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PqJ 14-The Daily Sentitiel

Pomeroy Midcleport, Ohio

~mday. J~-r

.

17•. 1910 .

W.Va. shooting leaves one coal miner dead, two injured

WORTH. W.Va. !UP)) - A
small group of United Mine
Workers protesters mingled with
state pollee Wednesday morning
near the scene of a shooting that
lett one coal miner dead and two
others wounded In a battle thai
"sounded like World War I:"
State Pollee Superintendent
Jack Buckalew said troopers

Pomeroy
Court news

remained at the scene through the site Tuesday morning to
the night. He said the troopers escort tbe combatants from · the ·
would remain visible and on scene. collect weapons and resalert.
tore order.
" We ·had people In there all
Buckalew said It would be a "
night long, which Is probably not _ lengthy Investigation.
ordinary," Buckalew said. "We
" There are a lot of people '
had people In there doing the Involved,'' Buckalew said. "It
lnvestlgatlon, trying to filter out will require a lot of Interviewing.
the truth fr.om the fiction."
We have men In there. We are·
State troopers descende&lt;! on · ·looking Into the Investigation; we ,

were Ronald E. Johnson, · Rio
Grande; S.S; Cecelia Harris,
Mason, W. · Va., $52; Jeffrey
Reltmlre; Columbus, $46; Brian
· Pothast, Delphos, $49; James ·
MCCloud, Middleport, $50; and
. Hester Eblin, Rutland, $48.
Other forfeiting bonds In the
court were Charles Lewis, Jr.,
Point Pleasant, $43, assured
clear distance; Lynette Aelker,
Middleport, $63, traffic ttghthvtolatlon; Michael Wallace, Gallipolis, $43, Illegal turn; Phillip
. Custer, Middleport, $63, expired
. vehicle registration; Michael W,
King, Pomeroy, $63, no valid
operator's license, and $63, ex·
· plred plates; and Michael Gil. key, $63, operating under
· suspension.
Fined In the court were Cyntbta· Sannln, Sctotovllle, $49 and
costs, speeding; Sean Patrick
. Liberatore, Roanoke, Va., $63
. and costs. driving under suspension; and Mary Ellen Sheets,
· Pomeroy, $63 and costs, operat. lng under suspension.

wer,e

BIG BEND

e

FRESH 100°/o PURE
SEALTESl .
ORANGE JUI~E

BJLBE....ON~

SEALTEST

ORANGE
JU\CE -

ability
control their own
des't lny," said Luebbers, adding
COLUMBUS '!'he Ohio tha~ townships which used to be
mainly rural now have popula·
• HoUle of Representatives Wed·
., nesday passed, 92-4, and sent to !Ions ranging up to 60,0011 people.
the senate a bill granting town· ·He cited Colerain 'fwp. outside of
ships the power to· govern Cincinnati.
·
'
.. themselves.
If a township chooses home
UDder current'taw, townships rule, It would have hire a law
may do only wllat .state law director and establish a law
permits their trustees to do. The enforcement agency. Luebbers
I)Ul SJX!nsored by Rep·.· Jerome
said It could set up Its own pollee
Luebbers, D·Cinclnnatl, permits district, have a joint district with
them to establish their Qwn · another ·township or contract
with a city, county or township
goverllments and lell&amp;late.
"Tlils Rives townships the . pollee force,

t/tii!Weho- a.orter

SPREAD

'

KRAFT
TOUCH OF

'12
GALLON
CTN.

aunER .
,.

l«hUL .Ol. IIO\IAlfSI

EASTMAN'S FOODUNIS IN
GAWPOUS ANI POMIIOY

Win a Coso or Diet Pepal,
Callolne Froo Diet Pepal or
SUpermarket Caah. Winners
Orawn e..,., F~doy through
March 2.
m Sti)IE 01m-Y F011 ~(UIL$

The House also passed, 91-5,
and sent to ·the Senate a bill
regl!latlng private full!!ral escorr
services.
Sponsored by Rep. Charles
"Red" Ash, R-North Industry,
the blll permits such ser.vices to
use flashing red or red-and-white
lights Instead of amber lights,
and allows them to stop traffic at
Intersections.
Rep. David Johnson, R·North
Canton, said the legislation was
prompted by an accident lnvolv·
lng a funeral escortservice In his

area.
The bill also · requires the
operators of such a _service to
take 20 hours of training and to
carry at least -$1 million In
liability Insurance. It also provides for random, unscheduled
Inspections of funeral escort
vehicles.
Some members com_plalned
that the legislation might apply
to law enforcement agencies
which conduct funeral escorts.
Both the House and Senate
adjourned·for the week.
•.

By NANCY YOACHAM
lion to that road and the road ·or a letter from Sharon Bailey,
·
SenUnel News Staff
leading to Veterans Memorial director of the county Infirmary ,
The mileage count on county Hospital " Warner $ald. How- of some Items which may be
roads In Meigs County ~mains ever, Si!it Is u~ on the hospl~~ needed at the facility . The
the same this year - 252.12 road while a mixture of salt and commissioners plan to visit the
miles.
cinders Is used on County Road home to review the list of need~ .
Melg~ EnglneerPhlUpRoberts 19, he reported. 'l'blslsbecauseof
Alilm Kohnen, representing
reported briefly during Wednes- the expense of salt and also Seasongood &amp; Mayer, Cincinnati,
d~cy's regular meeting of the because If the temperature goes ··a nrm which specializes In tax
Meigs County Commissioners on below l5 degrees, "salt won't 'exempt financing, attended Wedthe re:cent visit from the state work anyway,'' Warner added.
nesday's meeting to . acquaint
mileage man and the resulting
In the future Warner suggests,
himself with the commissioners
If residents 'see a changing and offer the 'services of his
mUeage _certlflcatlon. .
Roberts also reported that be condition on their road- such as company. Kohnen will be represwill . be working with other If cinders · blow ·away or salt entlng his company ln·southeastgovernmental units In the county doesn't start snow and Ice to melt ern Ohio.
to prepare bids for the next round - call tlie highway department
Finally , Interdepartmental
of State Issue II prol!!l!ts.
and explain the problems.
,
transfers were ~pproved in the
Roberts was advised by the
The commissioners were ad·
public assistance and ceunty
COIIUI)Iailoflet:av,.tlu!tA bey · !lave ~ ·v lsi!d"'ly Clerk Mat'y Hobstet•tel' coroner budgets.
recelvell a "titlzens petition asklng for more reliable snow and
.l ce removal ·on County 19 betweenRoute33andCountyRoad
20. The petition carries 66 signa·
.
tures .and .stated that during
.
recent bad weather, many close
·
· PI
uld
be di 1 sed
calls and several accidents had . An 18-year-old Point easant
dealh wo not
sc o .
occurred on that stretch of road man was killed in a Wednesday
Bolh Huddleston _ and SullivWl
which leads to the Amerlcare- evening accident on S.R. 2, near
were extricated ftom lhe wreckage
Pomeroy Nursing Center.
Point Pleasant, marking Mason
by the Valley Volunteer Fire •
RobertJ ·satd h.e already had a 'County's first aaffic fatality of the
Department and Rescue Squad,
copy of the petition.
.
·1990's.
dl
using lhe Jaws of Life. ·
Dead is Scou Alan ,Hud eston,
Acconling 10 the Mason Counry
As explained by HighWay .Superlntendent Ted Warner, when Main Street, Poinl Pleasant, a pasSheriff's Depanment, lhe accident
. bad weather strikes, the second senger in a vehicle driven by Charoccum:d approximately one·founh
truck . sent · from the highway les Clay Sullivan, 21, West Colummile soulh of Goodyear Plant in
departmenthto treat . roads al· bia. Sumvan was ftown to Cabell- Apple Grove. Apparently the Sui·
ways goes to County Road 19. Huntington Hospital by a ~ealth· livWl vehicle, which was traveling .
"We ·try to P!IY particular atten- Net helicopter, where a nursmg s~- north, crashed imo the rear of a ·
pervisor listed him in good cond•- garbage truck, owned by Sanitation ·'
lion. The olher driver in the two- Service Co., Inc., and · driven by
.j
vehicle acciclent, Randy L. Jordan, Jordan.
,
•
The sheriff-'s dcparunent srated
Point· Pleasant, was · tak:en to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by the the truck was stopped, partially
r ' II
1 r
Point Pleasant EMS.
. parked in the roadway, apparently ·
While aulhorities at PVH ·stated to pick up garbage.
·
~
.
Jordan was treated and released
Another Sanitation
Service
I H..I4Afrom the emergency room with con- empioyee, Fred Pearson, was unin·
tusions, lhe cause of Hllddleston,'s, jured.
By u,lled Preu lilterna&amp;lllllll
Showers and a tew thl,tndtr·
storms paraded across Ohio
Wednesday night, but the
weather dried out Thursday
before a predicted return to wet
weather late Friday.
Glenn Rizer, Racine water supervisor, reports that .the
· Mild temperatures were the ·
automatic waterman station Is now open for an~one who needs
rule over Ohio lhrougq the
to haul water. The station has been out of commission since the.
evening hours Wednesday with
freezing weather caused problems with the machln~ry . Repairs
most
temperatures
In
the
50s
to
~ill; ADVER'l1SING __. Memben . of
· tbe annua) Girl Scout_Cookie. Sale whlcll alar~
were held up while Rizer waited for necessary parts which had
lower 60s.
·
Bad..e Girl SCobt,"'"' lD« bave beeaiMII)' the
FrldaJ and will condaue tbrouch Feb. f.
A
cold
front
moved
across
most
to be ordered to arrive.
puf few dqoa maJdar JHIItera Ia prepariltlon lor
'of the state during the second half
...
of the ntaht and the mercury took
a dip behind It, falling Into the
upper 30s over .westl!rn parts of
It's that time of year again. Girl Scout cookies will beonlale
the state.
'
In
the area beginning Friday and continuing through Feb.4. The
.
A few showers were lingering
sale price remains at $2 per box with troops to recelv.e 30 ceata
over southel!St parts of Ohio just
ffrom each box sold.
•
, before dawn. Drier air was on the
A new variety of cookie Is being Introduced this year ' way In to Ohio but the clearing
Cabana Cremes - whlcl\ Is an assortment of lemon and vanUia
process was expected to be slOw.
.•
sandwich cremes. Other varieties Include Samoas, Thin Mints,,
l A larre cloud mass covering all
Do-SI-Dos, Trefoils, Chocolate Chip and Tagalongs.
'
Tbe. Middleport PTO has voted. meetings In preparation for a · ·--bundtnl proposal.
.
tbe Great Lakes, mid and upper
For more than ·so years, the sale of cookies has been a major_
The Ml!ldleport PTO' s state· Mlsal.lslppl Valley and the Ohio
to oppoee any proposal (or a- new survey of residents In the district
source of fundln&amp; for Girl Scouts. It Is also a real learntnr
bulldiDg procram In the Meigs which Is planned .1or sometime merit released by Bev!ln reads 1!5 Valley was 1low to breaking
experience for the girls as they learn to l!andle money ,Improve
' Local School District which within the n4!1't tew weeki.
follows:
.
down Thursday but some suntheir communication skills and build self confidence. Troopa
Aa explained by the auperln·
"We are In favor of maintain· shine wu expected to be vii lble
would result In ciOI!na the
uiie their profits to finance girl-planned projects such as troop ' ,
. ten~t all bonded Indebtedness Ina community schools. not big ThursdJY afternoon over the
Middleport Elementary School.
camping or special weekend trips. Co~ncU profit Is retlll'lled to
Accordlna to Sheila Bevan, of the dlatrlct will be paid ott In city factory scboo~. Parents do. .south~t quarter of the state.
troops through malnleriance of carnplnl facilities, training of
December, 1990, ud Jt the four not want to bus their children 16 Skill· sbould clw more quickly
secretary of the PTO, approxl·
adult volunteers, purc~ase of equipment, books film strips and
mately 100 parenta, teachers and mllll currently beiDa collected Is .mllel to and from school; nor do Tbul'lday atabt.
through staff support services.
.
. '
Other 1Dteres111!d citizens ra· conUnued, IJeiiMiq 1n Jan. 1991 they wut them rldiDa with
More law prn•1re II expected
If
a Girl Scout does not call at your doot, ask around the
thereclattheMiddleportElemen· and aliiDdllla tor 21 ye1n1, over junlllr and senior hiJh atudenta.
to deveklpe aloq the 1011thern
community to find t)!e nearest Girl Scout or Girl Scout leader.
· tary Scbool '1'118dJY ntaht to •• mlllloD will be ralad toward We feel that · there should be end of tha 1.'0111 froat In Taxaa
Theil ttl":e them a call.
.
·
)lear Melp Local SUperintendent thi propaa1d buJ)dllla pi'o&amp;ram · cbeaper alternat1v11 to th111'8dl·
later Thlll'lday IIIJht. The Naat
·
no
Increase
In
taxea
to
cal
acUon
of
cl111ln1
seven
' '
Ja.- Carpenter present the
tional Weather Ser\llce said th1l
. ICboo!l...
prGp(WI for lha CODIOUdation of relldenta of tha dlltrll:t.
law pres....-e wtll movw norlhlut
The pupPI- populaUoa Ia the
The location of the proposed and will brlq cloudl back IDto
the •lesnentary IICbooll.
'nte plall u proposed by the seven IICbooll, wbJoh varln fnlm. . new l:!uUdlnp. hu no! yet been IOUthem Ohio on Floldey. '
Seven calls were answered on Wednesday 11)1 unlta of the .
, · Melp Loell .Board of Education leas than 130 to more than 370, tile determined ~ the Melp Local . There Ia a slim cliiiJC8 for rialn
Melp COunty Emerpncy Medical Services.
.
II to co..truct two new bulldlnp student-teacher raUo, and the Board of EducaUon, but Supt. rettlna back lllto IOUihenJ OhiO
At 12:04 a.m .. Tuppers Plains went to Route 7 for Emeat
In the dlatlict to ~erve either u . tnab!Uty to offer run-Ume carpenter, accordtna to Bevan, by late afternoon Friday, but the
Perkllll Sr. whO was taken to O'Bleness Memor1alllolpltal.
Indicated that the O!le which the ·more serious threat will be
ele~~~entary or combination teacberiiD art, mualc and other
Pomeroy at 9: 2&amp; a.m. went to the Amerleare-Pol I!Of .
~ areu In the seven eJe.
Middleport studenll would at- Friday nljbt, with thlt -wet
•: elemeatary·Jun!Or. hiJb schools.
Nunllla Centl!r for · Roxie Moore , to yeterua liB:n;ortal
tend Would "probably he near tile· weatb(er spreading over mueh OC
· · .. Curritntly the superintendent mentary schoo~ Were lilted u
·
. ConUnued on pare 6
hllh school."
Ia presenUq the propaeal at PTO some ot the reuoaa for the
the state by Saturday morning.

Mason
·
county
. h88ms
· t
f alali·t y·
auto
1990

REGUlAR •

TROPICANA

1 BUNCH ()F

CORN • GREEN lEANS
CARROTS • POTATOES • SAUEIICRAUT •

FREE BROCCOLI . I

FOODLAND V.EGETABLES

.,

ORANGE JUICE

I

I

WITH PURCHASE OF 1 HEAD OF 1

I

CAULIFlOWER
AND THIS COUPON

16 Ol.
CANS

c....,~

... 1114190. 1/20190

oz.

12
CAN

I
I
I

c...,. Volltl 1/14190 - I

.

1i11o1t I P• F...y With ( - ... ~tioaal

-----------

rDorecas''·t

I

•a:n· JloJP '
r

'...: ,IIW!t.l'

J

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I..Dcal news

briefs-~

·water station back in operation

Cookies sale starts Friday

GRAPE JAM or
•caiS
GRAPE JEllY

ASSORTED HEll'S

100'- YEGOAILE

·

POTATO CHIPS

Sl 491ooz.

(

lAG

Middleport
. PrO opposes project
-. that would close elementary -school
.

oz.

32
JAI

ECIIIICit.DEU - WATD ADDED

CRISCO OIL

COOKED HAM

$ .99uoz.

1·99_w.

-. tu;.-ctn!i' :~r~;Tommy Romine,
· RutlaJid, $25 arid costs, open
container; Sally A. Gloeckner,
·R acine, $10 fine only, running a
atop slgrl; Curtis Lemley, Mid·
dleport, $100 and costs, driving
. ~~J~Mr auapenalon, and $100 and
-ta. Insurance suspension; Tl·
mothy E. Price, Jack!lon, $16and
eoata, speeding; Roy Boggs,
Middleport, $25 and costs, and
Gina R. PhiiUps, Middleport, $10
alld cosll, running a stop sign.

•

2 Soe1ion1, 1 2 Pages 2&amp; Cents
.A Multimedia Inc. Neww:aaper

County· road mileage count
same in Meigs, Roberts says

ENTER 'NOW AT

Six were fined and three others
forfeited bonds In the t'Ourt of
• - Middleport Mayor Fred Hottman

I

Lllebllers said township ordl·
The only neg.tlve votes on !he
nances could not supersede state b!Uweregenel'atedbyanamendlaw or city ordinances. Town- ment offered by Rep. Michael
ships would notbeabletolm110$1' Fox, R·Hamllton, and approved
jail time for crimes, only fines.
by the House.
The townships would be prohl·
The amendment gives an add!·
blted from offering services tiona! two-year moratorium for a
already In place In the county. township annexation dispute In
"No way do we Intend to give Butler County.
townships the authority to proFox said Sharonville · and
vide serVIces that the countle~ Springdale In Hamilton County
provide," said Luebbers. . ·
and Fairfield In Buller County
The townships would have no are attempting to annex Union
taxing powers, but they could . Township. He _said a one-year
collect taxes approved by the moratorium expired last ,July.
IJeDPle.
·
·
· ·
,..

·

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.

·Court news

at

Representatives
OK
township
home
rule
bill
.to

speclai meeting

Middleport

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,_ Thu111day; Jeinuary 18, 1990

Meigs
announcemenls
There will be a special meeting
of the Chester Township Trustees
· on Friday, 7: 30p.m . at the town
hall.
Dance planned
The Gallta Twirlers Sqaure
Dance Club will hold a dance on
Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at the
Henderson Community Center In
'Henderson, W.Va. Thec~llerwlll
be Herb Shelton and the dance Is
open to all western square
dancers.
Amerlc1111 Lepon meeting
There will be a regular meet·
lng of the Racine American
Legion Post 602 on Thursday at
-7:30 p;m. Refreshments will be
)erved follOWing the meettDg.
Tra&amp;eea lo meet
The Salem Township Trustees
will hold thler monthly meeting
on Jan. 27 at 9 a.m. at ·the fire
bouse In Salem Center.

Lew tonlJb&amp; near •· Friday,
Jijsh near 40. Cliuce of rain 31

•

' I

•

Your Jndependently Owned
Low·Priced Super~ark•t.

sought

Dpvorce actions have been
filed In Meigs Common Pleas
Court by David E. Huddl~ton.
Racine, against Lori L. Huddleston, Al'llngion Heights, IlL; and
Diane E. Brickles; Pomeroy,
against Larry H. Brlckles,
Pomeroy.
Filing for dissolution of their
marriages are Timothy R.
Priddy. Middleport, and Ll nda F.
Priddy, Pomeroy; Ada Mae
McHaffie, Middleport, and
.George W. McHaffie · Jr.,
Lancaster.
A dissolution of marriage has
been granted William Boyd
Deem and Beth Ann Deem.

Piek 3
428
Pick 4
6162
Super Lotto
4-18-22-26-31-34 .

'

A foreclosure action has been
' filed In Meigs Common Pleas
· Court by Citizens Federal Bank,
Mlam~ Fla., formerly known as
· Equitable Federal Savings and
Loan Association, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., against Wllllam E .
: Morris, Pomeroy; Sandra · K.
- Morris, Pomeroy; et al. .
The court cases of ·Michael
Burke, doing business as Rain·
bow Oil and Gas, et al, against
Untve'rsal Well Services Inc.;
and Barbara Queen against
Robert H. Eastman, doing bust. ness as Big J:lend Foodland, .e t al,
have been set Ued ahd·dismissed.

l

or

Wltnesfi!S heatd as manr a,
200 rounds tired In the first ata
Incident Involving the .UMW Ill
nearly six years.
f
Coal mine operators In our
pickups told pollee they
fired upon as t.hey drove Y
piCkets around 8. 30 a.m. at an
Intersection on t~e access road.
Pollee confirmed that all four
trucks had been damaged by
,.

n~eltlng bonds on the charge

Divo~

non-union mines where United .
Mine Workers 'members bad
gone to protest the firm's alleged
failure to pay back wages and
medical benefits,
.
_ . UMW Preside-nt Richard
',TrUIIIka expreslled outrage and,
1n a brief statement, said the
three miners were prates Ung
$357,000 owed thl'!ll In back pay
and medical benefitS.

I

•

Six forfeited bonds on speeding
charges In· the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday

: Foreclosure
action filed

are not even sure what !he truth
Is, yet.
''With this type of thing, you
may never find out. You got a
difference of opinions and perceptlons as to who started
shooting fii'Bt. Someone m~y
eventually step forward. It Is too
early to tell, yet."
Shots whistled through trees
near an access road to a pair

Ohio_Lottery

EMS has seven coUs ·

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Comm
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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE ~IGS-MASON AREA,

. B!m~
q,v

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"""--'._...,...,~=·­

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RQBEKT L, WINGETT
Publisher

':·

PAT WHrrEREAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer

J

•

Pomalov-Mi

.

5

- ~sbeml ' Rar.anj.:.Ut.

Ill Court Street
Po1Jieroy, Ohio

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'' ..'

