but do your best to keep tllese ~ranch of the American Assocla- buildings.
&lt;;:hambers
noted
that
he
had
good
and evil.
·
• ate.taklng place on a dally basis.
times at a minimum. ·
. tion of University Women held at se!m the largest Buddha Which ·
Chambers traveled as far as
Normally, these happen a little
In concluding .o ur little heart to
the Holiday Inn, Ga,lllpolls.
stands 80 feet high and weighs 143 the Tibet border during his stay.
after 4 each afternoon. However, heart chat, I do want tli tell you
· IntrOduced by Lee Lee, vice ton. He also saw three smaller
on Dec. 31, the btgblastcame ;~t a that the bottom line Is, that In
president, Chambers talked on Bt~ddhas representing the past, He demonstrated forms of tyechee, · an exercise form In slow
about 2. At any rate; I'm getting- your short reign; I shall expect
the month he spen t.ln China last present and future and.noted that
. lots of calls, especl;llly from · you to bring about as many good
using about 400 move- '
motion
fall. He showed slides of Bay one had 42 eyes to represent the
• Middleport residents, who are things as possible io help us ·to
ments
In
a 40 minute period with
Jung, his favorite location, dis- fact that Buddha can see
growing pretty weary of th~ keep smiling.
·
18
hand
positions.
'He said this Is
-cussed and displayed pictures of everything.
:
used to develop bOdy strength, to
architectural design as well as
The speaker commented on the c lartfy the mind and to relax the
the picturesque countryside. and Summer Palace built there In entire body.
noted how Impressed he was with 1703, the Royal Library, the lakes
He displayed some moriey and
and dykes a~tl the art of Chln.a . coins and noted that.3. 7 dqllars In

.

.
Community Corner

:New Year brings some
·changes in Ponneroy
By.CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The New Year brought some
changes to a Pomeroy law firm
partnership.
David L.
Frecker who
has - been with
Porter, Little,
Sheets and ·
Frecker, Attorneys at Law, for
. the past couple of ·years, has
. accepted an appointment to the
Judge Advocate General's
Corps, U. S. Army, and will be
moving from the area soon .
He has been commissioned as a
first Ueutentant and will be going
to Virginia .
'
That leaves F. W. Porter, Doug
: Little, Jennifer Sheets, and John
• Le ntes In the firm.

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&gt;

Racine ·UMW ·conducts •meetmg
A post-holiday dinner party
was held by the Racine United
Methodist Women In the fellowshlo hall of the church. ·.
The catered dinner was served
at tables decorated for . the
holidays. · The 17 members enJoyed Allee Wolfe's program
around the Christmas tree. Read-

Dawn Keesee Is off to
Tennessee.
•
The 1987 graduate .of Meigs
High School left today for Chattanooga where she Is enrolled In
Tennessee Temple, a Christian
C'•llege. She'll be living there
with her sister and brother-Inlaw, Don and Verenla Barkman.
Don also attends that college and
Verenla Is employed there.

---

•'
'•

•·

George Collins, treasuret, reports that the new tax forms are
expecte!j h1 today and will be
prepared and In the mail later
this week.

State Senator Jan Michael
Long has announced that scholarships to attend one of Ohio's
proprietary schools or colleges
are available.
Among the many relatives
He says they are full-tuition
Joining Janet and Roger Theiss of . with the student only being
near Racine for the hollda)'s was required to pay for books and a
· Hermann Henkel of Josbach, small . registration fee. These
West Germany.
scholarships, according to Long,
Hinkel . has spent the past . are provided by the Ohio Council
several months in the United of Private College and Schools
States doing an apprenticeship at through the cooperation of Ohio's
a furniture factory In Tennesse·e. bus iness , trade and cosmetology
He joined the Theiss family here schools.
for Christmas weekend .
Students from the high school
· Other guests were Home r, class of 1988 may contact Sen.
Julie, Rachel and Kevin Newell, Long at the Statehouse, ColumMason: Jamie and Kyle Or d, bus. or get In touch with their
Beth, Mark and A,manda Theiss . high school counselor for more
Barbara, Bobl)le, Ashley , ad details .
Christopher Rupe , Carol, Stacey, · Sounds good to me.
and Matthew Theiss , Marie
Theiss, and Scott Nease.
Anna Mae Lewis Is a patient at .
the Holzer Medical Center; Gat: · You can expect your tax bill for llpolls.Her room number Is 521tf
' the first half of 1987 sometime you would like to ·sehd along a
this week.
card .

'

TUESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, will
meet at 7:30 Tuesday night at the
hall. The charter will be draped
for Edna Reibel and Ethel Smith.
Members are to wear white. New
officers will be Installed and all
are asked to attend.

MICHELLE N. ROUSH

f•

•

'
•

'••

•

••

•
•

•
•
.'
&lt;

..•

To .think of lite so precious
·And a cycle so myster.lous to
all,
. · · Knowing II was created with
great wonder
And geni\.IS from our Father
,above.
·
, To think of a beginning of
another creation
And how It all began,
Is such a feeling of joy,
So wonderful, no one can
Imagine.
· ·

Roush birthday
is celebrated

_.,

Commur}ity ·calendar
.
p.m. Tuesday at • the Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy .

Literary Club will meet Wednesday, 2 p.m ., at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Wallace. Mrs. Roy Holter
will review· "ISland In The
Stream" by Ernest Hemingway .
Roll call will be a favorite
Hemln~ay character.

Family participation in funeral services is .
·becoming incraaalngty common as more
tpaople realize that this II one way to !)take
. sarvlcea mora peraonal and at·the aame
time allow moumera to expralf more fully·
their 'love f!&gt;r the daceaaed:
·

.

~-

. J

'

Sandra Reed Murray

:£1~~~
T~· Yf-

..

1614)992-5 141
MIDDLEPORT , OHIO

.,
I

.

We have had qulta a bit of experience with
arranging fu-al _,icll unique to each
altuaJion, end wa alwaya folow your
· wlah• exactly. H you would llka to talli
about family participation In Mrvicea, ,
pl•se call u 1 or etop by.

;:!."'o':~;".r,-~•::.:.:...":"::=•::.="'"

; COPY liUDUIOr ~
MOPI OU,... Il
T\lliOAV ,.,,..
WI!DMiiDU ·~I'(~
TI&lt;UIOIM• ·~1'(10

'fi01DO.Y PA ..j!R
. IIIPIDo.• Pll'lN

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IIU lifO~ I Pu.0:1CO.TI0'"
111104 J11' llot\1ftfl.t,V
• I 00 P"' 1110"'00.~
I Gil,"' lUUtiA~
- I Gil P "' MO ... IIIO.Y
• I 00 P"' TIOUIOIO"Y
- I 00
110oDIV

f"'

ustness Services
Howard L Wrlt11el

· OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
·JERRY'S

ROOFING

'I·;.
.

.'..

:~

'.,,_, . . '

NEW- REPAIR

'-;

Glitters .

WHITE HIU RD.
. RUTLAND, OHIO
12·31·871 mo. pd.

GUN SHOO.T
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

DON'T LET YOUR ELEC·
TRICAl PROILEMS BE·
COME ASHOCK TO YOUI
CAU

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

D&amp;C ELECTRIC

'1:2::

'toy .
..._ , ~t. '---

Basham Building

Ron Diles or
Gary Cummina

6:30 P.M.

slippery.
A motorist who drove from
Baltimore to Washington after
the storm hit Sunday night llaid
the snow m';lde driving !reacherous on Interstate 95.
'
"I saw between six and nine
accidents, Including two · overturned vehicles," said Mike
Tabor, 45, of Washington. "The·
road Is Just a solid sheet of Ice."
The same band of storms
dumped freezing rain · on the
Carolinas, causing widespread .
• power '&lt;Oiltages and numerous ·
minor I traffic accidents. Charlotte; N.C., was glazed In a sheet
of tee.
As many as 50,000 homes and
businesses In North and South
Carolina remained without etectrlclty ·Monday morning, the
Duke Power and Carolina Power
&amp; Light companies said.
Meanwhile, arctic air swept
from the Plains to the Great
. Lakes, sending temperatures
plunging we,il below zero across
North .Oakota, Montana, Iowa
and Minnesota.
Several schools In southwest
Minnesota delayed classes by an
hour because of the cold weather
and blowing snow..
Temperatures of 15 to 18 below

Middleport
tMurod/Ucomod

v.w.

GUN SHOOT

EVERY

PARTS

SUNDAY

zero comb!ped with gusty winds
early Monday to create wind
chills of 76 belbw zero at Minot,
N.D., and 70below at Alexandria,
Minn.
A wind-chill of 50 below means
It Is cold· enough to freeze
exposed flesh In a minute.
Service. stations were
swamped with calls to revive
vehicles that would not start In
the bltte~ cold.
"We're running about two
hours behind· right now. It's not a
total disaster, but we're busy,"
said :Phyllis Cosette of Bud's
Interstate Standard In Moorhead, Minn.
Northern States Power Co.
dispatched a crew to Avon,
· Minn., where 200cu.stomers were
without power for about a!Hlour
with temperatures at 15 below
zero and wlnd .chllls of 62 below.
Carbon monoxide fumes
forced the evacuation of students
and teachers Monday from the
Thom9-s Edison ' Elementary
~choolln Hammond, Ind., where
the wind-chill factor was nearly
30 below zero. About 154 children
and 11 adults were overcome by
the fumes, but most were treated .
and released from area
hospitals.

NEW AND USED

WIDE

1:00 P.M.

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

1ACINE
GUN CLUB

CALL 742•2315

llCINE,

tZ-4-'87-1 mo. d.

Public · Notice

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON P,LEAS COURT

the Defendants; ~iloh DoSmith, aka Hlloh

·
OF
·- - ~~~~~~i~ Smith, aka Hilah
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
Smith. ak.e Hiloh
WILLIAM E. CRAY. ot ot
Vorhes. aka Hilah

