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P.Qa · 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•
Continued from page 1

EMS has five Moncroy calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday; Racine at 4:50a.m . to Third St. for Carden Randolph
to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Middlepor t at 11 :10 a .m. to
Mulberry Ave. for Robert Rllfle to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Fire Department at12: 25 p.m. to a brush fire
on New Lima Road; Pomeroy at 3:35 p.m. to Oak St. for Louise
Conde to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse Fire
Department at 11: 52 p.m. transported Tracy Hein from an au to ·
acc!denyon Dutchtown Road to Veterans Memorial Hospl\81.

-----~a

Marybell Rowels

I

· VIvian Quickel Powell, 84, of
; Santa Barbara Road, Orlando,
. Fla., died Saturday at Grace
Villas Nursing Home In Orlando.
: A homemaker, she was born
March 25, 1904 In Winfield,
W.Va., a daughter of the late
Luther and Molly Cossin Quickel.
She was a member or and pianist
: lor the Point Pleasant Church of
: Christ In Christian Union, Point
: Pleasant, W.Va.
· Stlrvlvors Include a daughter,
Jean Forbus, Inverness, Fla.;
two sons, Joseph Dwight Powell
and Thomas William Powell,
. both of Orlando, Fla.; seven
grandchildren, Penny Madden.
Brandon, Fla., Michael Powell,
VIcki Billings, Scott Powell and
Mark Powell, all of Orlando,
Fla.; David Forbus, Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and Zachery For·
bus, Inverness. Fla.; {our great
grandchildren; two sisters,
Louise McClure, Orlando, Fla.,
and Gertrude Miller, South Cha·
rleston, W.Va.; two sisters-in·
-law, Isabelle Powell, Middleport, and Louise Hilbert,
Cincinnati.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Joseph Dwight Powell,
In 1984; . and one brother;
Everette Quickel, of Oak Hill,
W.Va.
Services will be Wednesday, 2
p.m ., at Rawllng-Coats· Blower
Funeral Home, Middleport, with
Rev. William Bud Hatfield.
Friends may call at the funeral
home for two hours prior to
services on Wednesday . Burial
will be In Riverview Cemetery.

Carl Matlack

Lester Ray Rickard, 90, Letart,
died Monday, Dec. 5, 1988, at his
residence.
Born SepL 18, 1898 in Letart, he
was a son of the late Perry and Lura
Huffman Rickard.
. Also preceding him in death was
his wife, Eunice M. Rickard, who
died in 1973.
He was a farmer, and a member
of the SL Made Lutheran Church.
He is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Donald (Loretta) M. Haynes,
Letart; one gllllldson, Barry
Haynes, Letan.
·
Service will be Thursday· at I :30
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, with the Rev. George
Weirick officiating.
Burial will follow in Hoffman
Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

Weather
By United Press International
Tuesday, mostly sunny and
breezy. Warmer with highs near
50. Southwest winds 15 to 25 mph.
Tuesday . night, becoming
partly cloudy. Low in themtd 30s.
. Wednesday, variable cloud!·
ness. High 40 to 45.
Extended Forecast
Thul'llday through Saturday
A chance of rain or snow
Thursday, fair and cold Friday
and Saturday . Morning low's will
be In the upper 20s to mid 30s
Thu)\sday, in the 20s Friday and
mld teens to mld 20s Saturday.
Highs will be In the mid 30s to
lower 40s Thursday, mid 20s to
mld30s Friday and upper 20s and
30s on Saturday.

Divorce action 6led

Burley prices stronger
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) Burley tobacco prices held firm
· to slightly stronger Monday as a
majority or grades continued to
average $163 per 100 pounds,
according to the Federal-State
Market News Service.
The lowest averages were
recorded for nondescript marketings, r ang!ng from $100 to $151
per hundred weight. Also, some
green and old crop tobacco not in
great demand.
Composition of the heavy volume changed very little from
last Thursday . Good and fair
quality combined accounted for
around three-fourths of sales and
abOut half was classified as tan
color.

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Allsha Renee Duncan,
Pomeroy, against James Albert
Duncan, Pomeroy.

November alanns
The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment answered five alarms In the
month of November, including
one structure fire, two auto fires
and two brush !IreS. The department'&amp; vehicles were driven a
total or 269 miles d.urtng the
month, reports Fire ChlefDanny
Zirkle.

ter in December, signed by finance program. Money tor the project
director George Miller, stating that wiD be feimbursed through Special
payment had n01 been received.
Education Funds, according to the
The board is expecteu .o come to superintendent
a decision on Webb's th1rd suspenA few empl6yments were made .
sion and possible dismissal at its by the board. Barblllll Scarberry
was hired as cook at Hannan High
next regular meeting on Dec. 19.
In other school board matters, · School, Charles McCallister as bus
the board approved an amendment operator, route 822, and a list of
to the Mason County Facility pan substitute secretaries and substitute
for $1,314.43. The money is to be aides was approved.
used for upgrading the trailer at
Tony R. Landis, health teacher
Ordnance Elementary School for and football coach at Point Pleasant
the • Preschool . Handicapped Junior High School submitted his
resignation, which was approved.
The board glllllted a grievance
for Joann CuUen. Board member
Chester PYatt stated the the bnard
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon- felt that she had met requirements
day's winning Ohio Lottery
of the policy for professional· leave.
numbers:
A personal leave bank policy
Dally Number
was place on review for comment
351.
until Dec. 15. The purpose of the .
Ticket sales totaled
PLB, the policy states, is to provide
$1,356,120.50, with a payoff due of protection for individ'uals who en$1,175,588.50.
counter severe medical hardship to
•
PICK-4
themselves, or in their household,
' 3812.
and who have exhausted their perPICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
sonal leave.
$3,048. PICK-4 $1 box1:1et pays
The policy is on public review,
$127.
and after the comment time, will be
either accepted or rejected by the
board,
Hospital news
The next board meeting will be
an
executive session with board at·
Veterans Memorial
tomey
Diane Johnson on Dec. 13.
Monday Admissions -Norma
Lee, Rutia.nd; Corden Randolph,
Racine; Katherine Feiler, Mid·
dleport; Goldie Hendren, Pomeroy; Earl Snyder, Pomeroy;
'\i'l
Nellie Connolly , Pomeroy;
Wanda Johnson, ~ac!ne.
Monday Discharges - Larry
Sigler, Kathleen Milhoan, Rus·
sell Cullums, Kathleen
·McNickle.

18
,, more

Daily Number
884
Pick4
.3795

days 'til
Christmas

•

at

Louery numbers

FIRST DEER - Todd Da·
v!dson, son of Allen and Diana
Davidson, of Zuspan Hollow
Road, Middleport, killed an
eight-point buck during last
week's deer season. This deer,
Davidson's first, was k!lled In
lower Meigs County.

Vol.39, No.149
Copyrighted 1 988

..

the

PAIN
with Pain Management, now available at

Home Medical Equipment
If you suffer from low back pain, migraine and ten·
slon headaches, post surgical pain, carpal tunnel syndrome~ acute muscle spasms and other forms of pain,
you may find relief In this new program through elec •
trlcal nerve stimulus and back braces. This form of
treatment has been proven successful!
For additional Information on Pain Management
and how It may help you call (3041 675-6100.

Westmoreland
KILLS DEER - Major Frank Nelson Reynolds, Mason, W.Va.,

a maintenance supervisor ol Central Operating's Philip Sporn
Pl1101, killed a nlne-polDt b.uck In the Vellowbush area of Racine.
The deer field dressed at 200 pounds, with a 21 and one-hail Inch ·
span. Earlier In the season, Reynolds kUied an eight-point buck In
Mason County, W.Va.

Family Care Center
Westmoreland FamUy Care Center

Is

located on Rt . 1, Mason, WV.

Stocks
'Dally stock prices
(As oliO: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;; Loewl
Am Electric Power .,........... 26)'8
AT&amp;T ........... , ............ ,......... 29
Ashland Oil .................... .... 32%
Bob Evans ........ ........ ....... .. .15';4
Charming Shoppes .............. 12%
City Holding Co .... ............... 30
Federal Mogul.. ................... 48
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... .. ... , ........ 48%
Heck's ................. ......... ....... ';4
Key Ceniur!on .... .... .. ...... .... 15~
Lands' End ................... .. .... 27%
Limited Inc ........................ 26%
Multimedia Inc, ......... .... ...... 70
Rax Restaurants ........ ...... .. .. 3';4
Robbins &amp; Myers .. ;............. 12%
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7~
Wendy's lnt1 ........... .. ........... 5')i
Worthington Ind ..... ............. 22

27 MONTHS WITH MONTHLY INTEREST9.25%

$100,000 or More
$ 50,000 . $99,999
$ 10,000 $49,999
$ 2,500 $ 9,999

8.75%
8.25%
8.00%

2 Section, 18 Pages

26 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspape,r

Syracuse man killed
in Tuesday accident

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Stephen Lee Baldwin, 38,
Racine, and Janet Sue Fetty, 32,
Racine; Ronald Wayne Stanley,
18, Racine, and Marsha Ann .
Mullins, 18, Racine: Harry Ed·
gar Stewart, 33, Cheshire, and ·
Carolyn J. Miller, 34 , Cheshire.

Pleasant Valley

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, December 7, 1988

Licenses issued

Westmoreland FamUy ~are Center
In cooperation with

•

Tonight, a In mid 30s.
Thursday , moslly cloudy.
Chance of snow or rain 30
percent.

ACCIDENT SCENE - Tralllc on State Route
338 near Apple Grove was blocked late Tuesday
afternoon as rescue workers"ilnd rreck~r crews

remove the truck Involved In the one-vehicle
accident which killed Syracuse resident Dana
Congo.

Workers say they
don'J·haV\e.a chance
'

SPOKANE, Wash. (UJ;'I) Contract workers at the nation's
federal nuclear plants have little
prot11ctlon fr'om reprisals lor
disclosing safety and health
problems because the govern·
ment runs a "kangaroo court"
for them, critics charged
Tuesday.
Nevertheless, the number 'of
contract employees at u.s.
Energy Department nuclear
plants willing to risk their jobs by
reporting violations Is growing,
said Tom Carpenter, staff attorney for the Government Accountability Project In Washington,
D.C.
Carpenter's group Is assisting
nuclear whistleblowers who say
they were fired or s.uffered other
reprisals for complaining about
or disclosing problems at Energy
Deparlment plants In Washington, Idaho, South Carolina, Ohio
and New York.
Carpenter said wh!stleblowers
at commercial nuclear plants
have protection from at least two
federal agencies, and those dl·
rectly employed by the Energy
Department have some limited
civil service protection.
But employees of Energy Department contractors like Westinghouse' and Du Pont, who run
the agency's nuclear plants,
have virtually no protection
against reprisals because the
Energy Department's appeals
process·is a sham.
Carpenter also charged that
the U.S. Labor Department often
refuses to hear their complaints,
many state labor agencies h,ave
no authority and some unions do
not aggres sively protect
workers.

"It's a n'on-remedy ,"he said of
the DOE appeals system. "lt' sIn
the kangaroo cpurt league of
remedle~ beca11.se it does not give
an employee any rights."
" We would not call It a
kangaroo court," Energy De·
partment spokeswoman Karen
Wheeless at the Hanford Nuclear
Reservation said. ''We think It'S
a system that works. We do tell
our contractors - with money
out of their pockets- when they
. need to Improve."
Added Pierre Saget, director of
Hanford's Quality Assurance
Division: "It's one man's opin·
ion. We have 12,000 people on the
site! Others have voiced comPll!lnts abOut things In the past
and have been satisfactorily
satisfied ...
In Washington state, Carpenter works with Jim Hutton, a
Yakima attorney . representing
abOut six present or former
Hanford workers.
"Because the DOE and the
coY,tractors are so closely con·
nected we don't think th~ em·
ployees can get a fair shake,"
said Hutton, who has settled two
of the Hanford cases out of court
and last week took a third to
federal court by suing a
contractor.
Carpenter and Hutton said the
DOE appeals process Is basically
an Internal Inves ligation with no
judge, no hearing, no record, no
opportunity to appeal and no
enforcement of DOE decisions
against contractors.
Some states and unions will try
to protect Energy Department
contract nuclear whlstleblowers,
but. Hutton said that's not always
the case.

Farm union
·see~s change
OTTAWA, Ohio (UPI)
President-elect George B.ush
must en~ct a farm policy that
PfOI(JjleS reasonable pr!c~ supports while ensuring that
farmers can earn a living !rom
the market: the Ohto' Farmers
Union said Tuesday.
The union also said it w!ll
become Increasingly important
for farmers to be weaned off
subsidies because of attempts to
reduce the detlcit.
VIrgil Thompson, the former
leader of the Ohio group, said a
new farm policy would ensure
that the nation's grain reserves
are not used to keep grain prices
below cost of production.
Thompson said that would
mean a "supply-management
system" that would allow the
farmer's Income . to come from
the market, because the nation's
grain reserves would be held
separately and used only for
emergencies, such as the 1988
drought.
.
The current policy allows reserves to be dumPe&lt;J into the
market to keep grain prices low,
which benefits grain handlers
and processors whose profits are
generated by volume, he said.
Thompson said lower grain
prices have forced many
farmers to become dependent on
subsidies for income. From 1980
to 198,7 the government portion of
farm Income has increased from
6 to 37 percent, he said.
"We must send a message to
Washington that the present
farm policies are a disgrace,"
Thompson told the union at its
meeting In Columbus last week.
During that time, profits for
farmers have fallen 7 percent
while profits for processors grew
14 perceni, .the farm union said. ·

Dana Congo, husband ofM,e!gs road and overturned. Damage
County Recorder Emmogene was heavy. No one was injured.
Holstein Congo, was killed In a Rayburn was charged with drlv·
Ing under the Influence and
one-vehicle accident at 1: 35 p.m.
Tuesday on State Route 338, near !allure to ma!nia!n control of his
Apple Grove, just east of Letart vehicle.
The Gallla -Meigs Post of the
Falls, according to the GalllaHighway Patrol Inves t!·
State
Melgs Post of the State Highway
,gated
an
accident at 4: 15 p.m.
Patrol.
Tuesday
on
SR 141.0.3 miles west
Troopers said Congo, 60, of
of
mile
post
17. No one was
College 'Road, Syracuse, was
pronounced dead at the scene. He injured. One driver was cited.
Troopers .said Jeffery Steger.
died of Injuries suffered when the
1977 International truck he was 19, PSR. Gallipolis, stopped In
driving went off the road , struck traffic and his vehicle was hit
a guard rail and overturned. from behlhd by a pickup truck
Damage was heavy. Congo was driven by Frederick McNe;ll, 51,
the only occupant of the truck. He Rt. . 2, Patriot. Damage. was
was taken to the Ewing Funeral minor to McNeal' s 1979 Ford
Bronco and moderate to Steger's
Home at Pomeroy.
pickup truck.
It was the sixth traffic fatality
The patrol cited McNeal for
or the year in Meigs County, and
ttie second fatality ln Meigs failure to stop within the assured
County In ten days. Steven clear distance.
There was no contact between
. McGrath, 27, Rt.1, Rutland, died
Nov. 26 as a result of internal the vehicles In an accident at 3: 10
Injuries suffered after being p.m. Tuesday on Neighborhood
ejected from a Jeep In an Road. 0.1 miles s'outh or SR 141.
accident on Corn Hollow Road , In There was no citation.
Troopers said vehicles driven
Rutland Township.
Another accident occurred at by Sean Harris , 17, 487 Kathy
1:15 p.m. Wednesday on Meigs Drive, Gallipolis, and Connie J .
County Township Road _112, 3.5 Rutt, 33, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, met on
miles south of SR 248. Ttfoopers a curve. Harris swerved off the
said car driven by Iva Ray- right side of the road to avoid a
burn, 50, Portland, went off the coll!slon. His pickup truck wen t
into a ditch. Damage was

moderate.
• The patrol cited one driver in
an accident at 9 a.m . Tuesday on
SR 7, 0.2 miles south of mile post
27. No one was injured.
Troopers said Arlen E . Saund·
ers, 57, Athens slowed in traffic.
His pickup truck was hit from
behind by another pickup truck
driven by David A. Lewis, 26,
Pomeroy. Damage was minor to ·
both veh icles.
The patrol cited Lewis for
failure to stop within the assured ·
clear distance.
Another accident occurred at
10:05 Tuesday on SR. 160, 0.4
miles north of mile post 8.
Troopers said a car dr !ven by
Barbara Glassburn, 45, Rt. 2,
Vinton, struck a horse that came
onto the roadway . The horse was
not kllled. The patrol did not
know who owned the horse.
Damage was moderate to the
car.
The patrql also received the
report Tuesday of a chipped
windshield. The accident occurred at 12:11 p.mn. Tuesday on.
US 35, about one mile east of Rio
Grande. Troopers said an unidentified vel}lcle flipped a rock aod
chopped the windshield of a car
driven by Floyd Moore, 57, Rt. 4,
Oak Hill. Damage was minor. No
one was injured.

a

Pearl Harbor attack reeul.led
P)iARL 'HARBOR. 'ilawali,
(UP!) - Thousands of sailors,
shipyard workers and others
gathered at Pearl Harbor today
to mark the 47th anniversary of
the surprise · Japanese attack
that hurled the United States Into
World War II.
The National Park Service
estimated some 6,000 people
would line the harbor to mark the
anniversary of the attack and
watch the Navy 's annual ceremony for·the 2,409 people who died
in the early Sunday morning
assault.
The ceremony on the USS
Arizona Memorial , a gleaming
white monument that spans the
sunken hull of the battleship
where 1,102 sailors remain en·
tombed, was to begin with
welcoming remarks and an Invocation, followed by a minute of
silence observed at 7:55 a.m.
local time - the 'lime· 47 years
ago the Japanese began their
attack.
The silence was to be broken by
the roar of four Hawaii Air
National Guard jets streaking
overhead: one ofthem veering off
in the l'mlsslng m·a n'' formation .
Wreaths were to be placed on
the memorial by leaders of
veterans' organizations and com·
munlty groups. The Navy's 150
Invited guests were expected tq
file to the railing one by one and
drop flowers into the oily water
above the sunken battleship.
The ceremony was planned to
continue with the national anthem and speeches, followe.d by
1

•

the Navy hymn and a benedic·
lion. A Marine Corps rifle detail
was to offer a 21-gun salute. and
the service was scheduled to end
with the playing of taps, with one
bugler echoing another at !&gt;ach
end of the memorial.
A Georgia man, G.P. Manning
of Savannah, remembered the
attack he witnessed as a 24-yearold stationed aboard the USS
Regal, which was moored not far
from the USS Arizona.
•'In my dreams, Is till see those
planes coming over me with red
spots, dropping bombs. like rain·
drops, ships exploding, and our
· people trying to fight back,"
Manning said in an Interview in
Georgia.
What Manning said disturbs
him the most is the memories he
has of the smell of burning
human flesh and bodies floating
amid oU that poured into the
harbor from the hulls of the
sinking U.S. destroyer fleet.
"It was instant death for some
of those sailors. We were taking
men out of the water that you
couldn't see anything wrong
with, but the explosion had burst
everything In them, " he recalled
in slow, deliberate speech.
On that morning 47 years ago,
Japanese aircr,aft from six aircraft carriers massed in the air
off Oahu's northern tip and then
began a relentless attack on the
96 ships moored in the harbor and
other Hawaii military
Ins tal lations.
Around the island and Its
approaches, 25 Japanese subma-

• rlnes had quietly maneuver~ ·to
points where they could pick off
battleships that escaped the air
attack.
In carefully coordinated at·
tacks they. had been' practicing
for three months. thl', 190 planes
roared down on the harbor that
had been calm aitd serene.
The Japanese planes bombed
and strafed Americans on ship
and shore, but their prime target
was Battleship Row along the
southeast shore of Ford Island in
the harbor, where seven battleships were moored. .
The planes were armed with
torpedos specially designed and
adjusted for the short, shallow
runs required at Pearl Harbor. In
less than an hour, 18 ships of the
Pacific fleet were sunk or heavily
damaged.
In all, 2,409 Americans were
killed and 1,178 wounded In the
atta'Ck, which also r!lduced 188
planes to ruin and damaged ·159
others.
The Japanese casualties : 64
dead; 29 planes, five midget
subs, one reconna!sance destroyed. One Japanese soldier
was captured.
The next day , President Frank·
lin D. Roosevelt addressed a joint
session of Congress.
"Yesterday, Dec . 7, 1941 - a
date whl~illllve 'In Infamythe United States of America was
suddenly and deliberately at tacked by nav al and air forc es of
the Empire of Japan ," Roosevelt
sal d.

~

EDDIE ALBERT FOR BELTON£

''Bellone had the
answer to
my hearing
problem.•.find out
if they can ·
·
help you too!''
Bellone Is offering

Pomeroy has five

would have been paid for extra
classes that he taught, he would
have received' around $7,000. But
that didn'tlxxher him, he says, be.·
cause he wanted his children to at·
tend classes here.
Last year, Webb says he taught
two classes second semester, which
would have nened him around
$3,600 extra pay. Tuition would
have run around$1 ,700.
Webb said that he thought the
agreement had been approved by
the board, but when he discussed 11
with them in executive session at
Monday night's meeting, they said
there was never an~ing written
down, and it couldn t be found in
the records.
"It was a gentlemen's agreement,
but suddenly, someone's not a
gentleman anymore," Webb commented.
At last nij!ht's meeting, the board
tabled making a decision on collecting tuition, after they came out
of an executive session that lasted
for more than an hour.
Chambers had not returned a
telephone call to respond to in·
quiries by the Point Pleasant Register at press !ime this morning.
In a letter of response that Webb
address¢ to the school board, he
stated that the working anangement
had obviously been of greater
monetary value to the people of
Mason County, in terms of dollars
spent.
Webb said that the first time he
heard of this bill, was when he
received an unsigned bill in
November for $1,791.37, but with
payments to be made to the Mason
County Board of Education. ·
He then received a follow-up let- ·

d eaths-----'

Marybell Barber Rowels, 56,
Carl M. Matlack, 64, Tuppers
218 Linden Drive, Painesville, Plains, died Sunday at St. Jo·
formerly of Meigs County, died seph's Hospital in Parkersburg,
early Monday at the Cleveland W. Va.
·
CliniC following an extended
Mr. Matlack was bor n Dec. 28,
Illness.
1924 at Tuppers Plains, a son of
A homemaker, Mrs. Rowels the late Howard and Velmli
was born July 13, 1932 at Swindler Matlack. He was reReedsville, a daughter of Lola tired from the U. S. Armed
Reed Barber and the late Delbert Forces and was a veteran of
Barber.
·World War Il He belonged to the
Surviving are her husband, Veterans of Foreign Wars In
James Rowles; three daughters, Tuppers Plains.
Sharon Rowles, at home; Mrs.
Surviving are a brother, Clair
Richard (Kathy) Day and Mrs. Cassidy, Tuppers Plains; a sis·
B. (Kimberly) Ludwig, and a ter, Dorothy Lambert, Apache
son, James, Jr., all of Paines- Junction, Ariz. , and several
ville; her mother, Lola Barber, nieces and nephews.
Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs.
Besides his parents, he was
Thelma Smith. Mrs. George preceded In death by his wife,
(Margaret) Buckley, both of Louise Kendrick Matlack; a
Reedsville; Kathleen Miles, Na- sister, Leota Cooper and a
ples., Fla.; four brothers, Jerry brother, Lowell Matlack.
Barber, Montana; Wilbert
Services will be held at 10 a .m.
Barber and Ronald Barber, both Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
of Reedsville, and Kenneth of Home with the Rev. Billy C.
Hebron. Also surviving are five Murphy officiating. The Tuppers
grandchildren and several nie- Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
ces and nephews.
wlll conduct graveside military
Besides her father, Mrs. Row- rites at the Tuppers Plains
els was preceded in death by two Cemetery., Friends may call at
infant brothers.
the funeral home from 7 to 9 this
Services will be held ' at the evening and from 9 to 10 a.m.
Spear and Mulqueeny Funeral Wednesday. Friends may conhome, 667 Mentor Ave., Paines- tribute in hls memory of the
ville at 11 a.m. Wednesday. Kidney Dialysis Research FounBurial will be In the Painesville dation, St. Joseph Hospital,
.Cemetery. Friends may call at Parkerburg.
the funeral home from 10 a.m. to
9 p.m. today.
Lestw Rickard

:Vivian Powell

Ohio Lottery

Mason board... _co_n_t_tn_u_e_d_fr...:om_p_a~&lt;_e_t_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..___

-Local news briefs

.l ..-~

.

1

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224 EAST MAIN, POMEIOY, OHIO
THUISDAY, DECl MIEI I
FIOM 9:00 TO 12:00 NOON
,

UMWA AND UAW PROVIDER

Rutland firemen elect officers
New officers for 19S9 were elected at the recent meeting of the
Rutland Fire Department held at the headquarters.
Named as co-presidents were Charles Barrett, Jr. and Jeff
Snowden.
The other officers eleeted were Dan Davis, vice president; Fred
Williamson, secretary; Homer Parker, .treasurer; Guy Hunter,
reporter.
Also elected were Blll Williamson, chief; Charles Rife and
David Davis, assistant chiefs; David Wllllamson, captain; Jeff
Snowden and Charles Barrett, III, first lieutenants; Mike
Wlllford and Carlos McKnight, second lieutenants; and Dan
Davis and CarJos ..McKnlght, training officers.

Water office will be closed
'.

So take Eddie Alben's advice - visit the Beltone Hearing Aid
Specialist today for a FREE HEARING TEST. Come in with
coupon for test.
~
Call 'IOU Free Number 1-8()()..634-5265 for immediate appointment.
COUPON

Local news briefs.-- Chambers says Webb was 'not singled out'

~~&amp;

""" HlBI&lt;l
LENDER

Water will be off today (Wednesday). and Thursday, on
Second St. imd Water St. In Syracuse. to accomodate work on
the Jines. The-Syracuse Water Board Ofllce wlll be closed on
Thursday, but will be open Friday and Monday.
Contlnu~ on page 9

ByJEA~ESURFACE

·

OVPStalf

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. MaSon County School Superinten·
dent Charles Chambers said
Thesday that Bill Webb was not
singled out or harrassed when he
was asked to pay out-of-state tuition for his daughter.
A Wahama High School
student's parent also received a bill.
. Chambers says ·he was just following up on a parent complaint and
the direction of the school board
when' he asked for out-of-state
students who were not paying lui·
tion to be identified and billed.
Webb, from Gallipolis, had been
suspended by the school board for
the third time this year for not fol·
lowing a teacher dress code when
he received the tuition bill for
$1,791.37 · the first he has received

since his children have attended ted him in the county," the teacher
school in MasQn County.
said. She received a biU in Novem. Though the parent complained ber of this school year.
that there were about eight students
She added that she could n01 af.
coming from Ohio and not paying ford to keep her child in school
tuition to Mason County Schools, here at a tuition mte of $1,791.37.
only two have been named. The "I feel terrible for him • he doesn't
other, a Wahama High Schoo.! ath· want to leave. I don't see why they
Jete from Pomeroy, Ohio, who is can't !rive a teacher a little bit of a
involved in many school activities, break~'
also received a tuition notice. . Thacker said she also received a
Chambers said that there were bill abnut the same time last year
previously more sttidents than two, when Meigs County teachers were
. but some have since graduated.
on sttike, but it was dropped. "I just
Sue Thacker, a teacher at New got one notice, but it was never enHaven Elementary in Mason forced. They just said not to worry
County and mother of the Wahama about it I have never had . any
student, criticized the timing of the trouble with the beard or anything.
notice.
I don't agree, but that's just my
"I hate to mess up his high opinim."
school career, but I guess I'll have 1 Thacker is a member of the West
to take him out and put him in Vuginia Education Association,
school in Ohio. If theY had told me and the organiution is handling the
this summer, I wouldn't have star· · matter for her. "I didn't know

Give A Gilt Suhscription To The Oailv Senlinel This Huli[lay Season

where else to tum. It· was either
that, or take him out immediately."
Thacker also said she had heard
people say Ohio children were get·
ling a free ride. "But I'm paying
West Virginia taxes."
The principals were asked to tum
in those names. and the students'
parents were billed for only this
school year, Chambers said.
Though Webb- wbo has never
received a blition notice until this
school year - told the school
board that he had a son of understanding with the school system
previously that extra classes he
taught were in lieu of tuition for his
children, Chambers said he or the
board members found no evidence
of an agreement like that
"I'm not familiar with a previous
agreement • none that we could find
anyway. There were no contractural
Continued on page 9

'

I

·-

Crtll 9UZ·Zl5ti

~

..~--

---- -

--·

�-Pega 2-The Daily Sentinal

P~oy

Nicaraguan policy unclear

1989 FORD ESCORT

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•

72 CT.

CAUF. ORANGES, 2/69c

Athens and Wellston received
majority picks from area
coaches and media to finish first
In their respective leagues, according to the results of a recent ·
poll conducted by SEOAL, TVC
and SVAC coaches and area
sportswrlters.
Athens received 15 of 16 firstplace votes from SEOAL media.
and area media gave the Bulldogs 20 of 21 top votes. SEOAL
coaches were unanimous in picklng Athens to win the league title,
as they gave the Bulldogs an of
thelr five first-place votes.
·
Among SEOAL and area medla, Logan received one first-

place vote and placed second.
All three parties agreed on
Athens. Logan, Marietta and
Gallipolis to finish In the order
given. The media agreed that
Warren Local and Jackson would
finish fifth . and sixth, respeclively, while the league' scoaches
said the Ironmen would push the
Warriors into the basement.
In the TVC, area media gave
Wellston nine of 13 first-place
votes, while Belpre got three
such votes and Vinton County
picked up one. Area spor tswrlters said that Wellston, Belpre,
Vinton County, Meigs, Alex·
ander, . Trllnble, Nelsonville-

final UPI poll last year, lost to
Missouri and Arizona In the
Tournament of Champions, the
strongest four-team tourney of
the youn11 sea,son. The Owls are
suffering from the loss o( forward Tim Perry, center Ramon
Rivas and guard Howard Evans.

