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PeQa 10-The Deily s.ninel

. ...

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
· ·
·
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'

J

. Daily Number
756
Pick 4

dies
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

'

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.

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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.

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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.

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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.
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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,

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

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

�•

t .

..

. : ..,

'

The Daily

Comlnent

.
•

'

The Daily Sentinel

.
. .

u; .s. to develop burro~ warhead
~

.

.

•

.

WASHINGTON- The U.S. Air without a prolonged political de·
At~·
Force Is working feverishly , and
bate..
..
.secretly, on a nuclear warhead
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
Our weapons wizards don't
per square Inch, The old sys'
lllb
. ..
.
,. that will burrow deep Into· the have an exclusive "on this enter· · · not So,vlet,.m.!sslle silos. Consld· · sure
tern's
chances ·against the -ultra.·
earth and ake mlncement out of
prise. The Soviets are believed·to erlng that the Hiroshima bonib
~~ ""-'L...TI ..........
silos
Is
15 pecen$.
•
Soviet uridergorund mtssUe sUos
\le perfecting their own earth-pe· . as In the 14-klloton range, the
The U.S. Navy has separately,
ad control bunkers.
netratlng warhead, but thelr :job W62 sounds like It could produce
developed
a mlssUe, the D5, for
have
learned
that
bOth
We
ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Is easier. Soviet missiles are bu· major destruction. Notmajor·en·
use
In
the
Trident
II stibmarJne-.
Lockheed
and
General
Electric
Publisher
rlecf deeper and ai more sites ough, hOwever, for today' s state
.
launched
missile
system.
with a·
have been working on more tbjln
than U.s. silos.
. of the art war.
·
"dial-a-blast"
capablllty
from
.$5 million In Air Force contracts
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
Pentagon sfrateg!Sis 1\ilve long
U.S. mlllary leaders decided to
seven
to
335
kilotons.
·
· to proouc.e prototypes of these
Aula~t PubllsbertConlroUer ·
General Mana1er
figured It would take two U.S. nu- upgrade the Minuteman III&amp; with
of
MX
missiles
with
~ ·
Deployment
eartb-penet·ratlng warheads by
clear warheads tO take OUt each the DeW W78 warhead, WhiCh bea
~to
500-idloton
blut
"wouldmtd-1988. The Departent of En·
Soviet sUo. These would have to be gan production In 199l.. With their
A MEMBER o(The United Press Int~rnatlonal, Inland Dally Press
ergy,
wblcb
has
responslblllty
warhea~~&amp; with "hard-target capf,l·
335-klloton wallop, more than 1,00! give the U.S. lntereontlnental bal·
Association and the Amel'lcan Newspaper Publishers Association. .
for production of nuclear weabUlly," meaning they could cles· of these warheads hav!! been pro- ltstlc mtssne force a much -Im-LETTERS OF OPINION are wetc:ome. They should "be less Chan 300 words
pons, has a piece of the research
troY underground mlssUe silos dl!ced and mounted on Minuteman proved time-urgent bard-tarliet!
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name. address and
on this project, too.
reinforced with steel and concrete. ms along with li new gu~ce sys- kill capability," the ACDA report_
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be 1n
,
, •:
· The United States already has
(In twisted nuclear parlance, tern lncreaslngtheaccuracy of the says. .
good taSte, addressing issues, not personalities.
..,
,
The
earth-buiTOW!ng
war~d
nuclear warheads which have a
''soft" targeisarecltles andpeo- missiles by 25 percent.
slim chance Of taking out the
, The secret ACDA report says would he a monumentallmprov~~ . .
pie.)
strongest Soviet missile silo with
A highly classified report by that with ~he new W78 wa~heads, ment over the Minuteman Ilf,;ille.·
a hit on the surface abOve the
the Arms Control and Dlsarma- a. single Minuteman III mlssUe 015 and the MX because It would •
silo. The new burrowing war~
ment Agency notes that the Jar· has a 76 percent chance of des· explode underground, close to the' ·
head, Instead of !lurstlng In the . gest force of U.S. missiles able to troylng a Soviet silo h~dened to suos and command centers, max.:
air over Its target, will cozy up
destroy hard targets are the up- wlthstland pressure of600pounds lmlmlzlng the chances of succells.
DEFECTORS STALKED next to the silo deep In the ground
graded Minuteman Ills. Before per. square lncl\. The previous
.KGB
agents who defect to the West
and explode at a certain, preset . the upgrade, they were topped system, with W62 warbeads, but
By STEVE GERSTEL
have
a grim fate awaiting therifU
'
depth.
with three W62 warheads, each only a 51' percent chance. The
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - In the waning days of the year duril)g
American nuclear weapons decapable of a 170-kiloton blast and updated Mlnutell'lan UI also has they are ever_caught by the Sowhich this country
celebrated the 200th anniversary of the
signers
belelve
the
new
waronly suitable, according to the .a 35 percent cl!ance of destroying vtets. The threatened sentenCI! of a
Constitution, .Congress tried like hell to ,violate the spirit or that
heads
could
be
fitted
on
U.S.
weareport to blf "soft urban lridust- · an ulra·hard Soviet sUo built to KGB defector Is to be shot In the
amazing document
·
pons by the mld-19oos. But not
rial ·a11d military targets," but
lthstand 5,300 pounds of pres- back of the head in frOnt of hts
The back-alley maneuver might well have succ~ed had not
tanner oomrades. FQrtunately, 1t
President Reagan been Insistent, although his motivation seemed
ts. only a threat. Our sources tell us
less a concer~ for. the purity of the Constitution and.more a politicaJ
that the Soviets, In splteofthelr bit
consideration.
·
Ust, have never been able to assasAt Issue was the Fairness Doctrine, which required broadcasters to
sinate one of their turnooat KGB
cover controv_erslal - Issues of public Importance and provide
agents. In fact, for at least the past
reasonable opportunity for discussion of conflicting views.
20 years, they have been unabl~ to
First put Into effect as Federal Communications Polley In 1949, the ·
lay a finger on defectors. That
doctrine was widely assumed to be law after Congress 10 years later
hasn't stopped KGB officials from
"Included a reference to It In legislation. It was upheld by the Supreme
clrculatlng false reports among'
. ~ourt In 1969.
. ,the ranks that any· past defectOrs .
. In 1986, however, an federal appeals court opened the way for
to the West have been ellmlnat.ed.
' reconsideration when It judged that the Doctrine had never been
VOLCKEit'S
- WARNING- Rea·
.
written Into law.
'
gan administered oHJctals wbo see
It Is of some .I nterest that two of the judges on thl!l court were
baffled· by the er~tlc behavior o(
Antonln Scalia, who has since been elevated tb the highest 't ribunal,
the ~tock marked had to IQok no
.and Robert Bork, who was set to join brother Scalia unlll the Senate
farther than their awn Federal Resrefused to confirm him.
·
·
erve Board cbalrmaa 1nr a warning~
' Faced with the FCC's stated Intent to repeal the doctrine, which
elf what wu to come. Paul VOicker,
occured Aug. 4, Congress galvanized Into action, hoping to head off
whO thenlJeld the job, lnvlted to 11ft.,
the Commission ambush.
c1a1s tn:m the Treasury Dl!part.',
· The House approved legislation making the Fairness Doctrine law
meat and banking !I&amp;I!Ddes to
302-102 and the Senate promptly foUowed 59-31.
monthly breakfast ~~~!~~liOns · last !.
President ~eagan vetoed the bill June 20 and Senate ·backers,
suinma- at which he ~ his; realizing the two-thirds majority to pverrlde could not be reached,
fears about the market '!be meet·.never even made the attempt.
litgs were strictly secret Volcker '
That should have been the end of the matter under an honest
warned biB guests about the boom· .
reading of the Gonstitutlon. The Constltiltlon Is quite specific on the
jog growth of the market and·
!!Oint.
blamed It on exeess1ve· borrowing:
. ~ "Every Bill which shall have passed the House of Represeqtatives
and reeliles~ speculatloa, but no
and the Senate. shall, ·before It becomes a Law. be presen~ed to the
one woold lis~, He told.an aide at-)
:eresldent of the United States; I! he approves, he shall sign It, but If
ter one Of tlie li'€akfast secsslons, .
:not he shall return it with his objections to that House In which It shall
'"'bbs whole thing 1,s going to blow
· :llave originated, together with his Objections, who shall enter the
up, and It's going to be the fa!llt of
-Qbjectlons at large on their Journal, and proceed to reconslder ·lt. lf
the White House."
'after such Reconsideration two thirds of that House shall agree to
pass the Bill, It shall be sent, togethP.r with the Objections, to the other
l:fouse, by which It shall likewise be reconsidered, and If approved by
two thirds of that House, It shall become a Law."
·
Unfortunately. the framers of the Constitution never. envisioned a
LO§. .ANGELES (NEA) Overburdened government In·
blowers ·u p to 10 percent of the eludes ·what Phillips character.legislative concoction S!JCh as the Continuing Resolution, which
From dishonest doctors who vestlgators. and prosecutors can
funds recovered In successful •lzes as "state-of-the-art whistleIncluded In one, single bill every appropriations measure for fiscal
overcharge tor Medicare servi- handle only a fraction of those
prosecutions. ·
blower protection" that 'applies•
1988 and also' became a haven for much that could never on Its own
ces
to
greedy
Pentagon
contraccases
but
honest.
employees
to
"any employee who IS dis- .
In
1943,
however,
a
U.
S.
-IJ.ave made It through Congress or escaped a veto on Its own.
..
tors
who
concoct
phony
expense
working
for
government
contraccharged,
demoted, suspended,
Supreme
Courf
decision
and
a
."But the most blatant example of piggy-backing on the flscal1988
claims,
fraud
permeates
v.lrtutors
consltute
a
vast
pool
of
threatened,
harassed or In aily
series
of
amendments
enacted
by
money bill - deemed ·to contalp too many necessary. Items for
ally
all
programs
financed
by
the
potential
whistle-blowers
who
mamler
discriminated
againSt"
Congress made the law virtually .
Reagan to veto - was surely the Fairness Doctrine.
federal
government.
could
provide
personal
testimIn connection with a fraud claim.
useless and unenforceable.
• Despite Reagan's many veto !bre11ts during the year , he vetoed
"Most fraud goes undetected,"
ony and -docull'lented evidence of
In the 14 months since the
After !dentlfylng the law, Phil·
only three bills. Two, the clean water and highway bill vetoes, were
says the Generl\1 Accounting wrongdoing.
lips (who Is co-director of the amendment$ were enacted, 40
overrlden but the third. the Fairness Doctrine. did not have that kind
Office. "For those who are
"There are thousands of cases
Center for Law In the ,Public civil suits - have been flied,
of support and should have been put aside for at least the ye.r.
caught...the chances of being out there," says John R. Phillips;
Interest) Initiated a determined Including 19 against McDonnell
prosecuted and eventually going a thoughtful public Interest laweffort to transform It Into a Douglass, Rockwell .Internato jail are slim.... The sad truth Is
yer In Los Angeles who In 1983
modern statute that would offer tional, Ray\heon, Northrop,
that . crime against t-he governbegan a ·search for some menas
'
would-be whistle-blowers two TRW and other Defense Department,often does pay." ·
"to revolutionize the enforce,
crucl!!l Inducements - -subs~n­ ment contractors.
The Justice Department estiment of fraud against the
Norte
of
the
40
cases
has
yet · .
tlal financial rewards and protecmates that · fraud accounts for 1 government."
.
been
tried,
but,
In
10
C?f
ther)l,
the
tion against employer
• · percent to 10 percent of the
What he found _was a federal
retaliation.
· Justice Department has Joined
TO THE MEIGS LOCAL TEACH·
Also I would like to see that the federal budget. With the governlaw more than a cl!ntury old, the
After a protracted legis Ia live the plaintiffs. (It declined to ·
ERS ASSOCIATION.
substitute teachers 1M! given an ment now spending' about $1
False Clafms Act Qf 1863. It was
struggle, the amendments were become Involved lh lS others and .
: In regards to the letter which I . opportunity to compete for per- trillion per year, that's$10 billion
enacted dur-.the Civil War to
Incorporated Into the law In . Is still reviewing the remaining.·
. . .
recently received, I would like to
manent positions In the Meigs to $100 billion lost to crooks and
help prosecute"''ll!&gt;se who substl·
October 1986. ' Among the new U.)
~Y that I consider ninety per- ·Local School District.
cheaters annually.
tuted sawdust for gunpowder In
Phllllps envllions a future of
provisions Is a guarantee that
cent or this Information as false
The abOve opinions are mine
Those determined to defraud
the munitions they sold to the
whistle-blowers will 'r eceive 15 exponential growth "that could
' and mls!eadlrig. At present our
alone and may put my family tn a the government Include lndlvlduUnion Army and others who
percent to 30 percent (depending result In bllllons of dollars ·
$Chools are open and the substi·
dl!!lcult situation, but I will pro- . als who submit Inflated claims
double- or triple-billed the goupon the circumstances of the pouring Into the federal treastQte teac hersa re quality profesteet them and iny right to ex- for everything from crop subslvernment for horses.
case) of the money recovered by ury'' while providing an effective ·'
sionals, who are doing a great job
press · my views and opinions dies to disaster relief, as well as
To thwart · fraud that was
the government In a successful means for consclence-strlcken
within th~ law, unless forced to those holdlngfederalcontractsto
under th~ circumstances being
rampant during the C!vU War,
prosecution.
workers to reveal 'fraudulent
cteated by the striking teachers.
do otherwise.
.·
provide goods and services.
the statute offered w_hlstl~·
In additiOn, the statute in, Q practices,
Tl)ese striking teachers are set'
. Robert ImbOden
tli)g such a fine·example for our
33562 New Lima Rd.
fjllldren-an example lor which
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Others would be condemned.
Ill C8ut1 Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Kyger ·creek routs Wahama five, 92-.5 8

Paga 2-The Deily Saalinal
Parneroy-Mil;ldlaport. Ohio.
Wedrtt;'ay, ~~6.1988 ·

7

By Jack Anderson arid Dale Van

I

do.;q ·

..

Bypassing structures
of the Constitution

Helping.Uncle · Sam fight fraud

FALCON JUMPS ::... Wabama'• Brad 8umprner, wllb ball,
jumpa to shoot two of his leam·hllh 18 potnta In tbe first baH of ·
Tuesday ill1ht'a non-leape colltelt 11abllt boal Ky1er Creek. ·
Bobcat forward Mike Bradbury (4%) defeacls on the play. The
Bobcats won 92-58. (Trlbune ·photo by G. Spencer~Osbome)

.....

Highlanders .trip

OVCS for first

...-.
•

PATRIOT - The SouthwestJoey Hammond, a 5-8 sopllO·
- .. ,ern Highlanders halted a nine- . more, recelv~ hts promotion
gaine losing- streak Tuesday
from the Highlander reserves
night by . handing Ohto· Valley
and played his first varsity
Christian School's Defenders a
game. He scored three pOll! Is and
62-53 loss, ·
had a like number oj rebounds.
"We were Ice cold In the first
Tlie Highlanders shot 23 of 57
half,"' said Highlander coach
from the field, for 40.3 percent,
Gregg Dee! of his charges, who
while the Defenders sank 21 Of 58
were behind- 28-23 at halftime
from ll)e floor, for 36.2 percent.
before catching fire and switchSouthwestern was 9 for 21 from
Ing defenses on the visiting
the charity stripe, for 42.8 perDefenders.
cent. Ohto Valley went 11 for 20
The expected matchup, pitting ·from the line, for 55 percent, ,
6-3 sophomore pivot Shawn
Southwestern, .now 1-9 overall,
McNeal against junior John
will return to SVAC play Friday
J&lt;eenan, the Defenders' 6-4 cennight against league co-leader
ter, was scrl!pped by Dee!, who . Southern.
opted to put 6-1 forward Mike
SOUTHWESTERN _(82) ,_
WlllJ!I!t' a-galYI'~tt&lt;e~nan'and liave' Mershon 1-5-0-&amp;-17; Wa~er5-1·1· ·
his-' Highlanders play man-to- t14; McNeal 5-0-1-5-11; White
man defense. "We stsrted off the 2-1-1-1-8; Hively 2·0-3-1-7; Ham.. game with a zone- (jexense, but mond 0-0-3-1-3; Bryant 1-0-0-2-2;
when John was doing It outside as Darnell 0-0·0·2·0. TOTALS well as Inside, we went ·to . 14-7-9-18-82
ma·n-to-man," said Dee!.
OVCS (53) - J. Keenan 9-0-3-521;
Gllllam4-0-4-4-12; Call4·0·1·3·
'
John Keenan. whose older 9; Patterson 3-0-0-4-6; E. Keenan·
brother Eric Is also his team- 1-0-3-3-5. TOTALS- 21-0·11-19-53
Score by quarters .
_
·matci, led all scorers with 21
points. He also bad 10 of the ovcs .............. 14 14 6 19-53
12 11 15 24-62
' Defenders' 24 rebOunds. Dave SWHS..........
Reserve game score- Southw· Mershon . led the Highlanders
with 17 pdlnts, 15 of which came estern 28, OVCS 24
·-Top scorers - Jesse Ehman
on three-pointers. McNeal had
exactly haU of the Highlanders' (Southwestern), 22 points. Dax
Hill (OVCS), 10 points.
28 rebounds.

Robert Walters:

.

Redmen·
lose tilt
.

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•

Concerned grandparent

'' fo WhOm It May Concern:
, "''ve read the piece In the paper
from the concerned parent abOut
tbe strike In the Meigs Local
8ehool District. I, too, share the
same vieW as this parent. During
strikes some people lose all sense
of reality, and do ungodly things! '
Some of the vandalism that has
occurred Is all uncalled for, such
as mustard . ori parents' ca,rs,
threatening phone calls and
letters, destruction of personal
property, and mainly spitting on
substitute teachers and using
abusive language, and to thl~k
these are the teachers that are
teaching our children and
grandchildren.
During ·. my time· working
around coal mines, I've had to
cross the picket lines several
times and I Blood up for what I
believed In and I'm not sorry for
doing so. I .think there II some
B.S. coming from the M.L.T.A.
and I believe the public knows it.
The_M.L.T.;,. waa wanting to put
a levy on the ballot In May and
since everything that hu happened, It would be hard to get one

(ij

at buzzer, 77-76

to letter

Privacy vs. right to know

passed.
The United States Government
wanted to tske the teachers
retirement fuDd and put It In with
Social Security, but the teachers
wouldn' accept lt. Then why
should I as a senior citizen and
taxpayer pay higher taxes to get
these teachers. more money.
I'm glad to know tha,t we have
a school bOard smart enough to
1\now you can't give money away
when there Is no money to stsrt
with.
·
What these teachers lrave done
will have to face a higher·board
than the school board.ljust want
to ny sometimes you can go too
far. You might as well get It In
your head these high wages must
come down. When tbe wages
drop so will the cost Of ilv!ng.
I believe the chUdren of Melp
County have auffered enough,
·because they are the ones losing
the most.
Sincerely yours,
Ben R. Batey
. ..
P.S. My heart goes out to Mr. Jeff
Werry and family for their Joss.
... -.,~; '

.

By Sarah Ovenlreel
rules, yet he thumbed his nose at
Gary J{art'e re-entry Into the the')lolltlcal watchers and 'dared
. preslderltlal r~ce heated up an them to catch blm doing someongoing discussion I've waged thing he knew would rUe some
with several of my friends since voters.
he droppi:od out In May.
But my friends are as apalled
I use the noun "discussion" at the Invasion of Hart's privacy
because we've been clvlllzed. as I was a Hart's press-blaming.
abOut It; they like me and respect . They don't like the Idea of
my opinions, an!l I like them and )Qurnallsts staking out Hart's
respect theirs. But I use the verg townhouse. And they don't like
. "wage" because, at times, the reporters asking •'Have you ever
dlscusslop ' hasn't been too committed adultery?" IIDY more
pleasant.
·
than Hart liked answering the
My friends dldn' t like the question. It made their skin
·
press's coverage of hart; an() I crawl.
dld!t't like Hart's reaction to 11. I
I don't think I'll ever fully
was disgusted at the way he . agree with my friends; because
whined and blamed the press, I'll never get over the Idea that
· InStead of owning up to.recklesa the presidency Ia the 11101t
judgment. I use t,lle word "Judg- Important job In the nation, and
ment'-' lnatead of "behavior" · that having a full portrait" of . a
~ause .I .thjnk hll reckle~~~nesa
penon alves me a better idea of
In judRJilent nysmore about . who to endorse fot the job.
moral character and fitaess to Nearly· 30 years later, John
lead than his behavior does.
.Kennedy's daring woman1z1ng
I've always !bought of the makes me furloua as In Hart's
political arena as a conatderably cue, not It! much tor the deecll
heated kitchen; one you ouahtlo themselves, but tor hli IIOiestsy out of If you can't atand a thumbilig. Thatcoaveyedueue
charred Image._Hart knew the that Kealll!dy thoqlrt he wu the
·moa~ powerful man In tbe United

'

SVAC land' '
8 . Ings

victory of year

-Letters
io
·the
editor
..
Responds

0.

&gt;

~

'

By GEOFF OSBORNE
the Falcons out of position for·
KYGER CREEK (92)- Leach : _2·0·1·1·5; Grimm 1-0-0-4-2; Ro~~
OVP Staff Writer
.
many a rebOund.
4-3-0-3-17; Loveday 7·0·3·3·17; 0-0-2-1-2, Noble 0-0·0·1-0 .
Kyger Creek placed five playThe BobCats who were ahead
Br11dbury 4-0-7-2-15; Hodge 7-0-0- TALS - 22·1-13-20-58
,
•~· •
1
th
'
1-14· Denney 4·1·0·2·11· Reese
Score by quarters
.
erslndm~blef'6Krescor ngas e from wire to wire, put up the first
. '. .
.......,_ -0. : Nibert wahama ........ : ... ll 15 14 18-58
Bobcats downed Wahama forth~ point~ of. the game on a long 2 0-3 2- 7• Peny • 0 24 • ·
KCH~
32 15 20 25 92
second time this season beating l ·
f
Le h 45
·d
1-0-1-Q-3; VIllanueva 0·0·0-1-0.
.,.. ..... .........
~ .
.
,
umper rom
ac
secon s TOTAUI at+u 1s- 92
Reserve game - Wahama 46 1
the White ·F alcons 92·58 at Into the contest.'T hey were ahead
· ·
KCCHS 31
Cheshire Tuesday night.
as mu.ch as 23-:i late In the first . 6- ";~~a~~i~i -:Q.~~~f.a~~~ ·
Top sco;ers ·_ Tom McDermitt
BobCat senior forward Bill quarter before finishing their
~; ;,.o.:.\. 4.7. Barnltz 2. 2•0. 6; (Wahama), 20 points. Matt Nl!
Loveday and junlor...guard Chad affairs In round one wltl) a 3~,11 . ~ lte 1 11-4 a;.6. M Dermltt bert (KCHS) 13 pci!nts.
Leach tied for game honors with · · advantage.
.
n
· · •
c
•
17polntseach.Lovedayhad10of ·. In the second quarter the •--------.-----------------+~
:1
lh!! 'Cats' 37 . rebOunds. Mike BobCats eased Into cruise mode,
Bradbury, the .· other . BobCat maintaining their 21-polnt lead
.•
·
forward In Scoft Stemple's tWo· Into the locker room at halftime.
'
forward, three-guard offense, By this time Loveday had racked
ALL GAMES
Eastern ............. .. 2 .4 254' 32~
chipped In 15, markers and six up 13 points, while Bumgarl)er TEAM
w i. p OP Kyger Creek ........ O 6 215 310
1
'
24 24 2216 2216
rebOunds . Sen or Theron Hodge had 11. In the thh'd quarter , tbe Hannan Trace .....8 2 197 633 TOTALS
Tuesday's
results
came off the bench and found BobCats stepped on the gas when Southern .............. ? 2 749 548
Kyger
Creek
l¥.!.
W
ahama
58
time to score 14 points, all on Leach hit a pair of tbree-polnt Oak Hill .............. 7 2. £21 545
Southwestern
62.
OVCS
53
Inside layups. Junior guard Alan Jumpers and Denney sank one of ' North Gall Ia ........6 4 626 653
Friday's games •
Denney , the other BobCat to post his own to put the hosts on top by Eastern ...............3 4 450 517
•
North
Gallla
at }Iannan Trace • ·
double figures , came off the 28 as the quarter wound down.
Symmes Valley .. .3 · 6 551 716
bench to score 11.
·The outside game, though, was Kyger Creek ........ 4 6 601 597 Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
Brad Bumgarner, the Falcons' only a change of pace, as the · Southwestern .. ..... l 9 563 730 Southwestern at Southern
Symmes Valley at Eastern
6-3 cepter, led his team with 16 BobCats continued to exploit the ..
SVAC O~LY
points. Teammate Bart Davis Falcon laCk of · size Inside for .
(Varsity) ·
NFL playoffs
scored 14.
layup points. The samethingwas TEAM
W L
P OP
. Jan. 9
"Their height hurt \IS, " said trueofthefourthquarter, though Southern ... ........... 5 1 533 351
AF.
C
Divisional
Playoffs
.
Wahama coach, Lewis Hall, who at this point the Bobcats had put Hannan Trace ..... 5 1 488 388
lndlauapoUs at Cleveland, :
had Bumgarner . as his post In their some of their reserve Oak Hill ... :....... ... 5 1 449 375
12:30 p.m.
,
player against the 6-6 Loveday players and were working to- North Gallla ......... 3 3 397 439
NFC Divisional Playoffs
and the 6-5 Bradbury. " Loveday ward completing their 34-polnt Eastern ... :.......... .-3 . 3 386 437
Minnesota at San Francisco,
'4 p.m.
controlled the boards," Stemple victory.
Symmes Valley ... 2. 5 400 511
Jan. 10
said of Loveday, who with
"If we have the same lritenslty
Kyger Creek-. ...... 1 5 344 395
NFC
Divisional
Playoffs
Bradbury had . free rein on the against. Oak Hill that we had Southwestern .. ..... 0 6 355 456
Washington
'at
Chicago,
Inside, while they and their agalnsi Wahama tonight, " said TOTALS
24 24 3352 3352
12: SO p.m:
.
smaller teammates played a Steinpie after the . game, "we
SVAC .
Houston at Denver, 4 p.tn.
stiff, man-to-man defense that shopld make the game competl(Reserves)
Jan. 17
_ W L · p OP
forced numerous Falcon turnov- tlve. My people will be fired up TEAM
NFC and AFC Championships
ers, many of which occurred on for that game.''
Southern ..... ... ...... 6 0 351 251
Divisional playoH'
Inside passing. Such pressure
Kyger Creek, now 4-6 overall,
Hannan Trace ...... 5 1 345 224
winners, timeS and sites to be
announced
·......--.defense, which was resp&lt;inslble will put Loveday and Bradbury Oak Hill .. ........... .4 2 233 246
.
Jan.
31
for forcing the Falcons·· to send agalnstthe Oaks' 6-8junlor Jedd
Southwestern .. .. ... 3 2 263 281.
Super Bowl
the BobCats to !he !mil line five · Rawllnsand6-3junlorMlkeHale · NorthGallla. :...... 2 4 286 296
AFC
Champion
vs. NFC
tlmeslnthe flrstrrame,alsotook Friday night In Cheshire. ·
Symmes Valley .. . 2 4 269 284
Champion at San Diego, 6 p.m. •

~-

Sarah Overstreet ·

.

