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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.

"

�•
Thursday, December 8, 1988

Commentary
DEVOTED TO THE INTEKFSTS OF THE MEIG9-MASON AREA

~~
S!m~ ~ .....
~v

-.-.,..,.....,.d.""'

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PA'J' WHITEHEAD
Aulatant Pt~bllsher/CootroUer

Thu111day, December 8, 1988

By United Press Inlernatlonal
Today Is Thursday, Dec. 8, the 343rd day of 1988 with 23to follow.
The moon Is new .
·
The morning star Is Venus.
The evening stars are Mercuri. Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on thls date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include Ell Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin, In 1765, General
Motors founder William Durant In 1861, Finnish composer Jean
Slbellus In 1865, Mexican muralist Diego Rivera In 1886, humorist and
artist James Thurber In 1894, actors Lee J. Cobb In 1911 and
Maximilian Sctiellln 1930 (age 58), entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. In
1925 (age li3), comedian Flip Wilson In 1933 (age 55), Irish flutist
James Galway In 1939 (age 49), rock musician Jim Morrison ln 1943,
and actress Kim Bas-Inger In 1953 (age 35) .

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

On this date ln history: .
In 1886, delegates from 25 unions founded the American Federation
of Labor, forerunner of the modern AFL-CIO, ln Columbus, Ohio.
In 1941. the United States, Britain and Australia declared war on .
Japan. ·
In 1949, the Chinese Nationalist government, defeated by the
communists; retreated from the mainland to the Island of Taiwan.

A MEMBER of The United Presslnternatlonal,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thrt.n JOO words

long. Alllettttrsare subJect toedltlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unslped letters will be publlshed. Letters shoukl be In

good taste, addrHslng Issues. not persooalltles.

Buy any Jewel mont family ring
and we'll give you this decorative.
hand carved. Italian-made Alabaster
jewelry case. ABSOLUTELY FREEl

Jack Anderson
a_nd__::J~os. .ep_h----!Sp!.......;.ea_r
...

Army gtlDg•hO OVer fuse. ____
WASHINGTON- The Army Is
determined to get Its hands on
some newfangled electronic artUlery fuses, even If the fuses
don' t work and even If Congress
doesn't want to pay for them. ·
Before the end of It's · last
session, Congress quietly stalled
the Army's efforts to put the
fuses Into production b&gt; ordering
the Army to walt until the
lawmakers have all the facts.
·T he decision outraged some
Army brass who think the fuse Is
the best thing since airconditioned limos. With a
Congress-be-damned attitude,
the brass certified the fuse for
field use anyway. A Pentagon
source told us the fuse was
certified despite reservations
!rom the Army's own weapons
analysts because the Army
feared losing funding for the $23
mUilon prqject. Congress has
already appropriated the money
and the Army didn't want to let
· the project sUp Into the 1989
budget and take the chance that
Congress, on secon!l glance.
woold cancel the funding.
We reported last summer that
at a weapons testing ground near
Yuma, Ariz., the new electronic
fuse showed a penchant for
exploding Its shells as they

passed through storm clouds. production before the GAO finAp!IBrently the fuse may only Ishes Its cost analysis.
During the next five years, the
live up to Its billing If a war Is
fought on clear, sunny days.
new fuse would cost taxpayers
The Army Wants the electronic $50 million for capabllltles·-that
fuse to replace the 10-year-old the old mechanical fuse already
mechanical model. The new offers, Thorklldsen told the GAO
fuses are designed to detonate In a private meeting.
The fuse may be a classic
artlllery shells on up to 200second flights behind Warsaw example of how the Pentagon
Pact lines. In tests, they have wastes tax dollars - frittering
exploded as early as four seconds away tile money on low profile,
Into flight.
overpriced projects that don't
Congress has never been as get much scrutiny.
gung-ho about the fuse as the
In this case, the Army Is
Ariny. but members of Congress resorting to Band-aids. Twentyare having a hard time getting five fuses were tested In stormy
answers to. their questions. The weather last AuiUst and 14 of
House Defense Appropriations · them exploded early. The Army
Subcommittee asked for a cost· put a cap on part of the fuse and
benefit study on the fuse last fired another 25 rounds. None of
December, but never ' got it. In them misfired. so the Army
September, a joint House- and
pronounced the fuse a success.
Senate conference committee
Piers Wood, a former Army
requested an Investigation bY the field artillery lieutenant colonel,
General Accounting Office to told our associate Jim Lynch that
determine whether the fuse was · one batalllon could fire off more
a good buy.
than 25 rounds In the first
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., two-and-a-half minute's of a war.
Independently wrote the Army a Wood thinks the Army should fire
letter asking for a breakdown of as many as 10,000 test rounds
the advantages of the fuse.
before It feels comfortable
Ray Thorklldsen, a former launching mortars over the
Pentagon staff specialist In am- heads of U.S. troops. An Army
munition, thinks the Amry will spokesman said another 300 test
try to march the ·fuse Into rounds are. planned.

·
b

•

In addition to fizzling on the
battle field, the fuse does not
even meet the original specifications. The Army originally
stressed that the electronic fuse
was needed because, unlike the
existing fuse, a soldier could
activate It from a safe distance.
The catch Is that the Army
decided not to equip the howItzers that would be fitted wlth
the fuse, with remote equipment.

1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY
4 Door, auto., air, cruise.

STOP IN AND
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Robert

Cities to bum gar age---..-,-,---LL..W!~al~te~rs
ISSAQUAH, Wash. (NEA)
As recently as the summer of
1986. garbage from Seattle and
Its suburbs was dumped at the
Cedar Hills Landfill south of here
and no effort was made to Isolate
u · from the . surrounding
environment.
Insecticides, weed killers,
drain cleaners, antifreeze,
paints, varnishes, stains, solvents and acids were among tlie
potentially lethal household
wastes hauled to Cedar Hills and
allowedtoleachlntothesoll, then ·
contaminate groundwater and
surface streams. On one occa·
slon, an entire shiP.Ioad of rotten
fish was dumped at the landfill.
Those conditions were hardly
unique. "Every single landfill In
the region was substandard In
1980," says Seattle attorney
Roger M. Leed, an authority on
litigation affecting solid waste
disposal.
Today, as a result of pressure
\ from Leed and concerned cit!-

/ Letters to

zens, Cedar Hills Is very different. Before using any portion of
the 920-acre site for garbage
disposal, the King County Public
Works Department conducts
elaborate site preparation work.
After excavating to a depth of
80 feet, a two-foot thick layer of
Impermeable clay Is placed
along the bottom and sides of the
pit. Atop the clay Is a sheet of
thick, Impenetrable plastic .
Above the plastic liner Is a
drainage blanket that contains a
network of pipes to collect liquid
wastes, which are treated before
being deposited In the county's
sewer system.
Equally .sophisticated landfills
have been built or are planned In
other communities as the nation
.struggles to dispose of a growing
refuse heap In an environmentally sound fashion.
The average person throws
away 3.5· pounds of solid waste
every day .. That waste Is composed of 35 paper and cardboard,

the editor
Dear Editor:
The fall festival was the first
money-making project that the
newly elected Rutland PTO ofllcers undertook.
Thanks to the donations from
the businesses In Rutland, Middleport &amp; Pomeroy plus the help
from-many volunteers the festival proved to be a success .
The Rutland PTO o!flcers wish
to thank all those who helped
make It a success.
Thank You,
Teresa Patterson-Pres.
Sandy Hysell-V Pres.
Lilly Kennedy-Sec.
Valorle Sawyer-Treas.

1986 rFORD MUSTANG
LX 2 DOOR
Power doer lOcks, cruise
control, AM-FM cassette, one
owner.

Indiana defeated Portland 129120. Dallas held off Seat lie 102-98,
Ulah beat Washington 111-94 and
the Los Angeles Lakers topped
Phoen 1x 125-111.
Hawks 106, Celtlcs 103
AI Boston. Moses Malone
scored 27 points and sealed the
game with three free throws In
the !Ina! 10 seconds. Glenn
Rivers added 16 points for
Allanta and Wilklnsflnlshedwlth
14. Robert Parish Jed th\' Celtlcs
with 29 points, followed by Kevin
MrHaie wllh 23 and Brad Lohaus
;..ll h 18.
.
76ers 134, Nuggets 109
At Philadelphia, Charles Barkley scored 29 points and Mike
Gm inskf added 19 to lead Ihe
76ers. Philadelphia , which set a
dub record with 45 assists,
ou1scored Denver 20-2 in a lhird
4uarter burst to go ahead 104-71.
The Nuggets never came closer
lhan 21 points In lhe fourth
quarter.
Pistons 102, Bulls 89
AI Auburn Hills, Mich. , Adrian
Danliey scored 14 of his 31 points
in lhe fourth quarter and Islah
Thomas llnlshed with 25 points .
Sam Vincent led Chicago with 20
points and Michael Jordan finIshed with 18. Jordan ended his
string of 72 consecutive games of
20 poinls or more, lhe third
longest string In NBA history .
Pacers 1:19, Trail Blazers 120
At Indlanapolls, Chuck Person
scored 27 points and Wayman
Tisdale added 24 as Indiana took
its firs t vlct~ry over the Tra il
Blazers in five seasons. The Trail
Blazers had won nine straight
games against the Pacers. Clyde

Dre.&lt;ler scored 35 points and
Kevin Duckworth added .32 for
Portland.
Mavericks 102, So nics 98
At Dallas, Derek Harper's
three-point shol with 1:48- re·
rna inlng pul Dallas In front for
good and the Mavericks held
Seattle scoreless fo r 3:39 down
the stretch. A basket by Derrick

ton added 18 points and 20 assists
as the Jazz took lheir ninth
straighl home victory. Bernard
King led Washington wilh 23
points and John Williams had 21.
Darrell Walker missed all 9
attempls from the floor fpr the
Bullets.
Lakers 12~. Suns Ill

McKey gave Seal lie a 96-91 lead
with 4:07 to play and I he Sanies
could not score again until 28
seconds remained . Dallas ran oil
nine straight points during that
time .

Jazz 111, BuUets 94 ·
At Salt Lak e City, Karl Malone
scored 34 points and John Stock-

At Inglewood. Cali! ., Byron
Scot I scored 28 points and Magic
Johnson registered his fourth
triple-double of the season _to lift
the Lakers to their sixth straight
victory . Tom Chambers scored
23 _poinl s for the Suns. who had a
four -game winning st reak
snapped.

Cleveland may activate ·S laughter
The risk involves the Browns'
using their lasl ol four regularseason roster moves to activate
Slaughter rather than wait to see
whether the Dolphin game'produces any 'serious Injuries.
Bernie Kosar , Cleveland's
starting quarterback. mlssed six
weeks with an elbow injury and
has been punished lately by
opposing pass rushes lttat have
sacked him 19 times in the last
lour games.. Gary Danielson and
Mike Pagel. who started the
season as Kosar's backups. are
on injured reserve with a brokl?n
a nkle and a separateq shoulder.
respectively. Pagel ~as been
lhrowlng wllho4t significa nt
discomfort.
II Slaughler is aclivated and
Kosar is subsequently injured,
the 9-5 Browns could not activate
' Pagel without first exposing him
to waivers. Don Strock. who
played in two games between's .
Pagel's in_jury and Kosar's return. now Is the backup quarter . back. Strock played 14 seasons
with Miami, 5·9, before signing
wilti Cleveland Sept. 12.
"If Webster Slaughter's avail-

BEREA, Ohio iUPI) - The
Cleveland Browns may take a
calcu la ted rlsk and aciivatewlde
receiver Webster Sl•ughter for
next Monday night's game at
Miami.

Browns Coach Marty Scho rtenheimer said Slaughter, who
broke his left forearm Oct. 16
against Philadelphia, would
work out lhls week and be
eva lua ted 11 by team physician
John Bergr.Jd .
Bergfeld ls expecled 10 X-ray
-Slaughter's arm as parr of the
examination and will provide Ihe
sole determination ol lhe wideout's stat us, Scholtenhelmer
said Monday. The coach added
that Slaughter. who was le ading
lhe Browns Wilh 309 recetving
yards and two touchow ns on 22
receptions at the lime of his
Injury. would not start but cou ld
play signiflcan tly.
"I feel pretty good." Slaughter
said Monday. "!don't have any
problems catching the ball. and I
don't think I he layoff would hurt
me. We'lljusthavetosee. Reggie
(Langhorne) has been doing I he
_job, but I'd like to play , sure."

Valvollne10W30
Motor Oil
• Llml112

able, I would like him to be there
for the Miami game." said
Schotlenheimer. "He would
wear a protective splinl. He ha s
run patterns and caught the ball.
and has had no problems.
"Of course. he would have to
' participate fully In the drills . and
the decision will . be Dr .
Bergfeld's."
Schottenheimer said he has

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52 Weeks ..... ............................ 175..40

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BAGS Ill-pointer - Robblo&gt;
.Calaway, 14, Tuppers Plains,
'Was among the succeosfu I
deer hunters lhls gun season.
Robbie is pictured wlth a 10
point buck where he bas-ged In
Meigs County on Saturday,
the final day ofthe gun season.

~

LINCOLN 225 AMP AC WELDER

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~

confidence in Strock's ability to
take over for Kosar . II needed .
" If something were to happen
to Bernie, Strock would work in
th ai (slartlng) role, " said the
coach. · 'We' d have to find
another quarlerba ck. ·(Rookie)
Steve Slayden ion a special
Injured list with a s1omach
muscle pull) could come back
and play Ihis year.

1981 BliCK SKYlARK

ONLY

CORRECTION
THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP AD
THAT APPEARED IN THE
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
30TH, SENTINEL EDITION
SHOULD NOT HAVE HAD
PRICES INSERTED UNDER
RUSSELL STOVER CANDY.

By JEFF SHA.IN
UPI Spurts Writer
The Mlaml Heat blew their
bj!!&lt;l opportunlly of the year to
wln a game, and may not get
anothei chance for a couple of
WP&lt;:kS.
·By that lime, the Heat likely
·,\(Ill hav(' broken the NBA mafl(
tgi- most .losses to start a season
a nd be on Its way to ecllpslng the
femrd fen mos1 consecu tl v&lt;'
losses.
The Heat were outscored 23 5
ve1 a span of 6: 20 Wednesd~)
night, blowing an 11-point le ad in
, ufferlng a 96-94 loss to lhP
'iacramento Kings .
" I thought that we should have
won," Miami guard Rory 'Spar
row said. "We had prepared
ourselves, set the table and
cooked all the food , then lei
someone else come !nand eat it. ..
Miami, 0-14, would equal the
NBA record ol 15 losses to begin
the season with a loss F1 iday
night at home 10 Denve1. The
Heat then embarks on a four·
game road trip, and going
winless would bring them wllhln
one game of tying the league
mark for most consecutive losses
within one season. The Philadelphia 76ers lost 20 straight games
!rom Jan. 9 to Feb. 11, 1973.
: The NBA record for conseru
live losses Is 24, sel by lhe
Cleveland Cavaliers over two
seasons. The Cavallers lost thei r
le,sl 19 games In 19.81-82. then
a&lt;lded fiv e more losses at the
tieglnning of the 1982-83 seasun
· "The win will come ," Mtarm
Coach Ron Rothsleln said. "The
bl!(gest thing was the turnovers.
"~:hey gol easy transition ho 0ps
off of them . They picked up lheir
defense and we got sloppy."
Thl" Heat led Sacramento 80-69
with 9:58 remaining, but turned
the bali over on lour consecutive
possessions lo 'park a Sacramenlo comeback that eventually
,gave the Kings a 92-85 lead with
3:38 left.
Miami rallied to tiP lhe score
94-94 on a Kevin Edwards free
throw with 20 second~ left. but
Sacramento's Kenny Smith sank
two free lhrows with 4 second•
lett to keep lhe Heal winless.
"It' s a sigh of reliEif," Smith
said. "As a team. we needed a
confidencE' builder. II we lost, it
would have been public notice
that we los t Ihe game."
. Sacramenlo's Derek Smith led
all seorers with 21 points. Jon
Sundvold led Miami with 15
points and Selkaly had 14_polnts
and·ll rebounds.
•
In other NBA aclion, Atlanla
slipped by Boston 106-103, Philadelphia rouled Denver 134-109,
Detroit thrashed Chicago 102-89,

I

20 percent yard waste, 9 percent
food, 9 percent metal, 8 percent
glass, 7 percent plastic and 12
percent other materials.
Until now, 80 percent of all
garbage has been dumped In
landfills while 10 percent has
been Incinerated and another 10
percent has been recycled. That
pattern Is changing, however,
because existing landfills are
being rapidly filled and new sites
are Increasingly difficult to find.
Some communities have
shilled to an Incineration method
known as "trash to steam" or
''waste to energy" because the
heat generated by the burning
~arbage Is used to produce
'lectrlclty.
Modern Incineration utUizes
high-technology furnaces that
reduce garbage volume by 90
percent and weight by 70percent.
More than 100 plants are operational and twlce that number are
being planned.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Miami Heat drops 14th straight NBA encounter, 96-94

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
P~y-Middleport. Ohio .

Today in history

The Daily Sentinel.

J

Gallipolis
!09 Upper River Road

(614)446-4103

�•
•

~

Page- 4 - Th a D81·1y Sent1n
· e1

Thursday. December B. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Oh10

Thursday, December 8, 1988

Dis_trict crown holder
visits Rio on Saturday
Defending District 22 champion Defiance will be out for a win
Saturday when It enters Lyne
Center to face the Rio Grande
Redmen, ·their rivals for the
district crown last March.
Marv Hohenberger's club was
3-3 entering action this week. and
was to play at Urbana Wednesday night. The Redmen are 7-2
following a 75-69 loss to Shawnee
State, the r ising power on the
district scene.
The Yellow Jackets were 24-6
and the Redmen 27-7 when they
battled it out at Rio last March 10
I&lt;! represent 'the district In the
NAIA Nationals. Led by senior
Dennis Bostelman, who averaged 24 points a game at the time.
Defiance stormed the Redmen
offense for a comfortable halflime lead. But the Redmeri
· rallied in the second period to cut
Defiance's victory to 81-80. Defiance was subsequently defeated 78-62 by the College of
Charleston (S.C.) at the
nattona)s.
Earlier in the season, Rio had
fallen to the Yellow Jackets 80· 72
on the road .

'fop 20

Notre Dame America's No. I team
' By Maj. Amos B Hoople
Peerless Prophet
;: J;:gad, friends! Now we can look
.jorward to a national champion·
·&lt;!hip game between the only two
majojr college football teams who
are stUI unbeaten.
• The Hoople Forecast mnks No-tre Dame (11-0) as the No. 1 team
:Qf 1988 and West Virgihnia (11-0 )
::as No.3. They will meet in the Fl·
..-sta Bowl on Jan. 2.
- In our pre-season selections we
pegged Notre Dameas No._8, but
warned: " If option QB Tony Rice
.:Can complete e nough passes to
::I&lt;eep the defenses honest," the
·Fighti ng Iris h can challenge for
:the top spot.
·
• The nimble-footed Rice dld just
"that. He had his best two outings in
victories over the defendlng national champion, Miami, our choice
now for the No. 2 spot, and the Pac:::w champion, Southern California,
-our choice for NO. 6.
: So, the Fighting Irish , under
"coach Lou Holtz, truly deserve to
be No. 1. They 're led by three
World Almanac All-Americans:
offensive ta ckle Andy Heck, nose
-guard Chris Zorich and llne: backer Michael Stonebreaker.
·Another N.D. defensive star,
:Frank Starns, was named to the

cans: RB Cleveland Gary, OT
,!ohn O'Neill, DE Bill Hawkins and
tB Rod Carter.
.
West Virginia's Mountaineers,
who were 19th in our pre-season selections, kept moving up through
the year. Late-season victories
over traditional foe-S Penn State,
Rutgers and Syracuse carried
coach Don Nehlen's team to the
No. 3 rating. Their defense is anchored by 'two World Almanac AllAmericans:
linebacker Chris
Haering and safety Bo Orlando.
Last August, Florida State was
just about evei'Yone's selection for
the top spot. An embarrassing 31-0
defeat at the hands of Miami in the
season opener sent their stock
plummeting. But the No. 4 Seminoles regrouped under coach
Bobby Bowden and won their next
10 games, outscoring foes by 473
points to 134. Florida State has a
pair of World Almanac All-Americans: offensive tackle Pat Tomberllnand defensive back Delon
Sanders.
No. 5 Nebraska, played 12 ·
games and won 11, including the
Kickoff Classic over Texas A&amp;M .
The Cornhuskers' lone loss was
to UCLA. Coach Tom Osborne
has to make do with only one
World Almanac All-American:
DE Broderick Thomas. ·
Southern Cal, led by coach
Larry·Smith, had a big year. But
USC's 14-game regular-season
winning
streak, the nation' s
grab a 36-34 lead with 21 seconds
longest,
was
ended by Notre
!eft in the first half but Jamerson
Dame
In
their
final
contest. The
hit two free throws with 9 seconds
NO.6
Trojans
(10-1)
placed three
remaining to tie the score 36-36 at
players
on
the
World
Almanac
halftime.
All-American
team:
quarterThe score remained close until
the Bobcats took charge, grab- back Rodney Peete, wide rebing a 73-61 lead with 5:34 left in ceiver Eric Affholter, and safety
the game. The visitors could get Mark Carrier.
No. 7 Aubum (10-1). co-champ
no closer than 7 points the rest of
with
Louisiana
State in the
the way.
Sotltheastern
Conference,
is a
The Bobcats, hitting 7 of 11
solid
club
both
ways.
Coach
Pat
three-point goals, tied a school
Dye's
troops
were
deleated
by
record for most three-pointers
LSU,
7-6.
But
.
t
hey'll
be
worthy
opset last season.
ponent for Florida State in the SuDarrin Hale paced Morehead gar
Bowl.
State with 30 points .
Coached by Ken Hatfield, Arkansas (10-1) won grudging ro:ts ' ' peel on Its way to the Southwes1 tern Conference title. But the No.
named the AFC's Offensive and 8 Razorbacks proved they deserved a high rating when they
befensive Players of the Week.
Wide receiver Ricky Sanders of nf'arly upset the Miami Hurrithe ·washington Redsklns and canes. That year-end toss in MI cornerback Carl Lee and line- ami, 18-16, was a heart-breaker.
Now the Razorbacks will
backer Jesse Solomon ol the
Minnesota Vikings are the NFC play the No. 9 UCLA Bruins in the
Offensive and Defensive Players Cotton Bowl. The Bruins (9-2),
of the Week. ... Kansas State behind QB Troy Aikman, had the
named Del Miller to become its top spot for several weeks in midfootball recruiting coordinator. season. But coach Terry DonaHe held a similar post atiowa .... hue's team wound up second in
The Los _Angeles Raiders have the tough PAC-10.
If No. 10 Michigan (8-2-1) is
been sued by an insurance
company claiming it is not
required to pay the team' s legal
defense for demolition of seats in
the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Transco Syndicate No. 1 •
Ltd. of -Illinois has asked a
Edward
Superior Court judge to release
them from defending a suit filed
by the Coliseum commission. .
Horse ~acing
Man o' War has been selected
Pediatrics &amp;
as the greatest thoroughbred of
Internal Medicine
the century by a panel of national
turf writers polled by Racing
Action, the weekly thoroughbred
Suite 12
racing journal. Man o' War won
Pleasant Valley Hospital
· 20 ol 21 races from 1919-20,los!ng
Medical Office Building
only to the aptly named Upset in
the Sanford Stakes at Saratoga.
Valley Drive
SecretarIat finished second and
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550
Citation third.
second squad at end.
Here are the Hoople Top 20 college football teams of 1988 (ahd
their bowl assignments):
1. NOTRE DAME (Fiesta )
2. MIAMI (Orange)
3. WEST VIRGINIA (Fiesta}
4. FLORIDA STATE (Sugar)
5. NEBRASKA (Orange)
6. SOUTHERN CAL (Rose)
7. AUBURN (Sugr)
8. ARKANSAS (Cotton)
9. UCLA (Cotton)
10. MICHIGAN (Rose)
11. CLEMSON (Citrus)
12. OKLAHOMA (Citrus)
13. OKLAHOMA STATE
(Holiday)
14. HOUSTON !Aloha)
15. WYOMING (Holiday)
16. GEORGIA (Gator)
17. SYRACUSE
(Hall of Fame)
18. WASHINGTON STATE
(Aloha)
19. Il!U (Hall of Fame)
20. COLORADO (Freedom)
No. 2 Miami's only ·loss in 10
games this season was to Notre
Dame, 31-30. Coach Jimmy Johnson has a talented squad, which
moves behind QB Steve Walsh.
The Hurricanes have four World
Almanac second-team All-Ameri-

·ou dom~s Morehead State
ATHENS, Ohio iUPl) -Paul ,
:Graham scored 29 points and
: Dave J~merso n added ,26 Wed: nesday night, leadi ng Ohio Uni-versity to an 87-72 lriumph over
' Morehead State.
Lorenzo Brva nt contributed 13
. points to help the Bobcats e\·en
· their record at 2-2. Morehead
: sta te also is 2-2.
: : More head State sco req the
· tn·st five poin ts of the game but
: the Bo b~ats came back to go in
front 8-7 and increased their
~dvantage to 21-12 wi th 11: 38 left
In the firs t half.
··· The visitors fo ught back to

l..- -·.

