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                  <text>BIG BEND

IEGIS1EI TO

Join In
Celebrating Wellston Foodland's

•••••

'

Wedn81day, November 29. 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Pag1 16-The Deily Sentinel

WIN A
FREE
MICROWAVE
A Winner At
Eve.ry Store
'

We Reserve The Right to Limit Quantities • Prien Effective Through Saturday,
· December 2 , 1989 • USDA Food Stampo and WIC Coupono Accepted. • Not
Reoponsible for Typographical or Pictorial Errors.

Ohio Lottery

25

Shop early,
shop locally

Piek-3

228

Pick
8013
Super IAJtto
9-14-22-25-29-39

Low tonlcht Ia mid I!Js.
Sunny Friday. HIKh near to.

Kicker 083ll0 •

· L-----------------------~

•

•

STOP IN FOI DETAILS

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND'S ENTRY BLANK
2 Sections, 14 Pogoo 2&amp; Cents

'LOADED .FULL OF.

. GROCERIES.

Win An S-1 0 Chevy
Pickup Truck!!

vot.40. No.143

Subdivision project prOposed in Sutton Twp.

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

NAME: .......
AODRESSL ........... .

'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Set~tlnel Staff
A housing subdivision which Is
belrig proposed for property In
Sution Township was discussed
at Wednesday's meeting of tjle
Meigs County Commissioners.
Eugene Triplett, of Triplet t
Engineering Services, and Bruce
Teaford, ol Teaford Realty, .
attended Wednesday's meeting
to apprise the commissioners of
the propOsed project.
Although much of the· ground·
work Is already laid !or the
subdivision, fl~al approval on the

. . . . .. ....... STATE' ..............ZIP: ... .

CITY: ...... .

No Purch•eJNece~ury ; Must be 18 Years or Older to Enter.

JlrawlnQ te&gt;be held Soturday, Dec. 23. 1989
. ,
.
famiil• of Ohio Vollev &amp;upem- ""' elogoble.

and

project must come fr om the
Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission which will rneet In
January.
Developersforthe subdlvlslon,
which Is being laid out on the old
Jividen !arm In Sutton Township,
are Richard and Sherry Payne,
of Englewood, Fla .
According to Teaford, the
agent for the developers, the
subdivision will be called Robin's
Crest Subdivision and will contaln 4llots of five or more acres.
Teaford pointed out that "only
the lots'' are being developed.

..........

There are no plans at this time by
the Paynes to build houses , he
said. The lots will be sold and
then purchasers of the lots can
make · ar r ang e m e n ts for
construction.
·
The commissioners com·
mended the project as one that Is
greatly needed In the area. They
also offered suggestions a§.tO the
type of Information that dl\ist be
Included In the January presentation to the planning commis·
slon, In order to meet review
proeess requirements.
·
Teaford reported that there Is

something the county needs, ..
Teaford said, "and hopefully will
be something most anyone can
afford. "
Meigs County Recorder Em:
mogene Congo met w it~ the
commissioners to discuss the
possibility of purchasing a new
microfilm camera which Is necessary In the safeguarding of
many county records . The camera currently In use Is outdated
and no longer does an adequate
job of filming, Congo reported.
Congo Is to gather Information
on new microfilm cameras and

pending litigation regarding
rights-of-way for a road which Is
needed to connect the subdivision
with Pine Grove Road In Sutton
Township. The commissioners
said the pending litigatiOn would
be a factor taken Into consideration by the planning commission
before their final decision to
approve or disapprove the project Is made.
Teaford and Triplett are- encouraged that any problems will
be worked out so that development ot Robin's Crest Subdlvl·
slon can · n~ove forward. "Ws

The fire department was again
called at 1: 50 a.m . to another

•

..

MIXED
FRYER PARTS

f

' .

DISH
LIQUID
22 Oz. Btl.

TENDERBEST
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

GREEN
GIANT

GRADE 'A' MEDIUM

•vrr.n ABLES

FOODLAND
EGGS

12-15 Oz. Cans

'

T-BONE STEAK 5/S2

••

LB.

RI!;LIGIOUS TROPHY WINNER - The
Pomeroy Uailed Methodist Chureh float took first
plaee In the rellgloua catel(ory In Suoday's
Cbrlsbnaa parade apon80red by the Middleport
and Pomeroy Chambers of Commerce. Here Dick
. Owe11, pr:esJtleat of the Middleport Chamber,

ARMOUR

SLICED
BACON
12 01. Pkg.

$ 19

ICE CREAM .

LB.

1!2 GAL
FOODLAND IUnEIMILI"...'h.W.....99c

1UIIEY FU·S-JA.... 99c

NON~O~UL ~ER - A ftoat
featurlnK a wlntor eeeae wltb a Jarse snowman
surrOUIICied by children woa ftnt place In the
nolt'COmmerclal catepry at Suoday'a Cbrlltmas

DIET OR REGULAR

S!VEN-UP
2 UTER
B.OmE

MA,RTHA WHITE

FROZEN TROPICANA

FLOUR

ORANGE JUICE

SLI.

12 OZ. CAN

BAG

PILLSIUIY CAKE MIXH.......II!P.... 79'

TIOPKANA

•

MAXWfU

MASTER

COFFEE

89

preoente a trophy 't o Geoqe Wrll(ht, theme
coordlaator, Su11811 Clark, chalraman, and Rev.
Don Meadows, pastor. The float featured a
nativity theme with Wesley Thoene, Clay Crow,
and Eric Qualls as wisemen.

I

·_: .j ,.

; cause
is unknown

.Weather

ORANGE JUICE .............~$ 1.69

Chamber of Commeree oa behalf of bulb
Chunben presented a trophy to bank repneenta·
llvetl, Mellada Duan and Chrll Venpr.

fire, this time on Lovers Lane
where three large bales of hay
owned by Brian Windon were·
burning. The second fire was
discovered by Deputy Ralph
Trussell.
The sheriff again today Issued
an appeal to the public lor
Information on suspects with all
tips to be held confidential.
Sheriff Soulsby reported that
the Nov. 24 breaking and enter·
lng of the Don Randolpoh home
on State Route 681 has been
solved. Four ,juveniles have

admitted to the offense. Soone of
the Items were returned and
restitution for damages will be
paid. Randolph declined to prose·
cute, Sheriff Soulsby reported.
Under Investigation by the
deparbnent Is a breaking and
entering at the Pomeroy Gun
Club. According tq the sheriff; .
the Gun Clob building was
entered sometime between Nov.
16 and Nov. 29 by breaking the
glass In a rear window. Charles
Goegleln discovered the entry
and reported the Incident to the
sheriff's department.

· ,Marsh.tl coed arrested
in death of newborn

Galllpolls Pollee are lnvesti·
gating the suspicious death Wed'n esday night of a Mason County
youth who was rushed to Holzer
Medical Center after he was
• found unconscious In a car at
Young's Trailer Court. 307Upper
River Road.
Pollee said Thomas E. Huddleston, Jr .. 14, of 2116 Lincoln
Ave., died at 11 p.n •. last night In
the Emergency Room at the
hospital. Huddlelston was the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E.
Huddleston, Sr. , 2116 Lincoln
Ave., Point Pleasant.
Gall Ia County Coroner Dr.
Edward J. Berklch ordered an
autopsy on the body last night to
determine the cause of death.
The body was transported to the
Franklin County morgue at Co·
lumbus for the autopsy.
Officials said this morning that
the cause of. death has not been
determined.
Pollee said Huddleston accom·
pan led two other youth to GaiUa
County. They stopped at the
trailer of Everett King at the
trailer court. The two other
youths went Into King's trailer,
pollee said, while Huddleston
panade for lbe RocIt Sprlap Grup. Weclllerday
In the car.
remained
afternoon the winners were anaouaced and here
Officers
said when the youths
Dick Owen, left, presents a trophy to Bunny Kuhl
returned
to
the car several
and Roy Graeser.
minutes later, they discovered
Huddleston unconscious and
found a small butane canister on
the seat beside him. Officers said
Mrs. King attempted to rescusltate Huddleston with CPR (cardia pulmonary resuscitation) before the arrival of the Gallla
County EmergeJ'!CY Medical Services to take Huddles ton to the
hospital.
The body Is at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home at Po lnt Pleasant.
Arrangements will be
announced.

aoon, Dick Owen, pneldetll of lbe MldtDeport

-.--

their costs, and report back to t(1e
commissioners at a later date .
Congo also made a request for
carpet and paint for the recorder's office. The commissioners said they are committed first
to repairs In the office of the
probate judge but that they
would be In favor of some work In
the recorder's office as soon as It
can be afforded.
"What we're trylng to do," said
Commissioner Richard Jones, Is
to Improve one or two offices a
year, as we can afford.

DeputieS probe two more
hay fires early Wednesday
Two more hay fires are under
lnvestlgailon by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Deparbnent.
Sheriff James M. Sokulsby
reported that the hay fire vandals struck again early Wednesday morning. The nrsr report
came In at 12: 57 a.m . on Sand
Ridge Road with the Chester Fire
Department going to the scene
where 23 large hay bales were
destroyed. The hay belonged to
Paul Baer.

HOLLY FARMS
GRADE 'A'

A Multimedi• Inc. New..,aper

Pomeroy-Middieport. Ohio, Thursday. November 30. 1989

copyrig~ted 1989

Soutb Ceatnl Ollie
Clear Thunday nllht, with a
low Ia the mid 20s. Mo1tly sunny
Friday, with hllhl near to.
Ex._W Forecut
Satlll'daJ tllr..;h Mollday
Snow Saturday and partly
cloudy with acatlim!d flurries Ia
the aortheastera part of the state
on Sunday. It will be ~lr acr011
the state Monday. Highs will be.
between 30 and 35 Saturday and·
Sunday, and ranging from the
upper 30s to the middle 40s
Mbnday. ·

"It was just a bad reaction,"
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (UPI)
Pollee
Lt. William Sinnett said.
- A six-day search, triggered by
recalling
his Inspection of the
the grim discovery for a frozen
death
scene.
"To see a newborn
newborn child on Thanksgiving
It wasn't stiff
covered
with
blood.
Day, led city pollee to Hunting.yet
.
It
was
still
flexible."
ton, and the arrest of a Marshall
Sinnett said the medical exaUniversity student on a first·
estimated the child had
miner
degree murder charge.
been
dead
abuut three to four
Pollee Identified the suspect as
Amy Elizabeth Pyatt, 20, of hours when found.
Pollee Chief E.E. Speece, who
Ravenswood, whO Is a junior at
Marshall. She Is awaiting a made the arrest In Huntington,
Intensified the search for the
hearing before a circuit judge.
child's
mother, assigning three
Pyatt was booked at the Wlrt
of
the
city's
seven-member force
County Jail, since It Is the nearest
to
the
lnves
ligation.
laclllly that accommodates feThe murder warrant contained
male Inmates.
no·
name lor the victim, but
Following her arralnment
simply
referred to him as a
Tuesday, she was sent to jail
"male
Infant,
newborn. "
•
without bond, as mandated under
said
the
Investigation
Sinnett
a capital offense In West
led pollee to question between 25
VIrginia.
The bloody body of the child, an and 30 pregnant women In the
11-pound boy, was found around city :·until we narrowed It down
8:10a.m. on Thursday, Nov. 23, to this particular subject.
:'The public really came
by a caretaker at Recency
through,"
Slnnell said.
Colonial VIllage Apartments. Po"We
asked
for assistance, and
llee said the medical examiner's
the
public
came
through. An
office determined that the child ·
early
tip
came
In,
and we
was born alive, based on the
followed
It
up,
and
It
led
to this
expansion of Its lungs.
female at Marshall University ."

-Local news briefs----.
Meigs receives litter grant
A $59,475 grant has been awarded to Meigs County to
, Implement a comprehensive Utter prevention and recycling
program In 1990, according to an announcement today from
State Sen. Jan Michael Long (D.Circlevllle) and State Rep.
Mary Abel, (D-Athens).
Meigs County Is, one of 79 communities which will receive
portions of nearly $4.3 million targeted for local Utter
prev~tton and recycling activities.
PrO(Il'am activities which Will benefit from the receipt of the
grant montes Include recycling promotion, litter collection and
containment, enhanced Utter law enforcement , public aware ness and ·education.
''l'hese grants reflect our commitment to making Southern
Ohio's communities clean and healthy places In which to livE'
and work," said Long and Abel. ''Preventing litt~&gt;r and
promoting recycling helps us save money and energy."
The grants are awarded by the Ohio Deparlment of Natural
Resources and are administered through Its Division of Litter
Prevention and Recycling.
Since Its creation In 1980, DLPR has Implemented a
statewide, comprelit!llllve Utter prevention and recycling
program. The grants are part of an effort to help local
communities establish self-sufficient local programs.

Immunization dates are changed
Regular Immunization days at the Meigs County Health
Depllrbnent In December have been changed. Norma Torres,
R.M. nursln&amp; dlrectcr, announced today .
IDI11!ad of havln&amp; the shot days on the usual second and fourth
Tuesday of the month, the ImmunizatiOns (OPT, Polio, MMR
and Hm) will be gtven 011 Friday, Dec. 8, and Wednesday,Dec .
.13, frtllll9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to3p.m. Thesbotsaretreeand there is
'
Contblued oil page 14

..

~l

.-..,.

...

�---- --·------

'

S VAC ooge preview

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomlloy-Middleport. Ohio
~. Now.mber 30. 1989

Eagles, Wlldcats to tangle in crucial league contest Friday ·

•••

·The Daily Sentinel
in c..rt St_.
Pomeny, Olllo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERI!STB OF TilE MEIGS-IIIMON AltEA
"

(Jr:b.

ts1m~ r-n............
"T"·~o::o~.­
'qlv
ROBERT L. WINGETl'
Pabi!Uer

PAT WJifi'EHEAD
Asslstallt Publ.lsber/CoMroUer

A MEMBER ol Tile A_..eted Praa, wnt DUly l'ren"-"

da&amp;loa•dthe~New

1 pii'Pwlil I

a4

Whe

LETl'EKS OFOPINIONo.. wel..,me. 'i'loe7 - l d beiOII~­
words loog. AU lel...o ore -jed te Nit... u 4 - be otpet wll~
-.ne, udr.,..uad lelep- -ber. No
'pd leltll'l wll be .....
lloM&lt;I. Letlensbouldbe Ia
•JI.

..,..lute,..._...,.._ _.,.,.,

tiel.

Can Malta save
Greed Decade?
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior E41kar
wASHINGTON -The gross excesses of the 1980s ranged from the
truly shocking to the simply tacky.
Reviewing some ot them suggests that we might have been better
otflf we had just stayed ln. bed, snoozing through the Greed Decade.
Ronald Reagan's reign In the White House set the tone for a
life-style that epitomized the narcissistic '80s, theselftsh butnotqutte
decadent decade of the yuppieS,
Shrewdly tapping our preoccupation with self-Interest, Reagan
won a second term by Inquiring If we were better off wlth.blm In the
catbird seat.
Most Americans, remembering JlmmyCarter'sacknowledgernent
or a national malaise, decided that life Indeed had improved during
what true believers touted as the Reagan Revolution.
The Great Communicator, after all, bravely opposed new taxes,
while restoring the nation's belle! In the free lunch.
The peanut farmer had never performed such feats of magic, which
made us feel good.
Both major parties throughout the '80s were afflicted withScandal.
'Shady dealings sent DemocratiC House Speaker Jim Wright home
to Texas In disgrace. Before Reagan retired to California, more than
100 of the top oficials In his administration were tainted by conduct
Ulegal or unethical.
· It was a decade In which members or Congress greedily doubled
their salaries while the federal deficit nearly quadrupled- from S40
billion to to $152 billion.
The ranks of the homeless swelled to estimates as hil:h as 3 million,
while the government InsiSted the correct figure was a mere 350,000.
Reagan's response to the burning question of the decade- whether
he authorized selling weapons to Iran- proved Americans could still
take a joke.
·
"The simple truth Is," the commander In chief told us with a
straight face, "I don't remember -period."
'As the '80s ended, the death tolls stU I were skyrocketing In the wars
on illegal drugs and AIDS.
.
A character in "Wall Street," a 1987 film, aptly proclaimed the
message of the decade: "Greed Is gocxl."
: But,.as the '80s drew to a close,lt seemed that realltywascloslngln.
Some Inside traders. lor example, were dolnl hard time.
Televangelist Jim Bakker was dlsiJ'aCed by sexual hanky panky
and ultimately Imprisoned for financial shenanigans. The electronic
empires of other TV preachers such as Jimmy Swaggart and Oral
Roberts were shrinking.
The Moral Majority, founded by the Rev. Jerry Falwell and
credited with putting Reagan In the White House, finally bit the dust
this year.
The last-ditch salvation of the notorious '80s could well be next
weekend's· first post-cold-war summit when President Bush and
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev meet orr Malta.
The crumbling of the Berlin Wall and the erosion of communist rule
in Eastern Europe hold out the promise that this dismal decade may
yet end in hope.
There are faint signs that the Bush administration finallyTs coming
around to the view that the Malta meeting offers a potentially historic
opportunity to avert Armageddon.

•

Berry's World

aure Rallett has the experience to
do lt. She has finished a triathlon
and Down an F ·18, but sbe Is also
a political opportunist who Is In
her spot In part because of who
she knows In the GOP and what
she has done for the party.
As Hallett assumes the roll of
the nation's chief trade en!on;er
and . one of Its drug bashers.
questions about her ablllty to
handle the job are passing
through the~ trade community
and on Capitol Hill.
Treasury Secretary Brady
chose her over a host of other
rumored candidates, Including
AI De Angelus, the fo'r merdeputy
commiSsioner of Customs, and
Roy Zimmerman, the former
attorney general of Pennsylva·
nla. Hallett's friendship with
Brady and her fund·ratstng re·
cord with the GOP fueled specu·
lation that she will be just
another Bush crony filling a
patronage job.
But congressional watchdogs
aren't growling yet. Although
they wonder If Hallett can do the
job, they're taking a walt-and·
see attitude. After tangling with
Von Raab, Congress apparently
wants to give Hallett a

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
now employer and employee, but
they are also known to be good
friends. The Treasury secretary
appoints the Customs commissioner without going through a
confirmation process In
Congress.
Hallett's experience In the
drug war Is respectable, but that
Isn't all the Customs Servtce
does. Approximately 75 percent
of the job deals with trade and
commerce. The agency enforces
standards on the quality of
Imports and exports. It makes
sure valuable technology Isn't
smuggled out of the country. It
pollees exporters and Importers
to make sure they don't mislabel
the goods to dodge tariffs.
Hallett admits she had no
background In trade, but says
her management skills and dl·
verse experience will get the job
done.
Knowledgeable sources told us
that the gender Issue can't be
discounted. They say some Cus·
toms agents tend to be "macho"
and are leery of working for a
woman. Congressional sources
told us they have already been
contacted by Customs agents
trying to diScredit their new boss.
Those complaints will bounce
off the solid wall of administration support for loyal Republl·
cans In patronage jobs. There Is
no question about where Hallett's
loyalties lie. She has worked for
Cit lzens For America, a group
that bills Itself as non-partisan,
but which was formed to promote
the policies of the Reagan ad min·
!stratton. That group has col·
/._;:=::::=~ ~:=::; lected thousands of dollars lor
--~....
Republican candidates, a favor
'1~..........,
'::~~~~~=1 that
B11sh can't overlook.
The Los Angeles Times once
"~
described Hallett as "a brawler
whose mace files most often from
the extreme right."
.
Hallett served In the California .
legislature, but when It came
time for the State Senate to
confirm her nomination to a state
administrative post, the vote was
thumbs down. California politl·
declared Hallett to be too
partisan.
That lsn' t a drawback In the
honeymoon.
She has a reputation for tough
management skills and was
considered to be an effective
force against drugs when she
served as ambassador to the
Bahamas from 1986 untO last
May.
When Hallett arrived In Nas·
sau: In 1986, she pledged to crack
down on drug tra!!lcklng and
persuaded the United States to
commit more helicopters, boats
and high-tech observation bal·
loons. She visited Bahamian
scbools to lecture on drugs. She
occasionally refereed turf fights
among the Coast Guard, Cus·
toms and the Drug Enforcement
Administration.
The Bahamian people admired
her and thought she looked .like
Queen Elizabeth. That admlra·
tlon Irked the Bahamian govern·
ment and one dignitary Is said to
have snarled, "Just because she
looks and acts like the Queen of
England, doesn't mean we have
to treat her that way."
It was In the Bahamas that
Hallett met Brady, who has a
vacation home there. The two are

iT Ha~i"
So Fa~Tf

I

"If you'll stop Mtlng for 1 minute, I'll tell you
about

•

the .d'-t I'm putting you on."

..

• • ••
• • •

J

• Is
HoopIe p red IC
.TIade WI••• con
ue
•
h
·
on a roII Wll
'

·

talented youngsters," says Max·
son. "I think that's OK, but .. we
ought tobeabletooffer the same
to academically talented
youngsters."
Elardl is one of a . small but
gr~ng group of public-spirited
Individuals throughout the coun·
try who have concluded that the
urgent need to Improve access to
the nation's system of higher
education demands their per·
sonal intervention.
In New York, businessman·
turned·phllantbrophlst Eugene
Lang has for many years encour·
aged youngsters from poor faml·
lies to remain In high school by
promising to pay their college
costs through his . ''I Have a
Dream" program. Moreover, his
example has Inspired similar
efforts In other states.
In Louisiana, Patrick Taylor
successfully waged a one-man,
year·long lobbying campaign to
convince the state legislature to
extend free public education
beyond high school As a result of
his tenacious effort, a new state
law waives tuition costs for many
sludents from low· and

The welfare or America Is the
last thing East Germans have on
their minds these days, but we
owe them our thanks for an
·unlntendl!d gift. They may well
save us a good chunk of $180
billion a year - not In 1990, of
course, but perhaps by the end of
the century.
.
That's how much, give or take
a few billion, this i:ountry spends
annually to defend Western
Europe.
Put ·another way, the total Is
about 60 percent of ou~ defense
budget, by the Pentagon's est!·
mate. It's a figure that will be
mighty hard to justify after the
crackup of communism In East·
ern Europe.
Indeed, much or the outlay has
been hard to juatlfy for some
:time. Not only Ia Western Europe
' more populous than the United
States, but Its combined econ·
omy Is larger, too - and utterly
dwarfs that of the Soviet Union.
Europeans hJve been able to
defend themselves for yean, had
they been 10 inciiDed.
They've not been 10 Inclined, of
course, and 10 only a f"' of our
alllel bave budpted even half aa
much of their IDCOIIII!I on delense
as the United States. But who
could blame them for acrtmplng

when Uncle Sam always stood In
reserve, nourishing an open
checl:boOk?
At least untll now It could be
argued that U.S. troops, whether
necessary or not, preserved a
successful arrangement that has
helped keep the peace for 44
years. Another arrangement
might have worked just as well
once Europe bounced back from
World War II, but why should we
have risked It? And what, after
all, Is $180 billion among friends?
Now the debate will be trans·
formed by the prospect of a
democratic, neutral Eutern Eu·
rope - presumably accompan·
led by a withdrawal of Soviet
troops·. In a. few years, U.S.
dlvtaions on the continent may
appear as odd e,s cavalry at Fort
Laramie.
Most Americans wW welcome
the rollback of troops and their
demobUtzatton. The more Inter·
eating question II whether U.S.
political leaders -and conaerva·
lives in particular - can recon·
clle tbemselves to a downllzed
mllftary. lt's bard enough thele
days to cloae a lingle outmoded
ba.le or cancel a weapon system.
What happens when there's real
money to be had from trlmm!Dg
back the Pentagon?

