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.
Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Annual fire department report released
. .
'

'

Losses as the result of fires excluded from the total, the loss
handled by the Middleport Fire esdmate .would be the lowest In
Departn{ent In 1988 totaled several years. Fire calls were
$803,800, Fire Chief. Jeff Darst down In 1988 to the 98 compared
reports. to 131in 1987.
Durlng the year the depart·
In-addition to the fire calls, the
nient answered 98 flre or rescue department made 467 emerfalls. The losses due to fires Is gency runs. That is compared to
Jomewhat deceiving, Darst 450 tn 1987. All department
states, because $700,000 of the vehicles were driven 14,933.9
loss was due to one fire , that at · miles during the year In answer- ·
the Facemyer Lumber Co. In ing the total of 565 calls.
·
.1 - July. U that · one fire were

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A Langsv!lle mao was fined on
a charge of possession of marlJuana along with driving while
Intoxicated when he appeared ln
the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Ho~an Tuesday night.
Fined · $100 and cosrs on the
possesslon charge and $425 and
cos IS and sentenced to three days
in jail on the DWI charge was
Scott A. Gilkey.

Other~ fined in the cou r t were
Derek D. Jackson, Middleport ,
$10 and costs, illegal tags; James
Lee Garnes, Middleport, $25 and
costs, no operator's licerrse;
Menifee Blevins, Pomeroy, $25,
anc costs, no motorcycle endorsement and $100 an costs, reck·
less operation; Tamra Wise,
Middleport, $25 and costs, dlsor·
derly ·manner. Tommy \Valters.

Mlddleport; $25 and costs, dlsorderly manner, and Eddie Aa-

---~· Tax

·

trick, Middleport, $100 and cos~.
disorderly manner .

Ohio Lottery . .
Daily Number

amounted io $2,360.49 with total
receipts ·to date for the year oi
1988 being $30,400.82. Total expenses to date for the year were
$21,853.53 leaving a balance of
$8,547.29.

Page6
..

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Vol. 39, No. 173
Copyrighted 1989

•

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of a comparable item , when available, reflecting the same sav~ngs
or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the adven1sed
item at the advertised price within. 30 days. 01)1V one vendor
coupon will be accepted per item purchased .

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO
TO DEALERS .

'

•

By BOB HOEFLICH
.Sentinel News staff
Dick Vaughan and Larry Rupe
were elected president and vice
president, respectively, for 1989
when the Meigs Local School
Dis trlct Board of Education met
for Its annual organizational
session Wednesday night.
Board members c?mmended
Robert Snowden for his work as
president over the past two years
and set the regular meeting dates
for the year for the third Tuesday
of.each month beginning at 7 p.m.
·A $500 service !und was established for the board and the
treasurer, Jane Fry, was authorized to pay all account bills as
they are presented, · provided
funds are available, and to report
monthly to the board that those

Including The Best
riety Anywhere!

Pof!1eroy~Middleport, Ohio. thursday, January 12, 1989

bills are paid. The board authorized the purchase-renewal of
Ita bllity Insurance for members
of the board, the treasurer, the
school administration and certif·
icated and non-certificated employees through the N ationwlde
Insurance Co.
Treasurer Fry was authorized
to secure advances from the
county auditor when funds are
available and payable to the
school district and authorized
her to Invest inact tve funds at the
most productive rates whenever
Inactive funds are available.
Supt. James Carpenter was
designated as -the agent of the
board to apply for, receive,
expend and account lor federal
funds. To round out the organizational session, the board renewed

MICROWAVE

Popsecret
Popcorn

$228
POPSECRET VALUE
21-0Z.

· U.S.GradeA

¢
•
I

;

CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL CORN,
FRENCH STYLE OR

300 SHEETS PER ROLL 1-PLY.

Charmin
Bath Tissue

Del Monte Cut
Green Beans

4-Roll

.

Maxwell House
Instant .Coffe.e
12-oz.

c

FROZEN

Fox De Luxe
Pizzas
6.8-7.6-oz.

15-17-oz.

Mason County jury _
indicts· 15 individuals

c
MAXWELL

INSTANT DECAFFEINATED
COFFEE 8-0Z .. . $3.99

For

NONRETURNABLE BOTILE, DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,

CHILLED .

Kraft
Orange Juice

Coca .Cola Classic
or
Coke·
.

• 64-oz.

'

2-Litar

...

Fresh
Cauliflower
Head

c
NONRETURNABLE 111-0Z. BTLS .. 11-PAK • .• .:!.29

•

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\

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.,

district attended the meetlng Renee Halley and a ·medical
wlthWendyHalaraddresstngthe leave of absence for February
board on federal programs and and March was granted· to
work being done at the Salisbury PauUne Snowden. Gordon Fisher
Elementary School.
was named plan administrator
The board recomfnended that for the AHERA Management
James Miller, former Meigs Plan . •
High School principal, contact
The board entered Into' service
the board's attorney In regard to contra.cts with E . C. Babbert for
his request for expenses Involved the Meigs High aeration system
in his attending a federal court and Lloyd's Electronics for bus
hearing In Columbus sometime radios. The board adopted an
In February. The suit Is that of asbestos management plan for
former Me.tgs High teacher, the dis trlct as recommended by a
Verna Evans. Added to the' . . company which completed a
substitute teachers list of the survey or'any problems. No mass
district last night were Jozie removal of asbestos Is Included ·
Roberts and Kay Wilson and the In the plan.
A special sesslqn was set for 7
resignation of Joan Corder as
head teacher at the Bradbury p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 19, at
School was accepted. Two days which timetheboardwilldiscuss
leave without pay was granted to personnel as well as attempt to

Chamber broaden its horizons to
also work as a region.
Mingyar told Chamber members
it Is wise lor small communities
to combine efforts and work as a
reglbn, as Meigs, Athens, Hocking and Fairfield Counties did a
few years ago when trying to
marshall support for the Route 33
corridor and Route 124 corridor
to the Ra:venswood Bridge. When
a region Improves, each community in the ' region benefits,
Mlngyar said.
Important steps In developing
a community, Mlngyar said, are
to lderitity the strengths of the
area; retain and expand exlsdng
businesses; create new small
businesses; and then, II other key
factors are satisfactory, such as
the work ethic and the educational systems In the community,
out-of.the-arejl businesses may
begin showing interest. Most

set pr.torlties on projects to be
carried out from the permanent
Improvement fund. A total of
$500,000 was established in that
fund by the approval of a no-cost
bond Issue by voters recently. Of
that total $300,000 has been
encumbered due to the place-·
ment of orders for several new
school buses in the district.
However, about $175,000 of that
will be returned to the fund from
the bus purchase by the Ohio
;/'
Department ,of Education.
Also the board met In execu dve
session with principals ·of thE(
district Wednesday night.
Attending were Supt. Carpenter, Treasurer Fry, and board
members, Vaughan. Rupe,
Snowden, Robert Barton and Jeff
Werry.
'

.

growth In a community will
"caine from Within'' already
existing businesses, he said.
Last year In this country :
according to statistics quoted by
Mingyar, 75 percent of all new
jobs came from small businesses. Only about two percent of
last year's new jobs came from
large businesses expanding or
relocating In new areas.
After opening the meeting to
comments. Dr. Dan Apllng,
superintendent of Eastern Local
Schools, reemphasized Mlngyar' s statement on the importan~e
of small communities "speaking
with one voice.'' School districts
also realize the Importance of
"speaking with one voice,"
Apllng said, and for this reason,
100 small districts in Ohio,

Including Meigs County's tl;lree
districts, have formed a coalition
to address Issues which could
lead to Improvement In all. small
school districts.
In regard to development,
Pomeroy businessman Blli
Quickel stated It was his helle(
that one of the biggest stumbling
blocks to development In this
area "Is Columbus." Quickel
said he could document "case
after case" of Individuals trying
to create businesses In this area,
only to be deluged with paperwork from the State and costs to
meet ' Srate requirements that
actually exceed Initial · costs to
buy the businesses, buildings or
properties the Individuals
wanted.

"...

Continued on page 16

I

-·

was made at Wednesday's regular meeting of the commission- ·
FOIST BABY - KaltDn Karlene Beaver, pictured here with her ·
ers. Approximate . cost for the
parents, GeoJ'Ie and Sandra Beave~, Racine, was Meigs County's
total project Is $141,200.
first baby of 1989.
'
A Force Account Resolution
!or
this year was adopted by the
0
commissiopers to use county
highway department personnel
for work In the construction,
reconstruction, Improvement,
maintenance and repair of
county roads, bridges and· culverts. The resolution was
George a"ild Sandr~aver of
Prizes won In the contest
adopted at the request of Meigs
Bashan Road, Raclne;~hose Include a $10 gjft certificate from
County Engineer Philip Roberts.
first child, a daughter, Kaitlln the Food Shop and Car Wash,
Also at the request of Roberts,
Karlene, was born on Jan . 3 at . Pomeroy; a $15 gift certificate
the
commissioners directed'
2:04a.m. are the winners of The from Heritage House of Shoes,
Clerk Mary Hobstet ter to adverDally Sentinel's First Baby of Middleport; a case of baby milk
tise
for the purchase of a 1989
.1989 Contest.
from Vaughan's Cardinal; a $10
four-wheel
drive JoaderThe Infant was born at ·St. gift certificate from the Pomeroy
extendahoe
for
the highway
Joseph's Hospital In Parkers- Flower Shop; a $10 savings
department. Bid specifications
burg, W. Va. Grandparents are account at Central Trust, Pome- .
may be picked up at the engiNancy and Lowell Beaver, and roy; a free meal to the parents
neer's or commissioner's offices.
Judy Bailey, Middleport. Great- from Craw's Family Restaurant,
Hobstetter read a letter from
grandparents are Juanita Miller Pomeroy.
Buckeye HilJs-Hocklng Valley
and Opal Biggs, Middleport,
A case of baby formula from
Regional· Development District
Henry Beaver of Chester, and Krogers, Pomeroy; a case of
advising the commissioners that
Don Bailey, Pomeroy.
Continued on page 16
the terms of Meigs County's
representatives on Buckeye
Hills' executive committee are
about to expire. The matter was
tabled untU next week. ·
PRESIDENT REAGAN
Meeting with the commission·
ers on Wednesday were Chester
Township resident Patty
Plckj!ns, to discuss the possible
By CHARLES A. MASON
circuit court.
addition
of a ·road to township
'
Three individuals from Leon .
0 0VPStaff
mileage, and Cindy Oliveri and
were indicted on drug charges.
·
John
Rice of the County Exten-'
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Floyd Ervin Hart, 28, of Route 2,
sion
Office,
to request permisFifleell people·, including one mur- Leon, and Pamela Gail Michael, ·
sion
to
paint
and carpet at the
der suspect, We!)' indicted this 31, same address, were indicted for
Extens~on
Office.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Preswed by the January tenn of the manufacturing marijuana, possesPickens' request to add a road,
Mason County Grand Jury, sion with the intent to manufacture ident Reagan gave hlrnsel! a
which
Is In a developing area of
Prosecutor Damon B. Morgan Jr. marijuana and possession with the good report' card In his sentimenthe
township,
to township mf·
said Wednesday.
intent !0 deliver marijuana Police tal farewell to the nation Wednes•
leage,
has··
already
been apAmignmcnts will be before seized 28 plants in the investiga- ·day, proclaiming a "satisfying
proved
by
the
Chester
Trustees.
Judge James 0. HoUicl!iY at 9:30 tion. The charges stem from a Sept. new closeness with the Soviets,"
The
request
must
now
be
turned
economic recovery and the "new
atm. Tuesday.
. . . ~- ,
2, 1988 incidenL
Morgan said the following inThe grand jury also indicted patriotism" as his major over to the county engineer for
further study and a
dictments were returned:
Lana Jo Randolph Chapman, 34, of contributions.
''We've made a dltterence," he recommendation.
Roy Vernon JliU, 24, of Route I, Rouae 2, Leon, for the manufacturOliveri's and Rice's request
Apple Grove, was indicted for the ing 1lf marijuana and possession declared in his Oval Office
was
approved since a recent
murder of his 58-year-old mother, with the intent to manufacture speech, and added that Instead of
water
leak damaged the interior
Rosa Lee Hill. Police say the mur- marijuana in connection with an in- changing the natlq_n ''we changed
of
the
Extension
Oftlce.
a world."
der occuned Sept. 16, 1988 at the cident Aug. 17, 1988.
Commissioner
Richard Jones
In the nostalgia of the moment, ·
Hill residence in Apple Grove. Hill
Roy Hagennan, no age or adand
Engineer
Philip
Roberts
is in the Mason County jail in lieu dress available, was indicted on an the "Great Communicator"
were
absent
from
Wednesday's
· of bond.
uttUing c~e. Police say Hager- 'might be allowed the luxury of
Hill's trial could come in the man passed a check in September looking on only the rosy side of meeting to attend meetings In
spring. There were two murder tri- of last year for $196 at the Paul's his eight years In the White Marietta on State Issue II
funding.
House.
als held during the last tenns of the
Continued on page 16

Racine couple .have
first 1989 Meigs baby

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26 CantS

State ·approves Meigs
grant for courthous~

10.HL

~

membership In the Ohio School ·
Boards Association for 1989 .
Moving then Into a regular
business meeeting, the board
agreed to request the Ohio
Department of Education to do
school building analysts In the
district . At no charge to the
district, the department will
come Into the district and con·
duct such an analysis at each
building evaluating the educational programs and how they
are being carried out In the
accomodatlons of ' each
structure.'
·The board named John Arnott ·
to serve as head teacher at the ·
junior high school for the remainder of the year and. employed Elaine Freeman to tutor
one student. Principals of the

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News staff
Members of the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Comm¢rce were
urged by Dennis Mingyar, assistant director of the Governor's
Office of Appalachia, !0 "work as
a community" and "speak with
one voice'' on projects vital to the
prosperity of the area. Mlngyar
was the guest speaker at this
week's Pomeroy Chamber luncheon meeting at the Trinity
Church.
Mlngyar commended Pomeroy Chamber IQr the cross
section o( bUsinesses andoccllpa·
tions represented by its active
membership. An active
Chamber with a varied member·
ship Is an Indication of a
progressive community, he said.
Although Pomeroy Chamber's
goal Is to promote Pomeroy,
Mlngyar suggested that

••

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2 Sections. 1.6 Pages

A Muttimedi• InC. N,w..,aper

Pomeroy ·chamber speaker urges unity

.1,1.1 ......

:Holly
Farms
..
·..:Brectst Quarters .................. .lb.

}

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Dick Vaughan to head Meigs school hoard

ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY
E~Ch of these ad~Jertised items is required 10 be readily available for
.
sale in ea;Kroger Store, except as specifically noted in this ad . II ·
WU do 1'\i ljt of an ad&gt;Jertised item , we will offer you voor ch!Jicte

1989, IN GAUIPWS AID Nlf.of 5'!01£S,

.

Low tonight near 30. Chance
of rain 60 percent. Friday,
sunny . High In upper 30s.

at

·;

COPYRIGHT 1989 • THE KROGER ,CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. B. THROUGH SATURDAY, JAN. 14,

638
Pick-4
9388
Super lolto
5-16-22-25-28-44
Kicker 484139

receipts listed----

Reeelpts from the relative new
Middleport Village income tax
for December totaled $5,541.72,
Carol H. Cantrel, tax administrator, reports.
. Expenses for December

.
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.Middleport man fined on possession, DWI

, Ohio Bobcats
defeat Miami
Redskins

•

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Wednesday. January 11. 1989

f----r--- - - - -

The Meigs County Commissioners have received notice
from the State that their $106,900
Community Development Block
Grant application to construct an
elevator for the elderly and
handicapped at the courthpuse
has been approved . .
Announcement of the approval

Reagan says
f areweII to
h
•
l e DaliOD

--· - --~--·--

-------__,.

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OFFERS BEST WISHES· Dennis Mlngyar, assistant dtreclorof
the Governor's Office of Appalachia, at left, congratulates Bruce
Reed as the new president of the Pom~~foy Arfa Chamber of
Commerce.

Local news briefs---.
Ga_llin man

k~lled

in Ross wreck

A Gallla County man was killed in a Ross County traffic
accident adi: 14 p.m. Tuesday on US35, just east of Chillicothe.
The Chillicothe Post of the State Highway Patrol identified
the victim as Roger G. Kitchen, 41, Rt. 1, Gallipolis. Troopers
said Kitchen .was crushed and pinned In his truck, which wa s
demolished in the collision.
The patrol said the accident occurred when Roger E . Nesser,
41, Rtchmondale, Ohio, passed a car driven by Jay v. Johnson,
.34, 238 Second Ave., Gallipolis, and coU!ded head-on with the
1985 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck driven by the victim.
The patrol filed a charge of driving under the Influence
against Nesser.
Nesser was Injured and taken to the Medical Center Hospital
· at Chillicothe. His condition was reported as fair. Johnson was
not injured. His car went off the road, striking a concrete post.
' The patrol said the stretch of US where tl)e accident occurred
plagued Ross.County with traffic deaths two years ago. In 1987,
. six people wete killed within six weeks on the same stretch of
road east of Chillicothe.

'

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No O!J-e hurt in Meigs wrecks ·
The Gallia·Melgs Post of tlfe State Highway Patrol
Investigated an accident, tnvol.v lng a Gallia County woman, at
9:05a.m. Wednesday In MetgsCountyonCR. 19,0.4mlleseastof
us 33.
.
Continued on page 16

·-

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�)·

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 12. 1989

WASHINGTON - Congress
created an Inspector general· at
111 Court Street
the Defense Department as an
Pomeroy, Ohio
Independent
watchdog to sniff
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
out waste, fraud and abuse. But
IZ
.
who's watch!rig the watchdog? .
II . ~
No one,stopped Inspector Gen·
flo! m;::! ............ ,_....,...',......., c::lo =
era!
June Gibbs Brown from
. ~v
taking
a month-long junket to the
·ROBERT L. WINGETT
.Far
East
In October and a trip to
Publisher
Europe last spr!rig. Now some of
. • the Investigators who work for
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
her tell us she looks more like
General Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
wlhdow dress!rig than substance.
They asked us how Brown can
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Pubtlshers Association.
expose boondoggles It be~ own
trips raise eyebrows.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shOuld be less than 300 words
Morale at Brown's shop aplong. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed wlth name, address and
peared to be on the rocks this
telephone number. No unsign·ed letters will be published. Letters should be tn
July, according to an Qfficial
good t~ste. addressing
_.:.~.::.;_....:..,
_ __;_issues,
_ _not
_;persooaUUes.
__ _ __,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ·_...J, . 1n te rna1 survey of. Inspector
general workers. NO one menti·
oned Brown's trips, but man;v of

·OPEC enters 1989 still
calling oil price shots

the Issues raised point to .poor dog," one miffed staffer told our
associate Stewart Harris. What
management.
. Brown says her trips were all they have Is a poodle.
Those who know Brown say she
business and done on the cheap$3,416.10 for Europe and $4,255.53 Is d~lcated to government work.
for the Far East. That doesn't She has served as the Inspector
SOIInd like around-the-worldon$5 general at the National Aeronau· ·
a day, b11 t maybe Brow it has her tics and Space Administration
and the Interior Department.
own definition of cheap.
Investigators who talked to us Some of Her employees complain
miss the cr-Usty Inspector general that at staff meetings, she often
who preceded Brown - Joe focuses on soft Issues, such as
Sherrick, now retired, used to long-term plann!rig and policies
warn his troops against accetn· - hardly the stuff to fire up a
staff of hard-nosed Investigators.
lng "a cheese sandwich."
In her defense, Brown said she
Brown told us that she has
concentrates
on management
accepted "neither a cheese sand·
Issues
because
they were neg·
wlch nor a cup of coffee from any
lected
in
the
17
months
between
contractor." That's right. As far
Sherrick's
,departure
and
her .
as we can tell, Brown only takes •·
arrival In December 1987.
from the taxpayers.
On Brown's four-week Far
"What we need Is a junkyard
@19iii Rlllr.-.,Rnl sw;:~

~'-il

By ALAN KRAUSS
NEW YORK (UP!) - Hold the obituary .
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the fractious
cartel that produces as much discord as oil, enters a newyearallveand if not well -still the dominant force on world markets.
OPEC, which tripled oil prices in 1974 and doubled them five years
later, limped through a tortuous 1988 and proved it could not only
elevate prices to crippling levels but send them Into an equally
·
·
disruptive tailspin.
''As in the past, when OPEC has stood on theedgeoftheabyss, they
contemplated the consequences and backed off," said Paul Mlotok,
oil analyst with Salomon Brothers.
OPEC members opened the taps.in mid-summer after unsuccessfully seeking a consensus on pricing and production policies at their
June ministerial meeting.
By September, the 13-nation cartel was pumping nearly 21 mllllon
barrels a day, far above Its agreed-on ceiling of about 16.6 million
barrels a day and at least 2 million barrels a day above worldwide
demand.
The flood of oil pushed down prices by one-third tojustabove$9for a
barrel of OPEC crude in early October from around $15 In April.
OPEC's official price target Is $18 a barrel.
lndones Ia's Subroto, who became OPEC secretary-general July 1, ·
warned that $5-a·barrel oil was not Inconceivable ifthecartel failed to
take steps to bring its output back into line with market demand.
West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark U.S. crude, began 1988at
$16.70 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange and hit a high of
$18.60 April 5 before plummeting-to a low of $12 .60 Oct. 5. .
West Texas Intermediate, which generally trades for a~ut $2 a
barrel more than crudes from the Middle East, ended at $17.24 a
barrel on the Mere when trading closed out t.he year Dec. 30.
Mlotok said OPEC experienced "a general breakdown In
discipline'· last year that he attributed to the desire of some cartel
members to sell more oil even If It meant lower prices.
In addition, he said, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait -two of the most
influential OPEC nations - did not want to see oil prices rise last
spring and therefore scuttled a proposal for bilateral export cuts by
OPEC and a group of Independent producers.
,
. But, Mlowk said, the Gulf pr~ucers' game plan soured as runaway
Oljtput and the worsening supply glut pushed world oQ prices near the
p~Jnt of collapse.
:.In this atmosphere of crisis, OPEC oil ministers gathered at their
VIenna headquarters for the organization's regular Winter
ministerial meeting.
After 10 days of talks marked by tumult and brinksmanship the
ministers signed a new six-month production-sharing agre~ent
Nov. 28intended to restore OPEC's Internal discipline and to raise oil
prices to the $18 target through output curbs.
;"While it's not the first time that we've-seen OPEC rescue itself
from the brink of disaster, this time they really were on the point of
falling apart," said John Lichtblau, president of Petroleum Industry
Research Foundation.
'fhe pact, although providing a pro-forma increase· in OPEC's
ofSicial ceiling on output, shaved more than 4 million barrels a day
!rom the cartel's actual rate o'f production. which Industry sourci!S
estimated at nearly 23 million barrels a day In December.
:·T~ey had never produced that mpch oil since the early1980s, and It
wasn t just a threat- they were actually doing it," Llchtblau said.
" becember production was 22.5 million to 23 million barrels a day,
and that's way above what the world needs."
~ven more Important than the new 18.5 million barrel-a-day limit
se\ under the pact, however, was the fact that)t. brought OPEC
pqwerhouse Iraq back into the group's quota system !or the first time
in-)nore than two years.
Jraq, whose proven oil reserves are exceeded only by Saudi
Arabia's, had rejected the cartel's quota system since 191l6 because It
WI\S not granted production parity with Its Gulf war foe Iran,
traditionally OPEC's second-largest producer.
•After Iraq and Iran agreed to a cease-fire in August following
nearly eight years of fighting, Baghdad' sdecislon to rejo!ri the quota
system "represented an effort to adjust to post-war reality ," said
Daniel Yergln, president of Cambrl&lt;!ge Energy Research Associates
10: Cambridge, Mass.
·
Despite misgivings around the world about whether the car.tel
actually would observe the production accord, which took effect Jim.
1, prices headed generally higher throughout December.
On European.spot markets, the United Arab Emirates' Duballighl
- the key OPEC crude from the Middle East- recovered from a low
o($9.04 a barrel on Oct. 7 to finish out the year 'at $13 a barrel.
;Analysts generally expect prices to remain firm through most of
the first quarter o! 1989, with West Texas Intermediate trading in a
range of $15 to $17 a barreL

HU~

"In 1989, I resolve not to do anything that would qualify me for a guest
appearance on Donahue, Geraldo or Oprah."

'

·
UnKed Press International
;Today is Thursday, Jan. 12, the 12th day of 1989 with 353 to follow.
·The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
include British statesman Edmund Burke In 1729, American patriot
John Hancock in 1737, painter John Singer Sargent In 1856, novelist
Jack London in 1876, World War II Nazi leader Hermann Goering In
1893, western singer and actor Tex Ritter In 1905, and champion
heavyweight boxer Joe Frazier In 1944 (age 45) .

.

.

On this date in history:
•
, ln 1943, the wartime Office of Price Adm!rilstratlon said standard
frankfurters would be replaced by "Victory Sausages" conslst!rigof a
mixture of meat and soy meal.
In 1971, a f~eral grand jury indicted the Rev. PhiUp Berrigan and
five other people, including a nun and two priests, on charges of
plotting to kidnap Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger
In 1976, the U.N. Security Council voted 11·1 to seat the Palest!rie
Liberation Organization for its debate on the Middle East. The United
States cast the only dissenting vote.
fn 1987, Britain's 22-:rear-old Prince Edward caused a stir by
re~igl)ing from his Royal Marines training course.
A thought for the day: British statesman Edmund Burke said
"You can never pian the future by the past."
'
./

.
'

•'

Jack Anderson ·
East trip, she made two stops In
Hawaii in addition to visiting
Korea, Japan, Alaska, the Phlllpplri~s and Okinawa. We admit
that just because the itinerary
looks like fun doesn't mean
Brown wasn't working. A schedule provided by Brown's office
shows she met with Inspector
general officials In those locales
on 15 of the 28 days. The rest of
the time Brown was with other
mUitary officials.
We'll even grant her a iew days
to take the pulSe of military
facilities In the Paciftc. 'But a
whole month? Brown told us she
needed the time to study how she
would reorganize the Inspector
· general's offices In the rel\'ion.
On her European trip, Brown
vis !ted military bases In Germany, Italy and England. She
also squeezed in some theater on
the weekend, No big deal, except
one of Brown's workers fetched
the tickets.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch;
the Defense Department
struggled with a mammoth procurement scandal. It Isn't
Brown's fault that the Defense
Department inspector general's
staff isn't on top of that seandal.
11 falls squarely In her jurlsdlc·
lion, but the FBI Is running the
operation because It was an FBI
source who exposed the alleged
fraud. Borderline paranoia prevents the FBI from sharing much
data with the Inspector general.
It Is unclear If Brown will
weather the Bush transition. But
the recent survey of personnel '
under Brown Indicates her office ·
could use a shakeup. Less than
one-fifth of the supervisors say •
there is a clear process for
setting priorities, and that only
one-third say the organization
works well as a team. Those tlfat
were surveyed also griped that.
. they did not get enough feedback
from higher-ups.

EASTERN EAGLETTES VARSITY Melllbers of the 198&amp;-89 EHS varsity f!lrls
baskelball team are front, l·r, Edna Drl~tp . Usa ·
Golden, Mlcbelle Maholtra, Tabby PblluPs,Suzanne Clay, and Lel~thanne Redovlan. Back

One sign of a great man Is the
eagerness of posterity to embracehim. On this basis alone
Mart!ri Luther Kllig Jr. easily
earned the national holiday In his
honor - now in Its third offlcal
year.
Everyone, It seems, possesses
a favorite version of· King.
. Activists on the left revere the
man who campaigned not only
for equality before the law butlor
"economic justice" - the King
who turned against the Vietnam
War and began to believe In a
drastic reordering of society to
cure Its Ills.
Even the 1963 March on Washington, celebrated today for
King's historic address, was
actually conveived !ii""part to
lobby for such government policies as a higher minimum wage
and a public-works job program.
Other Americans, of a more
pacifist or universaliSt tilt, ad-

mire the King who · repudiated
violence as a political tool. They
envision their hero as the New
World's Gandhi, an analogy
strengthened by the co!ricldence
of both men's assassinations.
StUI other Americans, IncludIng many conservatives associated with Ronald Reagan, pay
homage to the King who fought
for a color-blind society . They
believe his life's work has been
suUied by recent policies dol!rig
out social benefits and prMleges
on the basis of race instead of
Individual merit. Didn't King
argue that people should "be
judged not by the color of their
skin but by the content of their
character''? How can such senti·
ments be reconciled with hiring
quolas or minority set-aside
programs for government
contracts?
I, too, have my favorite King;
three of them, In fact.

feels ~ngals, 49ers game
will be 'a great match1:1p' Jan. ·22

•

became a minister despite his ·
early belief, according to Pu~ ·
lltzer Prize-winning biographer
David Garrow, that much black
religion "emphasized emotion
rather than Ideas, and volume
rather than elocution." And so
King developed a hybrid style of
his own, one blending powerful
feelings with nuanced Ideas.
"I have a dream that (&gt;De day
on the red hills of Georgia, the
sons of former slaves and the
sons of former slave-owners will
be able to sit down together at the
table of brotherhood."
You know the rest. Like only a
handful of speeches In American
history, King's address on that ·
warm August afternoon in 1963
captures the nobility of an entire
movement and the great national
awaken!rig it engendered. That
memory, undoubtedly, will be
the one of King that most
endures.

'

HONOLULU (NEA) - Hav!rig two-thirds In 1988 - and Is
almost exhaustel! the supply of expected to climb to almost
exlst!rig hotels available for three-fourths by the end of this
purchase near this city's famed year.
Walklkl Beach, Japanese InvesThe Japanese are acquiring
tors now have turned their more than downtown office build·
attention to church at the edge lngs, however. In the Los Angeles
of the tourist dis trlct.
area, they purchased the Riviera
But the proposed sale of St. . Country Club for $108 million.
August!rie Church by the Roman Near San Diego, they bought the
Cathol.ic Diocese of Honolulu to a La Costa Re$ort Hotel and Spa
Tokyo real estate firm for $45 for $250 mUIIon~
million has provok'!!d a storm of
Nowhere has the buying frenzy
protest In a city where Japanese had a greate~ l!'npact than in
real estate Investment already Honolulu, where JaP.nese interhas reached exiraortnary levels. ests now control about halt of the
Clergymen and . parishioners office space In · the central bus!·
from Catholic churches around ness district and more than half
the city have protested the of the hotel rooms along Walklkl
planned transaction. Three prl· Beach.
ests have traveled to Rome to
"In Hawaii, Japa~ Investurge Vat loan officials to exercise ment In real estate is esllmated
their power to veto the sale.
to have hit an all-time high of$6.5
"Purchases of prime land by billion In the three years between
foreign Investors have reached 1985 and 1987," reports the First
alarming proportions," says Hawaflan Bank. "That consti·
Mayor Frank F. Fasl In vehe- tuled 38 percent of tbe total $.17
mently objecting to the sale. billion In real estate Investments
"The• prices paid recently by made by Japanese across tbe
such Investors have escalated · country!'
beyond reason."
Fasl complains that "biiiiO:
In recent years, Japanese natre speculator Gensblro KawaInterests have purchased prime moto, who made his fortune In
real estate In many of the Tokyo real estate, crulles our
nation's largest cities - lnclud· city in a long white llmous!rie,
ing Arco Plaza In Los Anples, casually pointing out homes to
Cit !corp Center ID San francisco, buy."
One Prudential Plaza In Chicago, ·
Municipal officials believe that
the ,headquarters of U.S. Newal: the Japanese speculator pur·
World Report In Washington, and chaaed at least 170 houses valued
the bulldlnp hous!rig Ttffany'•, at more than $50 million. Not
ABC and Exxon In New York.
Included In that total Is the most
The proportion of office towers expensive reslentlal real estate
in downtown Los An(leles owned transaction In Hawaii's history
by forei(IMI'I, most of them - Kawamoto's pun;Jtase of In·
Japanese, soared from slightly duatrlallat.Henry: Kaiser's !!State
. more than half In 1986 to almost for almost $43 million.
'

a

Hawaii_R_o_be_rt_~_
- al_te_rs

Alter spending a record·
sett!rig $3.3 billion on Hawaiian
hotels, homes and condominiums
In 1987, Japanese Investors ap·
pear to have slowed their rate of
buying - in part because they ·
already own so many of the
choice properties.
One striking example of 11\al
trend is provided by the Waiklki
Beach block of run-down apartments and homes ·selected by the

Honolulu Diocese for the reloca·
tlon of St. Augustine Church.
In mld-1987, the property was
sold for $3.4 million. During the
last 1)!i years, however, It haschanged hands four times and
almost tripled In price. The .
Catholic Church! now has agreed
to purchase the site for $9.7
-million - from a Japanese
company.

