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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

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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.

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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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The Daily Sentinai-Page-3
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Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

DEVOTED TO TH~ JNTERES'!9 OF THE 11(EIG8-MASON AREA
.

II~

t:!!m~

I'T'--',_
....... , .....--r:::t ....

qjV
ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aallllant Publlllber/ Controller

· A MEMBER of The United Press international, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINlON are welcome. They shou.ld be less than l10 wcrds
tona:. All letters are subJect toedtttng and must be signed wltb name, addrela and
telephone number, No unstgne:i letterl w111 be publllhed. Letters shOUld be In
gocxt taste, addressing Issues, not persmalltles.

Potholes on the
road to victory

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t'lge- 2- The Daily Sentinel
- - ----POriiifOy:.....Midalitport; 01110 ---'--

Tu..my.

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WASHINGTON - For three
decades, the Indians ofthe Hoopa
Valley Reservation In Northern
California ·have been locked In
combat - not hand-to-hand, but
lawyer-to-laii(Yer, Their bickerIng can be traced to a muddled·
federal government trying to
atone for the mistakes of his tory.
In the closing days of the
congressional session, members
of Congress fell over themselves
to settle the dispute once and for
all. In their haste, they promised
' ·the Indians a $l!).mllllon taX·
payer bailout and unwittingly
voted to offer the Indians a chunk
ot. the prized forest In Redwood
National Park to make everyone
· · happy. Environmentalists cried
foul and the redwoods were taken
off the bargaining table. But the
taxpayer subsidy and a settlement that ·may not settle any-

thing were quietly signed Into
law by President Reagan this
month.
The schism dates back to 1864
when Congress decreed that
California should bave only four
Indian reservations. The onerous
plan was to round up all of the
Indians In the state and put them
on those four reservations. The
Hoopa Valley Reservation was
.one of the lour, but not all of the
Indians who eventually 'settled
there were Hoopas. There are
bits and 111eces of 11 tribes calling
It home today - the largest In
number being Yurek, whose own
reservation along the Klamath
River was added to the Hoopa
Reservation In 1891.
No one much cared who owned
what untU 1955 when the reserva·
tlon began selling valuable
timber - most of It on land that

the Hoopas had lived on for
centuries. A group of Yuroks
sued saying they had just as
much right as the Hoopas to the
bOunties of a reservation that the
federal government put them on.
A federal judge agreed .a nd since
1975, courts have been trying to
define who the tribal members
are. The mess has been before 13
federal judges In all. ·
Fed up with the lighting, Rep.
Doug Bosco, D-Callf., and Sen.
Alan Cranston, D-Callf., spon·
sored the legislation this year to
settle It once and for all. But the
settlement bas prompted threats
of more lawsuits.
Congress will spilt the reserva·
lion, giving 90,000 acres . to the
1,700 Hoopas, and 3,600 acres to
the 3,500 Yuroks. After the spill,
the Hoopas will have the timber
rich part of the reservation

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By ARNOLD SAWJSLAK
UPI Senior Editor
. WASHINGTON (UP!) ..:.. We are hearing plenty abOut what
Democrat Michael Dukakls did wrong In his losing presidential
campaign, so just for a change let us conslder-·what mistakes
Republican George Bush committed on his way to the White House.
Bush's first and demonstrably worst blunder was the choice of Dan
Quayle for his running mate.
This judgment Is not based on whether the Indiana senator will be
as bad In the vice presidency as the Dtimocrats predicted or as good
as Bush promised. That remains to be seen and Quayle has ev!lry
right to start the job with a clean slate and to get a fair assessment of
his work as he does It.
But as well as anything can be proved In the arcane science of
campaign-watching, It seems certain that Quayle was a net minus for
the Republican ticket. One exit poll had 16 percent of the. voters
Interviewed saying they voted for Dukakls because of Quayle; other
measurements had Quayle reducing Bush's vote by 6 percent.
Inasmuch as Bush won 54 percent to 46 percent, Quayle obviously
did not really endanger the Republican victory, butlf he reduced the
vice president's vote by as little as 1 percent, It denied the GOP ticket
of a iandsllde, which In presidential contests generally Is regarded to
be 55 percent or more.
·
It may seem to be splitting hairs to make an Issue of 1 percentage
point, but at some point the size of the vote for the top of the ticket can
have an effect on races lower on the ballot.
For example, the Republican Senate candidate In Connectlcu t lost
by Jess than 1 percent. The switch of 2 percent would have elected
another Republican senator In Wisconsin and 3 points would have
saved the GOP seat In Nevada. Ills Impossible to say that Quayle's
presence cost the Republicans those seats, but an argument ean be
made that 5 or more points on the Bush margin might have given him
more of the Capitol Hill help he will so sorely need In the next session
of Congress.
·
.
Which brings up the next mistake Bush made In his campaign. It
had to do with what Winston Churchill derided as "making the rubble
jump" when his military advisers suggested continuing the
saturation bOmbing of German cities already nearly levelet! by Allied
raids.
Bush and his advisers probably felt they had to hit Dukakls hard
with negative campalgnlnP, when the Democrat went out to a big
midsummer lead In the polls and that they were justified In doing so
by the ridicule heaped on Bush by speakers at the Democratic
National Convention.
The GOP attack ads obviously helped Bush catch up to Dukakls, but
when he started pulling ahead, the vice president should have started
thinking what effect the negative ap11roach would have on future
dealings with congressional Democrats, especially the fe~oclous
partisans who lead the party In the House.
·
It Is true that any pillltlclan who climbs to congressional leadership
probably Is professional enough not to hold grudges after a nasty
campaign, but there also Is a time-honored axiom of pontlcs that
says, "Don't get mad; get even."
Bush went to the Capltol10 days after his t!lectlon to break brea&lt;!
with Speaker Jim Wright, and from all reports It was a peaceful
meeting. But many who have watched Wright operate In the past
think the speaker, having had the president-elect to lunch, now will
undertake to have him for lunch.

Berry's World

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and Texas, bOth Popgalnlan. The
TFR In California Is 1.90 chl)dren
per woman; In .Texas It's 2.11.
(Texas Is 46 percent higher than
Massachusetts! Part, not ·all, of
that differential Is.due a larger
Hispanic population. )
From 1990 to 2000, recall, the
total population In all of Nogrowthla will rise by just one measly
million. (Slight gain In Northeast, slight loss In Mldwes t.) At
the same time the number of
people In Popgalnla will go up by
abOut 17 million!
Two countries. One Is warm,
somewhat fecund, and growing.
The other Is cold, not even close
to reproducing Itself, and not
growing.
The demographic conditions l.n
the two-country America refiect
In slow motion what has happened, and will happen, In the
Western world . In the '90s
Western Europe, now near popu·
latlon stability, will begin losing

Wattenberg

population. In America, Nogrow·
thla will go from population
stability to shrinkage by abOut
2010 (Poplossla?), whlle growth
In Popgalnla will slow down.
Other new Census projections,
to be lssued.shorlly, show AmerIca as a whole losing population
by abOut 2030. (If you're under ,
age 40, you may well be alive
then.) At the same time the
developing world will still. be
growing rapidly.
Is this all sure to happen? No.
l)emog~:aphers carefully dlstln.
gulsh between projections and
forecasts. Projections only show
what happens If the future
arrives In a manner consistent
with the patterns of the past.
If Americans don't like the
future that !s projected, they can
act to change lt. How? By making
It economically easter for young
people who want. to have babies.
By allowing more legal Immigrants Into America. We ought to
do both.

Assembly-line meat CreateS hazard$ Walters ·
CHICAGO (NEA) - Through·
out much of the 19th and 20th
centuries, most of the slaughterIng and butch.erlng of cattle and
hogs was done In Chicago,
Kansas City, Omaha and other
large Midwestern cities.
Steers and heifers destined to
provide the meat served on the
nation's dinner tables were
shipped from the packinghouses
to the rest of the country as bulky
halves or quarters of beef that
had been only partially
processed.
At food markets and restaurants, skilled, well-paid butchers
carved the large slabs of meat
Into steaks, chops, roasts, and
other Individual cuts to be sold or
served to retail customers.
In the early 1960s, however;
two businessmen determined to
radically transform Industry
practices founded Iowa Beef
Processors, Inc., built a meat·
packing plant In Denison, Iowa,

" ... until problems do you part?"

and began producing "bOxed
beef."
Because almost all of the
butchering was done at the IPB
plant (by less skilled, lower paid
workers) specific cuts could be
shipped to retail outlets In boxes.
That revolutionary process, now
standard throughout the Industry, eliminates the need to ship
260 pounds of fat, bOne, gristle
and other useless components of
a typical 650-pound carcass.
IBP · ·also wrought another
profound change when It rejected
the concept of locating meat·
·packing plants In the Midwest's
major river cities - never
existing stockyards but far from
the ranches and farms where the
livestock are raised.
.
Instead, It constructed processing plants In Luverne,
Minn.; Joslin, Ill.; Storm Lake,
Iowa; West Point, Neb.; Emporia, Kan., and other small
communities close to the source

Today in history_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
By Ualted Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 29, th e 334th day of 1988 with 32 to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
The evenlpg stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those bOrn on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include Austrian physicist Chr istian Doppler In 1803, author Louisa
May Alcott In 1832, Chinese Ell)press-dowager Tz'u Hsl In 1835,
English electrical engineer John Fleming, who devised the radio
tube-diode. 1849, film choreographer Busby Berkeley In 1895, Irish
novelist C.S. Lewis In 1898, and pop-jazz !lugelhOrnlst Chuck
Mangione In 1940 (age 48).

cranked phonograph that r ecorded sound on grooved metal
cyUnders. Edison shouted verses of "Mary Had a Little Lamb" Into
the machine, which played back his voice.
In 1890, the first Army-Navy football game was played. The Navy
.
Middles won, 24·0.
In 1929, Lt. Cmdr. Richard Byrd and three crewmen became the
first people to fly over the South Pole.
In 1963, President Lyndon Johnson appointed the Warren
Commission to Investigate the assassination of President John
Kennedy.
In 1981, actress Natalie Wood was found drowned off Call!ornla's
Catalina Island. A medical examiner ruled her death an accident.

On this date In history:
In 1877, Thomas Edison demonstrated his Invention, a hand·

A thought for the day : Novelist C.S. Lewis wrote, "Unsatlslfled
desire Is In Itself more desirable than any·other satisfaction."

•

1988

which, by some accounts, yields
$3 million to $5 million a year.
The Yurol&lt; share has little
timber, and the fishing business
on their land earned a mere
$185,000 last year.
To keep the Yuroks from
reeling short changed, Congress
gave them some choices. Yuroks
can join the Hoopa tribe If they
qualify. (Attorneys for the Yuroks say only abOut 30 meet the
qualifications ) Or, they can
remain as Yuroks and get a lump
sum payment of $5,000 each for
the young people and $7,500 each
for the seniors. (Their attorneys
call this a "bribe.") Or they can
renounce all tribal rights to the
reservation and walk away with
$15,000 each.
The Yuroks are now wondering
why that doesn't apply to them.
Some are tired of the legal battles
that have kept their money tied
up .In court. They want to take
their $15,000 and be done with it.
The money for the cash settlements will come from a $65
million fund of accumulated
timber revenues being held In
escrow. Since that fund won't
• cover all the claims, Congress
ordered the Interior Department
to · throw In $10 mllUon In •
tax.payers money. 'l'he unbappy
Interior Department asked Reagan to veto the bill, but he
wouldn't.
Interior officials also aren't too
happy with a requirement In the
law that they spend another $5
million buying more land to
enlarge the Yurek reservation.
And no one was happy with the
short,Uved scheme to give the
Yuroks part of the Redwood
National Park. The park Is land ·
tlie Yuroks consider sacred.
Neither Cranston · nor Bosco
noticed that the provision was
slipped Into the Se11ate and House
versions of the bill by underlings
rtegotlatlng a · settlement. The
Senate and House slipped It out
again by a resolution.

It's 'Norgr~wthia' vs. 'Popgainia'
In the 1990s, for the first time In theast. In. 1990 Nogrowthla will
American his tory, an entire have 110 mUllen people, roughly
region of the country will lose the combined population of Engpopulation! That stunning fact Is land and France. In 2000, and In
perhaps best understood by view- 2010, Its· population will be 111
Ing America as a tale of two million. No growth In
countries. These countries can be Nogrowthla.
named "Nogrowthla' : and
Why? Part of the reason, often
"Popgalnla."
mentioned, Is migration - peoThe data for such an Interpre- ple from the Frost Belt are
tation ·comes from new Census moving to the Sun Belt. But there
Bureau projections. The dlmln· Is another critical factor: birth
lshlng region In ques lion Is the rates. It's low In Nogrowthla.
Midwest. From 1990 to 2000 that Massachusetts has a Total FertU·
region Is projected to lose 181,000 lty Rate (TFR) of 1.45 children
souls (even after receiving lmml· . per woman per lifetime. That's
grants) . That Is a trivial amount. · almost one-third below the 2.1
But like the famous talking dog, r.ate required to merely keep a
the remarkable thing Is that It population stable over time. The
talks at all, not that It misquoted TFR In New York state Is not
Shakespeare. It's the first such much higher: 1.63. Ohio Is at 1.8.
loss ever, and It provides a Up-off
What abOut that other country,
abOut what will happen not only Popgalnla? That nation Is
In Nogrowthla, but In the rest of created by combining the South·
America and the Western world. ern and Western regions of
Nogrowthla Is a large country. America. In 2000, the two most
It Is made up of the American populous states will be California
Midwest and the American Nor-

N~bar29.

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van A tta

Tribes engage in legal battle

The Daily Sentinel

t

. (i)ester is :·
winner of
~ 1988 Hutch
award

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casses to the workers, In relent·
of the meat.
Again, other firms adopted the less assembly-line fashion at a
practice- and today those large pace of 300cattle or 1,000 hogs per
companies share with IBP domi- hour. Each workers must per·
nance of the $56 billion per year form specific chopping, cutting,
Industry. In 1975, the country's 12 slicing, trimming or carving
largest meatpackers accounted motions.
Repeating the same knife cut
for half of aU Industry sales. That
or
cuts as often as 10,000 Urnes
proportion now has Increased to
every
day produces chronic
three-fourths and continues to
affilctlons
known as repetitive
rise.
or
cumulative trauma
motion
Three firms - IBP, ConAgra
disorders
that
leave workers'
and Excel - process two-thirds
hands
permanently
disabled.
of all the .cattle slaughtered
aware of
The
Industry
has
been
annually. Four companies IBP, ConAgra , John Morrell and · the problem for decades but has
Smithfield- process one-third of done little to remedy It - a
all the hogs slaughtered every situation Lantos attributes to
''unconscionabl e c or por a t e
year.
Thus, bOxed beef appears to greed.' '
After conducting an Investigahave been a bonanza for bOth Its
producers and their customers. tion of Industry, the Chicago •
But the men and women who Tribune earlier this year reached
process the mea,.t pay a very high · a similar conclusion: " Debllltat·
price In terms of the severe lng hand, wrist and arm Injuries
Injuries and ex'lruclatlng pain (are) so routine at some packing·
houses that the workers have
they su!fer.
become
little more than dis posaOne witness who testified dur·
ble
Items
In the production
lng hearings held In Washington
"
last year by a subcommittee Ql
the House Government Opera·
tlons Committee chaired by Rep.
Tom Lantos, D-Callf., offered
this description of life Inside a
plant:
"Wor kers stand on treacher·
ously sUppery floors covered
with blood, water and animal fat
buildup, crammed side by side
with only 48 Inches o! working
space between them, wielding
sharp knives, required to make
five cuts In 15 seconds at different
angles, frantically trying to keep
up with the. breakneck chain
speed. "
S"fR/Kf A8LOW N Tl'£ W\R ON
The chain carries the car- HIGH PRICES. SHiP 11-£ CLASSf/fDS.

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NFL results

Monday's soore8

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1 8 0 .531 3!4 ! 61
5 i 0 .38!1 2%5 %1t
x-c ll~lled dl\l ls lon uue
y-cll~ht'd playoff berill
Mo .-.lq's r f!A uH
Sea&amp;tle 3:1, LA Rlll*n n
Su n:la,y, Ill! c. 4
Buffalo a1 Tamil' Bay, I p.m .
DaiiM a1 Clnel•d. I p.m •
Gu·e• Ray at DdroM, I p.m .
In dhuaapolll at Ml unl, I p.m .
NewOrleana.e Mlnae1ota, I p.m .
Phoenix at Nl' Glanla, I p.m.
Su Di e ~~) al ClltciD_.l. I p .m.
Saa FrandACO Ill AtlaD&amp;a , I p.m.
Sult~ Ill New En &amp;land , I p.m.
Wa&amp;~apo . .l PhUadelp~a,lp . m .
NY Jet11 at Kan•fl CUy , ~ p.m.
Denver lit L·A Raldera, -t p.m.
Pt&amp;t!Durrh a1 Hou!ion. 8 p.m.
Monday , Dec. II
Cbl cq:o lit Ll\ RamS, I p.m .

o:a,o

~

....... (Pa.) II, Plll..lotatllownl!

Jat.l llepkiM '71, Plllla. Ph•ma(.'Y 11
,Ju nla&amp;a to, Ellu IM!Ihtown 75
KJni(A C.llepiiS, Bard 8S
Lai.,.Ei1e IS, Mora\' ian 47
Leb Valley lOt. P SU·Rarl't!lburr&amp;O
~~mln18l. Me811lah iS
Manlllt"d 8i, F..dlrDoro 1S
Mereyhunt T3. Pll t-Bradford !It
Mt . St. Mary11 RS, Na" y 54
M•hledberc88. Wtdeller 50
PhUa. Tex. lie 10%. New Ralt'en ·33
Plym•uth St. I HI, Lyndon St. iU
Pre\'ldl'nee 93. Brown 115
Robert Morita tS, Sllp~r y Rock 84
-. St. Francts eN. Y.) 18, Winthrop 56
sa. Josepta IPa. l 14, C.nllll. . ~I
Slena81. Plt~rtrlt 1t
Syraa~E ll, l»r .. llll
Trlt'ftt011 Sl . tiD , Wllmlnpnn i2
Trlalty 13, WedleldSt. 'JS
Worceslll!r St. M, Curry 12

NATIONAL ROCKEl' I.EAGU£
Monday' s Rellul
F.Aimoaton l , Q•t&gt;hrc .f
Tue!ldq'll Gamf'!l
!II'Y bt...deual Df.t rllil, T:as p.m.
Boston at Phlbld elpN., 7: :JS p .m .
St. Lout. at " 'uhln&amp;toa. 1: 3-S p.m .
!ti' Y Ranp!n at Wlndpe&amp;. R: 3$p.m .
Clll caco at Mlnn!!!ltll, II: U p.m ,
Vanco uw r at Calpry , t: S5 p.m .

.....

RrldJPWal er 71. MIU')111o•N it
l: l em~~ooa 91i, Citadel K2
Eut Carolina 68, IJNC·GrHnllharo U
IE . Tenl'I!AM!t.' St. Ill, EnWne HI
Emory A He ary91, FerMIIII 84
F11.lrmonl 86. Ohlo-Belmonc M

Ne~~~o· ,J e.-~y

at Lo~ AaKel~ . te :IS p.m .
WednetdJ91 '• Gamftl
Mo•re~ at Hartfonl , •IPI
Quetwc ut Buffalo, niP&amp;
WasNnll:lo n a t PhlllbUflll, af«ht
Vancouwr 1t.t E dmont.on, nlghe

GeorJb 15, JadU&amp;onYIIIe 10

NBA resuks
~ ,\TIONAL

RAI-IKETBALL i\SSOC.
RfollouM
U Lak el"' 109, Phlladf'lpN111III-I
Mond~· · ,.

, 1\at'tldii,JI'IIG~t.m e!'i

Best on lit N"-' Jl'rHey, 1: 3D p.m.
Mi ami Iii Cbarlotle, 1: :II p.m.
san Antonio ai Atlanta , 1: :II p.m .
IMrolt ajJnclana, 1:!18 p.m .
Pornan• a1 Mllwaw lee. II p.m .
Phoen h: at Houll&amp;on, g: 3t p.m .
]'l'ew 'l'ork a1 Denw-r , 9: 3t p.m .
Utah a1 ~ -tit', 10 p.m.
Cbl cMJ;o M GoldPnSIMe, 10:10 p.m .
LA Cllpptn al S ~tcramento, 10:30p .m.

w.. ~.,. ·" Gam es

NE"'II ,fi'I'W~ .t BO!tf.en, •I liM

Portland at Phlladl"lplh, nl~
~&gt;~ an AalOQI' I" Mljlffll. nl&amp;ht
tndlana· ILI Detro61, nllht
Ho•••• M Danu, nt~~:hl
Cblcqo a1 Utab, ni~Eftt
SeaitW at LA Llt.kf'r!i, nigh!;
New \ 'ork al LA fllpper tt, niJttll

· Grid ratings
l'I' EW \'ORKI UPII - Tbe Unllf-dPrru
lnternaUonaJ Board of roa«'he'lll Top 20
t-oll el~ foothall n~ l inp. with rr1.-.erd IUid
flrllt-piM: e votto. In INU'eDI.Mn, total
point s (base d on 15 polnasfor Or llt plate.
1-1 lo r seooat , etr.\, and Iaiii WPek'•
ranldn c. J
Po lnb
I. NotR" Dam" (-1 21 ~ 11· 0 )
1U I

··~
t. Miami ( ! ) (I-I )

3. W. Vlr&amp;tnhl W lli·Ul
f . Florid.. Slatf' Ill ( 10-1)
S. Nt&gt; hrallka ( ll-1)
6. !-Ooulhcrn Cal (IG-Ii
1. Auburn ( I0-1 )
J! . Arkaasas (10-1)
316 II
9. l lCLA (9·\! )
Ill. OklalloR'IIl (D-2 \
II. MlddlfiU1 (B·'l·l I
Jt. OklaherJlll8tatt' (il-2)

160 12 t
U . Clt&gt;m11on r9-Z1
14. Wynmlnl ( ll · l ~
IS. H0t1!1ton li-t)
II.S)'IIlCU !ll' {M-2 )

.
"' .
6$M l

..,

6411 4

413 2
... 1

au &amp;
f2Rll

t &amp;S 10
15" 13

18 u
14 II
14 19

.. ,

n . Leu lfrllaaa Slatf' t8-:J 1
114. Wll8hln-enSia te ( 8--;j)
IK Ill
1!1. Colonado cA-:l)
~ ~ - Gt-tlrKt a (11-:t )
z-Y'ran lll"d
Otbt•rs rl'ce l\lln ~ vd.t&gt;s: 'Aiah.amll,
Arllom.. Iowa , Mlt:hl&amp;an stale.