MUSPE

SVAC STANDINGS
(All games)
WL P
TEAM
North Gallia .. .... .. 3 1 28p
Eastern ............... 2 1 248
Southwestern ...... . 2 1 215
Oak Hlll .............. 2 1 191
Hannan Trace ..... 2 3 327
•Southern .............. I 2 217
;Kyger Creek ........0 3 186
Symmes Valley ...0 4 222

COOL WHIP ••••••••••••~2~·••• S1.29
FOIDHOOK
LIMA BEANS ...........~·.~~•• S\.29
UDSEYE
CAULIFLOWER ........~·.~~...... 89&lt;
WCIY UAF CHEIIY

••

'

York, Federal Hooking and
Miller would ftnish in the order
given.
and the 6-foot-5, 285-pound Lo"
The TVC coaches agreed with
rlus, a glimt part of St. V's state
the sportswriters that the
championship team, was seRockets would win the league
lected the top lineman. 1
and gave them all eight firstMoody, who·wm earn a total of
place votes. The coaches said
11 letters In baseball, basketball
that behind Wellston, It would be
and football before he graduates
Belpre, Alexander, Trimble, Vln·
next spring, accounted for 38
ton County, Meigs, Federal
touchdown~ the past season for
Hocking, Miller and NelsonvilleCoach Craig Turner's Blue
York, respectively.
·
Devils.
There was disagreement
Moody
complet.ed
81
of
157
among area media and between
passes
for
1,827
yards
and
24
area media and the SVAC's
touchdowns
and
rushed
92
times
coaches .as to who the eventual
conference champion wlll be. . for another 664 yards and 14 TDs.
He also averaged 40.6 yards as
The media picked Southern to
the Blue Devil punter.
retain its crowri with North
"Rich was what made our
-G allla second. The coaches
offense
go," said Turner. "He's
picked North · Gallla first and
an outstanding athlete and has
Southern second.
•
Oak Hill was third In both polls,
Hannan Trace fourth , Eastern
fifth In the media and sixth by the
coaches; Southwestern sixth and
fifth; ' Kyger Creek seventh in
both and Symmes Valley last in
both.

,
(Reserves)
'l'EAM
W L
Southern.............. 2 0
North Gallla ........ 2 0
~fannan Trace ..... 2 0
Symmes Valley ... 1 1
bak Hill .............. ! 1
);:astern ...............0 2
~u thwes tern ... :...0 2
Kyger Creek., ......0 2
TOTAI.S .... .. ........8 8

PAT HILL FORD INC.
-·

THIRD

Tuesday's results
Fairland 60, Hannan Trace 54
OVCS 73, Symmes Valley 63
Friday's games
1iannan Trace at Kyger Creek
Southwestern at North Gallla
Oak Hilt at Eastern
Southern at Symmes Valley

Sale.

Published every afternoon, Monday

through Friday, Ul Court · St., Po·
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~~:0 ~©.!.!:~ G:l'"'NXJ~® .r.M:P~

IN AN EIGHT INCH CASE.

OP
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P OP
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Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

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I

the ability to turn potential losses better.
into fir.st downs . You'd think he
"He's . strong, but he's still
was going to be sacked and he'd maturing," added Cis tone, who
scramble out and make a big projects Lorlus as a college
plaay. "
offensive tackle. "He's going to
Turner credits Moody's high get much stronger than he Is now.
average of 22.5 yards percomple· He hasn't reached his peak yet."
lion to a strong arm and some
Besides Moody, the No. 1
speedy receivers.
offensive backfield Includes four
"He can throw the football a running backs- Lakumba Wallong way," said Turner, noting lace of Akron Hoban, Clinton
that as a pitcher In baseball he Lynch of Youngstown Ursuline;
has been clocked at 89 miles per Granger McLaughlin of Licking
hour.
Valley and Marcus Layton ot
"One of the big things about Orange.
Rich is that he understands the
The 5-foot-11. 185-pound Lynch
game," said Turner. "He was _played just six games the past
able to check off at the line of season, suffering a knee Injury In
scrimmage. I'd send In a general the Fighting Irish's sixth game of
play from the sIdelines and would tl\e season that sidelined him the
make it more specific, depending rest of the way.
on the defense."
Yet, playing both ways, he still
Moody Is being recruited both managed 565 yards and six
for his football and baseball touchdowns, averaged 25.8 on
abilities, with the likes of dia - kickoff returns and 21.1 on punt
mond powers Michigan and the ret urns .
University of Miami seeking his
Labeled " a legitimate 4.51n the
services.
40" by Coach Dick Angle, Lynch
Lorlus is the biggest player at was and . still Is one of the top
St. Vincent In Coach John Cis- co llege running back prospects
tone's 23 years at the school and in the state.
"one of the better offensive
McLaughlin, 5-foot-9 and 160,
line men we've had here."
rushed for I,557 yards and 24
·'He has good speed, he's smart touchdowns for unbeaten Licking
and he plays with a lot of Valley the past season, but he too
enthusiasm." Clstone said of was hurt in the final regular
Lorlous. who played both ways season game and saw little action
for the Irish.
in the Panthers' two playoff
''We never let him come off the contests. McLaughlin also refield ," said Cis tone. who won his turned 14 punts for 280 yards,
fourth state title last weekend at including one for a touchdown,
Ohio Stadium. "He was just too and threw one TD pass.
good. ''
"He's a major college prospect," said Cistone. '.'! haven't
seen everybody In the state, but
The Daily Sentinel
of those I did see; none was

World(/)®

•

(SVAC games)
W L
TEAM
P
OP
:Eastern ........... :2 0 175 162
Oak Hill ........... 2 0 136 108
·s outhern .... .... .. J 1 165 156
North Gallla .... .1 1 147 131
Hannan Trace ..1 1 139 127
,Southwestern .. ,.! 1 127} ' 135
Symmes Valley 0 2 108 140
Kyger Creek .....O 2 112 150
!rOTALS ...........8 8 1109 1109

COLUMBUS, Ohio (U P! ) Strong-armed Brookville quar·
terback Rich Moody and twoway tackle Brett Lor ius of Akron
St. Vincent-St. Mary head up_the
1988 . United Press International
Division lil all-Ohio football
team.
Moody, a 6-foot-1, 185-pound
senior who led Brookville to an
unbeaten 10-0 regular season,
was voted the Division III backof-the-year In balloting by
coaches from around the state
Meigs' Wes Y flung was
named Second Team Division
III All-Ohio loday by United
Press International coaches.
Two other Marauders, Je !f
McElroy and Wess Howard
were honored on the UPI
Honorable Mention Team.
Howard wao also a Special
Mention on lhe Assoolaled
Press learn lasl week along
with Jeff McElroy.

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.

SVAC standings

PIE FILLING ............~·.~~•• S1.49
IlTTY ClOCKER
PIE CRUST MIX ......~·.~~•• S1.19
UGU WRI MEAT
SPAGHETTI SAUCE.~.~~•• S1.99
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BEEF STEW •••••••••••••~\~~•• S1.39
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WMIE CLO.
·
BATHROOM TISSUE ~ft~.. S1.49
40c Off LAIIL-LIIUID PALMQPYE
DmiGENT ...........!\fi••• S1.39
•

WESYOUNG

WESSHOWARD

NEW YORK (UP!) - North
Carolina, which defeated three
ranked teams last week, Monday
advanced to No. 5 while Duke
remafned N9, ,l for the third poll
In United Press International's
college basketball ran kings .
Duke, w)11ch has played a sott ·..
schedule while winning Its first
four games, received 32 of the 42
first-place votes cast by the UP!
Board of Coaches. The Blue
Devils totaled 618 points and
finished ahead of Michigan,
Syracuse and Georgetown as the
top four teams maintained their
ran kings.
Michigan collected three first-·
place votes and Syracuse had Six.
~oting Is based on 15 pclnts !or
1lrst place, 14 for second, etc.
NOrth Carolina, 6-1, avenged
Its only loss of the season by
)&gt;eating No. II" Missouri In the
title game of the Charlotte
'J:'ournament of &lt;?hampions.
North Carolina, playing without
Injured All-American J.R. Reid,
topped No. 9 Arizona in the
opening round of the tournament.
Earlier In the week, the Tar
Heels beat No. 19 Stanford: The
)'ar Heels were ranked third in
preseason but dropped to lOth
last week.
: Rounding out the top 10 wert.
Iowa, which collected the other
!lrst-place vote, Oklahoma,
Nevada-Las Vegas, Illinois and
f\rlzoria. The second 10 contained
Missouri, Georgia Tech, Florida
Stale, LOl!lsvllle, Ohio State,
;I'ennessee, Vlllhnova, UCLA,
Seton Hall and Oregon State.
Tennessee, UCLA and Oregon
State joined the Top 20 while
Temple, . Florida and Stanford
t!ropped aut.
. : Tem'ple, th,$ No. 1 team in the

DAfT 16 SUCE

AMEI. PROC.
CHOSE •••••••l.UA••••• S1.89

'
JEFF MCELROY

Tar Heels advance to. fifth
in ~I college cage ratings

•

LARGE EGGS ...... P.9!•••• 89'

':.·:

.: ,;

Athens, Wellston, Southern and
North Gallia are pre-season picks

HAM LOAF •••••••••••••a:••••• S2.29
SWIFT'S ECKIICH
ROAST BEEF •••••••••••a:••••• S3.•69
SMITHFIELD
SHIEDDED...Ib. $2.19
COOKED HAM ••••• SLICED....LL $1.97
IOIIUADE
MEAT SALAD ••••••••••a:•••••••~.89&lt;
IDAII0-10 LIS.

Howard and McElroy·honor~d by UPI grid coaches

At

PAT -HILL
FORD FORD· RANGER 414

Th8 Daily Sentinel Page 3

·~oung,

(

-EIIOI BREAKFAST LUNCH MEAT

"T.DIIADE A

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Do Your Shopping

By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON (UP I) -The last muster for the chief supporter of
the Nicaraguan Coniras - President Reagan - Is Jan. 20, and his
beloved "freedom fighters'' will be In even greater jeopardy because
of his withdrawal from the field .
George Bush will succeed Reagan on Inauguration Day. and
although he has pledged to support the guerrillas, It is unclear what he
will ask for them and If he has the political clout to get it.
Reagan, despite his enormous popularity and persuasive powerswhich, Bush, although a man of considerable talents, does not fully
possess- could not convince Congress to maintain military aid to the
Contras.
.
The political reality is that It is unlikely the United States will again
serve as the Contras' arsenal.
.
Bush wants to begin his term with ~iOod relations with Congress,
and the formidable problems of the budget and the trade deficit are
expected to demand his priority at tentlon.
Virtually no one Is spelling for another divisive fight over aiding the
Contras. The polltlcal 'lssue may lie dormant, absent aggression by
the Sandlnlstas.
·
Congressional Democrats, under the leadership_ of Speaker Jim
Wright of Texas, this year stopped sending arms to the guerrillas, and
pressed Reagan to pursue a diplomatic settlement with Managua.
Reagan said the Contras were fighting communist subversion, .llu t
his critics called for economic and diplomatic pressure - not the
violent overthrow of the government - to check the Sandlnistas.
Thousands of guerrillas and their families are now In camps inside
Honduras near the Nicaraguan border, living on food and other
humanitarian aid provided In a $27 million appropriation Congress
approved before the election.
.
&lt;&gt; The aid runs out March 31. Bush can propcsea new policy by then or
ask Congress to give him - and the Contras - more time bY
approving another non-military aid package.
·
Bush may have no choice.
.
The opponents ofthe Contra policy are just as entrenched onCapitoi
Hill as they were In the last Congress when they defeated Reagan's
.request for arms.
There Is no real fire left among the Republicans- and no leader of
Reagan's stature- to fight' the Democratic majorities in the House
and Senate over resuming the war.
1
Polls show Americans have no real desire to support the guerrilla
Insurgency, much less . for U.S. troops to enter the war. Bush and
mainstream Rep ubi leans are not expected to expend political capital
now on a cause that even Reagan could not save.
Reagan's greatest political victory In behalf of the Contras was a
$100 million aid package approved by Congress in 1986. It was his last.
The guerrillas carried the fight against the Sandlnlstas to deep
Inside Nicaraguan territory , but there was no popular upriSing or
sustained support of the people for the Contras, the basic requirement
for success of a guerrilla movement.
Then the Democratic leadership endorsed the peace plan of Costa
Rican President Oscar Arias that callS for democratic reforms in
Nicaragua and an end to American support for the guerrillas.
Peace talks between the Contras and the Sandlnlstas ultimately
broke down , and with an end totheAmerlcanarmssupply, there is an
uneasy stalemate that offers Bush the opportunity for a fresh
approach.
Bush can heed the Democrats' call to enter direct talks with the
Sandinistas. And each nation can try to crack the stalemate by having
ambassadors In Washington and Managua.
Bush can also tighten the U.S. trade embargo against Nicaragua,
which has left the poor nation even poorer.
But the United States will not be soon sending arms to the
guerrUlas. It Is probably one thing that Bush and Nicaraguan
President Daniel Ortega agree on.

I

Wednesday, December 7, i 988

Wednesday, December 7, 1988

M~~port.Omo

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..

�Page 4 The Daily Sa 1tillll

POmeroy

Wednesday. December 7, 1988

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Harp, Stanley head UPfs Division ll - Ail~Ohio players
COLUMBUS. · Ohio (UP! ) Franklin quarterback Lance
Harp and Youngstown East
lineman Sylvester Stanley head
up the 1988 United Press International Division II ali-Oh.io loot·
ball team.
Harp, a 6-foot-5. 195-pound
senior, was selected the 11
back-of-the-year In balloting by
coaches from around the state
and 6-loot-4, 255-pound Stanley,
also a senior, the lineman of the
year.
Harp, despite suffering a wrist
injury the sixth game of the
season. led Franklin to a 9·1
record. He completed 128 of 246
passes for 1,843 yards and 21
touchdowns. He also carried 67
times for 549 ya rds , an 8.9
~verage per try. and scored five
TDs.
In the five games prior to his
Injury (torn ligaments In his
right wrist), Harp passed for
more than 1,200 yards and 15
touchdowns.
"Lance ls the hardest working
player I've ever seen,'' said

Franklin Coach Jobn Aregood.
·'In three years. nobody has ever
beaten·• him In a ctlnditloning
drilL His work habits are

He' s a helluva young man and he
brings a lot of his maturity to the
football field ."
For the past three seasons,
tremendous.''
Stanley has gone both ways,
In his little over two years as a playing center on offense.
Franklin starter, . Harp passed
This season, with opponents
for 4.515 yards and 39 touch· double teaming or running away
downs. with another 967 rushing · rrom him , StMtey had 56 solo
yards.
tackles, Including 18 tackles for
"Talent-wise; his strong point losses and five quarterback
is his accuracy throwing the sacks. He had four fumble
football," said Are good. recoveries and ca used four
"Through the adversity this fumbles.
year, he stU! did a great Job. "
1
Stanley played for Youngstown
East tram early in his freshman the East basketball team and a
year when, as a 6-foot-3. 235- first ba seman- pitch er In
pounder, he was moved into the basebalL '
starting lineup by then defen sive
" He's a strong kid and he's
coordinator Bob Beal, now the qulck,"saldBeai,"buti'dliketo
Golden Bears' head man, and led see him four years from now."
the team In tackles.
0
"Our opponents figured they
could beat him," explained Be a!.
with the likes of Ohio State,
"They ran at the baby and he Michigan State, Michigan, West
turned out to be a grown man.
Virginia and Notre Dame In the
''He's been blessed with maturhunt.
ity well above his age," said
"Whichever sc hool he picks he
BeaL " He was just born with lt.
will be an asset to ·that univer·

!
~

from the !-formation, whlcli was
about 25 percent of the time.
Duri!lg his two years as a starter,
O'Neal rushedfor2 ,217yardsand
scored32touchdowns.
Ohio State, Tennessee, Penn

lion this week. The team was to
host Morehead State Monday.
Since the opener Nov. 16, UC has
recorded victories over Cumber·
land (Ky.). 84-71; Dearborn
!Mich.) . 83-81; West Virginia
Tech, 81-53; Concord, 69-51: and
Shepherd, 93-52. Losses have
been to Central State, 84-68;
Indiana University ofPennsylvania, !18-72; and Marshall, 65-42.
Bennett is expecied to field as
power forward Donna Joplin
15·9, senior) and Lynn Bria (5·8,
senior) as small forward . Joplin
currently averages 6.9 points and
5.3 rebounds per game, while
Brla racks up 11.9 points and 4.3
rebounds a game. At center will
be Regina Jeffries (6·2, ·senior!,
who is averaging 15.9 points and
6.9 rebounds per outing.
Shooting guard is expected to
be Becky Vance (5-8, sophomore) , while Lisa Atterbury (5-7,
freshman) wlll handle the point
guard slot. Vance Is managing
14.3 points and 5.5 rebounds a
game, while Atterbury has live
points and 2.9 assists each
contest.

fi

W

J,.

u:

~

If
R

it
I

HMUM'

j\-t
.jl'r

Transactions

Ra IlKs

Grand \ 'aliPy 95, Northwood 7il
HIIIHIIalf' 79, Sprilllt Arhor 16
llllnoill 91. norldll ,,.
l ow111 "" ~ortht&gt;rn Iowa 76
KaniMll

l .o ul~ovUir

FoodJall coach · DI\'f'

Tuesday's
cage scores

11Mirsd111.J '!I Gam,.
Mllw~teeat Nf'w Yert.nl1ht
Clf'\leiMdat Sw. Aat!WIIo, niJht
Hall IliOn .. LA IAlen, alpt

'fvMd.. 'MS. ... N

Hutlonl I, llufllla I
\\'•Nn,;ton I, Phlllldetp.. ~t:l

H~ Team Game- Party Anlmals-620:
Pat RUI Ford-607; Main St. Plzza-605. '
Hlah Series - Men-Ron Smlth·513;

52 WEEKS

Oon Hyaell-485; Rod Walker-481. Women·

FOR
ONLY

-Melody 1\ambley-431; Betty McKinley·
411; Dobbie Call-390.
High Game - Men-Ron Smith-198·
Tim Cundlff·l901 Rod Walk""-187. Women'·
-Betty McK.Inley-150; Melody Ramsbury·
147; ·146.
MONDAY NITE MIXED

$66.56..

•

fa l Baptl'11l9 , C1an•mont Muddi6
O t apman Mt La Vl"rr~ 1 I
fo lonadO 611, Uiah 6~
Domini c lUI lot, (1111-MIIrllln ll' .110
Nf'\'lldat-~no IU, San F.ru.ncl"l'O lUI
Norllllrld«e IlK. Rf'thally Rlhl(' 19

~

Faster and easier than a conventional broom I
Blows debns from sidewalks , driveways, patios
and decks. Lightweight, rechargeable and easy
to store. #82 -460

'

1\Jaln ~St. Pltza-1787; Big Bend CB RadiO

Club-175~

SPECIAL
Pfli~E

nab

~·

erona thar, we'll gladlY

r.

The point ts, a

t cohJ

. ·a

"'"'

VIe unders

Gl~

.

As wvgh as our wlfllers ca

n 9et

.

Ann •

,,. ••. 18,1188

.
$1699
SPECIAL PRICE

T~amS&amp;U••P

.
Middleport Lunch Room .......... ............ 66

'tony's Cart:y Out ................. ......... .. .....60
Shammrs Ca rry out .. .................. ... . ....54
MlkeSe Is .. ................ ... ......................44
106 ......... " .. .. " .. .. ' ......................... " .•: ....44

.

SPECIAL PRICE

Henrley-544; Ray Roa ch-540;

·

mo

rrrber on your

erCJY

1\' L
Blue Tartan ............... ..................... !SO 22
•vau1hn's Aulo Repair ... ... ... ............ .S 26
"ObhJPallet ..................................... 44 28
~Team 3..... ............. .... .. ......... .... ...... 34 38
• SteWarl's Gun&amp;: Supplles .... ...... ... ,.. 28 44

d s~mmer.

piJIS.

tand what w·

rnre, can bring, especial I)'

We want to do

· nW
e~er yttun.

11'1ore co

,o "' "'"
e co"

ters

tne 10

u9n

••

Htsh Team Came - Blue Tartan-4!W1;
" V a~hn 's AU t(l Repatr-441; Team 3-440.
: HIKh Team series - Vaughn's Auto
• Repair-129M; Team 3-1251; Blue Tartan·
' 1240.
' Hl&amp;h -Game - Marlene WUsoo-179;
: Jackle Walburn-17 3; Debbie Glazt·168.
, Hla;h Ser!H - Jac)de Walburn-474:
~ Marlene Wllsfl1·473: Dottle Wlll-444 .

~·~

•
•
•'fi!UI

rn1ortable lor you .

MONDAY TIUPLICATE8
Nonmber 1', ltu

$

SPECIAL PRICE

' Hllh Game ...... MarleDe1 Wllsoo -235:
·1U.
•

..

~ ·,

..
. '

.~..mp Sortoo -

DotUe WIU-557;
WUICII-5216; Dottle Harrlaal-'-16 .

••
•

'•

Marte&gt;e

$

99

69

Chrome-plated high-carbon steel pliers with special
hardened 'heads and jaws. ClJshion grips, I'SS R

$999

Gas Trimmer/
Edger
2·cycle, 22.2 cc engine with adjustable assist handle
and Tap-N·Go II automatic line advance . 15" cutting

path. IXR20T

SPECIAL PRICE

$ .,ft99
I ;1.-

?9

9

Comprehensive 512-page guide with ideas, how· to
instructions and explanations tor 120 improvement
projects . Invaluable reference and repair manual.

15620

SPECIAL PRICE

$ft99
.,-

Home Centers

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
MIDDLEPORT

•

J&gt;&lt;!ttle WU1·21Jl;

Includes V4 · h · 1/2 drive socket set and 19" toolbox .
#HBSSA

405 North Second Avenue

:tteWarl'sliun&amp; Suppl1es ................ 26 38

COLUMBIA GAS

19

.

Hardware Lumber

'l'eam 3... :~.... .. .............. .. .. ........ .. ... 26 38

12M.

,m Jos7-4

l

~ htoPallet ...... .. ............ .. ............ ... 38 26

~ Hllh Team Game - Team 3-502; Blue
!fartan-417; 474.
• HIJh Team Series - Blue Tartan-1427:
team 3·1287; Stewart's Gun &amp;: Suppli'es·

Charger
SPECIAL
PRICE

Some stores may resltict rtems to
cash and carry termsant~.

lue

.~e

_
3 :7

Individual dealet5 fll3¥ limit QUanl~leS
lnarvidual dealers mr, not stoCk aH items.

1\' L
Tartan ... .. .... t ......................... . 48 16
&amp;\llhn's Auto Repatr .. ... ... ... .......... 40 24

.

99

Sounds warning alarm at earliest sign of smoke.
Hinged cover lor easy installation and bat1ery
replacement. 9·volt carbon-zinc battery included .
#SA670

.TEAM

/')udg et.

1632007""

SPECIAL ,
PRICE

Smoke A/arm

MONDAY TRIPLICATES
November ••· 19K8

wrnter an

'\
1

SPECIAL PRICE

Hi&amp;:h Game - Dale DavL"i·20!1; Deb!
He nsley-195: ·181; Ray Roach-207.

·cient.
ef l l

$

Battery

SPECIAL PRICE

Includes 1OR. 7R. 6LN and 5WR Vi se-Gnp locking
Pliers in a heavy-duty vinyl rOU·up storage bag. ·

Marlen fl'

wnsorl-486.

•

rc en

:7

1

99

.,~

85-Pc.
Socket Set

PlierSet

Hilt! Team Game- Spring Valley C&amp;A
Auto-737.
Hl1h Series - Dale Davls-555; Deb!

11111 e
eas ro help make theFT! 8

4 89

1428AH

Drill Kit

3-Pc.
PlierSet

$

#15511

$

SPECIAL PRICE

Includes 7" screwdriver and 4 bits, including 3·4 and
6-8 slotted . no.1 and 2 Phillips. Hexagon steel shank.

· High Team Game- Shammy's Car ry

Qul -733: •

'I

perpack

•s-

160t2HD

Magnetic
Screwdriver Set

112 .. ... .... " ........ .. .... " .......... .. .. " .. "" .......20
High Team Series - Tonys Ca rry
Out-2059.
·

Aulo-2:042.

flle.k.~ 1
t rnore comfortable ... and

~

enamel finish. *920SSR

Tony' s Carry Out ........ ........ ..... ... ... ...... 60
Sha·mmys Carry Out .. .. .... .... ..... ...... :.... 54
Mike Sells ...... ,.... . ,........ ...... .. ... ... ... ..... 52
#6 ................... ...... ...... ........ ... ..... .. ...... .46
Sprtng Valley C&amp;A Auto ..... ........ .... ..... .28
Htah Team Series- Spring Vallf!Y C&amp;A

,, h

SPECIAL
PRICE
SPECIAL
PRICE

Heavy-gauge steel cons truction with twin drawbolts.
3-section tote tray w1th socket divider. Dark gray

Early Wedn8d1Q' Mixed

•

ZIP

, Coturnb

JJfl/~E

Tool~hest

Tuck~r -J78.

Women- Betty McK i nley-158;
Splres-156; Debby Tlllls-153.

ern !hat's designed to meet your need s, anc

Your Columbia Gas olflce a

.' I

SPEC/AL$189

Drill

. $~199

SPECIAL PRICE

• High Game- Men-Larry Tucker-181;

CITY ___________-'----------------------------------

,,,,

J

522BP

16012HDW

matically. Powerlu l, fast 180 RPM. #9034

436; Ann Splres-•21.

ADDRESS _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

' d u&amp; elways r~adv to he\
.Joo'\1 hO
P

so '

MASON, WV.

Batteries

- Debby Tillls-437; Melody Ramsbury·

.

NAME _______________________________________________

also be a resource should wlnrer dO a fiLl

._,.1

al" ·

£

Long-tasting alkaline pe~ormance . Many
household uses. 2-pack "D", "C",_"AA". or
1-pack 9-Vott. #E95BP·2, 3BP-2. t BP-2,

~ordless

lOuch Powe r 3-position swirch lets you drive. screws
comfonably with either hand. Use manually or auto-

Amertcare-Pomeroy and Big Bend Ct'J
Radio Clllb-1551
. Hlgb Team Game - Rod's Wrecker
~rvfce-6M; Pat Hill Ford·615; Rod's
Wreker servtce-604.
' Hlib Series - Men-Larry Tucker-501;
Rod Walker-482; Don Hysell-467. Women ·

our gas
111 you bel1iQj~ ·
'lment Plan can even out Y
nce 5 P
18
Q SwJn
9s. no surprises .
cirC 1.1 f1'1S
.
peciftl
I s
n indNrdual Payment schedule 1

,~

I PICKENS J
I HARDWARE~

Professional quality. 2-speed. 5 torque senings.

Power Driver

High Team Series - Rod's Wrecker
Servtce·1857: Pat Hill Ford ·1802.t.

STATE

$3999

3-~e/1 ~ordless

Team Standlnp
Middleport Lunch Room ...... ... ........... 72

uoget Pa

J
J
J

EAERGIZER.

·cordless Broom -

McKinley-156.
MONDAY NITE MIXED

ll'ler

l'vo b'1

J.

· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · •1!)-~C)•t~.-.~e..~.-.~-~.--a•y~

Sweepstick,.