Berry's·World

•

record held by uarryl Sittler,"
said Nieuwendyk, who almost
got his sixth goal early In the final
period.
Nieuwendyk was not upset
about m lsslng the record.
"I will take the five :and run
with· a team effort," said the
22-year-old center.
"It has been a quieter year this ,
year," said Nleuwendyk, who
gained prominence last year
with 51 goals In his rookie season
to win the Calder Trophy as the
top rookie In the NHL.
"This ye~r I have been moret
consistent rllther than scoring in
bunches until tonight," Nieuwendyk said. "I was able to get good
wood on all my shots tonight and
the guys found me open."
Calgary took a 2-1 lead In the
openin_g period. After AndrE'w
McBain give the Jl&gt;ts a 1-0 lead
with his 24th gual at 5:37.
N!euwendyk and Jim Peplinski
~cored 44 seconds apart for a 2-1

By Unlled Press International
Overcoming· distractions ail
around him which translated Into
over four hours In penalty
minutes, Joe Nleuwendyk put
together the game of a li1elime.
Nleuwendyk ·scored four of his
club-record five goals in the
second period Wednesday night
to pace the Calgary Flames to an
8-3 penalty-filled victory over the
visiting Winnipeg Jets.
In all, there were 252 m!riutes
assessed in penalties during the
game.
Nleuwendyk scored three of his
goals within a 1: 51 span late In
the middle period - during
which 132 of the penalty m!riutes
were assessed - to give the
Flames a 7-3 lead after two
periods. The lour goals by
Nieuwendyk lied a NHL record
for the most goals In a period.
" Lanny (McDonald) sent me a
message between the second and
third period abo~! six being the

Calgary lead.
Nieuwendyk tied the score 1·1,
notching his' 27th of the season Qn
a Calgary power play at 11:45.
Peplinski put the Flames in front
at 12:29.
Joe Mullen scored his 27th goal
of the season at · 5: 15 and
Nieuwendyk scored his second
goal of the game at 6:29 to rnake
it 4-1.
After Brent Ashton scored for
Winnipeg, Nieuwendyk netted
short-handed goal at 17:29.
Ashton scored his second goal
of the game 15 seconds later to
make it 5-3 before Nleuwendyk
added his fourth and fifth goats42
seconds apart. He deked Jets'
goalie Daniel Berthiaume on a
breakaway a I 18: 40 and scored
his 31st goal at 19: 22wltha 25-foot
snapshot on the shortside from
Inside the faceoff circle.
·'The difference In the game
was Nieuwendyk In the second
period, .. said Jets' Coach Dan
Maloney .

a

Braves ,must start
from bottom this year

ATLANTA (UPI) - At this
either party."
time of year, most baseball
players want revenge froin our
Walsh, in another irony to this
teams look toward spring train·
game, was nearly responsible for
previous Super Bowl," Walsh
lng with anticipation. The
Wyche's firing last season. With Atlanta Braves vi~ It as work
said. "Well, all they have to do Is
get 11- pie and hit Sam In the face
seconds left In a regular season · camp.
with it because he had as much to
game, the Bengals gambled,
"We've got so much to do, It's
do with It (the Super Bowl
tu,rnlng the bail over on downs to
hard to decide where to start,"
victory) as the 49ers."
the 49ers. Joe Montana followed
Braves Manager Russ Nixon
Walsh describes himself as a
with a Hall Mary pass that Jerry said. ''We lost 106 games last
"semi-Big Brother, certainly not
Rice caught for a touchdown, season. That's the bottom line ."
afathE'rflgure".toWyche: But he
giving San Francisco a 27-26
Unless some rookies make a
says his former pupil has deve- ···· victory with no time left .
strong showing, the Braves will
loped his ·own offensive style
"That was one of our exciting enter this season with much the
which is unique to the Bengals.
wins," Walsh said. "We know same . group that finished 27
"!think we both have insights, what it feels like because we 've games behind the next worst
but our offenses are different,"
been on the losing end of a few of team In the National League
Walsh said. "We both have
those. The Atlanta game in 1983 West.
different types of personnel. He
comes to mind.
"We've been trying ever since.
"I called Sam later that night.
utilizes his a little ·differently
last season ended to make some
than I do mine. I really don't
He handled II very well, probably
deals that might help us," Nixon
think there Is an advantage (by better than I could . He got a lot of said. "There's been lots of
knowing each other well) for
heat from that po!rit on If you
talking, and we've bilen close at
·'
recall."
limes. But things havi!n'tworked
Walsh said he never doubted
out because we think our players
WI
Wyche's ability to rebound from
are better than some other
last season.
people think.''
·r ·m not trying to jump on the
Last year, the Braves gave up
. 1:
bandwagon, but I felt he would · young pllc hers Kevin Coffman
have a great year this year," he
CINCINNATI IUPI) - Ten me to tell me he was about to be said. ·'His team was playing very and Kevin Blankenship to ac·
years ago this week, Bill Walsh named head coach of the 49ers well. They were botching games quire catcher Jody Davis from
gave Sam Wyche his first coach· and wanted to know If 1 could go htre and there with things that the Chicago CJ!bs. Davis, 32,
batted .230 last season.
lngjob. Nextweek,inSuperBowl there to help him coach. I went
are easily correctable. The off
They also picked up41-year-old
XXlll, Wyche will try to out- and we wound up spending four season was just what the doctor
_free
agent Darrell Evans, a
coach his mentor.
years together. " .
ordered. They were able to cut 17-year major-league veteran
"We're good friends . and talk
Wyche left tlle 49ers to become down on all their flaws."
they traded In 1976. Evans hit 41
on the phone many times during head coach at Indiana University
Walsh believes this year 's home runs for Atlanta In 1973 and
the season," says Wyche. "But,! and then took over the Bengals Super Bowl will bE' a rematch of
40 homers for Detroit in 1985.
don't think we'll be.talking much five years ago.
Super Bowl XVI , which San
"We realize that Darrell is In
this week. We're both pretty
Wyche and Walsh first met in
Francisco won 26-21 .
the
twilight of his career," a
, busy."
Cincinnati in 1968 when Walsh
"1 think . this Is a great
Braves
spokesman said. "But he
Wyche's Cincinnati Bengals was a Bengals' assistant coach
matchup, about as great as you
stU!
looks
better than most of the
meet Walsh's San Francisco and Wyche was a rookie free
could find in the NFL this year,"
people
we
had p!rich·hitting for
49ers In the Jan. 22 Super Bowl agent quarterback with a $16,000 he said. "We bring offense to the
us
last
season."
'
and both head coaches are very contract, a weak arm and a
game. They bring offense to the
Last
season,
the
Braves
hit .242
familiar with each other's tac- strong football mind.
game. I think it's a great
with
a
4.09
ERA,
both'
11th
in the
tics, Including Super Bowl
"Bill was the coach who
matchup and should be a great
12-team
NL.
Their
.976
fielding
preparation.
worked with the quarterbacks
Super Bowl."
percentage was 12th.
Wyche was an assistant to and l.managed to hang on with
"We went from America's
Walsh seven years ago and him lri Clnclnnatlfor three years
Team
to people wondering who
CoUins resigns post
helped him coach the 49ers to a before I went on to the second of
we
were,"
says utllltyman Jerry
· 26-21 victory over the Bengals lri five NFL teams I was witli In nine
MONROE, La. (UP!) - Nor- Royster. who returned to the
Super Bowl XVI .
years," says Wyche.
theast
Louisiana football coach Braves last May after leaving as
"1 look forward to going
"When I was with my next-to·
Pat
Collins,
who led his team to a free agent after the 1984 season.
against him this time around," last team, the St. Louis Cardithe national Division 1-AA cham- "The team was In total turmoil
says Wyche. ''We're go!rig down nals, we played the San Diego
to Miami to win this game."
Chargers In an exhibition game · pionship In 1987, resigned Wed- when 1 came back. ·They had
nesday f6Uowing his weekend almost none of the same
Once th.e Super Bowl competl· In Tokyo In 1976. Bill was then a
arrest on a charge of aggravated players."
tlon is over, however, Wyche and Chargers assiStant.
,
. Rick Mahler, a 35-year-old
battery of his wife.
Walsh will resume their close
"We sat down at a Tokyo hotel
Collins, who coached Nor- pitcher who spentlO seasons with
relationship. After all, without one day and chatted about the
theast Louisiana for 'the past the Braves before going free
Walsh, Wyche still might be future. Bill told me If he ever got
eight years, said In a prepared agent last fail, blames the
sell!rig helmet chlnstraps In the chance to be a head coach
d~llne on the many changes
~tatement he was leaving for the
South CaroUna today Instead of he'd like for me to think about
when
Eddie Haas succeeded Joe
good
of
the
university
and
Its
enjoying the nation's sports coming along."
Torre
In 1985.
football
program.
·
spotlight.
Wyche vividly recal Is his first
1
'
'They
decided to brthg kids up
"I have always emphasized to
"Ten years ago this week I was day on the job for Walsh .
to
get
their
feet wet. knowing the
our players and the assistant
silting In my sportfnggoods store
"Joe Montana was only a
team
was
not go !rig . to be as
coaches that we should do things
reading a letter from a high rookie then and we had a fellow
gooo,:·
he
said.
"They figu~
right on and off the field and
school principal telling me 1 named Steve DeBerg who was
what
they
had
wasn't
go!rig to
never do imythlng to embarrass
wasn't qualified to coach his high the regular quarterb(lck," said
win.
I
disagree.
1
went
into '85
the unlverlsty," Collins said.
school football team," recalled Wyche. ''I stepped right out there
"If I say that, I must hold to
Wyche. "Within an 1\our of thai first day and I was going to
that myself and that's why I'm
receiving that letter, Bill called show Stev~ DeBerg exactly how
resigning. "
to hold that ball and how to follow
SpOrts briefs
Collins was arrested Saturday
through on his release and how to
on a misdemeanor charge of
Baseball
balance his feet.
aggravated battery and was
National League Rookie of the
"And Bill came over and
released on $500 bond. The pollee
Year Chris Sabo of Cincinnati separated us and said to me,
complaint said Collins hit his and his American League coun- 'Why don't you let him warm up a
terpa'r t, Walt Weiss of Oakland, m!riute? We don't need to over· ,.wife, Bonnie, at their home.
''What happened w.as a private
have accepted Invitations to play coach him just yet.' I must have
rna tter and I know what the
in the 1989 J;&gt;lzza Hut All-Star been pretty nervous and Bill
problem Is," Collins said. "I love
·
Softball Game Feb. 5 at Haines must have sensed that.''
my
wife and my children very
City, Fla. The Reds third base·
Wyche says Walsh "considers
much,
and ·1 am .. going to do
man and Athletics shortstop are football an art."
everything
1 can to make th!rigs
among 24 major league stars who
"1 can still him hear him
right for them." .
.
will participate, Including Mets talking about the flight of the
Collins said his first priority
slugger Darryl Strawberry, Bos· ball, the reach for the reception
ton AL batting champion Wade -talking in terms that are poetic was to his family .
The. coach apologized to the
Boggs and Minnesota AL Cy In a lot of ways," he recalled.
Young Award winner Frank · "But, he's very unforgiving on players: coaches, university ad·
minlstrators, fans and the
the practice field and that's why
Viola.
community.
he's
successfulon
game
day."
.
•
CoUege
Oregon a~slstant football
coach Bob Toledo said he will
decide by Thursday whether to
accept an offer to become offensive coordinator at Texas A&amp;M,
say !rig there's a " yery good"
chance he will make the move.
Track ud Field
Ingrid Kristiansen of Norway
apparently will not defend her
'London Marathon title April 23.
She Ia expected to run In the
Practlc~ .
Boston MarathonAprll17. Krist!·
ansen aet the world record when
Point Pleaunt, wv
675-6330
703 22nciStnlll
she won London In 2: 21: Gin 1985.
By WILLIAM D. MURRAY
UPI Sports Writer
SANTA CLARA, CalU.- San
Francisco coach Bill Walsh takes
some credit for the development
of Cincinnati coach·Sam Wyche,
but he won't 'take any bows for
the potent Bengals offense .
.
Walsh, one of the NFL' s
. brightest offensive minds In the
1980s, coached the thenquarterback Wyche as an assist·
ant in Cincinnati and also hired
him to dPVelop the 49ers passing
game in the late 1970s and early
1980s.
Ironically, II was Wyche who
designed tlie passing attack that
defeated the Bengals in Super
Bowl XVI. This time, the distinct
Wyche offensive style Will be on
thE! other side of the field.

''I read where some of Sam's

· Wych e "JJ t ry to outcoach
his men•or m· Super Bowl

Vincent Carroll

The first is the intellectual heir
· to Locke and Jefferson, a learn·
lng man who believed "there are
certain basic rights that are
neither confirmed by nor derived
from the state." Rather than
mouth Third World carit about
the evils of the West (at least
until his final years), King
understood that the concept of
natural rights, embodied In our
Constitution and Declaration of
Independance, distinguished
America "from those systems of
government which make the
state an end within Itself."
Then there Is a courageous
King, the clvU-rights leader who
recognized danger in his path but
' laced It with quiet dignity rather
. than loudmouthed bravado. King
·· always spoke of risks to otherswhether he himself was stalked
by _the worst perUs.
Finally, there is the master of
language and rhetoric. King

Coach Geol'!le Gagai,Toby Hill, stephany
Gardner, Tiffany Gardner, JennUer Roush,
· Jenny Cowdery, Amy Hager, Lee GIIWan, and
Wendy Rach, manager.

· wal~h

Martin Luther King Day is Monday·

.The Japanese. conquer

.

eTTA
~Ell-

Today in history

trips .Jets in NUL
encounter marred by penalties·:
·~algary

Critics say defense .watchdog too soft

The Daily Sentinel

.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

•

·

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The experiment backfired
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out."
Tann4r, the eternal optimist,
kep~slsting the Braves were
"on course." Nixon, who re. placed Tanner last May, Is more
the realist.
· "We simply weren't good
enough last season to overcome
our mistakes," he said. "Look at
where we finished In most'
departments. Statistics don't
lie."
Where do the Braves go from
here?
·we have too far to climb to
. expect to be contenders this
coming season," Nixon said.
"But as more of these young
players come into the picture,
we'll definitely, be stronger In the
' future.''

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'

Dr. J. Stephen Lovell, DDS

Announces The Association Of

Dr. Michael B. Carlisle
In The
Of Dentistry

.

"I sur(l hope I can do better with the campelgn promise thing than I'm doing with the
New Yej!r's resolution thing."
'

.

)•

f

j

('

1t

JIM COBB--•

CHEVROLET ··OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC
.,

.

•

POMEROY, OHIO
(614) 992-6614

.

.

J

'

.'

�•

•

•

.Page-4-The .Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday, January 12, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, Pomeroy-M~,

Pacers end Boston Garden hex, 127-108
Pro results

Girls scort"S

NATIONAL BASKETB.U.LAS 90C.

Girls Ohio HI Kh ScMoll6a'i 111baU
· Wf"IW!Iild""" , Jan . II
Mhl Ed &amp;:f'Wood S8, Aaht St Ju hn 2S
Bfolll"to~rt!f'k 64, :bnla i&amp;
8uckeyt&gt; Tl"'l.il S.1, \\' Lal Bld~wood411
t:f' nW'r~llf' U , W Car ru&amp;llon 31
Co nflf'a..l 311, Gf'nna Zl
o
Loula\'lllf' I I, N CUlton Ho·owr 4!

Wt'~lld-.v'11

Rftulh
... dl_. 1!7, Boaton 108

Pbllad~piii•ID S, Ni!W .llf'r•J S4
Chl cap Ill, CharloUr Ill
New York 1011, Dec roll t3
Mllwau Wit 1!3, Dtonw.r 101

Hou.ton 1!2, SID Aal !)IIIia 11'7 (OT)

ClfM."I .u:ad Itt, Phoenbr; IZI
Sacram,.. nto 106, LA Cllpptrtt

lOt

Golden Stl.lf' ltl, DaJluJO&amp;
Thui'ICIII0' '5 GamM

~

'

'

Charlotte .aa Nrw YGrk, 1': 30 p.m.
lkl11ton at New Jer~~ey, 7: sa p.m.
Miami at Wutinaton, 1':30 p.m.
• PortiMd at Houlllon, 8:3.0 p.m, ~
San Alii odo at Utah, 9: 3D p.m .
Dallas ·a t Sellltll(", 10 p.m.
f:'rldl,)''a Gam@!~!

Madh.1oa 4S, Allhlabula 18
Pal~ Harwy «&lt; ;- .ubi Harbe·r 4t
l'ai!W'S Rlnrll .. -18, Jelfel'llon U
Spring So uth ~t Falrborn42
UhrlchsvJII«&gt; Claymont 45, Donr .a.1

UPI prep
ratings

Atlanta at P•lladelphla, aiJhl.
Mllwau lee II Miami , nlpt

COLUMBUS. Ohio fUPII - Tile Out

WIIJtinllonat »•troll. nlaht
Dif'nw-r at Chii:qo, nlpt

Nt w York- Buddy Mr.Girt vt. ManP.'I
l)pl..t&gt;on. ID-round Judor Wf'lte rwel!l;hl
!"lout: Gino Gf'lnnnlno Vtl. Darnon
McGrl"M', 10-ro•nd ju:mur IIKhlwt'lght ;
Ricardo Crpl'da VII- A.lhforto M1•rc a do,
ll).round luthPrwP ight .~o~.
COIIe&amp;t'
San Fran r.l!o!Co - NCAA Con,•e ntlnn

19!18 U nill'd Pret~ll lnt,. rnallollll 0-"1•
IDI:h !khool Board of Coa e he.' boy8
ballketball ruttnp fwlt h flr!l-_phw:e vacet
.u"~d won- lo ~t record1 ln Jll'r~alhHft ):
Dlvl!don I
Tum
Pofllla
1. Tolt"do Maoombt-r (12) (9 ·1)
3•
2. O nclnrlul Woodward til (i-3)
251
!I, IAraln Admiral Kill&amp; {!) (1·1}
8ft
~ - Warnon Ws tltnerw (4) (9·0)
11"1
5. LoralnSf'nklr ( IG-Ih
lit
6. 0 nchuat1Withrow(l) (11·1 )
til
i. Toledo Scott ( 10-11
!If
II. Nf'wark(I J 01t ·2)
U
9. Day too Meadowdale (4) (1~)
II
IO .Ganton MciiD)ey I lG-2 I
71
SPco rd t eo1 11. Cohunb,.l Brookhaven
10: l t. Barberton64: ·J3. " 'arrenHanU•r ·
t7: 14. l..~PWood St. Edward 31; IS.
Tolf'du St. ,John'M3.; Ul. Toledo Whlltnt'f
:12; 17. Sf' avr-rt'rr-Pk· ZS: 18. PI ck#rlncten
28; 19. Trot"·ood·M•dlsoo 28; 20 . OnclnMII Oak Hill~ :n .
Divlsla n II
1. \\'~I Ge~a~ u (1) 111·0)
190
2. cambrtds~ (Iii c 10·0)
188
!L WIIIB.rd (%) ( 10·1)
117
t Lf"Jt"lnp.on til IIU·CH
187
5. l'or tMnoudl {l) (8-2)
Ul
6. \ 'o qnplvwn U b«ty OH {18-e)
115
1. Day Ch amlhlldf'-Ju lrnfl' ( .fl ( II· I )110
II. O n Fono!il Par ld 'l) (7·:1}
8fi
9. K«&gt;t1Prlnr AltH (t-! )
'J9
IO.Orrvlllt' ( 2J (&amp;-OJ
7:.
Sero nd Ct&gt;n: II. Wav~rly 8:: U .
Youngstown Cardhal Mool'l'y ( 1J 5t: 13.
Bay Vllla«t {II 45; 14. O.loM We~~l
Branc h ::18: IS. Belllll'f' 31: 16. IUIIIIboro
:ttl: n . ( tiP) Warsaw Rlvf'r VIII'W ar1d
, bn!dlt'ld Malabw (1 ), :14 uch; 19.

Golf

Division IU

Sacramrnlollt PhDmlll , nlpt
CIMrl and at LA Lakert,JIIJhl
GoldPn Slide at LA Cllppl'n. n lo![hl
NAION.U HOCKE\' Lt:AO UE
Wr-~a.y'11

RtosW.h

· Moi'IIIIN"aii.Nf"w ,Jrr.!li')' ll
WM .. n&amp;toa3 , Toronto t

Petrak!, t'lllcaro ~ (0T)

Cal pry 8, WlnMPf'&amp; 3
'nlunMIIO''!'I Gam~
Montreal at Boston, 7 : :1~ p.m .
Lb lcqo at Bllllalo, 1: 85 p.m.
QuPhec at Phlladelphl' 7: 3$p.m.
Plct!bu l'lh al MlnJP.'Iota, 8: 115 p.m .
St. Louis at LoiS Anlt:!itW, 10:35 p. m .
Frlda,)"s GamBO
NY Ialandfor~&gt;al Nf.w De\'lhJ, nlrht
F.d •11ontonat Washln~ton, nl.-hl
· Wln,.pf"g at Viuu·au"wr, nlpt

Calendar
RaskelbaJI
Ol•lot&amp;to at Nf"'· \ 'ork, 2:91p.m .
Bo!UOn at Nn· Jt'r8l')', 7: 30 p.m.
MIIVlll a1 WlL'illl n!(on, 7:!Jt p.m.
l"nrtland a t Houl!iton. 8:!10 p.m.
SIUI Antonloat Ulab. !:SO p.m .
Dallas Ai s,.,.r.tll', ID p.m.

Boxing

Bl'rmudD. DunP.!i, C~llf. -' I I million
I'UA. Boh H0Pt' 01'11t!'rl Cla»!ilc
Hockf')"
Montl"f'al at BoAton, 7: 311 p.m.
Chlc&amp;~~:o iU Bulfalo, 1:a5 p.m.
Qu rbec Ill Phlladl'lphla. 1: 38 p.m .
I•Jtt.!lmrxh at Mln,.. sQtll, II": SS p.m .

St. Lout!i at Los 1\natlfS, 10:3$ p.m .
8oecoPr
MJSL
No gwnt~ !ll"hetlik'd
Tt&gt;nnl!i
Sydney, Australia Soultl Wah.,; Op rn

13,0,000 Nrw

Transactions
Blt..~f'hall

Bul'iCon- Cai cher R ick CrrurJI' IIJC;..t.d
to a

I ~ )(' ar

co ntract.

Callfor!W.a - t\nnouncPd Deron ,John·
son tl'Jolnt&gt;d club IUii hllt-.ttlnstrootor.
1\llhVIlllkPf - ln\'lt e d outfletdrr" He-n
Olllvh:•, Davt&gt; En t'f' llll d ,JJ m Ad Wei,
lnftf'lrlrrs Billy 8ati':R 1111d Bill Spi('f'S,
c atc h~

Ronn R-l!'ywllh and

plt c ht'l' ~

Odt'll J one~~ an d RI\Y Krawc1.)l to spring
•:.mp u non-rONWr play1•r",
N\' Ml't8- N11nwd BIIIStf'tn muuo~g t&gt;t
ao d .l.11ck F\siiPI' pltchlnJ coaeh ot
Colwnbla In South Atlantic UqtW lA ).
las llf'tball
Miami- Pllu·t&gt;dputl Ptau-IW•hlng·
ton on lhf' lnju~d list and sl.-nr-d ruard
H.f'lvln Upshaw of Abarty In lfll" CD A. to a
1 0-d~· c ontract.
tra.lnln~

Bex ley a:t: 20, Carroltton26.
171
I. Oberlin (9) fll-01
l liHmtHon Bad.l n (11 I 10·21
1:t1
3.8u ...&gt;yrV..!I Wynfordfl )t iJ.I)
l21~
I. CohunbusAc11ilem)' (!) llit-Ol
II% .
5. l&amp;fverly Fort fo' r)"t- (2} { l!J-11 )
ID
fl. All ron Huban II!) (10.0)
71
l Tutt&amp;ra'A'M Valley 19·21
11.1
II. North Co llf!l t~ Hill (2) ( 12--t)
t . On'Olrk) til fll·ll
ft
IO .Jturoo {9·J)
37
Srco NI ten: 11. Akron St. VIN!f'nl.St.
Mwy f I} 3-1; ll!:. Quwaptoakt'.1:1: 13. (I if' )
Hal'llartd W~ne Tract" lllltl Oncln•ll
McNicholas. U fach: 15. etlf} Buekeyt&gt;
Thall and Shnwood Falr\'I!'W , U t'aK:h;
17. (tit~) Pffi'rmu 1"11: Spl!n&amp;fiNd and
Sputa Hl«:hland, 00 each: 1!. C&amp;dlz It ;
20. l)a,y ton Jf'tff'raon 16.
Division IV
1. •'Mt Loramie (6) f 12-1)
23.1
t K11llda (41 ) (9-1)
lte

'%

3.ColumbuNW~hrk-110)C7-5)
~ . Sprln.cflf'ldCatholk(8)(11.fl)

5. Mansfield St. Pt&gt;ter's (9·1)
G. DtlphO!ll St. John't (l-.'i)
"1.~1. Hf'nry(8·2)
!1. Holj1;a1P (7·2)
9. Uma Cf"ntral Cat Mile (11-'!)
IO .CanaJ WlfiChrster ( 1) (12-0)
S!'oo nd IPn : 11. Clf'\lf'laod

llti

H&amp;
lt'l
7~

f1
15
1-t
118
Hel~~~:hb

l.afll'"'" Eut 55: 11. Allhwr p U: IS.
Ubtrl)'l"'entt'r:lli: 14. Stt:rtnr:JS; lll. (tlt&gt;)
Tu !IC ~t.mWit!iC Miholk: and Mineral Ridlf',
:t., tad~: 11. Con\'oy 0&lt;1'!!1ht- 11; II.
~hb&amp;ld 21; 19. TIUin Calvt"rl 18; tt.
Olf&gt;l WII"Jiham, Van Burtn aiMI Mora·

dol"t', lA each.

=o 'Dell Lumber Night
.:is set for Saturday
~

: O'Dell Lumber Co. of Galllpo"lis and Pomeroy will sponsor the
Saturday , Jan. 14 men's basket·
ball game between the Rio
Grande Redmen and the Walsh·
"c avaliers at Lyne Center.
: Game time will be 7:30 p .m.
:Free tickets are available at
"''Dell store locations.
: O'Dell has been a longtime
. supporter of the Red men and Its
: vice president, Rbbert E. J en· klns Is co-c hairing a communlly
· athl~tic boosters committee for
: Rio Grande at)lletlcs.
•
: Through Its sponsorship of the
· game and its donation to the Rio
: Grande Athletic Boosters Club,

O'Dell assists Klo Grande College/Community ·College In Its
quest for quality students and
athletes, Redmen Coach John
LawhOrn Said.
The donation Is used to fund
scholarships and programs at
Rio Grande that allow the school
to compete In basketball, baseball, softball, volleyball, cross
country, track and soccer,
"Community support Is a vital
Ingredient to the success of our
team s," Lawhorn said. "The
support shown by O'Dell Lumber
and our other sponsors Is not only
gratifying but a key to continuing
the winning tradition in Rio
Grande athletics. "

~Oaks top Vikes 59-47

)o hold half-game lead

•
'• Senior forward Bobby Ward
:led all scorers with 18 points ln
:pacing Oak Hill to a 59-47 victory
l)ver hos t Symmes Valley T!JeSday night.
: The victory helped the Oaks
1nalnta ln their hal f-game lead In
the SVAC over Southern, who
beat Eastern 87-70 Tuesday
night.
• The Oaks took charge out ofihe
gate, building a 16-4 lead at tl1 e
t nd of the first quarter before.
. expanding the margin to 38-15
advantage at halftime.
Bobby Coon was the other Oak
Hill eager to record double
f{gures, scoring 10. Center Jedd
:,Rawlins spe nt much. of the game
~n the bench and scored only
:Dine.

The Vikings were led by Danny
Justice, who scored 15, and Carl
Robinson. who totaled 14.
On Friday night the Oak~ (6-4,
6-1) will travel to Southwestern,
whlle the Vikings (1-9, 1-7) will
entertain Hannan Trace.
Scm-e by quarters
Oak Hill ... .... ...... . 16 22 9 12·59
Symmes Valley .... 4 11 10 22-47
OAK HILL (59) - Ward
8-0·2-18; Coon 2-0-6·10: Rawlins
2-0-5-9; Miller J ,0-1·7; Smith
3-0-1-7; Rufl-3-0-0-6; Haines 1-0·0·
2. TOTALS - 21-0·11-59
SYMMES VALLEY (47) Justice 6-0-3-15; Robinson 6·0·2·
14; Hayes 2-0-4-8; Large 2-0-1·5;
Miller 0-0-3-3: Nicholas 1-0·0-2.
TOTALS - 17.0·13-47
Field-goal shooting -17·55 .
Turnovers - 26

Sunoco Service Station

By United Press IJ~ternallonal
The Indiana Pacers, given a
new outlook by a new coach,
ended and old mark offu tillty at
Boston Garden.
The Pacers beat the Celtlcs at
Boston Garden 127·-108 Wednesday night to make Dick Versace
3-0 since taking over as coach.
The Pacers won their tlrs I road
game of the season and ended a
string of 23 straight losses on the
parquet floor.
The Pacers, 1-15 on the road,
won at Boston Garden for the
first time since April 2, 1978.
They are also sporting a four·

ptili. dumped New Jersey 103·94,
Milwaukee defeated Denver 123106, Houston topped San Antonio
In overtime 122-117, Cleveland
clipped PhoeniX 124·121, Golden
State nipped Dallas 107-106, and
Sacramento stopped the LA
Clippers 106-104.
Bulls 106, Hornets 101
now."
At Charlotte, N.C., Michael
Chuck Person scored 29 points
Jordan scored 22 of his 24 points
to lead··a balanced attack thar
after halftime to lead the Bulls.
saw seven Indiana. players In
Scottie Pippen added 24 for.
double !iguret!. Rookie Rlk SmIts
Chicago. which avel\ged an ear·
had , a career-high 21 points,
ller loss to the Hornets: at
Wayman Tlsdal~ carne off the
Charlotte. ·
bench to add 18 and Vern
·~nicks 100, Pistons 93
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Mark
Jackson scored 19 points, IncludIng a pair of field goals In the last
64 seconds, to lead the Knicks to
their third victory over the
Pistons this season. Detroit's Bill
Laimbeer scored 21 points.
Sb&lt;ers 103, Nets 94
At Philadelphia, Charles Bark·
ley scored 13 of hls25 points in the
For Rio, Tuesday's 88-85_loss at fourth quarter to rally Phlladel·
cent) at second place and Rio
Urbana means the Redmen w!ll phla to Its thlrd·stratght victory.
Grande (12-4 at the beginning of
be on the prowl for a win to Barkley was 11 of 12 !rom the
the week, 75 percent) third. For
Improve their 12·5 stand ing. floor. Nets' rookie Chris Morris
senior-dominated Findlay , It
Guard Jimmy Kearns 16·1, se· scored 20 points.
bids fair for a re~t of their
nlor) came off the bench to lead
1985-86champtonshlpyear, when
Bucks, 123, Nu1gets 106
Rio's offense at Urbana, while
All-American Randy Kortokrax
At Milwaukee, Larry Krystko·
starting forward Larry Benning wiak scored a career-high 27
helped the Oilers on to winning
(6-4 , freshman ) pumped In 19 points to lead the Bucks to their
the district title.
While Findlay finished respec'
points and 12 rebounds against !ourth-stralght victory. Terry
the Blue Knights, who went to Cummings added 25 points lor
tably In 1987-88, the current
10·6 and were rallked fifth (60 Mllwa11kee. Lafay~tte Lever led
season bas seen Coach Ron
Niekamp's club compile a list of
percent) by the district entering the Nuggets with 27 points.
Impressive victories on their own
this week.
Rockets 122, Spurs 117 (ot)
playing level and tight losses to
Benning. making an ImpresAt San Antonio, Purvis Short
larger schools. The only two
sive debut for Lawhorn. Is scored six of his 26 points In
defeats so far have been to
expe&gt;cted to start against Fl ndlay overtime to lead Houston. Spurs
Bowling Green, 76·72 and Heldelat forward, with Mike Tidwell rookie · Vernon Maxwell hit a
berg, 59-54. _
(6-3. sophomore) at the other three-pointer with 14 seconds left
The Oilers' win column In- forward spot. Opposing them for In the fourth qu~rter to force
eludes. Denison, 90-68: Wllmlng- Findlay will be Dave Rosier (6-4. overtime. The Spurs played an
ton, 72-67 (overtime); Cedar- senior) and Pat Nolan (6-4,
extra period despite scoring only
ville, ·~ 69-58; Malone, 81-55;
senior). Uniontown (Ohio) High 10 first-quarter points.
Huntington .(Ind.), 77-49; Shaw - School product Rosier was
Cavaliers 124, Phoenix 121
nee State, 80-62; Central State, ranked first by the district In free
At Phoenix, Larry Nance
82-65; Ohio Northern, 54-41; and throw shooting for his 93.3
scored 28 points and John Willi·
Wabash (Ind.), 90-67.
percent performance at the
ams add~d 27 to pace Cleveland
stripe In 11 games (28-30).
to Its 12th victory In Its last 13
At guard for the Redmen will games. Mark Price had 24 and
be Anthony Raymore (5-11. seBrad Daugherty 20 for the
nior) and Brian Watkins (5-10,
Cavaliers. Tom Chambers led
sophomore) . Raymore remains Phoenix with 28 points.
the tearri's top scorer at 13.5
Warriors 107, Mavericks 106
points per outing, with Wa tkins·
At Oakland, Calif., Winston
following with an average.of 11.9
Garland sank a seven-foot
markers. Kearns has 10.6 points jumper with one second left to lift
score Rio's final markers.
a game.
Golden State and hand Dallas Its
: "Our goal was to stop MulThe defenders will face Findlins," McKnight said. "'While we' lay's top point-maker in Aaron fifth-straight loss . Chris Mullin
didn't stop her as -much, we kept Roth. A 5·H senior from San- led the Wariors with 34 points,
her from a wide open shooting dusky, Roth is credited with 16.9 while Dallas' Mark Aguirre had a
position. Offensively, we were points and 2.5 assists per game. game-high 41 .
Klnga 106, Clippers 104
very patient."
Joining Roth as guard will be
At Los Angeles, Kenny Smith
Flelltz said the team did well Desmond Buford (6·1. senior).
scored 23 points, Including the
on defense, particularly In the
Matt Mains~ a 6-7 senior from
second period by holding down Van Buren, Ohio and Firitllay's winning basket with one second
Frere's scorlng.~he also praised leading rebounder (6.7 a game) remaining, to lead Sacramento.
HastingS, who led the team in takes the post. His opposite The Clippers lost their seventh
straight and found out Wednesrebounding with 14.
number ·will be 6·6 junior Rob day Danny Manning, the No. 1
Other high scorers for Rio were Jackson.
pick In last summer's NBA's
MuUinswlth19andBergdollWith '
Last season, the Red men fell to
nine. Tina Martin and Sarita Findlay 79-72 on the Oilers' court draft , will be lost !or the rest of
Brown scored 10 each !or Jan. 2. Ron Rlttlnger scored 21 the season. Manning tore a
)lgament In his right knee and
Urbana.
points for Rio and Kearns had 20. will have surgery within a week.
The Redwomen were 40.9 percent from the field (27-66) and
sank 15 of 19 free throw attempts
for 78.9 percent. Urbana was 41
percent on field goals (30-73) and
69.2 percent at t11e !oulline (9-13).
Urbana was to host Walsh on
Thursday and travel to Mount
Vernon Nazarene on Saturday.
Rio Grande !aces Ohio Domini·
can at home Saturday at 5:15
p.m.
Box score:
URBANA (68) -Tina Martin,
3·4·10; Kim Fields, 2·1·5; Terlka
Tumbleson, 2-0-4; Kelll Risner,
3-1·2-;1.1; Sarita Brown, 5-0·10;
Jody Hemmelgarn, 1·0·2; Cindy
Frere, 12-2·26. TOTALS :18-1-11-&amp;.
RIO GRANDE (88) - Holly
Hastings, 10-4-24; Lea Ann Mullins, 5·9·19; Beth Coli, 2·2·6; Ann
Barnltz, 3-0-6; Betsy Bergdoll,
3·3·0-9; Kathy Snyder, 1-0·2. 1
TOTAls" U-3-lut.
game winnlr)g streak.
"~ ll wanted todowas stop the
bleeding," said Versace. " It's a
tough situation when you have a
club that respresents not only a
city, but a state and things are
not going well. I like a.hat I've
seen thus far, butwe'reonlyona
month-by-month plan right