..

''"'

Cage ratings
NEW YORK( VPI J- Tit eUnledPre~s
lnler ...tloral Board of Co!M:heti' Top ICI
· ~olle Kf' h• illfthall l&amp;llnp, with rtl'8t·
p ..1.:e "aCe!~ and r eoord 11 throurh No\' . !1
Ia pMrenth~, lotal polllt1 (bud o• Ill
polals lor nrst pl ace. 1-t for w.cenl, et c.)
IU\d pretie~ o• ~kln p:
t'olnltt
T• ~

...........'
i1'il I
5Jii I!

2. Ml chl&amp;aD (5) (3·91
:1. s,· "' t-u ~ (Bl , .... ,
1. Geo r ret own ( I) (2-0 )
li. Okl~ma IH l
&amp;. llllnoi8 (I ) fi ·Dl
341 s
3:14 9
1 . 1ow~t ( I) (1 -0)
il:) l t&gt;uda-Lu Vex.,. (2- 1)
"''
Ut 111
9. Arizona (O·DI
Z81 3
10. Norlh Carolina t3-l l
II. Mls MOOr1 (S- 1\
'lH 13
IOBlfl
12. Ge-orpa TP&lt;lh ( 1·0)
13. Temple (1-0 )
11. norlda Shal e ( 1· 0)
15. Ohio Sta le ( !·I 1
18. Lo•l!ivUie 1\l·l l
311t
n . Vlllannw. ( Z. IJ
IR. Florida (t-I l
19. SIIUltJrd (1- 1)
:!0 , St&gt;ton Hall (3-0)
z-unra nlted
Otbt&gt;r!l r ~t!tlvlnK lt' Ok'M: AlabiU11a,
Arkan&lt;o~ur., Br18fWri \'oun,: , Colontdo
Sl».l r, Co nnt&gt;ctk.-ul1 DPPau~ Geo rp a.
Indi a na, Kansu
S t ~&amp; t e,
Lllyol a·
Marymourt, M•mpWs Stale, Nortll
Carollm ·Ch arlotle, Nor&amp;k Carolina
~hatr, Not re D11. me, Oklalloma !&amp;M e,
Ortt ~n State, Put•rp:b, So•tb C...rolllw, St. John'•· Tennellloel', T~ u-EI

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

....
........
"

lt&amp;pUst It, F..ctward Wal er • to
Baa ~ 111, New Ensli•d Coli. i3
Bryant IIU, Ropr Wllllunll 5I
llucknell81, S.• queh•• 88
Dlckl111o• '18, Allentowa II

Fordbllnt 111, M:erey tl
Fr.. kiiDIMarahallll, W. Mau-yludl8
Hartford 11. Georte W•IUnllon'lt

NHL resuks

I. Dulle ( t1 ) (2· 0)

.

Me adowbrook II, C..m trld1e 14

Pet. PF P A
.ll5 2H 258

1 0
2 II 0
«A nlnd
11 2. 0

Wa&amp;hlnston

2'7'!
'UT
'UI
171
191

.

P118o. llf.LA.

Ga. Soulllern 18, t\upl&amp;a 411
Geottla Tech 115, Coalt Carolina 611
Loulslua Colh1e 51, SE Louillama 52
Miami (Fla.) 108. Oral Robert8 10:1
Mlsllllulppl Coli. 84. Ah»rn &amp; . 110
~s!Uslppl !:1:. 63, Rice II
Nerih Carolina HT, Stanford 16 .
UNC·Aihe-¥11e t8, E . Kenhdy 84
UNC-CharloUe 7i, -'P~.::hl.a St . 63
~ .c . scate 81, Akroa. 67
Hl e bmo• 'IL Wake Foretil til
St. .loteph'tr. 74, C aallllu ~~o 11
Sb~.., . . !S. Otle rbrln 81 (IUI'l
SW Laa.. lu a tl, Btl ..... en Collesr 76
Ten-.ee 8-t, Mlu l..tppl ~~
Ten.OauMoosa 19, s. CaroiiM AaT

••

Vlrclnla Tech 101, Woftonllill
Midwes t
Bul:ler il, E. Kenta:ky Ill
Cenl.al Ml ciiiPa 7'1, Detroit 56
1111no11 sa. '18, Coppin S&amp;. 15
Ml cldt an stale 98, Fumuan Ill'&gt;
MlaiiCMiri 111, T•nn-Marlln 5I
M•. We~~tern 1111, NW Mluourt KS
Mntu11. tfi, N. Dakota St. Ill
M•orbead Slate 106. MM.Y-AIIe St. 9M
Mou• Vitlon IS, Grow Cltr ~R
N. Dllnoll KO, IE. DllntliK 7t
NorthwH&gt;k&gt;r• 100, 01, Wr8k&gt;)'an HI
Notre Damelt2, St. 8o•\le nt1n 12
Ollp..Un lit, Hiram 7!
S. IU-Edwardntlle JU, Kao" ~1
" 'bl-olllln t8. Ferli!l $ . II
" 'lsconllln-La Crosse '16. Norlb Dako&amp;a

..

Xa\'ler 101, Marietta 5~
So•dawe•l
AriWI •s Statt' Itt, Abiii!IM'

..

Cl!r~dan

Mc Murry Ill, Schreiner 18 (OTJ
McN ef!IM! st. • · Houlton Baptl•t 51:1
MurraJ state H, Lamar 83

St. Loui• IU , Gramblh11 13
sou .. ern IS7, Mila Collea:e 81
Texas .U:M 111, Step. F . A•llttn 88
T l'llu-EI Paao 91, Teua fklutll.ern 8!
TI"JJas Lutheran 100, Dallu Bllpllllt '7tl
TI'Jlu-San Antonlol4, Texu-Arlln~ton

...
...
.,

Wcwt

Cai· Da\118 n, CII.I-PolJ Pomo-.1 ~
LoJola Marymounl 184, Atullll PadRe
Not.~

Dam e (Calli. ) TCI, Domlalca.n 99
Orepn St. 84, Alh.l e&amp;e8 In Acllon 81
Oreaon Tecllll4, Hawaii-Loa 114

Sl . M[M')''• (CaiU. ) 85, Olloost. i1

Sanla Clara Tl, P lll.i ftt&gt; t1
Sonema St. JlS, Saerameato St. 11
Soulu~r• cal 81, Portlucl U
US l•t'l liZ, Md-Eulera Skore 11j
We her St. '18, S. Ulall st. 71 ~

Calendar
Buket:ball
BoMton a&amp; New Jerse)l , '1: 30 p.m.
Mlantl al Cllarlotle , "': SI p.m.
Su Anto.la at Atlanta , 1:31 p.m .
Detrok at Indiana, 1: !II p.m.
Perll1111d at M:ltwa•llee, II p.m.
Phoenix ai Hou.&amp;on, 11: 38 p.m.
New Vorkll.l Den...er, B:H p.m.
Ulah at Seattle, 10 p.m .
Ull cqo at Golden Stah•, 10: st p.m.
l.A L11pperl M 8acrameato, 10; 31 p.m .
Boxlnt
mF Bultllmwe lr;tf Title
San Aalonlo- Orlando Canllal r11 Yjj,
,Jimmy Navarro

Hoe key

NY hlanden u Detroit , 1:§ p.m.
•1to• at PkUadelpNa. 7: 31p.m.
St. Lo•IA a1 'waalllniiM, 7: » p.m .
NY Ranwera a1 Wlalllpes, 8:15p.m.
Clltcaco at Ml••• • · I :SS p.m .
Va11~uwr at Calpy, I : Sip.m .
New " eraey at LOll Aftcele~, 10:35 p.m .
Skllna
t..es Me nulr tll, Fran cl' - Men'" World
Qlp Giant Slalom
Soc.cer (MISL)

No

&amp;&amp;me!!

aclledlllled

T ennis
Adellll de, A.u11tralla - 160,0M So ulllern
Croaa Cla••k

•

SEATTL E (UP !) - David
Kri eg, t hrowing ·touchdown
passes to flv~ different receive~s.
kept the Seat tie Sea hawks In a tie
for fir st place In the AFC West
Monday night with a35-27 victory
over the Los Angeles Raiders.
The Sea hawks and Denver ·
Broncos are tied for firs t in the
divi sion with Identical 7-6 re·
cords, while the Ra iders sli pped
to 6· 7 and out of firs t.
Seattle Coach Chuck Knox
bristled when asked If he thought
the AFC was a " ho-hu m"
divis ion.
" I don't th ink it' s ho· hum if you
saw that ga me out there today. "
Knox said. "That was a good
football ga me with some hard
hitting and Intense play. I just
hope we ar e poised to make a
championship run."
Krieg, who has now thrown for
eight touchdowns in his last three
g ames, de finitely a ppeared
primed lor a strong fini sh.
The nine-year veteran com·
pleted 16 of 28 passes lor 220
yards In his third game since
returnin g from a sho\Jlder separat ion tha t sidelined him for
seven ga mes.
The Seahawks dom inated offensively with 459 tota l net yards
and 25 fir st down s. But they made

I

elected not to join the Indians. ''
Cleveland opened last season
with rookie Jay Bell at shortstop
but demoted Bell to Class AAA
and finished the season with Paul
Zuvella .
Meanwhile Monday, Cleveland
announced It acquired Pitts·
burgh Infielder Denny Gonzalez
for a player to be named later.
The 25-year·old GoQZalez spent
parts of four seasons with Pitts·
burgh and complied a .200
batting average In 90 games with
four home runs and 17 RBI. The
four season· were ·1984, 1985, 1987
and 1988.
Gonzalez Is a native of Santo
Domingo, Dominican Republic.
I
..

'
from the line, and once the girls'
settle down we sho uld be a ble to
put points on the boa rd and
I mprove ou r shoo t i n g
percentage."
·southern shot a very di sma l 2~
of 86 from the field for26 percent, ·
but s hot .a war m 13-19 from the
line for 68 percent. Easter n was
7-40 and 7-19 at the line.
Southern brought home a hefty
65 rebOunds, led by De bbie
Greathouse with 13, Becky Winebrenner with 11, and Les lee
Duddi ng 9. Co wdery a nd
Gardner led Eastern's rebOund ·
ing departm ent.
SHS had only 8 turnovers and
27 steals, but was a little
overa nxious defensively with 33
fouls. EHS had 37 turnovers, and
14 fouls.
Southern led 28-10 at the half,
41-13 after· three, and coasted to
the 59-21 finale over the very
young Eag les.
' In the reserve game Souther n
claimed a 31· 7 victory. Mica
Jones led wit h 13, Tonya Iogles
and Sarah Duhl had 6, Wendy
Wo lfe 3, Marcy Hill2, and J enny
Varney 2.
Miche lle Ma holtra, Lisa
Golde n, and Lee Gillila n eac h
had 2, and Toby Hi ll one for the

RACINE - The Sou thern Tor·
nadoettes outdistanced the visit·
lng Eastern Eaglettes 13·3 In the
first per iod, then went on to
sweep aw ay a 59-21 SVAC gir ls'
basketball victory last night In
Charl es W . H ay m a n
gymnasium .
Southern was led by Tracy
Beegle's 15 points, Dawn J ohn·
son's 13, Becky Evans 9, Debbie
Greathou se 8, Becky Wine·
brenn,er 6, Les lee Dudding and
Junie Beegle 4 eac h.
Eastern was led by freshman
Tabby Phillips with 7 points,
Jenny Cowdery had 4, Ed na
Driggs a nd Lee Gillila n 2 each,
and one apiece by Tiffa ny
Gardn e r , s ister Steph a ny
Gardne.r , a nd Amy Hager.
Coach Bill Baer was pleased
with hi s team's victory, bu t
somewhat disa ppointed with
some as pe_ct s of his tea m's play.
saying, " Ou r shooti ng was very
poor even though we put a lot of
points on the board . We didn't
hustle like we're capable of
hustling, bu t we did do a prett y
good job on the boards . If It
wouldn' t have been , for getting
those second and third shots we
could have been hu rtlng. On the
bright side we did do a decent job

FALL SPECIALS

•

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Ohio.
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Newspa per Sales. 733 Third Avenue ,
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POSThtASTER: Send address changes
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SUBSCRIPTION RA.TES
B y Carri er or Mot or Route
One Weck ................................... $1.40

One Month ................... .. ......... ... 56.10
One Year ......... .... .. .................. $7'.2.80

Eagles .
Score by quarters:
Eastern ............. · 3 7 3 8-21
Southern ......... ... 13 15 13 18-59
SOUTHERN (59) - Becky
E vans 3·3·9, Debbie Greathou se
3·2·8, Daw n Jo hnson 5-3·13,
Becky Winebren ner 3-0·6, Leslee
Dudding 2-0-4 , Tracy Beegle
5-5-15, J u\tle Beegle 2·0·4, Cindy
Neutzll ng0·0-0. TOTALS22-13-59.
EASTERN
(21) - Tabby
Phillips 3·1 ·7. Jenny Cowdery
2-0·4, Tiffany Gardner 0·1-1,
Edn a Driggs 1-0-2, Stephany
Gardner 0-1-1, To by Hill 0·0·0,
Amy Hager 0-1·1, Lee Gillilan
J.0-2. TOTALS 7-7·21.

.

The Daily Sentinel

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•••••• ·I• ·Rert;

'Be-Pri.-r••f•r Wl1ter .

878-13 """" '40.95
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RADIAL PLY

BIAS -PLY

•

BRAKES
AS LOW AS $3995 FRONT $3 7.75 REAR
OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

Indians out of running for Fletcher
CLEVELAND (UP!)- Cleveland Indians President Hank
Peters said Monday free-agent
&amp;hortstop Scott Fletcher rej ected
a three-year contract offer worth
more than $4 million.
· " Recent conversations with
Scott Fl etcher's agent, Riehle
Bry, Ind icate that barring something unexpected, Fletcher will
sign with one of two clubs,"
:E'eters said wlthou t disclosing
the Identity of those teams.
- ·..we offered a contract In
excess of $4 million over three
years and, In addition, offered to
meet and exceed any other
contract he may receive," Pe·
ters said. "Despite this, he has

finally taking the lead for good
with 11: 17 remaining in the game
on a 7-yard pass from Krieg to
Curt Warner. Krieg also threw
scoring passes of six yards to
Brian Blades a nd of 11 yards to
Paul Skansi .
The balanced attack. which
Included 130 rushing yards by
Warner a nd 105 by John L.
Willia ms, dominated a Los An·
geles defense that had a llowed
only 28 points over the last lour
games.
"They won on great run ning
a nd controlled footba ll," said
Raiders Coach Mike Shana han.
"We had the opportunities, but
we didn't always take a dvantage
of them. We had to set tle for two
field goals (bOth 46 yards by
Chris Bahr) instead of touch·
downs. Tha i hu rt."
lose.' '
The Ra lders scored on Greg
Steve Largent. who opened the
scoring with a 15-yard TD pass in Townsend's recovery of a Krieg
the first quarter and now has fu mble in the end zone: rookie
caught at least one pass In an Ti m Brown's 49-yard pass fr om
Steve Beuer leln; and Steve
NFL-record 165 consecutive
Smith's 4-yard run.
games, said Kr ieg was as hot as
Brown ret urned a kickoff 95
he.had ever seen him.
" I think more than anyth ing vards before being ca ught from
behind by Dwayne Harper on the
else, " Largent said, •·Dave was
3 with 14 sec·onds' 'r'emal nlng in
just on ·-tonight. He· was as
the first half. The R aiders didn't
incredible as I have seen hi m."
score
when a holding penalty
The Seahawks came back from ,
nulli
fied
a BoJackson touc hdown
being down 14-7, 20·14 and 27 ·21,

enough mista kes - losing three
fumbles and Krieg throwi ng t wo
interceptions - to keep the
Raiders In the huot unt il Krieg's
20-yard pass to Louis Clark put
the game out of reach wlth3:40
remai ning In the game.
" Ir was quite a challenge lor
our offense," Kn ox sa id. "A lot of
things happened to us, bu t we
kept co ming bac k. Krieg made
some clutch throws and we had
some excellent catches."
"The adversity we came
through was something," said
Krieg, "all the ful!lbles a nd
interceptions. We ca me back to
win and that shows the cha racter
of this team. We had to tleat a
good football team to.do it in one
of the wackiest games I've been
involved in. We just refused to

Southern girls down EHS
59-21 in SVAC cage opener

Mo nda,y ' 11 SpD1111 Tran sacUo 1111

·-4

•

Seahawks top Raiders, 35-27
-

Transactions
Bu.e ball
Pltt!bui"JJh - Tra ded lnftelder Dt-n~q~
Gonralts 10 CleveiMd lor a player to be

quarter of Monday night 's game In SeaJtle' s
Klngd11me. It was Largent's 69th career touch·
down, and It bel ped the Seahawks claim a 35-27
victory. (UP I)

LARGENT SCORES - Des pite the defensive
efforts of L.A. Raiders' safety Eddie A nderson
(left) and cornerback Lionel Washington (right),
SeaJtle Seahawks wide receiver Steve La rgent,
center hauls In a 15-yard scoring p..Ss In the first

DAYTON , Ohio (UPI) - Cln·
ctnnati Reds second baseman
RonOester , whocamebackfrom .
a career-threatening knee In··
jury, was named Monday the:
winner of baseball's 24th annual ;
Hutch Award .
Oester, 31, underwent com&lt;
plete reconstructive surgery o!,
his Jell knee after Mookle Wllson
of the New York Met~ · suct Into,
him attemptmg to break up a ·
double play on July 5, 1987.
:
Oes ter, whose stat us· was so
q uestionable the Reds di d not
protect him on their winter roster
a year ago, repor ted to sprin g
training as a free agent. When
the Reds broke camp, Oester
remained behind to further reha·
bllilate his knee.
Alter a two-week stay with the ·
Reds' Chatta nooga farm team '
from June 28 through J uly 11,
Oester rejo ined the Reds on July .
16. Within a few weeks, he had. ·
regained the starting job he had
held since the 1980 season.
He finished with a .280 batting
average and played second base
with as much ra nge as he had
before.
The award, which will be
presented at the Da pper Dan
sports banquet, Feb. 4 In Pitts·
burgh, Is na med a lter former
ma jor league pitcher and man· ·
ilger Fred Hutchinson, who was
managing the Reds when he died
of cancer in 1964 .
It is decided by a pan el of
major league broadcas ters an d
wri ters a nd, goes annua lly to an
athlete who overcomes some
form of adversit y while dis playing th'e character and competl·.
tive instincts of Hutchinson.
Announcement of Oes ter's selection was made by Ritter
Collett, sports editor of The
Day ton Da tly News

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Tu~y.N~ber29, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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-81-76-·-Syracuse, 5-0, jumped to an 8-0
but we didn't."
By JEFF SHAIN
and never tralled. The
lead
One
of
Lebo's
three-pointers
UPI Sports Writer
Orangemen
were up 32-18 with
13-2
run
ear
ly
In
the
came
In
a
North Carolina successfully
9:29
left
In
the
first half when It
found a way to combat the loss of second half that wiped out
put
four
freshmen
· on the court
Its starting center. Stanford still Stanford's 49-46 lead. Madden
whlle
experimenting
with point
. had 6 points In the run and made 7
Is searching.
guards.
Jeff Lebo scored 24 points, of 8 shots In the game to raise his
Syracuse led 45-31 at halftime
Including four three-point shots, shooting percentage to 7;4.5 In
and
extended Its lead to20polnts
and Kevin Madden added 16 flve games.
less
than two minutes Into the
Meanwhile, Siena upset PittsMonday night to lead the lOthsecond
half.
ranked Tar Heels to an 87-76 burgh 80-79 as Steve McCoy
No.
11
Missouri also hild an
Intercepted a · tipped lnbounds
victory over No. 19 Stanford.
easy
time,
taking a 97-55 rout of
The Tar Heels, 4·1, are playing pass and scored with one second
Tennessee-Martin.
without star center J.R. Reid, remaining.
Byron Irvin soared 18 points
"I didn't expect to end up with
who Is lost to the team until after
and
John Mcintire added 13 as
Christmas with a broken foot. the ball, " said McCoy, who
·the
Tigers
pulled away In the
However, Madden and Lebo dropped In a layup as time
second half. The Tigers, 4·1, had
·
provided an effective Inside- expired. •
three 8-0 runs In a 10-mlnute span
With
Ptttleadlng
79·
78,
Darelle
outside combination to offset
In
the second half, ou tscorlng the
Porter
of
the
Panthers
tried
to
Reid's loss.
Pacers
27-8 over that stretch.
Inbound
the
ball
from
under"I thought that was the most
No.
16
Georgia Tech rolled to a
neath
Siena's
basket
to
team'
consistent 1 40 minutes we've
95-65
victory
over Coastal Carolmate
Bobby
Martin,
but
the
pass
played all year," North Carolina
Ina,
scoring
the
first 10 points of
was
tipped
by
Siena's
Tom
Coach Dean Smith said. "I was
the
game
and
never
trall!ng·.
Huerter
along
the
baseline.
happy with our consistency. We
Dennis
Scott
scored
25 points,
McCoy
grabbed
the
errant
pass
dldn' t die out there."
Including
seven
three-pointers,
as
It
went
off
Martin's
hands
and
Todd Licht! scored 20 points to
and Tom Hammonds' added 18
lead Stanford, 1·2. The Cardinal scored uncontested for the win.
points and 18 rebounds for the
was without Its center, Erl~
Yellow
·Jackets, 2-0.
"I just choked," Martin said.
Reveno, who strained ligaments
No.
20
Seton Hall, led by 18
"I should have caught the ball. It
In his foot last Saturday.
points
from
Australian Andrew
"In the second hall, we just was a perfect pass and I just
Gaze,
ousted
Kansas
92-81 for the
weren't , patient on offense," misSed it."
championship
of
the Great
No. 3 Syracuse, winner of the
Stanford Coach Mike MontgoAlaska
Shootout.
Kentucky
took
mery said. "And they killed us on Big Apple National Invitational
an
89-71
victory
third
place
with
the boards. We just stood around Tournament, won its !lfth !jame
and watched. We had a lead and a to start the season with a 91-66 over California.
Vermont won the Green Mounchance to do something with It victory over Cornell.

tain Classic with a 94-77 victory
over St. Michaels.
At Los Angeles. Hank Gathers
scored 33 points to help Loyola
Marymount tie the a ll-time
NCAA scoring record for a single
game In a 164-138 rout of Azusa
Paclflc. Jeff Fryer scored 27
points and Enoch Simmons
added 21 as six Lions scored In
double figures. Loyola tied the
all-time Division I record set by
Nevada Las Vegas In 164-111
victory over Hawall-Hllo on Feb.
19. 1976.

