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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.

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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•

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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
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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. .

•

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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
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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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Commentary

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Page-2-The Daily Stu aline!
Poma~oy-Midi:llepol1, Ohio
Wadnasday, January 26. 1989

Jack Aru:Wrson

Ill Court Street
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaslstaut Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

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' Dally Press
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Assoclat!on and the American Newspaper Publishers AssoclaOon.
LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should .b e Jess than 300 words
. long. Allletter.fiare subject toedttlng and must Designed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be tn
good taste, addresstna issues, not persooalitles.

WASHINGTON- Before Pres·
!dent Reagan leaves office next
week, be may have to engage In
some monkey business.
More than 50 celebrities an&lt;j
· two members o( Congress have
joined th~ animal rights move·
ment and are pushing the pres!·
dent to free nine monkeys from a•'
government-funded lab In
Louisiana.
The monkeys have svent most
of their Uves In the spotlight, and
muah of their lives In pain and
confusion. A medical research
lab In Maryland used them In
surgical experiments until the

.Backstairs at the White House

scientist doing the work was
charged with animal cruelty. He
was later cleared. Four of . the
monkeys arenow living at the
San Diego Zoo. The ones most
seriously handicapped by the
exper.lmen Is are wards of the
National Institutes of Health.
One has .since died and nine are
biding their time at the Delta
Regional Primate Research Cen·
ter In Covington, La. They were
trucked there from Maryland
under a cloak of secrecy, pre·
sumably to keep overzealous
animal lovers from lying down In
front of the truck.

Animal rights groups wasted
no time In u~lng the monkeys as a
broad condemnation of animal
medical research. The crusade
has been led by People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals,
which lsn' t satisfied with the
monkeys' • accommodations In
Louisiana. To hear the Nnt tell It,
the Delta Center Is a cozy nursing
home for primates. The animal
activists see It more like monkey
hell.
The animal advocates insist
that although the monkeys were ·
maimed by the experiments,
they can live the good life In a

rehabilitation facility. The Nlll
thinks some of the a bused mon·
keys would be better off dead.
A spokesman f~ the Health
and Human Ser ces Depart·.
men! told us that o ly three ofthe
monkeys are healthy enough to
be moved to another facility. Two
are willing to take the monkeys,
Moorpark College In California
and Primarily Primates in
Texas.
·
The changing of the guard at
the White House gives tlii! animal
advocates one more chance to
trumpet the cause of the mon·
keys. They won a restraining
order last week In federal court
II) New Orleans to stop the Nlll
from euthantzlng any of the
l)'lonkeys.
The monkeys' cheering section
also sent Reagan a letter asking
him to personally order freedom
for the ~aptlves before he leaves
office. Paul McCartney, Ryan
O'Neal, Angle Dickinson, Pa·
trick Swayze and Olympic
swimmer Matt Biondi are along
the celebrities who signed the
letter. Doris Day reportedly went
as far as to phone the president,
but Reagan would not take tile
call.
Reps. Robert C. Smith, R·N.H., .
and Robert K. Dornan, D·Callf., .•
are lined up on the monkeys'
side, too.
So far, Reag;m has not adopted
the monkeys' cause. The animal
advocates say all he needs to do Is
pick up a phone and liberate the
primates. Their crusade has
netted about 300 telephone calls ·
to Health and Human Services,
bu I some of the callers sided with
the federal government.

El'r• ~'9i9 FORT Y'IOiti\OrtU·'It.ai--+iULME'

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By HELEN THOMAS
UPJ While House Reporter
WASHINGTON IUPI) - The scene was the same, although
Republicans were taking over from Republicans. The hurt feelings
and comments were the same as l.f it were the political enemy that
was moving Into the White House. Just !Ike a hostile takeover.
Bush people are not Reagan people. much as they have worked side
by side In the same administration for years. The attitude by the Bush
campaign workers who are ready to assume the plum jobs Is that "ll's
Qur White House now.''
• Those who actively worked In the presidential campalgh of George
Bush are surprised that many of the Reagan staffers did not move
out, even before Inauguration Day. They also are not happy about the
few holdovers who have been asked to stay on lor continuity's sake.
White House spokesm'an Marlin Fitzwater, who stepped out of the
Pl!mpkln at noon Friday to receive the full title or White House press
secretary, has the easiest transition of all.
He Is staying put. But during the past week, he had to attend staff
meetings held by new W~lte House chief of staff John Sununu and
staff meetings directed by outgoing chief of staff Kenneth
Dubersteln.
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; Secretary of State George Shultz, who became more pompous In his
-striped-pants role, not returning a greeting from While, House
:staffers even on a short elevator ride, hit the ceiling when he got a call
Jrom the Bush transition office telling him to turn In his resignation
·effective Jan. 20. He complained that It was not necessary to tell him
'that his days were numbered.
1 ' Sources said Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci was similarly
:miffed at the treatment he received. Some of the Cabinet had
:assumed that Bush would, want them to stay on until new Cabinet
'Officers were confirmed. Wrong. He wants his own people In place,
:COnfirmed or not.
Reaganauts are also critical of the way they feel Bush has treated
Dan Quayle. They have wondered aloud whether Bush will accord
Quayle· the same courtesy that President Reagan gave his vice
·president - that is, a weekly private luncheon meeting In the Ova~
.Office.
· 'The determination of the Bush camp to keep Quayle under wraps
during the interregnum was obvious for all to see. But It's a different
:ball game now and 9uayle will have lobe brought In on the loop.
On the campaign trail, Reagan said on several occasions: "George
Bush was In on every decision I made." One wonders whether Bush
will be able to 'say the same of Q~ayle as time goes on.
' Reporters are looking forward to the reign of Barbara Bush. She
;will be a different kind of first lady. And probably more prone to say
·whalls on her mind. Nancy Reagan suffered in silence. But Mrs. Bush
pulls no punches.
Each first lady can carve out her own niche In the hierarchy. She
can wave a magic wand and make things happen. Mrs. Reagan made
a commitment to a crusade against drug use among youth and she
Tallied the nation, particularly schools and youth groups.
: Mrs. Bush Is focusing on literacy.•the first step for better jobs and a
:higher quality of life forthose who cannot read or write, or have only a
·limited education.
'
White House reporters are gearing for early morning and late night
. stakeouts. Fitzwater has passed out the word that Bush will be In the
·'oval Office dally at 8 a.m. to start work.
;.. With the president constantly on the move, there are expecled'to be
· very few contemplative evenings In the family quarters. George and
Barbara Bush believe In activity and they like a lot of people around
them.
• They are Impromptu and want to continue the lifestyle they led In
· the vice presidency, when reporters did not pay much attention where
: they went.
: As president, Bush Is news, no matter what, and that will be a
: difference In his life.

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DANGEROUS LIAISONS

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LOOKING DOWNCOURT- Soudlern pard ,Andy Baer, with
ball, loob downcouri for an open man after getdn1 the ball on a
rebound In the secoad quarter of ~esday nlcht's SVAC contest
aplnat the host Nordl Gallla Plra&amp;es. Behlad Baer Is teammate
Brad Maynard. The Plra&amp;es defeated the Tornadoes 77-~5 to drop
tile RadJM: sguad out of first place In the leape. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

Eastern avenges
earlier setback to
KCHS five, 77-61
EAST MEIGS - Racing to a one of his best games of the year.
24-10 first period score, the The hustling senior and frosh Jeff
Eastern Eagles avenged an Durst gave great complimentary
earlier loss to visiting Kyger efforts to allow Eastern to walk
Creek as 1hey rolled on to soundly on to the win.
Easternhlt 31-58 for 52 percent,
defeat the SVAC rival 77-61, here
Tuesday evening In boys' high was 0·1 outside the perimeter,
school basketball action.
and hlt17 ·26 at the line: KC hit 22
Junior guard Scott Fitch of 63 for 35 percent, hit 2·3 from
drUled through 20 points for the three point range, and hit 15·19
winners, while Shaun Savoy for 79 at the line.
Eastern had 23 turnovers,30
added 10, freshman JeffDurstll.
Mike Martin 9, and Chad Sinclair rebounds,8 steals,9 assists, and
19 fouls. Martin had 9 rebounds
8.
Kyger was led by Mike Reese and 4 assists to lead the team
who netted 21 markers, while while Bissell and Fitch each had
Chad Leach swished through 17. 2 steals apiece.
KC had 25 TO's,33 ·rebounds,
Shaun Denney had 8 and Ted
led by Reese's 13, 9 assists, 8
Perry 6.
Eastern moved back above the steals, and 21 fouls. Chad Leach
.500 mark to 8·7 al\d 7-4 In the had a good floor game and
SVAC, while Kyger Creek carried most of the weight · of
dropped to 4·11 overall and 2·91n breaking the EHS press, claim·
the league. .
·
lng 5 assists and a couple steals.
Mike Reese led with 13 re.
Wanting to leave no doubt as·to
who was this best on Ihis bounds, a game·hlgh.
particular night, Eastern quickly
EHS claimed a 54·51 reserve
got Its act together and aggres· triumph, their third In a row.
Tim Bissell led !with 13, Michael
slvely attacked the KC defense.
Also Eastern picked up the Smith had 12, and Randy Moore
tempo defensively and forced 10. For CKC Phil Bradbury had
many KC turnovers. Although 12 and Bob Gilmore 10.
Coach John Thompson said,
Eastern had 23 turnovers and '
Kyger 25, much of the Bobcat ''The reserves are now playing
miscues were forced, while East· hard and have learned how to
ern's upbeat tempo accounted · win.
r
for the majority of Its blunder,s; a
Eastern plays at Hannan
fact characterlstlc of up beat T~ace Friday.
Scol'l'l by quarters:
games.
Although Kyger played steady Eastern ............. 24 18 20 15-77
ball after the first period, the Kyger Creek ...... 10 14 12 25-61
Initial damage had been done.
EASTERN (77) - Mike MAr·
After the 24-10 opener Eastern tin 4·1·9, Sinclair 3·2·8, Savoy
"rolled to a 42·24 halftime 4·2·10, Lance 1·0·2, Fitch 7·6-20,
advantage.
Caldwell3·2·8, Horner 1·13, Durst
With most teams now giving 5-1·11, Blssell2·0·4, Murphy 0·1-1.
extra altentlon to hot-shooting Wilson 0·1·1. TOTALS 30-0-17-1.
Shaun Savoy, Scott Fitch, KYGER CREEK (81)- Swisher
another good shol and bal· 0-0·0, Chad Leach 4·2·3·17, Mike
!handler has been freed up to do Reese 8·5·21. Ted Perry 2·2·6,
· the job he Is capable of doing.
Shaun Denney 2·4·8, Jphn Sipple
0·0·0. Chad Johnson 2·1·5, VIlla·
Mike Martin was steady offen- neuva 0·0·0, Rob Gilmore 2·0·4,
sively and held his own on the Bobby Lucas 0·0.0, Bradbury
boards, while Chad Sinclair had 0-0·0. TOTALS 22-2-15-61.

A good first step on military bases
WASHINGTON (NEA) -The which was fraught with potential
federal government's first non· political problems,
Indeed, not a single military
partjsan attempt to Identify mill·
base
anywhere In the nation has
tary bases that ought to be closed
been
closed in the past 11 years,
has been a s trlklng success In Its
untU now congressional
because
Initial stages. What's needed
approval
has been required for
now Is a substantial expansion of
such action. Members of the
the program.
• Before the report of the defense House or Senate wh,o fall to wage
secretary's ,Commission on Base tenacious struggles to preserve
Realignment and Closure was un· bases In their districts or states
veiled recently, knowledgeable ob- know tlley risk defeat In the next
_servers predicted that Implement· election.
Moreover, the execu tlve branch
lng 111e panel's expected recom·
mendatlons would slash Pentagon can be equally Incapable of trans·
costs by o $2 billion to $5 billlon cendlng parochial politics. Eight
of the 11 bases President Carter
annually.
But the 12-member commission proosed to close were In Republl·
now says that its proposals to to- can House districts. During Pres~
tally close 86 military facilities, dent Reagan's tenure, l8 of the 22
partially close another five and bases ldentWed for closing were In
consolidate or alter the mission of Democratic House districts.
54 others will ~ave less th&lt;!II $700 · But the new procedure deftly
mllllon yearly. That's hardly a avoids those difficulties by man·
major reduction in a defense dating that the dl.fflcult decisiOns
be made by the bipartisan com·
budget of PJ()'bllllon annually.
mission,
thus Insulating Individual
But the commission deserves
members
of Congress from polltl·
the benefit of the doubt, In the form
cal
punishment
by their constl·
of an assumption that It decided to
tuents
and
political
retribution by
proceed cautiously and modestly
on Its unprecedented endeavor, the executive branch.

Robert Walters

Congress can veto the commls·
slon's recommendations - but
only If the House and the Senate
both disapprove of the entire list.
The law c~eatlng the commission
specifically prohibitS the law·
makers from picking and choos·
lng among the facilities the panel
has designated tor closure. '
Among the bases to be shut Is
Fort Douglas In Utah. Established
to protect stagecoach routes
against Indian raids, It stands In
the middle of the University of
Utah campus. That location, the
commission notes . dryly, "sev·
erely restrictsltsoperatlorull flex!·
blllty."
But the commission left un·
touched Fort Monroe in VIrginia,
which has the dubious dlstlncllon
of being the only base base sur·
rounded by a moat. Its construe·
lion began after the War of 1812,
to defend the Hampton Roads re·
·gion against future British at·
lacks - which never material·
!zed.
Indeed, the nation has count·
less military bases built to guard
·against Re~coats, Indians and

Hidden taxes may plague

assorted other foes who no longer
pose any threat to the populace.
The commission proposes to
close the Presidio, occupying
more than 1,400 acres of prime
land at the mouth of San Francisco Bay. But the panel ignored
Fort DeRussy, whose equally
choice.real estate is In the m1ddle
of Honolulu's Walklkl Beach.
Indeed. closing such facilities
poses special problems because
of the overwhelming sentiment
for providing continued federal
protection for the land (probably
under the auspices of the Interior
Department) rather than turnIng It over to commercial real es·
tate developers. Thus, much of
the "saving" In the Defense De·
partment budget would show up
as an expenditure by another
agency.
Finally, the commission focused Its attention on the 3,800
domestic military facilities. but
excluded from consideration aU
of the country's 1,500 bases In
other nations- an artificial dlvl·
slon that ought to be abandoned.

B~sh Robert Wagnwn
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WASHINGTON (NEA) - AI· less attenllon than usual to this casts; and the 1993 budget could poses to add a total of $25 billion
most everyone In Washington Is final budget because, as one end up $60 billion to $70 billion In for the sa vlngs and loan bailout
unhappy with Ronald Reagan's hlgh·level congressional budget the red.
at the rate of $10 billion next yea!"
final budget. Although they are staffer put It: "II Isn't worth the
and
$5 billion! In each of the three
At the same time the new
not sayjng so publicly, among the paper It's written on. If It were Reagan budget forecasts In· years thereafter. This may be as
unhappiest are the members of sold In bookstores, they would creasing record annual revenue much as $100 billion less than
George Bush's budget team. have to put It on the fiction totals based on an economy that what will be necessary.
Reagan's budget may paint them shelves."
At the same time this budget
will continue to grow at about 3
Into some difficult corners .
assumes
that Congress wUI go
The Gramm-Rudman-Hollings percent. This would mean that
Apparently Reagan and his budget limitation calls for a .the current economic expansion along with new major cuts In
Office of Management and steadily declining federal deficit -already In Its seventh year and many social programs Including
Budget forgot to read Bush's lips unlll flscal1993 when lt mandates showing clear signs of slowing multibllllon·dollar cuts In Medl·
during the campaign. The new a b(llanced budget. The new would have to continue unabated. care and Medicaid, an almost 20
fiscal 1990 budget contains at Reagan budget forecast~ better· Few If any economists are percent cut In agricultural proleast $14 billion dollars In new or · lng the Gramm-Rudman deficit predicting this.
grams, as well as the complete
Increased taxes. The Irick Is that target In fiscal 1990 by holding
Further, the Reagan spending elimination of 82 programs,
the budget's designers don't call the deficit to $92.5 billion and estimates do not seein to be many of which Congress has said .
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them that.
fulfills the requirement for a lodged too firmly .In either In the past It will not end. This
For Instance, about $6.5 billion balanced budget In 1993 by practical or political reality .
simply won't happen.
of a total of about $8.5 billion In forecasting a $2.4 billion surplus.
For Instance, the budget prowhat have to be considered new
But these are based on certain
taxes are labeled "premiums" economic assumptions appar·
because they cover the fees that ently only believed by the current
older taxpayers will have to pay Inhabitants of OMB.
next year for the new catastroFor Instance, Interest rates are
phic Insurance protection under critical In federal budgeting. The
Medicare. The administration federal debt Is so huge that every
By UnHed Press International
Insisted on the surcharge, which, 1 percent Increase In the Interest
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 25. the 25th day ofl989with 340 to follow.
by 1993, will amount to as much rate will cost taxpayers $11
The moon Is In Its first quarter.
as 25 percent of the average older billion next year; $20 billion . In
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
American's annual tax liability. flscal1992 and $29 billion in fiscal
The 'evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
An additional $5.5 billion In 1990 1994.
, Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
Increases are llibeled increased
As for long-term 10-year rates, Irish natural philosopher Robert Boyle, a founder of modern
or new •4user tees,'' or even more currently about 8.9 percent, the chemlstry,ln 1627, Scottish poet Robert Burns In 1759, soapmaker and
deceptively, "new· revenue CBO sees them remaining at 9 .Philanthropist William Colgate In 1783, novelists W. Somerset
Initiatives. ••
percent or slightly higher In 1990. Maugham In 1874 and VIrginia Woolf In 1882, news commentator
A president's final budget Is
This Is not the v'ew of Reagan's Edwin Newman In 1919 (age 69), and actor Dean Jones In 1935 (age
often considered a meaningless budget team. They see Interest 54).
exercise since It Is lnvartabiy rates falling, and falling sharply,
Ignored until It Is revised or to a level almost 3 percent lower
On this date In history:
totally rewritten by the new for both short· and long-term
1n 1890, Nellie Bly, a young New York report~r. completed a trip
president. Still, sometimes· It . than 'the CBO predicts. This around the world In the astounding time of 72 days, stx bours and 11
serves as the departing pres!· would mean that If the CBO Is minutes.
dent's final statement about correct, all other things being
In 1915, transcontinental telephone service was Inaugurated In a
spendlna priorities for tile future. equal, the actual 1990 deficit hookup between New York and San Francisco.
;.
Many key players In tile annual could be $33 billion higher than
In 1971, Charles Manson and three women were found guilty In the
budget drama are paytng even the new Reagan budget foremurders of actress Sharon Tate and six other people In Los Angeles.

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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Great learn play ... they wanted
It more ...a sweet wln ... these
were among some of the Ideas ·
expressed by the opposing
coaches about North Gallla's
77-55 victory over visiting South·
ern Tuesday night.
"That was a sweet win for us,"
said North Gallla skipper Bruce
Wilson, whose Pirates notched
, their third straight win and their
fo11rth In the lastflve games.' 'We
l!IS! had great team play tonight,
with Don (Mays) coming along In
Ihe last few games and taking the
pressure off (Rusty) Denney and
&lt;Brian) Stout," he added.
"They kicked our rearends,"
said Southern boss Howle Cald·
well, whose Tornadoes slipped
Into second place, half a game
behind Oak Hill (the Oaks beat
Hannan Trace 4843). "II boiled
down to North Gallla wanting II a
lot more than we did.··
In the beginning, the Torna·
does' aggressive man-to-man
defe.nse was forcing early Pirate
turnovers, some of which re·
sulled from missed connections
on passes. It was In the first two
minutes of the game that South·
ern would take Its only lead,
')when forward Brent Shuler got
loose for a layup to give Racine a
4·2 lead.
Denney tied the game at 4·4
with twd foul shots, and then 38
seconds later, Pirate point guard
Greg. Glassburn, who on ihe
gridiron launched his share of
long tosses, was on the receiving
end of one thai enabled him to
score on a layup, that gave the
Bucs a 6·4 lead. From that point
on, North never trailed.
Denney, a 6-5 senior center,
and Mays, a 6-3 senior forward.
used their size and experience to
great advantage against Shuler,
a 6-0 junior. and Brad Maynard, a
6-0 junior center who led the
Tornadoes with 18 points. Den·
ney, who led all scorers with 25
points, led the Ga!Uans with 11
rebounds, while Mays had 21
points and eight grabs.
In addition lo outreboundlng
their guests 41·30, the f&gt;lrates
made their rebounds count with a
number of well-thrown court·
length passes by Denney and
Stout to such open receivers as
Glassburn. Stout and guard
Steve George. Such passes
served to spread out the Racine
defense and put them on the
move, which was Instrumental In
creating a number of Tornado
fouls.
"Let's wake up and play"'was
Caldwell's battle cry In the first
quarter as the hosts stole,
passed, pressured, connected on
turnaround hook shots and
scored on second-chance baskets

It

to post a 23·13 lead at the end of
the first quarter. However, It did
the Tornadoes little good, as
North, according' to Wilson, ' 'did
a lot of switching from man-toman to zone defense."
Such switching appeared to
give Southern a chance to score
Inside points, but the Bucs' pesky
Inside defense (Denney racked
up three steals to lead North),
which also featured George and
senior Todd Petrie staying after
the ball and In the faces of the
ballllandlers, forced a quick end
to · a lot of Southern drives for
Inside baskets. Southern shot 8 of
25 from the floor In the .first hill!
partly for this reason.
In the wake of seeing the
Pirates double their offensive
output In the first half, Racine
started getting better position.
Inside, and with the third quarter
halfway ·gone, they actually
traded baskets with the Pirates
until Tornado guard Todd Grfnd·
staff followed a Shuler iayupwlth
one of the game's two threepointers (Stout had Ihe other one
In the first quarter) at the 4:45
mark.
The long bomb cutNorth'slead
to 46-34, which for the Tornadoes
was an Improvement compared
to the 19-polnt deficit they faced
at halftime. However, as the
third quarter entered Its last
three minutes, deep passes l:lY
Stout and Denney, combined
with several Instances of travel·
lng by the Tornadoes, enabled
North to expand Its lead to 20
points by the end of the period.
The final quarter saw the Bucs
lose a little of their cushion
before expanding It to 25 In the
game's last two minutes, when
the rest of the Pirate bench was
on the court getting some playing
time.
In the reserve game, North
broke a 4242 tie halfwllll(through
the fourth quarter to Wl'n 51·44.
Chris Tackett was the Midship·
men's top gun with 15 points,
while J. Hoback was the high
man for the Whirlwinds with 14.
On Friday night North Gallla
(9·5, 6-5) will host Symmes
Valley, while Southern (8·8, 8·3)
will host Oak Hill.
·Score by quarters
Southern .. , ........ .. 13 6 20 16-55
North Gallla .. .... '23 15 22 17-77
NORTH GALLIA (77)
Denney 11·0·3·25; Mays 10.0·1·
21; Slout4·1·6-17; George 3·0·0·6;
Petrie 2-Q.0-4; Smith 0·0-J.l.
TOTALS- 31·1-12·77
From the field- 32·59 (54.2
pet.)
From tlie ·Hne - 12·18 (6~.7
pe\.i
' '
On theboards-41 (Denney 11)
Assist leader - Glassburn (9)
Steals- 9 (Denney 3)
Tumovers - 16

Cold shooting cited
in Hannan Trace loss
"I've never had a varsity team
shoot that low," said Hannan
Trace mentor Mike Jenktns of his
team's 14-for-61 shooting from
the field in ' the Wildcats' 48·43
loss to host Oak Hill Tuesday
night.
"We played good defense, and
(Jedd) Rawlins wasn't a factor,"
said Jenkins of how his team
limited the Oaks' 6·8 senior
postman lo 12 points. "But we
couldn't shoot thl! ball In the

6·0·3·15; Rawlins ?·0·2·12; Coon
3·0·1·7; Miller 0-0.6-6; Smith
3·0·0·6; Ruff 1·0·0·2; TOTALS 18.0·1~48
.
Field-goal shooting -18·36 (50
pel.)
Foul shootlnc- 12·15 (80 J1CL)
HANNAN TRACE (~) Caldwell 3·0·4·10: Brumfield 2·0·
4-8; Rankin 2·0·2·6; Bailey 1·1·0·
5; .Bevan H ·0-5; Cremeens J.l ·O·
5; Cornell 0·1·1-4. TOTALS 10-l·ll·f:l
Fleld·coal shooting- 14' 61 (23
pet.)
Foul shooting - 11·21 (52.4
pet.)
Rebounds· - 27 (Brumfield 11)
Assists- 9
Steals -12
Turnovers - 10

hole."