.
States who could do whatever he media has behaved In recent
pleased, and the rest of us just years more Uke a pack of
better not be so disrespeCtful as buffaloes all thundering after the
to say anything abOut lt. Why same watering bole than lnde- ,.
should I not assume that that pendent tradespeople us1ng their·
attitude carried over Into every _profession's "rules" to decide
decision he made?
· ~
What Information they bave a
Yet my friends' argument -Is responalbUity to brlnil to the .
compelling. Reporters hiding public. Sort of remtnds you ofthe ·
•
outside a person• s house and candidates themselves, all rush· ~
asking such personal questions lng· herdlike toward wbatever .
'do tend to milk!! the skin tighten. 1ssues they believe will get them
None of us would like the same , :vot~.
questions asked of us, and
Gary Hart haa said that the
.sensitive pec;~ple can't help but voters ahould decide, ' and he's •
put themselves In Hart's sboes.
right. I believe readers IOid •
So what's a sensible comprom- viewers ~ave the orne retpollll· ,.'
Ise between the voters' right to bWty toward wbat they receive ·
know and a dj!Cellt respect for from the media. Use that voting .
privacy Not one of my frlellcla hand to fllp the dial and turn 'tbe
clenlel that overall character Is a newapaper page.
•
powerful atatement of tile meaWe don't have 'a frat pren ,
sure of a peraon. I can't deny tllat · unlell every jourullat lila! the
I'd tuat as 1000 not have 10111e011e q.-llona he or ahe llllllvll are •
btdlne my bu•bel at nllht.
lmportut-to aall. But tllapubllc'a ,
On OIII!]IOlnt; -I can't fault my demand tor ln!ormatloll - ud •
friends: They are u anary at Ole . Ita retetloll to the
that. '.
COUtant haiiiJIIel'lal Jlart re- lntoJnwtloll 11 aatbered IUid ·,.
ceived from lhl preae after tlle pr•lmted- hal u ~-- -. ·
May revelatlolll as tlle.Y are at effllct Dll edltln Ud ..... . .
the reportlna ltlelf. Tiley !lave 1 diNetcltl . . 'the ballot 1111 011 .
legitimate beef. T1&amp;e national .poUtlclana.
.
1'
1
'•

m

war•

.

A dramatic jump shot at the
buzzer by Andy Booth dashed Rio
Grande's hopes of stopping Malone and gave the Pioneers a
77-76 victory at Lynne Center
Tuesday.
Booth's shot came after 2
tlmeouts with 3 seconds left In an
Intense, well-played game that
marked Rlepenhoff/Holzer
Clinic Night.
·
"They had a tough shot to
make, and give them credit, they
hit It," .Redmen Coach John
Lawhorn said.
.
Malone Coach Hai'Smlth saw It
as a famlllar story this season
that worked out for his club this
time. "We've had 9 of our 14
games come · down to a single
possession," he said. "We knew
our record and we knew Rio
Grande Is top-seeded In the
district. I told the team, 'Don't
worry abOut Rio Grande, just go
out and play your best."'
The Pioneers are 6-8 on the
season and 2·1 in the. Mid-Ohio
Conference. Rio Grande Is now
12·5 and is also 2-1 In conference
ptsy.
The tone of the game was set
early as Booth sank a basket and
Rio Grande quickly uecl on a
2-polnter by Rob Jacklon. Ma·
lone pulled ahead, leading 12-9.
when Jim
fired ott a
3-polnt.er til tie It again at 12: 35.
Alter a timeout, the Redmen
otfelise kicked Into 1ear and
Wrested the lead away from

Keams

Malone.

.

Wblle the Ploneera remained a
threat throughout the bait,
bukell bY Ron Rltttnpr and
Rill Singleton, in adcliUoa to
a1111tber 3-polnt field p i from
Keaml, hoolled the halftlme
, 1e0rt to 41-35 tn Rio Grande'•

favor.
Flnt bait ltatiltlf:l proved that '
\&gt;'

while Rio Grande· held a slim
edge on field goals - 19 of 37 f~r
51 percent, com~red to Ma·
lone's 14 of 28 for 50 percent- the
Redmen were way ahead on free
throws. The hosts sank 9 of 10
attempts for 90 percent, wblle the
Pioneers were 0 for 0. For the
game, the slate on ~ th~ws
Continued on page 4
.

The Daily Sentinel
(U8PIIlf. . .)
A RlvlolollollllolliliDedlo, lac.

Published every alternoon, Monday
thr"""lh Friday, Ill Court St., P,meray, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlnl , Company/Muhlmedla, Inc.,
P,me&lt;oy, Ohio 45'18, Ph. 192-215i. Second c111s pootare paid 11 P,meray,

Ohio.

Member: Ualtod Pr..s loteraallolllll,

Inland Dally Pr011 Allaetlllon andChe
Ohio Newspair:f. Auoclatlon. Notional
Adverltahll
.-....tallve, Branlwn

NewJPapt!l'
a, 733 Third Avenue,
N.., York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Sead addrOII chan..,.
DoQy Se!ttlnet, m Court St.,

io 'llle

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.Pomeroy, Olilo-.
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Tile~ litnllaol OD I 3, 8otl2 IIUIBtb
bull. Cl'edlt ..UillillvCIII eotrloreadl

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·
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IJ w-..................................

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DJ ........................................,.
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IIW-..................................
........................................

' ,.

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•

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''·
• '.,
2

,,

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'4

,,

�•

W~naaday,

Ohio

Celtics idle;.
Prep scores
Bo)'!ll 011~ HJP 5!~ II&amp;AtiMball

By Untkd PrHA ~ie...U'-..al
'ftlellllar, laa. s

Akr Chr R. Soutbwet.&amp;el'll 011r 47
Akr East II, Akr Spri"'lield I! ·
.\m..Sa18, Lopa m,m •
A..MU. lt. Tt .. eo.t, N U
ArcllboW 1&amp;, allltolt M
A..rvna IS, Newbtlry M

College 8COI'e8
otlkt Collep 8ukelball Ruialla
By Ultlot4 PhNID&amp;er~~aUoill&amp;l
'htlllq, olaa.l
Detlaace 11. Wlhl. . . II
Urb... 8t. Ce. . vll~ IS (ot)
MU..e n, ... GraMe 1t
Mt Vtr•• '71, OHio Domlllllcu t8

.t.stlatowa P1teh II, Yo•p Eaal ...
8a)' VIU.re 11,

lfla Midpark n

Buvercreek 81, Da)o Wlak 11
Bellaire H. HailalbaliUwr •
Beran 111111111 H. La
fl
leme Ua"aM, Col Tree Of Life II

lie.._

Wolllltl 7t, TIWI• M

Bexley l8, LODdoD 17
811 Waln~t II. Mar~WIIe 1'7
Bloom C&amp;rroll '71. Col•ardey -N

Glrla ~kJ Htsh

84:Mol ~etball
.,......, ' , . ._5

lloardrn..a ». Vo•P R&amp;)'*n 52
Jlill.'keye 'l'nt.ll U. Skyne 51
J111ckeye W II. Slu.lf7tlde 73
Cadiz 7t, Conottoe Val N
Ci.htwell 85. lleallinllle '73
Caftlpbell 11. l'G-p Wlbon 'n
Cibfteld N, Sa&amp;.m ..
C.Mon Herllap 8&amp;, Muailloa Chr

BeUefo.U!at 5!, $prtaa Sllawnee 47

Bethel T.te ... New Rlclunoacl S7
OIWbllte 17, Wldteilllll ..
Cia . . . . . . U. W,oml . . IS '
See~t~~ 'tl,
Ha 1 ~~es
Cia Mc:A•Iey 7t, Cia Alku il
ci,. Mef'CJ' II. Cia Prlllcetoe 48

a.

te

C.nllnrtoa 'II, 'Marton El,tn Sl
Centerbura: IS. M~Jd Olr II
Champ&amp;Qall, EMt Palettu.e ft
Chesapeake II, Ceal Grove Sl .
Cln Coutl')' Day •• Jla&amp;avla II

a.

n

U. Cia Deer Par:ll14
Cia WU• Hllll U. Cl• Bacoa 11
Cia M&amp; No&amp;re 1Mme-t7, Mder•n U

Ci!l Madtlra

•t.

Cia Urallllt
Cia Nartllwealll
Cia 8t tli'MII. H. Un Greeallllla !t
Col S.llltll ... C.l ...... 41
Uot ee.....
Colllrtaa n
Col
It, Collleeellcntfl
Cel .-.olJI.avea a, Col Eaatmoor 41
Col Nol'lllla~ II. Col Mar-Pr-uk St
Col Ll ..u •• C.l Walald: RIIIP. St
Col Willet-. II, Collnftpelllll!once 12
Ctldwa&amp;er '74, Vaa Wel1 21
· Cnlloelo• 11, Eulllao• %8
Da_y DU.oocl ... Valley VIew U
DeGraff Rhenlde 71; SldDey Lehman
31
.

Cin GreeniLIIII!IIt, Cla'l'brpla t4

Cln Summit 84. Cla Lallllmar .. II
Cia Sycamore 17, NorwGOd U
· Cia Taft u. Cia WesttniDil• J!
Cln Wllnut Hilla 11, Cln Allin 54
Cllnlon Ma&amp;J!~ Ill, Cedarvtlle 't

u.

.Sal,.

Col Ac~rny 74, ,Jo..than Aldt't fl
ca:1 Brookhayen Ill, Col EaMmoor u
Col Ce.W•a'-J ... Col BriJP S8
Col Eul 78, Col W~ Tt
Col Ram Twp II, Wortlllaatoa C11r S1
Col Independent-•. .M, Cel Wbeilloae S1
CollJralen n , Col Walau&amp; Bhlce II
Col MURin It, Col S.uill If
Col NanJdud 17, Cel Mar-Frullll
Columbiana N, ller Clr Wsn Rev It
Cohmblana Crestview II, Unlkd e
Contlaentallt, Delta 47
Cu}'lhora Faltl fJ, Mr Garliil'ld II
Day carroll Mr MJUhllburs 38
Day Cham-olll 83, ForHI Part. I! (ot)
Day ChriAUUI 'I!, MUMI$5
Day NorthrMI1e' 17, Bra•rord 81
Delaware llil, Col Fra••11• Hla It
Doyii!IIIOWil "1t, Sml&amp;hllle 53
Dreaden Tri-Val 4t, New Leld . .&amp;oa H
East (liMon 71, S O.ar... &amp;oe SIE II
fJmweocl i7, Foa&amp;orta II
Felk:lly 111, Mancbes&amp;er ft
Fort Fr)'l! It, Woodanekl SB

Den..ee

tt,

n

Napo~eo. 14

EaatwMd Sl, Wo.tmore S3
Eat(Ml 4Z,: MlltDa Vaio• ..

hbt.ub ft, N LewUinut Triad all
l1..e,&amp;o1n1 1"1, Lovelaad H
hwal Park 1'7, Fairfield 41
~11 Reeclwry 0. 81 Hellfy I!
Fremold Joe H. Bellavll&amp;e II
Ga ..aaa II. W~rvllle N 48
GaUowar WeeUaad It, GroW!pOrt S8
Grurrille U. ·Beall :n·
IINnil•a IM• •· m..ci~H&amp;Jer f1
Harrt.HM, ll• WM&amp;era HUh 41
Jlebrolt LallnrOOIIII U, UCillal Val 41
IUda\'1111! H. Moatpeller !8
.loluwtowa Nonluid!P' 38, Mlllenpart

..

Fort Loramie tt, All• U
Franklin MoiU'oe 83, NeWton i3
Franklin 7fi, Trenton F•pwood 7D
Frentont'Rou 'Jt, Tol Wo.twanl 50
Frontier 1!!, W•erfonl 51
Galloway WHI.. nd 't!, Gnwput ti
GarreUIVIIIe '11, Portap S.vt!leMt fO
Grandvl•w ft, WeJ~t ,Jeffenon II
Harriaoa 71, MIHord 57
lleml01:k Miller It, Nel11011vllle 1t .
llldlaa v a1 s 51, Garaway 11
lftdlan Val N 51, Rldretrood U
Jacboa Center &amp;4, Bolld• Sl
Jameslowa Greeneview ~. Wa..vnes-

Lelp16r Sf., Holr..e n (ot)
Urr- Sr •· Ken&amp;on 41 ·
·
Unw SllawDet! fl, Waynesfield 34
Utile Miami H. Golllea Sl
MIU'Jarftta 5'7, 8 ... PerlliM II
MUOI$,1,K!Itpl8
Mil He ...., tt, W OK&amp;er Lakota n
New8rk CMII 14• .khaatowa tt
Nanr... fl. Gle~ Etse a:
Oalt Barber tt, 8a111haaky M&amp;rJii 41

r.--•. ~aen.aJ'J (Jal)

Pl:c~n U, Mt Vi!!rMn M

Be,n.a.taburr M, HIUiard H
Ripley 7fi, Mowrptown WhiteOak 52
Sltl!!lby Ill, ~orwalk 30
She-rw.od Falnlew UN, N Ce-..ral 41
Sprt., HEM, Knloa Rldl(e It (al)
Sl Parts Graham II, Sprln( NW t7 .
TecllmMk 71, Fir.lrtHim 34
11pp City N, P14Y&amp;I&amp;

wtlle 37
Jelferson Union ta. Mlnao A
Kellerl"' Fairmont II, Tre)' II
Kinsman Ball(f'r 112, BrOOkHf'ld II (ol)
"Y!f'r Cr«k M, Wabma (W\1 a )58
l#al'ittllutq LaBrae 71, Labvlf'w $8
Ubet1y 1!, New eon Falla 3t
Uahon 1!, Stanton Local 5S
Uldl' Miami 59, Clermoqt NE S5

Trlwa, •· Le.. o.mUe .13

.

Upper Sclo Val II, Allea E t1
lJpper .VUftl&amp;•• H, Weslervllle S .H
Urba• 58, Sprtq Greenon 41
Vlica4S, WUidna Mem 31
Weat RolmN Ill, DanvUle"tl
Worthlftl\011 41, Gr•w City S'7
Zanes Kosecran•llill, Lanraater 41

Uckland 89, Cln Seven Hlll1131
Macl10n Pial .. 56., Yello"' Sprtrws54
Malvern 58, Newcomentown S3
MaMiklld Sr· 103, Col Beecberufl 41
Manw.a Cmtwood 51, Whtdbam 41
M.aple1"ood ffi, Soutblqtoa i1
Martella '71, Belpre It
Marllnrlon 58, East Ca•o• 52
MJiorUna Ff'rry 74, Uakln Uc 10
Maysville 'le, Nflw Concord Glr.nn JtJ
McDonald '73, Lowellvlllf' Ill
MJd llu 'lt, Culnlf:oo (K)') Calvary44.
Middletown Fr.nwldt '11, LebaDOn $II
Mo«adore '14, Root8town 119 (ot)
Mollllt Vemon 19, Picllf'rlngton M1
National Trail ol'l., Ml•ala•h•wa. 48
New Phlladelphi11 :11, Coflllodon" (ot)
North RoJIIIon 41, lndepe.alem!e 31
Noi'WIIJne ol'1 , Dalton 42
.
Oxford Tala.,a-.la 'II, Lf'mea Monroe

B) Untied Prftl .. lerBitlonal ·

NATIONAl,. HOCkEY LEAGUE
Wales Contennce
Patrick IM~Ialon

WLTPta. GFGA

Phllaclf'lphla
Waehlnatoa
Nnr lf'n&amp;y
PlttatntfJh
NY Rqen
Ad

.

.......

P•rkk Keary St. V• Burn 52
Petenllur« Sprillf Sl, JacU.•MIIio111
411
. .
Pet.tiavtla..ss, Maumee Vallq 71
Pymalunbl&amp;' !13, VIenna ~a1hewt~ ..
Reynoldl!lburr 87, HJJI1an14'
Rlum. . Jl., M' .Salem Nortbweat.em 43
Rock HJU N, FalrlaDII H
SalleeYIIIe Soldlel'll 71', Leetonia ~II
St-hflnf 11, lk:ra:~la SpriJIIfle .. u:
Slterhlaa '15, PIIIUo 38
Sidney falrla"'n 78, HOUIIIOD It

Montrl!!al

Z! II I
!S 14 . J

S&amp;ra!iburt51 , Jewett-Sdo 411
Sy I No..U.\'lew U, Holb.nd Sprln1 44
Tol Waite N, Tol Otr a
.
Uhrtcl\5"1 Claymont 84, Maulllon 74
Urbana 10, Fairborn 59 14ot)
V BAiue ii, McComb 12

53
IJ

IN
168
Ill
114
131

lU:
IU
Ill
IU
Itt

Campbrl,l CoDferenc:e
Norrii IMYbkHI
DetroK
17 II . I St
St. 1Aul1
II 18 I 3'1
ToroiiiG
It !I I SS,
Olcaco
II !I ! It

lllil
lSI
ld
141!

JZI
141
IM
lt7

Ml.nesota

Bulfalo
Haliforll
Quebec

s Pollllllll!, Ceredo-Kenow (WVil) H
Sprin3 Calh Ill, Vr.ru.lllfoa 57
Sprtns;horo 5.1, Mlddl~own MadiAon 48
St Clalurll~ 78, Brfdpporl 61
Steubf'nrllle '74, Weirton (WVa) 56
S&amp;eubenrllle Cent 85. Toi'onlo 83

20 14 4 44 113 121
19 11 I 4S 114 142
lt 17 :1 41 . lh IU
18 1'7 I 41 IH 141
11. 11 a 41 Ut IH
II II 5 31 Ill Ill
IMvl:li&amp;o•

un•

1517'737
It II 7 Jl

II It

IS

a

2

I

34

S2

131 118

Smytltf' DMaloa
Calrar,
tt n: 4 st
Edmoalon
U 13 4 SD
Wlunlpe(
II n 4 31

JN 141
182 1341
138 1ft

Los Mrelel
IS It
Vanco"·er
.... JJ~ ft

158 IM
1%11 14"1

I
I

31
SO

'I'WHday'l Reaulta '

\halllqtonJ, rhHadelpllla 1
LoaAnpJH ·t, rtttabarJh4 (tlf')
~hlrw~ l'l, NY lai111den 3 (tie)

NATIONAL BASkETBM.L ASSOC .
Tuesday's Keaulta
_Phoenh: IH, New Yorilllli
· WMinr&amp;on •••· New .JI"Inr.y 9'7
AUanea ln. Detroll 11
Dlk:110 U, ln•lua '17
Mllwa... fll"i !Ill, I.A. Cllppen 82
Gol4enstall": 121, San An tonlo 1111
rartlalftd t•, Seattle 114
Wedae.IQ'a Garnes
New York at Bo.Wa, '7: 3t p.m.
Denwrat New~e,..,., '1:3tp;m .
Utah at PhUacklpbJa, '7: • p.m.
LA
atOe"elaad, 1: 30p.m.
AUaala at Detroit, 1:31 p.m.
Dallu at LA Lakera. JO: SO p.m.
lh•ton at seaaue, 10:30 p.m.

VI .-on CoUll&amp;)' 54, Aleu~er 53
Warren Hardll'll 11, Hubbard 80
WIU'SBW Rlwr VIew 70, Crook8v1Uc ..3 ·
Waterloo tit. WoodrldKe U

Wa)'nedale 14, 18118dale t3
Weir (" 'V) Madonna Ill, Bellalff'dohrut
58
. .
Wr.:ll.aton ~. Trlmhle $II
Wr.:llnUII! '7S, Budle)'e !f U
Wetit Bruc h 6"1, Bea~o·er Local 54
We!!il C11.rrolllon 70, ·W Chf'!l&amp;r.r L"ILota

11
Wesl Gnujtll8:1, Twluburr 6fi
West Mullklnau"' SS', Mora:an '22
West UnkJa 13, McDennutt NW 41
Mo' et~k!nllle S 51, Upper Arllfllton S6

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Continued from .page 3
..

was to go to 78 percent for Malone
(11 of 14) and 71 ~rcelll for the
hOsts (5 of 7).
~
·
Rio Grande built up a 10-polnt
lead in the second half, but
Malone erased It at the midway
point on a trio of 3-polnters. Both
teams suffered from an Inability
to protect .their Inside courts,
setting dp the last minute scenario. The Redmen.led by'3 (76-73)
on a Rlttinger basket, but Rex
Adams cut It to 1 when he burst
through Rio Grande's defense to
score 2 points. Jackson's try at
the free throw line failed prior to
· Malone calling the tlmeout"ln the
closing seconds.
"It was a well-played game,"
Lawhorn commented'. "We
would have played the last play
the same way.
"We all had a hard time
guarding on the Inside," he
continued. ''The key was a
jumper by Todd · Martin. He ·
played well, as clld Adams aild

MALONE (77) - Rex Adams;
9-8-2-26; Jim Klsh, 3·1:3~7;_ Andy
Booth, 9·2·2·20; Todd Martin, ·
3(2)-0-0-14; Keith Troyer, 2(2)-0·
3-10. TOTALS 28(4)·11-18·77.