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The Daily Sentinel

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Bend

Tuesday, November 29, 1988

Page- 5

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Bridal shower given
A bridal shower was given
honoring Patty Duffy,
bnde-elect of Greg Taylor, in
the Sacred Heart Church social
room. Hostesses were Paula
Chancey, Laura Horsley, Jen·
n!fer anq Jody Taylor, and Tina
Nelgler.
Refreshments were served to
Mary Kunzelman, Tin! Woods ,
Peggy Houdashelt, Ann Colburn,
Rita Hamm, Lynn Epple, Mars ha ltoudashelt, Betsy Jones,
Connie Soulsby, Paula Chancey,
Elsl~ Sutherland, Susie Abbott.
Julie Slezak, Autumn Hysell,
· Amy Legar, Jane Beegle, Jeannle Hood, Jeannie Taylor, Jane
Huffman, Phyllis May , Katie

Biron, Anna Blackwood, Ida
Diehl, Jeannie Tatterson, Bernie
Anderson. Sarah Anderson,
Janet Duffy.
Others presenting gifts to the
bride-elect were Darla Kennedy,
Geroge and Beulah Nelgler.
Janet WIIUamson, Diane Willi·
amson, ClarlceKen nedy ,Marlyn
Pwlin, Marilyn Meier, Nanga
Roberts, Mary Ashworth, Rosc mary Raul, Mary O'Brien,
Hilda Harris, Cheryl Rltfle. and
Kerr! Mellick.
Gameswereplayedwlthpr!zes
going to Susie . Abbott, Elsie
Sutherland, Jody Taylor, and
Jeannie Hood. The door prize
was won by Mrs. Abbott.

re~ently

a

The 302 total points Is the most
ever scored In an NCAA Division
I game, surpassing the mark of
282 set In UNLV' s 142-140 triple
overtime triumph over Utah
State on Jan. 2, 1985. The 138
points by Azusa Paclflc broke the·
record for most points by. a losing
team In regulation time. The
record had been &lt;h_eld by Pepper'dine in a 144-127 loss to t-oyola
Marymount Feb. 20, 1988.
In other games, Clemson defeated The Cltadel96-82, Georgia
nipped Jacksonvllle 75-70, North .
Caronna State routed Akron
87-67, Richmond beat Wake
Forest 74-61, Michigan State
rolled over Furman 98-68, Notre
Dame .blasted · St. Bonaventure
92-72 and Texas-El Paso topped ,_
Texas Southern 90-82.

Wright anniversary celebrated
A s urpr ise celebration was
held Sunday at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church in observance of the 40th wedding ann!·
versary of Jean and Lloyd
Wright, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Wright were
married In Middleport on Nov ,

28. 1948 and are the parents of
three children, Mike and Bennie,
Pomeroy. and Rebecca Anderson of Cambridge. They have six
grandchildren.
Rebecca and John Anderson
spent the Thanksgiving weekend
here with !1er parents.

SUS girls hope to improve hardwood· mark
J

't

DRIViNG LAYUP - Seton Hall's Pookey Wigington goes up
against Kansas' Kevin Pritchard In a runaway turnover. Seton
Hall beat the Jayhawks 92-81 Monday night to claim the
championship olthe Great Alaska Shootout. (UP I)
.

AI Molde named MAC coach of year
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Cen·
tral Michigan quarterback Jell
Bender has been selected the
Mid-American Conference freshman of the year and Western
Michigan's AI Molde the coach of
the year in balloting by the MAC
News Media Association.
·

Bender, a 6-foot-2, 200-pound
redshirt freshman from New·
berry. Mich., became the regular
Central quarterback the second
game of the season and guided
the Chippewas to a 7-3 records in
the 10 games he started.

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SUCCESS STORY - Jamie Anderson, a sophomore at Southern
High, Is glad his school district's Thanksgiving holiday Included
the first day of deer season. Jamie bagged thlslO-polnt buck early
Monday morning. Jamie Is the son of Jim and Becky Anderson.

Currently standilJg at 1-1, the
Southern Tornadoettes of Coach
Bill ·Baer hope to build improve
upon a 5-15 season of one year
ago.
Baer Is assisted by Larry
Wolfe.
Lost to graduation from last
year was Angie Bostick, leaving
a lot of experience returning to
the SHS lineup.
Coach Baer stated, "Our biggest' strength Is that we have
seven girls returning to the
lineup that have valuable experience and the co nfldence of
playing together for a couple of
years. Our size, shOoting potential, quickness, and d~lre to win
are also excellent strong points."
"We must learn to give 100
percent all of the time, not just
some of the time, and play hard
every minute to ·have a good
season. Keys to our season will be
our desire to get In shape and
stay In shape, learn to play
pressute defense, and the desire
to Improve each game and
practice. ~we can't get used to·
just coasting along If we want to
be successfu I."
In comparing this year's team
and last year's Baer commented,
"We havethepeopletobeamuch
stronger team, losing jus tone to
graduation and having a good

1988-8&amp; SOUTHERN GlRLS .
BASKETBALL SCHEDULi:

bench. ''
"We wlll take each game, one
at a time. However, we are
looking at thes season with a lot
of optimism. We have a good
attitude right now. If the girls
maintain this and continue to
work we can look forward to a
good year."
Usted as offensive strengths
are good shooting abllltles form
returnlr g lettermen, quickness
from guards Becky Evans, Dawn
Johnson, and Tracy Beegle, and
nine varsity players that wlll see
a · lot of playing time. The '
qulc_kness also enables to apply a
sticky press defense.
·'Although shooting has looked
good In the preseason, our
shooting had a little bit to be
desired last night," said Baer.
SHS has good size and Is strong
on the boards with 6-0 Becky
Winebrenner and 5-11 Leslee
Dudding. Also Crystal Hill and
Debbie Greathouse are strong
underneath.
Currently Hill. one of the
team's top scorers and rebound·
ers Is out with a severely
sprained ankle, but wlll work
back Into shape In the next two o
three weeks.
Below Is a roster and team
schedule:

DATE-OPP.

Nov.28-Eastern ..... ........ ....................... H
Oec.Ol-KYger Creek ............................. A

'Dec.05-Me1gs ... , ............ ., .......... ....... .... A
l)ec.OS-Symmes Valley ..................... , .•. H
Oec.l2-North Gallla ............. .. ... ..... ...... A

l)pe.l5-0ak Hill. ................. .................. H
Dec.lS·Hannan Trace..... ................ , .. ... A

Ilec.22·Aiexander ........... .................... .. H
Jan.05-Southwestern .............. .............. H
Jan.09-Eastern ........... ............. ...... .... .. A
Jan.12-Kyger Creek .............. ............... H
Jan.14-Waterford ................. .. .............. A
Jan.19-Symmes Valley ....................... .. A

VARSfrY GIRLS ROSTER
NO·PLAYER-POS.
HT YR
15-Junle Beegle-G .. .......................... 5·8 2
14-Tracy·Beegle-G .. ......................... 5-G 4
23-Leslee Duddln~ - F ..................... S·ll 4
12-Becky Evans·G ................... ......... 5-6 4
40.0ebbleGreathouse-G ............. ...... 5-6 4
35-Crysta\ Hlll· F .... .......................... 5-~ 4
51-C tndy NeutzUng'·F ............_.......... 5·6 4

22-Dawn Johnson-G.......................... S-2 4
41-Becky WlneiJrenner·C .................. 6--0 4
~Leslee Dudding and Cindy Neutzllng
did not letter.

COACH BILL BAER

Irish remain first in
ra.tings; Miami No.2
NEW YORK (UPI) - Notre
lng an upset last weekend and set
Dame, buoyed by a convincing
to finish lts season against
triumph over previously undeBrigham Young Saturday, refeated Southern Cal, Monday
ceived two 'first-place votes ,and
bolstered Its No. 1 ranking In the 659 points, 10 more than West
UPI college football ratings.
Virginia. The No. 3 MountaiThe Irish' captured 42 of 49 neers, with four first-place balfirst-place votes and 714 of 735 lots, moved to their highest-ever
points In balloting by the UPI spot In the ratings.
Board of Coaches.
No. 4 Florida State received
Notre Dame, 11-0, beat South- one first-place vote and 565 poln!s
ern Cal 27-10, knocking the as Southern Cal's drop left
Trojans down four slots to No. 6 Independents In the ratings' top
and setting up a showdown with four spots.
unbeaten West Vlrglnla In the
Nebraska joined Miami, West
Jan. 2 Fiesta Bowl.
Virginia and Florida Sta(e In
" It' s climactic but we're still moving up a spot, taking over No.
one step away," Notre Dame 5 with 504 points, 11 ahead of the
llnebacker Wes Pritchett said. · Trojans.
"We're 11-0, we've come this far.
''The thing we want more than
Ultimately, we're going to be anyth lng else Is a victory (over
playing for the national cham· Michigan) In the Rose Bowl,"
plonshlp. I'm glad we control our USC Coach Larry Smith said.
own destiny."
"We can't worry about the poDs
No. 2 Miami, narrowly escap- any more.''

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ANOTHER SUCCESS STORY - Monday must have been the
day for 10-polnt bucks In Jllelgs County. Joe F1 elds, of Pomeroy, got
hla 10-polnter Monday afternoon around 2 p.m. Fields says he
expect• the deer to dre~~• out at about 200 pounds.
•

LOCATION

Nov.21·Aiexander .............................. .. A

Jan .23-Norrh Gallla .............................. H
Jan.26-0ak Hill .................................... 1\
Jan.JO.Waterford ................. .. .............. H
Feb.02-Hannan Trace.. ............ ....... ... ... H
Feb.06-SOuthwestern ............................ A
Feb.ll-Melgs .............. ........................ .. H
•SOUTHERN TORNAOOE!l

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"
Joanne ~"•: ov. RulllBilldFrlendly G~trdeners,
took the best ol show award In artistic arrangemettls al' the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association's annual holiday Dower show
staged over the weekend at the Senior Citizens Center. Her
arrangement In the "Our Song to Mary" was In blue and white and
featured white fugl mums with pine and dock with a wooden
modern Madonna.

CREATIVITY AWARD - This modern abstract design was
mechanized causing the complete arrangement to swivel. Pat
Holter of the Chesler Garden Club and the Shade River Council of
'Floral Arts, used pine, water Illy leaves sprayed red, and
Christmas balls In her creation.

Weekend flower· show winners announced
By Charlene HoeRlch
Elegant traditional-and unique
modern designs In hollday flower
arrangements, swags and
wreathes created with cranberries, coal, and corn husks as well
as greenery and grapevine, and
pretty packages enhanced with
decorations of plant materials
gave viewers of the weekend
flower show an appreciation for
the talents of local arrangers.
There were 102 artistic designs
displayed at the show which
• carrie&lt;) out the theme ''The Sight
and Sounds of Christmas." and
was staged at the Senior Citizens
· Center over the weekend under
• the chairmanship of Shella
Curtis.
In the adult division, Joanne
Fetty took thebes t of show with a •
blue and white design featuring
fugl mums and a modern madonna in "Our Song to Mary."
The reserve best of show award
was awarded to Judy Snowden,
whlle Pa t Holter took thecreallv·
lty award with a modern mechanized abstract design.
Evelyn Hollon won the ·hortlcul·
ture sweepstakes award In the
adult division, while Billy Crane
was th e junior horticulture
sweepstakes winner, and Lisa
Stet hem, the junior best of show
winner in the artistic design.
Judging was by an accredited
judge of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs with ribbons being
awarded in four places In each
class.
In the category " Deck the
Halls," the winners were listed
first to fourth, respectively, In
door swags, Eva Robson, Pauline Atkins, Evelyn Hollon,
Shlela Taylor; Indoor wreaths,
Brenda Loper, Josephine Hill,
Judy Hlll, and Judy Snowden,
outdoor wreaths, Peggy Moore,
Connie Hill, Judy Snowden, and
Sheila Taylor, other wall decoration, featuring a stocking, Judy
Hill, second only ribbon
awarded, and other wall decorations, Connie Hlll, Held! Elberfeld, Evelyn Hollon and Sheila
Taylor.
In the class for blends of
potpourri the ribbon winners
were Mar ]orle Purtell, Judy

Snowden, Judy Hlll, and Brenda
Loper.
Taking the ribbons for decorated packages using plant material In the class "Under the
Christmas Tree" for adult packages were Judy Hlll, Evelyn
Hollon and Rhonda M!llir(ln, and
for children's packages, Judy
Hlll, Betty Dean, Evelyn Hollon,
and RhOnda Milliron.
For decorations using old
C)lrlslrnas cards, the winners
were Betsy Horky, first, and J;:va
Robson, second and third .
Artistic Arrangemettls
In the artls tic arrangements
division, ribbon winners, listed
first through fourth, were as
follows:
"Angels We Have Heard on
High," a tall llne mass design;
Melanie Stethem, Joan Snowden,
Eva Robson, and Betty Milhoan.
"From Our House to Your
House," a design Inspired by a
Christmas . card: Peggy Crane,
Evelyn Thoma, Josephine Hill,
and Helen Eblin.
''Our Song to Mary, Mother of
Jesus," a design using the
Christmas Madonna: modern
arrangernent , first division,
Joanne Fetty, Shelia Taylor,
Allee Thompson, and Betty Milhoan; and second d!vlslon, Paullne Atkins, Betty Dean, Evelyn
Hollon, and Marge Fetty; and
traditional, Judy Snowd~n, PauUne Atkins, Allee Thompson, and
Sheila Taylor .
"Hang It High For All to See,"
a kinetic design: Pat Holter,
Janet Bolin, Betty Milhoan, and
Evelyn Hollon.
''The Stockings Were Hung By
the Chimney with Care," a
design · for a mantel: Judy
Snowden, Allee Nease, Betty
Dean, and Allee Thompson.
"Sleigh Bells Ring, Are Your
Listening," a vlbratlle design:
Dorothy Karr, Betty Dean, Allee
Thompson. Sheila Taylor.
"Away to the Window I Flew
Like a Flash," a creative hortizontal design : Betty Dean, Sheila
Curtis, Janet Bolin, and Suzanne
Warner.
"It's Chrlstmastlrne In the
City," a free standing assemblage: Melanie Stethem, Pat
I

Holter, Peggy Crane, Sheila
Curtis.
'
"They Saw a Star," a tradl·
tiona! design incorporating candles: Judy Hill, Peggy Crane,
Neva Nicholson, and Sheila
Taylor.
"0 Christmas Tree," a design
incorporating evergreens and
baubles: Sheila Taylor, Bind
Diehl, Betsy Horky, and Eva
Robson.
"The First Snow of Winter ,"
featuring weather wood: first
section: WIIovene Bailey, Eva
Robson, Pearle Canaday, Peggy
Moore; second dlvlslon, Krista!
Bolin, Evelyn Hollon, Peggy
Crane, and Brenda Loper.
"A Visit from St. Nicholas," a
design using a Santa: Lisa
Stethem, Michael Taylor, Ben
Crane, and Bllly Crane and Jeff
Stet hem.
"Away In a Manger," lncludlng a Christmas madonna or the
holy family: Rebecca Taylor,
Lisa Stethem, Billy Crane and
Ben Crane and Jeff Stethem,
fourth places.
Hordculture Division
In the junior classes the
winners were as follows: Bllly
Crane, first and second, and Ben
Crane, third and fourth In dried
roadside materials; and Blll
Crane, first, James E. Ewing,
seocnd, Jordan Hlll, third, and
James Ewing, Ben Crane, Bllly
Crane, and Jordan Hill. all fourth
place.
Kyle Loper took first In the
class, food for Santa's reindeer,
with the other winners being
Amanda MUler, second, Chris·
tine Mlller, third, and B. J.
Kennedy and B.J. Jordan, fourth
places . .
In junior class for potted
plants, Jordan Hill took first,
Bllly Crane, second; and Ben
Crane, third.
_
In the . adult dlvlslon, the
winners listed were as foUows:
Potted herbs: Connje Hill, first
and second, Pauline Atkins.
third.
Variety pots: Sheila Curtis.
first, Connie HUI, second.
African violets: Kathryn
Miller, all four places In one

divlson; pauline Atkins, first,
Kathryn ~ Mlller, second and
fourth, Binda Diehl. third.
One stem naturally dried plant
material, three classes , listed
first through fourth respec·
tively: Janet Bolin, Ida Murphy,
Evelyn Hollon, Judy Hill, first
class; Evelyn Hollon, Judy Hlll,
second and third, and Judy
Snowden. fourth, second class;
Janet Bolin, Evelyn Hollon,
second, third and fourth, third
class; and Helen Eblin, Ida
Murphy, second and third, and
Pauline Atkins, fourth. fourth
cl.a ss.
One stem treated plant material: Evelyn Hollon, 'first and
third; Eva Robson, and Pauline
Atkins, fourth.

Are you

ngryfor
a great checl(1ng
?

•

Quirks in the news________
By United Press International

of the group Is to "lay responslbii·
ity upon all caring users of the
Dunce caps go out for grammar English language to choose properly between lle, an Intransitive
gaffes:
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. verb that means 'to repose,' and
. (UPT) - Doughnu-ts He but they . lay, a transitive verb that means
don't lay, and there are neither 'to place."'
airline fights nor flights along
Penn said Dunkin' Donuts
I.J5 In Dallas.
recast the ad so that the phrase
That's according to SPELL, now reads," ... been l)llngthere."
the Society for the Preservation
Second place went to a Mobil
of English Language and Litera- Corp. sollcltation letter that has a
ture. The group has handed down dangling modifier. The letter
Its 1988 "Dunce Cap" awards for l&gt;eglns, "As a Mobil credit
grammatical gaffes and customer In good standing, Montmalapropisms.
gomery Ward would like to ... " First plac~ went to the Dunkin'
Penn pointed out that It would
Donuts chain for a televlsllln be the recipient of the letter, not
advertisement. The commercial, Montgomery Ward, who Is aswhich boasted of the products' sumed to be the customer In good
freshness, explained that " ... the
problem with supermarket
newspaper photodoughnuts Is there's no telllng graph caption submitted for a
how long they've been laying Dunce Cap award by Rhoda
there. ••
Whatley of Wichita Falls won
Wllllam s. Penn Jr., the third place. It read: "Eye to
president of SPELL, said a goal Eye: A group of birds takes a

r~nd*:~as

•

'

T

Try

close view of a lady's face that Is
part of a billboard advertising an
airline's fights to Florida along
1-35 In Dallas."
In addition to noting the
fights-flights typo, she com·
men ted, "I've heard of things
that never get off the ground, but
this Is ridiculous."
The awards will be formally
announced on Dec. 13.

Stan wit11 a convenient cl1ecklng
account. Then toss in A big hunk of
proleclion wilh up lo $100.000 1n
accrdenlal death insurance. Add A
layer ol free credit card pro!ect1on and
a slice of emergency cash advance
anytime you need il (available W1ih
your MasterCar d or Visa). Put in a
healthy portion of financial newsle!lers

Now Open For The
Christmas 'Season.

and pour on a generous sauce ol
discounts on travel. enterta inment.
d1111ng and lodgu1g . Garn1sh with '"
free reg1slered key nng . and you
have il. The most delicious cl1eCkii iQ
account in town The Club Stop by
any of our convemen\ offices lorl"Y
and order 11 11.1~
for yourself. nlii

FREE CASHIER CHECKS TRAVELERS CHECKS &amp; MONEY ORDERS ALSO AVAILABLE WITH THE CLUB MEMBERSHIP

.,OINimiAI • POINimiA
HANGING IAIKETI oHOUY TREES
•AFRICAN VIOLETS •FOUAGE
PlANTS. BAIKET8 oMONUMENT
SPRAYS
•CEMETERf VAlES
•WREATHS ond GRAVE BLANKETS
•LIVE • CUT CHR18TMAI TREES

PEOPLES BANK

OPEN DAILY 9 AM-5 PM
SUNDAY 1 PM-5 PM

HUIIAID'S GIEENHOUSE

MEMBER
F.O.I.C.

992·5776-SYIACUSI, ON.

r

NEW HAVEN

882-2135

POINT PLEASANT

MASON

675-1121

773-5514

�--

- -- ----

By BOB HOEFLICH
; Wow!
What an audience that was at
Saturday night's Fall FoiUes of
1988 at the Meigs High School.
In 35 years of show biz I can't
remember~ enthusiastic
audience at the close of the
curtain as Saturday night's. A lot
of the audience, gave a standing
ovation to the large cast which
took part. Fortunately, someone
back stage- Deb! Buck, I think,
had the presence of mind to open
tbe curtain so the cast could
aeknoWiedge that support.
.
· And the Easter parade of
bonnets made by Meigs County
women did take place with 12
h.tlts modeled.
•The creativity of Aprll Smith of
Pomeroy came through with
April capturing the top two prizes
offered In the contest - a $100
savings bond from Bank I and a
$50 savings bond from Farmers
Blink. Third place went to Jean
Ann Bradbury of Middleport and
tJ:lat prize Is a $50 savings bond
also provided the Farmers Bank.
Fourth place went to Evelyn
Gilmore of Pomeroy who receives· a $25 gift certlt!cate from
Powell's Super-Valu with fifth
pjace going to Pat Thoma, also of
Pomeroy, and that's a $25 gift
certificate from Kroger's. Three
$10 gift certificates were added to
the orginal prize list and winners
of these were Frances Imboden
oi Rutland, sixth place; Paige
Cleek, seventh place, and Mary
F .. Roush, Racine area, eighth
place. The gift certificates were
provided by Dollar General and
Glark's Jewelry, two
certificates.
_Four creations were given
honorable mention by the panel
of judges who selected the
winners by number with no
names listed on the entries and
these were part of Saturday
!light's parade. Women making
tiie four honorable mention en·
tries were Cathy Blaettnar Johnson, Evelyn Gilmore, the Meigs
senior Citizens Center, and
Evelyn Wofford of Pomeroy.
. It was quite a cOntest with 30
entries - and now win, lose or
draw contestants are requested
to pick up their hats at The Dally
sentinel office- and, the sooner,
the betll!r. It was a great contest,
but frankly, I'm drowning In

C'JI~gy group. Send reeume tQl:
Box 328, Chlllic:ott.. Ohio
45801 .

UP TO •16 HOUR PROCESS·
lNG MAIL "-/ttfEKLY CHECK ,
GUARANTEED. FREE DETAILS , WRtTE' SO , 1087 W.
Phil ed.. phia. Suite 239-00. On-

tario, Callf9171!2.
Adorable ktnens looking for
good home. Ca ll 614 -448-

,7100.

614-246-9138 .