"'High Game - Men-Ron Smlth·198;
-1~; Don Harrlscn·190. Women- Debby
Tlllls-176: Ann Splres -159 ; Bett y

. .

Our 13

OPEN 8:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M. .
FERRELLGAS
614-992-5097'

•TOASTER
•CAN OPENERS
•MIXERS
PLUS MORE

• BlACK&amp;DECKER.

McKlatey-404.

\ o1 a Co\o..nnbia S.eTvice svsr

.Tigers romp 84-66

f
f
f
f'

J

1

HIJh Tealn Game - Pat HUI Ford-666·
Main Sl. Plzza-64S; Big Bend CB RadiO
Club-617.
"'High Series - Men-Ron Smlth-57S:
OOnHarrls&lt;~~-530; Doi1Hysell·500. Women-Debby Tl111s·451; Ann Splres-413; Betly

as iCJ

We can

Select From....

•

'l

Nov. 23, 1988

e s.re

~

"~
FIND THAT PERFECT ;
Gin FOR HER..... J

.. I

Hleh 'team Series- Pat Hill Ford-1835·

"

PLEASE SEND A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL FOR 1 YEARS FOR
ONLY $66.66 (Payment Included) .
SUBSCRIPTION GIFT FOR:

n wiotentlng your horne to

. :"

Don Harrtson-494· Don

1711.

11 . .. 1 . . tn•MI

tiPs 0

.I

if

MONDAY NITE MIXED

HiliNl Team Series- Pat Hill Ford-1752;
A.mertcare·Pomeroy-1722: Main St. Pizza .

YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

iY'&gt;e'

r

•FARM •HOME •INDUSTRY •COMMERCIAL
CALL NOW FOR THE PRICE ON OUR
FALL TANK SET SPECIAL"'

•·

TH.~ DAILY SENTINEL

,/re psr

3

J
J

MONDAY NITE MIXED

lunch Onl&gt;t · , AM · l PM
POIIIEIIOY
IIDUik
11011 ONlY
II .1111 -1 .W SloiL ·llwr~

WIN I ER'S BLOW.

l)·rt·l:'t-bA-1:!1-~

blcCall-153: Joan Banks-153.

Mil· I AM kon.-llfllu.
IM·I • k-det,

WE HAVE IDEAS
mHB.P SOFIEN

lf!l...

o

f

"for All Your Propane Needs"

Wf'S I

t\doelphl 96, FMt Str oudsbuf'!l: lt l
i\llesheny '- 1. John Carroll61
lltntk•y !13. 8 . Connedla11112
lk•wdvln 89. BMtn 61

IIIATIONA.L HOCKEl' LEAGUE

~'

ON SALE NOW: Warm Morning Heaters

Oklllohoma 10.&amp;, Sou thrrn i'otf'lhodl ~ot " 1
Tf'US 11 9, Oral RohPrh!ll
T~as-i'.ll'aso11:, Prairk' \'lrw 31

...,

NHLresults

f
1i

· Ferrellgas

11

SW Mluoart Si. M. SL Lnk ~~
,_; · Tarlde 119, Dana KG
VitJiey City Sl. lS, MoorhPad Sl. it
W.,;hlnAf,on 'l,, DePau I 75
Wa,yne St. 1i. llrlud lfl il
Wluenher.- 8-1. Hiram 641
so ..Un¥f'llt
Ll!ul!l i!UI ». Tl'l'h Ill, l .SU 109 {OT.J

Collelf' B.. krtbll.ll Re,; ulhl
ly United Prf'!I II IRI('rrMtloml

G....
ft F
I 8 or
H er '

f

J/""

PUt !flu I"K St. 10. Uncoln e6
Purd•f' $'7, Dllnolll !&gt;it. ~

ColleJI'

Clndnnlll -

\'l~ta

-N1•h. Wf'Ak')'llll 9.1,

r~~~~

~·

-n

M. MUM'II)' SL (II

Rurna
" Noire D».me ll-1, lnd.lllllli
71

then grabbed the rebound after

missing the second shO t with 16
seco nds teft.
After a tlmeout, Harper, left
alone. sa nk a 3-polnt Jumper,
giving the Cavaliers a 105-104

..------.....-------.. Jf SHOP WITH US ·TO

Ill, llf-thf' l Sit

Mllllllllo Sl, 93. UW-Milwaukl•f' 1~
MIU'Ian ~. Who .·OIIhku"h 19
MI\Y \llle St. !Ill, BC!m i ll.ll St. li
Mln1t-Duluth 17. L».kll' i!lupl'rlor M
NE ,, luourt Ill. HaJI lllh!IJ l.a-G ran,..

Relmtf'.

Currer re111pe4.
Huekf')'
Bo..on - ReC'IIIIrd left win.- olohn
C'o~rter and rill! hi wlnr PMII Ber».l do from
Mal Ill! ol A111erka Korby Ll' ~e -

WC!~Ir.t' li:D

Kn ox 18, MacMurnr.y

Acqul.red llf't."Ond hiLlif'man
Julio Frpeo from Cla.·pland lor firM
b ...mltn rt"l (' O' Brlfoa, !ll't.Vnd blUM'man •
.,Jerry Browne and ctnk'r fte!l .. r Otldibto
McDowf'll; alft'ed to (.'OIIt ntch wiih
pkh., Edwin Corrraand o•tfleldrr Ed

W•W•Jiollat Ulah, t.•p.m.

..

l 'f' nlral Ml't Mdlsl\17, Celumhia IU
Dalr.oW "'':t~lt'ya• !R, Nurthwl'llil'fl•ll'
Dr~tkl' !9, ,\J,~biUl\lll St. ill
Drury li-t, .VkaD- Tech il
ElmhUrst 10.111 . ln!itUulf' Ttch 62
f'lnllay Ill. Mal opt 53

Texas -

rt Phoenix at LA l.akfl'., 10: JD p.m.

•

Mldw~t

~e hn\la.

1~•

VlrMinla Tf't:h IO:t• .Jam~ Mllllllon M-1
\'lr&amp;tnla 1111, l' alrltoi POickll\!lo n &amp;I

C"arroiiiU, NorlhwHtfor n ( Wlti.) fili

Si""'

8a(ramenlo at Ml.-nl, 1: aG p.m .
O.teaaoat Detroit . 7:10p.m.
Portland at Ia dana. 7; :10 p.m.
Se~ttlf. at O.lltK. s:• ,.m.
;

"

8Mt'bi!.ll
Ctllcq;o (NLJ - A.equJud !ihorhlup
Lulfl BrnPll:r: Md outflel.-r Pahlo OriJadll INNn Tnu t o compolf'tf' Monda,y' .~
nl~playrr trade.
. Mlnri!!IIGta- DHoC.~IIdl~dl•r ,JimDI'IJer
aJreed to 1·)'1!111' co ntra ct ; M&gt;nl plil: h l'fll
Jdl Btmcarner and
OM!tf'r to
l'ortiMid of PacUic Cout Le Jt«Ue&gt; (AAA ),
Montrul - Obtaln t'd plll'hf'r Kf'v ln
Gros11 from Phlladrlplli• for plle hf'l'~
Floyd Vouman11and ,Jt&gt;UParreti : apoe~d
to wain rlgii&amp;M to red•m pllt' hf'r .lr ff
Tabaka.
S... Dlep1- ~nt'd to 1-)"lll' conlnu:l
wltllllhortatop GJtrry Templeton.
P,hUadelphlia - 1\al'ef'cl to l· )'l'IU'
con1ract wllh third bueman Mlkt'

HJgh Series - Russ Carsoo-579; Debt
He&gt;nsley-537; Rly Roach-512: ' MarJene
WUsoo-524.
. High Game - Ru ss Cars&lt;Jl-212; Debt
Hensley -234; Ru ss Car son-20 5: Pat
CarsOn-200.
Early Wednl!8di\Y Mixed

iarship violations. The NCAA
also limited the number of
football scholarships the universit y can award over the next
three years.
When Currey came to Cincln·
nail from Long Beach State five
years ~go he Inherited a killer
schedule that has Included na·
Ilona! champions the past five
years.
Among opponents beating Cln·
cl nnatlln the last five years were
Miami (Fla.). West Virginia,
Penn State, Auburn, Alabama
and Florida.
Despite his poor won-lost record, Currey co ntended his " lm·
portant "
goals w ere
accomplished .

HIRAM, Ohio (UPli - Brad
Baldridge scored 26 points and
Joe Young added 17 Tuesday
night to help Wittenberg remain
undefeated with an 84·66 victory
over winless Hiram.
The Tigers Improved to 4·0 and
the Terriers dropped to IJ-4.
The Terriers jumped to a 15-9
lead with 14:.(15 left In the first
half before Willen berg went on a
12-4 scoring run to grab a 21-19
advantage on a basket by Young
with 8:50 left In the half.
The Tigers lncreued their lead
to 41-29 and were never ·chai·
lenged in the second half.
Dan Young paced t~ Terriers
with 18 points while Dan Young
had 15 and Dan Brook had 10.

I .S11
II .-301

at._._, p.m .
Den\'tf lltPhU..elphla. 7:30p .m.

numerous r ecruiting and scho·

'

!I
II

l

MOIIII"UI a1 St. Loul!l, •l~t;ht
Edmonlon at ( 'alprr. niKf-1
\\olnllllpe J;Iil Los An~~;l'lot'!t, niKht

Walker-181; RonSmllh·l78; RlckH.atti'eld·

$4.99

m..s.t.

2

'flob Borlng-180; Larry

12" 1 !TEll PIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Soltdrlnks

11 AM· I 1M S.n.-n..rl.

I .6.17

174. Women-MelodyRamsbury-162: Deb-

,

ANY f2" 2 ITEM PIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Soltdrinks

$6.17
.....

1

11

WedMtldiO' 'M Gamtw

AllaaLI

Walker-500:

16 6z Soltdrinks

STORE ONL'

I .'OSS -

HyseU-479. Womea-Joan Banks-417; Melody Ramb!lcy--410; Aun Splres·378.
HIJb Game- Men-Don Hysell &amp; Rod

$9.99
.....

Areo

II -t .7:4..1

New \'ork"U4, Den~r 12:t (0Tl
Portland fr, Nrw Jt&gt;r~~ey t3
.41Uuta IU. Sat;ramt-nto 113
llllt'q:o 105, . . . . . 100
Mllwau~~H&gt;Jot , Dl!troltM
Hou•on 111. t1evt'lud 105
SellUiflllil, f'l an !\at unlo 107
Pbumlx 1110, l'•Nnllon 12
lA I.Uft'llJI , LA CUpp!!rs 112
U.hlen Slaie Il-l, U"h IO:J

If

~

·597; Party Anlmals..593.
'
High Serle~~ - Men-Ron Smttb &amp; Rod

LARGE 18" 5-ITEM PIZZA

PLUS 4 ·

13

2 12 .).43 10

1\letida,y '~

11::13 p.m.

l&gt;:dmonlon, 9: 35p .m.
Ttuar'!ld.,'!i Gam""
NT H:.nrr ,. at Hardonl , nt,;ht
Bull !do .. Uo!don, nlpt
f•ttt!lburr;h at PhUildf'lphb. nl~hl

2 1:1 .IU 10
\\'lhllf:rn Co.IP.rt n ~
Ml dwl'ltt Dtvllllon

sac ..m('nto

Mlnir!iO&amp;Mh

lead wllh fi ve seconds left.
" I was open," Harper ·said. " I
wasn't even trying to think, 'Tie
the game or take the lead.· I was
just looking to put points on the
board ."
After Harper's jumper, Houston called time out twice. Mike
Woodson then In bounded from
halfcourt to Eric "Sleepy"
Floyd, who fed the ball to a
double-teamed Olajuwon, who
spun around at the baseline to hit
the game-winning Jumper.
Craig Ehlo missed a desperatlon hailcoun shot at the buzzer
for Cleveland .

High Team Series- Pat Hill Ford-179!r
Party Anlmals-1679; Main St . Plzza-1~.'
HlgJI Team Game -Pat Hill Ford-613·

•· With Pep,-roni. Sau•g .. Mu1twoom•.

Limitttl Delinry

11 MI.J •

R

.

DINNER FOR FOUR
Ontgn1•11qGreen Pep,....

Qtlt'hec

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1

W L Pet. GB
IHnwr
11 I .U1 l ltah
10 I .U5
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11.100 1
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6 II .:f5a 7~

I .

DOMINO'S '
PIZZA
DELIVERS
FREE.

..

MGIIIII'...I at
3

loss snapped a four-game winning streak lor Cleveland.
"We wanted to protect rather
than a.! tack," said Houston coach
Don Chaney. "We got passive. I
think we learned a va luable
Jesson, though. They forced us to
take time off the clok and didn't
let us run our plays. We ended up
taking some ba&lt;l shots."
Cleveland trailed by 11 points,
103-92, with 2:45left, but erupted
for nine straight points to pull to ·
within 103-101 with 31 seco nds left
on a dunk by Ron Harper.
Olajuwon sank a free throw
before Harper hit a free throw,

l..ocal bowling

IN

Lunch Special

~OMUOT

Chlcaro
lruhna

312 GIFTS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) Ken Hockman , who guided Harrison to an unbeaten regu Jar
season, has been selected the
United Press International Dlv·
!sian II Ohio high school football
coach of the year.
Hockman was a narrow winner
of Ref\O Saccoccia of unbeaten
and No. 1-ranked Steubenvllle in
balloting ~y Division II coaches
from around the state.
Hockman received 10 votes to
eight for Saccoccla, with Uniontown Lake's Tom Greer and
Denny Marquette of Bowling
Green tied for third In the voting
with five each.
Others with more than one vote
Include John Aregood of Franklin, Tim Flossie of Akron Buchtel
and Jack Ruvolo of Solon.

DINNER FOR TWO

$TOllE Ollf

Mnwu~~r

~

FOR THE PERSON WHO HA·S EVERYTHING
1 Y,EAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
. THE DAILY.SENTINEL
.•

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'

£Aontml DIVItdon

Clt\lehnd
Ata.Ma

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')' I! .31l'l
-1 II .267
~ II .~n

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lt!al!AII!!IIlllt!al*lillll!t&lt;llUIIK•••••IIItllillll!aiOJIW•Blfllll!a-

O'Brien, 30, hit .272 with 16
ATLANTA iUPI) -TheCieveland Indians Tuesday traded homes runs and rankE'd third
second baseman Julto Franco to defensively among American
the Texa~ Rangers for first League first basemen with a .995
baseman Pete O'Brien, out- fielding percentage In 1988.
McDowell, 26. hit .247 with 6
fielder Oddlbe McDowell and
home runs and had 33 stolen
second baseman Jerry Browne.
bases. He was the Rangers '
Franco, 27, hit .303iast season
after hitting .319 in 1987 and .306 . nrst·round (jraft pick in June
In 1986. The career .295 hitler has 1984.
Browne. 22, hi t .229, but spent
1,051 hits in six seasons with the
part of the season at Chiss AAA
Indians.
Oklahoma City.

OH.
St.
992-2124

-

W L Pet .

HOUSTON IUPI) - Akeem
Olajuwon demonstrated Tuesday night why he is among the
premier players ln the NBA .
Olajuwon sank a 12-foot baseline jumper wllh one second left.
lifting the Houston Rockets to a
106-105 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers. averting what
would have been an embarrass·
lng defeat.
"There was no ttme towaste,n
said Olajuwon, who finished with
a game-high 30 points and 15
rebounds. "I just shot the ball
when I got It. Yes, I wanted the
ball. This is a game we were
supposed to win the way we
played . It would have been a
painful loss with the big lead."
Houston led 103-92 with 2: 45
left, but was held to just three
points the rest 'of the way. The

7:\. folumlll a M
lkm.aa H . MrdJcar !Hrto 51
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Mrrrlmllo\:11: "'ll, Sprln!lflf'ld 12
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!SorltiPa!lll'rnM, Khodto l.odutdll 2
Nyat•k IU , Bard 5~
Penn'71. Vlll1111ow 18
Phil. P bvm, Ill) , C~lumbl». t:nkln II&amp;
f'ttt!llurah Ill •. J u,· k~oo..,Uh• il
~TII.nlot~ ,0 , Drl'w S.1
S..1 on Hall !II), St. l'l'tl'r' 11 SS
Sl . \'lnrl'nt 0:\, \\'tuih . &amp; ol(&gt;fl. 11
Ur~inUM i1 , !\warthmort 51
WP.&gt;.k'YIUI 10~. Wf' nlwnl1h Jn,.;tllull' !15
So ulh
Vrtl'n!lloro ('oil. 711 , L)'nchhu '167
llan1pton IJll, Nt . A.ugustinl''!i H
l.ouinillt 11:1. Murn&amp;y St . 51
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Mf'nfp~!l ~t . U, Rl'll.dlrf 'T.l
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R1111d ul ph- M~~o~n 8a. H111mp;le n.Sydnf'y

!11.'1' Ranpr 11 S. VMl'QUW'I" 3
Win·~· 5. Lo~ .-\IJJ;elf'll 4 {OTI
lltlt"drlelid ~'• G•rnf'll;
W•hl•&amp;fon at Nt'w Jrtwy. 11 15 p.m.

AU•uc Dlv..lon
f\;-l'•rk
Phlladt'lpl'll a

I

ning of Van Wert, guards Matt
Foley of Springfield Shawnee
and Eric Graves of Akron Buch·

p,o

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Ptti ... 'ICh 7, OIIUfO t
So• on .t, PI.'V l tdUNin• :1
Sl. Leutl!l :t, MlnrEIMiia 0
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NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC
lly U•tted P res• .. tr:r•uu_. ·
F..UIH n C.li'tnnt~

J . No Purchase Necenary-Need Not • Preunt to Win . If
It
«
w Twin City Machine and Welding
It 17 COU
~92-3768 ·
POMEROY, OHIO 1

Indians trade Framco to Rangers

W11t Main

NBA re~~ults

It

DRAWING DECEMBER 22ND, l:QO P.M.

,
(

.

NOW

•

AND REPAIR CEJITER"
CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY e

STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WIN A.
LINCOLN 22 5 AMP AC WELDER ' ·

;
•

who could switch to defense ln
college.
Rounding out the first offenslve team are spilt end Roger
Harper of Columbus lndepend·
ence, .tightendBradLongofWest

Hockman top coach

I

TWIN CITY MACHINE AND WELDING
"YOUR WELDING SUPPL 'f

W

~~'ih~s~a:~ ~ua:·c~I:h~n~a~=r~~~ ~:~~gtol~~~\~~ !~:::' :~:~~~~~

and I've had mine."
Joining Harp In the first team
Division II o enslve backfield
are running ba
Ricky Powers
of Akron Buch I, Dunyasha
Yetis of Steuben le and Brian
O'Neal of Clncln I Purcell
Marian.
The 6-foot, 200-pound Powers
rushed for 1,542 yards and 23
touchdowns the past season and

Guy Decker of Olmsted Falls,
Shane DeSimone of Portsmouth,
Marty Mathis of Cincinnati Pur·
cell Marian and Andy Banks of
HarriSon.
A talented secondary Includes
MyronBellofToledoMacomber·
Whitney, Tim Williams of DelawareandJeffHarrlsonofColum·
bus East.
The first team punter Is Ryan
Haley of Bay VIllage.

R

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Fund~

City "11, Bltl~1n· W-.Ibr. c t• n
Har1Mrd 71. Falrlll'ld )I
Kink" 1:!, IJC!mlnil'WI 7'!

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Cavs-drop I 06-105 NBA tilt

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m~!~n~:~v\~y ~=c~~i::: ;~~~~~~ ~~~~g at~~:::~ruit\~~~N:~~

Currey resigns
CINCINNATI iUPll- University of Ci ncinnati football coach
Dave Currey, wh(\SC _36 losses in
live years were the most football
coaching defeats in school history, resigned Tuesday .
No successor was immediately
namE'&lt;!.
· Currey, whose 1988team went
3-8, suffered five straaight losing
seasons and finished 19-36.
The university's football ana
basketball programs were re·
cently placed on three years
probation by the NCAA lor

tel and center Rod Smith of
Cleveland St. Joseph.
The kicker on the first team is
Colum bus DeSales' Dan Sprout
Stanley, a down lineman OD the
first-team defense, Is joined by
Columbu s Beechcroft's Anthony
Austin and Paul Richard of
Cinci nnati Anderson.
Steubenville's Duke Malbasa
and Mike Burner of A.von Lake
are the ends and the linebackers

te:~~e;iC:.s a~~a~~sc! ~~r~%r ~~ ~~~~e ~~::~~~~ ~~J'.~~~~ ;~~

Rio ladies hunt win
over bigger quarry ·
·Rio Grande's Red women, on
the upswing with a 3-2 record.
will again be hunting bigger
NAIA quarry Wednesday when
they host the Lady Golden Eagles
of the Universlttof Charleston at
7:30p.m. in Lyne Center.
The Rio ladies recorded
another win Saturday by _downlng WVTAC competitor Concord
84-73. With balanced scoring and
strong bench support, the Redwomen led all the way . Top scorer
Lea Ann Mullins scored 22 points
and 11 rebounds.
Mullins 15-7, senior. McGuf·
fey) currently leads her team·
mates with an average of 28.4
points per game, while power
forward Holly Hastings (5·9,
senior, Ashville) is averaging 16
points per outing and 10 rebounds. Center Ann Barnitz (6-0,
freshman, Belpre) Is averaging
12.2 points each game and 5.6
rebounds.
Coa&lt;&gt;h Cheryl Flelltz Is ex·
peeled to cast· Mullins and
Hastings as her forwards, with
Barnltz taking the post. At
guards will be Beth Coil (5·6,
sophomore, Wapakoneta), the
team's top assis t person (8.2 per
game) and Betsy Bergdoll (5·7.
freshman, Galllpolis). Bergdoll
is presently one of the team's
leading free throw s~ooters at
84.6 percent (11-13) .
UC, under the stewardship of
third-year Coach Linda Bennett.
was 21 -13 in 1987·88, during which
it cinched the women's WVlAC
and District 28 championships.
In their subsequent tr ip to the
NAIA Nationals, the Lady
Go lden Eagles were defeated by
Wingate (N.C.) 81-76.
Last season. UC defeated Rio
97-81 at Charleston.
UC was 5-3 entering competl-

led Buchtel to tts secondconsecu'
live state championship. He had
206 yards and two TDs In the title
game win over Steubenville.
Yetts, a 5-foot·6, 150-pounder,
had 1,640 ·yards rushing and
scored 16 touchdowns the past
season and 124 yards and a TD
against BuchteL He totaled over
3,700 yards for his career, while
playing safety on defense.
O'Neal, a 6,foot-1. 217-pounder.
had 1,183 yards rushing and 18
touchdowns the past season for

I

lhaqw!i_. 114, St.

The Daily Sentinei - Page'-5

·I

'

...

�P·-6-The Daily Sentinel

Settlement
reached on
menorah
lighting
at statehouse

Wednesday, December 7. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I ) - An
The House of Tradition, a
out-of-court settlement reached Hasidic Jewish group, flied suit
between state officials and a
last week in Franklin County
Jewish group wUI allow a me- Common Pleas Court.
norah to be Ill for six hours on the
The group argued that failure
Statehouse,lawn this week.
· tp allow the display during
The agreement, reached Mon- Hanukkah violated constituday, ended a lawsuit filed by the tional rights of free speech and
Chabad House of Tradition In freedom of religion. Hanukkah·
Columbus after the state last began at sundown Saturday and
month refused it permission to ends at sundown Sunday.
display the candelabrum alongThe agreement means the
side a Christmas tree on the menorah will be up for two
north side or the Statehouse.
ceremonies and not in a perman-

ent showing, said Alan Katchen,
regional director for the AntiDefamation League.
"The distinction is that this Is
not a permanent display; It's a
tempcrary thing," Kat chen said.
"This really constitutes an
event."
As an "event," It does not
violate oonstitutloqal prohibitions against establishing a religion, which some argue a permanent display would do.
Wayne Hill, .director
of com·
,

WEDNESDAY

HARRISONVILLE Guy
Troyer will be the missionary
speaker al Harrisonville Holtness Chapel on lfednesday at
7:30 p.m. Everyone wel('ome.
--~

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. , in the high
school cafeteria.

--SYRACUSE -Syracuse Naza-

rene Church will be In revival
Dec. 7-11. Evening services wlll
be at 7 p.m: Sunday services will
be at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

'

POMEORY - The Salvation
Army, Pomeroy, will be laking
applications for food and toys lor
&lt;;hrlstmas on Tuesday and Wednesday, Dec. 6-7, from 10 a.m. to
12 noon, and 1 to 4 p.m., on both
days. ,

..

'

~

•
•

..

CHESTER - Chester Firemen's AuKil!ary Is "having a
Christmas party on Wednesday,
at 7 p.m., at the home of Clarice
Allen .

'

-·

-..
,.
•

RACINE Graduates of
Southern High School who would
be interested in forming an adult
basketball league should meet at
Southern Junior High on Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 8:30p.m.

"'•

..•

POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge
_ . 164 will hold its monthly meeting
on Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at the
Middleport Temple. Open Installation of new oftlcers for the
coming year will be held. Refreshments will be served:
THURsDAY

LONG BOTTOM - Revival
· services at the Long Bottom
United Methodist Church will be
held Thursday through Sunday at
7:30 nightly. Rev. Norman Taylor will be the evangelist Donna
Wolf wlli sing on Thursday and
Sunrise on Saturday. Everyone
welcome.

COPYRIGHT 1988 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
DEC. 4. THROUGH SATURDAY, DEC . 10, 1988, IN '"""'0010-IOYDOIIJ.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

,

AOVERTISI'D ITEM POLICY

Each of these advertised items ·is requir,ed to be readily available for sale in each
Kroger Store, e~tcept as specifically noted in this ad , If we do run out of an

advertised iterrt, we will offer you your choice of a comparable item, when available,
reflecting the sarne savings or a rainc heck which will entitle you to purchase the
advertised item at the adver1ised price within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will
be accepted per item purchased.
·

;

'
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF "UNTRIMMED"
10-12-LB. AVG.

Shelled '
Pecan Halves

Whole
Sirloin Tips

.&lt;

'

&amp;I
SLICED
FREE

ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday, Dec. 8, 6:30 p.m., for a
pctluck dinner. Members should
bring non-perishable food
Items.
POMEROY -A bake and yard
sale will be h.eld Thursday and
Friday, from 9 a.m. to4p.m.,and
Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
at the senior citizens ceriter in
Pagetown. Proceeds wlll go to
the Carleton Church.

Perdue
Leg Quarters

f.

"HAND DIPPIN KIND"

Fox De Luxe
Pizzas

Old Fashioned
Ice Cream ·

7.3-7.!1Coz.

!JCOuart

REGULAR OR DIET WITH NUTRA SWEET

.

Big K
Soft Drinks

POMEROY Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, will have its annual installation of officers on Friday. at 7:30
p.m. Members are urged to
attend. Refreshments will be
served.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens are having round
and square dancing on Friday,
from 8 to 11 p.m., with music by
the True Country Ramblers.
Those attending should bring
snacks. The public Is Invited to
attend.
SATURDAY

Duncan Hines
Cake Mix

...._____....

ANNIVERSARY -PictUred are Emma and Tom Hayman wbo
· celebrated their 60th wedding aunlversary with lamUy and friends

For

_

oa Nov. 13 at Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center.
READY TO SPREAD DUNCAN HINES FROSTING
16.5-0Z . .. 99¢

•NutraSweet and the NutraS~t tymboiM reviatered trademarks ot
, The NutriSWMt Cumpany tor ita brand of tweettnlng ingredient .

Shoot planned
13-INCH WHITE KROGER

Christmas Bear
With Hat

I,-----~·······~
. KROGER COUPON
I

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

Each

12:Pak 12-oz. Cans

CHESTER _: Ken . Amsbary
Chapter of the lzaak Walton
League will hold muzzle loading
shoots at the clubhouse near
Chester n Sundays, Dec. 11,
Dec.l8an
.1. The shoots will
consist of free
and bench
rest events with various prizes,
such as meat and money, to be
·awarded. All shoots will begin at
lp.m.

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
IEFIIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd Ave., GaHipolis
PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

~~-~
Speelal of the Weekf .
FOOTLONG HOT DOG

S1.09

g:!:s . . . ........•., SJB9

WITH FIIES...",S1.64

cond~"

arvest®
'

'

Won't You Help Feed The Hul)gry?
Please bring your eKtra canned food by your local
Kreger store and place it in our specially marked
receptacles by December 10th. The food will be
distributed by Kroger to local Food Banks in support of
the Second Hal'llest Program. Thank you for your
support.

J

•

·"

POMEROY - The Meigs
County. Ministerial Association
will once again be collecting good
warm, clean outer Clothing for ;
distribution to those who need it. ''
To contribute clothing residents
may contact either the Rev.

or the Rev. Melvin Franklin,
9~-3317 .