~

By MaJ. Amos B Hoople
Peerleu ProiJlOitUcalor

. Texas, in turn, upset highly ,
!avoi'N Oklahoma In their an·
nual ~boot-out.
In l!o bard-fou1bt battle, Texas
A&amp;:M wUl tr.lllmpb, 30-21.
' Now, ID tlle U.S. Export Dept.:
Rul&amp;"ers will
Plttsburab
settle their differences In, of all
placee, Dublin, Ireland, on Dec.
2. Pitt wm wto, 35-21.
On the other side of the world,
meanwhlle,.Lbullvllle and Syra·
cuse will tangle In the Tokyo
Bowl on Dec. 3.
'
For Syracuse, It will be the·flrst ,
trip to Japan. LoulsvUle Is also ·
m~tng Its first trip overseas but head coach Howard Schnel·
lenberger has been there before.
He took the MlamiHurrlcanies to
Tokyo In 1979 In a lostn1 effort,
4(1.1~. against Notre Dame.
This wlll be a more enjoyable
return trip for him. His Louisville
team will defeat the Orangemen,
3J.28.
Finally, on Saturday, Dec. 9,
Army and Navy wilt battle for the
90th tlrne (on CBS·TV). The
traditional Cadets vs. Mldahlp·men series, which has moved to
the Meadowlands,ls delideven at
41-41·7.
However, Army coach Jim
Yaung has a 4·2 winning margin
vs. Navy. It looks like another
Cadet year; the Middles have
been struggllnll.
Make It Army, 28· 7. Har·
rumph!
..
Now wa~h for Major Hoople's
final Top 20 teams of 1989. It's
coming next:

Egad, friends! Before the
re,w.r season cornea to an end,
there are a few more college
football classics to be played In
1989.
On Dec. 2, The 54th renewal ol
the rivalry between Alabama
and Auburn (on CBS· TV) wlll
decide the SEC title this year and the Sygar Bowl assignment.
Bill Curry's II,Jlbeaten Ala·
bama Crimson Tide is on a roll,
with a 12-game winning ~treak.
Jn fact, Alabama's last loss was
lit tbe banda of Auburn, 1.5-10, on
Nov. 25, 1988.
The Auburn Tigers (8-2) have
dropped two close ones - to
highly rated Tennessee and Flor·
Ida State. The Tigers' QB, Reggie
Slack, Is .having a good year In
the passing department.
However, Alabama's ground
attack, with spect;tcular RB
Slran Stacy showing the way,
should prevail. Make It Ala·
bama, 31·21.
Also on Dec. 2, Florida State
and Florida meet for only the
32nd game In an Intense Intra·
state rivalry. The Florida Ga·
tors, who lead In the sl\rtes,
22·8·1, had It all their way until
Bobby Bowden took over as head
coach or FSU's Seminoles. Going
Into this game, Bowden's Boys
are 6-7 against Florida.
This season, FSU (8:2.0) Is
rolling In high gear, scoring lit a
36-polnts per game cltp. Q'B Peter
Tom Wlllis Is rewriting their
SATuRoAY.Dec.2
•
passing records.
For Florida (7·3·0),1t'sbeenan
Alabama 31 Auburn 21
Arkanlu 35 Southern Methodist 7
upsetting year, with head coach
(at LlttleRock. Atk.)
Galen Hall being forced to retire
norkla State 42 Florida 24
Georgia Tech '¥1 Georgia 22
In mid-season. At the same time,
· Houatm 41 Rice 7
the team's top QB was suspended
Plttlbur&amp;h 35 Rutgers 21
(at Dublin, Ireland)
for gambling. '
TenneaEe 44,V•derbllt 17
Through It all, RB Emmitt
Ttxaa AlrM :tl Texas 21
Smith ha.s performed In All·
SUNDAY, Dec.3
American st)ole for the Gators.
~ut the Hoople . System • sees
LoulsvUle33 Syracuse 28
(al Tokyo, Japan)
Bowden evening his record In the
series. It's Florida Statt:. 42·24.
SATURDAV, Dec.9
In two more Intra-state clasH•wall 42 Alr Force 38
sics on Dec. 2, Georgia and
Army 28 NIYJI 7.
Georgia Tech go at It for the 84th
time In 'Atlanta, and Texas A&amp;M
entertains Texas In their 96th
The Daily Sentinel
game.
Both Texas A&amp;M and the Texas
(U8PII14J.. .I
o\ Dtvloloo of MUIIImodlo. Ia e.
Longhorns are at the top of their
game.
Publlollod every an........, Monday
A&amp;M pulled one of the sur·
lhrCIIIIb Fl1day, U1 Court 81.. Po·
mergy, otdo. by tile Oblo VoUoy Pub·
prtses or the year when It shut
lllblnl COIIIDonY!Multlmodlo, lne..
down the fabulous Houston scOr· .,. film....,., Olilo me. PJI, !112-21!16. Se·
coad el... poltl&amp;e paid at Pomeroy,
lng machine In gain a 17-13
Ohio.
vlctl)ry.

containing the human .missile
platform - Southwestern for·
ward John Ehman.
To date he has lobbed In a
·league-high 12 three· pointers,
more than enough to force
·oaks-Tornadoes
opposing defenses to come out
Oak Hillis desperately seeking
and try to stop him. But his
Its rtrst win of the season, and It's
proficiency has been somewhat
not likely to be round In the
helpful In opening up the Inside
confines of the James w. Hay- for junior center Chris Metzger,
man Gymnasium Friday night.
Who rang up 19 points In Tues·
Southern Is quick and fast
day's 71·64 wl!' over Oak Hill.
(what else Is new?) , bu.t In
However, the Bobcats' best
addition to that, the Tornado
chance for victory Is If they keep
bench Is deep with people who
the ballln$lde and let their bulky
could start on most other teams
front line of center John Sipple
,(ask Kyger Creek, who couldn't
and forwards Jet! Birchfield and
keep their heads above water II\
Bryan Hall use their strength to
Tuesday night's 7644 loss, even
secure the ball. If that happens,
after Racine's starting five sat
thehesttheBobcatscanhopefor
down ,for gocxl).
Is to draw some fouls that will
From all appearances the
Inevitably come from Southwest·
Tornadoes should be able to wrap
ern's Incessant desire to steal the
things up If they can control
ball and run upcourt.
,
three-point bomber Shane May·
B\1'1 If the Bobcats cant hold
nard and 6·4 postman Chad
onto the ball, the Highlanders
Smith. But cagemaster Howle
have the quick hands and feet to
Caldwell will be cracking the
make the fast break happen whip throughout the. game and
agaln 'and again and again.
not letting up on his Tornadoes,
, VIkings-Pirates
even If they are successful In
After losses to Unloto and
handcu!flngMaynardandSmlth. , Eastern, North Gallla skipper
CaldWell knows that his front
Tom R!ccardl .and his crew will
line, consisting of a pair of
san Into their home port Friday
six-footers In Brad Maynard and
nlghtlotakeona Symmes Valley
Brent Shuler, will have problems
squad minus Its big man and one
·in the stratosphere with Smith If
or Its top, scorers.
the Oaks can slow down South·
Juni&lt;J{ •Center Carl Robinson,
ern's running game.
who w~s. the VIkings' scoring
.. mghlaader•Bobcals
co-leadl\r ,with 11 points, twisted
Kyger Creek's Bobcats have
his knee In the first quarter In
thetr work cut out ror them 1n
ruesday night's game agatnst

Hannan Trace. Without Robin·
son, who has been projected to be
out tor, the res I of the season, the
Valley s hopes rest on backcourt
artists Shawn Mootz and Paul
Hayes.
.
These two have demonstrated
their ability to score from threepoint land, as they combined for
live such shots against the
Wildcats . But the void that the
muscular Robinson leaves.In the
middle will give Pirate front·

liners D.J. Hammel and Shane
Smith room to rule virtually
unmolested.
With this being the likeliest
scenario come Friday night,
North's three-point shooting
backcourt of Chris Tackett,
Brian Stout and Darin Smith will
probably do more shootlngtnslde
the arc. When all Is said and
done, Riccardi will most likely
savor his first prep coaching
victory .

SV AC standings
(All _games)
TEAM
WL
Southern .............. 2 0
Eastern ............... 2 1
Southwestern ....... 2 1
Hannan Trace .... ,1 1
Symmes Valley ...0 1
North Gallla ........0 2
Oak Hill ..............0 2
Kyger Creek ........ 0 2
,(SVAC games)
TEAM
W L
Southern .............. 2 0
Hannan Trace ..... 1 0
Eastern ............... l 0
Southwestern ....... l 1
North Gallla ........ 0 1
Oak Hill ............. .0 1
Symmes Valley ...0 1
Kyger Creek ........0 1
TOTALS .............. 5 5

PF PA
149
233
228
117
53
120
114
85

112
229
180
108
74
145
146
152

)

PF
149
74
73
139
68
64
53
44
664

PA
112
53
68

137 .
73
71

74
76
141

,(Reserves)
TEAM
W L PF PA
Southern ... ...... ..... 2 0 109 54
Oak Hill ........ .... .. 1 0 54 41

North Gallla ........ 1
Hannan Trace ..... 1
Eastern ............... o
Symmes Valley ...0
Kyger Creek ........O
Southwestern ...... .0
TOTALS ............ .. ~

0 45 34
0 43 23
1 34 45
1 23 43
1 17 47
2 78 116
5 f03 403

Friday's games
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Oak Hill at Southern
Symmes Valley at N. Gallla
Southwestern at Kyger Creek

l'hllnk You for the Gmt
G..-11 Opening!

another, to this very day.
But the side effects of such
spending haven't been pretty.
Thousands of American companIes have been seduced Into an
embrace wllh Washington, their
executives mouthing expendlent
arguments for Industrial policy
and a managed economy.
Scientific energy has been
diverted from civilian appllca·
lions, to our competitive dismay.
A "peacetlme 'ConStlt!lllon" has
yet to be restored.
We can never return to Amerl·
ca's unguarded Innocence of the
turn of the century, with Its
popular horror of all standing
armies. But It would be nice I! we
could do something else with at
least part of that $180 billion like.put It In our pockets.

Sports briefs
CoHere
Scalpers are asking up to $500
tor one ticket to Saturday's
Auburn-Alabama game. The
value of the ticket has soared
since the 11ame II being played at
Auburn's 85:000.seat Jordan·
Hare Stadlum,lbesecond largest
on-campus stadium In the !lOuth.
There may be as many as 20,000
more people outside the stadium
during the annual grudge match
between No. 2 Alabama,1()..0, and
No. 10 Auburn, 8·2 .... Michigan
football Coach Bo Schernbechier,
whole taam became tbe flnt In 23
yeats to win' outright back-tohack Big Ten ehampioublps,
was named UPI'a Big Ten Coach
of the Year. Michigan, 10·1,
finiShed the regular sea10n with
10 straight vlclorles alter l01lng
Its opener to Notre Dame. The
Wolverine$' will meet Southern
Cal In the Ro~ Bowl on New
Year's Day.

By United Prea laterna&amp;lonal
Today II Thursday, Nov. 30, the334th day of 1989 wltb 31 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evl!nlng atars are Mercury, Venua and·Saturn.
Those born on thiS date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladia In 150!; Irtsb
satirist Jonathan Swift In 1667; noveliSt Mark Twain (Samuel
Langhorne Clemens) In 1835; British statesman Sir Wlriston·
Churchill In 1874.

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VEN DAYS A WEE
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through FridaY
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to a.m. to 5 p.m. sundaY
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Member: Unhl!d Pre~s International,
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POS1MASTEit: !!oDd addr- ch•.,.
10 1be DillY Sctlnol. w coun St..

..

•.

CIIMINAL IECOIDS

an•

Vincent Carroll

l

,.

full. ButlfEasternstartspaylng
too much attention to Lloyd,
forward Todd Boothe, a 5·11
junior, will gethtschancetoshow
some solid Inside moves along
with his overall quickness.

13th straight 'v ictory'

Today in history

I

'

'

moderate-Income families at·
tending public colleges and higher education.
universities.
New or expanded grant, loan
To qualify tor the program, and work·study programs have
high school graduates must have recently been launched In New
a respectable academic record. Mexico, Oklahoma, South Carol·
While In college, they must meet Ina, Wisconsin, Idaho and Vlrgi·
minimum grade standards to nta. Other states are focusing
continue receiving scholarship their efforts on recruiting and
aid from the state.
retaining minority group college
More than 1,000 youngsters students from poor families.
now are benefiting from the
In New York state, the new
program In Its (lrst year ol Liberty Scholarship program
operation. "Attendance at public will pay public college costs for
colleges and universities must be !Jlgh·school graduates from poor
based on the ability to learn and families beginning In 1991.
not the ability to pay," says
In Nevada, Elko High School
Taylor, owner of one of the principal Adair says the Elardl
country's largest Independent oil scholarship program has In·
companies.
spired even those not likely to be
In other states, public officials valedictorians to Improve their
are taking the lead In belatedly grades and has provided a
enhancing access to colleges and college education to some who
universities, which had become otherwise could not afford it.
less available to low-Income
Before the program went Into
students earlier In this decade. effect, there never were more
Almost half of all states, for . than a half·dozen high-school
example, now have prepayment valedictorians enrolled at UNLV
or college savings plans that at one time. In the five years
allow middle-Income !amllles to since It was lpltlated, more than
more easily cope with the flnan· 100 youngsters have accepted
clal burden of their youngsters' scholarships.

Ol all people, however, true
conserva lives (as opposed to raw
rtght·wingers) should refuse to
mythologize mllltary spending
and martial accOmplishments.
After all, nothing In this century
(with the possible exception or
the Great Depression) has so
centralized government power,
eroded property rights and shat·
tered traditional constitutional
understandings as the two world
wars did.
World War II, for example,
featured nearly every form of
statism known to man, Including
wage and priCe controls, federal
allocation of resourcea, plan
seizures, rationing and lndlrl!(
sanctions against uncooperatl•
enterpr!Sea. Similar practlc
have lingered on, to one.degree

,

u
· e n

Private efforts aid public' education
. Robert Walters

ELKO, Nev. (NEA) - AI·
though high-school adminlstra·
tor Glen Adair has never met
casino owner Margaret Elardl,
he Is an ardent admirer. "A lot of
people just talk about helping
~lgher education," he explelns,
but she put up the needed
money."
In the mld·l980s, Elardl approached Robert Maxson, the
new president of the University
ot Nevada at Las Vegas, and
. announced that she wanted to
"give something back to state"
after becoming wealthy as owner
or the Frontier Hotel and Casino.
At the time, Maxsol! was
concerned about a "brain drain"
because almost half of Nevada's
hlgh·school graduates, Including
manyofthebestanthebrlghtest,
were leaving the state to continue
their education.
Elardl gave the university $1
mllllon to endow a unique program that every yar offers a
$10,000, lour· year UNLV scholar'
ship to the valedictorian at each
of Nevada's 53 -public high
schooll. "We've always offered
full scholarships to athletically

h1111ar and ready for takeoff.
Mike Frost, Reed.lvllle's 6-4
senior pivot, proyldes a d!Jnen.
slon- height - that HT center
Craig Rankin, a 6-2 junior, wlll
find a major challenge, but the
Wildcats would be wise to also
keep their eyes on 6-0 senior
forward Scott Fitch, who has
good Inside moves and likes to
use the back door that the Eagles
will be looking to pry open.
The Wildcats will have plenty
of!ormldablewelqiOIII of their
OW!I, such u Rankin, who Is
~to make use of his size
and streaath ID establtahlng solid
moves In the paint. While It's too
early to tell bow toUgh a customer he will be, the Eagles will
need to put the clamps on him
early In the game.
Lloyd got a jump start of the
first order, as he connected for 27
points against Symmes Valley
Tuesday .nlg)lt alter scor!Dg only
six a11alnat Green last week.
Should he be able to provide at
least a reasonable copy of
Tuesday night's performance,
the Eagles will have their hands

•
·
:
B.g
clash on TV Saturday

~==::::!!!!~~====::=====~:!::.:...J.z::ir...JBush administration.

We could use the $180 billion

I ..I

ByG.SPENCUOSBORNE
OVP lltaft Wrler
"We can't loae to ll!ague
contenders, especially on our
own floor," said Hannan Trace
cage chief Mike Jenkins of
Friday's gaine aa-alnst the vlslt·
lng Eastern Eagles.
Jenkins knows when the clock
strikes eight on Friday night, his
Wildcats will face their first
must-win game against a team
with a taller!rontlineandapolnt
guardwho!lfshootlnghasnetled
him an ever-Increasing point
total with each game.
Shawn Savoy, the Eagles'
senior floor leader, has seen his
marksmanship pay off In bigger
numbers each time out, from 12
against Miller and 19 against
Federal Hocking last week to 28
against North Gallla In the
league opener Tuesday night.
Tight pressure defense, adminis·
tered' by either Wildcats J.J.
Bevan or Eric Lloya, that will
make him either commit a
-turnover or pass the ball is the
key to cooling Savoy's hot hand.
However, the· Eagles ha've
other weapons sitting In the

New customs chief tackles a tough one
WASHINGTON- When Treas·
ury Secretary NichOlas Brady
announced his choiCe for the new
U.S. Customs Commissioner last
month, tbe business community
and Capitol Hill said, "Carol
wbo?"
Carol Boyd Hallett, a former
diplomat and California law·
maker, had never been mentl·
oned 'whien ln•lders talked about
the short list of candidates for the
job. "No one I talked to had ever
beard of this lady before," one
International businessman and
customs broker told us.
But Hallett was known to the
pec)ple who count - the Inner
circle or Bush advbers who have
been diligent In rewarding !althfull'tepubllcans with prestigious
jobs In government.
The Customs ServiCe was a
lackluster department that took
on more glitz under Its former
director Wllltam Von Raab because of Its growing role In the
war on drugs. Von Raab turned
the agency Into a posse of
Western Hemispheric cowboys
rounding up drug smugglers.
Now, some of those cowboys
aren't thrUled to have a woman
leading the posse, and they aren't

The Daly Sealinei-P!p-3

POI'11eloy-Middlepoet, Ohio

saturdiV •an

�-- ..____.

---

--Jhur!Uy. Nchanber 30. 18U

Pomeroy- Midd'eport. Ohio

Meigs opens TVC play
NHLresuks
NATIONAL IIOCillll' l&amp;AOOB

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p.m.
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lA Lllllen M s.erame.to. II: • p.m.

Blld•r
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College soores
8MII!Cball Reol*li

By ll•kd Pres s IIIHer.t .. -.1

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Go II
Lar&amp;o. n.. - Sl mUUon JCPeaiE'y

Mlxotd Tum Clutk

""''"
NHL

lhllth ae B.&amp;t... 7: SJ p.m.
Mo..analaa Qllebec. '1 :31 p.m.
11• at r••••••· 1: u p.m.
Nl' laa.Mt-rs lll Cblcato,II: U p.m .
Hani•NI at St. Lolllb, II :U p.m.
Mil•-• at Cal..-,-, 1: II p.m.
Ed...-.. .a Los Allf'!lm. 11: 35 p .m.

Ptt...,.

Ex-Belpre quarterback leads West
Virginia Tech into NAIA play~ffs

Friday

••
an early lead and coasted to the
"
victory. Head Coach Rusty Bookman will alend the aame starting •
five to the hardwood on Friday
night to try and pick up 1 win to
start TVC play . .Juan Wrlaht a
:
5-9 Junior wlll start at point
lllllrd, with Ca~y Betzlng a 6-0 •
sen lor and Robbie Fields a 6-1
;
junior at the winga.
In the poat will be Jay Humph- . ~
reys a 6-2 senior and Mike Van •
Meter a 6-4 junior. Betz!ng was .t
the leading scorer for Meigs last · •
week with 14. Also seeing lots of
action will be sophomores Shawn
Hawley (6·1) and L. J. Mitch • •
(6-3) . Mitch seeing his first
action ever in organlzl!d basket'
ball came of the bench to score 11
points and grab l l rebounds, :
Hawley chipped in with 6 points ~ •
off the bench.
The Falcons won their opener . 1
at home against Eastern, 90-78. ~
The Falcons placed five players ,
In double figures led by Kevin •:
Daughty with 33, Gossman added ,
19, followed by Sle,mer with 15,
Hetlich 11 and Barrett with 10.
Tip off for Friday night's
reserve game is 6: 30 with the
varsity contest to follow.
The Meigs High School Basketball team wlll sponser a 3-on-3 •·
Basketball Tournament on Sun·
day Dec.3. Entry.Fee Is $25.
For more information call
Rusty Bookman at 9$2-5298.
,•

l

WeiiM'wei&amp;M•
.-\l._..e City, N..l. - Aar• Davis va.

NY bludtri WC.. I!'aao, A:II p.m .
llartfoNI al St. Lo., A: U p.m .
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Valley Athletic Conference game · SEOAL power Athens, 82-411.
Inexperience aud cold shooUn&amp;
for both teams .
The Marauders lost their sea- wu the down tall for the maroon
son opener last Friday night to aDd 10111 ~ Atbelll jumped out to

c._ _. -11. ---~~~II

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By DAVE JIAitRIS
Meigs will travel to Hemlock
on Friday night to take on the
Mlller Falcons in the first Trl-

~~ 'Miller ·.

EASTERN JUNIOR HIGH GRIDDERS - The
Eastern Junior High foolb~l recently completed
its season on a winning note under Coach C.D.
Mcintyre. Pictured are team members, front, l·r,
Tyson Rose, Charles Bissell, Rebekka Mcintyre,

Pat Newland, Randy Kaylor, Lee Connolly, Jeff
Watson, and Scott Goldea. Baell row-toach C.D.
Mcintyre, Malt Bowen, Robbie Calaway, Jarod
Ridenour, Robert Reed, Wet Arbaap, Todd
Marcinko, David K-Jg, aad Buddy Kenney.

Soccer

MaJ•r Ia IIMr SOecer Leape
No ramfll ae lll•ard

EHS VARSrrY VOLLEYBALL- Coach Pam
Douthitt's Eastern Eaglette volleyball learn
recently completed Its season and was honored at
their banquet last we.ek. Pictured are front,
Michael Holfman, Mgr.; Kaee11a1.Jenny Deem,

Michelle Metzger, Lorrie Baker, Carrie Morris·
sey, Tabby Phillips, and Amy Well. Back
row-Coach Pam Douthllt,' Mary Jo Reed, Lee
GII!Uan, Mandy Harris, Stephanie otto, Toby Hill,
and Edaa Drlgp, Stats.

Eul

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N-· York - NaiUce M uwu

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TEAM
WLPOP
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VInton County ......... 1 o ss 53
Belpre .................. ..1 0 74 57 '
Alel(llnder .............. 1 0 75 .61 ;
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Nels-York .. ... .. ........O 1 42 77 '
Friday's sunes:
Alexander at Vinton County
Belpre at Trimble
_:
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York
Meigs at Miller
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N.4.TIONAL I'OO'I'IlALL LEAGUE
S.lllllll GaiiW!I
CIM:Ia•tl a&amp; Clnellal, 1 p.m .
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NY
at s-IMep. -1 p.m.

EAGLES JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEYBALL The Eastern Junior High VoUeyball team of
Coach Don Jackson recently completed a sood
season. Pictured are team members, Missy
Harris, Jessica Radford, AprU Smith, Kalhy

Bernard, Jamie Onl, aad lalme WilMa. Baek·
Edna Drlgp, Slala.; 1Jeck7 Drtaa, MarUyn
Kibble, Weacly
Mlellelle llehua., ,Aalla
Thom1111, Amber WeU, and Teby Hill, Slats;

"When you trY to analyze and
come up with theories as to why
certain things happened, my lui
fight was not that Impressive
because I'm my worst critic," be
said. "But, you know aometblq,
people try to figure out what
motivates Ray. 'Ibey say Duran
baa more motivation than I do.
Yet the tact of the matter Is that
they don't lalow Ray Leonard.
They doa't ~ wllat makes me
.......... -.. __,_
tick. (""''·-• na_. made me
tick. He (Durall) makes me

Rae..

Syracuse, Oklahoma romp

By TOM WITHERS
first l;lall in an attempt to reach
UPI Sports Wrller
100. The Sooners, 1-0. also set a
lt was a rough night for college record for most shots in a game
basketball's illtle, guys.
with 147, breaking lllinols'1321n
'et•
The
matchups
did
not
look
good
1948.
O.lcap .a Mia....,, II p.m .
Skeeter Henry added 27 points
on paper before the game and
lleMqoGa.-.
•nato at ~llllll', I p.n..
they
looked
and
Tony Martin had 24 for the
even
worse
on
the
8a .. Q . Dec. II
scoreboard afterwards. Three of Sooners. Davis also had 18
AtiMU. ai. Mia~-. I p.m .
Dala. at , ... llelplli .. I p.m.
the mition' s top teams ran up rebounds. Steve Smith led the
Bit,. .a adeap. I p.m.
" - • - CIIJ at GreH Bq-, lp.m.
scores Wednesday night against Gulls with 28 points.
New Orte. . at Ball ala, I p.m.
some unranked and lesser
Syracuse got 22 points from
Pll~ll' a1 NY .let a. I p.m .
SanDiepMW .... apon,lp.m.
opponents.
Stephen Thompson, 20 from
St...,. a&amp; alld••IL 1 p.m.
No. 1 Syracuse had little Derrick Coleman and held Cor, . , . llQ .a l••.toa. I p.m .
NY GIMt&amp; ........ p. M.
trouble
with Cornell. posting a nell without a field goal for
Clewl_. at lalll..,oHI, 4 p.m .
108-56 victory. No. ll Duke nearly eight minutes of the first
Phaorabl. al LA Rat ...., -4 p.m.
scored the game's first 11 points half. It was the worst .Joss In
N~
ai. Mhml, 'I p.m.
and coasted to a 102-66 victory Cornell history and the 21st
MOIIIIIIIJ, Dr c. It
s.. Fr•daco at LA a ..... I p.m.
over Canlsius .
straight to Syracuse.
M.UO&amp; INDOOR 80CCI!K LEAGU E
And if you had U.S. lnterna''They're trapping with 6-foot·
and
72
points
against
No.16
t,
l
onal
10,
6-11 NBA players,;and we've
-~.,~··
Wldll&amp;a til, dft&lt;elullll
•
Tac». . l. Kaa- Cllr ..
Oklahoma, you l,ost.
got
a 6-1 guy who is going to sell
n.nli.,Ga,...
Willie
Davis
scored
20
or
his
insurance
next year," Cornell
N1 IIIDH «~led
P'riUy Gamee
career-hl~;th 31 points in the first
Coach
Mike
Dement said.
. .ltii'IMft a1 Cln-elu .. aipr
hall
and
the
Sooners
set
an
"(Their
talent
) Is kind of ihe
.,..._.~~~,WI ~ -. ... I'M
8aa1Me~ at Sti.
•I pi
NCAA·rei:ord with 97 first-half same. They just seem to have
points to post a 173-101 rout of the more of it. They play the game
Gulls.
above the rim, " he added.
U.S. International was also
The loss surpassed the 51-point
Involved in the previous record drubbing that Pennsylvania adwhen Loyola-Marymount scored ministered on Cornell in 1974.
94 first-half points against the
Syracuse Coach Jim Boehelm
Gulls last year on Jan. 31. The was able to use every player, a
tick."
181-150 shootout established the luxury he won't enjoy once the
Duran has waited 9 7) years for
NCAA record 'for highest-game Orangemen begin their grueling
a rubber match with Leonard.
point total.
Big East schedule.
The 38-year-old Panamanian ·
Oklahoma, which used lull"Over the course or a 30-game
weighed 159 % after Tuesday's
court pressure from the star t of season you are going to have
training session, according to
the game, missed 4 three-point games Uke this." Jim Boebelm
trainer Carlos Hubbard. Each
shots in the last minute of the said. " As far as I'm concerned,
fighter ·must weigh 162 or less or
forfeit $1 mllllon.
Leonard, a 2-1 favorite in the
outdoor bout at the new Mirage
hotel, Is guaranteed$12.6 million.
B~xes
Duran, the WBC middleweight
title-holder, signed for $7.6 mlllion, bu I pr9moter Bob Arum
said $1.6 milllon wlll be deducted
SIOQ\ UP FOR CHRJSrMAS RJN WITH
to pay a debt to the Internal
Revenue Service.
Mike Trainer, Leonard's lawa••,........,•
yer, said Duran's handlers asked
tor the 162-pound limit. Duran
reportedly weighed close to 200
pounds before training.
'"The fact of the matter Is that
Roberto Duran wanted to fight
for Ray's super middleweight
(168-pound) title because It gave
him an opportunity to win his
fifth title, .. Trainer said.
"When I negotiated with his
representatives ror this bout,
they were the oaes who Indicated
that they really wanted Duran to
fJahl Cor the middleweight champlonsblp because they Celt that be
was far more effective If he had
to make the weight otl60 or lesa.
•'The fact of the matter IJ we
didn't give a hoot what Roberto
•
•
Duran weighed. Hll people felt
the heavier be wu, the worse
shape he waa In and worse
2...69
condition be would be In, and
171 let I .. SeeM
•••••_pert, Ol.
theretoretbeworapertormaace
he would put on.

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

,.

I "

r.a.-..

Lo•.

Duran sees. no justice from
judges in title fight Dec. 7
LOS ANGELES &lt;UPll - Roberto Duran said Wednesday he
expects the ringside judges to
favor Sugar Ray Leonard when
the two fight Dec. 7.
"I'm aware of the judges, "
Duran said through an lnterpreter. ·'I hope they're fair and give
me a fair shake if we go the
distance, but I'm looking for a
knockout. 1 can't expect to get a
decision. Most of the judges are
In favor of Sugar Ray Leonard.''
Leonard dismissed Duran's
comments at a news conference
leading to the Las Vegas, Nev..
bout in which Leonard will
defend his World Boxing Council
super middleweight crown.
"I don't think he means that,"
Leonard said. "What's he going
tosaywhenhelsaskedaquestlon
like that? "
Leonard and Thomas Hearns
fought a controversial draw last
June. Leonard feels he beat
Hearns but many others believe
Hearns was robbed. Leonard, 33,
admits he was at something short
of his best.