The Wildcats were down 30·21
at !he end of the third quarter.
Score by quarters
Hannan Trace ...... 6 9 6 22-43
Oak Hill .............. 12 JO 8 18-48
OAK HILL (48) - Ward

From the field - 22·52 (42.3
SOUTHERN (55)
:
Maynard 7-0.4·18; Grindstaff , pet. )
From the line- 8·H (57.1 pet.)
5-0·J.l3; Shuler 4·0·0·8; Amos
On the boards - 30 (Gr indstaff
2·0.0-4; Johnson t-0·2·4; La·
vender 2·0·0-4; Baer · 0·0·2·2; 13)
Steals - 11 (Maynard 4)
Deaver 1.0·0.2. TOTALS -2H·S.
Tumovers - 22
55

LOOKING INSIDE- North Gallta point guard Greg Glassburn, '
with ball, looks ·Inside for the open man as Southern's Todd ·..
'Grindstaff tries to follow his progress In· the fi1'St quarter of
Tuesday night's game on the Pirates' home court. Though
Grindstaff led all rebounders with 13, the Jlucs prevailed 77·55.'
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
·•
..

SVAC standings
(All games)
TEAM
WL P OP
North Gallla ... ....9 5 1001 891
.l£astern ........ .. .. .,8 7 1137. 1155
Oak Hill .... ....... ..8 . 7 896 932
Southern ........ .. ... 8 8 1035 1010
Hannan Trace ....7 8 892 867
Southwestern .... .. 6 9 1013 1126
Kyger Creek ...... 4 11 934 1041
Symmes Valley . 2 12 767 988
(SVAC games)
TEAM
W L P OP
Oak Hill ........ ...... 8 2 638 575
Southern ... ..... .. .. .. 8 3 767 684
Eastern ............... 7 4 847 812
Hannan Trace .. ... 6 4 603 575
North Gallla ........ 6 5 781 692
Southwestern ....... 4 7 718 788
Kyger Creek., ...... 2 9 665 760
Symmes Valley .. . 2 9 603 736
TOTALS ... .... . 43 43 5622 5622
.

7

(Reserves)
TEAM
WL POP
Nqrth Gallla ... .. .. .10 1 646 412
Southern .... ......... . 9 2 560 430
Hannan Trace .. .. . 7 3 456 399
Symmes Valley ... 7 ,4 475 480
Eastern ....... .. ...... 5 6 492 535
Oak Hill .... ...... .. .. 3 7 407 457
Southwestern .. .. ~.. 2 9 426 541
Kyger Creek ........ 0 11 348 556
TOTALS .... .. ...... 43 43 3810 3810
Tuesday's results
Oak Hill 48. Hannan Trace 43
North Gallla 77, Southern 55
Symmes Valley 75, Southwestern
62 .
Creek 61
Eastern 7.7.

The Daily

·'We were ahead 9-0 In the first frame, as the visitors scored 22 (38.3 pet.)
quarter, bu tthen our shooting got points to cuI the Valley's lead to
Free throws - 14·29 (48.3 pet.)
cOld," said Southwestern head seven, at 55-48. But sophomore
Rebounds - 16
coach Jim Walker. ''Our defense center Car I Robinson scored 11
Tumovers ~ 16
wasn't there, we made too many points In the fourth quarter, and
turnovers and we weren't boxing w1th help from Hayes and senior
out lor rebounds," he added .
· Scott Miller, the Norsemen
The VIkings, who posted a 36·26 pulled away for the win .
John Ehman scored 15 points to
halftime lead, watched the High·
lead
the Highlanders.
landers come to life In the third .
In the reserve game, the
VIkings won 47-40.
On Friday night Southwestern .
will travel north to take on Kyget
Creek, while Symmes Valley, 0·7
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Stanley Pete Rozelle will rule on whether on the road, will travel north to
Wilson . . suspended for drugs Wilson will be permanently
face North Gallla.
hours before the Super Bowl, banned, but'Bengalsofflclals say Score by quarters
telephoned the Cincinnati Ben· they doubt Wilson will play again Southwestern ..... 13 13 22 14-62
gals to say he.was In Miami with In the league.
Symmes Valley .14 22 19 20-75
Fist, waahable wall plina
his parents, the team said
"This Is the third time, this Is
SYMMES V,\LLEY (71) for interior 1urf11Ce1. Splat·
.' Tuesday.
the end of It," Bengals General
Hayes 6-2·2-20; Robinson 8·0·3·
lllr re1l111nt. MIY to 1pply,
WilsOn had not been seen M~nager Paul Brown.
19; Miller 6-1·0·15; Large 4-0.0·8;
flit drying •
publicly since Saturday night
Justice 3-0·1·7; Nicholas 1·0.0-2;
Added Assistant General Man·
and friends said they were ager Mike Brown: "He (Wilson)
SchQI!Ider 1·0.0·2; Smith 1·0.0.2.
worried because they had been was warned explicitly In writing TOTAU - 30-H-71
GALLON
unable to locate him .
by the commissioner that the
Pleld·pal sboottnc - 33·63
The Benga!s quoted Wilson as next time would be his last time.''
(52.3 (1Ct.)
saying he and his parents were
Said Wy_che: "There are no
Free throw8 - 6·9 (66.7 pet.)
leaving Mtam~ but , did not more appeals for Stanley."
SOVTJIWESTERN (62)
Wilson missed the 1985 and 1987 John Ehman 5-1·2-15; Bryant
dlsclllll! their destination.
seasons
for cocaine use and
2·0.6-10; Hammond 4-0-1·9; Col''We are all behind him In the
Bengals
players
said
they
were
ley
4-Q.O.B; Jesse Ehma'! 3-0.2·8;
challenges he faces," Ben gals
told
cocaine
was
Wilson's
undoWalker 2·1·0.7; Haeer 0-0-3·3;
Coach Sam Wyche said.
Wilson has been suspended Ing just before Sunday's ·Super Merahon 1·0.0·2. TOTALS U·ll-14-81
three times from the NFL for Bowl.
Pleld·goal sbootln~~; . - 23·60
drug abuse. NFL Commissioner ·

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Junior Paul Hayes scored a
game-high 20 points to p'ace
Symmes Valley to .a 75-62 victory
over visiting Southwestern Tues·
day night.
,
By doing so the VIkings picked
up their second win of the season,
as opposed to 12 losses overall.
'l'hey are 2·9 In the SVAC.
Southwestern fell to 6·9 overall
and 4· 7 in the conference.

Wilson in Miami with parents

Sentinel ~

A Dl\'l8ton of Multimedia. Inc.

Symmes Valley tops Southwestern 75-62

Today in history

•

..

"Let's stop by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and pick up some
S&amp;Ls. I'm feeling a little greedy."

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Mkklaport, Ohio

Pirates notch 77-55 win over Southern::

Reagan ·was urged to free monkeys .

The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Wil'dnncley. January 26. 1989

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Wednesday, January 25, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

- -.·Local news br~ejs... ---. Rain, snow moves across the Plains states

Marauders slap .55-50 loss on_Buckeyes
1 ~a (.4.t\.4.J, W.'.at WIIUam~~o eoach uf'l'ulsll
of Hw TeusiA'ape tAA ), Jim Crawford

Girls ratings

coach ol Guacma ot lh~

COLUMBLS. Ohio tllPI J - This
v;~rk' to lniU'd Prf'!I!OinlerMI~tal Ollkl
Hl&amp;b Sc.·hool Board ol Coa~hea' 1lrl!l
huketh!lll n.iinp (wMh ftr• ·platrvot.n
and WO!t-IO!ol l'f'('8rdS In parenilte!toft ):
Dl\·bkn•l
1'f' am
Polftll
1. Plr.lu•rln,&amp;ton ( l'i ) (1,..1}
Wt
'!. ~orlh Cal) tun GlenOak (1&amp;1 ( IHI U-1
S. Ontllltall Print'~ on ( I) ( 1-J.I)
17-1
I . Umaa!iioenlor ( J!S-1)
141

5. ~ria {:i ) U$-1}

U4

I. Cohunbu South ~Ii-I)

132
10'7

l. To~('.,ntraiCathfH·IJ

8. Brll\·trrl'f'fk

O~OJ

!It

ft8

I . ,\kron &amp;clllel (11·1)
tli. C'aanum Mf'Kinley (IJ..l)

-IR

SM"'M ll'n: II . Ctnclnratl Mother 'of ·,.
J't. (lie) MM!!IIeld S(&gt;nlor and
sa.n•sk)'. Ul each; u. ltH'-1 New
Phlladelphhtand Barbertoll,l4 ~ach; 16.
COiundfl.ls NorthiiUI d 18; 11. (llrJ Mentor
an4 Chlllk'04 he, 11 ~kh: II . {He ) (layton
Sorlhmolll:, " 't!!!iter\IIIJe Sorllh aad C\lyahop Falls. i each.
Divkk)n II
Mercy U ~

Tram

Polnt!i .
I. Garllf'ld HKfs'l'rlnly ( ~) (IS.O) 273
'Z . TippcttyTlpJifca•OI"I4til&amp;-tl
m
3, A\' on Lakr (I) {I~)
U7
4. W11Udna Memorial (I) (I .f.())
IU
.5. W~t Holmes{!) CIH I
Ut
, 6. \\' avPrl)' (I) (li-0)
11:1

Bulridball

Ml~mi-Siped pard CraJaNeal

11-tt..,. c.•raa.

Coi~JI'I!!I

81' Edt - &amp;!11pf'nded fonr.'flrdS .JeM
Turner of GeotKelfN'n aM .J-.v•n
~llllam!l of st. John's for I JAmf lor
IIPtln~t.

a.u:knell - t~ootball t'Oilch Gtol"'lf'
l.andhr; ,.,.ipect; aaamed Lou M arantana
Interim coach.
Kenl•li:)' - Named C.M. Ne~~t' kln
Ill hJ etk dll?lior, eflecU\'t April I.
TtlC"'! Tech- Nanwd T!Q'Ior McNeel
Ulllslllnt athletic dlr'lllclorlor(!GmpUant:e
and cerMfk~toa.
t'oothall
Kan,o&lt;M City- NametiMIP'tySt:hollu·
helmer coarh.
Hockey
Monlrul - Traded rl~tht win« .row
fharhonllil"au to VIU1COuwr for cf'nler
Dan Woodl.-,·: usi(T1f'd Woodley to
Shel'llrookf' or fliP Am~rlcan Hock.-,.
Lf'&amp;pf'.

NATIONAL 8.4.SKETBAI.L i\SSI}{',

&gt;r..t'lid 1Q' '1 ilt'!!

Z&amp;l
'til

3. Ouwrrln Falla ( 13-IJ
.. . Sorlh Unkln ( ll {IHJ
Cath ( I) (14-1)
.5 . lllf'l Onawa-Giandorl (1+1)

Ill
Ill

~ . { lie) Slet~bt-nvllk-

1.

Ll~n

'·{I lei

NN \'ork I'Zt, LA. Lalit'tt1117
i\fll"'aukee 114. Sacramento 110
• WedlleMIIO'!s Gameti

t.'hlra,;o ..t Phlladelplala. 7: 3Q p.m.
GoldeaSialf' a1 Detroll,l: 30p.m .
Boston at Ia diana, i:30 p.m.

LA Cllppus* Dallas. 8:afl p.m.
Utah IU Su Antmlo, ll:lll p.m .
T ..urwdiQ''III Games
Sat'rMm entoat Newdt-Uf')' , nlpt
Indiana »J. Wuhlln&amp;ton, niP~
Denwr at Ml ami, nld\1
LA Cllpprrul Houston, nl&amp;hf
O.•toUe at lllah, niRN
MU-•Iiee at Porrland. nlr:hl
NATIONAL IIOCKEV LEAGVE
'hi.'!JdiQ''s Res .as

88

R. Rndln11 03-t)

IS

Gar~tcs\llllf'GarfleldCI-1-l)

63

Los .U&amp;rln4, WMIWn~onl(llp)

!1. (lie) Upper Sandu~lcy (.13-1)
5J
StooNI ten : 11. IJellvtlle CleW' Fork .54:

12. CAPE u ;' 13. Indian Valli')' M; 1-1 .
fa•talia MKrprl"tla 23; U. Jv.clulo~
Milton 21: 16. Uiel HBnlll:hal Rinr and
Prf'bleShawnPe, Ill eacll; JM. (tie) Mal'On
; Jo;astern and Sudusky St . MIU'Y'"· J3
nch: 20. Oak Harbor II .
Division IV
Tram
PolntM
I. Kalldll (IR J (13-0)
231
~. Vpp&gt;r Scioto Vall11y ( IJ tI-l-l)
166
l. S Chw-k'slon Soutlleasct•rn t3Jt 15-

0i

U1

I. Rocky Rl\'f'r Lutneran " 'PSI CU· O! Hi
5. t'rt'mant St. ,lo!W'pll ( 2) ( IIH)
II

t . ZIUH..'~\ille ltcJSt"crans ( 13-1)

111

7..\hrkln IAtaJ i ll i 10·21
K. Mlddlt"tow• Ftnwh: k (11 · 1)
II. Gall'S Mill!! Gilmour Acdy \ll-11
IO .MIUrr Cit ,}' ( 11·5)

M6
71
70
:J I
SeLvdl ten: II . McDurald!l; It Fort
Re1'0\i'fy n: 13. Falrilllllks l-1; U. Far!
Lornmlf' 12; 1~ . Fref'portLakelandiO; 18.
Delpho~ .fPIIf'rM~n 7; li. fardin~t;tnn­
Uncoln6: 11\.IUII!Opli; Ul. file) Fll)"f'lk&gt;
and U•ipliic, -1 eal'h.

College score&gt;
"'omen·~ Ohio follell:t' Bw;

let hall

"Tuesdfl3', ,Jan. 2-1
Dyke 91 , L~tkt• Erlt' .5tl
Heldrl ht&gt;r~ $11, Ohio Norlhcrn -Iii
Marlelaag~,f'aplal IH
.
MooN St . Jo~phl3, F1ndlay $t
Musldn~PJm S-1, Willtnbt&gt;r~ 63
Ollerheln ~. Moonl Unkln 53
Rio Grand!• 70, Mt VC'rnttn 1'\'az. 9K
Walsh 85. Salem tWValfH
Ohio l 'ollt&gt;lt Bastrthall Rl'!i!Ato
Df'fW'Icl" 10-1, tuofflon .59

D:Y•e 9,, Lakp Frlf. At
Hiram !13 .•John Carroll II' Col)
Malont' !17, Cf'daniltc 8J
• Mounl Vermn Nlll. ~. \hJ!Ih a
Tlllln 51, Klo GraM.- 6!
Urhana96. Ollto Dominican 5!1

C11ll'ndar
,\utoRacla,;
Moml·o- Mul"'k' Carlo nUiv
Ba..;lltlhall
.
( ' hiCilA'O a1 PhUadelphla, 1:30 p.m .
(ioldl&gt;n Slate au Det roll, 7:30p. m .
Bo~ton llllnlll&amp;ftll, 7:30p.m.
LA Cllppl't!i at Dalb&amp;!. 14:30 p.m.
Utah al SIU'I Ani anlo, II: 30 p.m.
o.h~lt&gt;d

M'lnWrhf'rl(, Wt&gt;!!l Gt'rm&amp;n)' - F..uroJli' l"' f'hv.mpklnoihtps, tw•mllll and lourmlln
Hockey
Bo..lon at Toronto, 1: 35 p.m.
St . Louis 11 Harlford. i:31'1 p.m.
Huff all) at Dr! rolt, 7: 35 p.m.
Winript·~ al PIIIDI'II:h. 7:33p.m.
ChlcllkO al Ellmonto•, 9:35p.m .
SoL·cer

:\
1

MISL
·: ·

•

Baltimon• at Kani!lls fiiY,II:35 p.m .
T(•ft•)j\t

, Mplhnorrw, 1\U!!IIm!ht -

AU!iln\llan

• Ope n
t'
1

Tru.ni'lllcilofl!o
BasehaJI
•
•
,. ,
Baltlmon· - Tradt'd ~:ll&amp;du~r Tl'rry
• ' Kl)nfl'cb' to San Frand:K!o lor 1·JU:eh~tr
~ • Roh MPh·ln.
~,
Ph\bldt."lphia - Sl p!Cd plleher fln)d
\'ownan~otttli 1- Y~'arf'nnlrad .
.·
.,-

. \\'I nni!M'iJIM Ph tabu rrh..7: ~~p. m .
Ctllca,ro al Edmonlon, 9:35p.m.
ThunidiQ''s G\lmes
S&amp;. Louis 111 Bo~ton, niKht
W' -.ljn~on

at Phllacteli:•da. nla:hl

Wlnlllpejt ai !\!\. llllandt&gt;n, nl~~:ht
Qu~bri· ll( MlnrEtoota, nlthl
NY Ran~r~ at Cal pr)'. ni&amp;ht

V~ou""r aat Lot~

An ~(des, tilallt

prep...
Uberty Sl, Conlllnd Lakeview -1!1
Uc-kln,; Cou•y Chr i5, Col Maranalhll

"

l.ockland U, St Berl8rd H
Lo,ljflfl 93, Col Marlo~Franldln .5~
IA,e;an Elm IW, Llckl•l His 1i (OC)
Lon.tn lk'ooklildf' 51. Col..nhla 50
Lonbitown ~8, lrtslol S':
Louisville Aqutno.s 53, Akr Hoban 57
Malwrn 57, NPWC'OITM'tslown 53
Maplewood RS. Bloomfield 11
Marlet&amp;a.IM, ParllerMhu I'll: iWVal 5:1
Martins Fer I')' R2, Sa Clairsville 58
MIMIII'Ifl' 69, Bowllnr: Grren 5I
McDo111lid ~II. Jacb&lt;ln Millon SK
MeadowhrooU5. Wheel ~WVa) Ltnsly

.

Mel if! 55, Nel!!OII,illf' York 50
Ml unlshu rr: It, Tren1on EdJ"Wood -16

MldFeewh:k KS. Day Carroll '73 (~)
Ml dllet.own Chr 62, Xenia Wilson il
Mllknd 51, Gollhen e
Mineral Rldp It, Low~tllviUe 44
Moll:&amp;doft' :l-4, Mantua Crt5twood S-1
Mo111an N, Drellden Trl-\' all~1 .51
· "Nalloral Tnll')t. Dtxle 5% •
New Bollonl4, Port.moultt Clay 49
New Co-.:onl Gl~nait, Croolan-ille 55

New ~•lnaton II, SlterWian $I
New Mlunl 1!, On Seven Hills lit
Newbury 17, Klrtlud 51
North Ollila 11, Racine S.:.uiHII"rn 5.5

Norwayne II!, RJtbnan &amp;3
,
OU Hill .U, Han nul Trael.' 13

: Pro reouhs

~

N.-w .Jer!ll'y t, NY b!landen2 (llf')
Cblcqo "· Vanceuwr:!
Welhllllolclae·'s Game!&gt;
Do.!lion I&amp; I Toronlo. 1: S5 p.m.
St. LDW111U Hartford. 1::13 p.m.
Bullalo lit Detroit, T:35 p.m.

N Lew•1!.11 Tr&amp;ad 811, Flllrbanb 67

"

It

S

A.lll.•la Ul. (]evdiUid 10.5
Se..ttk! 103, Portland IIHI
Cltleaao JDI, Dalla• &amp;I
Hou8fu•lll, Miami 93
Phoenbt JOi; O.arlotli' 103

IU
IlK

Andl"r!lrtln [ U·Il)

'*

!'lr.' ew .Jeney 111, Denwr 113

ID .(lif!) N•rth Ro)'alton (15-1)
56
Seoo..t nllll! : 1!. Warr~n Ch amplon-IK:
13. Copley fl': If. Rlc~eldRP\' ere36; u.
Ne"' Lednaton Zi; 11. (tie) Struther~(l)
llnd Cln&lt;.in•UI Mou• J'liotre DamP ( 11,25
Pach; lit Oolil!!l 17; 19. Mhvllle Te,IQ'!ii
Valley 15: 211. Galllpoll!; 1-1.
Dh· tslonlll
T~tam
Pulni!OI

I. Sherwood fo'alr"'ew {111) ( JI-0)

to 1

PhUactripllla- ~ped forward Sheflon
Jonn for lhf remainder of lhe seMon.

1. (]ncl••t1FurutPII"k(H-IJ
16
11. Akron Kuhan c13-4 )
,
li!l
9. ByenUJe Meadowhrook (14-1 J
~
tt.(tlel Buckeye S.ulhwest W 11'~01 ~

2. I"Pmbt&gt;r,111e Ea.'iitwOOd ( ~I ( 14-0)

So•• Adanlh•

Li-aplll.' (A JaM Victor Ramlrt"z coach of
Ch .-lot~ or the Gulf Coast 'U~ (AJ ,

!•

~•
PktMltlrxh -Sipd fl't'e-ar:ent ptlrher
.,' Bill L!Uidrll'n: ~i,;nt&gt;d plll'hf'f' IIIII
• f(rlt('J'ff and ~·lite her Mlltt&gt; Lt.Vallli~t n
..• l· )f'arcanlracts.
,. • Tuat." - Namtd StiUI Housh t.'Oal'h ol
.. Ok!Jlhonw. t:ity ot lhP Amt&gt;riL·an ibSOI'\11·

Old Fnrt ti1, North Ballrnrtft' 57
Oxford 'tiAlan• .. 13, FrukllniK
Pa.lnt'fO Har~y a Asht Harbor 53
Pa.lnf!lol, Kh·H!llde 5-I, .Uhl Jelfer&amp;On 53
Pt&gt;rl')'!lbul"'l .51, Millbury Lake 41
Phi1o 311, WUMw River VI'"'' 31
PoriMlOIIth Eut ttl, Porl!i Damt' SQ
Retdnlllt Eultrn 77, Kyr:er Creek II
Rh·enlalt' , .. McComb 511
Ro"lford IS. Holland Sprtnl!lleld 53
Sud)' \ 'alley 71, Mlnfl'VIl Iii
S.hrln&amp;ii-1. U!!bon 4'l
ShMy!lde 63. Bel bUrt' St do ... ~
Sbenllndoah ft, Frontier II (!ol)

sa-,. Lf'•mu 7S. Covlnlloa11

South l"rlh• U, llllllale (WVa) 55
8oulhlncto•1'2. Vlen• M&amp;lhewsiJ

Sprint catht:J, S Ch•So•lllle...,.rnll5
Stf'UbenvUir fS, Co11hocton 1t ( ot)
Sleuben\411e Ca1h U, E Uver pnol M
Stow til, CU)'AhQII. Faits S6

stn!elnboro U, "'oOIIrldlt 57
, S,flvanll S'Yiew U, Anlheltf W~ne .51
TflllllllldJI:'! 71, R11venra U
l'eiQ'II_VAlit)' 5.1, Wffllf all 51
11UinCalwrt'7t, lleltsvllleSI
Tot Ctlr 7t Norllwoed 11 ,
Tol Dt&gt;VIIblu 11, Tol Starl st

TCJI U bbty 71. OrtpaStr..ch Ia
Tol M11c::entr Ill. Tol c..-ntraf 71
Tol Rol'!l'oU. ToiWoodward il
Tol Sl l"ran d1 t'J, T ol W file II
ToiSt Jotln 81, To I Bowllher II
17, Wellavlllt 41
Trt-County N 1$, ~ Nortllrld~e 41

Tor••

Trlmhlf' il. Federal Horklq 71
Tuak,)' Calh lA, Muullefd sa Pelt' 8fl
baky Valley •· h!llaw 41
tpptr Arllncton 51, Col Watter1o0n 36
Vlnt'ent "' fll'ft'll 14, Jackaoa '70
Vinton f-GUIII)" Sl, lltl"" .U

Rio ladies record
~rd M9C victory
!VIOUNT VERNON - Starters
Ika Ann Mullins, HoUy Hastings
al)d Ann Barnitz combined scorIng efforts Tuesday to boost the
R[o Grande women's basketball
telim to victory over Mount
VE!rnon Nazarene, 70-58.
'fhe Redwomen Improved their
rerord to 9-8 and 3·2 In the
M(d-Ohlo Conference. The Lady
Cougars are tied In conference
a~ilon with Rio Grande at 3·2.
Th,elr season slate Is 6·6.
Holding its turnovers to 11 for
th4i · game, Rio Grande held the
ball for an early start and never
let• up on the hosts. Paul Swan·
soli's club gave the Redwomen a
chase and trailed 35-29 at the
half.
'through effective rebounding,
patllcularly by Hastings with 13,
Rio Grande kept Its grip on the
ga!ne' s tempo throughout the
second period. The Redwomen
ouiooarded MVNC 33-28, while
the Lady Cougars turned over the
ball 22 times. ·
Leading the scoring for Cheryl
Fielitz's club was Mullins, the
cutTent District 22 and MOC
Player of the Week, who recorded 28 points. five rebounds
and' three assists. Hastings tal·
lied 14 points and Barnltz was
credited with 10 points and rive·
rebounds.