"FREE" RECLINER

STOP IN SOON AND REGISTER FOR A FREE
RECLINER TO BE GIVEN AWAY. DRAWING
WILL BE HELD ON DECEMBER 23, 1988.
No Purcha.. Neceaary-IINII llot h PreHnt to Win.

MEIGS
FURNIT
210 31D ST.

IACI., OliO

POMEROY - The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American RevolutlonwillmeetFriday, Dec. 9,
1 p.m., at the Grace Episcopal
Church Parish House.

lb.

II

$

Banquet, dauce
POMEROY - The annual
JayMar Golf awards banquet
and dance will be held Sunday,

Collecting clothing ' ·

Richard H. Freeman , 992-3172,
office. or at his home 992-6818,

. FRIDAY

18.25-18.!1Coz.

12-Pak 12-oz. Cans

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold their annual
Christmas Dance at Royal Oak
Resort this Sund\IY. from 7 to 10
p.m. Music will be by Orlando
Columbo.

Dec. 11. at the Eagles Club.
Social hour wlll start at 6 p.m.,
followed by dinner at 6:30 and a
dance at 8. Tickets are on sale
now for $25 a couple or $13 single.
Reservations must be made in
advance. Tickets may be purchased from Nancy Hill, Sandy
lannarelli or Bob' Freed.

GALLIPOLIS - Flame Fel
lowshlp, Gallipolis, will meet
Friday, 7 p'.m., at the Columbus
and Southern Electric Building.
Speaker will be teacher and
au thor, Carol Crook, of Akron .
She and her husband minister the
singles group at the Cathedral of
Tomorrow, Akron .

'
FROlEN

RUTLAND - A square dance
will be helil Saturday,from 8tol2
midnight, at the Rutland American Legion Post. Everyone
welcome.

POMEROY - An economic
developmeni seminar will be
held Thursday, Dec. 8, from 1 to
4:30 p.m., at the Meigs Senior
&lt;::!tlzens Center.

U.S. Inspectifd'

Pound

Pound

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange wUl meet Thursday, 6: 30 p.m., for a potluck
dinner. Members are also asked
to bring non-perishable food
items.

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., at the
post headquarters.

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Wesiern Squ.a re Dance
' Club will sponsor an open dance
PAGETOWN - A bake and at the senior citizens center In
yard sale to benefit the Carleton Pomeroy, on Saturday from 8 to
Church will be held Thursday 11 p.m. Caller will be Dave
and Friday, from 9 to 4, and Stuthard: All western square
Saturday, from 9 to 12, at the dancers are invited. RefreshPagetown Senior Citizens ments will be served.
Center.

•'
.•
•'

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Community calendar

munlcatlons for the Ohio attorney general's office, which represented the state, said lighting
the menorah · briefly during
events also Is consistent with
other court decisions.
Under the agreement, ' two
three-hour ceremonies using the
8-foot, electric menorah will be
held - one Wednesday and one
Thursday .
Menorahs are lighted to celebrate the Jews' recapture of the
Jerusalem Temple from the
Syrians In 165 B.C .

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wed1"181day. December 7. 1988

.ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VALLEY

Shop
·with
These

Shop
with
These

•

Local

Merchants
I

�-

•

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

EASTMAN'S..

\'our lndependent.l y

O~ned

Wednesday. December 7. 1988

Local news briefs .. ~ ------.

MONEY

Low-Priced Supermarket

A

Continued from page I

EMS has 8 calls Tuesday
· Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
cails Tuesday; Pomeroy at 9:39a.m. to the Super 10 for Rose
Lee to Veterans Memodai Hospital; Racine.Fire Department
at 11: 32 a.m. to a brush fire on Front St.; Ollve Township Fire
Deparunent at 12:18 p.m. to a brush fire at Long Bottom;
Tuppers Plains at 1:18 p.m. to an auto accident on Scout Camp
Road where treatment and transportation was refused; Chester
Fire Department al 1:23 p.m. to Long Bottom to assist Ollve
Township with brush fire; Racine Fire Department and EMS to
an auto accident on State Route 338 where Denny Congo was
dead on arrival; Olive Township Fire Department at 5:30p.m.
to Long Bottom where a brush fire rekindled; Ollve Township
.Fire Department was caiied back to the brush fire at 9:09p.m.

.HOUDAY

POINSEniAS
KENTUCKY BORDER

BOLOGNA

79&lt;

LB.

WHOLE STICK

. FISCHER

FISCHER LARD
25 LB. ' s
PAIL

$ 599

799,
.

WHOLE

Boneless
Tavern Hams

BACON
SLBS.

GRANVILLE, Ohio (UP!) Pollee officials say they plan to
file charges against anybody
they know who purchased a fake
driver's license from the opera·
tors of a ring that operated In
Granv.lile and Columbus.
The fake driver's license ring
was broken last weekend with the
arrests of William Watson, 20,
and Deborah Pfister, 21, in
Granville, and Michael
Schneider, 20, In Columbus.
The three have been accused of
selling fake driver's licenses to
people too young to buy alcohoilc
beverages, said Granville Pollee
Chief Steve Cartnai.
Cartnal said he Is concerned
about juveniles becoming in·
', volved In an accident after using
.. ihe fake IDs to purchase beer a~d
• liquor.
"We want to make sure these
people don' t become intoxicated
and get Involved in an accident,"
Cartnal said.

$499
•

. ..

'

•REG. •HOMESTYLE

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

Chilled Tropicana

B~neless

Orange Juice

Chuck Roast

Dana.Congo

Granulated Sugar

5
3PAII

WCTRIC

LIGHT BULBS
•6o •1oo wan

GROUND
BEEF

By llniled Press International
Falling snow gave the Rocky
Mountain and Northern Plains
states a Christmas ~ard look
Wednesday and more snow was
headed for parts of New Mexico,
Texas and Oklahoma, the National Weather Service said.
The snow that trimmed trees
and blanketed roots was being
generated by a high pressure
system being nudged Into the
country's midsection !rom Can·
ada, sending temperatures plum·

Chambers...

$1 09lB.
Boneless
T
•
Sirloin Steak

Hoover Elkins

POUND PUPPIES

2 FOR $5
"

BLUE BONNET

LUZIANNE

Margarine

Tea Bags

Quarters

NESCAFE INSTANT

Mt Blend Coffee ·
e

Weather
South Central Ohio

TOMATO
JUICE

Tonight: Variable cloudiness,
with a low between 30 and 35.
Winds becoming north less than
10 mph. Chance of precipitation
20 percent.
·• Thursday: Mostly cloudy, with
a slight .chance of rain or snow.
Highs will be near 40. Chance of
precipltation 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of snow Friday, fair
Saturday, with a chance of
showers on Sunday. Highs will
range from the middle 20s to the
middle 30s Friday and Saturday
and from the upper 30s to the
middle 40s on Sunday. Early
morning lows wlil be bvetwe.en 15
and 25 Friday and Saturday and
in the 20s Sunday.

Limit One With
$10.00 or More

46 Oz. Can

Cknnl will continue after Christmas.
Dorothy ltntz-Preclous ••oriel St1ll01
oWe R...,. The Right To Limit Quantltlee •Pr'- Effective Wed., Doc. 7 thru Sot.. Dec. 11; 1988 •USDA Food Stompo Gladly Accepted • Not Re1pon 11ble For Typovrophlcel Error~

--

Get the full
potenticd from your
Satellite System.
Add a decoder •
If you want to
update to an liD
Receiver, we have
them for only

$699°0

Don't have a Satellite
System? We have complete
IRD systems for
$1499°0

.
•COMPLETE UNE OF TOYS
•RI,JS'SELL STOVER CANDY •WRAPPING PAPER
.
•CHRISTMAS CARDS
.

WE ALSO DO REPAIRS ON ALL

SATEWTE SYSTEMS.

"FREE DEUVERY· AREAS"

STORE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
SAT. 9 A.M.·3 P.M .

~-w--•••••••••••••••••-~-

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
991-6669

OEJ READY FOR YOUR
HOLIDAY PARTIES

271 N. SECOIID • MIDDLEPOU, 6H.

WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF
DRESS SHOES AND FLATS
. .
IN THE ARE~
·

All Dress Shoes
Dress ~lots and
Matchmg

case.
., 600 RPM, 2.4 lloL

Reg. Price 195.00
Campcxt design, indudes dust

.

/0

OFF

connie"

CORDLESS
f DRIVER-DRILL
f'
KIT

Naturalizer

I s147so
Reg. Price $248.00

FootwOrks !'"
Reg. Price 174.95

Moolol 6093DW

' 9.6 V, variallle speed, fiYII'Ii·
· ' ble with bottwy, charger and

. : case.

O'DELL

("\

2 2.7 GIIIP Maiello motor, !fa" in
SMI, Ill" in wood, ballbloring
c consttudion.

I

JmceV'• LUMBER
POMEROY STORE

f

S

2

J

~

'

QOI

I
10':;= J

Model

Reg. Pri" 1155.00 60tODWI
lndudes ball•y, charger and

"Late Comers Can Make Up Work"
OUI SCHIDW IS UMIIED...CALL NOW
949-3060

SATELLITE

Middleport, Pomeroy, Bn1dbury, Minersville,
Rutland. Syrecute, Mason, W Va.
ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3 P.M.
Free Delivery On All Preacriptiona. If You Don't Need A
Prescription We Will Deliver Any1hlng In Store FREE On
A '6.00 Minimum Order.

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................................. 29%
Ashland O!J» .......................33\4
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Charming Shoppes ............... 13
City Holding Co ................... 32
Federal Mogul.. ................... 48
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... , ........ 48
Heck's ................................. \4
Key Centurion ....................15\4
Lands' End ......................... 27%
Limited Inc ......................... 27
Multimedia Inc .................... 71
Rax Restaurants .................. 3\4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12~
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7~
Wendy's Intl ............... :........ 5',4
Worthington lnd ................. 221,{,

CROCHO CUSSES WILL BEGIN
TUESDAY I DEC. 6TH
7 p.M.-9 p.M. AND THURSDAYI
DEC. 8TH 1 P.M.-3 P.M. ,

Hospital news

BEST PRICES ON TOSHIBA IN
MEIGS &amp; GALLIA CO.

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewt

Divorce actions have been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Lois J. Payne, Pomeroy, against Kenneth H. Payne,
Harrisonville; and Mary Maxine
Marcinko, Tuppers Plains,
against Robert S. Marcinko,
Tuppers Plains. A restral ning
order has been Issued against the
defendant In the Marcinko
action.

doing their job. K
"I hale 10 make. an assumption,
then tum around and it's no~ being
done," Pyatt said. As far as an
agreement wilh a previous superinlelldent, I didn't know about lillY
deal being made, and if it was, it
The senior Citizens Center,
should have been discussed with Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Is
board.'' Pyatt said that this issue is sponsoring a bake sale and
one the board will have to research . holiday bazaar on Thursday
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Dale
and look into.
afrom 9:30 to 3. ltems at the
"There is no harassment from bazaar include ceramics, quilts,
Taylor, Middleport; Jessie JarIbis board of education," Pyatt con· afghans, pillows, knit and · rell, Pomeroy; Mary Pickens,
linued, though he admitted it was crochet items, wall hangings and
Racine.
probably bad timing in the case of holiday decorations. The public
Tuesday Discharges - Goldie
Webb. "The board has the ultimate Is Invited to attend.
Roberts, Lewis Taylor.
decision as 10 what to do with it"
Pyatt said that two studeniS have
been turned in, and another possibility is being checked into. "If
there are two, there may be 10," ~
board member said.
Webb said that he had staned
teaching in lieu of tuition at the
time when Jerry Brewster. now superintendent of Cabell County .
Schools, was superintendent in
Mason County. After repeated attempiS, Brewster could not be
reached for comment.
Bill Barker, ' fonner superintendent of Mason CoUnty Schools,
declined to comment on a possible
tuition for free-teaching deal that
might have existed with Webb, until after the board's Dec. 13 executive session in which he has been
asked to teStify.

YOU'LL FIND GinS FOR
EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY

Stocks

Divorces sought

sibility to tum out-of-state studeniS'
nam!=l in. "I assume they should be

SANTA'S
GIFT
HEADQUARTERS

Granted judgment

Larry W. Banks, doing busl·
ness as Banks Construction Co.,
has been granted a $7,724.24
judgment in Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court from Robert 0.
Schmoll.
Johnnie K. Harrison has beeq
granted shock probation and will
be released from prison and
placed.Jn probation for live
years.
The case of Manning Roush, et
al. versus the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, has been
dismissed.

states.
They said 2 to 4 inches of new
The weather service said 3 . snow was likely in mo.st watch
Inches of snow fell by · dawn areas with heavier amounts
Wednesday at Sheridan, Wyo., expe~ted in New Mexico's mounand 2 Inches covered the ground
tains, and 1 to 3 Inches was
at Laramie, Casper and Lander,
predicted for Denver, with more
Wyo. The Wyoming Highway
expected In Colorado's higher
Patrol warned of slick roads in
elevations.
many parts of the state.
Another 2 inches of snow fell
early Wednesday at Great Falls,
Mont., and Billings, Mont., got an Licenses issued
Inch.
•
Marriage licenses have been
Winter storm watches and
snow advisories were posted issued in Meigs County Probate
Wednesday for parts of Montana, Court to Todd Christopher JohnWyoming, Utah and Colorado, son, 21, Pomeroy, and Gina Nicol
New Mexico and the Texas Pellegrino, 20, Tuppers Plains;
John Steven Buskirk, 30, Parpanhandle, forecasters said.
kersburg, W.Va., and Joy Ann
Jones, 22, Parkersburg, W.Va.;
Dallas Dwight Sayre, 28, GallipoBake sale and
lis, and Anita Lynn Smith, 20,
'Pomeroy.
bazaar scheduled

Continued from page 1

agreements, or previous apeerneniS
made relative to bltoring.'
Webb has said that he will
present lhe board with a bill for
$33.000 for extra classes he has
taught over the years that he was
not paid for, if the board persists in
the matter.
"Most teachers volunteer their
He said juveniles would be
time
10 helJ?. kids," the superinten·
charged under the state's juve·
dent
said. How can you be paid
nile code, while those 18 or older
for
a
position
unless you have some
would be charged as adults.
kind
of
a~ent to do that job by
Watson, Pfister and Schneider
someone m authority?K
appeared Monday In Licking and
The superintendent said that "We
Franklln County municipal
found
two students, they were bil·
courts, respectively, and were
led, they owe for four months tui·
released on recognizance bonds. lion. If they decide to continue (in
Pfister was charged with pos·
County),
they
owe
sessing criminal tools, and Wat· Mason
$1,791.37."
son was charged with forgery ..
Finance Director George MiUer,
Schneider was charged with
possessing criminal tools and whose office sends out the tuition
notices, says that the finance office
criminal simulation.
just
sends out notices of names that
Watson and Pfister had been
are
submitted 10 him. Miller said
operating about two months
that'
if someone had not been .sent a
before their arrests and had sold
notice
in the past, as far as he knew,
at least 40 fake licenses for $45 to
he
had
never been given a name.
$55, authorities said. Schneider
"We detennine the tuition,"
had operated several months and
had sold hundreds of fake IDs, MiUer said, which is based on lhe
law, then we charge so much.
· Cartnal said.
.
''Ours
is $1,791.37."
Schneider, an Ohio State Uni·
board member Chester
School
verslty student from Newark, ·
Pyatt
says
that he didn't know that
was arrested in his apartment ·
there were students who were not
near the OSU campus.
paying. ''We have a county policy
that out-of-state tuition wiU be collected. I have to assume those
policies are being followed." Pyatt
said that it is the principals' respon-

Hoover Elmo Elkins, 59, of
'Dana (Denny) A. Congo, 6(), of
58666 State Route 124, Porlland,
· College Road, Syracuse, died
died Dec. 2 at his residence alter
. Tuesday afternoon in a motor
a
lengthy Illness.
vehicle accident on State Route ·
Born April 9; 1929 In Lincoln
338 near Apple Grove. ·
County,
W.Va., Mr. Elkins was a
Born March 1, 1928 at Long
son of the late Whitelaw and
Bottom, Mr. Congo was the son of
Vatura Linville Elkins. He was a
: Charles andEvaKeyesCongoSr.
mlilworker for Colt Industries'
· He was a self·employ~d truck
Crucible Steel In Midland, Pa.
· driver, a member of the Forked
Survivors include his wife,
. Run Gun Club, and a veteran of
Mildred Triplett Elkins; three
World War II.
daughters, Car!etta Wolfe, Dl·
Survivors Include his wife,
anne Hazeiette and Georgetta
Emmogene (:ongo, Syracuse;
Beebout, all of East Liverpool;
two brothers, Charles Congo Jr.,
three brothers, Paul and Bill
Portland, !lnd 9~ne Coq~o, Long
Elkins, of Industry, Pa., and
Boltom; a siSter, Eileen Polk.
Wetzel Elkins, of Griffithsville,
Portia·nd: two stepdaughters,
W.Va.; six sisters, Shirley StanDiana Mlils, · Syracuse, and
ley, of Slas, W.Va., Jewell
Teresa Talbott, Long Bottom;
Pridemore, of East Liverpool,
three step grandchildren; and
Hazel Jeffers, of Hurricane,
several nieces and nephews.
W.Va. r Syldred Cooper, of Grlf.
He was preceded in death by
fithsville, W.Va., Dorothy Elhis parents and a sister, Louise
kins,
o! Yawkey, W.Va., and
Craig.
~uth
Jenkins,
of Kansas; and six
Services will b~ 1 p.m. Friday
grandchildren.
at the Ewing Funeral Home, with
The funeral was Monday, ·~1
Rev. Carl Hicks officiating. Burial wlil be in the Gilmore .a.m.. at the Koontz Funeral
Home In Ham lin, W.Va., with
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 7 p.m. on · Rev. Kenneth Bell 'and Rev.
Tommy Stowers both officiating.
Thursday.
Burial was in the Elkins Cemetery at Palermo, W.Va.

meting. The mercury was ex ..
peeled to hover in the teens and
20s through Thursday over the
Northern Plains, forecasters
said.
While the nation's midsection
got a hefty dose of cold weather
Wednesday, clear skies pre·
valled over the East Coast and
forecasters said a!ternoon highs
would climb Into the 50s and 60s
- 10 to 15 degrees above normal
- from southern New England to
the Carolinas and the Gulf Coast

_,...-:;..:.:.=~==-=--

--Area deaths--

BI-RITE

The Daily Sentinei-Pa9e-9

Nation's midsection has cold weather, snow

Police break up fake
driver's license ·ring

SUPERIOR

CENTER SUCED

PORK SAUSAGE
SLB.
ROLL

$499

PURE

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. December 7 •• 1988

Th
·
H
·
,
.
Sp
f
ORDERS
e 0
0 .
·a 9t For Lo Priees!

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

834 E. MAIN ST.
614-992·6600
OPEN: MON.-FRI. 7 A.M.-6:30P.M.
SAT. 7 A.M.·&amp; P.M.

f

I

~~~~~~-~~~~--~~~~~-

'.
.

;

·· · Chapman Shoes
POMEROY'S QUAUTY SHOE STOlE
'

'

-

~

\

�I

•

Page- 10- The

•

o8cember 7 , 1988

Ohio

Chtl11m11
Annlrst111g
-

298 SECOND ST. .
POMEROY,
OH.
'

;
!

• .

-

PRICES EFFECnVE

RAGU' MEAT OR MUSHROOM

SPAGHETTI SAUCE

DAILY
DRAWINGS
FOR
GROCERIES
NOV.27

. STORE HQ1JRS
Monday thi"u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

DEC. 4, THRU SAT., DEC. 10, 1988

FOOD STORES

tHRU

Pork Loin .~~•••• $139
·

Sausage •••••••••. .-•••••• 99c
HILLSHIRE FARM SMOKED
$ 99
Sausage ••••••••.':..... 1 .·

$ 89
~ T-Bone Steaks .~~.~ 3
i U.S.D.A. ~HOICE BONELESS
$1 49
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

·

-......

:.Chuck Roast •.••.••••
: CAROLINA PRIZE.
~ Bacon ...................
,·
. 69&lt;
LB.

SUPERIOR

LB.

I

. Lunch Meat..........

PRODUCTS
2 LITER

FLORIDA RIPE

WIN

$ 19

1

-

.

Penner Crunchy or. Creamy

TOMATOES

sso_oo

PEANUT BUnER

¢

-

Bramleys Peach or 2-lb:'"
.
.: '-------L-B.--_..,;;;;;~---'
Preserves

GIFT
CERTIFICATES

Strawbeny

~Low

GRAND .

Price!

~ LOW

Generat Mills

SALTINE
CRACKERS

CHOCOLATE
CHIPS ·

LUCKY
CHARMS
14 oz.

box
Everyday / Quick Time 10 oz.

1-

GRADE A .

Ex. Lg. Eggs ...~~.~ ... S9 c

ARMOUR 24 OZ. CAN

I Everyday /

•

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

.

Plus save an
additional $1QQ
with the
attached coupon

••
•••
•••

.•

1

'

(

~

r-

JIMMY DUNS

ALL VARIOIES

Um~ 1 Por ,.,.,.,.

Goo6 Only At Pow••• Suptr Y!llu
GMOI Sun.,
4 tllru Sat.; Dtc. 10, 1918

•

l l~i BUDDIG iji

Pumpkin Pie ••!·.~~ •.. 99C

t.

·BORDEN

''.' .'·

i

'"

'·
•'

• I

'

..

Prices guaranteed through Dec:ember 10, 1988 • '
We re serve the right to limit oil quanti ties.
Some items may not be ovoilob!e In oil store locotlonf

I

p;: , 1 Pew; Halves

29

box

rol

WE WELCOME
•WVWIC·
··Food Stamps
•Personal Checks
•Manufacturer's
Coupons

••'

I

1•29.

10.6 oz.

l-Ib.

2\/z oz.
pkg.

'

I

$

.&amp;.19

.

--~

/'

I

TOTINO'S
P.IZZA
c

·SAUSAGE
79

SLICEDMEATS
c

•'

Umit 1 Per Custom•
•
:
Good Onlr AI Powtlr • Sup« Yalu
•
• . Good Sun., Ooc. 4 tlvu
OoL 10, 1911 0

•

I e..,,c~ay Camilla 6 oz:.~

T

·.

ALL VARIETIES

.fb---_

·Closed Christmas • Monday 9 a.m .• 9 p.m.

SAVE·A·LOT
FOOD STORES ·

Rt. 62 North

(~04)
.

.......

..---~--

.

$119

:[!} (

ift

I

99~

•••

HOT COCOA MIX : : GRANULATED SUGAR i
:12 ENV.

~f,~ , CORN SYRUP
IEveryday/
Golden Quik 48 oz. btl.
p;f,~ , Com on

COOKIE

rs: • Christmas Eve 9 a.m.- 5
.

$1.89

WHITE RIDGE FANCY LIGHT 32 OZ. BJ!-.

•'

:• '----!

Pie Filling •.••••!·.~~~ 9 C Ice Cream •••.••~.G:~•• $139
MISS

VANILLA OR·CHOCOLATE 1 LB.

IEveryday/

TE CHIP·$

;. CREAM
j CHEESE

MOUNTAIN TOP

LUCKY LEAF APPLE OR CHERRY

$1.29

I p~:,, CANDIQUIK

'

Peanut Butter ~!~!~. 99c

can

· IEve'Pr~~~"fdoy l BEEF sTEw

FISHER-PRICE
DELUXE
CAMCORDER
SYSTEM

2°/o Milk ..•••..•~A~•···

2-pk.

254
I:;:::Prw.:::::'
"' : ~T~om:;;-;;;llt::::;-0Soup--;:;;-;:;:;:;---~

and · .

$ 49

Price!

$

DEC. 24th

FLAVORITE •

~Low

Price!

VanHouten Real

DRAWING 4 P.M.

· Tomatoes •••••••~~ •••.• 49C

~LOW

Price!

Ralston Reg. or Unsalted

DRAWING
3 MINUTE
SHOPPING
SPREE

LB.

:

•

¢

PRIZE

•

.

COCA COLA

LB .

.

GUNNOE'S

JAR

BAG

$ 09 WEEKLY
Steaks/Roast •• ~.... 1 . DRAWING

1/4

-$ 2-9

320Z. -

3LB.

DEC. 24
FRESH PORK BUTT

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11 · ·

-'

Sps~l1ll

We Reserve The Right To
· limit Quaniities

•.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. December 7. 1988

675-1155
. . .

100%
MONEY-BACK

GUAUNTEE

..•

..-.
•

•
•

.•
·.•..
•
••

Point Pleasant, WV

•

I

�•••
•
•
•

\

Merchants,
listen to
customer
wish, idea
Greetings. Geotlemen: Please skip
loday's column and go directly to
the sports oa:tion or the business
Jl8ll5 unless you happen to · be
in~resud in women's fashions.
Snaa1 readers have sent me
dippinp of an exldlent piece by a
first·ra~ writer, joan Beck, a Chica·
110 Tribune cSOiumnist.
joan has leroed in on a topic that
has made a great many women
anary and put. a serious denr '.i n
retail sales arowtd the country.
The queslion site raises il one I've
often wondered about. Why don't
the retailers ask women what they
want insle8d or trying to foist on
them whatner dcsi&amp;ners wish to
declare the "in" thllll?
If merchants would listen to their
customers instead of spendins zil·
lions of dollars on advenising,
fashion shows, celebrity appear·
ances, contalli and limmicks, they
would [let an earlld. And business
would be a lot better.
So, dear deslaners and retaUers. if
you offer your customers wearable,
attractive styles millions of women
will enjoy shopping apin and your
sales figures will refted their pleas·
ure.
DEAR READERS: By popular
demand I am repeatillfl my own

Community Corner

versions or Murphy's Law - with
topical modifications:
If you tell a lie, be prepared to
tell 10 more to cover it up.
· Nothina is ever as easy as it looks.
Everythinarakes longer than you

expect.
If there is any Possibility of
somethinaBOina wrong, it will be
the thina that costs the most to fix .
Aje and treachery will overcome
youth and skill.
If you work too lona to "im·
prove" something, you will end up
throwina it out.
The first half of our lives is
ruined by our parents and the last
half by our children. (Cia'rence
Darrow)
If you are sure ever)'tliina will be
OK, you've overlooked something.
It is always dlrkfst just· before it
becomes tolally blad.
left to themlelves all thinp 110
from bad to worse.
People who 10 out of their way
to save money inevitably end up
spendi111 more.
Early to bed and early to rise~
and you 'II never find out where the
action is.
Growing old graCefully is lot of

a

balonev.

•1 ... lAII A11Q11t1 Tinln Syndictto ond

The Allred Church held their
Thanksgiving carry· In Inner Nov.
13 after church. Rev. Archer r~
lllrnl!d thanks.
Turkeys were prepared by
Eloise Archer and Doris Dillin·
ger.
Others present were Eric and
Jackie Brooks, Erin and Jody,
New Marshfield; Gerald and
Norma Swartz, Debbie Roach,
Marietta Rt .; Randy and Char·
!ene D!ll!nger, Todd and Marta,
Athens Rt.; Kathy Essman, Nl·
cole and Kyle, The Plains; Ho' bart and Alma Swartz, William·
stown, W. Va.; Richard, Florenee, and Tim Spencer, Laurie
Boyles, Matthew, Ashley, and
Jessica, Ph!l ~yles , Sara Cald·
well, Gertrude Robinson, Clara
Follrod, Nina Robinson, Lloyd
and Ruth Brooks, J!m, Bob, and
Debbie, Julie Sloter, Russell
Archer. Pam and Richard Yost,
Aaron and Sarah, Sandra Ar·
cher, Lorle Ritchie, Mar!lyn Ro·
blnson, Nellie Parker, Charlotte
Van Meter Thelma Henderson, '
Mike
alllo·

.,.u ...,.

And whlle you're there, you
might look at those nice African
violets across the front oft he new
craft area. They were donated by
members of the Friends and
Flowers Garden Club of Rutland
as a special community project.
Fun with fruitcakes ..... you
might be Interested !n these
recipes passed along to us by the
Big Bend C!v!tan Club.
Annually, the club sells fruit·
cakes as a fund raising project
and members advise us that
sales were good. For those of you
who · bought several and are
about now anxious to change the
taste a b!t, here are the recipes
from Claxton.
Fruit Cake Cookies
1 box yellow cake m!x
2 eggs
1% cup vegetable oll
1% teaspoon rum llavor!ng
.1% pound fruit cake, cut Into
b!te·s!zed pieces
Combine cake mix, eggs, o!l
.and rum flavoring !n mixing bowl
Mix unt!l well blended, then stir
in fru!t cake pieces. Form Into
ballS about the size of a walnut
and place on an ungreased
baking sheet. Bak.e at 325 degrees
10 to 12 minutes or until brown.
For a variation, substltue spice
cake mix for the yellow cake and
add 1!-t cup chopped pecansandl
teaspoon van!lla to mixture.

---------

Fruit Cake Coco nul Balls
1 pound fru!t cake at room
temperature
1!-f to 3'h cup coconut flakes.
Cut fruit cake Into 1'h Inch
slices. Shape each sl!ce Into a

'
PUBLIC NOTICE
: SHEIUFF'I SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
• THE
•
STATE OF OHIO ,
'
MEIGS COUNTY
Tho Central Truot Compony

• of Southea~tern Ohio, N.A.
-vaThome~ K. Woods. et al
Cue No. 88 CV 117
In purauance to en Order
ofSeledinctedtomeinthe
tbove-entltted action, I will
otftr for Ale at public
IUction, at the front door of

-.-s.~: II . That be it further
i'Molved that the Village
oholl pay ooeh part·time

ota,litUIItodlnthoCounlyof
_.p, .,.d the Stete of
Ohio, arid In the VIllage of

11. on Third Stroet; lhence
_........_
-.-...
_ .,. 1•v en d one-third
fHt on the eut aide of Third
StrMt to the librery tot;
thence . .terly and parallel
with tr~.. non h 1·1neofuidLot
11. olong tho north llno of
uid Ubnlry lola dlotenco of
81 - ; thence n - l r
ond ~rallol with tho WMt
Une of Third Straet, • dia,...coofl6ondono-third

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE
A public heerlng will be
held on D•cember 21 •
1988.at1 :00P.M.inthe

10th.19BB. at 10:00o.m .. a
public Hie wtll be held 11
101 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio. to oolt lor cuh~ho
following colloteral:
1877 Ford F250 P.U. o#
F255UOI3049.
The hrmera Bank and
Sovingo Company. Pomeroy, Ohio, rwerv• the right
to bid at dH· Nit, and to
withdraw the above collet·
eral prior 10 ule. Funher.

The Ftrmen Btnk and Stv·
ing~ Company r•erves the
right to rliect any or all bids
aubmitted.
Further, the above collateral will be sold in the
condition It lo in with no
elllprllted or lmpliedwarranties gtven.
11 2) 7 8 9 3 t
' ' ' c

employe• in the active em-

ployment 11 of Dae~~mber
16, 1888 in addition to all
other aatary and fringe benlfh:1 her~ofora provklfd
the sum of One Hundred and
Twonly· flve (0125.00) I'
additional oatary .
Soc. Ill. Th11 thll ordl·
~ oc1 t o
nence •~ h ere by d e""'ar
be an •m•gency in order
thlt employee~ may receive

Middl-..ort, to-Wtt:
·
Being that pan of Lot No.
18 fonn•ly Sheflefd, now
incorpot;twd lnt.o Village of
Middl.,ort, boglnnlng It tho
·nonhw•t- of LCJt No.

thll ldditional PlY before
Ch r1rtmu.
Puoad the 28th diV of
November, 1888.
Anoit: Jon P . Buck. Clerk
0-oy M. Horton,
Preeident of Council
I12) 7 •14
• 2 tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On N....,t. 23 • l9BB. in
tho Molgs Counly Probate

Court. C.e No. 26087• Car-

olyn,..rv. 191 HlttviM"Drtve.
R~SVnokllbJrg. Ohio, 43088•
waa appointed Exea.trir. of
the •'lite ofEsta Bridd-. d•
CNHd. iote~fS~ Rt. 881 .A~
bony, Ohio, 46710 ·
.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K., Nnoolroad.
Clork
111130 11217, 14, 310

Business Services
hr=~~~~:==n;::=======:;i

~~~u;:;:,:."~~.,:,!~t:~~

to revi- lhe

hearing Is

1989-90 budget

for the

lAudermilt birthday

•POINSIM'IAI • POINIETTIA

SCrlpll

HANGING IAIKETI oHOUY TREES

1 pound fruit cake
112·ounce P,ackage semi· sweet
chocolate morsels
2 tablespoons paraffin
Freeze fruit cake, Cut Into 1~
Inch slices; then cut each sllce
Into 3 strips. Melt chocolate !n the
top of a • double boller over
simmering water. Dip frozen
fruit cake strips !n chocolate.
Cool on waxed paper. Yields 4 to5
dozen strips.

