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Pom~oy- MiddlePort,

Page-1 0-The Daily ~el
..
•'
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.HOME
!

''DIGNITVlAND
•
SERVICE AlWAYS"
Ben H. Ewing-Director

Thi1
..
·week't
· 6sme1·

. PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

..
"COME GlOW
wmtus

..

•

.

EWING
FUNERAl

tuasday, January 3", 198~

Ohio

'

Seton Hall
slips past

Fs

.

..

~eorget~wn

.........
-FARMERS
.

Daily Number

315
Pick-4
4828

Page 3

, BANK

•

Ohio Lottery

&amp; SAVINGS CO.

•

~-

POM£10Y, OH.
992-2136 )
992-2137
TUPPDS PUINS; OH.
.
985-3315

MEIGS

667·3161

BOYS

Vol.39, No. 167

U.S. jets down two.
·Libyan fighter planes

GIRLS
Jan. 5-Aiexander
Jan•. 9-Ftderal Hocking
USED CAIS
NEW CAIS
USED CAIS

POWELL'S

'

EASTERN
-BOYS

FOlD

; liUOS~
•COMPLETE RADIATOR SERVICE
•MAJOR REPAIRS
. •COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
&amp; IALAIIICE ,
oMOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED
'

298 SECOND ST.

GIRLS

POMEROYI :OH.-

Jan. 5 -Symmes Valley
Jan. 9-Southern
Ja,..-11-At T;imble

\992-2196\

Jan. 6-At Southwestern
Jan. 7-At Gallipolis

·."HOME BANK .

Jan. 5-Southwestem
Jan. 9-Eastern
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek

REMODELING TO BEGIN- Ph1111e I work will
begin Immediately on the fanner Royal C.rown
Bottling Co., building on Norlh Second Ave.,

STORE.HOURS:

MON.·SAT.
8 A.M.-10

BOYS

INSUIAHCE

ClAIMS
WBCOME
461 310 AVE. IIDDIEPOIT, 011.

\

•

SOUTHER"

IODY._

P.~

10 A.M.-10 '"'

GIRLS

HOME PEOPLE"

Work will begin Immediately
The building program for the building which will provide a
on the first phase of converting new future church and Christian 1,000 seat sanctuary as well as
the fanner Royal Crown Bottling · School Includes ·two phases.
areas for Sunday school classes.
Co. building, North Second Ave .. During the first phase, the front
The Rev. l\lllchael Pangia,
Middleport, in-to new quarters for part of the building wlll be
pastor, announced that work will
the Rejoicing Life Church and ·remodeled for use as a fellowship
begin Immediately on the first Christian School.
hall. youth meeting room, junior
phase portion and that blue
The Rejoicing Life Church high school class space for the . prints and permits will ano-:v
purchaaed the bulldlpg. some Christian School and restroom
oecupany of the portion of. the
time ago and received in late facilities .
bulldlng affected by that phase
December state approved blue
The second phase will include
before phase U is completed.
prints for the bu llding.
reworking the rear part of the
•

SYRACUSE 'OFFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFFI~E
949-2210

THE '
CENTRAL
TRUST

COMPANY
"Your Financial
Center" .
97 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT; OliO
992-6661

INSTALLMENT
LOANS

992-3077

Sales &amp; Service
EAST IWN ST. ·

POMEIOY

Yeiar Deller ••
River

t••

'1".

~1•11

AND

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
198B·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 2-Miller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .. :....................... Home ·
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York .......... ::--A~y
Dec. 16-Wellston .............. ........ Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co...................... Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
198B·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Miller :... c...................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ..................... , Home
Dec. 2-.North Gallia .........:.......... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ........................ : Home
Dec. 13-Kyger Cree_
k.............,...... Away
Dec. 16~Hannan Trace .............. :Home
Dec. 17 -Feder~l Hockihg .......... ... Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ......... .-..... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
.Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath ........... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28.....:Miller ......... :... :............. Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg qath ........... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
Nov. 29-Eastern .... .......,............. Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Dec. 9-Symmes Valley ....... c........ .Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill .................:...... Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Greeri ............................ Away
Jan. 6-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Aw_ay
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 -Oak Hill ........................ Home·
Feb. 3-Hanmin Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. HO!Jl&amp;
Feb. 10-Solithwestern ................ Home

Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home

Dec. 30-Lo&amp;an ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jari. 17...,-Warren ........ ,............... , Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville· York.. ........... home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co ..................... Home
Feb. 3~Belpre ............ ,................ Away
Feb. 7-Aiexander ................ ....... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

FOOO' STORE

St~!~~.R~•rol investigate

' EAST.- ST.

.,, . . y
'~

'i'·

'~:!!''.

;

&gt;--•. '

r

'

two hit-skip accidents

. ',&gt;

· ._.f,JerveO••.
•Ohio lOttery tlcketa
•VCR R-Ia •MHk

· . ·

,•ln..d ..

•HiintfnJ Ucenae .

, OWNEib DAN SIDWELL

99.2-9907
....

IRLSSCHEDULE~-----------------~---MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB-B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastarn ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 8-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co...................... Home
Dec. ·21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9:-Federal Hocking .............. Horne
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home '
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ................ :..... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away ,
Feb. 9-Federal Hockins ...............11way
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away ·
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec . .!-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble·.:........................ Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12~Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern·................ Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble.......................... Away
.Jan. 12-North.Gallia .......... :........ Away
Jan. 19-0ak H1ll ........................ Home
.Jan. 23-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Homa
Feb. 6-Symmes Valley ................ Away

BAUM

.Jim Cobb ·
Chevr:oleteGidsmobilt
e(adillat, Inc.

LIME DAN
EXXON .

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

WE .WILL '
TAKE CARE OF

e:-i!8
FOR IREAIFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER
ftattirina:
·*GMt 111mburprs
•ROat BMf on Croissant
Stuffed Bllltd Potatoes
TICO Slllds
* hll •• C.•

*

*

*

o~;:.,Out•
P.M.
~~;~~~~i:~'
P.M.
1 P.M. ,...,
I

'-ov

"'"~~'

INSURANCE
NEEDS

CHESTEI, OH. ,

DOWNING•CHILDS
MUlLEN,-MUSSER
. INSUWJCE.

MUZZLE LOADING
and IIUNir.G .,._5

FanaraI
Home

lfOUIS:
Men. tin Fri.

•

v

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992-5141

COMPLETE
SELECTION

.. 555 PARK ST.

MIDDUPORT
992-6611

CAll 992-1311 or

7130 a.m. to SdiO p.IIL

99t..JRl

II

Setwtllr

7:30a.m. to 4110 p.m.

I

'

.'. --- -

--'------·---·-........___-~
0

'

'

'.

'

'

~

accident at 1 p.m. Tuesday on US
35, 0.2 miles east of Mile Post 14,

where SR 160 merges westbound
with US 35. Troopers said Bonnie
S. Barton, 47, Middleport, passed
another car, that was merging
onto US 35, and collided with a
westbound truck driven by Clar·
ence J. Taylor, 47, Rt.l, Northup.
There was no damage to thetruck and minor damage to the
car. No one was tnjured.
The patrol cited Barton for
improper passing.
Violet M. Stumbo, 77, Scot·
town, was cited _for failure to
yield the right of way after •an
accident at 1: 17 p.m. Tuesday on
us 35 at the Intersection of
Buhl·Morton Road . Troopers
said Stumbo pulled onto US 35
and collided with a car driven by
Daniel L. Persons, 21, Fort
Bragg, N.C. No 0 newas Injured.
Damage was moderate.
The patrol Is Investigating a
hit-skip accident that occurred at
3:38p.m. Tuesday on Bob McCormick Road, one-halfmllesouth of
SR 160. Troopers said an unidentified vehicle went left of center
and collided with a car driven hy
Teresa L. Lewls,l7, Rt.l. VInton.
Damage was moderate. No one
was injured. The hit-skip vehicle
left the scene.

BATAVIA, Ohio (UPI) -The _pending before the Envlronmenstate says It will pursue the case · tal Board or Review.
against a Clermont County comJudge Robert Ringland, who
pany accused of puniplng con-· had said he wanted to continue
tamlnated water Into a creek that the trial that started 10 weeks
p r o v 1 des w a t e r f o r ago.' said he granted the mistrial
Wllllamsburg.
motion "with extreme reluc·
Richard Shank, director of the tance and profound disappoint. Ohio Environmental Protection ment and regret."
Agency, said Wednesday he
He granted the defense motion
would pursue a retrta~ after a for CECOS International, Its
Clermont County Common Pleas PiU'ent company, Browning FerCourt judge granted a mistrial In rts Industries Inc .. and Allan
.the case of CECOS International, Orth, fonner CECOS environ·
lis parent and two Individuals.
mental manager, but denied the
'Fhe mistrial was granted for motion for John Stlrnkorb,
the defense after the prosecution former CECOS operations
used a wrll.fen :memo. during · manager.
cross-examination of one of the
They had been named In an
defendants and the defense said SO-count Indictment charging
It knew nothing ol the memo.
them wit~... pumping ph~nol·
"Wewlllcontinuetopursuethe tainted water Into a branCh of
... case Involving numerous ha- Pleasant Run Creek; a water
zardous waste violations and we source for the community of
will continue to aggressively Williamsburg.
Closing argilments are sche·
defend our decision to deny this
facility a permit," Shank said.
duled lor March 15 .. "in the
Continued on page 5
A request' lor a permit Is

:LUMBER
OF

One person was slightly injured and two drivers were ~ited
after two cars al\d a pickup truck
coUided at 6:23 p.m. Tuesday on
SR 7, at the Intersection of Little
Kyger Road , in Addison
· Township ..
The State Highway Patrol said
Douglas E : Halfhill, 38. Cheshire,
stopped in traffic: His car was hit
from behind by a vehicle driven
by.Lisa A. Plants. 32, Henderson,
W.Va. Then, a .t ruck driven by
Delton W. Fowler, 44, Racine.
struck-the back of Ihe Plants car.
There was moderate damage to
all three vehicles. ·
Hal !hill was Injured and taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospita'l at
Point Pleasant.
The patrol cited Fowler and
Plants on charges of fallurJi' to
stop within the assured clear
distance.
The driver was injured in a
one-car accident at 11 p.m.
Tuesday on SR 554, about eight
miles west of Cheshire. Bryan
Branham, 18, Pomeroy, suffered
a minor visible injury,bu twas not
. treated. According to the patrpl,
Branham lost control on a curve.
His car went off the road, striking
a tree. Damage-was heavy to the
vehicle. There was no cltar· n.
One dr lver was cited
an

State plans to pursue
retrial of CECOS

VALLEY

ntM.AVL.

'

1----~-------~----~------~-----------------------------------~~~~-

Blowe.r ·

,..,

..

\

Rawll•.l•
Coat•

. ALL YOUR

HARDWARE
.........w..... ,.....

985-3301

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander .................-..... Away
nov..28-Eastern ........................ Homa
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away
Dec. 5-Meigs ............................. Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22 -Alexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwesterh .................. 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. 30-Waterford ..................... Home
. Feb. 2-Hannan Trace .....,........... 'Homt.
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 11-Meigs ........................... Home

Middleport, to convert it Into luture quarters for
the Rejoicing Ule Church and Its Christian
School.

W ~rk to begin immediately
o~ first phase of project

SUNDAY

FOR .
MEMBER FDIC

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - U.S.
""'-.(
fighter jets " acting in self~&lt;defense" on patrol over interna·
Mediterranean Soa ~tiona! waters shot down two
Li~yan MiG -23s above the Medl·
terranean Sea 'Wednesday and
0
200
returned to their aircraft carrier
milos
safely, the government said.
The Libyan pilots apparently
parachuted from their crippled
Sovlet·bullt jets after lhe F -14
Tomcats from the USS John F .
. LIBYA
Kennedy fired on them, accord· ·
ing to U.S. officials In Washing·
ton and with President Reagan in
Los Angeles.
The attack occurred at about 5
a .m. EST, about 11 a.m. local
time north of Tobruk, Libya, the f~;;a::;;;;;-;j'--\~:;;;---~
EGYPT
officials said.
The Incident, latest In a series
of clashes that Included the l).S.
·bombing of Libya In 1986, comes
amid renewed tensions over
reports that Libyan leader
l\lloamml)r· Gadhaflls building a
chemical weapons plam. Reagan
administration officials main·tained the downlngs had nothllig
to do \llith the plant. . ,
"The ' Libyan· aircraft apUPI Graphic
proached the U.S. Navy aircraft
in a hostile manner -over lnternationa I waters· and the Navy ·
aircraft, acting In s~)f· defense ,
LmY AN JETS SHOT DOWN - U.S. fighter Jets shot down two
fired air.-to-air missiles, downing
l,ibyan MIG-23s over the Mediterranean &amp;!a Wednesday,
both 1.lbyan aircraft, " a Navy
according to a Pentagon spokesman. The U.S. jets were from the
statement said.
carrier USS John F. Kennedy. (UPI)
The two Navy r-14s were
" eonductlng roUtine defensive sl"milar ena~oun te r · betwl'en foreign ·min isfry 'accuse¥ th e
patrol," said White House spo- American and Ll byan jets, had U.S. or a '' premeditated" attack·
kesman Roman Popadluk with led to sharp criticism on Capitol against the two MIG fighters.
the vacationing Reagan. The Hill and elsewhere.
Popadiuk told reporters in Los
president was awakened and
A White House spokesman said Angeles, " The F·l4s were threainformed at 3 a.m. PST, an hour President-elecl George. Bush
tened while conducting routine
after the incident, he said·.
also was awakened Wednesday operations ln International airsArmy Lt. Gen. Colin Powell. morning a1 the ylce president's
pace north of Tobruk. The F -14s
the president's national security residence in Washington. There
returned safely to 1helr ship. and
adviser, woke Reagan at his new was no Immediate reaction from
two parachutes were sighted
home in the Bel Air suburb of Los either Reagan or Bush.
from the downed Libyan airj\l)geles. Failure to wake the'
Libya n radio, monitored by the craft," indicating the Libyan
president in August 1981, after a BBC in London, said Libya's
pilots might have escaped .

{

Jan. 3-Southwestern
Jan. 6 ..... At Symmes Valley
Jan. 10-At Southern

PAT Hill FORD, Inc.

2 Sect lono, 1 2 Paget 26 Canto
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 4, 1989

Copyright«! 1989

Jan. 3-Belpre ,
Jan. 6-At· Alexander

•

at

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Variable cloudiness tonight ,
Low In mid 20s. Thursday,
High In mid tes. Chance of
rain 60 percenl.

------ -•.:,---------'--1

.-

lt------....--'--- -'--·--·--i-- I ,

-

'

C()nstr,uction
spending up
0.8 percent

TUNISIA

"M·'

.+.

CHAD

SUDAN

By LYDA PHILLIPS
UPJ Business Writer
WASHINGTON - · A spurt In
single-family home building and
public projects sent 'constructlon
spending up 0.8 percent In
November, the Commerce De·
partment said Tuesday.
•
During the first 11 months of
.
1988, $370.9 billion of new construction was begun, 1 percent
above the same period of 1987, ·
the department'~ Census Bureau
reported. New construction In
By LEE LEONARD
be a tough two-year session in
November was launched at a
UPI Statehouse Reporter
terms
of solving the state's offices In the new State Offlf'e
seasonally adjusted annual rate
COLUMBUS- The 118th Ohio problems .
Tower across tHe street !\'om the
of$411.1 bllllon,0.8 percentabove
Statehouse .
General AssembiX convened
"Now the real work begins. "
the revised October estimate of
Tuesday amid spec'alation It wlll '
Chief Just!~ Thomas Moyer of
warned
House Speaker Vernal
$407.8 billion, the bureau said.
the
Ohio Supreme Court and
Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg, as he
.Lawrence · Chlmerlne, c hlef
associate
Justice Allee Roble
accepted nomination and elec·
economist for the W.E FA Group
In
her first day on the
Res
nick,
•
•
tlon to his record eighth term as
of econemlc forecasters In Bala
job,
swore
In
the state senators.
speaker. ·'The road between now
Cynwyd , Pa., said the Increase
Stanley
Aronoff, RSen.
and the end of 1990 will be a long
was larger than expected.
Cinclnnatl,
was
elected
Senate
and difficult one. The choices will ·
" You have to be very careful "
6~
president,
succeeding
former
not be easy. "
Interpreting the construction fig·
.
· Lawmakers are expected to Sen. Patil Glllmor, R-Port Clinures," he )Yarned, Qecause durton, now a congressman.
The Ohio Bureau of Employ· have to raise taxes to accommoIng cold months good weather
Aronoff. 56. Is a 22-year vetecan mean more construction ment annouqced today the Ohio date the demand for public
ran
or the Senate and has been In
than ·the Industry's strength County unemployment rates for services. They may ask voters
the General Assembly since 1961.
November 1987. Among the for permission to Impose a
warrants .
Sen. David Hobson, R·
"Fundamentally cons tructlon state's 88 counties , unemploy- special flat rate income-tax for Springfield. was chosen presi·
ment ranged !rom a low of ·a. 7 education.
Is not a positive force In the
dent pro tempore. Sen. Richard
percent
in Hancock County to a
Other hot issues wlll be care for
economy right now ," Chlmerlne
,Finan,
R·Cinclnnatl. Is majority
sa ill. ''Construction Is zigging high of 10.7 percent In Monroe the elderly, general health care
leader
and
Sen. Eugene Watts.
and the growing gap In the
and zagging but not really going County.
R-Columbus,
Is whip.
,
·
The comparable unemploy· Medicaid budget.
anyplace. With Interest rates
Senate
Minority
Leader
Harry
But opening day was basically
going up, that trend will continue . ment rate !or Ohio was 5.3
Meshel, D-Youngstown, took his
percent,
a
bout
the.
same
as
5.2
lighthearted,
with senators and
next year.'&lt;l.
re-election oath on crutches
DaVId Wyss, chief economist percent In October. The com par· representatives mingling with
recovering
from a broken ankl~
able U.S. rate In November was their families, photographing
for Data Resources Inc. In
sustained In a nightspot accident
and being photographed, holding
Lexington, Mass., agreed that 5.2 percent . ~
In Kansas City last month.
Ten counties had unemploy - children and grandchildren on
ihe numbers might not be as good
Democratic Sen s. Neal
ment rates at or below 4.5 their laps, even letting them vote
as they look.
Zimmers
of Dayton, Eugene
"From November to March percent In November. Three . for them. ~
Branstool
of
Utica and Michael
these numbers aren't terribly counties had unemployment . For House members, It - l~t:
White
of
Cleveland
remain on the
above 10 percent.
volved checking out their new
useful," · Wyss said. "They tell rates
party's Senate leadership team.
Among six Southeastern Ohio
you how good the weather was counties, the jobless rate for
rather than how healthy con- November remained the same
struction was. Construction's not only in Gallla and Meigs coun·
dead, but It is slightly Ill." ·
ties. There was no change !rom
Overall residential construc- October percentages. Gallla's
tion spending was up 0.7 percent rate remained at 6.4 percent and
In November; led by single· Meigs remained at ji.8 percent.
family housing, the government
Ji'aul Gerard has been appointed _by Meigs County Common
The unemployment rate rose,
reported.
·
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow IIItotheposltions of criminal bailiff
however, In i\thens County, up
In November, speQding for 0.1 percent to 5.1 percent In
assignment commissioner and deputy sheriff. The term of
new single-family houses shot 2.3 Novewmber; Jackson County,
deputy shall be from Jan . 1, 1989 to Dec. 31, 1995: Gerard.Is to
percent above October to an up 0.4 percent to 7.4 ,percent;
receive $2,000 per year as compensatiOn for services as bailiff
annual rate of $121.5 billion, Lawrence CoiiJity, up 0.3 percent
Appointed as Meigs County, Common Pleas Court reporter~
while non·f!!Sidentlal .bu Udlng to 5.5 · percent; and . VInton
were Teresa Tyson-Drummer, Paul Gerard, Crystal Whitlatch
dropped 0.8 percent !rom Oc· County, up 0.3 to 9.4 percent, the
and Mary Gilmore.
._
Iober to a rate ol $92.3 billion, the highest among the six counties.
In other court matters, ,J .B. O'Brien, Pomeroy, has filed a
bureau said.
judgment action against Michael T. Grifllth, Pomeroy.
OBES said the work Ioree In
Public construction In No- the six county area numbered
The State of Ohio, ex rei'., the Meigs Co)lnty Commissioners
vember also did well, up to a 84,600 and 79,300 of them were
Pomeroy, have filed a complaint for necessaries to cover cost~
seasonally . adjusted annual rate employed In ·Novemher, leaving
of support, maintenance and medlcals for minor children
of $81 billion, up 4 percent from 5,300 or 6.2 unemployed In the six
'
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Continued on page 5
October.
counties. ·

Oh •

lawmakers expecting to
face several hot issues in '89
JO

. Meigs jobless
rate rema'tns
·
at B percent

Local news briefs-.
Gerard named to Meigs posts

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Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

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goods.~_·_Jac_k·A_nde_rso_n
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111 Court Street

Those Items and otber exotica was built tn 1926 for King GilletI!!.
WASHING-TON - The slugyears to sell the movie to a studio,
gish Christmas shopplilg season amounting to more than $11 the Inventor of the safety razor. If
but no luck.
,
·lett retailers wltb more inven· billion are the remains from the that doesn't suit, how about a
You can even I;Juy your "own
tory than they wanted. In that record number of bank failures 26-acre executive Island retreat
raceway - · a quarl!!r' mUe
respect, stores have sotnethtng since 1982. Tbe FDIC Insures on Red Cedar Lake in Wisconsin
asp!'lalt go-gart track accompan·
In common ··with the Federal depositors in tbe nation's 15,000 . that Is only accessible by boat?
led by a water sltdt!.og nine acres
In additiOn to rellJ estate, the
Deposit Insurance Corp. - bulg· banks pnd gets stuck with the
'
·
tn Rochesl!!r, Minn.' ·
FDIC has some other ·unusual
tng warehouses · that beg for a· property of the banks tbat fall.
You name ft. If someone went
sale.
·
Our associate Michael Bins win odds and ends, Including a movie
belly-up trying to market a loser,
If you shopped at lhe FDIC recently browsed through ihe entitled, ''And They''re Off," . you can bet llie FDIC has that
store today, you w;ould find 'FDIC ·c atalog. There are such starring Tab Hunter a!td JQse ·Ieiser In Its catalog.
everything from a complete finds · as a large mansion In Ferrer. Let the buyer beware.
While ,ll'e're on the subject of
. Western-wear shape to 705 men's Southern California with pano- This movie has no seundtrack. losers - a 10 percent Interest In
hairpieces. neat\Y sorted and ramic views of Newport Harbor You could probably get tt for
the snake'-bltten Dallas Cowboys
and the Pacific Ocean. The house sl!!al. The FDIC has tried for two
bagged.
has been added to tbe FDIC
. portfolio. Regardtes, a Washington business magazine, recently
reported that one of the team's
owners defaulted on. a cotnme~­
' clal bagk loan ano;l the Cowboys
were the collateral. ·
The FDIC declined to disclose
the name of the owner in default.
The loan was ortitnally held by
First RepubllcBank Corp. of
Dallas. Last July, · the FDIC
agreecfto sell the Insolvent bank
0~1?.
to NCNB Corp. of North Carolina
In the se.cond'iargest
government·asststed baUout In
banking history. The deal calls
for tbe FDIC to assume the losses
for a S5 billion pool of real estate .
and bad loans.
"Dte owner's ioan was tn that
pool. . James ErWin, who super·
vises bad assets for NCNB, wUI
actually be In charge of finding a
buyer for tl!.e Cowboys stock,
even though the FDIC owns It
now.
A Cowboys spokesman refused
to comment on any aspect of lhe
organization's books, except to
confl~m that the team fs.for sale.

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE ,MEIGS.
, . MASON .AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEF ... ICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

a

A MEMBER of The Unlted Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are w~lcome. They sho~kl be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subj ect toedtttng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published . Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persmalltles.

\AIE:ILL, IT'S
OFFICIAL ...
THe HOLIDAV~A&amp;JN
IS

Ohio Politics

Ingredients are right
for
hot political ·year
. .
"

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP I) - As 1989 rolls in, Statehouse observers are
i~:\"J;.!for a protracted and heated legislative session- the kind that
••
fuel for the poltttcal hot stove for years to come.
:..r~~~~.;~~
· Ingredients are there for a"sesslon that rivals the benchmark
1971, when the state income tax was firstenacled; 1983, when
'So·callled 90 percent Income tax was pasSed; and 1985. when the
""'''"'" and loan scandal put everything else on the back burner for
This ·ttme, lhe stage is set for anofher round on taxes. Backroom
consensus is that government leaders already have decided to ask the
.people to approve an income tax Increase for education.
· That campaign will play Itself out this coming sprlhg, and other
: government agencies on human services, the environment, aging,
: health and corrections "Will be fighting for lhe res I of lhe money
• provided by modest growth In exlsltng revenues.
: Add lo that the positioning of various legislators for higher office tn
· J990, notably House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg, for
;governor, and you have the making of a hectic 1989.
Riffe will continue to run the House with a tight rein, as he has for
· !he las l14 years. But if he begins to tip his hand ln the direction of the
: 1990 Democralic gubernatorial primary, some of his power may
: ll.egln to erode.
• There is new leadership on lhe other end of lhe Statehouse, where
: senate President Paul GUimor, R-Port Clinton, 'has gone to
:Washington and is being replaced by veteran Sen. Stanley Aronoff,
·R·Cinctnnatl.
· GUimor's steady hand will be missed but Aronoff, who has been tn
• the General Assembly si nce 1961 and has spent the last22 years In the
: senate, is batlle lested.
,
·
: Aronoff is a s~illed political tactician who has few peers at problem
· solving. His pragmatic outlook will dovelail with Riffe' s. Both should
: work well with Gov. Richard Celeste In navigaling the mtneftelds that
-:are wailing.·
,..
:; · Replacing Aronoif as chairman of the Senate Ftn;mce Committee
wlll be Sen. Theodore Gray. R·Columbus, the only senator whose
• experience surpasses Aronoff's.
- Gray wtll need to summon every bit of acumen gained during his 36
: years In the Senale to handje the 1989 budget negothitlons,
: • Though Gray. who was a Senale leader for 10 years In the 1960s and
-;'70s, has not taken a leadership role since 1975, he will also be a
&lt;&gt;teadylng mfluence on the process.
:. There'll be a change In lhe Ohio Supreme Court this year, too. Not .
: !hat the Republican ma jority won't slt\1 be 4·3.
• · But Justice Alice Roble Resnic k, the first woman on the high courl
: since 1982 and Ihe first one elected In 60. years, brlngs "a new
: perspective," according lo .assistant U.S. · Altorney Holly Taft
· Sydlow.
Sydlow. who represented the Women's Bar Association of Ohio at
Resnick's s wearing· In ceremony tast week, said the new justice was
. Instrumental in founding the Women's Bar Association in Toledo and
• for establishing a " mentor" program for female altorneys.
• Judge Peter Handwork, presiding judge of the Sixth District Co uri
: of Appeals, where Resnick has served for six years, said Resnick will
: help other jurists when she finishes her own work,
·; "You will learn that she Is a tireless and unselfish public servant,"
Handwork predicted.
: Resnick promised to be "one of lhe boys" (the other six justices are
men and she Is not uncomfortable wllh that) but she made it clear she
: ts aware of her pioneering status and will do everything possible to
: help other women and minority jurists follow In her footsteps.

Berry's World

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1988 bV NEA. Inc
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"Pat Sajak bags!"

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WAIMEA, HawaU (NEA) Out there, beyond the spectacu·
Jar waves that build and break
far offshore, beyond the distant
reaches of fabled Waimea Bay,
beyond even the horizon, Is the
enllclng yel evanescent prospect
of the Pacific Era.
For some, the Pacific Century
has already started. Others In·
stst thai 11 wUI begin shortly.
Skeptics are convinced thai tt Is
nol coming any time soon - If
ever - because It ts largely the
product of vapid chatler andun·
founded speculation.
"The era of Atlantic doml·
nance' Is coming to an end. The
economic center of gravity has
shifted lo Asia and the Pacific,"
says JuUa Chang Bloch of Harvard University's Center for In·
ternational Affairs.
Not true, says Christopher
Coker, a lecturer at the London
SChool of Economics who Insists
that the Pacific Century Is "ape·
cuitarly American obsession"
not shared by any of the Asian
nations supposedly responsible
for launching and sustaining it.
What is certain Is that the phe· ·
nomenon Is anxiously awaited by

Robert Walters

.