Browns' offensive line
confronts criticism

TVC standings

Mnttrul - WorW C..p mH4

Holder was named Offensive into Tecb's passing scheme.
ByDANH08E
" It's a passing attack where
Player of the Year l~t_ the West
Unlted Preu lnteriiMioaal
the quarterback drops and reads
Lee Holder 's golden arm led VIrginia Conference Iii" leading
the defense and throws to the
the Belpre Golden Eagles to their West Virginia Tech to the cofi rst Ohio high school playoff championship with Concord. In proper receiver," Gobel said.
"That's one of Holder's strong
appearance and now he has 10games, he completed 172of329
points
- d iagnoslng the defense
(52.3
percent)
for
2,241
passes
passed the West VIrginia Tech
Golden Bears Into Its first trip to yards and 17 touchdowns with 11 as he Is dropping back and
throwing !I to the correct
lnterceplions.
the NAlA playoffs.
receiver. ''
Belpre
was
not
a
passing
team
The 6·0, 175-pound left-bander
Both Holder s are glad Lee tried
until
the
elder
Holder
spotted
completed 57 ot his passes for
it
In major college football.
6,500 yards in a three-year career special talents in a seventh"
No, none (regets) at all," said
playing under the coaching of his grader. West VIrginia Tech was
the
father. · "He tried West
father, Ralph Holder. a Glenville not a passing team until Bob
VIrginia
and saw he wasn't going
College tailback In the mid 1950s . Gobel became head coach and
to
get
in
play, and West Virginia
. In his junior and senior years, started using Lee Holder's
Tech
was
a place that fit what he
young Holder passed the Golden golden arm.
wanted.
"I guess I'm just fortunate
Eagles into the Ohio playoffs for
"Lee's the k.lnd of kid, he
the first time In the history of the enough to be on tellms where the
overall talent was good enough to couldn't sit. He llad to play. He
Oh lo River school.
certainly wasn' t going to sit
After being Invited by West make the playoffs," young
around.,
. ·
Virginia University coach Don Holder said, when it was pointed
The quarterback said be Is glad
Nehlen to try. out and earning out to him that he quarterbacked
he
tried WVU.
and
Tech
Into
their
both
Belpre
virtual full aid his second semes"When
I was coming out of
first
playoffs.
ter, Holder saw that his playing
high
school.
I t bought I wanted to
tlmewouid'be limited and sought
major
college football.
play
a smaller school where he could
"We siarted with him (pass- .
Being
&amp;-foot.
175,
I tbought I was
pursue his degree in mechanical
!ng) because we could see in the
going
to
play
football the
never
engineering.
seventh grade he could throw,"
rest
of
my
life,
Then
I really got
Now, as a 23-year-oid senior,
his father-coach said. "We had
Interested
in
getting
my degree.
Holder leads the Golden Bears three receivers with him. So we
But
It
would
have
been
tough at
into the NAIA Division I playoffs could see he could throw and we
WVU because of the amount or
against 1988 national champion
just evolved Into that with him.
Carson-Newman (Tenn.) Satur"We were undefeated both his time req ulred In football."
Holder said he seriously considay at Laidley Flelcf in
junior and senior year."
dered
going to VIllanova, In that
Charleston.
Gobel said Holder fits perfectly
school's second year of its return
to football, but "things just didn't
work ou.t." and he received the
Invitation by Nehlen to try out at

this is a very good game."
Duke was Jed by senior guard
Phil Henderson and sopbomore
center Christian Laetiner, who
.paced a balanced scorlnjt effort
with 18 points. ·

r

Spsorts briefs

Football
Junior Colorado linebacker
Alfred Wllllams, who amassed 10
1·2 sacks this year and helped the
Buffaloes to an 11-0 regular
season record was named the Big
Eight Conference' s De(enslve
Player of the Year .... University
or Kentucky Athletic Director
C.M. Newton said, he alms to
have a new football coach before
mid-February but declln@d to
say If anyone from the Wildcats
starr will be considered for the
job. Jerry Claiborne announced •
his retirement Tuesday.

NOTICE is hereby give that on Saturday, December 2nd. 1989, at 10:00 a.m., a public ula will ·
be held at 1015 Union Avenue. Pomeroy, Ohio, to
· sell for cash the following collate111l:
1988 PONTIAC FIERO 2 DR. CPE.
S# 1 G2PE1 1 R6JP216449
1988 NISSAN P.U. 1h TON
S# 1 N&amp;ND1162JC307991
1984 FORD ESCORT 2 DR.
S# 1 FABP0422EW238037
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, rel8rves the right to bid at thie sale.
and to withdraw the above collateral prior to
ule. Further, The Farmen Bank and Savings
Company rel8rves the right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
Further. the above collateral will be sold in the
condition it is in with no expreued or implied
warranties given.
Nht ' gW

n·

$"

e·

ll

.0.. --·I

Action on
bounty case
less than 50.50

'

PUBLIC NOTICE

, • . e- •••·· ·

RES£RVE VOLLEYBALL - The Eastern 1' HoHman, Kneeling, Kelly Rldeaour, Sberry
Sml&amp;h, Jenny Deem, and Amy Well. Studlag u.a
reserve volleyball recently completed their
'Hoflman,
Michelle Metzger, Stephanie Otto,
season and was honored at the Fall Sports
Carrie
Bernard,
and Sarab Harris.
banquet last week. Pictured are front, Michael

......, -·

For Those Christmas Toys,
Jam
and Any Household
Need••••

..
•

.'

.

I!'
f

c

ENERGIZER.

I

I

=· s·s.aa

•··

I

~S:nS2.00

f
f

Your Cost

Prescr!tlon Shop

•IIIIPCIII

s•op Loe•lly 'nd1 Cllrill- Suaa!

HI·S617

----·--'-----.--·---'---------------___.;---~---..- - - - - · - - - . : . . . '- - - - - - - - - - - - -

f
f ____,__

DALLAS (UPI ) -Dallas Cowboys owner J erry Jones said
Tuesday he thought new NFL
Commissioner Paul Tagl!abue
had a chance, " to make an
exarrrple," concerning allegations that Phlladelphia players
tried to lntentlonally ·Injure
kicker Luis Zendejas and quar·
terback Troy Aikman In a game
last Thursday .
Jones said, however, he shared
the opinion of Dallas Coach
Jimmy Johnson about the even·
tual outcome of the Cowboys'
complaint.
''The chances are probably
less than 50-50 that anything wlil
come of it ," Jones said.
Alter Phlladelphia's 27-0 win
over Dallas Thanksgiving Day ,
Johnson charged the Eagles with
having a bounty on Zendejas and
Aikman. Zendejas was sl!ghtly
Injured on the openlllg kickoff or
the second half when he was hit
by Philadelphia linebacker Jessie Small. Aikman was hit by
linebacker Britt Hager:;everai
seconds after the whistle blew to
end a play, touching off a melee
that almost spilled into the tunnel
at the end of the lleld.
Game lilms showed Small
bypassed three members of
Dallas' kick coverage team.
· including special teams star Bill
Bates, in order to hit Zendejas .
The NFL's director of security,
Warren Welsh, spent Monday
interviewing . Dallas players
a bout the incident. Zendejas,
punter Mike Saxon and running
back Junior Tautaiatasl all said
they had been told before the
game that the Dallas kicker was
a marked man.
Phlladelphla Coa,h Buddy
Ryan has not only denied the
aecusations. but has matched
Johnson insult for insult since
Thursday's game. The two teams
play again a week from Sunday
and league officials are expected
to have something to !fay. even if
it is only privately to the team~
Involved, befgre that game. .
Jolll!!l said he had yet to talk to
Tagll!lbue about the Incident,
although he hoped to do so within
the next few days.
"I know the Issue itself is very
senaltlve to the league offiCe,"
Jolll!!l aald. "And this might be a
good opportunity to make an
example as the new
commissioner.
••

Bengals Browns in
••
'
I S d
cnt1cal batt e un ay
' CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
two critical dates in the Cincinnati Bengals' quest for a playoff
spot are Dec. 3 and Dec. 17.
The Bengals play at Cleveland
on Dec. 3 and entertain Houston
on Dec. 17. Cincinnati figures
victories in both games are
necessary to make the playoffs.
With four games remaining in
the reg\llar season, Cincinnati
trails Cleveland by 1"ii games
and Houston by one game in the
AFC Central division.
A joker in the deck is the Dec.
24 Houston-Cleveland game,
which could either help or hurt
Cincinnati depending on what
happens before then. That game
means that, barring an unlikely
tie, one of the two teams the
Bengais must pass in the stand·
ings is guaranteed a win In the
final game of the season.
Although the Bengals just show
a 6-6 record, they 're helped by
mediocrity throughout the division. Cleveland is 7-4-1, Houston
is 7-5 and Pittsburgh is 6-6.
"The Lord keeps giving us
extra chances, but we know
we're down to our last chance,"
said Bengals safety Rickey
Dixon. looking forward to Sunday 's importa nt game at
Cleveland.
Winning the mediocre AFC
Central division may be Cincinnati's best chance of making the
playoffs, because at this point a.
wlld card berth seems remote.
Discounting the tnree Ameri·
can Conference diviSion leaders,
the current standings show ·four '
teams ahead o!theBengalsln the
race for the conference's two
wild card slots.

with Bul!alo leading 10-0, Cincin·
nail's Jim Breech kicked a
26-yard field goaL But re feree
Red Cashion nullified the three
points because or a fal se siart
penalty against the Bengals and
refu sed to .give Cincinnati
another play.
Cashion pointed to a rule that
say s, "If there is a foul by the
offense (at the end of a period ).
ther e shall be no extension of the
period . II the foul occurs on the
las t play of the bail, no score
made by !he offense is counted."
But league ofllclals issued this
statement this week : "After a
review of the circumstances , the
league has determined that the
field goal play was properly
nullified. but that Cinclnnall
should have been penalized five
yards and given another untimed
play.
"Because it's a false start, that
means the play never happened.
Officially, the ball was never
snapped. Because of that. the
offense should stlli be entit led to
one play ."

. ~Y BOB KEDt
· UPI Sports Wrller
. BEREA, Ohio (UP I) _ The
Cleveland Browns' offensive
linemen, roundly criticized after
two straight sub-par performances, are fighting back.
Monday, center Gregg Rakoczy confronted reporters and
said he was wrongly blamed for a
sack by Detroit nose tackle Jerry
Ball In the 13-10 Thanksgiving
Day loss to the Lions. He also said
an Ulegal procedure penally that
occurred when the other 10
offensive players moved and he
did not snap the ball was not his
fault. and he also criticized a key
holding call against him in the
fourth quarter.
Tuesday , it was left tackle Paul
Farren's turn .
"We've got a lot of guys
playing bad, but I'm not one of
them 1" Farren said . .. I'm sick to ·
death. r can only bite my tongue
so long."
Farren was upset by a newspaper article that said the play at
center and left tackle had been
poor. a contention that seems to
.be supported by events on the
field. But Farren, a seven-year
veteran from Boston Un lversity,
disagreed.
"It's an outrage," he said. "It's
unbelievable. There's no way In
hell! played (poorly) . I think It's
unfair to put me In the category
of someone who's struggling,
someone who's having a bad
season. That's just not the case."
The 6-6, 270-pound Farren has
been lilllng in at left tackle In
place of the injured Rickey
Bolde~. who started practicing
with the team this week but is
still on Injured reserve following
a broken shoulder suffered In the
third game of the season.
When Bolden Is healthy,
Farren is the club's backup at
both guard positions. At let!
tackle, Farren must protect the
quarterback's blind side against
the opposing team's best pass
rusher.
Farren also objected to reports
that Kansas City outside line·
backer Derrick -Thomas dominated him in the 10·10 tie between
the Chiefs and Browns.
"I 'm just sick o! being the
scapegoat, " he said. "There's
other people on the Une that.are

having a tough time. I'm not
going to be Included In it."
Coach Bud Carson criticized
the play of the Une following the
toss to the Lions, and in an effort
to shore up the blocking, resigned tight end Ron Middleton .
Whlle Carson did not name
individual players, and it was
clear he was upset with the unit
as a whOle, Farren said he did not
deserve to be criticized by the
coaches .
" If it (cr!Uclsm) Is coming
from the organization or the
coaches, they're just blatantly
(wrong)," he said.
·
Of the Browns'18 rushing plays
against Detroit, 12 gained two
yards or less. Against Kansas
City, they averaged 2.1 yards per
rush.

wvu.

"I played for one season
there, " the quarterback said. ''I
decided I'd rather spend more
time on my studies - at small
university and get a little more
_playing time.
.
· "I'm in engineering. I really
didn't want to sit out a year. I
decided to move down a class,
and Tech was the only other
school with engineering so it
: made it a logical choice."
Is Holder glad be chose the
small · college route. instead of
transferring to a major college?
"Oh, that's a tough question to
answer. Right now , I'd say yes .
Tech's coming off its best record
ever, won a conference championship and now has a chance to
play for a national
championship.
"You can't ask for much

more."

LOCATED ON CIIEIRY RIDGE: lurn lent at Darwin /
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Miami and Houston have better rerords at 7-5 and both have
already beaten the Bengals.
Indianapolis and the Los Angeles
Raiders are 6·6 like the Bengals,
but both have beaten C!nci!Uiatl,
which is the main tie-breaker in
determining wlld card teams.
Cincinnati could have greaily
improved its playoff chances last weekend while both Cleveland
and Houston were losing. But, the
Benaals were pounded 24-7 at
Buffalo.
, Interestingly, NFL offiCials
admitted this week tile Bengals
were r~bed of a field gpalln the
game against the Bills.
On the last play olthe first half,

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�P.ga 6

Thursday, November .3 0. 1989

Ohio

Thursday, November 30, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar

K·DFF

THURSDAY

DEXTER - The Women's
Fellowship of Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
Dexter on Thursday at 7:30p.m.

ECD.
•

a(

•

To Help You, Our Customer, And All Of Us At Mason Furniture Xie•..Off The Christmas Season
We Have Redueed OUr J:ntire StoeJr Of MerehGJUiise To Super .tow Prie•s.
Never Aaain Will Priees Be This Low This Time Of Year, Co111e In And Save J..ots Of DoiiiJrs During
·
rJD CRAT.I CHRISTMAS JUCX.OJ'J' SALE!
·
·
•

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE - THIS ONE DAY ONLY!
.
.

.
.

STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WIN ONE OF THREE s100.00 GIFT CE~TIFICATES THAT MAY BE USED TOWARD PURCHASES AT OUR STORE!
DRAWING DECEMBER 20, 1989 ·NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.I

.

OPEN 9 A.M. 'II~ 9 P.M. FRIDAY, DECEMBER I5T
Many Other Savings Too Numerous To Mention - Prices On Most Of The Items Listed Here
And Many Other Items Throughout The Store Are Good Through December 23, 1989

•,

WHITE IRON DAY BED
WITH LINK SPRINGS

Gifts of Quality · .
The Whole Family WDI Enjoy

lOYEAR
WARRANlY
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ALL LIVING ROOM SUITES
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SYRACUSE - The Asbury
United Methodist '"Church will
have Its Christmas bazaar on
Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. There will be homemade items including pies,
cakes, cookies, brel\ds, comforters, crafts, gift Items, soup,
. sandwiches, and coffee~

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday evening at 7 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart CathoUc
POMEROY The Meigs
Church In Pomeroy. For lnfor- . County REACT will hold Its
matlon calll-800-333-50~1.
monthly meeting on Friday at
7:30 p.m. at Pleasers. Officers
TUPPERS PLAINS - The will be elected and all members
VFW Post 9053 will meet Thurs- are urged to attend.
·
day at7:'3Q P·1'1· at the post home.
MIDDLEPORT~The EvangeLEBANON TOWNSHIP- The line Chapter No. 172, Order oflhe
Lebanon Townsl!lp trustees will Eastern Star, will have Its open
meet Thursday at 7 p,m. at the Installation on Friday at· 7:30
township building.
p.m. Members are to bring
sandwiches.
·
.
FRIDAY
, SALEM CENTER - Star
SATURDAY
Grange No. 778 and Star Junior
GALLIPOLIS
-The third anGrange No. 878 will meet In
nual
Christmas
Praise at the
reg;,ular session on Saturday, at
7:30p.m., at the grange hall on Faith Temple qhlirch wlillle held
C6unty Rl&gt;ad 1 near Salem on Saturday at ? p.m. Groups to
Center. State youth, young adul- sing Include the Zion Hill Singers
tyoung marrieds, mens and from Columbus, and the Gabriel
junior baking contests will be Quarlet from Middleport. The
church Is located of Route 141 on
held.
Debby Drive between GalllpoUs
'
and
Centenary.
MIDDLEPoRT - There will
be a homemade craft and bake
ALFRED -The Alfred United
sale on Friday at tile Sears
·Methodist
Church will have Its
Catalogue StQre from 10 a.m . .to~
p.m. sponsored by the Middle- soup supper on Saturday . at 5

Hey kids! Don't forget this
Sunday's parade'- justforyouIn Racine. It's called the "Kids'
Christmas Parade," sponsored
by the Racine Merchants, and It
starts at 2:30p.m. All area kidsSYRACUSE - The Syracuse agE!$ 12 and under - are Invited
Volunteer Fire Department will to join the fun.
"Decorate your little red wag- ·
have ·Its Christmas auction on
Saturday at the station at 7 p.m. ons, bicycles, riding toys, or just
walk along,'' encourages BevRefreshments will be served.
erly Moore, owner of Racine Cut
Rate. "Or have your moms and
dads
help you dress up llketoys,"
life 18 like a trip through the autoshe
adds.
matic washing machine, and many of
However, Moore points out,
ua. spend most of It stuck In the
aglt!lor.
.
• 'No three-wheelers, four.p.m. There will be vegetable
soup, chill, hot dogs, and pie
·available. Donations will be
tak11n and containers must be
provided for carry out soups.

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some specials In the way of
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wheelers or mlnl·blkes will be
allowed" since _parade organizers expect that many small
children will participate.
Parents are being asked to
walk along with younger children
and the total walk wlll be two or
three blocks, Moore says.
Anyone wishing to participate
In the "Kids' Christmas Parade"
Is asked to register at ihe Racine
Cut Rate, 949-2942, or the Racine
Department Store, 949-2800, by
Friday, Dec. 1st.
And stay around after i the
parade because not only will
Racine Merchants be offering

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RACINE- The Racine American Legion Post 602 will have Us
Christmas party on Thursday at
7 p.,m.
Country ·Kitchen Restaurant In Racine. There will be a
$2 gift exchange.

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�Pomeroy-Middlaport,

Tht.nday, November 30. 1989

Peg a 8-The Daily SGIItinel

DAR meets to discuss projects

' RETREAT SPEAKERS - ScoU Lucas, left,
1Uimilllltnlor of Veterans Memorial Hospital, Is
plctllftd wllll two ~~ speakers feaiured a&amp; lbe
annual retreat for tile Board of Trustees of tbe
Pomery hospital held IIi the Holiday Inn In
JiiiiiAIIIa. For lbe first time the hOIPIW'smedlcal
staff jo..ed lbe board for the retreu and bolb
jvoups held business sessions. During the board

P•l Bee&amp;le, Let8rt Falll. aad James
Anderson, Baelne, were eleeted &amp;o the ll'IIBieft'
board to IIepa tern. In Janlllll)'. Beep served
prevloualy on lbe board. With Lucaa In the pboto
are Richard Bradley, center, Olllo Sta&amp;e Untver·
slty, aaciDavldGrauer, aColurnbua&amp;taney wllb
Squire, Sanden and Dempsey, a pharmael8t aad
fanner admlnlll&amp;rator of Unlvenlty Ho•pltals.
meet~&amp;.

Alfred news

·Group 2 has dinner
A catered Thanksgiving dinner
highlighted the recent meeting of
Group 2 of the First Presbyterian
Church held at the church.
:Mrs. Paul Haptonstall preskied over the meeting In which
Mrs. Myron Miller, nominating
chairman, gave- the report on
new officers for the coming year,
Mrs. Harley Brown and Mrs.
William Morris, · co-chairmen;
Mrs. Eddie Burkett, secretary;
and Mrs. Myron Miller,
treasurer.
Mrs. Don Lowery conducted
the Least Coin and read and
article, "Justice, Peace, Crea· ,

lion" from El Salvadore.
It was decldedtodonate$25toa
needy project In Kentucky. At the
December meeting, members
are to donate $3 each to go to the
Meigs Ministerial Association.
This will replace the gift
exchange.
Mrs. Carl Horky was the
devotional leader and she read
an article, "Paradox" from the
book Meditations for Women.
Bible study was conducted by
Mrs. Dwight Wallace on John,
chapter 7.
Mrs. Karl Grueser closed the
meeting with prayer.

TOPS 570 meeting held
The Chrlslmas party to be
held Dec. 12 was the topic of
discussion at the recent
meeting of Ohio TOPS 570 when
the group met Tuesday at the
coonhunters lodge at the
fairgrounds.
The meeting opened with
prayer and pledge by Lennie
Aleshire, leader. The time and
place of the Christmas party -wiii
be discussed further at a later
date.
There will also be a gift
exchange between secret pals
and other members ·a t the
Christmas party. The TOPS best
loser for theyearwillbethequest
of honor at the party.
- It was announced that Jean
Wright has reached her KlW
status.
· The fruit basket was won by
Bernice Durst, and the surprise
gift was won by VIrginia Dean.
The best loser was Nancy
Manley, and the runner up was
Suzie Dreyhel. II was reported

'

t11at Crys!JII Smith Is Ill. It was
announced that the monthly
queen Is Betty Fultz.
Peggy Vining, assistant
leader, conducted the program,
"Take Care of Your TOPS
Mobile."
The group meets every Tues·
day evening at the coonhunters
. lodge at , the fairgrounds for
weigh In at 5 p.m. and meeting at
6p.m.

The Alfred United Methodist
Church will have a soup supper
on Saturday at 5 p.m. There will
be vegetable soup, chill, hot dogs,
and pie available. The publiC Is
Invited to attend and contrlbu·
lions will be accepted.
The church held Its Thanksglv·
lng dinner on Nov. 19. Eloise
Archer and Doris Dillinger prepared the turkeys. Rev. Don
Archer asked the blessing.
Others present were Sandra
Archer, Gertrude Robinson, Will
Poole, Melvin Carsey, Thelma
and Clarence Henderson, Mr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks and Bob,
Mr. and Mrs.' Kevin Brooks,
Hallie and Aaron,. Lloyd Dillin·
ger, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Watson.
Stacie and Alan, Ostoi Mae and
Clair Follrod, Charlotte Van
Meter, Nina Robinson, Clara
Follrod, Sara Caldwell, Florence
and Richard Spencer and Tim.
Sheila and Dan Spencer, Kirk,
Danlelle and Tiffany, Russell
Archer, Nellie Parker, all local.

Thlrty·two members and gu ·
estl attended the buffet luncheon
prepared and served by Mrs. Rae
Reynolds at ·Iter borne when the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, met for Its November
mHtlng.
The national defense reportfor
the month was against American
technology being given to many
foreign powers.
A special project for Ohio
schools during the next three
years, chaired by Estavon Matthews of the · French Colony
Chapter, was discussed and each
member gave $2 for this year's
donation.
Mrs. Reynolds also hosted a
brunch fog prospective new
members this month. She reported that nlne women will be
working on papers to join the
chapter. They will be meeting
each month to ,complete their
applications.
Mrs. Anna Cleland, member·
ship chairman, announcedl.that
her daughter, sister, and .niece
have recently been accepted Into
DAR and will join the Meigs
Chapter.
June Ashley presented a flag to
Emma Ashley's classroom at
Middleport Elementary, and the
chapter gave iflagto the Chester
kindergarten classroom.
For the program, Mrs. Reynolds read excerpts from the
book, ''The Restless People"
which was about pioneer life. She
noted that most people have
exaggerated Impressions of this
country's founding fathers who

A sUent auction was held by the
scholarship committee with
members contrlbu tlni crafts and
foods at the recent mHtlng of the
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma held at Saints
Peter and Paul Parllh Hall In
Wellston.
Margaret Benson auctioned
the articles that did not receive
bids.
Ham loaf was served by the
· ladles of the church and VIola
Gettles gave the Invocation.
Tables were decorated with
.
paper turkeys.
Pauline Burson led the society
In singing Thanksgiving songs.
Rebecca Zurcher presided at
the business meeting. Thank you
notes were read from Howard
Nolan and My Sister's Place.
Friendship letters were read·
from Gertrude Trace and Mar·
tha Greenaway.
Nancy Sowers, scholarship

live dwellings and squalid condl·
tlonswithfood from the wild, and
homespun articles or skins for
clothing. They lived In fear for
their lives from the Indians, wild
animals, and raiding ,thieves.
Sickness and poverty ended the
lives of many setUers and depres·
slon and loneliness filled their
homes. Later, settlements appeared and more authority was
es!JIIlllshed when better edu·
cated people started to migrate
to the frontiers.
The next meeting of the group
will be held Dec. 8, 1 p.m., at the
home of Mrs. Mary Skinner.

were settlers of the frontiers
before, during, and Immediately
after the American Revolution.
Movies of the those times have
portrayed beautiful and dra·
malic people who were courageous and who enjoyed the adven·
ture of traveling to strange new
lands. In reality; they were
mainly Ignorant, poorly educated, desperate men and
women who were seeking an
easier life and foWld empty land.
Mrs. Reynolds went on to say
that In the backwoods many had
very little social activity. and
lived In forced solitude In prlml-.

The "Wrap" Wrth Style
And Convenience
DONATION - The Business Profl!llslonals of
America Club a&amp; Meigs Hlgh School recently ·
participated In a ten mUe walk-a-thon. The
money raised will go to Carleton School &amp;o allow
local a&amp;hletes &amp;o compete In Special Olympics at

the local, regional, and state levels, as well as
purchaslnlf new unifonns for track and field
participants. Presenting the SliOO check to Bette
Hoffman, of Carleton School, Is Kenda Kloos, club
president.

A silent auction was held
following the recent meeting of
the Chester Council 323 Daugh· •·
ters of America held at the hall
with VIrginia Lee as councilor.
Pledges to the Christian and
American flags (Were given, the
Lords Prayer was repeated, ,
Psalm 89 verses 1-6 were read,
and the group sang the first
stanza of the Star Spangled
Banner.
Esther Smith read a letter
from Linda Walton, state councl·
lor. The past councilors Christ·
mas d!nnerwlll beDec.13at 6:30
p.m.