PLANTS

•AFRICAN VIOLETS •'OI,JAGE

a

BASKETS •MONUMENT

LaGi~an •

Aigner • Autry • Pony

Uiclas • LaGean • Pany
'

20°/o oFF

20°/o OFF

ALL WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES

ALL MEN'S WESTERN BOOTS

Naturalizw • Hushpuppt\' • Meyers

Ac1111 • Dingo • Lal'llltt

25°/o to·50°/o OFF

20°/o OFF

'

OPEN DAILY 9 AM·S PM
SUNDAY I PM·S PM

992-5272

•WAEATHI and GPIAVE ILANKETI

HUIIAID'S GIII..HOUSI

.

" Bovorly Loa Long. by deed
rocordoct in Volume 267,
pogo 931. Moiga County
, . Deed Records.
Reloronc;o DHd: Volume
2711. Pogo 7119, Maio•
County Oaod Records ..
• Thll pr-'Y hM a postal
, oddr- or,., e..."' Third
A - . Mldclopon. Ohio
41780.
·
Property,' appnlood lor
, 1112.000.0Q '"d cennCJt bo

forappfaiMd
lou thonvalue.
two-thlrclo
oold
of
the

•LIVE 8 CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

,

.

WHERE SANTA SHOPS

HARTLEY SHOES

SPRAYS

•CEMETERY VASES

~no. whl~~~t wu co....,... ••
Dovld lllchord Long ond

CALL 992-67 56

~;

TERMS , OF SALE: Tho
• oucceaaful pun:haur. 11
ooon .. hi• bid 10 ••...,~oc~.
·•·oliall bo r-lrod to clopooh
;,on the.ctoy of uto. in . . h. or
by owtlflod ch-. payoblo
~ 10 the Sheriff of MaleCounty, Oltlo. 1all of tho
of such
, bid. !Mit lnn. .ventlooothan
11.000,00. Tho bolanco of
' tho purt~hooe prlc:o sholl bo
• clua a~d payable to tha
· Shor!fl · ot Molgo County,
Ohio. within thirty 1301 doya
lr'!fl' .,...,..., .cortflrtn•
,o f oalo. Tho p1nch.. ohall bo roqulnd to
~~- on tho unpaid bal·
' nco at tho rato of· 10 por

MATI VANVRANKEN. OWNER

• POMROY

OPEN SUNDAY 1-6

·-ott

9'1·5776-SYIACUSI, OH.

oci_....

:•JOr!

""Y

• OWit per

annum from the

.. _
of solo to tho doto of
poymont of b e - unt••
111d bolonco ohall be paid In
oigltt 181 doyo from lhe dote
&lt;lfthloalo.
Howtird Fronk. Sheriff
of Molgo County
:

11

Dougtu M. Cowkll,
Att&lt;&gt;&lt;noy lor tho Plaintiff
(1217.14, 21, 28; (1)4,11,

etc

$3 5

6•30 P.M
•

Factory Cholta
12 Gaugo Shotgtnts Only
Strictly lnfartH

IO·Hfn

TiiPLE P ·
EXCAVATING
a.

•Dozer
Bockhoo Work
•Witt Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker service
•Junk Yard lluoinns
WANT TO IUY WRICKm OR
JUNI URI OR TRUCIS
-FIUIITtMAIISFor ony of tho"'"""" coli

CUSTOM BUILT .
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

loasonablt Prices"

Chrlatm11 Selections.

"At

lltw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Loowo Mess-

HOME BAKED
GOODIES

•Otba.wc BUY

Get Your
Holiday Goodie
Orders In Now.
AUNT TE'S

PAY

Smith lun

~

LATER

I ·21·'111-1 mo.

With

lpprond Crotlit
Na PoyntHI or lnt•11t

'Til July I, 191'

D. J.' S TRADING POST
MIDDliPORMH.lY.t mo.

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

ALARM
SYSTEMS
•Residential
•Commercial

10 Years Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY

Authorized John
Deere, New ttolland,
Bush Hog Form
Equipment Dealer

Fit• E••IP•t~t
· Pmt &amp; Servlu

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

.

Tft•ou

I·J. ' 86·t~

Cardillo

HUDNALL

OWNII: GREG I. ROUSH
"~•
·GENERAL

: • ·,·

~

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

614·662-3821

614·992·5952

~

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Second

CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAl

Middleport, Ohio 45760

.CUSTOM IUTCHENI. lATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•VINYL SIDING. ROOFING
•METAL IUILDINGS

We Carry Fishing Su ppli..j

SINCE: 1969

Pay Your Phona
and Cable Bills Hero

1

HOUSING &amp; APT, PROJECTS

DUSIIY 51. SYIACUSE

11 -9 · 1 mo.

. IUIINISI PHDNI
1614) 992·6550
RISIOINCI PHDNI

992·7611
ll-21·88·1fn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

haler for
YAIMAIII &amp; EC"O

----81)734

•'

Be sure to watch
the Parade
on your favorite
TV station
and the

,,
~

'

'.

Rose Bowl Game

on ABC.

-I'

lradcrnd~ off~p!ti{"O,

fl&amp;

ftJI~

IK .

BUYl

••w

one we loved so

·deer. We didn't wont
' to ION him, but WI
had to let him go. It' 1
been alx long. lonely
,yeers .oince you went
· -ey. but the pain
· geta deep" with
111011 pnalng dey.
SediV mlsll&amp;d by wife,
· Dorothy, and hm lly
Public Sale
&amp;Auction

LARGE
: CHRISTMAS
• AUatON

·THURS., DEC. I

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

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

BOOKCASES
CUPBOARDS
CROCKS
BEDS
WASHSTANDS
PIE SAFES
DRESERS
PRIMITIVES
LAMPS
TABLES
"The Gifts Thaa Never Stop Giving..

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strrice Cantw for Ryan
Products
8. 7 Financing on Yardman
Service on An MakBI
Wt Honor MC/Disc!Visa
'·1·11-tfn

992·2526 POM~~2~ria·~H~~

1124 I. lWN

6:00 P.M.

AVAILABLE IN 15 YUMMY FLAVORS

HOWE'S GIIO~ PAIII

EVERY SUNDAY

SE~ICE

MARCUM CONTRACTING

GUN CLUB
RACINE. OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

We can repair and rt·
core radiators atHI
hiiCittr cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
oul radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMOOEUNG &amp; REPAIRS

ONLY
UTIST

CHESTER, OliO

....

w.·n

haft all now

ttordMtttll~tt

. . . ,...,

c.mtl

(GIIIferts,
r-t•·

can.

dols.
~ llkttJr•, jtwtlry,
•ltlntli af teys ..uslots
-We'U
· · mile.
Give Away A

lt-.

ibm and Otller Prl:lel

Patrick II. lllutr, Aud •.

PH. 421-7245
Not

lto••nol~la F• Loss

• AuWaoto.
._....I A

-Addona and remodeling
-Roofing •nd "'"'"work
-COnCfttl work
- Plumbing and allldrtcal

TOP OF THE StAllS

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

GENERAL (ONTIAUOIS

Middleport, Ohio
1·13·11&lt;

CARPENTER
SERVICE

CIITIFICATEI

915-4141

992-2196

YOUNG'S

GRE.IT PIICIS • Gin

PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

PAT HILL FOlD

.9·19·11 ""

Jl. &amp; IIISSY
FASIIONS,
HAIR lnUNG &amp; TANNING
GRIAT CIIIIIIIIAI GtnS

..,

Ill Wost Soc. P-roy

1 1 · 16· 'BB·tfn

work

992·6720

IZ· II- ·mo.

WANTED

i

DEAD OIAUVE

"

•Wethers •Dryers
•Rangu •Fraezers
•Refrigerators
"Mutt .....i... lo"

CHIPWOOD
POLES

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

cc licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICi985-3561

3
-

We Service All Mokea

1/22111/lfo&gt;

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

•17 Second Avenue. Box 1213

MAXIMUM

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

DIAMETER 14

·
or
Veterans Memorial HOSilital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

INCHES ON
LtiGEST END

S14 PElTON

WOOD STOVES

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

•12 Veare Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

992-6282

Fel!lurinR• Conoolldoled, Duteh

DELIYEHD TO

: WMt, Bruneo, Aihley

319 So. 2nd Ave.

LOWEIT PRICES .

WE TRADE

CAIPENTEI, OHIO (Off St. lt. 1431

Middleport, Ohio

I I

POMROY, OHIO

992·6461

698-6121

1·28·'18-tfn

'I

11-6--'11

•

•aoo

Giveaway

company blnllffl:1. For p.aonel ·

lnteN61w call 814-44&amp;-1141.

Voung mother OoWmen plua
h.- two moanth old pupplel •
dog r.;,u,• . Clll614-44&amp;-9441 .

Govarnnwnt Jot-. t18,CMO •
tl59. 230 yr. Now hiring. C.l

1· 806-587·6000 •t. R· 9805
for current fedtr .. IItt.

PWI Chihuahua. mala. puppy.
approx. 9 wks . old. Call e14-

.

Puppl• to gtveaway . 1h Border
Collie. 814· 247-4024. 614·
247-2113.
.

2 twin tize (nathesl, 304-882·
3104.
Pickup toad broken bloc:kl and
bric:ks. 3408 Franklin Aw. Pt.

AS Auto Mech.niCII, C.rp... ,

t•a. Cosmftotogiln:s. Olvenl-

fled Mdlcal Work ... EJec:trJ.
ciena, Food Serve. Worklrt.
Eleetron'ca Technh:lane. ln&lt;tJ•
trial Maintenance Worken.
Nurting Auilt.ma .. d Order·
Machlnilh, Offlc•
and w•d••· Regilt• now far
d•s• beginning JMU&amp;ry 3rd. •
Call Tri-CountyVocttlonatAdult
Cent• at 763-3611 en. 14, A ··
'lllrl•y ol t.l ndlng IOU~ to pay .
for training we w-'leble fOf
thou ttlglbte.
·

LACK THE SKILLS! NEED A

pr••·

of funding 1ourcn waN able tQr
ellglbla~pllc.ntl. Callt t.Adult

6 Lost and Found
LOST: All County Band Hat,
whtte • bur.,ndy. Lo.t downtown d-r of p•ade. Call 6143811-.780 oft" 4 PM .
Lott: Frid.,. December 2 In

Mlddtapon-Porrierov area. blue
billfold with velm-o f•tening.
Call 814-742-21 14.

Found: Small male dog. Carclnal
Mkt. In Middleport. Has coli•.
No lden1-ificatton. 114-387-

Pi••• id.rtify.

0584.

POUND black

famalapuponAt.

12 top of Dead Men• curve, ctll
30..576-2377.

Education Center-T ri-County ·
JVS at 753-3511 •t. 14.
Wlntlf quaner begin• January
3rd.
10 ladl• needed for Wlaphone
work. Mud: rttad w.et; 2 ahlfb
...,,.ilabla; 8:00 M\w2:30 pm;
4:0().9:00 pm. Oood hourlr
wttgtt: paid wllktt: IPPtt aft•
10:00 am 'TNrldiV. O.c. 1 M:
104'h (upstaln) Main 81.,

Pomerov.

Amerlc.._ Pom•ov h• Jmm.
dlate opening~ for fuU time; and
P ..t-tlme AN's • LPN'a, AI
shffta. FIIICiblelchecl.lling, comp«lltt'l lllrv .. d tt.l.tha of.
f•ed· Wh•a oontlnJing_ ..,.,.
tlonil:aplua. ContKilaRueHit.
AN-DON. Am•loar•Pom«D\'.
38759 Aodtlprfnga Ad ., Pom•

FOUND 1mafl Collia dag S.tur·
dav In north Paint Ple•ant .,..,
304-875-3004 or 171-1139.

'"'· at .. 992·5805.

7

MnDklr, and live in MicldltPOJt-

Yard Sale

Teach• at M•ga Junior High
needl babyd:t• for b.b,. Mult
1upply ,.,.,.,~::., be a non-

Ft&gt;m•ov.

Clll Surann• 114-

949-2359.

.......G.allipolis ..........

AVON· An

.

ar-. Call Marilyn

We•• 304-882-2145.

AVON Ill • - I I Shirl~¥ BPI••· ·

304-876-1429.

.......Pomerov...........
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Ple•ant van.,· Nursing C•e ~
il aaklng licena«&lt;
PriHII:Ieal Nu,... for tmmadl••

Ctnt •

.rnployment, If lnt.-..ted call

30 .. 576-4340. AA·EOE.

MIA IQament PDiitionA••ilable,.
ulary ,,8,000.00 . .
no.ooo.oo. depending on .
quallflOI!f;lons. ••perlenat end

performance. Send r-.ma to
P.O. Box 171. Point Pleaant.

w. v•. 25580.

Garag•-.ale. Fri. and Stt. Dec .
lhh 1nd 10ih. 10am · n. 234
Mulberry Aw.

8

12

Public Sale
8t Auction

P•••on

Aide
Auc1Jon... Hcenaed Ohio and W•t Virginia.
&amp;tate, .,tique, f•m. Uquldttion ..... 304- n:J.-&amp;785.

9

Wanted To Buy

Situations
Wanted

Lewing c•e for eld«Jrr tnd, •
hlndiCIPpod. 'liDO plo~ Coli

114-992·8873.

,We h.,• room far 3 lldtrtt
p•aolll In our .,. .onai

TOP CASH paid tor '83 model
lnd niWir Ultld C.l. Smith
Buidr.-Pontlac. .1 911 Eatt«n

Avo., Gllllpol~ . CtR 5 t4- 448&gt;
2282.
~

____

c••

home. ApprOI!IIId. Clll814--9126515.

~:...__

co II hut... lwt~ln'a Fwnlture
• Aucrtlon, Third &amp; Olive.
114-446-3159.
Junk Cart wfth or without
motON. Call ~ Livetv-614388·1303.
Md appll.-011 by- 1he

or ontlot hou-ld. Folr
beingpald. Call814-446-

15

"

Schools
Instruction

U1ed t1 rnlture bv the pJece or
•ntlre houtthold 1lao ullin g.
81 .. 742·2451.·

Want_, to buy ...ndlng timber.
30 ..5711-1321.

WANTED
S mal plaltic rtdlos macM Wore

A111101111 Cl: 1111: Ills
In Memoriam

18 Wanted to Do

1---------------

.w...

Clll 51 .. 388-

Will babrslt ., my horne wet*
olcll a 4 yr. ....

doys for 3 Y'·

Collet 4-441-4041.

•.

McDaniel C'uttom lutoh•fng.
op«t 5drt•wetk. call304-1823224.

Mlck~

MouN,

Hop I Long

C•nldy, ote. Alia. old TV oota
mldebtfote1860. 1 wll b.lfl"¥
old rtdloo malll - · 1UO.
Chuck. , ,0. lo• HI. New
Haven, W.Va. 2128&amp;, 304-112·
2220.

11
'

Help Wanted

Prol•s~NI long hatl

s.n

21

Busine11
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
,
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- lNG CO . racamrn.tdl thM you-

do bu•in_. with people ~ ...
know. Md NOT to IIRd mon.,
through thl mill untl you h•• kwll15gMed 1 he oft•lng.
.•

Earn aolld 1100nd income In '
v.,ding machln•. Flnencing
•nllable. C.ll 1·800·42~
02711. .... 4710.
.

*"'••

T.,.,..., TNGiclna lo new
l*mo •PifiMotd ower the ra.ct
drlltn. W. nlid fht. IICIDnd, •

• - - - e_.,. ..,_

awllkiY paydt-.Ctlt- 23
1- - - - - - -· 1304-882·
1112 or 1·1110-121·
In memory of Mother Md
FetMr: HeltnGRmoreFrye, who
Mff/ oo-.bsr 22,
lt11.,d Eorl frjW,- -od
• ., NoYamlllar 21, 1171.
Oona fro"' our
on• 10
der. lut 1rt our tMarta. •~•
ne.-. Connie and H•b Dutch•
ondfomly.

Rho~

1160. I wltl pty up to 1:100.00
for 10me modala of Em..aon~,
Fad&amp; lparton Ol•a •l•o novelty
radio.. auah • Lone Ranger,

s

11·14·' 118-tfn

A E·TAAIN NOWI
SOUTHeASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. &amp;29 J-on ~ko. ..
Coil 44&amp;-43e7. Aoe. No. u.t 1·
10558 .

Clk• by
8444.

Si'IVIII'\

p-

Wor...,.

II•.

6 puppl•. 4maleand2ffmal-. nolow program, N••t&lt;t ev-.
mother full blooded Baagla. · product ot incllltry. from corn304-895-33315.
flak• to turbln • II meda ekher ,
using midline tools Of' using
Part Cock• Spaniel and Wired machin• mad• with machine
Hair T•rler puppl•. hwe five. toofl. ln themiiChlneteehnololft'
30 .. 882· 3559.
progqm you will l. .n how 10 .
uae var~u• tvPII of m echlnery
7 part Lib an~ p.-t ShiMP dog
IUch M: IMhl. dritl pr... mlling
""""'•· 30 .. n3·5521 .
machine. grinding ,n.china end
punch
We hwe a vertatv

V. C. YOUNG Ill
Pomtroy, Ohio

2

~EBT~A~~~~~.'l,E,?DA,SJg~~ :

JOB7 We train people for joblat
machinists I~ our m.ehina ttch-

,

3 Amouncementa

OHIO
PAWT
COMPANY

son.WV.

[ llljllltVIIII'ill

ante

Dependable Heariug Aid Sales &amp; ~.,.;.~
Hearin&amp; Evalualioils For All Aaes

cO"',..,.,

Lot*
now hiring lor
full time employrY*It No •P41rlenct neee..ary. E...ning work.
Ught •fii"' lnvotvld.
per
YII'Mic. Profit atwlng and other

ment Co. U.S. At. 35. Hen dar·

(FREE ESTIMAl'ES)

992-621

.

HELP WANTED

U·Hout' oForAont. lld«sEqulp-

1:00 P.M.
RACINE

1/15/~n

.IBPIE, OHIO

I

GUN SHOOT

Mastic &amp; Certainteed ·
Vinyl Siding
· Roofing
Seam less Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm DooB &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992·2772

Dec. 7, 1982
At evening thadowt
ne•r. our
thoughts tum to the

a:

GETiFREE·

INSULATION

Hot~p.. al.

5t .. 992·2104 Ilk tor

Compltte hou1eholdl or lrrnlture a anUqun. A•o wood &amp;

J&amp;L .

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

t.oo.tod HalfwiV
betwHII Rt. 7 . 1M han.

In Loving Memory
' ot
SHERMAN
ROBERTS
Who paued away

(614)

Shop
Where
Santa
Shops!

Th•••• at

Otn!.•·

Moving Sale:12· $ thru 1 2· 12.
New rang.. w • 0. liv. • ·
bedroom IUitee. guns, tools.
lsdd.,.. can st .. 25tl-ose5.

ll·t-1 ... , pd.

Formerly Meigs Excavating

Call

~.ongovllle. 51 .. 742·207&amp;.

4

Help Wanted-

Uc.-...d Physic•

&amp; Vicinity

614-985-4180

KIT EXCAVATING AND
· CONSTRUCnON

v .. .,.,.., Memor'-1

614-"2·7301

11-19-'88 I mo. d.

BOGGS ·

Fitancing

10% Down

VERY REASOHAILE
NAVE REfEUNCES

Rdl Rutl101d. Oh.

NOW

With Cob Codot

INTERIOR-EXTEIIOI
F~EE ESTIMATES
Takt the pal• aut of
painting. Let Ml do
it for you,

742-2421

4·16-116-tln

2· 11'"11· •"'

NO SUNDAY CALIS

LINDA'S
· PAINTING

•r::

•ar•

Built

PH. 949· 2 801
,or Res. 949-2860

TERRI POWELL
12· ·'Il-l mo.

F• your shopping lon•tni·
lftCI we will bt
on Sunfrom 1 to p.m. ttwu
D" 11, 1911 .

or las. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAy CALLS

614-742-2617

Now H-s

..Free Estirnates 1'

992-5119

Come ••• our

PH. 949·2101

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Jacobsen

Rood 26
11·25-'88·1 mo.

WELCOME TO
CHRISTMAS
AT

I, lox IU, Ylnton
742-2235
ll·3·'88-t mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN .
INSULATION

Hometite

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mitl~~~~~!·, Ohio

Home
Hou••
Fri.
• Dloor.tinu
Silt. Dec. 0p4Wt
9 &amp; 10,
10
AM-10 PM ·~ d-r. Glorll
Oller·St. Rt. 325· 2V.mll•ffom

Pit.

Clk&amp;l

It,

Briggs&amp;: Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater

C011nty

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

1

J.!Hfn

Pameroy, Ohio
2 milts from Rt. 7 on

'::=:=;;;;;;:;::~ r.-,....~------:.,
'P

Specializ.i ng in
character and novelty

Authorized Service
&amp; Paris

35975 Flatwoods Rd.

8-S·II·IIn

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays

SMALL
REP All

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE

BILl SLACK
992-2269

•

Hollow Rd.

Across
Ph. 61

FOR SALE .
CHRISTMAS
TREES

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

JUST OPENED
CAKES
by Donna

SUPPUES

124 East of Rullond

11

Cute kltt ... needl good home.
f.......... Call 5t4-379-2436.

MODERN GUN
Murzleloading Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies
Guns • Ammo • Slugs •
22 Amino ··

3 Announcements

448· 3398.

AIIO

year.
SpecificatiQna 1heets are
available at the Trauurer's
office.
In order .to be consk1ered.
all sealed bida ahall be receivod in tho Treoourer•o of·
lice by 2 :00p.m . on Decem·
bet" 14, 1988. and wHt be
opened at that tim,.
The Boerd of Education
r•ervu. tha right to accept
and/or reject any and ell
pan a of any and all bidl.
Board of Educ.,lon
Eootern Locol School Dlotrlc:t
.
38900 SR 7
RoodavUie. Ohio 4&amp;772
Eloise Botton. Trltalurer
(11)23.30;(12)7,14,4te

CHERRY

EVERY
SAT, NIGHT

-~

Phone:

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Education of
Eastern Locll School Di•·
trict
deairn to receive
sealed bidt for fleet ln1ur·
once for the 1989 calender

OAK, LOCUST,

Basham Building

Spttc:htt,
Computer Graphics,
Public Relations,
Adrertising ~'

Public Notice

FIREWOOD

RACINE
fiRE DEPT •

LHsa M. Murphay
FrM•Lanct Writer

NIASE Certified Mechanic

Business Services

GUN · SHOOT

~

,J.•-

Most Foreign end
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
AU Mejor &amp; Minor
Repairs

"DOC" VAUGHN
Ce"ifled ue;,n;.;c

'"II
r~,':,·i1,~•
IJ

/'i

SYRACUSE. OHIO

ochool district. The budg.,
will be ovollable for lns.,.c·
tion. All lnterelted parties
ere to attend.
eloise Bo11on, Treu .
Eaetern LoC111 BCNird
of Education
38900 s. A. 7
1121 ~~~,~~ville. Ohio 45n2

l---------..1..-------;...-L.--------~

86 foot.
I"
hcepling 32 fo.,, 8
inch• oH th• north sid• ot
thoabovo·dlleribod reoi oot·

e

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

"UIIw~tothed~th~ '·----~------~--------~--------~

SUCE IIIII DIET SLICE m

'

Hundrod .,d Filly (1250.00)
M additional ulary.

F.ih::1~t:~~~1~~~

Chris1ma1 Season.

,

Mlddl..,art II tollowt:
Sec. 1. Thet for the veer
1988 the Villege shell pay
eech full-time employee in
the active employment •• of
December 1&amp; . 1988inaddidon to all other ulary and
fringe beneflta · heretofore
provict.d the tum of Two

O:hlo, in tht above named
COUnty, on ·Friday. January
13,1188, at 10:00a.m.,the
foHowing clelcrlbed r ... nt·

Public Notice
NOTtCE it Mreby given
thet on Seturday. December

ORDINANCE NO . 1201·88
An Ordinance to provide
additional co-onoation f&lt;&gt;&lt;
....
village employe• for 1988.
Bo It ordlinod by the
Coundl of tho Village of

tl!o Courthou•ln Pomoroy,

The Daily Sentinel Page 13

Ohio

Public Notice

flit tMnce
to the north
of said
11;
woo•er
on Lot
the I"
north ll!to of Lot 11 to tha

The birthday of Lorena Lau·
dermllt was observed recently
with a party hosted by her aunt;
Laura Scott. Gifts were pr.esented to her from her aunt. Sarah
McCarty, Donnie Armatrout,
and Betty Armatrout.
ball. Roll In coconut !lakes and ..,_ _...;·--·- - - - - •
refrigerated unt!l served. Yields
1.Now Open For The
2 to 3 dozen balls.