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states throughout the West, par· coupled lo lhe revitalized en· members of the Assbclatlon of
ticularly those bordering on lhe glnes of Europe; and North Southeast Asian Nations - the
Pacific. For them, It represents America."
'f '
· . Philippines, Indonesia, · Ma·
an unprec~ented opportunity to
Another experl, Seljl Naya. ari . laysta and ThallaOil - whose
high growth rales In recent years
shift the focus of economic acttv· economics·professor at t,he Univtty away from the East and the ersity of Hawa,U. offers Ibis per- are expected to .be sustained in
the future. ·
; Atlantic, where 11 has been since spective.
.
the nation's founding.
In
a
category
all
by
Itself is the
"Desplle rapid growth, the
The signs of growing Asian Asia -Pacific developing econ· ·People's Republic of China, the
economic tnfiuence In the region omles, with the possible excep· world's most · popqlous nation
are unp1istakable. Bank deposits lions of HOng Kong and Stnga, whose vast economic potential
remains ia~eiy untapped.
Increased 10 times faster tn Cal· pore, are not expected to follow
tfornla than tn New York during Japan Into lhe ranks of the fully
Finally, there are dozens of
the 1980s. The Los Angeles-Long developed countries within the other. na Uons In the region, rang..
Beach port now handles almost near future."
tng from oU·rtch Brunei, whose
three times as much cargo as
Hong Kong and Singapore, sultan Is ·the wealthiest man In
do'e s the previously dominant Naya notes, "are unique In many the world, lo Bangladesh, one of
New York-New Jersey port
ways" ~ca.use they "already the poorest countries on eart)l,'
In no state Is the newly emerg- (have) "highly sophisticated · with a yearly per capita Income
Ing pattern of economic ·activity economies" and enjoy ·· a long of only $113. Other low-Income
more Important than In HawaU, tradition as . merchandising at111 nations In the region Include
where Victor Hao Ll, president of . financial centers."
India, Burman, Nepal; Pakistan,
the East,West Center4 seeks lo
Sri
Lanka, Bhutan, Vlelnam,
Those city-states and two other
place recent developments In nations - the Republic o,f. China Laos, Cambodia and th€ Malconlext:
'
(Taiwan) and South Korea- are dives.
"The Pa.c lttc Era Is an exag- the region's newly lndustrialtzetlOverall, however, Naya- says
geration. The world focus cer· countries. Each of those "Four · that Asia has been and "will con·
talnly is no! going to abandon Tigers" .has enjoye(j exceptional tlnue .to be the ·faste!!t·growlng
North America and Europe and economic growth In recent de· reglori In the world." A. Pacific ·
shm to Asia and the Pacific . • .A cades. ·
Century, stU! somewhere bet·
.
powerful new Orient Express Is
Ranked behind thefll are fo11r ween chimera and ~eaUty, Is
roaring out of Asia - a real bul- resourcr-rlch,
middle-Income forming In the ocean mists west
· of here.
let train. But it Is. ; .firmly

Tuesday's cage scores ··

Overloaded.......brain is forge~ful. ·b rain .
I vtstled one of my friends for
his 80th birthday the other day
and he, his wife, the other guest
(my age) and I all lost my car
keys.
It took all four of us to lose
them: I had them when I came tn
the door, and ali of us watched
the birthday boy take my coat,
my gloves, my ear-muffs and the
gift I brought him, and none of us
paid any attention to what
happened to my car keys. When It
was time to go, we combed the
house several times; retraced
my steps; we did everythiJ)g you
always do when you've lost
something.
"Now, let's see, you were
standing here and then you went
to the phone to answer your
pager," (walk, walk, point,
polnt, re-enact, re-enact). Next,
we tried to recreate thought you
would put your keys In your coat
· pocket .. , maybe I was thinking 1
would put your keys on tbe bed
with your coat, and then maybe 1
stopped off to put tbe Irish Cream
In the .refrlgerator ••• MAYBE I
PUT · YOUR KEYS IN THE
REFRIGERATOR!" We looked.
He hadn't.
We peered through the locked,
dark car with a Oashitght, on one
hand not wantlng to see ,them
because that would mean we'd
have to call a locksmith, but
hoplni on the other hand that we
WOULD see them, IICl we'd knov.r
we hacln'l all just walked Into the
"Twilight Zone" where keys
disappear down black holes and
It's 1958 again.

Sarah. Overstreet

~

looked all over the yard; we · own system Is so faulty, I go to I say one resolution only, because
put on our coats and lay on our look for something and I don't I'm having a tOilgh enough Ume
bellies and looked under the car: even get a blip on my monitor remembeJ'Ing to ~ke . the gar·
We finally found tbe DevU Keys screen. A month later, lhe bage gut, much less a long Ust of
self-Improvements I'm supposed
In .a soft .c hair, sort of nestled system purges everything, .
between the arm and the cushion,
So, this New Year, my resoiu· to lie making. With memory
where Cheetos and peanuts rest tion Is to program my memory- problems, less · is more. Or
just before they disappear my cerebral computer -better. something Uke lhat.
forever. It was the chair no one
had sat tn. ·
And my friend and I are in good
company. Recently I watched a
TV program about Yuppies who,
believe they're developing Alz·
helmer's disease because ofthelr
forgetfulness, and are going to
their doctors by the hordes to
• B)' United Press International
have Jests for it. Turns out
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 4. the fourth daY of 1989, with 361 to
.
•·
· ·
they're notsufferini'tromAlzhei- follow .
mer's, they're just not
The moon Is waning, moving loward Its new phase.
remembering.
.
The morning $tars are Venus and Saturn.
Personally, I'm convinced It
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
doesn't have auytblni to do with
Those born on this date are under the stgn of Capr~rn. They
age, or early Alzheimer's, . or Include folklore and fairy talecollectQf Jakob Grimm in 1785, teacher
even faulty memory; I think,
of the blind Louts BraUJe In 1809, sllo~thand wrltln!!; system Inventor
first, we just have a lot to do, and Isaac Pitman In 1813, Charles Stratton, t].le midget known a~ Gen.
second, we're not paying very Tom Thumb, In 1838, Dilnols Sen. Everett Dlrk$en In 1896, actress
close attention.
Jane Wyman In 1914 {age 75), boxer Floyd Patterson in 1935 (age 54) •
I think the ·mind, like a
and actnT Dyan Cannon In 19,:!_.!_~~ 52) .
.;
computer, will hold X number of
bytes and plaf back to us.
On tbls date tn history:
•
However, you can't just say "Oh,
In 1885, Dr. Wtlliam Grant o! Davenport, Iowa, jlerform~ the flrsr
yoo boo, Mr. Computer, I'd like to appendectomy . His patient recovered.
have that manuscript I ·was
In 1951, €hlnese and North Korean forces captured the South
workJni on yesterday." You Korean capital of Seoul.
have to have a system for findlni
In 1974, President Richard Nixon refused.to release any more of Ihe
that information: directories to 500 documents subpoenaed by tbe Senate'Watergaje Committee.
scan, and commands to get at tbe
In 1985, Israel cobflrmed that 10,000 Ethiopian J.,...s had been flown
stuff ' once It's stored. We'n! to Israel. Ethlopta termed the operatiOn "a gross Interference" in its
·
·
putting the stuff once it's stored. affairs. --... · ·
I
We're putting tbe &amp;tuff Into our
minds, haphazardly, '&amp;lld relytne
A tho~ht for tile day: illtriots-S:;tor Everett Dirksen·once called' '
on It to be there when we want lt. tile U.S. Senate "an old scow which doesn't move.very fast, but never •
'
·
·
We have no way to locate it. My sinks. "

~oday

in :history·

.

..

st..,,._....
st CWrntlh'

t1. llrtdppnrt n

Sh11iN'ulllf' lf, Welrto• cW\'a) 4S
St-..aWIIP Ct'1tl._. 11. Tororllo M
·npp City ·a , Ptq• u
Tol Wld&amp;to 81, Tot Cllr l8
Trlmblf' II. Vlnton .Caunt.,r fl.l
Trotwoodn, Dq w"" .. to

h11Q' Val 11. 1'111111 (Jal: h 54

VleftM MM ..... !' '71, BloDrnftp.. U
WIIIWIIIJOR CH til, ZMf': 'fn ce tA
w•ertoo u , Pleld n
Wt'IW.,n II, Nela011¥Uie York f4
W1!1h~llf' Ml, llackf')e SW 11 (&lt;!Ill

\\'tel llru('h ... 'Bt&gt;!M·er IA&gt;CJ 13
• Laf Rl ......oed 11, Slrutwrz. $1
u, ....
it
w......... ar..,., Marl. . tlllllt
X:nta Wla.. tl, fh llilltrf':'lt 18

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\:'HIIP ctrr 'Jt, l'ldwr Chr 5%

v . . . . . .00.,. a, v ..... 81! lot )
v ..... Vn•• n, .......... u

Girls soores

Me•• ll11!11111d 31, thiUt '
Ml.-nl EMt '71, Newlon II

Mid Feww&amp;cll 47. Preble

Milford 15, Cln W IO:f;lol
Mt Heak~ 18, W 0.
.r Lllko4&amp; U

.. .

N 8etuiT"11Jior41,S.

MCo11riryDIIy

Navarftl Falr!Ns H, Tuataw t7
ltnox~llt

tt, Uma Perey tt

OUawa Gludorf 7ri, Lima CMh 2'7

&lt;htord Talawuul'a 0. HamlHo• Badin

"

Rernahbh .. oil, Col W•tenon 4t

• Rlet.lleld Jle\rere II, N•rtow •
e ....... ' ' OrdewUle It

a...a...