•

Lawhorn and Smith had high
praise for Rlttlnger, the Redmen' s top scorer this season.
While Adams was t9p scorer jn
the game wtth 26 points, Rlttln.
ger pumped In 24,
Singleton posted 18 and junior
guard Anthony Raymore had 13
for the Redmen. Booth, Malone's
center, had 20, Martin added 14
and Keith Troyer recorded 10.
RIO GRANDE (76),... Anthony
Raymore, 5(1)·0·3·13; Jim
Kearns, 1(2);0·1-8; · Ray Sln1!:\eton, B-2-4·18; Ron Rlttlnger,
11·2·1·24; Rob Jackson, 3·1·4·7:
Doug Fogt, 2-0-H; · Brian Wat·
klns, 1-0-1-2. TOTAL8 31(1)·1"1~ ;
16.

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top Net.s ; Suns win

Auto dealers sponsor

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APPLIANCES

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COBB
Chevrolet• Oldsmobile• Cadillac
308 E. Main St.

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614-992-8614

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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•60000 Jim Cobb ·Rebate
'On Most Cars

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ssoooo Factory Rebate

w...cfliy,, 9·1 Sm. Phone 982-8874
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HETTI .tLB. BOt

To Celebrate 2nd Anniversary .·
JIM COBB Is Off~ring

Pomerdy, Ohio

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rdinal

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ster night

ande College and community
A free ticket from any Gallla of the car. A participant must
Co
ege · and Its athletic proCounty New Car Dealers Associ- make a lay·up, a foul shot, a
gra
s," Lawhorn said.
ation member will qualify every 3-polnt shot and a half-court shot
•
For
further details and free
Rio Grande basketball fan for the In 25 seconds to win the car.
tickets,
stop by any one of the
In addition to the hoop shoot
opportunity to win a new car on
contest, the qealers are provld· four local dealerships between
Tuesday, Jan. 12, at 7: 30 p.m.
As a "proud sponsor of Rio lng popcorn during the game at now and Jan. 12.
de athletics, Jim Mink no charge to fans, the spokesman ·, . - - - - - - - - - - - - rolet-Oldsn'loblle, Norris said.
'
A
donation
made by the local
hup Chrysler-Dodge GOOD USED
'dealers
to
the
Rio Grallde Boos·
PI'ymouth, Smith Buick Pontiac
WASHEIS, DIYEIS
and Tllt nplke of Gallipolis are ters Club has made possible the
offer,lng as the major prize a new dlstrlbu lion of free tickets and
REFIIGEIAYOIS, TVs
car .valued at approximately the continuation of athletics at
GAS &amp; ELEC. IANGES
$12,000 at the RloGrande:Urbana Rio Grande as a major source of
unity and entertainment for the
game.
·
Tickets are free, and are community.
·
Rio
Grande
Head
Coach
John
available now at all four car
Lawhorn commended the Gallla
dealers. Only a limited supply of
627 3rd Ave., Gallpoh
County
new car dl'alers on this
tickets will be given away, as
"This
support
outstanding
effort.
Pl. 446·1699.
Lyne Center seatsonly2,000fans,
accotd.lng to a spokesman for the · by Gallla County new car dealer·
HOUISII A.IL-6 P.M.
ships Is appreciated by Rio
Rio Gr!lnde Boosters C1ub.
A hoop shoot contest during the
halftime, using · the 25 second
will determine the winner

6fs East Main s ·treet
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H&amp;RBlock
can make the
new tax laws
work fot you.

Open 9 AM·8 PM

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rent or royalty
· ,incotne? :

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Pomeroy-Middaport,
Ohio
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By GERRY MONIGAN
l/PI Sports Writer.
Judging from Tuesday night's
performance against the New
Jersey Nets, the "new" Washing-· ··
tOn Bullets are a lot !Ike their new
coach.
In Wes Unseld's coaching
· debut, the Bullets played hard and won.
"We've got a lot of work left to
· do," Unseld said after Washington's 101-97 victory. "Alii wanted
them to do Is play tough."
Unseld's first move was to
'Insert Bernard King Into the
. starting lineup, and . King responded with 27 points, 15 In the
fourth quarter.
"Quite naturally, we're glad
· Wes got his win, " said King, who
had e,xpressed dlssappolntment
when Kevin Loughery was fired
Sunday. "We know we're going to
be together f,or the res 1 of the
year whether we like It or not."
In his 13-year playing career,
Unseld, a 6·foot·7 center, helped
make the Bullets a perennial
contender with his grit. Tud!lay
night, his team's style of play
resulted In· a fistflghi between
New Jersey's Buck Williams and
Washington's Terry Catledge.
"You don't. want to see fights,
but I don't want us to get pushed
around," Unseld said.
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the second q114rter' of Tuesday night's bame.tn
"I feel good that we're off the
EYES BALL ;- Alvan Adams, right, of the
Madison Square Garden. Tucker drew the loW ,
skids- a five-game losing streak
Phoenix Suns has his eyes on the ball as he and
~
..
when he grabbed Adams' arm. ( lJPI)
• - and It's my first victory as
Trent Tucker of the New York Knlcks chase It In
coach. But I try .to .keep It In
perspective. We were playing a dumped Detroit 81-71, Chicago
over his average.
Bucks 98, Clippers 82
team with as many or more crunched Indiana 93·77, MilwauBlazers 128, Sonlcs 114
At Mllwauk~ Terry Cum·
problems than we have.,.
At Portland,. Ore., Terry Por·
kee thumped the LA Clippers mlngs scored 20 points and Jack
The Bullets Improved to 9-19, 98-82, Golden State toppled San Slkma added 16 to help hand Los ter scored a career-high 31 points
winning for the first time since Antonio 121·119, .and Portland Angeles Its seventh successive to help beak the SuperSonics'
whipped S¢1!1~ 126·114.
loss. Mike Woodson scored 19and three-game winning streak. Por·
Dec. 19. New Jersey, 5-23, lost Its
Michael CagPadded 18 to lead the ter had scored only 8 points over
Su~Jii
_100,
Knlcks
95
third ·straight, remained winless
Clippers.
·
the previous two games . The
At
New
York,
Walter
Davis
In 12 road games this season, and
Blazers,
who have won·eight of
jumper
with
1:.17
remain·
sank
a
Warriors
129,
Spursl18
lost Its 20tli straight road game
I
their'
last
11 games, hit 50 of 63 •
.
lng
to
break
a
tie
and
lift
Phoenix.
At Oakland, Caljf., reserve
dating to last March 18. Only
Golden State, the league's other Davis scored 5 of·the Sims' final 7 Terry Teagle scored 28 points to free-throw attempts.
lead six teammates In double
winless team on the road, has a points and finished with 22 points.
Sidney Green had 17 points imd 18 figures and help the Warriors
worse record this season, 4-21.
Unseld :s only previous coach· rebounds for the Knlcks, who stop a three-game losing streak.
lng experience con~sted of the 27 received. 16 points and 16 assists · Golden State Improved to 5·21.
San Antonio, i3-15, suffered Its
games he served as Loughery's froin Mark Jackson·. ·
third consecutive loss. Alvin
Hawks
81,
Pistons
71
· assistant this season. Unseld, 41 ,
.
Robertson
scored 35 points, 16 ·
·
At
Atlanta,
Cliff
Levingston
remains the club's vice presl·
scored
15
points
a·nd
pulled
down
dent, a position he has held since
Transactiona
14 rebounds to lead the Hawks .
retiring.
·
"I wasn 'I nervous. I thought The Pistons total was lowest In
Boi&amp;OD- Slped plebtrDenab lAmp
that I would be, but I don 't know franchise history since the Incep10 a mtaol"-leape cualrad.
Ch•ci.UI - Slped olltftelder Roa
that there Is anything to be tion · of the 24-second clock.
llo'nkke co a m...,._leape conlrael.
.nervous about," said Unseld , Dominique Wilkins left the game
lt&amp;D.u cu, -SliM ollltllekler Thad
llotdey 10 ai-~M' COIIII'IICI,
who does not anticipate . an late in the third quarter with a
Lo• Anplell - Slped pl&amp;ebl!!r Doa
knee Injury and did not return.
overl)aul of the team.
Sutton to a 1-rear conlrad.
Bulls 93, Pacers 77
Minnesota - Sl11tHf:lleber Sal litera
"There won't be any major
toal-yeu-coll&amp;racl: ••.-eetlmaupr
At
'
Chicago,
Michael
Jordan
changes, but I'm trying to get·
Bola WUIIIoiOr.... tefSCIIIIllile,. Leape
cAAt re&amp;tretl ... wu re.-- wD
them to see that If they play tough scored 22 of his 31 pOints In the
.JamleLewe • .
half
and
the
Chicago
Bulls
first
and challenge the ,other team, we
s. ~•• ~ Slrntd plkher n,. .., Cu
to a I- ,ear co•rac:t.
allowed' only 1 field goal In the
can wtn," Unseld said.
Moses Malone finished with 26 first · 9:30 . Indian&lt;!, hit 3 of 18
.U,uy (CBo\)- Sl.,.d center Tod
Murphy: waive• forward Clinton
points and' a season-best 17 field-goal attempts ln the first
Smtc.h.
•
quarter. Steve Stlpanovlch led .
rebounds for the Bullets.
CoUe1e
.,
Arlz.ou state - rromoled defi!!DIIIie
In other games, Phoenix edged · Indiana with 20 points. Jordan
coonlhator Larry Marmle tO llle. .
New York 100-95, Atlanta had 11 rebounds and 9'asslsts .
footh!\11 roaeh.

'Do you have

Booth. "

Wednnuv. ,Jantary 6. 1988 :

