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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
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VILLAGE CUT RATE

1.

949-2140

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GET THE WORLD'S FINEST PRODUCTS ...PROMPT,
FRIENDLY, LOCAL SERVICE ... DISCOUNT PRICES AND
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"Holiday Sbopplng" Made Euy Wltb Us.

PliO. IR OIDIIS - 2 DAYS DIUVBY IICIST CASIS
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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

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Tuesday

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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

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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

-------------·--

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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

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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

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2 Sections, 16 Pages

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

DAYS
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cloudy, high In mid 30s.

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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

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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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'

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

.
~~ ,......_,._--.-0 ..,-e,do&lt;=~
~~
~

ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publisher BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaalltalll Publlsber/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINlON are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long Alllrttersare S\lb)ect toedltlng and must be signed with name, address.a nd
telePhone number. No· unstgnBiletter$ will be publish~. Letters sh~~ld be In
aood taste, addressing Issues, not persooalltles.
·
.

Lacks Credibility____Ja_ck_A_n_de_r_so_n_an_d_D_a_le_.~_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON -For a few
people 1n the Reagan adntlnJstration, a Michael Dukakis victory
would have spelled freedom from
the hot seat. Karl Hoyle, thechlef
spokesman for the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board put It this way:
"I hope Dukakls wins so I can get
the hell out of here."
Hoyle, as executive director
for publlc affairs for the bank
board, has tried to put a happy
face on the savings and loan
crisis. That half-hearted remark
made to high-level agency officials underscored the I bunker
mentality that has gripped the
bank board, which is charged
with containing the worst flnan-

self-serving.
clal crisis In a half century.
"Tbe bank board Is engaged in
Wall may be the bureaucratic
sham
resolutions," said Senate
equivalent of Caplaln Bligh Banking
Committee Chairman
obllvious to the storm warnings
William
Proxmite, D-Wis.
that threaten the ship of state.
President-elect George Bush "Many of the most heavily
would be well aerved to read the Insolvent S&amp;Ls are conducting
lips of his advisers, some Ponzi schemes that take In new
members of Congress and the deposits to pay tbelr bills."
financial regulatory commun- Proxmire added that Wall has
"consistently underestimated"
Ity: "Make Wall walk the plank."
Members of both the House and what it will cost the Federal
Senate banking committees com- Savings and Loan Insurance
plain that every time they get . Corp. to bail out the thrifts.
Time is moner when it comes
briefed by Wall, they take his
words with a hefty grain of salt, to the thtlft crisis. Insolvent
and frequently find the informa- thrifts are losing $1 billion a
tion he gives to be Inaccurate and month, some $40 mllllol) every
business day -losses that will be

Bush inherits
a 'people problem'
ByROBERTSHEPARD
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The federal government structure that
President-elect George Bush will begin to direct In January has what
one watchdog agency calls a ''people problem" Involving morale, pay
and aense of direction.
To some degree, President Reagan reflected concern about the
problem when he recently vetoed a bill that would have tightened
restrictions on lobbying activities by former government officials. He
said the blll was "excessive and discriminatory" and would drive
away "America's best talent" from public service.
Tbe General Accounting Office, the watchdog arm of Congress. In
preparing a series of brief transition reports for the incoming
administration, dealt with the matter of government workers and
advised steps to Improve the situation.
'To a large extent, the government today Is faced with a 'people
problem.' How can the federal government attract, motivate, and
retain committed people -people at all levels who can come up with
neW Ideas and lnnovatlve approaches and see them through lo
elfectlve Implementation," the GAO asked.
·
·
"If the quality of the federal workforce is reduced, the qualllty of
government services and programs Is reduced. The bottom line In
this situation is not .less profit, but, more importantly, less effective
government services."
Corruption Is part of the problem, the report said. In 1987, more
.than 500 federal employees, at all levels, were convicted of criminal
offenses related·to their jobs. With a workforce of some 3 million, the
500 Is "minuscule," the GAO noted, "But numbers are misleading.
When such offenses occur, especially among higher level officials,
respect for and confidence in the government diminishes."
Tbe new president must provide the kind of leadership to
"invigorate the public service," the GAO said. "After years of
'fed-bashing' the new president needs to change course."
The report said government-wide surveys found "the negative
Image of public service was a significant barrier toattractlngneeded
staff," and that only 13 percent of senior executives said they would
advise people beginning their careers to enter public service.
Pay Is another problem, !be GAO said. "You get what you pay for.
Unfortunately, the federal government's pay structure has broken
down."
Numerous special commissions have "all concluded that the
Inadequacy of federal compensation seriously affects the government's ability to attract and retain a high quality workforce,'' and the
problem "Is expected to worsen over the next decade."
Tbe GAO warned that changing the situation "will take time," but it
cited approaches that· are essential.
"Tbe morale and credlblllty of the federal workforce can be great~¥
Improved If the president himself uses public forums to express his
support for high-quality publlc servants." .
"Political appointees must adhere to high ethical standards and
. make ethics In government a prtority In their agencies."
'The pay and benefit structure for poll tical and career emplOyees
. needs to be changed. We cannot continue to expect to make progress
1n this area by saying that all solutions must be 'budget neutral' and
that agencies must continually absorb the costs of all pay and benefit
Increases," the report said.
TbeGAO cited one other problem, involving a lack of continuity and
consistency of leadership In executive departments and agencies.
'The lack of measurable goals and objectives makes It difficult to
know whether Important programs and Initiatives are succeeding."
'The politics of governing is not always glamorous. It requires
paying attention to who Is going to do !be jobs of government and
knowing when !bey are succeeding," the GAO said In conclusion.

tacked on to a taxpayer bailout
estimated at more tban $60
billion. Since Wall has been in
office about 17 months, !bat's $17
billion added to the taxpayers'
burden, In part because he chose
to be an Industry cheerleader
rather than a regulator.
'
Wall should be relleved of his
command at least becauae he has
consistently understated the size
of the crisis. If "Don't Worry, Be
Happy" wins a Grammy, Wall
should collect !be award.
The ques tlon Is simple: How
much would It cost to rescue th.e
505 Insolvent thrifts and 435 more
that are barely afloat? Wall can't
seem to settle on an answer. 1 •
In late summer, 1987, be stated
flatly that $10.8 billion lrl borrowIng authority that Congress aulb,
orlzed would be enough, and he
ridiculed the legions of Industry
experts and fellow regulators
who disagreed.
Our associate Michael Einstein
obtained a document that suggests Wall was worse than wrong .
-he was saying one thing when
he knew another. The document
was the bank board's secret
briefing book prepared for Wall
on Aug. 1, 1987. In large print, it
said that 183 of the worst thrifts
would cost the depositor il!surancl! fund a minimum of $16
bllllon.
Not until February of this year
dld Wall revise his math - up to
$15 bllllon for more !ban 500
thrifts. And he accused those who
didn't agree of being too negative. Wall's estimates have been
creeping up since then - more
out of embarrassment tban
candor.
Roger Martin, a member of the
bank board, has publlcly stated
that the FSLIC may need up to
$62 billlon. Since Wall and Martin
rely on the same staff, what Is It
that Wall refuses to see, ar.d how
long will George Bush tolerate
his blindness?

Cong. ·
Clarence Miller

Canada votes for open markets_
Last week, Canadians went to
the polls and voted to return
Canadian ·p rime MiniSter Brian
Mulroney to power, giving hls
Progressive Conservative Party
a comfortable majority In the
Canadian Parllament. That election campaign had ·several Important Implications for our
country.
The main Issue in the Canadian
campaign was the U.S.!Canada
free trade agreement that had
been negotiated between Prime
Minister Mulroney and President Reagan. The agreement;
which wlll eliminate virtually all
barriers to trade between our two
countries, had already been
approved by the u:s. Congr~ss.
However, many Canadians have
been fearful of the agreement's
consequences for their economy
and Mr. Mulroney's opponents in
the election played upon these
fe!p's. In fact, John Turner of the
. Ll!Jer al Party and Ed Broadbent
of the New Democratic Party
both pledged that they would
scrap the agreement If their
parties won the election. Both
had charged that the agreement
jeopardized Canada's polltical

Independence and that its appro- behind protectionist walls. Inval would result In the disman- stead, the danadlans bave demtllng of Canada's popular social onstrated !bat they are secure In
welfare programs. Turner In their national Identity and that
particular had charged that the ., they are confident 'that they can
agreement would turn Canada compete with Americans on an
Into a colony of the United States. equal footing.
However, In the end, Canadians
Moreover, the ratification ·of
were not convinced by the the free trade agreement will
rhetoric of the Prime Minister's · strengthen the hand of the United
opponents and they voted to keep States in other trade negotiaMr. Mulroney in power, andln so tions. Tbe U.S. and Canada
doing, endorsed' the trade already enjoy relatively free
agreement.
trade in most products. FurtherTbls vote was significant for more, we share a ·common
the U.S.' in several key respects. border, a common language, and
To begin with, ratification of the many common cultural and
free trade agreement wlll bring institutional ties. Had the free
obvious benefits to American trade agreement between our
.industry and to our economy. two countries falled, U.S. negoMore American firms wlll now be tiators would have had a very
able io sell their products In the difficult time convincing other
Canadian market and this will countries ·to further open their
mean more jobs and Income for markets to international trade.
many Americans. furthermore, Tbe mandate provided Mr. Multhe election also represented a roney and the trade agreement
repudiation of the anti-American should greatly benefit the U.S. In
rhetoric that had surfaced during the upcoming·trade negotia tlons
the campaign. Canadians this December when the U.S. and
showed that they do not believe 95 other countries meet In Montthat free trade with the U.S. will real to continue the so&lt;alled
destroy their national identity UrugUay round of negotiations
and they do not belleve that !bat under the General Agreement on
Identity ·can only be maintained

Tariffs and Trade (GATT).
These talks wlll cover such
thorny issues as trade in services
and foreign Investments. These
same Issues are covered by the
U.S./Canadlan agreement. So,
approval o! the agreement will
set an example for the GATT
talks and should providee an
Incentive for oiher governments
to lower their trade barriers.
Additionally, the U.S. and Mexico ar~ expected to open trade
talks In the coming year and
Mexican officials have Indicated
that approval of the U.S./Canada
agreement would have a positive
influence on these talks.
In . short, the outcome of the
Canadian elections Is good news
for Americans. The Canadian
people have returned to power a
capable Prime Minister who has
a proven track record
constructively with the u.!s:--.:m
areas of mutual concern. At
same time, Canadians sent a
message around the· world that
open markets benefit everyone. ,
In both respects, Americans can :look forward to a long_ and ·
positive relationship- with our
friends to the north.

Long ·propOSeS Spending limitS Sen. Jan M. Long

•

•

Berry's World

~~&lt;"

till ., NEA. Inc:.

"Resd my P/NGEFIS - no new tsxes."

There Is a fundamental principle that many Americans cherish. That Is that any citizen In the
United States has the right to run
lor an elected office. However,
when we look at the thousands
and mllllons of dollars needed to
run a campaign, this cherished
principle deteriorates and a
public office seems out of reach
for the ordinary citizen. After all,
you cannot raise this kind of
money with backyard barbeques. Over the years as campaign expenses have dramatically Increased, the democratic
process has suffered. I have
recently joined olber state senators who are forming an lnltlatlve to limit c ampalgn spending.
To Illustrate how expensive It
can be to run a campaign, &lt;me
first needs to look at the figures
for one state campaigns. An
average cost of the four most
expensive Ohio senate races In
1986 reached $350,000 per campaign. Tbls- means that for the
most expensive race In 1986, It
cost the campaigner $6 per vote.
The expenses for the 1988 Ohio
candidacy races are due out
December 16, and we expect that
these figures will top one half a
mUIIon dollars per campaign,
averaging $12 per vote. If this
trend continues at Its current
rate (an Increase . by 50% each
election), the average cost of the .
· senate race In 1992 will reach 1.1
mllllon dollars. Only ten years
ago, the averag~ cost of the four

most expensive races In Ohio was
$70,000. Imagine spending seven
times !bat amount. More money
does not necessarily mean better
government. In fact what It does
mean Is voter apathy and overal
dlslllusionment with the democratic process.
One way to get big money out ot
the democratic process Is to limit
campaign spending through an
initiative petition. This Involves
mounting a 'combined effort
among state legislators, public
interest groups, and you, the
voter. The current effort underway Is ·being formulated by
legislators, and it wlll require
400,000 signatures by· August of
1989 in order tO' place tbls on the
ballot. lllt receives a majority ot
votes In the next general election
in the Fall 6t 1989, the amendment will take effect. This
amendment will be sent to the
General Asaembly for debate on
how to determine the spending
limits.
Currently, tl)e proposal reads
as follows: "The purpose ... Is to
limit campaign expenditures In
order to safeguard the political
process from undue Influence by
special interest." Additionally,
the hope Is that limits on
campaign spending will promote
an "opportunity . for seeking
elective office." The limits would
be on expenditures regarding
general elections for all statewide and general assembly offices. Tbls measure Is to . be

consistent with the First and This recent trend In skyrocketing
Foprteentb Amendments to the · expenditures makes Ibis action
all !be more necessary. The last
United States Constitution.
If this ballot initiative suc- thing Ohioans need Is a state
ceeds, Ohio will join 27 other legislature made up of politicians
states In placing reasonable who are there not on merits but
limits on campaign spending. because the price was right.
~·

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Wednesday, Nov. 36, the 335th day of1988 with 31 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward its last quarter. ·
The morning slars are Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Thole born on Ibis date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include Italian Renals5ance architect Andrea Palladlo in 1508, Irish
satirist Jonathan Swift In 1667, novelist Mark Twain (Samuel
Langhorne Clemens) In 1835, British statesman Sir Winston'
Churchill in 1874, Shirley Chisholm, the first black woman elected to
Congress,ln 1924 (age 64), actors Efrem Zlmballst Jr. in 1923,(age65)
and Richard Crenna In 1927 (age 61), TV music show host Dick Clark
In 1929 (age 59), and former 1960s radical Abbie Holtman In 1936 (age
52).
On this daie In history:
In 1731, a series of earthquakes struck China. Modern experts
es tlrnate more than 100,000 people died.
In 1782, p~ellmlnary peace articles formally ending the American
Revolutionary War were signed in Paris.
In 1939, the Russo-Finnish War started after !be Soviet UniOn failed
to obtain lerritorlal concessions from Finland.
In 1975, Israel pulled its forces out of a 93-mlle corridor along the
Gulf of Suez as part of Its Sinal Interim pea,ce agreement with Egypt.
A thought for tlle day: British Prime Minister Winston Churchill
said, ''Democracy iS the worst form of government except all those
other forms that have been tr.led from time to time."

..

•

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-·-·

-The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3 .

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 30; 1988

-- -Page--2-The Daily-Sentinei-- Porneri&gt;y-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 30, 1988

-

'No. -7 Hawkey~s top ~val Bulldogs, 96-72 for second ·win
eludes slx straight losses at the basketball now."
By JEFF SHAIN
Drlesell was forced to resign as
end of the 1987-86 season, and
UP! Sports Writer
Iowa Coach Tom Davis and losses to Northwest Louisiana Maryland coach Oct. 27, 1986
after slx months of Investigation
Drake Coach Tom Abatemarco and Texas A&amp;M last weekend.
Terrell Jackson came off the and deliberation following the
held completely different views
bench to lead Drake with 19 cocaine-induced death of former
of the No. 7 Hawkeyes after they
handed their in-state rivals the •points. Sam Roark finished with Terrapin star Len Bias .
At Murfreesboro, Tenn., Chris
worst pasting in the last 10 years 18 and Eric Berger added 17.
Meanwhile, Lefty Driesellcon- Rainey hlt 6 free throws In the
of the series.
B.J. Armstrong scored 20 of his tlnued his successful returp. to final 27 seconds of overtime to
25 points in the flrst half and five coaching as James.Madison took give Middle Tennessee State a
Iowa players scored In double a 94-92 decision over VIrginia 101-95 upset over the Soviet
·National Team.
figures Tuesday night as the Military Institute.
It was the last game of an
Troy
Bostic
rebounded
a
shot
Hawkeyes rolled to a 96-72
victory.
,by. teammate Kenny Brooks and 11-game tour of U.S. colleges for
''We've got a good ballclub, but scored with two seconds left to the Soviets, the 1988 Olympic
I don't know how good," Davis lift the Dukes to victory In their champions, who finished their
said after the Haw keyes ran their home opener. A desperatlon shot 11-game U.S. tour with an 8-3
record to 2-0. "We got after It In by VMI's Lennon Mings fell far record. The Soviets also suffered
their first loss with 7-loot-2 center
short at the buzzer.
the first half."
Arvidas
Sa bonis In the llneup.
"They say we can't win here,
Abatemarco said Iowa "Is a
Middle Tennessee tralled 81-70
great basketball team. Tiley just but nobody has beat us yet," said
.came after us. They by far Driesell, whose team Is 3-0 upon with 6:15 remaining in regulation
outclassed us and outplayed us. his coaching return after a following a 15-0 tear by the
Their press was very effective." two-year absence. He had won Soviets. However, the Blue Raid-·
· Tuesday night's loss was the 524 games in 26 years at David- ' ers countered with a 14-4 run that
was hlghllghted by Rainey's two
.
· Bulldogs worst to Iowa since a son and Maryland.
three-pointers.
·
"I'm
going
to
brag
about
It
·112-73 pasting in 1978.
Rlmas Kurtlnaitls hit the front
until
I
lose.
I
hope
all'
the
hoopla
is
Drake's loss was its ninth
end
of a '1 and 1 to give the Soviets
over
With
and
we
can
just
play
consecu live defeat, which in-

scored . 28 points to lead ve Anderson and Rr'Gri:1;f;;;;lhi-.ri2---~
Indiana players in double figures apiece and Joe Hlllman contrlbas the Hoosiers took an 87-70 uted 11.
victory over Miami of Ohio.
Mlamli 0-1, was paced by Tim
Todd Jadlow added 13 points Stewart with 20 points, Karlton .
for Indiana, 3-2, while Eric Clayborne with 17 and Jim Paul
with 14.
Among other ranked teams,
No. 6 Illinois defeated Metro
State 86-55 and No. 14 Florida
State routed Florida International 100-75.
In other games, Auburn nipped
State 74-70, Old DominGeorgia
WASHINGTON (UP!) - College basketball artd football
lon
topped
Wllllam &amp; Mary 70-62,
players throughout the school year spend more time with their
Indiana
State
edged Texas Wessports, than with academics., an NCAA study said Tuesday.
leya_
n
70-66,
Iowa
State rolled
The $1.75 million study, commissioned by the NCAA
over
Creighton
88-58
and Purdue
Presidents Commission and blUed as the first nationwide
clobbered
Long
Beach
State
survey of the effect of college sports on athletes, also fou nd
100-53.
athletes were more likely than non-athletes to view themselves
Also, It was: Darlmouth 80,
as Isolated from the student body.
Boston
College 74; Lafayette 68,
Still, despite recent recruiting anil payoff scandals, the study
Army
61;
New Hampshire 93,
presented a generally optimistic account of college athletics.
Harvard
74;
North CaroUna"I feel very good··about the report," said Richard Schultz,
Wllmington
75,
Ohio University
executive director of /the NCAA, which oversees the nation's
68;
Minnesota
97,
Youngstown
major college sports. "I think it paints a very good picture of
State 64; and Wichita State 96,
intercollegiate athletics and It paints a very good picture of
George Mason 75.
what the Institutions are doing with their athletic programs. ,
Other games Included Okla. "While the study obvlous11shows there are sol)'le problems In
homa
State 70, · Samford 44;
Intercollegiate athletics, In my mind It shows far more positives
Louisiana
Tech 75, Fresno State
~than It does negatives and it gives us an opportunity to zero in on
59:
San
Diego
State83, Baylor 58:
some of !bose negatives ahd some of those problems and deal
Idaho
50,
Washington
State 40:
with them,"
and
Southern
Cal
97.
U.S.
InterThe study compared athletes in the major revenue-producing
national
61.
sports of football and basketball with athletes In other sports
and with students Involved In such activities as school band,
student newspaper and student government The study did not
·
compare athletes with the general student population.
Interviews were held from March through July of 4,100
The Daily Sentinel
students at 42 schools participating In the NCAA Division I, the
tUSPSit5-9to)
highest level of competition.
A
Dlvlsion
or Multbnedla, Inc.
Tbe football and basketball players reported that during a
season they spent about 30 hours each week In practice, games
Published every afternoon, Monday
throogh Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
or other team preparations while only about 25 hours studying
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
or In the classroom (13.7 hours In class, 11.6 hours studying)lishlng Company /Multimedia, Inc.,
In addition, even during the offseason, the football and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se•
cond class postage paid aJ Pomeroy,
basketball players reported spending more time with their
Ohio.
•
sports !ban !bey do In the classroom or studying.
Member: Unlted Press International,
The study also said athletes report II difficult to make
Inland Dally Press Association and the
academics their top priority despite the greater availability of
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
tutors and academic counselors.
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
The athletes, particul!lrly the football and basketball players,
New York. New York 10017.
were more llkely to complain abo!! I a lack of spending money
POSThiASTER Send address changes
than the non-athletes despite their much greater levels of grant
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Qlurt St.,
and scholarship money, the study found.
Pomerl1/. Ohio 45769.
The study found several similarities between athletes and
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Other findings in the study by the American· Institutes for
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-39 percent of football and basketball players and 46 percent
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Mall Subftcrlptloftl
percent of other athletes said It was harder to a~oid drugs.
Inskte Melp County
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Martin Massengale, chairman of the NCAA Presidents
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the study produced no.· '~great surpris.e s" and he expects the
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an 86-84" lead . with 19 secondS'
remaining. However, Rainey hit .
a twisting lay-up with 16 seconds
left to· send the game Into
overtime.
At Oxford, Ohio, Jay Edwards

Survey reveals .college
athletes ignore academics

.Rio Grande edges Tiffin Dragons
77-75 in first/ conference encounter
.

Tiffin's deadly combination of
Tyrone Trbovich and Bryan
Brown proved to be almost too
much lor host Rio Grande
Tuesday as (he Redmen battled
thelr way to a 77-75 victory over
the Dragons, their llrst Mid-Ohio
Conference win of the season.
The Red men led 60-59 with 6: 45
left on an Anthony Raymore free
throw, theflrsttimeRiohadseen
a winning margin in the game
since 15:52 in the lh'st period.
. .I felt like we were really ugly
In the first half," Coach John
Lawhorn said of the Redmen
effort. "We met the enemy and
the enemy was us. We got more
aggressive In the second half,
which we needed. When we don't
play aggressively, we're bad."
The lead rocked violently to
and fro as the game opened, but a
Brown bucket and a 3-polnt field
goal from Brad Reaman opened
up the margin to five (13-8) at
-14:46. From there, the Dragons
took control to stay ahead 40-32 at
the half. Fighting Tiffin's hungry
offense, the Redmen saw some
bright spots In their game,
partlcularly on key shots by
guards Jimmy Kearns and Brian
Watkins.
The visitors pulled ahead by as
much as 13 (55-42) in the second
period, but a Watkins3-polnterat
9:45 sparked the Red men comeback. Raymore, Marc Gothard
'and Mike Tidwell broke through
to cut the margin to lour (59-55)
at 6:59. Official~ then whistled
Tiffin's Mike Conrad, allowing
Raymore to sink a free throw,
with two Ti&lt;!well charity shots

.
slicing the advantage to one Tiffin, Brown netted 22 points.
(59-58) at 6:56 .. Raymore then
Trbovich racked up 17, Don
Went in for a bucket to hand hls
Wllllams contributed 11 and
team the lead.
Reaman had 10.
The Dragons, whose last game
The Redmen will host Clncinwas Nov. 22, were not to be natl Bible Saturday at 7:30p.m.
denied and tied the score (69-69)
for Foodland Nigh' Free tickets
·at 3:09 on Reaman's outside shot are available at area Food land
and a free throw from .Trbovich.
stores.
Gothard, Kearns and Bemilng
In other conference action
then sank a combination of free . Tuesday, Malone edged Cedatthrows and a basket to give the vUie 80-76 and Mount Vernon
Redmen their biggest lead (77- Nazarene defeated Walsh 88·76.
72) with 35 seconds remaining.
Box score:
"We're going to be okay down
RIO GRANDE ('77)- Anthony
the road," Tiffin Coach Jim Raymore, 8-3-19:· Jimmy
Hammond commented. "We Kearns, 1-4-1-15: Mike Tidwell,
may be a little green, but we're 3-2-8; LarryBennlng,1-3-5; Marc
going to be good and we're Gothard, 7-2-16; Brian Watkins,
rapidly reaching that point."
3-2-0-12: John Lambcke, 1-0-2:
The Dragons, now 2-2, are . TOTALS 24-6-11-77.
considered the comeback team
.TIFFIN (75) -.Thad Patrick,
of the MOC following last sea- 1-3-5; Tyrone Trbovich, 8-1-17:
son's 6-24 overall slate and 3-11 Bryan Brown, 9-4-22; Mike Conconference finish. Hammond felt rad, 3-2-8: Brad Reaman, 2-2-0·
the team currently hits "certain 10; Steve Maglll, 1-0-2; Don
points where we lose our compo- Wllllams, 3-1-2-11. TOTALS 27-3sure, and we have to overcome 12-75.
that. At slx minutes In this game,
REDMEN NOTES: Although
we faced that sltuatlon, and a
well-coached team like Rio capl- Brian Watkins scored 17 points to
lead hls teammates to a 68-67 win
tallzes on it."
In a game where foul shooting over Musklngum, the 5-10 guard
made the difference, the Dragfrom Columbus actually poste.d a
ons finished ahead at 70.6 perc~nt game high of 21 in last week's
(12 ofl7 attempts). Rio sank llof 106-83 defeat of Bluffton. Watkins
17 for 64.7 percent.
scored five 3-polnters in that
"Gothard and Raymore were
game.
strong for us down the stretch,'.'
Tuesday's Tiffin encounter has
Lawhorn remarked. "There was
openecl a home series for the
also great support from the
Redmen. They will host Cincinbench."
nati Bible Saturday, Shawnee
Raymore led all scorers with 19 State on Dec. 5, Defiance on Dec.
points, with Gothard adding 16, 10 and Lake Erie on Dec. 13.
Kearns 15 and Watkins 12. For Game times are 7:30 p.m.

Sports briefs
Auto Racing
The Miami Grand Prix for
International Motor Sports Association cars will have a new
sponsor next year. The seventh
annual race through the streets
of downtown Miami will be called
the Nlssan Grand Prix of Miami
and run March 5, promoter
Ralph Sanchez said, The deal
between Nlssan and Miami Motorsports Is for three years.