Perhaps, you're not all that
hungry after all of that Thanks·
giving feasting. However, this,
too, .s hall pass and I thought you
might , want to know that the •
annual holiday luncheon and
bazaar will be ·held at the Heath
United Methodist Church In
Middleport on Tuesday, Dec. 6
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Among . the homemade luncheon Items will be soup and that
will be available to carry out by
the quart.
·
Among other holiday activities
coming up Is a ChrlSlmas auction
at 7 p.m. on Dec. 3 at the
Syracuse Fire Station. The auction Is under the sponsorship of
the Syracuse Fire Department.
Eastern and Southern basket·
ball fans will take part In the first
evening of the new program to
provide food for the needy at
Tul!sday night's game at E~$t·
ern. Fans are asked to take
canned food to each game this
season Including the glrls'.games
and these Items will be turned
over to the Meigs County Food
Pantry.
In the basset of loading and
unloading the Fall Follies costumes and what-have-you, I lost
the key to open the back of the
station wagon. I think this
probably happened on the park·
lng lot at the Meigs High School.
If anyone should lind It, I'd really
appreciate getting II back. I do
look a little awkward crawling
from the front to the back of the
station wagon, but I'm smiling.
Are you?

·Annual Thanksgiving dinner of
For roll call members gave
ttie Middleport Child Conserva·
memories of past Thanksgivt!on League was held at the Rock
Ings. Plans were made for the
Springs United Methodist
observance of ChriStmas and
Church recently.
.
project work.
The pledge and mother's .
Becky Broderick had devoprayer opened the meeting wl th
tions and the traveling prize was
Peggy Harris and Bonnie Scott won by Ann Colburn. Others
glving reports. Nancy Broderick
attending were Nancy Morris,
was taken In as a new member.
Angle Morris, Helen Blackston,
Baby Items were collected for
Ann Colburn, Clarice Kennedy,
dlsttlbu lion to the needy. Thelma
Linda Broderick, Kitty Darst,
Sines, a member, was reported
Betty Weyersm!ller, and tammy
.JU and gifts were collected to take Mash,
. t~ her.

.- People in the ·news-.,.......,
By WILLIAM C. TROtT
United Press Internallonal
BEATO BE BAPTIZED: Princess Beatrice will strike a I lny
blow for women's rights when she Is baptized Dec. 2. Prince
Andrew and his wife, the former Sarah Ferguson, personally
chose the liberal archbishop of York, John Habgood, to christen
. their child, who was born Aug. 8 and Is fifth In line for the British
throne.
The chrjstenlng will take place In the Chapel Royal of St.
James's Palace In London and will be notable because Habgood
Is known for his views such as supporting the ordination of
women priests, which Is contrary to the policies of the Church of
• England. Most of Queen Elizabeth JI's grandchildren have been
· · christened by the archbishop of Canterbury.
OLLIE AND JERKY: The Rev. Jerry Falwell says his
organization collected 2 million petition signatures and
forwarded them to the White House In hopes of get ling Oliver
Nortll a presidential pardon for pis Iran-Contra doings. "I
believe these petitions are representative.of national grassroots
support for a presidential pardon," Falwell said from his
headquarters In Lynchburg, Va. "The entire court case has
become a travesty at the taxpayers' expense."
North could go on trial as soon as January on charges offraud
and conspiracy In the arms-for-hostages scandal. Falwell, who
had North appear as commencement speaker at his Liberty
College In the spring, wants President Reagan to pardon the
ex-Marine colonel to "spare him what could easily be several
· .years of legal battles and a serious and unnecesary burden for
the Bush admln!stt:at!on. ''
MAMA CISSY HONORED: Gospel singer Clssy Houston will
be honored at Trump Plaza In Atlantic City, N.J ., on Dec. 16 for
her contrlbu !Ions as a parent, not as a musician. On behalf of the
Parents Anonymous of New Jersey, billionaire Donald Trump
will present Houston with a special achievement In parenting
award.
Her superstar daught!!r, Whitney, and sons Gary and Michael
will be on hand and the entertainment at the black-lie event will
Include performaces by Clssy.and Gary. Parents Anonymous Is
the nation's largest child abuse prevention and treatment
program.

Stop In Today anci .See Our
Fint lint Of Dtron,
liotoner Gloves, Plus More

For That Special Person On
Your list!

DEPARTMENT STORE

CASII SAliS OIIILYI
.
949·2100

MASTERCARD -

VISA -

.

P\.lppin-Thurman, OH. Call

meeting conducted recently

JD SIWI

---

CANA -Hig hMt nl.-y in 0h5o.
All benefits. FIJI lime p01tt~n
with CR NA oricwrted Anetthliill~

Child Conservation Leagtlfl-

'· .

-----

.
IACINE, C)IIO

GOLDEN BUCKEYE

,

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid _Sales &amp; ~•rvi••
Cl Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~

VOTING - Darrick St. Clair, Kristina Grate,
Tara Michael and James Hudson, third and fourth

Dear Ann Landers: Half of the
1.6 billion prescriptions
dispensed annually 1n this coun·
· try are used Incorrectly. This Is
America's "other" drug
problem.
If your readers are not Informed about their medicines,
are forgetting to take them,
Increasing or decreasing dos·
.ages on their own, or .s imply not
following directions, they could
be risking prolonged Illness,
avoidable side effects, possible
hospitalization and even death.
People should ask these five
questions when they receive a
prescription:
1. What Is the name . of the
medicine, and what Is It supposed
to do?
·
2:· How and when do I tak'e It,
and for how long?
3. What foods, drinks, other
medicines or activities should I
avoid while taking this
medicine?
.. ·
4. Are there any side effects,

BEAUTIFUL

MEIGS
FURNITURE ;

~ Ann

3rd St.
ANN I.ANJlERS e

'•1988, IAH Angr.lea
and what do I do If they occur? · 30-year-old woman who Is happTlmf"'l Syndlclll:f' 1nd
5. Is.there any written Inform a· Ily married with two children. I
t.:rt:"aiOI"''I Syndlulll'
tlon available about the entered the work force when I
medicine?
was 16 years old.
Thank you for helping AmeriOver the past 14 years, I have
cans with this lmporiant !nfor· encountered the same problem
mation. - Paul G. Rogers,
time and time again and have do many women have this
Chairman for National Council been unable to escape it. It's the problem? It's becoming a joke
on Patient llilonnatlon and Edu- senior males that I work around. among my friends - how the old
cation, WIUibington, D.C. .
I might add I have no trouble with men and dogs just love me and
Dear Paul Rogers: Thank you men between 25 and 50; It's the want to follow me home. Also,
for those excellent guidelines.
old geezers 60 and over who how do I dlscouraget\Jis behavior
May I add a few suggestions of continue to harass me.
before It gets sta~il? - Pamy own?
ducah,
Ky.
It always startss with a
Too many doctors fall to friendly greeting. The next thing
Dear Paducah: I' suggest that
explain to the patient what the Is they want to put their arms · you pay a little closer attention to
medicine Is, what It's supposed to around me for a little hug, or they the way you Interact with the old
do and when to stop taking it. The plant a kiss on my cheek. I don't geezers. Do you stand too close?
doctor writes out the prescription see myself af overly friendly nor Is there too much small talk? Are
and that's that.
do I encourage this type of you too Informal? What Is the
1.••
Patiots should ask more ques- behavior, but It persists.
nature of your nonbusiness
tions and Insist on satiSfactory
The minute I confront these conversation?
answers. They should not have to men they say, "I didn't mean
Perhaps without realizing II
look to the pharmacist, who all anything. I think .of you as a yo u're Inviting excessive
too often Is the one who comes to daughter." This leaves me feel· chumminess. My wonderfully
the rescue and provides the lng like a fool.
wise father used to say, "If you
Information and peace of mind.
I am beginning to get paranoid. don't hang out the welcome sign,
Dear Ann Landers: I am a !s this situation unique to me or nobody Is go lng to ~ove ln."

•

...-: · ~-

· ~\

1', ~

TUESDAY
THURSDAY
CHESHIRE - Gallla-Me!gs,
ROCK SPRINGS - S~llsbury
Community Action Agency free Pack 246 will hold their annual
clot!llng day will be Tuesday, 9 Christmas party on Thursday, at
a.m. to 12 noon, at the old high 7 p.m . , at the Rock Springs
school building In 'Cheshire.
United Methodist Church. Each
cub scout Is to bring a gift for
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu exchange. Families are
Sorority meeting and "Do Your welcome.
Own Thing Auction" will be
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the home
APPLE GROVE - Christmas
of Johnanna Shuler. Members caroling at the Apple Grove
are reminded to bring Watkins United Methodist w!ll be Thursorders.
day at 6:30 p.m. The church is
located 10 miles above Racine on
TUPPERS PLAINS- Orange State Route 338. Everyone
Township Trustees will meet In . welcome.
regular session Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., . at the home ·of Dorothy
RUTLAND - Rutland TownCalaway, clerk.
ship Trustees will meet In regu- .

Delta Kappa Gamma meets
Two new mem hers were In·
.!tlated Into Alpha Omicron Chap' ter, Delta Kappa Gamma at last
week's meeting held at St. Peter
and Paul Parish Hall, Wellston.
Linda Sue Carpenter and Su zanne Jackson were Initiated Into
the group by Eleanor Essman
assisted by chapter officers and
by Carolyn Smith and Sandra
Evans who acted as escorts. The
new members received red
roses.
The Initiation following a ham
loaf dinner at tables decorated In
a Thanksgiving motif. V!oa Getties gave the Invocation ·using an
old English prayer.
Rebecca Zurcher, president,
announced that Mrs. Get ties has
been named to the state nomina tion committee representing the
southeastern district . Nellie
Parker, secretary, and Esther

Maerker, treasurer, read appre·
elation notes from Pauline Burson, Avice Fre'cker's daughter,
Janice Briggs, Jane Bo4rne, and
Anna Maude Fehrman. The
gorup signed a card for Jackie
Fain.
·
Carol Eberts, scholarshipcomm lttee chairman, conducted the
silent auction assisted by
members of the committee.
Margaret Benson auctioned off
the Items on which there were no
bids . Next meeting will be at the
Masonic Temple In Hamden,
Dec. 10, at ~1 a.m.
A silent auction was held.
Attending from Meigs County
were Nellie Parker, Mary Virginia Reibel , Carolyn Smith, Anna
Elizabeth Turner, Dorothy Woodard, Rebecca Zurcher, and
Linda Sue Carpenter.

lar sesson Thursday, 6:30 p.m.,
at the fire s tatlon. The public Is
welcome.

GET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAl

'- ~- •TANS

TOP OF THE STAIRS

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

AND

DESIGNER IDUTIQUE
111 Wilt Sec. P-oy

$44995

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middleport, will meet 7:30
p.m. Thursday. A gift exchange
will be held . Men are to bring
men's gift. Ladles bring ladles'
gift. $6 limit on gifts.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet In regillar
session Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
grange hall on County Road· 1
near Salem Center.
The subordinate ba.klng, youth
baking and young marrieds and
adults baking contests will be
held .
A potluck supper will follow the
meeting.
All members are urged to
attend and reminded that it Is
time to pay 1989 dues.

Clvltan club
POMEROY - The Meigs JunIor Clv!tan Club will be selling .
poinsettias during the next few .
weeks. All proceedss will go
toward various projects IncludIng Childrens Hospital, Special
Olympics, travel expenses, etc.
Any area businesses Qr res!'
dents wishing
poinsettias, may
contact Jason Black, Ohio Dis·
trlct governor, at 742-2501, or
Debbie Musser, advisor, at
992-2158.

Open house planned
POMEROY - The annual
holiday open house of the Meigs
Museum will be held Dec. 3 and 4.
Hunter meals
RACINE - The Ladles Auxll·
lary of MI. Moriah Church of
God, Racine, will be serving hot
meals for hunters, Monday
through Friday, 10 a.m. to6p.m ., .
In the basement of the church
parsonage. All hunters welcome.

1P-25-l mo. pd.

YOUNG'S

LINDA'S
PAINTING

. C~RPENTER
SERVICE

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

- Addon1 end remodl!tling

- Roofing end gulter work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing end electrical

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me .d o
it for you.

work

!FREE ESTIMATES)

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

13.0.00

FACTORY CHOKE

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

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

Certified Licensed Shop
5-25-lfn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP -SOIL

Pomeroy, Ohio

11-19-'88 I mo. d.

11-14-'88 tfn

Now Homos Built
"Free Estimates"

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Service Center fnr Ryan
Products

PH. 949-2B01

8 .7 Financing on '(ardman
Service on All Makes

or Res. 949-2B60

We Honor MC/Disc/Visa

NO lUNDA Y· CAllS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

F.OR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

3-11-tfn

9-1-BII-tm

OWNER, GREG B. ROUSH
GENERAl
CDNT RACT DRS
RESIDENTIAL

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE

COMMERCIAl
.CUSTOM KITCHENS l!o BATHS

•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING &amp; ROOFING
•METAL BUILDINGS "
HOUSING 11o APT. PROJECTS
,'; I\ CE 11.169

35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
2 miles from lt. 7 an
County Rood 26
11·25-'88·1 mo.

DUSIT Sl., IUACUSI

992-7611

11-21-88-tfn

,(3
I ~
k,q

BISSELL.
BUILDERS

Pnrew111/on
Sp~l•llll

Laesa M. Murphey
Free-Lance Writer

CUSTOM BUlL T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Speethes,
Computer Grophiu,
Public Relations,
Advertising ~
Phone:
~.:J
II 14-992-31143

II MIDDIEPOIT/POMEROY
PHONE 446·0699
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

"At Reasonable Prius"

PH. 949·2B01
or Res. 949·2B60
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

4-16-86-tfn

11 -71 mo.

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN ,
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.-4 P.M.
992-7204
324 East Main,
Pomeroy, Ohio
l
Behind City Haiti
1

992-6282 '
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio
1·28·'88-lfn

10-27-1 mo. d.

WOMEN'S

MEN'S

Soft Spots
Nurse Mates
Naturalizer
Hushpuppy
Sebago
Dingo

Florsheim
Hushpuppy
Jarman 1
Winthrop
Dingo
I

OFF

HARTLEY SHOES
210 EAST MAIN
No

992-5772

•

ill

.AN~
RNER~

••,.nee..,.._

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

POMEROY, OH.
No .Special Orders

Speciullnsuranre Pro~ucrs
For Spt!dal People

FIREWOOD

SER~ICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

$3

PAT HILL FORD

s'

PER lOAD

DELIVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

1-13·11&lt;

H -88-tfn

Real Estate General

ATTENTION DEER
·HUNTERS
ACREAGE FOR SALE
APPROX. 200 ACRES LOCATED
· BETWEEN RUTLAND &amp;
LANGSVILLE ON ST. AT. 124 .
'

CALL 992-2136 BETWEEN 9 &amp; 3

Salem Street
R
Ohio

L5 (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
:I:
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pom6roy, Ohio

614-387-7180 .

z

8-

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Female Pomeranian to good
home. Call 814-992-7259.

tfn

..----------------~----------------1
BINGO

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

PaY Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE

1614) 991-6150
RESIDENCE PHONE
1614) 992-7754
I

WELCOME TO
CHRISTMAS
AT

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

JUNk CARS OR TRUCKS
-FREE ESIIMAIBFar onv of these SerYKes call ·

614-742-2617
Between 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Leave

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

fodory Chol&lt;e
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforracl

.LOST big bone German SheP.herd, 8 monlhs old. answers to
'King", ..,;cintty at 22nd St. and
JeriCho Road, REWA A 0 , 304675-6464.

-

GENERAl CONTRACTORS
References

11 -1 _6 · '88 -tfn -

IAN WOOD STOVES
•12 Years Experience

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

Shop
Where
Santa
Shops!

cakes
lt. 1, Box 136, Vinton

RIVERINE ANTIQUES
Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Gnxe, bonna, Angie
and Gwen Folmer

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
992-2725
MIDDLPEPORT, OHIQ
"'Walk·lnA Weleomf'1 '

10-31-88-1 mo.

LYNCH'S
GENERAL&amp;t.l
REPAIR~

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

BOOKCASES
CUPBOARDS
CROCKS
BEDS
WASHSTANDS
PIE SAFES
DRESERS
'
PRIMITIVES
LAMPS
TABLES
"ThP Gift .~ That '\1f'l 't&gt;r Srop Givinf{"

1124 E. MAIN

992-2526

ALARM
SYSTEMS
•Residential
•Co~mercial

Specializing In Chain

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR

UNDER

$3°0

MAIN mEET PIIZA
Our Delivery Staff
Knowo Where You
Live; .

Call 992-2221

or 992-9922
10·12·11·1 mo.

·····--Pomerov ··--------

614-992-595~
11-9·1 mot pd.

HILLSIDE MUULE
LOADING
AND

MODERN GUN

SUPPLIES
Munleloading .Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies
Gum - Ammo - Slugs -

22 Ammo.
124 East of Rutland
Across Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614-7U-2355
9110/tt. I...._ p1L

•DRYWALL

•DECK&amp;

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

•ROOFING
~•TILE WORK
•PORCHES

FREE ESTIMATES

Buckeye Card Weloomc

liTH LYNtH

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
II 14-11112-3821
Authorized John
Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm

Equipment Dealer

Authorized Sorvico
&amp; Parts

Briggs It Stratton

Tacumsah
Weed Eater
Homelite

Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
MiddJ.port, Ohio
992-6.611

$14 PER TON
DRIVElED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEROY I OHIO

992-6461

WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS ,
AS Auto Mech.,ICI, C.rpen- .
ters. C011m•ologilts. Oivertified Medical Work.._ Electrl! •

c:i.,s, Food Service Work...

Electronics Technicl.,s. ln~s-: ,
trial Maintenance Workers,
Nursing Aaainant1 tnd Order- i
Ues, Machinilts, Office Work-. .
and Welders. Regilt• now for
d••• beginning JMUMV lrd.·
Call Tri·CountyVocationaiAdult
Cent• at 753-31511 •t. 14. A .
variMy olltnding sourcee to .-y
for training • • willable for ,
those eliglbl•

"·

wort.:

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

p.,h &amp; Strvlct

1- 3-'B~tk

9

Wanted To Buy

WapaycHh for late model clelft
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidllnc.
Bill GeneJohn1on

&amp;14-448-3672
TOft CASH Plid lor '83 model
and ntw"er used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eutern
Ave.. Gallipoli1 . Call 614-446-

2282.
CompiMa hausehotds of furniture a antfqu". Also wood &amp;
coel
Sw•in's Furniture
6 Auction, Third &amp;: Olive.

hut••·

114-448-3159.

Richl.,d Awnue. Athens, Ohio
415701 .
10 llld• needed for tlltephorfe
work. Must read well; 2
.walllble,: 9:00 lf"''t-2:30 pm;
4'00-9,00 pm. Good hourlf •
wage: plid weekly; IPP~ after
10:00 am Thur~d., , Dec. 1 It,
104\lt (upstairs) Main St ..
Pomeroy.

~~m;IO~~~lt-l~E~ ~~:
CIALIST for P•rtial HospitaHza·
tlon Progr1m at Woodlan·d
Canters. Inc. Matt81'"1 dagr• or
equlllelent required. PrN •pe.
rience with m.,tatty

chabl.t~

E~~~perleru:,..t111ining

act.Jtts.

In•

group work would be helpl.Jt•
Woodlsnd Cenltn, Inc .•
not disa-iminlte on thl bells af.
age. color. creed. Nltionelorlgif\ .
race. .,. or typeofdlllbllty. For,
more lntorm.tion cont.ct s.,..
dr• McFarhnd. P•sonntll Of·

do•:

ficer. Woodlend

Cent--. Inc.,

4 1 2 Vlntori Pike. Galllpolla, Ohla '

45831 .

:

Junk Cera wtth or wtthout
moton. Call Larry Lfvaly-814388-9303.

Baby sin• needed. 11 :00 ..,. :
5 :00 pm. Call. eft• 5:00,•
304- n:H971 .
•

Furnlturfl and appllancas by the
piec. or entire houeehold. Felr
prices btingptld. Caii151 ... 44S.
3158.

AVON - AI er ... C.H Marilyn:
we..,er 304-882·2145.

Wanted to Buy-Uaed Pitno.
good cond. Cell614·446-4222
Of 441-2174.
Wented To Buy-Stendlng
Timber. C.ll 814-379-27158.
G ooduoedkltctlencabiriGta.CIII

..U1ed tJrniture by the piece Of
entire hou11hold. 614-742·

2466.
stng. a.Drge Bucklev 61 ... 6644781 . Hours2:00-9:00. Closed

onMonct.y .

FortTW Rliclne resident needs
Netlonal Blink currenCV
printad wh:h bank mme from
Racint, Pomerov, Middleport.
G111ipoU1, Pt. Pl....,.l, Rlpl8f
and R.,enswood. 1!14- 7842101 . Pete Simp•on.
Coturrttus.

old

f lllplnylllent
S1:rvtces
11

a.

AN'S
LPN'S-PH, full timet.
part time appllcallons •re l*ng.
eccept:ed for Pte.II'Yt VIII., "
Hospital Nunlng Car• Center. •
Contlct Personnel 304-875- •
4 340. AAEO E.
•

AVON aU •-IIShk'IIIVSPe•a. :
30 4- 875- 1429·
~

.

1188~ '

Needed Avon RIIJ. In At. 87 .
Rt, 2 1r11, Malon County.
Custom•• ht pravlchtc:t: no
up fee for qwllfted P81'"1un who.
calla 304-882-28415.
"

•ian-

-------.,-,--1198~ -

Trapping eupplles. Buying girl'

Announcements
3 Announcements

enthoodofSoutheM:tOhkt. 391

•hift•

U0.17tfll

fir• Equl•111..1

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

J08 HUNTING? NEED A SKill) '

0 E V E l 0 P M E N ~
COORDINATOR·B . S . pre,
ferrad . Significant experience In
atHI of p81'"1on-' and corpor811
soticiust5on, mlljor o'fls and.
direcl mlil is required. Demo ..
Open House: Chris1ma 1 Around strMedsucc•sandl...,..shipin
Tlle World. 3-5 kit~ marked the achiiJto'Mna'rt of tund-raleing
down; children's clothing 5-8- .goals. Donor cultlv•11an.
&amp;X; Octa Gyn, eouch- hide-a- with 801rd Wid vokmt-1.
bed. SMM CAmera, projector end exten•ive r.:10rd k~Mping .. d
screen, SlngerSewHlg Maehintt' reseerch Is raqu.,ed. F ~hi me '
cabinet, two 14 inch Jtudded poaltion b•ed in Athens, Ohio:
snow tir.,, rabbit colrt. De - requir• wening-weekend sch•
c&amp;rnbflr 1 and 2. 9:0()-2:00. dJies and trllo'el throughout
Clifton, W . V1., 1 mile below eight southe•tern Ohia CO\Jit- ,
bridge.
tl•. low 20"1. Stndre.ume111d
leiter of interMt to K•v Attdna, .
E IIBOJI We Director, Planned Par-

814-448·0924.