as tar as I know," sa:td Boston
Plaintiffs Dorothy Voorhn, Gerald A.
·Police spokesll\pn Scott Gllils. "I
. -vs.Smith. Mary E. Derry. and
think we're ln ·good shape."
·
HILAH DOROTHY SMITH, the Unknown Heirs. NeAl of
aka HILAH VOOHRES Kin. Administrators. EAtcuIn Chicago; where the windS MIT H, a ko H1 LAH tors. Devisees and A11igns
chill factor tell to 50 below·zero,
VORHES SMITH. aka or Successors, if any, of
the situation was more serious.
H I L A H D 0 R 0 T H y Mary E. Derry, Gerold A.
At the 250-bed Pacific Garden
VORHES, aka HILAH DO- Smith, and Hileh Dorothy:
·ROTHY WOORHES. et ol.
Smith, aka Hitah DorolhV
Mission, refugees from the cold
Defendant.
Voorhes,
aka Hllah Dorothy
. were being "stacked like cordCase
No.
87-CV-303
Vorhas•
.
Presbvterlan
wood," s,ald Pastor Jim George.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION Church of Wilkesville, aka
"We'i'l give shelter to probably
TO: Hitah Dorothv Smith, First Prosbvterlan Church of,
aka Hilah Voorhes Smith, Wilkesville, the Unknown
close to 500 people tonight'," he
aka Hil~ Vorhea Smith. aka Succeuore, It any. to l'he
said. "We may have to stack
Hllah· Dorothy Vorhos, aka Prosbvtorlan Church of Witthem like cordwood, . but we
Hitah Dorothy Voorhoo. Go· kosvill~. aka Tho Firs!Preobnever turn anybody away,"
rald A . Smith, Mary E. yter'ian Church of WilkesDerry, and the Unknown ville, be granted to quiet tRia
.. Shelters were a!so filling up In
Haire.
Ne"t of Kin, Adminis· to real estate, and costs of
Milwaukee, where the temperatratora. EJ.ecutors, Devlseea this acltGn; and all other
ture Monday night was 5 below
and A11igne or Successors, ury and proper.
zero and the wind-chill was 47
if any, of Mary E. Derry,
You are required to
Gerald A. Smith. and Hilah answer the Comolaint
below.
'oorothv Smith, aka Hilah within ·· twenty-eight 128)
"I expect more than usual,"
Dorothy Voorh81, aka Hilah . daya after the last publica·
~d Milwaukee Rescue Mission
Dorothy VorhN. Pr•bvter· tion of this Notice, which
spokesman Dennis Sabourin.
ian Church of Wilkeaville. will be published once each
"We're going to take In everybaka Firat Preabyterian
weak ·for six (8) succe•sive
Church of Wilka.villa, the weeks. This last publication
ody ,\,ho comes, whether It be 100
Unknown Succenon, if will remain on the 5th day of
or 1,000."
onv. tb Th~ Presbyterian Januarv. 1988, and the
A wlnt~r .storm that swept the
~
Church of •WIIk•vlte. aka twantv·oight 12BI daya for
East Sunday night and early · By United Press International
Asian markets, Including Hong The First Pretbyterian answer will commence on
that dote.
Monday hit hardest In I!OUthern
Tqe U.S. dollar soared against Kong and Singapore, by selling Church of Wilkesville.
You are hereby notified
In case of your feiilure to
· · N,ew England, where It dumped the Japanese yen In Tokyo today the German mark to purchase
that you have been named answer or otherwise re·
up to 8 Inches of snow. The snow as the Bank of Japan Intervened the dollar,
Defendants in the action spond as requested by the
closed schools In Boston, most of for the second straight day to
. The dealers said trust banks entitle William Crev. et el., Ohio Rulaa of Civil Proce-.
Its suburbs and numerous other support the U.S. unit.
· and foreign Institutional loves- Plaintiffs, vs. Hilah Dorothy dure, judgment by default
Smith. aka Hil•h Voorhn wifi be rendered against you
communities ln Massachusetts.
The central bank said the tors rushed to buy back the dollar Smith.
aka Hilah Vorha and for the relief demanded
Boston's Logan Al'rport, dollar closed at 124.80yen, up3.15 for profit taking In the belief the Smith, aka
Hilah Dorothy in the Complaint.
clogged with nearly 6 Inches of yen over Monday's postwar greenback has hit bottom for the Vorhes, ako Hilah Dorothy
Dated this 26th dav of
wind-whipped snow, wa:s forced record low closing rate of 121.65 moment.
Voorhos. ot al .. Dofondonts. November, 1987.
action hu been aslarry~ E. Spencer,
to close for 2 'h hours beginning yen.
• Prime Minister Noboru Take- · This
signed Cuo No. 87-CV-303
Clerk of Courts
at 5:30a.m., and the storm made
After opening higher at 123.00 shlta said Monday, "It .Is the and is pending in the Court By Marlene Harrison,
driving treacherous across the yen, the dollar sagged to a low of common desire of theG-7 nations of Common Pleas of Melfll Deputy
,
.
state.
122.90 yen before making an
not to allbw the dollar to fall county. Ohio. 46789. Tho (1211 . 8, 16. 22. 29: 11 I 5.prover ol the Complaint 6tc
"It's just car versus guar- upturn to .hlta high of 124.85yen. further."
demands
iu~gment agatnat
drail," state' pollee Cpl. Bob The fluctuation corppared with
. Analysts said market players
McKeon said of the numerous Monday's range of 120.45-121.80 were convinced the Reagan
accidents around the state. "The . yen. .
.
administration now Is deterroads are real slick. It was
The central trading rate rose to mined to defend the dollar.
coming down too fast."
124.00 yen, from 121.00 yen
)he dealers said the market's
Amtrak trains traveling from Monday.
attention Is focused on a U.S.
• New York City to Boston were
Trading was heavy with spot announcement on the November
delayed about an hour.
tumover totallng '$10.211 billion,
trade balance scheduled for
, T.F. Green State Airport In compared ~ with $8.042 b!Uion Friday next week.
• Providence, R.I., remained open Monday.
On the Tokyo Stock Exchange
hut reported delays of up to 1 'h
The dollar's strengthening was
today prices rebounded sharply
'hours. Parts of southern Connec- spurred by Joint Intervention by
In a ~omblnatlon of buying and
ticut got up ·to 6 Inches o! snow .
the Group of Seven Western sell!llj'. Trading was moderate. ·
Between 3 and 7 Inches of wet, Industrialized nations overnight.
· 'l:he Nikkel average of 225
heaVy snow tied up ·morning
Flnanee Mlnlster'K!Ichl Mlya- selected Issues, whlch.fell346.96
. '.rush-hour traf!lc In New York ~wa \Old a news conference the yen In a half-day session Mon·
City. The sun came out late Group ot Seven will counter the . day, gained 358.24 yen to close at
· Monday morning, puahlng the · dollar's fall througl! active 21,575.28 yen.
~ercury above freezing,. but Intervention.
Tbe TSE Index of all listed
tempeiatures ..were expected to
''Tile. United Stalel now II stocks was up . 1H5 points at
.drop back Into the teens after concerned about poaalbWttea
1,'107.119 •
·'
(
·dark. Nearly 3,000 sanitation that the dollar's further decUne
An estimated 450 million
workers were pulled o(! garbaJI! · will create dlftlcult problema.and · shari!&amp; chanpd hands, . com·
iduty to clear streets before ~he lheG-7naltonllarecletermlnedto pared with 182.3 11\llllon shares
carry out more powerful Inter·
traded Monday.
,
freeze set ln.
Brokers said tradlllg began on
Snow also swept over Philadel- vendOD than before," he aald.
phia, forctDg the PhDadelphla
Dealen Aid the BuJr; ot Ja"n a bu1lllh note aa lnveaton were
International Airport toc101eone II ~Jtlleved to have purchased encouraged by an overnight rally
'I'Wiway, and airlines reported · nearly
bDIIon Ill Tokyo to, ontheNewYorkStclckEJCChange
:some delay• .
support tile U.S. Ulllt.
.
and the dollar'a recover)' against
Up to lllch•of
accumu·
They Aid the West German tbt yea. Illveatment·relatld ~
:lated Ill patti ot the WMblll&amp;10JI. federal 'buk llld tilt- Fecleral glaJ!t-capttal illlael, lloweYer•.
D.C., area. CioiiJIIIOIIIe lubur· · Relerve Ballll ot New York also ell'lle llbder preuure ot profit·
lnterYelled IJt Tokyo aDd Other taldDt •IIIDa later, they aald. ~. _ _ _ _ _..;....;;.._ _ _ _ _--.
.•-~
b'an
aDd matJna

Dollar rises against
yen
in
Tokyo
today
.

Middleport, Ohio

CARPENTER
SERVICE

IS FOR SALE
If interested. stop by.

1/2 PRICE SALE

GOING

ON NOW

PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS. ETC:
12-2-'87-1 mo

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992"3410
LIMES-TONE
GRAVEL • SAND

. TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

Roger _Hysell
· Garage .
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR ·
Also fransmluioll
PH.· 9?2·5682
or 992·7121
6-17-tlc

HOUS~

FOR RENT ·.

107 lOCUST ST.
POMEROY-985-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE ·.
985-3561

All Makes

•Washers. •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freeze's

WE SEll USED· APPLIANCES
·-

4-5-lfc

-

Addons and remodeli ng
R(]ofing and gutter work ·
Concrete Work
·
Plumbing a"" electrical
work

(Free Estimate s}

V. C. YOUNG Ill ·
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15·' 8&amp;-lc

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE,
U.S. RT. $0 EAST .
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authorized John· Deere, .

New Holland, lush Hog •

. Form Equipment
Dealer

Far111 Equltmnt · .
Partt &amp; Ser.lce

1-3-'86 tic

SIDING
•AlUMINUM SIDING
0BlOWN IN

INSUlA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls

·BISSELL
.. BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES :
"At Reasonohle Pricos",

PH. 949-2801 ,
or 949-2860
Day or Night

SUNDAY CALLS :

NO

..

4-16-86-tffl

'

.

aoo11

YOUNG'S

THE DABBLE SHOP

12-7-'87 tfn

Arctic air stings· Midwest today
By l:fnlted Press International
Snow and Ice snarled traffic,
closed schools and knocked out
, power Monday front New England to North Carolina, and a
wind-driven blast of arctic air
stung the Midwest, confronting
the homeless and elderly with
llfe-threatenlngcold.
In Boston, where the temperalure was expected to drop to the
teens overnight, pollee, emergency madlca}..{e'chnlclans and
other rescue workers toned · to
· brlag.tile-tlomele!Y!..to shelters. •

992·6226

Factory Choke'
12 Gouge Shotguns

Delaware Valley; with snowfall slopping aboutlO
a.m . Monday. Traffic In this Bucks County town,
88 !"ell as the rest of the Ph!Jadelphla area, &gt;yas
hectic for the ru!jh hour. (UPI) . .
·
·

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulbefry Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohio

742-2035

4-22-17-tln

· .Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;Sen1icel
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

- ~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
·~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
:I: (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at

SLAUGHTER

949-2263'
or 949·2168

BRUSHES OFF SNOW - Phillip Varcoe
brushes snow off his car that fell In Doyleatown
Borough, l;'a., Sunday night and Monday
momlng. Four to five Inches of snow. hit the

0

CUsTOM

Downspouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting.
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2156

•now

-.

...,_,_..._
_. _
"---·,.__
___._
.,_
.....
~===
M-

•

'1.5

liTH STREET
i&amp;T4)11117-31tO
COOLVILLE ..OHIO

otl.llll

. . ..

____ ...,

._,_
....
·---1"---.-..

n--~~
~ •..;,.!~..:.0'"':'"~

ISA
WANT AD

FamHy mambera, Including children; can' ---, ·•
take part In funeral aervlc,a• In a variety of
· · waya. Th•a Include raadlnga pr prayers,
prose or poetry raadlnga, or apac;ial "lualc.
Carefully colllldered an.d prepared. auch
perao,.l contribution• to tha aarvlce help
honor tha memory of tha dacaued.

.._. "

·- -

___ _

~=

THE BEST

CAN
.. MY FAMILY PARTICIPATE?

I thank God for my life each
day!

'

••

~.

•

•

pr~gram.

---

To think life Is something we
have only once,
.
To try and change It's course,
as some may . ·
·
Life Is too too joyous and
fu lflll!ng,
To Just give away.

Revlvl\1
,
MIDDLEPORT "'- .Ash Street
To see the birth of. the treat ion, · Freewill Baptist Church In Middleport will be In revlal Ja11. 3-9at
-Only, you know you've begun
,
7:30
p.m. nightly:· · Everyone
, Gods' gift to you.. .
welcome.
·
·As the two of you became one.

Mrs. Wolfe had several gaines
with prizes being awarded,
Prayer partoers were revealed
for last year and new partners
were drawn for nex,t year. A gift
exchange was held and a gift was ·
presented to Mrs. Fisher, retirIng president. Coffee and cookies
were served following the

POMEROY - 'I;he Long 1191·
tom Chapter-of the Ohio Flame
Fellowship will be held Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., at the Mt. Olive
Community Church. Speaker
wiil be Daisy Tabor of Gallipolis.
POMEROY ~ Pomeroy Lodge
Suzanne
Bush,
chapter
presl•
164
F&amp;AM will hold a regular •
Michelle Nicole Roush obPOMEROY - XI Gamma Mu · dent, welcomes the public.
meeting
on Wednesday. 7: 30 ·
served her seventh birthday at Chapter ·of Beta Sigma Phi
p.m.
;
at
the
Middleport Masonic
her home on Bailey Run Road, Sorority will meet Tuesday at
POMEROY
The
regular
Temple.
All
master m·astms
Pomeroy, Dec. 24.
7:30p.m. at the home of Evelyn
welcome.
111eet1ng
of
Pomeroy
Eastern
Cake, ice cream, chips and Knight.
Star 186 will be held Tuesday,
koolaid were served and gifts
7:30p.m., at the Chester Masonic
POMEROY The . Meigs
were presented by the gues Is to
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Temple. Refreshments will be County Cooperative Extension
1
the honoree .
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will served.
Service and H&amp;R Block are
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the
·sponsoring
an Income tax school
Olin Knapp Bridget and Jennifer · temple. Refreshments served
LONG
BOTIOM
The
Long
from10a.m. to 12
on
Wednesday,
Cross, Syracuse; Mrs. Odessa following the meeting.
of
Ohio
Flame
Bottom
Chapter
·
noon,
at
St.
Paul's
Lutheran ·
Cart, Chuckle and Jer ry Jacks,
Church,
Pomeroy.
Fellowship
will
meet
Tuesday,
Mr. and Mrs. Maurl~e Johnson, .
CHESTER - Chester TownMrs. Sue Hall, Pomeroy; Mr . and ship Trustees • will hold their 7:30p.m., at Mt. Olive CommunMrs. Duan~ Knapp and Darrick, oFganlza tiona I meeting at 7: 30 Ity Church. SpeakerwlllbeDa!sy . To meet Saturday
Tabor of Gallipolis . Public. IS
POMEROY- A meeting of the
Rutland. Sending gifts.were Mrs. p.m:· Tuesday at the town hall.,
welcome..
·
Meigs
County Trustees and
Patty Imboden and family a nd
will be held
Clerks
Association
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Brinker and
POMEROY - XI Gamma
WEDNESDAY
Saturday, 7:30 p:m., attheSenlor
family.
·
Epsilon Sorority will meet at 7
MIDDLEPORT _: Mlddleport Citizens &lt;;enter In Pomeroy.

Poet's cdrner ·

."Life"

'
lngs were given by Martha
Dudding, Louise Stewart, Etta
Mae Hill, Margaret West. Fran-.,
ces Roberts 1 Maxine Wingett,
and Alice Wolfe. Hymns were
sung and Mrs. Wolfe had a
prayer. A dra'!latic reading by_;
Marlene Fisher with lights .
dimmed and all members partie,
!paling was presented.