•

Frere,sparks Urbana
to defeat Redwomen
URBANA -Turnover difficulties and a 26-'polnt performance
by Urbana center Cindy Frere
combined to hand the Rio Grande
Redwomen a 68-66 loss Tuesday
ln their first Mid-Ohio Conference encounter of the season.
The loss took the Rio ladles'
overall record to 6·7.
··The turning point occurred
when we came down the court
three times and turned It over,"
Redwomen Coach Cheryl Flelltz
noted. ''If we had capitalized on
that, It would have changed the
momentum of the whole game.''
As It was, the Redwomen were
never very far behind Cindy
McKnight's club, which went to
5-9 playing without Its lead
scorer, shooting guard Jean
Twehues, who was Ill. With guard
Betsy Bergdoll fir)ng a trio o!
3-polnters and power forward
Holly Hastings leading t!le team
with 24 points, the Redwomen
trailed the hosts 35-29 at
halftime.
Bergdoll and Hastings helped
cut the hosts' margin toone three
times early In the second period,
but 5·2 freshman Kelil Risner ,
connected .lor two or her game
total of 11 points to spark an
Urbana rally that put the Lady
Blue Knights ahead by 12 (58-46).
The guests gained ground at
the foul line and on baskets qy ,
Lea Ann Mullins, Ann Barnltz
and ,Beth Coli and were dqwn
68-63 with two seconds left when
Bergdoll landed a 3-polnter to

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POMEROY BOWLING LANI!S

DECisiONS OPPONENT -Jared Sheets declsloDS his Jackson ·
opponent by a score of 18·3.

Meigs wrestlers top Jackson,
.Trimble in four-way session

•

ROCK SPRINGS - ·The Meigs
Marauder wrestling team picked
up victories over Jackson 38-34
and Trimble 54-20 Wednesday
night in a four way meet.
In the Jackson win Eric Heck,
Wess Howard,;le!f McElroy ,
Ja~ed Sheets. and Burt Kennedy
. all picked up wins by pins ,whlle
Rod Stewart and Jerry Jacks
. won decisions over their
. opponents.
. In the win over Trimble Howard,Edmonston, and Aaron
Sheets picked up wins by PillS,
while Jared Sheets won by

decision. Heck, Scott Barton, and
Stewart won by forfeit.
,
Joe McElroy's match ended In
a draw. Chesapeake won its -two
matches 66-9 over Trimble and
45-27 over VInton County.
Coach Kevin Shepartl·· was
pleased with' his teams perfor·
mance as he used several
younger wrestlers In both
matches to give some
experience.
Saturday the Marauders will
travel to Ravenswood to compete
in a live· team match, beginning
ai 12 noon.

· EAKLY WEDNESDAY MIXED
Dec:. II, li,S
'

EARLY WEDNI!SDAY MIXED
Dec. II, 11118
TEAM
PI'S.

TEAM

I

PTS.

Tony's COrry Out ....... ... ...................... .85
Middleport Lunch Room .. .................... 84
Mlcklleport Lunch Room ...... ................ 84
~ny's ~ri')Qut .......................... ,....... T1
Mlke!lelts ........... ...... ,..................... ,, .. 68
amm~ 9Carry Out ....... ... .................. 66 · Shammy' a CArry Out ........ ........... .... .... 66
Mike Se Is ................................. ... ....... 66
Hackett RDolln1 .... :................... ....... ... 60
Hackett RDo!tng ........... .... . .................. ~2
C&amp;A Auto or Spring Valtey ................... 45
C&amp;A Auto or SprtngValley ..... ..... ... ...... 39
~AM SERlES - :Tony• s C.rry Out
TEAM SERIES - Middleport LunchRocrn 2107.
,
TEAM GAME- Tony's CArry OUt 769.
TEAM GAME - Middleport Lunch
RD&lt;rn 720.
!UGH SERIES- (Men) Ray Roach 581,

Larry Dugan

5!ls;

(Women) Debt. Hensley

509, Debbie Phelps 497.

HIGH GAME - (Men ) Ray Roach 212.
Ray Roach 202; (Women} Debl Hensley

HIGH SERIES - (Men) Ruaa CarsCJI
558, Bub Stivers $l); (Women) Carolyn
Bachner/ Debl Hens!~ 509, Marlene WU·
SCJI 472.
· !UGH GAME- (Men) RussCarsCJI217,

187, Maxine Dugan 185.

Bub Stivers 202; (Wome-n) Debbie Sayre

m. Debt Hensley 200.

the Vancouver Sun, said he and the camera with his bare hands .
Sun photographer Mark Van and then the camera hit the deck.
Manen, and Timbrel], caught up Tlmbrell turned and ran and
•
with. T).oson as the boxer ap· Tyson took three kicks at him as
proached the hotel.
he ran , but didn' t hlthlm. He then
" He got off a·4: 3_0 (p.m.) flight walked past me with a look that
from Las Vegas and we were would have kill~ and weqt
surprised because he had no upstairs."
entourage or luggage," Arm·
Van Manen sa ld he suffered a
strong said. "They wouldn't let slightly cut lip when his camera
us talk to him there, but we was ripped away, but the rest of
caught Up Wlth"him at tbe hote l the damage was to the
just a$ he was entering lt."
equipment.
Armstrong said Givens, who
was film trig "The Penthouse,"
Spo~ briefs
an ABC television movie, W&lt;&gt;S
staying on the 14th floor of the
'Football
hotel and that Tyson, who has
flied for divorce, had flown there
-Detroit Lions leading receiver
. Pete Mandley laces an assault
to meet her.
"He was real passive, but kind charge alter an alleged fight with
of confused, bewildered, at first . hls wife at their Phoenix home.
He asked Tlmbrell to turn off the Pollee spokesman Andy Andet·
camera," Armstrong said, "He son sa ld Mandley was boQked on
said, 'You· guys are going to a charge of "assault-domestic
make me mad.' I asked him If I violence," then released a!t_e"r
could just have a couple of two officers summoned to the
minutes of his time and then we'd home by Teresa Manley fouric;l
be on our way.
, her with a cut on the forehead . He
."He ignored me and keJ?t said officers also found blood on
walking and kept telling the TV the floors of the living room anCI
guy to get the lights out of his bathroom. ... The NFL playey
facj!," Armstrong said. "Then chosen winner of Gillette's NFL
suddenly he went into overdrive MVP "People's Choice" awarll
and· grabbed Mark's camera and Jan. 17 will be featured In a TV
threw It 10 feet Into the check·in special produced by NFL Films.
desk."
The nominees are q uarterbac~
Hotel security workers then Randall Cunningham Of the PhiIntervened and IIShered the news ladelphia Eagles, John Elway cit
])I!Ople toward the front door.
the Denver Broncos, Boomer
''Tyson seemed to have left, Eslason of the Cincinnati Beltbut I turned around and h~ ran gals and Jim KellyoftheBu!falo
right past me and Mark toward Bills, running back Roger Craig
Tlmbrell, who had been filming of the San Francisco 49ers and·
the whole thing," Armstrong linebacker Mike Slngletaryot the
said. ·'He tore the viewfinder of! Chicago Bears.

..•

PAT HILL FORD
HAS A SUPER~ BOWL GAME
PLAN FOR YO.U
AS LOW AS 4.9 APR OR
UP TO '75ooo CASH BACK
J

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NEWEST HALL-OF·FAMERS- Fonner Boston slugger Carl
Y astnemskl (left) and !onner Cincinnati Reds catcher Johnny
Bench are Introduced as the newest members of Baseball's Hl!llof
Fame at a ceremony Tuesday In New York. (UPI}

Bench: baseball's
·greatest catcher• BfMIKE TULLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
NEW YORK - Johnny Bench
: may be the greatest catcher who
· ever lived and, If his analysts
proves correct, he will keep that
• status for all time.
Bench appeared Tuesday with
· Carl Yastrzemskl at a news: conference presen tlng them as
· the newest members of base: ball's Hall of Fame. Among other
··: things, Sench saft! the era of
. great catchers may be over.
. • 'With the balks. and the
· ~mphi!sls on speed, If we con. tlnue to give leverage (to the
: runners) , we're not going to have
: great catchers," he said. "The
· catchers seem to be smaller.
: We're going to see more platoon·
lng of catchers ."
' Bench enters the Hall of Fame
with the third·hlghest percen·
tage of votes in history, trailing
only Ty Cobb and Hank Aaron.
Bench received 96.4 percent, and
· Yastrzemskl 94.6. They will be
Inducted in COoperstown ceremonies July 23.
Gaylord P~rry finished with
304 votes, 32 tewer than needed,
and Bench said Perry's reptua·
tlon !or throwing th~ Illegal
·spitball hurt. Bench added that
lntegr.lty should count In the
election.
· ' "You should llve by the rules ,
,you should play by the rules,"
. ,Bench said. "Let's get back to the
· basics for the kids of America."
Bench, 41, became. only ·the

'
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G

· 11th fulltime catcher to be
enshrined, and the first voted by
the Baseball Writers' Assocla·
tlonof America since Yogi Berra
in 1972. That In Itself suggests
how rare catching talent Is.
Bench sounds as If he enjoyed the
demands and rewards of the
position.
"I had four ways to have a good
ballgame," Bench said. ''Hit,
catch , call a game and block the
plate."
Bench and Yastrzemskl each;
spent his entire career with the ·
same club. Bench played 17 ·
years for the Cincinnati
Reds,
.

G

0
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0

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PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby
given thai on Boturdcly,

January 14th, 1989, at
10:00 o.m,. a public ute
wHI be held It 101i Union

Avanua. Pomeroy, Ohio,
lo ·..rr for caoh the
followi!la col~!:
19811 Chevrolet Cavalier
Sarlll Number

4

40
•

101JCIIPOF7201422

The F•rm•• Bank and

Savina• Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio• .....,_
the right to bid at thlo
oala. and to wltlldr-llla
•-ootiOWac prcorto
ule. Further, Tho
Farmero Blnlc and Bav·
lngo Company ........
lhe rlllhl to ...oct any oo
all bl. oubmltted.
•
Further, lhe above col....,.. wll be oold In the

condition It Ia In with no
a-ood or lmpllacl-·
rontleo given.

......_........__.._,.------so
''

5

SEE RICK, JAY OR PAT

PAT HILL FORD
461 SO. THIRD

992-2196

MIDDLEPORT ,

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The Daily Sentinel-Page

VANCOUVER, British Colum- asked people to stay away,"
bia (UPI) -World heavyweight Woodward said.
boxing champion Mike Tyson
BC-TV cameraman Mike Tim·
attacki!d" a television camera- brell said his $70,000 camera was
man Wednesday nlg'ht In the heavily damaged, and a station
hotel where his estranged wife, spokesman said BC·TV Is consid·
Robin Givens, Is filming a movte, erlng legal action against Tyson.
witnesses said.
"He was trying to grab my
News reporters said Tyson, camera and stomp on It , " Tlmwho new to Vancouver from Las brell said. "He grabbed It with
Vegas where l)e Is training !or a one hand and twisted the view·
light, threw a photographer's finder of!. That Is not supposed to
camera, 10 feet and knocked a come of!."
television camera tO· the floor,
"I was filming him In the
kicking three times at the camer- lpbby," Timbrel!. said. "He was
aman as he fled down a corridor shouting, 'Get out &amp;! here.' We
of the Vancouver Hotel.
.had a tug-of·war. He wanted that
Pollee said they were aware of camera really badly."
the Incident and that Tyson
Tlmbreli, who Is about 80
would be questioned about It pounds lighter than the boxer,
Thursday.
refused to give up the camera
David Woodward, an assistant and ran !rom the hotel.
"The doorman was holding
manager at the hotel, said he
back because he was trying
him
didn't' know hoi\' long Tyson
would stay and that the press to come . after me," he said. "I
would be barred !rom the hotel know he's got a short temper so I
until Tyson departed.
did not want to both.e r him."
' 'Mr. Tyson Is upset and has
John Armstron11, a reporter for

Current District- 22 -leader
faces Redmen at Lyne·Center
In what Coach John Lawhorn
views as one of the more critical
games of the .season, the Rio
Grande Redmen will go up .
against the currently top-seeded
team In District 22 when they
host the Findlay Ollers·Thursday'
In a 7: 30 p.m. contest at Lyne
Center.
''They're awfully good, •· Lawhorn said of the visitors, who
are seen by·observers as a strong
defensive team.
The game will be sponsored by
Rlepenhoff of Jackson. During
the halftime. pompoms will be
distribu-ted by Rlepenhoff staff
and Kansas City Royals pitcher
Jef! Montgomery, !onner!Y of
the Cincinnati Reds, will be on
hand to meet with fans and sign
autographs.
District ranklngs released this
week placed the Oilers (9·2, 81.8
percent) In the No. 1 spot, with
Shawnee State (14-4, 77.8 per-

Ohio

Tyson attacks cameraman at Vancouver· hotel

•

Fleming contributed 16 far the
Pacers.
;,It" was very frustrating out
there," said Kevin McHale, who
scored 21 points to lead the
Celtics. ' Whatever we tried
tonight didn' t work l!t all. "
Boston fell to 15-17, while the
Pacers Improved to 9-23.
·'I think we deserve what we
got," said Boston guard Danny
Alnge. "It can't get any worse
than this."
In other games, Indiana edged
Boston 127·108; Chicago "stopped
Charlotte 106-101, New ·York
' nipped Detroit, 100-93. Phlladei·

RATE· 8.00°/o-8.30°/o

282 W. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.

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The Pirates, who lost three
straight before breaking the
losing cycle with a 62-.53 victory
over Kyger Creek Tuesday night,
must continue to play hard and
not fall behind early, as they did
against the Bobcats In the first '
half of their most recent encoun·
ter. II It happens again the Buc~
will have to face the "sixth
man," who will beep me active
should-the Eagles take control.
North will need a combination
of Mr. Inside (6-5 pivot Rusty
Denney) and Mor, Outside iG·O
guard /forward Brian Stout) to
take control on offense (translated: at least25polntsperman),
while Denney and 6·3 fOrwiird
Don Mays must use their ·
strength to crowd the Inside ~nd
beat frontmen Mike Martin,
Mike Frost and Chad Sinclair to
the boards.
Southern·KCHS
Though Howle Caldwell's Tornadoes· have lost three of their
last five games, they have won

their last ,three league g'l.mes to
pull themselves to within half a
game of the front-running Oaks.
With the departure of senior
frontmen Dave McMillan and
Shawn Diddle, the Tornadoes
will have no true big men when
they face a Kyger Creek team
Whose center, Mike RePse, has
added quickness to the. low post.
Reese, a 6-3 senior, must continue to Improve on his ability to
control the ball when he gets It
under the boards aild use his
lane-opening skills that have
been useful in gettlngpointguard ·
Chad Leach room lor layups.
Among some things fans at this
game should watch for are tight
defensive pressure by Racine
frontmen Brad Maynard and
Richard Deaver on Reese,
Leach's three-point shooting and
a lottery to decide who among
Caldwell's troops .will score In
double figures.
While the Tornadoes are likely
to key on Reese and Leach, they

Kent State defeats· Falcons;
Ohio Univers~ty trips Miami

By GENE CADDES
UPl Sports Writer
For quite a whlleWednesday
night, Bowling Green ha&lt;f things
pretty much Its way against
Mid-American Conference
leader l&lt;;entState.
The Falcons led 29-19 with 3: U
left In the first half, thanks to
what BG Coach Jim Larranaga
labeled "a terrl,!lc first 15 or 16
minutes or basketball."
Then, all of a· sudden, the
Falcons began playing like canaries and their 10-polnt lead
dwindled to 33-30 at the
Intermission. ·
After several lead changes In
the second half, Kent took a 51-50
lead on a layup by Ric l:llevlns
with 7: 28 left and the Flashes
never trailed again, pulling away
to a 66-57 win.
''We allowed them bacl\ Jnto
the game by not executing and
let tlng them do tbe things they
needed to get back ln." said an
Irritated Larranaga. "When the
chips are down and tM game Is
on the line, we just don't play like
a team. We play like IndiO! duals.
Our defense was not our prob·
lem, our toughness was."
Eric Glen11 scored 23 points,
Blevins added 16 and Reggie
Adams 12 as the Golden Flashes
Improved to 9-4 overall and 3-0 In
~ MOURNING GOES TO HOOP - Pittsburgh center Bobby
the MAC. Bowling Green
ftlfartiD (left) attempts to block Georgetown center Alonzo
dropped to 6-7 and 0·2.
MwrniDg (right) ali be goes to the hoop In the first half ol
"They really threw something
Wednesday night's Big East game In Landover, ~d. The Hoyu
different a' )IS - the wing trap,:·
won 711-57. ( VPI)
said Kent State Coach Jim
McDonald, "and we didn't handle It very well.
"We really hurt ourselves 111
the first half. We're a pretty good
outside s~ootlng. team but we
hu rrled our shots. A lot of our
problems had to do with what
Bowling Green was doing.''
Billy Johnsbn and Lamon Pippin paced the Falcons with 13
..
By .JOE IUUZZI
3. Pittsburgh hal lost all seven of points apiece.
In other MAC games Wednes·
Its games against the Hoyas at
··;
UPI Sports Writer
· freshman center Alonzo the Capital Centre and has a 3-12 day night, Ball State rolled over
Mourning gives Georgetown an record against Georgetown In Central Michigan 77-56, Eastern
Michigan downed Western Mlch·
Imposing figure Inside. If junior Big East play.
tgan 71-63 and Ohio· University
The
Panthers,
beaten
95-83
by
cOllege transfer John Turner
beat
Miami 80-74.
df!velops the way the Hoyas Boston College Saturday, have
At
Oxford, Dave Jamerson
eliJli!Ct, Georgetown could have a lost two cotiSecutlve games for
scored
24 points and John Beaudevastating front line In the the first time during Coach Pau I
ford
22
In OU's win over Miami.
Evans' t.hree seasons with the
second half of the season.
·The
Bobcats led 39-33 at
Turner has struggled In his team .
.
halftime
and appeared on the
In other games Involving
first season since transferring
frpm Alleghany (Md.) Commun- ranked teams, No. 1 Duke verge of blowing the game open
Ity College, but the power for- crushed William &amp; Mary 100·38, when they opened up a 69-58
ward came through with an No. 8 North Carolina defeated margin on two free throws by
19';polnt, 11-rebound effort Wed· Maryland 88-72, No. 9 Louisville Paul "Snoopy" Graham with
nesday night to spark No. 7 trounced South Carolina 75-52, 4: 59 Jell to play. •
But, with 10 seconds to play,
Georgetown to a 76-57 Big East No. 11 Nevada-Las Vegas
Miami's
Lamont" Hanna had a
downed
FresnoState83·77,
No.13
vl~torr over Pittsburgh.
chance
to
tie the game at 76, but
His performance came one day Seton Hall downed lona 74-58, No.
missed
a
close
In shot. Miami's
14 Florida State topped Jackson·
a~er a meeting with Hoyas
ville 85-70 and co-No. 18 Tennes- Jeff Scott tipped In the miss, but
Ceach John Thompson.
;••John and I had a little see edged Louisiana State 1()().96. was called for going over the
c&lt;tnversatlon - and I think he
heard what I said," Thompson
said. "I just have been waiting
for him to get going. I think he' s
been very tight, not being able to
react. We need a power forward
aqd John Is a power forward. I
thought he had always been
working hard, defensively and
.. rebounding, and today he made
hll shots."
Turner, a 6-foot-7, 235-pounder,
~tered his previous season ljlgh
o• 17 points against Mercer on

No. 7 Georgetown is
~inner over Pitt five

Dk29.

~·(Thompson)

just told me to
rebound hard and help Alonzo
mit. And that's what I did. He said
it.would pay off In the long run,"
1'\lrner said. ''I think (the meet·
llfg) worked."
· .
&lt;:harles Smith contributed 19
petnts to liecome the 24th player .
II( Georgetown history to reach
tl\e 1,000-polnt 'plateau.
•T he Hoyas led by as many as 15
potnll In the first half. Their
pressure defense forced 14 tur·
nljvers In the half. Georgetown
lefd the game with a 12-2 run
midway through the second half
thAt opened a 61-38 lead.
Georgetown Improved to 11-1
and 1-1 In the Big East and
Pittsburgh dropped to 7-6, 1-2.
The Hoyas have won two straight
sbice losing to Seton Hall on Jan.

•

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back of the 6-foot-11, 275-pound
Anthony Buford gave Akron Its
Beauford.
last lead or the game, 77-76, by
Beauford made both free hitting one of two free throws
throws with nine seconds to play with 57 seconds remaJnlng.
and Jamerson added another McFadden then canned the gopair from the line with five ahead layup at the 35-second
seconds later.
mark, but also was calkid for
Graham added · 15 points !or charging on the play.
Ohio U, 13 of those coming In the
Buford, however, missed the
second half, and Dennis Whl· front end of a one-and-one free
taker had 13.
throw situation.
Miami was led In scoring by
Albert Jones led Akron .wlth 18
Tim Stewart with 18 points, points, Buford finished with 13
Hanna with 14 and Jamie Mercu- and Floyd Johnson had 12 for the
rio and Cedric Vanleer with 11 Zips.
each.
,
Youngs town State lost for !he
In another ·game that went 12th time In 13 games, dropping a
down to the wire, Cleveland State 72-71 decision to Liberty ( Va.) .
nipped Akron 78-77 on a driving
Tim Jackson led YSU with 17
layup by Ken "Mouse" McFad· points, Kevin Haddock scored 16
den with 35 seconds to play. and Reggie Kemp 10. Bailey
McFadden led the VIkings In Alston had 26 points and Charles
scoring with 26 points and Wll- Richardson 18 !or Liberty.
llam Stanley added 22.

Toledo, West Gauga, Oberlin, Fort
Loramie top initial UPI cage poll
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMSUS- Toledo Macomber, West Geauga, Oberlin and
Fort Loramie topped the first week of balloting In the United
Press International Ohio High School Board of Coaches boys
basketball ratings.
·
Macomber, led by 6-foot-6 Jimmy Jackson, was the
overwhelming choice as the No. 1 Division I team In the first of
seven weeks of balloting. The Macmen polled 22 of 38 first place
votes and 339 poll points to outdistance runnerup Cincinnati
Woodward, which picked up lour firsts and 255 points despite a
6-3 record.
Lorain Admiral King (9·1) wound -up third with two firsts and
182 points, followed by Warren Western Reserve with 167 and
unbeaten Lorain Senior, which handed King Is only loss, fifth
with 119.
West Geauga, 11-0, held a sUm 190-188 edge In Division II over
Cambridge (10-0), a team the Wolverines beat In the semifinals
of the State Tournament last March. West Geauga received
seven first place votes to six for the Bobcats.
Perennial power Willard 00·1) was third with two firsts and
177 points, followed by Lexington (10-0) fourth with six firsts and
167 points, and defending tournament champ Portsmouth (8-2)
fifth with 146 points and three first place votes.
Oberlin, unbeaten In 11 games, held a 171-137 lead over
Hamilton Badin, 10·1, In Division III. The Indians also had a 9-4
edge In first place votes.
Bucyrus Wynford, 11-1, was third with 121, followed by
Columbus Academy In fourth, Beverly Fort Frye In fifth and
Akron Hoban In sixth. All have 10-0 records.
In Division IV, Fort Loramie, 12-1, held a 233-199 lead over
second place Kalida, 9-1, with Columbus Wehrle close behind In
third with 196 points.
Wehrle. despite Its 7-5 record and the loss of 6-foot-8 Lawrence
Funderburke for the rest of the season through suspension, stU!
had the most first place votes with 10. Fort Loram!e and Kalida
each had six.
Springfield Catholic, ll-0, was fourth among the small schools
'with eight firsts and 149 points, (ollowed in fifth by Mansfield St.
Peter's (9-1) with 93.

TOKYO (UP!) - Some 32,000 the capital on, the day o! the
officers will be assigned to the funeral, with a security alert
Feb. 24 funeral of Emperor beginning 10 days before to guard
Hlrohlto to protect scores of more than 50 Imperial facilities,
foreign dlgnltar les and guard diplomatic missions and other
against potential terrorism In key locations In and around
Japan's largest security task . Tokyo.
since World War IL pollee said
The pollee presence will exThursday.
Ceed the 30,000-m.ember force
Heads of state and dignitaries mobilized to protect foreign
from more than 100 countries participants attending the Tokyo
Including George Bush, who Stllllillit of Industrialized democsucceeds President Reagan Jan.
racies May 1986.
20 - plan to at tend the funeral in
· During that summit, five handthe capital for Hlrohlto, who died
made mortar shells were !Ired
Saturday at age87.after a lengthy over a guest house where Presibattle against ln~sttnal cancer. ' dent Reagan and other dlgnltar·
· Pollee said a 32,000-member les were staying, landing In front
force will be deployed throughout of the Canadian Embassy lln!l

In

TEAM
North Gallla , ....... 6
Oak Hill .............. 6
Southern .............. 6
Southwestern ....... 5
Eastern ............... 5
Hannan Trace ..... 5
Kyger Creek ........ 3
Symmes Valley ... 1

4
4
6
5
6
6
8
9

P
687
604
787
669
821
683
702
554

OP

607

617
759

715

.

866
656
781
717

(SVAC games)
TEAM
WLPOP
Oak Hill .............. 6 1 457 395
Southern ..... :........ 6 2 572 505
Eastern .......... ..... 5 3 613 600
Hannan Trace ..... '4 3 450 428
North Gallla ........ 4 4 548 476
Southwestern ....... 3 5 515 5'75
Kyger Creek ........ 2 6 491 557
Symmes Valley . .. 1 7 440 550
TOTALS ............ 31 31 4088 ,4086
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L P OP
North Gallla .... .... 7 1 466 305
Southern .............. 7 1 417 313
Symme~ Valley .. . 5 3 338 343
Hannan Trace ..... 4 3 314 286
Oak Hill .......... ;, .. 3 4 268 307
Eastern ............... 3 5 339 381
Southwestern ....... 2 · 6 321 365
Kyger Creek ........ 0 8 ~44 407
TOTAI.S ............ 31 31 2707 2707
Friday's Games
Southern at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Eastern
Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley
Oak Hill at Southwestern

Flrure Skating
Olympian Jill Trenary will be
"spokesathlete" for ·campbell's
Soup Co.'s sponsorship of the
U.S. Figure Skating Team. Trenary, 20, was the 1987 U.S. Ladles'
figure skating gold medalist and
1988 sliver medalist.

PARIS (UPI) Nearly 150
nations concluded a conference '
on chemical weapons with a
COJPpromlse statement In wlllch
tiii!'Y pledged not to use toxic
arms and urged the Geneva '
Disarmament Conference to Implement a treaty banning their
production, use and ,stockpiling.
Maj. Gen. William Burns, the
head of the U.S. delegation to the
five-day meeting, said Wednes- .
day the final declaration had
been diluted to reach unanimity
among representatives ol the 149
participating countries.
Meanwhile, a senior member
of the Soviet delegation, Your! ·
Nazarktne, said It was "deplorable" that the United States was
Investing In new chemical wea·
pons transmission systems as
outlined In the latest defense
budget.
The meeting rejected an attempt by Arab states to ltnk
chemical and nuclear dlsarma·
ment, but pledged general support for disarmament.
"The participating states are
determined to promote International ' peace and security
-throughout the world In accordance with the charter of the
United Nations and to pursue

effective disarmament measures," said the declaration,
read by French Foreign Minister
Roland Dumas, the conference
president
"In this context, they are
determined to prevent any recourse to chemical weapons by
completely eliminating them.
They solemnly affirm their commitments not to use chemical
weapons and condemn such
use," It said.
c.
Most Arab nations, led by
Libya and Syria. as well as Iraq,
had argued that It was unfair to
renounce · chemical weapons,
sometimes cailed the "poor
man's atom bomb," without
calling for the destruction of
nuclear arm~ .
The United States, the Soviet
Union, France and other nations
possessio~ ·nuclear arsenals· opposed the comparison of nuclear
and chemical weapons.
Delegates privately had said
they feared failure to comprom·
lse on that Issue would have
helped create an atmosphere
that would have encouraged a
pre-emptive U.S. military strike
agalns tan alleged Ll byan chemical plant at Rabta. 35 miles
southwest of Tripoli.

UNITED NATIONS (UP I) -A
triple veto by . the United States,
Britain and France blocked
passage ol a U.N. Security
Council resolution 11\_at deplored
the U.S. downing o! two Libyan
MIG-23 jets over the Mediterranean Sea.
The 15-natlon council Wednesday voted 94, with two absten·
lions, for the resolution presented by non-aligned nations. But
the vetoes prevented passage of
the measure, which was· toned
down from a fuU condemnation of
the Jan. 41ncldent.
Nine votes are required to pass
a resolution but a negative vote,
or a veto, by any of the five
permanent members of the Security Council - the United
States, the Soviet Un'ton, China,
France and Britain - can block
Its passage.
Canada cast a negative vote
along with the United States,
Britain and France. Brazil and
Finland abstained.
Voting for the measure were
China, the Soviet Union, Algeria,
Nepal, Senegal, Yugoslavia, Colombia. Malaysia and Ethiopia.
The veto votes from the United
States and Britain were not a
su~;prlse. But diplomats had
believed .e arlier efforts to tone
down the document would prevent France from casting a veto.