Beth Coli and Jenni Couch led
the team In assists with four
each. From the field, the Redwomen were 44.2 percent (31-70)
and net ted five of seven attempts
at the free throw line for 71.4
percent.
The Lady Cougars' Erin Sharrock had. 20 points and led the
team In assists with six. Nicole
Bosworth added 12 points and
seven rebounds. MVNC was 40
percent on shooting &lt;24-60) and
71.4 percent at the line (10-14).
Back at Lyne Center on Saturday, the Redwomen will host
Urbana at 5:15p.m. as the second
round of women's conference
play begins.
The only MOC women's team
playing Tuesday was Walsh,
which burled Salem (W.Va.)
85·68.
Box score:
MOUNT VERNON NAZA·
RENE (U)- Susie Burke, 3-0-6;
Erin Sharrock, 8·4·20; Alcock,
3·4·10; Nicole Boswortll, 6-0-12;
Amy Featheringham, 4-Q-8. TO-

TAU! 14-18-18.
RIO GRANDE (70) - Jennl
Couch, 2·0-4; Holly Hastings,
7-0-14; Lea Ann Mullins, 11·1·3·
28; Beth CoD, 2·0-4; Tina Azbell,
1·0-2; Ann Barnltz, 4-2-10; Betsy·
Bergdoll, 1·2-0-8. TOTALS 38-3-5711.

ROCK SPRINGS - Percen· ers controlled the boards at both
tage wise, Nelsonville York's ends during the eight minute
Buckeyes outshot the Marauders span as they outrebounded the
45.4 to 33.3 from the floor and 69.2 Buckeyes 11·6.
to 63.1 at 'the line but the statistic
The score was knotted twice In
that counted was on the score·
board and that one read 55-50 In quaerter three at the 5:36 mark
favor of the home team. It was (35-35) and with 5:18 remaining
the third win of the year for the (37-37) . On both occasions, Oiler
. broke the deadlock with a pair of
Marauders.
Nelsonville scored first but tree throws and a field goal with
Meigs' Kevin Oller tied the game Burdette, Greene, Baker and
seconds later and the Marauders Powell adding their talents to
went on to build a 19·11 advan· maintain a narrow three point
tage at the end Of the first period. edge after 24 minutes of play.
N-Y went on top49-47 wlth2:32
Six different players contributed
field goals to aid In the effort with left In · the game but Powell
John Burdette getting one three snagged two offensive rebounds
on successive misses and put the
pointer during the drive.
Starting the second frame, the ball back up for a field goal and
Bucks made a stow, but steady, was fouled on the play. The free
comeback to pull to IVithin one throw attempt w,.s good and at
(23-22) at the 2:59 mark. Matt 2: 04, Meigs hied a 50-49 lead.
In the final two minutes of play
Baker's six points, plus goals by
Mike Greene, Todd PoweH and the Bucks managed but one
Ol)er kept the locals up by four at point, that on a free throw by
the 16 minute mark. The Maraud- Brian Withem. With the score at

Continued froin page 1
under .the baton of the famed Wllliam D. Revelll. He has been a ·
band director and was a Supervisor of Music for the
Montgomery County, Maryland, County Schools. At O.U. , Dr.
Damron teaches Music Education classes to prospective band
directors and conducts tile yearly Solo and Ensemble Contests.
Music for the concert will be "Americans We" march by
Cincinnatian , Henry Fillmore; "The Blue and Gray," a medley
of Civil War songs by Ohioan, Clare Grundman: and
·:Dedicatory Overture," by noted band composer, duton
Williams. Also on the program is the "James Bond Suite"
featuring theme music from several Bond movies, and "Silent
Movie Music," a humorous compOation of themes and motifs
which used to accompany the showing of silent movies .
The public is Invited tp attend.
'

52-50, Cary Betzing was fouled
By q~~&amp;rlers:
and Coach Randy Penrod called Meigs
19 14 12 10-55 ·
time to Ice the shooter. Betzing N·Y
1118 13 8-50 '
calmly went to the Une after the
The Little Marauders tritime out and sank both ends of the umphed over the young Buck·
one and one for a four point bulge eyes by a 52-41 margin. Scoring
with nine seconds to go. BalCer for Meigs were Fields with 7; .
iced the victory at the two second Wright 6; McGuire 6; Blake 10;
mar!&lt; as he hit the front end of a Van Meter Hi: Taylor 4 and
one and one for the five point Glbeaut 3.
advantage. During the final
minute of play, Nelsonville-York
shooters attempted three long
range shots, but to no avail.
Powell had 11 of Meigs' thirty
rebounds and Withem snagged 10
for the Buckeyes who totaled 24. · The Meigs Freshman squad
maintained their shooting perThe Marauders turned the ball14
centage averaging over 50 pertimes to 20 for the visitors.
MEIGS- Oiler 5·0-2·12; Powell cent for the past three games (2
5-0-3-13; Baker 6-0-3-15; Betzlng wins · 1 loss) as IIley defeated
neighboring Southern 55-37.
1·0-2-4; Greene 2-0-2-6; Burdette
The first half proved disaster·
1·1-0-5; Crooks 0-0-0-0
ous
for the Purple and. Gold as
N-Y- Withem 10-0-5-25; Eckels
they
were outscored 29-10 but .
1·0-2-4; Taylor 2-1·2-9; Wilson
they
came
back In the f)nal two
1-0-0-2; Riehl 3·0·0·6; Dean 2·0-0quarters
to
post 27 points to the
4.
Marauders 26
Coach Ron Logan poi!lted out
tile play of Bill Harless who has
led the team in scoring In tile past
two
games. Harless had 13 points
easier time of It as they blasted
and
9
rebounds against Soutllern.
the younger Buckeyes 52-25.
He
also
had high praise for the
Kim Hanning and Trlcla Baer
play
at
the
guard spots but said
scored nine each for Meigs. Amy
Rouse nailed six; . Chrissy the Marauders must improve on
Weaver, Amy Wagner and Kerl the free throw shOoting prior to
·
Black had five each; Tara tournament time.
Southern scorers were led by
Humphreys ansd Missy Nelson
each scored four; Kim Ewing R. Bailey who canned 17 points In
picked up three and Mary the loss.
SOUTHERN - Roush 1-1-2·7;
Butcher added two for Meigs.
Davis 0-0-1-1; Lisle 1·1·0-5;
CodnerO·O·l-1; Drummer0·0-1-1;
Bailey 4·1·6·17; Russell 1-0-0-2;
Proffitt 0-0-1-1; Circle 1·0·1·3.
MEIGS
Logan 2·0-2-6;
Musser 2·0-0-4; Howerton 4·0-0-8;
Hawley 3·0·0-6; Haarless 5-0-3·
13; Haynes 0-1-0-3; Rupe 3-0-2-8;
Hovatter 0-0-1-1; Mash 1-0-0-2;
to find out where we're at."
Caruthers 2·0-0-4; Wyatt 0·0-0-0.
Kn lght found out In December
he had to revamp his team.
Michigan Coach Bill Frieder
must now adjust in the midst of
the Big Ten season.
.
Michigan opened with victories over Vanderbilt, Memphis
State and Oklahoma in Hawaii
but then returned to a home
schedule loaded with Michigan's
Mid-American Conference
teams plus Grambling, Soutll
Dakota State, Tampa and Youngstown State.
"You always have a chance (to
win the Big Ten), but It's going to
be tough now," Frieder said.
"We opened 1-2 in 1985 and then
won 15 straight. But you'd have to
say Illinois and Indiana are
c.e rtalnly In the driver's seat.
"I'm not going to panic. I still
like my team. rm not going .!o
throw in the towel. We'll go on a
mission. We've got a lot to
accomplish."
.J
•

Meigs frosh top
Southem, 55-37

-

high honors with 13 each.
Scoring:
r
MEIGS- JodyTaylor3-2-8; B.
Ewing 4·5·13; Smith 2-1-5; Jen·
nifer Taylor 3-3-9; Newsome
3-0-6; Carr 1-0-2; Nelson 1·0-2; K.
Ewing 1-0-2.
N-Y- Dupler 1-1-3; McDonald
3·1-7; Richards 4-3-11; Fuller
4-5-13; Barber 1·1·3; Schultz
0-2-2; Pancake 3-0·6.
The reserve squad had an

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Tuesday; Middleport . at · 12:01 a.m. to Riverside
Apartments for Barb Bolin to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 8: 51 a.m. back to Riverside Apartments for Barb
Bolin to Veterans MemoriaJ.Hospital; Bolin was transferred at
11:45 a.m. to Ohio State University Hospitals; Rutland at 12:23
p.m. to Meigs Mine No.2 for William Crabtree to Holzer Medical
Center; Racine and Bashan Fire Departments all: 36 p.m. to a
fire at a camper owned by Terry Hysell on Smith Ridge Road;
Middleport Fire Department at 6:06 p.m. to a brush fire on
Story's Run Road; Rutland at 9:43 p.m. transported Terry
Warner from an auto accident on Carpenter Hill to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital.

position. Three of those five were
guards.
''This may be his best coaching
job," said commentator Dick
Vitale.
Knight is ' going; with center
Eric Anderson (his firstfulltime
freshman starter since Isiah
Thomas) and Brian Sloan at
forward. The guards are Jay
Edwards, Lyndon Jones and Joe
Hillman.
Timing of the switch was
important, too. VIrginia Com·
monwealth, Santa Clara,
Arkansas- Lit Ue Rock and TexasEl Paso were coming to Assembly Hall. This was after a stretch
that included Syracuse, North
Carolina, Miami (Ohio), Louis·
ville and Notre Dame.
"We found out we're not good
enough to play good teams,"
Knight said. "I don't mind
getting bealln December. I !Ike

'

A stolen truck from Cleveland has been recovered by the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department, according to a report from
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
On Tuesday, the department received a call that a pickup
truck had been stripped and cut up and that the cab had been
dumped in the creek on Sharon Hollow In Lebanon Township.
Responding to the scene, deputies discovered the cab of a
gray 1987 Chevrolet 4 X 4. The vehicle lndentlflcation number
was located and a computer. check revealed .that the truck had
been stolen AprO 8 last year In Cleveland.
Deputies are following up on several bits or information found
at the scene.
·
Sheriff Soulsby also reports that Items taken in a November
1988 breaking and entering at tile Ronald Collins residence In
Rutland have been recovered.
· According to the report, Charles Burton, Wright St.,
Pomeroy, was on Parkinson Road near Langsvl1le when he
discovered a weedeater, a 10-speed bicycle and a push mower.
The good condition of the items aroused Burton's suspicion and
he notified the sheriff's office.
Since an Insurance claim has already been paid, the
Insurance company will be notified by the sheriff's department
of t])e recovery, so that the company may advise authorities as
to the dlspostion of the items.
The Tuesday arrest of Martin.Shuler, Route 1, Langsville, has
also been reported. Shuler Is being held for the U.S. Navy on a
charge of desertion. Naval authorities from Philadelphia,
Penn. are to take Shuler Into custody later this week.

Tiffin edges Redmen
67-62 in road·contest
6-4 starting forward who scored
24 points in the game, broke
through In the early part of the
second period to give the game
back to Tiffin. Assisted by
forward Steve Magill, Birdsall
built Tiffin's biggest lead of the
night (49·42).
But Rio guard Jimmy Kearns
exploded for six points, including
a 3-polnter, to again silce the
margin to one. After tying at 49,
Tiffin guard Thad Patrick
pumped in a pair of baskets to put
the hosts ahead.
• Rio regained the lead once •
more on a Kearns Up-In (57-56),
but Birdsall served up two points
to put Tiffin In charge again.
Down 65-62 In the last minute,
Schubert sank a . 3-pointer but
was whistled by of!iclals lor
travelling, erasing a move that
would have tied up the game.
Kearns led the Redmen In
scoring with 17 points. Antllony
Raymore added 15, Tidwell had
13 and Larry Benning posted 10.•
Other high scorers for Tl !fin
were Patrick, 10; Don Williams,
nine; Magill, seven; and Tyrone
Trbovich, six.
The Redmen are at Wilmington Thursday at 7:30p.m. and are
hosting Malone Saturday at 7:30
p.m. Tiffin (11·9, 3-6) faces Walsh
at home Saturday at 7:30p.m.
A Mike Tidwell bucket and a
Iri other MOC games from
pair of free throws from John Tuesday, Malone (13·8, 9-0) ceLambcke put Rio ahead 34·29· mented its hokl on the conference
with 48 seconds left. A foul cailed top spot by defeating Cedarville
on Tidwell placed Tiffin center
(12-9,.3-!\) 97-84; Mount Vernon
Dale Kuhl to the line for a pair of Nazarene (10-10, 4-3) posted an
successful charity shots, narrow- 83-75 win over Walsh (8-12, 2-7);
lqg the halftime score to 34-31 In and Urbana (14-7, 7-1) cakeRio's favor.
walked to a 96-59 victory over
Dorsey Birdsall, the Dragons'
Ohio Dominican (0-18, 0-7).

TIFFIN - At the, end of 40
minutes, the scoreboard read
67-62 In favor of Tiffin and under
other circumstances, it would
have capped oft a disheartening
night for the Rio Grande
Redmen.
But In spite.pf the loss Tuesday
at Gillmor Student Center, Coach
John Lawhorn said the game
"was the best we've played since
the Christmas break.
"I can live with the effort we
put up tonight," he said.
The Redmen, now 14·8 and 4·4
In the Mid-Ohio Conference,
bounced back from last wee·
kend's defeat on the road to
Cedarville to eitller lead Tiffin
throughout or ·dog the Dragons'
steps when they didn't have the
advantage.
"Tiffin's an awfully good bas·
ketball team," Lawhorn said.
"That created some problems,
but I think we played well."
Although Jim Hammond's club
broke out to lead by 12-2 in the
first period, Rio Grande slipped
behind to trail by one (21-20) with
less than nine minutes remain·
ing. Tiffin stayed ahead by two,
but a Rio basket tied It at 27 and a
3-polnter by guard/ forward Brad
Schubert handed the Redmen the
lead (30-27.).

John F. Stacy: 81, Ravenna,
died Jan. 17 at Robinson Memor·
Ia! Hospital following a short
illness.
', Mr, Stacy was born Sept. 18,
1907 in Kentucky, the son of the
iate Anderson and Victoria Far·
ley Stacy. He had lived in
Ravenna since 1!140, and retired
'n 1970 from the Ravenna Arsenal
y;here he was a foreman and
\"orked for the road and grounds
crew.
· Survivors include a son, Donald, of1 Ravenna: . four grand·
children: brothers, Roy of Ra· Carlos Lynch
'Venna; Erenst and Anderson of
Virginia, and William of Idaho,
Carlos Worth Lynch, 80, of
and four sisters, Mae Hines. · Pomeroy, a former resident or
Springfield; Lutchie Riggs of Athens, died Wednesday morn·
Pomeroy; Annabelle Bebout of ing in Veterans Memorial Hospi·
McConnelsville, and Virginia tal, Pomeroy following an ex·
Kauffman of Ravenna.
tended illness.
, Besides his wife, Hazel , who
Funeral arrangements will be
&lt;jied in May, 1987, and his announced by the Hughes Fun·
parents, he was preceded in eral Home in Athens.
death by three brothers and two
sisters.
Clarification
Services were held at 2 p.m .•
last Thursday at the Shorts
Michael Lloyd Burke, :18, Rt. 3"
Funeral Home, Ravenna Chapel,
Gal Upolls, an employe of the
and burial was in Maple Grove · General James M. Gavin Plant,
Cemetery, Ravenna.
at Cheshire, is not the Michael
Burke men"tianed In the Meigs
Harold Ohlinger
County Common Pleas Court
· Harold C. Ohlinger, 79, Letart, Story on Page 5 of Monday's The
(Broad · Run community) died Daily Sentinel. The paragraph
Tuesday, Jan. 24, 1989, at Holzer read: Michael Burke, (no age or
Medical Center Hospital in Gal- address given) h)ls been found
guilty In a contempt of court
lipolis.
order
filed Nov. 18, 1988, and
He was bam Sept. 22, 1909 in
finetl
.$500
in an action against
the Broad Run communitY,. a son of
him
by
the
BDL Gas &amp; Oil Co.
the !ale Joseph A. and Millie Sarah
Roush Ohlinger.
He was also preceded in death by
a daughter, Mary K. O~linger; three
brothers, Joseph A., Hennan
Donald and Lester K., and one sister, Mary A. Ohlinger.
He was a fanner and auended the
.Broad Run Zion Lutheran Church.

... g'we them the
gift of a lifetime.

TVC standings
TVC STANDINGS
(Varsity only)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Trlmble ............. ll 1 870 751
Wellston ............ 9 2 801 687
Belpre ...... .'........ 7 5 778 727
Vinton ............... 7 5 770 718
Miller ................ 4 7 707 · 752
Alexander ......... 4 7 651 707
Nels-York .......... 4 8 717 684
Fed-Hocking ...... 3 8 678 769
Meigs ......... ....... 2 9 785 782
Tuesday's results: ·
Wellston 51 Alexander 35
Vinton County 59 Belpre 54
Trimble 76 Federal Hocking 70
Meigs 55 Nels-York 50
Miller -Open
Friday's 1ames:
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Meigs at Wellston
Miller at Vinton County
Nelsonville-York at Trimble
Bel pre - Open

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Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T .................. ....... ........ 30%
Ashland 011 ........................ 34 Y,
Bob Evans .......................... l4~
Charming Shoppes .............. 15%
City Holding Co ............ ....... 19
Federal Mogul..: ........... .. ..... 50
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 49~
:Heck's .......... : ...................... %
K~ay Centurion .................... 14Y,
Lands' End ......................... 29li.
Limited Inc ........................ 29\4
Multimedia Inc .................... 78
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
RObbins &amp; Myers ................ . 17
S!toney's Inc ........................ 814
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6%
Worthington Ind ................. 2.'l\4

• s.l.cf from our low moD
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R.JOHNS,LID
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RINGS

Friday through Sunday
Fair during the period, with
highs ranging from the upper 30s
to the middle 40s Friday, from
' the 40s to the lower 50s Saturday,
and from the middle 30s to the
middle 40s Sunday. Early morn·
lng lows will be between 25 and 30
Friday and Sunday and In .the 30s
Saturday,
·

Pomeroy ·court news

25/$6.50 ......... .
25/$7. 50 .. """"
25/$7.00 .. " "'"'
25/$7.50 ......... .
10/$5.00 ......... .
25/8.00 ........ ..
501$14.00 ......... .
72/ $20.00 ........ ..

.......... White Pine
.. ........ Scotch Pine
.......... Black Locust
.: ........ Black Walnut
.......... While Birch
.......... Backyard Packet
.......... English Ivy
.......... Crown Vetch

NAME .................... .. ......... .................... Phone No ... ............ .
ADDRESS .................................... .......... Phone No .............. .

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Edward Moore, Route 143, Pome- ••
roy, $63 and costs, disorderly ·.
conduct; Charles Jones. Middleport, $43 and costs, failure to :
yteld; Kenneth Green, Rutlend, :
$63 and costs, open container.
:
Forfeiting bonds were John M. ·
Davis, Pomeroy, R. D., $64 on '
speeding; Robert B:atfleld, $47 on
speeding; Monte Chapman, •
Route 4, Pomeroy, ~63, squealing
tires; aild George Warner,
Pomeroy $63 and costs, expired •
license.

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Hospital news
Veteraos Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Flossie
Hysell/ Rutland; Raymond
Pierce, IJ.aclne; John Manley,
Pomeroy; Mark Duerr, Syracuse; Michael Hubbard, Syra·
cuse; Leland Saxton, Pomeroy;
Stephen Hoffman, Long Bottom;
Darrell Taylor, Racine.
Tuesday discharges- Tablth~
Phillips, Reva Johnson, Carolyn
Atkins, Louise Eden.

licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to William Michael Broth·
ers, 19, Paris Island, S.C., and
Jody Lyn Levingston, 18, Rutland; James Paul Lambert, 42,
Pomeroy, and Linda Jean Grei·
fensteln, 39, Pomeroy.
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Free clothing days
Free clothing days at the Meigs
Cooperative Parish, 311 Condor
St., Pomeroy, will continue
through Thursday from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. A wide assortment of
clothing for men, women and
children is available. For more
information, call 992-7400.

To meet February 7
Past Matrons of Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, Order of Eastern Star, will meet Feb. 7 at the .
home of · Emma Clatworthy.
Members are asked to· bring a
homemade baked Item or hand·
made craft ltem"for a Valentine's
Day gift exchange. There will be
a catered dinner prior to the
meeting at 6 p.m. Price of the
dinner Is $6. Any member wish·
ing to make a reservation for
dinner Is asked to call. Twila
Childs at 992-6188 by Feb. 1.

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES
STAUING FEB. 6ih
PHONE 446-0699
GAWPOLIS~ OHIO

· Revival underway

THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP
Are You Still Paying
. Bills From- Christmas?

A revival Is In progress at the
Silver Memorial Freewill Bap·
tlst Church, Second Ave., Ka·
nauga. Rev. Andrew Parsons
will be preaching on the Seven
Seals in the Book of Revelations.
Services start at 7: 30 each
evening through Saturday. Eve·
ryone welcome.

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Square dance Friday

$8415 UL!PIICE

- •1000

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Are You Worried About
How You're Gojng.J.L
Pay Your '88 Taxes?

A square dance will be held
Friday night at the V.F.W. Post
in Tuppers Plains. Entertain·
ment will be by Kathy Rose,
Wanda and Asa Boring, and
Alvin Chutes. Donations at . the
door, $2 for adults and $1 for
children. Dances will be held
through May.. Alcoholic bever·
ages are prohibited.

Well! . . . we have good
news for you! You have
always saved money
when you shopped our
stores, and now we will
give you CASH. Family
Cash that is! You will
save even more on each
purchase you make.
Watch for our sale fiyer
next week introducing
this program.

Home othce Col•,..,1', ,., Ot..o

(ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEfORE 3:00P.M.)

DINNER PDR POUR

Survivors include his wife,
Nelda L. Ohlinger; two daughters,
Mrs. Thomas (Martha) Peyton,
Girard, Pa., Mrs. Donald (Anna M.)
Hudson. Southside; two sons. John
W. and Charles D., both of Letart;
seven graiidchildrcn; three great"
grandchildren.
Service will be Friday at I p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral Home
wiLh the Rev. George Weirick and
Rev. Bill Skeen officiating.
Burial will be in the Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call Thursday, from
7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

slippery In the western and
northern portions of Kansas .
early Wednesday, and dense fog
was expected to develop across
much of the state.

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

Seedlings available for spring plantings

..;.....--Area deaths-John Stacy

Meanwhile. freezing ''drizzle
Colorado where 1 Inch was
reported filte Tuesday In Akton. and light snow fell late Tuesday
In addition, 3 inches of new over portions of the Dakotas,
snow was on the ground early Nebraska and Kansas .
Roads were , ex peeled to be
Wednesday at Grand Junction,
Colo., and 2 Inches fell at Limon.
In New Mexico, a heavy-snow
warning was Jn effect WednesSouth Central Ohio
day for the northern mountairu;,
Tonight: Rain, with a low in the
and ·snow was possible for all
upper 40s. Soutll winds 10 to 2lJ
other mountains In tile state, the
mph. The chance of rain Is 100
NWS said.
percerii. ,
A heavy snow warning also
· Thursday: Rain ,or drizzle,
was in effect for the southwes 1 with highs near 55 then falUng to
· mountains of Colorado, with3 to6
near 40. The chance of rain is 100
Inches of snow forecasted for , percent.
other parts of the state as well.
Extended Forecast
In Arizona, the White Mountains were again living up to their
name, prompting forecasters to
Issue a snow advisory for the
Two men were tined on
peaks good throughout the day . .
charges of petty theft and given
Slightly warmer temperatures
Dance set Saturday ·
jail sentences when they ap·
caused scattered showers and
peared in the court" of Pomeroy
Round and square d'a nclng will thunderstorms over southwest
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday
be featured Satruday evening, 8 Oklahoma and the northwest and
night.
to 12 midnight, at the. Racine central portions of Texas. Hall
Fined on the charge were Greg
American Legion. Mus!~ by the measuring a halt-Inch across fell
Hicks, Pomeroy, and Greg
True Country Ramblers. Eve- early Wednesday at Altus Air
Hicks, Pomeroy, $213 and .costs
ryone welcome. ·
Force Base, Okla.
with each being sentenced to
three days In jail. ,
Donald C. Poole, Middleport,
was fined $20, no seat belt;
Charles Brown, · Middleport, $50
Four defendants were tined on
and costs, along with r('stllution Lodge to meet
' charges of. disorderly conduct In
for
destruction ·of prop ertv:
the court of Middleport Mayor
The annual inspect ion of Shade
Weaver, New Haven, $15
Darlene
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
River Lodge No. 453, Chester,
and costs, speeding; Rogrr K.
Deem, Middleport, $10 and costs, will be Saturday. Dinner will be
( Fined $50 and costs each on the
running a stop sign; and Jack served at 6: 30 p.m. and the lodge
charge were Richard Davis and
Spires,
Syracuse, $10 and costs, meetihg will open at 7: 30. Work
Kim Davis, Pomeroy; Chris
parking on the sidewalk, and $25 will be in the Fellowcraft Degree.
Musser, $50 and costs, and Keitll
All Master Masons are invited to
and costs for expired tags. ·
Musser, $25 and costs. Keith
attend.
AU members or Shade
Forfeiting bonds Ill the court
Musser was also fined $100 and
River
Lodge
are asked to bring a
were Emerson L. Little, Rus·
costs on a des !ruction of village
homemade
pie,
If possible.
sell'sPoint,$450onDWI; Tony A.
property charge, and $100 and
Chapell, Pomeroy, $50, failure to
costs on~ charge of assaulting a
control his vehicle, and Dixie I. · Hymn sing Su'n day
pollee officer.
McDaniel, Racine, $41, speeding.
Others fined in the court were
The Churches of ChristChristian Churches will have a
fifth Sunday hymn sing at the
each
of
Scotch
Pine,
Lilac,
The Meigs Soil and Water
Zion Church of Christ on Sunday
Conservation Dis b'lct Ladles Forsythia, Redosler Dogwood at 7:30p.m. Each congregation is
Auxiliary will again be offering and White Birch.
Invited to share a musical
Ground cover plants av,.nable number along with congregafor sale, quantity bundles of tree
seedlings and ground cover include English Ivy, 50 plants for tional singing, devotion and
$14, and Crown' Vetch, 72 plants communion. The public is In·
plants for spring planting.
The selection of plants does not for $20.
vlted. Zion Church Is located five
Orders for the seedlings and and one-half miles north of Route
Include any plants which are
ground cover packets will be 7 on Route 143.
Mkely to spread or become a
nuisance. Each should encour· taken until March 15 or until
age wildlife. control erosion, o_r quantities run out. Three see- Seeks foreclosur.e
dlings and ground cover plants
beautify your area. ·
have been ordered in certain
McArthur Savings and Loan
This year, the District is
amounts, so orders will be taken Co., McArthur, has filed a
offering quan tlty bundles of 25
only until March 15 or until foreclosure action In Meigs
tree seedlings. The District also
quantities run out.
County Common Pleas Court
has the ever popular backyard
Tree seedlings and ground against Clair A. Turner, Middlepacket of 25 seedlings for $8. The
cover plants should be ready for port, and Shirley Y. Turner,
backyard packet contains five
pickup around April 1.
Wellston.