Paga 2-TheDalySallllriilel
u•~ an. Ohio
~ 18; 1890

Thuradlly:
- •

Truth_abo~t fan Am flight 103

·The Daily Sentinel
a~

'

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. ......r, 11, 1110

~

'

CHABLENE HOEFLICH
General Manacer

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Ieos than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. adclrf!lsand telepbeiDe number. No unsigned lrilers ,.m be published. Lelten showld be In goqd Iaaie, addre81lnlllsues, not ..........Illes.
....,

Early retirements
By STEVE GERSTEL .
WASHINGTON (UPH - Sens. James McClure, 65, William
. Armstrong, R-Colo., 52, and Gordon Humphrey, R·N.H. , 49, are
wa lking off the job at the end or this year.
. ·
Given thelrages, their salaries and the success they have enjoyed
In their chosen work, the retirements would be unusual even In the .
real or the private world.
That they are leaving the _Senate, a highly coveted 'pos!llon open
only to 100 at any given time, makes It almost astounding. Senators
normally cling to the office until -d eath or the voters removed them.
or course, there are retirements every election year: Two years
ago, It was Sehs. William Proxmire, D-Wis,. Roller! Stafford, R-Vt. ,
Daniel Evans, R-Wash., and P'a ul Trible, R-Va ..
·
But Stafford and Proxmtre were well into their 70s; Trible decided
to run for governor; and Evans never was happy In Washington.
Much more common Is the penchant among senators to go after still
one more term, no matter wha_t age, no matter what Infirmity.
In the coming election, there are a number of senators seeking
re-election who. In age, dwarf the three retirees.
Going to the post again are Sens. Strom Thurmond, R-S.-C., 87 ;
Claiborne Pel!, D-R.L, 71. James Exon, D·Neb.. 68, Howell Heflin,
D-Aia .. 68, Jesse Helms. R-N .c.. 68, and Mark Hatfield , 67.
Those ages for senators seeking re-election are not unusual, even
though a six-year term will carry Thurmond into his 90s, Pell close to '
80 and the others well Into their 70s.
Sen. Dan Nickles, R -Okla .-, chairman of the Republican Senatorial
Campaign Committee. although not happy, said he could understand ·
McClure' s decision, saying the Idaho senator has been In "e)ected
o(flce since 1950 and tl)at's a long time for public service." '.
But Nickles also conceded It Is' "unusual" that Armstrong and
Humphrey are leaving after two terms, a time when senators are
moving into positions or power in the tradition-steeped Senate. .
No matter, th&lt;' decision by the three will ma-ke It even harder for the
GOP's probably Impassible mission of recapturing control or the
Senate in the fall elections.
McClure. Armstrong and Humphrey are all proven statewide
vote-getters who won their last elections with hlg majorities: ·
Nickles expr&lt;'sses confidence in the three Republicans. all
members of the House, who will probably be the nominees In the
states with vac·ant" seats - Rep. Hank I;lrown In Colorado, Larry
Craig in Idaho and Rep. Bob Smith in New Hampshire.
But Nickles is quick to acknowledge that "ally open seat is going to ,
be seriously challenged- there aren't that many open seats." ·
Nickles pre fers to look ahea,d to 1992 and 1994 when he anticipates
that Democrats- who will be putting up more seats in thOse yearswill be the ones retiring.
·
"I see a lot of Democrats retiring .. : more than Republicans,"
Nickles says. .
- That, however, Is a ·political long way off and doesn't help
Republicans this year.
'

WASHINGTON - .President
had apBush and British Prime Minister · proved the bombing. .
Margaret
Thatcher secretly
Pan Am 103 originated In
agreed last spring to downplay Frankfurt, Germany, stopped In
the truth about,who blew up Pan London and was bound for New
Am flight 103 over Lockerble,
York when a bomb exploded at
Scotland.
30,000 feet over Scotland on Dec.
After both leaers had lntelll· 21, 19~. All 259 passen~ers were
gence reJ;,orts pointing the finger killed, along·wlth 11 people In the
at a terrorist hired by the Ayatol· village of Lockerble.
lab Khomelnl, Thatcher called
Iranian-sponsored terrorists
Bush on the tlilephone. In that quic!ily· claimed credit, hut the
conversation, they agreed that British and American governneither could stand the political ments put out the story that there
heat of making the evidence !ll!b· were -seyeral suspects. Behind
lic ·llecause both were Impotent tlte scenes, all the evidence
· to retaliate.
pointed ,to Jlbril. He had been
Hlghiy plac~ White House shopping for money for his wrroSO\JrCes told us that the phone rlst group, the Popular Front for
call took place aboufmld·Mar~h .
the Liberation ofPalestlne-GeBy that time, both the British and
neral Command. His usual span'American intelligence services
sors, Libyan leader Moatnmar
had followed the trail of evidence Gadliafl ·and Syr!&lt;ln President
to terrorist Ahmed Jlbrll as the
Haf,ez al-Assad, were short . or,
hit man who was paid by Iran to cash.
,
,
blow up the plane. The lntelli·
The lnto;lllgence reports told
gence services had evidence that
Bush and Thatcher that Jlbrll
Khomeinl and his successor, went to Iran In July 1988 and

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

•
struck the deal with Khomelnt
and Rafsanjanl · to blow up an
American plane In retaliation tor
he accidental U.S. downing of an
Iranian airliner
earlier that
month.
When the Intelligence reports
began to leak
last March,
Tl)atcher called Bush to discuss
their dilemma. She said no purpose would beserved by making
public the evidence against Iran
because neither the
United '
States or Britain could respond.
Bush knew that Khomelnl had ·
proved the undoing of Jimmy
Carter and had nearly proved te
undoing of Ronald Reagan. Carter lost an election becasue he
couldn't get ·American hostages
back -from Iran, and Reagan surfered the biggest blow of his pre- ·
sldency when he tried to trade
arms to Iran for American hostages.
So Bush didn't

Thatcher suggested that they
"low-key" the flndlaga - ·say
that the lnvesUgatlon was !neon·
clus_ive and loag-.l!mn.
After the phone call, word wa1
quickly passed 10 top offlcl~s
conducting the Pan Am Invest!·
gallon that t!l"Ywerenot to make
any otr- the- ~rd remarks lm·
pllcatlng Jlbrllor Iran. In Britain, when the press speculated
about possible perpetrators, the
Investigators called the spet11la- .
tlon 11 WUd" and "irresponsible."
The American
IntelligenCe
sources who told us about tbe te·
lephone call thought the dec:lsl&lt;!n
was political cowardice.
Thatcher. the "Iron Lady,"
earned her tough reputation In a
war With Argentina over the Falk·
land Island$. But, by last March,
her popularity was on the wane ,
and she didn't need to be embarrassed by Khomelnl. Bush, stUI
fighting his· "wimp" Image, didn't
· want to face the 11ltimate calls for
· retrlhu(ion. He has now thrown otr
the wimp label with the Invasion of
Panama- mere war games when
compared to a brawl with Iran.
WHO CALLS THE SHOTS? Who rally controls the stock market? A"handful .or super money
manag~rs control $2 trUiion In
stocks. buying. and selling them
on behalf of pension funds, tns11r·
ance companl!lS. mutual funds
and other major Investors. That
concentration of power ensures
volatility in the market. This socalled "Institutional
money"
grew by 14 percent a year In the
1980s. Investing Is, no lqnger a •
matter of picking quality cOmpanies for the long 't erm. tnstead,
the market has taken on the ap,
pearance or a casl,no.
ThaJ .
makes It even more dJffiC\IIt for ,
American Industry to telnves.t
and retool as It must to remain
.
competitive. '
'

·What .does .A merica oew Ollie?

.f{)seph Spear

.

Should Oliver North, Lt. Col., and be disqualified from holding referred to the Judlcti.ry Com·
' by the media, those
have been told
USMC, Ret., retain his mUitary any office under the United
mlttee, chaired by Democratic great thinkers, that Mickey GorQpension? IUs a matter you'll be . States."
..
,
Rep. Jack Brooks, a crusty Texan
achev's a goOd guy." .
bearing a lot about in coming . A retired military officer holds. , who knows the difference -between
In my judgment. North Is a
weeks, and it is not as simple as It an offle, the GAO reasoned. chicken salad· and chicken teath· posturing,
prep0$terous, self·
sounds.
Nqrth forfeited· it. No of{ice, no ers and who long ago concluded"' righteous, superficial, swagger·!
The problem Is that North, in pay. Case closed.
that Oliver North is walking pluming, theatrical little . Naploeon ,
the 'opinion (If experts, was not
Enter the Ardent Right, which age. He and other House Demowho tolok It upon himself to run
· receiving a pension to which he views Oliver North as a direct de- . crats have been studying a memo the world the way he wanted to,
contributed. He was receiving a scendent of Mars, the Roman- entitled "Options for Oliver North and to hell with the Constitution.
reduced salary for ''holding the god or war. Ollie might have Ballou! BUt" There are seven
office" or a regular military of· made a m),stake, they thundered, items oil the list, and the first oire He Is blessed with a boyish grin
and set of baby blues that melt
fleer in retired status, subject to ·but he was a warrior for freereads: ·"Hold the bUI, taking the
the cameras. He was fortunate to
rec~ll tb active duty. This Is a
dom. If hed_efled the 'law by ~rm ­ position that North was convicted
get
a judge, Gerhard Gesell, whq·
crucial difference which renders lng the 1reedom fighters with and must accept the punishment."
was fair to fault, and a compasNorth lneilglble to receive his re- money squeezed out or the IraAnother North pension mea·
sionate jury that would convict
tirement pay.
nians, then it was the law that sure has been ,referred to th~
him only on things he confesse&lt;t
It Is complicated, but ·ln capneeded fixing and, by God, Ollie House Armed Services Com- to.
. ~J.._
sule form , what happened is this:
fixed lt.
mittee, where conservatives will
All that being said, North Is a
After North's conviction · on
Shortly before adjournment last probably be able to · wrench It . veteran who shed ltis blood for ,
three felonies in the Iran-contra yel\r. the Senate pas~ a "gen·
loose. Once It escapes comhis country, and the only honoraAfter reading the article In They work many hours that no scandal, the Navy wlthhoHd pay- eric" but purpOrtedly designed to mittee, It will 11ndoubtedly beble recourse -we have Is-to pay
Tuesday's paper I felt compelled one realizes. During wind and ment o! his $23,000 a year pen- . exempt retired military officers come law."No one wants to vote
him
his pension, or retirement,
to write this.
snow, There are many hours of slon. pending an official ruling from the forfeiture-of-office law. against North on the record," or whatever. But I would like to
· see every monthly cheek ' made
It concerns the people known , sleep lost so we have clean roads by the General Accounting Of •. In fiiC(, said Sen. Howard Metzen- said one House Insider.
as the trustees and a certain fire
As a taxpayer, I abhor the · out In a way that reminds him It
to travel on, D9 !hey get thanks flee , which, has jurisdiction in baum, D-Ohio, it was little more
contract between these trustees
for -that?. I dare say we have the such matters The GAO subse- than an "Oliver North Protection thought that a fraction of my con· · Is grudgingly given., Something
and Racine and Syracuse Fire
best' roads In the state. It -t akes quently pointed out that North Act.' ' . ~· Jesse Helms, R-N.C.. tributions may end up In the felon
like "Pay to 'the order or Oliver
acknowledged as much when he Oliver North's pocket.
·That
Departments.
special men with 'a sense of was convicted of breaking a
North, Lt. -Col. USMC, Liar,
I just have to ask myself what
caring and pride to do this kind of criminal law which states that exultantly declared, ''Ollie, this amount hardly matters to a man
Document
Shredder, Illegal
whoever destroys government one• s for you~ •' ·
who pulls down $25,000 a crack for · Gratuity Recipient. Ret." •
kind of people we have become work.
In the House, a similar but was
uttering such lnanttiey; as· "We
that we could turn our backs on
In my opinion that remark records "shall forfeit his ' office
'
our fellowmen when they ask for
made at 'a publiC meeting about
our help. Syracuse did just that.
not·getting the roads graded was
They asked for our help and we
uncalled for. I. doubt ' that out,
tried to give IL Racine has a fine • trustees or their . employees
fire department, thanks In part to would do that. All roads will be
the momey Letart Township has
taken care of as usual, I'm sure.
WASHINGTON (NEA) -Those
Does this mean that Reagan surplus to pay off babyboomer
paid to them for fire protection, I
I think the trustees· and fire
people who read George Bush's and Bush are ·braking their no- claims.
·
think It's wrong for them to
department could have worked
Ups when he promised "no new new-tax pledges? Not at all: The
In the meantime, the Social of a giant private pension fund.
assume they should get It all. We
this problem out · on their own taxes" are In for a rude shock Increases are velng considered Seuclryt surplus Is being "borroMoynihan calculates that, by
need to h&lt;'lp one another.
without all the so-called con· when they
accumulating
Interest, th': 1990
get
their
first
"revenue
adjustments."
wed"to
artificially
lower
the
fe·
. .
cern and mud slinging.
paychecks of 1990. There will be
Given this Increase, It Is es· deral budget ' deficit. Technl- withholding lncrese can be rolled
The pap&lt;'r was misled on the
Let he who makes no mistakes less lnthem: Once again, Social timllte4that!n1990theSoclalSe- cally,the trust rund is restricted hack and next year workers can
duration of th&lt;' contract. It Is for sUng the mud. It seems tome that Security taxes have Increased.
curlty system 'Will take In $389 to pyalng for Social Security and be give" an additional! percent
five not three years, according to some people In Letart1'ownshlp
FICA withholding - wli!ch sup- billion. This Is about 80 percent of Medlare benefits. However, the · cut. This would save workers and
Don Richard Hill, Letart trustee. need to look at all the help these posedly finances both Social Se- what Income tax takes in. In fact , , fund·Is still part of the over aU fe - employers almost s62 billion
I have heard and read so·many . men . have, given and re-think curlty and Medicare. - has In· for workers ~pBklng
over the nexttwo years.
under deral budget system:
hurtful things about our trustees. their positions.
.·
creased from 7.51 percent ol 7.65 $30,000 annually, Social Security
The Gramm-Hollings-Rudman
':The administration Is happy to,
The meetings have always been
Let's be honest A difference or percent, with the maximum With- takes more than the IRS.
,baJanced budget law called for a
see the budget defiCit grad~iy
open to the public. Why riow do oplnfon Is a healthy thing, but I held annually for an Individual
This has left some legislators 1989 target deficit of no more than eliminated by the gtow!ng Social
they need "checked on."
think this spite, greed · and worker Increasing from $3.604.~ on Capitol Hill unhappy. Far $152 bUUon. Congress and the Security surplus," said Moynihan.
It makes no difference what hurting others Isn't so healthy. to $3,924.45. The amount Withheld from needing more money to White House say we will hit this "This perverts the original purdecision Don Richard Hill, Harry Let's all clean up our own !rem each worker
must be stay solvent, the Social Security target. But that II after counting In pose of building"up the surplus to
Hill or Dave Graham make.
backyards befo"re we condemn matched by the employer.
system Is actually rolling In the Social Seucirty surplus Of more pay of;f'the claims or te baby-boom
Someone is going to disagree, no others.
. generation."
The Increase, about 9 percent, excess cash.
.
than $55 bliUon.
.
one sees eye to eye. lteel they do
Signed Is the 15th FICA Increase In the
Some Democrats are arguing
The adjustments..akreed to In
Many. both In and out of gothe best job they can and If you
A caring Letart Township last 27 years and wUI aet the the 1983 law are part of a plan to vernment, call this accounting for an even greater. SOcial Secur' '
look around we have the best
employee, Treasury an additional $15 bll· build up a huge surp!us in Social
trickery. Keep!!lg the Social Se· Ity. tax cut, believing It would do
roads to 'travel on and they' are
Dale E. Riffle, an(! Pamela S.
lion. In thelast dozen years So- Security while · the baby-boom curlty trust lund, With Its grow- much more to help the economy
very well kept and look nice. Lutz.
lng surplus. as part pf the ordl· than the capital gains tax cut becia! Security's take
has In· generatlan remains In the work·
creased by more than 30 percent. force. These workers wUI start nary budget allows the president ing pushed by President Bush. A
This year's hike ta the result or retiring and drawing Income and Congress to lower the deficit 40 percent cut In FICA would
mean an additional $750 for a
" .a 1983 Social Security "reform" · from the Social Security trust
without lowering spending.
bill, which was pushed throuah fund around 2012. By the year
But It also means that IntereSt worker making·$25,000 annually.
.
BJ Ualled PrMa l.tea..uc;iW
and signed Into law by Ronald 2030, the fund wUI begin ex periearned on the Soc!al Security. The capital gains cut would
Today Is Thunda)', ,Jan. 18, the 18th day of 1990With347 to follow.
mean nothing to the average
Reagan. That bill set forth a enclng ~lgnlflcant annual deft·
Effectively, the money just goes
The moon Is In Ita last quarter.
worker - but It would· net lax·
Into the Treasury's central pot.
series or FICA hikes tluit wUI ella that will last for 30 years. HoThe mornlJJistars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
payers wth a $:110,00 annual Incontinue through . the next de- wever,.by 20:11, planners hope the
Sen. Daniel Patrick Maynllian,
The evening star Is Jupiter.
come
about f25,000 a year.
•
trust fund will have a $12 trUIIon D-N. Y. , Is an outspOken critic of
cade.
Those born on this date are under the sign of CapricOrn, They
Such a cut would meaa a lou or ·
the current system. As chaJrman
lnc:lude English physician Peter Roaet, Who compUed "Rogel's
revenue .to Social SecuritY• or
of the Senate Finance Com·
Tllesaui'UJ, "In 1779; American orator and statesman Daniel Webster
about $75 billion - about the llze
·'
mlttee's Subcommittee 0!1 Social
In J782; English author Alan Alexander Milne, r,vhowrote ''Winnie the
In 1966, Iadlra Gandh~ daughter of the late IDdlan Prime Minister Secu rlty, he Ia In a key poalt!Dn to or thee year' a proJected surpluil.
Pooh," In 1882; and actors Oliver Hardy In 1892, Cary Grant Ia l!IOC · Jawaharlal Nehru, herself bec:ame prime minister ol India
· do somelhlng about it.
If It' Is. necessary to bUUd up a
and Danny Kaye In 1913.
surplus, that amount could be
In 1968, the United States and Soviet Union agreed on a d~aft or a
Moynihan says that he will
nuclear non-proUferatlon treaty.
push a bill that would separate found by putting a 10 pe1 ceat
On this date In hit tory:
"Social Security" surcharp! 011
.
· tbe Social· Security truat fund
In 1871, William ot Prusala was lleclared the first German emperor.
A th~ilgbt tor the d11y: Author A.A. Milne wrote, "One or tile · !rom the rqular budget, keeping · incorile ti!Xes. It Is e•ttmllted
In 1943, Moscow announced ,that the 16-month Nazi siege , of
that 1~ out of 20 taxpayers would
advantages or being dl'sorderly Is that one Is coliStantly makll!g all Social Sl!durlty revenCies and
Leningrad was lifted.
excltlna ~lscoverles."
·
Interest u th011Jh they were part end up better orr.

Letters to the editor

,

Responds to article in paper

Are su•plus ,funds being misused?
'

.'

·

Today in history

I

.I

.. .

,,

•.f

·

Robert Wagnum

Pometov-Midclaport. 01119

s~c~~~P~

Wildcats, To1ttadoes to

start weekend

By G. SPENCER OIJIIORNI!:
continue to need 10lld ahoOUag to stay Ia secolld place, a aweep
, OVP SCalf Wrller
!rom juniOr forward Riehle Cor· by Trace would ·drop Racine to
· UnUke tllelr enco11nters or nell, who hu colilltC!ted for third If North Gallia does the
years Past, Mike JenkiDI' Han· double fleures In five of hll Jut expected and q~ats Oak Hill.
nan Trace Wildcats and Howle six games In addiUOn to prtMd• · · ·
OU.Piratel
Caldwell's Southern Tornadoes tng some decent work oil the . North Gallia, ' returning to
must pace themselves when they boarda. JuniOr center Craig league play after back· to-back
begin . their weekend double- Rankin has also been a model of non-league losaea to Rock Hill
header Friday night at the consistency, u he hu oome and Chesapeake, should satisfy
Charles W. Hayman.Gymnasium through with doubllt·flgure acor- the oddsmakers by laylna the ax
m Racine.
tng ertorts In six ot hls 'last seven . to Oak Hill and ending a "'hreeaecause the second game In games, and junior fJIIBI'd Ertc · game losing skid.
this doubleheader Will take place Lloyd seems to have flnlllly
The Pirates must do as they did
Saturday night in Mercerville, gotten orr the offeulve roller· 1n their Jut encouater wtth•tbe .
these games won't be the play· coaster that he \i)as oJralnce Ifill Oaks, whlcb Is to control the
'tll·you&gt;drop affairs that they five-game streak of ICOrlilll In' Hill's scoring aces - "Julllof
would have been had Mother double figures early In the seuon forward Shane Ma)'Dard · aad
Nature been more cooperatlveon with back-to-back 12-polnt ef· ~n!Dr penter •,,Chad Sinlth Oel!: 8, when lheWIIdcatswereto forts In last weekend'• action while keeping enough pressUre
host the Tor~does. But as It Is; ap!Dit Sym~etl VII~, and oil the rest or their ll!illllmAies to
both teams should be gratefultor · lrontoa St. Joe. If thll trlumvl·• keep them froni breaklnl loose .
the week they're be aettinl to rate caa acore coDIIItent!y and and picking up tlie alack for
mentally and physically prepare often agallllt thi!To1114doel. that them.
'
,.
for this hardwood marathoa.
may motivate solid efforts from . Even thougl! theOau loatby 18
Southern, stUI steaming after the rest of the Wildcats.
toSoutb Weblter'I'uesday night,
fa!Ung out of the league's un· ' Southern, averQIDa nine men . t11ey undoubtedly '!U'e beatnnlng
beaten ranks at hQme to neigh- In the scoring column per ga_me,
to believe In them.etves, aa their
'borhood rlv;li Eastern, must plays laD offensive shell game twoWinslnthelrlaltthreegames
begin the second halfoflts league that can wreak , havoc on any attest. This suraelnconfldencels
schedule by shooting better at the team tooktng to key on any one or something North Gallla must
line, as Hannan Trace; as usual,
two players (translated: anyone control with a healthy balallceof
promises to provide plenty or from Andy Baer to Todd Grind- outside shooting from Chris
defensive pressure.
· $taff to Br•d Maynard to Jeremy Tackett, artan Stout and Darin
In Saturday's five-point loss to Rose et.at: , can lead the team In Smith, and' domination of the
_the Eag)es, Racine nailed 33 scorl~g). the Galllans must, as . paint from D.J. Hammel, Shane
from the ·charity stripe, ·hut Jenkins has prea_ched to them Smith and Richard Haney.
missed 22. Don't look for the tlmeswlthoutoumbel'beforean;:,: among others.
Tornadoes to miss that many in
game against the. Torni~.
Ri&amp;hlallden-EaP,.
either or their games With the play superb defenie aaaJnst a , Southwestern started strong
Guy an five·.
team more motivated to get back out of the gate, Winning three of
Hannan Trace, not the run" on the winning track than ever. - the!~ first four contes Is; bu\ has
and-gun team or years past, will As Southern needs at lea•t a 's pllt faded · out ·of the running since.
·
·
then, !&lt;&gt;sing seven or their. last

Kent edges Ball State;·
OU defeat Falcons

By United· Press Internal .,nal ·
David Barnwell hasn't had ·
many chances to play the hero In
his four years at Kent State. He
got one ·wednesday night and
made the 'most or ft .
·
Barnwell, a 6-loot-9 senior
center, scored 17 points In Kent's
·1i . 68 victory over Ball State,
second only to teammate Harold
.Walton' s 18. But It was Barnwell's two free throws with two ·
seconds remaining that Iced the
game for the Flashes .
· They came after three limes tn·
the final , two minutes Kent
"missed on the first of one-and-one
free throw opportunities that
would have put the game out of
Jhe Cardinals' reach.
"I thought David Barnwell was
magnificent playing with four
fouls," said Kent Coach Jim
McDonald, whose team moved
into a second place .tie With Ball
. ~ tate, the preseason favorite to
successfully defend Its MAC title.
' 'He got a couple or big rebOunds
and showed a lot of courage at the
!oulllne."
Both Kent and Ball State now '
have 3·1 conference marks and
trail Idle Miami (4-0) by a game
in the standings.
Kent led 39-33 at halfllme and
held it until Ball State's Billy
Butts ·hit a layup will) • 2: 40
remalnlnl!' to give the Cardinals
their only lead of the secilnd half,
68-67.
With 2:'13 remaining, Tony
Banks scored on a goaltendlng
call against Ball State. That was
all the scoring untU Barnwell's
two free throws.
· •'Kent wanted this game more
than we did," said Ball State
• Coach Dick Hunsaker. ''They
thoroughly outplayed us and they
were more compoaed.''
Banks, a product of Southside
High School'ln Muncie, Ind. , the
home or Ball State, added 14
points for Toledo and Eric Glenn
had 10.
.
Ball State was led In SL'Ort"ngby
Butts With 18 and Curtis Kldd
With 16.
In other MAC games Wednes. day ntaht, Ohio University beai ·
Bowline Green - 65-&amp;1, Toledo
downed Central MlchlgaD 83-69
and Eastern Michigan defeated
Central Michigan 96-85.
At BowUng Green, Ohio U
turned loose senior Dave JallH!J'·
son. the MAC,'s leading acorer,
and the result was the Bobcats'
first win In five conference
games.
Jamerson poured In 40 polnu,
breaking the Anderliiln Arena
record for most polnta In a single
game by a BG opponent. He now
Is just 16 points away from 2,000
lor hli career.
Jamerson conaected oa ellbt

Meigs drops 3~2
contest to GARS .
Karl Brown led Ill scorers With
15 paints to help puah the Gallia
Academy elghth-arade girls'
basketball team to a 39-32 victory
over Meigs Wednesday night In
Ga!UpoUs. ·
Also contrlb!ltina to the Blue
Angela' win were MaateThraPP
(nine) and
Jolmloa (llx).
Teylor led the Marauders 1"itb
nme polnta.
The Aaaels will play h01t to
,Wellattlll 1111 MondaS' . ,

.I.e-"

Qur.... ....

