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;Oil'- -

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January 8. 1989

Bengals
win AFC
crown

LAST WEEK
TO GET

YOUR HAM

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

'

SJO

THRU SAT., JAN. 14, 1989

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN.,

ON YOUR
WHOLE .OR
HALF
BONELESS

.

.

$ 59
Cube Steak ••••• ~... 2. ••••••·•• $14 9
.1,4' por'k Lo1n

Sliced Bacon ......~~. 69&lt;

''
•
. 1/
•

POWELL'S
SUPER VALU
•One space will be vHiidnted BACh

week with , the purchase of
or more, excluding
beer. wine and tobacco pro·

·~o

nnw cards will hP. iuued a her
Saturday. Jan . 14, 1989to~tart
the promotiOn .

•Only o ne Ham Certificate per

family .

•Aif 12 .spaces must be properly
validated before a Ham Certlticate will be honored.
•Certificates can only be redeemed
on the purchase of a Whole or
Half Boneless Ham . NO cash re-

funds wil1 be made. _

LB. ROLL .

•Ham certificates will be honored
Morch 19-25, 1989. No ••·

demptiona after thl1 date.
•Tho week of Fob. 26· Morch 4. wo '
••k that you bring in your CMd
1nd exc:henge it for • OIIW c1rd
.4 for our invenlory purpoHit.

SPECIAL
OFFER ON

U.S. ~1-10 LB~ BAG

$

'

199
Idaho Potatoes ....

GENUINE
NEW ARE
\·

,\

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
GAL.

$ .4_9
Orange Juice •• ::~!~ 1, .

KRAFT GRAPEFRUIT OR

SUNSHINE

·

Dog Food •••••••••••••
BONUS 22 lB. BAG

2 LITER BOnLE

. .
10-11 oz.
99&lt;·
D
1nners
••••••••••••
TV
349
KEMP'S S QUART PAIL
$ 99

$

-BANQUET ·

Seven -Up •••••••••••••• 99( Ice Cream ............
OR OR. PEPPER

MAXWELL HOUSE

BETTY CROCKER

INSTANT COFFEE

CAKE MIXES

12 OZ. JAR

$429
c..- ,
... .....

1i.soz.

lillllt 1 ••

Ottly At Powoll's Super Vatu
lall.lthruS.t.,Jall.l4, 1919 ,

._

Reagan sends· 1990 ·
budget to Congress

idntccl each weP.k , no mal!:e-ups.

Fish 'n' Batter •••• $599
GUNNOE'S OAK RIDGE FA.RMS
.Sausa ge •••••••••••••••• 99&lt;

3J$2

Lilllit 3 P• CIMtomer

Goo4 Only At Powoll'1 Super Yalu
Goo4
.._,., lllru !at. Jan. 14, 1919
0

•

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2

·:couPON
CAMPBELL'S

.(tiCKEN NOODLE SOUP
10.75
oz.

3/Sl
c,.,_,
•

Limit 1 ' "
Goo4 Only At Pawoll's S.,. Yalu
0
Goo4 Sun.. .kin. lllwu Sat. Jan. 14, 1919· o
•

•••••• •

PAPER TOWELS
..
.
JUMBO

lOllS

3/Sl

Limit I ' " c..to,..r
0
o. GOIMI CWy At Powoll's Super Vatu
...GOIMI
.-..1 tin Sat....... 14,1919 • •

5 PC. PLACE
SETTING

$199
WITH 20 BONUS
CERTIFICATES

6 Piece Place Setting
Consists of: Dinner Plate,
Cup, Seucer, Soup/Cereal
Bowl and Salad Plate

Two Beautiful Pauerns
To Choose From

•••

Matehing Acee88orles
Available

• ••

SEE STOlE DISPU Y
FOI DETAILS

KEGWORTH, England (UPI)
lies problems. The jetilner ·smashed Into a ta ngle of trees on
- A rare multi-engine !allure
landed safely and there were no the highway embankmen t. said
may have caused the crash of a
injuries, officials said.
aviation expert Chris Lockwood.
new British Midland Airways
For the second time in three
As the plane desce nded
jetliner at the edge of one of weeks Monday, Queen Elizabeth sharply, one unidentified surviII had to send a message of vor said from her hospital bed
Britain's busiest highways, kll·
ling at least 43 passengers,
condolence because of an air Monday, "We just said a prayer
aviation officials said Monday .
crash -this time to tell relatives and got on with it. "
Investigators said they had of the BMA accident victims that
Another surviv or, Gareth
recovered both flight recorders she was "deeply shocked."
Jones, hospital ized with cuts,
Authorities said a bomb blast bruises and a black eye, sa id that
!rain the wreckage of BMA
Flight 92, a 12-week-old Boeing brought down a Pan American when they were to ld th ere would
World Airways Boeing 747 jumbo be anemergency landing, "I just
737-400 with 126 people aboard,
jet on the Scottish village of shot my head down to get Into
that plowed into an embankment
along the Ml motorway Sunday Lockerbie Dec. 21, killing all259 · position. That's where I got the
night after narrowly missing the persons aboard and another 11 on shiner - I didn' t get my head
the ground - Brltain's worst ai r down fast enough."
• tiny town of Kegworth. ·
Asked whether sabotage might disaster.
As dazed survlvors stumbled
The Boeing 737 crashed Sunday from the wreckage, firefighters
have been Involved, as in the
crash of a Pan Am plane that 55 minutes after it left on a swiftly poured foam onto the
killed 250 l11st month, Transport commuter flight from Heathrow wreckage to prevent any remainSecretary Paul Channon said, " I to Belfast, Northern Irela nd, ing aviation fuel from exploding
don't rule out anything but coming down within sight of the a nd causing an even worse
there's certainly no evidence of it runway lights where pilot Kevin catastrophe, said Chan non.
Hunt had hoped to bring his
at this point."
The last of the vlc'tims was
Tony Butler, assistant chief crippled craft to a safe landing. pulled from the rubble in the wee
Hunt skillfully avoided hitting hours . of the morning, nearly .
constable of LoJlghborough. said
there were 43 confirmed dead but the tiny town of Kegworth, 110 e ight hours after the plane went
that more than 80 people, includ: mlles northwest of London but down.
lng the eight-member fllgh,t
crew,. sljrvlved ln Britain's second air disaster in 18 days.
Channon said investigators
were checking the flight recorders at.d reports of witnesses
amid growing indications that
both the jetliner's engines had
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- Congress are expected to overfailed, forcing It down one-half Ident Reagan, in his final budget, haul in the months ahead, ·promile short of an emergency sent Congress Monday a $1.15 poses a flscall990 deficit of $92.5
. '· IIII)P,\ng at Eas.t Mldla.nqs , \rUUol) spending plan lor 1990 bllilol!. bel'ow the $100 billion
:·; '{MTJ&gt;Qrt. .~
. . . ,.. , '
that. contains rio new taxes, calls · deficit cap required for next'year
Authorities said there had been
for etlnitnating 82 programs and by the 1985 Gramm-Rudman
only seven reports of multi- projects a deficit of $92.5 billion.· balanced budge! Jaw .
engine failures in the past 10
The budget projects a deficit
"This . budget shows that a
years. Pilot John Tritton sald it
gradual elimination of the dell cit for this fiscAl year of $161.5
was "almost unheard ol" and
is possible without raising taxes, bllllon. , ;
another expert described it as a
The 'president, who presided ·
without cutting into essentia l
' '100 million-to-1 chance."
over
the largest peacetime mil·
social programs, without dev,asAt London's Heathrow Airport
ltar-y
buildup ln U.S. history,
tating defense and without m!gMonday, about !2 hours after
lectlng other nationa l priori- proposed a $315.2 billion PenBMA Flight 92left on Its Ill-fated· ties," Reagan said 'In his budget tagon budget for the fiscal year 1
journey, another Pan Am 747
message. "New taxes are not beginning Oct. 1, representing
from Washington to London with
real growth after inflation of 2'
Although many of the passengers and crew
required."
percent. ·
·
·
a bout ~00 people aboard made an
survived the incident, at lell!it 431ost their Jives In
Reagan's budget , which Reem~gency landing after the
Congress passed a $298.8 bilthe accident. REUTER
·
pilot reported suspected hydrau- publican Pres!dent-!!lect George lion defense spending bi ll las t
Bush ;md Democrats who co ntrol year.
.,

.

, Ouly one space may be val - .,

SEA-STAR-5 ll.• BOX

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

(

ducts. The first two weeks are
FREE . no minlmum . purchase.

LB

1 Section, 10 Pages

engine failure
may have caused crash

$15 .00

·aucKET

Tonight, parlly cloudy . Low
near 25. Tuesday, partly
sunny. High .in mid-30s.