... ...,
..._

011 1111

,

' -~~~!"::.:::.:·=~t!~'::.""!;";':

"Ther:e~saplaceforeverybody

.

•
~

their money .would equal $100 In
our money. He also said that
there a two bedroom apartment
with servants would cost about 30
cents a month . . Chambers displayed the Chinese sword which
Is used In slow motion to develop
strength. His slides showed the
exquisite gardens and he displayed several wall hangings and
paintings which he had brought
back from China.
Christine Napier, president,
Introduced and welcomed the
members •. lncludll)g 10 new on11s,
and guests.

.

' ' ·•

o11.1111

""-···-·--

_.... ....,__

'

••

••

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

......... ..,., ... M. •

top~c

. ... .

~· ·--·

loo

Two · Meigs Counttan~ have
been. named to .the Tri-County
Vocat.lonal School adult education honor roll for the tall session.
They are Brenda Calaway and
Kim Jordan who are.studylng In
the diversified medical occupations department of the school,
located In the Nelsonville area.

.

I IIO.n

__ _-... - .............
............
:;.·.:.~:

H .•

...

,. 00.... .....
·-·

... .. _ .. _

":'.L--:.;. ~~":":'.:" ~--- I'-· ...
.,......,.,..,.
.,_
·s..- .... - ...,.o._c.o_too
,....., ..... ..,.,_ ,c_
.........
...... ..-..-,............ _.. o...'

Named to list

'

to.r.n
Jo.r.n

__ _

,

ftATEI

..,,_!» ,... _!» ... 111'011 •

~.!:'.!........,..Gooo :i

..r.:'- ... -

The ann\181 Christmas party of
the ' Busy · Bee Class of the
. Middleport First Baptist Church
was beld recently at the church.
· The Rev. Dwight Anderson
gave table grace with his wife
having devotions using scriptures, a meditation and carols for
her program. She played the
.
autoharp.
The table was decorated 'with
red and green streamers, Christmas placemats and a centerpiece. · Each one attending
brought a gift which was placed
beneath the tree. The minister
was presented a gift from the
class as well as from several
members.
Attending were Caroline
Miller, Nora Jordan, Lillian ·
Demoskey, Rosemary Lyons,
Freda Edwards, Mary Brewer,
Gwlnnle White, Betty Gilkey,
Janice Gibbs, Beulah White, and
the Rev. and Mrs. Anderson.

AAUW meeting held, China -speaker's

( .1-,

I

I A.M. Untii,NOOIIl 5ATWIDAY
UOSfD.. WIIIU
_ ___..... _

Busy Bee
class meets

About that new arrival.....

'

TO PU.(( 01 .. (Ill tft·IIJ6

IIONDAT tfww , . .,lY I A.IL t• S P.M.

· ·Beat of the Bend

..

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

.6. 198$

(!~~!~2!v

_$3500

Per Pickup Load

Delivered
BILL SL4CK
614-992-2269

New lo1ation:

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE ..

We Carry Fishing Suppli~

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINESI PHONE
t6141992-6SSO
RESIDENCE PHONE
t614j 992- 77!.

"

¥

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair andre·
core radiators aild
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
11pair.Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

Middleport. Ohio
.
1-13-tfc

1118/ttn

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP •
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS .
•MUZZlEL04DING
SUPPLIES
OPl:N 1 to 9 P.M .
Rt. 124 Acro11 from

Happy Hollov1,- Rd.
RUTLAND

614·742-2355

12114/ 1 mo.

IAICUI

1

C~CnNG
I
CHI
OHIO
I

ot&lt;OME lUI IHII
o~~ooM ADDmO!II

•IIITCH&amp;NI • lATHS
•IIOOPINO
R!MODIUNO•
IIII'AIIII

,
'

...... .., .........
IEI'T1C aVITEMI •

.

IACII HOI WOIIK

...~·~
11·J·Itft

Kllill Ill

roadl_

\

•

�..
. '

•

Tuaaday, January 6, 1988

Middepon. Ohio

•

311 loti &amp; AcnNige

LAFF·A·DAY
kinde of dMno IIII'VIc.. write

P.Q. to. 111. Iooman. OH
411311. 1-1 a:H-2741.

llo-o•

41

Homaa for Rant

NICIIIy fumiehed emil hou•..
. Aduttt ontv. Ret. Nquir... No

12 wk. old mli1 kitten. bl.ck.

pota, Coli 114-441-03'38.

Utt., trained. C•U 11114-448·

4737 aft•l:30 PM .

LM"g•· 2-3 "8R . hou•. Pl.rty of

etorag&amp; H1nderaon 1rn. Cell
114-44_1 -7025.

5 puppi• to gift to a goad
· hom.e. 30•· &amp;78-2384.
·

R•nt-Liele-Lend Con ~.ract :
Hom• In Eureka. Rodn.-, VU·
l~~gell . Event Hgts. Dep. • Ref.
r•qulred . Blackburn Realty,
8 14-441-ooos.

lost and Found

:~o~-=·~og.G"'v':':ltysh:;
Georg•
Rd . Call 814446-4200Creek
Or 814-446-9302.
LOST-Hereford Simmental
"•lf•· 800 lba. Coli 814•317-

7678·

- ' - - - . . . . , - - - - · l cLOST: Ladl• goid wetch,~ Natrix. Blltween perldng lot end
Chapma~o Sat. 814-992·281,8.

Nloe 2 BA. unfurnlaMd Wllh or
wtlhDut ItOw • refrlg. • 210 1
mo. plus dliposh • utllitl•, Call
114-441-2516.
.

"Gee, I only got a sled. What

channel did you pray on?"

I'";~~::;::;~:::::;~::::,~;r~F,:~~=~~~,
·
11 Help Wanted
12
Situations
Gtt PAID for ·rellding' bookll
I 1 00 ptr title. Writer: ACE· 33f,
111 S. Lincolnwty, N. Aurora, II

80IU.2

J--LL.-·- - - - - - -

AN. LPN, or Paramedic · to
Shoph•d. Floppy o•o. blind in complillt mobile lnsuranoe ueme In Oallie County.
Mu.t h111e
1
r~hl eye, r.S coli• on, 304s d
8 • -6., 42 or 304-4&amp;8 -1710 . • ven 1puncru,. uper ence. en
"
u
reeume to EMSI 1010 Woodman Drive, 210, Dayton. Ohio
4&amp;4~2 .
.
7
Yard $ale

Want.ed

Nlct2, 'pouible38R.
houaeln
MlddiiiPOf'l.
Dlehwll•h•
. ••.
baga dlap•. .lC, lui b-mont.
Excal. locotton. Coli 114-448·
1208 oftor 8'30 PM.

Room. bo.-d, or 11...-.o room
for in""li.or aldorly. 114-1127204.
·

4 8R. country home for rent.
U7B. Vir... la L. S01kh· Rnl
Eotot•l14-381-8121 .

Insurance

2, 3, or 4 bedroom hO:UNI and
1p1. In Pom•oy eru. Pey own

. u)sT tan and blec:k Germen

•

Call ut for your mobile home
Jnturence: Miller lnturence.
304-882-2145 . Also: auto,
home. Uf-. health.

Job humlng1 Naed a tldll1 We
train pooplo for jobo • outo 18 Wanted to Oo
mach .. iCII•• c•pentllt't. alectr~ · • --------~­
ci
.... toed aervice worm.. r
&amp; Vicinity
electronict teehnld... indul"
trl.a mlintenan~WOfken, nur•
..... .. ........................... ina aatiiUintt end Ofd•ll-. · Oeyc•e Center h• posklon
op.n for 2 rnor. chHdren. Hhe
mechlnlat~o and w.ldn. Aeglt21 8 lrd. Ave.• Mond.,. TUet~ t• now for ·c l•... beginning · r.r• .,c.. ,Ciill 11 4-441·1147.
dey, Jan. 4th. &amp; 6th .• C?lottl•· January 4th. Cllll Tri-tounty
dlth•, ~a/ pans, ..uw~ng m• , Voc.. ionel Adult Cent• at 713·
f l lldlll:r,il
chine. etc.
31511 axt ,4. A vefiety of
funding tot.lrcet to ~ PlY fOf
training ere IIYelleble for those
8
Public Sale
eligible.

·······Gallrj:iotr$··········

&amp; Au.ction

Wedem.,.er' I Auctktn servie.
~Naillble at your convenience
and locations. M•lin Wed•
m.,-tr Auctioneer- 814-24&amp;5162 .
'

Wanted To Buy

9

We' pay cah for late model ciNn

used c••·

·

Jim Mink Ch•.·Oids Inc.
Bib Gil'n e JohnaOn

Do you h..,. the spirit ofc.-ing1
Th•earameny jobopportunHiel
for h•llh c.-e worllen. Btoome
1 vt~luable member of
hellth
c•e teem in ju.t. 11 w.eka.
Enron now in the Nursing
Attittllnt·Dfd.-ty progrim at
Tri-County VomJonal School-Adult Educ1don cenltt. Need
moniiV for .tRlnlng1 We h.,e e
varillty funding eourcee:n•-..1•
for thott eligible. Regilt• nWN
tor cl••• beginning April 4th,
call753-3511 MI. 14. Catch the
Spirit!

•h•

and newer used c••· Smtih

Government Jobe. •11.040869,230 ve•. Now Hiring. Your
Area. 805-887-8000 Ext. A·
9806 for cunent ~eciiN'IIIilt .

Bu ick-F'ontiiiC, 1911 E..tern
Ave., Gall ipolis. Call 614-448-

The Meip Loc .. St:hoal Dittrlet

614-4.4 6-36_72
TOP CASH paid tor '83 model

2282.

'

·WANTED TO BUY: Used wood
&amp; coal heaters. Swain' s Furni-

ture, 3rd. • OWe St. Gallipolis.
Call 8 , ._.,46-3 1 69.

is ·accepting epplicetions for
lubttitute t..chera. Subltitulet

are needed WI •II c«tiflcetlon
areM. The dtlily 'rate of PlY
•12s. Schaolt ere apen end •

21

Busine11
Opportunity

11
t,

Help Wanted

Ou t of Work? No job in tight1We
can help! Basic Education elid
Skill Training available. Contact
Adult ' Service~ , BHCC at 814-

245-5338.
DRUMMER WANTED : For
country-rock bend. Cell 614·
448-2144.

Chrlttmae billa to pay? Star1
setling AVON before Jan. 12.
receive free cologne. Call 614·
448-2166.

4340 nl. 307. AA -EOE.

Working service mtneger
needed for immediate emplovmenl. Must hw. Agricultural
and MechWiictl b.ckground and
furnith your own toolt. Salary
tnd comminion." Ser'td JHume
to 639 Uppw River Ad., Gallipolis, 0 . 46631 .

R.N.. physiciWit' office. Ple•e
send retume to Box C1 &amp;, In c•e
ot Pt. Pl ... nl Register, 200
Main St. Pt. Pl.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY in
Home Atumblv work, Jewelrv.

Toys • Oth••· FT • PT AW~II.
CALL TODAYI 1 -618 -4193636 {TOII-Refundtlbltl Ext. 8 22&amp;•. 24 hours.

AIRUNE JOSS .lVAILABLE
WANTED: Pen.-tlme(34 hour• NOW! Earn up to t&amp;O.OOO .
/ weeki Retief Hou•m.,-u• Mechenict, Flight AttendMtt,
tor an intermediale c•' fM:ilitv , Cuttom• Service. 316-733·
for d.Velopmentelty diM~td 6082, ltkl. A-293,8 tor info.
edulta in Bidwell, Ohio. HoUre: : llttin9f.
6:00 PM- Frid-v through 4:30
PM· Sund.., (llv•-ln), 2 -hour
Wanted drummer for Rock
weekty IIIaH muting. end holi- .Band, would pref.- IOmeone
d.ys. High ac:hool degree, Wllid u11d., 21, phon• 304·773Ohio driv.,' t IIQtnM end good
1991.
drilling record required; must
harwe good communlc.Mton nd MONEY FOA COLLEGEtuvotlorg.-d!lllon eldllt. able 10 work able to indivlduell who becllma
• pert of • te.-n, work whh membert of the Armv Nanonll
minimal aup..vitlon, good moGutrd. Coli 304-175-3910 0&lt;
n~ mtn-u.mtnt sklllt, Mld be
1-800-1142-3819 .
punctual; ekp•ience working
with p..-aont wllh men1111 rfler- VETERANS: 't .t uthlllppayyour
dlltlon tnd dwelopmental dlt·
Chrletmee billa. A""Y NeUonll
ebilitles preferred . Salary ; Ou.-d- · part-11ma .tobt·ful time
•4.50/ hour. Sidt/ VIution/ llfe bentlfha. 304-175-3950 or 1·
inaurnece benefits. Sendr•um• 800-142-3111.
1o Robin Eby, Buck.,. Community S.rviCM, P.O. Box 104,
Jecli.ton, Oh 41140. O._.lne
for appllcente: 1 ·8·88. Eqa*
Opportunity Empfoyer.
" Frlendt A...ll Corp" of Gampolil, Ohio ileeu a .compMMI
ul• p...,n to work in Child,.,., Clothing ltore. Mutt H
highly motiYOtod ond LOVE
worldng wilh chlldrM. . Send
r•ume to: Friendt ANI Corp ..
P.O . Sox 111 . Oolllpollo. Ohio
48U1 .
DanT• ll now ecOiptlng . . .'-=-ttona for •pwl•a,d · T•
Preper••· MUit H femlft• with
Individual tax raturna. For lnfof·
m•iOn tnd eppolntment. phone
DeftT•· 114-oMI-1178. Hn:
10 .lM-8 PM, M· F.

