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                  <text>Vikings
eliminate
LA Rams

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
948
'
Pick-4
1432

·Page 3

Chance of rain 100 percent
tonight. Wednesday, tempera·
tures falling to lower 30s by
evening. Chance of precipitation 70 percent.

.

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2 Sect ions, 12 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. New spaper

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 27, 19B8

Je.t makes emergency landing

Passengers say some
air masks didn't work
10,000 feet, Eastern airline spo- more than fiv e hours before
keswoman Karen Ceremsak said another plane carried them on to
In Miami, where the airline Is Georgia, he said.
No one was injured, airport
based.
"The pressure stabilized at and airline officials said.
that point, and (the pilot) went
The emergency oxygen mas ks
ahead and landed at Charles- were activated wit hout a hitc h
ton," she said. "In the interim, and the passengers remained
the oxygen masks were deployed calm, Bar nette said.
" People did not panic . Everyfor the passsengers."
Ceremsak described the hole thing went like clockwor k,"
that caused the decompression Barnette said.
However , some passengers
as a 14-lnch square rupture In the
outer skin of the plane, which was complained that not all of the ·
built In the late 1960s. The tear is masks worked.
·'The oxygen masks did fall
located in the top section of the
fuselage, near the ·tall of the · and they t.old us to put them on,
but during that time we were
aircraft.
·'From the interior of the plane falling quickly, and there was an
you would not have seen the excruciating pain In your ear s,"
Fuglmura recalled in an Intertear," Ceremsak said.
R.C . Barnette, chief of pollee at view with Cable News Network.
Officials said they had no ·
the airport, said the plane was
carrying 104 holiday travelers explanation for the hole in the
and a crew of six. The passengers plane, but the Federal Aviation
were held In Charleston, which Is Administration was inves tigatnot serviced by Eastern, for Ing the Incident.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- A 14-lnch hole tore open In the
rear fuselage of an Eastern
Airlines jet carrying 110 people
at 31,000 feet Monday, bu.t the
plane landed safely In Charleston
and no Injuries were reported,
officials said.
The cabin of Eastern Flight
251, a Boeing 727 en route from
Rochester, N.Y., to Atlanta, lost
pressure and passengers were
forced to breathe through emergency oxygen masks before the
plane landed at Yeager Airport
at 9: 16 a.m., officials said.
''We were a bout an hour out of
Rochester when we heard a
sudden bang,' ' passenger Amy
Fuglmura said later. "I looked
up and saw the ceiling sort of
vibrating and I knew we were In
trouble."
Cabin decompression occurred
while the plane was cruising at
31,000 feet, and the pilot took the
jetliner down to an altitude of

Authorities probe two slayings
t'JNISHING TOUCHES- ArtlstJaneGammon
applies finishing touches to a float representing
the Florida Keys and Key West In preparation for

the annWat King orange Jamboree Parade, slated
for a live national television broadcast Saturday.
(UPI)

Chicago storm keeps shoppers home
By BILL BLANNING
United Press International
Santa's heart may have been In
the right place In his Christmas
gift giving, but for many Americans who flocked to stores
Monday he blew It on the size or
the color of everything from
sweaters to T-shlrts.
Stores In many parts of the
country reported brisk business
the day after Christmas, as
people off work for the holiday
and with merchandise to exchange or In search of postChristmas sales filled malls and
shops.
Lori Taylor, a nurse from
Manhattan, stood on line in the
menswear department at Macy's
In New York clutching a shiny
red box containing a light blue,
cable-knit sweater her husband
had been given by his sister.
The problem, Taylor said, was
that he had gotten the Identical
gift from someone else.
"She'll never know we returned It ," Taylor said with a
laugh amid the hubbub of scores
of people carrying arm loads of
gifts destined for the return
counter, while others stormed
the store In search of bargains
from post-holiday sales.
In the Macy's customer ser-

vice department, employees reported they were still getting
calls from people with charge
accounts who wanted to know
how much more they could
spend.
A clerk at a suburban Atlanta
mall said the day after Christmas can be entertaining as
shoppers fabricate stories about
why they are returning gifts.
"Women will tell you tales,"
said a manager at Cumberland
Mall. "We ought to write a book
about it. Their grandmother sent
their cousins to buy it. I tell you,
the stories are stranger than
fiction."
Jane Griffith, manager of the
Wimbledon Shop In East Towne
Mall, Knoxville, Tenn.,saldmost
mall stores were running afterChristmas sales, but it appeared
many of the shoppers coming to
shop Monday were returning or
exchanging gifts, rather than
taking advantage of reduced
prices.
''Things started off slow this
morning, but It has picked up
steadily since then," Griffith
said. "Just about everyone I've
seen come Into the mall has a bag
with them, though, so I figure
they're here to return or ex·
change - at least that's their
main purpose. I'm sure they'll be

--Local news briefsArmed man robs Gallia store
An ar med man held up the Go-Mart store, 1875 Eastern Ave. ,
Gallipolis, at 1: 30 a.m. Tuesday, according to Gallipolis City
Pollee.
Pollee said the robber made off with an undisclosed amount of
cash In $20's, $10's, $l's and two $2 bills.
Officers said the man had been In the store earlier and asked
for the restroom key. When he was finished, the man returned
the key. About an hour later, the man returned, pulled a gun on
20·year-old Mike Gilles and demanded all the money In the cash
drawer and safe. Gilles told pollee the man left the store with
the money In a bag and walked across the street. That was the
last time he was seen. ·
The rob.ber was described as a black male, 25 to 26 years of
age, 6-foot-1, weighing aboutl35 to 140pounds. He was wqearlng
a red-and-black striped blue shirt and blue corduroy.trousers.
He had short hair, a short moustache and was clean shaven.
Area )aw enforcement agencies were alerted pollee said,
however, the armed robber has not been apprehended.
Pollee also received the report of a theft at the residence of
Richard Roach, 83 Chillicothe Road. Officers said someone took
a tool box and tools, valued at $500, an amplifier worth $1,000,
Continued on page 12

hooked by some of the sales·. "
At the Sports Source In Glendale, Calif., owner Terry Davis
said many adults were coming In
to exhange T-shlrts for betterfitting sizes while the "kids !Ire
buying baseball cards with their
Christmas money ."
Employees In some stores
were so busy they barely had
time to answer their telephones.
"It's busy as all hell," said an
exasperated Steve Torres, a
salesman at the Foot Locker
sports store In the sprawling
Glendale Galleria, before hangIng up.
Iowa shoppers braved nasty
weather to return unwanted
Christmas presents, cash In gift
certificates or take advantage of
Items marked down to make way
for spring Inventories, retalllers
said.
"We are very busy, but we
don't have as jarge a crowd as we
would have had had there not
been freezing rain and sleet. But
It's amazing that the maills still
quite full even with the weather,"
said Pam Schenck, general manager at Westdale Mall in Cedar
Rapids.
"What we've seen Is .. . people
u tilizlng things like gift certlfl·
cates or Christmas money," she
said. "We really haven't seen
that many returns today."
In Chicago, the first major
snowstorm of the season confined shoppers to home. At
Marshall Field's, the expected
post-holiday rush never materialized, leaving some employees with less work than on an
ordinary weekday.
"It's been really dead all over
the store, " said saleswoman
Cathy Flynn. "When I walked In
at 11 o'clock I thought, 'This Is •
weird. There's no one here."'
For many store employees,
worn out from working extra
hours for several weeks, Monday
represented the last mile In the
Christmas season retail
marathon.
"I've been working 7 a.m. to 11
p.m. since the day after Thanks·
giving," said a weary Nicole
Johnson, manager of Macy's
outwear section In Manhattan,
explaining that everyone had
been asked to p!Jt In extra hours."Now maybe I'll get some
. rest."

Meacham' s body was taken to
the Hamilton County coroner's
office for an au topsy Tuesday,
while the Harris autopsy was to
be done Tuesday by the Richland
County coroner.
Meacham's cellmate, Charles
Mercer Jr. , 39, is a suspe.ct in the
slaying, the spokesman said.
Mercer was moved to an Isola·
tlon cell following .the Incident,
which was being Investigated by
the patrol and prison officials .
The patrol spokesman said
Meacham' s cell was splattered

By United Press International
The Ohio Highway Patrol to·
day was Investigating the slaylogs of two convicts Monday at
the Southern Ohio Correctional
FacUlty· In Lucasville and the
Ohio State Reformatory In
Mansfield.
A patrol spokesman said Tl·
mothy Meachem, 24, was disco·
vered dead of apparent stab
wounds In his cell at Lucasville
about5:30 a.m. Saul Harris, said
to be In his 20s, was discovered In
his cell in Mansfield about 4 a.m.

Woman shot, killed
in Lawrence County
cHESAPEAxE,Ohlo(UPI)Authorities were searching Tuesday for an unldenUfled man who .
shot and killed a woman on her
way home to visit relatives In
West VIrginia for the hoUdays.
Pollee said LesUe Joann Sharkey, 42, of Detroit died Monday
after she was shot three times by
the assailant early Christmas
Day.
Detective Jim Howard of the
Lawrence County SberUfs Department said Sharkey was able
to give pollee a detailed description of the man, who shot her In
the neck, shoulder and hand with
a small-caliber handgun.
Sharkey told pollee she was
driving east on U.S. 52 near
Chesapeake early Sunday when
she noUced a driver flashing his
headlights and puUed over.
The man told her sparks were
coming from the back of her car,
and said be would call Sharkey's
parents In Huntington, W.Va.
Howard said the man left and
then retumed, saying he bad
called her parents.

with blood and a 9 1'2-lnch
"icepick· style shank" was found
in the cell.
Mercer admitted to prison
authorities that he stabbed Meachem. saying he acted in self
defense, the spokesman said .
Meachem was serving a 7- to
25-year sentence for aggravated
burglary from Franklin County,
while Mercer was sentenced to 5to 25 years fo r involuntary
manslaughter from Columbiana
County.
There were no furth er details
on the Harris slaying.

Patrol investigates 5
•
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·mishaps over holidays
Melgs·Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol investigated five
accidents over the Christmas
holidays in Meigs County. No one
was Injured. Three drivers were
cited.
Zane A. Beegle, 23, Racine, was
cited for failure to maintain
control after an accident at 8:40
a.m. Monday on US33, in Bedford
Township, 0.2 miles south of the
Meigs-Athens County line.
Troopers said Beegle fell as·
Jeep at the wheel. His car went off
the road struck a mailbox and a
ditch. Damage was moderate. No
one was Injured.
Michael L. Amos, 18, Racine,
was cited for failure to maintain
control after an accident at 2:10
p.m. Saturday, on SR. 124, 0.5
miles east of mile post 24.
Troopers said Amos 'lost control
on a wet highway. His car went
off the road, striking a utility
pole, owned by Ohio Power
Company . No one was Injured.
Damage was heavy.
The patrol Investigated an
accident at 12:05 a.m. Saturday
on SR. 681, near Tuppers Plains.

Troopers said James A. Myers,
18, Reedsville, swerved to miss a
skunk, lost control and his car
went off the road, in to an
embankment. Damage was mod·
erate. There was no citation. No
one was injured.
An accident occurred at 10:50
a. m. Saturday on CR. 5, 0.2 west
of SR. 7. Troopers said a car
driven by Lillian E. King, 68,
Middleport, backed fr om a private dr iveway onto the highway
and collided with another vehicle
driven by Lee R. Cadl e, 38,
Middleport. There was minor
damage to both vehicles. No one
was Injured. The patrol cited
King for failu re to yield the right
of way.
There was no co ntact between
the vehicles In an accident at 1:45
p.m. Sunday on SR. 681, about
four miles north of Reedsvil le.
Troopers said Kathryn M. Reed,
24, Coolville. met an un identifiC'd
car, that was left of center, and
went off the road to avoid a
collision. Da mage was modera te.
No one was in jured.

Winter stonns ·m ar holiday
travel in midwestern states
\

By RUSSELL SNYDER
United Press International
The white Christmas over·
stayed Its welcome In many parts
of the country Tuesday.
A massive storm that brought
snow, Ice and misery to much of
the west and northeast Monday
continued to dump snow In
ntinols, Minnesota and Wisconsin early Tuesday, the National
Weather Service said.
The snow was a white night·
mare for holiday travelers and
caused problems for just about
anyone who dared to venture
outside.
"It was like a skating rink out

there, " said Beld, Ill., Assistant
Pollee Chief Jeff Hendricks.
" Roads were completely Icecovered. It was bad."
The Inclement weather
stranded hundreds of holiday
travelers at O'Hare Interna·
tlonal Airport Monday, and
forced United Alrllnes - the
airport's largest carrier - to
cancel all flights.
The situation at the world's
busiest airport was not expected
to Improve much early Tuesday.
" It looks bad," said United
booking agent Linda Lambert.
"The weather Is not supposed to
get any better throughout the

night, and there's supposed to be
fog In the morning which will
double our problems. I' m tr ying
to book people In the afternoon to
be on the safe side."
Snowfall a mounts varied in the
Chicago area fr om 12 Inches at
west suburban Naperville to 3
Inches at O'Hare and 2 Inches at
Lincolnshire, a northern subu rb.
Ten Inches of new snow were
reported at Rockford. Numerous
traffic accidents, and at least
three fataliti es, were reported In
the state.
A winter storm warning remained In effect early Tuesday
Continued on page 12

·-- ..... -- - .--l

'

�Pomao~-Middleport,

Bush faces rude awakening _ _ _Ja_ck_A_nd_e~_w_n
WASHINGTON - In the after·
glow of a dazzling performance
by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev , Americans are daring to
hope for real peace on earth.
President Reagan, who some
feared would bring America to
the brink of nuclear war with his
rabid right agenda, has wooed
and been wooed by the " evil

111 Court Streel
P omeroy, Ohio
, DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AR E A

11'b

~in~ rT"\.-1 '--r"t~ cd· -==-

~~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

emplre.''

Those of us who remember
N!klta Khruschev poinding his
shoe on the table and promising
to bury us with worldwide
communism are particularly dis·
armed by Gorbachev and his

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Allslslant P ublisher I Controller

AMEMBER o! The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
- Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Christmas present - a unilateral
troop reduction.
Baby boomers don' t build
shelter s for their own babies to
hide In when the bomb Is
dropped. School curriculums no
longer Include a course on pow to
dive under the desk during a
nuclear attack. We haven't been
eyeball to eyeball with our
archenemy In who knows how
long. And our archenemy just
had his picture taken In front of
the Statue of Liberty while his
wlfe shopped at Estee Lauder.
Before this warm glow over·
whelms you; Imagine the cold

LETTERS OF OPrN ION are welcome. They shou ld be less than :IJO words
Alll~tersare subj ect toedlttng and must be signed with name, address and
tel ephone num ber. No unsLgn ed l etters will be published. L et ters should be In

long.

'Q:ocxl taste, addressing issues, not persooallties.

~p ,WATc:I41MG
'\T~ AWoNI::ERFOL LIF9'

The Senate's new leader
WASHINGTON (UP!) - As implausible as It may appear in the
velatile world of nationa l politics, only three men have served as
Senate Democratic leader in the last 35 years. Now the torch has been
passed to Sen. George Mitchell of Maine.
The three men whO put together the adm irable record of longevity
In one of th e mos t Important and most punishing jobs In Washington
were Lyndon J ohnson of Texas, Mi ke Mansfield of Montana and
Robert Byrd of West Virginia.
No trio of lawmakers picked a t random could have been more
different from each other than Johnson . Mansfield and Byrd - and
Mitchell will create his own mold.
Johnson, as he was later to be as pres ident. wa s huge In every sense
of ihe word as the Democratic leader - cravi ng the power that made
him the most powerful member of his parry du_r!ng President
Eisenhower' s second term.
He was a wheeler-dealer and a tyran t who was admired and
respected for his skills, but never loved by his colleagues:
When Johnson decided to become J ohn F . Kennedy 's vice
president, the Senate wanted something diffe rent - and they got It In
Mike Mansfield.
Mansfield, who held the position a r eco rd 16 years before leaving to
become U.S . . ambassador to Japa n, was a tough, life-scarred
Irishman of few words with an immense sense of integrity who was
worshipped by his colleagues.
Although never a great speake r , he reached great heights of
eloquence on seve ral issues o! his Urnes - most nota bly during his
Intense opposition to the VIetnam War. Unlike Johnson, his
leadership tended toward a consens us, not one-boss rule.
And Byrd, who led · Senate Democrats the past 12 years before
stepping aside to become president pro tern and chairman of ,the
appropriations committee, was a third kind of leader- a technocrat.
:Although Johnson was adept at using the rules to forward his needs
and goals and Ma nsfield su!fered from the procedural demands,
Byrd reveled ln his knowledge of par liamentary rules and the
Senate's a ntiquated procedures.
In his final years, Byrd became an able spokesman for the
Democratic Party on both International a nd national issues. But hls
true strength came In his love of the Senate and his desire to maintain
Its traditional values.
Although much Is to be learned abou t Mit chell, It is already safe to
say he w!ll offer a leadership different from his predecessors- par tly
because the members of the Senate have changed.
The Senate of today would never have put up with Johnson 's
au tocrat!c rule, would have pressed Mansfield to become more
aggressive although admiring him as much and was very close to
being fed up wl,th Byrd's parOfh!al leadership.
Mitchell has Indicated he will be the standard bearer of an agenda
and Issues hammered out by all Democrats In an effort to present a
united front.
, '(\former federal judge, a s killed and proven politician and relative
Rewcomer to the Senate, Mitchell will not be a !lamboyant leader . By
nature. he appears to be cautious, weighing in a judicial manner the
pros and cons of the Issues.
Despite their differences, the four leaders of the so-called
"millionaire' s club" have one thing In common - their roots.
Johnson came from Texas poverty, Mansfleld ra n away to join the
military at 13, Byrd was an orphan a nd Mitchell is theso nof a janitor.

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church secretary and brought
For almost as many years as
down God's servant with sex.
Jim Bakker has diamond stick·
A lesser man would have
pins, the devil has been plotting
admitted defeat, but the little
against the evangelist.
evangelist rall!ed once again. He
But he hasn't been able to fool
01' Cry!n' Jim, notfor even a spilt
gathered around him the truest
believers, and almost raised
m!lli-second of eternity. Why, I
remember hearing Jim expose enough new desperately needed
the Evil One's plot some10years · dollars to vanquish the foe yet
ago on the PTL Club, when again and buy back his ministry.
Beelzebub was masquerading In Then, when the prize lay so close
the guise of the FCC. Dollars he could have stuck out a
were needed lmmedlcately to gem-studded pinky and touched
defeat the VIllain and claim a It, the devil closed In for the kill:
He turned Into a whole room
victory for God; PTL partners
responded to the call, and Satan. fuU of IRS agents and a federal
was stopped dead In his hoof· grand jury, and accused little
Jimmy or 24 counts of mall fraud,
prints for a time.
But no sooner had he caught his wire fraud and conspiring to
smoky breath, than the Prince of defraud the public through the
Darkness switched Into the suit sale or lifetime partnerships In
of an IRS man and began PTL's Heritage VIllage theme
persecuting Jim even more vi· park In South Carolina.
c!ously. Yet, Praise the Lord,
To the unschooled, It might
even more desperately needed
dollars rolled In, and this time the appear as though Lucifer has
devil was just about whupped. finally dealt the death blow to
Then the archfiend pulled out all Jimmy, Tammy Faye and all the
the stops: He transformed him· riches they've amassed through
self Into the shape or a young God's graces. If that's what you

Not always the same problem

----:-,...----------·-·"!''

bottom of the tank, causing It to
refill. This flap Is flabby and
won't seat and seal the hole. I
Jiggle the handle to get It seated
and It still leaks slowly.
With this new Flu!dmaster
device I have a new sound. A
warning that sounds like a faucet
turned on. Every five or ten
minutes It makes a sound like
running water, lasting a few
seconds. It' s telling me that I'm
losing water , that my napper is
flawed.
This has to be the most
talkative commode I've eve r
owned. A veritable symphony of
accents.
I went to various stores to
purchase a fla pper. I found It all
right, nicely sealed In plastic
along with sundry other parts for
which I have no worldly use. The
least I could buy was a flapper
and overflow pipe which won' t
wear out In a hundred years. All
It does Is stand there.
I should have a choice to buy
what I need without having to
car ry home a package of useless
parts, spending more money In
the process so that someone can
make an extra buck.
Mr. pol!t!t!can, where are you?
Are you doing your job?
Does my vote really count?
If you can tinker with time and
toss It about with abandon,
declare National Chicken Wing
Week and junket to Jakarta,
syrely you can do something
a bout my plumbing. Have a talk
with the manufacturer.
If I don"t get relief soon I may
start digging a hole In the back
ya rd - without a permit.
Despite Its exasperating ways,
gasping, croaking, whispering,
sighing, fluttering and scream·
lng, I w!U miss the dialogue with
my old and faithful porcelain
friend.
Floyd Clark
6504 NE 9th
Portland, OR 97211
.~.' •

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shower awaiting George Bush on In developing space weaponry.
The U.S. es timate Is that Soviet
Jan. 20. His new national security
troops
will be withdrawn ·from
team Is already being briefed on
Aghanlstan
In February as prom·
the world situation, stripped of
·!sed,
but
the
communist regime
public relations and Christmas
good will. Here are some of the there Is not expected to crumble
Insights the team Is getting.
overnight.
In the Middle East, Bush wlll
War with the Soviet Union Is
now unlikely. The Soviets have Inherit a ticking time bomb. The
too many problems at home to regional powers are feverishly
worry about taking over the rest seeking chemical weapons, nuor the world right now. Troop cuts . clear arms and tong-range mls·
notwithstanding, the Bush people sUes. Botn Iran and Iraq are
have been told that the Soviets rushlllf the production of deadly
are still bolstering their military chemical weapons. Already Iraq
forces and that they are disturb- has stockpiled hundreds of tons
Ingly ahead of the United $tales of mustard gas and other cheml·
cal agents. Now Iraq Is tfY111g to
acquire biological weapons, too.
Iran Is frantically trying to
catch up. It has stockpiled an
estimated 100 tons of mustard
gas.
Both countries are seeking
nuclear warheads and th.e lpng·
range rockets to deliver them.
••
Elsewhere In the Middle East,
0
Ll bya has acq ulred a mustard
gas capability and Moammar
Gadhaflls trying to build, buy or
borrow nuclear weapons.
. But the worst menace \hat the
Bush ·administration will race Is
not bloodshed. It Is an economic
war fhat the United States Is
alp~ady , losing ... ~at war may
find the United States forging an
alliance with Its Cold W;~r enemy
to combat the economic boom In
the F~,f'Ea,t, .. , ,
• , \
. II'he olA futlii'llts belleve •the
Japan-China alliance could drive
the United States and the Soviet
Union close together. Expect for
Ideological differences, the two
superpowers are compatible and
Gorbachev Is working hard to
make the Soviet Union appear
even more palatable.