•

~~~~;~~~~~·h;~o~~~~~~~8;9 :::=:=~:=:=:=:=:=:=~::::::::::~~;;~~~~~~~~0~h~i~o~,~~onday. January9, 1989

HOMEMADE

CAROLINA PRIDE

1-22-23-34-40-42
· Kicker 998103

1

.

Sandwich Spre~d •.~. 99C

Super Lotto

at

•

$ 59 ·
.
Chuck Roast ••••••~~ -1 EASTER
49
HAM
Kahn's Wieners .~~ $]

.U.S.D.A. C~OICE BONELESS

Pick-4

•

'SAVE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Daily Number
922

Page 4

CARD!

STORE HOURS
Monday 1hru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

CLEAN UP DEBRIS - Firemen clean up
debris around the broken remains of the Midland
Boeing 737 airliner which crll!ihed on lhe Ml
molorway embankment late Sunday night.

Court to hear arguments on
Missouri's anti~bortiOn law
· WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court stepped into the
volatile abortion debate Monday,
agreeing to review the constitutionality of a wide-ranging antiabortion la.w from Missouri.
The court will hear arguments
In the case brought by the state of
Missouri seeking review of a
ruling by the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court · of Appeals that struck
down major portions of the law.
The case Is the first major test
of the legality of abortion to be
accepted by the eourt since It
returned to full strength last year
with the confirmation of Justice
Anthony Kennedy , whose view on
the matter could be critical to the
fil lure of the landmark 1973 Roe
vs. Wade ruitng that legalized
abortion. .
The last major abortion case

before the court was resolved on
The federal government and 'a
a 4-4 vote. The tie upheld the number of states have bans on
lower court ruling that struck the use of public funds for
down portions of the Illinois law abortion and have placed limits
that dealt with a minor's access on the use of publicly financed
to abortion.
hospital services for abortion.
The 1986 Missouri abortion law The Supreme Court, ln rulings in
includes a variety of provisions 1977 and 1980, generally upheld
that range from declaring llfe the bans.
·
begins at conception and that
•
Doctors, nurses and two non,
"unborn children have protectable interests in life, health and profit corporations challenged
well-being," to provisions ban- the constitutionality of the Misning the use of state funds, souri law. The district court
employees or public facilities for struck down the provisions and
the appeals court concurred. •
abortions.
The appeals court held that the
The law also requires that
of the law were
.
provisions
doctors, before performing an
unconstutional
and designed to
ll,bortlon on any woman whom a
erect
obstacles
"iri the path of·
doctor has reason to believe is 20
or rnore weeks pregnant, per- women seeking full and uncen·
form tests to determine the sored medical advice aboutalternatives to childbirth."
viability of the fetus.
The court also said the ban on
the . use' of · public facilities for
abortions went beyond Supreme
Court rulings. .
·

CONTRmUTES TO RIO SCHOOL OF BUSINESS- Ohio Valley Bank recently presented a
$20,000 check to Rio Grande College as the final
Instalment on a three-year, $50,000 pledge to the
endowment fund of the Emerson E. Evans School
of Business Management. Since lis founding In
1983, the School of Business has graduated more

. . . . .-- Local news briefsMiddleport tax fornts arrive
'

Middle(lOrt residents are now receiving their first Middleport
Income Tax forms. These are standard forms which will be used
for all years the tax Is in effect.
Middleport's tax ordinance went into effect July I, 1988 and
residents are reminded that they will be.paying for six months
ol'lly in 1988. Residents are to enter wages D11ly from July 1when
fiUlng'out the return form, however a W-2 copy should also be
returned with the tax form.
Anyone with questions regarding the tax or the tax form
should Co~Jtact the tax office at 992·2827.

Fire destroys electrical box
An outside fuse box at the Dan Littlefield house.on Broadway
St. In Racine, caught fire early Sunday morning. The Racine
Fire Department was called at 6:44a.m. Destroyed was the
electrical box and some of the siding on the house. There were
· no in)urles.
·
Continued o.n page 5
I~ .

,· than 200 degree recipients, Including nearly 20
graduates from Meigs County. A total of 168Meigs
County residents are currently enrolled al the
college. Pictured presenting the $20,000 check to
College President Paul C. Hayes, center, are OVB
President James L. Dailey and OVB Executive
Vice President Jeffrey E. Smith.

Ohio Valley Bank· completes
School of Business pledge

The appeals court said there
"Is a fundamental difference
between providing direct funding
to effect the abortion decision
and allowing staff physicians to
. perform abortions at an existing
publicly owned hospital ,"
Seeking hlgh court rev lew,
Missouri argues that the appeals
court's analysis "expands this
court's precedents In favor of
abortion on demand , further
contracts the state's compelllng
Interest In the life of viable
unborn children, and disregards
this court's holdings that abOrtion Is a private matter which
government need In no way
subsidize."
Missouri also said that lf Its law
Is unconstitutional, "Roe vs.
Wade should Itself be
reconsidered.

Ohio Yalley B&lt;J.nk 'officials OVB President James L. Dailey.
presented a $20,000 check to Rio
"This generous gift ls greatly
Grande College/Community Col- ap preciated and wlll assist in the
lege In late Deceml!er as.the final college's effort to serve · the
Installment on a three-year, common community," Dr.
$50,000 pledge to the e ndowment Hayes added.
fund of the Emerson E . Evans
The mission of the Evans
School of Business Management. School of Business Management
"Community service has al- reflects the career and Ideals of
ways Men a hallmark 'of Ohio former OVB President Emerson
Valley Bank's philosophy of E . Evans, entrepreneur and
doing business throughout sou- -successful businessman In souththeastern Ohio," College Presi- ern Ohio. Evans serv~d as
dent Paul C. Hayes said In president of OVB from 1954 until
accepting the check presented by 1976.
I

The school of bu siness at Rio
Gra nde College was officially :
dedicated In the fall of 1983. S1nce
that time, Ohio Valley Bank has
contributed $150,000 to the
school's endowment fund .
In addition to Its financial
support for the endowment fund.
OVB each year awards sc holarships to deserving students from
throughout southern Ohio. During the current 1988-89 academ ic
year; 18 students, incl uding residents or Ga llla, Jackson and
Continued on page 5

•

�•
•

·c
~J!lmentary
.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Monday, January 9, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 9, 1989

Gallipolis slop~ Southern. five
57-46 in non·c~nference game

~

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
•·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ll'b

.

~ ~..._--..~dl-==a

ROBERT L; WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

•

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

good taste, addressing Is sues. not persooalitles.

Money stands1n way of wo~ker. safety
WASHINGTON- The federal
·government Is equipped to warn
; thousands of American workers
i that they face a high risk of
disease because ol exposure to
dangerous substances on the job.
But stingy bureaucrats are l&lt;eeplng many of those people from
being told about their precarious
position.
Federal agencies have lists of
' current and past workers at
specific plants where the health
hazards have been documented.
So why don't the bureaucrats
get the word out? One reason
would be laughable If the Issue
were not so serious: Healthy
workers who are notified of a
poss!ble risk might get so upset

thai they would make themselves sick.
For years, federal health experts haYe asked for funding to
launch a full-scale effort aimed
at notifying workers at risk. The
Reagan administration has rejected their budget requests.
· A congressional effort last
year to set up a notification
program drew strong opposition
from the administration and died
in a Senate battle.
Many workers, both retired
and stU! In the work Ioree, could
be spared premature death If not
for this sad snub by fe&lt;!!!ral
budget bosses. The government
knows that they have been
exposed to hazardous materials,

such as asbestos or toxic chemi·cals. A worker's exposure could ·
lead to a disease such as cancer,
which can hide Its symptoms for
years. Some of the Illnesses can
be prevented if the person at risk
receives regular medical monitoring. Some can be treated
successfully if the disease is
detected early .
Sen. Howard . Metzenbaum, DOhio, sponsored a notification
bill last year and plans to try
again In the next session. The
people who support such a move
are anxious to see where George
Bush stands on the Issue, and
they're keeping an eye on VIce
President-elect Dan Quayle, too.
During the vice-presidential

Referendum on education
tax probably will be delayed ·
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS -lt now appears certain that any public referendum
on an education tax will not go to the ballot until November, despite
lhe eagerness of Gov. Richard Celeste to submit it this spring.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr.,D-Wheelersburg, who is not all that
keen on a public vote on the Issue, told reporters last week he does not
favor submitting the question to the voters In May or June.
Celeste w~nts to get the issue settled before the · slate's 1990-91
budget is finalized at the end of June.
He has Indicated a special election in June might be necesSary,
because the deadline far get tlng an Issue on the May primary election
ballot is in February -too soon for adequate debate on the matter in
the Ohio General Assembly.
Riffe believes, along with a large segment or the education
community, that the General Assembly should deal with the state's
!lnancial matters without help from the voters.
·
He belieVftS that school funding should be decided within the
structure of the overall state budget and not necessarily be singled
out for spec Ia I treatment.
But if there is to be a public vote, Rifle said last week, work on the
budget must be completed first. Then the voters will be able to decide
•f they want to raise their income tax rate a notch as a step toward
" excellence" in the schools.
"People are going to demand that they know what Is In the budget ill
before they vote," said Riffe.
It is the Speaker's belief that education spending be spelled out
before the voters are asked to tax themselves for more. And he said
they will also demand accOuntability in spending, and reorganization
of the educational system to make it more productive and efficient.
Add to this the fact that a special election in June would cost the
taxpayers $6 million, and you have all kinds of negative feelings about
·
any education proposal on the ballot at that time.
•

In the slight reorganization oft he Ohio Senate this year, the stars of
Republican Sens. David Hobson of Springfield, Eugene Watts of
Columbus and Robert Ney of Barnesville appear to be rising the most
rapidly.
Hobson, a six-year senator, was chosen president pro tempore, the
second highest leadership post In the Senate. He also will chair a new
catch-a! !.committee of-leaders called Reference and Oversight.
Watts, starting his second four-year term, is the majority whip. It
will be the llrst time on the leadership team for the college professor,
who will be given the added role of chairing a major Finance
subcommiuee on education.
.
.
Ney, also starting his second full term, has been handed some
choice assignments and will be having an Impact on financial
matters. He is vice chairman of the Finance Committee and will chair
a Finance subcommittee on general government, which covers
·.,. everything except education and human services. Ney also has been
appointed to the Controlling Board, which oversees state spending
and _pontracts.
.,

Letters to the editor
,',

;~., I'

Taxes, taxes and more taxes
Dear Editor:
Governor Celeste wants a lot
more money for schools. See the
Governor's 2000 Commission Report. A lot more money means
millions and millions of tax
payer's money.
Periodically the cry goes up
from the ellucatlon lobby
(O.E .A.} for more money for
• education to which they hope· to
attach some strings. They ne\'er
seem to get enough and never
wUI.
The Governor as I understand
it wants more of the same old
things with a lot of liberal lingo
attached, like teaching parents
to be better parents or teaching
the girls how to raise healthy
babies. Politics may be able to
play a role in correcting what he·
sees as wrong with education but
not the critical role. The Governor thinks like a pi&gt;lltlcan because he Is a polltlcan.
In this age of computers and
sending men to the moon why
can't school administration be

set up to run several schools as a
large unit~ We have too many
boards of education, too many
executives, superintendents, administrators, spe.;lallsts, clerks,
aids and secretaries and all of
their retinues.
Education thinks It can't get
along with out more money but
thinks taxpayers can manage
just fine on less and less. Almost
every group with political clout is
clamoring for more money.
Members of congress say they
are going under lftheydon'tgeta
50% pay hike. The federal government wants a raise in the tax on
gasoline. The state also wants to
hike gasoline taxes. Another
group In Ohio wlants to raise the
sales tax to build a high speed rail
system. Governor Celeste wants
a 1% Increase In the state income
tax. A 15% sur-tax has just been
Imposed on the elderly to pay for
catastrophic health Insurance
that old people don't know they
will ever use. W-h-e-w ! ! ! ! ! !
Gayle Price

Dear Editor:
The Salvation Army, Pomeroy, Ohio wishes to thank all
those who contributed to them
during the Christmas Season.
Thanks to the Motorcycle Club
for the toy run, to those who gave
money. food products and used
toys. To the volunteer bell
ringers a! the kettles, those who
washed dolls and dressed them,
washed stuffed an !mats and all
·
other toys.
Thank you to the volunteers
. who worked on gifts and helped
deliver them to · the Nursing
Homes and other Institutions. To
the workers wbo packed groceries to be given ou I to 207 families
In and around Meigs County.
Because of the many wbo were
thoughtful during this Christmas

..

.

lack Anderson
debate In October, Quayle In·
· slsted he and Bush had a
commitment to safety "for our
working men and women."
But Quayle's commitment
didn't go deep enough for him to
support Metzenbaum's notification bill - a bill that even some
chemical companies favored.
Quayle arid other detractors
hid behind that old standby - '
that a better bill could be drafted.
They said the notification process would be a financial burden
for small businesses and that
workers would sue their bosses
when they learned about the
exposure to dangerous substances. (The bill Included a provision that notification alone was
not grounds for a lawsuit.}
·
Critics wbo also raised the
concern ·that healthy workers
could receive a notification by
mistake and make themselves
sick worrying about It
The agency program Is designed to keep people from
panicking, said spokeswoman
Diane Porter. Workers are told
they face a risk and are advised
to have a medical checkup and
monitor their health.
"I. think people have a right to
know their health status," Porter
told our associate Scott Sleek.
"How they deal with lt"is up to the
Individual. We try to set In place
a system so fleople don't overreact."
The occupational health
agency has conducted experimental notification programs in
the past, without causing a wave
of panic. In 1981, an experbnental
program in Augusta, Ga., nollfled 1,400 people who were at high
risk of developing bladder
cancer. As a result, fourteen
cases of bladder cancer were
caught In the early stages.

Upset with ·the procedures
presently In place that allows
members of Congress to receive
a pay raise without having to vote
on such increases, Miller's bill
would preclude such raises from
going Into elfect until the succeeding Congress.
Therefore, a member, In effect, would not be taking action
that would hike his or her· own
pay, but acting to increase the
pay for • the individual that
prepresented that District in the
succeeding congress.

OWEN GRABS REBOUND - Gallipolis' Joe
foreground Is Shawn McNeal (42}. Souihern
Owen(«) grabs one of his game-high 16 rebounds
ptayers are Andy Baer (35) a~d Brad Maynard
In Saturday's 57-46 victory over visiting Southern.
( 45} .-Photo by Chuck Boyd.
On right is Gallla's Todd Casey (10}. In~

·'

can afford, the Congressman's
Legislation calls on the Congress
to reexamine the U.S. commitment 1n this regard.
Contending that we as a
cou11try cannot afford to continue
to be the world's policeman while
the rest Of the world's major
economic powers sit on the
sidelines, the Lancaster Jawmaker pledged to work toward a
more equitable solution to this
problem . ·

I

.

\\'IN JACKSON TOURNEY - The Meigs
Matauder wrestUng won the 6 team Jackson
Invitational Saturday afternoon pictured with the
Championship Trophey are Front row lett to right
Eric Heck, Jeremy Heck, Joe McElroy, Rod

'

Sophomore guard Jennl Couch
and freshman center Kathy
Snyder came off t.he bench
Saturday to lead the Rio Grande
Redwomen to a much-needed
88-75 win over the Lady Demons .ro
of Dyke Colleg~.
"Everyone put in and did a
. decent job," Coach Cheryl Fiel!tz
remarked. " I was pleased with
how we ran the floor. Dyke is an
aggressive team that never lets
up, so we had to be on our toes ."
While th&lt;&gt; Redwomen turned In
a less-than-anticipated 32.5 percent performance In the .field r29 ..
or 82 artemptsl, they made their
effort count at the foul line,
netting 27 of 39 trieS for 73
percent. Lea Ann Mullins, currently shooting 98.4 percent on
free throws (63-64) sank all eight
of her shots at the line, while
Couch (5-5, Pomeroy) sent In
nine of her 10 attempts. Snyder
r 6-0, Gahanna 1also connected on
three of three.
Fielitz and n:vke mentor Pau 1
Haught agreed that their teams
played hard. evidenced by the
quiek lead the Redwomen estab1ished In the opening minutes.
Dy~e·s Dawn Christian tied the
score 16-6) at 16:51 and teammate Tonya Fenney put the
visitors ahead by two 45 seconds
later.
The Redwomen caught up and
Mullins' 3-polnt shot at 12:50
gave the game back to Rio
(19-17). The Lady Demons stayed
closely behind. but Couch,
Snyder, Holly Hastings and Beth
Coil penetrated the guests'

Stewart, and Scott Barton. Second row left to right
- Coach Kevin Shepard, Wess Howard, Drek
Creameans, Jared Sheets, Jerry Jack, Aaron
Sheets and Decker Cullums.

•

Committee assignments ____S_en_._Ja_n_M_.L_on....:::.g

Meigs wrestlers wm tourney

COLUMBUS - State Senator
Jan Michael Lon·g (DCircleville} enters the 118th
session of the Ohio General
Assembly with assignment ·to
seats on three of the Senate's
mostinfluenttalcommlttees: Ed- ·
ucatlon (ranking minority
member), Finance, and Highways and· Transportation.
As the ranking minority
member of the Senate Education
Committee, Senator Long will

By DAVE HARRIS
Jackson - The Meigs Marauder wrestling team under
Head Coach Kevin Sheperd captured the Jackson Invi tationa l
Championship Saturday afternoon at Jackson High School our
R!Jinting 5 other teams to bring
home the title.
Meigs won 6 Individual championships with a s~venth wrestler

make funding for rural school
dlstrictsatopprlorlty."Mymost
Important goal Is to direct
additional funds to rural distrlcts. It Is not fair that "s ome
· school districts enjoy the very
best facilities while others cannot afford textbooks," saidSenator Long.
Along with his appointment to
the E(lucallon Committee, Senator Lorig has also been appointed
to the Senate Finance Commit·

tee, which places him In the
·unique .position of being Involved
In all aspects of the State Budget
process ,
"Time and time again I have
said that It is of vital Importance
that our area of the state
received its fair share of state
funding. As a member of the
Senate Finance Committee, I
will continue to work to see that
the 17th Senate district receives
It equitable portion of state

dollars," said Long.
With an assignment to the
Highways and Transportation
Committee, Senator Long will
continue to look for Improvements of the highway system tn
southeast Ohio.
"I look forward to the chdt.lenge of the 118th General Assembly as It will be a critical session
for rural southern Ohio and the
state as a whole," concluded
Long.

Technology improves

The Lady Maraud ers under
Head Coach Roger f'oster will
host the unbeaten Federal Hocking Lady Lancer Monday night at
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The Lancers 9-0 and 7-0 in the
Trt-Valley Conference feature a
ex plosive offense having scored
in the ninet y's a couple of ga mes
and hitting the century mark

'

once.
The Lancers are lead by Lori
Williams Dlstict Co-Player of the
year and a second team All -Ohio
. pick. The 5-8 senior guard ·
forward ·averaged 27 points a
game, 10 rebounds, &gt;asslts and 4
·steals a game as a junior. The All
· State canidate.has signed a letter
of Intent to play for Miami o!Ohio
·of t h e M I d - Am e r i c a n
Conference.
The Lady Marauders currently
9-1-and 6-lln theTVC: and tied lor

Today in history

I

second with Vinton C'o unly one
game behind Feder a l Ho cking
will play with out 6 foot senior
center Missy Wood s. Wood s, last
year's leading scorer and the
leading rebounder and one of the
leading scorers this year , will
miss the remainder of the season
with an knee Injury. Mi ssy
injurie d the knee 3 we eks ago in
the Marau(lers only loss ol the
year against Vinton County and
aggravated It last week. She
underwent major knee surp;ery
last Wedneasday .
In last weeks win over Alexander sophamore Kelly Smith
led the way with a career high 23
points. Trlcl~ Baer fiJIIng in for
Wood s had an outstanding game
with 9. The reserve game gets
u.nder way at 5:55 as Coach Kim
Adkins Marauders will go for win
number 11 in as many tries with
the varsity game to follow .

ISN'T IT
ABOUl
TIME..
COMPLETE PAYROLL
PROCESSING AND
PAYROLL CHECK
WRJnNG.
Ua A. ICEIUI IU, CPA

---

'

finishing second .Marauders win ning first place honors were Rod
Stewart 130 lb. cla ss, Wess
Howard 145 lb. class , Jeff McEI·
roy 150 lb. class.Jared Sheets17J
lb. class,Jerry Jacks JB91b. class
and Aaron Sheets in the Heav yweight division . Eric Heck fin ished in second In th e 103 lb.
class. Stewart and ·McE lr oy
finis hed the afternoon with opins

Meigs girls to host Federal-Hocking

Robert. Wagman

•

. Varsity box:
SOUTHERN . (46) Todd
Grindstaff, 2·4-8: Chad Taylor,
2- 0."~;
Andy Baer, 3-!1)-4·13:
Brent Shula, 0-0-0; Brad May.nard, 6-4-16; Chris Murphy ,0-0-0;
Hank Cleland, 0-0&lt;0; Richard
Deaver, 2-1-5. TOTALS 15·(1)-1346.
GALLIPOLIS (57) - Shawn
McNeal. 6-0-12; Rob Skidmore,
0-0-0; Joe Owen. 12-0-24; Todd
Casey, 1-(1)-0-5; William Strait,
2-4-8; Pete. Anderson, 2-0-4; Chris
Rathburn, 0-0-0; Eric Murphy,
0-0-0; AI Elliott. 0-0-0; Josh
Williams, J-0-2; Gene- Sheets,
1-0-2; Justin Fallon, 0-0-0. TO.
TALS 25-(1)4-57.
By Quarters:
Southern ... ......... ... .l2 14 7 13-46
Galllpolis .. ,.: ........ ..l4 16 8 19-57
Reserves- Gallipolis 50 South·
ern 38.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 11~910)
A Dlvlsloa of Multimedia. Inc.

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through Friday, llJ Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
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Couch, Snyder play
keys Redwomen win

Cong. Clarence Miller

With respect to the defense
Interests of the Free World, as a
member of the House Appropria tions subcommittee on defense, It
had long been the contention of
Congressman Miller that the
United States pays more than its
fair share to keep the world safe. ,
. Concerned that such major
economic powers as Japan,
France and West Germany are
not devoting the financial and
personnel resources that they

'

' ),.

G·a llipolis,led by Joe0wen 's24
a 13-point spread , 48-35. with 3:29
points and 16 rebounds, handed
remaining. SHS cut It back to
visiting Southern a 57-46 noneight. 50-42, with 1: 34 left .. but
conference hardwood setback could get no closer.
before a standing-room only
Besides Owen' s 24 points,
crowd in the GAHS gym Satur- McNeal added 12 for GAHS, .
day night.
Wtlll;~m Strait chipped in with
It was the Blue Devils fourth eight. GARS connected on26of56
win against six losses this winter. field goal attempts for 46.4
So1,1thern dropped to 5-6 overall. · percent. At the line, the Devils
After jumping off to a quick 6-0 were four of nine for 44 percent.
lead, the Blue Devils fell behind Gallla had 14 personals, 33
12-9 with 2:06 left In the Initial rebounds and nine turnovers.
stanza following a pair of charity
Maynard paced the Tornadoes
tosses by Brad Maynard.
attack with 16 marker~; Baer
Shawn McNeal scored on a added 13 and Grindstaff chtpwd
layup (:53) and Todd Casey in with eight. Maynard picked off
unloaded a three-pointer(: 36) to 15 reboullds for 1he Tornadoes .
put GAHS ahead 14-12 after one · Baer had seven. SHS connected
period. The ·Galllans were never on 16 of 43 field goal attempts for
'
headed.
37 percent. The Tornadoes were
Coach Jim Osborne's quintet i3 of 16 at the line lor 81 percent.
built up a nine point advantage, Southern had 12 personals, 32
30-21, following back-to-back rebounds and 16 turnovers.
Iayups by McNeal wlt.h 2: 27 left
The Tornadoes will host East In the half.
ern Tuesday in SVAC action.
The Tornadoes of Howie Cald- Friday, SHS will play at Kyger
well reduced the deficit to four , Creek. Gallipolis wilt play at
30-26, behind Richard Deaver, Warren Local Friday In an
Maynard and Todd Grindstaff. SEOAL contest and host ~t
That was the score at halftime.
Pleasant Saturday In a nonNeither team shot well In the conference battle.
third stanza - GAHS was five of
In Saturday's reservE&gt; game,
16 while Southern was three oll2. Gallipolis won Its third game In
Galllpol!s led 38-33 following a 10 starts, 50-38. Matt Bond paced
three-pointer by Andy Baer with the Blue Imps with 15 points.
2:24 left In the period. Neither Donnle Haynes added eight.
team scored after that. It re- Mike- Kincaid led the Little
mained 38-33 going Into the final Tornadoes with 17 markers. John
period.
Hoback added eight. Southern
GARS, behind Owens, built up dropped to 8-3.

Miller underscores major
concerns
.
In an elfort to locus allen tlon
on two Issues he feels should be
given priority consideration· In
the new lOis! congress, Ohio' s
lOth District, Congressman Clar. eitce Miller made It his first order
of business to introduce a bill to
revise the way pay Increases are
provided members of Congress,
and · a resolution calling on
Congress to demand a greater
role on the part of our major
European and Far East allies in
underwriting the cost of the free
world's defense.

-

-

WASHINGTON (NEA)- Now matchstick - powered by a
number of "false positive" read-· gage will be slow process.
that Investigators have deter- watch battery. This small detoings by the machine. Because
Also, airllne officials are conmined a bomb was responsible nator Is all but Invisible to X-ray
there is nitrogen in so many cerned wttli the potentially negafor the downing of Pan Am 103 examination. Finally, given the
common things, the machine tive reaction of the flying public ·
over Scotland, the Incident raises .power and pliability of the · somet lmes reads concen tra tlons If a proposed rule goes Into effect
a question: Can modern technol- ·explosive, enough to bring down
high enough to be an explosive requiring that all luggage be
ogy detect bombs made of the a plane can be hidden in a small
when no explosive Is present. checked at least two hours before
newest explosives? · ·
radio or camera.
\_
According to the FAA source this a flight.
The answer Is a q ualifled yes.
occurs about once In every 25
Then there is also the question
However, the cost of doing so On June 23, 1985 an Air India suitcases examined.
of cost. The first models of the
both In dollars and Inconvenience fl lght from Toronto to Bombay .
While It Is obviously better to new machines carry a price tag
- will be great.
was blown up off the coast of be safe then sorry, opening all the . of almost a miiJton dollars each
Currently almost every airport Ireland killing ail 329 aboalld. suspect bags would "be very and even when they are manufac:
In the world checks hand luggage Sikh separatists were blamed for time-consuming. The new malured In quantity they will '
by X-ray OF fluoroscope; many the blast and the bomb believed chines can check about GOO pieces · probably cost over a half-million
International airports also use used was made from plastic of luggage per hour. Even at thiJ dollars each.
the same process on checked explosive. This Incident brought rate neutron-checking all bagluggage. These metliOds are home the need for some kind of
elfectlve for discovering tradl· detection device for these bombs.
tiona! explosives, which contain
Development of such a device
metal and are of identifiable became a top priority for the
shape. Dogs can also detect the Federal Aviation AdministraSeason, we were successful In
scent of chemicals used In such tion. Now, says an FAA spokesBy United Press International
delivering 110 gifts to Pinecrest
bombs.
Monday,
Jan. 9, the ninth day of 1989 with 356 to follow .
Today
is
man, a prototype - the thermal
Nursing Home, Gallipolis; 99
As a result, "plastic" explo- neutron device - had been
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter .
·
gifts to Amertcare ·Nursing
The.rr\Qrning stars are Venus and Saturn.
sives have been increasingly successfully tested and, with
Home, Pomeroy; 35 gifts to
used by terrorists. They are luck, will be commercially availThe evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Extended Care Unit and 20 to , pliable and can be molded into able before the el)d of the year.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn They
regular patients at . Veterans
alm!)St any shape. Unlike TNT
include women's suffrage and peace movement leader Carrie
The X-ray machine was deveMemorial Hosplal; 12 gifts . to · and other traditional explosives, loped by a group ot MIT scient·
Chapman Catt in 1859, pioneer psychologist John Watson In 1878
County Infirmary, 8 gifts to
their chemical makeup Is such lsts led by Lee Grodzlns, an FAA
Metropolitan Opera IT)anager Rudolph Bing in 1902 (age 87):
Home on Mulberry Ave. and 12
that they are relatively stable consultant in bomb detection.
choreographer George Balanchlne in 1904, Frenclj novelist Simone de
gifts to other Health Care homes
and can·be transported with little The prototype devices are being
Beau voir in 1908, Richard Nixon, 37th president of the United States
In Pomeroy, and 10 gifts to
danger of accidental detonation. made by Science AppUcatiOns
1n 1913 (age 76}, str.lptease artist Gypsy Rose Lee In 1914 ..actor Le~
Overbrook Nursing Home,
In Its newest forms, plastic International Corp. of San Diego.
VanCleef in 1925 (age 64}, singer Joan Baez and actress Susannah
Middleport.
explosives are up to 20 Urnes
York,
both in 1941 (age 48) , and country singer Crystal Gayle In 1951
Reportedly the machines have
To any others who helped and
(age 38} .
more powerful than TNT. They undergone very Sllccessful testwere not named we appreciate
are odorless and cannot be Ing at several West Coast air'
their services. Not only does this
. On this date ln history:
detected by trained dogs. Most ports. Reportedly that have
ministry go on but Chrl.itmas • Important, they are virtually detected every plastic explosive
.. In 1861, Mississippi seceded from the Union.
time but In many ways throughtransparent to X-ray detection.
In 1945, In World War II, American troops Invaded the Philippine
device hidden In test suitcases.
out the year.
A plastic explosive Is set off by
island of Luzon and went on to liberate Manila .
.The one problem that wUI bave
Mrs. Dora Wining
very small expl01lve detonator to be overcome, though, accord·
In 1969, the British-French supersonic Concorde jetliner made Its
Pomeroy Outpost
possible no bigger t11an a lng to an FAA source, Is the
first test flight at Bristol, England.

Expresses appreciation

•

The Daily &amp;tntinei-Page-3

l
•
I

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES J
992-7270
611 East Main StrMt, Pomeroy, qhio

each.
Greenfeild McClain finished
second behind the Marauders,
the host Jackson team finished
third , followed by VInton County,South Point and the Warren B
team ca me in sixth .
The Mar a uder s will host a Tri
Meet Wednesday night at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium with
Chesapeake and Trimble beginning at 6, before heading to
Ravenswood for a 5 tea m dual
meet Saturday.

SUBSCRIPTION R-'TES
By Carrier or Moter Route
On(' Week ............. .... ,..... ......... ... $1.40

1

One Month ... .................... .......... 16.10
One Year ..... .. .......................... $'12.80

SINGLE COPY

..

quarter-court enough to give Rio
a 41 -31 advantage at the half.
RIO GRANDE (88) - Jennl
Couch, 5-9-19; Holly Hastings .
6-4-16; Lea Ann Mullins, 3-J,S-17;
Beth Coil, 3-0-6; Tina Azbell.
1-1-3; Ann Barnltz, 3-2-8; Betsy
Bergdoll, ~-2-0-8; Kathy Snyder.
4-3-11. TOTALS 26-:1-27-88 •
DYKE (75) - D&lt;'idre Taylor.
l-0-2; Tonva Fenney, 3-0-6; Anita
Baker, o:5-5; Da1vn Christian.
8-1-17; Eliza Martin. 1-0-2; Latrina Fields, 4-1-9; K!rstieSettas.
1-0-2; Lori Wa!10n, 1-ll-2; Tracie
Shorts, 8-2-18; Gloria Martin,
6-0-12 . TOTALS 33-9-75..

PRICE

Dally ... ..... .. .......... ....... ........ 25 cents

Subscrlbns not dP.Sirlngtopay the car·

rier JTJay remit In advance direct to
Tht' Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit " ' lll be gtvPn carrier each

week .

No subscript ions by maU permitted In

areas where home carrier service Is
available.

Mall Suhscrlptlons
Inside Meip County
13 Weeks ........ .. ...... .... ..... ...... .. $19.24
26 Weeks . .. .. ...... ...... .... ... .. .~ ·...... $37.96
52 Weeks ......... ,,.,.,, ,; ................ $74.36
Outside Melp Coynty .,
13 Weeks ...... ....... .. ................... $20.80
26 Weeks ... ... ............... .. .. .... ..... $40.30

52 We-eks ....... ....... ......... .. ......... $75.40

..

SCHOOL DISTRICTS
AND CORPORATIONS
BEDFORD
Meigs L.S.D.
Eanern L.S.O.

CH!;STER
Eartam L.S.O.
Meios l.S.O.

COLUMBIA

. Ai~1nder L.S.O.

LEBANON
E11tern L.S.O.
Southern L.$.0 .

County

TWI ,

IIs~noo•

4.30 1.70
4.30 1.70

20.50
24.00

4.30 2.70

33.70

4.30 3.50
4.30 I 3.50

LETART
Southtm L.S.D.

OLIVE
EammL.s.o.
ORANGE
Eanern L.S.O.

RUTLAND
Meigs L.S.O.

vmSALEM
Meiao L.S.D.

SA~:.ut:D.
M";,r,,·.:PORT VILLAGE
y LJ.AQE

SCIPIO
Mei- L.S.D.
SUTTON
Soul""" L.S.O.
RACtN•VtLLAGE
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
SUTTON
Mli.;·LJI.D.

4.30 4.30

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In pursuance of Law, I, George M.' Collins, Treasurer of MeifP.I County , Ohio in compl iance w1th t!~Jised Code No .' 323.08 of State of Oh io .
do hereby give not •ce of the Rates of Taxation for the Tax Y!ar of 1988. Rates e~e:prened in dollars and cents on each Oil! th ou sand dollars
tax valu:~tton
I

I

.

. ..

Rates of Taxation for 1988
TOWNSHIPS

.

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!
.
1oo •.06..., 1.031388 I 37.80.
!37.00
1.00 1.141""'

35.462922 3Ut980

t.OO 1.210"'" .! .......
t.oo I .t 31277

44.20
40.3G

31.770975 35.07296
34.9011564 39.412114
34.848332 38.07981

1.00 1.05144• .028704

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36.27otJ:t 1»&gt;&amp;2359

-

..,

.
'

Flui Esute texes whiel't
r1ot been paid 11 the close of each collect ion carrv a penalty of ten percent. Taxes may be Paid at the· office ; )
tl'le county treasurer or by mail. Please bring -.,our list tlx reetiP'I ; Jnd if you pay by mail, be wr! to Joeete your property by taxing distrtct
and enclose nampt9 st:lf·tddressed emrtlope..
.
Alwavs uamine vOur tax r~ipt to 1ft that It coverS all vour property. Offiee Hours 8:30A.M. to 4;30 P.M.. MondiV thru Frid1y-Ciosed
on Saturday .
, ·
•

GEORGE M. COLLINS, Molgo County Trooouret

•

�J

l

I.

I
Page-,4-The Daily Seritinel

j

Monday. January 9. 1989

Pomeroy-Middlepqrt. Ohio

.I

•
WOODS HAS BIG DAY- Cincinnati Bengal running back lckey
Woods pounds out yardage In the second quarter of Sunday's AFC
championship game against the visiting Buffalo Bills. Woods
scored two touchdowns and gained 102 yards In the Bengals' 21-10
victory, which advanced lht&gt; Ben gals to their second meeting with
San Francisco In the Super Bowl on Jan. 22. (UPI)

S ( 'rnt i&amp;, s.-..nton 7:1
Nat Trail 71, Trl \ ' lllqf' 1ft
SrM.' l..ondon ~.f. Blwk Hh· :n

"':t\TIOSAL IIOCKE\' LF.r\GI't:
Sl&amp;lu.U;ot'IJI ~uh!l
N\' ltWI)\f'F.!o .5. X1' blandrr.; I
Hulfalo 5, Toruntu I
\\w-hln~;tuni. {bica~o :1
Vano~HI\.o"r

S"w Alb141ll' 10, Ol••nt.t.no

t

~~~f")' ~. Ct•llr~~ 53
!'i prnet'fvtlh• $!l, MlnMI&gt;r ~
Slo~~o· W:d.Jt .JI'!iull 70, Nonlo nl:t. U
Tf'll,V!i Vib 61, Col \htt~·r~on 59
Tol !'olttl'O~llwr 'Tf, Nll'\olark 5Jt
Tot " ' hilll'lf'r 7%, To I Bow~IM'r 6'l
Tnl Cf'nt 'ill, Sy l\'llnM Norlhvil'\lo' 61

lUonl"'al :J. Boslon I
l 'al ~U) i , Edmontun ~
St. l.oub 7, Phii:Jdelphiu I
Su n:lay's Fl4'!&lt;1ulh
1\u!&lt;oton " · Quo•IJII•t· 2
l.o~ An ~It-s ~. \\1 nalpt·~ -1 1Uri
,.::.dnwnlon E&gt;, ('a I !';Dr)' 0
( ' hh• a~to

:1, N\' l slandl&gt;rs t

Tot S l FraruiN 10, Olilallo'II ·Gian~rl S I
Tol Rapt I~ . l ' p"llanU (Mil Cah·ilry-15
l.'ppor 1\rl/njftonlll, Coi .Mifnin 13
Utll;a.\7, Ht•i¥1141
,
\\'t~-.hl nl(lo•fHU, AI nand 11flf'~r•·~k

l\lltndD,Y'" liiUIIf'~

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MOniM'LLI at Do-croll, i : l~p.m ,
\' annulu.'r 1tt To ronco, i:U p.m.
1'\u&gt;Ndl\.l' ' ~ f,:~omt'l'
ll arlford Ill " 'lnnlprj!:. nl ghl
~\' ~t,.hlllk(on &lt;tl ~lo(• ill'(;, nil(hl

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l.,lanlk&gt;r~

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Pll.IAAul1:h. night

Glrb Ohio

Saturday'!!o Rf'~••l"

flt•u·l Wid 10-1, St'"' York !I
fh arlclll(' 10 ~. \\ a."hln~on 10 I
i\111\nla Ill:!, Sl'w &gt;ll'r!OI"y !1.1
lnjSian~t 11 :1, 1&gt;l't roil 99
l'hUadrlphl a 96, llou:4on 9~
lh• u~vr 113. DaiiM~ !I~
l'h~·n~ IOi. Ml ami 99
Milwllnkt•f' 117,l!lalf.M9

S!•aUh· 1!!1, l'ortiHnd 1:!.1
S1tn t\nlllnitt HI.&amp;, Gl'llrli&gt;n ."ilalt"l02
SuNil~· '!!&lt; Rt&gt;!iiult.oo

:"'lt•w \'J&gt;rk t:u . L:\ fllpp•rrt JIJU
I.!\ l.ukt&gt;l"li ll!G. /'ian Ant nnlo !16

;\lotxlaJ' '!j Gaml'!'l
J,,\ Cllpl"l'r·s Ill Bos~n. 1: an p.m.
llluh at Churlotl4•, ~: liO p.m.
Phllaull'lphla ~ Dllllns, k:30 p . nt.

"Philo

al AJianl.u., nl~thl
,
1•.\ t.. akw!O 11.1 SaCI"dm l'nln, nlll;hl
~·attlo• at l'orUaad. nldJI

Saturday's scores
~\{~:; ~::~.~~~~~~~~:~'·r8!~=~~;tll

l'llllunt~~· • .lan . 7
1\kr ll~lu.n IU, ( 'an l"t•nl Cath 3S
,\ttn;t ~li. M.. rkm lm· !m
o\n:•Hmlu 69, 8radfortl 5i

rl..,Na"d ('r(.,hirw 37, Monr!JI'\' illt• ~6
Brook,lllr '1'7. 0")-'loa "'ordunonl 7t
Drt.Jrr.'&gt;l·ld~ 6$,ll t"diM Hl.-hlllluUI
Br)'O'n tn, ~·flant· t' 62
£'111 d\1.1'11 &amp;.1. Rr nll"'\illl" :i l

8!. Unkmtowt~ l...akf'311
('~n Glt·nOt~~ .f~

Gt, :\lldclr4o-n51
Fulton N\\' H lbilton r.

llr.tf'\UI;•3!1.111111ard 1!1
I'IP tulh E 71. Garflt'id 1ft,.. n
(II' .s t -lo... ' :t tlt· ('rna ( ath ill
I It• ll11ly ~· .. m,• Gil, Lak('\liHIII Sj

$1, \\' 1\lu!lldnpam 311

f

.\~

OLQ' ,JI'flrr!ODn 59, C'ol~'ltlf'r )1
O:a~· l'atiA'rson 37, Springflfld N.f~
l)undf't' {rtllt·h) 63, OttawM toll ~ 53
El) rtu Kin.:; 68. In dl'pr-nll'nl't' &amp;pt !n
f;ut·lid 1!1, ('h•l'niv 1.1 ('Z(ofl
*"'rontlt'l' 9$, :tta•nolia (\\' \'111 i7
For1 l.or.unlt Kt ~1'\lo' HrrmMI ~'l
n Mill pull!!&gt; ~~- Ralinf' Soulhl'l"n -111
(iHmuur 6.1. L11lu• f'ath M
ll1trnn 'IIi, I'Mt rllnton 51
Juhn!&lt;&gt;IO'A n :--:urthrldll:t' U , Urklntr lit.!'

