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                  <text>Your ladepeadeatly Owned
Low-.-ncecl Supenaarket
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Browns
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Ohio Lottery

prepare
for Colts

·Help T~-. .. "Speelt1
Athltttt" •
.00 FOR THE

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. Daily Number .
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.

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liT. DEW, PEPSI FIO,DIET or lEG.

PEPSI COLA

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16oi. -_, ,
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Lillllt One with

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hposit

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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.
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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

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House ·subco~ittee approves registrars' bill

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

Copyrtphted 1988
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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

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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

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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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Thursday. :January 7, 1988

Comment

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Page 2-The Daily ~nel _ .
.Pomeroy-Mldclapon. Ohio
Thlndey, January
' 7, 1988

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Winners and losers __B_y__Ja_c_k_A_n_de_~_'SO_n_a_n_d_D_a_~_~_an_A_t_ta

The JA.ily Sentinel
.

WASHINGTON - The future (lat glass Industry, predicted to
looks bright for · computers and fall by 10.3 percent In 1988. .
bleak for construction. This Is the
The statistics come from an
Commerce Depai'\ment) _predlc- · advance copy of '·u:s. Industrial
tlon for Industry In 1988:
Outlook, " a Department of ComComputing equipment will be , merce report that · wUI have a
the fastest growing Industry with long .list of eager readers when It
an anticipated gain of 22-J · Is disseminated to the public tbls
percent Eight · of the 15 Indus· week.
tries with the best outlook for the ·
The Commerce Department
year the related to electronics, l09ks at the winners and losers of
defense or medicine.
the Industrial world and predicts
On the list of the 15 Industries that the fastest-growing Indusll'.!tli growth to m'!lch the rate of tries will be serviCe related- the
slow molasses, seven are related businesses that do something for
to ~onstruction. At the bottom Is a you Instead of making something

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Pomeroy, Oblo

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

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l'OBERT L. WINGE'l'T
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulslut Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFUCH .
General Ma.nager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

for you. Manufacturing Industries will also 'continue their
siX-year pattern of rising sales
with 82 percent o! those Indus- ..
tries expected to-Increase.
. According to the Commerce .
Department report reviewed by
our associate Michael Blnsteln,
the top 10 .fndustrlal winners
from 1972-1988 wUI· be computing
equipment, semiconductor devices, optical devices, lenses, X·
ray apparatus, llthograhlc services, biological services,
electronic connectors, medical
and · surgical appliances, ani!

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LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than !00 words
long. Alllettersare subject toed;l.tinK and must besJgned wtth nam~. address and
telepbane number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not persooallties.
·

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ONLY SHoW

·MY GooP SIDE!

•

.Can they keep
:up the -pace?

medical and surgical
Instruments . .
The 10 losers during thJs:ume
period will he l!lrblne generator
sets, photoengraving, cigars,
leather-lined clothing, railroad
equipment, paper board mllls,
primary zinc, textne machinery,
rubber 1,1nd plastic footwear, and
wooden radio and television
cabinets,
The Commerc11 pepartment
complied Its forecasts before the
stock market crash of· Black
Monday, so some of the report
may err on the side of optimism.
Here Is the Commerce-Department assessment for three
Industries:
·
- While th!! Immediate future
Is bright, down tl1e road, computer equipment companies will be
bounced around by Intense to~, ·
elgn competition, short product
cycles and aggressive pricing.
All of that shows up In the
Industry's declining trade surplus and employment. Look !or
more mergers of · those
companies.
On the softer side, the computer software Industry will continue to grow In revenue and jobs
to keep up with the demand by
computer users to get the most
out of their hardware. American
, manufacturers will have to keep
looking over .their shoulders to
keep forflgn com):Jetltors especially the Japanese - from
besting us' In the new hardware
and software adva11ces. But the
bluest .threat may come from
the Inside, not !rom foreign
competitors. That treat Is a
growing shortage of skilled programmers. By 1995, the demand
lor programmers and system
·analysts In this . country Is expected almost to double

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(O

ln~ide ·traders

Miracles do happen

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WASHINGTON (NEA) -The uncovering Illegal activities.
hit movie "Wall Street" has
This point Is driven· home by
perpetuated something of a the recently released, but littlemyth. It suggests that Securities noticed SEC study.
·
and Exchapge Commission In11 had been assUmed that
vestigators can monitor major unusual trading activities before
stock exchanges to detect. Insider a takeover bid Is announced are
trading.
often the mark of Insider trading.
However, a .newly released Thus, the theory goes, all the SEC
SEC study of stock activity need to do Is to trace back trades
surrounding takeover bids points made· in the weeks or months
up just how difficult it Is to before a takeover bid Is
uncover Insider trading.
announced.
Using powerful computers, the
But the SEC's. study of stock .
SEC's watchdogs track trading transactions surrounding 172 Ia·
on all major U.S. exchanges. In keover bids over a four-year
addition, the exchanges them- period found that a sudden riSe In
selves - the New York Stock stock prices before announceExchange, the American and the ment of a takeover bid proves
over-the-counter NASDAQ nothing. The -study concludes
malntall).,.llurvelllance units that that "price rises are of little
"
follow computer trades.
value as measures of Illegal
. Authorities can quickly !den· Insider trading."
tjfy buyers and sellers ~ven when
The study was prepared lor the
they are hidden by street ac- SEE:'s Office of Chlet Economist
counts ancj other devices to mask by economists Gregg Jarrell and
their Identities.
Annet!e )&gt;oulsen. It found that
' By United Press lnternattoaal
But
despite
all
this
hlah·tech
stock
prices of takeover targets
Today is Thursday. Jan. 7, the seventh day of 1988, with 359 to
surveillance,
more
evidence
Is
began
rising an average of 17
follow .
needed
to
make
Insider
trading
days before public allliOUaceThe moon Is waqlng, moving toward its last quarter.
cases stick, as U.S. Attorney ment of the takeover attempt.'
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
Rudolph Glullanr has pointed out Every takeover taraet ·~Jed
• The evening stars are Mercury, Ven)IS and Jupiter.
Recently, when fallen arb!· experle!lced a rise 'In Its ' atcick
·: Those born on' this date are under the sign lf Capricorn. They
trager
Ivan Boesky wu IM!IIt· .Price. The lncreue averaa~
._ . Include Frenchman Jacques Montgolfler, whll with his brother
enced
to
three · years In Jail,. almoat 39 percent.
,, ·
·:- Invented the hot air balloon,ln 1745; Millard Flllmore,l3th ~!dent ·
GJuHanl
soyght
to
juatjfy
What
'J'he
two
eeonomlsls
Btw:l!ed'172
.. of the United States, in 1800; St. Bernadette (BemadelteSoublroua),
many considered a Jtaht tenjler oUera between 1981 and
:. whose visions led to the foundation of the shrine Lourdes, France,
aenteDce:
·
. .
1&amp;
lor tile com~ 1n 1844; 111m executive Adolph Zukor In 1873; cartoonJJt Charles
''Without
t~
help
Or
...
.;;...
.tracked for··
~ Addams In 1912 (age76), and singer Ketbly Loggins In 19(8 (qe40).
•
lllle
BoMq,Jt
\VIlJ
lie
dUIIcult,
If
·
10
clayJ after
..
...
.
'
;.
. not~.to · mau..,. ·
talleoftr aa~ On this date In history:
llll4e.
·• .In 1610, Gallleo, uslag his. primitive telescope, d~ tbe four · · tradblac-. U be (JitWJqr) W ·
neeJ•Id . . .. ....,. ....
CODCJIIdicl
major moons of Jupiter - Io, Europa, Gan~ and Calllato.
IM!IItenee It would .have 18at ·a
for
In 1789, the·ftrst nationwide U.S. preslc!entlalelecttoawaabeld. The
''toot:: eleCtors choeen by the voters uiWllmou.lly pk!l{ed Georp
;: washJngton as president a~ John Adalll8 u viee pmJcleat.
• ID 193l;as theGreatDepreslllon walpttiqUDderiii!I,Y,a NpOI'tlo
·: President Herbert Hoover esdmatecl that 4 mJllloD .to 5 mWJon
:-Ari\erJcans were out of work.
·
.
.
..
· ID 1982. President Reagan ordered resumpil011 of draft~
In Dec. 1982 our son Stephen
called to tell us the devastating
news, he had Hodgkins Disease.
Finally, after 5 yrs, In spite of
national statistics, doctor's predictions. personal fears , potentially lethal drug therapies, opera tions, transfusions, radiation,
CAT scans, liver scans, bone
scans, brain scans, X- rays, biopsies, and a hOst of other unpleasantrles, the time for good news
has arrived.
Following Steve's physical
; early last spring, the Surgeon
: General' softli:e found him fit lor
· active duty. Stephen Is now
wearing the - Air Force blue
again; stationed In Arizona.

Now that Isn't the end. Just In
time for Christmas, Steve received word he was being put
back on fiylng status. The Air
Force finally agrees; Stephen
·has made a remarkable recovery, 100 percent plus. Steve will
soon he back In the cockpit,
piloting a plane.
Is Steve and his family
happy?! Excited?! Ecstatic?!!
All are understatements!!!
" Miracles do happen.;, We
wish to 'thank everyone, (some
we didn't know,) that gave us ...
their support and for the many,
many prayers during Stephen's
Illness and recovery.
Mary and Gerald Powell family

.

~ Today in·history

't

as

I

·:

'

tor 18-year-olds.

·

---

'

'

.. . .

. A tho~ght lor the .day:
· sincerer love than t!!_e Jove of food. "

, .

Geo.;-i;rnard S!Jiw lild, •"l'beri II~
·· ·

'

.. . ~ · · . ,

SVAC staridings

ALL GAMES
P
TEAM
W L
Hannan Trace ..... 8 2 797
Southern .............. 7 2 749
Oall Hill ... ... L ..... 7 2 621
Nqrth G&amp;llla ........ 6 4 626
Eastern .. .. ........... 3 4 450
Symmes Valley ... 3 6 . 551
Kyger Creek ........ 4 6 · 601
Southwestern :...... 1 9 563
SVAC ONLY
•
(Varsity)
TEAM
W L ·. p
Southern .............. 5 1 533
Hannan Trace .. .. . 5 1 488
Oak Hill ..............5 1 449
North Gallla ........ 3 3 397
Eastern ...............3 3 386
Symmes Valley ... 2 5 400
Kyger Creok ........ 1 5 344
Southwestern ....... O 6 355

OP
633
548
545
653
517
716
597
730
OP
351
388
375
439
437
511
395
456

Scoreboard ...
Clevelud Ill, LA Cllppen IIMI
DHroll II. Atlalda &amp;7

aad

!.:.,.... ·.

atJIItllua, 7:1tp.m.
De'"~t .. Dllca'id,' IIi ID p.m. '

,

n.a.. ..........

FAp-O~Iud

Ha•&amp;ltaaiGo.,n.BI-'e.l~ ·•p.m.

· ·s.n AntOiltoat sea-arne .... 11: II p.m.
FrkiQ'•GamM
New York a&amp; Ne.,'.lene)', nlPl
Wuhlfti\OD at BoaiOn, nl1ht
LA Cllppen at P•Uallelpllla. nt1"

cMmpiHIIIlp JMW!.
•te.~w

bledJ• apJ.a .. e ll&amp;eeW.I• ...... .

l . t laMe ..lowed Ute . ,.... Ia liMp
the ball fer ..I bat Ill aeeoMI of Ule fourth
q•rlllr. 'he Co. . h.ve 1 llllret~ Pro
Bowler-.- Cft&amp;tr Ray Da•llllon,
lion Soa aad lac. . CluU Bllttoa- but
c.:,riUca attrlbu~ .-elr ..cee11 lo

,_n:l

Dlckr.noa.
,Kfr ••U•I:It: llredll are IU wllll the
nw lleeman lbal wllllllart !\Curday.
F.AIIp - Clewlalld
' DrlfeMiw U••

Clew&amp;Ud DB Carl ··alnt&lt;ln, Ill,
ertJoJ"l• oDe olllh bMt aeuo•ln )'ean,

:::

BuUalo 6, Montreal S
Nl' Ranceri 4, V ancounr 2

Games

Bofinl.l Pllbbura:la. 1: II p.m.
· St. Lotdll at PhUadelpllla, l: • p.m.
Vaaeoll\'er at New lerw,, 1:4$ p.m.

·.o..... '

Frw 111
N\' RUWfl'llat W.a.llll'oa, •liN
Rartlonl at BalfaJo. aiPt
LDA All,. at Oe&amp;NM, •laW
Toronto at &lt;blcap, •IJbt
Edmont•n a t Wl•nlpeJ, alrM

J

lllndar, Jan. I

p.m.

8urfact- Gr••
Tf'lev•kl• - NBC

PolniSpre.. - ..,.... IIJ 7 ~

quratrttaella
'•ler•
lleiM' .....,make
the. Pro Bowl ........
fihl
(llnel ...

nt1l .. f'

~~A

alterule, hull.. a.t Aln: ••• a 11.4
qu~~rlllrback ....... ... • a peftelll
comtwi;Da rue, _. liM Ute klweal
Interception ..ae.
M: .._..,
mowwell,htllehal . . . . ..,alllll)'
torflt rldOitheballil...,,......wMik .
•klnnn.tllirow .. Jaek Tr..NIIIilla 1'1.4
rUiq Ud1 IIU Kaur, , , , .., lluow
many latertepllo&amp;
lla&amp;lltlc: IMar.,.,l.tl...-ee,.
lfoaner,t...... aM .Trlll. . l,l.

Q1Uclt.,

· ALL RIGif R

t

..........
..... . ____ _
ae,

14p-Oe~

•

......,........ ..,.ne, ....... ..,

Brie DlellenH. "'' IU fir l,lll ,aru

••, .... (:ella. ................ . _ . . . .

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

_
11M Cella
•IIIN...............o.tYI-a

.-..,...._..
... ............
..........-.....
.,._. .,_., nn.IMII - - . . tM
61.. le- II Nft.....,. .. liMe ...

..,

WEST . LAFAYETTE, Ind. .
( UPI) - Ohio State opens Its Big
Ten season tonfght against de-.
d lOth
fending co-champion an
ranked Purdue, already off and
running with ~ convincing win
Monday night "' Illinois .
Ohio State completed the nonleaglle portion of Its schedulf
with a last-second 85-&amp;3 victory
over Central Michigan last Satur- ·
day afternoon. The Buckeyes are
7-3, losing to Florida and New
Mexico State on the road and
Dayton In St. John Arena .
In Purdue, the Buckeyes face
one of the veteran teams In the
league, with three senior starters
·In forward Todd Mitchell and
guards Everette Stephens and
·Troy Lewis, considered by many
· to be ,the .best backcourt pair in
the league.
The 6-foot-4 Lewis leads the
· Boilermakers In scoring with 18.3
point~ per game and three other
starters are averaging double
figures - Mitchell 15.2, cente.r,
junior center Melvin McCants
13.2 and Stephens 12. 8. The oilier
starter Is junior forward Kip
Jones at 9.1 points per game.
Ohio State Coach Gary Willi·

Fenner must wait
year to rejoin team

CHAPEL HIJ..L, N.C. (UP!) Derrick Fenner, the North Carolina running back cleared of
murder charges last month,
likely will have to walt a year to
rejoin the school's football team
If tlie university decides to
readmit him.
"If he's )lere, the Important
thing from our standpoint ls _tQ
help get his life back on track and
headed In the ·right direction,"
North Carolina Athletic Director
John Swofford said Wednesday . .
·"Certainly, that's what he wants

also."
. If Fenner does not play this
year, he would be missing his
second straight season after
· rushing lor 1,250 yards In 1986,
fifth best In the nation. But
Swofford said the year ilelay .\VAS
''the
''

with M

WA)I

s

L

INe..._ . . . .,... ................

·;·;::,=~~=

~

'

,.....,.

season.
Member: United Press Int ernall onal ,
Joining Mateen will be 6-foot-8
In land Dally Press Association and 1he
freshman Perry Carter and
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
6-foot-5 Jerry Francis at the
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
forwards and 6-loot-1 Curtis
New York , New York 10017.
Wilson and 6-foot Jay Burson at .
POSTMASTEft: Send address chan ges
.the guards. Burson leads the
to The Dally Sentinel, ltl Court St. ,
Buckeyes with a 20.4 per game
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
0: .,... ..,__, •
I
"·-..
M
t ;,
acor.lng av.euge. ,.fQ!.IOwO!i J&gt;y,_.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Francis at 17.3 .
Ry Carrier or Motor JWute
"Our work Is cut out for us," ·
On e Week .. ,...... , .. .. ... .................. $1.25
On e Month ... .... ...... ..... ............... $5.45
said Williams. "There's no easy
One Year .... ..... .. ,.................... $65.00
way to go and we don't worry
SINGLE COPY
about'lt. We just go out and play.
PRICE
"You have to get their big
Dally ........... ............... ... .... .. 25 Ce nt ~
people In foul · trouble," a dded
SubscribE-rs not desiring to pay the car.
Williams. "To .do that against
rler rpay remit In advan ce dire-ct to
The Daily Sent inel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
Purdue, ·you have to run go.od
basis. Credit w ill be given car rier each
. offense and that won't happen
we.ek.
with one pass."
No s ubscriplloris by mall permitted in
Purdue's 81-68 win over Illinois
areas wher(' home carrier S('rvice is
available.
•
Monday night, the[lollers' lOth In
a row, even surprised Coach
Mall Subscriptions
Insid e Meigs County
Ge11e Keady. ·
. ·
13 Weeks ................................. $17-.29
"We've never beaten anyone In
26 Vlceks ........... ................ ...... . $34.06
the league by 13 as long as I've
52 Wl&gt;eks ... .
.. ............. $66.56
Outside Meigs Couaty
been h~re, " said Keady. "We're
13 Week~ ...... .. ,................ .... ..... $18.20
probably playing like an expe26 Weeks ...
. ............... $35.10
rience~;! team should be playing."
52 Weeks ... ., ........................ ..... $67.60
~

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wtle• lle ftltned h'om a liMe l .. llfr)' to
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MONEY MARKET ACCOUNTS
U.S. SAVINGS BONDS

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..._ a,.elll a 't
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/)

PubliShed ev(!ry aft~rnoon, Monday
througli Friday, 111 Cour t SL, PomE-roy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshing Company /Multimedia, -1!1c.. ,
Pomer oy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Second class pos tage paid a t Pomer oy,
Oh io.

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....
•-GI-.
_,
.... -..... .. ,..... .....
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,.. . . . . . . . . . , , . . . . . . . . . . . .r

r

ams will go with the same
starting l'.neup he used In the win
over Central Michigan, with
6-foot-11 Grady Mateen starting
at center In place of 6-foot-9 John
Anderson, one of the big Buckeye
disappointments so far this

(USPS 1411-Bit)
A Division of MuiUmedla. Inc.

~ce-Of'WLancl

~.l ....olll Col&amp;l (Hl
... • . ae...eland Brown~ ( lt-5 l

•

'

The Daily Sentinel

lle)l lllaUtUc: Qllarttrbacb m••ncl

Analysis ·
8trnlll. .ll

have established themselves as
statistical leaders for Rio
Grande In shooting and
rebounding.
Dyke, coached by Paul
Haught, Is expected to place
junior Dawn Christian on Its
!?Dint guard position and pttt
junior Tonya Feeney In the
shooting guard slot. Melanie
Collins, a freshman, will be small
forward and sophomore Laurie
Walton . will ·take the power
forward position. Center will tre
junior Jodie Gorendt .
Dyke is . 5-7 after losing to
Central State 84-53 on Jan. 2. The
Lady Demons have been under' going· some changes s'nce the
holiday break but are working on
btlghtenlng their season prospeels, Haught explained~
"We have a pretty good chance
at placing In the top 6 In District
22," he said. "We have some
home games coming up and that
will be a help. We'-re still young,
but we're looking to Improve.·:

U•hadwMI

111111 a u.e
Oewlud.

AFCPlayoff
A.Ff Playlllf AnalyeiA
B)· RICH BXNER

Jim Kearns , who sank all of Rio
Grande's 3-polnters Tuesday,
will take guard positions. Senior
Doug Fogt will repeat as center,
with freshman Brian Watkins
and sophomore Rob Jackson ·
expected to come off ttie bench.
MVNC had fallen 71-61 to
Walsh at Canton on Dec. 1 in
early conference play. The Redmen had defeated Ohio Domini;
can and Tiffin on the road.prlor to
the Malone game.
Redwomen On Road
Rio Grande's Red women .
tackle another road trip Saturday when they travel to Cleveland to face Dyke College In a 6
p.m. game.
'
The Redwomen are 8-5 enterlng ·tonight's 'contest with Glenville (W.Va.) State.
Coach Cheryl Flelltz · Is expocted to field freshman Beth
Coil as her point guard and senior
Renee Halley as shooting guard.
Probable starters on the forward
slots will be junior Lea Ann
Mullins as small forward and
junior Holly Hastings on power
forward position. Sophomore Angela Packard Is expected 'to
repeat as center.
Halley, Mullins and Hastings

IBdl~oiiL

NV lalandl'rt id Cal1ary, nfl:ht

. " RAC1'ER?
GH~ .
, NO QUESTION

'

Oe't't'land feat_.. two aoUd 1.-hle
l._backen In Mike John•• and Edlle
.(ah..on to 10 alon~~~: with Pro Bowl OLB
Clllf Matllww•. ttut the let\ out.We
lbll'backl• p011lllon I• AWipeei. It'• lite
CobM'hntclefeiDIIveunlf with Pro Bowler

Duane -BicPtl leaclllK the

Cal1ary I, WlnnlpeJI

At Clewland, II: II

lf'adl..... eh• I• •ckl wUb I, b11,1t Pro
Bowl NT BoiJ O.k laloat for die plafofh
wftb a br*e• arm. DE no...n Tltomp•n lea• a att.., Colb' II• with fl~
•cb ... DE olea Ra .... the ddeaolw
fNJ.t'•taeld! leatler .
lie)' IJ&amp;a&amp;lllk: ............ ( 113) ••
Cle\'el. .d (UI) ha't'e aUowed fl"Wer
polats tllan ••Jetller te.-na .
Bclp- ...... pol.

-•cb.Ke)' 1lailttlc: Blt'ketl'11 fl aaeks,
whlll' Malthewo lud11 t1t"veland lllll'·
backer• with 3.
Ed~- £.,.en
SecondU'y
. The lll'COadll'y h1 till! NniWf.h of
Clevel.ud'll defe..,, anchore• by Pro
Bowl cemer baeb Hanlord Dlxoa ud
Fn•k MIIUIIIIeld, wllo like to pia)'
mu-tcHnaa. II Ia tile weall link for

Mlnne.ota s. Tom.,.. 5 (Ue)
. DctroK 4, st. Loula 2
" Qlehec 1,· Cb~a10 1
· '~

WHAT A60\JT YOUR .
GANDIOAT£ AAO
TUE ~STION Of

Ll.s

• • aaekl I• 1Mt elpt aame.. Baa

-::'...

n~nc~.,•a

Llnelalld

llewra.d'a ll.e, wllleb larl•a Pro
Bawl taelde c.~y Bl*., ai!Mred juat

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGIJE
Wales llo•ference
Palrlck 01\'bllon
- w L T Pili. GF GA
NY Jslaaders 20 14 ol 44 153 121
PhUadelphla 19 J&amp; S 4S IM IU
Wuhlnat•n
II 17 5 43 lllli 12,
New der se)'
II' 17 3 · 41 132 ' 141
Plttllhu...-h
16 18 A -10 U2 158
·~. Ranters
ll . 19 5 31 10 15-1
Adarnt+ Dlvltlon
Ma~ltre al
;!2 II 9 $3 1!1$ Itt
Roston
~ 14
5 n 1!18 135
Rulf&amp;l'o
18 17 7 311 131 Ito
Quebec
J'j 19
2 36 137 141
Hartford
14 J'j 7 35 111 1%1
CampheiJ Conference
Norris Dlvlt'ion
Delrott
18 II $ 41 154 131
St. Loull!l
II II S 31 133 1414
T•ronlo
Hiliii6:J4111111
Minnesota
IS t2 7 33 lSI 113
. Chkqo
IS 23 2 32 141 , 173
Smytbt Ol't'llllon
Caltary
21'i 12 4 u
E41molllon
U 13 t 52
WlnnlpeJ
lfl IH J 38
Los !\n~ele!t · 19 !4 S 31 IN IN
Vaneouvcr
U! l:ll I II 13G lSI
Wednellday '" RP.tld*•
Edmonton !1, Harl.ford I

-

Pat Be.-ch llacll8ulehell ror

Ke)' uatlllk: New•me haa c ... ht a
pu1ID 1!1 lltnl&amp;fll replar M!U0~1a111e1
bill wu .... nl In lut aeuo..ll AF[

NHL results

.Berry's World

,,, ~!11'1•.~ ,,....."lllfi~l

~tJame.

Edp -

a

'

no~o~Eodo .

Thert!'s beea ..,eeulatloll ln Cle\'eland
. about Onle New10me'a polllble retlre'meot -tor Ute lUI two aeuo1111, bul he
ea&amp;~llit Jt f"'leiiD 1111'1,1ntlud.J.IIIIlhe
the Colis.

Cle't'el..d aC AtlMl:l, niJM
LA La1Gel'8 a&amp; Detroit, DIJht
Utah at Mllw.ukee, aiJIIt
SacrameM~ U Pordalld, nlJbt

~_agman_·.