Bakkers: Spending for the

Letters to the editor
oear Editor:
Confucius say "He who tinker
with toilet have space In head."
I have this problem with my
plumbing. It 's not always the
saiiU! problem. I address one
thlllg only to have surface a new
teyelopment. An Improvement
would be bolls , floods and
twilrms of locusts.
My toilet was trying to tell me
JOrneth!ng. Between flushes It
would gurgle while little ripples
4aneed across the bowl. For
·awhile It did a frog Imitation.
Croaks and then belching sounds,
followed by horrible gasping. I
coitld be In another room and
bear It talking - gurgle, burp,
croak, gasp, whisper and sigh.
Fortunately, It doesn' t scream
at nne anymore. I couldn't stand
it. ~ooee! Let me tell you- one
night that sucker slrened and I
leapt out ot deep sleep, thinking It
was a summons of World War !II.
It took me awhile to locate the
souree as the sound filled the
entire house. I raised the tank lld
and Old Faithful erupted, ba·
thing me and the bathroom walls.
I knelt and closed the cutoff
valve.
The screaming stopped after I
replaced the diaphragm.
I have never cared for those big
floats In there. You keep bending
the metal shank and eve ntually It
atarts flopping around.
So, I decided to change all that
atter reading how to do !tina how
to do It book. For $5.95 I
purchased a Fluldmaster 400A . I
DO lOnger have the float and get a
fDOd clean cutoff after tlushlng
aad the tank has filled. It doesn't
wllllper or sigh any more.
Now, I've got a new problem,
• probably an old 011e that
-n·t obvious among all the
otber&amp;. This one Involves the
n.pper that rises when the tank
11 nullled, allowing the tank to
ecnpty, at which point the nap
llropl, sealing the hole In the

~
~ ,e. ~~

·~

.M~esota elim~ates Los Angeles, 28-17

Redmen· set to play
in holi«;;ay tournament -·::

LordSarah Overstreet

think, you just haven't been
watching the PTL Club all these
years.
If you had, you'd know Jlmnty
and Tammy didn't defraud anybody. Did they· hide from the
Heritage Partners the tact .that
they were rolling In dough? Did
they were K·Mart fashions and
live In an humble, two-bedroom
bungalow while the cameras
rolled and sneak away to their
glltplated splendor rater?
·
They most certainly did not.
They paraded tllelr clothes, cars,
diamonds and furs lavishly be·
fore the prayer partners, preach·
!ng "prosperity consciousness."
They promised the prayer
partners that they Lord loveth a
cheerful giver, and that anything
given to God would multiply like
the loaves and fishes.
More Importantly, the Bakkers
never once denied It was the
prayer partners' dollars that
created the Bakkers' "prosper·
!ty consciousness." They merely
told the partners they'd be the
next In line: When you know the

•

Lord, the Bakkers preached to
their partners, life Is just one
huge multl·levelmarki!tlng.plan,
with Y -O·U, as one ' or the
orlgln!al Investors . Something
like Amway; only better.
The ·Bakkers lileren't so much
selling a real Investment plan.as
they were the outer trappings of
one, with an understood (wink! )
prom lsi: from the Big S&amp;L In the .
sky. It's the same ple-ln·the-sky
preachers like Bakker have been
selling for eons. If your ''prosperIty" didn't come, they could
always claim your "consclousnj!ss" wasn't right, or your "seed
money" wasn't slipped Into the
plate In the true spirit of giving,
so It dldn' t bear fruit.
So verily, the feels may never
be able to make a fraud charge
stick to Jim's s!lk suit. But If
they're any match at all for him,
they might just expose the devil
In his greatest role yet: as a little
evangelist who could cry on cue,
and attract people's money
simply by showing them how well
he could spend it.

..

••

,,

Is that· Quayle will Initially be
Kept very much In the back·
ground and given specific responsibilities as he shows he Is
able to handle them. He will be
given a progressively larger role
lf he does not falter. If he does, he
may end up an Invisible vice
president.

lion, of controlling the Senate .. ..
It's a bad Idea. Even If It wasn't,
his timing Is lousy."
So far Quayle''s only official
function Is to the head the
National Space Council, a board
that advises the president on
space activities.
Among Insiders the best guess

Berry's World
..
......... ··················· ..............

12. · .11

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....'"'
.. .. .
.
,,,,
D.,
,,,
'"·
'
,,
.
::::
.
.
;:
l
:;:
:;;;
C&gt;
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.. ..

•

Nehlen expects WVa
to . be ~ rea~y for Irish

Will Bush make Quayle invisible?·. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - In· House and Senate who fought
s!ders on George Bush's iransl· hardest to establish the position.
t!on team report that one of the
most vexing problems racing the
Quayle, though, does have one
president-elect Is deciding what
Idea for a major role he can play
role VIce President-elect Dan
In the comlngfouryears- that of
Quayle will play In the new
an activist president of the U.S.
administration.
Senate.
During the campaign, Bush
Under the Constitution, the
mentioned Quayle very Infre- vice president presides over the
quently. When p~essed, he said
Senate. For most vice presidents
Quayle would be a "meaningful"
this Is a largely ceremonial
part of the new administration,
function undertaken only on state
but he was always very short on
occasions or when his presence
specifics .
might be necessary to break a tie
Those close to the president· vote - another constitutionally
elect say he expects Quayle to mandated vice presidential
play a role very similar to one responsibility.
that Bush himself played for
· Quayle has said that he "could
Ronald Reagan - giving advice
be of great help to George Bush
when called for, undertaking working with the Senate" and
specific tasks when assigned,
might preside over that body on a
but, generally, remaining very
more or less full-time basis.
much In the background.
Reportedly, he has said that,
One Bush assignment under given the power of the gavel, he
Ronald Reagan was to head the might be able to help shape
South Florida Drug Task Force,
Senate debate and, In certain
a group that coordinated drug circumstances, such as the offer·
Interdiction efforts In that crltl·
lng or amendments, actually help
cal region. At one point during the GOP and hinder Democrats
the campaign, Bush suggested by withholding recognition or
Quayle would also be given a forcing roll calls.
major responsibility In the war
But Senate sources say that
against drugs.
minority leader Bob Dole, R·
But Congress recently estab- Kan., has made It clear to Bush
lished a new Office or National
that he would take a very dim
Drug Control Polley - to be view of Quayle In this roll. Being
headed by a single director - to the president's link to the Senate
run the war on drugs. It was Is the traditional role of the
Congress' clear Intent that this leader or the president's party ln
"drug czar" have cabinet rank the Senate, and Dole Is not about
and report directly to the presl· to share or abdicate this
dent. By law the czar cannot responslbll!ty.
simultaneously hold any other
A number of Senate Republi·
governmental job. That rules out cans are reportedly upset that
Quayle.
Quayle has even publicly voiced
Some transition team
his ambitions. As one highmembers have suggested that ranking GOP Senate staffer puta
Bush might appoint Quayle as It: "Here Ia the president-elect
the contact point for the new saying how he Intends to work
czar. That, however, would make with the Senate In an almost
many In Congress very unhappy non-partisan way on the deficit
- Including some or the most and other Issues. Yet at the same
Influential Republicans In the time Quayle Is talking confronta·

..

"I feel tha t we overcame a lot :
CLEVELAND &lt;UP!) - The
of adversity this year and bat tled ·
Cleveland Browns' problems
It right down to the very, very
against Houston Saturday m lr·
rored those of their previous 16 end, and ... time ran out on us,' '
he said.
games, beginning with an injury
As for the fights tha t frequently
to the starting quarterback.
broke
out, Schottenhe!mer said. :
The Houston Oilers. losers at
"It
was
a game that we expe ct ~d :
Cleveland six days earlier , dewould
be
a very physical and ·
feated the Browns 24·23 In the
aggressive
game. I don't know ·
AFC wild-card game, ending the
how
many
penalties
were called
season for a team once widely
for
193
yard
s)
,
but I don't
(22
expected to represent the AFC In
think that Is· uncharacteristic of
. the Super Bowl. Houston now
two physical teams when they .
plays In Buffalo next weekend.
play ."
Cleveland suffered from the
Pagel, who finished with 17 :
absence of .Its quarterback and
other key players because of completions In 25 a ttempts fo r :
179 yards and a pa ir of touch· ··
Injuries, an anemic offense,
questionable play-calling and downs, sald he was a pprehensive. '
defensive lapses at the worst when Strock went down " because I hadn't taken a snap In 11
times.
When 38-year-old Don Strock weeks."
But P agel completed his first •
weni down with a sprained wrist
In the second quarter and was three passes to quickly shake orr:
replaced by Mike Pagel, It · the rust:
"Our plan was ... to have the
marked the sixth quarterback
receivers
go out eight yards and
change . for the Browns this
let
me
drill
It to them, " Pagel
season.
said.
"There
Is not a whole lot of
When Bernie Kosar went down
reading
In
there
and a lilt takes Is
In the first game, he wu
to
get
back
there
and throw It ~ I '
replaced by Gary Danielson.
have
been
throwing
a football
Danielson's Injury the following
since
1
was
4
or
5
years
old arid '
week brought Pagel In, but Pagel
that's
what
I
get
paid
to
do."
· was Injured a few weeks later
One pass Pagel would have
and replaced by Strock, the
liked
to do over was an !ntercep·
ex-Dolphin who was signed after
t!on
he
threw midway through
Danielson's Injury. Kosar rethe
!ourth
quarter. Warren Moon
turned two weeks later, but was
drove
the
Oilers to a field goal
lnlured two .weeks ago.
that
gave
them
a 24-16lead at the··
Also Injured In Saturday 's
Rams' Aaron Cox In the tourdl quarter of Mo11day's NFC wild-card
LJIJE TOliGB ON bEI'ItND - --~ Vlldq defeasive
two-minute
mark.
game were Pro Bowl corner·
playoff game. The VIkings prevailed 28·17. (UPI)
back &lt;;arl 4e (!ell) knoeka a lona pus oueoltlle h&amp;~~da of the L.A.
Pagel drove Cleveland to one
backs Han!ord Dlxo'\ and Frank
Minnifield, both of whom had more touchdown wlth' 31 seconds
l~ft. but It was too late to avoid~ ·
nagging ailments much of the
loss.
year.
·•
E ~ pecially disappointed was :
Cleveland Coach Marty Schot·
free
safety Felix Wright, who had
tenhe!mer
was
chlU'acterlstl·
Damone Johnson, a 43-yard field
MINNEAPOLIS &lt;UPI) -The and Minnesota's defensive back- the best player In all of footbalL
two
Interceptions and bat~d
Minnesota VIkings bu!Jta reputa· field smothered the Rams' air On his first Interception on our goal by Mike Lansford and an cally calm afte~ the game.
down
another pass.
11-yard pass to Pete Holohan.
tlon for having the NFL's best atlack In the Vikings' 28-17 first drive, It was a touchdown. I
even said It as Everett threw lt.
The VIkings' defense held the
defense this season, thanks triumph over Los Angeles.
Rams
scoreless on three first·
But
Browner
came
out
of
nomainly 'to an imposing front four.
"The Viking$ really do have a
hall
threats.
Browner's . first
where
and
made
the
play.
On
the
· Monday, In the NFC wild-card great defense," Rams Coach
second
Interception
It
also
was
a
Interception,
his
sixth of the
game, their , secondary showed John Robinson said. "You know,
although
I
think
season,
came
_
on·
Minnesota's •
good
play,
us worth.
they talk about their front fqur
Everettlooked
at
(Henry)
Ellard
1-yard
Hne
on
the
game's
Initial
Pro Bowl strong safety Joey tJell)i so excellent, but their
a
little
too
long''
:
·
.
drive.
Browner lnterecepted two passes · secondary coverage was supe~b
The Rio. Grande Redmen will morel. with Jimmy Kearns 16·1,.
The Rams· then stalleQ on the
The VIkings' secondaries li!!Xt
to position t\VO touchdown runs today. That j3rowner, lthlnkhe s
senior) expeeted to be the first ' .
target Is the passing game of San VIkings' 24 aadLansfol'!l, rtilssed enter the Purple &amp; Gold Classic
from the ,bench to s~ll them. For
'
basketball· iournamel'lt . at De·
a 41-yard !!etd:goal try . •~!nne­
Francisco quarterbac~ Joe Mon·
Wheai.on; Harbeck Is expected to
tana. Minnesota advances to an
sota then h(!ld the Ratns'on downs · fiance Coliege Wednesday with
start as his guards Jim Magee ·.
NFC semifinal game Sunday by stuffing ' their running game the best record or all four teams
15-9, sophomore) and Boyd Kuhl· ..
slaied to play .
against the 49ers. In last year's twice whe.n •they needed just a
man (6·1, senior! .
The Redmen 00·2) w!ll face
semifinal · round. Minnesota yard for a first down at the
Starting center for the Redmen· .
the
senior-dominated
Wheaton
knocked an hietfectlve Montana
VIkings' 32.
will be 6·4 · freshman Larry . ·
(Ill.)
Crusaders
In
the
tourna·
Anderson scored on a 7-yard
out of the game and defeated the
ment's opening roun&lt;l at 6 p.m. Benning, whose hands are ex- .
run
around right end at 8: 13oft he
TEMPE; Ariz. (UP!) - West experience and quarterback Ma- 49ers 36·24. .
Defiance wlll play Wabash Col· pected to be f11ll opposing Whea,
Browner's Interceptions came first period, capping a nine-play,
VIrginia Coach Don Nehlen says jor Harris are Holtz's major
lege, Crawfordsville, !lid .. at 8 ton's 6·9 senior post man, Davi(! ,
on the Rams' opening two drives 73-yard drive that followed
he expects hls team to return to concerns.
Little.
p.m .
..
"We know West Virginia Is an and set up touchdown runs 21 Browner's first Interception.
Losers of the Wednesday
Its In-season Corm for Its Fiesta
Rio Grande s~!zecJ.flrst place.!n
Twe0 ty-one seconds later,
seconds 11part by Alfred Ander·
games
are to play in a consola· .
Bowl showdown against top· outstanding football team."
NAIA District 22 ori Qec. 17 with
tlon
round
Thursday -at 6 p.m ...
ranked Notre Dame In a game Holtz said. "It's true they dldn' t son and Allen Rice that gave Rice·. ripped 17 yards up the
Its decisive 86-65 win over top·
middle on the first play foUowlng
with
the
championship
round to'
that will deCide the national title. play a real tough schedule, but Minnesota a 14·0 advantage. ·
seeded Shawnee State on the
"We did our job," said Browner's second Interception.
Notre Dame Coach Lou Holtz they rose to the occasion when
be~!n
at
8.
Bears' ho)ne cou'rt ; The Bears.
Burns h!IS faced a quarterback
they played the tough teams. Browner, who also had the
-""
Isn't as sure about that.
who were · 11·2 · entering the
"Sure,' there's a degree or two Against two common opponents Vikings' only sack of· Rams controversy·much of the season,
contest. were rushed by a united
(Pitisburgh and Penn State), quarterback Jim E:;erett. ·'Our deciding between Wilson and
The Daily Sentinel . of difference," Nehlen said.
Redmen game that allowed the
Tommy
Kramer.
Wilson
com·
job
Is
to
create
some
opportunl·
"Friday, when we started prac· they outplayed us.
visitors to post an advantage of22
(USPS 115-110)
"West VIrginia whipped Pitt ties for the olfense. We did that pleted 17 or 28 passes for 253
tlce we were terrible, but we
points 173-51) in the latter portion
A Dlvllloa ol Multimedia, Inc.
yards
with
no
Interceptions.
like
a
y_ard
dog
while
we
early
."
regained It pretly fast. By the
of the second period. Anthony
Greg Bell helped 11ft the Rams
Everett completed 19 of 45
Published evPry afternoon. Monday
time we tee It up, we should be struggled~ West VIrginia's defen·
Raymore, John t,.ambcke, Mike
by rushing for 48 'yards In a
thrwgh Friday, 111 Court St ., Po; , .
passes
for
247
yards
with
two
.
slve
line
dominated
Pitt's
offen·
fairly close tow h ere we were. "
Tidwell and Brian Wat k!ns com·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub· ~
70-yard
drive
that
brought
Los
touchdowns
and
three
lntercep·
Ushlng Companyi Multlmedla, Inc., · ·
The Mountaineers, 11·0 ands slve !line, that's what shocked
blned for balanced double-figure
Angeles to 14-7. Everett's short
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Seranked No. 3. are trying for their me. I thought Pitt had an t!ons. It was the first time since
for
Rio.
scorlniZ
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
scoring pass to Johnson at 7: 42 of
first national title. Notre Dame, outstanding o!fens!ve line. And, the sixth week of the 1987 season
Ohio.
Wheaton,
coached
by
Blll
Har·
the
second
quarter
completed
the
11·0, IS striving for Its first against Penn State, West Vlrgl· that Everett failed to connect on
beck,
enters
the
tournament
with
:·
march. ·
Member: Untied Press lnternatlona( ..
national title since 1977. The nla got something like 700 better· than 50 percent of his
a 5·4 slate. Marv Hohenberger's
ln1•nd Dally Press Association and the
The
Vikings
went
ahead
21·7
passes.
yards.''
winner of their game next
Ohio Newspa~ Asaootatlon. National
Defiance club. the current de·
"The big deal oby!ously was 5:35 Into the third quarter,
Nehlen agreed with Holtz that
Advertising
resentatlve 1Branham
Monday almost certainly wlll be
fending District 22 champion
driving 84 yards In 14 plays with
New•poper Sa eo, 733 Thlrij Avenoe,
·
Browner,"
.
Minnesota
Coach
West
Vlrglllla's
defense
had
not
voted natlonarchannplon.
1New York. New York 10017.
which fell to Rio Crande 75·65 on
Jerry Burns said. "Any time you the second-half kickoff. Ander·
.. '
"A oowl'game Is different than allowed a quarterback to enjoy a
Dec.
10.
Is
also
5-4.
Wabash.
POS'IMASTER: Send address changes
a regular football game," Holtz good game. " But, we haven't make big plays like that early In son's second TO finished the
under the tutelage of Mac Petty.
to The Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St.. .
said. "To expect the same team played a quarterback that does the game, It's tough to equate the drive.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711t.
Is
3·2.
The Rams' Clifford Hicks
you saw In •the last game of the things Tony Rice does except the importance. ''
Wheaton last played Dec. 17
returned Bucky Scribner's punt
SUIISCRIPTION RATES
guy
at
Pitt
(Darnell
Dicker·
season would be ridiculous.
and
burled Carthage (Ill.) 96·57.
ly Carrier u Mote Route
,
Inside
the
Minnesota
10
late
In
the
Henry
Ellard,
who
caught
a
One Week ..................... .. .. .......... $1.48 ~
There's bee.n some lost timing, son)," Nehlen said.
Rio's
coaching
staff
Is
hoping
quarter only to have It called
He disagreed with Holtz's club-record 86 passes this sea·
One Month ............... ................ .. SUO .
lost momentum. It's really a
that senior 6·4 forward Marc
One Year ................................. $72.80 , •.
back tlecause of an !llegal block.
characterization
of
Notre
Dame
son,
went
without
a
reception
· one-game .season.''
Gothard, a starter In all 12 of
SINGLE COPY
The Rams then drove to Lans·
until 5:58 remained as corner·
The teains arrived In Arizona as ·'one-dimensional."
PRICE
tbe!r
games
to
date,
w!ll
have
ford's
field
goal
to
get
within
Holtz said, "We run with some backs Carl Lee and Reggie
Dally ................................... 25 Cent s
Monday. Nehlen ·accompanied
recovered
from
an
ankle
Injury
21-10.
his team to Phoenix on a charter degree of success, but we .can' t Rutledge excelled at man
Subscrlben not deslrlngtopay the car·
suffered In the Shawnee game.
The Vikings responded by
pass
the
ball."
coverage.
·
rter may remit In advance' direct to
filght. Holtz arrived on a com·
Gothard's opposite number 1or . The
moving 72 yards In nine plays,
Daily 5eDtlnel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
Nehlen
said
\he
Irish~ do not
•
'They
have
good
wide
recelv·
mercia! f!lg~t . abol!t 1 a.m.
Wheaton is 6·5 senior Keith
basts. Credit wUI be gtven carrier each
including a 46-yard reception by
have
a
"soph!s.
t
lcated'
'
passing
ers
and
we
have
good
defensive
Monday. A few of the Notre
week.
·
·Thomas.
Anthony Carter. Wilson found
Dame player's came on the game, "but they throw the kind or backs," Burns said. "Our guys
Tidwell
(6-3,
sophomore)
Is
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service ls
school's official flight later Mon· passes that do not get them In recognize that he (Ellard) ls one Hilton 2: 22 into the fourth period
expected
to
start
for
the
Redmen
avaUable.
day, but most traveled to Pho- irouble. I don't think we've ever of the No. 1 receivers In football to put the VIkings In front 28·10.
at the other · forward slot, with
Everett was Intercepted by
played
a
team
that
the
quarterthat
It
was
a
challenge
to
line
and
enix on their own after spending
Mall Subscriptions
Paul Sweatman (6·2, senior )
back runs as many options as up eye ball to eye ball. As you can Scott Stud well In Minnesota's
lnskle Melp Count)'
'•
Christmas at their homes.
facing
him
from
the
Crusad
ers.
13 Weeks .... ............. .............. ... ll9 .21
see, our people accepted the end zone with 4:30 left to thwart
"Our schedule has not been Notre Dame."
Lambcke (6-5, junior) will proba·
26 Weeks .................................. $37.96
the Rams' final shot at getting
Holtz said he was not Inter· challenge." ·
52 Weeks ........ ...................... .... $74.36
exactly the way I'd like to have
.
bly
be
first
off
the
bench
for
the
back
In
the
game.
ested
In
discussing
who
should
be
Anderson
also
had
a
1-yard
O.lolde Molp County
It," Holtz said. " We took 2 1-2 to
Redmen forwards.
13 Weeks ............................... ... $20.BO
Everett
connected
with
national
champion
lf.West
V!rgl·
touchdown
burst
In
the
third
three weeks off after the South·
Starting guards for the Red·
26 Weeks ............. ..... ................ 140.30
Holohan on an 11-yard scoring
52Weeks ... .. .. ......... .................. S75.40 · '
ern Cal game because players ·' nla beats Notl'l! Dame. Miami, · quarter and Wade Wilson hit Carl strike with 1:17 left to bring the
men w!ll be Raymore (5·11,
had final exams. We practiced which only loss this season was to Hilton with a 5-yard scoring toss
senior) and Watkins (5-10, sopho·
Rams to 28-17. The VI kings
the 18th through the 21st (or the Irish, Is ranked No. 2 ahead. In the fourth quarter for the
December) . I would have pre· The Hurricanes play In the Vikings. The .=tams scored on a recovered the ensuing onslde
kick and ran out the clock.
!erred to come out here or have Orange Bowl Jan. 2 against 3-yard pass from Everett to
Nebraska.
kept them on campus, but the
"I couldn'tcare less who winds
'
players hadn't been home since
No.
1
If
It's
not
Notre
Dame,"
liP
.'
August 11 and It was really
Holtz
said.
"I've
made
up
my
·appropriate for them to go home
mind I'm not going to get
for Christmas."
ASLOW AS
FIONT
Involved in that."
Although oddsmakers have
OTHERISUOHTY HIGHER
He said, however, he feels
tabbed the Iris!) a five-point
there's been ;•a great mlsear·
ROTORS TURNED EXTRA:
'&lt;
favorite, Holtz !tald, "I don't r!ageof justice" In promoting the
think there Is a favorite In bowl
Idea that Notre Dame was
games."' .
"lucky" In Its 31·30 victory over
Nehlen said he would not
Miami.
quarrel with Notre Dame's being
the favorite and that he Is --Sports briefs-comfortable with, and accus·
Hone Raclnl
Hall of Fame locl!:ey Herve
tomed to, being the underdog.
• CYL
CY.
CYL
"It's kind of fun to go to a bowl Filion won four or 12 races
game and . have everybody tell Moaday at Freehold R,aceway,
SATISFACnON GUARANTEED
you you're going to lose," ~hlell
N.J ., to !nc.r eaae hill wtll total to
UCENIED SHOP
NtAIE CIRnFIErll ..
said. "I'd rather be here u the 784 tor the year. rtlloal~ tr)1DI to
beCOme 'tbe ttnt drlftr to wtn 800
team that ev,erybody thinks Is
races In a year .... Lightly raced
going to lose than the team
Oralhl scored the tlrst stakes win
everybody thinks Is going to win.
of his career, c aptur!ng the
We've been In the top ) 0 all
$115,550 Malibu Stakes, opening
season, so somebody gives us a
feature of the 90-day winter
little credit. ·Somebody thinks
meeting at Santa Anita Park In
we're alive.''
The Mountaineers' strength,
Areaclla, Calif.