Bolli'- noodod for 1WO glrtofive and two. maetly'
-ing~. eon a14-3417-7717.

•••

•d cl•an. C.rplll:. Cell 114992-3090.
.
One Nntel at 107 LOCUli St.,
oth• .. 238 second St. Bolh
Poril•ov. C.l 114-811-3137 or
114-911-3581 -.
3 bedroom. ' 2 full b81hl, farge
living room, dining room end
kltchM'I . Also l.. ndry room. 2
c• g••ue. central •lr. Eatt.,n
School Dietrl~. Ret•enoee required. Call 114-2:47-4946. .

A•tau,.nt for ul&amp; 1380 Eeslern Aw. Ceii814-440-30n or

age. private, nice location, 304876· 37&amp;3.
.

8 room dupl•. b•ement,

a•-

448-9782.

~rofession.al

304·882-3217 ... 304-7735024.
Bolich StNOt Middl_.._ Ohio,
2 ._.,oom turnllhH ept, , utll-

ti• ~ld, rel•enc.•nd ,d .oah.
304-182-2688.
. .

Mlddi'I'OI1 • 2 room fu.,.hld

Apt. fof rent Unfurnillhed. one
bedroom. eftld.,cy epertment.
t221. per month. C.lll1.._~111 88 between 8-5 Mondtr( thru
Frldev.
5 unfurnJthed rooms, owr 3 c.e•ege. Aduht ontv. no plll:e,
•1 50. month. Cell 304-1712138.

Furnithtd or unfun*hed. l•ge
8 room •Partment, downtown
Point Pl. .anl, dep011t required .
304-8915-3,.60.

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

45 ·Furnished Roome

1----:----:----:Room• fGr rent. d.,-. we~~k.
month. Gallia Hotel. Calll14448· 9680. Reilt 11 low •• f120
month.

·

Furnlshad loom. • 911 . UtHIIi•
paid. Sh.-e bet~ . Slncg le. mel&amp;
919 Second: Gellipolie. CaH
.t48-44 1 8 after 7pm.

46 Space for Rent

Services
OHict Space tor rent. Excel.
downtown Galllpolle location.

McDani e1 Cu11om 8lllch•ing Open 8 dey~ a week. 304-8823224.

•cr•.

tared Staff Nur .. In rtCOVffl

room. P.A.N. baelt. Selarycommenturete wllh experience.
C&lt;intllct Geoff Polen. Dirtclor uf
Personnel. Ple...nt Vall• Hot·
pital, Valley Drive, Point Pl. .
senl, W.V. 215650, 304-676-

2 bedroom furniNd . . . ... end
dtpOtlt. New Hwen. W. v...

Furnllhed effldenr:t epartment
for one worldng eentJ..-nen.
Private, utilit'- paid. •110.
month. Jeff•aon Aw. 304171-2083 or 171-1811.

Unfurnished 2 bedroom hou•
for rent. ·En•gr effldent, ni ..

2 or 3 bedrooms, full b•ement.
u~n~~~• e~al'llte with beck en-trance, c ..l after 3:30 pm,

304-871-2199 .

32 Mobile Homes
- ror Sale
197312x66Frtedom3BR ., gM
furneca wnh eentrel air, weeher-

lnquiri•

Na•Weterloo- Z BR ., 1126 P•
mo. Aaf. &amp; dep. Aduht, Call
814-448-7764 or 843-2844 .
Eureka. 1 SA, 10x•l. •pplienc•. o•pet, w.t• paid, no pet ..
deposit • referencet. Rent

1145. Call814· 245-1529.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . aptt. 6 clotete. kitchenappl. furnithed, Wether-Dryer
hook-up, ww c•pet,. · newly
paint•. dedl. Regency, t~c.
Aptt. C•li 304-676· 7738 or
678-&amp;104.

Furnished apt. n•t to librarv.
One prof•lionel aduh only.
Perking. Cell 814·448-0338.
Downtown- Mod•n 1 BR .,
c:ompll'le kitchen, c•pet air,

.,.u.,..

Space for amall
All
hook-upa. Cable. Alto eHidencv
roomt, elr and cebla. Muon.
W.Va. Call 304-173-&amp;8&amp;1 .

49

For lease

9

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 638 Jeckaon
Plb from 1183 • mo.; Watk to
ehop and movl•. 81•·4463997. E.O.H.

614-448-7026 .·

61 Hou11hold Goode

51 Household Gooda

New wood 8 po. living room
suitet, •399.91: cheat of

drewen-4 drawer. •48: twin
mettretHt, •96 set: microw.ve
oven ttends.
THE WORKING .
MAN ·s FA lEND

611 Building Supplies

8 p~.. INCIIo,WI, .actl ... Con.... blodll ellt.e. v...a or
dallvery. Muon and. Golllpolta
condhlan. •17:1.• aofl•
304-171·8732 or 171-2H8. · Blodl Co., ·12311 l"'no lt.,
Olllil&gt;olla. O~lo Call 114-4411·
8W.liN
. 2783. '
.lUCTION • FURNITURE ez
Ra..,.· mix conct'• end ell
Oliva lt., Ga~lpolla.
NEW· I pc. wOOd pciup- Ull. COnii'... IUppll•. Clll ue Vall.,
Llvlng.--nUt•f111·"1t• Brook Ctm.t and luppll-.
Sunk- w•h ~-...- 1111. 304-773--1234.
ful foundllloo
sterling- I l l . Recliners
IllS
Pete for Sal•
otortlne- •••.
'
.
bUIEOoukn, •111-.UII. Onko,
Wring• wah•. e com:ptlle ..e Groom end Supply Shop.Ptt
of utH fumltu,.,
Grooming. All br. .dt ... All
NIW· ·W•wn boot• 130. ltyltl. Ierne PM Food O.el•·
Julio- Ph. 114-441-0231 .
Weir-a e11 • up. IStoal •
toft t&lt;*. Colll14-448-318t.
o_...,... Cottary Konnal
County Aapll- lno. GOOd CFA Hlm1111¥1n, Persian and .
uHd eppllen011 end TV Mit. II.,._ kttt.ne. AKC Chow
Op1n lAM to 8PM. Mon thru puPtJi• Coli 114-441-3844
Sot. 114-441·1198, 127 3rd. oft« 7PM .
.lva. Golllpollo. OH .
R - • HI YIL ·olcl Good
OOOD UIEO .lPPUANCEI wMch dog. No pep•t. Good
w.h... drvtr•. Nfria. .tora. ...,,. e1ao......11u1 dog. CoN
r•ng•. Sk,ge Ap_pli•IIOfe, 114-3111-1314.
Upp• R - d. ._!dolton
C - M-.114-4U-7HI.
2 AKC R-a. melt Chlhullhuet.
For mor. informetlon call e 1 4 ·
lAYNE'S FURNITURE
_318-8411.

•bl.,

m-•
- .-iara.

ch*•

Hom.... Big ••ection.

!'

1911 Dodge 2V. ton dump.
•1000. _1974 Chwy 'n ton
truck. •860._1803 Ch..-y. runs.
1310. Coli 614-387-1287 .

.

I
I

'

:

1878 Dodga 4 whHI *ive,
1tn Filnl-4 w11oo1 drive, 1971
Chwy 'hton Pl'*·up. 11100
each. 814·949·2801 .

... ..

.,

-1982
---------. ·.
Dodge 210 Ram. Custom ,;t '

•

e1400. 304- 76-2187.

.

dt••

a..,..,.

&amp; Vagetables

90 Days Nme 81 CMh with
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
Bi.llavllle Rd. Open 9em to lpin

Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-4480322 .

B1

Open All Wint• - plenty fruits
lnd produce. 8 tiii:OO, J1ck'a

M•Ut. At. 31. HtnderiOn.

64 Misc.

Me~.challdlee

\ I

',

I

I

I !II

,\ l 1\.'I", I(
Cellahtn' t Ultd Tire Shop. Ovw
1 .OOOtir•, ab:•12. 13, 14, 11,
18, U.&amp;. 8 mil• oul At. 218.
Coli 114-251-1211 ,
s o - • Ook..,.. .lah flr""OOd
for Mle. •30 e pickup load.
dallvorod. Coli 814•288-1174,
Tree •

s .h1mp

r•movel,

flr..-ood· •110 per dumplo...
Heap Vouch ... Don·•. Lan•-

Hutlllld:ar flreplece. gl•• fir•
pl.ce doOft, fire tcreen, fir•
piece grete . Call 81 4-441·
1340.
s'now tir•: 2- 10x14"' &amp;
whltlt. 2· 8x215x14'' a ·whHie.
2 fuel oM tUrnec•· 131 8TUuprlght.' Colll14-245-8180.
JVC VHS- VCR - 4 hlld, nmote
control. Exclt. cond. •200. Clll

614-441-11&amp;1 .
ACA- 2s•• contole color TV.
remote. EIICIII. con d. •300. Call
114-441-1151,
1 60 artkt• of glrle· clothinlt
8x-14. 1 pr. rotl•
1 pr.
tnow boote- Ledi• 7. C1ll
814-441-0011.

II

Home
lmprDvements

"

BASEMENT
. WATERPROOFING
,Un~dttlonll Uf•lme gueran-

~"

18&amp; Local referencee furn ..hed.

1 ":'

, ""

d•

r..,,

61 ·Farm Equipment
CR081.80NS
U.S . 31· W•t. Jeckson. Ohio.
814-211-114J1 .
MMIIY Fergueon, New Hollend.
luth Hog 811•. Servioe. Over
40 ue_. U.ctora to choote from
a complele IJne of new a ulitd
equipment. L..re• •lecllon In
S.E. Ohto.
MS 131 g11 t,.ctor, pkM"s. dltc
end bl_.e. Call 814-98,2-7401.

.. ,

I DIDJ'T WAlCH ll-IE.
W£All1ER ~ 11--IIS

·H :· 1

-.(
! 1

'i

George~_

Crnk f4d, Call 014441-0294.

~~

~~

Cerp•nltr Work· Plumbing.
roafiny• .acting. All homerepeln.
Call I 4- 38~-81142. .

1

•

Carpenter work· $0.60 ·• hr. or '
by lhe iOb. Penelling, peinting.
dry\4111111, remodetlng. Call 614441·8371.
•

1-cattle t..U.-. 14' diek. 1 w~.,~

•.

24'p~nco~

v.fOI, IHd tower. 304-175·

8919.

.

.

62 Wanted to Buy
RON'- Televlaion Service.
Hou• c ..a on RCA, Queu'r,

Now buying thtll corn or e•
corn. Call for lidMt quotet. Rlvar
Ctty . Farm Suppty, 814-448·
2181.

83

livaatock

Wented -to buy 1 to 8 br.t be.t
cows. c.n 814-992-804-0 or
814-112-7848.

84

Hay

a., G 111in

MYI!ii&lt;ANDFATHER FITTED .
THE WINOOW IN Hi5 RCQI.A.

Z~tnhh .

GE. 8peclallng in

C.ll
304-578· 2398 o• 6.1 4-448·
2454.

WITH Pi&lt;ESCI&lt;IPTia-1 "iLA55 ...

111-3802

.

AUlV"lRAPHED PIC/URE OF
DOROTHY LAMOWR.

I

Jr,ll -Jtilll.ill'tll

HOW ABOUT
ONE FER
TI-l' ROAD,

LUKE'f ?

.
•

i

l

, 1,
·- •

1 NEED NOW
FER TI-l' lOG

DIIIII'CI Water Service: Poolt.
Cletame, Walla. , Dtlive,.Y Anytkno. Coli 114•448-7404-No
lund., cllll.

'

J. J Wet• Service. lwhnming
PCNIIa. clttet:ne. wella. Ph. 814·
:.:41·1288 .
.,

34

Bu1lna11
Building a
'.

R •

\'

R Wit• Service. Hom•

·'.'~

.