.. break away

ca•~~~

II lie Col&amp;l' mal•
tarpt . wtl' II elle._ ud Ute team'•
deQ dlrea&amp;.
Ker t&amp;MII&amp;Ic: ClevelaH whle recelwn
ba"Vf' 11 l~t~CWtw•, c•aQIIU'ed ••• 11
fer tile Colh.
,
'

n.,...,.•• ounee _

~~~~-

•e

•n.,....

11aa Ilia

uat..c~

LA Laler~lll, Dallas Rl
&amp;ea&amp;Ue 111, a.,.-,.u ,

R-:--o_ber____;t

I

full with a Southern team that
should have few problems maintaining their current position In
the standings .
Gregg Deel's Highlanders will
need top efforts from three-point
scoring machine Dave Mershon
and Mike Walker, who will have
to match Tornado long bombers
Jeff Caldwell and Dave Amburgey shot for shot to keep the
Patriot !ive In the game.
Symmes Valley at Eastern
Terry Saunders' Vikings , who
have lost two of their last ti\ree .
conference games, will take on
an Eastern squad who has won Its
last two league games, Including
an 18-poliit victory over North
Gallla on Dec. ,22.
'

Ohio State ·opens Big .lO play tonight

,...,.,. 1,11'1 rlllhiiC aad .,,. recelvl•l·
I!'Aip- ladiUIIPOiitl
Wldt Reedl'erl
Cl nt"land'• Wtblltr Sla•&amp;bler
emel'ld u u nploan threal Ia hit
AMODI Jear llllll .,..... acertn1 7
touchdowa. ~II peftaf1 m... lluaero• w!W•Iwl! uleMI
tefeue ••• bll&amp;a

NATIONAL BMKETBALL ASSOC.
Wedneedar'• Re1ull11
Bollton 111, New York Jilt
Denver •· New .Jerq •
Mllladelplllall•• Utah N

posted a career high of 30 point~
In the Wilmington game.
Sophomore Tim Justice and ·
junior Sam B&amp;rber are expected
io take guard positions, and ·
soph()more Todd Morrlsmi, who
_had 19 points agaln&amp;t Wllmlngt0n, will be the center.
Joe White, a 6-2 sophomore
who transferred from Rio
Grande this year, will be one of
four Cougars who will probably
see action off the bench. The
others are juniors Jeff Case, Rick
Burke a nd Paul Gr~gory.
The Redmen will be looking
back a t Tuesday's loss, which
saw Rio Grande lead by 6 at the
halftime and post a 10.p&lt;ilnt lead
In the last half before Malone
sank a trlo .of 3-polnt field goals to
'seize · the advantage.. Center
Andy Booth's j,umper at the
buzzer gave the Pioneers the
l-polnt victory.
Senior Ron Rlttlnger, who
scored 24 poln ts TueSday to
solidify his pqsltlon as the Redmen's leader In field goal scorIng, Is expected to start as
forward. ·ue wtll he joined by
senior Ray Singleton , who had 18
against Malone .
Juniors Anthony Raymore and
'

and 111 ft~lviiC, • • Mack ud 8)'11er

NBA soores ·

nouncement foothold buying, the cant pre-bid market activity Is
run-up was 47.7 percent. Even In consistent with having little
hostile takeovers, which are . Illegal Insider trading."
usually Conducted quickly and In
The pu~pose of the study was to
Feat secrecy, target stock pri- allay Investor worries that the'
ces had an average run-up of 35 stock market was being fueled by
percent.
Insider trading activities .. IroniThe authors did admit thai cally, When coupled with com·
Insider trading might have been ments by Giuliani and other
a factor In some . of the pre- . prosecutors, 111 4oes just the
announcement trading. "We are opposite. It points up the dilff.
unable to explain a great deal ·of cu.lty ~ of uncovering Insider
the pre-bid trading," was the trading . .
way the authors put lt.
Tile SEC would like the public
But, they said, the combination · to believe that there Is a foolproof
of foothold buying, press specula· system for uncovering Illegal
tion and early buying of stock activities. But the prosecutors'
"supports the existence of .. .
statements, and the SEC's own
legitimate market for lnforma- study, suggest otherwise.
•
tlim ... and suggests that slgnlll-

1

Mid-Ohio Conference play revs
up for the Rio Grallde Redmen
when they host Mount Vernon
Nazarene's Cougars Saturday at
7:30 p.ni. In Food land Night.
Tl&lt;;kets for the . game are_
available, free of charge, at local
Foodlaild stores .
The Redmen are 12-5 11nd 2-lln ·
the conference following Tuesday 's 77-76 loss to Malone at
home. Third-year coach ~rnle .
TOTALS
24 24 3352 3352
' Ballklan's club Is 7-6 on the
SVAC
season and 1-1 In the MOC.
(Reserves)
.The Cougars lost to BaldwinTEAM .
W L
P OP
· Southern .............. 6 0 351 251 Wallace 89-78 In the first round of
the Colonial City Classic at
Hannan Trace ..... 5 1 345 224
Oak Hll! .............. 4 2 233 246 Mount Vernon on Dec. 28. They
Southwestern ..... ;..3 2 263 281 defeated Kel)yon 74-67 ·tn the
championship game to place
North Gallia. :...... 2 4 28~ 296
third the following night. After
, Symmes Valley .. . 2 ' 4 269 284
Eastern ............. 2 4 254 · 3244 dumping Wilmington 97-75 on'
Jan. 2, MVNC came from behind
Kyger Creek. ,...... o 6 215 310
TueSday to defeat Ohio DominiTOTALS
24 24 lt11 2216
can 75-68 at Columbus State
Tuesday'• results
Community College.
Kyger Creek 92, Wahama 58
Former .Gallla Academy High
Southwestern 62, OVCS 53
School
standout Tim Madison,
· Friday's games
co-captain
olthls year's Cougar '
North Gallla at Hannan Trace
squad,
will
be one of the forward
Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
starters.
He
will be joined by
Southwestern at Southern
freshman Steve Gregory, one of
Symmes Valley at Eastern
- MVNC's top new players, who

CLARK NOW A YANKEE - A. a press conference Wednesday
former Cardinal SI\lgger Jack Clark, left, wears the hat and, a!On·g
with New York Yankees ·_ general manaaer Lou l'lnlella, rtght,
holds up the shirt - number 21 - that he'll we!ll' as the newest
Yankee. Clark.was lntrlldooed to the media at Yankee Stadium,
·where It was announced thai, he bad signed a !wo-year contract. No
doUar amount wu announced
yet. (UPI')

SUicide__;_____..·:. . .Vi.. . .:. .inc_en.,. . . t~Ca.,. ;. .:r o:.:.:.l

hard to. catch __

The game could be a very· cloSe
ence games, have the opportunone lftheBobcatscontlnuetogel
lty to break from ,the --mlddle of
good outside shooting from Ch_ad - the pack and edge a bit closer to
Leach, Mike Reese and Alan
the conference leaders.
Denney.
The Wildcats are likely to have
In anticipation of next Tues- .. revenge on their minds for this
day's game at Hannan Trace, . contest, which should eliminate
Doug Hale may have the Oaks
a ~y possibility of their lo,oklilg
running the ball more often than
pa t ' he Vinton five In antlclpa·
UsuaL
tlon of next Tuesd&lt;!y's contest
Hannan Trace at North GaWs
·with Oak Hill. Mike Jenkins '
The Pirates, beating the Wild· charges have won their last five
cats · 60-58 In · the opener of the league battles.
Gallia County Holiday TournaSouthwestern at Southern
ment on December 28, have the
The Highlanders, coming off
possibility of beating the Wild· their first win of . the season
cats for the second time In two · Tuesday night with a ~2 -53
weeks In view .· The Pirates, verdict over Ohio Valley Chrlsbavlng lost their last two confer- tlan School, will have their hands

.'

Rio to host Mt.· Vernon Nazarene 'five

\.

': Letters to the editor

'

'

play resumes Friday night

'

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) .,... Thanks In large part to an ad-hoc group
that approved the Idea, your U.S. senator may be working a five-day
week this year.
·.. When he's In town, that Is.
In the past, the Senate generally has followed the TuesdayWednesday-ThurSday regimen worked out by the House. Under
\__
l'nformal rule~ of the notorious Tuesday-ThurSday Club, meaningful
· votes were taken only duri11g the middle of the week.·
This meant a congressman could safely visit the homedlstrlct)for a
•"
long weekend without missing anything Important.
· But this year, according to Sen. Daniel Evans, R-Wash., a member
of the special-purpose group, the Senate will he geared to a
Monday-through-FrldllY routine.
After Congress returns Jan. 25 from .I t's Christmas recess,
naturally.
It will be Interesting to see how the new schedule fits In with the rest
of the year.
·
Under a calendar adopted earlier for the second session of the 100th
Congress. the Semite will not meet for a week In February due to
,
·
. Washington's birthday celebration.
The balance of the year, I regret to report, will be equally
.
·
e xhausting. .
Hardly a month. goes by without so_m e celebration, leading up to the
August recess when the Senate will take the rest of the summer off: •
Final adjournment, also known as "sine die," which. may be the
Don't worry; we've been told to dispense wltl! . retarded or and experts will deny he killed
What .a transparent evasion.
only Latin words many senators are familiar with, Is penciled In for
·
over
the years. There is no such handicapped babies, which does himself. The clearest example of Everyone knew why Rodas
Oct. 8.
.
thing as a slippery ·slope In ethics. not lead....
this occurred last year In Grand
wanted the tube pulled out of
Fortunate!¥, however, Labor Day h_a ppens before that, so senators
A
"right
to
die"
does
not
No,
of
course
noi.
The
slippery
him. He wanted to die, and he
Junction, Colo., when a man
: will have siX days to rest up before facing the rigors of anotbewr
Inexorably lead to a right to slope Is a myth. Repeat that often stopped taking nourishment and
wanted to die decause he found
prolomnged period crammed with Latin.
suicide, which does not lead in enough ·and It act1,1ally sounds expired 16 days later.
total paralysis unbearable- not
This schedule, I hardly need remind you, Is highly tentative. The
turn to a right to ... well, finish it plauslble;;li'or those whose goal Is
Hector Rodas was unlike most because, or not mainly because,
first session of the 100th Congress ran well Into Christmas week
for ·yourself.
a brave new world, the first people who draw the media he had beell subjected to an
before the die-hard assembly was rece$sed until Jan. 25.
Now a group of Cali!ornians is tactic must always he to deny the spotlight when they seek to end
Invasive procedure. .
I don't need to tell you what the boss would say If you took off until
finally ready to give the game obvious·.
their lives. He . was not .a term!·
Even assuml11g RodaS would
Jan. 25 to recuperate from Christmas. Youkoow the boas as well as!
away. They believe a patient · Courts and medical ethiCists nally Ill patient whose short-term
have chosen to Jive had he only
.do.
should be able not only to order have been doing. this for years. anguish was prolonged by lifeHowever , the boss's reaction, carefully couche&lt;) In Latin phrases,
been able to chew and swallow
the plug pulled on life-support Rather t~an admit that hospitals support systems. '1\.lthough paramany other people would find
: might he the same as If you, a valued employee, took of( almost a
systems but also to request a . already , have been forced, In lyzed !rom the neck down by a
that sort olllle eq.u ally lntoleraweek to recover from the Labor Day festivities.
lethal Injection of drug&amp; It two effect, to help patients commit drug overdose, Rodas could have
It probably Is good that senators will not he overworked this year.
ble. Should hospitals be forced to
doctors certify the patient wUI be ~ulclde In a lew "rlght-to-dl~" lived .lor years.
help such people commit suicide,
Some of them are getting on In years, and need all the time off they
dead within six months anyway.
cases,
the
experts
simply
reinNor was he comatose and
too? can get.
.
.
•
.
If this group can gather enough vent langllage.
First they define hence dependent on relatives for
· This Is something for the voters to think about In the fall before they
· Admittedly, the California Insignatures In support of the food and water provided under his decisions. He could neither ltlatlve doesn't quit~ deal with
force another candidate to come to the national capital.
proposition, It will appear on the special copdltions as "medical speak nor swal,low, but communiAlso. I certainly wouldn't suggest that Evans gave out the
that question, but give the
ballot
In November.
treatment" Then they ·say sui- cated clearly by nodding yes or euthanaslasts time. II they sue. Monday-through-Friday news primarily because he lives on the West
At . that point, no doubt, we'll cide doesn't occur when a patient no.
coast and might not feel like flying home every weekend.
ceed In this opening bid, they'll
again
be assured that there Is no rejects any "Invasive" treat- · Yet predictably, fn granting soon be back with yet another
Some of those senators a re gluttons for hard work, you know .
suc_h thing as. a slippery slope. A ment -which naturally Includes Rodas' wish to have a tube porposal to erode civilized, llfelimited right to kill the termi- artlflch!l feeding.
removed from his stomach, a . cherishing ethics. We may not
nally Ill does not lead to a general
In otller words, a patient can judge said "Rodlis Is not attempt- . · even notice, either, so long as we
right to kill anyone wanting to order a feedfng tube removed
lng to commit Sl!lclde" because
keep repeating the lie tjlat there
die, which does not leiid to a right from his body, starve to death.
he sought relief from an Invasive Is no sucl) thing- as a slippery
Sl()pe.
procedure.

s)ipperyr slope.

\.

'

~age

The . SVAO tepms return to
coliference play F-riday night
with three contests featuring
league leaders·.
Oak IU II at Kyger Creek
In what could be a clash of the
SVAC's tallest players, the Oaks .
wm · put 6·8 junior center Jedd
Rawlin s and 6-3 senior forward
Mike Hale, one of their top
scorers, against Bobcat twin
towers Bill Loveday (6-6, senior)
and Mike Bradbury (6-5, senior).
HOwever, with the possibility
oi a standoff Inside, the Oaks'
advantage could be their outside
shooting. Ttrat is concentrated In
the form of 5-9 senior guard Eric
Faye, their other high scorer.

···~·

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

•

�•

• Page . 4 ' The

f•

•

Sentinel

Ohio

J

Little guns can also do." the jov well

' . ·&lt;

.CLEVELAND ( UPI) - . It Is
natural tnat mQs.t o! the attention
this Saturday will be focused on
the Cleveland Browns' til~ guns
- quarterback Bernie Kosar,
running backs .E llrnesl Hyner
and Kevin Mack and defensive
· standouts such as defensive end
Carl Hairston and big-mouth
' cornerbacks Hanford Dixon and
Frank Minnifield.
. However. NFL te.a ms are
comprised of&lt;l:i players . The
Browns have a number of llttle
guns who also must do the job and
do it consistently We)!..
These players have tar less.
notoriety than the above mentioned lmjlvidUals. Linebacker
Mike Johnson Is a good example.
Johnson, who destroyed San '
Francisco's offensive line In a
loss to the 49ers, led the Browns
in tackles during the regular
season. That faci, however, has
done llttle to increase his recognition among fans.
·
One also doesn't hear much
about safety Felix Wright, who
still is referred . to as being a
refugee from the Canadian Footbali League . It Is a pity that
telecasts of NFL games obviously can't span• the manpower to focus in on oine player.
If they did, the Individual operating that camera would be in for a
workout - Wright Is all over the
field, sort of a roaming troubles hooter. in the defensive
seco ndary.
"Felix the Cat" definitely Is
one of the most underrated
players in the game. And he.has
company.
Until starting nose tackle fractured his right arm in the
regular -season finale at Pittsburgh. Dave Puzzuolf had the
rep utation qf being strictly a
blue-collar player.
"Puzz" will not have an easy
task Saturday when the Browns
host the AFC East Champion
Indianapolis Colts. The Colts
starting .center Is a fellow named
Ray Donaldson, who just got
elected to the Pro Bowl for the
second straight season. Puzzuoli
wlll have to be at his sha~pest to
get near Indianapolis quarterback Jack Trudeau. .
,.
And, d.on't forget punter .Lee
Johnson.. the barefoot wonder
who had a terrible against the
Steelers and knows full well that
his continuing tenure with the
Browns next year depends on his
playoff performance.
The point cit this discu ssion Is
that · every member of the

' 'Dawgs."

Nobody ever brings a bedsheet
for· Hairston, Wright and Puzz .
Perhaps it's about time that they,
too, get that much needed boost.
Much has been written about
the condition of the Cleveland
Stadium turf, that the swamplike characteristics are to blame
for at least some part of the
Browns' weaker performance
this season.
Both Coach Marty Schottenhei·
mer and hls players have reiterated ad nauseum that the field
has nothing to do with the team's
one-loss record. Anybody who
still thinks so should drive out to
Baldwln·Wallace College In Berea , where the practice field
there makes Cleveland Stadium
look like the 18th green at Pebble

Th&amp;nday, January 7, 1988

-

One Marty will
never forget ...

•
free-agent pitching,
Bill Caudill, Attlee Hammaker ·
CLEVELAND (UPI)
An
and Charlie Leibrandt remain
embarrassing Incident durlllifirmly on the Tribe's shopping
hls collegiate football career has
list.
heiJ)ell Marty Schottenhelmer
develop his professional coachPeters Is expected to expound
on his philosophy of pursuit next
Ing philosophy. ·
week when he hosts a media : Sc hottenhelmer, 44, who has
luncheon, sQmethl{lg that the
been the head coach of the
!ndlans' front office have been . Cleveland Browns tor the past 3
reluctant to do In the past.
. ~ years, played for the Unlver.slty of PIttsburgh.
Primarily, he tolled on the
.Panthers' llnebacklngcorps. But,
there.came the game when an Ill
teammate foreed 'Schottenhelmer Into a new role; one he'll
·
never forget. .
''Our long snapper was sick,"
said Schottenhelmer, referring
to that member of a special
teams unit who snaps the ball to a
waiting punter or fteld goal
h.older.
·
..'_' -r.' ....•
''The coach asked me to give It
J_. _'
a try. I d.ld. I snapped the ball at
least ~0 feet over the head of out
punter, Jack Traflcant."
DEEP FREEZE IN CLEVELAND - Marty Schottenhelmer,
As Tratlcant, who now Is a
the Browns' head coach, cupa the ears of linebacker Eddie Johnson
Congressman representing the · u Ul4! team look io the fleld·for 1tretchln1 exercises ~ednesday.
Youngstown, OOhlo, area, ran
The tempera&amp;W'I! wu In the low tej!U at the.llme, u the team
toward .the errant offering, he
prepares for Us AFC playoff coalellt Saturday afternoon against
had some words of advice tor a . the Colts. (UP I)
u c h · .c .h a g r I n e d
Schottenhelmer,
After three seasons wltn the
"Jack probably called me ball team cannot win unless ·
every name In the book and I every player understands and Giants, Schottenhelmer moved
to Detroit for the · 1978· 79
certainly deserved It,'' he said. executes his role."
Schottenhelmer,
a
native
of
campaigns
. .
"The Incident bothered me a
••
Cannonsburg,
Pa.,
Joined
the
''There's
no doubt that my first
great deal but I learned
·-- something.
Browns' organlzatlo11 as · the few years of coaching prepared
"Every role a player assumes teams' defensive cOOrdinator In me tor the position I now am
BAREFOOT KICKER - Lee Johnson, lhe Browns' barefoot
on a football team Is lmportan t, 1980. He played professionally proud to hold," he said. "But
kicker. gets ~ff a couple of kicks prior to practice al. lhe team's'
whether that player Is the start- from 1.965 through the summer of you '.re never sa tlstled until you
trahi"'g facilities In Berea Wednesday. The Browns, preparing lor
Ing quarterback or a ll11eman on 1m and began his coaching win It all. The entire Browns'
their AFC .playoff game agalllst the ~oils Saturday atternoon,
speci,@I teams coverage. A foot- · career as the linebacker tutor tor organlza lion has the same goal -:
the New York GII\Dts In 1975.
to win the Super Bowl." ·
were on the field with temperatures In the low teens. (UPil

Beach.
. Kosar put It succinctly when he ·
said, "Have you seen what it'll"'
like out there ron the B·W field)?
We practice In as tough conditions than we'll ever find
anywhere."
.
Although no definitive transa ctions have been announced as o'
yet, It appears new Cleveland
Indians President Hank Peters
continues to actively pursue

By GENE CADDE$
.
UPl Sports Writer
Miami Coach Jerry Peirson
knows the price you pay .l or
losing a home conference basket~1,1 game 5 high.
.
We ~an t afford to lose home
games, Perlson said Wednesday night after his Red~klns
dropped their Mid-American ·
Conference opener to Kent State,
56-54, at Millett Hall. "If you do,·
you have to .~0 out and win two
road games.
That t:nlght be tough for this
Miami team, which now has lost
· .~lx games Ina row and stands 2-9
overall and.0-11n the Infant MAC
season.
Mla,ml, after trailing the entire
second halt, managed to tie It at
. 54 on a basket by Todd Staker
with· 36 seconds remaining. But
~eggle Adams, fouled by Eddie
Schllllllg while shooting with

!

"

-

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The H11wks lost guard Glenn
Rlvers .llhd Kevin Willis to louis
IIi the flnal4: ~2. Rivers scored 13
.o f hl3 22. . points In the third
quarter. John Battle, whose
3-polnter tied It 86-86 with 1:56 to
play, scored 12 points for the
Hawks. Jon Koncak and CUff
Levlngston ·each scored 10. · . .
. Elsewhere, Boston topped New
York 117-108, Denver defeated ·
New Jersey 98-93, Philadelphia
trounced Utah 116-93, Cleveland
crushed the LA Clippers 116:100,
the LA Lakers dumped Dallas
103-89, and Seattle beat Houston
110-95.
Cellles 117, Knlck11108 At Boston, Larry Bird scored
41 points and ·Kevin McHale
added 30 to help the Celtlcs hand
theKnlcksthelrse\lenthconseculive road loss. Danny Alnge set
an NBA record by connecting lin
a 3-polnter In his 13th consecutive
game. , New York was led by
Johnny. Newman with a seasonhigh 24 points on.ll of 11 shooting
Continued on page 6

1984 BUICK .
LeSABRE .

water 8114 fllllllt CIDIIetlllrallolta

a... prtcetln eftecf Jenuery 7 through January 13, 1888.

rl·

Kent, 56-54

.

The weather 'hasn't been cold
enough for long enough to develop a good strong layer of Ice 011
most lakes so.tee fishing Is pretty
much out of the question .
On the other hand the water
has reached a temperature low
enough to produce a thin layer of ·
Ice cover over some fairly wide
. expanll!l of water. ThiS Ice,
though too thin to walk on, Is
atroq enough to keep a lure from
ptlin&amp;' through. Cladng II also
.p retty much out of the question.
Fortunately, there Is atlll one
very rood place to flllr 011 most
·.lakes rtaht now. The tallwatera
areu are farely frolrea until the
very coldelt part~ the year aud
ofteD they ,....tp open even

Perfection

or Jet Choke

~

.

Al~~n~Amenca
Dla&amp;rlbuted by UPl

Jet Choke
Puii-Offs

t()

.

·. By COLLINS YEARWOOD
two short jumpers and a layup from the thild. Kentucky . lm- , .
UPl Sports Writer
.during a 16-6 run over 4:30 for a proved to 10-0, 3-0 In the SEC.
The Georgetown Hoyas did 56-50 lead with 5:19 IE!ft.
·
At Green~boro, N.C., J.R. Reid . ~
something that should Improve
In other · games Involving scored.23 points and Scott Willi- ...
their No. 14 ranking when they rsnked teams, No. 1 Kentucky ams scored 5 straight points at , ,
broke No. 2 Pittsburgh's un- routed Mississippi State 93-52, the outset of overtime, to lead the . ;
beaten atreak by outmuscllng No. 3 North Carolina beat Ford- Tar Heels. North Carolina played -. ·
and outbrawllng their Big East ham 76-67 In overtime, No. ~ 6 without Its second and third