........... ,.... ; .......... 9 12 7-32
GAHS .................. l2 15 8 4-39

·'

nine _

·

or 18 three-point shots and led the
Bobcats back !rom a 34-30
halftime deficit.
The' Falcons,.who m11de only
seven of 17 free throws, were,led
by Clinton Venable's -15 points
and Joe Moore With 14.
At Toledo, Cltad Keller scored
19 paints and Craig Sutters 16 io
lead the hot-shooting Rockets to
their win over Central Michigan.
The Rockets jumped to a 17·7
lead at the 13: 10 mark of the first
half, built their margin to as
much as 35-18 and were ~till oil
top 3'7-24 at the intermission.
Central cut the Toledo lead to
40-32 ear Jy in the second half, bUt
an 11-5 Rocket run made it 51·31
and the closest Central got the
rest or the way was 59-50 With 8: 38
to play.
· ·
Toledo shot 66.7 percent ffoin
the field for the game, 30 ot 45,
and hit a sizzling ~ percel)t the
second half, makJna 16 of 29· Th~
Chippewas hiU1.3 percent oa 26
of 63.
·
Musklngum, Baldwin-Wallace .,
and Otterbein still share the .top
""',2
spot In the Ohio Athletic Confer· . _1...~~=-~-'"iij;;
ence after Wednesday alght'• full

109,...

:~:_~aames,a11With7:21earue

~

Musklngum postedan84-70win
at Mount Union, Otterbein won at
Marietta 80-64 anci Baldwin·
Wallace managed a 59·58 win at
home over Heidelberg, Which
had also shared the lead going
Into the alght's play .
In other OAC games, Hlra!ll
edged John Carron 73-70 and
Capital downed Ohio Northern
71-61.
.
In the North Coast Athletic
Conference action, Allegheny
(Pa.) whipped Wooster 87-78,
OberUn edged Kenyon 67-'4,
Wittenberg downed Earlham
(Ind.) 82-'5 and Ohio Wesleyan
downed Denison 63-61.
In other g3111es, It was Urbana
over Shawnee State 91·80, Thomas More (Ky.) over Bluffton
75-47 and Defiance over Flfll)lay

\18\VOUnl

R..,.1,. 01\S
,... ,,.

'

The Daily ·sa •ti•ai...;,Page 3

_

doubleheader Friday

Jim Walker, ·the HtaJ!Ianders'
five have a chance to create a
head coach; said the third quar· livlna flashback or sorts.
ter h(ls been bad for them,
The Bobcats have a shot at
considering that it knoc~ed them . d~;~tng just that with a Sean
out .or the runnlnil aaalns t New Denney who has scored _tn double
Boston Tuesday night. That . figures In all but three of hiS 11
frame was also a snakeplt for games so far , but they must also
them In their last encot~nter do so With a Shane Swisher that
against Eastern, In which the has oaly scored In (!ouble figures
Eagles outscored them 15-9 en four times In the team's 12 games
this season.
route to a 72-69 win.
The VIkings must find a way to
It Is Imperative that Southw·
resurrect the acorlng genius
estern COI!trol Eagle point guard
Shaun Savoy and· keep the ball living In the body or senior pamt
.out or the hands of lrontmen Scott guard Paul Hayes, who was
Fitch and Mike Frost while shackled to the tune or silo; points
creating turnovers to lplte the In Valley's 14-polnt loss to Ports·
Highlanders' fast break and/or mouth Notre Dame last-$atur·
set up nylon wizard ~obn Ehman; day. That was only the second
who averages 23.5 pointa/aame,
for a three-pointer that wouk!
contlnile his trUecta scoring .
(All games)
streak to 14 straight !ames.
W L PF PA
Eastern, on the other hani!, must TEAM.
continue to use Its cross-court Eastern .... .. ......10 3 961 937
passing to spread Southwest- . North Gallla .... . 7 6 902 856
ern' s deense thin _and cre11te' Hannan Trace .. 7 6 792 73.4
seams for , Savoy and fellow Southern .. ....... .. 6 5 808 705
guard Kenny Caldwell to shoot · Southwestern .. .. 5 8 976 910
from the outside and open Up the S.Valley .. .. ....... 4 6 625 650
Oak II! II ... ........ 3 9 711 854
baselines.
Kyger Creek ..... 1 11 649 921
VlkiDp Bobcats
The up-and-coming Symmes
(SVAC games)
Valley VIkings, winners of two of
W L PF PA
t)jelr last three games, are a TEAM
sUght favorite In this contest Eastern .......... .. 8 0 590 517
against a KygerCreeksquad that Southern .... ....... 6 1 582 422
has dropped Its last 16 league North Gallla , .... 6 3 654 594
Hannan Trace .. 4 4 496 452
games.
·
The Bobcats' home court and Oak Hill ........ :.. 3 5 500 577
these Vikings were two of the Symmes Valley 3 5 489 535
ingredients In KC's last ~onfer­ Southwestern .... 3 6 645 627
ence victory, a 74·61 decision on Kyger Creek ..... O 9 474 706
Dec. 20, 1988, so now theChesh~ TOTALS . ........ S3 33 4UO 44311

Grant Sure
Grip Steerlll9
Wheel covers

Oft Alters
:;;.·r~-

·

-b ,_. . . . . . . . . . . . .

St.40

0.. y..., ...........~ .•;..................m...

,

llol'r .. ...., ...... ............... .. ..... 25 Ceala

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rler ~:r. rentll . . . . . . . • :
The
y8ftttoolonl,farB

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--...--.c.u&amp;r

alva-- .

No au!ttqrtptloill by matt penllltttd Ill
artOiwhere--IMMctll
avollabte.

t3 Wnlla ............. ............ ........ .SIJ.H

211 Weekl .................................. $37.98
HWoeb ....................... ........... t!f-31

o.....-.lllotp&lt;lltl.

.

.

13 Woeb ..... .,.,.............. ,.......... !.IO
116 WNb .... :......., .... ............... :. .311

HWnlla..................................

4Jo

377
430

TOTALS ......... 33 83 2775 2775

Friday's games
Hannan Trace at Southern
Southwestern at Eastern
Oak Hill at North Gallla
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek
Saturday's action . .
Southern at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek .at ~ortsmou,th Eas t
Minford at Oak Hill

.-

129

....-c&amp;IPIL4U.'I'D

boala. Credit willie

340
342

0117

Olllo Nowspa[f. Aaaodolloo. Nalloelat
Advert!IID&amp;
-ltve,llranham
N""""'fH'I' Sa eo, 733 Tlllrd A...ue,

111'101.1: COPY
Plllall

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Membor: United Preis illtomatloslal,
illlaild Dally Pr011 Auoclatlonlll6the

. ·

236
342

TradCO

Ohio.

l ••• • • •• • ••••••• • • • •

PA

ggt

'
.
Publlatsed every allemoan, MOnday
tllrqls Friday, m c.un flO ., Pomeroy, Olllo, by tbe Olllo Valley Publlllllnr Company/Multt:riedla, Inc.,
PoiMI'oy, Olllo 45'181, Ph. 11!12-21116. Second class postagp paid at Pomeroy,

one

PF
368
453
· 371
375
329
349
293
237

1127

(VSPIII-1

.. c.rn.r ....... ()np w.-...........~ , ..

·

1)'adcO
De\C"81'

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

New York, New York 10017.

(Reserves)
TEAM
W L
Southern ..... ,.. ...? 0
North Gallla .. ...8 1
Hannan Trace ..6 2
Oak Hill ....... :...5 3
Symmes Valley 3 5
Southwestern ... .3 6
Eastern .. ........ .. 1 7
Kyger Creek .. ...O 9

79t

The Dally Sentlnel

"....

,.

----SVAC standings----

Purolator

64-63.

time tbla season the iJ-8 Hayes
was held to less than 10 polnta. If
Hayes returns to form, be and
fellow target muter Chad Ren- .
rroe will make the Nonemen
tough to beat.
RojiiMOD recover1D1
Symmes Valley's Carl Robin·
son. a 6-2 junior center who
severed a tendon In hli hll knee In
the season and home opener .
against Hannan Trace after
scoring 11 points In the first
quarter, Is walking again and Is
tar ahead of the uauaJ rate of
recovery. accoidlng to VIking
head coach Terry Sat~nders .
Robinson's recovery Is ex·
peeled to be f&lt;&gt;mptete by June.

.411
J

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,,

•

Th.ndlly, _,....., 11. 1880

North Carolina jolts·No. 8 Duke, 79-60

BATI'LJNG INSIDE - Georgetown center Alonzo Mourning
(with ball) bllllles Boston College's Corey Beasley (with hands up)
In the first half of Wednesday night's BfgEastcontestlnLandover
Md. The Hoyas grounded the Eagll!ll 88-45. (UPI)
· . .
'

By .JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sportll Wrtter
North Carolina, facing perliaps
Its biggest reJUiar-season chal·
lenge IJ! years, came through In a
big way Wednesday night.
Rick Fox scored 19 points and
the Tar Heels held No. 8 Duke
scoreless tor nine minutes of the
first half to rout the Blue Devils
79-60 In an Atlantic Coast Conference game.
The Tar Heels, perennially a
Top 20 power, are encountering
their lowest period in a dec11de.
North Carolina has been out of
the ratings for three weeks, Its
longest stretch !n more tban 10
years.
But the effort against Duke
was the best of the season 'for a
tea111 that has been up and ·down
and rarely has put together solid
back-to-back games.
. "!think this game was a step,"
Fox said. "It sl)owed us what.
we' re capable of doing. Now,
we've got to take this kind of play
ort the r011d and prove we can do It
there.''
North Carol!na, 12·6 and 2:1 In
the ACC, also got 1~ points from
Pete Chilcutt and lO·from Hubert
Davis.
Christian Laettner scored 18
points and Alaa Abdelnaby 12 for
the Blue Devils, who had their
nine -game winning streak
snapped and dropped to 12-3 and
3-1 In the league.
"They played great," Duke
Coach Mike Krzyzewskl said.
''They played as hard on defense
as I've seen a t~am play against
us .. They deserved the "((n, .amj
they deserve the recognition for a ,
great effort. Their defense k!lled
our offense and that created
offense for them."
North Carolina's defense
started at the point, where junior
King Rice overwhelmed . Duke
freshman Bobby Hurley. Rice
had 13 points and nine assists;
Hurley finished with six points,
'

TVC standings
(All

Game~~)

TEAM
W L P OP
1'411ler ...... :...... .. 9 3 822 750,_
Wellston .. .. .. .. ... 8 3 781 665
Alexander ...... ~. 8 5 836 .- 777
Fed-Hocking ..... 7 5 887 · 857
Trimble .... ... ..... 7 5 749 721
Belpre .... ... ....... 6 5 784 669
Vinton County .. . 4 5 522 .514
Nels-York. ·....... . 2 10 627 914
Meigs ............... i 9 523 718
Friday's games:
Alexander - ·Open
Nelsonvllle· York at MIUer
Trimble·at Meigs
Vinton County at Federal
Hocking .
· Wellston at Belpre
. TOP INDMDUAL perfonners for the Meigs Marauder
Wrestling team last Saturday at lackson were, first row, left to
right- David Swanson, aecond In the liZ class; Eric Reck lint In
the 119 class and Joe McElroy first In the 130 class. Back row ~ott Barton, third In the 1311 claaa; Burt Kennedy 'second In the 189
dass, and Aaron Sheets, lint In the heavyweight cla&amp;s.
•

Meigs wrestlers are
fourth in tournament·
The Melgy Marauder Wres Ulng · the heavyweight class; Joe
team finished fourth In the McElroy first In 13Q class and
J ackson Quad meet held recently Eric Heck; first In the 119 class.
at Jackson.
Burt Kennedy finished second in
Jackson won the meet. Finish· the 189 class and David Swanson
ing behind the Ironmen were finished second In the 112 class.
Gree nfield McClain, Athens, Scott Barton finished third In the
Meigs and Vinton County.
135 class.
Top !ndlv!dual performers for
The Mar;lllders will wrestle at
Meigs were Aaron Sheets, first In Warren Local this Saturday in a
tri-meet with the Warriors and
Parkersburg Catholic.
The juniOr high wrestling team
wlll take part In a meet tonight at
Jackson. The trl-m"eet will also
The Meigs. Marauders junior · feature Mount Logan along with
high boys' cage squads chalked the host Ironmen. The junior htgh
up a pair of victories over the team will return home next
visiting Gallla Academy teams Monday for a meet with Federal
Wednesday night In Middleport.
Hocking.
In the eighth-grade game, the
Marauders won 41·27. Eric
Wagner led the hosts with 18
points, and teammate Brad And·
erson ~hipped in with 10 points.
The. Blue Devils, 7-3, were led
by Chris Sommerville, who had
11 polhts and 20 rebounds.
. Meigs .took the seventh-grade
contest by 42-29 count. Maraud·
er's Hill and Krawskyznand Blue
Devils Dylan Evans and Jamie
Henry ties! for game honors with
10 points ~ach, as the Blue Devlls
fell to 2·8 overall.
The GAHS squads will play at
South Point on Monday .

Junior Marauders
heat Blue Devils

Sports briefs
Boxing
Terry Marsh, the former world
!lght welterweight champion,
was arrested by Lolldon pollee
Investigating the shooting last
November of his ex-manager,
promoter , Frank Warren, Sea·
tland Yard did noi say how
Marsh, 31, Is connected to the
shooting.... . Britain's Lloyd Ho·
neyghan will fight Mark Breland
In London on March 3 for the
WBA welterweight title.
Grand Forks . N.D., will host a
· U.S.-Canada amateur boxing
dual meet on March 31. The U.S.
team will be chosen based on
results from the U.S. Boxing
Champlonahlps one week earlier. ·

I

,

j.TWO

Call Domino's Pizzo· now and save.

: 2&lt;MID. ONE ITEM::

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PIZZAS

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Tr._VIIIqe 1.

NATIONAL .OCitEV LEAGUE
Wedl:lelci.,Rnult •
&amp;.ten 1, Hartford I cot)

NY lltandtrl I , Monfre*' s

ColleJe S..letball R.efllfl•
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Allfl'-r~,. ~oo.ter 71 , . , . . . ,

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Colpie .. '
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Callfo!Wa (PL I 74, WQnnbull 5I

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Dowlea 81, c...rdla 70
Oeoraetowa II, lollloa Con. 41
Lafayette 71, Delaware 11 Cot)

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Quebe~ at MLIIIII!Iota, 8:!1 p.m.
NV R•aers u PHtlbU !.'lb. 1':U p.m.
'
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Detrok at Lo• AnpiM, 11:11 p.m.
Fri.,. Gam•

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U.,.Ua "'· Lehmu 41
Vr•laut1, Ha¥erford ..
W•re•lef Poly,., Salw Be PI 11

ri:.e aftet playing in
16 games. Other probable ttar·
ters Include Jennl Couch (6.6
points/ at shooting guard, Kerr!
Kldy;ell (7.6 points, 6 rebounds~
as small forward and Kathy
Snyder (6.5 points, 4.5 rebounds)
at the other forward .
Former Mld·Oh!o Conference
membei Malbne (6-12 ~ Is coming
off a 68-42 thrashing at the hands
01 MOC leader Urbana. The Lady
Pioneers, u'nder Barbara E~sllck',s Stellj&amp;r.ds~lp, are expected
to f!e)d as\ their guards Jennlfe.r
(\leuhart· ·.(5·6, freshman, 5.7
points~ and Madelyn Turner (5·7,
sophomore, 7.6 points~ .
At one · forward wUI be Lor!
Melendez (5·7, sophomore, g_9
points). with Mindy Marshall
(5·11, sophomore, 8.9 points)
filling the other offensive slot.
Sarah Nichols (5·11 , sophomore,
8.9 points) will be at center.
Lake Erie, however, contains
one of ihe top 3-point field roal
shooters In J;llstrlct 22 In Anne
McKeon, a 5·4 starting off guard
who Is averaging 7.5 points and 3

The iradltlonal rivalry be- last sev.e ral games, Is averaging
tween the R)o Grande Redmen 9.3 points: Donaldson brings 8.6
and the Cedarville Yellow points and 5.4 boards to each
Jackets gets its first airing of I be game.
Playing a large part In the
season Saturday, 7:30 p.m . at
Lyne Center during Ohio Valley Yellow Jackets' success!scenter
Michael Minto,
6-8 senior.
Bank Night.
Both teams. enter the contest bringing an average of 16. PQints
with a previous victory to their and 5.9 rebounds to the game.
' credit .· The Redmen defeated Dominic McKinley (6·3, sopho·
Dyke, 89-81, on Monday' to boost · more), who w!ll proba~ly start at
their ovenlll record to 11·5,while small forward, averages 1.1.7
Cedarville fought ·off Central points and 7.1 rebounds:
State ai borne Tuesday lor a 70-67
Frank 1Back (6·6, junior~. who
victory. The Yellow Jackets w111 w!ll prol&gt;ably be first off the
carry a 14-6 slate Into ·the Rio · bench, is credited with 13.1
game.
"markfr~ a game . .
Within the Mid-Ohio Confer·
In other starting positions,
ence, Rio Grande Is 1·2 and Cedarville' skipper Don Callan
Cedarville .1·1.
may utilize at point guard Todd
Redmen fans saw a new Pennlng}on (6·1, junior, 9.9
starting l!neup at the Dyke game points, 4.3 assists, 3.5 rebounds);
as Mark Erslan · spellel! Brad · Mark Combs (6·2, sophomore, 8.9
Scpubert as shooting guard. points) at shooting guard; and
·Sc;hubert ,has been shifted :to David Barnes (6·5, sophomore,
small forward, while Troy :Do- . 8A points, 7.3 rebounds~ as power·
·
naldson continues at the past. forward.
. RematniDg constant on the star·
The Rio men'are averaging 100
ter's llsi are Gary Harrison at
points per game and glvlngup85. ,
,. point gliard and Jeff Brown as CedarVIlle's offensive average Is
thll, power forward.
65.1-points per outing. The team
- Harrison leads the team In has surrendered 25.;; points a
scoring wlth 20.2 points a game, game.
and remains at the top In assists
Besides this week's Central
W\t!\ 8.2" per outing. Schubert Is State win, Cedarv!lle owns wins
contributing 15.6 markers and 4 over Pitt-Bradford (Pa.) , 103-56;
rebounds to the offense each time Roberts Wesleyan, 90-76;. Wll·
out, and Brown completes the ml!)gton, 109-81; Lake · Erie, ·
ayerage double-figure scoring at 114·58; Eastern (Pa.), 103-82;
14.2 a game. Brown Is also the Cincinnati Bible, 90-74; Dyke, ·
leading rebounder with 8.9 per· 85-81 (overtime) and 69·62; Bluf·
Qutlng. · ·
•
fton, 61•50; St. ~ndrews · Presby·
Erslan, who has made telllnl&gt; terian, 78-77; Warner Southern,
contributions off the bench In the 107-90; Wilfrid Laurier, ·114·86;

a

·

A...Un Pel,)' • , Tau Teclll8

8eco .. tea : 11 . WeUntle-(1) 48; II.
. · Wbeelfl'lbllrr 41 ; IS. Ot&amp;awa-Giudotf
.~ l'r; 1~. W)'tml• IH 11; ' U. •&amp;lelunoDII
J Dale Alalru11MNra 18; 11. llroollfJeld ·
t,

.._...