PRESCRIPTION .SHOP ,
271 Nortll Second

It was reported that Doris

Grueser Is In Ho~r Hospital,
and Iva Powell Is not well. The
death of Evelyn Ramey:S husband was noted. She Is the past
state councilor.
Officers will be nominated at
the next meeting and quarterly
reports will be observed.
Erma Cleland read "What Is
Thanksgiving?"
The district deputies and past
councilors club Christmas dinner
will be held Saturday at 1: 30 p.m.
at Western Slzzlln In Athens.
There will be a $3 gift exchange.

Attending were Goldie Fredrick, Eva Robson, Genleve
Ward, Thelma White, Mary
Holter, Everett Grant, Bonnie
Landers, Kathryn Baum, Alta
Ballard, Betty Young, ·Esther
Smith, Erma Cleland, Mae
McPeek, Lora Damewood, Sadie
Trussell, VIrginia Lee, Opal
Hollon, Helen Wolf, Sandy White,
Charlotte Grant, Shirley Beegle,
Cora Beegle, Inzy Newell, Mar·
cia Keller, Betty Roush, Doris
Koenig, Ethel Orr, Bulah Maxey,
Margaret Amberger, Ada Bissell, and Laura Nice.

Xi Gamp1a Mu holds meeting .

CJCJ2-666CJ
Mld...port, OH.

Charlotte Hanning and Debbie
Miller presented a cultural re·
port on "Living Fully" at the
recent meeting of the XI Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi .
Sorority held at the hQ!Tle A.R.
Knight in Pomeroy.
Debbie Miller read an article
from the magazl~e. "Ideals"
about Thanksgiving. The group
participated In answering trivia
questions and prizes were
awarded to Linda Bates and
Lynn Shuler.

Cindy Dillinger, Cassie and
Riehle, Athens; and Kathy Ess-•
man, Nicole, and Kyle, The .
Plains. ,

Twenty members were present
for the meeting which opened In
ritualistic form. Roll call was
answered by members respond·
lng with the Greek alphabet.
Charlotte Hanning reported
that the social committee has
decided to cancel the Fenton
Glass and Middleton D,oU Factory trip.
.
Ruth Riffle reported on behalf
of the service committee that all
Items to be donated to the needy

must be turned In aththe next
meeting.
Lynn Schuler, c halrman of the
ways and means committee,
reminded the group that a $10
fine will be Imposed on each
membt:r not participating In the
"Do Your Own Thing Auction"
scheduled for the next meeting.
A recipe auction was ~njoyecf
by all with members bringing
thefr favorite dish to be sampled
along with copies of the recipe to.
be (lurchased.

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Prl!lls International
A FRIEND IN NEED: Larry
Ga&amp;lln, the country music star
and reformed drinker, made a.
quick trip to Danville, Ind., to
ball out a friend jailed for public
Intoxication. Gatlin was In Ala·
bama to give a speech on drug
and alcohol abuse when he
learned about the friend's problem. He flew to Indianapolis at
about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday, took
e,are of the man's $500 bond and
was on his . way back to the
airport with the friend by 3 a.m.
Gatlin told the deputies he. lost
touch with the man about five
years ago and had been trying to
gel back In touch with hlm when
he got the call for help.
REDO FOXX TAXX: The IRS
trucks pulled up to Redd Foxx's
Las Vegas home Tuesday and
started hauling off his belongings
to pay for back taxes. Prince
Spencer, Foxx's longtime agent,
was a reluctant witness. ''They
had one of. those big car vans
that's used . to transport cars
cross country and they hauled

WINNER -Shirley Miller, left, co-owner of Joe'• Country
Market, .Rutland, recently presented Nellie Ha.uy with a stereo
tbal she won during the market's second annlverlllll'f sale. The
stereo was one of 28 prizes lfvea away.

Past matrons meet
The Past Matrons of Harrison·
ville Chapter 255, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at the
Ceuntry Harvest House In AI·
bany on Tuesday at 6: 30 p.m. for
the group's annual Christmas
dinner. There will also be a gift
exchange at this lime.

ANNOUNCINQ

6TH STilET

. HUNTINGTON CIVIC CENTER· DECEMBER 1·2-3

:==-.
..
ADIIITONE

,~.

·0

SANTA'S

:ANNUAL ~~ - uon~ rr~-~t~ta . WORKSHOP

. u ([afts
· Sl]ow
· Ouer 22/J Exhibitors &amp; Artisens

There will be a two day revival
on Dec. 8 and 9 at the Faith
Chapel Church In Frost at 7 p.m.
.
nightly.
Rev. FranRt!n Adkins, Beckly,
W.Va. will be -the speaker. For
Information call 667-6280, 423·
9766, 378·6238, or 989-2667.

.

I .

I
II

I
I
PmEIIOY
I
Adiii'UO----W1Caupan'2.110 I
Slnlall '2.1111
W,ICotfan •uo I
Cltln~ 1•1a,...ald..-----'UIO 1
CIM.-tlnllr1n. . __..,._.fM I
-.......,..,a, All Mill I
COUPON

.......

lla .m.

Attending from Meigs County
were Rebecca Zurcher, Twlla
Childs, Sheila Bevan, Wyk~
Whitney, Dorothy Woodard,
Anna Elizabeth Turner, Nellie
Parker, Marjory Fetty, an~
Sandra Tillis.

The community choir, under
the direction of Sue Matheny, will
present "A Magnificent Season"
Christmas Cantata at the MI .
Herman United Brethren Church
on Dec. 8 at 7:30p.m. The church
Is located In the Texas Commun·
Jty. Pastor Robert Sanders In·
vites the public.

Wish all your cz,~,s,tomers and
friends :a very Merry Christma$ in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 22nd. .

Enters hospital
Lillian Napper, Racine, en·
tered Holzer Medical Center
today for medical treatment.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Napper
were her 110n and daughter-In·
law, Lawrence and Dorothy
Napper, and Clinton and Karen
Napper and Infant son, all of
West Union.

;

ADVERTISING
. ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

992-2156

away five, six or seven vehicles,"
Spencer said. "It was heart·
breaking to watch. They took the
plano, the guitar, ukuleles, the
furniture. I had to leave. It was
too heartbreaking. The living
room was cleaned out when !left.
They took the furnltur,e, the
pictures, everything." Foxx's
home is about 4 miles from the
Las Vegas Strip where he Is
appearing at the Haci!!nda Hotel·
Casino and Spencer said all of
Foxx' s Income has been going to
pay off his tax bill since August.
The IRS has liens on Foxx's
property totaling $755,166 for the
tax years 1983 through 1986.

MIXED CROWD: Kendall
Truitt, a gunner's mate In the
m lddle of the Navy's tnvestlga·
tlon of the deadly turret explo·
slon aboard the USS Iowa this
year, and his wife, Carol, will be
at the party Monday InN ew York
for Penthouse's pet of the year,
Stephaale Page of Houston.
Truitt gave Penthouse an exclu·
slve Interview about the disaster
and his close friend Clayton
Hartwig, who the Navy suspects
caused the explosion. The Pent·
house party also will feature
Paul Janszen, who blew the
whls tie on Pete Rose's gambling,
Dr. Rulb Weslbebner and palimony lawyer Marvin Mitchelson,
who will give Page free legal
advice for a year as one of her
prizes for winning the Penthouse
honor.

Larkins birthday
Mr. and Mrs . Delmar Charles
Larkins, Middleport, honored
their son, Jonathan Charles, with
a party In observance of his
fourth birthday on Nov. 19.
A "Batman" cake was baked ·
and decorated for the occasion by
his mother.
Attending were his sisters and
brother, Angela, Sarah, and
Brandon Larkins, Jennifer and
Joshua Ashley, Stephan and Sara
Stamper, and Melodie and Ra·
chel Forbes.
Others presenting gifts or
cards were his grandparents,
Randall and Margie Peck,
Wanda Wolf, Mr. and Mrs. John
Nichols, Mark and Megan NIchols, and Jean Corns.

•'

-

*'

5AlE

-

JONATHAN D. FOREMAN

Foreman birth

PRICES!

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D.
Foreman, Newark, are announc·
lng the birth their son, Jonathan
David, on Oct. 5 at Licking
Memorial Hospital.
The Infant weighed nine pound
and one dunce, and was 22 Inches
long.
There Is another child at borne,
Jenna Larke.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills,
Pomeroy, Maternal great grand·
mother Is Mrs. Hattie Fischer,
Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Foreman,
Mason, W.Va. Paternal great
grandparents are Mrs. Joy Foreman, Mason, W.Va., Mrs. Hester
Lee, Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Rolfe Lee, Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.

FlEE

SALE
CIIIIB Of SD &amp; OIM

IAWPIIIIS

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

Christmas bazaar

Come Safe With Us!!

30°/o

OFF STOREWIDE

(Except lt.ns Already Reduced More)

FRIDAY and SATURDAY
DECEMBER 1 and 2
•FREE GIFT WRAPPING•

DRYCLEANING PICKUP•PARCEL POST PICKUP

Prior Ilia llatglo• ....II onl Tr•"
Choilto- Cactw, F. . . . . . ....
loniool Holy ,,.. onl .... Show
Pllllll, liYt C!llll (!II Owhh- ,,...
For tht loYtol 0..'1 Gmt ........
Sprays. 4c_.., v..:
tw.tch fw -Christ- 0,. -•1

BUnONS and BOWS

Iii

992-5177
220 East Main, Pomeroy, Ohio

M"" _,

OWNII:

Open Daily 9 AM-5 P.M.
Sundtoy 1 P.M.-5 P.M.

s,......

446·f045

DEUVEIY

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
· Pol-ttlas 17 coltnl

JONATHAN LARKINS

s59 9

Cuo10m
Order ol

Vidci (Grate) F•r.U

HUIIAIDS GIEEJIHOUSE
"2·5776

Ololt

was the month
before Christmas
And aU tllroug/1 tilt store
Tltere fiDm savings tl1ld bargains
Like never before.

Start Your Chrltt••• Seaton Off With
The Pr11orlptlo1 Shopl!
You'll fl•• tra•••••u• •••l•t• for ••eryone on your
.
Olft ll•l•t Lllf?

.•

Community Choir

~ ._. COUI'OH

---~

Page.
The next meeting will be at the
Ohio University Inn on Dec. 9 at

. .yowoy
New!

I

SYIACUSE, OHIO

51Jf OFF ADULT TICKET

12TH

Revival

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed wirh snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the blessings we've shared
this past year. For us it means saying "thanks" .to you, ~ur many
friends, old and new, whose kind support ..-e'll always 'treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!

THE BERRY BASKET

GIIAiliiSS IIQI. .

... -

The Enterprise United Methodist Church will be having Its
annual Christmas bazaar on
Friday and Saturday In the
Elberfeld's Annex on Main Street
In Pomeroy. ·
I
There will be homemade can·
dies, gift Items, baked goods,
Christmas decorations, and
more. C:offee will be served.

People in the news.

THE BERRY BASKET'S
NEW HOUDAY HOURS
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
'Til Christmas.

QUEEN SLEEP SOFA
MIUIIIII

Chester Co1:1ncil meeting held

Wolf Pen
personals
Carmel Evans was a Tuesday
visitor of Iva Johnson and Ida
Murphy.
Evelyn Thoma and Dorothy
Reeves were recent visitors of
Mrs. Iva Johnson and Ida
Murphy.
Mamie Swauger was a Sunday
morning visitor of Iva Johnson.
Harley Johnson was a Sunday
evening visitor of Iva Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, were Sunday visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
They also visited Mrs. Kevin
Knapp, Michelle, Amy, and
Ashley.
·Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
Chester, and Mr. and Mrs. Bryan
Reeves, Kingsbury Road. were
recent visitors of Mrs. Dorothy
Reeves.

committee member, reported
that scholarships are nowavalla·
bleforthe 1990-91 year, and that
applicants should apply soon.
VIola Gettles, legislation com·
m!ttee chairman, reported that a
local Income tax for schools can
now be levied with voter
approval.
The society signed get well
cards for Harriet Wood and Olive

Beautiful, durable. handled bags and boxes with C()Oidinaling ~
and tags. All from Carlton Cards.

Attending Ottehein
Christopher Spencer, son of
Mr, and Mrs. Roger A. Spencer.
Tuppers Plains, Is attending
Otterbein College for the 1989-90
academic year.
He Is undecided about a major. .
Otterbein College Is an Independent, liberal arts Institution
affiliated with the Unltt&gt;d Metho·
dlst Church. It If located In
Westerville.

.•

Delta Kappa Gamma meets

,.•

Thursday. November 30. 1989

Pomerov Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Ohio

(

•Selected Giftwan
•nmex Watches
•Chri1tmas Candles
•Stiko Watches
•Toys
•Chri1tma1 Wrapping Paper

eChristmas Cards
•Amity Wallets &amp; Billfolds
•Si• Flower Hanging Baskets
•Candy
•Perfumes &amp; Colotnes

PLUS MUCH, MUCH, MOIEI!I

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
991·6669
271 llol til Stco.l

Middleport, OH.

�.

-

- ·-------

Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

Thul'lday. November 30, 1989

Pomeroy- Midclaport, Ohio

1111:

!Name. R.. T .. S .• Doacrlption. Acr•. Velu1tkm, end

Totel T.._, A-.,.....t•

Md Panohioo lintheto-):
BEDFORD TOWNSIIIP MEIGS LSD
01 ·00332.000 llartloy.
K.nn.th G., 131 , Lot Sect.
31 IE of Nw'Ao. 45 - •·
13.150. ta2.29.
01-00487.000 Morkham.
- - · R13, T3, 1111, N.
pan of NE \4 ox. 21A NW.
100
..,.....
111 ,970.
1422.27.
01 -00488.000 Morkhom,
William • Merk. &amp;.ct. 1617 on N.llne of &amp;.ct .. 33.80
ocroo, S4.470. 11119.08.
01 -00498.000Morkham.
Wllllom • Mork. SOC1. 17 on
S . line of Sec.. 76 acr•.
86.250. 1188.82.
01 -00500.000 Morkhom,
Williom • Shoron. Sect. 111.
R13, T3 , 35 ocroa, 111,130,
$218.16.
01 · 00601 .000
Mork·
ham. William &amp; Sharon. Lot

s.ct. T . R. Nih ofSW 'h E•.

•1

I

1&lt;-.

5A NE • 28 A SW NE.
55.10
scr•,
13.970.
1141 .27.
Martin,
01 -00605.000
John E. • Judith E.. Sec.
·13-111 on W Nne SW of Wholoy, .26 ..... 190, 13.21 .
01-00501.000
Mortin.
John E. • Judith E .. R13.
T3, Lot 7 T. 3, R. 13,
11 , 850, t85.04.
01·00607.000
Martin.
John E. • Judith E.. Lot 8. T.
3. R . 13, 1210, 17.46 .
01-00370.000
Miller.
llorbort B. • Monno J .. Lot
Sect. 5 N y, of E 40A SE 'A.
20 ocroa, 11,400. l49.81.
01-00371 .000 Miller,
Herbert B . • Monno J .. Lot
Sect. 13-5 S p11rt of NE "A
Ex. 3A, 23.68 ocroa,
S1.860. 168.72.
01 -01120.000
Miller.
Herbert I . &amp; Monna J ., Sect
5 W of SE corner of NE v,,
.38 .....
11.41 .
01 -001165 .000 Spumey,
Jam• A • Abbott. TerryJ .,
Sect 38 R 3 T 13, 8.00
tcroo, $3,330, 1118.50.
· 01 -00B63.000 White, Potricio, ETAL.. S. 23, Center
of NV• • strip 14 Rdo. wide,
81.14 ocroa,
121.250.
S743.88.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
03-00089.000 Bartolo,
Chari• H.
or .Joyce L. ,
R13W. T 2N, 55, 1.01Acre
out of 6.125 ecreo. 1.0·1
..... 114,740, 1497.11 .
03-00613.000 Bortloo,
Chorl• H. • / or Joyce L.
R13W. T2N. 55, 1.0 ocrt
out of 4.916 acr•. 1,00
..... S1 ,400. 147.21.
0 3·00080.000
Boos,
John L., R13 T2 56, Soot II
(840) W of NW 'A , 40.00
ocreo. $2.800. $94.44.
03.00950.000
Porker,
Roy, c / o Albert Parker,
520 , W Centnl Part of Frac.
19 No LMd Uoooodl.
n.s8o. 1467.43.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
04-00080.002 Jocko,
Robin Eugene • Donno Y ..
R13 T2 512. Mid. on W V.
1 .736 acres out of 124. 10
acr•.. 1.735 acre. $7,480,
$279.49 .
04-00085 .000
Morrlo.
Eloioo, Slot. 12-16!282) S
Port of 9Acro Porcol, .34
..... $70, 12.118.
04-00016 .000
Morris,
Eloiu, 516 E part offrac. 4 ,
8.66
ocreo.
14,590,
$170.23.
- COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
Fk&gt;yd Vincent . , or Mary A .,
ALEXANDER LSD
011·006211.000
Roy , Lot Sec. -18 W cor of SE 'lA,
Jam• T. a Marilyn, Sect. 10 ...... 1700. 123.18 .
Howk,
10-00353.000
20-21 , Fr. 31 S port of W 'h
5x40', 8. 50 ocr•. 1460, Ftoyd Vincent S./ or Mary A .•
S 17.lotWPnofNEPrt.E
S18 .87.
88.00
05-001127.000 Ray, Jom• Prt of NW '!.,
T. A Morilyl\ 520, f1' 25 W ...... 11,,520, S447.89.
Howk,
10-00384.000
.,.... 189.00 ..... 118.890.
Floyd Vincent • / or Mary A·..
$7117.05.
S 17. Lot of N Prt near mid
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
tee . 17,
71.55
acres,
EASTERN LSD
08·00083.000 Homrick. 17.550, 1250.43.
10·00366.000
Howk,
Wondo L. llo Gionn C., 51122. 8 part Ex. FitchieWifeys, Floyd Vincent It/ or MeryA ..
11.31 ocrto. $800. $20.01 . 5 13-111, Lot NE Cor, 58.00
08· 000114.000 Hemrick, ...... 14,080, 1134.48.
10-00403.ooo Hvooil.
Wanda L. and Glenn C.
5 .11-22, SE corner above Dave F. &amp;I or Diena L.,
OoWitu Run Ex. 1A. 6 .86 R12W, T4N, $18. Froc. SW
cor, 6 .28 acrn, $2,070.
ocr•. 1350, 111 .88 .
08-00085.000 Homricll, 168.57.
10-00380.000 Miller,
Won do l . • Glenn C .. S 11 22. E. of LongBottom• Ho- Herbert B. • / or Monna J ., S
zel p_, of 8A, .85 acre, 140, 35, lot und. 1/ 3 of 34.02A
SW of NW 1/•, 11 .34 acr11,
$1 .34 .
$790. 428.17.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
10-00381.000 Mill•. HerS.OUTHERN LSD .
07-00005.000
Acldna. bert 8 . • ror Monno J .. S 35.
Eu_. 0 . A Joonl\ 525, S Lot Und. 2/ 3 of34.02A. SW
Plrt of60A e·sideof80AN 'I:r ofNW'A. 22.118ocra .,,590.
•
of SW 'A . . 62 ocro. 1180, t52.89.
$8.01 .
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
07-00058 .000
Bentz,
MEIGS LSD
Thorl.;f V. &amp; I or Donna,
11 -00705.000 COttom,
519 . SW Prt. E of Rd of31A George A .. S.14· 23. Lot SE
SE Cor. Ex. 1.20A E aide, Cor S or Rd. 1 A of 15.04A,
.80 ocro, 1830, 127.88 .
1.00 ocro, 1330, 112.14.
07-00148.000 Cr.-.-...
11-00218.000 Doy, For·
Donoid L • / or Stwon K.. rtl w . • t or Potrlcio K .. R14.
531 . 8.25ocrtoSE 'A EofRd. T6 Frtct. 12 E lido Pullllc
Ex. 7.25 oc:rto. 8.25 oc:ra Rd . NW cor .. 1.2173. '440.
tli80, 119.34.
118.11!.
07-00149.000 c ....- .
Grohom,
11-00366.000
Donllld L . / or S......, K.. l.inlo Etol. c/ o Mro. Juio WI531 . 2.7BA out of SE colde of N-. 68. NE '!. of Spir•
BA. 2 .7 5 - 1190, 111.32. 2.26A.. 1.00, f250, 153.31,
07-00150.000 c r - - .
11-004163.000 Hoy- BoDonold L . / or Sharon K., .. L , S. 25, .NE Pt48' fnn BE
531 , 2.56 A out of 7.25A. Cor. 65ATr.oNECor., 2.00
2.58-- 16.310. t210.29. oc:rw. 11.930, 170.92.
07-00151 .000 Cron-•.
11-00505.000 Hyooll, NolDonoid L A / or Sh•on K., ie c/ o - . Copolond, Lot
531 , SE pi of NE '-"of SE 'A Soc. ·8 on N Line of NE 'A h .
Ex. 2.75A .. 5.25--. 1370. Churt:ll Lot Ex. 3. 7liA. .111
112.33.
12.21 .
LETAIIT TOWNSHIP
Kn-.
11 ·001t5.000
Irion At or Donne Morio,
SOUTHERN LID
08·00318.000 Lone., lr· Lot
HU1Chlnoon Bub91'x118' . f11,110,
win R. ii. / MMaryF .. River dlv .
lend- houeolot. '210. 1427.98.
17.10.
•
11 -01314.000 Moynord
08-00400.000 Lince, Ir- Cool Compony, Tho, 1.01
win R. II.;., Mory F.. Lot Sect. •7 Cool Under 3.25A
15 Ex P_.. Hid a.rtha In Sec. •7, 3.28 ..,.., 1110,
PlciiiM
Wolfe.
1210. 127.73.
11-00882.000 Priclltt. FNd
17.10.
08-00402.000 Louder· M. • /or . . bao,II,IPartol
milt. Lony •/or _Horriet, NE 1A of E of Rd. 3.07 ..--.
1112 T2. Sl. !MOl lock to 138,4210, 11,301 .10.

uo.

I

ciiH end Young' a Add ...&amp;.OO
..... 13,770. t124.30.
08-00403.000
Louder·
milt. Lorry i./ or Horriet. lot
17YoungoAdd. S V.. t110.
11.07.
08·00154.000
Lowlo.
Robert l . A/ or Moi'YII L.. S
31, 1212) Mlnwolo. 24.23
- - 1420, 114.18.
08-00431.000 Monuol,
Oonold W. • / or Joyce E..
811, 1100-2221 Wend Prt of
42.85 ocr• on N Une, 1.50
..... t8.830. t224.411.
08-00324.000-. Donold E. 111..- Yldoio J., S. ond
82.28A E ond Ex. 84A N Pt..
1.034
113.430.
1444.84.
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LIID
09-00197.000
Broob.
Pout E., S 11 -35, E ptEx. 2A
S • 6 .89A Ea 1.5011A Ex
3.856A.
50.1108 ocroa,
11,480, 1280.25 .
08-01008.004
Bullh,
Stwon F .. R11 T3 530,
2.7438A out of 18.0188A
Pt N\4 of SE 'A , 2. 7431
1190, 11.28.
09·00824.000
Diem.
Williorn 11 . • / or Beth A ..
819-24, Prt of 24.88A
Hou• Lot W Prt. 8.00.
Ill, 720, 1216.93 .
09-ootOO.OOO Heyman.
Virginia L.• S 19, 9 A out of
16A PART 8.6A. 8.6 ocreo.
117,030, 11148.44.
08·0111!2.001
Huok.
Jam• R. • / or Maxine.
R11 , T4, SB • .343A out of
9.58A, .343 ocroa, 170,
12.31 .
Hulk.
09·001189.000
J•m• A. &amp; / or MIXIne P.,
58, .42A out of . BBA W ond,
.42 ocro. 16.900. 1221 .70.
09-00818.000
Lince.
Michllli W. Sr • t or Dorothy
A ., Slot. 11 - 36 N PrtofSE
Vt,
60 ICrH,
7,240,
$239 .27.
09-00882 .000
Pooler,
Michllli E. • / orLoloO .. SE
Prt of 28\4 S E Prt of S \4 Ex.
1'h A .. 5 ,80 ocr•. 1790.
126.10.
09· 00B83.000
Pooler,
Michllli E. • / or Lois G ..
Soct. 11 -34 NW cor. 6.50
acrea. $790. t26.10.
09·00884.000
Pooler,
Mlchllli E. • t or Loia G..
Slot. 11 -39SWCorSofRd
Ex. 1.26A,
.711 acre,
16.200. 1187.06. .
.
09-01061 .000 Roiqutl,
Robert. Sect. 3 • 9 - 10 NPT
of 25.25A SW Port 1BOA
Lot 1181 . 12.12 ICrH,
1840, 121 .15.
08-01012.000 Roiquol,
Robert, Sect: 11 • 3· 9 - 1 0
Mid of S Part 180 A. Lot
1161 ,
22.00,
11.110,
13B.36.
08-00004.000 RhodiO,
Charles E. • / or Lindo l ..
SW Cor. 70A Lot •119,
2 .00
ocr•.
$10,430,
1215.78.
09·00026.000
Smhh.
Herold E. Jr.. S 11-39, Mid
on .w line Bet. Ad ..96acre.
1200. 16.82.
09·01346.000
Swoln.
Morilyn J .. S 11 . SW cor of
120A SE of N'h Ex Lot
70'a500'. 5.65
• .,...
113, 900. 1450.63 .
09·01437.000
- · ..
Willi.m F.&amp; / orDeborah M.
, S30. NE port of SV. of N\4
Ex. Cool. 3.68
.......
11,610, 163.19.
09·01348.001
Young,
John Wilton &amp; / or Wilm1 F.,
R11, T4, S23 • .83BA out of
1.961A, .838,
.,,700,
S254.48.
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
10·00816.000
Howk,
Floyd V . • MoryA ., Royalty
Int. C1rl E. Smith Petro·
ltum, Inc.. Floyd llowk,
1920. 131 .54 .
10-00995.000
Howk.
Floyd V. or MoryA .. Royolty
Interest Carl E. Smith Petro·
leum Inc .• $140. 14.81.
10-00352.000
Howk.

..... •eo.
•a

t

I

11 -00878.000
Priddy.
loyd M . • / or P,iddy Fred
M.. Sl. Lot NE of IE 14 h .