I've always wondered what to
do with overripe bananas aside
from leaving them !n the fruit
basket to completely dry up or
rot away, or throwing them In the
garbage to await trash day .
But them comes this recipe
across my desk which boasts the
'1)hrase, "A good use for overripe
- ·bananas." Knowing that most
households face the problem
from time to time, we pass along
the recipe:
•••h Bran Mu!Una
1large en
3'h cup packed light brown .
sugar
1 cup mashed bananas
1'4 cup golden raisins. optional
1% cup safllower o!l ·
1 tsp. van!lla
3~ cup all purpose !lour
3~ cup whlole wheat !lour
1'h cup oat bran
2 tsp. baktna soda
114 tsp. ground allspice
Preheat over to 375 degrees.
Place paper or foU l!ners In 12
muf!!n cups. Beat egg and sugar
together unt!l smooth In a small
bowl, add bananas, raisins, oll
and van!lla.
M!x llours, l!ran, baking
powder, baking soda, and ails·
pice In a large bowl. Add banana
mixture. stir just enough to
moiSten dry Ingredients.
Spoon batter Into muffin cups.
Bake until a toothpick Inserted !n
the muffins . comes out clean,
a.bout 25 minutes.

: --~~~~~----­
Public Notice

cal.
read "One Nation Under God"
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton
by Helen Stetner Rlace, Florence
hosted a family party In honor of
Spencer sana '''lbanldlll. ~' and
the birthday of their daugbter!ln·
Gertrude Robinson ung ''Thank
law, Pat Keaton, Mr.and Mrs.
You, Jesus."
James Kelly.
The Chrl.stmas program wJll
Northeast Cluster Sunday
be Dec. 18 at.7:30. All welcome.
night service was held at Alfred
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee Hen·
on Nov. 20. Program opened with
derson bad 'lbanlcsalvlng dinner
congregational slnglna of "Let's
for h!s mothet, O~le Henderson,
Praise the Lord" and giving of
~meroy. and for their ch!ldren
the Thanksgiving responsive
'Susan Pull!ns, Sharon, Lisa and
reading. Travelln' On Qujirtet of · Bob Henderson. ·
Coolville sang. Their songs !n·
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
cludled "Singing In Jesus'
and Mrs. Clair Fol!rod were Mr.
Name," "Stnad Up," "Rock of
and Mrs. Steve Follrod, Athens;
Ages," Saved by Grace," "You
Nina Robinson, Clara Follrod,
Don't Have to Walt." Tile Alfred
Mr. and Mrs. David Watson and
choir sang "I'll Make It My
Stacie, all local.
Home Some Day" and "'rl* Old
Sara CaldWell spent Thanks·
Acount."
g!v!ng at the borne of her daugh·
Rev. Archer asked the coni!'~
ter, Janice Weber, Eagle Ridge. ·
aatlon to express what they were
Thanksg!v!ng guests or Mr.
thanldul for !n one word. His
and Mrs. Floyd Avis and Bob
word was forglveneso. Others
were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Avis, Jo·
were love, fam!ly, churc)l and
nathan and Megan, local; Mr.
pastor.
lk]
, and Mrs. Larry Spencer and
Lloyd D!ll!nger gave dfread·
Mike, Racine.
·
log "Excuses". Ne.l!!e 1arker
Gertrude Robinson. enjoyed.

1988 .

Classified

•
•

,. •

eo-~.

Cboeolate Covered Frull Cake

December

••

.Holiday ·recipes ...
By Charlene BoeOich
If ChriStmas !s catch!Jng
with you and there are
to buy, you
might want to
check out the
annual hollday
bazaar to be
held tomorrow
(Thursday) at
.
the Senior Cit!·
zens Center. Hours are 9:30 to 3
p.m.

. 'lbanksglvlng with her daughter,
Dorothy Cox IUid family . On the
next 4ay she blld dli!Mf with her
son, Blll Calaway and tamUy.
'l'llanklglvtnJ week JUe~t&amp;d Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Ste81'111 were
their daughter, Donlla Stearnl,
CentCI!Yille, va., and her f!nace,
Howard Stoler.
Recent pests of the PooleParker fam!ly were Mr. and
Harold Fetty Sr

Alfred community. happenings

Ann

•

•
•
••
••
•

Wednelclay. o..mbll' 7. 1118

Ponwoy- Middleport, Ohio

• I

'"'"' Sub14tCit to drug ecr... •

E.O.E.

Professional
Services

l-.rtySalon...,gaDDt11nPt. Mary Luca•PI.,o • Of~ I • ·
flt. ..n ••· Heir ltYtlll: are · IOM. Call 614-44&amp;-9787 or :
· for lnlor. Cal1304-17• '\41-4421.
•
2001.

R~cll [sldlt•

.

'·

�•

~;FP~~~~1~4~Tiw~~D~a~il~y~S~M~t~in~a~~~==~~~~--~---y;~~P~o~m~~;;,y~M~mdfi~~~~·~O~h~~~~~~~:;~~~~~::~~~:::=~~~~~~;:
LAFF·A·OAY
46
";;31

Homes for Sale

51 Household Goods

Space f or R ent

· VflfV attrac:t~e brick 4be~oom.
2 bllh. f.mity room with fir•
• pi ace. foi'rNI dirt ing. '-91' living
room. 30 fl. euttom 01111 kitchen
ca~nlls. oek woodwork. flnith
baemmt, 2 c .. u-119• l•el
l.,dlc.pld kit , 4 mlt1 fTom
Hol;rer Hospit~ off At. 35PDrt•twook Subdivilion. Call

Countty Mobile Hom e ,._k.
Route 33, North of Pomwoy.
tD11. ,.,.ahl, plf1t. HI•. C1H
614-992-7479.

Trll• spec•. Galtlpolit F~.
HWaga dly wo.t•. g•llbege
'pick up included In rent. *75.00
month. 304-87~1335.

614-446-4te9.

4 BR ., i.lll b•emll!lnl 6 Ulf'IUe.
ful~ ewpeted !tome nfiiNI. Citv
schooll. Utilititl low. Woodbnner. Natural g• furnc•.
Priced to •ell. ean 114-.-.&amp;0271 eft• 6 PM . 'NMkendl

49

6104.

MENT HOMES! Umited time.
I.Dw cott. Nationwide program&amp;.
0111 for buyoer's guidtllltt to

51 Hou1ehold Goods

&amp;t. G 2788.

1

r.:;::::;:;==:;::~;:;;~l'i;::::;~;~;;;::==1
41

Whv

.4 4

Homes for Rent

I'Wit when

you c.,

buy

e114.

1988 FIHtwood. 12x6A, bottle

s• hell 1nd hot wtter. nooo.

Cell 814-843-&amp;310 o.- 814843-6408 anytime. Ask for
Danny.

Double wide mobile home. on
foundatkJn. IPPrOx. 2 acr-.
close to town llld tchooll. 10kitch., laundry. 3 belt-oorN. 2
bM~.
new
concrete
porch-walkt, b.a dtcb. pldo,
reftnilhed celhr. pump, excef.
1.-,t condftton. Large b•n with
concrete floor. 614-992· 3218
evenl"gl lifter 6 : 30 or
weekendl.

e•p._

lll'ld contrfiC11 Hav1 2 hou ... In
PDm•ov- Needl some rep•.
'Nil sell or I'Wit. v.., low IJ'iced.

Hou11 for ,.,t or _.e in Muof\
3 bl'ld'oom~,
Nurnent
tnd l•oe lot, tmllll drlp01k
requi'ed 304-875-88n.

s•••

"" · 1979 BayviiMI mobile home,
.. 14x 70 Vllith 7x21 etpendo,
phone 304-876-6141.
1978 Liberty 14x70, 3 bed-room, &amp;7, 900. 00. 304-676·
· ' ·• 18 71 and 675-17&amp;3.
198$ Detroiler mobile ·home
40x12, dean. '&amp;3,100.00. 304..,., ' 67&amp;2321 .
10d0 Mobile home for •'•
t1,600.00. 304-875-1724.

2 bt•oom. 10x50mobHefmme

614-3811-8711 .

Ashton, bt.,tiful a.ge tall~ng
loti. mobile ham• p•mlfted.
public water, also rN"• Iota.
Ctvde Bowen. Jr. 30~676-

Z338.
36

2 bed-oom. four room ept,
&amp;110. 00. 2 bedroom smal
hoUse. t200.00 or wll ''"on •
lind Conti'IICI'f. 304-17&amp;-2722.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Moble Horn• for rtnt. In
Kan .,Oil .. .._ Conttructlon
wor"-• Mlcome. Ctll 114-

448-D&amp;Oa

2 BR . mobile home. Some
utlitl• paid. C.ll 114-44~

0806.

2 BR . moble home for rent In

Ntw~

dlcorltld. 2 SR .. fully
'•r•ec~ . s.c. dep. .,..ulred.

In Tuppers Pl•ns. 2 bed-ooms.
&amp;17&amp;. p.- month plus deposit.

Coli 8,4-887-348?.

3 be*oonw;, central air, at
electric. fully c.plted. Nie.
neiGhborhood In Mldcleport.

Calf &amp;14-992-685&amp;
2 BA . fur,.htd. WIStt.'. dryer.
t221 a mo. piLi a dep. • utilttl•.

elt&lt;trlc. On Rock.lprlngt Ad.
Mottty furnished lncludlnt~
tnd &amp;yer. 114-992-

304-92!;-2337.

.

Renlals
Homes for Rent

Nlc*v furnished tmiA hauSII.
Adutt• only. Ref. required. No
~·- Call

614-446-0338.

3 BR .. AC. carpet pool, g.-age,
2 firepl.::•. f.,ce, Good loCI·
tion. Call A-1 Aa. hteta
Bmk•. 30~675-5104.
Plants Sub.- 4 BR ., full bMem.,t c.-pet. g• range. c:trv
tdtooiL Aduht only -one c~1ld
No pets. 081). &amp; Ref. requ•ed.
&amp;326 per mo. Call 814-4460278 eft81' 8 PM , weekEWHis
anvtlme.
House- 7 room~, unfurnished.
t2215 . 29 Neil A -.e., Gallipolis.
Call 448-4416 after 7 PM .
6Court;21htlng.-NI, 3BR ., 1 'h
blll'hononea:ida 1 BR .&amp; bath on
other. Both kltch..-.s furnilhed.
Ideal for femity with grandparent. Ov•loob perk&amp;.rlvlf. Welk
to tehoOII. Downtown. 1376 I
mo plut utltiti•- Oepotlt ll
ref~enc.. Calll!l14-448-4928.
'-'~ · home

for rent. $250 pk11

deposH:. Virginia L. Smtth Reel
Eat. 61t3ea.Be28.
BR . double. EJCCel. eon d.
Acrou fro"' G•llla Acad~ ­
t260 per mo. C.lt 61~446-

3

0046 orw-.endsafter 6 PM .

Furnilhed 2 BR . g•ege IJrt.
Adutt1 onlw'. No pelt. Cll

814- 4-46- 240"'

703-3811-1109.

Nice hOuse &amp; g•age en St. Rt.
7 . t260 a mo. Ple•e call

814-446-0038.

3 BA wuh•/ dryer hook up, 1
c• 9'~ 811 e. 1300 a mo. 8160
dep. Aodn-,. Vlll~ge II . Call

814-446-4635.

2 H01,11• for

r.ni

1 8R ·· •171h
mo &amp; 2 BA .- f178 • mo. In
Cr~n City. Ref. Caii814-C46-

1511

0&lt;

2511-UBO.

Dnilrtmet Tr ..... 1v.. mi. from '
Rodnw on Aodnev· INcM-el Rd.
Call Rldl•d
Fitch•. 114-245.

C,_.Motei. I14-448- 7 HB.

LAYNE'S FUANirURE

8246

Fumtthtd 1 Br. rnodlrn llpt.
Dip. • rfllf. No pets. 980 Firat
Ave. can 814-441-1079.
•

SHADY LAWN ""Ts- 729

Saoond A. \II. F~Mhed effidenci• .-: ...·ung • *176 • mo.
Including .... • g•t.a•
Single
only. Call lf4-

.._,It•
4411'41107"' 446-2102.
8118.

2 be«oom API•· for rent
Ctr_~lll:ed. Nice setting. U.Undry
f•cllliet .,.. .,.. Cell 81499~3711 .

clea1 304-178-2321

Hom•tead Rellty, SII•Rent
(rail•. 4 krte. etc. 113.1500. 00.
Nenot Ctnterbury, 304-1715540.

EOH.

One Month Free Rent
Qu-'lfltd rent. . PlY t200.
dtpolft .. d no rent for the
month. November or 0.c..-nblr on~ . Vllll8 Mtnor
.. d RlvwsldeA~rrwrtt _,

2536.

Nlddl111ort. From 0182.
814-992·7787. EO H.

New effl dencv 1 or 2 be"'oorn
IPI•· inMidcrllport, Fwnilhedor
unfurni1hed. Cell 814· 992·

B304or 114-992-2711.

Unfurnished •partmentt for
rent. 1. 2. 3, and 4 room
2 bectoom treller. Hen den on · IPIIrfmenhl. 114-992· 2403 or
good cia., cond. n7&amp;.00 114-992· 2780.
month. plu1 dep01M, 304-8751972 oftw 6:00.
2 be«oomiPtrtmant In Mlddl•
port. ..cent., ..modeled. Urge
2 moble hom• furnllwed 1or roomt. · t1815. pw month. deprent 2 bectoom apartment oalt ,...,Ired. O.y 814-992·
furni.t.ed. phone 304-178- 2381 "'nlghl814-992·2809.
&amp;512 or 8715-3900.

2 bect-oom mobile t.lm• Sand
Hill Road. 304-171-3834.
3 bed'oonw, no pets. muet hltve
l'll'f.-enCII. 304-458-1887.

Trailer•. unfurnkhed. mu pl-.
1meU chll«8'1 acctPted, Rt. 1.
tD(l.lst · Roec1 P1.Ptt. behind
K&amp;K. 304-871-1078.

4

•-'ment•

n

Pom•ov-

One

end two bad'oorns, ~ly furnil Mel khct.tn. For more infor·
m•k»f\ c811 114-992-8211 or

,114-992·3786.

•ech Street, Middleport, Ohio.
2 befi-oom furnllhed ap.rtment.
uti hi• paid. rtf.-ene~~ . Phone
304-182:-2118.
Now 8&lt;:ctptlng 1ppllcMions for
2 be*oom 11p artmentt. ful.,

c.p•ed. appllencw, ...... and

44

trlth pid&amp;uPt provided. M•int•
nenoa *•living close to tho~
ping. t.lb end Khoolt. For

Apartment
for Rent

morelntornwtion call

30~8B:Z.

3711. E.O.H.

2 BR . apts. IJ clo•••· klfcherh
appl. furnflhH. WMher·O'rylr
hooJt- ~. new plu1h c.-pet. tl•
paint.
Nice good location.
Aegencv. Inc. Aptt, C.ll 304876-6104. or 675-138&amp; or
87.5-7738.

614-446-0338.

ch.._

•84. 91. 5 pc. wooden
dinnlt1e •eta. t 199. 96.

PICKENS USED RJANITUAE
Compt•e hou•llold furnltft.
lngt. Vt mile out Jerrlcho.
For low prlcee on Oualftv Cerpet
• Furnllurw come to Mollotwl

Fwnltu,..Upper River Rd., 814·

4411-744-4.

VIAA ' 1 FU-RNITURE AND
APPUANCES
Open Deity Mon.·Sat., 9 AM -6

PM

WELL, FORGET 'EM .. RUB
AN ERASER ON '(OUR ~EAD!

Furnilhld apt. Ne•HMC. 1 BA .

441left..-7PM.

-..

Ap..-t ment1 end hou.... Clll
304-878·1104.

Pets for Sale

..onoblo. AT HENS UVESTOCK
IALE· 1 mlo- oiAibonv on

Groom end 8upptv lhopo-P•
Grooming. All breeds .. . AII
11yt.a. lemt Pet Food 0.-'•·
Dregonwynd C1tt.-y Kennel
CFA P•1len end llem•e ldt·
, _ AKC Chow puODI-. Hl,.._,ln kttt-. ·eaH 814448-.44 eft• 7 PM .
AKC Cock• Spaniel p_upt,
mal... t110, femtiln· t200.
Toklng dopooil for Chrlotmoo.

lt. At. SO. Cel 11~592-2322

orl14-81.3131eveningt.

4 room IPt utlttl• pel d. •eo.oo
,_ week, 304-175-3100 or

87!;-8809.

Onetnd2balt-oomap.tmlftf..

_:_30:-4-~87:-15-::-20::-::77~2·=~:::-=:-

Wedge Apmments. no P«l.
One bec:toom furnished apart·
mont. ...... lro. utM~I• .-ld.
rod
d clop •
Ref•tnot.,
os requ
'

Open

Firewood for 1141. *36. pickup
tNdl lold. Oeltv.-ed. HEAP
vouch. . •ccepta:l. Call 814949-2017 oflw I,OO p.m.
Braa flrepl.::e screen wfth
sliding gl•• doors. 49 lndtas
wide 1nd 31 irui'l• high. With
matching toot IM. EJCeflent
contltlon. C-'1 814-94-9-2914.

titer hourt bv
appointment

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS ·

Bentwood rockers, •49.91.
He..-y duty rultlc bunk beds,
e229-complete. 4 pc. bedroom
suite with trlpl• . . . . . 1499.
Auttlc 4 dr. wood ch•t. $99. 4
dr. ch•t. t44.85. &amp; «. chest.
•154.95. Sofa • chair-~. 1899
now t219. v ... g~w~ sat. a. chair.
reg . 12400 now t899. 6 pc.
wood group, reg. t&amp;99 now
t319. Vaughn Bnslllt will
t..Jgger Nelin.,, $199. Rultic
courmy •bl&amp; 3 chan&amp;. bench.
•219 with matching hutch $560
lot bo1h p i -.

. 2411-11811.

Cal 114·388-8880.

1r&lt;III~IHJrlaiHHI

W•• Hlghland Vllhlte Terrlln.

mltlei. AM rediG, llmot:t na¥
tlra 80.000 mla R•• ,_.

2 Pure Blood Dechlhund female
puPI with thotl. t121.ech. Cell

rtpl- •1000. Fa.
more lnfDr1111tiDn c.. Pall 8f
814-....,2342. Mev
at

for .... Dog hou ... 1'h: mil•

WHk*fs.

0193. w.,.ne Shoemtk•.

Oovtmment: Sllzed Vehicl•
from t100. Fordl, Merced•.

114-448-4048.

out

141. Call 614-4-46-

R~

Corvllftft,

CF AMotloshort·hH-Id flwlltn.
Sp.,-ed fwnele. 1"h .....,, old.
ClmiD 1hlde wtth OOPI* .,...
814-912·183711ft:.- 4:00.

au- Gwdo. 111 eo~;-es?­
. 6000. .... 8 ·101e8.
1982 Plymouth A~• K, nlc:o1981 Chwv Plokup
AKCA--B-ootpu.-. 8 *16811.
truck, Y· B. euto, PS, PB • • 19911.
...... al'd. 0128. Call 814-887· Call
814-2811-6622.
17118.
M1M mlnl .. ure lchn.,.a:•. 12
wb. old. t76. AK
11oo ot.

Check • • • outl 19M Z-28,
•ssoo. 19e4 Muot- *3800.

AK c

•1100. 1982 Mercury Lynx,
t98&amp;. Ratliffs Auto 581•,
·VInton. Ohio. Clll 814-318-

c.

32300 SR 143. Pom-. Ohio.

noglot- molo llooglo. 1

montht old. Good prospct.

.60. 114-948-2143.

9631 or 4-46-6879.

AK C regilt•.t Codl• Sp~nltts.

For Solo- 188481idl Sky-~

982·2873.

Kenmore wesh.- and dryw pair.
Thr11111 cycle. H••v ~- t22&amp;.
Moving tale. Swing let, IQU•

rlum, rock• Md mOra Cell

Woothlghl.,dWhfto Torr!.-. Sibor I., Huokoro, 30":171-2183.
AIC.Cregllt•• Cat:*e Sptnleit.

noo.oo-. -

m•.
oell b
773-8838.

forChriot-

IPPolntment. 304-

814-982-1227.

SURPLUS ARMY. DENIM,

57

Musical
Instruments

CAR HART. Alntel clothing,
Small Armv t:'qulpment Ace. .

oorl•. SAM SOMERVIllE'S.
OlD ROUTE 21, NEW ERA
304-273-1111515. Noon-8 PM.
Nov, Dec. nnsulltlld CoY ......

Alto Slko'lhone, l.l ke new.

· -· Coli 14-992· 3482.

$27.&amp;0). Jungle Boots U.S .A.. - lndtvkl.lll ~ tt• t. .one. be-.
Original Army dot ... g. No~ ginn... •rious ., ...... IINImiiiUry cemfleuge pants
Mutlc. 114-441--0&amp;87.
*12.00.
Jeff Wlmlll¥' tnltruetor, 114448-8077. llmlt.S openingt .
Aft Chr1stme1 trill t12.00.
come Nriy before cold..,...,.. 5 pe LuMig drumt wtlh symand tag your tr•. Nlwellt bols, h••vv duty nand.
Chrl•t,.s Tr• Ferm, one mla teoo.oo. Phone Heat• 304above Muon on H~malng Rock 882-20 ....
Road, 304-T73-S37f or 304882-2886.

c.-•

58

Fruit
S. Vegetables

55 Building Supplies
&amp;..aiding Met.-t•

Bloc*, brick. ...,. P5J»•. windows. lint•. etc. Cla.ldl Win•••· Rio Gr.-.de, 0 . C•H 114-

Contole RCA 21 indl oolored
TV, r11n1ote control, 1300.00.

245-5121.

5 piece wood frtme family
furnttu'e ul, good cond cushions one vur old $126.00.

Concrete blocks· ell • • • yard
or detlvMV. Mtlonllftd.Otlllpoll1 Blade Co .. 123'h Plne St..
Galllpoll•. Ohio. Cell 814-448-

Q

~:30~4-=17=5-=41:5:3:.::::::;::.L:27:8:3:,=======~
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

'*cent

Churc:h Jl''"'~
Jllckt Fruit M•ktt. • At. 31.

dlocoum lo

w.v•.

StilllllrHs
&amp; IIVt:slut:k

UTILITY BlDG. SPL. :

30'x40"•8"1" Cle•1nce. 1 ·
11'dt" tredl door. 1·3' Wlllt
door: .4998 ER Ecreo. Iran

1

11r-. AM·FM . *19U Coli
114-446-0822.

1886 Ch.., ooto, *2600. 1179

O.evette. t?Oo. C•U 814-211-

1270.

1971 CONitte l · 82. 4 tpeed.

11ro1 ieeoo. •koo k. 114-9492886 dovo. 114·247·4811
nights.

1985E1Cern4no. 1988MezdaB
2000 •nd 1984 Cougar. Call

Dyne lounc. rnowint~ m8Chln•

bel•.

I•' model No. 12 hw
t3791. L.ternadlll125001tv•
tr1c:tor PI 311 HP. t 2711. NII'W 3
pt. httch wood splltt•. •399.
Own• wll flnenca C•ll 814211.1522.
FermEquill-m.U. z.torTr~etors.
Howard ..otevltors.
Foodw
Buying oldlied•.
boll orMorriiE.,IprMnt, Audtnd.
Ohio 514-742-2456.
1980 W201 Call .-tla.II•M. 4
WD. loodod wlth ..... loootod 1ft
Point Phuent ; W . Ve .

Ring~.

StrMton .nglne. llh new,

304-8711-32159.

Ford trlctor live power
t2IOO. 00 . Ford mower
•410.00. Large 11nk 24.11.5 ft 4

ln-.
20 ft comp•. 304-8762328 or 876-2801. 4 room
3 1/.t ecre

ne.eoooo.

63

1979 Ford Futuf'l. 6 eyL. new
redial ti'tt, good ooncltion.
t480. CAl 114-811-4473.
1971 Oldlmoble 98 Deluxe, 4
door, sedan. good condftion.
1977 Oldlmoblle 91. •clllent
oonltlof\ towmHeeu• 114-98251158.

For 1 ur• deal on • n8W ur utiJd
a., truakorven; ... Kenny Bess
at Jim Mink Chevrolet·
Ofdlmobl&amp; 114-448-3172 or

lind

AT. P8. PB, AC. CC. 59.000
·m11-. uc aond. t3,400. 00.

304-17!;-2 72.

'.81 Cutl••· PW, cruise, tlh,
AM-FM c•s«t&amp; V-8. 30~676-

304-8711-5834.

11 ft. IIOOH neak 1toak trWI•.
•1000. ThorouGhbred r•c•

horo-. A I - Colll14-4-46-

2107- doyo, 388·8804·

Houle with bit h. New A1dna
Nice ywd. g.-den s pKe. Call

wtnlngt.

v••

•8oo. 114-992-&amp;304.

gets me bacl&lt; tor all lhe foolball Q8ITI8II
by watching every Christmas speciaL"

i

1

3 Polled Her...,d
ool"'

Helf•• for

114-742·2014.

----- L_

I!J)

Jonathan helps an
ax--combat nurse with Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder.

gSpecial
Fat Aibttrt'o Chriatmaa
Holiday special

ht•ior.

-·

slerring Bill Cosby and lhe
- Cosby Kids. (0:30)
Naohvllle Now
1:05 (]) NWA Prt1 WntaUing
8:30 (I) a ill Hoed of the Clato

"·

a job in order to clear his

Dennis must get • and keep •

.,.· ~

Pump •I• end HrYice. 304-

MORTY MEEKLE ANf! WINTHRO.;.P-,-----~-r--- --~""""\"':j

8911-3902

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,

DO 'lOLl ~YE
ANY FRIEND5, .

hou .. call e.-vioing OE. Hot
Paint,
drylr1 end
ttoves. 304-678-239&amp;

w•h••·

Ron's Chlmn.., Sweep, ~pedel
llwu
*39.98. Cal

o.,.......,.

304- nJ-5348 or n3-6a40.

Ne.r.

and professionally. !:1

Contracting. inf•ior .. d ext• rlor pelntlng. earptntery •n d

ll-7

m•onry .

.

Captain Stea~•CIMn•a. get 2 ,
IVIrlgl 1111 rooms carpet
cle.-... •11.00 e8ch, wll:h tNI

SHE GALLED
YOU THAT TO

od, :104-571-2296.
82

YORI! PACe?

Plumbing

Golipolo. Ohio

Phone 114-448-3888 or 814441-4477

24,00,0 mllet,

oe.ooo.oo. Coli 304-B?B·
1287.

Crook and Chaso
10:30 ID l!aot£ndero A continuing
chronicle of llta lives of
rasldenllln London's East
End. 10:30)

S. Refrigeration
RHidantlal or commEI'cltl wirln ~ New s.-vlce or rilplirt.
Licensed eiectrlci.,, Ettimeta
free. Ridenour Electrical. 30~
675-1788.

C!J TBA

•

'blr

General Hauling

cisterna, well1 . Immediate·
1.000 or 2,000gtllontdellvlfy.

rii8Sonable rat... volume dlt··
counta. 2.000 to 4.000 capacIty, cllt•ns, pOoll. Wltll, etc.
Colli .. d llmlltont diiHv-v.
phone 304-171-3190.

1910 Ford Telephol'll Van. 4
IPd .. •1489. John' • AutoSel•.
Rt. 7 below Holld•v-lnnKin . . ..

.- -

Upholstery ,

Mowrey's Up 1\olsterlng ...-vlng
trloountvaree23v••· The ben
In furnhure uphollttrit1g. C.l
304- 875 - 41!54 for fr81
ettlmM•.

'Birthday

..