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hljacklngs during the 1970s, a) so •
has sent threats against · the
emperor from Its headquarters
In Lebanon.
Ultra-leftist groups have
launched several attacks against
the Imperial Palace In the pas t
few years, firing homemade
rockets that have landed on the
perlmete~ o! the compound, but
causing no damage or Injuries.
Currently, about 15,000 poUce
officers are on dally alert,
mainly deployed around the •
sprawling Imperial Palace that
dominates the heart ol central
Toky.o where Hlrohtto's body .Is
kept.
.
Pollee said a 21-year-old

The Issue of alleged Libyan
·chemical weapons production
dominated the conference, which
came on the heels of a U.S.Libyan clash over the
Mediterranean.
The conference's plenary committee worked through the night
Into the early hours Wednesday
to produce the draft text, aimed
at underscoring the need for a
treaty to enforce a .total ban as
called for by the Gene-Va protocol
Of 1925.
"The participating states
stress the necessity of concludIng, at an early date, a convention on the prohibition of the
development, produNion, stock·
piling and use of all chemical
weapons, and on their destruc·
tion, "the declaration said. "This
convention ~hall be global and
comprehensive and effectively
verifiable. It should b,e of. unlimIted duration."
Noting that the document supports efforts to give the U.N. /
secretary-general greater power
to Investigate the use of chemical
weapons, Burns, the top U.S.
negotiator, called the final declaration "a prl!tciplei:l and forceful
stand."

r-

"The language might have

been stronger." he added. " But
remember that this Is a consen- .
sus document."
·
U.S. sources said the American
delegation would have liked an
explicit reference to Chapter 7 of
the U.N. Charter, which provides
for the Imposition of sanctions
against states that meet the
disapproval of the world body.
Had that proposal been· approved, any nation viola ling
provisions of the document would
be subject to U.N. sanctions .
The Soviet envoy said Moscow
would have liked the declaration
to urge the Geneva Dlsarma·
menfConference to Introduce by
year's end a full treaty banning
chemical weapons. "As you see
there was no support," Nazarklne said.
On Sunday the Soviet Unton
pledged to begin destroying Its
chemical weapons by the end of
this year, a gesture the United
States said was welcome even If
It meant only that Moscow was
just playing catch' up with
Washington.
During the conference, West-

funeral

•

ern nations and the Soviet Union
defeated a move led by Arab
nations that have chemical weapons·to link toxic disarmament to
nuclear arms reduction.
Conference president Dumas
said It was pointless to link the
· two kinds of weapons. "The
nuclear arm Is made for prevent·
lng war. It Is a weapon of
dissuasion," he said. "The chemical weapon accompanies war. It
does not prevent it."
The State Department says
Iraq, Libya, Syria and Egypt

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have chemical weapons. So do ·:::~
the United States, the Soviet ::~
Union, France, Israel and about --"•
10 other countries, military ex· ·:;:
._,
perts say.
• ...
Iraq used fhemlcal weappns :~
extensively during Its eight-year ·· ...
with Iran, Including a massacre . ·~.•
of several hundred - perhaps : :; '
thousands - of ethnic Kurds 1ft : :
northern Iraq last year.
: .~
A total of 169 countries were • .::;
Invited to the conference and 149 . ~....
attended, 64 of them represented ;::
by foreign ministers.
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0

woman was assaulted by a
Federal President Richard Von . · •
knife-wielding man outside the Welzaecker, King Carl Gustaf ·•·
palace Wednesday alter she had XVI and Queen Silvia of Sweden, ..
signed her name to a condo lance King Boudouht II and Queen
book for the emperor. The Fablola of Belgi)Jm, and Pres!·
woman was not hurt, but a dent Mauno Kolvlst ol Finland.
policeman was Injured when he
Also planning to attenl:i are .
Intervened,
·
Britain's Prince Philip and Brit·
It was not Immediately known
Ish Foreign Secretary Sir Geof· ···
If the Incident was connected to frey Howe, Philippines President
the ultra-leftist groups .
Corazon Aquino, Prestdenl Su· •.
·Meanwhile, the Japanese go- barto of Inponesla and President
vernment said It has received Jose Azcona Hoyo of Honduras.
confirmations from at least 12
Australian Governor General· ·· •
heads· of state, members of ~designate 1;1111' Hayden will at· · ..
royalty and other officials thaf tend, as will the kings of the ..
they will attend the service.
Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan ·
They Include Bush and his and the South Pacific Island of ..
wife, Barbara. West .. German Tonga.
'

"

the U.N. Charter and Interna- nalssance flight.
The vote · by the Security
tional law, In self-defense In the
(ace of ·unprovoked hostile acts Council culminated five emer·
by Libya, or to circumscribe our gency sessions that began Thursright to navigate freely In Inter- day to discuss the Jan. 4 air duel
In which U.S. Navy fighters from
national waters," Okun said.
·'The various changes made In an aircraft carrier shot down two
the language of this draft resolu- Ll byan MIG-23 jets offthe Libyan
tion make It no less objectiona- coast.
•
Soviet ploc and non-aligned
ble," he said. "We continue
strongly to oppose It, and the ·nations backed Libya, accusing
the United States of acting with
Ideas It represents."
British Ambassador Crispin premeditation, violating the
Tlckell said his country opposed U.N. Charter and In terna tiona!
the resolution because It was law. These nations wanted the
"couched In the wrong terms and Security Council to hand out a
proceeded .. with wrong strong condemnation of the U.S.
assumptions.''
action.
The accusation against WaFrench Deputy Ambassador
shington,
particularly regarding
Pierre Brochard said the circum·
the
U.N.
Charter, Irked U.S.
stances surrounding the InCident
allies
and
some non-aligned
remained ''Imprecise." But he
said the non-aligned resolution countries, lncludlng 'F'Inland and
Brazil. who preferred mediation.
threatened freedom of navigaThey pressured the nontion In the Mediterranean and
was Incorrect In saying the aligned countries to soften their
position and tone down their
Ll byan aircraft were on a reconresoluton.

The last time the United States,
Britain and France joined together to veto a Security Council
resolution was In Aprll1986 when
the body was asked to condemn ·
the U.S. bombings of the Libyan
cities of Tripoli and Benghazi.
Non-aligned nations had
sought a strong condemnation of
the United States but opposition
from some Security Council
members forced several modlfl:
cations to soften the resolution's
language.
The toned-down version urged
the council to "deplore the
downing of the two Ubyan
reconnaissance planes by the
armed forces of the United States
of America."
It'called on the United States to
"suspend Its military maneuvers
off the Libyan coast In order to
contribute to the reduction of
tension In the area" and on "all
parties" to exercise restraint
and resolve differences through
peaceful means.
Before the vote, U.S. Deputy
Ambassador Herbert Okun told
the council the Libyan jets were
armed and ''highly sophisticated
aircraft ... and our pilots were
wholly justified In concluding
that they Were In Imminent
danger ol being fired upon and
they exercised their-Irrefutable
and legitimate · right of self·
defense under Article 51 of the
U.N. Charter."
"We view as whoUy unaccepta·
ble any effort to criticize the
United States for actlona which
were taken, In aceordance with

•Low

The Japanese Red Army,
blamed for an airport massacre
at Tel Aviv, Israel, and several

U.S., France,l' Britain veto resolution
..

. Sports briefs

near the palace residence of the
current Emperor Akthlto.
The ultra-leftist group
Chukaku-ha, or Middle Core
Faction, Immediately claimed
responsibility for the attack as a
protest against the meeting of the
Western leaders.
Pollee sourcesn quoted by the'
~yodo News Service, said they
fear the same group may launch
an attack against Hlrohlto's
funeral as part of their avowed
bid to overthrow the world's
\
·
oldest monarchy.

Hir~hito

Conference·concludes; nations condemn chemical weapons

SVAC STANDINGS

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PHARMACY WITH:
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the Prescription S~op.
I

271 Nornt SECOND

officers assigned to

SVAC standings
( Allramesl
W L

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7 ::

Ohio

should not forget about KC . forward· Bobby Ward - score' 25 ' field should give the VIkings
more than they c11n handle,
and 22 points, respectively.
guard/ forward Alan Denney,
Alter experiencing a 75-69 win
What the Highlanders need to
who has shown that with the right
over
Eastern, toppling the Ea·
do Is to shut down Ward,
touch from three-point land, he
gles
out
of first place, the VIkings
frustrate 6-2 forward Chad Smith
can also pull his weight In the
returned
to the L column by
scoring column. I! Racine Is able · by playing their usual tight
dropping
a
5947 decision to Oak
man-to-man defense and put the
to contain him, that could leave
Hill
Tuesday
night. Though
offensive burden on Rawlins.
Leach open to dial long distance.
The Oaks must play their game Symmes center Carl Robinson
It might also leave Reese or 5-9
power forward John Sipple free · and force the Highlanders Into will crowd the pal nt and exert his
situations where the · hosts' Influence Inside, the Wildcats
to connect In the paint.
turnover-oriented defense would have too much pressure defense
Oak HIII-SWHS
make them commit numerous and too many effective shooters
Fast hands lnslde...strlp the
fouls,
because the Oaks cannot to make this anything but a
ballfrom Rawllns ...an open Mike
afford a letdown, to say nothing Hannan Trace cakewalk.
Walker on the fast break; closlng
·
Reeerve wars
o! a loss, which could knock them
In on the hoop ... this Is the
With
two
losses ~tween them
scenario Jim Walker's Hlgliland- out of first and half a game
In
their
16
league
games. North
behind Southern.
·
ers must create on their home
Ga!Ua
and
Southern
are tied for
IITJIS..8ymmes Valley
court when they face the Oaks
.
Friday night: ·
I! Kyger Creek beats Southern first.
The only loss that Ron Twyand North Gallla downs Eastern,
In their previous meeting In
the Wildcats could slip Into third man's Plrates,10-1 overall, have
December, Southwestern posted
place If they don't disappoint the suffered this seasop was a 59·56
an elght·potnt lead to start the
loss to Symmes Valley on.Dec. 16.
oddsmakers.
second quarter, but let the Oaks
Turnovers, steals and strong The Midshipmen were the only
come from behind and pull away
boardwork from HT frontmen ones In theSVACtoweatherScott
for a 72-62 victory. In that game
Craig
Rankin and Scott Caldwell Frederick's Whirlwinds, edging
the Oaks had two players - 6-8
and
guard/forward.
Tim Brum· them 5&amp;55 on Dec. 30.
center Jedd Rawlins and 6-1

.

'

•

'

Oaks retain first place, but_Southern·stays on their heels
B&gt;' G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stall Writer
Because one of their league
games was postponed until the
end of the season, making them
half a game shorter In the
standings than everyone In the
SVAC except Hannan Trace, Oak
Hill retains possession or first
place by half a game over
Southern. ·
Nolth GaJUa·Eas tern
With the memory of their 78-75
loss to the Eagles In their
previous meeting still fresh In
their minds, revenge will be the
fuel by which the Pirates' ship
will sal! when they take on the
Eagles In Tuppers Plains Friday
night.
The Eagles, who have lost !lve
of their last six games and their
last three league games, are In
dire straits right now, because a
loss to the Pirates will put both
team·s In the middle of the pack,
while a win would most likely
keep the Reedsville crew in third
· place.

..

Thursday, January 12, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pege-6-The Daily Sentinei

NE'WHAVEN

POINT PLEASANT

MASON

882-~135

675-1121

773-55"14

�\

·(

•

'

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Suspected· whale
meat smugglers
are arrested ·

Thlnday,Janu

Thursday, January 12. 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

By Unlled Press Inlernallonal
Freezing rain and snow battered t.he East .Thursday,
hurricane-force winds raked
South,ern Cal ifornla and thunderstorms triggered !lash-flood
warnings in the South, the
National Weather Service said.
·The roads were particulafly
nasty in Alpena and Presque
Island counties in Michigan,
where officials reported some Icy
· spots even on main highways
despite salting:
Northern New J~rsey , eastern
New Yo.r k State and Vermont
braced for snow and freezing
rain. Weather officials said nor. theasten Pennsylyanta would be

NEW FACTORY AUTHORIZED REBATES JUST ANMO~CED!

TOKYO (UP!) ' - Pollee ar· ·ushed, said a spokesman for the
rested three importers suspected whaling Industry.
·
of smuggling 135 tons o!'frozen
·'They knew the ban was
whale meat worth about $690,000 coming so they stocked up," said
Into Japan, where tile delicacy Fukuw Nagasaki of the Institute
remains popular despite a world· of Cetacean Research.
· wide ban on commercial whal·
" Every store is different, but
lng, officials said Thursday. '
some have up to a year's supply
The lnternational Whaling in stock," he said.
Commission banned commercial
Whale meat, which used to be
whaling worldwide in March considered an Inexpensive food,
1988, and Japan agreed to honor has become a rare delicacy in
the ban. However, Illegal whal· recent years due to the decreaslng has continued and Japanese Ing supply.
smugglers may be importlng
''The wholesale price of whale
whale meat sold by the pirate meat has risen about 10 percent
whalers, said a spokesman for every year," said !Gyoo Tar\aha·
Traffic Japan, a conservationist shl, owner of the Whale Shop. a
organization. ·
restaurant featuring various
The three men attempted to whale meat dishes. ..
·
bring 135 tons of whale meat Into
The International Whaling
the country Dec. 4 by listing the Commission voted In 1982 to ban
mea\ as mackerel on ship manif- all commercial whaling from
ests, said police in Kagoshlma, 1986 to 1990to protect endangered
on the southern island o! Kyushu . whale species.
.Police suspect the whales were
caught by pirate whalers from
Japan objected, saying the ban
Taiwan and sent throu,::h Singa- Ignored sctenti!lc data showlng
pore, which has no history or some species of whales were
pirate whaling.
abundant enough to permit whal·
The meat was valued at ing without threatening the
$690,000, pollee said. ·
species.
The smugglers lace a possible
Later, under pressure from.the
Sl!ntence of up to three years in United States, Japan agreed to
jail and fines of up to $20,000 st&lt;lp .Its commercial whaling by
each.
March 1988, but has sponsored
"This is a continuation of a "research whaling," which last
perennial problem In this coun- year resulted In a catch or about
.. try," said Tom Milliken, director 800 minke whales.
of Traffic Japan, a division ofthe
The governmen.t said it spanWorld Wildlife Fund.
sored the research hunt to collect
Milliken said there were two Information on whale populains tances of whale meat smug- tlons, hoping to show some
gling In 1987lnvolvlng 300 tons of · species exist In large enough
the !ood.
numbers to support hunting.
Japanese restaurants and
The U.S. government said the
stores continue to sell whale research hunt violated the ban on
meat, but their source is frozen whaling and Washington cut
meat bought before the ban on Japan's fishing rights in U.S,
commercial whaling was estab- waters in protest.

LOS ANGELES (L!PI) - The
Santa Ana winds, blowlng at
hurricane force, ra.ked Southern
California overnight, knocklng
QUI power to thousands of homes
and businesses, sparking a
brushfire that threatened 50
homeS and shutting down a
suburban airport.
· Winds at Ontario International
Airport 35 miles east o! Los
Angeles were measured at 95
mph, !oJl;jng" the facility tcy;hu t
down at '9:30 p.m. Wednesday .
Flights were diverted to Long

..

the 1984 assasslna~ion of Indira
Gandhi. She was killed in re· •
venge for ordering a June 1984
army assault against Sikh radi·
cals holed up in Amrit~r's
Golden Temple.
t8967t,
4 cyl.,
PS, .
power
door2 doora,
lod&lt;s, coupe,
tiR wheel,
cruise
" You Hindus have hanged j&gt;ur l:or1tr0l,
AMIFM racia, aiBfea . tape, radial
two heroes, and now you too have
seats, """window defog.
to taste the pain of hanging,"
pollee quoted the note as saying.
''More Hindus wlll be hanged."
Radicals killed 10 Hindus in a
massacre one day after the two
Sikhs were sent to the gallows.
. Hindus, a minority community
in Punjab, are frequently the
target of attacks by Sikh
extremists.
Pollee reported nine other
overnight killings, but said they
did not believe any of them were
in revenge for last week's
hangings.
They said slx gunmen entered
a Hindu home in Pakhi Kalam
vlllage, 75 miles , south of .
Amritsar, and opened fire wlth
automatic weapons, killing the
householder, his wife and two
daughters.
Pollee reported radicals shot
and killed three Sikhs in Atwal
village near Amrltsar, and said I Sleek t t 205 t, 4 doors, sedan, front wilael
they had recovered the t&gt;ullet·
, 4 cyl .. air cond., auto. trans., PS, PB,
riddled body of a Sikh security IA~IIFM radio, radial tims, bucket seats.
guard believed killed by ex trem$3885
ls ts operating in Ludhiana, 50
miles southeast of the Sikh holy
city.

SOFAS

lllllapral trivia
The World Aimani1C of Presiden!lal
Facts lists some inaugural trivia:
Ronald Reagan's second Inaugural
was the coldest (zero degrea Fahrenheit); Franklin Roosevelt wu the last
president inaugurated 011 Mareh 4
(1933) and the lint president to be in1 augurated Jan. 20 (UIS'I); Warrea
Harding's Inaupral acklreso wu the
first to be amplified; and James Monroe was the last president to wear
knee breaches to his Inaugural. .

The area targeted Thursday
contains several training fil!lds
for the FRC . A 14-year-old boy
was wounded by shattered glass
In the attack, pollee said.
Witnesses said smoke billowed
in the sky-over the stricken area
as ambulances raced to the
scene. ·
Israeli jets struck the same
region late Wednesday, and
police said three people were .
The 50-star U.S. flag was rai* for
wounded )n that o!!enslve.
the
first time on July 4, UI60 at Fort
In Israel, an army spokesman
McHenry
in Baltimore after the ~Oth
said the Israeli air force "at: star had been
added for Hawaii.

$6 89s·

..__.._

airport remained closed.
In other Inland areas of Los
Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties ,
California Highway Patrol offrtcers and local pollee reported
wind-related traffic problems,
including overturned big-rig
trucks and downed trees and
power lines.
The winds were also blamed
for outages that left more than
ij,OOO electrical customers in the
dark. Ail the outages were
·
restored.
A downed power line in the
Orange County community or
Rancho Santa Margarita was
blamed for a brush fire that

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1-13-89

l;jaug1es.

.

STOCK I 84281
STOCK I 89902
STOCK I 40221
• STOCK II 94291

Dust kicked up by the strong
winds also dropped visibility in
several Jntarid areas.
The winds were blamed for
outages that left more than 6,000
electrical customers in the dark.
The National Weather Service
said wlnds were gusting to 90
mph at Laguna Peak above the
Point Mugu Naval Alr Station in
Ventu,ra County and 50 mph at

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799

CHAIRS SAVE 20-70%
lEG.

The staff at Tope's
Furniture Galleries
would like to thank
our customen for
their past
patronage. We look
foward to seving all
y~ det!orating
needs in the future.

I~:·:".JsNow

2995

s0 LD
22
219 5

SAVE

20°/o-50°/o

Point Mugu. There were no
Immediate reports ,of damage in
the area.
The high winds were predicted
to decrease by late Thursday, the
weather service said.
Southern California · Edison
spokesman Kevin Kelley said the
outages began Wednesday afternoon . The largest sfngle outage .
was reported in central Orange
County, where 4,000 Customers
were left without power after an
awning was blown into a power
i in e. Kelley said.

$6 495

Slockt93802, 4cyl.. aircond., PS, PB,
AMIFM radio, gauges.
WAS$2995

1987 FORD E-150 CONVERSION VAN, ~o~~cMcl ......- ....................................
1987 DODGE 150 RAM 7 PASSENGER VAN, loaded .......................... 510,995
· PASSENGER VAN
· · ................:............................ sg ,995
1987 FORD AERO~STAR
1986 PLYMOUTYH VOYAGER PASSENGER VAN ............................ 58,495
1978 FORD E-150 CONVERSION VAN ...........................:.....:....-.............:......... s4,495

.

STOREWIDE
40 Sofas
Drasticaly 1~:
Reduced! l~

Chippendale Sofa .............. sno
. , I (With oak legs. I
Tra d1t1ona
Modified Camel bac:k ........ S729
3 Pc. Sectional............... s1817
3 Pc.
La-Z-Boy Sectionai ........ S1907
Sofa, Chair &amp; Ottbman ..... S1603

S499
$539
5988
51488
$988

(Navy velvet with oak trim)

ALL HAVE BEEN RED.UCED AGA:IN FROM OUR
.
A~READY LOW, LOW PRICE!
HURRY IN WHILE OUR SELECTION IS AT ITS BEST!

&lt; •SIMMONS
•LA-1-BOY
· •STEARNS &amp;
FOSTER
•

10" Ou~tn Sleeper with
Beautrr"t

gr-.

Reg. '598

Sale

monr"'·

499

•

AND
LANE

850
400
299
197
12 5
399
69
150
99
89

ACTION

44

•CUSTOM DRAPERY

.-

•an.oo

$439°0

.NEW SHIPMENT/

LA-Z-BOY
•

599

SERVICE

•CARPET

REG.

I NOW

'249

•FREE DELIVERY
•INTERIOR DEltON

446-0332
- - - - --r-

(Almond &amp; peach. dark wood trim)

·

SWIVEL ROCKERS
3 di!W«rtltylol in.,..., burgund\-.
peKII, deep red. jtdtl

LEl OUR DESIGN SPECIALIST HRP YOU SB.ECT TH£ LOOK FOI YOUR PEISONAL TAST£1

---·-r-- - -- --- -

Contemporary
REG. NOW
Pub Style Sofa .................. S699 S388
Camel Back Sofa ............... S759 S449

·-==..-=o;;... -,

I --::;:-:- .

1/2 OFF

SAVE 30Cifo ON CUSTOM DUPEIY
SAVE 400fe ON CUSTOM 01 IN STOCI .D COVERINGS

(......, of S.Con4 &amp; Grope Str•t
Gallipolis, Olio

.

'•

20°/o To 70°/o OFF

AS MUCH AS

WINTER DRAPERY SALE

GALLERIES

sunny, with' highs In the upper
30s.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday ·;
Partly cloudy Saturday, wtth a·
chance of showers Sunday and
Monday. ·

SALE STARTS 9 A.M. SHARP, JAN. 13, 1989

DELUXE
INNERSPRING
MAniESSESI

1 O~ly Cherry Grandfather clock-Westminster Chimes .................... S750
Cherry Console ·Ent!lrtainment Center 71 x22x42 in ........................ 1429
Party Table &amp; 4 Upholstered Chairs on casters, cherry parquet
.
Top on Table with Cinnamon Fabric Chairs.............................. 2400
Cherry Sideboard with top shelf decorator piece ...................... :...... 1199
Original Oil Painting "Autumn Wood" gold wood frame ................. 650
Accent Chair Flamestitch in rose, green, cream, cherry t.rim ............. 398
Mahogany Plant Stand, Chippendale style ........................ ,................. 250
Bench QuHn Ame Leg, softgreen damask fabric ............................... 562
Floor la,..s, Brass • 4 styles ............................................................... 139
2 Only Wood Top Oak Cedar Chest by Lane ...................................... 349
·2 Only PKan lunching Table .......................................:...................... S349
Picture "Azalea Forest" Gold Frarne .......................:.......................... 199
Seafoam Green Ceramic lamp, brass base, 32" h.....................:....... 198.

FURNITURE

Sou lh f:entral Ohio
Tonight : Cloudy, with rain
likely early then ending. Lows
near 30. Winds northwest 10 to 15
mph. The chance of precipitation
is 60 percent.
1
Friday : Becoming mostly

ALL WITH

ACCENT PIECES
ON
SALE
1 OF A KIND
no. SALE

•

------Weather-----

.JANUARY
CLEARANCE

1982 FORD $. SCORT

1984 NISSAN PICK-$P KING CAB

11

SOFAS

SALE

BEDROOM GROUPS
DINING ROOM GROUPS

.

.

BRAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static . . Occluded
..
WEATHER MAP - During early Friday morning, snow
showers are forecast for parts o! the Pacific ,lllo'rlhwesl and lhe
northern lnlermouolain Region. Rain is forecast for parts of lhe
southern Plains, tbe Gulf Coast Stales, the lower Mississippi.
Val.ley, the lower Ohio Valley and the mid Atlantic Coast Stales. .
Rain Is possible In mostolthesouthernPia[ns with snow possible In •
paris of lhe upper Great Lakes. UPI
·

15 SLEEP

SWIVB. ROCKER ROSE-GIEEN-IlUE-................................... 1575 1199
SEAfOAM GREEN WING CHAIR .............................................. 520 199
HUNTU GREEN OAII WOOD TRIM WING -............................ 450 99
SIIEU BACK DESIGN, ROSE W/WIITE DOT ........................... 540 175
'PllOWIACILOUNGE CHAIR IN GREEN OR ILUE ................. 491 U9

Stock t 9413t, 2 doors, hard top, (:OUpe,
front wheal drive, 4 cyl., ail' cond., auto.
trans .. PS, PB, power door locks, AMIFM
radio, rapial tires, buoketseats, mar window

•

threatened 50 homes and caused
the evacuation of more than 100
people.
A high wind warning also was
posted Thursday for the middle
Rlo Grande · Valley of New
Mexico.
• Flash flood watches were
posted Thursday for southwest
Tennessee, northwest Alabama
and the southwest panhandle of
Virginia , forecasters said, as
recent rains caused rivers and
streams to come close to
over!lowlng,
.
Thundershowers also pelted
the lower Mlssisslppl Valley and
the Tennesse.e ·· Valley early
Thursday, the NWS said .

Thank You!

CAE IACI, Green-Rose Flallllstitch,.................... l1190 588

1985 CHEV.Y S-10 BLAZER
cy;,,

'

including overturned big-rlg
trucks and downed trees and
power lines .

20-70°/o

SAVE

Seat and base are solid peach with
contrasting back pillows in cream
and multi color. 80 '!.:

Stoekt9307t. 2doors, hardtop, frantwilael
~rive, 4 cyl., air cond., auto. trans .. PS, PB,
powerwin'*&gt;w,s, power door lod&lt;s, tiltwilael,
control, AMIFM radio, radial tills.

Stocl&lt; I B25t 2, 2 doors, sedan, front wileal
drive, 4 cyl., PS, PB AMIFM radio, bucket
seats.
WAS $2995

I 94912, station wagon, 6
PS,
AMIFM radio, radial tires, bucket seats,

Beach and Los Angeles International airports.
By early Thursday, the gusts
were down to.50 to70mph, but the
airport remained closed.
The Santa Ana wind gusts also
demolished a Pepsi Slice bllrnb
at the airpOrt, an airport spokeswoman said.
In other inland areas of Los
Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties,
California Highway Patrolo!fficers and local pollee reported
wind-relatep traffic problems •.

PEACH CONTEMPORARY SOFA

..

__ ...

In the wes't vicious winds
knocked out power to thousands
of homes and businesses· In the
Los Angeles, sparking a brushfire that threatened 50 homes and
shuttlng down a suburban
airport.
Winds at' Ontario International
Airport 35 miles east of Los
Angeles were measured at 95
mph, forcing the facility. to shut
down at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Flights were diverted to Long
Beach and Los Angeles International airports.
By early Thursday, the gusts
were down to 50 to70mph, bUtthe

.

1988 FORD MUSTANG .

tacked a terroriSt target belonging to Abu Nidal, northeast of
Sidon. Ail planes returned safely
to base.''
He said the site targeted
"served as a ·planning and
staging base for terror atlacks:"
Israel hit the same target by
air three times last year. In one
or the raids, 12 guerrillas, includ·
1ng eight women, were killed
during a graduation ceremony.
Last year, 150 people were
kllled tn more than 25 Israeli air
strikes, authorities said.

hit by freezing rain as well.

WINTER
CLEARANCE
SALE
0
SAVE 2 •7
/o

•·

Israeli jets strike guerrilla
targets in Lebanon again .
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) I.sraell fighter jets pounded Palestin ia n guerrilll! targetsThun&gt;·
day with rocket lire, the second
such attack In southern Lebanon
in 24 hou rs , police sources said .
The Israeli jets, swooping at
low altitude, attacked thevUlage
of' Bkusta, northeast of the port
city of Sidon and 24 miles south of
Beirut.
The planes fired at least four
rocket~ at a base belonging to the
Fatall·Revolutlonary Council, a
radical Palestinian faction led by
notorious Palestinian leader Abu
Nidal, police said.

..I

Hurricane-type winds hit Southern ·California

Sikh militants
.:kill 13 in
Punjab
.
l

, The assai)ants left a note
saying the four had been slain in
revenge lor the hangings Friday
o! Sat want Singh and Kehar
Singh, tw.o Sikhs condemned for

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Freezing rain makes ·highways nasty in East.

•

AMRITSAR, lnt\Ja (UPI)
Sikh mllltants killed 13 people in
. northern Punjab, including four
Hindu brothershangetllnretallatlon for the executions last week
of two Sikhs convicted of the 1984
assassination of prlnne minister
Indira Gandhi, pollee said
Thursday.
Police reported an upsurge In
statewide attacks by separatist
radicals. whose campaign to
, create an independent Sikh nalion left more than 2,300 people
dead last year.
Polite said 15 gunmen at
midnight stormed four hOuses in
Bhuj Jan wall village, 25 miles
nor l11east of the Sikh holy city of
Amrltsar, and abducted four
Hindu brothers of the high
Brahmin caste. The brothers
we~e identified as Ram Lal,
Tarsem Lal, Dharam Lal and
Yashpal .Lal.
The La! brothers, one of them a
_village headman, were !led up
and marched to the outskirts of
.the remote settlement where
they were hanged from a banyan
tree with nylon ropes, i&gt;ollcesald.
Pollee said villagers in the
morning cut down the bodies.

.1989

· Too late for
our Christmas
REG. S438.00
SaleSALE
PRICED TO
$29900

RECLINERS

SELL!

1988 BEAUTYREST
MATTRESS CLOSEOUT
EVERY MAnRESS IN STOCK DRASTICALLY REDUCED!
ITEMS LISTED ABOVE AVAILABLE AT LIFESTYLE ONLY!
ALL ITEMS CASH &amp; CARRY, THERE WILL BE A SMALL
CHARGE FOR DELIVERY.'

&lt;i*
Corner of

Third and

Daily 9-S
Mon. &amp; Fri.

Olive

Gallipolis

9-8

. 4'46-3045
·&gt;

--------r

,,

�•'

'

..)

')

Thunsday,
'.

•

.

--

Supreme Court c~nsiders
execution of the retarded

The Daily Sentinel .

By The Bend .

Thursday. January 12. 1989

WASHINGTON (UPI)· - The
mentally retarded tack ' 'the
moral culpablUty to ·deserve a
sentence of death," a lawyer for
a Texas prisoner with the IQ of a
7-year-old told the Supreme
Court Wednesday.
But a lawyer for the state of
Texas , Charles Palmer, urged
the· court to uphold . the death
sentence of Johnny Paul Penry,
saying, " It Is .clear he Is fully
aware of the consequences ot his
action."
The arguments came In a case
being closely watched by death
penalty activists around the
country. At Issue Is whethe~ the
Eighth Amendment pro~tlon
from " cruel and unusual punishment" bars Imposition of the
. death penalty against the mentally retarded.
A ruling Is expected by early
July.
· The court has already dealt
with the Issue of execu tlng the
mentally Insane, rullng5-4ln1986
that states must determine that a
convlct ls mentally competent
before kUllng him.
Penry, a 32-year-old man with
the mind of a 7-year-old and the
emotional maturity of a 10-year-

Page- 10

Girl Scout service unit plans annual Thinking Day activities
Plans ar e und erway ·in Meigs
County's Blg Bend East Ser vice
·Unit lor the annual Girl Scout
Thinking Day program io be held
Feb. 25 from 2 io 4 p.m . Last
year's Thinking' Day program
was held at Chester Elementary
and scout leaders hope to hold the
event at Chester again this year.
In making plans at the January
service ·unit · meeting for this
year's Thinking Day program,
Thinking Day's of the past were
• · discussed. A suggestion to use a
· (heater ln the round approach to
Ibis year ' s program was
approved.