Middleport court news

.Stolen truck recovered

Some feel Knight may be f;lomg his
best coaching Job ever this season
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sports Writer
Michigan won Its flrst11 games
and 14 out of 15 playing a
December schedule soft as a
cupcake.
The Wolverines are starting to
pay for such luxury.
They have dropped three of
their last four to drop to 3-3 in the
Big Ten and 15·4 overall. The
latest setback came at home
Monday night, a 71-70 loss to
Indiana. The Wolverines missed
two shots in the final six seconds,
giving Indiana, 16·4 and 6-0, Its
13th straight victory.
"I don't care if! lose a game in
December," Indiana Coach Bob
Knight said. ''It means nothing to
me.''
After Indiana gave up 100
points in three of four games and
a 3·4 start, Knight went with his
five ·b est players, regardless of

By Untied Press International
WJdespread rain and snow
moved across the Plains and the
Southwest states early Wednesday, the National Weather Ser·
vice said, whl!e snow and freez.
lng drizzle was .scattered. across
northern· states find parts of the
Midwest.
Mountains In the Soutllwest
received a heavy dose of winter,
with 8 Inches of new snow
reported at the ski resort on
Sunrise Mountain In eastern
Arlzon~. forecasters said.
A foot of snow fell In the
soutllwest mountains of Colorado, and anotller.6 to 12 inches of
snow was expected to fall Wednesday. Lighter amounts of sno~
also fell in parts of eastern

EMS has seven calls Tuesday

Meigs girls down Buckeyes, 4745
Meigs' Lady Marauders continued to stay in the run for the
TVC !Qpo spot as the varsity
posted a narrow 47-45 win over
Nelsonville-York.
Down by five at the half, the
Marauders narrowed · it to one
after three quarters and then
outscored the Buckeyes 12·9 in
the final frame for the victory.
Beth Ewing, of Meigs, and B.
Fuller, Nelsonville, tledforgame

The Daily Sentinel. Page-6

Poniaoy-Middleport, Ohio

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=MCnJRER'S

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Prescription Shop
992-6669

2 71 North Second

HURRY! RElATE ENDI MARCH 10,-

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·Middleport, Ohio

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Wednesday. January 26, 1989 '

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
·solo
. DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( ~;:~:~':!)
MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER'S LICENSE

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r ~emendous . j9b.!
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WE WOULD LIKE·TO .EXPRESS-OUR APPRECIATION TO
OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS WI .'THESE GREAT SPECIALS!

R. • Produets·

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FRYERS
CHICKEN·
Fry~r

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Baked ·Ham
lb.

MICHIGAN NO.1 .

Russet
Potatoes

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$ 69

Cinnamon Rolls

: Practices for spdng rally to be
held on March 11 at New
lJexlngton were announced when
District 13, Daughters of Amer·
lea, met recently at the Chester
hall.
· : Eileen Clark, district associate
cpunc!lor, presided at the meet·
ing with .a report on Friendship
nlght being given by Janice
l;'awson, district secretary. A
report was · also given by Opal ·
t!ollon, district treasurer.
·
• It was noted that Betty Wolfe,
oistrlct councilor of Perry Couneli, fractured her right knee In a
1~1 recently.
Esther Harden, distrfct 13
qeputy, spoke briefly reminding
members to get their gifts ready

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+ pkg.

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Chicken
Snack Box

Herb gardening designs ~ere
disussed by Linda McCoy of
Ravenswood at the recent meet·
ing of the River Valley Herbalists
held at the Long Bottom Com·
munlty Center.
Ms. McCoy suggested that
herb gardens be·planted close to
t~e kitchen and that fragrance, .
culinary uses, and everlasting
flOwers being included. She said
tllese will attract birds, bees and
butterflies.
Mrs. Larry Hili presided at the
n)eetlng during which time two
spring projects .were discussed.
T·he herb of the month report
glven by Sue Hayman was on
uses of different mints.
, Increased membership was
discussed and it was noted that
anyone Interested in herb gar·
· dening,
men and women,
all
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SNOW WHITE

Cauliflower
Oolden ·
$129
Ripe
.Large
Bananas
Head

4/*1
40+ Off

Label

_______

It's lln\e for membership rene- .
wals In the Pomeroy Merchants
Association·. When you have your ·
payment ready just give VIckie a
ring at Buttons and Bows,
!)92·5177, and she'll pick It up or
you can drop It by her business
establishment on E. Main St.
If you are in need of clothing or

know of a family In need, do keep
in mind that the SJ)lvation Army
will observe free clothing day on
Thursday from 10 a.m. until 12
nOon at the Atmy headquarters
on Butternut Ave.
All area
residents in need of clothing ·a re ·
more than welcome.
It's Girl Scout cookie time
again -aren't they delicious so buy some cookies from your
lavor!te girl scout and keep her
smiling.
·

for the various tables f~Ptherally
which will be hosted by Percy
Council.
Refreshments were served by
Guiding Star Council, Syracuse.
f:lelen Wolf was pianist for the
meeting. Next practice was ·
announced for March 5 at New
Lexington. Others at tending
were Mary Moose, Perry Coun·
ell; Belly Biggs, Bet!Y Spencer,
Margaret Cotternt, Guiding Star
Council; Faye Kirkhart, Betty
Young, Elizabeth Hayes, Ethel
Orr, M.arcia Keller, Esther
Smith, Dorothy Ritchie, Thelma
White, Erma Cleland, Jo Ann
Baum, Mary K. Holter, Chester
Council.

Herb club meets recently

(lnclud•• Broasted Chicken, Slaw, Roll)

LB.

and support is becoming more _
and more prevalent. Merchants
contribute various Items to en·
hance the dances - things like
food and"door prizes. One establishment - Pleasant Valley.
Hospital - sent along a donation
of $500 for use In continuing the
program.
Pomeroy . Business Womari
Clarice Krautter comments: "I
think the dances afe a wonderful
actfv!ty for our · young people
what with the exceilenr ch~.per·
oning. We don't have many
actlvltles here to offer the young
people and this Is, at least, one
supervised outlet."
·. Iva, of course, has had some
good help as the dances moved
along and especially from Shir·
ley Yoder, Barb Wilson, and
Tammy Searles· who have
plodded steadily along in getting
t!le support of business people.
It you feel that you want to help
with the successful program In
any way, just get in touch with
......
Mrs. Sisson.

P of A meeting held

Softy

1S LB. BAO

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· -, By BOB HOEFLICH
Feb. 18 will mark the first
anniversary of the beginning of
the teen dances
at Pomeroy Vii·
lage Hall Audit·
or!urn to provl!)e
something tor
teen-agers ofthe
a(ea to do.
Many times as
many. as 300 teens pack into the
small auditorium so It does get a .
bit crowded at Urnes but the.
young people se!lm to enjoy it.
There are chaperones and
· rules Involved and the young
p~ple don't seem to mind that
either - and the dances do
p(ovlde something for them to
do.
It's taken a lot of grit to tackle
the tremendous job of staging the
dances and handling them well.
Iva . Sisson has been the big
cl)argajlllld she deserves a lot of
credit for her role In providing
t~e activity for the y()ung people.
She arranges to get In good disc
jockeys. and she sees that the
audliorium Is decorated to make
the dances festive
events. She '
.
plans special activities to mark
occasions.
·
There have been· some problems, of course. Iva and her
group have asked that young
people attending be in their teens ·
- and finally had to lay'down the
law that young·people not 13 or
older just would not be admitted
to the dances.
And, of course, there Is the
weekly chore of making sure that
the dances are well chaperoned
by responsible people. Several
times appeals have had to be
issued to get enough to do the job.
Now with 300 teens attending the
dances surely, there should be
plenty of parents around to fill
the chaperone spots.
As the dances near their first
ai:miversary. public recognition

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CHICKEN

Harrisonville·
.
happenings

.

Anna Haye1 of Cheshire with Dick Vaughan of
Vaughan '• (;ardlnal, the fir&amp;t of 13 Winner&amp;.

Pepsi-Cola .

$ 99 t4P••c...
t-1~.
•

Cri•PV Serve

Bacon

Wednesday, Janu.-y 25, 1989 .
Page 7

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&amp;!at of the bend

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The Daily Sentinel

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·ages, are invited to attend the
meeting.
.
Nexr meeting Jm be held
Tuesdllv. Feb. 7. at the Dorcas
' Church. in RacUte. The meeting is
open for public participation. .

Quote of the day .
By United l".-ess International
Serial sex killer Theodore
Bundy, whoconfessedtomurder·
ing dozens of young women,
shortly before he was executed in
Florida's electric chair: ·
· "I'd like you to give my love to
my family and friends."

----Peopkinthenews------~----------~
By KEN FRANCKLING
UnUed Press International
· LIGHTS ON LUMINARIES: In a ceremony~! stunning ·
anti-climax, Andrew Lloyd Webber, supreme money-making
genius of the stage musical,· switched on lights to Illuminate the
newly restored facade of the historic London theater he owns.
His singing wife, Sarah Brightman, was at his side.
At a reception afterward, Prince Edward, Queen Elizabeth's
third son and a lowly employee of Lloyd Webber's Really Useful
Theater company. spent most of his t(me chatting with a squad
of London firemen, unaccountably present with their yellow
helmets pUed on the floor.
Luminaries like TV . personality and Richll.rd Burton
biographer Melvin Brarg1 Sotheby's chief Lord Gowrie and
theatrical producer Cameron Macintosh raised champagne
toasts to Lloyd Webber's $2.9 million refurbishment of the
exterior of the Palace theater, built In 1891 by Richard D'Oyly
Carte. Lloyd Webber bought It In 1983. ·
· ·
At the Monday night ceremony, he called it ''tjlis wonderful,
wonderful Victorian monument, a· work of art in Its own right."
He said Interior renovations cannot start until Macintosh' s "Les
Mlse,rabies," one of the few smash-hit musicals these days
which Lloyd Webber did not write, ends Its run, If It ever does.
WILL THEY OVERNIGIIT IT?: " Doonesbury" creator
Garry Trudeau ffi&lt;\Y get a nasty letter from.a lawyer for Federal
Express Corp. A recent comic strip featured Zonker watching a
televiSion show that contained the dialogue, "Next, she Federal
Expressed heJ:, husband's head to his lover .. ."
"Federal Express" and "Fed Ex" are service marks, said
Les Bishop, attorney for the air delivery company in Memphis,
. Tenn. A service mark is "no different than a trademark other
than we're a service company as opposed to a manufacturing ·
I "

· Mr.andMrs.PatrickLoweand
Mr. and Mrs. Mlcbael .Lowe and·
baby of Akron, Roy Lowe and a
THURSDAY
friend from Columbus visited
RACINE - Racine American
Nellie and Ruth Lowe recently.
Legion Auxiliary will meet 7p.m.
Darold' Graham, South Carol·
Thursday at the post home.
Ina, spent the weekend here with
his mother, Bessie Graham.
REEDSVILLE '"" Riverview ·
Mrs. Veronica Wright and
Garden Club wlll meet Thursday,
family of Arizona are guests of ' 7:30p.m., at the home of Maxine
hl!r . grandmother, Mrs. NelUe
Whitehead. Margaret Gross·
Lowe.
·
nlckle will be co-hos tess. ·
'Mr. and Mrs. William D. Scott,
FRIDAY
!llelsonvllle, were dinner guests
POMEROY - Round and
of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley.
square dancing will be featured
other recent jllnner guests of the
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. , at the Senior
Stanleys were Mr. and Mrs.
Citizens Center In PomerOY,
Steven Stanley, Athens, and Mr.
Music by the True Co11ntry ,
and Mrs. Harry Ross, Ona, W.
Ramblers. Admilllon $2. The"
Va.
public Ia invited. Bring snacks
1drs. Winnie Neal recently
for the snack table.
at1ending the funeral of her
brother, l)(&gt;lbert Cline, The
Butera al-ai
Plains.
EAST MEIGS - Anyone Inter·
Mrs. Winnie Neal visited her
es ted in pardclpatlng In the
sis~r. Ethel Wright, Dresden.
Eastern Alumni besketballgame,

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Episcopal Church .leaders disagree
over impaa of first woman bishop
BOSTON (UP!) - Episcopal
leaders disagreed over how the
first woman bishop In the history
of the Anglican Church would be
received, just as they disagreed
during four months of acrlmon•
lous .debate leading up to her
approvaL
Church . leaders nationwide
· gave final approval Tuesday to
sei~t . the Rev. Barbara C.
Harris as bishop to help run the
nation:s largest Episcopal'
diocese.
Sofl'!e 6,000 people are expected
to witness her"consecration Feb.
11 at the Hynes Convention
Center in Boston, according to
Rev. Ma~y D. Glasspoot, wllo
nominated HarriS ·at the Sept. 2~
convention, where she was nar·
rowty elected .over five other
candidates.
,
"People will .~e getting on
planes and trains and cars and
heading to Boston for a wonder·
lui celebration,' ' Glass pool said.
"This will be very healing and
. reconciling for many women who
have fe!tlocked out of the church
for 2,000 years."
However, others, including
Rev. Jerome · Polltzer of the
Ptayerbook Society, felt the
approval of Harris would mean
further dissent within the
church.
.
"Her consecration will have
very deep and serious ramiflca·
lions," PoUtzer said.
. 'We will be out of communion
with the Archbishop Of Canter·
bury (Robert Runc!e), who has
said he w!li not accept a woman
bishop, and acting out of concert
with the other provinces of the
church,' at least 22 of which have
expressed opposition, " Polltzer
said.
Supporters and opponents of
Harris's nomination had argued
their positions vigorously, show·
erlng church officials with pas!·
lion papers that denounced her
politics as leftist and anti·
American or hailed her stands on
social issues from gay rights to
black consciousness.
After ail the debate, !he Epis·
copalian Diocese of Massachu·

Community ·calendar
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE ~ Syracuse VII·
!age Council will meet In re·
ces!ieQ sessh&gt;n Wednesday, 7
p.n\., at village hall.

t

company."
The company is worried It could lose Its service mark If the ·
use of "Fed Ex" or "Federal Express" as verb.s becomes a
~ammo~ way of refe~ring to any form of express delivery.
What I d like to do is get In ctmtaci,J'ilh Mr. Trudeau and ask
him not to do that in the future," Bishop said.
NOT SUNNY ENOUGH: Kathleen Turner has turned qown
!~e role of comatose n\l!~ionairess Sunny von Bulow a key role In
Reversal of Fortune, the story of Clau.li von Bulow's legal
tribulations. ''She .preferred a more lively role," Harvard Law
. professor Alan Derllbowltz told the Boston Herald.
Dershowitz wrote the book about von Bulow's second trial, Oil'
which the movie is based.
TAVERN TEAMMATES: Jovan's bar in Birmingham.
Mich. , boasts two celebrity employees. Ex·heavywelght boxing
champ Leon Spinks is tending bar and.former Detroit Tigers
pitcher Denny McLain is playing tunes on the synthesizer five
nights a week at the suburban Detroit night spot.
On Monday, the two former big names In Detroit sports met
for the first time. "I told Denny that If anybody gives him any
trouble, I'll punch them out," Spinks joked.
TR~ IN OBIT·WRrriNG: At . his request, Henry M.
Johns!Aln s newspaper obituary Identified him as a ·~sea man,
entrepreneur, Inventor, probationer and felon ." Johnston. who
battled the Internal Revenue Service fo.t years in a business tax
dispute in which he pleaded guilty to felony charges, died Jan. lO
In Lincoln, Maine. Johnston also wanted the words "proba·
!loner" and "felon" to appear on his gravestone.
.
·
''We haven't decided yet whether to do it or not," son Daniel
Johns!Aln said. "But we probably will. He was very prouq of the '
fact that he was aself·made man. To have the IRS come in and
basically try to tear him down, he wanted people to remember
that."

on Feb. 7 should attend a meeting
and practice at the high school at
1 p.m. Sunday . A fee ofS10 will be
charged to play and the fee will
be collected on 'Sunday before
practice. Those interested in
playing but cannot attend Sun·
day's meeting are asked to
contact Tim Baum.
Open dance

POMEROY Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club is sponso,rlng an open dance
on Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. Caller will be John
Waugh of GaHipoUs. All western
square dancers are invited.
Free clo&amp;hln&amp; days
POMEROY- The Meigs Coop-.
eratlve Pariah. 311 Condor St.,
Pomeroy, Is sponsoring tree
clothing days Tuesday through
Thursday, Jan. 24-26, from 9a.m.
.to 3 p.m. A wide assortment of
clothing · for men, women and
children Ia available. For more
lnfonnatlon, call 992·7400. ·

Crystal-ized
Grammy awards

I

..

LOS ANGELES (UP!) -For·
set ts said Harris received the edged that "then: have been
toe
third year
In a row , comedian:
.
necessary approval from the some exceptions to the prevail·
majority of bi,shops who head the lng ~pirit of prayerful discussion Billy Crystal will be the host for::
the 31st Annual Grammy .
118 dioceses across the country . and sensitivity."
·
Harris. 58, wlil serve as suffra·
"These days ha"E!,· not been Awards, to be telecast Feb. 22:·
easy,
and I have ···had the from Los ·Angeles.
gan, or assistant, to Massachu·
setts Bishop Ilavld Johnson, who opportunity to reflect more than
" Crystal also will be on hand '" ·
oversees the nation's largest once that growth does not corriEl
Jan. · 12 when the National : :
Episcopal diocese with 190 par·
without pain," Browning said.
Academy
of Recording Arts &amp; :
!shes and 96,000 members .
Officials said there was no
Sciences
announces
nominees "'
"This is the first time in the precise tally of the 118 bishops
lor
Gram
my
awards
In
76
cat ego-:
history of our church that the full because the vote w·as conducted
ries
at
a
news
conference
in ;
breadtb of ministry Is coming during a six-month period, and
Beverly
Hills
.
The
program
Is
tointo focus," Johnson said. "I once. a majority -was recorded,
be
broadcast
live
from
Shrine:
hope there is a way for those who plans for consecration were
Auditorium on CBS·TV.
find II difficult to accept th0 ~ nnounced .
reality of a woman . in the
episcopate to experience It for
themselves."
Harris, ·w(lo became an Ep!sco"
pal priest in 1980, is the former
executive director of the Episcopal Church Publishing House and
lnterbn rector at the Church of
the Advocate in Philadelphia.
She already has moved to
Boston .
NATURALIZERS. D. MEYERS, HUSHPUPPY
Harris is a third-generation
member of the Eplscopaltan
ALL WOMEN'S
Church and served. as a lay
prison chaplain from 1968 to 1974.
The church opened Its doors to
women priests in 1976.
"This consecration will be both
LA GEAR, AUTRY, PONY, .IGNER
a momentous and solemn occa·
All WOMEN'S
sian. and a tbne of great joy and
celebration," sai d Edmond
Browning, presiding bishop of
the Episcopal Church In the
United States. which is the
American arm of the Anglican
FLORSHEIM, HUSfiPUPPY, JARMAN
.
Church.
·•
When Harris was . elected,
All MEN'S
Browning asked the churc/l to
·'offer in prayer our joys, o'ur
anxiety and our commitment to
unity." On Tuesday he acknowl·

.

I

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Wednesday, January 25. 1989
Wednesday, January 25, 1989

Pomeroy.:...Middleport, Ohio

Page-'-S_:The Daily Sentinel

Mitchelson says he'll sue over alleged denial of due process
'

BURBANK, Call!. (UP!) One of two women awar . · •
$56,000 by a state b!&gt;ard 'ror
allegedly being sexually as·
saulted by divorce lawyer Mar·
vln Mitchelson called Tuesday
for a special criminal tnves ligation of the attorney.
Mitchelson, wM has repeat·
edly dented the allegations of
sexual assault, charged Tuesday
the state Board of Control did not
even ask hhn . to testify at t*
hearing and said he would sue the
board tor violating his right to
due process and seek a criminal
Investigation of the matter.
The Board of Control, which
acts as a victims' compensallon
panel, determined Monday that
the two women, Kristin Barrett·
Whitney and Patricia French,
were victims of crime and
awarded them $56,000.
The Los Angeles County Dis·
.trlct Attorney's Office declined
. to prosecute the charges In 19B7
because of .Insufficient evidence,
and Barrett-Whitney asked the
state Attorney General's Office
to Intercede. The state office
concurred with the district attorney's decision not to prosecute;
Austin Eaton, execu tll(e officer
of the victims' compensation
bOard, said the board's standard
of proof that a crime was
committed Is based on a "pre·ponderance of evidence" while a
criminal case must be proven
beyond a reasonable doubt.
Barrett-Whitney was awarded
$23,000 tor psych0 logtcal damage
and up to $23,000 more for
medical bills she wlll submit.
French was awarded $10,000.
"I feel very strongly .. . In
asking tor a special prosecutor to
came into this case and look at It
and look at all the other victims
besides myself and reopen !his
case and prosecute Mr. Mitchelson," Barrett-Whitney said at a
news conference at her lawyer's

Burbank office.
The three-member panel
heard 20 minutes of testimony
from the two women. a psychla·
trlst and a pollee detective who
Investigated their allegations In
1986 before .making their
decision.
Mitchelson said neither he nor
his lawyers were told of the

'

BIG BEND

.

court, and seek an Injunction to
prevent them from glvlngoutone
penny.
Mitchelson accused F)-ench
and Barrett-Whitney, who has
alleged several other men sexually assaulted her, of being
"pro!esslonal extontonists."
Curt Soderlund, deputy executive officer of administration for

Yo11r Independently Owned
Low·Prlced Supermarket ·

against him.
Victoria Malloy, the lawyer
handling the case for the State
Bar, said the Bar has cited
Mitchelson with 14 Incidents of
'l'llsconduct, which are proceed·
lng toward trial, and , Is .still
actively lnves ligating other com·
plalnts.lncludlng those lrivolvlng
sexual assault.

the Board of Control, said the
board does not act as a court of
law and said It was not the
board's pracllce to allow an
alleged suspect to testify.
Barrett-Whitney and her lawyer accused the State Bpr, which
Is Investigating ~ltchelson for
alleged misconduct, of not taking
seriously the sexual allegations

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Shortly afterward, 2,000 volts
of electricity surged through his
body.
.
Bundy expressed remorse for
his -crimes Monday night and
said goodbye to his mother,
Louise Bundy, and stepfather.
John Bundy. in two 10-mtnute

, p,JP

"Many villagers escaped to
mountains when they heard
underground riunbles. A great
majority of lives were claimed
by the mudsUdes caused by the
quake," the report said.
Measuring 7 on the 12-polnt
Mer~11lli scale, the quake struck
at 5:02 a.m. local time Monday
with its epicenter located 31
miles southwest of the Tadzhik
capital of Dushanbe near the
village of Sharora. The quake
measured 5.4 on the Richter
scale.
Sharora, a village of 600
P.eople, was buried under 50 feet
of mud. Tass said rescue teams
have pulled more than 100 bodies
from the debris In that settlement, ~nd only one person was
found alive.
Tass said no more survivors
were expected to be found.
"The bitter truth Is that nobody
can be rescued from under a
landslide provok~ by the earth·
quake. Houses are burled under
many million cubic meters of
rock, " Tass said.
Besides destroying dozens of
miles of highways and communi·
cation lines, the quake burled
lhousands of cattle, lifeblond of
the agricultural region in the
Moslem republic. Tass said.
·
The quake area. about 300
miles northeast of Kabul , Afgh·
an is tan, is prone to earthquakes
and stts astride one of the most
seismically--active region s of the
Soviet Union.
Dushanbe Is a~ut 1,200 miles
east of the area In Armenia
devastated in a December 7
quake. The toll from that quake
now sta nds at just under 25,000
dead, more than 2,000 people
hospitalized , and 115,000 others
evacuated.
The worst earthquake on record In the Soviet Union was In
1948 In Turkmenia, a Soviet
republic near the1ranlan border.