•AEMOCELING •PAINTING
•PLUMBING

EXT. S 1622 ~4 HRS .

Middleport

•CEILINO FANS INSTALlm

offered

tell us and we'll
match it!
ALSO...

HUNTER
SECURITY

POMEIOY1 OHIO
11· 21·'18'·1 mo.

Unk and Wood Fencing

Your Hometown Place

competitor offers
you a better deal,

Yard Sale

IRolundoblol 1· 407-744-3000

&amp; Vicinity

Specializing in
character and novelty

PIZZA
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
H any local

7

Birthdays, Holidays

MAIN STREET
Has always

GovM'nment Jo... 816,CMO •

8898.

985-4141

10 Years Experience

GUN SHOOT

Lqst: man ' s wallet around
fllrmers Benk on Thank1giv ing

.

~-----------119881

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431
698-~ 121 10/ 13/8812 mo.

•Wrecker Service

Now eccepting applicltton• for
full &amp; p.-t time ernp~ment.
Ple•a apply in person lorobl's
Pizza.SitYer Bridge PI••·

LOST. reward. red male Min•
ture Dachshund. 3 yrs old.
•n•wen ta Rusty. last seen
Friday Reyburn Road , family
p•, 304-8?'6- 5263 or 671&gt;-

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

by Donna

•Junk Yard Business
WANT 10 BUY WRECKED OR

LOST: 1 1· 14-88, Large Welk•,
mllfll Coon Hound. In vicinity of
Nonhup-775. Call 614-448·

742-231&amp;.

__'1

FPaiU ring: Consolidated, Dutt•h
W.-u. Brunco• ..\shlt&gt;!f
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

Dump Truck

Wood/ Met .. MoldMak~~r. ElCP&amp;:
riencedMoldP.-tt•nMak«with •
own shop and loolt. Ser~ d
ra-ponse to; Box Cia 181 ~
c / ofiallipolis Daitv Trit..ne. 82&amp;
Third Aw.. Galllpolil. Ohto •

• - ~;_--.!::;.:.::;.:..:.:.:::;..

JUST OPENED

•Doter &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With

W•in••·

-

CHESTEI, OHIO

ll-21-'88·1 mo.

The Staff Is
Back!!!

SECR ETARV./ R ECEPTIONISTI :
BOOKKEEPING
Stta-Gtarlal. b•lc bookkHPln;
skil l1 required for 1oc.ttv own«! '
Apply with r•ume, 8
AM -6 PM Ill Zen it Video Ccwp.r
433 J1ckllon Pika Glllpolit.
Ohio 46831, 61~448-2411 . '

Earn Mon., At Home! A•emble
Jewelry, Toys, ElectroniCI. on..
er1 . FT &amp; P'Tworkavllable. can

J&amp;L
INSULATION

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

412 Vinton Pika GlllipoWs. OH '
45831 .
.: •.

Lost ' Whho fomoto Pitt Bull.
Twp. Rd . 447, Beech Grewe
oroo. Rullond. 6 Y" · old.
Anewers to Angel. Call 614-

FILL DIRT

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES

th McF•iand. P••onnel Of,
fie•. Woodl.,d Centen. Inc.,

S59.230 yr. Now hiring. C..H ..
1- 806-687·6000 ect. R-9805lor eurren1 fed•allin .
'

MARCUM CONTRACTING

enut we will bt open on Sundars fr• 1 to S p.m. tt.-u
.DIC. II, 1911.

CAKES

POSITION iWAilASlE PRO,,'
GRAM DEVELOPMENT SPE, ,
CIALIST for P•r1ial H01pit•liz ...
tion Program 1t Woodllnd
Cent ars, Inc. Mu1en degree or
equN"alent ,..ur8d. Pnrf• •perience witt) mentelly disabled •
adu ha. EJCP•itncel tl'tllnlng in
group wDrk would be h .. pfUI. ·
WOodl.,d Cent••· Inc., do;. "'
nor disc:rlminllle on the belil of
age. color, creed. rmlonalorlgin. •
race, . - ortypeofciubility. For.
more in1ormatlon c:Ont1ct s.,-:

evening. Call 814-99 2-2964.

742-2421
Smith Run Rd., Rutl'"'d. Oh.

Mastic &amp; Certain teed ·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772
8/15/tln

Lost and Found

3413.

2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchase of min.
1 H.C . Package. Limit 1 coupon per customer per
bingo session.
WE PAY '60 .00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '65.00 PER GAM E

Come see our
Christmas Set actions.
For your shopping conwtni·

---~---------1
2 do~. Shepherd and 198~
Collie
mixed. 304-8715-1753.

Immediate openingt 1or expe-'
rienced m•ons and concrete '
workers. Respond immedllltefV . .
ti 14-446-8048. 446-7849aftw .
6PM .

46831 .

DOOR PRIZE

We Carry Fishing Su1pplio1

Gerbils, 8 weeks old, 304-67&amp;1038 aft• 6:00PM.

6

THURS. E.B. 6:45P .M .
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

L________...;._,...:;:::;;..:~

.

Melfi Australia-t Sheph&amp;rd. 1
Y'tat' old. Call 614-949-2844 or
814-949-2863.

992-9.976

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

-Take whllt you need. 29t~Sth.

Heatthy, hiPpV. fritkv part Bea·
gla puppiw1o good home. Call

224 E. MAIN ST.

HUDNALL

"DOC" VAUGHN

t0-7-tfn

It's the SERIES ONE
Business Policy...
packaged protection for
retail stor'es, offices,
churches, apartments,
drug stores. Simplified
in content, convenient
in format and very
affordable.

&amp;

Hn

614-985-4180

992-6215

Ker Heaters
Wicks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic
Blem Batteries

RACINE, OHIO

CALL 992-6756

V. C. YOUNG Ill

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Furnace 1110.00

VIRY REASONABLE
. HAVE IEFEIENCES

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES
STAOING DEC. 4

State Auto
offers
somethiJl€
special

EVERY SUNDAY

ONLY

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

Parade
MIDDLEPORT
Middle·
port's annual Christmas parade
will take place on Monday, Dec.
5, at 6:30p.m. Present plans call
for the parade to start at the
Sears parking lot and end at the
T. All Individuals and organiza·
lion's wishing to participate are to
call Kim Blower at 992-5141.

.

·~~l~j;:-'•CLOTHES

Racine, Ohio

Dealer for

Community calendar

· · •HAIR

~

GUN SHOOT

Free-Ciothrlg. hautehold. 3 Fa -

mllieis are cleening out. Come
Call 614-388- 9655.

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

graders are shown working at a mock election
held at the Middleport Elementary School.

America's other drug problem

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Puppil!tl, Doberman milt. Also
mot,_._,, mos. old. Call 614446-9441

''

Help Wanted

Stlff nurM for M11on County ..

He lith Dept. PosllonA,.il.tlle:"'
Jan 1. 1989. Pref« BSN.:

Alternate ASN, current;lv .,.. ,..
rolled in BSN pragr1m. C~.nant ·
WV1 Lieenn, ENgibfe for scho~
nurM certiflc•lon. Call M11on

County He..th DBPt for d••"•·
304-675-3050.

~

12

••

Situations
Wanted

Need 1_.., to live in "&amp; help e1r.;
"" oldorlv lodv. Coli 814-882·
8122.
Loving c.-a 1or eld•IV and"
hlwtdicepped . $500 plus. C1ll 11

6 14- 992·8873.

15

Schools
lnstructiors

•

...

We wm hall coal for n•oenct

GilLS &amp; LADIES
SNOW &amp; FASHION

BOOTS
13, S5, ,
S6 &amp; sn

SIMON'S

HEAP, Meigo County Copt. of
Human S.VICIII, tnd HEAP
voouchen. We c:., givt you

prompt delft.t«IM. E~lslor Salt
Worb. tne. Pomerov. Ohio.

114-112·3181.

RE-TRAIN NOWI
,
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS •

COLLEGE, 121 JKbon Plk• ~
Coii441·43S7. Reg. No. 8&amp;-11- "
105M.
:

No t..Jndngor1re~pa•s5ng_, or
night on the Ch•l• Vottferma.
Vlol•ora wll be

pr~t.t.

No huntlna or ti'IIPitslng, d-v
or night on theJ. A. lmtthFerm.
Vlolllon wPIIJe pra..,.,.ted.

,,...,..,lno

No hJndng or
on our
f•ms. yau wll beproeta~Ud bi

the IM. RIIYJnOnd lmfth .nd
_

Ron Songer.

Will do bltrr'slttlng In"'¥ home
vveek diiVll onfy. Cell 8141-44•

819a

•

Oenul or M•clc.. --~lonilt :
In•.. Acmuntt r....,ebla 15 •
yn. apert.naia. N.w to .,... •
Call 814-441-1810 -ly AM 01 "
IOie P¥, 281-~1 cloys.
. •

�-·

I

-- -··· --

~.-

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel
Wanted

45

LAFF-A~DAY

ping,

•

remove! .

UtUftl• ~ld. Single male. Sh•e

Hedges

both. CIH 448-#1 8oft or 7PM.

ulmmod. CaH 1144411-80711.
· or 304 0715-4853.
Som.,ne to lltie in for

Sh•• •PI"'•·

room-919 Second

Ave., O.llipolil. •13&amp; • mo.

tap.

Aoorr. for tWit- week or month.
Stwtin_g It t120 1 mo. Glllia

compt~n ·

Hotol-814448-9580.

ion.
ReMaN bit. Senk»f Citiltn prtl•- . In
town. c.n et4-... &amp;.e.t12.

46

Aent 11 trail••· CaH 814- 99 2-

7478.

21

rent F.,nlfv Pride Mobile Home

Opportunity

Parle. OallltJoMa Ferry, W . Va.

304-8711-3073.
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH
lNG CO . rec:ommtndt thll you

49

do bu•in- wfth people you
know. lnd NOT to .-nd monev
ttwouW. the m.W untl vou h••
inv .... lglledtheotferlng. ·

"Don't be ridiculous! It's a
seat cover for my tenspeed!"

Buy dlrec:~ trom manut.ctur•
and tave •••· Spa' • lhlrtlng at
t1 ,560.00,' Call Aqua Tech,

For lease

5104.

RettMlrant Wid T...,am fDr tale.
,.,dr•umetoBox P 22, c:•eof
Point Ple•ent Regi~er. 200
Main Sf., Point Pla•ant, W. V1.

2U50.

H~ S.eon. high tr.tfic high
vQiu me thop. RecUced fur qui'*:
••· 304-526-3065 or 304523·7277.

Real

Acreage

AshtOf\ baaatifllll•ge building
. Iota. moble homa p•mitted.
public wet•. alto riv• lott.
Clyde

2336.

Bow.,, Jr, 3045711-

W.Va. 304-875-8429.

Rent ills

Hames for Sale

'V.fiiV ettractfv e brick 4 bedroom.
~

NtJ\ family room with fir•
place. forrM dining. l•ge living
I'Oon\ 30 ft. cultom oak ldlch•
c.blnata, olll woodwork. flnilh
baltment, 2 c• g'iuge. lwei
l.,dlelped krl. 4 ml• ftom
Hob:• Hot~lf off At. 35PDn•twooll Sutdvlelon. Call
-14448-4189.
4 IR .. fuiiHiem•t • g•~e.
(lome niW) . City
.t:hooll. Utlitiel low. Woodllurn•. Natural PI furMCe.
ftriced to tell. c.n 814-446~i..27!J .-tt• 6 PM, 'tMfek•dl
,..ytnne.

fUIIJ c.p•ed

3 BA . hou ... Uluxe, AC, &amp;
pool-Sale or Trade. 48R . hou...
f"od location. Cal 304-876q-104.

Nice good loclltion.
Reg•cv. Inc. Aptt. Call 304075-5104, or 875-5388 or

1711-7738.

New completely furnl1hed
apa1ment • mobile home in
city. Aduht on";'. Parking. Cal

41

Homes for Rent

Nlcetv furnilhed 1maM hou1e.
Adults ontt. Ref. requi'ed. No
pets. Calll14-441-0338.

3 BR .. AC. carpot pool. gar ~go.
2 flrepleee~, fen01. Oood loCI·
tton. Call A·1 Ru• Eat .. e
Brok•. 304-175-5104.

Pl.,tl Sub.-4 BA ., tun b••
ment e•pet. u• range. city
lchoolt. Adulta ontv-one child.
Nrt pea. Dep. &amp; Aif. requi'ed.
t325 per mo. Call 114-44&amp;..
0'276 aft• 8 PM, WUk.-dl
.,ytlme.

BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8UOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 638 Jocllaon

Pike from $1831 mo. Walk to

lhop .,d movlol. 81444825S8. E.O.H .

T•a TownhoUM eplrtment:• 2
BA1., 11ft baths, CA ., diahwaaher', dilpoeal, privlte en·
clo1ed pMio, pool, pllff•ound.
Wtt • · sewer, &amp; tr11h Incl.! ded.
SIW1Jrl_g_ 11 $ 289 I * rna. C•ll

814367-7880.

.t.

F..-nilhld
Ne• HMC. 1 SA .
.t 235. UtHttiet peld. Call 446-

441hftor 7 PM .

A,_.m ..tt for the Eld•ty.
Qallla Manor Apertmantt. 185
811'11 Morton Aoad. 0.1lgned tor
the Senior Citiren {82 &amp; older)
.,dHendcepedpnoM. Equ ..

ltEPOSSESSED GOVERN'MENT HOMES! ' Umtted time.
J,owooat. N8donwideprogram 1 .
C.ll for buyer's guide/lilt to
your arM 1·315-733-8084.

1Court:211vlng•.-. 3BA .. 11h
blll:hononeelde.18R . &amp;bllthon
other. loth tdtchent furnished.

hou1ing opportunity. Appllc•
dona mav be piak.t up·at Spring
Vallw Plua, 1529 Jectc1on Pike
or coli 614448-4.139.

""•'"'*·

Mo•n 1 BR , downtown, cornplltt Ide chen, air, t•pet, OepOIIt, no p 8tt. Cl\11 614- 4480139 evenings. lifter I.

lvOwn•-PrioaAeWced-2becf.
roorri kitchen. living room. clning room. btth. sun porch. full

blt.nent. llfge tot remodeled
inlide. MW vinyl tieing. By
tppointrnent Ontt. 608 Ri&lt;kle
A.,.., R&amp;o Gr..de. C.ll814-1827424. .,

ldool lor lomllr with gr.,dparent. Overlooks p~rlc&amp;. rht'•. Walle
to IChoull. Downtown. 1378a
mo. plu1 utlliti•. Deposit a.
Cal 814-448-4921.

7 Spruce Str•. Pref• Single
per1on. $175 I * month. 81lio
depo11t. AddtUonal pnon, .tditionll depolh:. Contact : Dr. S. L.
Boa•d MltmorlalllbrlfV, 814446-7323.

2 bedroQro hou.e pklt 3 ·acr•,
v.,.z.,,
Ad . t20,000, ,Col I=___:.;:_______

lftw I 814-742· 2448 or 44&amp;1646-anytlme.
By ONn•- 3 story A-Frame
home. 10 .,.,., ohl. Loclted on
Ro~ev·Cora Rd .. 3 mil• peat
Ou•U Crlllk t•H• perk. Plcturt~QUe eetting. 3 BR ., l•ge
kitchen w!bulll-ln c.blnets. c•peeed tfwoughout with l•ge
dowMt•lrt bttl'room and utility
lau-.dry room. ott• te•urw
in duite. flnpl.ce dining ar• _.d
ucond floor b•h w / Mower.
Lot it landleap-' with ttirge
g•da'l area &amp; fruittreeleawetl.
3 c• g•age with work area.
Garage door op•ert. Storage
building &amp; Sat. dish II included
-with the •2 acr•. The owrw
wilhel to Htt tt a r . .onabf11

Ferm Houe•4 BR .. city wet•.
Nt• Cadmus. *100 depostt.

t150 P«' mo. Co11 .1-B14-875-

40141fter 5 PM.

3 BA .• lR, kttdt~r~, bath. 1 c•
Oepastt 11150. 8300
mo. CaH 114-448-463&amp;.

a• ave.

Nice 1 BR furnished hou•. no
pelt. Ref. • Sec. Dep. requi'ed.
C~l 614-448-1759.

2 BR unfurnlthed. g•age. 1
mle-218. 1200rent, t160dap.,
Ref .. married cou~. one child.
Call 614-448-9686.

Lg . home for rent. 1260 plu1
depoak. Virginia L. Smith Rell'l
Eat. 814-3811-1828.
pric:e. con 8 '1"' 4411- 8811 '
3 SR . lo ... od -Rt 141 1n
3 .BR ., l•ge LR, ytllty roort\ Cent~r~.-y. 1300/ mo. Call814range. dlapo•l. Rent/ option to l-4-411-_1111_6_&amp;.
_ _ _ _ _ __
buy. Good location. 1 13 But~
!Wli St., Crty. 1200 depolh:. 2 Bedroomt, 2 bit ... niW built
t275 a mo. No ptrts. Call in kitchen• .wimming pool. nice
614-446-2!571
,erd. CfOINn City, Ohio. Cal!
814-2511-1431 .
2 beli'oomt. INing room, dining
room. kitchen. full beth. forced 5roomhouseln dty . t235amo.
air heat. cathedral ceiling in Alto 5 room house in BicMfell.
lt.ting room end dining room. t185tmo. Call814-446-0924.
Central air. Garage. 814-992·
Compltt~ furnilhed. one bed2615.
room cottage. Adulta. No pelt.
Home In country with ltnd. 15 1185amo. Weterlnnilheddlp.
miles fromn Athent. 12 mil• Call 814--44&amp;21543,
from Pomeroy , 614-992· 5848. 1------...:____
Hou1e with b•h. Ne• Racine.
In Syrac:ust. 5 room hou• wrth Nic;e v•d. g•den
CeN
bit I\ 5 aae. plus, newtv 18 mo. 61 .. 992·5868.
deled. g•age Mdbetement, g•
furn~ce, view of ri'ler, priced in 3 be~oonu. *225. per month
30' t , but n&amp;gotiable. Call 014-- plut depostt. Call 114-992·
99 2-8847 aft a 3 or anytime on 1 6_7_2_4_a&lt;
-'-8_1_4-_9_9_2_·5_1_1_9._ _

•PIC•·

weekMdl.

,.
Houae. 2 be~oo.,., kftdl.,
Will sell on *'d eontreet call stove, fully c•peted. Nice and
cle1n. no lntlde pitt. Oepoait
304-458-1888.
r~uired . 114-992·3090.

•

Mobile Homes
for Sale

3

bedroom home with ~~~
tocmed NrN Hevan.

ba~ement

304-S82· 3394.

Nice 3 bedroom home with
19 88 New Moon 1 b.&amp;O. 2 BA . b•ement and .9!1''9&amp; 304-87&amp;.

81900. Coli 614-4411-0390. -

3030 or 178-3431.

1971 Buddy 2 BA ., aU g•.
12x60. Been recondition
through out EJdra nice. $5950.
Call 814-446-0175.

42

bedroom 12x 50.

S 1900.

304.8711-2722,
1979 Bayvl_. mobile horne,
14x70 whh 7~21 IIM:J*ldo,
phone

30~875-8141 .

2 8R .. IUit, lurnla- -

AC, all utMitl• paid
I)ICtPt . . . C. &amp; g•. Ctblt TV
avtlabla Own• p.,. Wiler.
•awaga, &amp; trash pickup. Seo.Jr·
iry depoelt &amp; r,t. Four~ tMthl of
mile from city limits. ,Cell

Cll'pet,

1978 Liberty 14•70, 3 bed-

814-4411-7793.

1871 .,d875-1783.

2 Bedroom moble home. City.
Unfurnilhed. Adult• ontt. Prlv.te perWng. •280 mo. O.oail

room, *7. 900.00. 304-875-

.81 Redmond. 2 bed-oornt, u:c
eond, Otlllpolll location, r..u.od. Coli 11444.3791
•s,eoo.oo or belt
phone aft• IS PM.
304-8711-3779. •
141170, 2 bedJoom. ....,no Cll'l/v,
no
p••· Coli 814992·3328 or
1882 Festlttel tw Fl. .wood,
14M 70. 3 btctroome. 2 bll hi, 114112·8722 aft• 5:00p.m.
mu_. be moved. c;AIII 304-8715Tral•• for rent. all u nfanrMihld.
103Baft•B:OOPM.
nice and ciNn, couplll, 1mt1
ehllct'.. ecc.pttcl. refw.:lca:
Hom•te•d Aealtv . mobile . tnd
At. 1 loC111t Ad ,
homo. 41o,., ere. t13,800.00. fourthdepolit.
milo behind K&amp;K. City,
- " " Cant-... 304-878- 304-878-1078.
8540.
1978 Homettt moble home. 2 2 be*oom trell• on niot Jot
Ch•hlre. Oltlo. 1·304- 773-·
bedJoom. 1:t.ls5. t2.200.oo. &amp;828.
30"' 8711-2174 aft• 3:00.

off•.

8211ti S.c. E.:el. cond.. 21R ..
equipped kitchen, air. AwH_.,.e
No\1. 1at. •225 ptu• dep. Cell
614-44S.0803 or 44S.2158.
Nic.-2 SR. apt. 4"h mil• from
G•llipolit. Stowe. refrlg. &amp;. wet•
furnlllwd. I 226 e mo. No pelt.

Coli 814-44&amp;.8038.

1 &amp;. 2 BR •.-tment. $300
month. lnctudn all utlllt:l•.
Adult• only. no pets, dep .
raqui'ed. Call 614-448-4222
between 1•6.
Nicety furnilhed 1-2 BR . Wat•

&amp; g•bege peld. Pritletep•kin&amp;

Deposit required. Call814- 44~
•345 after 6 PM .
Furn•hed apwtment. 1 IIA .
t225. UtMkiM pold. 6Q7 Second, Oelllpotil. Caii44S..4418

oft• 7 PM . .

~ Modern 1 BR . apartrntnt. CaH

81444S.0390.

Pomeroy -2 BR. remodeled
apartment off Spring Aw. Sec.
dep. &amp; ref. Call aft• 8 PM ,

8 14-992· 8888.
Fwnilhed dowrmai,., 3 roonw
&amp; bll h. C le... No
Adults.
Ref. II dep. Off atr• parking-1
c•. Call 614.446-1519.

p••·

SHADY LAWN APTS.· 729 So·

eond Aw. , furnlthed effleienoes
ttarting It '17!5 a mo. Including
wat• • g•btge. Slngte a~tts

onlv . Coli
4411-2102-

8144411-~107

or

Unf.unilhed 2 BR g•ageap.....
mMt. In town. Carp Mid. Adlftts
ontv . No p•a. C.ll 614-44&amp;.