Ohtli Wnir}·an 7!1, fMr Wt&gt;l'llrrn $(1
" 'OO!olt'r 'It Obt&gt;tlio Gl
8:.aldwln·\\'a.IIMt' $11, Kl'nl'on I'!
Rio Gnndt tiM, Dykr i5
rl'nl ml SIMI' Rt l !rhana S.f
lk'llant·r la. Wllmtnrson Si
Shaw·Mr!&lt;Ot ttl, Lakr IE:rlrSI
ln•Ma Sc i.'l, " 'rlllll !oil 311
Ohln \\rsil&gt;yan ~. CaM• R.'M'r\1' Ml

..

k t•nlon 31, RiHrdalp .t~
lA'\ In ~on 6'1' . -'1 anflllrld Sr li4i

n. Goshi.&gt;n $1

l.otlln li'l. Zan~vlllr 55
l.ofltln Kin~~: K!l, Sandullk;y &amp;e
l.oudon\illf' $i, E Knox»
Loul-..,·Utr ,\quln&amp; !i 1\.5, H•d§nn\\' R,... :n
Marlinl(tun 66, Fairlr!ill 5'J
Ma.~s .latk!&lt;&gt;un il. N ('an Hoo\'l'r 4l'l
l'oiAA!i P1•rry '71!, AJIIWI&lt;'f' 4$

!ll:wtll'll'" n. Ort&gt;lon nay$:\
.UI•ruklwdah&gt;67, ltay 01 am.. luUO ((II)
lllld•U•1•'"'" Madl!iu~H. Nrw Ml.mlil
Milan ~l"oo !KI, S.uwi•MIIy St M•f Kll
Mllh.,..!Opurl ~I. C.-nh•rhul"ll n
111t (ill f' IUI 70, I( I d(('dalf" 611

...

NAIA players

CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
Wilmington's Jay Slouffman and
Cedarville's Chris Friesen were
chosen Sunday as the NAIA
District 22 basketball players of
the week.
' Slouffman, a 6-foot·l senio?'
forward from Winchester.
scored 26 points and. grabbed
eight rebounds in the 85·72 win
o~•er Defiance, and had 27 points
and 14 rebounds In the 85-68 win
over Bluffton as the Quakers
Improved to 8·9.
Frie'sen. a 5·foot-8 guard·
forward from Redding, Calif.,
led Cedarville to a . pair of
victories, giving the Lady
Jackets an 8-3 mark. She had 20
points and 10 rebounds In the
65·54 decision over Urbana, and
' then had 19 points and 14
rebounds ln the 72-~romp over
Blu!fton.

!&lt;ctH1'!'1

JIUI. ~

a'''"

MldTrnrw.•s!K't"&amp;9, Akron9-i
111, Mo-K an!e.sCil y'1

Dal ct-1n-"' alllll· ~ 711. Kl'n)'On iO '
fapi&amp;MI a, OlU't,btln 6'l
lll'ldrlhf'rR;II'l, MU!IIdftl'lm 4it
Ohio Nordlf'f'nl7, i\1uk'Ua 61
\\llll'ntw&gt;r~~:Kti,

MeuM l 'nk.n 65

Ohio M'l'lilf'yan !M, f'lllli-1' Hl'!if'F\.,., ii •
Woosur Q. Obrrllft 1&amp;0
\\'lhWn~Gn ltl, Rlurrt on 611
A.ta~•• a, Sll pp:or)' Rock !Pal ti8
I)('IIMCf' IN, Dyh 101

fo.,n.IQ' to, Wab&amp;'lb Clnd) 67
SbawnrrSC 1111. Lalif' Eri('AI

C4'dardllf, 11!. Ohio Dumlnlcllllll &amp;o
!'tlalonr 1t. Tlfnn H
RJo G,.ndoe- S'l, 1\lounl VM" ..n 10

t triu•rua 84, \\'alllh 15
.\rkan&amp;~·PIIM' Blull Tournam!'nt
Cf'nlral stall' 18, Ariz Bapi!IIAIIra:lwnl' •

To•m•mt-nl

Redmen seize control
to beat MVNC 82-70

s•~eeter,"

Montana said.
"You've been there, you know
what's going to happen. Just
keep get ling those rings.''
"It's a privilege and a pleasure." Walsh said. "They keep
coming out of nowhere. The first
one we surprised a lot or people.
and this one we did, too."
Walsh said Montana was at his
best Sunday, when he completed
17 of 27 pa,s ses for 288 yards with
no interceptions against the
stingy Bear defense.
"This could have been his
greatest game." Walsh said.
"UndE&gt;r the conditions, under the
pressure and with what he had to
prove ... this might have been his
greatest game."
Montana wore a glove on his
left hand and a heater insidE' his
jersey pocket.
"That · madE' it just about
right. " he said. "We fE&gt;Irgoing in
W&lt;' cou ld throw but. during
1\'armups I felt really good about
It. "
After ail 0·3 playoff record
since 1985. Montana has reestablished his rep utation as a
blg·game, quarterback. In trea·
cherous weather t17 degrees
with a wind-ch ill factor of minus26) suit ed for running, Montana
hit Rice for touchdowns of 61

Squads receive 10 weekend calls
Meigs County. Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend; five on Saturday and live on Sunday.
Saturday atl: 39 p.m., Racine-to Route 124 for Steven Triplett
to Jackson General Hospital In Ripley; Tuppers Plains at 4:19
p.m . to Callaway Ridge for June Smith to Holzer Medical
Center; Poemroy at 5:41 p.m. to Butternut Ave. for Walter
Morris to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 9:55p.m. to Salem
St. for Verona Martin to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at
11:20 p.m. to Butternut Ave. for Daneite See to Veterans
Memoriai ,Hospltal.
.
Sunday at· 1:37 a.m:, Pomeroy to to Rotite 33 for Martin
DeMoss to Veterans Memorial Hospital, later to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; Racine at 6:44a.m. to an electrical-fire at the
Dan Littlefield residence on Broadway St.; Tuppers Plains at
8:52a.m. to Route 681 for 'Frank Houser to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at12: OS p.m. to Rutland for Aaron Bowersock
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; later to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport at 2 p.m. to Broadway 'St. for John Krawsczyn to
Holzer Medical Center.

yards late in the first quarter and
27 yards midway through the
second.
After Chicago's Kevin Butler
kicked a 25-yard field goal late In
the first half, Montana took the
49ers on a 78·yard drive to open
thE' second half.
The 13-play march used 5: 27
and ended with Montana's5-yard
TD strike to tight end John Frank
that gave San Francisco a 21·3
lE'ad and furtlier chtlled a Soldier
Field crowd of 64,830.
The 49ers opened to 28-3 on
Tom Rathman's 4-yard touchdown run to finish a 70-yard drive
with 6:53 to play. That ensured
San Francisco would become the
first visiting team to win an NFC
title gam&lt;,&gt; since the Los Angeles
Rams won at Tampa Bay In 1980.