Commerdel e.,..1cMn11 fOt l. .e.
Downtown Pl. Jlt....m. llONt.
offiOM. A..One flell Elt81e.
Corol v . . . .. ........ Coli 304118-8104,

•

W•ti•non' a Weter Heullng • ~

r-aneble retM, lmmtdl•• · ~ 1

36 Loti &amp; AcnNige

_.

lSI Building iuPPIIee

80 eor• ''w Dc d1d"' tDCIItd on

.....

Penial. Ponora CrMk rood. 4
_.. CHI a.nd Hll Rold, city
aOMIIIVILU!, REAlTY
....... 111-:1030 ""'•
118·3431 or 171-UU

••

.........

"Hey, Moml Did Pop take hie shoes off,
or Is It low tide?"

•

1110

'

ca...... wllt1'14 ........

o.- - eeoo.
448-1100.

Col .,.._

llrfdl. ....... - 1........
- .. . _ ... CltioM- .... Ill• o ...... 1111
Rio ~- 0. COl 114- Clt.t... ...... A-. COl
248.e1Z1.
""~"''·
.

,,

•

2.000 gelan dellllery, cltterne. ·

:

(IOOio. ...... .... ... :104-1781111.
.

l'

87

·-- -

.

Q

......

i

...

1111

AXYDLBAAXR ·1'

II LONGFELLOW
,.

One letter stands for another. In Uiis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
&amp;JIC!Itrophel; the lenith and formati~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different

..
.,

'

a:=
.
~

·I-I

MOVII: Tile CIJtjay Mallia

Z ·p E L X F

X G X F 0

(NR)(bl6)

• ~

··"•

..

CIYPTOQUOTE
.

'

'
MOwr.(aUpholoiOik'i ........D ;I '~
1r1-n1y-u".._ Til•- j
In
furnlhn
Cell • 'fl
104·
171 -4m'14 lor fr11
·' .

.......

ies

. •! ~

Upholetery

I

11:111

•·

\

38 Inventor-

love
DAO.YCRYPrOQUal'F8 :...Here'sb-to.workll:

QJIIgltOI'I

l,·
-·

l'oul llupo. Jr. Wotar lorvloo.
-..
- · •- Colll1441e-3171
.

(J) Ntghll~

'

38 Geralnt's

il:,':.l~

1

1'

:1104-1711-1370.

stratagem

26 Brooks
27Distort
30 Nigerian
81- Scheider
32Maxlm
33-Gompers
35 Resiliency

111 Mlgnum, P.l.
«J) 8ponl Tonlgllt
~
·• IIJ 'Diamonch' cas Lata
NlgM
•
2
.!HI
Magnum, P.1. L.A. Part
emful
12:00(]) lluma and Allan
(I) WlnterWartd Crans
Montana Olflclal Film Against All Odds (A)

·,
"'. /,
\": ...

" " - - - ooola IHIIII. Foornertr J•m• lore w..... C.II

'

•

•

·37 Angel (Fr.)

(!) SportiCarmar ~L)

llJCIIaere

·.

z•

11:30.11(2) 1111 Tonight Show

••'

10 Ethics
12 zOla.
novel ·
13 Noah's
landing
•• Gerund
ending

23 Hunger
reminder
Footless
2~ Gridiron

e (!) L011t1 Connecllon

.

9 Medicinal
plant ·

1 Craze
2 Swedish
·
island
3 Book of
the Bible
4 Oolong
5Had
Yesterday's Answer
gumption
6 Old
note
18 Donna
"27Belief
7 Start
or Oliver 28 Target
a ditty
21 - ad
distance
29 "Boss" 8 Ripping
22 Manage
10 Man's man_ 23 Minor
34 Swiss
11 Scam (sl.) 24 Glean
canton
115 Arrow
25 Betting
811 Chinese
poison
groups~.,.,..~pag~o:-da

of Hosea

Years B.C. (NR) (1:40)
10:30 ()) Celebrity Chell
I!D Ho- lor All lleuono
SliD Hogan•o Herooa
11:00 (}) Remington Stern Ill aCil 1111 ec
1111 NeWI

.'i

Obligation

22 Variant

1!J1 Moneyllnl
!HI Jallaraona

~;::;~:;;;;;;:;;:: ~!

·'
\ "''

Killin~

(!) Lighter Side a! Sports
I!J Sign 011
liD Tht KUling of Bhopill

"ee. Ridenour Electrical, 304- .. ,.·•·
175-nae.
·,

~

pushers ·
21 Fly

IIIID Benny .Hill

Uceneed tlec:triclen. Ettlm_,• ~ ' ..,.

Ganaral Hauling

/"'

DOWN

Fella"

19 Stannum

10:20 (l) MOYIE: One Million

Rttldentlel 0\ comm•ciel wlr- ~ "tt
. ing. New e.rvtce or repair .. ·... : 11

86

+751

+872

20Pedal

!HI News

--~-- -·~~

114-448-9340.

•s •

s&lt;&gt;mesay

Happy

France
16Bombay
. title
17 Bedecked

10:00(2).Siral(lht Talk
11 (2) !lSI Crime Story
Chinese agent tries to·
smuggle stolen _EIOionium out
of the country. Q
·
(I) 1!1 (J) thlrtyooniatlling
Gary·s in love, but he begins
to receive threats on his life.

~

-;;:::;;:;;:;::;::::: .. ',,''
84 •. Electrical
.. Refrigeration

EAST
+KQJ109

39 Got better,

15-de

The
of Bhopal
1111 18112l Cagney l Lacey.
Chris' handsome. successful
date attacks her and she
must prosecute . 1;1
I[JII!venlng New•

1r

ACROSS

1!J1 Larry l(!ng Livel

'

.

WEST
• 87 3

• K 10 9 8
+AQ
+109 51

1 "The-

whose, target is McCabe.

'••

CARTER 'S PWMBING
AND HE.lTING
Cor. Founh end Pin•
Oallipolle, Ohio
Phone 814-446-38'8 or 614448-4471

+Q6 3 .

·-

identity of a notorious hltman
YE5TEI?Dl\Y THE SUN SHININa
11-IROLI~ IT SET FIRE 10 HI~

•

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Q

(1 :55)
.Ill(!) Hoover vo ~
K•nnec:tya, Pan 2 INRI
8:05 (l) NBA llalketball
8:30 ()) Branded
III
(JJ Growing.Pains
Carol and her bQyfriend
· Bobby announce they ara
engaged to be married. Q
-~~~ ell2l Cathy Cathy
agonizes over securing an
escort for the Employee of
the Year Awards Banquet
when she 's nominated for an·
award and Irving has other
plans. Q
9:00 (J) 700 Club
II(}) 1111 Hunter Hunter's
ex-partner becomes a
suspect in the murder of
drug peddlers.
(I) 11 (J) MoonllghHng . .
.Agnes· mother comes to
visit, unawara that smugglers
are using her. E;1
(!) il] Who Uvea, Who Die•

'

removal, 304 -678-2842 or-.;
171-2803.

• 8 62

~

More than a generation ago Swedish
+A 42
expert Einar Werner found a decep.J3
tive defensive play to hoodwmk de.+ KJI0 93 ,
clarer. Attribute the bidding to meth·
+AKJ
ods used in Scandinavia in the midVulnerable: Neither
1950s. You and I might open one noDealer: South
trump with the South cards, but the
actual bidding was as shown, · wtth Wesl
North East
Soulb
I+
Werne!'sitting Wet. \
HIT
' AgainSt three no--trump, Werner led Pass
Pass
Pass
his partner's suit, a top-of-nothing Pass
eight and continued spades. Declarer Pass
play~d low on tricks one and two, and .
Opening lead: ... 8
although East could now have beaten
the contract by switching to a heart, L - - - - - - - - - -- -.J
he made the safe play of a third spade.
Declarer won the ace and played the
jack of clubs, overtaking with du~- East ·was marked with the diamond
my's queen. He now led the e1ght of eli- queen? Sure enough, declarer rose,
amonds. When East and South played with dummy's heart ace to take anoth-..
low, Werner won with the diamond er diamond finesse. West won the
ace. He then played the 10 of hear~. queen and cashed the setting trick·
Place yourself·· in declarer's cha1r. with the heart king.
Who would not assume that East held
Obviously if_West took the first dla- ·
the queen of diamonds and the king of mond trick ~1th t~e queen, declarer
hearts as well? And what declarer would have no chotce but to take the · '
worth his salt would not he able to heart hness~ and make bts contract
count three·clubs, two maj'lf aces and . w1th th~ dtamonds, three clubs, two
four diamonds for nine tricks af~r· heart tr1cks and the spade ace.

iFatman
m ll2l Jake and the
Jake assumes

J'

Starke Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn c•e. landlc:eping. n:ump .

82

Pr~

90 HE \MJLJLON'T HAVE 'rO
· WEAR Hi5 GtLA65E61V
LOOK OUT "THE WI ~DOvll. ·

Fetty Tr• Trimming. ltump
removal. Call 304-875-1331 ,
Aotery or c.ble ·tOol drilling.
Molt well a CQmpllltiKt semad.,..
Pump NIM and tervice. 304-

1-S-88

e

,,

SWEEPER and sewing me chine
perta. end auppli•. Pick
up end deltvery. DIIYII Vacuum
Cleener. on• half mil• up

NORTH

+6 5
.AQ752

SOUTH

I!J PrlmeNoiwo
!HI MOYI!: Into·Ill• Night 1~1

llr• Mtlrnetee. Cell colect -, :..
1-114-237-0488,
or night. ' ~ ·
R o g e r a l e e e m • n t '".... \
Wet., proofing.

r·~

•kit•.

Mollohan Furniture
Upper River Rd., OelllpoUt, Oh.
Dinettes-1225 a up, Uving
room l:ui tet· 1300 • up,
Reclin••l151 &amp; up, Carpet
ttllrllng at •• • vd. Flnenclng
available to qullfl_. bu.,..rt. Cell
814-448-7444.

cel~br~Je.

.,

Complete the ch uckle qu,oted
by fi lling in the miss ing words
vov develop from step No. 3 b elow.

By James Jacoby

year rushes to a close, a
mammoth homework
assignment threatens to ruin
Charlie Brown·s vacation
while the rest of the Peanubi

,.

'

Red-suit
trickery

' iCharlie
e ll2l Happy New Year,
Brown As the old

...

I0

James Jacoby
--c--:-----,---

Ill(!) WKRP In Clnclmatl
7:35 (l) Sanford and Son
8:00 (]) c.O..bow
II(}) 1111 Msltock MaHock's
client accused of murdering
sexy, young exercise
lntructor.
(!) NHt' Hockey
(I) flJ (J) Who's tile loa•?
Tilny's attracted to woman
whO kidnapped her daOghter
In qustody suit. Q ,
·
(!) (1lJ Nova Examtn6s
various amusing, but real
mathematical puzzlas. (1 :00)

' .

yE0

BRIDGE

IQ)Iamoy Miller

1879, 8 cyt, 4 tpeed, CJ5 jeap, . f
uood tires end running cond.. , ·
t2,200.00 firm . 304- 876- 1 "'
1115.
.

.

The speaker at a seminar
asked the group if any one
worked i n an office with a
grapevine. One young man
replied, " r--, we .had one."

Si lance is what makes the real conversations between
friends . Never having 10 say a word is what really COUNTS .

181121 1111 Jeopardyl Q

'
.,

1878 ' Chevl Window van.

•
..,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
'" .
Clutch -- envoy ·_ Foist ...: Rodent -- COUNTS

I!J cro..flrti

•

.

j

L.-:-.l.-.J.L......L.--'---'--.J

rn

·r

Trail.- rudy. can·
114-4U-4383daro. 448-0139 • •
evens. • week•dt.
·~· ~

1983 Jo111 CJI , I cyl. : 4 opd.•
h•d top. Lots of' extrat. Excel.
cond. Colt 814-441-4976.

I

• ' IQICheere
.. (!) M'A'S'H
7:05 (l) Andy Griffith
7:3o II
HollYwood Squares
(!) Countdown to Calgary
III NtwlyWed 011111 ·
II (J) Judge
·
1111 Wheel of Fortune Q

••

.

i

FI R
~-,:,:....::,lr-i-1....:;-I..:.:.."TI'fs-i

I!JI Moneyllne
Ill i!J 1111 Wheal of Fortune

. ~,

conwre~n .

.

91 News

'
.

I

2

NewsHDIIr (1 :00)

I

Vana &amp; 4 W.O.

73

I I I' I I'
. C A~L 1B KI
II I

•.

(!) SporbCenter (L)
(I) Enttnllnment Tonight
D (JJ People' a Cciurt ..
(!) "crll M1cNeH/ Lehrer

j •

,,

c•
reduced. Shop end ..ve.
Franc:h City Mobile 'Hom. .

.