' Redwomen host WVS on Thursday-

PIZZA BURGER

With an eye toward Improving
Following a grueling road trip Monica Lepley (5-8, sophomore)
!heir 1-2 record, the Rio Grande to !be Francis Marlon Tourna- Is .likely to start as shooting
Redwomen re-enter season play ment last weekend, West VIrgiguard, the point guard position
Thursday when they host West nia State was 1-3 as the week may fall to Lisa Bell (5-6,
Virginia State at 7: 30 p.m. In began and was to play at WVIAC sophomore).
.
Lyne Center.
During
last
weekend's
tournarival Glenville State on Tuesday.
The Redwomen last played
Basketball
The trip forced veteran Coach ment, the Lady Yellow Jackets
Nov. 19 In the championship Robert "Bud" Francis to revise fell to the College of Charleston
Houston Rockets forward Bergame of the Bevo Francis Clas- hls probable list of starters, with 86-72 and St. Augustine 112-85. nard Thompson, who Is suffering
sic, where they lost to Wingate senior Tracy Hamilton (5-10)
They defeated North Carolina from a wrist injury, was placed
Central
91-68. Earlier, WVS lost on the Injured list and wlllmlssat
(N.C. ) 100-96, but not before Rio anticipated to start at center.
small forward Lea Ann Mullins
Its opener Nov. 17 at Alice Lloyd, least five games. His place on the
Tammy Richards 15-8, freshscored a career high of 46 points man) will be the probable starter 84-81.
roster will be taken by Purvis
Last season, WVS fell to the Short, who missed the first 13
.and broke her own record for the as small forward and Regina
most points scored In a single Marshall (5-9, sophomore) wlll Redwomen 92-88 in a game games of the season because of
game by a forward for the be at power forward slot. While playe~ Dec. 3 at Institute, W.Va. hamstring itlljurles In both legs . .
•
Redwomen.
Mulllns' play In the second
- period of that game - which saw
the Redwomen down 56-44 at the
half - sparked a comeback !bat
.saw the hosts slice a large
Wingate margin to two with three
seconds left to play . A palrof free
throws by Wingate's Ann Han. cock gave the Lady Bulldogs the
win.
toLJ9h as our .winters ca •
p.s
•
n 9ef C
Earlier, the Redwomen had
' Of
fallen 71-60 in their season opener
urnbia has .
Ideas !o help make
Nov. 15 at West VIrginia Tech,
but bested Lenoir-Rhyne (N.C.)
, 6 Co\umbla ~erv\ce S)'st
,
, needs, and
85-70 In the second game of the
•te paJ\ o
.
ern rhat's designed to meet you
.
•o~
.
Bevo Francis Classic.
'
t·ciefltCoach Cheryl Flelltz wlll probef '
wintedzing
your
home
to
ener9Y
ably rely on her two seniors,
nS on
llllko I\
d -ore
re \I~"
~
more comtortable . . an
MuUins (5· 7) and Holly Hastings ,.
8
d""l
(5-9) as small forward and power
•''
your vu •- ·
We
number
on
forward, respectively. Starting
can also tie a resource sl'lOuld winter do a
nd summer.
point guard will probably be Beth
.,ylnter a
Coli (5-6, sophOmore), while
0 ttl•·
Our 8udgel
vr gas
ut you
Betsy Bergdoll (5-7, freshman) Is
No .
Payment Plan can even out IJO
star'lces p
expecied to start as shooting
~-, mgs, no surprises·~
·at ctr
guard. At center will be Ann
·t1 sPecl
Barnitz (6-0, fres hman) .
'ndividual Payment schedule
'
•n'
Willie Mulllns is leading · the
.
~
~0
.,.
.
thB toLl
team In scoring- 89 total points
4r,C1 be .
\"leiP
uoderstand what Winter can bring, especiallY
Yona that. we'll gtadh'
tJia we
for 'a three-g&lt;~me average of 29.6
coiLifff
d us a\ways read'-/ \o l"le\fl
- Has tlngs is reasserting her
· 1 IS eI
'II tin
.
sklll at rebounding. The former
The po1n
'
~ou
.
mtortat&gt;Ie Ior you .
so
ore co
Teays Valley High School stancall. ,ers l'fl
dout has ave~aged 10.6 rebounds
tfjC8 8
&gt;1'1 11'1
•
Give Your Columbia GaS 0
f1'1a~ 8
and 15 points every contest.
n \O
Barnltz Is also a top rebounder
we ce
'Ne wan\ \o do everytl'!lflQ
with five per game, In addition to
a three-game average ol 13
points per outing. Ex-Gallla
Academy High School scoring
leader Bergdoll has also made an
Impressive debut with a total of
19 points and 100 percent (six for
six) on free throws.

S1.24
WITH FRIES ............. S1.7,9

'

ADOLPH'S.
DAIRY VALLEY

WE HAVE IDEAS

mHELP SOFIEN

WIN IEH'S BLOW.

•••r•

1

fhem

a oule
-';:,;._..-

fJerson'aJ situation .

"

..

n•

COLUMBIA GAS
•,'f

•

•

I .

�.

.

..., _____

. )I

Eastertt ~outlasts Southern quintet, ~97 -87

· -Gallia~knocks_oH .BObcats, 72-53 _--.. ;. . .,_. . By 0- SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP News start
North Gallla had four of Its
starters score In double figures
en route to a 72-531eaguewln over
Kyger Creek Tuesday night.
"It was a very physical game,"
said Pirate skipper Bruce Wilson, who witnessed his team win
In their firsi league game.
However, "Kyger Creek played·
with more Intensity than we did,
especially In the second quarter," Wilson said.
·
' 'We picked up our Intensity In
the . second quarter, and we
picked better shots," said Kyger
Creek boss Larry Markham.
11

However,

we

didn't

have

enough pa lienee on offense In the
third quarter, and we dl(jn't get
the shots we needed."
In the first quarter, the Bucs
began asserting themselves Immediately Inside, as forward Don
Mays scored on an Inside j11111per
six seconds after Up-off. It took
only 25 seconds before KC guard
Chad Leach hit a short to tie the
contest. Leach, who sank four of
the Bobcats' five three-pointers,
was the top gun on the floor with
26 points.
Though North began to take the
KEARNS PASSES OUTSIDE - Rio GrBDde guard Jimmy
upper hand toward the end of the
Kearns (30) pas-.tbe ball outside after gelllnl! Inside In the
first quarter, Bobcat guard/forsecond half of Tuesday nlght\s game against Tiffin at Lyne Center.
ward Alan Denney was able to
The Redmen came from behind to win 77-75.
stick In a three-pointer from the
·' right side In response to Pirate
point guard Greg Glassburn's
long bumb less than a minute
earlier. Glassburn ·responded to
Alan Denney's long bomb with
his second and final deep shot In
the
closing minutes of the open..
Ing act. When the first frame ,
Olrl8 Oltlo Hlab Scboel Bu llltball
..,
ended, the Pirates seemed to be
NHL results
Tuetdllt'. Nov. 11
headed fpr calm seas with a 21-11
Arcanwn
18,
Broekvllle
31
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
A.urera tt, IUrtu• J'J
Tur!!ld!Q'' I Res .. s
lead.
BehtNur 51, Nor_.k 14
Detroit 5, NV blandera 3

Pbu.delphl• 5, Be1tonl
W•Napoa 4, St. IAultl :J
NY &amp;uan'• 4, Wlntllpe:c :1
Mlnnr•MI, ()!leap 2
Vaneoawr 3, Calpry3 (tie)
LoiS Anple11 8, New Jeney 3
Wedlteldt,y'l Games
Moncreal at HarUord, 7:35p.m.
qu.,bec alBid'falo, 1':35 p.m.
WMhln(tonati"IUibursh, 7:35p.m.
Vucoa~r at Edmonton, 9:35p.m .

TtaindiiJ'• Game~~

MJ8Jiello&amp;ll at Boston, •let&amp;
Montreal a1 Philadelphia. niP'
Quebec¥ Detroit, nlgta
NV II Ianden at st. LoMb!, nlpt

NY Ranp:nat CalprJ , nlsht

Tor Olio at Los An~ ... alcht

Transactions
Bueball '
calc her RlchGed!n'n

80s~ on -SI pd

loa 1-,earcontl"''ct.
rttt.,uqh- Re-slped flvf! member11
of IICOlldng department Dom Scala,
Gerry Ganlner, Steve Demeter, An1el
F1peroa and Fred Goodman: named
Woodf Huyke managf'!' and Bruce JUs on
pichlng coach o( Bradenton ol Hoolde
Leape (1\).
NY Meta - Named Gerry ]Ju nlicker ,
director ol minor leape oprrat.kiM and
Bohb)o Floyd minor leape coordllat.or.
Balllll!tball
Clllcago - ActlvatedCh aries Da\f 11 off
the inJun!d lbit.
Hou!ion - Placed forward Bernard
TllompBOft on the lnJun!d liSt..
Co IIese
Colllll'lbla - Football coach Larey

McEIN"IlVY reslped.
Football
Dallas - Signed defensive end Chad
Henlinp, efleetlve when he completes
his military ohllp.tlon In IB93.
Detrott - Slped Lynn Dickey u
qiiU'terback t'flac h.
Hoc key
llarUonl - Reclalrned left wtarerTom
Martln on waivers lrcm Mln~Esota .
Mln~»cU Aulgned delenaemaJI
Unk Gaet:r. tu K li.huna:r.ou of the IHL.
Philadelphi a- Acqidre.d cenWr Mike
Bullant lrMl St. Lou\8 for center Peter
Zczel.
Pltt!ilu rr;h - Up fll'&amp;ded contract ol
c enter Mario Lemieux.

New Jcr~~ey al Boat on. 7:30p.m.
Pnrtlandat Phlladdpftla. 7: 30p.m .
San Antonio at Mla,~nl, 7: 30p.m.
lndiiiDil at Detroit, 1: 30 p.m .
Hou!lton at DaUas, 8! 31 p.m.
Chtcaro tat Utah, 9:30p.m.
Seatlle al LA Lakers, 10:30 p. m.
Nr.w York At LA Cllppeu, IO: llll p.m .
Bo:dng
WBC Fe atllerwelaN Tit te
Me lhn11rne, Australia - J eff Fenech
Yl. Geo~e Navarro
Continental America~~ Jaalor We1Wr·
welpt T1Ue
Dec roll - Courtney Hooper va. Howard
Stewart
Continental Americas FeadlerweiJht
Tit~
'
Detroit - Tom Jomson ""· Gil
Co nueras
Super Bantamwel p:hl!l
Detroit - Hurley Snr.1d n. Mlhony
Flores
\to'~IU!rwel ghls

Aaron Davfi vs. Larr,

Ho ckey
MontreiLIIIJ llartlonl , 7: 3S p.m .
Quebec at Buffalo, '7;35 p.m.
Wawhlnl(un at Pltt.sburx .. , 7:3~ p.m.
Vancouwr Ill Edmonc.on, &amp;:SS p.m.

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC .
Tueild"Y '" ~WI.!!
, Bolton ltlO, New ,Jer.ey 93
Ch IVIotte 99, Miami 84
Atlanta 120, S*' Ant onlo 104

ln diWJa 107, 08 rolt f:IK
Milwaukee 119, l"ortland 114
Phoenb' 124, H0oulitun 1117
Denwr 1311, New Vo.rk 119
Sea&amp;tle lot, Utah 102
Goldell Statt 109, Chlcqo 99
Sacramenlo 123, LA Cllppera liS
W edne5d~'• Games
New Jer!ll!y llt Bolllon, 7:30p.m.
Portland at PhlladelpHa, 1: 30 p.m .

San Antonio at Miami. 7:30p.m .
Indiana at Detroit. 1:30 p.m.
Hou!Jion at Dallu, &amp;ao p.m.
Chlcq:o ld Uhah, 9:31p.m .
SnUie at LA Lakers, 10: 30 p.m .
New York at LA Cllppen, 10:30 p.m.
Thu I'ICI-.y's Games
Phlladelp,.aal Cb •lotte, nlpt
WMiinAtonat Atlanta, nlpt

Cl"el .. ht Mllw-llee, allht
De•ftl' at Sacnunento, nlpr.

Grid pairings
Hllll School Foolball
Ch ampionahlp•
AI Ohio stadium, C.lumbua
Frl~, Dec.~

Dh'lldon V

a.m.

{Il-l) v.. Archbold 111-1).11
. ~·

IHv.,.lonll
Akron Bu clatel (Il-l) v1. Ste.beavllle
( 13-0),1:30 p.m.
Saturd~ , Dec. 3
DI\'ISion rv
Canton Cenlral Calbollc ( 11-%) n.
Ver•lllel ( l t- 1), II a. m.

Dl••ton Ill

1\kron Sl. VI nee at-St. Mar)' ( 11-1 1 u.
lrorun (11-0). 3~ H p.m.
SUnllft', Dee. 4
Dl••lon I
CJe..-eJ•d !Jt. f&amp;"natllls (IJ.I) VI,
Clnclnliltl PriiiOdoa f U-J), I

,.m.

\
'

.
•

m

conere Basketball Re&amp;ull!l

By Untied Pres~ lnter1111Ue~

BenUey M. lAwelllll
Bran *Ia 81, Mrr 111

Rrookpcwt IO!i, Robtrt11 Wt!!IIL IS (OT)

CentnaJ Coan. St. 74, Hot.tra II

Cbeyaey to, Delaware St. 8810Tl
Colllll'lbla1S. Mantatw. 13
Dartmoa&amp;tlllll, Boston Collece 74
Delaware 77, W.utin ..on Coil. 71
Hua110n 10&amp;., New Bru111wkk 13
tloMJa,y i$, Hunter74
Lat.wetle Q, Army 81
Llll Brooklyn II. Concordia 76
Martst 104, Mt. St. Vlnctnt l'i8
Md.- Baumorr Co. 'lCI, Tow10aSt 6'1'
MoN"DOuth 68, Drew H
New H1m .... lre 93, Hanarf14
NY Polyllecb 53, Ste\fenll Ttc1141
O.wtro St. 88, cortland St. M (!OT)
PSU·Behrencl 1%, Thiel 75
SE MM8. 110.1 E, Na;r:arene 104 iZOT)
Springfield 87, So. Conn. St'. 85

Swarthmore 88. Neurmn 56
Ur11tnus 112. Rutler•Camft t1

.. ..

WMhl niJI:on&amp; JellersonW, Dendllon5t
W. New Eapnd 18, We.leyan 93

"

Alabama St. IS, Florida UM 8t
AWu m 7ol, GeorwtaSiate 71
Caml*eiiiJO, St. Anirew's 67
Flortfa St. 110, nortdalatl. 15
Jamw Madbon N, VMIII%
MJd. Tenn. St. ltl, 80\'let NatiO•Is M
(O'T)

Pro scores

Mopdo~

Cln hrpln sa, Nctrwood 35
Cln Mercy II, Colenln 28
Cln UruJI~ 41. All deraon If
Cln Readln(D. (]a ll&amp;c»nf8
Cia Won 4l, Cln Sycamore Z4
Clalnllaft Hll14l, Lavelan4 39
Cia AI km tO, On Greenlflla Z5
Cln McAule, 44, Oil OakHIIIII 38
Cln McNicholu 41, 0eol'letown 44
Cln Westen Hilla IS. Harrkon 45
Cln Purcell ta, Hamlllon a.ll.n 4!
Cln Norlllwllll U, N Bend Ta,ylor liJ
Cln st Ur•ula ~~ . ()a Walnat HillA II
Cln Prl.:etoah; On MtNotre Dame83
Cle Laurel 47, Richmond Hl1 48
ColdwiJ er 71, W11JUi o-. U
Copaey n, Akr vaaceat 44
Cu,ah•r• FallA '21, Akr Sprill&amp;fltld 12
Dan"Uie II, .Jo...,.town N'rtdce 3S
DIY PatteMJon41, FalrtlornS4
Deer ParkU, Mar'-monl t3
Defiance ta, Wa~aeo aM
Dixie II, Trl Coudly N 17
Fl'anldln Monroe 14, Bradford 34
Gran \flUe 47, tlohnltown U
Hamil on Roe• O,l..l{tlt Ml1111l .U
JUnp MUll U, Golbea M
Llkfl1dleAcadS3. Mell•latBapU! •
Uma Perr, tl, aten•a tJnlftli41
Uma ShiiWIIIIt 47, Delphae 81' .John 30
Lodl Clo\ferleaf 54, Stroapvi.IJr. 39
M..t!lra to, Flnaeytown 25
M•IOa Local3t, Fort Recowry %8
Me•na 17, Berea t2
Middlefield C&amp;nlllal a&amp;., Perry tt
MlnM' 51, "nuNa 5!
Norlon 38, Akr Kr.nmore 31
Norlh RoyaltC*II, Berea Mldptlrk 24
Olmlled Fall&amp; 7t, Mell• Buckeye SS
· Rlc~ft~d Re\fere 61, Akr Nbrtll54
IU\ferdale U, llenton 33
Si Henq 38,' Ver•llie!! 33
StMary. 53, New Brem~tn U
Stow 41, Aln Flre.toae 33
Trenlon Edcewood U, Fairfield 39
Twla Valley South li, Eaton 64
Van Wert 59, Parkway 51
We~t Cari'GIIt011 511, V Mdalla 32

Adelphl81, DowHnr Coli. 7S
American U, 111, Clark i Ga.) 62

Buketblll

Ohio

Celh• It, Gree~~dlleS8 (Zot)
Cln C~E U. Wyoml111 S8

""''

Calendar

Detroit Nichols

Bellbroek 71, DQ Or 32
Blancltmter 41, 8prhliboro S4
Bru•wlc:lliM, Jlredl.nllle 50
lluton Berkalllre M, NewiMtl')' 14
Canal Fu•on NW IZ, Cuii'NI SeuUI4S

•

UNC-WIImlnJ'on 71, Ohio U. liB
Old Domlnkta 70, William 6 Mar)' 62
RoAne~ 71, Greenllboro Collere 88
W•hlncton I Lee 94, Hamplt&gt;nSydney 14
M'beellnr ole~Jdt 98. Shepherd 10
Midwest
1\uplnlfl 81, St. Sc ltota,tlca i9
Ball State 15, Cardl.-1 Strltch 53
~., ... St. ( 0 .) 84, Ohio Dominican 81
Chlcqo Si. 112, Oakland 56
Dllnols 116, Metro St. H

111.-0IIcaro Wi, Loyola (Ill.) 114
In IIana 111, MIMnl (Ohio) '711
lnllana st. 'lCI, Te•u \\lea~yun 66
Iowa 16, J)rllke 12
Iowa State 18, O'elrhlon 58
Lake Erie 74, D)tle 71
Malore 81, Cedantlk 16
MIRIII'!Iota 11, Younptown St. 64

Mo-8oulherniS. Mo-Rella 6!
MI . Se•rloM, Lalr.eland14
MI . Verma Nazarene 118. W&amp;lllh 78
Nor111eaeler n 81. '21, Lake Foreat 11
Notlltrnlowa 114, A.upl!ltana (S. D. t88
Punhle Jll,lA . . Beach st. n
Rio Grande 'M, Tifft• 15
St. Norbert h, Wla.-Oalllullll 17
WI diU St. M, Gee11e MMon 11
Wll.-81 IMd II, St. Ol.t 81
Wla. ·WbNe. IU, C.rardla~Wia .) 811
WIA.·PIM*e. 11:11Tria. Dlrllllan 88
8ouCbwnl
llardiDIIm~ 71, M&amp;rJ H.rdla·Bylor

.

OlllllloiM 8&amp;. 1'1, Samford M
Lan . .oan, 8oldtleraN.arene 11
IA.Ur.a Tech 11, Free• 8t61.
Labbodl. Chrla&amp;IM 11, 8ulllou 71
Paa Amerlua 17, TrbdtJ Tau n

SulMepSta&amp;e sa. Bar~r u ·

8W Olllaboma 71, Olr.lt. ftaptiat II

w...

o\lr Foree '7t, M ..... St. 54

Athleta Ia Action II. Orepn U
CaJ.Ilap&amp;llll

n, Pomoaa·PII~er ta

C.l-l.ulheran Ill LaVer~ IX
Cell hal Wutt. 8t, Padflct.theran It

E. Waahlactoa a, Whitworth II

Graacl C..roa H.IW. TIMmM Coli. tt

, lclallolt. WIIM•I*O•II ••

MlealeCollere71, ...,...,. ._ell
OreJOnTech 114, Bawalloi.N II
8ou.era Cal t'f, ti.I.IJIIL II
Whittier 111. tiC au Dlero

n

But Kyger had other Ideas.
Leach sank a three-pointer from
the left side nine seconds Into the
second quarter to cut the visitors'
lead to 21-14, the last time KC
would be behind by less !han nine
until senior center Mike Reese,
who Markham said "played a
heckuva game In spite of giving
some In size (to Pirate postman
Rusty Denney)," scored his only
points of the game on a long
jumper to cut North's lead to
33-26.
Glassburn hit the front end of a
one-and-one opportunity at the
2:25 mark In round two, only to
miss the second shot and freeze
the Bucs' lead at 34-26. At this
point Leach, taking advantage of
the Pirates' defensive shift from
man-to-man to zone, went to
work. His two three-pointers
were responsible for cutting the
Pirates' lead to four, setting the
stage for sean Denney's long
·jumper with -56 seconds left that
halved North's lead to two at
36-3.4.
Pirate guard Benjl Blackburn
hit a long jumper to re~tore the
four-point advantage at 38-34
with 44 seconds left, but the
Bobcats survived a missed oneand-one situation by Reese to get
another crack at the one-andone. KC forward John Sipple
sank the flrstshot, but missed the
second, which made the score
38-35 with 24 seconds left. Sean
Denney had a chance to bring the
Bobcats to within one after he
Intercepted a pass by Rusty
Denney after a rebound, but time
ran out before Sean D~nney could
get the shot off.
Rusty Denney, who finished
the game with a team-high 19

points, had eight points In the made a run on us," Markham
first half, as did M~ys and said.
With the Pirates leading by no
Glassburn. Though the second
quarter belonged to Leach, who less !han seven points In the final
had 13 of his 17flrst-halfpolnts In act, there were three longthat frame, It was becoming distance net connections made In
apparent that without Inside · the last eight minutes. Lead!!
scoring from Reese to comple- sank one from the light side with
ment Leach's outside game, the 6: 011eft, and two other PiratesBobcats were going to have sophomore Brian Stout and seproblem§.agalnst a Pirate squad nior Chester Hess - were also
whose offense was scoring Inside successful downrange. Stout hit ·
his 26 seconds after Leach scored
and ou tslde.
•
·
In the third quarter, the Bucs his final three-pointer, and Hess
returned to playing man-to-man burled his with 17 seconds left,
defense, and Blackburn, a 5-8 after which the Pirate bench .
senior, was matched with Leach, erupted In shou Is and cheers for
a 5-10 senior. "Blackburn did a Hess.
In !he reserve game, the
better job (than Glassburn, a 5-7
senior who started the game Pirates won 58-21. Chris Tackett
matched with Leach) because of led the Bucs with 16, and Dave .
Wellman led the Bobcats with
his height," Wilson said.
The first 2:30 of the third six.
The Pirates (3-0, 1,0) will host
quarter was a scoreless eternity
until Leach put Kyger within Eastern, and the Bobcats (0-2,
striking distance of Its first lead 0-1) will travel upriver to take on
with a short jumper that cut the Southern In Racine.
NOR'l11 GALLIA (71) - Ruoty Denney
Bucs: lead to 38-37. Twenty-nine
8-0-3-19: Greg Glassburn 3-2-1-13; Brian
seconds later, Blackburn stole Stout 3-1·2-11; Don Mays 4·0·2'10; Ben(l
the ball from Leach and took the Blackburn 3-~1 -7: Todd Petrie '1·1·2·7;
ball downcourt for a layup that Chester Hess 0-1-~3; Dar In Smith 1-0.~2.
Q.IHI-7!
gave the Pirates a 40-37 lead. TUT!ILSJl'leltl-pol ........., 28·68 {41.2
This breathing room was In- percent)
Fottl ohoollnr- 11-24 145.8 percenll
creased until North had outRebo..ta- 40 I Denney, 141
scored their hosts 17-6 In that
.boloto-19 (Stout, 7)
quarter to lead 48-41.
Steals-17 (BlackbumandGlassbum, 7
The Pirates continued to domi- each)
TunOW!I'• - 22
nate on the boards though Reese,
KYGER CREEK (53) - Chad Leach ,
outsized by Rusty Denney and 5-4-4-26; John Sipple 3·0.1-7; Sean Denney
Mays, was able to block several 3-~0-5; Ted Percy 3-~0.6; Alan Denney
MlkeReete1·0.0-2; Ernest VIllanushots and stay active In the paint. 1·1·0-5:
eva 0·0.1-1. TUT!ILS- 11-!1+68
Though Reese had some help · Fteltl-&amp;ool oltooiiD&amp; - 21-65 132.3
from Alan Denney, Ted Perry percent)
Foulohoollarr 6-9 166.7 ,p ercent)
and Sipple, the pressure-Inside
Rebountll - 31 (Jleeoe, 1ll
forced Reese to foul enough ~~ Asalllts- 5
' •
times to earn him a permanent' . !!leal•- 9 (Leach, 41_.
Tumowra-2~
seat with 5:16 left in the game. Seo~ by q...,ters
"When Reese picked up his North Gallla ................21 17 10 24-72
fourth foul that's when they Kyger Creek................ 11 24 6 12-53

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - The
ortense o_f the Clevela-nd
Browns took a major step forward this week, churning out 25
first downs with a variety of
running plays and short passes
and coming up with two fourlhq uarter touchdowns.
One name kept coming up
Monday as Cleveland coach
Marty Schottenhelmer and the
Browns' players evaluated the
17-13 victory over WashingtonKevin Mack.
Mack, who missed all or parts
of the last five games with
various injuries, rushed for 116
yards on 22 attempts against the .
slug,~:tsh

Redsklns, accounting for all but
42 yards of Cleveland's rushing
offense.
Tight end Ozzle Newsome,
asked about problems !he offense
exper-Ienced since quarterback
Bernie Kosar returned to the
lineup Oct. 23, cited the absence
of Mack and wide receiver
Webster Slaughter (broken
arm).
"We still had two pieces of the
puzzle missing. One was Kevin
Mack and the other was Webst.;r.
We got Kevil\ back yesterday and
I think we play&lt;'d as well
offensively as we have all year,"
Newsome said.
··

Bengals step closer
to berth in playoffs
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Bengals, with their
NFL No. 1 offense leaving even
the best defensive units In
shreds, are on the verge of
making the playoffs.
Cincinnati, 10-3, can clinch at
least a wild card playoff slot by
beating the 4-9 San Diego
Chargers Sunday. The game will
be In Cincinnati and the Bengals
are heavy favorites over the
lowly Chargers, who were destroyed· 48-10 by San Francisco
last Sunday.
Then, If Cincinnati beats San
Diego, the Bengals can clinch the
AFC Central division championship Dec. 11 by beating Houston.
That game, however, figures to
be tough because the contest Is In
Houston and the 9-4 Oilers still
have a shot at the division title.
Cincinnati Is fresh from one of
Its most convincing victories In
what has so far been a very
satisfying season - a 35-21
conquest of the Buffalo Bills,
11-2, theclubwlth thebestrecord
and best defense In the American
Conference.
The Bills' defense came Into
last Sunday's game allowing
opponents an average of just 270
yards a game. The Bengals
rolled up 455 yards. The Bills had
permitted an average of only 101
rushing yards a game. Cincinnati
ran for 232 yards.
The Bills defenders were Impressed with the Cincinnati offensive machine. "It's the best
olfense we've played against all
· season," said Buffalo defensive
end Art StU!.
The Bengals were potent

against B,uftalo all game long even on drives when they
couldn't quite cash ln. The
Bengals' first possession resulted In a 75-yard march to the
Buffalo 1, where the Bills'
managed their lone goal Une
stand of the day that kept
Cincinnati out of the end zone.
sun, that drive was Impressive
because It showed the Bengals'
.offensive line could open huge
holes for the running bac~lsand
offer good protection for
se'r
Boomer Eslason.
On that Initial march, Ickey ·
Woods had runs of 17, 12 and 10
yards, whll~ Estason completed
passes of 14 and 10 yards.
Woods went on to carry 26
times for 129 yards, Eslason went
on to complete 18 of 25 passes (72
percent) for 238 yards ana James
Brooks came on to run 22 times
for 93 yards to tan Buffalo's hide.
The Bengals were extremely
Impressive In the fourth quarter
with a magnificent drive that
kept Buffalo at bay after the Bills
had pulled to within 28-21. Cincinnati controlled the ball more than
nine minutes and marched 65
yards In 15 plays for a touchdown
with two minutes left !hat put the
game _out of reach at 35-21.
Despite all the offensive fireworks against a team with a solid
defensive reputation, most of the
Bengals limited their post-game
comments and were careful not
to ~ub It In against the Bills. It's
very- possible Cincinnati could
meet Buffalo again In six weeks
In the American Conference
championship game.