H hs h I

--Area deaths-Virginia Jone,s

New DoctoR Dlacovety

Weight Loss Pill
Approved fOr

MOUNT VERNON - Scoring 63.3 percent 119-30) from the
80 percent on free throws and
charity stripe. Holmes connected
sinking ali six of their 3-po!nt on seven of 12 tries. center Rirk
field goals. · the Rio Grande Burke was three of four and Eric
Redmen earned a share of the Van Fossen five of six . Gregory
Mid·Ohio Conference upper half netted both of his two g-rati'
'Uizy ,.,_, 10 •-se We""ht
Saturday by defeatlnj! Mount shots.
Vernon Nazarene 82-70.
The Cougars will tran•t to
•v
Guards Anthony RaymorE' and Ca nton Tuesday for a conference
AJtudy s-plng u.s.
Jimmy Kearns each scored 17 . encounter with Malone. now 4-0
C 00
BEVERLY HILLS,CA(Special)points for Rio, now 12·4 and 2·1 in in loop actio n. Rio Grande faces
Anamazingnewweightlosspillcalled
theMOC. TheCougarswentto8·8 Ur bana on the Blue Knights'
"fat-magnet"hasrecenllybeendeveland 2-1.
court Tuesday at 7:.~0 p.m.
oped and perfected by two prominent
The Cougars. who defeated
In other MDC games Sat u1·day. ,Jan. 9
doctors at a world filmous hospital in
Lake Erie 100-84 Friday. drew Cedarvll!edumpedOhioDomini - Girls Basketball·Federa! · LosAngelesthatreponedly"guaran·
strong performances from Ron · can 102-60, Malone put away
Hocking-Home·5: 55
tees" you steady fat loss and calorie
Holmes with 17 points, Sam Tiffin 76-56 and Urbana outlasted
Freshman Basketball at Federal
reduction by simply lakingtheirtested
Barber with 15 and Steve Gre- Walsh 84·75.
Hocking 5: 55
and proven new pill.
gory with 13. but it was Rio's Box score: . ,
Jan. 10 •
ed~dU.S.goo:rnme
• ~hasjuSirdapproo;game most of the way as the
MOUNTVERNON(70) -Sam
BoysVarsityatFederalHocking
octorscaoms,oraha -to-get
visitors swept across the MVNC Barber , 0-5-0-15; Rick Burke, 6
~~~~that confirms "there has never
floor for a 53·30 halftime lead.
1-3-;: Jeff Case. 0-2·2: Steve
Jan. 11
nanythingliketheirfat-bondingpill
·
w
I'
· h Ch
k
d
processbefore.''ltisatoollly,_.major
MVNC remained a threat In the Gregory. 4·1·2·13: Joe White ,
restmg wit
esapea e an
scientific breakthrough and is re\'Oiusecond period, but Rio out · 3·0·6: Ron Holmes. :.-7-17; Eric
Trimble-Home 6
lionizing the weight loss industry.
boarded the Cougars 32·30. The Van Fossen, 2-5-9; Aaron ReyJan. 12
\ilu Can "Eat Normally"
hosts forced Rio to turn over the nolds. 0·1·0-3. TOTALS 15-7-19·i0.
Girls Basketball·Miller·Home
Best of all, "you can continue to
bali 19 times. but suffet·ed 18
RIO GRANDE (82)- Anthony
5:55
eat your fa\'Orite bids and you don't
Freshman basketball at Belpre
have to change your normal eating
tu rnovers c~urtesy of the Raymore, 6-5-17; Brian Watkins,
4-J-0-11; Larry Benning, 6·4 -16;
5:55
habits. You can stan losing lilt and
Redmen.
Top rebounders for Rio were Mike Tidwell, 2-0·4: Rob Jack·
Jan. 13
reduce calories from the very first day.
center Larry Benning with 10 and son, 3·0·6: Brad Schubert. 1·0-2;
Boys varsity at Miller 6:30
until you achieve the ideal weight you
Raymore with five. MVNC's Jimmy Kearns, 1-5-0-17; Marc
Jan. 14
desire without e!(ercising".
Gregory had seven and Holmes Gothard, 2-3-7. TOTALS 26·6-12Wr_estling at Ravenswood, 5·
Flushes Fat Out of Body
added six. The Redmen had 21 82.
team dual meet. 12.
:rhe new pill is appropriately called
assists, seven by Raymore, and r--------------.,.---------------1 the "fat-magnet"pillbecauseitbreaks
the Cougars ·J3, three each
intothousandsofpanicles,eachacting
like a tiny magnet, "attracting·• and
supplied by Holmes and Jeff
Case.
trapping many times its size in undigested fat panicles. Then.all the trapped
From the field. the Redmen
l'atandcaloriesare naturally "flushed"
shot 58.1 percent 132·55) and
right oot of your body because they
netted 12 of 15 attempts at the
cannot be absorbed.
free throw line. Benning was
Within 2 days you should notice a
successful on four of four shots.
changeinthecolorofyourstool.caused
Raymore sank five of six and
by·the lilt pilnicles being eliminated. ·
forward Marc Gothard was three
"Automatk:ally" Lose Fill
of four.
According toone ofthe inventors. Dr.
MVNC sank 22 of 51 field goal
William Shell, hean specialist and &lt; '
attemptHor43.1percentandwas
associate professor of medicine at

---"""!--.
.
.
.
-•
' Opening Monday, January :y-9th
O~t\' l'oi· Elkin.,.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports the following
activities over the weekend .
No. enforcement .action was taken Sunday morning when a
female resident of the ~ountry Mobile Home Park, Darwin, was
sllghtly'lnjured In a family disputE. The woman refused to filed
charges.
·
Early Sunday morning, · Barbara Richards. Reedsville.
reported that money had been taken during the preceding
evening from her purse at her residence.
Saturday evening the department took a report that Walter
Morris, Blake Hill Road, Pomeroy, sustained Injuries to his left
forearm when his muzzle·loader exploded during unloading
,Procedures. Morris was taken to the Pomeroy Fire Station by
private vehicle, then to Holzer Medical Center by Pomeroy
EMS.
·
Also on Saturday evening, the department received a report
than an Individual was seen entering the Meigs County Dog
Pound at Rock Springs. When deputies arrived, the suspect was
gone. Dog Warden Wayne Roseberry reported that the lock had
been broken off the door. A door to a holding pen had been kicked
In and two male dogs taken. The Incident is under investigation.

U.S. Gov1. Patent
·-T ..,

( W\' al II.!, Ill ram 13

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

UCLA medical
"the way"
new fatbonding
processschool,
is a "lazy
to
tose weight because the pills atone
"automatically"' reduce calories by
eliminatin5 dietary fat . It is 100% safe •

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sweeping the coontry with glowing
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who an: now slimmer. trimmer and
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Teresa Spivey of Middletown;
seve n grandchildren; . one
brother, Noah ChastEen of Rutland; and thtee sisters, Mrs.
Howard (Edna) Pinnell of Middleport, M(s. George (Virginia)
Evano, Toronto, Ohio, and Mrs.
Paul rDeloras) Straka of
Toronto.
He was preceded in death by
one sister. Bessie McGhee.
Services will be Tuesday, I
p.m. at the McCoy·Moore Fun·
era! Home in Vinton with the
Rev. Sam Basye. Burial will be In
Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call Monday, 2 w·
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral home.
'
Military graveside services
will be conducted by theVinton
American Legion Post 161.

Meigs County native. VIrginia
Mae White Jones, 63, of 4830
Hickory St., South Ch-arleston,
W.Va., died Saturday at home
after an extended illness.
A homemaker and member of
the Church of Christ at Rand,
W.Va., she was bOrn at Long
Bottom July 27, 1925, a daughter
of the late Grover C. and Lucy P.
Groves White. She graduated
from Chester High School In 1943
and was a resident of South
Charleston for 42 years.
Su rvtvors Include her husband,
Clayton (Del!COn) Jones; a son
and daughter-In-law, Aaron and
Frances Coffman Jones, St.
Albans, W.Va.; a son, Michael
Jones , Wooster; a daughter and
son· In
Martha Schaller
law, Karen and Joel Pauley,
South Charleston. W.Va.; three
Martha Schaller. 84, of Route 2,
grandchildren, Jessica, Mc·lissa
Little Hocking, died early Moil·
and Joshua Pauley . South Cha- day at St. Joseph's Hospital in
rleston, W.Va.; a brother and
Parkersburg, W.Va. Arrangesister·ln-law, Grover C. and
ments will be announced later by
Elsie White Jr., Long Bottom; . the White Funeral Home,
three sisters and brothers-inCoolville.
-law, Wilma and Ralph Ballard,
'
Long Bottom; Donna Jean and
Paul Baker, Killbuck, Ohio; and
Doris and Albert Hill Jr., Foster,
• W.Va.; and another sister, Daily stock prices
Thelma Eddy, Killbuck, Ohio.
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
In addition to her parents, she Bryce and Mark Smith
was preceded In death by an of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Infant son, David Shannon Jones,
and an Infant brother and sister. Am Electric Power ...... ..... .. . 27
Services will be Tuesday, 2 AT&amp;T ................................. 2814
p.m., at the Redbrush Church of Ashland Oil ......................... 35
Christ, Long Bottom, with minis· Bob Evans ................... ....... l414
ter, Vernon Dolin. Burial will be Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
in the White Family Cemetery, City Holding Co ................ :.. 23
Long Bottom. Friends may call Federal Mogul .................... 507!
at the Good Shepherd Mortuary, Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .. ...... ....5114
335 Fifth Ave .. South Charleston,
Heck's ..................... , ..... .... .. ~
W.Va., from 3 to 5 and 7 to9p.m.
Key Centurion ......... , ........... 15
on Monday, or at the Red brush Lands' En'd ................ , ........ 28\1,
Church, for one hou·r prior- to Limited Inc ........................ 28%
services on Tuesday.
Multimedia Inc ................... 75~
Rax Restaurants .. .. ................3
Robert E. Chasteen
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 1414
Shoney's Inc .............. .......... 714
Robert Eugene Chasteen, 57,of
Wendy's Inti ....... . .................. 6
Middletown, Ohio, died Saturday
Worthington Ind .. ... :.. .......... 23
at Kettering Memorial Ho\pltal
at Kettering.
Born Oct. 31, 193lln VInton, he
was the son of the late Noah and
Mattie (Gadd) Chasteen.
He was employed by the J.P .
Transportation Company of Mid·
dletown. He was a U.S. Air Force
veteran, serving In Korea.
He is survived by his wife,
Janice (Dyas) Chasteen, whom
he married July 16, 1983 In
Middletown. Ats·o surviving are
six sons, Robert Chasteen Jr.,
James Chasteen, Rick Chasteen,
Mlke Chasteen, and Mark Chasteen, all of Middletown, and
Larry Chasteen of Cincinnati;
two daughters, Mrs. John (Judy)
Cornett of Ft. Pierce, Fla., and

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The Daily Sent\nei- Page-5

By United Press lnl&lt;'rnatlonal
A winte r s torm brought ra in.
sleet and snow to the Soutlleast
Monday as cokltlghtened Its grip
on the:northern half of the nation,
keeping temperatures well below
freezing across a vast stretch of
land from the Rocky Mountains
lo New England.
Snow advlsorle~ were Issued
for Monday~ worsening to winter
storm watches Monday_night in

Ohio Valley..

part s of Ma ryland. Ocl~ware.
Washington. D.C .. Virginia , \yest
Virginia and North Carolina.
with the storm also affecting
most of th e Tennessee Valley Into
Louisiana and Arkansas, the
National Weather Service said.
Some ihree inches of snow fell
in parts of central Arkansas late
Sunday and early Monday.
Snow was also falling Mondliy
morning over the eastern half of

Continued from page 1

the PaCific Northwes t' .. wes tern
Montana and Idaho, the weather ·
service 's aid.
_
The winter storm had earlier
dumped ~now on the upper
Midwest over the week end,
which was already suffering
under freeezing weather and
wind chills that plunged to 65
degrees below In parts. The
storm had let up in most of the
area by early Monday ,' but th e
cold remained . ·
Temperatures around the na·
tion at 2 a.m . EST ranged from 27
degrees below zero at Devils
Lake, N.D .. to 73 degrees in
Miami and Fort Lauderdale. Fla.

Temperatu res from the north·
0rn and .centra! Rockies across ,
the lower and middle Mississippi
Valley and Into New England
were expPctedd to remain below
freezing a II day Monday , forecas·
iers said.
•
In Michigan, temperatures In
the southeast portion of the state
fell more than 40 degrees late
·Sunday and parts of the Upper
Peninsula got more than a foot of
snow. but the National Weather
Service said the storm center ,
responsible for the drastic ·
change to colder and snowier
weather had moved out of the
state in the pre·dawn hours
Monday ..

Vinton counties. are being as- entrepreneurship and higher edsisted in their educational effbrt ucation is reflected In its financial support of Rio Grande
by OVB scholarships.
Since its fo~nding In 1983. the College, " Dr. Hayes said. "Both
school of business has graduaied sys~rms focus on the future. Both
·more than 200 degree recipients realize that today's Investments
A chance of snow or rain
South Central Ohio
In accounting and business man· lead to tomorrow's social and
Wednesday
and Thursday , and TQnlght, partly cloudy . Low
agement, including nearly 20 · ectmomic rewards ."
fair
Frltlay.
Highs will be in the
near 2&gt;. Winds southwest IO to 15
With a current enrollment of
graduares from Meigs County. A
mph·. Tuesday. partly sunny . 30s Wednesday and Friday and35
total of 168 students from Meigs more tllan 300 students, the
to 45 Thursday. Lows will be In
High in, the mid-30s.
school
of
business
extends
small
County are currently enrolled at
the
20s Wednesday and Friday
Extended
Forrcast
business
and
·
entrepreneurial
Rio Grande College/ Community
and
25 to 35 Thursday .
Wednesday
through
Friday
principles
to
the
community
as
a
College.
service
function
by
supporting
" Ohio Valley Bank recognizes
To meei ~uesday
that people throughout southern industry and small business In
Ohio share the same social , southern Ohio.
The Greenwood Cemetery
Community service projects
economic and cultural needs , "
Veterans Mrmorlal
Trustees will meet Monday. 6
Dr. Hayes said. "Through Its inrlude sponsorship of counsel·
Saturday
admissions
p.m .. at Star Mill Park in Racine:
· active scholarship campaign and ing workshops and programs lor
George
Harvey.
Gallipolis; Ray The BQarcl of Public Affairs will
endowment support, OVB helps operators of small business. The
mond
Little,
Middleport.
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at th e
Rio Grande. College meet those school provides management
Saturday discharges -None.
same location.
needs through the shared benefit ~ssistance to area business
Saturday admissions -Wilma
through a small buslness'cooper·
of higher education."
White,
Mason .
Danee scheduled
The Emerson E , Evans School atlve program in thE' U.S. Small
Saturday discharges -None.
of Business • Management em- Business Administration.
Round and square dancing will
In addition to counseling. lea~·
phasizes small business and
be
featured at the Pomeroy License issued
ersh!p
in
bu.s!ness
education
Is
.
entrepreneurship through educaSenior
Cit lzens Center on Friday
tional programs designed to offered through workshops in
from
8
to 11 p.m. Music will be
foster free enterprise, marketing productivity, ~uman relations,
A marriage license has been •
provided
by the True Country issued in Meigs County Probate
marketing techniques and other
and business management.
Ramblers. Admission S2 . Bring Court to William Wesley Rollins,
··Ohio Valley Bank's dedica- related fields . The school also
snacks for nack table. Everyone 28, Pomeroy , and Karen Grace
tion to ihe true goals of' both provides computer training and
welcome.
tax parer assistance.
DeVault , 25, Leon, W.Va.

--:------Weather------

Hospital news .

Dr. J. Stephen Lovell, DDS

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:

Announces The Association Of

PLEASANT VAUEY HOSPITAL

Dt Michael B. Carlisle

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"

In The
Practice Of Dentistry
675·6330

703 22nd Street

(304) 675·1244

- POint Pleasant, wv

Stocks

1

OhloSII\If' ~~. \\'iso-omin iO
Kl'nl Statr 19, f Mlchipn 77
\\' Mlrhlj~:an ~li, Miami 5!1
Oltlol!nh· 'l'l, RaiiSI-,tt•!l'l
Eilslf'n Mi cllli!'W' lilt TDirdo 51i
Do.ot.rolt IlK, Bowllhll: GN"l'n It
Wri~~;lf Shalr H Brooklyn iO
Oayton lUI, Loyola Ill
X
!11, \ ' ll.lpmah;ojlnd) AA
Tt&gt;IIII'!IM'r Slll2. \ ' OUR«S iaw.,t 711
fhwl n lilt I lUI, l'lfrmptb S. 19
f'IM'f' lt~.ndSt

Sheriff releases weekend report

assessed a 15·yard penalty If It
tried to gain advantage by
having too many players on the
field during It~ no-huddle offense.
"The team overcame learning
about this only an hour and fifty
m lnutes · before the game,"
Wyche sald. "We've had 16
games and one playoff game -17
games - using our .style and
suddenly we couldn't. 11 could
have been motivational."
Esiason completed 11 of 20 for
94 yards and 2 Interceptions.
Kelly completed 14 of 30 for 163
yards and had 3 Interceptions.
Kelly was intercepted In the ehd
zone by David Fulcher with 8:07
left. ending B~ffalo's only strong
drive of the second half.
"It's extremely disappointing," Kelly said. "I wanted It and
I was playing at 110 percent. We
had a great season, our goal was
the playoffs, but we thought we
could make the Super Bowl. We
had our ups and downs, but there
were more ups."
Kelly threw his second Inter·
ceptlon of the first quarter - to
Eric Thomas, who returned to
the Buffalo 19. Four plays later
Woods ran in from the 1 to give
Cincinnati a 7-0 lead wlthl: 511eft
in the opening period.
·

eigs ig
sportS schedule

· Ohln \\'nnwn'lll ( 'o llt&gt;JtP Sl'fllft
.Jan. 7
Mlll'k'Ua 74. Ohl11l"'iOrth(•fn69 ~ol/
" lii.t• n.._,,K 11, Moitnl l 'nlen 1.1

Ohio C'o llll'•l' Ra.&gt;.lrthall

the AFC championship game.
CHICAGO {UP!) - The San
Francisco 49ers Sunday moved
The 49ers have been installed as
into position to become th'e first
flve·point favorites to join the
team to win three Super Bowls
Pittsburgh Steelers and the Raid·
this decade, thanks to the quar·
ers as the only teams to win three
terback who guided them to the
Super Bowls.
first two.
The Super Bowl will be a
Joe Montana threw three
rematch of San Francisco's 26·21
touchdow n passes on a day when
victory over Cinclpnati in the
the Windy City lived up to its
NFL championship · game aftjSr
name and the 49ers breezed to a , the 1981 season. The 49ers won
28.- 3 NFC title game victory over
their second Super Bowl under
the Chicago Bears.
Coach Bill Walsh three . years
Winds that registered 29 mph
later. Montana was MVP of both
at halftime did not stop Montana
Super Bowls.
.
from hooking up with Jerry Rice
Walsh and Montana consider
on two scoring passes to help San
this trip to the Super BoWl'
Francisco advance to the Jan. 22
especially rewarding, s incE' the
Super Bowl in Miami against
49ers were written off by many
Cl ncinnati. The Bengals defeated
people near m ldseason.
the Buffalo Bills 2J.10 earlier in
"They just keep getting-

M

Ed'~

l"ol \\70. Marltln lbnUn 11~'~K
I 'ol :\l-ad (It , M :u"lon l't•ntl'r I rn~ n
l 'ol ~I {'h arlf'loi 65. \\orlhin ~011 fhr !I I
C'ollln .. \\1011 ltt'.oo 7S, Norw~tltl Si f'IW U9
Cri'"l ~ ood 61 . T~ lnsht~t-.: fh lllllhl'rttUn

Hon~r

to::&amp;'-h•·nod 7'!, "nodmo,..

ClncinrMIIIIO. n.,·Lun 56

(If' Sllcn:ulus S~. Parma Pallw. 6!t

Llttlo· Ml:tnll

Da.,.W(hul.l

Sh1olh) ~.ll pprr )o;andutlcy :19
Shf'l'ldan It C'rook.-.,1111' ;!~
Sf! rlnr N 71. .\It ami Tncf' 1:\
Tlpp fll y '\'t, Sl !boy Lll'hmi&amp;n ~'
l'Pil't :-\dOlo \ ' allry ~. Unu~ ('(' a:J
Vrr,..iJI;.,. -1:1. Ml uml E t1
\\ Gt'UUU 62, " 'f't•k llffr 26

I to.h '" ~u ~Unl, ni Kilt
('hha~~;u

I"" \h· Hinl•• ~

Hl~~:h School

Pf'mlv-r~tlll'

GiUllftl.
Ol·n\t'r at w.._hln"on. nl~hl
Ttn~a.,· ·,.

c ·an~l

53

.n.

(.ipwl a11d at 'SPalth•, 10 p.m .
Phnrnh: all;oldi•n Shlll•, 10:.10 p.m.

l'~tn.,..

L~tkt•l'tood

s~ urd "'' •• fan. ;
Ar•· ~~tdla 17, Fo!itorla r.
8ul'ki&gt;Yt' Tnall il, Claymonl ~!I
8ul'l.oryr 8" ' It'! Edilmn Norlh :16
C'•mhrldll:t' i:l, Zan4'!i.,.IIIP til
funal FUlton NDnhwrst ~. Falrlt•!is~:\
( 'In t ' AJ•t: 11, 1\lu If&gt; mil I'll 11
Clr St ·lo.o At· Mel .f:S, E a, VII An K21
ro\"in«tnn H. Millon Unkln ~~
ll : 1,~ t on Norlhrld(P i2, IJII'Iht'l 50
On'lid••n Trl \ 'allt'y ~I. Rh·rr \' 1~· :i1
fOrf'rnfltld Md:tatn .&amp;9, ,\thf'nlll-16
Hanrihal Rlv t'l', Wlll'f"ll Lol' ~I .
Kalldll fl. Uma Balli 6~
,\lan!4il'ld 1'\r H. Cif'ar hrk ~1
M~l' s ~lllf' H, MorJtan 11!
1\tlllt"r i.f., ,u hany AI nan ck'r -Ill
N C'an Huuwr
l\lu11 .Jacloion Sl
Nt&gt;w l . ul njftonU, ~· ('ont:ord Ul
NolrM.aynl' U, llllltdalto Ill
Pandora-(111~ II, t'urt Jrnnlni'S U

N;\T 10~1\L 8A.'S KF.TB.\LL i\880&lt;' ,

flln Tlmkt'n U.

ldn!!. M••m 6:1, lh&gt;lwon

\hnr ly At, .Jacboa 60
" ) 'nford 85, ,\.,;;Ill and fi'l

Mln111'!!1fa at Phlladf'lphla.nllht
F..dn10neon 01 l .os .\n gf'lf'S, nii!'N

.

n

Pltkt'f'IRgton 611. Col Hill' liP)• li
l"lobth !I'll) Shadyllidc&gt; ~~. (;al ~111
llavt'lwn it
Ru!i!ll11!6. SlcW-y Lrllman 75
Sandu1111)' Pt&gt;rldn" U, "hrpro•lta ~9

";, Pltl'ohntJh 5

N1'¥o ·h•r~')' 5. O..t roil

Continued from page 1

49ers roll 'over Bears for NFC crow.n

Scoreboard ...
·Pro seores

Woods capped an 11-play,
rPmained In the game. Buffalo
39·yard drive on the first play or
managed just three first downs
the fourth quarter with a 1-yard
and was 0 for 10 on third-down
burst for the second haiC's only
opportunities.
touchdown, giving the Bengals a
The key second·half drive
21·10 advantage. He finished with
featured a 6-yard run by Stanley
102 yards on 29 carries against
Wilson with C!nclnatl in punt
the AFC's best defense. He also
formation that gave ,the Ben gals
scored the opening touchdown
a first "down on the Buffalo 27.
with a l·yard run.
'
d
"It hasn't sunk In yet," said
Five plays later, after Shane
Woods, who produced two of the
Conlan tackled . Woods for a
lour 100-yard rushing games
3- yard loss, Buffalo cornerback
against Buffalo this s~ason.
Derrick Burroughs was ejected
. The Bengals raised their home
for an Illegal blow toihefa"ce. The
record this season to 10-0, relying Infract ion gave Cincinnati a first
on a defense long considered the
down at the 4, and two plays later
team's weakness. In the postsea·
Woods scored.
son, the Bengals have yielded 10
"I'm proud of this team,"
points to the Bills and 13 to
Buffalo Coach Marv Levy said.
Seattle.
"Although It ls difficult right
The Bills failed to make a !lrst now. They didn't measure up
down In the third period and had
today and we lost our poise a few ·
drives that began on their own 20,
times, but win or lose I am still
13, 1, and 13 In the quarter.
proud."
"Most gljmes are decided by
Cincinnati quarterback Boo!leld position and that was the mer Esiason threw a 10-yard
case today," Wyche said. "Our touchdown pass to James Brooks
offense did a good job, our in the second period. The Bills
defense has been accused of only scored on a 9·yard pass from Jim
playing as hard as It had to.
Kelly to Andre Reed and a
Today the defense bottled them , 39-yard field goal by Scott
up."
Norwood.
Buffalo. failed to score in the
Cincinnati, with theNFL'sbest
second half and did not register a offense, was told by the league
first down in the half until 9:29 before the game it would be

. Pomeroy- Middleport, .Ohio

. . . ... Local news briefs... -... Southeastern states hit by winter storms

Bengals triumph, advance to Super Bowl·
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Bengals, their nohuddle offense stopped before the
game by the NFL, turned to a
rookie running back and a
maligned defense Sunday to
complete a startliljg reversal and
advance to the Super Bowl.
Rookie Ickey Woods ran for
two short touchdowns and Cincinnati's defense s t!ffened in the
second half to help the Bengals to
t)lelr second Super Bowl with a
21·10 AFC title game triumph
over the Buffalo Bills.
· The Bengals, who finished last
in the AFC Central in 1987, will
play San Francisco, a 28-3 victor
over Chicago in the NFC championship, In the Jan. 22 Super
Bowl at Miami. Cincinnati, 4·11
last season and 12-4 this year,lost
to the 49ers seven years ago In the
NFL championship game.
This year's Bengal turnaround
mirrored the one in 1981 when
they finished last, then went to
the Super Bowl where they lost to
the 49ers. Last January, Coach
Sam Wyche's job was in jeopardy, but General Manager
Paul Brown gave him another
chance.
"This Is a proud moment for
our city,'' Brown said. ··I sure ~m
· happy I stuck.with what we had."

Monday, January 9, 1989

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Monday, January 9 , 1989

...

By The Bend.
Literary Club meeting

conduct~

Ofllcers were elected at the
recent m·eetlng ol the Middleport
Literary Club held at the home of
Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Elected lor 1989 were Mrs.
Ceorge Hackett, Jr., pres ident; ;
r.trs. Bernard Fultz, vice pres!·
dent; Mrs. Chester Erwin, treas·
urer, and Mrs. Dwight Wallate,
'
secretary.
Mrs. Wilson Carpeiner pre·
sided at the meeting welcoming
the 14 members attending. The
nominating committee of Mrs.
Y\'allace, Mrs. James Diehl, and

contents from documents and
dialogue of Emily. The book
deals with her· love lor a Judge,
her worry and hesitation about
becoming his wife and his sudden
death. She bec!lme a recluse and
and wore only white for her
remaining years.
Mrs. Forest Bachtel read sev·
eral of the poems of Emily
Dickinson and for roll call
members read an original poem
or verse..
The hostess served candy,
cracker snacks, and grapes.

Mrs: Richard Owen presented

the slate of n~w officers.
Mrs. Richard Owen reviewed
the autobiography of Emily
· Dickinson, noting that It wasn't
until 1935 th.a t she was declared
one of the bestlemale poets. Mrs.
Owen said that the author spent
her entire life In Amherst, Mass,
never married, lived with a
sister, and died at 55.
Mrs. Owen reviewed the book
"The Resistant Heart" by Ann
Edwards, a story about Emily
Dickinson using material and

Eight and Forty Salon meets
: Contributions to help children
with respiratory diseases were
made at Thursday's meeting of
the Meigs County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty held at the home
of Rhoda Hackett.
~
Mary Martin, . chapeau, presided at the meeting during
· which II was voted to give $115ln
aonatlons to the National Jewish
Jios plla)ln Denver. The national
organization of Eight and Forty
has taken on the project .of
contributing several thousand
dollars this year to a' special
treatment program for children
suffering with difficultes of the
Immune system.

The special treatment, accord·. por t and the ways and means
lng to Dr . Erwin Gelfand, pedlat· committee noted that the sale of
r ic chairman at the hospital, pecans and cashews was success·
costs about $40,000 a year but ful
Plans were made to purchase
allows the patient to live a !llOre
gifts for two children with
normal life.
The group also voted to send asthma.
Five applications for new
several entertainment tapes to
the children in the special care partners were received. It WjiS
unit at the hospital. Julia Hysell, noted that Veda Davis is recuper·
children and youth chairman, atlng at horne and that Gladys
also (eported.that-a check for $50 Mowery remains In the Point
had been sent to Mrs. Joan Pleasant Nursing Care Center.
Tewksbary to be used for child· Both will be remembered with
gifts.
ren with respiratory problems.
Mrs . Richards and Catherine
Florence Richards , Ia
secretalre·cassiere, gave her re· Welsh served refreshments.

&amp;out parcy held, patches awarded
Achievement ·patches were iamily members and den lead·
presented to several cub scouts ers. The annual Christmas
pf Pack 246, Salisbury. at the Around the World collection was ,
annual holiday party held at the taken.
Rock Springs United Methodist "- A vote of thanks was extended
Church.
to Jane Frymyer fordemonstrat·
Receiving patches were Seth lng voting procedures to the
McDonald, J . . T. Humphrey, scouts.
Daniel McDonald, Ryan Rams·
Chris Ball won the Christmas
burg, Joshua Wilson. Joshua treefllledwlthcandybyguesslng
Dodson, with Linda Broderick, how many pieces were used In
den leade~.
the decorations.
The webelos opened the meet·
Scouts and family members
lng with the !lag ceremony. attendlngwereJamieBroderlck,
There was group s lnglng of Josh Witherell, Chris ~II.
carols by the scouts joined by Jeremy King, Joshua Wilson,

Nurse aide performs
invaluable services.

Joshua Dodson, Daniel McDonald, Seth McDonald, VIncent
Broderick, Josh Leach, Chad
Folmer, Erron Aldridge, Tim
Peaveley, Jason Lawrence,
Adam White, Shawn White, Evan
Struble, Michael Frymyer, Ryan
Dill, Adam Jay, Nathan Haines,
Pete Sisson, Michael Lle!helt, J.
T. HuJllphrey, Matt Milhoan,
Shawn liarrls, Billy Yourtg,
Ryan Ramsburg. Jeannie With·
erell, Linda 13roderlck, Janet
Peavley , Blll Yoiung, Becky
Broderick, and Frank Broderick,
den leaders, and Danny White,
cubmaster .

ANN UNDf.lt!le

•1918,t.Anpl'"

· Pear Ann Landers: I am a

who are 2 years old and8 months.
Tlma Syndinte ..ct
ere.... 8yndk~~e
I don't have a room of my own
or even a dresser. I sleep on the
floor In the baby's room and am
living out of a box and suitcases.
They won'tlet me haveakeyto . had the time or energy to' do
the apartment and Insist that I be homework. She used to tell my
In by 10 p.m. when I go out on father I was too dumb for plano
Friday night.
lessons and too clumsy for
My Ute Is so empty and I'm dancing lessons. "It would be a
beginning to feel worthless. What waste or money." Is the way she
can I do to !eel like a person put lt. .
again? - Loa&amp; Ia Sacramento
. I could never talk to my
Lord! .,
Dear Lost: Apparently you pare!lls about anything. They
A lot of people think it's an haven' t heard that Lincoln freed refused to address any grlevan·
aWful Job. ''Not for all the money the slaves.
ces of mine or entertain the
Ill the world" Is what one of my
For heaven's sake, get a job- notion that I could be right about
friends said. Well, believe It or anything that will keep body and anything. After I married I never
not, there Is something special soul together and clear the heck went home again.
•
about Ibis Job. People really out or there.
I am now out of tbat rotten
depend on me. I not only care for . You will never feel like a marriage, my children are one
them, I care about them as well. person as long as you allow their own and I am trying to
• Being a nurse's aide Is not yourself to be treated like an improve my lot In life. It's
glamorous. There are many animal. The extent to which you extremely difficult to build self·
aspects or the dally routine that are being exploited Is disgrace- esteem arteF you've been made
ate demanding and physically ful. I don't know when I've been to !eel Inadequate !or so many
difficult. But I take pride In my so steamed. Write soon and tell years. But I'm determined to
wOrk. There Is so much to learn. I me you took my advice.
make it. Wish me luck, Ann. I
try to Improve my skills every
it. - Montana Woman
Dear Ana Landers: I am need
day. Things do get hectic. SomeDear
Womaa: I believe you are
times all the call bells seem to go writing In response to the letter going t~ make It becayse not only
ott at once. Family members ask about runaway teens and how are you determined but you have
me to do extra things that take street life can mean death.
a keen understanding of what
There Is more than one way to went wrong In your life. Good
time. I do my best to accommodate them but sometimes It just run away. I ran away at 18 by luck, Montana, and God bless.
getting married to a miserable
Isn't possible.
.
• My work Is the kl!ld that many man. We had !our children. I left
sons and daughters can't do or because I was never able to
A,. you hovini ~problem fi,.ding
won't do, yet somebody must please my stepmother. She was a gi/1 /or lhe perion who hat
ta)te care of the sick and the old. very domineering and critiCal. etJerythingP Ann Lender•" neW
So I bathe and shower my Nothing I did was ever good booklea, "'Gem•,•• i• ideal jo'r a
patients. I want them to be fresh enough. I broke my neck trying to nighwarid or co/lee lable. "Gem•"
and clean. I comb and brush their win her approval and, of course,! U a collection of Ann Landen' mon
hair. I want them to look nice. never got it.
I was her maid, cook, house- requeued poem• and e.IM)'J. Sendj
Their hands sometimes shake so
14 plw a telf.,ddre.,ed 11omped
I have to cut their food and help keeper and laundress.. Every No. 10 envelope (65 cent• potlage) 10
them to eat. I want them to get minute of my time was taken up Ann Lander, P.O. Box 11562,
doing things she should have
the proper nourishment.
done. I was also expected to be a Chicogo, Ill. 6(}611.0562.
Now do you understand why superior student although I never
fl'liT Job Is important even though
some folks look down on a nurse's
aide? These elderly people really
depend on me. Being there !or
them makes me feel very special. Just sign me - Feeling
Good .\bout M:raelf ID Quincy
De!£ .JIILIDey: You refer to
youtaelf as "Just a __,.N'brse's
Aide," but you sopnli like an
angel to me.
.
I bope every person who lias a
loved one In a nursing home will
read tbls column carefully. He or
llh,e wUI never look at a nurse's
aide In the same way again. Bless
you for all the dignity and caring ·
WITH EACH
that you bring to a thanllless job.
"Dear ADD Luden: Ever.since
'10.00 PURCHASE
· I moved In with my brother and
bls wife, I have been made to feel
like less than nothing! Tbey both
work and Ibaby·slt !heir children
nurse's aide. We aiqes provide
over 90 percent of the hands-on
care tor nursing home residents.
Yet the pay we J;tart with .ts
_s,llghtly over minimum. wage.
" 1 hope you will print the
enclosed piece.
JUSTA NURSE'S AIDE
Someone asked what I did !or a
living. I said, "I'm a nurse's aide
tn a nursing home." The person
made a sour!aceand sighed, "Oh

Sunoco Service Station
282 W. MAIN ST.
POMEIOY, OH.

E2 Uter Pepsi

•'

992·3CC4

•

The Daily Sentinel
'

Fill THE Bill

Page-6 .

Racine Church has ·program

JOEY DAWN HANING

Hahing birthday

"Christmas Through the Years' • was the theme of the annual
Children's Christmas program
presented at the Racine United
Methodist Church.
Rhonda Dalley was chairman
of the program assisted by Ruth
Sterns, Vickie Hill, Teresa Wll·
son, Donna Sayre, and Lois Bell.
About 35 children partllcated.
There were recitations by the
children, many giving the same
pieces their parents had given
years before. They sang songs
about the birth of Jesus and the
Journey to Bethlehem. and there
were readings by adults.

celebr~ted

A skit was presented by -the
primary and Intermediate child·
ren entitled "Who Stole the
Christ from Christmas." Some
secular songs, a saxophOne
number by Shawn Dally, and a
candlelightlng c~remony with
!Jots Bell as the narrater, were
Included, with Donna Sayre.
Sharon Hubbard, Evelyn Grady,
Beth Theiss, and Brenda Ander·
son as angels.
A social hour was held in the
church basement with Mrs. Hubbard and Margie West In charge.
Santa made a visit and ·gave
treats to each or the children.

• The

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.Mason-Gallia-Melgs Crusade for
Christ will hold~rvlces Monday
through Sunda:,: Jan. 15, 7 p.m.
the Church of
each evening,
Christ in Christian Union, Main
St., Point Pleasant, W.Va. Special singing and speakers. Eve·
ryone welcome.
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladles
Auxiliary will meet Monday. 7
p.m., at the post home on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, will have a regular
meeting, Tuesday. 7:.30 p.m. All
masons urged to attend. Refresh·
ments will be served.
EAST MEIGS- The Eastern
Local Band Boosters will meet
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the high
school. Plans for the spring trip
will be discussed at this time.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (UP!) John Jenrette, the former South
Carolina congressman who took
a bribe In the FBI's Abscam
operation, says the shoplifting
charge against him Is a " sUiy,
sUiy mistake." On Dec. 7, Je·
nrette, who now lives In Myrtle
Beach, S.C., was charged In the
Washington. D.C. , suburb ol
Baileys Crossroads, Va., with
taking a pair of rubber shoes
from a discount store.
His lawyer, Warren McLal,n,
The regular

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce will
hold Its monthly meeting on
Tuesday, at 12 noon , at the
Pomeroy Trinity Church. Guest
speaker wlll be Dennis Mlngyar,
assistant director ·to the Gover·
nor's Appalachia Program for
Southeastern Ohio. All members
are urged to attend.

out,lide Meigs, Gallia or Mason countiaA mu st be pte·
• .,,,.;.". S.50 ,.,.s~ourtt f or •rt~ P!'i d In 11d'l~nc6. .
a d~

- Gtwuway and Fou.ll!:lad!! tJ:'Ii.!l!! 15 words wm be
tun 3 d ~ s at no ch •yo.
•Price of ad ktr eH cepitll letters ;, d ou~e pt" !ce of ad cost
•? point tine ty pe only uted .
•sentinel it nol re!I POnotibl e fnr errors 1iter fint dav. CCI"I &amp;ck
for errora first diV ad runt iu paper) . Call b efrue 2 :0 0 p .m .
dav aftM publi clll ion to m ak e e o rrf! tt iOil .
.. Ads that m\llsf hfl ptid in adv11n ce are
Card of Th an h»

RUTLAND -

REPLACEMENT CONTACT LEN.S SERVICE

Contact Lens
Replacem.ents

Refill your

CONTACT
LENS

Save 35o/o to 65%

Prescription
Jhru Our _Pharmacy

The Onty Dm.tn.ce Is

.

··

The Price

I

__
-

.,_

• Elbsda •

• 0 ail
.,.air

f ftrll

• A l l _ ...

::=:t"
-110.000
.......
..-=

and

...

• QurlaUUUJfll

•

SAVE
UP TO 65.%

Just Phone 992-6669-2 Day Service

PRESCRIPTION S
992~6669
·271 NOnH SECOND

.DDUP~IT, . 01110

o-15
1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
tO DAYS
1 MONTH

w o~ o s

. $4 00
$5 .00
$8 .00

18-25 W OROS

10-7-lfn

$t 3.00
$33.00

Rates•re t or c on ~e ~tiYe runs,
f nr ur.h riMI as ~ep r.iat e a d ~.

~Jtfl

1 - Ca.rd uf

H~ an k$

3 - Annoucem en ts
4-- Giveaway
5- Happy Ads
5- Loat an d Found

PAT HILL FORD

&amp;G· · ol!~ !

'i'S -Fr ~o~; ~•

Services-

TUESDAY PAPEA

·· 11 :0U A M SAllJADA r
·· 2 :0 0P.M MONDAY

WEDNES DAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPE:R
f ~ IDAY PAPfR
SU N DAY PAP t: R

- 2 :0 0 P M . V\IE ON ESO AY
- 1 ·0u P ~ 1 Hlh'tSiJ A·-·
- 2. .00 P.r.i. I·IHOA 'r

- 2 '00 • .M . YiJESDAY

. Clu s.~ified p ages co l'ef .t he
following releph o nc f!Xi' h an.ges ...
G•lli e Cou rrty
Area Co de 6 14

Meigs Co unry

Aru C{ld e 61 4

tlila&amp;?n Co. , WV
-'vee ('ode 304

446- G•IIipol is
367 ~ Ch01hlre

992-- Middl eport

tl75 - ·t't. Phtasa••'-

388 -~ V inton

985- Ches ter
843- Pon..nd

Pon) er(J'I'

247

379- Walnut

War.t.!td

~ '"J. !ro~ m oOl ot C(;
I ' ·- &amp; llli ll ~h1 Tt.(J;M ing

15- Schools &amp; ln!l't&gt;&lt;'\ k·n
16- Rad io, TV &amp; C g P 9Jl air
"t 7-- ~I I CP!Ito fl fl0\.ll

16· ·\1\",e.t Ad r11o._,

.

2 "' · But01'1 es• Opportv.:'a•.v
2 2 --Mo'1 ey r.t) lo an
23- F•Muufo nal Set v ~c~

Real Estate

8~2

Pay You r Phone
•. and Cable Bills Here
,...., - IUSIII!SS PHOrll
1"41 ,2:6S.IO

7 1- Aut os 1or SIIII A

74- Motor cyr.laa
7 5 - Boats !It Mo10l$ f o r Sale

H~)., ttl hY1i)1 0'1810 W 1fls

·b tra Speeial io Middleport

MIDOLEPORT-GOOD CONDITION - Otderhomew«h•
nice block garage and work· .
shop in good rondit iw.
PRICED 10 SEll AT
$19,900.00.
POMEROY - A bPauliful
modern k~ch en romph
ments this 3 bedroom home
Full basement, newer l!ar~.
deck, lots of cloSt1 space
Nrce woodwork' PRIC[ RE·
DUCED. $41,900.00
RUTIAN0 - 1\istoryhome I
m·town. Buy house'and lot
lor $24.000.00 ol house and
17 acres fot $31 ,900.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Jl,
story frame home w~H J
bedrooms, bath, I car g31
age silting on a mce Jou bl ~
lot. ONLY $17,900.00.

MIDDlEPORT'- Hete is a
cute little lbg house with a
cule little p1 ice. Up to 1 betltooms1..wrth a beautrtul 1 iv~r
view. nANT $17.900.00.
Henry E. Cleland
992-6191
Jt.. Trnsell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Tu•n• .....992·5692
Jo H111 .......... .... 98S·4466
Olfict.............,.. 992·2259
IIEW LISTIIIGS IIUD£0 -:We ••• IN,.rs lor lltiel
Coullly Property. list wit~
11 far b•t ltllll&amp;.

1

'

Ma"Qll J

f.:Jl~ etJtliA ~.If 1hft 8J f 8 18 ljf ~
M~ ry B. Ni1:holfl:. d m:ellstnf,
le-:: a ~f Rc&gt;u..e # l • 8olrl 1 ;l
R -...itla~,,i ,

-Mt ~ga COUI"Il~·.

\) hto 4 6775.

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

Middleport, Ohio .
'992-6611

Ill Wtst Stc. Pomoroy

992 ·6720

J&amp;L

.LASHLEY
SERVICE

[his rearry is an extra special property.ll's "" 186il ~,·;&lt;~~in extellenf cu old~ion. The 5 rooms clownslairs iot;lude livingroom.
large ta•nily room, krtcheo. rlinctle. \1! balh, dOd kids' pia·, room
which could be a form~i rlilrlng room. li t-~•y cr ~~w nsfait s
bedr0001 Upsla11s th e~e are 2 ro ode'" ~Jir; ;nd 4 be~rcoms
wrh amss loa large ptivate porch. Thr entire horne is _i1 rvro
(OildftMJ! I W~h new l'liiiOg th roogho"~ 11100e111 pi!IIO!Jiilg &gt;t:d
heal in~ central air, hardwood Hnor! ptellvst11rway. •n d l;oot
eo•lrafla&gt; Antique II !!Ills and unu:.ual aill•i"" cemmi ccaslings
ti at io fh~ck to civil war period. Be su re to notice the H r• la• ~e
1'.0 mer lccatmn wrth 1e111~ed '" play vu'd and i'{2'li d ~te\'1 rvei 41Zed t t ol gJtG_~t'. Ma1'~t th F..re ;:; c,(:f,lethmg bdJ&lt;:!I. 1n l\~ ld,JI'1f'Oii. ll 1here ~ ! is not on the market We pnt ed ilal ~59 . ~0 0.
lou IGok and tell us what yoo'U give.
nlG8

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
3644

qn 'Z48 at

Roofin g

Seamless Gutter

4UTO &amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BOD Y &amp;
WR ECK REPAIR ..

l ns ul ~tio ~

Storm Doors &amp; ·
Windows

985-3844

Fr911 Estimates
Call 992· 2772

4 0 YRS . EXPERIENC E

1111/ Ho

'

GEN~RAL

' _,
COMMFRCI AL
tLu ~roM KIH..HENS 6 BAtHS
,.·.,· r;~f~~~~ ~3~~~~gfN°

•Washers •D ryers

•R anges •Fraezers
• Refrigerators
"Must lo Rtpairdlle"

We S e rvice All Makes
112V88/ Un

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

AcmssHoppyHollowRolid

· Middleport, Ohio
1·28·'88·tfn

INSULArtON

No w Homlt Built
. "Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY (AilS ·

3-11-tfn

:i:":'·:·:··:::

firW!If!lt~!f·fin'ttfyl!lli!fJ..

SYRACUS£, OHIO
Most foreign and

CLOWNS
Collactors of
Emmitt Kelly Jr.
LIMITED EDinON

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

.

50°/o
.TO 75°/o

SAVE

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
·,

POCKET·

Certifiad Licensed Shop

·

5-25-tfn

Anyone letnlng the ac:ddent on
Eut•n Ave. In front of R.IUI: .Dn

11-10-88. Pie•• can Atta.
114-4411-4780.
• •

PH. 1-992-6822
12· 11 -88- t mo.

pro~ dellverlflll. EliC-tJ ior S1111t

Vlu-Meii•CW"d. US Ctter ge
Gwrtnt.-d rega-clea of Credtt
Rotlng. Coil nowl 21 :1-9 289908 ext. U 11485.

Ron• Chhnnev SwiiP Special
thru Jmuary. 304- n:J.&amp;348.•
No Hundng or Tr•p--=:~~n
my property loctted Cl
in

Diltrl&lt;t. Did Colhoun Propoff Crab CrMk Aotd. Signed:
Jaoquellne Darien• T_..n•. VIO-,
l aton~ wltl be PI'Oieout•.

4

.·.

Giveaway

3 Auatrl•' Colli111 10 gtlte .we~ .

Coli 6t4-4411-341l4 bolore 5
PM. 448·4019 otter B PM.
3 yr. old f~m•le Hutky.
614-4411-8087.

bt-

&lt;jv--.,.

TRI·COUNTY ·
EVERY SUNDAY
RECYCLING
1:00 P.M.
OPEN 7 DAYS
RACINE
GUN ClUB

9AM-7PM

.. Paying today
(Subject to Change
Without Notice I

#l COPPER .... 83(Jb.
CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS - ........ 40c lb.
CLEAN ALUMNUM
CAST ............ 35 1 lb.
ALUMINUM
CANS ........... 42 1 lb.

. 992-5114

RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
• ONLY
, .9·19-88 tfn

Oogt : Mixed, St,' lern•d " li
Norwolg., Ellhoundo. lnd $t.
B•foll'd·AIMkan M81mute, .to
304-182· 2!19. ·

!JN •ow-.,.
e whttetlerm~n Shephltd--;;e
Englilh ""'"'• puppiOJ. 3048711-ft20.

Small type dog pr.t• homewhtt

chlldr.,, p8rt Chlhulhu1 lAd

~d. ·

..

6 lost and Found
LOST: White Hound Do;.'
Own•'• nlme Dn ooll•.
If ...n ,. . . . Cell 8144411-8005.

v.Y

mv.

1989 Southern Hlth Sc:l1ool
ct••
ring • Raclneltundrlm.t ~
Jo Anf'l wrinen lntlde. Cell •
814-843-5227.

8

Public Sale
l!o Auction

•a.6a w: BUY
4,._
•

NOW
PAY
,LATER

Willi Cub Cadet firlonclng
10% Down
With Approul Cr..t
No Pay,_t or lnt•llt

'Til lulr 1, 1989

Located Off Bypass
At Jet . of Rts. 7 8o

D. J.'S TRADING POSt

143. Pomeroy, Oh .

MIDDLIPOITDIIO

12-11 -81-1 mo.

..

Smol. 3 manti! old ftmelll
puppy. Mlxod brood. Col tn4.
982· 22!0 oft• 8:00.
. •

Cock•. female 1'h ye11rs

GUN SHOOT

citu.

l mol• rnbood
1 fomol•
Chlhu•hue.1 t.mllehouncf811"t o
Coli 814-2811-1814.

304-773-11018.

. Dec. 12, 1988

•

Worke. Inc. Pomarov, Ohla.
814-992· 3891.

! : = =9
: ':2:
0·:' d: ..

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

•

319 So. 2nd Ave.

Ph. 614· 742·2355

·--.

3 Announcements

992-6282

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

IUIIrf II., SUlCUli

Anrwun cnnu:c; Is

We wil hlul coellor emwgen of
HEAP : Molfll Count; Dopt. of
Humtr1: 1.-vioa. and HE AP
vouchers. Wt. can gl\oe VQ\•

AND

22 Ammo
Rt . 124 Eatt of Rutland

"SUBTRACT' THOSE
GATHERING DUst
lDD'' DOLLARS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

HILLSIDE MUilLE
LOADING

rHW:'"JiNtl do Af"Y. rl'lOJt..C't s
5lV(.F 19M

•

•

DEAD OR AUVE

•ALUMINUM S iOINli
•BLOWN IN

Ma,.nleloading Supplirf
PAodetn Gun 5upplilf
GuM - Ammo· Slugs

&gt;Sf'TEN,tV E Rt~YIODF.I..INO

.!

WANTED

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

CONTRACTORS
RFSIOENTIAI

'•.

1 - 3 ~ ' 86 - tf c

• VINYl. SIDI NG

OWNEit: G~!() B. ROU!If

THAN A I
GARAGE,.FUL
992-7611
OF STUFF I'-----1
~~~-2~1-;!8£.8.!: ""::.~·