B7 TIMes CuRING TIE
l-tOI..IPA&lt;/S WILL. 00
\T £\IEIR&lt;ITIM@.

HlER
Oni&amp;IM:JMNfJl

•

Broivns ousted
by Oilers, 24-23

Page 2- The Daily~
Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt, Ohio
Tuelday, December 27, 1988

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily..Sentinai- Page- 3

Ohio

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FALL SPECIALS ·
BlAKES

$39 9 5

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ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
S1500
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�Pllga 4 The Deily Sei.1tinel

-.

Pomeioy-Middlaport, Ohio

Nebra8ka has fu-st workout
in Miami for Orange contest
MIAMI (UPI) - Nebraska both on game day and In
safety Mark Blazek knows Big practice. That concentration,
Eight teams like his have a along with the run mentality of
reputation for being easy pick- most of the conference, espe·
Ings for an efficient, pro-style cially Oklahoma , leaves little
passing attack.
time for Nebraslia to work on
And, with the opponent in next pass defense.
Monday's Orange Bowl the passIn fact, the Cornhuskersdld not
hiiPPY Miami Hurricanes , even have a nickel package In
.mazek realizes Nebraska's pass their defensive playbook until
defense will be tested. Corn- this spring.
husker players and coaches
"I think good pass-oriented
acknowledge the second·ranked teams have good pass defenses."
Hurricanes possess the best . McBride said. "Run-oriented
passing game they've faced this teams play the run better. That's
season.
the major problem you have. The
"The opportunity (to prove kids are oriented more to the
they can stop a good passing run."
team) Is definitely there,"
To stop Miami's passing, Ne·
Blazek said Monday after Ne- braska needs to accomplish two
braska's first workout at Tropi- things: pressuring Miami quarcal Park. "There's been a lot of terback Steve Walsh and dlsguls·
talk In the papers that the rug lng Its coverages ao Waish - who
Eight or Nebraska can't play the excels at reading defenses passing teams. That (criticism). falls to recognize what Nebraska
Is. something we can't control.
Is playing.
"Naturally, we're seeing It as a
In Miami's only loss this ye~r.
challenge. We want to go out and Notre Dame applied pressure on
play well. But that doesn't Walsh and forced him to hurry
guarantee that we are going to
play well."
The best passing attack the No.
6 Cornhuskers have faced this
year was UCLA's. The Bruins
beat Nebraska 41·28 Sept. 10. In
that game, Troy Aikman passed
for 205 yards and three first-half
NEW YORK (UPI) - Iowa
touchdowns as UCLA roared to a
VIrginia and Louisville fS
joined
28-0 first-quarter lead.
Nebraska's last three oppo- college basketball giants to fall
nents -Iowa State, C()lorado and this decade at the Chamlnade
Oklahoma - all are option Classic In Hawaii and It causecl
the Haw keyes to tumble Monday
teams.
"We haven't seen a whole lot of In United Press International's
passing," Nebraska defensive weekly rankings.
The Haw keyes, who traveled to
coordinator CharUe McBride
Hawaii
ranked fourth In the
said. "So we've had tochangeour
nation,
came
home with the No. 9
whole character. That's been the
rating
because
Cal-Riverside
hardest thing for us. You've got
shocked
them
1111-92
Sunday
to screw your head on different.
In
the
chamiJionshlp
game
night
Our whole conference Is proba,
of
the
Chamlnade
Classic.
bly more run-oriented right
Duke, Michigan and Syracuse
now.''
held the top three spots for the
The Cornhuskers are known fifth s tralght week. Duke refor massive offensive llliemen ceived 26 of the 32 first-place
and powerful running backs, votes cast by the UPI Board of
meaning · Nebraska runs a lot, Coaches. The Blue Oevus totaled

'•

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NA.TION.\L BAIIU:OM.L ASSOC.
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Ro•MaM MI.._ AIll·'"·
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.. II•• at Mnwu-., 8:-p.m.
8•"-t .... &amp;Oaii-.II:Mp.m.
ao.a. at Deewr, t: • p.m.
. Se.U. It LA Cllpt1H11, 11: It p.m.
PIIUadel ... a M GflltN lUte, ll:st
p.m.

Portl•d &amp;I iMftm-., II:JI p.m.

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This week's games

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NFL Playoffs
Nn. Pl_,llf Pldllft

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Mull.,'• RMulb

NY &amp;.apnMNn.ln~~ey,1:Up. m .
lh•rell al lAI Aaplr'll, II: ~ p.m.

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a. sr ..ca• tt• (11·11

NHL reults
NY . . ..,.. S. Nf'w Jer..,. 1
..., ..d,BMitll
P1uau1ll&amp;. R•ttord 3 (OTl
NY lalu11H11 .J, ToroiJio 3
St. Lollla 4, Otl&lt;:qo I
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CaiP'7 I, V~M~I¥M' t
"-aflldQ'I Gamn
Plllladelpllfa at Wuhlnpon, 7: .U p.m.

Polata

&lt;•I ('l'·ll

A.FC Wllti-CaN Game

'

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NFC WII..C..I Gam• •

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11. LA Bamll1

Dh'W.-'""' ••

s....... Dec. II

Nn:- ...... . _... t'llllcare. It: a

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

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AFC -luWt li Chtd.-&amp;1, t ,.m.

AFC- ...... at . .ftalo, II:• p.m.

Nrc -••-•••• Fraa-..,4

p.m.

APe ul Nile Q.mple... p GamM

a... ..,.,••..,.

"

..... -XXIII
AI Mlam&amp;. I p.m.

S.lll.,,l••rru..

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

teach.''

Shocking losses are not uncom·
mon at the Chamlnade Classic.
In 1983 and '84, host team
Chamlnade knocked off firstranked teams Virginia and
Louisville to bring tile tiny NAIA
school Into prominence. . In '83,
the Sllverswords upended VIrginia when Ralph Sampson was a
senjor. Chamlnade worked Its
magic again by beating a Louisville team that had been to the
Final Four the previous season.
The Chamlnade .Classic normally draws one touted Division
I team and seven lesser schools.
Virginia Coach Terry Holland
said playing against unheralded
teams and the long travel can
have a detrimental effect on
players who go to Hawaii.
.. Yo.u 're always concerned,"
Holland said. "You think they
might take the game lightly . .
With our team, we were coming
back from Japaq. We had beaten
Houston without Sampson. He
had the flu. We had a day off, beat
Utah and then came back with a
good practice. They played hard
(against Chamlnade), they just
couldn't get the ball to go ln.
Sometimes you're lackldalslcal,
but we outrebounded them.

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·'~'

EWING .
FUNERAt
.HOME
"DIGNITY AND
SERviCfALWAVS'

•

108 MUI.IEIIIY .AYE.
POMEIOY, 0~.

••
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-••
BOUNCE PASS - Peon State's Chr18tlan
Appleman ( rliht) dished the ball off past the
defense of lemple's Mike VreesW)'k (left) durln'l

Monday nlsht's Atlantic 10. aanie at' "Te•mple
University's McGonigle Hall. TheOw18ed1ed the
Nlltany Uons ~. (UPI)
'"

Hawkeyes upset by Divisioh
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI) Iowa coach Tom Davis says
Sunday night's shocking 110-92
loss to Division II Cal-Riverside
pointed up weaknesses In his No.
9 Hawkeyes' perimeter defense
and his young players'
Inexperience.
The unheralded Highlanders,
9-1, who had not faced a rated
team previously, handed Iowa Its
first loss In 11 games by connect! ng on an NCAA record 21
three-point goals to claim the
title In the Chamlnade Christmas
Classic.
"It pointed out a weakness In
our man-to-man coverage," said
Davis. ''If they've got somebody
that can shoot three-pointers,
right now we're not good enough
to go out and cover them with
those two guys."
Maurice Pullum scored ' 33
points and Cal-Rl verslde made 21
of 36 three-point tries to break the
previous record of 18 set by
Division II Cal State-Sacramento
against Cal State-Hayward qn
Dec. 15, 1987. The Division I
record Is 17, set by Oklahoma vs.
Nebraska on Feb. 21, 1987.
"They played an outstanding
game and I think that's the
bottom line," said Davis.
"You've got to give them a lot of
credit for how they played at both
ends of the court. I thought they
established superiority over us
defensively early, didn't give up
the shot that we wanted to shoot
and at the other end of the . cou~t
they were just getting open
.
unbelievably." .
The Iowa coach said he's
certain the defensive vulnerabll·
. lty at the perimeter when 7-foot
center Les Jepsen and 6-8 forward Ed Horton are In the lineup
will not go unnoticed by Big Ten
teams preparing for next
month's start of league play.
"Right now I'd say we're really

shaky. We're very questionable
as far as getting out arid
defending the good outside shooters," said Davis. "It's really
exposed how much work we need
on defense.
··
"When you get something
exposed as a weakness, you've
just got to try to do something
positive about It," he added.
"Luckily. we have one more
home game before we go to
Michigan State." The Haw keyes
host Southwest Texas State Friday night.
Davis said he does not want hls
team nor the .media to use any
excuses lor Sunday night's defeat, and he said he hopes to use It
as a positive motivation heading
Into Iowa's Big Ten campaign.
The Haw keyes are trying to fill
two large holes created by the
losses of forwards Michael Ingram and Matt Bullard to InjurIes, .but Davis said he was not
sure his seven freshmen are
ready to . play at the level
necessary to win consistently.
"We were able to do It up to this
point and stUI get 'Ws' out of It,"
said Davis. "In this case, It
caught up with us and no matter
what strings we pulled we
couldn't get the job done,
"I think the good news, If there
Is such a thing, Is that we were
beaten so badly that youknow It
wasn't a fluke," he said. ''I think
this game will make us angry,
this game should make the

(',

P

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1./

.•

A buainea Insurance pack-

~·

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ONE, a broad-coverage,
competitively·pricad plan
for . retell !store••, .offlcea,
church••· •P•rtmant• and
drug stores. Call' ua tor a
propo..l and quotation.

'

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214 EAST MAIN

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H2·7270
611 ~ llaln Street, Po...roy, Ohio

••
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••

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•••
•
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"HOME BANK
, 01 ' !'

HOME .PEOPLE'
1

.ElliE•.IDIC'w ~'

••
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......

.182*MII'O

SYRACUSE OFFICE
. '992-6333
RACINE OFFICE

••
•'•

949-2210:

4 PJI. to 11 P.M.
Every M..day and
T~day In December

THE

•
•
••

,'.

•.r

•

Coupon Ntctttary)
(PICK UP or EAT IN ONLY ON THIS OFFER)
(ItO 01111 DISCOUNIS APPLYI

MEIGS

CALL 992-3311 or
992-2342
-.

BOYS

he. 30-At Logan
Jan. 3-lelpre
Jan. 6-At Alexander

GIRLS

~lOW

Jan. 2-At lelpre
Jan. 5-Aioxanclor
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking

'.

&lt;

EASTERN
BOYS

Jan. 3-Southwntorn
Jan. 6-At Symmn Yaley
Jan. 1O-At Sout..m

GIRLS

11• ·' ... . .

SOUTHERN
BOYS

...

he. 27 -At GrHn
Jan. 6-At Southw.. t•n
Jan. 7-At Gallipolis

.

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 2-Miller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York ......... ;.. Away
Dec. 16-Wellston ...................... Home
Dec. ZO~Vinton Co ...................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-Lopn ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hockin&amp; ............. 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-Aiexander ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hockin&amp; ............ Home

Nov. 22-Miller ........................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ...................... Home
Dec. 2-North Galli a .................... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 13-Kypr Creek.. ................. Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec: 17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwest•n ............... Home
Jan. 3-Fedaral Hocking .............. Home
Jan. &amp;-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-South•n ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Park•sburg Cath.......... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28-Miller ........................... Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersbur' Cath........... Away

r~us:r

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

,

992·9922

.

~-

~:

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
Nov. 29-East•n ..................... .... 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 ............... Ho11e
•
Dec. 23-Southeastem ................ Home
. 'lloM.·SAT•. ·· ,.
Dec. 27-Green ............................ Away
Jan. &amp;-Southwestern ................... Away
.· I A.M.~ P.M.
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Away
. . "' SUNDAY '
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kypr Creek ................... Away
••
Jan. 20-Symmas Valley .............. Home ··m:~•• ':IJO .~~JO ~"' .
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Galli a ................... Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill ........................ Home - - - - - - - - " "
'
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Home

'dOlE ~OURS:
to

IRLSSCHEDULE~-----------------1
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-East•n ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ...... ;................. Home
Dec. 8-Trlmble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co.............,....... Home
Dec. 21-Eutern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexender ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-liller ........................... 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

Nov. 22-Meics ........................... Away
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-'-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-So~thwestern ................ Away
Dec. 21-Mei&amp;S ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 12-North .Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 19-0ak H1ll ........................ Home
Jan. 23-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home
Feb. &amp;-Symmes Valley ................ Away

LlnLE DAN

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EXXQN

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-'--Eastern .................. :..... Home
F AND
Dec. 1,-Kyflr Creek ..................... Away
Dec. 5-MII&amp;s ............................. Away
STOR~
Dec. 8-Symmes Val_ley ............... Home
EAST MAIN St
Dec. 12-North Galha .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
POMEIOY
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
•Self Sarve Gu
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
•Ohio Lottary Tlcketa.
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
•VCR Atntllt •MJ. l
Jan. 9-East•n .......................... Home
•Breac;l
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
•Hunting
Llcln.Jan. 14-Wat•ford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Vaney ............... Away
OWNER: DAN SIOWEU
Jan. 23-0ak Hill. ........ :............... Away
Jan. 3D-Waterford ..................... Home
992-9907 .
Feb. 2-Hannan Trace ................. Home
Feb. 6-Sout.hwestern ........... ,...... AwayL----------1
Feb. 11-MIIgs ............................ Home

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Jan. 5-Symntet Valley
Jan. 9-SOuthern
Jan. 11-At Trimble

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players really upset and, hopefully, we'll come back io practice
and just get better and better. I
think what we have to do Is just
gel. down and flat out teach."

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Iowa drops to ninth
in UPI poll . ~er loss

NBA results

HARDWARE

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mazek said: ' 'In the secondary, we'll stress pass first and
run second. We just have to
realize lhe ball IS going to be In
the air more. We just look at It as
a challenge. We've had a fairly
successful year. We' re going to
come out with confidence In
ourselves and do the best we
can."

WE WILL

Ofiii&gt;. Tbi1

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The Daily Sentinel- Page 6

BAUM

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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throws, three of which were
Intercepted. The player charged
with getting to the quarterback
will be Ail-America linebacker
Broderick Thomas .
''The biggest thing that we can
hope for Is that we get pressure
on Walsh, "McBride said. "Even
If you get him to change his
throwing motion or throw a bad
pass. That's as good as a sack.
•'I think we probably have our
best secondary depth-Wise since
I've been here," added McBride,
In his 12th year with Nebraska. "I
feel confident. All we ask Is that
they do the best they can. We
know what we're In for."