SVAC STANDINGS
(All games)
TEAM
W L p
North Gallia ........ 3 1 286
Eastern ............... 2 1 248
Southwestern ..... .. 2 1 215
Oak Hill .............. 2 1 191
Hannan Trace ..... 2 3 327
Southern .... .. .-....... 1 2 217
Kyger.CrceK ........ o 3 186
Symme-S Valley . .. 0 4 222

OP
262
252
210
193
303
223
2.35
307

(SVAC games)
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Eastern ............ 2 0 175 162
Oak Hill ........... 2· 0 136 108
Southern ........... ) I 165 15£
North Gallia .... J 1 · 147 131
Hannan Trace. J 1 139 127
Southwestern .... ) 1 127 135
Symmes Valley 0 2 108 140
Kyger Creek ..... O 2 112 150
TOTALS ........... 8 8 1109 1109
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L
Soulhern ............ .. 2 0
North Gallia ....... .2 0
Hannan Trace .. .,.2 0
Symmes Valley ... 1 1
Oak Hill .............. 1 1
Eastern .. ............. 0 2
Southwestern .......O 2
Kyger Creek .. .. .... 0 2
TOTALS ............. .8 8

A'S

GIFT
HEADQUARTERS
YOU'LL FIND GIFTS FOR
EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY
.
. •COMPLETE LINE OF TOYS
•RUSSELL STOVER CANDY •WRAPPING PAPER
•CHRISTMAS CARDS

"FREE DELIVERY AREAS"

p

124
123
93
78
72
82

lio

53
685

OP
72
6.3
65
84
73
128
81
119
685

The loss of Bostelman, the
District 22 Player of the Year, to
graduation has created a void
that Hohenberger has tried to fill
with his veterans . He is expected
to start two 6-3 juniors, Keith
Wischmeyer and Terry Morman,
as forwards, while Kirk Seemann
(6-2, junior), who sc'ored Defiance's final two points In the
championship· game, and Jim
Harris (6-2, sophomore) will
start as guards. Harris was
injured in last Saturday's game
at Oakland (Mich.). but was
expected to be healthy for the Rio
tilt.

Middleport, Pomeroy, Bradbury, Minersville,
Rirtlend, Syr.c:u•e. Meson. W Ve.
ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3 P.M.
Free Delivery On All Preacriptiona, If You Don't Need A
prescription We Will Deliver Anything In Store FREE On
A '6.00 Minimum Order.

Pro results
NATIONAL BAHKETIALL LEAGUE
Wt-dnr!ldll)''!ii Rtot;wt"
i\tllanlll 101, BoMion 11:1
PhlladtoJphlll IH. Denwr 109
~IU'ramt&gt;nlo !HI, Mh..d &amp;.1
DririM lOt (lllcqo lit
lncbnll ll!l, PoriiMnd I'm
Dall1111 10~. S.•allr til
Ul~th Ill . M' wohi•Kton t~

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

LA Lllkl!'l'lf IU PhOt"nbl Ill
Thuf!lldii,)''.'I.G.amt'!ol

Mlht'IWIII't• .. Nf'w V'ork. 'l'::tl p.m.
flt'Vt'IIUid Ill S11111 ADitldo.it :It p.m.
Hou.. on Ill L..\ l.akft'l'l, 10::«1 p.m.

Tuesday's res ulls
Fairland 60, Hannan Trace 54
OVCS 73, Symmes Valley 63
Friday's games
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
Southwestern at North Gallia
Oak Hill at Eastern
Southern at Symmes Valley

f'I'IIIIQ''~

: Executive of the Year.

Basketball
Freshman guard Sean Tuns tall
~as failed to meet academic
req uirements to ,play at Kansas
this season. The St. Louis pla yer
plans to rema in in school and will
have three years of eligibility
re maining . ... The World Basketbail League. for players 6-foot-5
~ and under, an nounced a three: yea r dea l with SportsChannel
; America for live telecas ts of the
• teague 's ga mes. Twenty-five
: ga mes will be shown. starting
; after the Stanley Cup playoffs.
;
Football
• Quarterback Bubby Brister of
·' the Pittsburgh Steelers and def! ens ive end Greg Townsend of the
', Los Angeles Raiders have been

Dr.Ayers

Office Hours
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
New Patients Welcome

(304) 675-6015

G•m"'

PblladfotpN11al hilt• ftl,...
Nt'W .J~rllt"Y ut ( 'h..tGIW, nl ...
l,_.nwr •I Ml Nnl, niPt
Drir... 1U 1\Uanla, nllftl
SIC'I'Ilmt'nlo .tin chn~ ni.W
MllweuJ.•• a1 ("hlu«o, nl .....
Billa. al Utall, niPt
Gal•n ~ad"' al Ptnx.lx, nl ...
W~W~tlnp;t.onatf'orUud, nl,.tll

NATIONI\L HOCKEY 1$.\GUE
w~•'!ICf..,..,..,"ult"

Ntow ·lt&gt;rlll'y I, WwHqton I
Montrf'lllllC, Mlniii'IOola

t

(tip )

Edmonton M, Qtlrbfoio 3
Thu nid.q'" Gatml'fi
NV RIIII..,.Mial H•r1fol'd, 7::!$p.m.
Blftllo ad 80!111011, ~:35 p.m .
rMI!Itluf'Kh · ~tl Phll..dt.'lphll&amp;. 1::1G p.m.

Manll'f'el Ill St. IA•IK, X: :IS p.m .
· EdmontoniU fiJ...-)' , 1:;&amp;~ p.m.
WinniPf"« a1 Lo11 Alll(t!ll'f'l, IO : l$ p.m.
FrldiY'KGaml't!
Qurlwt· al VIU\j,'fluwr, niPl
N\' IKir.ndf'rMIII Nt'w .lerllty , nl«ftt
1'Drm•o al Df'lroH, nl~

'

Transactions

THAT'S

Rauu•b*l
flnt•lnrall - lilp"d frtr lltl'tnl out ·
flf'lct.'f'

lhwt• {'oiiiRM to 11 ont"• ,...,.

I'Onii'IU'I; loUINiprd ~C'Ond hiiiM'mM •lf'lf
. Trt•adwa)' to NIUitftrllll' !II liM' Amt&gt;rh~ tln

N-EW
EVERY
DAY

,\ . .IIIGn.
Oriroll - Slpd plll: hrrTt•d Powl'r tn
a ,.. llltll.l'l wllh lht&gt;ir Tohode !A AI\) farm

ct.-.
Lo11 i\n~~- Namrd Kf'Vkl Kt•n••d)'
mMIJt•r of 1\lhuqurrqWI' of lhr P~tclfk
null! Li-~~Pt· 1.\A.\J, Jolin ShiH'ftlilkl'r
m ..... ...,. uf S1111 1\lllMio of lllf" Tn.1111
I.# lip!' ( .\i\ )llndltlr .o\l~ll.rl'ltmJUtll.-t'rof
V••ro •·r.K:h ollht• Florld11 l'll~th• Lt·~··
·(,\): Mlll'ndrd w.,ldllll: ll~m••• wllh
Albuqut•rqUP lhr~M~Jh 1111.
Mllwau a.•r - Tl'll.d.-d l'lllcht&gt;r-llrJ;t
hlllll'mlln RIIISt·hrortlf'r lo('llllfornl•lor

lnftl'l .... GUH Po1140r.
MlllrrPiotll - ,\\.-qulrf'd /1('\.'0 . . ha~~~t•·
man K'il.ll)' Ba•·kmu and lc•tl· h..ndrr
MIM&gt;SautUttkO lromlht' Norw \' orkMf'tllln
l'kchiiiiC" tor rll'ltt ·flllndt•r~ ·ft•fl Bum·

TVC standings

'

TVC STANDINGS
TEAM
W L
P OP
Miller ............... .. .2 0 156 121
Trimble ...... .. ....... 2 0 125 lll
Wellston .............. ) 0 74 50
Alexander ........... 1 1 115 104
Fed Hocklng ....... 1 1 119 122
Belpre ........ ........ .1 1 124 125
Meigs ..... ....... ..... !0 1 62 90
Nelsonv!lle .......... 0 2 110 125
VInton ................. 0 2 100 137
Tuesday's results
Meigs- Open
'Miller 66 Federal Hocking 59
Wellston 74 Vinton County 50
Trimble 54 Alexander 52
Belpre 65 Nelsonv-ille-York 54
Friday's games:
Trimble at Meigs
Nelsonville-York at Miller
Vinton County at Federal
Hocking
Wellston at Belpre
Alexander - Open

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

llH

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL i

~ ·

Valley Drive, Polnt Plr•ant,. W.VL 25550

Morosky, Monnot are named
top Division IV Ohio players

Widder top coach

COLUMBUS. Ohio CUP!) Jerry Widder, who guided Marion Elgin to an 8-2 record the past
season, has been selected the
United Press Tnternatlonal Div·
At center will be Doug Prigge,
lslon IV coach of the year.
a 6-4 senior who, like Seemann,
Widder edged out Tom Sapp of
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UP)) inside, but once he breaks
attended Bostelman's alma Columbus Academy fullback through, he can go the distance." College, Syracuse, West Virgi- Columbiana Crestview and Mike
nia, Michigan State and Ohio
mater.· Patrick Henry High Mike Morosky and two-way
Warbel of Loudonvllle In ballot·
Morosky's two-year stats In- State.
School at Deshler, Ohio.
ing by Division IV coaches !rom
tackle Dave Monnot of Canton elude 3,025 yards rushing and 44
the state.
around
Statistically, Prigge was aver- Central Catholic head up the 1988 touchdowns .
Loudonvtile's Dan Arnholt is
·
aging 18.6 points and 12.6 re- United Pre~s International Div·Widder
received eight of the 40
"He got every tough yard we the quarterback on the first
bounds per game. Morman Is lsion IV all-Ohio football team.
votes
cast,
while Sapp and
needed this year," said Wolf. offensive team. while the other
Warble
managing 14.2 points and 3.5
each
had
seven.
Morosky, a 6-foot, 215-pound "There wasn't a whole lot we two running backs are Chuck
rebounds , while Seemann has power runner with above- asked of him that he dldn'tglve." Geiss of Columbiana Crestview
Others with more than one vote
been good fo r 12 poinls and 3.5 average speed, was selected the
were Larry Wolf ol Columbus
Monnot helped lead Central
Academy, Jim Parker of East
rebounds per au ling. Harris is Division IV back·vf· the-year in Catholic to Its l!rst state football and Jim Norman of Heath.
averaging 11 points and 2.5 balloting by coaches .from title by going both ways.
The 6-foot-3 185-pond Arnholt. . Palestine, AI Hetrick of Verrebounds ; while Wischmeyer has throughout Ohio. and the 6-foot-4, · ''We could have named him our
la in his firs t full season at .. 'Sl!illes and Ed MIIIPr of
p y gb ack • IedLoudonvllletoa Wheelersburg.
4.8 points and 6.8 rebounds a 247-pound Monnot the lineman- offensive lineman of the week quarter
game . Seemann is the team of-the-year.
each week." said Central Ca- 7-3 • season after a 2-3 start,
leader in assists (24 over six l MorOsky, who increased his thollc Coach Lowell Klinefelter.
missing one game and part of
games) .
Lincoln, Neb., wlllholdthel990
weight from I85a year ago with a " He's just a tremendous of!en- another with an injury .
Prior to the Urbana game, the vigorous off-season lifting pro- sive lineman. He can pull and
He completed 118 of 205 passes Junior Olympics, which will
Yellow Jackets held victories gram rushed for 1,562 yards and lead or blow people olf the ball. "
(57-5 percent) for 1,992 y.ards and bring up to 6,000 athletes to tM
over Anderson, 71-60; Ohio Do· 24 tou~hdowns in Academy's 10-2
14
touchdowns. He had five city. Mayor Bill Harris :said thl!
Klinefelter feels Monnoi's only
min lean, 95-74; and Heidelberg, season, despite playing the first weakness is his strength, due to receivers with more than 30 city will receive a $7 million
63-60. Losses have been to Tay- seven games with a broken left the fact he plays basketball. catches.
economic benefit from tbe event.
lor, 61-54; Bowling Green, 91-67;
hand In a soft cast and the last which prevents him from lifting
and Oakland, 71-61 .
five with a shoulder separation.
during the winter months.
· .
Rio Coach John Lawhorn is
"That's
.
a
tribute
to
his
tough•.
"He'
s
just
physically
finding
anticipated to field Marc Go- ness " said flr~t year Academy himsel'f," said Klinefelter .
TURNPIKE USED CARS U TRUCKS
thard (6-4, senior, Circleville) Coa~h Larry Wolf. "He had to "What he needs to do Is go to a
and ·Mike Tidwell (6-3, sopho- carry the ball in his right hand university-wher~ he can red shirt
more, Cincinnati) as his for - and he couldn't protect himself. and get on the weights. When
wards. Guards will be Anthony He had to take the hits."
1988 MERCURY
1982 CHEVY
they get to that size, It all depends
•
Raymore (5-11, senior. ColumSABLE
Asked to describe Morosky's on how well they move their feet
MONTE CARLO
bus) and Brian Watkins 15-10, style of running, Wolf said, "he's and.Dave has quick feet. He ca~
Stock
183631,
4 door, sedan, front
Stock 194072. 2 door, 11-8 engine,
sophomore, Columbus), while a big strong, physical I'Unnlng run as fast as some of our backs.
Wh~6 cyJ_, 1actarv l!ir. ault'. tra!ll ..
lactory air, vinyl roof. auto . trans.,
P)i,,.. , p.,, PS, l'Dl, tilt cruloa,
Larry Benning (6·4, freshman,
PS, PB, tilt, cruise, AM'FM radiO,
back with 4.6 speed In the 40. He
Monnot _has narrowed his col.
A"""
sl8n!o tal!&amp;. ladi8l tim,
radial tires, wh1te waits.
Wooster) will be at the post.
White walls, mar diitog.
has the strength and power to run lege choices down . to Boston
Raymore is currently leading
the team In scoring with 12.8
WAS
WAS S
points and has recorded · 2.4
i681......;;;...;........,......
rebounds a game. Watkins ·,is
averaging 11.5 markers, two
1985 FORD
1980 MERCURY
rebounds and 3.3 assists, while
Gothard Is credited with 9.8
RANGER
BOBCAT
points and 3.4 rebounds pe~
Stock 194631, 6 cyl., PS, PB , AMI
Stock 188043, 2 door, 4 cY!., factory
contest. Tidwell has 8.3 points
FM
radio,
stereo
tape,
1/2ton
pic!&lt;up,
air, aulo. trans., PS, AMIFM radio,
·utilizing overall team depth aid the Redwomen.
and 3.2 rebounds for an average,
long wide bad.
stereo tape .
OC went •to 6-3 on the season
and Benning is racking up eight and a rash of Rio Grande
NOW
WAS
WAS
points and 4.7 rebounds per turnovers, the University of and will be on break until Jan. 7.
Charleston
took
control
In
the
when
it
plays
West
Virginia
outing.
second period Wednesday at State. Rio goes to 3-3 and faces
Game time will be 7:30 p.m .
Lyne Center and defeated the Central State on the road SaturRedwomen 72-63.
day, starting at 6 p.m.
1986CHEVY
Both teams were successful In Box score:
1983 CHEVY
keeping each other's shooting
RIO GRANDE (63) -Lea Ann
s-10 BLAZER
s-10 BLAZER
low, as UC connected on 33 of Its Mullins, 5-1·11-24; Beth Coli.
Stock 194671,4 Wheel dri~. 6 cvl.,
Stock
118995t, 4 _.drive 6 cY!.,
factory air, auto. tra~.~,I!S. P)i; PW •
78 field goal attempts for 42.3 2-0-4; Tina Azbell, 4-3-11; Ann
auto. trans.. PS, PB, AM'FM niCfio,
POL lit~ auise AMI"m r8d10, $ 18percent and Rio Gran de ended up Barnltz, 4-1-9; Betsy Bergdoll,
• Ulll'r, Tohy Nl\'l'ftll amd Mtrvr G&amp;M,....r.
reo laDii, radii tires, wMe Walts,
radial tires, whitewalls, buc!&lt;et IHII,
Phlladflphl• - Third h.-.man Mllw
buc!&lt;allaats, gauges.
gaugas.
with
40.3
percent
(23-57).
3-2-8;
Kathy
Snyder.
3-1-7,
TOSchmldl ... ,.t'd to «orm11 •• 1 DIW'· )'l'U
Redwomen Tin\1 Azbell and TAU! 21-J-18-83.
t'Onli'IIU'I: rt•·Kipf'd plkhf'r Gr•~ H11rrt11
WAS
lo 11 o,...~., (."'I'IInu:t; rl'lrMt'd ""lk-1
WAS
.,
~~
151
Betsy
Bergdoll
exploded
In
the
UNIVERSITY
OF
CHARLES·
pltchrr Kt•nt Trkuh'••: ...... .._... d dub
first few minutes to lead the hosts TON (72) - Christine Nagy.
would aut on"r 11 t-onlractto .rutflrklrr
OrrrGr0811.
to a 10-point advantage. UC · 3-I-7· Donna Joplin, 2·0-4; Becky l-lrrlrWilli
TMIII!i - Slpt"d frt't&gt; lllf'ftt plk•hf'l'
Nolttn Ry11n IOIIOIW'·)'('Mr't.'O.Nd wtlhll
center Regina Jeffries and Van~e. 6-I-13; Lynn Brla, 7-l-15;
OII'·)"IM'oplton: annou•·rdll W9uldoftt'f'
1986 FORD
1985 FORD
guard/forward Lynn Br!a then Tina Boone, 6-0-12; Tracy Wllll·
lll'hlt n~tlon toplt·hl'niCf't'lliDG•anlf' and
F..d Vudr Bt'rll' 11nd c .llk:h,.. .Jim
spearheaded a coiiitterattack ams, 2-0-4; Regina Jeffries;
ESCORT
ESCORT
SU!IIhf'l'll:.
that
allowed
UC
to
trail
closely
7-3-17.
TOTAU!
33-6--72.
Stock
188362,
4 door, sedan, front
PKII•tUIIfh - 1\t-qulrl'd plk'hf'f' Pr&gt;trr
Stock 1182392, 2 door, iront Wheel
Blohm from Ratltlmo,. 11M tit' pbly~r toht•
Wheel drive, 4 cyl .. auto. trans .. PS.
all the way to the half, with the
drive, 4 cyl ..
naml'd bdt•r In lhl' lna•~thll wnt Randy
PB, AM'FM radiO, radial tiras, white
Redwomen ahead 31-27. ·
MIIIIKM to lit• OrlolfoM.
waMs.
The hosts opened the final
~~·II··~··
NOW
WAS
KP:oM!i ~Uillt' - NWnd Del Mll-.r
WAS
period with an Ann Barnltz
foothall l?t.TIMin« coonlhator.
Sou6 ..... n l !nh'PrNUy -Marino ClliWm
bucket at 19:12, but a two-point
tNIIAIN'•a.-. football coach IIlii wlll,.m .. n
$3895
field goal from Jeffries and a
""111hll'tk: dll'('t'lOI".
,.-,.,.1/•ol/
basket by Tina Boone deadlocked
LA Rllllbl- Slpd ..... 1111:1'111 dl[hll"nd
9 am-8 pm
the score (33-33) at 18:20. Brla
Erlt• !Uf'\'rr~.
.
Ml llfl11 - Sl ~ fn-1' lltl'flll dl'fPnMln
in
for
a
goal
at
17:14
to
At
home
of Susan Hay11,
then
went
('nd N.t .. Hill; plat.·rd llnrhetlttT .fat•kk'
hand her team the lead.
s•tpp onlnju"'d I'I"IK·rw.
,
11111r Gract laptist Church on
NV .ft&gt;t~- EI.Wntlrd thl' t'lHIINcl Of
f'Oilt•h .fot' WIAI Dft.
Led by Lea Ann Mullins' game
Rt. 62, Pt. Pleasant.
.......
high
of
24
points,
Rio
sought
to
SAYINGS ON All DECOIATING
NY l~landt·r~ - Ftr~d foach Tl'tr')'
stmpMO~a; "'P ..nd him wUh i\1 Arho•r.
regain ground but a cold streak
ACaSSORIES
at the midway point ensued as
Wednesday's
AND
GREAT
GFT IDEAS.
the Lady Golden Eagles forged
ahead to pull their biggest lead
cage scores
PH. (304) 675-6057
(65-46)
with
5:10
remaining.
A
Ottlo folltl~ BMicthldl Rf'llultN
late rally helped put SO!fle dents
By tralttd Pri"MI'i lnlf'I'MiioNll
Jl.tont !'41 101, Sl. 8oral'NI .... l'l3
Into the visitors' margin as Rio
Mhml n, Dtyten &amp;f
Ollhllaho II'J, Mor~llltolld~l (Kyl 1t
came to within nine (70-61) In the
• X.11~61'rln, Rolwrt Morrts tPal i i
game's final minute.
lh&gt;nllolon1'0, MIU'..Cllll.t
Mount Union St. WoOIIIfr Ill
"I think we looked a llttle flat,"
MuKidni(Mm ~~~ W' IQ' ,.,..., .. ~I" a) lilt
UC
Coach Linda Bennett re·
TIIfln 11, Oblo Notlhl'r nn
- Ohio M'NII'y•n 58, ottf'l'btoln lt
marked. "Intensity-wise, we
Rocht'Mt'r tNVIIO. Cur ~rw Iii
didn't turn It up as much. I think
Wllmlapon 15, K•nyon U
UrhiULII ~. Df'fhtn(.'l" 77
we have a lot of depth and the
WllhlhM1, II•Hton 11
rotation helped us a lot."
£ilrlll Ohle Hl«h St-~ l~~~o~Wthllll
UC and Rio substituted heav.\Nil Edtl'""ood :11 , .biht st.lohn :It
Ily,
and the Infusion of personnel
&amp;\'l'rt'l'f'rlt 1n. Wf"MI ( 'a rrollloa .U
luc•kt'f" S"' 1!l, l ln ion Loc al t I
may have helped UC pick off 27
ftnk'r\'lllrll. Xf'nta•
rebounds on the Redwomen,
('onftl' .. l :IM, Gl'n&lt;l"\'lt :1:i
Glltn"IIN\'tllf' 1M. DIMmoncl Soulhl'll'il :18
while
they allowed 14 to be
,Jt·ff~n U , Pal""" tu~ .. r~ldt.o :\li
Loulllvlllf' Aqul~a" r,, MAK.IIon 17
committed against them. Tough
M11diHon IIi, ,\sh&amp;Jlh.lla 4!6
Inside play also kept both squads
M1111t• Cl'ft!twitod 11, WI.IUll :n
P11l.- Huwy -l.t , Atiht Hubor ~
!rom keeping the ball alive
R•~•nnt $1, Slrt'f't IIMiro a
during some critical moments.
Kootlllown JU . Mo...,.,.. 51
Ubrlt'hK~III' I111Jm•n117,SIIIId)o Vlll.&amp;.'t
The Redwomen benefitted at
Wlllf'rkMt II, \\'o «&lt;rld•t• 51
the foul line, as Mullins sank all
Vt'omrn ':-~ Oltlo
( 'ollt"'tl' ........ thllll
11 of her shots to post a game
percentage of 66.6 (18-27). UC
Bowllnti'Grt•l'ft MK, Ellllt..T niU•nt.,.·k.v 7~
Wlt ...nfN•I'• 78, Dr•IMn ~I
was
successful on six of Its 12
Mt&gt;rt•yhurN 1Pal X.t, .John ( 'Ill' roii!W
9.25% . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $100,000 or More
shots
for 50 percent. Beth Coli
sa Vlncrnt! 1"111 '10, Will!~~! M
came through with 10 assists to
. . . . . $ 50,000 $99,999

Sports brief

Turnovers boost UC
to victory over.RGC ·

'3'1Js

1 J.",W•s

•sz9s

Scoreboard ...