.

E••l!mtftl
StiH &amp; Smlet

I·S-'89-1 mo.

! --; U-SH....:.:.:;.::.:I
CONSTRUCTION
t:!',

Chester

WELDING

Replace ment Windows

Blown

St. Rt: 1

1 Mi. East of

Vinyl Siding

C~e rf.

Is BETTER

12-5-88· I mo.

Mastic &amp; Ceitainleed'

E, Bu• ~~ .
Pmt;at e J udge

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

AIID

INSULATION ,

Rob~rt

Len3 1\. . tl urselh?ad
(1) 9, II•. 23 3!c

TOP Of THE STAIRS

3·J0.'87 1fn ·

Bernice Honaket , 900 lr. -

I

~., .,

• GIFT

VALLEY LUM.ER
&amp; SUPPLY

Ohio. 43 302 wae. a ppoint(4U ·

POMEROY , OH.
992·2259
MIODLEPORl - A nice
14x65 mobile hfi mein beau·
tilul t ondrlloo. New if ont
deck and screeued rear
porch. New carpet- vinyl,
paneling and ceiling laos.
Storage bUildmg and tham
link fen ced yard. Nolhlng to
do but move in. OWNER
WANTS OfFER' $26,500.00.

.4

Court, Case No . 26 1 18 1

di.,na Avenue

Bush Hog fa1 m
Equpmenl Dealer.

CEitTIIICAIES

Jacobsen

N01 1CE OF
APPOINTMEN T OF
FIDU CIAR Y
On January 3, .1989. in
the Meigt County Probttte

.

t;,fAT PRIUS

Homelita

Public N"otice

608

NEW LISTING - 6.098eau·
tiful count ry acies close to
lown. 3 bedroom mobrle
home. small bat n. and hook·
ups for 2nd molllle home.
WANTS $21.900 00

'f ecum seh

Wenl'i f•ter

Real Estate General

~i

HAIR ITYUNG &amp; UNNI"G
GR£AT CHR~TMA} GIFT&gt;

Bfiggs 8t Stratton

ft6 - M obile Home Repai r
81 - Uphol•terv

~ '

' Deara, New fi olland .

l ~T IS l

l rarh

GOODIES
Get Your
Holiday Goodii
Orders In N'ow.
AUNT TE'S
992-5119 •
TERRI
POWELL
·
.,
12·6-'18-1 mo.·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

JR. &amp; MISIY
JASIIONS. I

Aut hori1.1Mi S.ni'e

8 4 -- Eiectr i(:\'11 &amp; ~pfugtjfHlt Ofl
86 Gfln f!llll Hau1.119

- ..-.

lao or Pauloy Bowland
209 South 4th St.
Middlepoft, Oh.
" LOW INCOMl HOMl"

SMALL ENGINE
REPAI R

HOME BAKED

BOGGS

12·2 1-1 mo.

ServiGes

Get Results fast

1 2· 1 t -tfn

Lie. #005·32

U. S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSYilE, OHIO
614·662 -382 1
Aut11orizad Jo~n

Cl92-lo873

PHONE

- Nfl"b lL\relo

81 -

with c oupon and purchae ot min ...
limit 1 taupon per customer per

bingo session.
WE PAY $50.00 PER GAME
OVER 110 PEOPLE ' 65.00 PER GAME

2&amp; Yn . Exp.
Referancea.

We Carry Fi•hing Suppli •

72 ··Trucks for Sl!l fl
'13 -Vans &amp; 4 WO s

9 3'1- Bu-N.:tio

2 H.D . FREE

li .C . Package.

T .LC.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

llfht1!1JDAIUJ.j

82 - Ptumbing &amp; He at in!j
83 - F..u :.a\lat lng

E.M.m

Good Rates

Middleport, Ohio 45760

6 8 ~1 - Co olv iil e

.

Room &amp; loord For
Senior Citinm und
Hantlirapped

Now lo&lt;ation:
168 North S.&lt;ond

L.S5 - letar1

- ·- -----·· --

PER LOAD

ELIM HOME

76 - At.I O Parts 81 Acc:EI$ $\lr l ~
7 7--Aut o Repair
7B-·CBf"•1PillY Equipm ent
79 - CIHi"'Jl l'll"ll &amp; Mo hu Homes

A!) R--leon

224 E. MAIN ST. - 992·9976
THURS. E.B, 6:4S P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:4S P.M;
OOOR PRIZE

DELIVER ~D

992-2269

L

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB

$3 s

BILL SlACK

..

BINGO

C HERRY .

LIGHT HAULING DONE -

II
I

I-ll

OAK. LOCUST,

8·1·'88· tffl

6 1- f"arm E.quipmen t
6:l Wao1 teJ co Uuy
6 J --Uveatocl.
64 - H av !1. Grflin
.65 - Saltd &amp; Ferhh.t or

Ftnancia1

!i"ffi , . Aople Gfove
173- Mat ntt

- Lttta~t f ;Jo'-;-;

949 - Mednot
742 - Rurlan d

643--A•i.bi a Ot!lt.

1 ..!' - ~!lt•ll•ion

i3

2- 1 lr-'88-.-n

992 -2196
Middle port.

.Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

. \ 1 - Help W•nted

OAV ft F F=OA ~ PUBLIC""'TION.

to, 'i11ll"

fmployment ·

polis Deily Tt lbllne, reaching O\l"i! l' 18,000 homn

'FIREWOOD

S. V• \llltables
!..9- Fc. r Sale (Jt l redc

55 -- Building Supphos

1- Yard Sale (paid i1' a:Jvanee)
6 - Publl ( S al e ~ A ~.:ctlu n
;t ·- ~II:MOO w Buy

RADIAT
SERVICE

.

I: (614) 446 -7619 or (614) 992·2104
3 4l 7 Second Ave11ue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Me morial Hospital
~ul berry Hgts, Pomeroy. Ohio

614· 742·2617
Betwioen 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
· or leanMK•-

s ·/- MvMw..l knflh.il l1at~ h

53 - A nttquet
5 4 -Mi ::~c Nl ercharodiso

z

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: licensed Clinical Audiologist

TO IUYWRlCKtD 01

Pami!oy, Ohio
.
ll-14-' BB-tln

We con repair and re ·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and [ Od
out r.adiators. We also
repair Gos Tanks.

Merchandise
51 - HousefHII d Goori5
6 2- Sp(l•llng Goodt:

2- l n Memorv

wilt 11lso appear ifl the Pt . Pl ell:fittj·.\ t{eg; lt.•• bNi Jt. ;; c ..:::

COPY D EAD liNE
MON DAY PAPI! A

be cPlarl)ed

Devices
De pendab le Hearing Aitl Sales &amp; Sen1lc.l
(!) llearing Evaluations For All AJes

-IRI£ ISIIMATlS for any ofth.. uonicos call

992-6215

.

, , ·16· '88· tfh

l

JUHA URS 01 !lUCKS

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1i 2t;; 00
$ 60 0 0

broken upd~sw ill

An!1ouncen\'eJ)ts

.

G£NERAI. CONTRACTORS
References

•Do.zer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•WrecXIItf Service
•Juhk Yard Bu11in•s

- Roofi ng and g~.~ite r wwk
- CtlnCJ t te work
- Ph•mbing and &amp;lect: rical
w or k

$/.00
$1 0.00
$1 5 ()0

.$6.00
$6.00
$13 .00
$ 21 .0 0
$5 1.00

985 -4141

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

I -Addon~!.~~~!d~ing
I

26 -·.:.n; WORD S

•ROOFING
• REMODELING 8o REPAIRS
PHON£ DAY OR EVENINGS

Factory ChOke

Stric tly Enforced

.

• HOME BUI LDING
•RO OM ADDiTIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS

12 Gauge Shotguns Only

CARPENTER

l

CHESTER, OHIO

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

YOUNG'S
I

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Basham Building

"At Reasonable Pricu"

RATES

• A elass;tif!Ct advf'lt'iHI1' fW'Jt pl.ik•&amp;d •n T h~t D;,lty Se,1 \ i'1~i ~ ~ ·
c: ept ~·· clastifieJ li~ P.Jlifa-¥ 8t.JII;n.fl!i' C&lt;Kd tud hJS.tl 11H t ~c!O~I

POMEROY -- Old"' 2 story
home, gorgeous woodwork,
fitepiace, nice kitchen cabi·
nets. .3 bdrms.. equipped
kitchen. central arr, garage
and storage. $39,900.00.

11111111

Hopp-.• A.d s
Yl!fd S 1tles

ln.Mam oriem

'

says Jenrette tried on the shoes,
paid for a pair of pants and a
shirt, and walked out, forgetting
to pay for the shoes. ~enrette's
version of the Incident was that
he was trying on the shoes when
the store announced that lllegally
parked cars were being townd
away and he dashed out to check
on Ills car.
Jenrette also Is charged with
altering the price tags on the
shirt and pants and the matter
comes to trial Fe b. 1. ·

··-·~··"

Number 1 Marketplace
..

245- Rio Gran de
256 - Guyan Dl te

Ex-congreJJman's shoplifting trial slated

Area~$

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
·a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY -

Everyone welcome.

Counlywlde meeting
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Association of Township
Trustees and Clerks will meet
Friday, Jan. 13, 7 p.m., at the
Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy.
·
·

RACINE
FIRE DEPT•

I FR ~E ESTIM ATES !

Calendar ·

TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees will hold their
organlzatbnal meeting on Mon·
day, 7:30 p.m., at the home of
Dorothy Calaway, township
clerk.

.

CUSTOM BUILT
. HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Classifie

Personal note

HARRlSQNVILLE - A free
blood pressure clinic will be held
Tuesday,10 a.m. to 12 noon, at the
Harrisonville Town Hall. All
ages are welcome. Harrlsonv\lle
Senior Citizens will meet after
lunch.

GUN SHOOT

4·16-16-lfn

•

Modern Woodmen dinner
BURLINGHAM - Modern
Woodmen of·America Camp 7230
Is having a dinner, with a
business meeting to follow , on
Saturday, Jan. 14, 7:30 p.m. at
the Modern Woodmen Hall at
Burlingham. ·The camp will
furnish different ·kinds of soups
and crackers, and coffee, free of
charge~ Members are asked to
btlng a salad or' dessert. A
drawing will be held !or a family
door prize: Guests are welcome.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

CCL meeting held recently

monthly meeting of Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
be held Tuesday at 11 a .m·.

~====~===
' ~~~

PH. 949-2801 ·
or Res. 949-2860

Joey Dawn Haning
her first birthday recently with a
_
party given by her parents, Homemade Christmas orna· Morris.
Members
and
guests
attending
James and Robin Han tng.
ments were exchanged by th e
The cake was decorated by her members, along with gifts which besides those named wer e Angle
grandmother, Ann Barrett, In a had wrappings judged !or prizes Morris, Clarice Kennedy , Kitty
heart theme In pints and blue with at t)le annual Christmas dinner Darst, Becky Broderick, Tammatching napkins and other party of the Middleport Child mie Mash, Ann Colburn.
decorations. Attending· were her · Conservation League held at the Members played "Jingle Jln·
brother, James Haning, III, her Rock Springs United Methodist gle", a game played at the club's
party every year .for over 20
grandparents, James and Sue Church.
years.
Winners in the package judg·
Haning and Charles and Ann
Barrett, her great-grand · lng were Nancy Broderick, ·the
mother, Katherine Weaver, Jeff prettiest; Nancy Morris. the
and Becky Haning, Chris Han· most original; and Linda Broder·
Mr. and Mrs. Ches-ter Knight
lng, Charles Barrett, III, Jen· lck, the most unusual. Gifts were
niter and Lana Barrett, Faye exchanged and secret sisters have returned from Riverview.
Stelnmentz and Dougie Dill, revealed. New names were Fla. where they visited over the
Russ Haning and Be.thy, Rusty drawn.
, . holidays with their son, Dick and
and Amber' Haning, and Mildred
Plans were completed lor gifts · his family . A highlight of their
Fowler.
for a needy child and a family for trip was a two day cruise on the
Sending gifts were her grand· Christmas. Peggy Harris read Knight 's 36 foot, two bedroom;
mother, Margie Haning, ·Dave some correspondence, and yacht. Prior to going to Florida,
Beaunot, Mike Haning. Kim Nancy Morris was installed as Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight
Stewart, and her great· vice president. Linda Broderick visited In Caledonia with their
grandfather, Donald Weaver, assumed the office of.presldent. other son, Terry, his wile, Sherry
•
and Annie Quivey.
Devotions were given by Mrs. and son, S!eve.

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern ·Local
OAPSE Chapter 453 will ml\l!t
Monday, 7 p.m., at the high
school.

Business Servic~s

·1

ClAC~IFIED AD~

Monday, January 9, 1989

The Daily. Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

614-992-7301

1~·2''11-1 ....

9

Wanted To Buy .•

Wll .... .. .., ...... onythkigl '

. AntiqlMI, furnlture.~IPIIIf'lon.
Mtl't•, eutot. oom
1 hom.
furnish ing~ . Mlrlln

814-2411-5152.

demar•

••

mr.· ...

W•tod To Buy 280.1100 'lol
k. Coli _014-"'f';

.. ..

'

�-

·- ---~----·------

-···- -·--· ...

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel
9

..

~·

·•

•

....

Monday, January 9, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
44

Wanted To ,Buy

51 Household Goods

Apartment

't or Rent

TOP CAl H plld to. '83 model
.nd n_.,• uatd
Smtth

'72

KIT N' CARLYLE®

Tn1e:k1

fOr Sale

'

j

•
f

c••·

luidi:·Pontl.:. 1111 E811tem

Comp•• houMho. . Of tlrn~
lure • M1iqull. Atlo wdod •
coli tw.t... lwa6n•1 Fwnlture
I Auction. Third I Olivo.
114--31U

c...

Junk

with .. without

mot .... 0.11 lAony Uv"'· l1431a.ll303.

•

AcfuMo ...... PorlciO~ Col
814-448-0338. .

City.
~

l,,j')

·;&gt;:-:~, .;·'•
&lt;-__\' ·--)
'\ \

1; f

•

-

.F.......,,. .,d oppllon- bv the
oloeo 0&lt; ..,.,.. hou-hl. Folr
bolng ....... Coli 114-44831 . ..

·~r 1·-;~ }.

. .

l }c_\1 - , . \

w.nt..t to Buv·Goad L!eed Pool

Tofllo. Coli 114-448-17&amp;1. ·
Uted fumhure by b

114-742-2488.

~ , II!

~erv1cus

11

hunum New Year's

Phyolcl.,'o Dltlce Loboootory.

~~ '"Jr'.:'..'!,!:'•..,~cl.::!
- 1::»4:30.
VISA/MASTERCARD
USCHNIGEGUARANTEED
Aeo•._. ofCrdl: A.tlng. C.l
N-1 213-821-91108. ••- U·
2124.