rival. ·
Temple downed Pennsylvania leading scorers. Ranzlno Smith,
The Hoyas' defense exposed 84-50, No.9 Duke decked Miami averaging. 15.2 points, and Jeff .
Pittsburgh's · backcourt wea(Fla.) 107-69• .No. 16 Iowa de-· Lebo, averaging 14 pofnts.
kness In a 62-57 victory Wednes- fealed No. 1J Indiana and No. 17
At PbUadelphia, Mike Vreesday illght.
Kansas pasted American 90-69.
wyk scored 20 points and Mark
Georgetown Junior guard Ch.a·
. At Lexington, ·... Ky., Winston · Macon added 19 to lead the OwlS: , .
rles Smith scored 13 of his 20 Bennett scored 17 points and Rob Temple, 9-0, opened the game by .
polllts In the second half,lnclud'
Lock added 15topowerKentucky scoring 24 straight POints.Vrees- .
lng nine during a decisive run, to In a Southeastern Co~erence wyk shot 7 of 11 from the field and . , .
power the victory.
game. Mississippi State, starling . was 5.of 9 on free throws. Macon
The Hoyas forced 21 turnovers,
three . Iresh~n. were over- hit 9 of his 14 fleld .goal attempts
14 In the first halt, and nullified whelmed by the Wildcats, man- and center Ramon Rivas contrlbContinued on page 6
freshman starting guards Sean aging only 37 percent shooting
Miller and · Jason ·Matthews, , - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - diffusing the Panthers' significant Inside advantage. Matthews
alone had seven turnovers.
''We tried to play good defense.
we knew that !hey had young
guards and we wanted to tesf
' them and go after them. We had
to extend . pur . defense to the
perimeter.'llecause of what they
1986 FORD F-;s:,u
could do til us In the Inside,'' said
1987FORD
Georgetown Coach John ThompDUALLY
BRONCO II
son, who drew two technlc.als as
177651, S.W.,4X4,6eyl. eng .. ~ airccnd .. 185321, V-8 eng.. 4 speed vans., standardl
did Panthers Coach Paul Evans.
standard !rans., P:S.,P.B., P.W., P. daar,klcks, nns., P.S., P.B., amnm radio, radilil tiiBB, 1
Georgetown, 10-1 and 1-0 In the
pictwp, long wide bed, reau;lep bum pow, w•iliaiJf
·~ &amp;lllering wlleel, cruile CO!ltrol, aml!m radio,
Big East, has won all six games
sl8oto tape, radial liel, &lt;Mlila wells, bucllst
tiel tank. gauges
against the Panthers at the
seats, rear ,.;nc~cw delogger
Capital Centre and dropped
.
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
Pittsburgh to 9-1 and 0-1 . ~I tts:
burgh was off to Its best start
since 1929.
The game was "Jia1ted - • .:.:-..
~
~ -r-~
approximately 10 minutes with
11: 27 left In the ftrst half after a
benches clearing brawl touched
off hy a fist fight between
Georgetown's Mark Tillmon and
Plttburgh's Jerome Lane. · Tillmon, the Hoyas' leading scorer;
was ejected.
Evans said he believed there Is
a problem with ·nghtlng In the
confere11ce, which Is known tor
Its physical play.
''There Is definitely an Intimidation · factor going on . . They
don't call the hand-checking,
they don't call .the clo~ ~outs, so
this (fighting) Is ii)tng to
happen," Evans Said.
But Thompson said: "The·
1979 ,:oRO
league Is Intense. We play
.,
BR.ONCO
Intensely. I don't think it's that
big a thing."
183942, S.W., 4X4, Y-6eng., factory air '""''··I
arto. trans., P.S.. P.B.. emlfm radio, radial
With the Hoyas trailing 44-40,
Smith
a three-point jumper,
. 5ank
.

OhiQ Outdoors

..-...

~

Prewnt etlllllng
ldleMIIng.

The Daily Sentinei-=Page-5 - :,

By JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Wrltera

i'F
Ped•dioft .
........

From

From

;•I

to-amp automatic charger. #C7612

. ~

.

By Ualted Presil International
rna e a big thing of 11."
.
A home·and-home series
· hey're almost a better club
matching the Atlanta Hawks and
without DominiqUe," said PistheDetrollPistonsprovedlncon- · tonscen~erBIIILalm~r.' ,'They ,
elusive which team Is superior In just post. up and they've gottour ·
the Central Division.
guys .that can post up."
The Pistons achieved a split
Daly made a key move when he
with Atlanta by beating the left Dennis Rodman In and took
Hawks at the Sllver&lt;!ome 90-87. Adrian Dantley out fii the fourth
TUesday night they lost to quarter. Rodman's 5-foot bank
shot started a 7-0 Detroit run at
Atlanta at. the Omn!Bl-71.
"At this time of year," Detroit 7:45 that gave the Pistons a 78-77
Coach 'Chuck Daly said, "a spilt lead. ·
, just doesn't look that bad." '
·Rodman ended with 10 points
The spilt left both clubs with and 16 rebounds, 8 of the
elght.losses. Atlanta has won 22 ·rebounds _coming In the .final
PJ)Ielilllld Detroit 19. · The period. ThomaS' · made a shot
tons knocked the defending from the wing with i: 07 ·left to
ntrat Dl.vlslon champs out of ..give Detroit an 88-86 lead and Joe
. the playoffs last year In five Dumars sank a pair of free
games, then lost In seven to the · throws with six seconds left ·io
Boston C~ltlcs.
.
make It 90-87.
"One tearri Is going have a
Thomas lead Detroit with 18
tough .time bounc\ng back from points while Lalmbf!er had 17 and
this," said Detrott:s Islah Tho- Dumars 13. Lalmbeer. had 14
mas. "ltwlllbelnterestlngtosee rebounds and Mahorn, who had
Which It Is."
· 11 points, hauled down 10 as the
The Pistons host the NBA Pistons held a 55-42 rebounding .
champion Los Angeles !-akers edge. ·
Friday night while the Hawks
return to Atlanta to host Cleveland and De11ver on Friday and
Saturday nights.
·
The Hawks played without
forward Dominique Wlljdns, who
hurt his right knee In a collision
with teammate Antoine Carr In
the second halt Tuesday.
· Despite that lass, Atlanta led
71-62 late In the third quarter and
was up 77-71 with 9: 09 to play.
· "I didn't see any purpose In
knocking hlm out of action for
two or three weeks by running
him In there," Atlanta Coach
Mike Fratello said. "I don't

38!!1h
W111anty

10W40&amp;
5W30 .
Motor Oil

lefl, moves Iii.. to
.
TIUmon wu ej~cted
from the game for hl8 part Ia the altercation, but.
the Boyu went on the .upaet the Panther:&amp; 82-57.
(UPI)

FREE-FOR-ALL - Pittsburgh Panther eager
.Jerome Lane, . center, throws a ,punch at
Georrelc!wn's Mark TtUmon, rlgbt, during a
tlrllt-half, fracu u the Hoyas' Dwayne Bryaut,

50-Month
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Protects all cooling system
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Ohio

seven seconds lett, 'htt both tree pre'seasqn favorite Central groove, s·c ored 30 points and
over Akron. The'Vtklngs trailed Purple Aces.
.
throws to provide the Golden Michigan 72-65.
grabbed 11 t:ebounds to power
38-37 after a closely played first • _ The Bearcats, led by .Steve , :;
Flashes with the viCtory.
At Muncie; Ind., Derrick Wes- Ohio University to Its convinCing
naif alld went ahead tor good, · Jackson with 21 points and Roger
Miami's last gasp came when ley SCOred 14 points, Including win over Toledo. ·
54-53, on William Stanley's 3· McClendon with 20, trailed 35-29 · ' ·
Tim Stewart rimmed the basket four during the flnal81sec,o ndsot ·
Reggie Rankin added 11 points
polntfleldgoal with 12:24 to play. at halftime and twice got to ., .,
with a 19-fnnter from the corner the gam~. to help Ball State beat and George Reid chipped In with
Eric McLaughlin of Akron led within a point In the second halt,
at the buzzer.
Bowling Green.
.
10 to help the Bobcats Improve to
all scorers with 25 points.
the last time at 57-56 with 10; 50 ·
."I thought we met some
BG, whlchled21-20athaUtlme, 6-6. Toledo, which led 40-32 at .
At Dayton, Iona came from remaining.
..
challenges,'' said Kent coach trailed by eight polnts_several • halftime, dropped to8-2.
behind In the~nd halt to beat
IntheOhloAthletlcConference: :
Jim McDonald. "Tiley caught us times during the second half, but
The Rockets 1111 11 of 14 shots
Dayton, 84-77, the fourth loss In a Wednesday night, Ohio Northern .
and we didn't fold. ' We just kept the Falcons narrowed It to 48-46 trorh the floor In the first half, but
row tor the struggling Flyers.
beat Baldwin-Wallace 67-54, Cap- .
coming back."
with 1;2lleft on a Joe Gregory went cold 1n thesecondandmade
The Gaels trailed 43·37 at Ita! downed Otterbein 79-59,
. On the last shot, Peirson said, layup.
only eight of 34 a't tempts.
., halftime and took their first lead Heidelberg rolled over Marietta ··. ,
''We had· the shot we wanted at
Wesley then hlt twQ consecu,
QU went ahead 46-45 with 15:01
of the game at 47-45 with 17: 56 92-74 and Wittenberg defeated . ..
the end. It just didn't go ln."
· live baskets and SteveDziatczak . ' left In thegameonanelghHooter
rema!ni!Jg. They never tr;~lled Mount Union 72-67.
Eric Glenn led Kent State, now added another to give the Cardl- by' ~nnls Whitaker and steadily
again, although Dayton briefly
In the North Coast · Athletic .
5-6overall,.w lthl7polntsandJim nals a 54-46 edge.
.
pulled away, leadlnjl by . Its
tied It at 71 on a basket by Conference, Case Reserve edged . .
Mangapora finished with 14.
Greg Miller also scored 14 biggest margin at the end of the
Anthony Corbitt. Alvin Loti's Denison 66:64 and Wooster got bY.. •
Miami was paced by Staker with points for Ball State. Gregory led game. F'Ted King paced the . 3-polnter 22 seconds. later untied Kenyon ~-62.
.·
14 and Jeff Fuerst with 13.
Bowling Green, with 13 points , . . Rockets with 18 points. ·
It for good.
In other games, Ohio Wesleyan ·
In other MAC action In the first and· Anthony Robinson scored 10
Cleveland State, Jed by Eric · Cincinnati dropped an 82-75 whipped Musklngum 88-68, . · night of league play , Ball State points and grabbed 1 rebounds.
Mudd with 17 points and Ken
decision to Evansville as Marty Wheeling drubbed BlUffton 93-62·~· · :
(!owned Bowling Green 54-49
OU Bounces Rockets
·. McFadden with 14, pulled away~. Simmons scared 23 points and and Wright State won · over :
Ohio University beat Toledo 79-62
At Athens, Paul "Snoopy" In the second halt tor an 80-73 win
Scott Hafner 17 for the host Brooklyn 80-56.
•
and Eastern Michigan upset Graham, seemingly back In the

'""'

CINCIN~AT I

"

Pomerov-Midci8JlQII1.

Georgetown ·upsets-Pittsburgh.·.

Reds sign player
(UP!) - The
Ci ncinnati Reds, signed veteran
outfielder ·Ron Roenlcke to a
minor league contract Tuesday
and reported that third baseman .
Buddy. Bell und erwent .arthroscopic knee surgery. '
Roenicke, 31, a switch-hitter
who has been with five major
teague teams, signed a contract
with the Reds' Class AAA Nashville farm team. He will be
invited to the Reds' spring
training as a non -roster player.
ln 1987, Roenicke was ' with
Philadelphia and · the Ph lilies'
Class AAA Maine farm team.
With Philadelphia in 63 games,
he hit .167 with one homer and
four runs batted ln. With Maine In
38 games, he hit .242 with one
homer and 15 RBI. Before
Philadelphia, Roenicke played
for the Los Angeles Dodgers,
Seattle Mariners, San Diego
Padres and San · Francisco
Giants.
Bell underwent arthroscopic
surgery on his right knee TUesday by Dr. Warren Harding. The
Reds a11nounced !hat "a small
sp.ur on the kneecap was
smoothed away and a small tear
of the medial meniscus was
removed" and said "the surgery ·
went well."
·
Bell lseexpected to be Inactive
for seven to 10 days and then start
four-to-six weeks of rehabilitation. He should be almost 100
'percent healthy by spring train. tng, with "no problem antic!;
pa ted for the regular season,'
said Reds' ottlclals.
Last season, Bell hit .284, with
17 homerund 70 RBl

•

-Miami Redskins drop ·MAC home .opener

...,

~;- •

·--·

Bro:wns deserves some attention

from the ClEiveland Stadium
fa ns. One always sees the
banners for Kosar , Hyner, wide
rece iver Webster Slaughter and
that mad pack known as the

'

�..
llnnday. J.nu.r, 7, 11188

.

Georgetown upsets Pittsburgh... ____eo=n=tln=ued:.::..:tr::..::om~pa:::::g:.:...:e5_-L.)___.:.. ._ _ •
· strong seored a career·hlali 27 . their 53rd · conaeeuuve homeuted 15 points . .
At Durham, N.C.,DannyFerry points and Ken\ Hill added 16 I'! court vtctory. Branch seore&lt;r
most of his points from the
scored a game-high 23 JX)Ints and help the Hawkeyes overcome a
five other Duke players scored In 16-polnt . first-half deficit. _Tbe · tree-throw line In the second half
double flgl.n:es, poWering the Hawkeyes, 9-3, fell behind 33·11 and Kevin Pritchard scored 15
Blue Devils. Duke, Improving to tn the first Jl!!rlod on two Indiana points and Milton Newton con8-1, won Its · 40th consecutive runs before Armstrone and Hill tributed 11 for Kansas, 10-3.
. In other games It was Boston
home game against a non- keyed a second-half comeback.
U.
75, Colgate 53; Duquesne 72,
At
Lawrence,
Kan.;
Marvin
con1erence opponent. The Hurrl·
Georce
Wuhlqton 70! Na-vy 70,
Branch
scored
a
·came-blah
20
·
canes, 7-6, suffered their most
Lafayette
53; Temple ·84, Penn
points
·
and
Danny
MaDDini
lopSided loSS Of the feason.
50;
West
Vtrelnta
80, St Joseph's
added
l8leadlng
the
Jayhawks
to
At Iowa City, I ow, B.J. Arm·
(Pa.) 73; Auburn 72, Florida 67;
Bradley 118, N.C.-Cbarlotte 82;
Continued from page 5
Duke 107, Miami (Fla.) 69;
' ···-~____.__;_:::...___ Florida St. 87, Jacksonville 63;
bottom of .the lake above the don't eat them in montl)a that Georela Tecll 62, Louisville 61;
Kentuc)ty '93, Mississippi St. 52; ·
dam.· .This time of year', that have "R" In them;)
means It's the warmest water In
Spinners take fish at times If Louisiana St. 51, Vanderbilt 39; .
the lake and much warmer than they can be made .to work their New · Orleans 71, Houston 64;
In the creek farther downstream, blades without having to retrieve ,North Carolina 76, Fordham 67
(OT); North Carollns St. 70,
The . predatory species that them too qulcJdy. Even preda·
Clemson
61; Tennessee 77, Mlsfeed on smaller fish visit such tors are too cold to move quickly
sites frequently since their prey from their hideout to take a prey
Is much more abundant In them. when the water's this chilly.
Most of the predatory fish are the Lures should be active but slow
ones fishermen seek: walleye, moving. In many cases the
both .species of bass. p!Jte. tallwaters are clear, so you'll
•crappie and the ll.k e all feed on . .want to make tbe presentation
other fish.
using light line.
The word Is out ·on tallwaters
Most successful anglers will be
using either live batt or lures that ftshlng. They're otten crowded
closely Imitate some hapless on w,e ekends and at the Jl!!ak of ·
critter. Minnows are very good, many runs. Plan Y0\11' trips to
as are larger size fish. Worms Include times when most otber
may work at times, but the fish people are working to maximize
seem to realize they're out-of- your success.
season right now. (Maybe they

' OUtdoors.
Ohw
'

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

'INSURANCE
~
111 S.COIIII St.,
Pomlroy

YOUR IIDEPEJIDIN'I
. lGIIITS SERVING
MDGSCOUm
SIIICE 1868

. '

2.5 °/o OFF Seasonai ..Merchandi·se

JANUARY 16, 1918-ROYAL OAK RESORT.
DINNER 7:00 P.M.-DANCE 8:30 til Midnight
JOHNSON DRIVES - The Cavaliers' Kevin Johnson drives
toward the bucket after the Cavs stole the ball from the Los
Angeles ClipperS during second-quarter action Wednesday night
at the Richfield Coliseum. The Cavs moved on to lead 53'46 at
halftime. (UPI)

UVE BAND-Doors Open 6:30 P.M.-BYOI

awks... ---'-~-~..:;..:.::.::_:_.__~
.-. Continued from page 5

INV EN

ARANCE
3 DAYS ONLY
'

FRIDAY

•

JANUARY 8

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JANUARY . , . ·:_

JANUARY~

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LUllS '

LADIES

Mr. and Mrs. Bill OsbOrne and Weber and daughter, Morgan, all
daiighters, Lori and Kelly, Cb_es- local.
Lauren Young of Pomeroy
ter, visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Road,
visited with her grandpar- '
Jack Westfall on Saturday evenents,
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
Ing lor a holiday dinner.
·· .
Kirk Reed, Abigail Cauthorn, Reed. recentiy.
and Tammy Roberts, students at
Ohio University, Athens, and
Alison Cauthorn of Ohio State,
· Columbus, .sJI!!nt their hollc!ay
SJ1!!ndlng Christmas with Berbreaks with their fa-IJlllles.
tha
Bing, Bailey Run Road,
Christmas Eve guests at the
Pomeroy,
were Vernon and Dahome of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
'
r
leen
Bing
and son, Tony, Duane
Balderson Jjlere Mr. and Mrs.
and
Dla,ll!!
Bing, Terry and
Jay Long, and Mrs. Kathryn
~baron
Sayre,
Misty, Tr~vls, •
Dietz of Belpre, Bill Marshall of
'Leesburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Jared, all of Gallipolis; Melissa
Bing,. Huntington; Eric and
Warren Pickens.
Holiday guest~ at the home of Janie Bower,' Chrissy, Tommy,
Mr. a:nd Mrs. Ernest Whitehead . and Terri, Portsmouth; Paul and
Included Mrs. Jean Frydmiln Kar McElroy, Jett, Joey and
and daughter, Sarah, Evanston, Jeeslca, Pomeroy. Missln&amp; trom
Dl., Mr. and Mrs. Ed Heuch and the family aroup was the Vernon
sona, Eddie and Matthew of ~- Blna. aon of Vernon aad
canton, Mr. alld M111. Walter Darleen BID&amp;, .wbo Is serving In
Hen.sch and daughter. Llaa, the U. S. Navy on the USS
caul Fulton, Joy SaiH!r of Nlarara Flilll Slllp Ill Guam.
.Cbrtatmu cuesta at tile home
Polkklleport, Mr. and Mra. Bill
.Men!dlth ot Beverly IUid l!'and· ot Freda Smith were Mr. and
dauabttr, Tert, Columbu, Mr. Mrs. Larry Staaley and daugband Mra. Warm PlGUDa. Mr . ter, ADDI, Edlloll; Mr. and Mra.
VI''II''P Tarlor illl Da)rton crm- · alllt Mra. Denver Weber and-· Reece PNtber Ud aoa. TblroD
Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. David ot Ketterlq, and John Holliday,
the bolldaya
•
.

New Yeafs Day guests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens were Mr. ·and Mrs.
William Meredith of Beverly and
.aranddaugl\ter, Terl, Columbus. ,
· Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber and
Mark, Mr. an~ Mr~. David Weber
and · Morgan, Mr. and ,Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead .and grand·
dall#hter, Sarah Ftydman and
Mrs. Lyle Balderson.
·. Garrel Chevalier aiid Nathan
of Fredericktown spent a feW
days with his mother, Mrs. Lona
CHievaller.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead entertained with a holiday ·
meal for Mr. and Mra. Earl
Henderson of RavenswQOd, W.
Va., Others there were Mr. and
Mrs. William Meredith of Beverly and aranddauahter. ' Terl,
. Mr. anlf Mrs. Warren Pickens
and Mr. u~:nver Weber
and Sarah
• .
.
Walter Browll apent the boll·
clays wltll Mr~and Mrs. WIDiam
Thomll llad flmlly at
Sprlqfteld.
.
,.
Mr. and Mrl. David Weber and
.lrforlu vla!Wd Mr. and Mrs.

20010

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community events ...

I.
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BLAZERS,,
SPORT COATS

30°/o..

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Carsey b , hd'ay

Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
A family 4.limer was held spent Christmas Day In Westerand
Mrs. B.- K. Ridenour were
Sunday at the home of '"Opal ville . with Dr. and Mrs. Billy
Mr
.
and
Mrs. Lowell Ridenour
Eichinger. Attend!~ were Mr. Allen, Katie and Bobby. Mr. and
and
sons,
Opal Wickham, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Eichinger and 'Mrs. P. E. Simms, Allentown,
and
Mrs,
James
Ridenour al)d
Susie, Pickerington; Mr. and Pa., parentsofKarenAilen, were
Janet, John B. Ridenour and
Mrs. Dennis Eichinger, Reeds- . also guests .of the family.
Mr. and 'Mrs. David Smith, John L. Ridenour, all local.
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Don ElchlnJoining Mr. and , Mrs. ·DOn
ger, Tiffany and Justin, Laura Meaghan and Tyler, · Okemos,
Eichinger,
Tiffany and Justin for
Eichinger, Columbus: Jeff Nor- MICI:t., were guestsd of Mr. and
Christmas
dinner were Laura
ton, Worthington; Mr . and Mrs . . Mrs. Delmar Baum, Christmas
Columbus,
and Opal
Eichinger,
·Robert Wilson, Pat and Jimmy, week. Joining them for dinner·
Eichinger.
On
Saturday
evening
Savannah, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs . were Mr. and Mrs.Tim Baum
DOn,
Opal
and
Laura
Eichinger,
Terry Coffman, Shawn and Jen- and Derek, local.
nlfer, Marietta, and Laura Mae
Kathy Freitag, Mary and Su- and Mrs. Tom Nice .enjoyed open
Nice, Chester. In the afternoon, a . san, Canton, and Geroge Reuter, · house at the new home of Mr. and
Big Bird birthday cake and Ice Akron, spent Christmas week Mrs. Charles Eichinger and
·
cream ·were served In obser- with their aunt, Lucille Smith. Susie,' Pickerington.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
, vance of the second birthday of Reuter remained for a longer
an.d Mrs. Kirk Cheva)ler, Jessica
Justin Eichinger. Family pic·
visit.
and
' Kristen, were Mrs. Betty
tures were taken and a gift
Opal Eichinger was a dinner
Chevalier,
Tuppers Plains, and
, guest or Mr, and Mrs. Dennis
exchange was held.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
RodneY- Chevalier,
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
Eichinger. Kim and Mlchaelle,
and
Abby
.
·
Adam
Reedsville, on Christmas Eve.

NEW 2 PC.

-.pc.

'

A m.uslcal heritage of life In the gift !rom the chapter.
markings held tor Mrs: John ·
N:orthwest Territory was pres.
In conjunction with the pro- · (Emma Smith) Reuter . Mrs.
ent~ by Dr. MarJorie Malone,
gram, members related Chrlsdt· Robert Ashley reporte9 that the .
gues~ speaker . at the recent _mas' memories of childhood, with
Meigs County History Book, Vol.
meeting of Return .Jonathan . some centering . around family . 2, Is C!.n sale at the Meigs ..
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the · and church traditions.. ·
. Museum.
•
By BOB HOEFLICH
American
Revolution,
held
at
During
the
business
tneetlng
Mrs.
A.
R.
Knight
led in th.e
~e.rd mlssus got nu ne
·
.Sentinel N~s Stalf
Heath United Methodist Church, delegates and alternates were pledge to the flag , with the
HoJI!! she ~oln gOQd,
It you have any Christ~s
elected for Continental Congress president general's message beMiddleport.
Wish yu a! Mary Crlsms;
money weighing down you);.
Accompanying herself on an In Washington D. C. in April! lng read and Mrs . . Reynolds
Next yr b goods!,
pockets, perhaps, you'd like to
autoharp, Dr. Malone played and Mrs. John Rose and Mrs. Clar- glv!ng the national defense re·
Won yt fer ye;
· pick up a copy of the new Volume
sang and. then was joined by the ence Struble were named dele- ·port. Members were ·asked to
'Hant got no purty .krd, Kant
members for a time of singing gates, and Mrs. George Skinner write their representatives about
II of the Melg County History.
ford a purty store bot one,
\
!
and
playing games familiar tokk and Mrs. Ronald Reynolds were a bill to designate Blennerhasset
There are extra copies availa. Hope this I b good nuf ."
their
ble and the new volume ts a
early childhood. They ennamed alternates.
Island as a National Historical
'~
joyed
"rounds"
llke
"Row,
RoW,
Also
named
were
delegates
Park. ·
dandy. The volume lias 432 pages
The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
Row
Your
Boat"
and
then
and
alternates
to
the
state
Mr . and Mrs. John Rose were
featuring 900 stories and ment has awarded Its prizes- an ·
photographs.
' 'annual project- and the winners
concluded with " Amazing
conference to be· held at the given a vote or thanks for
MISTY D . LYONS
Grace" and "Silent Ntgtit."
Marriott Inn, Cincinnati, Matcti delivering clothes to the DAR
. Cost ofthe book Is $49 •. plus $3 If are: VCR, Rita R~. Pomeroy;