•

Sports briefs .

Baseball
Fred Claire, execu live vice
:·president-player personnel for
~ the . champi on Los Angeles
: Dodgers, was named The Sport; ing News 1988 Major League
• Executive of the Yea r. Claire
: became I he first Dodgers execu: tive to win the annual award
' since General Manager Buzzy
: Bavasi in 1959. Sandy Alderson of
; Oakla nd was a distant second.
• Last month Claire and Al derson
~ were named co-winners or UPI's
;
:
;
•
;
;
:
·
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SVAC standings

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

No one· should live
in fear of ex~hub_by

Thursday. December 8, 1988

Page-6

•
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•

qirl Scout Service . Unit prepares for upcomtng acttvtttes
It won't be long before Girl

Scouts will be knocking at doors
and calling on te lephones to sell
cookies. reporte d Shirley Cogar.
director of Meigs County's Big
Bend Eas t Girl Scour .Se rvice
Unit, at the December se rvice
unit meeting at the Sy racu se
Un ited Methodis t Chu rc h. Cookies sa.Les are an important
source of fund ing for Gir l Scout
Cou ncils acmss the country and
Black Diamond Council, wh ich
includes Meigs County. is no
different. Cookies will be sold
locally from Jan. 20 to Feb. 5.
Cogar aiso' reported that Joyce

A countywide Senior Girl Scout
Sisson. service untt cookie chair·
man, needs to know the number Troop 1208, for gl.-ls In grades
of girls in,each troop in Big Bend 10-12, Is also In the process of
reol'[!anization. Tammy CapeEa s t.
A more immediate need in the hart. a for mer Girt Scout, will be
service unit is a sustaining • thl' leatter. and anyone In teres ted
membership chairman. A chair- in joming the troop should c all
Cogar at the above numbe1.
man is needed by Dec. 9 and
Any girl in · grades 7-9 in
anyone wishing to volunteer for
the position should contact Cogar Eastern Local School District
who woulcl be Interested In
at 992·2668.
Troops which have been organ- joining tne Easter n Cadette
ized, or reorgan !zed, ill the Troop should contact leader
service unit , include Chester Gladys Thomas at 378-6466.
And there are enough interDaisy Troop 1037, Racine Dalsys
ested
girls in the Tuppers Plains
1020 and Chester Juniors 1051.
area to form troops at the Daisy,

Brownie and Junior levels, if
leaders could just be found,
Cogar reported. If any adults in
the Tuppers Plains area would
like to take over a troop, they
s hould also get in touch with
Cogar.
Discussed briefly was a contest
sponsored by the Morton Salt Co.
to benefit Girl Scouting's Camp
of Tomorrow. and Connie Collins
demonstrated a stained glass
ornament and fabric flower for
possible use by other leaders
with their troops. Cogar also
demonstrated a Christmas lamp

We Are Vour
Christmas Shopping
.Headquarters for
fine Wearing .
Apparel for Men and·
Vlotnen.·

Infirmary for Thanksgi\'ing
The kitchen chairman noted
that se\'eral Christmas parties
are scheduled to be held at th~
annex · and she encouraged
members to assist. Flowers were
delivered to adopted grandfath·
ers and grandmothers and a

American Legion makes contributions
Contributions of nearly $7;500
have been made during th e past
mon th by Feeney- Bennett Post
128. Al:ner ica n Legion. Middleport. in it s annual project o(
distribu ti ng funds from the ye·
ar's money-raising activities .
The grou p ga ve $1.087 to the
Gifts for the Ya nks Who Gave,
$1,000 to the Middleport Fire
Depa rtment, S500 to the Museuta r Distrophy Association and

Plans are being completed this
$400 each for the Can&lt;"er Society,
for Christmas projects . Six
week
the Heart Fund, the Kidney
hundred
one pound ba·gs of candy
Foundation, the Ronald McDo·
and
nuts
will be sacked next week
nald House, the Junior Civitan
for
Santa
distributional a time to
Club, the Salvation Army·, the
Diabetic Foundation, the Meigs be announced.
Instead of fruit baskets this
County Senior Citizens, the Mid·
year
for the nursing homes
dleport Jaycees, the Middleprt
Chamber of Commerce, the annually remembered by the
March of Dimes, and the Easter 'legion. Christmas cards with $2
Seals; and $100 to Boy Scout will be provided for about 350
residents.
Troop 245.

handicapped child on Thanksgl\'·
ing by Gerry Parsons. Reported
ill were Bertha Ward, Celia Hite,
Mary Madden . EdHh Spencer,
Zelia Taylor. Judson White,
Roscoe Roush , and Raymond
Justice.
Welcomed into membership
were Lisa Hooten. Betty Carsey,
Monna Anderonl and Juanita J .
Ratliff. Kim Chadwell and Amy
Epple were welcomed into the
junior group. Membership now
stands at 11 over quota , It was
report!'d.
A gift of two flag poles with
tassels and eagles and a 3x~ foot
American Illig were presented to
the Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop.
Pauline Greathouse presl.d ed at
the meeting with Kathryn
Metzger, chaplain, leading in the
prayer and pledge. Officers'
reports were given.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
:z
MIDDLEPORT

Quarterly bi rthdays wer e observed at the recent meeting of
Ches ter Co uncil 323; Daughters
of Amer ica, held at the hail.
In the hon ored group were'
Charlotte Grant , Betty Denny,
Zelda Weber. Kathryn Baum,
MaP McPeek. Thelma White,
Sandy White, Ad a Bissell, Ruth
Smit·h, Alta Ballard . a nd Esther
Smith.
Thelma Wh ite pres ided at the
meeting wh ich opened with devotions using Psa lm 128, the Lord 's
Prayer , pledges and the national

TOPS•
meettng
conducted

anthem .
it \vas not.ed ihat Virginia Lee
has a new grandson and that
DoriS Dodds. state junior past
councilor, is recuperating from
leg fractures. The death of
Dorothy Wells was also noted.
Letters were read from Ruby
McGowan, national councilor;
Ruth Shannon, national secre·
tary; Evelyn Ramey,statecoun-

cilor, and Helen Taylor, state
secretary. Nomination of offic- ·
ers was held.
Erma Cleland reported on a
holiday dinner held at the Western Sizzlin' Steak House, Athens.
The Past Councilors Club dinner
will be held on Dec. 14 at 7:30
p.m. with a $3 gift exchange.
Attending besides those named
were Beulah Maxey, Lora Dame-

· :

co

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You'll Find The
Perfect
Christmas Gift
At
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

wood, Mary Holter, Erma Cle·
land, Faye Kirkhart. Zeda Rit·
chie, Dorls Grueser. Betty
Young, Pauline Ridenour, Opal
Hollon. Zelda Weber. Doris KOenig, Lillian Demoskey, Sadie
Trussell, Betty Roush, Jo Ann
Baum, Ethel Orr, Everett Grant,
Dorothy Ritchie, Elizabeth
Hayes, Laura Nice, and Marica
Keller.

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BUICK LeSABRE

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EXCLAMATION

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BY COTY

Cologne &amp; Dusting
Powder

OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88

30°/o OFF

J

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COLOGNE
1 oz.

REG.
$4,95

NOW

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ROCK SPRINGS . Rock
Springs Grange will 'i"eet Thursday, 6:30 p.m., for a po!luck
dinner. Members ar~ also asked
to bring non-perl~habie food

~

~f!~,~~~s~Yo~. . . . . . . . NOW $5 29
DR. GRABOW .

t

~
~

$339 ;
;

r---------~c-ouPo~;-~-------,1

Mr . and Mrs. Babe Whaley of
Pal m Harbor. Fla. vis ited Lola
Clark a nd Mr. and Mrs. Bob ·
Alkire recently.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Paul Kioes ,
Michael Kioes, Pome roy; Danny .
Riggs, Columbu s; Paul, Linda
and Lisa Riggs, Athens, were
Than ksgivi ng dinner guests of
Stella Atkins a nd Ruby Diehl.
Mr . and Mrs. Danny Young
a nd son, Mr. a nd Mrs. Ed Dill and
sons, Penny Pridemore, . and
Dav id Steinmetz were dinner
guests · Wednesday of Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Steinmetz.

I '

.! TIMEX

WATCHES
dJ
··-----------------------------''
DON'T FORGET TO REGISTER TO WIN
I

I
·I

:Tree
Soft 'lJrin~
:Tree '

$500 OFF !Ip

SWISIIII &amp; LOHSE

0

EXP. 12·12-88

.THE POMEROY MERCHANTS
GIFT CERTIFICATES.

SUJISHER tt:IHSE

TOM PEDEN

Pharrnocy
Kenn eth McCutlouQh . Ill Ph

ChNdlt • Oldlmobiii•Piriai: •lluid&lt;, lnc.

Phone: 372·2844 • 422.0756 •

OFFER GOOD
THROUGH MONDAY,
DEC. 12, 1911

344 5947

•

- . . c. .- ---·- -·--' I

.............,....,_.

________

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Slinderella meers
J udy Eblin was the best loser
a nd Cathy Hudson was runner-up
at las t week's class of Siinderella
at Five Points. At the Mason
class over the past two weeks,
Brenda Roush and Enid Adams
were the top losers and Beth
Knight and Connie Goodnlte
were runners-up. Jo Ann New·
is lecturer for the classes.

I

ChllriM RIHI~t R Ph

AoNid HIII\IIH! R Ph
M on thru $111 8 00 A M 1o 9 PM
Sundll¥ 1 D 0 0 AM w 4 00 P M
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH 99 4' ·:?955
Frl8n r11v S•' IY•r•·

J

l

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but nobody you can talk to about
them? Ann Landers' newty revised
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager," will
giw you the answers you need. To~
ceive a copy, send $3 plus a SL/f-&lt;Ui·
dressed, stamped buslness·size envelopt! (45 cents postage) to Ann
Landers, P.O. Box /1562, Chicago,
Ill. 6061 UJ562.
AN~ LANDERS •

Ct988, los Angeln T- Syndiorta end
Crtllors Syndicllo

. items.

---

I

PAGETOWN - A bake and
yard sale to benefit \he Carleton
Church will be belli Thursday
and Friday. from 9 to 4, and
Saturday. from 9 tb 12, at the
Paget own Serltot Citizens
Center.
--- t

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053, Tuppers IPlains. will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m .. at the
post headquarters. :
ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thu rsday, Dec. 8, 6:30 p.m ., for a
potluck dinner. Members should
bring non-perishable food
Items.
·
POMEROY -A tlake and yard
sale will be held -ilhursday and
Friday, from 9a.m.:to4p.m.,and
Saturday, from 9 a rfll· to 12 noon,
at the senior cit~ns center in
Pagetown. Proceejls will go to
the Car Jet on Churc .
POMEROY n economic
development sem oar will be
held Thursday, De . 8, from 1 to
4:30 p.m., at the elgs Senkir
Citizens Center.

FRIDAlo

GALLIPOLIS - f Flame Fellowship, Gallipoli$, will meet
Friday. 7 p.m .. at k,e Co tum bus
and Southern EII!C ric Buil\ling.
Speaker wlli be teacher and
author, Carol Crll9k, of Akron.
She and her husband minister the
singles group at thfi! Cathedral of
Tomorrow, Akron. I

--...,

POMEROY - ~eturn Jona·
than Meigs Chlll'pter of the
Daughters of the American Re,......c - ·~""'-&lt; -~

I
i

I

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 publtc is Invited to
attend.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club will sponsor an open dance
at the sen lor citizens center In
Pomeroy, on Saturday from 8 to
11 p.m. Caller will be Dave
Stuthard. All western square
dancers are Invited . Refresh·
men ts will be served.

---:
RUTLAND - A square dance

will be held Saturday, from8 to12
midnight, at the Rutland Ameri·
can Legion Post. Everyone
welcome.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold their annual
Christmas Dance at Royal Oak
Resort this Sunday, from 7 to 10
p.m. Music will be by Orlando
Columbo.
POMEROY - The annual
JayMar Golf awards banquet
and dance will be held Sunday,
Dec. 11, at the Eagfes Club.
Social hour will start at 6 p.m.,
followed by dinner at 6:30 and a
dance at 8. Tickets are on sale
now for $25 a'coupie or $13 single.
Reservations must be made In
advance. Tickets may be purchased from Nancy Hill, Sandy
Iannarelli or Bob Freed.
CHESTER - Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the lzaak Walton
League will hold muzzle loading
shoots at the clubhouse near
Chester on Sundays, Dec. 11,
Dec. 18 andJan.1. The shoots will
consist of free hand and bench

le a Wilson, Bobby and J ason.
Thornville; Vi rgil a nd Ger ry
P arsons, Lol• Jenkins. J .D. a nd
Daylon, Albe rt and Veisie Roush, •
Bec ky and Charles Tyree. Ken
a nd Lisa Roush. Jason. J usti n
a nd J eremy . Pomeroy.
Da r rell a nd Mary Ann Herd m a n, Da r rell II and Lynette
Herdma n, Vic ky Flowers, Bonnie Mathe ny. Doug, Rachel.
Jared and J im Matheny . Leon,
W. Va. ; Jo Ann Hudson, Cindy
Overs, Chelsea and Ka tie, Jacksonville, ·N.C.; Steve and Lo r i
Miller, Jordan and Taylor, Wilmington, Deia. and Mike a nd
Debbie Nowlin, J ason. and Jona than, Gassaway, W:Va.

Smith, Co lumbus; Dale, Joy and
Dav id Roush, Sherr! and Michael
Haynes, St. · Albans; Carl and
Barbara Miller. Shirley Wha ley,
and Gina, Jer ry and Chris Fe lice,
Roger and· Janie Rou sh, Susan,
Roger II and Ryan Roush, Grove
City; Larry and Judy Flower s,
Pickerington.
Jerry and Helen Miller, Newburg. Ind.; Shirley Miller·. Tom
McNeely , Ralph and Barbara
Miller, Teresa Summerfield,
Benjamin and Samantha, Linden
Miller, Jeanne Miller, Melissa
Tibbits, Danny and Randy . ail of
Point Pleasant .
Pete and Ruth Johnson, Grand
Rapids,
David and Veron-

oo

JULIE H. LEACH

t.UAWA1S
WllCOMl
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Vt-CliAT ClUSTER .•... 1399
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Reg.
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S.V.ral 11JIII
~ME

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ALL OIAMONDS
25% Ofl

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Jewelry and Diamonds by

Leach certified
Julie Hysell Leach, Cheshire,
has qualified for her Ohio Cosmetologist manager's license by
passihg state board examinations.
A bea11tlclan at Hair
Highlights In Gallipolis. she is a
graduate of Meigs High School
a11d the daughter of Rosemary
Hysell, Middleport, and Lawrence Hysell. Rutland.

Clark's
Jewelry Store~ ~~==
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I U Ceurl SL
342 Seeond A••·

Po111erur, Ohio

Galllpoll•, Ohio

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rest events with various prizes,
such as meat and money, to be
awarded. Ali shoots will begin at
1 p.m.

Hanukkah, the eight-day Jewish
feast of lights, commemorates the rededication of the Temple of Jerusa·
tern after the defeat of the ancient
Syrians.

SHIPMENT JU$T ARRIVED!
Living Room Suites in Stock.'
A1l At PIICIS SO LOW, YOU WON1 IRIEVE YOUI EYES!

New 2 pc. U.. Rm. Suitt
s.,. 1eto1t

Girls' Co-ordinates •••...•. 2 0°/o off
lsotoner Gloves •••••••.•..•• 20°/o Off
Ladies' Leather Boots ..••2 S0/o off
Hang Ten Sportswear ••.• ~0°/o off
O .

BOYS' FlANNEL

Shirts &amp; Sweaters .•.•....••• 20 Vo oft
CHRISTMAS HOURS
OPEN MONDAY -FRIDAY UNTIL 8 P.M.
9-5 ON SATURDAY
OPEN SUNDAYS 1 P.M.-5 P.M.

•u•.•s

$19995
SAVE
$150.00

CURIO
CABINET

CEDAR CHESTS

Glass Doar, 1
lighted, mirror
back.
REG. '250

$16995~
SAVE sao

REGISTER FOR POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT
GIFt CERnFICATE DRAWINGS
S200000 IN CERTIFICATES

Sug:

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169.9'5

Sug. Rot. '249.95

2 FOil

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GET ONE FREE

MIDDLEPORT

FOR BOOKS, GIFTS, OFFICE SUPLIES
MUSIC, TAPES, ETC ....

992·361•

t70

Sug. Retail

IECUNERS

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290 North Second

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While In Middleport Check Out

Middleport, Ohio

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--- I

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--·--oo·oo·-·-·,...

Velsle Roush, Ralph Miller ,
Mildred Meade, and John Miller ,
children of the late Alta and Elza
1.NN L.4.NOER S•
Miller. and Mary L. Miller and
"'1988, lAMI An-""
Tim.-. ~ y•dl,...- and
Jeanne Miller, daughters-in-law
(«o.. ~ Syndlulf'
hosted a Thanksgiving dinner at
the American Legion hall in
Middleport for about SO members
For some Godforsaken reason I of thE' family.
All eight children ol the late
went back to Mike when he
Mr
. and Mrs. Miller"were repres·
returned and promisc9 that he
ented at t~e reunion. Ham.
would never hit me again. Within turkey and coffee were furnished
four mont~ he !!3 ve me two black by the hosts with others br lnging
eyes ami fractured my a•m. 1 had covered dishes.
him arrested for assault. He got a
The traditional get -together
yedr's probation after soft-soaping dinner is usually held at the
the judge.
. .
homeplace on Pinegrove Road in
1 am ashamed to tell you that 1 Leon, W.Va. butduetovacations.
took him back three months later. work schedules and the larger
In a matter of weeks he attacked me · family this year !t was changed
with a baseball bat. My family to the legion hall.
Noted at the gathering was the
insisted that I get a divorce before
death
of Garrnet Herdman, the
he killed me.
of Christine Smith and
weddings
Shortly after the divorce I found
Jim
Sterkel,
Bunnell, Fla .. and
out that Mike had been married to
Christina
Miller
and Jel'ry Fea woman in South Carolina and
lice,
Columbus;
alon~
with four
was supporting three children. Dur·
births,
Aimsley
Taylor
Miller,
ing our marriage 1 could never
daughter
of
Steve
and
. Lori
figure out where all tbe money was
Miller, Wilmington, Delaw11re;
going
Chelsea Pauline Overs. daughter
Now, for the current trouble: 1 of Cindy and Ronnie Overs,
am happily married to a wonderful Jacksonville, N.C.; Dayton Jen man. We have been together two kins, son of Lois and J . D.
years and our love grows stronger Jenkins , Pomeroy: and J amie
every day. The problem: Mike is Georgeanna. daughter .of Chris
constantly threatening us. We and Jim Sterkel.
moved to another city 120 miles · Altending the holiday gatheraway and got an unlisted phone ing were Venessa and Brian
number, but Mike found us. He Moore. Mildred Meade. Mary
wants me back and says he'll never Lou Milier, al!d Kevin and Cora
give up:
,
I am afraid of the lunatic and
fear for my · husbimd's safety. The
polire say there is nothing they can
do unless he tries something.
(Sound familiar?)
What can we do, Ann? TERRI·
FlED AND PRAYING
DEAR TERRIFIED: Nobody
should have to live in fear and
that's why we have laws to protect
people against severely disturbed
individuais like your ex-husband.
See a lawyer about a restraining
order. The matter then goes to
court and if the judge decides your
complaint is valid, Mike will oo
served with papers ordering him to
stay away.
Do you haw questions about sex,

Community calendar
''
voiution will meet Friday, Dec. 9,
THURSDAf
1 p.m. , at the Grace Episcopal
LONG BO'ITOM
Revival · Church Parish House.
services at the Lopg Bottom
United Methodist Church will be
POMEROY
Evangeline
held Thursday throui!h·Sunday at Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
7: 30 nightly. Rev. N'drman Tay- Star, will have Its annual installalor will be the evan~Jist. Donna tion of officers on Friday. at 7: 30
Wolf will sing on ThUrsday and · p.m. Members are . urged to
. Everyone attend. Refreshments will be
Sunrise on Saiurday&lt;
I·
welcome,
1
served.

l
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~~~~EG~~~2~~~...... NOW $899

·I

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40°/o OFF

73(

'

}

COMPLETE STOCK

BAG OF 30

~
'

Converswn Vans
and

I

CHR,STMAS
ORNAMENTS

COUGH
TABLETS

1988 .

Harrisonville
happenings

0

0

WHITMAN'S SAMPLER
1 pound ..... Reg. S6.50 ...... Only S45A

HALL'S

Ger trude Cas to was the top
loser for November in the Ohio
TOPS 570 Club.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
Coonhunters building on the
fai rgro un ds, Teresa Wood,
weigllt recorder, noted that
Pearl Knap p was the best loser,
Phyllis McMillam, the runner·
up. a nd Mary Roush, the winner
of the fruit bas ket.
Len nie Belle Aleshire presided
at the meeting. The surprise
package was won by Frances
Haggy. Peggy Vining and Bonnie
John ston received birthday
remembra nces.
A holiday dinner wJil be held at
next week's meeting with weighin at 5 p.m. Me mbers are to take
a covered dish. There will be a
g ift exc hange among the
members and al so among secret
sis ters. New na mes will be drawn
for next yea r.
Mrs. Aleshire, Nellie Grover,
J uan ita Humphreys, Peggy Vining, and Shirley Wolfe were
named to the de corating committee. To select door prizes will be
Pea rl Kna pp, Julia Hysell and
Mary Mart in. Jenny Hayman,
Dayton, vis iting here with Mrs.
Hysell, was a gues t.

