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Page-1 0-The Daily SUitiuel

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-Local news briefs· - Ohio records 6 weekend fatalities
'

Eastern board to meet

one Sunday.
By UnHed Press lnleraaUoaal
VIctims Included:
At leas I slx people, Including
Friday Night
Eastern Local Board of Education will meet In special session
one pedestrian, were killed this
Tuesda)'. ~ p.m.• at the high school cafeteria.
Sandusky:
Sheri L. Mather, 17,
past weekend In Ohio traffic
Sandusky,
kUled
when her car hit
accidents, the State Highway
a
ut!l!ty
pole
one
an Erie County
Patrol said today,
road.
The count showed one death
Saturday
Friday night , four Saturday and
Springfield: Brenda K. Wise,
NATIONAL WEATI'IER SERVICE'FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11-15-88 39, New .Carlisle, k!lled when

Squads have
13 calls over
weekend

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Monday. November 14. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

'

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the truck she was riding In hit a
utll!ty pole and fence along a
Clark County road.
·
Eaton: Go ldie B. Kreitzer, 84,
Eaton, k!lled when hit by two
vehldes as she tried to cross a
street in Eaton, Preble County,
Austinburg: Steven S. Degen·
narl, 68, Jefferson. kllled In a
two-vehic le accident on Ohio 45 in
Ashtabula County.

Miamisburg: David C. Brackett, 22. New Lebanon, killed when
hiS truck collided with a car In
Miamisburg, Montgomery
County.
Sunday
Newark: PatrlckC.Futrell,23,
Newark, killed when hls vehicle
left Ohio Route 16 In Licking
County, struck a guard rail and
overturned.

•

Ohio Lottery

Buffalo
posts lOth
NFL victory

DaiJy Number
606
Pick 4

9316
r

Page 4

•

'20

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports 13 calls
over the weekend; 11 Saturday
and two Sunday.
Saturday at 12 midnight,
Tuppers Plains to Sumner Road
for Ora Sinclair to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
12: 1~ a.m. to Butternut Ave. for
Debbie Morris to Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospital; Middleport at
4:57a.m. to Ash St. for Cella Hlte
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 6: 06 a .m. to Nay lor's
Run for Hugh Leifheit to Vete- .
rans Memorial Hospital; ..
Tuppers Plains at 9:55 a.m. to
Silver Ridge Road for Lewis
White to Veterans Memorial .
EasNow
-RAIN
W.?~ SHOWERS
Hospital; Pomeroy at 12:42 p.m.
to Lincoln HlllforSteve McGrath
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
to Veterans Memotlal Hospital;
Map s!Qws minimum Ia~- At least 50% or any shaded area is forecHt
Pomeroy at 12: 53 p.m. to the
to receive PeciPI&amp;IicHI lr . tecl
UPI
Flood Road for Edward Tim·
WEATHER MAP - During early Tuesday morning, snow is
mons to Holzer Medical Center;
forecast for parts of the eenlral and northern Plains slates, with
Tuppers Plains at 1:48 p.m. to
rain forecast lor the e•tera portloDB of lhe central and norlllern
Scout Camp Road for Nellie
PlaiDS. Rain &amp;lid showers are po1181ble In most of the' central Plains
Perry to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroy Fire Department at
and lhe mld·Misslslllppl Valley. ·(UPI)
•
8:18p.m. to a brush flreonRt. 681
West; Pomeroy at 8:33 p.m. to
the pollee department for Matt
'
"
Craddock to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine Fire Departmentand EMSunitsat11:04p.m.
to a single car accident on
Morning Star Road; Dennis Long
was taken from the scene to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
actual market price for the 1989
Life Flight made an on-scene
By John C. Rl.ce
landing for Sheila Long to Grant
crop and the $2.84 per bushel
County Extension Agent,
Hospital In Columbus.
target price. For a typical
AIJ'ICU!iure
Sunday at 10:21 p.m., Rutland
producer with an actual corn
transported Ernestine Lambert
yield of 120 bushels per acre, a
to Holzer Medical Center; Ra·
Shelled Corn Good Alternative program payment yield of 110
c!ne at 11:43 p.m. to Ross Road for Hay - Ron Bolze, beef bushels per acre , and variable
for Merel!n Godfrey to Veteran.s specialist at Ohio State Univer- costs of $160 per planted acre and
Memorial Hospital.
sity, says merely substituting $15 per ARP acre, the 19~9
shelled corn for bay could be·one harvest price must exceed about
Licenses issued
way to solve the feed shortage $2. 651n order to earn more by not
_ ·
,·
this year.
participating. This Is above prl·
Marriage Ucenses nave been
For 'cow/calf producers, the ces currently available for forIssued In Meigs County Probate feed shortage Is a hay shortage, ward pricing next year's harvest
Court to Roger Lewis Bissell, 50, 1n a .cow/calf operation, produc- .and well above the expected
Long Bottom, and Barbara Jane ers can substitute shelled corn market price next fall unless a
Pooler, 40, Chester; Thomas for hay for up to 60 percent of the back·l&lt;)·back drought occurs.
Nath.an Swan, 29, Columbus, and total dry matter recommended
Avoiding Herbicide Residue
Ruth Rucella Phllllps, Portland;
in a cow's diet.' this .can reduce Problems - The persistence of
David Wayne Collins, 29, Long costs, especially when liay prices herbicides varies considerably.
Bot rom. to·Beverly Joan Britton, are high.
'
Many factors can Influence her·
25, Parkersburg; Leonard · Based on early October feed blclde persistence, Including
George Scarbrough, 46, Shade, prices, a producer can save moisture, temperature; son ml·
and Nancy Ellen Aelker, 36, about 35 cents a day per cow by croblal activity, soU texture, soli
Rac!ne; Robert Ray Edwards adding 8 poumiS of corn to her organic matter content, pH,
Jr., 23; Letart, W.Va., and J;leth diet and reducing the amount of time, and the amount of herb!·
Ann Pierce, 18, Pomeroy.
grass hay from 25 pounds to 10 clde applied. Most of these
pounds.
'
factors are not constant but are
Commercial Small Fruit -Pro- part of a· dynamic and everduction Seminar -This seminar changing system. Therefore,lt Is
Is des lgned f.o r the commercial often dlftlcult to predict closely
Dally stock prices
production of small fruit, but It Is the persistence of some herbicide
(As or 10: 30 a.m.)
open to anyone Interested In and degree of risk. We do know
Bryce and Mark Sml!h
that the persistence of some
small fruit production. WHEN:
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loew!
Thursday, November 17, 1988 herbicides Is of relatively short
slartlng at4 : Oop.m. Light supper duration and presents little risk
Am Electric Powwer .......... 26JA
will be served from 5·6 p.m. to subsequent crops. Other herbl·
AT&amp;'t .................................. 28\fl
(lnculded'ln registration cost) . It cldes may present sufficient risk
Ashland 011 .. .... .............. ....32%
will Include a roast beef sand- that they preclude ' planting of
Bob Evans .......... ....... ......... 16~
wich, ' chips, and beverage. certain crops the next season.
Charming Shoppes ............. .13'h
WHERE : Jackson ,District Ex- Some herbicides may or may not
City Holding Co , .................. 32
tension Office In Jackson, Ohio, affect the next crop, depending
Federal Mogul. ................... 49JA
PROGRAM: Strawberries - 4-5 upon the factors Indicated above.
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 48'h
If you are concerned about the
p.m .; Brambles - 6-7 p.m.;
Heck's .............................. ; .. JA
Blueberries - 7-8 p.m.; General poss!bllty of herbicide carKey Centurion .................... 16'h
D!scusslon - 8-9 p.m. Pre- ryover, there are several options
Lands' End ............ .. ....... .... 24Ys
registration Is required. Regis- to determine or alleviate the
Limited Inc ........................ 251'&lt;
tration Is $6 and Is due November problem. Call the Extension
Multimedia Inc ......... :.......... 70
Office, 992-6696, for details-:
15. Please send reservations to:
Rax Restaurants .... :..... ........ 3'h
Cooperative Extension Service,
Robbins &amp; Myers .. ,............. 12'h
280 West Union Street, Athens,
Shoney's Inc .... ......... ... ..... ... 7%
Sou Ill Central Ohio
Ohio 45701.
Wendy's Intl ..........................6
Mostly clear, with a
Tonlght:
1989 Corn Program: An Eco·
Wor thington Ind .... ... .......... 20%
In
the
mid 40s. Winds
low
nomic Outlook - The 1989 corn
becoming
southeast
less than 10
program, despite ' cUts of 7
mph.
percent In price supports and 3
Tuesdl!y: Becoming partly
'
In the target price, has
percent
Veterans Memorial
cloudy,
with highs near 70.
Saturday Admissions - Ora features that make participation Chance of rain 20 percent.
· Sinclair, Pomeroy; Cella Hite, attractive for many. The acreage
Extended Forecast
Middleport; Hugh Leifheit, reduction requirement (ARP)
Wednesday
lllrough Friday
Pomeroy; Lewis White, Reeds· for participation was cut to .10
A
chance
of
rain Wednesday',
vUJe; Steve McGrath, Ru,iland. .. percent from last year's 20 with fair conditions Thursday
Saturday Discharges - Edith percent, -significantly Ibwer!ng and Friday. Highs will be In the
Spencer, Madge Barr, Joy the prodUC\lOn•CUI needed to get 60s Wednesday, ranging from the
program benefits. Benefits In·
Spaun, Ivory Bush.
elude
price support loans at a mid 40s to the lower 50s ThursSunday Admissions -None.
day , and mostly lri the 40s
, Sunday Discharges - Debbie national average rate.of $1.~ per Friday. Lows will range from the
Fisher, James Owens, Todd bushel and deficiency payments mid 40s to the mid 50s Wednesbased on a dlfierence between
Lisle, Lewis White.
day.

Vol.39, No.134
.
1988

with own cable ·service

.Shelled com may
solv~ feed shortage

BREAKING THE RmBON - Ohio Governor
Blchard F. Celeste broke a ribbon strekhed
across the bypass on U.S. Route 35 at Jackson
Tuesday afternoon. Celeste coasted through lhe

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.. .

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Hospital news

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l'tltCES EFHCTWE IDV. 14 THIU MOV. 20, 1111 • /IE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO 1,11117 OUAMTiriES • MOT RESPOISIBlE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAl ERRORS

No one claims
Super Lotto prize

.•
l

CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) No winners In Saturday night's
Super Lotto game means the
jackpot for Wednesday night will
be $6 million.
Numbers drawn Saturday
were 1. 23, ·24, 33, 35, and 36.
Ohio Lottery officials said
$3,115,372 worth of tickets were
sold for the game which had a $3
mlll!on jackpot, and $501,090 was
paid out In prizes.

RITE

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET

POMEROY,-OHIO
.PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2S86.

'

ribbon driving a se1nl-1truo:k n1rovlded
Trucking of Jackson. ( OVP photo by Lee Ann
Welch)

Gov. Celeste· opens
Rt. 35 Jackson bypass
•opened the hlghwi'y,-- breaking I hope- this stl.mulates you 'to
· 'By -L EE -ANN WELCH
the ribbon stretched across the dream for this community and
'
OVP Staff Writer
road
by driving through it with a the commu·nlt!es who'll benflt."
Making good on the promise
· So much was at stake with this
inade a generation ago, Ohio semi-truck.
project
that it began to have a
The Jackson bypass was one of
Governor -Richard F. Cele~te
positive
impact on this area's
officially opened the Jackson 22 new highway construction
economy
even before ground was
bypass of U.S. Route 35 Monday projects announced in January
broken,"
and the ripple .effect
1985 through Ohio's Operation
afternoon.
from
the
construction has had
Addressing several hundred Jobs: Highway program, and
stimulated
growth In the area.
people, Gov. Celeste said the was financed completely by state
Celeste
noted
several indus$28.8 mUI!on project "eliminates and local money, Celeste said.
tries
were
added
to the area
Celeste said the project was
one of the worst transpor tation
economy
after
announcement
of
bottlenecks In the eastern United funded without use of !he gasoconstruction
go-ahead
for
the
line tax. which seems to be held
States."
He· added the problems of up In the federal government, bypass were made - Goodyear
Route 35 have long been known to being kept to help balance the and Merrllat expanded their
. operations and Twin Oaks Devel·
budget, he added.
truckers and have hindered
The bypass is more than a road opment on S.R. 32 has been added
economic development and tourfor cars and trucks , Celeste said, as a new business.
ism In Southeast Ohio.
State Sen. Jan Michael Long
In trucker fashion, Celeste . " it Is the highway to our dreams.
(D-Circleville) said the bypass
project showed determination of
southeast Ohio to move foreward
by bringing forth highway and
economic development.
At least two speakers reminded 'the governor of the
incomplete U.S. Route 35 -how
It Is only two lanes In Gall!a
County.
·
Carl Dahlberg of the Southeast
Celeste, told him "It's ready to
Wh!le Ohio Governor Richard
Regional Council and State.
Ohio
go, gover nor ," In reference to the
Celeste lauded the completion of
Rep.
Jolynn Boster (D·
project. In Gall!a County, a few
the U.S, Route 35 bypass at
Galllpol!s)
let Celeste know Gal·
right-of-ways need to be obJackson, finishing that highway
l!a
County
is
still a bottleneck for
tained, then the project Is ready
through Gall!a County was the
traff!c
on
the
highway between
for act ual construction.
. topic of two speakers who took
Ohio
River
and Columbus,
the
State Rep. Jolynn Boster (D·
the podium.
Boster
praised
the efforts of
Gall!pol!s) noted the Jackson
Carl Dahlberg of the Southeast
the
region
putting
aside squabbypass completion is a prime
Ohio Regional Council listened to
bles
and
pulling
together to
example what ca n be accompCeleste praise the bypass as the
but
noted there
better
the
region,
lished when communities put
"highway to our dreams" for
are
st!ll
problems
with the
aside their squabbling and work
those In the Jackson area who
Route
highway
system,
namely
together toward a common goal.
will benefit from its open lng.
35
1n
Gall!a
County.
However, she also let Celeste
But Dahlberg took the oppporThe road "needs to be four
know
there are stil l problems on
tunlty to let the governor know
all the way to the river."
lanes
that highway· and U.S. 35 "needs
making U.S. 35 fo ur lanes
Dahlberg
also said the bypass
to be four la nes all the way to the
through Gal !!a County is tops of
completion was a great day for
Co ntinued on page 10
the SEORC list, and looking a t
the region. but now the highway
needs to be completed through
Gallla County.

Celeste told Gallia
Rt. 35 bypass ·project
is ready to complete

·

All vocalists and vocal groups
taking part In the annual Fall
Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association wlll rehearse Tues·
day evening beginning at 7: 30
p.m. at the home of Charlene and
Bob Hoeflich.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc.

Middleport to proceed

Meigs County agent's comer

Weather

1 Section. 10 Pages

November 15, 1988

' Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

fW

I

Cloudy, breezy tonight. Low
in mid 50s. Chance of rain :W
percent. Wednesday, high In
mid 60s. Chance of rain 70
percent.

- . Local news briefs-Middleport parade slated Dec. 5
The Middleport Christmas parade sponsored by the Chamber
of Commerce , will be held on Dec. 5 at 6 p.m.
Both the Meigs and Southern bands will be participating In the
parade which will form at the Sears parking lot and then march
down Second Street to the T on Mill Street. ·
Individuals, clubs and organizations are Invited to join In the
parade and are asked to register with Klm Blower, 992-5141 or
Bob Freed, 992-2044,
"Santa will be on hand to give out treats to the children, " a
chamber spokesman said.

The Gallla-Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol investigated an
Injury accident atlO: 55 a.m. Monday on SR. 338, about one m!le
east of Racine.
·
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Sharon C. Pierce. 38,
Rt. 2, Racine, went off the road, striking an embankment. There
was moderate damage to the truck,
Pierce was 'injured and taken to Veteran's Memorial
Continued on page 10

1

study by Cable Services, Inc., that a recently authorized study
which does suc h installations. on the need of motel facilities in
The compa ny has Indicated that the town Is expected to be
the system would cos t almost completed and on hand for
$300,000 based on 800 cable discussion at the next meeting of
service customers and would council. Council approved the
Include 29 channels plus other report of Mayor Hoffman show ing receipts of $2,761.19 In fines
features.
A representative of Cable and fees for the month of
Services which now serves the October.
In the short session council also
town with cable television ser·
discussed
the annual Christmas
vice was on hand .at last nigh t' s
which
w!ll be held on
parade
meeting to !!nswer the few
Monday
evening,
Dec. 5; onequestions or complaints that
way
traffic
problems
on North
counc!l members had.'
Counc!l au thor! zed start up Second Ave.; the proposed bicyvisits by Floyd G. Browne cle path, and the possible estabAssociates on the new equipment !!shment of a com post area using
which has been lnstallated at the leaves which are gathered in the
v!J!age sewage lagoon. The visits v!IJage each fall.
Attending the meeting were
will be made at a cost of $1500 to
ensure that the equipment works Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck
properly and that there is an and counc!lmen Gilmore, Geunderstanding on the correct rard. Jack Satterfield, James
methods of operating the Clatworthy, Dewey Horton and ·
W!ll!am Walters.
equipment.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported

State Issue II, connector
road planning topics Monday
The State Issue II program and Regional Development District,
the connector road from Rock the types of information which
Springs to the Ravenswood must be submitted to the state In
Bridge were discussed at great order to qual!!y for Issue II
length In Monday' s meeting of funding.
Although ·lherr are stU! no
the Meigs County Regional Planofficial state guld'ellnes avallable
ning Commission.
Those in attendance at tl)e for Issue II, Buckeye Hills·
meet!ng learned from Ann An· Hocking Valley Regional Develfang, planning coordinator for opment District can offer techn!"
Buckeye H!lls-Hock!ng Valley cal assistance in preparing what

1s anticipated \O be the necessary
lnformat!on,_Anfang said.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones, who serves on the
executive committee for State
Is~ue II's Dls tr!ct 18, reported
that the county and the townships
wlll compile separate plans fo r
possible Issue II projects, which
would then be combined in a total
Continued on page10

Racine park gets new name
The name of Shrine Club Park
was changed to Star Mlll Park
when Racine V!llage Council met
in regular session,
The name was chan ged since
additional · property has been
acquired for park purpoies. The
village will place a plaque at the
park site noting that the original
park was a gift to the town from
the Trln City Shrine Club.
Star Mill Park was selected
since the park area was the site
of the Star M!ll, a three story
structure which was struck by
lightning and burned In the ea rly
1900s. The Simpson Fam!ly was
operating the mill at the time It
burner.
Council approved the request
or the fire department to pur·
chase an air rescue bag, boots,
bunker pants, hose clamp, battery chargers for the trucks, a

smoke ejector fan and two tires
for the tanker truck. Counc!l
expressed Its appreciation to the
fire departrnen t for ihe service
rendered during the trick or treat
observance.
Special thanks were extended
· to the flremen's a uxiliary for
sponsoring the party. Youth of
the town were also commended
for good behavior during the
Halloween season.
Councilman Dick Wamsley reported he had beenb asked about
a Neighborhood Watch program
and council members Indicated
they would support such an
activity bu t It must be the
responsibility of residents , Cou ncil discussed a drainage problem
on Third St., with Thor lief Bentz
and Street Commissioner Glenn
Rizer will check for a drainage
blockage.
The flnanclal report was ap-

proved and includes: cash ba J.
ance or all funds,' $152,387.44
which includes general fund,
$23, 725.37; street, $16,899.14;
!Ire, $41,386.38; state highway,
$3,547.54; water revenue,
$52,503.45; cemetery, $4,184.50;
water depo~ !t s, $3,641.54; cemetery endowment, $6,500. Super
Now interest to date now totals
$5,353.55 with the October Interest ·amounting to $643.81. Recelpis for the month tota led
$25,316.96 while expenditures
amounted to $21,293.45.
Attending were Mayor Frank
Cleland, Clerk Ja ne Beegle,
Councll members, Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz, Carroll Teaford, Richard Wamsley, Larry
Scott and Scott Wolfe; Glenn
Rizer, street commissioner; Fire
Chief Robert Johnson a nd Thorlief Bentz.

Governor
won't talk

•
on tax ISSUe

Driver injured in auto accident

..

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
Middleport Village Council
voted unanimously last night to
proceed with the insta llation and
operation of a v!llage-owned
cable ,televis ion service.
The vote came after both
Councilmen Bob Gilmore and
Paul Gerard stated that they
believe the time has come for the
village to either move on the
cable service proposal or to drop
the matter. They stressed that it
is not a situat!on in which the
village w!l! start on the project
tomorrow but a sltuauo·n to
advise the people of the town that
the v!llage would l!ke to proceed
with the project. The motion to
proceed will also lead to the next
step of surveying the town for the
number of customers which w!l!
be a part of the service.
The action to proceed with the
v!llage-owned system fo!!ow s a

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Gov. Richard Celeste says he will
not discuss a tax Increase for
schools until "a vision" Is Cleve·
loped for the dlrecllon of educa·
tlon In Ohio and presented to the
public.
The governor told educators
and reporters Monday that any
tax Increase next year will have
to be predicated on a solid plan
for making specific improvements In Ohio's educational
system.
"You begin with a visiOn of
where we want to go, and I think
Continued on page 10

8PR1Utl!IIGVP- DII!:CORATIONi ===iiiifu: the
hoUdays just around the corner and lhe Pomeroy
vUJage decoralloD8 In need of some sprucing up,
member of tbe Melp County Garden Clubs
A8110Ciatlon aiJ'eed to lend a hand. Here PauUne
Atkins, of the Rutland Club, Pegu Crane,

I

..

Wladlng Trail; -~tty Dean, Shade Valley; Neva
Nicholson, star;· Pal Holler Chester, and Doris
Grueser, Wildwood, attach greeney to a wire tree
frame as a pari of refurbishing the old
decorations. Others working on the project were
Mary Pugh, Allee Thompson, Binda Diehl, and
Ann Elizabeth Turner.

�----

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Commentary
The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TUE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~~

S!m~

..,..._.._-.-,........,.c::::l,.,..

~v

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlllher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaalatanl Publlllher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Man&amp;ifer

AMEMBER ot The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban 300 words

lOftl. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signEd wttb name. address and
telephont number. No unsigned let ters wtll be published. Letters s hould be tn
good taste , addreulnglssues, not persooaltttes.

' How the Democrats survive

Tuesday, November 15. 1988
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. November 16, 1988

WASHINGTON - Nobody
loves a holiday like a terrorist
does. Those International mer. chants of carnage enjoy making
headlines almost any day of the
year, but shedding blood on an
anniversary of birthday Is extra
special. It Is one of the lew
predictable elements !n a business based on surprise and one of
the lew weapons the u.s. government has against terrorists lnf!ltratlng America.
The U.S Customs Service has
circulated a secret calendar
suggesting days · when terrorist
Incidents might be likely. The
"Intelligence Alert Message"
was sent by the customs lntelltgence division director to all
regional and assistant regional
commissioners of the Customs
Service;
Here are some dates that are
likely to catch the fancy of

Jan. 20- The anti-American
group Hezhollah could be active
on this day. It Is the anniversary
of the freeing of 52 American
hostages from. Iran In 1981.
Hezbollah Is the Iraniansponsored group responsible for
killing more than 250 Americans
In the Middle East since 1983. The
group still holds American .
hostages.
Feb. 1 - This Is the anniversary of the Ayatollah Khomelnl's
triumphal return from exlle to
Tehran In 1979.
·
Feb. 11 - Iranian-aligned
terrorists celebrate the anniversary o! the final overthrow of the
Shah of Iran In 1979.
March 21 -This Is the Kurdish
New Year. The Kurds area tribe
of -people In Turkey, Iran and
Iraq who would like their own
homeland. A large group of them
was killed earlier this year In an
Iraqi chemical weapons attack.

