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                  <text>P'.ge-D-8-Sunday Times- Sentinel

.'

JanuatY 29. 1989

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.
i

No. 3-ranked
Cards upse•
by Buckeyes

·. Ohio Lottery

Tourney drawings·

Daily Number
977
Pick4 8197

Pages 3-4

Ann Landers
Page 3

Super Lotto
4-5-6-15-24. 4.3
Kicker 659886

Page 6

•

THE A'RIUM DOOR
REPLAC,E YOUR
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ODD DOOi!i
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[][]0 DOD,
'F""oo;c
·
I ! 1'

·

1

i

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Ii I

6'0 X 6'8"
Includes Screen and Hardware

The Atrium Door is
actually a whole
system of Ideas for
enhancing the beauty
of any home.
Come in today -let us •
help you choose the
idea that's right for
your home.

DELIVERY IN MARCH!
DOWN WHEN ORDERED
ALL SALES FINAL!

ANCHORAGE, Alaska &lt;UPI)
- The third week of skin-freezing
cold began In Alaska with the
crash of a Canadian military
plane that killed eight people In
52-below weather In a dense, Icy
fog, as emergency shelters
opened and dozens of towns
reported food and fuel shortages.
''It's even too cold for Eskimos," an Eskimo said Sunday at
the packed Brother Francis
Shelter for the homeless In
Anchorage.
The Sunday night crash of a
Canadian C-130 transport plane
at · Fort Wainwright was not
Immediately attributed to the

SIZES AVAILABLE
Bungalow Mushroom Hickory ......... *2.99
Bungalow ran Back Hickory ............ *2.99
Vista New Cut Cedar ......................... '6.25
Vista Misty Meadow .......................... '6.95
.Vista Floral Bouquet ......................... *7~95
Norfolk Elm ................................." ..... 16.49
Pedimont Cherry ............................... '6.50
Spirit Birch ..........·............................... •8.25

•2832
•20210
• 24210
• 28310
•28210
•30310
• 30210
• 2842
•3042
•3046
•2846

DELIVERY IN MARCH!

Ill', JJ()\\' ,\ \\'IllY (Jill! I Ill /J - \I I '&gt;\II' I 1\ \1'

u .................................

Light Birch ..........................................'9.75
Moonlight Maple ................................ *9.75

Dorothy Leifheit, daughter of
· Ro_&amp;er and Lenora Leifheit, won
- t1ie Sal!~bury· Elementny ..
School's geography bee and a
chance at a $25,000 college
scholarship.
The school bee where students
answered oral questions on geo·
graphy was the first round In the
new National Geography Bee
that Is sponsored by National
Geographic World. ·
The bee was kicked of! the
week of Jan. 9 and was for fourth,
fifth and sixth graders of the
Salisbury Elementary School
under the direction of faculty
member, Mrs. Dorothy Chaney.
Leifheit has taken a written
test and up to 100 of the top

Miramar ...................................... ~....... SS.99
A~torla ·Cedar ................................... 510.50

Mountain Adyenture ....................... 110.99
Wildlife .............................................. '11.25
Nutone Cherry ................................. *11.25
Floral Teellis ..................................... *11.50

8 VINYL

$4.95
VINYL FLOORING ................. sa. YD............... $4.95
.
$
RUBBER BACKED ........ sa. YD............. 7.95
KITCHEN CARPET ... YD.... $7.59
GRASS CARPETING .. YD.• $3.99

CARPETING TRELLIS ........ SQ. YD............:.

SQ.

BrUsh ....................................... s11.99
Slate ...............~ ...............~ .........

Birch ................................... ~..~.... "12.25
~81~18 .....................·........................... "12.75
Flek ............,.............................. '12. 75

I Capri Floral ...................................... '12.75

SQ.

UVERAI. COU111t9 10 CHOtJ$£ FROM

RO' WATER TANKS
$

141 20
~ilti~~~~. . . . . . . . . $13660
'52 GAlLON
$
75
ELECTRIC ................ .. 159
ELECTRIC ........ :.........

ftJB SURROUNDS
•5 PIECE
1 TRAY

STAIRWAY
10'

8'9"

12' Main Tee ........;.......
(WHITE ONLY)

4' Cross Tee ....................

REG.

x 6-8 Birch .......................... 36.40
~-u1 ·x 6-8 Birch .......................... 44.78
x 6-8 Birch .......................... 71.80
x 6-8 Birch .......................... 79.60

(WHITE ONL Yl

10' Wall Angle ............ 51.90
(WHITE ONLY)

2' X 4' LAY-IN

CEILING PANELS

x 6-8 73D Full Louvered .... 61.22
x 6-8 73D Full Louvered ...• 69.78
x 6-8 73D Full Louvered .... n.24
x 6-8 730 Full Louvered ... 117.45
x 6-8 73D Full Louvered ... 135.20

29¢
ST. JOHN ........... FT. .•...•.. 29¢
TRINIDAD .........
35¢
CAYMAN ............. FT. .•....•.35¢.
BARBADOS .... sa. FT.......... 35¢
SQ. FT........
SQ.

An unoccupied trailer on Kingsbury Road, justoff State Route
143, was destroyed by lire late Saturday eveningg. Scfplo
Township Fire Deparlrnent was called to the scene at 10: 25 p.m.
A spokesman for the fire department was not sure If authorities
had pinpointed the cause of the fire. The trailer was owned by
Harold Graham. No Injuries were reported.
Another strucuture !Ire occurred early Saturday morning on
Silver Ridge In Orange Township. Chester and Orange
Township Fire Departments were cal jed to the scene but
specific Information regarding the blaze was unavailable on
Monday morning.
••

SA\E

21.88
42.04
41.41
24.84
30.21
47.79

12.84
38.48
43.84
48.81
72.88

83.70

Aruba ...............................................................'1.89 ••·
Waverly .••• ~ .....~ ................................................
*1.99 ea.
. •
$
Martinique ..................................:................... 2. 75 ea.

CELOTD 12" X 12"
CEILING TILE

3112" X 15" ..........~

1258

X 23"

~

II

Food handlers issued reminder
The Meigs County Health Department would like to remind
current food service operators In the county that the deadline
for applying for a 1989 Food Service Operator's License without
a late fee Is 4 P·!Tl· Wednesday, March 1. After that time, a 25
percent penalty will be added to the cost of the license.
Those people wlslilng to open a food service operation for t)le
first lime must obtain a license before opening for business.
They must also submit a detailed set of plans and an equipment
list to the health department before opening.
For guidelines concerning the necessary plans. prospective
food service operators may contact the health dtflartment by
calling 992-6626.

Meigs women injured in wreck
ROLL

$1622 ROLL
6" X 15" ............. .. $11 51 ROLL ·
6" X 23" .............. $.1765 ROLL

3112"

The bee featured questions on
the broad subject of geography.
the study or the earth and Its
Inhabitants.

Trailer destroyed by fire

BI·FOLD DOORS
x 6-8 Lauan ......................... 39.D1.
x 6-8 Lauan ......................... 63.D5
x 6·8 Lauan ......................... 69.68

scorers In each state w111 be
eligible to cqmpete In their
stati!'r!M!e"on AprD 7.
Th~ National Geographic Society will fly all first place
winners from the state bees,
along with their teacher escorts,
to Washington, D. C., to partlcl·
pate In the National Geography
Bee finals on May 18 and 19 and
the first pJace national winner
w111 receive a $25,000 college
scholarship. Other scholarships
w111 be aw.lll"ded to the top
national winners.

r--Local news briefs-..

'42• S4P

•

SQ.

•5 PIECE
2TRAY

PRE-ASSEMBLED nLDIIG AI nC

CELOTEX
CEILINGS
•

MONTEGO ........ SQ. FT........

CONTEST WINNER - DOrothy LeUbelllll the school winner of
lhe National Geotraphy Bee held at lhe Salisbury Elemenlary
School. She Is pkltured wllh Mrs. Dorothy Chaney, a faculty
member, who headed lhe bee at lhe sehoul. She received lhe book
In lhe photograph and an lnfiatlble globe as her prizes for being Ihe
school winner.
·

:Dorothy Leifheit wins
·geography bee contest

Arshile Oak .....
SS.25
Pecky Pecan ....................................... '8.50

30 GALLON

tne

OLD SLIDING
DOOR WITH THE
ATRIUM DOOR!

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11 1 •certlfled lor Federal .
Energy Tax Credit
•reacly·I!Hnstall
•solid brass mortice
locli Included

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at

IE S U G.G EST I 0 N S

Cloudy tonight. I..Gw In mid
305. Partly cloudy, windy
Tuesday. lllgh In mid 50s.
Chance of rain zero p~rcent.

. . .....

Two area women were Injured In a one-car accident Saturday
at 4:18p.m. In Letart Township on C.R. 28, about a quarter of a
mile north of S.R. 338. according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
Sandra K. Dowell, 36, of Long Bottom, and her passenger,
Tammy L. Thomas, 30, of 39254 Landaker Rd., Pomeroy, w~re
taken by the Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Dowell was admitted, and at last report was listed In
satisfactory condition. Thomas was treated and released.
Dowell, drMng a 1979 Toyota Corolla, was heading south
when she · went off the ·len side ot the road, struck an
embankmentand returned to the road. She went otf the lett side
of the road again, at which point the car overturned.
Dowell and Thomas were ejected from the car. Neither was
wearing a .seat belt.
·
Dowell was charged with DWI and cited tor failure to contror
and drMng without a license.

EMS luu 16 weekend calls

..

Melgl County Emergency Medical Services reports 16 calls
over the weekend; nine on Saturday and seven on Sunday.
Three of Saturday's calls were to structure fires.
·
Continued on page 5

weather but officials said a thick
fog of airborne Ice crystals
limited visibility to an eighth of a
mile near the site. Eight people
died and 10 others were Injured
when the plane apparently
landi\cl short or a runway and
split In two, Army officials said.
The plane was taking part In
joint war games planned to train ·
troops for the cold but the cold
was too bitter even for the
exercises and U.S. Army off!·
clals were forced to cancel most.
activities.
At least 28 towns reported
problems ranging from food and
fuel shortages to frozen pipes.

The Red Cross opened a shelter
Sunday for Anchorage families
with frozen pipes and no heat,
while the National Guard prepared to air-drop food and fuel to
towns cut off by the cold's frozen
grip on virtually all of Alaska.
But the ice fog was hampering all
flight activity in many areas,
officials said.
Cold is the single topic of
conversation In Alaska and when
people talk about the cold, they
no longer say "below zero" or
"minus."" That's taken for
granted.·
Fairbanks forecaster Brian
Lynn said in an Interview Sun-

January weather has been ·
warm and sunny, minus snow
By United Press lnlernallonal
Old Man Winter, most years a
plodding curmudgeon In J anuary, has turned out to have q ulte
a spring In his step this month in
Ohio.
·
This has been one of the state's
warmest, sunniest and least
snowy Januaries on record.
Temperatures are averaging
7.5 to 9 degrees above normal
statewide, said Sandy Maurer of
the National Weather Service In
Cleveland.
It's been 10 to 15 percent more
sunny than usual In Ohio, and
snowfall Is close to 10 Inches
below normal at most weather
service reporting stat tons, he
said.
In Columbus, for example, the
low temperature so far was 16
degrees, on Jan. 21. That's the
second-highest low . ever recorded, said Leon Weber, a
meteorologist In the capital city.

Record lows In Columbus for
every day of January are all
below zero.
Northwest Ohio. one of the
hardest hit areas by last
summer's drought, Is still dry,
accordlg to the National Weather
Service, which says about 5.6
Inches of precipitation would get
the area out of those drought
conditions.
''The storm track that usually
produces periodic snowfall out of
western Canada moved more
easterly Into the northern Great
Lakes, well norih of the Buckeye
State during January," said
Maurer. "The primary storm
track this winter has •been from
Missouri through the eastern
Great Lakes.
"Ohio has been In the warm
sector of virtually every storm so
far," he said, "and the result has
been a relative snow drought."
Celebrate now, however, be-

cause change Is In the wind, said
Maurer.
A vast pool of cold air has been
hovering over Alaska this month,
and part of that could make Its
way Into Ohio by the middle of
this week, he said.
"There could be a major
change ... for most of the eastern
half of the U.S.," Maurer said.
Highs could be below freezing
by midweek and there Is a
possibility of snow, he said.

day, " The coldest today was 63at
McGrath (northwest of Anchor·
age) and there are lots of people
In the 40s and 50s. But the west
coast warmed up to the teens and
20s." "
As an afterthought, Lynn said,
" That"s all below zero, of

course. ' '
Early MondaY, temperatures
d lpped to 46 below zero at
Fairbanks and 58 below in
Nenana.
"Temperatures In the lower
Levels of the atmosphere are as
cold as we have ever seen," Lynn
sat d.
Alaska almost certainly has
broken U.S. cold records - 80
below at Prospect Creek, Alaska ·
on Jan. 23, 19TI - several Urnes
and In several places during the
cold spell. said Fairbanks forecaster Kraig Gilkey, Anchorage
weatherman T!m ·Craig and
other meteorologists. Military
officials volunteered the coldest
unofficial report- minus 88 near
an air base at Galena west of
Fairbanks. but the official record
was still in place.

Ohio records
nine deaths

By United Pre!IS lnternallonal
A mother and he daughter
were killed In a traffic accident
Sunday, raising the ~tatfs trafAround-The Nation
fic death toll to atleast least nine,
High winds gusting to nearly 70
the State Highway Patrol sa'!d
mph lashed the West Monday,
today. The count showed two
rain fell in the Southeast and cold
deaths Friday night, four Satur·
air from Alaska's emergency
day· and three .sunday. One
deep freeze was poised to head
pedestrian was among
south toward the lower 48 states.
victims.
the National Weather Service
A 7-year·old Crestline girl
said.
several hours after her
The polar air was expected to was killed in a tw&lt;J-VE•hlc
dip Into the northern part of the accident \'n Crawford County
nation Tuesday as a s.trong cold
Sunday, the only multiple fatal·
front over southern Canada
tty of the weekend.
slides south. Temperatures have
In another accdlent, a man
'd ropped as much as 50 degrees
whose car was being pursued by
over several hours as the front
pollee officers. died when his
has passed some locations over
vehicle crashed Into a steel pole. ·• ·
west central Canada.
Victims this weekend
Alaska has been under a state Included:
A group of professors at the of emergency since Saturday
. • Friday Night
University of the District of because of a 3-week-old cold
Bedford: John M. Kunsman
Columbia predicted the city's wave that drove temper;ltures as 22, Bedford, kllletl when his ca;
death toll may reach as high as low as 80 below zero. Early struck four par~ed autos on a
610 this year as drug dealers morning temperatures Monday Bedford street.
continue to fight over the limited were lower than 50 degrees below , Cleveland: Richard D. Drook,
amount of turf and the number of zero, with 61 zero reported at 30, Cleveland, killed when his car
drug users Increase.
Nenana. 60 below at Fort Yukon struck a utility pole along a
"From all signs Its a ·very and McGrath, 59 below at North- Cleveland street.
conservative number." Profes- way and 50 below at Fairbanks.
'
Saturday '
Back In the lower 48 states,
sor Dave Chatman said.
Eaton: Andrew J . Frazier, 34.
The District of Columbia's rain !ell along a cold front from Dayton, k1lled In a one·car crash
weekend wave of violence began south-central Texas across Lout- on an Eaton street.
about 6 p.m. Saturday when an slana, Mississippi, the Tennessee
Dayton: William J . Duty, 28,
36-year-old unidentified man was Valley and southern Appalach· Medway. killed In a one·car
shot by an assailant wjeld!ng a tans to Maryland and southern accident on a Datyon street while
semiautomatic pistol in the city's Pennsylvania.
fleeing a pollee officer at a high
Southeast section.
· Strong winds were continuing rate of.speed. His car hit a steel
Shortly after 11 p.m. Saturday, over the Front Range of the pole.
Calvin Keyes, 22, was fatally shot Rockies In Montana and northwContinued on page 5
outside a halfway house for est Wyoming. Livingston, Mont.
delinquent boys In Northwest,

Nation's capital said
deadliest U. S. city
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
nation's capital recorded · Its
deadliest month ever In January,
and experts predict the death toll
could rejlch more than 600 by the
end of the year If the murderous
trend continues.
Many at the klliJngs are
blamed on drugs.
Five fatal shootings during the
weekend- Including one claim·
lng a 15-year·old boy - have
brought to 49 · the , number of
homicides this month. That total
Is five more than the previous
monthly record and 12 more than
last January's totaL
The latest victims were MonaShlferaw, 19, and her 26-year-old
brother Tesfay. The two were
· found shot to death Sunday night
In their Northeast Washington
home In what apparently was an
execution-style slaying, ponce
said.

Burglars ~1 safe at
Wahama High School
proceeds from the lunch program.
Burglars forced their way into
Seveml checks were found in the
Wahama High School Friday and
safe.
peeled open the office safe, making
In addition to the office, at least
away with an undetennincd amount
one
teacher's room was entered and •'
of cash, authorities said Saturday.
searched
by the burglars, apThe break-in was discovered
.
when school officials arrive Friday ··parently in search of money.
Authorities said footprints were
morning to beJ!in classes.
West Virginm State Police inves· found on top of a filing cabinet in
tigators found the office safe had . the office where someone apbeen opened and itS contenl.'l rum· . parently stood while looking out
rnaged through, a spokesman said.
the window of the office while the
The intruders reponedly knocked safe was peeled.
the safe from its concrete mounting
Investigators said that the
in the school's main office, using burglary · probably took several
so~ type of chisel and hammer to "hours to complete due to the heavy
do so.
safe.
Once the concrete had been
No actual forced entry was dislrnocked away from the safe, the covered during a check of the
door was peeled by using burglary building Friday. ·
.
tools.
School authorities are continuing
Investigators did not say if those to check the building to make ccrtools were found in the debris or if lain nothing else is missing. ·
they .had been removed fronl the
The investigation is being conbuildmg.
.
,,• .
dueled 'jointly by state police and ~
'lll;ken ft'!lm the safe, a schbol memberS ·of the Mason County
official said, was the weekly ' tSheriii's Depnment.

'

TEACHING THE ALPHABET - Bunny Kuhl of near Pomeroy
Is pulinc on her knawledre of alp language lor the deaf to various
orcaat&amp;atlou aad schoola In Melp County. Here Mrs. Kubl 111
plclured 1lplnr lhe alphabet wllh lllxtlr rrade studentll of Ed"
Bartel• at lbe Salisbury Elemeatary School. Mrs. Kuhl hu
l•lrucled llb.at cia.. for tile put two Frldaya. 11

�(

'

"

Cominentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.¥A80N AREA
'

l!Jb
csm19
M"\,J._..,..,

.

,..,.._c:~

~v

.....

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher

WASHINGTON- The beauty
of the American public library
system Is that It makes information free. Anyone with a yearning
to learn can walk Into a library
and read, no strings attached.
But some library patrons, and
maybe even a few librarians,
·have taken freedom of Information literally and are heisting

valuable books and rare manusBut In recent years, university
crlpta as though they were free and city libraries ·have had to
for the taking.
. step up their security with book
In the past, book repositories markings that set off buzzers at
assumed that their readers and the door and other devices that
their librarians were honest. The protect the latest best sellers
bi1111est problem of the librarian from being heisted by people who
was to track down overdue books bypass the checkout counter, ·
that the re•der unwittingly put
Now, the thievery has spread i
on a shelf at home. to the rare book oollectiona,

A MEMBER ol The United Pr"alnterna llonal, Inland D!llly Preu
A.uoclatlOn and the American Newtpaper Publlallen AaiOClallon.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are weloomt. 'l'loey 1hould belltl tloan .!00 words ,

lq. Allletterure •ubj oct toodltlooJand muatbeallned With name. lddrltllnd
telophOne number. No ullllped letters wtll be publllhed. Letb!ro ahould beln
10011 taate. adoiNUinlllllll•· not peroonalltllt.

Riffe, Celeste clash over
8olution to Medicaid shortfal
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slalehouae Reporter
·· COLUMBUS - This Is how It Is In the topsy-turvy world of
Statehouse polltlcs these days:
, Wild-eyed, liberal, tax-happy Gov. Richard Celeste Is trying to 11et
runaway Medjcaid spendlllll under control by Instituting a series of
reductions In the state's reimbursement schedule for nursing homes,
while asking recipients or care to make small, token payments.
I

: Senslblil, responsible, fiscally conservative House Speaker Vernal
Riffe Jr., 0-Wheelersburg, bullying the administration at every turn.
lilts rebuffed all the cuts. His answer to balancing the Medicaid
a}lendlng line Is to feed more state taxpayers' money into it .
Last week the state Controlllllll Board, taking Riffe's cue, rejected
a Celeste administration proposal that would have trimmed S8
mUllon a year from the nursln&amp; home reimbursements. There Is little
doubt about what
happen when the other proposed cuts undergo
tile scrutiny of a special legislative committee.

will

Meanwhile, a House task force appointed by Riffe Issued a report of
Its eight-month study last week, heaping all the blame on the Celeste
administration for the projected $134 million deficit In Medicaid.
What's going on here?
Well, some af . the fault probably lies with the Celeste '
administration, and Riffe has a genuine compassion for older folks,
especially those who are ill and can't pay their own way. ·
But the more cynical around the Statehouse suspect that Riffe may
want to protect nursing home owners, who offer a lucrative source of
campaign funds, from any undue dents In their profits.
, The Speaker went to bat for the nursing home operators once
before, Insisting an Increasing the number or beds for Allzhelmer's
disease patients In the face of Celeste's cos,-containment program for
Medicaid.
··
Tfle heavy-handed report of the House task force on Medicaid
the administration of trying to "bypass the General
Aasembly" by reducing Medicaid expenditures. Nothlnll could be
further from the truth.
·
. The administration, to Implement ltscu t•, has to take them before a
Joint Committee on Arency Rule Review - a legislative panel lfhlch may disapprove the proposals, and probably will.
. 'I'be Speaker is so Incensed with the administration on this Issue
that he wants to set up a Joint Legislative Committee on Medicaid
Ovenl11hl; more like the Joint Legislative Committee on Medicaid
Overkill.
accu~e~

.• This

new watchdog panl!l would serve as another layer of
leiJlslatlve bureaucracy on top of the rule review agency.
· ; The General Auembly Is supposed to pass laws and let the
administration carry them out, not do both.
Riffe would say the Celeste administration has forfeited Its
prera,atlve by falllne to follow the intent of the Legislature In
admlnllterlni 'the Medicaid program. In fact, the task force report
cloncluded that the aovernor's proposal• "conflict with the leilslatlve
I)I tent of the original nurslnJI home reimbursement law."
. That 10-year old law promised high-quality care tor nursing home
realdenta on Medicaid, which 18 fine. But costS have Skyrocketed, and
something has to give.
It's not unreasonable for the eovernor to ask for a combination of a
state appropriation, reductions in reimbursements to nursing homes
and small co-payments by recipients to rectifY the Imbalance.
It's unreasonable to loudly blame the administration for the
~oblem and then throw money at It In hopes It wlll go away.

"It's good to be back here In California to host my new television series."

Ohio State five upsets No. 3
Louisville; Pervis Elli8on hu~
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Wrller
Within the past 10 day s, the
chance to be ran ked as the
nation's top team has become a
curse to all those who stand next
In Une to the throne.
The latest heir appare nt to go
down to de feat Is No. 3 Louivll1e,
which lost not only an 85-79
decision to No. 17 Ohio State, but
also star center Pervls Ell1son
with a knee Inju ry.
The los~. which snapped a
14-game winning streak, makes
Louisville the fourth team
ranked No. 1 or No. 1-to-be to
suffer defeat In the last 10 days.
Duke was the nation's top team

where a manuscript may be
worth thousands of dollars and
even first editions of well-known
contemporary works are valued
In the hundreds.
The Amer~an Library Aisoclatlon, which ~ently concluded
meetlne In Wa•hlngton, D.C., has
a hlgh·powered security committee trying to figure out how to end
the growlni theft ot rare books.
The thfeves are of two kinds ,
outsiders and Insiders, and the
motives for each are simply a
. lust to possess or the desire to
profit from 111-JIDtten Jain.
Recently, edltlona of · books
printed during the Civil War,
rare religious rnanuscrlpta and
the letters of notableil have been
stolen · tram libraries' special
collections.