00

•

Chester Council D of A meeting conducted

'

00

:·

Miller holiday gathering held

Ann

Dear Ann landers: 1 hav~ always my day was ruinl'd.
Ann. I should tell you that thi&gt;
applauded your advice to readers
who want to get out of miserabi• has happened before. I am about 20
relationships, but I could never do pounds overweight and it is ail in
it myself. Invariably I rev~rted to front. I ag1 37 years old and not
. the same old panern and c~ose the married.
Am 1 thin-skinned? Should I be
same trap I had escaped fron\ .
I am a co-dependent, I which able to laugh it off/ Comment.
.
means I am addicted to peo91e with please.- NYC
DEAR
NYC:.
Your
salvation
addictions. The addiction can be
be
a
style-wise
woman
in the
could
alcohol, drugs, sex, gamblirig. com·
pulsive talking, spending mbney or dress department of your favorite
any other kind of compulsive store. You need to wear clothes that
seem conceal your st"'"'tC~ . Such outfits
behavior. All these peopl•
I
perfectly normal when yQu meet are available. Find tfiem.
Dear Ann Landers: Recently you
them, but soon you learn t~at they·
are hooked on something. If you're printed a letter about two sisters
wise, you run in the opposite who had not spoken to each other
for 20 years. You were so happy
direction.
when they read something in your
It was always easier fot me to
focus on friends who had ~roblems column that brought them together.
Believe me, Ann, it won't work
than to face ·my own. I never had
the slightest idea why I con\inued to for everyone. Take my sister
hang out with these crippled chick· please. She, called 'llle up the day
ens. · I now know that 1 n~ before my birthday and announced
someone to blame for all the things that she never wanted to see me
again. She gave no particular rea·
in my life that went wrong]
When I was finally ablelto admit son, just said 1 was "no good" and
to a close friend that my iife was a had caused her nothing but grief. I
mess and my level of seif-dteem was couldn't believe my ears. I have
zero, she did me the biggesf favor of never done anything to hurt her
and there was absolutely no justifi·
my life.
·
'
She introduced me to two groups cation for her to land on me like
that have helped me rf'1l'lin my
that.
1 want to tell you that these last ·
self·respect Co·Dependcpts Anon·
ymous and Emotions Af1onymous. . six months without that tempera·
Both are based on the I 2-step mental wiich in my lire have been
principles of Alcoholic!&gt; Anony· · heavenly. I •no longer have to hear
. mous and have shown me that what an Esso B her husband is (he is
not), and what an angel her son is
there is a better way to live.
Nine months after joining and (he is not), nor do I shake when the
attending two meetings i a week, I phone rings for fear that she will be
feel an incredible sense of freedom on the other end. ready to rip me
and, for the first lime, .a sense of apart.
So, forgive me for saying this,
personal worth.
I want everyone ou~ there !O dear Ann: Your advice is terrific
know that they no longer have to
most of the time, but it doesn't
be doonnats, martyrs or people always work for everybody. I'll sign
pleasers. Nor do they have to pump this .. Ll BERATED IN NEW YORK
up their egos by hangil)g out with AND HAPPY AS A CLAM
folks who are inadequate, confused
DEAR NEW YORK CLAM: My
and needy. If you see iyourself in advire is not. nor was it ever meant
this letter, do yourself a favor and . to be, the "one size that fits an··
write to: Emottons Anonymous. variety. Circumstances alter cases
P.O. Box 4245, St. "'aul. Minn. and vou r case is certainly out of the
ordinary. Your sister sounds in·
55104, and Co-Depend~¥~ts Ano~y·
mous, P.O. Box 33577, Phoemx.
tensely hostile, and she may well be
Ariz. 85067· 3577. - L.M .• CORPUS a bona fide wacko.
When it is impossible to get along
CHRISTl, TEX.
:
Dear Ann Landers: 4Ist Sunday, ·with rertain individuals, your best
at a church social, several of us were bet is to get along without them.
discussing an acquairltanre who
Dear Ann Landers: Four years
had just had a 1()-poun~ baby boy. ago I got a divorre. My ex-husband
A woman in the group, ·whom I did (I'll call him Mike) lied to me
not know, tunied to me and asked. constantly, had a violent temper,
"And when is your llappy .event broke my jaw and caused me to
going to take place?'' 1snid, "Excuse have a miscarriage. After that I left
me?'' She replied, "W\'en is your him. To get even, he took off with
baby due?" I told he~ 1 was not ail my belongings, incl\Jding my
pregnant. She was em rrassed and toothbrush.
0

.(1uxilia1y prepares holiday season events
Pla ns for r emembering shut- Tuesday with members to meet
ins a nd those in nursing homes in to tag each one and also prepare
the Bend area were made at last · fruit trays to be deliver~ on
·
week's meeting when the Amer i- We dnesday.
A party was held at the
ca n Legion Auxilia ry , Feeney
Bennett Post 128, met a t the hall. Coolville Arcadia Nursing Home
II was no ted that 350 poinset- and fruit was taken to Elam
House and the Meigs County
tias will be delivered to the hail

lntro&lt;'luced th emselves. including sev&lt;?ral visitors from the ,
Big Rend Wes t Service Unit and
Dee Lawrence. Girl Scout field
director. from Athen s.
Finai\Y. an investiture and
rededication ceremony for new ·
and returning leaders was held,
followed by a Christmas party
and ornament exchange.
Next momh 's service unit
meeting will be Jan. 5 at til"
Chester Fire Station.

made from re cycled mater ials.
Next month 's demonstration wlil
be by Debbie Cook.
It was reported t.hat any troop
wishing to submit Information to
the Daily Sentinel for publication
in the monthly Girl Scout Diary,
should submit the information 10
the newspaper by the 15th of
every month. Clear photographs
may also be used by the
newspaper.
Those present at the meeting

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, December 8. 1988

Q

�•

Paga 8-lhe Daily Seminal

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Ohio

Thursday. December 8, 1988

BIBD'S EYE VIEW - VIce President Geoi'Je
Bub, President Ronald RfiqanandSovlell.e ader
Mlldlall Gorbachev view the skyline ol New york

day Ignored anti-Soviet protests
ad y
dt
tedN Y k
an rea
ew .or ers Io a
ofsuperpower diplomacy capped
·
by a twilight visit to the. city's
tallest building and an unscheduled stop In Times Square.
..
We are very pleased by the
fact that thousands of New
Yorkers ~.ave come out to weicome us, the Soviet president
and CommuniSt Party leader
said on a llOth floor observation
deck at the Wo ld Tr de Center
r
a
an hour after his luncheon with
President Reagan and
Presldeni·elect George Bush.
"We saw their faces, we saw
their eyes, we saw their friendli·
ness. Believe me, this is !mpor·
tant. We are grateful for this
warm hospitality," he said as the
twilight sky darkened on the
horizon and the Big Apple citys·
cape flickered with evening
lights.
"To be here as tourists almost
a half-mile over New York, I am
very Impressed by the city, by Its
architecture. · its bridges, the
water and by all that I've seen,"
said Gorbachev, his wife stand·
!ng at his side.
A half-hour later, the Soviet
leader's quarter·mlle·long motorcade screeched to a halt in
Times Square, shocking
hundreds of pollee escorts but
thrilling ten&amp; of thousands of
well-wishers who sent a roaring
welcome through the famous
neon-bathed canyons.
The Gorbachevs hopped out,
waved and clasped their hands
over their heads, and the din of
their welcome was reminiscent
of the square's famed New
Year's Eve revelry.
"It was totally awesome!'' It's
one of the best feelings I ever
had," said Dan Negrelll, 17, of
Stafford, Conn., who came with
classmates . to see. a Broadway

alter their meeting at Governor's bland, N.Y.,
·Wednesday. The Twin Towers of the World Trade
Center are In the background. (UPJ)

One dead in shelter shooting
DENVER (UP I) -A resident
awaiting counseling at a shelter
for battered women "stood up
with a mean look on her face 11nd
started shooting'' at random with
a piStol Wednesday, killing one
person and wounding two others,
pollee and witnesses said . .
The assailant, Juanita Whi·
taker. 40. then barricaded herself
In the basement of the she!ter
operated by Volunteers of Amer·

lea until police persuaded her to
surrender without further trou·
ble about an hour later.
Police Sgt. Phil Dinan said he
had learned Whitaker's motive
for.the shooting while negotiating
the woman's sutrender. but said
he could not discuss it.
Whitaker apparently had been
llvlng at the shelter since Nov. 23,
police detective John Wyckoff
said. She had an arrest record In
suburban Aurora and Golden,
and had filed a sexual assatilt
complaint with police on Nov. 23,
pollee spokeswoman Ann Mon·
toya said.
There were unconfirmed re·
ports that Whitaker used either a
.38-cal!ber or .45-callber. hand·~~
gun. Pollee said they did not
BOSTON (UPI) - A federal
know where she had obtained it.
appeals court Wednesday dis·
The shelter Is housed In an old,
miSsed claims that chemicals
three-story brick apartment
from property owned by the giant
building that is kept locked for
Beatrice Foods Co. contami·
security reasons, said Diana
nated wells in a Boston suburb
Kuntz, president of the Colorado
and caused a rash of leukemia
branch of the Volunteers of
deaths.
America.
But the court ordered a new
Even employees of the shelter
hearing on alleged pollution from
are not given keys, Kuntz said,
a Beatrice tannery because of but residents are not frisked as
"misconduct". by the company they enter and leave. "The
and its lawyers in failing to security that we really focus on Is
supply evidence sought in the keeping people out of the shel·
trial of a lawsuit filed by the ter," she said. "Battered women
victims' famUies.
are sometimes afraid of the
A lawyer for the families batterer."
hailed the ruling, saying the
She said security would be
order to investigate the !'(lnduct reviewed to prevent a recurrence
of a company· as big as Beatrice of vl~lence.
· and Its highly regarded Boston
Carla Eilts, 20. who had shared
law firm. Hale &amp; Dorr. had a room with Whitaker for three
·'nationwide significance."
days, described her as generally ·
But a lawyer for Beatrice said "happy but shy," but was very
he was •'confident" the company nervous Tuesday night and kept
and the law firm will be vindi· pacing her room and slept on a
cated In its handling of the case. couch rather than in bed.
The lsi U.S. Court of Appeals
E!lth said when she got up
upheld a lower-court ruling that Wednesday she went to the
cleared Beatrice of responslbil· shelter counselor's office and
tty for alleged toxic-waste poilu· saw Whitaker sitting with other
tlon from 15 acres of property women who were waiting to be
. located near drinking water counseled.
supplies in Woburn.
"Juanita apparently couldn't
B)lt the panel ordered a lower · walt any longer," Ellth said.
court to determine whether Be a·
"She stood up with a mean look
trice was guilty of "derellction" on her face and started shooting
of duty by withholding a 1983 and everybody ran like hell."
hydrogeologic report that may
A resident who identified her·
have confirmed groundwater self only as Polly, said, "I was
contamination from the nearby justgettlngupandlheardashot.
tannery.
Then they came on the louds·
U.S. District Judge Walter Jay
peaker and said !or everybody to
Skinner was ordered to deterget out. I said, 'Oh, s-·.' and
mine whether the families are grabbed iny baby and some
· entitled to any remedy, including diapers and ran ."
the possibility of a new trial on
Authorities said Jeannie Ar·
the tannery issue.
chuleta, 24, an employee of the
· Lawyers for both sides said shelter, was shot three tim~ in
they were pleased by theunanim·
ous 54-page ruling.
"The whole case we tried was
the question Involving the 15
acres, and whether pollutants
from the 15 acres reached the
wi!IIS," said Jerome P. Facher,
representing Beatrice, " ... and •
I
It's clear that part of the case is

Federal court
dismisses claim
of contaminated
wells causing illness

theheadandchest.ShedledatSt.
Anthony Hospital Central, across
the street from the shelter on the
western edge of the city.
Two other people were taken to
Denver General Hospital with
gunshot wounds. Officials said a
Ken Sanchez, 29, the shelter
manager, was In serious condl·
tlon with an abdominal wound. A
female resident of the shelter
whose Identity was withheld was
shot in the thigh and was In fair
condition.
Five other people were treated
for minor injuries, apparently by
flying glass or In the rush to leave
the building, Wyckoff said.
Montoya, the police spokeswo·
man said the victims apparently
had been waiting in the main
administrative room on the first
floor of the shelter. She said
Whitaker apparently began fir·
lng at random.
She then barricaded herself
Inside a basement apartment at
the shelter and told pollee she
would kill herself and two hos·
tages she was holding If pollee
stormed the room. It was later
determined there were no
hostages.
Dinan, the pollee negotiator,
talked with Whitaker for more
than an hour and persuaded her
to give up after promising that
police would not shoot her and
that her picture would not be
taken by news photographers.
Whitaker was taken out the back
door out of sight of the media.
"She was very concerned
about her future . She's been In
town, she's not had good luck In
town, not had any chances td
Improve her lot," Dinan said.
"l 'm not sure what her total
grasp of reality was. Some of
what she talked with me about
was coherent. some of it was not
coherent.
Other residents said Whitaker
reportedly had a fight with her
boyfrlend·Tuesday night and was
afraid she would be thrown out of
the shelter.
Patrick Frank, a Denver So·
clal Services Department coun·
selor, said he had talked with
Whitaker last week and realized
the woman had mental
problems.
"I only talked with her 3 or 4
mlnu tes. but I knew something
wasn't there," Frank said. "It
was her attitude, but she didn't
seem any more prone to violence
than a lot of other people in her
situation."

play. "To see any leader Is a
The couple's day began w~h a
thrill, but especially the~eaderof quick trip from the Uhppebnt~J .
such a powerful country "
-Side mission to I e
Fl as hi ng across the · 1amous
Nations . where Gorbachev be"Z!
..
came the first soviet leader to
pper e1ectron1c s1gn a1 1
1 A sembl
Times Square were the words ·
address the Genera s
Y
"G , 1 Se t
G b h ·
since N!klta Khrushchev's his·
en.,ra
ere ary or ac ev
.
at the Crossroads of the World."
torte 196() visit.
f . tf.
The couple waved energeti·
An ethnic potpourr1 o an
cally through tbe window of their · Soviet• protesters representing
Jet-black Z!l limousine as it
Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Ar·
snaked its way back to the Soviet
menta. the Ukraine, Poland,
U.N. mission through broad
Afghan.lstan and Iran - all with
streets eerily emptied of traffic.
bones to pick with the Kremlin ·
Th
t
d -b 1 fl
competed
for attention In Dag
ey s oppe
r e Y aga 1n ou 1·
.
ld
side Manhattan's mecca of con· Hammarskjold Plaza outs e
U.N. headquarters.
sumer cap 1 1 a 1 1 sm,
B:lolioiimii!ilng~d~~aillel.'lis..._ _ _ _ _ _• • • • • • • • • • •

MARGUERITE'S
GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE.
CONTINUES! !
"Everything Must ,8ol"

.'Thulsdlly.

December 8, 1988

I

over."
Boston lawyer Jan Schi!Ct·
mann, representing the Woburn
families, said that "as far as
liability Is concerned, Beatrice's
responsibility regarding the
tannery and the 15 acres are of
equal Importance."

Lottwy n~mbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Wed·
nesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
874.
Ticket sales totaled
.$1.436,057 .50, with a payoff due of
.$348,885.
PJCK-4

. 2660.

PICK·4 tiCket sales totaled
$250,036, with a payoff due of
$112,790.
. PICK-4 $1 ,straight bet pays
$5,616. PICK·4 $1 box bet {'3YS

$468.

Super Lotto
7, 20. 23, 28, 32, 42.

Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$4,449,374.
Kicker

453806.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$676,666.

(

I STARTING DEC. 12 OPEN NIGHTLY UNTIL 8
II Register To Win $2,000 Worth of
1

1

Certificates To Be Given Away By
The Middleport Merchants.

I

POMERO't', OHIO

HOME BAKED
GOODIES
Get Your
'
.. Holiday Goodie
• Orders In Now.
'
AUNT TE'S
"'.
.... 992-5119

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

Member FDIC

1·28·'88-tln

•

"MUst le lepairallle"

: KEN'S APPUANCE
·
SERVICE

Service on A II

We Honor

•

. Public Notice

•

•

sav;ng coupons

•

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given

/ Sovlnga Company. Pom•

Service

~ roy, Ohio, reserve• the right
·, to bid at thi1 ule. and to
1
withdraw tha above collet' erel prior to aale. further,
!· The Farmer• Bank end Sevl
iftQI Coml)8ny r•ervet the
' tight Jo roioct any or on bido
submitted.
Funher, tho above collet·
erol wPI be sold In tho
condttion tt is in wilh no
expr•JIIdorimpliedwarrantiel given.
02) 7, B. 9, 3tc

i

i

· 8

Emergency Cash
Advance Service
Accidental

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certainteed ·
Vinyl Siding

Roofing

Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
·windows
Free Estimptes
Call 992-2772
8/15/ttn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNII: GIEG I. IOUSH

,..

GENERAL

:' '•'

CON1RACTORS

~ · RESIDENTIAL
~

COIIIIERCIAl

.CUllOM IUlCHENI. lATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODEUNO

.VINYL SIDING. ROOANQ
-Mn"'- .UILDINGI
HOVIINO. APT. PROJECTS

SINCil/969 .
IISI'f 11. STUll.

MEMBER
F.D.I.C.

NEW HAVEN

882-2135

POINT PLJ!:ASANT
675-1121

$14 PER TON
DRIVERED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMERO't', OHIO

992-6461

Between 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or leave Meuaae

2-1~'88 - tfn

' FREE ESTIMATES
Toke the pain out of
pain!ing. Lot me do
tt for you.
VEIY REASONABLE

HAVE REFERENCES

LATESI

TRACTORS: Oliver 1550 Diesel with wide front, live power, 3
pt., IH 350 ulilrt, and Farmall H. Bolh sold AS IS.
ti~CHINERf: 4K 14 Oliver plows, 5' N.H. Brushho&amp; I,H2 row
corn planter N.H. 2J3 hay bailer, NH 7' 477 hayb~ne, I.H.
H14 hay rak~ 8' Cocbhul wheel disc, 8' lime spreader, M.H.
3 lon and IH 3 lon wagons, 2 IH 7 ton wagons, Nl H7 co1n
picker, IH fast hitch 2 bottom plow, IH field chopper and I
row corn head, Powell one row plant setter, cultiVators and
end loader lor Farmall H. and etc.MISC.: 1971 Ford I ton truck-as is, 255 gal. water tank,
commercial eleCtric meat slicer, 10' slide in truck campe1,
stove, \? bed, refrigerator, etc.
.
AIITIQUE or COLLECTOR'S ITEMS: Apple buHel kettle w1th
stand sausage stuffer, horss drawn 1ron wheel wagon. boK
bed an,d spring seal. horss walk behind plow, 2 sets harness,
horse cuHivator, Eagle hand corn sheller and bo•. horse sled.

}

'.

" Free Estimates '·

Up to t 15 hour JJfOC1811ttng mail

SER~ICE

We 1on repair ond re-

AIID

core radiators and
heater cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gos Tonks.

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

PAT HILL FORD

111 WntSec. •-•Y

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

lOP OF THE STAllS

992·6720

1-13-tft

12·5-88-1 mo.

Middleport, Ohio

992-61111

NO

A/ C Service

992~6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

Certified Licensed Shop

5·15· tfll

Pm•lit1tlu
s,.~le/111

Free-Lance Writer

Spttehes,

i

Phone:
- _.
614-992-3643
.
11.·71 mo

by Donna
SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES

Birthdays, Holidays
Specializing in
character and novelty
cakes

Rt. 1, Box 1311, Vinton
742-2235

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING
AND

Munleloading Supplies
Modern Gun Supr,liu
Guns • Ammo - S ugs •
22 Ammo
12 4 Ea51 of Rutland
Across Happy Hollow Rd.

anthdaltv room and bo•drate.
YoU provide a Mtme. guld111ce
and friWldlhip in a femitv
atmotpha'e. Requhl ability to
teach ~ . .onaiiMng sldllt and a
commitment to the growth and
ctw.opm.nt of an lndhliclllll(s}
with ment-' retarMUon. Contact Syt.ie Oov at 448-7109
aft• 6 :00PM. Applicants must
r•ide in G1Mia County. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Free adorable Coon Hound puppie~ to good horne. Call 614742· 2356.
&amp;puppi•. 4mtleand2femat•.
mother full blooded Be~la

· P.-t Codter Spaniel and 'Nired
Hair TM'ri• pupptel, have five.
304-882·3669.
7 pwt Lab and pert Sheep dog

popp;eo, 304-n3-5521 .

6

~tt~~.

9/to/ttn I

•r•.

work

!FREE ESTIMATES)

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
·
n l4C' aa-ttn

e

Found: Small mille dog. Cardinal
Mkt. WI Mlddteport. Has coli•.

CARPENTER
SERVICE ~
- Addon1 •nl:t remodeling
- Roofing end gutter work

Lost and Found

Loat: Ftid-r. Dec-..,., 2 In
Mlddteport-Pom•ov
biu
billfold with velao f•tening.
C./1814·742·2114.

pll

YOUNG'S

No identification. 814-387·
0584, pl ... eldentity.

Lost in Rutland neighborhood.
Solid Grey female e•. We•ing
whfte flee collar. If fDund call
814-742·2073.

FOUND black fa'nala pup on Rt.
82 top of Deed Mana curve, cell
304-875-2377.
FOUND small Cotlle dOg Satur·
day in north Point Pleallnt trN,
304-878·3004 o• 87&amp;-1839.

'

Yard Sale

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

.......G.allipolis ......... .
&amp; Vicinity
Moving S•le:12· 6 thru 12-12.
New range; w &amp; D, iiv. &amp;
bedroom ·auitM, guns. tools.
/add. .. C./1814-258-8688.

.......Pome.rov.......... .

ONLY
.9·19-81 tin

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

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Suppli
Pay Your Phone

-. and Cable Bills Here
lli~r -

· austNEIS PIIONE

16141 992·6lSO

Owner&amp;. Operator,

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Gerage 1ele. Fri. and Set. Dec.
9th .,d 10th. 10am . n 234
Mulberry Ave.

8

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Rick Pe••on Auction..,, 11cent8d Ohio and w.t Virginia.
Ettete, ~tkwe. f•m. liquid•
tlon salet, 304-773-5786.

RESIDINCE PHONE

1614) 992-7754

11-9·' mo.

1/2811111

WOOD STOVES

ALARM
SYSTEMS

e12 Years Experience

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES
· Featuring: Consolidaled, Dutch
West, Bruneo, Ashley
WE TRADE

CAIPENTEI, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431

698-6121
.Television Listening
Dependable Heariag Aid Sales &amp;Sentic•
C!J Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

•Residential
•Commercial

10 Years Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY
614-992-5952

11·1-1 ~·d pd.

•a.a.w~

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ .Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~ (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue, BOK 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.
or at

3-

'Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy, Ohio

With

c.~

IU't'
NOW
PAY
lATER

Codot Flnand,.

1D"'o Down

With AptlrOWid Credit
No Payment or lot•Mt
'Til July I, 1..9

D. J.'S TRADING POST
614·992-7301

IIIIDOIIPORM'\~ 1 mo.

Gov•nment Jobl. t16.040 •
859.230 yr. Now hiring. Cell
1· 808-887·11000 act . R-9805
for cumnt fed~ral lilt.
JOB HUNTING? NEEDASKILL7
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOSS
AS Auto Meeh.-.ics, C.rpent•t. C01mMologi.ts, Olvenifled Medical Wofk•s. Electricians, Food S.Vioe Work•a.
Electronics Technici1111. ln6J•
trial Maintenance Workers.
Nunlng AltMtants lind Ord•lles. Machinllts. Office Worken
and w.td•s. Regiltll' now for
cl•s• beginning January 3rd.
Call Tri-Cou nty VoCIIIionll Adult
Cent• at 763-3511 ext. 14. A
variMy ot llndingsource~ to P'IV
for training are IYailable for
thole eligible.
.
BU ILO FOR YOU A FUTURE.
La•n both rough and fin!.h
carpentry tldlt Ill the Aduft
Education Center-Tri-County
Voc.llonal Sc:hool. lhe Adutt
c.JNntry progr*" will provide
you with tl'lllnlng to beconw 11
c•pent~r. Carpentry lldlls 11re1o
important 11nd vertttNe that
c•penters make up the l•g81t
w-oup of b.lildlng trMe work••To regilt« tor el••• beginning
January 3rd. call7153-3611 lkt.
14. Ask about our varllty of
funding sourcell available to pay
for training.
10 lldi• nMded for telephone
work. Must mel well ; 2 shHts
aveilabte; 9:00 .-n·2:30 pm;
4:00.9:00 pm. Good hourty
wage: paid waekty; _,Piv after
10:00 em Thundav. De.:;. 1 at
104'h (upsti!IU) Meln St.,
Pbma;ov.

Am•ic.e. Pomeroy h• imm•

1:00 P.M.

11-21-'BB'·I mo.

LOWEST PRICES

Giveaway

Puppies to gNeeway. 1fz Bord•
Calllo. 114· 247· 4024. 814·
247·21 13.

614-742-2355

992-2526 POMEIOT1 OHIO

Cardillo

WANTED : Full-tiine employ~ent In vour own home " · a
Home Services Work• with
Buekeve Community Serviete.
We provide salllrY plus benfits

304-895-3335.

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

Tony

local busin•s inter•ted in
career orien1 ed itulvid.Jal want·
ing to work In finiclll servk:M
inlllstry. Base salarv plus •I•
commission. Needl to h~rt~e
computer and secrMary lkillsu
well. Mu1t be aggr•tWe. Send
resumes to: P. 0 . Do~~: 359.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45831 .

Grav strlpp~ cat to gtve ttNtJV.
Mike nice Chr"ilt,..l pr•ent.
Bea~tiful m•klngs. Male. Call
814-441·4436.

7

Full Excavating and Construction
Residential &amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential &amp;
. Farm Work
Rt. 1. Vinton
388·8745

Local company now hiring for
full time employmetlt. No Pp•
rience nec•aarv. Ewnlngwork.
light Nft in9 invo~ecl.' 1300 per
week. Profit s~ing and oth•
compenv benefits. For personal
intervklw call 814-446-6146.

Cute kin8ftl needs good home.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Formerly Meigs Excavating

HELP WANTED

tomel•. Coli 814-379-2436.

985-4141

K&amp;T EXCAVATING 'AND
CONSTRUCTION

Denise.

Part Chihuahua, male. puppy,
appro11. 9 wid. old. Call 814448-3398.

-Concrete work
- Plumbing end electricat

1124 E. MAIN

licensed Phf.ic al Therapist 11
Veterans Memorial Hospttel.
C.ll 8t4-992· 2104 ••k lo•

U-Haul's For Rent. Siders Equipment Co. U.S. At. 35. Hend_Jir·
son.WV.