Sa.. l'e..- •lt.I•NIIII..-~~ee4.1
~~~~

Palnl• II, Nof11t Ceohsl

II

!pr..r OrH!IIall It, Sprllll Cat II Sl

.,,... N'e.-er•41. Meeh•ktbu 1'141
Tellf'•\'~

OAC player honored

Shawne~ -K

Milan Edison It, • r u Si

New

a nd Car lton Screen each added 17
points, Eric Murdock had 16 and
Cal Foster 10. JasoR Buc hannQn
scored 18 and Bill)• Si ngleton H
!or Sl. John 's, 7-4 overall and 0-2
in the Big Eas 1.
In the Top 20. No . 1 Duke
dropped Washington 87-61 . No.~
North CaroHna knocked Pe p~r­
dine 102-80, No . 6 Oklahoma
ripped Sam Hou ston lll-66 aird ·
No. 12 ' Nevada ·Las Vegas t(p
e nded Long Beach State 97·7G.· ·
At Seattle, nisPrve J ohn Smith
scored 15 of his seaso n 'high 17
points in the second half [o r
Duke, 9·0. E ld r idge ·Recas ner
and Dion Brown ·genera led 15
points each for Washington. 3-7.
At Malibu , Call!. , Kevin Mad·
den hil fo r 19 points to le~d six
players in double figures ior .
North Carolina , 12·1. Craig Davl,
. _led the Waves, 8-6, with 16 poinls.
At Norman. Okla ., Tony Ma rtin collected 40 point s and 17.
rebounds for Oklahoma . 11&gt;1 .
Sam Hou ston, 2·7. managed onl y '
28 second-half points.
.
At Long Beach, Calif.. fresh
man Anderson Hunt came of[ the
bench and scored 17 of his 21
poinls in the seco nd half for
UNLV, 8·2 overall and 3-0 in th~
Big West. Hunt hit all 6 of hi s
s hot s in the second half. includ·
ing 5 3·pointers. Long Beach fell
10 3·7.
"·'· '
ln other gam es, it was:

·Army:

1!, C.IBanle)r •

Teftmaelllf4,P'abiJoraM
,...__IWpw... IS, MIIRWNI'I H
u,pw Sdlllte Val All• £ u
Upper Arliql . . .; Col8rooktla¥tn 61
v . . Wert n, Coldwater 411
Watldna Memodlltl, Growpon 3t
We~le.....Uie 1."1 71, Col ar111118

a.

Wlla..llb18 II. Norlo.U t4
Wlhniiii'H n, W'll'-wllle U

W)roml.. U. ClaiA•aa Hill.

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP l)
Mount Union Guard Ernie
Moore, who helped lead Moun!
Union to the championship of Its
own Carnallon City Classic, has
been selected the Ohio Athletic
Conference basketball player of
the week.
Moore, a 5-foot·ll .senlor from.
Youngstown, scored 31 points,
grabbed 11 rebounds had five
asslsls and five sleals In lhe
two lournament games. He also
played. the two games wit~out a
Iurn over:
·Moore, voted the tournament
MVP, had 13 points in a 79-53 win
over Hiram In the semifinals and
18 points In an 80·66 victory over
Alma (Mich.) in the title game.

\

Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!).

•

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-" Januaty Super Sav

1986 Chrysler Fifth Ave. 4 Door
loaded with luxury equip·
ment. This car ha~ low miles,
one owner, one of a kind.

1986 Pontiac Sunbird 2 Door
Auto., air, AM-FM stereo,
Pontiac excitement!

low miles, AM-FM stereo cas·
sette, sport wheels, Tonneau cover. This is an excellent truck.

1988 GMC SKYWAy.
CONVERSION VAN
It has all the popular options including
sofa ..,.., blinds and contains luggage
rack, Fiberglass running boards. This is a
new van at a gr10t savings.

"WE HAVE A GREAT SELECTION
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STOP IN AND SEE•••MAIK, KEN, ED or J.D.

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500 UST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO
'

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:· ~

95, Cornell 79: Hanford 62. New
:
Hampshire 55; Holy Cross 98 , ".;
Dartmouth 82: Miami !Fla. ) 99 , ::~.'
Rutgers 94 in overtime; Northw-· • ·
es tern 83, Navy (](); Notre Dame
60. Pennsylvania 55: St. Peter's
68. .

Chuck Noll fires
four assistants

"

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attend. IV

ished as the bottom two• tea ms
each season,
I.
SetOn Hall and , Provrdence
entered this week a mong lhc
eight . undefea ted Divis ion I
teaf11s. The Pirates knocked off
one of the unbeaten by topping
Georgetown, 9·11 . and possibly
will get another chance Saturday
when they face No . .2 Syracuse.
13-0 with a game Wednesd ay
against Pittsburgh.
··
. "The Big East Is Iough," sa id ·
Cooper, who finished with 12
point~ against Georgetown . "We
have Syracuse next and then
Pitt. Connecticut, Providence.
No game will be easy this year."
The Pirat es won before a
boisterous crowd of 19,761, the
largest to see a college game at
lhe Meadowlands . Co ns ider that
in three previous season·s of
.playing ils home Big East games
rn the [acility, the Pirates had
never drawn more than 13.101
spectators . And ju si across the
Hudson River, the New York
Knicks had fi lled Madison
Square Gard en with basketball·
hungry fans.
"This is the btggest night in the
history of th e Seton Hall basket ball program," said Coach P .J .
Carlesimo, who Jed the Pirates to
their first NCAA Tournament '
appearance last year. "The fans
came to see a great Georgetown
tea m, but t.hey mostly came to
see Seton Hall. When you con·
slder that 19 ,500 fans went to
.Madison Square Garden -and
19,700 fans came here for us,
that's
quite
an
accomplishment. ..
For ProvidPnce, Ma r ly Co nlon

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Ex-Wehrle
ace plans to

Green named
Stanford coach

'

ln .search of the ...Pacific CenturY

By ,JOEL SHERMAN
UP I Sports Writer
A new order ha s descended on
the Big East.
Seton Hall a nd P rovidence.
long the league's doormats, have
shown lhey will be factors this
season. That was evident Tuesday night.
At Easl Rutherford . . N.J .,
Gerald Greene and Darryl
Walker scored 20 points each and
Michael Cooper came off the
bench to provide 10 second-half
points. rallying No. 10 Seton Hall
to a 94-86 triumph o~o. 5
Georgetown.
Seton Hall, 13-0, matched it s
best start since 1952·53 and'
moved to 2-0 in the Big East, the
first time the Pirates have done
that in the league's 10-year
history .
At . . Proviqence. R.I., Matt
Palazzi scored 19 point s . as
Providence placed Its five star·
ters in double figures en route to
thrashing St. John's 98-69.
The Friars pr·oduced the most
points agalnsl St. John's in a Big
East game in also rising to 2·0 for
the first time 'in the league.
Providence is ll·O for the first
BATTLE FOR REBOUND - Notre Dame's
Jerry Simon (left) as the lhrer battle for a
time si nce the 1964·65 season.
· Keith Robinson (right) reaches over the back of
rebOund in the first half of 1'uesday night 's game
Neither Seton Hall nor Provl·
Pennsylvania's Hassan Duncombe (center) and
In Philadelphia. (UPI)
dence has finished In the top
three In the Big East regular
season and only once has either
managed a winning record in the
. \,. conference, the 'Fr iars in 1986-87
when Ihey went ro Ihe Final Four.
In the league's fir st six years,
Providence and Sel on Hall finOutscor ing Eastern 22 121n the and Murphy 3 assists.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPli
third per iod, TVC rival Federal
Coach Charles Riley said of his
Lawrence Funderbu rke. who
Hocking broke away from a Eagles, "We've had a slight
was thrown off the Columbus
35-35 halftime deacllock to de- breakdown after Christmas. To- Wehrle High School basketball
feat hos't Eastern 79 66 Tuesday night we had a let down and the
team over lhe weekend, has
in a non league basketball momentum changed. In sports
announce his inten lions to at tend
STANFORD. Calif. (UP!) contest.
the ball game goes with momen·
the University of Indiana .
Dennis
Green, the San Francisco
Eastern drops lo 5·4 overall tum. I can promiSe you we will be
Funderburke's dismi ssal from
receivers coach. was
,49ers
and is 5·1 in the SVAC
back:"
t he team resulted from his
named
to
succeed the !Ired Jack
Eastern flew to a 2115 firs \, \ Federal Coach Tim Simpson
breaking team curtew rules
Elway
as
Stanford's head foot·
pe~iod lead. then suffered an
stated, "'I though t we played a while Wehrle .was in Pine Bluff,
ball
coach
Tuesday ; becoming
about fa ce as ~edera,l Hocking good man-to·man tontghl. I also
Ark. , to participate in the King
black
head coach In the
\he
first
reversed the role- playing to tie thought that (Jeffi Markham did
Cqtton Classic last week.
Paciflc-10
Conference.
Ihe score al 35-35 at the haiL
a good job guarding Martin . The
The 6-foot-8 Funderburke was
"l've always felt a part of
Federal Hocking mainlained a key was tM 11·0 run at the end of
UPI's Division IV co·player of
Stanford."
said the 39-year-old
fast tempo throughout the second 't hesecondquarler. Wealsoa hda
the year in 1988 as a junior. when
Green,
who
served
lhree years as
half, scoring 44 poin l9 to just ill" great contribution from our
he led Wehrle to a state cham a
Card
ina
l
assistant
before befor Ea,.lf'rn .
bench."
pionship, averaging 28.5 points
coming
the
head
coach at
A big third period rocketed the
Federal won the reserve ga me
and 14 rebounds a game.
Northwestern.
Lancers 10 a ri7 47 lead, a llowing 76-45. Mike Summerfield led with
He sa(d he chose Indiana
Green said at a news confer·
.them to s tave off the opponents 17 points. Eastern scqrers were
because he liked Coach Bob
ence
he would stick wilh the49ers
for the 79-66 win.
Jeff Durs1 with 14 and Matt
Knight ' s reputation as a
through
lhe next playoff game
Federa1 was sizzling from the Finlaw with 12.
disciplinarian.
against
the
Chicago Bears and, if
floor, hitting 36-61 for 59, while
The EHS reserves are 3-5.
"I think I need som e discipline San Francisco wins, the Super
posting a more mod&lt;"•t 7-12 (59i
Eastern travels lo Symmes
in my . llf~ and he definitely can Bowl.
··
at th e line. Eastern hit 26 ol66 for Valley Friday at fj p.m .
give il to me, " sa id Funderburke,
"I Will be Weljring tWO hats. "
$co...,by quarters:
.
a cool 39. hi1 . 2·J three pointers,
who had been suspended from
he said. "Bill (Walsh, Sari
and 12 of 20 at the li ne for 60.
Eastern ............. 21 14 12 19-66
the Wehrle .leam lor two g~mes Francisco head coach) has co nJunior point guard Shaun Sa· FH ................... . 15 20 22 22-79
earlier in the season by Coach vinced me I have to jump lnio the
voy led all scorers with 24 p.&gt;lnts.
EASTERN (66) .- Mike Martin
Chuck Kemper .
Stanford job. I '11 also do my best
but his effort was not enough to 4·1·9, Mike Frost 2·3·7, Shaun
·'He's 90 established coach and
to take the49ers to the next step."
manhandle the l.ancers. Fellow Savoy 7·2+24.Chris Lance 0-0·0,
I plan on going there and giving
Elway was fired Dec. 5 after
Eastern g uard &lt;;cotl Filch Scott Fitch 5-4-14, Ken Caldwell
him my aiL And he expects tha.t the Cardinal finished the season
notched 14 poinls, Mike Martin 1·0-2, Jeff Horner 0-0·0, Tim
from me, too . r'
at 3·6·2. Stanford lost several
had 9. fres hman Tim Bissell 8, Bissell 4·0·8. Jeff Durst 1·0·2.
Funderburke also had been
games
in the final seconds.
Mark Murphy 0·0-0, Mike
anll Mike Frost 7.
recruited by Ohio State and
On
his
coaching philosophy,
For Federal sophomore Randy Wheeler 0-0-0, Chad Sinclair
North c.. rolina, among others, Green said, · 'I believe In the
Shuford posted 20 points on ten 0-0·0. TOTALS 26·2·12-66
bul said he felt Buckeye Coach sludent alhlete, and Slanford"s
field goals, Shane Burchwell had . FEDERAL. HOCKING (79) ...:.
Gary Williams ··rea lly didn't tradition in that area."
19, Brent Dishong 11, and Jeff Shane Burchwell 8·3-19, Ron
come after me like lhe other
He said that when he was with
Eddy 0·0-0, Sequoia Lemmon
Markh am 10.
sc hool s did."
the 49ers and their headquarters
EHS had 17 turnovers. 6 steals, 2-0·4, Brent Dishong 5·0·11. Jeff
"I think the people around here
9 assists, and 22 re bounds Jed by MarKham 5-0·10. . Kevin j\'lace • (Columbus) really didn't appre - was in nearby Redwood City, " I
never took my• eyes off
Martin's 8.
Federal ha d -27 1·2·4. Tim Lairson 1·0·2, Brell
ciate me enough to go to Ohio Stanford ."
turnovers,8 steals, 12 assists, and Lewis 0-0-0, Brian McPherson
State," said Funderburke, who .
Green, with the 49ers since
a whopping one-sided 37 re· J.0-2, Jeff Jordan. 2·0·4, Craig
left Worthington Christian High 1986, was a Stanford assistant In
bounds. Burc h"'ell and Shuford Jarvis J.l-3, Randy Shuford
School after his sophomore year
19'17·78. both bowl seasons under
10.0·20. TOTALS 36·7·79.
each had' 9.
and transferred to Wehrle. Peo·
Walsh,
and was the Cardinal's
Bissell had 3 sleals 'or Eastern
pte really tltdn' t appreciate me offensive coordinator in 1980
as a basketball player or a when the team flnishe.J 6·5 under
person. They kind of looked at me Paul Wiggin.
a,s a. bad guy."
He was at Northwes.JV .. 'irom
1981 to 1985, compiling a 10-45
record. He was named Big 10
Bata\'lail. Cln Couriry ~· 51
Huchon 6-t, N C~o nlon Hoowr 1.1
&amp;llhrook411, Brookvii!P at
butt an Y aJ i3. Zantt~vlllt' ltG!W't:ran~ 19
Coach
of the Year In 1982 when
B€'11M'W. ~1. Tiffin Co lwnbl1111 40
lroMon 72, E Cul(&gt;r ( N,t ') 411
the
Wildcats
BIIUICh811&gt;r
t'.!,
Hamilton
Roslt
:til
finished 3-8 and
,Jefft'l'son 17. Atlllt Ed~ood :m
Canal Fuloa NW 59, l\laiti!illllon l!K
,J,.wftt.St'lo 117, t'rN"Pori Lak!'laml $2
broke
a
34·game
losing streak.
Cin NW fi.t , St Jk-rtard 4~
Kt&amp;nSWI La.kota 8.1, " 'oo*nol'f' II
PmSBURGH (UP!i -Pitts·
Cln
Ci\PE
U
,
lk&gt;w
Park21
As
a
player
he
was a starting
Krt &amp;.•till~ FalrmBIIII 55 , Tr ny 511
burgh Steelers Coac h Chu ck Noll
Cln Readln11t, Lo\'eland %4
Knf'r Crtof"klll, " ' ahama l\\\'1111 ii
Iowa
tatlback
and
later played In
Cln Seloo 56, Cln Hu~hf'K 5e
LaBrar 7%. N.-.· lOIII Fall!l ~ ~
has decided to fire four assistanl
Cln
Prlncl'ton
t8,
I&gt;Q
Dunhar
n
the
Canadian
Football
League.
Lt.moaMoAI'Of' It, llamiiiOfllb:dln .n
coaches, the Pittsburgh-Post
Cln lacon tl , Cl• WalnUI Hills ii lot )
UhertyiS. •ookflt'll H
Cln Mt Not l'f' Dame7S, Cln Mcl'lii choii.S .
llibon U, Hano\1'rlon IJ a~ d 54i
Gazette repor ted Tuesday .
l.opR Elm ~. Mlllenpot't 7t
Noll will dismiss linebackers
Col
"
'8t
$11,
Coi.
Whl'htorK"
51
Malveral!. 8trHnllllandil
The Daily ~entinel
Col Bfoeehcrol 58, Colin depend• net :n
Manehf!!"'' 6'! M~Q· nUI(' ( KJ) $1
coach Jed Hughes, co ndiltoning
Miut~lid Chr 57, Q&gt;IUtrltur ~ :n
Contlrtt'ftialet, Df'lpM!'iS&amp;J6hn I!
coach Walt Evans, guardsMa•l• Crtor~lwend li, Garnotts\·. ,.. ~M
Co nvo)' O'eAC..tt"W a, J&gt;'•rt J•n nlnll" ' 5 .•
(USPS 141&gt;980)
Mapfteod 1!, Brkltul 71
Coplf'y S!, Grf'ftttbUr'l" Gree• tt
cenlers coach Hal Hunter and
A Divi!Jion af Multbnedla. Inc:
M.rt•s F..rry 113. Unto• ~~· it
Cpvlalflon 12. Sidley LellnWI:II
Dennis Fitzgerald, a special
•
MMaMioa Q, Uhrk:hnllh! nQmo• Mi
Ol)'lllliora Fall!! 71, Ah Norlh 62
Published every afternoon, Monday
ML&lt;:omb tl, , . an lilt' $II
Dll)' Bt'lmoM n, Y~low Sprtnp -IG
tea
ms
coach.
the
newspaper
through Friday, Ill Court St , PoMlaRIIIV 71, Celwnhl ana Crnt .4f'W S11
Dlxlr h, •nnldln MonrM :U
said.
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubEaton 43, M:IU011 Valon .fl
Mo•Mkl"' lf4,Siref'tlitero81
Elida 71, Findlay til
NA~~IliteoB 11, ft'MIIIf'On 5K
lishing Company/Multimedia, Inc ..
Club
officials
had
no
comment
Nf'W Miami M,S•rnrnk Cow rar, Day Ill
Forett Park U, Fairfield -tt (ot)
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!5769, Ph . 992-2156. Se·
on the report but were expected
Nf'Whwl')' '$0, Graad \ ' allry -IR
F'l'a.n tforl /\dena u, Wa&lt;dlln~ton GIU5
co nd class posta ge paid at Pomeroy,
t..hforrl TaJawanU i'J, Ct nNorChw1•sll2
F'rfimori Sl ,JoRphSI, 0)'dt! t1
Ohio.
to call a news conference taler in
Pahteli Rlv"nlde 71, Ma-_.,. -lfi
Galllpolb ,Z, PorttnUtlllb SS
the day.
,
Patriot S'W4'Wrn Ill, ot. .. l'al Chr Ill
Goslll'n 67, UtUe Miami S4
Member: United Press International,
P~t't"abUR SpriftJIA, 1Awf'I1YIIIt U
HamUton It, Oa Mc.4.ulry 44
The
firings
would
be
the
first
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Phi~ 1!1, Ut:klnJ hll.-,. :18
Harrtaonll, an Taft •
pt P'le...,.l (WVa)52, Ru .... Tnct"U
JoMihu A.l6er 48, Canal "1ncluwter .12
since Noll dismissed a secondary · Ohio Newspaper AssociatiQn. National
Kfap t1, MMDII 41 (Gt)
Advertising Rep resentative, Bran bam
P)malu.. •IVaiM, So••lnKtanM (Btl
coach tn 1981.
H.ool!llnwn U, IMamelld Soulflf-1 Nl
LebaRon $1, X.•nla 1.,
Newspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenue,
LM~a 1'2, Ver~llle!J n
'
lA IlMo• 14, M.IMe&amp;ewn Qr •
The Steelers finished the past
New York, New York 10017.
Salrm Rl, F..astiJ\'PrpHIP
1..1~)' Unio• 11, Col WPilrtf' &amp;8
season
with
a
5·11
record.
their
SprlniC Calh IU, Sprl11• Norlu•M&amp;ef nO
Lo•llvllle A~aulnu II, R•\'enna ·10
POSThiASTERo Send addrESS change;
Ma*ln It, M•temo• M
Sprlapore 11. Mlddll'town Madttonll
worst since 1969.
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.
75, 011 Lu..,arll O.r II
Mara:utda 14, S1111d8t Marysl4

Lancers ,topple EHS
79-66 in non-loop tilt.

•

.,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Seton Hall edges GeorgetoWIJ;
Providence .thum~t~ ·John's

Pag8--J-2-The O!Uiy-Sentinel
. Pomeroy-Middli1port, Ohio

Wadnnclay, Janu.,Y 4,

..FDIC holds defaulted

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

•

·. C ommentary.

.

•

�•

'-

'

•

•

.Wednesday, January 4, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

P*.-4 The Daily Sentinel

• Wednesday, January 4, 1989

•

KCHS records 80-67 wm over Wahama

'
'
Wahama's John Barnltz (32)
'

RISING TO THE OCCASION rises above the crowd of Kyger Creek players to shoot lor two of his
team-high 22 points, as teammate Bobby Kincaid (tO) rushes In lor
a possible rebound In the first quarter of Tuesday night's
non-leagu~ match on the Bobcats' home court. The Bobcats
prevailed 8&amp;-67. (OVl' staff photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Scoreboard ...
H tudonl A!, Nf'W H amp!lhlrr&gt; ;J5
Holy O'O!;!O 9R, ~rtmoul.h II'!
lndl¥11l ( P a.) i:'. f.lfon\illr 3;1 I ol)

UPI ratings
NEW UJRK ( UI'I ) - ThtUnkPdfn-sp;

lntr r,..lloml Board uf Coac h n&gt; Tup '!II
llnal coollt'lff' foolbuJ I rullnp -.1th tt't.'O rd
andftrsl pl act&gt;110 I ~ mpart' nliM-'!..P!o, Wf,tl
pulnl8 { lu•t&gt;d on U poinl s for fir M pia. t
U for !it't11_. f' h ) a nd IB!il Wf'~ k 'r;

....

IA'hl«h K6, Albrhthl 5,

LonpoM IlK PSU(ap~l 15

Mf'rt:l' i5, Mt St Mary'!; a
MlamltFI B) 99. Rulll'ndU (ot j
Norehw~t.:ornlb1 Na\y60
NOII'f' Daml'iiO Pt'O"')I\I Il Pi tli~
Provlck&gt;nc.:l' 911 M fohn Ni9

n~nklnKo

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G~"!!

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20~

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17 ' !11f'I~CS1itlt ~ ~~H

11 rii,. J ~ ah~&amp;~ n .a (9 H
1!1 Indiana ot~l I I
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Mhunl at Guldl:•n Statt• It .111 p m
GM.ml'!&lt;

f hli a,;o at ( 11'\l'la nd nl~tltl
l'hlllld (•lp"':l IU S11n t\111011.10

ra l ~l

{ooldfon !o\lall .. n.-nwr. nlrhl
~!ol~nl m f'ftlfl at Sf' at ilt&gt; nl~ltl

l!ltn-so udwMf"t :tl Uur111a
l!t6-Not" l) ~ mt'
IIIIU-AJahama

l!lt:I- TI'XL"
1952-so ulto rn

f'a lii~Jr li!a

1!1111 - AJatuuna
19•- Min..,"'llla
1931-Syru.c.'U!jl'

18$11- Louls lanat N.att•

19n- Ohlo Sl$l t'
lt~Oir.llahon.

NHL resuhs
NATIOSAL HOCK E\' LEi\Gl;t·;
Thr..dii,Y 1!11 Kl"'&gt;uh
Plllbt.d l'lpti a l :'&lt;til l,.lllndPtl&lt;i I
{ a lpry l, Q•l'l"'t' I
" rtlnt'sd~ "'Gamt.,.
\\ li!llftl ngtnn ~&amp;IN\' RanfCt't.'i, 1 IS p m

Har lfo niWftulf ldo 7 Upm
~ L4loul~&lt; ill IMroH, 7. :t5 p m

\'IUico uwr at \\'lnnlpl' !l'

t1

:iS p m

Qtw iK·~ ~

F.dmutiGn !1 , 3 ~ p m
Thu!Sdi\V',. GarnO'S
Nl .,.huuk,..,. al Boliton, nlkltl
t'hll:ld••lphi iiiWMi n ...!loola. nl,;hl
r.o~ Arl~t"' Oil (' liii~J. nll(hl

" "dnl'lid~

s ~ons Calt'ftdar

8i&amp;,;iwthall

l'h Of"nlx nl

R o~ton, j

30 p m

N1ow l ' orll.al Nt'ol l f'fll('y, l :iQ p m
tliMrlol.ll' 11.1
t~~natoa 1 :ill p m
!\IIMIIl l&amp;llnti~Uaa , j :i8 p m
1...4. C'llppP,.IIIt Mlhwuatit&gt;f' !I :10 p m
l'orth&amp;n d Ill LA l.akw1 10 :t1 p m
Ml~&amp;ml 11.1 r.oldPn .SC.Mit', 10 3tt p nt

w..

Hotlu•y
,\\WiiJ(nrr:t Dn lll '1\ R;anl\'r! '3$p m '
llartfonl ld Rlllflllo, 1 3~ p m
!&gt;14 l.oull at Dfot rett ~ :t'i p m
VIUM~uwr 111 \\lnnl pt a , !I :13 p m
Qut"bo.'f' l&amp;t Edmo 11 on 8 311 p m
Slnlnl(
Martbor \ u,cu~M"III wo nt,.n "

11 klom

~~.:l'r

MISL
TIH.'Oma at Balllmor.-, i :15 p m
Tf'n nil!l

BrlthaM Australia
womea'!ll Hardoourt

•

-

.tu;lrallan

CoUt?l s cores
CollrsP &amp;u;JI!thall ~••

B)' United Prt'!l!i lnill'rratloral

Eost
A.I'-Pt N• i"' Muhlt'nb.,.r ,It; 6$

Ann) 15, Cor.,ll 'Zt
fanWu~o~il Qll ... e-'B
Co lby M. llauon U
Falrk-1 ~ Dtt:.l80n Mt, St Rll!ll' 66

•

l!l !i~ Mi l higan

Stidt•

lt~l-1't&gt;nlftfoiff'

ltM-Oklllhoma

Prep scores
Boy 11 Oblo Hl1h School lasldhall
Akr G~rflf'ld 6.1 Stow 5!1
Akr KPnmore 52, Elyria H
Akr St Vhtef'nl&amp;l, Akr FlrPliloDf' 50
An8onl•8l, Mlulssl1111.wa Val 51
A.rcadl• 55 Hoprwtll Loudon .\1
A~hlahllol:it.lohnill Ofn~a ~7

A.•hUtihuli U .Vtuhuh Harbor 43
AasllntCMn flt('h -19 \'ounr E .u
BrllaJno 54 Hanllibal River M
llfolprt' U Ml'lp ~
. , CtrW 118" t8 .laduwn Millon U "'
• r u 114, Parn• N•rm~~ndy
lndford U Day NorthrldSf' n
B.catieyf' N 5I Edl!iootl N Sl!:
Wf.ao ( W\'a ) f4 Co&amp;l Grow til
C.mpbtll n Poland ie
C.a1e1•11 Watrt'nKunr:tl:f n
Q~• f' 10, Rock Hill •
Gh1 AJke~~U, Cln Walnlll Hills 0
Cln Gr.-.nNII l'l st, an brpln 511
Cln Oak Hill!! it, an Elder N
Cllt Prt.cf'hn 51. O.a Ba~n U
Cln St!Ytn Hill• 1-t. B1.11.111a n
ctn Syum""' IK. Norwood It
Cln Ta• t3. O n Westf'rn Hflli ¥1
Cltrmo• N~ Ia, UIUp Miami 8~ ('ol )
Col lh'ookha vf"a It, 0\&gt;la&amp;ll'llrf' 61

-n

Transactions

•.

ltM-OkLahonw.
1Ut- l i(LA
IIM- MIU'ytand

Col Cu~etu•u

71, COl Hntlfo) H
CGI Pf.Sale~ • • Wh!Uohall "

Col EMunaor 81, Cal Sl Chrlelt sa
CollndependPaao SS, Col Be ~dtcroh .._,
Col M.,...Aih Cltr 7t Xenia Qr M
Col Wai•IIU. IS. ilf')'ttoltiiiMI tJ U
Col W•l•, Col
7t

••••o•
c.ttnfaG. BarrfiHil

••wy

••fll!l'

Coaw•l ft. PaJIItN
11 (otl
•• c.rtiM41 LU:e.-n M,
11
0., Cltlfthhtl n , F ..... l Partr. 51
..._, ••..,_ h. llePft'treek U
0.0....1 &amp;ftnt klf: 71,1aeboa C. nl i5
Dllblt• I!, L.uc....,r 1S {.t}
Eat PalMbe It, OnpiO•IA
Eulwoad n , ~·· u
Falrpl Sl , hrr, •
J
F ed Hotklnc 71, Ree•"me Eater n 61

FelldtJ S8, F-.yeilel'lle S$
Fort Frye 8&amp; wo• hid 511
F'rDntlf!l' fll, W.tet'hrd f1 t

Gar hill Hts 11. Eull&amp;lle N 7:1

.

Bobcats unleashed S1ppte a nd
Johnson on the scorin g end of
the1r final fast breaks that helped :
give de!impon to thetr 13-point :
wJn.
Sophomore guard John Barnltz~
led the Falcons wuh 22 points
·
The reserve game saw the ·
Bobcats edge the J~mor Falcons ·
47-44. Stacy Nutter le d Wahama ;
with 24 pomts. and Phil Bradbury
paced the Bobcats with 22
The Bobcats, 3-6 overall, w11l
return to SVAC action Fnday
mght when they travel west to
face Oak H11l, a nd the Falcons, ,
1-6 overall, Will fly upriver to
take on Buffalo-Putnam Frida}
mght.
Score by quarters
Wahama
15 14 21 17 67 ·
KCHS .. . . . 25 18 16 21 80
KYGER CREEK (80)
Reese 13 0 4 30, Leach 8 I 1-20;
Johnson 50 2 12, A Denney
2-0-4-8; Perry 1-0-4-6, Sipple '
2 0 0 4. TOTALS - 31-1-15-80
'
WAHAMA (67)
Barnitz 9 0 4 22, Kmc a1d 9 0 220; McDermitt 6-0·4-16, Zuspan
2 0 2-6; Jewell 1-0-0-2; Petry
0 0 1 l. TOTALS- 27-0-13-67

Osborne Hall But the Redmen
stayed tn the race, allowing the
hosts to outdi sta nce them only by

room wlfh a 46-29 deficit.
While Rio came back and
pumped m another 3-pomt shot to
open the second penod, the
Pioneers forged ahead on accu
rate shooting by freshman Ph1l
Gebhardt and jumor Todd Martm Steve Perry's foul shot With
10 minutes remaining put Malone
ahead 75-45. RIO was unable to
slice Malone's advantage by any
more than 14 points dunng the
seco nd hall
Larry Benning led Rio Grande
m sco nng with 16, wh1ie J ohn

as muc h as nme pomts m the

openmg t&gt;alf's first 10 mmutes
Bnan Watkms' 3 pomt er for
RID Grande hel ped c ut the
Malone margm to four, the
closes 1 the Redmen cam e to
Malone for the enure co ntest
The P1oneers then broke out to
outscore th e Red m en b) 19 m the
half's ftnal mmutes. Anthony
Raymore' s bucket at the buzzer
sent R10 Grande to the l""ker

Lambcke supphed 10 and co ,
captain J1mmy Kearns a dded '
nme. Gebhardt had 18 for Malone, Marun had 17 and Andy ·
Booth pumped m 15
The Pwneers travel to Wheel
m g J es ui t on Thursda y and hos t
TlfftnSaturday. RtoGrandegoes ,
ro Mount Vernon Nazarene Sat
urday for a 7 30 p m game
In other MOC games Tuesday . '
Urbana de feat ed Cedarvtlle 10291 , Mount Vernon Nazarene
buried OhiO Domimcan 91-65,
a nd Tiffin bested Walsh 74-55

Belpre edges Meigs Marauders~ 64-59
The !mal score reM 64 -59 m
favor of the vtsltors , leavi ng
Belpte wnh a 4 5 overall record
14-2 TVC) wh1Ie Metgs drops t o
0 8 overall and 0-5 m league
com pet m on
The lead changed hands sc'
eral tunes m the first ha lf of pia)
and was n ed on seven different
occasions as each squad attemp
ted to ga m an adva ntage
The turnmg pom t came m 1he
f~r st four mmutes of quart el
three as. th e Go ld en Eagles
ou tscored Metgs 9-0 a nd held a
46-39 adva nta ge with oneq uaner

SVAC standings
SVAC STANDINGS
(All games)
p
TEAM
W L
North CaiiHi
:; 3 571
Southwestern
. 5 3 562
Easter n .
5 4 682
Oak Hill
. . 4 4 471
So uthern
4 5 584
3 6 589
Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace .. 3 G 546
Symmes Valley 0 8 432

OP
495'

567
70&lt;
510
582
645

545
589

(SVAC games)
TEAM
W L p OP
Ea s lern
5 l 474 438
4 1 3 2~ 2S8
Oak Hill
Sou 1her n .
4 2 415 3B5
Nor th Call1a.
3 3 432 364
Sout hwestet n
3 3 408 427
Hannan T race
2 'l 313 317
Kyger Creek .. . 2 4 378 421
Symm es- Valley
0 6 318 422
TO'I'i\LS
2:1 23 :1062 :1062

l!':it-Qk lahoma
197j-Soulht'l'n Ca llforNn

D11lla.~9tl

Thutsd~ ~

~0

l!t!(.l--MIIIInl
l!lll't- P1 nn Stlltf'

It t, IWirOl 101

Clt'\t'l and l l91ndiana9M
NP" \ ' or k 109, &amp;tilon IO "itOT!
( hi Ut.lt O l'l6 LAfllppt',S I! I (OT )
llou..tora ltl&amp;. Ll•h 112
~an

Baptl"t
""''

~I

Ohio ( oiiPJf' B;u; II'! bUll

~li!M~':oo lllhl!. mn

t

Uht... t~66

lllola i'i Arid(

.!!16 10

M !II
I t•nii"J.I Oh I!'&lt; iOn

Ont'ILU1d
Dc l roll -.,
,\tlunta

statt' il Lilmar Gil
\tonoh t'ad St 16 TPXa.'l ,\rlln-'on 7l
Nt. Loul~laat~; K l Nl c lloll~s• i l'l rut )
&lt;Mr.Mhom&lt;11 111. S:.un Ho u!ollun 6ti
ot.;.klhoma ~ ill l .f'ntNI ( o nn II\
S\\ !.owl• lana ;!t, Bapll~t (oll"ll:' i !
Si l•t~ n lttl

CANTON- Malone Coach Hal
Smith's hopes of takmg hts team
to a leadership · role in the
Mtd-Oh1 o Conference were fu 1
hlied Tuesday when the P10neerR
took off for a 101 69 victory over
MOC co-c hamp ton R10 Grande
Malone 17-7) JS now 3 0 as th e
co nference ph ase of the season
gets underway The Redmen ,
suf(ermg the1r second co nsecu
live road loss are 11-4 and 1 1 m
loop actwn
With two stJatght wms going
1nto the game, the Pwneers
;umped to an early lead a t

con les t.

Tllftn 71 Wal.'!lh .5$
Urbana lOt fl'darvlllr 91
\\11mlnatoll l'5 Dfoflftll(' t&gt; '1:!

'

and gtving the Galha ns lour
pomts, had hts troubles With
lntentlonal foul shots. The Bobfouls, as he p1clled up three tn the · cats made th ree of them , giving
firs t half and sat the bench a
them a 43-29 lead at halftime
considerable portion of the se··our defense left us in spurts In
cond hall. With one member o(
the second half, " sa td Kyger
the skyline out of commission,
Creek boss Larry Markham, who
the Mountameers h~d some
witnessed the Mason bOys au I
problems on the offensive
sco re Kyger 21-16 In the th1rd
bOards, a s the hosts would
quarter. Though the quarter
qUick ly pass out to halfcoun ,
belonged to Kmca1d , who scored
where either Leach or semor
10 of hts 2p points in that
forward Alan Denney would run
eight -mmute span, Cheshtre led
the Sldelmcs wanmg for the pass
59-50 to end the third period
that often beat Wahama upcourt
Throughout the game the BobJewell's problems with fouls
cats were able ro·get numerous
paled in companson to those
chances at layups, whether they
suffe!)Oid by Hall, who lnqu1 red
came from the fastbreakorfrom
a bout a foul call m with 1:30 left a n occasional back door' play tn
before ha lftime According to
whtch Reese would draw Kmca1d
referee Chuck Malone of the
and/ or 6 4 Jumor forward Tom
Portsmouth chapter, a Wahama
McDermttt outside, leaving the
player mtennonally pushed a· tnslde open for Leach todnve for
Kyge1 Creek player m the' low
a layup. -. ·
post area alter Leach scored on a
With 6 37 left m the game,
layup Hall protested the m an ner
McDermitt's two one-and·one
of officta tmg at that stage of the
free th rows e nabled Wahama to
game, at wh 1ch pomt referee
cut the Kyger Creek lea d to less
John Pendlen gave Hall a warn
than 10 points for the last ume
ing Hall s la mmed a cha tr on the
The Falcons were able to• keep
edge of the stage behmd the
the margin at less than 10 fo r
bench , earnmg a technical foul
abQut two mmutes, until the

..---Local news briefs-.....-.

Pioneers defeat Redmen, I 01-69

The fu·st 16 mmu tes of pla y ended
m a ue (31 31) as the Met gs
Marauders and Belpre's Golden
Eagles faced off a t Larry. R
Mornson Gy mnasiUm m a TVC

\\ 1\llllltt• GG. Mu l'ildrtJ!Um G'l'

Rutk&gt;r 11.\ Alt411n PPay ill

NBA resuhs

By G. SPENCER OSBOf!,NE
OVP Staff Writer
Senior Mike Reese recorded a
game high 30 pomts to propel
Kyger Creek to an 80-67 wm over
vtsltmg Wahama Tuesday night
The Bobcats, who never
tr&lt;l)ied, started out with · an
aggresstve last break offense
tha t enabled Reese lo score 18 of
hiS pomts m the first hal[, "'hlle
sen10r poml gua1d Chad Leach
s~1yed close behtnd with 14 of his
own · Th ey outh uslled us 10 the
ftrst ha lf, and that 's hov. they
beat us ," sa 1d Wahama head
coach Lewis Hail
The Iast break wasn' t all tha t
defeated the White Falcons , as
Reese, the Bobcat s' 6 3 pos t
player, used hiS leapmg abiijty
and quick hands to grab many a
rebound agatnst 6-4 semor p1vot
Chrts Jewell a nd 6 4 semot
forward Bobby Kmca1d Reese
got plenty of help fr om 5-9
forwards John Sipple a?d Chad
Johnson. who spelled each other
and provtrled key possession
rebounds that gave the Buckeyes
num ero us offen sive trtps
upcourt

Jewell , who• only scored two

(Resenes)
TEAM
W L P OP
North Calha
5 1 344 241
South ern
5 1 318 238
Symmes Valley
4 2 255 2G1
Ha nnan T race
3 2 219 193
Eas ter n
3 3 273 299
Sputhwestern
2 4 232 242
Oak Hlil
1 4 182 234
Kyger Creek.... 0 6 179 294
TOTALS
. 23 23 2fl02 2002
· Tuesday's action
Kyger Creek 80, Wahama 67
Southwes ter n 06, aves 65
Point P leasant 52, Ha nnan Trace

45
Federal Hocking 79, Eastern 66
Friday's games
North Ga llia at Hannan Trace
Southern at Southwestern
Kyger Creek a t Oak Hill
Easter n at Symmes Valley

'
to play.
6 0-6-18, Congleton 4.0-2-0: Davis
In th ar !mal e1ght mmutes. 4-0-: Wotring 1-1-3
Meigs pu lled to wuhm two ( 44-46)
Score by quarters.
at the 6; 33 mark As m past Me1gs
JG 15 8 20-59
contests the Marauders were Belpre
14 17 15 18-64
fa t ced to become more aggres·
t
Girls Triumph
s1vc a nds m turn. comm med
In recent g1ri's actton, thi'
sewra l fou ls Tim Baker. th e Lady Marauders upped thell'
'£agie's 5-8 guard , had the hot ' varsit y record to 8 l whiletheJV
hand dowp the suetch as he squad main tained th e1r perfect
canned te n of the vlsuor s fma llG season 19 01 With wms over
pom ts
Belpre
Eac h tea m placed four players
Jody Taylo r led th e Me1gs
m double ltgures wnh Baker varsity With 15 pomts agamst the
leadmg a ll SCOI'C'rs with 18 Todd Eagles Teammates Betth Ewing
Po wei 1 p1cked up 15 mar ker s to and Kelly Sm1th fmtshed m
lead the Mat auder shooters.
doubl e d1g1ts with 14 and 12
In the f1eld goal departmen t , respecllvely
Marsha King
Me1gs hit 19 of 47 for a 40 4 ch1pped m 6 for the wmners whtle
average a nd had 16 of 28 free Deanna Ha ggy, M1 ssy Nelson
tht ows fa ll for a 57.1 percentage
a nd Jenmfer Taylor add 4 each
Belpre can ned 24 of 47 from the Newsome and Kioes each had a
flom !01 51 pel cent and hll on 15 h eld goal for Metgs. Reed . of
of ~2 f1 om the line for 63.6 Belpre, led all scorers with 19
percent
Th e !mal score was 63-29 as
Metgs outrebOunded the ta ller the Marauder s completely domiEag les 30 to 24 with Powe ll nate d play
·
g1abbrng 10 and Matt Baker
Th e ]umor vars11ypreva1led by
get tmg9 RyanMcConkeyledthe a 31-18 score wnh Ktm Hanmng
vlsuors with 8
garnermg 12 pomts, K1m Ewing
Box scorf':
addi1ng 6 , Tara Humphreys 4,
MEIGS - Powell 3-0-9-15;
Rouse , Cremeans and Weaver
Baker J.4 -0 14, Burdette 4-1-0-ll ;
getong 2 each and Butcher
Betzmg 0 0 0 0, Oiler 4 0-614,
adding l McCutcheon led the
Crooks 2 0 1 5, Neigler 0-0-0-0
losers with 8.
BELPRE- McCo nkey 4·1 4
'l'he Lady Marauders have
15. Woodburn 4-0-2-10. Baker

Bills out for
ORCHARD PARK, NY !UP I)
-It's go mg to be a week of work
and remembermg for the Bulfalo
B1Jis
Btlls' players had a day off
Tuesday and will begin preparatwns Wednesday for the AFC
champtonshtp game Sunday in
Ctnc1 nnat 1, well aware they must
get off to a quicker start than
they dtd In the 12th week of the
regu lar season when they visited
_the Benga Is ' Rtverfront Stadium
"Jungle "
Buffalo ~as ndtng atop the
entire NFL With an 111 record
and a seven gam e wlnnmg
streak on Nov 27, but went to
Cincmnat1 without tnjured linebacker Sha ne Conlan and delen
slve ha ck Derrick Burroughs
The Be ngals' explosive offense
took advantage of the absences,
runmng up a 21 7 halftime lead
The Btlls regrouped to cut their
deficit to 28-21 early In the fourth
quarter before the Bengals kill~
a late Buffalo dnve by InterceptIng a Jim .,Kelly pass, and they
later scored on a two-yard run by
lckey Woods

· ~.

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,,

this

· "They were running all over
us," Btlls veteran nose tackle
Fred Smerlas recalled. "They
were hittlng the cutbacks, they
were htlting dives on us They
were hitting outside on us We
were flat and they were on,
"We settled down and then we
saw what we had to do We
couldn't stop them at the beginningofthegame Then we settled
down and started to get a little bit
in control
"We had four turnovers, they
had nopl&gt; That really killed us."
The Bengals offense piled up
455 yards In the win over Buffalo,
which played most of the-game
without starting linebacker Darr-yl Talley, who suffered a

w~kend

bruised thtgh m the first hall

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three Important hom e gam es ,
upcommg as they face Alexander •
on Thursday. Federal Hockmg •