Vl:'b_ll. ........ atue80

'

.,reltlbol.lu~?a

~~':'!!!Ill ~ ~ poll ,

usia ts per
to
the last statistical reP,ort,
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) McKeon had connected on 12 of26 · New leaders graced three of the
attempted trlfecta shots for 46 four divisions In this week's
percent.
United Press International Ohio·
The Storm recently ended a llllh School Board of Coacbel' ·
six-game losing stf!!ak by bury- girls basketball ratlnp.
•
lng Michigan Christian, 93-36.
Only Pickerington In Ptvtalon I
The team, coac!led by first-year wasableto .s urvlveasNo. llnthe
mentor Richard Anderson, Is 5·13 second of sllC - k l of balloUng
entering a home contest with by coacheS from arOUIId the
Mercy hurst 'CPa . ~ on Saturday .
state.
Anderson' s other starters In·
Last week's other three lead·
elude point JUard Stacie Chap- ers -Garfield Hel&amp;'hta 'l'rllllty In
man (5·5, freshman, 5,4 points, 3 Division II, Wei Iaviiie In Division .
rebounds); small forward Tall· · Ill and Kalida In Dlvtalon IVana Lechowlck (5-10, freshman, all · were unseated, W~lllvllle
11.5 points, 5 rebounds~ : power rather emphaticallY.
forward Julie Staska (6·0, fresh·
· Pickerington remalned.lll solid
man, 8.3 points, 8 rebounds); and No. 1 In Division I. The Ttaers
Cheryl Burdeni 6-0, sophomore, 7 piCked up 15 of 24 flntplacevoteli
points, 8 rebounds) at center.
for a 214-168 margin over run·
The Redwomen already own · nerup Canton McKinley· The
an 83·53 win over the Storm, Bulldogs held on to second
earned at the Lake Erie'sPalnes· despite a loss to No. 3 Canton
ville campus Dec. 15. Last GlenOak, which wascloeebehlnd
season, Lake Erie fell to the Rio with 153.
·
ladles at .home, 108-42, while· ' Logan (12·0) remained In
Malone was defeated twice, 97.73 · fourth with 123 points, ·folloll'ed
and 106-80.
· by. Cleveland Kennedy (12·0) In
fifth. Kennedy was 14th a week

Rio, ce,darviIIe f ace . off Satu;rday . ag~be

Ohio a, BGWUir GrHa tl
Olle~la81, Martitta ••
Plttlbu 11 lt.•• SW lapllel II
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The Unlverilty of Rio Grande
WOinen'a baaitlltball team (11·7~
f&amp;Ce4 a weeiJend doubl~header of
District 22 action at home when
Malonevl$itsSaturdayat4p.m.,
and Lake Erie Invades Lyne
Center at 3 p.m. Sunday .
· The Rio ladles had actually
ptaoned a triple threat ol home
gpmes, beginning with a 6 p.m.
Friday contest against Dyke.
The game was cancelled because
Dyke has disbanded its women'!!
program for the remainder of the
season.
. ·•
Carrying an offerislye average
of .72.6 points per game (apd
giving up 62.9 per ouUng~ Into the
weekend, the Redwomen are led
by center Arin Barnltz, a fo.rmer
standout at Warren .Local High
School who is bringing13.2 points
and 6.8 rebounds to each game.
following Rio Grande' s 78-62
d!!feat of Walsh 'l).lesday . Barnttz
lias started In all 18 of the·
women's games.
Following ·her statisltcally Is
point guard Debbie Fredrick .a t
11.5 I!Olnls, 4.8 assists and •3.4

1

T._riii-.,Ga,n•

Mlhnlllll!e u ·w .... natoa. 7:• p.m.

new Dlvlskln m leader
was · unbeaten Heath. which ran
ltsrecordto12·0wlthan8&amp;-54wln· ·
over Ucklng Valley saturday
night . The Bulldogs received 12
firsts· and 192 points to outdlat·
ance runnerup Rlch~ood North
Union (14-0) with 140 points.

and Ohio Dominican, 110-63.
Its losses were to Findlay,
82-76; Shawnee State, 76-73;
western Ontario, 87·78; Tampa:,
96·71; Alma, 93·79; and Urbana,
71-70.

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent
Family Practice

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

Wednesday
9 a .m.· Noon
Appointments and Walk·ins Wel~ome

Office Staff:
Lisa Thorne, LPN
Gail Hoveatter
Linda Trent .
. 138 Main St., New Haven, WV + (304) 882·3134
F~rmerly Bend Area Medical Cent~r

.-

.. Sports briefs
Baseball
Representatives for major
league ·baseball players and
manageme11t met for 6 ~ hours
over non-salary Issues Jn the
latest session aimed at reaching
a new labor agreement. The two ·
sides were scheduled to meet
again Thursday. Spring training .
may ·not open on time If a new
agreement !s not reached .... A
Houston judge fined Yankees
outfielder Dave Winfield $10,000
for falling to disclose a California
bank account ' during divorce
proceedings. A jury last summer
found Winfield had a commonlaw marriage to Sandra Renfro
from 1982 to 1985. He was ordered
to pay temporary alimony and
child support for the couple's
daug!1ter . ... The new owner of
the Boardwalk and Baseball
amusement park In Florida shut
down the attraction, saying t!Je
park was hopelessly unprotlta·
ble. But Busch Entertainment
plans keep the park's two baseball stadiums ·and four practice
fields open. The Kansas City
Royals have held spring training
at the faclllty for two years.
·

VCR-TV
Repair Center

a

one assist and 10 tjlrnovers,
At Charlottesville, Va., Jerrod Rebels With 28 potnta aad Tim
"( Rice~ was the one kid I went
Mustaf bit a 15-foot jumper With Jumper added 17. -Auburn was
up . to after the ballgame";" 1:19 left to lift Maryland. Tony led by' Ronnie Battle with 18
Krzyzewskl said. "I was lm· Mllll!llburg SCOred 23 pointa to points.
pressed with how well he played lead the T~raplns, passing the
.At Memphis, Tenn., Todd
and with . his Jl!Solve. He was l,OOO.po!J!t mark for his career. Mundt scored seven points in the
mentally_ and physically tough Vlrglllia Wll led by 19 points last three minutes ki lead Memthroughout the whole baligame. " from Kenny Turner.
phis State. Memphis State blew a
Elsewhere Wednesday night In
At Rosemont.- Dl, David Booth lead that had been 11 many as 20
the Top 20, No. 2 Georgetown scored 24 pqlnts to power DePaul points In the f~t half and had to
trounced Bost(ln Colleie 88-45;
to tt• sixth victory In Its -last come from three points behind In
No. 13 Arkansas routed Southern seven· contests. DePaul out· the last 2 ~ minuii!S for the win.
Methodist a0-61 and . No. 16 scored Niagara 12·2 over the first
At Tempe, .Ariz., Brian WIUI·
Purdue nipped Wisconsin 5&amp;-54.
7: 10 of the second half to take ams scored 20 poln Is to lead
Also, Kentucky upended Ala· ·control. Patrick Jones led Nla· Arizona pa~t Its rival. AriZona ,.
bama 82-65, Tennessee pounded gara with 22 poiJ!.ts. .
.
led 30-28 at haltllihe and pulled
Florida so, 75, Maryland edJed
At Oxford, Miss .• Mississippi away In the second hal! as Wayne
Virginia 74-72, DePau.t overpo- !18ed a 1H run In the final seven Womack scored 14 of . his 18 '·
wered Niagara 73·58, Mississippi minutes to pull -away from points. Alex Austin finished with
beat Auburn 8(),72, Memphis Aubu'rn. Gerald Glass paced the 24 points to lead Arizona. State. , .
State held ott Texas Southern .
85-82 and ArizOna thumped Ariz·
· ona State 70-61.
At Landover, Md., Mark Ttl·
lmon scored 17 points and Dl· !
kembe Mutombo added 12 polllts
and 13 rebounds td lead Georgetown to Its 27th ~tralght home
victory. The Hoyas never trailed
and took control of t.he game with •·
an 11·0 run midway through the
first half. The Eagles liave lost
five straight games.
At Dailas, Todd ))ay scored 17
points to lead Arkansas to Its fifth
straight victory. Lenzle Howell
fired In 15 points and Ron Huery
added 12 for the Razorbacks.
Tony Patterson and John Colborne each scored 16 points for
the Mustangs whlle freshman
Gerald Lewis added 15.
.
At Madison, Wis., Tony Jones
scored 15 of his 23: points !n ,the
flJUII six minutes to lead Putdue.
The BoUermakers won their fifth
straight game.and notchect their
25th consecutive victory over
Wisconsin dating to February
1977. Purdue has have won the
last 13 games played between the
two teams In Madison.
992·2124
811 w. Main St.
At Lexington, Ky., Reegle
Pomlt'OY, Ohio
Hanson scored 20 points · add
.--··········~·..-··········--·,
Kentucky led all the way In I
I
I DINIR FOR FOUR I
upsetting l).labama. The Wild· I
LAIOE 16" 5 ITEM PIZZA
cats had the,ir best shooting night 1
1
.
I Whll ~oppi oooi, '•••· ..... I
of the season, hitting 52 percent, . ·I I
I r-, Oni011 and Grllft ,..,_, I
I
, ... · .
.and led by as manY.as 24 points In
the second half. Melvin Cheatum . [
PLUS 4-111
SOFTDIINIS
led the Crimson Tide with 18 1
: Additional 118m 86C J;ach :
$999
: 1I-:•
points ..
At Gainesville, Fla., freshman
I
I'
I
· forward C2[Jus Groves, taking
I
I
I I;
I
I
I' !
advantage q~ Florida's depleted
I
e
I
I
front lllle, scored an 15 of his
I · "'~ •Dift~llllli--Cini'II. Nat\IIIICI .. m...,.OI _ I •uo atoan&gt;eoUIIIO.,..._,., ,_. . . .,,._OII'4&lt; I
points In the·second half to lead
I ""' P~e~~ , _ ~.,., c......, ~JetS . . . . ,... '"""'• I ·• "''o:tts ~h' ~,., c~ D M - ....... _ I I ..
Tennessee. The Volunteers out1 ! IIOIC...... Dlilo--. .._
111 ..._. SN &lt;!"""
1 ,;JOIDIO!f 0::!11•..,.,.,... "~ to .,._. 1M on~· 1
Our"'"*' taft\''"'"'"" 120.00 Our C"-5 • ·e I
, o \Jul df&gt;'fillll c3r,... oeu rn.n$20.00. 0 " ' o • 1 ~ 111
scored Florida 13·7 In the final
I ,«"9 ·Dll'l•.o
101" •• """""""·
or Mft.,•ttoa
I
tliree minutes io complete a r ally
~
a 48·40 deficit with 16 minutes
Je!IW'I'I' -UIIm~IG IO .,.,..... Ulll Ol.,onq ,· 1M0 Oc!ol&gt;ono1 " 'IU. •"e
remaining.

n.

Ohio

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for R11orward Visibility

• sn.oom, Relp()nti¥1 new

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8ff _'H ills AI

dy_Low Dlscou"t Pr1ces

We'r8, clearing out for new Spring merchandise so we'v~. taken Hills everyday low prices
and discounted them 20%.to 50%1 This isn't a sale, It's better. After a sale, prices bounce
·· .:bick·up._.yh•ae prices stay loW until 'the gQOds are'gone~ (And at these prices they're
. ··
going fast.) ~et In on the Javlngs at Hills Winter Cleara~qe.

• Ullfadriwe, the World't
Most AdYGnced Automatic
Trantmiuion
• Crystal KeyS Yeor or
50,000 Mile Owner Car11
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• Outerwear for the entire family..·
·• Dress, casual-&amp; athletic footwear.
·• Hou.,ewarea"&amp;.,gffts.. · ~: ~ .~ .
·
· •· Olttware &amp;·~•. ·,, :.. .'. ,
• Electronics &amp; video game cartridges.
•.Dolls, plush &amp; boys' action flgurea•..
• Health ·&amp; beau,ty.alda.
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Due to the netu,. of clennce, noUIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIble In lllatorwt.

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.The Tri-Counties' .way to ·go.

992-3524

OPEN 9:30

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Page 8-The Daily Sentinoll

Pomeroy-Midrlapor;. Otio

clumnei seroice, luh., pnces··

Cable Vision ex~
Local news briefs... -. - · Local
.

.

/

Continued fl'om page 1
Hospital.
.
At 12:08 p.m., Tuppers Plains was called 10 Ro\111! 248 for
Debbie Pickens who was taken to St. Joseph's Hoapltal.
Pomeroy Fire Department was called at 1: 511 p.m. to a
chimney fire at the Roberta Diehl residence.
At 5:10p.m., Pomeroy transported Ellzabetb Horak frcm
West Main St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:15 p.m., Rutland transported Carl Bonecutter trcm
Meigs Mine No. 31 to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
, ·
Ra~ne at 8:37p.m. was called to RoW!! Road for Elmer Pierce
to Veterans Memorial-Hospital.

CableVJSioa um•nced that it
wiU be w!c!ing tine new cbanaels
· 10tbe blsitc:abletdevision ICrVi&lt;:e
in P'oiat PJeaQnt. 11Cbon County,
Meias Cowuy IIJd Oallipolis IIIII.

Tlie new chlnnels ue "es:'line
N:cws. 24-botr aews, llpOI\S, and
wellber in »minute heecllj1J8 for.
mal; 'lNI', Turaer Netwcrlt TCicVi·
sion brinp.cl'auic HoU)'W!Xld ftlms

as welf as originll

movies,

c:hillben's programming and NBA
basJretbaJI; and C-Span, live: and
taped Congn:ssional coverage: from
Washington, D.C.
·• . I
In at1dition.to lheae new services,
· Cablc:V'JSion iS also adding five
:~ pPark.m..m~t Londonthe
Montgoni.• tiy · olher aervices !0 the basic cl)lnnc:l
linc-up. These five services wen:
There: wiD be 1\0 visiwion.
previously only available 10 "ex·
panded besic" or "Jic:r jlackaa~·
Charles Grady
sublcrjbc:rs.
· ·
These services inclode A&amp;E,
· Word has been received of the drrlmls, comec!ies, specials and the
Sunday death of Charles H. best in performina arts; Nick·
Grady, 66, of Phoeniz, Az., . elodeon, children's progrmn~,
formerly of tbe Ractne area.
as wdl as "Nick At Nite's" clasSIC
Mr. Grady was bom June 21
si!COIIIS; FNN, Financiai News
1923. He was a sonofthelateOnt~ Network povides updated financial
A. and Estle E. Walls Grady.
news and ·investment .information;
Among survivors are his wl·fe
Lifclime,
women's ' orienr.eil
Bobble Grady; a son "· and !W~
daughters; . two stepchildren;
three brothers, Hollie Grady, of
Wellsville, Raymond ·11nd Del·
mar Grady, of Racine; and three
CLEVELAND (UPil - An
sisters, Francis Parsons and Ohio Lottery spokesman said
Martha Emerson, of Wellsville, Thursday two tickets were sold
and Tessie Wolfe, of Racine.
bearing an six nwnbers In
In addition to his parents, he Wednesday night's Super Lotto
was preceded In death by his first drawing for a $10 mUIIon Jackpot.
wife, two sisters . and three
The winning nwnbers were 4,
brothers.
18, 22, 26, 31 and 34 . .
'Services for Mr: GradY were
There · were · 175 flve·of·slx
held In Arizona.
tickets worth $1,000 eac~ and

!1-"""!"---.,...---.;...--..;...-------J

..-....---· . ea deaths----:...

Ava Lutz
·

Mrs: Ava R: Lutz, 97, Lancas·
ter, died Wednesday at Alfieri·
care Nursing Center.
Born in Meigs County, she was
the daughter of the late Floyd
and Frances Landaker Gilkey.
She Is survived by two daugh·
ters and a son·ln·law, Mrs. Edith
F. Bresler. Amanda; and Mrs.
Clyde (Evelyn ) Bresler, Lancas·
ter; four grand_chlldren, eight
great gr·andchlldren, and one
great granddaughter, as well as
several njeces and nephews.
In addition to her parents she
was preceded In death by her
husband, Walter C. Lutz In 1968,
and a s on, Bernie Lutz.
Se~vlces will be held Saturday
at 1 p.m. at the Halteman-Fe!(·
Dyer FuneraiHomelnLancaster
with the Rev. Bryan Thomas
officiating. Burial will be In
Fores t Rose Cemetery In
Lancaster.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday from 7-9
p.m. and on Friday from 2-4 p.m. ·.·.
and 7-9 p.m.
·

l..overcia Evans
Lovercla M. · Evans, 76, died
early this morning (Thursday) at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born in Meigs County she was
· the daughter of the late John and
Malinda C. Kerns Riggs . She was
a homemaker.
She Is 'survived by a son and
daughter-in' law, Brady M. and
Jane Huffman, Middleport; a
daughter and son·ln-law, Sharon
and Marshal McMiuton: two
sisters, Mrs. Dale (Lucille) Jacobs, Middleport. and Laura"Hof·
fman. Colwnbus; five grand·
children, Brady Huffman Jr., of
Letart Falls, Gregory Huffman,
of Racine; Beth Ann Brown, of
Minersville; Bill McMillion, of
Laurel, Md., and Melissa WIIU·
ams, of Ctescent City, Fla. ; two
great grandchildren, Dustin Huf·
fman and Cote Brown; and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, Mrs.
E vans was preceded In death by
her husband, Harold 0. Evans In
Dec. 1977, two Infant daughters,
three brothers, one sister, two
half-sisters, and three half·
brothers.
.
Services will be Saturday at 2
p.m. at the · RawUngs coats
Fisher Fyneral Home with the
Rev. Donald Carr officiating.
Burial will be In .Gravel Hill
Cemetery. .
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Friday from 2-4 p.ni,
and 7-9 p.m.

Virginia .Willi&amp;m8

'

on

heaJdl 8lld ia-, as

wldliu !be ·ueld

vil:el

fa.: •

•w

channelldecur, supplied auo Ill·
dilional charge for lhe primay OUt· ·
let, wiU work on Ill television&amp; m1
wiU Icc s~ enjoy aU of.
their new CableVISion basic llllr·
vices, Errett said.
Subscribers who alteacly have a
~leV'ISion Cbannel Selector, a
"cable ·compatible" television, or .
"cable compatible" • VCR will be.
able 10 recetve aU of !he basic ser-·

•ATI'ENTIONe ·

.res CARD HOLDERS .

WE ·HONOR ILL PCS CARDS.···
INCLUDING IHE RECAP.
YOU ONLY PAY THE CO-PAY.

9,104 follli-of ·six tickets worth $75
apiece.

Hospital news

...• ..., MoC-.g~o. II.PII.

Cll.relllfllo. R. Pll.
lloolkl tt.nnlftg. "·""·
Mon. thAt Set. 1:00 • ·'"· to 1:00
••....., 10:00 . .... 10
p.m.

( . Vetei'IDI Memorial

,.m.

•:ao

Wednetday admissions - Ell·
zabeth Horak, Pomeroy; Roxie
MooJ:e, Pomeroy.
·
Wednesday discharges -Titus
Pickens.
. '

"'EICIIIPTIONI

-.

PM. IIZ·2tlll "

Sorv"".... --·
·OH .
ap., w.... Nigh!•
.

Molft

Ftlondly

.

LAwrence Robc:rt ' Roush, 76,
Millwood, W.Va., died Tuesday,
Jan. 16, 1990, in the Ravenswood
Villaae llealth Center after an ex·
tended illness.
Born March 3• -1913 , in
Clarks"'-. W.Va., he was a son of
"UL6

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stoeks. .

·
· Dally atock.Prices .
(AI of 10:10 a.m.) .
B..,cie aild Mark Snildt
oiBCaat, Ell116 Loewl

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Tom Peden has an inventory of over 400bllndof1lw~ OldlmobY11, PondiCI, Bulcka,lndSpecill Fac:laly Purchasevel&gt;klr 1thltmust 111 SOld. Tom Peden will .
Clllr 0111 his inventory at substantial dlacountt, up to $5000.
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Tille adYantage of up to $2000 Cash Back or 4:8'Y. Financing up to 4a months on approved cndl! ON SELEC", LJ IIOOELS. Hurry, l'llll!ta ind taci.:W """"iored·
~ endS February 3, 1980. '
.•
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nilt reduction Is FOR RET~L CUS'I'OIIERS ONLY. NO SALES PERMITTED TO DEALERS. Prlcilapply toavallllllt Unitt only;.NO ORDERING PERIIITTEO AT
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'(' rn,f r, .. ,!·

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GEOMETRO .

---~--wANo'NEW199o-------·--,-·-.,.- -·-----11' l'lUf·~,.~r.

Am Electric Power ............ .. 31
Virginia E. WiUi311ts, 73, of New ATIIf ................ ......... ........42¥.
Haven, W.Va., died yesterday, 1an. Ashland"OIL ...................... .38~
17, 1990, at Veterans Memorial Bob Evana ...... .!.. .. ..............13Y,
Charmlllg Shoppes .... ........ .. 10&gt;,i
Hospi1al in Pomeroy.
.
Bam Feb. 2A, 1916 in London, City Holding CO. .................. 15
W.Va., she was the daughter of the Fedetal Mogul. .. ................. 24%
lale Ben and Virginia (Smith) Hess. Goodyear TlrR ............. ..... .39"'
·
"
3Y,
She was a cook for the O.F. Shearer Hec"k' s ..................................
Key Centurion .................... 13Y,
Company.
Lands'
End .......................... 19.
Also preceding her in death was
her husband, Ernest Williams in. Ll!nlted Inc. .... .. ................. . 34
Multimedia Inc . ...... .. .. .:.... ..
1964.
She is survived by live Rax Restaurants ............ ...... }~
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ......... 16
daughters, Alma Hale of Kiftla!!d Sh
.
oney ' s Inc .......................
10%
Ohio, Barbara Harper of Kenwclcy'
Star
Bank
...........................
20~
Carole Davis of IGng; N.C., Judy .
Wendy's
Inti
.
..
.....................
4%
Sturgeon or Letart, and Janet Smith
Worthington
Ind
......
.......
..
....
2l'J4
of New Haven; qne sister, Iva
Naylor of Can1011, Ohio· 17
grandchildren; and . 21 geat- Meig&amp; announcements
grandchildren.
Services will be Friday, II a.m. Lod&amp;e to meet
at the Foglesong Funeral . Home
The Shade River ·Masonic
with the Rev. Jack Grimes officiat- Lodge No. 453 will meet Friday at
ing. ·
7: 30 p.m. There will be work In
t Graveside
services will be the Entered Apprentice Ilf1gree.