FINAL
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~-I

I

of Southeast Asian Nations
BANGKOK. Thailand (UPI)(ASEAN). was to be the major
Gambodian Prime Minister Hun
topic of the talksln Bangkok.
Sen arrived Wednesday In Bang·
The Informal talks be)ween
kok for unprecedented talks with
his Thai counterpart on a politi- Chatichal and Hun Sen was to be
the first meeting between the
cal settlement of the 10-year-old
.
leaders
of Thailand and the
conflict in Cambodia.
Phnom
Penh
government InHun Sen, dressed In a dark suit,
stalled In 1979 following a maswas given a low-key welcome at
sive Vletnamese lnvas Ion of
Bangkok's Don · MuaJW Airport
Cambodia.
by Anuwat '1!1' at tanapongstrl,
Thailand, like most non -Soviet
minister,attached to the office of
bloc countries, does not recogThai Prime Minister Chatlchai
nize the Hun Sen government,
Choonhavan.
and Chatichai has Insisted that
Hun Sen arrived from Vienti·
he Is meeting Hun Sen only as a
ane, Laos, aboard a Thai air
force passenger jet and was leader of one of the four Camboimmediately wl\isked off to a dian factions, not as head of
government.
large hotel in northern Bangkok.
Plans for the controversial
Official sources said the Camtalks,
which have drawn crltl·
bodian leader was expected to
meet Chatlchallater Wednesday clsm from former Thai governand then attend a dinner with ment officials, have been
senior Thai officials. He Is also shrouded In secrecy since Chatlexpected to tour a major Thai chal first publicly broached the
food -processing company on Idea in a talk to ihe Foreign
Correspondents Club of Thailand
Thursday, the sources said.
on Dec. 22 .
The planned talks with Hun Sen
Sources at the National Secursignal a major shift In Thailand's ity Council said some otflclals of
at ~tude toward the Phnom Penh
Thailand's top security policy
government and shows its deter- agency opposed the visit, fearing
mination to reach a political It would cause Bangkok's allies
settlement In Cambodia:
to doubt the strength and consls·
A settlement of the conflict,
tency·of That foreign policy.
which pits the Hun Sen governChatlchal said be had disment, backed by Vietnam, cussed the visit with Indonesian
against a three-party coalition President Suharto last week and
government supported by Thai- Suharto had endorsed the Thai
land. China and the Association
Initiative.

CLEARANCE SALE

BOYS, GIRLS, LADIES &amp; MEN'S

.

DENIM

1 :·:

rows of witneses. with his jaw
firmly set._
"He seemed to have his composure when he came In, but when
they strapped him in and put the
electrodes on him you could see
In his eyes that he really looked
scared," one witness said .
After the power button w a~
bushed, Bundy's head snapped
back and his body went rt~:td for .
surges of JO·and 60 seconds . One
official nodded to the executioner, who then cut o!f the
power.
~
Steve Hooker, a Florida State
University pollee officer who
Investigated the Chi Omega
sorority slaylngs, said despite
t!Je execution. he did not feel
Bundy's saga had ended. " I
came this morning looking for a
sense of flnaltty and I'm leaving
without that sense," he said.
''Ted Bundy has waited until
the 11th hour to establish a whole
new generation of grief! or a lot of
people in the United States,"
Hooker said. '·'He had 11 years to
give us what he has given us In
the 11th hour. we· are left now

wjth just another chapter In his
book of evil."
·
In Northern California, Where
pollee suspect Bundy murdering
at least three young women near
the Stanford University campus ·
during the 1970s, officials alsri ·
said they were left with unsolved .
·
cases.
Santa Clara County sheriff's ·
Sgt. Ken Kahn, who Investigated :
one of the murders, said the ·
death fit Bundy's style, bul
detectives could find no evidenct
linking him wllh the murder
Stanford University pollee .
Chief Marvin Herrington said, ·
"We looked at Bundy for a long ·
time (w)]lle trying to solve ;
another murder), bin we neve1 could tie him ln."
Gene Williams, owner of the
Williams-Thomas Funeral Home
In nearby Gainesville, said he .
received Bundy's body several ·
hours after his death, but had no ·
specific Instructions . He said he .
expects the body to remain with ·
him until Thursday at the lates t.
when final funeral a;-rangement s
are made.

'

'

(

•

JACKETS
SCHOOL
'JACKETS

r O/ ·

'

l
/0 OFF
SEASONAL CLEARANCE
.

.-,
•

ISTRnCH

-----

wage of $4.25 an hour and up.
Under the , plan, 15 percent of
their pay would be returned as
restitution to crime victims, 20
percent would go for room and
board and 40 percent !or forced
savings or family expenses. The
prisoner could keep the remalnlng~:i5 percent. '
The governor said such work
would help defray the $19,000
annual cost of housing each of the
state prison system's 76,000 adult
Inmates. Of those, he said, 7,000
already were making furniture,
baked gonds, license plates and
clothing for prison or state
government use. About 30,000
others perfonn_prtson houskeeplng chores, such as laundry and
janitorial work.
The governor said his legal
advisers have told him that state
constitutional amendment was
needed to expand the prisons'
existing work programs.
"While It's very popular to

make little rocks out of big rock s
and to punish prisoners ... , most
of these prisoners will be re·
leased," said Assemblyman William Baker, R·Danvllle, au tho1·
of the measure. "The can 'is !or(lnstilllng) a work ethic.''
"Idleness breeds unrest, and
unrest breeds disorder'· said Joe
Sandoval, secretary of the Youth ·
and Correctional Agency, who·
also joined Deukmejlan at the
news -conference. ''This wiW
minimize the likelihood of that
unrest occurring."
Deukmejlan said the leglslallon would Include provisions for.
hicentivcs to draw businesses·
Into the program such as tax
credits and preferences In bid-.
ding on state contracts.
Another Incentive would be
that the employer would not have·
to pay health or accident insu-·
ranee premiums, since the state
Is responsible for prisoner health'
care, the governor noted. .

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HOMEMADE MEAT SALAD •• ~-. •• 89&lt; .
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MEDIUM EGGS "..JIRJ........ &amp;9c
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1

LEE &amp; LEVI JEANS

.'

H LI,,CTH

( · :.,~ 1· i , . ' · : '\.

Cambodian leader
in Thailand for talks

JUNIOR &amp; MISSES

~' .M .

.

with the labor force In the state."
For example, Oeukmejlan
mentioned assembly line workand clothing manufacturing jobs
that U.S. companies have ex·
;~Jkh~~~ ~~r~~c~~:~~~t ~~c:~r;;~ ported overseas to save labor
keep. The proposal was Imme- costs . .
diately opposed by organized
Jack Hen.nlng, executive secretary of the California Labor
tabor.
Federation, said, "Quite simply,
The key meas!Jre In the leglsla·
live package was a proposed
we oppose convict labor taking
constitutional amendment that
jobs away from free labor. The
would remove the prohibition
governor says he wishes to meet
against work by . Inmates for
with labor on this Issue, but that
private industry. It would need a
Is what we wllltell him.
two-thirds majority In both
"This measure would merely
houses of _the Legislature to
excite the appetite o( private
qualify for the ballot In 1990.
Industry for. more . and. more
' 'What we want to concentrate convict labor, once It rias tasted
on Is having the Inmates do jobs • the advantages of a controlled
that perhaps are . performed labor force," Henning said.
Deukmejlan said his short·
overseas," the said at a news
conference. "We don't want to 'term goal was to employ 7,000
. get Into programs that · are prisoners In such work who
considered In direct competlton would be paid the mlnlmuin

ll
'L2.
OFF
$
·
BASIC BLUE DENIM 500 .

I

;r,

. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP!)
- Gov. George Deukmejlan
announced legislation Tuesday
to put state prison lnmate.s to

·
BOYS, GIRLS
LADIES APPAREL

BEGINNING THURSDAy JAN. 26th

,

phone calls to their home In six-month period where he was In
Tacoma, Wash.
great distress . He was extremely
"He sounds very much at guilty. He was frightened. That
peace witli himself," Louise gradually subsided and this ·
Bundy said. "He said, 'I'm so sexual frell1!y that he would go
sorry I've given you all such grief through occurred again and he
... but a part of me was hidden all k Uled another woman," Dobson
the time.' And then he said. 'But said. "Only this time the Intense
the Ted Bundy you knew also agony was a little easier to cope
existed'" .
·
•
with."
Several hun&lt;!'red spectators
Dobson also said Bundy had
who had gathered near the rural problems with pornography as
prison chec~hen wltnesse.s an adolescent.
emerged fro
the death
Bundy told Dobson he did -not
chamber with t e news that
know why he was more susceptiBundy was dead, and cheered ble to hard-core pornography
again when a white hearse took than other people, but predicted
his body away.
the nation's reaction to his
Bundy spent his last night execution:
·
praying with a minister and
"They will condemn Ted
refused a final breakfast of steak Bundy while walking past a
and eggs.
magazine rack that contains the
Religious broadcaster James very things that send kids down
Dobson, who Interviewed Bundy the road to being Ted Bundys."
the night before his death, said ·
Witnesses In the death
the prisoner "talked at consider- chamber 'said he appeared to
able length about the process of have lost his usual composure.
desensitizat.lon" he underwent He did not struggle as he was
during his series or sex slayjngs manacled With leather straps on
of women across the country.
his wrist and chest. He sat In the
wooden chair, glancing ner"Aft~/the killed the first
womaf he went through a vously around the room at the

Convict labor opposed . by union_leaders

40°/o TO 7 0°/o OFF

32 OZ. BAG WHITE· YELLOW

7 LB. BAG NATURAL WOOD

ist on serial klllers, also told
Blair that the confessions
touched on at least 20 more
slaylngs In various staies, all of
them young women, · possl bly
dating back to 1969.
In some of the confessions, he
described the murders In enough
detail to allow investigators to
consider the cases closed. In
others, Investigators were left In
doubt as to whether or not he
committed the crimes.
Bundy. 42. was executed
shortly after 7 a.m. Tuesday In
Florida State Prison.
"I'd like you to give my love to
my family and friends," the
nation's most ~otorious death
row inmate- said firmly and
clearly before a mask was
draped over his face In the death
chamber.

MOSCOW (UPI) -The Krem·
lin said Wednesday the confirmea dea1h toll from the
earthquake in Tadzhikistan now
stood at 274 and was not likely to
rise above 300 - far fewer than
original estimates of 1,000
dea!\IS .
The local government in 1he
Central Asian republic declared
a day of mourning for victims of
Monday's quake and subsequent
mudslides as media reports also
predicted a death toll "much
smaller" than Initial reports
indicated.
Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennady Geras imov
told a news conference that 274
bodies had been recovered so far,
most oi them victims of muds··
lides that ln. one case buried an
entire village.
.
"The is not a final figure but it
is certain to be under 300,"
Gera;;Iinov said.
Radio Moscow and the Comll)Unist Party dally newspaper
Pravda said damage amounted
· to about $19.2 million , a fraction
of the estimated $19 billion In lost
production and property damage ·
suffered in December's quake In
Soviet Armenia .
Pravda said five schools. two
hospitals and more than 400
apartment buildings were either
i:lamaged or destroyed by the
quake and subsequent mudslldes
Monday In Tadzhikistan.
The official Tass news agency
said the Tadzhik government had
declared Wednesday a "national
day of mourning" in the republic,
with flags being flown at halfmast. shows and concerts canceled and restaurants closed.
"Although the casualties of the
Tadzhik earthquake Monday
morning have not yet been
specified ltls clear the death toll
Is much smaller than the esti·
mated 1,000," Radio Moscow
said.

rk Roast

FOODlAND

II-RITE
SHORTENING

STARKE , Fla . (UPI) - The
execution of serial sex klller
Theodore Bundy put an end to
many nightmares. but to frus·
!rated detectives hoping to close
the book on unsolved murder
cases around the country It left
one big question unanswered Just how many people did Ted
Bundy kill?
Bundy, put to death Tuesday In
Florida's electric chair for the
1978 murder of 12-year·old Kimberly Leach, confessed in his
final three days to the slayings of
some 28 women in several states
during his 1970s murder spree.
But Jerry Blair, the Florida
state attorney from Lake -€:lty
who prosecuted Bundy for the
Leach murder. says the number
of slayings may have reached 50.
In addition to three Florida
murders, Bundy closed the books
on 13 killings In Washington,
Utah and Colorado, Blair said.
He said Bundy provided Information that may never be confirmed
on 14 more cases In Washington,
Idaho:' California. Utah. Vermont and Pennsylvania .
Bill Hagmeler. an FBI special-

Kremlin confirms
27 4 dead .in quake

FlO liN

DR. PEPPER OR
7-UP

I

·Bundy slayings may number 50, ·according to attomey

HONOLULU rUPI)- Remains believed to be those of25 u.s.
servicemen missing In action since the Vietnam war arrived on
U.S. soil Tuesday from Southeast Asia to full military honors.
An Air Force transport planle bearing.the 25 sets of remains,
which were turned over to U.S.•otflclals In Hanoi earlier ,landed
at Hickam Air Force Base Tuesday morning .
Members of an honor guard and a color guard representing all
branches o! the service saluted as the !lag-draped caskets were
carried one by one from the plane to a waiting bus.
The remains were taken to the Army 's Central Identification
Laboratory, which will try to identify them.
This was the eighth repatriation of remains since a visit to
Vietnam by special Presidential envoy retir ed Gen. John
Vessey.

Chicken

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Remains of 25 .thought
MIAs returned to states

GRADE 'A'