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and n8NM' Uled c•s. Smtth
Buick· Pontiac. 191 1 East•n
Avo.. Golllpolio. Coli 814-4482282.
Complete houslholdl of llrnlture &amp; antktLtas. At.o wood a.
coot hHt•s. Swain' a Furniture
• A I.ICtion, Thlr d &amp;. Ollv e.
814-448-3189.

dl•• openings for ft.! II time and
p.-t·time RN's · LPN'I- AN
thiftt. Fl811ible tchecl.Aiing. co~
pMitlve ularv and ben!rfttr off•ed· 'M'I•e continuing education ilaplut. ContiiCil.aRueHII.
RN•OON, Amwlcare-Pomeroy.
38759 Rockspringr Rd., Pom•
ra.,. 814-992-1108. ,
Job opening for School Age

lnttruetor. Full tlmelamporary.
Must hiYe amerrt M.S .P.R.
Certlflcete. Valid Ohio Oep.,.
ment of Education Certlflclte.
Matters Degree Ptaferrtd. Selary begins at 816 ...00. Po1itk&gt;n
begins.Januery 3. 1989. Appty
to Melgr County Bo•d of
MR·DD. P.O. Box 307, 1310
Carl•on St.. Svri!Wse. Ohio
45779. Att.rtion Bette Hof·
fm.,, Program Director,

Teach• at Meigs Junior High
IlliCit blt:.ttttter tor babrf. Mu11:
aupplv rNances, be f nonamokw. and live In MlddleportPbmwoy. Call Su1anne. 814949-2319.

Uted tnnttur. bv the piece or
entire hou•hold ... o ulllng.
814-742· 2455.

.

Will bab\1 sit irt my home week
days for 3 yr. olds &amp; 4 yr otds.
C.ll 614-448-4048 .
McDaniel C uatom 8 utchering.
open 5 days week. call 304-882·
3220l

Ftnancial
:;;-;;,----,,..--:-----

21

8 usiness
Opportunity

THE .OHIO VALLEY PUBLISI+
lNG CO . recomrnMdll that you
do busine.s 'With people you
know, and NOT to lflt'td mont¥"

AVON- Atl areaa.

C•• Marilyn

inve.w•gated t he o~•ing.

h~rt~e

Heir Salol\ high traffic high
volume shop. Rtclleed for quick

sale. 304-525-3056 or 304523-7217

23 Professional
Services
Mary Luc11 -Piano &amp; organ les-

sons. Call 614-446-9787 or
446-.W26.
Piano Lessons in my home,

beginning to intwmediete. Call
614-441-0200.
Piano Tuning and repair. Line
Daniels. 614-742-2951 . Al10
for tale: Kimball 57 inch Grand
piM'IO .

Real Eslale
31

Hanes for Sale

Very attractive brick 4 be"'oom.
2 btl h. f.nit¥ room whh fireplace, forn'llll dining. l•gelilflng
room. 30 ft. custom oak ldu:hen
ceblnMs. oak w ooctNark. finilh
b•ement, 2 c.- g•ege. let~el
hndlcaped lot. 4 mil• from
Holur Ho1pitat oft Rt. 35~rt•brook Subdivision. Call
614-448-4189 .
4 BR .. h.lll b•em.-tt &amp; G•!!'le.
ful~ c•peted (aoma niW) . Ctty
schoola. Utilltl• klw. Woodburnlf. Nat\Jral g• furnace.
Priced to ull. CaM 814-4410276 aft• 8 PM, weeka1dl
anytime.

3 BR . house. deluxe. AC, &amp;
pool-Sale or Trade. 4 BR. house,
good locelion. Call 304-8756100l
REPOSSESSED GOVERN •
M ENT HOMES! Umit.t time.
low oost. Netionwideprograms.

Call lor
your

buv..-•
IJ.Iidl/ lllt to
1 -315-733-6084.

eree.

e.t. G 2768.

House for nle. Po11ible land
contract. 822. Jackson St. Vin.
ton. OH 114-38S.B3io.
3 belt'oom. 2 baths. full ftntlhed
b•ement, .,_.
and
centre! air, g•age. fenced v•rd.
2414 Mt. V•non Ave., Pt. Ptt.,
priced on inspection, 304-8715- ·
1774.

"'"*'

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1968 New Moon 12x50, 2 BR .
t1900. Call 814-.W&amp;-0390
1970 New Moon 12x65 trell.-.
C.ll814-258-133311ft'" 6 PM .
1972 Artington 12x.SO. EKtra
nice. 14000. Call 614-2588793.
1970 1211:60 Mon11rch mobile
home. 2 BR . Coli 814-38~
8114.
1988 Fleofwood. 12164. bottle
g• heat and hot wetll'. UOOO.
C•ll 814-843-5310 or 614··
843-5406 ltrlytime. Alk for
Dtnny .
Ooubla wide mobile home. on
foundation, epprox. 2 aa•.
close to 1own and schools, lg.
kitchen, laundry. l "bettoonw, 2
bathl, ftiiN carp•. cona•e
pord-1-Mikl. back dedts, ~tk&gt;.
rtrflnilhed cell•. JJtlmp, Meet·
lent condition. Large b•n with
concrete floor. 814-992-3218
evenings after 5 : 30 or
weekendl.

Mobite home .,d lot. 88500. In

Mldcleport. 2 bedrooms. Call
814-992-8618.
2 bedroom 12~~:50.
304-878-2722 .

t1900.

1979 Bayviwl mobile home,
1 4x 7Q with 1x21 s.pen do.
phone 304-675-8141 .
1978 Libony 14•70. 3 bedroom , 17, 900. 00. 304-675-

w•.,., 304-882·2845.

1871 and 675-1783.

AVON all .... HShirlev Spe••.
304-875-1429.

10,..60 Mobile home for ule.
t1 .500.00. 304-6751724.

Ple•ent Valley Nul'llng Care
Center is seeking llcented
Practice! Nurs81 for lmmcKIIMe
emplovm.,t. If in1•11ted call
304-878-4340. AA·EOE.

2 bedroom, 10x60 mobile home
in good 5t'l8pe. 8990.00cun or
owner will finance, 304-875-2722 .

Men ~gement Poall:klnA,.ilable.
salary •1 8 . 000 . 00 •
130.000.00. depending on
qu .. ifl~iont, expatlenoe and
pel'fDrmanoe. s.,d r"ume to
P.O. Box 171 . Point Plea~ant,
W. VI . 26650.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Junk Clrs with Of without
moton. C.ll """" LiveiY·8143BB·9303.
Furniture .,d •pll8nce. by the
piece or «t1 ire hOusehold. Fair
,.,.., bolng poid. Coii814-.WII3168.
-

by Rhn CJII 614-388-

throuijh the mail until you
HElP WANTED

Wa wiH haul coal for emarg&amp;ne,
HEAP, Me-iga County Dept of
Human Servieea. and HEAP
vouchers. We can g;.,e vou
prompt deiNeries. Excelsiof Sah
WOf'ks. Inc. Pamerov. Ohio.
614-992· 3891 .

4

JUST OPENED
CAKES

GENERAL CONTIIACTORS
11·16·'88-tfn

Denise.

Don' t .,....d theHolidiiV• alone!
Eligible men &amp; Woman w~nt to
meet vou . Write: Heart Se•ch.
So~~: 5846, Athena, Ohio 46701 .

Home Decorating Open HauseFri. &amp;. Sat, Dec:. 9 &amp; 10, 10
AM-10 PM aach d., .. Gloria
· Oiler-St. At. 326·21f.t mil• from
lang~ille, 614-742-2078.

· Computer Graphi~s,
Public Relations,
Advertising

8444

I NOTICE I

Ucented Physicl!ll Therapist at
Veterans Me'm orial Hospital.
Cell 114-992-2104 ask for

Need a Mast•card-Visa in a
hurry7 Guaranteed program regardt•s of hiltory. For manual
fUld applicm:lon call us . 1-315733·11063 EICI. M278~ .

Leesa M. Murphey

Cakt~~

46831 .

All Major &amp;. Minor
Repairs

NIASE Cenifiod Mech.,ic

Schools
Instruction

1 8 Wanted to Do

Send re~umfl 1o: Bo• Cia 183.
c/ oGallipolil Daily Tribune, 825
Third Aw.. GallipoUI. Ohio

3 Announcements

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

BOOKCASES
CUPBOARDS
CROCKS
BEDS
WASHSTANDS
PIE SAFES
DRESERS
PRIMITIVES
l.l&lt;MPS
TABLES
"The Gijh Thai Never Slop Giving"

BabVsitt• needed weekdfr,tt in

Annou ncemen Is

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles

CHESTER, OliO

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

SUNDAY CALLS

our home. Hob:er. Hoapkalerea.
Send resume to : BOJt Cle 181
e l oGalllpolil Daily T
Bobyolttor ""dod weekdlr(t ;,
our home. Holzer Hospitll area.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Shop
Where
Santa
Shops!

w&amp;eldy. Check ~arenteed, free
details, write SO 1057 W.
Phii.Wphia Suite239-GO. Ontario, CALIF 91782.

J.tl

Ph.

.

Bu~f

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

11·3·'88·1 mo.

JR. I MISSY
FASHIONS,
HAIIt STYUNG I TANNING
GIEAT CHRISTMAS Gins
GREAT PRICIS • GIR
CEinFtCATES

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Ohio liCifllt, 57-611344 - W. VI. 515
llot Rnponslble for Accidents or loss of Proper!
j

614-742-2617

ante

OWNERS: Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rollins
DAN SMITH-Auction"r-614-992-7301

MASON
773·5514

-FREE ESTIMliESFor ony of these strvl(eS call

LINDA'S
PAINTING

ReferencH

LOCAnON: lpproK. 8 milts on St. Rt. 143 N.
from St. lt. 7 Pa1111roy ly·pou to Harrisonv~le,
Ohio. Turn right on St. Rt. 614. Take 2nd rood
on right to deodtnd. Watch for signs.

PEOPLES BANK

•Junk Yard Business
WAN! 10 BUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CARS OR !RUCKI

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

11·21·88-tfn

MAXI1UM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

.VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

SAT., DEC. 10, 1988-10:00A.M.

Insurance

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7611

CHIPWOOD
POLES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Urgenttv need dependable .person to work wh:hout eupervilion
for Texn 01 Co. in Gallipobt
ar.ea, We train. Write H. J .
Oickertcn. Pr•. SWEPCO. BoK
961005, Ft. Worth. TJC 76 161 .

Now Homts

15

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COU.£GE. 629 Jeckson Pike.
Call 446-4387. Reg. No. 86-11 10658

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

CALL

BOGGS

PUBLIC AUCTION

Death

IO·Hfn

11·25·'88·1 mo.

11-19·'88 1 mo. d.

11·6.'88

Key Ring lltld
Registration Service

12 Gauge Shotgun.' Only
Strictly Enforced

614-985-4180

1977 Ford F250 P.U. o#

' F265UOI3049.
~ ~ The Fermer• Bank and

Protection

Factory Choke

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY B A.M. to 5 P.M.
B A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
.q _OllD SUMP~ Y.

following cotloteral:

Cattl

3S9iS Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
2 miln from Rt. 7 on
County !toad 26

INTEIIOI·EXTEIIOI

thlt on Saturday. Do Climber
10th, 1918, ot10:00o.m .. a
, pulltlc ..to wMI be held ot
~ 105 Union Avenue, Pome' roy, Ohio, toHIIIorceshthe

S2,5(YJ in money.

EVERY
SAT, NIGHT
6:30P.M.

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE

Get Results Fast

We Service All Makes

, ..

Basham Building

1·3· '86-11&lt;

L.~------~l/~2~VU/t!•

National
Discount Program
fealuri"{J ewer

CHRISTMAS
TREES

farm Equipmedl
Ptrh &amp; Service

8 .7 Financing on

985-3561

•

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

TERRI POWELL
12-6- ·aa.t ..a.

••

f

GUN SHOOT

FOR SALE

L..-"'"--=~

•

I

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

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvi&lt;e Center for lyon
Products

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •F reezers
•Refrigerators

1'
1

I

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949:2860

DEAD OR AUYE

I

.

· Lotated H•lfway
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bas han .

WANTED

I·
I
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

PH. 949-2969

"At Reasonabt. Prices"

4•16-86-tfn

.. '

II

I

Dealer for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

I

I

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

.

I

I

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

,•

I
I

I
I

11·21·'88-1 mo.

•

!~~ ~

I

742-2421

!

I.

I
I
I
I

Snoith lun ltl, lutl..,d, Oh.

You'll get' a great deal with The Club!

I

I

I
I

I

ChritiiTIII Selections.

992-2269

.

992-3639

~-----------------------11(
I
WILL BE OPEN THE FOLLOWING
SUNDAYS FROM 1-5 FOR YOUR
.•
I
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
I
DEC.11 &amp; 18
I

I
I
I

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

-

MARGUERITE SHOES

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

s

Come aee our

.. BILL SLACK

.

"$bsp Now F~t Cblltftnll"

B. impressive values on c:
variety1)f tremendous
services! C. no added fees!
Congratulations' you get
al.l of this and more with
The Club checking
account
package.

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY-CAllS

NO LAYAWAYS- CASH SALES ONLY

What's your idea of a great
deal in checking? A. all
the personalized checks
you need at no per check
charge!

OAK. LOCUS"'(.
CHERRY

For your shopping co~¥tni·
en• we wil lit Optn on Sun11-rs~ frDI'II 1 to 5 p.m. thru
Dt&lt;. 11, 1981.

YOU'LL FIND SAVINGS FOR
·MEN, WOMEN AND d~ILDREN

102 EAST MAIN

FIREWOOD

WELCOME TO
CHRISTMAS
AT

erv1 ce~s:.-_ ___,'

Help Wanted

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

A11thorited Serviu
&amp; Parts

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
•
•

us1ness

11

Business Services

Classified
· $3

The Daily

Ohio

8·&amp;-88·tfn

•SUPER SAYINGS •PRICES SLASHED
.
•
ALL SALES FINAL

..

,·

Gorbachev greets Times Square
visitors; touched by their welcome
NEW YORK (UPI)
Mikhail
and Ralsa Gorbache;Wednes·

.....

Billing Clel"k. Ayan F•mlly
Health Is seeking an energellc
fndtvldual for ~time poeltion

Lot for sale on Rt. 160-100 or
1 50 ft. frontage x 300 fl . Call

614-388-8711 .

Astwon. beanifu I l•ge building
lots. mobile hom• permitted.
public water, tlso rNer lots.
Clvde Bowen, Jr. 304-6762338.

Renlals

of billing cleric. tlnowlege of
m8dical termlnologv 1 must,
BCperlenoe pr.. •r.S. 304-87&amp;11015, .. ,.,. F""'Hy Heolth will
bo locotod In Golllpolll Fe...,.

w.v..

w.,t.t to buy .._,ding timber,
304-875-8328 .
WANTEp
Smal pi IItie: riCiol mlda t.tore 12 · Situations
18110. I wAI Pll'f ·up to UOO.OO
Wanted
for 10me modlll of Emnons.
Fld1. Sp.,.on GIMI ello novelty
rlldJoa. auch • Lone Ringer.
Loving c.e for alderty and
Mldlll'f Mou,., Hop • Long hlnciCII'Pod. tiiOO pklo. c.n
CoNic!¥. Me. Alto. old TV ,,.. 814-H2·H73.
medet.fore1810.1wllbuyeny ....,.. h-e room tar 3 lllderL
~
old rodloo mode-· 1940. 1 p";,r·,.,;.Chu• P.O. lox 598, New I•
In our pnoflll c•e
Hovan. W.Vo. 28215, 304-H2·
APIIrovod. Coli &amp;14-9922220.

41

Hanes for Rent

-------

Nicetv furnished sm~ll house.
Adults onty. Ref. required. No
pots. Call 814- 448-0338.
3 BR .. AC , c•p«. pool, o•age.
2 ftreplecM. fene~~. Gaod toeadon. C.ll A-1 Real Estl'te
Broker, 304-~76-6104.
Plelta Sub.- 4 BFL full bat•
m.nt. c.-pel,

a•

rtnge. ctty

tc:hools. Adult• ontv·one child
No p1t1. Oep . &amp; Ref. required.
0325 p., mo. Coli 814-448027S m• 8 PM. .. do
'"Ytlme.

•

'

�...
Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
41

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Hanes for Rent .

House-7

roon'll.

51 Household Goods

unfurnlehed

Colt oft•4 PM , 814-448-2118.
WMtinghou•

5 Coutt:2 llvlng ....... 3 BR . 1 \la

bathonon,tide.18R &amp;btlhon
other. Both kttch.,s furnished.
Ideal 1or f•mitv wrth 1Jt.,~lr·
ent. Ovartookt park&amp; '"'•· Wille
utilitie~.

Oepottt &amp;

S1um m.,le upright

Vlllllther· Kke mrw, *175. Electric

OY.rt cool!

Sk~gga

304-871H589.

MOLLOt:tAN FURNITURE

2583. 9 ·5 dolly.

..CompletellneofCMPit congo-

leum. Wtyte •d carper rerns.

House for rent. S300 mo. ph.Js
sec. dep . 822 Jackson St.
Vinton. OH Cell 814-388-9360.
In Cheehlre. Ohio, 3 lA ., 2

boths. ott ols&lt;t•ic. AC. Oepos~
niQUrad. Coll614-387-7867or

703-368-1109.

Nice house &amp; o•age on St. Rt
7814-446-003&amp;.
. S250 a mo. Pleaae call

3 SR .. washer/ dryer hookup, 1
•• grag&amp; 0300 • mo. $160
Village II . Call

614-4411-4535.

2 HousH for rent. 1 BR .- t175 a
8 mo. In
CrGWn City. Ref . Call 814-4481 5 11 or 2656580.

mo. &amp; 2 BR .- s 175

3 bec:t-oom home on At. 141.
near Green Elem. 0300 plus
deposit. Call 614-446-8566.
HOuse with. bath. Near Redna
~ca yard. garden- spece. Call

6.14--992-6858.
House, 2 bel7ooms, kitchen
stove. fully car peted. Nice Md
de., , no inside p&amp;tl. Deposit

required. 614-992-3090.

Whv

rent when you can buy on ·
land eontraer? Have 2 houses in

Pomiwov. Needs some repeir.
Will sell or rent. Very low priced.

C.ll. 614-992-2403 or 81499 2-2780.
SALE OR RENT - 4

bedroom l'lome.

phone 304.

675-2130.
House for rent or sale in Mason,

3 bedrooms, gawage.. buement
and large Jot. small depot:it
required 304-875-6677.
Full besement. one and half

story, quit.a location. 8 miles
north of Point Pleasant. 3046.75-1076.

House for rent S150 .00month.
n'o kids, no pets. call 304-57~
7443after 5:00PM .
~

bedroom, four room apt,

$110.00. 2 bftdroom smal

,,_,
"JUSt think What Inl•ght ha"e
.-.
happened if you didn't wear
44

......

Aport--tt fur

tha E........

......

-"T

Gttlll1 Milnor Apertmenta. 11515

BlltiMortonAold. O..ifodlu•

the Senior Ciltr:.. (12

older)

llndHon&lt;fcopped pnonoo. Equot

housing opportuntty. Applcetionlm8't"bePicktdupetSpring
Vall Sf Pl•a. 529 Jeckt.on Pit•
or call 114-446-4831.

Moda'n 1 8A . downtown, oo~
pltle kttchen. air, c.-pel, Oeposit, no p•s. Cell 114-4460 139 eyeninga, 1ft• 5 .
821 Vt Sec. E.:et. cond.. 2 BR ..
equipped kitchen, eir. AwrHtbfe

Nov. 1tt. 0228 plut dep. CtN
614-448-01103 0&lt; 4415-2158.

Nic.2 BR. apt. 4Vz mil• from
Galllpolil. Stove, reftig. &amp; wat•
furnllhed. $22151 mo. No p••·

Colt 614-4458038.

1 &amp; 2 BR ap.-tment. '300
month. Induct. 1H udlh:IM.
Adults only. no pets, dep.
required. C.ll 814-448-4222
between U&amp;.

Nicety furnithed 1· 2 BR. w.ter
&amp; u•becJ•pllid Priwetepwldng.

Oopotlt ._trod. Colt 814-44114345 .tt.-15 PM.
Pomeroy-2 SA . remodeled
aptrtment off Spring Ave. See.
dep. &amp; rol. Coli ol1• 8 PM.

614-992· 8681.

Furnished downatein, 3 'roo.,..
&amp; bMh. C...,. No pett. Aduhs.
Ref. &amp; dlt:J. Offttreet parking-1
c.-. Call814-448-1519.

Unfurnilhed 2 BA a•ege aplft·
m.ant, In town. C.rpMed. Adults
ontv. No pet1. Cell 814-448-

4561 .

Furnished 3 room IPt. t225 per
mo. $75 dep. Utillti• peid. No
chiht·.,, 94 LoGJat. c.n 814In

Kan liUg&amp; area . Construction
workers vvelcome. Call 614-

44&amp;-0508

2 B r., unfurnished, 12x60,
washer hook-up. In Cheahire.
Call 614--446- 4369 or 304-

675-9760.
Newry decorat:ed, 2 BR ., fully
c&amp;rpeted . Sec. dep . requio-ed.
Call 614-44&amp;8658 or 44~

4756.
2 BA mobile home at Ewrgreen.
No Suntllll'f calls please. Call

6 14-379-2678
2 BR .. fulty "furnished. new
c •pet, AC, 'all utilititiJI paid
except etec. &amp;. gms . Cable tv

available. Owner pays water,
s"""'age S.1rash pidcu p. Sa111rlty
deposit &amp; raf. Mutt be em·
ployed. Four-tenths: of milefl"om
city limits . Call 614-446· 7793.
3 bedroom!, central air, all
elect ric. fully carpeted. Nice
neig hborhood in , Middleport.

Call 614-992-5858.
2 BR . furnished. washer &amp;dryer.
$225 a mo. plus dep. &amp; utilities.
Call 614-992-7479.
3 bedroom tr•iler for rent. AM
electric. On Ror:ksprlngs Ad .
Mosttv furnished including
washer and dryer. 614-992-

3182- 1

7479.
Hom•tead Realty . Sale-Rent
trailfJ'. 41ots. etc. S 13, 5DO.OO.
Nancy Canterbury , 304- 675--

5540
2 bect"oom traiii!W'. Hendfnon,
clean co nd . S175. 00
month. plu!l deposit, 304- 6761972 after-5:00.

good

2 mobile homes furnihsed for
rent 2 bedroom apmrnent
furr\tshed. phone 304· 675·
6612or675-3900.
2 bedroom mob ile Mme. Sand

Hill Rood, 304- 675-3834.

3 bedrooms. no pets, must have
referene&amp;!l. 304-468-1887.

Trailen. unfurnished. oouplaa.
small childrun accepted, Rt. 1,
LoOJat Road. Pt.Pit, behind

K&amp; K 30 4-675 1078.

44

44&amp;-1300. 4453870.

Furnithed 2 BA . g•ege ..,t.
Aduh:s onrv. No petl. Cal

614-448-2404.

.,t.

Furnit:t.d 1 Br. moder"
Oep. 8r rflf. No peta. 960 Firat

('ove. Coli 814-448-1079.

4926.

p••·

Apartment
for Rent

446-3356.

863 Thl•d Golllpollt·OupiO&lt;, 2
BR . upttairs. cerpettd. IPPIItn·
ca~. 'IWihs &amp; *ver hookup.
S250 """ dep. Colt 814-2415-

9595.

2 be ~Yoom Apte. for rent.
Cerpated . Nlceurdng. Laun~
fecili1i• avflllebl• Cal 614-

992-3711 . EOH.

Qualified rent•• JMtV 8200.
deposit and no rent for the
month. Nov amber or De·
cembar onty. VII age Minor
and Rlvtr~ide ApertRMnls h
. ~ddeport. From $182.

614-992-7787. EO H.
New effician0p1 1 or 2 be*oom
apt's. In Mlddeport. Fwnllhedor
unfurniahed . Cell 614· 992·

5304 0&lt; 814-992-2778.