By ARNOW SAWISIAK
UPI Sealor Editor
WASHINGTON - The old political saying goes, "To the victors belong
the spolia." The rest of It usually Is, "And to the losers belongs the
bloodlettbtg."
The Democratic Party last week lost tbe election for president for the
fifth tlme In the last six elections and probably Is In for some Internal strlfe.
There are a lot of reasons Michael Dukakls lost to George Bush, but one
ot the biggest Is fundamental: the Democratic Party Is not a united
organlzatlon.between elections and Its factions, while giving lip service to a
conunon political philosophy, have not agreed on spedflc means to put It
Into practice since the end of World War II. ·
·
However, the Democratic fight, If It comes, Is not likely 19 Involve the life
ot the party Itself unless the ~s Insist on converting or evicting the
1oeers. Only then rnlgbt the collection of uneasy allies brought together by
the Great Depression fly apart.
Actually, the Democrats don't need the. Whltl! House to be a viable
political party. With finn control of both the House and .Senate, the
majority of J!OVernorshlps and legislatures and local elective offices, the
defeated Democrats are by no means In the same shape as the
Republicans were In 1936 or In 196l
After those years, the GOP seemed to be In perU of losing ltsentlrepower
blue and the seed stock of up and coming leaders every organization must
·
have to survive.
In a sense, the Republican Patty made It through Its hours or travall
because It lives on Ideology. Even If there were no GOP otllceholders In
national, state or local otrlce, there probably would be a political party
clinging to the economic tenets and social Ideals that Ronald Reagan
periiOIIIfled.
The Republicans have had their dlvlsi&gt;ns, but the classic spilt between
the Eastern Establishment liberals and the Midwestern-Western
conservatives has for the most part been bridged by adopting the
Internationalist foreign policy ot the former and the :tree enterprise
eamom1cs and ''traditional values" social Ideals of the latter.
·
"This is Olaf, our custodian. Olaf recently got
The Democrats do have a central philosophy ot government and the role
It should play In the lives of citizens, but many of the specific goals of the
attendance."
: party seem to be the result of Internal negotiations among the often
· ·dlvergl!llt special Interests that were brought together by Franklin D.
Roolevelt almost tlO years ago.
.
Thus Democrats find unity easiest to achieve onaregloMlor local basis.
When they present a national ticket they either have reached a
Among the measures passed In the Act. It restores the right of
compl'llllllse of the sort that held the FDR coalition together so long or,
the final days of the last session farmers and certain other "offmore and more often, one wing of the party has gained centro~ as the
of Congress was a miscellaneous road" users or diesel fuel to
liberals did In 1972.
tax bill, commonly referred to as
purchase this fuel without paying
Political observers who forsee a Democratic bloodletting usually talk
the highway user tax. Also, the
the technical corrections bill.
about conflict pitting the left against the right, Northerners against
Although It's principal purpose depreciation period for single.
Southerners or Ideological reformers against pragmatic politicians
was to make technical correcpurpose agricultural or horticulInterested mainly In gaining power.
.
tions to the Tax Reform Act of tural structures Is lengthened to
Any or all of the above might be Involved, as they have been In the past
1986, the bill also contained a 10 years. For those farmers
but the party has survived because the winners usually have been content
number of new tax provisions affected by last summer's
with control ot the national party apparatus. The losers have gone back to
that could prove significant for
drought, certain tax deferrals
their states and cities to run their levels of the party as they saw fit.
some
Individuals
and
companies.
are
given. The act also modifies
But the differences have remained unresolved, aiu:lln some pl;tces -the
some
accounting rules for cerBelow
Is
a
review
of
the
major
South, for example - have resulted In defections. Efforts to reconcnethern
provisions
of
this
legislation.
tain
livestock
producers. These
through such exercises as tinkering with the rules lor selecting presidential
From
the
standpoint
of
the
modifications
will
also apply to
candidates have not solved tbe deep conflicts that have more than alit tie to
average
freelance
citizens,
perhaps
the
artists,
writers and
do with the party's !allures In the presidential arena.
photographers.
most Important aspect of the bill
To help parents finance their
was that It contained a taxpayer
children's
college education, the
"Bill of Rights" designed to
Act
creates
a new exclusion from
protect the Individual taxpayer
In his or her dealings with the Income for Interest Income
By United Press International
Internal Revenue Service. In- earned on U.S. Savings Bonds
Today Is Tuesday, Nov.15, the 320th day of 1988 with 46 to follow. cluded In this Bill of Rights are
used for that purpose ..The Act
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
permits widows and widowers to
new protections and guarantees
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
tor people audited by the IRS. exclude taxable Income gains
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
_For example, It gives one the from the sale of a home when
Those born on this date are under the slgri of Scorpio. They Include right to consult with an attorney · they use the proceeds to purBritish statesman William Pitt, "the elder," In 1708, British during an IRS audit. It also
chase another home. The Act
astronomer Sir William Herschel, discoverer of the planet Uranus, In Includes new protections for . also ensures that current em1738, Nobel Prize' winning physiologist August Krogh of Denmark In when one's property Is seized by
ployees of state and local govern1874, artist Georgia O'Keeffe In 1887, jurist Felix Frankfurter In 1882, the IRS and new provisions to
ments will not be taxed on certain
diplomat W. Averell Harriman and World War Two German Gen. speed up the return o! property
employer provided compensaErwin Rommel In 1891, Gen. Curtis LeMay In 1906 (82), actor Edward that was seized by the IRS
tion such as sick leave and
Asner In 1929 (age 59), and pop singer Petula Clark In 1932 (age 56). without justification.
compensation time. Likewise,
churches can exclude such comThe Tax Bill also Includes a
On this date In history:
pensation from their employee's
number of tax breaks for certain
In 1864, Union Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman began his Civil groups of Individuals. Farmers
Income. IRA holders would be
War march from Atlanta to the sea.
permitted to acquire state-Issued
In particular should be helped by
gold coins for Investment. Furth-

Today in history

MUKfi.TEO, Wash, (NEA) A ahlp's horn blares, seagulls
ahrlek, and the water at the stern
of the MV Kittitas begins to churn
furiously as the ferry eases away
from the fog-shrouded mainland
and begins Its journey to Whldbey Island.
·
That scene Is repeated almost
500 times dally In 20 communities
alo111 the 2,000-mlle shoreline or
Puget Sound, but the Washington
State Ferries never Ieee their
appeal to either tourists or loca(
realdents.
Indeed, ridership has stl!adlly
, tncreall!d In recent years not
•only In the Seattle area but .ln
. other citieS throughout the country. ·Ferries are experiencing a
revival as a means of urban
transportation with a special
my1t1que.
In San Francisco, ferries,
which lOIII 110 were presumed to
have been displaced by the
Golden Gate Bridge, once again
carry cars and paall!ngers between the city and nearby Marin
and Solano counties.
In Boston, almost $100 mllllon

Robert Walters
--------------~----------------~

has been loves ted In docks along Jersey.
Transportation Department..
the Inner harbor by the Boston
In addition, the Port Authority
The state took over the terry
Redevelopment Authority, of New York and New Jersey Is
system
In the early 1950s after a
which believes It .can attract 3 seeking a private partner to
private
operator experienced
mllllon riders annually to a fleet share responslbllty tor a ferry
financial
difficulties. Today, 40
of water taxis.
operation that would cost more percent of Its passengers are
Already In operation, under than $150 million toes tabllsh and
another public agency's sponsor- that would eventually carry 4,500 regular commuters and tlO pership, Is the Airport Water Shut- passengers every hour across the cent tourists or other occasional
tle, which whisks riders between Hudson River between the two riders.
Ferries here and elsewhere are
Boston's waterfront and Logan states.
long
allure but short on
Airport but avoids the chroniFinally, there Is New York's profitson
.
Washington's
ferries
cally jammed Callahan and venerable Staten Island Ferry,
an
annual
budget
of
more
have
Sumner tunnels.
which carries fully half or the than $74 mllllon but almost 30
In New York, municipal offi- 160,000 people who board ferries
cials turned to ferries earlier this every day throughout the Q percent of that total must be
subsidized by the state.
year when the Williamsburg country.
The Staten Island Ferry
Bridge was declared unsafe and
Although that route attracts charges only 25 cents for a round
cloaed for the repair ot structural the most passengers, Washingtrip, compared with $1 for a New
deficiencies.
ton's ferry operation Is by far the York City subway or bus ride. As
Boats capable of carrying 1,280 nation's most expensive and
passengers each piled the East elaborate. A fleet of 23 vessels a result, the ferry accumulates a
River between Brooklyn and the traverses almost 100 nautical $26 million annual deficit that
must be made up by government
Whitehall Ferry Ter,mlnal at the miles and carries 18.5 million
subsidies.
southern tip of Manhattan.
passengers (and 7.8 mllllon vehl·
But even with the limitation,
Almost a dozen privately owned cles) annually.
the
ferries here can boast of
"boutique" ferries regularly tra"Ferry boats are as much a utility as well as charm. Every
verse other routes that connect part of Washington's heritage as
points In Manhattan, Brooklyn, our evergreen forests and snow- . working day, they carry more
than 20,000 people and 6, 000
~ueens, Staten Island and New
capped mountains," says the vehicles In and out of Seattle.
Marine Division of the state's
)'

ROCK SPRINGS - Jeff
" Cheez." McElroy was selected
by Tri Valley ConfeFence
coaches as the league' s offensive
player of the year for the 1988
· (!rid season and, along with
teammates Wess Howard and
Wes Young, was accorded first
team honors on the dream squad.
Marauders Scott Nelgler, Matt
Peterson and Doug Stewart were
given honorable mention.
McElroy, with his explosive
running ability and drive, led the
Marauders In rushing ya~dage
and total points scored during the
year. Carrying the pigskin 144
times from scrimmage,' 'Cheez"
ground out 989 yards (6.87 avg.)
and tallied 13 touchdowns. He
also picked up a six pointer on his
only Interception of the season. a
· 43 yard effort. On kickoff returns,
· he averaged just over 14 yards
per try and was responslblefor30
punts lor a total of 1038 yards
(34.6 avg.) . Defensively from his
linebacker position, he accounted for 20 solo tackles and 34
assists plus one fumble recovery.
Howard, who posed the outside
threat In the Marauder offense,
was equally effective as he
acco unted for five touchdowns
via the running game and added
two on pass receptions. Howard's

1

a bonus for perfect

rently active Palestinian terrorIst groups are the Palestine
Liberation Front and the Popular
Front lor the Liberation of
Palestine-Special Command.
. April 1 -This Is celebrated as
"The Day of the Islamic Republic" In Iran, the day In 1979 when
religious rule was established
among Moslem leaders In Iran.
Aprll 24 - Armenians use this
day to memorialize the thousands of Armenians massacred
by Turks In 1915. The most active
terrorist group Is the Armenian
Secret Army for the Liberation of
Armenia. ASALA has been active In assassinations In America
as well as throughout Europe.
May 5 -The Provisional Irish
Republican Army considers this
a day to remember with
bloodshed because It was the day
In 1981 that IRA member Bobby
Sands died In a Belfast prison
after a hunger strike.
Sept. 10 - Anti-Turk ArmenIans are not happy with · this
holiday memorializing the formation of modern "J;Urkey In 1920.
Sept. 17 - This anniversary of
··the Carter administration's 1978
Camp Da vld accords between
Israel and Egypt Is a likely day,
according to the lntl!lllgence
alert, for Palestinian terrorism.
Nov. 4- This Is the day In 1979
when Iranians took over the U.S.
Embassy In Tehran and began
the 444-day hostage ordeal. llezbollah might take new hostares
on this day , the memo suggests,
or try some other anti-American
stunt.
Nov.19 -The Customs Service
suggests that on thlll day, any
number of Palestinian. terrorist
groups might be active because It
Is the anniversary of Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat'shlstorlc
trip to Jerusalem In 1977.
Dec. 22 - This Is a good day for
Turkish Americans and Turklllh
diplomats In the United States to
stay home. It Is the annlvers4J'Y
of the 1978 riot In Kahramanma·
ras, Turkey, when 105 people
were killed In fighting between
rival Moslem sects.

ground game attack nettPd 77 ~
yards In 145 tries (5.34 avg.) and
he snagged 11 aerials for 172
yards. Wess returned five kickoffs for 57 yards ~11.4 avg .) and
was responsible for 25 solo stops
and 35 assists from his defensive
position.
Sen tor center Wes Young effectively anchored the middle of the
offensslve line and even broke .
Into the scoring column, being
credited with a safety against·
Trimble. Young led the Marauders on defense with five quarterback sacks, 29 lone tackles, 33
assists and one recovery of a
loose balL
Used mostly as the motion man
from his flanker spot, Scott
Nelgler gained 85 yards In 13
carries for a 6.54 average and
had two pass receptions .for 28 ·
yards. Defensively, he picked off
one enemy aerial, sacked the
opposing signal caller once and
was credited with 14 unassisted
stops and 21 assists . '
Twin towers Matt Peterson .
and Doug Stewart at the offensive tackle spots were gr,eally
responsible for opening the gapIng holes in the enemy lines to
spring the Marauder backs.
Peterson slnglehandedly

d

t~ Ct;)

J oe Edge!, or llelpre, took
home the defensive pla yer of. the
year award and VInton County
coach Jack O' Rourke was named
coach of. the year .
Besides the Meigs players
mentioned, tlrst team honors
went to Bob Douglas, Joe Edge!,

Dave Zitcov!ch, Jim Goff, Jeff
Freeland and Todd Haynes of
Belpre; Randy Shurford and Ken
Green of Federal Hocking; Sean
McLaughlin, Timothy Bookman.
Jason Brooks and Jim Monk of
Nelsonville-York; Brent Swaro
and Rich Cain of Trimble; Tom
Reed and John Remy of. Vinton
County; Jason Federhoff of
Miller and Dan Jaycox and Scott
Bragg of Wellston.
Others receiving honorable.
mention were · Jlni Blair of
Alexander; Jay Turlczek Tim
Baker and Paul Davis of Belpre;
Dave Engl!sh of Federal Hocking; Brian St. Clair and Jason
Ark-ley of Miller; Scott Joyce and
Tom Campbell of NelsonvilleYork; Jerry Pastel, Aaron
McCown and Todd Fouts ot
Trlrqble; Brian Wiseman, Matt
Saunders, B.R. Robinson and
Shawn Ray of VInton County and
Mike Lambert and Jeff Hendershott of Wellston.

The Daily Sentinel
ALL-TVC FIRST TEAM HONOREES - Wess
Howard, Wes Youn~~; and Jell McElroy (l·r) were

named to the 1988- TVC f.ootball dream team.
McElroy was also chosen best offensive player.

(USPS 14$-900)

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throogh Friday, lll Cour1 St. , Po·
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HONORABLE MENTION ALL-TVC - Doug Stewart, left, and
Matt Peterson received honorable mention In thl! 1988 TVC foolball
picks along with Scoll Nellfler (not pictured).

Scoreboard ...

mall carriers Is liberalized by the
Act. The Act also broadens the
existing reduction In the gasoline
excise tax for !I&amp;Sohol producers.
The tax exempt status of certain
mutual or cooperative telephone,
electric or water companies Is
reaffirmed by the Act. Furthermore, to help safeguard small
businesses, the IRS will be
required to solicit Small Business Administration ·comments
on tax regulations prior to their
Issuance.
On other tax matters, tax free
bonds to finance high-speed
Inter-citY. rail facilities are authorized under the act. It also
establishes certain rules to help
the FSLIC ball out troubled
thrifts. The Act also repeals
certain congressionally Imposed
limits on the Treasury Department-to Issue bonds with maturities of at leasl10 years. Finally,
the bill also contained a number
of other provisions unrelated to
the tax code such as the acquisition of more land for the
Manassas Battlefield Park.
In short, the new tax blll
doesn't make any major changes
In tax policy that will affect all
taxpayers. However, It does
contain a number of changes that
will a!fect specific groups.
Should you require additional
Information concerning any of
the provisions mentioned, please
!eel !ree to contact our office.

Berry's World

Stewart, a junior, kept constant pressure on the oppos ing
quarterback throughout the season. With 31 assists and 25 lone
tackles, he was a nemesis to the
enemy runners . With his spPed
and ability, he will be a welcom
returnee for the 1989 season.

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

Cong.
e_=Cl=.:.;are=nc=e..:..;..;;M=.:ill;.::_;_er

ermore, American shareholders
In certain "controlled" foreign
Insurance firms are granted
certain tax deferrals under the
act.
In order to make up for these
revenue losses, the bill also
contains a few revenue Increases. It will Impose Income
taxes and a 10% penalty tax on
loans or cash distributions from
certain types of life Insurance
policies that permit the most
rapid buUdup of earnings over
the first seven or fewer years of a
contract. These are known as
"single premium" policies . It
will disallow the estate and gift
tax deduction for transfers of
property to spouses who are
non-American citizens. It Imposes a federal excise tax on pipe
tobacco for the first !!me. Tallpayers who remit bad checks will
be subject to greater penalties by
the Act. The exemption for an
adult dependent who Is a full time
student Is limited to students
under the age or 24 by the Act.
The Act also contains a few
new tax benefits for businesses.
The "targeted jobs" tax credit
for employers who hire economically disadvantaged youths and
certain other groups will be
extended for two years. Gasoline
wholesalers will be permitted to
claim refunds on behalf of
certain exempt gasoline users.
The mileage deduction, for rural

dropped the opposing ball carrier
nine times and also had a hand in
fifteen · other tackles. Against
Belpre, he realized a lineman's
dream as he pounced on a loose
ball In the endzone for a: Meigs
touc hdown, perhaps the only one
of his high school career.

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Obio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham

I

Sorne ch ~ges to th e

Urban ferries return

TVC coaches name Jeff McElroy top offensive player

'ack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
J
The key terrorist group Is the
Kurdish Worker's Party, a MarxIst outfit begun In the mld-1970s
that targets Turks everywhere.
Kurdish terrorists could extend
their hatred to American because the United States and
Turkey are NA.,O allies.
March 26- Palestinian terrorIst groups seethe with anger
when reminded of the anniversary or the signing of the peace
treaty between Israel and Egypt
In 1979. The Abu Nidal group Is
the most active of the Palestinian
terrorists. It has carried out 90
attacks since 1974, killing or
Injuring almost 900 people .
fo.merlcans are a preferred
target. Abu Nidal attacks on the
Rom and VIenna airports In
December 1985 lett i7 people
dead, five of them Americans. In
addition to Abu Nidal, the cur-

The Daily Santinei-Page-3

Young, Howard named First Team Alt~TVC

Terrorists like to pick their days
r.

Pomeroy- Middlepon. Ohio

Ry Unl&amp;ed Pre1111 lnll'l' •llonal

NATIONAL FOOTBA.LL LEAGUE

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Monda,y'l Game

Bulblo 31 Miami II

Sunlay, Nov . :tt

Nl' Jetut B.,lah», 1 p.m.
Ctllca10 al Tam.- Baj , I p.m.
Clnclm:atl ai Dallal. I p.m.
Denwr at New Orleans. 1 p.m.
Betr* n. Gree•Ba)' (Milw.), I p.m.
In dlan~~~tollaat Mlnne11o&amp;a, 1 p.m.
Pflneab: a1 Houlon, I p.m.

Seattle Ill Kan-. Clly, I p.m.

's

1112 4

"'... '

....

U2 7

3MO B

33711

188 12
151114

It . Oklaboma St.Ue (7·!)

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n. ( lie) Heullo• (7-2)
ll. (Ue) Coto.. do (1-3)
11. Brl&amp;llam Vounc Ct-2)

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Others reeelvln1 voka: Alabama,
Arm:J, GMflla, Iowa, Mlchl1an Slate,
Pit ti!OO IJh.

This week's games
This Week's
Ohio Colleae Football Sc hedu ~
B:Y Unlled Press lnter•tloml
Saturd-.y, Nov t5

Mlchlpn a1 Ohio Slate
Central Ml clllr;an at Ml ami

Ohio Untwraky U Western IOchlpn
ClnclnMII al Eut Carolina
MIU''*'all (W Va) at Yo•IIIJII-n Stale
Cealral St a&amp; Florida A, 6 M

NCM 1Mvll6on IIi playorf5
Wttlenbtra at Da.Jton
N..UA JMvhlon II pM)'olf•
Bluffton at C:umberlalld (K)'I

NHL results
NI\'OONAL ROCKEY LEAGUE

Plttlilu ~What CleoveiMd, I p.m.
F'hllldelp~al\t NY Olanta, t p.m.

MoMay's fte&amp;"'-s
MJnrr.aoU I, TorOII:o 4
'r.M~ 's Gami'S

A.llanta U LA Raiders, 4 p.m.
San Ule lfl at LA KIUllll, 4 p.m.

New EnJiandat Miami. Sp.m.
Monday, Nov. 21
w~.-.nato• at San Fran~l~o. 9 p.m.

•

1111

11. Mlclllc- (1-2· 1)
12. Lo*lana state (H)
IS. s,-..cuE {8-1)

15. aem~on (8-:!)

Rosten at Quebec. 1:36 p.m.
Nl' Ranpsal Phl_lllldelphla. 7:35p.m.

Mlnne1cM at Wuhlnllon. 7: :l5 p.m.

CAl pl'flll NV Islander&amp;, 11:01 p.m.

UPI College

p.m . Friday in Lyne Center, while the KloUrande
Redmen will lace Dyke College at 9 p.m. The
consolation game will be played at 1 p.m.
Saturday- and the championship follows at 9.
Lenoir-Rhyne , coached by John Lentz, was 12-11
last season.

Tigers are favored
MIDDLEBURG HEIGHTS,
Ohio (UPI) - Ohio Athletic
Conference coaches and reporters who cover the league have
picked Wittenberg to win the
1988-89 OAC basketball
championship.
·Results of polls of the coaches
and reporters were announced at
the conference's sem i-annual
meeting Monday.
In the pre-season survey of
coaches, Wittenberg collected all
nine tlrs t-place votes and 81 total
points. cap ital was picked to
finish second, follow ed by Musklngum, Heidelberg, Mount UnIon, Marietta, Olterbein, Ohio
Northern and Baldwin-Wallace.

Napoleon coach let go
NAPOLEON, Ohio (UP J) The head football coach at
Napoleon High School for the
past eight years will not be
rehired next season, school officials have announced.
Lynn Schrlckel has complied a
45-36-1 record and two playoff
games during his eight seasons .
Schrlckel was an assistant coach
at Irolnton before accepting the
Napoleon position.
His teams have had three
losing seasons, Includ ing this
year when the Wildcats finiShed
4-6.