.Steinberg
'·o ptimistic'
· :"NEW YORK (UP!) - Joel
,Sielnberg Is "sOmewhat optlmls'lte" he will not be convicted of
inurder In the death of the
·· ~ear-old girl he Is accused of
·::iii!Jdgeonlng, his defense lawyer
: Jatd.
• -:&lt;Defense attorney Ira London
."ipoke of Steinberg's hopes Tues]lay after the jury In the case
Indicated It was de(ldlocked on
· The second-degree murder
. charge and wanted ,to consider
• the less serious charge of first: aegree manslaughter.
; • The jury was scheduled to
.: liegln Its third day of dellbera·
• Oons at 10 a.m. Wednesday. after
: deliberating for 10 hours
:, 'tuesday.
:~ : "He feels somewhat optimistic
•-' based on the fact that this jury Is
; &amp;erlously examining the evl- •
~ dence and they're seriously Inter. pt.etlng the judge's charge on the
:':faw," London said Tuesday out·
:&lt; ~ide the courtroom.
. • The disbarred millionaire law: l(er faces life Imprisonment if
. convicted of second-degree
· murder In a case that has drawn
: qatlonwlde attention to child
:abuse. He Is accusedofshowlnga
_ :~depraved Indifference to hu.• man life" by striking Lisa and
· )ben falling to Immediately sum; • mon medical ald.
::-, ln Its second day of dellbera·
:.(Ions, the jury sent a note to
• Acting Justice Harold Roth wax
: lndlcatlng It was unable to reach
: a verdict on ·the murder charge.
.Jurors asked the judge If they
•. must agree unanimously to ac•. Quit on murder before consider·
: 1-ng three lesser homicide
:charges.
: : The judge told the state Su·
preme Court jury It must tlrst
deal tully with the murder
-~ c;harge agalns t Steinberg, who Is
·• accused of beating to death
·:~year-old Lisa Steinberg, the
: ehlld he and his companion,
• Hedda Nussbaum, raised but
.; !lever adopted. .
.
:; • That means jurors must vote
· unanimously either to convict on
· i;he murder charge or to acquit,
- allowing them to move on to the
~ Jesser charges of first-degree
: !!lanslaughter, second-degree
:manslaughter and criminally
• :aegllgent homicide. The maxi·
-: mum prison terms for those
., erlmes are 25 years, 15 years and
: !pur years, respectively.
• - EarUer In the day , the jury
" asked to view videotapes of
:Nussbaum's bruise-covered
: liody, of Steinberg's scraped
• Briuckles and of the couple
: entering a police station at the
time of thetr arrest Nov. 2, 1987.
• Steinberg, 47, Is also accused• tiut not charged - with beating
• J!iussbaum, 46, throughout their
: l:2-year relationship and reduc• tilg her to a submissive slave.
: In her seven days on the
witness stand, Nussbaum testltled that Steinberg handed her
Lisa s unconscious body at about
6 p.m. on Nov.l,l987, and that he
later admitted, "I knocked her
~~~:rn~ she dldn~t want to get

hearing until they learned of the
award through the news media.
" It's an Incredible violation of
due process and equal protection
that should outrage everyone In
the United States," Mitchelson
said. "I'm going to sue the state
crime victim compensation
panel, which In this case has
operated lis a . total kangaroo

.

----

.

-

~

--·~-

----

---

'IDtAjNfiSI
290 N. 2nd MIDDLEPORT

OFF

\

••

\

'

I

v

'

••

•
'

�.

~

Wedn~ay, January

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

4-Mile ditch
may prevent
illegal immigration,
drug smuggling

.- .

•

LOS ANGELES tUPI) -The
federal government Is planning
to dig a ditch 4 miles long near
San Diego to s top lllegal lnimi- ·
grants and drug smugglers from
crossing Into California from
Mexico In vehicles, it was reported Wednesday.
The 14-foot-wide, 5-foot-9eep
ditch Is to be constructed of soil
. and concrete next to the port of
entry at Otay Mesa, a flat area
where vehicles can now cross

easily, sources in the aush
administration told the Los Angeles Times In Washington, D.C.
Although Immigrants' rights
advocates expressed outrage at
the plari. a Bush administration
official defended It as necessary
to prevent illegal crossings.
The ditch "should be extremely effective in preventing
vehicle traffic." said one admln·
lstratlon official, adding that
more drug smugglers also would

.

be caught.

The Immigration and Naturalization Service has comm issioned
an ·environmen tal fmpact study
and is expected to announce the
plan soon, the Times sai(l.
"Construction on the ditch.will
begin as soon as the study Is
satisfactorily completed." a
Bush a dm inistratio n official
said, adding that the project I&amp;
expected to be completed this
fa ll.
·
By Sept. 30, the end elf the

Official~

estimate that 300 to
400 vehic les cross the · border
Illegally In the San Diego area
every month.
Arnoldo Torres. national poll!I·
cal director for the League of
United Latin American CitiZens
in Washington, called the plan
"shocking, for 11 takes on desperate proportions and · will have
negat)ve consequences, symbol!·
cally as well as substantively."

25, 1989'

Wednesday,

25,1989

Prep scores
ea...a

.'

"

Cia Wyemlqll, ftetlael Tate 55

eta &amp;opl' 8a(lDal5, OaMeNicMIAtl

n

Col Eu-.oor•. Col Westff
C.IBriiP :!1, Col Mar-Frank44
&lt;lol UJiden .tf, Col Ceallta ritl •
.Col Northlud 71. Col •ltOkhavrn 118
Col W~lllaatoa$8, Col U~rty lllr 1
Coldwaler 1!, Da,y oleffeuon fl
Copley ~··Field Sl
Cuyahop fallll4, Slow :U:
Dan~le 54, \\'ttrthlaPon Cbr U

..

Delplloa JtfferiOn 13, PMkway 14
Eutwood 7t. Glbsoaburr; SK
Eut Kaox. Sf, New Albr.ny "6
Ellcbl sa. Jbfltoe so
Elyrta. Sr 17, N RICWevlle st
ll'alrfl-eld Uakla "· Lo&amp;M Elm !8
Fairfield 51, Oxford Talllwanda M
F1adlay Ill, a '.,.kollda 40
Fort Reoowry II, Mli.IIIMwa !8
Fran Wort Ade• :li1, Westfall ft
Gruvllle I~ Vtk:11 38

.. .

Ch ~m)lia• st. L•r•e SS
OleMpeaJie 'tip Falrlalld tt
Cta .Forat PM"k , , Oa Bacop 55
0~ Moeller '71, ~ While II
Cln Norltwe~l 'TI, Hamilton Rosa 13
Oa Pu~diM. Qa PriDCdoe 48
C1a Summtt 81, 0• Cauley DIQ' •
Cln Weden 81111 It, a a Ehler U
Col Cfoa&amp;tn dal Jt, Col Mlllll• tt
Col EuDnoorll, Gro11tport 1%
Cal H11mWoo Twp7t, Neow o\I.,_J 51
Col Tr~ of LU~ 81, Oblo De tl 8~
Col We lute 8t, Rasa Soudle•ler n M
Cot Wllfii&amp;OJie '77, COl !§outh '71
Coalll!•IIS. Genewa I! ·

H11mi111111 Re1s iJ. MAlon II
llunUioa
st, P.,.bleShllwnee f8

•d:l•

Harrt.on 51, Colen! a 31
He.lllh 84, llelnn.Lakewood4fl
Kalida 84, M'IQ'M!!!Ifield-Goahell2:8
,lentil, Nordula 31
Laac..cer Fl1ber 1), Amanda 51
UllertyUn .. niH, BerM UalonU
Lldt1n1 HIM H. Mlllera,ori 24
Mullleld Owr 74. Col Tree of Ute S8
Marlo !I Local a , St Keary !8
M~ll•llltfPadiS. HuUeniO
Miami Val 31, Xenlll " 'll80n 11
N C.lle(eiiUJU, N Be. . T.,Ior SO
N-ark Calh 1t, Ucld-c Val 5&amp;
Newarkn, Col Walnut KdiiJt' Jl
NorlhwOGil St, Elmwood S5
OaJt Harbor II, Milan lt.:dlllion 48
ottawa OlandDrf 'M', Uma PerrJ 36

,
'

'•·

I

',•'
'

~

ConthteiKIII •· Col.nbu 1 Gro\'e 48

D..,- BelmDnf. 71, Spd•s:flelw.N II
Day Chm-.lulll, Day P.111erson 83
Dq wQllf 51,
41
.
Day WhUe 71, Qa Moeller II
Dowr 11, Ubridwvllle C1aym•lll JS
Doyle.tcrwa 1L W Slllem N'wntera 5!
Ealt PaJMIIae 71, Newton. FaJll 7fl
Eullern Brewa •. New Rlebmo.-1 5$
E\'e'lretD 'JI,M•mee Val~ Sf
Fort Frye 11, SIQ'we 51
Fort Loramie II. Jlo11Mio• .U
Fraak FUr Greet~ M, lr..,on 8t .roe 10
Fremont J01teph11, Fo.torla WeiMielbl
13
Galloway WMtlal&amp;d 8!, Ph:klnprton H
Geortetawn 14. ledlel Tau- 51
Han•hal Rl\ler II, Wheel {WVa) Ceat

Tr.,.

38

lUll*' ale 11, DaJien 57

Hopewell LotMion 19, New Rlepl 48
Hubbwd $3, Slr.then ft
lniH 1r1 vaJiey tl. Buckeye Trail Sl

81, V-'alla3S

'

._ Ironton IS. Portlfll.-lh W Sl (ol)

.Jacluea Center U, Mlftlkor 5I
Keat 51, Nordonla 51
Keatoa Ri.S,e 11, TlpPCky Bethel 5'7
· Laaclll&amp;er . , CIIUICOU!oe 57
LeblnOP11, Lemon Moiii'Oe tl

Unloto II. ZILIIe Trace 41
Upper Saa&amp;lullky 'Jt, MuionPieMantJI

•.

LeeiOIIIa S!. Col.-nbi- Cretllltew Ill

WadlwortiiU, Nort• Sf

(

HanlhtNorlhcrn81, Lelpllc 68

llolple 83. Arcbbolcl'f&amp; l!ol)

Speneentlle IS, New Knnntlle 42
Sp~ll&amp;'bOroH, Klnp H
TeQI Val 7t Col HamUton Twp30
11ffln ColwntMan 41, Fremol'lll Ro11111S
11Pf Oty Bethel to, Tri-VIIIIIe 51
Twin Valle]' S 51, Dixie"'
·'

Sliced

Basketball
Indiana's Jay Edwards, who
scored 28 points and 19 points In
two Indiana victories last week,
Is UPI's Big Ten Player of the
Week.... Nancy Darsch of Ohio
State, Marynell Meadors of FlorIda ·State, Linda MacDonald of
Temple and Chris Gobrecht of
the University of Washington
have been chosen to coach at the
1989 U.S. Olympic Festival
wo":leil's basketball competition
at Oklahoma City July 21-30.
College
George Landis, saying he could
no longer stand losing, resigned
as football coach after three
losing seasons at Bucknell University. Assistant Coach Lou
Maranzana will serve as Interim
coach.

UJy\'11 Chr Acadll, .. dllpeDCHnee II

Plckerl•at• 11. GaiiM• 3Z
Jtawen•IK, TaJimadp It
Rewere $1, Greenlbu 1'1 Green .as
Reynehllbu 1'1 "'· Growpurt45
&amp;QisSoudleutern 71, PaJni Valle)' 35
Saadualy 11, Lorain Sou,.WIN 41
Sh~by M, Manlfleld Ma61on 32
SherwOOd Falr\4ew 1!8, Edon 5S .
$*'e)'

Baseball
The Pittsburgh Pirates signed
free-agent pitcher Bill Landrum.
The rlght·hander was 1'·0 with ·a
5.84 ERA in seven games with the
Cubs last season. ... Tommy
·Holmes, a player and manager
with the old Boston.Braves and
now director of community rela·
· !Ions for the New York Mets, will
be honored for devotion to
baseball at Sunday's New York
Bas1la11 Writers' dinner. SimIlar honors will go to Tom Knight,
baseball historian for the bo·
rough of Brooklyn, and Barry
Halper, owner of the world's
largest personal collection of
baseball memora billa.

CarroUioa IS. Ea.l Ca•klllll
teH•KeaOYa (WVa) 8!, Caal Grow

Da..v Oakwood f4, EMo11U
Da..v Chrlall• •· Newton 41

•

Bologna
I

'\

BUYO·NE
12-0Z. CAN

. ..Hormel
Ham Patties

GET ONE

FREE!

BUY ONE
HB. PKG .
HOT OR MILD

Purnell's Whole
Hog Sausage

GET ONE

FREE!

Classifie

BUY ONE

BUY ONE

4-PAK 40, 60, 75 OR 100 WATT

Armour Sliced
Bologna

G.E Soft White
Light Bulbs

HB. PKG.

FREE!

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

F.REE!

POLICIES
•Ads outside Meigs, Galli a or Mason counties must be prepaid.
•Receive 1 .60 discount for ads paid in advance.
•Free ads - Gi'oleaway and Found ads under 16 WQrds will be
run 3
at no ch •ge.
.
•Price of ad lor all c~Jhllletters is double price of ad eosl.
•7 point Nne type only uNd.
•sentinel is not rnponsible for errors after fint dav. (Check
fot erron first diY ad runs in paperl . Csll before 2:00p .m.
d~ after publle.tion to mike correction.
•Adl thM must be paid in advance are

d.,.•

·-...
•
......
......_,
...
··'---•.
~

~

:"!•

--.~-

~.

,:\

12.5-0Z. FROZEN
BIG'N CRUSTY

24-0Z. BOX SUNSWEET

BUY ONE
12-CT.

8-CT. JUMBO

Breakfast
Prunes

Lender's
Bagels

Ziploc
Storage Bags

Freezer Pleezer
Twin ·Pops

GET ONE

GET ONE

GET.ONE

FREE!

FREE!

GET ONE

FREE!

- 2:00P.M. MONDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

following telephone exchanges ...

-_,

Gellia County
AreaCode614

"'
_.

446 - Galllpolis

-·

Pomeroy

985- Ch•ter

24fi - Rio Grand8

843- Port\tnd

266 - Gu.,..n Dist.
643- Arabla Dist.
379 - Walnut

949- Racine
742-Rutland

247-Letart Falls

&amp;67- Coolville

•
4.s.. a.oz . FROZEN
MICROWAVEABLE GREEN GIANT

One Serving
· Vegetables

GET ONE

·FREE!

14-0Z. REGULAR, UN SAL TED
OR TORTILLA

···~·-..:
·-.

Get Results Faet

·oali Style
Nacho Chips

2-Liter

GET ONE

FREE!

FREE!

1- Cerd ol Thankll

61-Houaeltold Good•

2-ln Memory

12- Sporting Ooodt
63- Anllques
64 - Miac. Merchandise

3- Annoucements
4 - Giveawev
5-Happy Ads
· 6 - Lost and Found

55 - Building Supplie~
68 - Pets for Sale
57-Music• Instruments
58- Fruita &amp; Vegetabl•
59- For Sale or Trade

Employnwnt
Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Serv1ces
11 - Help Wanted
1 2- Situation Wanted
13-lnsUran ce

61 62 13"6465 -

14- BuainMa Training
1 6 - Schoola • In It ruction
16- Radio, TV S. CB Repair

17- Miscallaneous
1 B- Wanted To Do

Fitrm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
Ltvestock
Hay &amp; Grain
.
Seed &amp; Fer1Mizer

Transportation

21 - Busin•• Opportunity
22-Money to Loan

71 - Autos for Sale
72- Trucks for Sale
73- Vans &amp; 4 WO ' s

23-ProfMiionll ServicM

Real Estate

74- Motorcycl•
76- Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale

31-HOm .. for Saht
32- Mobile Hotn11 for Sale

78 - Auto Parts &amp; Aec•tofi•

77- Auto Repeir
78 - Camping Equipment
79 - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

33-Farmaior Salt!
34-Busin•• BuildingS
35- Lots 6 Acreage
36-Real Estate Warned

Services

41 - Houtet tor Rent
42- Mobile Hom• for Rent
43- Farms for Rent

81 -- Hof'!e lmprowments
82- Piumblng &amp; HeM~ng

83- E•cavatlng
84- Eieetrical &amp; Refrigeration

46- Space tor Rent
47 - Wantad to Rent
48 - Equipmem for Rent
49 - For le•e

86 - Generel Hauling
86 - Mobile Home Repair
87'-Upholstery

Tho opptiC811on ia on file ot
tho office of tho Mtigo

Wrltton comment• andfor
roquato lor on lnlormol
conference may be 1ent to
tho Olvialon ol Roclemllion,
Founlllin Squore. Bulcilna

B - 3, Cotumbua. Ohio
43224. within 30 deyo of
the Jut dlda of publication
of 1hla notlct.
(1) 18, 2&amp;; (21 1, 8, 41c

45769 and the Vinton
County Recorder, Vin1on

0 . Box 490, Athens. Ohio

County Court HouM, Main

'46701, hll aubmlt1ed en
. opplicltion to rovilt a Coat

Stroot, McArthur, Ohio
45651 and the Gottlo
Coun1y Recorder, Gottlo

..

.. .
.....
••

......
DIET
OR PEPSI COLA
12-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ... $3.49
•

THIS IS NOT A BUY OlE-lET ONE FREE ITEM

-

• 'I

'

~

mining

....
....
..
. , ..
.

r

\o

!

er••

64 Misc. Merchandise

Happy Ads

L,d,, z,d,,
N~ncg'1

40"//

11

encompa11

7.068 acroa, end erelocotod
on lllo Wltlt-tlo end Rutland 7'n Minuta U.S.G.S.
quoclranglo mapo; ••-ding
Wilt 10 Wllklovtlo T-nahlp end 2.11 mltoa south of
Solem Cemor. Tho oppllcalion P"'PG- to ox pend lllo
are• lor room ond pit•
underground mining. provide for pilar romovll on
tho• ai'MI end ar... ..,..
vlou1ly epproved to be
mlnld end to pormh ere• .
lor longwott mining.
._...,_ _ _ _ _ _""

Will, feHI, f••·
. A•g, eu KJ•

•

Jsnus1g Wblfe Ssle

County Court Hau•. Locutt ·
Stroo1 , Oolllpolia, Ohio
4&amp;631 lor public vlowing.

5

RACINE

12 Gauge !hotgun1 Only
Strictly l,.lorcod

10-7-tln.

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE .SHOTGUNS
ONLY

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

985-4141

.9-19-81 tin

GENEIAI. CONTRACTORS

J&amp;L

RotMan~

11 - 11~-'lRA .~ ••

x

INSULATION

GUN SHOOT

Mastic &amp; Catlainteed 1
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows

BINGO ·
POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB

,.

RACCOON VAWY
SPORTSMEN'S (LUI
Rt. 124 letw11n Wilkes·

224 E. MAIN ST. - 992-9976
THURS. E. B. 6:4$ P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:4 5 P.M.

villt and Salem C111ttr

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

12 Gauge Shotgt~ns Only

DOOR PRIZE

factory Choka
STIIICTLY INFORUD I
1· 11·'19·1 mo.

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

Ntw location•
161 North Sec011d
MHNioport. Ohio 457 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C.rry Fl&amp;hlng Suppli•
Pay Your Phone
Cobia Bills Here
IUSINISS PHON!

16141 992-6550
IESIIINCE PHON!
1614) ... ,._._..,

PUBLIC
RECYCLING

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

WANTED

•Mobile Home

DEAD OR AUVE

Pans
•Mobile Home

•Washers •D ryers
.•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mutt. It lapair,.Jo"

SYRACUSE. OHIO

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehides
A I C Service
All Major a. Minor
Repairs
NtASE Cer11fied Memanic

Rantala
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

It. 33 North of
Pomeroy. Ohlo .

KEN'S lPPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

CALL 992-6756
"DO(" VAUGHN

1 -13-'I'HI~

We Servlca All Mekn
1/22188/lln .

Certified Licensed Shop

5-25-tln

PUBLIC
AUCTION

IUSINISS

14th &amp; llaht St.
Poil1t l'leasa.t, W. Ya.
We Buy Aluminum ·
Can1, Glu1. Bre11.
Copper end More

MON..FII.• 9 am-6 pni
SAT.: 8 am-12 Noon
fll' Mart Information

1-24-'11- I ,..,

Publi&lt;; Notice
ADDENDUM TO PART 1 ,
ITEM E 16) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY RACCOON MINE NO. 3
LEGAL NOTICE

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.

BOGGS

HOWES GROVE PARK

SAUt &amp; SERVICE
u. s. n. so rAn

$1695

Nits

A uthorlzed John
O.eoro, New Hollend.
Buah Hog Form
Equpment DeoiM.

CHISTEI, OHIO
985-3350

Fir•
Stl• I Sllfl"

ltlprt, Ohio
CONSIGNMINTS WB.COME

GUYSYUE, OliO

PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-428-7245

614·662-3Ul

SUNOCO

1-1VJ9-1 mo.

E••lp•••

EUM HOME

1-3·'8&amp;-tlc

1-tl-'19-1 mo.

IDO!R&amp;I-dfor ·
Senior Cltil- alld
Han.capped

Southern Ohio Coal Com·

ADDENDUM TO PART 1,
ITEM E I&amp;) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPAN~ MEIGS MINE NO. 1
LEGAL NOTICE
Soulllorn Ohio Coat Com-

pany. Meiga Mine No. 1, P.

1:00 P.M.

CHESTD, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING 8t REPAIRS

factory Choka

304-675·3161

Public Notice

County Recorder, Meig1
County Coun HouM, Second Street, Pomeroy. Ohio

·.

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

NOW OPIII FOI

Public N otlce

motion oporetlon wnt be
conducted in Moigo County,
Setem Township. Sectlona
1 . 2. a. 7, a. 12. 13, 11. 11.
19,24.25. 28,30, 32, 33
end 34, Frectlona 1, 2, 7.
1 3. 19. 24. 2&amp;. 31 . 32, 33,
and 35; Oattle County. Mo•·
gan' Town1hip, Section1 li,
11, 17, 23 and 28; VInton
County, WMkoavlle Townahip, Soctl!&gt;na 3, 4. end 4E.
Tho propoMd underground

..' ..
.

'

'

'

Merchanrlise

Publlc Notica

Pormh numbered R-03647, to tho Ohio Deportment of
Natural r•ourc•. Divi1ion
of Roctematlon. The pro-

'

•

'

Ann ou ncements

Public Notice

Mining and Reclamation

"

o

Baked Beans
GET ONE

&amp;7 .00
$10.00
&amp;15.00
&amp;25.00
$60 .00

"-I

Diet Pepsi ·
or Pepsi Cola

18·0Z. JAR

EVERY

EVERY SUNDAY

MARCUM CONTRACTING

H .C. Package. Limit 1 coupon per cuotomer pM
bingo sesaion.
WE PAY 860.00 PER GAME
OVER 1 10 PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME
Lie. #006·32
12-11 -tin

21-35WORDS

$5.00
&amp;8 .00
613 .00
$21 .00
$51 .00

45 - Furnished Room•

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI' ·
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI '

BUY ONE
B&amp; M

$4.00
&amp;5 .00
&amp;8.00
$13 .00
833.00

44..:.. Apertmant for Rent

~

poiiHI coal mining end reel•

BUY ONE

937 -;- Buftalo

'-,(

.

BUY ONE

675-Pt . Pleasant
4&amp;8- leon
576 - Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
895- letert

1

..

DELffiffiy

Basha• Building

GUN SHOOT

2 H.D . FREE with coupon and purohae of min.

Aat111are for conHcutive runs. broken 1.1pday1 will bech•ged
for each tl~~~t as MP•rate ads. .

Co., WV

Area Co4e 304

992-Middleport

388 - Vinton

·'_,
_,

Mason

Meigs County.
Area Code 614

387- Ch•hif e

·'

IN THE

2:00P.M. TUESDAY
2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
2:00PM . THURSDAY
2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Classified pages cover the

...

FREE!

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

11-Z&amp;WORDS

1·28· '88·tfn

RACINE
FIRE DEPT •

RATES
0-15 WORDS

-·

''"·AVOn
614-698-7111

Froe Estimates

lihijhlrifiil

-·,,'
__

BUY ONE

- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY

~~o~WXP~~PER

_-',

BUY ONE

OAY BEFORE PUBLICA"f\ION

-

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Call .99.2~2'77-~

9-Wentect to Buy

WEDNESDAY PAPER

For Job Openings In Your

Windows

In Memoriam

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

992-6282

Storm Doors &amp;

Card of Thanks

COPY OEAOLINE -

' ..'

Call the Avon District Manai.er

Blown lnsulalion

7 - Y•d Sale !paid in advance)
8 - Public Sale&amp; Auction

•A clauified adliertiMment pl.ced in The Dally Sentinel (Pcept - ciMtlfied dltplay, Buain111s Card and legal notice~)
will elao eppe• in the Pt. Ple111ant Register end the Galli·
polil Daily Tribune. reaChing over 18, 000 hornet .

--··

BUY ONE

GUN SHOOT

· · The .Area's Number 1 Marketplace

GET ONE

GET ONE

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

A.IWI."'- .. II, M..... tl

Alnn li llldunolll Bla 7%
AY.alllCM'•ntellll. Fanell ( Pa ) M
Bu-beraon 15, Allr.Sprtq:Q
Bare"lle Bl, Ua._ ~ulll
Buehweall II. ear.&amp;-.1. U
lullntUeU, Woallsfte1•7t
BeM'et IE•IIfrn11, S. . . Wel*f!r II
BeiWin.THk H. Fairfield .JI
Bel lUre 71, a.tkeye se . . . . ., a
BenjMtla~&amp;a 74, Rldpmo.- Sl
Berla Hllaad 81, Zaes ReaeetU s H
Bolld11111 1!, 81-,. Fairlah IT
Brookfield 1'7, IU.-nu la . .r 71
Breolrvll~ M , FraniiUa Moaroe 11
Bucle)e NMtlt It, •ld&amp;;eport 5'7
• lien Berllllhlre n. Pert)' ..
ea•l5, EdiMn s.tlllh n

Cia MerCy ft, DaOak BJitiH
Clo Laallmarll Dr 41, a a Chr tt
Chi FGIWI Park II, Oa WotdWU'd t1
Cia Pla.,-klwa It, Oa Marlemoall: 41

!'•

START SAYING NOW
FOR NEXT YEAR'S
VACATION!!

AII•St, H. ... II
Arl ....•••· Carey IS (01)
AIM 81 .laM 81, Mtlt Edp!'Wood It

o.,..,..,

Col Ea~t st. Cot Ml m1a

8o)'l Olllo Hlp &amp; hlol &amp;.tll!tball
Nawarre Fairlea•

AkkrNiuche~&amp;er78,

Cla CAPE 11, IAvehlld 15
Cia 9f Ua 11, N•rwMd O.r D

I

11

WIIWq Memorial U, 'elalowa48
W•ter'o'llle N IJ, Cola.ICiepto~~deace J'f

GiriiJ Olal• W1b Scllo(JI B• -.ball
Bluca..ter 14, lJUJe Miami II
Bloom Carnlll n ,
lt'-ch 81 ~ •
Br)'U M, n.r-..ce S$
rnwr1N11 5(. IAat• u
O.IW«.»mt 17, Wantlta... a M
Clo Wltllrow fS. MUW t1
ClaA..tenoa41,

f

The

Middleport, Ohio

sco~neP.tiSil.----.

-Tuesday's

current fiscal year, the numbf.r
of Border Patrol officers will
have grown from 3,000 to 4,500.
But INS resources have long
lieen thought inadequate to stem
the flow of Illegal immigrants
across the 2.000-mlle southern
border.
More than a .third of the 1.2
million lllegal immigrants
caught last year were appre·
hended along terrain separating
Tijuana, Mexico from San Diego.

I '

\

Pome~ oy

d

THURS., FRI., SAT. ONLY
9 to 5 Daily

10°/o OFF
ANYTHING WHITE

Baking and cooking supplies and candy
making supplies such as flours, sugars,
candies, spices, beana, etc.
.

FREE (HOCOLATE SUCKER TO ANY CHILD
UNDER 5 YEARS OLD
SIGN UP FOI FREE CANDY CLASSES
Don't Forget Our Everyd!ly Low
Pricea

OHIO VALLEY

5141att lain
991-6910

FOODS

•-•y,
ohio'

pony, Raccoon Mint No. 3,
P. 0. Box 490, Athono, Ohio
45701, hoa aubmitltd en
applicaltion to revlle a Coal

Mining and Reclamation
. Permit numbered R-0483·
t 2, to 1ho Ohio Department
of Naturel r•ourCea. Div·
i1ion of Reclamldion. The

propOMd cu.l mining and
racl.metion operation ,-111
be conducted in Meig1
County, Solem Townahlp,
Soctlona 13, 26. 28. 30, 31,
32, 33 end Froctions 7 , 13,
19. ond 2&amp; ond Vinton
County, Wltkoavile Town·
ahlp, Soctlono 1, 2E, 3E. 9 .
end Goltlo County, H.u nting·
ton Townlhlp, Section 1.
Tho P,opo10d underground

mining areu encomp111
3.287 .cr-. •nd are located ·
on tho Wltkoavltte 7'h mlnuta
U.S.G.S. quodrongle mop,
opproxlmotoly 0.2 mil11
aouth 10 2 .8 mlloa aouth of
Wllkoavlto ond 0.3 mitoa
soulll to 2 .6 ml1oa aouthw·
oat of Setem Center, Ohio.
Tho opptlcatlon propo- 10
ea.-nd the are11 for room
end pltter nmhod of underground mining. ond provldt
for pHtor removal on tholt
ar.. 1nd on .,rea pr•

vloualy approved 10 be

mined ond ID&lt; lon-11
mining.
Tho opptlcolion Ia on lilt at
the oHice of tho Meigo

Cou,.,.y Recorder, Meig1
County Court Hou•, 8•
cond StrMt. Pomeroy. Ohio
45789 and tho Vinton
County A-rdor.
County Court Hou•.
Stroot, McArthur,
45651 lor public v - i ....
Wrlt1on commonto Mid/ or
req-to for en Informal
oonfeNnce m.y be aen1 to
1111 Olvlaioft of nocte~natlon,
Fountlln 8qllll"l. aun•nu
1·3, Columbue. Ohio
43224. within 30 dr(e of
tM lilt ct.to of pubtl..tlon
olthll notice.
(11 18. 211: 121 1.
4tc

a.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

GoodR•T.L.C.
2&amp; Yra. Exp.
Refetj!QCOI

HILLSIDE MUZZU

OWNII: GIIG I. ROUSH

lOADING

~ ~~TRACTORS

MODDN GUN

. 992-6173
Joe or Pauley lowlanol

SUPPUES

Middleport, Oh.

.--:~~

UD

GEN~!~l

~

-

"

RESIDENTIAL

COIIIIIRCIAL

tCU8TOitll KITCHENI. IATHI

Muzdtloo4ing Suppil•
Guo Suppll•

•VINYL IICMNG. ROORNG

Gu111 • A- • SJ.gs

Moti••

-EXTEHIIVE REMODEUNQ
•METAL IUILDtNQS

41~ St.

"IDW IIICOIII NOME"
12-21 -1 mo.

22 Ammo

HOUSING. APT. PROJECTS

Rt. 124 Eoat of Rutlend
Al:rou HopP'f Hollow Roed

SINCE J969

GUII'f IT. SYIACUII

Annou nee men t s

. Ph. 614-741-2355

992·7611

8/ 20/ rln 1 mo. pd ..

11·21-81-tln.

3 Announcements
Ditch Witch Trench• lenriCII •
for !lying wilt• ln11 &amp; drein

LASHLEY
SERVICE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN

INSULATION

1 MI. East of St. lt. 7
on 141 at Chester

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

WELDING
AUTO 8t
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY 8t
WRECK REPAIR

lkw"-lullt
"Free Eatlmetn"

PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949-2860

985-3844

NO SUNDAY CALLS

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1·5-' 89-1 mo.

3·11-tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

fiREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

$35

209 S.th

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PER LOAD
DEUYEIED

"At llta"'"'l• l'rbs"

PH. 949·2801
or Its. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

UGHT HAUUNG DONE

BIU SLACK
992-2269
........ 1fn

4-16-86-lln

ripe. Own• C.W. Dnlson. call
8t4-448-01&amp;9. .

Reduce rout Weight· Tllk e ''Ntw

Sh.epe Diet Pl111'' .,d E-V•
Wettr

Pilla .

Awlltbte Fruth

Ph•rNCY·

W. wll ha~t CDal for "e m•gen at
HEAP. Moigo County Dopr. of

Human Saivk:w,

and H!AP

voud'l... We OM P,e you
pro,..n deltv•l•. E_.tior Slh
Workl. Inc. Pom.-ov. Ohio
·114-892· 3891 .
.
Don' t Tr11h It Caah it!
Public Reqollng ntM' opan for
bueln-. We •e on M.. n tnd
14th StrMt, Point Pl . .~t.
W.Va. We b.ly cana, 1lumn,'
cooper llrld more. Mo"d-r thru
Frtdfll 8:00 till 8:00. Soturdoy
8:00 til noon. For mot'tlnfor.,...

llonccoll304-178-3181 .

4

Glveilwav

P.-t Coon Hound puppi•. CaH

11.4-2&amp;&amp;-&amp;1101 ""• &amp;'PM•
2 rebbtta. 1 y•r old. IIIICik m•e
.,d c.mtl femllt. Alto 2 m••
CMe, 1 bt.ak lnd 1 white Md
- · Call 814-882-8904 ""•

B:OO.

One bl.ck f8male

o.,..., Sh..

pherd pup 8 mon11w old. nooc1 1
good l)omo. 304-4511-1 B2t.

,
''

"

••

-.

�..
Paglt- 1 2-The Daily Sentinel
6

K-

lost end Found

FOUND: E.... 01-• in
porWnglo1· _

.. -

Clll30 ....7.31112.

.

LAFF-A-OAY

Oftcl

Unt..r,.hld.' Adull• ontr,. Prlvoto ~""'• . U80 o mo.
Dopoolt _ . . .. Clll 814-4411-

44

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH po(d loo .. 3 modll

,a,

and n•• uNd c.,.. · Srnll:h
Buldl·Pontlec.
Eeltern

Cornploto -ldo of .,rniMO • ontiQu•. Aloo Wood II
coel ...... s..an·. fwnlture
II AUOIIon. Third II Olive,
114-446-3151.
with or without

"You. m
me nervous,
Shorty, let me drive!"
~~~:;::;:;:;:=:;:=:::-r;:;:;::::;:;:::~=::;~~::i::="-l
H
31 H
f
S le

· 1.any u.,.IY·I14- I .11
moton.-Coli
3811-1301

lip Wanted

011181 or

a

-o:

GET PAID ior .-ng boolcll For III•Home buitt 1983. · •
e1oo.oo ~ ottlo.
PAtE- room. Mlh. v•~• llltalel.ct11711. 111 I. llnoolnwoy. N. rlc. Potnt Pl..unt. call 30+
1711-1349.
AurO&lt;e.IL 80842.
Nl tlnio moclcol t....,ologlot Government Hom•! From
AICP: tlmo mOIIcol lobor· I 1. 00 Ill RoD llrl· Forldoo--.
lOry -olc&gt;Qiot AICP. Flo• Rep~ Tu boNn!!'*" Pro...,.
N- -ln;ThloAioolC.I
tech II 11d:lont nwtt be llbl• to tl•.
, _ lllloblol 1·3111-733-8084
MIY doy ol ohllt. 3 to 5
, ... •f*l.ncB ,......, ... Cd Eld G27 41H "" """""'llotlngol
Wontod To Buy Uood Mobllo ,_,.onnel office 304-175Hom•. Colt 114-.-.01711.
· 4340. AA·EO E.
2 otory. 3 bedroom, 2 b•ho.
... "'. ,_,_ "'" .... hod ......
mom. on-od porch,
o•-e• o• hell. Induct.. nave.
12
Situations
rolri-or. - · ond dryor.
Wanted
ztos Jodooon A.... 304-17111881.