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NHL results

Nv hlllDdera

6,1988 " ·
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.r--.-Local

news------~

Seeks judgment through court

~~~~~~=======;~~~~~~;;~~-~~~~~n:s•:*Y~·~J:~~N~·~~~·~·~~:98~8~

-ea
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-d:=eaths
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S¥rvlvlng are two sons and
dauahten·ln·lawa, Herman' and
•
Sue Rickard, · San LuiJI Obllpo,
Calif., Reuben and Carolyn Rickard, Albany·, two dauahten and
sons-In-law. Ellen and Robert
ScndbmWidt, Dela'ff'ware. Ohdlo, MOahrlloe
a · ade·Je en, Lon on,
i
· 1,1 .grandchildren; 10 great·

Reva Simms

•

Farmers Bank and Savings Co., Pqmeroy. has flied an action
In Meigs County Common Pleas Court requesting judgment of
$1,172.85 from Samuel Gibbs. . ,
'
, Emma Ashley, .Pomeroy,_a teacher In Meigs Local School
District. has filed an action against Meigs Local Board of
Education requesting payment of$135.17, the value or one day's
sick leave, or to fully restore the one day of sick leave to her
· credit. The action stems from a day In 1987 wh~m Ashley was
absent from school on sick ll!ave. On that day. school was
dismissed three hourS early due to hazardous weather
conditions. The school _board subsequently determined that
students ~hould make up the day. and according to statute. all
teachers were fully paldfor the day. Aslll~y cla·lms the .Board
acted unlawtully In not paying her a regular day's for the ciay In
question.

Dixon pleads innocent
Don Dixon, Pomeroy, charged with criminal mischief and
disorderly conduct as a result of a teachers strike related
Incident at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport on pee.
21, entered a plea of Innocent to· the charges In the court .l,!f
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Mayor Hoffman Indicated ' that · the charges are being
transferred to Meigs County- Couri.
Bobby Joe ~ster and Jerry Armstrong, both of Middleport,
appeared before Mayor Hoffman Tuesday night on destruction
of property charges. Lester was fined $200 and costs, was given
a 10 day jail sentence and was ordered to pay one-halt the cost of
a window broken out of a business building and was fined $200 ·
and costs, and was given another10day jail sentence, plus being
. ordered to pay the full cost of a tire he allegedly slashed on a
vehicle In Middleport. Armstrong was fined $200 and costs, was
given a 10 day jail sentence and was ordered to pay one-half of
the cost of replacing the window which he and Lester allegedly
; • broke out of the business building.
.
, · Others fined In the court were Dennis Shuler, Langsville, $50
and costs. each on two charges ot disorderly manner, and $100
and costs, menacing threats; John H. Eblin, Pomeroy, $425 and
costs and three days In jail, driving while Intoxicated; James W.
Barton, Pomeroy, $10 and costS, expired license; Mary Anna Durst,. Leon, w. Va., $10 and costs, running a red light, and $10
and costs, wrong way on a one way street; Jeannette L.
Lunsford,
Middleport, $10 and costs, assured clear distance,
•
and Carl Hughes, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, no operator's license,
and $10 and costs, expired tags.

Teacher among those fined
A teacher at the Pomeroy Elementary School was among the
defendants fined In the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler·
· Tuesday night
·
Fined $500 and costs and given a 10 day jail sentence ·on
destruction of property charges flied by April Smith, secretary
of the school, was Bonnie Fisher. Fisher was the first teacher ·
fined In any local court as the result of alleged teacher strike
related offenses. She has JO. days to appeal the mayor's court
decision to the Meigs County Court. ·
·
Others fined in the court were Nelson Morris, Middleport, $63
and costs, operating a motor vehicle while under suspension;
Jerry Reltmlre, Mason, W. Va., $63 and costs, flctlclous plates;
William Anderson, Hartford, W. I,T.a .• $55 and costs, speeding;
Emory 0. Bryant, Ironton, $46 and costs, speeding; Eddie Dill,
Pomeroy, $46 and costs, speeding; Linda Crites, Pomeroy. $25
and costs, violation and the leash law and $25 and costs, no dog
license; Sally Moore, Pomeroy, $213 and costs. and six months
probation. and banned from the lormer Liberty Restaurant, W.
' · Main St .. on charges of' trepasslng.
' · ·
Forfeiting bonds were Don Tillis, Rutland, $46; James Dalley,
Middleport; Tammy Bobo,' Gallipolis, $48, all posting on
speeding charges, and Rita Brewer, Pomeroy, $43, wrong way
on a one way street
'

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ADD6uneementss

Melgs lCounty REACT Team
will have a mee~ Friday', 7: 3il
p .m~. at Pleuers Reatau1'811t. All
' active memben are uiced to
--attend. 1 ,: c• ... pfbeavy· lnow, the
~, ....meeq l\'111 be_ poslponed.

Stocks .

....

ar,ee 111111 Mark 8m lib

CTON

The\Bank One Certificate of
· De~sit Rate published in
The ~ Daily Sentinel -Decem.ber 31, was incorrect, and is
corrected to read:

t Year

7.60%

7.~3%

POMEROY .AREA CHAMBER
OF·COMMERCE
.
.

2 Ye;:tr"

8; 1o&lt;vo

7.75%

ANNUAL·DINNER-DANCE

These

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JAN..AIT '16, 1918-ROYAL OAIIESOn-

rat~s will

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· TH;ERESA S. BAKER

Baker birthday
·
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Clark •birthday

CHILDREN'S

SALE! .
BOYS'

CORD.UROY JEANS
.

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R~g~~lar sizes - ifims,
_. hUller Iii!!: Sell~

••••nt
colors.

$15.95 Slims &amp; Regulars,
I to 14.. ~ ................ •11.20
517.95 Husky Sizes,
I to 11..... _ .._ ....... $12.60
•11.95 Student Sizes,
26 to 30 ...;............. 513.30

All
All
All
All

Winter
Winter
Winter
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Gowns
Robes
Pajamas
Nightshirts

1/3

WINTER COATS
&amp; SNOWSUITS
Cold Weather is Here!

·- 40°/o

Earrings, Bracelets,
B~ads

Siz• S, M, I, ond XL Two
pocl(ets, long shirt tall.. Will
known brand, colorful ploi•.

$699

111.95
Siz• 211. 3XL 4Xl-.. Sale II.Jf

WINTER
TOPS
&amp;·SHIUS
.
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33°/o

FLANNEL.
SPORT ~HIRTS
.~..,. and button front
ttyles ~ sll• S, l XL, plus Ill
&amp; IXIL Good

Reg. Pricll11.9$ _to '29.95

S837 ,~ S2Q97 .
i

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REDUCED,

fllleclion. •

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$120 to $410
MEN'S' SJ9.95

MEN'S

Flannel Shirts ··

Winter -Hats,
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let· •z.oo to •a.oo

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OFF

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JEANS
wltilt siz• i1 lingths
29 to 42, SOlid colon.

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·1/2 NICE

nominating letter to the Unicorn
Hunters, a group of language
guardians at Lake Superior State
· University.
Sharon Drain, director of the
• A spokeswoman for lbe UniGa!Upolis
branch of Southea~t­
· col'll Hunters ..:_ a group , of
ern Business College, released
Writers, students and faculty
the list of students achieving a 3.5
members - said 2,000 nominaor better grade-point averake
. lions were received tor the 13th ,. while completing at least eight ·
annual list.
·
..
credit hours during fall quart&lt;ir.
Group members gather each
On the list were Sonia ClrcJe,
New Year's Eve and make their
Eric Cunningham, Sharon Darst,
final selections "for the list. The
Rita , Ehman, Carole G\lk!ly,
oftlclat" title Is "The New Year's
Debby Grubb, Dawn ·Hali,. Oaqe(
Dishonour Llsi of Words Ban·
Hart, Jill Johnson, William
lshed from the Queen's English
Litchfield, Tina McGraw, Le~h
for Mls-, Mal- or Over-use as well
Martin, Kenneth Mayes, Shenle ·
. as General Uselessness."
"
Mayes, Cathy Norman, Karlm
Peter Kinner and Trudie MaPhalin, Charlotte Rldeno~tr •
son ot Montreal nominated "safe
Peggy Russell, Debra SmUh.
sex," suggesting theterm be
Julie
Spires, Kathy Stone, Naney
sentenced to "life·In prison with
Sweeney, Tamml Taylor, Je!(!l·
Dr. Ruth."
nle Tolllver, Linda White,
. . The economics term "irickleTammy
Wolfe and Christina •
down effect" 'came under fire
Wray. ·
·
with the suggestion that It now be
"limited to toddlers In loose
diapers."
·
Also among banished phrases
were "on a roll" and "living In
poverty."
"I am not living In poverty,"
said Linda FlusherofOhlo, ''I am
poor and llvlrig In Columbus." ·
"Cutting edge," as In the ·
cutting edge of fashion or research, 'was suggested for ban·
lshment by Jack Dietrich of
Albuquerque, N .M.
";Excessive use," he wrote,
"suggests banishment before
someone Is slashed to ribbons."

Commurtity calendar

· :~: 'Broadcast

·

POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge
164 F&amp;AM will hold a regular
meeting on Wednesday , 7:30
p.m ., at the Mlddlepori Masonic
Temple. All master masons

·~

welcome.
POMEROY

..
- Tbe Meigs
.
\
.SJt.arlene Baker-,. ; Gb~lle -~tenslon . , . RI\YTON, Ohlp.~(!.ml,):, ,... El· ;
'·'An Individual who lives alone,
~ ilaua-h~r • oT· Rick and Sherr! Service- and H&amp;R Black are derly people whose body "ther- who doesn't have proper heat or
· Baker, Anchorage, Alaska, cele· sponsoring an Income tax school mostats" may be lmpa:tred run . proper clothing, may very easily
bra ted her fourth birthday on on Wednesday, from 10 a.m. to 12 the greatest risk of suffering die from hyJ)othermla," Nelson
Dec. 28 with a party at the !lome noon, at St. Paul's Lutheran from hypothermia, a severe loss said Tuesday.
of body heat that can lead to
· of her maternal great- Church, Pomeroy.
death.
·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
"The Health and Human ServiRichard Myers , Route 1, To meet Saturday
ces
Department estimates that
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnltz
.Reedsville.
.
· POMEROY -Ameetlngofthe
25,000
elderly
people
die
from
visited
with Mrs. Eunlc Brinker
A.Strawberry shortcake theme .Meigs County Trustees and
hypothermia
annually.
Howand
Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Johnson
was carried out. Cake and Ice Clerks Association will be held
ever,
only
15
people
In
Ohio
died
and
Shery
I, on Thursday.
cream were served. Atendlng Saturday, 7:30p.m.,attheSenlor
of
cold-related
causes
In
1986,
Mrs. Ethal Orr spent Chrlstbesides those named were Des I- Cl tiZens Center In Pomeroy.
and. six died of ·'coid·related •mas Day with the Robert Lee
,
ree Beaumont, Carr!e._and Kathy Revival . .
Bernard, Libby Beaumont, Shlr- · MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street causes ' through August 1987, family.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Oneil of
ley Myers. J.a mes Myers. SuFree\YIII Baptist Church In Mid• according to Ohjo Health DepartIJlen
t
records.
.
·
Columbus
and family. and Mrs
zanne West
dleport will be In revlaiJan. 3·9at
"Many times the death certlfl· Evelyn Ingrlm called on · the
Sending wishes throughout the
7:30 p.m. nightly. Everyone
cate doesn't Indicate It," said Robert Lee family on Sunday,
day Included Betty Damron. welcome.
Morton Nelson, commissioner of and stopped to see Mrs. Eunlc
, Norma. Larry and Nancy Baker.
the combined lfealth District of Brinker also.
. Nettle Moore, and Helen Roberts
Parents meeting
Montgomery
County.
Gene Clark of Peach Fork
of Anchorage.
POMEROY - 'The second
'J'~eresa

i'

•'

j[ ~~People in the·. ~ws------..........-----.. . . . . .------..__~
1
B:r WILLIAM c. TBOTl'
Unll.. ...._ IDienladODal
•
•
UBOti.N ·TO RUN: •'"---- Sprtnp•-- will be hl'tlng the
...,.,
_,..
'
road next month. Sprtnaateen recorded his newest album,
"Tunnel of Love," wiUl Oll1y mlnlmll partlclpaUon from bls
E-StreetBandregulanbUtlheywlllreJo1nhlmfortlleTunnelot
Love Expren Tour. The outing starta In late FebrJJary and will
take Sp~ to 22 cltlea.
·
BUT . . . . . FIIOII DAU: Spain'• llq luan Carlos
~:peclal birthday pi a ntTileldl)' -II po~mofpralle
fl'om
IIIYidlr DaU. 1'lle aarre•l(lt wrote "Ode to the

·~

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;:
,
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Spanllh Monarchy" to mark the ldng's 50th birthday,
descrlblllf Juap Carlos as "eternal like the fatherland, more
racllant than the sun." The.day's only otrlciJII event marklna tile .
birtbda)' wa1 the klllf's trip to the Royal Theater for a concert
by _cellllt Mallalav ~. a per10nal frleDd 'of Juan
Carloa, but ~ aJao plallned a private party later. The po~tal
service took note o1 the occulon by llsulne a special atamp
commemuratlllf the !10th blrthclaya or both Juan Carlos and
Ql- SoDa, w11o ~e&amp;ches the mll!tatone In Nowmber.
MADONNA NOT ITA.TtiEiqtlt: TO IIAY08: Then will be '
no ~tare of Mall r ID tbe lWJan hill town of Pacentro If
the ~yor JIY• c1ow11 the atatuary law. .

·I

E. Main St. 614·992·6614
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· . JEFFERY F. HOLTZ ,

•,

Holtz serving
in US Army

•
,

•

Airman Jeffery F . Holtz, son of
Mike and Lura Swiger, Syracuse..
has completed his basic tralniOg
at Lackland Air Force · Base ~n
. Tex·as and technical school lw
Chanute A.F .B. In lllinols.
-' •·
· He Is now going to Andrews
· A:.F .B. In Maryland where his
address Is Jeffery F . Hol~.
236·01·0490;- PSC I Box · ·(!$,
Andrew A.F.B .. Maryland, 20331. Airman Holtz spent Chrlstmf.s
here with his family .
· •
•

•

called on Mrs. Eunice Brinker,
,;
Sunday.
Mrs. Florence Circle spent tile
weekend In Columbus with Mq;.
Beulah Circle. '
,
Mr. and Mrs, Patrick Johnson
of Georgia , · Mr. and Mrs. Loyd
Johnson and Sandra of Mlddlfport. and Mr. and Mrs. William
Carleton and family of Racfne
were visitors of Mr. and Mr.s.
Arthur Johnson and Sheryl over
the holidays .
'

News; .,Moqnstruck' top list for Golden Globes

BEVERLY HILLS, · Calif.
for best drama; best !o·
Danl;lng" and "Hope and Awards, whose60thannualnu.. ·
mance by an. actor In a movll!
Glory."
nations are scheduled to be
(UP I) - "Broadcast News,"
,· "The ·L ast Emperor" and drama, John Lone; best director,
Best movie drama nominees announced Feb. 17, with presen•• "Moonstruck" garnered five Bernardo Bertoluccl; best were "Cry Freedom," "Fatal tatlon set for Aprllll.
;: : J!Omlnatlons each Tuesday to screenplay, Mark Peploe and
Attraction," "Empire of the
"L.A.Law"wasnomlnatedfor
• dom1nate the list of film contend· Bertolu'Ccl; and best original' Sun, •• "La Bamba' • and "Nuts." best television serl~-drarria and
, ers In p!e HollywOod Foreign score.
'
In addition to Lone, actors earned nominations for Susan
~ Press Assocl~tion's 45th annual
"Broadcast ,New.s'' was noml·
nominated for best performance Dey and Jill Eikenberry for best
• Golden Globe Awards.·
, . nated for best movie musical or
In a movie drama were Michael pefformance by an actress In a
~
The movies "Cry Freedom," . comedy; best performance by an
Douglas for his performance In television series-drama .
, · "Dirty Dancing," and "Fatal actress In a movie musical or
"Wall Street," Jack Nlcbolson In
Harry Hamlin and Michael
• Attraction" each received four comedy, Holly Hunter; best
"Ironweed," N~ck te In Tucker of "L.A. Law" were both
: nominations, while three each performance . by an actor, Wll"Weeds" and Denz
ashlngton nominated for best performance
went to "Nu't s" and ' "Baby liam Hurt; best screenplay and
for "Cry Freedo . " .
. by an actor In a television
; Boom. "
best dlr~tor, James L. Brooks.
Nominated for best perfor· series-drama while Alan Ra'
Th11 top vote-getter for televl, '_'Moonstruck" was nominated
mance by an actress In a movie chins was nominated for best
· slon was NBC_'s hit "L.A. Law," tor best movie musical or ·drama were Glenn Close for performance by an actor Jn a
which received six nominations. comedy; best performance by an
"Fatal Attr11ction,'_' Faye Duna- supporting role In a series.
, · ABC's "Moonlighting" and actress In a movie musical or
way for "Barfly," SallYKirkllln&lt;l, mini-series or motion picture
_NBC's "Golden Girls" followed comedy,Cher; bestperformance
for "Anna," -and Rachel Levin made forTY.
'· with four nominations each.
by an actress In a supporting role
for "Gaby -a True Story."
The critically praised show
,
NBC led the networl&lt;s with 27 In a movie, Oly_mpla Dukakls;
The awards ceremony, to be won five Emmys. ·Including best
( nominations, while CBS had 17 bestperformancebyanactorlna
heldJan.23attheBeverlyHllton drama, from the National
~ and ABC trailed . with · 15. Fox movie musical or comedy, Nlco·
HD_!el, will be televised live In Los Academy Of Television Arts and
' f!roadcastlng Co. and the Show· las Cage; and best screenplay, , Angeles, Atlanta and Las Vegas Sciences In September.
time Cable Network each netted John Patrick Shanley .
.
over a syndicated network and ·
Other best dramatic television
', one. but the Public Broadcasting •
tape-delayed for the rest of the
series nominations went to CBS's
' Service received none.
· Other nominees In the best
country.
"Beauty and the Beast," CBS's
In the movie catagory "The movie musical or comedy cate·
The Golden Globes are a
"Murder She Wrote " NBC's
:· Last Emperor" was no~lnated gory were "Baby Boom,'' "Dirty
leading Indicator to the Academy
"St. Else~ here," ABds "thirty·

:.

meeting of. Salisbury Cub Scout
Pack 246 has been cancelled.
Next meeting will be Feb. 4 at
6:30 p.m . at the Senior Citizens
Bullillng with the blue and gold
banquet to be held at that time. "

-Cool indoor temps
can be _elderly threat·

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Carmel
notes
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JERICA CLARK

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II'NK ONE, ATHENS, NA,
-FDIC

PARK, Colo. (UPI) - A clever
bank robber with a pearl-handled
revplver !Dade off with $250,000
after buying himself extra getaway time by telling a caller that
,the bank's · alarm · had been
accidentally triggered.
"FDIC. This Is a false, alarm . .
There must be static on the line,"
the robber .reported!)' said when
he answered the phorie.
Bob Deutsch, a .Jefferson
County sheriff's spokesman, .
speculated the bandit was talk;
lng to an alarm company the
bank uses. He said the man was ·
In the bank less than seven
minutes. Deputies arrived several mlnytes after the robber got
away.
The robbery began shortly ,
before 5 p.m. New Year's Eve ·
when · the man . walked Into the
.unguarded bank with a pearlhandled revolver, He had the
fur-lined hood of his green parka
wrapped tightly around his face
and distorted his voice by cupping his hand over his mouth,
witnesses said.
The man ordered bank officers
. to lie down on the lobby floor and
told . a teller to f1mpty cash ·
drawers Into a bag;-'·
·
"One of the employees heard
the suspect ·s ay, 'Where' s the big
cash? In the vault?'" Deutsch
said.
After getting the large denoml·
nations out of the vault, the man
walked out and drove away In a

blue Chevrolet Nova. The balik
president followed the car for a
short time before losing it.
.
Controversial doctor lrkecLby
typo: IOWACITY,Iowa(UPI)A West Des Moines doctor who
adverstlses bls abortion services
statewide Is more than a little
Irked at a Yellow Pages misprint
listing his business as a "family
plumbing service" Instead of a
family planning service.
Dr. Paulino Fong, an obstetri·
clan .and gynecologist whose
clinic has been the subject of
numerous pickets · by antiabortion groups, Is not convinced
the ·misprint In the Iowa City
phone bOOk was unintentional.
"Maybe ltls lntentlonal.Idon't
know ,'• Fong said. "Given the
choice of words It makes you
think."·.
Nancy Nett, spokeswoman for
US West Dlrect, .publlsher of the
Northwestern Bell phone books,
said It was clearly a mistake. She
said If Fong contacts the company they will come up with a fair
settlement.
Words banned for mlluae:
SAULT STE. MARIE. ' Mich.
(UP I) - ''Alternative lifestyle,"
".safe sex" and "cu ttlng edge"
top an annual list of words and
phrases that a group oflanguage
guardlans thinks o1,1ght to be
banished from the English
language.
"Every way ot life Is an
alternative," said John Sherwood of Marshall, Mich., In his

WEDNESDAY
meeting for concerned parents
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
regarding the Meigs f..&lt;?cal sehool .
Literary Club ~Ill meet Wednes! situation has been set for Sunday,
day, 2 p.m.-, at thenome of Mrs. · 2 p.m .. at Pomeroy Vl!lage Hall. ·
Dwight Wallace. Mrs. Roy Holter
will review "Island In The Cancelled
Stre.am" by .Ernest Heiplngway. ......-sALISBURY - The January
· Roll call will be a favor e/ .
Hemingway character..

.

SLEEPWEAR
CLEARANCE

DOUBLE REBATE

tton of $112. to Johnny was Helen
·
Teaford and Dottle Turner.
His father.- Jim Re:Ynolds, had
tors, In lieu of.a Christmas party,
presented a gift of money to · a stroke about a year ago and has
since them.
.... .. Johnny Reynolds, 276 Sycamore been unable to work
I
.
~
St., Mlddlepotl.
~
... l
.The 13-year-old youngster was
born with spina blflda, has club
· feet and Is paralyzed from the
1 ·~alst down. He has had many
surgeries, tw9 just recently, and
• travels to Columbus frequently
! for medical treatment and hospl..• tallza.tlon .. Making tbe presentsMe'igs Co.unty members of the

~utheastern Ohio Board of Real·

••
Jerlca .Clark celebrated her
.; eighth birthday recently wth a
;, party at - Show Biz Pizza lit
'·I •Parkerburg. ·
:: : The party was hosted ' by her
:•, father, Rick Clark and Ellen
•"' Stewart. Attending were Nancy
; : Clark, VIcki and Sonny Gloecker,
.. Brent and Chad Hanson, Sara
• · Craig, Jessica Stolbart. Natalie
:: Grande!, Erin Haggerty. Amy
:: · Hayes, and David Anderson.

tla

$1,00Q.DO

Gift given to area child

.

Three named

·oN ANY
'87 OR '88 TRUCK
· IN STOCK
$50000 Factory Rebate
'50000 Jim Cobb Rebate

and DO.Ide Turner
of moJie)' from lhe Melp mem"en or the
Ohio · Board or Regenls to Johnny Reynolds, .
Middleport, a disabled youth.

be in effed until J•nuarr 10, 1988

; Fil/een thousandpeople who care.

UVE BAND-Doors Open 6:30 P.M.-BYOB ·
$22 Couple/$12 Single Dinner &amp; Dance
$10 Couple/$6 Single Dence Only

Anniversary Celebration
JIM COBB Is Offering .

Qulck·thlnklng baudlt steals
12110,181 from bani&lt;: BERGEN

BANK.~' ~ON!:·~·~t·~

DINIIEI 7:00 P.M.-DANCE 1:30. til Mltlnlght

Honor studenis
are named at :
'
Southeastern
•,

weather

Meigs County Emergen.cy Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday; Syracuse at 5:24 a.m. to Forest Run Road for
Elwyn Yost to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:28
a.m. tq Harrisonville for. Carson Deskins to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:04p.m. to Mulberry Ave . .for David.
Hardwick to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10:55 p.m.
to County Road 34 for Goldie Roberts to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

man " ..'"""

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~"!,•::~ t_~~

Hospital news

EMS has jolir calls

A Marietta man was cited In an
accident Tuesday, at 6: 45 a.m .. · court reporters
In Chester Township on County
Jan lee Young, Crystal Whl·
Road 28, one mile -west of County
tch and Mary R. Gilmore have
Road 32, according to the Gallla·.
been
appointed by Judge Charles
Meigs Post of the Srate Hlg)tway
Knight
as offlcal court reporters.
PatroL
Mark D. Miller. -34, was cited
for fa ilure to control after he, Action filed for
who was traveling north, lost
child support
control on a patch of ice and went ·
off the right side of the road. Into
A reciprocal action for child
a ditch. He then returned to the support has been filed by the
road, where his car overturneo.
State of Ohio and Connie Meeks
Miller was not injured In the against Karl Meeks.
accident.

-Page-r7

·sentenced

.

Wednesday, January 6, 1988

••"' ,. :1

o1 Blaat ElBa II Loewt
Reva I. Simms. 80. Pomeroy,
~
formerly of Charleston, W.. Va .•
·
26TL
I
A.m Electric Power ...... .,..... ,. ••
died Tuesday night at Pleasant
1 Mld*rt EvangeUne ChapAT&amp;T ........ :.... .................... 28% .:
Valley · Hospital following an
ter 172, rder of Eutern Star, . AShland 011 ................. :.... ~% •
extended Illness.
wiU luive a regular meeting Bob Evans ........................... 17 ~
Mrs. Simms was the daughter
Thund~r at ?: 30 p;m. OffiCers Charmlna Shoppea .............. 12% i
of the late Guy Oevelalid and
Martha Elizabeth Watson Stone.
~~::~.cyhl_ !~~y·~·~!:~.thl';: are to· r street dresses.
· ·City Holdlllf Co .... ·· ............. 30
··
___
.
• Federal MoiUI; ......... ._. ....... 33%
She was a member of the
bany; two nephews who were
The aeml-annuallnstallatlon or . Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 63
Middleport First Baptist Church.
raised In her home, · Milton
·_,H k' 8 1
· ·
2
Surviving are two sons and
ec
nc ........._. .............. ·· .. .
Roush. Syracuse, O,hlo and D)lle officers f9r Jobs Daughters will
be held 7\ p.m. Saturday at the Key Centurion .................... 38~
daughters-In-law, Ralph and DoMiddleport Masonic Temple.
Lands' End .......................... 22 •
rothy ' Simms. Columbus, !l.nd · Roush, App~Creek, Ohio.
Services
will
be
..
at
11
a.m.
1
..
Limited
Inc...................... .. 18~
·
Charles and Emogene Simms of
Friday
at
the
Blgony-Jordan
Buc~ey
Multimedia
In'/!........... :....... 55~
Langsville; live grandchildren.
Funeral
~ome
In
Albany
with
·
·
Rax
Restaurants
.................. 3% ;
Unda Simms, Morgan Hill,
· CariB kley,Ca, ·R.utlaDd,has Robbins, &amp;Myers ....... ;--....... 7~
Calif.: Tammy Weber, Langs- Willard Love offlclathig. Burial
been ol'!llred by Meigs County Shoney s. Inc............. .. ........ 22%
ville; Annette Simms, Sheryl · will follow at Broad Run Ceme/
Common Pleas Judge Charles Wendy's Inti............. ...._.........6
Simms and Brent Simms, aU of tery, ~iart.
Knight t serve, an 111-month Wqrthlngton Jnd; ................. 17~
Friends may call at thefllneral
Columbus; one greatgrandchild. Zachary Keith
home from 2 to 4 and 7·9 p.m. determinate sentence In the
'. · ·
. Weber, Langsville; two sisters, Thursday. Memorial services Orient Correctional o__..uon
be
conducted
.
at
?
p.m.
;,.._
.,.~~r
Vetinaa
-Memorlal
will
Agnle Stone, ~lie, W. Va., and
Thursday by the Albany VFW . Center' . I!&gt;I'Ient. Buckley had
.
,
Margaret Bonn, Colum!)us, and a
Ladles Auxllla"", at the funeral entereda ~oluntarypleaofgullty
Tuesday Admissions- Helen
• J
to a charge of gross sexual Kennedy, Middleport; Elwyn
brother, Samuel Stone, Charles·
home.
lmposltlonf stemming from an Yost, Racine; Barbara Peterson, '
ton, W. Va:
. Besides her parents, she was
Incident oq Nov. 8, 1986. Buckley Rutland.. ·
Gladys Stephenson
preceded In death by her huswas to begin serving his sentence
Tuesday Discharges- Crystal •
South, Roger . Reynolds, James ··
band, Clarence, In 1973; two
Mrs. Robert Rinehart, Middle- yesterday (Tuesday).
brothers, Delmore and ft9yStone
Clinton
J;'aul
Stover,
56,
DexMcClellan,
Irene Short, Ulla
port, bas .received word of the
and a, sister, Emma Stone.
Strauss, Franklin Lemley, Lovle.
Friday death of her sister-In-law, ter,ls to ~ID Jan. 18 serving an
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
lndetermin~te
sentence
In
Orient
Watson.
Gladys Lucetta Stephenson.
Friday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Of not leSS! than ·18 months nor
Jackson.
'
·Blower Funeral Home with the
South Central OIJtO
.,
Mrs. Stephenson was born ;md more than five years. Stover had
Rev. Mark McClung officiating.
raised In Middleport and gradu- entered a v91untary plea of guilty
Sunny· today, with highs near ,
Burial will be In the Memory ated from Middleport High to the aggravated assault of 15. Becoming cloudy tonight, •
Gardens at Tyler. Mountain. W. .. - Schoplln 1927. She was a member Terry Mullins on Nov. 23,1987. A with a low between zero and five .. ~
va: Friends may call at the · of the Metho41st. tal th arid had .22 calibre pistol w_as Involved In above zero. snow likely Thurs- :
. funeral home from 2ti&gt;4 and 7 to9 been retired from the restaurant the lnclden~.
day, with
In the lower 20s.
p.m. Thur~day.
business tor several years.
Survivors Include Mrs. Rlne·
Lovina Rickard
hart; ·a niece, Carolyn W. Great
of San FranCisco, Calif.; and
'
Lovlna V. Rickard, 81, 2599
several other nieces and
I
Hebberdvllle Road, .Albany,
nephews.
Ohio; died Monday evening In
She was preceded In death by
Kimes Convalescent Center after
her husband, John K. Stephen·an extended Illness.
son; her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Folden; two brothers
She was born In Mason County,
the daughter of the late Reuben
Hnrl one sister.
and Ellen Roush.
Files notice of appeal ·.
She was a housewife and -a
A notice of appeal has been
35-year member of the, Albany flied In an action by David M.
VFW Post 9893 Ladles Auxiliary. McCOIJlas, Albany, against
I
. She was preceded In deati) by Southern Ohio Coal Com~ny,
her hustand, A. Coe Rickard; two · Lancaster; James Mayfield; ad·
Infant daughters; one grandson, mlnlstrator of the Bureau of
Term
AnnuaiYield
• Rate
Eric Schmidt; one sister, Ethel Wo_rk11r's Compensation and the
Grimm; two brothers, Dorsey Industrial Commission of Ohio,
14-31, .• DayI
5.50%
5.35%
and Adrln Roush.
Columbus.
90 Day
a:oo%
5.83%

c

.,The Daily. Sentinel

By The Bend

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something,'' and NBC's "A Year
Norma Aleandro was tapped
In the Life."
as a possible best supporting
In addition to Brooks and · aCtress In a n!ovle for "Ga by- A
Bertoluccl, best movie director True Story,' ' a long with AlUle
nominations went to Richard Archer for -'-'Fatal Attraction,''
Atten~rough for "Cry FreeAnne Ramsey for "Throw
dom,'' John Boorman tor "Hope Momma from the Train" and
and Glory" and Adrian Lyne for Venessa Redgrave for "Prlck .Up
"Fatal Attraction."
Your Ears."
Best foreign film nominations
The Ust for best supportiJig
went to France and Germany's actor In a movie Included Sean
"Au Revoir Les Enfants,'' an Connery for · "The Untouclialtallan-Sovlet production called bles," Richard Dreyfuss
"Dark Eyes,'' France's ,;Gean ''Nuts," Lee Ermey for '
de Florette," Sweden's "My Life Metal Jacket," Morgan
as a Dog," and the Soviet Union's
man for "Street Smart.~' and
,"Repentance."
·
tor "Square Dance ." .

.........ililitttlllllliiiiiii~-

�P.Qa

8~The

Deily Sentinel

Jenu.v 8, 1988 .'.

Wedt ucley,

•

Ohio

.

The

.

Celeste is looking for m~ey (or.s~':'ings, loans
By LEE LEONARD

UP] S&amp;atelioue Reporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) ·Gov. Richard F. Celeste says the
state will vigorously pursue the
remaining $38 million pumped
Into the rescue of Ohio's savings
and loan system in 1985.
. The gOvernor proudly an·
nounced Tuesday that all $91
million In bonds sold to ball out
th!! thrifts·, principally Home
StateSavlngsBl!nkofCtncinnatl,
have been paid off seventXea,rs
.early, saving the state$71 ml(lion
~~~terest costs.
~leste said the state still Is
lobklq fpr apother $24 million
Invested In the bailout; plus $14
mUlion In Interest payments and
administrative costs, to recoup
its entire Investment.
The governor said this money

.... -·

•
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.
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And One StOp Shoppillg
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Vegetables ........... 2o-oz.

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.$ .•·
French Fries ....... s~;b.
Kroger
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Quick
Oats ........... 42-oz;·
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$
Syrup .......................36-oz.

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Spaghetti.. ............ 2-lb.
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kroger
.,.0-X Sugar ...: ........ 2-lb.

$ 39

E~gle. Brand

Milk ......................... 14-oz.
•

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Vac Pack . .. ·$·
Kroger Coffee.·... 3-lb.

·.gg

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·- Big K
Soft Drinks ...

.

FROZEN .

Ozark Valley · ·

Pot Pies ........ :....... a-oz.

ssoo .

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12•oz ... -

Cans

HEALTHTEX

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TOMATO JUICE ·················"N.. S1.19
!f»U~. PRINCE YAMS·••••:•.i,N.. S1.39
PEAl HALVES ••••~ •• ~ ...........&amp;1JK.. S1.29
1111
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Wepre Making Room For Our

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ASSORTMENT OF
CLOTHING .

'

'

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BATHROOM·TISSUE........... S1.97
TRASH BAGS ....................
1.79
OYSTER STEW .........._••••••
1.09
ARMOUR BEE·F·STEW ••••••• .\\w.. S1.79
SWAIISII
BEEF BROTH ;..............it~n.. 2/S1.19
vuca.•s
.
PORK-N-BEANS ................~\N.••••• 99&lt;

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FISH-N-BAnER •••••••••••••••••ua••• S8.29
GRAPE JUICE .................... ••••• 99(
,KRINKLE CUT FRENCH FRIES ••• 1.4.9

Clothing
Reduced

Country ~ven .
Potato ChipS..... .'.1s-oz. •.

...

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:$.. 19.·;

· ' . ALL FLAVORS

Milk ................. :.. ;.... lZ-oz.

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Soft D'rinks.: .. :.:.::2-Ltr.

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Cost Cutter ... .$
Peanut Butter ... \s-o~,
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Embassy ·;
Mayonnaise ... ~ .... ~-!&gt;~.

c

Cost Cutter ---Egg Noodles ... :-.. ;16-oz.

c

·. ((roger Cherry.
.. F"ll"
Pie
I mg ......... .' ...21-oz.
•
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$ro~n Sugar ...... 2-lb.
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Chocolate
.
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Ch' IpS ................. ,... :.12-oz.

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51.99

CHOPPED HAM •••• .............. S1.3 9
HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 89C
C·OOKED HAM •••••••••••••••••
1.99

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Springdale· . ·. $.
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Pear Halves ........ 16-oz.

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·Ice Cream ..........~ . W-Gal:

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Flour ............... ;........~ 5-lb.

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Sandwich . , ';~, '·&lt; :;.: :.
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Margann·e... :.:.,.;.\ ,..,b.

Shortening ......... ;.:42-oz.
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Corn Flakes ......... 1s-oi:

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·Cake
Mix ......... ~.5-oz
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Tuna ..·.....:........ :....;:. :6:5-oz ·.

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zero ·m

'Oil slick· oozing
do~ ·-Oh~o ·p ath

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FI~OZEN

governor. ''Well, It's acolddayln . State officials Ito belle'le ESM
Columbus, Ohio. "
was financially sound.
Tliestateused$63m;JIIonfrom
Celeste said the bond retlrea recent settlement with Grant ment freed $20 million deslgThornton, a Chicago accounting nated for debt service In the ,
finn It h d 1
$
b d
·
· ·
a a.ready paid 28 current u get. He.said the extra
inlllion from a bankruptcy settle- money w111 be put to good use,
ment, liquor profits and other possibly to satisfy tlie state's
funds.
obligation to desegregation of
The bonds provided money for Cleveland public schools.
.
an Inducement to Hunter Savings
The governor credited "strong
Assoelatlon to purchase H9flle and . a:ggresslve. action" ilY the
State, which collapsed In Maroh stateforrecoveryotthemoneyto
1985 following Imprudent Invest- pay off the bonds. ·
ments In a Florida ·securities
He said he had promised from
firm. .
.
·
the outset of the S&amp;L ·crisis 10
, An auditor for Grant Thornton, reopen every Institution, see that
then Alexander Grant &amp; co., tleposlto'ts got all their money
provided false. Information to back, and recover the state's
Home state In an audit of ESM . investment .. "We have taken a
Government Securities, Fort giant step toward reachhtg that
Lauderdale, Fla. , leading Home th·ird goal," he said.