4561 .

3 roomt &amp; b•h-1 BA .. utlitlea
polcl t220 per me&gt; Ref. &amp; dop.
requi'.:j, Ctll 614-44&amp;. 7515.
Apartment lor r.-.t. 8226 1
month. Oepo1it required. 814992-5724. Aft• 8pm or 992·

5119.

2 beli'oom Apts. for rent1
Carp411ed. Nice 1 Btting. Laundry'
facilttl• evallable. Call 814-

992-3711. EOH. ·

Nlwtv redecmrlted ap . . ments

ovollblo. lltllkl• paid. t225.
p• month. dapoail requi'ed. Call

Mobile Homes
· for Rent

1970 New Moon 12x85 trailer.
Coil 8142611-1333 aft• 6 PM . In Euroi&lt;a 2 BR . Adubo oot,. No
peta. 1200 • mo. Dep. required.19&amp;8 FI..Cwood. 12x64. bottle Coli 614-2411-5883.
g• heat and hot water. t3000.
Call 614843-5310 or 114 Mobh Homea for rent. In
843-5406 onytlm• Alk .... Kana~p ..... Con1tructlon
worker• 'loWiaome. Call 81~
Danny.
4411-0508.
1983 Shultz 14d0. 2 bee&gt;
room1. g•den tub, centre! air. ATTN: DHr h.mter~-ctmpera
g• furnace, c•petlng. 14x52 for rent. Slllt)l 4. ev...,thlng
IWnlng. Excellent condh:lon. furnilhed with t.v. Call 814.
pr lc:edreckiCid 814-992· 7360. 38&amp;9788.

'

2 BR . fiPtt. I clotetl, kltdl ...
appl. furnilhed. WMher-Oryer
hook-up. n..v pluth c. pet. th.

Hous• 7 roomt. unfurnllhed.
1226. 29 Nell A¥1., Gelipoh.
Ceii448-441S.ftar 7 PM.

oe.t. G 2758.

.

-··~---

tlousehold Goods

0

0

•eetric rang&amp;.
Good condition. $150. C.ll

74

oil, t115.00. 304-8711-4883.

.

cond. Coli 614·448-6910 aorly

8ullclng Motorlolo
Block. bride. -.vw pip•. windowL holl. otc. Claodo Wit&gt;

114-992-5724 alter 8:00 or
992· 51 19_
One Month Free Rent
Qualified r•t•s PIV 1200.
depoeit end no rent for the
month. NO\Iember or December cml'(. VIllage Menor
and Rivenlde Apartm... , in
IY'iddleport. From t182.

-oy.

Rlvwine Antiquee.

ter1. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 014-

Clllllpolla, Ohlo,- CIII 814·44112783.

Slide tn Wreck• Boom. Call

W•hert. dly-.. ;efrlg•etors,
range~ . Skagga Appliances.
Upper River Ad. betide Stone

Croot Motol. 81444S.7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sof• and chairs priced from
$396 to f91&amp;. Tabl• •so and
up to f126. Hlct.a-bedl 1390
to *595. Reclln.. t225 to
1376. Llmpe •21 to 1125.
O.nett01 t109 end up to 1495.
Wooct'tlble W·8 chain U86 to
1185. D•k t100 up 1a 1375.
Hutch• UOO and up. Bunk
beds camplete w-mlttrett ..
1296andupto $396. Bab¥ titck
1110. Mlttr..._ or box aprlngt
fuR or twin •ea. firm 178. and
188. 0uMn lets t260 &amp; Up
King 1310. 4 draw• ch•t *89:
Gun cabinets e. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
Bab¥' mattreu• 136 !i t46.
Sod lram• t20, UO 8 King
frame UO. Good teleetion af
bedroom
m«al cabin et1,
helldboardl__~~- ~-~ up t.o 185.

IUit•.

90 D1y1 1.-ne at ceth With
approved crtdft. 3 MH111 out
Bul.,lle Ad. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru S•. Ph. 614-448-

0322.

Vall~

Furniture

applicancea . Call 614-4467572. Hours 9-6.

Pets

for Sale

ten a. AK C Chow puppl•. New

Flr81Nood for ••le: Oak. Call

114-441-0122.

Coli 814-3BS.B890.
Chinon 8 mm movte c.n•a &amp;
prolactor. Hke nBW'. t11!10/both.
Cal 814-448-7928 eve't:

'""'"" AC, PS, T, C, Alplno
II.., -vst.-n, low mH•. 1188

FOf Sllle-OOg Hou 1 ... 1'12 .m l•

outRt. 141. W&amp;¥neShoern'*•·
Caiii14·4411-0U3;

Formuta Flr_.d, loaded. Teke

over paym.,.a. CaM 814--44f.
7370.

ISA.VE$ Buv meil order. VIdeos / CO&amp;. meg111in•. MTWTF
8am to 4pm C•ll 1-114-4460742 ext. L-3

Regiltwed Rat ,.,.._ pups,
Mal• • femll•. Aeltd¥' Dec.
18th. •7Su. Depa.trwln hold.

Oovwnment Seized Vehid11
from *100. Forcla. Meroedel,
Corvett". Olwya. Surpk11.

both. CIU14· 448-79281va'&amp;

Diamond / Ruby 14K ring.
Valu•t200. ttking t71 orbfM,

Coli 614-44S.099e altor6 PM.

Slgntture 17 cu. ft. rtfrlg, •
elee. rane•a.,oeado. Good
con d. I 1815 for · both. CIIR
814-448-7928 ~Neninga .

..ite.

t4!50. Old
UOO. Old
Frtnklln sewing machine. •150.
Oldor dr-ar. 0125. Col 6144411-0924.
I

pc. Br.

2 choice Cemet.,Y Iota in Ohio

Ad. Call 614446-49B2.

Refrig. , •~eel . cond.-1200.
Complete bed. e]5. T1bfa •
chalrt. II!. Nice. 19n C•r.

$800, Cll1814-4411-3224.

Coli 814·448-1354

h1rd wood 1labt. t12 pw
buncle. Containing epprOit. 1Y,
ton. Ohio PtiiBt Co .. Pomeroy

PM.

VIRA'o FURNITURE ANO
APPUANCES
Open Dally Mon.- Sat., 9 AM-5
PM
Sun., 12 Noon-5 PM

Open after hour t
appointmant

by

CHRISTMAS SPECIA LS ·

Bentwood rockers. 549 . 96.
Heavy cl.lty ru .. ic bun k beds.
1229·complet:e. 4 pc. bedroom
auh:e with triple ct•s•. $499.
Ruttle 4 dr. wood chest, 899. 4
dr. ch11t, •44. 95.' 6 dr. ch81t,

054.96. Solo 8 choir· reg. $699

now U69. V.,ghn lofe &amp; chair.
reg . t2400 now U99, 6 pc.
wood group, reg. 1699 now
t389. Vaughn Bettett wall
hugg• redin_.., 1199. Ru1tic
country •bla. 3 chalre &amp; bench,
8219wlthmlltchinghutch 8&amp;50
tor bath pieces.

Chri1tm11 toye and genarll
merch.,dil• .. ditoount prices.
4ft. Santa. •29.95. Blc.yd..j&amp;
trlqocl• ,..rting lit t19.95. 14
K goldli.lcb. S7.4t uet . Mr. &amp;.
Mrs. Cla11. •14.95 1 tet. Iron
Stone churn. •14.96. Child'•
oak rocklng_chein. 18.99. Pogo
blll1. •7.99. Remoto &amp; redia
controlled c•• &amp; truck•. chlnt
dollt. '14.95. 1:Z.18Rellglou,
de•. &amp; acene pictures. $7.99.
Lllyaway now for Chrlltn'\11.
Open 9·6 an the 24th. At. 141 in
Centenery- 1A mile an Lincoln
Pika. 614-446-3158.
Oood u1ed floor model M'ld
partible color tv'• for 11le. C•ll
~14-441-1149 .

'

Se ..onad Ollk, Hidl:ory, Aah
fir~M~ood for •I e. Big nude toBcl

040.00. Coli 814-742·254.&amp;.

Bt.,tiful genuine mink stole. A
neal et 1400. Cell 61'-992·

2949.

SURPLUS ARMV.

DENIM,

CAAHARTJ Rental dothlng.
Small Army Equ~ment Acc.torl85. SAM SOMERVILLE' S,

OLO ROUTE 21 . NEW ERA
304273-&amp;865, Noon·8 PM .
Nov, Dec. (Insulated Coverelll
t27.50). Jungle Boots U.S .A ..
Orlginll Army clothing. Nonmilitary camflauge panu

pu-,

regittered. Running r•bbltt

8201 aft• 5 PM .

R.o ttweit•

1985Dodaelhlllw. 2dr., turbo
aherge, :· iC, AM-FM -Cait. ,
standerd trlnl. 41.000

good. Call 814-388-9943.
pup,- female.

10

Point Ple11111t, 304- 87&amp;- 2013.
10 gol oot up t14.99 ond 10 gol
complete ••3.25.

57

4:0(). 9:00p.m.

Electric gu ttar for ..... Amp.
mike and at.,d. c.n

•PIIk•.
814-992-7179.

lndivlduol gu111r l•tON, IJt.
glnftWI, llriou1 gult:Mst, IN~
. .~ Muolc. 814-448-0N?.
Jeff Wamsl., Instructor, 81444S.8077. LlmMod op.,lngo .

68
8t

Fruit
Vegetables

.locka Fruit Mork•. Rt. 38,
Hendlrlon, W.Va.
- : - - - - - - (19BIII
.Free:r:er beef, corn fed. ctll aft•

8_:_oo_PM_._3_04--87_5-;_4_1_8:.2·_ _

1

6872.
--:-=:-::----- 119881

.1978 Fueh&amp;~f 42 ft fiM bed
trail• with side kit, 1Udlngaxlee..
8.000, 30~773:5088 or 30~
875-6662.
. . , - - - - - - - - {1988)
.Niturel ga or bottlegli r11nge.
refrigerator and
2311
Lincoln A.... Point Ple•ant.

dr•••·

.,d two bodJoomo. partt, fur·

SNAFU®

by Bruce

Beattie

nllhed kitchen. For more inlor·

m•lon. coli 114992· &amp;21~ or
81 .. 992-3786.

F,11111
&amp;

Suppl11~~

61

Farm Equipment

For •Aie-Remndlllor-.1 11 ft.
lold-upbuohhogCIII814-28114821 .
800Ceae dl•lltraclor, plow1&amp;.
disc, O.hl grinder. mlxer12.96. 2010 JD wtth Dlows.
dl1c S. buh hog- t3891. Own•
will flnenoe. . Call 114-2888522.
15'"8' trtck door. 1 ~ 3' walk

door: t4999 ERECTED. lnm

. ~?::.klri.CIII814-332·9741

21•81122.

lla. 1144411-8221.

FermE:riDment. Z.. orTrtctor1.
How•r Aotw..ors. Bllld•.
F - Rlnl(l. Buying old blOt•
1• . Morrll
Rurt._d.

e:rrm--.

Ohio 814-74 . 4111.

63

2 bre~oom . . .menta. fultt,
c•pMed, eppHtnOII, w.t• and
trMh pidwpl provklld. Melnt•
nan ce • • IIYine dose to lhop-

Uvestock

lllv• lloyol. t 1100 ...,, ..... Ca11114-21.8B22.

3718. E.O .H.

.. 3 be*oom apt. J1rry1 Aun

wtth m..., extr11. Tom Amd•·
lOft 814-912-3348.

1187 Ford EtcOn. 4 1peed. rMI
sharp. One owner, E ICelent
oondll:lon. Under Trana . .eble

FO&lt;d Warronty. •&amp;300. 114742· 3142-

a~tomatlc.

air; 1179 MIIIHu wego"' ltUtometlc; 1978 AMC Hornet
- · 3 op. 304178-7888.
1181 Oldl Cutl•• Ci•a. one
owner. low- mlleagt. M.c cond,
304-8711-1238.
_ _ ___:_:_ _ _ ( 19881
. 1974 GMC Astra 310 Cummlns13opoad. 411 RoarO.IIfHI
woridng truck. 1 r811 mon.,.
m••· t9.ooo.oo. 304-77350S8 0&lt; 304-17S.8BU
119881
.1180 LlnGOin Town Clr, niW
302 ..gin .. 304-773-8310.

72

,

Truclu for. Sale

1984 Ch.vy. 1.11 ton CUllom
Dlluxe 8 cyL , atto., ne.v tlr•
wheela· pelnt . high mile1 .
U7SO. Cal S14-44S.3791 af.
t•8PM.
18BI Ch•v '12 ·ton CUllom
Deluu V·l, 4 1pd., extra trim,
alldlng window. bed liner,
chrome wheels, low mil•.
t7800. Col 114-448-3791 of.
t•8PM .
Milo tr.wmUion. YlrY good

.

Club colt. K.. A19&gt;•HifolorJI.

Slmmental CfOI&amp;

Atgldend

K.. AIIIJio llull. Colt 114-44.
1 158.
Suddenly, Philbert realized the price he'd
paid for the car was too good to be true.

·aHa..,. Hap 1275 to 300 lbo.l
lor bulcihorlng 304-8711-1807.

CompleJo tho chucklo quolod
.
_
•
_
•
.
.
by f1ll ing in the mining words .
L--1--L-.1..-1-..J...-..J you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

.

"•

·=

1111 WKRP
0 Carillon Expre11

bldg. by Doc. 15th.

. , OddifY -

e (I) PM Mlgulne

!JJ..-.c:(1) • Cll Currant AHalr
!Il C!l MacNeil/ Lallrer
NeWIHour (1 :00)

'

Wheel of

IIJI ,.,...,.,..
CBCIIeerl

FRANK AND ERNEST

Comflllny

0 Miami VIce C
CD Crook and cluo..
7:06 Ill Andy Qrlfflth

Motors Homes
8t Campers

WHA'r 51ZE PYNAMITE

,,

l&gt;O

1971 14 • · cemp•good·cond.
t700.00 firm. CIH 814-411118857 .. 44.3103.

You

WA.N'r? - IS EVE~YfoPY?''

•.

Serv1ces

" ,........u.• \'""'1Ja.VS"5 1\•1,

7:30. (I) F11mAy F•ud
())SplldWIIk

Cil En-Inman! Tonight
a!ll USA Today
01
OJ Jeopardy!
t8 !Ill M•A•&amp;•H
' CIJCrMeiiN
1B1 Night Court
CID YldeoCountry
7:35 (I) Stnfonl and Son
· 1:00 (J) MOVIE: lltanl Vlctoiy:
'r.1e Kitty O'Neil Story (NR)
(I :40)

ALLEYOOP

(I) IIJ) Mlllock Matlocll'a
new neighbor gats framad
for the death of a car deelar.

•

•

&amp;', lod~bullcllng Men's

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

Championship from Atlanta,
GA

s.u••·

Unooncltionaf lff•lme
tM. Local rlf•en&lt;* t.rMhed~

Tony's .consumed with
jealousy; he thinks A~la'a ·
fallen for coworker. 1;1 .
(l) (!) Nove Examine the
controverty surroundC"Q..!he
nation's vaccine pollcy.Q
Gl
TV 101 A young
teacher brings his sChool
newspeper Into the television

Roaer1Baeement

Wat•proofin~

e!ll Who'ethelloae'l

Cil

FrM ootlmtll•. Coli oollecl
1·614-237· 04811. d.. or nlgl!t.
"

SWEEPER anduwingmacfdne
repllr. P_,l. and luppll•. Pick
up and dellv....,.. o..,ia Vacuum
Cleaner, one h.et mile up
Oaor9111 Cr8111t Ad . C•ll 8144411-0284.

M~E:T

304-67S.2398 or 814-4482454.

lH6 RIGHT 001..

mu

S~IJD A
ECOD
Yt.PRS~ ...

Fitly Tree Trlmmlno. llump
NmOVII. C1ll 304.175-1331 .
Rottry or cable tool *llllng.
Moat wei• completedstmedav .
Pump selea .,d aervloa. 304-

(I

•

Ak«l Tree Trimming and Stump
Aemovtl. Free 81tlrMt•. CaM
304-8711-7121.

MORTY MEEKLE
MY DADS (X)C1DR
PUT HIM ON A
NEW DIEOT. •

Aon'• Chlmn..- SweeP. 1pedll
tlwu Docambor •39. 915. CIA

304-773-&amp;348 or 773-5840.
Ronnie Nell.

9,§

•

WINTHROP

'' IF "rrW WKE IT,
DON'T CA.T IT.'

ITS REOAL.L.YA PR5T1Y
SIMPLE DIET. THE
DOC'IORTVL.D HIM ...

ACROSS

with thio od, 304-8782295.
.
Plumbing
8t Heating
CARTER 'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio

Phone 614448-388B "' 8144411-4477

84
8t

•
WHO PUT
YOU ON
A DIET,

PRITCHilRT II

YO'RE LOOKIN'
MIGHlY PALE
AN' PASl'Y

DADIURN
DOCTOR!!

DOC?

P•tquale Electric Co. licenud
.. ectriOII'Ia. Resident!• • oomm•cill wiring. New t.-vice •
rsplir1. Free •timet•. 1152
Third Aw., Ganlpolit, Ohio

Bernice Becle Osol

'\bur
'Birthday

General Hauling

J S. JWat• Service.. Swimming
pooll, cls,twns. Wetli. Ph . 114-

24!&gt;9285.

A &amp; A Wr.et SM'V'ice. Pool•.
c:ltternt. wells . lmmedlat•

1.000 or 2,000gollonodollvery,
Coil 304-8711-6370.

w.t• dellv.-y , 1000 gallons.
Ae•onable prlc.. lmmedl•e

dllivery. Coli 814-992-5275.

WatteUon't Water Hauling
reaonlbla retea. volume dis :
oounta. 2.000 tu 4, 000 Clf)ecftv, c._.•ns. pools. well1 etc.

304-57S.2918.
. '
19M FO&lt;d pick up ........ noa•
. . gin. wortc t300.oo. 1111
01111 Omogo V·8. 280 cu ln.
~
Upholstery
'300.00. 304-8711-4813.
(1 9881
.. 1987 FO&lt;d A.,g_. XLT, nlw
llttlo INclc. V·B, 5 opoad, n- MowriP('I Upholstering •erving
tlres and wheels, AM·FM trl county are• 23ye. .. The bll'l
cauette. air, wry therp, In lunilure urholltertng. Cttl
• l.a80.oo. 304-773-8088 ... 304- 875 - 4 54 for free
304-8711-111112.
tlttmll•.
.

e.g.

zs..oec.

'"

18 till Love Connection
CIJ "1-rune
!Ill T. . 11om ttra Dlrltlkla
9 Mllml VIce Q
CD You can 11 a Stir
11:308(2) OJ Tonight-

;

•

Ill Cllearl
&lt;D TIA

e Cll Nlahtllne Q
!Ill USA Today
18tlll NeOI!y•ad Clime
0 8port1Tonlglrt

• \121 'Night HMf

CIS Late
Night Slavla'a attraC1ed to a
prime suspect In an
organized cr11111 ring.

1B1 1111 . _ 111111
• Amertoan Magi&amp;IM
12:00 (J) ,...,., cilua

m M-Amertoan ,.,..,.

..,._ From Atlanta. GA (T)

Ill,...,... .:;~
(I)IIgiiOII

e Clllnlll1llr-nt Tonight
Qlt Mlgftum. P.l.
•ONullllghl
o Twllght z-

~=Now

12:30. (2) Ill Late Night with
DIIV!cl~

(J)DI WOIIII
(I) AfhwlcM•

(abbr.)

18Graln
beard

or JMlat.'e

6 Arizona .
city
7 Palm

leaf

8 Brightly

.·

91nterweave

II Peril
25 Bullring 31 On guard
l9Rousseau 17Porker
32 Ritzy
figure
work
20 Baseball's
26 Wind361n good21Jezzjob
Sam
37 Jaunty
flower
22Consume 23Aslan
27 Rubblsl:i 39Dr. Casey
23Actor
desert
41 Steve of
29"Wilder
Z4Sacred
and
the
Z4Ciothes
Egyptian
·
Sympathy"
symbol
size
Dodgers

27 Ellf'llled
bull, for

one
28

Fop's prop

It Charges

31 Condor;s
nest
_ 33 Hit head-on
34 Study room
35 Slice off
38Haclenda

brick
40Next to

42Gaffe
43Burt
Reynolds
movie

44 Hire
45 Bring
to bear
DOWN
1 Football
Infraction
2 Whetstone

ea

(JJ SponaCanter (L)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 111 Cooper&amp;· areas . . ,
tlon, diplomacy and 1act are your most CANCER (June 21..Julr 221 Since
effacllve asaets today. When you ahow you're apt to be g-ou• with your reNoY. 21,1il88
a willingness 10 work with others, II will , ~mHtoo~.~tMmon~me­
encourange \ham 10 make special con- thing you'll enloy. thai will alao provide
ple-re lor thoH Y"" love.
In the year ahead you should be able to cessions to you.
finalize two enterprises that have never PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Participate LEO (Julr ZI-Aug. 221 A manor of tlgbeen comple1ed to your satisfaction. tooay in something tha1's bo1h phyalcal nlflcence to you. can be adv~ lOt
Alter lhis tronaplres. It will prove VfKY and fun, preferably In lhe fresh air and your satloiiCIIon tooay H you mike 11.
worthwhile financially and emo11onally. sunahlne. Acllve time out or doors will , the top priority on your egenda.
SAOmARIUS (Nov.
21) Be- help brighten your outlook lor the ratt VIRGO (Aug. 21-llpL 221 lady Luck
tenda to lavor you tooay In waya that:
cause you'll have Implicit faith In your altha week.
Ideas today, you are Ill&lt; ely to be eaally ARIEl (March 21-.Apltt 111 En1erprlses will be obvious to you, but might go unaroused to a rlgh1eous defense ol your requiring bold meeiUrao should work noticed by other8. It's bat to keep what
beliels, but don't be 100 bullish. Know ou1 ra1har well for you loday. You're not oc:curo to yourself.
where to look· for romance and you'll apl to rear 1aklng a chance, yet II' I un· · UIRA (lapl. 21-0ot.DI Yau'raln a cyfind 11. The As1ro-Graph Ma1chmaker likely you'lltaka foolish risks.
cle now - • your"- and axpact•
Instantly raveals which signa are roman- TAURUS (April 20-Mer 201 A aubs1an- tiona hava v«y good cihiiiOM of baing
tically perfec1 for you. Mall $2 lo Match-. tlal portion ol your time today mlgh1 be · lulftllad. Don'1 tat any negative thollght.s
· maker, c/o lhla newspaper, P.O. Box apen1 looking out for the needs of oth- ollp In and convince you o1harWIH.
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
ers. You won't mind 1hls, however, be· SCORPIO (oat. . - . Dl Therl are
lndlcatlona that you might accompllah
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 111 Trade cause you'll do Ct of yllllr own volition.
on the buslneaa acumen ot assocla1ea .'. GEMINI (May 21..June 201 Vou · 10methlnQ tooay o1 person~~~ pride. Othtoday, beCause the outlook lor joint en- ohouldn't have any problematooay IUC· .,. will 1110 admire your ach-mant
deavors appears to be more promising -.ru11y promoting ceu- or your true . and thllr approbation will e n - your
1han what you attempt 1o do on your bellela. Thll gift can work for you In~ Image.
· own.
both commarclal and noncommercial

3 Goddess

15 Sty
' colored
16 Jack Kemp, bird

~
8lcle of 8portl
C!l Sign Off

ASTRO•BRAPH

beast
Sluggish

U Devilfish

IJvlng Oelpoully (PO)
(1:55)
10:10 (l) b . .ndan A continuing
chronicle of the ltv.s of
retldentlln London'l East
End. (0:30)
• 0 Odd Couple
• Y*oCaunlry
11:00(J) RMI~ngton llaela

r

S711-178ti

Dll•d Water Servioe: Pools.
Cil1•n•. Wellt. Oet~ery Any·
time. Call 814-446-7404-No
Sundlr( c•l•.
.