Voln Cool Ex. I. lOA. 441.81
....... 113.180. t483.13.
13~ 00117. 000 s.,mour. ·
Ru- J . • / or Koren E.,
S8. On I Uno Bot Cr • IIR
Ex. #4 Vein Cool. 1.00 ocro,
1210, 17.48.
13· 00187.000
SmoH·
Buford W.yno. Sect
15-1 1 SW Cor Ex. #4 Voin
Cool Ex. 1. lOA; 18.40
..... 11,290. 148.• 1.
13-00868.000
Smell·
wood. Buford Wayne, 510,
NW Cor of E 212A Ex. #4
Vein Cool. 14.00 ecroo,
1980, 134oBB .
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
14-01208.000 ...
Trine Golo c/ o Trlno Hen·
non, 521. !11401 Mid W \4 of
SE W N of Avo. Brlctgo. 1.81!
..... 11.700. 1110.50.
14-00322.000
Eblin.
Claude Doualoa Etoi. 5211.
Out of 2. 2'1A, .44 ocro,
13,140, 1111 .74.
14-00323.000
Eblin.
Clule Doujila Ell!l. 828,
!6401 Out of 18.&amp;7A N of
·Union Avo. 100'x89', .23
ocre. t1.410, 150.17.
14-00324.000
Eblin,
Cloudo Dou81• E10t, 528,
!8401 On N UnoofE Y, • .72
..... 150, .1.76.
14·0032&amp;.000
Eblin,
Cloudo Dougla E101, 526,
!5401 On N Llno of E\4 of SE
v. E.:. coel, 4 .90 acres,
1340, 112.10.
14· 00328.000
Eblin.
Cloudo Dougloo Etal. $28.
!6401 SE 'A of NE 1A Ex.
11V.A NW, 30.50 acroo.
$2.140. $78.17.
14-00327.000
Eblin,

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
MEI08 LID
17·00BB7.001 Althou01,
Mervin • / or lonnie. 1114,
T7, 131. On N Uno of Sect.
3.08A, out of 13.0IA, 3.09
..... 18,830, •388.08 .
17-00184.000 Dlhon. Cl•
lio. Lot !3142'1&gt;' Side. t580.
1210.27.
17-00118.000 Dlhon. a.
lio. Lot 141. 12.820. 180.32,
17· 00201 .000 Doaldrio,
Donokl R. • / or Kothorino,
Lt St -18 -21 of Sec 15· 21
80.8A In St · 18 -21 Ex.
58.22. 2.68 - - 112,120,
12.373.18.
17·00257.000
Elllon.
Jtffr., lynn • / or Chari
Lynn, Lt St14·38 EofRdPt
of 120.55A, 1 .1182A of
40.12A Ex. 10. 91A, 18.10
ocr•. 13,170. 11111.87.
17-00358.000 Honnoh.
Mobel. 824, NE Cor NW of
SW '!. of NE 'A, 68.183
ocroo. 12.790, 1102.84.
17-00358.000 Honnoh,
Mobel, S24, 16401 NE Cor.
2 .48 - - . 19,1M10, 1387.18.
17-0948.000 Holt. Horbort
H. Etol, T7, Lot Sect -25 i840l
Und \4 lm SE Pt of 124.08A.
10.00 ..... 1700. 128.50.
17-00950.000 Holt. Herbat H. Etti, R14, T7, 521, Lot
Sec 26 !8401 Und \41nt In Cool
lll•o-. 71.00--.1820,
123.48.
17-00416.000 Hyott. Troy
- l or Morilyl\ R14. T7, 538.
N Mid NY, Out of. 40A,
16.305 .......
116,910,
11108.81 .
17-00472.000 Kennedy,
Perry E., lot Soot -14-15 NE
Port of 37.50A, 5.50 ocroo,
1770; 128.39.
17-00473.000 Kennedy.
Perry E.• Lot Sect ~ 14-15
(2821 NE Port, .50 ocro,
15.230. 1187.86.
17-00126.000 McKinnav.
John Wor Shaly, Lot Sect ·
14 No• Mid w of Rd.. .26
..... 1480. 116.96.
17-00127.000 McKinnay,
John • / or Shaly, 57, LotS 'h
N Prt of Mid 'E 'A, .26 _._
1480, $18.96.

17-00128.000 Me~.
John
llhally. Lot Mid of
Free 7·W of Rd., .14 -o.

1270.......

SCMbor·
Anno
E.. 11 l!x. Trl. W End,
15,1170. 1205.74.
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LID
20-00087.000 Coole. Emmo. Lot 2 I Yo Ex. Coot.
• 1,380, 13711.30.
20·00129.000 CouVon S. •/orPoulaJ., Lot 12
Crook's ht Add.. 11,000,
131.20.
2o-oo:t7a.ooo eou-·
Victor, II Crook'o tot Add ..
$1,000. t311.23.
20-00378.000 Counto.
Victor, 4 c . - 11t Add ..
I 1 .000. 138.23.
20'Q0377.000
CouVIctor, I Crook' o ht Add.,
11.110. 143.13.
_
20-00242.001 Gollla lilly
R. •/orJtdthM .. Lot878,
11,140, 12114.33.
20-00243.000 Gollla lilly
R. Ill or Judith M., IAnllna in
of 4-5-11-7-8, UBO,
18.53.
• 20-003114.000
l(eopp,
Atho OiM •/or Cello P..
298 711' OHW Enti1A Run·
nlng N • B. .229 ecre.
15,820, 1204.88.
And notloo lo hereby given
that tiMo whole of ouch - ·
eral tr1ct1. lots or par11 of
toto. will be certified for fo·
redoaure by the County Au ~
ditor puraUint to lew, dr
forl-d to tho Stoto. unloao

"'· u-co F. • / or

s

a

se.

e...

•1

•1

"A classified adve"amllt'lt placed'" Tf'l e Daily Sen11n•t (u
c-stt - el•sifilld displav. Busin•s Card and legal noticel )
will alto app,..r in the PI Pl••ant Register and the Gall!.
polit Daily Tribune. re.ch.ng ovoer 18,000 homes

•

,.

-

.

o-go

Red Wings lose again, 5-3

.r:

...

.

.·
.·

•
'

00 68

1

..

8.1

15 points," said Nets Coach Bill

At Montreal, Bobby Smith

I

score of the season.

•

·-

11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
2 :00P .M . MONDAY
2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
2 .00 PM WEDNE,SOAY
2 :00P .M . THURSDAY
- 2:00PM FRIDAY

FRIDAY PAPER

SALES &amp; SERVICE

W. C•rry fishing SuppH•

Your Phone

.!!!d~C:~blle Bille Here
IUSINISS PHONE
16141 H2-U50
IES•INa PHONE
1614) 9'12:77!

RATE
Days

Words

,.

15

3

,5
15
15
15

6

Rate
$4.00
86 .00
$9 .00
$13.00

Ovtr 15 Words
.
.20
.30
.42
.60
$1 . 30 / dav
.05 / dav

Rates are lor conseoot!'lle runs . broken upd-.yswill be ch•ged
n,., as sep•rate ads

Merchandise
1 - Card of Thltlks

51 - Household

2- tn Memor v
3- Annoucemen ts:

52 !5354 65 -

4 - GtVeawav
5 -- Happy Ads

6 - LoSt and Fo und
7 - Vard Sat e lpa1d in advance)
B- Publ•c Sal e &amp; Auct •o n
9 - Winted to Quv

56 -

575859 -

Employment
Serv1ces

Classified

pa![e -~ corer thl'

exchallf;!&lt;'-~ ...

following telephone
Gallia Cou"'V
AteaCode61•

Meigs C ount y

Mason CO . WV

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

992 - Middlep on
Pomeroy
317- Ch.ahire
388 - VInton
985-ChetUir
246-Alo Or.-nde · 843 - Portllnd
2se - Ouyen Oist. 2"7 - let•rt F•lls
643 - Ar•bi a Dil1
949 - Ricine
379 - Walnut
742 - Rutland

44G - Galhpoll t

675 458 57&amp; 773 -

Pr Pleasant
l eon
Apple Gf ove
Mason
882 - N - H•ven
895 - Letart
937 -- Buffalo

667 - C oolvill e

Oet Results Fast

Sponing Qoods
Antiques
M isc. Merchandise
Buildtng S upphM
Pets tor S1lf!
Musical Instruments
Fruns &amp; Vege( a bl•
For Sale or "Trade

&amp; Livestock

1 1 - Help Wanted'

12 - Sttualion Wanted
1 3 - ln • urance

141 S16 17 18-

Good~

Farm Supplies
61 -- Farm Equtpmei'lt
62 - Wanted 10 SUy
63 - Uvestock
64 - Hay S: Oraon
65 - Seed &amp; f e rtlli.ter

IJusrneu T"min g
Schools &amp; lnstruct•on
Rad1o . "TV &amp; CS Repa~r
Miscellaneou s
W•nted To Oo

Financial

Tr3nsportalion

2 1 - BustnMI!;'OpportunitV
22 - Monev to loan
23 -~ Pr o feas•onal S•rv• ces

71 - Autos for Sale
72 - Truclu tor Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WD ' 5
74 - M otor cycles
75 - Boats &amp; Motors for Sale

Real Estate

78 - Auto Pans &amp; Ac c 111sortlll

31 - Momes for S ale
32 - Mobil eHomes for Sale
33 - F•rms to r Sal e

77 -- Auto Repair
'
78 - C•mp1ng Equtpment
79 - Campers &amp; Motor Ho mf's

34 - B u t~n ess B ulldmgs

35 - lots &amp; Acreage

.
36 - Real Estat e Wilnted

l;iijdf!IAI

Services

41 - Hou el'!s for Ren t
42 - Moblle Homes tor Ren t
43 - Farms tor Ren t
44 - Apartm e nt ror Rent
45 - Fumlshed Rooms

81 -· Horne Improvements
132 - P iumb•ng &amp; He~ing

41!1 - Space f or Rent

84 - Eiectrical &amp; Refrigerat ion

2

85 - Geruw•l Hauling
86 - Mobil e Home Repa ir
87 - Upholstery

83- f xc tvlting

_ ..... -

47 - WentPd 10 ~ e n t
8 ~ Equ1pmen1 fo r Rent
9 .• For Le ase

3 Announcements
2

SMAU

ln Memoriam

BUSINESS FOR SALE

WANT ADS

IN LOVING

PfO(

Bird has off-night, but Celtics
manages to trip Nets, 118-95

.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

SUNDAY PAPER

'

.
"

Happy Ads
V ard Sales

MONDAY PAPER

MEMORY OF
P. K. FOLLROD
1 YEAR AGO

A111 PUfCil

TODAY,
NOV. 30.
Sadly Missed By

I

Children, Don,
JoEIIen, K'ay,
Philip &amp; Jack

992-2156

or Res. 949-2860

DEER
CUT AND
WRAPPED

16&amp; North S.C....t
MitWioport, Oltio 45760

THOMAS, TYLER SIMMONS

G1liia or M11 0n counl iBII must be pf e·
Plld.
•Aec.We S.50 discount for •ds paid in ad\llnce
"Free ads - Giveaway and Found ads under 15 words lll!fill be
run 3 d-ra at nil ch•ge.
"Pric:e of ad for all e~pit411etters •S doubl e pr ice of ad cost ·
"7 point line type only u~ed .
·
"Senuntl is not responsibl e tor err on after f.,st d.-;- (C heek
for errors. first d~ ad runs in paper) C1ll before 2 :00p m
d~ aftir publtclt 1on 10 meke corre ction.
•Ads thlt mu1t bt paid in adv1nc11 are

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPEFI

PH. 949-2801

PI.-lNG &amp; HEAnNG
Now "-lioto

•Ads outside Mtigs.

...'
...
...

"Free Estlmatot"

DOUBLE I
TACK SHOP

MY·T·SHOP
CUSTOM SCHill
PIINnNG

HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
CHEml, OHIO

ALIANY I OHIO
691-6500
Wootern Boots. Hato,
Shine, Beln For
Men, Ladieo &amp;
Children .

985-4300

SADDlES I
HOISE EQUIPIIEIIIT

CHRISTMAS
TREES

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS

SCOTCH PINE

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

11-17-Hn

Monthly

COPY DEADliNE -

.... ·-·ltollt
NO SUNDAY CAllS

10

Card of Thtnki.
In Memoriam

BISSELL
SIDING CO •

DIIIKIIn.
For Good Home
Cookln' Come ~. Uo!
HOURI: I AM -8 PM DoU.,
CLOIEO lUNDAY

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

Using tht Classifieds
Is as Easy as . ..

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Is stilt ownH allll
aperattd by Millie

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace.

1------,-=-=-=--

...

MilliE'S
IESTAURAII1'

----llllill-Classified

•1

11

usiness .Services

A birthday celebration for
flve-year old twins, Thomas a nd
Tyler Simmons, was held recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel McDonald, Rutland.
Attending were the twins par·
ents, Mr. and Mrs. 'fl¥Jmas
Simmons, and sister, Trlsia;
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Sanders; Jonathan
Sanders, Deleah Sanders , maternal great grandmothers, Lavina
Brannon and Effie Sanders;
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Simmons; Melanie
Dudding and Kathy Jeffers, John
and Amanda Jeffers, Mindy,
Angle, and Danny Jr. McDonald,
paternal great gra·ndfather,
Theodore Cremeans ; and Lee
Morris.
Sending gifts were Edna Lott,
Eileen and Lynne Kirkbrid e,
Mike and Debbie Holbrook and
son, Ben, and Ida Rock .

1140. f34.10.
11·00088.000

-t42.27.
· 11.40 - -· f1 , 180,
17·00771.000 Penon-. Ar·
noltlll/ .. ......,, Lot ..... .
11 -009110.000 Priddy.
15 !212) sw Cor. 41 / 2A Lot
loyd M. A / or Priddy, Fred
M. Sl, NE of SE '4 Ex, cool,
Mid. on Uno w.. .2li ocra 170.
Ex. 2.118A Ex. 11.40A,
12.58.
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
1.40 - · 1110, 19.10.
P,idcly,
11 -008.2.002
SOUTHERN LSD
Loyd M . • / or Priddy, fred
1e-oo1n.oo1
Alit•.
M . R14W, Tl, 51. NW
Jom• K. • t or Edno M.,
R12, 1'2, 15, W Yo of 1 lOA
cor,...., 1 . 3BA out
of
3.881A. 1.38ocro, 11,450,
Lot 2.00A out of 110.84A,
183.30.
2.00 ...... 1420, 113.811.
11-00983.000
P,iddy
18.00041 .000
Arnold,
Gerald, Lot 84. 11 ,210,
'\.oyd M. A / or Priddy FNCI
138.87.
M .. Lot Sect. -2 Mid on W
line Ex. coal, 33.715 ~.
18-00182.000
Cerna·
hon, Jomoo W.
Noncy,
117. 570. 11145.50.
S11. N \4 ofW'IJ of Nw 'A
11-00613.00 Romine DolEx. 1.71A .. 18,00 .., .,
bert Houu•d c/o Tam flo.
12.280. 139.13.
min a Lot Sea. ·21 neor CorN
18-ootn.ooo
Corn•·
of Rd. 1.00 ...._ 11110.
han, Jam• W. &amp;I or Nencv
11.12.
E.
w y,
coot e..
11 -01249.000 s-noon.
18.111A 1 Ex . 2.662A Ex.
Rlchord E. Sr. - /orDorloJ .
2.00A,
58.84
ICrll,
• lot W tide of 40A. 'I• Ex.
tl.1110. 1123.52.
4 .76A NE Ex. 28 . 73A. 1 .27
18-0047B.OOO
Greely,
..... f4.810. $184.83.
Dolmor L.
or Zolma E.,
11-00050.000 Thom•.
R12, T2, 53, E End 1.873A,
Anne Illite. s a ax 1720
of 8.13A, 1 .B73 ocroo,
Humington WV !Poland). SE
11 ,880. 1&amp;2.43.
'A EX 52\4A N EX. 10A,
10.00 ......
f10,400,
18-00722.000 Jon-. Wit1346.30.
· - M., S25, SE Comer of
11·00128.000 Tobin, Ar.... 26.
6.844
.....
thur A. I./ or Mary L., R14,
112,730. 12,221 .38.
T5, 512 , EX .735A •. 335,
Louder18-00773.000
S1,300. $47.78.
milt. Max E. • / or Terry L. ,
11 -00128.001 Tobin, ArLot 90 1.34A 138 Heck
thur A. &amp; / or MeryL .• R.14,
Surv., 16,900, 11 ,724,82 .
T.5, 5 .12 •. 736A out of
1B-00782.000 Loifhoit,
the Tea•,
A....lfft.nta.
1.09A.. .738.
S1,380,
Wilbur H. • / or Julio, R12 ,
ondPonohlooorepokl.
150.72.
T2, Soc. 1OOA Lot 280 E
Wm. R. Wlcldlno,
11 -01235.000 Williorna,
Side ST RT #124, 7.08
Auditor of
Robert 0. &amp; t or Patricia. S.
ICrot, 16,370, 1174.34.
Moiga County, Ohio
I . Out of 77.7SA E End of Claude Dougla1 Etal. 828,
18-00815.000
McKin111111. 30, 2tc
NE Cor.,
20.00 acres. !6401 Noor Mid of N'h of SE
ney, Jell
or Jonniter.
$1,6110. S81 .01·.
S14 , Froc. 7N Pt of Mid.
'!.. 1 . 4~ocro, 110Q. $3.69.
11·01236.000 Williemo.
100A Ex. Coal, 2.00 acres,
14-00528.000
Hoggy,
Robert D. I. / or Patricie. ST Wolter J .. 526, !840) Pt of
f1.480, 1389.23.
14-&amp;Midof NW'4 EX30AE 12. 37A Neor Mid of 'h N.
18-00816.000
McKin- ~::1129E-r,,•~o~•rtaoof"';',:.
Prt Ex. 1.30A Ex. 2.016A. 3.63 ....... 11120. $22.07.
ney. Jefff &amp;./or Jennifer, Front N. • eo·.
160.
30.661
ocro.
S2,510.
R12. T3, 514, .50 aero, 113.79.
14· 01848.00 Leo, CiaS92.21 .
170, 113.21 .
19,00308.000 Patrol; Jo·
ronco • Rose Ellen. SB.
11 -01237.000 Williams, !6401
18-01142.000
Rowo, seph c/o Edwin Cozert, lot
W y, of Lot #4 Radford
· Robert D. • / or Patricio E.. Surv. Ex. .7&amp;A, .1 0 acre,
Jerry F. &amp; / or Vol- Goll. 1, t890, 126.03.
ST 14-8 Mid of NW V. Ex. $40. 11.41.
R12W, T3N, 519, NE Cor of
19-00309.000 httol, JolOA E Prt .541A, of
tho NW'A.1.06A of32.70A, oeph c/o Edwin Court. 2.
14-01147.000
Leo.
Clo·
2.018A .. . 641 ocro, 890,
r~ce.RonEn~.SS,W~~--------------~~-----------------L------------------L-----------------13.30
of Lot #4 Redford Surv. ,
11-0123B.OOO wnnomo, .266 ..... 190. f3.21.
Robert 0 . 6 / or Petrida E.•
14-00893.000 l.oe. Jom•
56, Out of 32.15A NE End, Henry
Eloi c/ o .Henry Code,
22.15
ocr•.
$1,810. 533, !8401 SW of N 100A,
188.51 .
11-01239.000 W~liems. .50-· 1180, 18.41.
14-00894.000 Loe. Jom•
Robert D. &amp;I or Patricia E.. Henry
Eloi c/ o Henry Code,
Sect. 14-6 Mid • NE SOC1 533, !140) Mid. N. Uno E11.
Ex 1.85A. 121 .85 ocrto. 18A Cool.
20.00
oaa
117,620, 1647.46.
13,300, 1116.47.
RUTLAND VILLAGE
14·00186.001 Ohlinger,
MEIGS LSD
Joflray,
R13W, T2N, $24.
12-00111 .000
Franco,
Walter G. c/ o Kevin Hud- 1. 7146 Aero Out of 50A1.n48 ocro. 8970,
lon, Lot 19 Rathburn Add. croa,
f34.50.
.
_ :
19, '8,580. '268.57.
14-01170.000
Price,
Nor·
12-00413.000 Priclcly, .....
biro, S8, !140) Port of 61A mon l. Jr.. 58, 01 N Prt of
1.44 Acra f7;930,
Lot. .10 oaa
f5.880. 4.2BA..
1282.22.
8244.02.
14-01394.000 Sprou•.
Rutland
12-00447.000
Fuel Compony, Public Utllty Chari• - /or Ernestine. R.
13. T.2, S.8,!840)Prtof7A
Poroonol. f10.408.42 tlleto.
12-00451 .000 Rutlond NE Pn of S of Pom. Choo.,
Fuel Company, Public Utlity .50 ..... 1140, 128.37.
14-01395.000 Sprou•.
Par10n1l, 131.270 voluoChart• Ill or Ern.tine. SB,
tlon.
•
12-00013.000 Thom•. !8401 Pnof4.25 A. Mid E of
Anno Bolio, S. 8, (8401 W NE v... 1.00 acre, *4.360.
Pin of SE V., 8.99 1crea, $922.30.
14-01406.000 Stophan1630, 125.39.
oon,
Momlo M .. R13, T2.
12-00343.000 Tillil. Don.., R. • / or Soundro K.. S. 8, S28, !8401 Noor Mid W Y, of
!140)50'x8' \4 Rdo E of Rd EK SE 'A N of Rd., .3115 ICTO,
11,010. 135.96.
. .
'
13A. .3439 - · · 17,800,
14-01407.000 Stephan'1.805.40.
oon, Mamie M .. R13. T2,
SALEM TOWNSHIP
528.
(8401 Noor Mid W 'IJ of
MEIGS LSD
SE 'A N of Rd., .088 aero,
13-00044.000 Bua. John 140, f1 .41 .
L. Lot B. 1380. 113.55.
14-01408.000 Stephan·
13-00087.000 Bolen. Jock aon, Mamie M ., 828. 1640)
A. A / or Hoi., K.. 930, N Part E Prt of 7.94A Mid W Uno W
ofSW'A Ex7.9A .. 50.6oc:r.._ 'h . . 32 ••••• $110,$3.93.
.S.890. t1,103.49.
first quarter in Los Angeles Wednesday. LA lost,
ALL TIED UP- Clippers Ron Harper (L) and
14-01409.000 Stephan·
13-00087.000
Cardillo, 10n. Momie M .. S26, !11401
117-103. (UPI)
Charlet! Smith (R) and Buck Jay Humphries (C)
Amhony E.. S 18, 1A of NE W Prt Near Mid W 'At of SE Va
ge&amp; all tied up trying to get a hold of the ball In the
Prt of 12A Noer Mid of Soct N al Rd., .38 acre. 1130,
18. 1.00 - ·
S4,110, s4.&amp;4.
19110.78.
14·01410.000 Stephan13-00431 .000 Conlay, """· Momla M .. 526, !8401
Dconoal Kelley Etal, 538, SE SW Prt of 2A Nsor Mid W 'IJ
1A EX. Mini. EX . 114 Vein
of SE. .79 ocro, 12.270,
c • 36.26 ocr•. 19.120. $21.10.
1345.89.
14·01538.000 Wornor.
13-00432.000 Conley, Richerd A. •/or Shoron K..
Donoal Kelley E101. 538, N ST 36 16401 E of Crtok S Pt
Pt S'h EX. Mina. Ex. #4 Vein of N 120A Ex. 25A E.17 .60
By JEFF SHAIN
Fitch, who must wonder If his
Milwaukee pounded the LA
cool. 16.00 ocr•, 11,050, ...... 11,230, 143.74.
137.38.
players have the ability to hit the ClipPf!rs 117-103 and New York
UPI Sports Writer
MIDQLEPORT VILLAGE
13·00433.000
Conley.
·
'MEIGS LSD
Even on an off-night, Larry floor when they get out of bed In
routed Golden State 129-111.
Donoot Kollev, E101, 531, N E
16-00016.000 Alborcon
Bird
can
still
carry
the
Boston
the
morning.
Slxers 114, Cavalters 84
'A &amp; N.Pt of SYt Ex . lt4 Vein Inc .. E Port of lot 1891 #69
·Celtics.
Kevin
McHale
added
23
points
At Philadelphia, Hersey Haw·
Cool, 13.00 ocr•. 11 ,420, Ex. 36.6 x 60, 110,910,
160.63.
1444.05.
Bird scored 29 points Wednes- for Boston, Including nine In a
klns scored a season-high 28
13-00434.000
Conley,
15-01587.000
Bloile,
day night, including 131n the first 21-7 second-quarter burst that points, hitting 13 or 14 shots from ·. '
Donotl Kelley, E101, 538, w Joyce. lot 113 Lower POquarter, helping Boston hand gave the Celtlcs the lead for good.
the field and Philadelphia posted
Pt of SE '!. EX. Mina. Ex. #4 meroy, 1880. S235.57.
New Jersey Us ninth straight loss New Jersey went 5: 40 without a
Its fourth straight win. Cleveland
Vein coal,
49.00 ICrll. ' 15-015116.000
Bloilo•.
18.050, $215.27.
with a 118-95 vlclory over the field goal during the run.
got a season-high 20 points !rom
Joyce A ., Lot 154 Lower Po13·00196.000 Gordner. meroy 9'1&gt;' E Sido, $160.
Nets .
Robert Parish finished wlth 17 Winston Bennett.
Marvin K. &amp; / or Berden• M .. $42.82.
Bird hit 12 of 20 shots on the points and ·Jim Paxson and Ed
'rlmherwolves 101, Real 100
S. 31 , BA out of56 .86A. S
15-01270.000 Sleyton,
night,
Including
all
3
three-point
Pinckney
added
10
each
as
the
At
Miami, Tony Campbell
Cor o1 NE V4 , 8.00 acr... Alma, lot 90 P Joneo 3rd
·'
f4,170, 1784.8B.
attempts. That's excellent by Celtlcs shot 59 percent and broke . scored 31 points and Tyron
Add., 12.870, 1118.B2.
13-00210.001 Goble, lit15·01272.000
Smith.
NBA standards, bu I subpar for a six-game road losing streak.
Corbin added 24 to help Mlnnetv R. A/ orJudithM .. R15W, Donie l .. Lot 35 Horton •
·'
the
standards
Bird
Is
jUdged
by.
Chris
Morris
led
the
Nets
with
.
sola
snap a seven-game losing
T7N 838, 7.54A. OU1 of Booworth Add.,
~,
13.730,
"My timing's been off," said 18 points. New Jersey's loss, streak with Its first. road win. ,.
11 .92A,
7.84
..... 1147.80.
Bird, who missed all but the first combined wlth Minnesota.' s vic- Miami dropped Its fifth straight
14. 550. 1181.91 .
POMEROY VILLAGE
13-00417.000 Love. Ko·
MEIGS LSD
month or last season after tory over Miami, dropped the despite 28 points by Billy
ron llono, 86, SE of Lot 16
16-00087.000 Boumg....
•_,
undergoing suriery to remove Nets Into a tie with the Timber- Thompson.
Bot. Cr. • Rd.. .26 aero, n•. John Etal. c/ o Wlli.,
.•
bone spurs from both heels. ''I'm wolves for the worst record In the
Hawks Ill, Bullets 104
1180. 16.41 .
Boumg..,nor E.. sa. Lot 255
starting to play as good as I ever NBA.
13-00418.000 Love, Ko· Sub. 19 'h. $470. 118.86.
At Landover, Md., Dominique
·'
18-01718.000
.......
ron Ilene. lot 1810'. S100,
dld,
but
when
I
don't
score
30
In
other
games,
Philadelphia
Wilkins
scored 27 points and
13.69.
.
- Fred C. Sr ., Lot 282 Except
people think something ' s pounded Cleveland 114-84, Min- Gledn River s sank a 10-foot
13·00419.000 Love, Ka- 26' S. Sido,
18,720,
wrong . ' ~
nesota nipped Miami 105-100, baseline jumper wlth 22 seconds ,·
ronllono, lot 18 16' of Lot 1259.20.
18, f70, f2.48.
Bird will be the first to admit Atlanta edged Washington 111- left to propel Atlanta . John
18-001119.000
Bright•
13· 00783.000 love, Ko- Chriotlno, lot 189 Sub. 15
he's still not back 100 percent 104, Indiana topped Utah 100-88, Williams, who made hls first
ren Ilene, 55. NW Port SE, Burnap Add. 52' Frontogo,
from
the layoff, sa ying his -legs Dallas dumped Charlotte 102-83, eight shots. led Washington with
·'
.05 ..... 1530. *23.02.
15,900, 11,619.86 .
are
not
as
strong
and
he
gets
Detroit
defeated
Phoenix
111-103,
26 points on 12 of 15 shooting. ·
13-0041!4.001
Merlin.
15-01312.000 Cl•k. Fronk
w. Jr., 835, 1.00A c .. Lot 111 'A 36'11'100' Join. winded more quickly. But Boston
'r
out of 87.67A .. 1.00 Acre, lng Rcouter, 14,640. 1176.04.
~
Coach Jimmy Rodgers said the
,.
t350, 112.45.
16-00918.000 Johnson,
,.
Celtics
would
have
been
In
much
13-00656.000
Peyton, Carroll • MHdrod. Lot 305
more trouble If his perennial
•
Rich•d A . Etol, 511, E of .41A Noor End of Bridge Ex.
NE'A h. 34A NE E• . #4 .09A, .32 oc.-o,
16,260, All-Star wasn't around.
By United Preas International
scored two first-period, pow~r­
Vein c:Ool,
9 .05 ocru,
S408.30.
"He's been working his way
The
Washington
Capitals
Wedplay goals and added an assist to
19,050. 1322.04.
along at a real good pace," nesday night hallded the Detroit lead Montreal. Quebec is 1-6·1 In
·'
13-00656.000 Peyton,
16-00207.000
Morris,
Rodgers
said.
"Tonight
he
was
Red Wings their 12th defeat In 17 Its last eight games.
Richard A . E101. S5, on W Doborlh Lynn. Lot 469 23
Uno of NE 'A Ex. #4 Voin v.'
really good, he picked us up. He games.
lido W.
13.1!50.
Jets 5, Raaaers 4
cool, 4 .B4 ocroa, 1590, t140.81 .
took a r.w three-pointers and
Capitals defenseman Calle JoAI
Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Brent
121 .00.
11-00208.000 Monlo. Dobmade them. I think this Is the hansson scored with 2: 53 remain- Ashton scored with 11 seconds
13·005117.000 Peyton. orohlynn. Lot 4114 -14'W
first time this season he has had Ing In the game to snap a 3-3 tie remaining to lift Winnipeg past
Richord A. Etol. 811, sw· -·4B"ESido.tliO. 12.00.
•
PartNEy, I .OBA SE EX. #4
multiple three-pointers In a and lead Washington to a 5-3 New York. Ashton backhanded a
11-00209.000 Morrlo.
'
Vein cool,
40.18 ocreo, Doboroh Lynn, Lot 4111 Ex
game. He's looking real good.'·
victory
over
Detroit
.
Alan
May
shot
past
goal
tender
John
'
f4,120, I 1110.84.
31'•25'1.t', 1110, f4.37.
The same can not be said for added an empty-net score With 51 Vanblesbrouck.
13-00511.000 Peyton,
the Nets, who have not scored 100 seconds left to guarantee the
Rlch•d A . •/or Sondra,
111-00210.00 MonW. DobMaple Leafs 3, Caaucks 2
points
ln their last nine games. victory.
. I
IS, SW Pt of SW'A, 1.50 oroh l¥nl\ Lot 470 18' E S1c1o.
OT
Tbey shot only 37 percent on the
Elsewhere In the NHL, Mont- , .• 1 ~30 , •1 • ·• ·
1250. 110.31.
At
Vancouver,
British
Columa
· 000
Peyton,
18-01835.000 Womer,
night, following a game at Utah real tripped Quebec 5-2, Win- bia, VIncent Damphousse scored
1 ~o
R:'dWAUn
.
•
/oforNSeE
.
~,*
"
Rlchord
A
..
Lot
259
10.58A
In which they hit fusl 26 percent nipeg nipped the New York at 3: 48 of overtime to lift Toronto
Sa, 0 n
•
"• .a N End, 15110. f22.22.
. I
of their shots.
Rangers 5-4 and Toronto tipped over Vancouver. Damphousse
11·01142.000 WNIIorno.
ocre. f12.870, f487.11.
" We had good shots In the Vancouver 3-2 In overtime.
13-00811.00 leymour, . Mollie • Moxie AHII Roy•
• shot the puck between goaltender
Ru- J . A/or Koren E..
tor Lot 17 • 18 N Yo a 18
second quarter, but we only got
Canadien• I, Nordlques t
Kirk McLean's pads for his lOth
I. IE EX 1. 80A W Ex. #4 f4ZO, 1181.80.
'

