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.. - -

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. el

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

..Jim Cob

•

:'; i$'

MEIGS

~

BOYS
Jan. 27 ~At Wellston
Jan. 31-Vinton Co.

Sales &amp; Service

992-6614

Jan. 24-Ky~ Creek
Jan. 27 -At Hili'illari Trace
jan. 28-Miller

i'

Sentinel News Staff

GIRLS
Jan. 23-At Kyger Creek
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace

SOUTHERN
BOYS
COMPLETE
SELECTION .

GIRLS .
' Jan. 23-At Oak Hill
Jan. 30-Waterford

•

'

HOEFLICH HONORED -

Dewey Horton,
right, on behalf of Middleport VIllage officials,•

ruturin&amp;:

* Grut Hamburaers

*Roast Beef on Croissant

* stuffed. Baked Potatoes
* Jac.o Sallds
* Real.lee Crum *
Dlnini • CMry Out •
DrtQ·ThN
M-·T~. .• A.M.-11 P.M.

FrL

Slit!' I A.M.-12 P.M.
P.M.

·au~-7 A.M.·1

BlUM

QH«tj8
915-3301

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... A:~ay
Dec. 2-Miller ................:........... Home
Dec. 9-lrimble .......................... Home
• Dec. 13-Nelsonville·York ............ Away
Dec. 16-Wellston .:.................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co...................... Away
Dec. 23~Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-Lopn ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ... ~ ......... Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville·York ..... ,....... home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co ..................... Home
Feb. 3-Btlpre ............................. Away
Feb. 7-Aiexander ........ ~ ............. Home
Feb. 1Q-Federal Hocking ............ Home

Nov. 29-Southern ...................... Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia ................. :.. Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ......................... Home ·
Dec. 13-Kyger Creek ............ ~ ...... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-,Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking ...... :....... Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Parker~urg Cath .... ,..... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ........ ;........ Away
Jan. 28-M iller ........................... Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Febr 14-Parkersburg Cath ........... Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
OF
Nov. 29-Eastern ......................... Away
FURNITURE!
Dec. 2-Kypr Creek.. ................... Home
.
Dec. 9-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ....... :................ Away
811 af _.r
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ............................ Away
Jan. 6-SciUthwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis :....................... Away
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
H2-3307
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
POMEROY OHIO
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home '---;.;;;.;;;;.;;,;;..;~;.;.;;.;;...._,
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Gallia ................... Away - - - - - - - - - .
Jan. 27-0ak Hill ........................ Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4..:..Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Horn_e

Bat· Mort for

EMPIRE
fiiMIIURE

----------------~GIRLS~vJ•a~~ULE·----------------~1

..

. ,_ .................. "
HARDWAIE.

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1 988·89 BOYS BASKETB~LL ,.
Nov. 22-Miller .............. :............ ,.way

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

CHESTER, 0

MUZZlE LOADING
and HUNI1NG wPftiS
HOURS:
Mon. thr1 Fri.
7:30 a.m. to 5100):m.
Saturday \

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BA.SKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home
Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Nov. 28-Southern: ...................... Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
......Oec. 1-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 82T~mble ...........................:way ~ _.Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 1 - elsonville·York ........... Aome
Dec. S-Oak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... way
Dec. 12-Kyger Creek.. ................. Home
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 21-Eastern ......................... Away
Dec. 17-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Jan. 2-Belpre .............................:way
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................ Away
~n. ~::ander .... :.......... :....... Home
Dec. 21-Meigs ........................... Home
n.
ral Hock1ng.............. ome
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
• Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
~an. ~~-~irble ....i...Y................. ~ome
Jan. 11-lrimble .......................... Away
/"·
sonvll e· ork ............. Hway
Jan. 12-North Gallia ................... Away
2
1lsto~ ....................... Aome
/n. 30-v·'
Jan. 19-0ak Hill ........................ Home
anb. 2 Bellnton o......... ,............ Hway
Jan. 23-Kyger Creek ......... ,......:.. Away
F
e
.
pre
...............
;............
orne
Jan . 26 - Hannan Trace ................ Home
F b.
A
eb.
H.....,. .. ,............... Away
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home
F
r-.fJedl...ll:;::.SAIIIJIIWL.ock_'":.,g............,....... i.rl"...:.!!w~ay~~~Fe:b::..,:6...,:Sy::;m:::m:;es Valley ........ ,.... ;.. Away

&amp;-J

'···

SOUTHERN HIGGIH~:~;:.~~~~~
1988·89 GIRLS B

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... A•wavl
nov. 28-Easlern ........................ llnm1ill
Dec. 1-Ky"r CreeL ..................... .~=:~
Dec. 5-MIIIS ............".;".............. ..
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Ho1T1II
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Awa1vl
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... llnm1ill
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Awa1vl
Dec. 5-Southwestern
22-Aiexander ······~··············.
Jan.
................. . ~E~
Jan. 9-Eastirn ......................... .
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................. ..
Jan. 14-Waterford ..................... .
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ............... :;~~
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ........................ .
Jan. 30-Waterford .................... .
Feb. 2-Hannan Trace ................ ..
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern ................. .

litit. I d t·Dirtctor

...,. ~--

0

"

resolution of appreciation
was passed and a plaque pres·
~nted to Bob Hbefllcll, gen~al
manager of The Dally Sentinel,
when Middleport VIllage Council
met In regular session Monday
night.
Hoeflich will retire from full·
time newspaper work on Jan. 31.
although his popular column,
"Beat of the Bend" will continue
.to be a feature of The Dally
:Sentinel and The Sunday Times·
Sentinel.

'

M

'!'he resolution commended William Waluirs, and clerk·
Hoeflich for his many years of treasurer, Jon Buck.
dedicated service In providing
The attractive plaque was
news coverage in the Village of lriscrjbed;
·
Middleport and his cooperation
"In appreciation to Bob Hoein assisting village council .and , !llch - for your many years of
Middleport residents In publlclz· professionalism and journalistic
lng newsworthy events taking Integrity exhibited In the report·
place.
ing of our activities.
It was signed by Mayor Fred
"Best Wishes for your retlreHoffman, council members. De- ment. We'd like to thinl&lt;o that
wey Horton, president, James you'll come back and write a
Clatworthy, Paul Gerard, Bob guest column very often. So
Gilmore, Jack Satterfleld, and always: Keep Smiling!"
.

Bundy executed early this morning
STARKE, Fla. (UPI) -Serial my family and friends," the
sex killer Theodore Bundy, who nation's most notorious death
confessed to murdering dozens of row Inmate said firmly and
young women, w~s executed . clearly before a mask was
Tuesday In the e1ectrlc chair draped over his face In the death
after a night of weeping, prayer chamber at Florida State Prison.
and a farewell telephone call to
Shortly afterward, 2,000 volts
his mother.
of electricity surged through the
"I'd like
' killer's body and Bundy, 42, was

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER
·INSURANCE
111 SECOND AVL
POMEIOY

CALL 992-3311 or
992-23U

wnH us

MEMIEI FDIC

--- _..,._
a&lt;a

.._

0

HOME
.

•

' ;6&lt;

"COME GROW

·EWING
FUNE¥l

.

'

•.

I

'IJMITY AND
. . ..ALWA
.

·WE WIU
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
. NEEDS

presented Boh HoeDlch with a plaque and .a copy
of the resolution of appreciation during Monday
night's meeting.

·&amp; SAYINGS CO.

oCIOMPLII'IIIAOIATOIIM•VM!Iol
-lOll-Mil
ALIIMIMINI'

POMEIQY, OH.

.,

CIIIDIT CAIIOI

PATte

1992-219!1
~---~---,_,_J-- --·-~-----

.....a

.fARMERS
. BANK

.J:

. ft2-!U6 ·

SYRAQISI

.

•••

9ft•63S3 .

tiS

$
..~ 1

·UCM·OIJCE
949-ntO:
..._

------ -·--..:..---- .. -

Plans for adopting projects to
carry out In the spending of State
Issue II funds were started
Monday night when Middleport
Village Council met in regular
session.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that the village will receive
$31,500a year during the first two
years of the five year program
and $36,000 annually for the
remaining three years.
A 10 percent local match is
required for the expenditure of
funds and moneys from the Issue
can be used only for the repair
and Improvement of eKistlng
facilities. Mayor Hoffman gave a
list of possible repair projects to
council and ;~sked them to add to
that list by the next regular
meeting. Then the projects w!ll
be prlorltzed.
·
Mayor Hoffman commended
the Meigs County Commission·
ers for their wisdom In distrlbut·
lng the State Issue II funds
throughout the county. The list of
projects is to be turned In to the

comm lssloner s by m ld- has had property surveyed on the
February. Mayor Hoffman com· street at a cost of $925. She asked
mented that the commissioners council to reimburse her in the
could have kept the entire amount of $500 since that was ihe
amount for county scope amount that council had agreed
projects.
to spend several years ago for
In other actions, council gave survey work in order to establish
the first reading to a new property lines.
ordipance providing 40 cent an
Council also heard other com·
hour pay lne,reases for village . plaints about the street from
employees. If .the ordlnand!' ·- residents. The resident who had
proceeds as scheduled the raises the property surveyed pointed
will go Into effect March 1.
out that the survey had aided the
Following a pattern set by the village In establishing its prop·
Meigs County Commissioners, erty lines on Hudson St. and
council also voted to secul't' reported that some property on
building permits In the village the street Is for sale to the village
!rom Washington County In the If Improvements are planned
future. One advantage In ~cur· there. Mayor Hoffman referred
ing the permits through that the matter to the street commit·
county Is a faster turn-around on tee for study.
state required Inspections,
Councilman Bob Gilmore re·
Mayor Hoffman reported.
ported that a pack of wild dogs
Mayor Hoffman announced a
has been running in the Bone
fair housing seminar which will liollow area. Mayor Hoffman
be a luncheon meeting at 11:30 said the dog warden wUI again be
a.m. Wednesday at the Meigs contacted about the report.
Senior Cltlz,ens Center. Paul
Attending were Mayor Hof·
Gerard will represent council at
fman, Clerk-Treasuer Jon Buck,
that session.
and Councilmen Gilmore, Dewey
Horton, Jack Satterfield, Wil·
Three residents appeared before council to discuss Hudson St.
llam Walters, Gerard and James
One resident reported that she Clatworthy.

Bob Hoeflich honored ·by
Middleport .Village Council, Hofff!Uln t~ ht:ad plan~ers

•

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

25

2 Section•. 12 Pages
Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nawspaper

1989.

By BOB HOEFLICH

555 PARI .ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-6611

Jan. 29-At North Gallia
Jan. 27-0ak Hill

jii.lua,Y 24,

Middleport starts plans
·for Issue D projects

'

BOYS

'lour Dealer o•
The River

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday,

EASTERN

.AST IWN ST.
POMEROY

¥ol.31. No.111
·Copyrtghtecl1989

VALLEY
·LUMBER

Jan. 23-At Nelsomle York
Jan. 26-Wellston
Jan. 30-At.Vinton Co.

Cloudy tonight, chance of
rain 40 percent. Wednesday,
cloudy, high In lower 40s.
rain 40

•

,

-. Jan. 29-Nelsonville York

GIRLS

ChtvroleteOidsmobilt
•Cadillac, Inc.

6451

614-992-51.41

...

0

Daily · Number
335
Pick-4

Rawllae•
Coat•
Blower
Fa1aral
Ho••
MIDDLEPORT, OliO

'

I

Ohio Lottery

·m row;

This
Week'1
Csme1

I

..

'

.
wms

THE
CENTRAl
TRUST
COMPANY '
"Your Financial
Center"
•
97 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
992-6661 '
..
·
1.. ·I'·.
INSTALLMENT
LOANS
992-3077
'

•

01.
IUIICII OP DDD:II DRIVE VNDBBWAY - A baclle&amp; for
de..ale• to tile MIU'Ch of Dll- Blrtb Defect• Fo•Jidll&amp;.,n Ia
plaeed oa tile oollllter Ill Crow 'I Family RestMJrant In Pomery by
Bob Crow gi¥1111 eaHmlen 10 oppnrhml&amp;y to give. While Mothers
Mlll'dleltalle plaee Ia many co1111tte. acr- Oblo, It's been several
yearallllce door-a.cioor aollclatton for funds hM taken plaee here.
(See 1tory on pa1e 7.)

offlciall~

pronounced dead at
7: 16 a.m. EST, said Jon Peck, a
spokesman lor Gov. Bob
Martinez.
Several hundred spectators
gathered near the rural prison
cheered under a full moon when
witnesses emerged from the
death chamber at 7:15a.m. with
the news that Bundy was dead.
"It's taken 10 years too long," a
man shouted from a roadside.
Several had chanted "burn
baby burn" and sang "On Top of
Old Sparky," a ref11rence to the
nickname of Fl.o rlda's electric
chair.
The crowd also yelled Insults at
a small clump of anti-death
penalty demonstrators standing
nearby:
Bundy was the second person
executed this year and the 106th
person put to death In the United
States since the Supreme Court
lifted Its ban on capital punish·
ment In 1976.
Bundy was executed for the sex
murdt!J: of a 12-year-old Lake
City girl, but he confessed during
the weekend to 28 murders In
Washington state, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, California, Michl·
· gan, Pennsylvania and Vermont,
apparently trying to win a stay .
by offering Information on un·
solved slaylngs.
The Supreme Court and the
Florida Supreme Court both
turned down his appeals
Monday.
Bundy spent his last nlgbt
praying with a minister and
' refused a final breakfast of steak
and eggs. His head was shaved
and he was led to the electric
chair shortly before dawn.
"He didn't want any break·
fast," said Bob Macmaster, a
spokesman for the Flnrlda Department of Corrections. "He
spent the night with a Methodist
minister (Fred Lawrence of
Gainesville, Fla.) In his cell and
spent part or the time praying,"
Religious broadcaster James
Dobson, wbo interviewed Bundy
the night before his death, said
the prisoner "talked at consider·
Continued on page 12

.nor Thomas, executive director
By NANCY YOACHAM
of the Meigs County Council on
Sendnel News Staff
Fred Hoffman, Mayor of Mid·
Aging; Kim Shields, county
dleport, was elected president of director or development; Mike
the Meigs County Regional Plan· . Duhl, conservationist for the
Meigs SoU and Water Service;
nlng Commission when the com·
mission met Monday at the David M. Fox, executive director
·Farmers Bank and Savings Com· of the Meigs Agricultural Stablll·
pany, Pomeroy, for Its regular zatlon and Conservation Servi·
January meeting. Hoffman re- ces: Vljay Gadde, of Buckeye
places Theron Johnson in the Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District; and
position.
"We need some new faces," Fran!&lt; Cleland, of the Southeast·
said Johnson, who has served the ern Ohio Regional Council's
as president for many years . Highway Users Committee.
"We need your help," said
Johnson commended the noml·
·natlng committee for their selec· Eleanor Thomas In a preface to
Uon of Hoffman as president, her report.
John Rice as first vice- president,
As explained by Thomas, the
and Orlan Roush as second Ohio Legislature Is considering
vice-president. Lee McComas In-home and community-based
will contmue as secretary for the care for older people as part of
comlsslon, and Charles Blakes- the new budget. This program,
lee, as executive director.
called Eldercare, would provide
Ron Ash, chairman of the funding lor services in the home
nominating committee, recom- to elderly citizens who do not
mended the slate of officers. The require skilled care nursing,
pew officers were approved such as the type received in
unan lmously.
nursing homes.
·
In-home and communityReports to the planning commission were presented by Elea- based care for older peopole

would ihclude ·such services as
home-delivered meals, house· ·
keeping chores, personal care ln.
the llome, respite care for
caregivers. medical transpor·
talon and housing assistanc~ .
"Did you know," Thomas
asked, "that Ohio ranks seventh
In the nation of persons age 65
and older In population , but 47th
In appropriatjon of state funds
for long.term care services?"
Meigs «:;ounly's older population
Is far higher than the state
average, Thomas sald. In Meigs
County,l8 percent o! the popula·
lion Is over 60. The state average
Is 12 Jlercent. And the 85 plus
population Is the single fastest
growing population in the coun·
try. By the year 2,000, a 35
percent Increase is projected In
the population fQr the State of
Ohio, Thomas added.
The costs for in-home care
would be substantially less than
the cosrs for nursing home care,
Thomas explained, bu~even with
the obvious cost dlffel'ences, the
future dlrection .of Eldercare will
Continued on page 12

•

Celeste proposes $25 billion budget
By LEE LEONARD

~

UPI Stateho08e Reporter
COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard
Celeste, emphasizing health
care, the environment and senior
citizen preservation, Monday
proposed a $25 bihlon state
budget for flscai199&lt;J.91, a 10 to 13
percent hike over the eKisting
outlay.
State Budget Director Lee
Walker described It as "a meat·
and-potatoes" budget, but state
Tax Commissioner Joanne Limbach said she preferred the term
"spuds and Spam. "
· The fiscal blueprint, balanced
by increased "sIn" taxes on
cigarettes and alcoholic bever·
ages, g()j!s to the Ohio House
Finance Committee Tuesday ! It
does not count another $1.4 billion
In state sales, Income and corporate taxes returned to local
governments.
Federal and seeclal revenues,
such as highway and wildlife
tunds, bring the total spending
figure above the $42 biiUon mark
for two years. The new fiscal ·
biennium begins July 1.
"It's a respon!lble budget,"
said Umbach. •'It doesn't do
everything we want It to."
One thing It does not do,
according to Walker, Is !uUy !und
education. "Education barely
keeps up with Inflation," she
said. "It does not come close to
what the governor would like to
see. If there is no additional
money for schools, that will be a
probl!"'-"

Celeste Is counting heavily on
an "education Initiative" - a
proposed 1 percent tax on lndlvld·
ual and corporate Income - to
raise an additional $1.84 billion
for primary, secondary and
'higher education excellence
starting July 1.
But state legislative leaders
have said they plan to consider
the basic budget request first,
before turning to an education
financing proposal to send to the
voters, perhaps In November.
In planning for the special
·above-and-beyond effort for edu cation, the governor has limited
primary and secondary educa·
tlon In his budget to $5.76 billion,
a modest lncrea,.se of 2.8 percent
the first year and 3.5 percent the
second- a smaller increase than
for 1988-89.
Higher education Is ticketed
for $3.25 billion, annual Increases
of 3.2 percent and 4 percent.
Celeste's outlay Is ~alanced In

part by a whopping lO·cent ·
Increase in the 18·cent tax on a ·
pack of cigarettes. Beer, wine
and liquor prices also would be
hiked.
The budget also Is supported by
an unprecedented number of lee
increases hitting public water
user\, Insurance agents. bakeries, beekeepers, nurseries
sportsmen, miners, criminals:
pesticide dealers and adult day
care centers.
Professionals and businesses
would be assessed for their own
regulation at the state level.
The Department ·of Human
Services, which generally receives the largest portion of the
budget, Is written In for $8.6
billion- annual increases of 15.3
percent and 7.2 percent. A 4
percent Increase in welfare benefits Is included starting Jan. 1.
1990.
Celeste's outlay would allow
Continued on page 12

I..Dcal news briefs-Patrol probes Meigs aecident
The GaiUa-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol
Investigated a single vehicle accident Monday In Chester
Township, Meigs County, on CR. 23, 1.2 miles east of SR. 7.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Craig E. Venoy, 29,
Pomeroy, went off one side ofthe road slriklng a fence, then the
other side of the road, striking another fence. Both fences are
owned by Horace Karr, Rt. 1, Racine. Damage was mOderate.
No one was injured. Th~e was no citation.
(

�..

The Daily Sentinai-Page-3

•

Commentary
_Iran suspect

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INtERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

rs:m~
~v

'
I"T'\-J._.,...,,..,....,
d.~
.

. ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
. PA-T WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhllsher/ControUer

BOB liOEFLJCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Pres ~
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are- subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in

good taste, addressing issues, not persooalltles.

WASHINGTON -Iran Is lhe
most likely suspect behind the
December bombing of Pan Am
flight 103, according to our
intelligence sources In Western
Europe and ~ashll)gton, but that
Isn't what the White House wants
to hear.
British and West German
intellegence services · have
singled out Iranian-directed terrorist groups as the culprits.
Some of the Information the
foreign spies have gathered has
been shared with the Central
Intelligence Agency, but not all.
The British and West Germans
are leery of a. CIA bias that seeks
to make Ll bya's Moammar Gadh;~fl the bogeyman and blame
him for the deaths of the 259
passengers aboard the plane and

•

m

bombing

·11 people In the town of Lockerbie, Scotland.
One CIA official admitted to us
that he understood why foreign
spies were W&lt;\ry about sharing
what they know. "It's hard to
blame them," he said. "Look at
the Reagan administration's
past shenanigans with Libyanrelated Intelligence,"
He was referring to 1981
rumors about a Libyan hit squad
and the 1986 bombing of a Berlin
disco.
West German police believe
the Reagan administration
hyped - or manufactured :...
flimsy evidence blaming Gadhat! for the disco bombing In
which one American serviceman
was killed. President Reagan
used the Incident to justify a

Pay raises? What
about refoMn?
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior -Editor

Berry's. World
~

'
~~
1Ht
NEA. Ine /· C,
by

C)

"/ don't remember saying that I wanted
KINDER, GENTLER hockey team/"

•

"

+::

to find out who Is responsible.
The flaw In this lntelllegence-forcash approach Is that It, encourages Middle Eastern gadflies to
come forward with what the
United States wants to hear that Gadhatl did it.
These espionage entrepreneurs know that President Reagan has been obsessed with
Gadhatl for eight years and
might like to have the final say.
The last thing Reagan wants to
bear Is that terrorists directed by
Iran bombed flight 103. Reagan
has been humiliated by Iran and
Is not anxious for a final IgnominIous footnote fn hls dealings with
the Ayatollah Khomelnl.
That's what makes the West
European intelligence services
so wary of sharing · Iranianrelated InformatiOn with the CIA.
They pointed out to us that
American embassy oftlclals
across Europe and the Middle
East have pooh-poohed the
claims of a shadowy pro-Iranian
group that has been frantically
trying to take credit for the
bombing.
The group calls Itself The
"Guardians of the Islamic Revolution," and claims It wa, moll·
vated by the downing of an
Iranian airliner last July by a
U.S. war ship. The Guardians, In
a call to London news services,
warned "there will be another
present In the new year for
America" If the United States
doesn't deport Reza Pahlavl, the
son of Iran's late shah.
Yet another caller, this time In
Budapest, claimed that the
Guardians bombed Flight 103,
and warned that If Pahlavi Isn't
deported, the Guardians will
place a bomb aboard a Scandinavian Airlines System plane.
' Sweden has often acted as a
clandestine go-between for the
United States in dealing with
Middle Eastern Arab groups.

subsequent bombing _ raid on
Libyan sites, lncludlngGadhafl's
.
Tripoli home.
In 1981, the CIA paid tens of
thousands of dollars to a Middle
East Informant who gave the CIA &gt;
what It wan ted to hear. He
manufactured false reports of a
Libyan hit squad out to assassl,nate President Reagan. The
story unraveled when alert West
European Intelligence oftlcers
noted that the Informant had
Included among the · alleged hit
squad members several people
who had sworn to kill Gadhafl,
not Reagan.
..
Now the Pan Am bombing has ·
become the top Intelligence gaiherlng priority for the CIA. Our
sources say they are prepared to
s~nd "several million dollars"

~MMM

a

IMT~RN~t~ll

AlR

GAT~+

Senate eucation conunittee convenes
The Senate Education Committee held It's first hearing this past
Tuesday, January 17th. As the
ranking minority member of the
Committee, I was not only
pleased but anxious t9get started
with the business that lay ahead
Of US.
The Committee had an oppor. tunlty to hear from the three
select commltlees that have
reviewed the educational process In Ohio: The EducatiOn 2,000
committee, The House select
committee on education and the
Gilmor/ Schafrath Commission.
Mr. Brad Butler, who was
chairman of the Education 2,000
Committee, stated that he felt
there were two critical Issues
that the legislature would copfront accountability and funding
methods for schools. Mr. Butler
Felt that voters were tired of
hearing about problems with
education because they did not

see the results of previous efforts
to assist our schools. The problem, according to Mr. Bu tier, Is
that most efforts to assist our
educational system are geared
towards long range planning and
not quick fix solutions. Chairman
Butler, when discussing funding
methods, noted that the major
concern that he has Is that our
schools are funded in a manner
that Is neither adequate nor
reliable. Butler stated that unless, House Bill 290, which
established the current funding
formula In Ohio, Is repealed or
amended then we will not be able
to assure even a minimum of
funding for poor property and
Income school districts.
State Representative Mike
Shoemaker, Chairman of the
House Select Committee on EdUcation, testlfil!d on his committee's findings, he felt that there
were three major . at;ea' s of

Sen. Jan M. Long

concern that are lacing our
schools. Representative Sho· chard Schafrath spoke on behalf
emaker stated that there Is of this yet unfinished report.
definitely a need to Improve the Senator Schafrath felt that chalstate of the current facilities that lenging our children to learn
house our school children. He should be our number one priorpointed out examples of build- Ity. He also went onto say that we
Ings with no central heating and should Involve business leaders,
structures with no restroom parents and citizens from the
facilities. He also called for a community to make education a
specltlc line Item In the budget top item in our communities. The
that allocates money for capital Senator also suggested that he
Improvements for those dilapi- would favor a statewide curricudated buildings. Representative lum and the development of
Shoemaker also staled that this Alternative Schools to foster
type of Investment could not be competlon amongst our children.
expected to be thrust on the
With the many different viewbacks of local tax payers and that points being offered, one can see
the state and the legislature that the task of shaping Ohio
should take action to revise the educatiOn policy for the future Is
present structure for funding our Indeed going to be' complex. But,
local schools.
we must not forget that our most
The last group that the Senate Important goal is equal educaEducation Committee heard tional opportunity for all Ohio
from was the Gilmor/Schrath · sc hoot children regardless of
Commission. State 'Senator Rl- where they may be living.

