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'
November 27. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport GalliPolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page-D-B- Sunday Times-SQJ1tinel

S&amp;WGD t·o-partieipate- Pesticides-degrade-loo-fas-H o -he- effective· ~.~L.... - in Heidelberg program

wooSTER, Ohio (UP!) -Many tern In June," Dick said
people are ccincerned aboUt pestt.
"It's just the opposite of the
c!de resklues remaining In the problem of too much pesticide
sample.
environment, contamtnatlnll SOU residue, which gets the most public
Yo\1 need to s top by the Me igs and water, but farmers face attention."
SWCD Office o n the second floor another prl)blem.
Dick's research has two tmmeof the Farmers Bank building In
Some chemicals degrade too dlate goats. One Is to trace how the
Pomeroy a nd pick up your rapidly and become tneffecli\le·
compounds break down blochemt·
sam ple bOttle. Bottles need to be
Soli scientist WarrenDickatOIUo cally In the soU. The other Is to
returned to the Meigs SWCD State University's Ohio AgriCUll\l. develop a rapid way to measure the
Office on Thursday, Dec. 1 or ral Research and Development rate of degradation In soDs to help
Friday December 2 before noon. Center Is trying to find out whY this fanners know when pesticides may
A representative from He idel· rapid degradation of pestlddes · degrade too quickly.
berg College wlll pick up the sometimes occurs.
.
"We want to design an easy,
sa mples at the office and take . "If a farmer applies carbOfllllln quick, yet accurate test that could
them back to the college for In April to control com rt)OtWOllll, tell If a soD hlis developed addltlonaJ
testing.
microorganisms In the soU may degradatiVe capabWty,'' Dick said.
Results will be mailed to degrade the compound so that it ·"'The farmer could· then use this
Individuals who participate In loses its eff~iveness before the tnfonnatton to decide If 1te should
the p rogram. ·
rootworm becomes a serkJUS pl'Ob. avoid using a certain chemical to
·
For more Information, contact
the SWCD Office at 992-6647.
·

BY OPAl- DYER
PISTBJGT PRoGRAM ADMIN·
ISTRATOR

•

MEIGSSWCD
POMEROY - The Meigs Soli
and Water Conservation District
Is parttctpating in a program
sponsored by Heidelberg College
Water Qualtty Lab.
The Nllrate Screening Program !or Rural Private Wells
gives you data regarding nut·
rlent and pesticide runoff from
agricultural land. Tests Include
ammonia nitrogen, c hloride, nl·
Irate nitrogen , sulfate, and
conductivity.
. The cost !or the test ts $2 per

Cutting back woodlot saves money

Ohio apples available
aJLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) - Ohio
apples and Cider will be available
into December but there will be
tewer apples because drought
reWced harvest by one-third, says
an Ohio State University fruit
specialist.
"Trees looked full this year but
WI! had about a third less apples
when the harvest was over," says
Dick Funt.
Despite the reduced harvest,
Ohio apples and elder will be
reasonably priced. Strong demand
·for cider has led to high supplies
because farm markets are Import·
lngout-of·slate apples to make their
elder, he says.
"Cider Is a seasonal product, with
sales peaking at Thanksgiving, "
Fun! says. Ohio produces 6 million
to 7mllllongallonsofcider a year. It
takes about 2 million bushels of
apples to make the cider.
·
"Sixty percent of Ohio's apples
are sold fresh at the farm, 25
percent to 30 percent are sold to
wholesalers, and 12 percent to 15
percent become elder," Fun! says.
"At least 60 Ohio farms are
known to have elder mills. Most are
located near the state's large cities.
Many other Wldocumented mills
exist statewide."
Now Is the time to visit roads ld.e
farm markets, Funt says. They're
where the best selection of Ohio
apples and elder Is found . Most Ohio
apples are not sold in super·
markets, which buy large volumes
~ produce from consistent, high·
volume sources outside the state.
Ohio apples should be available in
retall markets until Dec. 31.
Large out.of·state apple suppliers ·
store apples in coolers with 32
degree temperatures and 90 per·
cent humidity, preserving the
apples and allowing them to be
avallable all year.
"Demand in Ohio for apples and
apple products Is high this year,"
Funt says. "Ohio a pples are not

control an lnsectorweedproblem."
DlcklsustngtheherblcldeEPTC,
also called Eradlcane, as a model
compound In his experiments. It Is
commonly applied in com produc·
tlon lor harder-to-control weeds
such as Johnsongrass, quackgrass
and nutsedge.
Other related compounds such as
the Insecticide carooturan, or Fura·
dan, and the herbicide butylate, or
Sutan, are thought to behave
simUarly In soUs.
Dick said that very raPid degra·
dation usually does not begin to
occur untU the same chemical Is
used for two to four consecutive
years. Factors such as soU type,
climate, type ot pesticide, and
possibly the use of other chemically

· aJLUMBUS, Ohio (uPll Cutting firewood from yourwOOdlot
saves money and improves the
only bougllt by consumers but a,lso
condition of the woodlot, says OIU0
by companies that make apple
State University forestry spedalist
sauce, juice and pies."
Randall Helllgrnann.
The roads ile markets will help
" The woodlot's quality and ca.
you pick the right apples for the
paclty to produce firewood or other
seasonal and traditional dishes,
wood products can be ehhanced by
such as mince meat pie, apple pte,
properly harvesting !treWood,"
apple crisp, stewed or baked
Helllgmann says. '1! you want to
apples, and applesauce, Funt says. · cut wood lor a fireplace, severa.J
Many markets will ship apples or medium-sized trees wtll be enou&amp;h.
other fruit and create fruit baskets,
You probably won'tneedmorethan .
he says. Be sure to order a basket or two cords."
shipment early In the week. A
HeU!gmann says this type or
Friday shipment may sit In transit
woodlot management wtll have
for the weekend, reducing Its
relatively little impact on the
quality.
, productivity of the woodlot as a
whole. He calls this casual cutting.
"Generally, the casual cutter's
selection of trees can be guided by a
preference for a particular species
of firewood and tree quality. The
casual cutter can simply remove

Ohio ranks
in forestry
industry jobs

Ohio grain report

aJLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio
ranks ninth nationally with 70,600
forest industry employees earning
$1 bllllon a year, but Utile Is known
about the Industry, a forestry
dtstrtct specialist. for Ohio State
University says.
Much of the Information abOut
Ohio's forest Industry is 10 to 15
years old, coming from studies that
didn't intend to focus on Ohio, but
merely Included Ohio in parts of
researcb, said Steve Bratkovlch,
who Is updating the information.
"The information we have lndl·
cates that Ohio ranks 11th In total
'value added' In all wood·based
industries,· · Bratkovlch said. "That
total Is $19 billion, which Is 4.1
percent of the total manufacturing
industry in Ohio."
" Value added" compares the
economic importance of manufac·
turers among lhdustries In a
geographic area, he said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) The average closing prices (Per
bushel) paij) to farmers by grain
elevators In the principal mar.
kettng areas of Ohio Frtday:
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3. 96, No. 2 shelled corn $2.53, No.
2 oats $2.58, No. 1 soybeans$7.40.
. Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$4.05, No. 2 shelled corn $2.56, No
2 oats $2.77, No.1 soybeans $7.48:
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$4.04, No.2 shelledcorn$2.61, No
2 oats $2.65, No.1 soybeans $7.4o·
West Central Ohio: No.2 wheai
$4.06, No.2 shelled corn$2.59. No
2 oats $2.70, No.1 soybeans $7.49:
Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$4.01, No. 2 shelled corn$2.52, No
2 oats not available, No. i
soybeans $7 .45.
Trends: No. ·2 wheat, sharply
higher; No. 2 shelled corn
higher; No. 2 oats, unchanged;'
No. 1 soybeans, sharply higher.

trees of obvious poor quality."
Poor.quallty trees may be dead·
WOOd, hollow trees, or those with

Signup underway
BY OPAL DYER
DISTRICT PROGRAM ADMIN·
ISTRATOR

MEIGSSWCD
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Is Presently taking stgnupfor the
multtrtora rose cost-share
program.
''
Signup tor the program, which
has the. same rules as In the past
couple of years, will continue
through December 9, 1988.
Anyone interested In particlpat·
tng should stop by the SWCD
Office and sign up.
FieldS treated In the program
the past three years are tnellgtble, because of the two year
maintenance period.
For more information, stop by
the Meigs SWCD Office on the
second floor ofthe Farmers Bank
building In Pomeroy.

crowns much larger than the
surrounding trees. They may be
damaged, .crooked, severely lean·
ing, diseased or insect-infested.
Trees with a small crown, a low
fork in the trunk, multiple stems or
low branches may al so .be
undesirable.
"In woodlots containing high·
value or potentially high-value
trees, the woodlot owner may
choose to cut any trees crowding
the valuable trees," HeiUgmann
says.
When cutting trees, you should
also consider leaVIng trees that
meet the needs of wUdllfe, such as
those with dennlng bOles or nuts.
Two or three trees an a,cre should be
left standing to benefit wildlife.

27 --more
::-- - -1days 'til

Daily Number
270
Pick4
1266

~--= -

related compounds, all help deter·
mine when the problem may
develop.
"To dale, we have Isolated a
microorganism from soU that can
very efficiently degrade EPTC,"
Dick said. ''.OUr procedure has been
to a dd the EPTC to a soU sample or
microbial culture, then to observe
Its biochemical breakdown."
Dick found that EPTC can take
three different .biochemical path·
ways as It breaks down. He thinks
that one of these three pathways
wtll Identity a soU with greater·
t h a n . n or m a 1 de grad at 1v e
capablltty.
"We think these three different
1!lithways are common to most
agricultural soils and that extended
use of EPTC increases the activity
of one of.them," Dick said
Finding out why EPTC and other
compunds break down so raptdiy in
some soils could take ten years or
more, Dick said. But he adds that
new soU tests for use on the farm
probably will be avallable much

Christmas

1-10-16-23-2543

RUtland man killed ln
Saturday auto Wreck

LARGE SELECTION
~

j

I,

SANTA WAVES TO CROWD- Proving himself
again a · most popular fellow Sunday In Pomeroy
was Santa as he appeared In tbe annual parade to

welcome In the Christmas season. With Santa are
Terre Wood and Brian Anderson.

ATTOINEY -AT -lAW
336 5. High St., Columbus, OM.
LOCAl CONSULTAnON
in P-oy 992-6417;
in Galli• County 245-9591
(OIItlty 245-9591

W. , _ _ iohh ATTORNEY D.
MICHAEL MUWN

·---

·--- ~-··-··

·--

~ock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 difl~rent colored granites .
\"Vhatever your requirements mav be, complete satisfaction is as·
•urad with Rock of Ages .
Hours: Mon., Tues .. Thur . &amp; Fri . 9 :00-4:00; Closed Wed .
Other Hours by Appointment- 446 -2327 or 693-6686

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS .
3 52 Tli!ird be.

PH. 446·2327

GnUipotit, ON.

-

Chicago grain report
CH.ICAGO (UP ! ) - Grain and ,
soybean futures were higher and
were at or near session highs at
the close Friday on the Chi cago
Board of Trade.
Grain futures were supported
by hopes that a new grain supply
agreement with the Soviet Union
was Imminent. Negotiators for
the two · countries will res ume
their talks Monday In Moscow. A
new agreement would replace
the one which expired at the e nd
of September.
Grain· prices also were boos ted
by short-covering and light coun·
try movement. Co mm ercials
were featured buyers throug hout
the day .
Soybean meal was the price
leader in the soy complex. Active
trading and higher prices fo r
meal in Europe supported Chi·
cago meal va lues . Substantial
quantities of soybeans and meal ·
were traded in Rotterdam , a l·
though the activity slacked off
during the a fternoon ..
Soybeans had additional sup·
port! rom a firm cash markP! and
higher basis levels.
At the close, corn was up 1 'A to
3 14, soybeans up4 to 12, wheat up
3 to 7 1h and oats up 2 34 to5cents.

SHUFFLERS A'.fTRACTIVE - Members of
the Shady River Shulfters were attractive In their
Christmas box outfits durtng Sunday's Christmas

parade In Pomeroy. All members of tbe group
also wore attractive red and white Santa hats.

Hundreds line street to ·view
Pomeroy Christmas parade
.. Slug" it out with the best or 'em . Remington
"Sluggers" now in 3 gauges. 3 special prices.

12 ga.

16 ga.

Santa again proved his popu·
larily Sunday as he made his
appearance In the annual Pome·
roy Christmas Parade staged by
Pomeroy merchants to officially
open the holiday season.
Hundreds of residents lined
Main St., to watch the annual
event which featured floats, the
marching bands of Eastern,

20 ga,

S2.09 S2.09 S1.99

I

O'DELL LUMBER·
VINE ST. &amp; 31D AYE.

534 s. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.
992-5500

Meigs and Southern High Sc hoots
playing "holiday season music
along the route, entries by
granges; · pickup trucks loaded
with representatives of various
groups, queens, costumed
dancers, both modern and clog·
gtng groups; !Ire equipmen t,
antique vehicles, baton twirling
groups, Cub Scouts and Brownies

and even several sets of twins
from the Mothers of Twins Clubs.
Santa was "the final feature of
the parade and after the parade
presented treats to youngsters In
the Court St. mini park. A
number of merchants not only In
Pomeroy but In Middleport held
open houses during the afternoon
with special promotions held to
enhance the activity.
•

Alcohol, drug use may mean
no wheels for · Ohio teenagers

GAWPOUS, OH.
446·1276
OPEN SUNDAY 10·4

In a recem survey, Shoney's Breakfast Bar was chosen the best breakfast
in town.
And it's no surprise when you consider that you can get all the
freshly scrambled eggs, bacon, and sausage you can eat, along with home
fri~d potatoes, country milk gravy, buttermilk biscuits, and southern-style
gnts.
·
·
It's Shoney's Breakfast Bar, not only the best breakfast in town, but
also the most popular breakfast in town,
Come see why and register for ·s honey's/Folger's"'NASCAR Weekend

G&lt;~~y.
Folger's is a registered trademark of The Folger's Coffee Co.

NEt .

Breakfast Bar

A fatal auto accident, and two
other auto accidents occurred
over the weekend In Meigs
County.
· Killed In an accident which.
occurred at 4: 23 p.m. Saturday
on Rutland Township Road 56
(Corn Hollow Road), was 27·
year-old Steve McGrath, of Ru ·
!land. McGrath was a passenger
in a 1975 Jeep CJ·5 drlv~n by
Martin Shuler, 28, of Langsville.
According to the Ohio State
Patrol report , Shuler, who was
traveling east on Corn Hollow
Road, went off the left side o!the
road and struck an embankment.
The vehicle overturned and
struck a tree as It came down,
pinning McGrath underneath.
McGrath was pronounced dead
at the scene by Meigs County
Coroner R. R. Pickens.
Rutland EMS units and fire
department were also on the
scene .
Rutland EMS transported
another passeqger IIi the vehicle.

Michael Shuler, 18, Langsville, to vehicle, seven-year-old Jessica
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Waugh and 10-year-old Jean
where he was treated and , Waugh, were taken from the
scene by Racine and Syracuse
released.
The driver of the vehlcl was EMS units to Veterans Memorial
taken by the Southeastern Ohio Hospital where they were treated
Emergency Medical Service io and released.
No citations were Issued.
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
There
was moderate damage to
where he was listed tn lair
the
vehicle.
·
condition on Monday morning.
At 11:15 a.m. Sunday, Iva P .
The accident ts still under Rayburn, 50, of Portland, was
investigation by OSP.
traveling south ori County Road ·
Two accidents occurred on 34 (Pine Grove Road) when she
Sunday, both In the Racine area. lost control and went off the right
At approximately 10: 20 a.m. side of the road Into a ditch,
Sunday morning, Susan Waugh, knocking down two mailboxes
29, of Pomeroy, lost control of her and two newspaper boxes.
1979 Buick LeSabre as she was
Rayburn was taken by Racine
traveling north on County Road EMS to Veterans Memorial Hos28 (Bashan Road). toward the pital where she was treated and
Intersection of Route 124. Accord· released.
lng to the Ohio State Patrol
No citations were Issued and
report, Waugh . applied her there was heavy damage to the
brakes , went off the right side of vehicle.
the road and struck a bridge
The accident .was investigated
railing.
by Meigs Deputy Harry Lyons .
Waugh, and two children In the

Governor Celeste to sign
dep.u ty re~trar reform bill

614-221-0888

L. W. CENNAMO

2 Sections, 12 Pages
A Mullbnedla Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 28, 1988

454 2nd Ava.
()PEN Af 5 A.M.
FOR HUNTERS ,

'.

•

•

PEARL'S
COUNTRY
COO KIN'

I

Cloudy. Low In 20s. Chance
ol s now 50 percent. Tuesday,
variable cloudiness. Highs In
mid 40s.

Super Lotto

sooner.

.,

BANKRUPTCY

Ohio Lottery

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Teenaged motorists who become
Involved with alcohol or drugs
may find their wheeis taken
away.
Legislation being prepared for
the signature of Gov. Richard
Celeste stipulates tharany m(nor
convicted of a drug offense,
disorderly conduct while lntoxl·
cated, or drunken driving could
forfeit the right to a learner's
permit or a dr lver' s license un ttl
the age of 18.
This bill, sponsored by Rep.
Jacquelyn. O'Brl~n. R·
Cincinnati, c·ould be on the
governor's desk In two wee.ks . It
will take effect 90 days after the
signature, possibly by late
winter.
O'Brien's original bHI called
lor a ban on driVIng privileges
untll the age 18, but·a provision
was added that allows teenagers
to regain permits or license If

they complete a certified threeday driver 's i ntervention
program.
Such programs are used for
adults convicted of drunken
dr iving, but teenagers can be
sent to them lor other drugs and
alcohol offenses, O'Brien sa id.
Convicted teenagers who do
not satisfactorily co mplete such
programs will not be eligible for
driving privileges until reaching
the age of 18.
. This special program has won
the approval of Paul Coleman,
director of the Governor's Office

of Recovery Services.
He said teeangers should real·
lze that a driver's Intervention
program Is an intensive, In·
patient treatment program , and
in most cases, requires confinement lor the full 72 hours.
"It clearly Is not the arne as a
driver's ed course, and It is not
pleasant," Coleman told the
Columbus Dispatch Sunday.
He said the bill's rehabilitation
provisions recognizes that alcoh·
ollsm and drug addiction are
diseases from which recovery Is
possible.

Chase M8Jlhattan raises prime rate
NEW YORK (UP!) - Chase
Manhattan Bank raised Its prime
lending rate Monday to 10.5
percent from 10 percent, effec·
live immediately.
The last change In the prime
rate - the base rate used to
calcula~e Interest on a variety ot

loans, Including those to consu·
mers and small businesses was on Aug. 11.
Financial markets had In re·
cent weeks expected an Increase
in the prime. Other major banks
are expected to follow the move
by Chase Manhattan.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Fulfilling his two-year old vow to
take the .PQUIIcs out of_motor
vehicle registration tn 6hlo while
sustaining efficient, low-cost service, Gov. Richard Celeste plans
to sign legislation to that effect
Monday.
The signing ceremony for the
long-awaited deputy registrar
reform bill Is scheduled for 10
a.m. at the Main Post Office.
The ceremony Is taking place
there because the leglsla lion
Implements motor vehicle registration by mall starting Jan. 1.
''That bill was not my pre·
!erred measure," the governor
told reporters last week when
asked abOut Senate B!ll1, which
he will sign.
Celeste explained he preferred
the original version, passed by
the Senate early last year, which
would have turned vehicle regis·
. !ration over to branch offices of
the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehl·
cles, operated by government
employees.
Instead, the deputy registrars'
. offices will remain, at least one in
every county, with the operation
contracted to private lndlvldu·
als. The new law specifies that
the offices no longer be awarded
as political favors, but through
Informal bidding based on e!!l·
clent, low-cost service.
The new law also wllllimlt the
amounts of political contrtbu·
lions that deputy registrars may
make. It also forbids political
parties to solicit donations from
the deputies .
In the past, if has been the
practice of the party In power to
· expect deputies to donate 10
percent of their $1.50 fee on each
license transaction, thus raising

Ohio has
at least 12
holiday deaths
By 1)nlted Press Internalloaal
At least 12 peGple died In Ohio
traffic accidents this Thanksglv·
lng holiday periOd, the State
Highway Patrol said today.
Patrol troopers also reported
heavy tratflc Sunday night as
Ohioans returned home from
Thanksgiving visits.
The Patrol's holiday survey of
fatalities showed two deaths
Wednesday night, two Thursday,
two Friday, ttve Saturday, and
one Sunday .
Victims Included:
Wednesday Nlcht
Bethel: Harry U. Fries UI, 22,
Bethel, 1\llled when his car went
oft a Clermont County road near
Bethel and hit a tree.
Continued on page 12

of their ltcense tags . They will
up to $2 mUllon for the party .
Rural lawmakers worked In receive an Itemized bill, lnclud·
llli all local fees, based on their
tJie House to p(e&amp;erve the depu·
ties. They sl!ld' peljple ~nJoyed "'191!8 vehicles, ano· may return
personal contact with the depu· their application In the mall with
ties when re-register lng · their a check.
"They can go back to the
vehicles. Urban legislators com·
plalned about long lines at the deputy if they want," said Wendy
Schweiger, a public Information
city offices .
officer
with the Highway Safety
William Denlhan, director of
Department.
"There's abso·
the Ohio Department of Highway
.
lutely
no
pressure
to do ttoneway
Safety, which Includes the BMV,
or
the
other.
"
has predicted that up to 30
During 1989 the state wlll
percent of Ohioans will choose
switch
from registering by last
mail-In registration. That will
name
to
date-of-birth reglstra·
trim a number of the 272 deputy
tlon.
Denthan
said he hopes that
registrars ' offices In time, he
in 1990, motorists may use credit
said.
cards to get their tags,
The bill requires the deputies
A political stalemate blocked
to advertise their locations, spell
the legislation for almost all of
out their services and provide
convenience to motorists. There 1988. But agreement was reached
two weeks ago after Celeste
will be a toll-free hotltne to the
Issued an executive order to
BMV for any motorist who Is
accomplish the same goals, and.
confused.
It was challenger In court by the
Motorists will receive 45 days'
AAA
auto clubs.
adva!lce notice of the expiration

North Carolina tornadoes
kill at least 5 people today
on central and northeastern
By United Press International
A weekend snow storm made Minnesota . The National
driving hazardous and stranded Weather Service said It left 16
travelers in thEi upper Midwest, · Inches at Aitkin, 12 tn·ches at
Long Prairie and Bagley and 10
and a series of tornadoes ripped
Inches at Duluth. Snow also hit
through North Carolina early
Wisconsin
and Michigan.
Monday, killing at least live
Icy
winds
gusting up to 60 mph
people and InJuring more than
in western Minnesota piled snow
100 others.
into drifts and robbed motorists
A cold front brought the
of vtslblltty.
blustery snowstorm to Minne"VIsibility was zero for a
sota, Wisconsin and Michigan
while. You could hardly see
Sunday . Snow continued to fall
across some areas early Monday · outside the ·window ," said Ed
Funk; an assistant news director
but the bulk ot It stopped by early
at
KWOA radio In Worthington,
morning.
Continued on page 12
The storm was especially hard

..

.....-Local news briefs---.
Middleport parade Dec. 5
The annual Middleport Christmas Parade will be held on
Monday, Dec. 5, and will beglnat6p.m. rather thanat6: 30p.m .
as previously announced.
All participants should report to the Sears Store parking lot by
5: 30p.m . on that evening.
Meigs, Southern and Eastern High School bands will be on
hand as well as Scout troops, church groups, the American
Legion, Masonic Lodge and dance groups, Bob Freed, president
of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce, announces.
· Santa will be showcased during the parade and will greet
children and pass out candy treats immediately after the
parade at tile Central Trust drive through facUlties.
Any Individuals or groups wishing to take par t are requested
to contact Kjm mower at 992-5141 or Bob Freed at 992-2044.

EMS has 13 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 13 calls
over the weekend, five Saturday and eight Sunday.
Saturday at 7:28a .m., Syracuse to Fifth St. for Oris Hubbard
Continued on page 12

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Monday, November 28. 19~8

'

,.

'

·'Commentary
The. Daily Sentinel

-

•

'

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG!l-MASON AREA
/1~
'
~m~ ~..._-.-.~~·~
~v

ROBERT L, WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
'

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject toedltlnR and must be signed with name. addressand
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good rasre, addressing Issues. not persmallties.

It won't be easy to
limit cainpaign spending
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Everybody around the Statehouse thinks political
campaigning has become too expensive. The question is, when are
they going to do something about it?
·
The answer is, probably not very soon. Changing the nature of
polltical campaigning is an extremely complex and touchy issue,
fraught with constitutional pr0btems .
Sen. Charles Butts, D-Cleveland, made a start last week with a
proposal forcing the Ohio Genera! Asselftbly to put a l!d on
expenditures in statewide and legisiatlve elections.
Butts pointed out the "obscene" amounts that are being spent on
campaigns. In 1974, $35,000 was considered a lot for a candidate to
spend in a state Senate race. By 1986, the average bill for the four most
expensive Senate campaigns had escalated to $330,000. Reports
aren't in yet for this year, bu I some Senate campaigns may have gone
over the $500,000 mark.
Butts says almost 90 percent of the people want to put a stop to that
kind of spending for an office in which a senator is paid$35,000 (soon to
be $36,650) , supposedly to serve the public. Instead. a senator may
turn to serving whomever helped him or her raise tbe $500,000 needed
to get elected. ·
Butts wants to put it to a vote of the people. He is convinced they
would demand that the Legislature enact spending limits. But what
limits? 'Suppose the limit was $1 million for a Senate race? What
purpose would that serve?
The last time spending limits were enacted, ·;n 1974, they were
based on a certain ~mount per person. For governor, the limit was 10
cents per resident of Ohio. That was f!ne, except that the courts found
a spending l!mitat!on was a violation of freedom of expression.
Moreover, there is a suspicion that a limitation on spending is an
. ' advantage to the incumbent, since It prevents a challenger from
using more money and ·advertising to overcome the natural
advantage of the officeholder.
''Placing a Hm!t on spending, some people say, would give lifetime
tenure to an incumbent," said Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R-C!nc!nnat!.
Aronoff is in a position to know. He raised the estimated $3m!!lion this
year to retain all 12 Republican Senate seats and bounce one
Democrat.
So it comes down to that same old culprit that gets the blame for
- everything- television. Most of the expens~ of an election campaign
goes toward pure hasing time to air TV ads.
The answer may be a !imitation on the use of television, bu tit would
almost certainly have to be voluntary, or the freedom of expression
argument would come into play. ,
It has been suggested that television stations ought to donate a
certain amount of air time to a campaign. The content of material
aired during that time could be monitored to eliminate blatant
negative campaigning.
.
Democratic State Chairman James Ruvolo is wary of any so-called
reform in campaign spending. He ' recalls the reform of the 1970s,
when political action committees were first allowed, and ·says they
"turned into a monster."
"I think everybody has to be part or the solution," said Republican
State Chairman Robert Bennett, adding that perhaps challengers
could be given three free mailings during the campaign to help otrset
the power or incumbents. "Maybe we have to take a look at public
(campaign) financing," he said.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, says it is
· hard to get candidates to run against an entrenched senator when
their first assignment is "raising a ton of money."
Meshel is particularly b!tter about a law pushed through last year,
permitting corporations to funnel money and services to candidates
, for the first time through political action committees. Naturally,
most of the corporate support this year went to Republicans.
"They broke our legs," said Meshe!.
The Senate Democratic leader believes that !!Butts's proposal does
nothing else, it will show the General Assembly that the public wants
something done about expensive campaigns. "It may foment a
healthy discussion," he said.

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Scoreboard ...