FEDERid.. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICEJOII.
NOW HIRING. Your •r••·

013,11410 to 089,410. IMME·
OIATE Op.,lngo. CAI.L 1-315733-1012 bt f 2751.
Ott peld for r..aing bookll
•100 P• tlda Write: PASE-

33A, 111 8. Llnoolwoy. N .
.......o,ILI0842.
l••llt• In Rio Gnnd.. chool

....,ld. Coli 114-245-M21 olw5PM.

MANAGEMENT POSITIONS
It '/OU .,. . . . iftg .I Clf. . 81'1d
not jult a )ob. .. d H' Yrlf ere
wlltng to put your
to
worll. we would be lnt:lrtlttd Jn
t1Hdng with you. We ott. :

•.m•

IX~Int PI¥

ecal&amp; .. 15 Mon.·
FrL . ......... •
, • . , _ , P&lt;+W••· To quollf\l
for .. tltwvllw, ~· Cllll
814-448-3373. Moncllr tlwu

-rv

9 AM-I PM

.. d •k fDr Mr. Joe Kr*

NURSES

vo•

H h.,lng ..tllfaion ~ c.ing
for tM tldlrtL' OM of your
In llfto - l c Hllo Nursing
~ looking for ~ .......
ty~ of lndfvktJ... We off•
· oc:mpetl~• 111'11111• Md«cell«rt

c....

ot - l c HDio
838 IL&lt;Iorldgo

Rd., Oollpollt.

HAIISTVUST
- - - t . r for Holr Hopp-gSty..,lolon. Pl . . ecolt
lor """"'""' 14-448-3383.
Holp Wontod
Nnd 8 good - • ' •

No •perienoe

n~.

Mult

lmmedl••

.,.a.we for

be
~
pkprfMnt. Hours: 1 to 10 PM.

•1200• mo. Cell forlnttrYIM'.

114-4411-7411.

AVON. l.e•n whle YOU . . nt

F,.. tr•lnt l'*'renee .....

tie. F._M• haun. R.w•d md
reoognlllon far ..._ eucc•..
Wlnt to know more? Clll Avon
0 - M.,_ ot 114-89a.
7111.
Clot pold lor r - o ' bookol
tiOO. P• tlllo Wrlto: PASE31A, 111 S. Llnoolnwoy, N .
Auroro. IL 80M2.

Oonm-Joloele11,037. 10
•e9,401. lmmedl•• Hlrlngl
Your • • Coli (Rolo-ol
1-11a.-3111 Ext. F1122
lor F-ot Llot 24 Hours.
AVON · AI • - · c• Morllyn
w.... 304-892-28411.

Qtt C*d far

,_..0

bookll

010000 . . tllle. -ooPASE117A, 111 S.
N.
Auroro. II 10M2.

Lin"""''""''

M.UDR NAT'LMULn-UNE IN·
SURANCECO .
-Ina moturo. IIOar-•lndlvtdJ II to milt. Hom•Auto-Ltf•
Heolth ...... 2 trolnlng
- - -Ina POVO•" ..,,
....... plrg. 125- .311. 000.00
tnt yell' aiiiiY aomm •pen~•

..ow.n-. EJCIII..t opprortult-

lty "" ....... ood lifo .. d
.-aplrty ....,...., . .enta. wtth

proven tredl ,_,..._ Phone
304-~2-3309.

lot'• .....

COOK

..,_.,. Voltw Hoopltot ~ - Ina • onon with oooklna
......... APPI¥ - n o l of-

flee.

-,._

.M -EOE
DhCOor of Phyolcol Tlloropy
221 bod'-otore
M-longt.-m c.•
. E~~:IIIIJY . . d
~Outo_
...dlnll..,__
Contoel

,...Ina

°

.In:.-:

::::.:;-.:.

',:'.C:..!"'J

----nat&amp;

··--wlth

•n.

..........low-..

1--------

a.

-

--on w,_ ...,. ........
AI-

a-...

,.._.,.c.,

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

..,•.c•

F11ranc1"1

Ch...,...

._...........

-ori·

J!-•

,_..,.._clio

_..

......

•eoo

-ori·

lh••

fl-.

'"Ina

•-•o. "* a•- 1.... .

a.m

-.... u••• -·

.,,MOl.

........

_,«

Him•

Pl., ..

-cl
:0.:'

IMI'•

g,::.•*·=';.:

'80 CJI Jotp. •• ooncl 304- .
175-2311.
•

........... , ...... v..,.,

Hoo..ol. PoiortPro.ont. W.
v • . 2&amp;510. 304-8711-4340.

P..,.,.

M-EOE.

l'odoriil. $tole "'d clwA IIIVIoo
jobe. NDW JWolno Your • •
t13.&amp;10 to tll,410. lmm•
..... _ . . ... Col 1· 3111-7338012 at No. F2931A.
Atttnlion Woftlln _.d M•.
Sol•c-...,.,d
__
ment T"*'• .......,,. ~~~tlllble
With ftllliof\11 oorp. a.Hpirf •d

.........liN\ .. ,.,.. . .d ....
n.tlta. M•IM*•totrwel.

tttom• - 0111:..Mr.
clio H"""'·
For
int_......,.,
.... office
Mon~Thun

1 :00 A.M.·7:00
P.M .. At 1-IQ0.543-8940 or
I ·100-543-AZI. (lot• .... ·
' ,..,.........,..,, but not
.-,1. " - • ell on CM before
lhorodor. J,......, 121" 1988.
Aloe&gt; coli F~dlr " " ' - 9~0
AM•d4:00PM .

n.,....

Situations
Wanted

. . . for ...., """' In ~
-ea.
114-441-A N-lmolololtl lad¥ to lvo In
wllh Chrtot... ildorl¥ """'· Co~
114-448-2137.

-........................_

-oo-.

.31.--

Ftoo_._, ......
m- to"'J:;.-&amp;IUtA
1812. 14o70 ..... 2
- - 2 f u l b o l l a _..

"'· ~~-~ .. ..d
· - 2out lufcln.., 11!1
- • ln ""lind . ..._ Col
114-384--"" lob or 114ltil-27. . for Ewlyn. ,.,... to

BUDGET TRANSMISSION -

. - --··t-

....

Very nloo opt. In olty. 2 ••

pr........ pr•-. • throw out
bt•lne - - - 1 2 mot. eve
Jolnto-ol typow. Col 114-37a.

- . - - _______

..._

. _ -- ____ __

'.
--:-

.....

._

...........

I

0

every_
one nuts.

01 1811J Klllo Allie Allie
disturbed to see lhal Bob's

e

\i1 mncltionlll llfttlmt guer...
L.ocel rlf•enCII ltr. .Mcl.
Fr• . . lrMt•. r.n aolec:l

Movlt

1-114-237-0488. d" or night.
Roo•r•B•••ment

CJ •IIJ Murphy llrllwn

'17 VW fort OL. 4 - · olr.
..,..em
_ . . . •o. oond.

_Murphy llnds she ·s tho only
one nof Invited to the
Inaugural Ball. C
11J Larry King f.Wtl
fl) T,.ppor John, M.D.
Prtmt Tlma w..aMing
8:30 (!I Colltgt llaketbll
01 •IIJ llelignklg Women
Bomlce treats the ladies to a
three-dawo survival course in
the woods. 1;1
Ql VldtoCounlry
10:00 (}) 700 Club
()) TBA
01 ltiiJ Almoa1 Grown
Norman and Joey's
masculinity Ia assau~ad .
Ill liD lllrrtey Mllllor
iiJl Evening Naw1
IBl Ntwa
Ql Crook and Chait .
10:20 (!) MOVIE: Slltnt Running !GI

w.....-.

SWEEPER end a .wing m.::hine
rtplllr. p.-ta. M'ld tupplf•. Pidt
up end diNwery, DIYII Veauum

- I 'M CAL.L..IN~

SCW.E60DY

IT "TI-lE L.A5T

Clean •· on• helf mHt u'/
Ooor1101 C - Ad. Col 11
44&amp;029"

o

5HUTTH IS

THIN6-0:F!

nMe= I6AW
PARROTS.'

~I
I'

RON ' I T•lwislon lervlce.

Houe• cllt on RCA. Quu:•r.
GE . Scooelolln' In loniiL Col
304-1,11-239 .. 114-44824114.

I

I

=r..,-,-::T,-oo'-:11:-:rlni-:....,~.-....
-..,:
.. Coll304-57f.1331 .

Aotrt or coblo tool *ltlna
- - conopl•.roomet~w.
Pump al• ond -1oo. 30489&amp;3102

(1 :29)

11:08 (}) Ranllngton Slloolo
• (I) ()) l1l • (J) 01

Cor. Fourth •It Piuue
Gtlllpoh. Ohio

Alone 1.1... ~3881 or 81444.4477

Bernice Bade Osol

Electrical

COlr
'Birthday

&amp; Rafrigeration

General HauHng ' . ·

II Wll• ...,.._ " -

oillt.,., welt•. lmmedlat•

1,000 or 2.000 IIOio.. dollvory.
Coli 304-1711-5370.
.

304-171-4112 Ill• I a7a.
1114.

Upholat.-y

--··

••

iicipate in a brid(ll!-tips competition
SOUTH
that was open tO selected journallsts
+A 10
and sponsored by Bois Royal Distill-.
.KQ
erles. The competition bas been held
tAKJIOJ
several timet since then, with differ+K70
eat columnists and writers invited to
Vulnerable: Neither
participate. Although these "tips" can .
Dealer: South
be esoteric,, this week we'll look at
those from 1988 that have practical Weool
Norllo Eut
Soollo
value for any playef.
2NT
Today's declarer ducked the first Pass
JNT
Pass
Pus
'!J)Ide trick hut bad to lake the contin· Pass
uation with his ace. Slnce be bad only
elpt top tricks, be went to du111my
Openln1lead: • 4
.....
with the ace of clubs aad led the jack
of hearts. He hoped that East mlpt
bold the ace of burls and decide to
play low. That hope wu laid to res! winning the &amp;f'l! of spades. West fol-..:.:
when West won the heart ace and rat· iowa to two rounds of the suit and dJa. •
tied off enough spades to set the con- canlli his two small hearts without ·,
tract. Here is the tip from Patrie• pain, but on the fifth diamond there. :
Jourdain, editor of the International will surely come a pl-. U be throw&amp; :
Bridge Press Auociation Bulletin, to a club, South can cub out four cl11b help in aueh situations: With eipt win· tricks. U be lell a spade 10. declarer ~
ners aad five losen In three no-tr11mp, ' can force out the ace of burll without
play off your long suit early,. .
fear. Even If the layout of the eardlla •
Look wbat bappemr wbell declarer- diUerent, playing out the wlnnen can
plays off. flv_e di8.Jnond tricks of~r do no harm and may do p-eat IOOCI-

..

-·

.,

ACROSS
I ~ wt•t • l
pnlaln

.f

:u lid•·

pnulud

1\;mln

!)

Prosak

4

.\rl il'ie•
of fitilh

IJ:I.I intl

•

.,

r; Mt•mHrahh•
pPrit ul
·
fj llaydn •; mt

H Hus...:.ia11
l'ih
IU l!o ;s. •r\'l•ol .

7

a.-.. a 1ahl• ·
· I I f'n111t

"'""'''

21

t\ lu·il':lll

.

'
10 Ti• '

2~1

up

....

( fa!l e·r)

au "l':ol .l .... i.
um·o•lisl
:11

loi ·

l';a,.

' 12 t.lnwn
""'
lfi.lapa1ws~ ·
dly

2:1 """'
E Ion""''
'!-'

16 t 'urwtoif

...
....

IA'OII

rt ·puhli1·
O JWUI
22
lll'lh
!t 1-:rlli!"ls; u \'

I :1 11.1·····
14 De• l,uis e•
('Hitll tnsi

..
...'"

u•'j:eio11
2 Milwauke·o·

7f)IIP Of

17 \'ue·al

·•

I t ':Uiadim•

t •~·nn : m

:1

...

UOWN

'•

Slrin~t&lt;'&lt;l ·
it lSI t1111ll' Ill

:12 llihlinol
\'e•rh

..

ri n •l
f hIll
t•nclii!J,t
24 \\' a nwd
I !I ( 'ruolc •
:17
I
i rl't'k
I
R
l'e•rshing
25
I
'
hal!&lt;'ll~e
'
20 Misn•llall)
ll'i
lc•r
nr
Pa
tton
,
27
s~
·
:u·y
21 llunl ••
:19
Mauua
· lnl
22 ( 'lassk
,.......nr--,T'\\'P~h·n1

'-.

tl!•r.: tl

27

.-

~·o·:ollu •r

....

llt't ' k\\'1':11'

2K

n..e·,,..,.

:W

wi i h

-·

won I ·
!Jti ( f amhlin~ ·

It liD ~~ Connecflon
iiJl Monafllne
11J Miami Vlca

:J81sradi

J!anw
.,.

st':tlu•rt
40 t' iiiiiS)'

.' •',

41 Adliu~
. 42 To lot• paid

.,

43 I 'hhii'SI'

~

'

paJtmla

DAILYCRYYI'OQUOTFS-Here'• how lo work It:

1!1

the:

PI•

•liD Ntwlv wad Qllma
iiJl 8porta Tontglll

• • Pat Bljllk Show
Ql Amorlcln Mlglzlne
12:00 (}) MOVIE: Mr. Hom, Part 1
(3:20)
.
()) Colllga Fa alii Ill William
&amp; Mary ve Japanese All
Stars !rom Tokyo, Japan (R)

1111 Plt=8how

•liD
Zona
iiJl NtwaNight

a:.c.

AX.x.DLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etr. Single letters,
apostrophes, the kmgth and fonnalion pf the words are all

- ..,

e~=ci
(J) E - - n l Tonliaht

hints. Each day the code letters are different.

V D V C P

.

Now

12:20 (!) Nltlonlll &lt;leogrlphlc
! ........
12:30. (I) fiJ) Lata Nlgll1 wt1ll
David LMIIIH IIWn
()) .11118110118

• ()) U8A l'odeJ
IBl MOVIE: The Aopllla 4NR)
(1:30)
IIJ ldgl ol Nlgllt •
1:00 (J) .• (J) Wtpuut
. .liD ~whldil

OASV

MVFGNWV

M X G B V'

v·v

,.

...

R

w

' C

G

l V__ F G T' J

V D V C P J l A T Z

K l

.,
•

JLV ZKDV&lt;:TBVTL-GTKTPB .KNW
Yn•• 'a,'•CaJFiaqaai••THEREAIN'TNO WAY
TO FIND ·our If A SNORER CAN HEAR HfUSFIF
· SNORE. -MARK 'TWAIN

•
'

T

..

••'
·"

CRYPT()QUOTES

8 G T

..

...,_

OIUSATjlday

I'ISCEI (Feb. 20 Morell 20) Campan- LEO (.1111)&lt; 23-AIIfl. 12) Your mala, u
lona may lose patience wllh you loday II '· well • other members of your family,
you fall to bring Into the open acme- may have 10 be han&lt;llld wllh IIXIrl IIC1
Jan. I, 111111
thing !hal IS dlaturblng you. Undeflned today. Jf your behavior lllnconoklerate,
_
problems-.... be reooM!d.
· rumblalln your h - .,. likely .
AcouraeyoumaychOOfl&amp;loryourselfln ARIES(--.:n-Aprii11)Beonguard VIRGO (Aug. ......... 121 Your colhe year aheed mlghl nof be an easy loday 10 tlti\ a friend who alwaya lllcea 1 workara will be a - by the type of
one, bul you will knew II a worth betler to stir lhlnga up daean'l drag you Into example you 881 today. II you're ncl ;
1han o111ers. Do n01 let those who are Ill· some !rouble. Don'l be thll per10n'olall : prepared to de your lair lhare, don'lexlnlormed discourage you.
guy.
peel C®l*lllon from !hem.
CAPRICORN (Oec.II-Jatl. 10) You are TAURU81Aprll 20-Mir 20) Usually you ' LIMA (lepl. 21-0cl. 21) Analyze your
somellrnes too g-ous lo !he wrong are nOI an lndec:IIMI person, bul loday , expendltureo II lhla ttme IO II you
people lor the wrong .......,, Thera Ia a you might lmpada your own prcgr- , .' can atarl eliminating some ol
slrong J)OIIIbiHiy 1111a may be one ol toecauae of your raluclanoe lo mUe ......,.. • ...,...._ !hal nickel and
thote days. Major changee are lhead -.,.,..
you 10 the bralltlng point. It can
lor Caprlccm In Che coming year. Sand QE. . . . (Milr 11....,.. IO)In order to , doiW.
,
lor your Astro..Grapll predlcllonotoday. expedite a llltuatlon today you mlghl •ICOR.''IO (DoL It Naw.l2) Tllll could
Mall S1 to AalrQ:-Grapll, c/o IIIIa dtlegattiiOIM reaponlllbiUiy 10 en lndl- ,tum out to be a .-y 4rullrlllng day lor
paper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH vidual who cannol be relied upon. To be · you If you make u~ demlndl•
44101-3428. Bo surelo atellyourJodl· on ' the sale llda, hlndle lhe crtl~ ol ~-Be 8l1lalled with doing
ac sign.
chorea yourtell.
- - y o u can.
.AOUARIUS (.............. 11) Bo oure CANCIR (.luM 21-.lulr :II) Try nOI to IAGITT~ (NIW. 21 Dao 21) To- ,
thai the
you ara slo IVIng 10 hard let your curloolty get the bell• ol you d8y dlll~og with 101o-1A you
for at lhle Hme are wor1h lhe ellorl you lodlly so !hal you poke your .,_ lnlo tl4sllke, do 1101 do MY1hlng out Of aplle
are expending. There's a chance you'll somelhlng Where you ara nol ~lcame. . or malice. Jf you try to up ., old
be dlaappolnled when lhe obtecllveo· ·: Jf lrlendo fhlnk you're too prying, lhey'll ...,., you',. lhe guy Who coulil 001111.
~re achieved.
clom up In your ~·. ,
out on the lhort end again.
t

'I

.......

25 1\lr·nimt 'ltl
26 llialo~lll'

IIIIIJ I!Jl N"'

Ql You Clll II a Star
11:300(1) I!J) Tonightlhow
(!I SportaC())Ch..,.
(D " " - Gama Look closely
at Congressmen and woman
as 111ay via for re-ek!c:llon. Q
II Cll Nlahtllnt 1;1

CNITER'B PWMIING
AND HEATING

..

C' Uclt'll« ' l'

\t:' Moy,,., World at ·

a. Heating

U5

. +JIO 8

:1:1 liu wn lit~
:)4 ( h:t&gt; rtlikt •
ar. l/ll's

® Colltgt Biaketblll
Ql ..... Country .

Plumbing

I

EAST'
+KI5
••• 762
+182
+Qt

( ~· h · \·~ · 1

10:30 lllllll Odd Couple

'.

..

H ·ll

tQH
+A652

Som~ years ago I was invited to par·

Is

anchO&lt;WOman is !lining with
him.
8:00 (I) 8l 'Twist of Fall,
l'llrt 2' NBC - I f Night It
the MovleoC
D ()) MOVIl': 'Prince of Bel
Air' ABC _ , Night

t•

.J

NORTH
+011
103

by JHOMAS JOSEPH

Mrs. Poole subslftutes lor
Sandy's secreta~ and drives

IAIEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ft •

UNSC RAMBLE ABOVE LETT ERS
TO GET AN SWER

CROSSWORD

Wrote

8:05 (I) MOVIE: Z.rdo1 (R, (1 :45)
1:30 D (}) 8l The Hogan Family

Home
Improvements

86

-·She

QINoelwlleNow

SerVICI!S

Mowr.,'o Uphofot"'"g """"'•
..
_...., . . . 23yon. ' " ' · ........... u ............ C.l
304·17&amp;· 4114 for froo

0111 114-742-3080.

fiJI PrtmeNawa

Ill Dlglt81 D4acovery

-b..,._

84-

I

+QJ70
· •.H4

IRH1 :53)
Pinto
114-

fO&lt;
1971 Pontloc
G...
Lo - ·· 0200. Coli
114-812-2331.

82

t

I

By Jame1 Jacoby

IJ.'Y[D'l,OVI!: 9 1/2 WHke

2220 ar 304-17a.I7M.

ff1

CA. o• - . Rot. •
...... •......od. Cool 114-44641&amp;1.

._.

,-

44

111 Farm EquiprMnt

HIND THOSE ROCKS!

""-

"
-"-..,

.... r . . . . . , . . . . . ...

- ...-

-·.............
-·-- .
...........
.......
.. .........

..,

YELLOW BEAR!) AND HIS
BDVS lOOK TH' CHE$T INSIDE!
Cl~! LET'S MOVE UP BE·

Auto Parte
AcceSIDri8a

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
houoo coli ~-~OE , Hot
Pofftt. wahwa,
era and
· - 304-578-238
Akort TOMT~mnine=lu•llfl
Remcwtl. FrM Mt
. C81
304-1'711-7121 .

•

QIF-ngo

()) Cot'-

Uied a rebuilt '" tvP*•·
- - - 3 0 -~ ,~. . 095&amp;

_

_

. WEST

ro

ALLEY OOP

81

_

early

7:30 D (}) Fomlly FIUII
College Beak-!
ID En,_lnmant Tonight
II ()) USA Today
01 • 0 I!J) Jeopardy! Q
Ill liD M'A'S'H
iiJl Croeafl,.
IBl Night CC&gt;urt
Ql Cllllll&lt; ond Chuo
7:3f C!l S.nlonl and Son
8:00 (}) MOVIE: Mr. Ham, Pert 1
(3:20)
II (I) I!Jl ALF C
Beafletblll
(IJ Live iiom UtiCOin C•llor
Zubln Mlhta conducts lhe
NY Philharmonic and Placido
Domingo.
It ()) MlcGJVOr MacGyver
· and Peta Thornton stumble
onto a cocaine smuggling
operation. 1;1
(!) Live froril Uncoln Conllor
Tenor Lucian Pavarotti
pertorms wi111 lhe New York
City O~ra . (NR,
I!Dl ltiiJ Ntwhert Dick
becomes foreman of what he
perceives as an Indifferent

----·

1983 Hondo V45 Moan" 30417&amp;-3133.

eon

a

..

lhe chockle quoled
by Idl ing in the missing words

IBl Cheera

7:05 (I) Andy QriHitll

P••~·

3110.

1971 -·Corio -~ 2300 ........
992-2125

_

' ,'/&gt;

Q Compleeo

Squeeze them

11J Mllml VIet

g:, tenkl.

· rolult

_

n

BRIDGE

Til-'•

1984 Hondo KR 200 Pro Link.

*·

No-,-....

(D (!) MICNall/ Lehrer
N-eHow (1 :00)
01 • IIJ fiJ) Wllaal "'
ForiUneQ
4D IIJl
Compony
iiJl Montyllne

... concl. 0100. oo. 304-882-

a

I

Piping - AHu - Inlay - Neatly - SEA AGAIN •
A reply to a note found In a bOttle washed ashore; '·Please
don't throw 4hil rubbish into the SEA AGAIN!"

00 SpolltC.nMr

Motorcycles

Uood

•

' ..

Grandpa says that you can
clutch the past 10 tightly to
your chest that leaves your
arms too lull to embrace - .

&lt;Il • Cll Cunwrt Afltolr

r,:.~~ol30tt:a2-22r;:.-

up.

r

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

7:00 ()) Our Houoe
D t2l PM Magazine

FRANK A:ND. ERNEST

1171 ...... c ....... 4 - - .. tiiOO. 304-1711-4437.

a.

•

.,,. (I) • to

1971 CJI .loop. E -... co"'
cltlon wlh - · ...~ 011100.
310Hon&lt;lo4whoolctlvo. 1171 •.
- · Tovd&amp;. Coli 114-1149- • , ·
2541.
-.

78

••

8 .PRINT
NUMBERED lE TT ERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Ql Now CC&gt;untry
5

...

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

74

}

OCI~ElPNU

..
::;o;---rr:-::::-...-.......-.;o- • .

'77 Ford Vm. 11

·

Ill WKIIP •

CDnd. 11.300. 304-48a.I031.

duel ll6r oond and

..-

l

'--L-'-....0.-"'--"'--' you develop from sfep No: 3 below.

01 .IIJ CIS Haft
.liD WKRP In Cincinnati
!l2l Show81z Todlly

-:-:--:::-:-=-:c--:---::---:
18BOF-350V-I.,gln&amp;41tr.,._ GIN.. cklmp IMcl. t.c.

73

I

(DBodyEieclrlc
·
(!) Nlglo1tr Bu......o Report

••tended
1881
a - rc•b-hho.e
r • l ·10. Val pka
auto.
loeded. 10.000 mla • •
,...,.,, See •t Jim Minkl.
Chovrolot· Oido . 814·441·
3172.