Milil Subscrlp(lol\8
Inside Meip County
13 Weeks .......... ....... ...... ........ ... $19.24
26 Weeks .... .•.................. ... ..... . $37.96
52•Weeks .. ....... .... .... ........... . ..... $74.36
Outtilde Meigs County
13 Weeks .. ..... .. .... .... ..... ... .. ...... . $20.80
26 Weeks ....... ........ ...... ...... ....... $40.30
52 Weeks ...... ... ..... .. .... ... ... ....... . $75.40

Catalog
Home Appliances &amp;
Eleetronles Store

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Centn~l

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1. Notre Dllme (31) lf.CI)

3. Miami (I) (7·1)
4. W. Vlrallla (2) (IH)
1. Plertda Slate ( I J (8·1)
8. UCLA {.. 1)

PLAYING IN BEVO FRANCIS CLASSIC- The
men's basketball team at Lenoir-Rhyne College,
IUckory, N.C., above, will be one ofthe four teams
participating in the Bevo Francis Classic Nov.
18-19 at Rio Grande College( Community College.
The Bears will play Shawnee State University at 7
-. . -

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It for ~Mnd, etc.), ud lut week's
ranldnlf
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areas where home carrier serviCe Is
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grid ratings
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'Applies only to store Jlk:k·UJI orders. Home deliVery extra. Doe&amp; not IIIJPIY 10 o11ters placed belare11116J88.
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Tuesday. November 15. 1988

Bil~

eyes to back·to-back 20-13 re- were Proposition 48 casualties said Williams. "Our veteran said Williams. "If he continues to
cords, flnlshlng9-91n the Big Ten and were forced to s!t out last players have done a great job In work on his om don' t think
both seasons while using mostly · year, although the other member practiCe. Not only as Individual there' 5 an~ limit to his
the players left behind by former of that group, 6-foot-8 Perry players, but in terms of lleing .potentiaL"
coach Eldon Miller when he was Carter, started 27 of the 33 games people who have to work the new
Grady Mateen, 1 a 6-foot-11
fired.
at center.
guys Into the program and senior, will back u~ Carter and
Two-thirds of his first recruitBoth Brewster and Lee are blended the guys who are new to White.
ing class - 6-foot-3 guar d Ell ellglble this season and will be us.
•'Grady worked very hard this
Brewster and 6-foot-8 TregLee- . joined by another excellent crop
"It's nice to have talent." said summer," said Wt!Uams. "He's
of freshmen, which Includes Williams, "but you have to have put a tot of pressure on Tony
6-foot-4 guard Jamaal Brown of guys who play toget her. That's White and Perry Carter for
Arlington, . Tex:, and 6-foot-7 the most lmp&lt;irtant thing."
playing time. He will be a very
WllUams musJ find a point Important part of our inside
guard-forward Chris Jent of
Sparta, N.J., 7-foot center Bill guard to replace Curtis Wilson. rotation."
Robinson of Canton, Ohio; and ~ who handled that spot the last
Brown, the last recruit signed
6-foot-7 Steve Hall of Haviland, two years. In practice, ·he has by Wllllams, has been the surOhio.
·
worked Brewster, Brown, James prise of the team.
Williams, asked to name a
WllUams' job now Is to mesh Bradley and even Burson at th at
16-yard Jim Kelly pass to Harmon and a 30-yard Scott Norwood those six newcomers, none of spot.
·
starting lineup based on the first.
"I think he (Burson} found out four weeks of practice, lis'ted
field goal. Miami scored on a whom have ever played In a
four-yard Marino pass to Mark college game, with the six who that you can play the point and Brown along with the fo ur
·Clayton, but missed the extra helped carry the Buckeyes a year stili score," said Williams. "I returning regulars .
ago.
think Jay might have been a little
"J a maal has really worked
point.
Leading the veteran contlng- reluctant to make that switch If hard and has earned that right,"
The touchdown was the first
allowed by the Bills defense In ent Is 6-foot guard Jay Burson, he ~uldn't score. Now that he said Williams. "He's been a very
good guard for us. He gives us the
three games. Buffalo now has the team's leading scorer'a year sees he can score from there, I
6-4 size. we haven't had in the
surrendered 148 points In 11 ago at 18. 9 points per game, think he'll be fine,"
Carter was the top rebounding baCk_Court our first two years
games, best In the AFC and 6-foot-5 forward Jerry Francis,
who averaged 15.4, and 6-foot-7 freshman In the Big 'I,'en last here."
second-best In the NFL .
· Kelly completed 18 of 26 passes Tony White, last year's most season and Improved his shoot·
How good Is Ohio State? Good,
for 211 yards and no intercep- Improved player, who started 26 lng and scoring output dramatl· says Williams, bu t not good
enough, yet.
tions. Marino completed 19 of 30 games and averaged 7.8 points cally late In the season.
"Perry looks like he's a little
"I stili think we're onee quick
and4.6rebounds. All are seniors.
passes for 224 yards.
"I like our team, I really do," better with the ball this year, " guard away from where I'd like
The Dolphins, who were penalIzed 11 times for 110 yards in last
week's loss at New England,
were penalized 10 times for 79
yards Monday night.
"I thought at halftime we could
win the game," said Miami
Coach Don Shula. ''We had some
scoring opportunities but
couldn't capitalize. We felt we
had to have this one: As It turned
out, we dldn'tchallenge. lt'sa big
disappointment."
The biggest play of the game
for the Dolphins came on Buffa·
lo's first drive of the second half.
Jamie Mueller fumbled and Rick
Graf recovered at the Miami 48,
but the officials ruled Miami ,
defensive end Jackie Cline had
Illegally held Mueller after the
fumble and nullified the play.
"The big play was the fumble
call," said Shula, a member of
the rules-making Competition
Committee. "It's the first time
I've seen It called."
_.....,._DMr
The Bills came Into the game
~n• ; semi·
with 35 sacks, butfalled to tackle
automatic.
Marino. Although Marino was
under heavy pressure several
0
JWmingloo '349
:WINCHl'J1Z'A. 199 ..lftlrliJI. 1/(
times, the Dolphins did not allow
.
.
.
Price.
CorbiM
rl·
i
rtfte*;
30-30
a sack for the seventh straight
game, an NFL record.
. "Marino will be Marino," said
Buffalo defensive end Bruce
Smith. "We pressured him pretty
'WINCH£ST£A.
good . He said, :come on Bruce,
'WINCHUT£A
ARCTEX'
this Is no fui\,' In the third
quarter, but! said, 'A man has to
do what a man has to do."'

rip Dolphins
31-6 for lOth win
MIAMI (UP!) - The Miami
Dolpl!lns' high· powered offense
had precious little time Monday
nlght In which to mount a
comeback.
Leading 10-6 at the half. the
Buffalo Bills kept the ball for
20: 48-of the second half, scoring
21 second·half points to take a
31-6 victory that gave t~em the
NFL's best record at 10·1.
Despite the absence ·of leading
·rusher Thurman Thomas, the
Bills rushed for 205 yards,
Including 77 yards and two
touchdowns from Robb Riddick
and 67 yards from Ronnie Harmon, who also scored twice.
"I think our great balance In
therunnlnggameandthewaywe
controlled the ball was a big key
to winning tbls game," Buffalo
Coach Marv Levy said. "We
thought this would be a !Jigh·
scoring game, and by controlllng
the ball It helped our defense
' even more.
"Harmon and Riddick did a
-good Job of balancing each other.
The loss of Thomas didn't hurt us
because these guys are good,
experienced role players."
When Miami's top-ranked
passing offense did get !he ball In
tile second half, the Bills took it
away.
Quarterback Dan Marino
!brew three second·haltlntercepdons, two of which led to a
six-yard Harmon touchdown run
and Riddick's second score of the
aJght.
Miami, which was ranked 22nd
· against the rush en terlng the
game, fell to last place In the AFC
East at 5-6andlsnow0-5thlsyear
against division opponents.
"We played Bills football tonight and that's the best In the
NFL right now," Riddick said.
"Harmon and I both had It going
toa!ght, but our line made it
poulble. Ronnie and I are best
friends and do things for each
other."
Buffalo also scored on a

lgosl

Cooper explains decision
to punt against Hawkeyes
quarterback Chuck Hartlieb
three times, was the defensive
player.
Cooper then quickly turned his
attention to "the game,'' the
regular season finale 1hls Satur·
day In Ohio Stadium against
Michigan, already crowned the
Big Ten's champion and Rose
Bowl representative.
"I've been involved In some big
ball games," said Coope·r.
"When I was at Arizona State, we .
SkUJett.
"I wasn't very happy with the tell Arizona-Arizona State was a
tie," Coopet told his weekly press big game. But I think this Is !he
lwlcheon Monday . "We felt like only place !n the country where
we played pretty well In the they refer to It as 'the game.'
"It's tradition, fanfare. bragsecond half and had a chance to
ging rights and usually It bolls
.. win the ball game.
'1'm prOIId of four football down to the conference chamteam," said Cooper. "We had pionship and the right to go to the
some chances real early In the Rose .Bowl. Without a doubt, It's
game to fold .our tent when we got the biggest game In co Uege
football. "
beblnd 14-0.''
The Buckeyes go Into the game
Cooper said the decision to go
with
a 4·5·1 record and Cooper
, for the first down on the Ohio
State 40 or punt was based on a looks upon the clash with Michl·
couple of things, Including a gan with a chance to "salvage
shoulder InJury to fullback Bill our season.,.
"I think it's a golden opportunMattock.
"We're not a very good short· Ity for us to salvage something
yardage football team, " he said. out of what's been a very
'1f we don't make the first down, disappointing season," said
Cooper, who also said It will take
t~~ey•ve got tbe ball with over a
minute to go on our 40 yard line. "every effort on our part" to beat
"My tblnklng was let's punt the the Wolverines.
"I'll be honest with you," he
.football and play defense. They
added,
"Michigan will still have
'hadn't scored the whole second
p
us
a little."
to
he!
half. I never thought they'd kick
Cooper
said
he feels Michigan,
a 40-yard field go to tie game, but
at
least
right
now, Is two
that's hoW our season's gone."
Cooper said U,htend Jeff Ellis, touchdowns better than any
who caueht elpt passes for 97 other team In the Big Ten. The
yards aplnat Iowa, was the Wolverles, 7-2·1 overall, have
offensive player of the game and been establish an early 10-polnt
outJlcSe linebaCker John Ka- favorite.
cherskl, wbo sack1!d Hawkeye

Coagratulations
Donnie Fry
·

5.88

•

SO'- Prlco Ea. Wln·911

chMter mountain
parka Insulated lo1

warmth end comlort9
Insulated Pants, 29.91
aklle~o'

tO

O&lt;or&gt;Qt

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SOlo Prlco. Qulllod

rain JacQI with PVC

TUESDAY
PT. PLEASANT - OperatiOn
Uftoff meets Tuesday, 7 p.m. ,
Moose Lodge.

shell and nylon loffe ·
to lining. ln bloze or·

O\)Qe 01 camouflage.

~ ~~mo~CNQoe

MIDDLEPORT - Gr.pup II of
Middleport Presbyterian Church
will meet 6 p.m. TueSday at the
American Legion for their annual Thanksgiving dinner.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet Tuesday, 7
p.m., -at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Members
are to bring three non- perlsha·
ble food items.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
· Chamber of Commerce will meet
Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m., at the city
hall on Race St. , to discuss the
. Chrlslmas parade.

. ---

POMEROY - A special meetJog of Pomeroy Lodge 164 will be
• · held Tuesday, 7 p.m., at the
:: , Middleport Temple.
~
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
: • ·PTO wlll meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday
:_1 (tonight) at the school.

:

r ""'
i

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15.97

Sale Price ~ 920

v.nlblelnsu·
laled VMt. Or-

Camouflage
hunting seat
with 3 pockets.

ange IO CO!pO.

8

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••

HOPPE'S

tasco
•

Sale Price Ea. 3x9x32
rifle scope. Fog proof. ~
4a32RitleScope ... 34.97 915
4d6x40 Rifle Scope, U.97 916

16.97
·. Sale Price. Insulated hooded

sweat shirts
with zip front.
!lore orange
r:::1
~

Eveory&lt;llay Low Price. Single-scope gun case with metal

15.97

4.97ALLEN ~

SalePrlce.~~~!;i!~~;Sa~le~Pr~lc;e~-~~::~·~::h:ee~ I-!Sa~le~Pr~l~c!e~.l~7~"~h~eat~MKrt~
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bag; 30x24~slze.

hunting seat.ln colors.

#

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6.97
Sale Price Pr.

~
Sale Price Pr. Men's hunting
::::::.:::;;,In colors: suede trim.

sleeping bag; 33x75" size.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Democratic Executive
.committee will nieet at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at Carpenters' Hall, E.
Main St., Pomeroy; all Inter·
ested party members Invited.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet at 6:30 p.m . Thursday
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church for a Thanks·
giving potluck supper. Members
are to take baby Items.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club will meet at 7: 30
Thursday night at the Reedsvllle
Church of Christ. Nelle Wilson
and R~th Ann Balderson will
conduct a workshop. Members
are to take finger foods -and
Chrlslmas gifts for the health
.care center.
FRIDAY
RACINE -Annual Thanksglv·
!ng dinner at the Racine Grange
Hall, Oak Grove Road, at 6 p.m.
Friday. The ham and turkey wlll
be furnished. Those attending
are to take a covered dish and
their own table service. There
will be a pig In a poke auction
following the dinner.
Bazaar
NEW .HAVEN - Plans are
underway for the annual New
Haven Fire Department AuxilIary Chrlslmas Bazaar on Dec. 3
from 10a.m. to4p.m. The bazaar
will be held again this year at the
New Haven Fire Station. or more
information, call (304} 882-2814
or 882-3243.
·
Turkey d!Mer
RUTLAND - The annual
Rutland Fire Department turkey
dinner will be served Thursday,
Nov. 17, starting at 5 p.m. at the
Rutland Grade School. Tickets,
at $5, may be purchased from fire
deparlment members .

Ronald and Pauline Davis of
Dexter hosted a family gathering
on Nov. 6 honoring Mrs. Davis'
brother, Gene Nelson and his
wife, Shirley, of Columbus, Ga.
Nelson retired . from the U. S.
Army after 24 years of service.
He served In both the Korean and
VIetnam Wars, and now owns
and opewes the Nelson Custom
Gun Shop. He serves with the U.
: s. Army Rifle Team. Mr. and
Mrs. Nelson have O)le son, Glenn,
, · Jr. who Is married to Suzan Scott
of Columbus. They have a son,
Paul David and J!ve In Easley, S.

~

Electric socks
of wool/nylon
for warmth.
8atterlt1 no! lncll.ldeCI

l)enny Coburn of Gal Upolls
Church of Christ conducted a
seminar at a recent meeting of
the Ladies Fellowship of the
Meigs County Chu rc hes of
Christ, Rutland.
His subject was Satan: llls
Power, Character, Power and
Symbols backed by scriptural
references.
Jeannette Carter gave the

Letart Falls Elementary School.
Dinners wlll be servedstartlngat
noon. Prices are $3 a meal, $1.50
for children 12 and under and
··
children under two, free.
Hymn sing
PORTLAND - Hazael Community Church Is having a hymn
sing on Saturday, Nov. 19,
featuring the Unroe Family. The
sing starts at 7:30p.m. Everyone
welcome.
RTA meeting
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers' Association wlll meet Saturday, Nov.
19, at 12:30 p.m., at !he Middleport Masonic Temple, Middleport. Anyone not contacted but
wishing to attend, should call
742-2251 by Wednesday.
Revival set
HOBSON - Hobson Church of
Christ In Christian Union will be
In revival Nov. 21-27, 7 p.m.
each evening, with Pastor
Theron Durham.

Ramsburg birth
Robert and Christy Ramsbu rg,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of a son, Bradley Allam,
born on Sept. 12, at !he Holzer
Medical Center. The !nfan t
weighed seven pounds, one ounce
and was 21 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hysell,
PomerOY, and paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Ramsburg, Middleport. Great--grandparents are Ethel Mace,
Charleston, W. Va. and Cynthia
Cardwell, VInton.
~r. and Mrs. Ramsburg also
have a daughter, Melissa. and a
son, Ryan.

Father, JOn
bake-off set

LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls PTO will be hosting a fall
festival on Sunday, Nov. 20, at !he

Stacey and Johnathan,
Baltimore.
Others attending the gathering
Mr. and. Mrs. Woodrow (Heswere Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Good, ter) Adams. Fred and Kathy,
Mr. and Mrs. Parreli Puckett Columbus, wereunabletoattend
and twin daughters, Cristy and due to Illness. This was the first
M!sty,Mr. andMrs.StevenGood time the family has been toand son, Stevie, all of Ra"diff; gether since 1963. They are the
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Jack_s anc!, children of Elwood and Mary
son, Ricky' Reynoldsburg, Mr. Nelson. The family received a
and Mrs. Ernie Jacks, Tracie,
t
Mrs Adams during the
Kevin , Brian, Kelly and ca11 rom
·
Amanda, Lloyd Nelson, ~I of day.
Coumbus; Mr. and Mrs. Geroge
Oller, Jeffrey, Jennifer and Kim·
berly, Pataskala; Mr.' and Mrs.
Randy Jacks, Heather, Amber,
The annual Thanksgiving
dinner was announced for Saturday night at 6:30 p.m. at the
been negotiating with Horowitz
Salem Township Fire Departto obtain the material for two
ment in Salem Center when the
years. The contact was made
Star
Junior Grange met recently.
throul(h a Yale alumnus who
The
current candy sale was
knows Horowitz's wife, Wanda
at the meeting con·
discussed
Toscanlni-Horowltz. She said her
dueled
by
Crystal Vaughan,
husband chose the Ivy League
master.
university because it has "one of
Following the meting,
the great music schools" In !he
members
made Chrlsimas ornacountry, and that he enjoyed
ments
and
enjoyed a potluck
playing at Yale, where he was
,dinner
with
members of Star
"stimulated by his young audlen·
Grange.
ces.'' Horowitz Js an assistant
fellow of Yale's Silllmarl College.
. A ROYAL BIRTHDAY BASH:
Prince Charles celebrated his
40th birthday Monday by launch·
ing an appeal for more than 40
million pounds - about $70
million_ for a trust fund to help
young people start their own
businesses. The man who will be
king one day visited a shopping
center In Birmingham, 120 miles
north of London, to see some of
the small businesses begun by
young people with grants from
his Youth Business Trust. More
than 1,500 people who have
benefitted from the trust gave a
party for Charles In a converted
tram shed. The prince cut a giant
birthday cake with a sword and
listened to rock and steel band
music before heading to London
to celebrate with the Princess
Diana and their sons.

People in the news
By IRIS KRASNOW
United Press lnternaUona1
rr•s BEEN SWELL: President
and first lady Nancy Reagan
wave a cheery goodbye to the
United States on the cover of the
December Issue of Vanity Fair.
The Reagans look remarkably
vlprant (thanks In part to the
skills of photographer Annie
Leibovitz), even rel!eved to be
departing their Washington
home. After eight very busy
years, they appear more than
, ready for that laid-back Cal !for· nia landscape they left behind.
vanity Fair heralds the couple In
. Its 1988 Hall of Fame "because In
an era of one-term presidents,
· theirs was a thrUl-packed double
feature .. , because they broug~~
high style back to high office.
There Is no mention of whether
the red cashmere Bill Blass dress
Mrs. Reagan wears Is something
borrowed or something new·
YALE SINGS FOR VLA·
DIMffi: Pianist Vladimir Horowltz, 85, ·has turned over his
priceless memorabilia to Yale
University, a collection that
Includes the only recordings ever
made of his recitals at Carnegie
Hall during the 1940s and 1950s.
, Harold Samuel, a music professor and librarian at Yale, has

Dr. Benjamin J. Sol
Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Now accepting patients
8:30 a.m. • 5 p.m. Monday • Friday
Suite215

(304) 675-3400 .

DLI PLEASANI' VALLEY HOSPITAL

IVl The family of proleNionoh

. ·

Star Grange
dinner held

welcome and there was hymn
singing and a solo by Jane Wise.
Devotions were presented by
Maryln Wilcox of Middleport.
Routine business was conducted
by Jeanette Carter, president.
Followlngthesem!nar, !he meet·
ing was closed by prayer by Anna
Elizabeth Turner. Refreshments
were served in the church social
room.

BRADLEY A. RAMSBURG

Polllllettla sales
POMEROY - The Meigs JunIor ,Civltan Club will be selling
poinsettias during the next few ·
weeks. Proceeds go towards
projects Including Children's
Hospital, Special Olympics,
travel expenses, etc. Contact
Jason Black, Ohio District Governor, at 742-2501, or Advisor
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
Debbie Musser at 992-2158.
· will hOld a father and son cake
baking contest at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Mlddlep~rt Masonic
Temple. Cakes will be Judged
Fall festivals
with trophies to be awarded the
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO bakers of the prettiest, fanciest,
will be having a fall festival at the most original and the most
Rutland Grade School on Satur· unusual. Cakes will be auctioned
day, Nov. 19, from 6 to 9 p.m.
following the presentation of
There will be games for children, awards. The public is invited to
food, door prizes, a variety show, attend the auction.
baked goods, giveaways and a
general store.

C.

camouflage jute burlap.

....

21.88
Sale Price. \lagabond

In Athens.

Davis family ~as recent gatherin~

•

ln":klnnlatches. handle, quality hard-side construction.

"'···' '
~·

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds In Minersville.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz will review
Mary Todd Lincoln by Jean
Baker.
THURSDAY
LAUREL CLIFF- The Laurel
Cliff Health Club will meet on
'IlhurSday, at 7 p.m., at the home
of Jean Wright, Pomeroy.
ATHENS - Meeting of the
Buckeye Joint-County Self-Insurance Council will be held
Friday, Nov. 18, 10 a.m., at the
Athens County Extension Office

12-, 16·, 20-ga.Slugs•, 2.4719061
Choice Of Cartridges:•
Pkg. Of 20, 3D-30 .. ' 6.97 907
Pkg. Of 20, 30-G6 . ' . 8. 97 908
Pkg.Of20,.270 . .. . 9 .97 999

lml

9.

---

WEDNESDAY
· , • POMEROY - The Wildwood
- ~ Garden Club will meet at 7:30
:: • p.m. Wednesday at the home of
·- • Mi's. Mary Nease .

39.97Q

Churches of Christ have seminar

Community calendar

''

----

DOIIIIIE IS lUI WINNER IN THE FINAL
WEB OF M DilLY SENTINEL CO-SPOil·
SOlED focnllLL CONTEST. TO ALL OF
·YOU WIO WillED AND TO ALL OUR CO·
SPOIISOIS. WI THANK YOU AND LOOI
fOIWliD
SEEING YOU NEXT YElll

12~

Tuesday, November 15, 1988

Page-5

Falcon', ladies fu
exhibition contest

w... "

....

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI} Ohio State Coach John Cooper
said Monday there "was never a
doubt In my mind" whether to
punt or try to pick up a first down
In the final two minutes of
Saturday's 24·24 tie with Iowa.
On fo11ttb and Inches to go on
the Oblo State 40, the Buckeyes
punted. Iowa got the ball on Its 38
and moved Into position for a
tying 40-yard field goal by Jeff

11~7

to be," said Williams, who lost
that Ingredient when Mark
Baker, another of this year's five
recruits, failed to meet the
NCAA's Prop 48 requiremen ts.
"We'll have that next year. But,
at the same time, we're much
deeper this year and can .press
more. And, I don't have to worry
about the inside players getting
tired." ·

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UPI) - Bowling Green State
university's women's basketball
team. whlc won the MidAmerican Conference title the
past two years, unveil lhls year's
squad Tuesday In an exhibition
game against the Mexican National Team.
.
The men's team will compete
against the Zadar-Yugoslavla
Club team that night in an
ex hibition contest.
Coach Fran Voll's women's
team opens theseasonatChicago
Loyola Nov. 25 and men's team ,
under head coach Jim Larran·
aga opens at home Nov. 26
against Siena.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Ohio State may finally·reap recruiting rewards · this year
By GENE CADDFS
VPI Sporia Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI}
This is the season Ohio State
basketball Coach Gary Williams
begins reaping the benefits of a
couple excellent recruiting
years.
Williams ·has taken the Buck·

----~-

•

I

'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Deily Seutinel

--------

BACK.

If you like to watch your raies, consider investing in a Rate
Watcher CD from Central '!l-ust.
This 1-year CD offera you an escalating rate of return throughout
the term with built-in withdrawal optioos.

YOUR

PENALTY.

A Rate Watcher CD is !he ideal im•estment because you can get
your money back without penalties at four-month intervals. This way,
)'00 have the freedom to change your investment strategy if you see
interest rates shift.
Of course, the longer you keep a Rate Watcher CD, the more it
earns for P'· Because !he rate is compoonded monthly and rises
twice dunng the term. ·

'

Slinderella meets
Janice Re!tmlre was the top
loser with Lots Ann Re!tmire' as
runnerup at the recent meeting
of Sllnderelta held at Mason. At
the Five Points class, Cathy
Hudson was runner-up. Jo Ann
Newsome Is lecturer of the club.