By Ualted.Prll!l&amp; •nternatlonal . Pittsburgh .and 1 below in Boundssaldshecouldnotpayher
A winter storm today spreadCincinnati.
. .
rent without her welfare checks snow across the sou them Grea I
·Temperalutes below freezing and was evicted from her Chi· Basin and through the . central
A frigid Canadian air mass
plllnged temperatures below stung much of .the :rest of the cago· Housing Authority apart- Rockies.
,
zero In at least 17 states from the nation except for southern Flor· ment last week.
As much as 6 inches of snow fell
Plains to the Northeast In the Ida and California and thedesett
"Without getting a check, 1 late Tuesday in the valleys of
I
'
SPEAIUNG OUT - Pea118;rlvaala Geveraor Roberi P. Cuey
third day of a nationwide cold Southwest..
dldn'thavenomoney,nowhereto western Colorado while GardenSJI!!aka at a Dews coDferenee In Plltlllllirwb Taeaday, ~oaeel'lllil1
snap· that has routed the home'
. Record low tE)mperatures were ~·" she said. "The people took t;:lty, Kan., measured 21nches of' ·
tbe coUapse Ill a diesel fuel slon1e lank In .Jeffel'lllin, Penn., .on
less, endangered the elderly an4 set ·In South Dakota, Iowa, my clothes, the furniture, when riew snow and Enid, Okla. ,
Saturday. (UPI)
·
.
.
.
. set temperature records on edge. . Michigan, Illinois Ohio, New the sheriff threw my stuff on the reported 2 Inches of snow since
Temperatures dipped as low as Jersey, West Vlrglilla, CoMecli· ground. I really don't want to be morning with 4 inches on the
36 below zero In Huron, S.D., and · cut and New York.
here, but you 've got nowhere else ground.
·
It was below zero in 16 other
The homeiess fl6cked to she!-" to stay with your kids."
Icy CQndltlons were blamed for
Frozen . switches delayed Chi· . the crash of a single-engine plane .
states from, Montana to Maine ters In Chicago t(/day, where the
and south to Missouri, the Na· temperature dipped to a record cago Transit Authority "el" near the Woodward, Okla., air·
.llon!ll Weather Service said.
14 .below zero.
trains and frozen gas lines kept port T.uesday, the Oklahoma9-ther sub-zero readingS' In· · · Shlrley Bouhds, 34, and her ·. inany city·buses in their garages Highway Patrol reP9rte~.A man:: ·. ·
eluded 27 below ' In Bismarck, 7-year-old daughter were among or stalled at lhe city of wlnd- and. a woman were Injured In the·
PI'ITSBURGH (UP!) ...:_ The . until the oU dilutes.
N.D., 18 below In Minneapolis, i4 nearly 500 people seeking refuge swept city streets.
·
· · · ·. .
·
eras h. . .
oil sllcl,c , oozing down the Ohio
Tuesday, the utilities that below lnRapldCity,S.D.,6below at the 250-bed Pacific Garden
The cold spot in the nation ·· Ice coated the ~indShield land•·
River endallgl!red the water serve Midland, Pa., and East 'tn Omaha, Neb., 2 below In Mission in downtown Chicago. Tuesday was Huron, S.D., where . wlrigs of the plane, bringing
supply of 1 mUilon people In 80 Liverpool, Ohio, joined suburban
o
It was 28 degrees below zero. It down about a half mile from the
communities along a 70-mlle ..Pittsburgh's West PeMsylvanla
wasalsoatleast20belowinpart$ airport as It tried to land about ·
path of pollution today while Water Co., Westview Water
II
of North Dakota and Minnesota. · · noon, said Trooper Jeff Dean.' thousandsofhouseholdslnsubur· Authority and Robinson TownWind chUis made it feel like It The pilot and his passenger were :
ban Pittsburgh were forced to '-ship Water Co. In shutting off
was 60 below across much of the hospitalized In stable condition. •
cope without running water for a river intakes. ·
• ·
"'-'
region Tuesday.
Freezing drizzle glazed the. :.
third day. ·
Germann said the five utilities
AI least two deaths have been roads In the Texas panhandle and .
T,he government warned the serve about 1 mllliqn people In 80
blamed on the cold. A night
plains, making .travel
ALGONA, Iowa .· (UPI) difficult to prepare a eulogy for watchman at Denver's Stapleton southern
crisis could last weeks.
municipalitieS and "they aU are
Snow advisories were
hazardous.
Water shortages and manda· going to have to enact water M(lurners were urged . not "to the man desctlbed by"'hls rela- Airport was overcome by carbon posted for the Owens Valley of :
tory conservation forced schools, conservation measures to 10ake judge or condemn" things they. lives as a troubled loner Who · m9noxlde from a space heater he Southern California as well as ..
do not understand as they paid sometimes emotloni!IIY tor- used to keep warm and a wom&lt;~n mu.a..of northern Artzona, Utah· : ·
factories, restaurants and. car sure they dori't run dry."
washes to close, and hundreds of
The oil from one of the worst their last respects to Robert mented his parents and had was found frozen to death Tues- and' pa'l'lffi"C!!lllrado.
· . .
workers were idled. A nurslng inland spUis on record . crept Dreesman and the six family undergone psychiatric treat- day not far from Chicago's
cold
chased
the
homeless
·
The
.
home that lost water evacuated toward an expected arrlvaltOday members he kUied last week men tin the past.
central pollee beadquarters.
to
shelters
as
far
south
as
Dallas
.
·
•'You w'ant to answer the
Its patients.
in Wheeling, W.Va., 90 miles before commlting suicide.
Dreesman, 40, Was buried question that Is · Qn people's
Ashland 011 Corp. Chairman from tile Ashland·. reflneey In
Tuesday
morning · beside his minds; ·that question is 'why' John Hall acknOwledged Tue5- Jefferson; Pa., where the storage
parents,
John
'and Agnes Drees- and you simply can't find such an
day night that the company bad tank ~Uapsed.
man,
his
sister,
Marilyn Drees- answer," he said.
no permit to ereet the · storage
Chester lnHancockCountyhas
man
Chuang,
48,
and her three
A ·s eparate memorial service
tank that collapsed Saturday and t'he only water treatment plant
spilled diesel fuel Into tbe Monon· along the river north of Wheel- children, Jason, 12, Jennifer, 11, was held at St. Cecelia Catholic
•
Chlirch for Marilyn Chuang, who
gahela, River. He said the 4 lng. Harold Nash, Chester'i, and Joshua, 8.
He shot the sill at during a was widowed a year ago, and her
million-gallon tank · had ljeen treatment plant operator, said
filled to CI!Pkily~thout stand- the sys,ezn'i unusual dellllft !lAs . hollda:r. ~~;a!Jiering .at his P!lrents' children. Most relatives attended
·
ard tests and ·apolog~ for "any protected tlie water supply In the house ·Dec. 30, then turned the both services.
"The two ·most prominent
inconvenience" from the mas- past. and .he expected no gun on himself.
· About• 60 ciose friends aild emotions· for this hour are grief
slve ·on .slick.
problems.
Oil had contaminated 70 mUes
· Wheeling. City Manager Mike family niembers · 6raved sub· and bewilderment," the Rev.
or the· Monongahela and Ohio Nau said the city of about 50,000 · zero temperatures to attend the Gerald Hartz told the mourners.
OSCAI IIAYEI
Rivers at last report, forcing five will attempt to treat the water II private burial at East L&amp;wn ."We are drawn here by. a
Cemetei:y
In
Algona.
Marilyn
·circumstance
that
seems
to
have
water utilities In ~ennsylvania it becomes contaminated. If that
u~.M.
and Ohio to shut down. The slick falls, the city would string pipes Chuang's in-laws, some of whom no rhyme, no reason. Our hearts
.SWin ECKIICH
'
· was expected to reach Wl)eellng, across a bridge to pump water 'traveled from as far away as ' are heavy with sadness and that
Canada
and
Hong
Kong,
wept
Is
compou!lded
wtth
a
sense
of
W.Va., today.
from Martins Ferry, Ohio.
~
J1.~
About 22,000 suburban Pitts·
Pennsylvania Gov. Robert P. before the seven wooden caskets confusion.
The survlvingfamllymembers
HOIIEIIADE
burgh residents were without Casey ordered a state investlga- covered , with flowers and
wan ted Dreesman buried wl th
water for the third day. Portable tlon ,of what lie called a "tfe- wreaths.
'I. •••
. Later In a memorial service for his family, said Rick Murphy,
toilet rentals were , booming. mendous crisis.~·
.
Peopl~ ·kept water on ~iandlty .In
Hall, the Ashland chairman, ' Dreesman and his parents at co-owner of . the · GeilenfeldSMITHFIELD
SHREDDED .'2.29 LB.
'$ . .
sinks and bathtubs· and stripped said no cau~· had been deter- Trlnity Lutheran Church; Pastor Murphy·Schaaf Funeral Home In
.smt.~
store shelves df bottled water, mined for the tank's rupture. He Gary Dehnke told about 300 Algona. ·'They wanted to be sure
that'
"God
is
the
only
..
Robert
was
Included.
•·
mourners
pa!ler plates 'anll cups. ·
.
said the 40-year-old. tank had
While pollee refused to specuThe National Guard rumbled been moved from Cle'veland and being justified to judge Robert
Dreesman."
late on the motive for the
Into dozens of communities ln reassembled In the tall of 1986
SH!OO'S
''NEW .
"This Is nota court o( hiw here · slaylngs, family friends said the
400-gallon tanker trucks and set without a permit but !•an verbal
SOFT SPREAD " ·
GREEN CABBAGE ..a ..:.2 5c
up 24-hour depots to' pass out communication' from the au- ll)ls aftetnoon and we ·are not killings may have been the result
thorltles. I do aotfmqwlf:wewere here to judge or ~n~emn ·. _of an argum~t Dreesman had
.water.
MARGARINE ......z.u... S1.29 WINESAP
''They're bringing in sprin- In C011Jpllance with the law or anyone, ·Including Robert Drees· with ··his father over .who would ·
KRAFT SUC!D SINGLES AM (RICAN
APPLES ...........J.JA •.u&amp; •., 97 c
man. That is God's business," h,e mailage his father's more than
kllng cans. coolers, five-gallon not."
,
SUNKIST
PROCESSED
said.
,
·
·
1,000
acres
of
prime
farm
·
l
and.jugs, almost anything that can
Fuel tank construction In PenBut Dehnke said . he found It •
carry water," said Ray Marko, nsylvanla·ls subject to. approval
CHEESE ;.............u.oz.. s1.89 LEMONS ........IA5J:I••• 3/ 49c
who supervised the handouts in by the county fire marshal, and
30 CT. CALIFORNIA
SHUR FlESH GlADE A
Robinson Township. "One guy Allegheny County Fire Marshal
-------SMAll EGGSM...l.llaz.. $1.39 CELERY ...................au... 79&lt;.
came in here and took -out 150 Martin Jacobs saiq his office
gallons In ~ · plastic garbage · never authorized the assembly of
bag."
Ashland's tank.
1
The city of Pittsburgh, which
"Nobody can say 11 would have
STAI
.
draws Its water from the uncon· , made a difference. But I would
laminated Allegheny River, was have definitely ~ne out there to
pumping 3 million gallons a day Inspect It," he said. .
WELCH'S
..
'
to a suburban utility.
'
Ashland normally tests a tank
·"We're trying to get water to for leaks by filling 11 wttb water, '
~w.
people as fast as we can," said but the 48·foot-tall tank that
OII·IDA 12 OZ.
·
Ray Germann of the federal rupture«! was tested wtth only 5
Environmental Protection feet of water, Hall said. It
S
Age_ncy. "We really feel for these collapsed as It wu filled wtth
'
people, but It wtll go on possibly diesel fuel for the first time.
weeks."
State officials said mandatory
WillE CLOUD .
.
'th~ Coast ·Guard battled in . conservation imposed Monday
,.~J~~~
sub-zero temperatures to sop up :for 2.5 million' J)eaple In Pittsoil wtth booms In a .cleanup . burgh and Its suburbs helped cut
GUI111
expected to take weeks and cost water use in half, preventb)g
\llu...s
more than 115 million. Officials more · ~omes from going dry.
said only 10 percent of the 1 Businesses and Industries are
HILTON
million gallons that spilled had required to cut water use by 50
\lliMJ.s
been recovered, and the danaer percent,, and many ciQied tQ
R~CI OF INFANT
to drinking water .would not
comply.

'

'·

Arthur Andersen &amp;: S::o., an
accounting finn involved In the
case from undervalued Home
State assets or · from former
Home State owner Ma.rvtn L.
Warner, whom the state has
.
sued.
l..
"There are a number of lively
assets to be recovered, and we
will pursue them with dUigence,"
he said.
.
. Celeste and Chad P. Wick,
execu.tive vice president of Tiie
Central Trust Co., Cincinnati, the
bondholder, said the state's obligallon was satisfied in full, well
!lhead of the 1995 maturity date.'
''There were some legislators
who said It would be a cold' day
somewhere when these bonds
were paid off," smiled the

,'temperatur~ . below

.

'

· may come fromalawsultagalnst

.

I

'

i

�1~The

....

Sandnel

Wednuday.

~ontinues

after new
Vft Reser~• The Richt To

p~ures

STORE HOURS ,

from UN;

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM '

By WIIJ.IAM B. RIES

· After tear gas and rubber ·
bullets failed to disperse the
crowd, a soldier fired Into the air
then. shot ar the protesters' feet ,
killing Dahlan and wounding
eight others. the spokesman said.
A soldier was hit In the face
with a rock.
A report by the Palestinian
Press Service that a second
person was.kllled In Khan Yunls
could not be confirmed. A curfew
was Imposed on Khan Yupls after
the shootings.
Palestinians ln the West Bank
threw rocks and erected blockades of burning tirfs imd stones
on roads In Nablus, Bethlehem
and several refugee camps. The
military . Imposed a curfew on a
c•mp In Tulkann, situated near
Israel's -pre-1967 Slx·DaY War .
border.
·

I ,

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, ·OH·. ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU
9, . .f988 .
. ·. SAT., JAN.·
..
~

..

~

-.
28(
Fryer Parts ••••••• ~...
·
.

THIGHS

GRADE A
•

Whole

68&lt; lb. -

DRUMSTICKS

.

,·

88&lt; lb.
I

.

Fryers~ •••• ~~.

HORMEL SLICED.

$1
:l8
'
PepperQni •••• !·!~!·.'::·.

CRISPY SERVE

ECKRICH SMOKED

In recent years, Maravlch had
become outspoken on nutrition
and fitness. At 'last year's NBA
old-timers'. game In s·e attle,
Maravlch· ·appeared tq be In
better shape than most of the
former player.s. ,
Maravlch, . nicknamed' "Pistol
Pete" for his una~shed willingness to shoot. played tllree
seasons 111 LSU _unller his father
Press Maravlch, who died last
year, His mother e~ller committed suicide and Maravlch referred to her death at recent
public appearances .
The 6-foot-5 guar~. his droopIng socks hanging• around his
ankles, became. one; of !he most
flamboyant.player~ ~ver to pick
up a basketball. With his shaggy
hair flying, Marjlvlch '!"OUld take
long, -loping stl:ldes ' downcourt.
Barely past halfcoui:t he might
just as soon holst a shot from 30
feet or hit an . ul)suspectlng
teammate with a behind-the-

I

,

!B••

LB • .

12

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

PKG • .

s·-.- 88

·

Round Steak ••••• i:·. ·1

I

____.____
____ .. _

10 IUCI 111 " CAll ttt-tu• ·
MONDAY fin n.&amp;Y I A.M. te 5 P.M.

.....

I Ul ==-=D~IUIDAY .

..

,

..... ..

IGD&amp;n

.;..-;].~:;.
:~"::":..=.=:
......... .... '""'! .. _ ..

,.,

e:~~·

:· 1'1,

.

GUN SHOOT

f;

~~

. EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

'

...,.._

6:30P.M• .
Choke'· .. .'
12 Gouge Shotguns
Factor;

.Bana.nas ••••••• ;: 3 Las. 88 (
BROUGHTON
$
1
3
8
2°/o ·Milk ••••••••••••••

Howard L Wrlt-1

IOOFING

NEW - REP,AII
·Gutters

Downspouts
· Gutter Cleanlnsr
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4-22-17-tln

CHECK THE

'

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GAL

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FUVORITE SHREDDED TACO OR

Cheddar Cheese~~!·. 8.8C
... .'

(HEER

.

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Detergent,...... ~:~~~.

GOLD MEDAL

$588

DAIRY· LANE

Ice ·cream •• ~:~:~~ ••••• sac

JENO'S FROZEN

-

Flour •••1....... ~.1:·:::••• ~ 8

8C

.

·,

••• sac

v\,:...

1:~~1::.~z

Pizza •••••.·•••••
·.

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..
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, .,._.ion.

....

111.111

.,.,. •

Ul. .

..,..

',, f\

·'.' ,~ " J
t:_,
, .
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PRICE SAYER

SLB.

BAG

S-1·28
·

hu~.,dwr..to­

PKG.

GOOif

~AI

,_..,

3ll.
CAN

S~p.-bl

Offlr ........... -

'· , ... :

$

.......... C':I:"......

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. 4 .q

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Pomee., allaH poovldi all

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op~

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41. 0~~1!1.~

4 ROLL

.

I

GRAPE JELLY
.
.

GRANULATED SUGAR

===t~

...••

. .••

=~·.~

'fiN

Public Notice
COnd to the motion end upon
·roll cell. the vote ruulta Iii

1

lollowo: .
John Anderton, yeo; Betty Beronlck, aboont: Lorry
Wahrung, yu; ·ltonry W••·
ry, yeo; Wllllom Young, ab-t; Olck Sayle•. Moyor,

Vel-

ATTEST: •
·
Jane Welton, Clark ol
Pom•oy Vllloga.
-Melr. County, Ohio
(11 ,13,2tc
.

Public Notice
' ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Melgo County Council on
Aging. Inc., Melgo County
Senior Cltlreno
Center,
Mull,.ry' Holghto. Box 722,
Po,..oy, Ohio 41719 .
Sapar.- oeolod bl* for
the oonatNatlon of on addition to and ,.,ovation of tha
Molgo County Sanior Cit·
llano Ctnt•wlll be r-od
by tha Mol go Ci&gt;unty Coun- ,
ell
Inc. altho 01flcti
Dl...,.

Cltijtni
NOW, THEREFORE, IE ' Holghlo.
IT IIEIOLVED by tho Pom- m•ov.
eroy W..,CounaiL County 2;00 ~~---~.&amp;::o::-:
ofMatgo.'l-ofOhlo.lhM.
tht '"-ov VIII.... Council•
•
Hlflll'l: 11001111t and' 1111"
provo lha ~of INOI
J. Reed .... ""' J, . . .

• 'ol.J

WELCH'S

tl---··
.. - ...·-·
=====-"
·-- ·==-·'

.,_.

-C...

tor, 1

:v

.
~~--=
.

I

. .,..

1

oHOME BUILOiNO
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
, REMODELING &amp;
'
REPAIRS'
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

614-662-3821
Petre,

Aulhariz.. John

1

.

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

Now Hoilond, lush Hog
form Equipmonl

• o..,ler

985-4141

Flftn Equlptnut

GEIIDAl tDIIfiACIOIS

Parte &amp;Sar•lee
l-3i861fc

Public Notice

Card of Thanks
'

We wish to thank
our friends for
remembering us
with (lards over
the holidays. We
'11re unable -to
anl!wer due to
illness but we
appreciate your
kindness.
Dale and Elsie

Public Notice

Ienior

thank eil the friendo end
neighbor• of Bally Run
lid. for .their 11enerouo
glli of llowero. At 1
tlmo of grieving for the
palling of 1 loved one
It' 1 good to know there
ere peopie who Indeed
cere. Th.,k you from
the family end ' many
th~~nko to ell, for your
oupport.
Sin-ely,
Rogel',
lloulh

appertaining Work.
Sep.rote CONTRACTS
for:
1. Generol
2. Electrical
3. Heating, ventilation.
end •ir conditioning
4 . Plumbing
· 6 . Kitchen oqulpmont
The CONTRACT DOCU. MENTS moy be axomlnod
et: The Office of tho Executive Director, Malga County
Council on Aging, Malgo
County SonlorCitluno Con••· Mulbeny Helghto. P. 0 _
Box • 722, PomatOy, Ohio
411789;
lu'll•• • Niple, Umlted.
4424 EmeroanAvenue, Per·
k•oburg. WV 28104.
, Cap loa of tha CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS may bo obtelnod at tho Office ot lllr·
gooo • Nlpla, Umltod locetod at 4424 Emaroon
Avonua. Porkaroburg, WV
21104 upon poymant of
f45.00, none of which wHI
~· refunded.
By order of tha Exa..,tlve
Olrector
Molgo County
Council on Aging,
EIOMOrThomM
Exoouth/a Dlr10tor
111 e. 13. 21c

Referenc..

~~col•

RACINE - 4 bedroom
home w/large modern kitchen and · dining room,
family room with woodburner, FA gas heat. Carport,
large lot. MUST SEE!
$31,000.00.
SYRACUSE -Remodeled 2
story home. Includes 3-4
bedrooms, 1\\ bath, basement. garage on appro!. I
acre. Great for a big family!
$39,900.00.
..

MIDDLEPORT - 2 unit
brick apartment building in
town. Garage, AC units. Good
rental income. Close to
shopping. $28,900.00. •
RUTLAND- II\ story home
w/3 'bedrooms, enclosed
front porch, equipped kitchen, storage building and
part basement. $21,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT -:- PRICE
REDUCED - 2 story home
that shows the work that has
been done! Nice kitchen, 3
bedrooms, dining room, one
and a third baths, much
more. $26,900.00.
POMEROY -:- PRICE RE·
DUCED - Beautiful view of
the Ohio River! 2 story home
features 3 bdrms., full
basement, 2 car garage, I 1\
baths, attic area. Only
$19.900.00.

-

_ , l ClaNID, ...... 99%-6191.
·JUN TIUIIIII ......... ... 949-2660
,DOnll ruRNIL.,...... ~92:569!
TIACT lltfFII ............. 949-3010
OFFICI ...................,..... 992-2251

Weather .foo• Thnet"

SPECIAL
JEWR EVANS
~tone Ground Corn Meal ... 25' 11u.
Dried 8eans ..................... 1OOfo Off

Nny, HollMy han MiK. Umat. lltd IIWity, Plntli
..... GNIIt Northern, lladteytii. PNt, Sp&amp;t P-.
lorlty.

11 -3- ttn

We can repair and re·

core rad 1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair .Gas TankS.

WIITE Hill RD.
RUTlAND, OHIO

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

742-2035

.

Middlepor1. Ohio

12-31-871 m~. pd.

1·1 ll.t...

I

" '•

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPUES

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
. GUN CLUB

OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.

RACINE, OHIO

61.4-742-2355

·

RUTLAND

. v.w.

FIREWOOD

Locust, Oak, (IMtrrv

PARTS

$3500

NEW AND.USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALLMAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILULACK ,' .
614-992-2269

.PLUMBING &amp;A
HEAnNG

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

New location:
168 Nort,h Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

992-3410

DON'f'FOIGET- "ANS F-Y IIUDS

TAANI'fiOIITATioN
Oolumllut. Olllo

. . - 111111~ .
.V. ........, .CIIOCIIA11 PUIIIII
~IOPIUCBm

Director • - tho
rt1ect •nv end oa

right to

bl. .

WAIIIIIN J. IMITH

(II e. 11, 2to

~ICTOR

mao VALLO lULl FOODS

sTiiii IIAII

IWIIOf

'1..."
,_.=

''

SALES &amp; SERVICE..

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL -~ SAND
TOP SOIL

· Wo co,., Floh"" Suppllol

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

IUSIIIESS PHONE

'r•u1 992-•sso

f'ILL DIRT

I. I'

RESIDENCE PHON!
(~141

10-8-tfe

992-7754
1128111n
' • .r

HOUSE FOR RENT

THE DABBLE' SHOP
Middleport, Ohia
IS FOR SALE
H interested stop br.

107 LOCUST ST.

' •·
.,

POIISIOY _:_985-3561

...' ,.

KEN'S APPUANCE ·
SERVICE

. 1f2 PRICE SALE

985-3561

....

"~

All M1k11

GOING ON NOW

•Washers •Diahweahera
."•Ranges •Refrigerator•
•Dryers •FreeZer•

' PLASTEACAAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE. IAKITS, ETC .
12-2-'87-t mo pd

•,

WE SELl USED AI'PliANCIS

"

4-1-11&lt;

AllllUIIIIII~Illl~lliS

3 Announcements

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I~ , .

- Addona and ramodtllng .

- Roofing ..c1 guner Work
- Conetete work
- Ptbmbing and electrl~l
work

(Free Eotlmateo)

KUPID'S . NEST. Oft. . two
klndt of dttlna MrYioe. wrtte

P.O . Bo,. 118, Ironton. OH
41831. (1011 131-2741.

- INFORMATION WANTEO-

.,,

·-

AboUt Stovon l.owlo. wlf• Polly

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992 ·7314
· P.naroy; Ohio

4-15-'86-lc

Gardn• r•kl•nts of 011111
County, 1140 to tiiO. Po;ont 1
of Neth• IAwil born In Ot11g0

Co. N .Y .. Varnon Lew .. 3414

Grimoby
11102.

4

._..,., Un .... n.

NE .

Glveeway

·'
'

Wheat ltrritt. Whale Wheat Flour,
· ·
·

.......

..

'•

·'

'

·~-.:::.

.,

12/14/ 1 mo.

ludl.....t htlcellt 11!1, Orlgl..t '-lit Ml1, 1D ·
Gnhi ' Ctrta~

...

Rt. 1 24 Acroo• from
Happy HoiiQw Ad .