""•"* ,..

olclorly "'tho!r 32
Coro
home. Coil 814-4411-8384.

Mobile

Hom81

for Sale
15
Utecl

~rntture

IPf thi piece or

e..-1n...1 d - • w. d -

........ Aof. . . . ...,..
11,..._8121.

Help Wanted

eon

Will do lnoome Ta. Short torm
~.rlmoMLTfor fill~ -ippod

ezo.

con e1... 992·1137.

Phyeld81'1 Office labor•CII'Y·

UPto etSHOUA PROCESSING
MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUARANTEED. FREE DI!TAILI,
WIITE. ID, 10157 W. PHILAOELPHIA. IUrrE 231-00, ON·
TARIO, c;A:LIF 11782.

-o

WANTED: Full·tlmo -ploy·
mlllt
your
own
home
Homo In....,
_
_
.._ uwith•
8udlora Community lervllioo.
Wo
provldo
oolory ..... - " do
dilly ooomMidbonrYou provldo • he- guldonoo
ond lriondohlp In o lomlly
llmoopharo. " - " • ollllly .,.
t - p - l l v l n g - Oftd 0

cammltmlnl: to tt. ~end
diUIDjMMit of In ln.kl.lei(IJ
with r .........
toct Sylvlo 0"1' • 441-7101
olt•I:OOPM. A ..._amutt

2908 Jockoon A.... 30,..87111881.

Wll . . .oM In "!'! ho- Any
houro. M1Y dov· Coli 814-44111859 aflw Sp.m.
Wll do hou• d-Ing .. be!Jt
olltlnll In or out of homo.
304-1711-2740.

Bo!Jt -lnmy-ft•lblo
hourw. Hlolild Ordnonoo School.
Pho,. 304-8711-2714-

-0 .

r olclorly _ . . In
...., t.ome or btilllr•lt In my
ho- Inquire 1714 Jafloroon
Blvd.. Point
Wll

PI--·

21

do .... with ,_.. you
k"aw· end NOT to ... d money
throuth t .. mil und yau hwe

co,, _ _ -

lnvootltllod tho ofl•ln•
Own your own IPP... 01 ehoe

ttore. choo•• from: J•en·
lport1wetr, Ladl•. Mena.
ChM«on--nlly. La-go olooe.

Don--·0&lt;

-•ori•
111-

·
- - -.......... d
n-•:IJICiolborno.Hollt-.

P.o-

tlonlot •ob. lomo ••IIIIo
hours. lend......,.. • , . . . d
P.O. 8oo
110. Oollipok Ohio 45131.

- ...

14x70. 17.800.00. 30.....
3427.

34

81.11inesa
BuHdlriga

0·8 NightClub. Din•. otod&lt; ond
oqulpl'lltlri. 2 rontolep.,monto
-ha
Contra!
t1r '"'*!Own•
other Mt__,L AI
thl1 Including buldlng for
0711.000 OlD . Coli Ron 81...tl:!-9972.
36

lots &amp;

Acraege

Ch.,o. t..a II. Mlcllolo. For..
noo. luglo loy. LovL Comp
Beverly Htflt, Orgenlcally
o-n. Lucio. -20ooorOr e1:t. 99 one prloo dtllgn•.
Multi 11or prloloog • ...,,_ 0&lt;
tornl¥ ohot • - Rotol prun-tblo lor top quollly
normolly ..-lrom 119
to . .o. o- 210 - · 2800
otyloo. t!LIOO to 121.100:
lnvontory........._ 11111.-.,..
tore. - d oponlne ... c..
opon 11 doyo. Mr. Lou~

41

Horn• for Rent

Ni.-, fllrnlohod omol houoo.
Adulto only. All. ,....trod. No
- · Coli I I ... 4411-0338.
31A . hou •. clolr ... AC.I380o
mo. Col 30... 1711-1104, or
11711-53811.
3 BR .• 1 botl\ CA . No poto. I
mlo out I 80. UIO. Dop . • rol.

1 yr. llloa

c.• 114-.-.2380.

2 BR . hou• II 2 IR . trol• loo
..... Coli ..... .,... 4411-41011.
3 Ill. houoo. Dopook roqulr ...
10 Old Fort Trol. Coll114-4462883. I to I dolly.

War-•

u.Md IPPII.r.oe~ ,Md TV e-.
QpM BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sot. 814-.-.1119. 827 3rcL

Inducing Mt• • gll'bea&amp;
111!1 ale adu Ito only. Coil 8 f 4- . Ave. Otlllpolit, OH.

441-4807 or 44&amp;-2toz.

-~~ ,.... ...... 1 IR. opt.

App~

fllrnlohod. klo ollo. .lo.,. I
block from downtown. Cll
II 4-4411-41311.

.,,,.heel

Nlct 1·2 bedroom epertmeme.
Awltbla
or unfur·
nlo hod. [lopool roqulr... Col
814-4411-4345 oft• I PM.

2 lA . opt., now plioh CIIPot.
nM · _,_...,.,....,paid.
e17Somo. Co~ 30... 1178-5t04,
575-83811. 5711-7738.
Furnlohod 2 Ill. gwogo opt.
Aduttt

ontv.

8, 4- 4411-2404.

No

• •·

Cell

Ap.c..,... wlllble. HUD ec-

cept ...

con 304-1711-1104-

-,_,_ · 2 .-kln~~o
BR .. lounclry
ln-11
Ell:ol·
1om -ldl. No p - Dop. •
rot. Cal 114-.-.1817.

GOOD UUD A~PUANCES
W•'*'· dry.... . raft_ll_
rengu. Skegga Appliencea,
Up!* RN• Rd ....ide Stone
Crllt Motel. 814-..,.. 7388.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sof• end ch*' priced from
0311 to •981. Tobl• 010 ond
up to U25. Hlde-•·bedl 1310
to eus. Rodlnn *228 to
UTI. lAmpo 121 to e121.
Din•• *109end up to *41&amp;.
Wood table w -1 ch .... •us to
17911. D•k 1100 up tQ UTI.
Hutdael •400 111d up. Bunk
bedi · compl•• w-mlll'tNNM
t21.enduptot395.hbfbe*
1110. M•tt-orbox "'""go
ful or twin •ea. ftrm e7L ond
••8. o..- ... U80 • up.
Klng•3SO. 4 dr.Wit Chei 189.
Gun collin. . I. 8 • 10 glin.
Btbl m-oo e38 II e45,
Bid frlrn• 120. 130 • King
frame tao. Good ••.Ulan of
bedroom eutt11. mttll eebinllltL
h...a.o•• •30 Md up to 185.

90 Oeya 11m1 11 c•h with
approved crldll. 3 Ml• out
Bulwllo Rd. Opon 9wn to lpm
Fumlohod 2. 3. cw 4 roomo II Mon. thnl a.. Ph. 81""4411boll&gt; Ct-. -~· only. No 0322.
- · Ref. • dop. ooqulrod. Col
51 ... 4411-1119.
v•iev Fwnlture
N.w •d uud furnllure and
eppllcancee. Call 114-4417572. Hour1 9-5.

Effld•cr IIP.-tmtnt w / prl\llte
both ~ Ilia Orondo. Coli 11 ...
2411-5221

2 bo*oorn /l.pto. fur ront.
Corvotod. Nlcoo.,ln• Laundry
ladlat• wllobla CoH 11""
912-3711. EOH.

Depoelt 1nd no rent

tor the

PICKENS USED RJRMTURE
Complete hou11hold turnl1ft.
lngt..'h mlle-Jerrlcho. 304-8711 4BO. 814· 38 B· 9773.
1\fenlnge.
VIR~ ' S

FURNITURE •
APPUANCES
Opon Mon.·Sot. 9 AM·I PM,
Sun. 12 noon-&amp; PM. 814-44113158.

PRICES SLASHE O·W•*"boreg. 1149 now S75. Qu.., sire
Rlvnldo Apart- In
rNttre ~
sar- reg . t181 ftOW'
Mldcl_.. From etaz.
•106. Counw.,woodteblewlth
81 ... 992·7787. EO H.
3 cllrolro&amp; bind&gt;· rOc!. U89 now
120. M.,y
Monoy lov· .
2 bem'oom unfurnilhed with ln;VIIu-. Rt. 141 lnC.,.on-v
.. ove •d rlflfvaator. No pete. ,,N. mle on Lincoln,..,
. , ........ 2283.

one,. Vll~geMtnar.,d

1 bedroom. booomont opt. I
A!utiM\• paid. .,50. ~
month. In ftomeoy. Cell 114112-2141.'
oclu~.

-e

Uving room euite • ~oom
tuht. rol-e-My bed. CDrbln •

Snyder. 885 Socond Aw .. 51""
4411-1171 .

Good fro.t·fr• rftlg. , 1121.
Hoopltol 140. Coli II""
Btoclllhr... Middloport. Ohio. 2411-1182.
2 bedr-..rnlohod ............
utiiU• ,.kl. ,.,...... Phone 1\No-~ plold llvln~m ou·
304-882·21811.
111. 3 yra. old. good concltion.
•100. 080 . CoH 814-742·
21114111• 5:00.

2 Hldo-o·Bido .... oola CoN

114-Dt2· 710T.
Dinino roomtlble 81d lour btiCk
Ft.rnilhtd tlfldlncy dowmown
opt. ol utlltl• pold. dopook
r.qulrod. 30 ... 9911-3480.

o,....

ch- ..00.00 orlolnolly
•1 .250.00.
wtth mlr·
row Md •• of twin bldl
e300.00. Fulelzewhtlec.oo~
b .. *100.00. 30 ... 17e.l130.

KenR'IM'e •to wah•. works
nlo.htd. t280.00month. 180tl'ti good. e 100.00. 304· 895·
Jaflw..., Blvd.. 304-875-2184 3422.
lfl• 1:00.
Five room •Pt. b.e:h. unfur-

53
45

Fwnilt.f room-911 leoand
Die. t75 • mo.
Utili Ia
Slnai1IMie.
both.
.-.44181f1•7PM.

Ave.,irJ"
~o.- tor

Ita••

rent·week or mo111h.

St. .ln_g .t t120 1 mo. Bdl•
Hoto"'1""4411-8880.

11-.tng roome wtth oooldng.
AlooTrlll11- AI hoofo.upo.
CAll. oft• Zp.m . .304-7731111. M•on WV.
Sleeping room With ldtdten
prlvol- to old.-ly lady, phone

30,..571-1791.

46

Antiques

Furnished Rooms
Buy tw Sell. Alvlrino Antlquoo.
1124 E. M•n Str-. Pomwoy.
Hourt: M.T.W 10•.m. to ep.m.,
Sundoy 1 to lp.m. 114-992·
2126.
64 Misc. Merchandise
Whllldtaln-rww or u.... 3
Whltlld .. ICirlc ICOot«&lt;. Clll
Rogn Mobllty collect, 1· 11,..
170-1111 .
FlreNOod 1oo lllo. HordWood

.....,P ""'*

• •· e30
Coli 814-44&amp;-4182.

GOVERNMENT JOIS
ne.040.· eet.230. - · HCoM II) 8011-587·8000
Ext. R·IIOI for cauront - a l
llot.

'*"'•

U80. o dort At homo! phone orclln tor our oe~.
I'Ooplooollyou. Nlllonwldo. For
Ootollo
.... ~--·
8111-451-81197Eot.
K1822. , .
Got pold "" r - g tooo .. l
0100.00 ~title. - · PAIE-

...... ; flcllty. Lo-hlp Mid

111.000 BTU Lon,_ Coont.,.
ftoalllm.a1Whh2&amp;0gel.t:Mk.
Exctfltnt condition. Cal 8144411-2233.
Hou .. Coat lor •le. 125 a to'n.

Con bodollvwodorpl&lt;*odupot
tho ..... Koyotone Rd. C.H
114-38~8120 _,time.
l1n Kenmore refrig.-•or-3
yra, old. EJDCel. cond. C.H
114.-4116-3044.
Mixed ,_dwoochiD. '12p•
bunrla Contoinlng epprox. l'h
ton. Ohio P ..l• Co .. Pom•oy.
Ohio. 114-992·8451 .
GEwather. Whfle. he.,yduty, 3
cycle. A1 . *160. e14-367·
0322.
1184 C.J . 1 Jeep. M•rtin 22

u -...·m Rlfle wo. h

-p·- . ,._

~ 11

.....,..114-.992·1229 oltw 5:00p.m.

For ule: Olk firewood. Cali

30 ... t75-2717.1ft• 4:30 p.m.
40 ft. he.,y duty lluminum
conetructlon llldd• *210. 00.
304-87~7991 .

SURPWI-Ori;inol A,nny. Oo·
nlm. Rontol Clothlne gr.,
c. .
(block·wllltot. Som
Somerv•e 1 Old Route 21·

oufl.,,.

Junction Independence flo ...

(-ERA). (EootRovon-ood).
fridoy, Sotunloy. ·sundoy only

P .M.• 1o perctnt an.
C.m.-t dathln;. C.mouft.,ge
Noo~a:oo

at... 30...273-

lnoulotod c . . .
5181.

TIIPPOft. S .S . elttd:rlc. 4 burn•
top, 33"JC20Yz o.D.
. 171.00. 30... 875·2&amp;08.

••ov•

BuDding Motoriolo
Bloc*, brick. IIWer pip•. windowa. lintels. Me. Clatde WintWI, Rio Or•de. 0 . C1l 114245-5121 .

WESTERN REO CEOAII
• Chenn• RUitfc
ind -olod Lop Siding
• Deck Met•ill•
o....ontood Ouollty
CEll DE. INC.. Athono·ll 4·
894-3178

Pets for Sale

56

Groom and Supply Shot&gt;Pot
Grooming. All breedl . .. All
ttyltl. 1'"'1 PM Food De.ter.
Julio Webb Ph. t14-4411-0231 .

o...,nwyncl

Can-v KMinol.
Penl .. end Si.-n•• .. d Him•

Hay

&amp;

Grain

11motfrv hoy. Good q,.llty.
.n .80 ~bola Rogiot- Nu·
bien buck kldl . Benum
chlckono. Coli 11 ... 388-8841.

.._, for •le. phone

Tro 11 s port a11011

Vehlal•

Cotvliftl.

Chfl'll y. Sur@l!'t. Buy-

"' Guide Ill 8011-tl7·1000
Ext. 8 · 10189.
198&amp;FordEXP. hpd •• AM ·FM.
12399. John' • Auto Sll11.
bMow Holld., lnn- Kena~gt .

...

1oo - I n T-Piolno.
2 bedr- et71. ~ montlr
oflla .._ .... ond - - Col

GOVIR~~=Ifrom

tl•.
IIIIIAI Col ...... -... 1·
318-733-IOMIJOI. Cl 273a·A.
1'011 CUIIII!NT U811NGII

.... dKIIIt 30 ... 1711-1078.

,,•

Poor loyo Tlr-. Hon dnon.

disappearance of an Oragon
t"'!B~r.

I 188 Dodge Doytona. low ml·

1875PontlacLI Mono. ....,lld8
.

-tt.

til

'

Horne
. :
Improvements ·
, ~ 1.

BASEMENT

UnoondlliDMI Hf•lma oU•--~
t ... LoCII rtt.tnCII .,,,.~

• 0 MOVII: UnlallhluUy

Free

e ill TV 101 Keegan

-1m••: c.ll

• ".

F u M - CoHio pup e7&amp;.oo.

-

.. 30... 87&amp;-2233.
Musical
Instrument&amp;

I "'Ill ~llllllllr':,

&amp;

li'lt!',hll.~

DPt.aNNIW•

For• Welt deal on en.,., otulld
Cll', trudtor~n. MIICennyBiu
•t Jim Mink Chevrolet ·
Oldornobll' 114-44&amp;-3872 or
304-773-5134.

21.0110

mil-. 2 door, or--. while
lnt..tor. tutornlllla •a oond.

suspects Vance·a new gl~ Ia
an undarcovar n.arcoliCI

(

a

dellc:tlve.
IIJ) MOVIE: l'lay Milly lor Ma

SWEEPaf endt•lnvm.ichm•
repllr• ..-rte. .nd eupptl•. Pldl
up end d.UV.,. Dwtt V.a.um

Cleenlt", one heft milt. ~
Ooorgoo C""* lid. CoM '&amp;tJ4411-0214.
. .... .

EEK &amp; MEEK
~~

.---..._

Corpontry
tJtwol.
tho t&gt;f\rl1il&gt;&lt;
jq~ "''
hour, ·,.nollnt
dry
Ina llearlclll, f'll'l'tOdlling ~

• NaehviUa Now
1:05 (J) Qaldan Glabaa Preview
1:30 (J) • (I) Heatl at ... c...

Marla hlde1 her high gradaa

CC'Mik.lG

In order to k8!£1 thl hunk
shl 'a dating. 1;1

y-

Ill M"A'8'11

t:OO e

(J)

82

MORTY MEEKLE AND' WINTHROP
-.
. MY qR/&gt;,NDFATt-IER
H E 6AYS !Tis tz:l&lt;

:
·.

\

'
·Gl ?' f-,.-1Gf. 4~',
.

~~
I

~

i'

Plumbing
Heating

PEOPLE WHO DON 'r
LI KE FAST FOOD.

SAY5 H E 'S INVENTED
S LOWFCOD.

'

304-8711-7121 .

I

·~

I ·
I

~~

.
IT TCOK HIM 'THREE t-IOLJRS
• LAS T NIEiHTTOEAT HIS
AMS H ED I'OrAltJE.6.

dettltuM flmlly 111nda ill

\

~(J) · ~·

j

:":\~Equalizer A
ground agalnsl a rutn)MI
landlord.

11J Lany Kina Llwl

9 MOVIE: lllnd Date (P013)
(1:36)

1:05 (J) MOVIE: Onoe Upon a

,,

~ In

Oil'

·~I·,I..!J-1

BARNEY.

&amp;.

1111 Waat (PO) (2:45)
•.30 (J) (I) IIOOparman After
being ahol, Hooperman
awakens to find himself In
·--neR. C

e

. Ill VklaaCaunlry

e 01

liS Nlgilrhllrllnotgtaalllltal The
director of studanl nursta
moves Into Nlghtingtle '
ruldance hall. C

).

CARTER'S PWMBINO
I
ANDHEATING
· 1
Car. Pourth •d Pin.
Ohio
.
-ne 1143888 or ,,..,
4411-4477
· I

f

Oolt":"

ea.eoo.

84

Electrical
&amp;, Refrigeration

lJ)

til

port)._,.-... -·*•.......

..,m

whoolo,

Eoglo

........., op1lrm -

,

•

.'

18C-anciC10:30(l)Newa

-

.

"79 Ford LTD, 74,1100 mi-.
..... . . . nD Rill. .778.00.
30,..1176-2311 or 175-2102.

TNdll for Sale

Clotwno. Wollo. o.iv-v AnyCoN 81 ... 446- 740,..No
SundoyC..

R II R w•w
Poolo,
clltll'nt, w ..11 . lmm.ctiM•
1.000or 2.000gollonodlllv-v.
Coli 304-t711-1370.
' •.
- • • Wllw Houllng '""'toil: :
phono 304-576-2311 or 114-&gt;
.. '" '
4411-40ea.

1158 Chevy ;&gt;lcku' hoH 101\
.,_ bod. E - eond. Col
., ..... 4171.
11M etowy ~ .., c Dotu• V· L 4 oprl., utn ........
olldlng ...- . ~od llnor.
...,._ low mil•.
neoo. Col 8, .........
,.., of·
t•IPM.

Bernice Bede OsoJ

0 • •d Wt111t Strvlot: Poo.a,..

tim~

87

Upholst_.,

- ..
.

")guess I'll wall lUI he decides wllalhar or
nollo jump ... "

.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

.•

' ..

..

42 Himha
43 llll!"knt•yt•d

I H.A.

litdlan

44 M1uht

6 Top off

slump

9 While•

45. S!'llU&lt;'III'('.

f)OWN

poplar
instnnnc&gt;nl

2 l'ul

12 "Cry Ml'

·a-

·

I lliamoml
l.t•rm

10 SlrinK&lt;'&lt;I

..

Ull With

13 Watdtful

3 Ba•:chanal
41sland

15

Fruit .
drink
16 Rest
18 You (Her.)
19 "Father
of the
li ·homh"
21 Ualf

a scorP
22 Noachlan
·craft
23 "Th~­
Beautiful
Oirl"
24 Punish
a lot
27 April
Is one
28Meat
29 EHpou94'
30 l'ahl••

5
6
7

(Fr.)
Amu&lt;:k
Tete-a· tete
Indian

17 Exasperate
20 Gaunt
23 Fashion
mulberry 24 Tra1:k
8 "Musl•·
25 Entrance
Man" star 26 Sister .
11 Abbe
of Apollo
or padre 27 Remem·

32 Angry
33 llrinll joy
34 lluyer
or bettor
36 Chinese
society

14 Extra

41 Uockey

hrance
•

39 Feather
scarf

8ft!al

29 Su.-

inning

S&lt;'rtlJl

EAA .

spedalty
35 Suffix
denoting
origin
36 Bahy's

dlsi'Overy

37

llock

workers
union
38 Stallonl'

rule
· 40 "Vertigo"
star

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI liS- Here's how to work It:

~· .8 =....

. . . . . . . . . . .~~'·" . . . ~~-,~-­

Through Weet Alttca

1115

AXYDLBAAXR

18 Naw Ca.ll!b r

11:00(]) llamlnglan 8laela
• (]) (J) • (I) \II) •

lsLONGFELLOW
ill

III)Newa
(l) MGIIII: JoMpll
Clmpbellancl .,. ~ Dl

a.. MJih The planting

cultUree with their emphasta
lng with a senslllve friend today try not one Is imposing upon you to take core
arll hlahllghtod.
Jen. 25• 1•
to let anything of a monetary nature be· ,of something this person should be
(!) .... MOyers' lltll1d at
·
come an isaue. If It's )uot petty costs, handling alone.
....(NA)
In the year ahead you are likely lo lnlll- suHer the loss .
LIBRA (S.pl. 21-Gct. 23) Usually you're
II]) LoVe Connecllon
ale a number of chlngealn order load· TAURUS (AprU zo.Mar 201 career con- nor a poueulve person, bul1oday you
D Mauewtlne
v~nce your personal ambitions. They dltlons could be a little more compell· could step out of character K someone .
9ltoneYmOOnttl
should work oul favorably for you. pro- live I han usual today and the race Is you like is more a11en11ve to others than ·
0 MlamlVIaa
vided you give them adequate lima lo likely to go IO the quick-witted rather to you .
Ill You Can S. 1 liar
develop.
then lo the strong .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nav. 22) Olaegrii- t1:30e&lt;J&gt; sta.etatca.AQUARIUI (Jen. ZO.FIIb. 11) ll's belt GEMINI (Mer 21..June 20) Someone ments ""'-you and your male !Mil'
lll Cal111 lllklllll
neil to be unduly angry with anyone to- yrnl may have lo deal with today knowa r 'trivial IIIU88 could lead to 101ne1hlng
Purdue va. Michigan
day. but II you leal you muel vent your 1111 the right bullons lo push In order to ·• more aerlous today U they ar11 not
temper, take II out on the party who get your goat. Don'l play Charlie Me· quickly reaolved.
m - you mad. not an lnnocenl by· Carlhy to hla Edgar Bergen.
IAQITTAIIIUIIND¥.11 Dee 21) II may
• 0 ...., ... Qeme
Stander. Aquarius, lreot yourMif to a CANCIR (June 11..Jtrly 22) Try not 10. ,be w1ee notlo a11ernp11Ukl today lila!
bir1hday gin. Send lor your ~atro- use anything belonging lo !rlendsloday require pa- and CC&gt;n&lt;*tlratlon . n
Graph prodlctlono for lhe year ahead by unle&amp;s you haw their apj)rova). Bitter you handle lhem poorty, II m)ght ba
IB) . . . . . . . . . . Hatr
ni6Hihg S 1 to Altro-Graph, c/o this I leellngl could reeuH If what you borro"' quite some time balore you pick up
Apparent
-njsWipaper, P .O. Box 91428, C-and. 11 misused.
where you left on.
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Guard against CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-..JM, 11) You are
· &gt;odlac algn.
lncllnatloni to puoh too hard today apt to be I'IIMOn&amp;bly pnrclenl w1We 11:00~=1:
(NII)t t :34)
PIICEI IF!Ib. 20-llateh 201 You may when anemptlng 10 make your points major expendlluree 1r11 concerned lo- ·
. (ij lpc kCutsr
have a few exira raapo?"'blllt)Mio COn· with others. This tacllc wllllncreaoe re- day, but you mlghi be more ax1ravagan1
Ill CJl1910fl
tend with today. Don t make matters ·. alalance, not II.
lhan , _ r y regarding amalllr
.(I) 111111
••Hanlght '
WOrM ~Y blowing lhem oul ol proper· Vll80 (Aug. 23-llepl. 121 Don't' be expenditures.
'·
Gii)_!IM_IIjlk
-..
.
~ion In your.mlnd.

c

e

lf..~l;l

::=.:...-:.....
.,,.1.1111
·~·
···'"'

One letter stan&lt;b for ano~r. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation or the words are all
hints. Each day Ill!! code letten are different:
CRYPfOQUOTE

1·15
W M S

MS.IGWXKS

F XIW

GI

CJGZKI
D T

··-

WMS

TDJWM

Dt

ISS Q
WMS

W ·M S ' T R W R J S .