4and5.~rs. Dwlglt1MIIhoanand l!chools. Mrs. Paul Elch was ,
Dr. Malone told or how the
you want your copy mailed to chalnsaw, Slteryl Roush, Ra·
early colonist&amp; brought their own
Mrs. Rose were named delegates commended for · donating two .
_you. You can send your payment cine; deer mount, Jay Carpen·
songs with them, and found them ~ and Mrs. Reynolds and Mrs. · books to the National DAR '
to the Meigs County History tet, Rutland; Powell's gift certfl'
tobesourceofhelpln'
c onfllctand . Gary Moore, alternates.
Library In Washington of the ·
Book, P.O. Box 145, Pomeroy, elate, Gene Kropka,' Pomeroy;
Mlsiy, Dawn Lyons, daughter
communication
In
the
settleGifts
for
.veter!'ns
at
the
early Meigs County poll records
Ohio 45769, or you can stop by the black and white television, Frat:
of Raymond "and Debra Lyons, ·
Vetera'irs
Hosplta_l and information on the .Letart
·
•
Chillicothe
ments.
She
was
presented
with
a
.
Meigs CouQtY Museum on Butter· ernal Order of Eagles, Pomeroy;
celebrated her eighth birthday
were brought by the members. A Township Cemetery.
nut Ave., and pick up your copy.
G.&amp; J. gUt, Chris Arquilla, Kent;
recently with a party at her
1ft
report was given on the recent
The birthdays of Mrs. Joseph
The museum Is open from 1 to Farmers Bank gift, Jack Folhome.
and
grave
Cook
and Mrs. Knight were
memorial
services
4:30p.m. Tuesday through Satur- lrod, Pomeroy; Hartley Shoes
Cake, Ice cream and punch
Kenneth
and
Sheila
Carsey
of
observed,
day each week.
gift, Bryan Shank, Pomeroy;
were served. Ga!fles were played
Middleport entertained recently
Mrs. Reynolds presided at the
Clark's Jewelry gift, Kenny
with prizes being awarded to the
tea service for refreshments
So what do you know a~ut
Imboden ;"'-Middleport; Sugar winners. Attending were Misty's wtth a party In observance of the
second birthday of their son,
served from a deocrated table.
Gen. U.S. Grant?
Run Mill gift, Gralg · Kaylor,
grandparents, Ted and Marge Kenneth Ryan.
Hostesses were Mrs. Nan Moore,
J.,etart, W. Va.; food processor,
· Last week, a column contained
Connolly; Arlene and Jason
Pound
puppies
was
the
theme
Mrs. Arthur.Skinner, Mrs: Larry
Bill Hayes, Dexter; fire extln·
Information about a celebration
Parker, Michael, Sheila, Jeremy
tee
-cream,
~hips,
with
cake,
Wiley, Mrs. Roscoe Wise, .and
· . held in Middleport In honor · or
gulsher, Sabra Pearsol!, Mason,
and Christopher Connolly, Sandy
sandwiches,
pop
and
Iced
tea
·Mrs.
Daniel Thomas .
W. Va.; A!f, Gilbert Zwllllltg,
General Grant.
and Christie Mills, Erma, Erm~
being
served.
Gifts
were
pres, Jim Brewer following that
Pomeroy: Pomeroy Flower Sh_op Jean, and Darlene Connolly.
en ted by the guests to the
article comments that he has a
gift, Betty Spencer, Pomeroy;
Sending gifts were Misty's
honoree, .
movie rentals, Emma Clat- grandmother, IJazel Lyons,
bust of General Grant which has
Attending the party were his
worthy, Middleport.
·
been around a long tlfne. He'd
great-grandmother, Beulah
grandmother,
·Mary Birchfield,
!Ike some Information on the bust
Schultz, and her g~eat-great­
Ray
Birchfield,
his great·
and Gen. Grant If you happen to
Construction Is moving right grandmother, Lola Griffin.
grandmother,
Hazel
Grate, Ha·
along on the new nursing home
be knowledgeable. Do give Jim a
rold
.
Grate,
Jim,
Megan
and
facility In Middleport. Dr. Harold
call. He'll be glad to have any
Jerry
Clark,
Eloise
Drenner,
Brown of Pomeroy battled
Information that you have.
, Penny Clark, Louise and Wendy
· through the necessary state
Carsey, Ronnie, Connie, Sam and
For the past seven years Mel
approval and financial backing
Beth Thompson, and the honoSmith, 33385 State Route 7,. · ·for the facility .
ree's sister, Kenda.
The nursing home will contain ·
Pomeroy, has been receiving
New officers were elected
Sending gifts were his grand·
1.00 beds and will provide employChristmas cards - such as .they
when the Reedsville Community .mother, Grace Clark, and John,
ment for 90 people which should Builders Pub met recently at the
~tre from an anonymous
·
sender.
be quite an economic lift for home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest . Cind)l and Missy Clark.
- ---------- - The cards (?) have been made
Middleport and Meigs County.
Whitehead.
.
from brown pa,per sacks or very
Elected were Denver Weber,
much - used · cardboard. The
Tile Rutland Civic .C enter will president; Mrs. Ronald Osborne,
•N'S
sender could spell pretty well at
be hosting a volleyball .tourna- vice presliient; Mrs. Lyle Baldermen-! on Jan. 23 at the civic son, secretary; and Mrs. Warren
the· time or the first card.
SUITS~
However, through the years, the
center,
The double elimination tourna- Pickens, treasurer·
BY LONPON FOG nC;
spelling has gotten worse;
ment
will
be
open
to
eight
A
donation
was
made
on
Below Is the verse from the
member teams from across our Christmas lights. for the· coinfirst card:
.
REDUCED
REDUCED.
·•!:P·
Churches and businesses munlty Christmas tree. A thank
, Nb mo~ to spend,
_'Everything looks bad; t1"mes" .,... 'as weii"'ls •chibs 'and organfzl\- .. ~ou-_wasread from Mrs. Osborne
·tlons are Invited to form teams for flowers she received when
are hard;
and take part.
she was Ill.
So here's your d--·--.
MEN'S COLORED
There
Is
a
$20
entry
fJ?e
.;md
·A holid!IY potluck was held ·
Old Christmas card!
sponsor trophies will be awarded preceding the meeting and at•
As I say, the language and
to
the winning teams. To sign .a tending were Mr. and Mrs,BY. A.UOW
spelling over the years have
BY
KEY
INHSTIIES
team
up
for
the
competition,
or
Donald
Mye~s,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
LONG
AND
SHOll SLEEVE
gotten worse, and following Is the
lnfol!lllatlon
call
Ronald
Osborne,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
for
further
verse which was on this year's
742-2279 or 742-2895·.
'
Warren Pickens, Mr.· and Mrs.
REDUCED
REDUCED
card - It may take you a minute
___
Lyle Balderson, and the hosts,
or two to figure It out:
Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead. The
If you ever needed your love to
Jus Iaing round ·
Baldersons will host the next
keep you warm, now Is the time. meeting.
Hant doln nutjn,
. •N'S
Do keep smiling.
Gettln ole fore my,time,

· RCcdsvill~

S999S

.:.__~--=----~-=--

DAR presents musical heritage

Chester comm~~:nity ht:lPPenings·

FOR
BUY ONE IECUNEI
GET ONE fill

SO%
OFF

·Page-7

If:;

20°/o

RECUNERS

2

- .... . ..·-· . .

Thursday, January 7, 1·9 88: •.

Community Builders
have holidaj-event

YE

•

Harper added .16 points to gjve.
!rom the field.
·
Cleveland
Coach Lenny Wilkens
Nunets 98, Nets 93
his
599th.NBA
coaching victory.
At East Rutherford, N:J., Alex
Michael
Cage
had 26 points for
English scored 35 points and
Clippers.
the
became the 14th player In NBA
Lakers -103, Mavericks 89
history to score 20,000 points.
At Inglewood, Calif., James
English entered the game needtog 11 points to reach 20,000 and Worthy, held without a basketfor
surpassed the plateau In the first more than 32 minutes, sfruck for
period. The Nets lost their fourth 13 of his 17 points tn· the fourth
quarter to help Los Angeles
straight .
·extend
Its winning streak to 12
Slxers 116, Jazz 93
games.
The Lakers outscored
At Philadelphia, Cliff Robinson
Dallas
29
-7 to finish the game."
scored 21 ot his 25 points In the
Mark
Aguirre
led Dallas with 29
second half and Charles Barkley
points.
added 23 points for Philadelphia.
Sonlcs 110, Rockets 9ii
Utah, which dropped Its third
straight, received 14 .points from · At Seattle, Tom Chambers
· John Stockton and 12 each from .scored a career-high 46 points to
lead Seattle.. Chambers . con. Karl M.alone a!ld Mel Turpin.
verted 15 &lt;;&gt;f23 field goals and 15of
_ . Cavaliers 116, Clippers 100
At Richfield, Ohio, Brad · 15 free throws. He also had 8
Daugherty sank 11 of l4 shots en rebounds . The So nics led from
route to a season-high 29 poll!tS, start to capture their 11th
helping the Cleveland Cavallers straight home victory. Purvis
stretch the Los Angeles Clippers' Short led the Rockets with 21
losing streak to eight games. Ron points.

By
The
Bend
-. -:-'-:--:---------_.;...-----_;,.,.,---..:...___;_____

The .Daily -sentinel :

CHECKlHE

$22 Couple/$12 Single Dinner • DarN?•
-$10 Couple/$6 Single Dance Only

0
fli

..

Lyons birthday ·

1 RACK OF SUNSET BLUE JEANS
$1.799 VALUES TO S30.00

POMEROY AREA CHAMBER Of COMMERCE

ANNUAL D.INNER;.DANCE

slsslppl 68 (OT);- vlrglril!l 115 ••
Radtord 56.
•
Also, Oeveland St. 80, Akron ·
73; Eastern Michigan 72; Central •
Michigan 65; 'E yansvllle 82, Cln·
clnnatl 75; Grambling St. -71,
Nebraska 68 &lt;O:r). ,

.

•••

I

·· . . . . . OliO -

�•

..
.. !P~~~~~~n.~~D~-~~~~~~~------------~--------~~P~~~m~~~~!:~~~~~~~~·~O~h~~~-~~.~----------~---------Th~~~~y~,J~an~u.y~7~,~1~9~88~.

Chester firemen "have holiday party

CaJendiJ,r

Here for funeral

Grange conducts· meeting·

..:: The
.
National Grange sewing

· Contest was announced for the
; gext regular meeting on Feb. 6
· when Star Grange 778' met at the
'- hall.
·
. · Ben Rife, legislative chair·
• man, reported ' on the national
::budget and upcoming bills In the
: state legislature.
· Linda Montgomery, women's
; activities chairman, gave health
· hints. Opal Dyer, youth chair·
; man, reported that the Meigs
· County Youth Group will meet at
- ·the Ponderosa on Jan . 30 for
.-:.supper
and ·then will go to the
.

.

Eastern ·menu

Perfect score

-. -L---------People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TROTl' ·
United Press lnlematlonal
. HAm AND NOW: First lady Nancy Beajan Is In ser(qus need
of a new hairstyle, according to a vote liy the 35 halrsfylists at
the Raymond and Nasser ·Beauty Center on . New York's
Madison Avenue. ''During all seven years as first la,dy, Nancy
has clung loyally to the same hairdo," said a statement from the
sa'lon.
Second place was a three-way tie between Ivana Trwnp, wife
of millionaire developer Donald Trump, actress Joan Collins
and Dr. Joyce Brothers.
"Whlle Ivana proved her loyalty to a version of the 25-year-old
beehive, Joan Collins Is said to clamp on a parade of frozen wig
styles, never changing a single spit curl," the stylists 'siild.
" Busy Dr. Brothers, obviously too engrossed In reading her
mall, never paid attention to l\er hairstyle."
Third place \t'as a slx:way tie between Jaequellne Onassls,
Julie Andrews. C.ndlce Bergen, Ellen Bunl)'n. Unda Ev1111s
and Tammy Grimes, who, said 'the hairstylists, "were
obviously all victims of having been locked In a time warp."
POET HOwLs ABOUT CENSORSHIP: As poet Allen
Ginsberg was heading to Israel to protest censorship there, his
landmark Beat Generation poem "Howl" was the subject of a
similar debate at home. Some radiCl stations across the nation
planned to read " Howl," which Is laced with obscenities, on !he
air this wee!( as pari of a series on censorship and other stations
will be running an Interview with Ginsberg titled "Why He Can't
Broadcast 'Howl. " '
At Issue Is the Federal Communication Commission's ruling
that adult-oriented material be broadcast. only after midnight.
"The government now haf · set out rules which have had an
Intimidating and chilling effect on broadcasters," Ginsberg
said. "It's very similar to what goes on In the SOviet censorsh,lp
bureaucracy."
Ginsberg Is In Israel as vice president of the writers group
PEN to protest treatment of writers In Israel.
FAMILY POLITICS: There will be one big winner In the
Di.tkakls family this ,year, regardless of how Massachusetts
Gov . Michael Dukakls does in the campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Olympia, Dukakls, whose role as Cher's mother In

"Moanstruck": earned her a bE!st-supporting actress nomina·
tlon In the Coldep Globe competition, Is the gOVernor's cousin.
The actress, who also played MarloThomas:s mol)ler In "Socia,!
· Security" on Broadway, says she Is a strong supporter of .her
cousin's effort but won't be on the campaign t.rall for him.
ROYAL DOINGS: Prince Aildrew and his wife, the former
Sarah Ferguson, will attend a rock concert, a polo match In
Palm Springs and visit an aircraft carrier when they visit
Southern Calfornla as part of the UK·LA '88 arts festival.
·The couple will arrive Feb. 26 and staY, 10 days on the royal
yacht. "We are very fortunate, Indeed that their royal
highnesses, the duke and duchess of York, have decided that
their first official visit to the United States should be to Los
Angeles," 'Donald Ballentyne; the British' consul:general, said
at a breakfast and news conference attended by actors Michael
York, stacy Keach and Judd Hirsch.
..
.
The rock band that will entertain the royals has yet to be
announced.
·.
I REMEMBER MILLARD: Millard FIUniore Is not forgotten
at the State University of New .York at Buffalo. Fillmore;. the ..
obscure pre~ldent who succeeded Zachary Taylor In 1850, will
be honored Thursday on the 188th anniversary of hiS birth.
The occasion will be marked by the placing of a wreath from
President Reagan on Fillmore's tomb. Fillmore moved to
Buffalo In 1830 and called .the city his home until his death In
1'874. He was active In educational and cultural affairs there ant~._
helped create the Buffalo and Erie County Public Library,)
System and the Buffalo. Mu~eum of Science.
•'He really did a lot for the city Itself," said Sue Wuetcher, a
SUNY-Buffalo spokeswoman. "We hohor him more for what he
did for BUtfalo than for what he did as president."
GLIMPSES: Gal'l'Y ShandDDI will be sharing his show with
the Showtlme cable network and 'Fox Broadcasting Co.
Showtime will continue airing first-run episodes of "It's Garry
Shandllng's Show," which also will' be tunnlng oil FBC on
Sunday nights. ' 'When my manager called," Shandllng said,
"and said, 'Fox wants to do the show,' I told him I wasn't
prepared to leave Showtlme since they've been so supportive
creatlveiy. But he said, 'No, no, they (FOX) want to do II along
with Showtlme. · So I said I'd be willing .t~ give It a shot."·

Dutch .firm -purchases
interest in supermarkets
,:..ipcluding Pick~n-Pay

Officials said the new owners
MAPLE HErGHTS, Ohio
(UPI) - A Dutch firm has have . also promised to keep
bought a major interest In :First current union contracts.
Officials of Local 880 of the
National Supermarkets, whichoperates 122 Flnast, Plck-n-Pay United Food and Commercial
and Edwards food stores In six Workers union said they have
had a good relationship with
states.
·
First
National management and
First National officials said
there
Is no reason to believe that
Wednesday the new owner, the
that
relationship
will change.
Ahold Group, an International
''An Indicator oflhat Is the fact
food retailer located In the.
Netherlands, has plenty Qf cash that they (managers) picked up
the phone a,nd Informed us that
ana a hands;off policy.
• "The relatlonsnlp with Ahold there. were new Investors In the'
certainly strengthens us and it company," one union official
gives us the ability to do what we said . .
First National operates 52
need to do In the market place,"
stores
In Northeast· Ohio where
said Richard Bogomolny, chairman and chief exe~llt!ve of First retail food competition In recent ·
~atli~been severe.
National.
•:we'll haVe' the opportunity to · "More than ever, It takes
make the kinds of Investments resources to succeed In the food
that we couldn't make before. retailing business and with our
What the timing for that will be, I partner, we ·have gained· access
d«m't know. But we consider to these," said Bogomolny.
He said First National would
ourselves to .l;le tough competitors before and this should make continue to operate under Its
present board of directors and
us tougher."
management
team.
The Dutch owners have
Officials
did
not disclose the
pledged more than $100 million .
purchase
amount
or th·e· amount
over the ne¥t three years for new
·purchased.
store openthgs and modemlza·
First National also operates
· tton, Including automation equipstores
In Connecticut, New York,
ment and management InformaMassachusetts,
Vermont and
tion system,s.
New Hampshire.

·Parents calm over return of AIDS student
• MOUNT VERNON, Va. IUPI) tener was back.
· - Most parents of students at a
Principal John Spataro said
.Fairfax County elementary l~ier Wednesday that the girl had
school have accepted the pending not returned.
·
return of a kindergarten girl with
Malone said she was upset
AIDS. but at least two say they officials did not disclose until
may take legal action against Monday that the child with AIDS
· of!lclals.
attended the school in the sou"I can't take the .risk," ex· theastern area of the wealthy
plalned Betty Ma,lone, with a girl county In the suburbs of the
of he r own in kindergar ten and a nation's capital.
boy In second grade at Riverside
The case became public Dec.
Elementary $ch0o1. "! want 22, when the mother of the
them to have a good education, unidentified girl sued the school
but their lives are more lmpor- ·' system for removing bet daugh. tant to me than their educa.tlon ter from class In early Noright now."
vember. The suit sought the
• The child · with the deadly girl's return to class and asked
disease had been cleared to that the system come up with a
return to school as early as formal policy on acquired ImWednesday, and Malone kept her mune deficiency syndrome.
two children home because she
The county school board desaid school' officials would not tell . clded to admit the girl last week,
her if the 5·year-old klndergar- a nd It was scheduled today to
. I

consider establishing a written
policy to handle future cases of
.the syndrome experts say cannot
be spread by casual contact
Malone, who· spoke at a public
meeting Tuesday night against
the board's decision to return the
child to class, said Wednesday
she had heard from a Qumber of
parents supporting her position.
· "We're trying to geJ a petition
together t9 find out how to get an
Injunction to prevent the AIDS
child from returning to school,"
she said.
Jim Hurst, father of a second- .
grade girl at Riverside, said he
sent his child to school Wednesday but might consider keeping
her home. He said he Spoke to a
law firm about the posalblllty of
legal action but made no final
decision.
"We ne.ed to get a lot more

qd~stl6ns answered," Hurst explained. "I'm not lncompassiQnate toward thl&amp; child, but things
do happen with children. If this
kid gets pushed Into a corner, this
kid's going to fight. "
AIDS, which fatally destroys a
body ~ s ability to fight lnfectton , ls
usually spread through sexual
activity but can spread through
blood· to-blood contact.
Spataro said overall attendance Wednesday was about normal, with 35 of '183 students
absent. He said parental response generally had been "excellent" and the afflicted child's
teacher had shown •'not one bit of
nesltatlon."
"We had less students absent
todaY, than we did yesterday," he
said. "You would think If there
was a backlash, It would occur
today." .

High-dose nicotine gum.helps smokers: study
'By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
.

.

BOSTON (UPI) - Strongly
addicted smokers would apparently have a much better chance
of kicking the habit If they could
use prescription chewing gum
with twice the amount t&gt;f nicotine
allowed In the United States,
researchers say.
·A study published Wt;dnesday
In The New England Joyrnal of
Medicine found that the two-year
success rate among hard·core
smokers was about five times
higher for those who used nicotine , gtlm containing twice as
much nicotine.
. Although many smokers ap'
pear to beCome dependent on the
nicotine gum, the researchers
urged. that the higher-dose gum,
be made available to help more
~X!DPle quit smoking.
"What Is the alternative?" Dr.
Philip Tonnesen, a pulmonary
djlease expert who headed the
study at the Gentofte Hospital In
Copenhagen, Denmark, said In a
telephOne tntefvlew.
• "If a patient does ~ot u~
4-mllllgram pm then maybe he
. will smoke 20 cigaret~s a day. It
Is betler to use four or five pieces

'

·-

•

of gum with no cancer·causlng milligrams of nicotine or· 2 smoking for ~lx weeks, 44.4
chemicals," he said.
, ·• milligrams o! nicotine. The 113 percent abstained for one year
· KarenMonacooftheAmerlcan smokers with medium or low and 33.3 percent abstained for ·
Lung Association said more dependency were given gum two years.
study would probably be needed containing 2 milligrams of niceAmong the highly dependent
to confirm the findings, but tine or a gum containing no group that received 2·mllllgram
anything that can help people nicotine.
gum, 54.5 percent were smokeAll the smokers participated In less for the first six weeks, 12.1
quit smoking would be welcome.
group counseling.
percent abstained for the first
"Certainly If It can have even
In the highly dependent gro11p year and only 6.1 percent ab- .
more effect and there are no ' that received 4-mllllgram gum, stained for two years.
medical drawbacks I think It 81.5 .percent abstained · from
would be valuable asset to~e ..-~----------~----.....:..-------.:....1
on the market," said Monaco.
Charles Rongey, spokesman
for Lakeside Pharmaceuticals of
Cincinnati, Ohio, which makes
· Nlcorette, 'the only nicotine gum .
approved for prescription use In
the United States, said the
company plans to apply for
government approval to sell
4-mllllgram gum later this year.
"The 4-mllllgram · gum appears to be needed In about 20
percent of the smokers," Rongey
said In a telephone ln~rvlew.
In the study, 112 smokers who
conaumed at leaat 10 cl8arettea a
day were erouped u belnl either
highly dependent on nlootlae or
as havtna medium to low degrees
of dependence.
·
Sixty highly dependent smok·
ers were given gum contatnlna 4
I

~oscow tUPI) -

Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
said Moscow hopes 198ll "will be
the last year of Soviet troops In
Mghanlstan" and predicted the
next round of U.lll.·medlated
talks on a peace settlement will
be the last.
. Shevardnadze made the co;;,.
merits Wednesday In the Afghan
capital of Kabul at the conclusion
of a three-day visit to the
war· torn na·tlon, the official Tass
news agency reported .
"We would like that the just
begun year of 1988 will be the last
year of Soviet troops In Afghanis. tan, " Shevardnadze told the
Afghan Bakhtar news 'agency In
an Interview carried by Tass In
Moscow.
•~A favorable situation ls devel·
oping on the whole at the··
Afghan-Pakistani talks, which
gives the hope for the early
completion of a political settle-

I

352 E. Mail St. '-oy, Oh.
'PH. 992-2.44
"Often Imitated- Never.
Duplicated"

WH MAKE HGH PRICES ·
:DISAPPEAR
.•.• ,.,.
'
HERSHEY'S

INSTANT
CHOCOLATE
MIX

s]39

!'OOC:IU

:::,..
..;::,:::; :;. ';.':".:Z: 100......

TARTAR CONTROL

oz.

.....

____ _

t.....nt
~_

__

·t_, .... _ __
.
.. .
·-Jo----lk•--Mool
:v IC::~::::::.::..:.'.~"':l.=: - "'"'

$169 '

f:::.:!':::'"

. CREST

'

REGULAR

$1 69

· : -~---.....,.,.-:---

6.401.

.

'.

.

.•

"NEW" GAYISCON
IIIIA-m.G111............- ......

.·Public Notice

------

: COUN'IY: MEIGS
1t
PUIUC NOTI.CE
Tho follow Ina W8rii'IICIIved·
' /r,rop•od bY Tho Ohio Env ronmentol '•otoctlon