10-9-lfn

WE CARRY .EWEL EVANS l'IODUCTS

NOTICE TO
CONTRACT0118
STATE OP OHIO ·
DIPASTMINT OF

~ Ulllli 10:00 A.M., OHo

IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 acre farm with older
home, garage and other
buildings. Clo~ to Pomeroy.
ASKING $42,500.00.

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

Cam Meal. ·

:r...,""::.DJ:::::.

. E. llil•lr•WIII
, POMEROY,O.
992-2259
MINERSVILlE ~ Nice 2
story home with a view of
the beautiful Ohio River. 3
bedrooms and much more!
PRICED TO SELL AT
$19,900.00.

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
-JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

YOUNG'S

Public Notice

Da•u btr 14, 1987
COII&amp;iliUt . . . .
ICo NoU.43
UN PRI~OONTIIACT
lollltljii I I wlbt•
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OJ.

Real Estate General

ST. RT. 143- A-(rame and
2~ acres ol ground close to
town . 3 bedrooms, full
basement, woodburner hookup. In a greal location.
$29,900.00.

We sincerely wioh to

/

MARCUM
CONTRltnNG
I
CHESTER. OHIO
I

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO . ·

RUTLAND - Very neat
ranch style ~orne with C/A,
garage, 3 bedrooms, lg:
living room, dining area
w/bar. nice big Jevel lot.
MAKE OFFER. $38,500.00.

back pass. .
from halfcourt at the halftlll'\e
· Despite Maravlch's electric
buzzer against Georgia.
· llresence, LSU barely finished
Maravlch's inability to_play for
above .500 his first two varsity
a consistent and winning team
seasons. The Tigers went 22-10 continued In the NBA. He was
his . senior year In 1970. That
selected third In the 1970 draft by
season, In which he scored 50 or
Atlanta and inade the All-ROokie
more points 10 times, he was
team.
·
· named United Press Internation"l'he· Atlanta Hawks are
al's College Player of the Year.
shocked and saddened by the
He struck for 69 points against
news of the death . of Pete
Alabama.
Maravich," said Stan Kasten,
Maravlch scored 3,667 ·points general manager of the Hawks.
during college, an average of 44.2
"The Pistol was one of the
points a game. Even though greatest players of our genera· college players at that time were · tion, 11nd although he played for
eligible tor varsity play for onlY
two other teams, we will always
three years, no four-year Jllayer
~member ' lilm ·as an Atlanta
has .since matched Maravlc)l's
Hawk."
total. His field goal and free
In May . 1974, Maravlch was
tlirow totals of 1,387 . and 893 traded ,to New Orleans for two
remain major coliege records.
players and four draft choices
· In Mar~vlch's · last college and went on to become the Jazz's
game, he scored his usua140-plus most successful player.
·
points, Including a hook shot

_.....,.,

RESOLUTION
Thlo lo to certify thot tho
following ectlon woo token
by the Pomeroy Vllloge
Council,
Meigo County,
· Ohio, while In rogular _ ..
olon on tho 21 ot doy of December, 1117 and r-rded
In Pomeroy Vlllogo JCMirnal.
Mt. John Ander10n m . tho motion to odopt tha following:
_
WHEREAS . BrucoJ. Reed
and AltAI J. Reed, huobond
and wife, have fllod a Petition to An- opproxlmotely
.34e • - • oltuatad In
Molgo/Sutton
Townohlp
within tha' Vlllogo of Porn·
eroy.
Furtller. It oppeoro that a
portion of tha Raod 1ool eotate Iii currentiJ oltuoted
within tha VIH... of Pomeroy ond the pellllon•o
are cleolrouo of .,nexlna tho
bot- of thalr •ldtntlal
reel - t e wlth!n tha Vlllogo
of Po.-oy.
WHEREAI: tho P-oy
VIII... Council fMio tt.t •to
In tha bolt - . o t oftl" P•
lltlon.-t ond tha YDtllll• of
Pomeroy 10 permit Mid an- ·

No Sunday Calls

SALES &amp;SERVICE

Basham Building

•.&gt; " ..!';

: : _ _ .. ..... ,., _ R _ _ ..oO..MI

Public Notice

...

PH. 949·286D
or 949-28.1 1

BOGGS

RACINE
FIRE DEPT•

.•.: ·.......
•

,, 1-

-c--

__........,_ ........

New Homos Buill
"Free Eatimiltes"

,

"..,

Clahlfied pa&amp;e• awer I he
followln&amp; leleplw,... e.uMnp ....

.•• _. __ ;,__ co;c-:"'~'::'.=":'.!:. ·

BISSEll

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

;~

....

-.-~

- ~=

INSULAnON

1

..... , .. '

.'Aft- ............ .. ....__

'llOWN IN

SIDING CO.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

•

'VINYL SIDING '
•ALUMINUM SIDING

Prices"

417 Second Avlltllt, Box 12-13
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

-

!Woo ... iC'-o

_~_

Reasonalllt

~ (6~4) 446-Js19 or (614) 992-2104

z

....

111101o'tM

HOMES &amp; _GARAGES
"At

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

_
':.=-...............
. _,..... . . . . . ..._____
-.....
.... . - .. -· . -.

OOUCKl

_,
,,_
..,,....,..
,c:_,IO_
...,""""'"'-'

CU$TOM IUIT •

llependlble Hetrinc Aid .
C!J Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

r.ATE8
.,,,..c.·,.
.• -• ,..• ..,..
:::: :::: .:: :::::
....... ,..
......................,
' O.'l't

BISSELL .
BUILDEIS

6-17-tfc

·1

!
"I

'•

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto .Jr••••IHio•
PH; 992-5682
or 992-7121

two.''

.

Sa u~sage . . . . ... ,198 Sliced Bacon •••••~•••
BUCKET .
.
.
·$198
Cube-Steak ••••••••••
KENTUCKY BORDER
'
'
.
oz.
W·1eners •••••••••••••••••

Roger Hysell ·
Garage

I

.

1

The

B-u siness Services
Rl. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

· PASAbENA, Calif. (UPI) Pete l\ll$ravlch, the greatest
scorer 1ri college basketball history, coi)apsed from a heart
attack a'nd died Tuesday during a
pickup game moments after •
declaring, "I'm reall)' feeling
good ." He' was 40.
Maravlc)l, one of the game's
most dazzling players and a
member of the Hall of Fame, was
playing a hiilfcourt game . with
friends at· Church of the Nazarene when, he fell suddenly. He
was taken to St. Luke Hospital of
Pa.s adena where doctors tried to
revive him for 5() minutes,
hospital spokeswoman Sue
McPherson said.
The fanner Louisiana State
star who spent most of hls NBA
career wltll the Atlanta· Hawks
and New Orleans Jazz died at
9: 42 a.m . PST. ·The cause of
death . was a · heart attack,
McPherson said.
G11ry Lydl~k, at the church to
tape a religious radio show with
Maravlch, said the former star
marveled at the·good time hew as
having.
·
·~He said, ' I haven't played but
once In thepastyear-lnanNBA
Legends game,"' Lydick said.
''He said, 'I need to do this more
often. I'm really feeling good.'Maravlch turned to walk away
and Immediately fell to the floor .
He wasn't playing hard at all and
then the next thing, ·he just fell.
'.'We could tell immediately
that lt Was very 'severe. l'm sure
he probably went Into a ielzure.
Hls eyes started to roll and he
became very jaundiced almost
within a matter of a minute or

Limit Qutnlities

'.

'

'Pistol Pete' ~aravich dies.
Tuesd4)r in pickup ball~ ~e

•

In New York, the U.N. Security
Council voted 15-0 Tuesday to
approve a resolution that "calls
upon Israel to refrain from
deporting any Palestinian clvlll. ans from the occupied terrlto·-- rles." The United States joined In
the un11nlmous vote because .It
considers deportations " harsh
measures unnecessary to maintain order," Ambassador Herbert Okun told the Council.
Israeli Ambassador Benjamin
Netanyahu defended his government's policies In the occupied
territories as "the .first and
foremost duty of any government
- to maintain order. "
Palestinian Intellectuals said
they may call for a campaign of
non-vio lent civil dlsobedlance If
Israel deports the nine acthdsts.
"We would ask th~ population
not _to pay any kind of tax In the
occupied territories and not to
buy Israe)l products on certain
days," said Hanna Slnlora, editor of the Aral;llc-language dally
newspaper AI Fajr.
Bu t Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres expressed doubt that the
residents of the occupied territories· would support any .kind of
boycott or strike.
"The residents have their own ·
limitations, " he sa,id. "Whoever
suggests making circumstances
1n the territories more difficult,
In my opinion, Is kicking a ball
Into his own net."
Arab unrest Bared anew Sunday when a soldier, chasing a
youth, shot to death a woman
hanging laundry in a West Bank
village north of Jersualem. The
soldie r and his lieutenant were
- suspended-pending an Investigation, but army officers expressed
concern the killing would fuel the
flames of protest.
In Tuesday's vi olence,
hundreds of people gathered In
the Khan Yunls refugee camp In
Gaza out side the house of an
activist ordered deported. The
crowd hurled rocks at an Israeli
patr_ol as martial music blared
from the minaret .of a nearby
mosque, an army spokesman
said.

Ohio

.

Violence

JERUSALEM (UPI) - An
· Israeli oftlce.r shot a P·alestlnlan
man today as violent disturbances continued In the occupll!(i
territories one day after Israel
came under new pressure from
the United Nations to refrain
from ·deporting alleged Arab
Instigators.
_
State-run Israel Radio said the
Palestinian man forced his way
Into a military car In the West
Bank town , of Tulkarm and
stabbed a female sojdler In the
hand before he was shot and
captured by an army officer In
the vehicle.
· The radio said Khaled Khelrallah, 20. was In serious. condition
after being · apprehended and
taken to Tulkarm Hospital, 20
miles northeast of Tel Aviv. The .
female &amp;oldler was slightly
wounded on the hand. An army
spokesman said lie had no
Immediate Information on the
Incident.
_
. The military also lmpos~d
curfews on the Tulk11rm refugee
camp after youths threw -~tones
at soldiers.
The shooting Incident came a
day after Israeli troops !ired on a
crowd of rock-throwing Palestinians In tile Gaza Strip, killing
Athes Mohammed Dahlan, 25,
and wounding eight others In an ·
Incident that threatened to unleash a new round of violent
disturbances In the occupied
territories.
Dahlan's death brought to at
least 24 ' the number of Palestinians killed by Israell troops since
anti-Israel riots flared Dec. 9,
according to army figures. ~.a ·
lestinlan and hospital sources
said at ieas\27 have died .
· On Monday au,thorltles ordered the expulsion of nine
Palestinians blamed for Inciting
the anti- Israel unrest.

6, 1988 .

Pt.- - No. lt'o ""' In •Hiont
oondltiDn. lUI tt' 1 free. Cell
~~4--2201.

em

i-ondWJ&gt;ko""'"•

~

D&amp;C IUCTIIC
Roll 011.. llr

Oery C ummins

·

-Oidorlnlllo.. - . .

dn_.u..,.... ........

Aloollllle.llllot"-'-•

........... todotrloillo. .....

- - · 1 4 1 1. . . . ,

I ft. erttiiGIII Chu lllii4C ,.._

Colll"-192-2041.

.·

· •••

�•

8,1988

Pea• 12-The Daily sentinel
4

Glveeway

Pornea,.,- Midtleport. Ohio

•

LAFF-A-DAY

.

· 41

Allwllioe-- wllh llttw

Homo for Rent

Nl..., lumiehool amal . _...
....,., - · lltlf. . . . .. No
, _ Coll.t4-UI GUI.

_.,..,..1.

' IIIM.iilv-ondlll•rM

Lor. . Z·3 IR . ......... PI"""' of

f

Loet end

o t _.......1.1 4.441'70ZI.

Found

----Dr.C..
lle-Mni-._.D,.Ctll

.''' •••••a.

-

L08T -Heretortl •••••tel

llolh: -

1M.

L OIT -

ond

c.a

Ill"'*
Gormon
.... WIM h't

....... .,.. .....- 0011• on. 104- '

·

171-1142 ., 304-418-1110.

7

· Yerd

Sele

"Surely~

Rudy, . you must

·······Ganrpolia·········· have some idea of when the
. &amp; Vicinity
...................................

ltMistalii:FiwM•kM · form•
lltll•
Ru, 31. teO.

o.r...

elevators will.be repaired!"

Public Sele
• Auction

.

.

: Wa da ,. ._. • A~lon SerYic•
, .,..... M your convenlenc.
- ' Merlin
Wod•
·• ond
, . _Auction-11 4-245·

• 111Z.

Wanted To

8
We •

Buy

o•h for l.te model ciMn

• ut~~~ ·a.e.

:

.1111'1 M"'k Chw.-0 .. Inc. ,
. • OM• JoM1an

.,

.........3172 .

TOP CAIIH poid ""' '83 model
. lrNI n..., URd c... Smhh
luldi-Pomloc. 1911 ·E•..•n
A.w .. Oolllpolll. Coli 814·448·
2ZIZ.
WANTED TD IUY: U10d wood
• oo• h.._a. Swein's Furnl·
3rd. • Olivo St. Oolllpollo.
Coll814-44t-31 51.

. . . . to

buy- uhd furnlturt~
_.. entiQurM. Will buy entirJ

:-'*

Could IVmiahlng.. M1rlln
..... 114·241·1152.

UMd Mobile Homa C.ll 1141-

441-0171.

I•• ,with Wl1«. on
comr•ct. 1500 down -

I .art11 or
1..-d

. · •200 • · mo. In Cl-v tchool
• ·· - o t. Call 814-258-8887, 8
' PM ·11 PM ;

'

W~TED

TO BUY· Cantonnltl
• - · Oo~lpollt. Ohio printed In .
1110. V~non Lewia, 34&amp;4
Orlmabv Lane Lincoln, NE.

88502.

-

Buvtriy.!.,~ gold: altver coins.
ring~.

-

la. 114-44t-1221 .

ry. llerting w.re. old

ooiM. Iii• cu"ency. Top prilcw. Ed urkltt S.rlt• &amp;hop.
2nd. Aw. Mkloll-" Oh; 11 4112-34711.
.
Ill.., fvr. beef an4 d. . hid•.

-G,n- ling and Yellow' root. We

tt.. wll•

and ntte • lttM.
, ........... .uppl• tor Ml&amp; (Buy.

lne·u...-t..pet. Georgeluc:;kler.
Hou,.12·9. 1114-18"-4711 ;

_O.UILTS
lf!th prl- pold for pro· 1960
quiiiL Applique.
any ·.
oorMitlon. Colll14-9.92-2101
or 114·112· 5117.

pl-.

Uted outdoor color T.V, In·
-nL Co118t•·992·7304.

I1''1JI11 1,'l~l!';1t
~el 'JII,l~;i

4 .BR . country homt for rent.
f275. Vloginla L. s,.lth-Rall
·E-o-114.311' 1828.
.
2 . 3 .· or 4 bedroom hou111 end
ept. in Pom•ov .... Pf¥ own
utlltl•. oociui'ad. Coli
1114-982-5 i13. 114·112-11723

......._N_....,...

Help W .anted

Out ofWork1 No ;q,binaightlWe
D-" h•l lastc Educltion and
llklll Tr~lnlng n.tlllbla Contact
Adu• ·a..l -. BHCC ot 814·
2411-1338.

DRUMMER WANtED ' Foo
-ntry· rodl b.,d. Coli 814·
448-2144.
Chriltm.1 bill1 to PIY1 Stert
...lng AVON befuoo Jan. 12,
rtcllwa free cologne. Call 814-

44t-2158.
" Frl- R.,.ll Coop" of 0.11&gt;
polio. Ohio • com.,..ont

Ml• p...on to wark in Chllcf..

,..., Clothing Store. Mult be
highty mottnted and LOVE
worling wll:h children. Send
rteume to: Friend• Retail Corp ..
P.O. IOJC 981 , Oalllpolll, Ohio
41131 .
O.nT• II now ac~ing •ppU·
Gltfona for Mperlenctd T~
llreperWI. Muat be flmlll• with
IIMIIvlduel tu ,...,,.., For infof.

medon and appointment. phone ~
DonT•· 114·4411·8179. Hro:
10 AM·I PM. M·F.

....,.-. needed for two glrllea• ft¥tl and tw9, montv

-lnga.

'.

eo1 llt•· 387-n67.

'

72

Household Goodl

:

~!:.!':,oc~:?;J:".;,!,":,~: .

:w~=NITURI

5

154

k

f

rue • or

. ·'

, ·:

1

•c:r•.

Lend Cont..at. 1.81
3
be*oom hou11, b•n and 3
oth• building~ . 13151,90 nt9nth
plus 12500. down or c•h _price
of 121.000. Colll14.812·2143
boloro llvo Of 814-192·8373
1ft• five.

78

wttlpunctu,. •pwl.nce. Send
,..,,.. to EMil 1010 Wood·
m.. Drive, 250, O.Vton, Ohio
41432.
.

7:30 • ()) Holtwood lqUPrH
• Cl) _.,.,..... Game •

I=::! Q
•= OIJ~viQ
I
e tJl

ouALIFY, su:e, SUi
WE DON'T HAVE A
~~EOVENT ~Ye~,;

r.•..,.w. ·,

'78 Dodgo Coli n:uot D&amp;O .lot .
~rta. niWfrontend. mlktofftr, •
~0~17&amp;·&amp;110.
' . :

ne~, ~goes to hie
head.
&lt;!J 11!1
I~ Yoyllll
ReMarch In lttle·known
regions of the earth Ia
examined. D
1111 ea Tile 01c1111 ROOkie
Ike. Tony and a baby girt
"arch lor the baby'I
mother. D ·
QPrlm.r.iwa

ALLEY OOP

1D1 MOYI!: The Compe1111on

.
'
•

.

'

\'

'· \

~ '

.

.

,,.
'

partner.

e

Cle•ner. ont h•lf mile .up •

Cerpenter Work·· Plumlplng, ~
roofing. llldlng. All!o...,oopoln ..
Coii814-31S·Itl42.
. j

. MS 1 3&amp; g•lro~. plowa. dloc
Md blado. Callti14-IIZ-7401.

62

Wanted to Buy

NoW buying 1hell cttrn or • •
corn. Cell tor !Meet quotet. River
City F"m lupply, 81 4·441·
2811.
·.

448-1377.

.dJ

J•J-oH_.__..;
Build ~ l'lmodel bith rOom a..., '

.....1111.................. ~~

F«ty T'" · Trimming. otump ;

•

Rotary or cable tool dr•na. "'
M_ oetwtltacompl..ede...edar. ~
Pump Ill• end atrvloe. J04- :.
881· 3102
.•

64

82

Grain
\

.. .

Plumbing·
• . Heating

-----------....:.
' ·.
' , ·,
\

Hoy lor oola- Largo 1700 lb.
oound btl.,. ..uaro bel•· Coil
!114-117-8184.

; CMTEft'S PWMIINO
AND HEATJNG
_ :·
Cor. Fourth •nd Pin a~
·;
0.11-. Ohio
;
Phone 1114·441·3181
t14- •,
441-44n
- ·•

Mlxod h.. lor Nlo. Coli 814.
742·2711.

84

11)1 Larry ~ Uvel

;N AYeE ITS Q&lt;.\ZY
BUT IF IMNOT
A WE'REWOL.f. .. '

Stoty

f.JON

O::::W.E l HAVE.AU-!HIS

HAIR G-ROWINEf-AL..L OVER

'

MY~'i

. ''·•
'

.,• .

.' .
.

,.

..... .

r::rter.(R)

JEST FINE !!
HE'S L'ARNIN',
HIS ABC'S IN

• (l) lenny Hill
10ioll (I) MOYI!: High Noon (NRI
(1 l25)
·
10:30 Ill A-"can Snlpahobl

KIDDYGARDEN

11!1 ....., for !.port Q
(8)Newl
.

.a.

e (l) Hogan'• tteroH

. . ''

11:00 (]) Retnlnglon Sleale ·
• ()) (I) • (I) 1111 •

;
Refrlgeretlon .• ;,:·

lng. New a.-via. or , . , . ·:: ·
U0onood oiiCiirlol.,. Eot...... . .
Rld.nour 'EiecllriCIII, ICM.{,
11711-1781.
.
. .~}

tr•.

&lt;!JifgnOff
11!1 1.ou11 Rulteywa 1•
~ Clukle Look ~t what's
ahead for the counl{y
economiCally tnd polftleally In
11188. RllklyMr explores
whl1 Nnllrlcana cen elCpiCI

TH£ GRIZZWELLS®
rYMAT Ai-116HTM~.~I !IREAI'ED
,t; ~GilA~' ~ ~\.. 600\c:.
-...:.....('\,&amp;...,.., ~· : .

•• AHI7 WHEN

I~UP.,

whh the new ta• law.
0 .....,...

11:30.()) Coli II I I' elblll
Kentucky va Mla1laelppl

m•••
c•p.m•a.
81-. hoct
wor'-1.

s-

electrl-

Mf'llce
.. .......lol-. ln ....
_... rniiiUn•cewOf•l. nur•

&lt;1&gt; ~::Centcor (L)

(J)~IIIllllllllwQ

1111 ..,·rtanta end ord•U•.

......

and walden. Real ..

1u-. _,_

__- ..........
....... ,..,.....
...;...bf
-.
'"..
.........-..-.........
'"'= . . . . . .
loll~-

'

........... m....,oflfllahNith

sr.~·-ew
'1:i::..t
. Nood
ohwoo

li--~

--oiJtiiWa ·R...... _

....

... ·

~·

11111Qiclllll......

.... 4th.
311tlllt. 14. A
Cotolllllo

1------------J

by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 Optional
ACROSS
1 Throat-

cleerer .

II USPS IU!m

lO"-,
Britannia"
11 Pail

partner. ·

12 Encourage

13Caravan
1&lt;&amp;Chest
lining
16 Gra.sslaild
17 Trilby, e.g.
19 Frosted
2llsolate
23 Subject of
Insurance
27 Smith's
need ·
28Poem part

&lt;&amp; Bo11ndary
INYSE
concern
8Crag

7 G.-and·
parental
8 Persian's
ancestor
9 Kind of ·
bargain

24 Cabinet . 35 Smooth
concern
dept.
consonant
15 Parsley
25 Headliner 38 Toward
kin
26 Hawaiian
shelter
i 7 Find out
storm
38 Church
18 English
28 Jargon
part
princess 30 Shabby 40 Misdo
20 MUd curse 32 Sordid
42 Now
22 Fodder
3.&amp; Russian
(Ger.)
CitY
4311 NASA's

29 VIrginia ·
dance
30 Caning palm
31 Sultanate · hr-+-+-I--

33Time : period
3' Palm leaf

· 37Rose
esilence
39Siacken
41 "Lonesome"
tree

e=·mc2

46 Kind
of puss

.&amp;6 Cautious
'71rish
river
DOWN
I Macaw
2 Center

l/8

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. in this sample A ~ used
·for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatioo of the words.are all
hints. £ach day the code letters are different.
·
CJliPNQUOTB
1:6

NU

OEXAAR.JH

X H

QXS

Old You

a-111ft,.._.

+82

I

P.l.

1I:GO!Eneend Mill ·

. . 11111111..-e ww lwa. leoome

... 3
tJ 10874
.. 75

SOUTH

C

.CZ).

D o_
- h_
- tho oplrit of ••lnel
,...

I

EAST
+KJ74
• A J 108
t632

WEST
+A IS

The best defenders have a good .
+QlO
sense of smell. They can snUf out de- I ·
.K7 52
fensive plays that other players might-j
+Q8 5
. overlook. Place yourself in the East
+10863
..
; poeltiOTI, confronted . with your part·
Vulnerable: North~South
. ' ne~·s lead of the diamond jack against
Dealer: North
three no-trump. Declarer wins dum· I
my's king of dianionds and plays a low Weol
Eall
heart from dummy. If you rise with
Pua
Pus
the heart ace, you will give tile declar· Pass
Pus
er two triets, not 011ly the queen but - Pass
Pus
the obvious king in the COTicealed Pass
band, so you play low - or do you?
Paso
· Tile ~c prillclple of defending
Opening lead: +J
against three no-trump Is to take ·
enough tricks to set declarer before he
cari take h~ niae tricks. Here, If East
plays the jack, io or nine of hearts at · must first play the spade klni. West
trick two, declarer will obviously will encourage with the eigbt and
scamper home with nine tricks - 3 diwiU next play a low spade.'·Now
.amonds, 1 heart and 5 clubs. Tbe only Eait
the _Q-10 are gone and West can play
cbance for the defense Is to grab the back the five through the dummy/s 9· b88rt ace and !ben take four spade 6, enabling East to take two ·more
tricks. But note well how that needs to t!icks with the J-7 to set tiKi contract.
be del!!!:J¥ith the .layout. as it Is, East

I\' CIS .....