472 points, Michigan collected 434
and thtee first-place votes, and
Syracuse 386 and two first-place
votes.
No. 4 llllnois had 349 points and
one first-place vote. Voting Is
based on 15 points for first place,
14 for second, etc:
Rounding out the Top 20 were:
No. 5 North Carolina, No. 6
Georgetown,
No. 7 Oklahoma,
No. 8 Arizona, No. 91 0 wa, No. 10
Nevada-Las Vegas, No. li Missouri, No. 12 Florida State, No. 13
Seton Hall, No. 14 Louisville,
No. 15 Ohio State, No. 16 Georgia,
No. 17 Georgia Tech, No.l8 North
Carollna State, No. 19 South
Carollna· and No. 20 Tenne55ee.
The Atlantic Coast Conference
and Big Ten each placed four
teams In the Top 20, and the Big
East and the Metro Conference
each had thr~e.
Iowa was the only teain to
experience a drastic change In
the ratings. The Haw keyes fell to
a Division II Riverside team that
hit 21 of 36 3-polnt shots.
"Right now I'd say we're really
shaky," Iowa Coach Tom Davis
said. "We're very questionable
as far as . getting . out and
defending the good outside shoot·
ers. It's really exposed how much
work we need on defense.
"The good news, If there Is
such a thing, Is that we were
beaten so badly that you know It
wasn't a fluke. This game will
make us angry, this game should
make the players really upset
and, hopefully, we'll come back
to practice and just get better
and betier. I think what we have
to do Is jusi get down and flat out

Tuaoday. December 27, 1988

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�Tuesday, December 27, 1988
TU(IIIday, December 27, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Abu Nidal met hostages before release
By SAMAR KADI
BEDWT, Lebanon (UP!) -A
Palestinian guerrilla faction said
Tuesday two French girls held
hostage with their mother and
other foreigners for more than a
year met the 'tlrgsn!zatlon' s
leader, Abu Nidal, before they
were freed .
The Fatah Revolutionary
Council (FRC), which said Mon·
day the girls had been freed and
were on their way home, lndl·
cated In a statement Tuesday the
girls still were In Lebanon. The
statement did not say when Abu
Nidal met with the girls or how
the children's release was being
carried out.
"Comrade Abu Nidal and his
assistant comrade, Sellm Ahmad, met the girls, Marte-Laure
and Vlrglnle, to bid them farewell at one of our secret military
bases on the Lebanese territory," the statement said.
The FRC abducted the girls
with their mother, Jacqueline
Valente, and flve Belgians from a
yacht off the lsrael~occupled
Gaza Strip In November 1987. It
accused the captives,- who hold
joint Israeli-French or Israeli·

Belgian citizenship. of being
Israeli spies, but said the girls
would be freed In response to an
appeal Saturday by Libyan
leader Moammar Gadhafl.
The organization said Abu
Nidal was pleased that the girls;
Marte-Laure Betllle, 7, and Vlrglnle Betllle, 6, were returning
home safely, "and underlined
that the release was a slap In the
face of the real Imperialist
terrorists and at their bead,
(President) Reagan."
Late Monday after~n. the
father, grandmother and uncle of
Marle-Laure and Vlrglnle re·
turned to France from Lebanon
after their Initial attempts failed
to bring the two girls home with
them.
FRC spokesman Walid Khaled
met Sunday with the relatives at
the Palestinian refugee camp of
Mar Elias In southern Beirut and
released separate videotapes
showing the French woman and
the Belgian captive&amp;, Emmanuel
Houdeklns, his wife Godelleve
Kets, their two children, Laurent
and Valerie, and Houdekln's
b~other, Fernand.
The organliatlon - a radical

faction of the Palestine Liberation Organ!zaton - has said the
French woman gave birth
shortly after she was kidnapped,
and that she again was pregnant .
Valente appeared . to be pregnant In the videotape Khaled
gave to her relatives, which he
described as a " gilt for the
children of the world on the
season hollday."
Valente Is estranged from her
husband, Pascal Bet!lle, who Is
the girls' father. Valente and
Fernand Houdeklns, one of the
Belgian captives, are widely
reported to be lovers.
The FRC has claimed fl!Sponsl·

'

The Department of Commerce and
Labor, created by Congress on Feb.
a, 1903, was divided into separated
departments of CoJTimerce and Labor
in 1913.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPRAL

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EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGISt
"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
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WASHINGTON (UPI) - Retired Chief Justice Warren
Burger has been hospitalized,
suffering from dehydration, exhaustion and a mUd touch of
pneumonia, a Supreme Court
spokeswoman said Monday.
Burger, 81, was hospitalized at
Sibley Memorial Hospital on
Christmas morning, spokeswoman Toni House said.
House ·said Burger. the 15th
chief justice, expects to be

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bookshop manager did not give a reason why the
goU course locale was chosen as there are only a
handful 9f courses In China. (Reuter)

released from the hospital late
Tuesday or Wednesday.
"1 talked to him and he seems
to be in good spirits," House said.
"He describes his Illness as a
rare new disease Bi·
Centennial exhaustion."
Burger, who led his colleagues
In a gradual shift away from
many of the liberal trends of his
predecessor, was named by
President Richard Nixon to head
the court In 1969, succeeding Earl

N.T. Rama Raoasked the central
government to deploy federal
troops, the Press Trust of India
reported, but Glrlskumar said
the unrest had been quelled by
Monday evening and military
intervention wa~ not needed.
The state chapter of the Congress (I) Party called a general
strike for T~esday across Andra
Pradesh to protest Ranga Rao' s
murder.
Girlshkumar said thousands of
supporters of the ruling party,
which controls the national go·
vernment bul forms the main
opposition group in Jhe southern
state, rampaged through Vljay·
wada and nearby towns after
learning ofRanga Rao's murder.
Many of the rioters attacked
public property owned by the
state government or private
holdings of members . of the
Telugu Desam Party, the dominant political organization In
Andra Pradesh. Glrishkumar
said.

Vljaywada pollee chief R.R .
G!rlskumar told United Press
Internauonal that the slaylngs
sparked widespread riots ln the
city of 545,000 people, where he
said furious supporters of Ranga
Rao looted shops and set homes,
stores and buses on fire.
Glrlshkumar said by phone
from Vljaywada that rioters
fought pitched battles with pollee, who opened flre, killing at
least 13 people. He said at least
two other people were kllled by
mobs and about 100 people were
Injured.
Glrlskurriar said hundreds of
police and paramilitary forces
from several states had been
rushed Into the city to restore
order.
A dusk-to-dawn curfew lasting
until 6 a.m. Tuesday was
clamped on Vljaywada, and
security forces were ordered to
shoot violators on sight, Glr Is·
kumar said .
Andra Pradesh Chief Minister

Two groups claiming ~esponsibility
for patrol-guerrilla clash in·Lebanon

Warren.
Burger stepped down from the
bench In 1986 at age 79 to devote
his energies to planning the
following year's 200th anniversary of the Constitution, a docu·
mentthat perhaps meant more to
him than other court members
because It was signed on his
birthday, Sept. 17.
· Burger was succeeded by
Justice William Rehnqulst.

JERUSALEM (UP I) -Israeli
soldiers on patrol ln southern
Lebanon early Monday kllled
three armed guerrnlas near the
fence separating the two coun·
tries, the army said.
In a separate Incident, Leba·
nese pollee said a small boat
carrying Palestinian guerrillas
on a possible mission to attack
Israel crashed into rocks on the
Mediterranean coast south of
Beirut, killing at least one
guerrilla.
No Israeli soldiers · were
wounded during the confrontation between Israe!l soldiers and
guerrillas In the central area of
Israel's self-declared security
zone In southern Lebanon. an
army spokesman said.
The Israeli patrol encountered
the squad early Monday morning
near Meiss el Jebel In southern
Lebanon, less than 6 miles
southwest of the town of Klryat
Shemona, !n the northernmost
section of Israel between Le·
banon and Syria.
The soldiers opened flre at
close range ·on the three guerrll·
las and kllled them, the spokesman said. The clash took place
several yards froon the border
fence, the spokesman said.
Near the guerrillas' bodies,
Is~a~ll , ~9.lc!ler~ . found Sovletmade' Kalashnlkov rlfies, ammu·
nltlon, combat jackets, anti-tank
rocket launchers and leaflets.
The spokesman declined to release details on the leaflets.
The pro-Syrlan National Res·
!stance Front said In a statement
from Belru t Its guerrillas
clashed with an Israeli patrol
using rockets and machine guns.
The coalltlon of leftist factions,
which has made similar claims
In the past, did not elaborate on
the clash.
The radical Fatah Re.volution·
ary Council of Abu Nidal also
claimed responslbiUty for the
clash with the lsraell patrol. The
group said Its gue,rrlllas were on
their way to attack the Israeli

settlement ofManara in northern
Israel when they were involved
In a fierce battle with Israell
troops. The statement did not
mention casualties.
In Beirut, police sources said a
motorboat carrying four Palest!·
nlan guerrillas slammed Into
rocks on the Mediterranean

coast south of the Lebanese.
capital Monday, killing at least
one of the gunmen.
The sources .said the guerril·
las, whose affiliations were not
Immediately known , may have
been headed toward Israel to
carry out an attack.

Dr. Dan Trent
is pleased to announce
the establishment of his
private medical practice
in New Haven, West Virginia

Appointments and Walk-Ins Welcome after Jan. 3

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a.m.- Noon
Wednesday

(304) 882-3134
•

·Daniel R. Trent, D.O.
Family Practice

New Haven, West Virginia + (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

Bush son, grandson aid relief efforts

Soh

;:.SJ.

-

Bush's campaign chief and
BEEVILLE, Texas (UP!) Soviets "were glad the trip took
President-elect George Bush, place too. .. .so that made this
secretary of state-designate
headed for a few days of secluded Christmas very special for us ...
James Baker and his wife,
quail hunting, said Monday he it was so moving and so right. I Susan, also will be joining him.
was grallfled that his son and expect the boy will remember It Mrs. Bush, whom the presidentgrandson had carried Chr lstmas
elect described as "like a little
for the rest of his llfe."
wishes to Soviet earthquake
girl going off to college," reHe also defended his hunting mained In Washington to pack.
victims.
Bush, speaking to reporters expedition; telling reporters
Vice president-elect Dan
"these aren't animals. These are Quayle was In Vall, Colo.
aboard Air Force II, also said his
own Christmas was merry, al· wild quaiL You've got to eat."
Bush said he did not anticipate
But
he
added,
"I
don't
think
I
.
doing
any work - "not that I
though he and his wife, Barbara,
could
shoot
a
deer
....
quail,
that's
planned but it could happen" corralled only 'one of 10 grand·
something else again ... tremend- until he leaves Thursday for a
children for the holidays.
one-day fishing trip In Montgo·
Bush, however, said he was ously exciting."
Bush said he spent the holiday mery, Ala., and then heads back
deeply moved by the trip his son
Jeb and 12-year-old grandson weekend playing paddleball In to Washington.
George made on Christmas Day the gym at the vice-presidential
Bush nearly completed the
to earthquake-stricken Arm.e nla. residence to "try and 11et back In .lo~atlon or his Cabinet Satur·
"I just wish they could nave · ·sMpe. rve been feetmg''lous·y tlie day with the Selection of former
gotten back In time," he said. "It last nine days. I'm staging an Transportation Secretary El lza.
beth Dole as labor secretary. He
was beautiful and it said what we athletic recovery program."
He also said he and Mrs. Bush has two more major appointfeel - that we want to reach out
were a "little bit" emotional ments - energy secretary and a
to those other kids."
Arriving In the small town about their last celebration at the drug czar.
On another topic, Bush said he
nearest · the 10,000-acre Lazy F vice-presidential mansion and
Ranch where he Is staying, Bush the prospects of leaving after welcomed a move by Egyptian
President Hosnl Mubarak to
sald he talked to his son and eight years.
"II w!ll be different for us and
grandson by telephone as they
speak with Middle East leaders
our dog, Millie," he said about In the peace effort. Asked If he
flew home.
He also said he spoke with the upcoming move to the White would join such talks, he said, "II
I thought It would forward the
Soviet Ambassador Yurl Dublnln House.
A
clearly
relaxed
Bush,
who
peace process. I'd get on that
and that all he heard wa•
sported black, shiny cowboy plane right now and go.
gratitude.
Dublnln, Bush said, was over· boots Into which he later stuffed
"But one, I'm not president,
whelmed by U.S. generosity and his pant cuffs, planned to spend and two, a lot of planning and a ·
even brought up the name of three full days hunting quall with Jot of policy review Is necessary
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba· his 'Jpngtlme friend, Houston before we even contemptlete
chev. "He told me that," Bush millionaire and financier Wlll ~uch a thing."
said. Earlier, Bush said the Farish.

4 DAYS ONLY

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Former ·Chief Justice .hospitalized

(304) 675·1244

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ATTENTION-GETTERS - Calendars for the
new year bearing photos of western beauties on
the .golf course, draw the blcgest attention at a
bookstore display In Peklnc Tuesday. The

DECEMBER 27 THRU DECEMBER 30

w '

MADRAS, India (UP I) -The
murder o! a state lawmaker axed
to death Monday while on a
public hunger · strike against
alleged pollee brutality Ignited
rioting that left at Jeast15 people
dead and about 100 Injured In
southern India, au thor!ties said.
Mohan Ranga Rao, an assemblyman In the state of Andhta
Pradesh from Prime . Minister
Rajlv Gandhi's ruling Congress
(1) Party, was slain by an
ax-wielding attacker In a pre·
dawn assault on the fl!th day of
his "fast unto death" to protest
alleged harassment by local
pollee, the semiofficial Press
Trust of India and pollee said.
Ranga Rao was killed as he sat
beneath a canopy outside the city
hall ln Vijaywada, 900 mlles
southeast of New Delhi, the
reports said. Accompllces of the
ax-wielder murdered · two of
Ranga Rao's aides before all the
assailants fled In two buses, they
said.

bllily for numerous terrorist
at tacks, Including the assaults on
the Vienna and Rome airports
Dec. 27, 1985, In which 20 people
were killed.
In addition to the French
family and the Belgians, nine
Americans and six other !orelgn
hostages are believed held in
Lebanon by various radical
factions.

YEAR E D CLEARA CE
4 DAY SALE
RESUCE BEGINS - Israeli frogmen run Into the Mediterranean to help rescue sailors aboard the Dutch cargo ship "RAicky"
thai ran aground off lhe 111raell coast durlllg a storm. All19 crew
members were brough safely ashore Monday. (Reuter)

Riot in India leaves 15 dead

-

PAT HILL .F ORD'S

·.

Th8 Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy...,..Middleport, Ohio

•'

NEW YORK IUPI)- Looking
tired and worn, a son and
grandson of President-elect
George Bush reiUrned to the
United States Monday alter
spending Christmas dellverlng
hollday toys to the youngest
victims of the earthquake In
Armenia .
"It was very sad for me to see
kids my age under rocks and
pulled out and taken to the
hospital, so I thought It was only
fair to give presents and share,"
said George Bush, 12, standing
wearily by his father's side at
Kennedy lnternatiopal Airport
after a 12 'h -hour flight from the
Soviet Union.
The boy and his father, John E .
"Jeb" Bush, 35. stlll had another
leg of their journey to go - an
evening flight to Miami. where
they were to celebrate Christmas
at home In Coral Gables, F1a.,
with their family.
'
In Armenia, young George had
said he could not enjoy Christ·
mas at home while the earth·
quake victims suffered.
In addition to bringing toys, the
Bushes also delivered sorely
needed relief supplies. to an
Armenian hospital, where they
visited a chlldren's ward after
arriving In Yerevan, the repub·
Uc's capital, city, at dawn
Sunday.
·•we met a glrl that lived by
sucking blood from her (dead)
grandmother underneath the
rubble for four or five days," Jeb
Bush said sadly, adding that he
was very moved by the suffering
he saw and was grateful for being
able to make the trip, sponsored
by the Amer!Cares Foundation of
,.........--'---~--

-·--

New Canaan, Conn.

"People helping people Is what
this country Is all~bout," he said.
·'My father talked about 1,000
point of light In his campaign,
and Ibis ls one example."
A snowstorm delayed their
departure from the Soviet Union,
originally scheduled for Sunday
night. The two had left Kennedy
Airport aboard a privately char·
tered DC-8 cargo plane Christ·
mas Eve.
The DC-8 carried 4IJ tons of
medical supplies, clothing, toys
and other goods for victims of the
Dec. 7 earthquake that killed
55,000 people and left half a
million homeless.
Vremya, an even lng television
news program In the Soviet
Union, showed the Bushes' arrl·
val and a later visit to the
Yerevan hospital.
"You can see they don't need a
translator," a Vremya comment·
ator said as the camera showed
the elder Bush wiping away a
tear while the younger Bush
delivered toys.
The younger Bush presented
toy bunnies, teddy bears, tick·
tack-toe games and other toys to
patients In Children's Hospital
No. 3 In Yerevan.
The Armenian Orthodox
Church, using the Julian calender, celebrates 'the birth of
Christ Jan. 7, but the toys
brought early smiles of delight to
the hospitalized chlldren.
''There were en11ugh toys for
all, Including for the youngest
one- the 4-month-old Andranlk,
who was rescued from the ruins
of one of the houses In Lenlnakan," the official Soviet news
agency Tass said referrjng toone
of the worst-hit cities In the
_...

quake.
The elder Bush turned over the
emergency aid, Including medl·
cine, clothing and pediatric suppl.les such as cribs and blankets for

nomeless Infants.
Jeb Bush stressed before they
departed that he and his son
visited Yerevan on behalf of
AmeriCa res

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Kicker ticket sales totaled
$584,255.

(Saturday)
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Satur·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbe'rs:
Dally Number
195.
Ticket sales totaled
$1,448,135.50. with a payoff due of
$557,535.
PICK-t
9159.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$240,837.50, with a payoff due of
$108,435.
PICK'4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,172. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$431.
Super Lotto
3, 17, 20, 26, 28, and 38.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,713,168.

Monday
CLEVELAND (UP!) -Mooday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
948.
Ticket sales totaled
$1,137 ,608.50, with a payoff due of
$204,006.
PICK-t
1432.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$187,670, with a payoff due of
$84,490.
PJCK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$1,872. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$78.

NOW

DINNER FOR FOUR

DOMINO'S
PIZZA
West

OH.
. St.

~-

DEUVERS
FREE.

992·2124

Wlth . . . . . onl. ........ IIUIIwaemt. ,
OnioM•dGf'Hrl

PLUS 4 · 16

'-1*t
oz. Soltdrlnks

$9.99

Umlttd Dtlnoty

Area

LARGII 111" 11·11111 PIZZA

PDIROI
ITOI! OIIIY

DINNER FOR TWO

Lunch lpeol81

ANY t2" II RIM PIZZA
· PLUS 2 • t6 oz. Softdrinks

11" 1 lTD PIZZA

-

PWS 2 · 16 oz. Solldrinks

$4.99

$6.17
POI£111'W
STOll Olll
r

------·-----.--···-~-

Lunch Oftt¥·11 AM-1 PM

POIDO'f

11 All· I ,. ...._"""'
11

•.a

stOifOaY

All M.S..

-

---'·-·-

-

~

:~

- - •

PEOPLES BANK
IIA80N
773-ISS14

POINT JltEA8ANT
875-1121
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

NEW HAVEN

882-2135

�•

. -Page 8-The Dllily Sitntinel

Tuaadlly,

Tu81t!aY. December 27, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

o8cembei 27

_People in the news____________._ _layette shower is held

: By United Press In&amp;erfta41on~

: TJtYING IT AGAIN: Televi·
• slon hearnhrob Den OJohoson Is
·:engaged to his former wife.
: actress Melule Grlftllh. The
•COUple was spending the Christ·
mas holiday weekend In Aspen,
·Colo., on a' ski trip when they
: decided tel make their engage:'"
; ment public, Johnson's publicist
. ·Elliot Mintz said. No wedding
date has been set .
"During the last few weeks. we
rect!lved dozens of calls from
.reporters seeking confirmation
;on the engagement," Mintz said.
•"Both want to enjoy this special
;t1111e together In order to provide
;a sense of dignity and privacy."
-Johnson and Grllffth wre mar·
rled In 1976 but were divorced In
·little more than a year.
. Griffith recently received good
;reviews for her performance as a
•working-class secretary · strug·
;gung to become a . corporate
:el{ecu tlve In the newly released
111m "Working Girl. "
Johnson, the star of NBC's
."Miami Vice," appeared In a

feature film ea rlier this year
deepes t c raving In human nature .
titled " Sweethearts Dance,"
Is the desire to be appreciated."
which was a box .office !lop.
FISHING WITH BUSH: Ray
BURT, TOM AND DON ARE
Scott, who Is to bass fishing what
. OUT: Manwatchers Inc. Is n' t · Jose Canseco Is to baseball, Is ·
wa tching some of Its old favor· about to go on the saf~st fishing
ltes. The group 's list of 10 mos t trip of his ll!e. Scott's old fishing
wa tchabl e men d~s not Include buddy, President-elect (teorge
standbys Burt Reynolds, Torn Bush, lscomlngtbScott'sprlvate
Selleck or the forementloned Don late south of Montgomery, Ala.,
Johnson.
to wet a hook or two on Thursday
Th e 1988 list features Kenny after Bush's Texas hunting trip.
Rogers , Donald Trwnp, Mel
Gibson, Paul Newman, John
They went fishing a few years
Kennedy Jr., Tony Danza, An·
ago and Scott, leader of the Bass
drew McCarthy , Allan Thlcke,
Anglers Sportsman Society, had
Tony Curtis and Lou Gossett Jr.
trouble getting used to the Secret
For those aspiring to make the Service agents who accompanied
list, Suzy Mallery, president of them. "There was one Secret
the organization, has some Serviceman sitting In the boat
advice.
and we !lshed," said Scott, who
served as Alabama chairman of
"Since Manwatcher's started
one Bush's earlier presidential
In 1975, women's taste In men has
campaigns.
·
changed considerably. Big bulg·
"The man just sat there and
log muscles have never been
watched. Icouldn' tgethlmtosay ·.
Important but now dress, groom·
a word. He didn't bo-t her George
ing, and keeping In good physical
but I couldn't get used to him. I
shape has become inuch more
was afraid of hooking the Secret
impor tant. " The official slogan
Service man and he'd take out a
of Manwatchers Inc." "The
gun and shoot me."

THE AGING OF MARIO
(;UOMO: Is Marlo Cuomo mel·
lowlng7 The New York governor
thinks so. " I don ' tevenyellat my
kids , anymore, " he said re·
cently. Cuomo · says that as he
gets older, the less time l)e wants
to waste on revenge. • ·
Furthermore, Cuomo, who
once disparaged the riCh , agreed
In a speech Dec. 8 at the
University of Maryland that be
was definitely a " have' ' and not a
'' have·not. " "I don't disdain the
people at the top," he said. "I'm
at the top myself."