Redmen comeback

BURSON SHINES- Ohio Slate polnl guard Jay
Burson ( 12) fights to maintain ball control as he
was closely parded by Louisville's Tony Kimbro
( 44) and Everlck Sullivan ln.l!aoday's non-leape

What West Germany knew·and when
WASHINGTON (NEA) les, Including Imhausen-Cheinle,
Chancelor Helmut Kohl of West were involved.
Germany oriiJlnlally said his
The United States and Britain
iQVernment was only made took their fears to Bonn and to
aware In mid-Novmeber of pose!· several other Western capitals,
ble involvement of German com- but received little cooperation.
panies in bulldlne a Libyan Construction continued
chemical weapons plant. Under unabated.
presaure, he later changed that
Then, In early November, U.S.
to October.
lntelllience agents learned that a
But according to high-level lar11e supply ·of thlodlglycol (a
U.S . . Intelligence sourc" here, critical Ingredient In mustard
West Germany officials were . gas) bad arrived at the plantfirst made aware early last year enough to begin limited
of American fears about the production.
plant.
The United States acted
AccordlnJI to these sources, quickly, calling on the then·
West Germany bad enough Infor- upcoming international confermation to ferret out the truth had ence on chemical weapons being
It been so Inclined, but -like the held in Parts to condemn Gadhagovernments of Italy, France fl's plans.
and Japan - It chose not to get
The United States believed It
Involved.
needed more than Britain's sup- ·
Both the United States and port to win the kind of InternaBritain had closely watched the tional cooperation It needed at
· development of the plant at the conference, so It was decl.ded
Rabta - about 40 miles aouthw- once again to try to win over the
est of Tripoli - since 1986. By West Germans.
mld-1987 evidence was mounting
When Helmut Kohl was In
that the plant could make chemi- Washlni\on In mid-November to
cal weapons.
·meet with President Reagan, he
By lale 1987 both Washington was ilven more details about the
and London knew the plant could specific Involvement of not only
produce mustard gas and a Imhausen·Chemle, but other
newer nerve gas called Sarin. German companies as well.
They had also learned that
The United States waited for
several West German . compan- some reaction from Bonn, but

late November, Washington contacted the Western J1Dvernments
who It believed had nationals at
the plant site. The governments
were advised to remove their
nationals or else risk their safety.
Implicit was the tllreat or unilateral military action.
StUI nothlnll definite was forthcomlnll from Bonn. U.S. diplomats were told that the matter
was being Investigated. They
were alao told that the Kohl
government would possibly be
willing to chan~~t a IOni·held
position and consider chan11es In
weak West German export laws
to prevent sensitive technology
from getting Into the wron11
hands - something the United
States has wanted forqultesome
time.
It became clear that the only
way to overcome West German
opposition would be to publicly
release information on the plant.
However, the CIA was reportedly
worried that thl1 would jeopardize U.S. Intelligence gathering
methods and sources.
On New Year's Day, two weeks
before the Parts conference,
Information about the plant and
the Involvement of ImhausenCiwl!lle was leaked to The New
York Times. Predictably the

This week's games
na. \\o'eek'll

.
;

Tllen, just when It seemed that '
Kohl and Genacher would han11
toueh, the major anti-Kohl German newsweekly, Stern, got hold
·of numerous document• clearly ·
detalllnll the Involvement of
lmhausen-Chemle. Then another ·
major German publication,
Bunfe, came up with documents .
showinll how loq Germany had •
really bel:n aware of the whole ~
matter. . ·

·,

Berry's World
••

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•, ••
•
•

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•
•
•
•. -•

..•
..•..
..
1 .•·''
•

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-• •

-··:
•'

1.,;

!

••

••
'

•
••

•

•

j

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

...

•,•

..

q,.~ ~
4D lift toy NIA, Inc .

"Y.,, I'm AI, the 'klmMr, gentler' /011n •h•rk.

Whdd,_ w.nt, P•l?"

tutlon - the power to Impose
taxes - is understandably
viewed leas enthusiastically by
the members. Nobody likes to be
seen voting for new or Increased
taxe&amp;.
In this regard, Nirvana was
achieved by the Congresses of
the 1970s, when infiatlon was
rlslni year by year . Since tax
rates were progressively hteher
on hlllher Incomes, all Congren
had to do waa keep the lnfiatlon
roarlne. Peoples' real Incomes
mJiht remalnJhe ume, or even
fall, but their nominal Incomes
rose -and, In the proceu, lifted
them Into hl11her tax bracket•,
where they ~qld be plucked
more voraciously, Yet Congress
was never seen votlnll to raise
taxes .

realistically optimistic scenarios
about Income, etc.
So, Cuomo proposes modltylne
the Gramm-Rudman-Holllngs
Act. If Congreas and the president fall to agree on a budJiet that
meets the Act's requirements for
deficit reduction, half of the
amount needed to reach the
target would stUI come, in equal
shares, from automatiC cuts In
defense and domestic programa;
but the other half would come
from (you ~Uessed it! l new
taxes. Once again, the new taxet
would simply appear automatically, as If out of the blue.
Congreu would never be seen to
pan them.
Frankly, I question the conatltutlonallty of all such efforts by
Congress to duck Its constitutional obligations. But even If the

Ohio Collcce Bas lletballtkhedule
By V.llfod P~l .. Wr.atiG.-1
MondiQ', Jan. 31
Eas&amp;ern 01 a1 Cle\'eland Stale
Hiram AI \'ounptown Stat•

OIM"Ieston CWVa) at sa....,.-.ee Stal e
'l'llesdq, .lan.ll
i\kroa at otllo Untw
O.,.wa .t. N.t"" Dame
Ml Sl. MIV)'II {M•J al Wrlpt Stal e
Mt Vernon Nazartne a4 Rio Grandt&gt;
UrbiUUI Ill Walsh
Thomas More II Wllmlnrton
Qoshen (In d ) al Bluffton
Dyke at Dellanee
Wt&gt;lh!Mq, t'eb I

Ohio State • Mlnrrsota
Ball Slate a1 Miami
Eu6ern~ clt at BowUna Green
Toledo at Ce nt I'll Mt ch
Kf'nl Sl•l~ al We.tll!rn Mlc:h
lavier at Cl•cln111tl
lla.ldwtn.Wallat e M Ml Union
Mar~ta lllill ~b!Sklapm
OtWMin at Ohio NortiM!rn
Heldelber"r at \\o'H~ber~

Cap llal at Wooster
Cu e

al AllePtny 1Pa)
Den liMn at Ohio Wtllle)'"l;l
Oberltn at Kl'nyan
MR.Iorr at Tlflln
~rw

Flndlll,)' at' L'it.kt: Etle
IDram at Grow Cit)' (Pa)
Thiel (Pal at .John Carroll

ThunMI..,- , Feb. 2

This led to a reversal of Kohl' a :
position, as he admitted that the ·
West German government actu- ally knew since October of the
plant's purpose and German
Involvement In Its construction. ·
It also led to West Germany ·
grud11ingly ilvlng In to U.S. efforts to deny Ubys lon11-term access to chemicals neceaury :
for puttlnll the plant Into full .
production.

Let's keep the heat on Congress_William,Rushe&lt;
Under the Constitution, all
federal expenditures must be
approved by Contp'ess, and usually Congress enjoys exercising
Ibis mighty prerogative. SpendIng other people's money, after
all, Is the aver.,e politician's
favorite sport.
Only In rare cases - such as
the cumnt proposal to raise the
salaries of senators and represen'-tlves tci $1150,000 - do our
legislators show much fear of the
spendlni process.
So terrified are the members of
Congress to be seen voting to
ralae their own pay that an
elaborate atrataeem has been
worked out and enacted Into law
to' obscure the process. First,
Congresa authorized the creation
of an Independent commllllon to
recommend whether there ou11ht
to be raises In the salaries of the
president and vice president, the
members of the federal judi-·
clary, and the Congress.
Once this commilalon makes
Its recommendations, these can
be approved, modified, or rejected by the president. U he
approves any raises, these 110
Into effect au~atlcally - un. lela ~ne house of Congress or the
other votes, Within a specified
time, to tllupprove them.
The result (and It II happening
under your nose rl&amp;ht now) 11
that the members of Collll'es•
~~tt tat ralael, yettherelsnopotnt
at which Coqress can be seen
vollq tor them.
Tfle . other great power reserved to Conllll'ftt by the Conatl-

Constitution permits t)lem, they :
are testimony •.to._ moat unbe- ·
comlne cowardice on the part of
Congress.
And Incidentally, once .Congress discovered that new taxes
would be Imposed automatically
any time It failed to meet the
Gramm -Rudman- Hollings
tareets for deficit reduction, how
often do you think Congress's
budeets would meet those
tar11ets? You can bet that we
would have· seen the l81t of any
serious effort to reduce the cost
of eovernment. On the contrary,
an unconscionable bud11et deficit
would be an absolute precondition of an automatic tax Increase.
No, let' a keep COIIIII'ell' feet to
the fire. If It doesn't meet the
deficit-reduction tarieU, let
Gramm-Rudman-Holllnil rip.

Now, as the 101at Congren
convenes and cuta about for
ways to ralae new taxes, Gov.
Marlo Cuomo of New York baa
come forward with an lqenlout
By Untied Pr- International
proposal that would haw much
Today Ia Monday, Jan. 30, t~e 30th day of 1989 with 335 to foUow .
the ume effect .. the dod11e
The moon Is wan11111. movlne toward new .
described above - I.e., It would
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
raise taxes Without Congress
The evening stars are Mara and Jupiter.
ever being - n to vote for them. .
Those born on thlsdateareunderthealgnofAquarlus. They include
Accordtne to Cuomo, the curFranklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd president of the United States, In 1882,
rent requirements for year-byhistorian Barbara Tuchman In 1912 (ait 77), actress Dorothy Malone
year debt reductlona under the
In 1925 (ap 64), actor Gene Hackman In 1931 (ale 58), Louis
Gramrn-Rudmllld·HoUtnp Act
Rukeyser, host of TV's "Wall Street Week," In 1933 (aJ18 56) , and
are limply unrealistic: Faced
actresses Tammy Grimes In 1938 (ace 53), Vaneua Redgrave tn 1937
With the proapect of IUCb uvap
(age 52) and VIctoria Principal In 1945 (ale 44) .
automatic acrou·the-board outa
On thla date 111 hlstnry:
In dtteue ·~ dom•tlc expendttlll'tl, Congreaa llld the •dmlllllIn 183ll, a pnman fll'ld tWice on Pr"tdent Andrew Jackson, the
tratlon have already fiddled wltb
first attempt on the Ute of a U.S. president. Both allOta mlatlred.
In 1933, Adolf !filler became chucellor of Germaay.
~· budpt tarpts, adopted un-

Today in history

---

•

GAHS, Meigs

Scoreboard ...

Robert W-e
r~trn1nn:
.. news caused a sensation In West
Germany .
Not so predictably It also
brou11ht swift and complete dentals from the Kohl iQvernment.
In some pro-11overnment Weat
German media there were even
·mutlerlngs ab_out Involvement of
"the U.S. Jewish press." .

all season until last week, when
EllisOn, Louisville's leading
they suddenly dropped three In a scorer, slipped while diving a!tet
row before defeating Clemson on a loose ball, spraining a ligament
Sunday. Illinois became the new In his left knee. It . appeared
No. :\. team. but last.Thursday to · Ellison slipped on a wet spot a nd
Minnesota. That left No. 2 did a spUt.
Georgetown as the heir apparLoutsvijle led 41-37 at ha lftime
ent, but the Hoyas lost Saturday a nd went up 51-41 wlth 16; 06 to go
to Louisiana State.
before . the Buckeyes started
That leaves No. 4 Oklahoma closing.
:
the likely choice to take aver the
The Cardinals lost their othe~
top spot when new ranklngs by big man, 7-looterFelton Spencer,
UPI's Board or Coaches are when he fouled out with 5:50 left;
released Monday. The Buckeyes used a 9-0 spurt to
Jay Burson scored 29 points fo r take a 72-67lead with 3:23 to go:
Ohio State and Louisville was not
Ohio State Coach Gary Willi'
able to make up for the loss or ams said he really didn't con:
Ellison, who went down with 44 sider the loss of Ellison during
seconds to go In the !lrst half.
the game.
''When you play Lou lsvllle, you
don't think. You Just play Louis'
ville," Williams said.

Pion.eers survive·

Rare books could be prominently 1114rked, )Jut such markIngs often deertue the value of
the documnta. Besld", hlih·
tech eradlostprt often can era~e
all evidence of origin.
Another problem arises because Institutions from which
thefts occur often don't want to
report them to the pollee. They
fear tbe embarrassment of havIng the pollee discover that the
· thief was oneofthelr ownPh.D.s.
Or, more Importantly, they are
nervo11s that once the alarm Is
sounded, the thief wUI destroy
the booty.
The llbrartana meeting In
Wuhlnifon ge11erally took the
admirably stern view that wben
an academic or common criminal Ia cau11ht steallnJiboOks, be or
she should do time ju~t like •ny
other miscreant. Otherwise, the
librarians fear that booknapplnJI may become endemic.

'
nothing was forthcoming. So, in

The Daily Sentinel- Page-$,

Pomeroy--- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 30, 1989

BOB HOEFLICH
General Maaacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
ANIItaal Publl8ber/ConlroUer

Mond8y, January 30, 1909

Theft of-rar~ books a problem _Ja_ck_An~de_rso_n

The Daily Sentinel
I

Pege-2-The Deily Swatlntl
Pomlroy-Middlepolt, Ohio

Northern Dllnois at Akron
A11hlanrt at St . .lo8eph (In d )

Cent .... Slate IIi Union I Ky)
«Adan1111' ld Ohio Demhdcu
Sha"ue'" St st W.W.
Dr:IIMCf! Ill Tri-Statl"
Poh~' ParkCPa)

¥

D~~

Friday, Feb. a
Wllrnlltjltoll at Lalit Erie

Sallftlt' ' ,. b. •
WMiern Mlc:h al Miami
Olllo Uatftrlkr at Ball $tal~

Cealnl Mlehlpaa&amp; l.nt &amp;ate
Ellll!lter n Mlclllpll al Toled6
Xavier It Dar 1111•
Clevela.Hf state al Valparals.
Akrottal Voanpl..,. 8tate
F1orlda State a1 tiHIB.al
N•llllltOI&amp; al Wrllht Stale
t\t..._nd a1 Lewis (01)
C~niral State at Point Park ( Pa)
Mt ll n~n M WIUenber1
' N'uikirfpm at OUerheln •
MarleUa M Heldelberl
Capital atllaldWI•M'allace
Ohio Ncn1hern al Thomu More

S.JII..-'• KdW.
C&amp;l pry 4, V•oouwr 4 (Ut)
Mondii,Y'• Gama

NY h ... hsll NY Blllllft'l, 1: l$p.m.
Qllebec • Dd.rell: , 7 : 35p.m . ·,'

W•N•ato•M Nle-.u.. 8::JS p.m.

,.m.
.,. •• Gamt!lo

'r.NIIIIle M Cllleap, 1\:U

..._•
Bwlhllo • Hartlerd, niP!;
Morareal M PIU!lbtll'lb, •leN
Wllllllpe&amp; U fM . ....... Dllhl
&lt;lal..,.,. at Loll An~~!~•. alp!
Edmoll&amp;on at Vanoou\lllr, niJN

Pro results
NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS$0C.
Satuniii,Y'S Reslllts

Golde• State II' ltullana II%

P.l .. delphla 121, New Jeney
HoiUifell H. Sa Alii Mlltt !I

,..,..... Ill, AtlMU ••
SU.:IIIf'l Re!l, . .,
, LA Lakers Ill. Dal ...• 13
WMhlaltolll!t, Oevelud 117 (0'1')
Bes.... ltl. Mlllni 113
Detroll Jtt, Sacnmea1GI1
Selltlelll, Mtlwaulft IM
l'h.:IQ'sGamM
Goldetl Slate .. Ml•nl, 7: JOp.m .
Den.-er al PhMnbi, t:31 p.m.
AUa~Ua atLACUpper .. ll:31p.m.
Charlotte • r.rtw.d, to:• p.m.
'l'llesdi.Y'I Oame~
llldlana a1 New ferk, flllll
Bt!!IMI at WMIIIal(oa, nl&amp;llf
Pblladelphlald Cleveland, nl1hl
Detroll at Chit_,.,, nlpi
S~~enmento It Mll.n~alell!,

nl1hl
lA Lalr.ers » Hou!lloa, nll:hl:
Uta• .t Dallu, nlxhf

Den\'tf at San AM.mt,llllthl
N~ Jer~~ey

at Suttle, niK'h!

Satunlay's
~scores
Ohl• Wo~nen ' 1 Colleae Baa ilf:ibaJI
lly Unilk'd Pnss 18urratl0•1

lan. !ll
a.wun1 Grt:eelr/, Ce•t.-1 Mlchlpn~ 15

Mllfl1181, Kent Stale It
Tolt:do 18. Ohio Unhoer1HJ 53
Soulier• Mill 1J, OlldDtaU M
Muld&amp;a lt. ~nr• 12
Rei IIeber&amp; I~. Moul'lll U8IOII.f8

Wkle*rc12. Baldwllt·"' aJiacf'
Walsh 71, Oh~ DomiNe• U
Rio Grande at, Urh .... 11
\'ouncMown St "'It, .U.rontt
l.ewls 81 , "---"llllfld 11

,

.1 Ohio C.llqe 11M ll!lball Srores

lnn•q at 11•1••
R'llmlnl(on at D)il.e
IOram 1.1 Car .e(le-Mellon (Pal
Grow Cit)' (Pa) at Jo,_ Carroll

Ceftt Mleh U. Bewha Gret:tt 55
Ml.n '7t, Kut state 1!1
Till~ 71, 01110 U11ho 14

Moad19' ' 11 SCi ortfl C.lt:ndar
B .. lethal!
Golden Stat e AI Miami, ~ : JO p.m.

'Den¥er at Pttoenbl , 9:11p.m.
A.tlan~ u LA Cllp,en, 11:30 p.m .
Charlotte Ill PortiMd, 10:3(1 p.m .
Golf

Boca Raton. F1D. - Playofii•UOO.IIOO
Oldllmobtlr Cla11le

Hockey

NV l~tlaftdersal NY RaliKf!l't, ~ : .U p.m.
Quebec M ~roM, ' :SS p.m.
w•tnpuatMiaR~Ma.B:n p.m. ·
Toronto a&amp; Qlcqo, 8: :U p.m.
Socct:r
MISL

No runes lll:'htdall'd
•
Sllll•!f
Vall and Burver Creek, Colo.- World

.tlptae Ot .,.......

,,!

Tll!ndll
Tnk)'O -;- Paa P•t... Dc ()pen

115

Dr:nwr IU, PlloenbliS8
Utah 1%7, New .York 1141
Mllwaa ll!e 115, U. Olpper 11 !W

ke•y&amp;n .. Allt,Way ( Pa)
case n.e.et¥e a1 WoM&amp;er
Earllwn Chid ) al Denliloa
Ohio Wt~&gt;kyan at Obt:rUn
cea.. ~n~ at Ttmn
Malolll'! a1. M&amp; Verno• N..,...ene
at 011110 ~fi'IIJ*l•

,wawa
UrbaM .. Rio Grand e

to open Rio .
sectional play

NATIONAL IIOCKEV LEAHUE

OhloSt II.

~:l

......

Ml c~p118&amp;

5i

lu. 28

Akr• t7, Wett.ll!rn MlehiiJM if

O.,ton81. Oacla ... IM
Clf\lrl•d St 8 , Sa' Mluourt. il
•tll!r 71, X a~ler '71
WrlJIIISI 77, WI•Greea Bay 72
AaWanci'JI, Lewll (01) 61
Ol•leM•• 71. Ceatral Si '2S
o•lo'Northera.U, Mulklnpmll tot)
Oderhla 'Jii, ca.pl&amp;al "IS
lel*'lllrlll7, Mo1111 Un ..ut4t
Wk~nbera tl, &amp;.1,_...,,., allau 48
1\DqMar II. DuiiiOn fl
OWo'Wa~ 17, Cue RMerw '11

Gallipolis (5-11 ) will take on
Meigs (3-13) In the first game of
the 1989 Rio Grande Devlsion II
Sectional basketball tou rnament
on Monday, Feb. 13, at 7 p.m.
Winner of the Gall1polls-Melgs
cont.e st will Ia ke on secondseeded Rock Hll1 (10-6 ) in
another top bracket outing at
6:30 p.m. on Feb. 15 in Lyne
Center.
In the lower bracket, topseeded Wellston (13-3) will battle
Jackson (3-13) at 8:15 p.m. on
Feb. 15.
Finals will be held ~·riday,
Feb. 17, at 7 p.m. The winner wm
advance to the Athens District,
and play theChllllcatheSectional
winner an Thursday, Feb. 23, at
Rio Grande scored Its last two
8:15p.m. ·
points on a pair of Anthony
General admission at Rio Raymore rree throws at 1:08
Grande Is $2.50 per person. Doors (87-83) ,' whlle Malone finished its
will open one hour prior to game scoring a basket and a pair of
time. Tickets will be available at free throws by Keith Troyer and
the door.
foul shots provided by Phll
Three other Division II sec- Gebhardt and Walt Wilson.
tional tournament. drawings
Raymore, who scored 11 points
were held In the southern Ohio in th e !lrst period, ended up with
area Sunday afternoon.
, 24 points. two rebounds and two
The Division II Dis trlct Tourna. assists . Lambcke had 13 points
ment will be held at Ohio and seven rebounds, Schubert
Universit y' s Convocation talUed 12 points and four reCenter .
bounds and Watkins added 10
points to complete the Redmen
- - Sports briefs-- scoring.
Rio Grande was 43.5 percent on
Boxing
field goals (27-62) while netting
Maurizio Stecca of Italy won
20 of 25 free throws torSO percent.
the new Wor ld Boxing Organiza·
The Redmen turned over the ball
lion featherweight tltle Saturday 12 times · and recorded 29
night In Milan, ltaly, when the
rebounds.
handl ers for Dom~can Pedro
Malone's balanced scoring
Julio Nolasco cone
2: 55 into
sheet revealed that Booth was
the sixth round . olasco was
credited with 11 rebounds and
taken to a hospital for a CAT scan four assls ts, while Martin, Geband doctors said his condition hardt and Troyer led In assists
was not serious.
with' five each. Jim Klsh re-

aa,.. u. M•""la u
Wo.,...II,O~Il

t'1 , Urttana Ill
Malaat 14. Rio Grudr: 81
Mnll Ver•alft, OMG Dominican 0
Ced•lll~

a'lrnl•~t••l8,

Oeft-.:e

111Ra '71. _. ... 1'1(at~

~~

Fl ... .,. 'T'I, O:rkt '7t
Gea!"4 '1' 1', ,... Can•
More•e. . St II, 8hw.e St M

't

w.. and

.lt:UIS, BJqm II

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Malone cemented Its hold on
the top spot in the Mid-Ohio
Conference by fighting off a Rio
Grande Redmen comeback to
win, 94-83, Saturday at Lyne
Center.
The Pioneers, who are leaving
the MOC at theendo!thecurrent
academic year, are 10-0 ·tn
conference action and 14-8 overalL Rio Grande goes to 15-9 and'
4-5..
"We were too passive In the
first half," Redmen Coach John
Lawhorn summed up afterward.
" But we came back and did a
good job In the first 10 minutes of
the second half. We showed a lot
of heart and character In that .
second half."
Coming off a 97-84 defeat or
Cedarville Jan. 24, Hal Smith's
Malone crew tied It up at 2 on an ·
Andy Booth basket at 17:32 and
led for the entire game, outdistancing tbe Redmen by as much
as 21 (44-23) with 2:24left.
Forward Stewart York then
sank a 3-polnt shot for Rio
Grande at 2:01 and Marc Gothard pumped In a pair or free
throws at 50 seconds to leave the
halftime margin 46-30 in Malone's favor.
The Redmen chipped away at
Malone to fall to within five
(65-60) at 9:51. John Lambcke
then tipped In a failed Brian
Watkins 3-polnter and Brad Schubert connected on another trifecta shot to narrow the deficit to
two (67-65) with 8:081ert.
A series of foul shots helped a
surprised Pioneer offense gain
additional points as the Redmen
came to within three lour times.
But Booth and Todd Martin, who
each scored 18 points, helped
keep their team that much
ahead.