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3RD
7:00 P.M.
SYRACUSE FIRE STATION

. SPOISOIED IY 'SYRACUSE VOLUITRI Fll' DIPT.

BYS~WOLFE

·•

Easte~nlsnow1-1and1-0lnthe

GRA~ REBOUND - 'Soulllern's Shawn Diddle (S3) IJ'abs a
rebound against some Eastern defenders in Tuesday nlgbt'sSVAC
game on Eastern's borne court. The Eagles aent tile Tornadoes to
their aecond sll'alghl loss of the aeason with a 81-87 verdict.

BROWNS NOTES: Linebacker
Clay Matthews broke a bone In
his hand early In the Washington
game but Is expected to play
Sunday against Dallas, using a
rubber cast. Nose tackle Bob
Gollc olnjured a hamstring, butts
also expected to play this week.
Slaughter, who broke his arm
Oct. 16 against Philadelphia, Is
not expected to return before the
playoffs, If Cleveland makes the
playoffs. But there Is some
chance he wtll return earlier.
"I think he (Slaughter) Is going
to be a couple weeks yet,"
Schottenhe!mer said. "The Information I have Is that he might,
might be read for the last regular
season game."
.The Dallas game Sunday at
Cleveland Stadium Is a sellout.
Some 6,000 tickets remain for the
final ho'm e game Dec. J.8 against
Houston.

FITCH SCORES- Eaalern'sSeott
(34) scorestWoofhlsU
points as the host Eagles downed the Tornadoes, 8'l,871n the 1988-89
SVAC cage _opener for both teams. r

Columbus gets Olyn~pic Marathon trials

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In 1992, the city will be
observing the 500th anniversary
of the voyage of Christopher
Columbus to the New World.
Columbus, qhlo, Is the largest
city In the nation named for that
explorer.
The city has already been
awarded the prestigious International floral exhibit - AmeriFlora '92 -for that year.
The TAC has not selected the
date lor the marathon trials, but
Is looking at April 11. 18, or 25. Columbus officials favor April
18, two days before the outdoor
portion of AmertFiora '92 opens .

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Southwestern senior Zane Col-'
ley sank two technical-foul shots
with one second left 'In Tuesday
night's league game against
visiting Hannan Trace to give the
Highlanders a 65-63 victory.
"We almost blew It," said
Southwestern head coach Jim
Walker. "We were up by three
when (Hannan Trace's J.J.)
Bevan came In the game. We
knew he was on the floor, but for
some reason he was left unguarded, and he made a threepointer to tie the game at 63.
When they tried to substitute
again, they had six men on the
court, and after several seconds
the referees called a technical
foul against Hannan Trace.''
Walker went on to say that the
·game would not have been as
close, but "we missed a lot easy
shots In the fourth quarter'' after
the Highlanders broke a 26-22
halftime deficit to take a 49-40
lead at the end of the third
quarter, That was a quarter that
saw the Patriot five · hit seven
three-pointers en route to outscorlng the Wildcats 27-14 In that
period.
"At halftime, we changed our
offense to go against the Wildcats' 2-3 defense In the third
quarter," said Walker. "In the
fourth quarter, I was disappointed with our play In the
fourth quarter because we
missed a lot of shots then. We
have · problems with hitting

EASTERN (91) '- Mike Frost 1 -~6-26;
Scott Fltch 7-9-1-15; ShawnSavc&amp;"5-G-5·)5;
Michael Martlr1 6·0.3-15; Kenny Caldwell
2·1·4·11: Chris Lance2-0.5-9; Chad Sinclalr
3-0·0·6. TOTAL'!- 3H-24-9'1
•
SOuniERN (81) - Dave McMlllm\
8-1+20; Chad 1'aylor 1-5·1·18; Andy Ba~r
6-1-~15; Shawn Diddle 3-0·1-7; Todd
•Grindstaff 1-0-4-6; Mike Amos 2-0-0-4·
Brad 'Maynard 1·0-2-4; Chris Murphy
1-0·2·4: Chris Stout 2-0-0-4; Brent Shuler
1-0·1-J; Hank Cleland 1 - ~0.2. TOTAL'! fl-7--l~tl'l

Score by quaners
Southern ........ ............. 17 · 27 18 25-8i
Eastern ... .. ................. J7 32 26 22-97

CHRISTMAS
BAZAAR
SAT., DEC. 3
AT THE HOME OF
GERILDIIE CLELAND
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Our Store Hours
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Score by quarters
.
Hannan Trace ... 11 :s 14 23-63
Southwestern ..... 10 12 27 16-65

ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) Derrick Thomas, a 230-pound
senior at Alabama, was named
· winner Tuesday of the fourth
annual Butkus Award as the
nation's outstanding college
linebacker.

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layups In pressure situations,"
Walker added.
Hannan Trace (1-2, 0-1) wtll
host Symmes Valley Friday
night.
SOUTHWESTERN (115)
Zane Colley 3-2-2-14; Dave Mershon 0-4-0-12; Mike Walker 3-0-612; Jesse Ehman 5-0-0-10; Joe
Hammond 0:3-0-9; Bill Hager
2-0-2-6; John Ehman 1-0-0-2.
TOTALS- U-9-10-65
HANNAN TRACE (63)- Bill
Bailey 9-0-8-26; Tim Brumfield
4-1-3-14; J.J : Bevan 1-1-1-6; Rich
Cornell 3-0-0-6; Craig Rankin
1-0-1-3; Scott Caldwell 1-0-0-2.
TOTALS - 22-2-13-63

Alabama lineman
cops 'Butkus award

DINNER FOR TWO

POIEIOY
STORE OILY

OP

W L
P OP
: Eastern ............... 1 0 · 97 87
; North Gallla ........ 1 0 72 53
. Southwestern .......1 0 65 63
' Oak Hill .............. 1 0 64 46
Soulhetn.............. O 1 87 97
Hannan Trace ..... 0 1 63 65
Kyger Creek ........0 1 53 72
Symmes Valley ...0 1 46 64 .
TOTAlJ! .............. 4 · 4 1147 M7
Tuesday's results
North Gallla 72, Kyger Creek 53
Southwestern 65, Hannan Trace
63
.
Eastern 97, Southern 87 ·
Oak Hill 64, Syll)mes Valley '46
Friday's 8chedule
Symmes Valley at Hannan Trace
Southwestern ai Oak Hill
Eastern at North GalUa
Kyger Creek at Southern

-, TEAM

35,000 ITU .... S306.00
40,000 BTU.",s5o2.00
50,000 BTU .... S6,06.00
65,000 nu_,S652.oo
85,ooo BTU".. sno.s3

,,

SVAC STANDINGS
(All games)
TEAM
WL
P
North Gallla ........3 0 211
Southwestern ....... 2 0 153
Hannan Trace .....1 2 197
Eastern ...............l 1 170
Kyger Creek ........O 2 127
Oak Hill .............. 1 1 119
Southern .............. 0 2 .139
Syinmes Valley ... 0 2 97
. (SVAC only)

WARM MORNING
HEATERS

OPEN
· -'I AM·4:30
Ferrellgas
PM

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The city of Columbus wlllhos t the
1992 Olympic marathon trials,
and could get the 1990 and 1991
national marathon
championships.
The International Competition
Committee of Athletic Congress
voted unanimously Tuesday io
award the .marathOn trials to
: Columbus. The Men's Long Distance Running Committee,
which meets Friday to pick ihe
sites for the 1990 and 1991
national marathon championships, Is expected to give Columbus strong consideration.
, The TAC serves as the governIng budy of track and field In-the
; United States and Will seleCt the
. Olympic track and field teams
· for the 1992 Olympic In Barcelona, Spain.
"I'm extremely pleased for
Columbus, " said Greg Lashutka,
chairman of the Greater Columbus Sports Committee. "It will be
an exciting and positive addition
to the 1992 events. It's just
another Important step for us."

SVAC standings

I HARDWARE I
71

percent;-was- ·8&gt;16 from- 3- polnt------1.
land,andhitjust12of18fromthe
line.
Southern won the battle of the
boards 38-28, led byMcMlllan's 9,
and Brad Maynard and Diddle
with 7 each. Frost had 8 for
Eastern and Martin 6.
•
SHS had 14 turnovers, 10 the
first half. and had 7 steals. EHs
had 11 T.O. 'sand 11 steals.
Southern won the reserve
game to go 2-0 with a 63-40 win
over EHS. Roy Johnson led the
way with 24 points, while Michae1
Kincaid added 10,John Hoback 7.
Richard Deaver 6, and Jeremy
Rose,6.
•
For Eastern Jeff Durst had 14,
MlkeWheelerS,andMattFinlaw
5.
Eastern goes to North Gallla
Friday and Southern hosts Kyger
Creek.
Score by quarters
.
Solilhern .............. 17 27 '18 25-87
Eastern ......... ..... . 17 32 26 22-97

Southwestern tops Hannan Trace, 65-63

Baseball
Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher
Brian Fisher underwent arthroscopic surgery on his right
shoulder to examine a cyst and to
do minor repair work. Team
orthopedist Dr. Jack Failla, who
performed the surgery, said
Fisher should be ready to start In
spring training. .. . Milwaukee
Brewers center fielder Robin
Yount underwent successful
surgery to remove a blood clot
from his right thigh. The team
said Yount would remain hospitalized overnight. Yount Injured
the leg Sept. 1 sliding .... New
York Mets center fielderA:en
Dykstra, a longtime tobacco ,
chewer, announced he Is giving ;
up the habit. The announcement
came at a news conference at the
Hollywood studios of "Family
Medical Center." After the news
conference, Dykstra taped a
segment for the ·syndicated series. The episode, which will air
the day after Christmas, tells the
true story of a high school student
who chews tobacco, develops Up
cancer and Is forced to undergo
reconstructive surgery, leaving
his face permanently disfigured.
. .. Allee R. Kuhn, mother of
former baseball commissioner
Bowie Kuhn, died Monday In St.
Augustine, Fla., ofcompUcatlons
from a brain tumor. She was 90.

-~~

as the- -wHeiffHe smoliel!all c learea aT
lead. changed hands 7 times and
the half the score stood 49-44
was tied on 11 different
Eastern.
'
occasions.
Southern fought back to within.
Mike Marijn and guard Shaun one early In the third frame, bu t
Savoy piCked up the pace for
that soon faded to a 16 point
Eastern early In the game with
Eastern advantage. Again paSavoy often on the bubble ~o tlent offensive patterns' opened
deadlock the score. Southern s up the back door for Easter n to
Chris Stout countered with his score, · wh!le Southern's sticky
only two buckets of the nlght, ----'--Ce{ense was whistled for the
gaining complimentary goals hand check on a regular basis
from Todd Grindstaff and Mike sending Eastern to the line early
Amos.
In the third frame.
Both Eastern and -Southern
Meanwhile things got rough
have been rich In tradition underneath. SHS had the bulk,
defensively, but neither dis- but EHS had the speed and
played enough adhesion to keep determination of Martin and
the oposlng from scoring at w!ll.
Frost.
The tempo rose to a blistering
With 2:35left In the game and
pace b}' the end of the first Eastern having led by as much as
period; SHS using Its patented 18, the Tornadoes made a valiant
fast brea~ and Eastern breaking comeback effort, led by McMIISouthern s press to the tune of lan Inside and Chad Taylor's
repeated bunny shots and 3 on 1 barrage of three polnte.rs. Unl!ke
breaks on Its scoring end.
In the third frame when Southern
The first period ended at 17-17. apparently did not set up an
The second frame was more offense, the Torandoes became
heated than the first with Andy more patient and worked the ball
Baer, Dave McMillan, and Inside to.McMIIIan and. Diddle.
Shawn Diddle providing the SHS
If It wasn't there either Taylor
fireworks.
or Baer tooolt It at the key. Super
ballhandlfng by guards Caldwell,
In the second canto E-5 Mike Savoy, and Fitch, however,
Frost came out of hiding and helped ease the tension and EHS
went on a torrid scoring ram- kept Is cool to hold on for the97-87
page, blocking shots along the win.
way, and getting good support
Easternhlt35-51for69percent,
from guards Scott Fitch, Savoy, was 1-4 at 3 point range, and 24-37
and Kenny Caldwell.
at the line. SHS hit 27-59 for 45.7

SVAC, wh!le Southern Is 0-2 for
the first time In nea~ly 20 years
(unofficially the 1968-69 school
year).
Eastern placed five men In
double figures , led by the mildmannered junior forward Mike
Frost, who was allbut timid on
the court Tuesday. Frost had 13
points In each half and led the
club with 11 rebounds.
Next the trio consisting of
senior post man Mike Martin,
Shaun Savoy, and Scott Fitch
added 15 each, while Kenny
Caldwell added 11, and Chris
Lance 9.
Southern was led by Dave
McMillan's 20, Chad Taylor had
18 Including 5 from three point
, range, and Andy Baer had 15.
From the fans point of view,
one could not have asked for a

Sports briefs

"We ran when they expected us
to throw. And we threw when
they expected us to run. That's
when we are most effective,"
Newsome said. "As good as we
p_layed offensively, we can play a
lot better."
The time-consuming offense
allowed Clevela.nd to control the
ball for 38 minutes, compared
with just 22 minutes for
Washington.
''Let's be realistic about it.
Kevin Mack makes a difference,'' Schbttenhelmer said.
"When Kevin runs like he did,
he affects our whole football
team," Schottenhelmer said.
"He has big-play · ability. That
type of performance has a
positive effect on your team."
Mack, however, was no tin the
Browns' backfield when the
game-winning tou~hdown was
scored.
Cleveland trailed 13-10 and
faced a third down and five yards
to go with 1:49 remaining.
Schottenhelmer had four receivers In the game but called a trap
play for Earnest Byner, who ran
27 ya~ds for the game-winning
touchdown.
"It wasn't a great call. It was a
great play by Earnest Byner,"
Schottenhelmer said. "He had to
break two tackles to get lpto the
end wne.''.

more--thrtllln~firtt half,

SenllneiSiaffWrlter
EAST MEIGS - In a game
literally won on the foul line, the
high -flyi ng Eastern Eagles
steamrolled to a 97-87 offensive
shootout over the Southern Tornadoes Tuesday evening inSVAC
varsity basketball action .
Eastern hit 24-37 attempts at
the line; as well as pick apart the
Southern press, while Southern
hit on 12 of 18 occasions from the
charity stripe. Southern \"as
whlslled for 39 fouls and Eastern
17.

.

Browns offense minus orily
Slaughter as· playoffs near

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

WedneaMy, November 30, 1988

POmelov--Middleoort •. Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

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

Wish all your customers a'nd
friends a very- Merry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
,.
December 23rd.

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--Pi&gt;meroy Middleport, Ohio

P~-6 The Daily Sentinel

- lV
-IMQ_r_ me_.m·_
_
W./' opdme_n'~ h·_Q
Modern
1

Andrew Howard, Guysville,
was Inducted into the half·
century cl11b and ·presented a
lapel pin and certificate of merit
at the anhual harvest dinner and
celebration of the Modern Woodmen of America, Camp 10900
held at the Alfred United Methodist Church.
A 25-year membership pln
was presented toPatrlciaHartly,
Wayne, and Jazmln Russell,

b~~r. _____

-------~

renovation_: supported by the
___
'.I..£.
_·Movern Woodmen . of America
- . -fund ..di:.lll.e .earUer- thls..-yeax.. ACaldwell
and
Marjorie
Malone,
silver offering was collected for
Coolville, was welcomed as the
Coolvllle,
led_
tradltlonal
Thanks·
delivery
to the CARE organtzanewest member of the group.
giving
songs.
,
lion
to
help
the needy around the
The Wodmen's creed service
Edith
van
Dyke
Athens
reworld.
Care
plates and cards
was opened with the song, "God
presenting
the
Am~rlcan
Ca~cer
were
prepared
for shutlns In the
Bless America" directed by
Society,
provided
Hemocult
n
community.
Marlene Donovan, Coolville.
Door prlzes and thanksgiving
Leading the prayer service, the dlspensapacks and instructions
for
their
use
were
given
by
food
items were won . by Tess
pledge of allegiance to the flag,
Frances
Henderson.
Breedlove
and Goldie Yates,
and thE! Woomen' s Creed were·
Thelma
Henderson,
Coolville,
Belpre;
Zona
Sheridan and Keith
Lisa Henderson. Martha Caldon
the
progress
of
Dorst,
Tuppers
Plains; Wilma
reported
well, and Calvin Hawk, all of
Alfred
United
Methodist
Chufi,h
Henderson,
Derrick
WineAlfred. Jennifer and Michelle

Wednesday, November 30, 1988

Meeting time changed

....

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

New officers were Installed
when the Blg Bend Clvitan Club
met recently at Over book
Center.
Installed by the Ohio District
Governor Patricia Thrash, Ma·
r!etta, were Sue Maison, pres!dent; Yonlece MlUer, secretary;
and Madhu Malhotra, treasurer.
Inltlated into membership
were Kathy Hunter, Mason, W.
Va., · and Patricia Wood, Long
Bottom. Ms Wood, employed as a
job coach at Meigs Industrles,ls
a recent graduate of Eastern
High School anll the first Ohio
District Junior Clvltan to become

FLORIOA 125 SIZE

Tangelos
OR 176 SIZE
Tangerines

a member of a senior Clvltan
Club. She was credited with
belng.tnstrumentalin helping the
Civitans to start a junior club at
Eastern.
•

•

~%ty f~ 1:::1 ~et~~~~ ~t the
ens en
ea
en er on
Dec. 13 were made when the
~er~a~ L1!on Auxiliary,..
rew t ~ ::~ ost 39
· • Pomeroy,
met a e a 1 ·
The u~it wlll also have several

Potnsettta sale set
The Pomeroy .PTO and students of Pomeroy Elementary
School are selllJ1g poinsettias for
the holiday season.
The poinsettias are In six Inch
pots and are available In red,
pink and white with pink, Cost is
$4. each. Orders are being·taken

b'11

grouJ-J

J
'J:'
this week and should be prepaid.
The flowers can be picked up
on Monday at the school between
the hours of 9:30 and noon. They
may be purchased from any
student or by calling the school;
992 _ 2710 .

District party at the Chillicothe Veda Davis with Mrs. Hamilton
Veterans Hospital on Dec. 15. A to serve as chairman.
potluck dinner preceded the
Sharon Wright thanked the unit
meeting with Frankie Hunnell for the scholarship given to her
giving grace Sharon Wright was daughter, "I:ammy, now attenda guest at th~ meeting conducted ing college.
by Gerrl Mlller. The pledge was
Mrs. Martin gave a report on
led by Ashley and Jessica Hamil- Amerjcanism emphaslzing the
ton.
.
need to keep the founding Ideas of
Loretta Tiemeyer, field ser- the American Legion fresh and
vice chairman, reported that alive for future_generations as
hours of service by unit members well as to firmly Implant the
should be given to her so that she American way of life and its
can submit them to the state freedoms In themindsofchlldren
chairman. ·
and grandchildren.
Named to the budget commitMrs. Martin presented matetee were Ellen ~ane Rought, rial on Buckeye GirlS State to be

talked about the citizenship a nd
government training noting that
about 24,000 high school girls ln
their junior year participate.
Ohio leads all other states with
over 1,300 girls enrolled.
Veterans service chairman,
Catherine_ Welch, will have a
program m January. There will
be no meeting In December.
Round robin cards were signed
for Norma Jewell and ,Janet
Jenkins.
At the close of the meeting,
Mrs. Wright sang "Shnadows of
My Heart and "The Lord 's
Prayer."

c
FRESH "SILVER PLATIER"

IUIVBmml ITIM POliCY

Assorted
Pork Chops

Each of these advertised items is required to be readil'; available fo, sale in
each Kroger Store, e~tcept as specifically noted in this ad . If we do run out of
an ~dvenised 110!'". we will offer yoU your choice of a comparable item, when
ava•lable, reflecting the same savings or a 1aincheck which will entitle you to
purchase the advertised item at the advenised price w ithin 30 days Only one
·
.
vendor coupon will be accepted per item purchased .

Pound

COPYFIIGHT 1988 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
~UNDAY, NOV. 27 THROUGH SATURDAY. OEC . 3, 19881N

•-

Ullii'OUS MD PO.IOY STOll!.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLO TO

DEALERS .

•

'

.'
'

U.S. GRADE A

Holly Farms
Breast Quarters

BODO 8 IUIPII
.Ml2fihiiLI co., INC.

Pound

'

White House
Apple"Juice
114-oz.

Trust Kroger For
)

I

WHITEHOUSE

Low Warehouse
.-::
Prices Everyday!

'

~~JW.1
I"•
II
-·l,..,
--··,;..

.

~~~:~r'~~~~ . . . . 8-tb_$8

U.S. INSPECTED

99

Flander's.
S-Ib $399
Beef Patttes .......... sox·
,

$ 99

4
29C
~:~~n~:~~~. . . . . . 59

Rope Sausage ....... h.

Kroger ·
Tomato Soup ...... 1o.1s-oz
'

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'

C

16-oz.

SWEETENEO

~~~rters.............. ~ - 39 C
9
9
r~~d~~~·-~. . . . . . . ~~~~~-t$s7
I SOLD IN tO-LB. BAG ONL Yi

FROZEN ·

11:6~l~L

·

·

INTHEMEATDEPT.

COST CUT'I'ER

~:~:!d~~~ . ~~~. ".". ~~~ $119
~!ft~~~ . . . . . . . . . . 21 C
26-oz. •

FROZEN

Carnation . ·
$129 ·Cost Cutter•
Cnndensed Milk ... 14-oz.
Orange Ju1ce........ 12-oz
can·

CIIPnlll
Rubber Backed .. oa.vo. :...... •6.99
Kitchen Carpet .... oa.
'7.59
VInyl Flooring ....,.. oa.
'4.95 :

SQUEEZE BOTILE

Hunt's
Ketchup

YD .......

YD .......

· 32-oz.

c

CELO'IX CEILINGS
•

12' Main Tee ................ •3.45

399

House of Martin l-Ib .
Corn Dogs ............. so~

99C

(WIITE ONLY)

4' Cross Tee .................... 99¢
(WtiTE ONLY)

Texas Gold
Ice Cream

10' Wall Angle ............ •1.90
(WitTE ONLY)

%-Gallon

2' X 4' LAY·IN

CEILING PANELS

$

Aruba .............................................................. 11.89 •·
Waverly ........................................................... 11.99...
Martinique ...................................................... 12.75 ...