A parting shot for cost cutting_.-~_ta:_!~_M__:__;_ille-=-r
Former President Reagan, as
required by law, submitted his
final budget request to Congress
last week and it was quickly
dismissed by the President's
critics as a meaningless measure. I feel such a reception Is.
unfortunate for a number of
reasons. First, If this request
were adopted, It would slgnlfl·
cantly reduce the federal budget
deficit to $92.5 billion in FY 1990,
a figure that Is well below the
current Gramm-Rudman deficit
reduction target of $100 billion.
Moreover, it would do so without
raising federal taxes. So, this
. budget forms a good starting
point for President-elect Bush In
developing his own budget request, and It would be well worth
Congress's time to take a serious
look at what President Reagan's
request has to offer,
President Reagan's request
would reduce the federal budget
deficit by cutting federal spendIng by $25 billion. Of this, $3.9
billion In spending cuts would
come from reducing spending In
other programs. However,
spending In certain priority
areas would be Increased under
the Reagan budget. More money
would be made available to clean
up nuclear waste at our nation's
weapons plants and fulids would
be made available to help ball out
Insolvent savings and loans.
Spending for anti-drug abuse
efforts would also be Increased,
principally · by beefing up enforcement etforta. The Defense
Department would receive a 2.0%
·(after Inflation) Increase IncludIng more fullds for the Strateilc
Defense Initiative, the Stealth
bomber and for rail-mobile lntercontlnentai ballistic mlssUes.
The President'S ,~udget would

also Increase funding for the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration and for AIDS
research. ;Finally, It should be
noted that the Reagan budget
request also contains some new
revenues In the form of new and
increased user fees.
While there Is much In the
Reagan budget request that Is
commendable It also contains
some distinct flaws. In particular, In this request the President
endorsed a proposed 50% 11.1·
crease , In the salaries of
Members of Congress and other
federal officials. While I can
appreciate the reasoning for
Increasing the salaries of some
federal officials, particularly the
judiciary, I find such a proposal
for Members of Congress most
untimely anil unwarranted. Th'e
emphasis In Congress must be
upon the reduction of the federal
budget deficit. As a body responsible In large part for that deficit,
Congress must set the standard
for selflessness rather than be an
example of selfishness.
In summary, It should be kept
11.1 mind that the Reagan budget
request Is not Important for Ita
specific propo~als, for as stated
at the outBet, this budget Ia
essentially a formality required
by law, and PntaldJIIIt-elect Bush
will soon aubmlf1i11 own budget
request that will a~ually form
the basis of the budget process
soon to be undertaken by Congrell. President Reagan's final
budget request Is Important
because of what It standi for.
That II, hll budget request shows
that It II numerically poulble to
reduce the budget deficit without
raising taxes. This Ia conalltent
with what President Reagan has
advoeated all along and It Is In

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Wrll.er
As far as Denver Coach· Doug
Moe was concerned, the lowly
Indiana Pacers might as well
have been the Los Angeles
Lakers.
The Nuggets dropped ~ their
seventh game in their last eight
outings Monday night, allowing
the Pacers to post their iOth
victory of the season wJth a
117·102 triumph.
'" "'

Jack Anderson ,

SAY AHHHfol

WASHINGTON
Last week, ·my colleague Leon Daniel
characterized the proposed pay raise for members of Congress,
federal judges and top officials as a burglary In progl"ess on Capitol
Hili.
He gets no argument here. In fact, the crime has been going on for
years.
Especially, as he noted, the same Congress that last fall
fiUbustered to death an increase In the $3.35 an hour minimum wage
(less than $7,000 a year) apparently Is going to pretend now that it
can't do anything to stop Its OWJI salary from being Increased from
$89,500 to $135,000.
Also, as less often noted, the same President Reagan who approved
the 50 percent boost for Congress, proposed only a 2 percent Increase
for rank and file federal employes and a freeze on cost of Uvlng
Increases for military and civilian federal retirees.
. The question here Is not whether the public officials involved are
worth the money. Most may be, but It seems no more than the
simplest justice that if people in low paying jobs and on pensions are
going to be asked to tighten their be its, so should the folks at the top.
And It's not as if Congress did such a great job for the money It gets
now. Since their last 50 percent pay raise, Congress and the president
!lave let the national debt grow by hundreds of billions of dollars and
permitted national disgraces like poverty, homelessness, drug abuse
and declining educational achievement get worse.
There might be some weight to arguments for congressional pay
raises if there was more than the slightest indication that some of the
scandalous practices regarding money and perquisites on Capitol
Hill were going to be cleaned up.
~~-A step In the right direction Is the pay commission's proviso that
would bar' 'honorariums," which are fees paid members of Congress
for making speeches or simply ·showing up at trade shows and
conventions. Members now can keep from $26,850 to $35,000 of this
money, which In some cases smacks of plain bribery.
But that would still leave plenty of room for reform.
Campaign financing Is the biggest scandal. Political actiOn
eommlttees pour millions of dollars into congressional campaigns,
frequently contributing to Incumbents whose politics they dislike but
whose Influence they covet.
That also can look like bribery, and it floods the political arena wltb
money to keep incumbents In office: last year, 98.5 percent of House
and Senate members who ran for reelection were successful.
El~s are supposed to be the voters· weapon to get rid of bad
public officials, but the flood of PAC money overwhelms that process.
And on top of that, some members can keep excess campaign funds
for themselves if they retire or lose an election.
The free mall privilege also is abused. It Is supposed to be for
official business only, but many members use It to flood the mall with
. material glorifying the~selves. It Is campaign material, pure and
simple, but Congress puts little limit on It In non-election years.
Alone arriong federal officials, members of Congress can operate
their own businesses or law practices at home and they often work
only three days a week In Washington. They also get expense-paid
trips to and from their home districts.
.
For $135,000, let alone $89,500, legislators sliould work full-time at
one job. For that kind of money, the only business members of
Congress ought to be attending is the people's.

Williams leads Pacers' 117-102 VICtory

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
POITI8I'Oy-Middleport, Ohio
Tueeday. January 24, 1989

these terms that ertorts to reduce
the deficit should be conaidered
In Congress. Thus, this budget
request will hopefuUy set the tone
for, rather than the substance of,
future budget dlscusslona. Furth-

ermore, It represents President
Reagan's parting call for a
continued reduction In federal ·
spending, a call the Congress
would be wise to heed.

Today on history
By Unlled Preas International
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 24, the 24th day of 1989 with 341 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening sws are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They lncl ude
the Roman emperor Hadrian In 76 A.D., English dramatist William
Congreve In 1670, Frederick the Great of Prussia In 1712, British
social reformer Sir Edwin Chadwick In 1800, author Edith Wharton in
1862; abstract painter Robert Motherwell In 1915 (age 74), actor
Ernest Borgnlne In 1917 'age 72), evangelist Oral Roberts, In 1918
(age 71), ballet dancer Marla Tallchlef Paschen In 1925 (age 64),
singer Neil Diamolid In 1941 (age 48), and comedian John Belush I in
1949.

--

A thought for the day: English dramatist William Congreve wrote,
"Music hath charms to soothe Ute savage breast, To sotten rocks, or
bend a knotted oak."

shot."
Reggie Miller scored a careerhigh 27 points to lead the Pacers
In scoring.
The Nuggets shot just 40
percent from the floor, Including
dismal performances by both of
their starting guards. Michael
Adams hit ju~t 3 of 13 shots and
Lafayette Lever 4 of 13, though
Adams did hit a 'three-point shot
to extend his NBA record of
making at least one to 79 games.
Indiana led by as much as 47-34
with 7:52 left in the second
quarter when Miller hltone of his
3 three-pointers, but the Nuggets
rallied to within 59-54 at halftime.
Indiana gradually pulled away
In the third quarter, never
leading by less than 20 in the last
5:20 of the period. Indiana led by
as much as 27 points, taking a
97-70 lead on a Wllllams layup
· with 32 seconds left tn the third
quarter.
"The second quarter was by
far our best quartllr, but In the
third we played terrible," said
Alex English, who led Denver
with 25 points. " We didn't con. centrale In the beginning of the
third quarter. Wedldn' tcomeout
prepared."
In Monday night's only other
NBA
games, Cleveland ran over
J
Golden State 142-109 and San
Antonio stuffed Miami 119-101.
Cavaliers 14%, Warriors 109
At Richfield, Ohio, Larry
Nance scored 22· points to pace
the Cavaliers to their best
offensive output of the season.
.;. -·•
The Cavaliers' point total and 68
,
rebounds are team records for a
regulation game. Chris Mullin
scored 27 points to lead thE:
Warriors, who had their winning
streak stopped at eight games .
•
Spun 111, Heat 101
At
San
Antonio, rookie Willie
night's makeup game with host Nelsonville-York,
GOING FOR LAYUP - Alief passlns teamAnderson scored 26 points and
as N-Y's Mike Elkels tries lo block the coming
male Todd Powell (U) In the lane, Meigs' Kevin
the
Spurs held Miami to 12
shot.
The
Buckeyes
won
79-415.
Oller (31) goes for a chance at a layup In Saluday
third-quarter points. The Spurs
·lrailed 58-54 at halftime beJore
C' I
outscorlngtheexpanslonHeatlly
20 points In the third quarter to
By United Press International
beat us in our barn 14-3 on Dec.
·
take command. Grant Long led
·
· ~
In other games, Hartford shel- · ·Miami with 16 points.
The Calgary Flames evened 29).,
· ·
tacked Quebec 5-0, Mlnne$ota
their hypothetical NHL chamMullen's 31st goal of the season crushed New Jersey 7-2 and the
plonshlp series with the Cana- broke a 1-1 tie. He fired a shot New York Rangers edged EdThe Daily Sentinel
dlens at one game apiece by from the faceoff circle through manton 3_2_
avenging an earlier home loss thPlegsofgoalleBrlanHayward.
Whalers 5, Nordlques o
(USPS Uli-. .)
A. IMvlllon ef Matumedt .. lne.
with a victory In Montreal.
Nleuwendyk's 35th goal of the
At Quebec, Peter Sldorkiewicz.
Joe MuUen scored the go- year, a deflection during a power . stopped 29 shots and Kevin
PubUshed every afternooo, Monday
thrqh Fr-Iday, 111 Court St., Poahead goal with eight seconds play at 16:03 of the third period, Dineen scored two power-play
meroy, Ohto, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
left In the second period and provided the Flames with an goals to lift Hartford. Hartfortt,
llsblng "Company/MuUlmedla, Inc.,
Nleuwendyk contributed two insurance goal
PomerO)'. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-%1!16. Se·
3_1_1 against Quebec, took a
coM class postage paid at Pomeroy,
gco~ls Mo nd ayi nlghht to give
"That Is what happens when five-point lead on the Nordlques
Ohio.
. a gary a 3·1 trump thatended twogoodteamsplayeacllother," for the final Adams Division
the Montreal Canadlens' home Hayward said. "Nieuwendyk playoff spot. Quebec went 0-for-9
Member: United Press Jnternatlonal,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
winning streak at 18 games.
specializes In those type of goals. on the power play , while HartOhio Newspaper Association. National
"Thatwas a playoff-type game I had no chance on the goal by ford was 3-for-10.
AdvertislDg Representative, Branham
between two good teams," said Mullen."
North stars 7, Devils 2
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue:
New York, New York 10017.
Nleuwendyk of the match up
Calgary went ahead 1-0 at 1:24
At E&lt;!St Rutherford, N.J ., Bob
\
between the teams with the bes t of lhe opening period. Hakan Brooke and Brian Bellows each
POSThiASn:l\: Send adclre,. chBft&amp;"ll
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill COurt St ..
rehcords In the league. "We play Loob shot and Nieuwendyk scored two goals to spark MlnnePomeroy, Ohio t57m.
1 egamethewaywepracticelt.I tipped a backhander past sola, which scored twice on
go for the net and tonight It paid Hayward.
power plays and twice short
SUIIIICIIIPTION RATES
BJ CVrler w Mof.• Boule
"I got my stick in the right handed to win for the first time in
off on both of my goals.
One Weel&lt; ........................... ... .....$1.40
"This was a confidence builder place," said Nieuwendyk, last · four games. - .
One Month ................................. $6.10
for us in case we meet Montreal season's NHL Rookie of the
One Year .......................... ....... $72.80
In the finals."
Year. "On the 3-1 goal, 1 saw an
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Montreal has 72 points to opening In front of Hayward and
Dolly ..... ... ........................... 25 Cents
Calgary's 69, but the Flames got the puck from AI Macinnis.
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car· ·
have played three fewer games.
"The same thing happened on Barboursville at Pt. Pleasant
rler may remit In advance direct· to
Each team haswonontheother's my first goal when Loob took the Chesapeake at Fairland
The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
shot. We were getting tired near . Logan at Marion- Franklin
home ice this season.
week.
'Mike Vernon made 27 saves theendofthegameandiamsure South Point at Buffalo
Parkersburg at Marietta
No subscriptions by mall permltled In
and helped keep Montreal score- Montreal was also getting tired.''
areas where home carrier service Is
less In five power-play chances.
Claude Lemieux tied the score Washington CH at Greenfield
available.
Calgary outshot the Canadlens, 1-1 with a backhand drive at 11:30 Oak Hill at Hannan Trace ·
MAII-rltlilo•
30-28.
of the period. Lemieux raced Into Southern at North GaiUa
IDIWe Melp County
"It was all out war," Vernon the Calgary zone, with MuUen Southwestern at Symmes Valley
13 Weel&lt;s .................................. $19.24
said. "We battled them and both wrapped all over his body, but Kyger Creek at Eastern
26 Weeks ...................·...... ......... S37.96
52 Weeks .................................. $74.36
sides got their shots ln. We are Lemieux managed to getthe shot Welllston at Alexander
O.tololeMelp Counlf
VInton
County
at
Belpre
working as a defensive club and away and past Vernon.
13 Weeks ................ ... ............... $20.80
26 Weeks .......................... ....... $40.30
that Is why we are number one In
"I hit the goal post In the Trimble at Federal Hocking
52 Weeks ........................... ..... .. S75.«J
at
Meigs
Nelsonville-York
goals against in the league second "9th score tied 1-1; I
(Calgary has allowed only 137 should have scored that one," Miller - Open
goals, with Montreal second In Lemieux said of a narrow miss Jn
the league at 150) .
the second period. ''They got
"Our guys were getting hit In pumped up when they went
our zone but~they still managed to .ahead 2-1 with that late goal.
get the puck out. We owed Vernon was great In the Calgary
Montreal one after the way they net. "

...

ers, who finished 20-62, needed
until Jan. 6 to post 10 victories.
Herb Williams scored 21 points
and puUed down a team-record 29
rebounds to lead the Pacers ..
"I was happy for Herb," said
Indiana Coach Dick Versace, 4-5
since becoming the Pacers' third
coach this season. "He was in a
terrible slump, and I think he felt
worse than anyone. He had a bad
elbow and it was messing up his·

•

.---

J.

DAUG_HERTY FOULED - Cleveland's Brad Daugherty Is
fouled hy Golden Stale's Manute Dol while attemptlns asholln the
third quarter of Monday night's NBA contest In RlchOeld, Ohio.
The Cavaliers won 142-109. (UPI)

KCHS downs Eastern 37-27
Sophomore Yon Ragland's
marksmanship earned her a
game-high 18 points, which
pushed Kyger Creek to a 37-27
win over visiting. Eastern Monday night.
The Bobcats held the Eagles
scoreless in the first quarter as
Itagland and teammates Beth
Bradbury and Joy Skidmore
powered the Bobcats to a 17-9
halftime lead.
In the third quarter, the
' Eagles' shooting came to life, as
Suzanne Clay, Jenny Cowdery,
Edna Driggs and Tiffany
Gardner cut the Bobcats' lead to
23-21 at the end of the period. But
the Bobcats' offense returned to
Its first-quarter form, as Ra- ·g-land scored 10 of KC's 14 final
points I&lt;J'Itelp record the victory .
Driggs ., led . the Eagles with
seven points.

:t;»irates top

Southern~

SeniOr Rachel Borden Jed the
floor with 19 points In pacing
North Gallia to a 44-39 victory
over Southern Monday night in
Racine.
Both teams played a tight,
hard-fought game, as shown by
the 17-17 halftime score. In the
fourth quarter, the Tornadoes
took a one-point lead with six
minutes left, but the Pirates,
fueled by Borden's shooting,
retook the lead and never gave it
back.
•
On Thursday night the Pirates
(10-4. 9-2) will play at Symmes

•

On Thursday night the Bobcats
will play at Southwes,tern, while
the Eagles will host Hannan
Trace .
&amp;.ore by quarters
Eastern ................ 0 9 12 6-27
Kyger Creek ........ 11 6 6 14-37
KJ-ger Creek (37) - Ragland
7-0-4-18: Bradbury 2-0-4-8; Skidmore 3-0-1-7; Shaver 0-0-2-2;
Swisher 1-0-0-2. Totals- 13-0-1137
Foul shooting - 11-29 (37.9
pet.)
Rebounds - 29 (Bradbury 7)
Turnovers - -24
Eastern (27) - Driggs 3-0-1-7;
Cowdery 2-0-2-6; T. Gardner
2-0-2-6; Clay 2-0-0-4; S. ·Gardner
i-0-0-2; Giltilan 1-0-0-2. Totals 11-0-5--2'7
' '
Foul shooting- 5,10 (50 pet.)
Rebounds - 28
Turnovers ._ 26

44-39

Valley, while the Tornadoes will
travel west to face Oak Hill.
Score by q11arters
North Gallia ....... 7 10 15 12-44
Southe~n ...... ....... J3 4 6 16-39
North Gal Ita (44) - Borden
1-1-2-19; Stout 5-0-0-10; Parsons
3-0-3-9; Cordell 1-0-2-4; Pickens
0-0-2-2. Totals 16-1·9·44
Free throws - 9-12 (75 pet.)
Southern (38)- Evans 4-0-1-9;
Hill 4-0-1-9: Johnson 3-0-3-9:
Winebrenner 2-0-0-4; J . Beegle
1-0-0-2; T. Beegle 1-0-0-2; Greathouse 1-0-0-2; Dudding 1-0-0-2.
Totals 17-0-l&gt;-39
Free throws- 5-14 (35.7 pet.)

I

Sports briefs...

in the Feb. 12 All-Star Game at
Baseball
Toronto reliever Tom Henke Houston. The West coach will be
agreed to a 1-year contract worth Pa I Riley of the Los Angeles
about $1 million. The right- Lakers, Cotton Fitzsimmons of
hander went 4-4 wit)l25 saves and Phoenix or Bernie Bickerstaff of
a 2. 91 ERA last year. .. . Free- Seattle, depending on which
agent outfielder-first baseman team has the bes 1 record next
Rick Leach signed a one-year Sunday . ...
Indiana center Steve Stlpanocontract with the Texas Rangers.
Leach, 31, a former star quarter- vlch, who has . yet to play this
back at Michigan, hit .276 with 23 season because of an injured
RBI in 87 games last season for knee, probably will miss the rest
of the season. ... Golden State's
Toronto....
Minnesota shortstop Greg Chris Mullin, who averaged 27.0
Gagne, who hit .236 last season, ·points In leading the Warriors to
agreed to a one-year contract four victories last week, was
with the Twins .... The Cleveland named the NBA Player of the
Indians acquired pitchers Joel Week. ... The Warriors anDavis and Ed Wojna from the nounced center Ralph Sampson,
Chicago White Sox for Infielder sidelined 12 games since undergoing arthroscopic surgery to his
Eddie Williams.
left knee Dec. 30, will rejoin the
Bulrelball
Lenny Wilkens, who has led the team later this week. GoldPn
Cleveland Cavaliers to the NBA 's State has won eight straight In his
best record, will coach the East absence.

On this date In history:

In 1848, gold was dllcovered at John Sutter's mill near Sacramento,
Calif. The dl!ICOvery touched oft the great gold rush of 1849.
In IQ, the first Boy Scout troop was organized In England by Sir
Robert Baden-Powell, a general In the British Army.
ln 1916, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an income tax .was
unconstitutional.
In 1935, beer was aold In cans for the first time, In Richmond, Va.
In 1965, former British Prime Minister SlrWinsttm Churchllldted at
age91.
•
In 1987, some 20,1100 civil rights actlvl8ts held a "brotherhood"
march In all-white Cumming, Ga., population2,800. It was the South's :
largest civil rights demonstration since !be 1968s. The march came
one week after 400 Ku Klux Klan supporters pelted 75 civil rights
marchers In Cumming.

,"E,erybody who has played
against us has had a career
night," said Moe, whose team
also has lotte!ght straight games
on the road. "All the other teams
look thesametome.ldon' tcare
If It's Indiana, Li' Ue Sisters of the
Poor or whoever. We are just
playing awful."
Indiana, which· broke a fiveg!liile losing streak, has set a
team record for the latest date to
win 10 games. The 1983-84 Pac-

Dlames Snap· CanadtenS
• ' hOme Wtnntng
• . • Strea k

'

Tonight's games:

-~-·

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�-·
•

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tun day, January 24, 1989

Indiana edges Michigan for
13th straight court triumph

Poil~e~oy-Middleport. Ohio

)

Scoreboard ...

'