CIJEwnlngllewa
• Crook and Chile
10:10 Ill MOYIE: The YMr of

CIS Newt

814-4411-2718.

85

(l) Clllllewa
1m lrllh R.M.

• !2l CIJ • 111 1111

+J
•n

30Devoured

•oa-rrrt~~er

MY

Electrical
Refrigeration

Ae1ldential or eomm•clll wir·
lng. New a.vlce or repalrt.
Llcenud electrlei.,. Eatimlte
frN. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

l3

we..,. Spacial The beat
and moat unforgetlll)lt
moments from Interviews
during the last 12 yearw are
featured, along with
Barbera's thoug!ltl during

. . . . . . . . c-try
10:00(J) 700 Club

BARNEY
DOC

SOUTH

4 Aust.in

ll African

~=
Uvel
CIJ Pltmll Kln(l
Time W'N-!e1111rlllrllllll.

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

tiO

10 Navigator's
or Bentley
" device
5 In lltil{atlon

Qlt eiDMOYIE:'._.;r
Cl8 Tueedly Movte (RI

IICh.

82

I A Marxman
6 Carry

lhel~.l;l,

Captlil Steam•CI•.. ••.geC 2
rooms c•plll: cl..,ed •18.00

uu

by tHOMAS JOSEPH

(l) (!) Tire Alnti10in
Eopeotenaa Follow-up on
lamlles proftled In NNCIW lsi
U8 PniiM Famous Man. 1"1

G. Gra.l lr'tdlons:ConcrMe .. d
Contracting. interior end •••
rior painting. earpentary .. d
m•onry.

.QJU2

CROSSWORD

w..,

WMhtra, dryera and

• ...... 3045711-2398.

..

or

(R) (2:091
(JJ Top Ral1lt lloltlng
(I) • Cll Tire I10ih ........

RON'S APPUN\ICE SERVICE,
hou•e call aervlclng G E. Hot

EAST
tQ1082

+

1:00.

885-3802

+QJI
t754

tAKI063
split badly, and he realizes that by '
tAK832
po8tponing the play of the trump suit
he may be able to do something about
Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: North
a bad split. So he would rulf the second
spede, play only one round of di.a· ,
Eut
monds and then cash the A·K of clubs, Welt
Puo
intendi.nfl to 111ve up a club and, if need
PUI
be, he would ruff a fourth round of Pass
Paa
cl~bs. U this particular declarer falls ~=
Paa
prey to carelessness, he too may be Pass
Pw
set. Wouldn't it .be unforLunate· if East Pass
ruffed when declarer tried to cash that
Opening lead: K
second high club?
Although a wise declarer' cannot
provide against all contingencies, he'· 'c:-::-.===:=-:=:o.:::;-;iT!I=~
should certainly do wbat he can. And er will naturally play low. U
there is a way out of lhla particular cards, declarer will win bls klnc.Pft
trap. Tbe correct sequence of plays Is up a club and still be able to ruff m:
to rulf the second apsde, play a dia· other club with a bl&amp;b trump Ia cla!Dmond to dummy and lead a club to tbe my to make his contract. ~t's mueb
ace. Tben return to dummy witb a · better for a defender's trump to "beet
biCb beart to play a second club to- tbe air" tban to lake declarer's ate
ward the kllig. U East ruffs in, declar;
of clubs. ·

CIJ P111MNeWI
1B1 MOYIE: Tire IIUH
liotheN (R) (2:13)
C[J Mulder, 8111 WIOII Q
•Mnt.,..Now
1:01 (I) NIA lllkllbllll
1:30 Cil a Cll Ro..-..,. '
Ro881nne cihMrt Dan's
decision to enter a
. aongwrltlng ~· Q
(2) 01 MOVIE: 'TI1a Daltlt
" - ' NIC Movte of ...

JUST" A (t\A~E: 10

.AK4

The simple, straightforward play Ia
today's live-diamond contract just
.won't cut the mustard. Suppose de·
clarer ruffs the second spade and WEST
draws trumps In three rounds. He can t A K 9 7
then hope for a favorable division in •. 10 I 8
his second suit, clubs. But because I 7 2
, West bas four to the Q-J, the c011tract i • Q J 9 8

l'o MOVIE: Tire Vardlcl (R)

Hou1e cllta on RCA. Quuar,
OE - Spocltilng In Zonkh. Col

·•

u.ao.u

NORTH

By Jameo JaCoby

ea

RON'S Televltlon 9ervice:

-·

•uu

goes do~m .
The more sophisticated declarer
sees the possibility that clubs may ,

•az

'LSIG6ER" oR

1917 13ft. ShMto Troll•. Soil
oonralnod. 814-9811-3920.

Home
Improvements

mac:
BRIDGE

7:00 (J) Our HouM That
Lonesome Old.CabooH

1111 • a OJ
..--g
• Cllll'IIIM'•

SCIIAIMETS ANSWERS

Maker - Lanky - Coyole - ALREADY

An elderly man walking out or a repair shop mumbling to
himself "What this country needs Is fewer inventions and
mora
han los to fix thOle· we ALREADY have."

CD You can 11 • Stir
1:35 (I) • to 5

POOR BOYS T1R ES

1971 Plymouth Vol we. Sltnt 8
angina arto. ft.lftl good Good
gao mll~~ga. t3SO. Coli 814-

1971 Cho:vy pick· up. PS, PB,

New •how 11Chllewlthptd, hted
..... &amp; lw- otrop. Modo bv

morelnformetlon call304-882-

Rood, 304-&amp;711-2103.

1984Bulck-" Elllfooharp,
1- mM ..ga l;j.&amp;,OOCJI. s qrL

oondlllon. Price on Npecdon.
814-B4&amp;-2237.

plna bonlol .,d IChooll. For

Sm,.l •t. Jactl:lon Aw , ...
rwrt t138. 00 month I..:JJrltv
dop- '""""... coli 304-87114410oxt. 10 or 53.
- - - - - - 1191181

1988 Vol"-" JOfto, 4 dr ..
eve,., option. Excel. cond.
t11,800. Cll 814-4411-8738.

1180 1hl nderblrd.

I

newsmadame--.

.h7:-TI:_::;I,...:._,;I:......;.1...::."1"'8~ Q

1111
Cl8 llewe .
• !Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
CIJIIIDwllzToclay

AAutoccePssoartsn'es

over 4.000 u!Mdtlr•. Moving to
Hen tttnon. W.Va. into new

Pbint,

I

L U F TIE

discovered, that the evening

Cll ABC llewe 1;1

(I) •

--~~=-:::::- 119811)' :

Oldlmoblla. 114-448-3672 "'
304-773-1134.

APARTMENTS. mobile hom-.

Now •cctptlne appll0116on• for

•aooo flrm. Cllll814-388-

For • • • dHI on • new" or uaed
'*'·
truck or ven. ue Kenny 8811
•• Jim Mink Chevrolet·

5000 Ford Olea II trector w•h
piowe • die. grain *ln. liege
chopper. 280 gallon o,..,. CRitftt
wllh can &amp; boo,.,.. •31150.
Owrw wl flntnca. C.l 814-

hou . .. Pt. Pl. .ant tn dOallipo-

CIR 814-448-7075.

1971Corv.,e. h:oll..rCoodltlon..

IBIF-o!Ufe
0 Fat Albert

(I) Nightly ln•lr••• hpolt

L1vest'11.k

Com'*'•36MF.-pr-ICI.
ttso. Cai1814-2B•eo311.

2 u nfurnilhed. 127 Mul beny
Ave .• Pom•ov- 4 roomt and
b•h. Adutta onty. No pets. De.
&amp; Ref. 814-992·2275 aft•
5:00pm.

MW pot1&amp;

1887 Chevy 4 door 28&amp;. Runs.
1871 Ctm•o 3!0. Runt and
loolcl: go(HI. 1 •• of 194 heedl
lor Ch...,. Redone. Can 814949-2350.

614-992-7787.
U.T ILIT V BlDG
. S PL.1-:
.
, . . . - - - -EOH.
- - - - - - I~~::::::::::::::::;:::.Jl:=========:.J 30'•40'x8'8"
Clea'anco.
4 ep.-trnentt in Pom•ov. One

1182 MtrOJI'Y Ztphf'r: Ill o~
tiona, f"'IW • • • brek•......lt.

l

!IlllociJ Elaclllc

•vallabl&amp;

742-2BOz-

Rood. 304-773-5371 or 304882·2888.
'

For ule Christmas Tr~ . ,
now, Eck•d Chapel Aoed.
mlletnOnhPointPie•entonRt.
2, WhileandScotch t18. 00~and
Spruce 125 . 00 . 304· 1756773.
.
• 119881
.One third c•at diamond sofi.
talre 8760.00 value Wll ull
$41!10.00 or best offer. 304-175-

*•·

1110 Corvette. Also 1984
CotWtteConvertlble. C•lt 114949-2888doyo; 814-247· 4.811
evenlnga.

Sunk bod $50.00. 304-8787247.

and tag your tr11. N~ella
ChrlstrNI Tr• Farm, one mile
ebove Malon on Hanging Rodl

1911 AMC Etgles.w. Auto..air,
PS/PI. ttl. nw-. nav
t2200. Clll·814-248-5817.

8897.

Truckioact apple Hla. Red ..d
Gold Delicious. •15. 99 bu1hel.

como ..... botoro cold ""''''h•

mil•.

t4495. CIIIS144&lt;111-8197.

1979 Pinto. New paint. niW'
tr-Ntian, one owner. Othw

Plat &gt; for 111&amp; Story end Cltrk
eonaole. Good ooncltlon. Call
814-992·5108, 9e.m.-12 noon.

• !Ill HafiiiV Dar•

(2:091

Eocelhm mpg. Coli 1144482030,

Musical
Instruments

812.00.

All Chriatma1 tr... t12.00.

Buyars Guido. (11 IOS.887·
8ooo. ...t. 1·101B9.

MOVIE: Dr. Who: Tire
Ulllnhl (NRI (2:17)

m8cholae~~cSparta

~

1-,_,I; ~.:E;I.:c:. . riL:. . .:o:,.,l',. . j' ; w~~~~~~~~ao:,;~';:.~al

i.

1:30 • •~ IIJ) NBC Nightly Newe

U.ed tr-mlulone. AI Internal";' in1pecled. 30 deys guaran- •
t•. 'Nt laly tnntminlont. Cal .
81 4 · 441· 09G8 . Aebu lldlnA :

81

I~

RL_

..,...

I

GHEED
1-..r:-1
:..;..,.:ll:...;;1.:..;.1-1

Fandango
1:06 Ill One Day a1 a Time

UIId II rebuilt all ty pel.
Wwtnty-30 d.,t. Prlc. t99 &amp;
up- Uaod &amp; rebuln torgue •
comtertera. Sttndlrd duldiM. ·
pr•sure pi•• • throw out ' ·
be•lng. W•rantv-12 mol. CVC

79

a •a

•

1182 l•lln . .a Cam•u. 306

W.l Highland . Mite Terri•L
AkC
A Chrlotmoo Gift 1911.3 Oodgo Charger, 2.2 m&lt;&gt;
ttlat wlf l•t. Call &amp;14-387- tor, red wtth blldt Interior.
0824.
t1,788. 1980 Clt•lon. one
ow,., 2 tone • •· met:tllc
AKC Miniature Schnauzer llnilh. Sh•p. t1295. CIH 814puPPV. Femlle. 8 wkl. old. 2811-111122.
*225. Coli 114-4411-4880.
1987 OMC .lmmv S -15 4 wh.
Oooc! male Beegle A•bbit dog. dJ., l o - EJCol. cond. 18,000
H-!1 yr. old. Mother a fllhlr mi. Must • •· Call 814-25&amp;-

Ml~~:ed

Oltio. 614992· 8461 .

Sleeper sofa in excellent condition. Call 014--448-3646 after 5

r.,.

AKC Coatcer Spaniel pups.
male•· 11 tiO, femelee · t200.
Tlklng dep011t for' Chrilltmaa.

2 9117 flba'gl•• gariQe doort •
h•dward. •46 ..ch. 180 for

Fish Ton.. 2413 Jockaon Avo.

Buy. Sell. Trade. Call Bargain-

814-4411-234.2. M.. be a.., ot
The Oatlipoll D•ly Trlbune,IJ-.5

1981 luldl Contury, 4 dr., AC.
AM·FM, 911,000 mil.,, Ona
OIINner. Vrt Sh•p. *21915. CIH

Flr.,..ood for llle I 30 pldw p,
dellv•ed. S26 U-ha~l. Recooon

,.,d. 814-4411-8444.

Auto's For Sale

lllmol,.on kltt-. Call 814
4411-3944 oftar 7 PM .

614-367·7118.

con 814-44S. 3499.

448-7444. .

71

Grcom ond Supply Shop-Pot SS22.
Grooming. All br••d• ... Anl-:-=:-::---:---:-- atvllll. lame Pet Food Dell•- 1112 Pontiac Tr•• AM . Black
Julie Webb Ph. 114-441-0231. •urtor. renlnlwtor. t-topl. PW.
Pl. tit. tlr. lh•p cw. Rurw
Dr1110nwvnd Clttory Konnol ......... A-g t5200, NeCFA Poralon ond Sl~m•a kit· gotlolola. CoR 114-4&lt;111-1788.

1979 Jaop 268, niW head
t160, compl8te *260. New
950&gt;&lt;18.5 &amp; rim. $78. 1982
Escort. ·•1200. Cell 114-44&amp;7019.

REALL'o'? THE KID WHO
PLAVS GERONIMO 15 601N6
TO BE VERV DISAPPOINTED.•

1o1nr. ." rv.-. caH 11437&amp;- :
2220 or 304-875-87118.
.

1984 CltMIDn 2 tone
exterior, light ur-v ve our
lntorlo~ t199&amp;. Coli 1142811-

1415 Ealtern Aw,
4 drawer ch81t, •48. 5 drawer
c:heet. 154.9&amp;. 6 pc. wood&amp;n
dlnnette •••· S199.96.

For tow priCM on Quality Carpet
• Furniture come to MollohM
Furnltur&amp;-Upper Rhler Rd ., 614-

Transpurtat1011

metic. AM
~~-. 80.000 ml•. Re• seal
needt r~laced. •1000. For
more lnformMion call Plul at

weeki uld. No pap .... $110.
Col 814-8117·3021 .

304-5711-1450.

h.,.,

Cit..,.,.. Aut&lt;&gt;
racNo. •lmDit new"

Valier Memory Gardens. UOO.

Complete hou~~thold iurnithlng~. 1IJ mile out Jtrric:ho.

of

1984 Chevy

J 8 S FURNITURE

PICKENS USED RJRMTURE

bll111

1nd Beveled Lip Siding
- ~ DIICk M.. •ltle
0 .-rantlid au.lity

56

614-446·7370.

kMchon cablnot.

New .. d ua.r furnllure 'lnd

IqUiri

304-458-1858.

-dllyo.

King wood burn« foto 1111 or

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

.. otOO

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Channel Rudie

CETIDE, INC.. Athono-814
584-3578

87().9681,

uode. Coli 114-367·0418.

IT WASN'T
GERONIMO ..
ITWA5
6A6RIEL ...

BUDGET TRANSMISSION-

(19881

Caner•• blocU· II . . . . .,.rd
or deUv~~ry . Mil on 1M d. Oalllpo111 81ocll Co., 123'/Jo Plna St.,

Wheolchair•new or ulld. 3
wheeled electric acootn. C•ll
Rogen Mobltty collect, 1·&amp;14--

Ave. Galllpolle. OH.

.,.

2411'6121 .

1::::;~;;:=~=::;:=::;:;:=
••lr•. l;)ookl. wrlngorwoohor. • 54 Misc. Merchandise

Sot. 1144.48-1899, 627 3rd.

"'

•&lt;ll

(%)Ramona Ramona's brand
new.ahoes attreC1 more
anention than she'd hoped.

1880 CR250R Honda. phon•
304-8711-4&amp;81 aft• 5:00PM .

BuDding Supplies

Cil

SpartaL.ooll

(!)

Motorcycles

!;:=;;:=:;:;::::;::=.;=:-r:64;:~H~a=v~";:;G;
.r::81.;n=='17a •55

ltiAin(t
t99 .dr•sers, bedroom
USE[).. &amp;edt,

County Apphnce. Inc. Good
Ulld epptl .. ~ Md 1\' 111!11:1.
Open SAM to 6PIYI . Mon t twu

•CJJ

OJ llewe

At. 35 Cyolo Sol•. Southoldo. '
WV. Ph. 1· 304-B78-4130. Now
lllllng New Pol•li 4 wheel . .
and ulld 4 wheel••·

.

1MI by NEA. Inc.

Ohve St.. Gallipolis.
Hours: M,T,W 10a.m. to 8p,m .•
NEW- 8 pc. wood groupo 1399. Sunday 1 to 6p. m . 81~992·
Uving room a~ it•· 1199-•&amp;99 . . 2528.
Bunk beds wtth bedding- 8249. - - - - - - - - - Full aile mllttr- &amp;. foundation Antique cherry love 1811:. Call
starting· t99 . Recliner• 014-949-3012.

complete line of ulld furniture.
NEW- Weltern boott· 835.
Workbooto ne t!o up. (Sloel &amp;
toft toe) . Call 814-446-3159.

EpiiOdee

IOCIO. EIIICIII.rt condtt6on, ...,
clelr't. OrNf forChr-.tmae. CAl
814-112·1888 aft• llp,m.

- - - - - - - 11988)
..Wutwanddryer In goodcond.

1124 E. Moln Street,

1:00 (J) a-nu: Tire Loll

Kaw11akl KXIO and Kewauld

.Couch .. d chair like new, new
outtide electric box for mobile
~me. 2218 Jeff•ton A.,..,
•nvtlme.

Sf~!.

EVENING

1178 C'-v Blu•. 4114, good
cond. t1.850.00. 304-17824.87.

4 pc Pine Famly room furnllure

Buy or

'

- - l c : ,972 Dodge. 304
8711-7858.

IVICado

Antique Dental etbinet ·
MllhagEy, 24 dr.... er. E~Cel.

W .O.

1178 81•• 4-tp; 1971 Chw
lwd Mltomatlc:: 1971 Dctoge

11491111-3810.

Antiques

8t 4

1183 S-10 Bl••· •e. cond.,
PSI Pl. AC. 17.000. CIA 814379-2103.

flnilh. 2 V"" old. t400. Cal
114-985-444.8 aft• 8:00p.m.

30 Inch

Vana

Coil 814-4411-7370.

Excellent con .. lon H lnd1
Zanh:h color wltwilion. Walnut

53

Merchand1se

SWAIN
Al!CTION 8 FURNITURE 82

814-4411-0338.

~1

.

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-

1977J"" c .J7' vlnv ltap. 1178
Je.., C.J7, hwdtop. lett offer.

AM or tete PM. 28&amp;-4401 daye.

Apartment
for Rent

paint.

Building lot. 144'1:106.
$8,000.00, aet'OM from Belle
Gntde School. Ganlpolit Fenv.

Estate

44

73

111!10.00. Phone )04·175-

304-523-1288.

35 Lots 8t

Wriaht

Outchw... e.~ wood • coli
ltove wtth Kcettori•· U1«1
ontv . 1 . . .on. •soo. c.•
114-448-2835"' 248-1378.

2844.

51

N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Sectional couch ., d Luy loy
recliner, Ilk• n...,, teoo.oo.
3048711- ~082. .
C1!ia8l

Comm•dll Building for leMe.
Pt. P1eallrt. Cell 304-875-

Plrn Reeta~r.nt for 1ale. Be
YOfJr own baq, Gr. . pot~ntill
in a growing•ee.lnqulteto: BeN~.
Cle 178. cloG•IIIpolle Daily
Trlb.lne. 825 Third Ave., Galllpollo. Ohio 411631.

KIT

Goods

114-992· 1594. .

Spacious mobile home lot• for

Business

Household

White Frtnch Provlnclet ~
room IUhe. Double bed .. d
•••• with mirror. 175. Catl

Space for Rent

COtiNTRV MOBilEHomePor~
Route 33. Nontrof Pom•rrv·

F lllallCiol

51

Furnished Rooms

F~~n61twd

2

....

Tueeday, Novanber 29. ,988'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ro Do

TreeWorkW~ntld·PNnin9-

32

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18

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·DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'sllow to worklt:

11111 .

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
·for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
: apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon ol the words are aU
hints. Each day' the code letters are different.

_,

CRYPTOQUOTE

J H 0 F H

CM

STUTJJOFM
G Y 'J J A C X T

MY E

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BY.A:SP

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HDTS

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. Yeaterdq'a CI')'Ptoqaote: THINKING WITHOUT

]LEARNING MAKES ONE FIJGHTY, AND LEARNING
.WI'I1f0trr THINKING IS A DISASTER.
- CONFUCIUS
..

•

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- .-

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J
0-The

Sentinel

.Local news briefs...