For

., . $1 09
8
~!k~ Mix. . . . .'. . 18.2~oz 59

~~~:

~~o:!~n~!ttee...... ~~o~.$ 5

49

99c
,....__......

M-.pli ....................~ ........................... '12.75

KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs

G"'fd Flak ...........-; ...................i .......... '12.75
...... .t

Dole
Dates

ar,res

•

•

-

I-oz.

..

. Won't You Help Feed The Hungry?
Please bring your extra canned food by your local Kroger store and place
it in !JU~ specially marked receptacles by Decembe( 10th. The food will
be d1stnbuted by Kroger to local Food Banks in support of the Second'
Harvest ~rogram. Thank you for your support.

BLANtHEO, SliCEO OR CHOPPED
DOLE ALMOND S 10-0Z. $2.99

'•

•

I'

Floral ...................................... '12.75 ·

Dozen

Cost Cutter
C Pancake Syrup:.... 24-oz.

co

COMPOUND .....

1/4 Birch ........................................... 112.25

VAC PAK

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

Bungalow
Hickory ......... '2.99
Bungalow Tan Back Hickory ............ '2.99"·
VIsta New Cut Cedar ........ ~ ................ '6.25
VIsta Misty Meadow .......................... '6.95
VIsta Floral Bouquet ......................~ .. *7.95
Norfolk Elm .~...................................... '8.49
Pedlmont Cherry ............................... '6.50
SALE
Spirit Birch ........·................................. '8.25 3·0 x 6-8 Lau•n ...............:......... 39.01 18.88
4·0 x 8-8 .l.auan ......................... 63.05 42.04
. Arshlle Oak ...................................i .... '8.25 5·0 x 6·8 Lauan ........................·. 69.68 48.41
Pecky Pecan....................................... '8:.50 2·0 x 6-8 Birch .......................... 36.40 14.84
X 6-8 8 lrch .......................... 44.78 30.28
Light Birch ..........................................'9.75 3·0
4·0 X 6-8 Birch .......................... 11.80 47.79
5·0
x 6-8 Birch .......................... 79.60 81.84
Moonlight Maple ................................ '9.75
Miramar ...........................:.................. '9.99 2·0 x 6-8 730 Full Louvered .... 61.22 aa:4a
2·6 x 6-8 730 Full louvered .... 69.78 43.84
Astoria Cedar .. ~................................ '1 0.50 3-0 X 6-8 730 Full Louvered .... n .24 48.81
4-0 x 6-8 730 Full Louvered ... 117.45 72.88
Mountain Adventure ....................... '10.99 s-o
x 6-8 730 Full Louvered ... 135.20 83.70
Wildlife .............................................. *11.25
READY MIX
Nutone Cherry .................................. '11.25
JOINT &amp; TOPPING
·Floral Teellls ..................................... '11.50
Harris Weave .........:.......................... *11.99
5 GAL ....
Rose Blush ....................................... '11.99

Blue Slate ......................................... '11.99

FROZEN

Cost Cutter
$119· Morton
·
$249
Chocolate C-hips ... 12-oz.
Fried Chicken
....... 2a-oz.
•

1 Place, Whlta Only ...................................... '189.95
2 Place, White Only ...................................... 1259.95

1 Place, Sliver Gray ...................................... 1199.00

1Piece, Almond ............................................ 1199.00

..

.5Place Tub Surround• ..............ll'M.l............ 149.95
Plect Tub Surround• ............,.!.!~~!.!.......... '58.85.

NONRETURNABLE BO'l'TLE, DIET
COKE, CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE.

Coca Cola Classic
or Coke

6-PAK 12·02. CANS 11.79

Page-7

.I Civitan ctJ eleas officers I~~.ri~~. ~~~~~ ~~~.~5~2:. ~~~ s~~~~~.

B
ed
azaar ptann

ore

'

]

brenner, c. w. Henderson. Dorothy Robinson, Jean and Calvin
The Riverview Garden Club
Hawlc., Alf~ed;-£1¥de-Eatr.!sh,.. - will meet-at- the home of Mrs.
Paul Mc~herson, Billy and Denver Weber on Dec. 13 at 7:30
Shanon Breedlove, and Wayne p.m. not Dec. 3 as was earlier
and Martha Caldwell, Karen and announced.
Tony McPherion, Coolville, Ida
1
Livingston, Guysville; Mary Lou
. Hewitt and Valar!e Dunfee,
The annual Christmas bazaar
~arkersburg.
.of the Enterprise United Methodlst Church will be held Friday
The annual Christmas party and Saturday at the church, 9
was announced for Dec. 10 at 6: 30 a.m to 4 p.m. Besides many hand
p.m. at the Coolville Elementary crafted items the group will also
School cafeteria.
have baked goods for sale.

rtce.s .
.

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Wednesday•.November 30, 1988

•

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Page 8-The Daily Seutiuel

BIG .BEND ·

Wednesday, November 30, 1988

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Your independently Owned
Low·Priced Supermarket

FOODUND
HOUDAY
GIFT CEITIFICATES
AVAILABLE

--

.......

-·

....

-

-

-

-

. ov'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ri_, Grande Basketball vs Shawn~e State
ltOMDAY, DEC. 5-7:30 p;M. GAME TIME
I

I'

WIN·
1
~.

90 SECOND SHOPPING SPREE
•oR S100'' IN CASH SCRAMBLE
01 FlEE GROCERIES

..

·"

Whole
~Fryers
.

e
FLANDER'S

$. 99·

Beef
Patties

4

5 LB.

.

KAHN'S ll' and REGULAR
BONElESS
HICKORY
GROVE

Ham

MUSIC BOX COLLECTION - The Rev.
William Mlddleswarth's music box coDectlon Is a
feature exhibit at the Meigs Museum for the

SLICED QUARTER

$199'
.

Pomeroy. The bears will remain on display
through December, as wlil other exhibits.

BEARS EVERYWHERE - Everybody loves
bell'S and sharing her coUectlon at this year's
open house at the museum Is Nancy Reed,

Po.rk
Lom

LB.

$149

.
hoUdays. The boxes range from the latest Mickey ·
Mouse 80th anniversary one to an antique beetle
box.

M~igs

Museum open
house being planned

LB.

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

531 JACKSON PIKE- RT.35 WEST

The annual holiday open house bears, and antique toys. Several
at the Meigs Museum will be held demonstrations will also be given
Saturday and Sunday .
on both · days and these will
The museum. located on But- Include the making of bears
ternut Ave., Pomeroy, has been using fur cloth and other mateextensively decorated for the rials, and package bows.
holidays, and will be open both
There wUI be carolers on both
days from 1 to 5 p.m.
· days at the museum and. a slide
The kickoff will come Friday show on the Christmas story will
night when a traditional candle- be continuous on both afternoons .
light dinner party will be held at
Traditional and modern deco·
the museum.
rations have been fncluded along
On Saturday soup.. chill, hot: with those from the late 1800's.
dogs and sloppy joes will be
served in the upstairs dining
room. Food willalsobeavallable
for takeout.
There will be numerous dis·
plays Including music boxes,

. FROZEN

Tropicana
Orange Juice

-

Phone &lt;W6-4524

ALL . . . II.ID
.............. IIVIIIY -

D of A plans
holiday dinner
ANTIQUE TOYS - A dlspllly of antique .toys

will be featured around this tree for the Meigs
Muaeum open house. Here Margaret Parker,

.president of the Meigs County Pioneer and
,IJlstorlcal Society puts the finishing touches on
the tree decorations.
1

•

DAR conducts recent-meeting

Buv Oae
Oet 01tt

Mrs. Joseph Colburn, vice
regent of .tile Ohlei Daughter~ of
the American Revolution, talked
on the history of the DAR at a
recent meeting of Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter held at the ·
home of Mrs. Ronald Reynolds.
Introduced by Mrs. Dwight
MDhoan. regent, Mrs. Colburn
defined history as people and the
DAR as a part of history. She said
the Continental Congress, the
national DAR organization
formed 98 years ago, now owns
the most valuable real estate of
any women's organization In the
country. She talked about the
Ohio organization which Is 90
years old and noted that the
national group was organized
when the Sons of the American
Revolution excluded their
admission.
The first action taken by the
women was the designing of the
DAR lnsll(JIIa. She talked about

FREEl
15.5 oz.
PREGO

.

16 OZ. ROLL

FIELD

SPAGHETTI
SAUCE .

HAM
SAUSAGE

.••, 0111

•v
o,,
,,, o,,
1

Community calendar

Ott Oilt

THURSDAY

FREEl

FREEt
ITEMS USTED BELOW ARE

NOT

ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
Pack 246 will hold their annual
Christmas party on Thursday, at
7 p.m., at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church. Each
cub scout Is to bring a gift for
exchange . Families are
welcome.

BUY ONE, GET ONE FIR

APPLE GROVE - Christmas
caroling at the Apple Grove
United Methodist wlll be Thursday at 6:30 p.m. The church Is
located 1d mUes above Racine on
State Route 338. Everyone
welcome.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees will meet In regular sesson Thursday. 6: 30 p.m.,
at the fire station. The public ts
welcome.
MIDDLEP.ORT - 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 gtft. Ladies bring ladles'.
gift. $6 limit on gifts.

SATURDAY
•We A•~ The Right

If Limit Que~ltl• •PriC* EHIICih'1 w....d.,. Nav. 30. thru~l•tun:t.,., Dec. 3:, 1118
r

the youth-group organization In
'1895 and stressed the Importance
of helping children have more
respect for the constitution and
the ·democratic form of government. She reminded members
that everyorfe except thOse with
Indian ancestry have Immigrant
ancestry and concluded by tellIng the members to appreciate
the DAR background In history,
hut look to the future.
Elected as delegates to the
Continental Congress were Mrs.
Reynolds, Mrs. Clarence Struble, with Mrs. Paul Elch and
Mrs. Geroge Hackett as
alternates .
Elected delegates to the Ohio
State convention were Mrs. Reynolds and Mrs'. Struble, with Mrs.
John Rose and Mrs. Robert
Ashley being named alternates.
A Thanksgiving message from
the president general was read
and Mrs. Reynolds, national

••

•USDA Food 8t1mp11nd WIC Coupona Acc.;tect

.~

.. .

• ....
ft

SALEM CENTER - Stat
Grange 778 and Star Junior
~
. .

Grange 878 wm meet In regular
session Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
grange hall on County Road 1
near Salem Center.
The subordinate baking, 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 11 Is
time to pay 1989 dues.
Parade
MIDDLEPORT . ..:. Middleport's annual Christmas parade
wUI 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 organizations wishing to participate are to
call Kim Blower at 992-5141.

Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township Trustees
wUimeetThursday, 7p.m.,at the '
township building at Rock
Springs. The public Is welcome.
Scipio Township Trustees will
meet Friday, 6 p.m., at
Pagevllle.

defense chairman told of the
efforts being made to remove "In
God We Trust" from coins. She
said that even coin collectors
support the move because It
would Increase their collection
holdings.
Officers' reports were given
and Anna Circle Cleland, a new
member was Introduced.
Mrs. Gerald Powell told of the
Pomery VIllage historic project
which Is getting underway. An
Invitation to partllcpate In the
Christmas parade at Marietta
was read along with one from
Nabby Lee Ames Chapter · to
attend· a luncheon. Mrs. Gary
Moore had the closing prayer.
Mrs. Mark Grueser, Mrs. Gc·
roge Skinner, Mrs. Reynolds,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter and Mrs
Nancy Van Meter served refresh·
ments. The December meeting
will be held adt Grace Episcopal
Church parish house.

Bazaar slated
The annual bazaar of the
Racine United Methodist Church
wlllbe Saturday from10 a.m. to&amp;
p.m. Q\lllts, rugs, comforters,
crafts, baked goods and candy
will be sold. Chicken and noodle
dinners will also be served. The
bazaar and dinner are sponsored
by the United Methodist Women ..
Everyone welcome.

Meeting date changed
The Meigs High Band Boosters'. meeting for ·December has
been changed from Monday,
Dec. 5, to Tuesday, Dec. 6, due to
the Middleport Christmas Parade. The meeting w111 be held In
the band room at the school at
7:30p.m.

•POINSETTIAS • I'OINIETTIA
HANGING IABKET8 •HOUY TREES
•AFRICAN VIOLETS •FOUAOE
PLANTS &amp; BASKETS •MONUMENT
SPRAYS

..... -

MDCIANDISI .

SILL 011 COM'UIOII II U&lt;ro
na~narotna

OPEN DAILY • AM-5 PM

SUNDAY 1 111·5 PM

HUBBARD'S GIDNHOUSE
992-577.--SYIICUSt OH.
't

,

"Make His Praise Glorious Exalting the ChriSt of Christ·
mas," will be performed by the
Community Choir, under the
direction of Sue Matheny, at MI.
Hermon Un lted Brethren Church
(the Texas Community), on
Sunday, Dec. 4, at 7: 30p.m. Rev .
Robert Sanders, pastor, wei·
comes everyone.

DECIMIIR 2, 1918

•CEMETERY VASES

._

Special program

1I ll. 'IIIIIY
D l l - DIC. IJ, "II
fOIIIOIII llfOIIIAnoN '
CAll Uli·IUI

SWin ECDICH

VIRGINIA HAM ...............~•• Sl. 99
HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD ••••••••••••••••••• ~••••••• 89c
SMITHFIELD

SHREDDED 12.19 lB.
SUCED lB.

$

COOKED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••• 1•97

Big Bend Clvltan Club met
recently at Overbrook Center for
the Initiation of new members
and the Installation of officers for
1988·89.
Guests a~ the meeting were
Marilyn Kurtz, from Marietta,
and . Jenny Hunter, daughter of
Kathy Hunter, of Mason, W.Va.
Ohio Dis trlct Governor Patrl·
cia Thr!lsh, Marietta, was on
hand to install the club's officersPresident Sue Matson, Secretary
Yonlece Miller and Treasurer
Madhu Malhotra.
Initiated were Kathy Hunter,
Mason, W.Va., and Patricia
Wood, of Long Bottom.
Wood, employed as a job coach
at Meigs Industries, is a recent
graduate of Eastern.:mgh School
and the first Ohio District' Jr.
Clvltan to become a member of a
senior Civltan Club. Wood was
Instrumental in helping Big Bend
Clvltans start a Jr. Clvitan Club
at Eastern High. Being the fifth
club to charter, Eastern made It
possible for Ohio to become an
official Jr. Clvltan District.

56 STATE SIIIIIT, GAWPOUS, OH.

•WREATHS fllld GRAVE BLANKETS
iUVE. CUT CIIRIITMAB TIIEEI

......

Civitan Club
inducts new
members, officers

GUND OPENING
BOB PERSON'S
BAIGAIN STOlE

Now Open For The
Christmas Season.

..

The District Deputies and Past
Councilors Club, District 13,
Daughters of America, will have
Its annual Christmas dinner
party at the Western Slzzlln'
Steak House In Athens on Satur·
day, 1:30 p.m. There will be ai3
gift exchange. Any lodge
member Is welcome to attend.

KRAFT PARlAY

MARGARINE
QUARTERS "......:... ..L.t... 89&lt;

CALIFORNIA

BEAVER VALLEY

"FRESH"

CELERY •• ~.........JP.~.t!Ve.. 69'

GRADE A
MED. EGGS •••••••••••9P.L.89&lt;

CRANBERRIES •••••• M.9h•• 99&lt;
CELLO PACK

KRAFT 16 SUCE PROCESS

CARROTS ""••••••••••••\§.P1.:.39&lt;

AMERICAN ·cHEESE ••• S1.87
SEA PACK 16 OZ.

OCEAN PERCH FILLETS ••••••• S2 .89
NEW YOlK .
GARLIC BREAD •••••••••••••~~.o.z•• S1.89
JIF CIEUI

PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••••~~~.z•• S2 .19
LUCKY UAF
RED TART CHERRIES
••••~~.a.z•• S1.1 7
•
AIMOUI
CHOPPED BEEF ............~t.0.~. S1.89
LUCK'S 15 OZ.
CHICKEN &amp; DUMPLINGS •••• S1.19
JUMBO

BOUNTY TOWELS ••••••••~~.c!i.$1.19
QUAIII SMALL
"
.
QUICK OATS ................~~~.z•• S1.49

11m ClOCKER

HAMBURGER. HELPER •••~'Mli Sl.S 9

101 WHITE

'

SYRUP •••••••••••••••••••••••••~~.0.~. S2 .29
AUNT . .MA

PANCAKE MIX ••••-.........~t~.'e. S1.4 9
CUIPIIU'S
TOMATO JUICE •••• ~•••••••\~~.~•• ~ •••99&lt;
SIIUCID'S GUPI
JAM or JELLY ••••••••••••••u.o.z•• S1.29
'

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Peg a 10-The,Daily Sa: :ti: :el

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

on reSoluli

.N. ~generar~assemb1y to vote

2-week-old proclamation lmpllc· at the conclusion of the Algiers know)edges Israel's right to exist · convinced that Secretary of State
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) Dec. 13-15.
George Shultz "made the right
U.N. legal experts Tuesday
Arafat applied for a U.S. visa ltiy recognizing Israel's right lo meeting of the Palestinian Na- within secure boundaries.
Dozens of nations recognized decision" In denying Arafat a
drafted a resolution condemning so that he could address the exist unless the United States Ilona! Council," ·Kh'!laf was
quotecl
as
saying.
the
proclaimed state and hailed U.S. visa.
the U.S. refusal to grant an entry General A~sembly debate In New responds 'to Its peace overtures.
Shultz also defended Ills deciAt
the
end
of
a
meeting
In
the
the
declaration as a positive
The remarks by Salah Khalaf,
· visa to PLO Chairman Yasser
York and explain a new platform
sion,
saying he thought "very
Algerian
capital
of
Algiers
on
peace
lnldlative,
but
Israel
and
Ararat as a violation of lnterna- adopted by the Palestlrtlan lead· better known as Abu Iyad, a
before making lt.
carefully"
Nov&lt;.
15,
the
Palestinian
leaderthe
United
States
rejected
lt.
: tiona! law and demanding that ershlp, but was barred from representative of Yasser Ara·
President-elect
George Bush
The United States described
· Washington reverse the decision. doing so by the State Depart· fat's AI Fatah group of the PLO, ship proclaimed a Palestinian
said
there
shOuld
be a U.N.
state
In
the
Israeli-occupied
the
proclamation
as
am,
b
lguous
The Reagan administration ment. which cited the Palestine were made In an Interview
meeting
ori
Palestine,
but
said It will not be swayed by Liberation Organization's links published In the Saudi Arabian territories where a year-old and said It did not go fl!r enough
avoided
stepping
Into
the
conPalestinian uprising ·has been toward meeting the U.S. demand
newspaper AI Sharq Al-Awsat.
world condemnation or Its dec!· to terrorism.
for a clear PLO recognition of troversy over whether Arata!
slon, even though a senior PLO
·The resolution worked out by · "If the United States continues raging.
should have been allowed Into the
The Palestinian leadership Israel.
official was quoted as saying the the legal committee of the to Ignore the Palestinian peace
Palestinian leadership might General Assembly said the U.S. Initiative, this will force the alsolssuedapolltlcaldeclaration · In Washington, White House United States. ''I think there
: conalder withdrawing Its recent visa refusal "constitutes a viola- Palestinian leadership to recon· that Included for the first time spokesman . Marlin Fitzwater should be a U.N. meeting and
· Implicit recognition of Israel's tion of the International legal . slder all our positions, particu- the PLO's acceptance of a U.N. said President Reagan Is un· there will be on that subjeCt," he
: right to exist.
·obligations or the host country larly. those which were declared resolution, which Implicitly ac- swayed by work! opinion and sal d.
; U.N. officials said the resolu- under the headquarters
.....Ill irilll!ll iril.
tion, which gives the United agreement."
States 24 hours to reconsider the
It "urges the host country to
' refusal, was expected to be abide scrupulously by the provi·
adopted by the 159-nation Gen· slons of the agreement and to
:era! Assembly when It Is pres- , reconsider and reverse Its
decision."
: ented for a vote Wednesday.
. U the United SLates refuses to
U.N. Secretary-General Javier
: change Its mind, the General Perez de Cuellar's legal counsel
:Assembly Is expected to adopt a said Monday that the United
motion by Arab nations, possibly States "was and Is under the
F'flday, to move the assembly obligation to grant the visa
debate on Palestine from New request to the chairman of the •·
:York. to the U.N. European PLO, an organization that has
· headquarters In Geneva, been granted observer status by
:Switzerland.
the General Assembly."
·
The General Assembly post·
The U.S. decision to bar Arafat
. ponedthedebateattheNewYork drew a chorus of criticism from
·headquarters, which had been the Arab world and even from
. scheduled to begin In two days, U.S. allies.
·and sources close to the assem,
A senior PLO official, mean- ~~~~~~-~~~~-~~~--~-~-~--~
. i
:bly president said the proposed while, warned that the Palesti· 12
OUR (OMPLEJE STOCI MEN'S
lADIES'
i
:date for the Geneva session was nlan leadership may revoke a W

:. Supreme Soviet
·
:debates refonns
.; MOSCOW (UP!)- The Soviet
:,union's rubber-stamp parlia:.ment resumed Its landmark
·:session Wednesday under orders
.-from President Mikhail Gorba·
:chev to vote Itself out of existence
·:to make way for a Western-slyle
: legislature.
:· The official Tass news agency
::said the second day of the
.;Supreme Soviet session began
·,wtth a debate over proposed
•amendments to the Soviet constl·
:tutiOn- proposals that sparked a
furor In the nation's Baltic
.republics wJ\en they first were
,published a month ago.
·' "Although the versions ot the
'bills now put before the Supreme
Soviet differ significantly from
'the original ones published a
month ago, · practically every
apeaker In the parliamentary
debate suggested further amend·
ments," Tass said.
: At the opening session Tuesday, Gorbachev called for a
:radical restructuring of the So:vtet political system. s~ylng
''political reform Is a kind of
oxygen needed by the public."
''The Supreme Soviet cannot
·do a proper job If the role of
,deputies Is limited to voting
prily," Gorbachev said In a
lenglhy speech, the text of which
was more than 50 pages.
"If we do not carry outpolltlcal
reform to back up the processes
now already underway In the
«anomy ... the drive for perestroika (restructuring) wllllnevll·
·ably begin to skid," he said.
· The three-day session of 1,500
,Supreme Soviet deputies Is expeeled to end Thursday with the
rubber-stamp legislature voting
Itself out of existence In favor of a
smaller body that will convene
next year.

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6 planes damaged

· ''The fire apparently started
when a gun on an A-7E aircraft
(Ired during routine malnte·
~~&amp;nee, which resulted In a round
of ammunition striking an A-6
aircraft and starting the fire,'' he
said, "A total or six aircraft were
damaged."
: Smith said the Injured man
wu being . evacuated from the
Nimitz and an lnvfStlgatlon Into

I

Limit Quantities

a

Thedeputlesalsoweretoadopt
laws calling for multi-candidate II!
\2
parliamentary elections and lim· a
111
lting the terms of all office- It
EXWIIfrS
~
holders.
·
~
- ~
a
The effect ofthe changes would ' \2
.... '19.95-- Now SJ3,97
W
be to create a full-time, Western i
.... '24.95- Now SJG.97
Vi
slyle legislature that would
leg. S39,95"-.. Now SJJ.97,
II!
draft, debate and vote on new \2
·
"·
11: ·
laws rather than automatically 'ii
2l
adopt legislation sent down by It
if
the party, as the Supreme Soviet II!
111
has done In the past.
~
. II:
The proposed constitutional il
l'l
amendments, which also call for \2
l'l
restructuring the political sys- II!
if
tern, were first broached and II
RT .3 5 WEST II!
adopted by the special 19th Party il
JCT. 160 &amp; 35 ~
Conference In June and have 'ii
GALLIPOLIS
II:
been discussed for weeks In the 'd
' OH.
press In an unusually raucous II!
~"Y
i
tone.
ll
'-'
J!!
The proposals helped trlgger a ' f'l:I;:!~-IS::&lt;WW~~J;~:g;¥~g:&lt;g:o:~~~~~-1&lt;¥l&lt;lll&lt;llW~l&lt;"
flowering of nationalist senti·
· ments and street demonstrations
In the three Baltic republics,
Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania.
Critics said the amendments
would vest even greater powers
In the central Soviet government
while rescinding the symbolic
right of the Individual republics
to secede.
As Supreme Soviet deputies
met In Moscow, tension remalned high In the transCaucasian republics- Armenia,
which Is predominantly Chris·
tlan, and Azerbaijan, mainly
Moslem.
Ethnic unrest there over the
past nine days alread has cost at
least five llves In a dispute over
which republic should have control over an autonomous region
In Azerbaijan called Nagomo
Karabakh, where most residents
are Armenian. Curfews were In
force In three Azerbaijani cities
and Armenia's capital Yerevan.

the Incident was under way.
He said the carrier would not
have to return to port and would
continue Its mission In the
Arabian Sea.
The Identities of the dead man
and the Injured man were being
withheld pending notification of
next of kin, Smith said.
No further details were Immediately available, Smith said.
The Nimitz, launched In May
1972 and commlBsloned Into
service three years later, was the
world's second nuclear-powered
aircraft carrier after the USS
Enterprise.
.
The 1.092-foot.long carrier has
a displacement ol72,798 tons and
a complement ol5,836 men -155
of!lcers, 2,981 enlisted· men and
2,800 assigned to the air wing. It
Is armed with Sea Sparrow
missiles and carries between 85
and 90 aircraft.
The Grumman-made A-6 Intruder Is a low-level attack
bomber designed to deliver nuclear or convention weapons.
The A7·E Is a fighter manufactured by the LTV Aerospace and
Defense Co.
1

We Reserve The Ri&amp;hl To

I

TINIEX··

Navy man killed,
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -One
man was killed, another was
~riOusly Injured and six air·
~;)lanes were damaged when a
gun undergoing maintenance on
the carrier USS Nimitz accidentally went off Wednesday, causIng a fire on the flight deck, the
Pentagon said.
: Pentagon spokesman Maj.
John Smith said the accident
recurred Wednesday morning In
Jbe north Arabian sea.
·
· ''The Nimitz was not conductlne flleht operations at the time
of the Incident," Smith said.
;,The fire started at 2:48 a.m.
15:48 p.m. EST Tuesday) and
was brought under control at 3: 10
•
a.m.

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_____ :J

·992-6669

· - - -- - " 1 - - - - - ----.,.

�~

-~-~-

...

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--

....

Local news briefs...___, Six...
EMS has 10 calls Tuescfuy
'

•

•

. .. ..
·,...
-" . .
-

'

'

-...

Eight fined in Pomeroy court

'
•'
• •

...... -.
._

..

...,
_.. ·'"'

·"

',

.....

. '·-.1.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reporls 10 calls
Tuesday: Tuppers Plains at 6:50a.m. to ROute 681 tor-Harold
Brannon who was dead on arrival; Pomeroy at 7; 38 a.m. to
Union Ave. for Hubert Clower to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
later home; Middleport Fire Department at 10:35 a .m. to a
possible fire at the Haley residence on Pearl St., no fire was
found ; Pomeroy at 10:48 a .m. to Un ion Ave. for Opal Cummins
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 11:31 a.m. to
Long Bottom for Mildred Hauber to Veterans Memorial
Hospi!al; Pomeroy at 2: 13 p.m. to Mechanic St. for Homer
Baxter to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 2:22 p.m. to
Railroad St. for Lewis Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 3:16p.m. to Long Bottom for Elza Larkins to