on Monday and Mtller a week ''
from Thu rsday The fan support ,
has been great, accordmg to the ,
players and coaches, a nd they
are very apprec tauve of that
s upport
Frosh Lose
Ron Logan s freshmen squad
dropped a 68-55 dec 1s10n to
Belpre to giVe the m a 7-2 season
record w1th the Colden Eagles
sull undefeated a 7-0
Shawn Hawley. who had
missed three games with an
ankle tnjury, returned to action
to lead all scorers with 23 Other
Me igs scoreers were Mu sser
with 7. Howerton 12. Harles s 2.
Ph alm 7 and Mash 4
Dar m Logan and Kevm Mu sser
ha sd good floor games and
James Howerton and Shawn
Ha wley played an excellent
game comemmg for 15 of 27 field
goals, 18 rebOunds and 35 pomts.
After etght games, Haw ley Is
averagmg 20 points and 10 .
rebounds per game, Howerton 15
pomts and ll rebounds, Jeremy
Rupe ts shootmg 629 from the
!outline and Jeremy Ph a lin has a
58 average
Dann Loga n a nd Kevin Musser
lead the team m ass1sts.

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STOlE HOUIS: Mon.· Fri. 9 A.M.·6 P.M.; Saturday. 9 A.M.· I P.M.
171 NOml SICHD
991·6669
•DDUPOIT, OliO

Continued from page 1
against Ja.rpes E. Husk, Bidwell, and George D. Husll, Bidwell .
Dismissed by the court was the case of Lyle R . Sinclair versus
Joyce A. Sinclair

Steer weigh-in slated 'Jan. 7

.

The Meigs County Junior Fair steer weigh-In wlll be held on
Saturday, Jan. 7, from 9 to 11 a.m., In the show arena at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds. All steers l,llanning to be exhibited
and sold at the 1989 Meigs County Fair must be weighed In and
· Identified on this date.
Steers will be weighed and tatooed In the ear, plus a round
button tag. Picture money will also be collected at this time. Be
prepared to pay S8onJan 7fortheplctures. Also, know the birth
date of your steer.
In case of bad weather, listen to WMPO Radio .lor possible
announcement of cancellation. If the weigh-In Is cancelled, it
will be reschedtjled for the next Saturday, Jan. 14
Anyone with questions regarding the weigh- In should call
John Rice at 992-6696.

EMS has 15 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 15 calls
over the holiday weekend: four Saturday, nine Sunday and two
Monday.
.saturday at OS a.m. , Columbia Township to Carpenter for ·
John Har~en who refused treatment; Rutland at 5:05a.m was
also called to Carpenter lor Joli'n Harden who refused
treatment: Chester Fire Department at 7· 02 p.m. to a chimney
fire at the Parker residence on Route 248; Syracuse at 9: 53 p m .
to Pine Grove Road for Dana Lyons to Holzer Medical Center.
Sunda1; at 12:06 a.m., Tuppers Plains transported Dennis
Marcinko to O'Blenness Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
12:43 a.m . to Batley Run for Elden Morris to Holzer Medical
, Center; Pomeroy at 1: 12 a.m. treated Melvin Lee and Rebecca
Thompson at the scene of an auto accident on Forest Run Road ;
Syracuse at 9:48a.m . to Seventh St. for Linda Ferrell to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 12: 52 p.m to Loop Road lor Dennis
Searles to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 12:52 p.m to
Happy Hollow Road for Leland Haley to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 8:06 p.m to. County Road 28 for Zelma
Grady to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 8 36 p m. to
Bridgeman St. for Jane Teaford to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroy at 11: 20·p.m . to ROute 33 for Mlnnle.Brown to Holzer
Medical Center.
Monday at 2: 56 p.m. , Tuppers Plains to a structure fire on Ow 1
Hollow Road; Fireman Brian Bissell was taken from the scene
to St Joseph's Hospital; Middleport at 6:08p.m. to Route 554
and Story's Run Road for Wesley Ward to Holzer Medtcal
Center.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Tuesday; Rutland at 12:26 a.m. to Happy Hollow Road for
Leland Haley to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 10:32
a.m treated Ru'thArnold and John Riffle at the scene of an auto
accident on Route 124 at Syracuse; Pomeroy at 3· 31 p.m. to
Route 7 for Jim Heaton to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 3: 33p.m. transported Delta Pratter from an auto
accident to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3: 43p.m . to
Route 3J8 for George Harvey to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 5: 14 p.m. to South Second for Steven Mardn to
Holzer Medic-al Center; Rutland at 11.03 p.m. to Pageville for
· Charles Ohlinger to Veterans Memorial Hospital

a:

•

Indianapolis pilot dies
in Springfield crash
By ALISON GRANT
United Press International
An Indianapolis pilot was
killed Tuesday when hIs twl nengtne plane crashed Into a yard
In a residential area of east
Springfield.
Meanwhile, authorities Identified tlie lour people killed in a
• plane crash near Mansfield late
Monday afternoon as William
Auer of Atlanta, his wife, Judy , of
Sandusky. their son. William Jr. ,
a student at Ohio State University In Columbus, and Auer's
mother, Anne Auer of Mansfield
Auer Sr. was the pilot, authorities said
•
Springfield pollee said Mark
Annest, 22, radioed the Dayton
International Alrport Tuesday
morning to report fuel problems
In first one engine, then the other,
before the plane nosedlved Into
th~ground :

Annest was flying a Piper
aircraft, owned by Apollo 2 Ltd.
of Ann Arbor, Mich., which left
Mount Comfort Airport outside
Indianapolis at 7: 30a.m., pollee
said. He filed a 50-minute flight
plan at Terre Haute and was
believed headed to Don Scott
Field at Ohio Slate University in
Columbus.
"(It's) nothing but shambles ."
AI First, a crime scene technician, said ofthe wreckage. "That
thtng just cut right Into the
ground from the Impact."
First said controllers from the
Dayton airport apparently were
trying to guide Annest to a
landing at the Springfield MunicIpal Airport four miles from the
crash scene.
"I don't know If he was
disoriented or lost or what. It was
pretty foggy," First said.
The plane crashed In a yard, its

tall floppmg over onto a garage
behind the one-story home of Joe
and Judy Schlnld, and their
daughters. Brooke, 6, and Brittnle,.J.
Famtly members, sleeping
when the acc1dent happened
shortly after 8 a .m , were not
injured and, In fact. didn't even
know a plane had crashed In their
yard until awakened by
neighbors.
"It woke us up but we went
right back to sleep," said Mrs.
Schmid "We thought it was a
sem1''

Winter's .f~t big storm· hits NortheaSt
By Uotted 'Pressloternatlonal
The llrst big winter storm
system of 1989 brought l tq 2
inches of snow to the Northeast
Wednesday , spreading a layer of
white from New York to
Washington.
Heavier snow fell over tire
Appalachians and eastern Great
Lakes, the National Weather
Service said Wednesday. Four
Inches of snow fell at Pittsburgh
and Oeveland, ft&gt;recasters said,
while about 5 Inches was reported near Chadron and
St~ongsville In Ohio.
Three Inches ot new snow was
reported on the ground early
We dnesday at Erie, Johnstown
and DuBois In Pennsylvania and
in Rochester , N.Y.
·

WASHINGTON (UP!)
George Bush has performed
many ceremonial duties since
becoming vice president, but
none quite ranked with the one
facing him Wednesday when
Congress counted electoral votes
and he was supposed to declare.
himself the winner of the
presidency .
Following a procedure as old
as the republic, the House and
Senate, which began the 1G1st
Congress Tuesday. were to meet
Wednesday in a joint session to
count the Electoral College votes
that will make Bush the next
president and Dan Quayle of
lndlan'a the next vice president.
Under constitutional procedures , the pres ldmg officer of the
Senate, who Is formally the vice
president, Is to preside over the
event and announce the results .
Tuesday mght , the v1ce presi-

OVAL meeting
slated Jan. 19
The Board of Trustees of the
Ohio Val!ey Area Libraries will
hold its regular Jan nary meeting
on Thursday, Jan.l9, at 7p.m . at
the OVAL headquarters. 252
West 13th St ., Wellston.
Established In 1973 as the first
state-funded regional pubilc
library agency In Ohio, today
OVAL administers through local
P,ubltc libraries a variet y of
programs designed to Improve
and extend services to local
residents.OVAL Is made
of the public
libraries In Athens, Hocking,
Jackson , Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto and
Vinton The OVAL Board of
Trustees, which consist of one
trustee from each member public hbrary board, determines
policy, contols finances, and
makes final decisions on what
services will be offered.

up

· Others forfeiUng bonds were
Mark HArden, Lancaster. $43,
Ulegalle!t turn; James Buskirk,
Middleport. $63 open container;
- John I. Kerr, Middleport, $63,
expired plates. Fined 111 the court
were Toby Hysell, Syracuse, $48

Two are fined and
sentenced on charges
Eric H. Knotts, Middleport,
and Duane Tuttle, Racine, were
fined $425 and costs and given Jail
sentences of three days each on
charges of DWI when they
appeared In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Tuttle was also fined $10 on a
charge of expired license plates.
ForfeiUngbonds In the court on
charges of speeding were Edl10n
E. Roush, Cheshire, $40;' Terry
L. Carpenter. Racine, and Terry
"stalling, Pomeroy, $41 each.

-.

the Atlantic Coast Wednesday
morning was blamed for strong
northerly wmds that blew across
much of the eastern United
States. The winds promised to
brmg .coldef temperatures into
the area Wednesday and Thurs
day, forecasters said
The mercury was not expected
to clunb abOve the freezing mark
from Vtrgln1a to.New E ngland.
In Vermont, sub zero cold and
strong northerly wmds promised
to produce wlnd.-chlll readings of
30 to 40 degrees below zero.
Winds were gusting to 60 mph
early Wednesday In parts of
North Ca rolina, blowmg down
trees and causing scatte red
power outa~es , officials said.
Strong winds also toppled trees m

Most of the snow was tapering
off by Wednesday morning on the
East Coast, but snow advisories
remained In effect for portions of
Long Island, N.Y., southeast
Pennsylvanla,southernNewJersey, Delaware and eastern Maryland, the NWS said
Th!! low pressure system off

A $14,963.07 judgment has been
awarded In Meigs County Common Pll'as Court to the plaintiff
In an action by Shirley A. Lawson
against Robert F Lawson Sr
A monon to release from
prison, Johnnie L. Evans, Racine, has been approved by the
court Evans will be placed on
probation tor five years.
An action by Mary Maxine
Marcmko against Robert S
Marcinko has been dismissed

GrJ1118e to meet
Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet Friday, 7: 30 p.m., at
the ROck Springs Grange Hall.
HarrlsonvUle Grange will serve
refreshments.

·10

dent's aides said Bush would
attend the session and planned to
"play 11 by th~ book." personally
announcing himself the winner.
The results of the 1988 presidential election already have
been noteworthy . Bush became
the first Sitting vice president In
152 years to rise to the Oval
Office by way of election Martin
Van· Buren achieved the same
objecttve In 1836
The Electoral College system
Is one that has sparked controversy almost since It was forged as
a compromise by the nation 's
founding fathers.

FRONTS: "

Stirnkorb case, while lawyers for
the two sides will discuss Friday
if Ringland should be the judge in
a second trial
The prosecu tlon wants the
retrial as soon as possible. but
Ringland says his docket is so
crowded that he can't find a
two-month block open until
March of 1990.

Hospital news

"Cold

WJSHOWERS
"

Stat1c

ft Occluded

WEA'I;HER MAP - During early Thursday morning, snow Is
forecast lor parts of the central and northern Intermountain
Region. Rain/showers are forecast for parts of the central and
southern Plains with showers and thunderstorms In the
southernmost portions. Rain/showers are possible In the southern
Intermountain RegiOn with showers and thunderslorms possible In
the western Gulf Coast. Snow Is possible In parts ofthe upper Great
Lakes. UPI

Auxiliary meeting
Olive-Orange VFW Auxiliary
will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m .. at
the hall.

Missionary senice

A missionary service will be
held this Wednesday, 7:30p.m .,
at HarriSonville Holiness Chapel,
State Route 684 , Pomeroy.
Speaker will be Faith Hemmter
from Bolivia, South America.
Pastor David Ferrell invites the
public.

·Completes
winter break
R Steven N!ikamoto, son of
Janet Nakamoto, Rutland, and a
graduate of Meigs High School,
has completed a wlnter·break
Internship at the Neer Manufacturing Plant Iii Lexington as part
of•h is Ohio University's Master of
Business Administration
program.
Tile program Is designed to
broaden the student's exposure
to a variety of business Issues
and provide the opportunity to do
career-related work In a business
setting.
Nakamoto earned his bachelor's degree In mechanical engineering from the U. S. Military
Academy.

Saudi Central Ohio
Tomght, variable cloudiness
Low 20 to 25 Winds becoming
south less than 10 mph. Thursday. rain likely High In the mid
40s. Chance of precipitation 60
percent
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of rain Friday, a
chance of rain or snow Saturday

Meigs board changes
organization date
The Metgs County Board of
Educat ton had announced lis
annual organization session on
January 10. However. that has
been changed to 7 p.m. on
January 12 . A regular business
meeting will be held followmgthe
organiza tional session in case
you have any bus iness you need
to discuss with the board.

Eastern board to meet
The Eastern Local School
Dis trict Board of Education will
meet at 7 p.m . Thursday at the
high school lor tts orgamzational
meeting Matters tobedealt with
In addition to the reorganization
Include financ!al, personnel a~
budget matters and the refl€nt
report pf the evaluation of the
district by the Ohio Department
of Education.

Square dance Friday
A square dance will be ,held
evenmg at the Tuppers
Plams VFW Hall Caller will be
Ronnie Woods. Dona tions of $2
for adults and $1 forchtldren No
alcohol permitted
Fr~day

Dancing slated
\ Square, round and slow dane·
mg will be featured Saturday at
Eli Denison Post 467, American
Legion, Ru Uand Live band,
snack bar and refreshmen t
stand Music from 8 p.m. to 12
midnight. Everyone welcome.

and a chance of snow Sunday.
Highs w111 be in the 40s Friday
and Saturday and In the 30s ·
Sunday Lows wtll be 25 to 35 :
Friday and Saturday and In the :
teens Sunday.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt; Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Elect riC Power . . . ... 27
AT&amp;T.. . . . .
. ... 28~
Ashland 011 . . . .. . . . . . 33%
Bob Evans
15
Charmmg SShoppes .
. . 15
City Holding Co ..
. .. .. 21
Federal Mogul . .. . . .. .47Yt •
Goodyear T&amp;R
.50~
Heck's
. \4
Key Centunon ............15Yt
Lands' End ... . ......... . .29]1,
Ltmlted Inc .. . . .
26Ys
Multimedia Inc . .
....74';6
Rax Restaurants ......... ... .. :/J;.
Robbins &amp; Myers . .
. . 14~
Shoney 's Inc
.. . ?Yo
Wendy's Inti
.~
... ... . 5~
Worthington lnd . .. . . . . . .22';6

Racine dance slated
There will be round and square :
dancing this Saturday night, 8 p.m. to12 midnight, at the Racine
American Legion. Music by the
True Country Ramblers

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ElEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

•

627 3rd An., Gallipolis
' PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to J ackle Lee Large Jr. ,18,
Pomeroy, and Katherine Louise
Givens. 21, Pomeroy; James
Erwlne Snyder Jr .• 22, Pomeroy,
and Norma Jean Hysell, 20,
Pomeroy; Tony Alan Causey, 24,
Coolville, and Francis Loretta
VIola, 36, Coolville.

'

NEW HOURS: JANUARY AND FEBRUARY

thiu Fri.- 8 A.M.·1 P.M. Sit.

UCINE DEPARTMENT STORE
949-!800

lAC-. OIRO

MASTERCARD-VISA-OOLDEN BUCKE~E-

•

------Weather-------:.
•

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - El eanor Ewing; Mason , W Va. ; Alva
Will, Pomeroy ; George Harvey,
. Gallipolis.
Tuesday discharges - Goldie
Lawson, Evelyn Spencer
Saturday admissions -Ernest
Wtngett, Racine
Saturday discharges - None.
Sunday admissions - Sarah
Waller, Middleport
Sunday discharges - None.
Monday admissions - None
Monday discharges - None

"PLUS OTHER SUPER SPECIALS"

31D S11RT

Warm

-RAIN

Map •haws mtromum temperatures At least 50% of any shaded area tS forecast :
to rece•ve p&lt;eppotat10n Indicated
UPI •

1 RACK OF CLOTHING
REDUCED 20°/o!

9 A . M.·4 P.M. Mon.

~SNOW

State
...
Continued from page 1

- -a

northeast Georgia
Much of the rest dl the nation,
meanwhile, woke up Wednesday ·
to clear skies. Few clouds were to
be seen from Florida to the
Central Plains ana the upper
Mtssiss1pp1 V;~lley
Dense fog was reported in
portions of southern Idaho, north ern Utah and the Central Valley
of Cahforma
Scattered r&lt;\mshowers a nd a ·
lew thunderstorms doused Arizana and Southern Cal ifornia,
while the Pacific Northwest
rece ived a few ralnshowers
Temperatures arou nd the na
ttona t 2a m ESTrangedfrom14
degrees below zero at Interna tlonal Falls, Minn .. to 73 degre~s
at St. Petersburg, FJa

. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·5-89

•

Judgment awarded

''It sounded like It hit our
house. It rattled our whole
home," said Denise Vanderheide. who lives next door and
called pollee.
" We noticed right away that
the man was dead, so we stayed
back. We thought tt might
explode," she said
First said the pilot was carry·
December calls
tng film packets and photo-graphs, and was possibly a
total nine
courter for a photography com
pany Apollo officials were un- , The Pomeroy Fire Department answered nine alarms
ava~ lable for comment Tuesday
during
the month of December,
afternoon.
Schmid said the garage sus
Including, tour structure fires,
three au to accidents or fires, one
talned only minor damage.
"There wasn't much to hear," brush fire and one mutual aid call
he said. "It wasn't a crash like a for a structure !Ire
car accident. It was just a good
Divorces sought .
solid thump."
Schmid said neighbOrs re•
John M. Davis, Pomeroy, and
ported hearing the engine
Jamie S Davis, Point Pleasant,
sputtering.
The Federal Aviation Adminis- W.Va. , have filed •hi Meigs
tration and Springfield pollee County Com~J~on Pleas Court for
a dissolution of their marriage.
were lnves ligating.
Edith A. Watson, Racine, and
The Mansfield crash occurred
Ter~y
Lee Watson , Racine, have
while the plane was on Its final
flied
for
a divorce
approach to Mansfield Lahm
Elizabeth
Lucille Upton was
Alrport.
granted a divorce from Wayne
Wesley Upton.

and costs, speeding, and Ricky
Lunsford , Middleport, $63 and
costs, driving under suspension.

' An mch of 'snow fell overnight
on Washington O.C., Baltimore,
Philadelphia and Wilmington,
Del .. o!flcials said
A heavy s now warning was In
effect for portions of northeast
Ohio, while more snow was
expected for parts of Indiana,
western New York,' western
Pennsylvania and parts of West
Vtrgjnia.

Congress to count
electoral votes today

Seven forfeit bond in Pomeroy coUJ1
'
'
Seven
persons charged
with
· speeding forfe~ted bonds In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
They were Jeff Hoffman,
Pomeroy. $49, also$63 for driving
without an opera~or's license;
tcaren Bissell, Reedsville, $48;
Donald Ph!Uips, Gjllllpolls, $51;
Michael Dent, Clarksville', Tenn.
$49; Warren Schleifer, Jr., Bethlehem, Pa.,$46; ErlcG1'yszka,
Jr., Athellllt $47; and Scott
Kimes. Racine, $46.

'
The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pometov-Micldleport,-Ohio

allg1~ oNiamll blaml11h IIIII Whtt. Sewing Machine d..l_.
11 offM"lng
ule to the publlo • limited number of new apecial
1988 HEAVY DUTY Zig Zag oewlng mechlnea that are made of
METAL and- on ell fabrlcl, Levi' a, cenvaa, uphola*Y, nylon,
stretch, vinyl. allk EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER I No llt8Ch!l1enta
· needad for button hoiH (eny slzel, monogrema, heme, sewa on
buttons. .11tln athchn, overcutl. derns, appliquee end more
Juet aet diela end - !TIIglc heppen without old feehioned cama
or progremmen ThHe WHITE HEAVY DUTY MACHINES ere
aulteble for home, profaaaloiUII or tchool room aewlng. 11\'-lr
warranty. ,
YOUR PRICE WITH AD '139.00. WITHOUT THIS AD. •299.00.

Check. cuh welco!Tie. VISA 6 Mut8rC11d ecc•pted. Brand new
In fKIOIY
c:n-

••ect

llf f [ fi t;llllil f11 I iii:\ llllJi II UN llNI

1'

PLACE: THE FABRIC SHOP
110 Welt Main Street, Pomeroy, ()hlo
HOURS: Thur.tay, FriciiY, Slturdey, Jan. 5, 6, 7, 9:00.5:00
PHONE: 81 4-992·2284
'

PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED WITH VISA/MASTERCARD

•

�\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.~-6-The Daily Sentinel
•

BIG BEND

•

.

~· ·

f

Wednasday, Januay 4, 1989

:January Fil •Your
Cupboards Sa~e

Your Independently Owned
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10 LB. FRESH CHICKEN

5-1 Ll. ROLLS

LEG QUARTERS

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8-12 OZ. PKG.

OLE CAROLINA
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26 LBS.

MEAT

BOB EVANS

SUPERIOR

Farm

LARD

Sausaa•$.1 99

25 LB.
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1 LB.
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PillSBURY

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CAKE
MIXES

2 Littr lottlt

U-11 OZ. BOX .

KAHN'S ·
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12 oz. .
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15 IJ,IlG

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The Daily Sentinel

.~Everyone got out...

WEDNESDAY
,
lational meeting on Thursday, at
HARRISONVll.LE - Harri·
7:30p.m .. aJ the town hall.
sonville Holiness Chapel . will
see that a,ll weni well on the have a missionary service with
POMEROY- Thursday 'sreg·
. Faith Hemmeter, of Bolivia, on
ularly scheduled pack ,m eeting of
parking lot.
Cub Scout Pack 246 will not be
At midnight somel500balioons Wednesday, Jan. 4, at 7:30
p.m.Rev. David Ferreil. invites
came floating down from the
held. Instead, the pack is going
ceiling to add to the festive night . the public.
ice skating on S~turday , from
1:15 to 3:15 p.m,, at the Ohio
It was a great - and more ·
POMEROY - Tile regular
University campus. Skate rental
importantly safe - night for the
stated meeting of Pomeroy
will . be $1.25.
teens.
Fur further
Lodge 164 will be held· Wednes·
information, cail your den
leader.
As usual, time is marching day, 7:30 p.m., ·at the Middleport
right along; you know, and you Masonic Temple. Work In EA
folks out hi the Eastern Local _Degree: Refreshments.
POMEROY - Calvary Pil·
School District are advised that
'
grim
Chapel, Route 143, PomeTHURSDAY
the Meigs County Board of .
roy,
will
be in revival Thursday
CHESTER - Chester Town··
Elections j:)fflce, located on Methrough
Sunday
at 7:30p.m . each,
chanic St., In Pomeroy, is now ship Trustees will hold an organi·
~"pen for absentee voting for the
tax levy to be voted upon the
district. Deadline for absentee
voting is ndon on Feb. 4.

•
By BOB HOEFLICH
The long weekend must have
~ht on cabin fever which
resulted in everyone being
on Tuesday
evi-n though
wei!.ther was a
bft nasty.
The traHic
· North Second
Ave. in Middleport Tuesday
afternoon was bumper-to-bumper and tli&gt;d up for seve"'!
traffic light changes befor~it
could move on. I made .the
mistake of crossing the streei to
grab a photo of the former Royal
Crown Bottling Co. building and
about never got back across the
street to my car. Belleve me, .I
was ready to call the Boy Scouts.
Left to my resources, however, I
finally hiked up the street quite
distance to .get above the traffic
tieup .

Area young people really had a
blast at the New Year's Dance
Saturday at the Pomeroy Village.
Auditorium.
.
A total ol 350 teens attended now that's quite a crowd for that
sized auditorium. However, no
one seem to notice that it was a
bit crowded. The young people
consumed 56 pizzas and 63
two-liter bo!tles of soft drinks.
The refreshments were free and
the pizzas were provided at cost
. by the Pizza Hut and Dominoes in
cooperatlon wlth the dance spon·
sors, headed by Iva Sisson.
Several businesses provided
gifts for door prizes and Iva
extends a big thanks to all of the
businesses for their help.
There were 20 chaperones on
. hand and they did a fantastic job.
"Two police officers were hired to

_ The Don Lisle family enjoyed
-their annual Christmas break·
fast at the home of Roy, Rose
Ann. Kimberly and Rochelle
' Jenkins, Forest Run Road. From
there the family went to the home
of John and Janice Lisle. Todd,
Scott and Travis. for a gift
.exchange. From there they a II
went to the home of Mary and
Don Lisle for a dinner party. On
Monday the family was joined by
Keith and Karen Lisle, and sons,
Jason and Nick of Warrior, Ala.
and oq TUesday had another
dinner party and !)'\ft exchange at
the Don Lisle home.
The Keith Lisle family also
joined the James Johnson family
in Middleport for a holiday
dinner and gift exchange. Attend·
ing were John and .Janice Lisle,
Todd, Scott and Travis.
Mrs. Edson Roush spent
Christmas in Kent with her
daughter and son-in-taw and
family·, Dr. and Mrs. Walter
Watson. On Oec. 26, they all
came to the Roush horne where
they were joined lly the Rev. and
· , Mrs. Richard Young and family
for a get-together.
Chfistrrias guests ai the ho.me
of Freda Smith, Albany, were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley of
E.dison and Anna Stanley of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Reece
Prather and son, Tharon, KetterIng, and John Holliday; Dexter.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry of
Pomeroy entertained on Christmas Day with a .famiiy together.
Atending were Mr. and Mrs.
James Werry, Morning Star,
Jimmy yverry, Randy Werry,
and Jamie We,rry, and a friend,
Viola, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Werry,
Brandon•and Ryan, Belpre, Dick
Werry and a friend of Fairmont,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs . Bob Werry
and Kyle, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Price, Stephanie,
Stacey and Shannon, Pomeroy.
Visiting on the day after Christ·
mas were Dorothy Werry and
Denise Hysell, Belpre.

---- ------

Perhaps, you had wondered
a bout Mrs. Norma Lee.
She fefl in December receiving
a fractured hlp. She has under·
gone surgery at Veterans Mem· .
~orlal Hospital. She will receive
.mail at 104 Peacock Ave.,
Pomeroy.
And - .Edith Spencer - for •
many years such a faithful
bellringer for the J,pcal Salvation
Army during the holiday season,
is having health problems. She is
confined to Room 121, Veterans
Memorial, Hospital in· Pomeroy.
And - I had mentioned recently that my sister, B~tty
Hoeflich Hammer was having
some serious health problems
and was confined to the intensive
care unit at a Columbus hospital.
Slle Is progressing and has been
returned home ·for bedrest. Her
address is' 2087 Rochelle Place,
Columbus.

St. Paul United Methodist
Church has holiday event

The annual Christmas pro- junor .classes of Wes Sanders,
gram of the St. Paul United Billy Francis, Adam Sanders and
Methodist Church was held on Stacy Reed gave a "Precious
Dec. 22 with John Rice and Amy Babe ,W~s Born."
Louks In charge..
There was a play en til led "It'S·
There was singing of "0 Holy the Lord's Thing" with parts
Night" as the children entered. being taken by Mike Weber,
Folowing the call to worship, the David Rice, Robert Reed, Mary
junior high class of Susie Fran· Jo Reed, and Susie Francis. Mike
cis, Becky Reed and Janel Weber read "'Make Ready for
McDonald presented "The Path Christmas." Some of the older
of Faith."
children sang "' Silent Night" in
The kindergarten-preschool sign language foUowed by a
class of Jonathan Louks, Travis closing prayer by the Rev. Don
Wilford, Brad Wilford, and JenArcl!er.
nifer Cline presented the "The
Gift were exchanged and reStars of Christmas." ·
freshments served In the' church
. Any Francis gave "I Am social room.
Small", there wa~ a vocal duet,
' 'One Star'' by Susie Francis and .
David Rice, and the prlmaty and
_

Or.ganization session'

The Meigs County Board of
Education had announced its
annual organization session on
January 10. However. that has
been changed to 7 p.m. on
January 12. A regular business
meeting will be held following the
-organizational session in case
you nave any business you need
to discuss with the board.

Eagles class has
· Christmas dinner

Now, there'sjjl that stuff to put
away -but where? But do keep
smiling.

The annual Christmas dinner
of the Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church, Syra·
cuse , was held at the Ohio
University Inn. Dick Ash asked
the blessing.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry
A game was played following
·--traveled to Wilmington over New the meeting with each of those
The Eastern Local· School .
Year·s weekend to visiting attending winning a package.
District Board of Education will
former residents, Mr. and Mrs. Mary Lisle had seve~al articles · meet at 7 p.in. Thursday at the
Dwight Goins and Mr. and Mrs. on Christmas carols. Attending h·igh school for its organizational ·,
Bill Storrer, Heather and ·were Marcia Karr, Mary Lisle. lneeting. Matters to be dealt with
Jennifer.
rr&lt;'ne Parker, Dick Ash, Betty in addition to ' the reorganization
Holiday guests of Mrs. Pearl L. . Asll Helen 'Teaford, Virgil Tea- include financial. personnel and
ford, Harrietta Sinclair, Addie budget matters and the recent
Russell .were Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
and
Carroll Norrrls, Wanda report of the evaluation of the
Chapman, the former Kenda
Rizer, Beulah Ward, Bob and district by the Ohio Department
Russeil, and daugther, Kim.
Donna ..Smith, and Karl Kloes.
Pickerington. Mrs. Russell ac·
of Education.
companied the Cllapmans home
where on Monday they were
joined' by Mr. and Mrs. Mark J .
Ca~m· ~ t~~~o.Q~;~er ~eJley Cllap·
man, for a brunch. Mr. and Mrs.
·Karl Russeliand family, Melissa
Lynn and Ken, . Olathe, Kansas
joined the family Wednesday
evening at Pickerington. and
then on Thursday brought Mrs.
Russell back to her home In
Raoine. .
' ,.

FOR ALL'YOUR HOLIDAY
PICTUIES~•• Biiii'C YbllrfFIIM IN
TO US FOR PROCESSING.
12 EIP ••••••••••••••••.•••••.•• ., .•.••• S3.29
. 15 DISC ••••••••••••• ~ ................. S4.4 9
24 EXP•••••• ~•••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••• S5.99
36 EXP•••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••• S8.4 9

'

''

.

TIME,TO
CHECK

THAT

FURN~CE
We have in stock:
Furnace Filters
Furnace Cement
Furnace Pipe

· WHEN YOU
BRING YOUR
FI P
FILM IN
~e ex;~~~6VE
TO US
J.~ DEVELOPING
YOU'LL .
OFFER
GO ONE ctfo~~~!
OFTHESE ~~~~ , ~,~--~-~---s-ec_o_N--o-s'

t..

~ fREE!

.. and more

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

~~ ..:-

at 3'/.xs"
PRINTS

.,.-...

.,.~-::...."":- U P·G RADE
l, .~to 4" PRO-S
PRINTS

1 DAY

SERVICE

GET A COUPON lor

GUARANTEED

t\~J..8x10
t., ....

/o

0

OFF
e

•

50•~ OFF

EACH ROLl
WITH COUPON

FilM - ONE DAY

SERVICE

ELBEIFELDS

ttJ-6669
171 I. SICOit
_...,., OliO

·-' -----

992-3671 - POMEIOY, OHIO
I

-' . '

.____:..-'.--- -.. -----·-·------,,--.----11----:-::-'--~~---'

--·~

---~---

,

'PIESCIIPTION SHOP

'

·-- - -

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Saion 710, Eight and
Forty. will meet at 1 p.m .
Thursday at the home of Rhoda
Hackel t.
FRIDAY CALENDAR
MIDDLEPORT- A spaghetti
dinner. sponsored by Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 172, will be
held Friday, from 11 a.m . to 6
p.m ., at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Adults, $3:50; ~hildren
under · 12. $1 .75 . Everyone
welcome.
, 1

SATURDAY .
-RUTLAND - The Rutland

RUTLAND - Rutland Civic
Centef Is sponsoring a volleyball
tour,nament at the center Jan.·7.
First, second and third place
trophies will be awarded. Eight
Individual trophies for first place
wlii also be· given. $20 entry fee
per team. To enter. call 742-2100
or 742-2279-by Jan . 5
Lodge
MIDDLEPORT- A spaghetti
dinner, sponsored by the Order of
F.asternStar, Chapter 172, wlii be
lleid Jan. 6, from 11 a.m. to G
p.m., at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. The menu will included
spaghetti with sauce, slaw.
frenchh bread, coffee or tea, and
cream or cherry pie. Adults,
$3.50. Children under 12, $1.75.
OrganiZational meeting

CHESTER - Chester Town.·
ship Trustees will hold an organi·
zational meeting on Thursday,
Jan. 5, 7:30p.m., al the town hall.

WINTER CLEARANCE
•

EVERYTHING
IS

25°/o

OFF

Corner Collections
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

WED. THRU SAT., JAN.-4 TO JAN. 7
VISA

- HOURS:
10 A.M.-6 P.M.

M.C.

DISCOVER

. Sorry, No Llllyaways

KRISP &amp; SERVE VACUUM !ACII

SLICED BACON ••••••••••·••••~~•••• S1.19
SWin'S ECKRICH

,

JUMBO BOLOGNA ••••••••1!:. ••• S1.99
SMITHFIElD

Shredded lb .... $2.19

COOKED HAM ••••••••••••~·~.~~,!~. S1.97
MEAT SALAD••••••••••••••~~!•.... S1.69
DAFT

CAUF.30 CT.

VRVEETA

'CELERY ............~~.~£~..... 91

CHEESE ............¥.!-!~ ... S4.59
HAMM«*D GRADE A

lARGE EGGS .........1!9.L89 1
IUfT 16 SIKf

CEllO PACK
CARROTS .........!!.~~:..... 2 c

AMER. PROC.

IDAHO
BAKING

CHEESE ............!!.~;. s1.87

POTATOES .......:::,::••

TROPICANA

ORANGE JUICE ............ !!.~z~. S1. 79
N. Y. GARLIC BREA.D••• !~.~z•. S1.89
. MRS. SMITH'S

CHERRY "PIE •••••••••••••••••!!.~z~. S2 .89
.CAKE MIX ••••••~ •••••••• ~~.o.z~ •••••• ;-$1 •3S
IUTY CROCKER
RTS FROSTING •••••••• !!~.~~·..... s1.3 9
CAMPBELL'S
• .
.
TOMATO SOUP .... !~~.~~·....... 2I 89c
ARMOUR
CORNED BEEF ••••••!!~.~;......... S-1.69
DETEIGENT·

CHEER ••••••••••••• ~.~ •• !!· ~!•••••••••• 51.5 9

CHARMIN •••••••••••••!:2!~~~
..... SJ.4 9
.
WHEATIES ............ !~~.1; ••••••••• 52.99

. GENERAl MILLS

BLACK AND WHITE

-- ---·-

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Star, will meet 7:30p.m.
Thursday. Officers are to wear
street dresses.

VoUeyball ,.,_

BATHROOM TISSUE

MANY ITEMS MAilED MORE THAN
·
6001. OFF

--.,.:

POMEROY- Salisbury Town·
ship Trustees will meet Thurs:
day, 7 p.m., at the township hall.

DUNCAN- HINES

22 LB. lAG