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel ·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
- - - Monday. November 28, ·1988
•

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NFL results
By U•-..,d Putillnler•tio!MI

Illegal drug makers labeled as .polluters

NATIONAL fOOTB.U.L LE.\GUE
1\merlc• Conlerrn~

W

WASHINGTON - Chemists threatening farm animals. Somelabs, they raid them and confiswho cook up Illegal drugs and times the drug makers simply cate a!! the material there. That
"farmers" who grow marijuana dump the chemicals into the
makes the DEA the owner of
have a new distinction: They are ground, where they leach into the
toxic chemicals and the dutiful polluters. We have reported In
poUuters too.
soil and groundwater.
EPA felt obliged to label the DEA several columns about the organThe Environmental Protection
ized bands of pot growers who
Sheriff B!ll Arnado of Joseas such.
·
Agency has labeled them as a ph!ne County, Ore., says he has
It's not a tag the DEA.th!nks It plant marijuana In tl)e na tiona I
threat to the environment. And, seen "the number of metham·
, forests. They surround their
deserves.
·~
in a twist of bureaucratic inge- · phetam!ne )abs In our state grow
''It's ridiculous," a high-level crops with armed guards, attack
nuity, the EPA has lumped at an alarming rate in the last DEA official complained to us.
dogs, rattle snakes and booby
federal drug pollee into the same few years." And the crooks Tile drug agents raised such a
traps that threaten Innocent
category. The EPA says the couldn't care less about the fuss .that the EPA has been
hikers.
Drug Enforcement Administra- environment.
brought 'to ·the bargaining table.
Now we have learned from
tion iS1 a "toxic waste generator"
In February, Arnado seized ,a The two agencies have been
internal
Forest Service memos
because it disposes of the chemi- lab In a remote section of federal secretly working out a com prom·
,
that
the
environment,
as well as
cals from confiscated drug labs. land. The drug maker l!ve in one !se that Includes congressional
the
hikers,
is
at
risk:
The environmental tlireat tra'!!er ana used a second tra!ler legislation and cooperation on
Pot growers use huge
from drugs is no joke. One of the for his lab.
the disposal of the waste.
amounts
of high· nitrogen chemimost serious problems is the
''We found that the suspect was
The EPA has been pretty cal fertilizers. Their plots are
proliferation of illegal metham' dumping raw sewage from his . selective in pinning labels on
. phetamtne labs on public and living quarters Into the creek pol!uters. The U.S. Forest Ser- near water sources and the
· private land.
running nearby and also dump· vice has busted 80 methamphe- chemicals . leach Into streams.
Cooking up the drugs means !ng his toxic waste from the lab in tamine lal)s in our nation's Hundreds of pounds of fertilizer
creating chemical waste that the the same creek," the sheriff forests in the last year alone, but not used d)lr!ng the growing
crooks dump Into streams, -kU- reported. Other law ertforement the EPA doesn't brand them as season are left behind.
- The pot growers don't want
ling f!sh, endanger,lng all wildlife sources say that's typical.
toxic waste generators.
rats
to eat their profits, so they
that use the water and even
When DEA agents find the
Chemical labs are not the onlv engage in overkUI with rodent!·
c!des, and the active !ngredlent!s
usually strychnine. In some
areas, growers have used as
much as 300 pounds per acre.
The Forest Service, according
to one internal memo,' 'has found
large numbers of dead rats and
squirrels, as well as a few larger
an im,als such as foxei'' near drug
plots. One Forest Service agent
said he knows when he Is close to
a pot farJ;ll when,he begins to see
dead animals.

Jack Anderson

Ripper murders hid
'
(It occur• to me thai ~n view of the

recent lelevision hoopla about lhe
centenni.al of the Jack the Ripper
murder~, you might be interested in
a column 1 wro~e on thai penm·
niolly foscitUJting su.bject almd.Jt 12
years DKO· - W.A .R.)

If, like me, you are one or those

people who have always been
fascinated by the story o!"Jack
the Ripper, who murdered and
mutilated five prostitutes In the
East End of London during the
summer and fall of 1888, "Jack
the Ripper -The Final Solution"
w!U simply enthrall you. The
hook is by Stephen Knight, a
London reporter, and the title is
not a misnomer: I believe that
Knight has a last truly solved the
ancient riddle of the Ripper's
identity.
The crucial break in this
world· famous case came in 1973,
when two BBC writers, commis·
s!oned to script yet another
documentary on the Ripper,
were advised by an acquaintance
high in Scotland Yard to talk to
one Joseph S!ckert, son of the
noted painter Walter Sicker!
(1860-1942). Gradually Joseph

was cajoled into tell!ng- first as
a surprise guest on the BBC
program and later, much more
f!Xtenslvely, to Knight - the
fantastic story"hls father had told
him in deep confidence In or
aboutl939,-when Joseph was 14.
According to Walter, in 1884 he
had introduced the young Duke of
Clarence ("Prince Eddy," eldest
son of the Prince of Wales and
thus heir presumptive to .the
throne) to a Cathol!c girl named
Annie Elizabeth Crook, who
worked In a shop near S!ckert's
home in Cleveland Street. Love
blossomed. The young duke
would leave Buckingham Palace
In a royal carriage, transfer
secretly to an unmarked cab
driven by a close-mouthed serv!·
tor named Joseph Net ley, and
hurry to the arms of his lover.
In 1885, Annie gave birth to a
daughter, named Al!ce Margaret
Crook. (The child's birth certificate, with the father's name
omitted, was found by the BBC
team In 1975 among the publ!c
records in Somerset House.)
Later, according to S!ckert,

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Clncln ... l :1$, Buffalo U
Cleveland 11. " 'uhlnato- 13
t.'hlcaso II, Grefft Ba)' I
Plullbu.-.h lt. Kan• Clly 111
PhUaddphla 31. Plloe~~lx 'U
Atblnt.a n, Tam .. Bay Ill
Dfnwr SS, L.o\ RUTI!i U
In dian ~~.polls !t, Nrw Endand:ll
!haa FranciiiCO til, San Dteso Ill
N\' Giant" U. New Orlearu~ 12
Mondl,)''ll Gam£"
LA Rahk•rs Ill Suttle, I p .m.
Su rllay, OPe. I
luJrulo al Tamp~ 8~, I p.m.
Dalh&amp;li at Clt"'el .. d, I p.m .
Grl'e.t Bay al Decrok, I p.m .
ln!IUiapoll~o~ a.1 Mluni( l'p.nl .
NewOrlean"al MlniiPMOU, 1 p.m.
Phoenlll at NY 011111$. I p.m.
San blel9 Ill Clncln .. t~ I p.m.
san Frand~M,.-o a1 Allan &amp;II, I p.m.
~lllk- ld New En &amp;land, I p .m .
Wulllna:JonatPhlladelpW~~o,l p.m .
N1' Jl"t• at Kan•• Chy, -1 p.m.
~nwr at LA R .. der~. t p.m .
Pithllurgh at Houton, X p.m .
Moa:lay , llfoc. 5
fh,lrago at LA RIUHM, 9 p.m .

Forest rangers have found
significant amounts of bulk fertJI·
tzer and polson being used or
stored on at least80percentofthe
marijuana farms . they have
uncovered.
,
- Finally, there Is the ou!right
sl;~ughter by pot growers of
w!ldl!fe that they · think might
forage on their pot. In particular,
thousands of deer have been
k!lled across the United States by
these growers. "Bear and moun·
ta!n lions are sometimes killed
and their carcasses hung at sites
to · discourage d~er from ap·
proachlng," one Forest Service
memo :;ays.

NAT tONAL HOCKEY LEI\GVE
S.tuniiQ''!i Result!
Basion K. Olltqo '!
NY KIIU\p:l'lll, Nl' 1M landers -I
Hartford 4, Q•ebet' t
Pltll!l* l'(h -1, Phlladelphlll3
Montreal 1', Edmo.un 5
Minnesota 6, Torllllf.o 3
Cal pry -1, Los Aa(f':lftl I
Wln_.peJ-1. Sl. IA•III -1
Sun.t~'J~;Result~

Bullalo 7, Phlladl'lpN a:&amp;
NY Ranp:n), NY b!luden:J
W•hln~ton 4, DPirotc 3
\'ancouwr 5, l.o• An reiN~

Monday's Game
Edmonton at Quf'hec, 1::13 p.m.
Tul!lld-w'• G•me~~
NY IHil•derlal Dl'lloll, niK~
Boston AI Phlll .delpNa, nllhl
Willllr.ln~on.

niKh!

NY Ranprs at Wl"nlpe(J. nl,;hl
Chlcq:o Ill Mlnll!llola, niPt
\lancouwr at Edm01•o., nlll'la
Nt&gt;wder~~ey aj LosMidH, nl"'t

scanda)_w_illia~m_R_ushe_r

NBA results
NI\TIONAL BAS~BM.L A.'iSOC'.
Sahlf'II&amp;J!I Relulhl
Ntw York 121, Clf"Vel•d 112

Prince Eddy and Annie went Allee (who was later returned to
through a Cathol!c marriage and raised by Walter Slckert ceremony. The ch!ld continued to eventually becoming his · long·
l!ve with her mother, and was time mistress and the mother of
also cared for by a girl named Joseph). Kelly, sinking into pros·
Mary Kelly, who had worked In t!tutlon in London's Wh!techapel
the same shop as Annie but,was slums, concocted along , with
paid by Slckert to become Allee's three other "unfortunates" a
scheme to blackma!l the mighty
full·tlme nanny.
Eventually the government of with their scandalous
Lord Salisbury got wind of the knowledge.
That, according to S!ckert, tore
affair, and in 1888- fearing that
the monarchy itself might be it. Gull, who had already had one
endangered by the scandal stroke and must · charitably be
moved swiftly and silently to assumed to have been going
break It off. In a pollee raid on Insane, enlisted the coach·drlver
Cleveland Street, Prince Eddy N~tley and (though S!ckertnever
was whisked home to the palace, admitted this to his son) Sicker!
while "Annie was kidnapped and · himself in a scheme to kill all four
held for five months In a hospital blackmailers. The record of
run by Sir W!lliam Gull, phys!· those four murders (plus one
clan in ordinary to Queen Victo- other the trio committed - a
ria. Sicker! bel!eved that Gull case of mistaken Identity) is the
performed some sort of primitive . public record of Jack the Ripper.
lobotomy on Annie. In any case,
Knight's description of his
records lnd!cate.that she lived on dogged detective work in subobscurely, in various work- stantiating Joseph _Sickert's
rhouses and hospitals, untU Feb. seemingly w!ld story, and Sick·
· 23, 1920, when she died, hope· ert's pathetic postscript endors·
lessly insane.
lng Knight's account, powerfully
The nanny Mary Kelly, how· reinforce the basic credibility of
ever, had escaped with little this remarkable book.

Philadelphia U2,1ncUIId*llt
W•~n~ton 1210, OI!WiotW I 1:1
Atlanta IU &amp;.MDI tr'
Dt&gt;lrok 112, LA LMkw• 9!1
PaiiM 113. Utah t3
San Antonloll7, Phoenll: 10-1
Mllwau ~I! IOl MIIIRd 13
~nwr

1!8, Odc~o 1%3
Houston Jlt, Gohlrn ShUt&gt; 109
N~· .fer IIIII!)' M, Sa.cramrnto 97
S.rii!QI'II Reull!&lt;l
t.'IP'O'I!IIIIIIdltB, Mlami!Mt
PortiiUJd 101, Oolckn ~lalt' 9t
Monda.Y'• Gamto
LA L#kf'rt at Philadelphia. 7: 30 p .m .

EST
'1Ue8th,y'li Gamf!ll
Boston at Nt&gt;w ""uey, •llhl
Miami at Charlot If, niPt
SIUI Antonle at Atlanta, niKht
0\otrolt at lndl.,.., nl~
Ponlandat MJJwaulle~. nlrhl
Pheenlx •t H••-'on. nipa
N~' York at O..nwr, nl_...
Ut11h Ill Seattle, Ill eM
t'llllc,..-o •t Goh~n stat.-. nlj!:hl
LA Olppers at Sacnmumto, nlaht

Grid scores
~llurdlt,)''!l

Collell' Fooltl. •1 ResUlts
DIYhloa l·AA PI a,)OI 'oo
Gf'o""laSoulbcrn 38. Th_, Cludt'l 20
t"urman 21, llelaware 1
,'MM'!Ihall7, Nurlh Texlb 0
Norlbwesatrn St. 1lAL 1 21. Boltw Stalf'

"

W~tern

lf'nlll•ky 35, Wes!.ern Dllnol,;

"

Sleplaon F' . Au111lln tt, Jacbon Sl . 0
ldll.ho 38, MonCI\n11.19
E11.11Wrn Keal~kJ' ZK, Mu•('hu!tt'll!i 11
D!Yislo• II Playoffs
N. Dakotll Sl. :Mi r Mlllerllvlllf" Sc. 26
Wh1. · Larroue U, Norlhwt"skr n

(Iowa) 33.
Portland st . (OI'f'. l %11, Jacksonvillf' !&lt;it.

''Fred, maybe you ought to lay off the oat cereal for a while. "

,,
(

01\' 18kln Ill ft.1Q'otf11
AuauMan• llll.~t8, Wltlf'nber&amp; (Ohio )

Let'S all give thanks for SOft life Sara Overstreet
This year I was struck by how
appropriate it seems to have
Veterans Day and Thanksgiving
in the month.
The two holidays always call
forth many of the same feel!ngs,
but I'd never noticed the sim!lar!ty until this year, when preparations for ABC's "War and Re·
membrance" stretched
Veterans Day into a month·long
affair for me.
I am a reporter at an ABC
aff!llate, and sit right next to"the
rep(jrter assigned to do a local
companion piece to the national
epic. During my reporting career
In this city, I've Interviewed
some of the same war veterans,
Holocaust survivors and resistance fighters my colleague Inter·
viewed over the last month, and
he and r talked often about what
we'd learned from them.
Some or the lessons we shared;
others were more personal. He
seemed to be most affected by
the amazing, malleable human
essence that could carry someone through a Bataan, a Buchen·
wald, or a burning B-52 and the 36
pla.sttc surgeries that followed.
I was most affected by the
knowledge that !f I had any of
that essence at all, how little of it
had been tapped - and how
much I hoped It would never be.
Which, I guess, brings me to
Thanksgiving. Since I have been

' .

able to appreciate hat.dsh!ps and
tragedy to any extent - and I
calculate that beginning with my
mother's tragic and unexpected
death 12 years ago, because I had
been pretty insulated before that
- Thanksgiving has always set
me thinking how soft my life has
been compared to so many
others.
I'm not sure why the holiday ,
has touched me In that way since
her death, except that since then
I've felt that for many of us there
comes a time when the veil Is
lifted, and we see !or the first
time the extent to which life can
go wrong. Maybe it's not untu we
acquire that perspective that we
can appreciate the good fortune
of a l!fe gone right.
War, death and sacrifice al·
ways make me thankful for the
need not to have to sacrifice. I
look at the hardships others went
through, and feel darn lucky.
And I think how all their bard
work paid off: I, and all the rest
or the descendants for whom they
fought In wars, marched In union
picket lines, worked their way
through schools and saved their
money, have the foot up on life
they hoped we'd have.
I used to think my father would
have begrudged me the life I
have,now, It he'd lived to see me
have It; he was forever telling me
how bad his l!fe was when he was

a kid and a young adult, how I
never appreciated what I had,
andsoon.lfhecouldseemenow,
it he could see how he managed to
give me the l!fe he never had, I
don't think he'd begrudge me a
moment of !L He'd see his

'"

llhac•(N . , •. ) ~4. CArtland St. ( N.\'.117
Fernm (\'&amp;1 d, Monavt. (P&amp;.) ~"
C~nlnd Collel£' (low-.) 111, Wl!lf:on!lin·

WhJ.&lt;'WAier 13,

thoughts and dreams bear fruit,
finally. I wish some of this could ·
have been his; I'm glad!t'sm!ne.
I 'have no children, and I
wonder how being born to this
lucky generation I belong to will
affect kids born to my
generation.

NAIA Dhll!lio•l PJ•yoff!l
CfnlnLI St. (Ohio) t~. (',ata•ba lfl
lllll&lt;tdale -12, Fairmont S&amp;. 7
MoortwMd st. (Mila.) 28, Meilll Sl. II
Adams St. 14, Em poria St. II
Plttl!!bu 'W St. ~. Norlllern 81. IS.D.) 14
CartiDn'!'Jewman lit. Co-=onl (W .V-.)

"

SF. Oklahotnll tl , ft"ntral Arllans.s 14
(O'rl
NAJA Ul~l!ilon II Playoffs
Evan.,t 'l2. Bett.&amp;n)' 10
Orr~n Tf'th 71), ( ~rroll 35
We~lmln•&amp;t&gt;r tl'a.)tO, HluUt.a7 tOhloJ
Wl~nBin-L.Cr08IJI! 45., Norlhwe~ter11
(IOWil) :13.

Today in history.

-·

Tf'mple -11'1, Boston Coii£"Jf" U
Seulh
Becllulll! Coolman h, norhla AAM I
Gtol'l{la U, Gl!oi'Jill. Tech 3
Miami 18, 1\rkanfl&amp;ll; I&amp;
Ml&amp;.slppl33. Mlslllsstppl St. 6
Trnnenee 14, V•derbllt'

By United Press lnlernatlonal
Today is Monday, Nov. 28, the 333rd day of 1988 with 33 to follow,
The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include English poet W!lliam Blake in 1757, John Hyatt, inventor or
celluloid, In 1837, ar.chitect Henry Bacon, designer of the Lincoln
Memorial, in 1866, Motown Records founder ijerry Gordy In 1929 t age
59), actress Hope Lange in 1931 (age 57), and former Democratic
presidential hopeful Gary Hart of Colorado in 1936 (age 52).

So.thwnl
Hn•IJII:on4S, Rl~ U
1\iha !12, Colo'rado gaatp 'lX

Weol

A.rbo ..

u, Arizona St.

Ul

Hawaii It, Air Fon:~ lt
Nutre Uam e21,USC 10
VNLV 42. Lon1 BeliCh st 41

College scores
Colle1e Bu llllthall Reli•11
Tuunuunen's
Great A.lub Shoat out

On this date in history:
In 1520, Ferd!nand.Magellan entered the Pacific Ocean an his way
around the world. He was the first European to sa!lthe Pacific from
·
the east.
In 1919, VIrginia-born Lady Nancy Astor became the first woman
member of the British ParUament.
In 1942, a ffre ,at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub ln Boston fatally
injured 491 people. Most victims suffocated o~ were trampled to
death.
In 1958, the United States fired an intercontinental balUst!c missile
at full range for the first time.
In 1963, Cape Canaveral, the space center in Florida, was renamed
Cape ·Kennedy to hopor the assassinated president. Area residents
later voted to revert to the original name, but the NASA spaceport
remained the John F. Kennedy Space Center.

PUth P1ace
tlorlda '71. Ulab 118
Srventh Place
AIMka· Anl'ho ...Ke 11, lo1111 71)

OreenMoa.ai•CIMak
Ch 11111pkl lllhl p
Vrrmunl 75, Middlebury 68

Couti!Uion

St. Michael• to, Norwich 15

Hawaii 1lpaff

Ch ...plllnahlp
Hawalt 81, Texu M
Co . . .atkln
Moniana
81, Pep.-nllne 111
LobftCI&amp;Mic

m.

Ch.mp6o..tllp
San Die~ 64, New Mol co DS

.'

S.IUI

Juu

Shootoul

Sne•th Place

-·

,.

SW Te1118 St 101,

AmerlciVI~Pu'lo Rln~

Mahw. 51l, Qleqo St. 43
MantattuvUie 85. (',onn. Coli. 71
S.. Aa!Wim 1S, Brhll;eport 1'7
St. Joll!ph'siiZ, Malae-Presq1Mllsld.1
Thomu Atf,tdMI!l M, Daemmen M
Vermont 75. MhlllleWry 88

.....

Uvlnpton 114, Baptillt Cbrklllan 60

Midwt!lit
Cl...::lnr*l 1'11, N. Ke•l~k) 63
Evannllk! 75, Valparaiso 51
, Fon HIQ'sSt . U, Rocllhunl7t
• Rio Grall4e 18, Mullldnpm 61
Southwest
t\rkal,.. t8. Rl der •

.....

M'811 Nnpon 97, .COlorado 1!1

Satu~ay•s

scores

Roy!l Ohio HI Kit School Bulethall

By Uaited Prfts .. lertalloMI
salurday, Nov. It
o\da51, Rlnrdalr Sl
Alexander 61, Raclllf' Sou111trn 5a
A.olhland5:1:, Glllloalfl

Alhenll65, fA)I Wlllnut

Rlc~Kelll

Buckeye TraU 78, Buckfl)'e S~ 110
CamhrldKI! 11t, Me-.lowbrook U
Cln Hu1hee '17, ~ella 1t
Cln N'west M. Wllmlnston 39
&lt;Tri Xavl«" It, Un Colerain 59 •
&lt;.:In Madeln 71, Clinton Massie il
Chi MtNicholu '70, Nutenon M {ol)
Cln N Collere Hill 10, On Bacon 6-1
Cln In diM Hill U. Qn Sycamore &amp;0
Clf'l'monl N'eutern 4!, OMhen Ill
Colchntrr 88, Arc!Yiwn -14
Connottun Val K-1, ,JeweU.Scln 18
· lb)' .Jefl7"1, C'ln Aiken n
Garaway 81. Lakeland 11
Grl!4&gt;nDeld.)ll, Pallll Valley~
In diM Lak!! $-1, Bdlelo.Uine H
KeU Aller68. HamUton53
IUnp lit, N Bend TIQ'Ior 58
Ll' bin on l1; Cartisl£" 74
llmo•Moqroe 76, KeltoerlnJF.alrmonl

..

Miu'IAbldH. Masllllonl:l
New Rlc)llmond 18, On Glen Estr 52
S)'l Norltlvlew et, Ore Strlich S8
Tol f'f"ntrrd 67, Orr CIIQ' 52
To I Woodward 51, O.IIIWIC'I' 5t
To I Sl .lobn 64, Tlfnn Columbian 110
VInton -19, Galllp,lls 411
Glrlll Ohio Hl~~:h Sc:bool S.ldball
~aillr.IIQ', Nov. M

NHL results

Sl. IA•Is at

J'tjl,C~t

\.JNL\1 to. Mrmphh ~ate 81 (OT)
FUtl'l Piau
Ohio State 11'1, v . .derbllt 8t
Srventh PI•ClE'
O.PIWIIII, (]'lamfflll,d eil

.8H 273 189

Cl~•land

NV Olantll

Championahtp
Mt chl(lll'l !1. Olill&amp;Jie_.., M

2 0

"'K 'I 0

St-auw

Couolatkln
CMd. l n
Maui Ciullic

Lo~ola

Thlnl

C.entntl

·Hi,
i'M PaN, aNP

'

II

Hou!llen

MY ViC€ PReSU&gt;eNT WiLL.
Be fNVoJ.VeD ir-1 evBRY
PaRT of! MY W·HiTe wovse!

GUipe.

Eul
L T

Jt·Bullalo
l.ndh1napul ..
New En)laad
NV .let1
Mllwnl

.

i'LL Be YoUR

LelllJh til;

tAIL I 13

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Atr Hoban M, Mau J.ack10n 50
8.-llnue Sl, Fr.-moN .a~ .
Cardlnscon t4. 'RI dledalt 3t

Ea1tlakf" Norll 44, MIQfteld ZJI
F1n•ll)' 64. Tiffin Columbian 38

Frem•m 14, BeUt~vUie 9
Haulhal River&amp;$, Mark!tta -1»
Sl\crldllll U. Crook&amp;\tlle U
Tol Cenl,.l1~ Perl'll)'burc J7
Zane1ntle fto!ll' 7t, Bellaire ,John 43
Oblo HIR:hSchool FoolbJLII Plli!Joft's
Nov.tl
...,
Dl\'llilon I
&lt;:In Prineelon 3$, Wesk'lvtlle N 12
Cle IJCnatlos3l. To! Whllmer II
Dlv!Mk)nll
Slf"UbenWile n, HanUon 21
Akr Buclr.toelll'l, ChardonO
DIYit;lon Ill
lror~on 2:8, Urhana 7
Allronst \llncenl ~1. &lt;:leOriUipo U
DlvllllonV
MolfAdon' 17, N..wartCath 14
Ar&lt;'hbold 28, Mln»ter I

Ohhl Hlll'h !l.chool PI Q'Oif Palrlnp
At Olllo Stadium, Columbu11
Frllla)r , Dec 2
DIYIIklft V
Mopdono ( l~ll vsl\rchlxlld ( 1~0), II
Lm,

Dl~lslon II
Akron lklchtel ( ll· l l VIi Steubt:&gt;nvllle
( 13-0), 'l: :JO p.m.
Salunt~, O.l!. :J
lMvi!Mon IV
Canloo Cent,.! Catholic (11·2) VIi
Ver-.llle8 CU·Il, II a.m.
Olvl!ikln Ill
Akron St. Vlncent.St. Mar)' (11 ·1) v•
lron&amp;on 113-0), ~=
p.m .