Agtnlli' (OEPAI !alt -.lt.
l!f*ti!M . . _ Df ftnol Ill'· t1on1 •d le• en01 c11te1 of
~ ~ csodiGtlaMIN.-.1.

100 JAIIIYS

S49t

'

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

lltlaM 11111'1 Ito .....
· ......,,1!\w:lllo:~o w11t:1n ao

.;
:1

"'

nlllllto 10 Tl:e lt:vt-·
t1t1 loft or ~~~ev~... ttm.

JOI),

••
\

Ul I. TIWn lt.,

v.w.

tAll
~~
lllll!l;
- t:.,___
_

,

PARTS

D&amp;C ELECTRIC .
Ron Ditoo or
Gliry Cummins

992-it226
Middleport .
lnourod/Uun11d

' 12-7 -'87ttn:

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OltiO . •

..•

10·9·ttn'·

Roger Hysell
,. Garage

··-·
____

=--==·

DON'T LET YOUR EL£(. •
TIICAl PROBLEMS BE-:
COME A SHOCII TO YOU!"

I!''

Ml.ll

... ..

....

. , .•

•

•

.•

~·

Cl-.1/i•d pq.• oover riM

,· --,---···---

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SLACK
614-992-2269 .

992-2156

fol""'""' ....,.~oo ...............

..' ··~-=:=:i:-:.:-...:;
:r__ _.... - -..... -

$3500

YOUNG'S

r

~

locust, Oak, Cherry

AQlJ PUNC~!

~~=·

==-·

=:·:: ..

illl=

Public Notice

.U!!l1Jt:.: • •
Public Notice
tlon", • uad liiOft doll
not lnoludo ~ ·or 1
WMHioot oom,tibt. If

i' $
I

pulllto ~
..... ~ l:!!kL
Altoli&amp;y
~~

.....litOf-1111-·

::....: .:r....-.:"'....m:
..........................

. ,....,. Unllll :•uwlw
lln!VIdlillli iloi41 I H tfJIIi....
. . . . . . . . . . . . IL-111
Ilona ..... .., . . to:

duro. Judtlment lit ileloult
wHI bo rondlrod lltllln• you
fat tho rolt.r ........... In

411·1111. Canoutt OIIC

=

~

notlal

117, l·p11t11 I

•IIIOidlng f8olllty In

Rlvlr.
( I • ho

Also Jr•autlsslon

o - or otherwloo ,..
oiiOftll • rtquncl lly tho
Ohio Rutoo Df Clvl l'fooo.

41111..0141. '"· 1114)

11Dn1M:illrCMI Co., c-.
IPeMittl .. 401

REPAIR

My, Olllly,
Darla's ,

......

.

.

WHITf HILl RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO
742-2035
· 12-31 ·87 1 me. pd .

6-17-tfc

RADIATOR

HOUSE FOR RENT

SERVICE

I 07 LOCUST S.T.
PCNVEROY..' 985-3561

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod·
out radiators. We also
repai'r .Gas Tanks.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561'
All Maku
•Washen •Dishwasher&amp;
•R anges •Refrigera~ors
•Dryers •Freezer&amp;
WE .SEll USED APPliANCES

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

.

Middleport, Ohio "
1-13-tfc

4·5·tfc

A1111 uunce 111 enls

CONTRACTING
CHESJEA . OHIO

oHOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS

•AOOFINQ

REMODELING 6

REPAIRS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS 6
BACK HOE WORK

,......., .........m.
915-4141

3 Announcements
INFORMATION WANTEO ·

About Steven Lewia. wH• Pqtty

Gardner realdenta of QaUia
Counly,1.840to 1860. ParMtl

of Nathll'\ Lewil

born in OtMgO

Co. N.Y.. Vtrncm Lewit 3464
Grlmtby Lane, Lincoln NE
88602.
•
.

GillUM tOIITIAtlOIS
A •ftrtnCN

1 1 · 3· ttn

THE DABBLE SHOP
Middleport, Ohio

IS FOR SALE
If interutlld stop by.

1/2 PRICE S~LE
GOING ON NOW
PLASTER CRAFT
BISQUE
MAKE. BAKITS. ETC.
CERA~!C

~:::==!::===~

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL

JUST CALLI ·
992-3410
- eom,lelnt.
01ttd Docombor 10.
1117
LIMESTONE
~;,=
Molal County Ctt1NRon GRAVEL • SAND
I'IIMCtlla't
TOP SOIL .
ly M1rlot1D Hori1oon,
FILL DIRT
17. 14. " ' 11)7.

r·

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

oonttnenoelli
In - • Df your felluro to

H..tng Clerk. OE,A. P. 0.
loti 1041, Columllut, OH.,

ChiiP. 1741 and 'OAC
Chapl. t741-47 ond 1741lftWI ttkll&amp;ltL
... • '[*ft far 1111111111

other mlnerol1 underlying
the following dncribed real

for
en...,
on thot
dlt8.• •

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

pl1int i1 a partition action
concerning the oil. gu and

Htlte:
Sltuatod ;n Malg1 County.
edminlatretor•. executore, Townoh;p
of Lebonon. State
and/or ••.aun• of W. H. of Ohio. being in SaCtlon28,
Berdine, deceoud;
Town 3, Range 11 of ·tho
JENNIE BEROINE, If llv· Ohio Company'• Purchuo.
ing, . eddr•• unknown; If known u the Henry Ours
deceeaed, the unknown Form, ond being oil of the
heirt. dwlo-. leget-. oouth holf of tho oouthout
admlni•tnnon, executon. · quorter of Section 28: uve
and / or oulgno · of Jennie and excepting 16 acr•
Berdine. diCeued:
which wu deeded to Wm .
FLEM LONG, 11 living, .Ourt by Henry Our~. Janu•ddi-•• unknown: if de· •rv -30, 1899. Volume B8, ·
ce•ed, the unknown helra, Pogn 372-373, ond con·
dw'"-; 1oget-. odmlnl• taining 85 ·ecra. ·more or
tr1tor1. ex--.torl, 1nd/or leo e.
•••lgna of Flem Long,
The proyer io that the oil.
d-od;
QM and other min. . la unNONA LONG, ;f living, derlying the above clncrlbed
1ddre11 unknown; if d• root estoto b~ . partitioned: ·
cealed, the unknown helra. thet their Int-I be oet off
dOYIINo, legot-, odmlnl•· to them •nd If that 11 not
tr•torl, executor• • . 1nd/or · foulblo, lhlt tho entirll
l81lgn1 of Non• Long . lnt-t In the oil, gu ond
d.e ce•ed:
·
other mln111l1 be oold end
!. C. MATLACK, dt· the Plollitlffl pold their ohoro
ceMed; the unknown heire. along with paymont to oil of
dev'"-. leget-. odmlnlo· the Oefondento occordlng to
tr'ltora. uecutor1. 1nd/ or their lnttreot In uld oil, 11•
••IOno of I. C . .Matlock, ilnd other minerala; that tt.
dece. .d:
lnteroot of the portlel be
MARY MATLACK. dt· determined end that tltlo to
....ed; the. unknown helrt. Aid rHI •tllto be qu-d •
dw'"-. legit-. odmlnlo· ogolnlt oil Oofondonto; that
tratorl. executorL •ndl or oil of oald prcooodlnfll be In
aoigno · ot Mory Motlaak. eccordonco with the 1- ond
diC•••d:
thot Plelntiffl' ottornoy f RICHARD ROBERT MA· be paid from the proa81da of
TLACK, dec.-: the un· uld ulo end Included In the
known holrt. d.V'-. logo· colto of thlo octlon; th1t oil
tuo. · odm In ll!rotoro, , tax• ogelnlt tho 011. gu ond
oxecutoro. end/ or oulgno of ott,. mlnerelo be pold ond
Rlchord Robert Motlock. thot the colto of thll octlon
d-•ed:
be pold from tho prOCMdl of
SAMUEL LONG,.I111vlng, lllid ule: ond thot the
oddrao unknown: If d• Detendonto bo roc:ulrocl to
ce•od. tho unknown helro, lilt forth ony lnteroot · or
dwloHI, Jog-. edmlnl• defHH which thoy inoy
tretoro. exocutoro, ond/or hove or be forwer berred
therefrom.
You 1r1 required to
6
Heppy Ada
anawer the Complaint
within ~-eltlllt deyo
tfter the 1001 pulillcotlon of
thlo notloo which wll bo
publlohed onoo oech -.It
fat
olx con-.ti!M ·
The l•t publlootlon w11 11e
medoonJonuory14,118i.
ond tho ~ olgltt doyo

Public Notice

'

-IJI&amp;IItllo liiiiNII Ill

PUBLICATION
TO: W. H . BERDINE, if
living. addr•• unknown: If
deceeeed. the unknown
heire. devi..... legat... ·

rooi.oJ hJL ), i"•r

FIREWOOD

PACK

.......
,..... .......
......
....-.
. ···-.... . ..... .•
....
...- ......_
..
..._ __ ..... _ ...,.. .... .... ...
. . ...._ ...... _.. _
....
..........
....... -...-·--.-··-...
--Of..... .' --------...,---1
... -···--·
fO NCI AN AD WI tft,U56
• MONOU tllrw ~y I A.M. tt S P.ll
I A.M. Until NOON SAIIIOA'
ClOSED SIIIIDAY

lK..

PlllliC I~YRED _ ..

ROOFING

SMALL
WANT ADS

i

CREST

6;4

GUN SHOOT

.

2001.

U.. S. RT. SUAST

~

By·PATRICK MOSER
Impose at least limited sanctions critic of South Africa · who
NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI)
against South Africa, and many strongly supports calls for com·
British Prime Minister Margaret
accuse her of supporting Preto· · , prehenslve and mandatory eco·
Thatcher lett Kenya today for tM
ria's white government through nomic sanc'tlons against
Nigerian capital of Lagos, where
her policies.
.
.·
Pretoria.
sstudents and workers threa·
In Lagos, a spokesman for the
Thatcher, who just became
Nigerian government said au· Britain's longest·servlng prime
tened \1 massive airport protest
thorlties would not stop anti- minister this century, is on her
·against her government's South
Thatcher demonstrations unless first visit to Africa since the 1979
Africa policy .
...Thatcher's reception in l,agos
they endangered the safety of the Commonwealth Conference In
prime minister.
Zambia.
,.
was likely to contrast sharply
Nigeria's labor congress called
Her visit to Kenya was the first
with the warm welcome she was
on Its 42 member unions to ever by a British prime minister.
gtv~n In Nairobi. where newspapers had mainly praise and only a
mobilize workers for a " peace- During her stay, she visited a
ful"
demonstration at the Lagos number of British-financed prolittle polite criticism for the
airport to protest Thatcher's jects and announced .$36 million
British leader.
refusal to adopt sanctions In new economic assistance to
In Nairobi, Thatcher reiterated her opposition to sanctions against South Africa.
..
Kenya.
against South Africa, while PresShe praised Kenya f~hat she
The National Asscielatlon of
rights
ident Daniel arap Mol told her he . Nigerian students also called on called Its "good" hum
ntry
saw economic sanctions as the Its members to turn up at the record. The EastAfrlcan
' only way to bring down apartheid' airport to give Thatcher " a cold · last year came under tnt rna·
tlona.l criticism for human rights
reception."
: In a peaceful manner.
· The two politely agreed to
&lt;The prime minister was ~he- violations, Including the alleged
duled to hold talks with President torture and killing g(. political
disagree.
.~ '
: Most African leaders criticize Ibrahim Bal)anglda, a vocal prisoners.
Thatcher for ller refusal to

Meigo County'o Oldeot Florllt

SAliS &amp; SERVICE

·z

.

FLO~IST

·BUILDERS

.

CHECK THE

BOGGS ·

CUSTOM BUILT
. He said one 'prerequisite was
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
BISSELL
that the United States .stop aiding
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
614-1162-3821
the Afghan Moslem rebels who
"At RlaiOIIG!It Prku"
SIDING CO.
Authorizod John Deere,
have been fighting Soviet troops
New " - • Built
Now Holland, Bush Hag
PH. 949·2801
and'"thelr ·Mghan.army allies.
. '"Fr~ Estimates• '
Farm .Equipmont
But In neighbOring Pakistan,
, Doalor
or
949·2860
PH.
CJ49-2860
.
. Underse.c retary or'State Mlc ha ~l .
Ftrlll t;u11••1ul
. l)ay or Night
or 949·2801
·Armacost ended th~ee days of
NO
SUNDAY
CAlLS
Pert• &amp; ! 'oro1lo
.No Sunday
talks with Paklstanl.offlclals and
Afghan rebels Wednesday with a
pledge ihat Washington will ·
'· Television Listenin1
·continue Its support until a "Just ·
HILLSIDE
llependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; c.....,;.ol
and honorable" settlement to the
MUllLELOADING
conflict Is reached. · ·
CJ Hearinc Evaluations For All Aces
GUN SHOP
"The Afghan people ha'te the
•SLUGS
· ~liSA M. KOCH, M.S.
full suppo~t of the United States
•AMMO
In their battle to rid the mselves
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
•GUNS
of foreign occupation," Arma. •MUZZLE LOADING
(614) 446-76i9 Of (614) 992-2104
SUPPLIES
cost said In Islamabad. "And we
417
Second
Avenile,
Box
1213
.
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M .
will stand by Pakistan a nd Its
Rt. 124 Acrou ·from
- Gallipolis, Ohio 4~31
principled position In the face of
Happy Hollow Rd .
·
or
at
pressure from outside. "
RUT(AND
Veterans Memorial Hospital
The U.S. official also allayed
Mulberry
Hits,
Pomeroy,
Ollio
614-:1U·2
fears among the rebels that a
· secret deal had been made on
Afghanistan ,during last month'·s
Howard L. Wrlt1111
U.S. -Sovlet summit.
"Unless there Is a settlement
PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
RACINE
acceptable to the people of
New lo&lt;atian:
NEW -REPAIR
Atgh;lDistan, tlle United States
FIRE DEPT.
, 168 North Sec"!'d
will continue us: support for the
Gutters
Middleporl, Ohio 45160
Basham Building
(guerrillas)," said Armacost.
Downspouts
SALES &amp; SERVICE..
EVERY The Pakistan-based Afghan
Gutter Cleaning
We Carry Flah""t Supplie-s
rebels received about $715 mil·
Pay Your Phone
Painting
SAT. ~IGHT
lion In U.S. military and humanitCable Bills Here
FRI:E ESTIMATES
arises, one can be sure that In the arian aid In flscal1987~
6:30
P.M.
IUSIN~SS PHONE
American Interpretation, It Is not ~ · Shevardnadze said a wlthdra·
949-2263
16141 9~2-USO
Factory
Choke'·
..
. Washington who is to blame for wal could take place within 12
RESIDENCE PHONE
or 949-2168
12 Gouge Shotguns
It, " Pravda ·sald.'''"But deeds months or less, beginning first In
16141 9924·22-87-tln
. .testify better than words ."
l)le.provlnces If a cease-fire takes
firm hold there.
Public, Notice
The article was ,prompted by a
He sald the negotla lions In
Dec . 23 test under the "Star Geneva provided the mechanism
Wars" program In which an for ending the war and ,that the
aaaigna of Samuel Long,
experJment was carried out to Soviet withdrawal could begin
dec~eo :
·
J
PHINE B. WHITE,
see It a laser beam could be after . the lmpiementatlon of a
cie aaed: the unknown
NEW AND USED
formed by chemical combustion. U.S. guarantee to stop aiding the
heiro. dev-. legit""•
WIDE
"The alpha (laser) Is too rebels.
adminiatntora, executore.
and/or uolgno of J-phlne
low-powered to be used against . "There Is a possibility that the
SELECTION
B. White. decoued.
·
any grand task except one - it. next round In February (at
SOLON LONG , If living,
ALL MAKES AND
undermines · the ABM trea ty,"' . Geneva) will wind up these
addrou unknown: If d•
Pravda said.
ceaed. the Unknown heirt,
MODELS
negotiations,' ' Shevardnadze.
devi1Ma, legeteea. adminle- ·
The newspaper, the most In- said. ''If this llappens, then there
cALL 742·2315
triton. ex~tora. end/ or
fluential In the country, said the· would be guarantees on ceasing
•••ian• of Solon Long,
weapon' would . be "useless Interference In Afghanis tim.
dece•ed:
,
against a massed missile attack:'
WILLIAM
S.
LONG,
If
"In accordance with the. pre·
living, oddrao unknown: If
but would be able to hit a single pared documents, · the guarandeceaaed, the unknown
target 111 space. Moscow con- tors of this obllgatlqn will be the
CARPENTER
helrt. . doylo-. legJ!ees,
tends that Is a violation ofthe 1972 · U.S.S.R. and the U.S.A,'' he told
admlnlatratora. exa~n.
SERVICE
end/ or aulgno of WilliamS .
treaty banning new anti-ballistic ·Bakhtar. "I stress thai the
- Addon• 1nd remodeling
Lang,
dece•od:
·
mfsslle defenses.
- Roofing end gui1er work '·
American side agreed to. be a
. BEULAH CLONCH LONG,
Thl! otfl~lal Tass )\ews ,agency guarantor and accordingly to
- Concrete work
If living, addren unk~own ; ;f
- Plumbing and electrical
also took VIce President George. cease helping the Afghan anti·
deceaaed. the unknown
work
Bush to task for his support of government armed groups, who
helro. dev-. loget-.
(Free Estimates)
administrator•. exacut6rl,
SDI In a largely favorable report are conducting military
ond/or uolgno of Beuloh
on his views of super(iower ·operations.
Public Notice
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Clonch' Long, decouod:
· relations. Tass termed hls .com·
992·-62H
or 992-7314
''It Is with the Implementation •t------~-­
You
her~y notified
mit men t , to the program "a of this guarantee that the withthat
you
have
been
named
' IN THE
Pomeroy, ·.·:·.~ ...
Oelendonto In a legol action
curtsy to the rlghiwlng."
. drawal of Soviet troops will COMMON PLEAS COURT entitled
Jom• W. Suttle. ot
Surlkov's Izvestia article Tiles· , begin," he said.
OF
ol.. Plelntilll, v1. w. H.
MEIGS
COUNTY,
0
HIO
day night criticized the logic
Berdine, et al .• Defendants.
Shevardmidze said he and
underlying SOl and warned that · Afghan President Naj lbullah had JAMES W. SUTTLE, et ot., Thla action h1,1 been a•·
PleintHfo olgned Cue No. 83-CV-2
the future of the world could reached agreement on a wlthdra-VIand 11 pending In the Comdepend .· on the a~curacy of . wal, adding.. "There ar7 not W. H. BERDINE, et el .,
Pl ... Coun of Melg1
Defondanto mon
compute~ programs controlling
County, Ohio.
·
many questions left to be
Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio
CASE
NO.
83·CV·2
the·sys~m.
The
object
of
the com·
· resolved."
NOTICE BY
merit of the foreign aspects of the
Afghan problem," Tass said.
"Contacts which. the Soviet
side had recently with representatlves of other states confirm
that there are gpod International
prerequisites for a settlement of
the Afghanlsta.n situation and for ·
an end to outside Interference In
Its affairs," Tass said.
"In turn, this will make It
· possible to withdraw the contlngent of Soviet troops from Afghan·
!stan within 12 months," Tass
·said. "There Is full understand·
ing1 and agreement between the
Soviet and Afghan sides on this
score."
In his Interview with Bakhtar,
Shevardnadze stressed that Wa·
shlngtoti and Moscow would be
tho:! guarantors of a peace settle-:
ment In Afghal)lstan , ·which the
Soviets Invaded In December
1979.

.

Busiriess Services
•viNYl SIDING ·
• ALUMINUM SIDING.
•BLOWN IN ' .
INSIILAnQN

Kenya protesters welcome Thatcher
.

~~

Charles Williamson was
elected ·president when the Ru- .
ttand Township Trustees held
their organizational session ·for
1988. Charles Rife was named
vice president. The third trustee
Is Charles' Barret~. Jr.
Regular meetings wer.e set for
the first Thursday of each month
at 6: 30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station. The next regular meet·
tng will be this evening.

The Daily Sentinel-

Soviet newspapers
attack-US laser .tests
.
.
'
By JACK REDDEN
.
~oscow . (UPI)
- Laser
weapons tests under President
Reagan' s " Stat Wars" program
have drawn fire from the Soviet
Union's two most Important
newspapers, which charged the
experiments undermtnr trust
between the superpowers .
An attack on the· tests In
Wednesday' s edition of the Communist Party newspaper Pravda
said they also undermine the 1972
· Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.
The Pravda article came one
day 'a fter publication of an
Izvestia article I~ which Maj.
Gen. Boris Surlkoy asserted the
"Star Wars" program would be
powerless against' future Soviet
weapons. •
The consecutive articles, In the
nation's two most Important
n~wspapers, underlined the continuing differences over "Star
Wars," Reagan's Stniteglc Defense Initiative for a space-based
defense against nuclear missiles.
Although U.S. officials Initially
presented the Vl!!W that Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev had
accepted·the l)!S. position on SDI
.a t last month's Washington sum·
mit, It has subsequently become
clear that Moscow still wants
limits on the program I;Jefore
agreeing to cuts In ballistic
missiles .
"Much has been spoken about
trust In Washlng\onJ!..utwhen the
theme of. undermining trust

.

Ohio

. Mghanistan Soviets ·predict

Williamson Is Elected
Trustees President

.

Last peace talks, last year '· in

-.Hocking Tech announces list

Nineteen students of the Meigs port; Debor!lh K. King, Racine;
area have been named to the fall Theresa E .. Marcinko, Tuppers
quarter dean's list of Hocking Plains; Christina McGhee,
Technical College In Nelsonville. Route 1, Rutland; Tracy McKinTo meet Saturday
Tbe-group . Includes Delat!! ·ney, Route 1, Langsville; David
POMEROY- A meeting of the Baker, Reedsville; Max A. El- H. Mora, Pomeroy; Michael A. ,
Meigs County .· Trustees and chtDger, Jr., Pomeroy; Kirk Neutzllng, Pomeroy; Ken Rlt·
Clerks Association will be held · Flck, Long Bottom; Dawna R. chle, Coolville; Lee Aitn RoblnSaturday, 7:30p.m., at the Senior Grueser, Racine; Julie Hawk, son, Coolville; Resa J . Sawyers,
Citizens Center In Pomeroy.
Reedsville; .MI!lanle Hemsley, Racine; Mark T. Shriver&amp;,
Pomeroy; Dawn Keesee, Mldle- Reedsville; ,K arla Smith and
Revival
·
Wilma Smith, Portland; Bobby
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street ·.
"'W . vance, Pomeroy; Tod~Allen .
Freewill Baptist Cliurch In Mid- 1
Mr. and Mrs. H. ·R. Walter, Wilson, Reedsville; Hobart A. .
dleport will be In revlal Jan. 3·9 at
Barker, Rutland.
7:30 p.m. nlgh~.IY,· Everyone Toledo; Miss Suella Wal~r.
Bloomington, Ind.; Mr . and Mrs.
welcome. -~ ,
Rl~hard Maier, Westerville, and
The menu for cafete.r las tit' th~
Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Smith and
Parents meeting
Eastern Local School District for
Mrs.
Audra
Thompson.
ColumPOMEROY - The second
. residence of Patty Dyer for a of the literary pr0gram whlclr · meeting for concerned parents bus • were recent gilests of Mrs. · the ·week of Jap. · 11 are
announced:.
meeting. All grange youth In the carried out a new year theme.
regarding the Meigs Local school Carl Moore.
Monday .. hot dog·sauce, french
.:rhe
·
g
roup
came
to
Pomeroy
county are Invited. A state Ann Halliday presenteded
situation has been set for Sunday,
fries,
fruit, milk.
due
to
the
death
of
Mrs.
Ethel
grange department . heads tour "Another .new Year"; Anna· E.
2 p.m., at Pomeroy VIllage Hall~
Ti.tesday--chlll,
peanut butter
Smith,
a
former
resident
of
meeting was announced for Feb. Turner, ''Creative Treasurers~' ;
sandwich,
carrot
and' celery
Pomeroy . Mrs. Smith was a
Larry Montgomery, "Good Ad23 at lhP Athens Grange Hall. ·
former teacher In severaiMetgs sticks, fruit, milk.
Mater Patty Dyer appointed a vice"; "The Year Ahead" by
Wednesday--chicken patty , ·
County schools and was a
committee composed of Everett . Maxine Dyer; Jokes by J;llll .
peas,
fruit, milk, cookie.
member
of
the
Enterprise
Meth·
Dyers;
riddles
by
Ruby
·Lam. Holcomb, John HolUday, Ben
Thursday- -spaghetti·c heese,
odlst Church. Mrs. Smith had
·. Rife, Wald Nicholson, Ray Mlds. · bezrt, and "NewYear'sWish"by
resided with her daughter, Mrs. homemade roll, bu Iter, green
kiff and herself to Investigate a Ben Rife.
ROmanian
gymnast
Nadia
Co·
Walter,
'for. the past several beans, Ice julcee, milk.
Thirty-two
membews and gu.
safe exit for the meeting room In
manecl
won
three
gold
lnedals
Frlday~-cooks' choice.
years.
case of an emergency and also a ests attended the meeting. The
and
achieved
seven
perfect
next meeting will be at 6:30p.m.
handicap entrance.
.
scores In the. 1976 Olympic
Ruby Lambert was In charge on Jan. 16 with a potluck supoper Games.
·
to preceed the meeting.

: The traditional holiday dinner Newell, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brandon, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
party of the firemen and auxll- · Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Taylor, Michael and Becky, Mr.
lllry was held at the firehouse Conroy, Mr. and Mrs. {)wen and Mrs. Rick Hollon, Chassatl,
iecently with Santa as the Damew9Qd, M~ and Mrs. Lowell Eric and Ricky, Mr. and Mrs.
featured visitor.
· Ridenour, Jacdb and Zach~ry. Leonard Myers, Dorsel Miller,
; candy canes and gUts were Mr. and Mrs .. Bruce A. Myers, Dorothy Cashdollar, . Bonnie
~ven to the children, Games
Landers, Elizabeth Hayes, Do- ·
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell.
were played ·with prizes being
Larry Cleland, Mr. and .Mrs. rothy Hawk, Leonard Koenig,
awarded, and several door prizes Keith Wood and Chelsey, Mr. and Opal Wickham, Arvllle Frecker,
were presented.
Mrs. Charles Radford, Nathan Victor Bahr, Marcia Keller, John
Enjoying the party were Mr: and Jessica, Mr. and Mrs. Buel . L. Ridenour, Si.t.san Baum, Opal
and Mrs. Bruce D. Myers, Mr. Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs. J(lrk Htlllon, Cleo Smith, Opal Elchln·
. and .Mrs. ROger l{eller and .Chevalier, Jessica and Kristen, ger · anq Tlf(any, and Erma