Also this year, Black Diamond
Girl Scout Council, which includes Meigs County, wants the
theme of Peace to be incorporated ln Thinking Day, ln keeping
with international Girl Scout
efforts to build all1989 Thinking
.Day programs around peace.
If Thinking Day is held at
Chester, scouts will be permitted
in the building atl2 : 30 to prepare
dlsplllys.
Each troop ln the service 11nlt is
responsible for preparing a finger food, and presenting a game
or song, or other information
from the country which they

represent on Thinking Day , ln
addition to preparing a display
on the country.
The service unit still needs
volunteers to serve as Sustaining
Membership chairman and
summer day camp director. The
day camp director's job wlll be
shared with a co-&lt;llrector from
the Big Bend West Service Unit.
Much planning lS involved lnday
camp and a day long training
session ls scheduled Fe b. 20 In
Vienna, W.Va., Cogar said.
Exhibits for the 1989 Meigs
County Fair must not · Include
names of exhibitors, Cogar an-

and reserve champion awards in
each world for e ach level of the
Gir l Scouting program. These
awards are In addition to the
regular A, Band C premiums.
A' contest to design a Super
Troop patch for Black Diamond
Council is underway and entr ies
should be mailed to the service
center ln Charleston, W.Va. by
Aprll1.
Deadlines for other contests
open to Girl Scouts is Feb. 13 for
the poster and essay 'contest
sponsored by Mothers. Against
Drunk Drivers (M.A.D.D.) , and
March 15 for the Colgate-Pal-

nounced. Therefore, troop leaders wlll have to develop an
lndentl!lcatlon procedure for exhibits. Elimination of names will
help ensure impartial judging,
Cogar said. Leaders wlll also be
required tosubmlta brief evaluation of each project submitted to
the , ~alr by members of their
trojlp.
.
For the first time, fair exhibits
may be submitted ln a sixth
world, theWorldofGirtScoutlng.
This. sixth \¥orld pertains to talr
projects only.
Another change at this year's
fair wlll beth~ awatdlng of grand

mollve Community Ser Vice Progra m Awa rd.
For informa tion on these contes ts, or abou t changes in Meigs
County Fair rules for Girl Scouting, contact Cogar at 992-2668.
Also discussed by leaders at
the January meeting were age
level activities. for combined
Daisy and Brownie troqps in the
servi ce unit, and combined Junior and Cadette troops ln the
service unit. Plans for these
service unit events may be
finalized at the next regular
meeting to be held F eb. 9 at the
Chester Fire Department.

Mom, ..rethink

DALE TEAFORD

DEREK TEAFORD

Teaford birthdays observed
. A party was held in observance Joshua Pape, Jim O'Brien, Denof the second birthdays on Jan . 6 nis Teaford, Ellie Peelle, Aaron,
of Dale and Derek Teaford, . Shirley, Stephanie and Lori
children of Dale and Linda Sayre, Sheila, Jenni and MatTeaford.
thew Arner, and Somer and
• A Big Bird theme was carried Timmy Wickersham.
out with two Big Bird cakes being
Sending ,cards and gifts were
served With other refreshments. Rex and Mary O'Brien , other
Attending the party were the great-grandparents of the
. youngster's younger brother, twins, Raymond _Adams, and
Darin, their grandparents, Larry Kenda and Kelly Rizer, Clarence
and Phyllis O' Brien , and Dale and Gladys Weddle, Ronnie and
and Wanda Teaford. great- Cookie Salser, Jack and Pearl
-grandparents, Bob and Flor- Adams, Earl and Doris Adams,
ence Adams , and Carol and Boone and Carolyn Adams.

Dear ADD LaDders: May I
comment on the letter from the
mother of the 11-year-old obese
child with the rash between her
thighs? She was furious with the
doctor's nurse who said, "The
trouble with this chlld ls that she
lS too fat."
Both ~Y mother and my sister
were grt!&gt;ssly obese. When Mom
died at '46, she weighed at least
450 pounds. My sister weighed
160 pounds when she was 6 years
old. She Dow weighs at least 400
·pounds. Many specialists have
said there Is no medical reason
for my sister's obesity.
Perhaps I didn't end up obese
because my sister used to eat
most of my meals. Mom catered
to her because "Sis" could never
run or play like other children.
Kids can be cruel, so Mom
overcompensated.
Sis Is now a very unpleasant
adult. In the last two years she
has broken three chairs to my
dinette set. We've had many
arguments because she sneaks
food from my cupboards and eats
out of the pots on the stove.
Parents who stuff their children so they grow up so fat that
they can't live normal lives
should be charged with child

'.

to whom the contestant is
related ls to be sent to Marcia
Guess, Box 241 , Tuppers Plains.
Additional information may be
obtained by calling Mrs. Guess,
i\67-6513 or Shirley Harris,
985-4481.
The contest Is being sponsored
by the Auxiliary to the Post, Rose
Carr, president.
per~on

UMW conduas recent meeting
"'Looking Back and Looking
Ahead" was the title of the group
discussion when Pomeroy United
Methodist Women meet at the church Tuesday evening.
Bernice c;u-penter' president.
led the dlsc~sslon which -featured
accomplishments and activities
of 1988 a nd goal and projects
planned for 1989.
Dorothy Downie. devotional
leader read fr om Gen. 1 and
talked on the theme, "The

Wokmen Aware-Talking to
God" noting how to make use of
and take full advantage of all five
senses. The group sang "For the
Beauty of the Earth " and closed
with a prayer circle.
Duvlng the business meeting
committee reports were given
and the least coin was collected
by J ackle Hlldebrand. A total ·of
162 sick and shutin vl5lts were
repor ted. A cookie exchanged
was enjoyed by those attending.

TOPS gathers for meeting
Kay Morris was the best loser
and Ola Sinclair. Virginia Dean,
and Ruth Dugan tied for runner-up at the Tuedsay night
meeting of TOPS 570.
Mrs. Sinclair also won the fruit
basket and the surprise gift. At
las t week's meeting Gertrude
Casto was . the top loser, and
.

.

Sy lvta N ee ce was the
runner-up.
Lennie Aleshire presided at the
meeting which opened with a
prayer and pledge to the flag.
Mrs. Dean read "The Brick
Layer'·'

and Maida Long also had a
reading.

Harrisonville happenings
Mr. and Mrs . Oble Coomer,
Bourbonnais, Ill. ~ Mrs. Geneva
McElroy and Richard, Lion, IlL ;
Miss Helen King, Athens, Ga. ;
Miss Grace King, Mansfield; Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Felts, Meredith,
Meldoy and Mlcha€'1 of Sway
Island, Africa; Mr. and Mrs.
Courtney Wllllams of Portsmouth were holiday visitors of.

Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and Mr.
and Mrs. David King.
Mr. and Mrs. Kleth Plummer
of Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lee
of Mansfield, Phillip Smith,
Darlene and Tract Casto, Scott
Kaiser, Pomeroy and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Jewell and Cheryl
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Paull¥ Atkins.
.
Robert Gibson and Robin of
Columbus were Saturday visitors ot Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mrs. Lois Hamilton aDd son of
The Women's Department of · Nashville, Tenn. spent a week
the Reorganized Church of Jesus with her pareDts, Mr. aDd Mrs.
Christ of Latter Day Saints wlll Millard Christian recently.
meet Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. at the
church.
Tree pickup
The regional conference was
RACINE - Christmas trees
held at McArthur Sunday and will be . picked up ln Racine
those attending from the church Village on Thursday morning.
were Anna McHaffle, Juanita Residents are asked to take trees
Wells, JaniCe Danner, Eula Prof- to the curb. This wlll be the only
fitt, and Lucy T_aylbr.
day for tree pick up In Racine.

Meeting_ set
forWS

their eyes bulge.
Good drivers should be relaxed
yet alert, ready for an unexpeeled move by another drl~er.
Please remember that driving Is
not a social occasion. When you
drive, shut up. And shut up the
children, your friends and the
dog. Big packages belong In the
trunk, don't talk on the phone or
try to drink a cup of coffee or eat
-a cinnamon roll while driving In
heavy traffic.
With a blt of luck and common
sense, you 'll get from here to
there alive. Sign me - 40,000
Miles Without au Accident (And
mostty on tbe Dan Ryan Ell pressway - Clllcago)
Dear Daa: I wish everyone on
the Dan Ryan Expressway drove
· like you. Ditto for the San Diego
Freeway and the New Jersey
Turnpike. Thanks for the wise
counsel. ·
Deu Aan Landers: A stranger
·approached me at the super·
market today and said, "Trlplets! How can you stand It?"
and then walked off.
Every time I go out with my
three well-behaved children
someone makes an uncalled-for
comment such as, " My God, I
sure feel sorry for you!" or "You

Ann

THURSDAY
STIVERSVILLE - The Stlversvllle Community Word of
Faith Church will meet Thursday
(Jan 12) at 78 p.m. with Dwight

·pastor, invites the public.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta, Sigma Phi
Sorority wlll meet at '7: 30 Thursday at the Grace Episcopal
Parish House.
CHESTER- The Shade River
Lodge 453, Chester, will met In
regular session, Thursday, 7: 30
p.m. All Masons invited.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
RUTLAND - Youth revival
services will be held Thursday, 7
p.m., at Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church; · Friday, 7 p.m., at
Mission Church, Syracuse; and ·
Sunday, 7: 30 p.m. , -at Ash Street
Free Will Baptist Church, Middleport. A pizza party will be held
alter the Saturday evening service. Co.- sponsor of the revival
ls Rutland Church of God . All
youth welC\)me.
RACINE Southern Band
Boosters will hold their monthly
meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m., In
the high school band room.
Parents of all band students In
the dlstrlct,are
_. urged to attend.

by Country Blend. Everyone
welcome.
SATURDAY
,
RACINE - Round and square
dancing will be featured Saturday, 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, at
Racine American Legion. Music
by True Country Ramblers.
Everyone welcome.

have my sympathy. dear." It
burns me up:
How should I respond to these
Insensitive, rock-headed fools? I
need to express my outrage, but I
don ' t want to upset my darllng
younsters. - Sandra H. In La
Grange, Ky.
Dear Sandra: The best response Is a broad smile and a·
positive comment su~h as
"These are wonderful c~lldren.
We feet blessed."

'MAJOR SUCCESS' - Surseon General C.
. Everett Koop muks the 2Sih annlveraary of the
report llnklDg amokiDgwlth death at a Wednesday
press conference. Koop released the report of

How .much do you know about
pot , cocain e, LSD, PCP. crack.
speed and down ers? Think you can
handle them ? For up-to-the minute
information on drug•. write for
Ann Lander•' newlv &lt;fevUed booklet,. 1"Th e Lowdo ~n on Dope."
Send 13 plus a self-addre.,ed ,
stamped buain eu-&amp;i:e envelope (45
ccnt.t pouage) to Ann Landers. P.O.
Box 11 562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562.

'

.

Drinking may disrupt breathing

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Sev eral shots of liquor or mixed
drinks before bedtime can
trigger serious breathing problems ln otherwise healthy men
- who snore, researchers reported
Wednesday.
A study by the Scripps Clinic
Sleep Disorders Center In La
Jolla, Calli., found snorers who
drank "moderate" amounts of
alcohol wlthln an hour of bedtime
had double the normal number of
Incidents In whiCh breathing
stops for at least 10 seconds.
During such a stoppage, called
sleep apnea. a person's blood
oxygenleveldrops,andtheheart
Is prone to rhythm disorders and
may ln severe cases stop beating:
In a study In a journal called
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, the Scripps
team gave orangejulcewlth 5 to6
ounces of vodka to each of six
healthy middle-aged males who
snored but had no other sleeprelated complaints shortly before bedtime. .
·
The drinks raised the men's
blQOd-alrohol level to about 70
wrcent of California's legal
drjvlng llmlt of 0.10.
The drinking snorers .experienced an average of 10 to 12 of
the brief breathing stoppages an
hour, compared to about zero to
five an 1\our for a normal person,
researchers said.
When the test subjects were
given orange juice with only two
drops of vodka, their breathing
.

POMEROY - Round and
square dancing, Friday, 8 to 11
p.m. , the Pomeroy Sen lor Clti- ·
zens Center. Music by True
Country Ramblers. Admission
$2. Everyope welcome. Bring
snacks.
MIDDLEPORT - Round
dancing, Friday, 8 p.m. to 12
midnight, at the American Legion Annex In Middleport. Music

and slow danCing will be held at
the Ell Denison Post 467, American Legion, Rutland. There wlll
be a live band imd refreshment
stand.

531 JACKSON PIKE
ROOTE 35 WEST .
446-4520

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CRUISE

RAIN MAN

PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.
Mason-Gallla-Melgs Crusade for
Christ wlll hold services through
Sunday , Jan. 15, 7 p.m. each
evening, at th~ Church of Christ
In Christian Union, Main St. ,

ill

STARTS TOI«)RRQW !

''

7•00 I 9•20"" lllllll .

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A "commitm~nt to providing
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FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Association of Township
)'rustees and Clerks will meet
Friday, 7 p.m. , at the Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - Square, round

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Daniel R. Trent, D.O

YOUIIIDEPIIDERY
AGDTS SllntG
MillS C0111111'

138 Main St., New Haven, West ~irginia • (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center
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BLUFFTON, Ohio (UPI)
Bluffton College has approached
the half way point of Its threeyear, $6 . million fund raising
campaign that wlll help mark tl)e
northwestern Ohio college's 90th
anniversary In 1990.
Martha Nelson, a spokeswoman for the Allen County college,
said 'pledges totaling 68 percent
of the $6 million campaign have
been received, including greater
than expected grants from various private foundations.
' The money will be used to
strengthen Bluffton College's
scholarship and faculty endow- ,
ments . and Improve campus
programs,
.
ABC newsman Hugh Downs,
who at ten &lt;~!'!I Bluffton College ln
1938-39, Is the campai'gn' s honorary chairman·. ·
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condition, but doctors said she •. .. -·
.....
will need another transplant.
• .&lt;
"They had a new heart they :. :
were going to give her last · : ·:
Thursday night but It dldn ·t · • •
match," Ray Ashlock, Donna' s . : :
father, said Tuesday. "They are -:: ;,:
still looking for the right heart." ~ : •
Donna , who will be 18 on April • • '
1, ·has been studying at home this • ::.;
school year and still hopes to
graduate from high school wi th
her class this spring.
She Is fully ·aware that her
transplanted heart is not working
properly .
" I think I'll be better offwlth a
•••
new one," she said.

MOOSE MEMBERS
&amp;W.O.T.M.

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Join your friends and dance lhe
nigltt away to the entertaining
music of GEORGE HALL at the
Organ.
SUNDAY, 'JAN. 15
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW
.
CAll 675-1880
Delicious Bullet Dinner-$6.00
Dance to your all-time favorites
· 6:00-10:30 p.m.

* NEW EXPANDED SERVICE *
"FREE DELIVERY"
TO THESE AREAS
MIDDLEPOU, POMEROY, IIADIUIY, MINERSVILLE,
RUTLAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W.VA.
OIIIIS IISY II PIIOIIII IJIIEFOIE 3 P.M.

FREE DEUVOY ON AU PIESCIIPliONS, IF YOU DON'l
NEED A PIESCIIPTION WI WIU DEUVEI ANYTHING IN .
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STOlE HOUIS: Man.·Fri. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.; Saturday 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
H2·6669
.DILIPOI1, OHIO

271 NODH SECOND

.-

The Daily Sentinel

Family Practice

SliCE 1161

suspends exercises ~ear Libya

Bluffton College
at half way point
fund raising

beating mechanically until he
could be flown to San Francisco
for the transplant ope,ration. '
Everything seemed to be going
well, and Donna, then 15, returned home, went back to high
school and resumed a life only
slightly more restricted than
those of her classmates.
Garza's family moved away
after burying their son. The town
council named a park after the
boy who gave hls heart for love.
Except formonthlyvislts to the
.San Francisco hospital for checkups and· the dally doses of
anti-rejection drugs, llfe was
nearly normal for Donna.,
But late last month she dld not
feel well, and the doctors found
that her
heart had been
permanently damaged by her
body's attempts to reject lt.
Nancy Millhouse, a spokesw.onlan at San Francisco's Pacific
Presbyterian Medical Center,
said lt Is noi unusual for a body to
reject a transplanted organ, even
after several years.
.
"In five to 10 percent of the
cases, there Is chronic rejection," Mlllhouse said . "She
(Donna.) has been through a lot
the past three years."
Medication has stabilized her

'
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We Deliver ....'.
Your newspaper ... daily

DOWNING CHILDS

CE
111 Slc11d St.. Pomeroy

from chron_lc sleep apnea.
But he said the California study
was the flrstt.olookat the effects
of moderate alcohol consumption
on otherwise healthy snorers whOm he defined as people who
snore loudly in all steeping
positions or those whose snoring
Is Irregular with breathing
·
pauses.
Dr. Boris Tabkoff, science
director at National Insdtute of
Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse,
said that In light of the study,
people who snore should be
aware tqat "although they may
think alcohol helps them go 10
sleep, It also has ad\!erse con~­
quences on their breathing."
Dr. Andrew ) amleson, associate medical director of SleepWake Disorder Center at Presbyterian Hospital of· Dallas, said he
was not surprised by the latest
findings . Jamieson said he advises people with sleep apnea to
avoid drinking alcohol after 6
p.m.
"Most people who are snorers
are policed by their bed partners
to avoid taking alcohol ln the
evening hours. If they do drink, .
they are going to be sleeping
alone," said Jamieson, nodng
drinking generally Increases the
volume and duration of snoring.
The Scripps team dld not look
at how drinking affects the
nighttime breathing of nonsnorers, but are planning a study
to examine that Question. ·

PATTERSON, Call!. (UP!) A teenage glr I has broken the
heart of tile boy who loved her so
much he gave her a life-saving
transplant, and _she wlll need
another operation to replace the
rejected organ.
Doctors learned last month
that the heart Donna Ashlock
received from Fellpe Garza Jan.
4, 1986 has been permanently
damaged by the repeated attempts of Donna's body to reject
lt.
Garza died at 15 of a broken
blood vessel In his brain, just a
few days after he told his mother
that he had had a premonition of
death and that he wanted his
heart to go to Donna. Th~glrlhad
learned a year earller that she
would require a transplant.
Although they had only casu- .
ally dated, Garza told his mother
that lle loved Donna, and knowIng she was sick and needed a
transplant, offered .hls own
heart. His wish was · fulfilled
when doctors kept his heart

. WASHINGTON (UP!) - The week.
had been filed with Libyan
United States has cancelled
The cancellation comes during officials ln Tripoli that the
planned naval exercises near the .a period of.lnternatlonal concern exercises were to be conducted,
Llb)ran coast and moved them to over U.S. threats to attack what
Pentagon officials said. On Tuesanother part of the Mediterra- It alleges ls a chemical weapons· day, Libya's ambassador to the
nean amid International fears of plant In Rabta , Libya, 35 miles
United Nations, AU A. Trelld,
U.S. aggression, Pentagon offi- southwest of Tripoli. Libya In- disclosed the Nav;y's exercise
cials said Thursday.
sists the plant makes
plan and called lt provocative,
The alr combat and missile- pharmaceuticals.
Tensions between Libya and
firing exercises are part of what
the Pentagon has called "rou- the United States have been high
tine" training missions to ease since two Navy F-14s shot down
the transition ln the area of one two Libyan MIG -23s Jan . 4. The
U.S. aircraft carrier battle group two F -14s were based on the
to another.
·
Kennedy.
The United N allons considered
"The U.S. Sixth fleet had
Issued a notice of intent to a resolution Wednesday deplorconduct flight operations In inter- .ing the downing of the two Libyan
national alr space and waters In jets, but a triple veto by the
the central Mediterranean Jan. United States, Brlt,a ln and
16 and 17," Pentagon spokesman France blocked its passage.
Maj. Wllllam O'Connell said
A routine "Notice to Airmen"
Thursday.
"Those plans have changed
and · the notice has been rescinded," he S!lld. "We expect the
operations to be conducted ln
another part of the
Mediterranean."
• The exercise was to Involve
ships and planes from both
13-shlp battle groups, otflclals
said. The group led by the carrier
USSJohnF. Kennedy Is completIng Its six -month deployment In r
the Mediterranean and Is to be '
For advertising or subscription information call (614) 992·2156
replacced by the carrier · l]SS
Theodore Roosevelt later this

"

MUWN MUSSER

stoppages were similar to a
norrnalperson.
.
Most breathing dlsturban~es
occurred In the two hours after
the alcohol was consumed. After
that, the effects of the alcohol
diminished and breathing patt·
erns Improved.
·'Drinking Isn't good for these
people w~o snore. It changes
people who have
them ln
perlndlc'b eathlng problems du ring sleep," Merrill Miller, the
study's chief author, said ln a
telephone interview.
"We didn't see anything that is
life-threatening," he said. "But
in extreme forms, (sleep apnea)
Is life-threatening. It can trigger
epileptic seizures, heart attacks
and stroke."
• Mltier said further research is
needed to determine exactly how
alcohol disrupts breathing. He
theorized the problem may be
caused by depressive action on
the central nervous system,
relaxation of the throat muscles
that keep the·airways open or by
a lack of coordination between
throat muscles and breathing.
Bu.t the sleep researcher said
simple snoring does not mean a
person has a breathing problem.
"Someone can snore beautifully
all night and never have one
pause," he said.
Mltler said previous studies
have shown larger· amounts of
alcohol aggravate th!' condition
of people already known to suffer

~

. your family ..
with quality health care.

That's what Dr. Dan Trent is bringing to the people' of the Bend
Area with the establishment of his private medical practice in the
former Bend Area Mepical Center. lt's the same commitment he's
made al Pleasant Valley Hospital,' where he's been an Emergency
Care Center physician for the pas~)four years and where he will
continue as an active member of the Medical Staff.
·
. A West Virginia native, Dr. Trent graduated from Marshall
University with a degree in biological and general science. He earned
his medical degree from the--West Virginia School of Osteopathic
Medicine in 1983, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
City Osteopathic Hospital in Michigan before re-locating with his
family, wife Linda and children Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
Dr. Trent is looking forward to bringing a continuity Of care to
his patients and their families. and working with the community for
the good health and welfare of all its residents.
Appointments and walk-ins are welcome from 9 a.m . to 5 p .m.
Monday. Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and 9 a .m. to noon
Wednesday .
,.

anti-smoking successes and called lor reslrlclloD8
on cigarettes · and called the an II· smoking
campaign a "major public success story." (UPI)
~

Phone

Modern
BURLINGHAM .Woodmen of America Camp 7230
is having a dinner meeting on
Saturday. 6: 30 p.m. , at Modern
Woodmen Hall ln Burlingham.
The Camp will furnish different
kinds of soups and crackers and
coffee. Members are asked to
bring a salad and dessert. A
drawing will be held for family
door prize. Bring a friend.

I

Point Pleasant, W.Va. Special
singing and speakers. Everyone
welcome.

deatp penalty.
old, contends that he should not
''Regardless of whet.her he !Its
be held ·fully responsible for hls
within a clin ical definition of
crime.
" How can somebody with th e retardatlotl', his status is suc h
reasoning capaballlty of a 7- that he knew what he was doing, "
year-old be determined .to have Palmer said.
the moral culpiib[Uty to deserve · Penry was sentenced to die fo r
a sentence of death?" hls at tor- the Oct. 25, 1979, murder of
ney, Curtis Mason, asked the Pamela Carpenter of Livingston,
Texas. In a confession to pollee,
court.
·Penry
said he raped Carpenter
Mason said the court should set
a mental age, " like 7," under and then sat on her chest while h e
- which the death penalty wlll not stabMd her 1 with a pair of
be allowed, adding that lt Is scissors she had been using to
easier to determine clinical re- make Halloween decorations .
Evid ence Introduced at trial
tardation than insan \ty.
Insanity and ' retardation are- showed P enry' s IQ falls someconsidered vastly different men- where betwere 50 and 63, which
tal defects. The former describes • suggests he has the mind of a
a treatable coodltlon ln which a child of 6 or 7, and the social
person Is out of touch with maturity of a chlld of 8 to 10.
On Tuesday , the NAACP Legal
reallty, the latter refers to
sub-average Intellectual Defense and Education Fund
released the results of a Harris
functioning.
Penry's appeal also contends poll conducted last summer ,
that Texas law governing jury which found that 7 out of 10
Ins tructloll$. In capital cases Americans oppose the death
precluded the jury from properly penalty for reta rded prisoners
taking Into account his retarda- lll&lt;e Penry.
Fund spokeswoman Tanya
lion as a mitigating factor .
Palmer argued thai the jury Coke said lt 1s not known how
that senten~d Penry to death many of the nation's 2,200 death
was aware of his retardation and row prisoners. but ''the fact that
determined he still deserved the there are a ny is alarming to us."

,Teen girl b~eaks the heart boy·
gave h~r; another organ needed

Caie'11d4r

l
VFW plans frfiss Va entine event ~~::';~~~:~~~~~-~~;yu~~~ie~~

A Miss Valentine contest will
be held lor family merniJers of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Pos t 9053, TuJ?pers Plains, on
Feb . 12.
Any girl ages 1 to 19 may
participat e as long as they have a
grandfather. father, grandmother or mother belonging to
the pos t. The name, address,
phone number. age and name of

abUse. The nurse In that doctor's
office Is right. The 'lhother who
wrote refuses to face her daughter's real problem. Pray that she
will before It gets bigger than just
a rash. I'm taking about heart
disease, high blood pressure and
early death, not to mention
everyday nuisances . such as
dlfflculty buying clothes and
shoes, fitting into · desks at
schools, theater seats and so on.
- Ohio Sister
Dear Ohio: I agree with you
although many readers did not.
The ones who were critical of the
nurse were all mothers of overweight children. It figures. I hope
your letter will get them · tO
rethink this issue for their
children's sake.
Dear Ann Landers: You once
wrote: "Drive as though everyoneelseontheroadlsamanlac
or drunk." I see your point, but
let's face lt. We live In an
automobile-dominated world.
Frightening the hell out of the
drlver won't help.
You see them every day ,
up-tight people hunched up with
the white-knuckled grasp that
the Instructor taught them. They
are so tense that the veins on
their foreheads " stand out and

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Ohio

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. Page-12-Th,~ Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, January 12. 1989

ffiM Korea target of union huriger strike

Suit ·says Bibles should be ·taxed

·-·

RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -The
North Carolina Clvtl Liberties
Union flied a federal lawsuit
contesting the constitutionality
of a .state law that exempts )he
Bl ble from sales tax.
The suit was filed after Brian
L. Rubl!l, now a lawyer In
Washington, balked at paying
sales tax on a copy of the. Old
Testament at a Durb,am bookstore while attending Duke Law
School.
In the suit, Rubin says he was
told that he had to pay the tax on
copies of the Old or New
Testament but he would not have .
• to If he bought them combined In
a Bible.
"It's.Important for a number of
' reasons," Rubin said of the suit.
.. ' 'Through the exemption,' the
state Is treating the Holy Bible
differently from any other book, .
whether It's another sacred text

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"The ACLU Is trying to swal·
of another religion or any book at
low a camel and strain at a grult,
all.
"Therefore, the state Is treat· to use a Biblical quote," the Rev.
!ng books and lde&lt;~s and ex pres· Thomas J. Vestal of the Mount
slons differently bas!ld solely on Olivet Baptist Church In Raleigh
their content," he said. "Add!· told the News and Observer of
t!onally, ft seems that It 's an Raleigh.
exercise of religious preference
Among the five plaintiffs Is
for Christianity over other W.W. Flnlator of Raleigh, a
rellglorts." ·
retired Baptist minister and a
The exemption, In effect since member of the national advisory
1939, lists the Bible and other ·board lor the ACLU.
Items, such as false ieeth,
"It's the Idea of the Bible
eyeglasses and baby chicks, as having a prlvtleged position
being exempt from the state within the state, which Is repug·
sales tax.
nant to anyone who believes In
The state Justice Department church-state separation and
has ruled the exemption applies basic; equity," Flnlator · said.
to all religious scriptures, but the . ' 'Why should the Bible be exempt
suit says bookstpres only exempt and a good novel not exempt?"
the Chris tlan Bible.
. The other plaintiffs Include
The department's exemption members of the Jewish, Hlndn
as It applies to all religious and Hare Krishna faiths who had
scriptures Is constitutional, said to pay sales tax to buy scriptures
George W. Boylan, a special associated with their rel!g!ou~
deputy attorney generaL
beliefs.

·,M urder case probes mental ·states
I

.

.

Joel
Steinberg's murder case has
focused on the mental stales of
both the accused chfid killer and
.his ex-lover, Hedda Nussba\lm,
with thedefenseseek!ngtoprove
. Nussbaum faked her reported
' psychiatric problems.
Steinberg was expected Thurs·
day afternoon to resume his own
examination by a prosecution
psy·c h!atrlst, · Dr. Martin .
Brecher. The exam· began Wed·
riesday
and could either strengSchool of Government brief reporters on recent
RARE APPEARANCE - In a rare public
appearance Wednesday, the fanner Secretary of
disclosures by the Soviets of their role In the 198! then or des troy Steinberg's chan·
;ces for pursuing an Insanity
Cuban missile crisis. (UPI)
Defense Robert McNamara and several re·
·defense.
·
- searchers from Harvard Unlverslly's Kennedy
In Steinberg's second-degree
·murder trial, the defense
planned Thursday to call a
,psychiatrist, Dr. Azarlah Eshkenazl, who reviewed Nussbaum's
medical records. He was ex·
,peeled to testify that Nussbaum
has been hospitalized Improperly
In psychiatric units for more than
a year.
·
Steinberg's attorney, Ira Lon·
LANSING, Mich. (UP!)- The knife-wielding woman, accord·
good job oflt. It's a garish thing.;, '
· sta te Cor.r ectlons Department lng to pollee reports.
When asked whether· the key don, earlier this week told state
, has suspended the warden of the
Jones left the Pitts' apartment was lost at Pitts' apartment, her Supreme Court Acting Justice
Huron Valley Men's FacUltY In with pollee on Dec. 17 after attorney, Wendell Jacobs, said: , Harold Rothwax that Eshkenazl
Yps!lanti for losing the prison's getting fresh clothing, and cor· ' 'Theonly thing I can say is that's considers Nussbaum a "malin·
master key, possibly durtng an rectlons officials said they be- a speculatiOn on the prison's gerer" and a "fraud" who faked
her mental condition to avoid
:altercation with a female guard lieve the key was Jost with his part."
.
who later stabbed him.
original clothing. None of his
Pitts Is scheduled for arraign· prosecution and to drum up j urQr
Travis Jones, 49, was placed on Jones' belongings was reco- ment on Jan. 18 In Jackson sympathy.
Both Nussbaum and Steinberg
Indefinite suspension without vered, said Capt. Daniel Heyns of County Circuli •Court on charges
were arrested In the death of Usa
pay last week, but the announce- the Jackson County Sheriff's of assault with Intent to do gn!at
Steinberg, the 6-yellr-old child
. men! was notmadeunt!IWednes· Department.
·
bodlly harm and carrying a
they
raised but never adopted.
day. His attorney described the
Pitts, who has been suspended concealed weapon. She Is free on
But Nussbaum's charges were
'bizarre situation as "a 'Fatal from her job at the Cotton $5,000 bond.
dropped In October 1988 after
.Attraction' kind of thing" be. Regional Facility In Jackson,
prosecutors said she also was
tween Jones and the guard, Sgt. !aces felony charges stemming
abused by Steinberg. ,
·Olivia Pitts. 42.
from the Jan. 3 stabbln~ Incident,
Nussbaum, "whose seven days
· Corrections Department off!· which occurred at a service cameraman
of testimony against Steinberg
c!als have not decided whether to station in Jackson. Jones told
.replace a 11 the -locks Inside the police Pitts had followed him to
'4 70-bed maximum-security pri·
VANCOUVER, British Colurn·
the station and stabbed him with
son, which would cost between
a 6-lnch knile when he got out of bla (UPI) - World heavyweight
boxing champion Mike Tyson
$40,000 and $65,000, said depart· his car.
ment spokeswoman Gall Light.
attacked
a television camera·
Jones, who Is married and has
The master key unlocks all four chlldren, denies having a man Wednesday night In · the
Interior doors, Including ce!ls,
sexual relationship with Pitts, hotel where his estranged wife,
llut does not unlock the prison's said"his attorney, Richard Hltt.
Robin Givens, Is filming a movie,
weapons arsenal or exterior
Hitt said Jones was counseling witnesses said.
doors, she said . .
News reporters said Tyson,
Pitts, who Is divorced and whom
- ''The supposition Is that the he had known lor 10 years. He who flew to Vancouver !rom Las
key was not lost Inside the said Jones was naked In Pitts' Vegas where he Is training for a
Jnstltution. but Is floating around
apartment because he had been fight, threw a photographer's
'Somewhere outside the prison,"
camera 10 feet and knocked a
served spiked wine.
,Light said.
''It appears he was slipped a television camera to the lnoor,
Jones was suspended Jan: 3, mickey," Hilt told the Detroit kicking three-times at thecamer·
the same day he was stabbed in News. " He obviously over· aman as he fled down a corridor
.the back by the guard and two extended htmselfln trying to help of the Vancouver Hotel.
• :weeks after pollee responded to a a colleague. It's a 'J,"atal AttracPollee said they were aware of
call .from the woman's apan- tion' kind of thing.
the Incident and that Tyson
t
ment, where Jones was found
"She set out to bring down the would be questioned about It
naked and struggling with the warden, and she's done a very Thursday.
'

· ~:Warden

NEW YORK (UP!) -

contained some of the most
damaging evidence against him,
hasbeenaresldentofpsychlatr!c
hospitals since the child 's death
In November 1987.
London said the disbarred
millionaire lawyer· "was asked
questions and gave answ~ r&lt;" to
Brecher durtng a thr•' •·· hour·

examination Wednesday with the
prosecution-psychlatf!St. London
said the exam took place In a
' 'hot, alrless" room on the 12th
floor of the Manhattan Criminal
Court Building.
.
Defense lawyers declined to
reveal whether Steinberg balked
"~ P.rPrher's questions.
·

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ATTENTION:
ALL PC·S CARD. HOLDERS
Swisher .and . Lohse
Pharmacy will fill
prescriptions· on all PCS
Cards~ You only pay your
co-payment.
WE WILL BILL PCS FOR ·THE
BALANCE

prison's master key in altercation

._____
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Pet-.