Bernice.Becie Osol
CAPRICORN (0...~.~22::-.J;:on~-~.':,.,;;;)~l;;l:;y~ou~..:'
. ~~~ow~n~t~h~ai'ili;;:na~w:
- hitn
, your work starts lo

QlJ Odd Couple

aVIcleoCouniry
10:35 ([J MOVIE: In Harm't War
(NR) (2:45)
11:00 I]) Remington S - S1eele
Away Wlllt Me, Part 2

leellncllnod 10 lake rloka today. gamble pile up.
on yoursel1 and your abiiHies and nol on CANCER~~- 21-.luiJ 22) Opportunlothera. Where you lack pereonal con- lies could slip pu..you today, becauae ,
ern Cll mill OJ
1rol,' ma11era could go awry.
you mlghl lrea1 proplllous developIIJ) Newa
AOUAIIIUB (~M. 20-Feb.11) You might menta Indifferently. Upon r - , you'M
(J) CoiiiQI Ballketball
lind yourself In a buslneu sl1uallon to- regret It II you didn't capilallza on your
&lt;DTBA
day where you'll feel a lillie embellloh· ·breaks.
C!J Sign Off
ment of lhe facto won'! hurt. You're LI!O (~uly 2J.AIItl. 22) In car- sltua·
QlJ Lowe Connection
wrong - 11 will.
tiona loday, btt more concerned about
IIJ Moneyllno
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) In an lm· doing 1he job properly than about mak·
® T•o 11ont lllo Darkportent dlacuaslon today where critical 1ng a favorable lmpretllon on UI0- 1
IIJMiamiVIce
information will be diSClosed, you'll r• clalell. You'll only~ 1118 applauae you
You tan Be a Star
gre1111klng more lhan llslenlng. Be a1- If you perform will.
·
1en11ve and don'l let the key poin1a get · VIIIQO (Aug. 21-Bept. 22) EV&lt;tn II you . 11:30el]) Itt Tonight Show
(j) Cheara
by you.
hawlto dlil with someone today who.
ID Amlrlcen Art Form
ARIEl (March 21•Aprll 11) Condlllons llwaya lays It on rather hea¥y. don't fol·i
·
eill
NlahtiJne Q
are a lrllle lrlcky loday where your fl- low IUH and otart exoggerallng. In the
OJ USA Today
nanclallnlerestsare concerned. Try not ftnal enolyola, modealy will melee you'
QlJ NewiJ •ed Clime
lo ~ InvOlved In slluallona where you look ouperlor.
0 . , _ Tonight
have 10 overextend yourHif.
UIIIIA (lept.D-Oot. 21) It may btt wl~
eO 'Night HMI' CIS Late
TAURUS (April 21 IIQ :Ill) There's a , to let your mate call the financial ohOio
Nltlht O'Srien and Gllmbone .
poulblllty 1hll you mlghllgnore your today, becaueeyoumlglttnotbttatyour
are under preature to catch
beller ludgment today and do aome- btttl In lltla ~. Swallow your
1 cat bu'llilr. (R)
lhlng lhal does nol ll8rV8 your beot ln. pride and otop to the rear.
9HII811Mtillulo
leresis juot bttcauae you'll resonl being · ICORPIO (OGL awlo¥.11) For oxpedl·
Amlrtcan Maga11ne
!old wha11o do by anolher.
tloue rt11110111, 1011110118 might make
12:00
(JJ
Paper CheN Burden of
GEMINI (Mar 21.JII(te 21) You might you a big promlae totlay that you'Dtaka'
Proof
nol devole proper lime and effort lo to heart. Unlortunlloly, 1118 lndlvldulll
crlllcal Iaska confronting you loday. · Involved may btt Insincere.
!£=~1;1
Thla could cresle problems lor you .

· A

~

Complete the ckvckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

.

P~INT NUMBERED lETJE~S IN

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-L.ETS ANSWERS

Chance - Acute - Hoist - Tawdry - CATCH up

WITH
Teacher 10 lourth grade class: "When you're in too much
of a rush, you're liable lo pass more lhan you CATCH up
WITH ." ,

BRIDGE

NORTH
+J7
'l'J7S

t95
+AKJP64

JAMES

WEST .

JACOBY

+5

iliittlitll---,

•aaa

'l'AKQIOI

+a 12

+Q 103

How do you lead from thr(!O small
cards in your partner's suit, when the
opponents are playing a suit contract
themselves? I ask because mimy play·
ers make a top-of-nothing lead, believ·
ing that it is very important to Jet
their partners know that they do not
have an honor in tbe suit. The crucial
problem that comes into play is that
partner may then have great dillicul·
ty distinguishing between the top of
three small and the top of a doubleton.
My recommendation is that you lead
low from three small cards, since I be·
lleve it is more Important to let your
partner know for sure when you a~e
leading high from a doubleton. Here IS
a deal that demonstrates the effec·
tiveness of this approach.
led 1
Against four spades, West
a ow
heart. East cashed two high hearts.
Since he knew the remaining heart
. ~ was held by West, it was futile to play
a third round of the suit. So he
· switched to a low diamond. There was
nothing for declarer to do but put up

.

tQ 876
SOUTH
.AKQIOI832

.12
+K 10

+s
Vulnerable: Neither . ·
Dealer: East
We11

Norcb

Pw

-••

Opening lead: • 3

.

the king, so the contract was dOWtt
on~i West was a top-of-nothing leader,
he would have led the eight of beartl.
East would cash two tricks and tbea
not know what to do. (It would be a
reprehensible violation of the proprieties of bridge for West to fumble or
hesitate before playing to the aeeood
heart.) A third round of heart. Wllllld
let South make the contract.

'" lila year ahead you are likely to be·come more Involved In activities 1ha1
are Imbued wl1h otrong elements of .
glamour and gr..dttur. You'll lit Into
lh- new developrnen1a with surprisIng-.
IAIITTAIIRII1-· 21 U.C, 21) You
could be diaappoln1od today II you think
lhlngs are going to come to you wlthoul
pu111ng fOI'Ihllle nee nary_._ Strive
10 btt productive end don't iesve any·
thing up to chance. Soglllarlus, !real
yourMIIto a birthday gift. Send for your
Astrp.Graph predlctlonl for 1118 yaar
ahead by mallng $1 10 Aalro-Graph,
c/o lhil, newap-. P.O. Box 91428,
C..-nd. OH 4-4101-3428. Be sure IO
. a1a1e
. your
. zodiac sign.. ·

CROSSWORD
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
l Church

3 Oardcn
plant
4 Sicilian

SE'CI.ion

fi RPIIgious
cily
symbol
- fi neldam
10 Suburban6 Decay
itE'·s pride
7 Face
II Wallow
shape
12 l'la&lt;·e
II Groups
of bli~s
9 Citizen 1
13 Go around
Kane's
14Consumed
"Rosebud"
16 Mind·
11 Make
bending
welcome
drug
15 "All
17 Can. prov.
19 Caution
Jazz"
2111erate
17
Spoken
23 Whaler
IS Alpine
sailor
snow
27 Stave off
field
28 Demon·
20Mend

a

e

a

~

Yesterday'11 Anllwer
22 Irish
river
24 Apis
me llifera

34 Fellow

311 Present

36 .G reek
river
211~rt
38LA.ooam
26 Composer, 40 Deblll18)''s

"La -"

Alban -

42 Greek

28 Separate
30 Maxwell

letter

43 Number
for Moses

strate

29 Raw-boned
30 Headliner
·· 31 Pitcher
33 Work unit
34Tea

variety
37 Vestibule
39Woody4l Go
along
with

4•

Highway

branch
45 Apportion
46 U.S.Navy
hero
47 Actor Penn

DOWN

I Beverage

2 Writing
tablet

I)AILY CRYFI'OQUOI&amp;I-Here'lllow lowort It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

1117

...1'" '

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is llled
for the thiee L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are aU

hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQUOTE
ll-7

NH

FDC

N H T H
X A C

UCHHCK

CAFDQHW·

IN E C
HDXQUE

HFKXAOCK

I N
F N M C

DXUE

XA

wu

I

N
FDC

DWODCK XACH . - E . H . RXKENA
\ Yesterday'• C17)1to4aaot.e: WHEN YOU ARE ILL,
I MAKE HASTE TO FORGIVE YOUR ENEMIES, FOR YOU
. MAY RECOVER.- AMBROSE BIERCE

C 11118 Kong Fl....... Syndicate. Inc
'

EAST

+&amp;I

tAJI32

•a=

e

Dec. 7,1-

R &amp; R Weter Service. Pools,

87
Vans S. 4 W.O.

New c0111111y

10:001]) 7GO Club
(j) Dill China Beach The
heal of war catalyzes a new
relallonahlp tor nurso
McMuriJ(1y. Q
&lt;D I!J) Nawa
OJ • i1J1 WIMgUJ r;J
QlJ 11emoy Miller
IIJ 1!-lng New11
i1J1 Tallii!IIO&gt;W Nlcl&lt;
undargoes a riveting
experience when he repays a
favor.

304-576-2918.

tapp•r.

INRI (1!14)

a

a

Electrica I

85.

11J MOVIE: Fa- Knowo
Ball: tor Chriotmaa

e

1958 Cloowrolot oldl up lor oolo.
*780.00. 304-8715-1724 .
' Watterson' • Wlttt Heulln8.
2417.

IN TH' BRESH

AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine

Call 304-675-6370. '

good. *960.00. 304·575·

SH~ TOLO IT
TO IDA BELLE

I WAS HIDIN'

CARTER'S PWMSING

"•

3171.

NO.SIR!! II

.

SQUIRES!!

S. Heating

84

9:00 (!) College Saokatbttll
(I) 8ill The Wonder Years
Kevin agrees 10 acl in a play
written by a laacher he has a
crush on. Q
ID (!) Jaoaye Normen'o
Chriatmao Symphony ,
Celobrl1od Jnlematlonal diva
Jessye Norrnen aings a·
variety of Christmas hymns
and carols In a performance
from England's Ely
Cathedral.
at 11111J Graham ·.
i1J1 LMy King Llvel
Ill I!)) Billy Greham Cru1:30 (I) • (() Haap1nn1n Harry
Is challenged both personally .

a....... Mid toni Cona.ta., d

J • J WMIII' S.VJoe. Swimming
p:10ls, ci•t•ns, wellt. Ph . 81~
245-9286.
•
~

1881 Ford R.,ge-, red, 8, 200
actual mil•. 4 cyl, 304-886-

PRACTICAL.L.Y

NOT IF 'rOLJ'RE.
t:;Cll NGi 1tli$ET
MLJ5HY.

Ak••Tr• TrlmmlngendStump
Remowel. Free eetlmat•. C.ll
30 ... 1175-7121.

72

Trucks for Sale

WEL~. ~ YOLJR
I'RJENq RI6J-!T~

VERY, VERY FeW...
NONE .

NASiY~

dml. Ctll 114-441-740~No
Sundlr( call•.

30+871-1214.

debts. C
OJ tD 0 Annla McGuire Q
0 Snow Willie Clwlllmla

remove!. Cell 304-1715-1331 .

ml•,_ good cond. •1.200.00.

'80Pomloc:ll..,dPrk.l2.000

a

RON'S Television Servk:e .
House c811t on RCA, QLJ~Ur,

Mod Willi compl•.ts~medly.

Manhun1: Live AbOut the

I!Jl Highway to Heaven

114-44~

Rotery or c•ble tool clriiHng.

G)

I

Green River murders .

..

73

4
old Aegtn..-.ct-JA Arabi.-,
Gelding. For ehow or pl. .u,..,

Chrlitm.. INRJ (2:00)

Dll•d Wat.- 5.-vic:e: Pools,
Cl11erns. Wells. Oellv~ Any-

'71 Chwroltt pick up, runt

Uvestock

leaves people cold. Q

Ill QlJ MOVIE: While

' &lt;

1!J1 PrimeNtWI

rtrll6ghl *en gina .,dtmtmiaoloO\

a

money for a theater furnace

8331.

'79 Okll CudMt runt good.

a

spend time alone wllh a
special girl. 1;1
ID (!) Evening at Pops
l!Dl Ill® The Van Dyke
Show Gala benefit to raise

Carp.-rttr Worlt-by hour or job.

304-882--31111 .

19n Ford Anto. tuto. 1r1n1..
Rail Sh•g· •1.4110. Phone

spread of the hOliday spiril in
Elernla. (NR)
·
Crook and Chaae
7:05 (]) Andy Grilllllt
7:30 8 aJ Family Feud
(I) Entenalnmen1 Tonlghl
Gill USA Today
at tD I!Jl I!Jl Jeopardy! Q
GIQlJ M..... S'H
·
I!J CIQMfire
I!Jl Night coun
VldeoCoun!ry
7:35 (]) Sanford and Son
1:00 (JJ Movie
81]) Kon1ucky Satktlbttll
KY vs N.W. Louisiana St.
Cll e (II QIQwtng Polna

Goorg10 Crool Rd. Coli 814446-0294.

Q.

1981 Oh.. Omega Cru.ile controt. tit wheel. AM-FM lt.-eo.

NAUGHTY·
...............

SWEEPER end 1...-vlng miChine
repH, Plrtl. end suppfl•. Plc:k
up end dlllvery, Divis Vacuum
Cle.ner, ona t'lalf mile up

Ronnie

2586.

WHII.E f&gt;OING SOMeitflNG

Wateprooflng.

1881 Oldlmoblle Oelt• 88.

1187 GMC pldl up 5·15 w•h

mo.

PoN'T APPL.Y
If you 1~E INJUREP

,.,•.no.

Roy•le Broughn. Auto. Good
condition. f1450. 114-849-

1984 Plymouth AeUant WllgOI\

haute

~~NfFr'T.&gt;

.

Fetty TrN Trlmn*1g. etump

«.

iHf

Ben's desperate tor a way to

19eOOidomoblloom- 4opd.
•eoo. ea11 114-4411-92.18.
1981 Buick. 4
One own•.
11.000 mi-. AC. EIICtll. «tnd

cou~se,

Home
Improvements

OE . Spociollng In Zon~h. Call
304-176-2398 or 814-4462414.

304-773-6134.

UIO.OO.

oF

St:rvrc1~s

*3711. 1978 Ford v... *1800.
Coli 814-2116-6611.

II MF tr8CI:or, Nice. w/MF

*28,000.00 0 .1 .0 . 113-112·
0084 Moncllrt 1hru F~dov.
Wood oplttw. B hp 8olgg1

UtHII• Plld.llnglem81e.Sh.-•
both Cal446-44'1hftw7PM.

Aportrnomo lot tho Eldorly.
O.llla Menor Apwtmenta. Ill Roo ... for rent· WHk or rna nth.
St.-ttng • •120 • mo. Gtllia
B~l MorlonRoad. DftiQnedforl
the Senior C hiun {12 &amp; oldwl Hotol-l14-446-9880.
814-992·5e58.
endH.. clcappedp . .Ofll, Equll
House, 2 be&lt;tooms, kitchtM · houtlng opponunftv. AppHce- •MPinG rooms with cooldn9
It ow. ful~ c«pettd. Nice end none m-r' beplcted up at Spring A..o Trill.- tPeCe- AI hoo._ upt.
cfl.-.. no im-Ide pill•. Depotlt VIII ft( PI••· 829 Jed&amp;: ton Pike CAll oflw 2p.m. 304-17311151. Muon W'!J.
or clll 814-441-4139.
requir . .. 814-992-3090.

1629.

A 1ellow worker had a bad
anxiety attack. He was told
1hat 'his job re~ume' had gol·
ten caughl in Ihe office - .

L.-.L....-1--'--''--'---' you denlop fro-m step No. 3 below.

Horde, 8're out to stop the

8288.

r•

HorooBI&lt;h. Call614-33~97411
Coli oct.

1•.

FRANK AND ERNEST

1973 28 ·ft. Champion Motor
Home. Pow•ed wkh eChry .. •
4-40 .... *4800. Col 814-381-

8344.

.

Hordek, wor1&lt;ing under
orders ot !he evil Prime

81 Campers

'-'ntlng: lnt«for '
Fr• . . lnwt•. C.l

s&lt;T,-,,'&lt;&amp;1,-1,11

villainous Skelator and

~79~~M~o;t;o;rs;:;H;01;m;e;s;=:

UncondltloiWI llfllllme gu•en••· local
furnished.
Frw •I"*•· Cell bollett "
1·814-237·0488, dov or night.
Aoger•Besament

"

.

p

I!J Monoyllne
®Cheers
IIJ He·Man, Sht·Ra
Chrillmaa Special The ever

675-3884.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINO

.

• QlJ Tlwea'a Company

studded ...tl• on Ford truck
rims, used one . . .on. 304-

81

Fandango
1:0511) One Day 11 a Time
•
1:30 (2) IIJ) NBC NlghUy Newt

.

111

Moving to At. 38, H.-.d.-.on.
W.Ve. -Into ntw bl~ by D•c-

P..-1 elng. .-lntlng, drv•ll,
1978FordLTD H, euto., PS, PI, . rnodlllng. Cltll Fred Cox. 11~
446-7943.
elr, low mHeege. CeQ 814-288-

114-949- 21515.

r dllll

··9· .,.

446-S678

114-192· 6304

All klndl fena, fruit. nut1 end
candy forChr'-tmat, 10
Hlnderton,

Eactllent oondltlol\ Cell 814-

197&amp;Jeep, 1450. 1987Dodge.

Furnilt.d room-911 Second

.71

11184 Eocon. *1995. 1183
Flroblr4 *41100. 1e13 Coli.

stove. For Information c.lt 814-

48 Furnished Rooms
Ave.. GIIIIDolt.

OUIVY'I.- Surplus.

For Ale. 815.000 .BTU W.m

-nlng Stovo. 18.800 BTU

ty p...

.POOA80YS !IRES

be,.,

a

8:3511) 9 to 5
7:00 Cil Our HouM Off We Go
81]) PM Magazine
(!)College a~aktlball
(I) Dill Current Affair
ID (I) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NowoHour (1 :00)
,.,.: ~1!)) Wheel of

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·

. Tho Oolllpollo Ooly T~buno.ll-6

.

.

a You Cttn Be a Sler

71 Auto 'a For Sale
1984 Chevy C.... ooto. Auto-

~.-r1T_,_,EI..;;E.,,Ji;-~,c1r-11 :
A WE N O I
r-~,

1

!

11J ·c.rtoon E - a

81 Accessories

·

AIIC pu-. A Chrlot- ~1ft
"'" wlf loot. Cal 814-387·
0124.

1914 Dodge Ari-. SW. Auto., .
Air. •2499. Johns Auto Sal•.
lltowHollyt lnn. .KMtuga.

e.

304-8711-5599.

c.n

tD QlJ Happy Doya
IHJ Facta of Lifo
11J Fot Alber!

1!J 81towlllz Today
1HJ WKRP In ClnclnaU

1Btl\ Call 304-871- 331.
260 Dido .,gino. 304-87113049·
Veil Prott..w wentlng "firm _:_
S_n-ow--,ll-ro,o-::-P:-2:-3:-5.-:7::5::R:;,;:
15:-.
Frelh" c.N• 10-111 lbe. Hallteins, 3-7 Mv• otd.
814-

r-1·_,.;.lr_,ul,.,.lQ-rt_,.rl-11

. tD Q]J WkRP In Cincinnati

Horoo • Colt. Cal 81 4- 25 1117e2 or 2156-1102.
DAIAY FARMERS

Fish Tank. 2413 J8eklon Ave,
Point Ple~t. 304-871-2011
10 gel• .. up •14.98end 10gel
compl•• t43.2!5.

ChriltrNs tovs ~m·d gen.-11
merchandltl at diiCCMJnt p.-lcea.
4 fl. Sen1•. •29.9&amp;. Blcyd es ll
trkyd• starting at .19.95. 14
K gold ckldcs. *7.49 • let."''· 1111
I Ho
Mrs. c-.. •. n4.911 • ••· Iron
FOR SALE - 8·~
u ....... ng
gs.
Stone churn. •14.96; Child'• l -30:-4--:-87_t;._40_e_7_.- ---;:;oak rocking chlln. te.99. Pogo
Chrlstrn.t trees, tag now, Eek·
ballt. f7.99. Remota &amp; radio .ard Chapel Rd. At. 2. 7 mil•
controlled c.• &amp; truc::ktl, chin• North Point pte•ent. 'Nhlte .-.d
dolft. $14.9G. 12x 18 RtUgiQul, Scotch &amp;1115 . 00 . 304·1715·
deer, &amp;. scene pictures, t7.99.
6771
Uyawey now for Chrlltmtl.
OpM9·5onthe24th. Rt.141 in
Church org., UOO.OO. 2 n-..
Cent~narv·'A mile on Uncoln th•• alan milk• bo•d .,_8ft.
Pika 114-446-3168.
t40. 00. Antiqut Singer SIM'Ing
M.. klg 811•12-8 thru 12-12. lniMlhlene wh:h CJJblnet t40.00.
Or Boot Offer lot l h - :1040 I•·
-bedroom
... ge.
w • gunL
.. toola,
~.
"1
""39 ·
8Uittl,
a 1-- ao or v u-._
l.tden. C.l 1114-26&amp;-111588.
Comfort Grow k•oeene he...-.
Good u11d floor model .,d 10,000btu, uccond.nwtw..,,
porbbl a color tv's for Ale. Cell
5 gel can, fuel pump. AI for
114-UI-1149.
$10.00. 304-876-3485 8ft•
4:00PM .
Drop In ,..,__~~ 30" with hood.
Call oltor4 PM. 614-446-2118.
Uted sii'Wing miiChln•. Priced
fram -•49. 9!5. lbe Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. Ohio. C1ll 114-9922284.

·

I

v Ill T 12

R0

Cll mill at 111 a=

1D Nightly 8uolnHI Report
at tD I!Jl cas Newa

WITH REGULAR SALE· SAT- up. Utld &amp;.. - f'lbult tCN"gUe
URDAY, DECEM.R 10, 1:00 · canv•rt•t. StMcWd clutch&amp;
p.m. AI ... _ . Including Hot· pr••ure pt•• • throw out
ltelns. C.Uie wll be -.pt-' bt•fng. Wlrrentv·12mae.CVC
F-. Ooc. 9. 4:0().9:00 p.m. · )olntHI typoo, Col 114-379end up 10 llletlrne ••· Hauling 2220 or 304-17&amp;-17U.

Golllpolio, OH 814-446-4331.

Plk1 from •183 1 mo. Welk to · 4 room. 2 bedroom apt, 700
llhop and movlet. 814-4-48- Main St. •110.00 plue utlltl•.
26811. E.O .H.
•
One be*aom tpt 70tM Main
St., t111.00 Ullkl• attra. Five
T•r• Townhou• ep.-tments- 2 roona two beclroom IPt. 702
BR• .• H~ bllhl, CA .• dll· Mltin St. pound floor, 1118.00
hw11her. dtlpoul. privlte en- J*,lt utlttl• 909-8 Vl.,d St.
clo111d p.rlo, pool. pllt(ground. one be*oom apt. tno.oo
Wilt«, ..Wif, &amp; t1111h Included. wlhout utlltla Pt. .ent Vellt~t
St.rtlng It t281 pe mo. Cal R.lhy, 30~171-4100.
1!1114-387-7810.

0238. Utllltloo pold. Col 446-

56

c

1D Body Electric

'"

GAM I

tke
be.
low lo fo!m four $imple words

Cll Dill ABC Nawo Q

'81 HondiiOXLSttrtetendtl'll
hila ltreet legal wlh helmet
good -con d. MilO. 00 or belt

Uted &amp;. rebuilt .U

·- I I I I

WDID

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

!If
ID NBA Today

SPECIAl. FEEDER CALF SAl~ W•ontv·:IO dovo. Pri- 088.

51._.3178

JulloWol&gt;b ,.,, 614-446-0231.

A1 ohopo. 614-387·0322.

Sun., 12 Noon-&amp; PM

A,_..ment for rent. 1226 t
month. Depo11t r~quif'ed . 814992-5724. 1\ft• lpm or 992-

utlllt lu, dapo11t, 304-175·

f150. 00 month utlliti• paid.

au ,
0
1111 111
CETIDE, INC.. Ath.,o-114_.,,

RonAIIIIon, 1210S.cbndAw.

7861.

304-675-1450.

Hou•• for .., .. Pottlble l1nd
contract. 822 Jacklon St. Vinton. OH 8'f4-388-9350.

requ~ed- Call 614-367· 7567 01"

Uled ll)pllenme end TV •••·
Qp., BAM ta IPM. Mon thru
111:. 114-44tr1899. 827- 3rd.
Avo. Golllpollo. 0 H.

J. S FURMTURE

30 4-1178-9780.
Cent• of. downlown. large one
BEAUTIFUL ""ARTMENTs AT boct-oom opt, nso.oow•hout
IIUOOET PRICES AT JACK- '"AMI•. 304-1711-2080.
SON ESTATES, 838 Jocbon

In Chethire. Ohio, 3 BR ., 2
bfllhs all efedrlc. AC. Oepo11t

Ad. Call 114-441-4812.

.,.,ment

10 Old Fort Trail. Call614-446-

2&amp;e3, 9·5 donv.

NO,
NOT 601N6 TO
BE 6A6RIEL OR GERONIMO
OR AN'( BOD'(! '1'0U I-lAD ALL
'{OUR LINES MEMORIZED'?

wheel••·

Mol. • br- otro(l. Modo bv
Slh• Aov•l. •1100 ... 1u. now
UBI. Call 814-216-8822.

• Deck Met•l•

e.• •

New completely furnished
•r,artment &amp; mobile home in
c ty. Aduttt only. P.,-klng. Cell

3 BR . hou ... Deposit requil"ed.

l

Gelllpolll. Stove, tafrtg. • w81•
furnll...._ 1228 • mo. No pea.

3 beG-oom mobile homevou J8V

1999 Ootrollw mobile home.

41

Nlc.-2 lA . IPf. 4'1J ml• from

••h•
3182.

lo llllase iJr b.Jy hill ~op
l~d for strUcture of toVo~~r site.
Call collect. 304-529-2337 or

BLAME ME ...

BLAME T~E SCHOOL BOARD !
NO, WE'RE NOT 601N6 TO
I-lAVE A CJ.lRISTMA5 PLAY...

Selling NeW Pol•il 4 whHI. .
end u.- 4

New ~-.ldlewtthped.haed

Cf'IMnell...ep
Rustle
lnd• Beveled
lldlng

0000 USED APPUANCES

Coli 814-446-4369 or 304- chll"''"· 94 loca~lt. Cal 114675-9780.
446-1340. 446-3870.

3 bectoom trtl• for .-.nt. AI

W~r~trd

Coumy AIIPitnce. Inc. Good

141&amp; Ea8tern Ave. ··
Furnlohod 3 room oot. 0225 P..
mo. 171 dep. UtA I• peld. No 4 drew.- oh..t, •48. 5 drMer

House for rant 1110.00 montf\.
no lddt, no .,.... 011111 304-1757443 1ftw 8:00PM.

Coli 614-992-7479.

}leal Estllle
• Warited

3

2 Br., unfurnlthed. 12x60,
Mlh• hook-up. In Ch•'*•

north of ,_,lnt Pl. . w . 3048715--1078.

M:1 sUnu,. C1111 PI-e. CIH
114-379-2178.
.

Lot for sale on Rt. 180.100 or
150 ft. frontage x 300 ft. Cell

4

NEW- W.tem booU. 13!5. 0? 2 at. l·
-kbo01o
*18 a. "t4!Stot1 • 1.,...---.......,--:-:::--:-:-' dollY-.
Fh-ewood for sele 130' pickup,
oolt too) . Call 614- 11-3169.
• 26 U-hall. Aooooon

IIIM&lt;ol. Coll614-4-411-9889.

F'-'1 N.ernent, one end hlf
rtory. quill lo~ktl\ 8 mil•

Col 614-4-46-8568 or 448in good1t.pa t990. ~CMh or 4768.
ownM will finence, 304-8762722.
2BA moblehoma•Evergreen.