· · ; Russell, Mr. and Mrs .. Harold Mr. and Mrs. Ray Werry and ClelaQd.

·~tar

Communtty

.

Thursday,

4 ··

Givaawey

3 O'IV •nd whH• '•tripped
kittens. 0 ld• m.. t cat, whi...
d•k spota. Alt good hunterS.
Alto lai'ge. light brown fem.t•

dog, tnln_. to do trlckt. Good
watch dog . 614·885-3884. ~i
6 ft. lrtificill Chrittmtl Tr.:..

c.u 614-992·2G48.

5 puppi• to give to • goOd
hom1, 3o•-&amp;7t·23S._,

All· white meta klttMI wtth lilt•
bore , very · cute M1d ,t.yful

304·171· 7991 .

. • •:

UHCI b., bed with mattreaa
and ecceasoritt, 304·1753401 .
.. :

6

lolt and Found

.'
LOST·H•r•tord Slmmental
Helf~r-800

7171.

.

lbl. Coli 814·317·
•

,FDUNO: 1 •mel•-llyaeltl

Mllldoa. PI•• oil to ldentlf¥,
K-lot'hot Ct.rch Rd. Cell

114-44t-Ut4.·

:

·

1'-'.----

•

•

••

�Page 1Q-Tha· Daily Sentinel
7

LAFF-A-DAY

Yard Sale

41

Home

46

for Rant

· 11~ ·

--

- ~·- ---

IPO IS

e• u•..a. c•ral air, Eut•n
Schoof Oi1trlc:t. Ref..,.cel r•
qulrtd. Celll14·2•7·•••a.

&amp; Vicinity

Public Sale
&amp; A u ction

117t ford Elhe. gOOd cond,
1171 Pontiac LeMen• wagon. 8
qyL "~ PI, AC. auto. accoRd.
*2.100.00. 304-171-1784 ofttl' 1 :00pm.

'

Wedemtr;"er' 1 Auction Service-

---- -o41
. ,.,,_

•v•illble· ~t your -conveniilric8
and loc.tions. Marlin Wed•
miFf• Auctionoer- 114-24&amp;·

d.m-.ge dep. &amp; utilh:l•. Old•

261-1 131 .

,

9

,_,

Wanted To Buy

We pay euh for late model cl..usld c••·

Jim Mink Chw.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

"Dad, can I borrow the keys
to the snowmobile?" ·

Buidt;· Pontiac:, 1911 Eattem r
A~ .• Gallipqlis. c.u 814. 446 • Dental Mslst~nt lor Gallipolis
2282.
· .
oHice . Pl ... e ""d complete
r"uma to: lo)c Cia 122 c/ o
WANTED TO BU'i': Uaed wood Oalllpolia O.ily Tribuna.' 825
&amp; colll heMeu. Swain's Furni- Third Ava. Galllpolia, o ·h io
'
ture. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Galllpolla. 46131 .
Call614· 446-3159.
Government Jobt. t18,0·0·
*59,230 .,..,. Now Hiring. Your
W1ntecl to buy- U1..t turnh.ure Ar•. 805·117-1000 E:d. Rand antiqu•. Will buy entire 9806 for cu"ent Federal \Itt.
houMhald furnishing. Marlin
Wedem.,er- e14-245-6152.
federal, State and CivJ Service
Jobs S1 2,141 to e57,191 per
Uted Mobile Hom•. Call 814Now hiring! C..l Job Line
448-0175.

v••·
1-518-4&amp;8-3111 E.1 F1122 for

3 acr• or IMs with water, on
lend contract . S600 down .
UOO a mo. In Cl-r school
dis1rict. Call 614 · 256- 6887~ 6
PM-11 PM .

info. -2• hr.

Gat paid for ralldlng booklil
*100 . _,.rtitlt. Writ a: ACE-31 d
161 &amp;. 'llncolnway, N, Auror1.11:

80542 . .

WANTED TO BUY- Ce~tennilll · Ohio L!c8nMd Nursing Home
Book Gallipolis. a ·h lo printed in
netdltll tor 100
1880. Vernon Lawll, 3454 Admlrtlt1r1tor
btd
ICF
1nd
aldllid nurting
Grimsby hne lincoln, NE . home. Appty at
Amtrlcare68602.
Pomarov Nur-'ng and RehabiHt.tlon Center, 31759 AocktpBuying datly gold. silver coins
ring• Road, Pom•oy. Ohio.
rin_p , Jewelry, nerling wtre. old Tel ~phone (814) 992-8606.
coms, l•g• currtflcy. Top prictt. Ed Burkett Barb« Shop, AVON · All .,.... C.ll Mtrilyn
2nd. Ave. Mlddl1p0r1, Oh. 814 . Werv"er 304-882-2846.
992·3478.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY in
' Rtw fur. beef and d . . hid•. HomaAsaem~y work, Jewelry,
Gyn Sing and Yellow rOQt. We Toys • Oth..-s. FT • PT Awll.
h.-e wheat 1 nd f1tte litn. CAll TODAY! 1· 518 · 469 Trapplng auppll• for Mia. !Buy- 3635 (ToU-Atfundabl .. ht. a.
ing ultld I reps) . George Bucklay. ,, _2-:2::8~4-:
. 2::4:-h~ou::-r:=~.,-----:Hourt12-9 . 614•664-4761.
AIRLINE JOBS AVAILABlE
QUILTS
NOWI Earn ~P_, to t&amp;O.OOO.
High priCM paid for pre. 1g 50
Mtchlnict, Flight Atttnd1nts,
Cullom• Service. 316-.733quih:t. Applique, pieced, any
conditk)n. Call 814-992-2101
6082. Pt. A-2938 for inbor 614 · 9~2-5 16J .
littings .
W~nted

drummer for Rock
B1nd, would prefer tomtone
under 21 , phOne 304-773 ·

5996.

E111ploymen1
Servtces

2 bedroom. •100. depo•Jt.
t275'. p« month lnduding
utlttl•. No drunks or dop• c.n

814-·82-3122 .

MONEY FOR COLLEGE il avail·
eble to individual• who become ·
membtrl of the Army N1tiontl
Guard. Call 304-875.·3960 Or

Help Wanted

VETERANS: Let uthelp pay your
Chrlttmas billa. Army National
OUard- · pert· tlma jobl·lull time
benflfit1. 304-676·3960 or 1.·

'
"

Outo1Work7 N~jobinaight1We
can help! Bette EducatiOn tnit ~ . 800- 642~ 3619 .
Skill Trtlning evsllllble. Contact
'
Adult Serviees, BHCC It 614· Gat, pa
tor reading booktl
246-6336.
t100.00 par title. Write : ACE 517f. 161 S . Llncolnway, N.
·
Chrittmcl!• bills to pay? Stsrt Aurora. Ill 60642.
selling AVON betora Jan. 12.
receive free cologn a. Cell 61 4- Part time. temportry employeo
to organize drug prevention
446-2166.
pt'ogram . Quallficationt. ability
" Friendl Retail Corp" of G•lli- to work with elementary .:hool
eg~ - children, organize group1,
p~il . Ohio teeks a eompltent
sal• per1on to work In Child- ebllrtv to mike public pratent•ran '• Clothing Stqre. Must ba tion• end fund raising •kills.
highly motivated and LOVE Must h""e c.- end '!lalid driver' s
working with children. Send license. Equal oppo"unity em-·
retume to: Friends Retail Corp .. player. 160 hours p• month.
P.O. BoK 981 , Gallipolis, Ohio Apply at the Senior Center {Old
Moose Bldg.) t01 Seco"d St.
45631 .
OanTu _is now accepting appliCit•qnt t or experianoed Tax
Preparers. M Ult be femilier with
individual ta~t returns. For information and appointment, phone
DanTu- 614-446-8178. Hrs:

10 AM -8 PM. M·F,

Babysitter needed for two girls·
agea five and two. mostly
evening1. Call 614-367-7767.
GEl PAID for reading baoldl
t 100 per title. Write: ACE - 33f,
18, S. lincolnWev. N . Aurora, II
60642.

•

TEXAS OIL COMPANY needt
mature p•ton for short trips
surroundiung Gallipolis. Contact
cuttomers. We train . WriteP.Q.
Dickerson. Pres., Southwett11rn
Peuoi8Um, Box 961006 , . Ft.
Worth, Tx. 76161 .
RN. LPN, or Paramedic to
co mphrte mobile inturence tx·
am1 in GalliaOounty . MutthJYI
. venipuncture ex perience. Send
rasu me to EMSI 1010 Wood-...
man OriYe, 260, Dayton, Ohio
46432.
Old astabllstled busine11 firm

will hire "cretary . Must be
efficient in tvplng. Light book·
keeping with good teloptlone
technique •nd take dictation.
Mutt be able to start immedi ttety . Send r11ume to: B(ix ·
Cla-121. c / o G"illipolit Deily
Tribune. 826 Third Aye . Gallipo-lis. Ohio 46631 .

13

Insurance

~all

us for y~r moblla home
mt urtnca : M1tler lnsuranc111
304· 882 · 2146 . Also: 1uto'
1
home, lite. health.

18 Wanted to Do
Dave•• Center hu position
open for 2 more children. Have
ref~encM . Call614-448·8147.
Will do babysitting anv hadn
Caq give raterencn. Call &amp;14~

441-9402.

Fin onctal
21

Homes for Sale

QoV.rnm-'n Hom• tor S1 . (U
rpair). DellnqUII!nt •~ property.
At_p oe•uioni. C.l ~ 805-18715000 EX1; . GH-9805 for current
r.,olilt.
2 beclroo~. 2 b•M. 2 c•
.-age. l•el lot on At . 33.
wimming pool, Mteltte, clo•
'to Meigs High. Call 114-992-

I

3254.

'

12J~~:I0 mObilehome.compl~
turnishedwtthw.. heranddryer.
304-678-2942.

7479.

2 or 3 b•oom•• full b. .m~t.
o••u•
Mptrtte with btck ..,.
trance, c•l tfttr 3 :30 pm,

.

3 bedrOom•. 2 blthl, full ilnthed
b•emer1t, n..,., futnace • centrlllif. g . .g., tenotd yard. low
eO' t. 2~1· Mt. v..-non Ave,

304-175-1774.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

.

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH ING CO . reoommendt that you
do business with people you
know, 1nd NOT to send monev
!hrough the mail until yoU hiVe
1nvest~ated_ the offering.
Restaurant for ..,._1390 Eeatern Ave. C•II .614-446-30n or

446-9782,.

S:econd~

Middleport, O.h. 1, 2. or
3 rooms. Will remod .. ~ tuft
tennant. Phone 114 · 9$2~ 1471 '
or 814-112·2413 1fter ·7:00

pm.

Furnithad ept. niiCt to library .
One profeuional aduh only .

992-3160.

-

10~60

mobllthomei2.000.00.
C•ll anytim·e 30'4 -•68-1 783 or

468-1890.

.

1 4x70 Windtor with 14d0
1ddltion, 3 bed rooms. bltck top
r01d , approx J t!re•. Glllipoll•
Ferry_. 304 - 67~·6930 .

Farms for Sala

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 1531 J1ckson

Pike frO;m •183 a mo. Wtik to
shop and movl11. 614-446-

3997. E.O.H.

Luxury Tara A_partmlf'!ls. Ele2 Br. ,2 floor. fully
cerpetad. CA end heit. Privata
entl'8nce, en doted patio. pool &amp;
pl1yground. Stlrt-•298 per
month. Utl_litiet not included.
C1ll 814-387-7860.
·
g~nt,

238 firtt · River view- 1 BR .• 1
blth, no children: *176 plut
utiUtiet. ~II apartmeht•Oep. &amp;
rflf. N,o pelt. Call 614-448-

Lind Coittrtct. 6.91 acrea. 3
bedroom hou•. b•n 1nd 3
other builclngs. t361.90 month
plut *2600. down or cath price
uf S26,000. Call814-992-21 43
before live or 814-882-6373
1fter live.

Upltlifl . 3 room 8a blth. furnished. Cle~n . Utilhi• Pili d. Ret.
• deposit required. Adult• onty.

No polo. Co11614-448-1619 .

Nice 2 .. A apt..

refrlg., &amp;
weter lurni1had. 4Vz mil• from
Gelllpolil. 1216 11\.0. No Pl'tl.
IIOOJ8,

28 ecret ~ll'm whh ha ..... 2 Coli 614-448-8031.
b•nt, ~~~~ mil• out H•nn.,.Trece
Ro1d , Glenwood. 720 lbt- toExtra nlet.' 2 BA'. i•,ge apt.
bacco be~ . t12.000.00.· 304- N•• downtown. Adult• only.
576· 2220 Of wrtte Kim Jefl•e.
N~ pets. Call 814-446· 230().
P.O. Box 34, Rob . . Jburg, W ..
Vo. 25712 .
1 8"- furnished or unfurnlthtd
apt. near Meigs H.S . Call 814992-630. or 446·8898.
·

Business
Buildings

CommerCial buildings lor le•e·
Downtown Pt. Pl••ant. Storet,
oHioes. A-One .Retl Estete.
C1rol Veager, Broker. C1il 304676-6104:

Furni•h.t apartment, 4 room•'
bath. 1 or 2 adults. No ptta. Ref.
&amp;. tee. dep. required. Clll
614-4_.6-0444.

Skills g.t you jobs, tht 1duh
welding prog.-•m at Trl-County
VoaUonal School u•• you
sldll1. W.. ders art hlohly tldlled
workln. Receive the training to
become that highly •killed
W•ldlf in 1. . than one,..,, CaH
the Adult Educatto,-, Cent• at

7&amp;3-3&amp;11 0111.14 1aroglotorfof
d • • beglnnlnt_ ~anu•rv 4th-.
You may be allglllte to rtcalvt
financial aide to tlelp ,.Y foty,our
trtlnlng. call Jtnd .811k •bout. our
flnanctlli aid IOUf'CM.
··

,.

. Antiquaa
56

Afttlquee. buy or . .. Alverlne
Antlqutt, 1124 Eett Mlln St.,
Pomeray. Houn: Mon., Tutt ..
1ndWed. 10:00e.m.-I :OOp.m .,
Sun. 1:00 p.m.·t:OO p.m. ly
chtnca or eppolntment. Ruu

U4-182-2UI .

' ,

M e rchan li i SI)
·

.. 51 Household Goods

He .... lltor flreDiact. gl•t fir•
plaae "oor1, fire ICI'etn, fir•
Pl•c• ·g;•te . . C•ll 114-44113J'O.
.

Snow 1lr11: 2 - . 10a14" e.
wlloalo. 2- 8&gt;&lt;25x14"". whoolo.
SWAIN

AUCTION

I&lt;

FURNITURE 62

Oliva St .. Gtlllpotit.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- t399.
Living room IUhN· S199- *691.
Bunk bad• whh bedding- t199.
Full tlze m.Uml &amp; foundltion
tllrting- S99 . Reclinen
starting- t99.
USED- Btd1, dretMrs, bedroom
tultu, *199·*299. Detks,
wringer wash•. 1 com.,. ... line
of uMCI furniture.
,NEW- W11tefn boot• 130.
Workboou *18 &amp; up. (Steel Ia .

. ~ofttoo).

Colll14·4,tl-3159.

County App!lfi"CI. Inc. Good
uttd IPPIIII1cet 1nd TV 1at1.
Open 8AM,..to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sac. 114-448-1e99. 827 3rd.
Aw. Oalllpolit. OH .

0000 USED APPUANCES
Wah.,.., dryers. r.trla. .tan.

Ctll 114-441-3844

puptllll.

after7PM.

.

4

I

1111

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

•

Sof• 1nd ctuirt priced from
1395 to *996. T1bl11 150 1nd
up to •121. H!d•a· beda 1380
to t696. Rtclinera 1221 to
· *376. Lamp• S28 to *126.
Dlnflltee •10$ tnd up to •416.
Wood tabla w-6 Ch-'r• *28&amp; to
17915. Desk •100 up to e37&amp;.
Hutch• •400 1nd up. Bunk
beds complete w-m-'1ret. .
t29&amp;anduptoS396. Be by bedt
t110. Mlttr•... orbox. sprlngt
full or twin tea, firm e 78, 1nd
$88. Ou1en tats •226, King
1350. ~ drawerch•tel9. Gun
cebinlls 8 gun. 011 or electric
range *376. Blby m._ttres. .
.1 36 • •415 . Bad tram• *20
S30 &amp; King frlma t50. Good
selection of bedroom sutte 1,
. matal cabinlltt, heldboerdt 130
and up to II&amp;.

AKC Ooldon A01ri- puppy. 7
monthl okt.

114-441-1 1&amp;1i.

RCA· 21" console color TV,
remote. hctl. cond. •300. C•ll

114-441-11&amp;6.

1 &amp;0 ertld• of plrls clothlngBx-14. 1 pr. rOIIir lklttl. 1 pr.
1now boats· Lad1M· 7 . C.ll

814-441-001&amp;.

304~ 871·7881 .

. 7:00 (J) A-lfl(ltan Stella
(2) PM Magazine
·.
(!) College lolltetbl~

W.O.

. e

1112 .Dodge 210 Rem. c ·u.r:Om
Trill.- relldy. C11i

convtr~on.

114-.48-4383 d., .. 448-01 38
avtn1. • wetkand1. ·-

h•d top. Lots of extrlls. beet.

773-5188. ,

.

I

..,

..-"'...

Auto Parta
.Ia Acceasories

(; LiiJI::; !IILk

..
·"
!'

'......,
,'

Re:frlg.·ffoat fr•, couch, chair.
ch•t of_drawer., redln•, 11ice
roll top d.. k. box ,priftga •
mattrets. C.ll 114-44e-3t24.
Mixed h•d wOOd ellbe. t 12 per
bundl• Contalnll!'l approx. 1Ya
ton. FOi. Ohio PaiiM 1 Ca.
Pom.ray, Ohio. 11•·tl2·14e1.

S.E. Ohio.

Sa•oned hlrdwood flrltWood
lor •le. Klap thla number for
future OJd••I1•· 742-26Ui.

62 Wanted to Buy

H.ome
Improvements

.
.

4

'
••
,·~
'

Unconditional lll.tlmt gu1ran·
111. Loc• rllf.,.cea.furnllh• .
Free Mtlm._, Ctll collect
1-114·.237·0488, d-v or nJghc.
Aogara .Beaament
Wlt.-prooflng.

2986.

441-0284.

63

Carpenter Work· Plumbing,
roofln,. siding. All home rep1lrs.

Livestock

'1··•1

OJ • 0 !limon ond Simon
A.J . and Rick look lor
teenage iuneway lnlenl on

Pigs U&amp;.OO each, Rice't Pig
F•m. Tan Milt Road, 2 mil•

from Rt. 12. 30~- 48a - 1&amp;13.
64

Hay

&amp; Grain

400 bel• of Clover Hay. 400
bel• ot Mixed tt.y. Ctstl only.

Coli 614-388-8483 ar 388·
88&amp;0 or 114-471 -1472.

H.y for 1111• large 1700 lb.
round blll•·squa,. bal•. Call

114-117-1184.

H-v for ul• Call 814-941-

2618.

Tr~ n spnr l al tllll
71 Auto's 'For Sale

murderous revenge.

·

,

'

.'•'

·

'
'

J &amp; "' Mobile Home S..-vicet·
Build on· rlll'nodel hth rooms.
well pump repelr-Nplectment,
drain work Cdean or unstop). All
work guarentNd. Service call•

mldo. Coli 114,441-1744.

":'
' ,,'

RoN·s TtltVIalon Service.
HouM call• an RCA, Qulur,

'

~

OE . Spoclellng In Zenkh. Ctll ,
304 ~ 1571·2398

or 61 4·448-

24,&amp;4.

?C

.

stump
rarnowl. CeU 30•·676-1331 .

..• ''

Rot1ry or clblt tool drilling.
Most wells compl•edurnadll'f.
Pump HI• and •arvlce. 304-

''

2111-1121 .

1171 Trono AM. PI, PB. AM ·
FM-Topo. t2a11 "' boot all•.
~I 114-441-4327,
. ·

delhrcuy. Mooan 01nt1. Gllllpallo
lloolc Ca., 1 231'o Plno 11

5,00- 441-1244,

Coli 114-892-3090.

By Own•· Off 141&amp; Neighborhood Rd. Nice 3 bedroom.
enclottd br . .eway, 1ttachtd
gng• Callt14- 787- 24~1 .
·

8 room duplex. b•emtnt, g•..... privati, nloe loe ..lon. 304-

Gtllllla~ll. Ohio C1H 814-44-i:

2713.

B2

,Ill

Petafor Sale

Cor. fourth and Pine
Gllllpolit, Ohio
Phone 114·44e-3888 o; 614-

;

.. ' tr

448·4477
B4

'&amp;

' '

' '

'I

Electrical
Refrigeration

R•klantial or com.....-c1al wirIng. New twvlct ·or Npalu.
Uoeneed · aleatrlol.-.. Eltlftmt
tra.. R idtnour ElectrtCII, 304- ·

171-1788. '
B5

General Hauling

,..,

Tiaaem•Jiu

_. ~~....

_......, --111u

"Have 'a ny tuck catching
lhe horse thieves?"

• No

.- ·."""·
010." ....
2171
•

•

I

HOPE

I AIN'T

TOO LATE FER
.TH.' WEDDIN'

PARTY, ZEB
~ I·

. ''
"' ''
"...
,., I

..,.,,
.....
I

-

TH' CAKE'S ALL
GONE BUT, YO'RE
HERE·- THAT'S

WHAT
COUNTS

..

. @Newt '
Gl NCAA Flf1lll Four

=

Hlgllllg~ta 1114 Georgetown,
Houlton, Kentucky, and

VIr=

011
OMan.,.. ..
(!)

ill....._

'

• ctJ Love ConiiiCIIOn
11:30 e (I) Ol Tonlghl Show

'

. (!)llpoltiCenter (L)
(I) CM.rl

• !Ziglltllne
Ill
num, P.l.Q
liD
m Menltl Chase at
$hlllneCOOk

11J llpor\l Tonight

eO 'Nighl HHI' CBS Llll
Night

®Magnum, P.l. Old You

•

J &amp; J Wattr Service. Swimming
pools. clatwnt. w.lla. Ph. 114-

241-928&amp; .

.w..-...-

..,.._,
'"'"

-·
•
''

Ptul Aupa, Jr. W•er ~~CI

Pooll~ cls..-nL weiiL Call 1 14~
~

''

...•
'.

Wattenon' • Water H1ullng
re11onllble ,..... lmmadl•l
2.000 tollan dollvery, ~torno,
PGolo. woll. 01a. col 304-&amp;71-

1 .
2111

..
' '

+KQH
tA$2

+K6 5
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

'

Upholstery

' r

- _;'

'" '

·Mow,.,·,
u,hakl h ..v1n "' ''
.. -IIIYifM22 -lTho.Jl ::J :
In furnllun u - n g. Ctll -&lt;1 r
IO.a·lll-4114 for froo , •· '

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

f

.. .

{', j .
&lt;

I

,.••
•

Welt

I+

Eul
Pass

Pass

Pass

Nartb

3+

2t
Pass

Pus

Sotttb

Opening lead: +K

t!l~•~aaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 37 Ann,

1 Piercing
Richard,
tool
• or Mike
4 Painter 38True
Chagall 39 English
8Chlnese
river
port
DOWN
9 Pungent 1 Soap plant
11 Tree
2 3 Little
· Pigs'
trunk
12 Consider
concern
13 Greek
14 Fairy tale 3 Caustic
25Entrance
towtlship 28WeU·
figure
4 Naval
15 French
5 Maple genus 15 Time
named
8
Clothes
period
novelist
shooting
18
Opening
291'he
match
size
21 Spirit
Longest
18 Last of 26 (abbr.)
22 - borealis ·
17Muffte
7 Crafty
23 Evening, 31 Movie dog
(sl.)
19Sweet
in Napoli &amp;4 English
potato· ' 8 Still
24
Coarse
· river
20Raced
sleeping
file
35 Ingested
21 Other
10 Front part
22 Fenni's
concern
23 Skirt
feature
24 Valley
21JSwnmit
28'The hills
-· alive"
27 Cantank-'
erous
SO Turf
31 Altar
constel·

(!liNt Rlclng lnternaHonal
Outbolrd Grand Prix from Ft.
LauclerciiiiFL(T)

i tm-..:~~•
t:;l
011Gvj '
!I] ....

d) Nauutlllht
• (1) Rftllilde
12:20 (() MOYII: The Groundltlr
COnlpiMDJ (PGI (1 ;38) .

.•

-·

'

'

,. •

...

latloo. ~

•.

3ja Theatrical
union
(abbr.)
38Marcei85Ata
distance
81Main

.,. ..

~

"

artery

DAILY~Yl..,:::;;:~t.;

'

.,

. ,·.-

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One.letter stands for anCither. In this sample Ais used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoltroplles, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hin~, Each day the code letters are dif(erent.
·

...

..

' j

ClttPI'OQUOTE
1-7

,,

t ..

WUMUKK
Z C U J X

RWXA

~
~- ·j·
87

..

'

•au

12:00 (J) llumllnd Allin

-~ ~J

H
SOUTH

e&lt;ll TPI

IU

us

'QJ!Of32

+JIOH ·

See the Sunrl11, Part 2

DHI.-d Water S...,ice: Poott,
Cla. .nt, Weill. DeliVery Any·
time. Call 1514-440-1404-No •· v
Iunday caUt.

........ ---

. 1171-........ llu•good.
114-?G-.71.
. '

I SEI-.ISE CK HLI'r\CR.
.'

!I] Adami ChronlciH After
17 years in Congress, Adams
suffers a heart seizure end ,
. dlee. t:;1
·
·
11:00 ~Remington $teoll
• (I) (I) • (() 11m •

-

C:ARTER"S PWM BINO
AND HEATING

Paul Rupe. Jr. Willer 'Service . ~!
~~·J. cfsltrnt. MIIJs. Call 814~ • 1
--;,171.
'

1171 Fanl llllt. .,.... PO. pb.
-fm. liMy ..........
. 1 - Clll114-tti·17JZ.

/ -·'

Abby surrenders to Charlcjs
Scott: Karen and Mack
babysit lor Greg. t:;1
!I] Gi)llewa

IIJ Evening ~Jew•
10:05 (J) MOYlE: ciilitey Vlnlek
(PG) (1:51)
10:30 (J) Orut Americen OUtdDorl
(0:301
.

HAVEA~TTI:N

Pll!mbing
&amp; Heating

1111 Opol. Oood cond. Aula..
Cl-.
2 · MOO. Coli
114-441-3774.

'*·it321i. lf4·112-

THESPRINa'

1

..:&gt;.SA WHOLE,

/

441-3171.

-iy. ~un- ...,._

"PARR015/N

CLEW&lt;
WATER.

'

UIOO. Ctlll14-31a-10aa If.
wiPM ~
.

1171
lion. ...,

FOR RENT
WITHOUT UnUTIE&amp;

875-4100. h .m. - I p.m.

i 810 VW Doohor. dlololtor 1010.

1111 • Q2l Knoll Landi:IQ

I 'M CALLING-IT

aAiHE IN Ff&lt;E51-11

&amp;71-2803.

.A • R
Silrvlca. Home
1812 Ch•y Ch..- .- Hlth clsws. we111. POet'* filled . For·
m ertv Jem• loy1 Watera.Call
' ml-.a Prtoed to 1111. CiiH 304
-171-1370.
114-371-2114.

.. .

875-3753.

Brand ntw 3 BA . n_. Glllipolis
Loeb on At. 7 . ~ c• u•age. nice
7 room hou•. midtown. 1211
lot. lmmdlllt poa•••kJn. Wlll - month; 1 bedroom dupl•. midconskl• trllde In of mobile town, •110 month; 1 bedroom
hom1, prop.,y, 01c. llorgoln ~ . . .mtnt. midtown. t131; 4
prlaod. Co11114-448-1031.
room dupl.-:, midtown, •111
month; 4 reom ~oe. Jeff..
New 3 or41R ., 2 bet hi. Hell an
ton Aw.. •210 month.
acre. WDDdld lot. Prlctd •
WITH UTILITirl
•47,000. Colll14-441-la&amp;a.
1 blclroo111 ar-rtment. down-.
~. · eaoo month: 2 bedroom
2 Badroom hou.. on Ch•ter apllrtmtnt, fuml8hed. down•
'Road In ParrilrDY. •1000. Call 1own. U10 month. Ctll 304-

1112 Oklo CU1- luprorno.
Pl. Pl. AT. tit. Good ohopo.
13471. Cell 304-1711-2700. ,

IM WRmNGAI:!CXX
ABOUT E:)(OTIC
SI.I&lt;D5 \'MD UKJ; 10

· -~

Stsrlka Tr• 1nd Lawn Service,
IIWn c••· landacaplng. stump
removal, 304·1571· 2842 or

AAAE-18&amp;6 Ch.. y 2 dr. Sod., ·

e1200. Ctll

'

,-~

888-3802

327, 4 apMCI. n.W p.,nt, atr11
plll't&amp; lnter•ted pirti• only.

Good cond.

,.

' '
'

courtrool1) Is endangered
when Dan is handcuffed to a
time bomb.
·
. 10:00 (J) 81nlgllt Talk
e (2) Ol L.A. Law Kelsey
·.
and Mirkowllz' relationship
, becomes emotional roller
. : coaster.
·
(I) Hart to Hart
. (!) h'lalde Ttlovlelon Issues
concerning lelevlslon and
terrorists are dabated.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

FMty TrM Trimming.

1----------Coli 114-378-2112. ·

iiJ Larry King Llvel
9:30 e (2) Ol Night Court The

'

.

Coli 8 4 -318-8142.

Ol ChMI'II .

ABC Thum.y Nlghl Movie
lPG) '(1 :43) D . '
(!) tiD Myeteryl Young
nawlyw8\lls convinced she
once witnessed murder In
new ville. D

I

•

BAST

Jaleesa takae bet&amp; on how
Dwayne IICts when Peggy
lriea to seduce him.
,,
• (J) The Chlmllntjl
Charmlngs are robbed;
Lillian's horrified to lind the
Mirror gone. (R) t:;1
9:00 (J) 700 C1itb

Gl Colllllllollt-11
8 (J) MOVIE: 'The Sting II'

'''
., 1''

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Four losers
become three

1!11,PIIIIIINiw1
® .MOVIE: .yeo ol Llul'll
Mira (R) (1 :43)
.
IIIID MOVII!: Heaven'• ,Oote
(R) (2:29)
. .
1:05 (J) Bailie lor Peace
1:30 e (2) Ol A Dlfletenl WOfld

e (2)

'

1113 Ch-... 40,000 ml•.

Un1urnlthed. 2 HdrOCNM, no
Coli Doyo-814, 441-111&amp;, aft• · eppiiMCM.
Oepo•fl required.

'

~.

up end deUvary, Davis V1cuum
Cl ..:ner, one h1lf mile up
Georg• Cr... Rd. Cell •. 14·

Good aond.• ueoo. c.11 '114-

4 IR .• f_lrepl_ei::t. full b•tment. 3
m!- eo. of o,lllpolil. t32,500.

'

·~

Now buying •hell corn or ••
corn. Cell forlllt•t quotea. River
City Ferm Supply, 114·44-1·

1810 C h - wfth "84 - ...
Good oand. UOO. Coli 114441-1100.

':::----:-::-=-::---:,-Cone. . . bla&lt;*o II ..... yot&lt;IO&lt;

I

SWEEPER 1nd sewing machine

11111 Nil_,. 300 ZX; t1ZOOO.
-Od wflh looturoo. Collt142"1-1141 8 PM.

llldals. Me. CIIUde Win-'

SoUTHEI?N
CALifORNIA I

MIIMIE A WALK IN 11-IE ·
MOONUGHT WILL HELP!

.........

•

1178 . Mollbu Cl-lc. Oood
- • • • · N&amp;O. Hl1h ml10, Ctll .
114-241-81117 llf!or I PM.

....., ~lo 08rond1, 0. Ctll
.114-241-5121.

from his young daughter
hinder&amp; Anderson's
leadership ability. t:;1 .

repair. parts. Md euppll•. Pick

t710. Coiii14-441-DOII.

lul6te Materl•

YEAH! HEitE WE ARE I
I GOT IT MP.DE ND/1/1

·'·

187&amp; FordOrtnlda. Runs good.

9206 ofter &amp;:30 PM .

,

•

B1

• 763

+AQ73

~~=:.=n~D
Ill • Q2l Tow ol Duly Letlat

.

61 Farm Equipment

Mtlll'f Ferauton. New Holltnd,
lu ... Hog Sll• • S•vlce. Over
40 uted tractor-1 to choo• from
&amp; cdfnpl• line ot new &amp; u•d
equipment. Llrgeet M&amp;action In

Nice 2, poulble 3 BR . hauMin
Middleport. Ol1hwlther. g•·
bage dltp.. AC, fuM b•tmtnt.
Euel. loution. Cell 814-448-

~u'v£ &amp;Oj
iHE/?E IN

·

114-245-9448.

.AK7

WCollege lolltetbll

Tic

••""
••·I
""'
,. ·J!f

buy Junk tranemlllior'!e.

304-871-6180 .

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 31 W•t Jadc.aon, Ohio.
114-281-8451 , •

814-448-2515.

ThAT'S A BAD