:se

Sund~. llfc. 4

Dlv81o'n I
.
CIM'rlaadSt. IIJIIIIIull {13-0) \'KCinclnJW.il Prl~on (1'l-ll, 2 p.m .
Ohio Collece Bu II!Uulll ScoreM
No¥. !I
OhloUntv Ill. f'aplal61'
8owUn1 Grem ln. SleNL (NV 1 flo$
AltronH, Bailie st 51
Slippery Rock 8(1, Cleveland St 19
Cl•rlon Sl 7:J, Younctown 8111

lbyioa a, Buchell ill

IUo Grandr 17, HaaO¥er 55
Dellance GS, ,..,.,lher~ 10
Tbomu More 70, MIU'Ietta 119
Adrlu (Mich lilt, o•to Nonhern 5
Wlttrnbera: U, Menyvn -19
C•rrEII 5l, Denison 12
Ohio Wftl)eyan 109, Ohio Domlnlun 66
Pln•ay 72, Wllmln-'•n 11 (otJ
Sha~wneeSII03, ll)'ke99
UrbiUIR t-1, Lakt&gt; Erll' 11
Aflhl1111d K!. HIIIHd all' I Ml c iL I 61

Thl"' Wct!k'~~'
Ohio ('olk'll't' Basllttball St· hl!dult&gt;
Mondll,)', Nov.~
Akron a1 North t:arollrM Si
Martttta al Xavier
Grow Cll)' I Pal at Mounl Union
Ouerbf'lnal Shenandollh (Val
Hlnm Ill Oberlin
Tul'!ldQ', No, , !8
lndiiiW. at Ml ami
Ohio Unlv at N(' .WIImln~on
Youaptii"Nn Slat Mlnnuotll
Dyllr aj Lake Erlr.
DeniM!n at WIJ I Pal
MlliniW' at (;('dar\'lllf'
Ctonti9J st aj Ohio llomlnlcan
11tflul Rio G r1111de
Wah1h 1M Ml Vernan
Wedandt.Y. Nov. SO
Df'llanCf' a1 Bow lei Green
Nla&amp;llN a1 Kent sc
MIM.nlpJi V.a&amp;ry Ill Day ion
llethuy (W Val at Baldwln·W1tllact'
Capital •t Allhland
Flall-.v 11 Hel*lber.:
Mar6etta at Jotln t:arrnll
Kenyen at Mu111dn~m
Ohio Northern at OhiO Wesleyan
OUr.rbf"ln •t Brld&amp;ewater (VII)

Wo!Nt'r at Hiram

UrhiiM at Shawnee St
Wlhn!n~&amp;on at Norlht\rn J(enllll'k)·
Thur!ld.Q , Dl'r~ I
Ctontral Sl atEdlriloro (Pal
Wad (Pal at Moura Unlon
Frldltf, Dl'c. 2
Central FlOrid~&amp; at To I~
Morehead Scat C:lnclnr&amp;ll
Crellhto•Ut Cle\oel ... dSt
Wa!M at D)ilc
Miami at Ca.rriH Clultc (La. Te cll)
Akron MeDoN'~ d's Classic
Den ilion 811 Red Claa1lc
Malo• Plo~Wer Claulc
BlUffton lnvM .. 6oral

Spartans top Tornadoes 67-52 in opener
RACINE - Coach Jay Rees'
Alexander Spartans Invaded
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium
. in Racine Saturday where they
soundly defeated the host Southern Tornadoes 67-52 in the
non-league basketball opener !or
SHS .
In a student-mentor type billing, Alexander Coach Jay Rees
returned home for his first
career varsity coaching victory.
The win was very "sweet" for the
former Southern star, but yet
somewhat bittersweet as his
Spartans defeated some of the
players he had formerly
coached, and the team of his
mentor Howie Caldwell.
Last year Rees went 19·1 as"
Southern's reserve coach, ending
a 3-year stint at the school.
. In the beginning, all was
'nip-and-tuck' as both clubs
battled in royal fashion until
Southern stead!ly gained the
upper hand in the latter three
minutes of the opening period,
the score 14-9.
Southerners Chris Stout, Andy
Baer, and Dave McM!llan added
to the Southern swing of momentum that enabled the Tornadoes
to take a 21-9 advantage.
Southern Coach Howie Caldwell reflected back to this point in
the game by saying. "If you're an
Alexander player and playing a
team as rich in tradition as us
(Southern) on our home court,
you've got to be thinking that tha t
you're probably beat. On the
other hand if you're a Southern
player you ought to have some
confidence and bei!eve you are
going to win .... and not let the
game slip away. Neither happened .... we let them back in the
game, gave them some confidence and they started to
believe,"
After the first three minutes or
the second round, Alexander
outscored Southern 16-9 the remainder of the frame, the close
\he gap at the half to 29-25,
This l!tter glimmer of hope
snowballed throughout the first
half and cast an omen for the
second half of play.
The main cogs in the force
were two seniors and only
returning lettermen Denny Jarvis and Jim Martin, who took
control during this time frame,
Also some good inside play from
Danny Burke helped AHS on the
·
boards.
In the second half Alexander
tied the score at the 6:15 mark on
a Burke one-on-one, 29-29, before
Alex went ahead 35-31 on goals by
Jarvis and Brian Skinner. At this
point it appeared that Alexander
may have missed their chance at
something big, having three
missed chances to go ahead by
six points or perhaps push their
four point lead to 10. As it turned
out _they failed to capitalize as
Chris Stout put one last comeback bid on the table, tying the
score at 35-35 on two successive
field goals with 3: 10 left in round
three.
Alexander held on to lead 43·41

WAITING TO PASS - Alexander's ' Denny
Jarvis, right, waits for the defensive pressure
offered by Southern's Todd Grindstaff to subside
before he passes off In Saturday night's season

opener on the Spartans' home court. Jarvis _led all
scorers with 19 points as the Spartans, pOoled by
fonner Tornado assistant Jay Rees (lower rJgitt),
knocked off the Racine five 87·52.

round, where they bewildered points).
the hosts md perhaps outhust!ed
Coach Scott trederick's ,SHS
the ''hustling Southeern ·reserves won quite handily,
Tornadoes".
58-27. SHS was led by John
In that round Alex outscored Hoback and Roy Johnson with 13
Southern 24-11 and clearly domi- each, including Johnson's 7-for-7
nated in every aspect of the at the line. Michael Kincaid and
game. Alex beat SHS up the Jeremy Rose each had 8, and
court, went back door,beat the Richard Deaver 6. Davis led the
press, and outreboundect the visitors with 6.
Tornadoes as if some spell had
V:arsity slats had Southern
been cast on the SHS five .
hittlng just 15-44 for 34 percent
One burr in Southern's side and a meager. 2-16 from three
came as a result of Alecander's point range for a dismal 12.5
combo of sticky man-to-man, percent. Ale/&lt; hit 24-46 for 52
Southern style, and an aggres - percent and 3-4 from the twilight
. s!ve 3·2 zone with press\lre up zone for 75 percent. SHS was 13-22
front and on the wings. This at the l!ne and Alex 11-19.
forced many SHS turnovers and
Although not handling the ball
led to frustrat!on uncharacter!s." much offensively, Shawn Did~le
tic of Southern teams .
was a powerhouse on the boards
Southern is 0·1 and AHS 1-1 with 10 ofSouthern's30rebounds ,
(AHS lost to powerhouse AHS had 42, with Martin's 9,
Huntington-Ross by only 8
12, and Jarvis 7.

,

......__Sports briefsBoxing
Daniel Zaragoza of Mexico
retained his WBC super bantamweight title, knocking-out Italian
challenger Valerio Nat! in the
fifth round in Foru, Italy . .. ;
Moon Sung-k!! of South Korea
retained his WBA bantamweight
crown, stopping Edgar Monserrat of Panama "in the seventh
round of a bout in Seou I.

ALEXANDER (17) - Brian Skinner,
3·0.1·7; ~nny Jarvis , S.2-3-19; Danny

Burke. 4·2·8; Jim Martin, S.0-16; Benll
Dlxoo, 1·1·0-5; Jeff Grlndstead, 2-0-4;

Steve Hawk, 0.1-1; Tony Dicken, o-o.o;
Chris Warren, 1-0-0..2; Chad Bayha,
1·0.3·5; C.W. Cochran. ().~, 'I'IKIIIo -

Zf-il-18-17.

SOUTHERN ($Zl -ChrlsSiwt, 2-1-S-12;

ChrLs Murphy, 1·2·4; Mike Amos, Q-1).0;
Todd Grindstaff, 1~1-3; Otad Taylor.l·l·3;
Hank Cleland, D-0-0; Dave McMillan,
6-IH2: Shawn Diddle, 1·0.2; .(Dey Baer,
3-2·3·15; Kevin BurgESs, 0.0.0; Brent
Shuler, 0.0.0; Brad Maynard, 0.1·1

· The Daily Sentinel
(USPS

'

14~1·)

1\ IMvlslon of Multbnedla, Inc.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 11.1 Court St., Po. meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company / Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Pb. 992·2156. Se·
cond class poatage paid at. Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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r;;~z ;:;~i:;~l
(All games)
TEAM
W L
P OP
North Gallia ........ 2 0 139 131
Southwestern ....... l 0 88 75
Hannan Trace ..... 1 1 134 116
Eastern ........ .. ..... 0 1 73 90
Kyger CreeL ... ... 0 1 55 85
OakHill ...... .. ...... o 1 55 85
Southern .............. o 1 52 67
Symmes Valley .. :o 1 51 94
Saturday's results
North Gallia 75, Northwest 71
Hannan·Trace 82, Ironton St. Joe
53
'
Alexander 67, Southern 52
Tuesday's games
Hannan Trace at Southwestern
North GaiUa at Kyger Creek
Southern at Eastern
Oak Hili at Symmes Valley

SHS had 8 turnovers and
Alexander 15, but the story was
told in the fact that the winners
had just two m !scues in the
second half.
Southern plays at Eastern
Tuesday in the SV AC opener.
Reserve play starts at 6:30.
Score by quarters:
Southern ... .. ..... .. l4 15 12 11-52
Alexander ......... 9 16 18 24-67

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Mall S•becrlptlens ·
.

SHOOTING UNDER PRESSURE - Southern's Andy Baer
experiences pressure In the paint from Alexander defenders Steve
Hawk on Baer's right hlp, and Jim Martin (34) as Baer slloots in
Saturday night's season opener on the Spartans' home courl.
Alexander topped the

Inside MeiJfJ County

IJWC&lt;ks ........ .......................... $19.24

;~ ~::S :::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::::::: ::J!::

OutoldeMelpCouoty
13 W•l'ks .... ............. ..... ............ $20.a)
26 Weeks ........ ... ....................... $40.30

Tornadoes~67~-5=2~-----------:---~:5:2:W:e:ek:':--:···=--=···=--=···:··:···:··:,..:···:··:···=,$15=·=40~

Saturday's scores ,
M au I ('I Mtk'
Secolll Rourll
Ohlu Sllur 1'1!, Dd"au 170
San .ruan Shootoul
Tolrdo 119. Pu~rtu Rico &amp;9

Vlratnla Tounuuutml
ConsolatiOn
Dartmoutb IlK; Krnt st 86
'd'abih K of(' Tourney
Cllamplolllhlp
Sl . Hose (N\') 100', i\qut.w (Mich ). 7$
Consolallon ·
Wal!ih 113, Sraltle 13
Clneland t1a~lilc
Champloftl6hlp

BaldwlP.Widlt'Ce !I. ,foOO Carroll7-l
Con.'Oiatlon
OherUn 83, Case Reserw

~ :I

Ohio ColleKiM'umen'~&gt;
Ball !Bbllll Sco~!i
Nu~ . 2&amp;
Ken I St11te 711, CanlsluN 76

Miami ll'l, Aleron II
Bowll11 Green 81, Norlhwetiler n 11
Younptnwn 8t 102, Dyke 62
Texu We~Jey•n 88, Mulelta 112
Malone IS. Lake Erie 39
WrlaH ~ 74, ln•Mna Tech o~:a

-$1.99
IICMMIEII21·
&amp;LLIIR9

Saturd", Dec. II
OhloSl at Weeller n Mlchlpn
Bowln1 GMen at You~~tlowa 5I
Jllffil!'l Madill• at Kent St
Ofllo Un 1\1 at Bot!&amp; On Unlv
Willner at Clnel.-cl St
Central Florida al Da)'aGn
Mhklf" TennNIII!e at Wr11111 Sl
Air Fon..,. at Xavier
RaldWtft.Wallate at " 'IUenber1
Mu!lklnpm at Capital
otkrbelnat He I delberr
Moulll: V•lon .. Ohio Nor*l'.rn
WllmlnPea id Marietta
AMhland at Chrlett«&lt; (W Va)
Ct!ntra.l 1M at Gannon (Pa)
Dellanee 111 OakLind (Michl

Edlllboro (P•l at DJke
JoN! Car roll al Euler a Michl ran
Emory (Ga) at Caae Reflcrve
Penn St· Rehrcnd at Obr rlln
lllram at Ohio We!llt&gt;)'an
WoOllier Ill Haverfon:l (Pa)
tlndlar at Ce darvllle
Cinl.i• ... l Bible .al Rio Grande

Urbana .a Tlfftn

Miami at Cartier Claule
1\kron Mc:O.Mhh CIMJIIe

Denison Ill RedCI•sle
Plo•er Chulic

Malo~

Blnffton lnvltatlon'!.l

For Your
Complimentary Vote
in the November
8th Election

EMMOGENE HOLSTEIN CONGO
MEIGS COUNn IECOIDEI

Pd. tor by Candidate, Collece Rd. , Syracuse, Ohio

WI ,..,..WMIMMIT•
Dolr'f Queen• store'S ore proud sponsors of th9 C1'1I Idren 's M1roe1e Ne~1k
Telethon which benefltslocol.hospltals lo r children

NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, ·OHIO

1

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Monday. November 28, 1988

Pomeroy-Mkk!leport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middlepot:t, Ohio

Monday, November 28, 1988

-

Trail Blazers move closer to
top of' division' .after ·~ictory

.
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"HOME BANK·
FOR •

HOME PEOPLE"

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By United Press International
The Trail Blazers managed to
make Golden State's big inen
seem smal1er in the second half
Sunday night, helping Poriland
pull within a game and a half of
the Pacific dlvision·leading Los
1\ngeies La kers.
Clyde Drexler tallied 29 points
In helping Portland improve to
7·5 with a 109-94 victory over the
Warriors, who slipped to 5· 7.
The Warriors held a 53·50
halftime advantage with the help
of 14 points' from both 7 toot 4
Ralph Sampson and Winston
Garland, b\lt watched it slip
away shdrtly after a 55-54 early
second-half lead.
Manute Bol, who used his 7 foot
6 frame to block 5 shots, helped
clog the lane in the first half for
· Golden State.
Po.rtland then got 6 points from
Kevin Duckworth and four each
from Drexler and Terry Porter to
take a lead it never relinquished.
''Those guys (Sampson and
Bol) look about 11 and 12-foot
apiece," said Drexler.
Jerome Kersey scored 21

Cavaliers 109, Heat 80
At Richfield, Ohio, Ron Harper
scored 26 points to help Cleveland
"I tho~Jght we played much overcome a 14-point, firstbetter, particularly in the second quarter deficit and deny the
half," said Portland Coach Mike expansion Heat their first tri·
Schuler. "That's a very difficult umph. Brad Daugherty 11nd
team to play because of their big Larry Nance each scored 17
guys."
.
points for Cleveland, 8·3. Miami,
Golden State was led by 0-10, was led by Grant Long with
Garland with 18 points and Mitch 14 points.
Miami scored the first 8 points
Richmond wlth 17.
"A big key was Kersey's and stretched its lead to 26-12
three-point play at the end of the with 3:35 left in the first period.
third quarter," said Golden State The Heat led 32·2~ at the end ot
Coach Don Nelson. "We had the the quarter as Cleveland hit only
momentum and would have 8 otits first21tleld goal attempts.
finished up (the third quarter)
Miami took a 42·30 lead when
just six behind but that made 11 Anthony Taylor went in for a
nine (81-72) ."
driving layup and Nance was
The Blazers did an excellent called for goaltendlng. But the
job of shu ttlng down Golden Cavaliers then . scored 15
State's Chris Mullin, who scored · straight, 5 of them .bY Harper, to
only 8 points. Two weeks ago he t@ke the lead for goed.
scored 42 points against Portland
Cleveland led 47-46 at the half
and entered Sunday night's game and bulit its lead to 78·64 in the
averaging 25,4 points per game.
third quarter. Both coaches
In Sunday's other game, Cleve· started wholesale substitutions
land overcame a slow start for a and Miami turnovers helped the
109-80 triumph pver the Miami Cavaliers outscore the Heat 31-16
Heat.
in the final ·period.
points and Duckworth and Porter
each tal lled 18 in the effort.

MEMBER FDIC
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period action of Sunday's game. The Cavaliers
won the game, 109-80. UPI

SEJKALY DRIVES- Rony Seikaly, center for
the Miami Heat, drives to t~e hoop in second

Bears in playoffs after 16-0
· ·victory; ·Jets triumph, 38-34
1

·'

By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
The Buffalo Bills felt like
second-best Sunday;despite haV·
ing a playoff spot sealed and the
best record in the AFC.
,
The Bengals clubbed the Bills
35·21 In a Cincimiatl showdown
matching the conference's best
teams. The loss dropped AFC
East Winners Buffalo to 11-2,
while the Ben gals improved their
AFC Central-leading record to

'.

10-3.
The Chicago Bears became the
NFC's first playoff team Sunday,
blanking Green Bay 16·0 to
match the Bliis with the best
record in the league. The Bears·
'victory was costly, however,
because they lost quarterback
Mike Tomczak and top pad
rusher Richard Dent with
injuties.
'
.
The Bengals have yet to clinch
a playoff spot, but, barring a

Hannan Trace, North Gallia
post non-league triumphs
Senior Tim Brumfield led aif
scorers with 21 points in pushing
Hannan Trace to an 82-53 win
over host Ironton St. Joe. Satur·
day night:
'
"We were very sluggish early,
and we couldn't lose St. Joe until .
the fourth quarter," said HT
mentor Mike Jenkins, who
watched his charges lead by six
at the end of the first quarter,
only to lose a point off their
advantage at halftime. "We'll
have to be a little more intense
against Southwestern (the Wild·
cats play them Tuesday night),
or we'll be in trouble," Jenkins
added.
"We played our· bench ex len·
siveiy that night," Jenkins said,
pointing out that sophomore
guard J .J. Bevan, who played
three quarters in the preceding
reserve game, came off the pine
to score 16 points, though he
played in half of the varsity
game.
HANNAN TRACE (82)- Tim
Brumfield 7-0-7-21; J.J. Bevan
7·0·2·16; Richie Cornell 5·0·1·11;
Bill Bailey 3-0·2-8; Craig Rankin
3·0·2-8; Brad Cremeens 2·1·0-7;
Charlie Wood 1-0-4-6; Sec n Cald·
weil1·0·3·5. TOTALS- 29-1·21·82
Field-goal shooting - 30·65
(46.2 percent)
Foul shooting - 21·42 (50
percent)
Rebounds - 41 (Cornell, 10)
Assists -19
Steals -17
Turnovers - 15
IRONTON ST. JOE (53)
Fuller J.J-2·13; Smith 5·0·2·12;
Bryant 1·1·2·7; Brown 1·1·0·5;
Niese! 2-0·1-5; Woods 2-0-1-5;
Rawlins 1·0·2-4; Cooke 1·0·0·2.
TOTALS - 14-$-10·53
Fleld·JOal shooting - 19·64
(29.7 percent)
Foul shooting - 10·22 (45.5
percent)
Rebounds ...., 28
Score by quarters
Hannan Trace .18 14 18
32-8822Ironton St. Joe .. 12 15
12 14-53
Pirates 75 Northwest 71
North GalUa 'picked up Its
second w!n of the year with a
75-71 verdict. over hOst MeDer·
matt Northwest Saturday night.

•

-"

"We got behind early again,
but we made some adjustments,
got the ball to (Rusty) Denney
and (Don) Mays inside in the
second half and got clutch free
throws late in the game from
Greg Glassburn, " said Bruce
Wilson, North Gailla' s head
coach.
"We knew they (Northwest)
were going to be physical inside,
and they crashed the boards,"
Wilson said. Wilson went on to
mention that Mays and Denney
controlled the Mohawkf J.R.
Listen, who scored 12 of his
game-high 24 points in the first
quarter, from the second quarter
on.
•'In the second half, we pressed
them and went to a zone defense,
which they had problems with,"
Wilson said. With Mays and
Denney working the inside, "we
forced them to beat us from
three-point range."
The Pirates will have to · get
over their high over beatit;tg the
Division II Mohawks, b~cause
their first league game is Tues·
day night at Kyger Creek.
NORTH GALLIA (75)- Rusty
Denney 9·0·3-21; Don Mays 8·0·0·
16; Brian Stout 3·1·2-11; Todd
Petrie 1·1·2·7; Benji Blackburn
3·0·0·6; Greg Glassburn 0-1-2-5;
D.J. Hammel 2·0·1-~; Darin
Smith 2·0·0·4. TOTALS- 28·a-10·
75
· Field-goal shoodng- 31-62 (50
percent)
Foul shooting - 10-15 (66.7
percent)
Rebounds - 31 (Mays 10)
Assists- 17 (Stout 6)
Steals- 9 (Glassburn 3)
Turnovers - 17
NORTHWEST (71) - Listen
10-0·4·24; Gambill 5·2·0·16; HOW·
ard 5-0-0-10; Throckmorton 1-2·2· .
10; Brinlnger 3-1-0-9; Burnworth
1·0·0·2. TOTAU- 25-5-6-71
Fieki·IOal shoollng - 30·64
(46.9 percen I)
Foul shoollng - 6-9 {66.7
percent)
Rebounds - 42 {Listen 17)
Slealll- 4
Turnovers - 21
Score by quarters
North Gallia .. 17 18 25 15-75
Norlhwes! ..... 23 16 17 15-71

coUapse, they will enter January
·as one of the Super Bowl
favorites.
''This game put it all up on the
table for everybody to see,''
Cincinnati Coach Sam Wyche
said. "There were two good
football teams out there and
today we were the better team. I
hope we see them again in the
playoffs."
Rookie fullback Ickey Woods
ran for 129 yards and three
touchdowns and veteran· half·
back James Brooks gained 93
yards and scored twice to stun
Buffalo's tough defense. Cincln·
nat! gained 455 yards.
"That's the best offense we've
played agains.t all season," Bill
defensive end Art Stlli · said.
"They're rated No. 1 In the NFL
and we found out why.
"We had a lot of problems
trying to stop them. You couldn't
ask for a better pair of running
backs than they have. When you
add in a great quarterback and
an offensive line that is l)ig and
aggressive and just explodes off
the ball, you've got a ' total
offense. You have to play almost
above your best to beat them.
Today, we were far below our
best."
In a duel of the AFC's top two
quarterbacks, Boomer Esiason
completed 18 of 25 passes for 238
yards and a touchdown while
Buffalo's Jim Kelly hit 24 of 35
passes for 265 yards.
··
The Bears had little trouble
with the Packers Sunday at
Chicago, but were worried about
their fu lure after the game. They
are down to their third quarterback, Jim Harbaugh, and Dent
might be lost for the season.
Jets 38, Dolphins 34
At East Rutherford, N.J., Ken
O'Brien, replaced as starting
quarterback two weeks . ago,
returned to throw two fourth·
quarter touchdown passes and
lead the Jets.

By Untied Press International
Even the gentle breezes of
Hawaii can't mellow Jerry
Tarkanian.
The volatile coach of Nevada·
Las Vegas barely avoided ejec·
tlon Saturday night as No. 6
Oklahoma edged the No. 7 Rebels
83·81 In a semifinal of the Maul
Classic.
Before an overflow crowd of
3,500 in Lahaina, Maul, William
Davis scored 19 points and the
Sooners advanced to the cham·
plonship game against No. 2
Michigan, which beat Memphis
State 79· 75 in the other semifinal.
in the consolation round, Van·
derbllt overpowered Host Chami·
nade 94· 70 and Ohio State beat
DePaul 72-70.
Davis put back a missed shot
by Stacey King for the winning
basket with 1: 38 remaining.
Davis sank four free throws in
the first half when Tarkan Ian
was whistled for a pair of
technicals. Tarkanlan had to be
held back on !;E!veral occasions
by assistants as he was threatened with ejection for complain-'
ing on the sidelines.
After his final basket, Davis
missed the front end of a 1-and-1,
and a held bali gave UNLV
possession and a chance to force
overtime. Trapped at the top of
the key with time running out,
freshman Anderson Hunt drove
to the middle and threw up a
desperate underhand layup that
bounced off the top of the
backboard and was called dead
by officials with two seconds
remaining.
"Our kids played their bu Its
off," Tarkanlan said. ~J' his was
a real tough bail game fo~ us."
Glen Rice scored 29 points to
lead Michigan Into the title .g ame
against Oklahoma. With Mem·
phis State trailing 77-74, Elliot
Perry took a 3-point shot that
bounced off the back of the rim
before he was fouled. Perry
converted on the front end of a
two-shot foul and missed the
second shot after a Memphis
timeout. Michigan's Sean Hig·
gins was f~uled on the play and he
sank both attempts to ·c ap the
scoring,
Elsewhere in the Top 20 Satur·
day , No. 1 Duke trounced The
Ci tadei 93·52, No. 4 Georgetown
routed Hawaii-Pacific 95-55, No.
5 Illinois downed lliinois·Chicago
85-59, No. 9 Iowa defeated
McNeese State 77·56, Southern
lllinois surprised No. 12 Vllian·
ova 102·81, No. 14 Florida topped
Alaska-Anchorage 83-72, No. 19
North Carolina State humbled
Columbia 110·54 and Kansas
State beat No. 20.Purdue 81·77.
Danny Ferry scored 18 points .
and Duke's pressure defense

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MEIGS

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BOYS

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BOYS

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Nov. 29-Southem-Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia-Away

Rawll•t•
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GIRLS

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Nov. 28-Southern-Away
Dec. 1-North Gallio-Home

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SOUTHERN

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BOYS

992-6661

Nov. 29-Eastern-Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek-Home

INST AUMENT
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Nov. 28-Eastern-Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek-Away
Dec. 5-Meigs-Away
.'·

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:Jim CObb

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-----------------BOYSSCaEDULE-----------------

Sales &amp; Service

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

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614-992-5141

GIRLS

992·3077

992-6144

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f

Nov. 25-'Athens .................... :..... Away
Dec. 2-Miller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York ............ Away
Dec. 16-Wellston ...................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co...................... Away
Dec. 30-Logan ..................... :...... Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. 6-Aiexander .......... :............. Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ AY!IY
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville-York ............. home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co..................... Home
Feb. 3-Belpre ............................. Away
Feb. 7-Alexander ....................... Horrie
Feb. 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·S9150YS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Miller ........................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ...................... Home
Dec. 2-North Galli a .................... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 13-Kyger Creek ...........:....... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-Southarn ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Galli a.................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath.......... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28-Miller ........................... Home
· Feb. ]-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg Cath ........... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
Nov. 29-Eastern ........ :................ Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Dec. 9--Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ........... ...... Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ............................ Away
Jan. 6-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gilllipolis :....................... Away
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Galli a................... Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill ......................,. Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Home

LUMBER·
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555 PARK ST.

·MIDDLEPORT
" 992-6611

(RU:IIS~ :
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Dec. 1-Miller·Away
Dec. 5-Southern-Home

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'tENTRAL

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LlnLEDAN
'EXXON

Dec. 2-Miller-Home
Dec. 9-Trimble-Home

d

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Schedules

Qsmet

992-6333

held ·the Bulldogs scoreless for lead Southern Illinois past Villan·
eight minutes late in the first half ova in a semifinal of the San Juan
at Durham, N.C. Reserve John Shootout. The 6-foot-5 junior
Smith scored 7 of his 11 points to transfer scored 8 of the first 10
spark a 15-6 Duke run at the start points of the second half.
Dwayne Davis, subbing at
of Jhe second half to open a 57·30
center for suspended Dwayne
advantage.
,
At Honolulu, Dikembe Mu· Schintzius, scored 21 points and
tombo scored 14 points and Jarin grabbed 12 rebounds at AnchorJackson 12 to spark George- age, Alaska, to pace the Gators,
town's rout on the final day of the ' who dropped a .73-58 decision to
Hawaii Loa Thanksgiving Clas· California Friday night. The
sic. Johnny Young had 21 points Seawolves led 31-28 at the half
for Hawaii Pacific, which trailed and took a 35·30 advantage before
Davis scored off an alley-oop to
54-31 at the half.
.
Ken Battle scored 18 points to trtgger a 10·0 spurt.
lead five Illinois players In
Chris Corchiani scored 17
double figures at Champaign. points and handed out9 assists to
Coach Lou Henson substituted pace the Wolfpack at Raleigh,
freely after lllinots opened a 44·18 N.C. North Carolina State
halftime bulge. Steve Bardo boasted a 52-26 advantage off the
added 13 points and Kendall Gill boards and sank 9 of 15 3-point
attempts.
12.
At Manhattan, ·Kan., Steve
At Bayamon, Puerto Rico,
Freddie McSwain scored 17 of h!s Henseon scored a career-high 26
24 points after intermission to points.

.,
-0

·Thit
Week'1

SYRACUSE OFFICE '

Oklahoma edges No. 7 Rebels
in semifinals of Maui Classic
I

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MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB-B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

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FOR BREAKfAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

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·Drhte·Thru
Mon.·Thu... I A.M.-11 P.M.
FrL. Sat. I A.M.-12 P.M.
·sundly7A.M.·11 P.M.

eel w. Mlin StNtt Pomeroy
912•2067
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Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5~Southern .....,.................. H~ome
Dec. 8-Trimble ..................... :..... Away
Dec. 12~NelsoAville·York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston .:..................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 21-Easter.n ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York. :........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ................ ,...... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking............... Away
Feb. 11-Southem .•:.................... Away

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL .
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ............... _. .. Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-'Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17 -Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................ Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble.......................... Away
Jan. 12-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 19-0ak Hill ........................ Home
Jan. 23-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home
Feb. 6-Symmes Valley ................ Away

..

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
198B-B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Dec. 5-Meigs ............................. Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec'. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastem .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ............... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 3D-Waterford .....................·Home
Feb. 2-;-Hannan Trace ................. Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................. AwaY
Feb. 11-Meigs ........................... Home

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.'
Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'!

' 'I think third a nd fl .probably
\IS , " said
lbbs, who
surpised
I
saw his team's ch nces for a
return trip to the Super Bowi
virtually die with Byner's touchdown scamper. '-'We actually had
a blitz on. We had an odd front
and everything, which should
have been good, really, against
the draw ."
Byner, who only rushed five
times for 44 yards, said he was
just trying to get Cleveland four
more downs.
"All I was thinking about was

Was!!ington~

the first down, but atter I broke 100-yard plus runn ing day.
•Washington's defense .
the first tackle, I was thinking, , .:;we resolved to run this
" We went with a one-back
'Just run as fast as you can to the game. " Byner said. "We re ally formation probably more today
goal line. • ' '
needed to In order to have a little than we have all s'!!ason," he
The Browns were successful • more (offensive) punch and take said. ''It forced them to make the
running against the Redsklns, the pressure off Big K. "
safeties cover a receiver and that
-amassing 158 yards on 31 carries.
Cleveland ilght end Ozzle New- opened up the r11nnlng lanes and
Kevin Mack rushed for ll6 yards ' some said the running game was gave the backs more running
on 22 carries for only his ninth effectlve·because they spread out room.''