~~~IT QUANTITIES •PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN .. J~. I., ... THRU SAT.. JAN. 7.1811 •USDA FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS ACCEPTED •NOT ~EIPQNitBLE POll TYPOGRAPHICAL Dll PICTORIAl ERRORS

evening. E:vangelist will be Rev . Civic Center Is · sponsoring a
Earl Newton from North Carol- voileyliall tournament thisSatur·
ina. The Mal\ns Family from · day at the center. $20 entry lee
P'oint Pleasant will sing. R.ev .
per team . Call by Thursday.
Victor Roush, pastor, invites the
742-2100 or 142-2279, · for
public .
·
information.

HOMEMADE

DOG
FOOD

•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO

Page 7

Calenti4r

•

Holiday personal notes...

1 Ll. PIG.

Russett
Potatoes

Beat of the bend

a

SUGAR

KY. BORDER
WIENERS

'pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. Januay 4. 1989

-- -·

-

.......,._

ROYAl CREST SANDWICH

COOKIES ......~ •••••••~!~.~......... s1.09
DEl MONTE

PEAS ••••••••••••••••••••!~~!; ••••• 2 /S1.59 '

AUNT JANE'S

SWEET
'

.

R RINGS ••!!.~~~ s1.39
.'

•

I

'

�P·-8- The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Wednesday, January 4, 1989

Cla'S sifie

•
•
•

..··

..

•

. We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

•

• TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992~2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. ,to 5 P.M..,
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'
ClOSED SUNDAY

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

•

POUCIES

.

.

•Ads ()Utside Meigs Gallia or
paid.

298 SECOND ·sT.
POMEROY, OH.

.·.

P~meroy-Middleport, Ohio

M~ son

countif:J5 must be pre·

•ReceN~ ~50 discount for ads paid in advance. ·

1 DAY
3 DAYS
&amp;. DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

16-25 WORD S

$4.00
$5.00

se.oo

$1,;1.00 • '
S3l.OO

Happy Ads

.

Announcements

26· 35 WORDS

~

$7 .00
S10 .00
$15 .00
$25 00

5---:' Happy Ad s

In Me moriam

Vard Sal•

COPY DEADLINE • '
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPE~

THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

- 2 ,00 P.M . T~URSDAY

'

53 - livestock

Cla .~.~ifiPil

"

pages cover t.h('

Transportation

Galli a County

Me•gs Counly

Ma5on Co., WV

AreaCode614

Area Cada614

AreaCod rt304

44636 7 388245256643-

99 2 - Middteport
Pomeroy

GJIIipolis
ChMhire
Vinton
Rio Grande
GuY.,n Disr.
Ar•bi• Drst

11 - HelpWanted

Situation Wanted
lnsurance .
8usiness Train ing
Sehools &amp; lnstruclion
16 -=~adio. TV &amp; CB Rapau
17 - M•sceflllfleous
18 ~Wanled To Do

985- Ch•ter

675- P1 Ple••nt
458- leon
576 - Apple Grove

843- Por11and
247 ~ l8tart Falls

773 - M•son
882 - New Haven

949- R•cine

21 - Busm~s Opportunity

896 - l etan
937- Bufhlo

22- Money to loan
23-- Proi•sional Ser\li ces

742-- Rutl~nd

379 - Walnut

.66 7 - Coohrill e

-.. 2 00 P.M . F~IOAY '

42 - Moblle Hom .. for Rent
•3 - Farms tor Rent
44 - Apilrtmeot fo.r Rent .
45 .- furntsh~ Room s
46 -:spaCe lor Rent •
47 - Wanted to Rent_,.
48 - Equipment tor Rent
49 - For le•e

1213l4 15 -

~

7 1- Auto s for Sele '

•

•

75 - Boa ts ~Motors for Sale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Accessori es

77 - Auto Aepa1r
78 - Camping Equ1pmem
79 - Campers 6 Motor Homes

' Merchandise

5556575859-

·'

72 - T'tucics for Sa le
7 3 - Vans &amp; 4 WO ' s
74 - Motorcyclee

'

81 -- HOme lrn~r.ovemenl$
82 - Piumbing &amp; Heatlr,g

Merchandise

83 ~ EJlCavat~ng

Building Supplies
Pe ts for Sale
MuSt cal lnstrurnttn \5
Fruih &amp; Vegetal&gt;l et
For Sal e or Trade

84- Eiec1ncltl &amp; Retriger.at ion
86 - Gt: nMal Ha uling
86 ~ Mob il e

•

•.

Services

51 '- Ho usehold Go ods · \
52- Sporting Goods
53- AJltlq!JOS
54 - ~ isc .

,_

6 4 - Hay &amp; Gra1n
65 Seed Rl Fertih!'er

.l;i§illhl

Empl oyment
Services

•

&amp; , - Fatm E-q uipment
62 ....., Want ed to Buy

33 ~ Farms lor Sale
3l Busma&amp;s Bu1ld1n9~
35 - l otli &amp; A crt~ ag e
· J6 ~ R eal Estate War,te~

41 - Houses tor Rent

Jollf!win f! telephone exchanges ...

DAY BEFORE PUOUCATION
- 11 :00 .A .M . SATURDAY
...,, 2";00 P.M . MONDAY
- 2 :·00 P.M ·..TUESDAY
- 2 00 P.M . WEDNESDAY

32 - M obile Homn' for Sal e

6 - Lost and Found
7- Y•·d Sale (paid in advance)
8 ~ Pubti c Sale &amp; Auction
. g_: want8d to .Buy

,, "

1-iomes for Sale

31

4 --- Give~PNay

sso.oo

Farm Supp lies
&amp; Lives!ack

Real Estale

1- CardofTh.nks
2- ln Me mory
3- Annoueement s

'

po"s Oa,ly Tnbune, reachmg over 18,000 homes.

Homo Repatr

.
•
•
•

87--,- lJ~hol ster'l

'

-

Public Notice

$

JTM

Beef Patties ••'!~~·. 11

0
9

Mea.t ••••••••••••••• 2/9 9 (
MICROWAVE
$
6
Hormel Bacon ••~.~~ 2 ~
KAHN'S
.
$ 9
6
·Sliced
Bologna
••••
'!
1
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.
. $2 69 ..
Sirloin Steak·•..•••~~ .
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$ 359
T-Bone Steak •••••~~ .
HILLSHIRE FARMS
,Smoked Sausage ~~·$1 ~9
FLAVORITE
Sliced Bacon •••••L:·.~ $129 .

SHERIFF'SSALEOFREAL
ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO.
MEIGS COUNTY

The-:Central Trust Company
of Southeastern Ohio, N .A
- vs;tnonia K, Woods, et •I

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

aboVe·entitled action, I will
offer for sale •l\ public
auction, at the flont door of
the c·ourthOUIIt in Pomeroy,
Ohio. in the above named
county, on Frklay, "January
13, 1989, at 10:00o.m.• the
fo--.g d""ribed real oat·
•••· Mueted in the County of

Meigs, and the State of
Ohio. ·and in the Village of

Midcloport, to-wit:
Being that part of lot No.
18 formerly Sholiold, now
incorporated into Village ot
Mlddl-n, beginning otthe
northwest corner of,Lot No.
16. on Third Street; thence
IOUthert'( 66 and one·third
feet on the east side of Third
Streot to tho libr~ry lot;
thenoe ••••rtv and parellel

,

with the north line of aaid Lot
16, along the north line of

"'~

oft.

S£170) .

'--------------

-1
l
~~

SPECIAL
OFFER ON
GENUINE
STONEWARE

said Library lot a diatanoe ot
B6 feet; thence northerly
8nd par•llel with the wnt
line of Third Street, • di&amp;·
Unce of 65 and one-third
feet to the north of said lot
1 6; thence -terly on the
north line of Lot 1 6 to the
plac:e of beginninv. Said lot
being 66 and one·third feat
on Third Street and of en
equol width to the depth of
B6 foot.
Excepting 32 feet. 8
incha oH the nortt} stde of

Paying today
Dec. 12, 1988
(Subject to Change
Withaut Notice!

#1 COPPER •••. 83&lt;

loca_ted Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;
143. Pomeroy, Oh.

12-11· S8·1 mo ,

HOME BAKED
GOODIES
Get Your
Holiday Goodie
Orders In Now.
AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI POWELL
12·6·'18-1 mo.

Reference Deed. Volume
270. ·Page 759, Moiao
County Deed Records._
This property has a postal
address of 158 South Third
Avenue, Middleport, Ohio
46760.

WANT ADS bring.

Vacation Money

· Property appraised for
$62,000.00 ond connot be
sold for len than two-thirds
of 1he oppraised volue.
TERMS OF SALE: Tho
tuccessfol purchaser. as
soon •• his bid ts accepted,
ahall be requWed to deposit
on the day of sale, in cash. or

$

FLORIDA RED or WHITE

99
!Grapefruit ••••• !~!!~ 1
. FlAVORnE

Vit. D M··lk·........... .$169
GAL.

'

, FISHER CHEES~ FOOD SLICES

1 ~:

.STARKIST-OIL OR WATER

.

·

6

·GOLDEN GRAIN-7.25

Mac/ Cheese....

·

D·onuts •••••••••••••••••
·.

BUY OlE

BUY OlE

ZO oz. BOX Of OUAICER
RliGUlAR OR CINNAMON

Hb. PKG. OF KAHN' S
REG., JUMBO OR BUNSIZE MEAT

~

LIFE CEREAL ~
~rc:taox FREE.

WIENERS
~UJ~~ FREE

=·. .,""'---.. . . .

PKG.

lillllt 1 ' " ' Mffll' -'Cft '""

FRESH BAKERY

BOX

tlltwtfi Ot
#';;"~.~~~-\Df'tii!OM"t Met Yalw
(OUDillllt . . . .

.

DOZ.

•

IUY OlE

6 ·Piece Place Setting
Consists of: Ojnner Plate
Cup. Saucei. Soup/Cere~l
Bowl and Salad Plate
Two Beautiful Patterm

•

To Choose From

•*•

Mate hi "!I .-\ccessorie~
Amilable

•*•
SEE STORE DISPLAY
FOR DETAILS ,

12 ct BOX SWISS MISS IIi&lt;!,,_

BOx

(

•

pd.~"

CUSTOM BUllT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonoble Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Rei. 949-2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

EUM HOME

laam &amp; Bo.-d For
S.niar Citizens and

HaRdicapptcl

Good Ratas
T.l.C.

Yrs. EKp.

Raferences

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

"Free Estimates" ,

•

PH. 949-2801
or
949-2160

I••·SUNDAY CAIU

NO

YO.UNG'S

In

Memoriam
..

...

- CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona 1nd remodeling
- ,Roofing •nd gutter work
- Concrete work
- PiumtHng and elecnlc*

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

payment of bal1nce unlesa
uid b•l•nce ehall be·paid in
aight 18) dayo from the dote
of the sale.
Howird Frank. Sheriff
of Moigs County
Douglas M . Cowlos,
Attorney for tha Plaintiff .
ll2)7. 14, 21 , 28; (1) 4,, 1,

Smith Run

Rull111d. Oh.
11·21·'88-1 mo.

Rd,

JUST OPENED
CAKES
by Donna
SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES

· Birthdays, Holidays
Specializing in

6tc

cakes

I11 Memory Of
Arnold J. Hupp
Who Left Us
Jan. 4. 1987

lt. I, lox t36, Yintan

742-2235

11·3·'83-l,mo.

A million times I've
needed yau,
A million limes l'n
cried.
If lowe could ltawe
sav IHI yov;
Yau IIIYtr wauld han
died.
In fife I loved you
dearly,
In death I love yau
•

.

alone,

.

with

yau

The day God taak you
home.
Sally mintd by WHt,

•

81.
CHIPWOOD
POLE.S.
EXPERIENCED '·
MEDICAL
·TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Immediate opening
for experienced medical tr-aiptionlst.
Prafidtnt in medical
t«ninology' and • a
gooll typist. Exctlltnt
warking conclitiam
and fringe btntfits.
Stnd rtstlml to hr·
--a Dtpartmtnt, P.
0. 8011 344, Gol&amp;palis,
OH. 45631.

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14 ,
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

$14 PER TON
DRIVERED TO

OHIO
.PALLET
COMPANY
POMROY, OHIO

992-·461

R). 1 24 East of Rutland
Across Happy Hollow Ro.t
Ph. 614·742-USS

Pomeroy, Ohio
ll·l4-'88·tfn

75°/o

PH. 1-992-6822
12· 1'1-88 -1 mo.
J&amp;L .

1~1!5'1

JR. ~ :.11!n
FAS IIOMIS.

INSULATION

HAIR STYUNG &amp; TAN111NG
GREAT CHRISTMAS Gl nl
GREAT PRICES • Gtn
C£RTIFICATU

TOP Of THE STAIRS
AIID

992-6720

Mastic &amp;Certainteed·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
• Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates

Call 992-2772

1115/ Un

12-5-88·1 mo.

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Oo Hauling With
Dump Truck

•Wrecker Service
•JUnk Y1rd Bu1inesa
WANT TO IUY Wlt£UEO 01

JUNK CUI 01 TRUCKS
-FlEE ESTIMATESFor any of 1110111 ••lcn coli

614-742-2617
letw•n 9 9.m.-6 p.m.
or Loovo Mosstlllf

Z· ltr.''88-tfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
sYRACUSE, OHIO
Most

Repair,s

NIASE Certilied Mechanic

CALL
992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C•ry Fl1hing Suppli•

Pay Your Phone
Cable Billa Here

IUSINESS I'HONI
16141 992·6150
IESIIINC£ PHON£
1614)

6

10°/co Down

Wilh Approved Credit
No Paynw~t ar lnt•nt

'Til Jutr 1, 1'119

D. J.'S TRADING POST

614·992-7301
MIDDI.IPOih.~!\~t mo.

located Halfway
~
between Rt. 7 &amp; BeahAn .

NEW &amp; USED

8 , 7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Makes :
We Honor MC/Diu/VisCI'

9· 1·11· 11n

WANTED .

DEAD OR ALIVE:
•Washers •D l)'ilrs:
•Ranges •FreezerS:
• Refriqerators
"Must Bo Repairable"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•
985-3561 !

f'emuring : Conaolidaled, Plltf'h
Wt8t, Brunt'o, Ashlt)'
WE TRADE

1'43)

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt.

MOWER~

Strvico Cent• lor Ryan ·
Products
:

Stric lly Enforcod
10-Hfn

LOWEST PRICES

:

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO:

6:30P.M.

We Service All

698-6121

,
'

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION .

BINGO

OWNER: GRlG I. ROUSH : ·
::~,

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB

.

GENERAL .;

~ CONTRACTOits

~

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

• -

·

RESIDENTIAt
COMMERCIAl

.CUSTOM KITCHENS &amp; BATHS ,

•E&gt;&lt;TENSIVE REMODEliNG ....
•VINYL SIDING &amp; ROOFING \
•METAL BUILDINOS
·, ,
HOUSING &amp; APT, PROJECTS" .
.~1 1\Cf:: /069

DOOR PRIZE

2 H . b , FREE with coupon and purchae of min.

DU!IIT IT., SYIACIIIE

H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon par customer per
bingo session.
~WE PAY 550'!00 PER GAME
n~"'" 10 PEOPLE 0 66 .00 PER u~

:

992-7611 ' .

11·21·88-ttO:

.

...,.

SAVE STEPS! .:
Shop the
Want ·Ads ~

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

•

first!

. Formerly Meigs Excavating

.Full Excavating and Constru.ction
Residential &amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential &amp;
Farm Work
Rt. 1 , Vinto.n
3B8·8746
Owner &amp; Operator.
Tony Cardillo
11·9·1 -mo.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING ··
&amp; HEATING:'

992-6'282 ::

L~tening

(!)

Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Seriic•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

319 So. 2nd Ave.:
Middleport, Ohio:
1 ·28 ·'88 - tf~

•

!: LISA -M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

LINDA'S
PAINTING

~ · (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
2 417 S«:Qnd Avenue, Box 1213

-

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts; Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES •

Take tho pain out af.
painting. Lot 1110 do :
it for you.
·
YERf IEASONAIUor(
HAVE REfEIENCIS . ,

614-915-4180 •
1 1-19·' 88 ·1 mo. pd l&gt;

•

RIVERINE ANTIQUES
GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

BOOKCASES
CROCKS
WASHSTANDS
DRESERS
LAMPS
.. Th e Gifrs Thol Never

.

INTERIOI-EXTOIOit

Shop
Where ·
Santa
Shops!

t c BUY .

NOW
PAY
,LATER
Wilh Cub c.. t Financi"l

Dealer for

Basham Building

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, 1NSERTS AND
'· FURNACES

Certified Licensed Shop
5· 25-tfn

aa.6
~
Ntw
161 North'Se&lt;ond
Middleport. Ohio 457 60

Foreign and

Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

PH. 949-2969 :

•12 Years Experience

Collectors of
Emmitt Kelly Jr.
LIMITED EDinON

TO

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

WOOD STOVES

9 / 20/ tfn 1 mo. pd,

SAVE SO~/o

GUN SHOOT

1-1-'JI. tfn

CLOWNS

Public Notice

#

GuM • Ammo • SIU9J
' 22 Ammo
,

J.li·Hn

Joe or PaoMy lowland

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

992-2269

Modtrn Gun Suppli•

IFREE ESTIMATES)

WELCOME TO
CHRISTMA!l
AT

$3 s

Munloloocli"l !uppli•

Now Ho111es luilt

992-6873

"LOW IICOME HOME"

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

AIID

work

209 South 4th 51.
Midtlloport, Oh.

FIREWOOD

1-13-Hc

3-30-'ll lin

the purchase price shall be
due and ~able to the

For part .of mi went

'

992-6611 .

111 Wost Set:., Pomeroy

lona; sri. Daughfll'l,
and Famil~.
1

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

.... '"'

..
' · . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ¢¢ . . .tilt
. . .....
. . .....
..,.. OMCOIIIOJI
.. ,..,

Factory Choke
12 Gauge · Shotguns Only

742-2421

lui yau clicl not go

JAR

BILL SLACK

992-2156

In my heart you hold a
piCKe
Na one else can ew.fiU.
It brakt my htart Ia

Jll or JELLY·
='cJ:m FREE

COCOA Ill
~reo~ FREE

PAT HILL FORD

Homeltte
Jacobsen

diiJS frem 1 to 5 p.m. tlwu
Qoc. 11, 1911.

stiH;

, SMUCICEIS GRAPE

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Tecumaeh
Weed Eatar

Mi.Wieport, Ohio

cherector."and novelty

CERTIFICATES

PER LOAD
DELIVERED
1Llli"l HAUUNG DO~IEI

Brigg• &amp; Stratton

County. Ohio, 10% of tho
amount of such ·accepted
bid, but in no event leu th•n
$1 ,000.00. The bai811C8 of

___ __

WITH 20 BONUS

We can r~air and, retort rad1ators and
haatlt cores. We can
also acid boil and rad
out radiators. We alsa
repair Gas Tanks.

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

BISSELL
BUILDERS

26

Authori•od Strvko
&amp; Parts

SER~ICE

far;•'

·2

IUYO.E
5Z Ol.JAit

U1l Olt wmtiiiAIISHMAUOwn

11·9-1 mod.

RADIATOR

by cenified check. pevable
to the Sheriff of Meigs

anca at the rate of 10 p8f
· cent per ennum from the
date of sale to the date of

$19'
9
. (

Sandw1ch-Mate •••·•• 9
· 9
$
·
(
99
Chunk Tuna ····•· ~~;; 69 Ice_Crean:w •••••• !::~. 2
oz.
3/9 9(
$1 59
KEMP'S

SETTING

HUNTER
SECURITY

EAGLE RIDGE .
SMALL ENGINE:

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Come see our
Christmu Selectiono.
for your shopping (Oft'ftni• • wt wHibe Ofllll on S..n-

Sheriff of · Meip· County.
Ohio. wichin thirty 130) days
from the date of confirm•·
tion of sale, The purch•er
shall be required to P•Y
interest' on the unpiiid b•l-

5 PC~ PLACE
•

•Residential
•Commercial
10 Years Experience

lb.

992-5114 .

pogo 931, Meigs County
Deed Records.

-' ALARM
SYSTEMS

614-992-5952

CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS ........... 40' lb.
CLEAN ALUMNUM
CAST ............ 35 1 lb.
ALUMINUM ' ·
CANS ........... 42&lt; lb.

the above·dncribed real HIate, which was conveyed to
DIIVKI Richard Long and
Beverly lee long. by deed
recordad in Volume 267,

•

•

~----------------r-----~----------~----------------~----------------~----------------~----------------r-------------~--

.Caoe No. BB CV 117
In pursuance to an Order
of Sale directed to me in the

2.5 OZ. PIIG.

'

Business Services

PUBLIC NOTICE

WAFER SLICED FI:AVORITE

•

$6,011
$8.01!
$13.00
S21 .00
$6 1.00

Rates are for co n~t~cu~ive runs. bfoll.en up dav swill be ch argad
for each dfl¥ $5 separate ads.

tor errors first dfiV ad runs in papet] . Call before 2 :00p. m.
d~ after publi c- ion to make correction.
• Ads that must be paid '" advance ar~
Car d o f Thanks

•

RATES
0-15 WORDS

• Price ot ad tot all capital I filters is doubl e price ot -ad cost.
• 7 point line type only used ,
•sent inel •• not responstble tor errors a her hrst day . [C heck

' A cl•s•hed adYertrsement placed in The Daily Sent in e4 [ex ·
cept
cl&amp;u•tied d•splay . BUsiness Card &amp;l)d legal notices)
will also appea in the Pt. Pleasa"t Reg1ster and the Galli-

...

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

'Free ~ds - Gi&gt;Jeawav and Found ads under 15wordswill be
,un 3 d~s at no ch•ge
··•

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 7, 1989

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

·BOGGS

CUPBOARDS

SALES &amp; SERVICE :

BEDS

PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

U. S. IT. 50 EASY
GUHVRU, OHIO

•

614 ·662-3121

, Authorized John
D eere. New Holland , :

1124 E. MAIN · 992-2526

Bush Hog Farm

~qupment Dealer.

.
p,.,,,~~;,

s,.,,,/1,,

EVERY SUNDAY

Leesa M. Murphey
FrM·Lance Writer
SpHches,
Computer .Grephics,
Public Rllatio111,
Advertising ~ ·

Phone:
614-'1'12-3643

GUN SHOOT

·..eJ
.