. _,

w.v....... "· J'l;\.o&lt;lollllt-1 ,.
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UPI ratings
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Mutombo Is a 7-foot-1, 230·
By Unl&amp;ed Press International
In the only other game involv·
pound
sophomore from Zaire
lndtan_a Coach Bob Knight lng a · Top 20 team, No. 2
playing
his first college season.
knows a good thtng when he sees Georgetown defeated St. John' s
Mutombo
did not begin playiD!;
75-64. .
It , Just give him some time.
basketball
until his brother introKnight's Hoosiers stretched
At Landover, Md ., Dlkembe
their winning streak to 13 games Mutombo carne off the bench for duced hlrn to the game in 1985. He
Monday night with a 71-70 Big foul-plagued freshman Alonzo at tended a Jesuit school ln his
Ten victory ov er No. 10 Mourning to set a school record native land and came to GeorgeMichigan.
with 12 blocks, keying a tena· town In 1987" after a U.S. govern- 'rnent employee working In Zaire
The winning streak, which has claus Georgetown defense.
"l was very· pleased with the told Thompson about him, then
vaulted Indiana to No. 14 In the
nation, coincides with Knight's way ..Mutornbo played," George- sat out last season while acclidecision to start three guards.
town Coach John Thompson said. mating hlmsi!U to this country.
"I can block a lot of shots,"
· Indiana was 6-1 with three "He's a very confident Individguards last season, but Knight ual. He's very agUe, he has the said Mutombo, who still strugchose to begin this year with a abillty to block shots and he' s gles with his English. "I just need
· conventional lineup. Howeve.r, a awfully tall. Awfully tall. His to keep my hands high. I need to
3-4 start In which the Hoosiers · presence on the floor because or · lift weights, then my hands can
be stronger."
three times yielded 100 points his size helps an awful lot. ..
Elsewhere, It was: American
Georgetown's 16 blocks estabconvinced Knight to go to his five
86,
N.C.-Wilmtngton 85; Central
best pJ&lt;iyers to start, three of lished a school mark and was two
shy of the NCAA rel!"ord. The. Connecticut 72, Dartmouth 70;
whom were guards.
.
The three guards are Joe previous school single-game George Mason 94, George Wafirst half of Monday night's Big Ten game In Ann
FIGHT FOR REBOUND - Mlchlgaa'a Glen
Hillman, Jay Edwards and Lyn- block record olll was set Dec . 7 shington 75; LaSalle 89,lona 64;
Arbor, Mich. The Hoosiers edged the Wolverines
Rice [lar · ten) aad ·teammate Terry Mills
Princeton 74, Muhlenberg 61;
. don Jones, and all three had a by Mourning against St. Leo .
71·70. (UP I)
surround Indiana's Jay Edwards [left) and Eric
major hand In the vlctm'y.
The shot blocking and general Furman 77, Marshall 69; Old
Anderson
while
tnolnr
to
snare
a
rebound
In
the
Jones 's basket gave Indiana a ·Intimidation helped Georgetown Dominion 99, VIrginia Common71·68 lead with 2:38 to play. · hold St. John's to 31.6 percent wealth 87; South Carolina 92,
Coastal Carolina 65; The Citadel
Michigan' s Mark Hughes ans- shooting !rom the field.
Dwayne Bryant scored 16 of his 73, VIrginia Military 61; Akron
wered with a tlp·ln basket 28
18
points In the second half and 80, Northern Illinois 69; Cleve-_
seconds later. Those were the
the Hoyas made their llnall5 free land State 94, Western Illinois 90;
game's last points.
MIAMI (UPI) - As a boy, impressed winning his first Su· Lewis Billups on him during the
Terry Mills missed a three- throws to improve to 15-1 and 5-1 Creighton 84, Southern Illinois
Jerry Rice marveled at Lynn per Bowl ring than adding to a next drive and had gains of 7, 17
point try with six seconds re- IIi the Big East. St. John's, 12-5 74; Nebraska 71, Wyoming 58;
Swann's acrobatic Super ' Bowl fleet of vehicles that Includes a and 27 yards on the49ers' 92-yard
maining and Hughes rebounded and 4-3, had a five-game wtnntng Southwest Missouri State 81,
catches for the Pittsburgh Jaguar, Mercedes and Mazda winning march in the final
and failed on a short baseline try. streak end despite 25 points by Oral Roberts 77; and Tulsa 53, . Steelers.
seconds.
· ··
truck.
Illinois State 51.
Hillman rebounded as time Matt Brust.
Montana set a Super Bowl
On Sunday, Rice had a better
'1
have
so
many
cars,
I
don'
t
'
expired.
performance than Swann did In know what I'm going to do with a record by passing for 357 yards,
• Edwards finished with 28
any of his fol'r Super , Bowl Subaru," said Rice, obviously a including his team's final drive, •
points. He scored 15 or Indiana's
appearances. In fact, Rice had bettercatch man than pitch man. which ended with a 10-yard ~
19 points II) one stretch toglvethe
the best day of any receiver In
"Maybe I' II give the Subaru to scoring pass to John Taylor.
Hoosiers a 69-66 lead with 3: 20 to
any of the 23 Super Bowls, my mom," he said. "She's really While Rice's showing denied
play.
'
catching 11 passes for 215 yards gotng to get a kick out of lt."
Montana a third Super Bowl
He missed a shot with 40
and a touchdown . In the San
Rice has not been hurting for MVP · trophy, it was the 49ers'
The second half o! Mid-Ohio shooting and have compiled a
seconds to play and Michigan
Francisco 49ers' 20-16 victory cars since his college days at quarterback who drew the lolti·
Conference
men's action begins 72.3 percent slate at the foulltne.
worked to one shot. The Hoosiers
over the Cincinnati Bengals. ·
est praise.
Misstssip;&gt;l Valley State.
dented Glen Rice, who had 19 Tuesday as Rio Grande travels to They are now averaging 77.9 .
"I loved watching Lynn
"Joe Montana Is not human ...
"I drove a JOOZX in college,"
points, a chance at the ball, so Tiffin for a 7:30p.m. encounter points.
Swann," said Rice, who pointed he said. ''I could afford it because Bengals wide receiver Crts Col'
Mills was forced to take the with the Dragons, whom the
Tiffin fell 77-75 on Nov. 29 at
to a juggling sideline catch by I was working during my spare Itnsworth said. "I don't want to
Redmen bested ear!Jer this Lyne Center, in which· forwards
three-pointer from the come~.
Swann against Dallas in Super time.''
call him a god, but he's definitely
"We wanted to win or lose at season.
Bryan Brown and Tyrone Trbo·
Bowl X as his favorite.
Rice's day left him with 21 somewhere in between."
The Redrneq are 14-7 and 4-3 In vich kept Tiffin on the Redmen's ·· Rice made a one-handed side- caches lor 409 yards and ij TDs in
the buzzer," Michigan Coach Bill
"I've seen him do it time and
Frieder said. "We were not going the MOC following . Saturday's heels throughout the game.
line catch and another lunging three postseason games.
time again," 49ers safety Ronnie
to score and have them go down 87-741oss at CedarviUe. Tiffin, an
In Tuesday's game at Glllmor
grab down ·the middle, bOth
Rice was at his bestin th~ Iouth Lott said of San Francisco's
83-58 winner over 'Ohio Domini- Student Center, Dragons mentor
and win II.
reminiscent of Swan. His 11 quarter. He caught a 12-yard TD , 32-year-old quarterback. "It's
Jones and Hillman contributed can Saturday, Is 10-9 and 2·6.
Jim Hammond Is expected to
receptions tied a Super Bowl from Joe Montana 57 seconds sad that people have questioned
Rio Grande will be facing a start Trbovich (6-6, junior, 15.5
12 points apiece for the Hoosiers,"
record and he broke the record into the period, added his 44-yard his ability, but you can't question
16-4 and 6-0 In the Big Ten In a tough defensive team In Tiffin,
points per game, 9.5 rebounds)
for receiving yardage.
lunging grab with cornerback his heart. ..
year tn which they were expected which is currently 48 percent and Dorsey Birdsall (6·4, junior,
Like Swann, who suffered a
to finish In the middle of the pack. from the field, 70 percent on free 13 points, 4.4 rebounds} as his
concussion in the 1975 AFC title
The Wolverines, 15·4 and 3-3, lost throws and averaging roughly 70 forwards.
game, Rice missed two days of
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
·- their second straight and t.hlrd In points. Unofficial statistics show
Super Bowl practice because of a
the Redmen are 49.6 percent on wlll probably start Larry Ben·
four games.
sprained right ankle.
ntng (6·4, freshman, 9.1 points,
"I was so motivated," Rice
5.5 reboun~s) and Brad Schubert said. "I knew I had to make big
(6·3, freshman, 7.7 points} as
plays. A lot of people were
opponents for Trbovich and
counting on me. There was no
Birdsall.. ·
way Jerry Rice was going to let
EXCLUSIVE
Anthony Raymore [13.9 points,
his teammates down. I just
3 rebounds, 3.1 assists} and Brian
blocked everything out."
PHOTO
Watkins (11.5 points, 2 rebounds,
"He was playing on nerve
Boosted by their 97-'1fvictory bounds, while Hastings is cre- 4 assists} are, Lawhorn's proba·
alone," 49ers Coach Bill Walsh
ble starters as guards. Facing
said.
over Malone this past weekend, dited with 16 points and 9.5
them tor the Dragons will be
Rice said the ankle "flared up
the Rio Grande Re.dw~men boards "per outing.
Scott Morrissey (5-9. senior, "2.1
travel to Mount Vernon Naza.
for two or three minutes" after a
Against them, Lady Panthers' points, 3.1 assists} and Don
l.-t;:~~~
· -~-"~-SE_C_ON_D_
fourth-quarter catch, briefly
rene Tuesday looking for another Coach Paul Swanson will field
Williams (6·4, junior, 11.5 points,
~,;.·
~-- of 3Y,x5"
forcing him lrom the game. But
Mid-Ohio Conference wln. Game Samantha Sadowski [5·11, jun4.4 assists).
he had a feeling early on this was
PRINTS
time Is 7:30 p.m.
ior, 5 points per game} and Amy
his day.
The Redwomen are 8-8 on the Feathertngharn (5·10, senior, ' At center for Rio will be John
Lambcke (6-5, junior, 7.5 points) .
His first reception was a
season and 2-2 ln the MOC 10.2 points, 9.1 rebounds}.
who scored 13 rebounds against
J'~').UP·GRADE
left
-handed 12-yard grab near the
entering the contest. MVNC,
Starting guards for Rio Grande Cedarville to become the team's
'-~ -~ to 4" PAIO-SI2cEI
right sideline, setting up San
which fell 75-67 to conference will be Beth CoO (5·6, sopho·
top
man
on
the
boards.
Lambcke
PRINTS
Francisco' s. first-quarter field
leader Walsh in two overtlrnes more}. the team's assists leader
, Is currently averaging 5.7 per
1
DAY
goal.
Saturday, is 5-6 and 3·1.
at 4.8 per game, and Betsy outing. His opposite number
As conference play for the first Bergdoll (5·7, freshman}, who ts
SEmCE
"The hardest catch was the
GET A COUPON for
half winds down, Coach Cheryl averaging 8.8 points. Facing from Tiffin will be Mike Conrad
one-handed
catch,"
he
said.
"I
GUARANTEED
li~J.Sx10
Flelltz has been seeking and them for MVNC are Susie Burke (6:5, junior, 9.3 points, 6.4
felt like I couldn't get to the bali
~·"'-~
.
rebounds}.
getting standout performances (5·6, freshman, 4 points) and
but
at
the
last
second
I
popped
Hammond's first man off the
from her senior forwards, Lea Erin Sharrock (5-8, sophomore,
my hand out and the ball fell ln.
bench
for the forwards will be
Ann Mullins (5-7, ,McGuffey, 9.4 points, 3.3 assists}. ··
"After I caught that ball, I
Brown (6·6, senior, 1U points,
Ohio) and Holly Hastings (5·9,
Center Ann Barnltz (6·0, freshknew
I was on. When I'm on, the
Ashville ). Hastings was MOC man, 10.4 points) Is expected to 3.3 rebounds}. with Lawhorn
football
looks !Ike dollar signs
MIDDUPOII, POIIUOY, .ADI..Y, MIJIEISVILLE,
Player of the Week lor her efforts start at the post for the Redwo· expected to send In Mike Tidwell coming into my hands."
(7 points, 3 rebounds) first for
Jan. 8·14 In games with Urbana men. Her opposite number is
Rice's performance earned
•UlLAIIIU, SYI:;;:ACijUSiijl' IUSOJI, W. VA• .
and Ohio Dominican, while Mul· Nicole Bosworth (6-0, junior, 13.6 Benning or Schubert.
_....
Ill
S:OO P..ll.
him
the
Super
Bowl
MVP
and
a
Jimmy Kearns (6-1,_, senior,
tins ear-ned the .tltle for her work points, 13.1 rebounds}.
ALL
PIISCIIPTIONS.
Subaru
XT6.
He
seemed
more
10.6 points, 2.4 assists} will go in
against Walsh and Malone Jan.
Tuesday's game will conclude
IF YOU DON'T . .D A PIESCIIPTION FIWD, WE WILL
to relieve Rio's guards. Ham·
15-21.
first halt women's action In the mond will look to Thad Patrick
. Sports briefs
DIUVEI ANniiNG IN IHE STOlE FlEE ON A
MOC. The Redwornen will be
(6-1, freshman, 9.3 points, 3.5
$5.00 MINIMUM OIDEI.
Hockey
Mullins is currently averaging horne Saturday at 5: 15 p.m.
rebounds) as relief man for
Boston acquired center Bobby
23 points a game and 5.8 re· against Urbana.
Morrlssey,and Williams.
Carpenter frorh Los Angeles for
In other MOC games Tuesday, center Steve Kasper. The Bruins
Cedarville travels to play confer- said the deal completes the
ence leader Malone, Walsh hosts "future considerations" part of
Mourit Vernon Nazarene and the trade that send left wing Jay
Ohio Dominican heads west to Miller to the Kings . .. . New York
Urbana.
Rangers rookie Tony Granato,
/
~"
who had eight potnts in three
iiJ)
Sports
briefs
By GENE Ci\DDES
ln.
road games, was named the
!' ,_, 1.,
UPI Sports Writer
"Everyone takes it so per·
Golf
NHL's Performer or the Week . ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) sonal." continued Rose. "All we
• 271 N. S.Cend, ••••port, Oh.
Spain's Seve B&lt;!llesteros leac!s · Jim Jacks"on or · Rochester 'was
~--'-~~
Pete Rose took a verbal swing at do here Is try to give a guy 110
this week's golf ran kings. He Is tabbed the AHL Player of the
departed first baseman Nick opportunity to play the game of followed by Greg Norman ot· · Week.
Esasky at the opening stop of the baseball, more than one opporAustralia and Sandy Lyle of
Cincinnati Reds' media caravan tunity in most cases.
Britain. Curtis Strange, at
· "If they don't take advantage
Monday night.
fourth, Is the top American.
Speaking to newly acquired of the opportunity, there's not
BusiDeM
Todd Benzinger, obtained from much we can do about lt. I guess
Gulf &amp; Western has scrapped
the Boston Red Sox In the trade of that's my speech for the night."
plans to build a massive olfice
F;sasky, Rose said, "you'll !Ike
Rose did have some advice lor complex on the site of New
first base. It's a fun poJitlon. the !our ClnciJ\Dall players along York's Madison Square Garden
You'll !Ike AstroTurf, too. You on the multi-city trip - Benzin- and erect a new sports arena
were good last year, but you'll be ger, Tom Browning, Paul O'Neil nearby, state development olfl·
a lot better on AstroTurf. There's and Rick Mahler, ~IDother Reds' clals say.
newcomer.
no bad hops.
"If you get traded, don't say
l'
"Plus," added Roser "all you
have to do Is be awakl! out there anything bad about the Cincln·
I
'
and you'll be better than what we nail Reds," Rose. said. If I got
\
fired tomorrow, I would say
had last year. ·•
Rose, whose comment drew a nothing bad about the Cincinnati
••
rise from the audience, called the
Reds. I would thank the Reds !or
••
remark "my own personal the opportunity they gave me to
come back ho!'l!!· I'd thank
opinion."
;
"I'm get tlng tired reading (General Manager) Murray
!IIese quotes from these players (Cook) for the opportualty he's
we trade and players we re- given me thiS year and the
I'
\
leese," Rose said, referring players he's etven me to work
speclftcal)y to Esasky, who was with. I'm looking forward to tt."
••
Esasky, along with southpaw
given the first base . job last
••
relief pitcher Rob Murphy, were
season . by Rose but performed
•
sent
to
the
Red
Sox
for
Benzinger
below expectations. In 109 starts
and
pltche~s
Jeff
Sellers
and
Luis
at first base, he hit just .243, with
..
•'
Vasquez.
·
1~ home runs and 62 runs batted

Swann was Rice's boyhood idle

Redmen .back on road
to confront 10-9 Tiffm

"'*•

Plr~ IMal palllt• (b. .d 01 II
pMtl .., Hr• pUce, It lor .et~DIIII , St. )

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f. OIEiallema t 16-2).
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t. 8f!IMI Hall ( I'J.l)
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S.Ol-Edwudnillt 11, Mo.&amp; . Loul11'l
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Tn:u S.•itlerallt, Gr.mblht«ll

Pro l'ftlults
NATIONAL ll..tiD:I'B.U.L ASSOC.

Mo.._'aa..••

Clevel .... IU. Gold~!• Slate I"
..... ,.. 117, lleltwr It!
Su Alit. . 111, MIIMI Ill ....
........ .., •• Gamel
0e•wrMNew.ler.,,7:Mp.m.
C1eveluC .. AUMta, 1:.. p.m.
Suttle a1: Pertlud, 1 p.m.
o.lb!ll. Clllcap,
p.m.
MI..-.&amp; at Ho••l\ I : M p.m .
OII•Wk at PIIIOHla, t:• p.m.
New Yor•at L-' Ll.llun. 11:31 p.111.
Mllwaube lit S•crama~., II: II p.m.

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

Otllltra recetvtnc vo&amp;H : ..trbn . ..
Ar~caa ... uu~r &amp;Mk, Nf'W M:exlet.

Pr-"'dMre, pgrd•e. Se•lh CaroU•.
Texu.EI Puo, Wlc:l*a

......

•=•

Teanes~ee,

Monday's scores

We41ad:ll''a Gam•
Ollcap.at.-......!lpW.,•Iallt

Glrki Oblo RIJbSchooiBuiBball
By llalted P111a &amp;.terraUoaa.l
Mond..,., Ju. U
Aftladla ••· PMdon Gilboa 31
Aaltl HarMr 4'7, Jefi•H• M fot)
hht St . . . . . . ..UIIICilllllll
Bubertoa • • .Ur Sprl•lllel41 SO
Bu-..YIIIe 51'. 8t Clalrntlle Jt
BeaUntlle '72, Weodafleld •
lleM"erueek 1f, DQ Pllttenon J8
Brooldleld 11, Ub!rtrM
Burto" &amp;rblllre t1', ae Notre D•mr

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

GoldetiSiate M Delr.M, allllt

u en,,.,.. •

NATIONAL ROCKE\' LEAGUE

Mo•q•aa.•a
Cal prJ s. Moa&amp;rtall
lartford s. q.e• 1

Mln~ala '7, N...- ltrll!)' t
NV RupniJ, EdmNtoal

"eo....,u.

a.....,p6oa51, Cort ...dLake¥iew M

~.oos

Aallt EdcewOid h
E Uvtrpoel tA. CUte. Cettt Catb U

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

WN~eidllt''l

1\ielid.,.'l Sport• Calml&amp;r
AaltoRadq

Sl

Mo~ac:o-

Madlaon 48, Pa.lnn Ra"ey 3!
Mut-. Cr5&amp;woocll8, WIMihm !3
Pallft Riverside 4'7, GeDtva S,
IGDIIiewa H. Mopdore Ji
Slrlllhen il , Poland Ill
M'oodrldp St, Wllterloo Sl
&lt;Htio Colle~ IIMIIetball lift IIIla
Mo.. ..,, 111. !3
Akron M, Nortller ft Dlllloia •
ClrvPIIUid 81 N. Walen 01 to

Games

Baa&amp;oa .. ToroMo, alp&amp;
St. Loula IY Hardont, niPI ·
lulfalo at Deti'Gk, ai!Jii
"'ln ..pelld: Pli.-.l'lh. niP'
Odcaro at E41moa&amp;ea. aiJitl

GU'rettnlle II,. Dlamolll Soulh••l U
Graad Val II, Rh:hrnonl Hb -IS
Gree~~leld 48, Peehltto Ill
Holpte 71, Fort lennlnp 5I
"Jacluon St. Ml•lonl18
JUn.._ a.dpr II, N•wto• Falla 54

.. depe~~*-t
u .... Sr u. n., at1 ••

'nle•hr'• Gamea
Maft• at w....._. .. 7:JS p.m.

New ler~~ey at NY lalarlders.l: IS p.m.
Chtc . .ctal VMCOIIWI', li:U p.m.

Eut Pai.U. f'J, LIBne 21
Edlaoa SIS. Wenntll•lf (ol)
Pedl!nf Hookln1 U, TrimNr !f

IUrtluMII •1.

0a11-. allfti

llt•• .. s... All&amp;-.. lll«ff

Mo'* Carlo rail)'
Bull!tball

Denwr at N~ .rer..,, 7:a p.m.
Clevelu4 IY AU ..a., 7:• p.m.
Suttle M Portlud, 8 p.m.
o.Jlu Ill Chlc:ap, 8:• p.m.
MAIIIII atl. . ~a.ll:M p.m.
Ch •klt&amp;e at PbOI!alx, • : • p.m.

New York .a LA IAiurs. II:M p.m.
Mllwukee M SamunHlo, li :Jt p.m.
Bebolod

Wl•rbl!ra. WNI Gerrnu,. - Ellr•
pean Ch ~mplonahlpa, two-m• and fo.,...

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

WHEN YOU
BRING YOUR
FILM IN
TO US t"'~
YOU-LL
J.
GO ONE clo~~~!
OF THESE

ne

Rio ladies will carry victory
into conference tilt at MVNC

DE'6EF~~~NG

FREE!

•on

Do1't Fortet To Cheek Our Low
Prlc11 0• Oar Prucrlptlonl

Rose takes verbal
swing at Nick Esasky

.-

Prescription Shop
992-6669

'

EXTENSION. GRANTED
Last Day To Pay First Half
Real Estate Taxes Will_Be
FEBRUARY 10, 1.989

'

10°/o PENALTY Will Be Charged

After the Feb. 10th Data on Real
Estate Taxes.

..
\

'

.,,

River Racers open season
Racers 41; Scorers for the River
The 1989 River Racer Basket·
Racers: Sandy Johnson 38;
ball team consist of9 players this
David Karr 2; Sarah Harmon 1.
year. They are: Ray Lauderrnilt
1-19-89 Pioneer School81·River
and Lisa Montgomery of Racine,
Bill Neutzltng, Joan Hart, ChesRacers 67; Scores tor the River
Racers: Ray LauderrnUt 39;
ter Arthur, and Juanita Arthur of
Sandy Johnson 18; David Karr 2;
Pomeroy, David Karr of Long
Sarah Harmon 2; Joan Hart 6.
Bottom, Sarah Harmon of Mid·
The River Racers will have a
dleport and Sandy Johnson of
horne game starting at 7 p.m.
Reedsville.
The River Racers have Ira- , playing Mt. Aloysius on Tuesday,
1·24·89, This will be an exciting
veled to Jackson, New Lexington
game that you will not want to
· and Frankfork In the last 2 weeks
miss!
·
for games. The results are as
The
River
Racers
are
coached
follows:
by PatJy Hays and Dee Brown.
1-13-89 Hope Havenstars 87·
Anyone wishing to bel p support
River Racers 52; Scorers for the
the River Racers can do so by
River Racers: Ray Laudermllt
35 pts,; Sandy Johnson 12; David contacting Patty or Dee at
992·6681.
!&lt;arr 6.
1-17-89 Mt. Aloysius 48-River
!

.

ln,-!,· p,·n~c.r!

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE M. COLLINS ..

'

•
,
•

Columbus first stop for ·Reds' caravan
By GENE CADDES
expected to battle it out with
UPI Sports Writer
Cincinnati this season In what
COLUMBUS - .The Clnclnnat I '· many see as a five -team race.
Reds' four consecutive second
Rose , of course, says: " I think
place finishes In the Nat tonal
we'll win It;" but he also admits
League's Western Dlvlsion ha·
he might be a slight prejudiced.
ven't fazed Manager Pete Rose's
"If this were in LA at a
outlook one bit.
Dodgers media caravan, I'm
"I'd rather finish first,' \ Rose
sure Tommy Lasorda would be
said Monday night at the opening
saying the same thfng. " said
.stop of the Reds' annual media
Rose, who ligures the Dodgers
caravan, ''but lf you can't finish
might be eliminated becallse
first, you gotta finish second."
"nobody's been able to repeat."
Tbat philosophy, translated
Rose has good reason to be
Into It you can't go !our fo.r !our, optimistic about his team, which
you gotta go three for four,
won 19 of its last 29 games a year
helpeq _Rose break Ty Cobb' s ago and has made moves to fill
all-time record for base hits and · some the obvious holes ln last
finish his major league career year's club.
with 4,256.
Among the new additions are
The Reds finished seven games
behind the world champion Las veteran r!ghthanded starting
Angeles Dodgers last season ln pitcher Rick Mahler, who will fill
theNL West. Theprevlousyear, one of the spots in the Reds '
It was the Houston Astros who tour-man pitching rotation, and
made a runner-up out of Todd Benzinger , ticketed to take
· over first base. Benzinger came
Cincinnati. , ·Those two teams, along with from Boston in a trade that sent
1986 winner San Francisco and Nick Esasky and lefthanded .
the upstart San Diego Padres are reliever Rob Murphy to the Red

1. . RIVER RACI!B
Buk-JII&lt;INd•le

.DATE-1'111E·TEAM
LOC.
Jan.24 7 p.m.-MI. AloyJlus ....... ... ..... ... ..... ........ .. ....... ......... .. ...... ............... ..... .... H
Jan.26 6:30 p.m. -Beacon School-Athens .. ..... .... .. .. .. .... ....... ..... ........... ..... .. ........... A
Jan.ll 6'30 p.m.-Good Sltephel"d Manor-Wakelleld ..... ....... ..... ........ .... .. ............... "'Feb.2 7 p.m.·Mt.Aioyslus ........ .... .. .... ....... ......... ...... .... ....................... ............... . H
Feb.7 11 a.m.-Piont!l!f Schooi·Otllllroihe ..• ......... ....... .. ..... ....... ...... ...... ............. .. H
Feb.9 10:30 a.m.·IIDDe Haven Stars-JacbCil ... ...... ...... .... ............ ... ...•. ............. .. . H

NEW "YORK (UPI) - Attorneys for New York Yankees
owner George Steinbrenner and slugger Dave Winfield have
agreed to go to arbitration to settle their dispute over money
allegedly due the Winfield Foundation.
The New York Dally News reported Tuesday that the ,two
sides had agreed to submit their cases to Michael Armstrong, a
New York attorney who rose to prominence as counsel for the
Kaapp Commission.
Winfield !Ued suit Jan. 6 against stelnbrenner, accusing the
Yankees owner ol reneging on a 1980 pledge to pay $3 mUiton to
the Winfield Foundation over a 10-year period. The slugger
claimed Steinbrenner had not made quarterly payments to the
t01mdatton since Sept. 1987 and owed some 1450,000.
Steinbrenner !lied a countersuit Jan. 9, asking the charily be
placed In receivership because lis funds were routinely Wled for
the personal expenses of Winfield. That lawsuit also asked that
Winfield pay some $380,000 he allegedly owes the foundation
under the 1980 agreement.
Steinbrenner said the disputed money has been placed In !'n
Interest-bearing account until the matter is resolved.
The Winfield Foundation Is a non-profit organization designed
to fight drug abuse and help underprivileged children.
Dally News columnlllt Mike Lupica submitted a proposal last
Weclne.day, suggesting the two sides submit their cases for
arbitration before Theodore Kheel, a labor mediator for nearly
liO years. But Winfield's atiorneys balked, noting Kheel's father
Is a partner In a law !Inn that represents Major League
Baseball.
Armstrong's name was presented to the two sides on Sunday,
and bla selection was agreed upon by Monday.

By JOE IUUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
NEW Y~ Illinois, benefitting from a
of Duke losses,
Monday bil · e the first college
basketball team in almost three
years to be voted No. 1 unanimously by United Press International's Board .of Coaches.
The Illlnl, at 17-0 the nation's
only major ulldefeated team,
collected the 41 first-place votes
castand615potnts.Onecoachdld
not vo«: this week. The last
consensus No. 1 team named by
UP! was North Carolina in the
11th week or the·1985-86 season.
Duke, which had held the top
ranking since the preseason, fell
to No. 7fo!Jowlnglosseslastweek
to North Carolina and Wake
Forest. The Blue Devils had won
their first 13 games before the
losses.
Georgetown was No.2 followed
by • No. 3 Louisville, No. 4
Oklahoma, No. 5 Arizona, No. 6
North Carolina, No. 7 Duke, No.8
Missouri, No. 9 Seton Hall and
No. 10 Michigan.
Rounding out the Top 20 were
No. 11 Florida State, No. 12 Iowa,
No. 13 Syracuse, No. 14 Indiana,
No. 15 North Carolina State, No.
16 Nevada-Las Vegas, No. 17
Ohio State, No. 18 Stanford, No.
19 Georgia Tech and No. 20 St.
Mary's (Calif. ).
Knowing the No. 1 ranking was
"theirs to lose may have put
pressure on the llltnl Sunday
against Georgia Tech. With a
packed home crowd at Champaign and a national TV audience

watching, Illinois fell behind by
14 points to the Yellow Jackets.
Kenny Battle and Kendall Gill
led a comeback and the Illtni won
103-92 In double overtime.
_ ''We had them on the ropes and
we let them get away," Georgia
Tech Coach Bobby Cremlns said.
"But they play hard. They're
quick and they've got great
athletes."

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churches, apartments and
drug stores. Call us for a
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·~·~F;,n~'~ER@

I

Ser•lceo

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

EX·TEAMMA.TES REUNITE- Scott Frederick, !ell, and Kent
Wolle, right, both members of Southern's state runner-up team In
1982 recently reunited at the competitive level as coaches. Scott is
a coach of the 12-2 Southern reserve squad, while Kent Wolfe is the
coach of the Waverly Tigers reserve squad, which Is also 12·2. The
two recently met in a scrimmage between the two clubs. Scott Is
the son of Milford and Romaine Frederick of Racine, while Kent Is
the son of Larry and Dolores Wolle of Racine.

!Bill-----

Jeff Montgomery t.tt ~ttontso"'e''f
OF THE

, ,r_HI R

Kansas City Royals

SUMMERFIELD$
REITAURANl
CHESTEI, OHIO

Wed., Jan. 25
4 P.M. to 6 P.M.
For Autographs and
·Pictures

!'GOOD
NEIGHBOR''.
CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT

992-6687

~ STATEAUTO
~ lnsu11na Compani•

•

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK AuTo DEPRECIATION

:!~C io?tf·?.fu~tS~t~=~state·Bi'ST·-ro~·~~mi·::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::C:OiUmba~

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,.....,.,

116 East llaln St.

991·2111
991-9912

PEPPERONI
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$585
Additional Toppings
Ollly 90•

UIL 111111, E.A.

OUI PIICES AU
LOWD

EVElY DAY
FREE Loc•l DtHvery

~nday-Thursday

Month of Ja"uary

rrf.:

WILL BE AT

Feb.12 2-6 p.m.-BIS"t Rellonal Tournament..OU ConvoCenter ............... .............. A

Feb.ll 6: 30 p.m .· BeaconSchooi-Ath..,.(Dance loU owing) ......... .. .... ...... .. ......... ... H
Feb.:n 12:30"p.m.·Guldlnglillld CuiM·Gallla ······· ·· ····· ······ ····· ········ ······ ······· ······ ··"
Feb.24 6:30 p.m.·Good Shopllel"d ManOl'Wal!elleld .... ... .................. .. .. ................. H
Feb.28 6:30 p.m.-Beaoon School-Athens ....•. ........... .................. .. .... .. ..... ............ .. "'March 2 6:30 p.m.·Beacoa SChool-Athens .... .. ........ ...... ...... .. ....... .... .. ..... .......... .... H

.