Kathy Ihle presented a proIJ"am on needlepointtna wben the
Phllathea Women of the Middleport Church of Christ met
recently. ·
Mai11n WilcOx presided at the
, meeting with OIJ!!Dlng prayer by
'1 Farte COle; .
The secretary report was given
by Doroth,y Roach, treasurer
report by Farle Cole, and the
flowers .and cards report by
Mildred Riley.
·
• Named on the prayer list were .
Wilbur Theobald, Donna Hart·
Colleen Van Meter,- Nora
, Rice, Rllllsell McElhinney, Mary
Kindy, Maivln \'ofurtay, Gary

and

'.

•

1989 CADILLAC BROUGHAM

'

Power windows, air, AM·FM cassette
aiuminun wheels..... loaded! '

•

Loadeo with Leather! ·

'

'

.

·$5 999~ve~

85"'

40 I'UI;II,•;)IA'C
CONVERSION VANS
In Stock!

1'989

@!]@ _ ~,,
Only

--:.~..,~~~ ..1fJm~**

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PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

·-

L
_,_

~-

BRAND NEW 1990
CONVERSION VANS

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Eagle Class has.dinner

SnOuffer, Norma Wilcox, Martha
ChUda, and Mary Durst.
Thank , you cards were IC·
knowledged from the Loyal Men
and · Women's Class, Clarice
Erwin, and the Marearet Lal·
lance family. '
Named on · tbe nominating
.c ommittee to report at the March
meet~g were Clarice Erwin and
Regina Swift.
Devotions were etven by Mrs . .·
Wilcox with readlnp "If 1 Had
the Time" and " Stewardlhlp."
At the February meetlq,
snack night will be observed and
members are to make a valen· .
tine to exchange.

son,

· Past Councilors meet

Gues,Ln!il!l~wA~ observed "and

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: During the IJleetlllg, notes o{
appreciation were acknowledged
for remembl'ances at Christmas.
A contrlbu Uon from · Cybll
Ebersbach was noted. Cards
. were signed rOr Eliza beth Fjck
· and Mary E. Chapman.
The I,enten breakfast will be

·AsburoJ UMW
_ :.. _·. · . m_ee
. · ·.~, s ·

446 4524

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:

Not £ood 'In a&gt;njunc:tion with any other oHer.

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community ser-vice committees.
Ann Layne opened the meeting
with prayer and pledge.
·.
· The bookS were audited by the
committee .of JoAnn Grady,
Gene Lyons, and Kay Holman.
It was noted that a tape
recorder had been purchased for
the meetings. ·
Others members attending
were Alana Butler and juniOr
members, Valerie Patterson and
Mary Roberts.

ANDERSON'S

;

REG. S969.00
OAK or PINE

COUNTRY GROUP

Include• 5 Drawer Chait,
Triple Ont...r, Headboard,
Footboard and Hutch
Mirror.

Group to sing
The Fellowship Singers will be
at the Middleport ChrlsUan Un·
ion on Sunday. Services begin at
7:30p.m.
: ·

REG. S1399.00
CONTEMPORARY

OAK GROUP

Set include• Doored Triple
DntaHr. Mirror,
.
Haadbo•rd. Doored Chelt
and Nlghtatancl

BUICK REGAL

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DeliveredI*

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PRICE SALE

.

• ON AI.L"fAlL &amp;

$1~88

r:'

January Sale Price~ On Quality Name Brand Bedroom
Suites and Serta Mattresses &amp;·· Box Springs

'

Loaded with extras!

L.Oidld With txiiU!

OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE ON ALL
14K YELLOW GOLD HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS.

..

OFFER EXPIRES MAY 31, 1990. '

served on Feb. 28, Ash Wednes·
. day, at the Trinity · Church:
Women and men of the area are
welcome. Marie Houck and Pau·
line Mayer are the chairmen.
Intent to attend should be phoned
to one of the these women. Maye
Mora Is In charge of the program
and Gay Perrin Is In charge of
publiCity.
Each member contributed to
· the program.
,
.
Mrs . Perrin closed with a talk
on the new year and a positive
outlook on the goals and sltua·
tlons ahead. She dlstrlb!1ted note
pads and pencil$ asking each to
list things they planned to pray
for and. work toward with a
·posl.tlve outlook In this new year.
She also shared quotes from New
Year sermons from 1982 by the
late Rev. W.H. Perrin.
The · meeting closed with
prayex:.

This ·Is The One .
.
You've Been Waiting-For!

.

Jt was suggested · by Hope ·
Moore that thegtoupdoaskltfor
tile skit off to be held at the
,church.
.
Cards were sent to Harriet
Sinclair, Marlca Karr, and Anna
Hlldore .
The meeting closed . with a
reading from Guideposts and a
prayer by Hope Moore.
Attending were . Mary Lisle,
Ann Sauvage, Hope Moore, Irene
Parker. Marte Houdashelt, Bu·
elah Ward, Mary CunCIIff, and
HelenTeafordtaklngtheplaceof
secretary, Apr~) Harmon, who
was Ill.

SPRING VALLEY CINfMA

Wfl Eqv/ppfdl..
•

The third birthday of Jetfrey
Baughman was recently observed. He Is the son of Jeff and
Crystal Ba,ughman of Langsville.
Paternal gtandpa~ents are Lee ·
and Besste"B!lughman of Middle·
por.t and great grandparents are
Fred and Ellen Smith .of
Middleport.
,
. Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burnem and
great· grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Burnem of Rutland.

weekly meetlnp at the church on
Feb. 5 at 9 a.m. to wQrk on·future
projects.
· A new stove for the kitchen was
decided upon with Wanda Rizer
and Beulah Ward as chairman.
. The skit for Sunday was
planned and Beulah Ward closed
the meeting with evecyone wtn·
nlng a prize.
·Attending were Ann Sauvage,
W11nda Rizer, Beulah Ward, Bob
and Donna Smith, Dick and Betty
Ash, VIrgil ll)d :Qelen Teaford,
Karl IOoes, Marcia Karr, Irene
. Parker, Mary Cundiff, and Mary
It was reported that church's Usle. Guests were Mark and
bazaar was a success and that VIckie Morrow, and Malcolm
the ladles will ~sume their Parks,
, ·

.Auxi~ary . names officers ..

.
The auxUiary of !he Racine
Fire Department met recently at
tbe . annex and .·officers for the
. new year were announced. ·
Offlcen are Ann Layne, pres!·
dent; . Rhonda Lyons, vice pres!·
dent; Wanda Patterso11, secre·
tary; Sandy Patterson,
' treasurer: Kay Holman, reporter; MJsSY Jonei, assistant re·
119rll!r; Gene Lyons, Jo Ann
Grady, and Angle ~tterson,
memberihlp and grievance
committee:
Rhonda Lyons, equipment
commit~; Rhonda Lyons and
Ann Ll.flle, coffee committee;
and the auxiliary as a whole will
serve on the ways and '!leans and

Baughman birthday

A turkey dinner was served at
tile recent meeting of the Eaeles
Class o( the Asbury United
Methodist Church held at the
home of Martha Moore and Ruth
Crouch with Dick Ash asking the
blessing.
.
Irene Parer presided at th"l!
business ineetlng In whicll devotions were given by 1\{ary CUndiff ·
with a meditation on "A Fatl!er's
Son." It was the story of Joseph
talking to Jesus as a father would
to a son. Reports of the secretary
and treasurer were also given.

Estl)er Smith and JoAnnBaum officers, Opal tfollon, president;
...
2 were welcomed as new members Inzy Newell, vice president; h·
"Hope for the Homeless" was
ofthePastCOuncllonCiubofthe Thelma White, secretary; Betty the title of the program pres·
Chester COuncil 323, Daughters Roush, treasurer; and Elizabeth en ted by Mary Cundiff when· the
of AmeriCa, when the group mel Hayes, flower eommlttee.
Syracuse Asbury United Methorecently at the lodge hall with
The secretary and treasurer dlst Women met recently at the
Inzy Newell and Betty Roush as gave their reports and games church.
hosll!?ses.
·
were conducted by Lora Dame- .
Everyone present participated
In the program. ·
Charlotte Grant, vice pres!- wood ·and Ethel Orr.
deQt, conducted the meeting and
Refreshments were served by
The meeting was conducted by
she .also read Psalm 23. The the hostesses and Elizabeth Mary Lisle In the absence of
. l.ord's Prayer and pledge to the Hayes and Thelma White won the Harriet Sinclair, president, who
Amerk:an. flag .. were given In · dOQr prizes.
·Was 111.
· .pnlsoa.
' · · ·
· · Others present were Erma
~li e call :Was answered by . Cleland·, Margaret Ainberger,
There . were 23 shut In calls
., members tE!lllni lhelr New Ye- Marcia Keller, MaryK. Holter,
reportedandBeulahWardreada
'~ 8 mohitlons.
Sadie Trussell,. Jean Frederick,
thank you letter from Sine Cara
Faye . Kirkhart, anil a guest,
for the.Chrlstmas gl~. .
Mrs. Grant Installed the new Sandra White.

I

thsle1F YOu PLAII 011 BUYING AR AU)Ji)NDBILE,~_. ~;···

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Page 7

• :1 .

plans made for the Lenten
breakfast and quiet hour when
: the Friendly Circle of the Trinity
:: Church met Tuesday evening.
· · A covered dish dinner pre' . ceded the meeting In whlcb Gay
:: Perrin welcomed eight guests.
~ · Dinners wer.e sent to two housebound members.
. Officers lns~led by Maye
: Mora ··were Gat Perrin, pres!·
dent; Mary Virginia Stewart,
vice president; Norma Louise
Jewell, secretary; and Evelyn
Gt.lmore, treasurer. .

JACKSON COUNTY'S LARGEST
..
Jl.lli!/)3}(/lf[DJ[tl? .
.

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Thursday. Januay 18." 1990

t

Philathea Women meet

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The_·Daily .Sentinel

.,

Friendly Circle makes
:plans for Lent breakfast

..

the late Leonard and Susan (Burris)
.R~h. was 8 member of !he
· Eveigreen Hills United Baptist
Church,
Ravenswood ·Senior
Citizens Cub, and a fonner
employee of G~ American TrUck
Unes. He was a caretaker for the
West Virginia Eastern Star Home in
Millwood, and a farmer.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth Ann
(Green) Roush; two bro!hcrs,
James C. Roush of I.,etart, CQI!is
Roush of Pomeroy; three sisters,
Nettie Moore and Icie Miller, both
of Syracuse, and Thelma~
of Pomeroy.
Services wiD be conducted
Fpday, · I p.m., It the .Evergreen
Hills United Baptist Church with
· the Rev. Mart Snyder llld . Rev.
John L. Price officiating. Burial
wiD follow in the Jackson County
Memory Gantens at CouageviUe;
W.Va. .
• ·
· Friends may caU It the Casto
Funeral Home, Evans, W.VL, on
Thlirsday after 2 p.m., and at the
church one hour prior 10 services.

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Birman

Two Super Lotto jackpot tickets sold .

Lawrence Roush ·

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By The Bend

.

, .~tli,.1111l .3o 10 Feb, l, 10
wen • litl:oml llliid moriei; .s donll elf It '"""
' .• .... ID 6 p.m.
.
M'JV, 24-bo!,lr masic videoi,CXlljSublcriben ne1illa a clllnDel
"Wo CIICOIII1I&amp;e aublcrlben wbo
cem andillallc 118WS
IOiol:lor may pick mo up It arJ "of neecl ct.melllleclm 110 Yisllu at
"We lie eiCiled io ·brina 11.- !be roDowilw klcldaaa durinJ lhe · ..y cl lhe liltDd loGetionlllll! we
fine II8W chenncls 10 our IUb- . lilred IIMsllld limes:
· · ·
wiU lbow...lbeill bow DillY it.u 110
scribcn in lhe ~· lllid Syarem
Bllioc's JIIMM !81 TV cl Ap- OOOaleCt die cm.mel telcciiOr, Er·
MaiMpr Leller Bnea. "We ~ ~. Slher Bridp Pia&amp;, Gal- rett Slid.
· · ·
had many reqQOIII for thele chin- lipolis. Feb. 2, 10 a.m. 10 6 p.m.
''Remote controls will now be
nelllllld we file! they Jally be1p 10 and Feb. 3, 10 LID. 10 2 pm.
avan.ble 10 aU 'subscriben for just
roundo()Ut ICi vice."
· .
Pllilt "'""ant Youdl Cenlll', $2.95 1 month," 1!m:1t condnued.
. The II8W ICIYices wiU ofllcillly
hill: Point Plealt. Jan. "W6 are abo offerinJ free in~labccomci avalllble on Feb. 1, 1990.· 30-Feb, 2, 10 Lm;' to 6 p.m., llld tiorrofanypremiurnservicesiOIIIY
The price: of basic ClbleV'IIion Ill'• "Fc:b. 3, 10 a.m. 10 2 p.m.
customer in our .service Jre? who
vice: will be ~11.9S a IJiondl plui
pl@s their order . before Feb. 7,
Jax wbele applicable; ,
Hudnall's Plumbing·&amp;: ·Heating, i990."
··
. . ,.
Since many IClevlsion 1011 i:aD
" '
onl~ handle 12 channels, 101110 IUbscribcn wiU need a ClbleV'IIion
Channel SelecU in on1er JD
~vc aU of die
chmneJs. The
progt'IIIIS

.

1989 DELTA 88

. I ~til,.

DISCOVEI WHY
PIOPLI SAY,
. .
~

get.

Will II
MEICHA.ISE

.

"SERTA SUPREME

SERTA PREMIER
COMFORT
~ ·

U~TRA lUI. W&amp;pm

1 YR. WAIIANTY

588 5108

.

S144

. TWIN SET
FUll SIT

QUEEN SlY

S344

$319

$459

SAil STAm FIIDAY

Wa-988
Claevrolet • OH=alllle • Pellttllc • Balck • 010-.

.,_....._M

...... n .-_.

................. .
.........
ft41

mna •a

:&amp;,

JANUAIY 19 'AT 9:30 A.M.

FlEE DIUVIIY

]ACK&amp; JILl'S
"Fallaio,.. for rlae
~-:second Ave.

STORE HOURS

r.,.,_." ·

Mon-

Pllone 446 134J

9:30-8:00
Tu....y-Saturday

ALL SALES nNAL • NO LAYAWAYS!

9:30-15:00

J '

.,.,,,
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FURNITURE,
. APPUANCES, TV'S, ROOI COVEIING
.

992-3671
DOWNTOWN ro.ROY, OHIO

~

.......,

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5299

599

·." Twll Ea. Pc.
FUll Ect. Pc. QUEEN SIT

IWIN Ea. Pc. FUll Ea. Pc.

SERTA P~RFECT
SLEEPfR

...

I·

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•

8-The Deily Sentinel

Grange has prograrp
on New Beginnings

Community' calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter,.Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will have Its c.a rd party'
on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
· senior cltlzeiiS center In Pomeroy . Membj!rs are to bring two
snacks.
·
·
-

POMEROY '- The Pomeroy
chapter of A.A. and AIAnon will
·meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For Information call
1- SJ0-333-5051.
.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Democratic Executive
Committee will meet Thursday
at the Carpenters hall onE , Main
St. In Pomeroy for Its regular
meeting and for recommend&amp;·
lions or the appointment to the
Board of Elections .
POMEROY -The MiddlePort
Child Conservation League will
meet on Thursday at 6:30p.m. at
the Royal Oak Resort. ·
RACINE - There will be a
regular meetfng ·or the Racine
American Legion Post 602 on
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. Refresliments will be served.
FBIDAY
POMEROY -The Belles' aud
Beaus Dance Club wlll 'have au
open dance on Friday at the
sen lot citizens center from 11-11

p.m. The caller will be John·
Waugh from GaiUpoU.S. Reftellh·
ments will be served.
-

1:

SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - The Bedford Lodl History Group will
mee~ on Saturday at 6: 30p.m. ·at
the Modern Woodmau · Hall In
Burlingham. Anyone lnteres ted
In history or having pictures aud
so forth Is Invited to attend the
meeting.
.
.
.
SALEM CENTER -The Star
Grange will hold Its regular tun
night and potluck supper at 6: 30
p.m. on Saturday at the Salem
Center Fire Station.

., WIU.WI c. ftO'I'1'

,

Thera
flu
Flu, Cold Cough
&amp;

Medicine

. APPLEGROVE-R,ev.Davld
Harris :will hold services Sunday
at the Apple Grove Methodist
Chureh at the 10 a.m. service.
~v . ' Carl Hicks lnvit~ the
public. A covered dish dinner will
follow the service.

.PERM
SPECI·AL

KELSEY MARIE WIMBISH

Wimbish hirth

·10°/o
OFF
All PERMS
SPECIAL EF;FECTS.. :
BEAUTY SALON
773·5272

MASON
·IOXANNA DIVINCENZO

The Only Flu and bold Medicine
In a Hot Liquid
Drink · . _
.

, See Inside lor Oe1a1ls

HEAVEN LEE , ANN ,WEST. '

IIG liDS &amp; BAllES PROGRAM
· TUESDAY; JAN. 23

LADIES COATS
&amp; JACKETS .
.
'

IEIUUI

,

675-4340 Far Mart lnfonnaliuol

'SOFAS .STARTING AT $29900

'

RIG. 1599.00
' SAVE 50°/e
•BROWN &amp; BEIGE COUNTRY CHECK
Camtl back sola.
Rtg.' 1599.00 .

SAVI SO"'o

oTRADinONAL TIGHT BACK SOFA
herringbone print.
Rtg. 1799.00
SAVE SO"'o
Dark mauve,

•LA·Z·BOY SOFA

In Earlhlone nlvot. Reg. $999.00.

SAVE SO"'o

LADIES CAPES
IIDUCED

30°/o,

MEN'S COlORED

SHIRTS
1y Anw.-'--11 Slim .
IIDUCED· 30°/o
DRESS

IIIC'S

...'S All WEAIIIR

JACKETS

COATS

REDUCED

'30°/o

SWEATEIS
,..

C. 'a

'I

IEDuaD

I

REDUCED

40°/o

MEN'S LEVI'S

MEN'S

DEtiM ~~CIUS
IEDum 20°/o
AU STYlES

LONG

. J
.,

·acm40°/o

t----+---_.5 Saf SlEEVE

MEN'S

SHilTS

SWEAT SHITS

30°/o

·
· OJ
· PAIITS-.............' 30111. OfP
-·1
,••
.WS · - - -..........._ ..~ 2K Off

Ml.11fiS

'"

~D '20GL
IIIRU/0
&gt;

'

•

IIIDUCED

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
t

'112 WHI Moln St,_

S18900

•White Iron' Daybed .

Off

Selected Group

..._ 1m.oo NOW 519900 •
•Gun Cabinets

.

Starting It 522'9 .00 1
•Ma~gany Vanity .
·

50°/o ·SLEEP SOFAS

w I rmrror

• ,

Reg.t691.00NOW ~34900

La·~-loy

•COtUined. you ••• hereby
notified IIIII you in 1 togo!
oct1on entitled TIM Vinton

n.- del•-••

•mt.oo

NOW

bg •.

· ·

cOUrtlY
NltloMI ..... "'·
Clltil o.tt..... et 11. Defend-

··TRANS11'10NAL BLUE &amp; MAUVE
SLEEP SOFA by st~I'M &amp; Fost• $
llti-'1119.00

·

:NOW

..,,.. 11tlo ootlun -

.'

-

O.ilianed Cite Numller 811-

pendln.l'.:

CV-'47 •d te
Ull Court flf CoiiNitOii
of MeltiO CountY. PomerDy,
Ohio 48711.
, The llloleat of tl'!le comqtolnl it to .... 1M ...,.._lllthe--·
ily 10 .-title ............

72900

'

LET YOUR GUESTS SLEEP ON THE BEST!
'
.
The Area's Finest in Sales ·and, ESPECIALLY, Service

eddr"'-

whooo names and
•r• unknOWft and cannot
wi1h r-onobfe diligwiCO be

~mESSI

SS6-

Oh. 41781: The Uooknown
HMI. Devil-. Letotand Auigno of John J-ell.
DeceHed: CliFFORd H.
BRYSON. 419 II&amp;COIM
A_,.,, Pltl ...rgh. PA.
15214:' BETTY BLACK-

ford.

~:&amp;7uo NOW $53900

ALSO: .
•D~RI GREEN PLAID EARLY AMERKAN-·
SLEEP SOfA~ St..rlll &amp; Forttr
900

•4•~ Gallipolis
317- Ch•hir•

311- Vinton
2•1-Rie GrMde
216- GuYI!In 0111.
. . 3 - Arabi• Di11.
379- Walnut

" •. r

192 - Midciipo,c ..
Pom•oy
.
111 - Ch•llfr '
143- Pvrtt.Ad
247 - Letart Falla
141- Raoine
1742 - fWutland
107- CoolvMie

•

9- Wii'ltld to BuY '

1.7 - MpeaUaneou•

i

18 · Wanted To Do

17&amp;- Pt. Pl . . .nt

571- Apple GrO\Ie
773- M .. on
112- New Haven

895 - Letart
937 - B"'f•o

•

·lilsiillifill ·
~1 - Bu•'"•• Opponun11y
,

1

22 - Monev 'o Lo•n

23 ·~ Pfoi-~on,- 5.,¥11;111

64- tbv &amp; Grain
65 - Seed &amp; F~Jtlli1 e r

Transpor1a11on
71 - Autos for Sale
7 2 - Trucks for Sal e
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WO "s
74 · Motorcy.~ l•
75 - Botta&amp; Matot t tor S•e ·
7&amp; - A.uto Parts II Ac c•sot iM
77 - Auto Repair
78 - C•mping Equ,pmM1
79- Cimpers &amp; Motor Hom,es

L..••
Merellanrt1se

·'.

11 - Aadio, TV. CB Aap11r

ANa Code 30• : '

•a•- Leon

14 - lwtin•s Training
16 - Schools &amp; ln1truction

62 - W• nred to Buy

63- llvustock

41 - Houtet for Rent
42 ·- Mobilt Hom• lor Rent
43 - Firm• tor Rent
44 - Apartmant for ~en1
46 - Furnllhed Rooms
46'· -Space for fhnt
47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - Equtpment far Rent ·
49- For

· 13 - lniUf..,c.
;o

61 - flrm Equipmen t ·

.