-"

Monday-Thursday .
Month of January
'

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992 ~2174

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POMEROY, OHIO

Jerry Francis scored 15 point~
and substitute guard Ell Brewster had 10 lor the Buckeyes, 15-4':
"It was a real team effort out
there today," Wllllams said. "i
really liked the way we played.' '
LaBradford Smith led Loulsvllle, 14-3., with 23 points, 161n the
second half. Tony Kimbro had 16
points and Ellison, the MVP
when Louisville won the NCAA
Tournament In 1986, left the
game with 6.

corded · 15 points and six r~
bounds, Wilson had 15 points and
four rebounds, Gebhardt added
12 points and Troyer had 10.
The Pioneers were successful
on 34 of their 61 field goal
attempts for 55.7 percent and
were 75 percent (15-20) at the foul
line. They held their turnovers to
10 and totaled 30 rebounds.
In other games Sunday: No. 5
Rio Grande hosts Mount Ver- Arizona routed No. 18 Stanford
non Nazarene Tuesday at V: 30' · 72-52, No. 7 Duke pummell8Q
p.m . Malone Is Idle until Wednes- Clemson 92-62, No. 10 Michigan;
day, when It travels to Tiffin for a
trounced Purdue 99-88, No. 15
7:30p.m. ~ntest.
North Carolina State topped.
In other MOC scores Saturoay, Maryland 90-67, Notre Dame.
Cedarville edged Urbana, 97-88;
edged Temple 64-60, Texa$
Tiffin outlasted Walsh 78-77 In stuffed Southern Methodist 96-65.
overtime; and Mount Vernon and Washington State beat Soutli~
Nazarene dumped Ohio Dominiern Cal 72-65.
·
can, 102-63.
Box score:
The Daily Sentinel
RIO GRANDE ( 83) -Anthony
Raymore, 9-6-24; Jimmy
•
tt1BP81U.IW)
Kearns, 1-1-0-5; Brad Schubert,
A DlvlBioa or MalUmedla. Inc .
1-3-1-12; Larry Benning, 1-4-6;
Published evety afternoon, Monday .
John Lambcke, 5-3-13; Marc
Friday, 111 Court St., PoGothard, 0-4-4; Brian Watkins, . thrClla:h
m..-oy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub- · '
1-2-2-10; Rob Jackson, 1-0-2;
lllhln( Compuy!Multlmedta, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio t~'IW. Ph. 992·2156. SeStewart York, 0-1' 0-3; Mike Tidcond c:lua POitaae pald at Pomeroy,
well, 1-0-2. TOTALS 26-H0-83.
Ohio.
·
MALONE (94) -Todd Martin,
Member: United Press lnteraatlonal, •
2-4-2-18; Phil Gebhardt, 2-1-5-12;
lnliDd DaUy Pres• Aasoclatlon and the
Keith Troyer, 1-2-2-10; Jim Klsh,
Oblo Newspaper Anoclatk)n. National .
7-1-15; Andy Booth, 7-4-18; Walt
AdvertlllDg R.epte~entattve, Branham
NewJPaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue, •
Wilson, 6-3-15; Steve Perry, 2-2-6.
New York, New York 10017.
. ,
TOTALS 27-7-11&gt;-94.
1

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MIDDUPOUI OHIO .

�Monday. January 30, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

: Monday,.January 30, 1989

Miller comes from behind to
defeat Eastern quintet, 70-56
BY SCOTI' WOLFE
MILLER - Gaining a 28 point
eftort from versatile John
Doughty, the Miller Falcons
rallied to defeat the Eastern
Eagles lor the second time this
season, 70-56, in a non league
boys' basketball game at East·
ern High School.
Eastern Is now 9·8 overall and
Is 8-4 In the SVAC.
Eastern's junior guard tandem
of Shaun Savoy and Scott Fitch
camblnled for over half of
Eastern's output with 38 points.
Savoy led with 20 and Fitch
added 18. Mike Martin tossed In

8.

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LOOKS FOR RECEIVER -

Philadelphia
Eacle quarterback Randall Cunningham (1) ol
·the NFC squad hunts lor a receiver while celllnl
• . protection from Dallas Cowboy nmnin1 back
•

Herschel Walker (right) In the second quarter of
the 19th annual Pro Bowl In Honolulu Sunday.
Cunningham wu aamed player oil he game alter
tile NFC's 114-3 victory. ( UPI)

·.NFC routs AFC 34-3 in Pro Bowl
most spectacu tar play of t.he
HONOLULU (UP!) - Philagame.
delphia's Randall Cunningham
Facing 3rd-and-10 at the AFC
directed three touchdown drives
39, Cunningham dropped back to
· and Herschel Walker of Dallas
pass and found himself scramscored twice Sunday to lead the
bling outof pressure. He escaped
NFC to a 34-3 rout of the AFC in
two tackles, dropped the ball,
the 19th annual Pro Bowl.
Cunningham, selected MVP of
picked It up again and found J. T.
Smith open at the 28 for a first
the game, completed 9 of 14
: passes for 83 yards and rushed . down.
Morten Andersen kicked a
· twice for 49 yards. As a team, the
27-yard field goal to make It 17-3
NFC collected 355 yards In total
with 8:03 left In the period.
• offense to just 167 for the AFC.
... The victory stopped a two-year
The NFC got the ball back
again at Its own 27 and Cun·
: . winning streak lor the AFC and
nlngham put together a nine-play
• · marked a radical turnaround for
touchdown drive.
: the NFC, which had been limited
'. to just six points in each of the
Neal Anderson of Chicago, who
: ; last two Pro Bowls.
gained 85 yards on 13 carries, had
• · Leading 14-3, the NFC took the the big play of the drive, gaining
: • second' half kickoff and marched 25 yards on a draw to put the ball
67 yards In 13 plays. In the drive,
at the AFC 16. Two plays later,
Cunningham threw over half of Walker ran In from the 7 for his
his completions and pulled off the second score of the day.

. _. Soothe~, Kyger t:reek will
~ open 'Meigs Sectional toumey
• Kyger Creek (4-12) will battle
-defending champion SOuthern
(9-8) In the opening round game
of the 1989 Division IV basketball
tournament at Meigs High School
on Monday, Feb. 13. iM!ginning at
7p.m.
.
Winner of the first round game
wU! play North GaiU&lt;! (10-5) on
Wednesday, Feb. 15 at 6:30p.m.
Top-seeded Trlmble•(13·3) will
battle Eastern .(9-7) In the
nightcap on Feb. is at. 8:15.
The championship game Is
slated Friday, Feb. 17, at 7 p.m.
• ·T he winner will advance to
' district tournament play.
·
Chesapeake Sectional
SOuthwestern (7·9) w!ll play

Franklin Furnace Green (8-10),
the top-seeded teain, In the
Inaugural round on Monday,
Feb. 13, at 7 p.m. The winner of
that contest will face Ironton St.
Joe (0·16) on Wednesday, Feb.
15, at 8 p.m.
No. 2 seed Hannan Trace (7-9)
will take on Symmes Valley
(2·13) on Feb. 15 at 6 p.m.
The championship game will
be Friday, Feb. 17 at 7:30 p.m.,
with the winner to advance to
district tournament play.
Oak Hill, another SVAC
member, Is a Division III school
and wiU play its sectional at Rock
Hill.

Meigs frosh cagers up record to 12-4
Shawn Hawley scored eight in
each hall to lead the Meigs team
with 16 points. Jeremy Phalln,
with six on tbe evening, got them
all In the second quarter and
James Howerton, who was held
to one point In the first .half,
scored four In the third and eight
In the fourth . .
Meigs hit on 14 of 46 from the
floor for a cool 34 percent.
Monday evening the Marauders
will host Jackson at home and
then return to the tournament
trail on Wednesday against Bel·
pre (at Belpre) at 6:-00PM
SCORING:
.
MEIGS - Logan ().().(); MUsser
0-1·1; Howerton 6-1-13; Harless
0-2·2: Hawley &amp;-4-16; Wyatt 0-0-0;
Rupe O.Q-0; Mash 0-0-0; Phalln
2-2-6; Caruthers 0.().(), Hovatter
0-0-0; Haynes 0-0-0.
ALEXANDER Garroda
Darin Logan, Kevin Musser,
Robby Wyatt and Jeremy Rupe · 3-0-6; Wilson 4·0-8; Da!!ey 4·1-9;
were praised for their continued Elmore 1·1·3: Smith 3·2·8
Scoring by quarters
fine play as the Marauders
Me!p
I
, 8 8 12 10-38
committed on 12 turnovers on the
Alexander
8 5 12 9-34
. ni&amp;'ht.
BELPRE - The Meigs Freshman basketball squad raised Its
record to 12·4 as they won a hard
fought battle against Alexander
In the opening round fo tournament play by a score of 38-34.
With the score knotted at 34 all,
James Howerton canned the last
two buckets of the game on fine
assists by B!ll Harless and Kevin
Musser. Alexander's Joe Smith
had tied the score with two free
throws with 58 secolllls remain·
lng prior to Howerton's four
points.
Coach Ron Logna stated the
• free throw shooting, which he felt
needed some improvement, was
excellent as Meigs made 10 of 13
attempts lor a 77 percent aver·
age to 40 percent for the Spartans
who hit 4 out of 10.

'•

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:
'PIIASlfiT

•

YA 11 'Y

HOSPITAL

Ell, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENEUL ALLERGIST
"W' HA~E HEARINI AIDS;'
(30.) 675·12"

The extra-point attempt symbollzed the troubles of the AFC,
as they were penalized for the
second time for having 12 men on
the field.
Minnesota's Wade Wilson
quarterbacked the final period
and directed the NFC to 10 more
points. ·
The first effort bogged ~own at
the AFC 33 and Andersen of New
Orleans set a Pro Bowl record by
booting a 51-yard field.
The kick erase\~ the . previous
mark of 48 yards set by Jan
Stenerud of Kansas City In 1972.
The final NFC score was set up
when the Giants' Terry Kinard
Intercepted Dave Kreig's pass
and returned it to the 11.
Two plays later, Wilson hit the
Rams' Henry Ellard for t'he
score. Andersen kick his fourth
extra point to make It 34-3.
Early in the first h~lf It looked
like the game would be all
offense.
The AFC took the opening
kickoff and marched 46 yards In
10 plays. They took a 3·0 lead
when the Buffalo's Scott Nor·
wood hit from 38 yards out.
The NFC ~nswered with a
67·yard drive of Its own.
Cunningham started It off by
rolling to his left and running for
33 yards.

Statistically , 6-4 John Doughty
led In just about every category,
leading the Falcon offense with
28 points. Tim Stlckdorn added
13, Tom Fulk 15, Jim Brunson 8,
and Albert Siemer 6.
Eastern flew to a 13-12 lead,
sparked by outside shooting by
Savoy and Fitch, while also
getting a potent response from
the duo off the fast break.
Savoy has been battling with a
back Injury all-season long, but
. that hasn't stopped the sharpshooting point man from hitting
double digits most of the time. A
flare·up did hamper Savoy's
offensive output during a two
game ·trek, but this weekend he
was again back in true form.
Friday evening, Eastern lost
the services of steady senior
guard Chris Lance, who also
missed Saturday with a badly

sprained ankle.
Behind Doughty's !I ness Miller
marched on to a narrow 32-32
halftime lead.
Always a key threat to Eastern's success, senior Mike Mart!n 'was taken out of his role early
In the third period when he
picked up his fourth personal In
the opening part of the frame.
Martin later fouled out In the
final round, taking away a big
portion of Eastern's success,
senior Mike Martin was taken out
of his · role early In the third
period when he picked up his
fourth personal In the opening
part of the frame. Martin later
fouled out In 'the final round,
taking away a big· portion of
Eastern's inside play.
Eastern managed to keep It a
close ballgame In the third
round, but missed Martin' s pres·
ence In the last round, dropping
from a 51-47 deficit to a 70-56
flnale.
Miller hit 30·64 for 47%from the
floor and 10-14 at Uie line, while
EHS connected on 20-63 for a cold
32% and just 8-16 at the line .
Savoy and southpaw Kenny
Galdwell· kept EHS close In the
second frame when they went for
the three·polnt bomb, Savoy
hitting 2·3 and Caldwell one key
goal just before the hall .
Eastern had just 20 rebounds,
to Miller's 43. EHS was led by
Scott Fitch with 7, wh!!e Doughty
had 14 and teammate Stlckdorn

Local news briefs... - - Stocks
Dally stock prices
&lt;::onunued from page 1
Saturday at 1:40 a.m., Chester Fire Department to a
structure fire on Sliver Ridge Road; No name was given on the
Incident; At 1: 45 a .m . , Orange Township Fi;e Deparb'nent was
called to the same fire: Pomeroy at 10:06 a.m . to Mulberry
Avenue for Hazel McCloud to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 10: 22 a.m. to Race Street for Mary Kerns to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 11: 35 a.m. to County
Road 3 lor Frank Drehel to Ho17..er Medical Center; Racine at
4:27 p.m. transported Cindy D9welfand Tammy Thomas from
an auto accident on County Road 28 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 4: 51 p.m. to County. Road 28 for Stella
Durst to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 6:23p.m.
to North Second · for Rodney Clonch · to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Scipio Township Fire Departtnent at 10:25 p.m. to a •·
. structure fire at the Harold Graham residence on Kingsbury · .,
Road.
Sunday at 1:17 a .m ., Middleport to South Third for Marjorie
. Walburn to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:04a.m. to
Route 7 for Maude Gray to Camden·Oark Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 3: 48a.m. to Crew Road for Keith Ashley to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Columbia Township Fire Department at
3:34 p.m. to a grass fire on State Route 32; Pomeroy. Fire
Depariment at 4:20p.m. to a brush fire on Route 124; Pomeroy
at 7:33 p.m. to State Route 68l for James Boyd to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 11: 40 p.m. to State Route
124 for Esther Bukey to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

17.
EHS had 7 steals, 4 assists, 14
turnovers, and 17 personals.
Ml!ler had 8, 14, and 14
respectively.
· EHS mentor Charles Riley
stated, "The Joss Is going to be
beneficial to our team because of
the parody In Southeastern Ohio
basketball this year. When tile
whistle blows, we'll be right
there. Tonight, we .got caught
thinking ahead.
Riley -added, "Injuries and the
loss of · the juniors dJre to
discipline problems have made
the teamk stronger. People must
realize we've played without two
Important guards and our center.
We're a lot better than out record
shows/'

Miller won the reserve contest
49·37, led by Randy Moore with 10
and Jeff Durst8. Larry Paige had
16 for Miller.
Score by Qqartef!!:
Eastern .......... ! ...... l3 18 16 9-56
Miller ...... :........... 12 20 19 19· 70
EASTERN (56) Martin
2-0-8; Sinclair 2.().4; Savoy 5·3·120; Fitch 8-2-18; Caldwel!0-1·0-3;
Horner 1-0-2; Durst 0-1-1; Bissell
0·0-0; Murphy 0·0-0; Wilson 0·0-0;
Moore 0·0·0. TOTALS 111-4·8·56. ·
MILLER (10) - Tom Fulk
5-5-15: John Doughty 13.0-2-28;
Tim Stickdorn . 6·1-13; Albert
Selmer 2·2·6; Jim Brunson 4-0·8;
Tom Hettich 0.0-0; Tim Van·
blbber 0-0-0; Chad Snyder 0-0-0;
Jim Toth 0·0-0. TOTALS 30-10·70.

..

Rio Grande Redwomen Coact)
Cheryl Flelitz credited effective
defense and rebounding skill as
the key ·to the Rio ladles' third
straight win Saturday as the
Redwomen crested to an 80-70
win over Urbana at Lyne Center.
The victory improved Rio
Grande's overall record to 10-8
and 4-2 In the Mid-Ohio Confer·
ence. Cindy McKnight's Urbana
club, which defeated the Redwo·
men 68-66 at Urbana Jan. 10.
went to 7-12 and 2-3 in the

'

531

,.

conference:
"Good defense and outrebounding were the main factors
In the win." Fielitz said. "We '
were also helped a lot by good
scoring from Lea Ann Mullins.
Ann Barnltz and Betsy
Bergdoll."
Mullins pumped in 26 point s,
Barnltz 20 and Bergdoll 15 to lead
the Redwomen as they led the
Lady Blue Knights to a 45-38
halftime' lea d. 'Urbana, led by
'

'

center Cindy Frere, kept close
quarters with the Redwomen but
were burt by fouls and turnovers.
Urbana lost the ball 15 times,
while Rio Grande turned it over
11 .

Mullins exploded for a set of
3-polnt shots, Hastings had a pair
of free throws and Kathy Snyder
added, a basket over a four·
minute period to give the Redwomen their biggest lead (67-48) of
the second h'llf.

Dr. J. ~tephen Lovell, DO~

JA CKS~

PIKE

Announces The Association Of

RT. 35 WEST
"""""- 44.6· 4524

Dr. Michael B. Carlisle
EXTENDED OFFICE HOURS:
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday, 5-9 p.m.; Friday &amp; Saturday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

675-6330

Point Pleasant

•••••••••••••••••
•

Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce 4

•
:

VALENTINE'S DAY
DINNER AND DANCE :
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1989 4
ROYAL OAK PARK
4

4

•
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DINNER 7 P.M.-RIBEYE STEAK
DANCE 8:30 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT
Muslt ly BUTCH WAX &amp; THE GLASS PACS

4
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Power windows, power door locks. tilt, cruise,
AM·FM stereo cassette, 9 passenger seating.

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See Mark, Ken, Ed or J.D;

"lf·We Dot't H1ve It, We'll Fl•• It"
~

NElSON MOTORS, INC.

500 EAST MAIN

992·~~174

'

1. Up to 50% Discount on Eyecore
2. Discounts on Your Auto, Home, or Farm lnsur·
anee
3. Property Protection/$500 Reward Program
4. Prescription Drug Discount Service
5. Discounts. on Balkamp line of Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
6. CAUV ·discounts on farm property taxes .

.
- POMEROY, OHIO

Ull

MEIGS COUNTY FARM BUREAU
540 E. Main St.
P.O. lox 426
· Pom•roy, Ohio 45 769
614·992-2111
.
Monday through Friday 1:30 to 5:00

his wife, Janett Capehart In 1980,
J~ Albright
one sister, two brothers and one
John G. "Big John" Albrigh~ 54, grandson.
West Columbia, died Sunday, Jan.
He Is survived by three sons,
29, 1989, at his residence.
Frank Howar.d, HI, and James
Born March 27, 1934 in Alan, both of Point Pleasant, and
Moxahala, Ohio, he was a son of William Ray of Corinth, Texas;
· the late Hiram and Lovinia Kenison two sisters, Kathleen Taylor of
Albright
. Vienna, W.Va., Anna Brown of
He was a journeyman lineman Mesa, Ariz.; four brothers, Paul
for the Bruce and Merrilees of Dallas Texas, Gerald of
Electric Company of Newcastle, Mulberry, Fla .. James of Mac
Pa. He was a member of the Chris· Ung!e, Pa. , and William of Plant
tian Community Church, Point City, Fla.; eight grandchildren;
Pleasant, the Scottish Rite Valley of and four great-grandchildren.
Huntington, the IBEW (Intcma·
Services were today, 2 p.m. at
tiona! Brotherhood of Electrical the Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Workers) Local 245, Toledo, Ohio, Point Pleasant, with .the Rev .
and the Clifton Masonic Lodge Frank Frye and the Rev. Michael
AF&amp;AM No. 23. He served in the Chapman officiating. Burial was
U.S. Navy.
In the Kirkland Memorial
Surviving are his wife, Laura L. Gardens.
Albright; two . sons and daughtersin-law, John R. and Sharon G., and Hllary Turley
Terry E. and Ruthanna L. Albright,
all of West Columbia; two sisters,
Hilary A~mand Turley, ' LinMrs. Sally Sith, Loughman, Fla.• coln Hill Pomeroy, widely kpown
Mrs. Carol Downard, Canal in Meigs County as a p'!ano and
Winchester, Ohio; one baJf.sister, organ entertainer, died Suqday·
Mrs. Kathryn Barlow, Canton, at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Ohio: one half-brother, Hiram following a lingering U!ness.
· Scene, Zanesville, Ohio; two
Mr. Turley was born May 24,
grandchildren.
1923 at Corcoran, Calif.. He was In
Service will be Wednesday at the 8th Air Force stationed In
1:30 p.m. at West Columbia United England during World War Il as
Methodist Church with j&gt;l!SlOr Dan a radio operator on B·17
' Wellman officiating. Bunal will fol· bombers. He completed 36 mislow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, sions over Germany. He worked
Point Pleasant
for the Royal Crown Bottling Co.
Friends may call Tuesday, from 2 In Middleport for 19 years and
to 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the was well known an an entertainer
Foglesong Funeral Home, and one at the organ and plano In the
hour prior to services at the church trl-cOunty ania for many years.
on Wednesday.
He belonged to Drew Webster
Masonic graveside services will Post 39, American Legion.
Surviving are a daughter,
be conducted.
Nancy Scolari, Walnut, Calif.;
two grandsons, Marlo and An'
H. Roush
gelo Scolari; two sisters, Mrs.
DeLoris Osgood, Lake Tahoe,
Meigs County native Llewellyn
H. Roush, 79, died Saturday at his Call!., and LUllan E. Moore,
Pomeroy; a close friend, Ralph
residence in Columbus.
Stewart, Mason, W.Va.; nieces,
A retired driver for the Atlas
Laurette Lee, Concord, Calif.;
· Llnen Company, Mr, Roush was
Kathryn Doidge, Pomeroy; Mo·
born Sept. 27, 1909 In Meigs
County , a son of the late Hayes
rlne Reed. Las Vegas, Nev.:
nephews, Kenneth Rankin, Los
and Ella Jones Roush. He was a
Angeles, Calif.; Stephen Rankin,
member of the Y.M.C.A.
El Paso. Tex.: Paul Rankin,
Survivors Include his wife,
Martinez, Calif,; Frank Hickcox,
Anna H. Kloh Roush; two sons,
Pinole, Calif.; 14 great nieces
Charles B.' Roush and Daniel L.
and great nephews, and 'Several
Roush, all of Columbus: a
great-great nieces and nephews.
daughter •. Susan Arnold, of New
Memorial .services wUJ be
York; seven grandchildren; two
·
announced
l'!ter by the Ewing
great grandchildren; and a
Funeral Home.
brother, Chester B. Roush.
Friends may make donations
Services will be Tuesday, 11:30
a.m., at ·the Schoedlnger Hilltop
to the Meigs Unit oft he American
Cancer Society In his memory.
Chapel, 3030 West Broad St.,
These are to be sent to P.O. Box
Columbus, with Rev. · Randy
692, Pomeroy .
Nelswanger officiating. Burial
will be in Sunset Cemetery,
Rev. John D. King ·
Columbus. Friends may call at
the funeral· home today (Mon·
The Rev . John Daniel King, 71,
day) from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 .p.m.
721 Third Ave., Gallipolis, died
Sunday at his residence following
Frank H. Capehart. Jr.
a lengthy Illness.
He was In the ministry for 21
Frank Howard Capehart, Jr.,
years, and served as pastor at
79, of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,d!ed
Trledstone Baptist Chruch for
at his home Friday evening after
the past 14 years. He retired from
a brief Illness.
·
O'Dell LUmber Company In 1982,
Born March 3, 1909 In Point
with over 40 years service.
Pleasant, he was the son of the
Born Marctr 27, 1917 In Green
late Rev. Frank Capehart and
Township, Gallla County, he was
Anna Zirkle Capehart.
a son of the late John King and
He had been a Point Pleasant
Priscilla HIH King.
resident since 1941, and was a
He Is survived by his wife,
retired pipe litter of Local 625 of
Bernice Doss King, Whom he
Charleston. He was a voc~t!onal
married Feb. 23, 1945 In
teacher at Wahama High School
Gallipolis.
· In the 1950s. He worked at the
Also surviving are two daugh·
Marietta Manufacturing Plant
ters, Patricia Ann Armstead of
for many years.
·
Columbus and Christine Will!·
He was a member of tlle
ams of Gallipolis; three sons,
Heights United Methodist
John (Ben) King of GaU!polls,
Church and attended the St. Paul
Elmer . D. King of Fort Hood,
United Methodist Church. He
Texas, and Phillip Andrew King
was a former member of Loyal
of Gallipolis; ten gra_ndchlldren;
Or.der of Moose Lodge 731 of
five great-grandchildren; and
Point Pleasant and a member of
one sister, Pearl Scott of
:the Masonic Lodge Minturn No.
Middleport:
19 of Point Pleasant. He was a
He was preceded In death by
32nd degree Mason, Scottish Rite
four brothers and four sisters.
' of Charleston, and a member of
President of Sunday School
the Ben! Kedem Temple in
and BTU, he was also 'a life
Charlesion, and Pat Wilson
member of the women's
Shrine Qub of Point Pleasant.
auxiliary.
He served several years In the
He was a veteran of World War
Public Relat!QIIS Departtnent of
11, serving In the United States
People's Bank In Point Pleasant,
Army.
where he served as vice
Services will be conducted
pres!d~nt.
·.
Wednesday, 1 p.m., from Tried·
He was a member of the Mason
stone Baptist Church, the Rev.
County Fair Board and was one
Grover Turni!JI the Rev. Harry
o~!he flrstloundersfo the Hidden
Scott Jr.; tbe Rev. Gilbert Craie
Valley Country Qub.
Jr., the Rev. Arlu1 Hurt ud the .
He was preceded In death by

L.