SEARS SERVICE
CUSTOMERS
FOR PARTS &amp;'
SERVICE
CALL

l-800-227-2560

7.00%
YIELD

6.79%

LOO%
YIELD

J.n%
RATE

9.GO%
YIELD

L65%

RATE
Thin! 4 Mmths

Stamd 4 Mmthl

RATE
Ff..t4Mmtlu

m%..,...Rm 8.00% . .UAL YILD
So the first four months, yru'U earn 7%. From five to eight
months, it's 8%. And from nine months to the end of the term, yru 'll
get a hefty9%.
So if it's a r.-eat investment you're craving for, open a new Rate
w..tcherCDW1th as ~ttleas $2,000. For complete details, call or stop
by any cmvenient Central 'Ihlst off.ce.

THE CENTRAL TRlST C&lt;MPANY
The Bank That Mahis Things Happen.

.VfiiMft; TkCfltllll .....,..,... Chttl~rwli.

~it

Nrntttr/ fttwJitinllf'lf+ltrlflit.mm.l1~.1 ft"ff'!fnt,.,.lh.t!l /lfco4 mt~~~IA iriMI'It..

GAWPOLIS, OHIO
446-0902

--

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6661

�lr"'- ~-

.

--~~--~-------- -~--'--'-'----~-

..
Paga 6-The

Daily Senti11el

Tuasday, November

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio

Thanksgiving di.nner held

Sisters win
baton titles

A Thanksgiving dinner was
held at the Mt. Union Baptist
Church Friday evening hosted by
the Bonnie Belles Ladies of the
church.
Joe Sayre, pastor. read a poem
and led in group singing. N. L.
Russell. associate pastor, gave
special gifts to the widows of the
church.
Attending were Joe and Rosalie Sayre, N. L. Russell, Cathy
Rupe, Lillie Marklns, Andy and
Nancy White, Lee and Teresa
WOod, Heather Wood and Pam

Heather and April Hudson,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Bryant Hudson, Route 2, Albany, ,
won six state titles Saturday at
the West VIrginia National Baton
Twirlers Associat!orr's state
competition.
The ·girls are members of the
Riggs Rangerettes Baton corps,
directed by Mrs. Judy Riggs,
Reedsville. Apr!! Is captain of the
corps and won five state titles,
three In dance twirl, one in baton
pompon, and one In parad&lt;'
corps. Heather won state titles In
junior pompon and parade corps.
' · The sisters also hold 18 na·
tional titles between them and
several Ohio state individual
· titles .
They are now preparing for the
national contest which will be
held In July at Notre Dame
University In South Bend, Ind.
Heather Is a student at Meigs
Junior High School where she is a
member of the Marauder band
and a member of the Lady
Marauders basketball . team.
; Aprllls a student at Meigs High
where she is a feature twir ler of
the Marauder bana, a cheerleader, and recently received her
varsity letter in cross country
and was named to the All-Academic team.

·- - - -

•

Zirkle, Bo Hartley, Paul Ander·
son, Mildred, T. K. and Todd
Workman, Jeff and Bobbie Jo
Workman, Chris. Lisa and Justin
Workman, Jim and Darlene
Vantman, Morgan Vaniman.
Carla Smith, Ted and Melinda
Hayes, Todd and Christie Byrde,
Gall and Kim Byrde, Michael
and Shad Byrde, and Edith
Greer.
On Sunday evening the Joyful
Aires sang at the church which Is
located on Carpenter H!ll Road.

Wolf Pen personal notes
Chrlsth\e Bailey and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bailey were Sunday
afternoon visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bailey, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Knapp
were Sunday dinner guests of her
Grandmother Peterson of New
Lima Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited recnetly with Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Smith. Donald Smith,
Sabrina and Mark of Rocksprings Road. They also visited at
Americare Center.
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves was the
Sunday afternoon visitor of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and
Melissa.

Michelle and Amy Johnson,
Syracuse, were the weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith. Also visiting there were
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and
Mark spent Thursday with Mr .
and Mrs. Charley Smith. They
also visited Mrs. Iva Johnson.
Recent visitors of Mrs. J . R.
Murphy and Peggy were Mrs .
Iva Johnson, Mrs. Clara Rowan ,
Mrs. Shelly Brocak. and Jona·
than of Athens, Jeff Bole,
Stockport.
Summer Giles was the recent
visitor of her grandparents, Mr.
·
and Mrs. Clair Giles.

Tuesday,

16, 1988

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUN DAy
..____...;;;.:;::.:;:,;:;i~~:.:.-------1

were also asked to give pictures
pf past reunions to Madeline
Pai nter. Frances Hysell had the
blessing before the dinner was
served. Games of horseshoe and
baseball were played in the
afternoon.
Attending were James and
Betty John son, Middleport;
Carol, Bobble Jo, Angelia and
Ryan McClure, Mason, W.Va. ;
Tom, Barbara and Tommy Var·
ian of West Columbus; Ann, Bill
and Billy Carswell, Pomeroy;
Shirley, Marty, Martin and To·
nya Woodard, Bidwell; Cora and
Martin Woodard, Pomeroy.
Randy, Genla, Rachel and
Cody Hysell, Kenneth, Janet and
Kennet:t Jr. McKnight, Rutland;
Roger, Kathy, Rachael, Bud.
Tim and Jessica Rou sh, Pome-

roy; Charlotte Hysell, Rutland;
Mike, Joy, Shane, Billie Jo and
Joshua Hysell, Middleport.; Kay
Johnson, Dennis Marcinko,
Tuppers Plains; Madeline and
Ralph Painter, Middleport;
Esther Goble, Hartiord, W. Va. ;
Dana and Juanita Goble, Obetz ;
Nellie Armstrong, Columbus;
Dorothy Kathryn Gibbs, Hart·
ford , W. Va.; Evelyn P. and Lori
Gay, Marian; 1 Gary Tammy,
Wend!, Fred and Heather Hysell,
Pomeroy; Roger, Jane, Dennis,
Janelle and Bill Hysell, Steve,
Joyce, Steve, Jr., Daniel and
Stacy Hysell, Guy Hysell, all of
Pomeroy; Dana and June Hysell,
Grove City; Becky Bethany and
Ryan Amberger, Racine , Fran·
ces Hysell, Pomeroy; and Larry,
Pam, and Autumn Hysell,
Columbus.

3- Annoucemems
4-Giveaw~

5- Happy Ads

6-Lost and Found
7-Yr~~~d Sale!pa•d in advancet
8 - Publlt: Sale &amp; Au ction
9-Wanted to Buy

61-Firm Equipment

62- Wanted 10 Buy
63- Livfttock
64-Hav &amp; Grain
65- Seed &amp; FertiUzar

17- Mitcellaneous

lihijhiQijil
21 - Busin•• Opportunity
22-Mon.,. to Loan
23-Proteuiona! Servic•

Real Estate
31 -Homes for Sale

32- Mobile Homu tor Sale
33-Farms for Sale
34-Susiness Buildings
35 - Lots &amp; Acreage .
36-Real Estata Wanted

wmmma

41 - Houses for Rant
42 - Mobile Homes for Aent

43-Farms tor Rent

44-Apartment for Rent
46-Furnished Rooms
46-Space tor Rent

47- Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For Leau

.
I
•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 10, 1988, in
tho Moi1111 County Probate
Court, Caaa No, 26067.
Pearl A. Smhh 11nd Patricia L.
Smith. C/o Susan L. Gwinn,
Attomay-at·Law. 77 Nonh
Court Street. Athano, Ohio
46701, Mtra appointed CoAdministrator~ of the ntate
of Shelley M. Smith. docaaad, late of 36198 Peach
Forte Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 .
Aoben E. Buck,
Probata Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad. Clerk
111115. 22.29

:~.
•..
•

featuring

saWng coupons

VICA fall conference conducted
Fifty Meigs High School VICA
Chapter membets wer e among
the approximate 450 person s
attending the Southeast Region a I
Fall Con fe r e nce held In
Columbus ..
Regional officers a reelected at
the annual event with Meigs High
having four candidates for re·
gional positions. These students
include John Brickles, Trtcia

Davis, Sam Rife and Sona Steele.
Students prepared signs and
various other types of ca mpaign
mater ial for the election. Some
students participated in skits at
the regional event. Sherr! Blair,
Matt McCourt a nd Aimee Rupe
were the Meigs District voting
delegatP representatives.
E lected to posts from Meigs
High were John Brickles, son of

David Brlckles, Pomeroy,andan
auto mechan lc s student,
sergeant -a t-arms; Tr lcia Davis,
daughter of Donna and Bill
Davis, Pomeroy and Hemlock
Grove and a cosmetology stu·
dent, regional sec retary, and
Sam Rife, son of Ellen and
Charles Rife. Middleport, and art
auto mechanics student, regional ,
parliamentarian.

Can1

Protection
Service

.•
K8yRing and
Reglatratlon Service

Officers have been elected by
seniors of the Meigs Hi gh School.
Cindy Maynard , daugh ter of
Mickey and An·n Ma ynard.
Langsville, is the class president.
, She has been a member of
student council for four years
and is currently president of the
• council. She Is a member of the
National Honor Society, president of the French Club, and is
active in the Deer Creek Churc h
youth group. She is employed by
Backstreet Video in Pomeroy.
JtJdy Taylor, daughter of Fenton and Jeannie Taylor, is vice
president. She Is a member of
student council, Teenage Institute, H.U.G.S., and has been a
member of the voUeyball, basketball and track teams through
her high . school year. She is
active in 4-H club work.
Lesley Carr, daughter Of
Donna Carr and Ronald Carr,
Pomeroy, Is secretary. She has
participated in volleyball, bas·
ketball and tra&lt;¥&lt; through her

high school years. She is a
member of Teenage Insti tute,
studen t co uncil. H.U.G .S., the
yearbook staff and is an officer
and library as sis !ant.
Class Treasurer Is Missy

Woods, daughter of Ma ry Woods
and Tom Woods of Middleport .
She is active In varsity basketball, volleyball and track.
All four of the officers are
college preparpatory course·

Accidental

i

!

Public Notice

dleport. Ohio, at tho Traa·
eurer'a Office until 12:00

to Section 4511 .76 of tho
ment of
Education
Oh10
Revised
Codepursi.Jant
and all
other pertinent provisions of
law.
Specifications and in struction•
to bidders may be
obtained at
the office of
the Treasurer, Middleport,
Ohio .
A certified check payable
to thelrauurer of the above
board of education or • .satiaflctory bid bond executed
by the bidder and the surety

Standards for 'School Bus
Conttructlon of the Depart·
ment of Education pursuant
to Section 4611 .76 ofthe
Ohio Revised Coda and all
other pertinent provision• Of company, in an amount
equal to five percent (5%) of
law . ,
Specifications and in- the bid shall be submitted
structions to bidders may be with each bid.
Seid board of education
obtained at the office of
reaerVet the right to waive
the Treasurer. Middleport,
into;malitiea to acCept or reOhio.
A certified check peyable ject any and all or parts of
to the Treasurer of the above any and ·all bidtl.
board of education· or a aat- ' No bidl can be withclrlwn
isfactory bid bond executed for at taaot thirty 130) days
by tho bidder and the surety after the nheduled closing
companv. In an amount time for receipt of bids.
Meigs Local 8o1rd of
equal to five percent 15%) of
Education
the bid ahall be tubmitted
Jane Fry, Tre11urer
with each bid.
621 South Third Avenue
Said board of education
Middleport. Ohio 45760
reaerve1 the right to waive
1 161~1 992-6860
informelities to accept or reject eny and all or partl of 1101 25: (1 1 I 1, B. 15, 4tc

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

REPAIR

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
.ar Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16·86-tfn

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

In Loving
Memory Of

Tecumieh
Weed Eater
Homelile

BEULAH OCHIER

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

RACINE
GUN CLUB

who passed away 2
years ago today,
Nov. 15, 1986.

Jacobsen

Ohio
992-6611

Middleport,

CHECKlHE

1:00 P.M.
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
· 12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

PIZZA
Your Hometown Place

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA

At The BEST PRICES.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR •

EXTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES
When you were little

PEOPLES ·BANK
MEMBER

NEW HAVEN

F.O.I.C.

882-2135

POINT PLEASANT

I 675-1121

773-5514

You were

10

mean!

Juet look at you now

You've tumad aightaenl

H•m Blr•••• r

We love yoa,

Doofl

Mom. Dad. •nd
lorena

MASON
i

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham

SOUTHERN OHIO•
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO . 2
LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal Com pany, Meigs Nine No. 2. P .
0 . Bo• 490. Atheno, Ohio.
46701 , has submitted an
epplication to revise • Coal
Mining and Redamatkm
Permit Numberad R-03561 0, to the t&gt;tlio Department
of Natural Reeources, Divi Jion Of Reclamation . The
proposed coal mining and
reclamation operation will
be conducted in Meigs
County , Columbia Township, Sections 32, 33, arid

Take tht Jlain out of
pain~i,. let me do
i1 or you.

Vtry Reasonable.

Han Rtftrtncts.

61 ..·985-4180

lll-19-'lt-1 ....

Building

EVER y
SAT. NIGHT

Public Notice

6 : 30 P.M ,
factory Choke
12 GoUgl Shotg1111s Only
Stri&lt;tly Enforced

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

614-662-3821
Authorized John
Deere. New H ol!and,

Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

Equiptnent
Paris &amp; Service

farm

34: Meigs County. Salem
Township, Fraction 35, and
Sectiono 29 , 30. 34, 36, and

1-3-"136-tfc

36; Vinton County,· Vinton
Townshp. Sections 1 , 2. 3.
4 , 7. 8. 13 and 19, Fractions

1, 2 , 3, 4 , 7, 12, 13: Vinton
County. Wilkesville Township, Sections 4 , 6, 6, 10,
11, 12, 17, 1 B, 23, 24. Tho
proposed underground min
ing • • • encomp111 10.063
acr-. and ara located on the
Mulga,. VI!Js Mills andWiiJcal.
ville 7V, mh&gt;U18 U. S.G.S. quodrangla mapt. appro•imatelv
If• nonh to 6¥2 mil• north of

SER~ICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
healer cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

W~k•viHe

and extending apprOitimataty 3.4 mill• weat of
the Vinton County/ Vinton
Townohlp and Melllll County,
Columbia Township line. The
application Pf'OP0181 to axpand the ••• for room and
ptll• undwground mining.
provide few pilar removal on
th088 are• and lf&amp;M prevtouoly appr"""ld to be minMI. to
81lpand ar. . to be mined l1y
lo~l methods and ar. .
pnoriouoly oppr"""ld to bo
mina:t.
The application is on file at
the offices of the Meig1
County Recorder. Meigs
County Court Houle, Second Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
and the Vinton
County A ecordetr Vinton
County Court Houle, Main
Street. McArthur,
Ohio
46661 for public viewing .

45769

Written comments alld / or
requae"k tor an informal
conference may ba senl to
the Divltion of Reclamation,
Fountain Squar\1. Building B-3. Columbus, Ohio
43224, within 30 days ot
the lut dele of publication
of lhis notice.
111)16, 22,29: 112)6 . 4tc

Thlnga .-e buuln ' In the

WANT ADS

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mull Be Repoi1ob~"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service

match it!
ALSO"..

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UND£R $3°0
MAIN STREET PIZZA
Our Delivery Staff
Knowo Where You

Live.

Call 992-2228
or

Anrwuncemenls

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"00(1"'Li c~~:~~j~~~op
Certified

10 Years Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY

614"992-5952
11· 9-l mod. pd.

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRl
10·8-tfc

CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

$14 PER TON
DELIVERED

TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

POMIIOY I OliO

99

1

•CEILING FANS INSTALLED
•REMODELIN G •PAINTING
•PLUMBI~G
•ROOFING
•DRYWALL
•TILE WORK
•D ECKS
•PORCHES

SIMON 'S
PICK• A• PAIR

FREE E&lt;;TtMATES
Buckeye C11&lt;c!,Weloome
IBTH LYIICH 99&lt;1·3173

IN THE HEART OF
POMEROY

The Staff Is
Back ! ! !

· p,.,,flflo•

Spllll•lllf

Mary, Naomi,

Lftsa M. Murphey
Frft-Lance Writer

Ohio

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Addont and umodaling
Roofing and gutter work
ConCftt• work
Plumbing •nd electrical

and Gwen

Spee&lt;hes,

V. C. YOUNG Ill
. 992-6215

MEIGS
FURNITURE

3rd St.

Public Relations,
Adv.ertising ~

MIDDLPEPOIT, OHIO

Phone:
-~
614-992-3643

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

$449 9 5

10:31-88-1 mo.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

JUST OPENED

PH. 949-2969

by Donna

Located Halfway
between Rl. 7 &amp; Bas han.

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays. Holidays

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

SpeCializing in

CAKES

Dealer far
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

11-3." 88·1 mo.

BEAUTIFUL

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

~~:1.~£-'•CLOTHES

Now Homts

~

•TANS
TOP OF THE STAIRS

luilt

AND

"Free Estimates"

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

111 Wtst S.C. Pottllt'oy

992-6720

•Junk Yard Business

WANT TO BUY WR!CKID OR
JUNK CAIS OR TRUCKS
- FRII !STIMT!SFor ony of thoiHetvi&lt;tl&lt;ollll·

t.14-742-2617
Betwaen 9 a.m.- 6 p.m.
or LeGve

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
C .H ERRY

$35 ~lM~ffo
BILL SLACK
992-2269

mo.·

10·21· '88·1

Salem Street
Rutland, Ohio
742-2466
10/ 28/ 1 mo. d.

Free Estimates

Call 99

HUDNALL
PLUMBING HfATING
Pay Your Phone

and Cable Bills Here
IUSIN!lS PHON!
16141 992-6550
RIStDENCE PHONE
16141 992-7714

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain

SALES &amp; SERVICE

OPEN
MONDAY -FRIDAY
10 A.M.-4 P.M.
992-7204
324 East Main,
Potl\eroy, 0 hio
(Behind

4

Giveaway

2-Kinens to give ewflt( to good
home. Call 614-448-373, .

Yorkl:hire Torr•-tull bred-No
pap••· Has allergy-MUll be abte
to provide medlcel attention.

Call 8"4-268-t924.

.

All white kttten. C1ll 614-44~

8630.

4 kitten• to give aw..,. 2 mos.
old. Call aft• 6 PM, 6,4-448-

0952.

fiN.., ..

outside eata.
Good hunt.n-to wild for pets.

To give

Cott 814-245·5811 .

3 kittens, 3 eat1. G'ood mar:Hts·
Call 814-949-2345.

Otl.

2 kittens. 2% monthl old. Alao
mother catandl'untingdog. Cell

•

Shepherd, 304-876-8809.

Two grev tlrlpp«&lt; kttt- to
good home. 304-87&amp;-2474 or

6711-61 1a.
~

Lost and Found

LOST:large gray dog. whhe
eh•t. Small•-blaek. while &amp;
brown Walker Coon Hound.
ReW'ard. It teen eell c:ollect

white English Sprlnv- Sp1nl ..
with bobbed ten. Rewtrd. 304-

876-2225.g

lOST OR STOLEN, mlleBaagle

puppy, 9 months old. mottty

white with d•k brawn mixed
with biiCk 1pot1. V-v frlencl'(,·
eats lay:lng down, ~new.-. to
Elrna-, Wyou h•e thl• puppy or
hava seen him
Cllll

p...

304-875-7279 he h• -

gone for 2 weekt.

LOST l•ge Walk• male dog,

white with brown m•klnp.
'Jtcintty oi l.alart lnd Rllclne
loc:kt • . .nswer1 to Blod. RE LOST 5 'months old red ., d

Ker Heaters
Wicks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic
Furnace 1110.00
Blem Batteries
130.00 &amp; Up

Mastic &amp; Certainteed ·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Glitter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
. Windows

•lght. Jim StewJrt.

WARD. 304-1711-3415.

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

J&amp;l
INSUlATION

NO ttunUng Of tr"p .. aingon my
f•m. any oneea~ght oruanwiU
be proaecuted bv law or shot on

LOST: Mele ch•tnut brown &amp;

.,•HAIR

1

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

814-992-389t.

6t4-532·0238 "'632-7961 .

...-(.~

, .' i~ .:

We will haul ooll for em•v~or
HEAP. Meigs Counry DePt. of
Hum.-. Servicea, 1nd HE}IP
vouchert. We c., gJve you
prompt deliveri•. E 11CIM1ior Salt
Worlu, Inc. Pomerov, OhiO.

Puppi•. mott. \Nhlle Germ.,

742-2235

We Honor ""'' ""'" '"'"

3 Announcements

614-992-3786.

character and novelty
cakes
lt. 1, Bo• 1U, Vinton

Service Centor for Ryan
Products
8.7 financing on Y11dm•anl
Service on All

Hall)

l

whh:e Brlttelnv Spaniel Oellipolil
Ferry ere~~. If found REWARD.

304-876-t310.

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rick Pe••on Auction_., lleensed Ohio and Wett Vlfglnle.
Estate. antique, firm. liquid•
tion sal•. 304-773--17815.

9

Wanted To Buy

Wep..,cuhfor leta model d..,
used c.1.
Jim Mink Chw.-Oidllne.
SUI Gene Johnaon

614-441· 3172
TOP CASH plld for '83 model
end ntwer used c••· Smith
Bulck-Pontiec. 1911 Eelt•n
Ave .. Oalllpollo . Coli 614-44112282.
Complete houHholdl of ~rni­
ture &amp; entk~Y ... Alao wood &amp;

coal heat111n. Swain' a Fwnlture
Auction. . Third &amp; Olive.

&amp;

814-4411- 3t 59.

Junk~ Cart with or without
moton. C.ll i...tt'ry lNtly-114-

BINGO

388-8303.

POMEROY ·EAGLES CLUB

Furniture lnd •PII•• bv tfw
piece or entire lmuMhol •. Fair

224 E. MAIN ST.

p&lt;l ... being potd. Catl114-44113158.

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

Used lJrntture by the piece or
entire houMhold. 814·7•2-

DOOR PRIZE
2 H.D . FREE with coupon and purchase of min.
H.C . Package. Limit 1 coupon per customer per
bingo session.
WE PAY 160.00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME
Lie. #005·32

2456.

Trapping suppllei. luring gin.
sMg. Geor911 Bucld-v 11114-IM-

4711. H~n Z:OQ..!t=OO. Clo11d
on Monet.( .

[ill plo v1111~ 111

·r"..I""HIAN
WOOD STOVES
•12

St~rVILI!S

Vaars Experience

45 DIFFERENT WOOD

11

STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

Help Wanted

UP TO 116 HOUR PROCESSING MAIL WEEKLY CHECK

Feeturing: Con8olidated, Dutch
Weal, Brunco, Ashley
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

GUARANTEED, FREE DetaHa,
WRITE: SO, 10157 W. Philadel-

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431

Cotit. 91762.

698-6121

10-25-1 mo. pd.

•Dour S. Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling
i
Dump Truck
•Wrecker SeNica

Welcome'~

-•watk-Ins

11 -7 1 mo.

Racine, Ohio

6ET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAL

Folmer

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
992-2725

Computer Graphics,

WOtk

!FREE ESTIMATES]

Jone,

Graci, Donna, Angie

992-6282

p
EXCAVATING

ante

$1 200

YOUNG'S
-

Speclollzlng ln Chain
IJnk and Wood Fencing

We Carry Fishing Sufoplil-l

~

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

3, S &amp; 6

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
Middleport,

•Residential
•Commercial

BOOTS
SIZES

&amp;
168 North Second
Middleporf, Ohio 45760

319 So. 2nd Ave.

ALARM
SYSTEMS

LYNCH'S
GENERAL
REPAIR

GIRLS &amp; LADIES
·sNOW &amp; FASHION

NO SUND-Y

CARTER'S

.9·19-88 tfn

If any local
competitar offers
you a bethr deal,
tell us and we'll

SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS - These are the officers of the
senior class at Melp High School, I to r, Cindy Maynard,
president; Jody Taylor, vice president; Lesley Carr, secretary
and Missy Woofs. treasurer.
'

GUN SHOOT

1-28- '88-lfn

Authorized Service
&amp; Ports
Briggs &amp;. Stratton

In Memoriam

•

Death
Insurance

Education of the Meigt local School Diatrict of Mid-

Daily

l,::::::::::::::::;~~::::::::::::::;llf.~~~~=======f1

Business Services

Sadly missed by
daughter &amp; son-in-law.
Jean &amp; lloyd Wright
and family and friends.