-~
SIFT
WRAPI'III8
TISSUE PAPER

• ioiWIE FEEl'
ltiiiR-.IIIIIff1r

TRIM-UIFT
STICIC-1111
lltiWS

1/MI/fiJ

~100 ~100

Tyson was one of 15 people who
were baptized at the Holiday
Trinity Baptist Churcl). After the
ceremony Tyson told reporters
he believes religion Is going to
change his life.
Tyson wore a long white
sheetlike robe, a matching scarf
cap, and gray socks during the
ceremony. He sang and clapped
his hands to the gospel music.
along wit h ot her church
members, the Cleveland Plain
Dealer reported.
So many people waflted to
attend the service, many had to
sit with the choir at the church,
which Is a former dairy undergoIng a $1 million renovation.
Several religious celebrities
were on hand to witness the
baptism by the Rev. Henry J.
Payden. Payden bent Tyson
backward and slid him Into the
3-foot-deep waters of the bap,
tlsmal font.
Jad:aon brought . his sons.
Jes~ Jr. ~ Jos he 'fait like a
proud father.
• •a feel wonderful about this,"
said King. " It Is justmagnlflcent
that he has round Jesus, has been
baptized and reborn again. I feel
so happy."

-.,rj_~'""-'"~-~-..,.---il~------- - - - --~.~ - - - ~-----~--- -~------ NLoDI:Iay,.__Ncwanber_2J6_,_jlS_
Page- 7

John Rice:

Drought's full effea may not be evident yet

proved, a board of 15 corn
producers and the Director of
Agrlcu lture will administer the
program. Money collected by the
program Is Intended for activ l~
ties that enhancefthe use of corn
and corn products . This would
Include market development,
r e se a r c h , promotion and
education.
. - - - - -- -- - - - --

Have a set of carefully thought
manliKe behavior, whatever
potential shortage and have a
lions. Refusing to allow ·an
out
rules
,
go
over
them
with
the
form it may take, will not be
plan to deal with lt. U It's going to
acquaintance or member of the
hunter,
enforce
them,
.and
withtolerated.
mean borrowing money to buy
local community to hunt can lead
Com Referendum
draw
hunting
privileges
!rom
feed, alert your credliors now. to a disruption of community
'
who
Ohio
corn farmers will vote In
violators.
Each
landowner
Drought relief postponed the The overall decline In pro!ltabll·
harmony and bad feelings . AI·
grants
permission
will
need
to
mid-December
on whether or not
Inevitable for dairy farmers. But lty mean you' re going to have to
lowing a stranger to hunt my lead
to fund corn promotion and
by the end of 1989 they will be do things better.
to. new friends and could result In have his own set of rules .
1. Have It understood that all
research.
That could mean selling the opening up new opportunities to
facing lower profits, says an Ohio
New Doctors Discovery
game
laws
will
be
obeyed.
The proposed corn referendum
State University agricultural least profitable cows inothe herd. you. For example, you might be
would -deduct a half-cent per
- 2. Make sure that hunting and
Two-Thirds of Ohio's 1988 Tree
ecoilomlst.
able to trade pheasant hunting
gun
safety
rules
are
followed.
bushel of corn sold. Ballots for
Plantings Died
· Federal drought relief ellml·
for grouse hunting or vice-versa.
3.
Don't
allow
drinking
or
those
the
vote are available from
Based on a recent survey, If you are . suffering animal or
nated expected cuts In milk price
under
the
influence.
of
alcohol
to
·
county
Extension office, the Ohio
supports, Gary Schnltkey says. nearly all Christmas tree-grow- bird damage to crops, hunting
hunt.
'
Department
of Agriculture and
,
For the time being, that helps the ers in Ohio suffered losses due to can help alleviate this situation.
4.
Clearly
state
how
you
wish
other
farm
organizations.
Baldairy industry stay profitable this year's drought. However," II
Suppose that after considering
gates and fences handled; leave
lots must be mailed to the ODA In
even with high feed costs. But It appears the growers' troubles the pros and .cons, you are still
open If found open, shut If found
Columbus, postmarked no later
may not last. The effect of the wlll have little effect on tree willing to allow others to hunt on
shut, fences are not for climbing,
than Dec. 16.
drought will catch up In late 1989 buyers, at least In 1988.
your property. What can you do
Voters must be Ohio residents
et c.
The majority of growers des~
and early 1990. Schnitkey expects
to Insure that such permission
'Lazy Wily' to Lose Weight
5. Plainly mark and show the and must have produced or
a 10-percent to 20-percent decline cribed the drought's effect as will not cause problems? One
AII'Ndy Sweeping U.S.
marketed corn between Sept. 1,
safety zone around houses and
In cash Income on dairy farms by moderate or severe. Those rething to keep In mind Is that
buildings
"Safety
Zone".
1987,
and
Dec.
16,
1988
..
A
simple
sponding
reported
losing
neatly
BEVERLY
HILLS, CA (Special)the end of 1989.
under Ohio's law, a landowner
6.
List
the
species
which
may
majority
or
favorable
votes
is
all
two-thirds
of
this
spring'
s
plant~
An
amazing
new
weight loss pill called
who gives permission to someone
The drought's effect on cash
be
hunted
and
those
you
want
left
that
Is
required
for
the
measure
''fat-magnet"
has
recently been devel·
lngs
to
the
hot,
dry
weather.
now may not have been felt yet.
to hund on his land withou I
alone.
to
pass.
oped
and
perfected
by two prominent
Overall,
loss
of
1988
plantings
charge Is exempt from liability.
Next summer many farmers
·
7.
Make
11
clear
that
unsportsIf
Ohio's
referendum
Is
apdoctors
at
a
world
famous
hospital in
at
64
percent.
It
was
reported
may have to purchase addlilonal
Of course, you must make sure
Los
Angeles
that
reportedly
"guaranappears
the
loss
onpine
and
outright hazards are guarded or
feedsduetoreducesfeedinvent~
tees"
you
steady
fat
loss
and
calorie
rles . And at tbe same time, milk spruce species was about the explained.
,
reduction
by
simply
taking
their
tested
same, while firs suffered slightly
In addition, there are several
prices may begin to decline.
and
proven
new
pill
.
steps you can take to Insure that
The milk price support may worse.
TlieU.S. gCNenunenthasjustapprovThe Public Employee Retirees changes In the medicar e
drop next . at the beginning of Tips On Granting Permission To you and the hunters have a
ed
the doctors claims for a hard-to-get
program.
Inc.
Chapter
will
meet
Thursday,
Hunt
mutual understanding of what
1990. Congress has reduced the
patent
that confirms "there has never
Members
and
guests
are
urged
Dec.
·1,
at
1
p.m.,
at
the
Grace
The 1988 hunting season Is can and cannot be done. Mark
price regularly since 1981 when
been anything like their fat~ bonding pill
to
attend.
Parking
is
available
In
Episcopal
Church
on
East
Main
the price was $13.10 per hundred getting Into full swing with your property boundaries.
process before." It is a totally new major
the rear of the old Jurtlor high
pounds. Scheduled price cuts for squirrel, deer , and ra bblt. Those
Interview each applicant for St . ln Pomeroy.
scientific
breakthfilugh and is revoluschool with an entrance In the
Guest speakers Include Carl E.
January 1989 were eliminated by owning property are bound.to be hunting permission yourself.
tionizing
tbe
weight loss industry.
rear of hte church.
the drought relief legislation. asked by someone for permission This is an Import responsibility Janes, president or Ohio PERI
\On
Can
"Eat Normally"
VIrgil BroW!!. local president,
to hunt. The following tips may and offers you the chance to get and representatives from Aetna
The price Is now $10.60.
Best
of
all,
"you can continue to
Feed supplies will be shortest help you to decide:
to know the hunter and to explain Insurance Co. of Columbus. who . stated that this meeting is very eat your favorite..foods and you don't
Important and a one-time chance
Why should you allow someone your rules. Make It clear that wlll speak on the subject of long
and highest-priced just before
have to change your norll)al eating
to
hear the experts.
permission Is being given only term extetlded care and recent
the 1989 harvest That's when the to hunt on your property? Grant·
habits. You can start losing fat and
lng permission may help to · for the person named on the
milk price should drop.
reduce calories from the very first day.
written permit.
You better be aware or the maintain good community rela·
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desire without exercising".
Flushes Fat Out of Body
mUk;
on
Wednesday,
toea
salad
Menus for schools In the
The
new pill is aj&gt;propriately called
with
corn
chips,
peas,
fruit
and
Eastern Local School District
the
"fat-magnet"
pill because it breaks
milk;
on
Thursday,
chicken
have been announced.
into
thousands
of
panicles.
each acting
patty,
baked
beans,
fruit
and
There will not be school on
MONDAY .
p.m. Thursday. A gift exchange dents wishing poinsettias, may Monday . On Tuesday the menu milk; and on Friday, fish, peas, 1ike a tiny magnet, "attracting" and
trapping many times its size in undi RUTLAND - The Rutland will be held. Men are to bring contact Jason Black, Ohio Dis- will consist of chill, peanut butter fruit and mill&lt;.
gested
lilt particles. Then, alhhetrapped
trict governor, at 742-2501, or sandwich, relish tray, fruit and
Garden Club will meet Monday men's gift. Ladles bring ladles'
fat and calories are naturally "flushed"
Debbie Musser. advisor, at
at 7:30p.m . at the home of Neva gift. $6 limit on gifts.
right out of your body because they
992-2158.
Nicholson.
cannot be absorbed .
SATURDAY
Within 2 days you should notice a
SALEM CENTER - Star Parade
TUESDAY
New officers were elected at their Christmas parly on Dec. 13 change in the color of your stool. caused
MIDDLEPORT MiddleCHESHIRE - Gallia- Melgs Grange 778 and Star Junior
the recent meeting of the Mt, at 7 P-'ll at the parsonage. The by' the fat panicles being eliminated .
Community Action Agency free Grange 878 will meet In regular port's annual Christmas parade Moriah Church or God held at the church Christmas play will be
"Automatically" Lose Fat
clothing day "Will be Tuesday, 9 session Saturday at 8 p.m. at the will take place on Monday, Dec.
presented on Dec. 18 at 7 p.m.
According toone ofthe inventors. Dr.
church.
a.m. to 12 noon, at the "old high grange hall on County Road 1 5, at 6:30p.m . Present plans call
William Shell. bean specialist and
Elected were Hedy Lauder- with the public being Invited.
for the parade to start at the mllt, president; Tessie Wolfe,
near Salem Center.
school building In Cheshire.
Prayer requests opened the a&gt;sociatc professor of medicine at
The subordinate baking, youth Sears parking lot ·and end at the vice president; Anna Wolfe, meeting. Icy Tucker read scrip- UCLA medical school, "the new fatPOMEROY - XI Gamma Mu baking and young marrieds and T. All individuals and organlza~ · secretary-treasurer ; Patsy ture from Psalms. Final plans bonding process is a " lazy way" to
Sorority meeting and "Do Your adults baking contests will be lions wishing to parilclpate a r~ to
Laudermllt, flower chairman; were made for serving meals to lose weight because the pills alone
"automatically" reduce calories b~
call Kim Blower at 992-5141.
· ·
Own Thing Auction" will -be held.
deer hunters Monday through
and Ailsa Findley, reporter.
.. . ... '
eliminating
dietary lilt. It is 100% safe
Tliesday: 7r30·p:m:, at the l'iome .., A: potluck supper will follow thl!"
Holiday activities were dis· Friday from 10 a .m to 6 p.m at the
and
not
a
drug."
Open house planned
or Johnanna Shuler. Members meeting.
.
cussed with the women to have parsonage.
The fat-magnet pill s arc already
All members are urged to
POMEROY - The annual
are reminded to bring Watkins
sweeping the country with glowing
attend and reminded that It Is holiday open house of the Meigs
orders.
'
reports of weight loss from former!~
Museum will be held Dec. 3and4.
time to pay 1989 dues.
&lt;werweight
people in all walks of lite
THURSDAY
who
are
now
slimmer. trimmer and
Panglo.
ron
Hunter meals
RUTLAND - Rutland Town- Clvllan club
Honor roll for the Rejoicing
more
aurJctivc
again.
Flflh graders: Tracy Shaffer.
RACINE - The Ladles Auxil- Life Christian School in MiddlePOMEROY -The Meigs Junship Trustees will meet in reguNow
Available
to the Public
lar sesson Thursday, 6:30 p.m .•. Ior Civitan Club wlll be selling Iary of Mt. Moriah Church of port for the first six weeks Shawn Rice, Todd Davis.
If
you
are
trying
to
lose 20, 50, 100
·
Sixth graders: Melissa Pierce,
at the fire station. The public Is poinsettias during the next few God, Racine, will be serving hot grading period has been
pounds
or
more,
you'
can order your
Jason Panglo, Mandy Jones,
weeks. All- proceedss will go meals for hunters, Monday announced.
welcome.
.
supply of these "no~risk " highly su e~
toward various projects lnclud- · through Friday, 10a.m. to6p.m.,
Making a grade of B or above In Ryan Dodson, Jessica Cochi'an,
cessful fat-magnet pills directly from the
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline lng Chfldrens Hospital, _Special in the basement of the church all their subjects to be listed on Joey Barrett, Emily As beck, and doctors' exclusive manufacturer only
parsonage. All hunters welcome. the honor roll were the following Kristen Torres.
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern Olympics, travel expenses, etc.
(includes optional calorie-reduction
Seventh grade: .Deanna
Any area businesses or
reslStar, Middleport,_wlll meet 7:30
plan for even bener results). Send $20
students.
.
First graders: Max Brat ton, Boothe.
for a 90pill supply ( +$3 handling). or
Children of ·the kindergarten $35 for a 180pillsupply( +$3h'llldling),
Ashlee Vaughan, Janna Boring,
quallflng
to be listed on the honor
to: Fat-Magnet, 9016 Wilshire Blvd.,
Tawny Jones, Candace Werry,
roll
were
Chaslde
Biggs, Zachary
Dept. W705, Beverly Hills, CA 90211.
Joshua Jones, Joseph McCall.
Bolin, Tara Boothe, Margie Brat- (UnconditWIIOI muney-/lllck guaranand Tiffany Richmond .
marketed by Sonoco Products
Horse falls Into septic lank:
out.
Second grader.s: Rachel ton, Adam Bullington, Benjamin tee if no/100% satisfied.) Visa,
Inc .. of Hartsville, S.C., a major
CASTRO VALLEY , Call!.
MasterCard and Amencan Express
Forbes, Audra Gaul, Jacque Call, Caleb Jones, Alicia Kersey,
marketer of plastic bags for Hall, Stephanie Jones, and Ra~ Jenny Long, Rose Schrock, OK . (Send card number, expire date.
I UP I) -Firefighters and anilnal
Uquor and plastic don't mil&lt; :
grocery stores.
Debby Searles, Cassandra and signature.) For fastest service for
lovers teamed with a backhoe
CHAPEL HILL. N.C. iUPil chel Panglo.
,
M. Drew Case, product manoperator to rescue an Arabian Liquor md plastic don't mix with
Third graders: · Joshua Dod· Vaughan, Brandon Werry, credit card orders ONLY call anytime
horse that felllntoa septic tank, a drinkers frequenting stores that ager for the company's commer- soil, Tara Davis, Sue Ellen Isaiah Keebler, Beatrice Mor- 24 hours , toll free 1(800) 527-nlll,
ext. W705.
' F·M IIIII~
messy kind of a job that had are packaging their booze In bags cial development division, said Barnhart. Steven Rice, and Aa- gan, and Budd Smith.
the
company
would
address
the
everyone holding their noses.
other than paper.
"II was pretty foul," said Capt.
Twelve of the 150 stores In complaints if it decides to market
Dave~ Tibbets - or the Castro
North Carollna's Alcoholic ·Bev- the -bags-after the tesi. - "What yo_u see is not the final
Valley Fire Department.
erage Control system are experiJudy Martin lost the most
product,"
he said. "We still feel
Tibbets coordinated the rescue
menting with plastic rather than
weight
at the Monday night Five
can
be
filled
In
60
the
bags
or Reine , an 11-year-old gray paper bags, and paper seems to
Points
class
of Slinderella. At the
percent
of
the
time
I
!"takes
to
fill
Arabian that sUpped lntothe5- by be the favorite, the News and
·
Tuesday
night
Mason class,
a
paper
one,
and
we
can
change
9-foot sewage tank Saturday Observer reported Sunday.
Janice
Reltmire
lost the most
the
color
or
tint
to
solve
the
while the horse's owner, Suzanne
"The clerks don' I like them
weight
and
Lois
Ann Reitmlre
see-through
complaints."
Chase, was taking the animal !or because they slow them down ,
was
runner-up.
Jo Ann Newa ·morning strolL
and the customers aren 't acceptsome
Is
lecturer.
"I thought we were going to Ing them too welieither," saldM .
have to shoot her," Chase said.
Benton Efland , who manages
"It's amazing she didn' t break a ABC liquor stores In Or~nge
County.
leg."
'
Barbara J. Thorton, a general
Tibbets said the horse'sforeleg
sank Into the sticky black muck manager of ABC stores In
and the animal panicked, driving Greensborp, said her customers
Itself deeper Into the pit.
are dissatisfied because a plastic
Four firefighters, a backhoe bag does not conceal its contents.
operator and workers from the "They just wanted It In plain
Society for the Prevention of brown wrappers," Thorton said.
Cruelty to Animals worked In the
Wililam Hester. administrator
stench for two hours to free the
of the state Alchollc Beverage
&amp;
horse .
Control
Commission.
said
hls
Chase held her nose as she kept
group has delegated the purthe horse's head above sewage.
chase
of store materials, Includ"She kept struggling to get
Ing
bags,
to local boards. But he
out," Chase said. "I held her
has
heard
the complaints.
head up so she wouldn't drown."
"Some people just don't want
The backhoe was used to crush
a slab of concrete that was other people to see what they
partially blocking the hole, ena- bought,"· said Hester.
The bags are being testbling workers to nrag the horse
By John C. Rice
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture

PERI meers Dec. 1

Menu announced for scpool

Community calendar

Mt. Moriah elects officers.

KOSAR SACKED -Washington Redskin defensive end Dexter
Manely (72) sakes Cleveland quarterback Bernie Kosar during
second half action. Ko"ff' was sacked six times during the Sunday
game. Cleveland defeated Washi!Jtr&amp;on 17·13. UPI

~...

Honor roll announced

1.100

'

CHLDRASEI'TIC
StJIIE THROAT
SPRAY

MYLANTA

'~- lllf

11 Ol. III1T7lE

LltiiiiD

ANTACID

REIJUIAR OR CHERR'f

39

Tyson baptized
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Heavy~
weight boxing champion Mike
Tyson was baptized Sunday
during a three-hour service attended by Rev . Jesse Jackson.
After the ceremony, Tyso11 said
he felt " clean, pure and reborn."

The Daily Sentinel

8 The Bend

Weight Loss PJII
Approved for
U.S. Govt Patent

Bengals
roll past·
Buffalo
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Rookie
lckey Woods rushed for 129 yards
and scored three touchdowns to
pace the Cincinnati Bengals to a
35-21 victory over the Buffalo
Bills In Sunday's match up of the
top two te11ms In the American
Conference.
Cincinnati, 10-3, remained
alone atop the AFC Central
division by · one game over
Houston . The Bengals have a
showdown game against the
Oilers In two weeks.
Buffalo; 11·2, had a sevengame winning streak snapped,
but the Bllls have already
clinched the AFC Eastern divIsion title.
'
Woods, who carried 26 times,
scored on a pair of 2-yard runs
and a 1-yard run. James Brooks,
who carried 22 times for.93yards,
ad&lt;led a pair of scores pn a3-yard
run and a 13-yard reception from
Boorne~: Eslason.
In a duel of the American
, Conference's top two quarterbacks, Eslason completed 18of25
passes for 238 yards while ·
Buffalo's Jim Kelly hit 24 of 35
passes for 265 yards . .
Buffalo scored on a pair of
1-yard runs byRobb Riddick and
Kelly's 9-yard pass to Ronnie
Harmon.
The ams trailed 28~71ate ,.,.the
third quarter and rallied to·:ls~21
early In the final period. As
Buffalo was driving for what
could have been a 28-28 tie,
Riddick fumbled with 11:43 left
and Cincinnati's Lewis Billups
recovered at the Bengals' 35. ·
Cincinnati then held the ball
more than nine minutes on a
65-yard march, with Woods scorIng his third TO of the day on a
2-yard run with 2: 19 left to seal
the win.

---

Monday. November 28. 1988

Browns -all but eliminate defending ·champion
who has been a d,efenslveWASHINGTON (UPI) - Alorlented coach for the past 14
though Cleveland Browns Coach
years, decided the best person to
Marty Schottenhelmer has been
rm the position was himself.
under constant criticism this
season !or his playcalllng, no one • When asked who called the
wlll second-guess his choiCe to
trap, Schot tenhel mer ju s t
run a. trap play in a crucial
smiled. ~
third-down situation Sunday.
"We decided on the trap play
Trailing the Washington Reds- during the time out. We expected
klns 13'10 with 1:56 to play In the
pressure because we were close
fourth quarter, Scbottenhelmer
to a field go_al, " he said. "It
decided to run Earnest Byner on
worked out well."
a trap play on third and five from
Washington Coach Joe Gl bbs
tile .Redsklns' '1:1 :
said he was a little surprised by
Byner broke tackles by linethe call.
backer Ravin Caldwell and free
safety Todd Bowles to score the
game-winning touchdown that
gave Cleveland a 17-13 lead with
1:49 to go.
"We talked abo11t what to run
during the two-mln11te warning,"
said Browns quarterback Bernie
Kosar, who was sacked six times.
"The way I was being pressured
all day, we felt we should run.
Marty Schottenhelmer called the
play and we went with a quick
count. Marty has been under a bit
of criticism for his play calllng.
But that was a great call at a
crucial time."
After offensive coordinator
Lindy Infante left after last
season to become Green Bay's
head coach, Schottenhelmer,

_..._-

Quirks in the news ·

SlindereUa meets

BROOKS ·AIRBORN- Cincinnati's James Brooks goes airborn
an eight-yard run for a first down during fourth
quarter action Sunday. Buffalo's .Ray Bentley makes the tackle.
Final score 35-21 Ben gals win. UPI
at the end· or

RITE ACCEPTS

-Sports briefsGolf
Larry Mlze sank a birdie putt
on the final hole to win the
$743,000 Casto World Open In
Kagoshlma, Japan. Mlze finIshed a stroke ahead of Japan's
Mas a hi Ozaki to take the $135,000
first prize.. .. Mark Calcavecchla
shot a 3-under 69 to win the
$297,500 Australian Open by six
strokes. Calcavecchia, of North
Palm Beach. Fla. , finished at
19-under 269. He left compatriot
Mark McCumber a distant second and Australia's Wayne
Grady In third, seven strokes
behind the leader.

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PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ,

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Play it safe around electricity,
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Call us for a free booklet
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--~-

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

~""

--··

---

-Monday, November 28, 1988

Monday. Novemb8r 28, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.------Peo,ple in the news
By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT

United Press International

CLASSIC FORD

Roy Grueser drove this

antique vehicle In Pomeroy's Christmas parade,
an entry by Rock Sprlnp Grange.
·

THE BUSH LEGACY: Somewhere ln Washing•
ton, homeless men are walking around ln George
Bush's hand-me-down underwear In the spirit of a
kinder and gentler America. Mitch Snyder, whose
efforts on behalf of the homeless ln Washington,
D.C., were the object of a made-for-television
movie, told The Washington Post that his group,
the Community lor creative Non-violence, has
benefited from the Bush legacy.
"Barbara Bush has brought us clothing,
Including her husband's underwear, several
times, visited the shelter and had us over to lunch
with Cabinet wives at the vice president's house to
talk about .the homeless and the hungry," Snyder
· sal d.
Snyder met the tlrst-lady-ta:be through Susan
Baker, wife of Bush's choice for secretary of
state, James Baker, and he hopes that Mrs. Bush
also will be giving hls organization leftovers from
White House dinners. "I've read those menus The
Washington Post prints of those state dinners and
they certainly sound delk:lous," Snyuder said.
"I'm sure the White House kitchen must have
some left over. "
RAMBOMOBILE GOES TO HIGHEST
BIDDER: The Rambomoblle was sold Saturday
for $68,250. Sylvester Stallone's luUy armored
1987 Chevrolet Suburban, which he had built alter
his first "Rambo" · movie," went to -Marvin
Friedman of Miami, who told otllclals at the
Newport Beach, Calif., coUector car auctlon that
he wlll use it to promote his custom car business.
The vehicle has 2-lnch-th!ck shatter-proof glass,
reinforced plating In the floor and sides, a
computerized navigation system, a pollee alarm,
a pllbllc address system, a television, a VCR, a
compact disc player and a telephone. Stallone had
the vehicle created after receiving death' threats
and a spokesman for the actor said he plans to get

TO PLACE AN ·AD CALL 992-2156
MONbAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
''

RATES
0- 15 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

S4.00
$5.00
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1&amp;-25 WORDS
$5 .00
$8 .00
S13 .00
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for e~h rtiiY 111 Sllparate adt .

Public Notice
NOTICE' OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Novombor 9. 1988, In
tho Molgo County Probate
Court, Caaa No. 26981.

Emm• Jane Walton. 626
Mulborl\l Holghto, Pome&lt;oy,
Olilo 46769. w 00 appointed
ExecutriK of the estate of
Kermit L. Walton. doceuod.
late
of 626
Mulberry
Heightt,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
46769.
Robert E. Buck.
Prob1te Judge
Lana K. Nes•lrot~d, Clerk
(11) 14, 21, 28. 3tc

2

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
Ker Heaters

FOREVER AND EVER...AMEN - Several
members of Rock Springs Grange were featured

•

:,·

'

·'

•

.,

CORR~CTION

•.
'

I

TRUE ~ANING OF CHRISTMAS - A huge
truck loaded with many children was the float

·Salvador Dali hospitalized in Spain
FIGUERES, Spain (UPI) • Surrealist painter Salvador Dall
was rushed to a hospital Sunday
.· for an undisclosed aliment, the
artist's personal secretary said.
Dall, 84. has been lnlrallhealth
since 1984. In the last two years
he has lived the life of a recluse ln
a wing of the Dal1 museum of

'

entry of Pomeroy Brownie Troop· 2171 with a
oatlvlty scene featured at the rear of the vehicle.

.

Flgueres, in northern Spain. · ·
''He was rushed to the hospital
late this afternoon, but I can give
you no further details," said
Teresa Brugues, his personal
secretary.
She said doctors at the Flgueres Hospital would Issue a

· Polar bear gets plate in leg'
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) BlIzzard, .an 11- month-old polar
bear, has' a little bounce ln her
step as she goes to Indianapolis
Monday lor a prospective breed~ tng loan.
_
Blizzard tell in to an 18-loot
· moat at the Columbus Zoo Sept.
· 8, breaking her left hind leg ln
two places. .
" Surgeons at the Ohio State
University Veterinary Hospital
placed a stainless steel plate In
her leg. This procedure is com.. mon tor dogs, cats, and horses,
but It Is belleved to the first
· · performed in Ohio on a polar
· bear.
Sometimes steel plates are
r

statement Monday on Dal1's
condition.
Dal1, whose outlandish must·
ache has long been his trademark, has received much of his
medical attention at the museum
annex since he ·was severely
burned at his castle on the coast
of the northern Spanish region of
Catalonia.
In recent years he has been fed
Intravenously, rarely leaving his
bedroom and almost never receiving visitors.
Dall was married to Ru sslanborn Gala lor 40 years until she
died ln 1982.

removed after an animal heals,
but BUzzard Is expected to have
hers the rest of her llle, said Dr.
Marvin Olmstead, head of the
surgical team. He said the plate
Is on the center of the leg bone
where growth does not usually . 1 r-------------,
·occur.
Blizzard, which weighs 200 '
pounds, ls expected to grow into a
norma1600-pound bear.
She spent eight weeks convalescing In an Indoor area at the
Columbus Zoo. and her attending ·
veternarlans and keepers de- ·
clded she was strong enough to
travel.
She ls· behig loaned to the
Indianapolis Zoo, hopefully for
breeding.

. ·'_........