Garden Chili
judges decorations
MIDDLEPORT Two
members of the Middleport
Garden Club and two members of
the Amateur Gardeners Club will
meet at 6 p.m. Thursday to take
judges throughout the town to
judge In the annual Middleport
community Christmas lighting
contest.

'

jDAR meeting pays tribute to Evelyn Knight

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SAtUIDAY

~r~
.~
outlidt Meiga, Cllllli•
MMDn count I• mull be pr•

THE €ENTitAL TRUST

Card of Th....

6 MONTH
CER.TIFICATE OF.
DEPOSIT

DAY IEFDRI ~UILICAT!ON
- 11,00A.M. SATURDAY
- z,oo P.M. MOIIDAY
- 2'00 P.M. TUIIDAY
- 2'00 ~.M . WEDNIIDAY ·
' - z,oo P.M . T"UIIIDAY
- 2'ot P.M . FRIDAY

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ... •
OaMie Couniv
Ar.,Codlil14
I

:ser on Medicare
: " Medicare, 1989" .will be pres·
-ented by Veterans Memorial
:Hospital Extended Care Unit on
;wednesday at 1 p.m. In the unit
.conference room.
: At the meeting the Medicare
{;atastrophlc Coverage Act will
:tie reviewed. Refreshments wlll
:be served.

"'*

Muon Co .• WV
ArN C;ode 304

Melp County
Are1 Cede &amp;14

143-.,-abla Oltt.

949- Radne'

171--!Pt, PIIMint
458-Looo
171-A,ple Gr011e
n3-M..on
182- NIW f1aven
115-Lotert

379-WIInut

742-Rutllftd

137-Buffalo

441-0olllpelio
3417-th . . . e

' 882-MIHoport

318-Vimon

Pom•DY
916- Ch••r

241-Rio Or11;1dt

843-Poitllnd
247-Letert flllt

211i&amp;-G!JVI" Oist.
(f

Dump Truck

•Wreck• Bervtce
•Junk V•rd Bullinns
WANT TO IUY Wl!CIED 01

.,NI &lt;MS

1

DAY

3 DAYS
&amp;OAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

$4.00
16.00 .
08.00
$13.00
t33.00

For '"'Y of tl,.t&lt;••l&lt;n

614-742-2617

21-35WORDS

$5.00

u .oo

$13.00
$21 .00
t51 .00

$7.00
$10 .00
$16 .00
82&amp; .00
860 .00

letw•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or Lean~~!!:!!~~

DEAD OR AUYE
•Weahers •Dryers

•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
" Mutt lo Repairable"

lEN'S APPLIANCE
• SERVICE
985-3561

We Service All Makes
I/2ZI181"" ·

I~

J&amp;L

run•. broken updev1will be c~•ged

NOW
PAY
LATER

1- C.d Df ThMiu
2-ln Memory
3 - Annouc:emtnts

4- 0i......y

5-Hoppy Ado
1- loat 1nd found

Ml:rchnmli:,e
51 - Household Goods
&amp;2- lponlnt 0 1
53- Antillue•

Wilh

1 1- Help W1ntac:l

1 2-lituetfon Wanted

13- lniurance
14-IUIIn•s Training
11-8chooh: • Instruction
11-Rotllo, TV. CB Rtpok
17-MI•c.n.n.oua
18-W~ntld

To Do

21 - lutln•s Opportunitv
22-Monett to LOMI
23- ProfMIIon.. S•vic:ea

Willi

56-Pitt for Sete
!57- Mulicelln•trum"'t'
&amp;8 - Frult• • Vq...bl•
159 - For s... or Trede

Crlllit
IM•oot
1919

He

POST

f;•rr'l SlliifliiP;;
/1, LIV!!,I1,1.k

32-MobileHom., tor Sale

33-P•rtTtt tor •~•
34-lustn•• luldingt

35-Lott • Acre19e

61 - Fifm ,Equipm•t
&amp;2- Wantld to Buy

SER~ICE

83- li¥eltock
64-Hay &amp; .Grain ·

We can repair and rt·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
alsO' acid boil and rad
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Ta ..s.

8&amp; - S.Id &amp; Fertliler

f I nllSporldiiPil
71-Autoe for Slle

72 - Trudtt for s ...
• 4 wo·,
74-Motorcycl•
75- loatt &amp; Motors tor Sale
78-Auto P•t• • Acc•110ri•
77- Auto Aeplir'

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport,

78-C•ri'tping Equipment
79- C•"P•• 6 Motor Homes

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVllE, 01110
. 614·662·3821

...

Equipment Dealer

82-Piumblng • H1alng ·
83-bc..,lting
84- EIIIftriCII &amp; Refrig•ation
85-Gen...e Hauling
81-Moblle Home R-.,•lr

Without Moticel

1·3·'16-lk

LINDA'S
PAINTING
lhiiiOI-IITIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
la.. tilt pain aut •f
pallltllla. Let 1t1t da

It for reu.
,
YIIY IIASOIIAilE
NAYI·fi-CIS

614-985-4180

.'

992-5114

·Located Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rta. 7 &amp;

143. Pomeroy, Oh.

LH10 M. Murphey
Fr•-la•e Writer

Orders In Now.
AUNT TE'S

S,..hes,
Computer Graphics,
Public llllatioM,

992-5119

Adwwtislng

o.

GUN SHOOT

Sorwkt , .... "" . , .
S. 7 Fln.,clng on Y.-rlme..
SotY!M on All
We H - ._/Ditc/1

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

Preducts

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST ENI)

Ph-:
-~
614-992 ·3643

22 Amnto

NEW &amp; USED MOWEIS

$14 PER TON
DEUYEIED TO

OHIO
PALLO
COMPANY

RACINE, OHIO

POMUOY; OHIO ·

992-6.61

.1·19-lllfn

TO Close Out 19~8, Some Car Dealers Will Have AS.aJ' ...
Not Jim Cobb·Chevrolet • Olds • CadiUac, Jim Cob~ .WiU Have

HUDNALL
PLUMBING

'·

&amp; HE~TING
168 N•th S.and
Middleport, Ohio 45760

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•

We Corry flohlng
Pay Your Phone

C1ble BOla H•re
' JustNESS PttONE
I

(6141 H2-6550 :
RDIDINaPHONE '
(6141

SPEtiAL HOLIDAY SMOWTli4ES ...

JUST OP.ED

CAKES
by Donna
SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES

Birthdays. Holidlya
Sl*liallrlng In
character end nowlty
cak11 ·

••· 1, ...

n•, vw..

.

CHIPWOOD.
POLES

~

Munleloatllng~s
Modern Gut1
·s

Dealer for
YAIDMA• &amp; ECHO

8

ante

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

124 Eatt of lutlantf
Acrots Happy llellow 1~.
Ph. 614··J~~r.tJIIS

SHEETS ........... 40 1 lb.
CLEAN ALUMNUM
CAST ............ 35 1 lb.
ALUMINUM
CANS ........... 42 c 111.

8

Get Your
Holiday Goodie

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

lb.

12 11·118 1

Lo...M Holfwoy
- - R.t. 7 8o Buhon.

.

#I COPPER .... 83'
CLEAN ALUMINUM

mo. d.

EVERY SUNDAY

Guns·,_·

B7~Upholotery

(SulljKt Ia Change

Far• E•alp•.-t
Part• &amp; Servl11

PH. 949·2969

MODliN GUN
SUPPUES

81 -~ Hof'fte lmprovement•

Paying today ·
Dec. 12, 1988.

Bush Hog Farm

HOME BAKED
GOODIES

TERRI

HILLSIDE MUIZLE
LOADI.G

IECY~LING
OPEN 7 DAYS .
9AM·7PM •

Authoriru John
Deere, New Hollond,

11 ·71

lijpiilll

41-ForU••

Free Estimates
CaH 992·2n2 .

Til· COUNTY

BOG·GS

11-19-'18 I

·3e- R. .1 Ettate w_.ttd

41-Equipmlftt tar Rem

Roofi
Seamless 'lfutter
Replament Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