Veterans Memorial HosP.!tal; Racine at 7:46,P.m. to Trouble
Creek Road lor Mary Kerns to Holzer Medical ·Center:
Middleport at 10: 28 p.m. to Stonewood Apts. for Evelyn Mains to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

'

Eight defendants were fined In the court or Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
They include Michael W. Klng, Route 1, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs, squealing tires, and $20, seat hell violation; Ronald
Eakins, Route 1, Racine, $375 and costs, driving under the
Influence, and $63 and costs, driving while under suspension;
Leon Gray, Mason, W.Va., $48 and costs, speeding, and $250and
costs, driving under the Influence; John Knight, Huntington, W.
Va., $43 and costs, lllegalleft turn; Jenna Arnott, Racine, $45
and costs, speeding; Blaine Qualls, Pomeroy, $213 and costs,
five days In jail suspended and placed on probation for six
months. petty theft; Barl)ey Hiles, Racine, driving while
Intoxicated and left of center, a total line of $250 and costs.

*'' ••

... Federal....

Continued from page 1

gorously defend it~lf. He also
· said the government's seeking
· more than 300 charges Involving
' a single contract was an effort
· "to sensa tionallze the case."
,...
GE officials believe the go~ · ver.nment is stretching the legal
· ~ • theory of " vicarious liability" in
• · ' charging the giant firm, he said,
·" · noting:
"They have Indicted lndivldu·
: : · als and they also Indicted the
.. · company on the theory the
. . company should he criminally
· prosecuted for the acts of these
•" . two people when there's no
'.: :. ' indication the company was in
any way involved."
Bunch said GE officials do not
think the indictments will have
· · · ·· an adverse affect on current or
future contra~.
" • The indlctm,rit said that from
:· . 1979 to 1984, GE's wholly owned
•• • subsidiary. MATSCO of Klng of
. . Prussia, Pa.. entered into a
• ". series of contracts and contract
· ' · modifications with the Army's
;:. ; · Information System Selection
•· · · and Acquisition Agency and the
· .: Air Force for the production of a
.. . battlefield computer system
: :: known as the Decentralized
Automated ·service, or DAS-3.
•. ..
After the Initial competitive
• ' contract award In 1979, GE was
·;. • designated by the Army as the
sole source for the DAS-3 equipment, and contract modlfica·
tions were awarded on a firm• •.. fixed price basis.
·•
A flrm •fixed price contract is
••
" ·
":
,. .

..

awarded after negotiations
based on the contractor's proposal of material, labor cost and
other Indirect co~ts. plus a
reasonable profit, usually calculated as a percentage of the cost
of producing the equipment.
Before the contract was
awarded, GE was required to
submit current, accurate and
complete cost and pricing data to
the Army, but the Indictment
charges that GE, Leo and Bado-.
Jato engaged In a scheme to
submit false and fradulent cost
and pricing data by telling the
Army that GE would he paying
more for material than the
company knew It would pay,
thereby defrauding thl! Defense
Department of more than $10
mUllon.
Taxpayers could have been
cheated out of more than $22
million if the scheme had not
been uncoVe.red by the Defense
Contract Audit Agency, the Pentagon statement said.
The Indictment alleges the
phony Information was supported by various methods, Including the use of "contingencies" in subcontract pricing, as
well as double-blUing o( parts
and raw materials.
It also alleged the defendants
did not reveal · savings on
subcontracts.
The Indictment also charges
Leo, of King of Prussia, with one
count of conducting the affairs of
an enterprise through a pattern
of racketeering.

Continued from page 1
apparently had a permit for
explosives but had not !lied a
material safety data sheet with
the . Fire Department, Knabe
said.
The Fire Department was sent
to the site about 3: 40 a.m.
because of a burning pickup
truck discovered l!Y two security
guards wl\o were searching for
an Intruder.
While extinguishing the vehi·
cle fire, the first three !lreflgh·
ters spotted a second fire at one
of the trailers, atop a hill about
400 feet away, and called a
second pumper and a battalion
chief to the scene.
· The chief arrived about' 4: 05
a.m., just as t)le first trailer
exploded. The chief, who was not
near the trailer, was thrown
several feet but was not Injured,
otftclals aald.
,
That explOsiOn spread fire to
the second trailer about 100 feet
away, prOmpting a second explosion about 15 minutes later.
There also were several smaller.
expioslons, Knabe said. ,
Investigators waited until daybreak to approach the scene
because of the danger of a third
large explosion and found q 0 Iy
remnants of one of the trucks but
nothing of the second pumper.
"The other fire truck. - there Is
absolutely ito evidence that It
was even there," he said.

Announcements
Special lodge fete
Shade River Masonic Lodge )s
having a special dinner meeting
on Saturday to honor · members
who will receive 25-year pins,
50-year pins, and one member
who will receive a 60-year pin.
Dinner will be at 6:30 p.m.,
followed by the meeting at 7: 30.
All master masons, wives and
family members are welcome.
Members receiving pins may
bring any special guest.
Junior Clvltans lo meet
The Eastern High Junior Clvltans will be stationed at area
supermarkets on Saturday to
collect canned foods which will
he donated to the Methodist
Cooperative Parish Food Bank to
be distributed to needy families
In Meigs Cotlrity. The Junior
Clvltans wUI beat the stores from
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The "Can Do"
food drive project Is an annlial
project of JuniorCivltan International. Last year, the project
brought In over 150,000. cans of
food for the needy.
Lalli day to sign up

Friday, Dec. 9, Is the final day
to sign up for lt2 Multiflora Rose
Cost-Share Program through the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation D!s(flct.
All Interested persons should
stop by the SWCD office on the
second floor ofthe Farmers Bank
Building, sign the application
and locate on the map, the fields
to be treated.
Rules for the program are the
same
as the past two years.
and granddaughter-In-law,
For
more Information, conlact
Jimmy and Gloria Haning; and
SWCD office at 992the
Meigs
two great granddaughters, To·
.
6647.
nya and Sonya, all of Albany.
In addition to his parents, he To spons.., auction
was preceded in death by a
The Syracuse Fjre Departgrandson, James Max · Haning ment will sponsor a Christmas
Jr.; two sisters, Flora Nelson auction at 7 p.m. Saturday at the
imd Leona Folden; and three ·fire station.
brothers, Albert, Jasper and
Selba Cline.
Garden Club to meet
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday
at the DyesvUie Community
The Middleport Garden Club
Church with Rev. Arthur Crab- wlll meet Moncjay, 6:30p.m., for
tree-officiating. Burial;will be In a Christmas dinner at the new
the School Lot Cemetery, Car- Mlddle,port AmeriCan Legion
penter. Friends may call at the Hall. A Christmas party at the
Blgony-'Jordan Funeral Home, home of Mrs. George Anderson
Albany, from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 on will follow the dinner. A gift
Thursday.
exchange will bt"held. Reservations lor ~e dinner mus,t he in by
Sunday,
Pee. 4.
Harold Brannon

:...:. ·- -Area deaths· -' :. ·; Dorothy Wells

·: .::: Dorothy M. Cole Wells, 58, of
• · ·Route 1, Long Bottom, died
·.-: Monday evening at Veterans
• :. Memorial Hospital.
·
Born at Chauncey, she was a
daughter of the late Qulncey and
.. .. Catherine Cleary Cole. She was a
~ ' member of the Mt. Olive United
Methodist Church, Long Bottom,
• ' ·· and the Pythian Sisters, Rock~
land Temple, Long Bottom.
Survivors include her husband,
Chester, at home; four sons,
· Ralph and Jack Wells, ofPome~ ·' : roy, David R. Wells, of Reedsville, and James P. Wells, l-ong
: · · Bottom; eight daughters, Fran•
· • ces Thomas and Donna J. Taylor,
Middle~rt, Connie K. Semels·
: • berger, of Day ton, Doris L.
Henry, of Jackson, Jo Ellen
• . Corrigan, serving with the U.S.
· . Navy In Hawaii, Sara D. Derryb• · erry, also of Hawaii, Barbara
··
Storer, of Addison, and Mildred
L. Nutter, of Maryland; five
grandchildren; two great grandchildren: and ..one hall-sister,
Betty Martin.
Services- will be at 1 p.m.
Friday at the White Funeral
~ .~ Home, Coolville, with Rev . Law.
renee Bush ofliclatlng. Burial
wlll he in the SandHill Cemetery,
Long Bottom. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 2 p.m.
on Thursday.

..

•

:~

I

· Glenn Cline

Glenn Roy· Cline, 86, of Albany,
: ; ,died Tuesday at the Hickory
• • Creek . Nursing Center, The
· 'Plains.
Born May 14, 1902 In Columbia
·: : Township, he was a sonofthe late
John and Mariah Van Blbher
· Cline. He was a welder for the
New York Central Railroad, and
a member o~ the Association of
_ . Retired Persons, the Dyesvllle
• • Community Church, the Meigs
County Senior Citizens, Colum·
• bla Grange 2435, and the RaU·
· road Maintenance of Way
.' Workers.
Survivors Include his wife,
Anna S. Carpenter Cline; one
daughter, Mrs. Max (Maxine)
j ··· Haning, Albany; one grandson

.,

'.

Harold Dean Brannon, 80, of
52219 State Route 681, Reedsville,
died Tuesday at his home.
Born Jan. 1, 1908 In Looneyville, W.Va., he was a son of the
late Ephraim H. and Rebecca J.
Dye Brannon. He was a selfemployed brick and block layer
and a member of the Joppa
United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wile of 58
years, Lavina Barrett Brannon,
at home; two sons and
daughters·in-law, Bernard and
Marie Brannon, Mansfield, and
James and VIrginia Brannon,
Reedsvllle; three daughters and
sons-In-law, Nina and Robert
Sanders, Reedsville, Eileen and
W!ll!am Kirkbride, Lexington,
and Kathryn and . Robert Hill,
Mansfield; two brothers, Ellis .
Brannon, of Cleveland, and John
Folan, of London; two sisters,
Ella Harris, of Moundsville,
W.Va., and Maxin'e Miller, of
Athens; 15 grandchildren and 18
grandchildren.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by an
Infant son, George Brannon, two
brotbep and one sister.
Serytces will be 11 a.m. Friday
at th~ White Funeral Home with
Rev. Seldon Johnson and Rev.
Jordan Brannon both officiating.
Burial will be In . the Tuppers
Plains Cemetery. Friends may
call at the cemetery from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 on Thursd~y.
""' i

Public Notice

·
· ·
:laceive •.so di.eount for ads peld In advance.
free ads - Givenvay and Found adt undlf 16 WOtdl will be

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On N....,ba- .23, 1988. in

trict dn ir• to receive
Mlltd bida for fleet lnaur·
ence ·for the 1989 .calendar

•Price of ad for Ill cepltallettert Is double price of ad cost.
•7 point line type onty uMd.
•sentinel It not responsibla for errors after first d-w- . IChedt
for anon flrtt day ad runs in pap&amp;r) . Ctll before 2 :00p.m.
d_. 1her publie.. ion to make correction
•Ads thM muM he peld In advance are
'
Card ofth.,lcs
Happy Ads
I~ Memorl.-n
V11d Sal•

the Moi(lll County - ·
Court. C..o No. 2t017, Cor·

ald.

d~tat

no ch•ge.

olvn Perry, 191 Hlh;..ortve.

Rovnoldoburg. Ohio. 43068,
oppoloilold EQQIIri&gt;&lt; of
t h o - of Elll Bridd-. do&gt;
. . - . llteofS~ Rt. 681,AIbll1'(, Ohio, 46710.
Robert E. Buck,
Probete Judge
Lena K. Neaoolroad, Clerk
(11130; (1217. 14, 3tc

•A Cllllified advertitement plae&amp;d in The Daily Sentinel tea capt - elaullied dlspley. Busin11111 Cerd and legal nolij;:nl
will also appear In the Pt . PleManl Regittar and the Gallipalla Oaity Tribune. reaching over 18.000 homes.

COPY DEADLINE -

Public Notice

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESOAY PAPER
'!IIURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

- 1 q)O A ,M . SATURDAY

- z,qo P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P.M , TUESDAY
- z,oo P.M. WEDNESDAY
- z,oo P.M THURSDAY

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Education of
Eastern Local School Dis-

- z ,OO P.M . FRIDAY

following telephone
Meigs County

MatonCo., WV

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

448- Gallipoli•

992- Middleport · 175 - Pt. Ple•ant

246- Rio Grande
2S8-~'(8n Dist.
ti43 - Arabla Dist.
379-Walnut

Michigan, Dakotas· g~t light snow
'
By United Presslnteraatlonal
conditions through much of the
Light snow spread across parts. day.
of Michigan and the Dakotas
The storm system producing
Wednesday and rain fell from the snow was expected to pick up
central Tennessee to 'south- mo lsture over the Great Lakes ·
central Louisiana, the National during the day and dump more
Weathet SerVIce said.
snow over parts of northeast
The weather . service posted· Ohio, western Pennsylvania and
snow advisories for 3 to 5 Inches western New York State by ,
of new snow In northern parts of nightfall, forecasters said.
lowl!r Michigan. Forecasters in
Rai-n trailed southward from
Michigan and the Dakotas the storm system, forecasters
warned of hazardous driving said. Scatter8d showers were

Cold JiIron t·••• _ _ __
Continued rrom i&gt;age 1

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE
3597 5 Flatwoods Rd.
P-roy, Ohio
2 milos from Rt. 7 on
COINity Rood 26
11·25-'88-1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUcnON

Stocks

OWNIII: GREG I. IOUSH

,..
'"•'

.CUITOM KITCHENS. BATHS
•EX11NIIVI REMODELING

•VINYL SIDING. ROORNG
•METALIUILDINQI
.
HOUSING. APT. PROJECTS

SINCE 1969

DUI!IY IT. SYUC:UII

992-7611

11-21-88-lfn

HUDNALL

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG ·
161 North Second
Midtlloporl, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C:arry Fiahing Sui&gt;Piiolllj
Pay Your Phone

and Cable Billa Here
• BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992·6SSO
RESIDENCE PHONE '
16141 992-

WELCOME TO
-CHRISTMAS
AT

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

Veteraas Memorial
Service unit meeting
Tuesday Admissions J VIrgil
Girl Scout leaders and co- Saunders; Pomeroy; Thelma
-leaders of troops In the Big Ashworth, Pomeroy; Lewis TayBend East Service Unit will meet lor, Middleport; Elza Larkins,
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Syra- Long Bottom; William Quickel,
cuse United Methodist Church. Middleport.
An investiture-rededication ceTuesday Discharges .,... Freda
remony, and a Christmas party, McFann, Menifee Blevins, Gol·
will follow the business portion of ' die Hendren, Cecil Karman,
the meeting.
·
Lincoln Smith'.

WELCOME TO OUR ANNUAL

Christmas Open House
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3RD
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4TH
12 NOON-5:00 P.M.
ePoinseHis ePoinstHia Hanging Gardens
•Holly TrHs •African Violets
efollage Plants eMonument Sprays
eGran Bla'*•ts •Ctmttery Vases &amp; Wrta ths
el.iYI and c.t Clwistmas TrHI

Refr11~••••• • Deer

p;fzee • Fr11 Ll••
Pl11t Fer E1e~ Perto• AH•••I•t

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
992-5776
o•o

Come ••• our
Chriotmaa Selectio11a.

for yaur shopping conYOfti·
tne wt wiiiM Dplll an Sun.
days from I te S p.m. tlru
Do&lt;. II, 1911.

·

MEIGS
FURNITURE

i

•

•

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

$44995
10· 2~1 mo. pd.

WANTED

DEAD OR AUYE

BOXED

•Washers •Dryers ' .
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators .
"Must Ba Rtpairablt"

CHRISTMAS CARDS
50°/o OFF

KEN'S APPUANCE
· SERVICE
985-3561

.

.

SHOP AT HOME - ' SHOP WITH US
•WATCHES •CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS
•Gin ITEMS •Gin WRAP

We Service 1;\!l•. ~!~.k.~~·

992-6669

271 N. SKOIID • MIDDUPOI!, OH.

414-742-2617 .
Belw•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

Mastic &amp; Certain teed·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seam less Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates

CAKES

••'

.

Speclollzlag In ~holn
l.tnk ud Wood Fencing

cekea
lt. 1, lo• 1U, Ylnten

7U-223S

11·3·'88-1.mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Bult
.. Free Estimat•"
New lomea

PH. 9C9·2B01
or Res. 9C9·2160
NO SUNDAY CAW

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

Toys, Collectables,

Clowns, Porcelain

319 So. 2nd Ave.

992-7204
324 Ealt Main.

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio
(Behind City H•lll
~~

YOUNG'S

SER~ICE

"DOC" VAUGHN

Reas~le

PH.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

-Concrete work
-Plumbing and .. ectrlcll
.

WDt'k

992-6215

/_~

lind IPPHcation call Ul. 1-315733-41083 •t. M2938-A.

Munloloading Supplies
Modtrn Gun Supr.liu
Guns • Ammo • Sugs •
22 Ammo
·
124 East of Rutland
· Across lktwY Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614-742-2355

BILL SLACK

,-,.,.,.flf.

,992-2269

9120/tfll 1 1M.

$pultflll

BOGGS
SALES

a, SEIYICE

GilLS &amp; LADIES
SNOW &amp; FASHION

BOOTS
S3, SS,
S6 &amp; S12

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-66~ -3821
Authorized John
Deere. New Holland, ·
Buoh Hog Form
Equipment Dealer

Phone:
· -~
614-992-3643

11-71 mo.

filii E•ilpMIIt

Wicks ·

Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic

Furnace •uo.DO
Batteries

130.00

&amp; Up

~

:a

8.7 FlnandngonYordmon
Servk:e on All Makes
Wa H - M(/Disc/Vilo

-

PICK·A·PAIR
IN THE HEAU OF

Clinical

The Staff Is
Back ! I I

Mary, Naomi, .lone,
Grac1, Donna, Angit
and Gw111 Folmtr

992-6461

15 tmllll breed puppl• to give
..,..,. Coli 814-3811-98811.

.,d "-'. Terrter. hou• broken
and tov• chldren. 304--175-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gal6polis, Ohio 45631

8204.

BEAUTY SALON
992-2725
MIDDLPEPOIT, OHIO
"Walk-lno Weleome"
10-31-88-1 mo.

•

6

Lost and Found

mtle Coon Hound. In vklnlty of

Nonhup- 775. Coli 814·448·
3413.
Lott: While temlla Pitt 8~1.
Twp. Ad. U7, Beech Grewe

are1. Rutlend. I yu. old.

Answer. _to Angel. Call 814742-2318.

.. LOST big bono Gormon SilO'
~ 8 monthl old. llntwen to
'King", vicinity ol22nd St. .,d
JOIIdlo Rood, AEWAR 0,' 304878-5454.

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

7

Yard Sale

.......Pil"marov......... ..

Shop

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Santa

VIII IEASONAilE
lAVE IEFEIINCES

BOOKCASES
CROCKS
WASHSTANDS
DRESERS
LAMPS

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

1124 E. MAIN

992-2526

RACINE
GUN CLUB

8t Auction

Fell urlnK• Conoolldated, Dutch
W .. t, Btuneo, Aohley

RACINE, OHIO

LOWEST PRICES

FACTORY CHOKE

.

.9·19-lllfn

698-6121

W. p-r c•h for

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHESTEI, OHI.O

If any local

ReferenCN

t.HOME COOKED
WNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UNDEI $30°
MAIN STIBT Pt:ZlA
Our Delivery Stalf
Knows Where You
Live.

1 1· 1 8· 'BB-tfn

BINGO

ALSO ...

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

Low 20's, Send rwurne 111d
Ililt• of lnt•• to 1(-v A tldna,

E MM"Utt.le Director. Pl.,.ntd Pllr·
ont-..oiSout-Ohlo, 391
Rlchl~~td Avenue.

Athenl. Ohio

equlv1ln requlrld. PrO .:perience wtlh m.m.tty chlbled
•lilha. E~q&gt;a"lenCIItrelnlng In
•oup work would be h•plll.
Woodl1nd Cent... lne., do•
nat dilcrlmM•• on the ._... ct1
age. color, creed. nettonll orlain•
riC&amp; . . ortypeofcldbltty.l=or
more lntorm.tlon oorUct San·
dra McFarland, P. .onnel Of.
fie•. Woodl.,d Cent.., Inc..
412 VInton Pike. Gollpolia. OH
45831.
SECII E:TAAY I RECEPTIONIST/
80 OKKEEI'ING
sklls required for loclll¥
bu1ln.., Apply with ,_,,_, I
AM·5 PM at 2.,k Vldoo c .. p..
433 Jaokaon Pille. Galipolla.
Ohio 45831. 814-4411-2411 .

Wood/Motel MotdMik•. E rionoadMoldPnt. . Mok•wlh
own shop and toota. ... d
r•ponea to: Boll Oa 111
c/ oGIIIIpolla Dally Tribune, 828
Thltd A.... Gllllpolla, Ohio
48131 .
Now •••lng ~pplicaOiona lor ·
.,. &amp; p.t time empk'fment.
PI••• IIIPI¥ i'l PtnOn Lorobl'l
Plzu-Siw• Bridge PI••·

P.,·tlme betr,111tw for 4yr. old.
MUI't be able to work mc:a.tfV

WMk.,.dl•w.,lng. lendl.n•
•of. to' At. ,- 110}1 705.
Northup, Ohio 4811&amp;. '

a

G.,...,..,.
Joba. 118.040 .
• 59.230 yr. Now Nring. c.n

1·805-M7·41000 .,,, A·9B05

for ourront - e l 1111.

Earn Mon., At Home! A•emble
Jllwllry. Ton. Eleal:ronicl. oth.,._FT. PTworkw.. lble. CeH
IReiUndablel 1·407·744-3000
EXT. S 1122 24 HAS.
JOI HUNTING? NEEDASKILIJ
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS
AS Auto Mech.,lm, Clrp.,....
t- CoamotoiOglata. Dlv-~
flod Modioli Workorl. Elocor~
ci~na. Food S.Viol Workwe,.
E'-alronla. Technklllnl. ln..,•
Nuralng Aaalllonta ond Ordorllea. Machlnllla. Oltl..
and Willden. Regilt:• now for
ol•s• Mglnning J•u•rv 3rd.
Coli Tri-CountyVooetlonol Adu~
C.mw It 75~351 1
14. A
wrt«v oft.! ndlngaourc. to PlY fur trHI1'18 •• IVallllble for

-kon

•t.

-·allatblol.

D E V E L 0 P ME N T

COORDINATDA·I. S. P••
f.,.,.ed. Signfflc.W uperi.,ce In
.... of p ... on.l•d mrpoNt•
aolldiMion. mljor.J.fl• •d
direct meR II requ~ . Demonllrated IUCC.IM'Id INdenhlp fn
the echlwement offund-,.lng
oo• Donor cult~atk»"' work
wM:h e_.d ll'ld v•m....
extensive NDDrd k. .lng Md
,....ch 5I r«~Uired. F\Mtlme
poallon .,_ .. In A - . Ohio,
r-.ulrel WtnfnU'WMkend sched.ll• .nd tr.,ll throughout
eight sout"--tern Ohio oou ntl•. Low20'a. Sll!'driiUIM•d
lett• of lnt•Mt to Klw Addns.
EMGrttlr•Oir.ator. Plann.:t P.r.,t-dofSout-Ohlo, 318
Rlchl.,d
Allwla. Ohio
48701 .

"''*"'"'

a.ct• needed

10

_.«

for ....., Mne

wort&amp;. Mt.m rNd wei; 2

1hift1

.,..
9:00 em-2:30. pm,;
4;0().8'00 pm. Good hourly
paid -ly;, 11&gt;01\0 oft•
1m

Thurwdlf, O.c. 1 •

'

nc&amp; . . ortypeoldlaiiMIIry.J:or
mort lnfortNtlon oontiCt a.n• • McF.I.. d. Per~onn.. Offie.. Woocl.,.d Cent ... Inc.,
412 VInton Plko. Cllllllpolla, Ohio
4883! . .
'

AVON • AI .,. .. Cal Marlty n

w..... 304-882-2145.

AN'S llo LPN'I.PH, lull time

a

p.-t dmt IPPII•MIIM are being
accept_. for PleMint VIlli.,
Hoapll:lll Nuraktg Care Cent•.
Coftt•ct Peraonnel 304-8715·

4340. AAEOE.

AVON ell.,_ll Slllrl_, Sp-a,
304-878-1U9.

. ~eded A von Rep. In At. 87 .
l:om!!l•• houllholda of .,,nf • At. 2 era Melon County.
ture &amp; .ntiqu... Alto wood a.
lot - - no algn
ooll hMtWJ, .Sw.ln'a Furnltu,. Cuat-.
-. fH for qwllfllld pnon who
a. Auction, Third • OIIV'e, colla
304-882·28411.
814-446-3159.
.. Staff nurte for Maton County
Junk C.n wfth or wfthout Hollth Dopt, PoollonA,.IIablo'
moton. Coli Larry U.ef¥-814- J., 1, 1819. Prot• ISN.
318-1:1103.
Att•nlle ASN, CIUr'l'ent., enFvmltu.- ... appll.. _ by tho railed In I I N ptopom.
WY• Ucww&amp; Elon•efor school
pi- or .,.Ira houllhold. Folr
nurae cwtffiCIIIton. Call M•son
=belngpold. Coll814-~
County Hellth .Oopt for dotoMa,
304-075-30410.

C..,_

12

Situations
Wanted

a

Need lldv 10 Nveln help c•e
for ~dorl\0 lady. Call 514-682·
81 •. 2.

DOOR PRIZE
H.D. FREE with coupon end purchaae of min.
H.C. P•ckllll•· Limit 1 coupon P" cuatomer per
bingo -•Ion.
WE PAY 0&amp;0.00 PER GAM£ OVER 110
2

PEOPLE

c••· Smtth
1111 Eo at ern

n.-• uaed

Goodu- k~- Dillin . .. Coli
814-446-0124.

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9976 '
THURS. E.B. 8:45 P,.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

I

l

TOP CASH pold for '83 modol
8ulok·Pontloc.
Avo.. Ollllpolla. Call 814-4482282.

985~4141
GENERAL CONTIACTORS

competitor oHtrs
you a better clec!l,
tell us and w1'H
match itl

I••

mocW dun
uMCI Cll'l.
Jim Mink Chw.-Oido Inc.
BRI OtneJohneon
814-448-3872

Wid

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING. REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

At The IESTPRICES.

ac:h-.. .. •nd trftel throu__.t
eight aouteett.-nOhio counta..

BaiJ(slttw needed 11:00 em5:00 1m. Cotl oft• 5,oo.
304-713-5971.

WE TRADE

CARPENTEI, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

12 GAUGJ~~~~OTGUNS

V~.lnt....a.

. .d

r.aord kMPint 111d
r__.ch II rtqulrtd . Ful time
~lon b•od In A- Ohio,
requires ev enlng/weellend

dla•lrnln••

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

1:00 P.M.

Hou1e; ChriltrNS Around

bed. IMMcams.. proiector.,d

•12 Years Experience

EVERY SUNDAY

IOM'd

•t~nalve

tcreen, Slno-SM'IngMIChln• t;;;:;,~ (upatalrt) Main St .•
cebfntt. two 14 tnch atudd.ct
Fbm-w.
. .
tnow tir-. rllbbtt oo .. Decomber 1 .,d 2. 11,00.2:00. POSITION AVAILABLE; PR().
Clifton, W. Va., I mle llllow GRAM DEVELOPMENT 8PE·
bridge.
'&gt;l
CIAl.IST for Part ill Hoepllallratlon Progrem It Woodltnd •
Y•d s•e. Friday evenln~ Sat·
centers. Inc. Mat. . dear• or
urct., end Sundlrv. Indoor. "uMIItnt ,.qulred. ,,.,_ •peBulldlng between Poet Offtoe n.,oe with nwt181fy diatbled
1nd Larndr.,.et, Rtcfna 114- ,..,"" E•_..,_.tr.lnlng Jn
849-2972.
poup wCIIIo would be help.,l.
WoociN Cent ... Inc., clo•
not
on tht bMia of
age. oolor,creed, nltionlllorill6n.

'"The Gij11 That Never

11-19·'•8 1 mo. d.

()p~n

The World. 3·6 klla nwkad
down; chldran'a clotNng 5·&amp;8X; Octo Gyn, couch- hid..•·

RIVERINE ANTIQUES
GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

oo•· Donor cvuttlwetlon. work

With

trl.. Maintenance Worltere,

Full l;xcavating and Construction
Residential 8&amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential 8&amp;
Farm Work

KAY'S

Call 992·2228
or 992·9922
10·11·• 1 m

814-446-0422.

1 ve• oldfemelepertCNhuahua

Formerly Meig1 Exceva11ng

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEIOY, o•o

To give.,.., good rllbbil: dog to
country horne. 1'Ya Yl'll· old. C.H

.. 2 doga, Sll~phord ond Collie,
rnl,..d, 304-875·1753 .

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

Your Hometown PJ'Iice

DEliVERED TO

Puppi•. Doberm111 mbl:. Also
mother-US mos. old. Call 81"'
4411-9441

Ldsr, 11·14-88. Lorge Wilker.

PIZZA

DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

2 TV's to giveaway. Call after
4:30pm. 814· 4411-8252.
·

Femll• Porl*enl~n to good
homo. Coli 814-992-7269.

Audiologist

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

9-1·81-lln

MAIN STREn

MAXIMUM

Giveawav

Hellthv. hoppy, !Yiakv pon •••·
alo pupplea to good ho,., CoH
114-3117· 7180.

~

NEW &amp; USlD MOWERS
Sorvlct C111t• for Ryan
Produlls

GUN SHOOT

4

Fr•CtotNng. hou.ehold. 3 Fa·

M. KOCH, M.S.
"a: .LISA
Licensed

Located Ho!f,¥tay
between Rt. 7 li Boohon.

atretld aUCcetS . .d IMderthip tn

tho ochl..,omant of t.nd-rolalng

Secrcllrill, Male boo•::::

Malo Aulltrlll., Sh~phord. 1
yo., old. Coli 814-949-21144 a&lt;
814-1149-2883.

hal.r flf
YAIDMAit I ECHO

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