67&amp;77 38.
New compleu ly furnished
apwtmant It mobile home ill

city AduiU only. Parking. Celt

614-445p33B.
8EAUTIRJ LAPARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES , 636 Jackton
Pike from S103 a ma. Wllk to
shop and mavkle. 614-44~

2688. E.O.H.
Tera Townhaun ap.-tmtntl- 2
CFb., 1 1f.! baths. CA., dls"'wash•. dltpotaf. pflvlt• en-

cloud patio, pool, pl~ground.
w. sewer. &amp; trash lnduded.

lng at 8 289 par mo. Call

387-7860
f urnlthed apt. Near HMC. 1 SR .
t235. Utlliti• p.;d. Call 446-

4418oftsr 7 PM .
Ap.-tmanta ind houses. Cen

304- 1711-5104.

Hotel-814-448-9580.
Slet~~ing

rooms wtlh oooldng.
A teo Trll• a.,.ce. AH hook- upt.

CAll ol1ar 2p.m. 304-773-

5151 . Muon WV.

Unfurnished apartmltnts for
rent. 1. 2. 3. 1nd 4 room
ap.-tments. 814-992-2403 or

814-992-2780.

2 beli'oom apartment in Mlddl,...

port, rec::enttv remodeled. L..rge
roorns. t185. p• month. deposit r~ulrtKI. Dey 814-992-

2381 "'night 614-992-2509.

4 ap.-t,..,ts in Pomerov. Ona
and lwo M~oonw , p.-tly furnished kitchen. For more lnfor·
million, call 814-992· 8218 or

614-992-3768.

Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,
2 beli'oomfllrniahad ap.,mant,
utMtti• peld, rwf• .. cea. Phone

304-882-2586.

2 be~oom ..,.,mMta, lult,o
c•peted, eppll.,c:et. weter .,d
tr81h pidtupt provkled. Melnt•
n81'1ce free living close to tho~
pinG blnks and schooll. For
more lnformetlon carll304-882-

3718. E.O.H.

4 room apt utilhl• pel d. •eo.oo
per week. 304-!1'715-3100 or

875-5509.

46 Space for Rent

Wedge Al*fments. na pita.

30 4-6711-2072.

One be*'oom furnii'Md ep.-tm.n, uptWtrt, U1Mitl• pllld.
Ref•~W~ce ll'ld ckiPoatl required.

30 4-8711-9780.

Cent• of downtown, a.ge one
be&lt;*oom apt, t210.00 w•hout

. 304-578-2050.

4 room , 2 bedroom apt, 700
Main St, $1&amp;0.00 pkJt utlhl•.
On a bettoom apt 70()1,.; Mlln
St., 1116.00ut.tti• extra. Ftve
roomt, two bedroom apt, 702

Mlln 51. ground ftoor. ues.oo
pklt utiMI•. 809-1 Vl.,d St.

PI_.,

one t.croom ept.
w~'-t utl~lto.

frame famlty

814-992-7479.

Trailer •Pic•. Ga!llpotit: ftn"Y.
sewege. ctty \MIItlr. g .. ebege
pfck up included in rent. t75.00
month. 30..._875-1335.

49

For

Lease

Comm•clll Building for .... ._
Pt. Ple.MI. Call 304-8715-

5104

Merchani11se
51 Household Goods

Olive St., O••lpole.

NEW- 6 pc. woodgrou~ 8399.

Uvin'IJ room tuitlll· *199·t589.
Bmk beds with btddfnet t249.
Full stze m
&amp; foundltlon
Ulr1ing · t99 . Recliners

.n,..,

Jtlrting- t99.
'
useo- ledl• ..,• ..,.., bedroom
tuh.es. Oeaka, wring« Wither, 1
cornphrte Mne of uaed t.unfture.
NEW· W•1em boots• t315.
Workbaots $18 &amp; up. (St... &amp;

tof1toal. Colt 814-448-3159.

Coun'ly Applfenca. Inc. Good

uaed tPpllanon end TV 11111:1.
Optn SAM to &amp;PM . Mon tlwu

Stt. 114-446-1699. 827 3•d.
A-ve. GIIUpoltl, OH.

GOOO USED APPUANCES

$110. Mattr..... orbox tPtings
full or twin til. flrm $78, end
188. Queen lets 82150 &amp; uG,
Kl 03"0 4 dr
88
ng cablntt:t
u •
Qun
6,IWttt
8 &amp;Cheat
10 gun.·

Beb;- mettreues t36 &amp; ' •4&amp;.
Bed tram• t 20. t 30 &amp; King
fr.,e t&amp;O. Good setec:tion of
lledroom tulta1. mel:el c.ablneta.
heedboerds 130 and up to t61.

90 D•v•

uma n c•h wtlh
approved credit. 3 M Rea Out
Bul.,llle Ad. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Sit. Ph . 414-448-

0322.

• Yeller Fwnlture

Naw and used furniture tnd
epplieencet . Cell 114-4467572. Houra 9-6.
1416 Eeatern Aw.
4 drawer chnt, t.S. 6 driWer
ch•t 854.95, 15 pc. wooden
dlnnetta te11. $199. 96.
Complete hou•hold furniah·
lng~. 'II mile out Jerrleho.

304-175-1450.

For low- prt~a ooQullttyC~rpll'l
&amp; Furnh:ure come to Mollohan
f\6ntture-Upp•RiverRd., 814·

APPUANCES

Op.. Ol!lly Mon.·Sit.• 9AM-6

PM
Sun., 12 Noon-&amp; PM
0 pen • f t e r h o u r •
~
epp...,.,.ment

bv

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Bentwood rockers, t49 .95 .

Heevv dutv rustle bunk beds,
t229-eomplete. 4 pc. bedroom

aufte
8499.
Aullicwhh
4 dr.triple
wooddi-ess«.
chelt. t99.
4
do-. dleot. 044.98. I dr. ch•1.

::·~a:0~~J:"!'.;,':t:::~

reg. t2400 now $199. 5 pc.
wood group. reg. t&amp;89 now

t180. 00

R111ty. 304-8715-4100.

VIII Ill'

0

8-4. 614-992-2017. ott• 4 call
814-992-8976.

tori•. SAM SOMERVILLE"S,
OLD 'ROlin 21. NEW ERA
304-273-5-856, Noon-8 PM .

t~;:=~~::;=:;:===T---------..,
57

Musical
lnrtrU11181ltS

E.:elent oondllion. Clll 814-

Buy or Sell .. Riverine Antiques.
1 124 E. Main Street, Pom•ov.
Hour~ : M.T.W 10a.m. to &amp;p.m..
Sundav 1 to 6p. m. 614-992·

Churctt organ esoo.oo. 2 new
thtett tign mak• board 4d ft,
$40.00. AntM~ue SingM sewing
mKhiene with cabinet t40.00.
Or Bett Offer for ...... 304676-64915 or 8715-6839.

Kimball pltno, 8500.00 firm,

1978J•II'· t480. 1917Dodao.
t37!. 1178 Ford v... nBc!O.
Coli 814-258-8588.•

Trumpet, phone" 304· 875·

198001clomobita0mogo. 4spd.
01100. Coli 614-448-1218.

58

88.000 mla AC. EIICII. oond.
-1~-. AM-FM . t1995. CoR
114-4415-0822.

2018.

tSAVEt luv mail Order. Videos / CO 8t magezines. MTWTF
lam to 4pm Cell' 1·814-4480742 •t. L-3

Tlr'lning -bed tor cofm,..,ciel or

3298.

Firewood for ule 830 pickup,
delivered. *25 U-ha.ll. Raccoon

Buck stove fire rtace intert, exc

Rd. C.ll 814-448-4182.

Christ mal Tr--1 1.4 mi. from
Rodnev on Aodn..,.·Bidwell Ad.
Cell Richerd Fi1eher, 614--2458246.

Small englnefor•le. lnvantory.
Call 814-2815-1489.
Ron Allison, 1210SecondAw.
Glllipolia. OH 414-441- 4336.
19in. color tvlnd 13in. color tv.
Good cond. Good picture. C1ll

614-446· 7453.

Soloftex , like new. ell attach·
ments included. $700 firm.
Kerosene heatw. ellcel. cond.

troma use; 24 bulbi, timer. 8
fant , t 1 , 600.00. 304· 937·

cond.

.

plus el

Building Materiels
Blodt. brick. sewer pipea. windowa, lintels, etc. Claude Win·
t:ers, R6o Grande. 0 . Cell 814245-5121 .

Conc;r'l le blockt- 111 1tr.11- yard
or dellvflfY. Muon •nd. Gllllpo-

Ua Block Co., 1231h Pine St.,

.

Colt 614-445

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Channel Auttlc

Guaranteed Queltty

CETIOE. INC .. At~ant-814 694-3578

Ohio. 814-912·6481 .
CHRIST~$ TREE'S
Home grown Chr'-tnwt Tree' a.
Scoteh end wtlita Pine.
Weber's
._
_ Farm
_ in Rutl111d.
81 742 2143
New hen dmede quitts for aale.
Vera Van Met.ar, 814-992·

7851 .

Pets for Sale

Julie Webb Ph. 614-4415-0231 .

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Perti.. 111d Siem•e ldt·
tens. AKC Chow pupol•. NeW
Himlll-ven kttt.ns. ten 814-

448-3844 ott• 7 PM.

AKC Cocker Spaniel pupt.
m•l• ~ t1t;;O,

femaln- e200 .

Taking depotit for ChrittmM.

eon 114-381-6890.
West Hlghl .. d YVhlt e Terrier~~ .
AleC puppi•. A Chrittmn Gift
thll. will lut. Cell 814-387·
0824.

.

.

2 Pure Blood Oachshundf.-nale
PUPtwithahots. t12581ch. CaM

614-4415-0046.

hou••· 11h mil•
141 . Call 614-446-

CFAa•otic shon-haired Pertilr'l.

Br... fireplace screen with
sliding gl•• doors. 49 inches
wide end 31 lnchet hlgh. Wfth
m.tchlng tool aet. Excellent
condition. Clll814-941-2914.

cameo shade with copper eve•.

Send rweum. ta: Box Cia 183.
c/oQIIIIpolia DeltvTrlblne, 821
Third Aw.. Glllipolls, Ohio

45831 .

out At.
0693. Wevl'!• Sho..,aker.

Speved female. 11A ve•• ald.

114-992-6837., .. 4~0 .

AKC Registered Billett pupt. 6

-

·old. 012!. Colt 814-667-

1758.

Male miniature Schnauzer. 12
wb. old. t76. AKC SM ...
32300 SR 143. Pomeroy, Ohio.
AKC regittered male Beegle. 7
monthl old. Good prospect.

060. 814· 949-2643.
Flth T•lc. 241l Jackson Aw,
Point Ple••t. 304-675-2083.

llcenaad Phy sleel Therepift 11
Veteran• Memorial Hotpltel.
Call 814-992·2104 ask for
Oenillt.

10 galoot up 014.99 and 10 gol
complete t43.25.

HELP WANTED

AK C regist erad C ock fit Sp..,lelt.
0100.00 nch. ,..dv lu•Ch•tot-

pl070

For 1ale. 86, 000 BTU Warm
Morning Stove. 18, 600 ' BTU
atove. For inforrretlon call &amp;1-.
992-2173. ·

Kenmore
end
dryer• ~1•.
Three
---~weaher
.. H..,u
duty.
._

•T..

•

A1thlpo. 814-387-0322.

2•

Moving nle. Swtng tet, aqua.
rium, rocker end more. Call

m•. call tor app~ntment. 304-

773-111138.
Chrittmas pupptel. AKC reg~.,
tered Pom•l.,a. Mehi-. ShlhShu, SlbtMien Huak.,,, Pooclee.
deposR
• w 11 hold your Cho 1ce 1·11
1

Doc. 24. 304-6715-2183.

AKC registered Beegle, 4
months old. male end female.
good ChriltrNt glfla, 304-675-

~~8:1:4-:99=2-:1:2:2:7:.====:.1.:5~88:8:. ::::::::::::::~
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

UTILITY BLDO . SPL. :
30'K40'K8'8" Cle•Mce. 1·
1s·.a· trade Hoor, 1-3' Wllk

door ' t4919 ERECTED. l"'n

85 M F trector, Nlca. w 1M F
O'f"l Bounce mowing machine,
late model No. 12 hlr( biller,

c.• e 14-

1984 Plymouth Roll.,.
AT. PS, PB. AC. CC. 59.000
mi-. exc oond. •3.400.00.
304-882-3551 .

Wood apltn•. 15 lip Briggs
Stratton engine. like n..,,

0380.00. 304-8715-3289.

1977 Ford Pinto. auto. trens .•

Roll Sh•P· 11.450. Phona
304-678-2072.

Ford 'tractor live power
$2600 . 00 . Ford mower
t410.00. Llrge tlrlk 24a5 ft 4
in~• - 20ft Clmp•. 304--15782328 or 1578-21011. 4 room
house 3'11: acre lend

'II Cutl•a. PW. Cftlila tltt.
AM·FMcMterte. V-1.304-1758338.

I 16. soo.oo.

Gl..,. Combine. both
· 304-937-2018.

63

Uvestock

New ahow IIICiclewlthpld. heed
nan. &amp; br. .t 1tr1p. Mede b¥
IMv• AoYII .• 1100 v.lue now
1598. Colt614-288-8522.

SPECIAL FEEDER CALF SALE
WITH REGUlAR SALE• SAT·
URDAY. DECEMBER 10. 1:00
p.m. AI " ' - ln.., ...,. Jtelnt. Cattle wll be IICCephd

Frldor, Doc. 9.

4~o.9,oo

p.m.

1n d up to lltetlme Set. HIIUiing

Pltco. 814-441-3188.

Moving 8ol•12· 8 ·~"' 12-12.
Nlo¥ ....... W &amp; D., tlv. •
bedroom lutt•. gun.. tooll,
· Col 114-218-8881.
Good UHcl floor modal 1nd
pOIUibll aolor tV• tor •'•· Celt

"She's demand ing a frequent-flyer discount."

1988 UnOG1n T-n Cor, low
mlleogo. fully oqulppod.
013.1100.00. 304-182-2111.
1984 zzs eom.o. tooo ..1 o1

..,.... 30 .. 17&amp;-32...

1979 FO&lt;d T·B~ci 110111 Town
Lind... tully -~~ now • •
.,d
01.288.00. Ch..,
motor. e cryL 48,000 mla
304-6715-3574.

bon..,.

1981 BlAde

La S.bra one

8782"' 2815-1902.
18 fl. goc.a n8dc atodc treil•.
81000. ThorouJhbred race
hones. All aa•. C11l 814-441-

2107- doyt . 398 - 8804ev..lngs.
4yo•

304-1715-3030. 8711-4232 lind
8711-3431.
1980 c...._ Sup...,.. 1971!

Lem-.

fiGU~EP OUi HOW

'Tb c:;Ei U.S
COMING ANP 601NG.

8288.

... tor now. 0

ALLEY OOP

••

VUNPEIIFUL!

I-FOR

~P,N'(, UNO
DIE GODS ZENP

IAIEMSIT
WATERPROOfiNG

ME A CRAZY

Unoondtionlll lflthne ou••·
t•.
local r ... _
. . . .hod.

eathMI•. Call
1-814-237-0488, dar .. night. ~
R o g era 8 1 a • men t ·;
WatsrproaflniJ
Free

SWEEPER tndttwirtgmachine 1
,.,•. perls, Md au1J131•. Plct: , ,

up end deltv lfY, Oevt. YltCUum ~
Cltan•. one hlff mile up "
Goo•gos C - Rd. Col 114-

448-0294.

EEK &amp; MEEK

Painting: lnt•ior .. Exterior.
Free lltimetes. ea• 114-44&amp;-

NOT

8344.

.c.,.
.... Wo•ltby ,_,
• .. olln(J polnlln(J ct.v-. ...

R£1\LLY. ..

0&lt; job.

modeling. Call Fred

448-7943.

Co•• 1,4-

motor, auto., PS, PI, AM-FM·
C.uana Runa uc4. t1400.

Colt 814-3
Babytlttflt needtd wMkUVa in

&amp; Grain

Ground thaN 08. DO . - 100 lb.
drBIN $1 .60, AHatfe t3.00,
•ound bll• 128.00. 8'00 ~~
1 2:00 dolly, Mo•san• Woodtown F•m. Rt. 35, Pliny. W.Vo.
304-937-2018.

our home. Hob• Hotpft:el • •·
Send retUme to: 801: Cia 183.
c/oGollpolo Dolly T•l"'ne. 828

Third Ave..
48631.

Oottipollo.

MORTY

~EEKLE

I WONDER

.M•s Tree Trim"'"p •d8tump

IF THERESA
HE'AVEt-,1 FOR

_ 304-5711-239a.

304-1711-7121 .

I'LL BET HEA'VE'N 1'5
A c=iUY WITH A

BARBEOJEqRIL.L .••

\;;'

Nell.

....

" ' ,' .., ',. ' . "

0 . Green ~ndsontCone7«eend ,
Contracting. lntwlor Md
rior patntlng. e•pent-v end

•t•

..

,,., ......... ........ •-. . '' ' ...

'

..

~ ·-~·

18 tiD Berney Miller
0 Evening News

YORE RECIPE
JEST WON

111".30 (lJ Eei!Enclere A continuing
chroniCle of lha llvea ot
residents in London's Eas1

THE BODACIOUS

&amp; Heating

HOOTIN'
IIOLL!R

··-~

Phone 814--44~3888 or 614-

End. (0:301

COOK.
OFF It

18 tiD Odd Couple
111:35 (I) MOYIE: Cepe Feer {NRI
(US)
11:00 (JJ Remington Steele Red
Hot Steele

•

448-4477

Cil • ()) 1111 •
I!)) New•
CZJ TIA
•

Electrical
Refrigeration

Auto-

•tmott ntiW
Re• • •

1914 Dodgo Arioo. SW. Auto.•
A~. U498. Johnl Auto Sol•.
Solow Holldarl nn. Kon.,go.

1978 F,.d 4x4 thort bed 01111
lid&amp; Too f7W1Y llltr• to Nat.

E Ktre tharp. *3100 firm. CaR
brine 2 PM or Itt• 10 PM

814-448-8124.

1961 Chow•- old&lt; up for tole,
1750.00. 304-11'711-1724.
'71 ChewrcMt pici up. NN

85

~enaral Hauling

Dillsd Wet• S.-vice: Pools,

Clot.- ... Wollo. Dellvory A"V-

time. Call 514-448-7404-No
Sund.,. cella.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
DOOII. c;sterns. wela. Ph . &amp;14~45-9285.
.
A • R Water S.VIce. Poolt,
dsternt, Willi. lmmediat•

good, 0950. 00. 304· 875Z4S7.

1.000 or 2.000-ntdolt.ory . •
Coll -304-8715- 8370.
•

1987 GMC pld&lt; up S ·15 wMh
topper. 24.000 mllee .
OI,OOO.OO. Co11 304-8751287.

Watterson'• Water H•ullng.
r-.ONible r•M. volt.lm11 dtecounta. 2.000 to 4.000 CtPIC'ity,
pools, wellt. Me.

73

Vans

c

(!)llgnOfl

ASTRO•SRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

675-1788.

1982 F-180 2 wo. otd. ,.,,,
Runo good_ o2995. Colt ol1• 7.
814-448-2099.

(1)

181[11 Love Connectton

HELP WANTED

o.;-;;-:::c;,-,;:-:-:-.;,.,-;-71 Auto's For S•le

()) Opnfh Wlnlrey No One
Dlts Alone
(lJ ® New•
Cl ()) Million; lmposolble
The Impossible Missions
Force must stop an asussin
from moving. (R) t:;1
iiJl •
]('not. Lencllng
Jill's alibi comes under
scrutiny; lhe Williams take
refuge 11 ranch. g

c

•

Plumbing

&amp;

Uvel

axam. D

Copt lin s,. . . .c ......... gel 2

84

til ,.,...,, t:;l

e

--"~''G
;eJ

Decem'* 139.95. Col
304-773-5348 0&lt; 773-6840. '

Ohio

l1!'ol

loki lila truth about her

College Blak.....H
(I) 1111 Night Court Harry
dabbles In diplomacy to help
Sovlal friend (Yakov
Smlmoff). (RJ
C!l College Beak...,.ll
Ill IIIIH ol a Ounllghtar
This classic teaMao Marty
Robbins aa a good hearted
ouHaw who falls In love wllh
a dancehall girl.
10:00 (JJ 700 Club
(I) 115 L.A. Lew Kuzak
1eams his rival anorney in a
caM never passed lhe bar

ANDAN ENDLE55
SU~YCF
.
HAMBURGER
PATTIES .

spedll

CAIITER"S PWMIING
ANOHEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pin a
Gollpollt, Ohio

Cheers

recenl strange behavior. Q

AND WINTHROP

DOes.

Remoo,el, Free . . imft • . Cal

nwonry.

I!))

Cil • ()) Dynuty KryS11a Is

0
1:30 B

houH call a..,idng GE. Hot
Paint, w•hws. dryers end

Aonn~

9:00 • (I)