UnltiiiXCeplionureflltd
, thereto, ssld accounts wHI

'

Hch•v.a

.

.9-19-81 tin

50°/o
.TO 75°/o

coNsnucnON

OWIIa "10 I. IGUII

t.t~

QENEIIAL
COIITIIACTORS
IRIDOTIAI.
COIIEICIAI.

•

Merchanl11sr.

·

Witlt Approvlll.Crorllt.
D~

Jutr

.....

HIWIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

GUYS¥111, OliO
614-6.Z-S121

SUPPUES

SALIS &amp; SIIYICE
u. s.n. so un

992·7611

.... &amp;llnlto

Employmf:nl
Serv1ces
1 1 -Help Wented
12- Situation Wanted
13-lnaurance
14-Busin•• Treining

15-Sehools lit Instruction
16- Aadib. TV 1o CB Repa4r
17- Miscellaneous

21 - Butln•• Oppa"uni1'r'
22-Man..,. to Loan
23-Profeuion_. S•vices

l;!!tlll!ll!ll
S:. ·

31 -Hom• fer
32-MabUeHom• for Sale

33-Farma for Sale
34-Buain•• Building~

35- lots &amp; Acreage
38- Aeal Estate WIW'Ited

IRQ IIIli
41-Housea for Rent
42- Mobile Hom• for Rent
43-Farma for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
46-Furnlshed Rooms
46-Space for Rent
47- W..,ted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For

le••

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
thot on Saturday, Jonuary
14. 1989. 11 10:00 a.m .. 1
public ule will be held at
1 06 Union Avenue. Pom·
troy. Ohio. to 1111 lor c11h
the following collateral:
I 988 ChevroiOI Covoll• S#
1 G1JC89POF7201422.
The Fermera Bank and
Sovinga Compony, Pam·
oroy, Ohio, r . - thll
right to bid at thio ule. end
to withdraw the above colla-

teral prior 10 ule. Further.
The Fermer• Bank and SavIng• Comp.ny reaMYM thll
right to roject any or ell bidll

aubmltted.
Further. the above collattrol will be aold In the con·

Inc. Pomeroy, Olllo.

4

Glv81Wf1Y

Modorit·G"" Suppliw

. G- · Anttnt • Slop
t2 Ammo
·
lit. 124 E•t of Rutland
Acrwo Hippy -Rood

.... , •• 742-!355
t/20/tln t ..o.

'Jn-.

4 Janaholroll
e wJco. o111.
Colt 114-21.1114.
.

II.,. Lob pu- to,...,..,..,,
Colt 114-21...11804, 21141-1317
or281-HIO.

Mtll....,."llufltlllw

Authorized Johft
O..e, New Hottond,
Buah Hog Farm
Equpment Dealw.

I • 1·1&amp;-lfn.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

·e 1-Farm Equipment
82-WMt•d to Buy
83-Livettodl

64-Hey • Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertllz.er

Tr~nsportolllln

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6100 P.M.
HOWES GlOVE PARK
......... Oltie

71 -Aut01 for Sale
72-Trucks fGr Sel•

COIISIGIIIENTS WRCOMl

73-V••••wo·,
,74-.Motorcyel•

75-Boats 6 Motora tor Sale
76-Auto P•ts • Acc•101l•
77-Auto Repair
78- Cemping Equlpmtnt
79-C•mpws &amp; MotOt' Hom11

PATIICI H. ILOSSEI
AUcnONEER
PH. 304-421·7245

3yoar old moltlrtttlany lp .. JII
to goad
Good with
chlldr.._ Ph0nt814-lll-4407.

""mo.

,.,........... e - h o old.

colt

,.,!

Frw

e woolc old

6

Lolt and Found

83 - bc.,•tlng
84-Eiectricel &amp; Aefrlg•ation
85-Gtnlfel Hauling
86-Mobilt Home Aepllr

87-Upholattty

Business
Services

•Doaer • hck- Work
•WIH Do Houtlng With
Dump Truck
•Wreck• Borvice .
•Junk Y•d Bu-s
WANT TO IUY W•CIED 01
JUNI CAliS 01 TIUCIS

-Fill ES111ATISfor lillY tf ,.,..
col

•••lni

..,...........·• ,.. ...

614-742-2617
•

llaYtMIII~

t;:=;;:;;::;;:;=::;1 r--------"'1
EUM HOME

.· -

Senlot-

&amp; •---' F-

....-. Cltl1- and

llaft.CII.....

GUN SHOOT
IACINE ·
PilE DE".

..............ng
EVDY

Good Rotll
T.L.C.
28 Yra. bp.
Raferen-

SAT. NIGHT

992·6173

Jot or Pauley hw'-1
209 South 4th St.
•••• ,.. t, Oh.
"IDW INCCIIU IICNII"

6:30 ....
Otlkt

12 Ciatlll
Strktly

Only

SEIYICE

1 MI. last ef St. lt. 7
011 IU at Ch11ter
WELDING
AUTOio
REPAIR
BODYio
REPAIR

985·3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE

. WANTED

DEAD 01 AUVE

.... t.-tiort:
161 lllrth Socerrd
Middl...... 111!1• 45760

•Drv••

•W11here
•Rengea •FteeZII'I
•Riifrigerator•
"Must ...........

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FOUND:Irown. whli• loalt

We Carry Flehing luppli•

Ohio. ClaM ta Roullh lan&amp;

,_

Par Your Phont
...end Cabta Blllt 'Here
IUSIIISS PIIONE
1614) 992·6550

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE
915-3561'
We Service

or Dochl...nd 1VIIO· Clloollio,
-

... Cotle14-317·0130.

FOUND: - · fornolt '"'"'.inl
dot! In Ch•hlr• . . . Clll
81~3117·0312.

021 l'tEWARD:IOIT·

-m

lb:e, Mghl: brown, mile dDg ll'om
lpruoe at. • • AI~R~~ . . to

:~~~,!~:~~N:lOING

HOME BAKED
GOODIES
Get Your
Holiday Goodie ·

•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
CO~
... ._ltrlt

Orders In Now•

"Fr• Eollmllt81"

AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI POWELL
12·6-'11-1 ...

'"· 949-2801
or ln. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVIa

-AddoM ond -ollng

•'*

SYRACUSE. 01110
Mo.t Foreign •nd

Oomtltlc Vthlcioo
A/C Sorvlco
All Mojor • Minor
R••lra

NIASE Can- Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

Contfltd Uconatd Shop

flele from 1:30 • 4:30. or
e1 4-H7-32e7.aft or 11:00.

.

LOST bltolr •dtan Coon'-nd
pup on At. 2 tow.rd Lallrt.
304-H.3311t.
.
LOST holllri-w .,d Hound,
_,.,. obaut 20 Ill. Mt. Vernon
A., • • 304-175-3874.

Public Sale
Auction

B

a.

Aldt P•••on Auctktn.... 11-

.,d-

.

work

(FII EE

FIREWOOD

9

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

TOP CASH pold lor 'U modll
end n•• Ulld c.... lmfth
luldc·Pontloc:, 11, Etat..,
A¥1., Getllpotia. Col 114-441-

S35

-Aoolng and
work
-concntework
-Piumbln• and llectrioll

PRIOAD

Juntc can with .. without
· Coli t..ry Llvory.. e14311-8303.

""

Devices
Oependlble Hearill&amp; Aici,.Sales &amp; Servlct
CJ Hearina Evaluations For All Aaes
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second AVIDUI, Bolt 1213
Gllllpolls, Ollio 45631
or 1t
Veter1ns Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hcts, Pomeroy,

WIJ buy or approloo onytlllntJ(

Anttq-. IUrnlto":'"".,_

eltllhl, Milot. oo

• home

turnlll ...... Mwtln ~ ...

114-f45-II11Z.

Hotccil.

.

-·

210 cc or bii(IW' ., 8~

,..... • arb. 2 or 4 ltroM.

114-441-171e.

c.•
•

U.oll .......... ~~y tho .......•
....,.
hou-Jd •o
· -8
ltol-742·24...
.

f II ' II I'I '/II I 1' I 1I

5-25-tln

1·5-'19-1 MO.

a

114-44&amp;-3111.

992-2269

ll· J4.'88·1fn

~
:iii

... -.-1·

~
of ..rnJ.
turo • -lqult. Alto Wood l
coli hut... lwafn'e fUI'Itltu,.
• Auatton. Third
Oliva

DEU~D

BILL SUCK

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Wentlld To Buy

2212.

HAUliNG

~STIMATE81

.

SERVICE

Loot: In ••ofMolgoVerCllnJ~
• ytllow, m~• a&amp; RMII'd
ott•oll. II • - . . 814-HI-

ctnooll Ohio
VlrginiL
Eltlltt. ontlouo. I•"' llqUJdo.
~tot~-· 304- nJ-17111.

P-oy, Ohio

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL

LASHLEY

pu--

founho Auotrtn., · 8hptll•d.
.304-175-3t48.

""-·Colt e14-441-1170.

EXCAVATING

81 --Hom• lmprov.mtnts
82 -"-Piumblng &amp; H. .ting

. , . Cftlt,

on -

304-e7S.t181t.

pd.

1·11·'H·1-

TIIPLE P

SI)[ V11:1: S

SIIVI!I'~)

•

GO

LATist
. ,&amp;

~

3 days weekly with po·
tential of btcominc full
•time.
Applicants must pos·
sess excallent typina
skills and have a knowl·
edp of offica proca·
dures; ucallent com-·
munlcation skills with
the public.: pl11unt,
11111 appear1nce; will,
inpess to learn new
thinas.
Medical knowlld&amp;e and
experience witb third
.IJirly billina preferred
but not necessary.
Send compltlt Rnu111 to:
IIIIIIJ Sentinel
Box 729-C
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

•••
MODDN GUN

Suppht::;
(; LIVf:SIIIck

Help Wantlld

PART TIME OFFICE
-HELP WANTED

Warllo,

F.Jrm

dition it Ia In with no ex·
prnlld or Implied warren·
tiM given.
.11111, 12. 13, 3tc

11

for_..,.,

W. wll houloool
HEAP. Mol go County DoDt. of
H...- lorvlooo. ond ltE"IIP
Youell... Wo •• olwt you
prompt dollv- e..-tar ..

1·13·dc

BOGGS

hr•l4-Jt•MI

..

Middleport, Ohio

'J.m1 ....

158 - Frultl II Vetet•bt•
59-For Sale Of Trade

SINCE 1969

3 Amouncementt

e14-112-311t1.

882·2198

614-992-7301

•Ill' st. IYIIICII.

56-BuMding 8uppli•
58-Pets for Sele

PAT HILL PORD

J.'S TRADING POST

1·2S·'U·Ifn

A11111111 nc1: 1111: nl :.

We can r~r and ,..
core radiatn · and
htatw cores; W• can
also add boil and rod
out radiatn. Wt also
ripair Gas TaMs•

No Par-t or hll•lll
'Til
1, 1919

67-Mulicallnltrumenta

.CU8TOM IITCHal 6 IATHI
.U:lENirvl! ltiiiODIUNQ
tVINVL IDNG. lOOPING
iMI!TAl.IUI.DINCII
HOUSING. WT. PIIOJICTS

RADIATOR
SERVICE

PAY
.,LATER

10'1. Down

.

4·16-H-tln

•4.a. :g~

W1tli Cob C. .t financirtt

319 So. 2nd An.
Middleport, Ohio

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

, ----~;;,..·

..

992-6282

PH. 949.·2101
or 1... 949·2160

ONLY

IJMITID EDtnON

IOUSH

HOMES &amp; GAIAGES
'·'At lloatortGI!It Pricts"

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

Call 992·2772

11!5/Hn

CUSTOM IUIT

RACINE. OHIO

7-V•d Sele(p~d in advance)
8-Public; Sale6 Auction
·9- Wantld to Buy

be for hearing befor• aaid
Coun on the 14th d~ of
FtbrUtlfY, 1989. It which
time aid •ccounta will be
coneldered and continued
from doy to d~ until ftnottv
diopo11d of.
Any penon intoroatod
moy fllo written o•ceptiono
to uid account• or to
mottoro ~ining to the
e•ecution of tho truJ.t, not
leu than five days jltlor to
the doto 111 for hooring.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common PI- Coun,
Probate Dlvi•lon
Melgs County, Ohio
111 12. 1tc

ESTATE NO. 22284 Ninth Cu.-t Account of
K1111noth We!oh, Guordl1n of
tho Estate of Adrienne
French, on Incompetent

upd~•will

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

51-HouHhold Goodl
U-Sporting Oooda
63-Antiquu
&amp;4 - Miac. MerehandiH

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
S ETT LE ME NT 0 F
ACCOUNTS.
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts ond IIOUchoro of
tho following nomed lidu·
ciorioo h - bnn filed in tho
Probate Court, Molgo
County, Ohio, for opprovot
ond oetttem..t:
ESTATE NO. 24607 Fine! ond Olllrlbutive Ac·
count of Harold Hawk. E•c·
utar of the EltiUI of Hue! E.
Hocwk, o.-td.
ESTATE NO. 28748 Fine! end Distributive Ac·
count of Woodrow T. Zwll·
ling, Eaocutor of tht Eatote
of Sylvie Zwilling,
OIICtl-.
ESTATE NO. 24909 Flrot Account of Fred W.
Crow. tit, Guordlon of Shin·
non Fleming. I Minor.
.
ESTATE NO. 24909 Flrll Account of Fred W.
Crow, tit. Guordion of Soon
Floming. 1 Minor.
ESTATE "NO. 26892 Final end Diotrlbutlve Ac·
count of Earle LH Wood,
Exocutor of the Eotote of
Er-t Wood; DeceMod.
ESTATE NO. 2&amp;B32 Final ond Dlatributlve Ac·
count of Shirley M. Limbert.
Admlnlotrlltrlx of the Eotote
of Edno tlok•, Doc-.
ESTATE NO. 28838 Final end Dlltrlbutlve Ac·

Dec~.

'

EVERY SUNDAY

1- Card of Thankl
2 - ln Me,ory
3- AnnouClementl
4 - Giveaway
IS - Happy Ads
8-Lost and Found

,

eraon, E•ecutor of the Eat·
lte of Mynte M. Oordhor,
DICitltd.
EBTATE NO. 24887 Final end Olatrlbutlvo Ac·
co·u nt of Guy F. Gilkey,
E•ecutor of the Eotote of
Jlne S. Gtlkey, Dt..,.td.
ESTATE NO. 24889 -Final end Dlatrlbutlve Ac· ·
count of Richonl E. Jon•.
Executor of thll Et11ta of
Monnlng 0. Weboter,

.

run1, bro.ktn
•d•.

Public Notice

992-2156
'

88.00
113.00
821.00
851 .00

Public Notice

elAICIFifD ADI
fill THf

AI.LSALE PRICES GOODTHRU FEBRUARY 4
OR WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

'

937-Bulhlo

1tt11chmenta, count of Edw1rd D•• And-

tool• 1nd Inventory of the
bullntlo.
An1ngomonto m~ be
m1de lor lnapoctlon of thll
coneterot by conurctlng Do·
netd Tlce 1t Wood County
B1nk. (3041424-7800 prior
to Ill• dlte.
'
Ttrmo of Solo: Cooh ·or .
a.llfltd chock on dey of
sslo.
Tho Wood County Bonk
--therlghttobldond
'to relect any or oil bldl.
· Dt1tdlhls20thdayofDe·
cembtr, 1118.
Woocl County Bonk
Fifth ond Market Slrlllts
Porkoraburg, WV 211101
(12( 28, 30;
.
m &amp;. 8.12. 13. 19. 20. 81c

DAYBED
t:OMPI.lTE o

(Acroeo from Airport)

895- l.etari

867-Coolvllle

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
BY SECURED PARTY
Notlooia hereby givon thllt
Wood County Bonk. the un·
dttlllgntd holder of Security
Agroem ..ta doled February
Ul, 1988, end May 28,
1988, E..cu1ed by: Thomoo
L. Mill• dbo Coin Mochino
Vonclng Co. end Sanborn'•
Vending Co. will offor for
alo thll following dncrlbtd
collotorol on Jenuory 20,
1988, It 10:00 o'clock A.
M. II the Commercial Loon
'D..,.nment, Wood County
tl.,k, Fifth ond Morkllt
.StrMta. Parker Iburg, W•t
'Virginia.
Colloterol to bt oold of
Senborn'o Vending Co .. 19
Wilt Catumbua Street, Nelaonvllla, Ohio, 11 11 follows:
Cal an tangible peroonol
propertyofThom11L.MIIIer
dbl Sanborn's Vending Co.
Jndudlng otl furniture, fix·
tu-.
oqulpmont, pans.
occouorleo, ottochmtnto,
tool• and inventory of the
buain••·
lbi19711 Ford pickup
(cJ 1983 Oodgo pickup
(d) 1B81 Ford von
!e) 1880 Chtvro!llt pickup
lfl 1980 Chtvralllt von
lui 1981 Chovrolll Cltotlon
• Coll-ol to bt ootd of
Coin Mechlno Vending Co..
141!2 Coltgote Drivo, Me·
rllltlo, Ohio, Ia 11 follows:
(I) oil tangible panonol
property of ThomM L. Milt•
dbo Coin Machine Vending
Co. Including on furniture.
fll&lt;tu-. equipment. pano.

Buy Any Living Room Suite at the Sale Price of s39995

I

Meigl County
Area Code 814

Get Results Fast

Free Gifts
Just For

Loveseat!

PONDEROSA'S . .

pages cover the

GIIUI County
AretCode814

143-Arabla Dltt.
379-W .. nut .

Sale

On Feb. 4th We .
Will Be Giving
Away A Recliner,
1-Mattress and
Box Springs and
A Beautiful

••

26·36 WORDS
$7.00
$10.00
$16.00
S21.DO
S60.00

u.oo

$4.00
$5.00
$8.00
$13.00
S33.00

llhijhiij@il .

P,H. 812·291511!

FrNruly SliMe.

0· 16 WORDS 11·211 WORDS

t .DAV
3 DAVS
60AVS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

1B-Wanted To Do

M11onCo .• WV
Area Code 304

245- Rio Gr1nde

THAT'S RIGHT!

.

2:00P .M. THURSDAY
2 :00P.M. FRIDAY

following telephone exchanges ...

The Biggest Event In Our 20 Year History

WHEN YOU PURCHASE AT REGULAR DINNER PRICE

-

10:001.m. to4:00 p.m .

PRESCRIPTIONS

•Rt@IICiment Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm DOOII &amp;
Windows

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT

Stamless Gutter

SA¥E

Number 1 Marketplace

•Ads outside M;.iga. Gallia or Mason countiM must be preplid.
.
•Receive 1.50 discount tor ads l)llid in 1dv1nce.
•free ads - Givuway and Found 1dt under 16 words will be
run 3 diYs at no ch•ge.
.
•Pric. of 1d tor ell capital IItten is dou~e price of ad cost.
•7' point "n• type ontv u•d.
•sentinel It not rHponslble tor errOfslfttr first dtlf . (Check
for itrrors flut d.y ad runs In paper) . Call btriora 2:00p. m.
dw afttr publiciltion to mike correctktn.
•Ada that must be l)llid in adunce are
Card of Th., ks
Happy Ada
In Memori.m
Y•d Salet

Cla~sified

Aa•ld Hanning, R. ~-

c

Are~'s

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

O.wl• RHfl&amp; R.Ph .

INSULAnON ,

Mastic &amp; Ctrllinteed'
Y1t1yl Sidinc
Roofina

PH. 1-992-6822
12-1 1·11-1 ..o.

Mon. thfu IM. I :001.m. to I p.m. ·
lu~

•

• The

2151-0uVIIn Dial.
KenMltto McCu61C*Qh, R.Ph.

J&amp;L

Collectors of
Emmitt ltlly Jr.

Classifie

l":l:!,'lW.M~PER

Pharmacy

Business Services

CLOWNS

QAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE -1 , ·,oo A.llo1 . SATURDAY
llo10NDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. llo10NDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY

at Vancouver hotel

FREE
TELEVISION

In

•A cla ..ified 1dW'ertieement pi seed in The Deity Sentinel (ell capt - cl•lifled dlapiiV. Bualneu Card end legal notlca)
will 1110 IPPI• in the Pt. Ple•ent Register 1nd the Galli·
polil Deity Tribune, Niching o...er 18,000 hom•.

SWISHER LOHSE

Tyson (lttacks

·20th

SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) ninth day of a hunger strike. IBM democracy movement that
Some 60 striking union leaders at employs 1 ,200 people In Korea.
forced the government In June
IBM Korea, Joined by . 200
Meanwhile, ·dozens of union 1987 to allow liberalization of the
members or a national labor members of Motorola Korea, In political and economic system.
federation, staged a sit-In Thurs· eastern Seoul, contln~ed . their
day at the corporatiOn's head· , protest Thursday, demanding
In a speech June 29, 1987,
quarters demanding that the
the company recognize their President Roh Tae-woo, then
computer giant recognize their union. They have been prates ting rullng party chairman, promised
right to organ lze.
since Dec. 19, a union spokesman to promote democratic chi!JI8'e,
The prates ters chanted "Why
said.
Including la)lor reforms,
redo Americans rule here on _; Recently , labor disputes have
turn for an end to violent
Korean land?" during the 1 erupted mostly at domestic
anti-government protests that
%·hour sit-In and then marched .businesses. Including Korea's
rocked Korea for three weeks
around the building In southern large conglomerates. But u.s.
before his announcement.
Seoul.
firms are Increasingly becom·
A spokesman for IBM Korea's
lng targets of unionization
Since, there have been thou·
180 union members said the sit-In drives.
sands of labor disputes In small .
began Dec. 20, and 14 executive
South Korea's labor union and large South Korean fac:.t.oboard members entered the campaign grew out of the prO' . rles. ·

.

~

is suspended after losing

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-13

Ohio

.ssr

fASIIONS,
HAll !nUNG &amp; TAIIIIIIIG·
GlUT CHiiSTIW GIFT!
GliAl PIKES • GIFT
CIITlfiCATES

TOP Of '1111 STAllS
AIID

DISIGNII

TRI·COUNn
RECYCLING
OPEII 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

Paying today
Jan. 13, 1919
l~ttoO..

TTl Wilt

WltfiNt Notkt r

IT COPPa

UCCOON VAWY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUI
lt. 12411ttw- &amp;nw•18111W...c.tar

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

12 a.. Shtta

a.u

011y

lilTS

..o.47' ..

AUI.IUM
CASY--·..- • •
All Ill. .
IIYIUII,(ANS -· 46• Ito.
IICIIIY
SIBT --5' ,_ 30' ..
liOIIY CAST- 3• toiO' Ito.
QWI

SfAlNIIU --20'111.

992-5114

Lo081ed Off lypan

AtJtt.otRu.7a

143,

'-11¥.
Oh.
.
l·lli·'U.tfn

Help Wanted

-·

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST. - 992-9976

THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M•
DOOR PRIZE
2 H.D. FREE with coupon and pun:h• of min.
H.C. Plcltlllt· Limit 1 coupon per currtomor per
bingo -•ion.
WE PAY 1110.00 PEA GAME
OVIoA 10 PEOPLE '16.00 PER UAMO:

16• •

#I COPPa--·- 65• ~
CIIAH Allii.IUM

GUN SHOOT

11

Part·tlmo MLTC..r t.llt -lppoll '

""ald~'l Ofll• lUorMory •

Applt In pononto Tho Modlc.i·:
PI••· 203 JNkton Pile H- ~
1:30-4:30.
:
FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVtl:
SEAVICEJO..
•
NOW HIRING. Your erea.;

113. HO to Sll,o180. 1Milo1E." :
DIATE Op.,inJII. CALL 1·315- •
733-8012 hi. f 27H.
.

ln,

NURSED
If h..
llltftllotlon In
fDr tho older~¥ -of r - . . . •
In lito llo•Jc Hila N~nln1 '
c ..t .. tt Jaollloe
Juot thft

••lntJ .

for

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHISTB,

o•o

IYIIO of -lct.ll. W. oflw '

oanp•II_,•WIIfl•end•OIIIInt •
bMotltL AppJor II
IIIIo

-le

N... lnt c.tw, 131 1-hllo ·

Rd.,Qollpallo.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS

•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG lo REPAIRS
PIIONE DAY OUYENINGS

.

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

The [)awin Under ......,, ... 11
- .._.lnt IPPiiootiDM far .

,

-.A
.... In-lltlleD-.
Undoii!Oer-ont. 300 . . _ '
A.... Clollpallo. Dhlo.

. 915-4141

GENEUI. CONYIACTOIS

11·11·'118·111nA

.

�,

Ttusday, Janurt 12, 1989

Page 14-The Daily Semu""'

LAFF-A-DAY

11 Help Wented

46

Sp-

for Rent

64 Misc. Merchandise

'

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Lany Wriabt

72

'

Thursday, January 12, 1989

Tn1ck1 for Sell

Pomeroy- Middleport, Oh_io

1171 C'-'Y Luw Truolc. 77,000
engine.
_ _......... go. . . . . ...
114-.li-4312 .... ~....
'.
mla .utD..

•

.._..............
..............
.
_..

,

~

...... d

0
()

Oou•swu•tt Jo•l e11.037. to
e8.401. lm-lle Hklngl
lfeur • • Cllll (llollndolilol
1·111--11111 ht F1122
t o r f - Uot 24 Haura.

61 Houaahold Goods

AVON • AI • - Col -llyn
w. •• 304-. .2-2141.

MA.IOII NAT'LMULn·LI!IE IN· .
SUIIANCECO.
-lnfmllu,.. eggr..,.,elndl-

=:'h10.:_~ ~-;.A=:,~

c:-.:"·~'~ls."'nt.=

llow!Moe. E _..,._ opportuf'to
flrlt .,. til-v oomm1wcpen••
• ..., 1rrr •-..~~v
"" with
.,d

.....,cootev-o.

,_

-- -

-- -

~l · - •~.. • "'''"""' .

"Gosh, l feel great today! Got
the universe by the t.ail!"

~;.;;:;;;;;;~~~~::"f.~=ij~if,;~~~~~
42 Mobile Homes
32 Mobile Hom•
for ·Rent

for Sale

,
_ r-do.
304oM:Z.IJOI
.....
'o..._Phone

Or. J . llophan ......... 0-lot.
hM .,. 'lmmedl.te I'INd tor •

-·Dr.

c11nt11 -*twtt Md 1n offtoe
,.......,,towori1wlth . . n...

Mldlool Cortlola
Fleoillle houn. Export.,,. •
muA IMdr..,metoP.O. lloa
, 0021. Point W. Yo.

12

Situations

Wanted

1972 Barrington 12111111. 3 BR ..
2 bolho. uncforplnnlng • porch.
eeooo .. • • ..... poymentL
Ctlll14-448-1374.
Bealontl ho"*· el clopl"''
mo ...

.-..-d

Buy , _ .,d

-o. 1811 Modtlo. F..,dl Clly
Moblo Hom-. Inc., 114-44(1.
9340.
1110 El111no 141170, 3. BR.,
..go llvlnl room • klch.,_

Good con , · Mul't all. Reg.

e10.I5008poolli ell991. Frendl
Clly Mobh Hom-. Inc. 814.
44(1.9340.
•

'Mil ..e tor tlaiV 1n ~.......
- - Phone
TN_ ...
lftd
.....
..,...
e, ..,
4742-2217 _ _......

-do ........lngln my homo.

tn-.

Hwer...
EJCIIIent c.e.
Clll 114o 742-3010

16

Schools
Instruction

1974 Wlndlor, 14•70. 2 BR ..
front ..,lnJI room. Spooltl orloo.
Rev essoo. Bpoclol eet8&amp;.
Fr.,m Cttv Moble Hom-. Inc:.
114-448-.340.
Double wide mobile homa on
faundltton. IPProa. 2 - doll to tawn end sahDoll. a.g~
ldtchon, ..,ndry, 3 - - 2

bltht.

MW

b:'lflt

cona••

porch-wollco.
- ....tlo.
rollnlohad ...... pump,

IXCIIIMI ODncii:IGn. Lairte Hrn

wlh CIOncntt floor. 114-1823218 .,.,lngo oftw 1 :30 or

w.tktn • .
liE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEAITERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 129 Jeduron Pike. 1978 Uberty 141170. 3 badClll441-4317. lleg. No. 88-1 I · room. •7.900.00. 30•17&amp;
101111.
' ,. 71 .. d 8711-1783.
'81 moblo home 141114. 2
blft'oo..-. uc cond. lmmedl••
18 Wanted to Do
..... .,.,.. ,. e8,1i00.oo. 3041711-3779.
W. dD *••k»nLl.all•rihoiCI
Fllwlca • Fuhlono. 417 second

A,.. Co11114- ...... 0431.

Give plana.,..., •dtl-onlc
k"''lll•d-ln my homo to
bogln~ lldw.,.-d otudonto
•d ... ..._ Aloo- -ding
.,d _ _.,• II lnt-ad.
coli 114olll2-1401
-hor oftwow• boby olin my
homo. dwt oniV. rotwwr-.
304-1711-2102.
illll bellroll In "" hOmo. Mondll' lhnl F.._. Jedtoon A...

ftlf••- p;odd1d

1273

304-171-

'

1912 Neo ..,. moblo homewMh
•pendo, 3 bed

roonw.

CMtrll

llr............ out blclc&amp; 2 ....
(mart acrwa• . w.r.blet. •c
-cl mu01 . . . 304-11112-3327
oft• 8:00.
Fa&lt; Solo a&lt; A.,. : 1977 Sc...llz
14ollll. 3 boctoom.luiiV loodocl
Apple Qravo woo. 304o871i73'711.

33

Farms for Sale

-------118 ACR Elln Pike Co. Ohio. 4

IR . HOm• Barn. To blcco a.ae.

luHd CllbN'Ia h.,. n•ure .,....

Coli 801 Hoyo A.E.. 114-M7·
2819.

illl,il)[l,li

Mlni-fwm. I roome tnd bM:t\
be'n, ctlldcen ooop. ponr thed

end work ahop. IS.IIIK:I'•. AI

21

Buein••

Opportunity

f•.-d Now drllad - • wilt.
U9,1500. 114-992-2143 ' or
114o982-l371

............... "'

- ........

~ FIM Wortcf luptlblke

Championship From
Budapest, Hungary (R) "
(I) a (I) ABC Newa Q

~
NEW- "li:'cztwn llool8- • •
-Cllll14-~3119.
Ul • up. ~- •
- .....

(!) 11oc1J Electric
(!) Nightly Butlne" Report

2 ............, -

wllh • •

, . _ lormtl .... lng .........lng
_30._ ....,_ ........ ..
- - ..... _ _ .... tlnloh

....-.z-v--1•11

..,• .,..,....._4,..hm
Hallw Hooplttl off Rt 311A i r t - lu-lllon. CIIM
114-441-4111.
_ . , -doled 2 Olory houM
In Pt. "'""- Prlcod to . .. Col
304-1711-1311.

1 r- hou. . 1110'o.
Good oold lluldlnS. M,.. be
........ - - Cell 814o
441-1121.
Doluae 3 Ill . houM tor .....
o.- ""..- Col 304ol71o

1104

NI.-!V

A-

-Inti

u,-....

old. 11.mllo. :S m.ro. Wlleol a&lt;
af oquol ....... 814-742·
2121.
Floh T•lc. 2413 J-on A...
Point ,....... 304o811i-2011
10 gtloor 'III_I14.H•d10 1111
cane late e41.21.
Oog_.n.,,._ Proc:l•
••o. Ohio. 30•122-3111 •k
tor lanfiV.

67

0.

-·mode

Kon..,..- l!o dryor, nice-

Vory . nloo opt. In city. 2 ••
••1110. CA. 1• h - llol.•
dop. r..ulrad. Cll 814-4484159.
2 IR . opt.. , _ ...eh_p._
... - - ....w....... pold.

Hom• for Rant

• 17h-.C.I 304ol71-11104.
1711-1381. 1711-7738.

UIO .... - · - · """'·
A-1 •.• 10. Ctiii14-317-0322.

Coudl .,d
-v ole•.
t78. Coll14o441-2311.

goodooncf.--ei:OOAM
304-.8-3187.

RAY'I UIID FUIIMTUIIE
114o:ll7·0137
King cool
uoo.
Bunk - ·
e10.
12
""•'
a1
1111-..1 MOh. Wood

Dog-.304-871-23191111•
1:00PM.
·

""*·

a - •-·

*""•-· ••· o.. ..-.

ezo.

Orllcf'odMic. t20. Moytegwrlnt • - · • 4 1.

loll • oholr In ...... concl,
e171. 01- coffeo loble • ond
tabiM In A-1 o..... a 8200. Old
...lque d r -•• 31. Coll814441-0104.