In The Practice Of Dentistry
703 22nd Street ·

(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ........... ......................30%
Ashland 01! ........ .............. ,.34%
Bob Evans .......................... l4'l-j
Charming Shoppes .............. 16'h
City Holding Co .. .......... .. .... . 21
Federal Mogul. : ............. l .... 50)'s
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 48'h
Heck's ..... ............................ 'h
Key Centurion ..................... 15
Lands' End ......................... 28:V.
Limited Inc ........................ 29'h
Multimedia lnc ................... 78'h
Rax Restaurants .: ................ 3'h
Robbins &amp; Myers ........... ..... 17 %
Shoney's Inc .. ...................... 834
Wendy's. Inti ................... ,.... 5%
Worthl~ton lnd .... ............. 23 1,1,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Ohio .. ,

Alumni prnclice

Continul'd from page 1

Strongsvllle : MarkS. Linden.
24 , Olmsted Falls, kUed when hi s
pickup truck hit a wall along a
Cuyahoga County road (no seat
belt) .
Massillon: Mary A. Yokes, 76,
Massillon, k!lled when hit by a
car as she wa s crossing Ohio
Route 172 In Stark County.
Sunday

Xenia: Audrey F. Spence, 53,
Eaton, killed when her car
collided with another vehicle on
U.S. 35 east of Xenia In Greene
County.
. Bucyrus: Jean A. Cla rk, 34 ,
and her daughter Tracy L. Clark,
7, both of Cres tline, kllled in a
two-vehicle acciden t in Crawford
Co unty.

l
I

Eastern High School Alumn i
Bus)&lt;etball practic!' will be Wednesday, 8 p.m ., at the high school. •
The Eastern High School Alumni
Basketball Games will' be played
Saturday. Feb. 4, not Feb. 7.
sta rting with the women ·s ga me
at 6 p.m., followed by the men's
game. Proceeds fr om the games
will go to the Eas1ern Hi gh
Ath letic Booste rs .

Lodge to meet
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM
will meet -In special session
Tuesday at 7p.m. Work w!llbe In
the EA. Degree. Refreshments
will be served following the
meeting.

SECRET

-----Area deaths.-----

Redwomen. exercise defense,
rebound skill in Urbana win
.

Pomeroy- Middleport, .Ohio

OR SURE

CREST

SDUD

be In King Famlly Cemetery .
Flag presentation will be by
VFW Post 4464.
The body will Ue In state at the
church one hour preceding the
service Wednesday.
Friends may call Tuesday at
Waugh-Halley -Wood Funeral
Home from 6 to 9 p.ro.
Pallbearers will be Brent E.
Hogan, Joe Louis Oudley, Har·
vey A. Brown, Gilbert Craig Sr . ,
James F. Williams and William
0 . Qualls.
Honorary pallbearers will be
Bill Jenkins, Ted Stoney and
Dick McCalla.

ANTI·PERSI'IfiANTI
DEODORANT
RDUNO OR WIDE
SOU/i- 1 OZ. SIZE
IIIUR CHOICE

'IJBI.ETS

FDIL WRAmD
• I'IIG. OF 34

'TOOTIII'ASTE

REG., MINT OR llliiWI CONTROL
OR GEL-REG. OR TARiilll

"'~-~~

19

I

Esther Bukey
Esther Bukey, 73, Long Bot·
tom, died this morning at Cam·
. den-Clark Hospital In Parkers· .
burg after becoming IH at her
home Sunday night and being ta·
ken to the hospital by the EMS
squad.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home.

Lloyd Wright
Lloyd (Pee Wee) Wright, 62, of
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly
Sunday after undergoing surgery
at Riverside Methodist Hospital
in Columbus.
Born on March 8, 1926 in
Huntington, W.Va., he was the
son of Oren and Norma Turner
Wright. He, Is survived by his
wife, Jean, sons and daughters·
in· law, Michael and Sharon,
Bennie and Sandy, all of Pomeroy, and· a daughter and son-in·
law, Becky and John Anderson,
Cambridge: six grandchildren,
Taminy, Jason, Jessica and
Wesley Wright, Kelly and Eric
Anderson; a half-brother, Ri·
chard Wright, South Gate, Calif. :
and aunt and uncle, Freda and
Milton Hood, Middleport.
Besides his parents he was
preceded In death by his grand· .
mother, Johanna Turner, and an
Infant grandson, David MichaelWright.
A World War II veteran, U. S.
Navy, he was a 1944 graduate of
Pomeroy High School, and was
employed for 33 years at the
Central Operating Co. , New
Haven, W.Va. He ret Ired two
years ago.
Mr. Wright was active In many
community organizations !nclud···
ing the Pomeroy Litt-le League,
Meigs .Athletic Boosters, and the
Boy Scouts. He was a member of
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
American Legion, and the Meigs
Senior Citizens.
He was an active member of
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church and was on the board of
the Ohio Free Methodist
Conference .
Funeral services will be held at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, Pomeroy , Wednesday at
l'p.m. with the Rev. w. Williams
off!c!at!ng.
Friends may call at the Ewing .
Funeral Home Tuesday after·
noon and evening, 2 to4 and 7to9
p.m. Burial will be In the Beech
Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Pal·
!bearers will be Jack Stanley,
Jack Baggy, Marvin Friend,
Harry Qark, Bob Barton, and
John Hood.
In lieu of flowers the family
requests that donations be made
to the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church or the American
Cancer Society.

Weather
Soulll Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy tonight with a
low of 35 to 40. Partly cloudy and
windy Tuesday with a high of 50
to 55.
The probability of preclplta·
t!on Is near zero through
Tuesday.

Lodge to meet
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
wl!l hold a .regular meeting at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday with work
In the t.A. Dearee. Re!resh- 1
menta will be served followlna ' ·
the meetinl and all Master
M - ere lllvited.

KUTEX
MAXI.PAOS
REO. OR THIN
PKG. OF 31;

THIN SUPER

PKO. Of 11; I'IIC'mU
PKG. OF h DR

WATIVE

1'1111. OF • 7liiLEII

IIVEIIII«ES-PKG. OF 15

EOGE
SHAVE

GEL

7 OZ. SIZE
rllUR CHOICE

239 239
SUAVE
--EXIIIA
eotmiOL 1111

6'-~":
~-

_

IWIIIIIIM IIIII.DI Dl. SIZE 1111
IIUfAllfOIIIt 1111 llllfl·

_, Dl. SIZE

WHITE RAIN

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PRESCRIPTION WITH
GENERIC DRUGS
ASK YOUR RITE AID PHARMACIST
FOR COMPLETE DETAILS

L,.,..,-,,.-,-,.,:Prl~..;:.:p.:;lus;.:d::;•P~osl:;.:l.::rrh.::,,.:.:ro:.::q:.:ul:.,..,.db,-y-lo,.-•..J

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POME~OY, OHIO
PHAR"'ACY PHONE: 992·2586
,.

•

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•

Poma-oy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The ~Bend

Monday, January 30, 1989

..

Page-6

•

::·The people speak...
&gt;

Dear _ftan Lapden: Bless you
' for printing that column bashing
• the fashion Industry for giving us
: women's garments that are
unflattering, Impractical and
- unwearable. You told the designers and manufacturers that
If they ·would turn out decent
clothes, we would start to buy
aaaln.
I'm dying to know the response
you received. Wll@'ou let us In on
It? - llettJ from Danvute
Dear lletlyl: I was swamped
with letters from frustrated
females ·who thanked me for
singing their song. Read on and
you'll get It straight from the
people wbo count - the
consumers.
Dallas: The designers and
manufacturers of women's
• 'clothes are dumb to cater to the
young and the slim. Don't they
realize that older, full-figured
females have much more money
to spend? I shopped for weeks for
a JOWn to wear at my niece's
wedding. I would have spent up to
$2,0()0 but ended up wearing
something that was 10 years old.
Long Jalaad: Tooay's styles
are awful, but the fabrics are
wone. Where are the nyions and
dacrons? We are deluged with
rayon that has to be pressed If
you breathe on it. And how about
more wool knits that travel so
well?
New York: I'm a petite 7().
year-old, 5 feet and 115 pounds.
All I want Is a simple, elegant
dress for afternoon. Try and find
lt. Everything Is too tight, too
short-waisted wltb buttoi!S down
• the back. Looks as lfi'm going to
bave to start sewing again.
Cleveland: I could have kissed
you when I read that column on
women's clothes. The styles are
. dreadful and the workmanship Is
, appalling. Buttons fall off after
two wearlngs. Seams rip .and·
hems fall down. Zippers jam
because of the sloppy way they
are put ln. I'm disgusted.
Waco, Tex.: Buying women's
slacks that fit Is Impossible If
you're 5-foot-2 or under. Ever try .
to cut four Inches offthe cuffs and
have any taper? l give up.
CIIICIII'' WhY.doesn't someone
• design decent maternity clothes?
We don't want teddy bears and
cute animals on our stomach.
I've seen enough round collars
and bows to make me throw up.
Des MoiDN: Please, Ann, sUck
It to the manufacturers of panty·
hose. It Is Impossible for a
heavyset woman to get a . pair
that fit. Tbe elastic tops are too
tight and the crotch rips out after
two wearlngs.
So, dear readers, the 'people
• have spoken and the message Is
clear: A ton of sales awaits
designers and merchants who

will get the ladles what they
want. How about It?
Js that •peciol Ann Landers
column you dtpped - yean ago
yellow with age and impo1~ible ta
read? Or perhaps a columh once
touched your laeart and you Jailed
to clip it. Ann lAnder• reteive•
rhouMJnds of reque1t1 for reprints.
In re•potue 1he luu compiled a
bo-oldet, ..Gems,"' the molt fre~
quendy requeuM poems and e•
say1. Fo,. your copy -.end 14 plu• a
,.1/-oddreued JlamJH!d No. 10
en-velope (65 cents postage) to Ann
Lander~, P.O. Boz ll562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611.0.162.

Ann
ANN LANDERS•

""1988, Loe Ansela

Time. Syndira~ •ad
r....... Syndlellle

Dunn birth

Visit.or named

Linden E . and Melinda Rea ·
Thomas Dunn are announcl~~g
the birth of a son, Evan Matthew,
Dec. 27 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
The Infant weighed eight
pounds, seven ounces and was 22
Inches long.

PORTLAND - The Women's
Department of the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints, Racine-Portland
Branch, vlsll&lt;ijl on Wednesday
with Anna Cornell at her hOme on
Union Ave. In Pomeroy.
Those visiting Mrs. Cornell
were Ruth Bradford, Juanita
Wells, Anna McHaffie, Phyllis
Stobart , Lucy Taylor and Golda
Radcliff.
The group enjoyed · lunch at
noon and Mrs. Cornell was
presented a gift from the
women's depariment.

Maternal grandparents are
Larry R. and Donna Thomas,
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Handley and Linda
Dunn, Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Don E. Rae, Pomeroy, and
the late Dorothy Erb• Rea, and
Harry and Marie Thomas.
Pomeroy.
.
Paternal great-grandparents
are Nellle Dunn, Pll.ny, W. Va.,
and the late Elmer Dunn, and the

bless.
Dear Alln Landers: I was
especially Interested In the letter
signed "Perplexed Parents In
Kansas.'' (They caught Betty
and Rick "resting" In bed
together.) Since I have had
firsthand . experience with this
sort of thing, I feel qualified to
give them some advice.
When I was 17, I "rested" In
Dear Ann Laaden: I am a
bed
with my boyfriend, too. Of
34-year-old male. I tested positive for the HIV virus In No- course, we ended up doing thl~~gs
we had no right to do. After a few
vember of 1985.
These past three years, I have "naps" I discovered that I was
remained In fairly good health, pregnant. I was 17. My baby was
due to exercise, proper nutrition born when I was a senior In high
"Year of the Child" wa s the
and regular sleeping habits. I school.
of the prayer and self·
theme
My "Rick," who always said
neither smoke nor drink. Redenial
service conducted by
cently my T-cell count has· he'd stick wl'tb me If anythl~~g
Marlene
Fisher at the recent
went wrong, decided he was too
declined, so I have started on
meeting
of
the United Methodist
program of lmmunomodulators. young for fatherhood so I was left
Wokmen,
Racine
Church.
Although my physical condi- with the responsibility of raising
In her program, Mrs. Fl~her,
tion Is good, emotlolially I'm a our son alone. It was a terrific
assisted
b,Y. other members,
wreck. The long-term effects of struggle, but with the help of God
piDted
out
ille !&gt;light of many
living with :.this disease are and my parents l made it.
children
and
their need for love
Please tell Betty and Rick to
Indescribable. Some days my
and
support.
Scriptures,
hymns,
hands shake so bad, I'm sure think twice before "resting" in
and
readings
were
used
to
show
some of my co-workers think I'm bed together. Nothing will tire
the
need
and
what
Christian
having withdrawal symptoms out a teenager faster than raising
women are to do about It as
a child. Sign me - Been There
from drugs or alcohol
members gathered around the
Every cough, sneeze, ache or and Kaow lhe Scene In Denver
worship
table. Each was given an
Dear Denver: Beautiful.
pain has become a cause for
envelope
and following a prayer
You've given the Bet.tys '\,Ad
panic. I feel as If I'm living with a
of concern were asked to make
time bomb, never knowing when Ricks of the world some wondersacrifices during the next month
ful advice: Let's hope they have
It will go oft.
and to bring th.at money to the
This Is my third year of sense enough to take it.
next meeting to be ·given to
My Laugh for lhe Day: I know
celibacy. My heart cries out for
projects of "Year of the Child ."
closeness, but I don't dare take a man who gave up 'smoking,
Etta Mae IIIII presided at the
the chance of Infecting anyone. drinking, sex and rich food. He
meting
with cards being signed
Total abstinence Is a must for was healthy right up to tile time
!or
the
sick
and shutl.n members
he killed himself. (Johnny
me.
of
the
community.
Thank you
Three good friends have expe- Carson)
notes were read and the Lenten
Whal are lhe sign• of alroholum?
rienced terrible deaths f~om this
breakfast to be held · at Trinity
dillease this past year. My best How con you tell ij 1omeone you
Church
in Pomeroy
Feb. 8.
friend Is
dying. AIDS bas love i• on olooholi£? ..A lcoholi.tm : 7:45a.m. was announced. Reser·
How to Recogniu. It, How to Deal
taken over my entire existence.!
vations are to be In by Fe b . 6.
With It, How to Conquer It,. 1vill
dream about It almost every
It was noted that during
night. All my spare time goes Into give you the on•tven. To' receive a
November
and December 165
copy. ~e"d 13 and a !telj-llddr~ued ,
volunteer work with the AIDS
sick
calls
were made by
support group. Helping others In .. Jtamped buaine1.t-..Ue envelope (45
Sue
Grace reported on
members.
pain and sorrow has ,aved me cenu poaaoge) to Ann Landers, P.O.
missions
noting
that besides the
Box 11562, Chicago. Ill, 606JI.0562.
from going to piec!!S.
I'm horrified wheal bear of the
Irresponsible sexual conduct that
Is stU! rampant In many gay
circles. These people must be
Insane. Don't they realize that
By JOHN M. LEIGHTY
one reckless encounter can be a
Untied
Press International
death sentence?
AZNAVOUR
ORGANIZES
QUAKE RELIEF: Singer Charles
If my letter can save just one
Aznavour
bas
recruited
more
than 75 celebrities to take part
person fro this terrible sickness,
Sunday
In
a
record
and
fUm
project
whose proceeds will be
my misery will not have been In
donated
to
the
victims
of
the
Armenian
earthquake. Aznavour,
vain. Thank you, Ann Landers,
who
Is
Armenian,
collaborated
with
composers
Paul Williams
for the great service you provide.
and
George
Garvarenlz
to
come
up
with
a
song,
"For You,
- F.R., Tallabusee, l'la.
Armenia,"
that
will
be
performed
by
the
entertainmen
t
Dear F.R.: It Is you who has
personalities
at
a
Paramount
Pictures
recording
studio.
Among
provided the service today and I
the celebrities scheduled to record the song are Llza Mlnnelll,
thank you. Good luck and God
Rila Coolidge, Dionne Warwick, Juice Newton, Ray Parker,
Jr., Helen Reddy, Shari Belafonle. Robert Guillaume, Jack
Jones, Martl.n Landau, Holly Robinson, David Soul, Telly
Savalas and the casts of "L.A. Law" and "Star Trek: The Next
Generation." Director Peter Bogdanovlch will direct the film
manners to their economy have
production,
which will air as a television special. Proceeds from
taken such steps as appointing
will be sent to Armenta through the Armenian
record
sales
protocol officers and hokll~~g
Relief
Society,
which sent 40 tons of supplies and 10 complete
seminars for those people who
Armenia following the December quake.
dialysis
units
to
will be representing the city.
ONASSIS LEGACY: The daughter of Christina Ooassls.
"I'm sure that's why Peoria
4-year-old Albina, Is now living the life of a super-rich
made the list," Stewart said.
motherless child bel~~g raised under the scrutiny of trustees,
"They put their cab drivers In
bodyguards and her scandal-prone father, Rouuel. The girl has
tUl(edOS last year and that was
battery-driven cars, two zoos and a shabby plush doll called
mentioned on several surveys. It
Molly, but the real story Is the swirling family controversy over
was noticed and appreCiated."
her father, according to this week's Issue of PEOPLE. The
magazine reports that relatives see Roussel as a suave venture
Hlllband buys wife a Valenllne~s
capitalist and ruthless gigolo and have doubts of his a bUlly to be
Day blllloard
.the primary oversee~~ of Albina's personal life. Meanwhile,
PITI'SBURGH (UPI) - A
photographer Chrlslos Koroahls, who provided exclusive
doctor who wanted to do somepictures for the article, said Albina Is a sociable, cheerful child
thing special for his wife for
who Is ai&amp;O strong-willed and bas a capacity for tantrums.
Valentine's Dllf bought her a
"Sometimes she Is just like her mother," said Korontzls,
billboard sign that says "Bonnie
SOVIET HEART: A 7-year-old Soviet ~rtrl, Marla Seaolova, Is
Jeanne, Loving You ... Makes My
World Go 'Round."
Dr. Alan Renton, a plasUc
surgeon In the Pittsburgh suburb
of Mount Lebanon, said Sunday
his wife of 22 years, Bonnie
Jeanne, was especially under·
Mr. and Mrs . Charley Smith was the Tuesday guestofMr.and
standing whenever he had to be visited Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Mrs. Charle~ Sayre.
called out on medical Knapp, Syracuse, Tuesday after·
emergencies.
_.
noon. Kevin Is recuperatl.ng at
Ads
"She's even-tempered, not ex· home following major surgery
NMrW. a Vaataun
citable and vety t.olerant," he last week at the Holzer Hospital.
1llly W:lrk AI 'lllar1
said.
William Eichinger, Syracusj!
So for a Valentine's surprise, ·
be rented a billboard on a busy
road near their home. He chose
the site after quizzing his wife on
her travel route to the University
of Pittsburgh, where she takes
classes for a master's degree.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp
and Charlie were Huntington
visitors on Tuesday.

a

on

now

-~----· People

food, clthlng and toys the child·
ren In the mission study program
had donated, they also collected
$29.50 to be given to the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish. The
UMW voted to match the money
for the Parish.
Feb. 7 was announced as the
dalE' to take items ior re-cycling
to the church at 10:30 a.m.
Refreshments will be fur·
nished for the Feb. 13 County
Council meeting to held at the
Racine Church. The purchase of
several Items for the kitchen anti
dlnl.ng room were approved.
Plans for this year's activities
were discussed and will Include a
mother-daughter banquet In the
sprl.ng; and apple butter making
in October. On Feb. 16 the UMW
v.111 have a soup supper beglnlng
at 3: 30 p.m. with the menu to
lnclue vegetable and bean soup,
chili , sandwiches, pie and
beverages.
A report on the Elder View
program was given by Allee
Wolfe who distributed literature
on the , proposal and asked
members to contact their legis Ia·
tors In support.
Mrs. Wolfe and Mrs. Margie
W t served bread. cheese.
gr es and grape juice In the
"ag pe supper" style.

calendar
MOND~Y

PATRIOT - Southwestern
Alumni planl)lng committee
meets Monday, 7 p.m. in the
school cafeteria . New and old
committee members should at·
tend. For Information, call Bill
Baber at 446· 7.275.

......st.

....

u.hotl .....,

"1·1114
AllY

ta• I

POR TWO
~

fiiiZA

PLUS 2 · 10 oz. SoCI\Irinb

lO PLACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
.
,
"Ads outside Meigs. Gellia cr Mason cou~•• must be pr&amp;paid.
•Receive , ,50 discount for eds paid in advance.
•Free ads - GNeewrt and Found ads under 16 words will be
run 3 dav 1 at no eh •D•·
•Price of ad for all capital letters is double price of ad cost.
"7 point tine type only u.~~td .
.
'Sentinel is not respOMlble for errors afler first dll'f . (Chedt
for erron first day ad runs in paper). Call before 2 .00 p.m.

.

'

reported progressing well at Children's Hospital in Oak.;,_nd,
Calif.. after open-heart surgery last week to repair a hole In her
heart. Jo Ann McGowan of Martinez, Calif., who helped
organize a film festivall.n Russia Ia~ t year, helped bring Maria
to the United States for treatment after doctors In the Soviet
Union were unable to treat her successfully.
Dr. Nllas Young and other physicians who donated their time
for the procedure said the operation went smoothly. The local
Heart Lung Institute helped cover additional medical expenses,
estimated at between $30,000 and $40,000.
PUBLIC PATERNITY: A former Detroit city official has
filed suit In Circuit Court naming 70-year-old Mayor Coleman
Young as the fatber of her 6-year-old son. The paternity suit was
filed Friday by Annlvory Calvert. who recently resigned as
assistant director of the Detroit Department of Public Works to
accept a position with another, unnamed city. Calvert Is being
represented by Dearborn attornery Noel Keane, who has won .a
national reputation for arranging surrogate parenting con·
, tracts. The suit comes as Young, who was first elected In 1973,1s
preparing to run later Ibis year fora record filth term as mayor.
Recent polls have Indicated he may face {'trong opposition for
,
. ,
the first time In years.
RICE RUMBLES: San Francisco )19ers standout wide
receiver Jerry Rice caught 11 passes for 215 yards and one
touchdown In San Francisco's 20·16 Super Bowl win over
Cincinnati. He was named the game's MVP, but the usually
soft-spoken Rice Is complaining that the Bay Area media
doesn't appreciate him. He says they have focused their
attention · on quarterback Joe Montana, who engineered the
92-yard drive In the final threeminull!s that won.tl)egame. Rice,
who caught three passes during the drive, says he bas nothing
but respect for Montana, but Rice still feels Bay Area sports
writers have given him short shrift. He also says that he feels
that he should have done the "I 'm gol.ng to Disneyland"
commercial at the end of the game, Instead of Montana.