11 · 71md.

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
~GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

fmo E•u l~111ol

MARCUM

,9.19-81 ""

G.

Still &amp; Smltt

1 · 3 · '86 - jf~

CHESTER, OHIO

.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

FACTORY CHOKE

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
,

"'

Announcements

.•
·.
em•g~~

3 Announcements
We wil Nul coal for

HEAP, Mrtlgl County Otpt, bf
Human Servlc., and HE
vouehets, Wt c., ghle v~

. 985-4141
Referencet~

.

4P

, GENERAL CONTRACTORS
11-16·'88-tln

PI'Ompt cktliverl•. E cttsior Salt
Work•. Inc. Pom•ov, Ohio~
B14-992· 3S91 .
.
-.·

. -~·

..

�'

.,.._.;..- - - - · · 1"-· •.

•

~

Page 1 0 The Daily Sentinel
3

Chlmn~

Aon1

42

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements
_Sw., Spildtl

,thni"JanulfY, 304- n:J-6348.

4

Giveaway

44

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . treler tor rent. 1 ·mil e fro m
Hol.r11 Hosprtal. C1ll 6 1 ~245-

2 be•oom..,.-tment In Mldcl ..
PGf". t186. P* mGnth. depatil

.

3 SR ., 14x 70 Kyger Creek

PuPIM• to givt~~. ..,..,., Mother.

85 E noor• 3 BR lor rent or 11le.

Perttv h..trni~ t.d .

2 Mm-oom ., ll'fm.-.ts, fultr
ca-p•flld. appfi8tOI!tl, Wit .. W'ld

Cell 614-. .6-0&amp;80.

.. .

6

Lost and Found

pup. Mam Rd.·df 780. Rod
coll1r. Call 114-218- &amp;478

"And h ow 1ong h ave . yo.u
been a kleptomaniac, Mr.
Squiginore?"

evanlngo.

FDuNO: M... a...,.. Nooon..
No,hup vldnltv. Cell eft• 5
Pl\t e1 .. 44e.me.
LOST: 2 8-aOaf•blac:l( tw-n.
. Femtl•
moa. Add•HI•
•tagwhtte.
Adufi:t malehll
colt• ...
s-o1 ••· Bo.j~iii•Addloon

Rd. Coii814-«8-M90.

FOUND: Llr_g e white mete
Huolly or EW. Hound dot Ci ...
S!Qiool !lrw. . Cell 11 258-

.

1~ .

FOUND: Black, m•e Coon or

Fox Hound dog on Wheaton Ad .

outside of Eno. No coli•. Call
114-387· 0171 .

Loot; long hlllr .. block Sh•
phord dog. Loot In Baoh.,.Kino.
bgle Rldg• ana D•c -20.
AntMfl to Poo. 114'-941·
2083. Rtward.

F.,....

FOund: ctMI ring. Inquire at
Ewing
Hom..

Loot · 1981 PPHS Cl•o Ring ot
PPJH8- Yell- gold. blad&lt; ony•.
lnMiolo SC. 304-.IB· 1197.
15 montholdBa~teneHouncl. red
andwhhe. weiwlngcoll•. dawn-

town ... New' Raven, chid' a
pot,'304-8D2-3795.

LOST: Bnot. . o&amp;amoonitohord
..tie. Lincoln A... Ole. 31,
1111. 1:30PM. oonulrwlmporWM piP WI. contiCt Cart Momton 304-718-2944 Of loCII
pol ........

8

,._,on AUC1ioneer. II·
cented Ohio ltld WMt Virginia.
Rick

&amp;tate, WIUque, f•m. llquida.

tiQn Ml•. 304- 773-&amp;78&amp;.

r::;=;;:~'::;:=~;::=::-r;,~~r;;~;;=~;:ir;i;?1
11 . Help

Wanted

fln .. cfllllidato

•I• •ucc••·

-~~ . Stota .,d Ctvl Sarv ...

JobL Now Hlrina. Your lt'M.
•13.1150 to •udO. ImmadiMe

Opanlngo. Call 1·311·733·
8082 aL F2788.

Am•lcwe Porn.roy h• lrnrnedllta openings for plrt lime
RN'a end LPN'1. AI tttfftt,
fl•ib4• tc:heduting. comp.rlttve
sll..,. •nd b«&lt;eftt1 offered.

AVON · All 1r-. C.ll M1rllyn

Avo.. Oolllpolia. Coli 11._,.... Wa..,., 30.. 8D2·2145.
2282.

114-. .8-3159.

Got pold lor r - g bookol
t100.00 I* tttl• Write: PASE&amp;17A , 111 s. UnoolnWiy, N.
Aurora. II 80M2.

-:;;:::::;;;:::;:::::;:;:::==
Situations
Wanted

. F,..ntture tnd _,pllana. by the

3158. .

W.,ttd·Someone to liv•in &amp;
c•e for eiWiy ~ . C11f 814-

Buying Stondlng nmbor. Coli 448·0073 or 4U · 21 10
...,.,ings.
114-379-2758.
.

entire hauMhold lito .telling.

814-742· 2.55.

.

tedv

in privlte
ho,. 'and
to ttwe 10
IIPII'tnwd. AI llrnlthed, tv end
hot me•. Ae•oMbl&amp; C.H
H8v1 VICIROf' for

U1ed .,rntture by the piece or

"*'

014-2&amp;8-5509.

f illplllylllf:lll

HoinMood Or.• Bl...,efl, 8800.

Col1814-388-9789: .

·Unfur. .hed 12x60 Foreet Park. .
ptnaltd Wtlll and cellln go. IWOI
bedrooms, total e 1eetr c.
t?.OOO. C1H 11 ... 44&amp;-3010.
1984 2..._152 Sedionel,. 3 8R .• 2

t..llbolho. Rao&lt;ty oomova. e,.ol.
cond. Ctll Ff'lflch Ctty

aga 814-. .6-9MO.

ln:~k•·

19B4 Skyline 141&lt;70. 3 IR ., HI
bMhl. E.:et oond On rented
lot. lnctu del vinyl aklning,
porch•. f Sx11 wood 1tor1ge
b•n. 21 ft . l8tf COntlined
c.np•. Own• moving &amp; muat
...."'CIM French City Brokerage.

11+ ..a-9·a .o.

19B2. 1... 70 Wellington. 2
bectoo"" 2 full Mlht, central

etr. tot•l eledrle, pordl end

•nlngs, 2 out builclngs. 1~
.,. • . In Rutland village. een
814-384-&amp;0981or Bob or 814-

....

992-2768 for Ewtyon. Priced to

16

t 1900.

1 S78 Uberty 141&lt;70. 3 bod-

room, 17.900.00. 304-875-

1871 ond 87&amp;-1783.

2 bedroom.10x60mobilehome
In good•hlpa. t990.00c•hor
OWMI' will finlflC8. 304-8752722.
1988 For.t Perk 3 bedrooll\

T.alec:. 141&lt;72; 1988 Skyline 2
beltoorn T.elec. 1~70; 1971
Fleetwood 2 bedroom gat

1Cb:12; 1974 Vemoo Add-a·
Room oloc. 241&lt;12: 1978 Monlson 2 bedroom T. E. 60x12.

30 .. 875-3000.,

36

Schools
I netruction

Ser vu:es

2 be4-oom 1 2x &amp;0.
30 .. 075-2722.

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

Help Wanted

18

BRI., 1 1/t births, CA., d lt·
hwuh•. diaposel. priveta en·
-cloud pllio, poal, plavgrou nd.
Wat•. HWer,- &amp; trash Included.
St.tlng .. t 289 p• mo. CaM

30 .. 875-6104.

UP TO f 1&amp; HOUR PROCESS·
lNG MAIL WEEKLY CHECK
GUARANTEED . FREE DE ·
TAILS. WRITE. SO, 1057 W.
Phlladelphll. Suite239-GO . On·
urla, Calif. t 1712.

Mod•n 1 BR . downtown. compi•• kltch.,_ air, c.pet, Oep.
Gilt, 1'10 pet .. Call 814-4480 139 evening~. after 6.
821"h Stc. E IICel. co nd. 2BR ..
equipped kitchen, tir. A ve il able
NDv. 111:. 8 226 plu t dap. Call

11 .. 446-01503 or 448-2168 .

1 &amp; 2 BR oponmono. l 300
month. lndu d8a all utittti•.
Aduht onlv. no pets. dep.
r~ui'ed . Call 814-- 448. 4 222
between 9&amp;6 .
•

Requlrtt mtn-aernent ebility
Md v•bll. wrtlt., and public

rel•tionl aklli. •ch.tora or
bttt• d•Jred. Blek~ound In
tountmhetpful. StndrMumeta:

21

HELP WANTED
DEVELOPMENT COORDINA·
TOR •, 8. S. oroforrad. Signifl·

unt uperl... c:e .,. .... of
~--1 Md CXM"p&lt;nte aoldta·
llof\ mtiOf alfte end .direct m ..
it required. bemonmatti:l euc~ end 1-..hlp In
tM
aehicw....,.t of 1u nd·,.lltng
go•. Donor cull..,.ion. wortt
wtth lolrd tnd vo-.,....._
tdenatvt NCOrd kiiPinG . . d

· - " ' 11 ._lrad. · F,jlfime
poatdon bMed In Athena. Ohio.
raqu ,,., ev enln g / week end
tc:hl&lt;kll• tn d triVet throughout
eight aouthult., Ohio cou n.
tt.. Low20't. Sendrwume . . d
lett4J of Int .... to tt.y A ttdn1,

4 BR .• full betem..rt. c•pet. g•
r.ngil, ctry tohoolt. No Pitt.

FiflilllCial

Dop. &amp; Rot. i'lqulrad. f326 por

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINO CO. ·...,mmendl
you
do llualn.. wtth peo:rl• you

t,_

knQW¥, 1nd NOT to.-. man!Jf
tfw: mil untl vou hiHe
lnnotlgotod tho ofl•lng.

t~ough

31

Homes for Sale

•r••·

f13.550 to U9 . .SO. IMME·
DIATE Oponk\go. CALL 1· 315733-1012 e ... F 275a,
Noodod: Full- limo machonlcaliV
mlndlld emplov¥ for "'"'*'I
ei'NIII tQulpment for old .... bllohod firm. Bond ...um.to boll
C .. 111 c•e Df O•llipols D_,ty
Trllalna. 825 Third A... Oolllpollo. 0H41831 .

Got

pold

lor raodlnu boob!

*100 per titlt. Write: PASE·

UA , 111 8. Llncoiwoy, N.
Auroro.ILIOM2.
H!LPWA~TED

IDeol 0D'¥*if hiring fat fuN

, . . lfftpielri'I'Wit.

~

• .,...

riM• .,....,..,, Mult tJwe
outomobk E-lng """" · &amp;
"""' lfllng
" - ·,,.ring
., 200 ••
• month
plu• ' "
p;oflt
banofil,. CoN 61 4· . . 5et.S.

loilfoltor In Rio 0 rondo ochool
- · can et+24&amp;-M21 ot·
tori PM.

446-0008.

8 roomt &amp; bllh. beument.
e..ptll a •pWenca. No pete.

Qoe child. Rat. II dop. Call
11 .. 448-1183.

3 lA hou• for IW1t in Addtton.
OH. Behind Wamtl-v• GrOCIJIV.
C.ll .814-446-82&amp;21fter lpm.
In ChMhir8-3
bedroom,
2 betcell
hi.
111
Mte. Oep.
requlrtd.

81 .. 387-7867 or 1· 703-3881 109.

G701 .

NOW HIRING . Your

Hom• for RenVlA•e. IW!d
conti'IICI, Crou.. S.dc Rd.,
Roctl~rt Vills,ge II , E!.....nt Hgtt.
Aef•enON and depotitt r•
qulr•f. lla.burn Reltty, 114-

HouH b rent. 4 or 5 bedroom.
824 Jackson St,. Vtnton. Ohio .
Call 814-388-9310.

E.aut .,. Director, Pl.nned Ptlrlrrihood o!Southo•tDhlo. 398
Rlchllnd A&gt;Jenue, Ath.,t. Ohio

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS .

mo. Call 814-. .8-0276 oher e
PM, Weeklftdl any,ime.

3 bedroom r1nch, 2 betht.
lfftdent hellt pump, 2 CM'
g.nge. t 500 • mo. 3 be«oom
r•litwttl*l walking dlltenceof
downtown. t3&amp;0 • mo. Prtvme
4 BR ., IuiiiNoom- fo gw~ 3 bedroom 2 ttory brh:lr; on 1
illfv ..potod
now!. c
.,.., Crown Clly, t376 • mo.
schooll. Utlh: • low. Woo
R.wtodlled 2 8R . l'lnch, cloteto
laluw·. Netul'lll e• f\.lrMIJI.
grede achool, t27D 1 mo.
Pricod to ool. Col 114-445- VInton
Aef*anan and •curttv depoth:
0271
oftor 8 PM. - - ·· required on ell propertl• . WI••
mytha.
m., R. .l Eltlte, 114--448·
3144.
3 BR . toouoo. doiUxa, AC. &amp;
poot-s.te or Tr.te. 41A . ~.e. 2 bedroom. 'four room IPt.
good loootlon. CoR 304-176f110.00. 2 beolr.- omoll
610'houtt, t200.00 or
aell on•
l
..
d
...
.
30
..
175-2722.
3 or 4 ill. mo•l• homo .., 5
.... of land w"h pond. Vtlrf 2 bldrDDm
b•amtm
good '"'"d. Coli 81,..288- BD87. Nlw Htvtn . UnllrNihed tnd
alDie to echo~ . t 175. month.
4 or I - - 822 Jaduoon 30 .. 982·2513.
St., Vlnlon. Ololo. ~1814-3181380.
I
42 Mobile Homes
2 Pl . In cou ntry, Vlnt on • et.
for Rent
llowo. rofrtg. . Eloc:. . - · · ttuh
pold. 0210 monttolv. Dop. Colt
114-318-1188.
r.wtr dacor•ed. 2 8A ., tultr
c_w_plled. S.c. dtp, Nqutr.f.
"
'
tOmodoiod
2
......
""""
In Pl. PI- Pricod 10 ool. Cal Col 81 ....8- B558 « ..530.. 175-1311.
478D.

I:

For Lease

5104.

c.,_

rema.

otoclt only. Vlnyle
st..rlng 11 t199 y8rd In atock
only. F"" •tlnwt-. no job to
llrge or .,.• . Two loeattont.
122 Vl1nd Str...
PolntPieiHnt, W.Ve.

ch-

Antique dining room tlble .nd
five
304-875-3791 .

3 pe Spenith bedroom aulle.
ldngoizllbed. •.oo.oo. 3pcbod
room tulle. dioub4e all• bed.
•300.00. Pecan dining ttble 8
chi . ., china cabin«. •aoo.oo.
Otlw Mlrno. 304-195-3118.

Sunot.., 1
2628.

10

54

Household

Q oods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive Sl., GaiUpoltt.
'NEW- 8 pc. wood group- *399.

Uving room ..11... t199-·15~9.
Bunk bed1 with bedding- '249.
Full aile m . . reu &amp; foundltion
ttart ing· • 99 ."'. Recliners
ttarting- t99.
USED - Bedt. dr•t . .. bedroom
whet. Delkl, wringerw.•her. •
complete line of ulld furniture.
NEW- Wert em boot• . •as.
Workboot• S18 I. up. (Steel&amp;
soft toe). Call 614- ~6-3159 .

Wheelehelr•ni'N D!' ueed. 3
wheeled elecrrlc •coot... C•ll
Rog . . Moblhy coll.ct. 1-814-

B70.9881 .

Ave. G•lllpollt, OH.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Upper Ante.. Ad. beeide Stone

CrOOI Motel. 814-. .5-7398.

Second Aw. Furn~had efficien·

· LAYNE'S FURNITURE

qulrad. CoN 6 14-446-0045ofl•
&amp; PM Of weetc ends.

F,.nlohed '1&gt;1. 1 SR. 70 1
Fourth. U10. Utilit le&amp; paid. Call
. .8-.. 16 ott• 7 PM .
Furnished apt., 1 BR . 807
Second, Gallipolit. S22 5. Ulli·
ti• paid. Call 446-4416 aft er 7
PM .
2 apta. for rant clos e to A'lo
Grende College. C1ll 61~26&amp;-

1402.

Nice 1-2 bedroom _._.ment1.
Avellebte furnit'*l or ull'l.t r·
ni1hed. Depo1il requi'ed. C1ll
814-448-4346 after 5 PM .

,.,t,

2 blc*'oom Apta. for
Cerp•ed. Nice 1ettin9- Laundry
feclllll• INiillble. Cell 814-

992-3711 . EOH.

· One Month Free Rent
Qualified rmt•• JMY 8200.
Depotit .,dna rent for t he
month. December &amp; Januery
ontv . Vlll,e Manor and

:"d':'f7id! 11 . ~FIIr1romm~~~ ~
2.

So f• 1nd cheirt priced ~tom
8396 t o 1995. Tabl• •so 1nd
up to 1126. Hld e-B-bedl 8390
to 11595. Recliners 122&amp; to
t 376 . Llmpa 128 to I 125.
Olnattet • 109 end up to 1495:
Wood tabl e w-e c:helrt t285 to
1795. De1k I 100 up to t37!5.
Hutch• $400 an d up. But*
·bedt co mplete w·mattr•. .
129tii and up to 8395. Btbr ~
$11 0 . Maureues ar bo~t sprlngt;
full f'tfJ..t\Mn 088, flrm G78, and
088. u.oeen •eta 1 260 &amp; ul),
King t310. 4 drawer chett $19.
Gun e~~b in et• e. 8 &amp; 10

r.n.

Bwbv me ttr81iln • ~ 6
45.
8l.'d ften•e• 120. 830 &amp; King

han1c

•eo.

GoDd selection of

bedroom tultet, metaf ceblnet&amp;.
hesdbo•d• 1 30 and up to t8S.

90 Day 1 same at c111 h wit h
3 Mfl• out
Bul...-illa Rd. Open 9tm t o 5pm
Mo n. th ru Set. Ph. 814·441approved credit.

0322.

V allev Furnitura

7 572. Hours 9·6 .

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete household flnnllhlngt . Y.t mlle-Jarrlcho. 304-175-

1450 , IU - 3891. 9773 .

eveninga.

For low prieee on Qulltty Carplt
&amp; Furniture come to Mollohln
Furntture· UPP• Rtver Fld., 814·

448-74. ..

VIRA ' S .fURNITURE &amp;
APPUANCES
Open Mon.·Set. 9 AM -6 PM,
Sun, 12 noon-6 PM. 114-44831 &amp;8.
PRICES SLASHED-Wardrobereg. 1149 now 875. Queen size
mattru. set-reg. UBI now
1105. Country wood tllblewlth
leh1lrs&amp; bench· reg. t589 now
$ 269. Many More MoniV Sev·
lngVIIues. At. 141 lnCanten•rv

~~8:1:..:9:9:2-==B7:.:E:O:H:.===l':•:m:n:•:o:n:L:In:oo:l:n:P:Ik:a==~

3B8·B138.

2·t.,ning bed•. 1 toning Ubi&amp;
JICI.IIII.

••cite. equip., wick•

•a.

furnttu ... AI for
000. C.l
61•· . .1 ·7821 or 304-273-

999•.

hMI:•.

Tripi•WIII furMCe plpa Five
ulld uctlont 1nd T. •1 10. CaH

814-387·7114.

Fuel tank· 'h MI. Coli 114-. .68880.
A1flr'IU wDDdburner, 1126. Celt

81 ....5-48BO.

.

'

Mi.llted tt.d wood alebl. t 1 2 per
bundle. Contliining 1pprm:. 1 Vt
ton. ·Ohio Pallet Co .. Pomeroy.

Ohio. 814-992·M01 .

I

I

·

72

6

1

1973Tantllm1Datftd.wllhlag

bunko. Cal 814-258-1&amp;98.

I

&amp;

73

Red .nd Go4d D.tickM.It ltPPIII.

t 2. 99 p~ foDd mmp• wei·
come •.Jtek"• Frull M1rket. At.
35.., H•derlon.

&amp; r_,vr.sluck
Farm Equipment

'80 CJI5 Jeep,

175-2318.
UTILITY BLDG . SPL. :
30"x40' x8'8" C1e•tnce, 11 5'a8' ..,... door, 1·3' v.lk
door: U999 ERECTED. Iron
.._.Sidra. Coll814-332· 9741

Coli ...

4020 JO trector wi re• round
c1b. nice, t4450. Gr•h•m
HOEME chiolo plowo, OBD&amp;. J D
18ft. lold-upHorr-. f485. JD
1010 v.ctor w/JO quklk co~
nect - · · ohorp, f3895. Will
llnonca Col 81 .. 288-8522.

74

lnt•nationei·UII:I ntM~~ tlr11- wtth
plows. cuftlwiiOf', IJueh hog &amp;
rotery hoa •1715. Wltl ftn~r~ce.

Cell • 14-285-8522.

F•mEquip,_,t. ZMorTriC'Iors.
HDWird Rotweton. ll•d•.
Food•Rinr.luyingold better1M. Morrlt qulpfMftt. Rutland.

Ollie&gt; 01+7•2·24&amp;5.

USA Jungle Boott. Orwn Ct·
moufl... ('"d black wMol.
SAM SOMERVILLE'S . OLD
ROUTE 21, NEW ERA. WVA
(n""'l · I :ODPm. Doc. onl'll.
Otlw m.,.lho 'rid..,., ilolurdoy.
Sttndov only. 304-273-5811.

63

Livestock

••t

DAIRY FARMERS
Veil Proctuc. wwrtlng "Farm
F-h" ·colvM 9().115 l&gt;a. Hoi·
otolno. 3-7 d..,.a old. Col I 14-

2.8-158B.

64

Hay

81

Collage

•
'

(9j MOVIE: Par!oct Friday JR)

(1 :34)
OUntoiVeciMy.,.,._The
abducllon ol a 9 year old girl
is hlghllgloted In this edtlon .
0 Munier, . , . ll'tro,.
• Naahvllle Now
8:05 ()) MOVIE: In the Heat of lite

•

''

Ntgltt(NR) (1:49)

e

9:00
W Ol Night Court Dan
. lumas when a courthouse
fire cl098s llle door on
campaigning. lA) 1;1
(ll (!) The lnflnlt1i Voy111e
Naw evidence sugge81S
dinosaurs may have been
warm-blooded. Q
(JJ Tile WOIIIMt Yaara
Kevin Is lerrifled to make his
firs! phone calllo a girl. (A)

·'

Home
lmpfvements

e

PIOIJ£ER.
(Qa6

i • 01 Tile

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANO
Unconcltionll llf•ime gu•111· .4
tie. Local ref•encea furnilhed. 1

Fr• 111:1,.,.-.

Call

MOVIE: 'Agatlta
Cllrtall'a
Man In tlta
Brown Bun• CBS Spacial

Movie
!1J1 LIITJ King Llval

ooHect ·,

1·81 .. 237-a.BI. d..,. or night. - 1
A o g e r • B • • • m e n t ·~
~l'l-proofing.
' ..

441-0294..
~nting:

,

Fr• ... -

.. Coli 814-. . 6-

83...

MOVIE: Paper Moon iPGi
(1 :42)

9:30 e W Olhby Boom J .C.

'

i'TUI.4T

&lt;SOT A

TEQ-!NICAL

'

DIFFiCUl..TIE'5.

.....'

A ON'S T•levlalon Service."-:_
Noun cella on RCA, Quuer, ..... J.
OE . Spocioling In Zonhh. Cal ...0
:tO.C..I71-2398 or 814-441-

;~ntry

. RISAL FI...OP.

/

.

enrolls Elizabeth In classes
from finger painting 10
violin.(A)
81]) Hooparman Harry
inflllral8s lhe hangoul of a
knuckle-beating loan shark.

FLlND DRIVE
THEY HAD L.P6T
' WEEKMWOT
HAVE BEEN A

HAS ANYBODY'
OUT THERE

WE: ARE
EXI'SRIENCINEi'

0 I

lnt•tor &amp; Exterior.

0

MORTY MBEKLE

111'.00 &lt;Il 70G Club

e

W Ol Tatungara
. (JJ Colllga Beak-11

"!

24~

~

Wayloo Marie anempts to
land an armed forces TV
post In Vlelnam. 1;1
(!) Ptlmatlma/Japan Harry
Anderson hoata lhls loOk at
Japanese television, with
clips from soap operas.
child(en·s programming, .
dramas • even Japan's best
comm•rcisls.
((D Win at. Loalng Weight

::.-

Fetty Tree TrlrnrrW-Iv.

ttump ": ,.

":1•

BARNEY

. B95-3802

'•

RON'S APPUANCE 8 ERVICE,
houM elll a.,-idng OE, Hot
w•hera,

dryert lnd

""""· 30.. S78-239B.

...

•

I''M GOIN' OVER AN'
PlAY CHECKERS
WITH WALDO, MAW

WE DON'T--BUT Z.ONIE
Al-WAYS BAKES US ONE·
OF HER SCRUMPTIOUS,

HOT APPU!··

..

fLI.

8AI&lt;E YE

A PIEI!

e

-- ..-.:

OEvanlngNtwa

71

!Ill Nawa
C2l CIOOII lnd Cllaaa

r• •lmates. Clll

• 10:20 ()) MOVIE: Vigilante Force
(POi p:29)
111'.30. ((DOdd Couple
• New Country

Auto's For Sale

19711 01
f.OO. 1912 E 280
Von. n.ooo. Coli 11+-. .&amp;2359.
'
1977 Caclll.., llovh loodod.

Fl.. c.~. No Nit lmm-..l•e.
111000. ... thlo ....... f2800.

Cell 11 .. _7011.

Twa d. . . .w.. run

fr•.

loodo4 llol olllaiont ..., w•h
rodlolo. .1983 Ptv-.th Roll.,.
SE. 10.180 ml.·f2280. 1913
~· 800. 13.000 ml· 03700.
111114 Dodo• co....,lon Mini
VM, RIM' . . . . . . II t .. -.;1111,.

Shorpi 58.000 mi·U.3IO.
1979 Ford c ...,llr plcioup, """

p•int

•

frDnt fendere ,

dop ..clobl•fl50. Call 81 ..
4.5-839iit
1H3VW
bllclleooi.AM ·FM,
• apd.. AC. ..., 11r•. Col
114-:115-112"-

1978 Cllooly c-... 380 loigh
........... MIIOINI~ Red.

Coiii1 .. _11Z7.

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

11:00 (J) Remington lteala
CARTER 'S PWM81NG
AND HEATING

Cor. Fourth Md Pine
O.lllp~ll, Ohio
Phone 81.4-.-44~3888 or 61~

445- . .77

- --------84

'•

'

General Hauling

Dll .. d Watl!l' Service: Pool1,

.........

Ciotor,., Wello. Dotlwery Any·

time. Cell 614-441- 7404-No
Sundwt calls.
J&amp; J W•er SeN ice. Swimming
IDDOit. clst•na. w . .. Ph. B 14-

24&amp;-928&amp;.

R II ~ W•• S.Vioo. Pool~
cTtterns, wellt . lri'tmedl••
1 .000 ,. 2. OOOgoilonodollv . ,,
Coli 304-175-8370.

"*·

oe 2.

\

I

I,

'

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weot

Norlh

Eall

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

s•s+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2•

Pass

Soalh

3.z+
6.