U·H1ul"1 For Rent. SldwaEqulpm.nt Co. u.s. Rt. 36. Hencterson.WV.

mHiell are cleaning aut. Come
·Tika whet you need. 29th-5th.
c.tll14-388·9885.

SIMON'S

P1rt1 &amp; Slfiflel

fAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE ·
PH. 949-.2969

614·985·4180

$14 PER TON

CAll 992-2136 BETWEEN 9 &amp; 3

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

4-16-86-tfn

P-oy, Ohio
II· ]4.' 88-«n

AND

APPROX. 200 ACRES LOCATEQ •,
BETWEEN RUTLAND 8&amp;
LANGSVILLE ON ST. RT. 124

OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

NEED A MASTERCARD-VISA
In a huny? Guaranteed program
reg•cl . . of hiatory for m_.ual

ANO

Shops!

TOP OF THE STAllS

992-6720

FIREWOOD
PERlOAD
DEliVERED

.J."•

w

Centen. Inc. Mm. . deQr• or

IILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

S3S

or Res. 9C9-2860

.fjj

10.31-'IH mo.

COORDINATOR-B. S . prefwred. Signlftctnt experi.,ce In
..... of p.-.oMII .nd corporate
~cl:etion. m
•d
direct mail il ,..Uir . Demon-

POSITION AVAILABLE; PRO.
GRAM DEVELOPMENT 8PE·
CIALIST for Partt.. Hbtpillllb:e·
tlon Program •t Woodl1n d

Mlcldleport, Ohio
992

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pal• out of
palntln1. let ma do
It for you.
.

' :""\ - ' •HAIR
~
' ~ '"
·~~
·
..,..,:~·•nOTHES
\
-c:.,
. •TANS
DESIGNER IOU'riQUEI
111 Wont Soc. '-•r

Prices"

"
949·2101

742-24&amp;11
10/28/1 mo.

BEAUTIFUL.
.........

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

992·3723

UP TO •ts HOUR PROCESS·
lNG MAIL WEEKLY CHECK
GUARANTEED. FA EE DE TAILS , WAITE' SD, 1057 W,
PIIUodolphlo. Su~e239· GO . On·
tarlo, C.Mf 91712.

48701 .

INTEIIOI-EXTEIIOR

Salem Sti'HI
Rutland, Ohio

Certified Licensed

Jacobian

- Addona and r.mocl.. lng

Blem

CALL 992-6756

tPAINTII\G
•ROOANG
•TILE WORK
•PORCH El

Workl. Inc. Pom•ov. Ohio.
814-992-3891 .

-Fiooftng •d gun.r WOf'k

Ker Heaters

Domestic Vehiclea
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mech1111ic

~STALlE17

•REMOOEUNG
•PllJMINNO
•DRYWALL
•DECKS

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite

Where

CARPENTER
SERVICE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Most Foreign and

"At

Annuuncernents

We win haul coal for eniergency
HEAP. Melga County D~pt. or
Human Service., and HEAP
vouchers. We c~n give you
prompt dellveri•. Excelsior Slltt

LINDA'S
PAINTING

(FREE ESTIMATESI

OHIO

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

3-ll·lfn

992-6282

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

•CEILING FAHI

FREE F8TIMATE8

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Fne·Lanc1 Wrlttr
Spttches,
Computer Graphics,
Public Ralotlom,
I Advertising ~

OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.·4 P.M.

PAT HILL FORD

. REPAIR

~uthoriud Serokt
&amp; Ports
Briggo &amp; Stratton

REPAIR~

IIIJH lYNCI

992-2156
3 Announcements

GENERAL~B" .·.

Bo~

D EV EL0 P MENT

11·9-1 mo4 pd.

·

..-oup. Send ...,me to:
328, Chllllootht, Ohio
45501 .
ology

HELl! WANTED

614-992-5952

10-7-tfn

LYNCH'S

Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY

Factory thole,
Gaugo $holg'"" Only
Strictly Enforctd

12

porta of any ond ollbldl.
Bo•rd of Educltion
E11tern Loc.l School Dlnrict
38900 SR 7
Roedavllo, 0 hlo 411772
Elolae Bolton. Tr-urer
111)23, 30; 11217.14, 4tc

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES

Birthdaya, Holiday•
Specl•llzing in
ch&amp;f&amp;cler and novelty

CARTER'S
PLU,.,BING
&amp; HEATING

ACREAGE FOR SALE
' ''

all aNied bido ahall be received In the Treasurer' 1 of·
fico by 2:00p.m. on Decem·
ber 14, 1988. and wMI be
Optlned at that time.
The Board of Educltlon
r•erv. the right to accept.
end/or raj- ony ond oil

LHsa M. Murphey

10-8-tlc

We can repair and retort radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

10 Years

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

office.
In order to bt considered,

by Donna

1/15/tfn

SYRACUSE.

EVERY

Specifications 1heets ere
available It the Trt,.urer' a

2-11r-'"ll·tfn

JUST OPENED

Call 992-2772

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

Mos-

or lea..

J&amp;L
INSULATION .

ATTENTION DEER
HUNTERS

.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

WANT TO lUI WIECIID 01
JUNI CARl 01 TIUCIII ,
-FREE !SIIMATESf'l' .., of lhlltsar•i&lt;ll call .

937-Bufhlo

Real Esta1e General

"You'll Find GHts For Everyone)"

.

Racine, Ohio

SET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAL
..

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busineu

1·13·tfc

f, the E~tire

':

•Dozer 6 B1ckhoe Work
•Will tlo Hauling With
Dump Truck
'

468 - Leon
671- Apple Grove
773-;-Muon
882- New Haven
896-letart

Middleport, Ohio

Jrd St. .

i Family!
··''Prescription
Shop"

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

992-2196 '

Smith

year.

•Residential
•Commercial

Buckeye Card Welcome

10.27-1

.COUNTY
APPLIANCES

Hospital news

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RES IDENT IAL
COIIIIERCIAI.

.

Weather

r··Gi;;;;;;---~~~~~~·

Pomeroy
985-Chester •
843- PortS.nd
247- Lelart Falls
949 '-- Recina
742- Rutland
6&amp;7- Cootvlte

Basham Building

n

Business Services

reported from ceatral Tennessee
Into south-central Lotilstana.
Elsewhere, cloudy skies prevailed from the northern Plateau
and the Great Basin to the
Dakotas. Clouds also were re. iiorted over much or the
Northeast.
·
Dense fog socked In much of
western regon and the valleys of
northern and 'Central California.
Fair skies were the rule over
most ot the southern half or the
nation.
u
A 6-inch snowfall sent cars
sliding off roads into ditches In
Iowa 'fuesday, and as much as 5
Inches tell Tuesday night across
Wisconsin.

Assuming an on-time launch,
however, Atlantis could land as
early as Sunday morning at
Edwards Air' Force Base, Calif.,
based on ' an analysis of the
shuttle's presumed trajectory,
Dally stock prices
requirements lor a daylight
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
touchdown and other !actors.
skipper
Robert
Bryce
and Mark Smith
Veteran shuttle
"Hoot" Gl bson, 42, a Navy
or Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
commander, and rookie co-pilot
Am Electric Power ............. 26Jia
Guy Gardner, 40, an ~lr Force
colonel, practiced landing proceAT&amp;T ................. .. ... ... ......... 29
Ashland Oil ........................33',4
dures Tuesday In a jet modified
to mimic the shuttle's handling ·· Bob ~v!pls .......................... 16%
Charming Sboppes .............. 12%
characteristics.
Clty Holding Co ............... ...32%
Federal Mogul.. .................. 48¥.z
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................47Ya
Heck's ................................. Yt
Key Centurion ....................16¥.,
South Central Ohio
Lands' End ......................... 26%
Tonight: Cloudy, with a chance
Limited Inc ........................ 25~
of snow flurries. Lows will be
Multimedia Inc ........ ...........71¥.z
between 25 and 30. West winds 10
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
to 20 mph." Chance of snow Is 40
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12¥.,
Divorce actions filed
percent.
·
Shoney's
Inc ........................ 7%
Thursday: Becoming partly
Divorce actions have been filed
Wendy's Intl ................. , ...... 5%
cloudy, with highs between 30
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Worthington Ind ................. 21~
and 35.
Court bY Glen R. Bissell, Long
Extended Forecast
Bottom, against Naomi R. BisFriday through Sunday
GOOD USED
sell, Long Bottom: Naomi R,
A chance of sn9W or snow
WASHERS, DRYERS,
Bissell, Long Bot tom, against · flurries each day, especially In
Glen R. Bissell, Long Bottom,
northeastern counties. Highs will
REFRIGEUTORS, TVs,
and the Home Nallonal Bank,c be 15etween 35 and 45, with
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
Racine; Gregory Alan Shamblin,
overnight lows In the 20s.
Racine;-agalnst Klmherly Carol
Ball Shamblin, Racine.
Dissolution sought
A restraining order has been
Issued against thedefendant In
William J!ln Durst, Middlethe Glen against Naomi Bissell port, and Odella Ann Siegfried,
627 3rd Ave., Gallpolls
action.
Middleport, have flied In Meigs
PH. CC6·1699
DJvorces have been granted to County Common Pleas Court for
HOUIS: I A.M.·6 P.M.
Edward E. Adams from Lisa a dissolution or their marriage.
Louise Adams, and to Matthew
C. Van Vranken from Lori Lynn
.'
Van Vranken.

"We don't want to tank If
there's a low probability (of
launch), but If there's a good
shot, and that's a judgment call,
then we' II go ahead and tank and
see .what It looks like come
Thursday."
Forecasters predicted rain,
cloud cover and high winds with
gusts up to 28 mph on launch day·
II a cold front blows through as
expected. Such conditions probably would violate one or'more of
NASA's conservative post·
Challenger weather guidelines.
"Right now, It's too f~tr In
advance to call what it's going to
be, particularly when you're
dealing with weather associated
with a fast-moving cold front,"
Said Sleek, a former meteorologist. "If we felt we had a
reasonable chance of making It
we would go for (fuel loading)."

exchange.~ ...

Galli a County
Ar. . Code814

387- Ct't•hire
388-VInton

FIRE DEn.

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

ALARM
SYSTEMS

RACINE

Business Services

Classifie'd pages cover the
fl!ralture, and even toys, sucb u tbla popular
J(JST OPENED- A~lellllan bouday aboppen!
California RaisJD, whlcb Johaaoa llllbown bere
A aew atore, Jackie Dee's Varlety store, 112 West
adcJiallo tbe sbeU. Opea since Saturday, bouna&amp; · .
Mala St., Pomeroy, Ia opea for baaiDeu. Owaed
tbe store are 9 &amp;o5, Momlay lllrougb Sa&amp;urday, and
by Jacqueline Jobnsoa, of Middleport, the store
carrlell a wide variety of aoveltyltems, Cbrllltmu . 12 &amp;o Son Sumlay.
decoratio111, lamps, hou111bold decoratlolll, some .

GUN SHOOT

Public Notice

ouulde Meigs. Getlia or Mason counti• must be ooe·

•

Business Services

Oat Reeultt Fttt

y

run 3

The Daily

Ohio

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thruFRIDAY -a ·l~M: ln5 P.M. 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'

-.------ -

~--

1988

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

..

.

PEA GAME

.

Uaod "rnlboro br the pi- or
tntlre hou ..hold. S14· 742·
2458.
Tropplng .. DOl..........., gin.
-~ O...r.O •uotol-w 114-8ll44781. Houn 2:00.8:00. Cloaod
Mondll\0.

,Would lllle 1 IN•in femllle
oo-n. Age 25 to 40.

PI-e write: Tho.,.. R1cw, At.

2 ... 345. VInton, Ohio 48888.

fa&lt; llcle-11' and

. 11100 ..... Coli

'

'·

\

I

••

�--~--·~

Page . 14~The Daily Sentinel
15

RE·TR- NOWI
S OUTHEASTERN IUSIN ES S
COLL£QE, 521 -*bon l'llte.
Coli 44tr4387. Reg. No. ae- 1 1.
1 0 -.

18

Wanted to

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Apartment
for Rent

Z bactoom IPt. Point Pl. .lnt
BtUmeda tact io n. 11 4-448-

1221.

4roomept utiiiCI•pah1tiO.OO
304-8?11- 3100 or
175-51109.

[I'

Do

Pll -

lh•• .,..•.

.. Coll114-44e-8412.

45

Furnished Rooms

Wll do .._sitting in mv home
..... """'· Cell 810· 4458199.
·Dintll CM' Mad ell Aeceptio nltt.
Int .. Aaaouna receWHI• 15
Y'l'1· •perlence. New t o aree ..
Colll14-448-89110 _,AM or
lotoPM . zee-4401 deyo.

Aoomt for ,... WMk or mont:h.
8t1Wti1g at e120 1 mo. Gallla
Hat• 8 14-44fT 111180.

Opportuni.tv .

roro..-•-

THE OtiO
I NOTICE
VALLEY
I PUBLISHlNG co.
Y'"'

c1o buoln- with poopl• ....
know. end NOTto -dmon~

tlwoult\tho mtll unrl vau h.. o
FN•Iglll•:ltt. offwlng.

Buy dk'CI from mn.1 factu,.-

.,d ~r~•

ue. Spa•• ltlning It

f1 ,550.00. Coli A"" Tech.
304-523-8288.

. . . . .p-...

,._...,lnt,.,d Tw..,. for .-te.
send ,_...to 8011: P 22. c•aof
lloglot•. 200
,._n St.. Point Ple• .,t. W. V•.
255110.
Hti1r s•on. high traffic high
,...moohop. Ro.Woed r.. quid&lt;
olio. 304-525-3015 or 30~
523-7277.

Homes for Sale

v.., t~ttrKtWe bridl4 bedroom.

2 , . , flmly rvom with ftr•
pl-. forrMI din ina. '-ae lw'lng
room. 30 fl. cultom Mkldtctnn
. -... ook w-""'- tlnloh

32

t..

mc..t

42

Mobile Homee
for Sale

lot. 4

Holzer Hoepltel off Rt.

.81 Redmond. 2 beG'oom~,. ac
cond , G1lllpoll• locetlon.
t8, 1500.00 or
off•. phone

.,_t
304-875-3779.

-cv

Homuued Rallty, mobile
horn&amp; 41ott. Me. t13.500.00.
cont.,.rv. 304-1755540.
1978 Homme mohlle ~me. 2
bedroom. 121&lt;85, 02,200.00.
30~175-2174 oftw 3:00.

l•ge buldnp
lotr. mobla homes p•mttttd.
public wal•. ello rllr• lot.,
Clydl Bowen, Jo. 30~87e2338.
beta~tllll

Building lot, 144x105.
aero.. from...,,

•aooo.oo.

Orodo School. Oolllpolio Forrv.
w.v•. 304-1711-8421.

from
35-

_ _ _ Subdlvlolon. CIH
114-448-4189.

4 Ill .. lull .......... g•ogo.
fultv c.-p•ad (some nawJ. City
,cnooa Udltt:l• IDw. Woocf.
burner. Ntll:ul'lli gas .,rnace.

PriOid ta oell. Col 814-44e0278 oft• 8 PM, -endo
onytlmo.

41

Homes for Rent

Nlclfv fur'*had tmal hou ...
Aduttt ontv. Rat:. raquhd. No

-

· Cellt14-44e-0331.

3 BR .. AC. o•p._ pool. 1•111&amp;
2 ltropl-. ton~ Oood loootion. Clll A-1 Ratl E•••

3 liR . hou... deluxe, .a. c. a
pOol-811• or Trod a 4 IR . houeo. -•-'".:."-:...;.·..:.30..:.4-....:..87....:..&amp;-_e_10..:.4...;__ _
good laCOIIon. Col 30 ... 875- ' ' G104.
Pl.m:t Sub.-4 IR ...... b••
.. REPOSSESSED GOVERN·
MENT HOMESI Umhod time.
"" l:Dwoott Nationwideprogreml.
· ca~ tor buy_., "-'~lilt to
. .. your er• 1·315-733-IOM,
. • Ext. 0 2758.
' lvOwnw-PrlceAact.rce6-2bed,, ""'"'ldtchon, lllllng ,...,. din~ lng room. bait\ eun porch. full
booomom, l•eelot. ....,doled
yin'fl sldng. By
•palntmont On!r. 608 Rldgo
A.... Rio0n•,.lo.CIII81~912.
7424.

lnt* ,....,

'*''

2 bedroom hou•
3 a~r•.
Von-lent Rd. UO. OOO. CIH
ott• e 81'4 -742-2448 .. 4481848-onytlm•
ly OwMr-3 •orv A·Frwne
hom&amp; 10 yra. old. locaied on
Rodn.,.· Cora Rd., 3 mil• p81t
Qulllf CN~k
park. Picl:ureeque utti\g. 3 BA .. l•ge
ldlchewlbullt- tn cablnML a.·

Mobile Hom-

m•t. c•pet. g•

itln--

ctty

an ... ono chMd.
No P•L Oop. • Ref, . ._rod.
.3.2 6 pw mo. Cell 81 ... ...._
o 27&amp; 1ft.. a PM, w.~~:enc~~
oohoalo.

Adu~o

anytime.

Hou•• 7 roomt. un.. rnllhtd.
•225. 29 Nail Aw., G..Upoh.

~

448-4411 oft• 7 PM.

5Cour1:2U.Ing•- 38R .. HI
bethononatkle. 1 IR . • Nth on
. . .. loth ldloh.., bnlohld.
Ide• lor -Itt with,,_,,.,,..
ent. Overlool&lt;o .-k&amp;rlv•. Wllk
to schoolt. OOINntown. e37$ •
mo. ,..,, utlhl•. Dopooll lo

,.,• .,ctl.c.ll 814-44.4821.

Ferm Hou. .4 BA .• city wetar.
Ne• Cedmuo. noo dopooh.

t1110 ~ .... Col 1· 514-87..
4014 oft• 5 PM .

t,..•

:;;:;;:::=;;::::;:====::::'
.
49
For Leese

Rent

14x 70 3 bedroom mobile home.
Qlll,.alofony, 304-175-4018.

c-mwclol luldlng lor ' - •
Nl...., furnloloed 2 -oorn Pt. Pl• •..,,. Coli 304-1711- .
trellw, del&lt;*~ Md ,.,_en&lt;* 5104.
noqulrod, 304-87e-1926.
MerLilollllilse

44

· Apartment
for Rent

51

2 BR . ipta. e m ..e:•• kltdl'""
•pl ..rnlohoct W•hlr-Oryor
hooJt ""' n_. plush CII"Pit. tla
paint.
Nca good loallon.
Reclenot. Inc. Apia. Call 3048711-5104. « 175-5398 or
B?e-7731.
New completety frunithed
•pa'tment a mobile horne In
ctty. Adults onlv. P•ldng. Cal
114-448-0338.

BENJTIRJL APARTMENTS AT
IUOOET PRICES AT JACK·
BON ESTATES. 831 Joclloon
P•• from •183 a mo. W..k 'to
ohop ..d lrMWiol. 814-44fr
2118.E .O.H.
Ter1 Townhou•ep.-tment• 2
lAo.. I'll b•hl. CA.. dlo·
M•h.-. dlepoetl. prhtete en·
otaood p•la. pool oiOI'graund.
Wit•. ...,...,, • treech In elided.
ltll'tlng II • 219 pw mo. Cal
814-317· 71110.
.
Fwnlllwd.t.Ne•HMC. 1 BR .
U315. Utfthl• plld. Coli 44e4418 1ft• 7 PM.
AD.-tmenta end hou ....
30 ... 875-1104.

Apoot"'""" lor tho Elderly.
Oallle Minor APiflmentt. Ill
81111 Marton Rood. Oool1111od lor
tho Ienior Cllz., (12 &amp; aldeol

tn dH~ndcappadpnON. E~·
houolng opportunity. Apple.
tiorw m., beplokodupot Spring
Veu., PI••· 1529 Jack•on ·Pike

or coli 814-44e-4138.

Modlrn 1 8Ft, dowmown. co ....
pt•e ldtch... llir. CWpat. DIIIP"

-IlL

..otll,. no peh. CIH 81.._44.

0139 ..

oft• 5.

5211&lt;\ Sec. E_,. cond. , 2BR .,
equipped klohon. olr. AwMoblo
Nov. 1ot. *225 ,..,, clop. Col
114-448-0803 or 44fr2158.
Nlce-2 BR . apt. 4'11 f'ril• from
Golllpolo. Stove. oolrl~ &amp; wat•
tur•had. • 221a mo. No
Coli 114-44frl038.

throuGhOut wtth l•ge
downdalr'l b•hroomMdutllty

lautdry room. other fe•ur•
lnc:l.ldrt ftrepiiCe clningar• .,d

eecond floor b•h w/ shawer.

ptJ- •• • fruhtr•aswell. depOiit.
41· llomoVlrQktle
lor - · f2110 olu•
L. Smith Ani
3 c. o•~Ue wtth work • •

•c:r•

3 BR .. l•ge LR . utllly rooFn.
nnga cHipo.l. Rent/ option to
buy. Good loeatlon. 113 1111:~
onl St.. City. •zoo dopooh.
f275 1 mo. No pot~ Clll
814-445-2573
NIW on Mark•. Three bedroom
bride with .,_oad 1A: •ere lot, 2

e1~38JI.8828.

3 8R. loootod ·AI. 141 In
C»nt~n_., , UOO/ mo. Call814445-8681.
2 Bedroanw. 2 b•lto. now loolll

mldtchen, twtmmk'tg pool, nloe

minutM from Holzer, city
schools. Modern ldld\en wllh
IIPPII.,ca l•ge living room
with firtPI~&amp;a. dining room.
fern itt', room. 1VI b•tw. 0.•
he•·. cent.-.! air. -«Idled g.-~ge
with elec:lric door open.-. low
Mtunwble mort!JI'II• Cell 814445-0753 or 448-2425 oft• 8
PM.

Complllal¥ fur,.hed. one bedroom oottl(le. Adutt.. Na p•a.

Home In country wlr:h IMd. 16
ml• fromn A
12 mil•
fromPom•O¥· 814-992·5848.

Across from Gillie Aclderny.
n110 por mo. Coli 814-44e0045 or weekends aft Ill" 5 PM .

tn Syr10.11e. 15 room hou• wtt h

Hou11 with bath. N•• Radne.
Nice yard. o•den space.

th-.

bit h. IS

•c:r• pkl1,

del.t. g•-a• ,.,d

MIMI~ I'Mt~

'*""•·o•

.,rnec:.. v'- of .~.... priced in
30' s, but negotiable. Call 814992-18471ft• 3 or lnYtlme on

fllhmo. w... .,,... hldd"'.
Cell 81~44fr2543.

2 BR .. fuM boo-. oppll.,.
CM. ~P•· H4 Third Aw. No
- · Rot. • d•· One ohllcl eon
114-448-1183.
3 IR . double

EM:el. con d.

81 ~ 992· 88 51.

c.•

Pomeroy-2 BR . remodeled
8p8'trnent off Spring Aw. Sac.
dop. !o rot. Cell 1ft• 8 PM,
814-992·8888.

F..,nllhed downstllln. 3 rooms
&amp; bMh. Cletn. No Pet•. AduMa.
Ref. &amp; dop. OHotr• porklnjt1
c•. Cen 114-448-1511.
SHADV LAWN APTS.-729 Se·
condA\1111., furnished effid.,CII
n.ring • •1111 mo. lnc:lulng
wot• lo g•boge. lin ole oduho
...... Coli 814-448-'411117 ..
44&amp;-2802.
Unt..~rnithed

2 8R g•eg• 8p.-t·
ment.ln town. Carp•ad. Adults
ontv . No p•a. Call S14-4414U1 .

weak ... dl.

Wll sal on lind contract c::all

HouH,. 2 bactOOmt, kitchen

A ..... m.nt for r..t. t2215 1
month. Dapo1tt required. 814-

Mobile H crnes
for Sale

1988 New Moon 1211:&amp;0, 2 BR .
• 1800. Coli I 14-44e-0390.

1971 Buddr 2 BR ., oil g•.
1 ZxiO . Baen recondition
throuGh out. Extra nice. •&amp;960.
Coli 814-445-0175.

nove, futtv c::•pMed. Nice 111d
cle.,, no lnlkle pea. Oapolll
requhd. 814--992-3090.
Mod•nfurnilt.d brlok hou"on
unlmprowd road wiH llowmo•
of ""' In axch'.,ge for fHdlng
Cettle, 304-875-1113.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

-~~~---~- .

1970 New Moon 12x81 tNII•.
Cllll14-26e-1333oft•5PM.

In Eweka. 28R . Adulls Qntr . No
.,.,, t200• mo. Dep. ,_...red.
Coli 814-245-5183

2 lA . Vlndlle mo ... home.
IK 12 • pen do. C.., King woo~
bUr-. 2 doduo. fiiiiOO . Col

Mobh Hom• fur nnt. In
K.natgtl • •· Conetructk»n
workers w'llaun&amp; Cell 114-

11~25e-1I08.

44e-OIIOI.

1183 ....... 14ol0. 2 -

u•• Jub. CMtrel *·
t.mwca c.-pating. 14Jc5Z

a•

.wnlng. E~~;cellant oondlt~n .
prloedrocllood. 81~982- 731!0.

-oom

2
mobil ho- City.
Un.,rnlohld. Adu~o onlv. l'rf.
vote ...... ~ f280 me&gt; o.,.,.
noqu~od. Col 814-44&amp;3791
ott• I PM .

"'"r:

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

VieWIDg

Vans

a. 4 W.O.

CD Ill

-com

2

.,,.IIfer

Apto.

rent.

Cerp•od. Nlco •
Loundry
fedllll• avlillble. Cll 814992-3711 . EOH.

Ntwlv redaooreted ep.-tments
evoloble. Utlll'- pold. *2211.
P• month. d•oo- noqurod. Col
814-992-5724 oft• e:OO or
992-5119.

.. couch ..

_
doh -~ ll•en-.
•
·
-

r-tcn"'·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
SofM tnd Chalrl priC'td from

to ee9&amp;. Aeclln.. 12215 to
U75. IMnpo •ze •• •12s.
Din-'" t109 end up to •u&amp;.
Wood tabla w-11 ch•• •215 ta
t795. 0Hk • 100 up to t375.
Hutcha1 •400 111d up. BuM
bedl complete w-mmr....
f215onduptaf395. 8obv bedl
•110. Mattr.... or box lll)l"inga
full or twin .... ftrm e78. tnd
••. Queen lett $260 &amp; Up.
King •310. 4 dr.war ahall $89.
Gun cabin•• 8, 8 • 10 gun.
. .. ........ _
f35 • *45.
Bod ,....,., •zo. f30 • King
fr...a eso. Good telection ot
bedroom IUhee. mMal cabln•s.
hHdboerds .30 lnd up to ees.

90 Dan tame

c•t, wtth
approved eradft. 3 Mil• out
lul•lle Rd. Open 9em to Spm
Mon. thru Sit. Ph. 114-4480322.
11

Vall.,. Furniture
New lf'ld u1ed furniture end
applican"c" . Call 114-4467572. Hours 9-5.

• Fwnlture eome to MoUoh.,
F"ntture-Upp.-Afv•Rd .. 81444e-7444.
Buy, Sell, Tr.S.. Call Bargatn-

VIRA ' o FURNITURE AND
APPLIANCES
Open Oolly Mon ..Sat .. 9 AM-I
PM
Sun.. 12 Noon- 5 PM
Open eftar hour s by
lppointrnent

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS ·
Bentwood rockert, $49.96.
Ht.,y duty ru8th:;: bunk bedl.
•229-complete. 4 pc. bedroom
1ufta with trlpla ........ t489.
Rurtic" dr. wood ch•t. t98. 4
... oh•t .44. 95. 5 dr. choot.
f54.95. Solo • chelr·rll!j . . .99
now 1289. v.. ghn tofa • ch•r.
''II· t2400 , _ f899. I pc.
wood

group, reg. ena now

•318. Vaughn Bitten wall

hu- reel ln.,, • 199. Ruotlc
country •bla. 3 chair~ • bench,
U89wlthmotohlnghutch U50
bbothp'-.
Chrlttmts tOws and gen•el
marcfl~ndile .. cN•count prlcee.
4ft . ....... f28.95. llcycl• &amp;
triOfCI• stanlng R •11.-98. 14
Kgoldducb, •7.49es•. Mr. &amp;
Mrt. Cl••· e14.11t ••· Iron
Stona churn. e14. 91. "Chilcf'l
ool&lt; rocking ohelro. f8.99. Pogo
blllt, •7.99. Remota 6 · redlo
controlled ~• &amp; trudct, chine
t14.81.12K11Relitalous.
d-. ........ pldu... f7.99.
Loy- , _ fer C,.lotmoo.
Open 9·5onthe24th. At. 141 !n
Ceni81111'V· '.4 mila on Unooln

dotll.

Simnwttal

Buy or Sell. Rlv•lno Antlquoo.
1124 E. Mllln StrMI, Pom•ov·
Hours: M,T,W 10a.m. to lp.m.,
Sundey 1 ta ep.m. 814-892·
2526.

8k»dl,. brtck. _ . . pip•. window., Int. . eta. Cla~M MnWt. Rio GrM6a, 0 . Call 81~
245-1121.

Miec. Merchandise

71

Pets for

Sale

Dragonwynd C1t1..,

Gov.-nment Salud Vehh:lll•
•om •100. For. . Merced•.
Corvattei. Ctuwya. Surplu1.

Kennel.

CFA P. .l.n 111d Slam•• ktt-

tens. AKC Chow puppl•. New
Hlmlll•n kttt-. Call 814-

1983 Dodge cw... 2.2 motor, reel with black Interior,
•1 . ~11. 1180 c~ .. ,.,. ....
OW"nar, 2 tona gr.,, mM:alic
tlnllh. Sh•p. f1291i. eon 81428e-H22.

AKC Cocker Sp ..lal pups.
me lea- •150. females- e200 .
Toklng dopool fer Chrlotmoo.
Coli 814-31..1890.

Call

814-448·7928 ...... go.

e

pc. lr. .utte. $460. Old
kHchon ....... f200. Old
frMklln ,.,.,fng machine. e150.

1817 OMC Jlmrnv 8 -11 4 wh.
• .. loodod. E.,.,. oond. 18,000
mi. Muot ,.,. Col 814-25e8201 oft• 8 PM.

81~

2 choice Cemelirl 1ott il Ohio
Vall.,. Memory Gerdent:. e30o.
Cell 814-44e-3499.

W•t Hlghllftd 'MIIte Terri••·
AleC PAppi•. A C,_iotmoo Qlft
lhot w11 '""· eon &amp;14-317·
Oe24.

FlriWood for Mle *30 pidc.up.

delivered. e:zs U · h&amp;~l. Raccoon

Refrlg .. excel . cond.-•200.
Compl•• bed. •7&amp;. Tebfe &amp;
chlirt, •e&amp;. Nice. 1977 Car.
•eoo. co11 814-448-3224.

1982 MoriiJry Z.lrfr. Ill op.
tlo,... new
brak-. axhaltt.
Excellont mp~ Col 814-4452030.
•

ti'•.

Qood mille INgle Rabbit dog.
1'-'» .... old Mot- • tot•
ragitterad. Running rabbits
good. Coli 114-31e-9843.

Whlrlpoolwethw• dryer. Looks
rHIW·Nns like ne.v. Will tel
MP•Ite or $226 pr. C.lll143e7-0322.

1878Corvlll'ta. EmalltntConllltlon. *8000ftrm. Cell 114-38e8897.

Reg. Se.,point Hhnallrfen elt.

E-. br-g quollty. Clll

1988 Volkll-n Jette. 4 • ..
option. Exc.l . cond.
*1 1.800. Col 114-448-1731.

1ft"' 5 PM , 814-44e-4043.

Livilig room !k bedroom

rt~ery

Roawell• pup, tem•e. 10
'IMIIIkl old. No pap.-.. •150.
Cell 814·887·3021 .

furnllu,. almolt niW, kitch.,

a. women

clottwng. mit e. ReMonabl .. Cal

1888 Plymouth Horizon. Auto.,
lir, 4 dr. Coli 814-37,..2726.

e14-448-8412.

1984ZZ8Com•o. S.OitwHO .
*7,000 Col 814-3711-2574.

Mlxtidh•dwoodslebl. 112p•
bunc:le. Contalnhlg approK. 1Ya
ton. Ohio Pallet Co.• Pom.-oy.

,.6. I

1184 luldl; Wlclon. EJrtre 1h.-p.
low mllolgl
0001 .
eyl.
with mmy
Tom Amd•oon 814-982·3348.

Ohio. 81 ... 992·84e1.

57

BaM.It tful genuine mink stole. A
steal at t 400. Call 81~992·

2949.

_•If•.

Musical
Instruments

Plano lor •le. Story 1111d Cl•k
coneole. Goo(Lcondftion. Cell
814-992· 15108, h .m.· 12noon.

ladi• A.ign• leather COlt. Ful
304-882-

4 :011-9:00p ..m.

S URPLUS ARMY, DENIM.
CARHART, Rental clothing.
Small Arf'r'¥ Equipment Accetl ori•. SAM SOMERVILL£'S,
OLD ROUTE 21 . NEW ERA
304-273-5855. -n-8 PM .
Nov, Dec. {l"'ulllted Cov~~rel ..
$27.50). Jungle loot1 U.S .A..
Orlglnlll Army dot'*'g. Nonmllltery camflauga pants
*12.00.

814-982·7179.

•rtou•

1978 Plymouth Vol•• &amp;l ..t 8
engln&amp; auto. rune good. Good

1110 miloogo. UIIO. Cell 814742-21102.

•4•80n. Limited opanlng1.

boglnnoro, 304-529-8090 or
304-e7&amp;-3384.

59

a.

Fruit
Vegetables

For •or.. de,.onenBW" oruMd
c•. truck or...,, . . JC.tny8e11
et Jim Mink Chevrolet ·
Oldlmobla 81,f.44e-3872 or
30~ l73-51 34.

TNCkload apple ule. Aad end
Gold DeUctou•. tl5.99 bushel.
Jacka Fruh: Merk-. Rt. 315,

mil• north Point Pl. .ant on At.

2.1Mlho.,dSootch f15.00.,d
Spruce •2&amp;. 00. 304 ~ 87&amp; ·
5773.

1988 Ohio Cud•o CI•L one
owner, low mR-aa •c cond.
304-175-1238.

Hendlnon. W.Va.

.Fre.er beef, corn fed. call aft•
8:00PM. 304-875-4182.

..One t,.d c•et dlernond solitalre •110.00 veNa wll tell
...&amp;O.OOorbeltoff•. 30+17!8872.

.1974 GMC Allra 380 c .....
mini 13apeed, 411
gr...
wortdng truck, • rNI monw
moll•. •e.ooo.oo . .304-77350811 or 30.,.1711-1882.

R•••·

I o1r111 SlliJIJIH:s
.-; LIVI:SIIIr:k

.. 1978 Fueh~f •2 ft flat bed

.. 1910 Lincoln Town Car, new
302 .,g~n., 304- n3-131o.

I

!';o4:
81

.. NI'Iural get orbottlegM "rang.; .

refrlg•ator and dr . . . .. 2311

::,J

I"IP:;:I:k":·:8:1:4-:4:4~8=3~1~5:8·===~~U:•:oo:ln~A~ye=·:Po:i:nt~P:Ie:•::.,:,:·

1984Ron.,~F ...... l".ll~r&amp;B
· - oun roof, olr, tiL AM ·FM

Farm Equipment

c.•m.,

For tale-Reooncltloned 11 fl.

30~8711-2722.

1171 ...,.,_ moble homo.
141170 with 7&gt;121 ..........
plio no 304-1711-1141.

141170, 2 be~- - · · only.
no ooto. Cell 114-812-3321 or
11&lt;6-992·1722 ott• I:OOp.rn.

1171 u~ 14x70. 3 ,...
room . .• 7. 100.00. 30~1751171 ondl75-1781

2 bectoom tret• on nlot lot.
Ch•'*o. Ohio. 1 ·30,f. 7735128.

31.000 mi-.

like