..

•

'"nd lpecW
tl" t mill " " '
PLUS 2 · 18 oz. Solldrtnks

,.

!

"'

l

'

I

r r,p' r~;,,
' \ '\ I • '

- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 ,00 P.M . MONOAY
- 2 :00P .M . TUESOAY
- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAV
- 2:00P.M. THURSOAV ,
- 2:00P.M . FRIDAY

THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNQAY ' PAPER

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

1&amp;-25 WORDS

$4.00
$5.00
08.00
$13.00

$33.00

1 - Card of Thanks

2 - ln Memory
l - Annoucements

4- Giveaway
5 - Happy Ads
6 - loat and Found
7- Vrwd Sale(paid in advance)
8 - Public Sale a. Auction
9 - Wanted to Buy

following telephone exchanges...
Gellia

Cot~nty

Melg~

Muon Co .. WV

County

Araa Code 614

Area Code 304

.•

••6-Gallipolis

I

'

388-Vinton
2·5-Rio Grande

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
985- ChMter

•

266- Guvan Oist.
643-Arabta Dist.
379.-Walnut

675-Pt. PINunt
•sa - Leon
576- Appte Grove
773-Mason
882 - New Hwen
895- Lel... t

'

',•'

367 - Ch•hife

843- Portland
24 7'-Letart Falls

949- RllciRe
742- Rutland
667- Coolville

937 - Buffalo

'
J

''
''
•'

THIS CAl IS EmA SHARP!!
See Mark, Ken, Ed or J.D.

"If We Du't H•we It, We'll ft•• It"
'

992-2174

500

EAST 'MAIN

POmOY,

Ollc:f

CUSTOM BUI.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At IIHson..lt Pricu"
PH. 949·2801

or Res. 949-2160
Day t1r Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16-16-ttn

...

HIUSIDE MUZZLE
'LOADING

Serv1ces
11 - HaiD Wanted
1 2-Srtu.tton Wanted
13- lnturence
1 4 - Businen Training
15- Schools S. Instruction
1 6 - Radio. TV S. CB Repair
1?- Misoell.neous
18- Wanted To Do

63- Uvauock
64-Hay S. Grain
65 - Seed &amp; Fen U.ter

21 - lusin•• Opponupitv
22 - Mon~ to Loen
23- Prof•tional Services

Real Estate
31 - Homes tor Sale
32- McbileHcmes for Sale
33- F.rms for Sale

j.S- Busineu Buildings
35 - Lou &amp; Acreage ·
36 - Real Ettate Wanted

71 - Autcs for Sale
72- Trucks for Sale
73- Vans • 4 WO's

74- Motoreyel•
75- Boats &amp; Motors for Sele

76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acc•sori•
77- Autc Aep1ir

?S- Camping E~uipment
79 - Campert 6 Molor Homes

1;1511111

Serv1ces

42 _: Mobii8Homes for Rent

43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment lor Rent
46 - Furnittled Rooms
46-Sp•ce for Rent
•7-Wented to R•nl
48 - Equipn"'ent tor Rent
49 For Le•e

Get· Results Fast

81 -- Home lmprovem.,ts
82 - Piumbing • Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eiectric• &amp; Aefrlilar•tlon
85-Gen•al Hauling
86-Mobile Home Rep1ir

&amp;?-Upholstery

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Totol Tre81uoy
Bolance ........ .. 32. 129.30

sections in Athena. Gallia.

to the dati Mt for opening
bido in occordanco with

•

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Rutllnd Em•gancv
Squad ill now taking Nlfed
bido foro 12 • 12 roHupdoor
whh triCks. lido mull be receivld by Fob 2nd. Sand
bldo to Bo• 11, Rutlond.
Ohio 46716.
111 30. 31; 1211. ~tc

L.e.. Outstanding

Chocko ......... .... 4,eoe.B7
TOTAL·
BALANCE ....... 27,522.43
I certify tho fotlowtng report to be correct and true.

to the belt of

my

knowl-

Hocking. Meigs, Monroe.
Morg.,, Noble. Vinton and
W•hlngton Counties. by
opplylng flit doy alkyd pelnt

for center linea. lane lin•
and ldgs lln10.
Prolect llngth: 0 .00 feet
o• 0.00 milo.
.

Work length: various feet
Jonuooy 21, t9Be or verioua mHe.
Public
Notice
Barbero J. Gr-•. Clerk
P....,.,ont Width: varl•
__
_
_!,__
'
42774 Hotwia Rid""
The Ollio OopllltmMit of
Shade. Ohio 46 776 T•on_,..lon h-by noti·
FINANCIAL REPORT
814-698-1244 - oil bl-s thet it will
OF TOWNSHIPS
_ . . . . . , ....... 1ha1 In
(11 30. ltc
•·
For Fief" -~ v.. Ending
ony controct Into
...
~31.1989
,•' BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
Public N otlce
pu,..,.nt to thla - - ment. minority buein•s onCounty of -go
'
_ , _ - be olloidod lui
''Thlo loan unoudlted
FiMnc:lotRoport."
NOTICE TO o-rtunlty to IUbmlt loldoln
to thll Invitation
SUMMARY OF CASH
CONTRACTORS
,. BALANCES, RECEIPTS
.,d wll not be ciiCJiminSTATE OF OHIO
•g•lnat on the g1ounda of
)
AND EXPENDITURES
DEPARTMENT OF
race. color, or n8tiOMI origin
. : ..GOVERNMENTAL
TRANSPORTATION
ill
consideration for •n
· '' FUNDSColumbus. Ohio
~: RECEIPTS:
JonuiiiY 20, 1988
.weN.
11 1,164.91
Controat Sol•
"Minimum-· rotn tor
thil
project h - - ........
" lnt•oov•nmental
' Logo! Copy No. 88-83 1
tenninld • required by l :: Receipta .... ...... 64,466.26 UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
end ore let f - In the bid
• ln-1 ...............1.717.04
IRG-0001 1881
prOIICIIII"
• TOTAL
FG-000Fl3111
''The dot• Ht for _,.,...
~· RECEIPTS .......17.737.28
R80·000fi(2Bil
~ DISBURSEMENTS:
Selled ptap IIIIa wlf be tfonofthll--beHt
- o.n..eGovern•• Jlued at the oflioll of the forth In the bidding
ptopo•l.''
..
rMnt ........... : .. 23.831.88 Onotor of the Ohio Depert·
: Pullllc Bllfety ....... 2,100.00 , _ o f T,....pooutioll, CoEliCh bi- lhell be ••
Public Worb .....38.301.41 luml&gt;ua. Ohio, untl 10:00 quftcf to fllo with hll bid 1
;: TOTAL OIBIUBEA.M .. Ohio Blln.._d Time. CAitlled c'** or caNWe
-toron ...-eqllllto
MENT8 ..........15.040.42 w••dly.
22.
• Tm.l Ruelpll Over/
1111. for lmpucuan...Uin: fhre ......t of hlo bid, but In
I• tU_, Dlop...... 2,1111.B3 · Ath1111, Oelllo, Hocking. no wont IliON 1han fifty
Motae. M - Morgen. lhou-d doM•a. or • bond
•: Fund Ceeh ~~~~.• Jan. 1, '88 ...... 24,8211.10 Noblo. VInton .,d WMNng- for ............t of ""' bid,
to tho O!Nclor.
,: Fund CMI) Bolance
ton cou-. Ohio. on Blddtr mu•!IPPI¥. on the
• Doc. 31. '81 .... 27.122.43 1""' ATH-33-20.40 an U.S.
Dopolltory
ROute 33 .. Athanl County proper tonne. foe qulllflce.
11ft dlyo prior
·~
_....,. ........... 32. 128.30 and other nriout- _ , , _ at -

edge.

Chopt8f 5626 Ohi9 RevCode.

Plana end apecificationa

ore on llloln the Doplltmont
of Tr.,aportltion ond tho
office of tho Dlltrict Deputy
Director. .

Th• DiriiCtor reaervn the
right to reject any and all

bido.

BERNARD B. HURST.
DIRECTOR
(1) 30; 121 a. 2tc

• T••• ..............

_.bl•

UKE
DIAMONDS
2,.--~~~~~=---In Memoriam
In
WCY

Who
away
January 30, 1987
One I loved but could
not AVa
She bid no one a Jut

'·-··~

She uld goodbye to
none.
Her h•rt hed ceued
to bellt.
Befo111 I kn-1hat eha

wu

Basham BuDding

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Choke
12 Gougo s':::~~ Only
lmt.. v

Strklly

I

OREN'S
GREENHO,USE
Foliage Plants
Baskets

56 AND UNDER

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 MI. past
Southern lllth School

949-2682

1·27-'88·1 mo.

POMEROY. OH.
992-2269
........
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT- Commetcial build·
ing lor a place of Business.
Call for more details. ASK·
lNG $49,000.00.
NEW LISTING- POMEROY
- 24'x60' Trailer w~h 3
bedrooms, 24'x20' family
room . added on, carpet,
16'xll' porch and salellrte
dish. ASKING $51,900.00.
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- 21 acres wrth 24'x37' new
barn, electric available. TPC
water. ASKING $39,500.00.

NEW LISTING - COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP - ST.
RT. 143 - 23.89 acres of
vacant ground with electric
available. ASKING
$9,600.00.
NEW LISTING - COL·
UIIBIA TOWNSHIP - Sf.
RT. 143- 18.395 acres of
vacant land. Mostly level,
electric is available. ASKING
$7.800.00.
NEW LISTING - SYRA·
CUSE - Quality shows m
this 3 bedroom ranch home.
I bath, beaulifu I family
room, nice kitchen with all
appliances including dis·
hwasher, washer &amp; dryer.
large yard wrth chain link
lence . .New wood storage
buildin~ ASKING
$45,000.00.
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- One stay lrame house, lwe
rooms, 2 becioans, and bath
with carpeting Apprtlll. 150'
lriJIUgewth 4ttn Catleavaif
atle ASKING $13,000.00.
NEW LISTING - POIIEROY
- 2 stay frame house wrth 2
bedrooms and bath, wrth
wood floors and some vinyl
covering ASKING $6,000.00.
Htnry E. Ctll.. d
992-6191
..... TrUSiell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Tumer ..... 992-5692
Jo IIIII .............. 91H4&amp;6
Office ................ 992-2259
NEW LISTINGS NEFJ)EO We h•• bu,.rs for Mtip
County Property. list with
us for best 111uhs.
.
.

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST. -- 992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

DOOR PRIZE .

2 H.O. FREE with coupon and purchoe of min.

H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon per customer per

bingo session.

WE PAY $50.00 PER GAME
OVIoR 10 PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME

START SAVING NOW
FOR NEXT YEAR'S
VACATION! I
Call the Avon District Manager
For Job Openings In Your

.L~VOJl Ar-:l4-698-7111
1-26·'88-1 mo.
; Television listenin&amp; Devices
Dependable HeariPC Aid, Sales &amp; Sentic•
Cl Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

-az:

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

3

·Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy. Ohio

1-13-'89-tln

Ave.

LADIES WANTED!
PERM, CUT, STYLE
ONlY
Plus FREE.....
1 Tonnlng Session and
1 Session .of fit &amp; Trim
TOP OF THE STAIRS
AND
DESIGNU BOUTIQUE
111 W111 Second. rono.-.,

$27

991-6720

1/26/1 mo.

PUBLIC

AUCTION

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
:I: 417
Second Avenue. Box 1213

9.92-7479

Middleport, Ohio
1·21·'88-tfn

eoe

BINGO

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

319 So. 2nd

E. Moin

61 - Farm Equ;pmenl
62- Wanted to Buy

FIRE DEPT.

992-62'82

57 - Music.-1 lnsuumants

F~r111 Supplit~s
&amp; Ltvt~slock

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

56-Pets tor Sate

Public Notice

•

BISSELL
BUILDERS

53-Antiques
s•-Mise. Metchandise
55 - Building Suppli•

I

'

1/22181/tln

51 ~ Housetlcld Goodl
52-Sporting Ooodl

Employment

"""''*'

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
.

985·3561

We Service All Mokeo

$7.00
$10 ,00
$16 .00
S25 .00
$60.00

-pan•

•

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

9/20/tfn 1 mo. pd.

...

•

DEAD OIAUYE
•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •FI'IHizers
•Refrigerators
..,_, klopai ....lo"

MerchM1d1se

41-HouHt for Rent

..

.''

WANTED

Ph. 614-742·2355

58 - Frurts &amp; Vegetabl•
59 - For S•l• or Tr•de

9.85-4141
GENERAl CONTRACTOIIS
RefMencos
11·111-'118-tfn

NO SUNDAY

Acrou Hippy H - Ro«&lt;

Tran sporta tion

Classified pages cover the

Area Code 614

•J'

949·2801
or Its. 949-2860
PH.

Rates are for contecutive runs. broken up diiY 1 will be ch•ged
for ear.h l'tiW as S.p••te ads.

Announcements

CHESTEI, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
oREMODELING So REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

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

28-36 WORDS

$5.00
$8 .00
$13 .00
$21 .00
$51 .00

.

.. frM Eatim•t••"

Rt. t24 Eut of Rutlond

0· 15 WORDS

MARCUM CONTRACTING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

RATES

.

618 East Main Street
-·r·'
, : .. J, . ' 1
)\ J \

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER
TUESO"V PAPER

I

'
'

Put H&amp;R Block's experienced preparers
to work for you.

-&amp;R BLOCK
H
-

•A daasffiod edvertiMmtnt placed in The Daily Sentinel. I.. ·
cept _ cla~tifled displl"f Business Card and legal not1cnl
will afso appe• in the Pi. Ple•ant Register Mld the Gelli·
polis Daitv Tribune, reaching OYet' 18,000 hom".

..

..
,.
i

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Mod.-n Gun Su11111ill
Guns • Animo -·Slugs
22 lmmo

'

!

'The income tax laws are ever-changing.

PHON! 182·1174- POMI!ROY. OHIO
OPI!N 8 AM.a PM WEEKDAYS, 1·111 SAT.
lppolnbUNHII A¥ .. 1,,,

"Adt that must be paid in advance are
Happy Ads
Card of Thanks
In Memoriam
Y•d Sales

WEDNESDAY PAPER

•

'

-

diiW after pwblicat:10n to•mlke conec:tion.

COPY DEaDLINE -

•

Business Services
;:o:;;;;:c;:;;;c;:a;c;;;

SUPPUES
Munleloadlng Suppli11 ·

• The Area's ·Number 1 Marketplace

in the news

Air, cloth seats, AM-FM .stereo, cassette,
sport mirror.

I IIII IlLY

Figures on wildlife mortality
from lngf.'Stlng balloons or plas·
· tics is hard to determine, envir·
onmentalists agree. because
veterinarians and biologists
rarely autopsy animals found
dead in the outdoors.

Classifie

Free clothing days
POMEROY- The Meigs Cooperative Parish, 311 Condor St.,
Pomeroy, Is sponsorl.ng free
clothing days Tuesday through
Thursday, Jan.'~4-26, from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. A wlde.assortment of
clothl~~g for men, women and
children Is available. For more
lnformallon, call 992-7400.

1988 Chev. Cavalier Coupe
DEUVDS
Fill

On the West Coast, the San
Francisco SPCA warned re·
cently that an estimated 95
percent of all helium balloons put
Into the air are never recovered
and can fall and concentrate In
ocean currents. endangerl.ng Pa·
ciflc marl.ne mammals.
·"Floating in the water. deter to·
rated balloons with their frayed
rubber fringe look remarkably
like the tentacles of jellyfish, a
favorite meal for many sea
creatures," said the SPCA's
Lynn Spivak .

.

MODEIN GUN

RUTLAND- Rutland Garden
Club will meet at the home of
Margaret Belle Weber Monday
at noon. Bernice Nelson will be
co-hostess for the meeting.

Want

PIZZA

" If you're driving along the
highway and throw trash out the
window, you're likely to be
stopped and fined for littering,
but you can throw balloons In the
air and they come down as Utter
and nothing Is done," said
Schoelkopf. "One of the biggest
problems facl~~g us Is what to do
·with our trash; why add trash to
the' environment.'.'

.

MORGANCENTER- Morgan
Center Wesleyan Church Is In
revival with Rev. George Holley
and sl.ngers Monday through
Feb. 14, 7 p.m., nightly.

-------Wolfe Pen notes---:---

Dolltto·s;

authorities as evidence and the
firm fined for littering, he saLd.
In two states. Massachusetts
and Connect leu t, he said, legisla·
tors have been asked to consider
bannl.ng releases unless blode·
gradable balloons are used.

I tonal

Colorful helium balloons, re·
teased Into the air to celebrate
everyth l~~g from mall openings to
sporting events, create wind,
blown "mobile litter" that envlr·
.onmentallsts say should be as
illegal as tossing trash from an
automobile.
The fallout of balloons mad!' of
mylar and latex creates ecohazards, killing fish and wildlife
and adding to the tons of
randomly discarded plastics and
rubber products polluting the
earth, according to thOse con·
cerned with the problem.
A small group of people protes ling balloOn launches showed
tip recently at San Francisco's
· Candlestick Park. where 1,000
red and gold balloons are released during homt&gt; game fesllvl·
ties. On a larger scale, efforts are
being made to dissuade Disney
Enterprises from sending 1.1
milliOI\ balloons into the air
every year durihg promotional
res tlvities.
Such grassroots efforts to stop
balloon launches are apparently
having positive results, said Bob
Schoelkopf, director of the Ma·
rine Mammal Stranding Center
In Brigantine, N.J., an island
where volunteers recently
counted 700. balloons blown onto
.. an elght·mlle stretch of beach
over a two month period.
Schoelkopf, an outspoken anti·
balloon activist, said a big coup

Wolfe Pen notes
EVAN DUNN
tate Floyd and Gracie Hlgglnbo·
tham, Mason County.

was the agreement by the ·Na·
Science and Technology
Association to cancel next year's
'release of some 500,000 balloons
by school children In April to
. study wind patterns. In addition,
he said, Disney World In Florida
1\as already agreed to cutback on
balloon launches and release
doves at some events.
"I'm not against balloons, I'm
against the launching of bal·
loons," said Schoelkopf. adding
that he became aware of the
dangers In 1985 when he found a
young sperm whale dying on the
beach. "It was starving to death
because of a mylar balloon
blocking the valve toils stomach.
"It started me thinkl~~g. wh;lt
goes up must comedown . It could
be In the woods, on the prairie or
In the ocean ."
His main goal, Schoelkopf said,
Is educating peopl&lt;' by bringing
awintt(Jn to the dangers of
releasing balloons In the atmos·
phere. New Jersey schools. he
said, have halted the practice
and students are tatting part in a
letter writing campaign to other
schools around the nation.
"Our message Is that balloons
no longer become part·of celebra·
lions; they become litter and
trash. It's as simple as that. "
One way to stop the practice,
said Schoelkopf, Is to fine thf'
perpetrators for littering. Bal·
loons released for promotions, he
said, usually have the name of
the sponsoring organization on
them. These could be handed to

By JOHN M. LEIGHTY
United Press International

UMW conducts meet Community

-Quirks in the newsBy Unlletl rress International
Clllcago voted most wellmaaaered city
KEWANEE, Ill. , (UPI) . Chicago, city of the big
shoulders, apparently Is a city of
bll amUes as welL
Chicago Is the most well·
mannered city In the United
. States, according to a survey of
750 of the nation's top e11:ecutives
released Sunday.
Following Chicago In the fifth
annual survey by the Marjabelle
Young Stewart Etiquette Corp.
were Seattle:· New York; Pitts·
burgh, last year's top city;
Indianapolis, Denver, Charles·
ton, S.C .. Boston, Peorla,lll.,and
Dallas.
Company founder Marjabelle
Young Stewart said the survey is
based on how business travelers
perceive the people they deal
with In Individual cities.
"I think many pedple may be
surprised to see Chicago top the
. ·uat, but they've done a lot to get
there," she said. "They try to
train their people who will greet
others on how to ex tend courteous service to visitors. They
know mastering the art of
greeting people and businf.'Ss
etiquette Is vital toaclilevlng new
business and keeping old
business."
She said cities that have
recognized the Importance of

Festive balloon launches create fallout danger for many animals

The Daily

Gallipolis, Q!lio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial llospital ·
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

LASHLEY
SERVICE

1 MI. East af St. Rt. 7
on 2 41 at Cheater

Most Fore1gn and

Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp;. Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified ·Licensed

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.

RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

.9·19·18 !In

RADIATOR
SERVICE

BOGGS

PUBUC
RECYCUNG

DeMe. New Holland.
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Deal01:
1411~· ..,

Ft••

Still &amp; Strrlet

1~3·'B&amp; · ttc

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
Rt. 124 klwttn Willets·
•illo and Salem Ctttter
EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M•
12 Gouge SltotgUIII Only
Facttry ' Choko

STRICnJ ENfORaDI .
1-11-'19·1 mo.

LUBRICAnON

· OIL FILTER

S16'5

···s
A.J:a
SUNOCO

CHES111, OHIO

985-3350
1·11-'1~1

FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

$3 s

RACINE
GUN CLUB

We can :z:ur ond rt·
care r
tors and
heater cores. We can
also acid bail and rod
out radiators. Wt also
repair Gaa Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD
992-2198
Middleport. Ohio

Authorized John

985-3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1-5·'89-1

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK
klpro, Ohio
CONSIGNMENTS WBCOMl
PATRICK H. BlOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-421·7245
1-t 1-'19-1 mo.

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVII.I, GIUO
614-662.3121

WELDING
AUTO &amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY &amp;
WRECI( REPAIR

PEILOAD
DELIVERED
liGHT HAUUNG DONE

BILL SLACK
'

992-2269
1-1·'11· lfn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNa. GI!G I. IOUSH
.~h
GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COI!IIERCIAL
-&lt;:US TOM KITCHENS. lATHS

-EXTENSIVE AEMODEUt.IG

•VINYL SIDING 6 ROOFING

•METAL IUILDIHGS

HOUSING. APT. ~ftOJECTS

SINCE. 1969

IUSIY 11., SYUCUII

992·7611

11·21·11-ttn.

1·13·tlc

J&amp;L

INSULADON ,

NOW OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
14th &amp; Main St.
Point PIHIDnt, W. Va.
We Buy Aluminum
Cana, Glua, Brass.

Copp8f ond More
MON.-fRI.: 9 am·6 prn
SAT.: I om·12 No011
304-675-3161
For Mort lnformalion
t-2•·'11· t ....

Til· COUNTY
RECYCUNG
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

EUM HOME
Room &amp; Boord For
Senior Cltizw and
Handicappacl
Good Rates

References

Jan. 13, 1989
!Subject to Chanr
Without Notico
#I COPPII ............. 16' I~
#2 COPPEll ......... f.. 65• I~
CLEAN AlUMINUM
,
SHEETS .................... 47• I~
CLEAN ALUMINUM
tit.

ALIIIINUM

.VIllAGE CANS_,, 46&lt; I~
IONY
SHOT ............. 5' t.o 30' ._
IONY CAST .... 3' to 20&lt; I~
ST AIMLESS _,............ 20• lb.

992-5114

8/ 15/Hn

T.l .C,
25 Yre, E•p.