4 NT

Opening lead: • Q
dummy's ·r emainiiig'diamond, cashed
his second high club and then led another spade. Poor East could take the
spade ace, but because his last remaining card was a small spade, he
bad to give up the lasttrick to dummy. _
JIIIIJ8
"JO&lt;Oby ... Brloflo'/11111 •
"JO&lt;Oby .. c.nt Gamoo" (mila. .-1111 blo l•tlle'. •
the hte o.nJd I•~ ~ 1101r ua.U..~ ar ~
borJbUres. BotiJ are
l'hrl by PlY,. Boob.

h&lt;obT•-

®-.-........,..... .....

lll~torir
period
3 Plun~~
downw a rd
4 Big Power
(ahllr.)
6 Asse mbly
of wil.rhes
6 Nalive
( s urrix)
7 Fat

2

,ACROSS

1 Bill

of fare •
5 Punctua·
lion mark
10 Love gorl
11 Write musk
12 News
agency
in 4 Down.
13 Fe41ds off
Yesterday'• AMwer
I4 Blot out
8 Director
25 Really
35 James
160n thePreminger
now!
Mason role
(predsely)
9 - egg
26 Sand hill 36 Asian
17 Stripling
11 Of the nose 28 "On
river
19 Lion's
. 15 Amo, ~
Gold~n
38 Different
pride
amat
- "
40 •- Butter21 One of the ) 7 Frolic
, 30 V.M.I.
milk Sky"
kingdoms
18 Presently
student 42 Pistol
23 Sour
20 Merit
. 32 Safe place
(sl .)
27 Rambles
22 Submissive 34 One kind o&amp;3 Parjsian
28 Not in
24 Descend
race
season

-.

or

29Joint
30 Dishonest
one (sl.)
31 Mideast title 1..-4--1---t33 Private

r •

.'

34 Genetic
Initials
37Spoke
further
. 39 Transfer
4 J Theater box
44Good-luck
piece
45- team
(poHce unit)
46 Bridge
expert
47 Being (Sp.)

.

'

'

..

. "

DAD.Y CRYPTOQUOJI!3- Here's bow to work It:

. ••·.

AXYDLBAAXR

Night Gl~ Ia murdered wllan
llle Hmo aha was riding In

explodes. (R)

SOUTH
t62
.AKQJIOD
tAK
+AKZ

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IL"V.::;~;~

·

g .. .,... ......

II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for ~ two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrOphes, the length and fonnalion of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

..

• AIMrloan Magazine
12:00 Cll MOVII!: The Little

llhepllard Of Kingdom
(NR)(I :48)
'
(!)

lpartaCanter
"'':~P.r.

e ((D •-tllgril Zona

.

CIJNaaiNigltt

~=Now

12:211 ClliiOVII: llevld

cc~~ •lflsld INRl (2:12)
12:30. (J) Gl Lets Nigh! wllll

·

CRYPTOQUOTE

c:-

~1 r'i!-Ton~.

•&gt;

11mnm..,_ry Lyna Slotlon
w
n.aoo. Coli 11+. .&amp;-

W Ol Tonight Show

•o Na.twwed o.m;e·
(JJ llpootl1onlght
.
e OI'Ntght Hall' CBS Lite

bel1•:..

I""'·

e

+7 5

CROSSWORD

Cll Cllean
&lt;ll Amlrtcan An Forum

-

CAPIIIco••ca-.•

Upholstery

..

11:30

tJ9862
+QJI09B

upon

• You Ceil Be a Slar

CnU!Cea 'l'

AQUARIUS (...n. »-Fill. ffl
ion 1odiy, you ._'i.e liKely to en)oy your·
lor. luHIIIIng your ambiiiOUI obltJctlveo oeH more If your IIIIIOCiallons are
today are beller than usual. Proceed ' llmlled lo your very special friends.
wllh as little fanfare as poulble and LEO (.lu!J 23-A,.. Zl) If you have a ptawork only with people wl1o are dlrec11y 1ect whldo II of importance to you at
Involved.
•
lime, do all thai you can today ·ft··-·•·- ."1
PIICI!I (Fell. 20 Mlrch 211) Your oure lis foundations are uiOild u
gtealesl - t • todoy ate likely to llble. Malta II a springboard lo auccesa.
com. lhrough your lnvolvemenla with VJIIQO (Aug. 21-lspL Zl) Thare Ia
lrlandf. This lo becau8e you'll conduct . oornethlng special ilbout you todoy !hat
youroelf In a man- thai will encourage . will make you lland out In a crowd .I
olloerl to do speclld thlngo fat you.
E.-. thOUgh you rnlglot not dellberately 1
ARII!I (MMIII 21-Aprll 11) Don't be .. attanllon, your cl1arl111118tlc appeali
airaid to make whet you believe to be ' will draw people to you.
Tloerl are lndlcetlona that you wlllorm PDIIIIVe changn - • your work or . 1J11RA (Bapl. IS-Oct. D) Soma unex-~~ lmpart.nt a-lllona In llle, ca.., Ia - n e d todoy. Conditions , pacted -opmenta moy occr..1odoy
yew with people wllo wll be In a' can be lmprowid upon H you're bold : thai could have an 111act upon your n-··
PDIIIIOn to edvence your ~ enough to lake 1he llepllo do 10.
. ,, _ . alfalra. . Don't let this dlllllrb\
They will b e - . who- clall-. whet TAUIIUS (April • ..., 211) Don't at· , ~. '*-'M 11 IIIOUid be tor your uni t
they promlae.
tanopl 1o do -hlno on your own to- • ,, .,. ·
1M 11)1110orn- day 11181 can be eccomplltlild
ICORPIO(Oct.:IM llou.D)You'llfunc..'
lng more iiiVIIIuMd with your ' - " • with -lllanla who . . - t l y al · lion beat today In lltuatlona - . you1
ctub or-~ COUld...._ .your dtlpolll. T-.t allorla could be -can - . . your aUthorlly Of your'
advantages at IIIII lime. YINI ~ ·rnqre illfeclhM.
' " - . h l p abllltlae. In mattsra .....
....., ~ 10 ..,oatlonl that •" ' I (.., 1 1 Your paul- you 11aw direct control, all lmiONedi
ptt!Ckapaolpl•al 1111111111. Ca!Htcofn.. bllltlll tor 11-.t pin loot&lt; good to- lhould banellt.
t-l,ouraalflol ~gill. Sand lor day, but not neu a•rUy liiirn your cu. IACIITTAIIIUS
D Ilea. 11)
vour Allro-Gn!pll ~~~ lor 1he tomary IOUI'Cel. If you make ucora, It 1 s-hlng 1n wtllch yoU'N p,_lly Inyear ahead by mallng SI to Aetro- 11 lltcaly to lrorn a l l d l - . . -lhallllllrMdy procludng relurnt '
Gqplt, e/o IIIII _.,..,.., P.O. Box CAliCO C,._ 11-- II) AllhOugll
lor !IOU can Mil be improved ...,.,.,...,.,.
111421, ~. OH . . 101-3428. Be you'll have IINI warmth and esoy manDon'lllllllle lor IINI lllltuo quo.
/
'-' to atata 'tPIIt' ZOdiac llgn.
ner thai wl!l end- you 10 any com pan•

EAST

•ABs
.87432
• Q 10 s

4

DOWN
I Chanced

0 Monayllna
9Hona,....,...,.
0 Mllml VIce

Bernice Bede Osol

· Electrica I

1188 D..... Doyt..,, 1- ml·
' - " ' oot.,dodWorrtril'(avoR•
blo. Cal 114-445-1290-

'

(NR) •
elilael
((D Love Connac:llon

;,

R•identlll or oomm•cill· wir·
lng. New ,.,-ice or rapah.
Licenald ehtttriciat. Ettimate
free, Ridenour Elec:trlcal, 30 ...
875-1788.

87

Cll • Cll Ill&gt;
!Ill Nawa
C!J IIIII Moyen' World of ·

ea

~·

&amp; Refrigeration

86

• w (J)

•

VEST

•s
•s

and stopped below slam when bls par\·
ner denied holding an ace. After all,
even though North might hold good
spades, no defender worth his salt is
going to take the s pade ace right
away, and that holdup could well leave
declarer with· a club loser. But South
had a touch of slam fever, IUid for· all
be knew his pattner had the club queen
anyway, 110 lie ' bid six hearts. Sure
enoup, the club queen appeared at
trick one. Unfortunately it was led by
West rather than held by North .
Cover the defenders' hands and ask
yourself bow you would play to make
12 -tricks. Mind you, the contract can
and should succeed with proper play.
The easiest way would be to draw
trumps and then lead a spade while
mesmerizing East into taking the first
spad~ trick. But today's defenders
cannot be mind-controlled, ,a what is
there to do?
Declarer won the club and drew five
rounds of trumps, dlsc:arding froin
dummy a club and three spades. Tben
be cashed the A·K of diamonds and
played a spade. West signaled that he
held two spades by playing the live,
and East let dummy win the .trick . We
now see why declarer had not discard·
ed a diamond from dummy . He r uffed

verse

Cll .CIJCIIINI-h

·-~---

•

l0 ((DPtlmaNaWIIeaiia..,_.

.

·~

304-875-7121 . .

..w•

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICDE·
:recounllod oofa &amp; olfactwo bv
u. 8. ..._ of V.Oorinory
Modllllna a u - - ""'"" •
-......... In doll' • eoltl
IIDWILL CASH FEED J D
NORTH PRODUC!.

Cll Colega Beak-·
&lt;ll (J) ~Game Take a

Servtct~::;

Remov•l. F

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vah~
25" SylvonloCorwolo Color TV. d•fat f100. Fordo. Marcodoo.
CDrYIIttee. Olwy1. Surplus.
150. 30 .. 175-3188.
a._. Guido. 111 105-117·
eooo. EJCt. S -10188
55 BuHdlng Supplie1
1888 Covollw Z·24. Loodod.
4.000 mr.. Uke nWt. Clll
814-387-717..
•
Bullllng Moooriolo
·
Blodt, ~lck.
pip•. wln- 1973 Pontlolc G..,dAM, 4 olr..
dowl. lint• etc. C lar de Win· PS. P8, llr, tift. cruile. Runs
tert, Rio Gr.,de. 0. can 114- good. Goo tir• 1100. Coli
U&amp;-5121 .
11 .. 385- 07 oftw 5:30PM .

Drogonwvnd Clll1.. Konnol
Pwaltn end llem•• .. d Him•
..,.. ldn•a. Chaw atud ...
vic.. Colt 114-..a-31. . olt•7
PM.

(1 :48)
CJJ Colaga Bealc-1

(NR)

A~•• Tree Trimming •d Stump

304-075-2757 oftor 4 :30 p.m.

Pats for Sale

1:00 Cll MOVIE: The Lillie
Sltapltard of Kingdom Como

1984 Hondo KR 200 Pro Link.
uc cond, •eoo.oo. 304-8823190.

Point.

243•; OH 1· BOO· I33-M53

lio lloclo Co .. 1231-1 Plno t ..
Oalllpollo, Ololo. Colt 814-..a2783.

9 Night Coun ·
• CIOOk and ChaM
7:35 ()) Senlonl and Son

wom~nQJI;ITV 101 C

Pump •I• and a1r1ice. 30... '

f r;msportoiiOil

ocra..llre

close look at the power of
the press, lobbylats and
staffs. r;l•
e Cll Growing Palna Maggie
diiiCOvers the new nanny
they hired Is a pretty young

Moat wells oompl•edsemett.,.

nmottrt Hey • whMt .traw for
oato. Call81 ... 379-2789.

• liD M"A'B'H

..,

•c oond, 304-

nwnD'IIII. Clll304-175-1331 .

•nvtfme.

Concr•e bloc:b- 111 til. . ~rd

N!U$i &amp;f.SOMETHINli

--:-----···
- -• .t.w
Rot.,Y or eabfe tool driflln ~ ~-:: ~

&amp; Grain

Cll Ellhll'llllnmant Tonlgltt
e Cll UBI! Today
all • 01 9l Jeopardy! 1;1

ib THI$ Gt..08AL WAAMING
IPtt\ ···iHATr Ttle NINTH
~1GHT1NG oF AN
ABOMINAJI-E .)~LJSH MAN.

Ooo•gaa c ..... Rd. call 814-

SIGNS: Porteble lighted W·
letten t299. Fr• o.l. d
12-31-CI8. Plettlc lettlrt
f47.80 bo•. WV·1 · 800-M2·

For Hie: Olk fir.waod. C.ll

't:

+H4

•su

lowed some conservative medicine

ArneriC:II

National Wildlife ~ice 1rPTHE-Rf

0

SWEEPER ., d a.wing mchint
rep81r, p.-ta, endeuppli•. Pick '' "'!
up .-d delivery, D1vit VaGJum
Cleaner. one half mile up

evenings.

SURPLUS -Orlglnol Army, Do·

FRANK AND ERNEST

Motorcycles

.

.,

••

NORTH
,. ._ ..
.KQJI09 7

Perhaps South s hould have swal·

OMIIml VIce
Fandango
7:05 ()) Andy Brillltlo
7:30 ID Scllolaatlc Spoota

1988 Bronco II XLEdh:lon. Bladt- ..;,
•tMior. red pkuh lnt.tor. I'•
apd .. overdrive. 11.000mll•. lf -.
lnt...-ted, you e~n refinenoe OJ .. ~
,.. a • • pavmenu. Cal e 14- •
446- W156.
· •;

' 80 Chwrohft 4llll4, t2.600.00.
ltd lin• fOf lhot1 whlef bMe
o'ck up. 876.00. 304-895·
3830.

you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

By James Jacoby

e

W.O .

r.JriJI Supplir:s

Firewood far •le. Mbttd h•d

614-742· 2421-lime.

8o 4

_J

BRIDGE

9 Chiara'

.

Vans

-1
0
Complete the ct-.udde quote d
1
by f1l11ng in lhe m1SS1ng words

For1111111;J

1987Ch~vFI. .oldoEL pl'*"p.
f7.000. Col 814-2.5-9231.

578-2828.

Fruit
Vegetables

show and watch another
·amaze me. I can'l believe they
can find two shows they - to

•

Philo150phar: ' ' Don 't mistake knowledge for wisdom . On~
helps you maka a living; the other helps you MAKE a LIFE.

Nawallour (I :00)

•OMoneytlna
liD ""'"'' Company

TV

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
· Softly - Theme - Knack - Unwise -MAKE. a LIFE.

!II • 01 Ol Wlleal of

1978 Ch...., Sl'l&gt; Sldo PU. PS,
PB. AM·FM ·Con. alldo • •
window. 400 motor, auto.
f1200flrm. CoNe 14'.318-9e07
oft• 5:30PM .

People whO tape one

I I' I ITO I I I I I I

CJJ SportCanter
Cll • Cll Cu,..nt Aflelr
Cll (J) ~-/ LlhNr·

1

:

1 I I' I ...1...I

e CZl Collage llt11kllb8!1

Trucks for Sale

j

7
a
~-'
.-.I.L.....L.
--'.L

7:00 (J) Our HOIIH

•tom.tic tr.,.,_11ion. 304-

At'*&gt;o Llv ...ocic Sol•, Alb'"'f·
Slle fNW¥ Stturdlfrr· 1 PM .
IJvOOiocic occopt"' aft• • PM
ev.-y Fridllr. 1 mb
of
Albonv on St. Rt. 150. 'toll
8U· I592- 2322, 898·3531

wood. HEAP vouchert IC·
cept... Pick up Of deiWerfld.

I

'·

..r~T..:.A;..,.D:...,:,:l'I..:E;....T
.:...,...-1

·

Now Country
8:35 ()) I to 5

'82 Ford tni:k F 100 ohort bed.

'•

.

~
5

e

1978Un-Mork1V. •I&amp;O.OO.
coli 304-575-2&amp;1 1 aft or 5~0
·PM.

ntw tlr-. m-e~ whNts. 302V-B.

Coppertone g• ,.nge in ~JQod
condiUon. 1n eng6ne MtiVzer
1nd 1 3 hh:dt towb•. 114-9815-

3839.

tiOO.OO. Phone 304-

Ii

. -:;W:....;.O....:C:..·;;.R...:N::.-·-lj

ShowBiz Todoy
9WKRP

1973 HolltonF«dtruclc. fiiOO. '
Coli 304-458-1915 « 30 ..
. 175-2019.

Kenmore 14 cubic ft. rafriger•

..... f30. 814-992·7.73.

Groom ond Supplf lhop-Nt

sa y you ' re more o l a
grouch p o lato."

o eertoon e•..,...

CDnd.

outfit, · • • n o . 230

65.000 BTU AI ol oil .,,...,.. lor
troilor. Col 814-255-1291.

Grooming. All brHdi ... AII
otyleo. l..,o Pot Food Daol•.
Julie Wabb I'll. 814-,....0231.

" Aclually, l·' d

Musical
I nstrumanta

FlrSNood for Mia. HarctNbOd · lAte model 444 lnt1m.rklnel
tr•Of' w / 5 fl. buthhog, plows.
epl~ . f30 plcloup lniek dollv.,.
cfltc:. oorn p1tnt •· 9 pt. sprey
Cell 01··~4882 .

56

hou•.

87&amp;-2•&amp;7

· 1980F-3&amp;0V-8onglne. 4 o tr.na. Otllen dump bed. l~~e .
Cond. U,300. 304-4&amp;B-1039.

61

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Ch .. nel Auttic
ond S.Volod Lop Sldlnt
• Docio-wlolo
Q'*"''ood Ouolity
CETIDE. INC.. Atlo-· 114·
59 .. 357B
I

w•

I

Cll • Cll ABC Nawa Q
Cll Body Efac1rlc
(!) Nightly Buatnau Report
all
C88 Nawa

0

57

·-nod.

or dellvll'f. M110n Mnd. Gall o-

SNAFU® by ll'ruce Be auie

.

'79 Ford A -. • cy( good

•.7 7 Ch...., pidrup, good cond.
IO.OOOmleo; '77 15-pouongor
- · 55,000 ..... 304-5762 372 « 878-2281!.

For Slle FlrMook·Mixed or
f28 ...... _
locol,
Bl""'ol oroo. Dtvid Hll 114-

nlm. Aent.l. C.rhert Clcrthlng.

NeM~ o~tnd uctld furniture end
ap p liea n ea~ . Call 614-446·

~ N8A Today

NEHCW

~-,--.;.,I :...::,..:.
1 :...;:.....:1:,.,........{
1'

e

l'd dog paddle the
deepest ocean .

I'd cl.imb the
highest mountain.

•

A It T.,.kK pupt.. tl50: C1ll .....
5 p.m. 304-895-3942 or B953•28.

Oolllpollo. OH 114-446-.330-

Towemotor forklift, time dock.
office d•k. g•
engine
County A.r.pllenot, Inc. Good hoist. peHot jlck. lip tack bags.
used applan&lt;:M ll'ld TV tets. • · new commode 1M. C.ll 114-

aw

Nice 3BR . dupiiM for rant acrot ll
from Gallia 'Academy High
School, unfurnished- $2&amp;0 , parllelly f\lrnlshed-8 276, fuUy
furnlthed· • 300, Dep osit r&amp;

sol••

WHiTE'S METAL DETECTORS

WMhrn, dryera. refrlg•atorl.
reng11. Sktgg• Appllanct11,

Appl fur nis h&amp;&lt;~. lde al locatlon.1
blocK from dowmown,, CBII

Flah Tonk. 2• 13 Jockoon Ave.
Point PI-t, 30 .. 57&amp;-2083.
10
up f14.99ond 10 gtl
complete •43.25.

Ron Alllaon. 1210 Second A\41,

Unl.JPnlthed 2 BA gwage ap•t·
m.,t. In town. C.rpeted. Adultt
onty. No Pet I. Call 8 14-4464&amp;61 .

_.t.

Slberion H,.ky pupploo. Pu·
.rebred. bt. wh., til. M•kt. blue
eyn. Aeadv now. 3 mllll. 1
femola. fl5. 814-992· 51•4
aft• 6 :00 p.m.

M e r c h a n dise

51

.Dear Sweetheart,
I'd do anything
for you .

Dalaka
·
((D Happy Dap
QJI .Faete olllfe
0 Slle·Ra
C2l American MIII8Zine
8:05 til One Day et • Time
1:30. (J) Ol NBC Nl~htly Newt

Oerm~n

Pure 8 red White

Misc. Merchandise

--- - , - - - - - - -

1 DR ,

2

Shoplwd pupplto. UOO eoch.
814· 742· 2911 or 114-742·
3100.'

lp.m. 114-992-

SOl. 614· . .8-1899, 827 3rd.

3 BR .. s Court St. kftch en with
stovt &amp; refrl9- $260 pk.ls dep. &amp;

AKC regtst•ed 8111ttte Hound
pupploo'. CAl 01 .. 809-3711 .

luv or Sell. Riverine Antiqu-.
1 124 E. r.tllin Str•. PDm•oy.
Hours: M;T,w 10t.m. to lp.m ..

441-2359.

ttert inO at 1176 a mo.
Including &gt;NM er •
g• bJQe.
Single ecl.llt• ontv. Cell 81~
448-.S0.7 or 448-2602.

Pets for Sala

Afl!iques

0pen BAM to 8PM . Mon thru

SHADY LAW N APT $- 729

56

58

l'-

•

lwm, vinyle 8'1d

Pomeroy - 2 BA , ram od•l e d
.,wtment off Spring A ve . Sec.
dop, &amp; rot. Coli .ttor 8 PM.
61 .. su ease.

Nlcefv furnithed tmeM houl8. ' Plrtillly furnis hed 1 Br., 25\1
Adults only. Ref. required . No State. 1200 • mo. $50 clop. 8
mot. le• e. UtiUt i111 paid. Adults
""''· con 814-448-033B.
3 lA .• AC. c•pet pool. o•ea ..
Z &amp;eplleft. fen01. Goad location. Cell A-1 Reel blatt
lrok•. 304-87~&amp;104.

MOLlOHAN FURNITURE
..Compl•e Une of c•pet, con a-&gt;

53

tho Senior C~lzen (82 &amp; older!
tn dHanciCJPped p . . ont. Equal

ontv. Ct ll 81 4-- 44 6-3&amp;87.

DIRECTOR OF TOURISM
SOUGHT

Ida Clo 1B4. c / oOollpollo Dolly
Trllalna. 828 Third A,.., Gallf.
pollo. Ohio 45831 .

Homes for Rant

.

Commweiel Building tor taae.
Pt. Ple•ant. Call 304-675-

8"'1 MCN1on ROIId. Oeslgnedfot

81 .. 446-4639.

41
B.otr;oillin, fat wooldng poronto.
Mon. ttwu rt. IAMto&amp;PM .CIII
614-245-11028.

49

Apartmtntl for tM Eldll"ly.
Ollila Meoor Ap.-tm.Ut. 866

housing opportunity. Appli e&amp;tions mlrf be pidf.edupat Spring
Vall.,. PI••· 629 Jackson !»ike
ur cell 814-446-4639.

Household Goods

OOillpollo, Ololo
114-..8-7. . ..

Country Mobile Home Park.
Route 3 3. North of Pbm«ov·
LDt•. rentlft, parta, aal•. Call

a11 eo

e ((D•o
WKRP In Clnclnn.U

Llpp• RIY• Raid

8 ualneta or Retidentill- for rent·
1rt floor, Slwge,oomaend 11/.r
batt. on State St .. overlooking

PEANUTS.

otruts.30.. 175-51 10.

Space for Rent

61 .. 307· 78&amp;0.

2336.

Wanted to Do

46

w eCIJ

(ll Degra'"l Junior High 1;1
(!) Dr."Who: Planet ol the

tlr•.

304-17&amp;-MIB

81 li-992· 7479.

New~ remo deled

Ren tals

CAll 1ft• 2p.m. 304-7735861 . M11on WV.

cT_er_e_Tc:-o-w n-toou
- ,-. -..,- ...
- m
- ....
- ,-_-:2

lott,. mobile hom• p•mttt ld.
public wit•. also river IQ,U.

Ovole Bowon. Jt. 304-178-

roam1 wh:h cooking.

sea.Jrtry deposit: mquhd. Cell
614-. .6-4240 - - 4~0
and 9:00PM:

rflf. No pet1. C.ll 8 14-4484926.

R IHRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 829 Jocicoon Pika
eon 445-4317. Rov. No. Be. 1 1·
10558.

Sl~~~plng

A lao t rllll• tpece. AU hoolt- UPL

low ro form f our sirnple words

'
(JJ llportsLook

84 Pontlee Fl•o. bid,, MC.
aond., n-.v
brlk• •

Corpot In

PIWk. N o pets. Ref•WlCM end

Ashlon be.. tlful 1.-ge bulding

11

Holol-81 .. «8-stBO.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES·. 636 Jack1an
Pike fTom t1.8 3 a ma. Walk to
~:hop · ... d movi•. &amp;14-4462688. E.O.H.

Ap . . mtnt• end houses. Call

0011 R"or1. Call 814-992·
8314.

Junk Clrs
without -;;
mot.,...
Call with
Lony or
Lively-11412
388-9303.
piece or entire household. F1lr
prl- being pold. Ctll814-. .5-

81 ....6-0338.

19S5 Kontudd-. Lo-- tt
-·
..-~

1974. 2 be~oom. one1nd one
tenth acre IMd. clo11 to Royal

Compl•e houaeholda of ~rnl-'
lu,. • lf'IUqu ... Atao Wood &amp;
coli hnt•a. Swein'a Furr'llture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; ONve,

,City. Aduh:a ontv. Perking. Call

fln1ru:tll aid loun.&amp;

F,.. t""nlng. ln8u~WJ~ce eyall•
ble. Fl•lbte hours. R..wtrd and
reaagnltlon for
Want to know mare? Cell A von
Dlotrict Mon- ot 014-81B·
7111.

·

New completety furnis he d

trllfnlng. call •d etk lbout our

AVON. Le•n whHa you ••nl

Apartm•mt,
for Rent ··--

apertment &amp; mobil e home in

for Sale

p pl'fforyour

44

ew

9l Newa •

773-11009.

61

the ' , . -...... _,---..~,..-....
be·

Rearrange letters of
0 fovr
scrambled words

8:00 (J) lon8nza: The Loet
Epleodea

mH•.

Furnished Rooms

RooiTIII for rent· 'Wfek or month.
Starting at t120 a mo. Gallia

·Regenc,. Inc. Apt a. .Call 304176-8104. or 875-6388 Of

32 Mobile Homes

45

Furnished room-919 Second
Ave., O.lllpolit. t7&amp; • mo.
Utlliti• paid. Single mlle. Sh•e
beth. C1h 446-4418after7PM .

Mabile ho me•. furi1ithe d,

075-7738.

-·

wo .....
GAM I_...
r::~:~:~'
SCfH\~lA-~f..t;vSs
_ :..;.:_:..:;;.:_.,, ....::._:= Edi~od b1 ClAV I. POUAN - . ..:.......::::·- - - -

I

WED., JAN. 4

11 ."'

EVENING

'TI ChillY lrftpll-. 301 1uto..
77, 000
NM good. very
dop-bla Melia OH•. 30 ..

2 bect'oom ept, partialtr fur·
nilhed. U&amp;O.OO ~- momh
utiUt l• pllld. Phone 304-67!53100 or 875-5509.

f175. 00enduppormonthpluo
utHhl•. 304-875-8512 or 6753900.

appl. turnilhed, Waaher-Dry•
~oolf.up, neov pluth CB'put. de.
paint.
Nice good lo&lt;3tion.

lo•.

753-3811 ""· 1•toroglotorlor
cl. .• .,._,.,~.Jenuary 3rd.
You m.,. be all We to nteefve

Trliera. urrfurrlthed. ooupl•.'
•mall chlt dren aceeptad, Rt. 1,
l.oCI.IIt Road, Pt.Ptt behind
K&amp;K. 30 .. 675-1076.

M

-r.

30 .. 875-2072.

1--:----,- -:-2 BR . apts. B c:lotetl, kltch.,.

•ea.ooo.

TOP CASH pold lor '83 model

c••·E•at•n
Smith

Homes for Sale

Bride home. 4.1M«oom. 2 bllfth.
l•ge Uvlngroam wllh atone
flrtplace. khChen 1nd formal
clnlna•• -.11y c•pMed, 8yra.
old. 2 c• o•eue. epprODC. 1 •ere
SKILLS GET YOU JOBD, THE . l~ttd 1 'h mil• 1bove K...
ADULT WELDING PROGRAM b&amp;lp, n - Cfhelt•. Atldng
114-892· &amp;847 aft•
ATTII·COUNIY IIOCATIONAL
SCHOOL GETS YOU S KJUS. 3p.m.• 814-247-2911 dev, IRY·
Welden. ere highly 1kliled tlmeweelcendl;
wo,._.a. R•c.We I he trllntng 10
4 be$._ low - n pli'lmont
become that highly tkllled
aaume low-lntweat
304woldorln .... onoyw. Coli 175-1723
.... 4 :30.
ttt. Act.ttt Edu~lan .Cent• M

..d n.wo• uaed ·
8uldc·Pontlac, 1911

Wanted To Buy

31

Government Jobl. 111.040 f89.230 yr. Now hiring. can
1· 805-BD7· 8000 ••· R-9BO&amp;
for ClUTtnt fed•lll lilt.