Sox.
lood and Manny Trillo. Youngb- ·
"We really think we have the lood is 37 years old and Trillo Is
bes t pitching stat! In the league, .. 38. Also on the ros ter Is veteran
said Rose, who al so has 23-ga rne Dave Coll ins, with Ken Gr iffey
winner Danny Jackson, 18-ga rne given a good chance to make the
winner Torn Browning and Jose team as a spring training camp
Rljo, who won 13 with a 2.39 ERA invitee.
In his star ting rotat ion.
" 1'm very excited about 1989 ,"
Cincinnati also has one of the said Rose. " I think you can catch
top bullpen stoppers In baseball the vibes from the pla yers,
in lefty John F r anco, who re· they're ver y excited about this corded 39 saves In 1988.
. ba ll club an"d they should be. " ·
Rose claims hls starting lineup
or Mahler, whO PQS!ed a 12·4
is all but set fo r th e Ap rU3 opener llfel im e record against the Reds
against the Dodgers, wi th Ben· · as a member of the Atla nta
zinger at first, Ron Oester at
Braves, Rose said, " he's very
second, Bar ry Larkin at short- competitive. Just to go to Atla nta
stop and NL rookie of the year and not have to fa ce Rick Ma hlcr,
Chris Saba at third base.
will make it an enjoyable trip. '
His outfield is a solid one with •
" I think If the players we nave
Kal Daniels in left field , budding on our ball club do the thi ngs
superstar Eric Davis In center they 're capable of.doing, " added
and Paul O'Neil in right. Bo Diaz Rose , "and the player s on the
and Jeff Reed figure to do most of Dodgers a nd the Giant s· and San
the catching,
Di ego do the things they"re
The Reds, in an attempt to fill supposed to do. we' II still win the
another or their heeds, added West. T hat's how. good a ball cl ub .
signed free agents Joel Youngb- we have .. ~ ·

Winfield, Ste~brenner
will go to arbitration

Dlinois takes over top
spot in· UPI cage poll

FIR

FREE DEUVERY IN THESE AREAS!

The Deily Sentinei-"Page- 5

QUESTION: I recently purchased
a new, and rather expensive, auto·
mobile for use exclusively in my
business. What are the new annual
depreciation li)nits for automobiles?
ANSWER: For aut~urchased
after 1986, the depreciation limits
are $2,560 the first year, $4,100
the second year, $2,450 the third
year, and $1,475 each year after
that. The limits shown above must
be multiplied by the car's business·
use percentage, which won't pose a
problem in your case because you
, use the car 100 percent for busi·

ness.

H&amp;R992-6674
BLOCK

611• EAS11WN

POMEROY, OHIO

122 DAYS·
$10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
Simple Intere1t, Substantial Penalty
For Early Withdrawal

PEOPLES BANK
MASON

POINT PLEASANT

773-5514

67!S-ll21.,

MEMBER F.O.I.C.

NEW HAVEN
882-2135

�.Tuesday, January 24, 1989

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

. '

Beat o/the bend

. .
.
Ftgh ttng heart dtsease

Cancer screenmg
• c}"_tote
· s}ated m
• M
•
. etgs

The Meigs County Health De- pita! In Columbus, reports that
The department reports the
partment will be staging a this Is the most common cancer seven warning signals of cancer
By BOB HOEFLICH .
you should watch channels 20 or cancer screening clinic on Jan. found In the United States. The which are: change In bowel or
Don't look at me. I don't know 33 on television Wednesday
31, Norma Torres, nurslngdlrec· most frequent signs of this type
bladder habits; a sore that does
·what happened to January night.
tor of the d epar tmen t, cancer are blood 1n the stool and
not. heal; unusuual ·blee~llna or
either. ' AI any
At that time the chamlonshlp announces.
a change In bowel habits, most
rate, 11 never
ballroom competition which was
The clinic to be paid for out of ·commonly constipation. Res!·
overflows with
taped ln Cleveland last NO·
tax levy funds will be held from ' dents are asked to concentrate on
joy anyway, sa,
bember will be shown. Hours of · 9:30 a.m. to noon at the health these two areas ill an attempt to
·
perhaps, It's
the showing are from 9 to 10:30 department's quarters ln the help with early detection.
_
good that it's on
p.m .
multi-purpose bufidlng, Mul·
The department warns that ~onducts
the way out.
-------berry Heights, Pomeroy.
constipation Is not caused by '-"'
February, of
Marte Norris of up Racine way
The American Cancer Society Increasing age and urges that
.
Donations to Bethany Mouncourse, Is heart month and the Is the winner of the Jan. 15 wlll provide educational mate- residents becoming more than
American Heart Assoclaton and mystery farm contest In the rials and support during the temporarily constipated see taln Mission and Sine Cara were
SuperA.merlca conven lence Times-Sentinel. There were ~u;.Unlc as It has at past cllnllcs.
their doctors.
made at therecentmeetlng_ofthe
stores Jll'e teaming up to tight some 15 residents who correctty- - rhe Jan. 31 clinic will be
"I commonly see -people with United Methodlsf women at the
Meigs County's number one ldentlfl~ the Charles Ihle farm
limited to 12 patients. It Is free of colon can~r who thought that Rock Sprlnp Church.
killer, heart disease.
· and Marie won the $5 cash prize charge and county residents who their constipation was normal · Dorothy , Jeffers led In the
Durlng the first two weeks In offered through the lottery route.
are Interested In making an because they were getting older, Lord's Prayer wtth the group
-February, customers of local
-----appointment should call the ' and theytreatedthemselveswlth singing "He. Is So Precious to ,
SuperA,merlca stores ·can have · Cholesterol Is one of the big department at 992-6626 as soon ..~axatlves for months before Me" ahd "Love Lifted Me" to
their names displayed on a paper ,· topics of conversation In relation as possible. Appointments are seeking help. These months may open the Jan. 17 meeting atheart on the store wall. The cost to good health these days so you
made on a first call, first serve make the difference between tended by 13 members and a
Is $1 and money raised through probably wlll look forward to a
basis. The clinic will attempt to success and failure In the treat- visitor.
the sale of SuperAmerica hearts cholesterol screening program provide pap smear, hemoccults, ment of coloncnancer," said Dr.
Dorothy Jeffers reported on
will be donated to the American which will be coming up In urinalysis, height, weight, blood Nlms.
the sale of placemats made from
.Heart Association. Last year, the March.
pressure and a generalized
Thehealthdepartmentreports 'old greeting cards with the
The Meigs Health Department health examination.
that cancer ts the second cause of money being turned over to the
promotion raised over $7,300.
Funds are being used to support · is borrowing a very expensive
Dr.' Brown will donate his death tnMelgsCounty. lttsonthe treasurer, Tracey O'dell. Items
heart research and community machine to do these scr:eenlngs services at the clinic and Mrs. rise nationwide, but It ts one of for the craft table were diseducation programs In Central and If enough people do the test, Phyllis Bearhs, Women's Health the most curable of all major cus$ed. Donations from anyone
Ohio.
the department may be able to Care Technical, wlll be coordl- diseases lflt Is diagnosed In time, to the proje'ct will be
Each customer purchasing a purchase the machine and offer natlng the services.
the department reports. Early appreciated.
heart •will receive a piece of testing on an on-going basis
One of the stresses ofthe clinic detection of cancer Is one of the
VIrginia Wears Iedin devotions
literature describing the early . every three months.
Is colon cancer. Dr. Thomas alms of the health department's with Mary Showalter reading
Cost of the test will be $5 and Nlms, onocologtst of Grant Has· cancer screening clinics.
"Fosll!r Care In India." Mrs.
warning signals of a heart
.

Rock

discharge; thickening or lump m
breast or elsewhere; Indigestion
or difficulty In swallowing; ol&gt;
viousch&amp;Dgeln,wartormole,and
nagging CO\Iih of hoarseness.
'

sr rr,n.us
·••
In

~·

uMW

meet'lng

aw~

- - - - - - - -·
Two Meigs Countlans attendlng Mount Vernon Nazarene
College have been named to the
dean's !lsi.
They are Maralyn Barton, a
freshman majoring premed-blology, and Kenda Donohue, a
junior math major.
Maralyn Is the daughter of
Richard and Mace! Barton, of
Reedsville, and Is a graduate of
Eastern High SchooL Kenda Is
the daughter of Raymond and
Dolores Donohue and Is a graduate of Meigs High School.
_,..______
Gerald Powell, professional
dance instructor who keeps on
t·he move traveling through the
area to carry h(Ueachlngdutles,
suggests that It you are at all
interested in ballroom dancing,

I ntrod u

•

II

Wears read "A -Leill!r from the
Devll" and also conducted a
. Bible quiz. VIolet Hysell had
prayer for several who are Ill,
Clifford and Mildred Jacobs,
Lena Hellman, and Pauline Durenberger, Fern Morris had roll
call and alao reported that 17
cards have been sent during the
past month.
Following prayer by Mrs.
Jeffers, the group and a social
hour and refreshments In ' the
basement.

Fellowshp to

meet

• otthe
The Women's Fellowship
Melp County Churches of Christ
will meet on Thursday, 7:30p.m
at the Bradbury Church of
Christ.

on~~~lbl~.~oles•ol~l ••••••••••••~•••••••·~~---~~·-••••••••••••••••••••

be determined. According to
statistics, heart and- heart-related conditions are the major
causeofdeathandmorethanone
half of all Americans have blood
cholesterol levels high enough to
be at risk for heartdlsease.lfyou
.test too high, then you will be so
advised and can ~ke the proper
steps to Correct the sltuatlon.
The health department will be
taking registrations for the
screenlngdurlngtheflrstweekln
March, and I will advise you of
detalls as the world turns and in
plenty of time for you to get
Jogged ln.

000

Other people can tell what
you're say, but they can't read
your mind. Now does that show
great planning or what? Do keep
smiling.

•

The Best Way for Your
Dollar to Buy More!

Community·information
issued by local schools
Following Is the first of a
planned series of newsletters
from Meigs Local School District
Supt. James Carpenter to provide community Information on
the operation of schools In the
district.
In this first newsletter we
would like to give some general
Informatlon about Meigs Local.
Hopefully It will give some
background so that you may
better know about our schools.
Meigs Local School District
has the following schools and
enrollments: Bradbury Elemen·
tary, . 103 (Grades 5 &amp; 6);
HarrlsonvU!e Elemen~ry , 131
(Grades 1-6); Middleport Elementary, 210 (Grades K-4);
Pomeroy Elementary, 380
(Grades K-6); Rutland Elementary, 252 (Grades K-6); Salem
Center, 107 (Grades ·1-6); Sallsbury Elementary, 139 (Grades
1-6) ; Meigs Junior High, 382
(Grades 7-8); Meigs High School,
770 (Grades 9·12); Total Students
2474.
The certified staff of Meigs
Local is made up of: Regular
classroom teachers, 107; Chapter Teacher. 9; Extra Service
Personnel, 14; Special Education
Teachers, 20; Building Adminis-trators, 8; Superintendent, 1;
Tolall59.
The non-certified staff Is comprised of the following: Bus
Drivers, 26; Cooks, 23; Custodians, 14; Secretlilo,ies, 14; Aides,
12; Mechanics, 3; Maintenance,
3; Treasurer, 1; Total 96.
These numbers compare with
1966-67 figures (the first year of
consolidation) of a ·certificated
staff of 125 teachers and administrators, with 3104 students.
In looking at the differences,
there were no Chapter teachers
In that first year and there were
only 3 ~ special education
teachers. The district has also
Increased by 10 ~ people In the
area of extra service personnel,

and In 1966-67 there were only 4
full time administrators In the
district.
This accounts for most of the
additional persons and many of
these changes have been mandated by the changes In States
Standards over the last '1:1 years.
In addition, we did .not have the
vocational school In the first year
of consolidation, and the vocational staff was not a part of the
faculty then.
In 1966-67 there were 66 noncertified employees In the dis·
trlct. We have added two cooks
positions, 11 secretarial positions, 1 mechanic and one separate bus supervisor position, 2 bus
drivers, and 12 aide positions In
the lime since consolidation.
Not all employees of Meigs
Local receive their salaries from
the general fund of the school.
The Chapter teachers receive
their funding through a Federal
program administered by the
State of Ohio. Alt' salaries for
cooks come from the cafeteria
fund, which Is not a part of the
general fund. Most of the aides
are paid for by the DPPF fund,
which Is another special fund
administered by the State. There
are several other Individual
positions which are paid for In
whole or In part by other Federal
monies.
It should be added that all of
the employees or Metis Local
have the job of contributing to the
education of the 2474 students of
the district. This Is our job, and It
Is obvious that we would not be
working tor Meigs Local If there
were no students here to learn.
We are working together ~
bring about changes which will
Improve the opportunities for
children to learn. We would
appreciate your help and lnputto
see that ea~h child reaches as
high as he or she can. We will give
you more Information In-future
newsletters.

'

Center receives
excellent
rating
'
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center near
Pomeroy recently received a
5-star Award.of Excellence.
The 5-star quality assurance
rating system was designed by
Care Enterprises to closely monitor qualtty of care as expressed
by residents and staff and then
recognize centers for their commitment to this quality.
State and federal regulations
dictate strict quality standards
tor all sktlled nursing facilities

,,

•

.

throughout the nation. A 5·star
award Is Care Enterprises wy to
make sure their faciUtles are
complying 100 percent In providIng the best quality of care'
possible to all their residents in
all of their homes. Care Enterprises Is based In Tustin, Call!.,
and operates 100 skilled nursing
facilities nationwide Including
Amerlcare-J;'omeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center. The
administrator of the local facUlty
Is William J. Bias.
I,

8 oz.
REG.

SUDAFED

$3.19

REG. S3.59

Dewm

ASPIRIN
100
TAILETS

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NOW

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WITH A FILLED
FAMILY CASH BOOK

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Prescri tion Shop
271 NOUH SECOND·

9 2-6660
,.

•

TUESDAY
_ POMEROY -The Meigs Cooperative Parish, 311 Condor St.,
Pomeroy, will sponsor free cloJhlng days Tuesday through
'I'hursday, from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m.
l!ach day. A wide assortment of
clothing' for men, women and
children Is available. For more
Information, call 992-7400.
POMEROY- XJ Gamma Mu
Sorority will meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., at the home of A. R. Knight.

by club members were noted.
The Feb. 21 meeting will be
held at 1 p.m at the holl)e or
Suianne Warner with roll call to
be answered by naming a favorlie perfumed plant
The L!lrd's paryer and prayer
by Marjorie Purtell closed th~
meeting with Mrs. Murphy servIng refreshments to those named
and Helen Eblin, Evelyn Thoma,
Wllovene Batley, and Thelma
Giles.

public Is Invited. Bring snacks
tor the snack ~ble.
Eastern alumni
EAST MEIGS- AnY.One Interested In participating In the
Eastern Alumni basketball game
on Feb. 7 should attend a meeting
and practice at the high school at
1 p.m. Sunday, A fee of $10 will be
cl\arged to play and the lee will
be. collected on Sunday before
practice. Those Interested In
playing but cannot attend Sunday's meeting are asked to
contact Tim Baum.

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse VIllage Council will meet In re- Open dance
,
POMEROY cessed session Wednesday, 7
Belles and
p.m., at village hall.
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club Is sponsoring an open dance
THURSDAY
RACINE - Racine American on Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at
Legion Auxlllary will meet 7 p.m. · the Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy. Caller will be John ·
Thursday at the post home.
Waugh of Galllpolls. All western
·' REEDSVILLE - Riverview · square dancers are Invited.
. GardenClubwlllmeetThursday,
7:30p.m., at the home of Maxine Free clothing days
POMEROY -TheMe:gsCoopWhitehead. Margaret Grosseratlve
Parish, 311 Condor St.,
nickle will be co-hostess.
Pomeroy, Is sponsoring free
clothing days Tuesday !~rough
FRIDAY
. POMEROY - Round and Thursday , Jan. 24-26, from 9a.m.
$quare dancing will be featured to 3 p.m. A wide assortment of
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m .. at the Senior clothing for men, women and
Citizens center In Pomeroy. children Is available. For more
Music by the True Country Information, call 992-7400.
Ramblers. Admission $2. The

.---People in the news-By RUSSELL KISHI
United PressiDterl)&amp;tlonal
TENUTA PONDERS BURNING BUSH: Comedian Judy
Tenuta says she is both honored and anxious over her March 16
engagement in Washington. Tenuta has been Invited to headline
the annual White House correspondents' dinner, where
Prellldeat George Bush and his wife Barbara are expected to
evaluate her uniquely caustic humor from the head tabie: .
"r am very flattered that they asked me to come over and
abuse them," Tenuta said. Tenuta. Is . ~tlso-, hOpln~ ABC
correspondent Sam Donaldson might be In the crowd, even
though he no longer works the White House beat. "He reminds
me of my father," Tenuta said of Donaldson. "He always has
bad news while I'm eating, trying to enjoy my 'Baked Buffalo
Surprise."'
BORED MAN OF ALCATRAZ: Veteran trlathlete Dave
Homtnlb&lt;.,San Fninclsco says he Is ''99 percent certain" he will
reach shore without a hitch Wednesday momlng when he
attempts a swim from the former federal prison at Alca.t raz
Island to San Francisco.
·
Horning, 40, will try to succeed under conditions that saw
three prison Inmates fail when they attempted the same swim In
June 1962. Producers of the NBC series ''Unsolved Mysteries'·
are convinced Horning Is the right man to attempt the stun!. In
1988, Horning swam the Moscow River In the Soviet Union , the
East River in New York and crossed San Francisco Bay- allln
one day. "I'd bel I've swum from Alcatraz to San Francisco a.
dozen times," Horning said. "But I've never tried under the
- same conditions the Inmates did, when the water Is this cold, or
at ebb tide."
·
Horning said he Is so confident of conquering the 2.5 miles
between Alcatraz and the shore that he has never considered
flUng his last will and tes~ment. "This will be fun," he said.
"Just another day."
ZSAZSA REBUTI'ED: The $10 million lawsuit filed against
Delta Airlines by Zsa ~Gabor Isn't being taken lightly by an
air travel expert. Barbara Han80n, a ·former flight attendant
who now heads an organization called In-Flight Safety Services
Inc. In El Segundo, Call!., called Gabor's lawsuit "appalling,
when one.considers the potential safety threat caused by her
behavior."
Gabor's lawsuit claims she was "not treated In a first-class
manner" by "servants and employees" of the airline. Del~
says Gabor was vulgar and Insulting when shew as asked to put
her two Shih Tsu dogs back In their cages on a Jan. •6 flight.
Hanson said the dogs and a bag of jewelry that Gabor also
refused to stash away could have become "flying projectlles"tf
the Delta plane were Involved In an emergency· ''I also strong!~
object to her terminology, to think of using the word 'servants,
In this context," Hanson said. "That'swhat Ittnd most offensive
In this case."
POLmCAL CHESS MATCH: FoJ:tner Soviet chess s~r
Eleaa AkhmDovskaya and her American husband, James
Doaaklsoa, asked the Washington Legislature to try Its hand at
International politics on their behalf Monday·
.The couple asked the lawmakers to helpAkhmllovskaya gain
custody of her daughter, Dana, 7, who Is stlllllvlng with her
father In the Soviet Union. Akhmllovskaya was granted cus~ody
of her daughter after her divorce two years ago. tlut
Akbmllovskaya secretly married Donaldson last November
during the 28th Chess Olympiad In Greece, and her daughter
was left behind.
Akhmllovskaya told the legislature that Dana'sfather agreed
to allow the child to join her mother In Seattle, but said
opposition has come from Soviet chess officials. The state
Senate was expected to draft a requestto top Soviet government
offlctals, Including Premier Mikhail Gorbachev, In an effort to
pave the way toward a reuniOn between mother and daughter '

body to go on

F!GUERES. Spain (UP!) The body of painter Salvador
Dall, the flamboyant master of
surrealism ' with the "electric
antennae" JRustache, was returned to his museum home In
northeast Spain for publliC viewIng TuesdayDall, who died Monday at
Ftgueres Hospital, had been Ill
for· years with heart and lung
problems and In the Intensive
care unit since Wednesday. Doctots said he died of "heart failure
brolliht on by pneumonta.'' He

'

Marcfi of ·Dimes fund drive set

Community calendar

-Dali's

WITH A FILLED
FAMILY CASH BOOK

FAMILY CASH BOOK .

Fernwood Garden Club meets
New varieties of flowers and
:Vegetables on the market were
discussed at the recent meeting
of the Fernwood Garden Club
held at the home of Ida Murphy.
For roll call members named
new· varletes of flowers they
know about. ·Helen Eblin had an
·a rticle from " Streams In the
Qesert" for devotions . A report
.was given on a visit to the Noah' s
· Ark Park at Jackson. The group
8Iso discussed the Meigs County
:Chr tstmas show and ribbons won

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

public

ARNOLD GRADUATES Henry Gene Arnold recently
graduated
rrom
MarshaU
University with an ac:couatinll
degree from the tollqe or busi·
ness. While at Marsbal~ be was
named to the dean's list The
graduate is employed at Yauger's
Farm Snpply as a Purina Farm
- Consultant. He Is the son of Bar·
bara ArDOid 8lld the late Henry
Arnold or Southside.

While there Is no door-lo·door
fund raising campaign in Meigs
County for the March of Dimes
Birth Defeets Foundation,
Crow's FamUy Restaurant has
joined · In the Colonel Sanders
Memorial Campaign.
The campaign was started In
1979 and hils raised more than $7
mUllan for th~- March of Dimes
with nearly 2.7 million going to
provide a perpetual source of
funds for ongoing research
grants to scientists battling birth
detects.
' ·
A bucket has been placed near ·
the cash register at Craw's tor
the convenience of patrons who
want to contribute to the cause.
According to statistics from
the March of Dimes, every two
minutes a baby Is born In the
United States with a birth defect,
a leading cause of Infant mqrtal·
tty In this country. More than
40,000 babies a year die before
they are a year old, the agency
·
·
reports.
The March of Dimes, founded
In 1938 by President Frankl.ln D.
Roosevelt to fight poliomyelitis,

Dear Readers: Did you know
there are nearly "28 mfillon
veterans living today? These
veterans, their dependents and
survivors of deceased veterans
make up nearly one-third of the
nation's population.
On any given day there are
approximately 60,000 veterans
h,ospltallzed In the · Veterans
Administration's 172 medical
centers nationwide. Tbese men
and women served In World War
I, World War II, the Korean War
and the war In Vietnam. They
represent every race, color and
creed. We can never repay these
valiant vets tor the sacrifices
they have made, but we can do
something to cheer them up and
let them know that they have not
been forgotten. It won't cost
much and It needn't take more
than a few minutes of your time.
.
Read on:
Valentine's Day Is Feb. 14 and
It falls during "National Saluti! to
Hospitalized Veterans'' week. Be
a sweetheart and sent a valentine
to a vet. U you are creative, you

focus to preventing birth detects.
According to the March of.
Dimes, adequate prenatal care Is
the ke:t to reducing- low birthweight which can lead to birth
detects and. Infant mortality.
The Pomeroy restaurant Is one
of 4,500 Kentucky Fried Chicken
restaurants nationwide which Is
participating In the fund raising
drive.

:· Gospel sing scheduled at Liberty
There will be a Gospel Sing at
The Gospel Harmonalres, ar'e
Uberty Chapel on Sat., January a trio from Apple Grove, W.Va .
28, at 7 p.m. Uber ty Ch ape I, This Gospel group has been
d
known to most people In our area together for a few years now an
as "PawPawChurch'',lslocated · have just recently released their
on Swan Creek Rd.
'first recording.
The public Is Invited to enjoy a
The Fellowship Singers are
spirit-filled with some of the best from nearby Gallipolis the viigospel groups from our area.
!age of Vinton. They offer a
Singing will be, The Holley variety of Gospel music sure to
Family; The Gospel Harmo- make an enjoyable evening.
nalres, .The Fellowship Slngers
The Slngln Shafer's have
and The Singing Shafers.
worked In Gospel music In the
The Holley Famlly has become tri-state tor over 25 years. The
one of our areas' more expe- · Shafer's have been a s~ndard. ln
rlenced groups. They live 25 our area not only singing popular
miles. south of Galllpolls at sonp on the Southern Gospel
Crown City, Ohio.
Charts but also Introducing origl·
nal material.

Valentines to vets brighten stays

little girls, who were 10 and 14.
might even make one.
Three months after I arrived,
It you want ~ sign your name
and give an address, perhaps my son was stricken with a heart
you'll get a response. Should you attack and died. His wife came to
care to send more than one the funeral and we had a talk
valentine, that would be OK, tao. about the girls. She said she was
The more valentln,es you send, · not able to take care of them and
that I could do whatever I
the more hearts you will gladden.
wished, so long as I didn't let
How about you teachers out there
them
become wards of the state.
making It a class project? The
I
decided
to move back to
valentines will be divided among
California
and
take the girls with
all the veterans hospitals In the
me.
nation. I have raised seven children,
The address Is: Ann LandersAnn, Including two sets ottwins. I
Valentine Vet, Hines VA Hospistill have a 31-year-old hand!·
tal, Hines, Ill. 60141-1489.
I've always known my readers capped daughter at home. My
little granddaughters afe lovely.
are the most warmhearted, carI can't understand why their
Ing people In t)le world. Let's
mother refuses to make an effort
show the vets how much we
to·keep them with her.
appreciate them. Send your
Nearly every week sl\e writes
valentines today. Mine Is going
telling
them how much she loves
out this afternoon.
them.
This
really burns me up.
Love and Kisses - Ann
The
wqman
has made no effort
Landers
-·
whatever
to
support them. The
Dear Ann Landers: Three
years ago I sold my home In en tire burden bas been on me.
Do you feel that 1 should allow.
California and moved to Rhode
Island to be with my son. His wife this derelict mother to continue
suddenly left him and their two to write · these letters? Please

nn
Landers
ANN LANDEJISO

,.1988, L01 4np.if't
TimN Svndl nlf' arad
Crnlori S)'ndicolllt'

advise. -Resentful In Riverside
Dear Riverside: Your granddaughters need all the love they
can get. Even though their
mother abandoned them, she
may stU! care deeply, Please find
II In your heart to forgive the
woman and allow her to maintain
t!tls bridge. Bridges are far
better than walls.
Do you hGVe queuion1 about 1ex,
but nobo4y you can talk ro about
them? Ann Lander•' newly reviled
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager,"
will gitJe you ahe aruwer, you need.
To receive a copy. send 13 plu1 a
•elf·addreued, tlamped bu•ine,..
· 1i:e envelope (45 cen11 postage) to
Ann Londero, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicogo, Ill. 606JJ.0562.

---Quirks in the news---------Words can't describe ...
CHICAGO (UPI) - Rep. Robert Churchill said Monday he
wants to outlaw nasty auto
bumper stickers because there's
no way to prevent little children
from seeing them. ·
Unfortunately, he wasn't able
to say what words he wants to
ban.
"I obviously can't say those
words," the Lake Villa Republican said.
''The bill Is within the bounds of

teats of ..what Is and what Is not
obscene," Churchill said.
He said he also Is opposed to
T-shlrts with Improper words
and pictures If they're worn In
public places.
"111 consider putting the Tshirt Issue In an amendment," he
said.
•'This . kind _ of public bad
language can lead to a lessening
of morality and respect toward
others who are offended by this
language.'' he said.