1/15/~n

73-V~na

31 - Hom• for Sele

Mastic &amp; Certainteed'
Vinyl Sidin1

C. .t f•ncing

t .:'l·lilylllllli
~IIVII:l'S

INSUlAnON ,

IO"fo Down

64- MIIC. Merch..-.diM
&amp;lli - luMding Suppli•

~~~~~~t 1 c

~
I t
~
, . . . ll"tl·+"' ~ol&lt;lll

oa 111KIS

-FlU ISTIMATIS-

16·20 WORDS

41-Hou.., tor R•nt
42-MobileHDmee for Rent
43-Fermt for f\ent
44-Apart""'" for Rent
45 - FumiiMd Roomt
41-Space for."ent
47- W.nted to Rent

1~7-C'IOivllo

Get Retallt flit

·' \

;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii-

1VMH presentation

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work

· RATES
0·15 WORDS

WANTED

•Will Oo HouHng With

'

1 - W.ntMI to Buy

•A ela11Hiect ach'ertilrtment piiCid ln TheDIIttr leritinll I•·
c1pt - cl•-'flld d6spl.,, •~•"'•• C.rd ancflllll nOiicel)
will 1110 IPP•• in the Pt. Ple. .nt """'-' . .d the 01111·
poMa Dally Tribune. reeching over 18,000 hom•.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

wor k session. The 28 members
a nd guests exchanged recipes.
Mrs. La r ry Hill, president, an·
r10unced the next meeting for
Jan. 3 at 7 p.m . at the Long
Bottom Community Building. At
that time Linda McCoy will have
a program on garden designs:

•

7-Yirtl s•efpltld in ,acWance)
8- Publlc I lie &amp; Auction

H1'py Ada
YlniiJIIIi

In Memoriam

S3,000

·: Orange and lemon pomanders
;. using cloves were made by
· mernbers or the River Valley
:Herablist Club at a meeting held
:at the Royal Oak" Resort and
. hosted by Mrs. Horage Karr.
: A potluck dinner preceded the

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

·

d• aft• DUblicllkm to..,... correetion.
•Adt th• mutt be peld in 1dvan~ ••

RATE 8.00°/o-8.30°/o ~=AL

:Herb Club meeting held recently

Of

•Aacetve t.IO disr;ount for adl paid in Hvanee.
•Free Ids - Oivuway end Found adl unci• 15 wordt will be
run 3 dl¥1 .t no ch•O•·
•Price of 1d for all cepit81 1•••• ia double price of td cost.
•7 potm Nne tv!M,Oftty u.M.
·
•SMtintl it not r•pont•l• for errorsefter flrtt d.,. CChec:k
tor errart firlt dJit U runt in,..,). Cltll blfoM 2 :00p.m. ·

A tribure to the late. Evelyn . asked for 10 dozen cookies from
speaker and talked on raising
of herb use In their childhood.
:Gall Knight, long-time member the chapter for the Ohio Confer·
herbs for crafts and cooking. She·
The closing prayer was by
·of Return Jonathan Meigs Chap· ence In March.
. gave a brief commentary on
acting chaplain Mrs. Gary
'
.ter, Daughters of the American
Notes ofthankswerereadfrorn
ancient plant medicine books,
Moore. A Christmas theme was •
;Revolution, was given during the the state vice regent. Three
noted that Meigs County now has
carried on the refreshment table.
-recent chapter meeting held at names were presented for rnern·
an herb club, the fourth In Ohio,
:Crace Episcopal Parish House, bershlp and was accepted pend· and extended an Invitation to the
' '
;Pomeroy.
lng filing of papers with the
members.
MINIMUM [)EPOSIT
• ·U was noted that a memorial National DAR.
In l)er program she talked
,,.,
:Service for Mrs. Knight had been
Mrs. Robert Ashley reported
about a variety of common herbs
on ·a meeting held in Columbus and their uses and displayed
held on Dec. 4.
; Mrs. James O'Brien, Mrs. concening the closing of court· craft Items Including wreaths,
OF SOUTHEASTERN..OHIO,, N, A, ..
:clinton Fisher, Mrs. Gerald house records . She reported that
baskets, and other arrangements
·Powell, . Mrs. Pearl Mora , and records will remain open In
made using herbs along with pot
The Bank That Ma,kes "~&lt;Things
,Happen
:Mrs. Geroge Morris were hos- accordance with recent leglsla- pourrls.
.1,
1
j
' .~
'
i
'esses for the meeting conducted live action.
~rs . Dwight Milhoan, regent,
-by Mrs. Dwight Milhoan,
Mrs. Gene Yost reported that also talked on medicinal quail·
GALLIPOLIS
'::';,
· MIDDLEPORT
,president.
gifts, books and magazines,
ties of herbs and displayed
Mrs. Ron Reynolds was re- shoes and clothing had been sent several bottles of medicine from
•
992-&amp;661
360 2nd Ave~ GaiHpolis, Oh.
1x&gt;rted Ill. Officers' reports were to the Chillicothe Veterans
the former Sansbury Drug Co. In
446·0699
Middleport. Those attending told
. ,
:given, and Mrs. Ruth Moselr, Hospital.
Mrs . Connie Hill, was the t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;
'
;59utheast District director,

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES
. STARTING
JANUARY 2, 1988

Bu$iness Services

• The· Area's
Number ·1 Marketplace
. .
.

paid.

The Daily.Sentinel-

Ohio

Classified

Werry, Bonnie Krautter, Zora ·
Rawson Debbie Rawson and
Josiah, .'Kyla Sellers, Lori Raw·
son, Teresa Van Cooney, Candy
Harrison, Unda Mayer, Pam
Foreman, Betsy Hawthorne and
Dyana , Sheryl Roush, and ·
Derek.
Sending gifts were Marie Thomas, Ann Cozart, Evelyn Lan·
nlng, Lori Thomas, Pam Sellers,
Anita Kennedy, Tanna Kennedy.
Marie -Rea, Velsla Roush, and
several fellow employes at the
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.

Melinda Dunn was recently
honored with a layette shower at
the Middleport American Legion
hall. Cindy Brown, Jo Ann
Willford, and VIcki Hoffman and
Darlene Dunn, sister-In-law of
the honored guest hosted the
shower.
A hobby horse theme was
carried out In the colors of pink,
blue and yellow .
Attending were Donna Tho·
mas, Reva Bunce, Linda Dunn,
Brenda Cunningham , · Paula
Brown, Alteen Wehrung, Judy

1988 ..

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

2 H.O. FREE with coupon end purchoe of min. ·
H.C. l'ackege. Llmi1 1 coupon parcuttomerper
bingo -•lon.
WE PAY *50.00 PER GAME
OVE!R 10 PEOPLE '1111.00 PER GAME

531 JACKSON

PIKE
RT ,'JS WEST
Pf'ioM 448·45.24

ROUSH
CONSTRUOION

OWNER: llfll&amp;· L IOUSH

'

'-

..

. ' Dorothy Bryant who fell near
the Middleport Post Office re·
cently had some outpatient wrist
tutgery at Veterans Memorial
¥ospital, Tuesday.

CUSTOM UT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

.CUITOM KnCM8tl • IATHI
•EX11NIIVI A•ODILING
.YINYL IIDIN8 • ROOPINB
eMDAL IUILDINOI

·ClAfiRfD AD!

·Personal note

· BISSELL
BUILDERS

HOUIINQ .liT. PROJECTS

SINCE 1969

DIISIY ST. STUC.SI

992-76 1

"At leoiOIItllllsPrias"

Pl. 949-2101
or Ia. 949·2860
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY
. CAW

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
coNsnucnoN
Formerly Mlfg1 Excavlltlnt

full Excavating and Construction
Residential • Commercial
free Estimates for Residential •
Farm Work
Rt. 1, Vinton

388-8746

Owner 8a Oper1tcir,
Tony Cardillo

YOUNG'S

WOOD STOVES '

CARPENTER
SERVICE ,

CH€RISH- ME:MORIE:S · O~

•12 Vi,ara Experience

-Ad-

45 DIFFERENT W.OOD

Md Jomodollnt
-Roofing end gutter work

.STOVES, INSERTS AND
FUINACES

-conawteworlc
-Plumbing end llect"-1

.CHRISTMAS

work

(FREE ESTIMATES!

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

11-1-1 mo.

Fel!lurlngr Conoolldated, P. .. tch
. Weot, Bruneo, Aohley ·
LOWEST PRICES .
WE TRADE

CARPEN'Tftr OHIO IOH St. lt. 143)

691-6121

.FIREWOOD

9.95°/o
FIXED
RATE
.fiNANCING

'Nirh eve&gt;ry disc or roll of
color prlnr fllm broughr

In '"' pro&lt;es.slng.

OHer good Thru Jan. 10

on Tbese

oDlscounts
,00 supretnes\ 1988 &amp;: 1989
cutlass

PLUS! When You Purchase One Of These Cars
12 OR 15.EXPOSURE • 24 OR 36 EXPOSURE

50¢

OFF

$100 OFF

At This Price FREE 2 ROUND TRIPS AIR FARE TICKETS To
Anywhere Delta Flys In The Continental U.S.!

OLDSMOBILE
CUSTLASS
FROM

l

$35 &amp;t~J:fo
BILL SLACK
992-2269

Public Nvtlce
,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIAllY
On De-Hr 14, 1IIBB.

In the Melp County Probe,.
Caur1. c - No. 28104,

Chari- Cr...,eeno, 201

Glenn

Drive, G.lltpolio,
Ohio, 41831, wu IP·
pointed EQCUtrtx &lt;!f-1.. H·
we af Euren• J, Thomu,
d-Id. 1... of R.D . 1,,
Lonv Bottom, Mel110 Coun·
ty, Ohio, 41743.

I I - E. Buclt.
P~Jud..
t.an, K. Nlllllrlllld. C.... ,
(1 21 20, 27: 111 3, 3tC&gt;

COUCH
LOVESEAT
2 CHAIRS '100
ELEC~EI~
PEDDUI, nlil
AND SEAT
FilM •eoo
1 ACRE OF GROUND
SUIDIVISON
!5,000

992-2 71

• •Point Pltulnt, WV •Gallipolis, OH •W!kldleport, OH
J

$11~58

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

Business Services ,

LATEST

•VINYL SIDI"'G
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
.... ._.lhlllt

Jl. &amp; MISSY
FASIIOIIS,
T.L.C.
21 Yro. Exp.

H. STYUNG &amp; TAIIIIIIIG
GlUT ClaiSTIIAS GIFTS
GlUT PIKn • Gin
(IITIICATU

R•...... -

fOP OF 1111 nAIIS

Good Retu

" f - f!iltlmtt•"

...s..,_.,

Pl. 94,-2101
or .... 949·2860

IISIIMI IOUIIQUI

Ill SltfiiAY tAUS
3-ll·tln

12·5-11-1 roo.

ALARM

SYSTUIS
...etldentlal '
eCtmlfterclal
10 Y•ra Exptrl•nce

HUNTER
SECURITY

614-992-5952
ll·t-1•11. ....

111w..

992-·710

SIULL ENGINE
REPAIR

GUN

.....

. UCI.

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

Authorlllll Senice

. . lift.
IVdt . ~

Brt~~t~•lnrtan
T_
_.
WMIIIEMir
H-.1...

SAT. fiGHT

J _....

'!~~· .

YALLIY LUMIER

....,.rt,

I SUPPLY '

12. Gauge
- ~~';.cw'
Sfrktly I

"

.'
'•

Ohl•
....11 .,

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Television Listenin1 ~Ices
Dependable HNriol Aid, Sills &amp; Servic4
ClJ ·Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

-rz: .Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

992-6282
'

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104

:1 417 Second Av111ue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, lllio 45631
or at

319 So. 2nd An.

Middleport, Ohio

Veterans Memorial Hospital

. lulbeny Hats. Pomeroy, Ohio

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Shop
Where

Santa

SYIACUS~ OHIO

M.., Fortlgn ond
Dom-lc Yehlclu
AIC StNice
All Mlljor • Minor
.
R...ol..
NtASE Cert- ..lc

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

Certlflu

Shops!

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

GLAII

CUPIOARDS
BEDS

WICKER
·QUILTS

CLOCKS
CHAIRS
"the Gjju Tloar Never

lilt L IUIII

PIE SAFES

PRIMITIVES
TABLES

992·2526

CLOWNS

MARCUM CONTIACTING

Collectors of
E111111itt l(llly Jr•
IIMIIil EDmON

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDmONS

50°/o
TO 75°/o

SAVE

CHISTII, OliO

oKitCHINI·IATHI
•RGOPINO
•REMODELING. REPAIRS
Pt1C1NE DAY 01 EYU.GS

915-4141
GENEIM. CONTIACTOIS

1 1-11-'BB·tfn

'"· 1

r.

•

.

�Tuasd-y, December 27, 1988

Pomeroy-Midclapon, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

33

Farms for Sale

Mln~Farm.

Oood ...,. holM.

128.800. Coli Mtdlod ot 114112-21C3 0&lt; 114-812-13T3
olt•I:OO.

2

Fat a • • ..,0111 n• orUIId

I_..._
n..,

*•

.
Nco
good Col
- 304"
.....
..... ........
8104. ., 17•1- or

.,.,rftlnl • ,_..,

AM ·,M. Cl.llr, •c.oond,
13,100.00 Firm. 304-1713188.

.....
......................
"He Just
.
said his very fli'St

fmol do= Poltingon Coli
114-448.

.._

o~v.,.,.,

•

tof004ho,...1 mile
1 fomole Dobormon lllioh

doll Col - - I AM-8 PM,
114-28 .. 1CC1.
llamd llltt-Off•-ond
componlonohlp. 114- 1127312.

6 Lo.t and Found

.."'-•Colt
-··

lt-1.1

wor d s

wa
' nt

'I

-

mommy!'"

my

Il-...;;,;;,;.;;.;;,;;,;;;;;;,;;::.;____r.;:;;:;;;~~;:;==1

__........

LOST: llhrw ring wkh Rubr
. . . . t.o.t In . . . . ....,.......
114-448-7138.

FOUNQ: Cor ~GMC. In Municipal - g loL Thursdor·
Doc n . ldoritlflo .. tho cay

....,....

11

..

Help Wanted

ll ...... oC.o Glwor. Quolll. .

.....
"''*'* ................
lng- • - end"' • - h

UP TO 111 HOUR PIIOC!IIING MAIL WI!EKL'I CHECK
GUARANTEED. FREE DE·
TAILI, WRirE. ID. 1017 W.
Plllloddphlo. BuHoU..OD,Ont•lo. Coli. 91712.

Nlllod lldd. MUll hwo . , .
rllnoe tn ofllae skill.
rii.We liW p •loft tnd t:ae
wMing to warll "-Ill• houn
ln.clngwllllll,.. An E.O.E.
IIIIVm.llllooiiH--kod
1tr o....ber 31, 1888 to P.O.
lo• 722. Pomeroy. Ohio
Cl718.

h••

DIRECTOR OF TOUIIIBM
SOUG111'

Hcmas for Rent

Nlooly t.r•hod omoll '-'"·
Aduho onl¥- Rei . . _ h
. od. Ne
eo• 11 ... - . - .
31R., AC, ....... pool. ......

-

2 • •Col
- · A-1
""•llod
- d!IIIII
~o ...
lion.
304-87.8104
I'IMII S..b.·C Ill., til boo•
P._ 118
'""'0"- No - Dop. • Rof.
114-448-0271
I PM.
· - oftw mo.
Col

m- ..
-~-

--ony-

tlou
.. 7 · - un*'rnl&amp;hod.
12211. 28 Noll A.... Oolllpollo,

Coi448-CC11oft•7PM.

3 Ill . doullla EICII. concl
Acrou from Oolllo ,.........,,

1210 ,.. mo. Col 114-CC&amp;0041., wodl- oft• I PM .

-""·

Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction

-

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

9

3114-773-1711.

Wanted To Buy

TOP CAIN plld for '83 -dol

n•• uud
luldl-l'ontloc. 1811

.nd

Cln.

Smith

Eo•wn
Avo.. Gollipallo. Col 114-4482282.

Wanted

16

.. ,....

Instruction

trl81 ,..lfttenMce Work•l.
N~• 'buUMdDr....

18 Wan1ed

1----------

:..:=...........

121\1o loa. E..... ~»nd.. 2111 ..
oqulppod ldtdlon. olr. A,..llllo
. Nov. 111. · - ..... clop. Col
114-448-010301"448-2118.

---~-

.

mtnt. In town. C.rp•ICI. Adult•

onlv. No plio. Col 11C:.cc•
Ce81.

42 Mobile Homes

..-.---,--=,.,----21
BUIInOpportunity
I NOTICE I

SNAD'I LAWN
728
-ndA... F.... hodolll.,._
......1 . e171 ......

Col 114-448-UII or 448C788.

2 Br. moble home. Some

........,

46 Fumist,ed Rooma

Tnln. unlirnl&amp;hod. oouploo.
amlll chi*'" acceted. Rt. 1.
loCOIOI llood. Pt.Pit, -lnd
Kelt 304-17.1071.
• 171.00 .,dup~month pluo
........ 304-171-1112 .. . ,..
3800.

Avw..

iecond

Golt!t... ,,. • .....

Utlltt• Dlld. lln..emll• Sh••
bot I&gt; CoM 4*44"1hftw7PM.
Roo"" tor rtnt·WIIk ur month.
liMing Ill: e120 I mo. 0.111
Hotii-814-CC.. SIIO.
'
•riiPing. rooma
w•h
oooWng.
AlloTrol•
-A
I_
__
CAll oft• 2D.m. 304-7731111. M•on WV.

THE 0110 VAI.LE'I PUILIIII46 Sp- for Rant
ING C O . - - · - you
do ..... .h
you 141.70 trill• wll:h 3 roarM
10locl•noododlort&amp;lophonl ... dNOTto-tlmon. •200. e ml• out
-MUII-Wol: 2 1 - -gllthomol-youhwo ldded
Crob c..-. Coli 304-17&amp;- Cou..... Mobile Homo Pork.
•lloloiiO 1:00 om-2:30 ..... ............. h o - ·
30CC.
Aoute .,3, North of fla"'-.o¥.
4.-()0.1:00 pm. Good hourlr
lilts, ,......, 1*11. uta Cell
plld -1¥: •PI¥ oft•
.. 3 ••oom .., ..eab'lc moil.. 114- H2-7471.
10:00 . . Thu...,, Doc 1 ..
,_,,..
•200.00
month
r
.._.
10CI't
(up~roJ Mlln lt.,
' .. MobHe home tot.. tot: II el.ctrlc.
- - · 304-17-.40U.
hook up. Pl'r' uwn Ul•l-.
depoolt roqulrod, 304-871AVON. Lown wlclo you -••
Apartment
3000.

,_

.

for Rant

Wontte--o7CoiAMen- "' 114-81~ .,.
2,..3 .
7111.

..---;;n:::z:==...
=-~
-01181
r'IVIW

Services

A....m.... .a.
ooneu... •m•¢ ,..,....._

31R.-I c..ut It Kltcllon w•h

lnt-

r•

PMI-tlri&gt;oMLTfor "'1¥ oqulppod
l'hyololon'o Oftlco '-"IIOriiOIVAOPIY I l l - to Tho -ell
Philo. 203 .-,.., Pllto bo- AVONoii•-IIIINrl.,lp..._

Vooy-lvobrldo4--

:30-=C::30=.
====-+=30:;4-;1~=1=4=D=-'";:-:;;.8,;;
-

p
l -.forlllll
......_ Olk
lorgo
living
room,
30ft. -·~
.......

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

Wllh • •

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

""Idly tl-hod 1 Br.. 218
81oto. UIOO o mo. •.O deD. 0
moo. .... Udltl• aolcl Aduho
onlv. Coll14-448-3887.

u••••

· - - .... - - - l l n l l h Furnllhod ... 1 • . 701
pol&amp; c.1
lonill. .od loL 4 ml• 11-om FaurttL 0210.
C4t-CC11 oft• 7 PM.
- · Noopllol off Ill 31114-448-4111.
0&amp;11

THE BEST

--..ok ··--

........"bol_..,.

5

tlly o.p•od (lomo ...,, C

2 - - ........ for .....

· Nllturel
u.... ..,..
- -.,,,...
WOo
ClrD•od. NlcOIMtlnt lou"*f
tanner.

--

Pttcod to 111. Col 814-448- f...... ........... Col 814-

ISA
WANT AD

0278 Ill• 8 PM, - -

912-3711 . EOH.

One MDnth Frw Ain't

3 lA .' '-'"· dlluu, AC. •
• poci-SIIoorTndo. Clll . I!Ouoo.
good locotlon. Col 304-17~
1104

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

.......
., .......
dlled.t•lll••dMIIment.e•
lnlyrecuee. I room hDu• with
~

49

For Leeee

....
Col .......
. ,.........
·
- ·No
· ·p...
· · 1210
.
4128.

-1¥ nmodllod 1 Ill . . . .
pooltlono _..,., wlh
notloMI •rp.-bMo POf • Mory L-Piono • Mgon 1oo- · tlrnll-ldedloOIIIon-1
· 1. . . . . . . . • ben_.
~ ........
oono. CoM
114-448-1717 or blil&lt;* 11-om
COl
CGiiWI
114-448-CI38.
Mo.MUIIbofrooto_llio_ - - - - - - - - - - wodl- onl\tJ. Fa&lt;
Noo3111.dupl•""nnt""odl: Mr. - · · alii co Tv•Thurs
from Oollo Acodomr Nigh
8:00 o.m.. 7:00 p.m. ot 1 - loliooL unlirnl&amp;hod-1210. ~- ·
523-1114 .. t•-712-1101
!lolly t.rnllhod- 1271, fully
IHI••porloncoholjitllllutnol
tur•....,.••o. DIDolll
.n.ae~IIIYJ. ,.._. ell on or
before Thurtdn, O.oember
. . ~·- Coll14-448-004loft•
I P'M or wtlk~ndt.
21th. 1188. E.O .l . M.f.
31 Homas for Sale

r

t l r - vi- rrf ...... F"'¥
o.pllod, • • - far Hlo or
rllll P~Cid In 30'r. lout_..
bla Coii14-812-18C7oft• 3

Quolllod ....... poy . . .
Dopooltondnonnttor'lho
month. Docombor • JMuory
onl¥. VII
end
llvnldo Aport- In
MldciiDOit- From 1182.
114-HI-7717. EON.
:::
.--:..,-:S-:-tr..:..._-::.:M-::Iddi=:-:::10.::.__01~-0h:::-:.:.
.
2 _ _ ..... hod ..........
utlltl• DlkL ,.,.,'"~ PIMrne
304-812-281&amp;

Ill-"'

or...,,..,. onWMk....

.. 3 bodi-11 ' - • · """
027,000.00.30'4-S7.. 3738of- .. 2-oom.-. .hod . .ogo
•• 4:00 ,M,
... ..,_~• md teaurlt¥ d•·

•11o. Mlitlrlll··- ........

•u. -

ful
1'78. end
'"- OuNn- UID. up.
King UIO. 4 - - 1 8 1.
G... - - •• ,, • 10 '""

-·mild

op-

80 Doyo . . . . • - h with
ororlh. 3 M•• out
........ lid. o~ .. to hm
Mon. tlwu Sot. Ph. 114-CCI-

0322.

VIII..-Furnlturo
,.._ •d uud ilrnllure and
oppllcon-. Coli 11C.CCI·
7172. ~....1.

121111 Wlnoton 2 Ill .. E..._
.....
fliiOO " " " ' - Col
114-448-7104

hot-···-

fiiiF ... aaad 1211M.IIaftte

!•.. -114--1110
•d

.... 114143-1408
...... ....
Donny.

.... •d loL "No100
mor• or Ill&amp; In MkldiiPOft. 2
boot- MIOO. 114-81:Z.
1111.

z --

121110.
104-17.. 2722.

.,100,

-

PICIIENI UI!D FUIINITUIIE
Comploto hou-ld furnlll&gt;
lngo. \1o mllo-Jorrloho. J04-17&amp;1CIO. 114-388-9773,

Graom end

luPPI¥ Shop-Pot

Grooming. All brMdl ... All
otylol. 1 - Pwt Food Dod•.
JulleWolili Ph. 114-448-0231.

0.0."""""

Cottory lllnnll.
CFA P. .l11t •d 11.,., kit·
- . AIIC Claw pu....... Now
Nlmol- ·lllttono.
8144*38"" Ill• 7 PM.

·Colt

..

.....

63

Antiques

AUCfiON I. FURNITURE 12
Olivo lt.. GoKipoll.
NEW· 8 pc. wood 11""!1&gt; 1311.
Living room ...... 1119-.189.
8unlc- wkh lioddlnlt t2CI.
Full olrl m.,.,. 1. toU.-Ion

=:;:~;'tn"'· llocllnoro

~ll,

•11

WHY DOO'f '100

®C.,_.
i!J-VIca
.. "1!1 Croak and Ch. .a

J~p·~,

FRANK AND ERNEST

Bu....,

64 Misc. Merchandise

•

Wh-llr•now or uood. 3
Wt..f.t .. IICII:rlo IIIDDtera. Clll
llo- Moblty-. 1·114170-H81.

Fir-"" ...

Musical
Instruments

'

Auto Parts

8a Accaeeorias
.

1!9Binst breast cancer.
81]) Collaga llokatbl I
all • 1!21 Dirty Denclng Max
discovers he can'l afford 1o .
run 1he lodga with a lull staff .

.• -·

Nil 114.

lmllonglno-lorMiaCol
·114-21 .. 1411.
"
Mllld-wood-- 112.,.
bu...._ Contolnlng opproo. W.
ton. Ohio Pell.. Co., Pomeroy,
Ohio. 114-812·8CI1.
.

c-.
ony-

~-

oub • - door "" odo.
..28.00.
chllill ond ch*- lolld mopla 114112-3418 oft•lp.m.

wen:

•••ono. be·
glnnon. - · guhorllt. INI-

lndvlclill guhr

"Ill ~;u

r

1111 111::

,\ l:vl:,t:ILh

81 Farm Equipment
1 l"xr track door. 1·3' &gt;Mik
cloor: ICI98 Ell ECfED. Iron
NO&lt;oolldn. Coli 81C.332·9745
CoiiOO!. •

· - 4 unllllollond
monuro
tpr_..,
Dll•elrftlfk
...
COO golon Mull• llllk tMk.
. _ 18 It POll unloodior, 4
IK&gt;ttomJohnO..oplow. PriCid
roooonoble. Coli 114-2415221
.
FormEqulpmMI. 211orT-a&lt;o.
Howwd Rot.vetort. Bled•.

!='":.:.:"..::'.:... ~~:

Uve.tock

81 .._..,....,.'::"" Ohio
....,
..Whlrpoolauto al01t. wMtw,

IURPLUI ·Origlnll """'· 0.
nlm. 11-ot. Cilrh., Clinhlnt
USA J .....o - . o - Co-

up--

--- • l'r:od olgn wMh I•·

~= ~..-.,_- =~- ~t.

A - Llvolloiillllol-. AlbonySde wory loturdoy- 1 PM .
U.Miock occoptod oft• 4 PM
ovory Fridor. 1 mHo ••• ol
AllilnY on St. Rt. 10. CoM
814-512·2322. 898·3U1

.........

66 Building Suppllea
lulhlng MMorl.
llo..._
pip-. wln-r.lr&amp;toll.otc.Cioildo,.._ lllo - · D. Col 1142 ....1121.

brt..._ -

RON'S Television Service.
Hou•• clllt on RCA. Ouulf, ·
GE. S!!... allng In Zon~l\ CoH
304-571-2398 .. 014-44..
2484.

• Clt•nll Ruetlo

·Doole-a-...
-

CETIDE, INC.. Guollly
A-..114184-31171

~

&amp;:30

SHE:: 511.'1'5 ALL LITTLE 60'rS

MY~NDMA

8344.

~~~c~DY,WNKEMPTAND

. DOeSN'T LIKE
LITTLE- 6QY6.

ILL-MANNERED.