1~

CAR0 1 N
.1-- rii";...:.TI...;..:.TI;_;TI-"-..:. ~·~s~
_

()) • Cll ABC Newa Q

...
.,.., trol•. Coll14-..._
r.;1112oltw5pon.
-·•
·

.II II

l

iii Spor1nlllo

•
'

.,r-.,U::.......:,.T-"1-TQ'-'E
:;-;Vr.-1

I I l

8AntarlclinMagazlne
11:05 (I) One Qoy 11 1 Time .
1::10. (}) I!Jl NBC NlgldiJ Newe

II FO&lt;d F-110. 4oo4,..V· 9. fuol

-Mr."'

Tom Ooadt. Dlroelor ol

181!D HIPPY Days
IBl F - of Lllo
IIJ She·Ra.

lnj ...lon. I opel, p~ pb. oc.
I ""-• httdt. Alia 3

0o1-

*·

s.v.._

12

-

~i.;;.~::;;::;:::;:::r:;.~~~;";';"'~";";";·'"":;:~

the

other after midnight!"
-- dmoMLTiortul~-·lp
· --' ;.:;::::;:~;::::==:t-:~;;::;:;;;;::;;:;::;;::=:1
"' -.- ..- l

loonollt~ APPI¥
Nuroln~tCont•.

r.....:........

"Whal a lax hreak . Om•

Help Wanted

---on~.

C••

Dalelco

1

6ESIDE5,1T 5I-IARD TO 6ET OUT
OF A 6EANSA6 WI-lEN YOU'RE
I-IOLDIN6 A 60WLIN6 BALL ..

0

I J I I .I
I INOPIT

Cil Powtr of Choice C
Cll Dr. Who: Planet of the

IN A MINUTE. MARCIE .. I'M .
WATC~I~6 DONNA ADAMi:K
60WL .. ~E'S M'{ I-IERO •.

•.

WOR . El

fl2)

ro SpomLook

T•e TownhouM IP8'tmen't" 2
BRo., 1\.\ botho, C.(.• dll·
- ' - · ........ prlvftotndoood ...... pool. ....... net.
Wet•. HWer, a trMh lnr:Aidld. ·
IWtlng M •211 p• mo.
114-387-7110.

~W

Rearrange letters of the
fo ur scrambled words below ro form four simpJe words .

.

I!J) Hewo

- . ••vNE'S FURNITU"E
o::::...c:-,
f
~·
"
~
I'
• •
• ''
! • . •'
" '" '·' " ''1"
Softi Md chllrt prleed "om
.Q__
o38&amp; to o895. T•bl• eao ond
~ · !?-~
~
W&lt;lS
~furnllhod 2 lA 0•110• 1!&gt;.. .. . up to~t1 2 &amp;. Hldo-o-btdo t380
mn. In town. Cllrpltld. Adults
l~ve,
..... No ""'" Col 114-44&amp;- to
1375.
Lampt;
•28
U25.
•us.
R•aHn
. . to
t221
to
48&amp;1.
Dm.n• t108 .. dup•o•41a.
Wood
Uble
w·
l
dtlllrt •ae to
SHADY LAWN APT&amp;- 721
•791. Dotk •100,. to 03'711. 64 Mile, Marchandile 81 Farm Equipment
Hutdl• 0400 .,d up. lid
Second
Awe. Furt*hlcleffld.,_
d•
ol 0178
mo. bode compr.o w-- UTILITY ILQG. IPL . :
Mckldlng Wit• • u•bea ..
12
Situation•
3;2 Mobile Homea
Slnale ocfubi onrv. COP 814- e21&amp;Mduptol381.11obybtdo . Wlloolcl&gt;.... _ . .,. u - 3 30'•4D'•a'8" cr-..... 1t1,0. Mettr-•«box_.gl w+o .. *d -'---'c-.... Colt 15' r tr~ do
,. - Wanted
for Sale
441-4107 or 44&amp;-2102. .
lui o r - 181, 11rmt71. .,d
m - •-•
•
or, ·~
081. Oco- Mil 0210 • up. A - Mobllty ooltet. 1-114- : 0 - ERECTED. Iron
3 IR .-5 Couot St. Uc:to•wMh King 0380. 4 drM• doMI 019. · IJ70.- I ·
Honolldro. Colll14-332- 9748
otowo&amp; rofrlg 02110 ......... I
Gun . . I, I • 10 §'"
C.. OCI.
For ••• Rr...,-·Miocod or
t:'r:.":.-:~':!'
::.-==~~:.::In-:.~ 48
rtf. No P••· c.l -114-44e. . .br rn.ttr- 0 • • u•
""'·
•
cn.t.
e21
.
.
.,
.
.
.
looM.
4020 JO tracwr w/.,... round
25
..,.tmmt. AI tun•hed. tv and btdrooma, lot• I electric;. .,- - - - - . , - , - , . -~!:!;,
- o l .-roo. Dovld . . 114- colo. nloo. 14410. Orohom
hot m -. Ae•onololo OIM 07,000. Colll4--3010.
. Nowlv rtmoololod I BR . OPt. -oomoulta. -ot-eio. 38a.8138.
HOEMEchloloplowo.eii5. JD
114-2811i5509.
· Appl. tur..hod. ldoollocotlon-1 h-wdo 030.,dupto . .e.
•
llfl. foi6.14&gt;Hoorr-, 0485.JD
19,_ Uborty 14oo70.- 3 b . blade f&gt;om -mown. OIM
2-1-1 becloo, I toning toblo. 1010 troctor w/ JO .,Ide conroom. 07, 800,00. 3104-1711- 11+448-4138.
Wll
10 Dave t.n• • c.h with · •--• ·-·-·.wldcw
1171ond 17f.l713.
IPJ owed oraclt. 3 Ml• out ~;._ AI "" ee.Ooo. Col " " - C.l 11..:"211f.N:i2.
15
2 IPfl. for ttnt doee to Rio a-...,lle Rd . 0.,.... hm lo lpm 114-448-7121 or 304-27).
School a
'81 mololo homo 14oM. Z Q,.,do Coli- Colt 814-2411- Mon. thou Sot. Ph. 114-448- '-~• 444 ,..._
...
Instruction
b t c t - Me oond. lm-ot• 1221
troctorw/5fl . .... hhog. plowo,
0322.
0
OCOI-n, 01,1500. 00. 304Towuno&amp;ar forWHl. *ne dodl, cloc._n....,. •• , ... 175-3778.
Nice 1-2 be*oom . . .menta.
outfit. e4110 . 230
Vollov Furnltu,.
olll• olook. •• - - · . RE-TRAIN NOWI
A_.llbl• tur•hed or untlr·
New Wid ua_. turnltur• .,d
lnt-...
lode.
.., • ...,... laooh hog I
. _""
l -....
- . -4 lndl -...... plowo.
nllhod. Dor&gt;ool _.lfod. Col •pplluneM. C.ll 114-441· .
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS 33
Farma for Sale
814-448-4-348 oflw 5 PM.
..... ...... 11 ~dltlr•&amp;rlmt. , _ , - t171&amp;.- .......
COLLEGE, 829 .iocklon Pike.
7872. Hooro 9-11.
Coli 114-44.. 2389.
0111114-21.1122.
Col1448-4317. Aog. No. If. II·
10111 .
PICIENS UIED RJRMTURE
Mlnl-l*m. I room. .,d ""'"
Comploto houoohold fur.oiloo"' Flr..,ood lor • • HoriMood
·chl-*tn ooop. ponyo iMd
lngooo. 1-1 mllworrldlo. 30"-1711- ..... 030 olclup- -ery.
11td work •hop. I.H ecr•. AI
18 Wanted to Do ,.
14 so . 114· 38 · - 1773. Coli &amp;14--41112.
f.,oed, New *lied wat• will.
021,100. 114-992-2143 or
Uco now.-... 01110. Corn114-H:l-1373.
· For
o..ollty
c.rp. .... btd.-.101.-ch.
&amp;obvoatlnoforw-,por• Furniture oome to '-'ollohln
· · otryor. dook &amp;
- · Col
114--3224.
Mon. thruFri. IAMto PM. Col
Furnllu,.Uppw Rlv• Rd., 114- 63
Liveatock
114-24&amp;-1021.
311 Lots Acreage
448-7444.
""'"~""" .... 0210 ... ~,. pd.
T
Mode
t-or
a
Tom·
I ... 920 &lt;ltiL Golllpollo . ~ol
WUI do bo... oltlng In my ho""
VIAA ' S FURNITURE &amp; 21 - ....... Law loy.
448-441&amp; .... 7pon.
1171 lntlmlllo.... T.nolom
"'V time d~~W" • · n6ght end
APPUNICES
A - Llvatodo Soloo. A .....- -. Livarlghl-tiORio Allolori beertlful lergo luldlna 2 btdroom ...... "" r .... Op., Mon ..Sot. 8 AM· &amp; PM. P""'"' dump.ll70f-710Ford Solo overy 8•u-· 1 PM.
.....
.......
p
.........
O,.,olo Jll'od• odlool. C.lll4.......... Hei&lt;IV - · Uv. .odc ocoop~.r ott• 4 PM
corp .. od. Nlcoo.,tne Loun&lt;*\1 Sun. 12 noon-&amp; PM. 814-446- olnglo
mont of ,........, Equip.: J.D. ....,,
publla • • • · •o " ' • tota.
31f.8201.
3111.
....... , ....... of
Clvcloo
Jr. 304-5711- locl~l- .... ""'.. Col 114510
t - . . , ........
992-3711. EOfl.
on St. At. 10. Co~
2331
PRICES SLAIH£0-Worctobt- rnn•M11 mounted on Tem· 114· 582· 2322, 898· 3131
Wll """"'" ..... homo. ~p­
IAHe . . .. Have
C.l
dtm
......
IIUalt.
""'·
G"lft.
'"1· 1149 071. o..- ....
Ona MonthFr• RMt
u... 814-742-2889.
mlttr- ••·NO· t111 now Autttn Wwton 4
Oulltfled tint. . 1M¥ e200.
e101. Country wood toblowllh wlh 48 lo!ll ..._ 1150 CoM llul.-lng Hog. Cd 114-31&amp;
DopooM .,d no'*" lor tho
3do..... llooncfl.rog. 0589- dooorwMh_bi_L_od 84-..a.
month. Deoernber &amp; J..,ary
hama. c • ..-...on •• 114-215..
.219. Mtny Mare Mon._- SIY- 8l Athllia Ohio on It, Rt. 7 .
on~. VII,• MMor Md
8271.
IngVIIu•.
At. 141 lnCnen.., 814-81.8029.
lllv. . ldo ......... In
v.
mit
on
Lincoln,
...
Mldcl-. From 0112.
41 Homes for Rent
- ...... uao. Coli 114T1 dll~llllrlollllll
814-H:l-1787. EOH.
"""' . . . lor ....., In
their ho- dw Of night. 304Good Uo.r Color TV'i lor Solo. 44&amp;-7217.
&amp;7&amp;-2010.
Nl""' fur . .hod emol hou10.
Coll814-44f.114t.
tt.nd qullt.t quilt tor •Ia. Cal
Aduh onlv. Rll. - r . r. No
1114-448-0338.
a pc. liwlng room llrnkure. 304-45a.1171.
71 Auto's For Sale
e1500. Cell 114-3111-IOH.
4IR .. tul .... -.-Pot. o•
r.,l' dly ICihaoll. No p•a.
GOVERNMENT SERED Voh~
- l n g oppNcotlo.. lor Good Ulad .. . . . . . . . .
o• . I Aef. -lfod. t321.- Now
miaOMWaov~Wt . t110 for bot: h..
2 - - .............,.,
d•""
0100. FO&lt;do -·
66 Building Supplies
mo. Col 114-4411-0271 1111• e o•p•td.
Cont.n...
IUI'Diut.
IPpllln'*, Wit• and Colll14-218-'i438 oft• &amp;PM.
21
B111inesa
PM, wollc ..cloo onytlrrw.
lluyero CJuld&amp; II I ID&amp;-M7tr•h
- -· Molnt •
Opportunity
IOOO, Eoct. 8-10199
• • po
lhrlng do. . to shopntncepldoo
Hom• tor Rent/LeMa 18'1d ping, ._. .. •d scN»oll. For
.
.
.
ding
contriCt, Crou• 8edc. Rd ., morelrdarm.tlon ~I 304-11121112 E 210 v... n_, tW-.
llodc. bride. plpoo, wlft.
Rodnw Vlhgt II,
Hgto. 3718. E.D.H .
63
Antiquea
............
c
....
I NOTICE I
"-'-•... 1nd dlpoeb r•
- . Rio Q,..do. D. Col &amp;14- Rocfuood to 01710. CoM 814THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- qulr.r.
llodcboon .......,. 114- On• .-.d 2 t.Goom liP-': menta.
2411-1121 .
!
44&amp;-2389.
ING CO .
lhot you 4411-0001.
WedoAl*t,_.t,
No
Pitt.
Buy or Soli. Rlvaino A..lqu-.
m a...rn . . wtth people you
304-1711-2072.
.
con-• blocb- .. ok.
~
.
1124 E. Moln 8trMt. Pomoroy.
know, .,d NOT to .-.d manev In Ch•hlr•3 btctoOm, 2 bolla
or dtltwerv. M..on ....._
Houn: M,T,W 108.m. to lp.m.•
1t.ou• tM mil untl you,..,, ol oloc. Oop. oequirod. 'Col
llo llodc Co.. 1231-1 l'lno ..
Sundoy I to lp.m. 114-992lnw•5pled thl ofl•lng.
114-317· 711•7 or 1-70).311a.
ONo. con 814-4482&amp;21.
'"
1101.
1184E-LW_I\..,o.,PI.
2713.
PI, oir, foc:torv odorto. e1111.
46 Furnished Room~
Real hlilll:
3 bec*'oom , . . . 2 Uttw..
1180 ChOIIy PU, I cyl, .......
WElTER N AED CE OAR
54 Misc. MarchandiiB
etftclent hNt pump. 2 c•
PS. Pl. '1811.- Coli 11.114-21f.
• Ctt•nel RUIIIc
1•111'
1 mo. 3 be«*oom Furnllhad room-911 leoond
. . d ...... Loop Siding
l522.
\
r.-ch will* w.lkingdlltMceof Aw., Qllipoll. 175 • mo.
Dlcll
downtown. e310 1 mo. PrlvM• Udltl• Dald. ..,_ale mil..
a•.........
Quollly
1917 Cloryoclor loboron Coupe.
31 Homae for Sale
~:::: c:'lt4-t45.ieJ= CETIDE.
3 beet_,. 2 IIOIV brl&lt;* on I
both. C•• 44.. 44'18ofi.-7PM . &amp;PM. --onytlmo.
INC.. Ath.,o-114- &amp;ool. IDncl AI optlonL Col
•Cit. Crown City, •37&amp; • mo.
594-3171
114-44.. -oii•BPM.
Vwy .nr-=tNe brldt'4 ~oom. Remo.W..t 2 BR. rwu:h. dauto Roome b Nni-Wiillc or month.. 1 -------~-­
Stortlnl'!"
tl20
•
mo.
Gollo
.Golv.,lzod
roollna
12
~
2 ""'" hmll¥ raom wMh llr• Vlnton.odeodloole:V&amp;omo.
1981 ChOIIy Colollrlty, 43.000
14
23 - 1 2 f t bng.
mi-. V-I • ..to., AC,andl&amp; tilt.
"'"" formotclnlna ••..
Rot••- .,dooaorllydopool Hotll-. 14-44f.9AO.
For 0210. Coli 514-31f.&amp;ell.
room. 30 • · custom Olttldtchtn rlqU.,ed on el propertla 'MI•
AM-FM-Cott. Coli 114-311a.
66
Pets for Sale
woodNorto. ""~h m., Root Eelrto. 1114-448- 11-.lng raon with c:ooldng. Mixed ti•cl wood sllbe. ·~z P•
8240.
.,........_ 2 . .
3144
AlloTrll• ..,-.AI hoolt-_.. bundl C --~In
1'
.... 2~m. 304- n).. On-· "'I ....... "'
l.,cloo011&gt;od lot. 4 ml• from - - - - - - - - - CAll
1181 cr-y Coprlco Stotlon
ton. Ohio Poll let Co., PomerD'(.
•1 M
Groom ..d
Shop-Pot Wogon.
HDII• Haepllll ' off Rt. 35- 3 BA , hou•e. Dtp..ll: ...........
Good ooncl U200. Col
• . MOn
.
Ohio. 114-182-5411.
Oroomln
g.
All
bt
..
dl
.
..
All
l'brt•brook Su-lolo" 011 10 Old F"" Troll. Collll14-44f. "
814-448-1239.
28U. 9 to 1 d..,.
814-4411-4188.
""'"'·
• -Ph.""
Food Deotor.
FlrWtood for ..,., Mbted herd
Julio114--0231.
48 Space for Rant
wood
.
HEAP
vouch•rs
.c41ft .. full...,..,... &amp; 1•~ 28eclfoomhouHinoity. 12.3 h
c.ed. Plr*. up • dlf.lv.-.
brlgDftW wftCf CMI.ry Klnt1tl
.. ., ..... od , , _ ....,, c
month ............ Coli 114814- 742·2421 - -~~---d
Woo
44&amp;-0924.
Counny Mobile Homo Pork. I::---:-- : -, -- - : -...,.,
ldltChow '"''-· Noturol a• ..,_ ,...--------- Route
1872Ch011y ,.,.....
ofr.
33. North of Pbm•ov· For
Contlntlau~ Outt•
..... Col 814-446-3844 oft• 7 Good
Pnood to HI. Clil 114-4411- Nlco omoll hou• ot 447 ~ourth
con&lt;l eaao. Coli 114Loto.
•
..,,,
'"'•·
Con
Moohmo.
0.11114-982-2772.
PM.
0271 iillw I PM. _.,... A... Adulto on~. Rot . ._rod.
24a.t415.
, onytlme.
C.! 114-448-121hflor&amp;PM. 814-192-7479.
t..ge round bol• 1800 -ndo
11841kondoA.- d . Vrt good
good • millod h... e20. Coli
-lv _,.ololod 2otoryhou .. . 3BR.!Qoo&amp;!f0kl•t.AC.&amp;pool
-liN\
Col 114-448--.
814-&amp;e&amp;-31148.
.
In Pt. PI- P~codte&gt;oolt. Coft t350tme&gt;.Coll304-575-810"49
For Lease
304-57f.ll318.
.. 1711- &amp;381.
cotol (2) 1189 ford Tompoo, 1181
221.000 ITU J.,Mrol F,.._
J 0 l'ly-Cor•elo II81Chw.
114-8811-3844.
Hou•• with All ..bli.mtnt. v• 211R . Loeol.r"' 11211'h Ch•t·
a-on.. ..... lt89 ..........
Buu. . . or R.ldlntllf. fot r....
3
NHdl eoma nut St. "7hmo. t75dop. Col
1181 01111 c - . 2
1M floor. ll•oeroom~•d 1 ~ T.,nlng led for .ee. Used y_..,
...... 018.000. Coiiii14-1811- 114-446-3870.
bllht on ltM• St., aw.tooklng little. Wulf.Dr. K.rn B,.,d.
3UO or 114-37a.8211.
3 mole AKC Riigltt- Qblodc
m~
Nor$ Ref•en.- .. d e11100. Cell114-14f.2021.
lob popploo, 8 wlol. old. DOd lulc* ,.,,... 2
1 80 Chwy
New!¥ r~carlll!d. 2 b•do P•k.
am.~rtrv
1
otk
requhd.
Cel
,....,.. W-D hoolo-... Adubo
luntlng IIIDg or . .. c• 114- eoprr. .W. 1110' FO&lt;d LTD
114-446-4 40 - - 4~0 SURPLUS -Dolglnol Army, Dopr...,ed, one child ac~ed. ond8~0PM
44f.D221.
8.llll. 1171 Didio Cull- 2 dr.
.
·
nlm.
R1nt&amp;
C.rhert
ClatNn
..
No p•~ Rot•.,.. rogurod.
11-1
yr.
oloiAKCRiiQiit-m•o
I
' - to Bolli I I 0 MotUSA Jungle G,_ Co·
A""'tlllo now. Col 1-215-13f.
Plotlolly
lornllhocl
.,.
..
_
.
..
o
l.,d
bfiCII
-of.
mooft
hiiglo.
·
ollw.
Coli
"""
....,.
181). &amp;14-448-1815.
3182.
Sulllble tor on. ar twa Milts. SAM SOMERVILLE' $, OLD
448-2710. .
3 - · - 2 ...... lui
Rtf, r.,uhd. No p•a. ,...,. •• ADUTE 21. NEW ERA. WVA
lln~hod
- ..
, _ _ . , -""'"' 3 ............ • : 131 Fou"" Avo., Gdipolo. (noon
..
d_ ......
gorogo,
.......
• I:OOtlrn. Doc. only),
2molo&amp;3- ...... Coll
MillO!\ .2SQ. per month. P8y
114-448-0231.
Ot'- montho Frlclow, loturdoy,
ywcl 2414 MI. v._. Aw. Pt. own ....... 304-773-11114.
114-21.1810.
Sundoy only. 3114-2'73-1881.
Pit prtood on lno-lon. 3048711-1774.
Tllr• bo*oorn. 2 .,.,., &amp;rodFor ...., Ook . . .ood. Col
buoy Rood. 304-1711-3834.
M1:rclwHI1se
304-5711-2717 oft• 4:30 p.m.
83 ......... 1000. 4clr.
oulo.,
32 Mobllaflomea
40,000 ...... E_.., oondlBunk bed. TV llt.-.o, ooff•
42 Mobile Homea
for Sale
....... _.,. .. d dryer, tool
lion lnoldo &amp; '""· •2100. Col
114-31a.llll1t.
for Rent
61 Hou11hold Good1 boKM, CCU1'4W
• . . . . . top.
pllono 304-578- I BU.
·~c •~
114Doolgefloln. Coll14-..._
118424o52-lonol. , . ... 2
od
· 4224.
_ . , doaor•od. 2 SR .• full¥ Eth"' Alen qu- oko btd CompoctTrlltwmoolol-w
ful bolla ROlle"' t o _ .. E'"""
.,00,
114-- 1 .
--------cone! c• F,..cl&gt; City I ookor- •1*111. Ste. dip. r1q1.1~.d. frnt a 1Ntchfn_111 chtlt of whh •ttachments, 1181.00
11. .VWGolf. 4 - . 8 0111 l14-44f.ll81 or 44f. chw ... Colt 814-Zif-8981.
••h or..,,. .,..,goo~.
ega 114-448-8340.
AM-PMc-•a.Lowmla
4781.
304-5711-4418. •
........ - l o.. · - C o l
1184811VIInol41\70. 38ft., Il-l
• loot ft....... both tvb. 071.
814-811!-21. ..
ANYONE CAN APPLYI
bit ... 1!-=-1. Cllnd. On nnted MEn-a 38Riorr... or101o. Colll14-ll4:t-1348.
Coll814-44f.OI80.
GuorantHd
Vloo·MC.
Ul
lot. lnoluoloo vinyl oldnlng.
1171 T-Bird. Au .. _.t 311
Long 3 1&gt;11hlon coudo .10.00, Ch•go. E- with bod G'oolt.
p&lt;Ifcl&gt;-.
ec"
~~-·
N'n. 21 ft. . . c:anMin.. for Ron! or loi•Coown City. good ooncl 30,_812·3201.
Col 4213)12167
Mullcal
114-812-2828.
- - · •'700. Col
Collll4-21&amp;-laoe.
not •t. u 2101.
lnltrumants
en~·- Ow_. moving • mutt
.... CoiF-·CityB""'-•
117D Dodt• ltotlo-...
814-446-8340.
12..0 2 Bll . lo..,od In E - 1 - - - - . . . : : : : : : . . t : : = = = = = = = : : . J - -- - - - - - · -· Coblo TV hoololp. ChRol•a 2 1 - ..- oo1or TV.
IIIO ..... mont ... - 14o70. .., _ . .. 011 f.I4-448oil oloc., 3 8Ro ..• 11-1b•la r.go H17.
lllnO room wMh • • - Col
1112 Qodgo ...... .. ~ ......~
2
fur ..hod. In 114!·
114-448-1213.
.....
0- - .... •zooo.
dno Col 814-H2-1039. ·
Cllll14-fti!-2077.
CAeH ta. your mololo
..,.,.. N- laoylng 1872-1812 Flillv fur,.hod. 3 -oom
68
FNit
moololl. Got our 1'1111'11 doulol.,.ldo wlh ....... On St
~
Rt
143.
n
n
month.
.......
lit
VBg11table1
Col 800.828-0712 - · 311.
ot Jim Mh•• Chnrolet-~Oil. 114-H2-7401.
0 1 - o . 114-448-3872 or
Rogdo- 14o70. Nloo 2
304-771-11 M.
1Z.II ._.., ho- · 2 btdRod .,d Gotd Doll- .......... '
-"""'
2 ""'"
w / ..
llroplltM Portrlot
lndop
d.. ... roon. nl• lot. Rou•h Una
•z.aa DOdc. . , . d - wot- 1183 Chrvolor YorlcOr.
tiOOdown. . . . . . . . . . . Cell Ch•hlra Ohio. 304-77).8128.
oo- . l o c « o - - . Rt. ._•:-:2.:-:1:-:00.=30-4-_571-~------8211-0752. ... 311.
l'or-14o70trol•. 3oddl181J~IIollont. 47.000
Used . . . . Horn.. W• Hl- lionol ...- . I mil• - Cilb
mloo.R-IIOOil n .aoo.•on.
w'em. w.
C - 0200. montlily. 304304-171-MII.
1711-3044.
HOME Cl
I, Col t....,,
1113 Chry- E • CIMo.
- 1 2.. 07112. ... 3111.
12.800. JD4-571-4480.