:nr- .
0

........

•
_,..,.,

.

IJIIIIIll!!, 1'.1.

w ...... tor ce. . . biealnrilna
........, 4111. CoA Tri-County
Voaot- Adult CoM• ot 713·
M11 Mt 14. A vorioty of
to _., lor
- . . . . •• ......... lor tl!ou

.

+AK
+AKQH

DAILY CRYPTOQUOI'ES-

()) Schollllllc 8porta
Amallcl
.

e (II ~ CornnoiiCedllaliDII•

Jolt IMinttng1 Notld o oldll1 Wo
u • ,_.,,, for jobl 11 I!Uto

m~1.

0

IIIINewl

. +l
·R•klentl• or commtftllll ~...Jt,:"

l·HI

4&lt;&amp;Pertof

11)1 Evening N...a

a.

Electrlcel

e Ill Sfllp Mexwlfl

.
Slap agonizes over
dejlv•rlng the verdict that his
son can't write. Q
10:00 (]) 81ratgtd Talk
e ()) Ol St. Elaswl1eN
Ausc~lander enrolls fallow
cancer patient In an
aaperlmantal program. Q
(I) • Ill Drn•IIJ Q
&lt;!J Loula Rukeyllf't 1811
"-Y Outde Look et what's
ahead lor lha CC'untry
aconomlcally and politically In
1988. Rukayair explores
what Americana can txpect
with the new tall law.
111 ea The Equatt1er
McCall 1fC8S against time to
• help Cd'ltrol's kid!lapped
1:30 (I)

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

.clroln worklol- or • ....,1.41111
work prtntMd. ltrv!Qrl oeft• ·
mille. CoU 114-441·11744.

•a n.. ~:.,..;.... .

.. Control's goddaughter has
only •e·hours 10 deliver
information. (R)

.;

------------------~· .

·w.,tod to IKiy 1 to 1 broil bHI
cows. Call 114-982-llMO or
1114·982-7148.

400 bol• i&gt;! Clovor Hoy . 400
boloo of MlxOd 110\'· Cooh only.
Coli f14·381-1413 or 318.
8150 or 114.471-1472.

i

br· tbojoll. , ...................

Starks Tr• end Uwn Servloe. •'
t.wn c•e. l••eping. .cump ·'
rtmov••· 304-&amp;78-2142 or ·:
578-2803.
- ..

., ...;

. . . 1\.' '

dryw.t remad•ln• C.l .11~:

.

.

--

lv. ol' l

-1. Coll304.171·1331.

Uvestock

Hey •

perpelrator of funeral home ·
lhetta. a
&lt;!J dD li!Movar: World of
Sci•- Follow a drama11c
new procedure called
valvuloplasty for newborns.

.·.RON'S Tel•vl•lon •ervlcl.' · ·
Hou• c ..• on RCA. Quaur. ·
OE. 8pocllllni In ZonMh. - Coli '
304·171·2311 . . .14-441- '
2414.
.
-::

•

63

••.50 •

•

()) CoHIOI llllakelblll
(I)
Cll Haopennu Harry
poses as corpse to catch the

up ad delftry, DIIVIe YIOUuftl oJ

carp.... -

.Q,

Getting there
.first'

• Jim and Unctley reel tr;om the
escapades of their eccentriC

•-Ina

CII081. IONI
I
U.S. 3&amp; W- Jocbon, Ohlo.o
tit 4-288·1411 .
.
M•_,For. .-.N-Hol.,d.
BuaiiHoeltiM.Sorvloe. Ovw
40 uMd tractor• to ehooee from
a compiM llno of n- • uioil
..ulpmtlnt. Lor- oolootlon In
I .E. Olllo.
•
.

NORTH

+un z

:James Jacoby

1:00 Ill 700 Club
'
. .III Ol A Yaar In tile IJfe

IWEEPEII. ond
m..lliln~:·
fOIIolr, ond auppll. . Pl,.i

Farm Equipment
. .

BRIDGE

Arvid and Eric lrade Identities
when Arvid's pretty pen pel
visits. Q

BASEMENT
•
WATIIIPROOPINO _ '::1
UnOOftcllllonal llf«imt gu1rar.J
.... Loot! '"......_ lumlolltd;
Fr• Coli oolrOal
1 ·111~237-0411. - .. ~ht.
.. ID g e r I I e I e"' en"''
Ww&amp;ap;oollwg:. ~
·: , •

Goo .... Co- Rd. Ctll 111"- ·:
.
4411-0284. '·
' . •
.

jPO) (2:09)
' .
• (II Colage llllllllalbllll

1:05 (I) MOYIE: Tha Wild IlMas
CRI (2:14)
1:30 Ill AnlrMia ol Alrk:.l
(I) • Cll Hud ot tile Cl1111 .

'
Home
•• ·
Improvements ,·. · .... ;
.

In

commercial tor the

•

81 ,

Cll Ptlfect

When Larry atara

·-

•

-ngara

decldes to HParate lham. Q

(I) •

~----------~~- 1'
Flborgl- t - • · •18&amp;. FhoBI
Ford llhortbod. Coli 1114-3?9· '
2781.
, .

01 HlghWey 10

Hoven Orpha~MC~ brothers
hide out when the court

Pfrot;AAM.

.... Coli ""-"1-011 .
buy Junk tnn-tlona.

.

7:35 ()) Sanford •!111 lion
8:00 (]) Second ,...,.,_

'(ou•p C~frrAiNLY

Ua_ed • rtbull'tranlmlellona.-AI

57

81

in an office with a grapevine. One young man replied , "I
we had' one."· ··
·

· By Jamee Jacoby

=RP,In Cincinnati

....

Parts ·
Acceaaorl11

intemelty ln1p 1 all d •

Bunctv 111o Mx, u..:l very ltttl'
like~ new. 304-773--&amp;307- or'
773-1111.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

• (l).llrclga

I

Auto
•

•eoo. co1 ., •.

!he chuck le qyoltd
•
. bv fill ing in the missing words
1:..::1 you develop from step N o~ 3 below .

HEARD

Ol Wheel '! For1Une

.(II M•A•S•H
7:05 (I) Andy QrltlltJI

r

AKC reg. 8lbtlrl1n Huaby puppl-. 2 famll•. block and wflh•.
•zoo. Alk for Roe• or Jonnliw.
304-782-2173.
. .

Hoy lor Nle. Coli 114·141121111.

Business ·
Opportunity

ua.

,

Wurllb:• Plano for 11le. Exctf.;

I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS.
' • •.
Abjecf- Rench - Black ..:... Fervid - HEARD·
·The'speekar at a seminar aaked the group if any one worked

.

POtlune

,.1

Muelcal
Instruments
- - - -- - - - - -

oP-

I will say thihbout being an
1011 are certilln things will
get l;lollar, even II things don'ttlmlst,

e t~ms• I I I I I our I

@CMe... .

•tra•. opel.:

1978.1 cyl 4 optiOd, CJB ' -.'
aOod tlr• 1nt1 running cond~
U.200.00 firm. 304-UI,

112-2111.

lit liZ

1883 J"p CJI. II ayl., •
h•d top. Lots of
E.:el. •
cond. C.lll14·441-4171. ; _ ,

56

'""' .....1on.

ill He!~!&amp; •
0 MoneJIIne

T...,.

'
1178 Chwy Window
• 1400. S04-&amp;711-211117.

AKC Gold"" Rotri ...r puppy, 7
months old. 304·8715-7991 .

·' $

.

&lt;!J 11!1 MlcNIII/ L811Nr

73•. _ _
Vans • 4 W.O.
_ ._
_ _ __._ _
1812 DodgaZIO Ram. Cuot- :
CD~
rudy. C.ll ,
114-441-4313 d.,a. 448-0139 '
_,., • Mok-.
' -

Brook Cem.-.t •d Suppl-.
304· n:s-&amp;234.

AKC Boller pup1, 7 mal•. 2
·temaltl. very 1peoial puppl._
•210. uoll. 304.124· 7980 or
342-2487 oolloot.

.

.
•
.
_
'-...J.-.1..--1"-..L.-

()) ~...... lfllkdlall
(I) !nlertllnment, TCMIIgllt . .
• Cll Pnplt'e Coutt ·

I

2 Me Reg .. mele Chlhuahue1.
For morelnformetkm c• 114·
388·8481.

.

•())PMll.ga ~..

I

Drogonwynd Cottory IC8nntl.
CfA Himel•"· Peraien and
SlemMe kttt.nt. AKC Chow
puppl•. Coli 1114-448-3144
llfl• 7PM.

.

Newlllour (1 :00)

Re.:ty mix. oonc:rete Mid •H

• Groom 1nd Supply .S hop-P-.:
Grooming . All breeds ... All
atyl•. lama Pet Food Dell•.
Julio Wobb Ph. 814-4411·0231.

•

I

asH; ...."-::&amp;ort .
.

;_l

T L I B GH
out - .
1--."I;.,-;_l..:...,l;:...,_.:;lr-·.:.:...l"_a~ ,0 Complelo

7:00 Ill Rllrnlt'!"" ......

..

Am•i'*- tlvhg room . 1871 Ch•y IIU8r. 71,000
ml• Colll14-441·4111.
1978 Dod!io 4 · whotl d.:.Vo. : ·
5&amp; Building Suppliel
1877 Ford 4 whotl clrlvo, 1171 ·
ChcNy ~ton 'ldl-up. •1100 ·
ooch. 114-848·2101,
'

Early

Pete -for Sale

/jj NIA T~ (T)

.

.(II Too CION for Cotnloi1 .
. 8:35 (I) c.ol llurnelt

oulto. 2 pc. 30"-87&amp;·7984.

concrete tuppN•. can ut Yell'¥

'

llllllodv !leclrlc
0 IMkil Polltlel ••
iU1 WICRP In Clnclnnd

e3110. Coiii14-H7.7217. :..:~

'
Builclng Mdarl• (,
111ooio. brlak. - p i p - . win. - · llntola. otc. Claude Win- ·
..,.. Rio OrondO. D. Coil 814· .
20-1121 .
Concnto blocilo ahlloo yord 0.
dtllvory. Muon und. Oolllpolil
Blodc ,co.. 123~ Pine St.,
Oolllpollo, Ohio Coli 81 4·44t·.
2713.

..:r.v

5

· a 'iri'cu ..... ,

S.le

tnoc1o. •-.1113Ch~~ty , nl-

MIIC . Marchendlae

[, d II' ·I Iill 11111 II

21

T

.

H

I
.~ ,N.;_o,_w; . ,;-E I'- -~1
I I 1

e (II Ont, Dey au Time
8:05 (I) Allee
.
8:30 llf ()) 01 NIC Nlgldly Newl
'

2

· ' ILORPW
I I' I" .1:1·

br•:P

1H1 PICII ol Life

·too~

61

llr-

Financial

tlrat

be-

lo lorJ!I lour rlmplo wordr.

R

e0

!ll 1111

Cll

tho

I tl' t l I I

0 llloillll&amp; Todlj

;;:::::;=:;::;:::;:;;;;:::== ~~~~=:;:;~~~==r.;;:;;~~~·~~~~j 11000.
nas Dod!io
eon 1\
..,.
1f74 2~
Ch...,

10.1 42.
ftN, LPN, ·or P•nllflc to
comptlte ~bile lneul"'nCI ••·
...,, In Galli a County. Mult hwe

~4.-·3421 .

flrt

1811. Llnoolnway. N . Aurora. II

low

&lt;!J Dr. Wllo
11!1 DeaNasl Junior Hlgl1
Mel8nie retuNe to join race
when ahe'e teued about her

ibOd ...~~

1171 Ford Ilk._

Furniataed or untu"*•~ •-•
8 ..,.,.. _,,_,._ .;:;;..;;.
Point PI-nt. d - i t - " " ·

N••

GET 'AID lor i..dlng booul
UOO por title. Wrlto: ACE· 33f,

.

'78; 4 . ayl Porotleo lunlll!~
.400.00. 30~17&amp;· 2·17. '), •

wnh•.

Oevc•e Cent• h• posttlon
o'pen for 2 more chlldrM. Hwe
ref•enc:e~ . Calll14-4ot8-8147.

.,eiii...... e

8:00 Ill c...., Uk• • '""

•a.IOO.

•so.

11

Roarronoo lo110rs ·of
0 lour
rcromblod words

'

EVI!NING

71
· - lllyl•ll.
- -ruft1
...
cr·conlrol,
•utonuiltla.
...... · -· 304-171-1707.
11113 Oonag&amp; ....................
4-clr, ••· _,.,
Col
altor &amp;·p.m. 304-191-3120. :

·I unfurniahed fooma. ov. 3 c•
g-o. Adulto only, no plto.
•;eo. month: eo11 311+171·
2131. .

C••

.

M

. WED. 1 JAN. 8

....••••

fMf IIAilf
PUll Ill

()) lporlai.OOic (T)

..m Unfu"*hool. -

'*,.....

J!J:!

•

W.M

t 171 Ford !lltll, OU1G. po. pll.
.....
lodr - ·I7ZZ.
..........
lw.fm.
Coiii14-)IZ·

bt*CHNn. efflal•a, _,.,..._..
U21. por-h.CoiiS1"-448&amp;tllbotw-I·IMond"'thnl
FrldoJ.
,

or
1114·882-2108.
Call altor 1304'881-3450.
.
il:oo.
pl•o.
I·
3 - . . ..... 2 lui bathe. lorgo 4&amp; Fuml1hed Room•
llvlna ooom. d!n?J,room ond

:="th;d~pl,:"..;.,

·".......
*""

-:;.

v_.,.

1111 l'ontiao
HMolh
booiL N... - .......... Coll
114.1BJ-t305.

The Dlliily S•Jtinei-Pege 13

•.

Television
Viewing

~DIDN'T

1178 M.,..ry. R - . . tlon. lodr folr . '32&amp;. 11•·112'
1131.
:

·Pt.Pl....,ondOolllpo-

Apt. lor

For Sele ::

.

1----------APAIITMINTI. mobllo hom•

....,.... "\100 1..
.- . 2 A
00
central . l!aetern ' t " .... lor - r..e. d't WMk. Kltohtnclbln ... wtthgoldKen-'
Scllool Dlltrli:t . .Rot . . . _ ,. .m,;-~·~:,::c:e.;....: 11:0 -..,u..- . Cdl04-1171·
11 Help Wentad .
, 23 · Professional
qulnd. Col 111 4- 247' 4141 ·
mo.:.::..nt:::h:::·_ _·_..,.____ 2700 •
·
1
---'------'--~
Services
11 room •Pl.._ b•om.,.., a•· "
·
PICKENS USED FURNITURETEXAS OIL COMPANY nOoda
ega, Jlflnto. nl .. loeollon. 304- ' FurniShod room. • •. UtiMI• lola'• ch*a. 1 - roclln•o.
moturo ,.,_ lor al!on tripe
1171-3753.
pold. Shoro booth. • llngl• mtlo. clah-. - - · - g . hid•
..,....,ndlune Oolllpolo. Contact
811 . Soaond. Oallpjillo. can- •·bod. a i - r • • mloo. 304·
cuatom••· We tf'lln. Write P.Q. McOanltl Cuatom lutch•lng FOR. RENT
441-.c.418 .,.. 7pm.
1.71;14110.
304
Dldllooon, Pr.... Sout-orn ~r:.e d ..a 0 w~oic. '
·B,8Z·
WITHOUT UT,LITIES
Potral.,m. Sox 811005, Fti
7 room ho~oo. midtown. t215 46 Space for Rent
8 pi- 01otlontl. .........
Wonh. Tx. 71181 .
•
Fu'rnitUrt~ · raflnilhlngend repelr.
month; 1 bedroom dupt•. mid·condll:kan. •111 .. oo"•l8bla.
qullllty ~k. fr••timat• •nd town. t1150 momh; 1 b•oom
3CM.871·8732 or 171; 231111.
Govarnmtnt Joba. U8,040- rea•onabl• ritel. 304-87&amp;· epatmtnt. mkltown. 1131; 4•st.230 .,.• . Now Hiring: Your
':'.:·
AUCTION
112
ArM. 805·587-1000 EKt. R· 7981 .
aaoa for cuneht Fad•al liat.
- A.... •210 month.
lnqulrl•coll814-441-4222.
Ollv•Bt., poHipollo.
WrrH UTILITIES
NEW· II IIC- wood group- U88.
Fed•al. Stlta and Ctvl Swvlce
1 -oom ..,.,...... doWn- Mobile Homo-lot. 10ft. or l•a.
Living room- 1189·t599.
Jo.,. •12.841 to U7.181 por
t-n. UOO month: 2 -com 820 4111., Oolllpolll. 171. Wotor Bunk bodo with boddlng- UIV.
.,. • . Now hlrlngl Clll Job lin a
•partment, furni1hed, down- peld. Cill 014-448-4411 after7
Ful .a .menrw~ • fouftd•ioft
1·811-469·3811 EKIF1822f"'
town. 1310 month. Call 304- PM.
•t•rting .. 1.11 . Recllnera
Info. 24 hr.
1171-4100, 8 a.m. · 6 p.m.
1-:.._________ atorllng- ' "-'.
TriM• ap!ICa in Kyg• CI'Mk USED· lledl, dr........ bedroom_
Get paid for .-..ding bOob! 31' Homes for Sale
School Diatrld. 171. indud•
•uh... 1111·1211. Delll:a.
1100. per title. Write: ACE-31d~ .
42 Mobile Hon\ea
Wllttr • u•b-ae. Calli 1 4-~17· wttno•
a compl- nne
111 S. LII"!COIIIWIIy, N . Auron~,IL 4 BR .. firoPeooa.lullboa""'.,t. 3
7287.
of uud fumlturo.
for'
Rent
10142.
· tnt. ao. .of Gallipc:tlll . • 32,600.
NEW· W•tern boota- t30.
CaU Dey~I1._:441·1B15, aft•
COUNTRYMOBILEHomoParic. WDf-1 .. S . ••· IStotl.
Ohio ·ucenaad Nursing Home · &amp;:00- 448-1244.
Route 33, North of Pomoroy.
oofttGoj. Colll14-441•31&amp;9.
Admlnlstretor neecled for 1 DO
Wet•104?" .2 IR .• *1215 per Rent1l ·trail••: C.ll 814-112bed ICF and •lill.t n"rslng By Own•· 'Oft 141• NelghboF·
mo: flat. &amp; d..,. Adutt•. Call 7478
County ~p11·
In Good
114·441•7714 Of 143-2144. I• •:._..:...:__
· '
· -------C. Iota.
home. Appty •t Am•lc•• hood Rd. Nice 3 bedrOom.
uaod ltllpl . , _ ond TV
Pomwoy Hurling 1nd Aehebili- endoted br. .eway. 1ttachtd
Space ·for •mall tfll...._ AU
Open BAM to IPM. Mon thru
lotion Contor, 38788 Rodlop- li•"'la. C"'ll14-787-2441 .
Euroka. 1 BA . 10a46, appll.,. hook-upo. Coble. Alooofflcl.,.cy
Sot. 814-441-1889. 827 3rd.
rlnta RoM, Pom.-oy. Ohio.
c•. c•pet, Wilt• pakl. no P•l. rooma. air end aMie. M•on. Ave. Galllpolla:, OH.
deposit • reftl'tnOtt. Rent W.Va. C•ll 304-773-1811.
Talopl!onol8141 892-8101.
Brond n - 3liR. n- Oalllpolil
.145. Calltl14-24&amp;·1121.
0000 USED APPUANCES
Locll:• on Rt. 7 . 2 c• a•ee' nice
AVON - All ar ... Call Marilyn lot. lmm.tille pos .... lon. Will
For rent : office apece 172 N.
WMh... dry.,a. rtfrig. .tora.
Weaver 304-882· 2146.
conald• tr~de .In of mobllt • Crown City. 1 2xlfi 3 BR . New IV Second. Mldlleport, Oh. 1, 2. or 'r angn. Sk•ggs Appllence,,
home. prop.-ty. de. Bargain c.-p«td . AC , hut wtth pr~ 3 roams. Wll remodel to aull UPp• River Ad; b•kle Stone
Reoov.,y Room s .. ff Nur• , prlood. Coli 814-448· B038 . · _ .. 1220 • mo. pluo UOO tonntlnt. Phone 814·992·11471 CrMI Mottl. 1114-448·7388 ..
'lmm..la opening for Regisd-oe• diiP. a utlhl•. Oklor "' 814·982-2413 alt• 7:00
couple preferred. Limit 2 child- pm
t•ed Stllff Nur• in recovery , 2 B1droom hou1t on Ch•ter
ron. Roof. requlrod. Call 814·
'
53
Antiques
room. P.R . ~. b•ls. Sal.-ycom- flo•d In Pom.-oy. taooo. C•ll
2118· 1138.
mt!11Urltt with experience. 614-387-7287.
Contact Geort Pol•. Director of
For Laeae
Ptrsonnel. Pl. .•nl Valle, Hoa- Government Hom• for •i. (U ··2 - bodroom. •loo. dopoalt. 49
Antiqu•. buy or •II. Riverine
pitel, Vetl.,- Drive, Point Plea- rptlr). Delinquent tiX property. · 127~ . p• month lnclud,ng ,
Antiqu... 1124 E11t Main St.,
utilititl. No drunlu or dope. Call
oam, W. V. 25660. 304-676- Repoalftaiona. Call 806·1587Pom•ov. Hou,.: Mon .. Tues ..
814-982-3122 .
.
4340 Okt. 307. AA-EOE.
1400 SCI· ft. Cori.m•cial .tpiCe andWad.10:00o.m.-8 :0o.,.m ..
6000 Ext. OH·9B05 for current
suitable for offlc., retailing. ~ Sun. 1:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. By
repo lltlt.
services. ' Prime location-corner chance or appointment. Ruit
Working "rvice m•ntger
netded for immediate emptoy- 2 bedroom. 2 ,bllhe, 2 car
of 2nd. • Plna 111 G•lllpod1. Moon. 814-992,2528.
mern. Must t'IIIVe Agriculturtl e••g•. level lot on Rt. 33.
Ample parking ~n r•r. *350 per
and Mechanical background tnd $wimmlng pool, Ntelite, clo" 44 . Apert'mlint
month. Call 814-448-4249 ot
furnish your own tools. SaliFY to· Malgo High, Coli 814·892446-2326.
54 Misc. Merchandise
for Rent
tnd commi11ton. Send r11ume 3264.
to 1539 Upper River Rd., Galli~
Ill. 0 . 46631 . .
Gltnwood. WV - 13.5 ecrn, 8
C•lleh~n'• Ueed Tire Shdp. Over .
room1, 2 ll•ha. nmch nyle 2 BR. 1pta. e c:lo11ft1, kltchen1,000ti'....... 12.13.14.1&amp;.
R.N .·~. physicians' office. Ple•e
homo. 304-782· 2841 altor 5 . •ppl. furntthed. W•h•· Drver
18, 11.1. 8 mil• out Rt. 218.
p.m.
11nd resume to Box C16. in
hook· up, ww c•pet. nMtv
Call814·2&amp;il·ll2&amp;1
.
ot Pt. Pl . . . nt Register. 200
51
Household
Goods
pejnted, deck. R~ency , Inc.
Main St. Pt. Pl.'
2 or 3 bedrooms, full b•ement,
•
Apta. CoR· 304-875-7738 or
Tree • stump removal.
u•ae• Hpemt with hell. en- 8711-1104.
.
•110 por dumploool.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY In uanoe. cell aft• 3 :30 , pm.
tteep Vouch.._ Don't LendaHome A. .mbty work. Jewelry, 304-~7&amp;-2599.
Furnished ept . . n•t ta library.
LAYNE'S FII,ANITURE
•••.1114·448-8141.
Toys. Ottlera. FT &amp; PTA \Mil.
On• profe..ion.. edull: only.
CALL TODAYI 1·61B· 469· 3 bedrooii'RI. 2 batht, fuR Jn1hld Perking. Caft 814·448·0338.
Sot• '•nK;~ chalra prfoed from Retteunint Equipment for- •le.
3636 (Toii·Rofundooblol Ext. 8 - b•emlfd. new furnece • cent391 lo 1~95 . Tabl• ISO and Coli 81•·441-30n .. ....
2284, 24- houra. ·
1~81 llr, g•ege, fMced yard. low
Downtown- Modern · 1 BR ..
up
to •121. Hld•a·bodo UIO 8782.
60'1, 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave,
compt• ·kitchM, c•pet. air., to •111. Roclln.,. t22&amp; to
AIR LINE JOBS AVi!LABLE 304-676-1774.
electric heat:. Cell 814-448·
U7&amp;. Lampl UB to 11211. Helltl.llltor fireplace. ·al•i
NOW! Earn up to . ~0.006.
4313·d.,._ 4411-0139-ovon. •
Dlnet18• •109 fAd up to 1411. ptace doors. fire ecreen. . flr
MecheniCI, Flight AttendMta.
we,ekln*·
·
Wood tol&gt;lo W·ll.!oh*o •DI IO plooo groto. Call 1114-441'
Cunom• Service. 316-733- 32 Mobile Homas
t796. DMk • 1IIO'"bp to .371. 1340.
.
8082. ut. A-2938 tor infoModern 1 BR apartment. Call
for Sale
Hutch• •400 and up. Bunk
lla:tinga.
814-441·0380.
beda compl«e w-m.nr. . . Snow dr•: 2· 10x14'' •
U9hnd up toU86.1•br- whoolo. 2· BaUa14" • wh .....
Want~ drummer for Rock
Renewtv redecorated. v-v nice
Bind. would pref• someone 1873 12x86 Froodom 3 8R .. g• •partmentt in downtown GIIU-. •110. MottreA•orlloa apringa 2 fuel ol tumec.. 1315 BTUful or twin 188, firm 171, and uprlgllt. Col 11"-245·5150.
und.- 21 , phone · 304· 773· furnace with centfll air, wath•·
polio. 1 • 2 BR.· unluonlohod.
•ea. ouoon '"' nza. King
599&amp;.
dryer, •II kitch~ IPPIIIRcet, Hcond floor, from t171 -•221.
nao. 4 c1r- ahoat •11. Gun .NC VH&amp;· VCR· 4 hud, ownoto
dinette Ht. und•plnnlng. block O.p. &amp; ret•enctl requlr.r. Call
cllbln••·• vun. Gu or electric oontral. E•al. oond. UOO. Coli
MONEY FOR COLLEGEiuv_.l· • porchM. Col 814-367·0883. eve. 81 4-US-2328 or 448·
r•n. . •:t71. S.by mllttr•. . 814-441-1111.
tble to individuals who become
4249.
us • ••a. Bod """• Good
no. RCA· 21" oonaolo color Tv.
meinbtn·of the Army N1tlon .. 1985 Overland Ptrk-14x84, 2
· •30 • King ltaino
Ou.,d. Call 304-875-3960 or BR .• total a•. EJIICtllent condi2
BR.
apt.
Stove
•
refrlg.
•election
of
bedroom
auii:N,
NmoM. Excel. oond. t300. Call
tion. French Ctty Brok. . g• furniahtd. N•• Go Mart. Call
1·800-842· 3619.
metal cebinata. hllldboardt t30 11 ......·116&amp;.
814-441-9340.
81"-448· 7026 .
•nd up to 185.
VETERANS: Let us help PlY your
110 •rtld• of glrla olothlng1976 Kont-10x38. Good con•·
Chria~m~s blll1. Army Natlon•l
APARTMENTS AT
90 . D•va .. me •• c•h wi;J:h 8x-14. 1 pr. roll• allltea. v1 pr.
Gutrd··INin-time jobl-full time tkm. ManY PGIIIblltl•. Fr.-ulll BEAUTIFUL
BUDGEt PRICES AT JACK·
•PProved. cr~lt. .3 MUM out • :\':4..~~ Loocl0. 7 . Coli
beneftt~. 304-176-3950 or 1.
Chy Brokoroga. 814-441-9340.
SON ESTAlES, 538 Jacbon
BuiMtllle Rd. Qpln Bi.m to lpm
800·842·381 9.
Plk• from •113 1 mo. Welk t'o Mon. thru S•t. Ph. 814·441·
Us.:l Homet-Big ltlec:don: Pd·
al!op and movlea. 814·44110322.
'
Pool table. Good oond. •300.
Get p1id for reading bookal cee reduced. Shop end uve.
3997. E.O.H.
Coil 81.·4411· 7572, ••• fOf
t100.00 pw title. Write: ACE - French Ctty Moble Hom•
Velltrt Furniture
Jolt. ,
517f, 181 S. Uncolnway, N. 814·4•8·9340.
Luxury Tere Apartment•. El•
New and 4,.118d furnhure and
Auror1, Ill 60642.
gtlnt. 2 Br. 2. floor, tully
applicanc.. . Cell 114· 448- Clly weter In houM-Myers thaiFor Nleor r•t: 4 mobile hom•
CA •ftd hMt. Private
7172. Hour• 9-15.
Jow wei pumptnounted on 18nk.
One 3 bedroom. lhr• 2 bed- c.,Mid,
_...ranee. an do lid patio, pool•
Ooodworkl"'l_ardor. UIO. CoH .
12 Situations
rooms. 814-742-3033. Nop•a.
playground. Stert-•211 par
PARSON'S FURNITURE
114.218-1240.
month. Utllitl• not induded.
Wanted
1979, 14~~:86 , 2 bedroom. Also Calltl14-387·
7860.
19715 Dodge Osy1on• S E. Call
614-992-2622 tor details.
238 Firtt- River view· 1 BR ., 1
Room, board. or tfeeping room
both. no chllclrin, n71 pluo
for invalids or eld•ty. 814-992- 'OxiO mobile homet2,000.00.
utlllle~~. All epenment•Dep. •
7204.
Call anytime 304· 411-1713 "' r.r. No petl. Call 814-448·
458·1880.
4928.
13
Insurance
12x60 mobile home, compl•ely. Up.Wira 3 room a beth. furfurnl1htd wlthWIIhw and dryer.
nith~. CI8M. Utilltl• p•ld. Rtf.
304·571· 2842.
• depo11t requ&amp;rtd. Adult• only·.
Cell -.a for your mobile home
No pota. Collll14,441·1118 .
l,n aurance: Miller lnaurance, 14x70 Wln•or with 14x30
addition, 3 bed rDDml, Wlll:k top
304 ~ 882-2145. Al1o: auto,
Nice 2 BR ept., II ave, rllfrlg .••
roed. •pproll 3 •ct&amp; Oilllpala wa.ter fumtahed. 4 112 mil• from
home, life. health.
Ferry. 304-876·8930.
Gallipolis. *21&amp; mo. No pot~
Call 814·4411·1038.
1 8 Wantad to Do
33
Ferms for Sale
----------