5HES6T'ILLWDATMY
~~~~~~EoRESECAU~~HE
W/&gt;6A LITTLE 130YONCE.

Rotory or coblo tool drllln"

m

MOlt weh compl•ldt.-nedll;'.

Pump HI• .,d-...loo. 30489.3802

IIJJ Evening
-Chua
·
12!1
Croak and

houM clll t.-vldng OE. Hot
PDinl,
hert. dry•• 1n d

w•
....... 304-57.. 2388

10:20 ill MOVIE: Thll Dmtgl Men
iPGJ11 :38)
10:30 (I) ~lght of the Godl CoiiHn
Dewhurst narralas the story
of GrHk artists' saarch tor
the truth ol nature, by
portraying the humen body
as nature created 11.
·
Ill [J) R - n • Roseanne
contronta Dan abou1 sharing
domastic rasponslbllltlos. (R)

BARNEY
"SHOT,UN SNA'"

Ak. . Tr• Trimmng.nd Stump
Remove!. Fr• niimlt•.
304-871-7121.

C•"

IS SACK IN TOWN
AN' l'M LOOKIN'
FER THAT

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

VARMINT!!

HE'S
LOOIUN'
FER YQU
TOO,
SHERIFF!!

"OL' SHOT,UN" SAYS
HE'S GOT A SCORE
TO Sml! WITH YOU
FER SENDIN' HIM
UP TH' CREEK

fi12!1 I!JJVtciiOCountry
Odd

Ch.,...

..••

Bernice Bede Osol
85

OJOur.
'Birthday

General Heuling

1187 Olill. Cololl. 19,000
IIIII• n.ooo. Col 114-2e&amp;1C1o.
,.,. .. 1101110 Only 4.100
ml•••
••
21 II..
IIUionWia . _ , •I •• ..,,..
T0¥010

- .... liolh ,_.,with·-·
I . •• oookiiOW. e• or tleatrla
I , _ . . . . . . .,I.WIIool
orlllc. . AUTOMOIIlE
IN N A TRADE. Coli d_,o
114-448-7191........ 8144C&amp;-8138. Trwll when you

~

-...

1171111111111

c........ Coro~

.... - - 38Q. outo. 11,100. Col
..,_.""" I I . . . 114-446-

J a J W•• S.Vk:e. l~immlng
D001t. ciet•na. weh. Ptt. 814-

241-92815.

A • R Wilt• Service. Poolt,
oltterne, w .. lt . lmmedltte1,000or 2,000gollonadolillory.
Coli 304-171-1370.

Wettetlon't Water Hauling.
rtMonlble Ntll. volume dlt·
ODU .... 2,000 to •• 000 Ctp_.

hv.clotwno.-.-. otc.

30 ... 87.. 2811.

87

Uphol.tery

M'""'""'' Uphollt..,a .....a
trl oouneyerN 23yMrS. The bell
"fhollt...

e CoR
304· 1715 - 4 154 for free

In _,, ...,.

ettlm••·

-----·-- ....

·

-~-

' -.

PISCES (Feb. :ZO.IIIerch 20) The onus
may be on you to make a ra1her dlfflcull
decision today. It you're tlrmly con·
vlnced ~ 11 1he bell lor all concerned,
abide by your ludgment.
O.C.27, 1 Alltlll (IIMch 21•Aprll 11) Slngtenln the year ahead you should ~a.. op- ol purpoae Is .aantlel 1oday when In·
portunl11es to expand and build upon valved In W0&lt;1hwhlle projecta. Meaning·
tounda11ona you ha.. al1'1111dy laid. What tul achle..men1s are possible It you do
apperred 10 be lmpolllble lut year wm not allow side lntal'ft11 to dle1ract you.
now be within the rcelm ot probabllly. TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Let your .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jon. 11) Ras!-d- betler Judgment direct you todl)l In
leu ot how lncon..nlent It might be, 1ry · both commercial and ooclal altuallona.
to honor your proml- and pledges to : Oon'1 go along with lhe group In mailers
the leHer today. Baing a per11011 of your that you do no1 leel """'' your bea1
'
word will enhBnCII your Image. Know lnter88tl.
where 10 look tor romance 1nd you'll 01111.. (Iller 21.Ju• 20)A domN11c
lind lt. The Altr&lt;&gt;-Graph Matchmlker dllrUPtlon may arlae 1oday thll will ••
lnetantly rev- which eigne are roman- quire cool heads on everyone'• part In
tically perfeCt for you. Mall S2 to Match· order to be reeolved properly. Be car•
maker, clo thll nenpeper, P.O. Box . lui that you do not do anything unthlnkabla thai could tuel 1ha flre.
11428, C-and. OH CC101-3421.
AOUAIIIUI (Jan. 20 Feb. 11) Condi- CANCER (olune 21.Julr 22) Take time
tions araextremeiy ur~usual atthllllma, · to weigh _., and ~ alternatl. . 1&lt;&gt;and 11's poulble you mlgh1 reap har·, day befora making 1n Important deciveeta tram fields you have no1 sown. Be· sion. It you lhlnk tN8rythlng through
gratatul tor any opportunities that come ' · pr-'11. the end rwulta should be 10
ou1 ot 1ht blue.
' your liking.

LEO (~ulr 23-Aug. 22) Something un·
expected mlgh1 develop today th•.
could enhance your nnanclel poaltlon.
Be prepared 10 mo.. swiftly, becauae n
may be a neetlng opportunity.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) S~
who Is In your comer and - r to help
you mua1 no1 be contused by your tac- ,

~~ :=;o:·~~rho::,c~~~~: ~~c':~~~ •
~~:R~l=:~ft-Oct. 23) Do not rock
1

the boat 1oday In 1wo critical situations '
lhat are pr1118ii1ly moving along ralhel
smoothly. 11 even1s ara auo- to rur
thalr couraea, you lhould benellt.
8COIIPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) 'lou're n""
·In a cycla - . trlands wm play mol'f
, prominent rolao In your aftlll'l. Tlkead· ·
v&amp;nt11Q8 of any oppor1unHIM you h to e1rengthen your ralatlonlhlpe.
IAGmAIIIU8 (Not. 22 Deo. 21) Sev· erll thlnge are .,.._.tly de\aloplng
that could be of subltanllal benellt to
you In material waya. One, or perliopo
1w0, might 11ar1 emltllng potlttve sig- nals todey.

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTE RS TO
GET ANSWE R
•

BRIDGE

NORTH
11-1'1-U
.KQI087

•

'

.. .

.92
.KJ96t

•n
•Ku
•s

WEST

EAST

+t

.J78542
• K863

!0

.Q107H
72

•As

SOUTH
+AJV8 .5

'

.A lOt
• "J

-.

.QIOS

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Wtst

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

"

Eoat

...

Pllll

Pau
Pau
Opening lead: • 3

., ..
for a diamond discard, so Sollth wu : :
then able to concede a club IORr and
make six spadt:s. Even though South'1. .. •.
play risked going down an extn trick,, • ·
it wu a very reasonable risk. Given.
. that west had found the ltliUng leed, It . ,
. behooved Soutl! to try to salvaae his
·
contract. "I would never have bld the ·
slam without the nine of beerta; : ··
South jested.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

. .....

ACROSS

2 Canal
I Ascertain
('ity
6 Wotan
3 Ballroom
I 0 Brazilian
dance
bird
4 MetrilII Stately
measure
home
5 Citrus
13 Damask,
fruit
e.g.
6 Greek
14 Ritzy
letter
15 Meat cut 7 Pigeon
16Joke
. pea
18Cap
plant
19 Rulfa or 8 Primary
comique 9 V.I.P.
21 Nigerian 12 Unfriendly
22 Boxing
17 Biblical
great
lion
23 Lett
20 Split
Z4 Light
23 "Lulu"
cigar
composer
27 Donnybrook
28 Tilt
29 Spoil
30 German
composer
31 Rurn
slightly
33 S!'a (Fr.)
34 Tllwa•·k
35 Brooks
of •·omcdy

----..

._:--_,
......
..,
·--... '

.. '

24 Uproar
25 Generous
260n horse-

back
27 Artificial
29

Actress
Farrow

31 Sneak

'

32 Correct
a text
36 Dlssim liar
37 Certain ·

look
39 Feather

scarf
41- esprit

i

•

•
•

•••

38 Afric-an

''

anh•lnpe

'•

40 Whit.P

'•

(l aSI'OUS

element ·
43 Stupid
44 Ooze out
45 Presbyter
DOWN
1 Effrontery ·

•
•

•

•

· DAILY CRYPI'OQUOID- Here's how to work II:

11127

'•
•
••
• •

..

• ••

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

•

•

•

•

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

11:308(2) illlllat o.f C.r~on
(!J 8pariiCinter (L)
(l)CIIalrl

,

• «JJ NlwiYwtd Ooma
IIJJ lporta fonlghl
a 021 'Night Hilt' cas uta
Night Klrl&lt;wood goes
undercover 11 a derallct at a
dty ahllter ..(Rl
llJ HIIIOMI ..,_

· apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CII\'PTOQIJOTE ·

LOCH

CRTLEXR

AXRTCL,

TOA

•

~.==r
(I) NlgtiiiiM I;J

(!)llll)nOfl
81]) ll*"tlllroltanl Tonight
8111g1UR.PJ.

MBDVRXL;
•

XRPDXAL

CK

••

L DC R

SK

'•

G RTXI

•

TB D OR

I

••
•

•

CK

AT K L

TOA

CALVIN COOliDGE

- ·- -

'•

••

i!JOnlgnet

.~.

•

SK

•ID Twilight z-

-..

•

ATKL

G D E X L • - C ~ A f-! .l. D 0
P TV R H 0
YeatentaJ'• Crt.......-1 CHRISTMAS IS NOT A·
TIME NOR A SEASON, Btrr A STATE OF MJND.-

. - -·

•

•
•
.
..........

12·27

8 Amlltallll Mlglalna

12:00 (]) hplr Chill It's Only a

ONullllgllt

-

.Q

The aggressively bid slam was cold
' against any lead but a diamond. West
attacked in diamonds since he felt that
a passive lead would let declarer set
up clubs for discards . This was good
thinking. When your opponents have
.shown they have a suit they can use for
discards, it is often right to lead away
from a king or queen, hoping to set up
a trick in time to use it. This is true
even against a slam.
The bidding itself was a simple value sequence. North showed a good club
suit plus spade support. South felt he
had enough extra values to shoot out
the slam and did so directly.
With West's well-judged diamond
lead, South no longer had time to set
up the clubs. Fortunately South had
one last chance. Alter winning the diamond lead and drawing two rounds ol
trumps, South led the queeu of hearts
from dummy. East was obliged to cov-er, and South won the ace. Next came
the
of hearts. This time it was
West s turn to cover In the hope that
East had the nine of hearts. But. nOt 150.
ruffed and returned to h1' band
with a trump. The heart nine was good

42

18 Cllalrl
i1J Mllml VIce 1;1
at You Can Be 1 818r

ShOW

·quoted

pi&gt;plar

11 :00 (]) Remington Steele
Elementary StHie
8(%) (I) 81]) ® . @
IIJ) Newt
C!J Ughter Std• ot lporll
(I) l.lglcy of till Hollywood
IIIICIIHII Look at the
personal 1ragedlas that
re1ulted trom I!Westlga11on
Into Communist activities In
Hollywood. Eumlne 1ho long
term effects ot 1ha hearings.
(!)Sign Oft
IIII!JJ L.a¥1 Connection
IIJl ,._yltna

~~SA"TJ: I;J

chuckl~

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Genius - Stunt - Pouch - Burner - INTERRUPT
Did you ~ notice that the really rude people keap right
on talking while you are trying to 11\fTERRUPT?

Couple

..••

Electrical

e (%) Family Feud
a New Country

g

Trlm!Wna llump
- · •· con 304-87.1331.

&amp; Refrigeration

C

10:00 (]) 700 Club
8 (2) illl Midnight Caller
(I) llJ New•
8 [J) WfiO'a the Bou?
Angela comas to startling
conclualon lbou1 her feelings
for Tony. (R)
ill Ill Moyare Journal
Power ot Myth
«1J llmay MUitr

Fetty •~; Tr•

1212.
ondlwiilod&amp;a,-g

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Pointing: lntllrior I. Extwior.

f I diiSIIIIrld!HIIl

GOVEIINM!NT SI!IZED Voh~
Ill• .... 1100. Fordo. M.--.
corven...
lurplul.
a._. Guido. (11 S0..187IOOO. Ed. 1·10189

. -d

~ency.(R)

(I) (!) The Amarlcon
EapaalaiiCI C
Ill 8 il2l MOlliE: •st. Elmo'•
Fire' CIS TuaadiY Movle!AJ
11:48) 1;1
IIJJ l.arly tong Uvtl
at In the H11t ot tho Night
Bubba thinks he's tound 1he
tova ot his lifo. 1;1
i1J MOVII!: Klute (RJ (1 :54)

1'Vot•pr-·

84

SAM
OLD
IIOUTIIOMERVILLE'I
21.
NIW 111,.: ViVA
8:0~ Qoo. onl\tJ.

- - -·
- n•
..,......
L1110.00, phone 304-

au••·

•

71 Auto's For Sale

a. IJtlit· fm•gonCif Rid
Lono. 2 old. neo. wl
... 110.304-17-.1111.

Unoondltionll Ht•lme

t"' LoOII reftr•cee Unllhed.
Fr• MIImM• ' c.tl d.a!:
1·014-237-0CBI. dor or nlghl.
RogereBitement

CAIITER 'S PWMIING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fou11h end Pine
Qolllpolo, Ohio
Phone 814-44&amp;-3888 &lt;&gt;&lt; 61444 .. 4477

moufl... l•d lllack Wlllltttll.

Mini

rn

·'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

84 Hey &amp; Grain

E._.. . . .. . - . - ......
ldtolion ooblnllo. pip&amp;
.. _ . . . , , _ - - - ' " 304-I~C211. '

For .lc.f~ ...ood. e30. OOiold.
30-1881.

' "
•

82

:.r: Doli--

....."":.".:,~30i"'fi::'itY·

Home

Improvements

'

PlootloiMt-IC7.101ooo. WVo
~-DO--I"I,! 234·21".,34 or Ohio 1·
or
~
far •le - toliuy'lor-•l»•olallloo'o
Pig For1ll, 304-CII-1111

::J lr"" ·

81

.RON'S .IIPPUANCE SERVICE.

v14-742·2841,

Ill&lt;*·
114-112-1017 or
.14-812-3810.

1151 Metlock Ma11ock datends
a man charged with killing_
his vlndlctlva ox-wile . (R) Q
i1J Murder, Slla Wrote
• Naahvlllt 1:05 (I] NIA Beakatbllll
II:GO Profltllonlll Boalng
(I) Maonllllhtlng A model
becomes ihe plll'jner ot 1ho
head ol a da1ec1ive

. l'rM _,lmot01. CoM 114-C4..

63

lo-nodllr_for_ 125

Chlmpklnahlp Seuon IAJ
(1 :49)

•

UTILIT'I ILDG . SPL . ,'
JO'x40'al'8" Cle•~nc.. 1-

NEW- - - - 131.
...,.,.._, 11.1 • up. ~- •
oolt tool. Cllll14-448- 3189 '

""•· 114-892·1302.

(1 :27)

"'"Col 304-17.3331.

- · Muoio. 114-448-0187,
Jeff hy lnltruator•• , ...
"*1077. Llmltod oponlngo.

MOVIE: Clue lPG)

11JJ PrlmeNew•
181 MOVIE: Thot

W.Ve. lnlo ntw bldg,. b¥ Dec.

Mtp •. EJCelf-. concl-

F - Rlnr.luylngold botlorIM. Morrie qu-llutloncl
Ohio 114-742-2411.

fOUf ttr•. Unlroyel Uir8do
10.10 1 11. fllr tiWd, mdlo

.. POOIIIOYS nREI
Moving to 111. 38. N• dnon.

tlon. t211. C.th •d CIJJY.
114-812-1088 on far Dovlcl

Fa&lt; otlo. flr•ood. Mllod hwd
wood. HEAP vouaherl IC•
coptod. Pldo up or dlllv-.
114-742-2C21

uHd
. . .nd TV ltl&amp;
Op.,
to IPM. Mon """
.... 114-448-1181. 127 3rcl
Ave. G'"lpoll. ON.
GOOD USED APPUANCII
w................. - o t . . . .
•••a•- lkoaa• Appll.. - .
Uppw Rlvw Ad. lillldo Stono
c - Motel. 114-448-7388
MOUOHAN FUIIMTUIIE
..COmpl.ollnool-oongo....... vlnyle end
nmo.
CorpM In otock
. Vlnyle
-lngot11H'IIIr In otock
onl\t. Fno _ . . _ no Job to
1.-goor-M. TWo-lono.
122VIond8troot
PolntP-..... W.Vo .
304-17·-·
Ill¥• Rood

i «JJ

IAft hondod ol-lc gukw wMh

80

i)

By James Jacoby

7:05 Cll Andy Grlffllh
7:30 8 (%) NIA llelkatboll
(I) Moneter TNck Challenge,
Part 2 From Indianapolis , IN,:
Part II (T)
(I) E~1artainmant Tonight
IIJ[J)USA Today
® miDl illl Jeoperdyl
mi!JJ M'II'S"H
IIJl Cro01flra
181 Night Court
Ql VldeoCountry
7:36 (I] Blnlord and Son
8:00 (2) MOVIE: Onlonhaad iNAJ
(1 :50)
(I) Neflonal Sports Review'•
1188 Yaar In Sparte (T)
Cll Collage llelkttbaU
(I) (!) Nova Nova reports on
la1est rasaarch In the tl§ht

Compl,.e ihe

."

PRINT NUMBERED LETT ERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

A risky
salvage job

w....

f'OIIuneQ
Ill «JJ '"""'' Company
IIJ Moneyttna

EJ&amp;CIII.-rt condiUon. PwchMid

llborlon Huolly PUPP\'1- Purobrod, bl.·wh.·ol. MHb, blue

e

Cil 81]) Current Affair

a

with the small -

by hll1ng in the m1uing word J
1.-L._L._,l_-~--~--'-.J you develop
fr om step No. 3 be low.

rn SpoltaCantar

1881 DotounCWD. 8odV rougll,
nM clutch .,d brlk•. EJCefteni
Nnnlng oondhlon. t1171. 114HI-2828.

76

I

t:;J

(I) (!) MICHell/ ~oh1'11r
-.Hour (1 :00)
11m
il2l illl
t ot

I

FARELF

mom

saying

always qualad: "Beware of lhe
man who won't be bothered

I---T.IG--'TI-'"'-rl:;......:;l.,.;1-;·, r.-1 O

7:00 &lt;II Our Houee The Haunting
8 (2) PM ~pzlne

1971 Fa&lt;d Bronco 4WD. 381. 4
opd. 12800. con 814-25..
1410.

2

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

8:35 Cll I to 5

Vena&amp; 4W.D.

73

I I I' 1 I
I : .Famous wjsa

a

PICK li«M. UP? .

..1987 GMC pick up
wlh
topper , 24 , &amp;00 mlle1,
tt.aoo.oo. 304-&amp;71&gt;1297.

NEWTIR

...,S::....;,O,.:.:. H.;..I_:T..-Ij __~.!
11- I_ I_" Is_

(!)Nightly Buelnen· Repon
® 111 aJ cas Newa
mi!JJ lHl WKRP In
Cincinnati
IIJ) Showllz Today
i1J Cartoon Eapren
You C~it Be I Star

1187 Hondo Founno. 210 X.

USED· licit, dr...._ bedroom
oultoo. O.ko. -.... ...- . 0
complete- rrf ulod t.rnlure.

County~ ..... , ... Good

1878 Ford F-7150 trudo wMh 14
ft. mldWoot dUmp. 114-!ICll2072.

1984 Fcwd E1 10 CUllom Von.
-Higlil.,d'lllllhoTifrlft, , 10.000 mil•- E -... condiAkC p u - A Clwlot- Gill tio" 17000. 114-H2-1713.
e.•
wlf - - Col 814-317·
012C.
1880 Ford F-210 ploloup. 311
C.l .• utom.tlc.. tourwhNidrllte.
AKC Cocttw Sponlol pupo. 304-411- 1r21.
~·••-1180, · femel•·t200 .
llooc~W lor Chrllt,..o. CoR 11438~1190.
'
74 Motorcycles

67

luy or SilL 111¥-o Aiilt&amp;ju-.
1 12C E. Moln Str... Po-111'·
Noun: M.T.W 10o.m. tolp.m..
1 to IP."'- 11C.8122128.

31 ..8138.

SWAIN

mBody Elactric

up""'"

_

51 Housel1old Goods

Clay Target Shoo11ng
(I) 81]) ABC NIIWI

be·

I n·'n l1

~ Target Slloottng S1arsho1:

1171 Llnooln T-n Cor. 2 door.
l o - 11,400. Firm. Col be3112. 7..,- 1pm (304 882-

BUDGET TIIANSMISSION·
i:,:;";.~""':;tn'"t:";J Uud • rebuilt ol typ1o.
Fa&lt; low prl... onOU- Co...... oft•I:OO'pm
W•-·30 -~ Pri- IH 1.
•
•
up. Uood II ""'"" torgue
•Furnltu~ppwlllvwlld
.. oo- to Mollohm
.. 114- ~h T k.
, ':convort..,_ St.,dwd ckltdiM.
~
on . 2C13 Jocbon A.... P!•ouro Pill-. • throw out
"*7«4
.
Point P I - t 304-17&amp;-2083 ' ....... -.onty-12moo C:VC
10 ad . .
end 10 g;l, Jolrilwl typoo. ·CoR 81~379oomploto 143.21.
2220 .,;- 304-17J-I718.

WBITIIIN II EO CEDAII

f\DS

•aAn•

-MOf 1888. Roc... 20hour
lni!Md6on. Reaontble. 81 ~
812-728L
'

,.,. Silo ,....,_MIIod or

SNAFU* by Bruce Beattie

1111 -~~- 121110. 2111.
1171L Coll14-448-0310.

II

,_
....
......
- · .... -ld

---;;:::;;;:;::;;:::;::;::===
~o~·~·;-~~~od~,~30~4-~17~·~30oo~~-~~·IO=.CIO=·:330:4-:87:·:8:71~7:.
,;32
Mobile H
-_,_
for Selli

Read the

M-

W•INiltr

•28o ..duptei38LIIIby-

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
llonA. .on.1210-ndAw.
Clllllpollo. ON 114--C338.

'-'&amp;::'

Read the Best

00.......

''"*

· Peta for Sale

130 ploloup,
dlllv-- 121 U-llouL ll.._n
lid. Coii14-448-CII2.

-nt-

WoniiM •

====:J

....

p.,,

IN. F•llll• ._,._ R-ltrd end

-

Sol• end olilln from
1381 to • -- T•lil• 010 ond
up to f121. Hhlo-o-- o380
to 1888. llldlnn 0221 to
'371. lomPO •• 1o 1121.
Din- 1101ond up to CC815.
Wood' tolllo w·l ohlln •281 to
078L DNk 1100 up to •371.
HulilhM UOO end up.

M810n ...d.
111 Blooli Co.. 123\1o Plno ..
0111- Ohio. CIIII14-C4t2783.

. . . . ..,... onl¥- Coli 114...... ....,7 or 448-2102.

Furnllhod room-919

Mobile ham... furnlsll1d,

p-

-· .........
APT..

for Rant

3 - - 1\1o ....... tlly
c•pllod. portl\t furnl&amp;hod. nloo
nolghborhoccl In Mldcl.ort.
Colt14-812-1888.

tf YGIIte I I = .,.,.rtf OIYOUI'
-~~I
ololldond

-.;onCI'ete blocb-

LA'INE'S FUIINirUIIE

•.., IMitr•• •• • e41.
- - • • 130. King

Pomeroy-2 IIR . remodeled
........... ofl-gAw.S.c.
d• . • rol. Coli Ill• 8 PM,
Bmll
couploo onl¥, no .114-992-UII.
plio, LP 1• holl. 30it-87&amp;1801 oftwl:30 clll 17~ 1087. UnllrMhld 2 BR 1•11• ....

Coii14-448-080L

AilE 'IOU A IINOLEPAIII!NT7

" '" -ld-.. . . __...... ··-·......
._-rtat.............. _

11 Help Wanted

Molltm 1 1 1 1 . - - complotoldtdlon. olr, . ....._D. .
0111. no PI!&amp; Col 814-4480138 ........ oft• e.

21110.00.
- -2 ""''
...
-....
hou ... 1200.00 or wll1ll on •
lend ......- . 304-175-2722.

....... plld. . . . clop. . . . ..

3811 ... 14 .... - -..
3rcl· - · ....... Jonuory
-

114-7C:Z.-2CII. ·

'-alng
· · ......
...
...
.. morbopldlodupot
l'llco
Yolo, Ploto, 128
or odl 114-448-CI38.

" - 110. - l o n of
bodroom
-•r.
h - • • 130 end up to 181.

_ . , - · - 2111 ........
••
,.... .... • . -~od.

tD Do

MEA. In&lt;

-on

hou•

SCi)ools

Mo-.

Education center~Tri-County
Vo . .lond Col 713-

P'- or

r,t;:,:&amp;ook

JOINUNnN07NEEDASIOLI.1
WE TIIAIN PEOPLE FOil JOU
IIE•TIIAIN NOWI
AI c.rp..
eo.m•alaukl&amp; OlvW IOU'IMEAITIIIN IUSINEIS
l l o d M - - E - COu.EGI. 128 Joobon l'llia
CIIC4t--7.11og.No.... 11·
cl..._
Food
--- 10111.
EI-T
lndU•

- - · o - r u b -·111
arcllr to be gollltl _.......
--bolllllllo mo"""'to
poy for _ .., In ol ....
.,._,... ,.,...,. ot ""',...

U.od tlrnlturo br tho

Unt.r" "'1¥ _,...... no lnlldo
roqu~od. 114-

•,_Coli 114-812-1302.

1-. Mullilllo. Oftlco-ond w.~-.. lloglotw- lor
blgl ..... Jonuooy :!rd.
Coll TrH:ountyVo. .-AdU.
C...w II 7113-•11 ..._ 14. A
¥Wioiy "'tl-g • - topoy
for

.... tho E~
GIIIe Minor Apwbi411a.
loH
llood. Da """"""

_ . , . rrf 1 - .aid girt would
• • to MW•It · In ftl\' home

OovwnmMI Jol&amp; 111,040 •
188,230 yr. Now ~lne Col
1-101-117·1000 .... 11'·8101

••t.

Ride Punan Awll I 1 • 1Ohio ond- ~glnlo.

-.
lion -

Trllllno. 121 - d Aw.. Gol~

lot ....... _

·--~

Adu•• onl¥. no d •.
..... ~- Coli 114-448-C222

Situation•

poll&amp; Ohio Cl831.

Ollllp. . . , . _.. _

Coli 114-M8-21CC

8

12

-c~rtw..-~
......lo
.. for
01 D.,_o'o
Plao
In

IDit: Mel• bulla UngiV••
lrM.

-~·lloiiCio114.c/aGo_D...

I1!-

1183 C'-v lmpolo h• .. op.
213
·•·c. E.:. Cond.
304-87f.1310 1ft• 8:30.

..

the

I

a

171-3211

I'

1•2a11.,. . ...-.noo

llohtlon 01

tourilmMiptiL
S..clr
. .. . to:
-·
-.
In

e motor

I 913 Gnnd Prix. good con&amp;
don. Auna good. t2.200. 304-

1.

- ·-- ..........

Requtra mlftlll ,,... UNity

Found:_...,_ _
21 •• -~ lot In front rrf
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The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport. Oh_io

•

'•.
•

•••
••

..•

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

.....-Local news briefs...contlnued from page 1
and .two microphones valued at $300along with a chalnsaw. The
theft Is ~nder .Investigation.

Six Gallians homeless after fire
A family of six was left homeless when !Ire destroyed their
home early Monday morning, according to Gallipolis Fire Chief
Ray Bush.
Gallipolis firemen received the alarm at 3:13a.m. Monday to
the residence of Tim Smith, Rt. 2, Crown City, on Teens Run
Road. The four-room, one-story frame house was engulfed In
flames when the first of 20 men and three pieces of equipment
arrived on the scene.
Bush said an overheated flue Ignited the Interior wall of house
and spread to the ceiling and contents. The loss was estimated
at $6,000 to the house and at $3,800 to the contents.
No one wa s Injured In the fire according to Bush, however, the
family lost everything In the blaze. Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two
girls, ages 2 and 12, and two boys, ages 5 and 7.

EMS has 16 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 16 calls
over the holiday weekend.
On Saturday at 12:49 p.m., Rutland to Vance Road for Beverly
Morgan to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at 8:08p.m. to
Fourth St. for Herbert Shields to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 8:17p.m. to Route 124 for Frank Lemley to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland a.t 10:35 p.m. to Happy Hollow
Road for Leland Haley to Vetefans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12: 13 a.m., Middleport transwrted Jeff Cundiff to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 12:26 p.m. to Star
Hollow Road for Ronnie Hale to Veterans 1\femorlal Hospital;
At 3:44 p.m.. Hale was flown to St. Mary's Hospital In
Huntington. W.Va.; Pomeroy at 5:13p.m. to Union Ave. for
Mahlon Eblin to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Syracuse at 6:33