YDU'LLIMEMIIIIEY
IIlli CWSHDI
Alll TUT1.11lll

·~ -"'1'

Sofa end
prlr.d from AKC Boxer pupa, 7 mal•. 2
1391 to •111. Tlllol• eao and , _ . _ vory apacl~ puppl-.b
I I.
up to 1121. Hld•e·bede •uo •zao. each. 304-524-7180 or 76
..
Auto Parts
·lo •115. Atdln.-. e221 to 342·2417 colloct.
· &amp; Accessories
1371. Lo01p1 U8 · to •121.
~·
Dlnllltet I 101 and up to •ue. AKC r.g. Slb.-len Huebv pupWood table W·8
1211 tG pl-. 2fM'I.t•. biiCikendwhlte,
1791. Ooak noo up .... 3111. 1200. Alk for Aog• orJennH•. Ueed &amp; rebuitt trensmliliona. AI •''
Hutch• •400 end up. lunk 304-782-2173.
.
int•rnelty lnapected • guarn'
beda .c ompl•e W•men.-...
tead. Call 814-448·0988. We ll
Ulland uptoUI8. lob&lt;tb. .
buy junk transmissions.
··' \,
t11 0 . MlttNIHI ar bolt epringe 67
Musical
· full or twin Ill, firm 178, end
~ Fibtrgl•s topper, 1195. Fitl SB
Instrument•
' 188.
aetl •228. King
Ford shortbed . Cell 814-379·
t350. 4 drewer ch_. til. Gun
2788.
' r
cetMn. . e gun. Gat or electric
renge 1371. lib¥ mittm. . Wurlltler Pi-.o b- ule. Excel.
'
•31 &amp; 145. Bed frem• 120. lent condeUon. •aoo. C.l 814·
.
•30 • King frame 150. Good 192-2818.
MltcUon of bedraom tuftH.
·,'
melel clb4n•a.· hudboard8 130
and up to '815,
68
. FNit
•

1971 Kent· 1 Ox31. Good eondltion. Many poatlblitl•. French
Cit"' Brok.,.ge. e1 4-448·9340.

u..d

•J;

cRHN

~

Drive Competition from
. Pensacola, FL (R)
(I) II (JJ ABC Newa !;I
1!J Nlghlly lullnell Report
1111 milll CBS Newe
ll]BodyEieclrlc
1!J lnalde PoiHica '88
1BJ WKAP In ClnciMIIi '
a1 (!) Too Cloea lor Comfort
8:35 (l) Carol Burnell
7:00 (]) Ramlng10n SIBil
II C2l PM Magezlnt

half ton pickup, 8 cyl. , auto- :..;'Y

mille. 43.000 actual mil•,
11800. Coli 814-441, 1912.

·=

1

·(Jj Golf PG,t, Tour's Long

.:::
"''·
1974 Ford halfton pitikup302. ~
artometlc. •8ao. 1874 Ford

I I 1I

·

Sl (1). One Day ot a Time
8:05 (l) AHce
. 8:30. (2) 1111 NBC Nlghlly Ne,..

.,

TNcks for Sala

be-

CAJBET

!HI Fec11 of Ufe

~

the

Jew to· for~ four almple wo_rds.

101 ShowBiz Today

'78, 4 cyl, Pontiec SuniJird • - ~'
.400.00. 304-111-2417.
. •

72

O four
Reorrange letters of
xrombled words

liD OWl TV I;!

·'

I

WOlD

(!) !)r. Who

1

1983 Omega. pt, pb. alr. em-fm.
4-dr, . uc. cond. t2,100. C•ll it~
oft« &amp; p.m. 304-Btl-3120. , ;,.•
'"t
1989 GMC. 'II ton t5BO; 1972 . ·~
Ch•v. YJ ton •no: 1971
't
DultOr t525. 304-175-8803. • ·

R....un1n1 Equipment for •Ia,
Coli 114-441-3017 or 4419782.

Merchon!lis1:

·,

cr-control. •utometlc. runf •,,
good. uoo. 304-575-8707.
·~

~~~~~~~~;:==~:r~~~;;~~~~;=~

_, 'EVENING

'

GAMI .

•

TU.ES., JAN. 5

8:00 (]) Crny Uke a Fox
11(2) (I) 11(1)11111
IIIINewa
(!) Sportalook' (T)

-----------------.(
'
71 ·llilc* Skyl.-k. custom. ·~·

services. Prima locetion-cor~
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gellipolie.
Ample perking in rear. 8360 P•
momh. Call 814-448-4249 ar
448-2328 ,

PARSON'S FURNITURE

Ren.wly redecoreled. V•v nice
apertmenls in downtown Geliipolie. 1 &amp; 2 BA .· unfurnithed,
11cond floor, from 1176-•225 .
Dep. II ref• en~ required. Call
:~~ .81 4·4.. 6-2326 or 448-

lft"'•fm. Boctv aood. ru('a uc•
1.... Coli 814-tU-1722.

c.,.•.l14-441·1841.

Mod•n 1 SA apartment. Call
814-448-0390.

weekends.

1875 Ford Etlte. auto, pe. pb,

1400 sq. ft. commercilll apace
suitable for officet. rfltlllling. or

Vellav Furniture
New tnd ueed tumiture end
appllcances. Call 814-448·
7572. Hours 9 -&amp;.

14x70 2"'' BR ., 2 b ..h mobile
home on one sere. for Sale or

tion. French City Brok.,.g•
114-448-9340.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•k.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Alln.ltl lrail.-e. Cell 814-8127479.

elactric held:. Cell 814-44843B~·davt. •4&amp;-0139-even. •

2 BA . ept, StoVe &amp; refrig .
furnithed. Near Go Mart'. Cell

1985 Ov•l.nd Park-14dJ4, 2
BR .• IOtel g•. Excellent condi·

614- 441 - 42~2 .

Trail• •pace In Kya• Cnek
School Dlatrict. 176, i{'dudee. ~
water &amp; garbage. can 614--3877217 .

dryer. ell kitchen eppll•cea.
dinette att. und•pinning. blodl
a. porchM. Call 814· 307-0083.

Trade. C•ll 114-379-2129.

c•

Mobile Homalot. 10ft. or l•t.
920 4th .. Gallipolis. 176. Water
pel d. Ctll8 1 4-446-441 I efttt _7
PM.
'

I.

~~~~~---------- ·

D

G.....,., living. 1 end 2 bod-

APARTMENTS, mobile hom•,
hou. .. Pt. Pl . .ant and G.tlllpollo. &amp;14-441-8221 .
.i

•

.! .

114-112-1301,

1 IR . opt. with atcwo lo nfrlg.
No ptts. f111 1 mo. t100 dep.
Colll14-441-3117':
room lperlfiMnll el Vllega
Menor end AIYenlde APM't·
mentt In Middleport. f!rom
U1 &amp;. lndudlng utllhl•. Cell
814-112·1787. EOH.

~

~:~ :::•-:..:.~~;n~C!U ~

0

O.lllpolll. 121&amp; 'f'O. Na peta.
Call 114-4411-10311.

15:00, pltlee.

V«Yntce2bedroomhouoo.Miy
c•p•ed. recenttv ,.,odeltd.
Pey own utllltl•. dep01it r•
qulr.t. •226. per month with
DISCOUNT . Cell 814 ·992·
8053 ·

w.,.r

Employrnent
Services

0

-'owe·•r.trlg., •

•PI· Private beth. Utlltle1 ..ld.
304-112-2811.

t NOTICE,·
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING. CO, riCOmmendt thll vou
do butin ... w"h peopla You
lmow. •ntfNOT to eend rnon~Wt
through the mlil until you hwe
inv•tig•ed the oH•ing.

. 23

•

"'
,

1871 M•cury. Runninf condition. lody fair . 1325. 8 4 -IU18311.

wet• fu'""hlld. 4~ mil• ftom ·

utl~lot. d'l'oak ....,trod. Coli
114·912-1113. IH-192-1723
Of 114-112-Ziot. Cell ener

VIle St. In Pom•oy. 3 badroom.
g••ea. new kitch•. Depoail
....,trod. Caiii14·99Z-8181.

tamporery rntn~lnlng ord• le k'l
Rr.al tslilte
effect. Ohio Cartifled Teach••
Pool table and living room tuhe willing to crott a plc:ht line
in goOd cond. Call 614-256· thould lmmedietley contact
Meigs local School Superin6666.
31 Homes for Sale
tendent• office. 121 South Third
Wanted to buy- Uted furniture Ave. Mid1hport, Ohio. 4&amp;.7 80.
.
and enttquea. Will buv entire 614-992·2163.
4 BR .. flreo'ace. full Hi,m•t. 3
houNhold ' lurn.hing, Marlin
mi. .o. of GalllpoHs. t32.500.
Couple w1nted for mllintenence · Call Dav•814·44&amp;-18115, efl•
Wedem-ver· 814-245--6152.
of ,.,tel pr0plftill. Living quer·
8'0(). 448-1244.
Us~ Mobile Hom•: Call 814- tars end wetkly wage negotiated.
Send
ref•lncet
end
446-0175. '
By Own•- Off 141 a Neighborresum.t lo The Deily Sentinel.
hood Rd. Nice 3 bedroom,
Real nice pool table. Regulation P.O. B"oz729W, Pom.ay, Ohio.
endOMd brMitwev. attached
5 . Call 614-446-9251 aft• 7
a••a .. Cell 814·797-2441 .
Federal, State and CN-il Service
PM.
Jobt •12,846 to •157,691 per
Br1nd nM 3 BA . n. . Gallipolit
.v-•. Now hlringl Call Job Line ·'Locka
on Rt. 7 . 2o•a••ae. nice
1-l!ii18-•159-3611
E~ttF1822for
Buying daity gold. silver coins,
lot. lmmedi.te poe . .aion. wm
rings, jewelry, .Cerling ware, old info. 24 hr.
coneid• trade In of mobile
coins, l•ge currency: Top prihome. prop.-ty, etC. Blrglln
ces, Ed Burkett Berber Shop, Sai•P•ton naeded, UJ*'i.,ce
priced. Call 814-4-46-8038 . .
in
.....
end
craft•
helpful.
La
2 nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh . 614·
Selle Geltwy, epply in peraOf'l
992-3476.
2 B•*oom hou• on Ch11ter
Monday through Saturday .
Road in Pomeroy. •&amp;oo. Cell
Raw fur. beef end de• hldM. 10,00-5 ,00.
614-317-1287.
Qyn Sing end Yellow ·root. We
hl'tle wheat and nita lite1. O.t paid for reading bookel
Governrft.m "Hom .. for n . (U
Trapping suppli• for 11le. !Buy- t100 . Per title. Write; ACE -31d,
rpM). O.linquen't ta• propertv.
161
S
.
Linoolnwey.
N.
Aurar•.
ll
ing used traps). George Buckley.
Repoe ...slont. Call 805 -887·
60642.
Hours 12 -9. 614-864-478.1.
8000 Ext. GH-1106 for current
repo liet.
AVON · All ., . . . Call Marilyn
QUILTS
304-882-284115
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•
High prices peid for pre-1950
8
Glenwood, WV - 13.6
quitts. Applique. pieced, eny
rooma, 2 baths. ranch ttyie
Recovery
A
oom
Staff
Nuree
co ndition. Cell814-992-2101
home, 304-712-2841 eft• 6
Immediate opening for Regiaor 614-992-5657.
p.m .
\
UHd outdoor color T.V. an tenna. Cell614-992 ·7304.

1811 Chevette AM·FM , P.S.,
P.l .. .llr, naw -·roll¥ wlloalo,
4 door. 4 cyl., auto, C S mod..
13500. 114-912-3211 .

•300•

Nice 2 8111 .pt,.

Television
Viewing

•

Upellirt 3 room a b•h. tu ....
3 8R. hou• • g•eaa. A-l Reel nlthod, Clo... UtiKiotpoid.'Ref. ·
Elllat.. C.rol' Veeg•Brok•. · • d - • rOQulred . .ldulta only.
304-178-8104.
No pot~ Colll14-446-1111.

·. Piano -_Jo. lt't not- in ac.Utnt.
condition. lut It' 1 fr• Call
1,.·441-2201.

1,.·4U-4302.

71 -'uto's For .Sala

2 •~ : ,.,...._,_ n•1 ·
lloor,oooleg1.1ttloor.
mo. .lll utllltlot pold. C.U
114-241-111q, .. 441-1323.

The Daily s8ntinei-Page-9

Poinerov-· Middleport, Ohio ·

fOr Rent

....w-.,,..

KUPIO 'S NEST. Off.. two

1 qultt found onltineon Or, Can
beaMn at 1,115 Battlanl Dr. Call

44 , Apartment

ioxl 00 ft. ..... 4tlo 11. ••, ...
...,,..,.....e
troll•., houot. 114-HZ-3111 Dllu• 3 rooin untu"*Md firlt
floor. Uke new throulh out.
~"(rltoP.O . 'I"" 114,1y-oe.
Prtv1te • qut«. HeM furn6ehecl.
ua1 • .... Coli 114-446-4807
.,441-2102.