etDIIIIIJ Gr8111m CN!Iede

~~~~~~~~~~
"
FION"S APPUANC£ BBIVICE.

s.,...

il1l A Dlflere~t Wortcl

(I)

I!)) Larry King

-"*

Aon't Chimnt¥

!

ill lllfty GNhllin

ResidMtial or oom,..clal wfring New urvice or repairs.
Ucensed electrid.,. Estimat e
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

TidllSjltllliillllll

Af!D.Jr All

1:30

(lJ

ov-*ille. AC, ....,... A-1 con-

1978 Chow•olot 81111 tide. 400

Mi MJTHER (/&gt;1 ( s
all A UEK ...1HAT'5

RON'S Ttle'tl'ition Service.
H..,• c . . on RCA. Quuer,
GE . Specilllng In ZonMI\ CIR
304-878-2398 0&lt; 814-4482484

.. _

Knights' gift is lo taad 1ha
pollee to the area ·s drug
lords. Q
CZJ Chlfttmaa w1111 Lucleno
Pavarattl From Notre Dame
Cathedral in Paris, this
program of seasonal music
fall1uros ~as Oisctplls de
Massena!, 1he Canadian
Boys Choir and Luciano
Pavarotti.
(!)TIA
ill eO 48 Houre Q
• (!D MOYlE: Privet• lleoort
1Rl(1:22J
crJ PrimeNews
® MOVIE: Alllentl tRl (1 :571
i1JJ M.-, 8he Wrote
Nellhvttle Now
1:06 (1) MOVIE: lom-y Up
There UkH Me {NR] (1 :53)

a

-

82

3 PwJited He•-d Hefforo fur
..,• . 814-742-2014.

M~!

•
aolect •

72

dition. 123111. Col 814-2!81181.

c~......

Home
Improvements

average size room• cerpet
clell'led *18. 00~ch, wlthth61
ad, 304-8711-2295.

1900. 514-992-!304

Hay

81

1913 Ford RMg• V•8, 4 spd.

oldllaglot•ed~ANbi.,

Gelding. For show or pl . .ure.

64

Cil Cl ()) Knlg111watcll The
Serv1ces

Ylllo. 1979 Moll"' Wogon. 3048711-7981.
Trucks for Sale

eo

e

THeY FINA\..L..Y

440 .,,. 041100. Coli 814-H&amp;-

'80 Pontile Gr.,d ""'- 92.000
ml•.
tood cond. 81,200.00.
304-8711-6284.

Motnte Cerlo. 1979 Pontiac
117&amp; Pontiac Conn•

Chod&lt; 1toooo out·l 1114 Z·28,
oe900. 1184 Mutt.,~ ueoo.
1884 E-rt. 11185. 1113
Fir... &lt;\ 14800. 1883 Colt.
•1800. 1182 Mwa"y Lynx,
0195. Aotllfro Auto lol•.
Vl,.on, Ohio. Colt 814-3191131 or 4411-111179.

c...

/

Mote&lt;

Rot.-y or clble tool *lling.
Molt welt complllled•amec.t.r.
Pump . . . .,d
3048911-3102
•

Horse Ita Colt. CaN 614-256-

1982 Ptymou111 Ari• K. nl..,.
01818. 1881 Chovy Pldcup
1rUCk. V·8,.,.o,P8.PI .• 18U
Colt 814-288-8522.

d. ., • toene pk:tu,.., •.,.99.
Lor- now "" Cloritt-.
Open 1 -8 on the 24th. Rt. 141 In
tn...,·'ll mile on Uncoln

C~tmplon

Fetty Tr• TrimrNtg, etump
remGYII. Cell 304-176-1331.

ow,., •c cond. *3.100.00.

Qulde. C1l 8011-8878000, ut. S-10189.

dollt. 014.95. 1 2ll18 RollalouL

1973 28 ft.

'79 0~ CutiMt runt good.
ltreight U.: engine and t ... nWaolon. 304-8715-111134.

ovolloble. ATHENS UVESTOCK
SALE· 1 mle .-t of AlblnY on
St. At. 50. Colt 814-692· 2322
0&lt; 614-199-3631 .,.,lngo.

Government Se111d Vehld•
from • 100. Fordt, Mercedtt.
Corvettn. OI~~Wys. Surptus.

belli. t7.11. Remote &amp; radio
CGntralled 011"1 • truoka, ahln•

1971 CMdtmoble 98 Deluxe, 4
door. s.Sen, _g nod concltkln.
1977 Otdlmolile 98, •ceii~W~I

w-"

028.000.00 0 .8 .0 . 913· 8820084 Moncloy t1wu Fridtll'.

--·

olll •ocldng dllln. 08.99. Po10

J. WE:$TOtl, M.P.
08S'T'ei~ IC 5
J. WS.STON, M.p.

Home. Pow11rec1 w•tli • Ctwv...

n·-.

Olclomolllle. 814-4415-3672 m
304-773-8134.

114-448-2342. Moy bo • - tt
The Oollipoh Dolly Tri"' no, 11-8

K gold clldll, t7.48atet. Mr. &amp;
Mra. Ct..s , *14.95 1 lit. Iron
Stone churn. t14. H. Chich

FRANK AND ERNEST

G~RIATF.ICS

1450. CAt 814-988-4471

Fore.,. ... dellonen.-w orulld
car. trudcorwen.... KMinylall
at Jim Mink Chevrolet ·

more inforrnMion alii Pad 11

1rlcyctoo otortlngot 019.911. 14

210 Olclo .,gino. 304-875- '
3048.

1979 Ford Futut1. I cyl. ntM
rldi II
good oonciUon.

il78 Ford n.u.-blrd. Runo
good. Good con,.lon. U711.
Colkl 814-742· 2955 ..,......

t-1owerd Aot•.tort, Sled•,
Feed• Ringe. luvlngold Hn•
let. MorrloEquiD-. Ruttond

M2
-

2886.

5158.

. . - nploeod. o1000. For

merch.,dlst It dla count prtc..
4 tt. s-o. o29.911. IJicycl• &amp;

bl•

e14- 948·

conllion. low mleage.l14-992·

Farm Equipment, ZltorTrectors.

mMic:. AM reclo,

for both placet.

.POOR BOYS nR£6
Moving to Rt. 31,. Henderton. .
W.Ve. tneo n•
bv Dec . . ,
115th. Col 304-1711-3331.
'

1913 Ponttac 1000. 4 dr..

automatic. Iota of 11Ctr81. Runa
good • Mire clean. 39.000

114-949-2585.

Collad.

tr... eo.ooo ml•.

U89 wit~ mttdllng hu1dl 0850

JolnU.tl 1Y.-. Col 814-3792220 or 304-8711-8758.

79 Motor• Homes
&amp; Campere

1981 Oldl Om,a CNile controL Ill whMI. M-FM at•eo.

HorseBidn. Call 8 14-332·9745

1984 Chovy

hugger IIKlllnen, *199. Auatlc
country •bl• 3 chairs &amp; bench,

pr•ture plat• • throw. out

be•tnv --·12-..cvc

c~
...... o7oo. c.n 814-251- . _' ~~11-:~;"';::::~;:;;==1270.

oondftion. • 1410.

each. ' male. 1 ftmeleleft. can

814-448-1354.

• , . . . torgue
oonvert... SIM_.d clwt&lt;lh•.

Snow tires P235·71R-11.
ltudded r.tiela on ford truck
rima. used one -on, 304-8 7 38 8

cilt•,.,
304-!715-291&amp;.

&amp; 4 W.O.

1874Fordwlndowwn, 2tMit.
302 V·l ..... eutom.tlo
tr-. AC. e 21Rl. ea.oooectual
mla Con 814-2811-8831.

87

1173ChwySuiM.., 4x4, 454
Main&amp; loti of n-.v perta. must
..r 03000 or oflor. 304-89153427 or 30+8711-8106.

Mowr.,-' t Uphofst.-tng ...,., 9
tri OOU"'Ytrll23.,..... The tat
In ~rntrure uP'toln.W.g.
304· 875- 4114 for free
tetimeres.

Upholstery

C••

Rearrange lener! of
0 four
scrambled words

low fo form four

tDI MoneJtfne
&lt;II Tlleo fnllllllle Deltcolde
t1J Mleml VIce
11:30 e C1l 81 Tonight Show
C!llportaCentar

17

I_'

C&gt;---••=

: \!U'f= t:;l

eo NewlY ..d o•une
tiJ)Iporta fonlght

eNtglll
IIJ'Night
- · CIS Leta
Cocaine rtng has a
very dlllerenl mode ol

opel'a1ion ·- and motive. (R)

®HII._II_

a

Atnettun Mlgllzlne
12:00 &lt;D Piper Chloe Hart Goes
Home
C!l 1111 Nlllonll Flnels
Rt~Ma From Las Vegas, NV
oaysm

(i).tllneQ

I

_

J

.

:

;

-

_

I

Seen in a help wan1e&lt;1 ad or
local paper: " Wan1e&lt;l . .
Speech Instructor. Excellent
chance lo help young people
- l h e wo~d around them:·

Ie

KNUT EJ
1--.f.,::...::.;,.,,:::.,-,~.:;..,.:..TI,::-l

Camp,lete the c~vckle Quoted
.
.
by Id ling in · the missing words
.
·L-.L__.I_..l.._.L-L-.1 yo u develo p from step No. 3 below.

A

PR IN1 NUMBfRED

.-;:JP l f TTE RS

I'
•

II II II I I)

.... UN SCRAMBlE FORI
V ANSWER
.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Victor - Quilt - Ejecl -

Weapon - COPIER

A fellow worKer had a bad anx iety attack . He was 1old thai
his job resume· had gonen caught in the office COPIER.

BRIDGE

UKlr
+J7

WEST
+K62
. • 10 3
l +KIO&amp;S2

By James Jacoby

Perhaps North should not ofler
South a ch~ice of game contracts by
snowing spade support. Here three notrwnp will make easily, and lour
spades is in danger. But on many
hands Soulh would have weaker dia·
monds than A-Q, and then four spades
is likely to be a far superior contract.
West led the top of bis 10-doubleton
heart. anticipating getting the lead
with the spade king and hoping lor a
rufl. When declarer puts up dummy's
heart jack, the spotlight is on East,
who now will detennine the late of the
contract at the first trick. There is a
very sound reason for East to let dummy's jack win the trick, although of
course he signals encouragement with
tbe eight-spot. II West is leading a singleton heart, declarer has four cards
in hearts. With that holding, he surely
would have bid two hearts alter tile
two-club bid by North. After East
duckll the heart, West wins a trick with
the king of spades and leads a secc.nd
heart to set a ruff. The deal is not over
even then. If West carelessly leads a
diamond away from the king, four
spadt!S will still make. But West has an

. • 81
.A871

+984

• 9 43

+QI082

,.
,. ••

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nordi

Pus

I

,,,

Eut

Pus

Pass

Opening lead: • 10
easy sale play of a club and can wait
to take the setting trick with the king
of diamonds.

James Jacoby's boob "Jacoby 011
Bridge" and •Jacoby 011 Card a.m.•
(written with his father, the late 0.
nld Jacoby) are nuw available at
bookstores. Both are pubiWH!d by

tl)-.--.. ..

Pllsros Boob.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Stubborn
- mule
4 Wedgeshaped
piece
8 Bergman ·
TV role
9 Snake
orsea
ll Vases
12 Stir up
14 Derogatory ,
comment
111 Totality
16 Gsrcon's
"summer"
17 Crose oot
19 "Call - Day"
20 Arden
and others
21 Measure
22-de
cuisine
29Attlre
241n those

38 Japanese
assembly
99 Thrice

(Lat.)
DOWN

1 Eagle's
nest
2 Free from
duplicity·
3 --longa

4 Climbs
II Ululate

Yesterday's Answer

8 Biblical
man
7 Bsr order
8 Newsman,
Roger10 Miseive
13 _ tide
111 Crown
of Osiris

18 Symmetrl- 28 Scoff
cal
· 29 Greek
21 Chair
cheese
22 For jubilee 31 Alpine
singing
snow
23 Sharpen
Oeld
24 Run along 3t Siamese
211 Wine
35 Relevant

days

215 African
lake
26 Brown kiwi
27 Acquit
90 Nobel
physiologist
31 Holman .
of basketball fame
32 Mexlcsn

tree
33 Rag
311 Encourage
38 Permlselon
37 Supplication

DAILY CRYPTOQUOO'ES- Here's how lo work II:

Ill Mlgluft, P.l.

eo Twllfllil ztDI NewtNtgllt

Ie :C.
Gil L8ta

Now

12:30

Night with
Devltl Letl8nMI1
(I)

[]) ltneon

e ()) UIA Toellty
e C MOYll: 'Unci Juo-·
CBS L8ta Movie c::J

IIIII

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, x ·Ior the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatioo of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
IZ-8

KRZ

UNZEETNZ

HGWXTZGSZ

QW

EQSHBX

8 I QT K

T E

ZGQNPQTE,

B N P
W.

SBG

BOY

GQ

'

HE

(l)IJOIIOII

elllll•-ment Tonight

Soodi
2NT

2+

Pass

" EHGAXZ

NZE HEK

H K . .-

BYXZN

Yesterday'• Cryptoqaote: AS 1lfE LESSER EN1lfUSIASMS FADE AND FAIL, ONE SHOULD TAKE A
STRONGER HOLD ON 'mE HIGHER ONES

JORDAN

Clllll Ktng , . _ Syndocate. inc •
\

1%-f.ll

NORTH

+JD5
.QJH

No need
.to rush "'"

ChHrs
(l)OM On One

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 111 This ts a you're In a rather lovorabte cycle lor
period where your hopes and wishes your work or car-. Take 1he will have good chances of being gratl- sory stepslo prove youroell, becauoe e
fleet Don"t abondon your dreemo now . ' promotion or more Income could be In
,
jusl ~iuM1...., haven'! been fuHIIIed 1he offing.
,_,
LID (JIIIJ 23-Aug. 21111 your aoctatllle
Dec... , .
r.'l~cES (Feb. 20-Men:h 2111 vou are has been a bit dtom11 lately. don'1 be
now In a very good achlevemen1 cycle dlemayed. Big cnongas ere on lhe horiSeverat unproductive Ilea to the pul and 11 you taka the appropriate , . . . zon. 11 lookallke you're going to get Inwill be severed In the year ahead, The suras you can vsa11y Improve your ma- votvecl wilh an excl11ng, , _ group.
new couree you oet for youraell will pro· Ierial 'clrcumslances. Establish mean- VIIIGO (Aug. :n-a.pt. 211 Thlo could be
vtde you with a fulllllment that pravlous- ln ful goall alerting today.
8 day of both endlngo ond beglnnlnga.
IY eluded you.
A21EB (-ch 21·Aprll 11) If there Ia a
An old laaue wut be reeoiVM to your NIIAGmAIIIUI (Nov. 23-Deo. 21) En- s~lalsubjec1 you have been wan11ng lalactlon and an lntereallng ,_enterterprtaea or projeCts you personally
~rt COUld be Ia nchecl
manage or dlract have good chances Ia study this Is a good lime 1o lnttla1e p oe
u . .;.I B""h I"•••
the program. Whal you learn you will be UIRA (lepl. 23-0cL ·.,. t .....
for success In 1hls lime lrarne. Be caro-- ablelo rl1aln and put to valid ull8a.
you get today thould nol be Ignored,
fut, however. to Whom you delegate kay y•uiiUS (Apri12NIIIJ 2111 Be alert to- .,_, lithe~' .,. a csep.nure trom your
aaalgnments. Trying lo palch up a broA
t fte1c1 Your conoepta could ha. .
ken romance? The Al1ro-Graph Malch· day becauM something could tranoplre P ·
Ia
maker can help you 1o understand what lha1 makes II poaalbla tor you 10 add IO 1.--douo potan1111 ancl they lhOU
our -nlngllrom a new IIOUrce. There be bolclly pursued.
to do 10 make the relatlonohtp war k . Y ld be
partner Involved In this ICORPIO IOct. .......,, 211 Today
8
Mall $2 to Ml1chmaker, P .O. Box cou
you'll be entering • relher exlended cy91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. , . ;e:.::n(.M 21 -.lune 2111 There are cia 1hl1 hat exbemely encouraging 11CAPIIICORN IDeo. 21 ....... 111 You II
IJ
f
nonclel poalbllltlee. - · II ll over
IIWllkan an lnl-1 In auoelalea re- strong Indications that you may orm •
1herelh0Uid be I milked lmprovemeni
gardlng your preaenl plans If you•re a , _ alllance soon. This could 1urn oullo
mant
·bl1 myaterlouo about them Olsclose · be an extremely valuable OIIOCiallon.
In your money depWI
·
_just enough 10 whelthel• a~Pe~lea. _
CANCIR (June 21.July 21) As oltoday
II

word$

•

(II

Cabur
'Birthday

~o imple

WOlD
G4MI

The
be-

~. . . .I;.;. N-=-IrT:_;;..E
I I" 1
~~E;....:.P~C~R;.:....:I:.--li ~-"_:.
I

e

Uted

Roy ..e Brougham. Auto, Good

Reg. Rat TeHier puppl., t75

949-20871f1• 8 '00 p.m.

our home. Holler Hotpital area.

Ps, P8.

(!) Nightly lluiiMoo Report
CIS New•
18 (!D WKIIP In Cincinnati
crJ Showlllz Tocley
IHl WKRP In Clnclnetl
11J cartoon Expn111
Ill You Can le • Star
6:35 CIJ 8 to 5
7:00 (I) Our HouM Boun1iful Lady
(I) PM Mepzlne
·
(I) Cl ()) Current Alfalr
CZ) (!) MICHell/ Lehrer
Newollour (1 :OOJ
ill tm @ I!)) Wheal. ol
Fortune Q
18 (!D Three'• Company
crJ Monayllne
IHl Chnro
iiJJ Miami VIce
Ill CroOk 1nd ChaM
7:06 (1) Andy Grlfflltl
7:30 II (I) Fomlly Feud
C!l COllege Blsktlball
Cil Entarllllnment Tonlgh1
til ()) USA rodoy
ill
crJ il1l Jeoperclyl Q
• (!D Mws·H
crJ Crooattre
i1J Nlght Court
Ill VicleoCountry
7:35 i]) Sanford end Son
8:00 (I) MOVIE:. Halcll {NRt (1 :35)
Cl C1l il1l The Coeby Show
Clair's dress for Cliff' s
'hospital benefit is too sm~U

ill

AC. tun roof. *69&amp;. Celli 814448-7846.
1981 Chwlllta t2500. 1979

1188EIC.m"'"· 1988Mozdoa
2000 .. d 1984 Cougtr. Col
114-992-5304.

(; LtVI!SIIILk

19BOW208 C.u a1lallsted. 4

Firewood for •le. $36. pidlu p
trudc load. OeUvered. HEAP
vouchers accepted. Call . 614-

114-992-3717 0
Babl;'slttw .,eeded wHkdlys In

f dllll Suppl11~s

WD. kllded with cab. loCIIed in
Point Pleasant , W.Va .

For S.le Dog

color. Size 14. Worn twice.

1979 Ply-.th TC-3.

lily

Cil Cl ()) ABC Newo t:;1
CZJ Body Elac1rlc

Uted &amp; rebuilt an typ111 .
c• 814-2!&amp;- w
• ...,.30 dtii'L Pri. . 199 &amp;

«. One ow,..

"f.. tfS"

r:~~:~~· S© R.!\ lA_ _ _ ___:._..:; Edi,.d by CLAY I . POllAN

..:::l....--11
::·5

1Ji Beat ot Mutcla Me_ilzlna

mla Colll14-389-9818.

Ohio 814-742·24511.

Coleman woodburning atove for
Hie. t200. 8 fl:. •tellita dtl't-

Mlx.ed herd wood slabs. t12 per
bundle. Containing epprolll. 1 Vt
ton. Ohio Pillet Co .• Pomeroy.

Trude lo.d APIJI• jutt in. t8.99
bu. Jecttt f'rUit Mkt, At. 36,
Henderson,,

288-8522.

Groom and Supplv Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeda ... AII
st¥1•. lema P8t Food De1ler .

14:-:-PM::.::..- - - - - - - -

cMdv torChrWtmaa.10p•cent
dllcount to Church groupt.
Jacks Fn.il Mlrkat At. 3&amp;.
Henchnon. W.Ve.

Own• wiM fln•ce.

ond Bevolad Lap Siding

248-9258.

RCA portable VCR . Hltachhi
video cam . .. Cell after 5 PM
wMkdlr\'s. 814·44&amp;-9237.
10 ft. Unldom uteUke diaL.
'"
t896. Caii814-.448-3820aft•

All kinds fancy frutt. nutt and

t3796. lo1o madal1250 Ollv•
1niC1MPS3BHP, 027911-N- 3
pt. hltdl wood tpltnor. 0399.

56

448·8127 oft• 7 PM .

Fruit

61 Farm E"'ipment

O~io.

hs rn

BUDQET TAANSMISSION-

up.

Cl ()) ill .. @

(!) D•. Who The Time
Monsters
• (!D Hippy Dayo
® FIICio ot Life
iiJJ Fit Alben
Ill Flndongo
an.
11 • Ttme
8:30. (I) I!)) NBC NlgMty Newo

1981 Olclomobilo Oolto 88.

30 gel. h•ego n aqueriu m with
stand. arch lemp &amp;. new Transmlukm oil coohlf. Call 814·

gl••·18Ceiver•

1829.

1981 Buldc. 4

&amp; Vegetables

ti'ICtr... belt

• Deck Mlt.-ielt

remota 81m8f'. $800. Call 614-

32&amp;e.

air, tow mileage.

•

evanlnga.

CincJnl"ati fiber

304-8711-S728.

55 8ulding Supplies

090 . Call 614-446·1120

TRS 80 color computer 3 with
diak drive Ia books. 1276.
Contact R. Kemper, P .O . Box
1 177. Gelllpolit.

aon.

reasonable offer, 304·876·
7486.

Oolllpolit,
2783.

'

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Fe&lt; Sola- 1984 Blid&lt; llky-k.

5773.

870.9851 .

JUST A MATH TEST ON
REI/ AND GREEN PAPER ..

'91 Suauld Cklld $Port. 30487&amp;-2h1 eft« e:OO.

76

PM, 814-4415-9348.

1 150 Clle dozlf. 304-937·

NO CHRISTMAS PLA'&lt; .. NO
OlRISTMAS TREE .. NO
CHRISTMAS CAROLS .. NO
CH RISTMAS COOKIES ...

71 Auto's For Sale

Chrltt.,_t treea. •a now, Eck·
ard Chapel Rd. At. 2. 7 milea
Norttr Point Ple...-.1. White .-ld
Scotch $1 &amp;. 00. 304·07&amp;·

t80.00. 304-875-3485 oft•
4'00PM,

50RR'f '1'0lJR { ~RI STMAS
PLA'f WAS CANCELED..

IM

lftdUIId 4 Wheeilf'l.

1179FordLTD II. out&lt;&gt;', PS, PB.

Wheelchalr•I'WIIV or ueed. 3
wheeled electric acooten. Call
Rogers Mobihy coli~. 1-614-

I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

I -KRUPEC I

C!l SponaLook
CZJ TBA

At. 31i C,elo Sol•. Sou1haldo.
wv. Ph. 1-304-8711-•130. Now
Selling New Polft 4 wheel en

NEA. lne

Comfort Grow kerotene heater.
10,000 btu. e"c oond. r-.wwier,
5 gel cen. tuet pu,..,. Aft for

.

~r»&lt;i

Kewa11lri 400. Good for pert1.

military ctmfleuge pants

.

Epi-o
• (I) Cil
I!)) Newt

. o78. Coli 114-992-&amp;9152.

lndlvkU.. gu•ar lt~~~sons. be·
gin,..... •riou1 gultll'ilt. BNic.-dll Music. 814-446-0187,
Jeff Wilms I., inllruator. e 14-446Limit~ op ..lngs.

Ollc bed wtth cheat &amp; drea••·
*410 or be.t offaf. Cell aft• 7

... ,..,

19H Hondo TAX Z!D-G 4
- ·- Coll614-441-8820.

,,.,

Nov, Dec. Untut.ted Coveralls
*27.50) . Jungle Boott U.S.A ..
Origlnel Army clothing. Non-

•

t:OO (I) lon1nza: The Loll

1-t 81 Honda 70 4 - ··
0525. COII614-448-3620olt•
4PM . .

DENIM ,

CARHART. A•tll clothing.
Strlal A""¥ EqulprMf'lt Ace...

$389. v._. ghn Bllttett wall

814-441-1141.

0

THURS., DEC. 8

!

EVENING

1986 Honda 250 4T.... h•dly
IUd. Batt ofl•- Colt 114-44151120ev..W.go.

448-81578.

448-7444.

VtRA "t FURNITURE AND

{)

l.

All Chrlatrnaa tr.. 812.00.
come Nrlv before cold weather
tnd teg Your trea. Newell•
Chriot.,., T•ae F.. m. ona mlto
above M11on on Henglng Rock
Road, 304--n3-S371 or 304882-2988.

M

~

For lilt. P~otonlc atereo t75.
Turntable, speakers and receiver, elaoSz. 10 brown letther
ecket from 'Mitont Suede 1nd
0111t... 010. Llkt n-. Coli M-F

SURPLUS AftMY,

windows end

74 j;}io'PCYcles

0350. Co11 .814-992-3452.

Ladiet coat. BluewithSitverFo•

J &amp; S FURNITURE

Air conditioned, built In k~dlen.
nice '(lrd. t2215. plue depolit .
Colll14-992·3159.

Alto Se•ophane, like new.

IMIITE"S METAL OETECTORS

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURN1TURE 82

bedroom hou" In Mlckleport.

FOFI SALE - 8utcharlng Hop.
304-5715-0087.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Country Mobile Home Perk.
Route 33, North of Pam•oy.
Lots, rentalt. p.-ts, ael•. Caill

ttOO. 3

lt.,....,

power

1978 J - Clwokoo Chlof,
1977 Chow F-W·D tuto. 1978
Oodga 318, ..no. 304-8715781111. .

a.t7&amp;. Cappertone a• double

Chrietrre1 toya. and general

One .,d 2 belt-oom eptrtrnwrtt.

utl~ l •

Wood

2528.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE

Now accepting eppllC:Ciona for

2 BA . apts. 6 closets. It it chenappl. furnished. Wa~hw· Oryer
hoolc-.up, new plush carpel, ~Re,
paint.
Niett good loc.atron.
Regency. Inc. Apts. Call 304676-6104, or 675--5386 or

Aoo,. tor rent- WMic or month.
St.-ting at t120 1 mo. Gtnia

1295ondu~to 1398. Baby bado

Small llrniehed llfJt. 116 Stitt.
Nice for one person. Cell 114-

piece

plano.

012.00.

Upper AN• Roed

Furnished Rooms

Wuhers, dryel'l, refrkl•etors,
....ranges. Skaggs Appliencea,
S HAOY LAWN APT8- 729 Upper AN• Ad. betide Stone
Seo:md Ave. Furnithed did.,. c .... Motel. 114-448-7398.
dea starting at t175 • mo.
lndudlng ..,.,.... 8t P'baa&amp;
LAYNE"S FURNITURE
Singta •IIJits ontf. Cell 8f44415-4607"' 4415-2602.
Sof• and chllirt prk:ed from
$395 to t995. Tabl .. t&amp;O and
3 BR .-5 Court St. Kltchlr'l with
up to t12S. Hid•• ·bedl t390
stove &amp; retrlg. t250 pkls dep. &amp; to
t595i. Recliners $226 to
ref. No pets. c.n 814-448t375. Lampa t28 to 1 1 2 5 .
4926.
Dinettn t109 end up to t4915.
Wood teble w-6 cheirs S2815 to
' 1 B r.· 7 Court. Kitchen w•h t715. Dnk t100 up to t376.
ttave&amp; rafrlg. t17B pluadep. &amp;. Hutches t400 lnd up. Bri
ret No
C.ll 614-441- beds eomplete w-mettre~Mt

One Month F,... Rent

2 bedroom. furnished. Washer
and dryer . $226. month plus
deposit end utilitiM. 614-992·

304-175-11498

tu.n~u .. oat. good cond. CU •
shionl one.,..,. old. t1215.00.
30•87 .8 3
F~nithed roo~919 Second J;;:;;-;:::::15-:::;•:5;:.= = = = =
Ave.. Oolllpoh. 078 o mo.
Utllli• paid. SinQiemlli8. Sh•e 53
A •
bMh. CaM 448-4418.-ft• 7PM.
nt1ques

45 .

Apartment
R
for ent

House for rent. 304-875-8720.

for -rent.

onJv. Fr• e~tirnlt•. no job to
lwge or .,.u, Two locatictnt.
122 Vl.,d Str•t
Polot Pl....nt. W.Va.

L-;~=~:::;::::::::==~~~~~;;~~~~~1 15
I·

MoUse. $200.00 or will sell an 1
lar:~d contract. 304-675-2722

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

ClrpM in stock ontv. Vtnvle
Nrtlng •t t3.99 yerd in stock

814 . 446~i::IL O~io

your hard hat."

Kan .,g.. ul)ltfllrt, 2 bedroom.
Coli 614-44&amp;-22011.

Mobile HomM

Colt 114-992-

Coneole RCA 2&amp; inch colored
TV. remote control, 1300.00.

3 BR . house. Oepostr rtquir.,.

FOR

o~., .

Pomon&gt;y.
2284.

Exclllll. cor'ld.

10 Old Fo11 Trail. Call 614-448-

Rodn~

Applienc..·Upp• Rlv•

Utld aiW'ing mec::hln• Priced
from t49. 915. The Fabric Shop.

Call 814-448-220&amp;

Acrotl fTom Galli• Academv.
t250 per mo. Call 614-44&amp;-.
0045 or weekendl after 5 PM .

dep.

30··. o150. Goo · -·
0 .£. d l o - -. 075.

Television
Viewing

loakt.IU1o.C-C•-•-IIon - - 1100. 304-67151211

equ6pmtnt. Gail Mill• at 114·

froo. 095. Rofrtg. olde-bv-Jida

Fld .• 614-448-7398.

21 Gatlla St, 5300 • mo. 8200