11 - Helo \Nutfld
12- Sitwation W.nt.t

;..

31 - Homel for S1le
32- Mobile Homes for Sal e
33 - farms tor Sele
3 l - Buain•• Building s
36- Lots &amp; Acreage
36-· Rell Estate Wanted

6 1625354 55 5657 58 -

Services

Houllhold Good•
Sp.orting C00c11
Antiqwas
Miat. Merchandi1e

81 - Home Improvements
• He.t1ng
83 ~ Eacaw1tlng
84 - Eiectrical &amp; RehigMat10n
86·- Gun••l Hauling
82 ~ Ptu"'b.lng

Building Supph•
Pets for Sale
Mulical lnsuumenu
Fruits .&amp; Veilltlbl•
~9 - For Sale or Trade

86 , Mobile Home Rep11r ·
87 - Upholsiery

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

~

- ·· Tho IHI pubtiCIIion
wHI be made on the lth diV
of FobrUIIry• .1110. .
In c•• of your f•illtre to .
..,,_, Ot otherwiN ··pond • requiNcl by the Ohio
Ru._ of Ciwl ProceduN;
j~dgmWlt by &lt;!efMih
lie
rendered oplnat yau lot the
reloel dornondiid in the COfll·

SER~ICE

w•

"""'·
AttMI:1910.
Jon P. luok, Ct ....
.oewav M; !fonon,

John L Clelk, OIVid Rad
and John Jewell

BROWN &amp; BLUE Pi.AID

AU WITH DELUXE
INNEISPIING

7 •- Vard hli{paid in 1dvance)
8 - Publl c Sale &amp; Auction

cover 1h1•

Ar•aCodel1•

...

Rodfa(d, DeceHed: LOLA • ·
CLARK. Route ·4. Pomeroy.

To the unknown heir•.
devia-. and nnt of kin of

lA• Sllown)

. By

AruCo~614

seM. Thot • f• ·of
*21!.00 ohlll be cherged lor
eiCh fiOINr permit.
SEC. Ill. Thlo OrdlnWice
otwll telle .tfoot and 1M In
force from and tiler the - IIMtdote•provldedbytow.
PuMCithelthdiVai.Jan·

WOOO. 31145 MlnwtvMo
Road.' Roalne. Oh. 411771 ;
DEFENDANTS

•La~Z-Boy

•Stearns &amp;
Foster
•Simmons

4 - Gi'llf'M"ay
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6 - Lostand Found

. 05 / ~oy

Farm SuppliP.s
&amp; L1vesluck

Re al Estale

2 - ln Mtmory
3'- Annoucementa

1

pleinl.
McArt... r, Oh. 45151
PLAINTIFF Doted; J•nuOfY 2. 18110
-VI.- .
Lorry
--·
ClelkE.of·Court1,
CLETIS DAI.TON,•P . 0 . Box
Meigo County ,Common
324, AI.,_, Oh. 4&amp;710;
· .
. PI•• Court
IVA JANE DALTON. P. 0
Box 324. ..,_y, ·Oh. (1).4 . 11, 18, 211;
411710; OANIEL E. WIL· 12)1 . 8
LIAMI . Box 172 A.P.O ..
88ft FfMcioqo, CA. 11111115;
The Unlu!own Heiro, De·
vii... ~At~~- •nd Aa
aigi1a of John L. Ct..... De
ce•ed in 1141: TIM Un· Public Natice
known Haifa, Oev.._, Lo· - -- - - - -

got- ond Aoalgno cit David

ICribed .... _ ........ ...
, _ .. thll .... ritlhtC. ...
..d - 1111 oil pertloo
... ..................... edjulled ..... ~JGt ..... .....
- ... Pltlnlllf ... llllloo-

20°'/0

BAHR CLOTHIERS
;

.

lly la·z-lioy-1 only
llig. 1379.00 NOW

•

-·s
KNIT $HIRTS

20°/o

•Six·way Brass
:
floor ·L!Jmps NOW 57700
. •Solid hss Heollloaids ·

'

HATS
SUITS&amp; . aDdCED 20°/o
SPORT COATS
REDUCED

50°/o

50°/o

$2 4,500

SAVE UP
. TO

..
· MEti'S

'

.

NOW S7SOO

· •Cilerry Cedar Chests . ,
51~800
•Swivel Rockers ·

SAVE

Hackers oCfer hl1h--&amp;eeh ,laelp 141
Eul Germsa;r: ·
HAMBURG, West Germany
(UPI) - A West German computer club, once linked to au .
Intrusion Into a N~ sclentltlc
c!ata network, hu offered to help
political opp011lt1on groupa In
East Germany with some of Its
computer know·hoW.
With the tearing down of the
Berlin Wall, theChaotComputer
Club said Wednesday It wanta to
give assistance to East German
opposition movemenls handicapped In competing with the
better -equipped Communist
Party.
·Opposition politicians have In
recent weeks complained that
they lacked basic · communlca· ·
lions technology needed to run
their campaign for the May 6
national elections.
In contrast, t be Communist
Party, which has rul.ed the
country for 40 year s, bas an
elaborate communication s
network . .
The club made news In August
1987 for cracking a restricted
International NASA computer
network, gaining access to data
on weapons systems In a network
linking NASA to at least 135
computer systems In nine Wester.n countries.
Menibers revealed their Intrusion Into NASA's world computer
Space Pbyslcs Analysis Network
to expose the security loopholes
In the system ·and not to create
havoc with· the network.

'

Starting At S9900

Sovers

.

-LADIES suns
IIDUCID

log. 1149.00

use to clean their ears.

Public N alice

IN 1THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
.
OF ' '·
·
MEiGS C9!NTY. OHIO '
NOn•.oE BY
PUBLICATION
CASE NO. 811-CV-147
THE VINTON COUNTY
NATIONAL lANK

•Wood ,Table. Lamps ·

Wall

LOY OF
;o-

'$1900
•Brass Bakers racks ·
Reg. 179.00 . .NOW .$3·900

An noun ce 111 cn1s

•..1-Gord otThonko
!

J.ullowinf{ re{1•ph'on(• I{Xcha[lgf•s ...
oama c'ountv
Me+ia coun;.,
M•on co.. wv

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 00 A.M. SATURDAY
z,oo PM. MONDAY
· 2:00P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 00 P.M. WEOfiiESDAV
. - 2 ·00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 00 PM . FRIDAY

Public Notice

Reg. 139,00 . • NOW

or

1oucn 30°/o

THURSDAY PAPfA
t-HtOAV PAPER
SUN0AY PAPER

•Studiotype FlOor ·
Lamps Starting At 51900
•Tapestry foot S~ool

Action
SOUD WOOD ·
(LINERS
LIVING ROOM
. Rocker
TABES
Recliners
. by

SAVE AS MUCH AS
VALUES OF 165~~~

WEDNESDAY MPER

· ss.sa·.Sl o

.&amp; lane

S299

COPY DEADLINE •
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

.42
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•

Sl~rVII:I'S

~la.~.~ifi1•!1 e_al(e.~

will also appear 1n lhe Pt . Pte...n~ Re9ister aftd the G•lliputts Oaity TriiK'"e ru c hing over 18.080 homes.

I .

•Auorted Pictures

BOTH PIECES

LADllS 'ILOUSES

. 900 .
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NOW

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300fo

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40°/o

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IIDUCED

REG. 1102UO

$

15

&lt;

. . 30: .

AM'ft •• for can•c:utlve run•. twot.n up d.,swill be chaged
fOf eltdt d~ es uparata ·~··· .·,.
· ,

cl•s•h«t IKhertMment placed in The Dei., Senttr1et f•lll c•t
d~Sified ctiSplf¥ . · Business Card and ltg .. nolicell

!As Shown)

11i

Monthly

· Ae ci!Wf' $ 50 'di!\couAt lo• ildS pmd m !Mtwance.
"free ads Giwe8wa~ and Fou.nd ads under 15 words win be
run J d11¥S -.t no ch•ge.
"Pri ce (It ad tor all capilal let teu '"double price ot id coal
· 1 patnl line. type Of'lty uiGd
'Sentinltl is not rnponsibht for Mron1 tler first d.., (Ch edl
for •non hrsl d..- ad runs'" p•p•rl . Call before 2 :00 p m
dll¥ alter pubh cattOn to make correction.
·
'Ads thM: must be paid in a(ho;.n ce arlit
,
C..-d ot lhlf'ltls
Happy }\ds
In Memorl.,..
Votrd Sales

$29999.

Role
.
. 14.00
• 6 .00
.9.00
.13.00
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15
" 15
16

8 · ..
10

Ad$ outside MeHif$. Gilliil Of MftSOf'l c;ounti8fii mu 5t be pre · '

o.,, 1'~ W!M"~•
. 20

Wordo

" 3

patd.

.

$3 9 900

D•v•
1 .•

~

POLI CIES
a

•URTHTONE PUI STYLE
OR
•LOOSE CiiSHION .CONTEMPORARY
IN SOFT PASTRS ,

'•

'

$299~0

Ivory /lllui &amp; mauve.

.

..

MONDAY , thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. ·
8 A.M.. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

.

LADIES 'RUSES

1oucn 30°io

TO 'PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156

I

.

. 2 IACIS·

LADIES SWEATERS
&amp; KNIT SUITS

•

AND

•1 'ONLY TRADinONAL LOVESEAT

Cat110 wacky over wax :
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A
scientist Is looking for answers
about why his normally finicky
cats have a strange appetite for
h11man earwax .
In a letter publish~ In the
British scientific journal Natlire, ·
Thomas A1"ny, a physicist at the
Unive rsity of Massachusetts,
seeks sug!lestlons from the researc h community on why hls
tWo Siamese cats are so fond ot'
the s ubstance.
The cats' craving for earwax Is
so great, Arny said, that one
' 'leaps on the bed In the morning
hoping to be offered some."
When the · Massachusetts
scientist mentioned his pets' odd
behavior to three other people. he
said they told blm their cats al.so
had a fondnes s for wax .
" I'd always thought that earwax tasted very bitter (as a
deterrent to Insects getting Into
your ears), so I find the cats'
reaction ·hard to understand, "
' :Ai"ny wrote.
" Does · any of your rea~ers
haVe a ny explanation? I wonder
If It might be a means to Induce
cats to groom their kittens ," he
·
asked.
Arny could not be reached
. search from Stanford Unlverstty Wednesday to cOmment further
and the other In space systems on details of his unusual research
managem·ent from Webster project.
t!nlversity.
u.s. veterinary experts, none
Also named to the astronaut of whom wished to be named,
corps Wednesday was Thomas said they had never heard of
M. Sega; 37,husbandofastronaut felines gOing crazy over earwax,
Bonnie, , Dunbar, currently In although some pointed out that
orbit aboard the shuttle 'Col11m- . cats often like to play With cotton
bla for her second spacefitght.
or 'the cotton swabs many people

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

201·30-40 50°/o ~FF • j:'

'

BLllBIJ JOB 8111R:a ANNB'l'TE: St. Joseph's Hospital In
Memphis, Teaa., ba enlltll!d • DeW fuad-ralaer, Elwood Blues,
aka Du AIIDI'I.t, for Ita $3111i111on expanaiOn and renov41tl0n
PfOII'&amp;m. Ayllroyd dolllled hll Blues Brothers fedora alid
aunglaa- last year aud poaed 1\'lth Slsaer Aitaetlle Crolle, the
head of the hospital, who wore .her habtt and a pair ot shades,
and the picture wtll appear on T-lhtrts, posters and acta for
"We're on a Mission from God" money-raising campaign.
Sister Annette had never heard of.tbe Blues Brothers before but
someone rented the :Aykroyd-.Jolm Belusbl mor le for her and
now she's an authority, a spokeswoman said. '
.
RODEO FARE: Bill cesb;r will be the !lrst non-musical
entertainment to perform at the Houston Livestock Show and
Rodeo In 20 years. C~by joins ~6 . other acts- rangfltg from
countrystarGeorp8tnl&amp; to PaUl LaBelle toU.aLiaaandCult
IIIIJI -;- slglied for the r&lt;ldeo, which runs from Feh.18to March 4.
The BI~ - Willie Nelloon, .Jolumy Cuh, W11Jlon
.Jelllllllp and KriB KriBioffei'IOII - will play March 3 In wqat
organizers ~Y Is their first allow '"ether. . . ·
. GLIMPSES: "Jeopardy" hO'st Alex Trebec Will ~est star on
"Cheers" Thursday In an episode In which .JohnRatzenber&amp;er's
Cliff character gets to be a "Jeopardy" contestant ... .Jimmy
Desa, the singer and sausage maker, Is a serious yachtsman.
He's getting a pair of state-of-the-art engines for his new boat,
tbe 107-foot ·B ig Bad John, ~nd Is In Houston this week to learn
how to work on the big, bad engines. Each one Is the size of a
small car and has 2,200 horsepower ... DlckGreprydidnt' show
' up for cour! In Milwaukee Tuesday and thus forfeited the $79 he
put up for ball on li trespassing cbarge. The social activist was
arrestee! Jan. 8 for refusing .to leave a store that s~lls drug
paraphernalia as part of his protest against dr'ug abuse. ·

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
announced Wedhesday by NASA, shuttle pilot. A jet fighter pilot,
CUP I) - NASA has selected ·23 , is made up of 11 civilians an~ 12 Collins was the first woman ever
~Iw (astronauts, Including the .mllltary officers. Seven oftlle23· selected to study at the U.S. Air
rst emale to train as a shuttle
are pOols alJd five are women. All ·Force Test Pilot Sch&lt;JQI at
pilot, the first hispanic woman
23 will be ellglb_le for 1!J$lgnment EdwarCis Air Force Ba~. Calif.
to shuttle crewsdter a one-year
Marrti!d to James Youngs,
named to the astronaut corps and
t~alnlng period.
.
.
Collins holds a bachelo~'sdegree
the husband of Columbia flier
Bonnie Dunbar.
Air Force M,a j. Eileen Collins, In .mathematics from Syracuae
The 1990 astronaut group,
33r of Elmira, N.Y.,. Is the fltfl University and two master's
c~n from 1,945candld~tes a~d : female nsmed to train as a space
·
one In operatloiiS re-

9

.Qtt:irks in the news

NASA seleas first :female .sh~ttle pUot; · .

.

111

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•

'1/2 PI.CE .

SJ.OO

Annual January Clearane..t..

LADIES SWEATERS

300fo .o

MAIL IN
REBATE.

\

PlEASANT VALLET HOSPITAL ·
COMUIIIYY lOOM

"

1 lACK

$3 ·79 .

(ost

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•YOUR CHOICE: SOFA &amp; LOYESEAT

LEARANCEI

SA.LE

PRESCRIPT~ON SHOP
992-6669 .
271 North Sec:ond
Middleport, Ohio

FALL

With tak daw ._,. Neutral backgro1M1d
with D IIICIUVI fforaJprint, 0nt Of tur
fin"tl ·~· "19'-00
SAVE SO"'o

'

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Fin~l$2 79

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6:30P.M.

news~---~
..-----------.

..........,. 'h I
DAN DIIIICtJIIIIBI DatJOI: CBS anchorman DU RaBer AYS
he has "_no alibis, no excu11e1" for his one-time JoW-Rallttlc
. experll!lent with beroln. Back In the 19501, Rather Jiad a polll:e
employee In Houston Inject him with heroin 10 he would better
understand tbe drug for a story he was writing. "Looking back
on It , I don't ll:now' wbetber It wu a smart thllli or a dumb
thing, " Rather told The Baltimore Sun Tuesday before
addressing an anti-drug assembly for seventh graders. "It was
a whole different time and place. The whole country wu
different. I didn't know anything about (llerolp) and I wu too
dumb to be afraid." Rather first revealed the llerOln Incident to
a reporter for the Ladii!S Home Journal several years aaa and
now says his candor may have been " a dumb~miltake." Ral)\ef
aliso wu asked hdw he felt about Baltimore Mayor Kurt
Scllmoke's proposal to decrimlilallze drUgs. ''Thla Ia a
well-thougbt -througb and Interesting Idea, " he said. "But It's
.
.
nol one with which I personally .a gree. ••
ROWDY ROD'S CARNAL OONCERT: Rotl8tewU1'sconcert ·.
In Lafayette, La., was Just too much for one ooncert:goer.
Cll•lea Falfermaa, 27, Is seeking unspecified damaps from
Stewart, tbe Cajundome and Its Insurance company becauae he
lnjul'ed bls knee at the Stewart show last year. Falterman'sllult
went on at length about the nature of the concert, saying
Stewart's songs were "erotic and hedonistic In nature," which
combined with the light show to whip the fans " Into a boDing pol
of ecstatic emotionalism" and "a gross sense of abandon and
egregious sense of conduct InsouciAnce." i\11 of that caused
Falterman to allp and break his kneecap when SteW-art tJegan
kiCking soccer balls Into the audience, he says.

The Flue ·Sea1on l1
Here!!
..

·Westfall- birth

' Roger and Sheila Westfall
Reedsville are announcing th~
birth of ,their fourth child, a
daughter, Heaven Lee Ann, on
Oct. 11 at Camden · Clark
Hospital.
'rhe lnfan I weighed six pounds
eleven ounces and was 20 Inches
'
long.
, Maternal .grandparents are
Fairy Bell . Foster, Vienna,
W.Va. , and Jlinmle G. King,
Long Bottom.
· .
Paternal grandparents are
Margaret Westfall, ReedsVille,
and the late VIrgil Westfall.
The couple h,ave three other
daughters, Tracey, age 16; MIchelle, age 11; and Heather, age
nine.
.

r-r--Peopk in the

',

\)~

\

·: HENDERSON - The Gallla
Twlrters Square Dance Club will
hold a dance on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
CQmmunlty Center In Render·
son, w.Va .. The cdller will be
Herb She! ton and the danee. Is
open to ·all · western· square
dancers. ·

MAITHI COWNS

I

Hospitalized ..

· POMEROY -There will be a
hymn sing on Saturday at the
Laurel . Cliff Free Methodist
Cburi:h at 7. p.m. The featured
group will · be "Fellowship."
Pastor Bill Williams IJivttes the
public. •
·

2ND ST.

l

The Daly Sentinel-~•

I

CL~SS IF IE D ~~ DS

Patty Dyer presented the pro"Our Friendship," "A Friend's
gram, " New BetrlJmlnp" when VIsit"
Old Friends •"
• "Old Times
•
the Meigs County Pomona and a quiz by all membera.
Grange mel recently at the Rock
"God Be With You" was SUDi
springs Grange Hall with Pau- for the cl0111Dg, and Arthur
line Atkins as ~orthy master.
Crabtree gave the benediction.
The pledge to the flag was S·tar Grange served
·
given and •·•America" was sung. retreshmenis.
"Sweet HourofPrayer" wa,salso
sung.
It has been reported that Mrs.
. 'It was noted that the Pomona
Robert
(Esther) Harden .Is con· Grange will visit Athens CountY
fined
to
the Intensive Care Unit
sometime In March.
at
Rlver.
s
lde Methodist Hospital
The annual grange b;1nquet
In
Columbus
In serious condition.
will be held sometime In AprU.
Mrs.
Harden
reportedly suf. Westlnli Crabtree, "CWA, re- .
ported that the Columbia Grauge fered an aneurysm and heart
has. National Grange cookbooks attack on Jan. 7 while attending
. for sale and so does the He!f!loc.k services at the Syracuse United .·
Presbyterian Church.
·
Grove Grange.
.
l~~ 1'.
~.·
'
. "»( "
·::
·\~·
. Program readings. Included
' 'New Beginning," "New Year's
Wish ," " Morning · Surprise,"
• Winter Blessing," " Keeping
Your Car Cozy In Cold Weather,"

CHESTER ~ 'T here will be a
special meetlhg of the Chester
Township Trustees on Friday at
im p.m . at the town hall.

SUNnAY

Mike and Teresa (Barrett)
Wimbish are announcing the
birth ot a da11ghter, Kelsey
Marie, on ·. Nov. 19 at Grant
Hospital In Columbus.
The Infant weiglled" , seven
pounds and nine ounces and was
21 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Charles and Florence Barrett of
Rutland.
Paternal grandparents are
Mike. and ~rain Wimbish of
Columbus.

_.

'

lllurtclev. ~ 11. 111MJ

'llluray,.,......., 18.1180

Porneioy-Midcllpoit, Ohio

·

ORDINANCE NO.
1217-BI

An Ordlnoneo to Eotlblleh
Coont Coott for Mayor' a

We can r~oir and rt·
cort radiators and
htattr cores. Wt can
also cicid boil and rCNI
out radiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.

..
li

.

PAT HIU FOlD

'

992-2196

Middleport.

*SHRUB lit TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

PrMident of Council
l!l11.18,11c •

*FIREWOOD .

Court

Middleport- toll•¥¥•:
SEC. I. Thlt the -~~~

992·2269

"""""
for ..all
· prep_ ... thnlugh
the-Mldd•
port Moyor' 1 Court for c:our!l
cooto ohlll be *35.00.
SEC . II . Thll the,.........
-~~~ otll. .ecourt-o'
be oubmitted to the
Tr_u,_ of lhtl 1111• of
Ohio and tloet thtl ........ of
- · .court coati 1hllll lie
dopotlled In tile
count
Md
.,..,,.,.,

EVENINGS

992-2772

IUTUND nRE

WAMTED

monthly lntothtlv._t,._
.....,.
IEC. II. Thlo Onfln.,oe

•MSIIoe

SAUS and

SltYICI

m..,.,. •..,.

,.,1'1111

toll• eff8et ........ "'
-from llltllfloriM-·
II•tHie• prowldedlo¥1-.

992~

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

AIIOOt: J011 P. - . C...

. , _ M . Horttin,
,_!dent ol CGunall
(11 11 , 18, 2tc

jtatretl-. : :tM
- WIIA'
• c&lt;ltdtl ~
..........
21 .............

!Zl

MondaY'

Friday 9 ~·I

Clllon
of IIIII...... .....
wllbeptltlllho!l_
Wlllll for tla ••aaat I

•

Buying Hours:
7 :30-1:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7 :30-4:00 Saturday
•
1-2.'~1 mo.

OHIO PALUT
COMPANY

.,

B'S APPUAIICE
SIIVICE
992·5335 tr 915-3561
Aa-- ,,.. , ... Office

PGI.IOY

949-2493
3rd StrNt, Racine, Oh.
.