.---

Lost rosary beads re_tumed to

nun

Wheelchaired man trys
to set painting on fire
VATICAN CITY (UP!) _ A at~ck on a Vatican masterpiece
man In a wheelchair tried to set In 1972 when Laszlo Toth, a minor
fire to a painting by Renaissance Hungarian painter, used a
artist Raphael tn the picture hammer to break an arm off the
gallery of the Vatican museum Michelangelo sculpture, Pleta,tn
Tuesday but the 16th Century St. Peter's Basilica.
·
masterpiece was not damaged,
Witnesses said tlie man leaped
the Vatican said.
from his wheelchair to throw the
Chief va:ttcan spokesman Joa- liquid at the painting and then
quiD Navarro Valls said the man tried to run away. But the
threw flammable liquid toward Vatican spokesman and pollee
the painting, the Madonna dl could not confirm that report.
Follgno, and set the flulo;l alight,
Museum guards seized the
but guards extinguished the man and took him to Vatican
flames and ''prevented the paint- pollee, who then handed him over
tng from suffering any damage." to Italian pollee tor questioning,
The man concealed the ther- Navarro said. ,
mos fltsk of flammable liquid,
•'The man showed signs of
along with another bottle of physical, and apparently mental,
unidentified fluid and two spray handicap," the Vatl~an spokes·
cans, under a blanket covering ·man said. He said the man was
his Jep, Navarro said.
about 30 and spoke In English.
Museum guards, who told
Pollee said the man wore
pollee they had seen the man In brown trousers and a sweater.
the gallery several times before, carried no Identification and
said they had not searched him refused to answer ·questions.
thoroughly because they be- They said he had difficulty
Ueved he was handicapped.
walking, apparently because of
Raphael painted the large an aliment of the knee joints.
altarpiece as a young artist early
the Vatlcan spokesman and
In ,the 16th Century. 11 Is one of other witnesses said the man
three famous paintings of Ra- entered the ptct11re gallery In a
phael's early Urblno period on wheelchair shortly after the
display In a section of the picture museum opened at 9 a.m. The
gallery dedicated entirely to his Incident occurred about 40 minutes later.

displayw?g~lncldentrecalledaslmllar

was 84.
King Juan Carlos· and Queen
Sofia sent a telegram of condolence toJordl Pujol, president of
the regional government or CataIonia, In which they said, "We
want to express our profound
grief for the Joss of a Catalan, a
universal Spaniard, who was
personally close to us."
''We al110 want to pay homage
to his Inimitable work, which was
always a unique reference point
In the history of painting," the
royal couple said.

Is the only organization which
has conquered the disease It set
out to eliminate.
The Mothers March was
launched In 1950 !luring the polio
epidemic and the funds raised
over the next five years helped tn
the development of the Salk
vaccine to prevent polio. In 1958
the March of Dimes and the
Mothers March redirected Its

~--------~~~------~

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20% OFF ON All QUILnNG MATERIALS
AND ACCESSORIES

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9 A.M.·4 P.M. Mon. thru Fri.- 9 A.M.·1 P.M. Sat.

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MASTERCARD-VISA-GOLDEN BUCKEYE

PITTSBURGH (UP I) - A nun found her pur~ near the light·
left brokephearted after she lost house on Sanibel where It washed
her late mother's sliver rosary up on the beach after Hurricane
beads nine years ago on a Florida . Keith, she said.
trip said Monday that a man who
Dlrst wrapped up the beads,
found and returned them to her now blackened from sea water,
restored her "faith In In paper towels and two envehumankind.''
lopes and shipped · them to her,
Miraculously, the beads sur· along with some keys and an
vlved nine years In the ocean and Identification card, at the Divine
a .bout with Hurricane Keith on Providence Mother House In
Dec. 6, 1988, said Sister Margaret suburban McCandless, her perMary Wagner, principal of St. manent address.
Bonaventure Elemen~ry School
"I always hope4 for It, " Sister
In suburban Glenshaw.
Wagner said. "As I say, It's a
The principal said she believed miracle. And I believe l'n them."
the sterling silver rosary beads
were gone for good after pollee 49er victory may mean gold rush
could not locate them for years. for Wall Street
She lost the beads given to her by
NEW YORK (UP!) - If the
her deceased mother when her Super Bowl stock market theory
purse was stolen while visiting extends Its winning streak to 23
her sister, Elizabeth Wagner, on years. the San Francisco 49ers'
a vacation to Sanibel Island, Fla. victory over the Cincinnati Ben•'The pollee said they'd hold It gals means 1989 will be a good
up to three years, and It never year for the market.
The Super Bowl stock market
was returned," the nun said. "!
just thought, 'Well, It wasn't to forecast has · been correct 22
years In a row, and It -the theory
be.'"
Butactually, the beads eventu· holds tor another year, the 49ers'
ally made their way back to 20-16 victory over the Bengals
Sister Wagner. On Dec. 6, 1988, Sunday presages an up year on
Tom Dlrst of Fort Myers, Fla ., Wall Street In 1989.

Doctor Repora •....

"Overweight Patients
Lose Too Much Wei "
A Jipiliaim
wcipt loa bzakthrouib of UD·
pm:edcnted llllplitude 1111 just
been llllde. A uew. ~ve diet pill
ORANGE, CA -

r.rogram contatn•ns amazmg
'E.A.B. Plua" bas been perfected
and is beiDa marketed lllldcr the
lndaJ•mr ADol.u 200()TM,
Resan:bcn are 01llirur it the
"diet minde of the ;go;:;r ADol.u
2000- with "B.A.B. Plus" IICtUally
turDS the body into I "lit burning

Free lO Day Trial Offer
Anora 2000 is so effective and
the raults are so astonishing that the
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a fuD 30 days, ir will be held to let
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safely lose all the weight you want. If
you arc not I00% satisfied with the
l.'CIIWkable change you see in the
mirror, just rerum your Anorex
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stored lit, flab and cclluliu: tbua
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llln llld bcUth aperll folllld
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instructiooa should be followed Allorex 2000, 5'159 Triumph St.,
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o{ I tbin, bclutiful, bealtby body.
Some o{
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IUI:b a powaful weigbt loss CXIDI.,O.md, doctols have ldvised the
~to~ no more thancme

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c 1989
1-800-633-2222

'

,,
) l

•

�'

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Tutlllday, Janu.-y 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport,, Ohio

•

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{

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I

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'

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MENTHOL

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Tuesday, Janu.-y 24, 1989

Soviets dig in victim search

Business·:·S ervices

MOSCOW (UPI) - Rescue Sharora's streets under 15 me- left more than 2.000 hosptlallzed.
teams dug Tuesday through Ions . ters of eartll. Hundreds of people
Unlike the tnilial feeble re.
o.t sand and clay that burled at have perished tn this village sponse to tlle Armenian disaster,
least tour villages afler' a strong (Sharora) alone."
'
this time bulldozers, cranes and
eartllquake In Soviet Central
Landlldes crumbled lhe lin- heavy excavators rushed to the
Asia triggered huge landslides roofed houses buill of earth In the ravaged areas to clear the rubble
that killed an estimated 1.000 agricultural region In Soviet and rescuers began to dig ou t
people.
central Asia, burying Q1any survivors.
The temblor, measuring 5.4 on people In their homes as they
Soviet Television show~d
the Richter scale and centered . ,;slept.
--.
earthmovers scooping away tons
about 30 miles southwest of the Y " At that time of the morning of sand and clay deposited by the
Tadzhlklslan Republic captlal of people were still In Iheir homes," · landslides, while villagers and
Dushanbe, struck at 5:02 a.m.
salq a spokesman for. the Tadz. rescuers dug wllh shovels.
. .Monday as many residents were htktslan Academy of Sciences In
Tass said the quake measured
asleep In their homes .
Dushanbe. ' 'There was no warn· 7 points on the 12·point Mercalli
The official Tass news agency ing. There would have been little scale. The U.S. ~logical Sur·
said tons of earth jarred loose chance to survive the la'ndsllde." vey In Golden, Colo.. measured
from surrounding mountainsides
Tass said al least four villages Ihe eartllquake at 5.4 on the
smashed lhrough a string of - Sharora. Kullpoyen and Okull· open-ended Richter scale. The
farming villages, killing an est!, Olo and Gissar - were pulver· 30·second Armenian quake meamated 1,000 people.
!zed by tlle landslides . Dushanbe sured 9 on the Mercatll scale and
"Distant vtltages . have not and the towns of Tursunazde and between 6.8 and 6.9 on the Richter ·
been checked yet," Tass satd, Nurek were also jolted by Ihe scale.
indicating lhe death toll could be temblor.
"Small , buildings made from
higher.
"Hundreds of ambulances are earth were hit especially hard,"
The quake's epicenter was delivering gravely wounded peo- Tass said . "The quake caused a
near the village or Sharora, pie to the central district hospital serious }andsll\le, somP two kl
where the devaslatlon was re· and to other ·nearby medtclal · · lometers (more than I mile) long
mtniscent of a massive earth· eslabllshments," Tass said with· ·,. from a hill near to Ihe village" of
quake that struck Armenia less • outglvlngthenumberoflnjurles. Sharora. . ·
than two monl)ts ago. .
Transmission and communlca·
"OkulJ.Qio village Is now a
" Cries and walls can be heard lion Unes were knockeddoimand heap p! J Ubble," Tass said.
everywhere," Tass said. "Some bridges and roads were damaged "Seventy peasant households
are lamenting and burying their In the Moslem republic . ln have been completely demol·
relatives while others try to find addition to destroying miles of !shed and burled by Ihe
the few survivors beneath lhe highways. the landslides burled eartllsUde.' '
thick layer of sand and clay.
thousands of cattle, the lifeblood
In Washington, (he Sovlel
"Sharora had more than 150 of the region, Tass said.
·ambassador to the United Stales,
peasant households before the
The temblor followed one of the Yurt Dubynln. Iold reporters
tragic moment; bu 1 now most or most d.estructlve earthquakes on Monday Ihe Untied States of·
it Is razed to the ground. The record in the Soviet Union- the fered to send eartllquake relief
tremor was aggravated by a Dec, 7 quake in Armenia that assistance to region.
huge landslide that burled all . killed. at least 24,959 people and

...

Classifie
• The Area's

N~mber.

•Ads

oul~de

paid.
'
"Aeeeive $.50 discount for ads J)llid in adl.oence.
"Free edl - Qiv8twrt and found ads und• 15 words Wtll be
run l d.,s 11 no chqe.

•Senttnllll is n~t reaponslbtelor erron after first dlrf. !Check
tor enOt"s tint day- ad runs in P~t~MW) . Call betore 2:00p.m .
d., aft• publication. to
co"ection.
•Ads thM nwn be .-ld In acNanee are
, '
Card of Ttlanks
Happy Ads
In Memori.n
Yerd. Sales

m••

l - C.d ot ThW'Iks

,..

2-ln Memory
3- Annouc:-.nents
•- a~ve.w

667· 89-

..

H-py Ada
Lolt -.,d Found
Y*ld &amp;81efplid i.n advance)
Public $Me &amp; Auction
Wtntlld to. Buy

fn'nlnyrnent
Ser vr,:r:s

•A classified adwenllement placed In The Oalty Sentinel. (ex·

C:8pt - cl•sified dis pl..,, Busineu Card. and leQal nott~l
wiN alto app.., in the Pt. Ple•ent Repter and tt111 Gelltpolis Deity Trib&amp;.ln11. reaching owr 18.000 hom•.

12-Situa;tion Weed

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

13- lnsurance
14 - Busin•• Training
16- Schools 6 lnstrucUon
1&amp; - Radio, TV &amp; CO Repair
17-Miscellaneous
18 - Wtntld To Do

- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M . MONOAV

- 2'00 P.M. TUESDAY

-

2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
2:00P.M THURSDAY

- 2'00 P.M. FRIDAY

SUNOA'I' PAPER

Classified pages cover the

21 - Busin•• Opportunitv
22 - Mon., to loWt

23- Prof•lioNI S•vic•

following telephone e;changes...
Glllil County
Ante Code 614

Meigs County
AruCode614 ·

M1110n Co .. WV

446-Gallipoli.s

992.-.. Middleport
Pom•ov
985- Ch•ter
B•tl- Ponl.lnd
247- letart Fal!a
949- Racine
742 -- Rutland
667- Coolvile

675-Pt . Pleeunt

367 - C~•hire

318-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
266-Guyt~n Dist .
&amp;43-Arabia Dist .

379- Walnut

Rr!nl f stale

Area Code 304

32- Mobile Hom• for S1de
33 - F"arms for Sale
34- Busin•• Buildings
3&amp;- Lots &amp; Acreage
36- Real EstlteWented

458 - leon
882-New Haven
895 -- letiM't
937 --8uflalo

lhMilll
41 - HOUNI lor A.m
42- Mobile Hom• for Rent
43- Farms for Rtnt
44- Apanment for Rent

46- Furnilhed Aooms

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
INSURANCE
MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
Seoled propoeol1 will be
received by tho Mei91
County Commlulo-o. Po·
mwoy. Ohio, et tho crer11'1
Office untl twelve noon of
tile 1ot day of Fobnlery,
1!189. The blcio will be
o...,.ed et 2:00 p.m. , on
Febnlery 1, 1189, end ,...d
lfoud by the Clerk of Mid
, Bol&lt;d for M - t l t Robbery ..,d Burgltry Food
Swmp C - t 1o protect

•

.

,.

AVAILABLE IN FULL FLAVOR, LIGHTS, KINGS &amp; tOO'S

.

them-•
ond burglery

~~gtlnot robbery

looo In the
emount of *400.000.00.
s-ettendlrodlpon~ w11 be n:alued with
rapct to the ..,...,.... r•

'""""•eel •

•

qu- to bt
ptOVided .., the tptdfitlonl. Speciflcetlont end ,,..
-toblddtr1maybe
et tile office of the
clerk of tho Mel.. eou ...
ty Commleolo--. Porn·
oroy. Ohio.
Sold Boord of Commlo·
olo-1 - - tile right to
w•IY• torrnolltlee to eccopt
ond reject perto or ell of....,
ondoll bldo.
Mel91 County • - of
Commleolonor1
Mery Holltttltor, Clerk
(1117. 24. 2tc .
Public N otlce

SURG.EON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

Mfr. suggestad retail price.

'

,.

47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equipm.-.r for Rent
49-For

I.e••

!

Transportal ron
71 - Autos for Sllle
7'l- Trucks for Sale
73- V•n• 6 4 W0'5
75 - Boats &amp; Motors for Salt!
76- Autu Paru &amp; Accastor iM

n --Auto Repair
78- Camping Equipment

79..,..Campet• S. Mot Of Hom es

-0:

Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
lltown Insulation
. Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
frH Eotimates
Call 992-2772

Services
81 --Homelmprovements
82 - ·Piumbing S. He•ing
83- Exc..,lling
84 - Eiectticll &amp; Refrigeration
86-General Haulinr;J
86- Mf'lbile Home Rep•ir

In accord.nce with

Public Notice

of County
The · - IIIII\'
COINIIIIolontra
NIIUirt
llddiUonll oonllact prowl-lions with tho -o1u1
bidder lndudln1 but not
lim- to"" rigllt of the op.
tlon to cencil tho l-oll noCM08fY.
The front of the •••alape
-~ the bid ..... bt
merlltcl • Sttled81d. Humon

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On " - v 12, 19H, In

hrvice Dep1 hiNnt lulcl1"11". to fumllh .....
ownbldfonn.
The 11oen1 of County
COfNIIIo...,_. IMI' IICOefll

...... County
eo....
c.. No,

.... c. .......

tht'-tbldor-tht

Pr-..
2t103.

Mul'llht.

floule 1. Lot8rt. W.t Ylr........213,-trpp I led
1!- bilL of the of
c..t M. MMitcll. d ur ed.
IIIIo of R. D. llttdlvth.
Mt1tJ11 County, Ohio. 4171Z.
lltrlrert I! .......
Probtto . . . .
lAne K. N•Miratd. Clerk
11117. 24. 31, 3tc
I

SAT.: a am·12 11-.

gr1nddaughter1,
Kelll • Kendra, 1nd
mother Zelma

__J
\

nt·••n

Joo or Pllulty lowllnl

2" South 4th St.
Milllll1port, Oh. ,.,
"UIW IICDMI lOIII"
12· 21·1 mo.

S3S

SAT. NIGHT

1Utlftl

6:30P.M.

DIUV£1(0

HAUUNG DOfllll

....... Ohio
CONSIGNMOOS WaCOME

PATRICK H, BlOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-428-7245

•

II

NIASE Certified Ms•:h..,liC

CAll 992-6756

.

•Mobile Home
Perte

~=smuN;n:oco
OHIO

•Mobile Home

Rentals
•L01 Rentals

91

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

992-7479
lt. 33 North of
,_.,.,.,_~~«

BISSELL
BUILDERS

0111111: GlliG •• 1011!11
6£11ERAL

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

COIIIIEICIAl

"At RtosOIIaltlt Price1"

.CUSTOM KITCH Oil. IA'TMI
-t.X1ENIJV! IIIMODIUNG
-'i'INVL IIDING I .. OOANO

PH. 949-2101
• or las. 949·2160
Day ar Night

•MEtAL IUilDtNOI
HOUSING. APt . P"O.JECTI

SUYCF;; 1969

nuw•

•SD

~·s

t.nl

., DOC L
""ic~~:~!~H;
Certified

M

OUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

$1695

Repeirs

.~t,

1· 11·'19·1-

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

A/ C Service
All Major 6 Minor

·

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK

PULOAD

BILL SLACK .
992-2269

12 Go1110 ~::~Only

..--:·

PUBliC
AUCTION

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

EYEIY

'I

NOTICE TO DOERS
Sooled propooolt wMI be
received et the:
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
18&amp;5 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
SECONO FLOOR
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224
until Tueodlly, FebrllllfY 14,
1989 at 11:00 e.m. end
opened there- for fur·

on 1-18001Zez-1oa1.
RECOMMENDED:
Tim "· Dllr....... Chief
· DIYiolon of Real-n
Joeoph J. Bommer,
~or. Dopeof Nttllfll AeoouDett:
(1)17, 24,
2tcJen. I. 11n

Glenn ond

Yr1. Exp.
Ref•M'Ia.

FIREWOOD

UCINE ·
FilE DEPT.

Mott Foreign aod
Domestic Vehicla

;:.":'!...!::c:..~:
=~~~==.:.
jr,'4;':1~= !V~!:::

Jan. 24.
-Sadly ml..ect and
loved by wife
Gertrude, eon

T.L.C.
~~

3 84 4
40~~s~E·,[p i~R riE ~icE 1

1

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VAllEY
SPORTSMEN'S ClUI
lt. 124 lltw- Wllln·
• • 111111

w.n. Centor

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

NO SUNDAY CAUS

4-1~86-tfn

12 Gauge Shotguns Only

Til-COUNTY
RECYCUNG
OPEN 7 DAYS

"Free

(Sulljtct to 0tantt '
Witleoul Nrttictf
1(1 ,COPPEI ........,.... 16' 111.
#2 COPPEI ............. 65•

EVERY SUNDAY

Estimate~''

1:00 P,M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB •

PH. 949-280 1
or las. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-11-ttn

1~

CUlM ALUMINUM .

RACINE, OHIO

SHHTS _ ................. 47• Ill.

CAST_.................... 40• n.
AUMINUM
•vaAGE CANS-·· 46• IlL
IIONY
SHHL........... 5• to 30• 11.
.ONY CAST- 3' to 20' 111.
ST A1NWS -·---.... 20• ._

992-5114

Located Off Bypaao
At Jet , of Rh. 7 •
143, Pomerov. Oh.
1·12·'18·1fn

Alii

..........ngS.,.U•
...... Gtr• lorptrli•
' - . a.- . Slup
22 A111mo
Rt. 124 Eeot of Rut lend
AcrOoo Htrppv H - Rood

ONlY

DEAD 01 AUVE
•Walhera

•Ranges

.9·19-11 If~

•Dryers

•Fn~&amp;zers

•Refrigeretors .

CARTER'S ·
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

....... letopoirollll"

lEN'S APPUANCE
.SEIYKE
985-3561
We Service All Meka
1/21111/lfn

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
\OADIIG
MODEll GUI
SUPPUES

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

WANTED

CUlM ALUMINUM

992-6282

BOGGS

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

I. 5. IT. SO lAST
GUYSYUI, OliO

1·28·'18-lfn

SALES I SilVIa
614·66~-lUI
Authorized John
N- Hollend,
· · Buoh Hog Farm
Equpmont DNior .

o-o.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and r•·
core radiators 111111
hlater corn. We call
ahv acid boil and riHI
oilt radiators. We also
r.-lr Gas Ta,.s.

,., .... lpe•t
IIIM&amp;Imlte

Ph. 614-742·1355

9/20/lfn 1 mo. pd.

I

GUN SHOOT

.... ....

Paying today
Jan. 13, 1989

I

1-1 ·'19-1

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

9AM-7PM

I

factory Cholet
SIIICnY £11FOIQDI

•VINYL SiDING ·
•ALUI\IIINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1·3·'81·110

Listeninc Devices
Dependable Heariog Aicl.Sales &amp; Se~tict
c:J Hearing Evalu1tions For All Ages

PAT HILL FOlD

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

992-2198

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Middleport. Ohio
H3·1fc

~

(614)446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
3 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Galtipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hets. Pomeroy. Ohio

AIIIIUU 11 1:1! lllf: 11 I~
3

Announcements

MARCUM
CONTRACTIN
CMSTR OliO
r
•HOM!: BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS -11ATHS

•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG • REPAIRS
........, DAT 01 MNIIGS
rnvow;

Don't Tr•h I Cuh ltl

tiVI:IIIc

985-4141

GENUAI.

CONTRACTORS

Referencn

Aewtlng now open far

.,......... We •• on Meln tnd

.
,1 1-18·'88-tfn

oo·le~~~~~~~~~~~:'!~~~=:~

Of My Husband.
NORMAN RIZER
On Hla Birthday.

LL-...!~~2;

Wo lluy Ahrmlnum
Con1. Gleo1, Breu,
Copper and More
MON.·Fil.s ' 1111·6 Pill •

.....,..
In .-rrlng
contrtctoro
requlrln• bido
trom Certified MBE ouboontrec:toro oupplltre may

In Loving Memory

Good Aetoo

WELDI.NG
AUTO&amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY.
WRECK REPAIR