Emergency Cash
Advance Service

will be

. ,. .I

;!~!ls~~~~~~~~::::

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
SIX SCHOOL BUSES
FOR MEIGS LOCAL
BOARO OF EOUCATION
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Meigs Local SChool District of Middleport, Ohio. It the Treasurer's Office until 12:00
noon on wadnnday . No·
vambor 16, 19BB. and at
that time o~ed by the
Treasurer of said Board. tab·
AND
ulated and a report thereof
modo to uld Board at ita
next achadulad meeting as
provided by tawforalx (6]71
Muuleloading Supplies
pauengar school bu oea. ac·
Modern Gun Su~ies
cording to speclticati(Jns of
said board of education.
Guns - Ammo • 5 gs Separate and independent
22 Ammo
bids wilt bo received wkh
124 East of Rutland
respect to the chassis and
A 011 H
Holl
Rd
body typo and willotate that
"
appy
ow ·
the buawhonauemblod and
Ph. •14-742-2355
prior to delivery comply with l.l.---.....;';,;";;.'/;,;1"'--.';,;
...
;;...:;;_,
all school district specifications, all safaty ragulations
and current Ohio Minimum

2

Meigs High School elects officers

,

Dt'E'f

$2,51)1) in 111011ej'-

propo~~als

received by the Board pf

Acc,•ooriooJ

MODERN GUN
SUPPUES

National
Discount Program

Middleport. Ohio 46760
1 16141 992-6650
110]25: 11111. B. 15 . 4tc

noon on Wednesday, November 18, 1988, and at
, that time opened by the
Tr...urer of aaid Board, tab·
ulated and a report thereof
made to uid Board at its
next scheduled meeting as
Transportation
provided by law for one (1)
71 .,-. Autol for Sale
handl·capped school bus. ec72-Truck1 ior Sale
cording to specifications of
73-Vans &amp; 4 wo ·s
said board of education.
74- Motorcvcti.
Separate and independent
75-8oats &amp; Motors1or
bidl will be received with
76-Auto Parts &amp;
respect to the chassis and
77- Auto Aep•ir
bo~ type and will state that
7
8 - Camptng &amp;
~·i:t::;::"'~om~ol thl buawhenaa•mbled end
79-Campers
prior to delivery comply with
all school district specificetlona. all 11fety regulations
and current Ohin Minimum
Standarcla for School Bus
Servir.P.s
Construction of the Depart-

-"==:;:~~~=-===~==~~~~;:==~

•

Regional Fall VICA conleren.ce held in Columbus.
Three of the four were named to posts In the
regional.

Farm Supplies
&amp; LtvestuGk

13-lnsurllnce

18-Wented To Do

''

Jane Fry. Treasurer
621 South Third Avenue

Se..ed

1 4 - Buainel! Tnining
1 &amp;-Schools &amp; InstrUctiOn

16-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

Member FDIC

time for reeeipt of bids.
Meigs. local Board of
Education

NOTICE TO 81 DOERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
HANDICAPPED BUS FOR
MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION

57- MuS1clllnstrumen1s
58-Fruits &amp; Vegerables
59- For Sale or Trade

1 %- Situation Wanted

I

for at toast thirty 1301 days
after the scheduled closin,S~

Public Notice

56- Peu for Sale

1 1 - Help Wanted

•

No bids can be withdrawn

Merr.handise

Emplovment
Services

••

any and an bido

•

53-- An1iQUe1
54-Mile . Merchandi1e
55-Budding Suppliflll

Public Notice

REGIONAL CANDIDATES ~ These four
Melp High School students, John Brlckles, Trlcla
Davis, Sam Rile and Sonja Steele, were
candidates lor regional offices at the Southeast

$21 '. 00
$51 .00

26-36WORDS
$7.00
s, 0 .00
$15.00
S25.00
$60.00

Public Notice

5, --,Household Goods
52- Sporting Goodl

Public Notice

..

s1 3·.oo

Announcements

---

variety of tremendous
services! C. no added feest
Congratulations' you get
all of this and more with
The Club checking
account
package.

$8 .00
$13 .00
$33 .00

1-Card of Thllflks
2- ln Memory

Five new members were weicorned, Sharon Birch, Sharon
Hubbard, Donna Sayre, Shirley
Sayre, and Dolly Wolfe.
Next branch meeting will be
held Tuesday, Nov. 22 at 7:30
p.m. at the Racine Methodist
~ Church. Theme will be on cultu·
.ral arts with Yvonne Scally of
LaSalle Gallery to have the
program.
Refreshments were served and
hostesses were Cindy Allen ,
Jocelyn Bailey, Rachael Downie,
Vickie Hill, and Helen Smith. The
decorated cake using the AAUW
logo was made by Mrs. Bailey.

........why our
You can see
Club checking account
package is a great deal.
Sign up today'

B. impressive values on a

ss .oo

$6 .00
$8.00

Rates are for conMeutive runs , broken upd"'fSWill be charged
fnr ear.h diW 11
ad1 ,

You'll get agreat deal with The Club!
What's your idea of a great
deal in checking? A. all
the personalized checks
you need at no per check

S4 .00

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
t MONTH

The

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

0-15 WORDS 18-25 WORDS

----~
---·

Pomeroy_- Middleport , Ohio

Classified

Mrs. Louise Eschelman who
had surgery is now at home and •
Improving. Visiting her rece ntly ~
were Mrs. Louise Householder,
Glouster, and Mrs. Nancy Ptice
an d daught er, T erry,
Portsmouth.
Mr.· and Mrs . Robert Gibson
and Robin of Columbus visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs. BOb
Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
spent the weekend in Kentucky
visiting his mother who is
hospitalized.
.
Mrs. Helen Bible and sons,
Columbus, spent last weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Cotte'Hll.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
were in Iowa recently to visit his
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray .patterson
spent a recent weekend camping
in West Virginia. Whlle there
they watched the parachutlsts
jump from the New River
Bridge.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Donohue were Kenda
Donohue of Mt. Vernon Nazarene
College and her friend, Alun
Armstrong, and Linda Donohue
and a friend from Columbus.
The family of Dennis Donohue
of the U. S. Navy report that he is
.now stationed in Bermuda.

~~te~M~~~~A~?~t
~~£12Ucted
·
Hysell family reunion conducted

Charles Reed Hysell and Oscar
Hysell family reunion was held
recently at Forest Acres Park at
Rutland.
Ann Carswell conducted the
meeting with the officers named
for 1989 being Ann Carswell,
president; Guy Hysell, vice president; Jane Hysell, treas urer;
and Madelin e Painter.
secretary .
Blr ths reported was Cody
Hysell, July 29, son of Randy and
• Genla Hysell and grandson of
Charlolte and Nathan Hysell.
•
Door prizes were awarded to
Janet McKnight. Bobby Jo
McClure, Kathy Roush, and Lori
Gay. A gift was presented to
Cody Hysell.
Plans were made for games
with small prizes at the nex t
·reunion. Members of the famil y

November 16. 1988

Harrisonville
happenings

HEATHER, APRH. HUDSON

speaker at the October meeting it means to members and the
of the Middleport-Pomeroy active role which it takes in all
Area Branch of the American phases of education, community,
Association of University international relations, legislaWomen held at the Racine tion, cultural arts and women's
Methodist Church.
Issues. A question and answer
Lee Lee, president, Introduced session followed her speech and a
the Ohio Division Program vice gift was presented to her on
president and new AAUW state behalf of the AAUW.
president elect. The speaker'
During the business mE&gt;eting
noted that the AAUW Is the oldest' members were reminded of A
continuing organization in the Child's Christmas in Wales
United States and is noted for stage p.lay to be presented Dec.
giving scholarships. There are 11 . The president must be ad1900 branches in the United Staes vised before Nov . 20 so that a
and 89 in Ohio. She detailed block of tickets can be ordered.
Tile new program books were

-~--

phia, Suite 239-GO, Onta.-io,
Man aging Coametologilt-Halr
Heppening. C.ll any dav but
Thurs. &amp; Sun. to make .. eppt.,

• , 4-4411-3353.

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

Now aecepttng resun-... for e

Self Serve/ Conv•IMt Store
Min .... in Middleport .-...
Send to: Box Cll179, c/oGIIIipolls Oelly Trlblne. 82! Third

Formerly Meigs Excavating

A110 .. Ollipoh, Ohio 45831 .

Fiull Excavating and Construction
Residential &amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential &amp;
Farm Work
Rt. 1, Vinton
388-8745

Owner 8t Operator,
Tony Cardillo

CJ

11 -8-t mo.

Television Listeninc
Dependable Heariag Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Ttlllill Aefln.-y Corp. needl
mlture per.ton now ln,a.lipotla
aru. Regerdl••, of lralnlng.

Wrtte: 0 . 1. . Hopk1n1, IOJt 711 ,
Pt. Worth. Tx. 78,01.
S.cret1ry / Recept lonilt with • ·

perl.,ce in indlp•dent office
m .. agem•n. Medfcallna'-'rmQe
billing/collectioN • word processing. SJI.,y oommen1ur11te
with MpailnOI 8. qualfla.
tlons. Pri¥1tegroupinGdipolla,
Send r.ume to Personnel, P .0 .
lo• 910. Ooll'!'olo. OH45e31 .

Help

WantM-Ev.~lng

App~

Cook.

i1 penon. No phone cella.
Holldly·lnn, 410 Pike',

Oalllpolll.

~ .licensed Clinical Audiologi~
~ (614) 446-7619 01 (614) 992·2104
:a 417 Second AVt11U8; Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

McDon•cr • In O.IUpolil is now
.:eeptlng applk=-:iona. Stertine
PlY· •3. 71 1n hour, 90 d~•

••.oo

1n

hour. No ·IPDtiCIItlon

eccept.t from 11 :30 AM -1:30
PM. App.. In paooon.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
_Mulberry Hets. Pomeroy, Ohio

Fed••· It•• ~nd CWM Setvlot
Jo... Now

'*lnv.

Vour • •·
..-o.
lmm•
di•ooponlngo. Colt 1·3111-733-

•13, 510 to • ••

ttn

8082 Ext. F2761.

I

�--- - ....

------Page-8- The
11

- - --,

Sentinel
44

LAFF·A·DAY

Apartment
for Rent
~oom

51

r.m.
Carpaod. Nice oatlng.loundry
fac::IIU• ev.. .Wa C.M 114912-3111. EOH.
2

AVON · AM..--. C•H M.rllyn

w • .,. 304-182•2841.

Aptt.

fof

RN'S • LPN'S.PH. floll tlmo.
p.., time appiiCIItions
being
IICc.ptld for Pla•tnt VIII ...
Hot.,n:•t Nuf'ltng C~re Cent•.
Con..et P•r~onnel 30•875-4340. AAEOE.

ovolobla Utlltloa plld. 1221.
P• month. depolft ,..ulred. Cel
8t4-912-1724 ott• 1 :00 or
ft2-1111.

AVON ell • - I I Shlrl.,sp. .s,
304-875-1429.

Ndl'oomapt. Partir
..Pamwav.
,,.t.d Jn2 ravtorw
Run. lecul'-

•r•

Newlv llld•oorMed aplrtments

lry ....,otll. c.• .tt.-. lp.m.
114-892·1111.

Llcansld $Qdlll 'Mlrk• in ,.,..,
long wm c.-o fec:Hity . E.)lp ..
rtenoe pret.r«&lt;. Comm...ume
sll.-y .. d bln.th:1. E.O .E. Mail
raaume 1o Adminiltrlfw Cere
H.ven of Poh'W Pl. .ant At. 1
Box 32t. Point Ple•.,t. w. V1.
25560.
Situations
Wanted
Cit•

Have room tor 2111~ ~-In
our horne. LOCIII:ed in Mldcl ..
port. Call 814-992-2750.

15

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Millon Pike
Coll4411-436?. Aog. No. 811-1 t ·
10518.

18 Wanted to Do

"--f'-""**·" ........ -

For stile or rene : 2 ~oom
houu. goad location. nice
nlighborhood. ltw• lnd nft'kt
cltldren. IMIL d
aonslder land oantiiiDI. 1ft•
5:00PM phono 304-175-1792.

••or. no

Mobile Homes
for Sale

t~l8-

Moon tZkiO. 2 8R.
. • 2300. Coli 114-4411-0380.

Dozer " &amp; Backhoe Work-85() t911 fl. .wood. t 21&lt;14. bottlo
Cete doz•. Ae•oNbl• reiN. a• h. . lr'ldtllllwM•. • 3000.
Exp•lenot operMor. C~Nnl Coli lt4-143-13t0 or 114843-1408 onytlma Alk ,.,.
Conot. CoR 114-211·1?18.
·o.nny.
A8madellng: insulation: IOOfinff
vinyl1h:llng; pMnting: electrical. 2 bodroom t2k60. 01900.
etc. Cell 814-2,.5--9448 (8 &amp; W 304-1?5-2?22.
Conltruct:lon.)
19 81 Brit any 1 4•70 ,
Have room In PrtvateCareHome 110.000.00. 304-112-284-lol·
for elderly man or lady· •• 5:00.
Hondlcop. Coll814-2511-8109.
1883Triu ...... 14all0, . . . odd
Tree work-topping. trimming. on,_. pump, 11hb•Uw,
pruning. &amp; remOVII. tt.da• .nd .., • • undlrp•ning .. d
trimmed. Fr• lltlmM•. Cell decik. Ill •c cand. Cel 1148t4-445-8071 or 304-175- 31?·7t20 or304-l?ll-2047.
48&amp;3.
1880 Potrlot 141&lt;10. _ .....
dryer,
•c. from porcf'l wth
Wll o.efor.._..,womenlnmy
m,me with home prlvHeg~ 802 •wr*1g. Tllk e DY• p•m•a.
304-773-1471.
Founh Aw .. 814-4-011-2823.

••'*

•Itt• IN'aHable .-,y lime.
Rllf•en011. Loceted In CheS.by

lhWe. Gaod e.e provided. 81431?· 1281.
Will do

ba~slrrlna

Jn ""V home.

Mon"-v throuah Frld.,.. 2 ye. .
aid lll'ldUp. Celll14-992·8926.
Wanted to dO office .. d house
eletnlng. clll 30._.882-38•8.

F1nanml
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLIS IIlNG CO . rt'OOrnmtndlthtlt vou
do bJsin . . wilh people vou
knOYJ. 1nd NOT to ..-.d monllrf
throuW! the mllil untl you h..,e
investigll.cf the afl.tng.
Groc«Y Store/Get for •le. Be

vourownbon EM:ellantm.,.,.
making. Adventu,. for tom.
one. Gaod loc:Mion. Owner must
sell due to linen. Fteplv m:IOJC
Cit 180, c l oO•IIIpolis Dilly
Tribune. 825 Third A ...... Gelll-polls, Ohio 45131 .
Own your 1pperM or lhoeltare.
choose from: Jean·Sporttwe•~
L•dle•. Men ' s, chlldnnmst•nlty, large 1lzn, • • • ·
d.. cew•r·..,obic. bridsl, II•
g.-ie or acce~sorl• . llore. Add
caloranalysll. B,.,dnM'I•: Lll:
Cleibome. Healthtlll. 011111,
l..ae, St Micheht, For-•. Bugle
Boy, Levj. Camp lwertv Hills.
Org.,ICIIV Grown, Lucia. over
2000 others, or $13.99 one
price dMlgn.-. mutti-tier pricing
di•count or hmiiY shot ltore.
Retal prices unblflewlble11Dr1op
quality stto. nomwtty priced
from 819. to eeo. over 2150
brlr'ldi28001!VI•. t17,900to

829,900: inventory, training.
fixturet, elrf•t. gr.,d opening.
etc. Cln opw~ 15 d.,1. Mr.
toughlln (11211811-4228.
SALES MULTI LINE INSU·
RANCE . Ufe · health • Mlto. ·
homo. CNI EER OPPORTUN·
tTY. Call 304-743-6030 or
304-582·3309.

For ..I• 1170 Ch~pbn moble

homo. tZitiO 03.800. vorygood
cond. 304-1?11- 1118

1979 Bayv... mobMe home,
14x?O with '7&gt;21 •p-.do.
phone 304-175-11•1 .
1980 Sh..,ood Pork 141&lt;?0 on
eleculc with ftnpleoe, ill.nd
rMge. 2 bectoorN. 1 Nth.
houoo
_ _ , pluah
c•petl, ,... lnsul•ktn. •CIII·
l.,t cond. br~ndn• 18.000btu
Whlrpoot "' oond. Montgo"**'
W1rd dryer Included,
012.100.00 fir"' phono 304895-314t.
~Ypo

12x 55 trel•. 2 bect"ooms, Mw
raof end T1-11 slclng. electric
pol• lr'ld box, P6ldwl)enf!.ir'IV 111d
blookl. good oond, 12.100.00.
304-4111-1131.
t 978 Llbony 141&lt;70, 3 .....
e7.900.00. 304--171!11611 .. d 1711-1711

raom,

2 lA .. ol ol-Io. furnllhod.
17.000. Coli 304-1711-11113 or
c• • • 2 mil• out .Jim Hll Ad.

33

Farms for Sale

Complet* remodeiMI 3 BR.
ronch otylo homo. ' llropt.,. In
LR. rur.lwlt•. l..,•mll EC.
Colt 114-245-1204-

35

Lots

8o

12x80, 2 lA . mob'le hofM.
Pood cond. fwr*Md, AC. 1

acre l.. d Stor-e~• bldg. •
g•ag• LoCited on L.emt.t
Buti.-Une-Rt. 2VIntan.4rnl•

from Rio Grande:
91211.

814-318-

Renl als

41

Homes for Rant

T.,ning busin811 for 1111 lo-cllll:ed In Ravenswood. W.V1. cell
304-614-4-111- 712t .

3 BA .. AC. c•pM. pool. g.-age.
2 firepi.::BI, fence. Good location.. Clll A·1 Aell Estlte
Srok•. 304-875-lt04.
Unfurnllhed hou•. 2 BA .
Nelghbarhaoci"Rd. e221!1. Ref•
en~ &amp; depostt Nqulr«i. Cell
4-111-4-lt8 oflw 1 PM .

'
Homes for Sale

Vtity anractNe brlc* 4 bedroom.
2 bath. friitv room with firepiece. formal dining. 1.-gel~tng
room. 30 fr . custom aak kttchen
ca bin1t1, oak woodNork. Rnifh

be..ment. 2 c• g•age. l.,el
lsullciiPed lot. 4 mil• "from

Holzer Hospital off At. 36·
Fbrterbroak Subdivision. C.l

8t4-4411-4189.

Pl .. ts Sub.·4 BR ., fu II b• •
menl , carpet, rang~. city

tchools. Adults onfv. N()_ peta.

Oop . • Rot. roqulrod. UIO per

mo. eon 114-441-0211111• I
PM. weekandl anytime.
3

bedroom wttl1 .,_.....,.,

*·

rwrturtl D•· centrel
city
wet•. Convenllnt ao.-lon. Rtf·
eren011 .,d dlpaslt. Rent lt300
month. No pita. C11i 114--4411 288 1ft• 8 PM.

4 BR ., full bllernMt 8. 9•11&amp;
fully c1rp1tod {lome ni!M'I .
Ptlced to 1etl. Call 814-446-

0276 lifter 8 PM . weekends
anytime.
be~oom Rendt. 1'.1 blllhl.
famltf room. dining room. 1 c•
g•age. •torage buRdlng. pool-

3

/ woodln dtt&lt;*. Sl)flng VIIIIIF1
area. Cell 814-«S. 7903.

Oarilng 3 IR . rlf'lch in country
on 180. 7 mil• from Hol2•
Ho1pi11l, fMoed In back v•rd.
o ntr' 7 yrs. old. rural wat•.
copper plumbing, deck .
• 38. 000. Negot lbfe. Contact
NeaHenry-Agent forJanO.nl•
Aetlty, Jackson, Ohio, t14281-t370.

Older 2 otorv ho- 3 8R ..
edcltkuwl4 roam hou . . Cen be
Uled • bush111a. Rlv• trorage.
t38.000 or 0\NfW' will fln.noe
with stMtl down .-vm.m. 8'1.1"
lnteNit, 3 mH• a. of Mktdlaport
on R1. 7. Col 114-4-111-?040

betw.., 8-4:30 PM .

Government Hom•f t1 .00 jU
Aep.W) Foredo1urw. T.P D•lfn.
quem Propcwty. Naw Sellin 1J
'Thll er••l Call (R8fundabiiiJ
1· 5111-459-354&amp; exT. H1122

Mobile Homes
for Rant

*

2 bectoom rna bile home C.mp
Conlor. 304-1711-3812 • lflw
1 :00PM.

Tr.... for rem. en unfurniltMd.

ooupfa •rMI
chll*tn accepted,. rftences
and dlpolll.. At. 1 Locust Rd.
fuunh mlo bohlnd Kill&lt;. City.
304-8711-t071.
nice ., d

44

dee~,

Apartment
for Rant

Roa,. for rent· WINk or month.
Sta11ng •t •120 a mo. Qallle
Hot.l14-4411-9580.

46

Space for Rent

COUNTAY MOilLE HomoPor~
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental traillrl. Cal 81 .... 992·
74?9.

a•
hut..
,_,h
SO.OOOIJ1U
•. t75. F....,,
•. • 71. Wrfn..
upright. t110.F,..er.ch.-ttvpe,
ltiO. Woohlr, 1?1. Dryer, 111.
Sk- A.,...,_, 178 Upper
RlvorRd.,ft4-4411-7381.

r..

b11ement. 1132 Lincoln
IW!ghta. •zoo. Ret••ce ~nd
dopoo•. 814- ?42-2?28.
3 bectoonw. t221. P• month
pluo dapoolt. COli llt4-8828?24 or 114-882·1tt8.

3 bedrooms, 11h blltt\. blaarMnt

Houu tDr Nnl. 2314Mt. Vernon

Ave. •210.00monttt. Nf«enoe

....,0111.

end
unturnllhed. one
ohllcl 30'4-175-211t .

74

~;~~§§·'~~~=:;;::~:;.;:::::;::::;::;:::::!:~
54
Buy

Misc. Merchandise
•
di&lt;oct from ....... ~ec:~.,.

M.tchlng coud'l&amp;loveteet. T•
corduror. tHO. Call 114-· 4488833

8 pc. French Provlncl .. brtG'oom
aJite l1200. 304-1115-77,._
Lo•o . . _ . .

Wheeld'IIIU·· IIIW' or uted. 3

wheeled electric 10001... C1ll
Rogora Mobl!v ooiiOot. t·lt&lt;l870.9111 .

Dekote F.rm Home. Built on
you'r lot. •12.911&amp; up. 1M our
Model. Coli t·lt4-lllll-731t.

WHITE'S M!t'AL DETECTORS·
Cfl... lor apocl• on AU
Modell. Big dltcount~r• ,..,.,

ltocked rnodell. Aon Allton.
1210 Second Awe.. CJellpoll.
Ohio, 114-4411-43311.

.n••

•d nv• ttl . lpa'e ttartlna•

lullclng Motart•
. '
Blodt. brick. tew•
wlft."
dow ....... etc. c .... Win•... Ilia Gr.,do. D. Coll142411-5t2t.

pip•,

lio Blodc Co.• t2
Plno ..
Gill-. Ohio. C I 114-441127U.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Chennel Rultlc
ond BIYolod Lop Siding
'OockMot•lola
.
G-ontood Oullltv
CfTIDE. INC., Atll.,o-814·
514-31?S

56

Pets

for

Sola

l

N.w completety furnished
ap.-tment a mobAe home In
atty. Adulls antr. Parking. c ..
114-4411-0338.

Wood oplltt•. aplite t9 lncn
logs, llmolt nM. 1ft bushhog
dloc. 3 point. Call 814-3811lt41.