Paying today

CAST_...................... 40'

Mastic &amp;Certainteect•
Vinyl Siding
Roofin&amp;
Seamless Gutter
Re&amp;lacement Windows
!own Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

Located Off BYPIII
At Jet. of R1e. 7 &amp;.
1 43, Pomerc;\' Oh.
1-t .'...tfn

992·6873
lot or Poulty Bowland
209 Soulh 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"
12·21 · 1 mo.

PLUMBING &amp;
New t.cotlon:

168 North Socond
Mitldl.,..rt, otoio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fl1hlng luppll•

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Blllo Hero
IUIIN!SI PHONE
16141 "~·6150
IISIDBICE rHONE
(614)

�.
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
42

46

Mobile H ornes
for Rent

Nowlv deaorolod. 2 IR .. fully

c•peted. Sec. dtp. required.

1

Coli 114-4411-8558 "' 441118!10. .

~

2 8R . mobile home. Sec. depotil

I

• riff. roqur.t. Coiii14-44S.
0805.

I

Mobile hom• fDr rwnt. DfiP. 6
m . requhd. Call after 2 PM ,
I 14-4411-0527.

I

II
..

Fatten YOll wallet

2 BR ., futfy ~rnilhed,

~

with awant Rei

new

c•pll. AC. d utiN'tlll paid
111cept elec. a 1•· Cable TV
avallbt.. Own• Pf¥1 wattf,
I.W~&amp; &amp; truh pldwp. S.CIIr·
tty depOtit 6 rei. Four- tenUw of

~· mle

from. city

Nmlts.

814-441-7793.

44

c.n

Amouncements

Dhd1 W11d1 Trend&gt;• Sentifor loving - ·· . . . &amp; droln
. . . Owner C.W. o...,~on. c-'1
el4-448-0111.

Apartment
for Rent

w•

hall coli for mt•g~na;o
HEAP. Moitll County Dopl. of

We

HUf'ftln a.ivicll, and HEAP
vauah... We CIWI give you
pro..... - - E-lor8111

lne&gt; Pomti'O\'. Olllo.
1114-IIZ·l811.

Don't Tr•h It C.eh Itt
Public AeorHng now op.-. fur
bueln . .. We •• on Main .. d

s.-.

•mn.

14th
Polm PI-~
w.ve. We buy cane.

eoop. 1nd more, Monda¥ thru

Prldll\' 1:00 1111 1:00, Soturdll\'
8 :00tll noon. Formorelnfor,.,..
tlonecall304-171i-3181 .
Loving mtture .. d .... pontlble

32

Help Wanted

.

'

ment In your own home •• a ,
Home Slrvtc. Work« wllh
ludt&lt;rt• Community Sorv-.
W• prcwlde , ..-v plu• benefttl
-.dadaitv roomandto ..drllt.
You prOYklt a home, guidlftce
.,d lrlendohlp In o family
.. rno~P'*'• Aequlr• ability to
'~.£.,--:-' INing •kll• and a
com
to ,,_ •owth and
dwolap.- of on lrullvkk&gt;ol(o)
wkh m•.e r-dttion. Con_, Sylvie Ooy ot .48-7109
5:00PM. Appllc.ntemult
r•idt 5n Gllfla County. !qual
OpporlunMy Employof.

•ft•

mottw 1Mb children who
ri.edl .ameone to be with thtm
ck.rhlg d.,, wenlng or ltte
hourt. New H.ven home, a.g~

GOVEANMENT JOBS
01-1.040.-*111.230 . .,.• . How
hiring Cal 111 808-887·8000
Ext. R·9805 for currlltt fed•al

yord.nulrillouemNIIond4y. .

!lot,

old pa.,rrwte. Ret•ence upon

_

.... Call 304-882·3491.

E•n monev et honMI ANemble

Jerwelry. tova. ttltctronie~. othela. FT 111d PT work l'llilabte.
Coli lrollndoblol 1-407-744-

4

3000o•L 1122. .241n.
2-nicepuppiel,. plrtDachshund.

Coli 814-448-11041 .
2-9 mo. old be•tifut long hlired

· 1 lllld&lt;. 1 bled&lt; • - ·
Clll814-448-0330.
Baby Cdb , fair oondiUon. CtR

114-949·2187. John "'VIole!
Hunnll.

6

.

- ------

WANFED: Filii-time employ·

DIRECt' OR OF NURSING. R.N.
needed for Dlrctor of Nursing
poaltkm for 1 75 tMd aklled
nurolng fodllly. Loodorohlp end
pet lent e.-•sltlll•e•muet. We

In

off« 111 •CIIItnl vwtgl 11'1 d

benollt pod&lt;- Applv penon
.. Arc.dta Nu,.ingCint•. M1in
Bt .. Coolv•a Ohio 45723.

Lost and Found

1.5

Schools
lnttruction

FOUND-2 mole INOPI•. 1

1973 Fr.-mlft mobile horne.
Tot.r elea:dc. •aooo. C•ll 1144•&amp;-7751.

-----

Rent 11 property· two tr1ih... 6

lend Rl. 218. Coli 814-2568551 .
~-----··--

14x70 tl elec, W/ htM pump,
wnh•6..,.ar, 21R .. 2b•hlin

Quail Ck. CoM 814-2U·5294.

Movlngl Mutt •llf 1979 M~n ·
1101\ 14k70, 3 bedroom. an
electric;. und•plnning. porch.

Aoldng H800. C.ll 814-843-

FOUND' Engllah Wllk• Coon
dog. WI 1... I&lt; hood. Vldnlty of
Gre.~

S.Underl Rd. Cel 114-

4411-789t.

AE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEGE. 529 Jodotan Pika
c.lt.C..&amp;.4387. Reg.No. 86-11 ·
105111.

-

Lott -Vicinity of Redmond
Ridga brown m•e. rMI hlh.w.
whtte st.r on hull Would
ttwt ciii'N Hfore ctlf
. Couldn't ffnd yau. 304-

C::"

-

18

- · - - - - - -Wanted to

Mo bh home ., d lot 76x 100
mor• or ••· In Mlddtport. 2
ba«ooi"M. 114-992-1516. a..t
offw.

8

on

lno~lof\

pr•••lon.

_,come ••
114-948-2590.
TOP CASH plld 1o&lt; '83 madll

c••· Smith
1911 E•tt•n

end n.v• used

luick·PontittC.
Avo.. Ollllpollo. Call &amp;14-44822&amp;2.

Compl«o houeoholdo of furniture • ... 6ques. Alto wood •
ao81 .,_..., Swaln't F"nhurt
• Auction, Thltd I&lt; Olivo.
I 1 4-441·31 19.
Jun~

35

Lots

Cars 'Nh:h

Cltl

BlibV1it1tr IVIHable. fl.xlble
houn. lui or ,.,. limo. behind
Orcln111ce School.

-

h•• r.t'•en-

· 304-875-2784

lrlliiiH:ral
21

wtthout

01

.,.,__ Call LorTv LlvtiV· 114311-1303.

I NOnCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

Wonlod To Buy UNCI Mobile
Ho.,.. c.ns14-44I·0171.

40 or 80 acr• lor •Ia. Ne•
Hemlodl Grow, M.tgs County.
AI mlnerlll right, woodad.
t300. orl111 per ecre. 814-707..

•o ...

Utld tlrniturw by tt. pilot or
ent!r. houeel'told
ling.

I 1 4-7U·2415.
Top prloe

tor uNCI ft!rnfture.·

. gonnt houeohold. _..,__

and ...... c.~. AI tv.-. Cd
114-llil-4381.

0859.

Space ide II tor office Gr .-nal
On North Second in

1987 DocrOo 2150 Foelory Edl·
tion llaury v... Must 1111 to
uttle •ata. PS. Pl. Ill. eh',
Afn.FM-Cen. PW, PDL. meg
w,_., neAl .-.1111r-. eruilll,
31.000 , .• . Sdl undlr war·
renty. One ownar. Wll 111 for
bank bel .. ce ct1et1asoo. CIH
114-448-1141 lrom 1-5 PM.
S«ioue lnquiri• onty . Firm

Ulilll• pold Coli 814-9925848 dll\'1 Of 114-948-2217
night a.

Si'l VICI::.

11

H ttlp Wanted

Port-MLTIOr tilly -lppod
l'hyold.,'o Olflct ubo&lt;oiOI'f,
In ...... Ia Th• Meclool
pf•J., 203 Jac*•on Plk• be1:3CI-4:30.
UP to 111 HOUA I'IIOCESIINO
MAIL W!EKLY CHECK OUA·
IIANTEED. FREE DETAILS .
Willi'&amp;. ID, 1017 W. PHILADILPHIA. SUITE 2D-OO. ON·
lliiiiiO. CALIF 11712.

Deluxe 3 BA . hou111 for •le.
Owner fin.,ce. Cal 304-171II 104.

GOVERNMENT HOMEII From
ti.OO (IJ llopolrj, FOt-euroo.

Aepoe. Tu netlnqUinl Prop~r­
tiM . NOW 8 ELLING THIS

AREAl Coli (Refu-el. 1·
3111-733-8084 hi. G 2732-A .
FOR CUftAENT USTINOSI

2G u... w.,dDwl with ttorm
- - wll ... .., _ _ Cal

1114-4411-2143.
ZIIINLinaolnPork "Cod•
ls&gt;f/ ', siding. looded wlh Of&gt;tfont. Price
Bw• lllg
....._, loo ol FrWid1 Clly
MobhHOitl-. 114-448-1340.

,.,oacl.

2111841.Md_lr._ ....
d., wllh h•. .ood flocn •
.tone ftretece. Prt01 riClloM
t:t,.OOO. ,l1a at Frw~dl Clly
MobhHom•. 114-448-9340.

-

47 Wanted

AI-~

n.., ~~-- ..

-lppod ~- ........ , . . .

. .•1•eaf'-'dwlh1411111l
outbuilding Call 114-1121213.
2 otaoy. 3 bedr_,. 2 Nlho. on
...,., In Mlddlopart. Coli 114-

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

115-41:M avonln111 M d . Lind c o - . 3.1 • • 3
AVON .. • • " . . . . , lp....

so•171-148.

• ..

I ....
eMII~ '""""'
I N_,h
In
. . 111.
A.. todr.lnqulre Todd • -

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Oliva St,. Gelllpoh.
t~EW· 8 pc. wood
'391.
Uving room ault•~ t199·t&amp;99.
Sunk beds with bedding- t249.
Full 1iH m.n,... a foui"'CWion
sterling- t99 . Recliners
ltlrting- $99.
,
\ISED· a.dl, dr•nn. bedroom
suh•. Dnld. wrfnger Wither. •
oompl«• lin• af uled larnlture.
NEW· W.tln1 boot• '31.

.ou,_

814-448-1519.

Modetn 1 BR . IPirtmcwrt. Call
814-448-0390.

In

Elfldenq&lt; ..,.,,... '"' ""'"'•
bolh
Rio G... do. Coli 114·
245-5223.

Pft" month pku depot1lt 11nd

utiliti•. Cell 6'1-'- 992-6136

or

3 ' belt'oome. located ih Syra·
cute. C1ll 814-992· 7089 1ft•

5:00p.m,

raf•~r~~. Phone

304-882-25DB.

Now accepting applc:Miont for

2 bedroom IQ.-tmtnte. •11y
carpMed. applllftC*, Wl1• .,d
trMh pidcup11 provided. Melnte·
n.,~ fr• living do•• to lhopo.
pinll bMkl and achooll. For
more Information c•l 304-882-

County Appliance. Inc. Good
uMd eppli.,c. 111d TV •••·
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru

sot. 814-qe 1&amp;99. &amp;27 3rd
Ave. Gollipollo, OH .

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wuh...
rafrlg~rators.
nngH. Skegg1 Appliencn,
Upper Rlv• Rd. bllidl Stone
c - Motll. 614-441-7318.

drv••·

Soft~

VeH.., Fl.ll'niture

New and u1ed furniture end
eppllcencn. Call 114-448·
7572. Hours 9·5.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE

Corrtpl~t hou•hold 1urnls~
lngt. Y:a mlle-Jerricho. 304-876-

Fwnlshed efflcNncy daw ntown

JM'tl ar chllar.,, t221. monlh
pkoo dopoolt. Call &amp;14-9928292.

ull~ti•

plid. deposft

------ --

a

SnydM, 955 Seoond A.,.., 81~
441-1171 .

·- - - -

Plekent Used F...-nituN

Nowly ....,.deled 3 br hou•ln
Mlton. •2ao. per month. Pav
own .,.,110. 304-773-9514

•-ars.

42

Mobile H ornes
for Rent

-- ----

·

---·

chelt frNler. Worlu good.
Sofa bed. In good condtion.
UOO. Coli 614-7•2-2330ott ..

4 '00p.m.

53

Antiques

Buy or SMI. RivMine Antiques..

1124 E. Main StrMI, Pom•ov·

Houn: M.T .W 1 Oe.m . to 8p. .,...,
Sunday 1 tt:J 8p.m. 114-982·

2128.

54

Misc. Merchandise

45

SURPLUS-Originol A'"'V. Oonlm. Rentet Clot~ gr.-w
c. .aullarpeilllld&lt;·
ot .s..

60151 . MasonWV.

SoMonod Ollk I&lt; Alh. 135
piclalp laod. IIOckod I&lt; dollvor.t. Caii114-28S.I322.

-ti-

Hou11 COill for •Ia t 25 • ton.
Cen be deiW•M or picked up It
tho mine. Kovotane Rd. Col

"4- 388-1120
2 Miter go-CMt. Nt!W 1ngln._
t178. Coli &amp;14-241-1113.

Somer.ritle • Old Route 21·
Junc:don lndep•dlnOI Ro..._
1 - ERA!, IEooiR.. .-ood).
Frldoy, Soturdll\'. Sundll\' .,~-;
Noon-8:00P,M .. 10porc0njo elf.
Clthlrt clothing. Cftmoufhuge
ln•ulMMI Covwlll•. 304-2731155..- --...,.--

Portlble llthttd •iein with t«t.,.
$329.00. Free d.,ery. Pllltic

loltorol47.80box.1-800-133· 34153tn';'dme.

55

Building Suppliaa

21R . moble home with 14Jt30
room lddltlon. v.,., nloe. ltove.
Nfrjg., ........ lfllh COIIICUon

t188'*'•

Bea11ie

0111-.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Ch~nn" Rwtic ·
ond
Lop Slclng

a..•QockMot•loll

G -•loed Quollty

CETIDE, INC.. Atll.,o-114514-3871

dop. Call
4•• 3017.

gal.

llu rry Spreader,

• 12.1500. oo. .
.
10 .,... •k wenenty oo Sluny
Spr..ron.
Ltf.imt Wln'lnty !)" 1ldM 111d

floar . on II

-

boJI:

spr._c:~...

Hol.,d Madel L·513, 42

hp. dl•el•tcld St ... load•s.Jat

*11,000 . 00 soli lor
114.400.00.
Grin• Mkor 100
r... wllh315
ocol• end Hyd. drive.
t10. fiOO, 00.

........ ooo.oo.

.....

We h.,• 3 good uNci mit.,. in

B'*• •d

lgM• work.

63

A-Liv. .od&lt; Bolt. Albony.·
Solo wory latul'doy-1 PM.
U.ootod&lt; eeeoptod oft.- 4 PM
e"'Y FrtcNrt. 1 mle ellt of
AI- on Sl. Rl. flO. CeK
81 4·592-2322. 191- 3&amp;31

-...

..

Ago.

Coli 114-742-2718.
Hay

&amp; Grain

lMge round &amp; 1quere b"• of
hoy.

Cal 114-387-7486.

for Ill• Ct.. Wirl II• 1traw,
. . , . Wit . A....OK. 2.000bllll.

Clrdwllo · ll141 474-8189.

Groom .,d S..ppty

Dr-nwynd Cottery Konnei.
Per1l1n •d Sin. . 1nd Hi.,.
11¥lr'l ldtt•a. Chow stud . ..,.
vlea Coll814-448-3844oft• 7
PM.
AK C Be•ett puppla Aeectr 1G
go. F,.,d4 Bonectum. 114-1187·

3888.
Flo~ Tink. 2413 Jld&lt;IOO .....
.Polnl PI-~ 304-1711-2013.
10 1101 ,., up t14.H end 101101
eamplole 143.21.

57

Musical
Instruments

WM!Iod: A..panolllle p . .y to
tlke on 11N111 monthlv PIV"*•t•
on tUno. h• loCIIItf. Cell
Monogor o1 800-831-7111

onydrna

Flute end c•e. •• ,..rw, 114U6-4427oltori,OOp.m.

!not-.

-1111'
114441-8077. Umllod - " ' •·
'

I 'II

S, Ill

Auto's For Sale

Govomment Seiled Vehld•
""'"
•100.
For•.
- -·
Corvettl.
Chwy.
Surl)lu1.
Buy. . Gude 111 eoa-817-eoooExt. S-10199.
1111 Dodge Doyt- law m~
leege. ••tnc~M werrenty evlft ..
lila Coli 114-448-128&amp;.
197&amp;Pon11oelo Moolo. rebuNdl
r.yl., new twtk•. Good c:ond.
Au.. good. t7!0. c.n 614245-11017.
191111Adl: lom••li-1111 n.w.
AUie&gt;, til. cn~loe. AC. AM -FM c - Colll14-381-1240.

1117 Lob•on Coupe llrrbo.

__

Excall.m ooncltion. AI optione.
aoll Call 114-448-80150ICoop h'flng

1977 Tt-AM. bo"" taod
1hlp&amp; extriL t421. Engln•
....- . Clll 114-4411-8113
ott• 3 PM .
1178 Gt'ln Prl&lt;. Milo. . olr. o1
poMr. No rust. VflfY good
..,_..,.,, Coli 114-251-1138.
1184 lui&lt;* Rotol Um~od V·l
..,.,, PI, PI, PW. AC. cruloo
- • Ill. AM-fM rodlo. 2
· 41.000 . . a 15tH. Can
114-448-0247.

1173 ~D-.
2-·
•col.
~ cand, bo"" lolr.
'400. Cell ortr ...... oft• I PM •

114--72112.
I I•"

EquiPment

drv•. - o d In
~on. w .v • . 304-773-5188.

a_

_,_,,,.hodtrtl•w•h

_.... Md

r

lop, Flf•on• new 1nd u1ed. •

GE;'

$ET .•.

Motors Homes

&amp; Campers

~

~.

~.

,

Unooncltianli lf•irne vu•~n­
..._ local ,.,....eel . . . . . heel ~
Fne eatlmlla Call oollem ·
~

SWEEPER • d I~~Hing mechlne: •
riplir, IPII'tl. ~d IUppli •• Pic* ,,·

ee..,
Qraham: Chilli
Cnrudl .

.

FINAL-L.Y TAKING roNN
THS Q-IRISTMAS L.l~.

'

FotiV TrM Trlmmng. ol\lmp '
......,.I. Col 304-1711-1331. ••

For • w• drNI on • new or ulld
ar, tiUGII or wn. . . tc.,.., lla
at Jim Mink Chevrolet·
Oldomobll• 114-448-3872 ..
304-771-1134.

5C:l'AE f&gt;RETTY FAI-GY

Jol&lt;••·

L.AN$.1."BI'Z.

MeANT TO.

(Fil D
• Kl1lt • Aile Kite dllga
Allie Into I proteii!Mir I
parll biCOmlrrg • parlllng
garage. I;!

t:OO

...... 304-578..2388.

1;1

Explore lha Cl" aa
Praaldent'a covert army or

I

lntarventlon.D

Ak•tTreeTrlmmln~:dStump ·:

. 26

GJ -~~~ MCWtl: 'Tilllt'e

• · CIM ...

Life' Cll MoN lpeoltll

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

Rani Clllmnev 8 - Sl&gt;ldlll 1
.fwu JlnU_.,; 304-773-I:MI.
"

CAN 1 DO !off CUTTIN'
AN' PASTIN' IN FRONT
.OF TH' FIREPlACE,

..

P~mbing

82

eTNin'
(J) till MOVII: '"-r
NIC MondaJ Nlgld 11
&lt;D

700 Club

(J) , _ Glma Look II
dllwnaa probllma and 1111
WI dollara Involved.

• Gll AIMIIIo Hill

1;1

8r.

34 College
biiSket·
ball
tourna·
ment (abbr
311 Wobble
37The two

PrelideM or lha Unllld
Slltea.c

R•ldenthli or OOntn'lll'clll ,._~
lng. Haw s.-vlca or rap.._

a ... rleol. 304-1711-1718.

85
o••d

•12l (I) •Ill •

!Ill,._

DAILY CRYP'I'OQ(JOI E8- Hen'1 hw to wort It:

eo

(EIIgriOII

e !lll LIM Cotoreotlon

General Hauling

w...

a.vioe: Pools.

ctotomo. Wllflo. Dollv-v Any-

,~ ·

d41~ 2.5-92811.

olen.I0,1NI

· ""· 114-

=--~---- -

R &amp; R Wol• Sorvloo. Poalo,

cl•t•ne. wlll1 . lmmedlet• "'
1.000 cw 2.000gollonodoflvory. " ·

Wilt anon' 1 w.t• Hailing,

.-·.

r•• volume dis· ,.
- - 2.000 .. 4.1100 .... .., .
1M-

••

eonHI•

lly.. .......... -

304-176-2111.

- · ....

Upholatary

ARIII (M8rcll 11-Aprll 1t) Thll II I
good dey ta mlk• ..,.. chano-t In an
lltl'lf'IOII1*11 you 111WI wl1h IIIOIM! ChiC 1
you 1w1 aauld produce mora mutual '
Nolhlng Wllrtured. nothing
glllllld.
I
T AURUI (April .,_..., 10) 11 mey bt
nl!liiii'Y lor you atthla Uma to malce
an lmpor1am dacllion 1hl1 Will have rar-

benlltl•.

J • J Wolorllarvloe. Swimming

87

• New Cou!drr
11:00 (J) No 1e111t1r lleUoll For
Jll\11)' With L.oYt

Bernice Bede 0so1

Uc1n11d eiiCtrldlft, Ridenour

concern
l'eck mm,

ending

0 11-*'11 ,._

-------------------·

":

..
'.
•

EncoUriiCIIng cltangee could bt In tho·
oiling lor you In lhayarahead.lllavery

likely you may now errJoy eucoauln ar- ,
- . you pravtoutly txperlencad '
(.larl........ 111 Tllll r• 1 i
good day 10 brlllhe nr. Into 1 proJecl '
. that ,.. been lying c1orman1, 981 1 fe!iy
' 11 H per111na to ypur wot1c 01' - · 11a
opllml811c ~lng your upactl11ona.
Major cltln(jllll'tl llllld lor Aquarlua
In tha corning~- lend lor your Attro-

=:;,.

=

=~· ~~=-~

.

'

lid-.

. ==

~ r,::c:;·~

"'*·I

you
.:.:r:"t.
In order to , !ng Olleted
get co wot1cn to pertann • -1adl)l ICa""o
114 lin. D) You
that 1hey would rl1her nor, H might bt 1 within
the - - M I I n 11111
ary lor you 10 apeil OU1 In detail to -ptlllt rwllatlc
thelldvlltllgtlln doing eo.
, wlllch
lit
tlllncl.
CAIICIII
11-.llllr II) You COUld
bt rathlr
IIIII today In tllul11ona
of 111011-111...-re 111tura 11111 l1lve pro-

IMIJ 11-.luM 101

=

Grflllll predle110n•1adl)l. Mall 11 to Aa- ! =:::an~=.' 1
tro-Greph, c/o 1hll ,...,.,.,.,, P.O. • UIO lolulr II-A• 81 'lila -~~
Box 11421, a-tid, OH 44-101-3428.
Identity lor-...;., mey bt _ ........ .
.Be IU,. to tllte your zodiac illgn.
•--···•
NCII (Pel!. 10 Mlffll 10) PilOt' todl)l carl bt round IIY gOing back to 1
youfll(l In 11!1 Olhllr guy'a poil11on 11 your beginning•. Tha a n - 1elld• at
you have to Ill in Judgm1111 olanothlr · your core.
•·
lodey., Totaranae wll win you 1 , _,
IMotiMnca will Nt11 you an __,,,

-

&lt;be.