~

Pam
•MObile Helme

16lllwllis.M

'•
•

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"FrMEitlm...."

Pll. 949·2101

or los. 949·2160

·..•

CIISIOM . ,

.......".

·HO.S &amp; GAIAIIS

Pay Your Phone
1nd Cable IIIII Hero

PH• .949·1101

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992·7479

lt. 13 llartll ..

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PIIHIPOf,

,,

·-·-

.IISSEU
SALES &amp; RIVICI

We Cerry FloNng ........

Ren1Sit
. •Lot Rtnlllll

II

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Wl711rt, .... t$760

eMollleH-

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HOMIPAII

~~=~
ll

1-1-IH mo.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

COINIIY
. Public: N atlco

..

TOP SOIL
FOR SAlE

INSULATION

SAW LOGS
$160 n..'::••

•

ROSES'
EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN

LqWIU.Oll

AIIOnment
•0,11 Chango • Lube

1·15-'10-1111

" ' · Ohio
PH.' -992·3561
S1550 per ton

12-13-'19-l .mo.

effOIIt End

IIAIII n., 111U.

lloduprlnio ld.

FREE ESTIMATES

DIUVIIII TO

•••work

I··

.....,• 1110.

rireoltollelulr ........ ...
.................... tub.

Open Dally'
9 to 5

o.

BILL SUCK
4-6-19-tln

WANTED
W.Va. Chlppl~~~rlnc.

.,..1, Spaaltl
VIIYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Council ol the Vllllge of

Be it atdolnad by t ...

CHIPWOOD

J&amp;L
INSULATION

•

.

.,

.......'

•

••

••

·.
•

�..

,

'

· Pegs 10-The Daily Sentinel
11

Ar:nou rK Cllknts

Help Wanted

-·

3 AnnoufiCIIMnte _

1180

Ohio
w·

LAFF-A-OAY
1

c-.

- -

1

Apartment
torRent ..

44

" ----- ~ -- - -~-~ ---

NOTte£~ . . 1101 1 1 o olblo let any than
awn • of tNo - · Hllflh

•

;t,.

~edueoY-~ITU.._

-

Shqle Dlol Plori and E-VAP
W.ter Pilla. 14'1 ' 1I
FNh
Pharmacy.

.

Ron'o ChlmnaJ - P ...

e:'"r::p ·:::r::...-..:lnlr::
~t. net -

4

__ _

I-

Glvii8WIIy.

''"'-_old _ __

Viewing
fHURS..
'

.I))"
w

l:aG

Houeehold
Gooda

FOund: cat, tong illii.'liOC.. with
whH• marklnp. MouN ., _.

··
Floala Hair Fuhlana. A Laodar
LOST black mlnolura llahnauzor In lha lloouty lnduolry 1o
Camp Conley oraa, nomad - I n ; I(IOinl W.'ra loOicln;
"Sonrwr", Reward, 30W71- far a prilloaalonol, talonloil
71170.
olyllot whc lo onthuolutlc I

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

w..

'::i
clh
-::=~ii
.1.....
_ . ... pol
...lal. •
you ho..

08,.

with

or

without

molora. Call Lanoy U...y 114-

3811303.

•.

tzoo~mo. atliO

C.......... Mill
Craoll Rd. -arlurriloltad, 114-

OUIIIa

'712-e511.

Wanled To Buy: Plno -

IIR lody. lluol lumloll ro-- · Call14-ll2-3751.
Sec,..ary needed, IMurmce

. Dytr
Broe. 11M-W-111T la.m. to
4p.m.

Ratlrad lo llva In my
hcrno and aoolol In caring lor

awpar- profarnd,

Employment Services
'11

Help Wanted

AYON I An J.raao I Shl~oy
Spoors, ,_71-1421.
AYON • All araaa, Can Marilyn

441-24111alk lor

w~lo

Pl. PH.

Wanledo F~IHI . . flole.ln Nonny
to caralor ono child In norlhorll

llllnolo.

Auto Mechank:, uper~Mc:e ,..
qulred, muet have own tool•. ,,...
tervlew by •ppoliitmenl only
304-675-2531 .
.

dhlona,

-

-...1;114-1112-

Will laY cal!lll, .-

rateo, call

for Ntliute, 114-448-8250.

e~ceUenl Hllry. leni 1Mt1r wllh
qu.tHatioM anclllhalo to ...."
lrllnard, Bo1 11411, RFD, Long
Gro¥a. 111.10047.

21

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

Factory Choked

(614) 667-3271

12 Gauge Only
9·6-89-ttn

1111-I,XLT-4::
oMHIM llllor I 011 11
liST.

\HAVE'$

Polnl PIIM- .... locldl• and

Tadc, .~DW"~~-~0~4.

112 - - Fut.l
t'FIIId in

84

Good -

311W71-7NI.

Ownrour_o_,_or_

lhooee
from:
.
.
.
.
·
Lod
....
llan'a,
lnilnlltl- Largo .,_,

11"01 (2:001

iiJ PttmaNawa
.
aJ Collaga lalkatblll
11J Murder, 1M Wrote 1;1
• c;hwclt 1111W1SttttlcM

e (])

Sl......... color
sn•t::. Bran&amp;t n11m.: Uz
Cia!
llanhl Mlnlaturao,
Af!ne Kieln, $t lllchsle, Pinky,

2 bedroom tral..r lor rwnl, ~
-1D'II. 11010)
"" ..... 30W71.

~~~ ~Ia~~:-:z

Fumllhed al elec. 2br, 1 mi..
from dly, .,. Iorge prtvoto lot,
$200/mo. Ra-100• I oacurlly
~· 111 ••• 2~ ., ......

o..r 2!111

Fumt.htd,
3
IMdroorn,
w-ldryar. No plio. 114-141-

""lop

q=:ri

llranda,
lnwonlory, tral
olrfora, ,..,.. -

l11,tll0;
ftllurao

"fi, llo. Con

-·

31 Hometlor 8ale

10 ., _ carpal Pld, Lollar,
Sl2f, chock .. out "" -'"Y '
loW IMiott.llotlohln Rt.7N~ ,,.._
441-t444.

.

w_.,
Dryw:!, "'; -

til: Eleolrto

Clatl

~

=

Ra_......:

......

~""~..:-;:.
Swl8hlir.
Ulld Applnn , 114
Thlnl It KM1up. Ohio.
441-7t73.

-·:.-=..:.
Early

-

ouMo I« -

LMnaJ71. 11...._

t1~

For Sala: Twin II• rno-

~

aa:

htah •hi •

~~·~J=:
auo: -

aro11 f: 1oc1, ..,.... - • ·
IMi. Davia Ditch Wllch.l1....,
101 ..

1m
Carto.
h I a I,·now
-

e (]) 01 L.A. Law Sifuentes

-

0ae11

. . . . . . . . . -.....,. ruM

ra..-.

Is coming to villit. Q

'10:00 I]) CIIN Talellion

repraunts a former law clerk
who was Hred lrom her job.

i ~(I) PrtmeUrna uva 1;1

1m-21o4~.•

Oood

w.-.

tha"har lltri!IQIICI huaband

t=::r.':L'iOJ!tl-·

County Ajipllanca, Inc.

0000 • U$ED

aDNalltvllleNow ·
1:30 G (]) IJI) Orand JaniCe learns

1111 ,... ,....... 8t.uon
I oyt, ~· _aula,

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

Ill LaglalaiVI
. (!)
· · · -Updall

a..., ..... 101, Vol, PS, PI,
good,

8

APPUJ.HCII

!lrYin.!(oltlpIMaa- ADil'trDn,

1111~•

.~

- . ind AIC - ·
IIII,IUUIDm.

PO!nana,

, ... - -... -flOOd.
to IIIII. no

run1
aood. prtoed
__ (1...,..,..,

BUYING ALUMINUM CANS, GLASS,
PLASTIC, COPPER, BRASS. SHEET
ALUMINUM, AAOIATORS AND MORE

,

lnl.to'r alld 30M1W'111 .

'

-brande.--.- ...
eDII'III I Plllb:noe I'IPIIrt. WV •.
304.a71o281 Ohio " ........ ' •.
~

or cablo

:

IDol ......._ ,.

- . flOOd1-..:
- il....
Mollwl.. eon:plllldumelllij.

SPECIAL ACCOUNTS FOI

Building
Suppllaa

N NHuURS: Mon.-Fri. 12 :00 to 6 p.m.

1M1-Ragal.2--.
Ina
..... . 001d6on.
VI.
$1710. 114-fi2-e711.

.

FOI INFOIMAnON CAU 992-3194

12-14-89·1

.
.
.
4·-·1....1117.
1111-_l!xp, nloo c1oan - ·

---~~--

- · ...~.

cond,

.
. . . . .-.
"'"""

1' '

..

·''I•.

arid ........ -

Dawlo

Jackoon,OH 1 _ , _ . . .

82

l.ic:ensed Clinical AucloiOiist

j3 ,(614) 446-1619 or (614) 992-2104

417 Second Avenue. Bell 1213
% I Glflij!olis, Ohio 45631 "
- •
or at
iVtttrlfts ltllorill Hospital
llulbtny Hats. Po1111roy,

1 •.

a.,_

:::::.~"ii--=~

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

,.,_,,_.....,. __
......

114 •• 1111

.

-

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

(I)CaltiiBeall....

!Jl8:::~;L

One letter IWicll for another. In this sample A is 1L1ed
for the three L'11 X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the •enttb and _formation of the words •re all

·I............
&amp;...
ewnU••

hlnla. Elch day the code letlen are different.

·

IIOVII: Ln Mil CINar

••••

COF

..

I

'·"1

VNK

CAI\\IL
CZAK

Herb didn't mind equeulng back Into hill
old Army ul)llorm once he got UMd to his

eyeballs IOUchlng hla gl-.
- L

.

··

CIIYPI'OQU01E

IR

Ci

l 0 I

OAI.
COF

lFNEL ' N RAM

11 .......

hi,JDO.

.

DAILY CRYP IOQVO'l Fil- Here'• how to work II:

il) MIMtl VIce
'lit Clttnh ti1IWI ltttlloll
11:30eal01 Tonllfiht lhow

-

~-····0111

11,100.

....., •• 11 • ••1.11cre1at
11..-of-.Aiooo..._
on fir lot, Ito ef ..,.._
U..lloone..,._ltte_,

. !Col, )111111 -

*'"'

chair,

.........)IJII.

$"

till lllnll ~ b.H.O
• f114417,
.
IJt Ale. 01C, TtW,:.::: II I ....... ........_ ....... ...
...ntiiWiT-7141.
!,05.!!!::_111 •••• __, .... .,

II-a tlr::*il
,. -

,.,_,,-.
....
"-ollllllrflooM!t ..

Nawl

(1)8porlaCanlrlr

f*O, ~.r~~
USSSijl W

1.._••• OTI,

1111 Dak -.14d4,11WIIo
11M,•IIII&amp; .
.
1m ar, 1111• :d•.. - . aond,

ancestor
31Dupllcate
37 Capri, e.g.
38 Preemlnenl

eO"'-*'IMII
i!JIIonavfltte
8 CINrlt Olllu1111•a

85 Gantn~J Hlullng
..... M. - - . - ......

'

McComfck (R)

ewwe(I)IIIJeGilll

lObe

Mf2.

.

aiiOnStaga
11 :00 I]) Hantcallll And

toclllrUI

110,000; 11U 241112, .
111,000.
~-­
Ballo, ""'-Po OH 11M-W-

' ' ...
1-1711.

Molohan

e \1]) Ctllnawatcll Toniglll

.•,.

-11&lt;~-e~T.am.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

CCngrelaman Alan B. ·

..

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

(PI

2 Of 81 Samuel Is asked to
Investigate tile war-lima
actl.- of 1 banker. 1;1

• '

28 Move
sideways
29 Fencing
sword
31 Sandwich
lavorile
34 "... '
35 Woody's
companion

23 Sympathy
24 Editor's
mark
25 Fiddle·
de-dee!
26 Cry of
discovery
27 Real
30 Colorado
Indian
31 Craggy hill
32BHe
331n a bind
35 Iranian's

Ill Wa"* giOII Rapol1

--lie

lOIII - . ioncl. . .,ooo.
114411 IJII.
11112 Hamilton - . 241111,

(2:00)
10:30III MaiiiMpiiCI TloeeiN

YDII
SWIIT
HUITII

laplloTank ............ Oallo : ·
&gt;'

Co.-1-INfiiiPIWIIJ

1m 1411711 aaion P"""!., ztw,

iiE

DADBURN CA_KE?

BLISS

-VIc
11arv1ce, •·
01 a,.... CN111 1'111. Parte. eup- •.
~up, and-... 11&lt;1- !:

1m Ola u gd. 2 INiclroom.
11000. Eaailllnl -Hion.
Lorga adclad 011. 8111, 1!111.

Heuinc Evaluations For All Aps

WHY DON'T YOU LET
~fi· SAKE YORE

Iiiii loW !llnM ~) .,. anllololt at
11 r r .. - .. , l'llrlfl.!'~~

shoes

Sumnar Group owna
Oakman lnelustrtea. C
e G]) Maw TWtltght l'one
iiJ IVInfng NaWI
Gil N-1;1
10:01'(1) MOVIE: Voller Olrt !AI

;.

·:!
Ron'o TV s.vtoo, -'"'llintl '
In Z..Mft oloo oa.-,. lllplil :

.... .a......

·-=, ............... -

- ·Call

Uppw Rl&gt;ar Ra. IMido Cinl.
114o4411-?IM.
.

e

D ~ Lartcllllg
MIIOk clilcovers that The

311W-·-

1m..-,.

stranger. 1:1
CD (J) ~ • Polloi (PI 1
Of t) Polrot II ukeCI to solve
thl dftapptlllrance of a cool&lt;.
&amp;:.ny King
II) Tlourltlly Night Flglo1a

•

'"'
cewuanetor .... .....
lllllary. IU . . . .1.

w....,,

dlatant town, Lou ha 1
I'QIIIIIItlc n.wlllog -Milt 1

i.
iiJ llland Son 1;1
i1J1
Uvel

·
- . I n . . - . prlco · .- ·
104-e'III4Sit.

-

LnL

.,

,_
OM 81
.uhluat

IIIO•--•ndo1m

appl"-. T.V.-

.

Servrcrs

71 Autoa.for Sale

Fl-lor-.11-

Drpr, Uke
NeW,pl;llaclrto . . .:-,111;

ta Mid.1p1rt Tuphi11

'

I r&lt;Jnspor1at ron

Auto

97 lEECH m&amp;T, MIDDlEPOIT, OliO
Locatad ThrN • • • Wow $toper Amwica Next

,. .

,.

Apartment
for Rent

..... paid,-.., .....

-

=~'L...IIINII
(I) e(l) ount ,....... In a

1 '!!.. opt. In Ria .Orondo, All

Real Estale

a

Nor..

Opeoin&amp; lead: • A

ACROSS
39 Grecian
t Bird sound
dei1Y
41nsect . ,
8DOWN
McCartney 1 Long
9 Simpleton
poem
11 Before
division
(Lal.)
2 Shabby
12 "Mrs."
3 Viclory
ln. MeKico
cry
14 Give
4 Bison
-whirl
5 Yemen 13 .Compe1ent
I 5 Egg source seaport 15 Flock ·
18 Johnny 8 Bad
18 Binge.
17 Decadent
deed
2 t Speech
-19 French
7 Respect- flaw
· formal
able
22 Inactive
dance
8 Duo : 23 Breakwa1er
20 Civil wrong 10 Prelude 24 Close
21 Stringed
lo peace 25 Apt
Instrument
22 wear ing

.

aJ Cl " " CIIH tullillsa
dream by compafill9 on

2213.

44

aet by playia&amp; ace~ anotMr ~-

AmeriCa's most convnon

e:oo •

All pill

band.

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

by THOMAS JOSEfFH

.

-

IlD :

Ill Wllcl AmMica Examine .

.......,

vw-.tble: Neither
Dealer: SoUth

u
liiOIId. So Welt tried that Dlay. Soulb
tbe ace of · ruffed and qtickly played A-It IDd anhearts.
lieart king other club. 1'be lpade 1-. aow went
u East
·wilb the el&amp;ltt. H away 011 tbe IIQOd beartl.
Welt aowswttebed to 1 .pade, declarI Clll't ~ South's open1Dc
er would haft to will the ace and take bid, btlt It artllllly worked Ill toda)"s
r•-- 1a1t the
of 1 blla deal. H Soulb ap11111 oae club. East will
~
to mak:::a~:n.ID pt I lpade bid, and II wl11110 laqer
lad that ~ would ICIII'e an over- 6e
lor Sauth to 1teal • !I.etrick. But
did aot kaow what de- cl,a~- 'J...tr• .....,. uti
canlayretworbeJ~.~~.
the H Souwoutlll,dbebeld .,_,,.c.d_"("'lll•lllltUIIta-. ·•

CROSSWORD

·flllne, The Bobcat. Q

ZIH-,12dS mobile- let-·
11.4SW7111.

.AKJ1075JZ

r:,t!.el::rtllocnJ..c::": ~:
bid Wllllld have .,_ dUfereut II South
I _,- ltnJDC Unci.
It's easy to • the 1dvantap to del clarer. SIDc:e
of

·

"'"'

....

•Its

be liviDc your partaer a
heardacl1e too. bib, u dealer, tried ·
that !lp!lliJIC bid ID a receat tourDI-

CD - • k Prevtilwl Goea

Shakespeare. 1;1

90VTII

.1052

W.:.

8:05 (I) MoVIE: lacl Boy1 IR)
12:00)
1:30
1111 Ollferant WOIIcl
Dwayne 111naplred by the
Qlooal of WiHiam

hoy, 11.10 lillie,

••

jnklllll

· g~.
Hours~;~ .
~VIE:IIvannah

75 Boata &amp; Motors
for Sale

Mora,

iorlaa

St&amp;~~e' s

. delinquent kid brother is
lramed tor murder. Q

Hay &amp; Grain

~~~--

MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER

. lltpendable Hearinc lid Salta &amp; Slrvicf

Myllerlea Sister

Coo rt" 1ned mlxatl hoy, toO II.
baloo. 111. Don Cow, Patrlol,

lo I p.M . -·- · et4~ 127. :lnl. -

Listen inc

~8(1) Fa- Dawtlnt

MPrchondtse

I

.

el]) 01 Colbr lllcM!t Oenlu
tries to llx up Vanena with a
boy they met In a reataurant.

1- t8 ·

.KQII.

tAJI7!

-·t

7:31 (I) IInford And Son
' I]) MOVIE: Law And Order
1:00
(2:00)

Drywall is hun~on the bam's
interior wallS. !;I
'

oantral haol, air Oondltlonlng.
114-MI-2734.
.

Grant A.

Saturday 9 a.m. to 12 nOon

. •u=rdr'l;l_

EASI'
+K.QIH

'"
•Qu

'H4U

thtm. Oae tlilillil certain: ~your
first bid Ia five club&amp;, you .will live the
oppoaeats fill. WhAt you hope Ia thai

III Ill Thla Old HOUM

--y- ·-Ciao
abulmlnt,
- . bath.,,

-·a Fttinltr

••

,.H

Altbou{lb contract brklae Is Ill yean
old, we ~wa't yet seeD eaoup ellbt·
eard aults to know the best way to bid

(1)1!--- Tonlgltt

•Au
.QJ 107
uuu

WEST ""

By James jaeolty

iiJI Croatn

~ 19Wb,-NEA. If'll:

~•. 2 bath, 1o • - .
..,..mo. pl.. utll-, 13!0
lbr, homo rtvar - · W/10191
baokyord, t14 UfiD:It. ,

Business
Opponunlty

SITEWORK - ROADS

DUMP TRUCK
Sahd-Stone-Dirt

lo4.t1-112.

-

dap.llr. LoUghlin 112·

Starts at 1:00 I'.M.

Do•"'-

e (])

NORTH

in the dark

e G])' M•A•s•H .

Dollooll· . ...,..... raq-.

Frnancial

BRIDGE

JaHenorol'
111J Fllllllr F -

e (I)

.,........ 1111114-441-~

;::=======:tr;::====:::;:;:;::::::;:;i
:::..
DOZER
~LEARING

4114,'

·.R.!'o~~,aoo.
lxoilonl
dNion.
.!!! ~
11,1110. .....:
M.f,

to ba;ln-. ·ldvanced
and aduM IIUdanla. Aloo
chardln; and trr-1 ifl· W1...

or -..,lly Dao&lt;,
D.&amp;&amp;
rf"-obbc, lrldll, ~
Elccallonl '!"''lfno ...,_ garto,-lhaparacprlvato ll¥tna quort.,.,

Business Services

EVERY SUNDAY

, ... a.., .., --

. .

7:30

:rM NOT
. . v,J~y·
-/. JlJJ'f t/liNti Mi. A
JOWL oF WATf/l ~I&gt;
Al"i oi.IP Sl.lppi~
TO CHEW QN.

Ollltldlr~

lor

In "'Y

2000 ltrsndl ••· multi tier
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-l_·llalall
prlcln; .. _,,,.
... ::~t,pMMU
ablo

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

lt4C7471.

Cllowlllll! Ill .....

- " ' 4 WD ...... of,
=,.:·.
•••sa•
.,_

"""'*'
....
- ........
u.- ,..,.,.......
-lilY.._
-Col

to

BOw P-11, care of Polnl PI-nt
Rogl-, zaa Main Sl., Point
"-"'· wv 21510.
Wa"'- · naedad nlghl and
-nda, aootY In Vlllagto Pluo, 3004 Jockaon Ava,

Weav11 304-182-26Q. '

11i1 • WD

13100. • bell ellr,

t-

WIH glvo plano -

raq~~lrad,
ploua can - ·· ..
Klmba~y Quality Cora, l l 1 -

Pro 11140 qulno. Any condHion.
Caah Pold. Caii .I1W112·5657 or
&amp;14 ..112-2481 .

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

7:~ (I)

'

1171 CIIIC ... PU• . . . _ , -

Norlll ol

41 Hou... tor Rent

BULL"

•

\1]) •
•Court 1;1
iiJI M-rlloe
181 Abbot And Coatello
11J M'-1 VIce
all VldlaCountry

1 .......
$100 por
raam, AI IIIII.._ In e' t d. c.l
La..... , •••14 441 ~2'1·

Rentals

ALL Yllrd BIIH Muol Sa Pold In New company In araa .......... DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m. Top llo._ant I Solei Rap,
tho day balo&lt;a lho ad lo ... run. 125,000 lo ,71,000 IIJII" yNr.
Sunday edHion - 2:00 p.m. Polanllal - . . . . ltM-46Friday. llonclay adlllon • 2:00 atot lor apt., iloll 1o&lt; Mr.
p.m. &amp;.turday.
Slewut.