Dog hou-. 1~ mil• aul Af:.
141. W.,yne Sho..,.ek •. Calf
814-4411-0113.

Pioneer AM-FM-Cau with
eq1111bw. t1211. Must Mil ht(
frld1111. COII814-2111-11123.

AKC R,.iat.od W_, Hlghl.,d
Whko T«rloro. Mote • fornolo.
lhoto, .wormod. Colllt4-31119813.

IEAUTII'\IL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGEI' PAICE9 AT JACK·
SON E9TATE9, 131 Jockaon
,.Ike from t183 • mo. Wlik 10
lhop ond movloa. 114-44112111. E.O.H.

T•ra TVWnhouM aprtment:• 2
BAs.. H!t b81hl, CA .. die·
hw•tw. dllpoul prlvete .,..
oloood p•to. poet plovgrouncl.
Wltw,
tr-" hu:ludld.
Starting It 289 1* mo. Call
114-31?· 1110.

..w•.* •

Apertm.,ta for the Eld•tv.
OaMie Manor APWtmenta. Ill
1"'1 MortanAcld. O.klned fer
tho Santor CMizon 112 I. oldorl
"'dHan diCIIPPtd pnons. Equel
houalng oppMunit'(. Applications mer be plakedupetSprlng
Vlllev PI••· 128 Jackson Pike
or crlllt4-4-lll-4138.
Modern 1 BA, downtown, co~
plete kltchll'l. elr, c.pet Dep..

oslt. no p•a. Cal 114-4410139 WMinQI. -"• 6.
238 Flnt Ave. 1 lA .. ldlch.,
furnilhed, c•p•ed. No chilo
dron/Poto. 1111
utftltl•.
~. • rol. Callt4-4-lll-4921.
._...

'*''

8211h S.c. E-=-1. oond .• 28R.,
equipped kttchen. elr. A•llable
Nov. 1st. •221 plu• dep, Cal
8t4-4411-0103 or 4411-2118.
Fur•hed efftdenov. e 150. Utfl·
kl• poid. 7 Nell. Oelllpoh. Cal
441-4418 -"• 7 PM .
Furnllhed opa1matt, 1 lA .
•221. Utlttl• .-kl. 920 Fourth.
~lpolll. ~~ 4411-4411oltw7

51

Houaahold Goods

1---------SWAIN
AUCTION II fURNITURE 62
Oliva St. Golllpo•.
NEW· I pc. waod group 8399.
Living roam tuh:•· *199- *699.
Bunk bedt with bedding. t2U.
Full slu m.n:r... • found .. ion
•••rtlng· t99 . Recl iners
otortlng- 098.
USED- Bedl, dr...... bedroom
suit•. Desks, wringer wuher, a
complete Une of uled furniture.
NEW· Western boots· t36.
Workboot1 t18 • up. (Steel &amp;
aofl too). Coll814-4411-3119.
County AppUmca Inc. Good
used lppliWICM lf'ld 1V 18tL
Open BAM to IPM. Mon thru
Sot. 114-4-111-1199, 627 3r&lt;l

Ave. Oalllpolil, OH.
GOOD USED APPUANCES
W.. hen. dry«~. refriu-ators.
nngos. Skavu• Appliance•.
Upper River Rd . btelde Stone
Cred Motet 814-448·7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

t·510 gel. • ....ground flool
tonk. 1310. c.u 8t4-4411-0in
aft• ... PM.

Tr5-St• Y1cuum~ with unused
powernouelt end llltachnMnts,
gulrMtM, •220. CaornpMI V..
cuums also rebultt. $180. Cel
304-217·8324. Llmllod quollty
1110 hwe unulld 1988 Rainbows. Klrbvs. 8. ElectroluiC.
ladl•' 1 clothln~t like
nM, antlqw dilhaa·mHk .....
IMII• sho-. kltchen ttwns. •
lots ofmilc. C.ll814-446-2123
or •• • 802 Fourth Ave.

Avacado 13 Cu. ft. Frostfr~~t
Glbaon Refrlgw~tor. EK. Cond..
e200. Old elec:trlctrein, *100. 15
old qultts. 2 rallroMIIW•nt. 1!1
school marm btllt. Old ltone
Ant5que dr•ser. 814·96
280t .
.

J••·

Four tide: 1'1:1 toC IIIH elan dB rOW'~
Pftt:sburgh StMI. . gam a November 20th. C.ll 814· 9854339 .... 4:30 ~·

Sofa 1nd chllirs priced from
t395 to $9915. Tebl• 860 and
up to e1215. Hlcte-a·beds *390
to til&amp;. AecUn.. t221!1 to
t37S. lamp• t28 to t126.
Dln•tn t109.ndupto. t495.
Wood tlble w·8
t2815 to
1791 D01 k •too
t375
·
up up.
to Bunk·
Hutah•
t400 lr'ld
bedl complete w·mllt1r•••
1291Jilnduptoe391S. Iab¥be*
•110. Manr ..... or bo•JPf'lnQI
full or twin •18. firm t78, and
188. au- 1260 • up.
King t3110. • draw• ch11t 119.
Gun cabJn•• 1 · 8 11 10 ~n.
B•bv m.ar. . " I 31 &amp; t 45. ·
Bed frem• t20. •30 &amp; King
frame tiO. Goad seleotlon af
bedroom sutt•. m«BI cebinlt1.
headbD•d• •30 and up to $86.
............
90 D•v• s1me as c11h whh

Firewood fur •Ia Small pickup.
•20.: Regul• pidcup, t21. Call

tpproved crMih:. 3 Mil• out
But.vile Ad. Op.-. lam to Spm

Junction lndepencWtot A01d,

ch*•

Mon. ttwu Sot. Ph. 8t4-4-lll0322.

Wheelcheir with remonblt
p.U for medium tiHd perton.
u..d antv twice. like new,
r...onabty priced. Call 814992-2413 8nytlrne befora 4-:00
p.m.

114-?42·3tt2.

Alhlt¥ Woodburn« for •Ia CIK
114-992-220t.
Surplw army c•moufl&amp;lge. denlm. ramal. Carhert doU11ng.
Sm.tl army •cc••ora.. Fri.
Sit, Sun, noon till 8:00 PM.
(Nov. Doc open 7 dll\lal. som
Som.-vlle'•· l!alt·AIIVtniWood
Did Rt. 21. {New E...C insulated
comouftogo COY...Ua 127.10.
304-273-5165.

t 3 1 - Mothor AK C Aog. Coli
114-4-lll-2tOa.

Fllh TMk. 2413 Jeck1on Ave.
Point Pto.ont. 304-1?5-2013.
10 -··""114-ft .. d tO gol
compl•• t4321.

5~

Musical
Instruments.

towory 4-1 Gonia argon. E ,.., condNion. Call 114-44111703.

l••orw.

lndtvtwlf vutt•
be·
gtnn...
gutt•tst. INt..... Muoio. llt4-4-lll-0187.
Jeff WlmiiiV INtructw. 8144411-BOn. Llmhod oponlnga. ,

•rlou•

Trombone. or• cond. •"' for
beglnnen, 304-329-8098 or
304-1711-3314-

58

8o

Fruit
Vegetables

Dunrovfn Fruit F•rm will clo11
November 23 for the IIIIDn.
Mllcelllr'leoul h.,. ultprlaecl
. Houl'l 9·8, clos«&lt; Monda¥1. At
181 IE of Alborry. 114-19111298.
Jacb M•km Md 11&amp;8 Pro~ce
now combined In one loaltlon.
t=.n til fnllts, WGM•ble. can 6t.
nuta. much morel! Open 9:00 •
5:00 dolly. 12:00 •• 1:00
Sund.y. Food ttamp1 wetoorne.
Jocb fN~ M•ka. ~.. 35.
Hendenon. W.Ve.

59

For Sale or Trade

Arei:H111 m•a I v. .• old. Grav.
~ realn•ed. '1500. 11J .....
moro.lyooro old. Btock. OIOO.
Wo.,_lflt• on Its own trWI•,

...hounda
Mbones,
•180
~==========1====::====:.~ •kern.
1300. Coon
mountain
u 11. Aegln•• bea.n: fDincf,
w.~~c

SNAFU® by

Bruce Beattie

--;:::=;-~:;::~

milo. lid • whlto. 1300. Col
114-742-2412.

.: . :. :. . . .:. :.:.;.: . . ____
I .IIIII Slilillll·':
('., ! IVI:&gt;idl h

61 Farm Equipment
F• ••R18C0ncllloned 11 fl.
fold-upbuoh ho9 CoN 114-2111412t.

lh.., Lown Apu. 728 - n d
... ... ..... hod ollla..q, ....
lng of 1111 a mo. ln,..clna
wotw • a•bo9• llnale oduNa
..... Colt 11"4-4411--7 ..
814-4411-2102.

••ot.

toto 110 Ollvw
............ buoh hoJ .3110.
108 lnt.-natioNII 11•11 tr•«
with 1111. buoh ho" 14210,
Own• wl flnmoe. C1ll &amp;142811-1122.

•a-bog·-

NlooiV f l o r - t ·2 Ill. - •
-ot·p-·
Dapoolt -•od. CaR 114-44114341111•1 PM. M.P.

A,_.m.,t for rtnt. 1221 •
-nth. Dopooll ,..ulrod. 114892-8724. All• lpm or 992·
ltt9.

1h Chow Chow puppNe-4mal•

~·. •

Mlxod herd wood oloba. t t2 por
bundle. Containing epprox. 1"n
ton. Ohio Pallet Co .• Pom.,oy,
Ohio. 814-982·1481.

---'-------Pony, brldo • oodclo for ..to.
con llt4-3811-81?2.

I

W14AT '!'OUR
5A't'S, KID .. SIT

ENJO~ED THIS

CONCERT

MORE THAN ANI{ OHlER

DOrAJN OVER TJ.IERE!

BECAUSE

I 60T TO

ee AN u~"'~'c.

I rdiiS!IIIrliillllll
71

Auto's For Sale

plu• . 8~1 Guide. (1)
8011-117, Ext. S·tOtS9.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

·.A.RLO AND JANI.-S_
. ~-'------.. .,..........._ _ ____, .......------.,......-----.,

HAAAHAHAAA

(-{

WH~~I&gt;

1814 &lt;;hovy Ch..,.,o, Automt~tlc. AM rldio, almoet n-.v
tlr•. 10.000 ,.. • . Ae• ....
roplocod. 11000. For
mor• lntormltlon c,.l Peul It
114-4-111-2342. M"'' bo • - ot
TlloGolllp. . Dolly Tribune, 1·5

_.,.,,,

1984 Ford EIOOrt. one owner.
02395. t815FordEXP. 31,000
...... •3210. Col 114-21111122.
1BS2 HondoAocord hotchbook.
83.700 mil•. 5 opd. No AC .
Excel. cond. One own•. Call
114-4411-4821.
t9?3 01•. 98. 2 dr. 1700 or
rrlfw. Coli 114-4411-131?.

198&amp; Ch•·ger, 2.2. alto.• air,
PS. Pl. AM·FM ·C.tL. a~n roof.
eo. ooo mil•. •4200
firm. Colt 114-379-2182.

..._, *•

1188Pont~lonnwii•LE . elr.

AM.fM, power win-. power
door Jock. cruila tltt. E NCO!.
oonct Priced to eafl. Cel 8144411-111? Ill• I PM.

1984 Potwlac: Fl•o. 4 1pd, new
tlr•. low, low . .!"'!"- Caoh
prlc.. t39tl. John 1 Auto
Sai•-IMiow Holiday Inn in
K..,atg~.

1980Hond1Acc:ordl.X. 72.000
mi. AC. 111J0d concltlon. Cell

H"

f

e

&lt;.:

AND ERNEST

Mo.U, Loltllf
~ Tdl.a 'lou VIUA ¢
PAU, PRESENT

360 Chevy motor. Runs good
1100. Coli 814· 949·2594.
Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

/VO THAI\1/&lt;S I j&lt;NOWII\/~
TWo TENSrS lS'
~NOUGH ~EALITY
Fo~

~ altd FUTURE! ..
..

H••

19&amp;8 C•mpar, good eond.
•4oo.oo. Coli 304- n:s-&amp;141 .

·-

a s

7:05 Ill to
7:30 G (%) Family Feud
IIl AII·Amertcan Pulling
Serleo From Bowling Groen,

ME.

OH

Ill Entar1111nment Tonight
Ill (J) USA Todar
91 Ill 1121 1111 J10pardyl

-·

IIJ(l]) M'A•S•H

ALLEY OOP

IIJ Croooftre
®Night Court

ABSOI.UTELYI IF WE'RE
GOING 10 SEND L"'RRY

W"'Y WB CAN GET
WORD 10 /WI&gt;.
ABOUTWI-IAT

NeARGIDE

BACJ(

10.

ATI.ANTIG, [ W~T AN
EXPERIENCEP H~D 10 GO

W1! 1RE UPTO ...

Services

7:00 CD Our HouH Trouble In
Paradise, Part 2
G (%) PM Magazine
(!I 8por111Center
Ill (J) Current Altair
CD (!) MocNell/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
1!11 II 1121 1111 Wheel of
Fortuna t;1
IDI!ll Tllree'o Company
IIJ Moneytln,
®ChHra
0 Mllml Vice r:;t
ill lllcky Naloon end Fat•
Domino Celebrating 30 years
of rock and roll Ricky and
Fats perform 'Blueberry Hill'
and other classics at the
Universal Amphllhealre In
Los Angeles . (t :00)

H~~~~

'

1985 27 ft . Rockwood MiniHome.
Chary ch•sie. g.,..
•ttor, •wnlng. air condition on
motor and roof. 12,000 mHet.
A·1 1h1111e. lott of ••~"••· price
negotlabfa Clll814-992·1!1320.

WITH HIM I

Home

81

lmprovaments

.•

8A9EMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnoondiUonel llf•lme guari!Wl·
toe. Loc,.
t.lr. . hed.
Free Mlimet•. Call collect
1-814-237-0488. d.,- or night.
Rogeralasement

EEK &amp; MEEK

SWEEPER and IIWing machine
repli', p.-ts, and tuppli•. Pick
up end delivery, Davis V.mum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Oaorgas Creek Ad. Call 6144411-0284.

Painting: lnt•ior &amp;. Exterior,
,.... estimat•. Call 814-446-834-0.
Will do ..nd bh•tlng. · spr.,
pelnting. int•lor • •terfor
decorMing. 26 vra. eKperi.-.ce.
COII814-245-909?.
_
RON'S Television S•rvlce .
House calls on RCA , Quazar.
GE. Speclllllng in Zenhh. Call
304-576-2398 or 814·448·
2454.

1980 Trms Am, T·top, mtny

Fatty Tree Trimming. 11ump

option&amp; tutbo 400 with ohlftldt.
U710. OlD. Coli 114-24119184. 2411-1823 .. 4411-23011.

removol. Coii304-17S.t33t .

llr•.

1884 Blodc Chryolw to- XE.
turbo. •ceiiW oon- 88.000
mi-. I opd.. A C. PS. PS. dlt.
auile.. IIOWW windowl. pow.power dOor ktc*t, tlntld
wlndowL AM ·fM ·C.•ate. 111•
ampltflr, ,_ ct.toger, po.wr
mrt-on. '4600 Firm. C•ll 114317-nl?.
•

•-a.

1178 Ch..rota Impel&amp; 350
1uto., PS, PI, 71.000 mi. y_.,
goode•. t1600. C.ll814-«84041.
.
18791uldc.Eiectra. high mil•.
310 V-8. !ull"powor. Runa good.
1910. Colllt4-2111-1621 ott•
I PM .
t879 AMC Sprlt, I cyt. , outo..
1421. con ofi•5PM, I14-4410812.

1984 BW:Ic C.ntury Statio~
Wagon. E-=ellent condition.
44.000 mil • . Call 8t4-992·
3348 aft• I:OOp. m.
1987fardEIICOrt. 4tpMd.. rM1
st.rp. One OWIW. EM:ftll.nt
condition. Colll14-742· 3142.
1984FordEICDrt. PS, Pl. auto.
AM·FMc••.rte. E:celontcondltion. t2200. See t1 ftrat house
~ PoltOfflce In Longl01tom
aft• 8:00 p.m.
·
18111MW 320 l . lapeed. oun
roof. n.,_, lrtdgeltonetirll, new
••hauM: Wid brill•. Mul"f sel.
Colllt&lt;l-112·2141.
tiiiChovy 21 fl. MoU•dwfth
ta-..nld roorn. n--lng ltebll·
lln•Mor,
..:traa.
Low ml.aga L•e neN cond.
.... 100. 304-1?5-4111 ..

II•.

ot""

1111 Ft.to V-1. 4 opood. PW.
T ..Top. t7.ISOO.OO. Callwenlngs
304-1711- 21?0.

'77 Tuns Am, T-Top,
u.eoo.oo. '72 a - ....... ,
no rust. runt good. •375.00.
304-1?11-241?.
'82 Plrmouth Rlllont. 4 cyl. 4
lpMd. 0100.00. 304-885·
3427 .. 304-1711-1104- .

For • w• dell one n.., or uMd
a., tJud!:orwn, -tc.nrryllllu
•t Jim Mink Chewrolet ·
Ot•mobla 114-4-111-3112 or
304-773-11341981 Nllsan Mlxima
•:1.100.00. PS,PI.AC.AM -FM

c.,....
14.000 mi-. Cllll
304- 1711-1123111• 4:30 PM .
Trucks for Sale

tl79 Ch""Y 4x4. 310, 4 bb.,
Milo., 'h: tof\ bid:. C•l 8142411-8411.

Rotwy or cable tool drlllln.g.

Molt welt completedurne day.
Pump ooloa ond HrVIco. 304881-3802

13ELIE'VE
IN ANc:rELS,

I DON'T KNOW, 13LJT
SOMETIMES, WHEN I 1VE

I FIND f=EATHERS
INMYROO\I\ THE

SPOTL.E55":&lt;

BEEN ESPECIALLY qQOD.. .

NEXT MORNIN6.

DO 'lOLl

•I

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
houH cell urviclnt~ G E. Hot
Point. wnhers, dryers end
........ 304-&amp;711-2398.

r

I

•

Ak•• Tree Trlmrrin g Md Stump
Removal. Free eetlmeti!JI. Call
304-8?1Pt21 .•
Ron' 1 Chlmn8¥' Sweep, sped II
thru December S39.95. Call
304-n:s-1348 or 773-5840.
Aonnl1 Neal.

BARNEY
THAR

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

GOES

MISS
SNOOTY II

RIDIN' IN HER

DADIURN
CONVARTIIL!··

a VldeoCountry

Electrical

&amp;

Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wlr·
ing. New service or repairs.
Ueensad electrician . E.stimata
free. Ridenour Electrical, 3048?5-1786.

85

General Hauling

Dll•d Water Service: Pools,
Clst•ns. Wells. Delivery Any.
Ume. Call 814-448-7404-No
Sun~ cells.
J a J Water Service. Swimming
pool1, cl1tems. well1. Ph. 614245-9285.

A 81 A Water Servlct~. Pools,
cl1terns , well• . lmmediate1.000 or 2,000 gallon• delivery.
Coli 304-175-8370.
Wllter delivery. 1000 glllons.

Aeasonlbte price~. lmmediMe
delivery. Colt 114-992· 5275.

Wetter.son ' s Weter HaulinQ,
rMsonabte rat•. vqlume discount,, 2.000 to 4.000 C8Pac·
lty, o~t-. -~. wol~ . ....
304-5?11-2919 .

87

Upholstery

Mowrev'• Uphollt•lng s.ving
tri 00U/IIVIrH23yeltl. The beet
In furnltura upholstering. c1 1
304 · 875 · 4164 for free
..-timlt".

10:00 CD 700 Club
CD !HI Nawo
CD lrtoh A.M. t;1
1!11 II 1121 High Rllk
Segmenls: Rappel down
300·foot walls; Unlimited
Hydroplane Racing .
II tlD Berney Miler
(1]1 Evening Nowo
ill Crook and Chue
10:20 (I) MOVII!: Kung Fu INRI
(t:15)
10:30 (!) Eao1Endera A continuing
chronicle of tha lives of
realdenls In London's East
End. (0 :30)
lll!ll Odd Couplo
11:00(1) Aemlngtot1 SIHio
• (2) Ill • (I) 1!11 • 1121
1111 Newo
IJ) Llgllle• lido of llporto
CD CD Ill Moyere' World ol
ldoao Moyers talka with a
wide variety ol people about
Amerlca'a choices. INRI
ID tlD Love Connection
101 Moneyllne
® Chaaro
0 Mllml VIce t;1
ill You Can Be a Star

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth .,d Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or 6144411-4477

84

7:35 (I) 8onford and Son
8:00 CD MOYIE: Mother II 1
,-reehman (NRI (t :2t)
G (%) 1111 ALF The Tanners
suffer 111rough Thanksgiving
wlll1 the Ochmoneks'
relallves. t;1
IJ) Muocla Magazine
Ill
Cll 'War and
Remembrance, Part 2' ABC
No•el for Tela•lalon C
CD (!) Nova Analyre tne
scientific evidence
surrounding the
assasslnallon of JFK. t;1
1!11 Ill 1121 MOYIE: 'Pollee
Acedamr 3: Beck In
Tralnlna' CBS Tuuday
Movie (~GI (1 :22) r:;t
II tlD Movla
0 PrtmoNewo
® MOVIE: Deeth Wlok II !AI
(t :33)
0 Murdar, She Wrote Q
ill N1ohvllo Now
1:05 (I) NBA Beakalloll
8:30 G ~ 1111 MOYIE: 'The
Kt1r11te Kid, Part II' NIIC
Movla of the Week (PGi
(t :53) t;l
1:00 IJ) Top llonk Boring
(!) (!) The Amartcan
Experlenco Oocumentallon
of lhe Integration of !he Unl•.
of Alabama Ia updated. Q
(1]1 Lorry King Uvel
0 Prime nme WreoHing
1:30 ill Now Country

114-3'711-2798.

S2 Ltd. N- point.
brok•.
att•Mtor • •hac:b. AC. Aut•
m•lc ov•drttf• t1800. 080 .
Clll ., 4-&lt;1411-?071.

ill Vldeoeountry

e

,.,...,c.

Wat•prooflng.

After giving precise lnSiructlons on
how she wanted her breakfast
cooked,lh8 woman said. " Bring me
...-_A_F_R_E_A_C--'--,\anything lo drink. I'm no!-."

1

.