w-.

The

Simmons birthdays

1.011
.....
114,000.
1412 .38 .
18-01234.000
Tholto.
Thom• M.. S4, SE of W
28.t. .OAA,
4.00 ocroo.
1350. 111.511.
1B·01238.000
Thoioo.
Thom• M .. S10, E Side of
SE'A Ex. lAS, 38.46oc-.
13. 740. 1123.52.
18·01238.000
Tholto,
Thom• M., S. 4, Wend Ex.
cool 24.40 A, 24.40 ocroa.
11,710, 158.48.
Theloo,
18-'01237.000
Thomto M . 1.4. N End Ex.
40A E. Ex. 4A, 58.00 oc,..,
14,830, 1152.90.
18-01231.00
Theloo.
Thom• M .. ST 4 AU Ex 20A
E End • Ex. 3 .17A, Ex .
1.31A Ex. . lOA, 138.17
...... 128,140, 1821.38.
18-00173.001 Whltloch.
Torry S. - / or Chryltll,
R12, T2, 85 , NE Cornor of
Sect 5, .883 - ·· 1290,
19.80.
18-00175.001 Whltloch,
Torry S. -/orCryatol, R12,
T2. sa. SE Corner ofBOC18.'
e.75 ...... t24, 320,
11 ,247.40.
RACINE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
19·00159.000
GhMn,
Monuol. 61. 90C.I261 . 38 .
19-001110.000
Ohoon.
Manuel,
12,
16,800,
f1.094.09.
19-00181 .000
GhMn,
Monuol E. •'/or Berboro G ..
87 W87, $1,300, 1368.28.
19·00156.000
Gheen,
Manuel E. &amp;/or Blrb1ra
Gene, Landing in Front #29.
140. 110.87.
19-00157.000
Gheen,
Manuel E.
er Barbara
Gone, 40 All Except 30' E
End, $4,390, 1494.05.
19-0015B.OOO
Ghotn,

w..

··-

NOIIIIT'Ibar 30, 1989

Meigs County Delinquent Real Estate Tax Notice
DELINQUENT
LAND TAX NOTICE
The l.M\do, Lots Md Porta
of lote Ntui'Md OelinquMt
by tiMo T.-u.., of Molila
County, .m~ the r .... ...
. .llftel'ltl end
pen.ttiea
chorgocl thoroon - l i l y
to.._,, ... contein.cl end ct.
acrlb 1 d in the foMowing lilt.

~

Kenny's
Restaurant &amp; Pizza
•BREAKFAST, LUNCH, SANDWICHES &amp; PIZZA
•E!TABLISHED BUSINESS FOR 9 YEARS
•GOOD GROWTH AT 14% PER YEAR
•LOCATED BY 3 LARGE INDUSTRIAL PLANTS
ADDRESS:

502 BTH STREET, NEW HAVEN, WV

FOR APPOINTMENTS • SERIOUS INQUIRIES
PLEASE CALL: (304) 882·2400 (EVENINGS)

AREA'S LARGEST MULTI-LINE
NEW CAR DEALER NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR SALES POSITIONS.

11-2'1·'88- 1 mo. t&gt;d.

·coUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

Will Video Tape
Weddings,
Birthdays,
Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for
Insurance.

•Mobil• Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Ren1als
•Lot Rentals

992-747.9

Call 742-2486

lt. 33 Nerth of
Pontaroy,

After 5 p.m.

•IN STOCK•

L. W.

ZETOR TRACTORS
INTERSTATE BAnERIES

STEWART
TRUCKING

AUTHORIZED
ECHO-YARDMAN DEALER

WEDO SAW
REPAIR
•Saw Supplies
•Chains •Chain Oils

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742-2455

Sala11 St., lutland, 0~.
11 10. '89itln

9-20-tln.

CHIPWOOD
.
.
WANTED

Roger Hysell
Garage

W. Ya. Chipping,

Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Tr•••111l1slo•
PH. 9-.2-5682
or 992-7121
4-25·Hn

Inc.

Rocksprings Rd.
Pa-roy, Ohio

PH. 992·3561
Buying Hours;
7 :30-B:OO
Mon. thru Fri.
7 :30-4:00 Saturday
Ill) 7-' 19-1 mo.

li rou AN NetlnhNdell In A
,
CGrNr fJppoa•lan- PI••• Do Nol App~!

WEBER FARM
IUTI.AIIID; OHIO

DINEnE SETS
"NEW" RUUNERS
Located Behind
Tractor Dealership

MORRIS

•CUSTOM KITCHENS &amp; IA"THI
•EJITENSrYf AEMODELINO

.VINYL BIDING • ROORNG
•METAL IUILDINOS
~EWHOMES

Sll\"r:F. 1969

742-2455

IMISO 51. SYIA(USI

11-28-1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

6:30 P.M.

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS
4 / 6 / 89/ tfn

USED APPLIANCES
90 DAY WAIIANTT
WASHERS...IIOO up

DRYEIS-$69 up

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-S33S or 98S-3S61
Across From Post OHico
I'OIIEIOT OliO

985-4422

10/ J0/'19 tfn

ALLEN'S
HAULING

SER~ICE

We (an repair and re(ore radiators and
heo1er (ores. We con
also tKid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

1ia00 GAllON ,

WATER SEiYKE
LIMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIRT HAULED

PAT HILL FOlD

992·2196
Middleport,

FURNACE

DAVE'S

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4-cycle

engines ·
Stock Parts for
Homelite. Weadeater.
Tecumnh, Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

NO SUNDAY CAW

FURNACE
FURNACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SUVICE
992 -5335 or 91S-3S61
Across froN POll Office
217 E. S.C. ' - • 1

Ill 13/ '19 lin

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
FREE ESTIMATES

HAVE RIFIRINGS

AfTEI 6 P.M.

(6141 985-4180

SMALL ENGINE
YARDMAN MOWBS

ECHO SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIS

OIEGOfl IAIS, CHAINS
IY Alii SEIVICE CEIQEI
Parts I Swvko On
AI llakos
VISA · MASTERCHAAGE

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9· 7
Sot .9-5
Closed Sunday

949-2969

Iefort ' p.m. lean Message

10/ 10/ 89 tfn

1mo.

STREET
PIZZA

KOUNTRY KLUB
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP

Beginning Sept. 17

LOWEST PIKES
HIGHEST QUALITY

FREE LOCAL DRIVERY
POMEROY AND .'MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked 12

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

Gauge OnlY.

992-2228

9-6- B9-tln

j

RACINE GUN SHOP

49919 NEASE HOlLOW ID.

DEER .HUNTERS
PARADISE
114 ACRES LOCATED IN
. ORANGE TOWNSHIP, OFF
CHERRY RIDGE.
CONIACT:
PAUL ICLOES 01 IIUCE IEED

992-2136

I

EAGLE RIDGE

INTERIOI EXTEIIOI

Tab the pain aut ol paiftting.
Ltt u1 do it for you.
VIIY REAIONAal

PH. 949-.2801

..

CHESTER, OHIO

REFRIGERArORS...$100 up
RANGES-Gas-Eiec.L $115 up
FREEZERS-$125 up
MICRO OVENS- $79 up

nAt Reasonable Prices"

Strictly Enforced

EVERY SUNDAY

'

•FIREWOOD

Renlal Cloonups &amp;
Painling

12 Gaugo Shotg101s Only

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

I

•LIGHT HAULING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOME! &amp; GARAGES

1

ar les•.949-2860
Day or Night

Fadory Cholet

Grant A.

•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

PH.

SaleM St., lutlatotl
II tO, '89 lin

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

DUMP TRUCK
Sand- Stone-Dirt

(6141 667-3271

742-2143

Lotatotl at Yoloy l ....... r
In Mitldlopo.t, Ohi

EQUIPMENT

Basham Building

&lt;LEARING

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

liVING ROOM SUITES
IEDROOM SUITES

TURNPIKE.
•Tremendous Benefit Package
•On The Job And Factory Tratntng
··Pieu•nt Working ConcUttoDs
•Five· Day Work Week - No Sundays
•No Experience Nece11ary

S12 to S18

ROUSH

USED FURNITURE

APPLY IN PERSON!

195 UPPER RIVER RO.AD
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

FRESI-i CUT
&amp; SHEARED

'

11-!l-1 010. pd.

· wHilE &amp;

10- 2·' 89-1 mo.

10-9-tln

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

MAPLEWOOD .
. LAKE
614-949-2734
or
614-949-2635

'

RACINE, OHIO

GUNS· AMMO
12 Ca. DEER SLUGS ••• S2 .20 Box
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS
OPEN 9 AM -7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am -5 pm t

949-2168
Listening Devices
·De pencil bit Hear ina Aid Sales &amp;~n.i...l

Cl 'Hearinc Evalultions For All Aps

!: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a: l,icensecf Clinical Audiologist

::r::

z

~614) 446-7619 or

(614) 992·2104

417 Second Avenue. 801( 1213
- - Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

or at

Veterans Memorial Hospital
:.lutbeny Hcfs, Pomeroy, Ohio

�November 30. 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Senti•'lll ·

LAFF-A-DAY

41 HouSIS for Rwit

KIT N' CARLYLE~ lly Lury Wriabt

----

Space for Rent

•

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

-~

fiBid' 1 I t dOOM

,..Ii ....... Mil

1171. -

. . . . . ~ ....... -

a... ..

.......... .

t

~T~-2~~1 .

. . Vwn6a.

0

.....

&amp;? fl!'&lt;2~ :::.:::..~toi.J......,.,
. ~~

....... Cllll11t• ........

. ....

.......... - ..... ....
7--.~CMaJD.II:II .

n.

12&gt;111,

-

k1

w....;: • .,_.,
_ooblo T.V, 114-441'

Evwrawa.

- ··-

_:::.~~~.--;~. 1~

MlllltS 11M~ 10 READ .4 9«lK ~
M~Z.lll~ "fttAt4 ~ ~~-

torRent

0:

, . . 111 eo-.

?f~ ~W,...T ~T cYME~~~

42 Mobile Homll
~2dl

-

...... ~

~.,

411

For Lea•

2111', ........ ~ Ill Thlnl
A...,llo poto, 114-44W74ilt4-

et~~ w ~~ a eo

lraM $100. Cont.._ Che¥re.

Pooool• ond Ollllt ..........

IIJ.Iani

•

SIR .. COMIN6
Rt61-1T Ul'...

lirolaelt~Por ~ ~ 1;

IIOQ:.MI- _, ..,.,_ .1111
opiiiiUWIInll and
' •
lilT-

8 Chlltla In Cltlqa

. 't'ES,

Tz42,1100-.

18 Wanted to Do

/:t 1\":..."'::~~·od.

W11 llobyoll1 In"" -.., I doyo
I ..... Rio GNnde .,.., C.ll

-

6

-y

~-

Lost &amp; Found

U.RN

nltlhl. - . -

Aw.--.

'(llfot'

-.· . -

21

WV. 30W

you

--=

llooon

==- - ·
171-2224.
•

•=•

'

~~.:1.~.--

-ohooiiii. GunCo1, •, ta

e.

' ·

1::!:r

C.U

'1:::::':0: a'r.::

Aetwa• Cll, ........... 11~

1111.

ADollnooroto

lor rurf. Twin
Rhlura Towor llo: ..ng lilt lhl
Eldorly, llondlcoppod ond $01111
oporloblod.
ovalablo lor non-loolldlcoppld,
non llubled ,_,.... bllwMn
lhl uj.o of 4G ond 112, EQuol
"""'""' Opportunlly. :io44711171.
Aportmontu
hond
bullcllngo i'or runl. 11714210
month. "MUD. .._.,1-1104.
BEAUTIFUL APAATIIENTll AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 131 ......... Plko

from 11t21mo. Wllk 10 ehoD 6
movlle. Cell Itt t'll HCII. EOH.
&amp;Hicloncy Apl,"""" qulot, well

Comotory
,..,._
Comotory, 104..loll
71-4314.
Chrll- TroM Cui tii.OO,
ond Whllo "'•• ..,
llpnoco. llova dug lnd bol
oVolloblo. Thomooi Troo ~o':'ol

-:3

441.0ZIIIolor 4:10p.m.
County Apollonco,. lno. Oood
appllo,_, T.•. ooto. ()pon
I Lrn~
~

=:., Olt•:r·::r--t:.·
•

4041.

...... ..,. wflh ..........
Col ...., LiwiJ 114-diU

II

12

Oull1o

Atrr

- i o n.
c.h Pllld. ca11114-tl2 &amp;157 or
114-111 :1411·.

SituatiOn
wanted

Mid

'

flow roam, furnl.,_. or unfur·

n ; att.c.nt:!r.

tocattd, . 3 bedroom, by

ulll- pold. Roody
qulle ~
t•.· All
Dopooll wUI hold. lt.j:.
t12~M1
.
• ...--kloolono,

-·--......dining - , Nvlng """"• both,

ear. lor pre 11Choa4

lhlkll•• In

"" laM. I cloyo - . SUO
potdoy.l14 - ··

..... ,_ wlrlna. Priced to •II.

32 Mobile Homes

a121. l14-

=r.-

Olrl'o wltlto Uwn olzo Coptoln'o

11

14JIH, :1 bedroom, Bi ron
cent111l tlr with attached 10r24
encktled aunporeh, vinyl un-

dlooppod In -LPN- on call.
21 , .
..
..,..,._
Low

I SIIIMJ lnooiM homll. Calll14 112 1173

oftor 7:00 p.m. lor ""'"' lnfor.
AVOII • AI - - . Col ilorlyn -ion.

. . . . . . 1124145.

Schools &amp;
lnstrucUon
RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COlLEGE, 5211 Joctc- Plko.
Ctlll 114-4 .. 1317. Reg. No. ...
11-105&amp;1.

18 Wanted to Do
0.. prooellld. cut and ....
Did, as. - - 130. 114-

•ae•s.
-

Moln1ononco • ropolro,

~ ............ Olrponlry.

114-111-.

lllc:hkll..• wtahlng to nlum 10
Rs'Nf Ill Ar-. 13 ,_,. a•

r::":;.=:: =~

........
milt,
-·
drtl - d o
lnd
con moko
own
M1..,po,
work.l14-44f.3114.

adutte,

11 ,__

,.,.,1

1;:.:~~:.:_..,.,.,.,-""==
oponmont ·
pold, 1111', 7 Noll,

11171, 12170, veoy pr!VIIo
Dlllricl.

lot, Choollr School
$310C'-'114-187-1452.

Npolle. 114 t41 t411 .ti•Tp.m.

after 1:00.

F u - • · 24S ......_
-..w11 aflw ?p.m.

1113 ~on 14x70, 3 bed-

Oraa:la • lfvlng. 1 and 2 ......

••• · 14170 a-,, 2 bodroom,

on oloolrlc, - . 114-HZ·241• Plko, t:zsl. u1UH!oo pd. tbr, 114.

,...,., 2 beth~,, on ~cre
fllnllld tat, Muon, WV. 304-182-

room 1partlllll* al Vlll8ae

Manor
and
Rb...aa.
ADanmonlo In - - F"""
t114. -h 15.
F1rot month lroo to thooo
who quollly. Coli 114-112·7717.
EOH.
1 112
11o1 , In Poo••DY· .,.._n,
Nlliiwn• NC~Uired. 11~1114441 oftori:OOp.m.

2207.
CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL! No
poymonlo 111 llorch. TIYo NW
14172 modola. CoU 1-100-7&amp;
4045, ook,., Rogor.
For Silo: t:ZXIG moblll -...
newtyNmodeledon1.1ecreklt
01 odgo ollown. AIIO I on lhl lot, In . - of oopulro.
u.. In ono ond - lho ..hor,
$11,100
4p.m. llrm. 114 441 023! .,..,

::.T." ,_ - -

==·"·

OM lor., fum. or unlum. ••· In
114 012130( ..
-~·~
• 10
- · ' " " - opt, 1 .
33 Finns for ...le
.,.
1- 1 pluo - · SOUJ'II.
11.7,10mi.SouthGolllpollo,4k
• ·
loouoHoodo ropo~ Upotolro, . . , _ ipl. Co~
lrullli lot, $11,500 uoh, 11C: PUiod. ~polo, lnqulro II 1110
II7..220.
,__

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
-

...

llrto

building

45

1o1o.

· · prlcoo
l'oduood,
olio
,...
homio bOIIIporml11ocf,
pUblic
with
""r
Clydo
hwln, Jr. 304-171-2331.

Furnished
Rooms

ll~~~~~t~=~

...... For- Goillpoll:;.:;z:F a.oping _ , . wHh _,.lng.
•

2722.· Pulollc

-r.

'

..

Rentals

TilE--JWDIIMS

1liTRACf'

1DWIIPGCIEI
WIIHA

.-011 .Comoo'llllp - ·
.SSO.OO Eftll of Rliwweawd
304473-UII
Sa I well ' Oell •
HicbtY
Fkaw =d, Large plok·up loacf,
c!IJ, 141; oountry, 110. Don
Klnplze _ . . bed, I cllaw•6t Wiiugh, 114 411 1141.
poclootol wllh 2 mk
_Iaiii, Ellohonl Plonto, - .
~nd - · · - · -fa. 114-417-'1243.
"""""'"

•

Corpol?

i!- I':':..'='...:;

Also traillr epoce. All hwk-m:
call
:Z:DO p.m., 304-

•fl:•

11511~1~,~~~~:-~wv::..

r

--·
AUCTION
Olin Sl.,

• 12:001
• (J) Ul Coabr - - Q
(I) ·~Millikin:
111111111"1 The IMF works to

f'AC:f.

outwit and axpoae an arms

n

53

dro--·

(PI 1 012) (111 (2:00)

ICXIII. Eoool- - i o n. ClariMIIIM .... 114 - ........_
. . .:GOp.ln.

GJ P11114NIWI

1H1 MOYIE: ONeil &amp;y

'

lnu n

lhllllppy children of
Slnla's village enounter
m1ny lhrilla and a few scares
belare limo comes to llllp
Slnla mount his sleigh lor
his annual dutiea. (1 :00)

lor Sale

--lon-·-Jlm'a Fom Eaulomont. SR. SS,

Wool Go-lo,. 114-14Mm;

....... • IFJ r nuta. au,,
1011, . . - . I:GN:GO -yo.

76

&amp;oi. UII-.

Auto Parts &amp;

Lnn£ 11-ttX &lt;ARDS .

11-1£ SUSHI BAR IS
GOU'JA TAl&lt;:£ ~ ~

1;30 e CJI 1111 AM Jlliln

Rlclnlly wldowllll woman
and hor laenage daughter

hiltoly profntor decides lo

.... c-o, ' · AI
-Law,...· 100Burdd.
to
- 11om..
114-245-ltet

...... , .....
124 I .IIMToWin 81:00-~ P -ro'l·
IHoul
ro: . . • 10. o.m. 1o 1l:llll
p.m., Bundoy 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.

1 white IIWe AKC ~
Wool Hlghlollll Tonlor.
,
noiU.... ttOO. 11
11137 ahor 4:00p.oo.

=sur-.,~111
-.:1 -:R~,~~..~.=-Iq~-~.

1111~·~-~~~-=:::-:== I CUlm T - 1 malo, 2
;:
Top Cillo pold. Old IUmlluro
...........
quUio,
orlonlol,
............ ~;:::,re~o
... or
S04-ID lal4.

54 Miscellaneous
·Merchandise.
2 Wonn llomlng ~ hllloro,
10,000 blu, ono 111,100 lltu.
2 •
ft hn' rl t1ec1r1a
-. . 1410.with .. -

•

111m to drive. Q

Pluo now hoo Sllldloo
31)4.47S-4014.

ond

79

=

·=-'-Will

11174 Wll• • go -

~;/.a':::.-·

IF

moo. ·

AKC"'": 1~ as.:..".:;
11
ll4-44l·tAKC lllnloturu Solo&amp; •o born
111-14-11. 4 I I - 1 moll.
1110 .., hold 1or Chrlotmoo.
114..••••o-•:OOp.m.

1

Saonlol

pupploo.

llrot

Hod

AKC l
i l t -ChrlotNO
buff Cockor
olooto.
Boliulllul
glllo.

114·742-2233.

=:----::--:-...,-,=-..,..,-AKC~ ChaW'o a1T1 pOfco.
t1t t-..10.

·

.

-

. . 403 24thlt., Point PIE

..

nt,

DNQDO•tnd c.ttwr
PollomooO

_ , . , 11111-.

(1:30)

WHAT'S HE
BEEN liP TO
NOW?

Rallsrteon

the stend. Q

[£ ILPiftMiimaUveQ

.
_..._.....

~ hlall - - 4 . ,• .. 4

Heating

1tl0 Clldl -

··-~·~
1111-o,Ae,roclo,.

......... -.
~

·

....'

Gollpolo, Ohio

.