~~~~

tA6Z

1:00(1) HeU Town
• (2) Ol The eo.by Show

~~

'78 Dodile Coh truck 060 for
parts. new front end, makeoHer,

F.Jrlll SllpiJII':s

NORnl

James Jacoby

1111 Cto11fllil .
11111210lJ1o11,1!dyiQ
·OJ Barney Miller
Ill ctl WKAP In Clnclnnall
7:35 (J) Sanford and Son ·

.......""

t1400. 304-578-2667 ,

FlbqiMo looPer, 1181. Fka 88
FO&lt;d ahord&gt;od. Coli 814-3792711.
'
'

Oood warldng O&lt;dor, 11&amp;0. Ctll ·
114-2&amp;1-1240.

Nice 2 BR . unfurnl11led with or
without stove &amp;. refrlg. 1260 •
mo. plu1 depoth &amp;. utHitiM. Call

,.

1878 Chevy Window v1n.

....-n-

City Wllter In houM-Myert shal•
low weu p,~mp mounted on •niL

SURPLUS ARMY, OENIM ,
RENTAL. CARHART CLO-

I

~

Bundv •l:to IIlii:, u..cl very little.
like ntw', 304· 773-6307 or

BRIDGE

•

7:30eCil Hollywood "'"",.•
(I) Newlywed Gllme
8(1) Judge
OJ WhMI of ·Fortune 1;1

"', 'r

lont candl\lon. tBOO. Coiii14- . Uead &amp; rtbulh trllnlmiuiont. All
992-256B.
lntat"qally lnsplll:led •
'
teOd. C.l,l 114-441,0&amp;18. wo

.

2803.

trodo. •1000. 080. Coli 114742-2433.

Wurlttter Plsno for •le. Eacef..

Coli 114-441-7172. Ilk for

Mixed ~rewood, •8o.oo du_m p
trvck told, deiNertd, 304· 578-

197e Jeep ~cJ .'&amp; . 4x•. Runt
good, n8!N tires. Will contid•

-

.,

_I will say th1s aboul being an optimist, you are ce"ain things
Will get better, even if things don't TURN out WELL

7:05()) Andy OriHilh

••

Pool tlblt. Good cond. *300.

Jolf.

@ChMI'I
e ctl M•A•B'H

,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS.
. Shroud - Prowl - Woven :._ Blight -, TURN out WELL

!!t

1:00 p.m.

•

.

OJNewl
1111 Moneyllne
liZ Ol Wheel of Fortune

1111 Dlttun 4 wheel Drive
Truck. Call 814-992-7384 aftw

1111.

taoo. coli 11 4-3a&amp;-804&amp; oft•
I PM.

~hucklo

Complere the
·qu oted
filling in rhe missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

· by

ii

Newlllow (1 :00)

'

opel .,

cand. Coli 114-441-4978.

76

.L--1.-..l.._J__~-_J_c....J.

(I).Entertllnment T011lght
., • (J) Peopll'l Court
.
(!) tiD ...CNIH/ Llhm

tires end running cond,
•2.200.00 tlrm. 30. ~ 8715 -

Almott ntw'.

empty mind with an ..._ - .

•m

'

Curr* pilftO.

I
I1--f,:_;i,r:!-,~7r.i-,.!!.,,-...f 0

8;35 (J) Carol lumen

1871, I cyl. 4 opoOd. CJ&amp; 1-.

Mu•ical
Instruments

An old college professor was
fond of saying that education's
only purpose was lo replace an

'II
9 WKRP In Cincinnati
Too Clote tor Comlort

~od

67

I;

t _-

C U QN E H

·

•ocu~~ewa

!I] Body Elec:trlc
0 lnllkll Pollllct

•200. A-lk for Roo..- or Jtnnll•304-712-2173.

uprigh1. Colll14-241-&amp;1&amp;0.

JVC VHS· VCR· 4 hHd, r.,.ote
controt. bc::al. cond. e200. C.ll

t..-•. bltakandwhflt,

IN \

. Cll Ur1~=~ (RJ
&lt;Il
lullnlll AlpOrt

.

1983 Jup CJI. 8 eyl .• 4

1 mOio, 10 ..0... old raglotoNd
lloclo Lobrodor 111d Ill oak Colllo
pupa. Hoolthy oncl plorful. Hod
llhota. bHn w.-med. CaH 814112-5131 1111• 1:00 p.m.

2 tu.J oK furnac• 131 8TU -

r•ng11 . Sklgg• Appllen1011. · ·14.. H~allta chllin ••· llkt
Uppllf' River Ad . b11ide Stone niiW, tao. 1GMC motor home
Cr•t Mottl. 114·446-7398. , 11179-23 11.1. prlaod •ooelt c.n

Homes fQr Sale

'

praifonwY.,d Cltttry Ktnnll.
Ptrtlen 1nd
Sl.,.... khttns. AKC Chow
CFA ,Himllapn,

AKC rog. Slborl., #fuokor pup-

dow~o

114-317-7217.

Vans&amp;

.

lJ~ .~~ El'_E.
=-

&amp;:OS (J) A!tc:l
,
&amp;:30 (2) Ol NIC Nightly .....

.1 171 Ford Bronco 351 , 4 tpMd,
air, n... tir•. wh ..... clulch,
pr•ture piNs, n~built engine.

73

'

pi•. Z

ala-. brldo, - • plpO., wln-

31

Pet1 for Sale

2 AKC Rag. male Chihulhute.
Far morelnfo,....tJon call 61•-

THING . .Origin .. army camou'""' H. 0 . " 81m" Som•
rvllle't, Old At . 21
Eat~·Awentwood. Fri. Sat, Sun,
90 D•v• um.e 11 e•h whh noon · 8:00pm. 304·273·15855.
approved credit. 3 Mil• out · ln1ul1ttd camoufl19a cowrtlls
614·992-7787. EOH .
35 Lots S. Acreage
Ruleville "d. Open 9am to 6pm S215.00 : Black-White snow
•
2 bedroom ~partment l)n Lincoln , Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 61 4·448· c...-.ouflage.
0322,
Hill, Pomeroy. C811 614-992-lcU 1H1ul trucks end tl'8dera for
60x100 ft . lot, 4ttl St., Syra- 6~39 or 614 · 9~2-3.,89 .
rent, 304-e71· 7421 .
VIII4J( Fumiture
cuse. Water; gat, teWar, Mlltable
and
uud
furntture
er'id
New
New,
1
bedroom
apartment.
trail• or hou11. 614-192·3886
appllc•nc11. Cttl 814-448- Surplus Denim--Carh.-. - rent11
Of write P.O. bo~ 1 14, Svrecun. , Furnis~ed o, unturnithtd. In
dothlng. Dacron in1ul1ttd cova7572. Hours 9-6.
Pomeroy. Call814-448-8898 or
ralla t21 .00 Hatvy new work
614-992-6304.
clothing · boot1 al winter at
PARSON'S
FURNITURE
Aenl als
rNtOnlble pricw. S1m &amp;om• ·
, bedroom. All utilitiet psid.
New woad e pc. liv lng room rvllt'l - Old At 21 • Junction
8210. month: $100. depotit.
tuites. S389 .98; chest of lndep.ndtnce RoMI - E11t R•
Alto 1 bedroom, psrt of utllitl•
&amp;un,
drtwtrs-4 dr~war, •48; twin ventwood. Fri, Sat,
paid. S176. month, $100 . dep41 Homes for Rent
mattresaet, S96 ut; mlcroWwa Noon-8:00 p . m . 304-273 osit. Call 814-992-8763 .
&amp;1&amp;1.
oven ltlnds.
THE WORKING
APARTMENTS. mobil a hom•.
3 SR . house &amp; g.-•ga. A -1 Real
Wood bumer. mod..-n 4 tt, wood
MAN'S FRIEND
Ettate, Carol Yeager-Brok•- houtes. Pt. Pl•••ntend Gallipocoff• t1bl1. womMt mirrOftd
lis.
614-446-8221
.
304-675-6104.
dr••· 304-171-4054.
Mollohtn Furniture
Upp• River Rd., Galllpolil, Oh.
Nicely lurnithed small houte. 2 bedrpom 1urnised 1pt. m' tnd
Dinettet- t221 • up, liYing RCA Whirlpool Kitch• Tr..h
Adultt only. Ref. rwquired. N·o dapotit, New Haven. W. Va.,
Compector. New *181.00 (h.,e
room suiltl - 1300 Ia 1,1p
304·882-3267 or 304· 773pets. Cell 614·•48-0338.
Recliner•t156 • up. Ctrp.i: two nHd to tell on\lt 304-e?&amp;5024.
etartlng at t4 1 yd. Financing '1731.
Urge 2'·3 BR 1 tlou•. Plenty of
tvtllableto quiHI.:I bu~l'li. Cllll
Beech
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio,
stor1ga.- Henderson erea.· Call
3 piece bedroom 1ulta •110.00.
614·448-7444.
2 bedroom 1urni•had ept utll i614-446-7025.
304-176-2811 .
tl• paid, rel•encet and diJ,otit.
May&amp;llg wash~ Ia dryer, *400.
Rant · leese-Ltnd Cont11ct : 304-882-2586.
EltctroiUXl YICCUm, .300. Tri
Homet in Eureka, Rodney Vii·
Star VICcum, S300. AC cool.Middleport - 2 room furnished
ltgell . Ev•n• Hgu. Dep. &amp;. Ret.
•tiO, S11t1 framer, *160. ca1i
apt Private blth. Utilh.iet paid.
required . Bltckburn Rultv.
614-317-7267.
304-882-2666.
614-446-0008.
Greciou• living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartmehtl at VIllage
Manor end Riverside APirt·
mentt in Middleport. From
U15 . including utllltiM. Call

'

n.2oo.oo. 304-812:2438.

For Lease

Sell Xerox copi.-t &amp; typewrltert .
on 11 tull or par1 tlmebuiA. Otfice
teaching or sat 11 background
23 Professional
preterred . Good Income opportunity. Eatablithed CUitomer
Services
beu. Car neces11ry. Send letter
or resume to; Box Cia 12(), c/ o
GallipoliS Daily Tribune, 825
Third A ve. Gallipolis, Ohio Fumiturt ratln il hlng tnd repair.
qu1lh:y work. tree e1tim1tea and
46631 '
fiiiOntble rates. 304-876Part-time bsbylitter neede(I- 7991 .
Rodnl'j-Ja.ckson Pike are1. Call
614-246-9294.
Job hunting7 Na.t • skill? Wa
train people for jobt as ·auto
mechanica, c•penterL electrlclens. food HrviC. worker•.
elactronlce _tec:hnldM'II. lndu• .
triel mlintananceworklrt, nur•
lng ..,i... ntl 1nd orderll•.
meohln!ste, and wtldtrt. Regit·
tttr ' now tor clan•• beginning
Janutry 4th. Call ' Tri:County
Voctlional Adult Center It 75331511 IJCt. 14. A Yeriety of
funding •~rc• to PIIV lor
tr1lning •r• IYiillble for thost
eliglbla.
.

53

446-2326.

8:14-441-0390.

seeond floor. fro,;~ "176· '226.
Dtp. &amp; rtrf•encet required. Call
evt. 814-446-2326 or 4484249 .
I

I'

~-~- -=-~ I

F - of LHo
Ill ctl One l!•r at.• 'nmo

3811-1481 .

Modern 1 BR epert.ment. Call

polio. 1 • 2 SR .- unfurnlohOd.

. • ''"or .......... . .

l.!::=:::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=y;;;;;;;:;;:=======~~

3

IIJ Bhowlla Today .

ooch. 114-849-2801 .

1400 sq. h . comm•ci al spsce
suit1ble for oftica retailing. or· CeHih1r1'1 Ut«&lt; TireS hop. Over
tarvieea. Prima location-corn• 1.0001~...... 12. 13. 14. 1&amp;.
of 2nd. • Pine in G1lllpolit. HI, 11.1. I mU• out At. 218.
Ample parking in r_.. •350 p• Coli 114,251-1211 .
rilonth. C1ll 614·446-•249 or

Dow mown- Modern 1 BR ..
complllta kitch.,, c•pet. •lr
electric he8t. C.ll 614-448:
4383-davs. 448-0139-even. &amp;
w. . . . ..

Ren~M~~tty redecorated . V(Jry nice
~pertrilants in downtown Galll-

'

,

·

'

1 1~ I I '

. (9)

1878 . Dodge 4 whMI drlva,
1877 Ford 4 wh_. drive. 1171
Chwy "hton pick-up. •11500

1·1·1r

•

~oan.

49

1878 Ch..,y . Bla•r. 71 .~

C!JIIpotttLook

(!)'Dr. Who
!I] Moving Alaht AIOn_g

E.. el. cand. •5600. Ctll 114371-2745.
.,

For ro!11: atflce opoco i72 N.

176-&amp;104.

814-441-7025.

12x80. In Middleport. Call81 4·

34

w .vo. Coii304-773-&amp;181 . ·

2. BA . IPtl. 6 cloUtl, kitClhenappl. ' furniltled. W•her-Dryei'
hook· up~ ww c•pet. newtv
Pllnted, dedi.. Regency. Inc.
"ptt. ' C.ll 304·676-7738 Or

J

,I

-

~~ eeiJ 111 eQ21

I
I

111t Oodgi. 2'11 ton dump ..
t1 000. 1 t74 Ch ~Y lh ton
trUCk. •eao. 1913 Ch•J · runs.

VEEPRS

s:oo Cll .9 ruY Uku Fox

'

1979 Ford F-160. 4wh•t~•Na .

,

Space tor tmtl tr8H ... · All
hoOk·-.·· c.~ .. AIIO effldency
rooms, air and cabl&amp; Mason.

Apartment
· for Rant

2 BR . apt. Stove Ia refrig .
furnlthed . New Go Mart . Call

1979. 14J~~:I6. 2 bedroom. Alto
1975 Dodge Daytona SE . Call
614-992-2622 for dBtlils.

33

44

''

' mM10. Coli 114-446-41&amp;8 .

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•k. Routt 33, North of POmaroy.
Rent1l trail••· Cltl 014·112·

P10klng. C.ll814-441-0338,

Gl.,wood. WV- 13.5 1cr11. 6
rooma. 2 bltha, ranch sty~
home. · 304-782-2841 1ftat &amp;
p.m.

394-875-2699.

·

7217.

'

4921.

1-800-1142-3619.

11

31

·

School District. t7&amp;, i·n dud•
wtttr . . . .b.... C.l\814· 3·7- '

114-441-3172
TOP CASH pold to&lt; -83 model 11 Help W nted
and n -•r uood c•o. ·Smhh 1::_ _ _ :__a---'.- - - - ' -

-

I!V!NINQ

'

UIO. Coli &amp;14-H7-72 .7 .. .

ren . Ref. · requirtid . Call 111•- . Trlilei lprace In Kyger Cretlc

.--.:.--...._...

. 5152.

PM.

couple preferred. Llmtt 2 child-

I

'

''
'

Trucks for Sale

72

Office Space for r.-.t. EJ~~:cel.
downtown , OaiUpolil loc.tioft.
lnqulrl• c.U e14--44&amp;-4222.

CrowftCity, 12•1~ 3 aR'. ~t¥'
Moble Home lot. 10 ft. or IllS:'
c wp ...d. AC , heat . w;th pro820 41h., Oolllpallo. •75. Wotor
Pine. - e220 1 mo. plut t100 . pold. Colll14-441-4411oftor7

"·

304-al&amp;-342&amp;.

EurekL- 1- BA . 10•45, 1ppli..,:

8

•j

uoo.oo. 304-171-2417.

46 Space for Rent

c11, c•p«. w~" plid. no ptts.
deposit &amp; r.t.,enCM . Rent
.146 , CoJII14·24&amp;-1529.

-

'71. 4 cyL Pontiac Sunblrd

Fumlthad toom . *II. Uditl•
paid. Shtra blth. Slnglt malt.
119 Socand. GolfiPc&gt;Ho. (:all
441-441 I mor 7pm.

-42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

January 7. 1988
71 Auto' • For Sale

'.

we•

HYing room, dining room end
khchen. Alto t..ndty I'OOfft. 2

---· -·--

Furnlahed Rooma

RooMt lor rent d~ .
, month. GIUia Hotel. Cad 614441·1110. Rent 11 tow as 11 ZO
month.
·

3 bedroom. 2 full b.thl. '-rue

..... --G-a

Thldde

Pomeroy Midclaport, Ohio

K·N
'K

ZOB

YRLM

M WX I X

TCLMXIN

MWKCX

ALO

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ALO

K H X . ·- N K C C
I L E X I N
· Y•Urtar.. OIIJUpaeat PIA11'Ekf IS A TWO. WAY 8'I'REBT: TILL A M.\llr HOW SMART HI IS AND

HE'LL
I!IOON BE PIWBINO YOUR IN'I'RIJ.rnBn! ANO~
-··---i-·-- .
\

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'

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BWX

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10

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•

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~V

P.ge 12-The Daily Santii181

Thll'iday. JanuarY 7. 1988.

MW'l; art. Ohio

Lotto jackpot
r----I..ocal news---. ---. Anie~can Alloys ·starts _work; · Super
up to $25 milllon ,.
.

EMS has 4 Wednesday calls

.

.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports lour calls
Weclnesday; Pomeroy at 2:25a.m. to Bunker Hill Road for Don
Russell to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Middleport at 4:20a.m. to
North Third Ave. for Cheryl Ferguson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 7:53 a.m. to Route 338 for Franklin
Lemfey to Veterans MemorJal Hospital; Rutland at 11:19 p.m.
transported Hannah Queen to Holzer Medical Cente~ ,

CLEVELAND IUPI) -There
was no -winner of the j ackpol In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed· -•~ ·
nesday nJiht, Increasing the pot ··•·
to at least $25 mUllan for ~­
Saturday's game.
,
The jackpot, which has gone
unclaimed since Dec. 19, had
.grown to $20 million Wednesday !'
night, when the numbers of 8, 14,
18, 30, 42 and 43 were drawn: No ..
· tickets were sold that listed all of ··
those numbers.
,.
A lottery commission spokes·,
man said today anticipated brisk .
ticket sales for Saturday's game '
llk'ely would· raise the jackpot .
above the estimated $25 mUHon,•
possibly threatening the $30'
million Ohio record.
.
~
The S30 million record jackpot ,
was split Aug. 1, 1987, between
Christine and Jerry SmtiJI, Pataskala, and ROnald Mahillnec.~
Maple H,elghts.
.'