Contact Larue Hll, RN, DON,
Amerlcare Pom•oy. 31789
RoduoprinJII Rood. Pomwov.
Ohio. 4178D. Phone 814-992·
e8oa:

9

1972 DldoC l'lfao, goodoond. 2
ht. f4&amp;0 304-87&amp;-2U7.

Furnithtd or unfurnithed. Qood
dean condition. 1 child. no pett .
New H1ven. 304-882-2466.

•

Ool pold lor r-~ bookol
t100. p• title. Wr•e: PASE·
31A, 111 s. Llnaal-v. N.
Auroro, IL80M2 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

tr•h pidwpl provided.. Meint•
''""· On St. Ro. 143. 0275.
tree living dote to lhoP..
month, depu.lt required. 61 .. " n~~~r~oe
ping. bll'lkl an-t •ehoo ... For
992-7.01 .
more infd'rmetio n call 304-812·
3716. E.O.H.
2 bedroom. furnis hed. Wil ber
1nd dryer, air conditioner, $ 225 One Wid 2 be«toornapll'tme"ltt.
month plus depoait end utilitit. Wedge Apartments. No PWn:t.

3 bedroom.

~pl l cltiona

Television.
:Viewing

!lor • • •- de~ Dn • n., Df ueeif ..
car. truck or ..en. ... Kenny Bill ~
•t Jim Mink ChevrDiet ·

Oldo..-a 114-448-3872 or
304-773-513 • .

114-992·7·79,&lt;

FOUNO: Brown &amp; Whill 8e1gle

2 bed'q&lt;&gt;m furnilhed IP.-tment.
utHttl• paid. refwenca. Phone

The Daily

IUI O., low

tor

double w ide with o• eg e for

• ..,nth old pup. 304-1753278.

Pfmo.

EXPt.Ml IT TO ~~ ~.
l!mJAf'f\t!

1981 Conoord. 2 door. 114IBIJ-3838.

Bee~ StriOI. Mlddliii&gt;OI't Ohio,

No-w 1cceptlng

OlD 'W 4\AFS !l'.Ae 111!: alii A6Wr
lllf CW MAID 11.110 ~A Rl.Wf,\6
OFF A PIER AW '51WTW .

mil- nice. f5&amp;0. 814-9853834.
.

d•v• 1n d 814- 992 · 2601
eOJenlnSJI.

30.. 882-2566.

Ohio

Auto's For Sale

1978 Ford

........ Coli 814-892-23B1

.-

4. 1989

1984 EICOrt L Wegol\ .uta.. PS.
N , H . fectory 1ter10. ·1'1 115.
1810 Ctowv PU. I cyt., auto..
PS. PB. f1891. Cell 114-2881522.

iaUv fu:rnilhed. Mlin St ..
Pomeroy. 814-992·209'-

o ...... Sll'l&gt;hetd """""'
30+773-1838.
.

fothOr pOtt Collla 30+•&amp;8-

71

Qii

School district. t -2 50 plus .-c.
dep. • ,.,, lnciudla g•bag• &amp;
-~·· Coli 11 .. 387-7267.

1881.

Wrighl

'

0 e bedroom •pertment -

5 882"' 245-&amp;890.

•

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry

1.b 50, 2 fiR ., ear.port. Edge of
town. No pets. Dep. &amp; rfff. S tove
I&amp; r etrlg. 1 150 e · mo. C.ll

eu-44&amp;-0822.

~anuary

Wednesday.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

llevld~n·

(JJ ltlrtllol VInce
Femgamo and Jerry Kramer

E H

y

DYW

LWXS

LWR

XRB

KED

NYW

QEWF
KYMR

LH

KYMR
VRWVR,

·NLDDLW

VRWVR .
K.J. IRRNKRT
Yna. ...'e Capplu4...e: THERE ARE BIGGER
THINGS IN UFE 11tAN MONEY -. BIUS, FOR
: INSTANCE. -AUTHOR UNKNOWN .
C) 19119 King Fealurei Syndicalt. inc .

..

�'

•

•

Carmel cof!lmunity happenings

Williamson birth

David and Cherie Williamson, ·
• Rutland. are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Nov. 21, at
the Holzer Medical Center. The
Infant weighed eight pounds. five
ounces and was 21 Inches long.
She · has " been named Caitlin.
'l.uarle.
Grandparents are Bill and
Janet Williamson. Rutland, and
Everett and Gerry Lightfoot,
Pomeroy, Mrs. Alice Struble,
Pomeroy
is
a
great-grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Williamson have
·ason, Matthew.

received a boy scout knife and. a
hat pin; Morris a •.b oy scout knife
and hat pin, and also a casSE"tle
tape and sweatband from the
Council lor being the top salesman In -the troop. Troop commit-•
tee chairman, . Linda · Powell,
preaented Mat thew Morr(s with a
jacket from the commlltee for
being top salesman . ._
Mary Showalter and Betty
Weyersmlller were each presented a poinsettia In appreciation ,
for assistance In troop money
making projects held over the
summer.
Fruit baskets were prepared
and delivered by the boys as a
community project,

The lirst birthday of Joshua
Pape, son of Allen and Carol
Pape, was observed recently
with a party.
A Mlc~ey Mouse theme was
, carried -out with cake and other
refreshments being served. At·
tending the i&gt;art:r were Joshua's
grandparents, Larry and Phyllis
O'Brien and John and patty
Pape; great-grandparents, Bob
and Florence Adams and Nla,J ·.
and VIrginia ;&gt;alser and Eileen
Roush.
Others at the party were Jim
O'Brien, 'Lisa Pape, Raymond
Adams, Doris Adams, Pearl
Adams, Jeri, Tammy, Jordan
and Kevin Hill, Dale, Linda,
Dale, Derek and Darin Teaford,
Lowell and Alden a Taylor. Aaron
and Shirley Sayre.

•

JOSHUAPAPE
~

Sending cards and gifts were
Tommy and Sally Hill and
daughters, Jim and Judy Pape
and daughters Terry and Mindy
Patterson, and Rex and Mary
O'Brien, great-grandparents,
and Kenda and Kellv Rizer.

',

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e

mid 30s.
90 percent.

Fr!lda;y/rno•ot~ cloudy ch1111ce
In mid 40s.
40

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Vo1.39, ,No.168
Copyrighted 1989

..

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday. January 5, 1989_

2 Sections. 12 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newlliaper

Meigs Commission approves county ·budget
•

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff ,

An $11.7 million budget to
operate Melg$ County government and services In 1989 was
adopted earlier this week by the
Meigs County Commissioners.
The commissioners held a special meeting Tuesday afternoon
to review and approve the budget
for the new year.
This year's spending bill Is
approximately $600,000 more
than last year's budget of $ll.I
million.
. Appropriated to the county

A

general fund, which Is comprised ,
of county offices and departments, was $2,449,272.
Among the offices and depart·
ments In the general fund,
$168,556 was was appropriated In
the commissioners' budget;
$181,085 for the auditor's office;
$99,3I2 for the treasurer: $117,777
for the prosecuting attorney;
$72,492 in .common pleas court;
$49,576 for domestic relationsjuvenile court; $28,339to probate
court; $114,661.25 to clerk of
courts; $20,894 to the coroner;
, $85,424 to county court;"$98,413 to

..

the board of elections; $186,723 pay the county's cost for the
for maintenance , sewlces and · annual state audit which Is
operations of buildings; $345,959 · mandated by law.
to the sheriffs department;
Under capital Improvements,
$68,860 to the recorder; $84,017 $80,000was set asldetomatchthe
for agriculture; $36,450 to ·the Community Development Block
children ser.vtces board; $40,709 Grant which. tlie ·county hopes to
lor soldier's relief; $33,795 for receive for construction of an
veterans services; $58,744 for the elevator In !be courthouse.
county's share of public assistIn a miscellaneous category,
ance; $40,933 for the plat map $17M42 was approved which
office; $131,500 for all types of ., Includes matching funds to seinsurances; $6,500 to the his tori· cure the county's Utter grant for
cal society and $50,000 In 1989, costs to operate the county
·
Infirmary, and the county's
contingency.
. Also. $60,000 was approved to share of · cos.IS for crippled
children, soil and water conser-

Building permit application-S due Jan. 20

vatlon and the soil survey . which-operates the county highAccrued interest on Investments, way department~ -$387,653· fo r
which must be returned to the Meigs Emergency Medical Sermotor vehicle and gasoline tax vices · $110,363 for T.B.; and
fund, are also Included 1under $342,466 for -all other miscellanemiscellaneous.
ous agency funds .
This year's amount In the
Among the special revenue
funds Included In this year's motor vehicle and gasoline tax·
budget, $1,734,592 was approp- fund for the highway department
riated for the county board of reflects a decrease from last
mental retardation and develop- year's amount of $1,700,428. The
mental disabilities; $3,667,245 for total is down because anticipated
public assistance; $70,349 for receipts for this year are down. If
litter control and recycling; , receipts should, exceed anticipated amounts, the highway
$65;I73 In real estate assessment; $1,598,483 In the motor department budget would be
vehicle and gasoline· tax fund •revised later in the year.

Libya says U. S.

.None of Meigs' .villages are
plans larger attack
included in new service area
-ef'l

Redeem your Procter &amp; Gamble Special Olympics
coupons now! These coupons came ih your mail in the
·Publishers Clearing House SWeepstakes envelope. For
each,of these coupons you redeem at your Cardinal.
Affiliated Supermarket by Sunday, January 22, 1989,
Procter &amp; Gamble will donate 10' (up to •750,000) to
help Special Olympics Athletes. ·

•
Ass~- Var.•16-19 Ounce Package

EXTRA HELPING

1
1.1111~ ont ltMWitll coupon &amp; 11000 pura..M. E1~ bMt, and
1C1 ....... ,... ~-"11-"'lllly 01'1'41 COlli*" ofllfi. O..eoupon.,., fMiilw,
·GOod II C..AIInll s..,...m.,.._ .-11 o' ~ ~- 1•
OQ...OO..(Iii)

----------------~--------J

TOPS meets
Teresa Wood was the best loser
with Bernice Durst as run·
ner-up at the recent meeting of
T.OPS Club Ohio 570 held at the
coonhunters building on the Rock
S!&gt;r!ngs Fairgrounds.
·
• Prayer and pledge by Lennie
B. Alleshlre opened the meeting.
She announced that the annual
;\rea Recognition Day will be
held on May 20 at Zanesville, with
the theme to be "'Magic
i{;ngdom."
,
Ms. Durst also won the fruit
basket. Information on 'the club
activities may be obtained by
calling 992-7464.

Pick-4
5566
Super Lotto
2·14-16-25-30-43

Pages 3-4

Mlddlepon, OH.•Corner of Gen. Heninger PkWy. &amp; Peer! St.•892-3471

The annual Christmas dinner
bf the Asbury United Methodist
Women was held at the home of
Mary Lisle, Syracuse.
A carry-In dinner was served
~with Marcia Karr giving the
"'I' blessing. A birthday cal\e with a
,single candle centered the room
as the women formed a friend- .
ship circle to sing ··Happy
Birthday, Dear ·Jesus."
Christmas cloths covered the
tables with each being centered ,
with a candle, Favors were small
ba-skets filled with candles and
tied with _ribboi)S. Each member
brought a card for her secret pal.
New names were drawn. EAch
member gave $3 for gifts lor the
Slna-Cera residents Instead of
exl:l\nglng gifts. Ann Sauvage
read the newsletter from Sina-Cera.
A free-will ol!ering was
taken. shutln visits were reported and Harlet tte Sinclair
read stories or Jesus· birth. The
group enjoyed carol singing.
Aitendlng were Miss Karr, Mrs.
Sauvage, Hope Moore, Addie
l'ilorris, Beulah Ward, Mary
t:undlff. Irene Parker. Helen
'Feaford, Linda Ferrell, Marie
Houdashelt, April Harmon, Ms.
Sinclair, Mrs. Lisle, and a guest,
•, Rose Ann Jenkins.

Daily Number
000
.

.

('

MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE ,CARD OR DRIVER'S LICENSE

UMW meets

Ohio Lottery

cagers lose ·_
league tilts

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
. 51/o DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES (~~~~~':) .

\

I

ou,osu

•
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•"

.Pape birthday

Boy Scout awards.. given ·

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Thordson Pine Grove Road, on Christmas
A Christmas dinner and
of Cedarville, visited Lula Circle Day.
.
awards
ceremony was held rerecently.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnltz
cently
by
Rock Springs Boy Scout
Visiting at the home of Mr . and of Pomeroy were holiday visitors
Troop
246
.
·
,
Mrs,· Ro!&gt;ert Lee recently wer~ of Mrs. Eunie Brinker.
Roland Morris , scoutmaster,
Mr. and Mrs. RQger Grueser,
' Eunle Brinker accompanied
Logan, Mrs, Evelyn Ingram, and by Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnltz· presented awards to Butch PQwell, swimming sklll award,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leist, of Pomeroy spent Sunday with
cltizensJYp
~kill award and tenColumbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Barnltz and
derfoot
rank;
Ryan Dodson,
. Christmas Day visitors of Mr. family at Veto Lake.
citizenship
skill
award,
physical
and Mrs. Arthur Johnson and
Margaret Ann Johnson and
fitness
skill
and
tenderfoot;
daughter, Sheryl were William Eunle Brinker spent Saturday
Matthew Morris.. citizenship sklll ,
Carleton. daughters, Angelia and evening wttli Mr. and Mrs.
award.
physical fitness skU! and
Jennifer. Patrick and Jill John- Robert Reibel of VInegar St.
tenderfoot.
son and Eunle Brinker. Roy and
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E;i.rl
Unable to attend but earning
Donna Johnson visited on Mon- Johnson attended the funeral of ,
awards
were Patrick Young,
day evening.
Paul Bostic at St. Albans, WV on
swimming skill and Eric White,
Lula Circle was at •the home of Monday.
t-'lr. and Mrs. Robert Harden,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reibel citizenship S'kill.
The boys earned prizes from
1,
called at the home of Eunle
recent popcorn sales. Powell
Brlriker a recent evening.

•
Wednesday. January 4, 1989

Portl810y-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The D81ly Sentinel

•

../ '

I

/

The Meigs County Commis· Washlnf&lt;(on County area.
,
It was announced last week by
stoners have lea,rned that none of
Melg~; County's five villages are
the commissioners that as of Jan.
Included In theservlceareaofthe 1,' all building plans for the
newly established Washington county would be approved In
County Building Permit DepartMarietta, excluding permits for
ment In Marlelta.
plumbing purposes which must
Under State guidelines, munlcstill go·.through Columbus.
ipalltles must make separate
The commissioners said the
applications to be included with
head of the Washington County
department would be sending a
the rest of the county .
If Pomeroy , l'yllddleport, Raletter to the various munlcipaliclne, Rutland or Syracuse want
ties toadvlsethemonprocedures
to be included right away In the
to ·Include them In the service
area.
Washington County service area,
the villages must make applicaA request from Meigs EMS
tlon· by Jan. 20, .,_ • ···, ,, ··- ··-····Director Robert Byer to Insure
If applications from the viiall EMS vehicles under , the
!ages are . submitted by the
Buckeye-Joint County Self Insumld-month deadline, they would,
ranee Council, at a savings, was
as of March, be part of the
approved by the commissioners .

Special committee wants Ohio

comp

.sy~tem

upgraded

session of the General Assembly .
UPI Statehouse Reporter
· Minority Republicans on the
COLUMBUS -A special Ohio committee said there must be
House committee recommended ·'sweeping administrative
Wednesday that claims process- changes" In the OIC and BWC,
Ing and service to Injured which they characterized as a
workers should be upgraded at · · h o p e I e s s·l y t a nJ. l e d
reasonable cost to employers bureaucracy."
before any baste restructuring of · Meanwhlle, the Ohio S!"nate
Ohio's worker's compensation , held a brief housekeeping session
system takes place.
and joined the House In weekend
The committee issued Its final adjournment. The next substanreport after a study of almost two tive action will be next Tuesday.
years, recommending changes when Gov. Richard Celeste dellv..'
that Include · small bu 1 regular ers his "State of the State"
premium Increases for employ- -address to a joint session of the
ers to help eradicate a fund Legislature.
deficit, medical cost contain·
The workers' comp study comment, an emphasis on rehablllta· mittee cited "serious general
·· lion and better communication · administrative problems" which
between claimants and their must be corrected. It said the
attorneys.
.
organization of the ore and BWC
The Committee report contra- do not foster effective decision
dicted earlier studies on which making, and !hal there is no clear
legislation was based, restruc- demarcation or their dutl~s .and
turing the entire operation of the res ponslbillties.
But the committee added: "We
t Ohio Industrial Commission and
•
B-ureau of Workers' believe that It Is necessary to
'
''Compensation.
ftrst correct problems In claims
That legislation was killed by processing and maintaining
organized labor late In the last quality service to Injured
· By LEE LEONARD

CHUCK
$
I P_OT ROAST .......
1

lb.

•
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, ~------------~--------------~

:.-,--• 10.

I

r

Choir gives.
cantata
··Gloria in Exce!sls Deo", a
cantata by Joe Parks. was
presented by · the Syracuse
charge choir consisting of Forest
Run, Minersville and Asbury
United Methodist Churches at
the Asbury Church, S~racuse. ·
Solos were by Roy Jenkins,
Dennis Moore, Rick Hauber,
Kenny Wiggins, Judy Pape, Ann
Wiles. Mary Cundiff, Marybell
Warner; with trios l).y Roma
S'ayre, Mary Cundiff, and Helen
Teaford , and Judy Pape, Mary
Cundiff. and Hilda Weaver.
Others singing in the choir
Alfred Yeauger, Dick As II,
Kimberly Jenkins, Beulah Ward,
Kathleen Fryar, Debbie Hauber,
Kristen Pape, Hilda Yeauger.
Rose Ann Jenkins was the
pianist. and Wanda Rizer the
narrator for the cantata directed
by Mary Lisle.
As the choir circled the sanctuary with lighted candles, Rose
Ann Jenkins sang ' 'The Bethlehem Babe"as four angels came
center stage dround the manger
babe to sing '·'Away In a
Manger." They were Rochelle
Jenkins, Amy and Andrea
Moore, and Amy Weaver.
Dick Ash presented the Rev,
Wesley Thatcher and his wife. ,
Mary, with a gift of money. The
benediction was by the Rev. Mr.
Thatcher with the choir singing
"He Is Lord."

Assorted Varieties
Plus Deposit

-PEPSI .COLA

8

were

-· ···----..

16 oz. '
btls.

•

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L-----·····-·····--~------j

IT'S on.jJAL NOW - Speaker of lbe a - Ibn Wr..hl
(D·Texu), .rtrhl, applaucll alter VIce Preslde11 Geo111e Bush
IIIIIIOIUICed hlmaell wlaner of the pretildeooy Wednesday during a
lolllt IM!II&amp;Ion of Congress, wlJere the electoral votes were coant!ld
staie ~ stale. ( UPI)

-----

......

----

---~---

_!..._~,

-:-·-

r-·--··--- -'

e named
pres iden t OJ
SQ:at hern bOard

Local news briefs

No one hurt in Meigs accident ·

~!~~"u~ns-,~IJ~ ~~.!!c~~-.~~ien~~"!"~~~~~

.... ... ...

~-".!!..--~

oo.•Ciinlintll-..,.,• ..,..,..ar.......,.l,1•

LONDON (UPI) - Libya
Libya called on the Arab
charged the downing of twooflts League to "adopt collective
jetflghters by U.S. Navy planes measures lor defense and to
The county highway department was In preparation for a larger participate with the Llbya,n Arab
jotn~d 'the self-Insurance council
attack by-American forces, and ,, people in the defense of Its land
..
last year. ,
leader Moammar Gadhafl deand existence," JANA said.
The commissioners temporarclared "we are awaiting them."
Tanjug, In a report from
Ily tabled a request from Randall
The Yugoslav news agency Trlpol&lt;, said Libya was under a
Lambert, Qf the self-insurance Tanjug said Wednesday that security alert. Military and clvcouncil, to designate members
Gadhafl had asked the Soviet lllan airfields, strategic faci_Utles
and alternate members to the Union to send partofltsMediter- and vital Installations received
council itself, and the council's · ranean fleet to confront U.S.
fresh reinforcements, It said, and
settlement committee.
ships ·and help prevent a large-- Libyan warplanes were ordered
Requests from various county scale U.S. assault.
to move from their bases deeper
employees to carry over accrued
Libyan officials, meanwhile,
Into the Sahara desert for more
vacation time were also apappealed for urgent meetings of security.
MOAMMAR GADHAFI
proved by the commission. VacatheU.N.SecurttyCouncllandthe
Gadhafl's home was transtion carry overs are permissible Tunisia-based Arab League.
formed Into a ··fortress," Tan jug threats" to Libya, his people
over a .three-year ttme span only.
Llbjia's . offlgtal JAN.&amp; .news .... - ~aid, with additional anti· "will not bow, their heads.
Iri final matters; the coninils- a~ency · shtd Thursday that the aircraft guns set up on Its roof
"They will meet challenge with
sloners set Monday, Jan. 9. at l
country's Foreign Liaison . Bu- and batteries of French-made challenge," Gadhafl said. '
p.m. , for this year's organlza· reau had summoned Tripoli- an.tl·alrcraft missiles placed on
"History Is a witness to the
tiona! meeting.
based Arab · ambassadors to surrounding hills and parks.
defeat of the empires of expanpress for a "unified Arab stance"
The Libyan envoy to ,Lebanon, slon and tyranny and the triumph
In the -face of ""the aggression Ashour al Fortas, said the United of revolutionaries and the will of
carried out yesterday morning States was preparing to attack peoples, no matter how small
by America".
land ' targets.
tbey are," he said.
"This incident Is a preparatiOn
"If America has prevailed
JANA, In a report monitored
by the BBC, said the bureau for a larger AD;lerlcan military because it is a superpower in the
wanted to stress "the necessity operation against Libyan civil ,uair and the sea, it will inevitably
that the unified Arab stance targets," said a! Fortas. "Unfor' -be defeated on land. we ,.. are
should rise to the level or the tu~ately, we have to expect more awaiting them."
magnitude of the aggression escalation."
Libya Radio quoted a Foreign
which America embarked
'Pensions between the United Ministry statement as saying the
workers, at reasonable costs to
employers, prior to restructurupon".
·'' States and Libya were already d6wned Libyan warplanes were
Ing the entire operation of the TV/ ~~ ' .
htgnbecauseofU.S.charges·that • on routine patrol over the Metll· ..
bureau and the commission."
flY Q
a new plant In the Nor$ African terranean Sea when they were
natiOn will be used to manufac- attacked by U.S. aircraft.
The panel proposed Incentives
for safe operation by decreasing
,f
ture cheml~al weapons. Gadhafi
"While iwo reconnaissance
premiums for employers operatsay~ the plant Is a pharmace?tl· Libyan aircrafl were carrying
ing safely and raising them for
cals facility.
·
out an ordinary reconnaissance
companies with higher claim
Ghadafl. In statements re- patrol over International waters.
costs for industrial accidents.
leased by Libya's official Jama- the American Air Force flying
Scott Wolfe was named presihlrlya Arab News Agency from American aircraft carrier
dent and Charles Nor,!ls vice
{JANA) and monitored by the John Kennedy launched a preThe committee also recomBritish Broadcasting Corp. )n meditated aggression· and atm_rnded gradually wiping out the . president or the Southern Local
Board of Education when the
London, said: ''In spite of the tacked the two Libyan aircraft
aCJ!Parlal deficit In the workers'
Boa_rd met this week for Its 1989 Increase . tn official American and shot them down in internacomp fund by , small annu.al
organizational session.
terrorlsm, which Is .backed by ttonal waters," said the Foreign
premium Increases. It said emRegular meeting diltes were
brute force, and In spite of the Ministry,
ployers. were deceived when
premiums dropped In five out or established for the third Monday
the seven years between 1980 and · of every month at 7 p.m. In the
1987, and then went up by 30 high school cafeteria.
Board members' salaries were
percent.
set
at $80 per meeting, the same
The committee· also
as
1988.
recommended:
Membership In the Ohio School
-Continuing to operate the J.
The Metgs-Gallia Post of the State Highway Patrol
Board
Association was approved
Leonard ·Camera Rehabilitation
Investigated an accident at 7:05a.m. Wednesday In Salisbury
Center In 'Columbus and con- . for ·a total annual cost of $840 for
Township
on CR. 5, 0. 7 miles south of SR. 124, Troopers said
tracting to a private firm the the entire board. The cost InMedia
B.
Schoonover,
29, Rutland, lost control on a patch of Ice
operatiQn of the W.O. Walker cludes publications from the
on
a
curve.
Her
vehicle
went off the road, and over an
Rehabilitation Center In Cleve- State association.
embankment.
No
one
was
Injured.
Damage was moderate.
Bonds for the treasurer, the
land, and comparing the results
The
patrol
Investigated
another
accident
In ther same general
superintendent, and the five
after five years.
areaCR.
5,
0.6
miles
south
ofSR.
124.
Troopers
said Karen D.
-Installing computer equip· members of the board, were also
Schrock,
29,
Rutland,
lost
control
on
an
icy
curve.
Her car went
ment and programs to speed fee approved at a total costof$360for
off
the
road,
and
over
an
embankment.
No
one
was lhju red.
. bill processing, alleviating back- the seven. The treasurer's salary
Continued on page 6
logs and permitting monitoring was established at $29,600, re·
Continued on page 6
to cut cos IS.

,.

'

National Academy of Sciences
called on President-elect George
Bush Thursday to pledge his full
support for the space' station
Freedom the battle against
AiDS and projects to save the
envfronment.
The academy along with the
National Acede~y of EngineerlngandtheinstltuteofMedlclne,
Issued four "white papers" to the
new chief executive on what are
considered pressing scientific
matters.
They also called on Bush to
make an early appointment of a
sclence adviser to be given top
prestige within the White House
and fuull access to the Oval
Of!lqe.

adviser committed to the success
-Establishing "long-term na- tive ozone layer, which blocks out
of your presidency but willing to tiona! goals for space" including dangerous solar radiation, and
present the facts even when they possible manned trip to l'ylars, a encouraging use of fuels other
are disquieting, detached from return to the moon and increased thim on and gas, which produce
the federal bureaucracy but monltorlrig of Earth and Its poUullotl;bellevedresponslblefor
having Its respect and that of the environment.
the "greenhouse effect" of global
scientific communities, can help
-Continuing research Into ac· warning.
you formulate and Implement . qul~ed Immune deficiency syn"Human activities a re subeffective policies," the academy drome, and launching "aggres- stantlally changl,ng the global
,slve and unambiguous environment in diverse ways ,
added.
.
Noting space, AIDS and the educational programs" to stem including global climate warmenvironment are the primary Its spread.
ing, ozone deplet)on, tropical
scientific Issues facing the new
-Protecting victims of AIDS deforestation and acldralndepopresident, the "while papers" from discrimination, while de- sltlon," the academy said. ·"Atalso recommended:
veioplng "a . comprehensive though scientific uncertalnttles
-Setting budget prlorlt,l.es for plan" to care for the growing limit s!feclflc predictions of tu theplannedspacestatlon, Free- number of men, women and ture global environmental
dom," w!llch Is expecteq to cost children .suffering from the changes, long-term conseq_uen·
an estimated $30 blll~on over the deadly disease.
ces for the nation and the world
next decade and provide a
-Formulating plans to de;:--could be severe."
platform for launching Inter- crease the produc'tlon of poilu·

'

.

'

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36594">
              <text>January 4, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