p.m.m to Nease Road for Leah Nease to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 7:59p.m. to Happy Hollow Road for Mary
Ertckman to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:38
p.m. to Cole St. for PhyUis Blake to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Monday at 9:33a.m .. Racine to Route .124 for Frank Lemley ·
who was treated but not transported; Racine at12:03 p.m. to
Bash an Road for Randy Friend to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 1:07 p.m. , Pomeroy to Flatwoods Road for Mildred
Hawk to O'Bienness Memorlalliospltal; Tuppers Plains at 1:43
p.m. to County Road 28 for Esta While to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Middleport at 6:51 p.m . to Beech St. for Shirley
Frazier to Veter~s Memorial Hospital.

Tuesday, December 27. 1988

Porneeoy-Middleport, Ohio

Funds distributed

------Sen'ices planned---- St6cks
A New Year's Eve Service will
be held at Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church on Saturday
evening from 7: 30 p.m. to 12
midnight. Special pl'('achlng and
singing will be featured.

and Prodigal. Pastor, Rev.
Denver Hill. Invites the public.
Orange Township Volunteer
Fire _Department, Tuppers
Plains, Is sponsoring a dance on
New Year's Eve, from 9 p.m. to 1
a .m . Couples only; $Sin advance
and $10 at the door. Music by Lou
Petrola.

A New Year's Eve Watch
Service will be held at Eagle
Ridge Co!Dmunlty Church start Ing at 8 p.m. on Saturday. There .
wlll be special singing by Dan
Hayman and the Faith TriO,
Veterans Memorial
Jerry and Diane Frederick and
Saturday admissiOns - Herothers. Everyone welcome.
bert Shields, Racine; Carla
Smith, Jackson; Leland Haley,
Ru !land Freewill Baptls t Middleport.
Church will have a New Year's
Saturday discharges - Goldie
Eve Watch Service on Saturday Roberts, Willard Adkins.
from 7 p.m. to 12 midnight.
Sunday admissions - Leah
Pastor Paul Taylor Invites the Nease, Racine.
public.
Sunday discharges - Carol
Phillips, Mildred Stewart, Carla
The Bend Area Gospel New Smith. Mary Rlff)e, Carlos
Year's Eve service wlll be held Lynch.
Saturday· from 7: 30 p.m. to 12
Monday admissions - Darrell
midnight at the Christian Dugan, Racine: Nellie (Esta)
Brethren Church, Mason, W.Va. White, Long Bottom.
Preaching by Rev. Miles Trout . . Monday discharges - Wayne
Singing by the Renecllons Trio Brlcktes, Iva Rayburn.

Hospital news

Daley alock prices
(As of 18:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. . 27
AT&amp;T ................................. 29'&gt;(,
Ashland on ........................33%
Bob Evans ..................... .. ... 15%
Charming Shoppes ..............14%
City Holding Co ................... 31\1,
Federal Mogul .................... .47
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................50%
Heck's ................................. %
Key Centurion .. .................. 14~
Lands' End ......... .. ............ .. 26%,
Limited Inc .. .. ....................27%
Multimedia Inc ...... .. ...........74 3,.;
Rax Restaurants .................... 3
Ro bblns &amp; Myers ...... .. ..... .... 15
Shoney's Inc ....... .... ....... ..... . 7%
Wendy's Inti .. ...................... 6
Worthln~on lnd ................. 21%

Trustees to meet
Scipio Township Trustees will
have a special end-of-the-year
meeting on Friday at 6 p.m. at
the township building In
Pagevllle.

Marty steps

Meigs County's three local
school districts received
$603,115.84 as their share of the
$195,230,776.86 distribution made
throughout Ohio In the December
State School Foundation subsidy
payment.
Amounts received by the three
districts after deductions for
employees and teachers retirement, Include: Eastern Local,
$125,991.26: Meigs Local,
$337,726.90, and Southern LOcal,
$139,397.68. In addition, the
Meigs County Board of Educa- ·
lion received a direct allotment ·
of $31.068.41.

Ohio Lottery

down as Browns

head coach

Daily Number
992
Pick4

2568

Page 4

•

•
'

Dates changed
for trash pickup

•
•
Vol.

No.183
1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 28, 1988

Due to the holiday season, the
regular trash pickup In Racine
VIllage this week and next week
will be held on Tuesday and
Wednesday both weeks.

K

By LYDA PHILLIPS
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (U PI) - Businesses plan to spend a record
$455.96 billion for new plants and
equipment in 1989, 6 . percent
more than In 1988, the Commerce
Department reported
Wednesday.
The department's Census Bureau said the latest s urvey taken
In October and November
showed businesses would spend
$430.17 billion in !988, 10.4 percent more than in 1987.
The $455.96 billion In capita l
spending planned for 1989 and the
anticipated 1988 spending level
wou.fd be successive records,
even when price changes are
factored In, the bureau said. ·
The previous high was $389.67
billion ln 1987, the bureau said, ·
The robust capital spending
_plans reflect businesses' optimIsm abOut the future course of the
economy and intention to increase their capacity to produce
goods or ser vices and employ
workers.
Manufacturing Industries plan
to spend $171.67billlon In 1989,4.3
percent more than In 1988, with
the bulk of that coming from the
factories that produce expen- ·
slve, long-lasting goods such as
metals and motor vehicles.
However, aircraft manufacturer~ plan to spend less on
plailts anq equipment tn 1989, as
do electrical machinery produc"ers. the bureau said.
The largest planned capital

RELAX AND SAVE

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, JANUARY 1, 1989
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES.

--Area deaths--Sandra Norman.
Sandra Kay Norman, 39,
Athens, died Sunday at Ohio
State University Hospitals In
Columbus.
A homemaker, Mrs. Norman
was born In Pomeroy, June 29,
1949, a daughter of the late John
Wtlltam Mulford and Helen L.
Davidson Mulford who resides In
Cheshire. She attended
the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Survlvlng,ln addition to her
mother, are her husband, John
Roy Norman; a daughter, Tomorrow Dawn Norman; a
brother, Randy John Mulford,
Ches hire; a sister, Rita Fields,
Pomeroy; her father-In-law and
mother-In-law, Harold and Juanita Norman, Pomeroy; several
brothers-In-law and sisters-InJaw, and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thur "S'"day
at
the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower · Funeral Home where friends may
call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday. Friends may con-·
tribute to the local Salvation
Army in her memory.

Walter Brown
Walter P. Brown. 71, Reedsville, a former member or the
Eastern Local School District
Board of EducatiOn, died Monday at Enon, Ohio.
Mr . Brown was born Aug. 15,
1917 at Park, Ohio, a son of the
late William and Kathryn Wright
Brown.
He was a retired electrician
from the Eastern Electric Co.,
Mineral Wells, W. Va.,andwasa
32nd degree mason. He was a
member of Shade River Masonic
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM ~nd was a past
master of that organization. He
was a member of the Scottish
Rite, Columbus, and served eight
years as a member of the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education. Mr. Brown
was a member of the International Brotherhood of Electric
Workers, Local 968, Parkersburg. He had served In the United
States Army AJrCorpsandwasa
member of the Long Bottom ;
Christian Church.
·
Surviving are two daughters
and sons-In-law, Melanie and Bill
Thomas, Enon; Linda and Steve
Cowdery, North Dartmouth,
Mass.; a son and daughter-Inlaw, David and Peggy Brown,
Uniontown, Phlo; seven
grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Margaret Pickens Brown, twG
brothers and a sister.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville with Mr. Philip
Sturm officiating. Masonic rites
will be conducted at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home.
Friends may call at the funeral

home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday. Burial will be In
Reedsville Cemetery.

R.G. Greene
MASON - R. G. Greene, 7S,
New Haven, died Friday, Dec. 23,
1988, at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Born July 3, 1913, in MuUcns,
W.Va., the son of Everett and Mar·
gie Moran Greene Sr., he was
president of the New Haven Su·
pennarket and West Virginia
Sausage Co., Inc., and a member of
the First Preysbertian Chwch of
Gallipolis, Ohio.
In addition, he was a member of
the Citizens National Bank and
Pleasant Valley Hospital boards of
directors in Point Pleasant; a former New Haven City Councilman,
and the director of retail operations
for Evans Grocery Co. for many

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Winter ...

Continued from page 1
across northern Minnesota, the
NWS said. On Monday, snow and
tee prompted worried managers
of the MlnneapoUs Metrodome to
heat the domed stadium warmer
than usual to melt accumulated
snow on the roof prior to an NFL
playoff game between the Minnesota VIkings and the Los Angeles'
Rams.
Across Minnesota early Tues- '
day, up to 10 Inches of snow fell at
Thief River Falls and Bemidji,
while up to Slnches was reported
at Alexandria and Park Rapids.
Snow was falling over northern
and central Wisconsin early
Tuesday, w lth freezing rain also
reported from southwest Wisconsin Into the Green Bay area.
Freezln~r rain was peltlna:
northwest Iowa on Tuesday, the
NWS said, as well as lower
Michigan and northern Ohio.

'

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio &lt;UPI)Ohio authorities are baffled by a
Christmas Day roadside shootIng that claimed the life of a
woman on her way home to West
VIrginia.
·- Polfce" sii1d the)' have not been
able to uncover a motive for the
shooting of Leslie · Joann Sharkey, 42, of Detroit. She died
Monday after being shot three
times.
DNectlve Jim Howard of the
Lawrence County, Ohio, Sheriff's
Department said Sharkey was
able to give pollee a detailed
description of the man who shot
her In the neck, shoulder and

hand with a small-caliber
handgun.
Sharkey told pollee she was
driving east on U.S. 52 near
Chesapeake early Sunday when
sll,~ noticed a driver flashing his
headlights a'ncf pulled over to the
roadside..
The man told her sparks were
coming ~om the back of her car.
and said he would call Sharkey's
parents in Huntington, W.Va.
Howard said the man left and
then returned, saying he had
called her parents.
Sharkey continued driving and
the man followed her. She pulled
over again ani! got out of the cq.r,
Howard said, and the assailant
I

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shared equally with his wile Ms,ryann, 62, and
daughters Darlene and Cynthia (right). They are
shown at a news conference Tuesday . (UPI)

Highway killing baffles police

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years.

Survivors include his wife, Lillian R. Greene; a daughter, Karen
Kay Greene, both of the hOIIle; a
son and daul!hter·in-law, James AI·
bert and Billy L. Greene or Beckley, W. Va.; t.hree brothers,
Everette Greene Jr. of MuUens,
William Greene of Owensboro,
Mo., and Charles Gilben Greene of
Myrtle Beach, S. C.; two sisters,
Dorothy Farley and Betty Lester,
both of Mullens, W.Va.; two
grandchildren and one great·
granddaughter.
He was preceeded in death by
two sisters, Thelma Greene and
Mable Black.
Services wiD be Wednesday,
Dec. 28, 1988, at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with Rev. John
Campbell,. Rev. ClifTord West and
Rev. George Weirick officiating.
Burial will follow at Kirldand
Memorial Gardens in Point
PleasanL
· Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 27.
The family requests con·
tributions be made to the Mason
County Heart Fund in care of
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

LUCKY WINNER - John Evancho, 60, of
Waukesha, Wis., gives the approval sign after
winning lhe Dllnois Stale Lotto last Saturday In
the amount of $39,585,968.14. The prize will be

FIRST COME .... FIRST SERVED

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
United States will Impose about
$100 million In trade sanctions
against the European CommunIty In retal Ia IIon for the EC' s
coming ban on U.S. hormonetreated beef, U.S. Trade Representative Clayton Yeutter said
Tuesday.
The 100 percent tariff on
European beef, pork, tomatoes,
Instant coffee, fruit juice, lowalcohol fermented beverages
and pet food will become effective at12:01 a.m. Jan.1, Yeutter
said.
The tariffs will remainlneffect
as long as U.S. meat trade Is
Interrupted due to the ban,
Yeutter said. The value of the
retaltallon Is about $100 million,
equal to the estimated amount of
lost sales opportunities for U.S.
meat exporters , he said.
President Reagan decided
Dec. 24, 1987, that the Impending

EC ban on beef was an unfair
trade practice and warned the
United States would retaliate If
the ban was Implemented.
The EC delayed the ban for one
year but ultimately decided to go
ahead with It, arguing It Is fair
because European farmers are
already banned from using the
hormones, which allow cattle to
grow fat with less feed.
"I regret that the United States
Is forced to retaliate against the
EC's ban on meat treated by
growth hormones." Yeu Iter said.
"We have tried repeatedly to
bring this issue to a scientific
dispute settlement panel under
the GATT (General Agreement
on Tar riffs and Trade) In order to
have It resolved," he said.
."However, our European counterparts have consistently
blocked 'our efforts ."
The United States hopes to
force the EC to back off the ban

Licenses expire on Saturday

TIMEX
WATCHES

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman reminds village businesses
that all amusement machine licenses expire on Saturday, and
they must be renewed.
License fees are $50 for a juke box, $50 each for the first three
coin-operated amusement machines and $25 each for each
machine after the first three.
Licenses may be purchased at the mayor's office Monday
through Friday between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

25o~g

Five fined by Mayor Hoffman
CHI~EZ CURLS • CHEEZ I&gt;IU·'-"1

BITE-SIZE TOIIDLIA CHIP$
. OR NACHO CHIPS

grab bed her.
Sharkey managed to burn the
man on the left side of his face
with a cigarette, and then he shot
her.
Pollee said Sharkey got backtn
her car and drove to a main
highway In Chesapeake, stopping In traffic so someone would
stop and help her. ·
She · was taken to St. Mary's
Hospital In Chesapeake, where
she died Monday prior to
surgery.
Howard said police have not
been able to determine a motive
for the at tack, but It does not
seem to have begun as a robbery
or an assault .

Five are
killed by
speeding
automobile

United States will impose
trade sanctions against EC

,.....Local news bnefs---.

ENTIRE SELECTION
MEN'S - LADIES

2 Sections, 12 Pages
, A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Capital spending to be
up·record 6 % in '89

Plan basketball clinic
A basketball clinic for boys and girls, grades four through
eight , will be held Thursday at Eastern High School with
Charles Riley , Eastern Varsity coach, Instructor. Sign-up Is at 9
a.m. Entry fee Is $5. Bring sacl&lt; lunch or $2 to buy lunch.
Individual competition, with a first place trophy, and second '
and third place ribbons. will be held following lunch.

Clear, co ld tonight. Low in
mid teens. Thursday, sunny,
high In mid 30s.

defendants forfeited bonds and five others were fined tn
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Bernard P. Lavalley, Racine, $250, reckless
operation; Martin S. Lamar, Wintersville, Ga. , $50, stop sign
violation; Hobard Cundiff, Middleport, $50, stop sign violation;
$100, !allure to appear In court; James Fetser, Lafayette, 1na.,
$44, speeding; Julius Preston, Jr., $41, speeding; Robert F.
Lawson, Reedsville, $50, left of center. .
Fined were Connie K. Boston, Po,meroy, $16 a nd cost,
Continued on page 5 '
~

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

!

I

with the tough retaliatory tarriffs, but the EC shows no
Immediate Inclination to bend .
. At a meeting last week, the EC
foreign ministers agreed to counter the expected U.S. retaliation
with additional tarrtffs on lmports of U.S. honey, nuts, dried
fruit and canned corn.
But Willy de Clercq, minister
for external relations , said the
EC was willing to have bilateral
talks on the Issue.
U.S. officials Insist the drugs
used In slaughterhouse feed lots
are safe and argued the ban Is an
unfair trade barrier. An lnternatlonal food code committee has
endorsed the use of five such
growth hormones.
"Despite the EC's claim that
the animal hormone ban Is based
on health concerns, the EC has
yet to present any evidence that
proper application of the growth
producing hormones In question
poses any threat to human
health," Yeutter said.
The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration has said dally
production of hormones In humans, even In the most sensitive
segment of the population, Is far
higher than the small amounts
left In the meat of treated
animals, Yeutter said.
Even untreated animals have
hormone levels as high or higher
than treated animals, he satd:
The U.S. action does not apply
to the Import of European anutlal
Intestines, used to make sausage
casln,gs, bec'a use the EC Is not
banning Imports of hormonetreate~ meat used to make pet
foods.

Bomb caused crash
WASHINGTON (UPI) -BritIsh Investigators have determined that Pan Am Flight 103
crashed In Scotland after being
ripped apart by a bomb, administration sources said WedneSday.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPil - A
speeding driver smashed Into a
stopped auto on the city's south
side Tuesday night, killing the
second car's five occupants in a
fiery explosion, pollee said
Wednesday .
A spokesman for the Franklin
County coroner said Identities of
the five were not confirmed,
since the bodies were burned
beyond recognition. Three of
them may have been children.
The driver of the stieedtng car,
Emmett Gabriel, 30, of Columbus, was tn poor condition
Wedn_esday with extensive facial
injuries . A spokeswoman for
Grant Medical Center said he lost
his left eye.
Pollee Capt. John Rockwell
said the incident began shortly
after 6: 30 p.m., when officer
Lolita Perryman spotted Gabriel
drive past her cruiser at an
estimated speed of 80 to 90 mph.
She made au-turn to give chase,
but Gabriel crashed a red ll&amp;.lt
and hit the second car broadside
a few seconds later.
"It just exploded," said Dave
Bolognone, who was In his car on
the other side of the Intersection.
"As soon as It hit the other car,
there was a giant explosion and
everything was spinning. It was
crazy. There was nothing you
could do."
After the collision, Gabriel's
car continued north a short
distance, striking several parked
cars and a ptckuptruckdrlven by
Lindsey Cyrus.
"I saw them coming over the
viaduct and thought, 'He Isn 't
going to stop for that light,"'
Cyrus said . "I slammed on the
brakes."
Cyrus's van was damaged, but
he was not Injured.
After the fire was extln·
gulshed, au thorltles draped a
white sheet over the car's passenger compartment, and the
bodies were not removed for
about two hours. The rest of the
car was 100 feet away from the
passenger compartment, and the
car's battery was knocked about
250 feet.

spending Increase among producers .of more quickly con·
sumed goods Is for paper. Manu facturers of chemicals and food
also plan to Invest more in their
plants In 1989, the bureau said .
Non-manufacturing industries
plan to spend $284.30 billion in
1989 , 7 percent more tha n In 1988,
the bureau said.
The largest increases In spending for equipment were planned
by air and rail transportation
companies, followed by smaller
Increases for c hemical and gas
producers. Mines , utilities and
other transportation companies
plan to spend less on plants and

equipment in 1989 than in 1988,
the bureau said.
Capital spending in the third
quarter ofl988 rose 2.1 percent to
a seasonally adjusted annual
rate oU436.01 billion, following a
3.6 percent increase in the second
quarter. the bureau said. That
was 1 percent less than the
previous survey had projected.
Businesses said they planned
to spend 2.2 percent more Jn the·
fourth quarter of 1988,4.7 percent
more In the first quarter of 1989
and 1.5 percent more in the
second quarter of next year , the
bureau said.
-

FA,A to call for new
rivets in older 727s
CHARLESTON, W.Va .. (UP!)
- Federal aviation offtoials say
a proposal asking airlines to
replace rivets on aging Boeing
727 passenger jets was under
review when a hole was torn open
in one of the jets Monday, and
that the incident has prompted
officials to re-evaluate the
proposal.
Darrell Pederson. an assistant
manager with the Federal Aviation Adminlstraton in Seattle,
said tll~;~g~n~y ls_; ·ve~y close'' to_
Issuing a notice of proposed
rule-making, which leads to an
airwor thiness dlrecUve after a
period of public comment.
He said the proposal, affecting
jets sealed with an outdated

bonding process, will be re-,
evaluated in light of an incidenr
that forced a 22-year-old 727
operated by' Eastern Airlines to
make an unplanned landing
Monday after a 10-by-20-inch hole
ripped open In the fuselage.
The plane, carrying 110 passengers on a flight from Rochester, N.Y ., to Atlanta, landed in
Charleston. No Injuries were
reported.
"We will take another look at
what we had planned on doing in
view offhls sit uation," Pederson
said. ''If the (directive) covers
adequately, then we wtll proceed
with that one. If there's something new here not covered, then
Continued on page 5

BUSH GOES QUAIL HUNTING- President-elect George Bush
and long·tlme friend WIU Farl!lh bunt quail Tuesday on Farish's
"Lazy F" ranch near Berclair, Texas. (UPI)

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