OM, '1300.00. Phone 304ne- 89!ll_or 875-732t.

fold-upbuahhog.C.II114-28f.
4821 .

1983 BID Pontiac Bonn•~•
lrou_,..._ 305 atto trlnlimlt·
lion. 4 door. Ill P""'"'· 110,000
tCiull ml•. t ... SOO.OO. 30,.

One MDnth F,... Rent

•zoo.

au ..lflad rent . . pey
depo* end no rent for the
monlh. Novemblr or De-

837·2028.

cember ontv. Vlllege Menor

., d Atv.,..lde A pert"*" I i"'

Mldd.art. Foom f1U

814-992-7787. EOH.
i"'

INch Sir... Mldd ..... Ohio.
2 ba*oom llrnlthacf IPartmlnt.
utltti• pel(l, ref•anCII. Phone
304-n2-ZIII.

,..oom

.. 3
opt, Jorryo Run
Rood, 304-575-2103.

'

7:30

A~OUT "
G~OWING Ol.D/f~ I.S you ""

THt: c;oop THING

gf Tf-IAI'JfCFUL

Unoondtlonal M'-:lme

yoLJ

gu••·

~
!

i

t ... LoCIII rftenctt t..rr*had.

FrM

•lmll•. dll'
Cllll oollaet
or night.

Arkansas voodoo murder .

a

(JJ
(J) Growing Palna
Mike Is thrillad when his
pholography class requires a
nude_ph01o. D
ID
The Mfnd Focus on

1 · 11~237-0488.

Roger1Beeement
Wat•prooflng.

rn

SWEEPER lftdtewlngmachlne
,....,.., p.-tL ., d euppl•. Pldl
up and diiNary, 01¥11 VN~u m
Cle•ar# .one half mila ~P
Ooor1110 C - Rd. CoR 814-

the uniquely human qualities

of thought, not purely

i

Rotory or - · tool *llln~
Mottw... compl•ad•em•cll¥·

Pl.lmp al• and • ..,.... 3048911-3102

w•._e.

Akn Troo Trimming 111d Shimp
Removal. FrM ettlmlt•. Cal
304-1711-7121.

TAL K A60LJT
HL.Jfy'.IL-IAT ION!

B&lt;I.G1&lt; 1-\QMf;:-"6AI N .

ot-od t11.00 loch. wlh tNo
ed. 30 ~ 875-221 e.

a

Plumbing

a. Heating

~

CARTER'S PWMBINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth anctPine
o.n~o:'· Ohla
Phone 8143188 ar 11444e-4477

BARNEY
LAST NIGHT TH' PARSON
GAVE THANKS FER MY
VITTLES TWICET II

Electrical
Refrigeration

ONCE AFORE
WE STARTEO SUPPER
THEM A6'1N AFTER
OESSART!!

. Reeld... lel or comm•cl81 wtr-i"'g. New IWVICI or rap ....
Llcanled electrid.,. Estlrn.te
""· Ridenour Electrical 304875-1781.
.

86

a

HE WAS
PROB'LY
THANKFUL
TO STILL BE

1D 1H1 Newa
Ill Martin , _ _ King: The

AUVE AN'
KICKIN' II

Draamon Hold

ID crD Bemey Miller
II)) Evening Newo

1914 Chw/. 'h: ton CUllom
Deluxe I cyl. auto.. nM"
wheels· paint. ~~h miiH .
U7110. Col 1143791 of.
t•l PM.

a. J Wat• S.VIca. Swimming
14t9:~· .... - · Ph. 114R WMw Servl~ Poolo.
cltternt, wellt. lmmediat•
1, 000 Ot2,000oenonsdaiN.-y
Coli 304-8711-8370.
.

Wot• dollY... 1000 gollono.
R••onlblt prla.. lmmedata
c1111v . .. can 114-982· 1271.
Welterton'e Wet., Hauling.
r. .on.bte
volume dlt·
CDUnll. 2,000 Ia 4,000 Capac&gt;
lty, .......... poolo, wollo ....
304-57 .. 2819.
.

r••

87

~

Crook Md Chase
10:30 (!)l!eatEndere A continuing
chronicle of the lives of •
reslden1s In London 's Easl
End. (0:30) •
I '

•

Genar111 Hauling ·

Dotlv .. Any.

Upholetery

-t~·· ~-

. . ,.....

trl CDUnlyBrM23y.... Tha..J
6n llrnltura ufholldftg. Cal

304· t71 ·4 14 tor free
eatim.t•.

lfew Country

10:00 1D 700 Club
D (]) lUI Tattlngero Nick's
mother arrives in 1owli to
have her husband daclared
dead.
(JJ
(J) China IIHC:h
McMurphy's romance hits
the rocks when she finds out
Nateh Is married. 1;1

Pasquale Ele&lt;:~rla Co. Lle.,.ed
electrlcarts. Aetldantltl • cmmm•ollll wi'lng. New service •
rep*e. Free •tim.ta 1152·
Third A100., Ooll,.ollo Ohla
81,f.445-2718.
.

15000 Ford Df•el tractor with
plow• &amp; cite. grllln drill, .H.;a
chop~. 2110 gollon .,..,. ......
Wllh Clrt • boomt.
39110.
Own•
flnenca Call 11142811-1522.
•
.

..

ANDTH&amp;~IMN
HADW BR1NS-ME

c,...,_ o•

R •

1978 Che:vy pldc· up. PI, PB.
auto tf'WW,..tlon. VflfY good
condition. Price on lntpection.
114-948-2237.

YE6TERDAY J: CI-IASED
THE: q.AR BAG-E TRLlCl&lt; 60
FAR THAT I qQT LOST ...

•

CIPIIIn st . . . .
2
nerage size rooms c1rptt

72

N- ohow oodclowlh pod, he.od
otoll. &amp; br-t ,.,... Modo bv
Sllv• Royol. •1100 volue now
, te95. Coli 814-21e-1822.

MORTY MEEKLE AND·WINTHROP

G. ONtn andlo,..Concrete8f1d
Contrlllltlng. lnl•lor Md ext•
ricH' Plllnliflg. 'c•plnt.-y and
m•onry.

J

Livestock

I

Aon't Chlmn., sw._,, spadall
thru O.c•mbar 138.88. ean
304-773-1348 .. 773-5140.
.RonnloNooi.

time. Clll 814-44e- 740~No
Sunct.t c81l1.

1981 Ford Ranger. V-8.
c•e. .e. numeroue utr-. Ike
-'48110.
· P~oed
•aoo bel- - •·
Co" 30~1711-7875.

a

RON'S APPUAN&lt;:E SERVICE.
hou" c•l awvlclng OE, Hot
Point,
dryers and ·
IIOYoe. 304-5711-2311.

19nch.,., rtation wegon. runs
goocl 304-773-5825.

*--

teacher, sands the class into
a lallspln. 1:;1
Gil ID 421 Annie McQuire·
Red may be denied an ·
appolnlmenl because of an
allag~ly bad dinner.
9:00 II (]) 1151 Night Court D ·
(JJ
(J) The Wonder 'i'1111re
Kevin falls under the spell of
a dlsr~putable kid In order to
be cool. 1;1
ID Ill Mexico Examlno the
1988 elec~ons and the
emergence of a political
challenge.
!1aJ e@ MOVIE: ' Runaway•
CIS Spe&lt;:lel Movie
PreaentaUon [PGt3) (1 :40)
II)) Lany King Llvel
O 'MOVIE: Lefl Scare
Jeaalta to Death (POl (1 :29)
9:3011 (II 1111 Blby Boom J .C.
thinks Ellzabelh's been
kidnapped when she's out
wllh a friend .
(JJ Collage Beakelball
(JJ
(I) Hoopennan Harry
Is coerced Into deiiYarlng a
eulogy lor a hated cop. 1;1

ltUrnp
NmOYOI. Col 304-875-1331.

Dlll•d Wit• l.vlot: Pooll,

TNcks for Sale

a

r:.tty Tree Trlmmng.

&amp;

e

(R) (1 :51)
·
II)) PrtmaNewa
® MOVIE: National
Lampoon's Animal House (R)
(1 :49)
II! Murder, She Wro1e 1;1
® NaohviUe Now
8:05 (I) Night of Sovlel TIIIYiolon
8:30 (JJ
(J) Head of the Claaa
Arvid's dad. as a substitute

RON'S TaiiYielon Sanfice.
Hou" cllllt on RCA, Q.ur.
OE. Boeclollng In Zonlh. Col
304-1'71'2388 or 114-44824114.

84

logl~al.

421 The Van Dyke
ShowD
18 crD MOYIE: The Ama1eur

448-0214.

82

e (]) =amur Flllld

(JJ !n1e11alnmen1 Tonight
II (J) USA Today
1111 • 421 Ill Jeopantyl 1;1
IDI!D M"A"B'H
II)) Croaftre
IIJI Nlgh1 Cou,
12!1 VldeoCountry
7:35!II Sanford and Son
8:00 1D MOVIE: Jumping Jacka
[NR) (1 :36)
II(]) 1151 ·Uneo1Yed
Mroteriea Cases: strange·
tales of memory lapse;

VON 'i HAvf To PAY iHf
~---- .. FREIGHT CHAf'!Gfs.
•

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

1973 WI -.pw lootla 30489 .. 3083.
.

83

"Your fairy godmother said she needed
t he coach back ... She decided to m a ke
pumpkin pie."

•

Home
Improvements

Clot•~ Wello.

1111 Ch.,y 'IIi ton C.-om
C.k.la:e V·l. " tpd. , atre trim.
eliding windDw, b•d liner,
chrome whl•. low mil•.
*7800. Cell 114-44fr3791 If·
... 8PM.

-•lly

FRANK AND ERNEST

'(OU~Set.F - ,.... ANC&gt;

81

.

Bernice.Bade Osol .

'Your
'Birthday
AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. ,18) Ha rd feelIngs could resullll you expect loo much
from another In a joint venture loday.
Nov. 30,1818
Conversely, if expectations from you .
are 1oo "!uch,. lhls person will also !eel .
Powerful, new amblllons will be lei down .
arouaed In you In 1he year ahead. It Is PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Trivial do•
very likely lhal you will sel goals for mesllc Issues could be blown complele- :
" . yourself which you would never have ly oul of proportion today. Keep this In
dared lo attempl previously.
mind so that you don't slart llndlng faull '
SAOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Un-, wl)h your male.
..
dereatlmallng }'I)Ur competition today ' ARIES (March Z1·Aprll 11) There may
could prove to be an exercise In folly. be more career opportunity than usual
GIYe lhem credll for baing at leaal as around you loday, buill you 1rea1 devolstrong as you ate or perhaps even more opments Indifferently, the results will be
so. Sagittarius, 1roa1 yourselflo a blrlh- nil.
day gill. Send lor your Aslro-Graph pre· TAURUS (April ZO.Mar 20) Y&lt;&gt;ur ex ·
dlc11ona lor the year ahead by mailing , 1ravagan1 lncllnallons could be ralher

CANCER (June 21 · JUiy 22) Usually
you're a person who tries to let by,gones
'be bygones and feels uncomfortable
,holding grudges. yet today unresolved
•resentments may go~ern your behavior.
LEO (J.., 23-Aug. 22) It's Imperative ,
that you· manage your resources pru-'
denlly at this lime . Don'l spend unwisely or make loans that have pronounced:
elements ol rlak .
VIRGO. (Aug. 23·S.pl. 22) Es1abllsh re· ~llsllc ob)ee11- for yourself loday,.or
lse you mlghl be templed 10 s trive lor
' ome1hlng 1hat Is beyond your capeblll~ las, causing severe frustrations.
IBRA (llept. 23-0ct. 23) Avoid dolhg
things today that you know from your
qwn e&gt;&lt;Perlences could cause prob$1 to Astro--Graph, c/o th1s newspaper, ~strong today and they might Induce you
lems. 11 you Ignore your better ludgP.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH 44101 - ·,o do some1hlng foolish financially . menl, regrets are likely.
3428. Be sure lo state your zodiac sign. ·S1rlve to ·be sell-disciplined.
ICORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) A domlCAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 18) It may ' • GEMINI (May 21.June 20) The conse.
,_rlng friend mlghl try to Involve you In
be wiser 1oday 10 temporarily shelve quences of your actions could allecl
something today that you 1110n'1 want lo
dlsla81eful tasks ralherlhan doing lhem olhers adversely today, so examine · be pert of. Be your own person and do
reluclanlly. Poor work will only have to your motives 10 be sure they are pure
not yield to peer preasure.
.bjil repeated Iaior.
and noble. Lei th"J belter you prevail.
tll-.WW...... IWfiLI'NIIAUk ~

.

l

.

.

_

"I said anenlionf" yelled the
".Lam at attention ,
sir, ' replied lhe privale. " It's
my-- that· are at ease ."

sar~eanl.

.

'

.

a

1.-fA~N TO AC.C!ipT

UTILITY 8LOO . SPL .:
30"x40'x8'&amp; '• Cle•ence, 1·
115' x8" trD door, 1-3 ' Wlllk
daor: t4999 ERECTED. Iron
HoroeBidn. Cell 814-332-9745
Collect.

w•

lmtl IPt. Jecllton A\111 rw.
,.,. • 138.00 month
d.DIIt NqUirod. coli 304-57e44110at. eo .. 81

..

.. POOR I9Y8l1IIE8 : .
ov•4.000Uilldtlr•. Movtngto
Handenon, W.Va. Into naw
bid~ bv Ooc. 1lith.

19157 Chwv 4 door 2111. Run~.-1971 Cam•o 350. Run1 and
lookllgoocl 1 •• of 194 heodl
for Ch.,.. Redone. Cal 61494e-23110.

Trombone. grut cond. great for

now, Eckord Chopol Rood. 7

s.0:,~30:.n3-50'6s

._,ON.

lndhrta.al ~It•
beginn ...
auRarilt. INIoerdil Music. 814-441-0887.
Jeff Wamst., inttructor. 114-

For ule Christma Treae. 119

875-81182.

1187FordEooort. 4 . , - roll
eh•p. One owner. E.:.Hd
mndlr:ion. Under Trena,.able
Ford Won-. 15300. 814742-3142.

tof

tale. Amp.
•P••· mike and stend. Call

Electric gutt11r

All Chriltmu tr... t12.00,
DOrM ..-lv before oold w.ther
and tag your tr•. Ntwells
Chrlstme• Tree Farm, one mile
above Meson on H111glng Rodt
Rood. 304-773-5371 0&lt; 30~
882·2888.

fth Ide lett ..... din

AT M6' I DIDt.li &amp;AY

1985 Dodge Shollrf, 2 ... Mba
cherge, AC. AM-FM-C111 ..
ttandtrd trlnl, 48.000 ml•.
•449&amp;. c• 814-44e-8197.

AKC Mlnl•tura Schnauzer
puppy. Female. 8 wks. old.
f22&amp;. Clll 814-445-4180.

Rd. Coli 81.,.448·4982.

Oulde. (1 I 805-187·

lluyon

eooo. eort. &amp;·10189.

44e-3844 oft• 7 PM .

llgn•ure 17 CIJ, ft. l'lfrlg. &amp;.
alec. renge-avoc•do. Good

trail

WI.,D®'i~~

Auto ' s For Sale

1982 i -... Com•a. 308
ongln&amp; AC . PS. T, C. Alolno
tt•eo l";'ltent, low mH•. 1988
Forrnulo Flroblrd. - d . Toko
_.. p.,-mentl. Call 1114-"•
7370.

Groom 1nd Supp)V Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breedt .. . AII
ttylee. In• PM Food Deal•.
Julio Wellb I'll. 114-44e-0231.

Diamond / Ruby 14K ring.
Velu•UOO. ~ldng •nor bait
Cell 81~44fr0898 oft• I PM.

can

Auto Parts
&amp; Acca110rle1

1184 Cit•ion 2 tone • .,
exterior, light gr.., velour
'"'-~ uses. Cell 814-28e-

I

lo 4pm Coli 1-814· 4450742•tl-3

3 382.

76

1

~---T·J~;:-:,UJ'J:. .,: JE.:. D=.I6. . -I ~
I
Ih7:-·'TI::. . .;,I_:c..,.:l: . ...;TIB::-'--rl- .j 0

ID crD Odd Couple

~ VldaoCountry
11:00CIJ Remington SIMla
D (]) (JJ D (J) 1111 Ill a21
1151 Newa

IDTIA

IIJSign 011
ID Q]) Love Connection
. II)) Montlyllna
· ® Tale• fnlm the Dllrkllde
9 l'ollml Vlca 1;1 .
~ You Can Be 1 Sllr
11:05 (I) MOVIE: In Saorch of
Noah'l Ark (0) (1 :35)
11:30 D (]) lUI Tonight Shew
(J) SporiiCenter (L)
(JJ ChMre
1D American Art Fonn
(I) Nlahlllne 1;1
iiDl USA Toctey
ID Q]) NIWIYwed Qame
II)) Sporta Tonlghl
Ill @ 'Nigh1 Hear CBS La1e
Night Glambone goes
undercover to ftnd a drug
supplier to boxers.
1H1 Hill
Blu.ea
~ American Magazine
12:00 ID Paper Chaae
' •
(J) ThorG)Ighbred Dlgeat
(JJ Nlghltlne 1;1

a

a-

.

•

.

•

·.-

th~

Complete
chuckle quoted
by f1 ll ing in the missing words
you develop !rom step No. 3 belo w.

.

.:!. PR INT Nl iMBERE D

-~ lETTE~S IN SQUARES

rn

19110 CRZIOR Hondo. phone
304-1711-48111 1ft• 8:00PM.

1

S A GE R y

(J) ABC Newt 1;1
Body Eleclrk:
NlghiiJ Buelneao Report
Gil ID 421 CIS Newo
ID crD WKRP In Cincinnati
IIJ ShowBiz Toctar
.IIJI WKRP
II! C.rloon Expre11
12!1 You C.n Be a Star
8:35 !II 9 to 5
7:00 ID Our Houn The Third
Question
IIID PM Magazine
(JJ
(J) Current Affair
1D Ill MacNeil/ Lehrer
Newltlour (1 :00) .
1111 • 421 1151 Wheel of
F-nel;l
IDI!D Thrw'o Company
II)) M-yllne i
IIJI Cheere
II! Miami VIce D
12!1 Crook and ·chaoe
7:05!II Andy Qrllllth

w..-..

r FtI

3

im It

Rt. 315 Cyele Ill•. Soutlwlda.
wv. I'll . 1·304-87.. 4130. Now
SIIMng ,._ Pol A 4
.,duood4whlll.._

8822.

58

a..

length, size 10.

I IJ I I

1

11:30 II (]) 1151 NIIC Nightly News

8UOOET TRANSMISSION·
Ue ad &amp; rebu lh en ty pee.
W•ontv·30 ....~ Prl- f99 &amp;
up. Uood ltandlrd
• Nllultdutch•.
-·
00111tl'ert....
pr•wre pt•• • ttwow out
bo•ln~ Wwr...,.12moo. CVC
lalnto-ol typoo. Col 11,f.379- .
2220 or 30~8711'8758.

-···

0UII'Mt88Cf Quellty

FlrM"ood for sate: Oak. Call

it.-ns, enUaues, men

~;:.:;;:;~:'.::.. CAl

lho

WORTAD

1

a.-osro One Day at a Time

Ch.,.,..

Slide 6n Wreck• Boom. C.ll

•121. Col

I

1H1 Facti of LHe
II! Fat Alba,
12!1 Fancllngo
j

AAYliiiOO...

1984 Chovv
Autom•lc. AM rdo, elmott nBW"
tlr•. 80.000 ml•. Aa• teel
ropl- f1000. FD&lt;
mare lntatmttlon 0111 Paul ..
814--2342. Moy be • - ot
The Qollipolo Doly Tribune. 8-5

CETIOE. INC.. Ath.,o-114594-3578

11 4-44e-7370.

dr-.

WELL. MA'f'6E 'f'OU
USE T~E FEA1J.IER5 AND TI-lE
STICK ~ORSE SOME OHlER TIME ..

a. Grain

Tro~IISIIIHI~IIIIII

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Ch.,nll Ruotlc
ond Reviled Lop Sldln g
"Doell Mot•lolo

Wheelch,...new or used. 3
whaeled electric Jeooten. Call
Ro~ Mobilty collect. 1·11148711-9581 .

Oldor
445-0924.

Hay

Building Supplies

Concr«a blocb- 111 tlir:N- yard
or deltvery. Muon s.td. Oallll)ollo Blod&lt; eo .. 123'11 Pine St ..
Oolllpallo. Ohio. Coli 814- 44e2783.

814-948-3012.

•166 for both.

Aegllllterad

Building Moterlolo

Antique Cherry love taM. Cal

cond.

ci'oat.

Key Ang.~o bull Clll 114-4481181.

65

w......

rang• . lkagge Appll""eet,
Upper Rlv• Rd. bellda Stone
c114-4411-739&amp;.

Uv8stock
----------

84

$SAVEt Buy mal order. Videot/ CO &amp; mag•ln•. MTWTF

rotrla-•on.

·83

Cklb coli. Koy Aroguo-Horolord-

Antique D•nt•l cabin at·
MahogtnV, 24 dr-.v•. Excel.
cond. Coli 11,f.44fr89110 •wlv
AM or lotoPM. 28e-4401 d.,L

54

•

8:00 ID Bonanza: The Loot
Epl-1
II (]) (JJ (J) Gil II) 421
t8l Newo
CV Degra111 Junior High
Whe els' birth fathe r
unexpectedly appears.
Themes : adop11on , fa mily.
INA) D
"
(J) MOVIE: Dr. Who: The
MUUinlltNRI (2:17)
'
18 Q]) Happy Dara

KXIO. EIICIII'"' oondltion. "'*Y

f-----------,-----------1
Merchandise

I-IELLO, KID? t'M CALLING
ABOUT THE C~RISTMA5 PLA'f'•.
APPA!l.ENTL'f' I MADE A LITTLE
MISTAKE •• NO, VOU WON' T BE
PLA'I'ING GERONIMO AFTER ALL ..

---------~
Kow•olll ~ •d Kowulld

~

54 Misc.

Motorcycles

1987 Hondo Z·IIO. Like """·
tiiOO. Cell 11~44fr1724 ..
441-1174.

tt· }•

Antiques

11 ... 387· 7118.

clly1r1.

74

ho- 2218 Jeff111an Aw..
""Ytimo.
.. w..,_ and ctyarln goodo::md.
•110.00. Phone 30"4-075·
2844.

53

30

lettoro of

fo ur scrambled words below to form fo ur simple words

m

30 lnd1.v.:ldo elect:rlc: renga
Good oonditlon. fiiiO. Coli
114-982·111194.

Sot. 114-44.. 1199, 127 3rcl
Avo. QaOipallo, OH.
QOOO UIEO APPLIANCeS

1982 For,!! 4WO. Colll14-387·
0181.

Wtdta Fren~ Prcwincial beef.
room IUfte. Double bad .,d
dr. .er wtth min"or. t715. Cal
814-985-3910. .

outside alactrlc bo,; for mobile

NOV.

Q Rea"ange

EVENING

E-=ell1nt aondttton 21 lndt
lanHh color •wilton. Walnut
flnloh. 2 y.., old. f400. Col
81~988· 4448 oftw 8:00p.m.

:ft~" H:'":O:.d~e6Q~

WED: ,

•

Quean stra Eth.n Alen E•rtv
Am•ictn bed rr..,e w/ m•ct.lng Md tlbl•. CaN 114-21~
1151.
. .

304-875-3082.

- - - - - - - - ; : !dh•d by CLAY R. POLLAN

0

30~1711-1112.

73

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

r---~~~---::---~::--------------~-r~1l~e~l~e-v~.~.s-.~.o--n---,----=,=~~=~:=~~=,=s=©==~~JD=~~lA
~-~~~£~~==~~~=:=::=:~

XLT. nloo
, _ •tires and wheals, AM -FM
ca. . ette. •lr, very shlrp.
u.no.oo. 30~773-110811 ar

Cont.....

Z lA . furNahed moble home In
1 Ill . ..... hod
hou• on MacHton 8tr•. CIM
114-448-4109,. 3711-2740.

2 - - 121&lt;110. f 1900

Wednesday, November 30, 1988

llltlo truck. V·8,

Oood ut-' floor modtl ., d
I)Oftable oolor tv•• far •Ia. CaM
814-448-1149.

nlehed kltch.,. For mOralnform•lon. call 814-982-1215 or
814-992·3718.

19811 Fl•wood. 121&lt;84. bottle

roofM.

.. 1117 F•d

PICKENS USED RJJINrrURE
Complete ho ~l8hold klrnls hl n g~. 1h mla out Jarricho.
30 ... 875-14110.

PDm•ov . One
.wei two belt'oomt. partt&gt;f fllr-

1• helt 1nd hot wit.-. e3000.

Dlnny.

992-5724. After 8pm or 192·
.5119.

4 IPwtmtntt

1912 moble home-owner wll
ftnenoe or • • bait oH•r· 3
be ....... 2 b.ho. Cell 81~
21e-1010.

Con 81,f.843-1310 .,. 114843-1401 onytlmo. Aile lor

unci IPPIIenc.s end TV IMt.
Opan lAM to 8PM. Mon thru

lond. 814-448-8444.

3 rooms a ~h-1 BR .• utlttl•
pold. U20 P11 mo. Rot .• d.,.
requi'ed. Call 814-448-7&amp;15.

32

'

Fumlohld ......... 1 Ill .
nu Uti~'• plld. 1101 s.
oond. Oollipollo. Cell 445-4418
tttt• 7 PM.

3 bectoom~. e225. I* month
..... dopollt. Coli 814-982·
5724 .. 114-992-5119.

304-458-1888.

PJunty Appllenoo. lne Oood

For low prk:el on Quality C.rper:

¥''d. Cr'O'Nn Ctty, Ohio. CIH
814-25.. . 1431.
.

&amp;room hou•ln dry. $231emo.
Allo 15 room hou • In BldHel.
• 186omo. S:OIIe14-44fr0924.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; RJRMTURE e2
Olve 8t., QoOipolo.
NEW· I pc. wood group- $399.
Uving room 1Uit. . $199· el599.
Bunk bodl w~h boddln~t f249.
Full tin mattr- • found«ion
ttartlng- $99 . Recliner&amp;
tlartlng- tl9.
USED- . . .. dr....._ bedroom
"'"•· Detkl. wrinll' w•hlr. 1
complet:eline of u1ad t..lrnlture.
NEW· W.tam boot• e315.
--~~ f18 &amp; up. (Stoll &amp;
10ft tool. Clll814-44e-3159.

J &amp; S RJRNITURE
1411 Ea.r:•nAw.
4 drMer ch..r, e.g. &amp; dr.-.v•
ohllt. f54. 95. 5 pc. wooden
dlnnltte tete. e198. 95.

Lot It 1811diCIPed with l•ge

Eot.

Hot.aehold Goods

•us to et915. T•bl• •ao and
·ea• up
to 1125. Hlde-•·bedl 1390

p••·

.,..ed

Qlraga door openert. Storage
buH... g &amp; Sot. dloh II In'*' dod
wlth the 42
The owner
wil,_ to ael • e r111~e
price. Col 81~44e-8511 .

COUNTAYM081LEHomePuk.
Route 33, Norlh of "'m•oy.
Rontll lroil•~ Col 814-9927479
.
Pork. Qllllpolio Forry, w . vo.
30 •1-875-3073.

v•

for

o•••
•••
ml•

N~emem. 2 c.-

•

S p - for Rent

~~nii;iii;=ii:;;;;;;==r;;;:;;:;:;;~;:;:====-i Sp-.o
nnt. F1mlly'
moblo
Pridehomo
MobleHQma
loU fer

Aahlon.

31

_

48

"Caffeinated or decaffeinated section?"

B~.ainess

21

ft'O ,,.kJ

......, _...............
· c..·. -

for Slle

TNckl

•

.tove wtth 8CC8110riat. u..d
only 1 . . .un. e100. CID
814-448-2838 .. 245-9378.

ble. Stnior Citll., P:,ef•. In

r111&lt;1nc1dl

72

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriabt

Hot.aehold .Goods

DutchwMt Clllf wood •

Som.,ne t o liwoe ln for compM k&gt;n.
R•• unl·

-

51

.•

- --

Wednu~y. November 30, 1988

Pom81oy Middleport, Ohio

Schools
l nltructlon

•

'

---

-----~

C)

UNSCRAMBLE . fOR

ANSWER

SCRAM-LE'J:S ANSWERS
Wallop

~ Cello - Futile - FEEL GOOD
Alter spending an entire d ay wa tchi ng soap operas, I
d iscovered thai the evening n e ws m a de me FEEL GOOD.
~

Hedge

. BRIDGE

U-S0-18
NORTH
+J 7
•to 7
t K53
+ K Q 6 43 2

---::-·- -·- -- - -

Willy
. gets greedy

. ·WEST
EAST
Q 10 9 a 6
+43 2
.Q92
f • K843
We let two old friends of ours play . t Q 9
+ J 1074
+ A J8
today's de al. The fi rst declar er was
10 7
!Willy Nllly. On the opening lead of th~
SOUTH
:spade lO;IWilly put up the jack from
. AK 5
dummy. Whe n that held the t rick, he
• AJ 6 5
quickly and happily played the king of
t A862
clubs. Surprise! Everybody played
low. Willy came to his hand with the
Vulnerable: .Neither
diamond ace and led a club to dum·
Dealer : SOut h
my's queen. As you might imagine,
Eas t won with the appropriate card West
North East
South
and continued spa des. Now Willy 1
I NT
played king and a diamond, but that Pass
3NT Pass
Pa..
suit did not split. He wound up with : Pass
only seven tricks - down two. While j
'·
Opening le ad: • 10
·Willy w.a s nursing his wounds, we pre' sented the deal to Care ful Charlie.
·
Charlie s tarted out the same way as 1L--------~--.....l
Willy. winning dummy's jack of
It's true that Charlie ha d given up a
s pades. But then came a play unknown
chance for overtricks whenever West
to bridge pla yers blinded by greed for
he ld the ace of clubs only once. or
overtricks. Charlie played a low club
twice-guarded. (Charlie could arrange
from dummy. Sure, East put up the
to lead up to the K·Qtwice, getting to
jack and played back a spade . Charlie
his ha nd with the ace of diamonds. and
won and played a seeond club. Now
a high s pade.) But his play deprived
when the king forced out the ace, the
queen was positioned to win thit third East of the opportunity of setting the
contract by ducking with the ace on
round of the s uil, making the remain·
the first lead of the suit. All we can. say
ing low clubs winners , and declarer
about Willy Nilly's play is that now
still had dummy's king of diamonds as
you know how be got his name.
an entry.

!By James Jacoby

·

+

+

+H

CROSSWORD
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Miles or
Caldwell
6 English
river
9 Arson,
for one
lOOn
12 Snake
13 Tower of ice
15 Ship's di~
16 Somewhat
18 - et
labora
19 Arrange
in advance
21 Hawthorne
as a boy? ·
22 Prior to
(pre f.)
23 Flank '
24 Youngster
27 Sprinter
28 Perfectly
29 Make lace
30Danube
tributary
31Milltary
command
35 Palm leaf
. 36 Favoring
37 Grassy
land
38 Caution
40 Star's
go-between
42 Western
alliance
43 Malediction
44 Label
45 Join in
DOWN
1 Overcharge

3 Riva (Derby
win ner)
4 Wooden
core
5 George - If~~
Walker
!!;
Bush
6 Hurl
7 Had

oi;nnor

8 Stupid
II Military
· show
14 Serve
party
foods
28 Machine17 Resident
gun sound
(suff.)
27 Frantic
20 Tiff
struggle
23 Glut .
(sl.)
24 Got up 29 Chinese
25 Allergy
creative
principle
cause

32 Vigilant
33 Feel
34 Lotus ~
38 Kermit T.
39 Greek
letter
41 Speed

up

(st.)

2 Zeal

DAILY CRYPTOQUWES ~ Here ' s how to work It:

11130

...

AXYDLBAAXR
ls'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 ~tters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE
LUAA

D U

GZ

A FUM

I M V U J

B RUMLF ZG M

I GJ
I

PZR ' AA

A Z L

AUZGI W J

.Z E

-A .

IDBignotl

A U X F G M Z G.

1111 Mlanilm. P.l.
ID liD fwmgld Zona

Yesterday's Cryptoqoote: START BY DOING
WHAT'S NECESSARY, ·THEN WHAT'S POSSIBLE AND
SUDDENLY YOU ARE DOING THE IMPOSSIBLE. _ ST

a (J) I'I!INinmenl Tonight

II)) New•Nighl

II! Dregntll

a

Nalhvllle N,._,

FRANCIS \)F ASSISI

l

, Cl1988 King Fe-es S~lo. Inc.

.

�•

••

Ohio Lottery
--'24 more
days 'til
Christmas

I

Daily Number
719
Pick4

6563
. Super Lotto
6-8-20-21-24-44

1

''""'·

•

•

ar
&amp;ROUtiO
BEEf
(10 \.8. Ol MOll)

1/s PORlt

couMtl~
SS
R\8

e"o"tt tl pa:tt\£S s"~·.~'•···~

a·•aat£as............ ·\
.... ""
·. \'S''
sPO~
"'· "',ia ·~"·~·~,.\.8.ao}}
...............:·. ., 9- oaoutlo
S's\\~fltrsiieil'""::... .~ .. 69- C"UCl
i~~ooetl~ ...................... : a,- (s L8. oR MOllE)

~·!lao

. 99

~

' ~
\.8.

.
.
.
.
.
.
\~; . . ·~~~ . i1'9' ,,49
801.0 \\Oft.a C\\£ES£ ...... •~··
1.0"1 ""

asosl\" ·-~l:

KRAFT DREsiiNO
TOM

FR

89t
CHRISTMAS CRUNCH ••••• $f 99

PORI( &amp; BIAIIS
, t4 oz.
l(fDIIEV or CHill BE, tsy, "· .... .
AilS, uv. .,, ,•.,

.

'

OO)lES OF
·
NOODlE$ ........1!.tq~,J!f1;... t

•

5SO
~REIN BEANS .1~.·~.Pk.~,! t 550

3/tfOO

THOROFARE

.

MAC/CHEESE ........~~\P,z. sovn

..... rn..

THOROFARE

SQUEEZE

.·

.

CORN ........... J.,.!t•••••••••••
oz. CANS t

·

sso

PARADE TROPHY WINNERS - The Pomeroy (:hamber of Commei'(Je presented trophies
Wednesday morning to the winners in the various
categories of Sunday's Pomeroy Chrlslinas
Parade. Pictured with their trophies are left to
right, Tony Dingess, director, lor the ~elgs High
School Band; Mary Byer accepting lor the
Southern IUgh School Band; Terre Wood lor Bank

One.1. best commercial; Imo Jean Blevins and
Brenda Neutzllng, for the best theme, Brownie
Troop 1271; and Roy Grueser, Bunny Kohl, and
Charles Kuhl f()r the Rock Springs Grange, the
best non-commerleal float : Winners not repres·
ented were The Stylettes, . the outstanding
marching unit, and Eastern High School march·
lng baud, participation.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Bearwallow Ridge residents
are within a mile of a Tuppers
Plains-Chester water line. They
want the water line extended to
include them. And If they, or the
water district, can figure a way
to pay for an extension, they may
get what they want.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shum·
· way, of Bearwallow Ridge, were
at Wednesday 's Meigs County
Commissioners meeting to report their effo&lt;ts in trying to
obtain water and to find out more
information about State Issue 1I
which may be a possible funding
source.
Commissioner Richard Jones,
and County Engineer Phi,Jp
Roberts, who both recently attended a State Issue II meeting In
Marietta, suggested the Shumways prepare a proposal for the
water line extension, obtain a
resolu lion from the Bedford
Township Trustees In support of
the extension, an d then walt for
additional Information to come
from the State regarding procedures to follow for State Issue II.
"Other than that." said Jones,
"there's nothing more we can tell
you."

So far, the State has been slow

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts Company
gets RJR Nabisco for $25 billion
10 LB. BAO CALIF.

1
ts La. 9.~~L

.... S

$ S9
;
$159 .
SLB • BAG ••••••••••••••••••••••

SLB. BAG .......... \.. ......... 99+
CALIFORNIA TEMD~.R SWEET

s LB. 8A8

OIWIW REHIIIACHER'S 10.5 OZ. 8011

IOURMJ( MICROWAn