&lt;Mer

GI!IIN
21-.luMIO) CCimmerdal ·
dellnp could be a trth mara compllcatllll !Mit ......t IC!My, eepecllly H It
lnv~ a lltulllon where thlra 11 a
large aum of money 11 a1a1ce. Be

IIIII
elud

us •••c• ThMtrl

. . ...1-

'·-!gal·

Your lli1anclll proleetlonl loOk ra-:

t-

11un1y lor the ,.... lhallll, bill lliera

could be plriodl -

JOU! ..,,.,..

o- may . . . lhe upper Mltd
- y O u 10 ll*ld mara !Mit yOu

and

~ In dlptJi belen'
OOIM'iltllllll J')lftlll.
AMI CMinii11·Apoll tl) Today you
might ba 11tt1ng on a rather lhlllcy limb
.,._ your lmlge II - I l l !lid, Be
iltllldiUI pi your biMVIor, belli ~~a ··
thOuglltlaaa ICIIO!II could oil )'OUr·

~AIIIIIS (Niiv. 21 Dac.l1) llucl- =~

"You
I'm
the coat
of your retirement pm1y from your

gel your expendlllftl with ..,,.,. ,
cant today llld try to make II I policy
not t o - - AnY,_ abllgationl u11111
you 11m !Min car. of the old
·QNI. Trying to patch up 1 brolclll ro- .

laat peycl1eek?l"
I

..

.

lllf lilt Be....,. to

a

IIICI

11 ntlghi ...,
ltoi.- ' - c:111pe
111C1 IIIII - * I
you. Try to ba a
not

one

8 . . . . _ . . . a~ann..

who .

~10 (OIIL 11•1• . , Tlldlty II

g!Wi proper acknowlldgmenl lo the you haWi to do _.. cr1110a1 - ' ! of a
kiMIIItd dalllla ofotllerl today 10 lhll ........ na11n, don't Ill your IDIIIIIO!&gt;
lilly, In tum, wll do !Ita - l o r you. nl •w•tdlr. A Jack of 001-tbllltuot -*1
y0u 1111 to do 10, ~~ow-. 11'1 ~ ... -!Ita wejlfor 1111ou1 nilltallaa.
111111 lor hfmla!l,
..
, ... ·
.

Milt

•CNMa0..
1t:OO (I) MDVII: 'p·t IalLI AlA
(1 :30)
(I) lllllari'QA T.,. GTE
Wwt Claulc lram Ou11.

I

CA·IIt R~ (T)

11130

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

•WII•

IEiC
llf:W~

DilL.,

25 Abundant 31 Chevy - ·
26 Sense
32 Prongs
of taste 36 Blanc
27 Tricolor
and
28 One ol
Brooks
LBJ's
38 Anecdotal
beagles
collection
30 Philippine 40 Radio
island
operator

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

·..........

'"*'lara--·

to

DAILY CRYP'IUQUOTF.S-Here's how to work it:

c
- o.nay ••kl Dr.
M.....,. 104' the hind of his

eo

South would ruff a club back to 1111
haDd to tali.e lbe last trick with lbe
DOW good dJamoad Dine. All that WU
needed wu for declanr to vln•ll•
Eut'a dlscamfort with !oar canis left

1 Rebuff

.On .....

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

·Electrical &amp;

and u.e

DOWN .

• o0..welch

~

ruff another clllll, clrOppUil uae club
ace aod aettiDc up dummy's ~· If
Eut threw IIIOiber dlaDQM( ~
would calli both lbe _.
.iDe
of dlamoada, lbe Q-10 ~ !Ill, aod

44Grub

iiJ IWilllng 1D:OI (I) MOYII!: Tlia Cui teNia
Cowbarll2:001.
10:30(%)

+Q

support

;e.~ ·
CAl IUCONI (0.0. 1Wan. 111 TC!My cautloul.
Tanllhl
you could be &amp;, NIUe loo IIMrtlve far CAIICIII (.111M twuJr II) CompanIll IRWaaalt PreMnta twist
your OMI OOOCf ind IIIII COUld PfCMI to IOnl might make relher heevy demenda
be~ ltpleltil!&gt; II you on your t1n10 111C1 - t a IC!My, yet
11:00tllleb1Ml
h... to with 1omaona who Wltl lhlra 11 a pollllbllty lhell may not be
11181chyourebrlllheo II
equllly aa · toopa~atlva with yOu In • ·
• t11 w • ~ a e1111
AQUAIIIW (.._ • Palt. tl) TC!My return.
1
you might hive to conlllld with condJ.. LEO lolulr ...... II) Authartly ltgurW
1n1111o tlonl- wll iMIIIcl you from llo4ng IIUptto-lhllreyaeonyoutoelay,i
11J Ut
tltlnp of yOur own - n g . Drift with 10 don'l try to 111p enyt1t1ng paat them.
11J 11o111111 YiOe Viking Bikers
the !Ida, .!*~tiM bucking It wtH merely Do wiiiiiUIIpecllld of you IIICI do It
From Hall BIINO.
make
,belt you 0111.
•
VldUCJ tbt
PISCII (Pall. • M1RII •1 Buel- V111C10 ( propo~~ll brought to you tC!My by peo11'0" to ba a
11:10()) libii&amp;ll
.
p1e with whom you .,. not IMIIIar crew of
• til !llllelt Of c.lhoukl not be tall., II ' - .,.,._ 'In- '
of
- · OH 44101-3428.

.,

114-441-3181

84

to melee the relatlonlhlp .OOC. ~~~ S2
toMatchmlker,P.!). Bo•91428,Cieve-

·'

Cootor'lnd.....
Pl.........
I
IIIII
Fourllullll Plno

II, 4 -

-t

monee.? the AS1ro-Graph Matchmaker
can help yOu 10 underltand
lo do

Openin1lead:

I NT

43 Conslruct

Amlnda II assaultad soon
after lhe and Danny sign
dlvarea pe~;a\ zone
eiiJINaw

••o214.

AUpuo

volcano

Ill • 0 len* Landing

11179 Fan! Muotong tl,ooO. 304- Dovll
-........ .
171-44110.
OlD~ C,.. Acl. Parte, • • ·
plloo; plcllup, ... doll. . y. 114- :
1110 AMC S,lrl~ 4 cyl., 4 opood.
taO. 114-14W414 ollor lp.m.
tlopllc Tonk flunotolna t10 Oolllo ·
1110 Iuick- 1111 onglftl, Co.- EVANB ENTERPIIISU,
"'.. aood, good, JIQO. .loo"-. 0111~7..521.
Colllf4-11t-131t .
1110 ~ bodr
82 PlUmbing &amp;

4•

Eat

Nw1li
It

42 Picasso

())Upon .....

,·

2211.

-

35 See
28 Down
37 Shine
39 Macbelh's
title
41 Stove;

eOwen
til UJ L.A. Law 1/an
must decide whether

......,_11111_, .,...
.......

-

IaIIon

10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pat

Rolory or ooblo tool drlll!ol-·
wollo oomplolod- doi. ·

11179 Bonnovlllo, outo aood
oond, low mlloogo, u;ilo. .,,..
llmo.t new enow urea. 304-175-

,..

f

featured live.
UJ O.r John John
leela jealous when Kate
atorts doling his falher . (0:301

e til

10 put a five-year-old girl on

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

675-1333

SUPPER,MAW !!
I GOT ME AN
IMAII.IIICY II

•·..

Vullierable: East-West
Dealer:Narth

33 Trouble
34 Altar
constel·

~CaiFJIIIak-1

HOLD MY

HE'S QUIT PLAYIN'
CARDS ALL NIGHT
LONG AN' GOES
TO BED RIGHT
AFTER SUPPER!!

·

30 Exclusive

musiC's hOttest stars are

-hom

SOUTH
+HI
.KQIH32
tl74

28Chance

• Nelli- Now Country

Corihory,

tQIOIZ
+AKIOI

+J 7 5 4

29 Drink up

lint: HarM .... ~·

1:30

.A

• 10 1 5
t as

27 Fuss

King

1m
GIICv.w;
· ~
._
drtve, 1110
Rtllibl,
1m aotlon Wogon.
cw.l1.....a30.

"'n

811J .....,
LIWil
.
MOYII!: F - Knowa

71 Autos tor Sale

d-·
·Nioell14...
Ill •11.

Mtatwrrl CampiOn

vows to catch the Delay the llador ol the thieves. Q
G1 e aJ Top Of Tlia Hll

Home

.......

114-HH117.

(!) (!)

. Sl L.L.Y QI.JEST1GN.

Bell's 11&lt;1e commits aucldo
relher than reveel lha trullt

. . . .. 111411 . . . .,..,. 7

2 ........ lf121 ........ Call

OH, WEL.L:.. .Aet&lt;: A

Serv1ces

KMM~.

~

KNE!N 1HE:

Transportation

w.,.. ~··-

--....

t

FORMIJLA, I'D

trappl!l at a remota army
post. !;t

30TTLE.IT.

81

a

e

. - 13,111111. 114 - 17111.
1171 MI. Plfth . _ . Tliulaooct ·

ipd., 1480. 114-3N'2140.

loll-, 011.114-IIWIII.

-. .

lui &amp;Ill Colllt4 IG •11 .

POl. 114-

1200 IIMf d pnl R...,.nae.

=·

trapplld In Robin Colcord's
apartment. (0:30)
(J)
~ Yaung ldcMrs
H!Ckolc and Emma are

.......
...,.. f'lliMce.
I 1 I
...... up_, ..... , _

____.,LCOI~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~·~31~1~a:ta~4.;;;::::j· ::.f
':ol:l1b""r~~1.t:'dp,;,;~
good......
=:c.w.u
........
m.-.- -.-. .... ....
wv.
room IIKI I a - I 1

-~·CIIMa
t:aoetll
UJ a-n Rebocca
and Sam a)llnd the night

Clmpera&amp;

MotorHomaa

Vory gll!lil ohlldo pony. Wll
-lOr Chrlolmoo. AIOO,!"f'od.
Ouafttf honM. .,........, Of
....121

SUpplies

Pets for Sale

1 ,_beginning.

VIdeo

~"':N~ of hoy ti .OO. 304-

Antiques

1 Tiff
3 Cognizant
5 lnsecl
4 Thrice
9 Subside
(Lal.)
11 - ·sax
5 Misspend
12 Knowing
8 EvefY bit
about
7 Harden
13 Throw
8 Dagger
15 Apiece
10 Brazilian
18 Civet
seaport
or margay 14 Actor
18 For shame!
Richard
19 Complain 17 Hill
21 Remole
dweller
22 Frequently 20 Be sullen
(poe I.)
23 Look
23 Presenl
lorwa1d lo
24 Undeniable 24 Wan ·
28
Golden
darer's
"
home

()) Tl'fllttl Tlntls An art
Co

EAST
+A IOIZ

by THOMAS JOSfPH
ACROSS
2 Aulhority

8:01 (I) MOVII!: lla r a • , _
Qlllipn'l llllnd (2:00)

-

WEST

+Q1 1 5

CROSSWORD

!li IMak lifaiiiiWI Qoeo

Lorgo boloo .. hoy lor
ulo,
a11 oooh. Dollvory
OYO!Ioblo. 11...-1012.

Block. brick, -or olpoo, win- · llnlolo, IIC. Cloudo Win' - lllo - · 011 CoM 114241-1121.

poeitiOD; much u a competent cbell
player vlJDall- lbe cliea board
many 1IIOVell IIi advance. That ability
led to lbe wiDalaa IIDe IIi loclay'a deal.
South pmbleil four hearts after
Nortlt'a dJaDQM( openlli&amp;,- thoqb
lbe no-trump overcall abowed that
malt of lbe aulalalidlDI hip canis
would lie bebiDd Nartlt. ll'.t made a
good eholce of leads IIi the queen of
Jpadel. When that held the trick, be
llwitebed to a trump. He boped that
Eut beld two trumpl aDd could deprive declanr of" lplde ruff IIi dum·
my. Ellt - lbe heart ace, callled
lbe spade ace, IDII thetl tried to take
llettiD&amp; tridt with the kiDg of clubs.
declanr ruffed.
South llllllJII8d that Eaat held four
dJamoods to t1te :::•· From the play
of the club kiJtg,
beld t1te- abo.
So declarer ruffed a spade aod ruffed
a aec!)lld club back to bil band. He then
played K-Q of bearta, dlacanlllil a
club aod a diamond from dummy.
Eut dlacarded a spade aDd a diamond.
Declarer DOW played anotJter ~·
'llleddlnl 11t1:"J'' jack of dlam
.
Thill forced
to come down to four
canis. H lte threw a club, declarer
.oulcl play a dJamand to dummy and

Gil Colstiii'Mtlln Willi Dii11ts

ALL HIS WltS ~ CfJ

-......,.,hoy. ata
_ ... 114-317.0141.

Building

ooa (PG13112:001

Ill A Ctwlab:wa ~

75 Boats &amp; Moten

:zs ,.,..

55

·

•1111 MOYIE: Tlia QOdlaHwr

Hay&amp; Grain

YrAA FURNITURE
AT. 1~1..411ll.ES
CENooNAAY
RENT TO OWN. 4
wk., -llod •..,..,. . tto
wk. Sllllvol rockor • a1 wk.,
oo1, 4 • 11.10 wk.
Rocllnor • .. wk. LOW CASH
PRICES
,...., 1NO% c:..Jn ..,_
ovellllllo. Opon Mon.-. I o.ow.
Ia 1 p.m.,''"'· 12 ,_.,to 1 p.ow.
II.WU.OIII.

a .

,. eo a Hotn !:1

furniture,

f

•

I:OO(Jl MOYII!: 1111.1-•n

ANPA HARI&gt;

~

9·92-2156

Nlgltt Court
aTop eanr
7:11(1) IMford And Bon

Slrllst·lkln penela are
installed over the barn's
liniohlllllrame. Q

............ T........ ....,.

446-2342

8

Cll ()) 1'hll Old -

RCA conoola otoruo, Uko now.

$200. 114-441-1155 atlwf.
Sam SomerviiW. ~ SUrDh•.
. -..... Slolrlo. · .8fodo1Whlto

Dog ollll Ill - · lor 1111.
1 It 1111111 ... II.
141.
114441
Dla.

~

1:~ :

..

·
- lor Holl.
rout you
'""""'·
,.....ucto
vllol Arlo!
ond
...,.,_ Ariol Enlorprlooo/Cioon
elr and water. lob HirPW l14a
441-Ntl or T. W. Lowroncu 304171-7324.

_ p u . , . ...

41 Houses for Rent

aou71-21211 oftor

IIIJ ll,.t.t"""rdy'
Q
CriiNift

doller.

PICKENB FURNITURE
WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
Nowr\Jood
11oft AJUoon 1210 llocond Avo,
Ho&amp;.-•hokl tumt.hlng. 112 mi. o·ur1 ·., OH 1u ~41 a11.
.lortlcho Ad. Pl. PI_,, WV,
coii30WTI-t410.

.

~~

Mild, .

e~USAToay

Polnl Pluo now hoo _,.Ill ond
crol palniL Point Ptuo, 2411
Jac:k.on
Aw,...,
Poinl
PI-nt, WV IIIW71-4014.
Puru •• lor row lungo, . . .

12a11 1m Cameron Uo~S.
Homo. T..ol ol. .rlc. Col 11420-11140.

cz:t1.

IllS Chovy Von, -

,....., F-

(I) lltlallatl.....,l Tonight

=

IN Llfl, JT WAS
liTWllN A ft.OC/C

0200Mil
Von,IIOOd.
3ti
t•-

OIHEvanlngo.

110. - · 304-77W1U lhor
1:00 Pll.
••olu wotor -~ w/C
~..
draa--. baa:llDI:-. "*row,
$210. tt.o.rw Mater, ldng elu
bod, ~u.

-

112M.

We CIN for ....., lnd hln-

Tile III4X 11111 declarer pictures lbe ,
last few canis a! any complicated end

lit PIOfttllonel TIIWIII

WfifN . .X FINN-L'(
FOUNJ&gt; My NICHE

m.

~ uo OUI lilt • low
Fruo lloii...,IIAIIoro.
11-n , _ . _ ITT Exol- 11·»11. P...lc IIIWI
Morth. l14-441-7444.
14t.10 bo1. t ..OO.I-11.

moo.

-When a lrlandly lornt
ranger tails a lnolhar bear
and her cub llbout
Chrlltmu , the two decido to
lkip hibemalion 1nd lind lho
true hOliday spirit. (t :OO)
18 YlclloCcut*t
r:30et~~

II IJbl bed tar ull, Nkli MW
304-171-1132.
,
K • E - lor Solo: II..._

*pjf • • ,

ronoo.

-===----BRIDGE

7:01 (I) ..... . . _

· tai"i'tc.aor-412. ·.

1~ ho GravelY- wlllloulloy,
on I, t1,110. 304-74$'

by filling in the milling words

11....,.,;-'Q

· ·

=·

61 Fann Equipment

.

Complete the chuckle quoted

TolfBe - Owner- Harsh- Stench - AFTER
Each generation imagines ilseiiiO be mare intelligent than
the one thai went belore it and wiser than the one that comes
AFTER it.

181Ct-.
IIJ ...... Ancl Tlia ...._

vans &amp; 4 WD 'I

1m
oulo.,
--

I

saying,

SCIWMETS ANSWERS

,or:..;:~-01

·

- · - • • S.tO .......
•-• - · · · ,...... up
II,IOO.IIIW75-4410. ·
·

Will- ::S.loro
:O,'l."" - ·
l'llow odlor-. 114-112.. 244.
For loll: 21 ou. I.

U - River Rd. loo~ llono
Crul-l. Collll...-7311.

Goo Rongo SO lncll. ...; Goo
rongo, oiOC.
SO !ncb, tu;
W.llw, Wll,.._ m; Wilhlr,
G.E. ~; Dryer, K - . t71;
Dryor UnmOfl, whlta, 1171;
Konmoru w.-, -., Qui~,
S'll; Dryor Avocudo. 17 •
Applllncr~, It~

ono ulldrod. Colll14-~.

.

I I I I I I I I'. I

tt&amp;MIIIDIM'

1-'ngo.

•

A psychology professor
quoted this famous
"Always put off untlltomorrow
whal you ••••••••• do at all."

t-..1.......1'---'--'--.L-..J you d...lop from step No. 3 bolow.

•t~~I'MMaJI ~. (I) lpe 1&amp;Cs . .
til ·~ Cumint Alletr
Cll ()) llacNal IAhtw

dloool,

•

I

Tl....:lr-.::-r.ls-1
0
_
_
_

1:11 ~ """ Qrlflillj
7:00 (Jl Our Houaa

1117 Fwd Rongor Sport plol!o
up, nc. cond., ..100. lfWI'T·
0234.

~ , _ , 304-171-11771.

•••••oro.

lbgg~

alloo. 114-241-1111 oilor ••..,.....
u:'t:, plono wl1h llonch. F1nt

Road, 304-678.2233 or 17WI1Z.

- · tobio 'oncl 4 - . _ 304171-1111.
GOOD USED APPII•NC'I
Woohoro, d.,....
,..,....

lr-

mlloo,

I

RHIROD

OHlMan

!'::- -_.001
tiiTCIIo:l-10

~:.\:i, pooold mcio"l"'iac.Jico. 114 441

I.

I.T 0.Is C I.U LL16

8 - Ill Clllcillld

=-~lnl~.rn:...=­

111or1:ao
.
A - " -, drum ool, I llkljlon
...-llldllon .,..., ,_ 2

f

·.I;'-FI...:;-1

ll=:=:.'t

• ....

1112 011C 112 IGII U

.II. ooch lilY
olzu. 1 112 mlloo OUI Mlllo1ono

ohopo
~. 114-24T·244S" or 11 4-MS.

1ChiU, 2 bodroom, -

don&gt;lnnlng,

:.:.:!t
0::.
liD with r,n. 304-T7WtN

2
·~AICNIWeQ
(!} lkMIJ Ill Dtl1c

•••:.o

Phoiloii.,__IIOOT.

for Sale

Employment Services

-

·

r::a;'=~~·.·= i·~.P.J:~l~5 ~~~~~:;:

Wanted to Buy

=·====

1•
-

ftaft

Klmllol plono, oldor modol,

Ch-

lop, tlolhol Chuooll lid. - ·

ReJI Estate

Colll14-

=-:3.• F•~opi1.:'"h::

opon

tm Cllovy Convwoion v.n;
Aulo, lir, g.c. 121100. 11.._
lmll.
·

:::n,

MINIMUM
CASH lncomo AND f'M!I' InOUARANTEEDI Colli·
- ••• 1113.

olu

.

Mon-Thui.,Sal.

'

et~~ UJ NIC NIUf•llr-

()) 1-2·1 Cultillai Q

1114.

73

'

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

'

•.. ..__

Rt. 2 Nollh .., _ .....
Shophord Chwch, 304-4'15-

31.W. opl. 2 br, t bolh, fii'IYotO
enclo8ed , peiJo.
Clolil to
rocary • - • ohopplng..,.
P.or ...or
"ooh
11 ""
t~~ taU/mo.

por-

AVOII I AI -

'1'!..::"'~p~

~ good cond 304-

.~..:.....·uol

·--

1 - ·· Con&gt;nll 22
DKC 22.100 IITIJIIwo:._~!" ono
wlnlor, 1100., Ook a..,. """"
toblo, 2 ,.,,. ~~~-... c cholrw,
Uko now. t350. 114 3oo 1108.
Brown twHd couch US. 3041714131.
Couch.,hllr,ond,_Acolo
looloblo, oiooollonl _.t., 114-

11om Polnl P-nl on lho
Ohio and Konowhl Alvors. A•
q - lilt lnlormotion by moll
only. llooon Counly Wollr
TouN, Inc., P. 0 . Box 243,
Hartfonl, wv 25241.
Fw Solo or Loooo: Eotobllollod
A.l.. luslnMa In Maon, WV,
VENDING ROUTE
GALUPOUS ARI!A

....... ICIW?aot4ZII.

==.''"'.::'1,."::.-:=

1171::-=Pic"- 1~1. llollr
•
~- 114
·t~
-~
·a 11 ·

IIIW,

l!ac-h FIHQI Bumor. SIOO.
11W47-.ori14-14S.I2U.

3 - . both. qu,. locolion,
d o - ond rolo,._ requlncl,
1114..75-tOIIO.

t•Sp.m.

PN tMO ~

ond..:C.::

gu- · - - .
boalnnorw, gulllrlot,
.loll Womoloy lnot...,.or, 11444M077. 1rm11ec1
1np.

AmWe

liZ.. _

Counlr

:104 ..7M717, JD4..7T.M501 ....

9

.-a

_...,

11,......7411.

•t

County Wat.. T01.1ra. kla. to
opeNte an e.-cur.Jon . - •

EXCITING NEW
gome. ta00

="".J2I....•or::-...
=ow::

• - .... lllolro
to t1IL
~·- 11 •• 10 S71. ~·-up
a up. bUnk belli: oomptiCC
with ...a,.. 1211
nt1. boby bodo 1110
or bolt ........ 1YI o r -·

t174 1m a-.
Von; fiM - · '"""'; 1112 Flroblrd. lf4-24'-

d

141.
--.
2 bod"""" opta. lor rent. Cor- t»
Pllod. Nlco oolllng, lou.... - - $ . kinglocllnllo ovalloblo. Coli 114-H2' NO. oolocllon o f 3711 EOH.
.,...,
-~~
oobl-.
- - $311 onc1 up lo tiL
bedroom
opl,
GoUipollo
F~,
110
IIIJO
oomo
oo
oooh
wbh
3
_ ,,,
orodH. S mi. out lulovl
304.. 75-5421.
Pll lion
Opon I o\.11. to 1 . .
'
3 room opto. In P - 114- lhno ... CoU 114-441-0322. ·

A public onorlng of
-g
modo by llooon

•oek lo

Yard Sale

~bod~lllpollofony,

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
1hat youk.-,
do
w1111 pooplo
end NOT to Mnd money
,........., lhl Nil until you hove
ln..tlgalod tho ollorlnil.
A11onllon

7

iili:'

Business .
Opponunlty

typing • -

Foonl: Doa. - · 111h,
yoor ............
- - w/Wiilie, Can IIIU $311,111111
llolllllo, ( 1 1 - - Eld...
lid, _11...,.,.._
4M2.

op1. AI-

c. Cooo - IIIII Loodor,
uood4010DIIch-bT,...IIIt,
1_1
....14-7142....
IIIIo

do.
Cillo ~.':."h rumpo 111
::::'Ztr:"~' IIIW, ' '

110

- . lllol,.,. 12111 to tt7l.

IIR 101lum.op1. RangoArofrlt.
r..'!.~od. Wollr, - •· gorpold. Dop. • Rol. .,..._

Fmancial

In

· 1111. r - sso..,. up
to 1121. !lido o bod• t.a to

1 lr., unlum. ope., Flrot - ·
114-441-3-

...,.-.11~121.

Filii -

Apartment
for Rent

PIFJ 1M

1:01(1) ... ..., 111'11"'11

"I'm glad to finally sell the ::.:.. -,.-.,,
==~i=4=..,,.':.
114411
house. I just hope my land- =.
- ' .,..._ -------r..==:;:-;::"':
· ==::::;;:::=====~ 72 TrucksforSale
lord doesn't find out about =.":':'""....::.~"= 51 Housaliold
t,.. ....,., w, uao. 11&gt;1-m:
•t "
" - , =:.- -..
Goods
=244;;1•:::;"'.:.'';.:.:;4-MJ.IZH.~=::..,..:---:1m io;~~~~~:.;. l-..!1!;;·:.....-----,----....---1 114-441 - 54
Miscellaneous
57
Musical
p1o11 ,..., 111r oond.
:::
~.":E-::,::Merchandise
Instruments
S04..71-,71S•I7W474.
44

Aniao1CM

1111 1

} tAITI~LI

i:t.Jv=Q
iiJ Wlllld flldlty

(1) - . - . .

2

1

UJNan
.Cllllltl*• Timlllliilaoi Q

btl-111111.

.,.. t 'e 'lt4-44f.l5711t....,.
S4U..

nu
IAMI

1:001£~:::• Ani!

~o;.,;,;;m;...~~~;ii,.;dt!i·•~o,·iii•iM

F1rot......

3

EY!NINO

_.....,..IIIDD 'oWl 1

...:;:aa...

The Daily

M THURSO. NOV. 30 8

,_
1100. ,... ...,***
Coo 1
Chowp. -

...... --you....

m-tlf..

sea~~!

441-'-

uu.-y&amp;dlpcMit,,141tt MN.
1 tn droom fumllhed, ......, Mp u 1 • I&amp; fl. of ott1oe
ond ~ NC,-. pot - h ~- •'7t0
Dlue Ud~iiJ11, ,..... Dll, 304- Q«ttp'JI'I Plenty of paltifta

j

- -

IIOW~ .t.BOUT", 1A Rl?l..
.6+lO H~ NQ'B( ~

ri.