YIIIGO
D .lePt· 21Jihame1hlng
In w111c11 you•,. lnYOI't'ecl h-~ been
running to your utlttiCIIon r-.c""lly, l
11'1 time tor you to 111p In and llka
c111rgt lnltlld of obHMng even1 1
!rom the
LIRA (lept. 11o0ot. a) "n opportuni1y tor peraonlll gain hu _ , avllllabla
to you tor 101M time, yet you'w

,.su

iOat.

·=11111a
VIOt

One letter stands for 111other. In this sample A is used
for the thfee L'l, X far the two 0'1, etc. Single letters,
apaatrophes, the lqth and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters 1re diffe'l'ent. .

You C8ll II aiW

11 :01 (J) MOVtli 'lila Jll'lal1o Mill
(NR) (1 :37)
11:30 (J) !Ill Tonight lllow

e
~=111111

iii:T(0:30&gt;

.....

=tt~qdCIIIRI

• ;:!!:.!"'....

PZ

Hold tha l'lckll

VCO

~MMI)IO,

Ill

CIIYPTOQUOTES
·.

RCF

XU

CFG

CIZVJ
FZ

-•• MM1Mn "·ga "•

;.;=The

1t:OO D

""

I.IVZO

U..
oiiCIIigMilil:Onii

TOIIIght

1130

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

•

GJII~neJIM

0

,;.;;;,r;;-.,__..;;;.3,r7.;,;Proffer

.33 Youngster

• Craok and eMu
111:30(!)
Look 111111
rela11Ye power ol the

Electrical
Refrigeration

knot

verb

,_ca..

84

m~ellt.e

36 Make
a

Except
28 Misplaced
29 Right
·
away
32 Rlbllcal

&lt;D Ill,._

CARTER'S PWMIING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh .,d Pin•
Gollpolo, Ohio
Alone 814-441-3811 or 114448-4477

31 Alternate
33--

27

• VlcleaCountly

10:00 (J)

,;..;;;;r---,.,--..--

Book's

"handle"

( 19711)-

ill PltiM Tlntl W...atng
11:10 Cll c~n.aa ...........

UNK SNUFFY?

&amp; Heating

16

30

with "The"

. (P013l(1 :42)
aJ L8rry tong l.lwll

JEST DON'T
MAKe A M!5511

II

wreath .
22 Teased
23 Near
the hour
211 Rnwlers'

the MovtM tAl (~:al
(!)1-.tl

AON'S APPUANCE SERVICE. ·
hou• olll s«VIdng 0 E. Hot '
Point, w•herl, dry.,, and •

=:---,---.,.-~
·

1111 a.-, .,..,,. Good ooftll.
114-2111-

1:10 e
1111 'lila
Hogen "'"""
Tha(J)twlna
compete ag11net
oavld rn a battle ol practlcll

'la.JR Cl"D KNONe

,

-lduo Wol• H•llng llarvlct, •
p - 304-171-2311 Of 114- .
.46-4018.
•..

- · ...... Coli

SL.IDE~F
THEROCF~

I DCNr
THINk: l-IE

Rotary ar cable tool •ltfng.
Most Will oomplttedt .me dlw.

Call304-1711-1370.
-::-_
_...:._;:..;.:.:..__ _ j '•
•

1188 Chavy pldlup h~ tOfl.
. - - IJDOI. oond Cel
114--4171 •

WHY DID HE

lrre!IOIULP

3 Alon
4 __ ton

soup
Hindu poet
16 llomh?'
6 Rightly
19 Facade
and said!
20 Stalwart
17 Old musical 7 Big
23 Rental
note
_
sign
18 Choose
8 Quite
24 Actor
20 Dry
obvious
211 Fat
champagne 11 Beguile
27 Showed
Zl Heraldic
14 Evaluates

(1 :40)

I &amp;EI: YOUR MO!s

2 Rt•maln

~abbr. )

8:01 (J) MOVII: lurvlvlng (NR)

OE. Spod.lng In Zonfth. CeR"·
304-578-2398 or 114-448- ·

document
e.11.

title

• Nlllhvllll Now

:

41 Impala,
DOWN
1 At:ute

Ill Clerical

QJ Murder, 1M Wroll

tilmpod.- Ho"' Vouoh . . oo- - I

9 Tramp

u•nn

(1:5-4)

cepted. Don 1 ttn•ceplng. .. '

38 f;Jevate
39 llnhn
40 Le!!al -

13 llranimar

ill MOVII: IIUI Collllr (R)

'

1

ACROss ·
I Artie
nr Irwin
II Vrrlmten

I 0 Correct

(POi (2:05)

____

.K4

,.•••

12 Enf!lillh
river

IIINIWI

Pun,p • • end HNice. 304..
811-3802

••

•au

•Kt0785S
.QJIO

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(!) (!) Wlr IIIII , . _ In
The Nuolear Age Nuclear
Wllpolll biCOml tha cltolol
ol lha U.S. and Soviet UniOn.
Ill Newlllrt Sr.phanla'a ra,.
blood type II aupplemlntad

Floolln~

•

EAST

CROSSWORD

L'Mfr. c.~&gt; 1;1

Tree • atump rernowt, mutdt,

••

WEST
•to 5

....

"!!Ill"

pi•"- Calll14-448-7829.

topsol. It~ ftrMODd-t110 '

..... 71

By Jam01 Jacoby
'

prelllttera. Thl• year' a hOata
' " Anile Baket.. Debbie
Glbaon. Kenny
end
Rod S-rt. (L) !;II

Carpentry wark brf lhl job or
hour. ,.nollnll dry -•· ....mitin g. lledrk:lil. remoddlng com-

317-0441.

.AQI

.Sharp play
for thin slam

1!~~~,.,.1;1

• Polnllng' tnt- • E . - t. •
Froo . .• . Call 814-446- •
8344
•

,..,_Ill oleclrlcll &amp;
other home reptlr, Cltl 814-

NORTH

.KITH

Tbe 1ucceu of a alam often depends • 5 t
.KQ8762
upon
how the controil fit In the two !
7:01 (I) AIICiy Clllllltll
1
SOUTH
banda. To find thllt lit, North .liNd a
.AQJSI
jump to four clubir, 1 apllnter bid. That
7:10~Ei':.. ...
ahowed
a ainlleton club, at lust four·
(I)
lnmlnt Tonight
tel &amp;a
card 1pade •upport, and 12 or more
.Ill UIA Todl)l
+AJIOS
polnll. Eut doubled to 111 bia partner
Vulnerable: East-Weal
know thllt 1 club lead would be ule.
Dealer:
Eut
.South redoubled, not with any idea of
111 Night Court
,playln&amp; that contraet, but u a IIIUIII Wen
Eul
e Crilok IIIII Cllue
,of tellina bia partner be held the ace.
Puo
7:31 (I) IMfonlllllllan
Then North cu•bld the dlam011d ace, Pill
Dbl.
South cu•bld hll hurt void, and North Puo
8:00 (J) MOVII:''IIIa Llllla
Put
uted for aces and limply bid the PUI
lhaphard of tongdDm c4 NT P111
(NRI (1 :48) ·
Pau
It
P111
' llam.
• (J) II ""-' "LF IIOWI
;. Declarer played quickly and well. PIU
away In the back aaat during
'tpllnter bid
•He won the ace of clubs and ruffed a
t,ynn'a drlv..rn dlle. (A) C
club, and then played the ace of diaCll • (I) Amllklln lllltiaiO
ft10ndt. At thll point,· can you really 1
Openin&amp; lead: 5
A-.arda Tilt 18th annuli
fault Eut lor playln&amp; the diamond , in&amp; diamond while ruffin&amp; with the
"merlcln Mullc "Wilda.
four1 Nut came the act1 of hurll (d• . kin&amp; of apaclllln dummy.
lrom HollywOOd'a Shrine
clarer pitcbln&amp; a diemond), a heart
It'a euy DOW lo - thllt Eullbould
Civic "udltorium, horton
mualcal 1rt11111n lha 1ru1 .
ruff, another club ruff, another heart ·bave throwll tbe dlamoad kla&amp; uadet
ol pop/rock, IOUI/rltythm and
ruff, and a ruff of tbe lut club. Declar- the ace, but lull eredlt ahould 10 to deb!UII and COUntry millie.
er played 1 trump back to hil jack and • clam for pvin&amp; blmMIIIIOIIIII cbance
Tllla year. naw •warda hava
utiecf with a diamond. Suddenly poor for the alam. He played tilt diamond
been cru\Wd to honor hlavy
Eut wu on lead with noWn&amp; to play -early, ruffed wt all bia lidHIIIII,
metal and rap mualc. Nlllle
but a burt or a club, either of wbicb end drew juat 0011'01111d or trump be,.p,.unllng all . , . . of
would ellow South to abed bla lut loa- fore tbrowln&amp; Eut on lead..
·
contemporary mualc wilt
appe11r u pertormera end

.

AemCJ¥11. Frea 11t

Alltllr
Ultrer

• !lll nn.•a C01111111ny
aJ Monayttne
Ill ChieN
11J Mllml VIce

up end dlltwery, Dwlt YIOUunt .. ~
Cl•••· on• helf mile up .
Olortlll Crooll Rd- Con 114-"•

.41-0294

BRIDGE

+

..

304-&amp;71-7121.

SCIIAM-LITS ANSWIIS

•cr
.,.••
(J)

•

Unfoed - Occur - Rebel - oamalk - CALL me BACK
Tht did llm"ac:t tht gina 10 rtv.mrnuhiiOng d
phon•
calla. "Whal can I uy In live minutn?" ahe oaned. Dad
anewerld, "How about C"L;;:L...:m...:•:....B::A..:;C;;K.:.;?:....".,...z..__ _ _ _-i

l

~~--~~---------·~
81
Home
. .•..
Improvements
- - - - - - - - -:-

~....:..:....:

J

!

..

Sr.rvrr.es

S..ndlll' clflo•

171.

-.

-..L-

tiona C.l &amp;14-448-7404-No

.\ II Vi II· '

61 Farm

-~~ "fNilhiNESrirl--' 1-L..J.--_...c:, E!-:Q_l!~.--__w'--4--'

304-171-3331 .

2454.

. ;;...._~--

PIANO FOR SALE

'

RON'S Ttlevltlon Servlca. ~
Hou1e clllt on RCA. Qulllr, ro ·

sr.;,._p., 71

Grooming. All brnd1 .. . AII
otyloo. 1-• ..., Food Deller.
Julio- Ph. 814-448-0231.

j

Ordt•d Or111. t1.7&amp; P• bile.
per lalohol. Call
E.- -n.

••.oo

0

"-Port

;a&amp;:~... of

I

Poor lvr• Tlr-. Hendlnon. w.
Va. Chetp . . lir• around. Dun-

RogeraB11ement
Wltwprooflno,

,- stink at

;;....;;.1--'-"TI"--TI-rs.;...,lrrc--1

.NewCGul-·
1:31 (I) I to I
7:00 (J) Our HouH
·~Iilii ·

~

'

wu

bowling ."
1--TI
Camploro the chuckle quoted
-.1..
-J..-J..-.1.-..J.I-..J.
by lill;ng In the milling words
L
you develop lrom olep No. 3 below.

Ill WICRP In Ctnclnnttl
IIJ C.IIOolt .....

•

&lt;D

B.UEMENT
WATERPROOANG

.

II&amp;.~'=-a
aJ ._... Todl)l .

114-44&amp;-91148.·

Pete for Sale

56

(!) NIGIIIIr lullftlll

Mlxod h&lt;rt lor ello. *2. per bolo.
Call 114-742-2270.

114-742-2331.

L Ey Ey T

.

~ ':::::C Newii;J

1·114-237-0488. dill' or nigllt, •

bo•• tor 1111•11 Blue suit end
1 Hemp Dutoe C - . Sorviee

.,

.

young1tt boy on the
bowling 111m
thrilled
when he heard hi hid bowled
a 29. "Wow," ha yelled, "1-

The

•

.

l)ayl

&lt;D ladr llutda

BUDGET TRANSMISSION ·
Uud • r.a.ullt 111 tv pel, •
worronty-30 dll\'a Pri- tat • '
up. Used 6 relallt tori'J•. ;
com(Mt..., .mnct.d clutah•. 1
pr...urw pi•-. • throw out ,
bt•lno. W•remv-12 mol. CNC ,
ioinlo-ol iypoo. Cal 114-3792220 .. 304-8711-8781.

304-871-

.... 1:00 304-1711-1172.

• !lll Heppy
.,_o!Ufe

I

I~_.!

Icu u'Y
~ 1 1 ·1

I

DlnDIIUN

1:01 (I) 0111 Dey II I 1lrM
l:aclf (J) II IC Nightly Newt

t700.

Liveetock

•

mDr. WhO: lnnllan Of tile

Accessories .

Coli 814-992-35.2 ... 614111-1030.

_ , a1 ol-lc mablo

2-0!&gt;mlrol.-lnHondno"

81)1 No ·e nd Juat Say Y•
IUat won't 110. 1;11

1-lERE WE HAVE ,TO DO
TilE II HOKE'( POKE'(" .

Auto Parte

l&lt;l.t. . S.Vice CIM'Itw. Sl. Rt.

horM on privata lot. t171.

•17e.oo.-.... ,..., ..ed.col

AT OTHER RINKS THEV
PLAV TilE N~ONAL ANTHEM
BEFORE THE 6AME ...

17. Polm P I - end lllpl&lt;ft
Rood.
........ 304-9911-3874
- .-,-.-:-.-.
.
elocl! ..d ...... 2 ho..

"••om. ,._
hind UK. 304-871-1078.
monlh '*' utlllll•
40a

t:=

a=..Maguille

1979 -do CR ·2150, good :
oond 1988 Kawuokl KLR 250. ,
7to mil•. exCII. oond. Call ,
114-2411-15432 oft.- 5 PM.

79

•o

~
of Cllotoe
LMm whit to dO Whln Ju•t

.
~~~~------~ · ~------------~
•

31515 w•h MlcheniCII drlrte lftd

Tral ... Unllr•r.~. Coupl-.
1mal ohl«en IC~Id. ·At. 1.
~o ...., flood. Pt,

3 _

I

•

For SMe or. Trld•1981 250A :
Hondll 4 WhMI•. ,•actfllftl ,
condition. EKtr11~Nerf bws, ,
fronl bumper, rae*. 3 ••• ,. • •
tlr• • whMII. Pwl turner
O:~"!i.~1:C:,~Con 114-317-'

&amp;

·

Cll •()) 111
!IIINewl
•(J)

Motorcycles

76

M

u.ng . _ , Inc A WOIW'I, Tl

!phad11

_

Model 213 , . . . _ 10.4.
•Z.71Ml00.
Madel329. 138 .... t2.980.00.
Model514. 177lal. t3.!jOO.OO.
Model 304. 1,221 gal. SlurtY
Sllr-'•· 17.1500.00.
Modei301Ten-. Aldt. 2.275

I ronspurLltrun

ln..,_ Vlmon•oe.
dop. Cell 114-381-1881.

'*''
114-258-1787 ..

New Hoft~ndMmureS,....t. ..
Orindlr Milt...., Sldd Steerloe&lt;J.

llodl. brlelr. pipoo. wlndowL ...._ e~c. cr.. c~o wtn-

-

by Bruce

..

Jonu-vSolo

64

8ull. . g M01orioll

glnfton. - . . 111ttaitot.
- · bINIe_. . . ,.,.. 11.t-....... 0117,

SNAFU®

We h111e the lowest price~ on
Hom alit a Jont..-..:1 1n d Hutqvwne chlln IMft 11'1 d •cc••orl•. Sld•l Equlptnllll Com-

2

--- ~========l.====-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-J ' Incllv~el .....

38R . rnohlohomo. 1411'/0wMh
expendo, dithwllhlr. IIOYI,
- ·· - h ooll . . lon Included
Vory nloo. vtmon • • 2 d&gt;lldron. 1225 -"' dopooll. een
114-381-1888.

Farm Equipment

SM of Goff Clubs, beg &amp;. cwt. . 2 Bulls for. ..I•On• ChwoH•.
Coli 114-448-2727.
one Chi-Anguo. Call 114-387HSI.
Mblod- wood ol .... UZ por
bunclo. Contolnlng """""'· 1'11
1 I ft. Goo11 neck horn/ atock
ton. Ohio P.tl• Ca.• Pom•ov. ll"lll•. Bilek. E Jell. concl C•ll
Olllo. 814-H2·8481.
. 114-21S.N08.

mote tt.-n1. Y2 mile outJ•rtlcho

For ....: Olk ttr•ood. c.n
304-1711-2757 oft .. 4,30 p.m.

CAII eftor 2p.m. 304-773·

Colll14-448-2389.

Rd., Pt. Ple111n1, W.V1.

Jofltl'oon llvd .. 304-1711-2114
•fl•
1;00.

Shtaplng room1 wfth cooking.
.AI•o Trlii•~P~ee. All hooll· t4J•·

l··-·· 4.............. .

d- • c r - under noo.

Concrete blodrs- ell ll:rll- r.•d
ordtllv..-.:. Mnl)n..,d. Olftlpo11&amp; llook Co., 1 23'-1 Pine St ..
Ohio. Coli 814-441·
2783.

Just receNed another 1oect of
Merch~ndil• 3 pc. bedroom suite. ced• w.r*obe.
ch•tt.
youth bed. dtY
bed. oornpl•e line of bedl •
bedding. dinnlttl Hla. miPII
hutch, fce.boJ: , 2 pc. lvlng room
1ultt11, rf!Cflner, desks. marfV

Megnum Atfte wllh IODp&amp; Cal

Hotel- 814-448-1880.

Cell 114-448-0159.

Good

114·992-1229 oltor 5'00p,m.

Room. fur fWftt· wnk or month.
St'lt1lng It t120 1 mo. 011111

foOl ,

•••· Rio G,.,da 0. Col 814245-5121.

Ftie room IIPI. bit h. unllr·
ni1hed. 8250.00 month.. 1805'12

114-992-8844.

Will do t'*'c:lwwork. Pricedp•

13041175-1410 or (814)3819n3,Evo.

1914 C.J . 5 Jnp. Merlin 22

&amp; roonw and bit h. 1 1 acr•. c.n

opiM. •30 pldcup truck dellv-v.
Cell814-448-4182.

1450 , 814 - 388 - 9773.

r.qulred, 30 .. 895-34&amp;0.

Furnished Rooms

Fir.wDOCI for ·ula Her&lt;*Nood

WlningL

Uving room tufte • bedroom
suite, toii-•·WIIY bed. Corbin

61

Rogers Mobllty caltoet. 1-114870-9811 .
. Portr. 304-1711-7421.

Md chlirt priced from
$3911 ta $198. Tebl• $1() end
300 tollon p i - wetor
up 10 11U Hl .... o-bedo t380 to t695. A•dln., t225 to link. Meet. to II In Didc·uptrudc
bod. •zeo. Call 114-441-4048.
$ 371. llmp1 t28 IO $1215.
Dinlttes •109 end up to t49t.
Wood table w-6 chlir1 •2815 to Menual Trlldrniii-UIIld v~ k•ns. Duk t100 up to *375. Ilt. He.,y c:l.lty exerc:ll' bike.
Hutch11 t400 Md up. Bunk Bath for UOO. C.H 81-.381bedl co mpiMe w·mlltr.... .9008.
t29hndupmt385. Botrv bedo
$110. MettrMI•orboJC IIPI'lnl' Movlng-Houeohold lumlohlnt~~
full or twin tee. firm t78, .. d e. mile. 1051 Second Aw ..
•as. Queen sm t250 • up. 814-448-2907.
King t310. 4 dr.ww che~t til.
Smel ecreao• of aaod tlmblr to
Gun c1blneu &amp;. 8 • 10 gun.
be cl_. cut. C.IJ lfter 8 PM.
Baby mattr. .• t35 • t45. 114-241!1047.
Bod " - " 120. 130 • Kill;
frame t&amp;O. Oood ieltetion Of
bedroom IUh•. m•ll cabinert. 7 dr.wtr wood OffiCI delk.
*2110-orglnlorty 1800. s-Ing
headboard• 830 end up to til.
mechlno. •48. C.H 814-2•1tO D•v• •am• u c•h wah 9215,
approwd credit. 3 Ml• CKrt
Bul111•• Rd. Open 9em lo Spm 1971 Dodge pldoup hoK I on. 3
Mon. thru Sit. Ph. 114-448- hp, eiiC. W CO...,..MIOr.... ft,
llec. bl11ba•d hUlen.. CaH
0322.
114-441-8888.

3711. E.O.H_._ _ _ _ __

apt, Ill

Wheelahalr•new or usad. 3

whfNted elctric ICOOtlrl. c.l

pi•-. .,...

1125. 114-992·1193.

_.., S1r .... Mldtlori~ Ohio,
2 be*oom lmWhed ..,.,m.,._

Merchandise

118 &amp; up. (Stool &amp; Tow.notor fOftdtft. dme dodL
.... 1011). Coli 114-446-3159. · plllotleek. 4 -111nd11r•l&lt;
ririil, iladl
office

Middleport. Clo11 to lhoppin&lt;J-

1171&gt; plus dopooll. 114-992·
2879.

54 Misc.

-011

Nicely futnlthtd 3 rogm
oottll•on• bedroom. Adults

Mobile Home. Z bedroom.
t1711. Coll814-38 .. 1128.

In lyrial1' 3 bt*oom fW'Idl.

51

PVIILtl

1:00 (J) IIOMna: 'lila Loll

I

' 87 Ford Van, lold•d .
t11.900.00. Phone 304-17111080 ..- ott• 5:00 coli 114448-115011.

30

TIIAT lAlLY

IVININQ

0

j

l ~ATE PLAVIH6 I-lOCKE'(
ON WOODSTOCK'S HOME ICE ..

Ttlt TV

Q

0

J

1987 FO&lt;d F-1511 4114. 41.000 •
mi-. · E...r. aond. Call
114-2411-11432 oft .. 5 PM .

74

2 bfdtoom on Third St. In

1340.

-Pt."-·

app-men1. 114·441-

"''*-9- E.::!tl·

- -

"d.

Q

VW.TIOIJ\

.

MON.. JAN.

., -

mJI'ICAL.

Aw.. G•IIIpolla.

Merch2ndisc

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

Fd'nithed 2 .3. or 4 roonw &amp;
t.th. Cle.,, Aduh1 on~ . No
pet1. Ret. • dep. required. C..

utlltl•

M

00-~

to Rent

114-448-3849.

only. 'No P - Aof. • depooll.
Call 114-446-2143.

&amp;a.~
NU~

Price. M~bt •~ It 181 Third .

II• peo month. Cell 1· 304-8822904.

Montgomery W•d 23 eu bfe ft.

3 SR . doublewldo. unlnnllhed.
dty - •· 0275 • mo.

an

rent. 2 mil• from

Pomeroy on 'st. Rt. 143. No
drug~. drinking or~-- Muat
haie ,.,_l!lftce. •eo. plus utlf..

514-992-5732.
_ _:__ ___ _ __ I

3 Ill" 2 r..r.. lernlly
room. ctn•rM lir. LOOIIIed on
..trol•fiO 1o11n Mo- H•. 3
milO
Coli for
-

~for

~t/.JA,

11~317·

Cell

114-992· 7•79.

614-4411-4839.

-

'*'' . ,. ,. .

114-441-4111.

lr;rpii'V 1111 rlf

Newtv tlmOdllld 1 BR . apt
Appl. furnlthed. lde.,locat:lort-1
blodc from downtown. Call

3 BR .- I Court 81. Khd1., wfth
ltove a refrig. tHO J)kl1dep. &amp;
41 Homes for Rent
rof. No p... Call 114-4484 1 28
· - - - - -- Nieely lumlohed omol houM. (....:_:;.:_
Aduho onlv. Rof. requ ..od. No 2 bedronm Apct. for rent.
pots. Call .14-4411-0338.
. C•pBted. Nice un:lng. Laundry
hditill ..... ..,... C.ll 81438R . hDu•. cftMuxe, AC. UISOI 992-3711 . EOH.
mo. Call 304-875-&amp;104.. or
171&gt;5381.
2 bedroom unfurnil:hed with
3 BR. houU. Depolll NQuhd. lttwl .,d refrigerator. N.o pels.
1001dFonTroll. Colll14-4411- ~~~; _ _
2883. 9 lo 5 dolly.
In Syr.., ... 1 bodroom
·- .-.-1-3-l l

2 b•l\ ftl'nlv room with fir• Nice oneftoor pla1 home lit 197
p i - lorrnol dining. lotge living Mulbeny Aw., Po,....oy. Five
room. 30 ft. cultom Mkkii:Clhan rnorr.
a~n pordt ll'ld
ctlbinft1. o• wooctwon;. flnilh oft ttr. . P•king. StOYI 1nd
-... ......... 2 c• o•ege. lwtl rplrltwltor fur,.Md. Home il
l. . diCIIP.d lot, 4 ml• tram driiPid .,d Cll'pwted. Sony, no
Hob:ll' Hotpital off At. 35CIN

Slngte tdults ontv. Call 614

2 lA . turnAihed apertm•rt in
_,_Call 114-446-8332.

v., oltreellvo bflok 4bedroam.

PDrlwbroolt Subdlwkloll.

Second Aw. Fur,. had effiden-

cl• at_.fng at $175 a mo.
lnduding water • garbage.

..

.., . . roqu•od. c.n 114-4410239.

-,.,...-----,
31 Homes for Sale

LAWN APT5- 729

lent loCition. No pttl. Dep. 6.
ref. Call814-441-1817.

lNG CO . rMOrnmencll thai you In Ch•l*•l IR. 2 bltht. 1tl
do bualn• wfth people you e1- 1
n"'od ~11
know. end NOT to .-.d monav
_, c. ...._., requ.- ' tt.ou_. tt. mal untl you ft•e , ~~~~~7- 7S87 or: 1· 703-3&amp;8inYntigMid the off•ing.
.
7 room houae wtth 2 bit hi. 838
Third Ave. Unfurnished. Refer-

Real Estate

SHADY

room. indHktJ1I

2 BR . hou11 dote to town.
DouW• v•111a. full baem•t
t27te mo. P'uldep. r. ref. CIA

Business
Opportunity

o139 evenin{lll,. tft• &amp;.

New delu11e 2 IR .• lau\dry

&amp; Acreage

no. Coil 114-192-5537.

---

oslt no pels, Call 814-441-

D-lr.olly Reduced '84 Schuh lh~rnt.hed21R . g•age.,.-t·
14xl8. eolhodtll ooftlng. 2 mtnt. In town. C.rp4!11ed. Aduhs'
bectoom. total electric. 2 l•ge only . No pML C.tl 614-448.
deck1, und•pennlnlJt 304-875- 45e1.
7113.
.
Apertm ..l ev.lebla. HUD IC·
c,..od. Coli 304-175-5104.

WHI da Income Tax. Short form

11189olt ......m.

o....-

304-875-1435.

3' ecr. wfth pond, 6 ICttti'ICII,
80 ...... OWIW witl ftn1n01

Wll .,_,ft in mv ho"* Arrt
hauro. ortr dll\'. c.n I 14-4-46-

plete kh:d'ltn.. air, c.pet

1984 Town HOUM 14x70
mable home. uc oond. priced

wllh - • ...,.monl. 304-4511875.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Mocta-n 1 BR , downtown, com-

17&amp;-53811. 175- n3s.

3427.

-~-- --~--

171-1278.

..w•. • tra•h indud•d.

Slllrting It e 289 P• mo. Call
114-387-7980.

Nice 1·2 bedroom apartmlnll.
Avail_,., fur,.hed or unl.Jr1873 2-be*oom mo .. • horne n .. hed. Deposit required. C.ll
1 z.eo wfth potdl, -nlng ond 814-~8-.\3415 aft•&amp; PM.
unct.pennlng. 814-742-2393. ·
2 IR . .,... naw plu•h c•pet.
Thr• bedroom mobil home n-.v. paint, utltli• partlllfy paid.
14•70. 17,!100.00. 304-896- t175amo. Caii304-17S.5104.

27114.

Do

eloood p•lo. pool. ployground.

4411-4&amp;07 0&lt;441-2&amp;02.

54&amp;3.

brown, 1 bleck. •prOK. 8 Wb,

ald. Coli 814-441-1880.

T•a Townhou1e apll1ment• 2
BR1.. 11.4 b .. hs, CA.. dil·
hWIIhlr, dilpotll, private lnWatw•

EJicel. cond.

bu•in••·
Mldclopoot. ezoo peo month. AI

Television
Viewing

&amp; 4 W.O.

97.a.

SON ESTATES, 538 ... ck1on
Pike rrom t183 • mo. Wllk to
ohap end """'""· 614-4482588. E.O.H.

Mobile Homes
for Sele

Vans

19118 Ford Bronaa; Milo.. 30 2
lull lnjoclld. .... - ......
AM -FM· CIIt. JW• 1 101 more. •

I wouldllkelorenlathrltOrbtr
bed"oom hou.e in Glllla or
~~~~~ County. Call 814-381-