~~~~~N~E $189

•
CABBAGE .. ~!·..... 19 .
GOLDEN RIPE
TEXAS GREEN

I $ 49 BANANAS .. ~!·..... 29+

•

to develop procedures for applying for the Issue II funding.
Dis trlct 18, which includes Meigs
County, Is farther ahead than
many In dei!lding how Issue II
funding will be distributed at the
district level. But until decisions
NEW YORK (UP!) - Kohl· Barlett, which represents KKR.
minute proposal by the manage- are made at the State level, the
berg Kravis Roberts Co. He said KKR beat out its rivals
ment group led hy RJR Nabisco program will remain on hold.
snatched RJR Nabisco Inc. away because It "had the best offer."
Jones and Roberts will be
President F. Ross Johnson,
from two rival suitors late
Asked whether the $109-a · whjch sweetened its offer to $108 attending another meeting In
Wednesday, Improving. its bid to share p~lce, which included $B11n " In a deal valued at $24.8 billion Marietta on Dec. 14. "Hopefully,
about $25 billion for the food and cash, had been too high, Beatie when It looked as though KKR someone will know more by that
tobacco giant In the largest said, "No, KKR Is the best In the could get the nod.
time," satd Jones.
·
corporate takeover. in history.
business and they know what
The Shumways said the Bed·
RJI;l Nabisco stock rose ste!ld· .
KKR will pay $109 for each they're doing."
ily In trading on the New York ford Trustees have agreed to
share of Atlanta-based RJR
RJR Nabisco Issued a stateStock Exchange to close Wednes- make application for the State
Nabisco in deal worked out In ment saying a special committe
day at $93,375 a share, up $2 .50. Issue II funding on behalf of the
marathon talks that extended of the the company's board of ·
BearwaUow Ridge residents.
late into the evening.
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
directors considered all three
The winning bid, totaling over offers and unanimously chose the
District has also expressed
$24.9 billion, edged a $108·a·share KKR bhl "as being in the best
plans, the Shumways said, to
offer valued at $24.8 billion Interests of the company and its
apply for State Issue II funding
proposed by a group led by shareholders." The statement
• for the Bearwallow Ridge area.
Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc.; did not elaborate.
So, If the trustees are unable to
The pitched battle for control
Salomon Brothers Inc. and
qualify for the funding for
members of RJR Nabisco's se· of RJR Nabisco continued well
Be11rwallow Ridge, perhaps the
beyond a "company-imposed
nior management.
·water district will qualify .
KKR, an Investment firm that deadline of 5 p.m. Tuesday, at
The Shumways have help from
specializes In buyouts, also beat which time KKR reportedly bid ' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) . ~ Ohio University In preparing an
out a group led by First Boston $102 a share or a bout$23.4 billion. State Attorney General Anthbny actual proposal.
The deal dwarfed the previous Celebrezze Issued a cons)llller
Corp. whose bid was valued at a
Four families. and one proprecord
of $13.4 bUllon in 1984 alert Wednesday for Ohioans to erty owner who wants a tap,
minimum of $102 a share or $23.9
when Chevron Corp. took dver beware of telemarketing fraud.
bllllon for RJR Nabisco.
Gulf
Oil Corp ..
Telephone solicitors are con"The merger agreemen t is
No
winner
had
emerged
by
the
vincing unsuspecting consumers
signed, this is final, " said Dick
BeatUe. of Sl mpson. Thacher &amp; late afternoon despite a last- to purchase rubber rafts and
vitamins lor hundreds of dollars
above their market value and
circus tickets and garbage bags
are being sold to raise money lor
charities that don't exist, he said.
Telemarketing fraud has be- By United Press International
come
a multibillion-dollar busiAs much as 12 Inches of snow
The Pagevllle lll and IV reclamation project in Meigs County
ness
capable
of
reaching
any
blanketed the Buffalo, N.Y., area
will receive an additional $20,000 from the sUite, accordiljg to
Ohioan
with
a
telephone,
said
Thursday
while northeastern
State Representative Joiynn Boster and State Senator Jan
Celebrezze.
Ohio
braced
for up to51nches, the
Michael Long.
''The
tactic
used
by
fraudulent
National
Weather
Service said.
The funding will pay the cost of acquiring and placing new
telemarketers
Is
to
plant
a
false
SprlngvUle,
N.Y
., about 30
resoiling material at the project site. The current source of
Impression
in
the
consumer's
miles
south
of
Buffalo,
had 12
resolling material has a projected shortfall of 17,000 cubic
mind that something of great inches of new snow on the ground
yards .
value Is available to them at little ·Thursday morning and GoThe project Includes the placement of sub-surface drains and
or
no charge," he said. "Used In wanda, N.Y., reported 6 Inches,
surface channels to convey water, the grading and establish·
conjunction
with a high-pressure the NWS said.
ment of stable slopes, resolling and revegegatlon of the area.
sales
pitch,
many
consumers are
Six Inches of additional snow
The completed project wtll reclaim a 101.5 acre abandoned strip
convinced
that
a
great
opportun·
could
·fall with other areas of .
mine at an estimated cost of $518,825.
lty
will
slip
away
if
they
do
not
act
western
and north·cen tral New
The $20 ,000 was released by the State Controlling Board In
Immediately."
York
receiving
a trace to31nches
actlotr"late Monday.
One
scam
currently
reaching
of snow, forecasters said.
Continued on page 6
Continued on page 6
Continued on page 14

Consumer
fraud alert
is issued

Local news briefs--

More

•
•

MIDD

'

The Corner of Gene

'

PORT, OHIO

OPEN \7 DAYS A WEEK

8 ~.M.·10 P.M.

We accept foqd stamps and W.I:C. coupons.

-

r

•

Hartinger Parkway end Pearl Street

TEL PHONE: 992·3471

and cool off the economy.
But the Fed' s own report suggests the economic
expansion, which entered its seventh year
Thursday. may not be as strong as the recent
reports indicated.
The bureau satd the annual increase In the Index
from October 1987 to October 1988 was 0.5 percent,
much slower than the 6 percent jump between
October 1986 and October 1987.
The Index of coincident indicators. designed to
show how the eeonomy Is doing at the moment.
Increased 1.3 percent In October, while the Index
of lagging Indicators, designed to co nfirm the
previous reports, Increased 1.2 perce11t in
October.
'

water line seek hookup

RAMEN PRIDE OR
'I

The report follows a series of other government
su1"Veys showing the economy surged forward In
October with strong job growth, the largest
Increase In personal income In a year, brisk retail
.'
sales and hectic Industrial activity.
The exception was the Federal Reserve, ,which
reported Wednesday that economic growth
slowed in most parts of the country In November
despite still brisk export orders and business
Investment. Drought·stricken areas reported
persistent weakness, the Fed·sald.
Many analysts have worried in recent weeks
' that the spate of strong economic reports for
October ll)lght prompt the Fed to raise Its
benchmark di scount interest rate to curb demand

Meigs residents .nea·r

·-·

CAP'N CRUNCH f6 OZ. BOX

t6

Dll MONTE 28

stores, a change in the price of raw materials, a
smaller money supply, a shorter average work
week, and slower contracts . and orders for
industrial equipment, the department's Bureau of
Economic Analysis said.
The department's revised estimate for September showed the index dropped 0.3 percent
because of slower growth In the amount of credit
outstanding, Instead of the previously reportedO.l
percent dip, the bureau said.
The index, designed to show how the economy
may be doing three to six months down the road,
measures a basket of 11 Indicators, only nine of
which are available when the report is first
issued, leading to usual substantial revisions.

_______

ZESTA SA1TINES •••.it·.!gf...

SNOWF10SS
.
ATOES, or•••., SAUERKRAUT

FOULDS

89•

By LYDA PHILLIPS
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON ~The government's Index of
Leading Economic Indicators made a modest 0.1
percent advance In October, but revised September figures hinted at a coming short
slowdown, the Commerce Department said
Wednesday.
.
A surge in building permits along with rising
stock prices, strong manufacturers' orders and
lower unemployment helped send the index up 0.1
percent in October to 193.0, the department said.
But five of nine indicators available for October
held down economic growth.
These Included a faster rate of deliveries to

• "'

.

BUV f GET 2

..

1101 P\tl.

--1~~-.;,_~-.;-_;...

CATALIJIA FR8fCH 't6 .. •

..

2 Secllons, H Pages
A Mulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 1, 1988

i· $A ••

stoat••'
s
S~\IS~I£ ••••••••.••••••

r-:~-=:.=:.

flt~tll\lS

tt.

.

.

October index figures up modesL 0.1 percent

,,.L8.

8
S\11.0\ " ..· •••• ' "' I 4S•

s \.8. rtta.

Vol.39. No.145
Copyrighted 1988

Clearing, low In mid teens.
Friday, sunny, high mid 40s.

• I

p;,nds coming for project

Northern
Ohio braced
for snow

would benefit at this time if the
water line were ex tended.
The commissioners reported
on a meeting which they attended
Wednesday morning in Athens
regarding formation of a state
mandated solid waste district.
Some time ago, the commission·
ers passed a resolution of intent
to join with Athens, Hocking and
Vinton Counties In .forming a

solid waste district. The district
must be formed by March 24.
At the r'equest of Mike Swisher,
director of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services.
the comm lssioners approved a
State Increase of General Relief
payments standards, by four
percent, and Aid to Dependant
Children payments, also be four
percent, effective Jan , 1.

Goodyear chairman
•
rips · hostile takeovers
to thwart hostile takeovers be·
BEAUMONT, Texas (UP!) The chairman of the Goodyear cause he said federal legislation
Tire &amp; Rubber co: of Akron, would be biased toward Wall
Ohio, said Wednesday state legis· Street and would be lesS' likely to
latures need to adopt stricter take individuals and communi·
laws preventing hostile takeov· ties in to account. One way to
ers similar to the one Goodyear decrease speculation wou ld be to
get the federal government to
narrowly avoided In 1986.
Robert Mercer told a Rotary .make owners of speculative or
Club gathering that Goodyear is "ju nk" bonds pay tax on
strong after surviving an .at- dividends.
He said residents of the United
tempt by British financier Sir
have been alerted to the
States
James Goldsmith, ' but Mercer
problems
of takeovers, creating
said almost every major U.s.
"a rumbling across the land. "
company must be careful.
"We and our children will pay a
"We're always vulnerable. We
have some little protection devl· gigantic price for all this ta·
ces, but anybody who has enough keover madness if it isn't
money can just buy us out," he stopped," he said.
Mercer visited Beaumont ahd
said In an interview after a
San Angelo Wednesday, two of.
speech.
Goodyear barely survived a five Texas clti~s where Goodyear
takeover effort by Goldsmith in has major operations. Goodyea r
tate 1986, and the company has employs 650 people at a synthetic
had to sell off several major r ubber plant In Beaumont and
assets to survive. Resisting the operates a test track for tires In
takeover effort cost the company San Angelo. Other Goodyear
plants exist in LaPorte, Tyler
about $2.6 billion, officials said.
Mercer. 64, urged state action and Houston.

Heart experts offer advice
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A panel of doctors and nurses from
Ohio fielded questions Thursday and offered advice on
preventing heart attacks and strokes, which together are the
nation's leading cause of death and disability.
. For about eight hours, the medical experts were participating
in "DIAL-OGUE," the first national effort of Its type. The
program was being conducted by the Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, the second largest private group practice In the
world and the site of the first coronary bypass surgery in 1964.
"We hope to get thousands of telephone calls," Tony Furlan ,
director of the Cerebrovascular Program at the private ,
nonprofit foundation, said Wednesday. "There's hardly a
family that hasn' t been affected or touched by one of these
conditions. It's a very common problem.
"And, It 's a new thing for doctors to get involved on this level.
But from my perspective, ! firmly believe in public education."
As many as 20 foundation physicians and nurses planned to be
available from 9 a.m. unt115!1.m. EST, to answer the nationwide
toll-free telephone calls at 1-800-525-7455, and 444·8000 in the
Cleveland area.
·
,
Furlan said callers with questions about specific health
problems were being referred to their private doctor or the
"appropriate resource," but numerous helpful "tidbits" could
be offered over the telephone.
For example, Furlan said few people know that a stroke Is a
brain problem, not one of the heart. Also, If people have had a
stroke, they are at a higher risk for a heart attack. not anoth.er
stroke. Stroke victims are urged to have a heart-stress .test to
determine coronary problems, he said.
,
The warning symptoms of a heart attack include chest pains.
But potential stroke victims usually have what is popularly
called "mlnlstrokes" where for ortly a few minutes, they
suddenly go blind, can't talk or an arm becomes limp , he said.
The American Heart Association estimates 1.5 million ·
Americans will suffer a heart attack this year and another
5110,000 will have a stroke. Together, heart attack and stroke are
the leading cause of death and disability in the United States,
" the association .said.
The Department of Health and Human Services said heart
disease, cancer, and cerebrovascular disease, or Illnesses
Involving blood vessels of the brain, were ranked fo'urth. eighth,
and seventh as leading causes of death In 1900. In 1950 and In
1985, they had moved up to first, second and third places,
respectively.

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