t:::=;::::::=:::::=::-r:;;;:::;::::::~;:::;::::~

::." •-.,. • sund.,._

8

71 Auto'•

Apertment
for Rant

·c.a . z - - furn!Md ..... rf/1 ..d
w. v...

Nloo 2. . , - , 31R. e-ooln
Mlclcleport. · D..hwlaMr. I•·
b - dllp;, AC, Iul ..... _ ,.
E*'II. locotlon. C.H 1114-441·
l201altor1:30 PM.

114.M7·

f~

lt..lllf'CI.;

...

44--

304-111-32117 or 304-773·
Rent•Le•••· Lend Co"tract : 1024
. .
Hom• 1ft I - • .llodn"' VI~ .. _ ...,._· -·- ·- - - - - 1 - H. E - HltL DOll· • Rot. . ltroot. Mkloll- OhiO
requlrlcl. lleclcburn Realty, 2 -...... fuftwMd apt. d
114-.......0001.
,
11Mpeid. ....enOMandd.,Gtit.
304 88 2
Nt.,. 2 IR. untumllhoil wkh 0&lt; 1- _ _ :_'1J::.:.;IB...:.;,
.----without ot- I ..r.~g, UIO a Mlcloll_, • 2 room fu"*hool
mo. p l u o - • uditloo. Coli opt, l'rlnto both. Utlltloa !tOld.
111"-441·21111.
304-882-21111.

1 . . - -...

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Ohio Lottery

prepare
for Colts

·Help T~-. .. "Speelt1
Athltttt" •
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486
Pick 4
2808
Super Lotto

8-14-18-30-42-43

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.
By LEE LEONARD
member, -Wayne M. ·Jones of
UPJ Statehouse-Reporter
· Cuyahoga Falls, who replaces
COLUMBUS .:_ Legislation the late Rep. Vernon F. Cook
keeping the existing deputy re- . from the 43rd Dlstrlct.
glstrar system tor registering
· Jones, a·a. a Democrat , took the
motor vehicles but making It oath of ' office from House
more efficient and reducing the Speaker Ver.nal G. . Riffe Jr.,
level of politics has cleared a D·New Boston, as his three-year
subcommittee In the Ohio House old son, Jason Jones, held the
of Representatives.
Bible and his wife, Dawn, looked ·
U!!anlmous subcommittee ac· on.
lion Wednesday followed the
Also at his side were hlf
·House's first floor session of the mother, Ellen, and George Fa be,
new year.
state IDS\Irance superintendent.
The bUI, passed by t)le Senate _ Jones was. deputy insurance
last year In different form, was sUperintendent for tlie last five·
sent_.back to the full Highways years.
·
. and Public Safety Committee on
!$even-term veteran Rep. Clif- .
a bipartisan vote. It Is expected tpn Skeen,D·Akron, was sworn In
to be ready for a floor vote by the a~ assistant majority floor
end of the month.
leader, the position Cook held
- The House adjourned for -the until his death In November.
week after a brief session featur- Skeen, 60, has been one of Riffe's
lng the swear-Ing In of a new trusted lieutenants.

FAT
•'

'

liT. DEW, PEPSI FIO,DIET or lEG.

PEPSI COLA

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PwcMu

. . . . . .. .....,. Jan. 9

.
Action' also . started swiftly on ter months of hearings and
legislation transferring the Ohio studies, decided this was too
Transportation Researc)l Center coStly and elected to keep the
In Logan County to Hond·a Motor deputies and bolster their
Co. for $31 mllllon. The Japanese efficiency.
automaker plans to operate a
-They wm be encouraged to
fully Integrated auto factory and advertise their hours and locaresearch faclllty on the site.
tlon, and long lines are expected
The land sale bill, which to be reduced by "date of birth"
provides operating and job train- registratiOn, with each ~amlly
' lng funds for the Honda research being allowed to choose the date
center, was Introduced and given . of birth of one of Its vehicle
Its first hearing In the House owners. _
Finance Committee.
Tliere would be a toll-free
The Senate had adopted legis· hotline to Columbus to air grlel;~tlon, favored_by the adminls- vances about deputy registrars,
tration of Gov . Richard _F. who .would be given two-year
. Celeste, ellmlnatlng the deputy contracts under the House ·verregistrar system and . placing sian of the bill.
motor vehicle registration at
The House version retains the
"one-stop shopping" centers Senate's optional mail·in regisunder theoperatlonofabout1,100 tration, which theadmlnlstratioq,
state employees.
said w111 be used by about 3(}
The House subcommittee, af- percent of the vehicle owners.
•

12 oz.

ALL MEAT

Eckrich franks

lib.

CHEESE, BEEF .

Franks

Jib. :

•REO. •THICK ALL MEAT

Bolc)gna

1 lb.

•REG. •BEEF

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

Boneless
Chuck Roast·

Smoked

II.

w, · .

"ASST. VAA:IETI~

Water trtckled toward the taps
of thousands ,of· homes outside
i&gt;ltisburgh loday for th~ first
lime In four days.
The smelly sUck that has
threatened the water supply of
more than 1 mllilon people since

CAMPBELL'S

Bush Bean
&amp; -G·r eens

Chicken
Nooille So

The water supply for Middleport resldenta _Is not 1J1 dan1 er
from the Plllaburah oil spiU,
accordlag to Mayor. Fred Hoffman.
Hoffman said-the water of the
viUap syatem Is suppUed by four
deep w~Jls. None comes from the
Ohio River.

- - - - - -.
~pllllng Saturday near Pitts-

•

'

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14-16

12 0~.
PKG.

oz.

CANS

TEN POUND
MEAT SALE!!

.-

MOUI'RAIN IIAND

Superior Bologna .......... ].~~!.. 5790
SUPEIIOI REG•• HOT
Sl 290
Polish Sausage .......... )~.~~...
mas • souurs
lreaded
Fish .........;... !~.~~ .. Sl 290
, TI. . . .ST

.

,. G
. round luf...............!~.~~ ..

$1 .090

.
Sl 5.90
Whiting FIlets
.~ ••,..... !!.!~..

IONBESS

AGRI·GENERAL

1112 Dozen

Fresh
Head Lettuce

\

Large Eggs

sa· tO·
POll
.
Shoulder Steak .......... )~.~!; .. S13 90
.• Hor'"'l (hopped Ham.!!.~!: S-1490 ·
·Tlrkey Drumsticks ....!~.~~....... $4 90
MOUNTAIHIEI • •
~I Sausagi ...••....•..••!~.!!;......

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.

burgh crawled at about 0.5 mph
down .the Icy Ohio River, reachIng Wellsburg, W.Va. , and Brll·
Uanl, Ohio.
West VIrginia Gov. Arch
Moore said the Army Corps of
Engineers was limiting water
releases at the Tygart Dam and a
dam on the Youghlogheny River
to reduce the flow of water to the
Ohio River.
-Monitors In lhe river showed
an underwater slick was de-tected 10 miles down stream Of
lhe slick on the surface, he said.
With the flow of water reduced,
Mqore esllmated . the · leading
edge of the slick would reach the
Wheeling, Va., area between
noon and 6 p.m. today.
_ Coast Guard spokesman Tod
Nelson said a 50 perclml to 75
percent Ice cover on the river
also helped slow the oil slick's
progression.
Ohio Gov, Richard Celeste
declared emergencies In e!g)lt .
cities that draw water from lhe
river, arid Moore ordered water.
' tankers placed on. standby for
deli-veries lo endangered
communities.
·
Witeel!ng Cl1y Manager Mike
Nau said officials planned to try
to treat the oily water. 11 that
falls, Nau said, the next step is to
string pipes across e bridge to
pump water Into tbe city of 50,000
from Martins Ferry, Ohio, wblch
- draws water from wells.
"Rigbt now, all we can dq ls
waitaudaeewbathappens,"Nau
. ._ld.
'
About 22,ood residents of Plttlll·
barth's suburbs !lave been with·
· oul running water since Monday,
but officials uld water wai 011
•the way and would reach bomel
· today once storage tanka build
un. .
. Water teats *howed that oU
· tbere bad diluted tiiOUih for
·treatment, letting offici•\•
reopeil - aa Intake valw tuid
restore a reduced aupply to
CoJIIilluld ~ 12

oil

.. ··

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,.

Vehicle owners would have to
pay the return postage for their
stlcl!ers or plates,'butthey would
be able to submit their credit
cara number for payment under
the House version, which also
uses 12 cents of every $1.50
reglstratlonfeetounderwrltethe
cost of mailing and the 45-day
advance notice for renewal.
Highway Safety Director WllUam Denlhan said the admlnls·
tratlori supports the House ver:
sian of the bill except for what he
called the failure of the subcommlttee to take politics out .of the
system. .
A fine of $10,000would be levied
against anyone soliciting a deputy registrar for a poll tical
· contribution.
"Let's not kid anybody," said
Denlhan. "Politics Is going to
continue to be Involved as long as

.
there's a partisan appointment
system ."
·
The Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, which Is In Denlhan's
department, wlU continue to
appoint the 'deputies under the
House bill.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Newark,
chairman of the subcommittee, .
said having state employees do the registration In the field would
have c6st too much and required
either the closing of field office or
Increasing the reglstratlofl fee.
"We can't talk out of both sides
of our mouths, " said Guthrie,
"You can't close 123 offices and
still . maintain service to. the
public." One office which would
have closed is In Guthrie's
district.
"I will admit this Is not a
perfect bill," said Rep. Russell
Continued on page 12

adopt $11.1 .
million ·budget_-for_. new·year

· By SHEILA MULLAN
United Preu International
The National Guard went on
alert ln Ohio and West Virginia
and more water utilities closed to
eoatamlnatlon by a
.ltO.·mDI!"IOIICOU lUCk thall~01wed

79C
$189
$199
$1~·
·$ 239

26 Cent&amp;

Co~issioners

'· gu,atd
on 'alert'
Turkey franks

1 S•ction, 12 PagM

A Multimedl• Inc. Newapepar

'

Ohio

SWIFT

•

House ·subco~ittee approves registrars' bill

LOW

•I MILK .
I

MILK

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, January 7, 1988

Copyrtphted 1988
/-

........ ...:'

at_y ......,.enttne
Vol.38, No.167

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Snow likely ionlght. Low In
mid · teen•· Cloudy Friday .
Highs IJI mid 20s..

By NANCY YOACHAM .
Sentinel News Stan
An $11.1 million budget -· to
operate Meigs County govern·
ment and services In 191l8 w·a s
adopted this week by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
,
The budget is about $2.9 more
than last year's spending bill of
$8.2 mUllan. The $2.9· million
_di!W£elllle ratlAola ~ret !Milt -..
. Meigs County of the Gallla·
Jacl;son-Melgs Community Men- tal Health Board money; amount·
ing to $1.6 mllllon. The G-J-M
Mental Health money is kept in
each of tile three sharing coun·
ties on a two-year ·revolving
basis.
.
Also included In the $2.9 million
difference Is a $400,000 Increase In publlc assistance funds from
$2.8 mllllon In 1987 to $3.2 mllllon
this -year. or that amount, the
county's share to pay Is $53,400,
as compared to lasl year's share
qf $46,438.
.
· In the past, Community Devel.
opment
Block Grant funding, has •
'DON'T FENCE \liE IN' -This doe deer tound Ita way Into the
been
categorized
separately
fenced area of the R. and G. Feed and Supply Co., Welt Main St.,
from
the
regular
county
budget.
Pomeroy, Wednesday afternoon. The doe had an InJured leg. A
At
the
direction
of
the
state
gate to the area was closed to trap the animal until Melp County
aud!lors,
tills
year's
CDBG
fund·
Game Warden Keith Wood arrl~ed. Tbe doe was then taken to a
lng of 92,400 was Included In the
hUlslde across from lhe feed and supply store and larned loose.
regular budget
Last year's revenue from the
county's one percent sales tax
amounted to approximately
$418,000 according to Audilor
William Wickline, $53,000 more
- that the $365,000 that was antic!·
pated. Because the sales tax did
not go Into effect until February,
and because Initial receipts from
the State Department of Taxation did nol arrive until about•
April, the county budget commis-·
A teachers strike which began allons Friday morning at the sion anticipates 1988's revenue
In the Meigs Local School Dis,· courthouse In Pomeroy rather
trict could be coming to an end In than In Athens.
However, this morning the
the _very near future, according
to a stalement !Issued today by teachers assoc!allon Issued ·a
the _ Meigs Local Teachers statement Indicating thai the
MLTA has-changed Its position
Association,
whiCh
could bring an early end to
.on W~nesday, representa·
the
strike.
Tile statement reads:
tlves of both the Meigs Local
"The Meigs Local Teachers
Board of Education and the
··--Meigs Local Teachers Assocla· Association, after meeting. With
· tiOn appeared before Judge Cha· Ju\lge Knight and conslder)ng his
rles Knight In the Meigs Coupty concern over mutual agreement
· Common Pleas Courl to report on the financial status of the
Meigs Local Sc!tool District, has
pro~ess •In negotiations to settle
changed
Its position and prolhestr;lke. Last Thursday, Judge
posed
thai
future employee be·
Knight ordered -negotiations beneflts
be
based
on 'new money
tween the two groups take place
In addition to approving a tern· available during the third year of
porary Injunction against the the contract riow being'
teachers. Neg6tlatlons took negotiated.
''The MLTA bas Incorporated
place In Athens between· the two
groups on Monday, Tuesday·and that change Into a new position
until early on Wednesday morn- that It has placed befor11 the
lng but no settlement was Board. The Asaoclatlon believes
that this position should be
reached.
ac~eptable
to the Board and
However, In hearing a report
on the Jlt!IOtlatiOIII on Weclnee- could ""ullin a contract setU• -,
day, Judee ~laht Indicated that ' ment and brllli an end to ·tbe
·', ·
he felt good faith negotiations strike. ·
''The Association allo feels
had taken place on botb sides. He
10 CIOie to
ordered both the teachers aiiiOCI· that the two sldea
agreement
tbat
the
ODly
thing
atlon and tbe board of education
thllt
could
prevent
a
settlement
11
to Pr"Cnt to him toda~ ftoaaclal
1tatements latllcauaa thelt re-- If the Board Ia not truly Inter·
apectlveflpteiOII•amountof estell In an equitable ~tract
moaey tllat ftlll4 be needed to agreement but II more IDtent on
JnNt the pay lncreut req1111ted attempting to break till \Ulloa...
by te&amp;clltm of tile dlatrk:t. The
Clulel ·In lllx ot tile lllne
Judae fllrtheio ordered thlt the schooll of· tile cllltrlct were
ConUnutcs oil paaer 12
two gl'OUPI are .to resume aegotl-

Statement says
strike may end
in near future

are

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·from sales tax at $480,000.
were paid 011t of federa l revenue
Appropriated by the commls· sharing dollars, such as crippled
stoners to the general fund,
children, soli and water, soli
comprised of county offices and survey and others.
departments, was $2,205,000, - Set aside In C'!Pital Improvements is still$50,000, the same as
which Is $49,000 ·.less than last
year's general fund of $2,254,000. last year, and $155,000 In malnte• .
Insurance this year, which also
nance and operation.
includes liability Insurance, has
County departments showing
raised from $63,000 to $90,500. _
yearly increases Include the
-1 ast year to $180,300 this year;
auditor, from · $161,100 to .
Conllnued on p~ge 12

.Pa1idU:tn a r;dweet.atao~"·•-= .~r ~. 1

gory amount to $149,800. In•
eluded In miscellaneous are
~any, items which untlll!ISt year

;

Jt 11111

i :

•••14 r •1M,-.

Name director for
new Ohio agency
The Governor's Office of Appalachia moved Into full swing this
morning with the naming of Pike
Countlan Randy Runyon as director of the new agency _Thirty-five year old Runyon
has been executive director of
the Pike County Community
Action Agency for the past nine
and one-half years.
Just after Gov. Richard Ce·
leste'·s announcement this mornIng, Runyon told The Ohio Valley
Publishing Co~ . -that he will
assume his riew position on Feb.
1.
Runyon wUI betaking concerns
to the governor and the legislature from 'the 28 counties to be
represented by the Office of
Appalachia.
i·
Included In those 28 counties
are Meigs and GalUa.
AI though Runyon will be work.
lng out of the Ohio Department of

I;&gt;evelopmeni, he said he intend s
at this time to re main In
Waverly.
Although state moneY,s will be
used to fund only a smalr
administrative staff for Runyon,
one of the main objects of the new"
agency will be to ensure good use
of Appalachian Regional Council
moneys, which have decreased
over past years but still amount
to about $3 mllllon for non·
highway uses.
. Runyon was- chosen for the
director's position from among
125 appllcants for the job.
State Rep. Jolynn Boster was
lnslrumental in the establishment of the Office of Appalachia,
and sponsored House Blll891 two
years ago which paved the way ·
for the new agency. She .!!_so
served on the flve-memlier
screening committee which
helped choose the director.

..........
elot•Jl(,_both
a...._
11!14 ..... wllleatep._dlla8a&amp;11rdaJ
h'oal II a.m. te l p.m. lie former B. C. Cola

a&amp;
INIMil( .. Nerill leOla• AYe., Ml....pori, lbe
fulure lite tl tllit •JI' lq Ute Bapllat Clllll'llh
MllooL~wllktrilllll*..._la .... lllld
willa te ..... alfca Ia..., eaateet
lie
Rev. Mr. P....., •• 1 Do lhaclllllrmM,Ia ••·
or tile Bev.llfr.
liBeral ehalranaa Glthe
drive, . . 1111.
•
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....

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