"No charges will be pressed apll'tment
Now completely lurnlohod
It mobile horM in
if Billy apologizes to the clly.
Aduho only. Perkin~ CoH
814-448-0338.
.__..Kr_~e•J•l•ll_i_n_.'_'----,----------ol8EAUTIFUL
APARTMEiitS AT
,BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
11

73

Country Mobile Home P•k.
Route 33. Nonh of Pom•~·
lnts. rentatl. parte. ul•. Cal

Aruwuncer11 en ts
3

KIT N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

Space for Rent ·

Trill•

POIM'Oy-Middleport. Qhio

Monday, January·30. 1989 : ·

Pomeroy- Middl8port, Ohio

,

Xp

-

RCF

PQJ

xu

PQJZGZBJ

BZZ.UJV.IVP
'
y_....., •• Ctyptoflwtw, ONE OF THE MOST
; STRIKING DIFFERENCES BETWEE~ A CAT 1\ND A
1 .; LIE IS mAT A CAT HAS ONLY NINE LIVES. --MARK

..

" TWAIN "'

•

�•

Page 1G-lhe Daily Sentinel
'

Scoring
records
broken

•·

•

.Jim Cobb
•.

'

Monday, January 30. 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY
LUMBER

Thi1
Week'1
Csms1

ChevroleteOidsmobilt
•Cadillac, Inc.

Sales ., Service
EAST IWN ST.

POMElOY

Your Diller on
.The River

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
565
Pick4

0628

Page 3

•

555 PARI ST.
,MIDDlEPORT
992-6611
Vol.39, No.187

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Wednesday, February 1. 1989

Copyrighted 1 989

•

992-6614

BOYS

COMPLETE
SELECTION

· Feb. 3-At Belpre
Feb. 7-Alexander

GIRLS
Feb. 2-lelpre
Feb. 6-At Alexander

EASTERN
BOYS

Featuring:
* Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on Croissant
Stuffed Baked Potatoes
* Taco Salads

GIRLS '

By DAVID VESEY
l.JPI BUlllness Wrltllr
WASHINGTON - New orders·
for consumer goods and surging
stock prices helped push up the
Index of leading economic indicators 0.6 percent lli December, the
Commerce Department said
Wednesday.
For 1988, the government's
main gauge of economic growth
was up 2 percent, down from 2.2
percent'ln 1987 and 7.3 percent in
1986.
The growth in the Index was

much stronger In the first half of
1988, up 1.5 percent compared
with 0.5 percent from July
through December, the depart·
ment said.
The 0.6 percent hike In December matches an Increase ln
August and was the biggest since
a 1.5 perpent jump in June and
followed a 0.2 percent decllne In
November. ·
Six of nine Indicators contril?uted to the December increase
with factory orders lor consumer
goods and stock prices leading

the way. Other contributors, In
order of impact, were contracts
and orders for plant and equipment, changes in prices for
sensilive materials, building permits and the money supply.
Two indicators were negative
factors: the average workweek
and the average weekly claims
for unemployment insurance,
according to the department's
Bureau of Economlc Analysis.
The ninth indicator in the
December indel(, vendor performance, was unchanged.

BOYS

Mon.-Thurs. 8 A.M.-11 P.M.
Fri. • Sat. 8 A.M.-12 P.M.
Sunday 7 A.M.-11 P.M.
898 W. Main Strwt, Pomeroy

992-2067

Feb. 3-At Hannan Trace
Feb. 4-Federai-Horking

,

GIRLS
Fe•. 2-Hannan Trace
Feb. 6-At Southwestern

,,

BAUM

~~
HARDWARE

·wE WILL
'

.. , .................... Plll!l''

915-3301

.

CHESTEI, OM.

MUZZLE LOADING
and HUNrltG SfiiiiLIS
HOURS:
Mon. thrv Fri.
7:30 o.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Satur4ay
7:30 0-!"- to 4:00 p.m. .

'

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

.

.

"DIGNitY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
len H. Ewing-Dir•tor

PH. 992-2121
108 MULURRY AYE.

POMEROY OH.
I

TAKE, CARE QF.
ALL YOUR
------------------BOYS SCHEDULE------------------ INSURANCE
NEEDS
Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Nov. 22-M iller .............. ............. Away
No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 2-M iller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York ............ Away
· · Dec. 16-Wellston ...................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co....................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-Logan ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away Jan. 24-,.Nelsonville-York .........;,., home
Jan. 27 ..:..wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co .................... . Home
feb; 3-Belpre ............................. Away
Feb. 7-Alexander ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

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

Nov. 29-Eastern ......................... Away
Dec . 2-Kyger Creek.. .................. Home
Dec . 9-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ........ ......... Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ..................... :...... Away
Jan. 6-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis .. :..................... Away
Jan. 10-Eastern......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away ·
'Jan. 24-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill ........................ Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away .
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Home

1.

Housing Construction l.Jp
Housing construction rose 2.5
.

percent in December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate . of
$422.7 billion, the Commerce
Department said Wednesday.
The December figures brought
1988 growth In housing construction · to 1.1 percent, or $403.4
billion compared with $398.9
bllllon In 1'387, according to the
department's Census Bureau.
The 2.5 percent Increase In
December followed a revised 1
percent hike In construction In
November.
.
Spending on single-family
homes rose 0.2 percentage points

In December to an annual rate of
$122.3 billion. Non-residential
private . construction increased
3.4 percent to $96.4 bUllon in
December, the department said .
Private new construction from
1987 to .1988 rose 0.4 percent to
325.1 biUlon.
Public construction rose 7.8
percent In December to a rate of
$86.8 billion. Year over year, new
publiC construction rose 4.4 percent last year to$78.3 billion, with
the largest Increases in school
buUdlngs and highways and
streets.

Ill SECOND AYE.
POMEROY ·

CALl-992-3381 or
992-2342

"COME GROW
WITIJ US

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 8-Trimble ............. ;............. Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co................ :.... Home
Dec. 21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away ·
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Meigs ........... ;............... Away
Nov. 28- Southern ...... .. ............... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ....... ..... ,.... .. Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .. :....................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace .... ............ Away
Dec. 17- Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................. Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ................. ,.......... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ...... i-, ....... Home
Jan. 9-Southern ................r..:.... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ......... ................. Away
Jan. 12-North Gallia ..................: Away
Jan._19-0ak Hill ................... :.... Home
Jan, 23-Kyger Creek .......... ......... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace .. .............. Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home.
Feb. 6- Symmes Valley ................ Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ................. .... ... Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away .
Dec. 5-Meigs ............................. Away ·
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22 -Alexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symm~s Valley ........... ,... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 30-Waterjord ................... :. Home
Feb. 2-Hannari Trace ................. Home
· Feb. 6-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 11- Meigsl........................... Home

.~ Fo

·=·=

FARft11RS

BINI

&amp; SA~d.J CO.

t,~ ', .
... "~. gj~ ~

'"!'''
3~
• • . .J 37

lUPPERS PLAINS, OH.
915-3315
. 667-3161

'

fDICI

,,.

BANK ~ .

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
.. 1 .

FOR

HO. PEOPLE"
MB'IEa FDIC

"Your Financial
Center"
97 NORTH SlCOND

IIDDIIPOI1', OHIO

PAY . . ,_, Inc.

992-6661
INSTAllMENT

..

,.,,.,

.JMJS · •

POWELL'S
LITTLE DAN~S
EXXON ·

...

Rawll•e•

.'

c••••

,''"''
• .,.,

·•

RETIREE HONORED -More than 200 people
atlended Tuetday afternoon's open house at The

Dally Sentlael to wish best of luck to retiring
General Maaa,er Robert HoeOich. More than 20
years of HoeOich's 40-year career In the
community newspaper business were spent with

the Seatbtel. At the conclusion of Tuesday's open
house feslivltles, Robert Wingett, at left,
publisher of The Dally Sentinel, the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune and the Pobtt Pleasant Register,
presented Hoefilch with a gift from the company .

Judge considering contempt
action against ABC-TV News
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
federal judge overseeing the
Iran-Contra trial said Wednesday he was considering a contempt action against ABC News
for a report on the start of Oliver
North's trial that used his immunized testimony.
. U.S. District Judge Gerhard
Gesell noted the network's Tuesday evening news broadcast
carried a portion of North's 19B7
testimony to Congress about the
foreign policy affair. ABC reporter Tim O'Brien said In his report
t)lat anyone who sees that testimony would be excused as a juror.
· · Gesell said O'Brien "took
pains to advise the public that If
they looked at (his report with
North's testimony), they'd be
excused from jury service.·'
''I have not decided whether or
not this Is the appropriate basis
for a contempt action," the judge
said, and he counseled prosecution and defense lawyers to
question potential jurors Intensely about their recall of North's

-~1

appearance before Congress.
North, 45, faces 12 felony
charges, including lying to Congress, destroying documents and
accepting an illegal gratuity. If
convicted on all charges, he faces
a maximum 60 years ln prison
and $3 mUilon In fines.
Early ·wednesday, North addressed a prayer ~reakfast of the
Rellglous Rountable at a Wa·
shlngton, hotel and joked about
his current legal troubles by
saying, "Normally, In order to
speak In Washington, I have to
have a subpoena."
When North appeared before
the two select congressional
committees in July 1987, he was
given lbnlted Immunity so his
sta,tements could not be usell
aghlnst him at trial.
He acknowledged, among
other things, that he lied to
Congress, shredded documents
in his National Security Councll
office and accepted a home
security system apparently
bought with proceeds from the

Iran arms sales.
Gesell Is dismissing as a
potential juror anyone who acknowledges reading about,
Watching or listening to North's
testimony to Congress about the
U.S. arms sales to Iran and the
diversion of sales profits to
Nicaraguan rebels.
At one point, Gesell mistakenly
suggested that 1he defense was
trying to "obstruct the selection
of a jury ln this case." Lead
defenseJawyer Brendan Sullivan
jumped to his feet and said, ' 'The
defense. your honor?"
"No, no, the press, I meant,"
the judge said, chilckllng,
Wednesday, the second day of
North's trial. jury selection resumed with another 52 potential
jurors asked to fill out a questionnaire on their knowledge of
North's case.
Seven people were chosen
TuJ!sday for the final jury pool, 11
group of about 50 people from
which the ultimate panel of 12
jurors and six alternates will be
selected.

news· briefs-.....,

Flu epidemic closes schools
The Ohio Valiey Christian School will be ciQSed tor the
remainder of the week, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, due
to the lnfiuenza epidemic. Classes will resume on Monday, Feb.

"

298 SECOND ST.'
. POMEROY I OH.
STORE HOURS:

MON.-SAT.
I A.M.-10 PJl

SUNDAY
10 A.at-10 P.M.

By DAN CHISZAR
freezer full of food."
United Press International
At 8 a.m., it was 24 below zero night because of transformer
A frigid mass of supercold in Thief River Fails, Minn .. with problems, officials said.
Most without power stayed In
Alaskan air whipped by high a wind chill of 52 below.
their
homes, bu I about 10 people
winds plunged wind chills down
The temperature in Russell,
mostly
elderly- were taken to
to a dangerous 80 degrees below · Kan., tumbled 72degrees from~4
a
nursing
home, said pollee
zero·!n the northern Rockies and on Tuesday to 12 degrees Wed·
patrobnan
Boyd
Hagen.
· Plains Wednesday and spread Its nesday morning. Valentine,
"I
live
in
an
apartment
and lt
chill as far south as Oklahoma.
Neb., went from 70 to zero In 10
was
fine
as
long
as
I
was
well
"This Is theworstofthewlnter hours, the National Weather
covered,"
said
one
of
them,
1
but we knew It was coming down Service said.
from Alaska so we are ready,"
Temperatures were as low as Elena Johnson, 78. "I wasn't
said Virginia Hull of Wllllams, 23' below zero In Montana and suffering too much but I suppose
Minn. "It was 31 below this North Dakota, and strong winds it would have gotten colder and
morning and we are expecting · sent wind chills to 80 below at colder."
Power was expected 'to be
wind chllls of 50 to 60 below this Minot, N.D., 75 below at Cut
restored
sometime Wednesday.
afternoon. ·
Bank, Mont ., 66 below at WllllsLight
snow
continued to fall
"Butwearewarmandwehave ton, N.D., and 65 below at
over
parts
of
the
northern Plains
plenty of wood for the fire and a Jamestown, N.D., and ' Butte,
and
northern
Rockies,
and win·
. Mont. The wind also created
ter weather and storm warnings
vtslb!Uty problems by whipping were issued from Washington to
up the snow on. the ground.
Cut Bank, Mont.,
Wind chill advisories were In Minnesota,
reported 5 inCheS of snow.
I
effect for the Dakotas, Idaho,
Winds gusted to 75 mph ln
J'
Kansas, Mlssouri, Iowa and
Bellingham, Wash., where the
Nebraska as the cold wave
pushe'd across the Mississippi temperature was Bdegrees. Five
Valley and the Plains states as inches of snow fell at Sp9kane, 4
inches at Everett, and more than
ST. ALBANS, W.Va. (UPn far south as Oklahoma, the
a
foot of snow was expected ln the
Kanawha County sheriff's officials weather service said: Okiaho·
Cascades.
puUed a sixth body from a St. AJ. mans were enjoying SO-degree
Winds gusting to 70 mph
bans j11nkyard. near to where four readings on Tuesday but by
others were found this month.
Wednesday the temperature had slammed into the Reno-Carson
City, Nev.. area Wednesday
The fifth body, found Monday, falled to 20.
was
identifi~
Tuesday
by
Wind chills of 40 to 79 below morning, knocking out a trans Kanawha Shenff Art Ashley. Ash· were expected in South Dakota, former and power for about 4,000
ley said the fifth body was that of where shelters .began filling up residents In Black Springs and
Jimmy Price, missin~ since Oct. 31. with some of the state's esti- the Lemmon Valley areas north
of Reno.
Price was an acquruntance of four mated 4,000 homeless people.
The winds set off burglar.
other victims.who have been foond
"People who normally live ·
alarms
at businesses ln Reno and
dead of shotgun wounds .in the outside are not living outside
prompted
the Nevada Highway
, same general area, Ashley said.
now," said Hugh Grogan, of the
Patrol
to
close
a section of U.S.
A spokesman for the sheriff's Minnehaha County Welfare De·
395
between
Reno
and Carson
departl)'lent said the body found partment In Sioux Falls. He said
Tuesday was pulled from Price's officials were scanning the shel- City to campers and trailers.
Junlcyard about 3:35 p.m.
ters to see if they expect an · Ahead of the oncoming co id
front, the south-central and souThe spok~man said the body overflow.
was too badly decomposed to 11:11
Ernie Evans at the Corner- theast portions. of tbe nation
whether it was male or female. stone Rescue Mission In Rapid continued to enjoy unseasonably
warm weather on the day before
With the identification of Price's City said the cold weather sent at
body, police now are sean:hing for least eight families into the Groundhog Day. Overnight lows
were only ln the 50s and 60s from
Michael Schillings, 20, fohnerly of shelter In the past two days.
the Atlantic states to the TennesNorth Carolina, who has been miss"We checked In a famllyoffour see Valley imd from Texas
ing from the area since last sumfrom
Wyoming. They were sleep- across the Gulf Coast states.
mer.
ing
In
their car," he said. Evans
The cold wav'e was expected to
Medical examiners w~ having
said
the
shelter will take in all reach the mid-Atlantic stales
a hard time establishing a time of
during the weekend, although
death on Price because of ~ wanderers. ''Lord willing."
It was 15 below with a wind
with a lessened Intensity, the
. body's condition, Ashley said.
'
weatl)er service said.
, ·
Mark McCallisll:r, 19, has been chill of 50 below at Valley City,
In Alaska, the cold air from
charged with firSt-degree murder in N.D., where 1,500 municipal
the shotgun killings of two power customers have been Siberia still held Its nearly
brothers, Otis and Billy Sanson. without electricity since Tuesday 3-week-old grip on the state.
Their bodies were found Jan. 10 in
a triter compound where the three
men lived.
McCallister also Is a suspe&lt;:t in
· the shooting deaths of Bonme Sanson Pauley, and Charlotte Ferrell,
who
was
McCallister's
grandmother.
Price's body was found Monday
with the help of Marian Hardy of
Maryland and her dog, P.C, who
also helped police find Pauley's
body.
Ashley said the search will be
continued in the same area. The object of the search has narrowed to
Schillings.
Both SchiUings and Price were at
different times boyfriends of
Pauley;
The junkysrd is about SO yards
from U.S. 60 at SL Albans.
Also Tuesday, animlt c111City
charges apinst McAllister wea
combined with the murder char&amp;ea
l&amp;lina him. McAllister wu cbarged with starving and mislmllin&amp;
three clop two months before the
murder cherges were filed.
8Dl'JCBI.&amp;PPRBCJATED- Bettrta1 DaiJr Senlinel General
Muager Robert HoeOich, left, reeelvt!l a plaqne 1rom Ute
Prosecutor Bill Forbes agreed to
IJlCiie the charges with the underMlddlepon Cllamber of Commeree In appreciation of his many
standing humane officers will be
yean of IM!rvlce to Ule commaniiJ. Middleport Chamber President
free to ruspose of the dogs in' a way
Dick Owen Jr. pre.entlld Boelllch with tbe p\&amp;Qae during
that is in the animals' beat interests.
Tui!Ray's open holliM!, In Boeftlcb'a hoaor, at The Dally Senlinel,\_.

• th body
SIX
ound T uesday
• St , AlbanS
r,n

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER.
INSURANCE

IRLSSCHEDULE~-----------------

"HOME

The components that make up
the Index were adjusted for
seasonal vartatlons.
Based on 100 In 1967, the index
was 194.6 In December.
Two other indices that measure economic growth also rose
In December. The index of
coincident indicators was up 0. 7
percent and tne Index of lagging
Indicators rose 0.8 percent, the
department said.

Mercury plur:tges to minus 31
degrees in northern Rockies

SOUTHERN

Dining • Carry Out •
Drive-Thru

25 Canto

A Multfm8dia Inc. Newspaper

•

· Fe•. 2--Southwestern

* Real Ice Cream *

I'

•

Feb. 3-At Sauthwestern

*

2 Soctlono. 14 Pages

Economic indicators up 0.6 % in December

MEIGS

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Cloudy lonlghl. Low In 40s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday, cloudy . high In mid
50s. Chance ol,raln 50 percent.

6.

Saturday's Gallta Academy High School basketball game
with Point Pleasant High School has been postponed, due to the
closing of all Mason County, W.Va., schools the remainder of the
week. The game has been rescheduled Wednesday, Feb. 8, at
Point Pleasant.

Patrol completes wreck probe
TheGallls-Melgs Post, State Highway Patro~ has completed
Investigation of an accident which occurred at 6: 30 p.m.
Monday on Kingsbury Road, 0.1 mnes west of US 33.
Troopers said a car driven b)i Audra. Houdashelt, 18,
Continued on Page 14

, OLIVER NORTH

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