•

,(

-·

Some were good and tome

were bid.
Togothor. yQU and I.
lut I know God always do•
WhM'I b•t.
Thoust~tometlm•

we don't
unil••nd;
He'tl m-":e it cl...- to u• I
know,
Wh.-. w• reach that pro.
mited land.
So, Molh•. you may be
gone tor now,
Bufl know you are at rest;
And whttever He h• for you
up thor•.

PENNISULAR

Will be the very belt.

So I'll go tight on thinking

And ~reaming dreams ol

SUGAR

• Real Estate General

Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic Furnace 1110.00
Blem Batteries
130.00 &amp; Up
Salem Street

Not Pure Sweet
Gran. Sugar·

POMEROY, OHIO

BEAUTIFUL

SHOP AT HOME - SHOP WITH US
•WATCHES •CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS
•Gin ITEMS •GIFT WRAP
"You'll Find Gifts For Everyone!"

fr

POMEROY, OH.
992-2269
NEW LISTING- Really nice
1982 Double Wide, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. deckmg and
many other features. All in
good condition. WANTS
'$34,500.00.

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD- Approx. 80 acres of vacant
ground. Approx. 20 acres tillabl~ All minerals, water and
elec. availabl~ Good hurting
land. ASKING $29,000.00.

COMING ... ONE
DAY ONLY!U
***
"Today's Memories.
.. Tomorrow's
Treasuret"

***

THURSDAY,
DECEMBER 1
'liME:

2 P.M. til 7 P.M.

BunONSand
BOWS
220 1. Main str..t
In P-r•y

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP·
992-6669

271 N. SECOND • MIDDLEPOR!, OH.

..,.:----,_

;,

•HAIR

'~~""'
~":~:•CLOTHES

.\

~-

. •TANS
.

'

lOP OF IHE STAllS
AIID

DESIGNEI BOUTIQUE
Ill Wed Sec~

'-oy

992-6720 .

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

OrNe. Bo~t 1 38, New Haven.

W•t

Virginia,

Wll

IP·

pointed Executor of the

1124 E. MAIN

n·

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
. STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

10-21-'88-1

New NoNs BuHt

''Free Estimates ..

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
SUNDAY CAllS

3-11-tfn

YOUNG'S

GUN SHOOT
RACINE ·
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

- Ad dons •nd remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

-Concrete work
-PiumiMng end electrical
work
(FRE~ ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
ll·W88·tln

·HUDNALL
PlUMBING &amp; HEAliNG

POMEROY - Frame hou~
w~h upper and IO\Olr one bedroom apartments. Good rental
investment! $300.00/mo. po. lent~l income
REDUCED
$12.000.00

HUVDID:
MONDAY,
DECmlll19
TIME:
10 A.M. tllll A.M.

...I

RESIDENCE PHONE
(6141

SER"ICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also O(id boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
' 992-2196
Middleport,

BISSELL
BUILDIRS

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

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY fAlLS
4-16·86-tfn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Henry E. Cleland
992-6191
, Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
' Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
•Jo Hill ..... ......... 985-4466
Office............ ,... 992·2259

Public N alice

~

(H
REALTOR

Located Halfwav
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Service Center for Ryan
Products
8. 7 Financing.on Yardman
Service on All Makes

We Honor

M&lt;/Di~e/Yisa

9·1·18-lfu

FOR s-ALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pameroy, Ohio
2 miles from Rt. 7 on
County Road 26
11-25-'88·1

Foctory Choko
12 Gauge Shoflluns Only
Stri&lt;dy Enforctd

A

Dealer for
YAIDMAJt &amp; ECHO

mo. pd.

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

10·7-tfn

· NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 22. 1 9BB.
In the Mllva County Probate
Court. Cooa No. 21,049.
HtiMI L, Ioxton, n4 Glenwood Drlva, Logon, Ohio
431 38 oppointod Ext·
cutrbc. oft he •mteof Cbrnet
Wllllomoort, diOCOMod, lote
of Solem Str-. Rut..nd,
Ohio 41771 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probeto Judge
Lena K. Ntotolroad, Clark
(11128: (12) 6.'12

Mary, Noami, Jane,
GrtKe, Donna, Angie
and Gwen Folmer

992-3410
LIMESTONE

CHRISTMAS
AT

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP
Come ••• our

Chrlstmat Selections.
for rour shottplng &lt;Onnni•

bt open on Sundays from I to 5 p.m. tlwu
Doc. 11, lUI.

Repairs

"DOC" VAUGHN

742-2421
Smith Run Rd. Rutland, Oh.

11·21-'U-1 110.

H .C . Package. Limit

Tecumteh
•

Weed Eater

Homollto

Jacobian

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio
992-6611
'

l-«&gt;-"87 tin

c.--,.

Rog•&lt;l. . a~
c.1
Nowi 12131 925-11108. • t U
2524.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

TEKAS OIL COMPANY n mll:ure pnon for thDrt trtpw.
~&amp;nrounclng O.lllpolll. Conca
customers. We treln. • • • T.V.
Dlc*.•son. Pr•., louttwe.l•n
Petrottum. Box 911001. ft
Worth. r •. 7e1e1,

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out af

painting. Let mt

It .for you.

1 coupon per customer per

WE PAY '50.00 PER GAME OVER
PEOPLE '65.
PER GAME
Lie.

11·19·'88 I

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

mo.

d.

Announ c~ m~n I~
3 Announcements
We wHI Mul ooal for em•genC¥
HEAP , Meigs CountY Dept. of
Humtn Services. end HEAP
vauchll"s. We can give you
proqrt deliv•l•. E JCIItior Sell
Works, lne. Pomeroy. Oh~ .
814-992-3891 .

985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
11-16· '88·tfn

Ptu••ltllon

· No hunting or tre~peulng day or
night on theCh.-1 .. YoetFarms.
Vtolltort wll be prosecut.t.

hunling or tre~pe11lng. diiY
·or night on theJ . A. Smithflrm.
VIol Mort wll bft pro!laculed.
Ng

$pul1flff

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Loesa M. Murphey

Froe-Lance Writer
Speec!Ms,
Computer Grophiu,

Publi&lt; Relations,
Advertising ~
Phone:
-~
614-992-3.643

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

11 · 7 1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

JUST OPENED
CAKES
by Donna

OWNEI: GREG I. ROUSH
::~,
GENERAL

CONTRACiilRS
RESIDENTIAL
COIIIIERCIAL

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays

Specializing in
character and novelty
cekoo

• SINCB 1909

992-7611

It, 1, Box 136, Vinton

11·21·88-tln

742-2235

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

FIREWOOD

•Dozer 8t Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business
WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CARS OR TIUCIS

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

$3 s

:

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269

414-742-2617 '
Bolw•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or Lean Mos.-

2-,rr-"·••·tfn

8·8-88-tfn

HILLSIDE MUilLE
LOADING
~ND

MODERN GUN
SUPPUES
Munltloading Suppli11
Mall,rn Gun Supplies
Guns - AmtiHI - Slugs 22 Ammo ·
124 Eall of Rutland
Acrou llawy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614-742·2355

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR
IN THE HIAIT OF
POMEIOY

tlfOftfll I.._ llllll

IHD-'88·1 mo.

•

J&amp;L

INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certain teed '
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doots &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates

Call 992-2772

8/ 15/ Hn

LYNCH'S

GENERAL~

No hunting or trespaulngon our
f•m•. you wll be prOI.aJted br
the l.w, A-rmond Smtth '"d
Ron Songer.

NEED A MASTERCARD-VISA
In a fa.lny1 GuarMteed progrwn
reg•dl'•• af history for m.,ual
and applicltion c .. l us. 1·3115733.1083

•t. M2938-A.

U·Heul'tfor Rent. SW.s ECI'IiPmMt Co. U.S . Rt. 35. Hender·

aon.WV.

4

Giveaway

Part Chow pup to gtl!eiiW..,. CaN
614-&lt;Utl-3171 .
Britt~nySpanhHmale. 7yra. old.
C.tl 114-388-9993 .. 388-

REPAIR~

8870.

Speclallzln&amp;ln Chain

Adortble kittens looking for

Unk and Wood Fenclnr
•CEILING FANS
•REMODELINO
•PLUMBING
•DRVW.I.LL

INSTALlm
•PAINTING
•ROOANG
•TILE WORK

•DECKS

•PORCHES

FREE ESTIMATES
Buckeye Card Weloome

•atH LYIICH

992-3723

10-31·'11-1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

good home. Call

7100.

Pu ppl•· Thurman. 0 H. Call
814-2U·9138.
Mlud ~led puppies. 8wU. old.
Cell 614· ..11-8465.
2 TV'• to giv.-way. Call aft•
4:30pm. 614- .. tl-82&amp;2.

Pt.lppi11. Doberman mM.. C•H
814-..11-9«1
Ador.bre puppta Mother •
full-bk&gt;oded Beegle; Father It
full-blooded Chow. Wori"Md.

_.,ed, 5 wooko old. 614-992·
8512.
Gerbil. 8 weeki: old. 304-8751038 lite&lt; 5:00PM .

Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

-----------------

1-3-'16-tlc

ALARM
SYSTEMS
•Residential
•Commercial
10 Years Experience

· HUNTER
SECURITY

614-992-5952
11·,_1 MOt )If.

6 lost and Folind
LOST: 11· 14-18.

CRNA-High_, aolrry In Ohio.

All blneftt1. Full time poeltiDn

w lth CA NA orient«&lt; AMithleJ.

olouv Poup. S....d r... me to:
32B, Chllllootho. Ohio
411101.

UP TO I 1&amp; HOUR PROCESS·
lNG MAIL WEEKLY CHECX
GUARANTEED. FREE DETAILS. WRrfE: 10, t017 W.
Philedolphl&amp; luMo239-00, On.,lo. Colli 91782.
HELP WANTED
D E V E L 0 P M' E N T
COORDINATOR-B. S , P&lt;•

._._Olin

t•red. Signltlclnt
.,... of p. .on.. 1nd corpor••
solldt.e:lon.
1nd
~eel m.R Jl requhc[ D.-a,..
It riled IUocell .ndl ..... hip In
the act'll.,.,..,.. of llnd-r.lng
go • . Donor CIW'Utthlltlon. worll
wfl:h BOII'd lnd volunten.
exten•fv• ,_,d ke~plng ll'ld
, . . .ch II r~K~Ui'... F"' time
podlon booed In A.-. Ohio.

m*' _..,

requ lru ev•nlnglw•ellend

oout--

A-

I ch.cl.ll• lnd tr_,el t hrouflhout
.. ghr
Ohio-Low 20"L l•d ....... lnd
tenor otlnt•-' to lloy
Eaecutlie Director. Pltnned ftw.

onti'Dodoflour-.Ohla, 318
Rlchl.,d A""""&amp; A - Ohio
411701.
lmrnedtlte optning~ fof .,..
rlenotd mMone 1nd CGnQ"Ite
work•a.
lmmedl • .,..
814-.... 80&lt;48, -7841111•
SPM.

""pond

POSrrrON AVAILAII.E': PRQ.
GRAM DEVS.OPMENT IPE·
CIAI.tST ''" Portirl
tlon Progr.,., in Woo•end
c.nt... Ina. MMI. . . . . . .oqulo.. ont .... Ired.- .....
rltnce wllh
dlalblld
...Mo. E.-l.,oo/tnlnlng in
group work would bo h•tll
Waoll.,d c.rtn. Inc. .. do•
not diiCI'Imln•• on tt. ..... tlf

Hoop•••

mtnt............... ...

. __
'"""·- •tvooaf&lt;lnlllfly.P,.
more lnformtllon GDnl... a.ndra Mchrtmd. ....onnel Of- ·
fiCII'. Woocl•d c.nt ... lfte..
•12 VInton Plk&amp; Olllp... OH
41631.

1514- 448-

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

F1r11 E•alp11ut
P1111 &amp;Strv 111

Emplo&gt;t•·

Box

614-985-4180

CHESTER, OHIO

(Behind City Hall)
10-27·1 ·~ d.

do

VEIY REASONABLE
HAYE REFERENCES

110

quWed Uc.a~.. Diltid8n or
ellgi ble tDr lan1ura Appiv •
tho Golllo County Health oo.;...
ment. Counhou1e, 12 Lo0o11t
Oollpotlo. Ohio 41131.
Phone number 814-.,..4812
111t. 292. E"'lll D-unlly

St'"'·

INIRIOR-EXIERIOR

OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.-4 P.M.
992-7204
324 East Main.
Pomeroy. Ohio

B rigo- • Str•tton

VISA/MASTERCARD

US CHARGE G_.,.Md

992-6461

·MARCUM CONTRACTING

BOOTS
S3, SS,
S6 &amp; S12

Authariud Sorvico
&amp; Parts

TO

POMEIOY, OHIO

Toys, Collectables,
Clo:svns, Porcelain

GilLS &amp; UDIES
SNOW &amp; FASHION

Help Wanted

.11

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

bingo session.

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

SMALL ENG E
REPAIR

DELIVERED

2 H .D. FREE with coupon and purchase of min .

Cenified Licensed Shop
5-25-lfn

:~~~,:.!!'!';~~; call

E111111 o y1111'111
St:rv1c1: :,

$14 PER TON

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

CALL 992-6756

For ...

Gllltpolls. PI:. Pl....... R lw
md R.v.-.swood. 114- 142101. Pete Slmp1on.
Columbus.

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

NIASE Certified Mech.,ic

w~l

enca we

Rscine, Po~. Mkkl~&lt;l.

BINGO

11·3-'88-1 mo.

WELCOME TO

Fornw RICine rwldwrt n_.
otd Nttlonel Benk ourr~Of
printed with btnk name from

WIC Hoolth Prololalonlll: Ro-

SYRACUSE, OHIO

mo.

on Mondly.

or al
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C SeNice
All Major &amp; Minor

DUSn IT. IYIACUSI

10·31-88-1

Timber. Call 114-37&amp;-27158.

T•opp;ng ...- . IU'Iing ginseng. Qeorgalucld&amp;¥ 114-H+
4711 . Houn 2:0Cl-9:00. Claoed

(614) 446-~619 or (614) 992--2104
::J: 417
Second Avenue, Box 1213
:z Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631

10-8-tlc

MIDDLPEPORT, OHIO
'Welcome,

W1nled To Bu"l_·ltlndlng

entire hou•hold. 114-7422455.

~

FILL DIRl

.CUSTOM KITCHEN&amp; I 84TH&amp;
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINVL SIDING I ROOFING
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING I APT. PROJECTS

·~wJtlk-ln8

to Buy-U,t ed ptln~
good mnd. CeU 114-441-4222
or 44&amp;·21 74. •·

or

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

TOP SOIL

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
992.2725

piece or entire hquHhold. Felr
oricoo bolngpOjd. Coll814-441131&amp;8.

Wanted

Call 992-2228

-z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

GRAVEL · SAND

M

S1afr

Live.

.... -, Television Listening Devi~es ·
Dependable Hearillg Aid.Sales &amp; ~n•i••
&lt;!J Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

1-28-'88-tfn

The Staff Is
Back I I I

Furniture and IIPPiiMc:. b'( tt_.

Knows Whtfre You

Rt. 1, Vinton
388-8746
Owner &amp; Operator,
"
Tony Cardillo
11 -s -1 mo.

DENNY CONGO

mo.

388-9303.

MAIN STREET PIZZA

Full Excavating and Construction
Residential &amp; Commercial
Free ·Estimates for Residential &amp;
Farm Work

'----~.-

/,¥

Junk C.1'1 with 0t wilhout
matort. C.ll l.arTy Uvety-814-

Formerly Meigs Excevating

ROOM SUITE

'~

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
· UNDER 5300

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

References

· IIIDDLEPORl - Unique 3
bedroom home in good condi·
lion.
Equipped krtchen,
washer &amp;dryer induded Fireplace. wont silting porch, II!
baths. ASKING.$13.C:JO.OO.

NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe hiVt bu)'trs lor lleip
County Property. Ust with
us lor best muHs.

***

Pay Your Phone
and Cable BWis Here
1'-':lr- IUSINISS PHONE
1614) ·92-6550

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

a

it!

Used '"""".. by tho ploco ..

~. SPECIAl

10 ~ 25-1

Bltl Gene Johnson

114-&lt;U8-3872

Cornpl•• hauallholdl of tlmlture • .,..IQuet, Ako wood
coli hHl••· Sw.in't FunUtuf'li
&amp;. Auction. Third • ONv•
614-&lt;UII-3159.

Racine, Ohio

SET ACQUAINTED

,

tompetitor offers

Our Delivery

Wep.,.._•htorl•emodlld...
uud Cll'l . -, Jim Mink Chw.-Oidllnc.

TOP CASH p~d for '83 modll
and niM'et utMf • c••· lmft:h
Bulck·Pontic. 1911 East•n
A.,. ., G.. llpollt. Col 814-&lt;U&amp;2282.

H any local

698-6121

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

EVERY SUNDAY

THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST .PRICES.

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

MEIGS
F-URNITURE

$44995

mo.

1:00 P.M.

•·t'oturing: ConBolidaled~ Dutrh
·• We8t, Brunco, Ashlr"
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

985-3561

BISSELL .
SIDING CO.

Your Hometown Place
Has always offered

match
AlSO_,,

Wanted To Buy

9

you -a better deal,
tell us and we'll

WOOD STOVES

Probate JudQ&amp;
Lena K. Nesaelr011d, Clark

lrd st.

PIZZA

992-2526

cootod, loto of 43094 State
Route 124. Box 277, Ra·
cine, Ohio 46771 .
Robert E. Buck,

3 PC. LIVING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUI\II SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

Ute of Gladys M. Hood, de·

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

NO

We Carry Fishing Sui&gt;Pii•...j

808
E. Moln . .y,;~;,w. .

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER
-Chesler - Sumner Road.
Aneat 3 bWroom home wrth
large recreation room, full basemen~ 2 baths on approx. 3
·acre lot with stocke:! pond
and storage buiding Good location. ASKING $46,500.00.

J

CHRISTMAS CARDS
50°/o OFF

I

f

·~ ': ~·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEW LISTING - Building
with 3 lois in Dexter. Has
many potential uses. Call to. day. WANTS $8,500.00.

•

BOXED

_ RIVERINE ANTIQUES
.GLASS
BOOKCASES
WICKER
CROCKS
QUilTS
WASHSTANDS
DRESERS
CLOCKS
LAMPS
CHAIRS
"' Th P Gijls That Net'~r

111) 14, 21, 28, 3tc

We Service All Makes
1/2 2/88/ lf•

• 161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio '45760

..

Sh~p"

Probate Judge
Lena K. Nntelroad. Clerk

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November B, 1988, in
the Meiga County Probata
Court, Caoeo No. 26081.
Dotnor Routh, Jr., Mldwoy

4.25 li.IAG

' TUPPERS PlAINS - The
perfect building site w1th
. free gas, water and electnc
availabl~ Call for information.

Gifts for . ,

Syracuoe. Ohio, 46779.
Raben E. Buck,

.9-19-18 tfn

HARRiSONVIllE - Do you
want a Country Home? 141!
acres, newer home. Fimsh to
your own taste. Many features. ASKING 133,500.00.

·• . Family.
f "Prescription

I

to .....
And I often dream of you.
You didn't want to go. I
know,
But God Hw tit th• dll¥'
To exchange for you, th.e:
burdenllilllfa
For e b.uer pt.ce to 1111y.
Oh. I ml8s you. and alway1
by.

Sunday's Ad
Should Hqve
Read

r-~~~~·!o\~~11\'~~~-a~~~~ ~~~~~

I

EUcutor of the eatate of
Nora B. Houd•Mh. d•
ce•ed. late of CoUege Road.

will,
At l think of the tim• gone

. POWELL'S
SUPER VALU

SAVE STEPS!
the
Ads

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FtOUCIARY
On NovembOI' 9. 1988, in
the Meigo County Probrlto
COU"- Caoe No. 26066.
John E. Houdoehelt, 3367
Boetl• Awnue, Grove City.
Ohio. 43123. woo oppoimod

DEAD OR ALIVE

Wicks

.. '
ye•s

Where
Santa
Shops!

Public Notice

Public Notice

WANTED

,,. ~

IIWIY 4

Business Services

Business Services

In Memoriam

ago todatt.
TO A DEPARTED MOTHER
Moth• de•. you m-v be
tone
From all elllthty people'•
vl.w";
But in my he.t vou'rw th•a

.

• The Area's
Number 1

(1 1) 14. 21. 28, 3tc

'Cosby Show,' Olympic stars draw
thous~nds to Pittsburgh parade
Carnegie Mellon University, also
rode In the parade.
''This Is my hometown,"
McConnell said. "I went to my
old home In Mount Lebanon and
knocked on the'people'sdoor. It's
great to be home."
The Unicycle Club, the nation's
first unicycle club, based In
Findlay, Ohio, turned out lor the
parade dressed ln patriotic red,
white and blue oul1!ts and wearIng Uncle Sam hats. Riders
pedaled high above the ground
and did Intricate turns and
moves without losing their
balance.
A huge Casper the Ghost·
balloon, lnfiated with 89,000cublc
feet of helium, kept 38 handlers
busy as he floated above the
crowds.
Wrestler George ''The
Animal'' Steele, television star
Danny Ponce and the Osmond
Boys, five offspring of the !am·
ous Osmond Brothers, also appeared ln the par:ade.

21-35 WORDS
97 .00
$10 .00
$15 .00
&amp;25 .00
&amp;60 .00

Rat• are tor conMcutNe runs, broken up dwswill be charged

f

PITTSBURGH iUPI)
"Cosby Show" star Keshla
Kn!ght·PuUlam and Olympic at·
hlellc stars Suzie McConnell artd
- Roger Kingdom drew more than
135,000 people to the "Celebrate
the Season Parade."
The parade, In which members
of an Ohio unicycle club performed, began at theCivlcArena
and rolled forward In nearly
perfect weather, sunny but
slightly overcast. Kaufmann's,
the city's largest department
store, and WPXI-TV sponsored
the parade.
oo the Rock Spring&amp; Grange float nativity scene In
"I'm having a great tlme, 1' the
Sunday's Christmas parade.
9-year-old Kesh!a said, adding
that she wanted a video-cassel te
recorder and a bb gun !rom Santa
· for Christmas.
Kingdom, a two-time Olympic
winner who took a medal this
year ln hurdles, and McConnell,
who won an OlympiC medal ln
women's basketball, rode ln the
parade Saturday ln an open
convertible. Both are Pittsburgh
natives,
'"If you can't get into the
Christmas spirit from this (parade). I don't .know what would
get you into the Christmas
splrlt,' 'McConnell said.
Added Kingdom: "We're •just
proud to have everybody coming
out to honor us."
Other attractions included Sis·
ter Sledge, whOse anthem, "We
are Family" was the theme of the
Pittsburg Pirates' 1979 World
Championship season, and PI·
rates Kent ·Tekulve and Jlm
Rooker, who played that year.
"Sa.nta Barbara" soap opera
star Judith McConnell, a Pitts·
burgh native and graduate of

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

lassified·

a 1989 model with lighter' armor,
RESPECTING HIS ELDERS:_ At age 54,
Wilford Brimley Is a pup compared to some of hls
co-stars in "Cocoon" The Return," including Don
Ameche, 80, Hume Cronyn, 77, Jack Gilford, 81,
and Jessica Tandy, 79.
But he's still Impressed by hls elders: "I may be
the youngest of the old guys ln the cast but! wish I
could walk as fast as Ameche," .Brimley said. "I
like working with those guys. They're fine ·
actors." Brimley says the "Cocpen" movies have
an Important message - that old age and love
aren't mutually exclusive.
"In most movies only the yo.ung, beautiful
people can have those feelings," he said. "Well,
people at any age can still fall In love. Folks In
their 70s and 80s Included, They (the. 'Cocoon'
movies" are the kind of pictures that young people
will see and be provoked Into doing things like
calling their mom and their old man to see how
they're doing."
GLIMPSES: Pop star Phil Collins lsJeatured in
the new film "Buster" about England's Great
Train Robbery but he's not forgetting his music
career. Collins, who was a child actor In Britain
before turning to music, returns to the studio. In
February to work on a .solo album ... The
revelations about Nancy Rea.gan's Interest ln
astrology have been great for the business or the
first lady's favorite star gazer, Grace Quigley.
"You can't Imagine how many. people were
calling me from all over the world," QUigley says
of the spurt that started with Donald Regan's
tell-all book. "I was in despair.' I hate to turn
anyone down." The answer was audio casettes.
lnterested·partles call in the date, time and place
of their birth and then are mailed a tape of casette
of Quigley charting them. The casettes are being
sold through Tlcketron for $45 each. "The chart
says we'll be flooded with orders," Quigley told
People magazine.

'

L~rge

Walk•.

mal• Coon Hound. In viclntty of
Northup- n&amp;. Call 81 .. ·448-

3413.

Lcm:: beige Cocker Spll'lltl In
Src.more St. . , . Mldcbport.

Loll Fnd.,. 114-99Z·7114.

Lost: men' • welhrt ~round
F•rmers &amp;.nk on 1h ~nksgMng
.,.,In&amp; Colt 814-992-2984.

Get ~d for r ...ng baokll
UOO. P• IItie. Write; PA8.E-

31X. 111 S . lin&lt;X&gt;I-oy. N .
Auror, ll 80542.
JOB HIINTINCPNEEDASKILtJ
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOA JOIS
AS Auto Mech.,IOI, c;arp.,_

••s.

C•mt~otoallt•.

o~v.-.

fiod Medico/ Wo&lt;kn, El-~ .
ci.,,, Food S.VIot Work ...

Eledroni01 Technld-. In••
trial M1intenll'lce Workera
Nul"'ing All .. ftl Md Order:
Mechlnltta. Offloe WDrkn
&lt;Vld Wllldn. ROOiot• far
beginning,.,...., 3rd.

li•.

d•••

Call Tri·County Voellion .. Adull:
Cent• at 783-3111 Mt. 14. A
v•l.ty of '-"*'t•ourceatoPIV

""

t&lt;oinlng •• ovoloblo tor

· ~thN_e~~-g~I~------------­

One l•ge lwo ltory houaeto be
torn down tor '-'rnblr. Phone
814-992-7012.

DEVELOPMENT
COORDINATOR-I. S . pt•
t ....cr. Signlflctnt •..-len• w;
.,. . of p ... onll and aorporete
aoUdtetion. m.p aNti end
&lt;lroet mall It ._lr.r. DomonltrMed succees lnd I..... hlp In
the tchlw..-.n at t.tnd-rt~~~ln 1
go • · Donor e&amp;dU'Itto"- WOfll

-tt--·"""' lout-- A-

LHI : Mite femlle Pftt Bull.
Twp. Rd. 447, Beech Grov1

wll h Bc.rd and .,..,.,.....
•t.,.Ne record k. .lnl Md
r•Wch .. riQUHd. f&amp;alrne
-•ion b•od I n " - - Ohio,

742-2311.

•1•
d triiWII ,.........,.
•oqulr•..
..

e

eree, Rutland.
yrs . old.
ArtiWWI to Angef. Call 014-

LOST. I'IWV•rd. red mile Min•
ture Dachehund. 3 yra old.
IMWWI lo RUity, IMt ....

FrldOf Roybum Aood. tomlf¥
.... 304-17!1-1253 01 87!18891.

Ohio .....
tia Low 20"s. hndriiUfllliMd
l&lt;lnor ollnt.- to K.,

E•eciiiWeDir.ctor, Pllftftlll ..._,.hoodoflout-Ohlo, 311
Rlchl.,d
Alhono. Ohio
415701 .

"-&amp;

'

�..

II

11

Help Wanted

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Govom....,. Jobo. •18.040 ·
n9.Z30 yr. Now l*lnt Col
1 ·1011- 117-1000
. A· 9806
-

.torQIII............

hoolt-up,

EernMon~~t At Home! A•tmbl•

n..v plush C8'pt.t. de.

p.,t.
Nice good lo~ion.
R1gon011. In ~ Aplo. Coli 30487&amp;-1104 or 17&amp;-5388 or
'8711-7738.

J.wtlry. Tovt. ElldTonial, oth-

.,.. FT&amp; PTworllw.. lbla.C..
1-ndoblol 1·407· 7.U 3000
EXT. 8 1122 2• HAS.