)- I .

•

rn ao.,..,u: The Lo11
Epl-

WDID

PUZllll

MON., JAN. 9

• (}) ()) • Cll 01 •

Pomeroy-2 IR . remodeled
• .,,... oft Spring A.-. S.c.
clop. &amp; rol. Colt iofl• I PM.
114-99:1-1,181.

1111

r.1. ' ~' ~ '

t IIIIJIII y1111:111

&amp;:00

ol••

ent:lr• houllhotd alto ~tiling.

IAMI
S©\\g{}lJ-lG£~s·
_...;.._ _....;._ _ 14 itod
ClAY I . PPUAN - - - -- --

TUT DAILT

EVENING

IENJTIRJL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES , &amp;31 Jo'*"on
P•• •om 1113 • mo. Wetk lo
..
- ·· 814-44f.
2Ua.
E.Od .H.

M!:tdtrn 1 lA . dow mown. CD mldtcl&gt; ... olr. - .... Dip.... no p•o. C.l 114-4410138011-go.oflwl.

piece or

•

~
,...

completety furnlsh•d
.-:...... a mollla home i'l

New

...... Gl4tlpollo. C.l 114-44112112.
..

Television
Viewing

•
'

'·'1 ft

..
I

�9,1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 10- The Daily Seutinel

-

POWELL'S.
USED CAIS
NEW CAIS
USED U15

FOiq

Thit
Week'1
Gsme1

TIUtKS

Till~

•C0MPI£TE RADIATOR SERVICE
•MAJOR Rf.PAIRS
•COMPI£TE WHEEL AUGNMENT
&amp; BALANCE
•MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED

1

PAT HILL FORD, Inc. _
IODY WOII

!992-21961

INSURANCE

CLAIMS
WB.COM£
46\ 3RD AYE. MIDDLEPOR1, OH.

"HOME BANK
FOR

HOME PEOPLE"

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, ~H.

MEIGS

8 A.M.-1 0 P.M.

BOYS

10 A.M.-10 P.M.
•

BOYS

LITTLE DAN
EXXON

Jan.1 O-At Southern
Jan. 13-North Gallia
Jan. 14-Park'"burg Cath.

FOOD STORE

EASTERN

'

EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

..
·•Self serve Gas

RACINE Of'FICE

BOYS

OWNER: DAN SIDWELL

Jan. 10-Eastern
Jan. 13-At Kyger Creek
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley

992-9907

GIRLS
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek
Jan. 14-At Waterford
Jan. 19-At Sy111111S Valley

Nov. 25-Athens ......_
... ................. Away
Dec. 2-Miller .........:.................. Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York .......... :. Away
Dec. 16-Wellston ........: ............. Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-Logan ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ...-,................ ........ Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal-Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble ............. ;.. .......... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville-York ............. home
Jan. 27-Wellston ...................... .. Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co ..................... Home ·
Feb. 3-Belpre ............,........ ........ Away
Feb. 7-Alexander ............,.......... Home
Feb; 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

· 97 NORTH SECOND.

MIDDLEPORTI OHIO '
992-6661

INSTALLMENT
LOANS
992-3077

Sales &amp; Service
EAST MAIN 5T.
POMIIOY

-tour Dealer oa
The River
992-6144

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL .
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB-B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Financial
Center"

ChevroleteGidSmobile
•Cadillac, Inc:.

SOUTI-iERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

"ov. 22,...Miller ........................... Away
Nov ..29-Southern ...... ................ Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia .. :.. .......... ..... Away
. Dec. 9-0ak Hill ..................... .... Home
Oec. 13-Kyger Creek ........ .. .. ,...... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ....... ........ Home
Dec. 17-Federal Hockihg .. .. ......... Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ........... .... Home
. Jan. 3- Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
.J an. 10:_Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia ............ ...... Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath .......... Home
Jan. 20:_0ak Hill .............. .......... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .......... :....... Home
Jan. 27- Hannan Trace ........ ......... Away
Jan. 28-M iller ........................... Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley ...... ........ Home
Feb. 14- Parkersburg Cath ...... ..... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
• Nov. 29-Eastern ... ...................... Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek .............. :..... Home
Dec. 9- Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13- North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan. Trace ............... Home
Dec . 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27- Green ............. ............. .. Away
Jan. &amp;-Southwestern ... .......... ...... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis .. .... .................. Away
Jan. 10- Eastern ............. .. .......... Home .
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24_:. North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 27- 0ak Hill...... :................. Home
.Feb. 3- Hannan Trace ................ .. Away
Feb. 4- Federal Hocking ....... ....... Home
Feb. 10- Southwestern ................ Home

-----------------·GIRLS SCHEDULE----------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988 ·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 2:2-Eastern·........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 8-Trimble ............... ., .......... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. IS-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 21..,..Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonvillt·York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-F~eral Hocking ............... Aw~y .
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

BAUM

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

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

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Dining • Carry Out •
Drlve·Thru ·

Mon.-Thura. 8A.M.·11 P.M.
Frl. S&amp; e A.M.·1Z P.M.
Sunday 1 A.M.·11 P.M.
898 W. Mellllllelll. P-D¥

992-2017

EWING .
FUNERAL
HOME

-~

A GREAT

*Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on Croissant
* Stu~ Baked Potatoes
* Tll:O SalidS
* Rnl Ice Cream •

.

By BOB HOEFLICH
. Sentinel Staff Writer
A $1,311,779 appropriations resolution for 1989 was approved
Monday night when Middleport
VIllage Counc!J,.rnet for Its first
session of the new"year.
Breakdown on expenditures
approved for this year Include:
general fund, $395,260; street
maintenance, $78,100; mini-golf,
$11,600; fire equipment, $18,900;
fire truck. $76,400; sanitary
sewer eserow, $;10,000; .economic
development, $93,050; public
transporiatlon, $217,935; water
system Improvement, $35,000;
water, $169,100; sewer, $138,570;
swimming pool, $20,360; cemetery, $21,500; meter deposit,
$6,000.
'
Estimated receipts for 1989
total $1,408,302.
At last night's meet!ng;eouncll
also put on hold Its plans to
provide a v.lllage-owned and
operated cable television system. The actlon ·followed several
conferences between Mayor
Fred Hoffman and Lester .Errett
and Tom Lacey , representatives
or the Consolidated Communications Group, · Inc., which currently provides cable service

Nov. 2-i'-Alexander ...................... Away
nov. 28- Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away
Dec . 5- Meigs ............................. Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley .......... .. .. . Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15- 0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec ." 19-Hannan Trace ..... '" ......... Away
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5- Southwestern ............. ~ .... Home
Jan. 9- Eastern .......................... Home
· Jan •• 2-Kyger Creek ................... . Home
Jan. "14- Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ........... .... Away
Jan. 23- 0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 3D- Waterford ..................... Home
Feb. 2- Hannan Trace .. ............... Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .............. .... Away
Feb. u ...:Meigs ............................ Home

,c••,.

with the community. Several
council members Indicated that
they believe the cable service to
the town has Improved recently .
Council agreed to put plans for
the town-owned system on hold
for one year to ensure that the
company will continue to provide
Improved service. The company
had a letter In the hands of village
officials last night In which It .
agreed to add the Turner Net·
work Televlson al)d CNN Headline News as additional program
services lri 1989 and agreed to
continue carriage of local. regional and network television
news and other programming
originated t)y or transmitted by
Ohio based television stations .
The company has agreed to
participate on an ongoing basis
with a Middleport Cable Advisory Commltteee, comprised of
Middleport residents, appointed
by village council, for the purpose of determining and monitor·
~ mutally agreeable service
standards. The company has
agreed to continue to be reponslblde to the needs of the village
and will reimburse the town up to
and- Including $5,000 or docu,
mented costs encountered by the

,.....,.1

•

..

•

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
'-,.·'

.....,...

ltn H. Ewing-Dirtcter
.

HOIIISc

s.twas

74Ja.m.to4100p.m.
.
..... .,.
· ~..

Fo

W£ WILL '
TAKE CARE OF

-

101-....·lk
-POJJJIOfI ON.
.

'

.

'

that' a t•e slerawhl!eler Blennerhassett towing It
past Pomeroy at about 3 p.m. Monday afternoon.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

&amp; ,SAVINGS CO.-

.

toli to se~ve again as president of ' swimming pool a nd Mayor Hoi· .
council a'nd approved the report fman reported that an expert has
or Mayor Fred Hoffman showing recommended that extensive
receipts of $4,5371n fides and fees work be done to the pool In the
for December. Horton was also next few years. Cost of the work
named to serve as council's would be about$50,0001ncontrast .
representative on the village to $300,000 or $400,000 which
planning commission.
would be the cost of a new pool.
Approved by council were The Middleport pool baS served
several fire contracts Including:
the community for well over 30
Cheshire VIllage, $2800 annually years. Council discussed also the
and $75 per call, and one-half or posslb!Uity of Increased admls·
Salisbury Township for $1,100 a
slon prices next summer.
·
year.
It was ' agreed to . authorize
A discussion was held on the Mayor Hoffman to proceed with

.. village during Its recent study of
local cable television services
and agreed to provide the village
at least30 days advance notice or
any change In Cablevlslon's
basic and premium service rates
and-or channel lineup. The company agreed the cable service
rates charged to residents or
Middleport will not exceed those
rates charged by Cablevlslon In
contiguous areas served by the
company .
The company has agreed to
co·nunue to provide local ad·
Insertion and munlclpallnforma·
tlon capability for Middleport
rersldents' and businesses and
will provide one free basic cable
· connection to each public and
parochial school, fire station,
police station and any civil
defense !acUity within Mlddo·
eport. The company, In conclu·
slon, agreed to provide a basic
· service discount to senior cHIzens and residents or Middleport
who are permanenty dlsablelf.
Council named Paul Gerard to
head the advisory committee
and members of council 'will
come up wltll recommendations
of residents to serve on tile group.
Council reelected Dewey Hor-

Flatboat draws attention of
•
•
up
e
·
10
th Oh
many as It moves
.

•

LUMBER
555 PARK ST.

MIDDLEPORT
992-6611

..
COMPLETE
SELECTION

..

BY NANCY YOACHAM
ton, up the Kanawha River to the
Sea line I News Staff
Ohio, and then down the Ohio to
Come April 29 or this year, Cincinnati where It was the
visitors to Blennerhassett Island
"sweetheart" of Cincinnati's Bl·
near Parkersburg, W.Va. will centennial celebration held this
enjoy touring an accurate replica
paSt fall. The flatboa t' was last
or the flatboats which plied the
used In Cincinnati on Dec. 28 to
Ohio River about 1800. At that
re-enact the landing of the first
time, the Ohio was- the ' 'Watersettlers In Clllclnnatl . .
way to the West" for the
On Dec. 29, the Blennerhassett
frontiersmen, because It was
Commission took possession of
easier and safer to travel by
the craft !rom the Kanawha
water than overland . .
Commission, "for $1 and other
The flatboat which will be
valuable considerations," Todd
Included In . the variOus tours said.
offered at Blennerhassett Island
At 5:30a.m. on Monday, Jan. 2,
was built in Gallatin, Tenn. about Blennerhassett ' s three -man
four years ago to be used for
crew left Parkersburg aboard
. historical re-enactments In that
two s lernwheelers, the Blennerarea.
hassett and the Valley Gem,
According to Jim Todd, execuowned and operated by the Ruble
. tlve director of the Blennerhas- Sternwheeler Company which Is
. sett Historical Park Commis- . the company that provides transsion, the flatboat was eventually
portation from Parkersburg to
acquired by the Kanawha County
Blennerhassett Island. The Blen-Bicentennial Commission for\lse
nerhassett crew was later joined
In portraying the pioneer move- by other crew members, and the
ment Into the Kanawha Valley.
two boats made their way down
The flatboat was last used by the
river to Cincinnati to pick up the.
Kanawha Commission to make
flatboat.
an actual voyage from CharlesBad weather was a problem on

the trip down river, Todd re·
ported. Around Maysville, Ky. ,
the two crews ran Into heavy
weather and experienced 5Q.(j()
mile winds and !our to six foot
waves. The crews tied up their
boats until the weather calmed,
then went on to Cincinnati for the
llatboat.
On their . return trip, they
passed Pomeroy about 3 p.m.
Monday afternoon. They arrived
in Parkersburg about 9:30 this
morning (Tuesday), eight days
and four hours after embarking
from Cincinnati.
The flatboat will be permanently moored at Blennerhassett
Island and guided tours will be
conducted throughout the com·
lng tourist season which will
begin April 29, Todd reports .
All tours at Blennerhassettare
conducted by costumed Individu als portraying-actual characters
from ·the Blennerhasset t
household.
Guides on the flatboat will
probably portray flatboat travel·
ers from the 1800 ilme period,
Todd said.

•·

OF
. FURNITURE!

·a., Mort for
Ltll 11

POMEROY, OHIO

POINI' PLEASANT, W.Va. The Masm County Board of
Education, at a IJ!eeting Monday
night, directed Superintendent
Charles Clwnbers ID send out-ofstate tuition bills. for the past two
school years.
That 111C111$ Bill Webb, along
.with other parents in the county,
will not .only be receiving tuition
bills for this school year, but for the
1987-1988 school year as well.
School Board President Emma
Xeams said that the board would
bill ·for two years. because accord·
.ing 10 the statue of limitations. that
' is as far as they are pennitted to 'o
back. The board has not
. received
.

Local news briefs--

Patrol cites 3 Meigs drivers

out-of-state tuition for these School. .
'
Webb said Tuesday morning !hat
students.
Currently, the out-of-state tuition he had not received an official copy
rate is set at $1,791.37 for a single of the bo4rd's sction. When he dtd,
he woulo look at the bill, and
school year.
At a previous meeting, the ~ ~· decide what he would do. "I guess
had granted a grievtiJI!;e for Webb I'll write them a ch""" and psy the
to stop receiviJig tuition bills be- bill," Webb said. '""'!'
cause the matter had been tabled by
F"mance Director George Miller
the board. Webb kept receiving said that, aside from Webb, at this
bills, even though the board had ·time, there are two others sbldents
tabled action.
•
who wiD be billed for this year, one
But Monday night, board mem- of which will, recejve two-years'
bers removed the issue from the billing. Miller said he will have to
table, and came to the decision af. chec:k records 10 see if there are
ter an execwive session which was othell! who should receive bills
called for per1011nel.
from last school year.
.,
For Webb, who is from GalThe out-of-State tuition issue
Iipolis{ that will mean two Y~ · arose when W~ was in the midst
tuition billing for ~is daughter, ~ar- of stn138les wtth the school board
rod, a senior at Point Pleasant High_ over~ dress code.

~

President Reagan
hails free market

Groun(i.water
found free
of uranium

Webb to be billed -for tuition
By JEANNIE SURFACE
OVPStaff

tlon or learning; better rewards
for good teaching; and an empha·
sis on keeping " at risk" students
In school, Including pregnant
teenagers.
For college students. Celeste
wants easy access to programs of
choice and excellence on the
campus.
He also wants the education
tax to be placed In a special trust
fund, so Its spending can be
accounted for .
Following his address, to be
telecast statewide, Celeste will
conduct an hour-long "teleconference" dedicated to Issues
raised In his speech and using
studio audiences In Columbus,
_Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton, .
Toledo, Akron and Youngstown.
At 8 p.m_. , Celeste will host a
special 90-mlnute edition o! his
,radio call-In show, "Airing Edu·
cation," to be broadcast statewide !rom Columbus.

The governor also may ask for
a cigarette tax hike to fund added
programs for care of the elderly.
present record-setting peace· Celeste prefers a public vote on
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Prestime expansion began In 1982.
the 1 percent education tax at the !dent Reagan, Issuing hjs final
Unemployment has been cut to
May primary, or at a special report on the U.S. economy ,
below 5 percent, hitting 14-year
election In June so the added hailed the free market and
lows. Contrary to expectations,
funding can go Into the 1990-91 "circumspect" government
the low unemployment rate has
' Tuesday for returning the nation
state budget by July 1.
not led to a leap In Inflation,
But House Speaker Vernal to prosperity during his eight
which Is running at about 4.5
Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg, made years In office.
percent annually. Interest rates
it clear last week that he w111 n~t
' "Today, It Is as If the world
also have dropped from the
support any public vote until the were born anew ," Reagan said In
all-time highs that prevailed
the preface to his eighth and last
when Reagan took office.
annual report on the nation's
•
economy.
"ThIs record has been
Introducing a report that views
achieved not through· alchemy,'
the post-World War II period as a
battle between communism and . but by using that good old·
fashioned recipe of reducing the
capitalism, with capitalism the
role of government," Reagan ·
ultimate victor, Reagan said,
said.
"Systems that emphasized indl·
Sprinkel, one of the devout
vidual Initiative, open markets,
COLUMBUS,. Ohio (UPI)
supply-side economists wh~
The Ohio Department of Health and personal freedoms - as
helped shape the Reagan era,
reported Monday that a three- opposed to collective actiOn said he had no fears that
year sampling program has have prospered most."
continued drops In unemployThe U.S. economic expansion,
revealed no uranium In the
ment and Increased job growth
now ln. Its seventh year, Is "not
groundwater near a federal
would set off dangerous Inflation.
just Reagan luck," but the result
nuclear production facility at
' 'I'm never concerned about
of
sound policies, said Beryl
Piketon.
employment
going up," Sprinkel
Sprinkel,
the
president's
chief
A similar study showed urasaid.
"The
more
production we
economic
adviser,
who
with
his
nium In only three off-site wells
have,
the
better
.
We want a s
prepared
-the
report.
staff
and one.clstern near the Fernald
·much
out
of
that
supply-side
of
The
report
touts
the
creation
or
·
nuClear production facility In
the
economy
as
possible.
"
19 million new jobs since the
Ham !I ton County.
"No evidence of uranium contam!Jiatlon o! ground water was
detected beyond the area where
- ·.
the thr('i!_wells are located, " said
Dr. Ronald Fletcher, director of
the Deparlment of Health.
Both Installations, operated by
A driver suffered a minor visible Injury In a one-car accident
the U.S. Department of Energy,
at 6:30p.m . Monday on SR. 124,0.3 miles wes t of mile post 27,
have been suspected of polluting
according to the Melgs-Gallla Post, .State Highway Patrol.
the . nearby environment' with
The patrol said a car driven by Dana H. Bailey, 37, Racine,
harmfu 1 amounts of hazardous
went off the road, striking a mall box and a tree. Damage was
' and radioactive waste.
moderate. Bailey suffered a minor visible Injury but refused
State and federal otllclals In
treatment.
.
. • .J
November reached agreement
The patrol cited Bailey for failure to mainta in contr~
urider which the Energy Depart·
dr lving under the Influence.
'
ment would take responsibility
Henry
E.
Cleland,
Ill,
16,
Racine,
was
cited for failure to yield
ror a 0"" mllllo cleanup of
the right or way after an accident at 4: 10•p.m,. Monday on SR.
hazardo= and rad~oactlve waste
124, at the junction of CR 403. Troopers said Cleland, at tempted
at the Portsmouth Gaseous Dltfu·
to make a left turn Into the path ora westbound vehicle driven by
slon Plant In Piketon.
David Klein, 56, Syracuse and the vehicles collided. No one was
The federal government also
Injured. Damage was moderate to both vehicles.
agreed, under a court settleOne driver was cUed In another Melp County accident at 4: 08
ment, to take steps to clean up the
p.m. Monday on CR. 82,1.5westofSR. 7. Troopers said Donna C.
Feed Materials Production CenMorgan, 24, Middleport, ran off the road, lost control and came
ter at Fernald, at an estimated
back onto the highway, going left of center striking another
cost of $1.5 billion.
vehicle driven Sherry L. Dorsey, 24, Pomeroy. Damage wa5
The state samplings were from
moderate. No one was Injured.
309 water sources near the
The patrol cited Morgan for fa ilure to yie ld one- half of the
Fernald plant, and. seven SO!Ir·
roadway .
ees near the Pike County
Continued on page 10
Installation.

-.

VALLEY.

an application to a Marietta
agency for building permits
rather than such permits being
Issued from Columbus . Mayor
H_offman reported ' that the In·
spectlon scheduling out of Marietta Is reported to be quicker
which · Is Important to builders
from a cost standpoint. However,
costs Involved In going through
Marietta are about twice those
Involved In getting permits out or
Columbus.
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
Continued on page 10 ·

Celeste plans to ·ask _for one
percent tax hike for educatio~

2(){)0.

614-992-5141 .

1

fARMERS
. BANK

,.

ISN'T THAT A FlATBOAT? - Yes, It Is. And

All-

'
..._...._...,

4U

__

Horne

PH. 992·2121

.

740 ..............

"COME GROW
WITH US .

. ·...

1 Section, 10 Pagak 26 Cenu
A Multlmedle lne. Newtpaper

19S9~

budget Is In place. Riffe said
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Gov . Richard Celeste w111 ask voters must know how much Is In
state lawmakers Tuesday, and the education budget before they
are asked for more.
the public at large, to approve a 1
Public school officials have
percent . Increase In Individual
and corporate Income tax rates as ked for an extra $1.7 bllUon
over two years to bring education
to fund educational excellence.
Celeste's staff said late 'Mon- up to standards, while colleges
day the governor would call for. a and universities want $750
statewide ballot Issue "as soon as mUllon.
Celeste has warned them that
~sslble" this year on funding
there
wlll not be enough, even If
education beyond the anticipated
the
1
percent
Income tax passes . .
8 to 10 percent groW1h In the next
The
Individual
and corporate
·two-y ear budget.
Income taxes produce abput $800
The governor w111 address a
julnt session or the Ohio General million for each percent.
Assembly, dellverlng his annual , Ohio's personal Income tax
"State of the State" message In rates now range from about 0.8
· percent to 8 percent. An addithe House chamber at noon.
Las.hl!llnute adjusiments In tional 1 percent would be added
the text were being made late to most brackets, the lowest
· Monday as Celeste rehearsed out being excepted, according to
of earshot of reporters at the sources.
Celeste's education proposal Fawcett Center for Tomorrow on
Involves
greater equity In fund·
.,
the Ohio State University
lng
local
school districts; more
campus.
accountability
and demonstra·
.. . " But staffers reported It was a
Another sternwheeler, the Valley Gem, accom··:. certainty that he would call tor
panled the Blennerhassett but was not close
the public vote after making a
enough to be Included In the picture.
strong case for bringing education up to the highest levels by

&gt;

Blower .

Jimiia..Y 10,

.Councll ·approves appropriations

Ra•ll•t•

.

Featuring:

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday,

.

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE--------------------

·~your

Jim Cobb

.

'

AND

Jan. 9-Southern
Jan. 11-At Trimble
jan. 12-At North Gallia

::.._

Middlepo~

GIRLS
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking
Jan. 12 -Miller
Jan. 19-Trimble

• Partly cloudy, low In up1oea1
20.. Wednesday ,
cloudy , hlgbo In mid

•

·•

SOUTHERN

THE
CENTRAL'
TRUST
COMPANY

529
Pick-4

9208

Vol.39, No.171 •
Copyriphted 1989

992-6333

'

Daily Number

Page 4

SUNDAY

•Ohio Lottery Ticik~tta
•VCR Rentals •Milk
•Bread
•Hunting Ucen1e

949-2210 .'

Ohio Lottery

STORE HOURS:
MON.-SAT.

GIRLS

SYRACUSE OFFICE

Johnny Bench
in baseball
Hall-of-Fame

Jan. 1O-At Federal Hocking
Jan. 13-•l•r
Jan. 17-Warran

MEMBER FDiC

•

l

•
•

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