SYIACUSf, OHIO

~~~deof..::~.?m~..:::

lncl-•

••••ca....,

lest of St. lt. 7
241 at O..stor

011

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

tain Squ.re. Building H.
tion 307.86 of tho Ohio Re·
Code. Holed Ill do wNI s-nd Floor, Columbuo.
bt received by tile 8oard of Ohio 43224. No bidder may
Mol91 County Commioolon· withdraw hi11Md within lbcty
ero. Court Houoo, Pomeroy, (601 deyo oftor the ectuol
Ohio 45718, umM 12 Noon, data of tho opening t-.of.
The DiriiCior of N•tu,..
Feb. 1. 18811. Thellldo w~l
th., bt opentcl at 1 p,m, on · R01ourceo ,...,... tile rliht
Feb. I , 1189 end reol olaud to reject eny or oiiiMdo• .,.. to
eccopt the bid which emlrn·
for the purch- of:
NOTICE OF
cu 1uch combination·alterONE NEW 1989
lt8te propoaele 11 m11y pro·
. 4·WHEEL DRIVE
A~MENTOF
DuCIARY
mote the belt lntorOit of tho
LOADER/EXTENDAHOE
on Jo ory 10. 19H. in
Bid 1pecifl..tlon1 mey bt 'Stete.
the Mel
CountY Probete picked up et the Mol91
Ao provided in 9ectlorl
Court.
NO, 21123, County Engln-· 1 Office or
Cherltt M. McGreth. 37'h the Mei91 County Commlo·
May Aw .. Cheuncer. Ohio aion•• Office.
t1ve Rule 123:2-1&amp;.02 of
46711. woo op...,.....d bee·
The Mtl91 County Com· the Dtportmont of AdmlnloutO&lt; of tho eotete of Eerl A. mlo*-• may- tho lo- tratiW lltrvlceo. tilt CON·
McGmh, d-tcl. lete of
llld. Of Mloct tho beot TRACTOR 1hellmelle ~
38111 N- ume Rotcl. -bid for
tilt intonderrt pur· -rttoenl,..thltcortltled ·
p-ov. Ohio 41718.
,o., .,.. rlllrwl the rtght: minority bu-1 ouboon·
R-E.Buck.
to .,.. reject ony or olr trect'l'o end motorlelm.,
Prbldo llld/0&lt; port lhereof.
pertlcipete in the contrect.
...... K. Noo. .rotcl.
Meigo County 8-d Tho totet voluo of 1 - n(J1)17, 24, 31. 3tc
of Commlooloner1 treell-erdedtoendMery Hobttetter, Clerk riel1 ond rrorvlceo purchatd
(1)17, 24, 2tc
trom · ml-'tv butlneooholl bt eo ott forth In tho
Public Notice
apoalfioMiono.
2 · In Memoriam

2600 - e feet min~
mum otfi• apace contilt:ing
of 1 minimum of 16 roomo,
toM411 fedlltlee tor men end
women end et - t 11 peril·
1ng · - for eutomoiJileo.
llentol required for Mid
buldlng end rtl•ed fec:llitloo ohould bt -n
for e fiYe year btelo. AI bldo
tile Nntol
ohould
- • r y for the blddtr to
pruv. . rnolnt.....,oo for tho
atwlor .,d - l o r of the
buldlng- ........ , .
qulred &amp;,. the underolaoied.

·- &amp;
loftfet
Sltlltr
Cltlw01111

1115/ttn

84·9. February 16. 1984,
equel employment Ol&gt;por·
tunrty condilions ere applicable to thi1 bid. Wage rates
ootabll111td In eccordonce
with ooctlon 1513.18 1nd
1613.37 of tho rovloed codo
1re aleo applicable.
Bi• are ualed and eddreoood to: Doportmenl of
Natural R"ourtn. Ofvilktn
of Rtdemotlon. 1855 Four&gt;-

MC ·

EUM HOME

1 MI.

IUSIIIE$$
14tll &amp; Wt St.
Pairot " - I,W.Yo.

Stric11y I

Contractors are adwiHd
that maccordance with the
provilionl of the January
27.1972 executive order by
the Gov~rnor of Ohio ,and
emended e~ecutive ord•

NOTICE OF
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
DEALERS

w~lbe o...,.ed •

-bldforthe-f'
1ft IDDDi . .iW with S.C... .......... •d I II 0 UW till
right to Njoct lillY or • bldo
tion 307.8t of tile 011111 R• .,d
or ,., port dllteot.
eo., ....... llldo wll
lllti.. Coulllylloenl
be ICDCtu... br U. .....
· ofc_.....--.
County - d of c-~
MtryHobotettor.Cierll
- . I n their ofllceloOittcl (1117,
24. Ztc
1n ""Courthool-. P-ov.
• Ohio, untl ......,. - o n .
Fe..,_,. 1, 1111. The bldo

l

63- lfvestoc:k
64 - Hay 8 Grain
&amp;&amp; - Seed &amp; Fertih~et

NOW·OPII FOI

lalha111 hiding

Roofing

OivieH&gt;nof
p11rtm.,t of
~. upon recelpl of 1
in the amount of
mode peyeblotothe Depart·
ment of Nalu,.- Rnourcee.
Thee• may el1o be purchaed with cuh in tho
IJIIct amount. PI•• and
specificaliont became the
property of tho proopectiYo
bld1len end no oefund1 will
be mode. Addi11onel lntor'·
malion may bt obtained
from the Dtvilion of Reclemalio~ Department of Natural R•ourc•. 1855 Fountain ·Squero, Buldlng H.
Second Floor. Cohrmbuo.
Ohio 43224. (Phone: 18141
265-10118).
Each bid muSI be ICCOm·
ponied by 1 BID GUA·
RANTY. meeting the requiremonll of Section
153.64 of tho Ohio Reviled
Code.

Public Notice

2:16p.m.
on febnlery 1, 1IH ond
reod oloUd for tile following
buUdlng - . . Eech bid IO
mMt tile condltlor. end ,.,..
cifiCOitlont •
Office buldlng to hou•
lhe Mei91 County D"-'·
ment of Human Service~.
3000
- · f - minimum
tote!_.,

Mastic
Vinyl Siding

57-Muafcellnstruments

61 - Farm Equipment
62- Wanted to Buv

IECYCUNG

&amp; Certlinteed 1

66-'-t•for ....
68- Fruils &amp; Vegeta~es
59 ..... For S~e or Tr•de

LASHLEY
SEIVICE

GUN SHOOT

J&amp;L .
INSULA nON

56 - Building Supplies

87"-Upholstety

Public Notice

PUILIC NOTICE

Full flavor: 15 mg "tar;· 1.0 mg nicotinelights:.10 mg "tar;' 0.8 mg nicotine av.
per cigarette by FTC method.

•

46- SP•ct lor Rent

Get R·esults Fast

61 - Hou ....old Ooochl
52-Sportliljr G....
53-Antiques
64- Mtsc. Merch.,.dlse

74- Motorcyeles

31 - Ham• for S·a le

576-Apple Grove
773 - Meson

Mer r.h&lt;~rHiise

Farrl' Supplrr:!;
&amp; lr Vt:olllck

1 1 - Help Wanted
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER

W1 Corry FloNnQ Su,.....•
Your Phone
Blllo H'tri
IUSIIIOI I'IIONf
(6141 H2·6SSO
lfiiDDICE PHON£
llt41 HI::1J:ll4

of:
AIIUNDANT COAL D-201
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG·Sb-21·F
in accordance with the plena
and aP8Cificationa Dreoared
by tho Depertment of Netu·
rol R01oun::oo. The Dlvl1lon
of RederNrtlon. Columbuo.
Ohio , Bldll will bt opened In
the aecand floor conference
room of 1855 (BuftdlngHJof
The fountain SqUire Office~
of The Ohio Department of
Natur~~l Reaourc•. The allmate for thi1 protect u
determined by tho OiYiolon
of. Reclamation I
834.726 .00.
A pre·bid meeting wll bt
on Monday. January
1989 ot 11'00 e .m . et

1 Marketplace

Annou nee 111 ent s

"Ptiee of Ml tor ell c.pihtllettet's it double prioe of ad co1t.
•7 point line ty.,. ontv used.
.

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

execution end conltrvction

Rat.• are forcon•cutMt runs. broken upd..,awill be chwgad
for eer.h d., as
ads. ·

Meiga, Gillie or Mason counti• mu.t be P'•·

..... &amp;.GtiN:
• ... llertlt .....
Mid·l,art, Ollio 457.0

p-.mlng tho I - for the

0· 15 WORDS 18·21 WORDS 28·35WORDS
1 DAY
$4.00
$5.00
87.00
3 DAYS
ss.oo
110.00
$8.00
$8.00
$13 .00 .
&amp;DAYS
11'5.00
10 DAYS
$13 .00
S21 .00
S25.00
$33 .00
$51 .00
1 MONTH
S60.00 ·

POLICIES

PLIIMHG &amp; HEATING

nilhing the mmrialc end

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CALl 992-2156 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
' 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
(LOSED SUNDAY

·.

The

Ohio

BINGO

14th 11r- Palnr Pr_.,~
w.vo. w. buy ..... "'""'
~ end more. Mondeot 1hrv
1'r1111rv UIO till e:OO. ileluodllo
1 :00111 noon. Formorainforma-

tlonecoiiJO-.e7e-3181 .

4

Giveaway~

90MEROY -EAGLES CLUB
I ktn.-.. &amp; 1 C111 to • • ~.
Collt1-.446-GH2 Olt•l PM.

2241. MAIN ST.- 992-9976

.

.

THURS. Ll. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. E.l. 1:45 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE

do_.,_ ... H_.Rt.lll
• J&amp;otRodnew.
Ofve ~~-v·WIIIrlpool dry•r.

f

1

2 H.D. FREE with coupon end purahee o m n .
H.C. Peokego. Limit 1 coupon per customer per
bingo

•-ion.
·
WE PAY UO.OO PER GAME

0 811.00 PER -,..,..._OVER 110 PEOPLE
•

lmol lrreod 4 mo. old - •
lslodl pup. Motllor Ret. laottloh
Torrlor, Foth• Min, Pooclo. Coli

., .....1711 .

Co- colo&lt;TY. Nte.-oopelr.
Colll14·192· 1711. .

'•

'"

�--

-------------- - ----··-- -:-- --------

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

8

42

LAFF·A·DAY r

lost and Found

Mobile Hem11
for Rant

v.,.

"~•

e.n

O 'Detl't on Vine St.

Trll ... Unfur,.htd. Coupl•,
1mll c:hl*tn acCIP(td. At. 1.
lDcult flo ... Itt. Pl...wt. behlnd . . K. 304-1711-1075.

FOUND: Eye g l - In K·Mort
par~g kJt- tow•dl tuw.r end.
Coli 304-175-39t2.

49

2 blctoam. SMd Hll RaMI,

44

t 984 C'-v 8 -tO, TthoofMdl·
nice truclc. 304-8711- 799t .

-

Epleal:l11

.

I

~~~-

Vans

(J) SporttlOO(o
(D R11t10n11 Wilen plans stan

&amp; 4 W .O.

wedding, Ramona saves the
day.
(!)Dr. Who: Tllne Warrior
Hippy
Dar•
lUI , _
ol Life

fiE WON!! OLAF WON!!!
'i'OlJR BRoTHER WON THE

•o

''U6LY DOG '' CONTEST !

mil•.

f

8:011 (J) 0n. Dly II I nme

.

Furntru,. end eppli.. . -· b¥ tht
pieae or entire hOullhold. fllr

25550

prioM bolng pOi d. CoiiB.t 4-4483t58.
'

Dl•el rneah. wkh M.rlne •perien• Call or wrftt Mon Rtv•

Towlna 200 Sp- Rd. Bllto·
Vor...,. Po. 110t2. 4t2·4138051.

Will buy or op ....o .,.thlngt
Antiquoo. furniture. oppllon-

eettrt•. . , , . aaft'IDJIIIe home
furniahing~. M•lln 'llldem.,.er,

lt4-245-5t52.

GET PAID for - · boob/
OtOO.OO .,_IItie. Wille: PAS f.
1171, 111 a. Unwl • .,. N.
....ra&lt;o. IL 10 542.

Need • Y.. gllllon of . . . . L..rd
Imutton tlltowl . lllolp C.O. D. 10
Olivo llwllin. At t Boa t9J.E ,

Full 11mo mdcol t.,..,ologlot
ASCP; port tnlo modlcolloloortary -ologlol .UCP . Flo•
tech II 11Ctione rN.Itt be lblt to

C1own Clly, Ohio 45123. Coli
lt4-251-t32t .

Wented To Buy UNCI Mobile

Hom•. Coli Btol-44&amp;-0175.

U1ed t.arnlture by tht piece or
entire .houllhold llao ••ling.
Bt4-742·2455.

work eny d• Ill 1hlft. 3 to I
Y••• aplrienee prftr... C.l
Ptlrtonnel offfct 304-11764340. AA·EOE.
..

12

114-11811-4311.

Wonted to Buy, good uoc
tlectrlc cement

304-1715-5313.

"*•·

Coro tor ok* or oldorfV In tholr
ho,_ CoN lt4-44&amp;-1354.

ph:lne

t ,JipiiiVIllc!lll

15

lallnor, tOICtB t2xt4
- d bu ..... Col lt4-241J.
5021.
1973 Freem~ mobile home.
Totel electric. *6000. Call 114441-7711.

Movlngl Muot oolll t871 Mon.
..... t41'10. 3 -...... ..
.. _,.,. undorplnnln• pareto.
Aokin9 neoo. Coli lt4-84J.
5453.
'

School•

33

Help Wanted

Farms for Sale

r7 ecre mini flrm-4 mil• from
Oolllpollo-12 . .• m - . t 5
• • wood. Hlrdlap roM,
1ahool route. Mel route. Til•
phon&amp; Good wt1t wtt•. lfect·
ric. Good thtde t,.., Cll

Wanted to Do

114- 441-2110!1.

,a.,.

"'rlng In y_o ur .,.., both Ull.e

.nd uftlllll.._ Far 1 lilt of jo..
11'1 d liP h8tlun. CMI

Bodv Men noodod. Six yon
ex,.-ltnce plus too11. C.l 814o
381-llt5.
UP to 015HOURPROCEBSING

MAIL WE!IILY CHECK GUARANTEED. FREE DETAILS.
WRITE. SD, t057 W. PHILADELPHIA. IUrTE 231-GO. ON·
TARIO, CAI.1Fit71Z.
HELP WANTED
Ad•ortlolngSoi•Pr-lonllln
Florldo

=-

--1.

COntrol Florldo
dtilv ntWipipW,
......
ri.nced Adv-'•lno Ill• ,,.

• • - lmmicl•oJ¥. Wo'n
looking for
oo~
tlvo. h•cf.clo•glng ..... -

who'*' help us•CHdour•l•

;:;:=::;;;=;::====
Buslna••

Ill-•

E-lnocod
Wll cl- ;
..... _ . Rot. .......... 0o11 34
8t4-441-58H.
Wit do lnaom• Tu. Short

020. CoH lt4-N:Z.5537.

ONe Pl•o. Orpn ~d El.otronic Kiybo•tt liMON in mr

ho-10 .................. .
otudonlo .,d .... Mo. Alooohor.g •d tr.... DI:a H
Int. . . . . . . 114-1112·
,3.
-

• • • In mr ....... Anv
houro. ..., • • Coli 114-441••uro~~

.... m.

do IIOu• ol_..,g ar bolr¥
ltnlna In or out of hamt,

304-17.. 2740.
..,.... 718t.

P.O. Box 1440
Wim• H1ven, Fl. 33882:

GET PAID for -~ ~obi
f100 por ·~lo Wrlto: ..... 3311.
tBt S , Lincoln-.N . A...,.,II
80542.
WANTED : FuiHI- employ·
ment fn yc"" own home .. 1

Wortc• with

Home Servlc.

Bucker• Community ..,.._.
Wo pr'"'ldo oolll\' piQo bon., d • d•lv room Md bDMI nte.
, You P'OYkte 1 hom&amp; guldm•
on d Irion do hlp In o famllr
•moophore. Roqulreo olllllly 10
1-h p...,..llvlng .... end •

111

-olt

lllvd., Polrro Plo.....

lmtled IWTII lo ..,_. A'iOn
rilpr..ntatlv•. Catl 814-oM ..

4397"' 4411-4882.
Telephone toUdort needed far
•ftwnoon &amp; wining hour&amp; c.a

114-44&amp;-744t .

I.HI~ ~:tMded b good p.,.lnv
MmPGAirt Dffl01 like work. No
•IMrience n~. Allo need

Iori• wu cor b ll1lhf dollvll\'
Goo oll.-co. APJJIY In
p...., ONLY INa Phono Cello!

to: MN. C.rt«. Room 30. Eoono

Now -

ony-

Mixed herd wood al..... t12 P•
bunclo. C-lnlng oppr... tV.

tan. Ohio

Tnl• .... o l - l l r •100. W•m Mllrnfng • •
· f321
- 810'11'1.
...
wl,...,
Woad. Both
ar aa•
............
90 o.y, time • ce~h wllh
o p - aodlt. 3 Ml• out
lul•ll• Rd. Open tom ta Spm
Mon. lhru lot. I'll. Bt4-4410322.

Acreage

3 ., _ _. -•wlh PDIItL Thr•
I acre tfMtl. •c blda ••• off
Rt. 87. 304-488·ti7S.

rot. CoH lt4-44&amp;-tSt7.

op'pllconOH. Coli Bt4-441·

Furnllhed 2.3. or • rOCWN •
bllh. Cl-. Muho Dnfr. No

75'72. Hourt 1-15.

- · Ref. • clop. *lui-c. Coft
lt4-441-tlt9.
2 - . . . . . ........ for rent.

C•p•od. Nlcuottln!J Loundry
foclltl• 1¥olobl• CoM lt4982-37tt. EO H.
Ono Month Froo Rent
Quollllc , ..... poyf200.
0opoolt ond
for lho

-or

no'""'

month. December • Janulf'y
onll'. VIIond
l'llv. .ldtA-montoln
Mldcl
F
.tl2.

lllidlll'l,d

Busln111s
OPPOrtunity

p-

I NaTICII
THE 0110 VALLEY PUILIIJI.
lNG CO . --dtlhot YGU
do buoln- ""'h
you
...... .,d NOT to • d manor
ttwougtl thl mel untl you hwe
...... t h o -.....
,-oll,...,g -fllu,.wll

dwolop ...... In op..
._. toon. ltMt• ldl. o..ilng

-

ond

.,!'.:::::'tor·- ,..,.

......olty.

Coli

bu·rion:

3"0~7111-3200-

•

31

4--

Hem111 for Sale

2 blth. ,..,.,
with fir•
p i - formolllnlng. ..........
room,. 30 .. GUitC:nl Dill ldlah1n

·
._......_
- ·........
z ....
.....
_ tlnloh
...,ol
1., ......., lot. 4 ml• from
- H....... off Rt 311lu-lolon. 011
114-441-.,11.

.....

r""::..::::;::'
"::·- - - - - YIRA'I FURNITURE S.
A~PUANCES

PR
lASHED·W•ctobereg. Ot41-071.o-ollo
U81 now
• 101. Country wood tabl• wMh
3 cloolro&amp; bondi-ng. tHI,_

•ow

2 bechom unturnkhld with
~d rllfrl"'Mor. No P«L

ltH41-22S

-ctoll1r-. Mldclop01t.Ohla,
Z bedroom ..

,,.htd •

81mtn1.

oa ooffMt8ble. ' '· •dtlllll•.
Pr. wlntehllra. 31vcl. --~·
Brtt•nfCI. Cal 814-441-1720.
W•hor • dlyor. Awcodo. Goad
cond. eon lt4-44&amp;-3tt4.

UvmtJ room tuh:e &amp; bedroom
tulte. rotJ.1-wey bed. Corbin •
· Snydtr. 955 Sooond ....... 114-

utiiiUM Ptkl. ,.,• .,011. Phone

304-812-2515.
N- occopliog oppRcotlono tor j 4.:.*::::..t:...t..:7..:t:...
. - -- - - 2
.,
.
.
-~
~Ill'
c•pet... IIPPH..- . wn• •d Two-pi41Ce pllkiiNingroom .,_

41

Hom• for Rant

pr-"'""

Molnt•
tr ..h pi ~·;:
MnCII ht
lngv•_,..
dote to ~hop.

.... 3 yn. old. ,good concltion.

f100. OBD . Coli 8t4- 742·
pin• bona ond octoo~. For 12- 9_M_•_tt_.,_s_:o_o:_.- - ---'

reng'
814-112·72t5.

NIDI

gel

180.

Cell

..

Vfnton 1 ,.1 on 1 ecr. eR..,adolod 2 SR . IIOu-. ......
rppL. .. 1271 pluo....
Coiii14-3S1-84f2tltD I'M.

·-1v•
~

I looping , _ With coaljn•
A loa Tral• _ .. An hooloCAH roll• 2D. m. 304-773Uet. Mooon WV.
Sleeping IQDm with kitchen
llriw.._toeiMrtyW,. phont

304-1711-1711.

48

hD
Mut.._. A
mo.
-·• • ··
Pam-. 2 - - ......
,._, Wtcloon. dlnlnt r-., Country Moblo Homo ,......
1ovo1y.., pareto. F,.,_....., Route 33. NOrth of Pomaroy.
for- olr h . .. c...- ond Lota. _..._ ool•. Col
dropod. lorry, no ....., or lt4-18:Z.7478.
,... Awllbl• •bout Peb. 1.
*221. P• - h pluo clopColll14-8t:Z.I2S2.roll•tlp.m. 47 Wanted to Rent
or .,.tlmowooll••·

fiDn-

Very nlca cl..n Z bectoorft
IIOu• tuM lloonn. f200. per
montll. Rot•onoo •d clop114-74J.272S.
.

Dolu•• t3i n
IR. hotl• lor o..,..
- Coli 304-1711lt04.

-II' -doled 3 br - • I n

0210
-.,.
' por - " Poy
- n - - 304-77J.H54.

42

63

AntiqUIII

WANTED II Old honct-made
quNta. Any ~mount, eny conditlon. Co~h . j&gt;old. J. Whit&amp;
114-24~N48 .

9

S p - for Rant

lwciuld••toi"Mt•thrtlorfour
-oom 'houoo In Gollo or
-~~ Counrtr. Coli 814-3181748.

Al-l.hloolool&lt; Solo. AI._.,,.
Solo WilY lloturdoy· t PM .
U...oool&lt; .. _ .. oft• 4 PM
..,_,. F'"'-· 1 mit
of

••t

AI- on lt. Rt. 10. CoR
114-192· 2322. 118·3B3t

IYW'IInflll.

S
1l
ar oil. Rlvorlno Antlq._
4
tt
E. Moln 8 " - P...,.oy,

Hou,.: M.T.W 10•.m. to lp.m.•

Sundoy t ID lp.m. 114-112·
2 8 21
·

64

Misc. Merchandise

Whoolcloolr•rww ar · 3
whoolod oloctrlc · - - Coli
Rogoro Mobllty oolloct, t·114170.811t.
F i r - for' oolo. Hordwood
OPIM. 030 pl'*"p )Nell dollltory.
Coli lt4-441-4!1S2.

GEw-. -o.herwydutv,3
cyclo. At. 0150. lt4-357·
0322.

n.-hy her. Goad quollly.

SNAFU® bv Bruce Beattie
'

MoblleHomaa
for Rant

Got pold b

Building Supplies

Building Matori. .

.. Int._
•c.
Cla.di
lOlL Rio Orondo. 0. Col 114-

Blool!. briol!. dowl.

wlnWin-

2411-5t2t .

Concrete blocb- ell' •lin- ~rd

81

Oov.nm1rtt Selrtd Vehid•
from •100. Fordl. Merced•.

ODNittl. Chlf!ll'y. SurDiu&amp; Buy-

bol- Hoflclo, ~-........

t98t Forll f525. 1973 Dodge
pickup. 0425. t971 Joop,
.450. Coii11_4-3BSII78.

ml•.

t8S3 Chw.,o. 73.000
Good CDnd. ' A-9 02200. Coli
lt4-44S.I0114.

t978ondt9nT·Birdo. Both lor
•771. Won"toolloop••of¥. Col
114-81:Z.2128.

187&amp;PontlocLo - · · ...... d8

245-IOB7.

For •

Groom ond Supply Shop.Pot
Grooming. All brnclt .. .AII
11Y1oo. 1-a I'll Food Dool•·
Julio Wobb I'll. Bt4--023t.
Dr-wyncl CoUll\' -nol.
PMolon ond IN..,_ ..d Him•
11¥1n ldtt..a. Chow ltud ...
vloo. Colll14--3544roll• 7
P_M_
. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Rog. Ooldtn R • - pupttloo.
8ofn 12• 23• 18. • ,,....,....Coli
lt4-384-Ht7ott•IPM.

or-

S. ol'lwAKC. moloi!M
ShouNI, t yr. old. E-oly
- l o - . Fothor oloomplon.
- • 0400
o11or. Wll
dollvar. Coli 114-2411-8800.
AKC Rlllllaocl c••lp•lll
pupploo. llondt .,d white. 4
.... ol. . OtiO. 2 mol-. f125.
Ro:'U:Volontlno'oDoy.l14•••
7
~·.:.:.~.:...:...:...:..·_ _ _ _ __
Slbori., HuokY p u -. Pu......... 11.. ""'·· .l.llilitakl. blue
- · .88. lt4-182·1t44 roll•

ar• d... on • nM ot uMd

cer. truck or ¥1ft. _K.,nyoa.u

It Jim Mink ChtvralatOicltmoW&amp; Bt4-44S.3872 or
3G4- 77J.5t34.

"15 Chevy CoNolr, 21,000
mi-.
- · ,,_
·
Interior. 2artamatic.
•c oond.
304-171&gt; 58U.

tla M.Qirv cou... tor oalo.
3. 000 ...... COli 304-4551773.

Wll .... ,.._ .. nty
horM. llglw~to . ._ _
0111
-

~~.

-· . . . ---·Col

---~- ..............

17&amp;-2752.
...... - - · · -· 304-

problems for Jonathan . 1;1

r"'•..-.cw ._..,.no

EEK

RogeraBatement

MEEK·

Prize-winning physicist
Richard Feynman IS profiled.

'-··

.i

AtUK l-IAS 6WJ OIJ A

CU.·MA~

CAMPAIGU 10
fWJ SWOKIOO 1#J MRS...

0

Murtlar, Sill WIOta
Ill Nellftvltla Now
8:05 1D NIIA Saaketball
8:30 (i) • (J) I I - Dan and

MORTY MEEKLE ANJ!_WINTHROP

304-57&amp;-2398 nr Bt4·448·
2454.

DOING IN

Fetty Tree Trlmrftnc. .rump

HOW Q...D I AM WITHOWT
TAKING'OFFMY·MIT T E N5.

5W~JECT.

ARITHMETI C ~

romovol. Coli 304-B7Ji.133t .

I o:IN'T EV EN FleiURE' OUT

AWFWL ... rrt:;
MYWOR6T

I-'OW ARE: YOU

•

Roterv or c1ble tool drilling.
Mon welt compl•td•~meday .
PUmp .... end ltrvice. 304-

1111-3102

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE .
hou• clll ttrYicing GE, Hot
Point

w•her•. dryert •n d

304-57&amp;-~39!1.

Remov1l. Free e~tlmtt•. Call
304-5711- 7t2t .

82

AS LDN!t AS

WILL YOU KEEP
THURLOW WHILE
I GO DOWN TO
TH' STORE,
LOWEEZ.Y?

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTEII'S PWMBING
ANOHEATING
Cor. Fourth 1r1d Pine
Ohio or 614- ·
Phone 81ot3888
44&amp;-4:477

HE DON'T WRECK

TN'

HOUSE

t1113 Ply_,.h Roll .....7. 000
mH-. Nne good. fi,IOQ.OO
firm. 304-S711-3888.
•
"79 VW llobblt, AM·FM
COII. .I. nmo goo!l t7110. 00.
304-S711-7.ttl.

72

Tn1cka for

Sale

tl77~ y, ton. 310 ........
Rune
•eoo. Coli ttof.
4411- 17.

......

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

1117 Ford f.110 414, 41.000

Coli 114-2411-8432 oil• I I'M.

1111 CllowY 111 1on Cuotom
,..,.. V-8. 4 oocL. trm
all*• win-. lied llnor,
ollrmHa
17100 Coli lt4-441-3781 of·
tor I PM.

-·low

tl14 Cfl!oty

Y,

ton Cuotom

O...a&amp; . . ..... Milo. . . . .
- - - high ......
t371Q.
tor
• I'M.Col 8t4-441'378t of.

'!i..........

~;::======::=~:::===========-~

!!"

Rwidenti .. or o0rni'IHI'dll wiring. New urvlce or f'IP airs.
Ueene.t tlec:tridll'l. Ridenour

El.,.rlcol. 304-875-t781.

85

Bernice Bede Osol

Dll•d Wll• S.Viot: Poole.
Clot•no. Wolle. DollltOIY AO¥·
limo. Col 114-441-7404-No
Sundtycollo.

•

A • A W•• Slf'V5ol. Poola,
cf1terne. wellt. lmmedlllte·
1.000 or 2.000getlontdelivery.
Coli 304-1711-1370.

W.-t.-.on'tWII•Heullng. tMIOrwbtll rM-. wlunw dla

clot-.-

2.000 to 4,000 CIPIC-'lo. otc
304-571-2Stt.

DOUnt&amp;
IIy,

87

Upholstety

'

..

- · (fllarcll 21·Aprfl 111 Etlorto
you've lilian making recently have not
f101t1 unobserved. Allhough you may
feel you've baan owriOOfoad. rewtrda
could beln the offing.
•·
TAIIRUI (AprfiiO 11., 201 In Oldll' tO ·
In till year lllead you are likely 10 ·~ advance your Mll-lnt....,a tOday, II
rlan&lt;:l a aubatantfal rise In olatua. Thla mtghl be - 1111ry lor you lo IIIIa a
.-nslon wtll be rather conllltlant and calCulated rill&lt;.' II you f e e l - 1bou1
attribullble to a cltaln of unuiUII ' thle errangement, fire your bla1 ehol.
II
ttTif (llerl'l....._ 101 Taklllhllnf..
=Aiuul fJin. .r'ell. 111 II lOGica l lllllvl today In lrylng to raoaMt a t.mll)l
like you wffl profit from your buill- , .,._,... You can be . , _,lvl
· acumen todly even though you'l opll'· pea
and othlra "" lllfiOnd to
• ale without guile and wlthOU1 trying to your fiUidlnCe • • your axampll.
lalla llfvantage "of anyone - · Know CAIICIR 1"'- 21.,., Ill Thlra l f l
- . to look lor romance lnd you'M otrang lndlclllottl your IdeM will b1
flnd 11 Till Aotro-Gn.ph Motolomlkll' bltlll" litlll thole whom you"R bl
' lnllanUv..-owltfchlllgnu!lroman- . In-today. Haweu11,1t you hapllo.
llcllly parlecllor you. M11112to Milch- gellhlm -oea. you mlglllltawllo bel
llllkll', o/o lhfl nlitiiPIIPII'1 P.O. Box ~~~--~
_...__
I
11
91421 Cltl ••Ill OH4410t-3421.
....,.
{Nt.10 ;,
Conclfllottl ' eble tum In -llllliolll lodly the1
In 1111,.., loOk _.,......, lavor IIIII Ior: llftOukl -~~~~ you to do rllhlr In
you 1oc1ty, Ill* ldY In lltulllottll . actMIItllthot lt8VI fl11111clal O'&lt;lrlanee.
-.you 1taw1 10 cllltl- Olhlra on 1 • • Sanlflll COUld dlvllap In _ . , kl)"
·~ ·
1·
-.
one-lo-onti ....... Good .