~r'*hod

emol loouM.
Adulo
oniV.
Aof.
- -· No
-.eon 114o44S.0338.

,.,._e -- ..

Movlll1
d
....,.. fo&lt; Gold color. Coli
114o·2·3111.

21 Qolllo II. UOO o mo. t200
dopooll. Col 114o4411-22011.

Aur'*hod 2 IR . v-ega lilt
AwMo
- · No 114o4411-2404.
. Col

Hom• fllr A..,!Lo•o. lend
controct, CrouM BoDle lid ..
Rrrcfll"'' Yllogo II, E - HgtL
Aol••- Md dopooho r•
qulrod. llllolllllrn lleolty. 114o
44(1.0008.
.

892-3711. EOH.

Coli 814o

One Month,,.. Rant
Qlllllflad ,..,_ ""' UIOO.
Dopooll .,d no tor tiro
monlh. 0 . - • ,_...,
ontv. Yllega - .... •d
.....ldo .......mantoln

3111 . houM, cftlu ... ,.C. 8310 I
- · Coli 304-8711-1104. or
1711-13111.
2111 . Loceocl • 1121M Ch.,·
nutlt. tl71omo. e78dop. Col
., 4-441-3170.

Mldcl.,...,. From n12.

luy or lolL • • • Anllqu.._
11241........._ Ponwoy.
Houro: M,T,W 10o.m. to lp.m.,
.,.., 1 to lp.m. 114ol82·
2112t.

154 Mite. M8rch•ndill

814oH2·7717. EOH.

a..1dlng Supplie1

...ding ......... .
lloolc. brtCIIc. ....... -lnltlo.orc.CioudoWnt - Ala Orenda 0. Coil 1142411-1121.

0-

eo-.. bloolco- ..
.,. dolllrory. Maoon-d Otll
lio I lode Co.. I 2:W. Pirro ..
Ooll....... Ohio. Colll14-4482711
WEitEIIN RED CEDAR
• Chlftnlll Rustle
Mid ..._ Lop - ·
' Dodl Mllort•

66

Pets for Sale

In-

19100MCplolcupllorroCI-Ic
pks.. 3150 ...... w/al IM
opt- low m1-. .,,,. ohorp
end
A·1 corMIIIIon. A-g

c.....,

1t1B YWOoH. 4 door.llopaocl.
olr, AM.fM•-.,•Lowml•
.,,...,. ooncMion. e!IOOO. Col
814- ..2-211511.

For Sale or Trede

lmol ho,. with g•111o. ...,,.
lot. Good oond. Will 1rado lor
..._
!oriel .Cod 814-21.
1200.

I ,t 1,1 t

SIt :qllll' \

,\ II '.I~

l~11.k

1978 T-Brd. Runo -d. 311
Wlndoor ........ noo. eon
114oi8Z.2121.
1979 PIVmouth Vol•a 221
SIWit 8 lnglna Good ohlp•
Runo good
814oiB7·1B38
or 114-18:Z.31a.

c"'

c-.

_.,_ --d . .

1981 Toy..
ooncMion. .,000. C1i11 114112-3741 No Sunclor - ·
p f - Forn Grimm

"
".-.......
•d Alia
. _ ...lpMor.
-hor

end drter. Fun ,.._ani.
.18.100.L--n•_d_llko
lint Coli 114-Ms-2821 or
114-82-2841.

Col ...

11111 Cedlloc fllr ula Coli
814oH:Z.3711

UTILITY 8l00 . IPL.:

111'a8' ....., doa&lt;, .1·3' - k
door: e41n EIIICfiO. Iron
lforlolldri C.lll14-332-1741

40210 JD trooiO&lt; w/yew round
celt. nl.._ e44BO. Qroh..,
HOIME-Iaplowt. . .I.JD
I I fl. fold-upHir"-· ...... .I 0
1010 ....,or w/JD quldt ..,.
niOIIo............... _
........ Colll14-211-111122.

llor••-..,on•n••--·
-.lrirolc
or-. -Kenny1t Jim Mink Chevrolet·

Ol•mobl• 814o441-M72 or
304-773-1134.

.... -

1171 Mont• Corto ...... fll:ilo .
port&amp; 2300 angina Coli 114II:Z.21a.

hd 3 br houMin

46

81

BASEMENT

}

WATERPROOFING
Unoondll- llflllmo .......,.
,_ loolll , .....a. "'......
Free . . ., .... Clll cml•
1·114o237·0CIIII. dOl' or night
Rogere8e1ement
Wllwproollnt

;:
,·

=

48 SpiCe for Rent

4711.

'.

.

.

--::-::--:-- •

E - r. •

_ Col 114-448- ..

RON'I N'PUMCI IIIMCE •
- . . coli o.VIcln:r. 0 E, HOI
Pbtnt, w•Mra. ryera end
• -· 304oi71-Z•a

:

1971 C•dobe v-v good mncl
304o8711-17BI.

82

•
•

'--'--~

--~- or oom-c:lol

72

Tn1ck1 for Sell

1171 C._on.,. l1r ton pfolc up.
...0... ••
. . . f'S. , ..
AM ·FM-C.oo. I oyl.. JIO.
UIOO. Coii14-:117-0ia.

•n
~l:~:.·...o::.- ..r. "k-..."1
.... C.II14-441go ·a.~ealr

1112 .... .,.,.. .

..

-

Col 11.
1114.
11711 feN F•tiCI. V-1. Ma
~~.

.................
_.._....._AC.-IIo
__ . ._. . . ,..r-- ....._ ___
_.

'

• •

• •
0

••

•

a

•

-

n .... ., ~(,t, ....

®NIWI

Ellctrlcal

wlr-

tn e
be·
low tOform four simp le words

I

all 1111121

(I)

..

Bernice Beda Osol
P18CE8(feb. 20-Mtreh 20) Conditions LEO I.IUIJ 2S-AUCI. 22) Your possibilities

..._ •

0

__..............

•••• ,u

2411-1211.

II a A W•w llorvlco. P9oio.
c,.twne, w.ne. lrhmedlat•
1.000 or 2.000 ...... dol.. ory.
Cell 304o171-1370,
'.

......... w.....................

phone 304oiJ78.231f or 114- '

-·

_ ..... r•oo. ¥ ... _
dlo·
- - 2.000 1o 4,000 ...... .
304-171-alt. .
'•

tU-. •
-.uur
Lmrthday

In general are beginning to grow more
hopeful allhis 11me, so don't give up on
your dream. When you 1ea11 expect,
-ol
somathlng good may happen tor you
.
OUI ollhe blue
ARE8(-..ctl. 21-Aptll 1t) Condlllons
•
·
could be a bll unseltled today Wiler&amp;
·
your car- Is concerned. You may
1 1
Join. 2. •
1 hllive a goal you dldn'l anticipate and
Your sphere of lnftuence looks like ills . :"Mlback wtlere you lhouoht you had a ·
going lo lncreua considerably In lhe shoo-In
•
year ahead. In fact , you may be num- TAURUS (April :10-llaJ 20) Your way of
bared among lhe big fish ln •a rather doing lhlnga today Ia 11pt to be. a bit
·
more Ingenious lhan the melhods suglarge pond.
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1t) You are geeled by your contemporaries. Hownow In a Cytle where your leadership 11 mlgh1 take 1 bll of Mlllng on
qu8llllel are likely to growl1ronger and you,' behan 10 gel everyone logo along
11ronger. Todayyou lliay take charge of wtth yqu
a Situation you would have backed on. • • • •
21-June 211) 11 you are
!rom previously: Trying to patch up a prepared to,.,,.. 11 out, you coukf be
broken romance? The Al1ro-Graph quite lucky at IIIIa time 1n finding a SicfeMalchmaker e~~n help you to . under- nne ....,lure lha1 may add to your •msland wtlat to do lo maka 1118 ralaHon· inga Begin by chtclclng
wtlal
lhlp work . Md $21o Matchmaker, P.O. frlende 11M going fo&lt; lhem now. •
Box 91428, ~and, OH 44101-3428. : CANCER (,_21-,luiJ:D) Nice people
AQUAIIIUI (Join. 20 Feb. 19) You are . know nice people 10 lake advantage of
endOWed wflh a curloue mind and ad- any oppor1unltrM prtMnled to you by
vernuroualncllnailons. Today you mighl frlenda at lhll lime 10 make new condevole some lime 10 exploring an un- . tacts. Tha ,_,111 should be very
usual happening that hu caplured _vour : grallfy{ng.
.aHentlon.
..
~

·I...,

to -

Upholetery

...

..

..

lor fulfilling ambitious objee11ves are
likely lobe beller 1oday than they will be

tomorrow. Stay an lop of theM goals,
_ , 11 .you have to pu1 In a lillie

overt-.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-a.pt. 22) T~ not to
11rua1ure your agenda too rigidly loday,
becaul8 lha niceSt lhlnga that mtghl
happen to you could be throuoh chance
· Mcounlers or merely being In IIMI right
place altha right lime. ,
U8RA (a.pt. 13-()cL 23) Things should
have a way of working out to your ultlmate benllflt today, provided you do not
dllrupt the natural ftow of events. Thla
could be elj)telafly true In matters thai
. . ~MW~Ingfulto you financially.
of
ICOIU 10 (OoL 14-110¥. 22) LOll
projeelt and uslgnmenta aren't likely
to......, your productfvlly today,::;:,
c:oulcllneteed tnllenoe II. Being u
PI 1 n
a bl1 will tllmulale your
~
SAIITTAIIIUI (110¥. ZS.O.C 21) Be on
yowloallodaybecar!Man unexpacled
e111f1 In could provide
you with one or more profitable opport u -. Ledy Luck Wfl be puiUng !of
you In 1hls area.
·
'

t1J Miami VIce
1111 You Can Be a Sllr
1 1:30 D ()) !Ill Tonight Show
(I)Cheel1
.
D (I) Nlahlflna Q
OUSAT*Y
18tlll Newl)wad Game
1121 8pol1a Tonight
•

11:11 Pat lelllk Show

iiJl Hill s - Bluaa
!It Amenc1n Mepzfne

12:00 (J) MOM'

~~':'~":£

Dill Entertainment Tonight
all Pat Sajllk lhow
• till Twlllgllt zIIJ NewaNight
t!JDregntt
lltNIIthvllaNow
12:05 (I) MOYIE: Mother Lode (PG)
(1:41)
12:30 D ()) !Ill Late Night with
Dllvld L.tMnNn
(I) Jelltrsont
Dill USA Today
"iiJl MOVIE: Tenor Train (PG)
(1 :37)
I[Jll!dga of Night
1:00 (I) 8portaCenter
(I) DIll Wipeout
D@Ra~klt ·

·

I

UDOMI

· r-11 ~
It--lr,-.;r.:--1,lr-3

t

1
·
f--~r--1.----rls-r-""1:""
·
7
I

Afrien~whoown9apet

ARESE

.

.

I

.

.

.

1 1

shop once mused . "The onlY.

I·o

.

B~ CT 0 B

•

mystery about a cat ls why 11
decided to become a --:-

animal. "
Compleie lhe cllvcllo qvoied
by f1l ling in the missi ng words
L--1 you develop from step No. 3 below.

l--,.!~y...::..r.,,.:i-l...:....lr.arl

1

L.-L.....I..-

I

L.,...L-

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

111111111
~

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Noggin - Until - Hcxind - Woodsy - DOUGHNUTS
"My diet i8n 't working out too well, " moaned the guy .
"Here, you'd batter .hold my coat and DOUGHNUTS."

..

BRIDGE

NORTH
• •1ogu

- -- ·- -Try to get

,.

.AQIU

+KJ

t.De picture

WEST

I

\ EAST

+nz

lA

By James Jacoby

' K Q 10 v

.J653%

••

· .. 7 5 Z
The West band might well be used tc • s 4 s z
' .10871
show beginners the proper openina
SOUTH
lead Jll&amp;lnst a six-spade contract •
+KQJU
obviously the ·king of hearts. But the
'fA
Bois bridge lip by Matt Granovetter,
• KJ43
"Picture the original shape," leads to
.AQ9
•
a conclusion different from the norm,
Vulnerable: North-South
based upon listening to the opponents'
Dealer: South
bidding. Even when you hold a terrible
hand, you should pay ca..,ful attention Well
Nortli Eoal
to the bidding to try to construct the
shape of the opponents' hands. There- Pass
2t
Pass
wards lor your bard work can come as Pass
Pass
early as the opening lead .
Pass Pau
Pus
The automatic "wooden" lead of~
Opening lead: • 2
king of hearts scores up the slam for
the declarer in today's deal, since a
later lead of another high heart can be ' - - - -- - - - - - - - - - '
ruffed. But a defender on openintlead
who not only has bls hearing but can,
.
also draw a logical conclusion regard· ruffed, West will quickly come on lead ·
IDg the shape ID the oppo!llng bands with the spade ace to lead a aecond dl·.
should show a profit. What the bidding amond. That will be trumped by Eut
should absolutely convey Is that North and the slam will be let.
,
ami South have an eight· or nine-card J-heo6!)-·J-, .. ~·­
fit in diamonds between their two "hccbyoo~a.-·r-..,tt.urt-.
,.,_
CJrtnJd J-*TI .,.. • ....ol
bands, even. though they bave Ianded
. Ue
b
£11M' , . . .,. t!frt
JJoctb: .

..

••

t

ID slz spades. So West should lead a dt·
amond. Even If the opening lead is not

by JHOMAS

I 0 (Ia I
II

gPillls
l'ilv i11
Al'ghn11
isl at t

·

4 -- 1ril'l'
I) lknny's nu

..

6 Lum inr~('('
7 Sdwl:u's
I imr

·-

8 Spcrk .. n
9 Suh:o;icll'
1:1 !:PI •·nmfy 12 IJuCTc•rs
g:utw·t
14 Willc•ss
17 T:rK :r~Pnc ·y
I !i I'I'C'CiX
I !I AmaiRillillliP
lor cyd.16 li:cill
20 Banal
26 I{Psicll'lil
Ill ( 'harlic·
211 1nl'lc•
. of(sull.)
l 'han·o.; so11
of nolo•
27 llussian
22 I 'hurl•• 19 I 'ap
ri\'c•r
21 ('on IIH'Il
IIUif.!IW ' :-;
29
\'inlal(c•
•
24 1-'nray
1'&lt;'111111
au1o
28 Mri 1 ·an
(:thhr . )
31 1'1'11
23
S('Ot'l'
·
J!I17.P II .. I
33 Prinwval
29 lion" '
hnarcl
34 Win!(
:JO ( ~ l10w -·
Irio
(I.HL )

36

F.n~llsh

riVf•r

:IH "I -1»m1t ·~· "
:J!J Ht't ' PS~ in
a dmrdt
40 1~ ryscal ­

•

•

~l\Z('r

4 2 Buil•ling
wing

31 l'rc•1mrc·
25 Aardvark 's 3!; lloml hy 's 44
fnr IIIII!' hi..
1iclhil
;cs pigs
~.;,.,~T1'"'"'r.~'lr-

:J2 Twu lrtrc ·ks
:14 One • - · li11 IC'

·

•

JOS~PH

ACROSS ,
I ( lhS(' Illl '
6 l'ul a war

1 . ,, . . , . _

~- ....,.,J..- -

.....TT&gt;

·CROSSWORD

v..~ ~l~
('tlh(•

b--1-- +--+-t--

!17 I 'h II liS,\'

. hual
38 r·:xislt•cl
41

I{OIIIC ' CI,

..

lo .lulif•l

.t:l "Th" u .. ,.llo•.man b
"
451'crr:tl l'&lt;'l' f
46 W IL-&lt;h &lt;'Ydl'

47 t lni&lt;lt!C'
· 48 Sich•tra&lt;'k

DOWN

()) (I) •

' .

OTANMU

· I Limwl

t~Jlllonay_

Genersl Hauling

....

Reorro nQe letters of
0 four
scra mbled words

11:00 (]) Remington StHie

GNew1
II) College laakelball
(!) Bill Moye,.• World of
!Cleat (NRI
18 till Love Conntc11on
1121 Monayllne

lnlf o.,loo or nrpL!Conoad
E•lmooo •
I&gt;• Rld.oour Elocrrlool. 304o
8711-17811.

J•JW••~~n~oa.· aw~w

..

WOlD
GAMI

- - - - - - Edlrod by CLAY W. ,OLIAN .

11!1 New CounlfY
•

lk Refrigeration

tiOilrlcl.,.

schooi.Q
(!) New•
(!) Under Fire
all a 1121 Knot• Lending
Paige returns fo Greg ·s
••
home not realizing he plans
·to marry Abby. C
CD (J]) Barney Miller
· 1121 Evening Newt
1111 Crook and Ch..e
I 0:05 (I) MOYIE: The Savage lata
(NR) (1 :39)
10:30 (!) M..terpl- Theatre A
love-starved spinster is taken
in by a ne'er-do-well. Q
I!) Point Man !of Gad

18 till Odd Couple

11711 ..... ,....... 4 ......
drlrr&amp;VI.,.... NM~
..... -l!llitltl\ 1'1, ·Pt.
I l l - ,.• • • Nl...
·~
........... 11.841-2477.

r-.

..........

0

CARTER'I PWMIINQ
AND HE,.TINO
Cor. Fourth .,d l'lna
Qolt.O:O. Ohio
.
Phono 114o
3181 or 814448-44'77

1183DINI!MBOOUCI,.alp G
oparty ...... I opee4 e~wy
.,.""' ao 111nd. el300.00.
304-171-1301.

.....

....

ITCOME5
N::MI.

•

WHO IN THUNDER
STOLE MY
WINDER PROP?

84

.....
1111.
IIIIIM- .....- I I -10.000
.Col 114o

---'

0

•

;

.........
.
.
"· """"' ..... .,_.. 1':.c·.:..~:r.,.:ar; :.~ --·-·-·In·-·.
___ ............ ""· ............. ...
••••
. . .1'780.

.AND HERE

9:00 G ()) !Ill Chura Woody
quits Cheers and goes to
work for its rival. ·
II) College laaketbell
(I) Ill (I) DJM•IY Krystle
demands lhat Blake sign a
living will or else . Q
(!) I!) Myeteryl Inspector
Morse tnvestlgatesJB missing
girl's boarding school. Q
all 111 1121 Paredltt Ethan
turns himself In for a murder
h9 didn't commit C
1121 Le"J King Ll•tf
I[Jl MOYIE: Serpico (Rl (2:09)
9:30 G ()) !Ill Deer John
.. . .
1111 YldaoCountry
10:00 (]) 700 Club
8 ()) !Ill L.A. Lew K!Jfak
represents the owner or a .
nudish colony: Benny lalls rn
love. I;(
(I)
(I) Hurtlleat The
medical center assists when
a crane collap~es on a

Plumbing
&amp; H•ting

1
tl1
- ·- ·~~~~ ...
87,100
......
_,...,.
U.BOO.OO. 304oM:Z.
3231.
•

11R Pard AM.- 4o4. Mo..
CIIII lire too.,_.. .._aadtt
low m l - lliollolkan.,..
c ....ott&amp; Ch""'o. luroluo. • - Colt1• . .
. . _ . . CWda Ill eo.U7·
IOOO.Iat. 1-101..
. 98 f'ard F-110, ...... V·l. luol

1110 C..... PU. I orL. - ...
........, .... Coll1···

ABOUT WINTER ...

•

'

'

All. . T... Trtmm~ny,:.d8ti.mp
Rem-. F... _,
• · Col ·,
304-871-7121.

' 77 Ford Orenode I oyl
e471.00 1171DDIIaoA-8
"" arto. e3711. oo. """n• 3041'711-24111.

.

THERE5 ONLY~
TH ING I D::lN'rUKE

WINTER 1'5 MY
.FAVORITE TIM\:'
OF Tf-IE: YEAR •

...

L.._,oolc Sol-. Albonr·
Bolo WOlf
I PM.
U.alloolc - a d oflw 4 PM
wory flfcler, I ... af
Albonr on lt. At 10. Col
114·1t2-2322. 118-3131

,........ MIOo. Coli 11.

-- -

~

,.

I'Uml' 0111• .,d lllrVIoo. 3041111-3102
. '

1t71 Codll• ...... good
ohlpo. n•llr... 44.000 ma._
flnoohop• 304o.Z.3411

--tit. Alll.flll-o. 4

- - · • ...A'

Q

1
•
.:.,~W:.:W:::=:-ER::-.,-=:d_oow--:ln-g_m_och-.-:lio:-:ne :
nrpolr, porto. and ouppll• Plolc ,
up . . d cWiv.y. o.vt. v... um ,•

----· ·-·-·

11141-L"--~1!1·

......... _wllh0100hlnt
AlloTrol•-AI-CAI Ill• Z..m. 30•7711111. ..... Wtl.
.

Home
lmprovem111t1

1101., or coblo IGol drlllng. ,

LIVestock

4....

TliEN , .JA.CK!

'·

......, Tr• Trlmmln• · otump
- l Cal 304-1711-1331.

1--------.

,.. . . . 210 - · - ......
R1~o •1710. c.1 It~

THINGS EVE 10 EYE

'

In

Ohio 114-702411.

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

GOOP~ WE'RE SEEtt-4'

1344.

GOYEIIIIII!IINT IIREO Yehi-

Fuml1hld Roo1111

OOP

1871_....._ =-or ho-, ·
... ooo.oo. 304-8711-4410. .

A'• _, _

F-Rinr.
eurtngold-·
r• . Morrlt ,.,..,...._ Rutl•cl

11 Auto'1 For Sell

II) (I) Knlghtwatch Jesse
witnesses the killing of an
unarmed su_!POOt by a
policeman. t::;t_
(!) Only One Etrlh Look al
the problems caused by
development and a new sign
or hope .
CIJ TBA .
!Ill Ill il2l 48 Houre Q
Ill till MOVIE: Enigma (PG)
(1:41)
•
il2l PrimeNewt
tiJ) MOVIE: Bnrzll (R) (2:1 I)
t1J Murder, She Wrote
Ill Naohvllle Now
8:051]) MOVIE: Tentecloe (PG)
(1 :30)
1:30 G ()) !Ill A Different World
Kim anxiously awaits the 1
results of a pregnancy test. .. ,

.
----------

POinting: lntortor •

-e3710""".
gr...
Ac 110
XT blodo.
a.r.
e4110.12W.ACdlo-llndlr. 1111. NH a10
round bol•. e:IIIBO. Ownor ••
" " - Col814oaS.IIII22.
,._mlqulo_,., ZllorT-on.
HDW•4 Rot..,..ora. llad ...

11 ""' 11111 Ld11111

2

L . I DON'T F...FEEL I DESERVE;
AHY R... REWAA[), CA.PTJl.IN!

For •I• for 1978 Pontloc
Oren Lo Mono. noo. Clill
114-HZ-2331 .

_.:.._

31 MF. nloa olowe. cleo. I fl.

H1ylk Grain

M)' ,.,i3AP.

Clean•. one half mile u'l .
c- Rd. c:1111 e1 ; ,

In .,.....

84

ovE~

oh. .

RON'S Televltlon Service.
HouH on RCA. Ou-r.
Gl. liloclollnt
Zenkh. Co" .
304-1'7fl.23t&amp; or 814-448. •
2414.
.
'

_......

Wet..l- 1 I'M Us,EP TO
T'tf1N6$ GOIN6 ~IGHT

·\I

-Hol•dlllgrlndlr-mlxw.
,._, lde1 2 raw. n•aw ODin
pl-. 2 ......, .....I!Dihwllh
10 ton ,...,.., - · 1211
bu•hel ..lorMIID fwd W. . . n.
100 till. Zoro mlk Wile. AI
-iprnon!
concl
Ctlll14o2411-1811.

-rd"''·

e ())

''QUAL.IFICATION.S"?. .

,....,. ptoroo. • ~- ..,,
lle•ln11W..-12moo. CYC
1olniHI i y - C.l 814-3712220 Dr 304-1711-8711. .

86

3 -oom '-•In Ml":'.::'lull In ldlahlft. •lr GID .
"
nloo ,.,d. ezoo · ..,o clopoolt
114-182-3111.

cohtrollel".$ _,.

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·
Uo~ •
rebUilt eft typoo,
w.,-.30 cla\la. Pri- Itt •
up. Uoad •
....... t - e

....-goo_...___

lit-

/

Air lrat'fic.

...... l n l - i l l l
-orw/111. '*•h .... plowo.
..... - · plont•. 3 pl. outfll, e41110 . 230
lntw-rol·..enMIIr•wllh
p1owa. arlllr01or, llloh hoe •
ro~-v ho• e1ns.·MI ........
Coli 814--1122

83

II

Arrli~•tions 'fbto

&amp; Accessories

In - o y . -dllocl201ory.
3 baaioou•" I INI:h. new wlrina

3 lA . hou-ntry Rio
o ... do. Dop. No I flmlr
oniV. t2110 o mo. Ctlll14-2411431ov•lnll-

NowiV -od. 2 IR ..
.........
Bee. ...... ,"'
-CIII 114-441-HA
....._

Cnrlo• 120 hp. good ohiPo.'
304-1112-3413 Ill• 8:00

79 Motors Home•
&amp; c II11P11'1 .
Good

.• . ••l(re·· a ...,ce. , .

FRANK AND ER~EST

I~;;:=;;::;:::;::::;:===
76 Auto P1111

1184 0.._ Oolto II lloyol
8lflm.LI ,-1Jtecfecl1Jtw
m l - E-ant. e7811. Col
114o441-HBI.

&amp;9

Boetlend
Motors for Sale

II fl. ,,.,..oft olumn boor,
ln.._d outbo•d with liM

a... 4 o,:L~ ...o.. AC. cruMa

19118
C4!¥111•. - - d
- · AC. e21Cio. CIIHI14-3792121.
1117DDIIaoChw. .. ...... ek.
32.000mf• ••oo Calll1437&amp;-27:a

6:351]) 91o 5
7:00 (]) Our Houte
D (]) PM M8ila&amp;lno
II) Colloge Balktlball
(I) Dill Cunent Affair
(!) I!) MacNeli/Lehrer
NawaHour (1 :00)
all e1121 G Wheel of
Fortune 1;1
18 &lt;!])Three' a Company .
1121 Moneyllne
(!J)Chaefa
I[Jl Miami VIce
1111 Fandango
7:05 (I) AndJ Griffith
7:30
FemHy Feud
(I) Entertaln-nl Tonlglll
Ill (I) USA Today
all e 1121 G J.Operdyl Q
CD till M'A'S•H
1121 cro..flre
tBl Night Court
Ill Crook and Clia..
7:35 (I) Sanford end Son
8:00 (]) MOYIE: Pe- for a
(Junflghter (NRI (1 :22)
D ()) ((J) The Coaby Show

=========.,

'3800- Cllll1.211-1114.
1111 1 - lummnll lloa~.

·"•h
· - · ln'*'dod·
relrllf. -t210
· · .....
ric,
• mo.
Dopoolt Cell 114-381-9811.

"cia

715

In

llond H..,mond orlion. Loolco
ooundo be.,.ltr[ Ide• lor
home or dlurdl. 114-t492477.
.

2 BR. In oou....,.VInton • •·

Now!¥

1977 HondO 1000 Gold Wln11
Fuly - - blodl. ·17.000 :
ec:tuol ml• nliOO oeo. eon
e1•nz.au .....,,., 9:0o
and 1:00.
·
__
do--:CR=BOO::c:--m-Nif-,-cW.. :
-1_9::.B4.:.....Hon
good lllnd. ""' 304o8111-3114,..
or 304-171-1BII'ofl• 1:00. • ~

1171 Ford FUIUra, 2 dr. t800,
Clill814o241-IBK

':~~:~;~' co©tt~lA-~t-trs~

all • tal CBS Newa
• till WKRP.In Cincinnati
1121 Showll&amp; TadaJ
tBl WKRP
t1J Cerloon Exprtel
Ill New Country

74 Motorcyclel
1 - - - - - - - - --

1171-CIIry Copr\-AT, 8 oyL
en•o. 2 dr .. · 11711 Ford
f . fOO. I oyL, AT, I fl. llocl Col
114o44&amp;4837 oltw I I'M.

tilt. AM·fM·COOI. 87,1100
ml• Cal ,.1-8240.

M..ad- hoy. Cal 814o311o
8411.

3-4111 .. lg. Fll, LA,I.,ndry, 1 \1r
borho. l'llrie. - N o
,..,. CorN 114-448· 3107.

p....
••so.

ido- s.-.

o......... Clulillty
CETIDE. INC .. Alll.,o-814111•3878

2 - . . . . Apia. far rw.
c.,-.
Nloooltllfng. I.Mindry 63

foci•r. .........

66

62 Sporting Goods

Unllr'*hod 2BR . g. . . . ..,.,.
m.m. In town. car,..._ Milt•
only. No porL Clill 114-44141181 .

In Ch•'*•3 bedr-. 2 bllho.
oil tloo. 0.. requ~ad. Clil
114-387-7817 or 1·703-3111109.

e71.00. Millllaauet•_.d3dlt

tl50.00. 11-..npi Boctrlc otg., eze.oo. 304o411-1713.
One- '*lilY· ....

1140 Doclgo IUoln•o Cou ..
.... _ e~&amp;oo.
.......1111
"""··
.....
Moped.
Colll1. . . . 1120.

Muilllcll
lnatruments

-•o. -·

Ht~llldls

v-. -•••~llrtdt 411•*oom.

IIIAND NEW FUR JACKET&amp;.._, Port. blodl - . ekoo
rod ,., both be..!llll Jecl&lt;ll~
111a 12· 14. e78 ...... Col
814-112-21111 doytlma, or
I14-H2·11212 ..wrlngo. or
00- - II lhe Dolly

'"'*·

Chol• • - 3.1 mfl• outland
Hll flood, call oftw 4:00 PM,
304-1711-1204.

41

l ..... Rcrbbl doaL I \lr-4 yn.

lof• .,d oholra ~ ...m
t385 to •n1. Tobl• eso end
2 boctoon. fllrnlohod. In ~ up
10 81211. Hide-a ..... UIO
clu Coli 814-H:Z.IO •.
to tillS.
em to
8371. Lwnpo ta to .,21.
Pw11¥ t.rniahld. 3 b•*oom Din.,.
e109 .,d up to e411. Glfloo.
doubl.,.ldowkh 11"010. On st.
- · W·l oholro ea1 IO
AI. 143. t271 monlh. dopooll Wllod
t788. O.k UOO up 10 e371. Flr..,oocllor•la. t21 . . - -.
roqurad. 114-982-7401.
Hutch• 8400 .,d up.
Coli 114oH2-3810 or 114:
oornploto w-mllt,_ 112·8057.
For r., 141170 trolw. 3 adcl- -•a5.,duptoe38a.
•~~r- . ~.:....---......,..~-:--:::7
tlonol ...... I mH• cru1 Crob t110.Monr-O&lt;boJCiorlngo
0-Emnon18-oolorTY.
C - · e200. molllfllr. 304- tuft o r - eB8. ftrm e78• .,d " ' · 1973 Ford v... t271.
8711-3044.
. till. Quean e210 • up. lleclrlc PI/ T·IO 0 - with
King *310. 4 drew•- .... · .._d _._ eto. Fancllr "'-'Top
0
·-•~
8 I • 10 gu
wllh CMO. t1150. Col
44 Ap. .ment
.~ -~ 838 • t4:. l14-742·3073fromi:OU.I:OO.
lad .._ .. '20. 830 • Kin.
for Rent
frwno eso. Good - i o n "' l'ruk-doolo.•d-. -nd
-.om....,_,4 ofrolrs. - - l o a f.
h - - '30 and up 10 881.
cltolr ..d .....
New completitv furnlehed
•.•• a.......
Oil• mile. 11 ....2·1217.
•pe'tnwrt • moblt home In eo Dev• llmt - celh wtth
city. Moho oniV. Porklng. Col """ had orodfl, 3 Ml• oUI
IUIIPI.UI .Or!elnollirrny. 0.·
114-441-0338.
.....,•• Rd. 0p., - l o : r : nlm. ~ ....... Cir- Clcrtlilns.
- -------=-:-=1 M 11iru 801 - 11•
UIA
J • - ' • - . 0 - C.·
BEMJTIFUL APARTMENTI AT 0322
on.
. ~,_,,.;..-lond bfodl .........
IUOOET PRICES AT JACK·
·
SAM IOMIRYILLI'I, OLD
ION !IT,.TO, 138 Jo...on
Yall"'' Furniture
ROUT! 21. NEW EllA. WVA
Plko from t183 o mo. W,.k to 81d uoad furnlura end (noon • I:OOIN!r, Ole. only).
· ohop Mid .._.... 114-4411- oppllconc... Coli 114·"48· Othw mOtilho Frldor. lliturcfo¥,
25118. E.O.H .
7172. Hourol·l.
.... . . only. 304o2li-HIII.
T•• TownhDu• tp..ti'IWYI1· 2 PICKENI UIEO FU,RMTUIIE
Far alii Ollr. lirMciod. Clilf
BRo., HI bor Iii, CA.. dll· Cornplalo hou-ld furnloh- 304-8711-27117 oft• •:30 p .m.
hwoohw, dlo-1. priVote .,. lngo. \lrmle-Jerrldlo. 304ol711...... pOlio, pool, pl.,-ncf. 1410, 114·311·9773, CornpectTri _ _ _ _
w••• -·· • trooh lncludod. evlnlneo.
,.lth ottochmonto. nle.oo
llt.,lng "' •at .., mo. c.•
... h . . . .- .................
814-387-7810.
YIRA'S FURNITURE •
3Q4-8711-4411.
APPUANCEI
Modorn111R,cloo!w-.oon&gt;
Mon.-lol. t AM-I PM, Flr.,.ood fo&lt; UO.OO load.
ploro klldlon. olr. _,... Oop- .()pwr
.n. 12 noon-1 PM. 114-....._ olll Woy111 ~on 304-4111·
ooll. no porL Clil 814-448- 3111.
1181 .
'•
0139 ...,..... oftw II.
PRICEI ILAIHED·Wwctobo- Rtlnbow - · with rag. .,41 t71. au- olio monto UIO.OO. Door oldn
- · · - ....... e111 ............. - · - l c fire
8108. Country - - o w l h I.:..~'~.,..-.,· -~.,..•-2_·_20_1511_
, -..,..3 ....
bench-rag . .... -More -."1' 1 .., 10 II - · - o o : : : r - o .
SHADY LAWN N'T&amp;- 721 e211.
lngVolu ... llt. 141 ~nc .....orv .,,zoo.oo. 304-87~788 .
-nd A ... ,,.nhhad Olltol... 'A ... on Llnooln Plea
ol• .,.,lng ., n71 o mo
'321.00. Frw oJgn
_...,_
Pliotlc
In cildlnt - • • Pilla• 2 - o,_ tr•14", e28 l'rtoblellghtad
lll!&gt;ol• allo oniV. COD ef4o ·oech. Slde·bY·olde rofrlg.· • - ••7.10 boa. W.Va. I·
44 .. 4107 or ....._210&amp;
fr-. allll. oond.. .,00. 800-M2·2434: Ohio 1·800Woocl ...... Wilh pecldad .... 1133-3483.
e ..... e30. Pole lamp. ... Col
814o2ll-1121
10 fl. ........ dloh•dr-•
.• 100.00. au-. .... - d i n - - e • 4 b o - h - n Wilh - .
chllrl, e2110. 11811• ·oornw r-.luiiVb_m_wllh
hutch. esso. Coli 114-44fl. poddod o1c1o t210.oo
1330oflor 4 PM.
'
Kenmore dlohwooMr AVO

I NOTICE I
THE 0110 VALLEY PUILIS If. .
lNG C O . - - · thll you
1·2 bodr-opwtmontL
1*1• - e Hcrrtlorcl'*ldlng Nice
do llloln• wllh p::l'le you 100
A""obl• lurnhhod Of' u..,..
olt-.
hlltopvl.,.,
prioodtoiOI.
knaw, •d NOT to . - moner
nlohod. · Dopoo• _.,.,., Col
· 114-448-~41 oftw 5 PM.
_ . , tM mol unll you hwe 304o81:Z.3327Ilflwi:OO.
.............. 0 ......