DZ •

W G DZ

..

WMS
WMXW

MXJPSIW
GZIHJGF·

WMS

ZXWGDZXV

•

I

It

..

(!) Chuak Davia' Dancing

..., ...

e3.380.00 •king U,SIO.OO
30 ... 17.8301.

K,C. Ia hooked on herOin. Q
Ill) e!IJ WIHguy David
. Sternberg's legiiCy II 10 ltvt)
murder chorges agalnal
Plnzolo. Q
AtHnto H1ll
0 Evening Nawa
Ill Newa

eo

AHidentill or comm•clll wirJ
lnt- New 11Niot or retlirl~
U"""'od oloctrldon. AldonOU!
Boctrlcol." 30 ... t711- 178&amp; :. 1

8

othlrwlde •c ODnd. blok ,.....

«:-. llaalietbaH
e Cll China llaaOh

McMurphy dlacovtra thai

...••

85

,.-••

31

10:00 (J) 7GO Club

30 ... 87.5851.
1181 Mor111ry c ... gor lor lllo.
3.000 mil•. coli 304-45a.
1773.

G Nlghl Coutt a

e CIJ TM WonclarYeara
s.n,_

RON'S T•ltvlllon Ser-t1'8!1.'
cilia on RCA. auu.,,r
GE . Spodallna In ZonMI&gt; Col(
304-8711-2318 or 114-4411- 1
24114.

w•hlr•.
..... 30 ... 8711-231111.

(])

Trying 10 be COOl, Kevin
lakes up with a dlsrepUIIIble
kld._(R)Q
(l) ChaltlplanthiJI
Danclna 1111 Top
proteaalonal dancera from
lha U.S. and Caneda
compete In lht Latin and
'lnodern dlv)slons ol dancing
In the competition ht)d In 1
Cleveland, Oh)O . (NR)
. (!) ~llllp .._

Hou11

hou1e clfl e.vldng GE, Hot
Pblm,
dry1r1 lf'i~

.7•.u

11J Mutdet, lite Wrote

'Tl-m.'S A BIG

. .

"Darn!' exclaimed !1outh. "I knew I
should have bid a slam.' So be won the , WI!ST
EAST
ace of spedes, played a heart to dum· ' • Q J 10 8
. .Kill
my's ace and ruffed a heart. Then he • Q 6
.KJUS
played the club ace and ruffed a club. · t t 5
+n
Next be ruffed another heart with thtl • K J 10 7 4
•Qs
seven of dillitonds. Surprlle! West
SOtJTH
overruffed with the nine of 'diamondl
and returned a diamond. Now the 12
tricks that South thought were ln the
tAKJT!
bag dwindled to 10.
•A'UU
Declarer'! respon~lbllily II to en·
Vulllereble: North-South
sure maklnc bls contract If pc.lble.
Dealer: South
Here UDiucky diltrlbulloa could al·
WIJI have wrecked bls chances. What
Wftl
Nor,. Eut
if the second heart was overrufled, or
It
even the IIECOIId club when that suit Pus
Paa
was lint ruffed In dummy? But once Pau
Paa
declarer scored one ruff with a low Pus
P111
&amp;+
trump in ltia band and another with a Pau
Pus
low trump In dummy, he had no ....
Opening lead: • Q
cuae for goln&amp; aet. All of dummy's remalnli\g hearts can be ruffed with the
A·K·J of diamonds, ~nd declarer'• L - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . 1
third and lourth clubs with dummy's tricks and bls coatnct.
•Q-10 of diJIIIOIIdl. Then the Jut club
J-Jocollr'l- 'JM:oltt·• ........can be ruffed with dummy'• diamond "1"""*7 ... Clnloa-' (wr11,.,- .... - .
lolie -.M J....,) ,.. -I~ II
eight. 01 count the defenders wUI lite
to • t . . . .,., t'l 2 ,.,.,...,......_
eveatuaUy come in with their trump
niDe bul declarer will still have 11
o-.---~·

(R) (1:42)

Plalritlng: lmtrb &amp; EtttiHer.1
,.. .. oollmol•. Col ., ... +"-.
8344

Ak•• TrM Trimrrine.:d Stump
RemQWI. Fr• •
• · C•l

tMd. Alto Pomer.,lan. 3041711-2193.

heetth gu•r•-

Y"oura .(PO) (1 :36)

ooh!'!t

1983 Bt.idc LtS.bra excel.
mnd. 11998or-olfrr. 1983

1978ond1877T·Birdo. Both lor
1n5. Won't _.,..,.ratefv. c.n
814-992·2128.
.

~or,_,,

!11 CIMn Coal Tect..alag,

WATERPAOOANG · . . '

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,

w•

e

Jason and the kids remlnlsee
"about Ma~·s aHact on
their Iivas.
(l) (!) 8m oanlan Wtll1d
. Examine the quell lo
undar~land and conlrol the
genetic baalt ol lffe. Q

' " ...

1987 Lebwon Coupe Turbo.
Excelllnt.concltknL AI aptian&amp;
Muot ool. Co~ ., ... 446-1081).
Koop trylnr.

AKCregiat•edCGdc•Speniell,

Brllle•dllglrlowort.. noo.
Coli 114-112·3142 "' ., ...
111-1030.

Unt.ormhocl c ...ploa
........ _ _ od. Rt. 1.

2 - - Sond Hll Aotd.
Ill ...175-3834.

®~S.aketban
(I) Growing Pain•

Serv1ces

Rootlne P'omblrie ot...rt-:
ot._.
homo reprolr. Coli "1!1-·
317· 04411.
:.- ...

Chwy lmp•a 14100 or
trtdo. Col botw- 9 B. IJ4-446-T059.

lhot:l.

I:DO ~VIE: S.nllt!HIIIIII
My-.o C~J~~a Include lila

1983 Ch.,en.. 73.000 ml•.
CloQd mnd. A'*~g 12200. CoH

l"'lol

18 Crilolc llld Chaoe
7:35(1) Senfonlllltllon

30~111!2·2388.

pl•e. C.l 11 ... 44&amp;7121.,: 11!" :

co nota

IIJ CroaeiiN
Ill Night Coutt

y (NR) (1 :34)

Rot.-y or clble tool cHiing.."
Mon w.~, compl•ld• tmed.,i
PUmp eel• •d nrvb.. 3041
e9s.ao2
i

Point ,._.,t, 304-8711-2083.
10 gol oot up .,4.99 Md 10gol
compl•• e43. 21.

IIIA!f"H---rdy( Q

• (]) Ill \1......_

1985 Blick Som••et·ilkentw.
Auto.•
crulllt, AC. AM-FMc-. Coli 114-3118-1240.

Fish TMk. 2413. J•ckeon A_,.,

A rouND of. cv~e ·

Dodgo Ookoto LB porto. liberal•• topper 0400.0
Hltcli UO .OO . Bod lin
e1211.00. Bad mo' t75.

2411-8017.

p.m.

fO, ·

Va. CheiPett tlr•lfOUnd. Dun£
l_op. Firllton&amp; nM end uttc(
30 ... 1711-3331.
·
1

AKC Boooott puppl•· Aoody to
go. fl'll'lci1Benldum . I14-U7·
3881.
Coil 814-992·5232 ~rr 8:00

e (I) UIA Today

oUNCE Of p~EV~NiloN,
fVT .t'M CHA~GING

W:

Fotty Troo Trlrnrrinll IIU"''f'
nrrnonl. Col 30 ... 5711-133l ( ,

P•ro1 end cea• for .... 11&amp;0.

.I'M P~E$C~ICING AN

'

cyl., new brlk•. Oood oond.
Runo good. e780. Coli ., ...

·---·2--.

~olw

~ol~

.,

814-99Z..211411.

...,loo

2111. molllo- loa. dop1lolt
• rf/. rwqulrod. Col 81 .....
080&amp;.

-1.7·

,..,d

310Chwy .. glne•dtr..,•ml-j' ·
tion. Run.. 1171. 0 80 . Ca'J

.5

tQIGI4

18 Fandango
7:01 (J) Artcly Ollllllh
7:30. (]) l'amlly
· ® Schollaltc apon.
America
(J) 1!-1111111111 TaniJJht

a.

NOiml

•nz
.AIOIU

By James,Htlby

IIJ .._yllna
Ill CIIMII
IIJ lila... VIce'

I

I 981 Ford. 0525. 1173 Dodge
pleku p, 1425. 1978 Jeep,
'480. Coli 814-388-9978.

., ... 446-1054.

by filling in the missing word1
you develop from sfep No. 3 belcw.

BRIDGE

.

• o nne•• c-pany

BUDGET TRANSMISSIOI\(·

w.w;wprooftng.

Gov.-nmant Seiz ed

,-_1;1

Rogeral11em "en ~ '

from t100. Fordl. Mercedll.

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

Gothic .. Rower - Eider - Haartll - WHICH
The diner was upset wilh his mas). He called the waller
ewer and coldly asked , ''I know lhis is the catch of lhe day,
b.U.t WHICH day?"

Ill • ill liS W'-1 at

1·11 ... 237- 0488, ....... "'111!1•

71 Auto ' s For Sale

L.-.L.-.L.-

SCJIAM..Lm ANSWERS

•

Na~(1 :00)

•'

Auto Parte
&amp;. Acce110ries

U1ed &amp; rebuilt all type'
Wan'lllty-30 d.,.•. Prl~ t99 •
up. Uud &amp; reb.litt tOf~e
conv.-ttn. ltend•d clutch•
pr. .ure Pill:-.
throw out
be•lng. .W..rMty·12 moe ..CV.C

304-418-

1977Chovv'h- ROtn1100. Col If,..
44.3017.

Ow- " " - Col
1104.

76

81

Runo goorl.

Dtlnlo 3 Ill. hou• lor oola

Coli 11 ... 4411-8054.

Hoy lor ule. Coli 6 I 4- 742·
3081.

1673.

1. -

Ill .OCIINewa
WIClll' In Clncmr..tl
IIJ lllodl Today '

e (])

i

1987 VF 700 ~ondo Mogn6.
Uke newv. 3800 mil•. 13, OOQ.

Mixed hav for •'•· 12. per b••·

Colll1 ... 742· 2270.

.

Complete &lt;he chuckle quotad

• 0

.1 :38 (I) I 1o I
7:00(]) Our Houoe .
PM Magazine
;4'J) lpartaCanlw
til e (I) Culrent Alllllr
CZl (!) Mac-/ Lehrer

·'

:

72

'

'

ewnlng~.

64

Motorcycles

1913 Oodgo 100 ES (Eli-

.,. ....,.,...7.
, -.--.~: ~:s:;; ..... .............. "·,_..,._ ....
m..,.
Now u(uNGTe
.

••t

*

w.... 30~882·21411.

-

Athono Livootod&lt; Solo. Albany .·
Solo w-v Soturdoy· 1 PM.
Llv. .oclc ICcept.r .tt• 4 PM
everv Fric~trt. 1 nile
of
Albony on St. Rt. 80. Col
114· 112· 2322. 111· 3831

I

~-."

T 0 E VA C

1--,.:~.....:::,16,.::...,.;17;,.-;..;.I....:...TI~ 0

o cartoon • ..,...

)olnto·ll ty~. CoH 114-3'7{
2220 or 30 ... 1711-1788 ' ' _,

Livestock

2 ...._ , - ·
fllrnltuN.
e280 ~morrill ofll• dopooh.
Col 11... 38S.H4&amp;.

Hom.._ for Sale

74

*lv•
with mech.,ICIII drive .nd ac••

63

I

8NewCoumrr

grtn•mlo• 100buwlthoctle
end twrd
•10.100.00. 315
etoo.OO. Wo h.,o good milenln 1tock. KHf.,.SitfVIce
Center, St. Rt. 87PolntPie118nt
Md Rfpler AoH. phone 3048911-3874.
·

I•

9 WIOIP In Ctnalnnall

Aog. Goldon Rotrlvor pufll'loo.
Born 12-23-18. t17511ch. Call
BI4-3B4-29171ftor I PM.

nem-.

AVON· AI • •· Coil Morlyn

O loltl
with-· ...,..
- C o l i or-o Mon Rlvw
... 200 -.... lid. lolo
v - .... 18012. 412· 4531011.

308 tlndlm exle. 2271 , .
•nv ..,....cter. •12.100.00. 0
ve• tank ¥WWTinfY on elurry
:c:dera, lfetimeWift'.nty on
tnd flaor on •I boK
•pr..ci•e. N...., Holl.,d ~
l· l13. 42 hp dl•tl oldd (ot..,
lo.S.. 1ft •11,000.00 wll•el'
ior 114.400.00. Modll 385

t

Woman goin~ through toll
booth, "I' m paytng for the car
tlehind me . H$ hu tt\e kida
. . . · · ·
and no money." "GOOd," saJd
. - - - - - - - - , tha attendant " Keep him -

• Amettcal\ MagaZine
1:01 &lt;ll One Der at a Time
1:30. (]) all NIC Nightly New•

""

blo Coli 11 ... 416-8298:

1t A,_.aNur~lngCent•. Mlln
St .. Coolvl• Ohio 45721

......

Modol514. 177bu. ea30o.OO.
Modol 304. 1228 gal oluny
lprHder. 17.100.00. Model

•48-1506.

3

.

(l) loclr llaclllc
(!) NlgMiy lullnall llepon

1

I 1 I I .
A N J uT
1---i,;.-;;=r.;;..,;;.....;,r-i
\..
5
I• 1· ·1 1 :::' ·

a..

eIll .._ al Llle
o ........

.-

d

'87 ford Vin, lot de ,
111.900.00. Phone 304-0758010 or oft• 1:00 call II""

INge.IXt_,dtdW8fr8'1tVIY. . .

bin IIIII ....... Apply I n -

..d .....&amp; .,.dr.u,..tolh.

'Modtil 329. 138bu. 1~950.00.

8711-2782.

~11'11"---

TROPfl'( .•• AND Wf.IAT
DID I GET?

DlnaiMn
0 llappr Deya

Tf.IE USE OF THIS
BONE FOR A 'fEAR!

fYIRlTIII 2

,_,-r-w...:E,...L;:..,....N_vT'"'""''I ,:

Q

til e(I)AIC-Q

PM.

~nd

• • • ,, • •• Cll~~

ond okid toodw. Modol213
tpread• 108 t.J. 12.750.00.

s eaz

&lt;lJ IIIlA Today

ll¥'tn ldtttnt. Chow ttud • •
vlco. Coli 814-4411-3844oltrr7

......,. ctrtlklll.,. 1 mutt. We

oft• .. •oeltn .,...

on

2783.

61 Farm Equipment

31

J•u•ry S11e New HoiiMd.
Mwtun. lpi'Md••· grinder mk·

tlon. blue. vetv.clnltrkw. em-fm
....,. ••tra
304-

by Bruce Beattie

BESIDE~. SHE GOT Tf.IE

50 W~O WANTS TO WINAN ''UGLY DOG " CON!EST ?

I

I9B4 Chw S -10 "-' 4 T-o.
nice. cultom wheell• ..., . .. .
qulc:ll. 30... 1711-1152.
.

61 Farm Equipment

Concr•• blocb- til .m .... prd
or dlllvery. Maeonund. Qellipoollo I lock Co .. I 23'h Pine St ..
Oolllpollo. Ohio. Coli 81 ... 4411-

Fu-

311. 111 S. Lln-Y. N.
Auroro. IL 10842.

DIRECTOR OF NURIINO. II .N·.
noodod lor Dlroctor of l*nlng
poollon lor a 75 bod .....,

54 Miec . Merchandise

1984 Bulcl&lt; ConturyL-od 3.0
V· t. 82.000 mla conrl-

SNAFU®

:PEANUTS

~~~~=:::=~=:::l=:========j Mav .,.._, .t111 ThfrdAw.

't5 Chovv eor.M.

On•tfme fee 111.100 to
02L 100 "'....... "'""""'· flo·
lluyfnt trtp. .."''""
...."'. _ .. COli ,.,.,
dma -oy II-• 401-41325111.

low to form four sii"'P II words.

I

(l) Do~l Junior High
(!) Dr.
lnvallctn at

1841. 9·8. Sorlouo lnquir+
only. Frim Price. Aok torGionQ.

LIBERTY
Inc. off. .
._flwlchloo epporol •d ohoo
.,.,... llotol 11 •10.e20 AND
UNDEII. Mo-o. ,. E-.
1hre. Dvw 2.000 br.nd

®..,.,...._

IISNewa

owriir. - ool ..,. bonk btl cUe
approx.. 113.000.Calll14-="441-

Wll glvo plono 1oo0ono In my
home. hglnnlng to lnl.-m.
cl•e. Cloee to downtown. Call
., ... 441 ·0200.

et4-446- 7148 .._.,_, I:J0-1
P.M: Mo...., t1wu F~diJ.

:••a~••

lit 4 W.O .:

· Nnnin..J!,bo•&amp; 31.000
mil.,..
Stll u
werrMty :- One

II Z.BI.42ZI.

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

fl

lette r• gf the

Jour Krambfed wo rds be·

1:00 Ill lloMnu: Tile La•t

1917 Dodge 280 Focto;y Edl·

57

LPN n - tlmo loo
ICF IMR Qor-lc Foollly. F•

Vans

Uon Luxury y.,, MUM ·~A fo
,_,looototo. PS,PI. tltwhool.
olr, AM ·FM·Co-. Windowt,. power door lodct. I'NIG

c1o1111-v.

S p - for Rent

O Rearrange

EVININO

&lt;2l til • til

73

55 Building Supplies

month. December • JMUIIV

Renldls

In Golia County. Equol
0-rtunlly Em~.

word proc.llno • 111111111 •
,., . . . . . . . . . . •d ,.,..

bedroom mo... home '

Opportunity
I NOnCE I
THE 0110 VALLEY PUBLISHING
you

inwlt

nw..

81.11ine11

Plotlo.
..... Lin....

CCNnty Appll- Inc. Good

One Month F,.. Ra1t
Qulllfltd r.at., ..,. t200.

3 d_...r .,.. with pond. ThrM
I acre tr.:tl, •c blda 1k• off
At. 17. 30 ... 411-1871.

c..,.

so .. ...-y.Rocopllonlot tor
prlvoto prodlco. D.U. ~•
puf"Clh•Jng. ICCDUntl ,..,. . .

2 otO&lt;Y. 3 bedroom, 2 b•ho.
clnlng room. full lnilhed t.:•
m.,.. endoltd btdt porch.
r.trlgerator, wahtr, drytr,

OEr PAID for - g boolcll
I 100 ~ IIIIo Write """ .. 3a.
1118.1.1n--. N. Auroro.ll
10542.
1!XAI OIL COMPANY. n mlluro- lor ohon trlpo
eurroundlno Oaltlpofll: 1r11.
Canta 1111tDftW'I. W. trlin.
W.J. Dldc- Pr• ..
SouthwNtn Pwtrollum. 1-.
1110011, FL Worth. Tx. 71111.

1979 u~ t4xTO. 3 bodroom. e7.IOO.OO. 304-87111171ond 4171-1713. ·

1•-ee. a• u.. incUdlletow,

Aoolv In ~·on to Tho Meclcol
Pf.Z.i. 203 Jltckelin Plh betw- 8:30-4:30.
.

Body Mon nooolocl Six yo. .
uporlonco plio tooto. C.ll1431e.t518.

SHADY LAWN APTe. 729
Sooond Aw. Furnlohod lflld..,.
d• -lng ot 1175 • . mo.

o..,.

0 , 311 ..-~ ott• I .

lAM I

~r

WED., JAN. 25

oo.

ltll C'-v II ton pi&lt;*
32 . 000 mflee, exc c ond .
• 10. 000.00. 304-8711-4431 rtf.
twi~OPM .

m-•

line of Ulld ..,mftur&amp;a
..tt-.
D..D.wrlniJII"watlw,
NEW- ~"Veet.-n boot• 131.
eta • up. (Still"
tofttoel . Ceil114-441-3111.

wan

. '~~:~:~' S@~(llA-"'£~s·
1411t4
CLAY a. '0UAN

nlco truok, 304-1711-7991 . ;

Mer cliJ iHJJ se

oo~•

M

....r.... v.e. 4•~noruo~
• 0

lA, downtown, com
pl. . ldteMn,. 81r, c.p-.
oslt. no P,... Coli 114-4411-

UntuNhed 2 BR . o•egeapa1·
ment. Pn town. C.rpeted. Aduite
""'-· 10.11 doc:ll. 12o14 only.
No p11~ Coli 114-4411wood bui..,!J Col II"" 2411- .
4511.
1028.

RE·TIIAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS 1173 Freem• mobh hcune.
CO LI.EOE. 821 Joclloon Pike. Totol oloctrlc. UOOO Col 411""
Coli._ 4317. A. . No. II- 1 1· 446-77111.
1 0 -.
Moving! Muot IIIII 1179 Mon·
.... 14•70. 3 - - ..
.._,.. unclerplnnln!J porcll.
18 Wanted to Do
Aoklng enoo. Col 814-8431413-

['IIIli! Vill'i'l
~erVIII' ..

Modern 1

11...

1114 Chouy s .10. Tohoo pull·

a..ltKII• tor one or 1w0 . . .._
Ref. ,..,r.t No pMI. Inquire
•t; 131 Fourth Aw.. Oellpolt.

BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT 51 Houuhold Goods
IUOGEr PRICES AT JACK· - - - - - - - - -SON ESTATES. 838 Jockoon
Pike from t183 1 mo. Walk to
ohop ond .._.... 81,..4411SWAIN
2558. E.O.H.
AUCTION &amp; RJRNrrUAE 82
OIIYI St.. GoMipoilo.
T•• Townhou• •
2 . NEW· e pC. wood group- 1391.
eAo.. Hi b.ho. CA.. dlo· Livlnt room ouM• .,99-e891.
hwuw. dio-L orivoto on- Bunk bedt with brtdclnst 1241.
cloood p•to. pool piiJgrounrl. F,. olio
tou-lon
w........... • trllh lndu«**. 1t1rt1ng- t&amp;9. Aecilnert
St_,lng • U89 ~ mo. Coli ...,lnll' •98.
81 ... 387· 7880.
USED· - · dr•.-, bedroom

Television
Viewing

r.

Port lolv ..... hod ............

Apartment
for Rent

blll ho. 11 oloctrl~ CA. -

81 ... 742·2418.

lnt-""

~

The Daily

1ta4Chouv 8 .to trudr.-Tohvo.·
Pl. Pl• ....,.... tit. ~C. :!. , _
olnL Only 14.000 ml•. Ea·
Mt co-lon. Aoldng eetao.
Coll814-446-111t.
. :

1989 GMC plclrup.· Coli
4411-9211.

1110 sp_.on 14xTO. 2 BR .. 2

Sch9()11
Instruction

tJntire houtlhold lfeo •llling.

11

. ......,,..

.,ment•

Ave.. Qolllpollo. Col 11 -..-.
2282.

TNckl for Sale

26. 1989

.. 30x40 lor ..
conetructlon company , C•ll

New completely furniahed
epetrnent • mobile home Ira
dty. Adufte ontt,. Parking. Cetl
814-4411-03311.

Rick
Auction.... 1........ Ohio M i d - Vlrgini~
Eluie,. .n-.u.. f•m. liltLiid•
lion 111-. 30"" 773-11785.

~--

n

Wrighl

··~-0239 .

•
P•••on

•
Ju'*

by La,ry

'7llllflor 8 ,M.

Pilblic Sale
&amp;. Auction

9

_e ""

CARLYLE®

•

w..t«&lt; to Flent or Buy-Building

2 lo*oorn molllo homo. City.

pi-•

. KIT N'

47Wantad to Rent

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

LOST, bHifDid.
ratum
.,._. and keep monw .,d
. .M._ 304-77:J.5822.

8

Wednesday, January 25, 1989

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

XJHMGPSI
CRGYQGZK
Yat..,'e C.,.lo4_tel A STATIC HERO IS A
PUBLIC LIABILITY. PROGRESS GROWS OUT OF
MOTION. - ~ICHARD E. BYRD .
.
•

'

Q

C)1Me King Fe-H Syndicate. Inc .

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