New completefY furnl1hed

a

lp8'tment
mobae home In
city. Adutta onfv. P•rking. CaH

10 lecl• .-cted for tllep hone

&amp;14-. .&amp;-0338.

work. Mutt read w..: 2 shift•
n.M.tlls 1:00 .ma2:30 P""

""'iii

Pom•Of·

POSITION AVAILABLE: PRO.
GRAM DEVELOPMENT SPE·

Uprtlirs untlr . . hed . ,•. Ctr·
Plied. utllll• IJII!Id. No chlltren.
No ••o. Colll14-44&amp;-1837.

CIALIST for Plrtl .. H01plt•Hz•

ogo.oolor. cr-nlllionolorlaln.
r.::., .._.,rypaofcla ... lty.J:or
morenlor-ncontootS.,·
dr1 Mc'-lend. ,.,..onnll OfWoodlond eom ... Inc..
41 2 VInton Pic~ Gollpo•. Ohio

T•• Townhoult apartment• 2

BAa.. H~ bllha, CA.. dlt·
hw•her. dilpoal. prlvlte en·

45831 .
AVON · AI•-· Col Morilyn
Woeiot 304-n2· 2845.
AN'S • LPN'S -PH. full time 6

m af:r81'd

Homes for Sale

c.
;;:====

Will •el on lill'ld comr.i:t

.-rt time .,pllcllllonli ere being ~30~"',;'~5~8~1~8~8=8:;
.
occ:optod lor Plo•ont V~l... ;
HCJit)ltol Nurolno core Cent•. 32 M obila H omea
contoct Pwroonnol 304-87&amp;for Sale
4340. AAEO E.

41

ANYONE CAN APPLY!

12

Hom as for Rent

LQ. homo foo- - · t260 oluo
dlpotlt. Vlrginl• L. Smith Rell
Eot. t14-388-8828.
3 BA . loc:oted -At 141 In
Centenwy. 1300/ mo. C.lt 61~
44&amp;-1588.
2 Bedroonw, 2 b.tN. n_, bunt
1;, ldlch_.., swimming ,ool. nice
vord. Cro•m City, Ohio. Col
814-28&amp;-1431 .

MoMn 1 BR, downtown. oompltte ldtchtn, llr, carplt. o..,..
alit no P••· CIH 814-4410139 'wenln.. aft• 5.

equlppod kitchtn. olr. Alllleblo
Nov. 101. 1225 otus dop. Col
814-44&amp;-01103 .. 44&amp;-2158.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

15

Schools
Instruction

2 bedroom 1 2x60.
304- 8711-27 22.

AE·TRAIN NOW!
·" SOUTHEA9TERN BUSINESS
'· COLLEGE, 529 Jackton Pika

Clll ~8-4387. Reg. No. 88-1 1·

, 11 ,

v.,.- .~10~5=58~.=~;::::::;;==

..
.:, ; 1.8

$1900.

1979 Bavvl.., mobile honw,

14J&lt;70 wlrh 71&lt;21 •pondo.
phone 304-17&amp;-1141.
1978 u...,., 14J&lt;70. 3 bodroom.

•7. 900.00.

1671 ond 17&amp;-1781

30~876-

Wanted to Do
.81 Redmond. 2 bedrooms. OKC
•.;
cond, G•llipolit location,
... ...
18,500. 00 or belt off•. ph!lne
1: TnteWorkWanted·Pruning. top- l:-30:-4-::-:-8-:711-:--3_7_79_·~~-~~
• ping, a. ramov•l. Hedge•

-,. trim"*'·· Coli

&amp;14-448·8076,
or 304 875-4t53.

Someone to ltMit in for eomp ..-

Sh•• •P-•· ~alon•
.. bl .. S.,6or Cltlren prefflr. In
·town. CoH 814-44&amp;-8412.
··-------------------: WIJ do .,_,lttlng in my home
~i»n.

, wtak d.,.,

. 11t9.

onfV. Celt 614-448-

In Eur'*&amp; 2 8R . Aduh1 ontv. No
pill. *200 • mo. Dep. r«~ulr.t.

CIH 814-24&amp;-SU1

for ,... In
Coftltructk» n
wort&amp;n 'Miaom&amp; C.l 81~
4411-01508.
Mo... Hom•

e&lt;.n •

gl

• •·

ATTN: 0Ht t•urt.,.campws
for f'lnt . Sleeps 4 . ..,erything
tJrnllhed wllh t.v. C11l 81~
38&amp;-9798.
2 beli'oom furnilhed. Good.
de.,.. condition. 1 chHd No pets.
Large
Above Nw.t Hwen.
304-882·2468 -~~-

..,t.

14x 70. 2 bectoom. Adutta onty,
no pets. C ..l 614-992-3328 or
814-992· 1722 """'5:00p.m.

1982 Footwel br Fl-ood.
14J&lt;70. 3 bodroo ... 2 bill hi.

Trail . . for r'tnt. all unllr,.hed.

1038 oft• 1:00PM .

chnct .. KCC~Pted,
and depo•lt. At. 1 loOJIIt Rd.
fourth mUe behind Klot&lt;. C lty.

must be rnoved, clll 30-. &amp;75Home~Uad

Really, mobile

homa. 4 Iota. etc. S13. &amp;00.00.
Hwtat Cant•burv. 304-176-

5640.

1978 Homlltte mob.. home. 2
be~oom. 12x65, *2.200. 00.
304-6711-2174 .... 3:00.

Nlooly lurniohod 1 • Z 8A . Wot•
• IJII'btigt ptid. p,.,•• p.ldng.
Olpook roqurod. Coll614-44&amp;4345 oft• 6 PM .
Furnished ..,_.menl, 1 BA .
1225. Utliti• pold. 107 So·
con d. G•lllpolil. Cal 441-441 8

oft• 7 PM .

45

Furnished

Rooms

F .. nilhed

roo,..919 Seoond
Aw .• Gellipolll. e13&amp; • mo.
Utillti• paid Single m~e. Sh••

')loth Cal144&amp;-4418aft•7PM .
Roome tor rtnt-week or month.
Starting at s 120 a mo. Galli e
Hotel-114-44&amp;-9680.

46

30+87&amp;-1078.

Spaca for R enl

Apartment
for Rent

F111ancial

•

BUBiness
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

COU NTAY MOBILE Home Pork.

Route 33. North of Pom•~ ·
Rent .. tnil••· Call 814-992-

Spacious mobile home lots for
rtnt. Femily Pride Mobile Home
Puk. Gallipolil Ferry, W. V•.
304-1711-3073.

For Lease

49

ING CO . FN:Jmmtndl thll you
do butin., with people you
know, and NOT to send.mon.,
through tM mtl untl you h..,e

invntig•ed the ofl•ing.

. •.

Plzu Ant.,r.,t for 1lle. Be
your own bou. OrNt potential
in awowlng••· lnqulreto:le»c
Cia 171.. c/oGaUipolil Daily
Trib.ln&amp; 82! Thtrd Aw.. Cialipdh. Ohio 45831 .

BeaJiilJI s.tting tor • home
locat.t 17 ml• tram Athens.
near H•rrilonville In Meigs
County. 75 acr• ot l. .d with
tree
atr.n. wind c.we.
woodl8'1d pond, woodl. fou ndation with b•em.rt. C•R 814&amp;9-.8192 8VMing1.

Pomeroy-2 BR. remodeled
11pa1mem oH Spring A: .... See.
dep. S. r.r. Cell eft• 8 PM,

Alhton, be&amp;ltiful '-98 buldlng
Iota. mobile hom• permitted,
public wilt•. al•o rN• lou.

8 blllh Cloon. No p.... Aduho.
Aof. 8 dop. OH otr_, porkln9' 1
cw. Coli $14-446·1519.

g•.

8uy direct frOm m.._.fadur•
ll'ld ,..,e II*. Spa' a $rtlng a1

t1.560.00. CoH A..,o Tech.
304-523-8288.

R11tanant end Tavern for ule.
..,driiUmetoiQI{ P 22, c•eof
Point Ple•ll'lt Regilt•. 200
Main St.. Point ,.._.,t. W. Va.

25560
Hair SaiOf\ high lraffic hl.gh

die. 304-626-3065 or 304823-7277.

Nicet; furnished am.. house.

Adutta ont;'. Ref. requIred. No
3 BA ., AC. c•pet. pool. gll'eg:
2 fir~JPI.c•. fence. Good loc.don. Cell A-1
E.a.te

A••
Bro'Jcao, 304-675-510 .
4

Homes for Sale

No pet1. Dep. • Ref. r-.uired.
f326 p• mo. Col ll4-44&amp;0271 oft• 8 PM. -ondl
~nytime.

='r

v-r lttrKtlve bride 4 bectoom.
2 b.. h. flm ... room with firl'

..,-

Hous• 7 rooms. unfurnished

• 221 29 Nell A

G llfp

cu~:: ~":~~~ ~I 448-4418 1ft~·, :M . alii.

~'
coblnlllo. olk woociN--'batment. 2 c• g•IIU&amp;
lll'ldlctf' eel lot 4 ml•
Holler Hoopitll oft Rt.
Port•trook Subdivision.

814-44&amp;-4188.

• !;~~~*~~~~~
A
fln~h
IIYel
B '' 1112
from

38c.n

4 BR .• full banmart S. a•au•
~Itt c.p«ed C•oma n.w) . City
ac:hooll. Utlllll• low. Woo~
burn•. NllturM g• fUrnace.
Prlcad to 1111. Cal 814-44&amp;-

OZ76 oftw 6 PM. -endl
anytim•

3 BA ., hou1a. dek.lxe. AC. &amp;
poot-tileorTrlde. 48R.kou 1 a
good loCIIIon. Cal 304-8751104

oo nd A ve .• fur nil hed effl den eel

lferting Ill *176 • mo. Including

lklfurniUNtd 2 BR g•-ae • - 'mtnt. In tO'o\l'n. C.rpeled. Aduha
only. No PMO. Coli 614-44&amp;-

4581 .

~hon

other.
lurMhod.
ld•ll for
wfth grwu:flwent. Overtook&amp; l*k&amp;rlvw. W1lk
to .chootl. OOWntO'It'ft. 137! I
mo. plus utllhJ•. Oepolit •
raf.. .,.cea. Cal 61._44.. 4926.
7 Spruce Str•. Pretw Single
P•aon. e176 per month. e110

clopoalt. Addhlonatpnon. odd~
tionlll deposk. Contact : Dr. S. l.
Bo111rd Memorial library, 8144411-7323.

F•rm Houae-4 SA .. olty w ....

A .-rtment for rent. e226 a
month. Deposh required. 8'1 ~

992-5724. Aft• 8pm or 9926119.

I :.2 ---bl:_dr_oom
__--:A-pt-,. -~,-----r~-:..

""
_,.
Carp•.t. Nlceuttlng, Launcrt
fecillti• ..,.. _.,. CaM 81~

Newlv redecorated tplrtm.UI
eveihble. UtHMI• plfd. '226.
p.montt\.depostr:required.C.It
614-992· 572• oft• 1:00 or

992-5119.
One Month Fret Rent
Q lllfled
•
u
rentWI PIT 200.

d•o•lt end no r.,t for the
month November or

De~

ondAiv
.ldoAportmontoln
cembar.only.
Yll1g1 Manor
Middliport. From n82.

814-992·

-n t7. E?H·

4 ap.tmR• In Pom•ov. One
and two bectooom~ . p..Cfv furniaMd lr.ttchen. For morelnfor·
mlllkH\ Clll 814-992·6215 or

11 4-9t2- 3788.
1month.
beci'oamapt
.• SyriKIII&amp;
e131
.,Us utiltti•.
tt.poalt.
814-992-&amp;732 oft• !p.m.

8 Aol. 814-9t2· 2275 aft•
5:00pm.

AEPOSSESSED GOVERN· ~~~~~5~PM~
· -------­
MENT HOMESI Umltod limo.

APARTMENTS. mobile hom•.

Loweort. Nfth)nwkleprognms.

3 BR .• LA , kttchtn, bel h. 1

c•

a•ovo. Dopook t150. t300

your ...... 1-31 .. 733-1084.

mo. C•H 814-441-4153&amp;.

aooch Stroot. Mlddl_... Ohio.

21 0.111• St. e30o • mo. •200

2 bedroom furnished IP.Cm..t.
utlttl• .,.._
Phone

2 bect"oom houae

peu 1 3 I&lt;J'•. deposit. C:.l 81.t-448-220!.

Von-Zonl Ad . t20.000. Cll

aft• 8 81~ 742- 2448 or 441114&amp;-.,.,tima

Nice 1 lA furriaMd hou•. no

pets. Ref. • Sec. Otp. Nqulred.

Coll814-4411-1759.

2 bodroomi. lorna room. dining
room. ldtdlen. full beth.. forDid 2 IR unt.r,.hed. P-t&amp; 1
o1r ho•. cM-ol ooHing In ml•218. 1200..,t •150dop.,
11v-.e room tnd din tog room. Ref.. men"fed aouplea. one child.
eontrlll olr. Gorllga 814-ee2- _Col_l_8_,_,.._____988
__a.a.
________
1
2811.
3 be*oom home wtth trll
Home In CQUnii'Y wMh lll'ld 1~ bMemtnt located New HIY.,,
ml• fromn Ath-. 12 mil• 304-8t2·3394.
from Pom•ov· 114-992·5848.
Thr• be*oom hou• In counIn Svrecu•• I room hou1ewlth try. 1200.00 momh • 100.00

. . ,__ ., .

-~r­

dolo4 e•11111.,d.__.,.,,.
fur,_., viM of rift•. _priOid In
31Yo. but _,Ioiii&amp; Coii14"J.II•7 oft• 3 or onytimo ori

..........

•

d.poek,

..t•1n011 required

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 8 FURNITURE 62
011\ol e St.. Gtlfpola.
NEW· e Pc. wood gfOUp- 1399.
~ino room aultM- e199-1699.
Bunk bedl with beddin9' 1249.
Full alze m.nr- &amp; foundation
1Urting· *99. Recliner.

R~v-o

Mobllty coli .... 1·81487().."11.

For law priaea onQu.!lty Ctrpet
S. Furniture oome to Molloh.,
Furnltu,.Upp• Rlv• Ad .. t 1+

44&amp;-7444.

.

County Appll~nce. Inc:. GOod
Uled IIPPiiii'ICM .,d TV seb.
Open BAM 10 8PM . Mon thru

Sot. 814-44&amp;-1899. 827 3rd.
Aw. G•llipolil. 0 H .

GOOD

. Buy. Sell, Tr*'•· Call Btrgair\lond. 814-4411-8444.

c - Motol. &amp;14-448· 7398.

30 inch ...,acldo electric range.
Good concHtlon. n 50. Call

814-992·8594.

4 pc P6neFtmlty roomf\Jrntture

..... , 5.00. 304-876-4663.
Zenith TV, HotpQint refrigerltor,
TappM microwave wllh llll'td.
mll)le kltchtn tab4e .-ad chah'l,
brlal •ble lamp. coffee table,

304-8711-4442, 203 N. Perk

D rtve, Pt. Pit.

Sectlonel couch end Lltry Bov
r.dlner, llka new. $600.00.
304-675-30&amp;2.

burner fQr Mia or

Coli 114-3117-0418.

·

VIRA'o FURNITURE AND
APPLIANCES
Open Dolly Mon.-Sot.. 9 AM -I
PM
by

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Bentwood rockert, *49. 98.
Heavy duty rustic bunk bedll,
t229·COmplete. 4· pc. be«oom'
IUitl Whh trlpl8 dr. . ., .498.
Rudie 4 dr. wood cheat. 191. 4
dr. choot. .44. 9S. I dr. dl•t
t64.95. Sofe • chlllr·rog. "99
now *211. V•ghn •of•&amp; ohllir.
reg. 12400 now t899. 8 pc.
wood group. reg. t!99 now
8369. Vaaghn 881attt waR

huggw recliners. •199. Aust'c
countty tlbl., 3 chairs a bench,

*269wfthm..chlnghutch • 510
for both pieces.

Chrl1tm11 tov• end gener•l
m•dlllndlae II dlt count price~ .
4 fl. Sonto. tZ9. 95. Blcycl• 8
tricycl• ...rtlng M *1.9.95. 14
K gold ~ckl. 17.48 I set. Mr. &amp;
Mr1. ClllUt, *14.96 • &amp;tl. Iron
Stone churn, •14.96. Child's
oM rocking cheirs, .•8.99. Pogo
bills, e7. 99. Remote A redia
controlled en &amp; 1ruck1, chin a
dolla. e14.9&amp;. 12x18 A.Ugiof.l1.
deer, &amp; acene pidu,.., 17.99.
Llyeway now for r Chriltmu.
Open 9-5 on the 24th. Rt. 141 In
Centeflarv-14 mHe on Uncoln

Pike. 614-44&amp;-3158.

Sof•chair. • 39. 4 pc. Banett
bedroom suite. t179. King atle
mltbeaa, box spring~- 185. All
tvJIBI of bedding. hld••bada.
ch•t. dr..... dinnett• other
mil.c. ttema. Plek•rw Used
Furniture. Call 30~171-14150 .
Gibton hewy duty wa~tw- 6
ctyer. New. Re•oMble. Call

814-4411-8412.

814-4411-1149 .

814-44&amp;- 7370.

614-44&amp;- 2f35 or 2411-9378.

hcellent condition 2B Inch
Zenith color •lwit..,n. Walnut
llnloh. 2 y-• old. t400. Coli
814-9811-4448 aft• 6:00p.m.
'Ml~e French l'fovlnclol bod·
room autte. Doubta bed Md
dr••• with minor. t?l. C•ll
614-98&amp;-3610.

Kenmor• Walherand Dryer pi~lr.
btra nice ship&amp; e22!. 814-

367·0322.

53

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Atv•ine Antiqun.

1124 E. Main Street. Pom•oy.
Hours: M,T,W 10a.m. to 8p.m..
Sunday 1 to ep.m. 81.-.992-

2628.

54

Combln .. 31 MF, oolf pr-od.
••eo. c• 814-2&amp;&amp;-80311.

1979 JHp 258. , _ hoed
t150, ......... U60. 960x18. I • rim. f78. 1. . 2
Eooort. 11200. CoH 814-44&amp;?019.
.

Misc. Merchandise

tSAVEt Buy mioll . . .. V~
-/CD 8 mov•ln• MTWTF
a.., to 4pm Coli 1·114-44&amp;0742 .t.l-3
Mixed h•d wooclol•. f12 . bunch. ContoinlnJI ""prox. 1V,

ton. Ohio Pllllet Co.. Pomeroy.

Ohio. 814-992-84t1.

CARHART, Rental clothing.
Smlll Army Equip,.....t
•orl•. SAM SOMERVILLE'S,

Acc•-

King

•~•

In

••cia•

t75. Coli 814-992· 5840.

71

1884 Chewy ChwMto. Aut&lt;&gt;

mMic. AM radio, almost new
tlrM. 80.000 miM. R•• ,_.

-

ropt-. t1000. For

--··

more lntornwtlon c•l Paul •

0-nwyncl

pu-

Colt~

N-

Himllll_,.n llltttna. . Call 81._

44&amp;-3844 aft• 7 PM .

lnd tag your tr1111. Newella
Chrilt,.s Tree Farm. one mMe
1boYe M.on on HMgfng Rodl
Aolld. 30~773-15371 or 304-

!"~------=====-l~=========~
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

For Sele-Dog Hout-. 1'n mH•

t..-'-'

pupe.

Mol• • fornol•. Aoedll Doc.
18th •78 oo. D""oalt wl hold.
Coli 814-44&amp;-1354

_....,,_,lni.....

Coll11 44&amp;-175t.

Chwya. Surplu1.

1987 GMC Jlmmr 1 ·11 4 wl\
dr.. -eel. E -. oond: 18,000
mi. Muot o-. Col 814-25&amp;8201 oftw I PM.
191&amp;0-·~·br.

North 3rd Mlddopon two bodroom u""rnillwd apt. 30~882-

81
"I paid a deposit for an alarm system so 1
wouldn't gel robbed ... The company's
skipped town ... "

'

1211 Vldeocoumry
7:35 (l) Sanlonl and San
8:00 ()) MOVIE: Off UmHa (NR)
• (2) all ALF Willie's
nightmare cas1s ALF as his
colle~roommate In the

WB.L, NOW! IT
L.()01(S UKE I'M

'60s.

NOT ALONE
AFTilRALL!

--compi-odl ... lday.
Pump • • 1nd -.vk:e. 30._
ltll-3802
RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
houoo call ootVIdng GE. Hot
Point. w•htrs. dryers ..,d
....... 304-57&amp;-2398.
Ak••TreeTrim ..... gMd8tump
R•mov1l. Fr• •timet•. c.n

lhru Docombor

t38.95. Col
304- 77~1341 or 773-8840.
Ronnie N111l.

1812 Mor111ry Zop lrfr. oil opbrlk-. exhal1t.
- - mpg. COl 814-44&amp;2030.

*•·

1979 Pinto. -

trllna~

..;t•

m•onrv.

82

HE= BELIEVE6 iN 'PULL
EARS FIRST, ASK

WE'VE !SOT A VERY
OLD- FAe.HIONED
PR.INCIPAI-..

G. Gr~ ..,daOMCOf\crMIMd
Contr-=tlng. lntwior end
rior p8inting. carpent.., end

QWES110N'5 LAI9&lt;!1

Plumbing

8t Heating

point n-

on• owner. Other

Cor. Fourth lnd Pine

Golllooh. Ohio

4411-4477

&amp;

1tl41ulc*W.CX.n. Extr•sharp.
low ftllloogo iilS, OOCJI . 8 cyl.

m•dal wi'lng. New tarvice •
repllrs. Free •timat•. 112
Third Aw.. GoHioo•. ()!Ito
814-44&amp;-2718.

1184 Ford pldl up lruGk. noo•
F.. -Ro..,nclllloned 18 ft. onalnl Work .300.00. 1977
lold-UII buoh ..... Coli 814-ZII&amp;- Olclo Omovo V·l, 250 '"' '"
•30o.oo. 304-1711-4853.
4821 .

1'1

FINO YDRESEI.F
CI'IRD &amp;II~E It

PAW'S STAYI

Electrical
Refrigeration

P11qu1le Electric Co. Lleented
aleCiriCII'Is. A11idlntill &amp; COflt'

Trucka for Sale

IT'S A PLUMB

MIRACLE!!

84

- - . Col 814-44&amp;-7078.

-

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

HOME

...

~,J''"'

,.•.

A"ldentl• or oomma-clll wirIng. New ssrvlce or
Lietn1td elt&lt;:tridll'l. Est m•~
. . . Ridenour Eledricll. 304-

':f.""'

8711-1788.

85

General Hauling

Olll•d

w.... S.-vice:

Poole:,

Ciolll'na, Wollo. DollY.., Any·

timA. Cell 614-448-7404-No
Su.nday calls.

J 6 J WIA• S.Vice. Swimming
PDOia. ciat•na. w.nl. Ph . 1142411-92811R &amp; A Wal• S.Vic:e. Poo11,
clsltrns, welta . lmmedl .. •
1.000 or 2,000 glllona cWivery.

Coli 304-8711-8370.

Wit• delivery . 1000 o•ons.
Re•onlble prl'*. lmmedl•e
dillY~. Coli 814-992-12711-

Watterson' t Weter H1ulln'9.

r..

r••·

oneble
v~m• dlscounrs. 2.000 to 4.000 ctpec-

lry, cltt•rw. poole. wellt, .tc
304-17&amp;-2919.
.

87

Upholstery

Mowr.,·a Uphollttring aervlng
trl oountv•r•23y. . .. The belt
In llrniture ufholltertng. Cell

304 - 87&amp; - 4 14 tor tra•
eltlm••·

,,

,.

Bernice Bede Osof

'Your
'Birthday

CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Z..Jan. 11) Owing
to 1he good auspices of an associate,
something opportune could develop tor
you 1oday. ye1 you rnlgh1 tall1o apprtcl·
ale Ita lull benell1a and capitalize on 11
properly.
AQUARIUI (Jon. »-Fob. 11) You 'll be
able 1o go1 aiQng wltb Qthers 1oday as
long 81 oomo1hlng of value Is not an Is·
IIHI. II 11 Ia, everyone's base mo11veo
might muddy the waters.
Nov . 2S, , ...
PISCES (Fob. 20-March :!OJ You're still
In 1he year ahead you are likely to make . on a good roll tor achieving ob]4etlves
, some lmerea11ng changes concerning today. HOWIIY8r, continue 1o be careful
your material goals and ooclal lite. nol to alienate others In gallina wha1
1'l1ella alterations will pr.o ve to be for 1he you Wll11.
baUer, bu1 1h~ will take time 1o be AR,.a (lhrch 21-Aprll 11) Subordlworked ou1.
nates won't perform up 1o your expecBAGmARIUI (Now. 23-Dec. 211 Be 11110na today It you keep looklna over
advtMd tha11hlsla not a good day 1o 1ry 1halr lltouldera. Aulgn the lask and
to d-ve ,.apia wl1h whom you'll be •· 1h81'1 lltow t.Hh In those you've ch0081'1 .
doaltng. Your mou- are likely to be 81 TAURUS (April 20-lby 20) Today 11' o
1rii11Pirert1 81 a picture window. Major bell to trua1 only people who have prov·
'. ehanget are sheadlor Sagl1tarlualn 1IMI an lhalr dopendablnty. Thlngo could go
• coming year. Send tor your Aa1ro- ' awry If you rely 1oo much on unknown,
Graph predlctlona1oday. MaU $11o AI- qu1111tltlel.
.
1ro-Graph• . elo thla newspaper, P.O. OIMINI (May 21..June 20) In career InBox 91428, Cle¥eland, OH 44101-3428. vohlemen11 1oday beware of oomeone ,
Be aurelo stole your zodiac sign.
who newr ouopor1ed you In the paot .!
·
·
I ,

but has suddenly become an anthuslai!
Uc ally. This person could have ul1erlo~
motives.
CANCER (June 21-..luly 22) Avoid emphaslzlng your selt·ln1erests today to
thci detriment of o1hera. Inclinations
this Ilk can profit you now. bu1 what
about la1er7
LEO (JuiJ&lt; 23-Aug. 22) Do nol be Umld
In your lnvolvemen1S today. but by the
same token. don't lake Impulsive risks
that you have no1 thoroughly analyzed.
E"atlc
ac11oos
eould
breed
compllco11ons.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) Follow
humanaln111nc1a1oday Instead of I
111)1hlng lhat Ia vlndlc1tve. even II somaone you dlallke treahl you In a rather
lltabby leahlon.
L11AA (lapl. 23-0ct 23) Business ar·
rangamenta with friends might not work
out1oo well al thlo time. To be on
life lids, don't do an)1hlna 1hl1 could
jeOpardize the retatlonahlp If 11
wrona.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 22) In splla
some mllcaleulatlon• made today,
' lool&lt;allkeyou could still be ralherfortu- 1
·na1e In mauera 1hat ... meaningful to
you In material wava.
..

.

.

.

.

.l.-

1

.

I
I 1· I'

6
..1..__.L.__.l__.J.L..J
by llll ing in the missing words
. yo u develop fro m sfeJ? No . 3 be low.