11:30

rangement , because you could be l could have an opposite affect.
blamed for this person' s mlslakes .
GEMINI (Mor 21-June 20) Try nol lo ,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) Oppor· ' take yourself or your Involvements too
tunltlesthat will be dllllcultto recognlre
serloualy today. II you lei yourself get
uptight, your behavior could be aetlcould develop lor you loday through an
unusual chain of events. If you're not
defeating.
alert and observant, however, they will
CANCER (Jun• 2t-Julr 22) Even
Nov . 11, 1,U
count for little .
though you may prefer to "do otherwise,
Your materiel proapectslook encourag- AQUARIUS (Jon. aD-Fob. 11) Your im· • ll's b8St that you menage Important
lng for the year ahead. provided you age and reputation are rather fragile to..
matters for yourself todllly rather than
don't Involve yourself In lrlvolous ven· : day. so be mlndlul ol your behavior, es·
look for someone to ease your burdens
lures with quaatlonabl• people. SUck to peel ally
where
your
career
Is
for you.
' lhlnga and people with proven track concerned . Stalno made a! !h is Ume will 1 LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 221 Aaaoclata today
be hard to eradicate.
only with people wllh whom you are In
recorda.
harmony. If you get tied up with some·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22)1n· laws or PI ICES (Fob. 20-Merch ·20) Your
parents could be olrlft• more difficult to hunch•a and perceptions regarding ' one who Is abrasive, small differences
deal wllh today. Try not lo do anything wayt to further your omblllona could be
could lead lo mammoth oppositions .
that could divide your household Into ellghtly oft largat loday. Don't let your
YIRQO (Aug. :D-Iept. 22)11 you hove I
two armed campo. Know wheri to look amollona
override
your
logical
Iough aaolgnmant confronting you to·
tor romance and you'll lind 11. The AI· avaluatlona.
1day, analyz8 Ita problema In edvenca.
tro-Clraph Matchmaker lntlontly re- • ARIES (Morell 2t - Aprll 18) If your de· .· . Don 't dive Into a pool before you know
veall which tlgnt are romanUoally per· ~ sires are limited to material matters to- . the depth of the water.
teet tor you . Mall $2 to Malchmokor, clol dey, some disappointments are likely. : LIBRA (8ept. 23-0ct. 23) Be very care· ,·
thla newtpaper, P.O. Bo• 9t~28, Cleva· . Broaden your horizons and thlnkt ebout: · lui today about handling bualneoosltua' • enriching yourtplrlt u well.
; !lone with risky elements. If you get
lond, OH 44t0t·342B.
8AOinAAIU8 (Nov. ta-Doo. 211 You ! TAURUS (Apr1120-Mor 201 Aaaoclales~ i rocklell or carelall, your lmpultlvemlghl be a10oi:lated with tomeot1e to-1 will asalst you today bocau6e they want· · nees
·could
create
-loua
day whOM method• and taotlce ere~· to, and llka you, not because they feel t J complication•.
contrary to yours. Tak• care In thlo ar-.. obligated. In !act. bllng demanding

I

I

1111 Bell of Careon

.

~
111

I

8

u:C

e

12:30

e Cll Leta Night with David
Letterman
(J) Running 1nd Alclng

.Ill Jafloreon•
• Cll UIA Tocloy

e (I]) TwlllgM Zono

0

cdmplete ,,e chuckle quoted
by f1ll1ng in the rnl s!ing words

you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

PR IN T NUMBERED LETTE RS IN
THESE SQUARES

t)

UN SC RAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Feudal - Outdo - Vista - Velure - USED TO
While admiring an ciutflt on a male mannequin , its arm fell
off. I triad to reanach It without success. Someone behind
me chuckled, "They don't make men like they USED TO."

_______

-

..:_::;_.....:....:..:....:._....;·

.-- --

.

BRIDGE

NORTH

Despite the six·card diamond suit,
South had a balanced hand. With good
1stoppers in the majors and !5 high·
' card points, mostly in undervalued
kings, he bid one no-trump. North
traded on ·his six-card club suit to
jump aggressively to game.
Hearts were led, and East won the
ace and played another. Declarer now
had to bring in the club suit to make
his game. How would you accomplis~
this? Be honest. Wouldn't you lead the
jack of clubs for a finesse? II you said
yes, you just failed in a contract that
you should have made.
This combination of cards lends it·
setf to precise play. Almost surely you
will not make three no-trump If East
holds the club king. He will win and
play back hearts to set you . Nor will
you make the contract if West holds K·
x· x:·x of clubs, since you will not be
able to run the club suit. So it would
seem that you need the club finesse
working, plus a reasonable split in the
suit. But that does not mean that you
must play the club jack right away.
Suppose you lead the deuce of clubs. If
West plays low, you can put in dum·
my 's 10. If that holds, you can then re·
turn to your hand with the spade king
to play the jack of clubs.' And you wilt .

ll·"·BI

+Q43

.7 6

+ 7!&gt;

+AQ10 543

EAST
+J9 8
.A 432

WEST
+10765

.QJ9 85

t AQ8
+K

• 10 2

+98 76

SOUTH

.K

+AK2
10

tKJ964 3

+J2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Soutb
1 NT

Pass

·Opening lead: • Q
make the hand any time the king of
clubs is onside without a bad club split.
But playing the lowly club deuce the
first time also wins when West has the
singleton king. That's the correct play

because it costs nothing and may gain
a lot.

CROSSWORD
·by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Dobbin's
sweetie
5 N.Y.C.
street
9 European
river
l 0 "M"

40 Italian
dty
41 Israeli port
42 Czech
river
43 Fuel
DOWN
l

star

11 · - caput
mundl"
12 Victoria's
consort
14 Brazilian
bird
15 Table
scrap
18 "What
Kind of
Fool; - ?"
17 Wahine's
garland
18 Years back
19 Actor
Hutton
20 English
river
22 Computer
tenn
23 Rational
25 Miseries
26 Asseverate

Virtuous

2 Venerate
3 Take
no side
4 Generation
5 Very (mus.)
6 Eye .
15 Paddle
27 Spanish
7 One was 21 Bard's
city
signed In
adverb
28 Drink up
Versailles 22 Britain's
30 Mountain
8 Uninvited
Caribbean
crest
house
islands
32 Brazilian
guest
(abbr.)
bird
l 0 Extensive 23 One kind
33 Basic
13 Behind
of bar
precept
the24 Run of
38 Pen point
(archaic)
the mill
39 Top off

27 Arable

Jetter
29 Romanian
coin
30 Ex Mrs.
Sinatra
31 Sl\iak of
the "Wheel" 6--1---&lt;~
34 Wherethou?
35 Sunder
38 Before
37 Weed
39 Sonny
Corleone
portrayer

•

DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

till•

AXYDLBAAXR

II :~~lne r:;t

TOday
ID Ill) Nowlywed Clama
101 &amp;pom Tonight
18 1121 'Night Haot' CIS Lote
Night A neighborhood Ia
upset over a hall way house
lor e• oonvlcla. (R)
® Hill SlrH1 IIIUII Some
Like It Hot·Wired
ill Amertcon Mogarlna
tt:IO ([I MOYtl!: Bombardier INRI
11:391
12:00 (J) Paper C1111e
IJ) lnlildo the PGA Tour
Ill Nlghtllne ,.,
(!) Sllin 011 ...
(J) lnllr11tlnmont Tonight
Ill M~t~num, P.l.
e!ll Twilight Zone
101 NewoNighl
0 Dragnet
QDNuhvllloNow

.

I I I Is I

IJ) IP'!riiCenll•
.
Ill ChHrl 1;1
&lt;!l Tony Brown'• Joum11

Bernice Bede Osol

'lbur
'Birthday

D(2)

.

1._.J._.J_.-L....I._.J._

Ill G

--;:;;:::::;;::=======
75

79

•
(J) ABC Nows t;l
CD Body Electric
CD Nlghlly Buolneoo Report
1!11 II 1121 CBS Newo
lll!ll WKAP In Clnclnnlll
(1]11nlilde PoNUco '18
® WKAP In ClnclnnaB
0 Car1oon l!xpreoo
ill You Can Be a Star
1:35 (]) Andy G~lflth

I' I I I

--r.-C. . :.T,. . :H:.. ;. U..:..:Hr-11 l

r-

®lnolde thl PGA Tour

WV.
Rt. 36
Ph.Cycle,
1-304-875-4130.
. . .. Soutt.lde,
Now
.Selling New Pol•tl 4whiHitrs
ond uood 4 wh..loro.

=

CD Ramona When plans Slart
to go wrong during a
wedding , Ramona saves the
day.
CD Dr. Who Curse of the
Pleadon, Part t
lll!ll Happy Doya
(1]1 ShowBiz Today
® Facto or Life
OFat Albert
®Fandango
1:05 Ill Loveme and Shlrt•y
1:30 !It(%) ~ NBC Nlghlfy Newt

•

Roglot- Al1flll• 8 .. 1M tolo.
Aloo Al1fllla holf.,.. Con 114'
8all-388t.
· t978 Sao Sto0'1&amp; ft . Trl-ha~t 70
... Mere.. drive on traM•. Must
Two ..,Ice age Holltein Bulls Nla'lfice. Call814-448-9243.
""' -'• aon ·Homm VIII IV
""r- 114-849-2&amp;?476 Auto Parts
8o Acce1sories
64 Hay 8o Grain

72
"Unfortunately, we don 't know which of the
57 strains of flu viru s will strike .,. "

LlveltDck

l----------ODVER NMENT II!IZEO · Vohld•
1100. For.. - ·
CoRG'ete bku::b· Ill all• td c.del,.from
Corwn-.
c._..,.,, Surordellv..,.M•on!F.d.Oall o-

Drogonwynd Cottory Konno!.
CFA Peril• and Slam•• kft.
t .... AKC C - pupptoa. Naw
Him....,. kltt-. C.ll 11.._
4411-3144 oft• 1 PM.

110~

I

Motorcycles

•I•.

CennonA1 cam . .,50mmlens,
zoom lens, ft•h. tri
c•rv·
Ina ·c•a t400. Ctll 814-2415&amp;691.

Commercilll B uldlng for Ina e.
Pt. Ple•ant. Call 304 675-

63

.1 I I ll I . ·

(!I Sp0r111Look

\

2

~--;:....S..:.0..-:G:....,;.E...:,0r-11 · :•.

~Nowo

.O .

Lang lurntrfree St...... gcoll
• wood burnw h..U 3,000 aq.
" · 304-8?11- ?448.
Dlyumpua OM-10 31mm Ca·
BUDGET TRANSMISSION;
mera fl41• of EJrtras, •210.00; '-1• round bal• rA h-v for
U•ed a rebuilt ell type••
R_.,g Moohlno In_, 140. 120 oocll. Coli 114-4411-t052.
WarMiy-30 dlrft. Prices t91 &amp;
304-1?11-tlllt Ill• I p.m.
Will h ..l corn. lndum EFAP up. Used &amp; twbultt tor~e
Flt-ood UO.OO p1ok up lood, corn. Allo. wiH ..
end converter.. Standard ctutch~.S.
loool oroo. 304-418· 1131 or deliver sewdust.
4-77,. prll•re pl~~tes.. &amp; throw cxlt
bewlng. W.,MtV· 12 mos. CVC
1332.8:00 till 8:00AM .
4Sa.1728.
jolnto-oll "'-· Cell 114-37"
104 eq ft brown ehag c•pl'l Ground shell corn •e.oo P• 2220 or 304-875-11?58.
1200.00. 2 gold roctlnw choln tOO. Promklm AWolofo 1100.
1100.00. Phone 304·111· ltriiW t1.10. Round B•l• u..d transmfsslonl. A. lntW:
3t23.
•21.00. Mortlll"'• Wooclawn nally lnlpected. 30 dil'fl ~-In·
f•O\ R~ 35, P...,. W.Vo . I:OO .... We buy tran1ml1slon•. C1ll
tilt 12:00 Mon-811. 304-837· 114· 44&amp;·0968 . Rebuilding
· avellllbl e.
55 Building Suppllaa 20t8.

Groom ond Supplr Shop-Pot
Grooming. Alf bre•d• ... AII
ttvlel. l.rn1 Pet Food O.alw.
Julio- Ph. 114-4-lll-023t.

rod.

8o 4 W

-;.:.R..::U,_T:....;..S..::L,...:Y:.....,..~~ ·

.11111

1:00 CD Bonanza: The Loet
Epltodet
• (%) Ill Ill (J) 91 Ill 1121

Hunt. . Spodol. 1986 Big Rod.
Ecett.nt ..... Ridden Yfrt
ltftle. C.l 814-44&amp;-4737.

11.110.00. COli Acooo Tooh.
30 4-123-1288.

Misc. Marchandiee

Vans

1

TICKET

Chlnon, Super 8 movie
•Profoct«. loi•Howollatldo
wbe projector. All In nsw
condttlon. Clll 814-44• 7828.

Sptaiou1 mobile home lots for
2 IR . .,••. 8 CIOIMI, ldteh• rent. Femlly Pride Mobil, Hame
oppl. furnllhod. W•hor·Orvar Peril, G•lllpolil Ferry, w. Va.
hoollf.up, ww c•pet. n•tt 304-175-30?3.
ptllnted. de«*.
From 1175.
SMior Cttll:- Wllcoma AI·
onqr, Inc. Apu. Col304-8?5For Lease
t04. a&lt; 1711-1381 or 175- 49
7731.

73

'

.r

EVENINQ

1878 Ford Van. New tlr•ehromewheebl·b.tt.-y·CM•ett•
plav•. Loob • runt ,., good.
Mun ... taap"precillte. t1800.
COli 114-245-5829.

UoodChonvEth.,AI.,"Goor·
Court" torm~l dining table.
cnoko. • cnlno hutch. Ailklng
13.000. Colllt4-4411-t888.

__ .,.,,

Vllf'l/ nice hou•. 2 M*aome.

'

Refrlgerlltor fro•t·fr--whh:-.
t121. Refrioerltor fto ... fr . .
IYocodo, ·1121. 30 Inch g•
,.,.,...evocado. 111. 30 lndl v•
ron. .oopporlono. IBIS. 30 Inch
a• ..... cwen top • bDtt~

54

Fwnilhed roo~919 Second
Ave.. Otllllpatil. t138 a mo.
Utllttl• Dlld. Slngiemlle. Sh•e
both. CoU411-44t8oltw?PM .

ch•••·

Furnltun come to Moffohlr"t
Furnltu,.Upp• AN1t Ad ., 1144411-74-04-

r•.

2 bectoom •rM:t.d. \Wihtr
end drylr,
oond. e200.00
plus utllll-. ,.,. .. ca. 30._
8?11-48?4.

1979 Ch~Wrol• one ton SWB
ceb
4•4. 41!14 four
speed. pol trKUOI\. 77,000
mi-. •tra sprlngt. front lheet
m•al dim age. $2.500. 00. 3041711-30?3 otter 1:00.

for tow price~ on Quality Clrplt

white, *110. Woodburnlng
hMtlng nave. 171. G• ·~

Trucks for Sale

creeks. Good .:ondtUon. eHO.
Qoll 114-742·2979 or 814912-3341.

PICKENS UIEO fURNITURE
Compl•e houllhold fllrnl•hlng~ . 'h mle out Jerricho.
304-1711-1410.

Buy, hll. Trade. C.ll l•rallft..
lond, 8t4-4411-1444.

45

~---

Fiberul•• topper. Flu 1hort,
'Nide bM. SHdlng window. no

J. S FURNITURE
1411 Eut•n Awe.
" dr.wer chelt. t41. 1 draw•
ch•t. *54.95. 15 pc. Woodin
dinnerte ..tL '111.815.

G.E. W•her lr'ld 0~ P*·
In Ew*&amp; ZIA. Adults onlv- No On • Ndroom apt in Point Extra nice. 3 cycle. workl
- · 12211mo. Dop. -lrod. Ple•n. ¥III'Y cle., .nd good ~"'""'· '210. Coli 114-31?·
cond. wll r.rt furnishM1 or
Colt 114-2411-lal3.
I.J'Ifurnllhed, no pees, phone . ..~22.
LargeiNing roOmwllh •pancto" 304-1?5-1381.
Sof.. ••DIIII•t oondiUon. 83
rooR\ 2 IR .. nM cwp.t. CA.
Inch• long. 121. RCA 21 Inch
Ptlvotolot. Col 8t4-4-lll-t409. Smll tpt, Jeckson A~ott
bladt ond whho T.V. E-lant
rent •135.00 month MCUrlty
4-8 PM.
oondklon.
121. Call llt4-882deposit tequlred. cell 304-87&amp;&amp;4'38.
furniehed '2 lA trll• 'nMiv 44ao ... 10 or 13.
decor•ed. "Y.t ml: • • af Port•
3 piece bedrl;)om IUtte. tao. ~II
Apt. for rent 807 Mlln St. Rent.
on 114- Col 114-3111-8811
·
11?!1. Utlkloa pold. Soturlty 814-992·20n.
3 IR .. In Groon IOhool ...riel. dep. required. Call 304-875Wit•. 1..w-ae tnWdecL t300 4480. Ext. 10 or 53.
53
Antiques
1 mo. Oop. •ral. Coll114-25116 room unfurnished apartment
10t0.
304-1?11-2814 .
Buy or Sell. Rlv•ln• Antlquel.
Nice 3 bedrool'l'll. l•ge ytrd.
1124 E. M•ln Street. Pom•oy.
314 lhird St.. IWI.,ga Clll furnlthed •lrtment, 1411tt. no Hours:
M.T.W 1Da.m. to lp.m ..
poll, 304-1?11-221?.
114-4-111-7471
Sundly 1 to lp.m. 814-8922 IR moble home. Loc.ted In 1 be•oom ept, aft ut•i• lllid 2121.
J-on· a P•k. ~of. • dop. •a.pt el.ctrlc. Gelllpolil Ferry, AntiQue flour a~pbo•d. 121.
r-lrod. Colllt4-4-lll-80?8 .. 304-1711-t37t or 11111-3812.
Coli et&lt;l-849-2341.
304-875-4111

•us •

for tidiniJI.

*·

42

72

Vlll-v Fu.-nlture
New lr'ld u11d turnlture *'"d
lppflcences . Call 8111-441·
7872. Hour~ 8-5.

One Month free Alnt
OuaUfled renten ,_., t200.
dep ollft .., d no ,.,t far the
month. November 01 Da.
cember ont;'. Vll~ge Mlr'lor
and Ah.oertlde Apartmenll In
Mlddl..,ort. From •112.
114-882· ?717. EO H.

Now accepting epplicationt for
2 llll*oom ep..rmantl. fu!ly
c.p•ed. appllll'l..-. wet• and
tr•h pidcupa proykl~. Melnt•
n.n .. fr• lflling cl011 tD ~
ping. ban kl .,. d Khooll. for
more informltlon Clll 304-882-3711. E.O.H.

by Larry Wriaht

Household Goods

a

loocn Str-. Middloport. Olllo,
2 be*oomfurnllhed aplrt~
utl•l• peld, fWf•encaa. Phone
304-882-2511.

2 be*oom hou• n-.vtv .-nocWed. gr•et loC.Ck)n. Point
Ple•lnt. C8fl 1ft• 8:00 '""
30 ... 1?5- 2319.

3 bedroom home on At. 1411n . Nlce-2 lA. IPI· 4'f.! ""'• from
Cent~n.-y, Yt mile from OrMn
Golllp... ltovo. '""Ia. • - • •
tchool t3ZI p• month. C.ll fur . . hed.
mo. No P••·
814-4411-8118.
Fwnilhed hofMwlth 3roonw&amp; ICOIII14-4411-1038.
Court:2 Nvlna ..... 3 8A ., 1'1\o
bot h. IMgayord. On Modloonlt. bothononoatdO. t BA.• btrhon
Colt 114-4-lll-4t08 or 379- othor. Bolli ldtch.,, furMhod.
2740.
ldoolDWtloob
for lomlly~k·
with rt.•.\'lllk
grondP..
....
to
IChooll.
Downtown.
13715 •
3 BA .. fultv c•p•.t Cerpart.
mo. plus utlhl•. Dlpotlt A
Aef . &amp; dep. r-aulrld. LoCIIted
within 1 mHo of Gllllpollo. Col - -· Coll14-4-lll-4821.
814-4411-34t1
Fumilhed ..,... ,.,..,.. 2 roomt.
15 roomt • belh. ••ement. prlttattl bllth. loc.t_. on hoond
appll1ne11. Aduftl onh'. Ref•· Aw. 1110 mo. 1100 dip.
Utllll• plld. Qoll 814-4411en a. &amp; deposit. No pets.
A.-Hattie Decemblr 11t. Call 2381l
8t4-4411-ttl1
t • 2 IR op_,mont. 1300
HouH with Hth. N•w AltOin&amp; month. lndudlll a• utlttl•.
Nict yerd,. • • • ._... C.l AduNa ontv, no dop.
roqu~od . Col 114-4411-4222
It ... 88 2· 1115.

3 btdroom home wtlh tJI
b•emn Joc.ted New Hwm,
304-882-3384.

.. d o•-sr• Clntrll
In
Mld&lt;loport. con 8t4-882· 7912
or 814-992·6267,

------November 15. 1988

Effleiency llp.,rnent. 11 c•·
potod. Working odulo only.
~oslt and r...-enoe. Cll
114-892-1842 olt•I:OO.

APARTMENTS. mobllo homoo.
hou,... Pt. PleiNr'd MdGalllpc&gt;
"'· lt4-4-lll-1221.

Homes for Rant

Ashlon. be&amp;lttlJI l•o- bulding
kJta. mobh homes p.mtned.
public w ..•. elso riv• loti.
Ctydo Sowon. Jr. 304-17112331.

Nicet( furnflhed tmd hou•.
Adull1 onty. Aef. requ ..... No
pota. Coll14-4411-0338.

31

41

Ac111111ge

Modern Hair Salon in Pt. Pf ....
sant. EJC . high trlfflc locMio".
VtKY profiubl• Call Huntington
304-825-3015 or 523- ?2?7.

Real Eslctle

lj ·lf

"Mom, I need an oil slick."

32

•

Ohio

Help Wanted

12

-·----

......

II LONGFELLOW

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

11-15
SQEO

TE

WCTEYI

J BZZ

WL

I Q 0

OLGXIBZN"

TW

T I

ELW

WL

I Q 0

• D E L J

TW

T I

" D E L J

ABWWBX
I.WC BXI ."

SBEQEKBX

Yeatetday's

ACCURACY OF STATEMENT IS ONE OF THE ELEMENTS OF TRUTH;
INACCURACY IS A NEAR KIN TO FAlSEHOOD.
TRYON EDWARDS
CI')'Ptoquote:

�-~-.,_.

Local news briefs.. ~
Continued from page 1
Hospital.
The patrol cited Pierce for not wearing a seat belt and failure
to maintain control.
No one was Injured in another one-vehicle accident at 10 a.m.
Monday on CR. 5, 0.4 miles east of SR. 7. Troopers said a car
driveri by Maurisha A. Nelson, 38. Middleport, wentoftthe road,
striking a utility pole and an embankment. Damage was
moderate. No one was injured. There was no citation.
A Gailla County man was involved In a one car accident at 8
a.m. Monday on SR. 7, near Middleport. Troopers said a car
driven by Albert J. Shoemaker, 42, Rt. 2, Cheshire, went off the
road Into a ditch. Damage was moderate. No one was Injured.
The patrol cited Shoemaker for driving under the influence
and failure to maintain control.

EMS has five calls Monday
Five calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs
·
County Emergency Meqical ~rvices reports.
At 5:06a.m. , Rutland took Roy Sorrell from Meigs Mine 2 to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 9: 20 a.m. took Sarah
Theobald from S. Second Ave., to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Racine at 10:50 a.m. , took Susie Pierce from an auto accident on
Route 338 to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:54
a.m. took Sheila Patterson to Veterans Memorial Hospital from
Main St., and at 10:57 a. m., Mlddleporttook Lewis Taylor from
Rallroact St., to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Scouts gather food for project
Members of Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245 are visiting
homes in the community to gather food for underprivileged
families . Residents not at home during the visit will find white
plastic bags at their homes and they are requested to place food
Items in the bags and have them on their porches for pickup on
Saturday.

Two injured in auto wreck
Two Portland residents were Injured In a one-car accident
Saturday at 11 p.m. in Sutton Township on Morning Star Road ,
about a mile west of C.R. 28, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post
of the State Hi ghway Patrol. ·
Sheila A. Long, 32, was taken by Li!eFlight to Grant Hospital
in Columbus. where at last report she was listed in poor
condition. Dennis E. Long, 33, the driver, was taken by the
Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where .he
was treated and released for cuts and scrapes.
Dennis Long, driving a 1987 Olds Cutlass Supreme, was
driving east when he lost control on a left-hand curve. He went
off the right side of the road and hit a tree.
A West Virginia man was cited In a one-car accident Sunday
at 7:40a.m. In Chester Township on S.R. 7.
Gregory E. Scar bough, 25, of Parkkersburg, was cited for not
wearing a seat bell after he lost control of his 1980Datsun 200SX
and went off the left side of the road, hitting a guardraiL
Continued from page 1
State·· · ·
---------

Governor...

co ntinued from page 1

people need .to be convinced
a bout the merits of where we
need to go," Celeste told reporters. "When presented with a
vision for education, people support resources necessary for that
vision."