Jurik

•

OiiiJ "" .....

IIMdad baby olno; Gallfpcllo
=~ let nlghl ahlft, :104-

AN Caoa Mana;.. naeded far
podlatrlco I ldufto lor horrw
care nuralng. 1 mo. to 1 yr.
Home ca,. Nuralng Experience

Call- 2:00 ,. ....

4G Space for Rent

wv 25504.

no,ooo ,.. 1 , _ polontlol.
Dalallo. 11) IDHIIHOOO Ell. Y·
wz.

,0::

11

Llltlo Coaaar'o Pluo 1o "ttllraooln lnd- let an
7 __
· Yard
8ale_ _ _ . Slop
!oval Inmana;•_
......;;....;;,:;.:;,
.., locollonpoolllono.
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N-'lour
~ Wheel Of

IJIIIIIII

SCIAMUTS ANSWIIS
.
Benzol - Pip61'- V'10la - Junket ,... PIT BULL
"My wile is supposed to be the watch dog over our
finances," sighed the man, "but she's lurned"into a PIT

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all Top C.rd
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MODEST WHEN ONE IS- NOBODY.
RENARD .

AUS

~-

�12-The DalY Sutinel

,

Beat of the ·Bend

Ohio Lottery

A little update
By BOB HOEFLICH
Let me update you on some of
our friends.
SCott Lucllli,
long-time ad·
mlntstrator at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
apparently got
along beaut!·
tully with his
heart surgery at Riverside Meth·
odlst Hospital In Columbus. He
was returned to ' his home In
Cheshpre Wednesday and will be
recuperating there. "The address
Is P.O. Box 144, Cheshire, Ohio
45620.
•
Charles (Larry) Harris would
Jove to hear from you. He Is In St.
Joseph Hospital at Parkersburg,
W. Va. , where he underwent
major surgery Friday. He will be
confined to the hospital for about
three weeks. The room number
Is 312.
Long-time Pomeroy resident,
.Helen Neutzllng, a fanner em- ·
ployee of the Swlsher·Lohse
Drug Store, underwent major
surgery last week "In Columbus ·
and she'd like to hear from
(rlends. The address Is Room
722, St. Anthony Hospital; 1492 E .
BroadSt.,Columbus,Ohlo,43205.

King's Island, the theme park
11ear Mason, Ohio, will be holding
auditions for some 200 per·
formers needed to the' 1990
.season. The closest location for
anyone from Meigs County Inter~
ested In trying out for some ox the
King's Island shows Is Hughes
Hall at Ohio State University and
the date Is Monday, Feb. 12.
Singers, dancers, Instrumental·
Is ts and s peclal acts will bz
auditioning In that location.
For more Information, contact
the park's entertainment and
attractions department at" "513·
398-5600.

--------

thriDer
Michigan

that prObably means no customers In New York, rJiht off and the other Is Country America
- not too appealing to a lot of us
who were country before country
was In style.
Frankly, I have dlfflcul!f In
eyen In get ling any mileage o tat
the Readers' Dlaest - excep , of
course, for the advice artlcl on
rules to follow In leading a hap ,
happy . existence. We had
relative who must have gotte
wrapped uP In a sweepstakes
venture- hesubscrlbedforusas
a gift until somewhere In the mid
1990's. I don't think he won the
sweepstak~. but maybe he can
gain something from the happy,
happy ex,l stence articles. ·
And the "Son Of Heaven"
exhibit In Columbus over the past
summer lost well over a mUllon
and a half.
Now my understanding Is that
the City of Qhlo wlll pay $670,000
on tbeloss.whlletheState-o fOhlo
wlllbeaskedtopayonemilllon...:
you got Is -six zeros -on the
loss . .
. How about them apples1 Is
this an example of how our state
tax money Is spent? Apparently
so. Frankly, I'd like my part
spent on Route 33 In Athens
County for some centerline reflectors so that drivers can see
where that miserable road Is
going - and especially on rainy
evenings. You've probably noticed - In · Meigs County those
reflectors are right there to help
you ·cope with tbe problem -get
to the Athens County line and
nothing. I have a little difficulty
understanding that. But, I can
understand that the State should
pay the mllllon on the Son of
Heaven loss.
After all, the
exhibit was good for Columbusand that's Important to us -Isn't
It?

•
....
-

· -·~

·

.

..

~ ·

Potr~eroy-Middlepo~ O~lo• .Friday, January .19. 1990

2 li..:tiOno, 14 Pog• 25 Cent•
A Multlmedlo Inc. N_.,IPor

Pillsbury ·planning to
·expand ·Wellston plant
SALE UPCOMING - The tlleme ·ror thla Jelll''a uDUI Girl
Scout Cookie Bale ilt "Diacover &amp;be Treu-.'" Starbl Frld., .
aad coaiDtdDI ·throup Feb. 4, Girl 8coilta tbrOUCIII!a&amp; Me_lp

• •
&lt;.

LINCOLN
a luxury
What

car should be ..

.,;

rr

PROBE . WRECKAGE - Rescue worken
lnvestlltlte the wrecka1e ol a twln-en&amp;lne
• Bechcrafl Xlngalr after lUI Eastern Airlines '727

1988

Defense harrimers .away
at AIDS-afflicted doctor

Slinderella meets

252
Pkk4

9484

What this country nEeds Is
Barbara Bush -and you know
more magazines and · a good who she .Is - gives a "qualified
10-cent greeting card.
yes"
.on women servjng In
. ·
mUitary combat. Fine- and "the·
Two new slicks are about to · people who decide we should go
make their appearance on the , to war are tbe ones who don't
American scene- why do I have have to go. Great plan, eh? I
a feeling they will be short lived? know It's difficult- but do keep
smiling.
One ls called Midwest Living -

NEW YORK (UPI) , - A often .Interrupted by objections
defense lawyer, calling the. tesfrom Prego's lawyers who said
timony of a doctor who claims
he was being repetitive. Most of
she contracted AIDS In a public
the objections were sustained
hospital "Incredible," said she
and Friedman was forced to
only remembers Incidents from
rephrase his questions.
her medical hlstdry that bolster
After a · series of objections,
her story.
Bernstein snapped at Friedman,
Stanley Friedman, a defense
"We've already heard that." ·
attorney In the $175 million
· Ou tslde the courtroom, Fi-led·
negllgence lawsuit !lled by Dr.
man said he was pleased with his
Veronica Prego, hammered
cross-examination · and denied
away at the doctor on Wednes·
suggestions·he Is buUylng Prego.
day's fourth day of cross·
"It's not the first time·· (Preexamination In state Supreme
go's) attorneys have made
Court ln Brooklyn.
claims that are unfounded," he
Prego was expected to take the
said. "As far as buUylngher, I've
stand again Thursday tor cross- never raised my voice In all the
exa mination by•lawyers from the
days; never shouted, never ac·
state of New Yor)uepresentlng a
cused, never raised a finger.''
doctor Prego accuses of breach·
Friedman asked Prego If was
ing her confidentiality by dlsclos·
ever given the option of taking
lng to hospital personnel that she
the experbnental AIDS drug
had AIDS.
. suramIn, known to have danger·
" Her story Is Incredible,"
ous side effects, before she was
Friedman said. "She vacillates
diagnosed as having the disease.
back and forth and only re"We never got to that point,"
members what It Is convenlentto
the doctor replied.
remember."
· Friedman . then displayed a .
Prego's attorneys, though, dis·
deposition Prego gave In 1988,
missed Friedman's allegations,
lndlcatlni the woman said she
saying Prego had no motivation
had ' discussed the dru&amp; and Its
to lie.
effects with one of her doctors.
" Let's remember something- -Prego," though, countered that
we've got a woman here who's
she never actually was given the
dying," said attorney Diane
"option" of taking t!le drug.
Wilner. "There's no . question
Friedman also asked questions
she's dying. She has no motlva·
to buttress his claim that PreJIO
tlon to lle."
knew she had contracted AIDS
The Argentine doctor claims
before 1987 and thereto~ should
negligence by others caused her
have tiled her suit earller.
to prick herself with an AII)S. I Because she did not, he contends;
contaminated needle she said
the statute of limitations had
was left ln a pile of waste by a
expired.
careless Intern.
Prego Is suing the Intern, Dr.
Joyce Fogel, Klhgs County Has·
pita!, where the Incident oc·
curred, and the city's Health and
Cindy Lambert lost the most
Hospitals Corp., which oversees weight and Barbara Hudson was
the Brooklyn medical facility.
the "runner up In Monday nights
The case before Justice Aaron class of Slinderella held at Five
Bernstein· Is believed to be the Points.
first trial In which a doctor has
In the Tuesday nJaht Mason
claimed hospital negligence class Lois Ann Relbnlre lost the
caused her to get AIDS.
most weight and the runner up
Before the afternoon's testlm· was Kate Stone.
ony began, Prego' s lawyers
NeW members are now being
revealed the young woman, who accepted In both class wlilch
Us appeared gaunt though acted begin at 6 .p.m. ,..
feisty on the stand, was suffering
trom a ser lous deterioratiOn of
ber lei muscles caused by A~.
Friedman questioned PreJIO
about her medical history from
1983, when abe saye •b~ was
Infected IVIth the AIDS virus,
until sbe was dlapOied as
llavlng tbe dlseue In 1987.
·
Friedman repeatedly asked
the 32-year·old woman about
meetlnp with doclai'l and advice she wu etvea during the
!our-year spall.
, j'rledman's QUI!Itlonlng was

Pleir. 3

'Two die

MINNEAPOLIS (UPH Pillsbury· Inc. . a subsidiary of
Grand Metropolitan PLC, Thurs·
day ·announced a $140 mllllon
program that will result In the
loss of lip to 1,300 jobs across the
country, but an expansion In
Wellston, Ohio.
· Company officials said 800 new
jobs will 1&gt;e created during the
program's 18-month ~rlod.
The program of Investment In
product quality, customer ser·
vice and cost reduct-Ion Is designed to strengthen Plllsbury's
three grocery businesses, Bak·
ery Products, .Green Giant and
Pizza. .
·
The program Is the latest step
hi&amp; It wblle laadlag ThundQ a&amp; lllll'talleld
In a strategy to reshape Pillsbury
laternatloa Airport near Atlaata, GL Acconlln1 · as a key competitor In the 1990s.
to olflclals, one penon was killed In tile cruh.
The Investment plan will fl.
(UP I)
nance the expansion lind moder·
nliatlon of some plan 1s and
dlstrlbu lion centers, the realign,

ment and consolidation of sevThere will be a significant
eral leading product lines and the expansion at the Wellston plant
closing of some facllltles.
In southern'Ohlo. Wellston also
Paul Walsh, chll!f operating will receive new pizza capability
officer of Pillsbury, called the for · Its Jeno's and Totino's
program "a continuation of ef· brands , as well as new vegetable
forts to make Pillsbury even processing lines lor Its Green
better equipped to compete suc· Giant brands. Frozen dlstrlbu·
cessfully In the fast-changing tlon capablllty In Belvidere, Ill., :
global "food lnclustry. These ac- also will be created.
·
tions . will create a stronger
Vegetable processing at the
company lor the 1990s, and Wlll Watsonville, Calif., plant wlll
enable us to make more progr'ass shift to Wellston and other
In meeting our objectives of even existing facllltles over the next
higher quality and freshness ."
year, while the long-tenn status
Walsh said grocery product of Watsonville Is reviewed.
lines In the Springfield, Ill., plant
Plans are to close the Fridley,
and dry grocery activities In Minn., plant no earlier than ·
Terre Haute. Ind., will be trans· mid-summer of 1990. Fridley
ferred to a facility In Murfrees· manufacturing will be shifted to
bora, Tenn. A dlstrlliutlon center Wellston.
In Chattanooga, Tenn., will be
A coupon redemption process·
closed and the activity taken · lng operation In Golden Valley ,
over by the Murfreesboro dlstrl·
Minn ., will be transferred to an
outside firm. ·
bu tlon center.

..
I

THEY'RE HEKEl

*SPECIAL FACfORY RE.PYRCHASE

'

..

'

LOWMILESI
*SPECIAL FACTORY RE,ptJRCHASE
•

..
.

.'

May(Jr .IJ,arry is .arrested. by
police, FBI on ·drug charges

,.

'
*SPECIAL FACTORY RE-PURCHASE

1
CUTLASS SUPREME
SliockfSIIN2, 2dooll, hMIIDp,coupe,
Y~. lir, ..111., PS, PB, Clli.., AMFM
raclo, ....... buc1!81-.ge· ....

WAS

'3895

LOWMILESI

1984 FORD T·BIRD
Slackt2832, 2!1D«s. aoupe,lcyl., air,
111111., PS, PB, fiOiiW w'•lllaioa, po-.
-~ fiOiiW IDc:U, ~k w!IMI, AMIFM .
raclo,
~ whllll!llla.

cna..

NOW

1988 MAZDA 82200
Sliock , 3561, 2 doorl, .. cyl., • JPMCI,
AIWMIIIIMIIpe,,...,l:ucMt....,
lhortwida Mel,,.. IIIIP'binpir.

RIVE RIA

Slack • 1111182, 2 cbh, fn:nl .....
diM, v.a 350. atr.auto....... PI, P8,
j:oMrwi:dawa,ILCMi!r-.....,IDc:U,
till whell; onne, AM1FM 1111M-.
. ....... whillwalll, - - ........

. WAS

'.5G5

. 1989 PROBE GL

WAS .

'1a

...

.

NOW

1987 DODGE COLT

1-

...,.,.....

_1989 FORD TEMPO
Slack I 1$340, 173IICI. mill, I doorl,
coupe, 4 oyl., llr, 111111., PS, P8, ,_..
IDc:U, tit """'· ...... buc:MI ~
- wi:dauu defog.
·

...

....

WAS

WAS

HOW

WASHINGTON (UP!)
after being processed at FBI
Mayor Marlon Barry, arrested In . headquarters.
Accompanied by FBI agents,
an FBI-pollee sting operation
Barry was taken by motorcade
while reportedly smoking crack
coealne, faced arraignment Frl·
early :Friday to his home In
Southeast Washington, where he
day on "federal drug charges
lives with his wife, Effl, and their
while city . leaders met to deal
young son, Christopher.
with the' 'trsglc moment'· facing
. He had beer! under · federal
the nation's capital.
Barry, who has dodged persist·
lnves ligation for a year, ever
ent rumors of drug use In recent since visiting CharleS Lewis - a
years,· was arrested Thursday friend and former city worker ·
later convicted of drug dealingevenlna at a downtown Washing·
ton hotel on unspecified "narcot· at a downtown Ramada Inn In
lcs charges," U.S. Attorney Jay
December 1988.
Stephens .salilln a statement.
Barry bas repeatedly denied
The arrest was part of an ever using llle&amp;al drugs, and has
held blmlelf up as a role model
undercover operation by the FBI
and the Internal Attain Dlvl8ion lor the yOuth of a city wracked by
of the DIJtrlct of Columbia drill-related violence that has
pollee, Steplleu said.
given It the nation's hlahest per
Barry, 53, who became the capita m11tder ~ate. ·
Hours befOre hll arrest, Barry
secoad elected mayor of llle
District ot Columbia In 19'18, was a tlenclecl a memorial aervlce for
schedllll!d to be arralped Friday a bJiblchoolathlete•bottodeath
Satuntay alibi· Pollee have said
In U.S. DIJ II'let Court .
The WU~CIII Post; cltlq they beU.V. thllhoodqwu the
ulllllftltd 10utcea, aald Barry result ot a drul deal&amp;Qne bad or a ·
wu vldloteped smolllnl crack drul·related rDbbtliy.
D.C. City ~111dl Chairman .
cocaine after he wu lured to the
David' Clara called Barno's
Vtata Internattoaal Hotel by •
fellllle friend who wu working · arreet "a traatc moment In our
city's blatono." Collnclll'llan
with the FBI.
Barry, 1 lonner civil rJibll Harry 'l'bomU called It a "aad
actlvlat and IJu'N.term mayor 1tate of aff81rs tor the city."
Clarke, an aniiOUIICf!d caadl·
wbo · had. planned to offtclalJy
launeh a bid tor a fourth term on date for mayor In tllta year's
Suaday, wu releuecl on 1111 own race, lild be would meet wltb the
recoanlzance ' by, a magistrate council ·F riday to determine

' .
Slack utl8oe t, oe dooll, . . . , v.a. llir,
mylrooi,-.,PS,PB,tlltwhHI,CIIiM,
AM/Fiol raclo, rlllllt.
WAS

. ..

1880FORD
SSCORTLX
ESC~RTLX
~·-· . . . . .., . . . 1 IICI. ~I elDen,
rrar. .... tltlw, ... *"" .....
~,IIWWIIIII!cfiW,'""'
,...,PB,AMFM,.._
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••. \ P8,PI,AM'FM.IIIIM . .,rldlall.
. ~ !~

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.

.

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.

4

• •

•

•
_.,;J.. , .. ,... .... __.. ,.........,._,. _.- .... ·' . .....

what direction the city government .wouid take. Other city
leaders and members of Barry's
staff met to d.e termlne how to
deal with the bloasomlng polltl·
cal crisis.
"He has my prayers and the
city has my prayers tonight,"
Clarke said.
Clarke also said the.· city
Charter Indicates that a mayor
.cannot be forced to step down,
but can appoint another official
tocjll'ryollhlsdutles. lfheshould
resign, bls Immediate successor
wolild be City Administrator
Carol ThompiOn.
Barry's spolteawoman, Lurina
Rackley, said the mayor's ca·
blnet would meet Friday morri·
lng, at which Ume Thompson
may announce she Ia taking over
the day-to-day operattou of the
city.
Barry has been dogg\!11 by
allqattou of drill Ull tor at
lealt five yean, but amoaa thl
most dama11na alleaauou
stemmed from bla Ylllta to

Lewta.
Lut Nov. &amp;, Lewla teet11111d be
sold crack c:ocallle to Barry frCim

tbe 1\Unada Inn In Dlell1l._
1988. Tbe atatement came dlam,

a plla·barpln llevllla at willCh
Lewta pleaded . pllty to · two
cocaine dlatrlbudon cbarp~.
Barry later acculled . federal
Continued on page 10

fiLUEFIELD , W.Va. (UPI)Prosecutors and defense attar·
neys gathered In Bluefield on
Thursday, In hopes of picking an
unbiased Jury to hear the retrial
ot Bobby Dean Stacy .
·
Cabell County Circuit Circuit
Judge Alfred Ferguson halted
attempts Wednesday In Hunting·
ton, after It became clear there
were riot enough people In the

area unfamiliar with the Stacy
case to gather an Impartial jury.
Stacy, 38, of Columbus, Ohlo, ls
accuse.d In the 1981 slaying of
Huntington city pollee officer
Pau I Harmon. Harmon was ·
beaten and shot to death.

Ferguson has set aside two
days for jury selection. He said
the jurors are to be brought to
Huntington on Monday for openIng arguments In the case.
· Going to .~nother circuit to
select a jury Is rare, though not
unique. A Kanawha County jury
Is scheduled to travel to Fair·
mont this month to hear charges _
against a man accused of plant·
lng a car bomb that InJured a
deputy sheriff.
In that case, as In the Stacy
trial, the judge ordered that the
jury be Imported because of
extensive pretrial publicity.
Harmon's wile - Twyla Harmon - attended both days ol the
stunted proceedings In Huntjngton. She said she Intended to
watch all of Stacy's second trial.

Stacy was convicted In the
killing In 1982, but the state
Supreme Court overturned the
verdict, saying there were sev·
eral errors In the trial.
After stopping .the trial Wed·
nesday, Ferguson told the rejected candidates for the jury
that he did not want to give the
high court reason to overturn the
case a second time.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The judge and attorneys In·
Gov. Richard Celeste sent to volved In the case began proceed·
state legislative leaders Thurs· · , lags about 9:30a.m. Thursday
day his agenda for 1990, strongly
flavored with proposals to belp
children, women, the elderly and
the disadvantaged.
Among the two dozen recommendations In a letter sent to
.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
Meigs Sheriff a deputies lnves tlg'ated a two-car accident
D·Wheelel'lbU!'i, and Senate ·
Tbunday afternoon In Racine.
President Stanley. Aronoff, R·
Acconlllll to the report from SberiH Jamea M. Soulsby , as
Cl~lnnall, were proposals to
16-year-old
Gre&amp;Qry A. Sellers, Portland, pulled Into the Eller's
enforce child support, .raise the
Gulf
Station
parkm.lot from Route l.U, hll vehicle alld Into the
minimum wase, protect battered
side
of
a
stopped
veblcle operated by 16-year-old Michael Hill,
wives, ·reduce teen preanancy
Racine.
·
and limit nJiht work Ina hours for
There
was
no
damaae
to Seller's 1978 Plymouth but light
teenas~s.
damaae
to
Hill's
1M
Plymouth.
.
• The 110vernor also"prqpiJiel! tbe
Sellers
wu
cited
to
Melp
Juvenne
Court
for
failure
to
creation ilf an Ohio Women's
maintain an usurad clftr distance.
Cornmllalon as a permanent
state qency to focus attention.on
·-·
Issues of concern to womell.
Celeste delivered h'- ''State·o f
A Jury trial IIepa 'l'llanclay In Melp Common Plea Court In
the !State" ·~• to. 1 Jolat
tbecueoftbeStateoiOIIIovw-Davld"Per-.Personawu
sliOII of tlla Gen al AuemlllY
ladlcted Marcil 7, U.la Melp Couaty on a cllarp ot escape.
Jut 'l'Uelilay. lome lawmallen
A Jury o1 JJ .,. •llad 111 !lear t11a caa, aloaa with two
~llld hll addrea1 lacked
alternate
jlll'lft.
.·
·
I
.
, 'J'IIe le~Je!' to the
.commonPI_J.~CrowtDIIprealdlngO\It!rthecue
lel4enlllp · eoatallli!cl apectflc
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I..oeal news· briefs---.

Deputie~ probe areident ·
.

Jury trial underway·

Contln\·ed on page 10

a...--------------------.1

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.

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