Wise old saying: "If you want to give a man credit, put it
In wri11ng. If you want to give him trouble, do it ON the

PHONE."
NORTH
.9H

BRIDGE

+.us ·ez
+H4

I •QJ1098
A common way to develop lricks is t!0743
+Q9
to set up a side-suit, but care frequently bas to be taken to do it in the right
way . This week we will look at some
successful stratesies.
. Declarer won the opening lead with
the ace of hearts, retaining the king in
dummy for an entry. Then he played
Vulnerable; Neither
K-Q of diamonds. Going over to dumDealer; South
my with the heart king, he cashed the
Norlll Eul
Ioeiia
diamond ace. When the suit failed to
_,
ZNT
divide, the defenders eventually took
P
..
3NT
five tricks.
P111
Declarer can give himself a better
Pill chance. His play would have netted an.
•
overtrick if diamonds had split, but all
Opening lead; Q
he needed was nine tricks. What .mond honor did not draw tbe jack or
should he have done? Suppose that be 10 from either defender? Declarer
had overtaken the second diamond would still play another round of ella·
honor from his hand with dummy's moods and hope for a s-s split: By
ace. Because East had the doubleton playlns in lhis fasbioo, declarer ACri·
jack, he could now lead the nine of dia· flees an overtrick at times but give~
moods from dummy. That would Ioree himself a better overall cbaace Of
out the 10; later the eight woold swal- makin1 the contract. He aucoaedl
low up the sev.en, and the remaininl whenever the diamonds split $-S, or
small card · would be a winne.r. And · whenever the jack or the 10 II ~
what if overtakin~ l)le. second dia- ton in either defender'a.lland.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Cabinf't
6 Ellington's

"-- Doll"

3 Dodge

4

5
6

11

Vacillate
12 Albee's
"Tiny ~ •

Rigid
Paradoxure
"The~ nug"
( lll61l film)

7 Beverage
8-- foil

13 On the
9
warpath
14 Doctrine 10
UYouth
17
16 Guido's
note
20
18 Chan's son Z1
19 Choral
22
work
24 Crow's cry 23
215 Hershiser
of the
24
Dodgers
26 Automaton
29 Spiteful
26
30 Rock
singer

Rink
covering.
Final
Murphy's
Perfectly
Buchwald27 Seraglio 315 Consumer
Alllan
chamber
advocate
holiday
28 Interdict 36 Means
Like malt 29 Cost of 39 Vldeodrink
carting
room Item
Michael 31 Re.d or 40 Quencher
Douglas
Coral
41 Sine quafilm
33 Abrade 42 Off one's
Ship
34 Unforbeak
gotten
Die face

«

~ Ant

31 Perched
32Tommy
Lasorda
Is one
34 Anecdotal
collection
37 Traitor
38 Lose pace
39 White of
the "Wheel"
430ut of
'
the way
45 Influence
46 Acknowl·
edged
471nc ome(Fr
48 Put forth

DOWN
l Cold spell
2 Greek
seasons
~toddesses

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two '()'s, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

11-28
GWSQPSQU

SQU

(IIUtATCIUy

VT P X Z

F X T .D Q S Q U

NSGWECG

GWSQPSQU

-,

FXTDQ-

AFSUWGH,

•Ill 'Hun1er•lis Lote
Nlghl McCall PGHI 11 a
fashion model to expose a

NSGWECG
EQX

T Q M

iiJI 8polhl1onlllht

~·lJ)Newll

11118

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

• crD NewlYwed Game

12:00()) Piper CMae

EAST
• J 10 6 4
.7H
8H
.KIOU

·ffi

By James Jacoby

(I)Itnplln Joumll (0;30)

=.:-.&amp;.rlne

·n.ta.u

•Ks

A shortage
of entries

11JIIIn0ff

I

~r~~~::i~ to fix thon
G) Com11lete the chuckle quoted

E

Hobble - Apply - Envoy -- Fondly - ON the PHONE

e«D Love Cor.-:tlon
iiJI MoneJIIne
lUI Tiles from lhe Darkelda
ill You Can le a lhar
11 :30eC2J !Ill Tonlghl._

.

An elderly man walking our
of a ref.a\r s hop mumbling to
htmsel , 'What this country
neede is fe~ inventions and

SCIIAM·LETS AN$WEU

(ZJ 'BA

~'l~:i l.'ll.~

~

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

(1 ;40)
10:30 (I)I!oatl!ndare A continuing
chronicle of the lives of
residents In London's East '
End . (0;30)
·
()) JunkUtMnlllry
.llll Odd Couple
1211 VldtoCoumry
11:00 (J)IIemlng1on ltaele
• (2) 1111 • iiJI iiS) NaWI
&lt;D College lallcltball

1-:

·

1:\ PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS I
{;:p IN THESE SQUARES

1:30 ·• (2) all The Hogan Fomlly
David acts like a drill
·
serge1nt when he supervises
tha twin's par1y. C
&lt;D NFL Mond8y ~lgllt
Mogazlne
Qll • 11:1) Coming of Age
Delight turns to despair when
Clndybeglns dating Brian
Brinker. t:;1
9:00 Q (2) OJ MOVIE:
'Sh001down' NBC Mond~y
Nlgh1 a1 lila Movlaa C
&lt;D Collage laakltbaR
(i) 8 (I) Mond8y Nlgh1
Foolball
•
(I) I1J HorowHz Ploy&amp;
Mourt,HorowHz' Deutsche
Grammophon recording of
Mozart Plano Concerto no.
23 In A Major with the la
Scala0rches1ra Is conducted
by Carto Marla Glullnl.
IIDJ Ill iiJ Murphy Brown
iiJilarry King Uvel •
0 MOVII!: l!"ndlau Love (R)
(1 :55)
9:30 Qll 181l21 Daalgnlng Women
Charlene leads her friends
on a pilgrimage to Memphis.
1211 New Country
10:00 IIl 700 Club
&lt;IJ iHl NaWI
(DUne!.- Fire
ill • 11:1) Almoal Grown
Norrn111 and Suzie must deal
w11h their teen-age
daughter's pregnancy.
It crD Iamay Miller
i1J Evening Nawa
1211 Crook lnd ChiN
10:0&amp; (l) MOVIE: F..,18alaliR)

•

Sweep, IP8dll

Phone 114-441-3888 or 114-

tiont. new

"

304-87&amp;-71 21.
Chfmn~~r

L·-

a-

Aot.-y or ellbf• tool drll6ng.

I I I

.

II

e

atump
rornovol. Coli 304-17&amp;-1331 .

Ron's

.

(!) NF Mondly Night
Match-Up los Angeles
•
Raiders vs Sehttle
(i) • (I) !hc:Gyver
MacGyver Is seriously Injured
when his jeep rolls over an
embankme~t. C
·
CZJ I1J Pyntmld' Live-action
film and animation tell tha
s1ory of the planning,
construction and cultural
significance of the Great
l'yramld at Giza. t:;1
aDI
11:1) How IIMi Qrlnclt
Chrltl-· Mlaerly
Grlneh tries to erase
Christmas trom Whovllla by
stealing all the ma1erlal
symbols of Christmas, only
10 discover he can 't dampen
1he spirit. C
Ill crD MOlliE: Tha1 Waa
Then•.• Thla Ia Now (RI (1 ;40)
IDI PrlmeNel!f&amp;
IHl MOVIE: WIH Guys (R)
(1 :3t)
0 Murder, 11M Wrote Q
1211 Naahvtlla Now
8:0&amp; (l) MOVIE: Sine of lila P..t
(NR)
__

'

1911 AMC Eovloo.w. Auto.. olr.
PSIP8, til. tt•eo. · n_., tir•
t2200. C.U14-24&amp;-8817.

117t Chevy pldc·up. PS. PB,
•uto trlnlmtMion. Very good
endllloft. Ptla. on Np.:tlon.
114-8411-2237.

••

IDI Nlaht Court

Painting: lntiWior A Exterior.

CARTER 'S PWMBINO
AND HEATING

72

Farm E"'lpmant

•

I

2dr .. turbo

01•-•

,&gt;; I I " '.[Ill ~

~f-

Goorgoo Creole Rd. Coli 11444&amp;-02t4.
.

ch.,ge. AC. AM·FM·Ctss .,
tttnct.d ..... 48. 000 mil•.
f4415. Coli 814-44&amp;-8897.

with m.wy -.trat. Tom Amd«·

lei Ill ;;lfiJitll''.

.""

replir, partl, ilnd auppll•. Pick
up .,d dllllvery, Dwit VacuUm
CleMer, one halt mile up

1982 -loc Trono AM . Stock

Floh Tonk. 2413 Jodloon A,.. oon 814-992·3341.
Point Pl-ont. 304-1711-2083.
10 golnt"" f14 .....d 10gol 1110 Corvette. Also 1114
complete e43.2e.
CarYIIIt• eonv.rtihl&amp; C:.ll11.tt48-2811 doyo; 814-247·48t1
Wlnln • .
57
Musical
1917FordEICDrt. 4opoed. roo1
Instruments
thlrp. One owner, E ,...l.,t
tDndl:lan. Und• Tr-•.W•
Plmo lor •le. Story en cf Clark Ford WW1'onty. 11300, 814conoolo. Good oonclllon. Col 742-31•2.
814-. .2-1101. h .m.- 12 nOOC\
FOf•••dellon•n.., oruMd
•:00.8:00p.m.
c•. trudl OJ ven. . . tc.nnv laa
at Jim Mink Chevrolet·
lncllvlclool gullor ~-- ....
114-44&amp;-3872 or
gin ..... - · guk-. lru~
c•do Mulio. 114-44&amp;-0117. 304-773-1134.
Jeff - .• ..., lnotniCior, 1141811 Plrmauth Turllno Dutter,
44&amp;-1077. Llrnltlld ""....,...
... amitlc. AM-FM • • •· AC,
PS. Pl. hllchbook- ecc concl,
17.1100mla 304-8711-2281
58
Fruit
8t Vegetables
1UO ,..nclorblrd. Momotlc.
eir; 1971 Melllbu WIIIOf\ eut~
matlc; 1171 AMC Hornet
Tnickloed IPPie Nte. Red aind -n3op. 304-87.7818.
Gold Doll- ••·" buohol. ·1 111 at• Cud•• Cl•&amp;' one
Jodlo Fruh Morkot. Rt. 38.
owntr. low mll~~ge. axe oond.
- - w.vo.
304-8711-1231.

d""od roqurlld. colt 304-11711•410 at. 60 or 53.

-'

(1 ;29)

t ... Local nfweCIJII tur,.hld.
Fr• Mtlnwt•. Call aolleat
1·114-237- 0418. dl¥ or night.
AogeraB•••ment

r=.tty Tr" Trhn.,...g.

Corvenea.

ldt~

FLOW.

IAIEMENT
WATEAPROOANG
Uncondttionel llf•lme ou·~·

304-57&amp;-2391 or 814-44&amp;2464.

1 Gov...,"*" lolzed Vohlcl•
from e100. Forde. Merced•!

-nol.

TIMING/ AND

1211 Crook and Chaae
7:05 (l) Andy Grtffllh
7:30 • (2) Family Feud
&lt;DNFLT(i) En181Uinmen1 Tonlgh1
8 (I) USA Today •
1111 18 iiJ OJ Jaoperdyl Q
1811ll M'A'S"H
iiJI Crouftre

&lt;$)
N

'•

RoN·s Ttlevialon ServiCe.
Houu ellis on ACA. Quaur,
OE •. IROC!illlng In Z.lh..CoH

Guld~ 111 8011-887·
•oeakMat:•l•
8000. ... 8·10189.
Guorontolld Quollty
CETIDE. INC .. Atllono-814"1H3 Ooclgo Chorv-. 2.2 mo&amp;14-31178
tor. red with btD lntlrior,
t1,781- 1910 CltotloC\ one
owner, 2 to,. gr.,, metaftlc
lniol\ Sh•l&gt; t1285. Coll81456
Pets for Sale
2fll-8522.

CFA P. .lan ll'ld fU.m . .

YouR
.

r."'

-::------------

..,.,., llrntl Pot Food Dool•.
Julio Webb Ph. 814-44&amp;-0231.

~ cA~I'*fro~. ~E$Pi

Home
Improvements

1884 Cltotlon 2 tone .
uterlor. light oray w our
........ •18t1. Coli 814-28&amp;8522.

i.l

Groom ond Supply Shop.Pet

81

814-44.2342. Moy boo_, ot
ThoGolllpolio Dolly Tribune. 8-6

lullclng Motlrlell
: 1981 Bulclc Century. 4 dr., AC.
Block. brick.. - • Plo•. win- 1 AM -FM. 115.000 miiM. One
clowo. lnllllo. etc. Cl.,do Win- I · V.., lhwp. U195. Coli
llro.- Alo Gronde, 0 . Coli 114- l 814-44&amp;-0122.
.
_24~&amp;-~8~1~21~·--________ : ----~~=----------=
t 1912 ......... Clm•o. 306
ConcrMt bloCIIb- aN sir...
-.glne. AC. PS. T. C. Alpine
ordollvor;.Mooon-d.Gol
I • - .., ..... low ml•. 1918
lit lloclc Co.• 123'1 Pine t .. : Formulo Flnblrd. -eel. Toke
Pl¥monto. CoM 814-4411&lt;lolllpoh. Ofllo. Coli 814-44&amp;- . 2783.
: 7370.

GrQomlng. All brHdi ... AII

KWIKI- FIX GARAGE

INE A{)vl..l..STf.P '(ouR

/I

C.~~ECT~P OU~

Ft• ootlmlta Col 114-44&amp;8344.

Building Supplies

• Ch..MI Rustle .
ond levolod ~ Slcln g

&amp; ERNIE'S

~==~~~-------o
S'NEEP ER and eewlno m.ahlne

Auto's For Sale

I·IOpO.PW.
PS, tit. .... Sh.rp c•. Runs
......... -~. t120D. No·

WESTERN RED CEDAR

..

FR~NK

Wot•.-fln•

2. WMoondSootch f11 .00ond
Spruoo U5.00. 304-&amp;773.

Smlll tpt. Jackt:on A..,. ,...,
rent 11315. 00 momh staully

phone 304-8711-1400.

I I &lt;ill SPill ldlillll

.=\I

• -·

t

TO C y 0

Q

IDI Cheart
0 Miami Vlce' C

s~rvii:I!S

RegilteNCI

lot but-ln.. 304-8711-1807.

For Nle CtwiltlNs rr... -a
now. 1!alc•d Cllopol Rood. 7
ml• northPointPI. .antonAt:

56

cr011.

A"Fo bull. Coli 114-44&amp;..
11&amp;8.

undtrneath- Ntw, *1000.•

••kino tiOO. 010. ou.~ ection
bike. tenlion control
Md tim•. Bnnd new. Alldng

Bunk bed 1&amp;0.00. 304-175-

nWtoe tetltvlng close to lhopplng. blnkl .,d acltoota. For
moulnlormotlon coll304-8823718. E.O.H.

One bedroom furnllhed IPI.
•xtrl nice Md ciM'I, no PMI.

K~

hut•.

AeoWttrM Ret

Now accepting IIPPiialtknlll for
2 bedroom ap ... ments. tJit;'
c•p«td. tpplill'l~ . ....-.... d
trMh pldcups provkled. M.. nt•

Nice 3 bedroom home with
b•--ondgorogo. 304-117113030 01' 8711-3431 .
.

Livestock

Simrnental

w•terbed, .....,,.
wwlltiu, whh
lilde , ..
cuahOns. llrge hetd bo•d with
llghta tnd mirror. ator-ta driMN-

outRt. 141. WorM8ho-•.
Coli 814--Dt593.

All Chrlstmea tr.e. •12.00.
come eerty' before cold weather

Motor• Homes
8t Campers

1971 14 ft. cnp•good oond.
f700.00 "'"' Col 814-44'&amp;8857 .. 4411-3103.

Club ooll. Koy A"F..Horolord-

Aefrlglr•or tnd ttove. Double
oven. Pl.,o 'br •1 .. 81.-.9923159.

f27.60), Jungle - · U.S .A..
Original Army clorNng. Nonmilitary Clmfhuge penta
112.00.
7247.

79

1987 13ft. lhooto Trolot. Soli
oomolnod. 814-9811-3120.

• - oodchwRh pilei. hoed
• •· •Royal.
br-•1100
- ·wkle
Modenow
11r
Sllv•
titS Coli 814-21111-11522.

140.00. CoH 814-742·2&amp;45.

Noll. O.c. (ln-..'-ted Coverllla

Nf•.-.'*·

2&amp;88.

63

to•

AKC Cock« SpMiel pup1.
male~- *110, t•m•ln-ezoo.
Toklng d-oll lor Chrlot,_.
Coli 814-38&amp;-..,o.

OLD ROUTE 21 . NEW EAA
304-273-5865. Noo.,.8 PM.

882·2888.

Ohlo 'l14-742-2451.

I Ho.,y H- (275 to 300 lbo.l

se. .ned Oolc. HlclcofY, Aoh
firewood tor •le. Big truck

tono. AKC C SURPLUS ARMY. OEN1M.

Uaed tr-m•111ona. All lnt•

Chlnon 8 mm movie
proiector. like""*'· '110/both.

Clll 814-4411-7821wfio.

throw out

avaM.t»ea.

too. MOft'io Equlomont. Autlond.

c.n•• •

pr•aure pl ..-. •

bo•ln,. -onty. 12moo. CYC
Joint- typoo, Col 814-3792220 .. 304-8711-8758.
.

olow•
• doo.
• • - · lllov•
...,_.
280 glllonoutftt

F.,.mEquiDment. ZltorTfiiCtort.
Howard RotwMo,.. Slad•.
FMdw Rn111- Buying old boll.-

814-387-711t.
29x7flboral _ _ _ •
h•dwlt•rd. l41 • • eao tor
both. eon 81 4-44&amp;-1121 we· ..

W•onty·30 d1¥o. Prt- ••9 ..
U.ed • ........ 10&lt;1'!1
oorwera... StenWd clutch•.

'U!&gt;

no11r mpootod. 30 d"'• gu•ont•. W..luy tnna"*tlona.. Clll
814· 448-0911. Robulldl~g

with ... 8 boomo. t3960.
Own• wll fln.noe. Call 81._
2111-•u

tor alit: Oak. Clll

Fir..,oocl

rebUilt •H typ111.

.

Sportrllla S1et1ing Mass

()) Nightly Bullneea Report
11DJ .il21 CBS NIWI
1811ll WKRP In ClnclnnaU
ll1l ShowBiz Today
IDI WKRP
iiJ Cartoon Expreaa
1211 You Can Be a Shlr
6:3&amp; (l) 8to 5
7:00 ()) Our l:loUH Families and
Friends
G (2) .PM Mogazlne
(!) 8por11Can1er (L)
(i) • (I) CurreM Affair
&lt;Il ()) MacNeil/ Llhrer
NewaHow (1 :00)
Ill Ill iiJ all Wheel of
FOrtuneQ
Ill crD Threa'a Company
IDI Moneyllne

BUOGET TRANSMISSION·
Und •

I I' I I l

· • 15

()) MOVII!: r. Who: Sea ·
Devils INRI (2;16)
Ill crD Happy Doyo
IDI Facto of uta
0 Fa1 Albert
1211 Fandanao
1:05 (l) Cola Day 11 1 Time
1:30•• (2) all NBC Nightly Newa

e

POLLAN ___;__ _ __

I

IDOTDY

~

tomorrow.

and Rosl Mlttannaier
(i)
(I) .ABC Nawa
(ZJ Body l!lac1rlc

1000 Ford Df•ll tNator with

gotlobl~

Dutchwe.a c•t ·wood • co•
stov• with acce~torl•. Used
onlv 1 · ...aon. 11500. Clll

304-n2-2see.

30+8711-44U orl78-2138. '

UTILITY ILOG . SPL .:
30'x40'•e·r· cl. . ~nee. 1 ~
11' x1r trook door. 1·3' -lk
: 141. . ERECTEO. Iron
HON111dro.Coll814-332·f745
Collool.

Sleep• tof• in •aellw condition. Coli 114-44&amp;-3848 aft• S
PM.

USEO APPLIANCES

w.h. .. dry... refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appli1ncea .
Upper River Rd. betide Stone

~lnJ wood

Slide In Wreelt• loom. Cell

st•rtinct *99.

USED· ledl, drt.e... bedroom
auh:•. Deab. wringer waaher, •
complete line of und furniture.
NEW- WMt•n boot• e35,
Workboota *18 • up. {Steef &amp;

IOOCnedlellltractor, plowsa
dlac, O.hl grlnct.r. mbutr·
•2411. 2010 JO wtth -~
dllc• lllth holt •3191. Own.
wll ftnon... Coli 114-28&amp;1122.

CLAY

.....,N:;.;A:.;...:.:.K.;.L:....:Y,..·~~ ·

tonlgh1 thaiu can live with

REPORT TOM\' IS A600T CEILINGS!
IF EVERVONE WILL LOOK UP. ·
'(()IJ'LL NOTICE WE llAVE DIRECTL'(
ABOVE OUR !-lEADS SOMETI-liNG
WE CALL A 'CEILING:..

Wh_.ah. . rWN ar ul«&lt;. 3
whMied llectric 1ooot. .. C .. l

houa•. Pt. Ple•ll'l111'1d O•llipoHa. 814-44&amp;-8221.

CoH lor liuyll''o guldolllot to
Ed. G Z7 58.

Learn how to make choices

'1'ES, w:. AM. I'MAWAKE! M'i

0822.

2 untnnilhed. 127 Mult.rrv.
Ave., Pom•ov. 4 roonw and
b• h. Adullt ont,o. No P••· Dep.

Ctdmua. 1~00 dep01It.

mo. eon 1· 814-1711-

51

lOft toe) . Col! 814-44$.3169.

992-3711 . EOH.

Pl.-ttt Sub.-4 BR :. full .,_.
mer~t. c•pet. ,_ l'llnge. ctty
achooll. Adutls on!v'-one child

Real Eslale

~=

Homes for Rent

poto. Coli 814-44&amp;-0338.

vcWme a hop, Re~ oed for qui de:

31

41

SHAOY LAWN APTS.·729 So·
wot• 8 g•boge. Slnalo ...,,.,
only. Coli 81;1-44&amp;-~607 or
44&amp;-2802.

Renlals

Mc:rcha nd1se

Furnished downrtalrt, 3 room1

Clyde Bowen. Jr. 304-8711-

w .v • . 304-&amp;7&amp;-842t.

Comm•cill Building for .._e.
Pt. P....... Coli 304-87&amp;5104.

814-992-8888.

2338.

Buildin_g lot, 144x106,
$8,000. 00. acrou from Beale
Grade School Galllpolll Ferry,

Motorcycles

IIIPP"OV'!Mi credit. 3 ft.1 I• out
Rd. Open 9Mn to llpm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 814-44&amp;

Good used floor model and
port•bl• oo1or N's for •le. c.n

·21

74

l~lll'lh

Red T~ Special

7479.. .

2 bectoom tr~~l• on nice lot.
Ch•hire. Ohio. 1-304-7'736828.

44

•

ct~~h wllh

90 Dav• s.-n• ••

I

F'1 WOfttl. TX

6 :00 ()) Bonanza: The Loot ·
Epllodeo
• (2) (i) fiJ (J) IIDJ lll il21
I!Sl !&lt;lew• · ,
&lt;D 8po!h1Look
&lt;Il Tho. of Choice

1 t7B ChtiiiY 81uw. 41c4. good
cond. •1.860.00. 304-87112417.

by

- -of tFte
~.,·-1- - - Rearrange
letters'
four Kromb led words be·
low to form four sirnple words.

EVENING

8711-7888.

headbo•dl *30 and up to •••·

nice and ciiJII'I. coupiM. small

,.,_a1ce.

no. TV l.•lliltcl Clo'OUP . Inc

1t78 BIMW 4-IP&lt; 1977 Chw

bectoom sutt•. met.. cabin tis.

________;__: Edited

MON., NOV. 28 • •
OliN

fwd .,.omotlc:; 1971 Odogo
artomotlc; 1972 Dodge. 304-

188. Queen Htl 1210 • up,
King *350. 4dr.w•chelt eea.
Gun c.bintlt I. 8 • 10 gu~
Bobr monr- t38 • t41.
Bod 1r. . . no. 130 • King
fnme •ao. Good IIIICI:Ian of

eppolntrMnt

O.nny.

roonw. g•dln tub, centr .. air,
v• tmwaa c•p•g. 1obl2
awning. Exc:ell.nt condition.
prlcedr8lll- t14-992·7360.

t2t6onduptot395.11obv-

•

o

I 110. M.Ur. . . . or box epring1

Sun., 12 Noon- I PM
Open after hours

1970 New Moon 12Jtl!i tf•R•.
Clll 814-25&amp;-1333 oft•11·PM.

1t83 Shu11z 14rl80. 2 bed-

w ·lftllttr.....

Aportmonto lor tho Elderly.
O.llia Mwlor A.,_.mantt:. 856
BuhiMortonRoad. Dnianldfor
tho Bonlor c~~on 182 I otwl
end .... diCIPPidP ... Ofti, E....
houtlng opportuntty. Applcetione ml¥ blpidc.edup•t Spring
VIllar PI••· tl129 Jeckson Pile
or cal 114-441-4t39.

1973 2 IR .. N- Moon 12x55

1911 FIIOIWood. 12xli4. bollle
9'1 h. . .,d hot w.t • . 13000.
CeH 814-843-5310 or 814843-6401 . onytime. ....... lor

compl••

304-8711-5104.
Aportmonto
.. d hou-. Col

Own• moving. Price rGced.
s300o. co11 1 '"' :J79. 2278.

Situations
Wanted

b..

1813 1 · 10 II••· •c. oond.,

ro

lnt*Jding porch &amp;Underpinning.
Ch•ge. Even with bad cr..dit . . .aove. nrfrlg.. c•p~t-1 yr. old.
No one rtluaed. Call 213-926·
curtllina. llrnece-3 vra. old.
9908 at. U 2&amp;08.

P81PB. AC. f7.000. Col 114378-2101

;~

e

1235. Ullllti• palcl Calf 441-

8211-'z Sec. ED. oond.. 2 BA .,

Guaranteed Vlaa-MC. US

Hutch• *400 and up. lunk

ch••

t795. 0Mk 11001111 to t371.

...

4418aft•7·PM.

r~~;:;:;;;;:::;;;:::;:~~=T';;;:::~:::=::;=;;:==1
31

1t77.IMIC-.17, ,..,Itop. 1871
J""" C.J7. h•dtop. loot ollw.
Coli 114,.44&amp;-7370.

··--

-I

Furniohedopt. No•HMC,1BA .

guidance .COQI\S
. elor."

fl-.

to t!95. Aeolln. . 1221 to
1375. lampa f28 to e121.
Olnlll• t109 ond up to t411'Nood tabla w-1
UIIS to

oloud pMio. pool. pl"'groun4.
Wit•. ...,... a tr•h lnduclecf.
Starting et • 289 pao mo. C•H
814-387· 7880.

h ave certain
•
.
•
abOUt the fleW
feServatJOflS
"}'

Sot• ll'ld ch . . priced from
f396 to U9S. T•bl• .t 60 ond
up .to *125. Hlde-•·Mdl t310

·-

Nknda~Novam~~t:r~2~8~,1~9:8:B~--~--~======~------::~~P~a~m~MW~o~y~M~~~~~~rt~,~O~h;io~~~~lr~~;;~::;;;:~;The~~o~•~·v~s;end;:n:ei::P:•:a•:;!,~~
Television
':~~:~;~' &lt;0©\\~lA-~ttr.s·
::!:
t.
-V·tewtng
0

Vana8t 4 W .O.

1184C"-'v 4o4. 308. Mo. . olr,
· PS ,
S .W.I . with ,., P8. lh•P· t78110. Coli 81437t-Z748

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

tun or twin eea firm •11. ll'ld

BE.IIJTIRJL APARTMENTS AT
IUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jocbon
Pike from *183 • mo. Wllk to
ond movtoo. 814-44&amp;25 11- E.O.H .

4:00.9:00 pm Good t-r~
wove; pllid w - ; ""PIV oft•
10:00 - - ..- . Doc. 1 ..
104~ tupatelrtl Main St ..

73

KIT ~CARLYLE® by Lairy Wriaht

Apartment
for Rent

2 IR . apca. t clo••e. ldtch.,..
- ._Ju r. . !lll!,_ W.Ohor·D'Y•

tlon 'rogram 1t --woodltnd
Cent ... Inc. Mat. . degrte or
._ulritltnl r«~Uhd. Prefer •perl•ct wtth ment.-v di11bled
8llllto. E_on.,..t-lng In
woup work would be hllptJI.
Woocllnd c...... Inc.. do•
noldllcritn.,•eonthebMIIof

Monday, November 28, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 1 0- The Daily Sentinel

-

sz

T

MSZTZGXO_

REQACRSCZ

Ye.terdBJ'I Cryptoquote: KIND WORDS CAN BE
~ SHORT AND EASY TO SPEAK, BUT THEIR ECHOES
ARE TRULY ENDLESS. - MOTHER TERESA

�-

(

----

~==_::.=__::::._

-...,-

--

-

......

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Monday; November 28, 198.8

•

,

.