••oak•

..cit

all.,

-•-'II -• ,_. I._.

VIIGO .(Aug. D-lapl. 221 Be firm, but
nDI abrasive In arrangements today!
'that have an lmpacl upon your Mlf·ln·,
·, . , _. l.ttl thole with whom you're In·
vo1v1t1 know you Inland to play a lead·
lng roll.
LfiiiA (lepL :a-oot. 221 Thlo could be
an opportune day to Indicate to a friend ;
who 11 under obllgaflon to you that lhle
fl!ll111' can·now bl compatibly reoolved
without any embarr-1.
,
KOM tO (Oat. 14 Mas. 221 fl's lmpor·:
• 1.,1 lor you Ia know today that you hllve1
'1111 unwalllllng suppon of your friends
•pertaining to a situation thai Ilia baan1
• 001-nlng you. 11'1 nice to have good:

....

.

..

.

;IAGITTAIIUI(Now.23 Deo. 211 Focua
·your.....,. and ••gleetodly an

1110111mp0rtan1- OlljiCIM. You'ra
'In. good ldtfhlli•il qclllor lfllln-

·===-s= . . . ,.,

suffi x

Prry

..

. •.."

.

..
1124

..

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

=
\1:
:=:t::;,~

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Pit .....,~~~ow
a• IINII ..... Nut

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• M•1cl • Mag "ne
12:00()) IICMI: 1tt11 New Land,
Part2 (PO) (1 :20)
_.
(J) Ac1vwniuta Twtllghl of tile

BKWKOV

APSX

TOWHOTOK F.

MSXYB

XIK

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W

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.

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DXKOXl

SOVAWSZ
P .
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Ye•terdav'e C1f"11Pioqaote: INTEGRITY SIMPlY
MEANS A WilliNGNESS NOT TO VI OLATE ONE'S

•(I) .........._Tonight

..

you so!
32 Classify
36 Czech
river
37 Saucy
39 Negative
4 I Combine

AXYDLBA AXR
Is LONGFELL OW

e (2) 1111 IIIII of C,IIIOII
~=·nflr

Ill Pit'-~

31 I
told

' DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES..,..:.Here's how to work it:

can 11 1 llllr

~'r=i

'1

setting

ill T~=·• Journal

a _ , Wllf1 -.11 lodl)" IIIII
mlkllhlntatlecllwtoafl. L1a111••

' -rfghllhfng
- . . 1(
. .the
,- you•• ..,.. 1111•
rfghllfml.

mac h in ~
4 C h c m kal

1 Forest

Ill Uanayffna

Oorflll

·,.

DOwN ,

OMIMIIVlcll;l

You

...
.'

·'

45 Put fortJt

liiMa INA)
.II]) lAW Con.leCIIon

Odly

Jm1es Jacoby's boob "Jacoby on Bndgf!" and
•JacobyooC.rrtGrunes"(wrttten witb/Usfalber ·
tbe late Oswald Jacoby) '"' now ,.,liable ,;
boobton:s. &amp; th are f"'blished by Pltarm&amp;Jol:s.:
® w10. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ...N.

l 'f'nl,f'r

(I) : ,.. ,. Worftl ol

1t ::10

Now, howeve r , when t he remaini ngtwo h igh spa des are cashed , declarer
w1ll let go the 10 of c lubs from .dummy. ll East throws a club, dec larer _
plays a club to t he queen a n d a hearl ..
back to h •s ace, and h1s last club •s a ·
winner. II E~t t h rows a heart, decia~- .
er cashes h•s hea rt ace, a nd E ast s
kmg fa lls, makmg dummy good.

3 Shaping

• t2l Cll. • (J) 1111 • a
~ 1111 News
8lde ol 8porte

• You

+4

river

IS"(A) (I
:43)llllm
1&amp;.20(1)
MDVII:
The
10:30 (D M-r In Amerlcl: llte
Bulfnan ollanklng Look at
lawsuits fllld by borrowers
who were loreclollad on.
Ill New Countty
11:00 (J) llemlttglon SIMla

General Hauling

-lllllo Wot• Hading SoiViee,
phone 304-57&amp;-2311 •• lt444S.4081.

:

Opening lead :

..

.

"

34 Biddy
35 Cravat
fahri e'
38 Hag
40 Picture
42 lntRgrity
43 Pippin
product
44 English

andlnv=~

ODfll"*'lll
• Croak 81111 ChiH

Pass

temple
30 Soul (Fr.)
31 Ohjed
33 Radiation
unit

(DNewo

Electrical
Refrigeration

3NT

29 Shinto

(!) Loufa Aukeyur'a t989
Money Guide Louis
Aukeyser looks ahead to
1989 with key decision
makers in polltiCs, jounsllsm.

.lUI A
Hill
IIJI Evening lfeWfl

Pass
Pass

Soutb
I NT
Pass

If"""
solarium

• (2) Ill In tit! Heat ollhe
Night woman claims thai
motive lor k1Uin9Jior father
was lncest. jAl I;J
(i) • (J) lh rty11011111hfng
MIChael's old girlfriend from
college VISits. (R) 1;1

BARNEY

Aont Chimn-.. sw.., ,Special
lhru Jonuorv. 304- n:l-5348.

East

5 il 's ov~r
wl ll' n s he
14 "Spartacus"
si
ng"
se tting
6
fl
ahhl
e
15 Nonsense!
Paddle
7
16 Ablaze
8 Sup&lt;, rvi sor
18 .1apanese
9 Me r ci ful
coin
24 Laundry
19 Bring joy 12 Fre nc h
Sl'aporf.
product
21 Ran into
17
"Mak
e
26
Actor
22 Oklahom a
'
Rod
city
double"
26 Wind fl ower
23 Kidder
20 Swedi s h 27 No place
film rol e
man 's
fot n Down
24 Terriname
29 Andress
fying
27 Bivouac
2;3::..:F,;a;::t.:.fr,re ;.:e:,r,.r
fi lm
sights
28
a

8:30 1:111 VldeaCountty
10:00 ()) 700 Club

All•• Tre. Trimfftng tnd Stump

North

13 Anf.h P m

to take hon!Ymoon they
never had. I;J
· 8:00 1!1 Top Rank Boxing
(i) • (J) studio II Tha
proaucar and anchorwoman
are locked In a power
struggle. 1;1
(D (!) Frontline The damage
to u.s. securl1y by the '
Walker Spy Ring Is
·
dlscussad : C
1111 • C MOVIE: 'Red
Earth, Wltlll Earllt' CBS
Tuelday Movte 1;1
11J1 Lany King LMII
®Calli Ill Saak-11
0 Law and Harry McOraw

RON ' S Televition Service .

.......

·II

Roseanne can 't agree where

House ctllt on RCA. Quuttr,
GE . Spec:iollng In Zon~h. Coli

West

2 Vc n ezue!WJ
&lt;·oppr r

ACROSS
I Ne ighhor
of Nl'v.
6 Cart.o·l
10 Plowf&gt;d
land

ltiiNiwa
® Pollee Story Captain
HOOk

8t4-446-7B~.

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IIJI

C•rp.,try won: by the tob or
hour. pln .. htg. dry 'Mill, plumbing. .. ldric.e. remodtlil'_'lg com-

t H2
+ A 6 54

CROSSWORD

C

Tour of Duty
Andarson rlsks court-martial
by trying to keep w88ry men
from battle. ~
II]) MOVIE: 011 Heavenly
PO) (1:43)

Plintlng: Interior a Editrior.
Fhe tllltimtle~. CIH 614-446B344.

pl•e. Col

e

tAQ3

L-...-.-----------1

(D (E NOYI Nobel

I ·114-237· 0488. dl'f or night.

&amp;

..,...,_ . , . . . _ .,.. 1114Chaoryi·10trualt. T......
........................ lnfl. N.
AC. Z t . . . . ........ .,.......11117. .....
14,000- ~­
Jeff Wan ter ••b au~ 114- ,_ .,. lo" • • • ee110.
.411-1077................ ...,
1._Coll_..:•_1_.._4_41.:......tt_ t..:l____
.
_

·~--------~~--~------------~~·-·

magazine and causes

Unooftdllionll tlt•ime
tlrnlthed.
Fret llthnetM. Clll oolect

t•. Local

84

AVON · AI • -· Coli Mlrllyn
Wo•• ID4-18:Z.2S41.

•••

•

Go"f.":'·

.........1'1.
The fongtMfled twllsnltlle became extinct
because of Its tendency to lay eggs
standing up.

(i) • (J) Who'• the Bon?
Mona poses for a sizzling

........... fm

tion. ...... -

-ILSOIIU

AVONoll•-11-ll'lp....
304-171-t42S.

•

••

-'.

.AJ3

There were ple nt y of high-card
points for the no-trump ga m e, but the
nasty oppone nts began proceedings by
running the firsl four diamond t ricks.
On the last diamond declare r thre w a
spade from dummy and a c lub f rom
his own band, while E ast shed a s pa de .
West nat led a s pade; decla rer winning the king .in dummy. He played a
heart back to his jack and then c ashe d
the king and ace of clubs. Alas, East
had the clubs stopped and the hear t
king prolected. Declarer cashed two ·
more high spades, hoping a miracle
would happen, but East .simply dis·
carded the same suit as dummy.
· Declarer's error came at trick four ..
Rather lhan discard a low c lub from
·
b h ld th
th th
of
hiS hanoi, e s au
row e r ee
hearts. The play wilt then go as before,
declarer taking the heart finesse and
then playing king. and ace of clubs.

women••

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

t984 luldl c...urvLimltc 3. o
V·l , 12.000 mi-. rn1nt oondl-

AKC- fiUIIIIIoo. Ro"* "' . '78 Fard LTO, 74.000 ml&amp;
go. FIWiclo lon .... m. lt4-117- ,_ .r-. no ruat. •77&amp; 00.
304-57S.238t .. 871-2102.
3555.

MUIIiclll
Instruments

Home
Improvements

• K 10 8
t A Q3
• J873

SOUTH

By James Jacoby

•a

'

tJ 9 4

discard
holds the key

Adanta, GA (R)
Ill E - m e n l Tonight
e(J) UIA Today
.
1111
1111 Jeopaldyf
.II]) llrA'S'H
IIJI CtoBSff!l

''

EAST

WFSf
+ 10862
. • 97H

+9

7:35(1) Stutfold and sOn
8:00 ()) MOVIE: llte New Land,
Pall 2 (PO) (1 :20)
G (2) Ill MOVIE: Madock:
Dt..,. ol • Petlec1 Mulder
(J)
Junior
Bodybuilding
Champloneltfpe From
Chicago, IL (R)

In Oulclt It! 1011-887·8000 W••prooflng
Ed. S· tOtBI.
SWEEP EA end aewing m.chine
t9115 DodgoAri-. AC. PS, PB. repW, plrtt. end IUppiiM. Pick
nWI brllk• Wid dra *3200. up . . d ......,.y, Davit V1cuum
Colllt4-44S.3831. 441-12tl. Cleaner, one half mile up
Ooorgoo c . - Rd. Coli 8t41988ForA. IoocL. AM·FM . 44&amp;-0294.
•2311. ~. Aulo 8~-.

CETIDE, INC.. A-o· Bt4·
U4-3878

57

•ioo.oo...,- -•I'AIE,1. til I ........ _,, N.

...

cyl.. ...., brill•. Goad oand.
Rune good. 0710. con lt4-

Sale

'

l·IUI

. Q6 2
t 10 B 6
+ K Q 10 2

t K974

Nfgltf Court
Ill C-'t Md Chua

Hitch . tao.oo . Bed liner
0125.00. llod mot t71i.OO.

,

NORTH

JAMES
JACOBY

®

Tronspurlo!IUII
Auto's For Sale

eom.,.ny

Ser1ea Red Man(TNT from

JEEtNG O"rt-lliR peopLE.

AG('.IN

+ K 7S

(J) Afi-Ainattcan Pulling

$H! A'-~eAPY THINICS"
we'Re ReAPY· Tt:l &gt;T~ ...

Services

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Ch.,nol Ruotic
ond - - Lop Siding
•DeakMM.W.

Pats for

'

HO¥ for •Ia phone 304-45&amp;1873.

tl88 Dodge Doyt- low m&gt;
leaga •ttndtdwaTmty wail•
blo. COII1t4-441-12Stl.

66

QUtCfCLy.
ONL-'( oNe PATf: ANI&gt;

Dodge DMot• LB pertt. ~·

ordollvory. M...,._d.Ooll g.
lio Blodl Co.. 123Yo Plno t.,
QolllpoiJo. Ohla. Coli lt4-44&amp;27U.
.

a...~,.., 0uo111y

MAjU~El&gt;

fZ.IO por bole. Roglot- Nil·

71

BRIDGE

Celebrities Ricky Skaggs,
Brenda LH and Oak Ridge
Boys' Richard Sterban and
Stave Sanders take host
Lorfanne Crook for a
behind-the -scene tour at
t~lr special homes.
7:05(1) Andy Orffftih
7:30•(2) Famffy , _

ou~ ~~L.ATioNSHtp ~AS

2220 ... 304-175-S75f!

VollcaMQtft Van tor Plrtt

Pull,_ Calle IIUP t7B.OO.
...... 304-171-2233.

. - , IIDoal

WMT.rty-30 dlr;'t. Prie. *99&amp;
up. U.od ........ - ·
conwrt~ ltlndlrd dutch•.
pr•aure
&amp; lhrow out
be•ing. W•rentv -12: rna.. CVC
lolnt•al rtrpM. CoR 814-379-

304-BS:Z.235B.

65

.. .,j

"

Visual-

I was baking cook i'e s for my son 's class party one after·
noon. He walked into th e kitchen and shoutea, "Raisins!
You ' re going to embarrass me,_A..:~:...A_I_NI"----------,

Q!l Celablflfeo on.tage

FRANK AND ERNEST

...

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

OMflmtll~ee

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·
Uaed &amp; rtbu ilt all tv pet •

Hoy lor Mlo. Coli Bt4-742·
301!1.

SURPW8-0rjglnol A...... Do·
nl"' 11-' Clot~ 1•-•ll."lbl...,_
~.1om
Sonwvllo o Old Route 21·
J - n lndtp-oo Rood.
-ERAI.flntllov-oodl.
Frlder. loturdoy, Iundt¥ onlr
Noon-1:00 P.M .. t O - oil.
Corhort clol'*'l Climouft.,go
lnoulotod Covnltl. 304-27~
5158.

IIJI~

"

Beyond - AvOid - Singe -

®ChMIS

Auto Parts
Accessories

For . . , 0111 fir..,ood. Coil
304-1711-2717 roll• 4:30 p.m.

f100.00. I ft. - - b
Fard FtOO bolgolind brown
OtOO.OO. 2 pc IIVIngroarnouh
... oond esoo.oo. 30"BS:z.
20112. ,

•o

blan buck kldt . B•ntam
chlckono. Cell Bt4-38B·I5411.

for lnbn•tlon. 104-54t·B003
Ed. IOtO.

UIIO. o dwl At horMI Pt...,
pho....................... .
Pooploaolly-NotiO-For
- . Clll . - -.. t ·
1ti-4Q.. .7 Ert. 11122.

&amp;

Mkod hfit for •lo. 12. por bolo.
Coli lt4- 742-2270.

AKC1 sl taudCOCIII•IPittiell.

cu...,,

&amp; G rllin

•c

ch uck:Je

Complete !he
quoted
by fdlmg m !he m!S~1ng words
you develop from step No 3 below

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

1111
~~~- ot
Fortuna 1;1
ThrM'a

t5 ft. ftborgl•o fiol*o9 ~­
with trlil•. Good condhon.
Elrtroo. 6700. Coli 514-1123547.

76

X

(i) • (J) Current Atlalr
(D CE MacNaff/ Lahrw
lfew.ltour (1 :00)

-'

Boats and
Motors for Sale

flbo1 glooo t DJIPir f400. 00.

........... 43.21.

GOVERNMENT JOSS
.ti,Q40,.• U.230. .,_. How
hlrln. Coli ltl 106-117·5000
Ex!. R ·11101 for
fodorol

75

Megnum Rtfle·wlth ICOpe. Cell
II 4-182-1229 oftar 5:00p.m.

Floh Tonlo. 2413 J-on Avo.
-tDgolp-._
304-17&amp;-2013.
. . . . t14.111ondt0gol

boy Wo&lt;kl E~~:oll . . Poyl A•
ttml:lle prCKt.lctl It home. Caft

Hay

18M C.J . I Joop. MO.IIn 22

~==::=::::::::::..L::::::::::::::::::::J ~5.:::0:.:0:..:p.:::m:::·--------

Lodgo Molol. 1·8:30 AM. Mo,..
dw. Jon. 30.

....

••

.l.-.1..-J..-.1..-J

PRINT NUMBERED lE TTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

U

II! Spottaeo-

•• •

pi•-.

84

2 Hldtoo ·for oole. Coli
114-112-7107.

Dinlngroomloblo .. dtourbl-*
cholro •eoo.oo orlglnol'l
•uso.oo. D - • wtth mfr.
raw end ttl of twfn bedl
3aR.hou-.-u,AC. UIOo F,.nlohod r...,.. 9 t a S ooond 0300.00. F,.oiNwhlto..,..,.
011
.... c.1 30... 87.ato... .. ~'7;; ~::-~
· :~:.h":;,
bod •too.oo. 304-1711-Bt30.
175-138a
,
bit h. c. 4-ta. 11 eft• 7 M. Kenmore euto w.lhtr, worb
3111 .. t blth. CA. No p - t Roome tor--- ormontll. good, •too .oo . 304· 895·
mloouttiO. f310. DoP. S.rol. ltortfna ot tt20 0 mo. Oollo 3422.
t yr...... Collt4-44&amp;-2310. HotoJ.tl"t4-44&amp;-IIII!O,

2 IR. houoo • 2 Ill . tnl• tor
rent. Cal ..... Bt.4-448-410tl.
3 Ill , houM. Dopooll -Ired.
tO Old Fort Tnl. Col18t4-•
21
113. tal dolly.

B wk. old pl 111• Coli 114-251I Bot ott• a PM.

~~~t~n·lo~•400. Cd

5t4-112-284S.
I ___
.:.;..:_ _.:_____

1

IMtt- 101·'"11·

tv.nlnga.

c:h.

Homolta Jono- ond Huoq.

...,.
1i1W1 Md ecce.•~
ri•. SicWt Equipment Compony, 304-171-742t .

Opon Mon..Sot. 9 AM.S PM,
Sun. t2 .....,.1 PM. 114-4483 t511.

rom
114-182-7787. EO H.
.219. M8r1v More Mon., Sw~
2 boctoomoportmontln Mldcl • lngVoluallt.
t-tlnContonport. Ot75 per month. dtpao•
-•
r ..ulr•. Clll .614-112-2311 IJ•
on Unoofn , . .
d IY 0 In d It•· 192· 25 0 9 .:.O_:oll:;::.:pod_::::._:tl::.:bl.::&amp;::::_lool..::::,:_l_oh_olro._

s.•

21

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete houoohold llrnlol&gt;
logo. V.mH....,._. 304-1711t450. 114-318 · 9773,

ICEI

oport.

Na. Co.• Pom•ov.

Ohio. 114-112·- t.

.. 2 IR .. l.,nclry
lndlvklJel.,.klna. Ecef.
VIllar Fwnllure
1-.t ~ion. No petS. Dep. &amp; · N.w Md ulld furntture Wid

Nlooly flrrnloholl omol houoo. morelntormltkm eel( 304-812MrMo onlo. Rot. roqulr_,, No 37tl E 0 H
.. . '
- · C.H 4t4-44&amp;-0338.
F .. nilhtd trftciencv downtown
Hom• tor A•11Le•a l•d opt, lit utl-loo pold, dopaaM
....-. erou.
Rd., ntqui'... 304-1111-3410.
Ratlnoy Vltogoll. E-o Hgto.
llot•on- ond dtpoolta r•
Fumllhed Rooms
qulrod. a-lum Rootty, It of. 45
.
'44&amp;-oooa

Very·-"'-m·-

Need •tftl CMhl frM ldt for

35 Lots It

••lbl•

oommtlment to the goowth 1nd
dwolop..,. of on -lllJat(o)
wtth mtntll r•MdltlutL Con-

S\'ll&gt;lo Ooy ot 448-7109
aft• 15:00 PM. A....,_.t rnu•
Nllde In Oat:l1 tounty. IC.ull
Opportunity Emp-.

UPOfolro.h•
Contllf
OWMr
odw olr
. . .. . .AI
,.. Including building tor
17&amp;;000. OSO. con Ran 11411:1-11172.

...., olltlna mr homo.
lain. bohild Qrdft.,•lchooL

Wll ............, , . . . . In
their homo or
In mr
homo. Inquire t714 Joftonoon

lho-oChlef

•ulpm.nt. 2 rnal IPII'tmlntl

- -.. 304-1711-

., Equol OpportunllyEmployor.

and Tempi, nur Cypr••
O.dent. DiiM¥ and other Mtractlona. Mott Importantly,
we're in 1 ttrong kU hlgNv
compet:•tv• m•k•. If ,,...._
eded. _..dr.-unw .. d . .nlngt
histOIY to:
Don Hetl111. Publiehlr

O·INigNCiub.Din•. •Dell end

Wll ......................... d -

Phone 304-1711-2714.

We' rt kJCI'Itd bltwe.t 0rt8'tdo

Buldlngs

bm

go ... Wo prD¥1do ., •colltnt.
inomthte-drtvM ao:c+=DMdun
pl-. blndtt. c•"' growth.

and en •CIII.-t lf11tyle. We' re

Hou• COli for •le. *215 1 lon.
,C., N dtllvorod,. plcltod up 11
tloo .,.,.. ~...... lid. Coli
lt4-381-SS20

room.

18

383-2527, Ed. J 511

HUO ec-

We h•e the 1owett priCM on

151.000 STU Lonnoa Counterfto ol ll,_wllh250gol. -k. . :-;:;:::::;:;:::::::::~==
&amp;ool.,t condllo~ Coli ltof. ~
•411-2233.
63
Livestock

_

coptod. Call 304-1711-8t04.

GOVERNMENT J0881 N-

8e11an«&lt; Oak • Alh. t31
pl'*"p ...... 1-od • dol&gt;
. .... Cllll14-21&amp;.1322.

nlohld. DoPoolt *lui-c. eon

Ap11tm~n1 evdebla

'

Ulra neN. 3800 mil•. 13. 000.
Coli 6t4-441-1054.

mont on-e-.,....._
-. .......... •.

Instruction

-

Motorcycles

1987 VF 700 Honcl1 Megn e.

Nice 1-2 bedroom IP 1rtnw1t1.
Avalil ablt tur•hed or unllr-

'78 Wln•or 1411'10, mool at 114-441-4345 rollar 5 PM.
turnllu.., w-d!\'01', oon1rol
pluth carp-.
..... 09,000.00. Col 304-1711- 2 8R . opl.. leo portlolly pold.
452S roll• 1:00PM.
' nfl7 omo.utllt
Coll304-1711-5104.
1711-1381. 1711-7738.
2 OIDI"f, 3 ,boctoorn, 2 b•ho.
... ln ....... loll .... hod ..... , ..,.hid 2 ... . . . . . .t.
Aclllto only. No poto. Col
lt4-448-2404.
....... dryet.
....... 304-1711- I.M'llr,.hld ZIA . o•IG••a1m.n.tn town. C.rp•ld. Adults
only. No p•o. Col lt4-441451t .

eon 74

•a cu NiWfl

Ill Haw Countty
6:35(1). to 5
7:00 ()) Our HOUM
• (2) PM Mlpzlne

.,,

I l•go oltlolon"'' opt. flirnlohod
wlh bit h. Aloo t SR . opl. 8oth
In Rio GIMdo. C.H Bt4-24115223 or 44&amp;-3517.

t978 Uberty t4&gt;1'10. 3 bocJ.
room, •7. 800.00. 304-175117t ond 1711-t7B3.
'

~f~r Vlt:t)S

11

Ford her bolor, 0100.
lt4-357· 0Bt2.

..,r.lnt·

Situations
Wanted

Top price for u1ed furniture,
g., • ., houMhold. Mtiquft,
Md •plilftOII. Atl typN. CaM

SHADY LAWN APTS: 721
llcond A•. Fur•t.ct tfffd.,.
d• ' .....lng t1 .175 . • mo.
lnaludlng wn• • ~-.. ..
Sinal• aclltt1 on~. Cill lf44••4S07 ar 44&amp;-2502.

bMhl, •II llltPetric. CA, w~

.l.-

8

.II]) WKRP In Clncln111ti
IIJI &amp;Mwlfz Today
® WKRP In ClncftonaH
0 Cartoon EKpnllo

••

this is the catch of the day, buf
~--- day?"

T AHHER

L-

-i

wtth · or wfl: hout

The diner was upset · his
meal. He. called the waiter
over and coldly asked, "I know

1

I

1::10. (2) Ill NBC Nightly Newa

111

t180 Sporton t4x711. 2 BR .. 2

, _l:f.

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lnlkle "- PGA Tour
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_Tu9Sday, January 24, 1989

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-Tli8 Daily Sentinel '

IDENTITY, - ERICH FROMM
! © 1999 Ktng Fea tures Syndtca/e . Inc,

.

. -'
•.

�.•

'..

'

.
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Area deaths
John Watkins, Jr.

Harry Shain

Relatives here have received
word ot the· (Ieath of John W.
Watkins, Jr., Atkon, on Jan. 17.
Mr. Watkins was born Jan. 9,
1925 In Mlddlewrt, the son of the
late john W. Watkins, Sr., and
Myrtle C. White Watkins.
· A long·tll'l'\e resident of Akron,
Mr. Watkins was master fire
equipment supervisor lor the
Akron Fire Department for over
30 years. He was a member of the
Goodyear Heights United Met her
dlstChurch, Joppa Lodge666, F&amp;
AM, Yusef Khan Grotto, and was
past president of the Grotto
Safety Unit. Mr. Watkins was
active for many years with Boy
Scout Troop 302 and 317 in Akron.
He Is survived by his wife,
Audrey; a daughter, Kim L.; a
son, Brett; a son and daughter·
Marsha;
in·law, Roger and
grandchildren, Trisha and Clay·
ton, all of Akron.
Funeral services were held
Friday at the Schlup~Pucak
Funeral Chapel with the Rev.
Deane Williams offlciallng. Bur·
lal was In Greenlawn Memorial
Park.
Local survivors Include aunts,
Beulah White and Gwlnnle White
of Middleport, and cousins, Tom
Darst, Middleport; Texanna
Well' of Pomeroy, and James
Robert White, formerly of
Syracuse.