(Editor's Note: TtidiJ' Iiepa. dOWII, excepting a skeleton main· ' Station wlllllave at full capacity
the fll'lit ol a rtvD-(1&amp;!1 Hrlea on teliance . force maintained by the capability to produce
the .tart up·ol a new lme!"etll !n Foote. The three furnaces "ro~hly 60,000 to 70,000 tons of
MMon County, Amerleu Alloya, cooled. BNrd worlu!d' as plant .ferroalloys" a year.
Tomorrow: A lZth-hour
Inc,, at tile old Foote Mineral ll)ana&amp;eroftheoliiFooteMineral
ferroalloya plant at GraluuD plant, first I!Omlng lo the plant In reecue.
station, oulelde of New Haven. 1975 and )eavlng In· the early
Tl!ta article examlllee the.plan to 1980s.
rrom page 1
This week, 29workers returned ·
reactivate the plant. Tomorrow••
$173,300; the treasurer, $00,600 to
Due to an increase In state 1slory wUI look at how the new to the plant, the first of several. Soutll Cealral OhiO
.
$94,500; prosecuting attorney,. subsidies, .the County Board of
operation ·w11t ~ dUferent from workers to get two of tile three · · A SIIOW advisary Is In effect.
$110,300 to, $114,600; sheriff, Mental Retardation and Devel· · the old and bow th~ 11'8Dd plan to furnaces up and running for the
Snow today, accumulaUna two
$293,300 to $305,200; domestic opmenuil Disabllities will see an
resurrect the plant after two eventual180 workers of the new to three Inches, with highs near
relations and juvenile court, increase from $805,300 last year
ye&amp;l'!l of ., a shutdown came American Alloys, Inc. Beard said 20. Snow · likely again tonight,
$45,600 to $47,500; probate court, to $1 mllllon .thls year.
together at Uter!llly the 1Ztb . the hourly workers will number with a low In the mid teens.
$25,600 to$27,500; clerk of courts,
Due to an increase in state tax,
about 150 and salaried persorurel Mostly eloudy Friday, with highs
hour.)
$102,000 to $107,100; coroner's the auto license ;~nd gasoline tax
--will number more than 30.
In the mid 20s.
office, $19,400 to $20,100; countY&lt;- fund, which operates the county
By CHARLES A. MASON
ThallscomparedtoarnanageThe probabWty of preclpita·
. court, $74,400 to $78,900; re· highway department, Is at $1.7
OVP Newa Staff
men! slaft of more than 70 and an
tton Is near 100 perce'llt today, 70
corder, $62,700 to $65,200; plat million this ye11r, as compared to
BiU Beard is back at Graham hourly force of about 300
percent tonight and 30 percent
map, $37,400 to $39.000,
$1.4 inllllon In 1987. ·,
Station, this time to open a new workers, tbe one-time compleFriday.
·'
This year's Board of Elections
Other special revenue funds
business rather than to announce · ment'at Graham Station at the
Winds will be light and from
The!:luperLottogamereq~lres ;;
budget Is up from $76,900 to include litter· control and recy·
the_closing of an old .ferroallo;vs • old Foote operation. .
'the· east today and light and players to match six numbers ,,
· $96,700, reflecting costs or this cling, $76,700; real estate I!Ssess· plant
"We'll have 180 workers back variable tonight. ·
from a field of 44. Each $1 ticket ·
year's presidential election and ment, $60,600; youth service
This week 29 workers walked by mld·year," Beard said. "By
Ohio Extended Forecast
has a 1-ln-7,000,000 chance.
the election of all county offices. subsidy grant, $50,000; Meigs into the old Foote Mineral Plant · and· large, they wiU jle workers · · SaturdiJ' lllroUCh Monday
Although · nobody claimed the:
Being held In contingency this Emergency Medical Services, outside New . Haven, evidence that worked here before."
. Generally fair Saturday, ex- jackpot Wednesday night, . 381 .
year is $40,000, an increase from ·$408,400; T.B. office, $105,500;
that Beard's not only back, but
Bellrd said the start-up plans ceptfor a chance ofsnow flurries players picked five of the•
$25,000 last year.
childrens services, $55,700; bond he's the head of a brand-new Include activating one of the two In the northeastern part of the numbers to win $1,000 each, and :
Money to the historical society retirement for the Carleton company, American Alloys, Inc. 20-megawatt furnaces by mid· state. Fair statewide Sunday, · 18,908playersselectedfouroflhe· .
remains the same at $6,000.
School-Meigs · Industries build"We don't have business cards February and by mid-March, tbe with a chance . of snow on numbers to win $89 apiece.
·
Under speci;~l revenue funds,
ing, $46,~5; landfill, $96,900.
yet -we're too neW.," Beard, 57,
large 40-megawau· furnace . Monday.
Ticket sales for the· drawing~:
the budget shows an Increase In
Among other agency funds are a former vice presldentfor Foole should be on stream. Then, the
totaled $14,670,~. with the prize
· the dog and kennel fund , from county home, $90,200; child sup- 'Mineral's ferroalloys division.~·
process will begin to convert the
payout totaling; $2,063,812.
•
$6,800 a hail-year In 1987, to $9,832 port enforcement, $143,600; EMS said, seated in his bare, yet
third furnace, a 20-mega~att, to
' Continued from page 1
•&amp;-1 .
a half this year.
transfer, $44,900.
efficiently arranged office
produce "slllcon metal, a new
Underway again today with the
08pluu DeWS
,
across the rQild from the spraproduct for the plant. . .
·
use of .sul&gt;stltute teachers. This
,•
.n
Continued from page 1
wltng gtey plant. A bouquet of
"I don't anticipate any serious
makes the ninth day tliat classes
Veteran&amp; Memorial
1 •
~...
.
flowers from his wife, Montez,
problems In bringing the faclllty
have been held · with the use of
Wednesday Admissions - Gol·' .
utilities tliat were lo'fced to shut
"There is water back in the graced the wooden desk:
back to production levels,"
substitutes since schools were . die Rpberts, Racine; Gheryl
down.
system. This is great news,"
The president of . American ' Beard said.
reopened on Dec. 21. Schools Ferguson, Middlejlort; Brenda "'
Workers also finished digging Varga said. "We're certainly out Alloys, Inc. - a more than $20 . The start-up of the plant will were closed Monday due to Watson, Pomeroy.
a line to a suburban utility that of that dire emergency stage, but mUlion Investment In which the
mean a local payroll of several weather condltiollS. No acts of ·
Wednesday Discharges - .,
draws water from wells and we're not on easy street yet. It's workers have more at stake than · million dollars and enhanced ' vandalism were reported today. Jasper Powell.
bt
towed In uncontaminated water going· to take a while for the just their paychecks - talked
opportunities for local suppliers,
!rom the Allegheny River on storage tanks to build up again." about what he's got plannec!Jor
Beard said.
barges, state emergency manA mandatory conservation.._c the future In an exclusive InterThe. new company president
agement spokeswoman Veronica order that has covered 2.5 million view Tuesday afternoon with the
received word of his first order,
Varga said.
people In the Pittsburgh area Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
3,000 tons of a ferroalloy for
U
since Monday remained in effect,
Beard said the last time he w;~s
eventual delivery In March. and
f l OUSe. • • .
, she said,
.
~I Graham Station he came to April, just tbls week. "That Is a
.
"Everyone should have at announce the closl~g of the old
nice order," he said. "One that
Continued from page 1
least a trickle, enough to put a Foote plant in September of 1985. ·size,_as your ·first order, t~at's
. E . Guerra Jr., R-Englewood, a container under the faucet for . On Dec 29 1985 the plant shut
exciting."
member of the subcommittee, clean, fresh water," saii:l Dennis
· '
'
The American Alloys, Inc .•
"but It sure beats hell out of the Casey, _ a .spokesman. for West
lOD
product will be 5old through
other bill that .wants to hire 1,150 Pennsylvania Water Co., the
Ashland Chemical Co. ·and
state employees and has a area's largest water utility.
Hickman-Williams of Chicago,
The slick began · when a 4
Both serve as non-exclusive
1;hortfail (in ,revenue to support
!Services)."
million-gallon diesel fuel .tank
I!
distributors
. The sale of the TRC to Honda collapsed Saturday at an ¥h·
e I
e tOr
D S
Beard . expects the ·plant to
wlllfurnishmoneyforthestateto land OU Corp. refinery in Jeffer·
VInton County farmers · who
reach annual revenues of $60
Improve state and county roads son, Pa. , and spllled about 1 suffered property damage or
million within three years. Ofher
in the area, pay outstanding million gallons of oil Into the severe production loss from , ferroalloy operations include
SKW, Elkem Metals and ·Globe
revenue bonds on the facility and Monongahela River. The oil drought conditions from June 10,
provide Ohio State University moved Into the Ohio River at 1987 through Dec. 1, 1987. may be
Metallurgical.
with $6 million to operate the downtown Pittsburgh where the . eligible for emergency loan as·
The ferroalloys market, Beard
research center for at least two Monongahela meets the Allegh- sistance under t)le Emergency· estimated, Includes 350,000 to
·
TO QUAUFIED BUYERS
. '
,
eny to Iorin the Ohio. ·
Declaration, from the Farmers
450,000 tons of ferroslllcon-conyears and.· probabiy longer.
r------::----~=---'='-----...;-.., Home Administration (FmHA),
sumed a year, 160,000 to 190,000
PER MO.
the rural credit service of the
tons of slllcon metal cdnsumed a
United States Department of
year and another 65,000 to 70,000
84 OLDS DELTA 88......................... S205.67
Agriculture, David l.Jrwln,
tons at othertproducts each year
84 FOlD ESCORT Gl ..~ ••••;.............. S1 02.77 .
that are used to enhance steel
an aunt, Mrs. Mina Raub, Corn- County Supervisor for FmHA for
Jtaymond Green
Vinton
County
said
today.
and
aluminum
properties
on
the
ing, and an uncle, Bruce
84 DODGE 600ES•••••••••••••;.,........... S1 02.77
FmHA emergency loans to ' production lines.
Raymond V. Green, 67, Sun Yeimger, Cheshire. Cousins sur·
Beard 'said the American AJ.
·84 'OLDS CUTLASS BROUGHAM ....... 5136.21
City, Ariz., formerly of Meigs vlving· are James Ciatworthy, eligible farmers, ranchers, and
aquaculture
operators
are
to
loys;
Inc.,
plant
at
Graham
Mrs.
VIrginia
Buchanan,
Henry
County, died Jan. 1 at Boswell
85 PLYMOm VOYAGER SE........... S25 7.11
Clatworthy and Mrs. porothy enable them to return to their
•. Hospital In Sun City.
85 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE........... 5231.39
He was born in Tuppers Plains Lqng, all of Middleport, and Mrs. normal operations, after having
sustained losses resulting from·
and was a production scheduler Margaret Baird, Corning.
85 CHRYSLER GTS .......................... S179.94
Besides his parents, he was natural ,disasters.
!or the R F. Goodrich Co. for 40
preceded
In
death
by
a
brother,
Emergency loans are prohl·
years. He moved to Arizona !rom
86 CHITSLEI GTS ••••••::...............~••.1255.48
Charles
Richard
Clark,
and
a
bited
on crops grown in areas
Dally llloek prices
Akron In October, 1986. He was a
sister, Ethel Irene Clark He in.
86 CHRYSLER GTS •••••••••••••••~.......... S255.48
· where FCIC crop Insurance or
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
. veteran of the U. S. Army in
Masonic
rites
will
be
held
by
multi-perU
crop
Insurance
Is
World War II and the Korean
Bryce and Mark Smltb
87
TEMPO SPORT ................,5190.01
Clover )..odge, F&amp;AM, at the available, unless the crops were
of BIUIIt EIUs &amp; Loewl
Conflict.
.
Mountain View Funeral HomE: In not planted .due to the disaster.
87 DODGE SHADOW •••~................... S190.th
Surviving are his wife, Helen;
Tacoma
at
noon
on
Friday.
term
I
A
El
1
p
2"''
Long
and
intermediate
his mother, Muriel Green of Sun
m ectr c ower ....... ...... u!-1
87 DODGE 600 SE ...........:............. S211.14
Funeral services will be held at 1 loans maybe made for reorgan!zAT&amp;T .................. ., ............. 28%
City; a son, Lt . Col. Richard
p.m. Friday at the funeral home. lng the operation to make it more
Ashland on ........................ 54%
87 IILIAIT .............·••••••••••~•••••••••••• S190.01
Greenn of Warner Robbins, Ga.;
In
lieu of flowers contrlliutions effective.
Bob Evans .. .. ..... :........ ........ 16% ·
two daughters, Pamela Steel of
may be made to the Middleport
87 CHRYSLER LeBARON SEDAN •••••• S190.01 .
Applications for emergency
Charming Sboppes .............. 12%
Reedsville, and Shirley Kephart
or
Meigs
County
Emergency
loans may be made immediately
City Holding Co ................... 30
of Phoenix, Ariz ., and six grand- •
WARRANTY AVAILABLE- ON THE SPOT FINANCING
Medical
Service,
the
Heart
Fund,
at
the
local
FmHA
office.
AppllFederal MoguL.. .................. 34
children .
MON.-FRI. 8 A.M.-6 P.M. SATURDAY 9 ut-4 P.M.
or the Tacoma Rescue Mission, cations for physical and produc·
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ... 61%
Services were held at 1 p.m.
1510 Pacific · Ave., Tacoma, t19n losses will be received until
Heck's 'lnc . .................. .......... 2
. Wednesday at the Sunland Lake·
Wash.
,
98408.
August 15, 1988.
Key Centurion ..... .. .. .... .. .....38%
side Chapel in Sun City and quriai
•
was In Sunland Memorial Park.
Benefits
of
FmHA
'programs
Lands'
End ................ .. ....... 21%
Robert Parsons
are available without regard to . Limited lnc.".. ............... ......19%
'
•
·
·
race,
color,
creed,
sex,
or
mariM
ltl
edt 1
55u
Robert M. Parsons, 75, Racine, tal status.
u m a nc. .. .... ............ n
died
Wednesday
at
Veterans
Further
Information
can
he
Rax
Restaurants .... .............. 3'n
Chrysler•PlymoutheDodge, Inc.
Clarence (Joe) Clark
Memorial Hospital ·following an obtalnl!d from the· Pomeroy
Robbins.&amp; Myers ................. 7~
992-6421 -' 992-3606
.
21
Joe Clark, formerly of Middie- extended Illness .
FmHA Office located at 105
Shoney's Inc . ...................... %
399 S. Third Street
Middlcporr, Ohio 45760
1
po'rt, died Sunday at a Tacoma,
Evans, W. Va. , on Feb. 29,1912, a Ohio.
Worthington lnd .................. 18'n
Wash., hospital where he had
Mr. · Parsons was born at
... .. .. .. ..;..
son of the late David and Dolly
undergone · heart surgery on
Bennett Parsons.
·
Saturday evening.
Mr. Clark was born Oct. 26,
Surviving are his wife, JoseIt
1914 in Middleport, a son of the
late Clarence and Amy Yeauger
Clark. He was a graduate of
R., Richwood; William J ., Ra·
cine; James H., St. Paris, Ohio;
·
Ml~dleport High School and an
· employee of The Ford Motor Co.
thriee dwaui ghhters, PKaullne . Bo,
w1 ng ,
nc ester, y.; Irene
in Detroit, Mich., prior to World
Rhodes and Leota Wolfe, both of
War' II. He had served in the U.S.
. Navy in World War II and was
Racine; a brother, George Ova
Parsons, Springfield, Ohio; five
·
retired trom the United State Air
Force as a senior master ser_Reg.
Color Console
FREE 5 YR.
geant. He was a member 'o!
Tacoma Lodge 2. F&amp;AM and
Reg '
C
. 0 .~r C·ORIO I yy··..................,,,,," Sa I .
FREF,J YR.
WARR'ANTY
Scottish Rites. He was a member
Jane Thornton, all of Point
~
of the American Legion and the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
00Reg.
ReiiiOte Color Console .................Sale
FREE 5 YR. WARRANTY
Surviving are his wile, Helga·;
and
several
nieces
and
nephews.
-*
three daughters and two sons-in·
law, JesSe and Patricia Lee
sestdes hts parents, he was
~95900
Stereo Remoii Color Console ....,Sal~ ~
PLUS FREE YR. WARRANTY
preceded In death by a son, Paul
, Brlckles, Athens, Ohio; Robert
H. Parsons; an Infant daughter,
and Sharon Louise Gerty of
Columbus; Ohio, and Miss Amy ' Lily Parsons; two brothers,
Buster and Roscoe Parsons, arid
, Maria Clark or Wilmington,
two . sisters, Inez Hoschar · and
Calif.; four grandchildren, Den·
nis and Ryan Brickles of Athens, · DOrothy MCKinny.
·
He
was
affiiiated
with the ·
and Barbara and Michael -Gerty
Church
of
God.
of Columbus; two brothers ~nd
~rvlces will be held at 1 p.m.
'sfsters-ln&gt;law, Harry ·· K. and
Saturday
at the Ewing Funeral
Eileen Clark of Minersville, and
Home wl th the Rev. James
Walter Franklin (Bub) and San·
Satterfield officiating. Burial
dra Clark oi Point Pleasant, W.
wlll be In Greenwood Cemtery,
V~ . ; three sisters, Mrs. Kathryn
Racine. Friends may call at the
Coble of Gallipolis; Mrs. Florfuneral home from 2 to 4and 7 to 9
ence Tedder of Kerrville, Texas,
p.m. Friday:
and Mr,&amp;. Jean Null, Middleport;

Weather'

Commissioners ... cont~!l-ued

page

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fii'St furnace _to .be activated

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Statement
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Ohio tott~ry

Church
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notices

.-4

Daily Number
474
Pick 4

Page~ 9

l
. Partly cloudy tonight. Low
In mid :teellS. Cloudy Satur-

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at
Vol.38, No.188

day. Chance of snow.

en tine
1 Section, 12 Pagea
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday, January 8. 1988

. Copyrighiod 1888

I"

. I

u· ·

Oh l

"BEST -DEALS IN

Vm' ·County .
area
. farmers are
J'gibJ
fu d

. ONE Of 'filE OLDEST Syracilae residents to
be recoplzed Thunday nlgbt was Alpha CottrtU.
Cottrill was preeented his new hoWJe n.umber by

'

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I

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. Ro1er Michael, project engineer and Mayor Ebel'
Pickens. Pictured 1-r, May9r Pickens, Alpha
Cottrill, and Michael.

I

Area deaths

Stoc·ks

FOlD

COOPER

fB~u~tt~er~n;u~t~A;ve;n~u~e~,~p0~· m;er;o~y~,;;~W~e~n~d~y·~s~~nt~L~-~~~~~: ~"~"~"-~"~·6~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~

~~~~~~/?~he:~~at!~~~\ ~=~i

EI A
' II Th 8
I Of .

RcA

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8 OWl villi II · I .

ALL SETS AlE ON

~~~~!~\,ae~~~~ ~~~da c~!~~:

~=~~)i~sthF;~~u'it~rv:~d~~:;

S559oo 25"
S59900 2.6"

~~~~s:r;hi"g~~i.!~ff~~~~~~~~~~

S649

TV ...........:............. S~Ie

1

26"'
26"

PARKING

(

1

W~tRANTY

$48800 PLUS
1 $52900 PLUS
$57 500 PLUS

5

FREE

I

SALE PRICES

.' •

. night. The two oldest residents are Marcia Karr
and Alpha Cottrill. Pictured are l·r, Roger
· Michael; project engineer, Marcia l\llrr and
Mayor Pickens.

Syracuse Village .Council
:allopts .budget.for . new year ·.

1914 FORD ESCORT
SJJ04 nu1otm1 10.7 $~1o ,4.~J9..., -'')

I

PRESENTED HOUSE NUMBER -, Syracuse
VIUage Council presenled the oldest residents
wltb tbelr respective house numbers Thursday

rat,.es ln.l91!6:"fhe':nm.t$1%tf~ll.l
~In,'ollter business council preSel!tlnel COrrespondent
show on March statements, pared a letter to ~ sent to all
A budget of $149,000 for , 1988 Rates for oul of town subsc.r lbers . residents advising them what
was adopted, Jack Williams was will also be Increased $1.
their house numbers will be.
Jim Hill, councilman sug-·
House numbers were awarded
reelected president of council
and water rates were Increased gested that plans be made for a to the two oldest citizeqs of the
· $1 · a ·month when Syracuse celebratatlon to kick-of! little village prior to · the meeting,
Village Council met Thursday ' league activities this coming . Marcia Karr and Alpha Cottrill.
night'.
,
spring.
Mayor Eber Pickens presented
Hill . suggested a parade with council with a list of new officers
A breakdown of the budget is as
(allows: general fund, $29,000;
marching units,
floats, flea for the fire department. Pickens
market, entertainment, with the will serve as chief of the !ire
. street construction·, .." $16,900;
state highway, $4,700; park,
fire department in charge of department and the emergency .
$500; fire department, $9,000;
refreshments. It was suggested squad . Assistant squad chief "is
current: expense, $9,300; pool,
that ., trophies be awarded ' in Dave Lawson; assistant fire
$25,700; water department, various categories.
·
chief, Jeff Hubbard; president,
$49,900; pool repair, $3,400;
It was. suggested !hat HilJ and Dave Lawson; vice president,
. cemetery, $200; guaranty meter,
Kenny Buckley contact the base- Ken Jacks; secretary, Mary
$500; total, $149,000.
ball association president, Mar· Pickens; tr~asurer, · Julie
Council in 1986 increased water vln McKelvey as soon as .possible Hubbard.
rates $1 and made provisions at
to get his in-put Into the,proposed
Trustees will b~ Pickens, and
that time to add an additional $1 celebration.
Lawson and Julie Hubbard was
when the Board of Affairs
Anyone wishing" to •particlpate named to the medical board.
··
deemed it necessary.
or help with Ideas is to contact
Attending .were Mayor PickMeeting with council Thursday Hill or Buckley . Persons who esn, Janice Lawson, clerk·
night was Gorden Winebrenner, wish to take part In the entertain- treasurer, Jack Willi~ms, Minter
. member of the water board. men! phase are also asked to Fryar, Hill. Buckley and Ka·
Wlne_brenner told council that the contact ·one of the two men In thryn Crow, council members.
board will have to replace 1,300 charge.
!eel of wate,r lines In the upper
Buckley reported that repair is
end of Syracuse ,that wlll cost needed on SR 1U In the village
over $13,000.
and suggested a letter be written
Winebrenner also '1JOted tl\at to the State_ Departme11t of
Due to parcel delays, the Dally
they must consider replace!Dent Highways · ln regard to -the
Sentinel will not publish the TV
of the present water tank.
sl tuatlon. Council drafted a Jetter guide s,ectton.
There were no Increases in which wlll be sent today.
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·t o,·close
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&lt;

'

All Metgs County schools were
closed 'Frfday as a result of a four
Inch snowfall overnight, several
Inches below the snoWfall which
had been predicted.
Schools were closed also on
Mond!lY, this week·, also due to
weather conditions.
.
VIllage and . highWay workers
In the county were out overnight
plowing and tre~Ung roads so
that traffflc flow could be as close
io normal as possible on Friday.
By Unlled Preas International
A inow advisory for the south·
em third ot Ohio was canceled
Thursday night by the National.
Weather Service.
Snow, accumulating about an
Inch, lapered off to flurrie~ late
Thursday and was expected to
end early today, said weather
service officials.
There was little or no accumulation of snow elsewhere in the
state Thursday ,-they said.
Contihued on page 12

...

.... ,&lt;.: .. ~.••

HERE WE GO AGAIN - Motller Nature chose last night to
blanket Meigs County and lots of olh\11' places with snow. In
Pomeroy, as well u everywhere elle In the Meigs County, people
were out early sweeping and s.,veUng snow !rom sidewalks and
step&amp;. Here, Paul Klebl, of ~lmon's Plgk·A·Palr and VIdeo City,
does his share ol s.,veUng.
, .

Plan grand opening· for Johnson's
new Variety Store in Middleport ·
· The 'it-and opening ._ of John_son's Variety Store on Mtddli!port's North Second A've., will be
.
observed all next week.
The.store, operated by Brenda
and .Brlan Johnson of Mason, .W.
Va., ~~~ned In late -1987 with the
grand opening postPoned until'
next 'week so that the building,
· formerly occupied by Rall's Ben

.

.

Franklin Store, could be fully
stocked.
Colnc !dentally, Johnson·
worked fo~ Mr. and Mrs. E. 0.
Rall at their Ben Franklin Store
for six years beginning In 1972,
He al~served two years as
asslsla t manager of the former
I.G.A. o In Mlddl~port. Since
that ttme, he has been In

judge 'issues setdement provisions

eo.-

.Jutlp Chari• Kn"bt, Melp
Commo• l'leU Coarl,
lis liN erden whlell m11111 brtq
alloa&amp; a H$Utlllot. or &amp;be Meigs
Looa1 TNCben .taMiatlaa

lltrllle IDII .,..-, .... l..tay.

Nfii"IIUJ!I ti!Nlll fi'GIII the

............
IAcal.,_..,.
Wlleea1t1Dil1th1
Me... Local Boanl'lf Bdlleailoa
I&amp; 11M cautLa,u.

·-·t

14Jitl'11tlle

pubDe.

A con of lbe offer Ia to be

"~-By i~' CICO\V~"" ~ •

·No TV· gui"de·

construction work. He is a sign
painter and does woodworking In
his free time. He.ls the son of Mr.
and Mrs. · Earl H: Johnson of
Mason.
Mrs. Johnson bas been a 15
year employee of · McClure's
Dairy Isle in Middleport. She is
the daught~r of ,Mr. and Mrs.
Continued ou page 12

Settlement
sought today

Negotiating teams of the MeigS
Local
Sclloql District were In,
Melp_Local Teacllen Aaectasession
Friday morninJ at the
Cilla a1oq wltll tbe pGIItlon nf tbe .
Meigs
.
C!)unty
Courthollle In
baa 1 ,..., team on tbe offer.
Pomeroy
11ttempUq
to reach a
'l1le te1101len,.. tile -lation
will tileD meet UMI wUI veta on settlement In the teachers' strike
......, ...,"' ltcni ballot wltll which bepn on ~ov. 8.
Judge Charlet~ Kntahl Wednesall r1J1* or ~.., to 11e
day
ordered the aeaotlatlou
Obllrvtd.
·
lake
place
locaUy after llearllll a
" ...... dt ld . . YeUq.., ....
rePort
011
DtiOtlallq -.lou
.................. teJiv.ad to
between
the
teama ot till Melp
_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p.m.
Local
TNeblra
Auoclatllln and
....................... tale
cleliyt~red Ill every member of the

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.

. . . . . ,...... to ...
.

11111111
tlmete

Ute Melp Local Board ot l:duc•

ttoa. oa Mollday, Tlaelday and
euly Wid• llday mOI'IIIal In

AU...

.

.

.

J ..... Kalpt Wlda11da:,o allo
cdcrad Qll'laJn aauclal Iaior·
COatlntlld DD )111. . 12.

•

•

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