3 Announcements

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·N E X W L X H
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WE DRINK TO ONE
' AN0111ER'S HEAL111 AND SPOIL OUR OWN.
.JEROME K. JEROME

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PeQa 10-The Deily s.ninel

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Auxiliary' visits VA hospital
with cakes and fruit bask~ts .
A pre-Christmas visit to 'the
Fruit baskets were taken to
Chllllcothe Vell!rans Hosplt;ll
nine World War I veterans of
,with treats lor the vetllrans there Post 39 a'ld one t o Homer Smith,
was made byfourrnemberofthe who Is now home, along.with Joe ·
American Legion Auxiliary,
Zwilling, Pomeroy, who Is conDrew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy.
fined to Ills horne on State Street.
Ellen Rought, president, Cath-~ The baskets were delivered by
erlne Welsh, Iva Powell, and Jan Mrs. Roug)lt and Mrs. Jenkins . .
Jenkins made the trip to Chilli·
The WWI veterans remembers
.cothe with about a hundred were Oliver Bal(l!y, Reedsville;
veteran·s being provided treats Charles . make, . Racine; Tona
prepared by the Etgl\th District. Boring,. Reedsv.llle; Roberi Burl}nlt 39 took with them two large nem, Racine; Fred Goegleln,
decor,a ted cakes and a box of ·Pomeroy; Albert'l!offner, Pome··
oranges and bananas. Treats · roy; Russell Lincoln, Pomeroy;
· were taken to the wards for Leo Story, Pomeroy, and Homer
patients unable ot . attend the W1llard, Pomeroy.
The ano11al Christmas dinner
party. District 8 hosts two patties
a year at the iaclllty, one In July .of auxlllar:~; members was held at
and the other In December. ·
Cro"i's Steak Hause,

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Laurel Cliff WMFI meets

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Tuesday. January ·s•.1988

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

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Elvis memorabilia display¢d in Atlantic CitY:
valued at $6 million, and includes
ATLANTIC CITY, N.:,, (UP!) . ;:lass cases, along with guitars,
an
empty
bottle
of
champagne
14
cars, a motorcycle, 240 pieces
- Some $3 million worth of Elvis
from
Presley's
wedding
day
that
of
jewelry
and 28 guns.
Presley memora billa, billed as
bears
his
signature,
and
an
array
Some
$3
million of It was on
. the largest .such collection outdisplay In the ballroom of the
side hls Graceland home, went on --of prnately~ngraved R'l!ns. Carl Perkins, author of rocka- · Showboat, he said.
display Monday arthe Showboat
"He's a legend," Velvet said.
Hot!!l, Casino &amp; .Bowling Center. billy's national anthem and the
The display Includes two of song made famous by Preiiley, "Elvis changed the world of
"Blue Suede .Shoes," said the music, hairstyles, clothing. Elvis
Presley's cars - a white RoD$
Royce Silver Cloud III and a 1977 singer himself would be glad to was just·so well-liked and loved .
see his old belongings on displa:f. by his fans . Even people that did .
two:toned Cadllla~ SeYille, the
"It's s6mething that . Eivis . not know him, that were not !)Is
.Ias!.car ever drivel\ ~Y the king of
' ~imseif . is probably . smiling .. ,
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rock 'n' rolL
· ·
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about," Perkins said of the
Fa~Js who paid a $10 admis sion
exhibit. " He said, 'Keep it alive
·
.
price could also · view a wild
cats."'
collection of Presley's gaudy,
The collection belongs -to
chunky jewelry, ranging from
By United Press lnteraatlonaJ
Jimmy Velvet, a friend of Prespendants an.d heavy belt buckles
ley who Is preside!! I of the Elvis
to oversized dlamond·stud.ded
Take.thlll Job and shove II, says ·
Pr,esley · Museum Inc. • Velvet burglar: WINSTON, Ore. (UPI)
rings, as wel,l as two of tlie star's
runs museuins In Memphis and .,.-A ski-masked burglar who was
distinctive concert jump~ults .
several jogging suits, · and Nashville, Tenn., Orlando, Fla., ·surprised while fUllng a pillowaccompanying photographs au - and Honolulu.
, case with household Items tied up
Velvet 's total collection his vicUms' daughter and threathenticating that Presley achi ally wore them, were exhibited In numbers 1,300 Elvis artifacts, tened to shoot her, but then

fans, liked things that Elvis dld. ·: ·. ·
He said the exhibit Is the;
largest collection of·Elv!J!,memo, · ·
ra billa · than has ever been
assembled outsideof Gracelaild,
the Presley mansion In Memphis·
. .,
that was turned Into a museum .
after his deatb in 1917.
·,:
The weeklong display wu •
organized as a tribute to "the.•
King" marking his Jan. 8 ,
birthday.
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Qulf• ks'. lQ
• · the news

Ohio Lottery

'Pistol

Pete'

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756
Pick 4

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Page 'II

82&amp;4·

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her back all the loot and lndi-'!'
cated he was unhappy with hi$ ;.
chosen llrle of work.
·;-. ,
~"I didn't want to do this job in~
tlie first place," the man sal~}':
when surprised Sunday night by'I .
a·womanwhohadstoppedbyher •.
parents' house to feed their cats: -;

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:Vol. 38. No.1 BB
Copyrtphtod , 988.

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"some stability here at the top," Is the fourth
postmaster general to resign In little more than
, three years.
"I leavp this position reluctantly," he said
TueS&lt;jay. ~ '(But) the Postal .Service Is facing
several critical challenges that wUl require a
chief executive willing to commit to three to five
years at the postal helm."
Tisch acknowledged that the deficit reduction
package signed' by President Reagan last month,
which will cost the Postal Service more than $1.2
billion In the .next.two years amid Its modernlza-

general only 17 months ago, leaving 'his job as
president and chief operating officer of the Loews
Corp. He ~aid Tuesday he would return' this spring
. to the.New York hotel and entertainment giantln
a position he would not disclose.
The 61-year-old executive said he also would not
provide an exaci departure date so that the'postal
board would have time to find a successor. Board
Chairman John Greisemer said an Informal
process' would begin immediately .
"Tisch, who repla~ed Aibert C!'sey Aug. 15, 1986,
in ' what the
as. a move to gain
. board described
.
'

Cold·wave

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Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Sleple and guests, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloes
c hildren, Dayton , spent several · and Michael Kloes , Syracuse;
days here recently with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. David Ray Riggs,
'washington, D. C.; Danny Riggs,
Frances Young.
Mrs. Louise Dixon and grand· Columbus; Lisa and Linda
sons, and Denver Curtiss visited ' Riggs, Athens; Mark Riggs,
Sunday evening with Mrs. Lola Virginia; Mr. and Mrs. Rodger
Clark.
Alkire and family , Pomeroy; Mr.
Mrs. Margaret Douglas spent and Mrs. Don Stanley and sons,
the weekend with' Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Paulne Atkins, and Mr. and
Don Gibson, Athens.
Mrs. Bob Jewell and Cheryl,
Mrs . Cora jewell, Mr. and Mrs . Harrisonville.
·
Bob Jewell and daughter . were
Mr . and Mrs. , Bob Alkire
Christmas· dinner guests of Mrs . visited Ray Alkire and Mr. and
Pauline Atkins .
·
Mrs. Howard Gilkey, Columbus,
Mrs. Stella Atkins a nd Miss
on Christmas day.
Ruby Die!)! had as their holiday

' C. TROTI'
By WILLIAM
United Press Internatloaal
LIKE A STll.TUE: A sculptor plans to erect a }2-foot bronze
statue of singer Madonna In her ancestral homeland because
she Is "a syml:&gt;ol for our children and represents a b.itter worlr
thein .In the year 2000."
Walter Pugnl called a news conference In Rome to show off a
2-foot model of the statue, which features Madonna In a .daring
bikini; and says he wants to put It up next month In Pacentro, the
mountain viJlage from • which Madonna's grandparents
emigrated in 1919. He's also Invited Madonna (full name:
Madonna Louise Ciccone) to come when the statue is unveiled In
a small piazza near a ruined medl'eval castle ·tn the center of the
village.
Pacentro's five churches are dedicated to the other Madonna
- the ytrgln Mary- and there have been mild protests about
er ecting a statue of the singer with the sex-kitten lllfage. Pugnl
says his work will be a trll!ute to Italian emigrants who went to
the United States to seek their fortunes . At Madonna's feet are
suitcases representing tbe emigrant Image.

I

BROADCAST DOMINOES: Life Imitates the movies, even
when the movies are just imitating life, There's a scene In
"Broadcast News" In which Holly Hunter's super-serious
newswoman character chastlzes her Industry f()r spending too
much time on fluff rather .than hard news. To prove her JX)I11t.
she shows a film clip of an Intricate . falling-domino
demonstration that was a big !lit on the networks .
So what does NBC feature on the "Today" show Monday?
Yes, footage of an Intricate falling-domino demonstration.
KINNOCK-BIDEN TIME: If Gary Hart can get back In the
presidential race, why can't .Joe Blden get together with his
"speechwriter," British Labor Party leader NeD Klnnocil? ·
The Delaware senator Is making a trip to Britain this month
and Klnnock's office confirmed Blden will make a courtesy call
on Kinnock in London Jan. 12. Blden's Democratic presidential
. campaign started falling apart when It was revealed that he had ·
lifted parts of a speech from a K~ address.
One London gossip ·columnist, Chrl!i Hutehlns of the Today
newspaper, goes so far as to say that the meeting Is a prelude to
Eiden' s re-entry Into the race. "Joe Blden Is to re-enter the
American presidential race with a little help from no less than
Nell Klnnock," Hutchins wrote. " ... Whereas Hart can hardly··
produce Donna Rice on TV to convince the American public that
they were just good friends , Bldenhas succeeded In securing the
coopera tion of the Labor leader ... to whitewash his own folly."

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KING VS. THE DUKE: The King ~nd the Duke had quite a bit •
fn common, says Carl ''Blue S•ede Sboell" Perld•: ".John .
Wayne was a guy who could walk In the room and you didn't
have to turn around," Perkins says. "You felt the presence of
some strong force. In that room. Elvia Presley was that way."
· Perkins Is appearing at a weeklong tribute to Presley in
Atlantic City, N:J ., that is being billed as the largest display Of
Elvis memorabilia outside of Graceland.
·
Perkins says there Is no one around today who has Presley's
star quality, not even Michael .Jacbon, who Perklna suggestS
might have lifted some of his moves from Preiiley. "Stars come
and go," Perkins says. "Eivts· was original. He didn't borrow
from any~ody. He let that music work dOWn through his body.
· He couldn't help but move like he .dld."

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REGULAR .LOW
'\v11od,
• ' . IJie

" back.

Teachers .offer ·$500 reward
for garage hW"Iling ii:tcident
The Meigs Local Teachers

Asaoc~tlon today ortered a $500

Off HECKS Regular

0

Prl~e

Oli A'll

comforters

Limited

merchandise. sor:ry, no.ralnchecks.

0
Off .HECKS Regular Price
On All

Bed spreads
no ralnchecks.

~

MOTHER AND DAUGHTER REUNION: Calli! typecasting
but Vanessa Redgrave Is again playing .the role of mother to
Joley Richardson, her real-life daughter. Redgrave and
J Timothy Dalton, the latest James Bond, are heading a
for thcoming production of Eugene O'NeUI's "A Touch of the
Poet" to mark the centennial of the playwright 's birth.
R\c hardson said she also. played Redgrave's da\lghter In the
movie " Wetherby " but, "We never did scenes together .and
never met so this will be the first time·I've worked with her. " ·
Dalton and Redgrave also have a history, having starred
together In two Shakespeare plays In London last year. "We
always planned to do another play and this is the first
·opportunity to do that," Dalton said. "A Touch" opens Jan. 28 at
London's Xoung VIc theater.

J

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OFP

The Already Marked Down Price

Off HECKS .Regular Price

On All
Arts··&amp; crafts·
IDoes

on.All.

nOt Include yarn or neectlesl ·

Umlted

merchandln.

c
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ralncMc:ks.

WI ftiiiVI 1MI - T TO LIMIT OUANTqtU: 110'1 n - U 1'011 T-ICAL ..lOllS. IIOIIINICII MAY VAIY IIIII TO LOCAL COIIPITITIOIII.

. Open Dallv 9:00 • 9:00; sunday 12 NOon • 6:00 - HOurs May vary At Different LocatiOns.
Sorry, No Layaways or Ralncheclcs on Theil Items. All Items.SUbJect to

Prior sale. styles and Models May vary Per store.