Harry L. (Hack) Shain, 84,
46937 East Letart Road, Racine,
died Monday at the Amerlcare·
Pomeroy Nursing Center, Rock
Springs Road, following an ex·
tended Illness.
·
A farmer, Mr. Shain was born
at Antiquity on Sept. 18, 1904, a
son of the late Samuel and Susan
Watson Shain.
Surviving are six sorts, Charles
and Paul Shain, both of Pomeroy; Danny, Sam and Harry
Shain, all of Racine, and Ralph ,
Shain, Lake Wales, Fla.; lour
daughters, Susan Hayes, N~a
Clark and Ruth Johnson,
of
Columbus; Kathy Murphy, ake
uri
Wales, Fla.; a brolher,
Shain, FrederiCktown, Pa.; a
sister, Laura Rlffie, Racine; 12
grandchildren, and several nle·
ces and nephews.
Preceding him lno;leath besides
his parents. were his wife, Hazel
Shain In 1983; a soli, George
Shain; three brolhers, Charles,
Ralph and Orville Shain, and a
sister, Llna Curtis.
Services will be held atl p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James
Satterfield officiating. Burial
will be In the . Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday and all day on
Wednesday .

..

Tu11cley, January. 24, 1989

Pomaov-Middleport, Ohio

Souihem drops
77-55 decision
to North ' Gallia

Warm weather persists in eastern states
By UD!ted Press laternatlopal
More snow fell in the norlhern
Rockies Tuesday, while cold air
dominated the northern Plains
and unseasonable warmth persisted In the East, the National
Weather Service said.
The winter stormdumpedupto

Hoffman...

6 more Inches of snow over
sou lhern Mqntana by ear Iy Tues·
day, with 1 to 3. Inches In
northeast Wyoming. West Yel· .
lowstone, Mont., measui;ed 3 ~
feet of snow accumulated on the
ground over the past few days.
0 Snow also began falling across

Continued from page 1

depend greatly upon advocacy
efforts. For this reason, she
encouraged all presenHor Mon·
day's meeting io write letters of
support for In-home and
communlty·based care for the
elderly to State Rep. Jolynn
Boster, D-Galllpolls, and Senator
Jan Michael Long, D-Clrclevllle.
"Legislators must hear the vol·
ces of their constituents In order
to respond," Thomas said.
Thomas also distributed copies
of new, professionally done ~ro­
chures which were recently
published by the Meigs County
Council on Aging to describe the
programs and services available
to local senior citiZens.
Kim Shields, In brief com·
ments, thanked the Council on
Aging for use of the senior
citiZens building for a .recent
development seminar, and for
the building's upcoming use on
Wednesday for a lair housing
seminar. Wednesday's seminar
fuUfllls a requirement for Meigs
Emerson Lambert
County's participation In the
Mary Derenberger
Community
Development Block
Emerson Clay Lambert, 79, of ·
Mary PauUne Watson Deren· Wilkesville, died Monday even· Grant Program.
"There Is no shortage of
· berger. 58, died Monday at the Ing at his residents following an
economic
development projects
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Nursing extended Illness.
In
Meigs
County,"
Shields said,
Center, Rock Sprin gs Road,
He was a ret ired coal miner
"but
we
are
always
looking lor
Pomeroy, following an extended and a self·employed carpenter
olhers
to
materialize."
illness.
and truck driver.
Shields recalled Ohio Depart·
A hom.rmaker, Mrs. Deren·
Born Aug. 29, 1909 In Vinton
berger was born Sept. 28, 1930 at County (Wilkesville Township), ment of Development Director
Delaware, Ohio, a daughter of he was the son of the late George ' David Baker's visit to Melgl\;
County a bout one year ago.
Mr. and Mrs. James Slaine.
and Etta (MacComber)
Baker was stunned, Shields said,
Surviving are a son, Terry Lambert.
that ODOD was not more In·
Derenberger, and a daughter,
He Is survived by his wife,
Jeannie Derenberget, both of Pearlene (Spears) Lambert; one valved In Meigs County. Since
Middleport; a foster brother and sqn, Emerson C. Lambert, Jr. of Baker's visit, Shields said he has
seen a change In ODOD's Interest
sister-In-law, Mr. and.Mrs. Leroy Lancaster, Ohio; two daughters,
Watson, Minersville; three sis· Mrs. Larry ( Esthetl Balle of In Meigs County's projects.
Mike Duhl stated his disap·
ters, Evelyn Augestine, Bedford Ridge Crest, Calif., and Mrs.
polntment
in the response by
Heights; Harrlete Wright, Okee- Rick (Barbara) Pierce, Rt. 1,
Meigs
Countlans
to a recent
chobe, Fla., and Jean Smith, Langsville; one step-son, James
nitrate
screening
water test
Delaware, and a number of Robert Kinnison, Rt. 1, Langs·
which
was
sponsored
by the SCS
cousins.
ville; 17 grandchildren; six
office
and
Heldelburg
College.
She was preceded In death by great-grandchildren; two brolh·
Only
13
people
participated
In the
her parents, her foster parents, ers, Lester Lambert of WilkesWilliam and Jeanie Watson, her ville, and Lawrence Lambert, testing, Dub! said. Of those 13,
husband Alfred Derenberger in Rt. 1, Ewlngton; one sister, Mrs. only one came back with a hlgll
nitrate level. But because tes tlng
1985 and two sisters. She was Verna Cottrill of Okeechobee,
affiliated with the Syracuse Fla.; and one-half brolher, Cha· was limited. there Is not enough
Information to determine If a
Church of the Nazarene.
rles Conger. Rt. 1, Ewlngton.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
He was preceded In death by possible danger exists. Duhl
explained.
Wednesday at lhe Ewing Funeral · two sons and one step-daughter.
Dub! further rep0rted that two
Home with the Rev. Glenn
Services will be Frlday,1 p.m.
McMillan offlclallng. Burial will at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Resource Conservation and De·
be · in the Riggs Cemetery. Home in VInton. Burial will be In velopment projects, the nature
center at Forked Run State Park
Friends may call at the funeral the Wilkesville Cemetery.
home from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Friends may call Thursday, 7 and the Dexter Road stream
bank, are In the design stages.
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
The problem of flooding on
Shady Cove Road at the lower
Continued from page 1
end of Middleport was discussed
briefly. Duhl said that costs to
for an Increase of 3,000 state ,programs and $24.4 million for solve 1the flooding problems are
employees and contains $126 pUot medical and social services still frying to be determined, but
million to use for collectively
pointed out that If the project
programs In six counties.
bargained state employee pay
-A huge 6:j percent Increase In could qualify for RC&amp;D funding,
raises In the next two years. ..
the Ohio Envlron!llental Protec- It would only be for supplemenMajor thrusts of the governor's tion Agency budget the first year tary.fundlng.
David Fox reported that over
budget Include:
and another 40 percent the
-The use of $84.2 million In second, mainly to hire personnel $40,000 In disaster relief paynew clgaret te tax revenues to to monitor Ohio's drinking water ments for last year's drought
generate services for care of the supplies and pollee the dumping have been paid In Meigs County,
elderly, Including an extra $21.3 of hazardous chemicals.
which accounts for about half of
million for Independent living
-A new Department of Recov- total payments to be made.
Vljay · Gaddee reported that
ery Services, combining existing
drug and alcohol abuse preven· Buckeye Hills, as required every
lion and treatmentprograms In lour years by the federal Ecothe health and mental health nomic Development Agency. Is
.Continued from page 1
able length about the process of deparlments . The $60 million updating Its Overall Economic
desensitization" he underwent required would be raised by Development Plan which Induring his series of sex slaylngs taxing all alcoholic beverages at cludes Meigs County. Buckeye
the higher rate now used for Hills will be contacting local
of women across the country.
liquor.
The result would be about government officials for updated
"After he killed the first
a
penny
Increase In the tax on a Information to be Included in the
woman, he went through a
bottle
of
beer. Liquor prices OEDP.
six-month period where he was in
Frank Cleland reported on the
would
go
up
by a dime a bottle In
great distress. He 111as extremely
!lscal1990
and
another
nickel
the
January
19 meeting of SEORC's
guilty. He was frightened. He
next
year.
Highway
Users Committee. Clewas going through ... he couldn't
land
said
that those at the
-$5.7
billion
to
balance
the
believe that he had done that.
January
19
meeting were In·
·
state's
exploding
outlay
for
Medl·
·
"That gradually subsided and
cald
foryned
that
Ohio
has no funds for
this sexual frenzy that he would
go through occurred again and he
killed anolher woman. Only this
time, the Intense agony was a
little easier to cope with and It
las ted lor a shorter period of
time. He did that so many times
he got to the point that he could
!lOt feel any more. He. got to the
point that he didn 't have that
remorse.'' Do~on said.

new road construction In 1989.
Any funds available to the state
wll! be used for Improvement and
repair of. existing roads and
bridges, Cleland explained.
Because the state does not
have funds for new construction. ·
It may become necessary to
support a bond Issue or an
Increase In the gasoline tax to
provide funding, said Cleland.
However, several people at the
Monday's meeting said they
would , need a guarantee that a
percentage of revenue would be
spent In this area of the state
before they would support a tax.
Increase or bond Issue for new
construction.
In regard to the Meigs County's
proposed corridor road from
Route 33 at Rock Springs to the
Ravenswood Bridge, Cleland
said this remains a high priority
on SEORC's project wish list.
SEORC has published a · new
brochure describing its high
priority projects, "but we must
get these brqchures Into the right ·
hands," he said.
.
Cleland urged continued support from Meigs Countlans fqr
lhe corridor road, and pointed
out that the project has support
from Jackson County, W.Va. and
from government and commun·
tty leaders In lheHocklngValley.
It Is this type of collective,
continued support which will get
action In Col;umbus, Cleland
concluded.
The Regional Planning Com·
mission will continue to meet lhe
fourth Mondays of AprU, July ·
and October In 1989, If needed.

Hoi fipl
In an 1888 7~round llpt that lasted lor 2 bol!l'l and 1.1 minutes in 106degree heat, tbe last major bareknuckle boxinc matcb took place,
notes The World Almanac. Joba Sulli·
van defeated Jak~ Kllrain at Richburg, Mils.

west-central Colorado Tuesday
mqrntng, and a snow warning
was to be Issued late Tuesday for
the mountains of southwest Colorado, where a foot or more of
snow Is expected.
A cold front !rom the lower
Great Lakes through the lower
MlssouriValJeylntothesouthern
Rockies brought colder to {he
northern Plains and centJ:al High
Plains. with hlglis expected only
In the teens. Unseasonably mild
air dominated the southern
Plains and middle Mississippi
I

Valley, while temperatures were
expected .to reach the 50s In the
middle-Atlantic state!! and 70s
along the Gulf Coast.
Southerly winds south and east
of cold the cold front was lifting
the warmer moist air over colder
air and producing freezing dr!Z·
zle over 'much of western and
north centJ:al Nebraska, causing
Icy road cOnditions. ·
Ralnshowers were ·scattered
across western Tennessee
through , eastern Arkansas Into
northern Louisiana.

'

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number

032
Pick4
0544

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Page 3

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NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1-2H9
Vol.39. No.182
.Copyrighted 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January

26.

1 Section, 14 Pagoo

1989

.

A Muhimedlo Inc. Nawopap•

'

Ohio House memberS get first look at budget

~SNOW
FRONTS:

R

-RAIN
tfrJSHOWERS
Warm "Cold
. . Static ., . Occludec

Map shows mirimum te:ratures. At least !50% of.., Shaded 81118ls I~
to receive precil)italibn ~~
·
UPI

By LEE LEONARD
,UP I Statehouse Reporter
· COLUMBUS - State leglsla·
tors got their first look at Gov.
Richard Celeste's $25 bllllon
budget for 1990-91 Tuesday, and
there were lmmedlateconfronta·
tlons on two fronts:
i....The Celeste administration
said It wants cost-saving. Inltlalives to control Medicaid expenses. House Democratic lead·
ers said such measures are
unnecessary; that they will ap·
proprlate the entire .$77 million
needed to balance the Medicaid
budget.
-The Celeste admlnlstJ:ation

said Its two-year outlay Is based sures will be dealt with In the
on the assumption that education next two-year budget,
will be tully funded by a ballot
Budget Director Lee Walker
lnltltatlve in June; House Demo· and Tax Commissioner Joanne
cratlc leaders said the budget Limbach briefed the committee
they pass will stand on Its own.
on the big budget, which raises
A $186 million supplemental state spending by 10 to 13 percent
appropriation to balance the and contains $355 million in
Medicaid budget by June 30 was
additional taxes , mainly on ci·
Introduced and heard In the g are t te s and a I coho li c
House Finance Committee. Rep. l"~rages.
William Hlnig, D·New Phlladel·
Aside from Medicaid, many of
phla, committee chairman, said...__ e legislators' questions cenit will be reported out In a week.
tered around education spending
The bill,contains $77 million in and the cigarette tax, which
state funds, more than the wouldbeanextra10centsapack,
administration wanted to spend. with the proceeds going to help
Hlnig said any cost-cutting mea· · fund eldercare services.

Rep. Daniel Troy, D·
W!Uowick, observed . that the
administration's proposal allows
for annual Increases in basic
school aid of 7 percent ·and 3.5
percent, but eliminates funding
for other education programs.
"II would be. the position of the
administration that the Leglsla·
lure would seriously consider a
constitutional amendment before the budget passes," said
Walker.
'
She referred to Celeste's prop·
osal to Increase personal and
corporate Income tax rates by 1
percent to generate anolher $1.84
billion for education. That would

have to be approved by 'Ohio more than they're getting. It
voters.
shows we don't need the tax . we
Hlnig said that would be a ' need to re·eva luate our
"tough sell" and added, "we priorities."
have to look at the budget on the
Hlnig said If additional rebasis of the revenues that are venues are needed, the commit·
available, and not on any Iffy tee may consider a list of 99 tax
type ofthlng."
exemptions that Limbach said
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura, have never been evaluated. She
the senior · Republican on the said If all of them were repealed
Finance Committee, questioned $6 billion a year could b~
the need for any tax Increase,
generated.
pointing out that $2.1 billion In
Hlnig said subcommittees will
growlh of existing revenues Is hear portlorui of the bill during
built Into the budget.
February, and a revised version·
"That's 10 percent," he said. will be ready for House floor
''People are going to wonder why action March 23. The budget wm:
we can't get by 9n that. That's then go to the Senate.

.
.
Bush urges cooperation In

WEATH~ MAP :._ Durlag early WedDetlday·mol'lllllg, HOW Ill
forecast for parta of the central 1.11d 10udl,... Pial• wllll nllllll
parts of lbe Mid M••rcelppl Valley. Rain II peulble In parta of &amp;be
extreme P~flc Nortbwest. Sbowen are peulble In moat of ll!e soutbern Plalu, the lower Ml. .slppl Valley 1111• lbe Gall Coul
States. UPt 1
'

'.

order to-cut budget deficit
WASHINGTON (UP I)- Pres·
!dent Bush recruited congresslonal leaders Tuesday for a
bipartisan attack on the federal
deficit In a move toward budget
negotiations promised as his first
order of business In the White
House.,
,
A spirit of good will permeated
the first formal meeting Bush
held with Democratic and RepubliCan leaders to dramatize his
Inauguration Day offer to extend
a hand of cooperation .to Congress on the budget and foreign
affairs.
"The honeymoon's stUI on,"
assistant House Republican
leader Dick Cheney of Wyoming
told reporters after the one-hour
session with the full congresslonal leadership. "Two more
days, three more days; enjoy It
while It lasts."

------Weather----Extendetl Forecul
Thunday lbraql! Saturday
A chance of rain Thursday and
Tonight: Cloudy, with a chance· Saturday, wltb fair conditions
·Of showers and a low In · the Friday, Highs will be In the 40s
middle 30s. Northeast winds 5 to Thursday, ranging from the
10 mph. The chance of rain Is 40 . middle 30s to the middle 40s
percent.
Friday, and ranging from the
middle 40s to the middle 50s
Wednesday: Cloudy, with a
SatUJ:day. Early morning lows
chance ofshowers late In the day.
will be In the 30s Thursday,
High temperatures will be In the
ranging !rom the middle 20s to
lower 40s. The chance of rain Is 40
the lower 30s Friday, and In the
percent.
30s Saturday.
Soulh-Ceatral Ol!lo

For almost two hours, Bush
met with the most Influential
figures on Capitol Hill. The spirit
of harmony that emerged was
tempered by a recognition by all

concerned that cooperation will committees.
.
be tested· by the need to cut the · "We would like to demon- .
deficit .
strate, and I thlnll the Congress '
Bush promised to Jay out would like to demonstrate, that
proposed revisions to the $1.15 It's not business as usual In
trUiion fiscal1990 budget submit· considering this budget," Fltzled Jan. 9byPresldentReaganln water said.
·
aFeb.9speechtoajolntsesslon
The Initiative, however ,'
of Congress, with additional marked somewhat o! a retreat by
details to foUow.
Bush from an earlier pledge,
Congressional leaders offered renewed Nov. 22 before a meet·
to give his plans their Immediate lng of Republican governo_rs, to
and full attention, but withheld name budget negotiators his first
furlher commitments.
day In office. On that Issue. as on
Senate Republican leader Ro· others, the new administration
bert Dole or Kansas said the was off to a slow and cautious
meeting failed to produce firm start Tuesday.
agreement on a process, much
"Obviously, we chose to be a
less lhe political framework of a little more deliberative In the
credible and effective deficit· process," said Fitzwater, "a
reduction plan.
. little more consultative."
White House spokesman Mar·
After meeting with the full
lin Fitzwater said Bush proposed congressional leadership In the
regular meetings, "perhaps on a Cabinet Room, where he also
weekly basis," Involving negotla· promised proposals soon on
tors for the administration, the government ethics and the nacongresslonalleadershlp and the lion's savings and loan crisis,
ranking members of the House Bush adjourned to the Oval
and Senate appropriations, Office with the top five power
budget and tax-writing brokers on Capitol Hill.

Hospital president says nothing
wrong with St. Elizabeth surgeries
.,

REVISED FIGURES - Lee Walker, budget
director, Ohio Office of Budget and Management,

Bundy...

displays OMB's revised revenue estimates for FY
1989. (UPI

Economist says more women
are ch~sing . self-employment
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) -The
number of women choosing self·
employment Is Increasing at a
higher rate than that of men,
-says an economist.
. "As their 'numbers grow, fe_:tnale entrepreneurs are gaining
: more attention," said David
Macpherson of Miami Unlver·
slty. "Self-employed women are
more able, more motivated."
Macphersop said his research
Indicates that even If self·
employed women abandoned
-their own businesses and became
employees, ·they would earn
more than the average woman.
The economics professor analyzed U.S. Census data for 36,889

Stocks

married women to try to find out
"A lot of self-employed
what Influenced decisions to women, 37 percent of them, work
become self-employed and how · at home, so if you have kids, it
means you can avoid day c~re
that choice affected earnings.
costs and still get the opportunity
"If you have a woman who Is
to work," he said.
self-employed and a woman who
Macpherson also found that lhe
is In the' wage and salary sector
higher a husband's Income, the
with Identical characteristics more likely a woman Is to be
education, number of children,
self-employed. That's probably
etc. - and you put the self·
because such a woman can better
employed woman in the wage afford the risk of starting her own
and salary sector, she would earn business .and Is more likely to be
more," said Macpherson .
able to obtain start-up capital, he
Results of Macpherson 's . said.
study, due to Qe published In an
Also, women who are older are
economics journal, show that
more likely to be self·employed,
women with children are more probably because of bolh flnanc·
likely to choose self-employml!llt . Ing opportunities and expethan those without children.
rience , noted Macpherson.

Fifty warheads are removed from missiles

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a .m.)
Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

WASHINGTON (UPI) - An last mon,th that the missiles
to require that It be removed and
missile became detached achieved "full operational capa·
returned to the manufacturer for
from a mooring In Its under· blllty" on Dec. 30, the Post said.
repairs, the newspaper said.
ground silo In Wyoming last The Ioree of 50 Mx missiles Is
· An Air Force panel, chaired by
.. year. prompting the Air Force to deployed at lhe base.
Lt. Gen. Richard A. Burpee,
remove nuclear warheads from
The Post said authoritative commander of the 15th Strategic
five of the $80 million strategic , sources have studied the prob· Missile and Bomber Wing, conmissiles, The Washington Post lem extensively since June, when cluded the problem was not the
reported Wednesday.
the . trouble with one of the result of sabotage but from
· Quoting unnamed senior DeImproper production of a single
missiles was first detected.
fense Department officials, The
Officials Investigating an ~lee· group of five missiles, the Post
Post said the decision to remove
Ironic signal Indicating that an quoted sources as saying.
the 50 warheads - a tenth of all MX missile was not functioning · Senior Air Force officials rewarheads deployed on MX mls·
properly In Its silo found the sponded to the panel's findings
s)les - was made to prevent ·missile had become "unglued" late last year, secretly ordering
additional damage to the from t,he launch cannister, the that lhe 10-warhead top of each of
weapons.
Post said.
the five missiles be removed, lhe
Despite the removal of the
Investigators found the entire Post said. The panel has nbt yet
warheads, publiC affairs officials 70:foot long, 90·ton missile had
decided what corrective steps to
at F.E. Warren Air Force Base fallen between 6 Inches to 1 foot, take.
near' Cheyenne, Wyo., claimed ·causing damage severe enough

MX

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................................. 29¥&amp;
Ashland Oil .. ...................... 34%
Bob Evans ....... .... ................ 15.
Charming Shoppes ..............15*
City Holding Co ................... 19
Federal Mogul .................... 50%
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48\4
Heck's .................... ............. lfo
Key Centutlon ..................... 15
Lands' End:........................ 29)1
Limited Inc ........................ 28\4
Multimedia Inc ................... 77*
Rax Restaurant, .................. 3\4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16*
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8lfo
Wendy's Intl ...... ....... ,: ......... 6%
Worthington Ind ....... :.. /...... 22%

····---·-~··~·

, Low In upper oWs tonight.
Chance of rain 100 percent.
Thur&amp;day, high In mid 50s, low
near 40. Chance of rain 100
percent. .

•

..

Celes t e... __________

........

.

.. --- -. ··-·"'-----..

~·

-·--

l
···-

DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - Officials at St. Elizabeth Medical
Center, a Catholic hospital that
does not permit female sterlllza·
lions, saw nolhing wrong with
surgery a doctor said would
make women "horny little
mice," the center's new pres I·
dent said Tuesday ,
James Makos said at a news
conference that hospital records
showed Dr. James Burt per·
formed his "love surgery" on 170
women between 1975 and Janu- ·
ary 1987, when, "for whatever
reason, he decided to stop."
The surgeries In question Include female circumcision and
realigning the vagina, procedures Burl claimed In his 1975
book, ''The Surgery of Love,"
would make womet:~ •'horny little
mice." He claimed In the book to
have performed about5,000 such
operations.
Burt Is facing a Jan. 30 hearing
before the State Medical Board
on 41 charges, ranging from
performing unnecessary surgery
to overprescribing painkillers.
He also faces at least a dozen
malpractice suits from women
who said the operations left them
In pain and, In some cases,
unable to have sex or urinate
properly . •
''We fiave no knowledge of any
of this work being done without
consent, •• Makos said, adding the
hospital came up with a second
consent form for such patients to
sign In 1979.
When asked why It took four
years to Implement the second
form, he said, "From what I can
tell, we would see a lot of
self-pronouncements frorq Dr.
Burt In what he did or didn't do.
Part of It (the four·year delay)
was determining what Dr. ~urt
was doing from what be said he
was doing."
Makos refused to release a
copy of the special consent form,
. but said It told tile patients the

procedure was

'~unique,"

standard' •
documented."

and

"non·

··not

He said , a patient at St.
Elizabeth can choose to have any
elective surgery that Is not
Illegal, except for abortions and
tubal ligations, which the Catholic Church does not allow.
· '1 agree the purpose (enhancIng sexual pleasure) Is somewhat
unique, but It doesn't violate
Catholic tenets," he said. "I don't
agree that this Is experimental.
It Is unique. It Is different, but not
experimental."
Burt's lawyer, Earl Moore,
said Tuesday the Medical Board
has rejected his client's offer to
surrender his license and agree
not to practice medicine any·
where in the United States, in
return for cancelling the hearing.
"The only lhlng I know Is they
rejected our proposal." Moore

said.
Moore said he expected the
public hearing In Columbus to
last at least three weeks and
that Burt would be calling "300
to 400 witnesses," IncludiQ8'
former patients and members
of the medical community.
The .board, meanwhile, has
extended Its investigation into
the Burt case to doctors who may
have known about the unorthodox operations, considered
them wrong and failed to report
them to the board .
, Lauren Lubow. board spokeswoman, says the earliest that
"charge letters" alleging irregu.
larltles could . be Issued to other
physicians or support staff would
be at .lhe board's next regular·ly
scheduled meeting In February.

Local news briefs---.
Woman injured in accident
.

.

I

An Athens woman was Injured In a one-car accident in Meigs
County atlO: 40 p.m. Tuesday on CR. 10,174feei westofTR, 14,
Scipio Township, according to lhe Gallla-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Teresa Warner, 29, Athens, lost co'ntrol and her
vehicle went off the road, strll(lng an embankment. The vehicle
overturned. Damage was moderate.
Warner was Injured and taken to O'Bleness Hospital In
Athens.
The patrol cited Warner for failure to maintain control.
The driver escaped Injury In another one vehicle accident In
Meigs County, at 6 a.m. Tuesday on SR. 124, at mile post38, In
Leilanon Township. Damage was moderate. Troopers saod
Mark A. Compson, 28, Racine, lost control and his car went off
the road, striking some small tJ:ees. Damage was moderate.
The patrol cited Compson for failure to maintain control,

All-County Band concert Sunday
On·Sunday at 2 p.m., the Meigs All·County Band will present a .
free public concert at Meigs High School. Tbe band Is composed
of Junior and Senior High School band members from Soulhern,
Eastern ahd Meigs' Local School Districts. Recommended for
ml!mbershlp by their band 'directors, these musicians have
been rehearsing since January 7 Jn preparation for the concert.
This year's guest conductor Is Dr. Bert Damron, Dean of Fine
Art$ at Ohio University. Dr. Damron began his music career as
a student at the Unlverlsty of Michigan where he performed
Continued on pa~~:e 5

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