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apostrophes, the length and lonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
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Yeeter...'• Crntt041aot•: HONESTY IS NOT

ONLy THE FIRST STEP TOWARD GREATNESS - IT
IS GREATNESS ITSELF. - CHRISTIAN BOV,fE
1

@ 1989 King Fealurel Syndic ale . Inc

.,

•

,

�.

Page-16-Th&amp; Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,....._-· Local neivs briefs~..- - Pomeroy...
continued from page 1
Troopers said Patricia Halley, 28, Cheshire, met an
unldentl!led· vehicle left of center and swerved to avoid a
collision. Her car went off the road Into a ditch. Damage was
minor. There was no contact between the vehicles. No one was
Injured.
Anotherune car accident occurred at 6:50p.m. Wednesday on
US 33, 0.1 miles east of mlle post 2: Troopers said a car driven by
David Mora,~. Pomeroy, bit and killed a deer. Damage was
moderate to the car. No one was Injured. ·
The driver complained of an Injury, but was not treated, In a
one vehicle accident at 4 p.m. Wednesday In · Columbia
Township on TR. 15, 0.5 miles south of SR. 689. The patrol said
· Naree Hall, 42, Dexter, Ohio, lost control and her car wen tin to a
ditch and overturned. 'Damage was moderate.
David Herdman, 33, Rutland, ditched his car In order to avoid
a collision at 7:30a.m. Wednesday on New Una Road, o.5 miles ·
nortll of SR. 124. Troopers said Herdman observed another car
stopping for a school bus that was discharging chljdren. The
Rutlapd man applied his brakes but was unable to stop. His
pickup truck went off the road Into a ditch. Damage was
moderate.No one was Injured. There was no citation.

EMS has six calls Wednesday
Six calls were answered by local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Em,ergency Medical Services reports.
At 5:43a.m., Pomeroy took Mayton Eblin from Union Ave., to
Pleasant Valley Hospital, ,Point Pleasant; Tuppers Plains at
5:46a .m: took JohnK!bblefrom Eden Ridge Road tost'. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg; Middleport ;II 8:37 a.m. treated
Genevieve Demosky at her home on North Front St'.;
Middleport at 9:08a.m. treated Patr1cla Halley on the Peach
Fork Road; Middleport at 11: 12 a.m. took Shelley Smith from
the Riverside Apartments to Veterans Memorial Hospital and
Middleport at 7:27p.m. took Thomas Boyd from South Se~nd
Ave., to Pleasant Valley.
~

---Area deaths-Esta White, 95, Bashan Road,
Long Bottom. died Wednesday
evening at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
Mrs . White was born Aprll16,
1893 at Tuppers Plains, ·the
daughter of the late John and
Elizabeth Fleek NewelL She was
a long-time member of the Keno
Church of Christ.
Surviving are a nephew and his
wife, John and Mary Newell,
Long Bottom, 10,.Dther nieces and
nephews, and fou'r great-nieces
and great-nephews, Misty, Jeff,
Scott and MichaeL
Besides her parents, she was
precede!! In death by her husband, Timothy White, three
brotllers and three sisters.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville with Mr . Roger
Spring officiating. Burial will be
In the Tuppers Plains ChriStian
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 3 p.m.
Friday.
.

Also surviving are his wife,
Lula (Buckner) Kitchen, whom
he married Feb. 14, 19661n Wise,
Va.; one son, Anthony W. Kit·
chen of Gallipolis; one daughtf&gt;r,
Mellssa J. Kitchen of Gallipolis;
five brothers, Paul Kitchen or
Dayton, Ohio, Walter Kitchen of
Birmingham, Ala. , Robert Kitchen ot Bethel, Ohio, Donald
Kitchen and Carl Kitchen, both or
Sandy Hook; and three sisters,
Crlstlne Howard of Pomeroy,
Fern Heath of New Jersey, and
.Carol Kitchen of Sandy Hook.
Services will be Saturday, 2
p.m. at the Willis Funeral Home
with the Rev. Edward Buffington. Burial will be In the Reynolds Cemetery In Addison.
Friends may call Friday, 6 to9
p.m. at the funeral home.
Masonic services will be Frl·
day, 8 p.m. by the Cheshire
Masonic Lodge 456.
Pallbearers will be Vaughn W.
Johnson, Robbie L. Helms, Ray
L. Connelley, Ural Timothy
Humphreys, James Brewer, and
Larry Paul Kitchen.

Roger Kitchen

Middleport police

Roger G. Kitchen, 41, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, died Tuesday In
Chillicothe.
· Born May .23, 1947 In Elllott
County, Ky., he was the son or
James Delbert Kitchen, , who
resides In Sandy Hook, Ky., and
the late Erie Ethel (Hutchinson)
Kitchen.
He ·was a self-employed pipe
fitter. He was a member of the
Masonic Lodge 5761nSandy Hook
and was a 32nd Degree Mason.
He also was a member of the
Scottish Rite and the Cheshire
Order of the Eastern Star Lodge
450.

arrest 84

Esta White

'

Middleport Pollee made 84
arrests In December: Pollee
Chief Sid Little reports.
The department Investigated
four accidents during the month
and all vehicles were driven 4,038
miles. Merchant pollee collections totaled $20 and 121 parking
tickets were wr1tten. There were
no meter receipts since meters
were !reed In cooperation with
the Middleport Chamber of Commerce to encourage shopping In
the tqwn during the holiday
season.

eontlnuted trom page 1

Bill Nease, tanner Chamber
president, and Pomeroy Realtor
Hank Cleland, echoed Quickel's
statements.
' 'We are stomped to death by
regulations," said f'fease.
Cleland said that many area
businessmen, Including himself,
have tried In Te(!ent years to
develop opportunities and "'grow
from within, "as representatives
from the Ohio Department of
Development have lllways .In·
structed. But once the State level
In the development process Is
reached, "we get nothing but
hassles," he said. ' 'Those of us
who still have a few productive
years lett are led up. State
agencies keep us from growing
from within," he added.
"It does seem as If the State
can't get It together," said Bruce
Reed. The Ohio Department of
Development tells us we need
better roadsdownherebeforewe
can develop. But the Ohio De·
partment ot Transportation tel~ .
us we can't have better roads
until we develop. It's a Catch 22."
Mlngyar conceded that prob!ems of this type to exist, but
pointed out that thiS part of the
State Is the only area with a
·special office · the Governor's
Otflce of Appalachia· which was
formed In 1987 to act as an
advocate for the area.
Ohio was also one or the first
State's In the country wltlr1i
one-stop business permit center,
which can be reached by calling
1-800-248-4040. "Theone-stop'center doesn't relieve you of the
problems of filling out forms, but
one call will get you all the torms
you need," he said.
·
He also mentioned the small
business enterprise centers
which have. been formed around
the State, such as tlle Innovation
Center at Ohio University and
O.T.T.O. at Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College, which can
provide assistance In starting or
expanding businesses.
Mlngyar urged Chamber
members to contact his office In
Columbus when problems arise.
"Let us know your priorities," he

Racine
...
Continued !rom page 1
Luv's diapers !rom Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport; a ·$10 gift
certificate from Buttons and
Bows, Pomeroy; three boxes of
Newborn Pampers from
Swlsher-Lohse Pharmacy,
Pomeroy; a free Ice cream cake

COATS &amp; JACKETS

S.KIRTS &amp; TOPS

ly Lontlon Foe I
Sherwood of Ohio
REDUClO

30%-500fo

REDUCED

said. "We're here to help you."
State Rep. Jolynn Boster, said she ts an excellent choice, a
He also reminded members Democrat, Gallipolis, .has been · hardworking legislator, and will ·
that there have been Improve- appointed to the House finance a:dd a rural Southeast Ohio
ments In Pomeroy In recent and appropriations committee, prospective to his committee.
years.Mingyar'swl!elsfromthe House Speaker Vernal G. Rite,
Previously only Tom Johnson,
Pomeroy area and during their Jr., Democrat, Wheelersburg, Republican, New Concord, from
vtslts here In the past couple of announced committee selections Southern Ohio, served on the
years, he has seen many 1m- for the 118th General Assembly. committee. .
'
provements In Pomeroy's down· in a legislative session late
Boster was also named as
town area. "Sometimes It takes . Wednesday afternoon . ~ .
chair · of the house ethic and
an outsider looking in to see
standards
committee for a third
The finance committee rechanges," he said.
views and approves all legisla- consecutive term. The. house
In other Chamber matters, tion regarding the approprla· ethics committee reviews. legis·
Bruce Reed was welcomed as
lions and allocations of ·state latlon concerning governmental
Chamber's new president. Reed funding.
, '
ethics. Under Boster's leaderreplaces Paul Gerard ln. the
In the upcoming m1mths, the ship, the committee l)as dealt
position. Reed said he Is looking committee wllJ be studying and with such Issues as Ohio' s open
forward to tlle new year and will modifying the governor's budgef meeting ,law, public record acbe relying upon Chamber proposal which Is expected to be cess, and the conduct of state
members and Chamber commit- presented to the legislature on . employes.
tee~&gt; to make the year a success.
Jan . 23.
·
."This session or the General
Reed reported that the
Assembly
will have 1ifflcuJt.
"1 am very honored to be
Chamber sponsored New Year's chosen for this Important post. choices. Education, medicaid,
Eve dance was a success and As a member of the finance AIDS and long-term health care
may become an annual event. He committee, I wllJ have an oppor- are all Issues which will require
thanked everyone who helped tunity to have a greater Impact · tough decisions. I will be working
with the dance.
on the state's budget to Insure · hard In committee to make sure
Fund raising events which are that the needs of Southeastern that Southeast Ohio's voice Is
In the works now Include a Ohio are not Ignored," Boster heard when the decisions are
Valentine's Day dinner-dance; a stated.
1
made," Boster concluded.
golf tournament on May 11,
Boster was also appointed to
which Is being headed by Jay
Rep. Wllll~m Hlntg, Demo- · serve on the House children and
Hill; and a carnival around crat, New Philadelphia, wel- yhokuth and the ciVIl and comMemorial Day.
,
comed Boster's appointment. He mercial law committee.
Reed also remlnde6 members
that annual dues are payable
Continued from page 1
now.
Anne Chapman reported that
Exxon on Route 2. The check was the larceny of a stereo receiver,
theJ~tnuaryPomeroyMerchants
drawn on the account of Dr. Char· three VCRs and a television. All
Ass.oclatlon meeting has been les L. Brown-Melba Brown. Donna three men are in jail in lieu of bond.
postponed to later In the month,
Hagerman, also no age or address
Two people were indicted for
and that the Ohio Historical known, was indicted for fo~ery in third offense DUI. Darrell Ralph
Society lJas selected the Meigs'' connection with the same inctdenL Roberts. ·52, of Hendenon was
County Museum as the site tor a11
Susan Elizabeth Grinstead, 38, of charged in connection with a No~.
April 25 regional meeting.
Point Pleasan~ was indicted on the 10, 1988 incident. Joseph Rol:lert
Welcomed as new members of charge of fradulently obtaining Bennet~ 34, who has given
Chamber were Dr. Dan Apllng,
welfare
benefits.
Authorities authorities both Gallipolis, Ohio,
Eastern superintendent, and
believe that the benefits were ob- and Point Pleasant addresses, was
Lenny Eliason, new owner of tained between January of 1987 indicted for third offense Dill in
WMPO Radio.
and February of 1988.
connection with an Oct. 10, 1988,
The grand jwy indicted a father incidenL
and son from Wayne County in
Finally, Michael Lucas, no age
connection with the Dec. 15, 1988 available, of Bidwell, Ohio, was
Am Electric Power .............. 27
aggn~vated robbery of Trippeu's indicted on charges of obtaining
AT&amp;T ................................. 29"
Exxon. Indicted were Rand81.1 Lee property by worthless check and
Ashland 011 ........................ 34%
Davis, 51, and his son, Vincent Lee obtaining property by • false
Bob Evans ........................ : .. IS
Davis, no age available. Police say pretense. Police say Lucas passed a.
Charming Shoppes .............. 16% a knife was used in the robbery of $424.42 check to 84 Lumber Co.
City Holding Co ................... 20
more thar! $200 in cash and $10 on March 20. 1988.
.Federa,l Mogul ........ :........... .' 50
wonh of jiBS. The father is out on
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 52
bond while the son remains at
Heck's ..... ,........................... ~
large, officials said.
Veterans Memorial
Key Centurion ..................... 15
Three individuals were indicted
Admitted - Chris Davis, New
Lands' End ......................... 28Y. for the Dec. 28, 1988 breaking and Haven, W. Va.; Zelma Hawley,
Limited Inc ........................ 28% entering of the Point Service store, Syracuse; Michael Bradford,
Multimedia Inc ................... 75~ Point Pleasant. Indicted wete Wil· Racine; Walter Roush, Racine. .
Rax Restaurants .................. 2% liam Henry Baird, 26, and Brian
Discharged - Ricky Barrln·
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. 16
Keith Peterman, 20, both of Lon- ger, George Harvey, Car I Lee,
Shoney's Inc ........ ...... ............8 ". don, Ohio, and Mark Edward Jef- Raymond Little, Clinton Faulk,
Wendy's Intl., ........................6
fers, 24, of Apple Grove.
Elsie Forbes, Ernest Wingett,
Worthington lnd ..... ............23%
The three are also charged with Ella Smith, Chris Davis.

.Mason····---------....,...

Hospital news

to the parentsAfrom
Dairy
Queen, r=="'l:;:"'....,,.,.,"""'"""""'"""...,""::""'!!""'"""""'""',..""""""""""""""""""""'"""""'"""""'"""""""""'""'""""""""""""~~
Middleport;
$5 gift
certificate
~
·
fromtheM!ddleportDeP.Brtment
Store; a three piece feeder set
from K &amp; c Jewelers, Pomeroy.
c"'
A $10 savings account from the
• • • •
Raclne Home National Bank; a
1988 SPRINT
$5 gift certificate from the Fabric
1988 BERETTA
989 TRACKER 4X4
Shop, Pomeroy; a case or Gerber
strained baby food from Foodland, Pomeroy; a $5 gift certl!l·
cate from Johhnson's Variety
Store, Middleport; a ten percent
orr all prescriptions until the
Infant reaches the age of six !rom
the Prescription Shop, Middle-·
port; a baby cup from · Clark's
Jewelry, Pomeroy; and a $25 gilt
• •
certificate !rom Powell's Super
Valu, Pomeroy.

v'eryone Knows That Tom Peden
Has
. ' Ch evro I'etS
.

•

LADIES

BLOUSES
Long &amp; Short SIHvt
IEDUCED

30°/o

IIIIT&amp; WOOl

DRESSES
IIDUaD

30°/o

lADIES

.N'S

COATS &amp;
JACKETS
b' london Jog I Haggar

. REDUCED

·,. 1/2.

20°/o

MEN'S AU
WEATHER

30°/o

30°/o

MEN'S

REDUCED

Copyrighted 1989

20°/o

REDUCED

Manning Roush was named president and David Koblentz
vice-president of the Meigs County Board of Commissioners for
l989 when the board met earlier this week to organize !or the
coming year. Third member of the board is Richard Jones.
Mary 'IObstetter was appointed clerk and Community
Development Block Grants administrator.
Regular weekly commissioners' meetings have been set tor 1
p.m. on Wednesdays.
Other appointments made by the commissioners Include,
John Stahl as courthouse custodian; Homer Smith as
courthouse janitor; Cecil Wayne Roseberry as dog warden;
Everett Holmes as apiary Inspector; Linda Bentz as clerk of
Meigs County Court and Jennifer Jewell as deputy clerk of
Meigs County Court;
Reappointed to the Meigs County Planning Commission were
Her,bert Sb(elds and Orlan Roush. ·
r
Reappointed to the Meigs County Tuberculosis Board of
Trustees were Tim King, Harold Rice, Joan Wolfe, James Hill,
Donna Nelson, Dr. Larry Kennedy, Jeanette Lawrence, Pat
Struble, Paul Patterson, Rev . William Middleswarth, Charles
Riffle, Helen Swartz, Lloyd Blackwood and Faye Wallace.
Reappointed to the Meigs County Community Improvement
Corporation were Paul Patterson, Rutland; Frank Cleland,
Racine; Kathryn Crow, Syracuse; Richard Follrod, Pomeroy;
and Bernard Fultz, Middleport.
Ellen Rought, Edith Sisson and Dororthea McKenzie, of the
Pomeroy Pollee Department, and Kelly Guinther, In Meigs
~ounty Court, were appointed to tqke county court recognizance bonds.
Appointed to . the Public Assistance Examining Committee
were Manning Roush, ·Judge Robert Buck and William
Wickline.
David Koblen.rz was appointed to the Buckeye Joint County
Self-Insurance CounciL Manning Roush was named alternate
to the Insurance council.
Koblentz was also named representative and Roush alternate
to the Settlement Committee of the Buckeye Joint County
Self-Insurance CounciL

145 II. 2111
MIDDLIPOII

BUSH MEETS WITH FULL CABINET - President-elect
George Bush (L) meets for the first time Thursday with the luU
,

I

.

•

reputation as being tough-talking known.
,·
and outspoken when he served as
The energy job has been ihe
President Reagan 's education toughest to ·fill for Bush, who
secretary from February 1985 to · reviewed what a ides described
last September. In his new post, as several "shortlists" of names
often referred to as the nation's lor the job.
"drug czar," Bennett Is cons!One of the most pressing
dered to hold Cabinet rank.
concerns for the department Is
The Senate Is planning to begin how to deal with the nation's
confirmation proceedings for the decrepit nuclear weapons plants,
Cabinet members next week, which the agency administers for
although It Is not expected that the Pentagon. The 'factories,
all the choices will be cleared dating from the 1950s, are not
until at least next month.
only In disrepair but plagued by
Bush , had great praise Thurs· environmental problems. Some
day .for both Watkins and Ben· key tacllltles are shut down, and
nett. Ironically, President Rea· repa·tr and cleanup costs have
gan had once wanted to eliminate · been estimated In by congres·
both the Energy Department and slana! leaders to exceed $100
the Education Department, billion.
where Bennett made his name

Dr. R. R. Pickens was named Meigs County Coroner
Thursday night by members of the·County Republican Central
Committee, reports Evelyn Clark, central committee · president. Pickens has been acting-coroner since Dr. James Conde
resigned the post last !all, shortly before the November general
election, to take employment In another area or the State.
Pickens' term w!IJ continue until the next county·,Wide general
election In November 1990, Clark said.

Accident still under investigation
A Meigs County accldeni which occurred at 3: 11 p.m.
Thursday on CR. 49, In Scipio Township, at the junction ot TR.
386, Is. still under Investigation, according- to the Melgs-Ga!Ua
Post, Stam Highway Patrol.
·
·'
The patrol said James 1. Morgan, Jr. ,30, Albany, Ohio, turned
left tntothepatho!LarryK. McGrath, 36, Athens, Ohio, and the
vehicles· collided. No one was Injured. McGrath's pickup truck
went off the 'road, after the collision, striking a tree. Damage
was moderate to Morgan's car and heavy to McGrath's truck.
The patrol cited Morl!!an !or failure to yield the right of way
and no seat belt.
.
No one was Injured In a three-vehicle accident, In Meigs
.
(Contlriued on page 10) ·

"*•• lt'l1r r1c11f1 ...., ..

llrlffiletl

TOM PEDEN

a.wolll• Odlai 7 • Purtle. BLick, Inc.
t

Phone: 372-2144 • 422-0756 •
~ llan:-l'ri. 344 5947
1:30 a.m. 1111 p.m.

~aill:v

complement ol nominees for his Cabinet. The meeting took place In
the Blair House. UPI

Celeste will cbntinue to seek .school tax

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. Richard Celeste said Thursday he will pres~ ahead with
plans to ask voters this year for a
special Income tax to lund
educational l)xcellence In the
decade ahead, despite a cool
reaction from state lawmakers.
"This Is an enormously Important Issue for me," the governor
told reporters after an hour-long
meeting with legislative leaders
In his office. "I'm not going to let
It go away."
Celeste acknowledged It will be
will be a public meeting a1 7:30
"an
enormous education job to
p.m. on Feb. 21,atwhichtlmethe ·
board will review all convince people that this Is the
way to go."
.
applications.
He has proposed asking voters
The Children's Trust Fund has
to approve a flat 1 percent
been established statewide with
revenue coming !rom. special Income tax on Individuals and
corporations, with the proceeds
surcharges on certain docudiverted to a trust fuM and
ments issued by the state and
earmarked
. for public schools,
counties. Meigs County has been
colleges
aqd
universities.
alloted $10,000 as Its share ot the
"I
believe
there
will be an Issue
state funds . Applicants may
on
the
ballot
sometime
this year,
apply for as much as $9,700 of
and
that
It
wlll
receive
the
Continued on page 10
approval of a majority of people," said the governor.

Dr. Pickens named coroner

II

,

1

Roush to head
Meigs commission

20°/o

BAHR 'CLOTHIERS

I

hoped there would be a resur· - ment Jan. 20.
.
gence or research Into civilian .... After announcing the two cholnuclear power.
ces, Bush called together alltlle
Concerning drugs, Bush said members ofhls Cabinet for their
tie would be "personally In· first meeting and gave them
volved" In the fight and said the their marching orders.
matter was as "serious as any'
He told reporters his message
problem we're likely to face tn for his new staff was to "think
the years to come."
big," challenge the system, ad·
" We are at war. Dqtgs are a here to high ethical standards,
terrifying, Insidious enemy," work with Congress and seek out
Bush added, contending· they
new talent, es!X'Cially among
posed a threat that "reaches minorities.
deep Into our nation's soul."
. "I)n going to tell them I don't
T. e selection of Watkins, 61, a ··Jlke kiss-and-tell books," he
for r chief of naval operations added, In a reference to 'the
a nd c . mander In chief of the Insider books that numerous
U.S. Pa fie Fleet, was Bush's former aides to President Rea·
14th and nal Cabinet choice, gan wrote.
completing the team ·that will
Bennett, 45, Is an ardent·
take over the helm of
conservative who developed a

posts·

~~,.-::r--"""'1

Local news ·briefs--

2 0°/o

1

.

between choosing someone wit~
experience In that field or In
nuclear power, where most of the
department's tmmedlate trouhies lie.
He said Thursday that the
problems facing the agency
convinced him to turn to Wat·
klns, who has an extensive
background In nuclear power. In
an apparent attempt to calm
fears of oil and gas Interests;
Bus I! a(lded that the nation could
not rely on an:r: single energy
sourc~ and said he would be
pleased If Watkins selected an oil
and gas expert as a deputy.
Bush also contended that de·
vel oping energy sources was not
InconsiStent with protecting the
environment and added that he

2 Sactiona, 14 Pages 26 Cents
/vMultimedialrlc. Newapaper

administ~ation

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OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30-5:00

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Bush·fills remaining top
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Pomerov-:-Middleport,
Ohio, Friday, January 13, 1989

Vot.39, No.174

.,. ' 1ot11 &amp; "••••••

lo Colora - Long It ShOrt Sleeve

•

WASHINGTON ( UPI) President-elect George Bush
filled the remaining top posts In
his admlnlslratlon Thursday,
selecting retired Adm. James
Watkins, a nuclear advocate, as
energy secretary and former
Education Secretary William
Bennett to lead the battle against
drugs.
The vice president, citing the
cM!Jenges facl.ng both men,
promised that his administration
would be actively Involved In
tryfng to deal with the problems
plaguing the nation's nuclear
weapons ' facilities and in at. tempting to lessen America's
·drug problem.
For the energy job, Bush, a
former Texas oilman, was torn

Clear, low In 20s tonight.
Saturday, chance of. rain 80
percent. High In In upper 30s.

1'709

at

MEN'S PAJAMAS

ARROW SHIRTS

784
Pick-4

. :.

SPORT wa
BLAZERS
&amp; SUITS
REDUCED

Daily Number

Page 4

MEN'S

SWEATERS
Pulowen, Carlltan•
&amp; Stet•••
.REDUCED

40°/o

1 LOT OF LADIES SUITS

BENDOVER.SLACKS
REDUCED

TOPS, SIIITS &amp;
SLACKS

IEDU~

.

The Meigs County Children's
Trust Fund Advisory Board has
announced that applications are
now being accepted for grant~
from the Children's Trust Fund
for programs designed to reduce
child abuse and neglect.
Applications may be obtained
at the offices of the Meigs County
Superintendent of Schools, John
Riebel, located at Pomeroy VIllage Hall. Deadline !or submit·
tlng appliCations locally has been
set !or 4:30p.m . on Feb. 6. There

300/o•400/o .

1 LOT OF LADIES

LADIES

IOhio Lottery

Applications are being
a~cepted for trust fund

Aumus

REDUCED

•

•

Olinois
'
rematns
unbeaten

Stocks

SWEATERS

40°/o

,..

· Boster named ·to committees

WIES'

LADIES IINIT

•

Thlmlday, Jenu.-y 12, 1989

JANUARY CLEARANCE TIME
AT BARR CLOTHIERS
LADES'

--•

After hearing details of Ce·
teste's plan, House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·Wheelersburg,
said "It's a proposal that's
worthwhile and we're going to
consider lt."
But Riffe made It clear that
House deliberations on the 199091 budget, which will begin later
this month, will not be sidetracked by the education Issue.
And he said the governor's plan
will not be brought to a vote In the
House until the Republicancontrolled Senate acts first.
"I'm not one to put things Uke
this on the ballot," said the
Speaker.
Celeste said he Is "encouraged" by reaction tohls plan, and
tha1 his first task will be to
convince the education communIty to rally around II . He said he
will be meeting In the next two
weeks with key people, Including
as many legislators as possible,
to make his case.
"It's going to take considerable time tor the legislators and
the public to absorb this," said

the governor, noting the com·
plexlty- of the Issue. " People's
reaction In 24 to 48 hours Is no
way to measure this."
The plan was unveiled In
outline form Tuesday In the
governor's "State of the State"
address to the General
Assembly.
Celeste provided details to the
lawmakers Thursday, Including:
-The need for accountability
In the form of a board-governed
trust fund ensuring that extra tax
money Is producing results;
-the ability of the Phlo Sut
preme Cou·rt to discontinue payments II they are not having the
desired effect;
-the establishment or a
legislative-executive commls·
slon to recommend changes In
the organization and admlnlstra·
tlon of schools, to cut through the
exls ting bureaucracy;
-permitting some of the Inflation of property values to flow
through to the schools In the form
of taxes;
-diverting this year's excess

state lottery profits, above ex·
pectatlons, to a building fund tor
poor school districts.
Celeste and his budget director, Lee Walker, said that unless
taxes are,ralsed, the state budget
will Increase by only $1.9 bllllon
over two years - the same
amount as from 1986-87 to the
current fiscal period. That resulted In only about a· 4 percen1
annual Increase for public
schools.
The governor said he would
prefer that the proposal go before
the public In June, In time for
Inclusion In this year's budget If
It Is approved. But In view of
legislative reluctance, he said he
has ·•an open mind on the date"
for a ballot Issue.
Some lawmakers, including
Riffe, have Indicated that raising
taxes will be difficult because
education Is not' In a · crisis
situation.
''The point Is to do this so we
don't have a crisis, " said the
governor.

Wholes(Jle .inflation· jumps 4 percent in 1988
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Producer prices rose 0.4 percent In
December to bring Inflation at
the wholesale level to 4 percent
!or 1988- the biggest jump since
1981, the government said
Friday ..
The December Increase, 4.5
percent when figured on an
annual baSis, was fueled by
· widespread price hikes In wholesale goods for the consumer
market while food costs dipped a
little and .e nergy prices rose
slightly, the Labor Department's
Bureau or Labor Statistics
reported.
The 0.4 percent monthly In·
crease followed a0.3 percent hike
In wholesale prices in November
and was the largest since a 0.5
percen! jump In S«&lt;ptember, the
bureau said. But the 4 percent
gain In overall 1988 producer
prices was nearly twice the 2.2

percent Increase In 1987 - and
was the largest since a 7.1
percent annual rate In 198,1,
according to government
figures.
Fooil prices fell 0.1 percent last
month but advanced 5.7 percent
overall last year after showing
almost no change In 1987, the
bureau said. On the other side of
the coin, energy prices rose 0.2
percent In December but fell 3.4
percent during 1988, contrasting
sharply with a 11.2 percent spurt
In 1987.
Prices for finished goods other
than food and energy rose 4.3
percent last year after a 2.1
percent gain In 1987. All monthly
figures were adjusted for sea- .
sonal variations, the bureau
noted.
On the monthly basts, excludIng food and energy, wholesale

prices jumpe4 0.7 percent In raJ gas prices Increased 3.3
December after moVIng up 0.3 percent after a 2.5 percent
percent In November. Tobacco downturn In November.
Food prices were nearly unproducts surged 5.7 percent
following a 0.7 · percent No- changed for the third consecu tlve
vember hike, and prices also month as costs dropped sharply
accelerated for passenger cars, for fresh fruits and vegetables
light motor trucks, women's and processed turkeys . Slower
apparel, ho)lsehold appliances, price declines occurred In mllled
household furniture, sanitary rice, !Ish and pork, the bureau ·
papers, tires and sporting goods. said.
Prices turned up for processed
Prices fell In the finished goods
category for alcoholic bever- chickens, processed fruits and .
ages, books and home electric vegetables, bakery products,
equipment. Price· hikes slowed beef and veal, soft drinks, pasta
!or drugs, soaps, periodicals and and eggs.
Capital equipment prices rose
footwear, the bureau said.
Among energy products, gaso- 0.3 percent In December. after a
line prices declined 3.5 percent In . stmltar hike the previous month.
December, offsetting a compara· The biggest Increases were for
ble Increase In November. Home motor vehicles, railroad equipheating oil prices rose sharply, ment, transformers and photo·
8.5 percent, after a larger 12.2 graphic equipment, the l!ureau
percent gain In November. Natu· said.
•

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