IF YOU'RI-T HAPPY,
. WI'RI rtOT.HAPPY.
EFFICt AT

PRICES

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rewafd fo.r Information leading
to the arrest and conviction of the
person or persons. who recently
burned the.garage of Meigs Local
School Boarq 'member, Jeff
Werry ,-Potneroy.
MLTA· Presldlmt Michael WI!·
tong said that '''fVhlle the Association and the school board may be
engaged In a contract dispute,
ar10n and other acts of violence·
'are Inexcusable."
"A later attempt to burn Mr.
Weriy 's home ~mpted the
MLTA to offer · eward In the
hope that peopl · th lnforma·
tlon will come to · d so that the
perpetrator can be caught and '
prosecuted,'' added Wllfong.
"We realize," said Wilfong
that many people suspect the •
MLTA of being resJ'&gt;onslble for .
the destruction of Mr. Werry's
~arage. That simply Is not true.
. . "Unfortunately, thereareindi·
vtduals who engage ln vandalism
and other acts.during strikes In .
' the hopes that strikers wlll be
blamed for thelt activities. Our

objective Is not only to catch and
punish the guilty party or parties," said Wilfong, "but to
vindicate the MLTA. "
Individuals who believe they

have Information relating· to the
Wercy fire should call tlie Stale
Fire Marshal In Columbus at
1 - 614-864-5510, Wilfong
concluded.

Court hearing underway
Despl~ lone boun of negotiations between the Meigs Local
Teachers Auoclatlon and the Meigs Local School District
Board or Edaculon Tuesday, no settlement WD8 reached In the
teacher• 11trlke wblcb began on Nov. 6.
·
For the'secend conaecuUve day this week, negotiation II!,~
at 1 p.m. Taej~day In Athens b!ltween the negotiating teams of
the two group&amp; wltb federal medlatora, David Thorley aad Ward
WllloD OD band.
.
It wu reported that the boai-d of educ~tloa· team preseated a
propolal wblcb was rejected by the teachen' IISIIOCialloa team.
A prop.al by the teachers' team was rejected by tbe board, It
wu reported. Negotiations continued uaUI about 2: U a.m.
Wednesday moraine.
,
·
,
.
.
Stace no agreement ' was reached ID the settlement,
represeatatlves iii both grouJIII were scheduled to appear today
before ludle Cbarle8 Knlpt In the Melp County Common
Pleas Court ta report on progreaa In negotlatlo111 . .Judce Kalgbt
ordered tbe aegoUatlo•lut ThUI'IIday when be also approved a
temporary llijwactlon qalnst tb~ teache,!'8.

lion efforts, was a factor In his decision to resign
now from the $99,500-a-year post.
Though he had persuaded Congress to scale
back spending cuts the Senate originally pro- .
posed, the final legislation will requi-re the Postal
Service to shoulder extra costs to cover employee
health care and pension benefits·.
The legislation dictates · cuts In opera ling.
expenditures and will slash capital expenditure&amp;
by about 74 ~ent In fiscal 1988 and 1989;
seriously affecting the Postal Service's automation efforts 1 a postal spokesman..sa!d.
'

. m. state _

~emams

By United Press laternallonal
that 4,177 megawatts of electricBone-chilling cold weather ity were used.ln the hour ending
continued to grip Olllo today as at 7 p.m . Monday, breaking the
early morning temperatures wintertime record of 4,105 set
dipped below zero In most areas. Jan . .3, 1979. Company offlclills
Forecasters said little ~ellef was .predicted that a record of 4,400
megawatts would be set
expected until later this week.
In addition to the frigid temper· Tuesday.
atures, the snow belt counties of
Tom Jenkins, a spokesman tor
northeast Ohio were hit with up to Dayton :Power &amp; Light Co:, said
14 Inches of snow.
.
the utility set a one-hour record
Temperatures early today at 9 a.m. .T uesday of 2,295
. ranged from four below zero In megawatts, breaking a 3-yearAkron to two abovl! In Columbus old ~ecord.
and Cleveland, with wlnd chill r Ail electricity peak usage rereadings ranging from 27 below cord also was set In Cincinnati at
zerolnToledoandYoungstownto 9 a.m. Tuesday when 3.184
million kilowatts was being used,
minus eight In Cincinnati.
Cincinnati Post meteorologist breaking the previous record ·of
Tony Sands .had an answer to the 3.141 million set on Jan. 21, 1985.
question of the week: Just why Is
David Osterllinll, a spokesman
It so cold?
tor Ohio Edison In Akron, said the
"It all ties . together wltb the Increased consumption, forced
huge gears . that operate the the company to buy energy from
weqth~r machine. One gear has
other 10urces Monday.and Tues·
tockl~g- Ill, J1l•CI!~ tJie .day ~B.~se~oU~IIecJII!tl!', J11tJo·,
. - GultM'ArKsltaallilaslhPliiSina · tenance shutdowns and a water
counterclockwise motion, It · shortage caused by the oil sp1llln
drags huge churiks of cold Arctic . Pennsylvania.
air and spins them south to liS on , Ohio Edison's plant In Ship-'
the jet stream. Insho~t. weare on plngport, Pa., was operating at
the white stripe In the middle of · near-minimum levels to con·
the highway called winter." · . serve water needed .for Its
TemJM:ratures are expected to ·cooling towers. Theplantlsabout
dip below zero again tonight In
most of the state. The National
. Weather Service predicted lows
ranging from five to 10 below
zero . In northern Ohio to five
below to five·above In the central
. and southern sections of the
_
state. ..
Slightly warmer temperatures
a~ expected Thursday, but snow
By MICHAEL O'MALLEY .
Is. In the forecast for ,s outhern
United Press International
Ohio.
A massive .oil slick lapped the
At mid-afternoon Tuesday, the shores of Ohio communities
high temperature In the .state along the Ohio River today as
was only 13, and wlnd-chlll municipal water department ofo
readings were as low as minus 30. flclals kept wary eyes on reserve
More than two dozen school tankS and water Intake valves In
districts In the northeastern part East Liverpool were closed for
of the state canceled classes the second day, forcing some
Tuesday and several called off 30,00jl people to conserve water.
r:lasses today.
The · oil slick reached Ohio
In Geauga, Lake and Ashtab- communities In Columbiana and
ula couniles, snow squalls Jefferson counties Tuesday.
whipped by 30 mph gusts brought
East Liverpool Mayor James
vlslbll1ty to zero at times. Be- Scaflde closed schools Tuesday
tween 9 and 141nches of snow was and asked residents to conserve
· on ·the ground In the three water. He said the reserve .tanks
counties ..
held enough water to serve 30,000
Portions of Interstate 90 were Columbiana Count:v residents for
closed at times Tuesday due to 36 hours.
.
the blowing and drifting snow.
." We're asking (people) to
The bitter cold also forced conserve water as much as
several utilities to generate re· possible and we're pointing put
cord amounts of electricity.
'that we are facing a real
The Ohio Edison Co. reported emergency her"e /'. Scaflde said

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20 miles northwest of Pittsburgh
on the Ohio River, where •
massive oil spill has caused
water shortages.
:.
The South Central Power Co.;
which serves 57,000 customers in .
18 counties south o! Columbus;
Issued a peak usage alert Tues~·
(lay . The company asked Its customers to turn back thermos;
tats two degrees, limit the lise o!
hot water and major appliances,
and to reduce lighting In order to
avoid lnten:uptlons of power due
to too much demand.
Meanwhile, Linda Harris of
Yorktown, Va., was rescued
overnight Tuesday by Akro!l
pollee atter she ran out of gas and
scratched "God Help Me" In the
ice on the Inside of her
windshield .
She told pollee she had a fight
wtth her family and decll:led to go
to Clevelan!l to .vtlllt !11!1' (or:nwr

~e~n4.'' .~[,. ~ !fit . t~tr.

ex-husbands house, she ran out
of gas on a city street In Akron,
but had no money and was afraid
to venture out in the cold.
Pollee took her to a shelter for
.the homeless, where she planned
· to ,, spend a few days before
heading back to Virginia.

Oil .slick hits Ohio
River ·c ommunities
during his second day as mayor.
The mayor said a china and
pottery manufacturer, the city's
largest employer, dlscon\lnued
Its water operations and he asked
area greenhouses, laundries and
car washes to turn off their taps.
Eisht Draw Water
Eight Ohio cities - East
Liverpool, Toronto, Steubenville,
Bellaire, Chesapeake, Ironton,
Portsmouth anQ Cincinnati draw watt:r from the Ohio River.
East Liverpool schools were
scheduled to reopen today, wlth
classes beginning one hour later
than usual. The mayor said
students wo11ld be served cold
meals on paper plates 111 an
attempt to conserve water. The
school system also canceled gym
classes because of the lack of
water for showers.
East Liverpool was the only.
community · that closed water
Intake val yes Tuesday.
'•

Repair .w ork qt G~llipolis dam ·
backs up traffic · along 'Ohio
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Harrisonville happenings

-People in ·th-e news--

· 2 Sections, 1 41'ogeo 2&amp; Cents"
A MultlmocHo tnc. N o w - ·,,

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WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ · Preston Tisch' s
surprise decision to resign as postmaster general
lollows the loss of a fight against legislation that
siiiPB tough new· spendl,ng constraints on the
Postal Service.
,
· In announcing his move after the -monthly
meeting of the Postal Service Board of Governors,
however, Tisch Insisted, ''I am absolutely not
· leaving (simply) beca~ of the legislation. In
fact, It is keeping me h~ longer than I might
. :Otherwise hav~ stayed."
• TiSch became the nation's 68th postmaster
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.

enttn·e

.Tisch·to step down as postmaster· general

· Thirty-six mission boxes were. Janice Haggy, Marge Fetty ..arid
,
. prepared by the Laurel C!l~fFree Kay Clark. · ·
Methodis t WMl"' In December · Iva Powell was named news
with the members and their reporter for the group. Mrs.
families delivering and caroling Haggy gave a program on
the recipients.
" Reflecting Images of Light"
At a recent meeting held at the with the members reading scriphome of Wanda Eblin, a program ture verses on light. Evelyn
on .the the me " Fact or Fantasy, Stanley won th.e friendship
Myth or Reality" was presented. basket. Refreshments were
Prayer by Belinda Soulsby served by Brenda Haggy and
opened the meeting wlth scrip- Donna Gilmore with Jonny
Friend assisting. Vicki Bell Will
ture from St. L.uke being read.
Taking par t were Kathy Pullns, host the next meeting.
Wanda Eblin, Bonnie· Friend,

.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 6. 1988

.

Cloudy tonlpt. Low ~
tween zero and live above.
Sn- likely Thursday. H11118
In 20s.
·
·

'

" HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
the gate I!Dtll permanent repairs ·
- commercial traffic on · the are made, Ripley said.
Ohio River Is backing up at the
"We have · to be extremely
.GaiHpoUs LOc.ks and Dam as the careful how ·we handle this
Army Corpill of Engineers tries to problem. ·It we should mlsjudae.
rejlalr a 250-pOund wedge that the worst case scenario wouiC: be
has rendered a aate on the main If l)ie gate should, Ult or topple,"
lock chamber IDOjlerable.
he said: ''We would have to do
The ~· a la,rge piece of some tall b~ain wor" 1-f that
metal that bolda the aate In happens. We have to keep It (the
piace, pOpped out Sunday and aate) In a vertical pciiiUon."
broke a bolt, makiD&amp; the 360-ton
"There Ia no ftolltlq crane on
;ate "all but lmpoaalble" to tlie Ohio River between Pittsoperate, said Corpill spokesman ·bureh aliCillle Mlualallppi ft!ver
Colrid Rlptey.
•
that can 1Ift that cate," besatd.
Tile pte Ia one of two on the " Wltb tbe main locll. chamber
mala lOCk cbamber tbat come unuaable. moat . bar&amp;et were
toptlllrtotonna"V''toprevent belD&amp; routed lhroUih aamaller
•ater fl'llm OOWlDI throuih aa awdllary chamber that .Ia about
the locklllla. · •
·
ball_aa bla tile IIIJID chamber• .
After 1111b'Zina the problem, · "We can't 11111 the lll*ln Jock
the CariJI diCided 'l'lleldb' tO Cbamber and ' the pmr!Jiary
........._ i
wedp that chamber II 01117 380 feet lonJ. A
would illolf uatneers to IICIIJ'I! fuU·Ille tOW on tbe OIIJo today

•porary

'

''

wlll run about 1,150 feet In length,
including the boat and the barges
It's pushing," he said.
Ripley said the larger barges
had to be broken down Into
sections ·and sent' through the
auxiliary lock piece by piece, a
chore that can take up· fO' five
hOurs to'Complete.
.
By Tuesday afternoon, 15
barae* were sitting In the rivernine upstream and . ·aile down·
stream - waiUJii to pus
throllih the locks, Ripley &amp;ald .
Repalrlnl tbe brolten iate
could talce BII)'Where 1rom 10
d~ to lllx weeki, dependiDa oa
the auceesa of the temporary
wedp, he Hid.
"II we're IUCCHiflli wlth the
temporary wedp, wecaaaetthe
Jock - a lleCIIl'e poiiUOft to fJx, 11 ·
.vie can't do tbaj1 ~·n fall back .

on Plan B.. wbn •

lnvnted yet," he old .

lla~'t

...
. ..,...
.....
a

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