An entry confirming sale and
ordering distribution of proceeds
has been filed In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court In a foreclosure ·action by Blennerhassett
Federal Credit Union, Vienna,
W.Va., against James R. Van'ce,
et at.
Production Credit Association
of the Fourth District, successor·
In· interest to Jackson Production
Credit Association, has been
grantee) a $4,839.18 judgment
from Richard J. Schultz, et al.
In other court matters, a
motion for shock probation for
Monte L. Riffle has been denied,
alld a restraining order has been
issued against the defendant In
the case of Janet Faye Mowery ·
agalnst Charles Mowery Jr.
In the case of Francis Shaeffer
against Alvin Taylor, the parties
have reached agreement and the
case has been dismissed.

.
Contlnued from page I
Troopers said a car driven by Kimberly A. Ryan, 18, Racine,
· went lett of center, colliding with another vehicle driven by
Edward R. Martin, 61, Rutland. There was moderate damage to
the Ryan car and rnlnor to the Martin vehicle.
The patrol cited Ryan for driving left of center.
·•
The patrol also Investigated an accident I a.m. Monday on
CR. 1, '!boUt four mites south of SR. 143, In Salem Township.
Troopers said Karen A. Dress, 29, Dexter, swerved to miss a
deer and her car went Into a dltch. Damage was minor. No one
was Injured.
'

EMS has five calls Tuesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 7:21a.m. to Sliver Ridge Road lor
Lewls'Whlte to Veterans Memorial Hosp)tal; Pomeroy at 8:15 .
a.m. to Pomeroy C.llff Apts. for Hubert Clower who was treated
but not transported; Pomeroy at 11:36 a.m. to the sheriff's
office for Keith Musser to Veterans Memorial Hospltal;
Middleport at 3:38p.m. to North Second Ave. for Nola Swisher
to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 7:38p.m. to Route
248 for Dorothy Wells to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths
Brian Kinee

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmWt
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Harold Brannon

Brian Wesley Klzzee, 31, of
Cheshire, died Monday at Holzer
Medical Center.
Born March 29,1957lnHuntlngton, W.Va., he was a son of the
late Clifford Klzzee and Martha
Fraizer Klein, of LeGrange, Ga.
He attended the Presbyterian
Church In Middleport and was a
1976 graduate or Meigs High
School.
Survivors Include his wife,
Kathryn Coleman Klzzee, and his
daughter. Jaquelln (Mindy) Klzzee, of Cheshire; his mother and
stepfather, Martha and Fred
Klein, LeGrange, Ga.; a brother
and sister-In-law, Richard and
Patricia Klzzee, Columbus; two
brothers, Van Klein, LeGrange,
Ga., and Charles Klein, stationed
with the U.S. Army In Germany;
his mother and father-In-law,
Marcella and Jack Coleman,
Middleport; and a maternal
· grandmother, Anise. Cremeans,
Huntington, W.Va.
· Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Rawllng-Coats-Biower
Funeral Home with Rev. O'Quln
Kelly officiating. Burial will be In
Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
today (Tuesday), from 7 to 9 p.m.
'

Ada Kibble
· Ada B. Kibble, 84, Mfneral
·Wells, W. Va., fonnerly of
Pleasant VIew Towers, Parkers·
burg, died Monday at St. Joseph
Hospital In Parkersburg.
Born at Akron, she was a
daughter of the late Lucian Deck
and Elvira Argabrlte Watson.
She was a member of the Christ
United Methodist Church In
Parkersburg and was formerly
employed at the Uptowner Inn
and the Chancellor Hotel In
Parkersburg. She belonged to the
Daughters of America In Belpre.
Surviving are four daughters,
Frances Reed, Reedsville; Fay
Johnson, Mineral Wells; Ruth
Tuttle, Pomeroy, and Annabel
~Torrence,
Clnclnnnatl; eight
grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.
. Preceding her In death were
her husband, Paul, and a
·
granddaughter.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Leavitt Funeral
Home, 403 Seventh St., Parkersburg with the Rev. Clyde Beard
officiating. Burial will be In
Reedsville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday.

Otho Maye
Otho Cecil (Huck) Maye, 75 of
Cheshire, died Monday at the
Holzer Medical Center following
an extended Illness.
Born qn March 23, 1913, he was
the son of the late Willis B. and
Laura Grace Wilbur Maye. He
retired from his employment at
Foote Mineral In 1967.
He Is survived by a daughter ·
and son-In-law, Beatrice and Bill
Fink, three grandsons, William
Cecil Fink, John Paul Fink, and
Charles Eugene Fink; two sis·
ters, Thelma Inman and Betty
Ross; one brother, Ray Francis
Maye, several nieces and nephews, and a special friend,
VIrginia Overturf, no addresses
given.
BesIdes his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Bessie Melinda Durst Maye In
1967.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m Thursday at the Rawlings.
Coats· Blower Funeral Home In
Middleport. The Rev. Kenneth
Durst will officiate and burial
will be In Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Wednesday from 5 to9p.m.

Harold Dean Brannon, 80, of
52219 State Route 681, Reedsville,
died Tuesday morning at his
residence. Funeral arrangements are Incomplete and will be
announced later by the White
Funeral Home, Coolville.

Dorothy Mae Wells, 58, of State
Route 248, Long Bottom, died
Monday evening at Veterans
Memorial .Hospital. Funeral arrangements are Incomplete and
will be announced by the White
Funeral Home, Coolville.
•

Stevie McGrath
Other survivors of Stevie R.
McGrath, 27, Rutland, who died
In .an weekend· auto accident,
include his stepfather, Mickey R.
Hutton, Rutland; his step·
mother, Betty McGrath, Chauncey; two step-brothers, Lonnie
and Jerry McKee, Chauncey; a
half brother, James E. McGrath,
Lake City, Fla; two step·sisters,
Tammy Erwin, The Plains, and
Rebecca Dlmxon, Glouster; pat·
ernal grandparents, Earl
McGrath. Harrisonville, and
Minnie McGrath, The Plains;
step grandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
Charles Brown, Langsville, an.d
Mr. and Mrs. Ewing Hu !ton,
Rutland.
'
Preceding him in death were
his maternal grandparents, VIr· ·
gil E. Jacks and Doris E. Brown.

I

22)

Serving meals
The Southern Band Boosters
are serving meals for deer
. hunters and the public, all this
week, at the American Legion
Building In Racine. Meals are
served from 5 to 7 p.m.
Also, the Ladles Auxiliary of
Mt. Moriah Church of God,
Racine, will be serving meals for
hunters, through Friday, from 10
to 6 each day,ln the basement of
the church parsonage.

~p~---------------------~
The Ch,lttmst $sston.lt Now 1
~

1

Upon Ut.....

~ •Christian Christmas Cards - Counter and Boxed ~ ·
W •Bibles, Post Cards, Bookmarkers
I •Helen Steiner Rice Booklets
~ •Gift Wrap, Ornaments, Pins, Posters, Magnets
W •Praise Tapes • 2 Shelves of looks 50°/o OFF
~ WILL SPECIAL ORDER ANY BIBLE•••2 DAY SERVICE!
W "Let's Put Christ Back Into Christmas!"
~
To God Be The Glory!

I
~

VILLAGE CUT RATE

1.

949-2140

I 31D

.•Jlj;lil!l::ll!j;I-W

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;.-;.

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FREE CATALOG!

GET THE WORLD'S FINEST PRODUCTS ...PROMPT,
FRIENDLY, LOCAL SERVICE ... DISCOUNT PRICES AND
A FULL GUARANTEE.

"Holiday Sbopplng" Made Euy Wltb Us.

PliO. IR OIDIIS - 2 DAYS DIUVBY IICIST CASIS
Wll 1111¥• • MSI AIUS:

......an, POMIIOY, ••N•T, . .IISYI.LI,
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SYIACISI, 11110 -

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IUSCIII, W. VA.

Ut Chrlt+••• Stttll It llert. Shp WHit ne Phe,.ety
WI' MORE fer 'lear Mo••rl

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

271 N0111 SICOND • MmiLIPOIT, 01110

L'!l''lr'll'ltl'lr'lz!frUrt'ltl'll'ltl'lr'ltl ·

N-ABISCO PREMIUM

I Nov. 29th

SALTINES

'69 &lt;

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POWELL'S COUPON

I·

Nov. 30th

·

·

·

FIRST WINNER - Alberta Loftis, left, 39378
State Roule 143, Pomeroy, Is the flnt winner of
awards In the annual Christmas hoUday promotion of Pomeroy merchants. Mrs. Lollis received
more lhln $200 In awards-alld gift certificates as
lhe f!nt winner. Tllere will he lour more events
for the same amount of prizes tvl~h a fifth drawlilf!'
to be over 51,000 In awards. Seleetlon of winner Is

I

~~

SUNSHINE

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.

I .CH~EEZ-IT CRACKERS I

$ 129··

Tuesday

Wednesday, Nov. 29 and 30 Only

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Value- No
.Cigarette
Coupons)

POWELL'S COUPON

CHATEAU

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With The
TRIPLE
VENDOR
COUPON •
At Right. ,

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BETTY CROCKER

CAKE MIXES
181J20Z.
BOX

69 (

Good Tue1day l!t Wednesday, Nov. 29 and 30 Only

: .

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0 ..

1-~---------------POWELL'S COUPON
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FRESH
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$
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4
9
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DOZEN

.
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a. Wed~eaday, Nov. 29 ond 30 Only

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPJ) -A off by a fire that was being
fire Ignited two construction Investigated as arson.
The firefighters were battling
trailers loaded with. a highly
a
fire at one of the trailers,
flammable chemical at a build;
unaware
that It contained 30,000
lng site early Tuesday, setting of!
pounds
of
ammonium nitrate
two blasts that killed six !lreflgh·
with
a
kerosene
mix, when It
ters, reduced one" fire truck to
explqded
about
4:05
a.m. Fire
rubble and obliterated another
offlcl~ls
said.
Department
one, Fire Department officials
A second trailer, with 15,000
said.
·
pounds
of the same cargo,
The pre-dawn blasts left two
craters about 35 feet wide and 7 exploded about 15 minutes later,
teet deep at the two-acre high- said Fire Chief Ed Wilson Jr. .
The shock shattered windows
way construction site In a
worklng·class res ldentlal area of 25 miles away.
Fire Department spokesman
the city. The explosions were set

Harold Knabe said the mobile·
home sized trailers were not
labeled as containing explosive
materials and there apparently
were n? posted signs. 0
"They had no Indication what
was In the trailers, because If
they had, there naturally would
have been a different approach,"
he said. "They dldn' t know what
they were moving In on. They
thought they were moving In on a
construction shack."
Pollee Chief Larry Joiner told
the City Council In an emergency
noon meeting the Incident was
being Investigated as arson because two security guards reported suspclclous activity before the blasts. Seven detectives
were assigned to the case, .he
said.
The firemen apparentlY were
told by the dispatcher there were
hazardous materials at the south
Kansas City site, but neither they
nor the dispatcher knew where
they · were, said .Knabe. Two
crates were labeled as contain·
lng ' dynamite and caps and
Knabe speculated the firefighter~ may have thought they were
the only hazardous materials.
Ammonium nitrate Is a crystalline salt used In some explosives and as a fertilizer. Construction workers, Knabe said,
use It In conjunction with dynam·
lte to ensure an even blast.
The Fire Department's Bomb
and Arson Unit and the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
also were Investigating and the
city was trying to determine If
there were any code violations.
City flags were lowered to
hall-slat! for the rest of the week
In honor of the six firelighters
and a trust fund was established
for the men's families.
Mountain Plallli Construction
Co., Identified as the contractor,
Continued on page 12

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - NASA engineers kept
tabS on a threatening cold front
Tuesday and pressed on with a
secret countdown for the shuttle
Atlantis's blastoff Thursday on a
$375 million cloak-and-dagger
flight to put a spy satellite into
orbit.
A new post-Challenger "mis·
slon management team,"
chaired by veteran astronaut
Robert Crippen, met Tuesday to
consider the progress of flight
preparations and the prospects
for completing critical milestones In time for blastoff, which
sources say Is planned for around
7 a.m ,E;ST Thursday.
'•p~e)iaratlpns for launch are
going very well," Crippen said in
a statement alter the meeting
broke up. "We are closely
watching a frontal system which
could arrive In the area Wednesday evening or Thursday mornIng bringing high winds and some
rain showers."
The goal of the 27th shuttle
mission, th~ second since the 1986

llllllti

I

currently are employed by other
GE subsidiaries.
The Indictment charges GE,
headquartered In Fairfield,
Conn., with five counts of mall
fraud and 312 counts of presentIng false . claims to the United
States.
II convicted, GE could face a
maximum penalty of criminal
fines of $71.841 million In addition
to paying restitution.·
A GE spokesman, Bruce
Bunch, said the company knew of
the investigation and would vi·
Continued on page 12
·

Cold front thre~tens
Thursday shuttle liftoff

-------------·--

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A Department said the Phlladelfederal grand jury In Phlladel- phta · grand jury returned a
phla Indicted General Electric 321-count Indictment charging
Co. Tuesday on charges of GE- doing business as Managescheming to defraud the goverh- ment and Technical Services Co.,
ment of more than $22 million on or MATSCO- with trying to bilk
a 1983 Army contract for battle- the government out of more than
field computer systems.
$22 million In connection with the ·
GE, the nation's third largest June 1983 award of the Army
defense contractor, was awarded contract.
nearly $6 billion in contracts last · Also charged In the Indictment
year for the MX mlsslle,,nuclear were Gerald Leo, the former
reactors for submarines, under- materials manager for
water sound equipment and MATSCO, and James Badolato,
other projects.
former subcontracts manager of
In a statement, the Defense MATSCO. Leo and Badolato

s~ firefighters die in blast

(You must bring '
the Triple Vendor
Coupon at Right ·
One Coupon per
Family.)

LIMIT 1

held each Monday morning at Bank I In Pomeroy
with the awarding !If the last two promotions, one
over $200 In ·prizes and gift certlflcate!l and the
grand ·prizes of over $1,000 In prizes to be held on
Dec. 23. Joan WoUe of Ba'bk I Is pictured
presenting Lollis lier awards. ' No purchase Is
required lor participation In the hoUday give
away program,
·

-~~eral -~artd j~ry i~dicts
~n-erai Electric ·Company

We Will
I
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t6 oz. .
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Redeem
Up
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LIMIT 1 I
To 5 Vendor
~ood
8r.
.Coupons
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(Maximum soc
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25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newsoaper

State officials say
011 ·report misleading
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State ment said.
Co. had the highest premium
OII President Noreen W. John· .Increase - a 45.6 percent hike.
officials say a report by the Ohio
Insurance Institute that automo- son said changes In the .types of The lowest rate Increase during
bile insurance premiums In· Information available resulted In the period was reported by the
creased 40 percent In Ohio's eight different comparisons. But she Nationwide Mutual Insurance
largest cities during the past five defended the figures as being Co.
years was flawed and basically accurate.
The department, however, did
The Insurance deparment's not calculate increases for Ohio's
misleading.
The Ohio Department of Insu· own comparison of the 10 insu- eight largest cities as did the OIL
ranee Tuesday accused the 0 II of rance companies that sell most State officials said such a comusing flawed research methods. car insuranc.e policies In Ohio parison would be difficult and .
But state officials did not dispute indicated a 21.7 percent Increase provide.only a·'rough estimatethe Increase In car Insurance occurred statewide during the and possibly a misleading one '·
rates or that Clevelanders pay five-year period.
because of the erratic nature of
The
Buckeye
Union
Insurance rate rqtngs.
more for automobile insurance
than do residents of any other
Ohio city.
The August report by the trade
group funded by Insurance companies raised que&amp;tlons about
how closely the Department of
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (UPI) - The number of tort
Insurance monitors rate
liability
cases crowdlrig the nation's courts Is stU! growing
Increases.
despite the growth of Medicare, Medicaid, workers compensaIn reaction to the report, the
tion and other systems of loss Insurance, a new study says.
department created an 18·
Americans continue to rely on the tort liability system
member Automobile Insurance
because
health and disability loss Insurance payments function
Task Force to lnves ligate the
as
subsidies
supporting further legal action to' 'collect lor 'pain
matter through a series of
and
suffering'
and similar intangible, Incalculable losses," said
statewide hearings. The task
the
study's
authors,
University of VIrginia law professor
force, which held Its first meetJeffrey
O'Connell
and
Washington, D.C. , lawyer James
Ing Monday, Is expected to
Gulnlvan.
Investigate whether auto lnsu·
· Their study, "An Irrational Comblnatio)'l: The Relative
ranee premiums are too high and
of Liability Insurance and Contraction of Law
Expansion
what, If anything, can be done to
Insurance''
is being published this week In the Ohio State Law
lower them.
Journal.
•
But In Its own analysis, re·
O'Connell,
the
John
Allan
Love Professor of Law a!U.Va.,
leased Monday, the Insurance
was
a
creator
of
the
no-fault
auto Insurance concept and has
department criticized the· 011
proposed
similar
systems
of
compE!nsation
lor personal Injuries
report, saying lt did not compare
'Til
medlclll
mall)I'Iictlce
irisuriirice
and
lilgh
school athletic
the same companies In 1983 and
Insurance,
among
other
areas.
1988, the Cleveland Plain Dea'er
The report said that by hiring a lawyer on a contingent lee,
reported.
people
who already have been paid for most of their medical
· The result was that the public
expenses and wage losses by their own loss insurance are
was misled, a,llhough there Is no
particularly able to aggressively pursueliabllltyclaims against
evidence the orr did so on
someone
else's Insurance company ,
1••
purpose, the Insurance depart·

Study proposes alternative
compensation for suits

I

Good Tue1day 8r. Wednesday, Nov. 29 ·and 30 Only

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----.-----------Good Tuesday

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •.Wednesday. November 30, 1988

DAYS
I ·~SOL $479 -·1

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Vot.39, No.144

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MAXWELL HOUSE

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Cloudy tonight. Chance of
snow flurries 40 percent. Low
In mid 20s. Thursday, partly
cloudy, high In mid 30s.

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1988-89 81FT CATALOG

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RACINE OHIO I
Jlj;llioo:Jlj;ll!llliii!IOSIIC:IAII!IOS-SII:I!IIs:II!I::IWIIIII~IIlBil!llllsW

~ .....,,... '!Iiiii- .... -~,... ...... ,

LiMit Quantities

Ohio Lottery

25 more
days 'til

..

Wt Roser,. lht Riaht To

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Am Electric Power ............. 26* .
AT&amp;T .............. ,.................. 28'Va
Ashland 011 ......................... 33
Bob Evans .... :..................... 16~
Charming Shoppes ............. .12].1.
City Holding Co ................... 33
Federal Mogul. ................... .47
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .............47')i,
Heck's ............................ .. ... *
Key P!nturlon ...... .. .......... : .16~
Lands' End ............ ,......... ,... 26¥.,
Limited Inc ........................25*
Multimedia Inc .................... 70
Rax Restaurants .................. 3¥.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................12¥.,
Shoney's Inc .......................... 7
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 5~
Worthington lnd ................. 20'Va
(Key · Centurion Bank illiares
has set 10 percent stock dividends, payable Dec. 21 to those of
record Dec. 9. The company also
declared a regular 13 cent
quarterly dividend, payable Jan.
9 to stookholders of record Dec.

Dorothy Wells

Hospital. Jlews
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Flor·
ence Potts, Middleport; Lewis
White, Reedsville; Russell Cullum•, Pomeroy; Lincoln Smith,
Middleport.
Monday Discharges - Mary
Kesterson, William Morris, Ronald Collins.

...

Court news

-a&lt; I!
Olll

zl0
•
.

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

,,t

I

. 1

Challenger disaster, Is ·the deployment Friday of a new·
generation surveillance satellite
code-named "Lacrosse," sources say, capable of taking- high·
resolution radar Images of
targets In the Soviet Union at
night and through cloud cover.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration charged
the Air Force $70 million to carry
the satellite into orbit, although
NASA spokeswoman Sarah Keegan said the actual cost of the
flight Is about $375 million.
The management team
planned to meet again early
Wednesday with a final night·
time meeting on tap before
engineers begin pumping ' fuel
aboard Atlantis's external tank
starting about 10:40 p.m. Wed·
nesday night, weather
permitting.
,
"Between now and then we just
talk about It," launch director
Robert Sleek said In an Interview. "Tomorrow night we have
to make a decision.
..
Continued on page 12

Webb won't comply with dress code
POINT PLEASANT, ' W.Va.
(UPI) - Suspended three times
for refusing to comply with a new
dress code, a school teacher from
Gallipolis, Ohio, says he won't
comply with a relaxed dress
standard.
Bill Webb, a math teacher at
Point Pleasant (W.Va.) High
School, said the Mason County
(W.Va.) Board of Education has
made his dress a specific condl·
tlon· of his employement, and he
will not comply with any dress
code.
Webb was suspended for Insubordination lor his refusal ' to
wear dress pants and a tie to
work, preferring Instead his
usual garb of jeans and a work
shirt.
The dress code was Instituted
this summer.
Since Webb's Initial suspen-

slon, the county board modified
the dress code to require only
dress pants and threw out the tie
provision.
Superintendent William
Chambers said he will recom·
mend the board allow Webb to
return to the classroom If he Is
willing to comply with the new
dress code, but Webb said he Is
not inclined to do that.
Webb said he believes that
changing his manner of dress
would be tatamount to changing
the terms of the contract In
midstream.
"You do not negotiate a contract six months after the contract Is signed," Webb said. "I
am willing to abide by the
contract I signed in May."
A lawyer for Chambers said In
a letter to Webb's attorney the
teacher could come back to work

Immediately If he agrees to a bide
by the dress code, drop a pending
appeal of one of his suspensions
and is not paid for the time
served In his present 30·day
suspension.
Webb's appeal has been heard
by a hearing examiner, but no
decision has been Issued. The
county board Is set to hold a
hearing Thursday on Webb's
current suspension.
Attorney Char tes Damron, representing Chambers, said the
superintendent Is waiting for a
reply from Webb.
"I believe that It Is just about
as far backwards · !is Mr.
Chambers could bend to be fair,"
Damron said. "I would hope that
Mr. Webb would be reasonable
and come back to work dressed
appropriately."

•

•'

FAMILIAR SCENE- For years, this has been
a famUiar holiday scene at lhe Pomeroy Kropr
store. Major Glenna Rummel (Ret. ),at left,o!the
local Salvation Anny, was ringing the bell
. Tuesday lo attract sho11pen to drop donations In
the kettle. The
., donallon drive began Saturday and

."

~

'

will continue through Christmas Eve. Donations,
!such as those given by Kroger employees Gladys
.Cumings and Dave Cunningham, will go ll&gt;wards
Christmas food baskets lor the needy In Meigs
County.

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