35 Lots 81 Acreage

mag~~in•.

dlot / to
CD.
4 Pm C•l 1 •11MTWTF
lam
4-441-

Sof• end ch-. priced from 19in. oolortv. Goodcand.Good
Call 114-446-8038.
1398 to *995. Tebltt •so ~d picture. Cl11814-44~7413.
1 6 2 IR 11p .-tmtm, 1300 up to •126. Hide-e-~ ' 390 Solcift-.:, Ike n~. •H lttiCttmonth. lncludel eft utlhl•. to •na. RecDn... t22S to mentt lnduded. t700 firm.
Adutts ontv. no pMs, d11p. 1375. Limps •21 to 1125. Kerosene hellt•, .:eel. oond.
r-.ured. c.ll 514-....,4222 Dfn«t•l1091nduptot491. t90 . Call 814·4•1· 1120
Wood t.We w-1 chars 12115 to
between 965.
t791. Desk 1100 up to 1376. evenlnp.
Nioeir tur,.hed 1·2 SA. W.t.- HLrtch• •400 lnd up. Bur* 30 gil. hac..,:tn equnm wtth
&amp;. a• baa• p-'d. Privllte pt~rldng. bedl complete w-mettr- stand. •ch lemp • nM Tren•
Dopo•• -~od. Call 814-446- •211endupto139&amp;. Bab¥be$: million oU cool•. Clll 114•..,
t110. M.nress• 6rboxsprtngt
_
434115 aftw 115 PM.
fuH or twin tl8. firm 178, 8nd 2 v 8218
til. Qu.n sett • 210 &amp; up.
Moct.n 1 BA . IP.-tment. C." King
•3150. 4 driWer ch_. •19. Coltmll1 woodburnlngetwe for
814-441-0390.
OU!n cabin•
10 gun. ••• UOO. I ft. •tellle cllhPom•oy-2 IIR . remodeled leW ,.,. ., . . . t38 &amp; •41. Clncinn..l flblr gi-.I'ICillver &amp;
off Sprtnfl Aw. Sec. . . . from .. 020, 030 .. ~lng r-o olmor.• 800. eon 114dap. • ref. Call aft• 8 PM, fr~me tiD. Good •llec!l:~ ol 441-1127 1ft• 7 PM.
,114-992· &amp;818.
l:ledlocnneult•. metal e~~bln111t1. Mixed hardwOOd tlllbs. t12p•
h ... bo•~-~~-~-~ up to • 11· bund&amp; Containing IPJ'I'DX. 1'11
Fw-nillt.:l downslllirs, 3 room1
&amp;. b81: h. Cletfl. No pMs. -AdUIU. 90 Days same 11 c.h with ton. Ohio P.Jt• Co., Pom•oy.
R8f . • dip. Off1tN8t ,_.klng-1 tpproved credit. 3 MM• out Ohio. 814-992·&amp;481.
c•. C.H 114-448-11518.
CHRISTMAS TREE'S
. Bul.. lte Rd. Open 91m to 5pm
Man. thru Set. Ph. 814-441Nome grown ChriltrniS Tree's,
Untunllhld 2 BR u•aue IP.-t- 0322.
So0td'l1nd White Pine.
m..-.t. In town. Clrpeted. Aduttt
W..,_' 1 F1,m In Rutl.,d.
V811ev
Fwntr:ure
onfv. No petL C.ll 814-441New and used furnllure .nd 614-742·2143.
4561.
•ppllc•nc81 . Cell 114·44~New h.-.dm.te 'qulhs for Ale.
Apartment for r.-.t In town. 7572. Hours 9· &amp;.
Vera v.. Met•. 114-992·
Furnlohod. Call 514-448-1423.

814-992-6616.
' ..,., 304-876-2722.

Modern 1 BA , downtown. complete kttdltn. lir. cwptt. Deposit. no pals. C.H 814-~
0131 .,.,,""' .tt.. 5.

1e
eult•.
O..kt.
wrlngii'WISher
complete
line of
used .,rnlture.

821Y.I S•c. E.::.l. cond., 2 IIIR .•
FOR SALE OR RENT • 4 equlppM kitchen. Mr. AwUeble W.hlrt. *vtr1. rnl.-etors. Smlll engine tor sela lnv.-rtory.
beltoom ho~ phone 304- Nov. 1ot. 0228 pluo clop. Col 1'1ng•. Bkegg1 Appll.nce1. 0111814-25~1489.
875-2130.
114-4411-0803 or 448-Z111e.
Uppor Rlvor Ad. booldo Slono WHifFS METAL DETECTORS

Mobile tmme end lot. f850D. In
Mldcltport. 2 bedrooma. C.ll
2 be*oom 12IISO. •1100.

Apartment
f Or Rent

on

Call 614-892·2403 .. 814982-27eo.

1970 12x80 Mon•d'l mobile
home, 2 BR . Cell 614-38&amp;-

.LOOK, KID,

A1 36 C,.to Sol•. Southoldo.
wit. '"'- 1·304-176-41:10. Now

Aogw~

ml• fromn A thana, 12 mil•

r::~:t;~r S©~c(l}A-f&amp;£trs·
_ _ _ _....;.__ £d;ted br CLAY I . POLLAN

Newo
(J) SportoLook
ID Dearaosl Junior High Q
1D Dr.Who The Time
I!))

.•.,

The Daily Sentinel-Page 15'

Monsters

Klw•lkl 400. Good for Pll'tt.
*1&amp;. Coli 614- 892·8962.

~ IMI

WED.. DEC. 7

•I])

, ,... h-o..._ .....

1s'al Handl 250 4 Trex, h•dlr
tatd. Belt off.-. Clll114-44&amp;1 120 evenlflgt.

1.. ,

8

1:00 (l) Bonanza: Tlte Loot
Epltodeo

Antiques

Buy or Sell. RiY•ine Antlqua
1 12• E. Mllln Str-. Pomeroy.
Houn: M,T,W 101.m. to &amp;p.m.,
SUndlv 1 to lp.m. 114-192·

Television
Viewing
EVENING

Motorcycles

74

rMIW

from Pom«ov. 614-992· 15848.

6793.

stl~'f .

54 Misc. Merchandise
thiS C1OSet , S t rat eg1-•
1- - - - - - - NEW- I pc:. wood group- *391. ,
off•. 304-812·3127,
or uNd. 3
cally placed off the c hil. Sunil
llvlngroomou~ ... *199-01181. Wheelchair•
bedl with bedding- 1241. w"-'ad 81ec:tric 1cootn. C•M
17&amp;-2911
1:00
..
au......tl•
Cklod
ll(&gt;ort.
:10 ..
dren's room, is for battery ::':r~vn:~r;; ·A~~'l'i':!~~ 170. 9881.Moblty oolleet. 1·114- rI~~~~~~~~~~T~~~~~~~;;~
55 Building Supplies
63
Livestock
...
rtma-- •••·
~. v•• . - - -====~==--=::-::::-Storage. ,
USED· ...., ... -oom *SAY E* 8 "" mo11 a.WESTERN RED CEDAR
Auto Parts
76

Home in count.., w•h lind. 16

1972 Artlngton 12K&amp;o. Extra
rice. 14000. c.ll 114-268-

rM

•soo.

1289

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
OIIYoS1 .. 1lolllpolo.

", •.al\d

Houst for ~. &amp;300 mo. plus
..c. d.,.. 822 Jad!aun St.
)11m on. OH Coll614-388-9380.

Call 514-26

00, wiNA,~ ...

COO C.I .D. eng., PS. PB, elf
cond., power windowe and
tacks. IUto. C·CnMdltret'\1,.._
lion wor k.
304-87&amp;-

2826.

,our area. 1 -315-733-1064.

Qj \ti!I".~T

nn QMC 4Jt4 Slen-8 CIMIIC.

PM. 614-441-9348

REPOSSESSED GOVERN·

lHW 'ICil WILL &amp;; .. :SI~

3427 or 304-171-1108.

Oak bed wtth chett &amp; • - •·
.450 or bM1 ~-- Call lift• 7

Merd1a ml1s1~

MID 1100 QD ~ '100 ·
Oil ~OUR LAST 61F:rn0\'l ~

4x•.

304-6'71-141e

53

BORNL

1973Ch.wvS'uburben
414
enotn• lats of new c-rtt. mutt
•• •3000 or off•, 304-89~

Comc&gt;klte Nne of ca-ptt. oong~&gt;
t.. m. vlnyle .. d c•~Mt r~m~~ .
Corp01 In otock only. Vlnylo
•rtlng at U.ll .,.rd In ltodc
only. Frw ..tm.t••. no job to
&amp;arga or tmall. Two tooM.on;'.
122 Ylondltroot
Point pt_.,., W.Ve.

814-446-7444.

For lease

pooi-S.Je or Trade. 4 BR . house.
good loc.tioO\ Cal 304-8755.104.

1970 N....,

MOLLOHAN FUANirUAE

.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh~

Wednnclay. December 7, 1988

Vans 81 4 W .O.

73

Comm•cial Bulding for JNtt. 1- - - - - - - - - Pt. PleMint. catl 304-67S.

3 BA . hou•. dMuxe, AC. II

19U NII'W Moon 1:Z.50. 2 BR .
t19QO. C.ll 814-44&amp;-0390.

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Upp.- AiY.- Road
GoU~Io. Ohio

anyti,..

:&gt;;-o:;-::;:;;;:;;:r:=::;::--;;
32 Mobile Homes
fo S I
.
r 8e

Wednesday, o~mber 7, 1988

�'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Oec8mber 1, 1988

Singer Roy Orbison dies of heart attack

•

HENDERSONVILLE, Tenn
(UP!) - Singer Roy Orblson, a
rock ·n• roll pioneer who Elvis
Presley once called the "greatest
singer !n the world," died Tuesday night of a heart attack at a
suburban NashvUle hospital. He
was 52.
Orbison, who was known for
such hits as "Oh, Pretty Woman"
"Only the Lonely" and "Cry!n' ,"
suffered a massive cardiac ar·
rest and died at 11:54 p.m. CST at
Hendersonville Hospital after
being brought Into the fac1llty by
ambulance, hospital spokeswo·
man Melanie Lamb said. He had
a history of heart trol!ble dating
back more than nine years.
Orbison, a native of Vernon,
Texas, who lived In Henderson·
ville, was considered by many to
Be second only to Presley !n
influence on early rock 'n' roll
and he was a contemporary of
Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and
Carl Perkins at the legendary
Sun Records. He recently was
inducllid into the Rock 'n' Roll
Hall of Fame.
Orblson' s visual trademarks
were h!s black attire and sun·
glasses but it was his evocative,
&lt;tlmost spooky voice that will be
his legacy to rock 'n' ron.
His career had been boosted in
recent years as contemporary
rockers like Bruce Springsteen
cited his Influence. At the time of
his death, Orbison was .back on
the charts with a record he made
with a generation of rock super·
stars who grew up on his hits Bob Dylan, George Harrison,
Tom Petty and Jell Lynne. They
recorded an album under the
name the Traveling WlibU!J.;S
and it currently Is No. 8 on the
weekly Billboard magazine
ranklngs.
One of Orbison's last shows
was a 13-song, 65-mlnu U&gt; set
Saturday night at the Channel in
Boston In which he performed
hits like ," Only the Lonely,"
"Running Scared," "Crying,"
" Dream Baby" and "It's Over."
''In the process, Orblson
thrilled the near sel!-out crowd,"
the Boston Herald said In a
review. "He wasted no time In
es ta IJlishlng the fact that his
secret weapon, his voice, was In
fine shape.''
A Boston Globe reviewer
called Orbison the "premier pop
balladeer."
''The vocal crescendos are
unmatched, especially during
the mountain-climbing ballads,
situations that Induced awes·
truck smiles amongst the
crowd," the review said. "Orb!·
son Is the rare poa singer, the'one
where you year• for the ballads
and tolerate the rockers."
"There is absolutely no way to
leave a Roy Orbison show with·
aut sporting a wide grIn," the
Globe said.
Orblson, born Apr!l 23, 1936,
began his meteoric career like
Presley, country music legend
Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee
Lewis at Sun Records In Mem·
phis in the mid 1950s.
It was Cash who suggested that
Orbison take a demonstration
tape to Sam Phillips of Sun
-Records . That provided the im·
,petus for Orbison's main music
theme, "rockabilly" - a unique
combination or country music
and rock.
' Orblson's main Influences in
Texas were country and gospel
and he formed his own band
·while in high school. He went io
North Texas State where he met
Pat Boone who encouraged him
'to continue his music career.
Orbison once told an Inter·
viewer that he got Into rock 'n'
roll by accident. He said he was
performing at a dance on New
Year's Eve and someone asked
-for "Shake, Rattle and Roll." He
:Said he planned to do the song at
midnight but started too soon and
had to keep doing II over and
over. He said after that he began
ihcorporatlng .rock Into his act.
Orblson's music also had a
strong Influence on such stars as
Bruce Springsteen and Dylan,
and Presley once Introduced him
In a 1977 Las Vegas concert as the
" greatest singer !n the world."
His personal life was marred
by tragedies, which had an
influence on his music. His wife,
Claudette, ·was killed in a motor·
cycle accident In 1966, and two of
his three children died In a fire at
their suburban Nashville home
two years later.
After touring in the mid 1950s
with Cash, Lewis and Carl
Perkins, Orblson became a staff
writer for the Nashvllle publish·

lng firm of Acuff Rose and
penned "Claudette," named af·
ter his wife and a hit for the
Everly Brothers. At that time he
also wrote "Down The Line," a
hit for Lewis .
Orblson recorded "Only The
Lonely" for Monument Records·
In 1959 and the tune became a
smash success, selllng over a
million copies.
That hit was followed by a
number of hits, most of them
written by Orblson. They in·
eluded
"Runnl~g Scared,"
"Cryin' ,·•

"Candy

Man,"

"Dream Baby ," "In Dreams."
"Mean Woman Blues," "Blue
Bayou," "It's Over," and "Oh,
Pretty Woman," all In the early
1960s.

"Oh. Pretty Woman," which
Orbison enliyened wlth sedUC·
tlve growl, sold more than 7
mlllion units and by this time, he
was an International star and a
heavy Influence on the Beatles.
In 1963 he toured Britain with the
Beatles who at the time were less
well known than he was.
It was during this tour that
Orbtson developed a personal
trademark. He had forgotten his
reg\llar glasses which he left in
his seat In a plane. He had to use
his prescription sun glasses, and
the combination of dark hair,
dark suits and dark glasses on
stage was h!s reg\llar attire !rom
then on.
After his wife's death, Orblson
threw himself lnto a more

a

Ohi~ Lottery

•

17 more
days 'til

aggressive concert schedule but
neglected recording. He said at
the time that he had dllt!culty
writing, arranging and perform·
!ng, and the deaths of his children
sent him further Into reclusion.
Orblson was lnduce!l to return
to the studios In the early 1970s
but American fans had forgotten
him after his absence. But he
continued touring outside the
U.S. where he was remembered
as a legend.
He underwent open -heart
surgery !n 1979 but returned the
following year to limited success
with a country hit duet with
Emmylou Harris. "That Loving
You Feeling Again." That won
him a Grammy for best country
vocal performance by a duo.

Daily Number

874
Pick-4

Christmas
'

Super I..Allto ·

7-20-23-28-3242

Vacation Money

percent. Friday, variable
cloudiness, Highs In 30s,
Chance of snow 30

•
SINGER ROY ORBJSON,

December

2 Sections. 12 Pages 25 Cents

1988

A Multimedia Inc. New

•

Meigs general fund
Workers get pay hike

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT ·VAUGHAN'S
5o/o DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES (=:'!':)
MOST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD.OR DRIVER'S UCENSE

Middleport,. OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy~ &amp; Pearl St.•992-3411
A CARDINAL·AFFILATED SUPERMARKET

101
·-------·---------------~

Creamy or Super Chunk

Hickory Grove
Whole Hams

SKIPPY
BUTTER
••

Cl
I

Sunday when the band presents Its annual
Chrlshnas concert at 2: 30 p.m. In lhe Meigs High
School Gymnasium. There Is no admission
charge. .
·

NEW INSTRUM,NTS - Meigs High Scbool
band members, John TIIUs and John Anderson
display the new tuba and quads recently
purebased lor tbe band by the Meigs Local Board
of Educatlyn. Tbe Instruments will be used

23 Ohw schools are
nominated
for honor
I
.

COLUMBUS, Ohiq tUPI) -Westland High School in the
-State- Sc.hool Sup~rlntendent~ .. .SOuth·WesU&gt;rl) ~lty School Dis·
Franklin Walter sa!dr,:ec!nesday trict In Franklin County.
-Anderson High School in tJ!e
that 23 Ohio schools have been
nominated for consltleratlon In Forest HUlsLocalSchoolDlstrict
•
the U.S. Departmeni of Educa· In hamllton County.
tlon's 19118-89 Secondary School
-Finneytown Junior-Senior
Recognition Prograrrj.
High School in the Finneytown
The program ls designed to Local School District In Hamilton
honor outstanding middle, junior County.
high, and hli;h schooJs threugh·
-Mariemont High School In
out the country.
·
the Mariemont City School Dis·
A national review team will trlct in Hamilton County.
-Merry Middle School In the
study the recommend~llons, and
visit selected schools before the Cinclnnall City School District !n
nallonal winners are 1chose.n !n Hamilton County.
the spring.
_)
-Sycamore High School in the
Ohio schools nomln'lted are:
Sycamore Community City
-Ashland Hlgh School In the School District In HamUton
Ashland City School! District, ·county.
Ashland County.
.
-Findlay High School In the
-Wilmington High tSchool In
Findlay City School District in
the Wilmington City School Dls· Hancock County .
-Eastlake Middle School and
trlct, .Clinton County. I
-Chagrin Falls High School in
Eastlake North High School in
the Chagri.Jt Falls ~xempted
the Wllloughby-Eastlake City
School District In Lake County.
Vlllage School District, Cuya·
Ridge Junior High Schoolln the
hoga County,
-Cleveland School dt Science Mentor Exempted VIllage School
In the Cleveland CitY School Dis trlct in Lake County.
-Coldwater High Schoolln the
District In C~yahoga Cbunty.
-Westlake High School In the
Coldwater Exempted VIllage
Westlake City School I!&gt;lstrlct In
School District · In Mercer
Cuyahoga County.
County.
-Frank B. Willis Intermediate
-Revere High School In the
School in the · Delaw\ire City Revere Local School District In
School District in Delaware 1 Summit County.
-Perrysburg Junior High
County.
School In the Perrysburg Exemp-Johnson Park Middle School,
ted Vlllage School District In
Wood County.
,
Mifflin Alternative , Middle
-Mohawk Junior High School
School, and the MonrOe Tradi·
tlonal Middle Schooli In the · in the Mohawk Local School
District !n Wyandot County.
Columbus City School Dllstrlct In
Franklin County.

I

Save Up To 40' lb. (Sii~ed 11.49 lb.)
U.S. Gov t. Insp. •Pork Lom•S-7 lb. avg.
Ass't. Varieties• Bath

NORTHERN
TISSUE

RIB HALF
PORK LOIN

104

Liquid Dish•22 oz. Bottle

SUN LIGHT
DETERGENT

BUY ONE GET ONE

I

Loc~il

news briefs---.

Cou~tlwuse bJJices to close

Most of the offices \or the Meigs County Courthouse will be
closed Friday, from about 12:30 to 2 p.m., so that.employees
may attend the funerlll of Dana Cong(), who was the husband ol
Meigs County Recor~er Emmogene Congo. The recorder's
office w!ll be closed all afternoon on Friday.

Announce schedule change
A change has befn made In the schedule for giving
Immunization shots at the Meigs County Health Deparlment.
The last day thls month to receive immunizations will be Dec.
20, 9 to 11 a. m. and 1 [to 3 p. m. There Is no charge.
December 20 Is also the final day for receiving the flu vaccine
at the health department. The Ohlo Department of Health w!ll
not permit local personnel to give the nu vaccine past the last
week In December, acl:ordl!Jg,to Norma Torres, R.N., nursing
supervisor'.
,
~~

...'

EMS has five Wednesday calls
I.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentlnel Staff Writer
A five percent salary Increase
was granted all Meigs County
general fund employees Wednesday by the county commission·
ers. The increasl' in pay Is
retroactive for 13 pays from.July
1, 1988.
General fund employees include the courthouse, TB office,
EMS personnel, the county !nflr·
mary and the sheriff's depart·
ment. The Increase in salaries
will cost the county approxl·
mately $15,000 altogether for the
half year. Employees wlll re·
ceive one check for the 12 pays,
and the 13th pay, which is the last
pay of this year. wlll reflect the
Increase.
In January. new appropria·
lions and certifications will be
made to reflect the increase for
1989.
An important matter was re·
solved yesterday by the commls·
sloners when they made their
decision for Meigs County to
officially join with Hocking,
Athens and Vinton Counties in

forming a solid waste manag~
Earlier this year, the commisment district. The commission·
stoners passed a resolution of
ers passed a resolution that they
Intent to join the solid waste
would join with Hocking, Athens
management district with the
and Vinton Counties In the solid
above mentioned counties. Yes·
wastedlstrlct. and with any other
terday's resolution makes offl·
adjoining counties which might
cial Meigs County's inclusion in
wlsh to join the said district .
the district.
Also, as part of the resolution,
· The commissioners · also conthe commtssioners authorized ·dueled the following other bus!Athens County to act on their
ness matters during yesterday's
behalf in hiring a consultant to
session.
complete necessary paperwork
-Authorized Clerk Mary Hob·
to comply with the terms and
stetter to write a letter of
conditions of House Bill 592.
endorsement for possible grant
House Blll 592 is the new state funds to promote travel and
law which mandates that every
toulsm In the county, as re·
county In the state will form a
quested' in a letter from Mary
solld waste management dls·
Po.well. The Pomeroy Area
trlct, or become a part of a joint
Chamber of Commerce, the
district. Districts must have a
Meigs County Regional Planning•
population of at least 120,000, Commission and the Meigs
which Is why smaller counties
County Office of Development,
must jo(n together to meet the are working together to seek a
population requirement.
portion. of travel and tourism
The establishment of solid monies from the Ohio Depart·
waste districts ls for the purpose ment of Development, according
of solid waste management, to Powell's letter .
-Authorized the county audl·
Including waste reduction. recy·
cling, reuse and mlnlmizalion of tor to establish a new line Item
solid waste.
Continued on page 12

Earthquake cuts · Gorbachev's visit short
MOSCOW tUPl)-'- Adevastat·
ing earthquak,e that rocked the
Soviet republic of Armenia and
parts of eastern Turkey kllled
tll.,ousands of people and forced
President Mikhail Gorbachev to
cut short his visit to lhe United
States Thursday.
A Soviet newspaper Thursday
repor.ted "tens of thousands" of
casualties from the Wednesday
quake, which Soviet olflclals said
registered 8 on .t he Richter scale,
making It capable of tremendous
damage. It was recorded ai
between 6.5 and 6.9 by U.S.
monitors and was the strongest
temblor to jolt the Soviet-Turkish
border region In 80 years.
Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze· an ·
nounced eady Thursday in New
York that Gorblichev would
return to Moscow later !n the day
to take a personal role In
directing relief efforts.
"Preliminary data indicate
that In the Armenia Republic,
thousands of people have died,"
Shevardnadze told a surprise
news conference at the Soviet
mission to the United Nations.
Shevardnadze said Soviet man·
!tors registered the temblor at 8
on the Richter scale, and that
there was "a lot of destruction."
He described the earthquake as
"a terrible tragedy not only lor'
Armenia but for all the people of
the Soviet Union."
Gorbachev was to have stayed
In the United States untn Friday,
when he was ·scheduled to go to
Cuba. He also was to have visited
Britain on the way back to
Moscow.
The official Komsomolskaya
Pravda newspaper said Thurs·
day that preliminary estimates
Indicated there were "tens of
thousands" of casualties.

The newspaper sa)d Its repor·
ters visited the devastated Ar·
menlan clty of Lenlnakan six
hours after the q~ke struck
Wednesday and found much of
the city leveled.
"Practically all the buUdlngs
taller than nine stories were
destroyed as well as many
five-story buildings," the news·
paper sald.
The quake struck during the
morning while most children
were In school, and many class·
rooms were burled.
"More than 50 lillie corpses of
schoolchlldren have been taken
from the ruins," the newspaper
said. "Some chlldren, amaz·
lngly, survived."
Factories full of workers col·
·lapsed, and some buildings,
Including hotels, were ~rnlng,
the paper said.

Soviet officials and authorities
In neighboring Turkey, which
also was hlt by the quake, said
the death toll would soar Into the
thousands. But the full extent of
the damage would not be known
until communications were res·
tored and rescue teams were
able to reach affected areas, they
said.
"Much devastation a~Jd casual·
ties are reported from several
districts of Armenia. Particular
damage was caused to the towns
of Lenlnakan, Klrovakan, and
several district localities," Tass
said.
· Fllm of the devastation broad·
cast by Soviet television showed
people searching through the
rubble of collapsed buildings.
Huge columns of concrete and
sU&gt;el were twisted and broken
like matchsticks by the powerful

quake.
"By preliminary estimates,
thousands of people have been
left homeless, and there have
been deaths and Injuries,'' Sovjet
television reported from Klrovokan, Armenta's third-largest city
with 165,000 people.
Government spokesman Va·
dim Perfllyev and · Tass said
Lenlnakan, Armenia's second·
largest city with 228,000 people,
suffered even greater damage
and casual ties than Kirovokan.
Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennadl Geraslmov,
also In New York, said the quake
"was discussed over lunch"
Wednesday by Gorbachev and
President Reagan. "There has
been considerable loss of llfe,"
Gerasimov sald. "There Is even a
small village there that has
Continued on page 12

Meigs County to receive $21,886
for area emergency food progr0:ms
Meigs County has been chosen
to receive $21,886 to supplement
emergency food and shelter
programs In the area.
The select Ion was made by a
National Board made up of
affiliates of national voluntary
organizations and chaired by the
Federal Emergency Manage·
ment Agency (FEMA). United
Way of America wUI provide the
administrative staff and function
as fiscal agent. The Board was
charged to distribute funds appropriated by Congress to help
expand the capacity of food and
shelter programs In high-need
areas around the country.
A Local Board made up of

various Community Leaders will
determine how the funds
awarded to Meigs County are to
be distributed amoJig the emer·
gency food and shelter programs
run by local service organiza·
lions In the area. The Local
Board Is responsible for recom·
mending agencies to receive
these funds and any additional
funds available under this phase
of the program.
Under the terms of the grant
from the National Board, local
governmental or private volun·
tary organizations chosen to
receive funds must: 1) be non·
prllflt, 2) have an accounting
system and conduct an annual
audit, 3) practice nondlscrim!na·

tlon, 4) have demonstrated the
capab111ty to deliver emergency
food and/ or shelter programs,
and 5) If they('are a private
voluntary organization, they
should have a voluntary board:·
Qualifying organizations are
urged to apply.
Meigs County has distributed
Emergency Food and Shelter
funds previously with the Meigs·
Gallla C.A.A. participating. This
agency was responsible for providing 9,638 meals of lodging.
Futher information· on the
program may be obtained by
contacting: Sidney Edwards, Executive Director, Melgs-Gallia
C.A.A. at 992·6620.

Phone deregulation bill on legislature agenda

I

WANT ADS bring

Mostly cloudy, low In mid
20s lonlght. Chance of snow 40

2660

.

Meigs County Emer1!fncy Medical Services reports five calls
Wednesday; .Olive Tow)lshlp Flre .Department at 5:46a.m. to a
brush fire on on State :Route 124; Pomeroy at 2:43p.m. to New
Lima Road lor James Spangler to VeteransMemo.rlal Hospital;
Co~lnued on page 12

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
telephone deregulation bill, hotly
opposed by residential consumer
groups, will be the main Item of
business Thursday as the Ohio
General Assembly meets for Its
last day of the year.
Lawmakers will put the wraps
on the 117th biennial session and
go home until Jan. 3, when the
1989-90 session begins.
•
The Senate is tomeetatlOa.m.
and the House at 10: 30 a.m.
Most of the action will be In the
House, which grew impatient on
the "final" day last month and
adjourned · before the Senate
completed action on several
bills. The House must now decide
whether to agree with the Senate
versions of those b11ls.
One such bill gives the Public
Utilities Commission the author·
lty to use alternative methods of
setting telephone rates Instead of

using the traditional method
based on a company's costs and
rate of return.
'The PUCO said telecommunl·
cations technology Is moving so
rapidly that the free market
must be allowed to determine the
rates of sophisticated business
systems. But In a monopoly
s ltuation, the PUCO would be
allowed to use an alternative
method of ratemaklng.
The Ohio Consumers' Counsel
has· complained that the bill
permits the telephone company
to veto any alternative rate
method for basic local telephone
exchangll service.
Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley said the legislation is
too vague and will open the door
to rate Increases for consumers.
"We would not have presented
'a bill that would raise local
exchange rates automatically,"

responded Thomas Chema,
chairman of the PUCO. "If we do
nothing and rest upon the status
quo, we will g\larantee pressure
(from telephone companies) to
raise rates.
"This bill Is in the best
Interests of the consumer both In
the sllort term and In the long
run,'' said Chern a.
The Ohio Public Interest Cam,
palgn joined the fray Wednes·
day, asking Gov. Richard Celeste
to veto the bill If It reaches his
des!\.
Ira Arlook, execu live director
of the OPIC, said the bill "Is
destined to spawn a new era of
utUity abuses that will have to be
cleaned up by some future
'reform PUCO. "'
Spratley said the matU&gt;r d~
serves further study In the next
session of the Legislature, and
challenged sponsors to spell out
\

alternative ratemaking
methods.
,
Chema said 1he current bill
"elljoys broad support" and
warned that If a new blll were
introduced next session "it would
be a Christmas tree with ornaments on It for everyone."
Rep. Dean Conley. ::J.
Columbus, chief sponsor of 1he'
bill, said It is "absolutely and
totally ludicrous" that the bill
would guarantee higher tele·
phone rates. "Clearly It has the
potential to result In lower
rates," he said.
The House also plans to take up
Senate amendments to Hous~
passed bills expanding the options for lnves.tments by the state
treasurer, providing for special
borrowing in economically depressed areas, and curbing
abuse of the elderly and mentally
Impaired.

"

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