Ohio

Television
Viewing

,., - · ua Olllo..i:,
~
;;p-a:..:
a.. :m.

hook_1
3117,.,...,41-1221.

J

Pomeroy- Midllepo~t.

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

..........

t:

1liuraday, November 30, 1989

71 Autoa tor 8lle

CRYPTOQUOlE

ll-SI

NEEJ

LECCZRULWMUEH

H M U C ZK W M U RN

GOD,

HKDDA
~

WRJ

WH

BZHM

WGMDX .

Ull

F K WL 0

WH

L E G·

SWXJ

WRRD

WH

ME

CEXXEP

KU. RJFDXNS
Yulrr...•• .Ct"fotl-tr. I'VE LEARNED TO
. ADMIT IT WHEN rM SCARED BECAUSE IT TAKES
. COURAGE TO KNOW WHEN YOU OUGHT TO BE
1
AFRAID. - JAMES MICHENER
(§ 19119 King Features Srndicale. Inc

,

I

�Ohio

Middleport
eout1 news

SURE SIGN - Yoa kaow the bolcbly seaaonls
oftlclally here whea tile SIIOwflakes s&amp;art to Oy In
tile reconler's office Ia the Melp County
Coutboue. Employees Kay Hill, on coaater, and
,JIIQ Kine, a&amp; rJcllt, and Melp County Recorder
Emmocene Coap, center, hunc the paper

David Per sons of West Coluni·
bla, W. Va. was fined on six
charges when he appeared Wed·
nesclay night In the court of
Middleport Ma y or Fred
Ho!fmaa .
Persons was tined $425 and
costs and sentenced to three days
In jail on a charge of OWl; $10
and costs, operating a motorcy·
cle without eye protection, $10
and costs, expired lags on a
motorcycle; $25 and costs, no
operator's license; $50 and costs,
menacing threats, and $25 and
costs, disorderly manner.
.
Also fined on multiple charges
was David 'E . Watkins. Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's
Ucenses, $25 and costs, dlsor·
derly manner, and $425 and costy
and three days In jail on a charge
o! DWI.
Gall E . Thoma, Long.Bottom,
entered a plea of not guilty to lour
charges filed against her and
they wUI be transferred tocounty
court. The charges are DWI,
weaving course, running ·a red
light, and allowing an unlicensed
person to operate a motorcycle.
Others fined In the court all on
charges of running stop signs
were Margaret A. Landers, Mid·
dleport, $10 fine only, Sharon K.
Lone, Point Pleasant, $10 and
costs, Mary Mullins, Bidwell, $10
fine only.
Forfeiting bonds In ·the court
were Donald H. Bolen, Jackson,
· $~. stop sign violation; Tamara
Y. Hayes, West Columbia, W.
Va., $460; DWI; $190, driving·
under suspension; George John·
son, Mason, $52, speeding; Jo·
seph L. Thompson, Cheshire, $50,
speeding; Pete Oliver, MI. Alto.
W. Va., $54. speeding; and
Michael L. CelU, Pomeroy, $460,
DWI.

saowllakes oa WedaesdQ mclnlac. The IDOW·
Oakes are a tradition Ia Conp' • office which
started several years ap. The paper 'flakes are
saved !rom year to year with 1.,.1 • lew aew
additions here and there eaeh holiday season.

Stocks
--Local news briefs ...- -... Dally
stock prices
Continued !rom page 1
no appointment necessary . Residents are encouraged to take
advantage of the service which will not be offered again until the
second week of January.

.

ODOT helps 'tie-one-on'
MARIETTA - '.'Tie one on" will take on new meaning tor
many state employees this holiday season, The Ohio
Department of Transpor tation (ODOT) and other state
agencies are joining with Mothers Against Drunk Driving
(MADD) and numerous local organlzat Ions to reduce d~unk
driving this holiday season.
·
Gov. Richard F . Celeste is sponsoring the "Tie-One-On For
Safety" campaign lor all state agencies, to .demonstrate
support lor a less viole.nt season by choosing not to drink and
drive.
The campaign encourages cillz!!ns to lie weatherproof red
ribbons to a vehicle's left door handle, side view mirror or
antenna to serve as a reminder not to drink and drive.
In 1988, 1, 748 people were kUled In vehicle crashes in Oliio. Of
those, 766 were killed In alcohol-related crashes and 29,262 were
Injured due to Impaired driving. Vehicle crashes are the leading
cause of death for young Ohioans ages 16-35.
OOOT Director Bernard B. Hurst, P.E., joins Gov. Celeste in
asking all OOOT employees to display their commitment to this
campaign, thereby creating a safer highway system for au•
Ohioans.
·
Ribbons may be obtained at the Meigs County ODOT garage
located on State Route 7 at Ches.ter.

(As ollO: 38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. .... ... .. .. 30'l1
AT&amp;T ..... .. ... .., ....... .. .... ........ 43
Ashland 011 .................... ... .36¥.!
Bob Evans .. .. ... .... .... .: .......... 14
Charming Shoppes .: .... ........10¥.!
City Holding Co ........... ....... 141{,
Federal Mogul... .. ........... .. ... 20
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... .......... ... 46\&lt;i
Heck's .... ............... ........ ...... 4%
Key Centurion .......... .... ...... 14\&lt;i
Lands' End ...... .... ..... .. ........ 26\&lt;i
Limited Inc ..... ... ..... ... ... .. .... 33
Multimedia Inc . ... .... ., .... .. .. .. 92
· Rax Restaurants ..... ........ ..... 2\ii
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. .... 15
Shoney's Inc.. .... ... ... :.... ...... 12%
Star Bank ........ .......... ... ...... 20%
Wendy's Inti. ....... .. ...... .. ..., . .4¥.
Worthington Ind ........ ..........24ll
(Charm me Shoppes Inc.'s November sales rose lour percent.
Umlted lac.'a Ncivemher sales
rose 14 'percent.)

L-------------------------------~
, ~0

--Area deaths-raye Robie
Faye (Taylor) Roble, 74, of
Mesa, Ariz., died Monday in
Mesa.
She was born on May 23, 1915 in
Cbeshlre Township, daughter of
lhe late Fred and Maud &lt;Lem·
ley) Taylor.
She was preceded In death by
ber'husband, Everett Roble; one
son and two brothers.
. Survivors . include one son,
jobn Roble of Mesa; three
daughters. Mrs. Clarice Jarvis,
Mrs. Juanita Harrison and Mrs .
Shirley Oxyer, all of Cheshire; 11
grandchildren, 12 great·
grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs.
Pearl Carsey of Pomeroy and
Mrs. Margaret Morehouse of
Mesa; three brothers, Paul Tay.
lor of Rutland, Fred Taylor of
Gallipolis and Alex Taylor of
Mesa.
Services were held today at
Bunkers Garden Chapel in Mesa.
Burial was held in Mesa.

three grandchildren, six great
grandchildren, and one sister,
Mrs . Gladys Mowrey. Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
In addition to her parents she
was preceded in death by her
husband, James A. Gilbert In
June 1968, by a brother, Elwyn
Yost, and by a sister, Hilda
French.
Friends may call on Friday
!rom 5·8 p.m. at the Bolin
Funeral Home, 1271 Blue Ave.,
Zanesville, where . the funeral
wlll follow at 8 p.m. Pastor John
Edwards, of the Coburn United
Methodist Church will officiate.
Graveside services and burial
will be held Saturday at 1 p.m . In
Zanesville Memorialfark.
The Snyder Funeral Home in
Lexington is handling the
arrangements.

Vera Gilbert
Vera H. Gilbert, 84, 3862
Needham Road, RD 9, Lexlng·
ton. died Wednesday afternoon In
Grlf!etb Nursing Home In Mans·
field following an extended
Ulness.
Born June 5, 1905\n Syracuse to
the late Charles and Mary Miller
Yost. she was a homemaker.
Mrs . Gilbert spent most of her
life In South Zanesville before
moving ID Le;~dngton eight years
ago.
.
She Is survived by a son,
Howard J. Gilbert, Lexington;

One player picks
f6 million jackpot
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
player picked all six numbers In
Ohio's :;Iuper Lotto game Wed- .
al!llday nlJbl, becoming eligible
to claim the Sli mUIIon jackpot.
The namer of the player will be
annouaced after the winning
tkket Is redeemed, a lottery
spokeSman said Thursday. The
wlnniDg numbers were 9, 14, 22,
25, 29 and 39.

Licences issued
A mar,r lage license has been
Issued in Meigs Probate, Court to
William Robert Myers, 33, and
Melissa Jayne Longstreth, 21,
both of Langsville.
·

Forecl~ure sought
A foreclosure action has been
filed In Meigs Common Pleas
Court by Cbemlcal Mortgage
Company, Columbus, against
Cheryl Lynn Powell, formerly
known as Cheryl Colligan
Kropka. Middleport, et al.

EMS has six calls

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Thereafter Until

SOFAS,
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Hoapital news
-v-.... MemGrlal

Wednelday admissions -Lyle
Baker, Racine; John G. Hayes,
Middleport.
Wednesday discharges pauy Jones, Frederica Faris,
Lee BIIIJ, John Loscar, Forrest
Teaford, Debora Michael.

I

-

President Bush arrives for
Malta meet with Gorbachev

Qualifications listed
for ODNR program

~IIlilS.

OPEN HOUSE WINNERS

A routine DUI arrest late vehicle Into the pollee cruiser were notified thai a person
Thursday afternoon In Mlddle- whim Bird resisted and fied on answeringBird'sdescrl'ptlonhad
portevolved into a car theft and a foot. After radioing lor assist· been at a nearby service station.
A passing river tug fronr G&amp;C
search for the thief by authorities ance, Hall, also on loot, went In
!rom Meigs and Ga!Ua Counties. pursuit of Blrtl. The suspect ran Towing was contacted and used
· According to Information !rom lnlnthewoods,thenclrcledback, Its llJhts to assist authorities In
Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Lit· jumped lnln the pollee cruller searc~lng the river bank, but
tie and Meigs Sheriff James M. and drove away with lights Bird could not be found.
In addition to Middleport Po·
Souls by, Middleport Officer flaahlng. According to reports,
the
cruiser
went
up
Story's
Run
!Ice
and the Meigs and Gallla
Ryan Hall had stopped 33-year·
Road
and
SQOn
after
was
found
Sheriffs
Depar,tments, Pomeroy
old Ritchie Allen Bird, of Point
abandoned just below ·the Kyfler po11ce, and the Ohio Highway
Ple~nt, W.Va. , onPowellSt.ln
'
. Patr:9l ·~re.· Involved In the.
• )vli_dit)eport. at about ~ 30 p.rn. Creek Plant-on Route 7.
,,~Jillnl
Wllll'
.IPQited
by
Sh""'
~.......,frill:
BIJ'd.
,. .
yesten:1f~Y; .., • ...,.....
'~~, · ..
... Dr.
'
'
SOtilliby near the bridge on
:\(i-iitllltlday momlng, he sltll
M. Levine, Polllt PleaHall arrested Bird for DUI and Campaign Creek at · Addison, had no\ been located, Chief Little
1811i, a surceon, hu been
was assisting hbn from his own after Ga!Ua County authorities reported. He has however been
named to the Auoclate Medl·
charged In Middleport Mayor's
. cal Staff at V~erans MemorCourt with DUI, and charged In
1~ Hospital.
Meigs County Court with theft of
the pollee car. West VIrginia
authorities have been given a
copy of the arrest warrant lor
Bird, Sheri!! Soulsby reported.
Chief Little said Bird may have
an exuberant Bush said that jumped lnln the pollee cruiser by
VALLETTA , Malta (UP!) President Bush arrived Friday superpower relations "have m !stake, thinking II was hls own
for his first summit with Soviet changed greatly and clearly car.
have changed lor the better.''
leader Mikhail Gorbachev as
''This meeting represents a
White
House
officials
monitored
Jack M. Levl.ne, D. 0 ., Point
point
of departure - the begin·
an
attempted
coup
against
Phi·
Pleasant, W.Va., a surgeon, has
n
log
of a process as full of
llpplne
Presld~nt
Corazon
been named to the Associate
promise
as any that we'.ve
Medical Staff at Veterans Mem· Aquino.
known,"
he
told a Rose Garden
Bush authorized U.S. military
orlal Hospital in Pomeroy.
A native of the Bronx In New assistance to the Phlllppine go- . gathering, pobltlng to the ex·
traordlnary political chapges
York. Dr. Levine attended the vernment early Friday while
State University of New York at traveling to Malta aboard Air transforming communist reApplications for both HEAP
Brockport studying research, Force One and U.S. lighter jets gimes In Eastern Europe lnln
free
societies.
were
providing
alr
support
as
and
Emergency HEAP continue
1974-1976. In 197lj, he received his
"Ours
Is
a
powerful
and
loyal
troops
battled
rebel
forces
to
be
accepted at the GaiUa·
bachelor's degree In biological
hlslnrlc
opportunity
made
possl·
In
Manna
.
Meigs Community Action
science at the University . of
ble by a continuing American Agency In Cheshire,
"We'·re doing what's required
SOuthern California In Los An·
geles. Levine received his Doctor of us and we' re hopeful that the co!llmltmentto the alliance and the GaiUa Satellite office, 220
o! Osteopathic Medicine Degree matter will be contained," Bush Its defense," he said, adding that Jackson Pike, Galllpolls, and at
from the ~ew York Co Uege' of told reporters alter landing in the the last decade of this century the Meigs Satellite office, 39350
"marks the beginning of a new Union Ave., Pomeroy.
Os teopalhy Medicine In Old Mediterranean Island nation.
· The HEAP application dead·
White House spokeman Marlin era."
Westbury In 1982.
He did his Internship at the
Fitzwater told reporters aboard
line Is Jan. 31, 1990. The Emer·
Detroit Osteopathic Hospital and
gency HEAP application period
the aircraft carrier USS Forres·
the HI-Community Hospital In tal that "no Americans have
continues throughout the pr().
Warren, Mich. In 1983 followed by
gram heating season ending
been put at risk," adding, "If
a residency In general surgery at Indeed the tide Is turning, per·
March 30, 1990.
the same two hospitals from 1984 haps there woul!ln't be any need
Both programs provide heal·
!ng assistance to households
through 1988.
lor any further Intervention."
In addition he has done course
whose total Income is below 150
Bush administration officials
VALLETTA, Malta (UP!) work In trauma, a bdomlnal and said Gen. Colin Powell, chairpercent of the poverty level
pelvic anatomy, diseases of the man :of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, President Blish will host the guideline.
pancreas, general surgery, and
The annual Income tor both
was authorized to use U.S. war economic summit of the seven
post-operative management. His
planes to thwart the mosl serious Western Industrial nations In programs Is the same, however,
areas of professional Interest of seven coup attempts against Houston. Texas, July 9·11, a the HEAP application requests
Include general surgery, trauma·
the nearly 4-year-old Aquino spoke~~man announced Friday.
12 monthy Income while the
White House press secretary Emergency Heap state regUla·
tology,gynecologlc surgery, and government. No ground troops
critical care medicine.
were Involved, While House Marlin Fitzwater said Bush has lions provide a choice of using the
designated Frederic V. Malek to past three, or 12 months Income,
Dr. Levine who Is also on the officials said.
·
staff at Pleasant Valley Hospital
"We're providing air cover. serve as director of the summit, which can qualify some appll·
and his wife, Allison, reside at That •s what we've been asked with the personal rank of ambas· cants for Emergency HEAP
for," ·said Secretary o! State sador, to over~ the staging of only. Examples could be house-.
Route 2. Point Pleasant.
holds experiencing drastic In~,
James Baker, who was In Malta the summit meeting.
Malek, president of Northwest come cuts during the past three
lor the superpower summit.
Baker said the Philippine air AlrUnes, was a top campaign months due to Illness, Injury,
force "II evidently supporting aide to Bush In 1988 and formerly unemployment or retirement.
The objective of the Emer·
the rebels. The army Is sttll served as White House personnel
The Ohio Department of Natu· supporting Aquino lor the mo- director In the Nixon era.
gency HEAP program Is to
ral Resources, Division of Recla· . ment. It's lair ID say the situation
Bush also picked Richard I. resolve healing prices created by
matlon, operates a reforestation Is serious."
McCormack, undersecretary o! disconnection, threat of dlscon·
program lor the establishment of
Bush, speaking with reporters state lor economic and agrlcultu· nectlon or a bulk fuel supply of
new forests on abandoned. strip In Malta, said Vice President rat affairs, to be his personal less than 10 days.
mine land. ln order to be ellglble ·&gt; Dan Quayle telephoned Aquino representative to prepare poUcy
Assistance can only be authothe area beinl considered must:
rized for either the primary
and she was "very grateful for aspects of the summit.
1. Have beea mined lor coal or the call and very grateful for the
The summit meeting bas taken heating source or the secondary
IDdustrlal materials prlor to 1972. assistance and seemed to be on a new Importance wltb the heating soun:e If It Is required to
2. Have no likely . remlning ·confident. But that was a couple collapse of most of the commu· operate the primary .
potential.
Aul8 tance for each program II
ntst re~ 1D Eaatern Europe
of hours ago.''
3. Have had erosion or off site
Alr Force One touched down on and a stroDJ bid by Soviet limited to once per heating
sedimentation problems.
a raln·silck tarmac at the biter· Preildent Mikhail Gorbachev to season.
4. Be barren or devoid of national airport on the Medlter· join Western financial alliances.
For additional lnformatton,
The alUed leaders atteadinl call the Cheshire office at 367·
vegetation sufficient to control ranean llland nation at 9:43a.m.
er..lon.
under a steact'raln and overcast ' represeat Great Britain, France, 7341 or 992-6629, the Gallla
Specially Inoculated pine,
Italy, West Germany, Canada, Outreach office, at 446-0611, or
skies.
hardwood and woody ahrub seeIn remarks upon hl8 departure . Japan and the European , Eco- the Meigs Outreach office at
992-5605.
.
!rom
the White House Thursday, nomic Community.
(Continued on Page 10)

Bush announces
economic summit
slated for Houston

watts
• Fits under cabinet

$229

spree largely caused by generous
manufacturers sales Incentives.
"The . evidence suggests that
the economy Is losing steam, "
said Robert Dederick, chief
economist with Northern Trust
Co. In Chicago. " You look around
and it's hard to lind any pluses In
the economy ."
The department also reported
that Its Index of Coincident
Indicators, designed to track
current economic conditions, ·
was unchanged In October after a
0.1 percent decline In September.
The Index of Lagging Indica·
tors, In tended to track pas I
economic conditions, rose 0.4
percent Iii October after falling
by 0.4 percent In September. ·

Applications
for HEAP
still available

HUGE 46 JNCII SCIIE(N

PIINCUS lOLL-TOP DESK

all index !ell at an annual rate of
0.4 percent for the first 10 months
of 1989 compared will! a 3.8
percent annual rate of gain In the
same period In 1988, reflecting an
overall slowing In the nation's
economy this year.
Earlier this week, the department reported that economic
growth was a moderate 2. 7
percent during the July·
September quarter, but there
have been clear signs that
On the plus side, the number of expansion will be slight If at all in ·
new building permits Issued was the fourth quarter, Including a
hlgqer, the nation's money sharp decline In manu'tacturtng
supply Increased, sensitive . employment.
The automobile Industry has ·
mater lals prices rose, orders lor
plant and equipment were up and been particularly weak recently .
with sales plummeting In the fall
stock prices climbed.
The department said the over· after a summertime buying

tors were a sharp Increase In
weekly unemployment claims
and a shortening of the average
work week among manu!actur·
lng workers.
· Also pushing the Index down
were a drop In unfllled manufacturers orders, a decline in
consumer confidence, faster delivery of products by vendors and
a drop In new orders for consu·
mer goods.

Point Pleasant man charged
with DUI flees with cruiser

'
Dr.-Levine
joins hospital
staff here

Cable Roady
hmote Control

VHS Formal

Stecial

·~

19" REMOTE
COLOR TV

Remote · 2 Hoo~•

J

WASHINGTON (UPl) -The
·government reported Friday
that Its primary gauge of future
economic activity declined 0.4
percent In October, a sign of. a
possible rocky road ahead for the
nation's already slowing
economy.
The drop In the Index of
Leading Indicators, Intended to
predict f'conomlc performance
six ID nine months In advance,
follows consecutive gains of 0.3
percent and 0.6 percent In Sep·
tember and August.
Six of the 11 indicators ·that
make up the Index were down In
the October survey, reflecting
. particular weakness In the na·
lion's manufacturing sector.
The bl~est neeatlve contrlbu·

.

to.

~-

25 Cento
A Multimlldia Inc. New apaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 1, 1989

Leading indicators drop 0.4 %

BAND PARTICIPATJON PLAQUES - Eastero, Meigs ·aad
So"lhern High Schools will receive plaque• from tile Ml~eport
and Pomeroy Chambers of Commerce · la appreciation for
participating In Sunday's Christmas parade. Here Tamara
Hayman, field commander, accepts a plaque (rom Dick Owen,
Middleport chamber presldent,loUowlag Wednesday's ~neunce­
ment ol the trophy winners. Representa&amp;lve!l of Melp·and ~tern
bands were not present.
·

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leg. $279 SALE

Low loalpt Ia mid lh.
Cloudy Slturday. Hlp In low
th. ChiiiiCe of preclpltatloa te

0036

No.144
Copyri hted 1989

hall on Tuesday. 6 p.m. lor a
potluck dinner. There will be a $3
gift exchange. Officers are to
wear chapter dresses .

~

703
Pidt4

Vot.40.

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

,~

Pick 3

•

____ Meigs announcement _ _ __
To meet Tuesday
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, wlll meet in
. regular session at the Chester

24

percent.

~---------------------- .
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Six calls for assistance were
answered on Wednesday by units
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services.
At 1:02 a.m., the Chester ·Fire
Department was called a hay tire
on Sand Ridge Road. CIR!ster
Fire Department was called to
Lovers Lane Road at 2:03 a.m.
tor another hay (Ire.
Racine at 8: 32 a.m. was called
to Bridgeman St. for Jean Hall to
Holzer Medical Center.
At Rutland at9: 02 a.m. went to
McCumber Hill Road for Evelyn
McCasky to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 3: 07 p.m. , Pomeroy trans·
ported Laura Pickens from the
· Amerlcare-Pomeroy . Nursing
Center to Veterans Memorial
'.
Hospital.
At 7:30 p.m., Mlddle)X&gt;rt went
to South Third Ave. for John
Hayes who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Ohio U.ttery

.,

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y

SYRACUSE POSTMASTER RETIRJ!iS - Marcaret Cotterill,
right, has retired as postmaster of the SyracuiM! Post Office. On
Thursday, her last official day, she handed the keys over to aew
postmaster, Wayne Venham. Cotterill started In the postal
business on Jaa.ll, 19116, and was appolnted9CJ8bnaster onJan.13,
1979. She will be honored with an open bolW! at the Presbyterian
Church annex In Syracuse on Sunday ·f rom U p.m .

U.S. to assist Aquino
in
Philippines,
cruis ·.
..
.
'

MANILA, Philippines (UPI)Renegade troops strafed the
presidential palace friday and
seized three garrisons In the
seventh atten!pt to topple Presl·
dent Coraz(ln Aquino, prompting
the United States to assist Aquino
with fighter jets.
President Bush granted the
support request from the Philippine leader while aboard Air
Force One heading to his summit
In the Mediterranean near Malta
with Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev.
"AI the request of President
Aquino, the president has authorized U.S. mlli);ary asslstan~e to
the government of the PhiliP:
pines In defending Itself against a
coup attempt," the White House
said In a statement Issued early
Friday.
Aquino . said U.S. fighte r jets
"would give air cover to our
ground troops."
''This should complete the·
annihilation of the air assets of
the rebel forces." she said.
' Jerry' Huchel, an official at the
U.S. Embassy In Manila, said,
' 'U.S. planes have been In the air
over Manila, but I have not heard
of any engagements."
News reports said U.S. F -4
Phantom jets blasted fo~r rebel

aircraft and blew up the rue!
dump at the former U;S. alr
station at Sangley Point In Cavlte
province. east of Manila. The jets
screamed overhead In the capital
on undisclosed missions.
The Phlllppines are of vital
strategic Importance to the Unltell States In th~ Far East. The
United States maintains two
major bases in the Philippines Sublc Naval Base, and Clark Air
Base, home o! the 13th Air Force .
and the largest American air
base oulslde the continental
United States.
The Red Cross said at least 15
people. Including six soldiers,
were killed In the Intense fight·
lng. More than 50 others, mostly
Qystanders, were wounded.
.
Aquino, 56, In statement Issued
to reporters at mkl·alternoon
said, "The advantages are still
ours in the conflict" and said her
forces were consolidating · In
preparation tor a "major push.''
Earlier Friday, minutes after
addressing the nation by televl·
sion, a rebel helicopter bomb!!d
the station. knocking the ·only
functioning private television
station, Channel9. ott the air and
wounding several civilians.
The chopper then llred rockets
Continued on page 10

....--. Local ·news briefsHobson man held; charges pending
Johnny Ratliff, 23, Hobson, is confined to the Middleport jail
pending filing of several charges resulting from fleeing from an
. officer late Thursday night.
According to ~ld Little. pollee chief, Ratliff had been stopped
at 11: 38 p.m . at Powell and Ash by Patrolman Ryan Hail as a
possible DUI. While the officer was talking to Ratliff, he
suddenly pulled off in his pickup truck. Hall pursued and Ratliff
was stopped on Route 7 below Middleport and brought back to
the jail.

Baisden competency hearing set
GalUa County Common Pleas Court Judge Donald A. Cox has
ordered a competency hearing at one p.m. Monday for Dennis J .
Baisden, 18, Indicted Oct. 121n the triple homicide Sunday Sept.
24 at Kanauga.
Baisden was Indicted on three counts of aggravated homicide
In the deaths of Marvin W. Wears, 91, hiswlfe. Beulah Wears, 84,
of 415 Fourth Ave., Kanauga, and · Mrs. Wears' daughter,
Audrey Foster, of Mlllnn, W.Va.
Baisden entered pleas o! not guilty and not guilty by·reason of
Insanity to the six count Indictment which also Included two
counts of aggravated robbery and one count of aggravated
burglary.
Judge Cox ordered a PQChlatrlc evaluation by the Sllawnee
Forensic Center to cleterm1De tile ISsue of sanity at the lime of
the alleged o!fen.- Ud ttlf .._of competence to atand trial.
Batmen, who Ia In the county jail In lieu of $250,000 baad, Is
accused of slashing tile throats of the three victlma. Later he
allegedly took a ladles watch, a dlamoad ring and $500 from the
Continued on page 10
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