3 BR . doubla.

t75.

canct .

.,
•

400 C.I.O . .,,., PI, Pl . ...

HO trtins for' •'•· •40o. ..,.lu 1
"" 0200. Colt fo• . ltot of

992-3198.

ranD"
078.

refewenc•. C.l1814-441-.926.
depos~ .

.,..,Mr,

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

DORN LO ER

V•ns• 4W.D.

73

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri11ht

Thursday, December 8, 1988

1877 OMC 4M4 "-"• ca.aic.

Whirlpool Mah•. til. Ktn·
more drywr, *95. A.trlg. frott·
capperfone. 1175. K..,mora

to .::hooll. Downtown. t375 •
ptus

Misc. Merchandise

O..op In n~nge 30" wtth hood.

I Z215. 29 Neil Aw .. Gellipolll.
Call .46-U 18 tft• 7 PM.

mo.

54

ThursdaY. Dec:amber 8, 1988

'

.

-

D.S

.

'~

�PORMWOy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 12-The Daily Sentinel
r----

Mei.u~

Local news...__;,_-

'"'0~

c ontin ued from page 1
Pomeroy a t 2:43 p.m. to the Meigs County Infirmary for Maggie
Hoy· to Vetera ns Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 6:33p.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 1 fo r RonaldWindland to O'Bienness Memorial
Hospital; Raci ne at 10: 18 p.m. transported Barney Hiles from
an auto accident on Wells Run·to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Earthquake...

Twenty-one cases were processed in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
· ••
Forfeiting bo nds were David A. Warth. Pomeroy, $450 ~ .
driving while intoxicated. and $50. running a red light; Richard _
Rietm ire. New Haven. W. Va .. $50, stop sign violation; Geneva :.E. Bays, Ga llipolis. $50 running a red light; Ryari Pape.
Noblesville, Ind .. $43; Debra Dingy, New Haven, $40; Betty M.
Dill. Pomeroy, $40; Eldon Sauders, Pomeroy, $41; Sheila
Harris, Pomeroy, $4 ; Tony HendriX, Tuppers Plains, $40;
Charlotte Newe ll, Middleport, $41; John R. Nelson, Middleport,
$40: Walter H. Wilson, Pomeroy, $41; Henry W. Rider, Rhode,
$40; Herbert Crump, Point Pleasant, W.Va., $41; Donna Kent ,
Bidwell. $40. all posted on speeding charges; Ralph S. Duncan,
Middleport. $450. driving whlle intoxicated.
Fined were Philip W. Hoffman, Mason. W. Va.,$16andcosts,
speeding; Christy K. Johnson, Wilkesville, $15 and costs.
speeding, $10, expired tags; Dennis W. Blrchfl&lt;!ld, Albany, $25
and costs, disorderlY manner; Harvey Faw, Mlddh~port, $100
and -costs, fl eei ng a police officer; Danny Dalton, Albany, $25
a nd cos ts, disorderly manner, and $100 and costs, possession of

___ __

Missionary sen-ict'
'

There wlil be a missionary
service at the Harrisonville Holl·
ness Chapel on Wednesday, start·
lng at 7:30p.m .. wllh Rev. Guy
Troyer. . Rev . David Farrell,
pastor, fnvlles the public.

Seyler disposes of 24 ~s

'

Twe nty-four cases were processed in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor R ichard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Robert Powers. Middleport. $375 and costs,
driving while Intoxicated. and $43 and costs. defective eXhaust;
Mic key Eakins, Sy racuse, $43 and costs. left of center; Tony
Chapell, Syracuse , $613 and costs, reckless manner; Mary
Ellen Sheets. Dunbar. W. Va., $58 and costs, speeding; James
Werry. Jr., Racine, $375 and costs, driving while intoxicated,
$49. speeding; Ronnie Lambert, Pomeroy, $375 and costs,
driving while intoxicated.
Forfeit ing b(lnds were Elizabeth Gloeckner, Pomeroy,leash
law violation, $3B ; Franklin Richardson, Ewington, $45; Eric
Daniels, Rutland , $48; Theresa Bing, Racine. $47; David
Brya nt, Huntingt on, W. Va. , $57:
Theron Camp, West
Colum bia , W. Va., . $49; Kimberly Hudson, Rutland, $50;
Rebecca Ebersbach. Chester, $59, all posted on speeding
charges: Willard Moore, Portland, $43, assured clear distance;
Raymond Malyuk, Bedford, $63, expired operator's license;
Na ncy Coganore, Logan, $63, !allure to yield; David Darst,
Middleport , $43, stop sign violation; Eric Stover, Jr .. Racine,
$43, ass ured clear distance; Jeffrey T. Roberts. Grove City.
$375, driving while intoxicated, and $50, speeding; Mary Miler,
Pomeroy, $43, failure to yield; Sheila Shuster. Dexter, $63. :
expired plates.
"" 1 .
Todd Quillen, Pomeroy. was placed on si~nths probation
after bei ng charged with fighting.

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smit.h
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power : ............ 27%
AT&amp;T ............ ....... ... ... ... .. .. .29')1
Ashland Oll .............. .. .... ....33"'
Bob Evans ...... ....... ...... ..... .. 15'h
Charming Shoppes ............. .12')1
City Holding Co ....... .. .... ..... 31 'h
Federal Mogul. .... ....... ...... 47JI8
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .. .... .. .... .. .47%
Heck's ..... .. ..... .. ... ... ... ........ .. %
Key Centurion .................... .15\4
Lands' End ........... ...... ........ 27%
Limited Inc ......................... 27\1
Multimedia Inc ...... .... .... ..... 70\4
Rax Restauranls ........... ....... 3\4
Ro.bblns &amp; Myers ...... ........... 13
Shoney's Inc .. ...... .. .. .. .......... 7)(,
Wendy's Inti. .. .. ...... .. ... ... ... .. 5%
Worthlngtpn Ind ..... .. ... ...... .. 22

Continued from..:_:::_
page 1

Soviet Central Asia, near Len!nakan and between the Georgian
capital of Tblisi and the Arm en·
ian capital of Yerevan, Tass said.

'
poUce
radio from a sheriff's
cruiser which is no longer in use,
to the dog warden's truck.
-Appointed John Rice and
John Karschnik, and reap·
pointed VIcki Gloeckner, to the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Ret a rda t ion-.Deveiopmental
Disabilities.
-Signed the 1989 litter program grant agreement, as re-

Lanny R. Jenkins, 51, 423
Beech St., Middleport, died Wed·
nesday at the Holzer Medical
Center foilowing a brief illness.
Mr. J enkins was born Dec. 16,
1936 in Sy racuse. a son of Lenora
Oiler Jenkins, Syracuse, and the
late Fred J enkins, Sr. He was a
s teelworker at Foote Mineral,
New Ha ven, W.Va., for 21 years
and was a member o" the
Steelworkers Union, Local 5171.
He was a member of the
Syracuse First Church of God
and served as superintendent
and trustee of the church.
Surviving in addition to his
mother, are his wife, Jan Nessel·
road Jenkins; four brothers,
Fred Jenk ins, Jr., 'Columbus;
Darrell !Gene) Jenkins and
Michael Je nkins , both of Pomeroy; Ga r y Jenkins, Syracuse; a
sister, Donna Powers , Middleport; a sister-in-law and her
husband, Elle n and Jerry
Rougbl., and a brother-in· law and
his wife, George and Lena
Nesseiroad, ali of Pomeroy ; two
aunts , Faye Browning and AI·
ber ta Shirha rt, both of Cleve-

land; an uncle, George Morgan
Jenkins, Newport Richie, F1a.,
and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Pastor J. E. Hossler
officiating. Burial will be in
Gitmore Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7 to
9 p.m. Friday and from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.

1I
I

Square dance slated

Vol .39, No. 161
. Copyrighted 1988

STOP IN SOON AND REGISTER FOR A FREE
RECLINER TO BE GIVEN AWAY. DRAWING
WILL BE HELD ON DECEMBER 23, 1988.

1

A number of video tapes of the
1988 Fail Foilies of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association are now
available. Residents who ordered the tapes through . The
Daily Sentinel Office may now
pick them up at the office on
Court St., Pomeroy. Residents
who st!ll w!sh to order tapes but
have not done so should phone
Roger and Mary Gilmore at
992-6203 or they may call Bob
Hoefllch at 99~·2155 or 992-5292.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Alarmed by a
worsening gap in the state's
inabilitY to ft~nd its Medicaid
program - health carP for the
indigent- Gov. Richard Celeste
.. ,. Proposed Thut·sday a combina·
- tion of cost contaiJtment and
additional appropriations .
Celeste met privately in his
office, first wllh legislative lead·
ers from both parties, then with
legislators from the big-city
delegations of Franklin, Hamil·
ton and Montgomery counties.
The governor and his director
of human services, Patricia
Barry. told the lawmakers there
will be a $134 million shortfall,
$56 milllon of it in state funds , tiy
the end of the t!scal period next
June 30.
He indicated he will ask the
General Assembly for a supple·

Now Open For The
Christmas Season.
•POINBmlAS • POINim'IA
HANG! NO BASKETS oHOLLY TREES
•AFRtCAN VIOLETS •FOUAOE
PlANTS. BASKETS &lt;MONUMENT

SPRAYS
•CEMmRY VASES
•WREATHS and OR AVE BLANKETS

•LIVE. CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

OPEN DAILY 9 AM-5 I'M
SUNDAY 1 I'M-5 I'M

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
992-5776-SYIACUSI, 011.

ACHRISTMASCAROL-ThecholroiSouthern
High School will present A Christmas Cjp'ol at 2
p.m Sunday in the high shcool gymnasium.
Among the leading cbracters In the musical
directed by Roberta Maidens are lo front, Jenney

II

.SCOTCH and WHITE PINE

IIIII••• tur11 South on panl road, 1.1/t .... te pove.
WATCH FOI SIGNS- MOUIS: 10:00 '1IL Dill

I

I1

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

A $3.33 per load out-of-district additional $3.33 per load which
fee )s being added to Racine was not '!lnllcipated.
VIllage's blll at the Galiia County
·Council elected Carro~J Tea·
Landflll, reported Mayor Frank ford and Henry Bentz to serve on
Cleland at Monday night's meet· the Firemen's Dependency
ing of Racine Vlllage Council.
Board. Robert Johnson and John
It was noted that village trash Holman will represent the fire
bills will already be higher this department. These four will then
quarter, in accord with an meet and select a vl!lage resident
ordinance which was passed in to serw on the board.
September. Council wlll have to
In .final business, Council ap·
study the collection to see if the proved a resolution authorizing
rates will have to be adjusted the clerk to transfer money with
again to compensate for the the Water Fund Account, and
approved the purchase of several

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Dennis Conrad named
Trooper of the Year ·

FI P
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Usle who plays Tiny Tim, Mayla Yoacham, the
Spirit ol Christmas present; Angel Snider, the
Splrll ol Christmas Past; Herb Rose, Scrooge,
-and Hank Cleland, the Ghost of Marley. (See story
on page 6).

I

't

I

Highway Patrol Trooper Den·
n!s D. Conrad has been selected
1988 Trooper of the Year at the
Galiia-Melgs Patrol Post.
The selection of 27-year-old
Trooper Conrad, is in recognition
for outstanding service in 1988 in
the Gall!a-Meigs area . Fellow
officers at the Gallia-Meigs Post
chose Conrad on the basis of
leadership abilities, professional
ethics, courteous treatment of
others, enthusiastic work attltud.e, and cooperation with super·
visors, peers and publlc.
Trooper Conrad is now in
contention for the District and
State Trooper of the Year

Awards to be announced at a
later date.
Conrad joined the patrol in 1984
and• has served at the Gailia·
Meigs Post since graduation
from the Patrol Academy. Origi·
naily from Clarington and a
graduate of River High !;1chool,
Conrad has served as a Monroe
County Deputy Sheriff and Clarington Pollee officer. He, at·
tended West Liberty State
College.
Trooper Conrad and his wife,
Maria, reside near Galllpolls,
with their children, Adam, 4,
Allsha 3 and Jonathan. 7 months.

LOcal news briefs...-.....
Driver hurt in one-car mishap
'·

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9~E

DAY SERVICE

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

The Gallla-Meigs Post of State Highway Patrol investigated
an accident in Meigs County atll: 08 a.m. Thursday on CR. 29,
0.3 miles west of CR. 28. The driver was injured in the one car
mishap .
Troopers said Carol S. Dailey, 48, Portland, lost control and
her pickup truck went off the road, striking a tree. Damage was
heavy. There was no citatiOn. Dailey suffered a minor visible
injury .
No one was injured and no one was cited in an accident at 4:47
p.m. Wednesday in Meigs County, on SR. 7 near Pomeroy .
Troopers said the left rear wheel and tlrecameoffacardriven
by Thomas E. Mankin, II, 44, Pomeroy, and struck a car driven
by Mina M. Swisher, 74, Pomeroy. Damage was moderate to the
Swisher car and minor to the Mankin vehicle.
The patrol also investigated a car-deer accident at 6 p.m.
· Wednesday on SR. 7, near Pomeroy, in Chester Township.
Troopers said a deer was k!Ued when li was struck by a car
driv!!n by Karen S. Wheeler, 39, Pomeroy. No one was Injured.
Damage was moedrate. '

Farm·planning sessiory.s slated
An informational meeting on establishing a Farm Business
Planning and Analysis program lor farmers of Meigs County
will be held Monday, Dec. 12, at 2 p.m., in the vocatlonal-agr.!culture room at Southern High School, Racine. The
Continued on page 10

992·6669
271 N. SECOND
MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Despite protests from consumer
advocates who said 11 would lead
to higher phone rates, the Ohio
joints of plastic sewer pipe so the
G~neral Assembly. took final
materials would be available (or
legislative action.Thursday on a
repairs on the village's storm
telephone
deregulation bill and
drains.
adjourned
for the year.
Council recessed subject to a
The
House's
65-21 approval of
meeting on Dec. 19, !!there is any
the
Senate
version
of the controbusiness to transact at that time.
versial
telephone
rate-making
Present for Monday's meellng
blll
brought
to
a
conclusion
the
were Mayor Cleland, Clerk Jane
two-year,
117th
·
session
of
the
Beegle, Fire Chief Robert John·
Legislature.
son, and Councilmembers Ro·
Lawmakers will be back in less
bert Beegle, Henry Bentz, Car·
than
four weeks to start the
roll Teaford, Larry Wolfe and
1989-90
sessiOn, which promises
Scott Wolfe. Councilman RIto
bring
fireworks over state
chard Wamsley was absent.
finances.
The telephone deregulation bill
was proposed by the telephone
cqmpanles and the Public Utili·
Ues Commission of Ohio. It was
• advertised as a mechanism for
allowing prices on competitive.
high· technology telephone systems to be set in the free
marketplace.
William Spratley, Ohio Consu·
mers' Counsel, complained that
the telephone companies have
declined to reveal what plans
they have for "alternative"
ratemaking methods, which they
and the PUCO could establish on
basic localteiephone service.
Spratley said he w.ould seek a
person,!'! meeting with Gov.
Richard Celeste to urge him to
veto the b!U.
''I'J.l sign the bill," Celeste told
reporters shortly after It was
passed. "I think the blli is a
TROOPER DENNIS CONRAD responsible
piece of leg!slallon. I
think It has sultlcient safeguards

'

--

mental appropriation early next appropr iated fund s will st!ll be
year to help plug the hole. But necessary.
Celeste said cuts in state pay" We need to address this
men Is to health care providers deficit now ," ~e les te told the
and recipients alike are neces· legislators. ''Failure to address
sa ry ingredients of any recovery this deficit in a timely fashion
plan .
will mean that additional funds
·The governor suggested small must be built into the base for the
reductions In the formula for 1990-91- biennium."
nursing home and hospllal pay ·
House Speaker Vernal Riffe
ments, a small restriction in the Jr., D-Wheeiersburg, told repor·
payment lor drugs , a reduction in ters Thursday he does not favor
the fee increase for providers reductions in payments to pro- .
from 4 percent to 2 percent , and a viders or recipients. " As long as
co-payment of 50 cents to $1 by we have the money. we should
each Medicaid recipient for· not make cuts In Medicaid, "
medical services.
Riffe said.
Celeste said his plan would
But Celeste said any_ supplesave the state $19.8 milllon this mental appropriations would
fiscal year, $8.1 million of it in only add to the base of the
state funds.
Medicaid budget for the next two
"The proposed cuts for Fiscal years. "They will remain as a
Year 1989 will not solve t.heentire part of the Medicaid base for
deficit problem," said the gover- future years," he said.
nor. "The use of some additional

economically-depressed areas at
in there to protect consumers."
Before joining the Senate in below-market ra tes;
-setting guideilnes for and
adjournment for the year, the
encouraging
the operation of
House sent the governor these
pre-school
programs;
bills:
. -tightening the restrictions
~Expanding the options for
against
abuse of the mentally
the state treasurer to lnveot
retarded,
the developmentally
interim deposits, and allowing disabled and
the functionally
the treasurer to pool investment impaired;
of county funds for a better
-transferring the location of a
return;
pre-release
center from
-creating a state-backed pro- Hamilton prison
to
Montgomery
gram under which banks could . County.
loan ' money to businesses in

Dispatcher Higley honored
hy Meigs-Gallia State Patrol
Ohio State Highway Patrol
Dispatcher L. Kay Higley has
been selected for the 1988 Ohio
State Highway Achievement and
Recognition Award at the Gailia·
Meigs Post.
The selection of Higley. 3B, is in
recognition of outs tanding ser·
vice during 1988 as a Radio
Dispatcher at the Gallia·Meigs
Post. Higley was chosen by Post
troopers and dispatchers on the
basis of technical job knowledge
aod ability, enthusiastic work
attitude. team work, and prompt
and courteous response to the
public's requests for information
and assistance.
Radio Dispatcher Highley
joined the patrol in 1974 and has
served at the Gallio-Meigs Post
for 14 years. A llfe·long resident
of Bidwell, Higley is a graduate
of North Gallla High School.
This is the second time Higley

has won this award. She was the
1987 award recipient.
•

PSC drafts
rules marking
pawer lines
•
across rwer

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- The West Virginia Publlc
Service Commission has drafted
rules requiring the marking of
electric transml$s!on llnes
across the Ohio River.
The rules comply with a law
approved by the Legislature in
March. ·
PSC Executive Secretary How·
ard Cunningham said the Unes
must be marked to comply with
Federal Aviation Administration
regulations to · alert airplane
pUots.
Under the rules, all new and
existing lines must be marked
and lighted.
Cunningham said the proposed
rules affect 50 transmission llnes
crossing through 12 West VIrginia counties bordering the Ohio
River.

MEIGS QUIZ TEAM ON TV -The Meigs High
Quiz Team will participate In the televlalon
competition, "TV Honor Society," on Saturday at
8 p.m. The show alra OQ Cbllllnel 15 from wrAP
TV, Parll.eroburg, W. Va. Quiz team members

Give A Gill Subscription To The Daily Snntinel This Holiday Season - Call 992 -2155
J

,. ,..-..---- - - - · -

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohio Assembly adopts
phone bill, goes. horn~

Racine village .may h(lve to
adjust rates for trash pickup

THIS IS THE SEASON
FOR TAKING
PICTURES I

No ·PurchaH Necessary-Need Jlot Bo Pr-nt to Win.

MEIGS
FURNITURE
280 3RD ST.
RACINE, OHIO

•

Tapes ready

•'

3 SectionS. 26 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 9 •.. 1988

(:eleste proposes plan
for Medicaid funding

GET ONE
OF THESE

"FREE" RECLINER

.

j.

WHEN YOU

A square dance will be held
Friday at the VFW Post on
Vanderhoof Road at Tuppers
Plains. Donations wlli be $2 for
adults and $1 for children under
12. No alcoholic beverages
permitted.

'

Partly c loudy tonight .
Chance of snow 30 percent.
~aturday,
variable cloudiness. Highs near 30. Chance of
snow 30 perc~nt.

.

Lodge to meet
The regular monthly meeting
of Shade River Lodge 453, Ches·
ter, will be ThurSday at 7:30p.m.
Open installation of new officers
will be held. All master masons,
members and families of Shade
River Lodg~ members may
attend. Refreshments will be
served.

Daily Number
181
Pick-4
8697

Christmas

Wednesday Admissions - Nei·
lie Hudson, r,llddleport; Maggie
Hoy, Middleport; Sarah Nelgier,
Racine.
Wednesday Discharges -Darrlck_..McCloud, Nellie Connolly,
Saran McCarty, Hilary Turley.

Located on Cherry lltlp. '""' last at Darwin on lt. 611,

I

ques ted by Kenny Wiggins, direc·
tor of the Meigs County Litter
Control Program.
-Reappointed Manning Roush
to the Resource Conservation
and Development Board.
-Approwd fnterdepartmental budget transfers of $300 for
the Meigs County Infirmary. and
$950 for the Juvenile and·Probate
Court.

Velerans Memorial

PRE-CUT TREES AVAILAaE

•

Ohio Lottery

16 more
days 'til

Hospiial news

II·-----------------------~
CHRISTMAS TREES I
CUT YOUR OWN'AT
1
--Area deaths _ ____;.
I BRADFORD'S GROVE •
Lanny Jer,kins

·'

Continued from page 1

practically disappeared from the
face of the earth."
Gerasimov had insisted earlier
Wednesday that Gorbachev
would not cut short his visll to
New York, saying only that "the
army has been mobilized, the air
force has been moblliz~d. and
also physicians ."
The quake was centered south
of the Caucasus Mountains in the

·

198~

County···--~---------

account to be known as the . a special account to be spent only
Peters' Memorial' Account. This on projects for the aged of the
account was established so that county, to meet as nearly as
when the county-owned Mar· possible, specifications Included
garet Josephine Hunter Peters' in the will of Margaret Peters.
property in Racine is sold,
-Authorized the transfer of a
proceeds from the sale will be In

Hoffman processes 21 cases

marijua na.

Thursday, December 8,

1\

are, lrom left to rlgbl, Monica Turner, Scott
Edmoads, Cbad Carson and Jared Sheets. Quiz
team advisor Is Rita Slavin. The Meigs team will
compete Saturday with Federal Hocking.

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