...---Local news ·briefs...----. North Carolina Tornadoes kill ... _c_on_tln_u_e_d_fr_om_p_ag_e_1·- : - - - - - thaat struck.

Continued from page 1
Minn.
jammed the armory.
-:to-.P"l-e a--s"'a""'n7't~v
=
at"'I=
ey~
Hospltal; Rutland sq_u_,a-.d-.44,-a"'n:-:r
_~ .,.,
fl1r"e'~1 - An estimated 2,000 people- Siiow lUIVISllrli!S -continued
department at 4:32 p.m. to an auto accident on Corn Hollow
packed National Guard armo- Monday for the mountains ·or the
ries, schools, churches and cafes Paclllc Norlhwesr.amthlgh wind·
Road for Steve McGrath who was dead on arrival; Middleport
Rescue 17 was called to the scene at 4: 38p.m.; Rutland squad 40
In Jackson, Minn. In Worthing· · warnl!lgs were posted in many
was called at 4:50p.m.; Rutland squad 40 was called .back to the
ton, Minn., hotels put up stranded areas.
travelers and some people were
At least two tornadoes ripped
scene at 5:54 p.m. for Mike Shuler to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
given refuge at the armory while through tile Raleigh. N.C. , area
Sunday at 10:24 a.m., Racine squads 28 and 24, and the f!re
in Windom, ·Minn., 400 ~pie ' about 1 a.m. Monday, killing at
department, to an auto accident on County Road 28; Susan
Waugh and Jessica Waugh were taken from tile scene to
Continued from page 1 .
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Jean Waugh was taken from the
accident scene to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Syracuse
Bowling Green: Gary 0. De· accident on Ohio 18 in Defiance
EMS which was called at10: 28 a.m.; Mlddleportat11:05a .m. to
weese, 28, Bowling Green. killed County.
Dayton: Terri J. Gaulding, 29,
Riverside Apts. tor Barbara Bolln who was treated but not
In a one-car crash on a Bowling
killed in a one-car accident on a
transported; Racine EMS and fire department at 11: 21 a.m. to
Green city street.
Dayton city street.
an auto accident on Pine Grove Road: Iva Rayburn was
Thursday
Saturday
transported by EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Lisbon: Robyn M. Klusch, 18,
Middleport at 12:41 p.m. to Railroad St. for Lewis Taylor to
Lisbon, killed in a one-car ·Ashtabula: Steven G. Glazier,
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 5: 37 p.m. to County
accident on Ohio 1721n Columbl· 19, Jefferson, kllled in a one-car
accident on Ohio 307ln Ashtabula
Road 34 for Goldie Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
ana County.
Rutland at 9; 35 p.m. to New Lima Road for Ernestine Lambert
Columbus: SCott A. Boehm, 16, County.
to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy af9:34 p.m. toNyeAve. for
Warren: Kenneth R. McLean,
Grove City, killed when the
Allen Ward -to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
bicycle he was riding was hit by a 28, Leavittsburg, killed when his
car collided with a pickup truck
car on a Franklin County road.
In Trumbull County.
Friday
Wapakoneta: Rebecca A. SeiDefiance: Lester L. Ludeman,
bert,
53, Spencerville, killed In a
38, Napoleon. k11led In a one-~ar
;~ccldent on Ohio 198 in
two-car
eight grandcchlldren and 12
Auglalze
County.
Evelyn Knight
great-grandchlldren.
Pomeroy:
Steve R. McGrath,
Besides her parents, she was
Mrs. Evelyn G. Knight, 79, 118 preceded In death by two brotll·
27, Rutland, kllled when the
Dally stock' prices
vehicle he was rtdlngln went off a
Lincoln Road, well known Pomeers aild four sisters.
(As oll0:30 a.m.)
roy resident, died early Sunday
Meigs County road.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Bryce and Mark Smith
Cleveland: Barbara Davis, 36,
morning at Veterans Memllrlal
Wednesday at tlleEwingFuneral of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Hospital following a lingering Home with Mr. James Cum·
Cleveland, killed In a two-car
illness.
mlngs, Sr., officiating. Burial Am Electric Power ............. 26% accident on a Cleveland cltv
Among the survivors are her will be In the Letart Falls
street.
AT&amp;T ................................. 29\4
• husband, A. R. Knight, retired,
Sunday
Cemetery. Friends may call at Ashland 011 ........................33%
Hudson:
Gary
E. Hllls, 36,
who operated the Pomeroy Mo·
the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 Bob Evans .......................... 16%
tor Co. as well as automobile
Munroe
Falls,
killed
in a threeto 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Charming Shoppes .............. 12% vehicle accident on a Summit
agencies In Gallipolis and Point
City Holding Co .................. 32'4 County road.
Pleasant for many years.
William
Schall
Federal Mogul... ............. ... -47%
Plans for. a memorial service
'
Goodyear
T&amp;R .. .............. .47%
will be announced by the
Wllliam Henry Schall Sr., 80, of Heck's ................................. %
Caroling slated
Rawllngs·Coats·Biower Funeral Route 2, Stewart, died early
Key
Centurion
...
,
.....
..
.........
16'4
Home In Middleport.
Monday morning at his home, LandE' End ......................... 25%
Bring your best singing voice
after
an
extended
lllness.
Limited
Inc
......................
25\o!!
and
join the Christmas caroling
Stevie McGrath
Mr. Schall was a carpenter, Multimedia Inc ................ ... 70\o!! at the Apple Grove United
born Fe b. 26, 1908 In A!hens Rax Restaurants .......... :....... 3% Methodist Church this Thursday
Stevie R. McGrath, 27, of
County.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11'4 evening at 6:30p.m. The church
Rutland, died late Saturday
Surviving
are_four
sons,
Cha·
Shoney's
Inc ......................... 7% Is located 10 miles above Racine
afternoon !rom lnjl!rles sus·
rles
Schall,
of
Stewart,
William
Wendy's
Inti
........................ 5'n on State Route 338:Everyone Is
tained in an auto accident on
Schall
Jr.,
of
Guysville,
Walter
Worthington
Ind .................. 21
welcome.
Corn Hollow Road near Rutland.
Schall,
of
Heath,
and
Roger
A Cllrpenter, Mr. McGrath was
Schall, of Shepard Air Force
Party slated
born May 6,1961, a son of Charles
Base, Texas: a brother, Walter
McGrath, of Chauncey, and
Salisbury Pack 246 wlll hold
Rachael Jacks Hutton, of SChall, of Chicago, Ill.; a sister,
Veterans Memorial
Betty Hagel, of New Richmond;
their
annual Christmas party
Rutland.
Saturday Admissions
a sister· in-law, Beatrice Hawk,
Survivors Include hls parents;
Thursday,
7 p.m., at the Rock
Freeda McFann, Pomeroy; Got·
of
Route
6,
Athens;
16
grand·
Springs
United
Methodist
two brothers, Charles E.
dle Hendren, Pomeroy; Guy
children and 13 great
Church.
Each
cub
scout
is to
McGrath and Anthony McGrath,
Roush, Pomeroy.
grandchildren.
both of Rutland; two sisters,
Saturday btscharges- Goldie bring a gift for exchanging.
He was preceded In death by
Rhonda McGrath, of Rutland,
Famllles are welcome.
Roberts, Sarah Congo.
his wife, Etta Lonas Schali, In
and April McGrath, of Congers,
Sunday Admissions - Ronald
1978, three brotllers, a sister, two
Ga.; and two half-brotllers,
Collins, Pomeroy; Goldie Ro- Trustees to meet
granddaughters
and
two
· Christopher Hutton and Marty
berts, Racine.
grandsons.
Hutton, botll of Rutland.
Orange Township Trustees will
Sunday Discharges - None.
Services
will
be
11
a.m.
Thurs·
Services will be Wednesday, 2
meet
in regular session Tuesday,
day at the White Funeral Home
p.m.. at the Hunter Funeral
7:30p.m.,
at the home of Dorothy
with Rev. James Lillibridge
Wednesday
l!ome, with Rev. Tom Kelly
Calaway,
clerk.
officiating. Burial will be In
olflclatlng. Burial will be in Miles
Soutll Canaan Cemetery in the
The Middleport Literary Club
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Canaaiwille
area.
Friends
may
wlll
meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the funeral home on Tuesday
call
at
the
funeral
home
after
4
the
home
of Mrs. Richard Owen.
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
p.m. on Wednesday.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace wlll review
"Washington Goes, to War" by
Della Proffitt
David Brinkley. Memories of
Fox huntel'l! to meet
·World ·war II wlll be roU call.
Delia Myrtle Proffitt, 90, Route
ThP Meigs County Fox Hunters
1, Portland, died Mondayy at
wlll meet Friday. Officers wlll be
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
elected. Dues are payable at tllis
A homemaker, Mrs. Proffitt
time ..
was born Jan. 9, 1898 at Red
Knob, W. Va., a daughter of the
tated Frank and Sarah Daugh·
SAT., NOV. 26, 1988
Church· bazaar slated
erty Ferrell. She was a member
of the Reorganized Church of
The annual Racine United
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Methodist Church Bazaar will be
on SATURDAYS
be
Saints.
'held Saturday, from 10 a.m. to s·
Surviving are her husband,
p.m., at tile church on Elm St. in
9:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.
- Clarence W. Proffitt; three
Racine. .Quilts, rugs, comforters,
daughters, Mrs. George (Mada·
crafts, baked goods and candy
lene ) Weslfall, Ravenswood, W.
wlll be sold. Chitken and noodle
Va.; Mrs. Jack (Norma) Sharpdinners will also be served. The
nack, Col)lmbus; and Mrs. Joel
bazaar Is sponsored by the
992-6669
(Earlene) Stobart, Racine: a
United Methodist Women. Eve·
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
son, Howard Proffitt, Columbus,
ryone welcome.

Ohio has•••

--Area deaths---

Stocks

'

Hospital news

MeetS

least tlve pet pie and Injuring 119,

offlclals-said. -~--

Hundreds of homes were damaged by tile cyclonic winds, and a
K-Mart store on U.S. 70 was
reduced to rubble.
The twisters caught the vlc·
tlms and emergency planning
personnel by surprise, with the
first warning of the storm comIng only after It had already hlt.
Power outages also were
reported.
· Hospitals reported Injured pea·
pie arriving in droves, many of
tnem stillln their pajamas.
''They're coming In by the
carloads," said a spokesm&lt;!n In
the emergency room at Rex
Hospital.
Trees 16 inches In diameter
were snapped like dry pretzels
and blocked streets hampering
rescue efforts.
Gov. Jim Martin of North
Carolina said the fatalities In·
eluded three Wake County res!·
dents and two people In Nash
County following the tornadoes

Ohio Lottery

26 more

"Surely there have been more
lnjurtes," Martin said at a news
conference. "There may be otll·
ers (fatalities) as people are able
to uncover the debris. In some
cases, It took a while to clear1
away tree damage to · get to
people needing help."

Daily Number

days 'til
Christmas

831
0474

•

"There is Incredible destruc·
tlon out here," said radio repor·
ter Adam Hochberg in Raleigh.
The weather system that
spawned the tornado also
dumped he.avy rains and high
wln~s across most of the Eas I
Coast early Monday, flooding
roads In New Jersey and Dela·
ware, uprooting trees and down·
lng power lines In several states.

. ..

'

Vo1.39. No.143
.
19811

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·

with highs between 40 and 45.
Extenclecl Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of showers or snow
flurries Wednesday and Friday,
.with generally fair conditions on
Thursday. Highs will be between
·35 and 45, with overnight lows in
the 20s.

numbers, good for $5,000.
Another 73 had the first four
numbers for $1,000; 736 the first
three for $100; and 7,191 had the
first two numbers for $10.
Wednesday night's game wlll
carry a $3 million jackpot for tile
SuJ?Cr Lotto drawing. .

Now Open For The
Christmas Sea.son. ·
, oPOiNSmiAS • POINSETTIA
HANGING BASKETS oHOLLY TREES
•AFRICAN VIOLETS •FOUAOE
PlANTS a BASKETS -MONUMENT
SPRAYS
•C!METEAY VASES
•WREATHS •d GRAVE BLANKETS

•LIVE a CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

OPEN DAILY 9 All-5 PM

SUNDAY I PM-5 PM

HUBBARD'S GIEINHOUSE
992-5776-SYIACISE, OH.

ATTENTION!
Effective

Our Store Hours
will

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

JUNIOR WINNERS - Billy Cra11e was the
hordcallure sweepstakes wlaaer aad Usa Stethem won the junior best ol show in artistic

arr111pments a&amp; the weekend Dower show held a&amp;
the Melp County Senior Cltlzeas Center. (See
page 5 for additional plct ures and slory.)

:Snow, freezing rain closes
roads in Minnesota, Iowa
'

•

By United Press lnternatiOI!I&amp;L
Snow and freezing rain s)lc1&lt;ed
roads from Iowa to Mlt~nesota
Tuesday and high wind~ raked
the nortlleast and sot,~lhwest
corners of the nation.
Forecasters at the National
Weather Service said from 2 to1inches of snbw fell overnight at
Sioux City, Spencer, Storm Lake,
Fort Dodge and Mason City In
Iowa and up to 41nches more was
expected by midday.
"Roads are snow-covered and
very slippery In those areas," the
weather service said.
Snowfall ranged from 1 to 3
.Inches in Wortlllngton and Fair·
mont, Minn., early Tuesday and
road · conditions were compli·
cated by freezing rain, f&lt;irecas·
ters said.
Wet snow and freezing rain
also were falling across parts of
Nebraska and Wisconsin. Fore·
casters said a mixture of snow

and freezing rain would fall from
Kansas to Indiana later In the
day as temperatures rose.
Most of the rest of the iiatlon
re110rted dry weather by sunrise
Tuesday, with partly cloudy to
cloudy .skies coyerlng the north·
ern half of the United States and
clear skies prevailing over the
southern half.
Tallahassee, Fla., tied a record
low · with a 27·degree reading
early Tuesday. The record orlgl·
nally was set in 1959.
At Cape Canaveral, Fla., offi·
cials feared the prospect of high
winds and rain would delay
Thursday's scheduled launch of
·the shuttle Atlantis.
Air Fore«',. forecasters predicted rain showers and wind
gusts to 24 mph at launch time.
The weather Is a major factor In
the conservative post-Challenger
environment.
·'There Is a 70 percent probabll-

tty the launch criteria will be
vlolated,l 1 Air )force Capt. Ken
Warren said.
The storm system that
spawned &lt;1 half-dozen•tornadoes,
killing four ~pie and Injuring
more than 150 ill North Carolina
on Monday, was well out In tile
Atlantic Ocean by Tuesday,
forecasters said.
Likewise, anotller. storm system that caused heavy snow In
parts of Michigan moved into
Canada.
Squalls In the lower Great
Lakes region produced 6 Inches
of snow on Monday at Colden,
N.Y., with 2 to 5 inches reported
over the rest of. western New
York state.
Forecasters said winds gusting
to 60 mph were likely Tuesday In
Soutllern California. In the Nor·
lheast, gale warnings were In
effect for the New Hampshire
and Maine coasts.

Mason County teacher may return
to classroom by obeying dress code
10 Pieces ·

"'(ou do not negotiate a contra,ct
six
monlhs after !he contract was
OVPStafr
signed,"
Webb said. "I am willing
. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
to
abide
by
!he contract I signed in
Superintendent of Mason County
May.
They
would
be very upset if I
School Charles Chambers wiU
came
back
to school the first day
recommend to !he school board !hat
and said I would only teach four
Bill Webb be allowed 10 come back
classes
instead of six...
to the classroom if he is willing to
Though
the new dress code,
. comply to tile new dress code.
which
has met board approval, is
''They changed !he rules:: Webb
the same in many respects as the
said in reaction today, adding he's
dress
code previously enacted by
not inclined tD take up !he offer.
the
superintendent,
ties are not re"They have made my dress a
quired.
!hough
they
·are recommen. specific condition for employded.
Bul
jeans
are
stiU
banned from
ment," Webb said. "That was not an
the
classroom.
agreement when I signed my con''They 'II find out that conuacts
uact in May."
are
legal and binding, and thar they
Acconling to a letter sent hy
can't change !hem," Webb said of
lh~ issue, adding that would happen
no malter where it surfaced.
Webb's suspensions came after
he continually wore jeans and no
tie to school during the time that
the
superintendent's dress code ·was
James W. Carpenfer, who has served as interim superintend·
in effect in Mason County schools.
ent of the Meigs Local School District since last March when
"We are now awaiting a reply
Supt. Dan E. Morris became lll, has been named district
from
!hem," (Webb and Kopelman)
superintendent.
Chambers said today. Chambers
. Carpenter was named assistant superintendent to Morris
also indicated that he hoped the
·
.
,
some five years ago.
reply came before !he Thursday
He was named new district superintendent following• an
suspension
hearing
that
is
execu ttve session at tile board's regular meeting !1av. 22. Board
scheduled
for
Webb.
The
hearing
members Richard Vaughan, Larry Rupe and Robert Barton
would be the lhird suspension for
cast votes naming Carpenter to the post whlle board members.
insubordination
thai Webb has apRobert Snowden and Jeff Werry voted against tile appointment.
peared
in,
all
concerning
his non·
Carpenter was given a ¢&amp;ntract for the remainder of the
compliance
with
the
!lress
code.
current school year, plus two additional years.
"I believe !hat is just as far
backwards as Mr. Chambers could
bend to be fair," Damron said. "I
Rutland residents wlll get to enjoy Christmas decorations
would hope !hat Mr. Webb would
be reasonable and come back 10
throughout the village this y~. if enough donations come in to
pay tor adjustments which are necessary on electric poles to
work dressed appropria&amp;ely."
lacUltate decorations. The adjustments will cost $30 per pole.
Webb, who appeared in a hearing
Boxes for donations have been placed In Rutland businesses.
in Charleston after he filed a
grievance on !he school board's
previous decisloo, said that helring
examinez Drew Crislip Sl8ltd his
No one was injured in a Meigs County accident at 6:30 p.m.
. decision from the stale level hearMonday on CR. 30, about two miles east of SR. 7, near Pomeroy,
ing would not be made befcm: the
according to the State Highway Patrol.
,
Thursday hearing scheduled with
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
co-·n_
· tin_ued_o_n_p;..a.;;g_e_Io_~-------' · the county school board.
ByJE~ESURFACE

Kentucky fried Chicken
LarC• B~ Muhed Potatoes and
Large Gravy, Large Fresh Cole Slaw
and 4 Buttermilk Bilcuita

DAILY AFTER 4 PM, ALL DAY SUNDAY

PURCHASE AT REGULAR PRICE
PONDEROSA'S ALL• YOU •CAN • EAT

GUND BUffET"'

Charles Damron, counsel for
Chambers, which was addressed tD
Larry Kopelman,Webb's attorney,
if Webb is willing tD return to work
wearing dress slacks and not blue
jeans, then Chambers will be will·
ing to recommend tD !he board that
Webb go back to !he classroom.
Webb, Point Pleasant High
School mathematics teacher, would
have tD drop his appeal of an 11day suspensiOn wilhout pay, and he
would not be paid for !he days he
has been off during hi' current
suspension, according to Damron.
Webb says ,he is not willing tD
negotiate with Chambers, thll board
or. Damron.

Meigs
jobless
rate drops
Meigs, Gallia, Jackson, Law·
renee and Gallia counties showed
decreases in unemployment
rates from September to October
while VInton County's unnem·
ployment rate showed an Increase for the· same period,
according to tile Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services (OBES).
The total workforce of tile six
co·unty Soulheastern Ohio area
numbered 83,200, with about 6
percent or 5,000 of that number
among the jobless.
Jackson County had lbe largest
decrease In unemployment,
down 1.2 percentfrom 8.2 to7.0in
October; Athens County dropped
1.1 percent from 6.1 to 5.0
percent; Gallla County, down 1.1
percent from 7.5 to 6.4 percent;
and Meigs County, down 1.1
percent from 7.8 to 6.8 percent.
VInton County's unemployment Increased 0.1 percent frOI)1
9.0 to 9.1 percent.
OBES announced the state's
unemployment rates ranged
from a low of 3. 7 percent In
Geauga and Hancock counties to
a high of 10.4 percent In Adams
County.

Carpenter named superintendent

AND GET OUR SPECIAL CUT

SIRLOIN
STEAK
AND ALL• YOU •CAN •

Rutland may get decorations

EAT~ (A.tll/

SUDAIBAB~
r

Upper Rl\'1!1' Rd.
( aerGM from the Airport)

No one hurt in Meigs aecident

Gallipoll•, Ohio

CROW'S FAMILY RESTA

PHONE 992-5432

We know the value of a good family meal"

.228 WEST MAIN

POMEROY
EXPIRES 2/~_1/88

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc.

By BOB HOEFLICH
nounced for Dec. 8from 1 to 4:30
used for loading and unloading
Sentinel News Staff
p.m. Councilman Paul Gerard children b€cause it Is believed
Beginning Thursday, Dec. 1, has registered to attend the
that is a safer area than using
shoppers In Middleport wlll be seminar. Council also decided to North Second Ave., where there
offered two hours or free parking have only one regular meeting In
Is at times heavy traffic. Rev.
through Christmas.
December due to Christmas with
Pangia said that some68 cars are
This was the decision when Mayor Hoffman being au thO·
involved In transporting children
Middleport .VIllage Council met rlzed to call. a special session to the school and there are times
In regular session Monday night. · during the month should the need during the day that the alley Is
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported arrive.
busy with the traffic.
that the Middleport Chamber of
Council discussed setting up
Approximately 20 residents
Commerce had requested that met with co\mcll to open the loading zones during certain
meters be freed and had sug· meeting with a discussion on the bours at metered areas Ol). Nortll
gested several dates, one as late use of an alley behind the Second Ave., and use of the
as Dec. 12. However, council (ell Rejoicing Life Christian School.
school's playground lot for some
that the free meters beginning
Residents llving on the street of tile cars to alleviate the
Dec. 12 would be too late to behind the school use the ailey situation. Council members and
provide an incentive lor shoppers located · between Second and Mayor Hoffman were sympa·
to come In to the town and so Third Avenues because their thetic In the direction of both
passed a motion using the may- garages and parking facilities groups. At the suggestion of
or· s rec.&gt;mmended date of Dec. 1. are located on the alley behind Council President Dewey Horton
In return for freeing the meters their homes. Through their spo- who commented that too many
tile chamber is making a $500 kesman, Kenny Byer, they stated people make settlement of a •
' contribution to the village.
that the alley is being blocked dispute difficult, It was agreed
Thinking along holiday lines and made unusable because of · that a second meeting on the
apparently, council also took heavy parking In the alley by problem will be held at 8 p.m.
action to provide Christmas patrons of the school. Residents Wednesday. Present at that
bonuses for village employes and charged that their parking areas meeting will be Mayor Hoffman, ..
approved $250 for full time and garages are sometimes two members of council, two
employees and $125 for part time blocked and a result they are late representatives of residents, two
employees. Cost to the village reporting to their employment representatives of the church
will be $5,125. Last year full tinie and also two firemen llvlng in the ·a nd Police Chief Sid Little.
employees received $200 and area are at times unable to
Present for the meeting were
pa~t time employees, $100.
Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck,
answer calls.
~ayor Hoffman also asked
Representatives of the church and Councilmen Jack Satter·
council members to review a and school through their spokes· field, Wllllam Walters, Gerard,
letl!!r which h!! J!as prepa_rec;! for man, the ~v. l'4ich"el Pangia, Gilmore, James Clatworthy and
sending to all residents ofMlddle- commented that, the alley was Horton.
·porl to determine how many
custDmers will be available on
the proposed village operated
cable television service. Sugges·
tlons ·from council members will
be placed in the revised edition of
the letter before It is mailed to
residents.
The mayor also gave counc11
members a copy of an ordinance
dealing with the pay of vlllage
employees and asked them to
study the measure and to make
their recommendations at tile
next meeting.. Any salary In·
creases for employees would go
Into effect about next March the
mayor said since the last in·
crease for employees went Into
effect in March, 1988.
Councilmen Dewey Horton and
Bob Gilmore were appointed to
serve on the Firemen's Dependecy Board and Mayor.Hoffman
presented an Invitation to all
members of councll and Clerk·
Treasurer Jon Buck to attend the
fire department's honorary fire. man's dinner to be held at 6 p.m.
SIGNING INTO LAW -Gov. Richard Celeste signed Into law a
Thursday at tile American Le·
measure
wblch establishes a mall-order and date-of-blrih vehicle
gion Annex. A community devel·
registration
procedure and depolltlclzes Ohio's depuly registrar
opment block grant seminar to
system
Monday.
Applauding In the signing are State ~p. Marc
be held at the Senior Citizens
Guthrie
(D-Newark)
(L) and State Sen. Grace Drake (ft.-Solon)
Center· In Pomeroy was an·
(R). UPI
I

Local news briefs '-----.

I'OBDOOO:R

1 Section, 10 PagH

Free parking begins
•
Dec. I m Middleport ·

One player has winning lotto ticket
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) One Super Lotto player has a
ticket with the numbers 1, 10, 16,
23, 25, and 43, making It worth $9
mllllon.
Ohio Lottery officials said
there was just that one ticket
with the same slx numbers as
chosen In Saturday night's draw·
lng. The holder of the ticket can
redeem It and becomeellgible for
a 'payment of $450,000 a yaer for
20 years, before taxes.
Lottery officials said $5,634,886
wortll of Super Lotto tickets were
sold. They said 168 tickets had
five numbers, worth $1,000, while
7,638 tickets had four numbers,
making them wortll $85.
No Kicker player had the ·
combination 759956. Lottery offi·
clals said $807,728 worth of
tickets were sold for tllat game.
Five tickets had the first five

. .

November 29, 1988

For area shoppers

The National Weather Service
issued a flash flood warning
shortly after 3 a.m. EST for
Mercer County, N.J., where up to
2 Inches of rain fell witb more
expected this morning, causing
creeks to overflow ani) flooding
roads and qighways. ,

------Weather--.....;.._ __
Souih Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with
scattered snow flurries early and
partial clearing · by morning.
Lows wlll be between 20 and 25.
Winds becoming llght soutllwest.
Chance of snow is 50 percent.
Tuesday: Variable cloudiness,

Cloudy, Low In mid 30s.
Chance of rain tonight 40
percent. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High In mid 4Gs,
chance of rain 40 percent.

ick4

J

.

....

«(
.

~- - ~

HEAP applications
are being accepted
Applications for emergency
The Gallia-Melgs Community
HEAP
are being taken at three
Action Agency is now accepting
locations:
the Gallia County
applications for the HEAP emerOutreach
Office
at 220 Jackson
gel,lCY assistance program.
Pike,
Galllpolls;
the Meigs
Emergency HEAP provides
County
Outreach
Office,
39350
assistance to households that
Union
Ave.,
Pomeroy,
and
the
have had u tillties disconnnected,
face the threat ol dlsconnnectlon CAA central office in Cheshire.
Applications for emergency
or have a 10-day or less supply of
bulk fuel. The program allows a HEAP wlll be taken from 9 a.m.
one-ttme payment of up to $200 , to noon and from 1 to 3:30 p.m. .
per heating season to restore or Monday through Friday at the
two outreach offices. The central
retain home heating services.
Households applying for emer· office In Cheshire wlll accept
gency HEAP must report total applications Monday through
household Income for tile past Thursday only 9 a.m . to noon and
three or 12 montlls of all persons 1 to 3: 30 p.m. An Interview with
Community Action HEAP staff Is ·
18 years of age and older.
Homeowners or renters must required -when applying for
qualify If their total household emergency assls tance.
Applications for regular HEAP
Income Is equal to or less than150
are
avallable at Community
percent of federal poverty
Action
Agency offices, the Deguidelines.
Applications for regular HEAP partment of . Human Services .
are also available. Regular office, Senior Citizens Center,
HEAP pays a portion of eligible utility companies, community
household's heating bills for organizations and a number of
December, January and Febru- other public places.
For more Information resi·
ary. The amount of assistance
received from HEAP is deter· dents are to contact the Galllamined by the total household Meigs · Community Action
income, lhenumberofpeoplelna Agency at 992·5605 or 992-6629 In
household and the type of heating Meigs County or 446-0611 or
367·7341 In Gallla County.
fuel.
~

.......

~-·

...

.

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