In a speech to the Ohio School
Boards Association, the governor said the Nov. 8 election was
not necessarily a referendum
against a tax increase for
schools. But he said any tax
increase will have to be won by
demonstrating accountability In
education. access to schools and
alliances between older and
younger generations.
Celeste co ntinued to evade the
question of whether he favors a
tax hike for education, saying he
will rely on the upcoming report
of his Education 2000 Commission, assigned to set goals for
edticajion in Ohio.
"First we have to say. these
are the standards , these are the
goals, this is what we expect
from education, an d then we
have to debate the resources that
will be necessary for that," he
said.
.
Celeste said one group around
the Statehouse believes the public has spoken out against taxes

Celeste
told
...
Continued from page 1
rJver. ''
Following the official opening
ceremony, Celeste answered
questions from area media, and
commented on the lack of federal
dollars made available to states.
Celeste said the money from
the gasoline tax Is being held up
in washington, D.C., in an effort
to balance the federal budget,a
nd the money Is not being
distributed to the states.
He has the U.S. 35 proposal In
Gallla Co unty, the governor said,
but would not and could not
commit funds to the project until
he sees figures for construction
costs.
There are "very lltte new
constr uction dollars available,"
Celeste said.
1

planning commission.
Reports to the commission
·were . also presented by Kim
Shields, the county's director of
development, on projects In the
county with which he Is involved;
Ron Ash, Ohio Power Company
office manager and Private
Industry Council member, on the
PIC's Partners Award; Gordon
Gilmore, soil scientist, on the
county's soli survey; Mike Duhl,
district conservationist with the
Soil Conservation Service, on
services available through SCS;
and Cindy Oliveri, county home
economist, on a recent Bed and
Breakfast Seminar held In
Pomeroy.
The meeting was held at the
·Farmers Bank and Savings Company and presided over by
President Theron Johnson.

In the election, while another
believes "we need to move
forward to provide additional
resources for education."
The governor commended the
local board of education
members for passing operating
levies for schools. ''I believe that
1989is the time when we mu'Stdo
our part in Columbus to keep you
company in that partnership (for
education), " he said.
Celeste said a majority of
Ohioans " want to do what is
right , even If it costs more
money, to support quality
education.
The problem, he said, Is
defining quality education.

Board to meet
Eastern Local Board of Education will meet in special session
tonight (Tuesday), 7 p.m ., In the
high school cafeteria.

Installation set
Harrisonville Lodge 411 will
hold an open installation of Jerry
W. Well as district deputy grand
master of the 12the Masonic
District, on Wednesday, at 7:30
p.m. A potluck dinner will be held
in conjunction with the
Installation.

-... --·-

SJI JACKSOII PIKE : RT.JS WEST
Pttont 448·4524

--;--

•

'

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

proposaL Middlepo rt Mayor
Fred Hoffman noted that vlllages
must also prepare separate plans
for possible projects.
Frank Clela nd, mayor of Racine and an active member ofthe
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council's Highway Users Committee, and Charles Blakeslee,
executive director of the planning commission, updated the
group on the status of the
co nnector road from Rock
Springs to the bridge at Rave nswood and urged support from the
group to keep the project at the
·
public forefront.
Blakeslee presented status reports on the connector route. The
status reports were prepared by
James M. Jen nings Associates,
Columbus, and are available
from Blakes lee and others In t he

----

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Novanber 16, 1988

Snow blankets Plains; Southwest mUd _"
By United Press lnlerna.llonal
resort owners who . predicted
Heavy snow swirled by high they'll be running the l11ts to
winds left up to a foot-deep shuttle holiday skiers up the
bl~nket across much of the . slopes before Thanksgiving.
Alexander predicted heavy
freezing western mountain
states early today while parts or snow - blizzard conditions In
the Midwest and Southwest several places - for Colorado.
reached unseasonably warm Wyoming, the Nebraska panhandle and parts of the Dakotas as
temperatures for a second day.
Severe thunderstorms were the winter storm organized Into a
forecast for later today in the center over eastern Colorado
Southwest, and sunny skies were during the night.
to reign from New England to the .
He said wind chill te mperaMississippi Valley, said National tures would drop to below zero
Weather Service spokesman across much of South Dakota.
"Unseasonably mild air was
Lyle Alexander.
More than a foot of snow was present to the southeast of the
heaped on many spots In the storm," Alexander said .early
northern Utah mountains, with 6 today, adding that predawn
to 9 inches In the higher eleva- temperatures were in the mid 60s
tions of southwest Utah. Two as far north as Kansas City, Mo.
Severe thunderstorms were
inches of snow was on the ground
by 1 a .m. today at Minot, N.D., forecast for later today from
north-central Texas, northward
and West Yellowstone, Mont.
to Iowa and western Illinois.
The storm, which has already
Hot weather records were
left more than a foot of snow in Its broken or tied in eight clUes In
path, has delighted Utah's ski Texas, New Mexico and Kansas

on Monday with temperatures
High winds from the Rockies
ranging In the 70s and 80s.
across the Great Plains states
Monday's high temperature
and Into the Mississippi Valley
was 92 degrees at McAllen,
will cause blowing and drifting
Texas.
snow from the northern Plains to
Clear skies prevailed early
eastern Colorado today. and high
today from southern New Eng·
temperatures likely will reach
land, across the Ap(1alachians
6nly the 20s and 30s , Alexander
and Into the Mississippi Valley.
said.
.'
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11-16-88

Gibson
named NL's
Most Valuable

Ohio Lottery
Dai1y Number

421
Pick 4,
3322

Page 3

•

•

20

30

so

Vol.39, No. 136
Copyrightod 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport.' Ohio, Wednesday,' November 16, 1988

--Area deaths-HaiTY Bailey
A retired construction boiler
maker, Harry R. Bailey, 75, Rt.l,
Ga!Upolls, died at 10: 30 a.m.
Monday at Pleasant Val lay Hospital. A former employe of the
Marietta Manufacturing Com-

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. 26*
AT&amp;T ................................. 28~
Ashland Oil ........................ 32*
Bob Evans .......... ................. l6
Charming Shoppes ........... .. .13%
City Holding Co ........... ........ 33
Federal Mogul... ................. .48
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................49'!.
Heck's .......................... .. ..... ~
Key Centurion .. ................. .16%
Lands' End ............ : ............ 24~
Limited Inc ......................... 25
Multimedia lnc .................... 70
Rax Restaurants .................. 3~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12*
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7Y.
Wendy's Inti. .........................6
Worthington Ind ................. 20*
(Lands' End announced that
its third-quarter net was $5.5
mWion, or $.28/share, vs. 54.6
mWlon, or $.23/sbare. Sales were
$100.4 mWlon vs. 580.2 million.
Nine months' net was $16.2
mWion, or $.81, vs. $U.9 million,
or $.59. Sales were $267.2 million
vs. $204.9 mUIIon.)

pany, He had been In falling
health for several months.
Born March 17, 19131nAddlson
Township, he was the son of the
late George and Zelia Bailey. He
was married to Mary Lee Canaday In 1933. She preceded him In
death Nov. 1, 1984, A grandson,
Timothy Rutherford, who was
reared In the Bailey home, also
preceded him In death.
Survivors Include: one daughter, Mrs. Jo.hn iMona Lee)
Rutherford , Garden Grove,
Calif.; one sister, Mrs. Pearl
Canaday, Rutland, along with
two grandchildren and one great
grandchild.
Services w111 be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the Waughg-HalleyWood Funeral Home with the
Rev. Everett C. Delaney officiatIng. Burial will be In Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. There are no
calling hours.

Hymn sing Friday
A hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m. Friday at the Morse Chapel
Church featuring the Harvest
Trio. The public Is Invited.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Merlin Godfrey,
Portland; Sheila Patterson,
Pomeroy; Shannon Sievers,
Pomeroy;· Lewis Taylor, Middleport; Sharon Pierce, Racine;
Harry Gilliand, Shade.
Discharged - None.

We're

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map sr-I minimum temperatures. At least 50o/. ol any shaded area is forecast
to receive precipitation Indicated
UPI

E5:.nsNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

11

ft

WEATHER MAP - During early WedneSday momlng,
rain/showers are forecast for parts of the upper Great Lakes and
the upper Mississippi Valley. Showers and thunderstonns are
forecastfor most of the Mississippi Valley. Showers are poaslbleln
the eeatral to aorthern Pacific Coast. Showers/snow showers are
possible In parts of the northern and central Plalll!l. Showers and
thunderstorms are possllbe In the lower Mississippi Valley and the
Gulf Coast States. UPI

State board adopts test guidelines
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state Board of Education has
passed a resolution outlining the
basic proficiency test required
for high school graduation In the
nex I decade.
Under a law passed by the Ohio
General Assembly last year, a
student will have to demonstrate
.at least ninth-grade proficiency
- and complete course work
through the 12th grade -In order
to receive a high school diploma
In 1994.
However, Gov. Richard Celeste, speaking at a meeting of
the Ohio School Boards Association Monday afternoon, said he
would ask the General Assembly
to repeal the multi-tiered diploma plan.
The test guidelines approved
by the board Monday are general
In nature and cover a broad
range of subjects in four general
areas: reading, writing, mathematics and citizenship. The
board Is expected to adopt
guidelines for a 12th-grade test at
Its next meeting Dec. 12.
Approval of the guidelines
followed months of meetings.
"Nearly 100 educators and
other Ohioans were Involved in
work groups that prepared·prellminary lists of outcomes uMer
the four test areas," said state
Superintendent Franklin Walter.
''These lists were presented .In

looki~g

public meetings and were mailed
to residents around the state In
the summer and early fall.
"Written and oral reactions to
the preliminary Usis were taken
Into consideration when preparIng the lists presented to the state
board."
Once general guidelines for
both tests are approved, the
board will choose a test
contractor.
"It is important to emphasize
that the proficiency tests are not
the sole criteria for graduating
from an . Ohio high 'school,"
Walter said. "The student must
complete other requirements of
the school that he or she attends,
In addition to possessing this
common core of knowledge, to
receive a high school diploma."·
A student who falls to pass the
test - ·but still completes attendance requirements through the
12th grade - w111 receive a
certificate of attendance of high
school, rather than a diploma.
Diplomas w111 be granted In
three categories: diploma with
basic competency, to those who
pass the ninth-grade test; diploma with commendation, to
those who pass the 12th-grade
test; and diploma with distinction, to. those who pass the
12th-grade test along with meetIng certain criteria adopted by
local school boards.

for

'COATS FOR KIDS'
Can you help us?
Our 'Coats for Kids' program has been a great success! In the last three
years we have distributed more than 800 coats through area schools.
Please search your closets and look for unused coats. We 'll take care
o( the mending and dry cleaning if it's necessary.

Our goal is to deliver these coats to area schools by December 16.
Drop off your coats at our Pomeroy, Rutland or Coolville offices.

WE NEED YOUR HELP!

ALLI&amp;Ilnii.IO

i~IIIIIIOIIIVIRY,......

..... IUI'I 11.10

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA.
COATS FOR KIDS COMMITTEE
"WE REALLY REALLY CARE"

BANK:ONE.
.
Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE, ATHENS, OHIO, NAIONE PART OF THE CARING TEAM

I

2 Sections, 14 Paces
A Mullhn edla Inc. Newspaper

Riffe supports pay
hike for Ohio officials

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
70 percent.
Tonight: Becoming mostly
Extended Forecast
cloudy and breezy, with a slight
Thursday through Saturday
chance of showers towards mornFair Thursday and Friday,
Ing. Lows w111 be in the mid 50s. with a chance of rain Saturday.
South winds Increasing to 15 to 25 Highs will range from the upper
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent. 40s to the upper 50s Thursday and
Wednesday: Showers likely In the 40s Friday and Saturday.
and windy, with a slight chance Lows will be mainly In the 40s
of thunderstorms. Highs will be . Thursday and In the 30s Friday
between 65 and 70. Chance of rain and Saturday.

Tonight, low In mid 30s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday, mostly sunny, high
in mid 40s.
·

cember. Uiglslative salaries are state's workers' compensation
By LEE LEONARD
system was brought to the Senate
based at $34,904.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
floor , but was pulled back when
The
so-called
"cost-of-living"
5
COLUMBUS- House Speaker
Democrats
refused to furnish a ·
percent
could
be
extended
to
1989
Vernal Riffe Jr., Dsingle
vote.·
Wheelersburg, has lent his voice and future years. "If you're
A compromise had been hamof support to a pay raise for state going to do it, the cost-of-llvlng
mered
out between Industry and
legislators, but only In the (pay raise) Is probably the most
labor,
but the United Auto
context ·of a pay hike for ali palatable kind," said Aronoff.
Workers
Issued a statement
Riffe Indicated any pay raise
elect.e d county and state
saying
thE:
plan would make the
for legislators would have to be
officials.
workers'
insurance
system too
State lawmakers were to rec- attached to a hike for county
much
like
a
corporation
and
onvene today for their second officials. "We have to see
would
remove
public
day of a post-election session. whether counties can affQrd It for
accountability.
amid rumors the pay bill would local officials," he said.
The proposal called for the
But
he
said
legislators
deserve
start In the House.
transfer
of power from the
as
much
as
anyone.
a
raise
Any pay raise probably would
Independent
Ohio Industrial
''They
are
putting
in
more
hours,
have to be enacted this week or
Commission
to
the Bureau of
and
campaigns
are
becoming
next. The Legislature Is planning
Workers'
Compensation,
andesmore
expenslv.
e
,
''he
said.
''They
to\ adjourn soon for the year.
tablishment
of
a
new
board
of
pay
their
own
expenses
down
Slllee elected officials, including
trustees
to
oversee
the
system.
for
here.
I
think
they
(raises
legislators, cannot receive pay
Finan, who worked on the
raises enacted during their term legislators) ought to be cons!·
negotiations
for months, said he
dered
If
the
others
are
of office, an (ncrease for 1989 and
would
not
at
tempt
to pass the blli
considered.''
beyond would have to be enacted
agpln.
A proposal to restructure t he
before Dec. 31.
The Senate made plans to
adjourn Thursday for the rest of
,JUDGING -These five Meigs County women
judges Susan Clark, Iris Payne, Becky Anderson
the year, while Rille said the
Tuesday afternoon judged the 30 entries In the Bil
and Joan Wolfe. Eight winning creations were
House will probably be In session
selected and will be awarded prizes plus lour
Bend Minstrel Association's Create an Easter
for two days next week.
Bonnet Contest In conjunction with the .associaothers were given honorable mention. All12 olthe
In other legislative develophats will be modeled during the Easter Parade
tion's annual musical to be staged al 8:10p.m. on
ments Tuesday:
number, a part of a salute to song writer, Irving
Nov . 26 al the Meigs IDgh School. In the center,
-Organized labor torpedoed a
.
Berlin. The names of the creators of the winning
Shirley Quickel models one of the creations In the
Charles w. Barley was sent- The charge against i.audermilt
longstanding attempt to stream-.
hats wUJ not be disclosed until show night.
competition. Looking on, I to r, are the other
line the state's worker a' compen- enced Monday by Meigs County stemmed frorn an auto accident
sation system , probably killing It Common Pleas Court Judge on April 29 which resulted In the
Charles H. Knight to three to 15 death of Teresa Andrew. SenuntU at leasrnext year;
-efforis continued to spread years in prison on a charge of tencing for Lauder milt has.been
scheduled for Dec. 12.
the wealth of sevey11l Lake felonious assault.
Barbara J . Stroud, also apentered
a
voluntary
Barley
County school districts which
pearing
recently before Judge
plea
of
no
contest
to
the
charge
In
will receive a windfall in the tens
Knight,
entered
a voluntary plea
of millions of dollars next year a plea bargain arranged by
of
guilty
to
a
charge
of grand
when the Perry nuclear power Meigs Prosecutor Fred Crow III
theft
in
connection
with
the
plant begins paying property and defense attorney Steve
taking
of
several
Items
from
the
• Story .
taxes;
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Hav- secretary, sending a message of graphers, Bush made a point of
This was the same charge for Big Wheel store. Stroud's sen-legislative leaders from both
telling
reporters
the
West
Gerto
stabilized
economic
policy
Ing announced two Cabinet choiparties told lobbyists there Is no ·which Barley earlier stood trial tencing has also been scheduled
man
"
knows
how
strongly
I
feel
.
ces within a week of winning the jittery financial markets around mood In the General Assembly and was relea~ed when the for Dec. 12.
a
bout
doing
somethlpg
about
that
Probation
for
Rick
Eugene
White House, President-elect the world.
for Increasing taxes In 1989, even proceedings ended In a hung
deficit."
He
later
praised
by the
Hawley
was
terminated
Brady became the second
George Bush reportedly has
for education. Riffe said educa- jury.
Brady's
broad
"knowledge
of
court
and
Hawley
sentenced
to a
settled on an unannounced third, announced nominee to Bush' s
Crow decided to retry Barley
tors may have to take their case
markets
and
expefinancial
determinate
sentence
of
18
tapping New Hampshire Gov. Cabinet, following last week's
to the people II they want more. on the charge which stems from a
rience
in
the
private
sector."
months
on
11
charge
of
breaking
John Sununu to become his chief selection of campaign Chairman
shooting Incident on May 23, 1987,
money.
Bu'sh also claimed Brady's
James Baker, who served Presiof staff.
Sen. Richard Finan ,' R - at the Cove bar near Pomeroy. A and entering. Hawley Is to be
The Washington Post, The New dent Reagan as treasury secre- .six-month appointive term in the
Cinclnnati, said any pay raise blll gun specification, which would transported to the Orient CorrecSenate
from
New
Jersey
In
1982
York Times and WCVB-TV In tary and chief of staff, to be the
would start in the House, but he have required Barley to have tion Reception Center.
gave him Capitol fiill experience ' added II "Is very much In doubt " served an additional three years
Shock probation has been
Boston ·all reported today the next secretary of state. ·
granted
Johnnie K. Harrison who
selection of Sununu, retiring this
The retention of Brady, 58, had that should enable him to work
In
prison,
was
eliminated
from
because of the shortness of time.
"hammer
out
a
has
been
serving a prison sentwith
Congress
to
year after three terms in offlce. been expected. Bush undoubt "It'll have to be an orches- the charge.
.
budget
deficit
reduction
ence
for
receiving
stolen goods.
Although probation Is not guaHe was known to have been in a edly had influence In Reagan's
trated effort," said Finan.
In
other
court
matters,
Columagreement.
''
contest for the key White House selection of the Wall Street
Sen. Stan ley Aronoff, R- ranteed, It Is a possibility In the
"He
knows
that
our
most
bia
Gas
of
Ohio
Inc.
has
been
job with Bush's current chief of executive to replace Baker when
Cincinnati, was more coy. " Dis- plea bargain agreement. Barley
Is
to
keep
our
$16,446.11
Important
priority
granted
a
judgment
of
staff. Craig Fuller, who seems Baker resigned In August to lead
cussion of a pay raise is probably , was released Monday morning,
economy growing with low Infla- going on right now," he said. pending transport on Thursday from Scipio Energy Associates,
sure to f.lll a top position.
Bush's campaign.
The Post, quoting unidentified
Bush's determination to have tion and he knows we must resist
"It's been done in the past. and I to the Orient Correction Recep· Inc.
Parkersburg Billing and Colthe
policies
that
will
impede
that
sources as did tlie Times and the both men high In his administrasuspect It'll be done In the lion Center, Orient.
effort,"
the
preslden
t-elect
lectors,
Parkersburg, ')N.Va., has
Judith R. Laudermlll entered a
television station, suggested Su- tion sends a clear signal to U.S.
future. "
filed
an
action for judgments of
declared.
nunu, 49, was chosen partly a!Ues and to Congress that his •
The last pay raise bill was voluntary plea of no contest to a
Reaction
to
the
nomination
.
$48,306.56
and $845 from Harold
because as an elected leader he White He'iise plans to follow the
passed four years ago In De- charge of aggravated vehicular
was
lukewarm,
mainly
because
Smith
and Bonnie J. Smith,
E
.
outweighs Fuller, 37, In political course Reagan has set.
cember. A 5 percent annual hike homicide when she appeared
Brady
''has
taken
the
adm
inisReedsville.
statur e for dealing with
Indeed, Bush boas ted Tuesday
for legislators expires In De· recently before Judge Knight.
Congress.
that he Is fielding "a good team tration line and nobody really
Sununu is known by many here- a former secretary of the knows what his views are," said
polltlclans outside his state for treasury to be secretary of state Lawrence Chlmerine, chief econthe major role he played In (and) a widely respected secre- omls t with the WEFA Group In
helping Bush win this year 's New tary of treasury to continue. And Bala Cynwyd, Pa.
Hampshire primary election af- so you'll see some continuity and
ter the vice president was some change."
knocked down in the Iowa cauNevertheless, In the week since
cuses by Senate Republican Bush's election, world stock and
leader Robert Dole of Kansas, currency exchanges have shudwho was vying for the party'S' dered with steep declines, apparently fearing the loyal vice
presidential nod.
Bush would no t tip his hand president wlll have difficulty
when asked about the chief of coping with the blgges t problems
The Eastern Local Board of
staff's position Tuesday, saying of the Reagan years- the budget Education, meeting In special
only that he wanted to make a deficit and the nation's trade session Monday evening, took the'
decision soon ''so that person can Imbalance. ·
following actions.
Bush therefore 'announced his
start working toward staffing the
-Approved, on first reading, a
White House for what will be a choice of Brady outside the vice new policy on programs for
very Important early beginning presidential residence after a
handicapped children.
meeting with West German
there."
-Employed John Thompson
The sole announcement Bush Chancellor Helmut Kohl at which as assistant boys basketball
was willing fo make Tuesday was . economic concerns were coach.
his decision to retain his friend discussed . ·
·Dennis Newland
Posing with Kohl for photo- as-Employed
Nicholas Brady as treasury
an unpaid, volunteer assistant
basketball CQaCh, tO WOrk With
the junior high boys program.
-Employed C.D. Mcintyre as
an unpaid, volunteer assistant
basketball coach, to' work with
the high school girls program.
-Accepted the resignation of
A two-story frame house at Cheshire, formerly the old
JoAnne Newsome as high school
Cheshire Post Office and and Nate Rothgeb Store, was
cheerleader advisor.
extensively damaged by fire early Wednesday morning.
-Employed Lorle Ritchie as
Middleport firemen were called to the residence of Shirley
high school cheerleader advisor
Ferguson at 2:28a.m. to find the second story fully engulfed In
tor the balance of the 1988-89
.eduea&amp;Jonal prllll'am oa snulf and chewtu1
flames. They were on the scene for three hours. The Muse Is
DIPPING IS FOR DIPS -That's the m-1•
school year.
tobacco Ia tlmlld lo coincide wllh the Great
reportedly owned by Larry Craycraft.
of the Amerlcaa Cancer Society to thole who bave
-Met In executive session on
American Smoke-Out wblch takes place ThursAt 8:08a.m. firemen were called back when rekindling was
turned to Ullnl snuff or chewlag tobacco. Thai
personnel and financial matters.
day. Pat O'Brlea, fund raising chalnnaa lor lhe
suspected.
·m-ge wu taken to the schools Qlls week with
•'
Board members In attendance
local chapter, tell, Ia pictured with John Hunaell,
Information on the cause of the lire or the monetary loss was
p08lers
polnllDI
out
that
long
term
dlp8
may
be
were Jim Smith, president;
board member aad lnlonnatlon cbalnnan,
not available this morning.
much
more
likely
to
develop
gum
and
cheek
Kathy Manlcke, vice-president;
dlsplaylnc oae of lhe posters.
cancer
and
four
times
more
likely
lo
get
mouth
and members Susie Heines and
Continued on page 9
and
lbroal
cancer
than
aon-tobacco
users.
The
1.0 . McCoy.

Meigs man sentenced
on charge
by
judge
.

Brady another .Bush cabinet
choice; Sununu may get nod

Eastern
board adopts
new policy

-Local news briefs____,
Fire .damages Cheshire structure

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